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A selection of facts on chocolate, Easter eggs and general spending at Easter, plus some polls and surveys which reveal the knowledge - and ignorance - of the Easter story among Britain's adults and children.

Chocolate Facts
- The largest chocolate sculpture ever made was a 10 foot high Easter egg constructed in Melbourne, Australia
- Sales of dark chocolate have almost doubled in two years, growing 96 per cent to £85 million.
- On average, each person in Britain eats approx. 10.2kg of chocolate per year.
- The first chocolate factory in Britain opened in 1657.
- J.S. Fry and Sons developed the first solid chocolate bar and it went on sale in 1847. Cadbury Brothers produced their first bar of chocolate in 1849. Both bars would have been made from dark chocolate as milk chocolate was not available until after 1875 when Swiss chocolatier Daniel Peter developed the process for making the sweeter lighter version of chocolate.
- Mintel figures presented on shoppingbag.com say that the UK chocolate market was worth £2.36 billion in 2009 that's an increase of 5.9% over the 2008 figures.
- According to market research completed by Neilsen chocolate sales are up year on year by more than 36%
- The Ivory Coast in West Africa a is the world's leading producer of cocoa - supplying 43%.
- Thousands of children are being forced to work as slave labour on cocoa farms in West Africa. According to International labour Organisation figures, 12.000 children have been trafficked from countries like Mali and Burkino Faso to the Ivory Coast.
- Divine Chocolate the Fairtrade chocolate company was The Observer Ethical Business of the Year 2008. The company also celebrated their 10th year in business in 2008.
Easter Egg Facts
- Eggs were traditionally used in pre-Christian festivals as the symbol of new life, purity or fertility. Later customs concerning eggs were linked with Easter because the egg provided a fresh and powerful symbol of the Resurrection and the transformation of death into life.
- Decorating and colouring Hen, Duck or Goose eggs for Easter was the custom in England during the Middle Ages. The household accounts of Edward I, for the year 1290, recorded an expenditure of eighteen pennies for four hundred and fifty eggs to be gold-leafed and coloured for Easter gifts.
- Papier-mache Easter eggs started being produced in England in the 18th century and then the first chocolate eggs appeared in the 19th century with the earliest ones being completely solid
- The first chocolate Easter egg was produced in 1873 by Fry's.
- The most famous decorated Easter eggs are those designed by Peter Carl Faberge. In 1885 the Russian Tsar, Alexander III, commissioned Faberge to make a special Easter gift for his wife, the Empress Marie.This first Faberge egg was an egg within an egg. It had an outside shell of gold and enamelled white which opened to reveal a smaller gold egg. The smaller egg, in turn, opened to display a golden chicken and a jewelled replica of the Imperial crown.The Tsar and Tsarina were some impressed with their gold that they ordered the Faberge firm to design further eggs to be delivered every Easter. In later years Nicholas II, Alexander's son, continued the custom.
- The auctioneers Christie's sold a diamond encrusted Faberge egg in November 2007 for £9m.
- Approximately 80 million chocolate eggs are sold annually in the UK.
- The most popular chocolate egg worldwide is Cadbury's Creme Egg, they first went on sale in 1971.
- Easter chocolate sales make up 10% of Britain's annual spending on chocolate.
- £280million was spent on Easter eggs in the 4 days leading up to Easter 2008.
- £32.7million was spent on Fairtrade Easter chocolate products in 2008.
- Cadbury's foil wrapped eco Easter Eggs that were on sale in selected outlets in 2008 as a trial have won a Best Green Packaging Award. The eggs were displayed on special retail ready display shelf as they were supplied without the usual card packaging.
- Nestle's plans to reduce the amount of packaging around their Easter eggs by 25%.
- A survey by Friends of the Earth(FoE) Scotland has revealed that in some cases for every £1 spent on Easter eggs consumers could be spending the same amount or more again on packaging. In 2007 FoE estimated that 4370 tonnes of cardboard and 160 tonnes of foil waste was created by the packaging used to protect Easter Eggs.
- Dietitians are warning that eating five Easter eggs (the average given to most children) plus the bars included with them, could see youngsters doubling their recommended calorie intake for a week, risking becoming hooked on chocolate, plus seeing their weight increase by several pounds within days. The recommended daily amounts are around 2,000 calories a day for an average 11-year-old boy and 1,500 for a girl, but many could be eating up to 10,000 calories over the Easter period.
- In 2008 a 70lb Easter egg was being sold in Selfridges for £499. It was the heaviest egg they had ever sold and was made by L'artisan du chocolate. By the time this story had appeared in the press in late March 2008 Selfridges had already sold 4 of the giant eggs.
