If the throngs of crazed customers clutching registry printouts at  Crate & Barrel are any indication, wedding season is once again upon  us. Before you head off to the next joyous union on your jam-packed  calendar, let’s take a moment to reflect on the rich history of marriage  celebrations and revel in the realization that weddings are, at their  core, incredibly bizarre. 
               
 The White Wedding Dress
The White Wedding Dress
Technically, today’s wedding gowns aren’t white. They are “Candlelight,”  “Warm Ivory,” “Ecru” or “Frost.”  But there was a time when a bride’s  wedding attire was simply the best thing in her closet (talk about “off  the rack”), and could be any color, even black. To convince her groom  that she came from a wealthy family, brides would also pile on layers of  fur, silk and velvet, as apparently grooms didn’t care if his  wife-to-be reeked of sweaty B.O. as long as she was loaded.  It was dear  ol’ Queen Victoria (whose reign lasted from 1837-1901) who made white  fashionable. She wore a pale gown trimmed in orange blossoms for her  1840 wedding to her first cousin, Prince Albert.  Hordes of royal-crazed  plebeians immediately began to copy her, which is an astonishing feat  considering that 
People Magazine wasn’t around to publish the Super Exclusive Wedding Photos, or instruct readers on how to Steal Vicki’s Hot Wedding Style. 
Giving Away the Bride
Remember that “Women’s Studies” class you considered taking in college?  Allow us to summarize what you would have learned:  All of our society’s  gender issues stem from the fact that fathers once used their daughters  as currency to a) pay off a debt to a wealthier land owner, b)  symbolize a sacrificial, monetary peace offering to an opposing tribe or  c) buy their way into a higher social strata. So next time you tear up  watching a beaming father walk his little girl down the aisle, remember  that it’s just a tiny, barbaric little hold over from the days when  daughters were nothing but dollar signs to daddy dearest.  And that veil  she’s wearing? Yeah, that was so the groom wouldn’t know if he was  stuck with an uggo until it was time to kiss the bride and too late to  back out on the transaction. (There is also some superstitious B.S.  about warding off evil spirits, but we think you’ll agree that hiding a  busted grill from the husband-to-be is a more practical purpose.)
The Wedding Party
Talk about your runaway brides—the original duty of a “Best Man” was to  serve as armed backup for the groom in case he had to resort to  kidnapping his intended bride away from disapproving parents. The “best”  part of that title refers to his skill with a sword, should the need  arise. (You wouldn’t want to take the “just okay” member of your  weapon-wielding posse with you to steal yourself a wife, would you?) 
The best man stands guard next to the groom right up through the  exchange of vows (and later, outside the newlyweds’ bedroom door), just  in case anyone should attack or if a non-acquiescent bride should try to  make a run for it.  It’s said that feisty groups like the Huns, Goths  and Visigoths took so many brides by force that they kept a cache of  weapons stored beneath the floorboards of churches for convenience.  Modern-day best men are more likely to store an emergency six-pack at  the ceremony for convenience, but the title remains an apt one. 
Ladies—believe it or not, the concept of the bridesmaid’s gown was  not invented to inflict painful dowdiness upon the bride’s friends and  female relatives thus making the bride look hotter by comparison.   Historically, that dress you’ll never wear again was actually selected  with the purpose of tricking the eye of evil spirits and jealous  ex-lovers (spicy!). Brides’ faithful attendants were instructed to wear a  dress similar to that of the bride so that during their group stroll to  the church it would be hard for any ill-willed spirits or former  boy-toys to spot the bride and curse/kidnap/throw rocks at her. (Ditto  for the boys in matching penguin suits, saving the groom from a similar  fate.) Memo to the Maid of Honor: if you think organizing a themed  shower complete with quiche, cupcakes and creative uses of toilet paper  as a game is a tough gig, imagine this:  MoH’s of old used to be  responsible for making nearly all of the wedding decorations and putting  them up herself. 
Garter and Bouquet Toss

