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Thursday, December 18, 2025

Kids, and kids at heart, race out to make a snowman after a winter storm blankets the ground. Just as every snowflake is unique, each snowman's size and accessories are limited only by its creator's imagination. Indeed, snowmen of all sorts have dotted front yards and public spaces for centuries. Yet they were not always the "jolly happy" figures immortalized in the song and animated television special "Frosty the Snowman."

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... Q: Where did snowmen come from?

Although many people assume that snowmen have been around as long as we have, American snowman expert Bob Eckstein set out to learn who, in fact, made the first snowman.

Of course, direct physical evidence of all previous snowmen "is long melted," Mr. Eckstein quips. So he scoured museums, libraries, and other archives, and interviewed historians from all over the globe. His seven-year quest is described in his book "The History of the Snowman."

Mr. Eckstein says that researchers and historians have told him that Taoist texts exist from seventh-century China that show Buddha's followers were given the "blessing" to make snow figures of the religious teacher.

But Mr. Eckstein found the first known depiction of a snowman -- a satirical cartoon figure, drawn in the margins, that he says mocks Judaism and Christianity -- in "The Book of Hours." This volume of prayers dates to 1380 and is held at the Royal Library in The Hague.

Nearly 200 years later, in a winter festival known as the Miracle of 1511, people in Brussels lined the streets with more than 100 lewd and satirical snow figures to protest against the Holy Roman Empire.

Mr. Eckstein describes it as "an early form of political commentary," a Woodstock-like event held by illiterate residents who felt otherwise powerless against their rulers. ...



#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-12-18 08:01 PM | Reply

@#1 ... a winter festival known as the Miracle of 1511, people in Brussels lined the streets with more than 100 lewd and satirical snow figure ...

The Raunchy, Comical, Political Snowman Invasion of 1511 (2018)
www.atlasobscura.com

... Three big balls of snow, some lumps of coal, a couple of sticks, and a carrot. Today's typical snowman is minimalist, almost abstract. It is an artistic devolution from what they once were"markedly more advanced and artistically challenging. Even Michelangelo dabbled in the medium.

Centuries ago, snowman-makers, many of whom were themselves artists and craftsmen, put considerable time and effort into their snowmanship.

One particular fluorescence in the canon of snow art was during the Middle Ages, when things were made with snow to make a statement. In some places there was a tradition among artists to populate cities with snowmen after a heavy snowfall. In a time when famine, plague, sickness, and conflict were not uncommon, snow often brought winter festivals and other officially endorsed morale boosters, which provided some moments of relief and levity to people who might otherwise be surviving on grass or dropping dead.

The thinking was that the public could blow off steam for a week or two"with erotic dancing, excessive drinking, political jokes, and public art displays"but in a somewhat supervised way.

That is exactly what took place in Brussels, then an important city in the Duchy of Brabant, during the particularly brutal winter of 1511. It was called the "Winter of Death," and the city was covered with snowmen. ...


#2 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-12-18 10:05 PM | Reply

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