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Who was Saint Sylvester and why does France ‘celebrate’ him on New Year’s Eve?

Been invited to a 'Saint Sylvester party' in France? Don't worry, you probably won't need to know anything about the 4th century saint himself.

Who was Saint Sylvester and why does France 'celebrate' him on New Year’s Eve?
Celebrating New Year, or the Feast of Saint Sylvester? (Photo by MARTIN BUREAU / AFP)

France, in common with most of the rest of the world, has a celebration on the night of December 31st to mark the end of the year and the beginning of the next year. It mostly involves Champagne, some nice food, dancing and perhaps some fireworks, depending on where you are.

December 31st is the time when everyone gathers to celebrate the end of the old year and the beginning of the new – and January 1st is a public holiday, to allow you to deal with your hangover.

But while the general New Year period is known as le nouvel an (the new year), the evening of December 31st is known as Le réveillon de la Saint-Sylvestre, often shortened simply to le Saint-Sylvestre

But who was Saint Sylvester and how did his name come to be linked to one of the biggest parties of the year?

He’s one of the Catholic Church’s least known saints – in the sense that there is little about his life that is certain (and we know nothing about his views on what makes a good party). 

Sylvester was pope from January 31st, 314 – the year after the Edict of Milan declared tolerance for Christianity in the Roman Empire – until his death, in December 335. 

He was one of the first popes to be honoured with the title ‘confessor’.

According to one legend, he even baptised the Roman Emperor Constantine, curing him of leprosy in the process. This, however, has been dismissed as a fifth-century hoax, not least because Sylvester died, in Rome, two years before Constantine’s deathbed baptism by Eusebius of Nicomedia, in what is now modern-day Turkey.

What is known, is that during Sylvester’s papacy, work started on a Basilica dedicated to Saint Peter in Rome – the first Saint Peter’s. The original building, on the site of Saint Peter’s Basilica in Vatican City, stood until the 16th century, and is now usually known as Old Saint Peter’s.

The Basilica of Saint John Lateran, the Basilica of the Holy Cross in Jerusalem, and several churches built over the graves of martyrs were also founded during Sylvester’s papacy.

Vatican News, the official media of the Holy See, states: “Sylvester marked the transition from pagan Rome to Christian Rome and witnessed the construction of the great Constantinian basilicas.”

But the scale of his involvement in the rise of the Roman Catholic church, in the rapid development of Christianity around this time isn’t clear. It is understood he wasn’t present at the First Council of Nicaea in 325, where key tenets of the Catholic faith were agreed.

And, today, Sylvester is widely forgotten, while Constantine gets all the ‘development of Christianity’ glory.

However, the pope-turned-Saint was buried in Rome, on December 31st, 335 – which is why December 31st is his saint’s day.

It’s also been suggested that this day is appropriate for him, because his reign as pontiff marked the transition from the pagan to the Christian faith as the dominant religion of the Roman empire, and December 31st marks the transition from the old year to the new.

Either way, this is why New Year’s Eve is often known as the Feast of Saint Sylvester.

Fortunately, however, the accent remains more on drinking, dancing, fireworks and general merriment and you’re not required to know any obscure facts about the early Catholic church. 

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TRAVEL NEWS

Can I use my French carte de séjour for travel?

The carte de séjour is an official document attesting to your right to live in France - but can it be used as a travel document?

Can I use my French carte de séjour for travel?

Travel within the EU’s Schengen zone is usually a fairly slick business with reduced or no checks as you cross borders – but that doesn’t mean that you can leave your passport at home.

So integrated is the Schengen Area that if you’re travelling by car or train you may not even notice that you’ve crossed a border and entered another country until you start to see signs in a different language – and that’s the intention of the zone of free movement, created in 1995.

But while EU/EEA citizens can move freely within the zone, it’s a different story for non-EU/EEA citizens.

The rules

Borders between countries in the EU/Schengen area still exist and in order to cross an international border you will need a valid travel document – for EU citizens this can be a national ID card, but for non-EU citizens that means a passport.

France’s carte de séjour residency permit is neither of these – it is not a valid travel document and nor is it an ID card (although it can function as proof of ID in non-travel scenarios such as picking up a parcel from the post office). Technically the card is a ‘titre’ – title – which acts as proof of your status as a resident. 

If you try to cross a border without a valid passport you can be turned back.

The carte de séjour acts as proof of your right to live in France and your right to re-enter the country if you have left, so it’s a good idea to have this with you. If you travel without it, you may have your passport stamped as a visitor when you re-enter France. 

If your passport is stamped in error this may cause delays and questions when you next cross a border, but you cannot be penalised or denied entry provided you can show a valid carte de séjour.

On the ground 

As is often the case, there’s a difference between what the rule book says and what happens on the ground, and this is particularly apparent for travel within the Schengen area.

In practice, it’s common to cross a border with no checks at all – although things tend to be stricter if you are travelling by plane.

Cars and trains often pass through with no checks, or with checks when guards will happily accept a carte de séjour.

However checks do happen – sometimes this is in response to a security alert, for example after a terror attack, but sometimes it’s random or when the border police are training their new recruits. We regret to say that there is often an element of racial profiling, so travellers of colour are more likely to be asked to produce their travel documents.

Cars can be pulled over at border checkpoints while if you’re travelling by train, police will often board the train close to the border and check passengers.

If you are asked, you will need to show your passport – so don’t forget to take it within you when travelling within the EU and Schengen zone. 

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