The real story behind Santa Claus | CNN (2024)

The real story behind Santa Claus | CNN (1)

Santa sightings around the world —

A Santa Claus lights a flare while riding in a boat in Imperia, Italy. Click through the gallery for more photos of all the places Santa has shown up over the years:

The real story behind Santa Claus | CNN (2)

Santa sightings around the world —

Volunteers in Santa outfits toss their hats into the air before delivering gifts to the poor in Seoul, South Korea.

The real story behind Santa Claus | CNN (3)

Santa sightings around the world —

A fisherman in Santa disguise joins in the holiday celebrations in Valparaiso, Chile.

The real story behind Santa Claus | CNN (4)

Santa sightings around the world —

A Santa waves from his sleigh on the Champs-Élysées in Paris.

The real story behind Santa Claus | CNN (5)

Santa sightings around the world —

A Santa gives out sweets to a man in Beijing.

The real story behind Santa Claus | CNN (6)

Santa sightings around the world —

With help from a cable, Santa and his reindeer "fly" over Lake Geneva as part of the Christmas Market in Montreux, Switzerland.

The real story behind Santa Claus | CNN (7)

Santa sightings around the world —

Motorcyclists in Santa outfits take a group photo before embarking on a Christmas "toy run" on their bikes in Tokyo.

The real story behind Santa Claus | CNN (8)

Santa sightings around the world —

Santa distributes candy during a Christmas carnival in Mumbai, India.

The real story behind Santa Claus | CNN (9)

Santa sightings around the world —

Motorcyclists in Santa and reindeer outfits ride through the streets of Tokyo.

The real story behind Santa Claus | CNN (10)

Santa sightings around the world —

A performer dressed as Father Frost, the Russian equivalent of Santa, rests on a high-rise building in Kemerovo, Russia.

The real story behind Santa Claus | CNN (11)

Santa sightings around the world —

A Palestinian Santa distributes Christmas trees along the wall of Jerusalem's Old City.

The real story behind Santa Claus | CNN (12)

Santa sightings around the world —

Santa waves to passers-by as he walks along Jerusalem's Old City walls.

The real story behind Santa Claus | CNN (13)

Santa sightings around the world —

A man in a Santa outfit paddles a canoe decorated with a reindeer during the traditional Christmas bath in Nice, France.

The real story behind Santa Claus | CNN (14)

Santa sightings around the world —

Firefighter Hector Chaco maneuvers down a cable from a bridge to deliver presents to children as Santa in Guatemala City.

The real story behind Santa Claus | CNN (15)

Santa sightings around the world —

Santa greets passengers while moving between cars during the Polar Express train ride, a holiday fundraiser at the Maine Narrow Gauge Railroad Co. and Museum in Portland.

The real story behind Santa Claus | CNN (16)

Santa sightings around the world —

Santa interacts with king penguins at Marineland, an animal exhibition park in Antibes, France.

The real story behind Santa Claus | CNN (17)

Santa sightings around the world —

Santa takes a zip line away from Sugarloaf Mountain after riding on top of a cable car in Rio de Janeiro.

The real story behind Santa Claus | CNN (18)

Santa sightings around the world —

A diver in a Santa outfit feeds fish as part of Christmas celebrations at Aquaria KLCC underwater park in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

The real story behind Santa Claus | CNN (19)

Santa sightings around the world —

People donning Santa costumes paddle on the Cumberland River in Nashville, Tennessee.

Santa sightings around the world

Story highlights

In the early 1800s, Christmas in this country looked dramatically different

The original St. Nicholas was a bit of bad boy

When the Dutch came to the New World, they brought along Sinterklaas

CNN

Don’t tell the kids, but we’ve got Santa Claus all wrong.

Countless Christmas songs tell us that Santa is basically the Judge Judy of juveniles. He decides who’s been naughty or nice, and doles out presents or punishments accordingly.

But historians say Kris Kringle was originally created to keep adults, not children, off the naughty list. Being crafty codgers, we ducked Santa’s surveillance, turning the spotlight on kids and dramatically changing Christmas celebrations.

How did we achieve this very important historical victory?

Picture this: It’s the early 1800s, and America’s Christian leaders – most of whom were Protestant Reformation-types – had banned religious celebrations of Christmas as unscriptural and paganish.

But people still wanted to party. Because, why not? It was midwinter, the crops were harvested and sailors were waiting for better weather to disembark.

So, on December 25, working-class stiffs got fall-down drunk and stumbled around cities looking for stuff to loot.

Imagine Black Friday, spring break and New Year’s Eve – then smash them together like sumo wrestlers full of saki. That was Christmas in the early 1800s.

