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| Meta Title | St. Patrick's Day and the True Story of Saint Patrick |
| Meta Description | Here's what we know about the real history behind the holiday |
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| Boilerpipe Text | Modern St. Patrickâs Day
celebrations
, at
least
in the
United States
, are likely be to characterized by commercial lucky charms and green beerâall of which has very little to do with the historical figure of the saint. As it turns out, it took centuries for the holiday to accrue the elements that now seem crucial to its celebrations.
The March 17 celebration started in 1631 when the Church established a Feast Day honoring St. Patrick. He had been Patron Saint of Ireland who had died around the fifth centuryâa whopping 12 centuries before the modern version of the holiday was first observed. But very little is known about who he actually was, according to Marion Casey, a clinical assistant professor of Irish Studies at New York University (and a regular marcher in the St. Patrickâs Day Parade in Manhattan).
âWe know that he was a Roman citizen, because Britain was Roman then, and then he was enslaved and taken to Ireland, where he either escaped or was released,â Casey says. âAnd then he became a priest and went back to Ireland, where he had a lot of luck converting the Druid culture into Christians.â
Legend says
St. Patrick was actually born Maewyn Succat, but that he changed his name to Patricius (or Patrick), which derives from the Latin term for âfather figure,â after he became a priest. And that supposed luck of his is the root of all the themed merchandise for modern St. Patrickâs Day.
It wasnât until the early 18th century that many of todayâs traditions were kicked into high gear. Since the holiday falls during Lent, it provides Christians a day off from the prescriptions of abstinence leading up to Easter, and around the 1720s, the church found it âgot kind of out of control,â Casey says. It was to remind celebrants what the holiday actually stood for that the church first associated a botanical itemâcustomary for all saintsâwith St. Patrick, assigning him the symbol of the likewise lucky shamrock.
Modern-day celebrations and themes continued to take shape during the rest of the 1700s. In 1762, the first New York City parade took place. It wasnât until 1798, the year of the Irish Rebellion, that the color green became officially associated with the day, Casey says. Up until the rebellion, the color associated with St. Patrick was blue, as it was featured both in the royal court and on ancient Irish flags. But as the British wore red, the Irish chose to wear green, and they sang the song âThe Wearing of the Greenâ during the rebellion, cementing the colorâs relevance in Irish history.
As for the green beer, thatâs an even later addition. In fact, it wasnât until the late 20th century that Ireland repealed a law that initially kept everythingâpubs includedâshut down for the day. Since then, thanks to a marketing push from Budweiser in the 1980s, downing beer has become a common way to celebrate, regardless of how closely itâs tied to the actually meaning of St. Patrick himself. |
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# The True History Behind St. Patrick's Day
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by
[ashley Ross](https://time.com/author/ashley-ross/)
Updated:
Dec 13, 2023 4:10 PM CUT
Published:
Mar 16, 2016 9:00 PM CUT

A woman takes part in the St Patrick's Day parade through central London, March 13, 2016.
A woman takes part in the St Patrick's Day parade through central London, March 13, 2016.Tristan FewingsâGetty Images
by
[ashley Ross](https://time.com/author/ashley-ross/)
Updated:
Dec 13, 2023 4:10 PM CUT
Published:
Mar 16, 2016 9:00 PM CUT
Modern St. Patrickâs Day [celebrations](https://www.nycstpatricksparade.org/ "undefined"), at [least](http://www.stpatricksdayneworleans.com/ "undefined") in the [United States](https://www.chicago.gov/city/en/depts/dca/supp_info/parade7.html "undefined"), are likely be to characterized by commercial lucky charms and green beerâall of which has very little to do with the historical figure of the saint. As it turns out, it took centuries for the holiday to accrue the elements that now seem crucial to its celebrations.
The March 17 celebration started in 1631 when the Church established a Feast Day honoring St. Patrick. He had been Patron Saint of Ireland who had died around the fifth centuryâa whopping 12 centuries before the modern version of the holiday was first observed. But very little is known about who he actually was, according to Marion Casey, a clinical assistant professor of Irish Studies at New York University (and a regular marcher in the St. Patrickâs Day Parade in Manhattan).
