For the last two months of the year, it鈥檚 nearly impossible to escape the seemingly endless variations of a handful of Christmas carols and holiday songs. This mix of religious and secular tunes can be heard playing on the radio, in stores and in holiday movies. But have you ever wondered where these songs came from, and how they came to be Christmas standards? 

As it turns out, much of the holiday music popular today has been around for decades, and in some cases, centuries. Here are some of the stories behind six classic songs. 

1. Silent Night

鈥淪ilent Night,鈥 originally 鈥淪tille Nacht,鈥 was composed in 1818 by Franz Gruber, based on a poem by Joseph Mohr, says , a music professor at Santa Clara University. 鈥淭he story goes that Mohr came to Gruber with the poem on Christmas Eve and asked him to set it to music for that evening鈥檚 mass,鈥 he explains. 鈥淭he carol was performed that night with guitar because the church鈥檚 organ was damaged by flooding.鈥 

1914 Christmas Truce
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Soldiers playing soccer in No-Man's Land a year after the Christmas Truce in 1914.

Stille Nacht also played a significant role in the story of the Christmas Truce of 1914: a rare moment of peace and humanity during World War I. 鈥淲e know from soldiers鈥 letters from the event that Allied and German forces stopped their fighting and sang carols across the trenches,鈥 Hanna-Weir says. 鈥淎lbert Moren, then in the front-line trenches near the village of La Chapelle d'Armentieres wrote about hearing the song sung by the German forces.鈥

2. Jingle Bells

Sheet music of Jingle bells. (Credit: Brasil2)
Sheet music of Jingle bells. (Credit: Brasil2)

Originally released in 1857 under the title 鈥淥ne Horse Open Sleigh,鈥 the holiday classic we now know as 鈥Jingle Bells鈥 wasn鈥檛 written to be a Christmas song. In fact, according to some historical accounts, the carol made its debut at a Thanksgiving service at the church of one of the composer鈥檚 family members. That composer, by the way, is none other than James Lord Pierpont鈥攖he uncle of Gilded Age financier John Pierpont Morgan. 

He wrote both the music and lyrics. Much of Pierpont鈥檚 other work hasn鈥檛 stood the test of time. Among his other songs are a number of Confederate anthems during the Civil War, including 鈥淪trike for the South,鈥 鈥淲e Conquer, or Die!鈥 and 鈥淥ur Battle Flag!鈥 

3. O Holy Night

鈥淥 Holy Night鈥 started out as a French poem written in 1843 called 鈥溾 by Placide Cappeau. It was set to music in either 1843 or 1847, according to competing contemporary sources. The song first gained popularity in France, then made its way to the United States. 

In , Unitarian minister and abolitionist John Sullivan Dwight鈥攖he former director of the school at the 19th-century Brook Farm Transcendentalist utopian agrarian community in Massachusetts鈥攖ranslated the song to English. 

Dwight鈥檚 translation included a line that doubled as a political statement in the lead-up to the Civil War. 鈥淢oved by its plea for justice鈥斺機hains shall he break, for the slave is our brother鈥欌擠wight鈥檚 translation struck a powerful chord in the North, resonating as a symbol of unity and hope,鈥 says , an expert in audio and sonic branding and the cultural impact of music.

On Christmas Eve, 1906, 鈥淥 Holy Night鈥 made history as played in a radio broadcast. 鈥淲hat began as a simple French carol has become a universal hymn, a song of resilience, compassion and profound spiritual reflection for people worldwide,鈥 says Bhatt.

4. O Come All Ye Faithful

Like many Christian songs, the lyrics to 鈥淥 Come All Ye Faithful鈥 started out in Latin, when the song went by the name 鈥淎deste Fidelis.鈥 It is thought that , an English musician working at the College at Douai in northern France, wrote both the words and music to the hymn between 1740 and 1743. 

Like 鈥淪ilent Night,鈥 it also played a role in the Christmas Truce of 1914, says Hanna-Weir. 鈥淔or the most part, the soldiers on each side volleyed carols back and forth between the trenches, but when the English soldiers started in on 鈥極 Come All Ye Faithful,鈥 the Germans joined in the singing to the original Latin text of the carol, 鈥楢deste Fideles,鈥欌 he explains.

5. Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer

Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer
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Illustration of Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer leading Santa Claus's sleigh on Christmas Eve, 1949.

Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer first appeared in a 1939 that the department store Montgomery Ward gave away to children at Christmas that year. A catalog writer by the name of Robert L. May came up with the story of Rudolph, of being an outcast who was smaller and younger than his classmates.

Close to a decade later, Montgomery Ward gave May the rights to his story, and along with his songwriter brother-in-law, he turned the tale of the ridiculed reindeer into a beloved Christmas song. In the hands of famous cowboy Gene Autry, 鈥淩udolph the Red Nosed-Reindeer鈥 became a hit in 1949. The classic stop-motion television special debuted in 1964.

6. White Christmas

composer Irving Berlin composed 'White Christmas' between 1937 and 1939.

Legendary songwriter Irving Berlin penned 鈥White Christmas鈥 sometime between 1937 and 1939, and out of a catalog of nearly 1,000 songs, it became his most popular. He originally wrote it as part of a Broadway revue of holiday-themed songs, which never came to fruition, but eventually became the basis of the 1942 film Holiday Inn, starring Bing Crosby and Fred Astaire.

However, 鈥淲hite Christmas鈥 made its debut on Christmas Day, 1941, when Crosby sang it on a sponsored by the Kraft Company鈥攋ust 18 days after the attack on Pearl Harbor. The following year, when Crosby performed for American troops overseas, 鈥淲hite Christmas鈥 was the most-requested song.

黄瓜视频直播 Vault: the Christmas Truce

World War I was a brutal slog. But on Christmas Eve 1914, something remarkable happened: British and German troops stopped fighting, and came together to share holiday cheer.