A bunch of blue-blood New Yorkers decided all this fun must stop.

“They wanted to domesticate Christmas, bring it indoors, and focus it on children,” says Gerry Bowler, author of “Santa Claus: A History,” and professor of history at the University of Manitoba in Canada.

These grinches, who formed the Saint Nicholas Society of New York, would change the world with two little poems. Yep. Poems.

But let’s back up for a minute.

When the Dutch came to the New World in the 1600s, they brought a fellow from folklore named Sinterklaas with them, Bowler says.

Sinterklaas, who wore a red bishop’s miter and a snowy white beard, was based on St. Nicholas, a 3rd century Greek who lived in modern-day Turkey.

Despite being a bishop, this Nick was a bit of a bad boy.

An archaeologist who dug up his bones in 2005 found that Nicholas had a broken nose, perhaps a result of the persistent persecution of Christians around that time, said Adam C. English, author of “The Saint Who Would be Santa Claus.”

Or could it have been Christian-on-Christian violence?

According to one medieval legend, Nicholas punched a heretic in the nose at the Council of Nicea – the meeting in 325 that formed the first consensus on Christian doctrine. Early icons of Nicholas depict him without bishop’s garb, a subtle suggestion that he had been demoted, possibly for fisticuffs.

Alas, the Nick at Nicea rumor is not true, said English. But people seem to love the story, which pops up like poinsettias on the Internet this time of year.

Thankfully, St. Nicholas, was known for more than brawling. He also had a reputation for giving gifts and protecting children.

The first quality comes from a story about a poor man with three young daughters. Without a dowry to offer suitors, the man worried that his daughters would fall into prostitution. Legend has it that Nicholas dropped three bags of gold through an open window in the man’s house, saving the women from the streets.

The second story is a bit macabre: While staying at an inn, Nicholas discovered three dismembered children in pickle barrels. He reassembled and resurrected the briny kids and punished the guilty innkeeper.

These deeds, along with his everyman persona, (he wasn’t a martyr or hermit like so many other model Christians of the time), made Nicholas the greatest male saint of the Middle Ages, said Bowler. One measure of his popularity is the looong list of people, places, churches and Christian groups that list St. Nick as their patron.

Bowler, Santa’s biographer, says that St. Nick’s feast day, December 6, (the day he supposedly died) was celebrated across Europe for hundreds of years, often by giving gifts to children.

But, beginning in the 1500s, the Protestant Reformation swept away the cult of Christian saints, denouncing them as unbiblical and idolatrous. Christmas, too, went pretty much by the wayside for much of Protestant Europe during this time.

Some countries, though, such as the Netherlands, kept alive traditions associated with Sinterklaas. And it was these customs that 19th century New Yorkers wanted to revive.

As they sought to make Christmas more family friendly, the Saint Nicholas Society found the perfect front man in their namesake, who, after all, was known for being nice to children.

It was a genius move. The real goal was getting drunks off the street, remember? Now they could do that by turning Christmas into a family event when children – who had it pretty rough back then – would receive gifts for good behavior.

But the Knickerbockers needed more than good cheer to change Christmas. They needed stories.

Drawing on the Dutch legends about Sinterklaas, the American author Washington Irving wrote a series of sketches featuring St. Nicholas soaring high above New York houses, smoking a pipe and delivering presents to well-behaved children.

About a decade later, in 1821, an anonymous poem called “The Children’s Friend,” featured a magical figure called “Santeclaus,” who drove a reindeer-led sleigh full of “rewards” and filled obedient children’s stockings with little presents.

Building on that, an Episcopalian scholar named Clement Clarke Moore wrote a poem for his big brood called “A Visit From St. Nicholas.” It’s now better known as “The Night Before Christmas.”

Strangely for a seminary professor, Moore’s poem strips St. Nick of religious rhyme and reasons. Nicholas wears a fur suit, clambers down chimneys and gives presents to good children. But he says nothing about the “reason for the season,” as contemporary Christmas warriors like to say.

Still, Moore’s St. Nick story went viral, spreading across the northeastern United States faster than reindeer on Ritalin.

In some early depictions, Santa Claus looks like an overgrown elf; in others, he looks kind of scary, as American artists merged St. Nicholas with European traditions such as the German Krampus, who punishes bad children.

By the early 1900s, Bowler says, Santa became standardized as the white-bearded, red-suited, twinkle-eyed benevolent grandfather that we all know and love. And we’re not the only ones.