âWe know that he was a Roman citizen, because Britain was Roman then, and then he was enslaved and taken to Ireland, where he either escaped or was released,â Casey says. âAnd then he became a priest and went back to Ireland, where he had a lot of luck converting the Druid culture into Christians.â
[Legend says](http://content.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1972553_1972551_1972451,00.html "undefined") St. Patrick was actually born Maewyn Succat, but that he changed his name to Patricius (or Patrick), which derives from the Latin term for âfather figure,â after he became a priest. And that supposed luck of his is the root of all the themed merchandise for modern St. Patrickâs Day.
It wasnât until the early 18th century that many of todayâs traditions were kicked into high gear. Since the holiday falls during Lent, it provides Christians a day off from the prescriptions of abstinence leading up to Easter, and around the 1720s, the church found it âgot kind of out of control,â Casey says. It was to remind celebrants what the holiday actually stood for that the church first associated a botanical itemâcustomary for all saintsâwith St. Patrick, assigning him the symbol of the likewise lucky shamrock.
Advertisement
Modern-day celebrations and themes continued to take shape during the rest of the 1700s. In 1762, the first New York City parade took place. It wasnât until 1798, the year of the Irish Rebellion, that the color green became officially associated with the day, Casey says. Up until the rebellion, the color associated with St. Patrick was blue, as it was featured both in the royal court and on ancient Irish flags. But as the British wore red, the Irish chose to wear green, and they sang the song âThe Wearing of the Greenâ during the rebellion, cementing the colorâs relevance in Irish history.
As for the green beer, thatâs an even later addition. In fact, it wasnât until the late 20th century that Ireland repealed a law that initially kept everythingâpubs includedâshut down for the day. Since then, thanks to a marketing push from Budweiser in the 1980s, downing beer has become a common way to celebrate, regardless of how closely itâs tied to the actually meaning of St. Patrick himself.
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| Readable Markdown | Modern St. Patrickâs Day [celebrations](https://www.nycstpatricksparade.org/ "undefined"), at [least](http://www.stpatricksdayneworleans.com/ "undefined") in the [United States](https://www.chicago.gov/city/en/depts/dca/supp_info/parade7.html "undefined"), are likely be to characterized by commercial lucky charms and green beerâall of which has very little to do with the historical figure of the saint. As it turns out, it took centuries for the holiday to accrue the elements that now seem crucial to its celebrations.
The March 17 celebration started in 1631 when the Church established a Feast Day honoring St. Patrick. He had been Patron Saint of Ireland who had died around the fifth centuryâa whopping 12 centuries before the modern version of the holiday was first observed. But very little is known about who he actually was, according to Marion Casey, a clinical assistant professor of Irish Studies at New York University (and a regular marcher in the St. Patrickâs Day Parade in Manhattan).
âWe know that he was a Roman citizen, because Britain was Roman then, and then he was enslaved and taken to Ireland, where he either escaped or was released,â Casey says. âAnd then he became a priest and went back to Ireland, where he had a lot of luck converting the Druid culture into Christians.â
[Legend says](http://content.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1972553_1972551_1972451,00.html "undefined") St. Patrick was actually born Maewyn Succat, but that he changed his name to Patricius (or Patrick), which derives from the Latin term for âfather figure,â after he became a priest. And that supposed luck of his is the root of all the themed merchandise for modern St. Patrickâs Day.
It wasnât until the early 18th century that many of todayâs traditions were kicked into high gear. Since the holiday falls during Lent, it provides Christians a day off from the prescriptions of abstinence leading up to Easter, and around the 1720s, the church found it âgot kind of out of control,â Casey says. It was to remind celebrants what the holiday actually stood for that the church first associated a botanical itemâcustomary for all saintsâwith St. Patrick, assigning him the symbol of the likewise lucky shamrock.
Modern-day celebrations and themes continued to take shape during the rest of the 1700s. In 1762, the first New York City parade took place. It wasnât until 1798, the year of the Irish Rebellion, that the color green became officially associated with the day, Casey says. Up until the rebellion, the color associated with St. Patrick was blue, as it was featured both in the royal court and on ancient Irish flags. But as the British wore red, the Irish chose to wear green, and they sang the song âThe Wearing of the Greenâ during the rebellion, cementing the colorâs relevance in Irish history.
As for the green beer, thatâs an even later addition. In fact, it wasnât until the late 20th century that Ireland repealed a law that initially kept everythingâpubs includedâshut down for the day. Since then, thanks to a marketing push from Budweiser in the 1980s, downing beer has become a common way to celebrate, regardless of how closely itâs tied to the actually meaning of St. Patrick himself. |
| Shard | 39 (laksa) |
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