For some Christians, the celebration of
Eastertide,
Easter eggs symbolize the
empty tomb of
Jesus, from which he was
resurrected. Additionally some Christians believe, eggs carry a
Trinitarian significance, with shell, yolk, and albumen being three parts of one egg. During
Lent, the season of repentance that precedes Easter, eggs along with meat,
lacticinia, and wine are foods that are traditionally abstained from, a practice that continues in
Eastern Christianity and among certain
Western Christian congregations that undertake the
Daniel Fast. After the forty-day Lenten season concludes and Eastertide begins, eggs may be consumed again, giving rise to various Christian game traditions such as egg tapping, in which the "hard eggshell represented Christ's sealed tomb, and the cracking represented Christ's resurrection." Egg tapping was practiced in
Medieval Europe. The practice was mentioned to have played an important part in the 14th century in
Zagreb in relation to Easter. A study of folklore quotes an early 15th-century reference from
Poland. In
North America, colonial
New Amsterdam in the 1600s had the "cracking of eggs", invented by Jonathon and Michael Day on
Easter Monday with the winner keeping both eggs. Egg picking was observed by a British
prisoner of war, Thomas Anbury, in
Frederick Town,
Maryland, in 1781 during the
American Revolutionary War. The local custom at that time was to dye the eggs with
Logwood or
Bloodwood to turn them
crimson, which as Anbury observed gave them "great strength". Anbury was near
Frederick Town in
Maryland, July 11, 1781, when he noted the egg picking custom prevalent there at that time. By the mid-20th century, a
Baltimore, Maryland newspaper,
the Evening Sun, would devote an editorial column to discussing street cries, ritual, and techniques for the game. In the 21st century, egg cracking is still practiced every Easter by the
Saint Nicholas Society of the City of New York at the annual Pass Easter Ball. ==Competition==