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The earliest legend of Saint
Nicholas reaches back to Asia Minor in the 4th century. Born
in Patara, a seaport, St. Nicholas traveled to Egypt and Palestine
as a young man. Wherever he traveled, his extraordinary kindness,
and his practice of giving gifts to needy children made him a
hero to the people.
Much later, the name "St. Nicholas" splintered into
many variations among Protestant churches in Europe. Then, with
the colonization of America, religious and secular images joined
in recognizing "Santa Claus," who symbolized the spirit
of giving.
The original Santa Claus, St. Nicholas, was born in the ancient
southeastern Turkish town of Lycia early in the fourth century.
His generosity was legend, and
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he was particularly fond of children.
We know this primarily through Roman accounts of his patronage
of youth, which eventually led to his becoming the patron saint
of children. Throughout the Middle Ages, and well beyond, he
was referred to by many names none of them Santa Claus.
Children today would not at all
recognize the St. Nick who brought gifts to European children
hundreds of years ago except perhaps for his cascading white
beard. He made his rounds in full red-and-white bishop's robes,
complete with twin-peaked miter and crooked crozier. He was pulled
by no fleet-footed reindeer, but coaxed in indolent donkey. And
he arrived not late on Christmas Eve, but on his Christian feast
day, December 6. The gifts he left beside the hearth were usually
small: fruit, nuts, hard candies, wood and clay figurines.
During the Protestant of the
sixteenth century, St. Nicholas was banished from most European
countries. Replacing him were more secular figures, who in general
were not at center stage at that point in history.
The Dutch kept the St. Nicholas
tradition alive. As the "protector of sailors," St.
Nicholas graced the prow of the first Dutch ship that arrived
in America. And the first church built in New York City was named
after him. The Dutch brought with them to the New World two Christmas
items that were quickly Americanized.
In sixteenth-century Holland, children
placed wooden shoes by the hearth the night of St. Nicholas's
arrival. The shoes were filled with straw, a meal for the saint's
gift-laden donkey. In return, Nicholas would insert a small treat
into each clog. In America, the shoe was replaced with the stocking,
hung by the chimney. |

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Sint Nikolaas's helper, Zwarte Piet
(Black Pete) who on the night before Dec 6, would go around town
opening doors and throwing handfulls of candy into the rooms.
Also in Holland, Sint Nikolaas would arrive on a ship riding
a large white horse.
The Dutch spelled St. Nicholas "Sint Nikolass," which
in the New World became "Sinterklass". later changed
to "Santa Claus".
Much of modern-day Santa Claus lore,
including the reindeer-drawn sleigh, originated in America. Dr.
Clement Clarke Moore composed "The Night Before Christmas"
in 1822, to read to his children on Christmas Eve. The poem might
have remained privately in the Moore family if a friend had not
mailed a copy of it (without authorial attribution) to a newspaper
and became part of the Santa legend. |

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It was in America that Santa put on weight. The rosy-cheeked,
roly-poly Santa is credited to the influential nineteenth-century
cartoonist Thomas Nast. From 1863 until 1886, Nast created a
series of Christmas drawings for Harper's Weekly. These drawings,
executed over twenty years, exhibit a gradual evolution in Santa
from the pudgy, diminutive, elf-like creature of Dr. Moore's
immortal poem to the bearded, potbellied, life-size bell ringer
familiar on street corners across America today. Nast's cartoons
also showed the world how Santa spent his entire year constructing
toys, checking on children's behavior, reading their requests
for special gifts. His images were incorporated into the Santa
lore.
Santa is known throughout the
world in many different names, such as:
Saint Nikolaas (Sinter Klaas),
from the Dutch - Father Christmas, from the English - Kris Kringle,
from the Germans - Befana, from the Italians and Bobouschka,
from the Russians (a grand motherly figure instead of a male) |

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