Skip to main content

A brief history of Mardi Gras – find out how this tradition with beads started

A look at Mardi Gras roots

A tractor hauling a float with a huge lobster on the street at night.
Skip Bolen / Getty Images

It’s the time of the year again: Mardi Gras. The celebration that starts the Lenten season is held around the world, but the most famous celebration is in New Orleans, Louisiana. The question, then, is why? For many (or at the very least sex-driven college-aged males), Mardi Gras is a chance to hop a flight to New Orleans, drink copious Hurricanes or three-for-one beers, put on some wild Mardi Gras outfits, and throw beads at people in an attempt to see some public nudity.

Would you be shocked to find out that that isn’t the real reason for Mardi Gras? Amazing, right? Take a breath. We know that might’ve rocked your world, but it’ll be okay.

If you peel the layers of the onion that is Mardi Gras, you’ll find a Catholic holiday rich in history and tradition that spans the globe. While many of us here in the U.S. may associate it with New Orleans, king cakes, and Krewes, there’s actually a lot more to it. Read on to find out more about the history of Mardi Gras.

People waving at a float carrying Krewe members during Mardi Gras.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

What Mardi Gras means

Mardi Gras is French for “Fat Tuesday” and refers to the ritualistic eating of generally unhealthy foods (hello, king cake) and meat before the traditional 40 days of fasting that accompany the season of Lent in the Catholic faith.

The first Mardi Gras celebrations

The celebration of Mardi Gras — also known as Shrove Tuesday or Pancake Day, depending on where you are — dates back to Medieval times in Europe. Feasting on the days leading up to Ash Wednesday, which begins the Lenten season of fasting, was common in Italy and France, and these traditions eventually made their way to the New World with the French.

(Note: We’ll be focusing on the Christian holiday of Mardi Gras, but before the Christians got hold of the celebrations, pagans across the world celebrated various spring and fertility rites that included celebrations, feasting, and debauchery of all sorts. These types of celebrations can be seen in various Carnival festivities around the world.)

A bird's-eye view of crowds during Mardi Gras.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The first Mardi Gras in the U.S.

In 1699, an explorer — Jean Baptiste Le Moyne Sieur de Bienville — landed about 60 miles south of the place that would become New Orleans (the city itself would be established 19 years later by Bienville). Landing on the eve of Mardi Gras, he named the place “Pointe du Mardi Gras” as a means of honoring the holiday.  This is seen as the first celebration of the holiday in the U.S.

Evolution of Mardi Gras

Over time, the celebrations that began at Point du Mardi Gras began to grow. There were parades and street parties (not like those today, mind you), high society balls, and more.

The parties continued over the next few decades until the Spanish took over New Orleans in the 1760s and worked to shut down what they viewed as depraved celebrations. The restrictions continued until the U.S. government took over in the early 1800s. From then until 1837, the holiday was recognized but not encouraged.

A Mardi Gras parade at New Orleans in grayscale.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The first Mardi Gras parade and the first Krewe

After decades of suppression, the first official (read: recorded) Mardi Gras parade took place in 1837. Parades and elegant balls continued in the following years, but by the early 1850s, they had begun to wane in popularity.

In 1857, six men established a secret group that they named the Mistick Krewe of Comus. The Krewe of Comus held a themed parade — “The Demon Actors in Milton’s Paradise Lost”– as well as a ball, working hard to reinvigorate the holiday in the Big Easy.

Mardi Gras: 1857 to today

From the time of the first Krewe, Mardi Gras continued to grow. More Krewes formed (the second of which, the Twelfth Night Revelers, formed in 1870) and the celebrations and parades attracted more and more people.

Two years after the Revelers formed, Rex, the King of Carnival, was created as a persona to oversee the Mardi Gras daytime parades. The social clubs that presided over the parades and balls are the ones primarily responsible for the Mardi Gras we know today.

The members of Rex on a float parading on the street.
Sean Gardner / Getty Images

Dressed to the nines: Mardi Gras outfits

If you’re planning on heading down to New Orleans for Mardi Gras or just having a party at home, you need to put some thought into your Mardi Gras outfit because not just any threads will do.

That’s because Mardi Gras is the best time to put on an over-the-top outfit or costume and party away. As you can see from some of the pictures in this article, the more fantastical and colorful your Mardi Gras outfit is, the better. There’s no limit to what you can wear, so check out a local costume shop or Amazon for some great ideas for awesome Mardi Gras outfits.

And if you’re looking for a more low-key outfit but still want to be in the spirit of things, choose something that incorporates the traditional Mardi Gras colors of purple, green, and gold — you’ll fit right in.

Now grab your beads and go have some fun!

Nick Hilden
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Nick Hilden is a lifestyle and culture writer whose work has appeared in the Washington Post, Esquire, Rolling Stone, Afar…
The 9 best golf movies of all time – from Caddyshack to The Legend of Bagger Vance
Do you love the game? Then get inspired to get back out there by watching these movies
Happy Gilmore

When it comes to sports movies, some of our favorite films have always been golf adjacent. There's just something about this slow-paced and overwhelmingly frustrating game that we can't get enough of. So now that spring has arrived, it feels like the perfect time to go back and rewatch some of the best golf movies of all time.
Whether you're a seasoned pro or a complete amateur, these great golf films have a little something for everyone. Whether you're looking to experience the drama of the game through a comedy or a biographical spotlight, we've got you covered.

Tommy's Honour (2017)

Read more
The 11 best Clint Eastwood movies (acted in and directed), ranked
Here's a good place to start if you want see Eastwood's best of the best
Clint Eastwood in Heartbreak Ridge

 

If one were to mention the greats from classic Hollywood cinema (especially Western movies), Clint Eastwood’s name would be one of the first to come up. A highly successful actor, producer, and director, Eastwood has developed his own unique style of film that follows a narrative format with a monumental ending every time.
Before his illustrious cinema career, Eastwood worked as a lumberjack, a firefighter, a swimming instructor, and a bouncer to get by. Kicking off his film career in 1955 as a few unnamed extras, Clint has since spent the following over 65 years committing his life to the practice of film and acting. As a director, and unlike David Fincher and his meticulous directing, Eastwood has been known to get what he wants in one take without storyboarding, rehearsing, or changing the script at all. Considering some of the great directorial works he has produced, this is impressive beyond belief but not exactly unexpected from a character like Clint.
Since there are so many Eastwood features to pick from (72 acting credits on IMDB), this list is about the films he has directed and acted in. This means that we will, unfortunately, have to omit some of his greatest performances to date (Dirty Harry, A Fistful of Dollars, The Good, The Bad and the Ugly, Escape from Alcatraz, Hang ‘Em High, etc.), despite them being as great as they are.

Read more
The 12 best sports movies of all time – From The Bad News Bears to Goon
If you love all sports, here's a handful of the best films that feature sport
Caddyshack

Patriotism, unpredictability, and drama -- these are the things that make us love watching and playing sports. Movies are an amazing way to celebrate and memorialize these themes, especially their dramatic aspects. In the matter of sports movies, people just want to see incredible stories, and sometimes they want to see someone getting laid out. Today, we’ve brought you a healthy dose of the two. 
With some based on real historical events and some praised for their inventive storytelling, we want to make it easier for you to find many of the best sports movies of all time. It wouldn't take long for massive sports fans to name a few of their favorites, but finding something new and refreshing can really hit the heartstrings on a good day. Combining the visual aesthetics and the inspiring stories of an array of sports, we hope these give you that rising feeling in your throat as a touching moment surprises you with a single tear.

The Bad News Bears (1976)

Read more