Origins of the Easter Bunny
My wonderful wife, Dawn, often challenges me with questions I usually try to answer off the top of my head. But if my answer fails to satisfy her, she assigns me the task of finding the “real” answer and getting back to her. Such was her question about the origins of the Easter Bunny and its colored eggs since, we all know, rabbits don’t lay eggs and the whole Easter Bunny thing isn’t even mentioned in the scriptures. Well, I’ve put it off for as long as I can. Easter is this Sunday and I was reminded that the question is still “out there.” So I did some cursory research and here’s what I learned.
The answer lies in the ingenious way that the Christian church absorbed pagan practices. After discovering that people were more reluctant to give up their holidays and festivals than their pagan gods, the church simply incorporated pagan practices into Christian celebrations. As recounted by the Venerable Bede, an early Benedictine monk, clever clerics copied pagan practices and by doing so, made Christianity more palatable to pagan folk reluctant to give up their festivals for somber Christian practices.
In second century Europe, the predominate spring festival was a raucous Saxon fertility celebration in honor of the goddess Eostre (Ostara), whose sacred animal (or consort, depending on which version you choose to believe) was a hare. One story holds that Eostre hurled the hare into the heavens after giving it the power, once a year, to lay colored eggs. Another popular piece of folklore is that Eostre once saved a bird whose wings had frozen during the winter by turning it into a hare. Because the hare had once been a bird, it could still lay eggs, and eventually became the modern Easter Bunny.
But the eggs associated with the hare also have another, even more ancient, origin — The eggs associated with this and other vernal festivals have been symbols of rebirth and fertility for so long, the precise roots of the tradition are unknown and may date to the beginning of human civilization. We know, for instance, that ancient Romans and Greeks used eggs as symbols of fertility, rebirth, and abundance.
And eggs were solar symbols that figured in the festivals of numerous resurrected gods. Pagan fertility festivals at the time of the spring equinox were common and it was believed that, when day and night were of equal length, male and female energies were also in balance, hence the connection to fertility. In this context, the hare was often associated with moon goddesses; the egg and hare together represented, respectively, the god and goddess.
Moving forward fifteen hundred or so years, German children awaited the arrival of Oschter Haws, a hare who laid colored eggs in nests made from children’s caps and bonnets to the delight of those who discovered them Easter morning. Abandoned plover nests found in the spring were said to have been those of Oschter Haws in which he laid his colored eggs. It was this German tradition that popularized the Easter Bunny and Easter basket in America when introduced into American culture by German settlers in Pennsylvania.
Many modern practitioners of neopagan and earth-based religions have embraced these symbols as part of their religious practices, identifying with the life-affirming aspects of the spring holiday. The neopagan holiday of Ostara, for example, is descended from the Saxon festival. Ironically, some Christian groups have used the presence of these symbols to denounce the celebration of the Easter holiday and many churches have abandoned the pagan moniker in favor of more Christian oriented titles like “Resurrection Sunday.”
So there you have it, Dawn. I hope this gets me off the hook on this one so I can move ahead with some of your more recent “questions.”
Reader Comments (13)
And now we know the REST of the story!
Cute article and informative. I am sure Dawn will let you "off the hook" on this. Can't wait for her next "assignment".
A case where the mixing of pagan and Christian festivals in order to get the pagans to follow Christianity eventually came back to haunt the church. Now they need to disassociate themselves from the pagan bunny. But I doubt simply changing the name from Easter will accomplish that as long as both the resurrection and chocolate rabbits occur on the same day.
Interesting also is the way the confection industry and retail marketing picked up on the whole Pagan hare thing. We are all seduced (victimized?) by marketing. Look at Christmas. Look at Halloween, also based in Paganism but also morphed into enormous marketing ploys for the benefit of retailers. It's a mad, mad world!
Easter isn't actually observed on the date of Christ's resurrection. maybe we should more it to a more accurate date AND change the name to Resurrection Day" or something similar. The bunny and all its commercialization could keep the name since it really has no biblical connection.
"Eostre hurled the hare into the heavens after giving it the power, once a year, to lay colored eggs."
Must be true since he is still there. The constellation "Lepus the Hare" can be found under the feet of Orion the Hunter and beside Orion's hunting dog, Canis Major. Lepus is located close to the horizon in winter skies in the Northern Hemisphere.
Interesting how it all ties together, isn't it?
Everyone have a wonderful Easter!
You're off the hook. Well done Honey Bunny:)
Whew!
If memory and my research is correct, I also believe that Eostre is the earliest word from which the word "estrogen" is derived.
The associations are obvious.
You pulling my finger?
I think he is right, I remember something about that in school. And it does sound right, doesn't it?
Always interesting and educational posts. A very enjoyable site. You and your family have a happy Easter.