Classroom lesson · Festival · 🇩🇪 Germany

Christmas markets

Wooden huts, lights and gingerbread - a German invention

A Christmas market in Nuremberg lit up at night

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

A German Christmas market is a town square that turns into a tiny wooden village every December. Stalls sell hot drinks, roasted nuts, gingerbread, candles, wooden decorations and handmade gifts. The lights are warm and yellow, choirs sing, and you can smell cinnamon from streets away. Most Christmas markets around the world today copied the idea from Germany.

Tell me more

The oldest Christmas markets in Germany are over 600 years old. The most famous, in the city of Nuremberg, has been running every year since at least the 1620s. Towns all over Germany set up their own markets in the main square during the four weeks before Christmas.

The stalls are little wooden huts with steep snowy roofs. Each one is set up just for the few weeks of the market and then packed away again. Some sell food - bratwurst (sausages), gingerbread hearts, sugared almonds, hot apple punch. Others sell tiny handmade decorations, wooden toys and Christmas tree ornaments shaped like stars.

Christmas markets have spread far beyond Germany. London, Paris, New York, Tokyo and many other cities now have their own. If you have ever been to a Christmas market in your own country, the idea probably travelled from a German one. Some German towns even send their wooden huts and decorations abroad each year to set up 'sister' markets.

In many German towns, opening day is a huge event. A choir sings, the mayor flicks a switch and thousands of lights come on at the same time. There is often a giant Christmas tree in the middle of the square. Children look for the tower made of wooden 'pyramids' that spin slowly when warm air rises through them - powered by little candles.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why do you think Christmas markets are held outside in the cold instead of indoors?
  2. 02If you opened a stall at a Christmas market, what would you sell? Food, gifts, or something else?
  3. 03Lots of countries have a celebration in the darkest part of the year. Can you think of others - and why might that be?
Try this

Classroom activity

Design your own class Christmas market on a giant poster. Sketch the square, then each pupil designs one stall: what it sells, what it looks like, what it smells of. Label them and pin them up.

More about Germany

Other things that make Germany special

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