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***Mother's Day April 3rd 2011***
aka
MOTHERING SUNDAY
Mothers Day in 2011 falls on 03 April 2011 Mothers Day in 2012 falls on 18 March 2012 Mothers Day in 2013 falls on 10 March 2013 Mothers Day in 2014 falls on 30 March 2014 Mothers Day in 2015 falls on 15 March 2015 Mothers Day in 2016 falls on 06 March 2016 Mothers Day in 2017 falls on 26 March 2017 Mothers Day in 2018 falls on 11 March 2018 Mothers Day in 2019 falls on 31 March 2019
T SHIRT TED
This cute fella is a substantial 18" tall head to toe
That's a 12" ruler in the pix
He wears a baggy white T shirt which I will print, subliminally, with whatever message or image you want. This means that the T will show 100% faithfull reproduction with no plasticy feel as the image is IN the shirt not ON it
When you order the Bear email me the message and/or image to
[email protected]
Similarly I can give the back of the shirt the same treatment for a £5 supplement
Postage is recorded delivery (signed for) at cost
Mothering Sunday was also known as 'Refreshment Sunday', Pudding Pie Sunday (in Surrey, England) or 'Mid-Lent Sunday'. It was a day in Lent when the fasting rules were relaxed, in honour of the 'Feeding of the Five Thousand', a story in the Christian Bible.
The more usual name was Mothering Sunday. No one is absolutely certain exactly how the name of Mothering Sunday began. However, one theory is that the celebration could have been adopted from a Roman spring festival celebrating Cybele, their Mother Goddess.
As Christianity spread, this date was adopted by Christians. The epistle in the Book of Common Prayer for this Sunday refers to the heavenly Jerusalem as "the Mother of all us all", and this may have prompted the customs we still see today.
It is known on this date, about four hundred years ago, people made a point of visiting their nearest big church (the Mother Church). The church in which each person was baptised.
Cathedrals are the 'mother church' of all other churches in an area ('diocese'). Canterbury Cathedral is pictured below.
People who visited their mother church would say they had gone "a mothering."
Young British girls and boys 'in service' (maids and servants) were only allowed one day to visit their family each year. This was usually on Mothering Sunday.
Often the housekeeper or cook would allow the maids to bake a cake to take home for their mother. Sometimes a gift of eggs; or flowers from the garden (or hothouse) was allowed.
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