Day of the Dead Coloring Pages


19 Brand New Day of the Dead Coloring Pages – Free to Print and Color

printable sugar skulls coloring sheet
printable sugar skulls coloring sheet
free sugar skull coloring pages
free sugar skull coloring pages
sugar skull coloring pages for adults
sugar skull coloring pages for adults
sugar skull coloring pages for kids
sugar skull coloring pages for kids
printables sugar skull coloring pages
printables sugar skull coloring pages
printable day of the dead owl coloring page
printable day of the dead owl coloring page
printable day of the dead cat coloring page
printable day of the dead cat coloring page
printable day of the dead adult coloring pages 02
printable day of the dead adult coloring pages 02
printable sugar skull pdf coloring pages 09
printable sugar skull pdf coloring pages 09
printable sugar skull pdf coloring pages 08
printable sugar skull pdf coloring pages 08
cute skeletons coloring pages
cute skeletons coloring pages
printable sugar skull pdf coloring pages 07
printable sugar skull pdf coloring pages 07
printable sugar skull pdf coloring pages 06
printable sugar skull pdf coloring pages 06
printable sugar skull pdf coloring pages 05
printable sugar skull pdf coloring pages 05
printable sugar skull pdf coloring pages 04
printable sugar skull pdf coloring pages 04
printable sugar skull pdf coloring pages 03
printable sugar skull pdf coloring pages 03
printable sugar skull pdf coloring pages 02
printable sugar skull pdf coloring pages 02
printable day of the dead couple adult coloring page
printable day of the dead couple adult coloring page
free printable sugar skull coloring page
free printable sugar skull coloring page

Day of the Dead Coloring Pages

The Day of the Dead (el Día de los Muertos), is a Mexican holiday where families welcome back the souls of their deceased relatives for a brief reunion that includes food, drink and celebration.

A blend of Mesoamerican ritual, European religion and Spanish culture, the holiday is celebrated each year from October 31-November 2. While October 31 is Halloween, November 2 is All Souls Day or the Day of the Dead. According to tradition, the gates of heaven are opened at midnight on October 31 and the spirits of children can rejoin their families for 24 hours. The spirits of adults can do the same on November 2.

The roots of the Day of the Dead, celebrated in contemporary Mexico and among those of Mexican heritage in the United States and around the world, go back some 3,000 years, to the rituals honoring the dead in pre-Columbian Mesoamerica. The Aztecs and other Nahua people living in what is now central Mexico held a cyclical view of the universe, and saw death as an integral, ever-present part of life.

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