Pfingstbräuche#
Whitsun Customs: Whitsun, Pentecost (from Greek "pentekoste hemerá" = 50th day (after Easter)), the feast commemorating the descent of the Holy Spirit on the disciples of Christ and the beginning of the Christian Church's mission to the world. Accordingly, Whit Sunday is the principal day on and around which Confirmation is conferred in the Roman Catholic Church. Apart from its religious significance, confirmation has in Austria also become a secular feast of the family which is celebrated in accordance with a traditional programme (fiacre trip, visit to the Prater amusement park in Vienna). The theological significance of Whitsun was formerly symbolised by descending a carved wooden dove from an opening in the vault of the church ("Heiligengeistloch", "Heiligengeistschwingen"), a custom which is still practised in some places in Tirol.
While in former times noisy and riotous processions
("Pfingstschnalzen") were common around Whitsuntide, various
villages, particularly in Upper Austria, celebrate the night from Whit
Sunday to Monday as "Bosheitsnacht" ("Night of Mischief") (
Unruhnaechte), when young men engaged in all sorts of mischief.
Customs like "Kranzelreiten" in Weitensfeld (Carinthia) and
"Kufenstechen" (Slovene: "stehvanje"), which are
practiced in various places in the Gail Valley, where contestants on
horseback try to pluck wreaths or rings from poles as they gallop
past, appear to be remnants of aristocratic tournaments. Processions
of the "Whitsun King" ("Pfingstkoenig"), formerly a
widespread custom in Lower Austria, were re-introduced as a custom for
school children at Patzmannsdorf in the inter-war period and at
Arbesthal in the late 1970s.
Literature#
L. Kretzenbacher, Ringreiten, Rolandspiel und Kufenstechen, 1966; G. Kapfhammer, Brauchtum in den Alpenlaendern, 1977; H. P. Fielhauer, Alte und neue Pfingstkoenige in Niederoesterreich, in: Jahrbuch des Oesterreichischen Volksliedwerkes 32/33, 1984.