Coloring eggs for the Easter celebration event is a heritage with roots that some historians think can be traced to ancient Egypt. At least a tradition comparable to the contemporary practice was existing in the job of the early on Christians who stained eggs red to represent the blood of Jesus Christ. The folk custom of dyeing egg in festive, glowing colors might be one adaptation of pagan fertility and rebirth celebrations. End time, the Christian Easter solemn event is thought to have took in festive facets of neighborhood pagan ritual, which commemorated the regeneration of nature in springtime through dyeing eggs in shining colors.