|
Santa
Questions
Who is Santa Claus?
Santa Claus has a variety of different
names in different languages, but they all refer to the person of St.
Nicholas who was born many centuries ago in the 4th century (born c
245 AD, and died c350 AD, various sources list various dates) in Lycia,
Anatolia, a province on the southwest coast of Asia Minor (present day
Turkey). He was born in Patara, a seaport, and traveled. St. Nicholas
became a bishop of the church at Myra. Few documents exist which mention
him, however legends of his generosity exist throughout most churches.
Thousands of churches in the Middle Ages were dedicated to him.
St. Nicholas performed a number of miracles,
all associated with gift giving. His feast day was December 6, so think
of St. Nicholas on December 6th and December 25th.
In 1823, Clement C. Moore (see below)
wrote "A Visit from St. Nicholas', which showed Santa Claus driving
a sleight drawn by "eight tiny reindeer" and in doing so he created
an image we all have today. Thomas Nast (see below) drew Santa Claus
based on Moore's description cementing in this image.
The probable origins of various traditions
which then spread around the world:
|
|
- Gifts: St. Nicholas (gift giver) and
the Magi (the three wise men/Persian Priests from Orient bringing
gifts for Jesus) and from pagan (Roman) Saturnalia custom.
- Reindeer: Reindeer are from the north
(e.g. Finland) and they are cute, Santa needed transportation
- Chimney: St. Nicholas legend (see
below). Also, in England and the United states Santa comes secretly
and so the entrance must be secret and easy to use without the help
of adults. In Germany and Scandinavia often Santa comes through the
door.
- North Pole: America's Father Christmas
dwells there, it is a winter festival, Santa Claus needed somewhere
to live
- Hat: Bishops mitre of St. Nicholas,
the headgear of the Magi, and perhaps the Phrygian headgear of the
French Revolution.
- Beard: St. Nicholas, the Magi are
bearded, white because of age.
- Costume: Cloak from St. Nicholas,
and perhaps the Magi. The fur probably added to fit the Northern legend.
- Sock: Hung by the chimney to dry and
they make a good repository for presents.
- Candles (and now lights) symbolize
or were part of: Paradise, end of the days getting shorter, warmth,
summer, Jewish Hanukkah, festiveness, keeping the darkness at bay
- Holly: Christ's crown of thorns and
others
- Gnomes: Pagan (some celebrations)
- Straw: Stable and crib, readily available,
pagan
- Christmas Crib: Jesus' stable in Bethlehem.
Legend says it was started by St. Franciscus of Assisi.
- Red, Green, and White colors: Green
came from evergreen trees (e.g. balsam, fir, holly etc.), red from
holly berries, red and white also from the Bishop's mitre and cape
worn in religious ceremonies by St. Nicholas, white from the snow
seen on evergreen's during the holiday season, white from St. Nicholas's
beard, and white from the light of the Star seen over the stable.
Red may also have come from pagan ceremonies. [asked by Matt]
- Cookies and milk being left out for
Santa Claus: the modern Christmas tree tradition came from western
Germany, from a medieval custom, as a paradise tree -- a tree decorated
with apples, wafers and/or cookies. When the "paradise tree" merged
with Christianity and became part of the Christmas celebration cookies
and wafers were still part of the decorations. As time passed Santa
would often snack on a decoration (to keep in shape!). Children (and
perhaps parents) noticed that there were decorations that had been
snacked on (although in old times the snacking was done by mice too)
and so began leaving them out on plates by the fire -- partially to
keep them close to Santa's entrance and partially to keep the mice
away. Homes that did not use wafers or cookies thought it would be
nice to leave out something for me to munch on too after hearing stories
from other families about how much Santa enjoyed their cookies. Eventually
fewer and fewer people decorated the tree with food but wanted to
keep up the tradition of leaving something for Santa Claus. Eventually
the origin was lost to common knowledge, but we have included it with
the FAQ now. As for the milk, it was only natural that people would
be considerate enough to leave milk with the cookies!
- Why is Santa 'heavy'? Well, if you
read the information about the cookies and milk above you'll see why
Santa used to be shown as thinner than he is now -- not everyone used
to leave out cookies for him!
|