To look pretty
:)
Pumpkins are used to carve jack-o-lanterns for Halloween.
The Irish used pumpkins for Halloween but when they went to America they did not have pumpkins so they used onions instead. Gradually the use of pumpkins or jack-o-lanterns have become more popular.
Pumpkins, and in other places, turnips.
yes
Pumpkins, and in some European nations, turnips.
Turnips. They started carving pumpkins when settlers came to America. There weren't any turnips so they carved the gourds instead.
Until the colonization of the Americas, there were no pumpkins in Ireland, or anywhere in Europe. Early jack o'lanterns were carved from turnips.
The tradition of carving pumpkins originated in Ireland, where people used to carve turnips and other root vegetables for the Halloween festival of Samhain. When Irish immigrants came to America, they discovered that pumpkins were more abundant and easier to carve than turnips. This practice evolved into the modern tradition of pumpkin carving for Halloween.
Halloween was pretty much the same in what you did. They would scare people with their costumes not monsters though and they used pumpkins to make jack-o-lanterns, because they were more readily available then turnips.
Marrow's are very good for ghosts at halloween! Find the biggest marrow, take the flesh out and cut it into 2 then give it some eyes and a mouth and voila! Two Marror ghosts ;)
First, it was Ireland, not England, that created Halloween. Second, it was turnips. Third, the correct question would be "pumpkins instead of" as turnips were the original and pumpkins were the replacement.
It is believed that the custom of making jack-o'-lanterns at Halloween, from turnips or pumpkins, began in Ireland. In the 19th century, turnips, hollowed out to act as lantern frames and often carved with grotesque faces, were used at Halloween in parts of Ireland and the Scottish Highlands. The purpose was simple: by illuminating the scary face carved into the vegetable it was believed that the souls of the dead would be frightened away from homes thus ensuring the safety of the occupants and the next harvest.