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can someone tell me........??

2006-12-24 08:12:13 · 13 answers · asked by Adam Dan 1 in Society & Culture Holidays Christmas

13 answers

You bet he is real!

2006-12-24 08:19:37 · answer #1 · answered by Gone fishin' 7 · 0 0

To little children Santa Claus is the jolly fat guy in the red suit, but when you get older, you do not stop believing in the physical Santa Claus, but the spirit of Christmas itself. I do not believe in santa, but I believe how he holds it together and the history of how Christmas came to be.

Merry Christmas everybody! Keep the joy strong and do not stop believing in the spirit of Christmas!

2006-12-24 16:18:20 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

You would spell that Santa Claus, right? As a spirit of Christmas, he is alive and well.

2006-12-24 16:20:32 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

According to the Encyclopedia Britannica, Santa Claus started with a real person, Saint Nicholas, a minor saint from the fourth century:

According to tradition, he was born in the ancient Lycian seaport city of Patara, and, when young, he traveled to Palestine and Egypt. He became bishop of Myra soon after returning to Lycia. He was imprisoned during the Roman emperor Diocletian's persecution of Christians but was released under the rule of Emperor Constantine the Great and attended the first Council (325) of Nicaea. After his death he was buried in his church at Myra, and by the sixth century his shrine there had become well known. In 1087, Italian sailors or merchants stole his alleged remains from Myra and took them to Bari, Italy; this removal greatly increased the saint's popularity in Europe, and Bari became one of the most crowded of all pilgrimage centres. Nicholas' relics remain enshrined in the 11th-century basilica of San Nicola, Bari.
Nicholas' reputation for generosity and kindness gave rise to legends of miracles he performed for the poor and unhappy. He was reputed to have given marriage dowries of gold to three girls whom poverty would otherwise have forced into lives of prostitution, and he restored to life three children who had been chopped up by a butcher and put in a brine tub. In the Middle Ages, devotion to Nicholas extended to all parts of Europe. He became the patron saint of Russia and Greece; of charitable fraternities and guilds; of children, sailors, unmarried girls, merchants, and pawnbrokers; and of such cities as Fribourg, Switz., and Moscow. Thousands of European churches were dedicated to him, one as early as the sixth century, built by the Roman emperor Justinian I, at Constantinople (now Istanbul). Nicholas' miracles were a favourite subject for medieval artists and liturgical plays, and his traditional feast day was the occasion for the ceremonies of the Boy Bishop, a widespread European custom in which a boy was elected bishop and reigned until Holy Innocents' Day (December 28).

After the Reformation, Nicholas' cult disappeared in all the Protestant countries of Europe except Holland, where his legend persisted as Sinterklaas (a Dutch variant of the name Saint Nicholas). Dutch colonists took this tradition with them to New Amsterdam (now New York City) in the American colonies in the 17th century. Sinterklaas was adopted by the country's English-speaking majority under the name Santa Claus, and his legend of a kindly old man was united with old Nordic folktales of a magician who punished naughty children and rewarded good children with presents.

("Nicholas, SAINT", Britannica CD. Version 97. Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc., 1997.)


It is amazing but true that the common, popular view of Santa that we all have today, along with all the crazy things around Santa like the sleigh, the reindeer and the chimney, all came largely from two publishing events that occurred in the 1800s and one advertising campaign in this century. Clement Moore wrote "The Night Before Christmas" in 1822 for his family. It was picked up by a newspaper, then reprinted in magazines and it spread like wildfire. Moore admitted authorship in 1838. If you read the poem you will find that he names the reindeer, invents the sleigh, comes up with the chimney and the bag of toys, etc. Nearly everyone in America has been able to recognize or recite this poem since the 1830s.

Then, between 1863 and 1886, Harper's Weekly (a popular magazine of the time) ran a series of engravings by Thomas Nast. From these images come the concepts of Santa's workshop, Santa reading letters, Santa checking his list and so on. Coca-Cola also played a role in the Santa image by running a set of paintings by Haddon Sundblom in its ads between 1931 to 1964.

The red and white suit came, actually, from the original Saint Nicholas. Those colors were the colors of the traditional bishop's robes.

2006-12-24 16:25:46 · answer #4 · answered by Mummy is not at home 4 · 0 0

No..... the old jolly man at the north pole is not real

the man St. Nicholas is the real deal

2006-12-24 16:15:52 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

well, even though there are many websites, phonies, and tv specials, nobody knows because of the websites and tv specials go here and check it out.

http://www.noradsanta.org/en/default.php

2006-12-24 16:15:22 · answer #6 · answered by slhs_classof2010 2 · 0 1

yes

2006-12-24 16:21:30 · answer #7 · answered by Jon 3 · 0 0

yes, and let no one tell you different.

2006-12-24 16:14:26 · answer #8 · answered by sidekick 6 · 3 0

no,but things people do for you this time of year it would make you think other wise

2006-12-24 16:15:05 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

of course he is, it is all in the heart.

2006-12-24 16:17:35 · answer #10 · answered by Nora G 7 · 2 0

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