What Each Layer Means in Wedding Cakes

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Weddings are rituals full of actions that carry special significance.

The tradition of the wedding cake dates back to Roman times, when the groom broke a barley cake over the bride's head to symbolize the end of her chastity. Today's more elaborate multi-tiered wedding cakes have both symbolic (and practical) meanings.

  1. Origin

    Symbolism

    • Wedding cakes were often decorated in white to reflect the bride's purity, as did traditional wedding gowns.
      Wedding cakes were often decorated in white to reflect the bride's purity, as did traditional wedding gowns.

      One tradition maintains that the top tier, or layer, of the wedding cake symbolizes the couple, that the bottom tier symbolizes the couple as a family, and the middle tier (or tiers) symbolize the child or children they hope to welcome to the family.

    The Top Tier: Anniversary or Christening Layer?

    Practical Uses

    • The more recent (and non-symbolic) tradition of the three tiers is to use the bottom tier for eating at the reception, the middle tier to distribute as gifts and souvenirs, and to save the top tier for a first anniversary.

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References

  • Photo Credit Wedding Cake image by Mat Hayward from Fotolia.com wedding cake image by Jake Hellbach from Fotolia.com wedding cake image by Ruben Enger from Fotolia.com mother with baby in church image by Pavel Losevsky from Fotolia.com

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