Our Small Moss Covered Wooden Nativity Stable is 10 inches tall at the tallest center point, 13.75 inches across and 6.25 inches deep. The outside of the roof, the inside back wall and a small portion of the inside floor of the Wooden Nativity Stable is covered in lush Sphagnum moss. There is a log like pillar with three other smaller logs attached from it to the back wall of the Wooden Nativity Stable, forming a corral housing a large bundle of straw. On the other side of the Stable, there is a short wall with a large piece of bark, representing a tree trunk, sitting beside it. This Fontanini Stable is a beautiful start for your nativity scene decorations. Select this link to the impressive selection of Nativity Figurines. Select to view all of our wonderful Christmas Decorations Ideas for the holidays. Select to add other special Nativity Accessories to your unique Nativity collection.
The Christmas Crib
In the year 1220 St, Francis of Assissi visited Bethlehem. He liked the way the Christmas was celebrated there so much, that he asked the Pope for permission to recreate it in his own Italian village. Click to look at more Christian Gift Ideas for your holiday gift giving.
He built a manger in a cave. In it he placed a stone image of the baby Jesus. He surrounded the manger with real animals. Then he said a Mass (communion). The people found it so moving that they said it was possible to believe you were there at the actual birth of Jesus. Click to see all of our rustic Nativity Creches For Nativity Sets.
Before long, wooden nativity scenes were displayed in churches and homes across Europe. Today they continue to be popular as a way of reminding us of what Christmas is really about, the birth of Jesus. Click to check out our unique Christmas Nativity Scene Sets.
The tradition was brought into Spain from Naples during the reign of Charles III of Spain.
In Catalonia, a figure is included that represents a Catalan peasant.
In Provence, in the South of France, nativity scenes are sometimes made up of hundreds of small painted clay figurines called Santon. They represent all the traditional trades and professions of old Provence. Because of their cultural value the Santons are often collected as art or craft objects, regardless of their possible use in a nativity scene.
A Christmas Nativity Scene, also called a crib or crèche, generally depicts the birth or birthplace of Jesus. Nativity scenes, in two dimensions or three, usually show Jesus in a manger, with Joseph, and Mary in a barn intended for the housing of animals. A mule, ox, sheep, and sometimes other barnyard animals, surround them. The scene sometimes includes three wise men, shepherds, angels and the Star of Bethlehem.
Why 25th December
The precise date is more difficult to pinpoint, the calendars having changed so often since then. One argument which often comes up against winter is that shepherds would not have their sheep out then. This is cancelled out by at least two points:
1. Even today, Christmas pilgrims report seeing the shepherds in the fields outside Bethlehem.
2. Some sheep were usually kept close to the city all year, for sacrificial purposes at the temple.
The 25th was observed in the Western Church as early as the 3rd century. the 6th January in the Eastern Church. Certain theories relate to the celebrations of Saturnalia, and Winter Solstice, both during the last week of December. Another theory is that the Church arranged the commemoration of festivals not on any special date relating to that festival but to the cardinal points of the year. Thus The Annunciation at the time of the Spring Equinox, St. Michael at the Autumnal Equinox and Christmas at the Winter Solstice. Yet another relates the date to that of the Dedication of the Temple, a Jewish feast of great significance held on the 25th of Cisleu (December 20th) easily mis-scribed. Select if you would like to hang Nativity Ornaments on your Artifical Prelit Christmas Trees.