“Merchants seized on this guy right away,” Bowler says. “They immediately saw the possibility that this personification could be useful in their selling.” In other words, Santa was pitching products almost as soon as he hitched up his sleigh.

But before you blame Kris Kringle for commercializing Christmas, think back to what it was like before he came to town, when kids – and many adults – really had something to pout about.

The real story behind Santa Claus | CNN (2024)

FAQs

What is the original story behind Santa Claus? ›

The origins of Sinterklaas can be found in the stories of St Nicholas, a 4th-century Greek bishop from Myra, now in modern-day Turkey. St Nicholas was credited with a wide variety of miracles. According to one story, he resurrected three youths after they'd been murdered and pickled in a barrel by an innkeeper.

What is the true story of Saint Nicholas? ›

It is believed that Nicholas was born sometime around A.D. 280 in Patara, near Myra in modern-day Turkey. Much admired for his piety and kindness, St. Nicholas became the subject of many legends. It is said that he gave away all of his inherited wealth and traveled the countryside helping the poor and sick.

What happened to the real Santa Claus? ›

Over the objection of the monks of Myra the sailors took the bones of St. Nicholas to Bari, where they are now enshrined in the Basilica di San Nicola. Sailors from Bari collected just half of Nicholas' skeleton, leaving all the minor fragments in the church sarcophagus.

Is Santa real or a legend? ›

Santa is real in the sense that he was an actual person. Otherwise known as Saint Nicholas, his story goes all the way back to the 3rd century. He was a monk who was born in 280 A.D. in modern-day Turkey.

Is Santa Claus Based on a true story? ›

Yes, Santa Claus truly did exist.

The legend of a jolly red man who gives presents to children on Christmas Eve is based on the German and Dutch traditions of St Nicholas — a real-life bishop from ancient Greece.

What happened to the original Santa? ›

Early in the movie, Scott Calvin startles Santa Claus on the roof of his home. He falls off and disappears, enacting the "Santa Clause" and leaving Scott to fill his shoes. The death seems like an accident, but a theory on Reddit supposes that maybe it was planned and that Santa didn't actually die.

Is Santa real or is it my parents? ›

And the first question after that, in the “People also ask” section, is: “Is Santa real or is it your parents?” The top response comes from the motherhood website Her View From Home. “The answer is no. We are not Santa. There is no one, single Santa.

How long was Santa in jail? ›

As we described in one of our earliest posts on Solitary Watch, Nicholas was the 4th-century Greek Bishop of Myra (in present-day Turkey). Under the Roman emperor Diocletian, who persecuted Christians, Nicholas spent some five years in prison–and according to some accounts, in solitary confinement.

Is Santa Claus still alive and how old is he? ›

How old is Santa's real age? The most concrete answer to this is that Santa is currently 1,752 years old as of 2023, according to Email Santa!

What God is Santa based off of? ›

Though it's quite obvious that Santa has influence from Odin, we can't ignore some of the other obvious influences such as Saint Nicholas of Myra and the Dutch Sinterklaas.

What age do you tell your child Santa isn't real? ›

But the age range of when kids start to ask questions is around 7 to 10 – the average age of when kids figure out Santa isn't real is 8 years old. If you've been saying to your child Santa is real, when you tell them the truth about Santa is going to be based on your child and the questions they ask.

Was Chris Kringle real? ›

Who is this Kris Kringle we hear so much about? Was Santa Claus a real person? The answer, appropriately enough, is maybe. Christian tradition claims that old Saint Nick was, indeed, a real man.

What is the pagan origin of Santa Claus? ›

Santa Claus may owe his earliest influence to Odin (also known as Wodan), a god revered by Germanic peoples in Northern Europe as early as 2 B.C.E. Odin was celebrated during Yule, a pagan holiday that took place midwinter. During this time, Odin was said to lead the Wild Hunt, a ghostly procession through the sky.

What is the story of St Nick and shoes? ›

It is said that Nicholas of Myra threw the money through the family's window, which landed in their shoes, which were drying near their fireplace. Nicholas of Myra died on 6 December 346, giving rise to the present Feast of Saint Nicholas.

Why did Santa change from green to red? ›

The English folk figure "Father Christmas" originally wore green robes which eventually turned red over time. This was mainly due to St Nicholas, whose legend modern portrayals of Father Christmas are based on, often appearing in paintings and illustrations wearing red-coloured robes.

What is the meaning of Santa Claus? ›

Santa Claus in American English

(ˈsæntə ˌklɔz) noun. a benevolent figure of legend, associated with Saint Nicholas, supposed to bring gifts to children on Christmas Eve. Also: Santa Klaus.

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