Halloween and its traditions originated from the Pagans of England, before the apparent birth of Christ.
The Romans seem to get a lot of credit for Halloween, but the truth, as discovered by modern historians, is that the Romans stole the ideas from the English Pagans - before killing them.
However the idea of witches came much later around 45AD from Germany.
pagan
To neighboors and locally, but Halloween and trick-or-treating are not very popluar in France. Halloween and the tradition of trick-or-treating are mostly American.
it came from England
evil costumes
Trick or treating did not come from a tradition. It was made as a way to make Halloween more fun. It has no connection to the old holiday Samhain or any other Halloween tradition.
how did the ~America tradition of trick or treating on halloween begin
trick-o-treating began in early UK, Northern France, and present day Ireland. so about in the 1600's. it began because some of the adults wanted to give the younger children a chance to have fun and get some sweets.
There is no trick or treat on Thanksgiving. Trick or treating is for halloween. You can try trick or treating on Thanksgiving, but you might look odd.
Trick-or-treating in the U.S. began in the early 1900s as a way to divert young people from causing mischief on Halloween night. The practice became more widespread in the 1930s and 1940s, eventually becoming a beloved tradition for children to go door-to-door in costume asking for candy.
about 85% of people go trick or treating
People celebrate Halloween because it is an American tradition that every year on OOctober 31 kids and parents go out trick or treating at night. It's pretty much a tradition
Trick-or-treating is the Halloween tradition where children go door-to-door dressed in costumes and saying "trick-or-treat" as a request for candy. It is said that the tradition began in the Middle Ages and mimics medieval "souling", a day when the poor went door to door receiving food in exchange for prayers for the dead. It is said to have originated in Britain and Ireland.