Besides referring to the actual festivities, the word is also used to refer to the young woman whose 15th birthday is being celebrated (analogous to the word cumpleañera for "birthday girl"). The closest equivalents to the quinceañera in the English-speaking world are the sweet sixteen, Bar or Bat Mitzvah for Jewish children turning 13, cotillion, or, in more affluent communities, the debutante ball for those who turn 18.
History
      There are several different   theories as to the origin of this celebration; the most common is that the   quinceañera was the result of a blending of mostly religious traditions from   both Spanish conquerors and the native people of Mexico. Specifically, this   celebration contains elements of the coming of age traditions and Mexican   ceremonies along with elements from Spanish culture.[citation needed] The   quinceañera resembles and probably gets its name from a 16th-century Spanish   tradition of presenting one's 15-year-old daughter to society.[citation needed]   Over time, as the natives were converted to Catholicism by Spanish missionaries,   they also began to emulate some of the practices of the Spanish. 
Puerto Rico
      At a Quinceañas the party girl   is accompanied by her relatives and friends. They join her for a religious   ceremony then the party. When the girl goes to mass, she traditionally sits in a   chitcken chair covered in flowers. The girl must have 14 members of boys and   girls with her is 15.
Cuba
      The custom entered the country partly   due to Spanish influence but more so because of the French influence.[citation   needed] Wealthy families, who could afford to rent luxurious halls at country   clubs or 4/5-star hotels and to hire choreographers, were the actual pioneers of   quinceañera.[citation needed] Although lower-income families could not afford   the same display of wealth, they too started to celebrate quinceañeras, which   they called quinces.[citation needed] Those celebrations usually took place at   the home of the quinceañera or at the more spacious house of a relative.   Quinceañeras were very popular in Cuba until the late 1970s, yet the practice is   still relatively common today. 
      In Cuba the quinceañera is often considered   to be one of the most important days of a young woman's life because it   officially marks the transition from child to adult.[citation needed] Usually   the quinceañera wears a big white dress. 
Dominican Republic
      The quinceaños is a   reason to celebrate. At this party everybody is formally dressed, and just as in   Cuba, it usually involves choreographed dances, a rented hall and the   introduction of the birthday girl to society. In the Dominican Republic, not   only is the quinceañera the center of attention, but she also selects cousins   and close friends to participate in a choreographed dance to (traditionally)   Latin music. After this dance is over, the rest of the party joins the birthday   girl on the dance floor and the party officially begins. This is considered   extremely important in today's Dominican society, as when the party is at its   peak, photographers from the newspapers take pictures that will appear in the   press the next day.
El Salvador
      In El Salvador, these parties   are called the Fiesta Rosa, at which the color of the birthday girl's dress is a   rose pink ("rosa" in Spanish).[citation needed] When a young Salvadoran woman   turns 15, she is welcomed into womanhood with a large ceremony. This Quinceañera   is where all her friends and relatives gather to celebrate the fact that she is   on the brink of womanhood. The young lady is dressed to resemble a mini bride,   starting with a white dress. During this part of the evening, she has the first   dance with her father. There are three steps to the ceremony: first the   separation from her parents when she must blow out her candles or accept her   flowers, then the transitional state, where she is no longer an adolescent, but   not yet a full woman (the pink dress), and finally the emergence to womanhood,   during which part of the evening she may wear a red dress. 
Honduras
      In Honduras, the celebration is   similar to that of a wedding. It has the young woman in a dress of usually pink   or white, and the parents send letters of invitation to the guests many weeks or   months ahead. In Catholic families, a mass before the party is customary. Like a   wedding, the size of the party depends on the size of the city - it can range   from a modest celebration at home to a large affair filling a hotel or club.
Mexico
      In Mexican tradition, the   celebration is festive gathering relatives and friends. This "Quinceanera" to   the Spanish means a young girl is becoming a woman. The girl's court is often   made up of all girls or all boys. It's also simaliar to the traditions of   Honduran quinces 
United States
      Because of the large   population of Latino people in areas of the United States, the Quinceañera   celebration is becoming common. However, the way that it is celebrated can   differ greatly depending on location, family tradition, and religion.
      In   Washington, Texas, and Oklahoma, it is often the practice for many family   members or Padrinos (godparents) to contribute funds for this special day. The   Padrinos may be asked to provide for the quinceañera's dress, shoes,   centerpieces, cost for the hall, alcoholic beverages or other various items that   are essential for a Quinceañera. The most important Padrinos are the ones who   sponsor the crown, bible and/or missal and rosary, medal, bracelet and earrings   and they are included in the procession into the service or mass and are   announced during the reception. 
      There are some traditions that seem to be   practiced almost everywhere like the changing of the shoes, the first dance, and   the quinceañera traditionally being dressed in a ball gown. More often, the   girls' dress is often white with touches of color to match the court's dresses.   However, all other aspects of the Quinceañera have become subject to the wishes   of the young girl and her family. Some families celebrate the Quinceañera just   as one big party. For other families, though, it is a deeply religious event and   the young lady needs to have maintained a certain standard of modesty and   behavior to be given the privilege of having a Quinceañera.
      Until recently,   there has been a lack of formal rituals for Quinceañeras within the U.S. Roman   Catholic Church; priests and deacons have been left to adapt liturgies to the   needs of the celebration. In 2007 the United States Conference of Catholic   Bishops issued a formal ritual, approved by the Vatican, to be used in the   context of Eucharistic liturgies, with adaptations for Liturgies of the   Word.
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