The Young Chronicle: For Grade 3 December 19th, 2014 | Page 3

YOUNG CHRONICLE November 28th , 2014 How Did Santa Claus Come About St. Nicholas was a 4th century Greek Christian bishop of Myra, now in Turkey. He was famous for his generous gifts to the poor and was very religious from an early age and devoted his life entirely to Christianity. In Netherlands, Belgium, Austria, and Germany, St. Nicholas is usually portrayed as a bearded bishop in canonical or priestly robes. During the Middle Ages (5th to 15th Century), St. Nicolas’s Name Day was celebrated on 6th December. A Name day is a tradition in many countries in Europe and Latin America that consists of celebrating the day of the year associated with one’s given name. In those days many believers were named after saints. On this day, they would celebrate that Saints name day. So St. Nicholas’s name day was 6th December. The night before this day was when children were bestowed with gifts. During the course of Protestant reformation, and opposition to the respect and reverence granted to saints, many countries shifted this gifting day to 24th and 25th December. It is said that King Martin Luther, the first, suggested that children be gifted on Christmas eve, rather than on St. Nicholas’s Day. He first suggested that the Christkind, but Nicholas remained popular as the gifts bearer for people. St. Nicholas became popularly known as Santa Claus as an American interpretation of the Dutch pronunciation of St. Nicholas as Sinterklaas. Later, in the English and later British colonies of North America, US, the British and Dutch versions of the gift giver merged further, Making Sinterklaas, Santa Claus. It was 1773 when the new name first appeared in the press. Sinterklaas had lost his bishop’s apparel and was pictured as a thick bellied Dutch sailor with a pipe in a green winter coat. St. Nicholas’s Portrait from the 13th Century ‘A Visit from St. Nicholas’ a poem, better know as ‘The Night Before Christmas’ is also responsible for the modern description of Santa. Visions such as chubby Santa riding on a sleigh, entering through the chimney with a bag full of toys, have been propagated by the poem. The Raindeer were also named: Da