Santa Claus: Where the guy in red suit came from

25 Dec, 2016 - 00:12 0 Views
Santa Claus: Where the guy in red suit came from

The Sunday Mail

ANY kid can tell you where Santa Claus is from – the North Pole. But his historical journey is even longer and more fantastic than his annual, one-night circumnavigation of the globe.

The modern American Santa was born in the Mediterranean, evolved across northern Europe, and finally assumed his now-familiar form on the shores of the New World.

Who is this Santa, and how did he get here?
Images of St. Nicholas, Santa’s original ancestor, vary considerably, but none of them look much like the red-cheeked, white-bearded old man we see everywhere today.

One of the most compelling views we have of the real St. Nick was created not by ancient artistes but by using modern forensic facial reconstruction.

The remains of the Greek bishop, who lived in the third and fourth centuries, are housed in Bari, Italy. When the crypt at the Basilica San Nicola was repaired in the 1950s, the saint’s skull and bones were documented with x-ray photos and thousands of detailed measurements.

Caroline Wilkinson, a facial anthropologist at the University of Manchester (England), used these data and modern software simulations to create a modern reconstruction of the long-dead man. Wilkinson put a human face on Santa’s original namesake—one with a badly broken nose, possibly suffered during the persecution of Christians under the Roman Emperor Diocletian.

Much of her work is necessarily subject to interpretation. The size and shape of the facial muscles that once covered Nicholas’ skull had to be inferred, and the shape of that skull itself was recreated from two-dimensional data. Digital artistes added details that were based on best guesses, including the olive-toned skin most common among Greek Mediterraneans like Nicholas, brown eyes, and the grey hair of a 60-year-old man.

“We are bound to have lost some of the level of detail you would get by working from photographs, but we believe this is the closest we are ever going to get to him,” Wilkinson said in the BBC Two feature film of the project entitled The Real Face of Santa.

From St. Nicholas to Santa
How did this St. Nicholas become a North Pole-dwelling bringer of Christmas gifts? The original saint was a Greek born 280 years after Christ who became bishop of Myra, a small Roman town in modern Turkey.

Nicholas was neither fat nor jolly but developed a reputation as a fiery, wiry, and defiant defender of church doctrine during the “Great Persecution,” when Bibles were put to the torch and priests made to renounce Christianity or face execution.

Nicholas defied these edicts and spent years in prison before Constantine brought Christianity to prominence in his empire. Nicholas’ fame lived long after his death (on December 6 of some unknown year in the mid-fourth century) because he was associated with many miracles, and reverence for him continues to this day.

Independent of his Santa Claus connection, Nicholas rose to prominence among the saints because he was the patron of so many groups, ranging from sailors to entire nations.

By about 1200, explained University of Manitoba historian Gerry Bowler, author of ‘Santa Claus: A Biography’, he became known as a patron of children and magical gift bringer because of two great stories from his life.

In the better-known tale, three young girls are saved from a life of prostitution when young Bishop Nicholas secretly delivers three bags of gold to their indebted father, which can be used for their dowries.

“The other story is not so well known now but was enormously well known in the Middle Ages,” Bowler said. Nicholas entered an inn whose keeper had just murdered three boys and pickled their dismembered bodies in basement barrels. The bishop not only sensed the crime, but resurrected the victims as well.

“That’s one of the things that made him the patron saint of children.”

For several hundred years, circa 1200 to 1500, St. Nicholas was the unchallenged bringer of gifts and the toast of celebrations centred around his day, December 6. The strict saint took on some aspects of earlier European deities, like the Roman Saturn or the Norse Odin, who appeared as white-bearded men and had magical powers like flight. He also ensured that kids toed the line by saying their prayers and practicing good behaviour.

But after the Protestant Reformation, saints like Nicholas fell out of favour across much of northern Europe.

“That was problematic,” Bowler said. “You still love your kids, but now who is going to bring them the gifts?”

Bowler said that, in many cases, that job fell to baby Jesus, and the date was moved to Christmas rather than December 6.

“But the infant’s carrying capacity is very limited, and he’s not very scary either,” Bowler said. “So the Christ child was often given a scary helper to do the lugging of presents and the threatening of kids that doesn’t seem appropriate coming from the baby Jesus.”

Some of these scary Germanic figures again were based on Nicholas, no longer as a saint but as a threatening sidekick like Ru-klaus (Rough Nicholas), Aschenklas (Ashy Nicholas), and Pelznickel (Furry Nicholas).

These figures expected good behaviour or forced children to suffer consequences like whippings or kidnappings. Dissimilar as they seem to the jolly man in red, these colourful characters would later figure in the development of Santa himself.

St. Nicholas in America

In the Netherlands, kids and families simply refused to give up St. Nicholas as a gift bringer. They brought “Sinterklaas” and his enduring name with them to New World colonies, where the legends of the shaggy and scary Germanic gift bringers also endured.

But in early America, Christmas wasn’t much like the modern holiday. The holiday was shunned in New England, and elsewhere it had become a bit like the pagan Saturnalia that once occupied its place on the calendar.

“It was celebrated as a kind of outdoor, alcohol-fuelled, rowdy community blow-out,” Bowler said. “That’s what it had become in England as well. And there was no particular, magical gift bringer.”

Then, during the early decades of the 19th century, all that changed thanks to a series of poets and writers who strove to make Christmas a family celebration—by reviving and remaking St. Nicholas.

Washington Irving’s 1809 book Knickerbocker’s History of New York first portrayed a pipe-smoking Nicholas soaring over the rooftops in a flying wagon, delivering presents to good girls and boys and switches to bad ones.

In 1821 an anonymous illustrated poem entitled “The Children’s Friend” went much further in shaping the modern Santa and associating him with Christmas.

“Here we finally have the appearance of a Santa Claus,” Bowler said. “They’ve taken the magical gift-bringing of St. Nicholas, stripped him of any religious characteristics, and dressed this Santa in the furs of those shaggy Germanic gift bringers.”

That figure brought gifts to good girls and boys, but he also sported a birch rod, the poem noted, that “directs a Parent’s hand to use when virtue’s path his sons refuse.”

Santa’s thin wagon was pulled by a single reindeer—but both driver and team would get a major makeover the next year.

In 1822 Clement Clarke Moore wrote “A Visit From St. Nicholas,” also known as “The Night Before Christmas,” for his six children, with no intention of adding to the fledgling Santa Claus phenomenon.

‘‘It was published anonymously the next year, and to this day the plump, jolly Santa described therein rides a sleigh driven by eight familiar reindeer.

“It went viral,” Bowler said. But familiar as the poem is, it still leaves much to the imagination, and the 19th century saw Santa appear in different-coloured clothing, in sizes from miniature to massive, and in a variety of different guises,” Bowler said.

It wasn’t until the late 19th century, he added, that the image of Santa became standardised as a full-size adult, dressed in red with white fur trim, venturing out from the North Pole in a reindeer-driven sleigh and keeping an eye on children’s behaviour.

The jolly, chubby, grandfatherly face of this Santa was largely created by Thomas Nast, the great political cartoonist in an era that featured many.

“However, Nast did leave him half-sized,” Bowler added, “and in what I think are rather indecent long johns.”

Once firmly established, North America’s Santa then underwent a kind of reverse migration to Europe, replacing the scary gift bringers and adopting local names like Père Noël (France) or Father Christmas (Great Britain).

“What he’s done is pretty much tame these Grimm’s Fairy Tales-type characters from the late medieval days,” Bowler said — NationalGeographic.com

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