How did St. Nicholas inspire the Santa Claus legend? | Inquirer News

How did St. Nicholas inspire the Santa Claus legend?

/ 10:31 AM December 07, 2023

How did St. Nicholas inspire the Santa Claus legend?

FILE – Revelers take part in a traditional St. Nicholas procession in the village of Lidecko, Czech Republic, Monday, Dec. 4, 2023. Nicholas was a fourth century Catholic bishop from the Mediterranean port city of Myra (in modern-day Turkey). “Much of the rest is legend. There’s not really a lot of hard historical evidence about St. Nicholas,” said the Rev. Nicholas Ayo, author of “Saint Nicholas in America: Christmas Holy Day and Holiday.” (AP Photo/Petr David Josek, File)

NEW YORK — The white-bearded Christian saint whose acts of generosity inspired America’s secular Santa Claus figure is known worldwide — but Saint Nicholas’ origin story is not.

The legends surrounding jolly old St. Nicholas — celebrated annually on Dec. 6 — go way beyond delivering candy and toys to children.

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Who was St. Nicholas?

St. Nicholas was a fourth-century Christian bishop from the Mediterranean port city of Myra (in modern-day Turkey).

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“Much of the rest is legend. There’s not really a lot of hard historical evidence about St. Nicholas,” said the Rev. Nicholas Ayo, author of “Saint Nicholas in America: Christmas Holy Day and Holiday.”

FILE - Approximately 200 local employees dressed in Santa Claus costumes parade in the festive atmosphere through the Marunouchi district in Tokyo, Friday, Dec. 22, 2017. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko, File)

Approximately 200 local employees dressed in Santa Claus costumes parade in the festive atmosphere through the Marunouchi district in Tokyo, Friday, Dec. 22, 2017. AP FILE PHOTO

But whether the stories are true is not so much the point, said Ayo, an 89-year-old retired Notre Dame University professor named after St. Nicholas.

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“There’s no Santa Claus that lands on the roof, but there’s a desire in people’s heart for an unconditional love that doesn’t depend on your behavior, but the fact that you’re somebody’s child.”

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Devotion to St. Nicholas — also referred to as St. Nick — spread during the Middle Ages across Europe, and he became a favorite subject for medieval artists and liturgical plays, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica. He is the patron saint of Greece and Russia, Moscow and New York, charities, children, and pawnbrokers.

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He also is the patron saint of sailors. In 1807, Italian sailors took the remains of St. Nicholas from Myra to the seaport of Bari on the southeast coast of the boot of Italy. They built a church in his honor; relics believed to be his are kept in the Bari’s 11th-century basilica of San Nicola.

FILE - A man dressed as Ded Moroz (Grandfather Frost), the Russian Santa Claus, rides an electric scooter by a street decorated for the incoming New Year and Orthodox Christmas celebrations in St. Petersburg, Russia, Tuesday, Dec. 17, 2019. (AP Photo/Dmitri Lovetsky, File)

A man dressed as Ded Moroz (Grandfather Frost), the Russian Santa Claus, rides an electric scooter by a street decorated for the incoming New Year and Orthodox Christmas celebrations in St. Petersburg, Russia, Tuesday, Dec. 17, 2019. AP FILE PHOTO

When is St. Nicholas Day celebrated?

St. Nicholas Day is celebrated every year on Dec. 6, typically by filling the stockings and shoes children leave out overnight with sweets and toys. It also is a fitting date for the patron saint of sailors.

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“The December feast day of Saint Nicholas coincides with the beginning of the winter storm season on the Mediterranean,” Ayo writes.

What are the legends of St. Nick?

Legends surrounding St. Nicholas’ generosity appear in texts ranging from medieval manuscripts to modern-day poems, including how he interceded on behalf of wrongly condemned prisoners and miraculously saved sailors from storms.

One of the most famous legends, Ayo said, features the aging father of three young women who didn’t have means to pay for their dowry. St. Nicholas is said to have thrown gold pieces into the man’s window.

FILE - Sinterklaas, the Dutch equivalent of Santa Claus, and his helper, "Zwarte Piet" or "Black Pete" arrives at the roof of the Nemo Museum in Amsterdam, Netherlands, Wednesday, Nov. 29, 2006. Dutch Protestants who settled in New York brought the memory of Sinterklaas in the 17th century to New Amsterdam. (AP Photo/ Evert Elzinga, File)

Sinterklaas, the Dutch equivalent of Santa Claus, and his helper, “Zwarte Piet” or “Black Pete” arrives at the roof of the Nemo Museum in Amsterdam, Netherlands, Wednesday, Nov. 29, 2006. Dutch Protestants who settled in New York brought the memory of Sinterklaas to New Amsterdam in the 17th century. AP FILE PHOTO

“It is the quintessential Nicholas,” Ayo writes. “It requires no miracle, no credulity from the hearer, and no superstition at any level. What is needed is only a generous heart ready to give of his wealth in a self-effacing way that others may come to know a deep love in their life.”

How did St. Nick inspire America’s Santa Claus figure?

Devotion to St. Nicholas seems to have faded after the 16th-century Protestant Reformation, except in the Netherlands, where his legend remained as Sinterklaas. In the 17th century, Dutch Protestants who settled in New York brought the Sinterklaas tradition with them.

“The Dutch had St. Nicholas on the bow of the first ship that went into New York harbor,” Ayo said. Eventually, St. Nicholas morphed into the secular Santa Claus.

Artist Thomas Nast, an engraver in Morristown, New Jersey, who illustrated the front cover of Harper’s magazine for many years, played a key role in the transformation, Ayo said.

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“He followed the description of Santa Claus or Saint Nicholas — and Clement Clarke Moore’s ‘Twas the Night before Christmas’ poem,” Ayo says. “So, that’s how that got changed. But in Europe, the bishop shows up in bishop’s clothing at the door sometimes.”

TAGS: Christmas, Santa Claus

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