Humans have been decorating eggs for Easter for centuries, but decorated ostrich eggs have been found from as far back as 60,000 years ago, long before the Christian festival began. The Easter egg has long been a symbol of fertility and rebirth, but exactly why people started decorating them is unclear. One theory is that, because animal products were not eaten during the religious Lenten season, people would hard-boil the eggs and decorate them with dye and wax, until they could be eaten at Easter. A more opulent type of decorated egg, Fabergé eggs, were famously created as bejeweled Easter gifts to the Russian imperial family. Our homepage image shows eggs from Lithuania, where people use traditional methods to paint patterns with wax using sharp objects or etch patterns into dyed eggs.
Happy Easter!
Today in History
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Celebrating Chile’s Independence Day
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An enduring vision
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Edinburgh festivals
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Seville, Spain
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Berlin Festival of Lights
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World Architecture Day
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Winter in the Wild West
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Göreme, Cappadocia, Turkey
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The wild heart of Tasmania
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Ljubljana, Slovenia
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75th anniversary of the Spruce Goose
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Prayer flags in Phobjikha Valley, Bhutan
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International Day of the World s Indigenous Peoples
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Tassili n’Ajjer, Sahara, Algeria
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A century since Tut s tomb was discovered
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Hungarian Parliament Building, Budapest, Hungary
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Whitehaven Beach, Whitsunday Island, Australia
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Celebrating World Art Day
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The birth of Bauhaus
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A Christmas market with a long history
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A state-of-the-art lookout on the Rock of Gibraltar
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Let’s celebrate
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International Jazz Day
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Float on
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Making it work—in Norway
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Sea Otter Awareness Week
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Shadows on the solstice
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A holiday beacon of light
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Cloudy with a chance of enlightenment
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It s not always sunny in Abu Simbel…
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