- In 2009 Selfridges had an egg containing a Gold Bullion Britannia coin for sale for £1,000, billing it as "the ultimate alternative investment for chocoholics".
- One of the most expensive eggs on offer in 2006 was the unique Diamond Stella Egg - a chocolate egg laden with diamonds - which came with a £50,000 price tag.
- Easter eggs for 2010 went on sale in Tescos on New Years day 2010
Easter Shopping Facts
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Spending over the Easter period in 2009 was up by 4.6% compared to sales figures for 2008. The main reason for the increase was there was much better weather for Easter 2009 than there was for Easter 2008.
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According to Internet Retailing.net 8 million cards were sent in 2007 with a value of £22million and £100 million was spent on flowers and plants with Daffodils being the favoured variety.
All the above statistics from a variety of sources including the Daily Telegraph 3rd July 2008, Guardian 22nd march 2008, Mail Online 31st December 2008, foodproductiondaily.com, packagingnews.co.uk, Britishchambers.org.uk, chocolateexpert.co.uk, chocolate-emporium.co.uk, ekklesia.co.uk, Waitrose.com, politics.co.uk
Belief in resurrection
Nearly half of the population believes that Jesus Christ rose from the dead, according to a new survey commissioned in Wales Theos the public theology think tank..The findings challenge the widespread view that Easter is seen as little more than an opportunity to indulge a taste for chocolate.
- 60% of the people questioned believed that the resurrection at the heart of the Easter story is true with 35% believing Jesus rose physically from the dead and 24% said they believed it was a "spiritual resurrection"
- 44% said that Jesus died for the sins of the world.
- 26% the Easter story had no meaning today.
Reported by walesonline.co.uk on March 15th 2008 a copy of the full research results is available here:
http://campaigndirector.moodia.com/Client/Theos/Files/EasterTables.pdf
God? He was a dad to Jesus, wasn't he?
A recent survey by the University of Exeter involving 500 children aged 7-14 in a variety of schools found a high level of confusion and lack of understanding about the person of Jesus and Christianity.
- While nearly half the children were 'Christian' and nearly a third were Muslim the only thing most of the children were agreed on was that Jesus had a reputation as a caring person.
- Fewer than one in ten believed that Jesus was, or is, God.
- A third found Him "a bit confusing" and more than a quarter thought him "hard to believe in".
Professor Copley, a former teacher who led the research, which is designed to help with the production of teaching materials for use in RE lessons said: "They weren't anti-Jesus. The best way of summing it up is 'pallid respect'. They thought He was important but He didn't excite them."
The majority of children's understanding of the events of Easter proved particularly hazy. This is not helped by the fact that many children started learning about Christianity from their school nativity play and not only concluded that Christmas was the most important festival, but struggled to understand the resurrection particularly - even when they had spent a whole term looking at it. Many resorted to the language of magic to describe this and other aspects of Jesus' ministry, linking the miracles with the magic tricks of Paul Daniels.
Many of the other children with no faith were guarded in how they spoke about it, describing it as "too fantastic" or saying there was "no evidence". In reference to the Resurrection, one boy asked: "If he rose from the dead, how come he ain't here now?" Others wanted to know why Jesus didn't help them today, and why he doesn't "come down" and tell everyone He is true. "There is a perception that the Church and Christianity has an image problem and is perceived as, at best, outdated and, at worst, weird," the report says.
A sample of their answers to some of the questions were as follows:
Q: Why is the cross an important symbol for Christians?
A: Because he was crossified on a cross... Jesus was crusified to replenish our sins... Because he hang himself
Q: Why do you think Jesus chose fishermen like Simon and Andrew to be his disciples?
A: Because he liked fishing. And fishing is a wise sport.... To fight for him
Q: According to the Bible, why did some people want to arrest and kill Jesus?
A: Because everybody thort he was a wizard.... Some for shopping the cheats, and one for money.... Because he heeled people on days he shouldn't.... They thought he would become rich
Q. What do Christians celebrate on Easter Sunday?
A: Chocolate.... When he rowed into Jerusalem waving palm trees... Christmas
Reported in The Times 30 September 2006
Top 10 Easter Worship Songs 2008
Do you have a favoutite easter worship song? Here are a top 10 of favourites from churches in USA
1. Christ the Lord is Risen Today
2. Mighty To Save
3.My Redeemer Lives
4. My Saviour Lives
5. Happy Day
6. All The earth Will Sing Your Praises
7. In Christ Alone
8. Amazing Grace
9. Jesus Paid It All
10. He Lives
from research done by PlanningCentreOnline.com reported on LeadershipJournal.net
Updated by the Information and Research Centre, March 2010