 This pair of rituals has long been the scourge of the modern wedding  guest. What could possibly be more humiliating than being forced out to  the center of a parquet dance floor while a wedding DJ advertises your  lack of a boyfriend and then being expected to further demonstrate your  desperation by diving for flying flowers? Wait…. Yup, we can top that.  How about grasping in the air for a lacy piece of undergarment that  until moments ago resided uncomfortably close to the crotch of your  buddy’s wife? At any other point in time, that would make you a total  perv, so why is it acceptable at a wedding? Well, hold on to your  scruples boys and girls, because the history behind these customs is  downright dirty.  
It used to be that after the bride and groom said, “I do,” they were  to go immediately into a nearby room and “close the deal” and consummate  the marriage. Obviously, to really make it official, there would need  to be witnesses, which basically led to hordes of wedding guests  crowding around the bed, pushing and shoving to get a good view and  hopefully to get their hands on a lucky piece of the bride’s dress as it  was ripped from her body. Sometimes the greedy guests helped get the  process going by grabbing at the bride’s dress as she walked by, hoping  for a few threads of good fortune. In time, it seems, people realized  that this was all a bit, well… creepy, and it was decided that for  modesty’s sake the bride could toss her bouquet as a diversion as she  made her getaway and the groom could simply remove an item of the  bride’s undergarments and then toss it back outside to the waiting  throngs to prove that he was about to, uh, get ‘er done. 
Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, Something Blue (and a Sixpence in My Shoe?)
A common theme that you’ve no doubt noticed throughout this post:  humans used to be a superstitious bunch.  This rhyming phrase neatly  lists a number of English customs dating back to the Victorian age  which, when worn in combination, should bring the bride oodles of  fabulous good luck.  The something old was meant to tie the bride to her  family and her past, while the something new represented her new life  as the property of a new family. The item borrowed was supposed to be  taken from someone who was already a successfully married wife, so as to  pass on a bit of her good fortune to the new bride. The color blue  (Virgin Mary-approved!) stood for all sorts of super fun things like  faithfulness, loyalty, and purity. The sixpence, of course, was meant to  bring the bride and her new groom actual, cold, hard fortune. Just in  case that wasn’t enough, brides of yore also carried bunches of herbs  (which most brides now replace with expensive, out-of-season peonies) to  ward off evil spirits.
 The Wedding Cake
The Wedding Cake
We have to believe that there was a time, somewhere in history, when the  whole, “Will they/won’t they smash cake in each other’s faces!”  scenario was actually clever and original (even if we couldn’t find any  evidence of it). What we did find was the granddaddy predecessor to  cake-face-smashing:  the breaking of baked goods over the bride’s head.   Customarily, the groom would gnaw off a bite of barley bread and then  the remainder of the loaf was held above the newlywed bride’s head and  then broken, showering her with crumbs and a soul-crushing message of  her husband’s male dominance. Guests would then scramble to pick up any  wayward crumbs off the floor as they were said to bring good…wait for  it… luck!
This tradition evolved as cake emerged as the preferred confection for  wedding celebrations. Fortunately for the bride, a whole cake doesn’t  break in two quite as dramatically as a loaf of bread and so it was  sliced on a table instead. Rather than scrounge for lucky crumbs on the  floor, guests would stand in line while the bride passed tiny,  fortune-blessed morsels of cake through her own wedding ring into the  hands of the waiting masses. This act also fell by the wayside, as we  can only assume the bride determined that it was a lousy waste of her  time. Thus began the tradition of giving out whole slices of cake to  each guest, not to be eaten, but to be placed under their pillow at  night for (yup, here it is again) good luck and, for the ladies, sweet  dreams of their future husbands. [Image courtesy of 
alt text.] 
Refusing to Throw Away the Leftovers
This leads to another sweet, delicious, buttercream-iced mystery to be  solved: Why do couples eat freezer-burned wedding cake on their one-year  anniversary? To answer this, we must look to the lyrics of a schoolyard  classic: First comes love, then comes marriage, then comes a baby in a  baby carriage! It used to be assumed that when there was a wedding, a  christening would follow shortly. So, rather than bake two cakes for the  occasions, they’d just bake one big one and save a part of it to be  eaten at a later date when the squealing bundle of joy arrived.  Eventually folks warmed to the idea of giving the poor kid his own,  newly baked cake, but the custom of saving a portion of the wedding cake  far longer than it should be saved and then eating it and deluding  oneself to believe that it actually tastes good is one that persists to  this day.
Throwing Rice
Pelting newlyweds with uncooked starchy vegetables is a time-honored  tradition meant to shower the new couple with prosperity, fertility and,  of course, good fortune. Oats, grains and dried corn were 

also  used before rice rose to the top as the preferred symbolic sprinkle.   Rice lost its popularity when it became widely rumored that if birds ate  the rice, it would expand in their stomach and kill them. This is  decidedly untrue, as is evidenced by the fact that birds eat dried rice  and corn and other dehydrated vegetables and grains from fields all the  time and we have yet to see any mention of a national, exploding-bird  epidemic running on the CNN news ticker.
Rice can be a hazard to guests, who can lose their footing on rice  covered pavement and take a nasty spill. Turns out, even rice  alternatives have their drawbacks. Two Texas women were badly injured at  a wedding in May 2008 while trying to light celebratory sparklers to  send off the bride and groom. The group of sparklers ignited all at once  and exploded, burning one woman’s face and both of their arms. One  guest at a Russian wedding in Chechnya last March decided to buck  tradition altogether and threw an armed hand grenade into the  unsuspecting crowd, injuring a dozen people. Our advice? Stick with rose  petals. They are soft, non-hazardous, non-lethal and biodegradable.
Article sponsored by Flower Gallery