Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Lithuanians dressed as the Three Kings parade during the Epiphany Day celebrations in Vilnius, Lithuania, Monday, Jan. 6, 2020.
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The Christmas holiday is in the rearview mirror for most people. But there is one more occasion on the religious end of the ...
The Three Kings' Day, also known as Epiphany, is a Christmas holiday celebrated every year on Jan. 6 in many places across the globe. According to tradition, it marks the visit of the Three Wise Men ...
Although Christmas and New Years Eve may signal the end of the holiday season for many, for some, the celebrations continue well into the new year. Although not traditionally celebrated by all, Three ...
“Los Reyes Magos,” attributed to Hipolito Marte Martinez, Smithsonian American Art Museum A festive tradition in Spain, Puerto Rico and many Latin American countries, Three Kings Day, or the Feast of ...
An evening of music, food and gifts on Friday celebrated the arrival of the three wise men, or kings, at the manger of the baby Jesus, although it looked more like Union Station in Springfield.
For many in the Latin community, the holiday season is not officially over until Three Kings' Day. In East Harlem, one of the oldest Latino museum nonprofits in the country hosted its 48th annual ...
The feast of the Epiphany, or Epiphany of the Lord, is Tuesday, Jan. 6, 2026, a Christian holiday held 12 days after Christmas that celebrates the arrival of the three Magi who worshipped Jesus after ...
Balthazar, Gaspar, and Melchior. You've heard their names: According to legend, they're the three Persian wise men, or kings, who traveled by camel across the desert sands to Bethlehem, in pursuit of ...
Ernesto Acevedo-Muñoz still remembers the excitement of being a child in Puerto Rico, anticipating the arrival of the Three Kings on Jan. 6th. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access ...
The Christmas carol “We Three Kings” was written in 1857 by John Henry Hopkins, Jr., an Episcopalian rector, for a Christmas pageant in New York. Hopkins intended the song to be sung by a trio of male ...