The History of Santa Claus
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- čas přidán 19. 12. 2023
- This video discusses the history of Santa Claus or St. Nick from the early fourth century Nicholas of Myra to modern Santa Claus.
History of Christmas Presents: • The History of Christm...
The Story of Silent Night: • The Story of Silent Night
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Further reading on some aspects of Christmas and Santa (affiliate link):
Bruce David Forbes, "Christmas a Candid History" (amzn.to/3RtZSZy)
My books (affiliate links):
"How We Got Our Bible" (Zondervan, 2018): amzn.to/2MtmSYY
"Story of Creeds and Confessions" (Baker Academic, 2019): amzn.to/3OVDyGQ
#santa #history
No. The best version of Robin Hood is Mel Brooks classic, Robin Hood Men In Tights. No, you can't change my mind on that fact either. Just accept you're wrong and move on.
Merry Christmas and happy holidays to you and yours, btw. 😊
Agreed, there's no discussion warranted unless men wear tights.
Agreed
"Because unlike some OTHER Robin Hoods, I can speak with an English accent..."
tight TIGHT tights
Oh boy 530am time for a highly detailed and interesting lecture about the Church
Your history lessons are pure gold. Amazing stuff you’ve produced over the years.
You are a wonderful man for doing this. Please keep it up.
I just love the idea of Santa decking Arius at Nicea.
Those Arians are hard-headed.
I can only imagine how obnoxious and arrogant Arius was. He probably deserved it🖐️
Thank you, Ryan. Once again your videos prove to be a great joy and blessing.
Grace to you in the celebration of the birth of the Lord Jesus Christ.
8:40 Not only does Sinterklaas bring a switch for naughty kids (according to family legend one of my uncles actually did this to his kids once), the really bad ones are put in Piet's sack and taken away. This was always a source of hilarity for children if Sint and Piet showed up somewhere and asked if a particular kid had been nice and they would be met with cries of "In the bag! In the bag!"
That's both hilarious and kinda terrifying. LOL!
Your content is a joy to watch and absorb. A shining light of well researched knowledge amongst all the cacophony of bells and whistles that choke the web.
All the best for the festive season and for 2024. I eagerly await more.
Was “the night before Christmas” originally meant to refer to December 5th? I don’t think it’s mentioned when the transition to the holiday being on the 25th first happened
Great question. Depends on country initially. So Germany and a few others they make that move quickly with the Christ Child thing. In New York they are celebrating St Nicholas’ day but when they invent the new modern Santa Claus stories they make it Christmas Eve.
Merry Christmas. Love your videos!
Best version of Robin Hood is the 1938 version featuring Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland and the best version of A Christmas Carol is the Alastair Sim film 1951. Merry Christmas to one and all!
More awesomeness for the holidays! Thank you! ❤
Excellent research! Thank you for your hard work!
Ryan, great research once again. It's a pleasure to share your videos on social media.
Another great video that I didn't know I needed until I heard it. Your catalog of work is one that I look forward to showing my kids as they get older. Thank you for all your effort and dedication to the truth, God bless.
Thanks much Mr. Reeves... Merry Christmas, I hope you and yours are well.
I have been waiting for this.
Thank you.
I would love to see a video from you on the history of Krampus and other holiday foils.
Great work, thank you, Happy Christmas.
Great video thank you! One minor thing, though, my understanding is that the link between Christmas and Saturnalia is likely overstated (with maybe some cross-pollination re: specific traditions) and that 25th December was identified due to an older tradition that calculated the date of someone's death based on the date of their conception. Can you speak to this at all?
At the very start of the video he says “there’s almost no connection between the practice of Christmas and Saturnalia”…or are you saying there’s more connection than what he’s representing (which he says scholars would not agree with)? Regarding your question on the nativity, sounds like a topic for a separate video.
I’d be VERY interested analyzing the representation of Santa Claus in advertisements. Well done , Ryan 👏🏽
Thank you for another awesome video. You are incredible! Sending you many blessings and best wishes for a very merry Christmas and happy new year. Peace from the blind guy!
Timely!
Thank you, professor!
Excellent! Well balanced and factual! Thank you!
Merry Christmas. God bless you & yours Ryan.
Good explanation! I enjoy your history lessons. 😊
Thank you! Consistently excellent and easy to follow along.
I've enjoyed your work for years now going back to to heresies, Jan Huss, Luther and much more. Great to see you back.
Superb! Bless you brother. Thank you.
Been watching you since I was 17 (24 now) and so glad you're back with new videos!!
@Ryan Reeves, this was good man. And thanks for posting sources !!
I just had this chat with my 12 year old daughter.
Our Santa doesnt have a naughty and nice list...everyone is on the naughty list. Santa gives because Christ gave to him. His giving is his response to the Gospel.
You're right to wrap up, Santa is very malleable.
Sounds like Santa is reformed lol
Thanks for this Ryan, very historical and informative. Could you please do one on the origins of Easter? The historically inaccurate narrative that it was a pagan holiday has become has become mainstream, even among Christians.
In my own research I came across a fella by the name of Thomas Nast who produced the first image of Santa clause in 1863 and went on in 1866 to produce “The Works of Santa Clause” which contained much of the lore you mentioned and what we now associate with Santa. Another thing I found was that the song “Santa Clause is coming to town” produced in the same time period as the coke ads was one of that factors that led to a fully formed American Christmas tradition
The exclusion of the work of the cartoonist Thomas Nast weakens this history. It makes me question the veracity of the remaining information.
Im not quite finished with the video yet, but are you going to mention how Gandalf is Father Christmas??? 100% BELIEVE!
Hey brother, I’m sure you’ve been asked before, but could you do a video or lecture series on Brother Lawrence and his impact?
Thank you Ryan something to think about.
Thank you again!
I wish more people would learn history from you. Our world would be a better informed and wiser place.
Merry Christmas!
Fascinating video. I enjoyed that it gave this cozy feeling as well how apropos. Indeed it seems while having the kernel of European winter season traditions, Santa Clause is a product of modernity and forming new traditions for a relatively nascent culture in America. Right down to the iconic imagery coming from commercialization.
i live near a large dutch community in canada and the black students at my school kept trying to cancel the dutch kids for dressing like black peter 🤣
Very interesting.
Thomas Nast also had an important role in the image of Santa Claus as a jolly fat man given how widely his cartoons were published. Many late 19th century newspapers also contributed to the lore around Santa over time like the fact that he lived at the North Pole or had a wife.
Totally true. Also the letters from kids to Santa or asking if he’s real were published in papers. Lot of cool stuff didn’t make it in the video!
Qui Bono Merchant?
Great video
Would love if you could pick up where you left off with the church history series. Tracing the modern church through the Jesus culture movement and the emergent church.
That sounds fun. Great suggestion
Yes please!
@@RyanReevesM Yes please!
@@RyanReevesM
Glad you are back. I first saw your videos in 2016. Have you considered doing a series on American based Christianity such as JW, LDS and or 7 day Adventism?
👍
"Modern Turkey" in stead of "The Byzantine Empire" sounds a bit odd in this story. The oldest reference to "Black Pete" in the Netherlands is found in the works of a school teacher from around 1850. In other European countries, Saint Nicholas was then still travelling with a devil (Krampus) as companion.
Good video, will watch it again, the many changing faces of Santa 🎅, ... where will we be in 100 years time?
Waiting for the history of Christmas itself 🎄✝️🙏🎅🏻
Dear Ryan , relative, relatable research. Refreshing in recognizing reality from rumoured ramblings. ( Hmmmm....) wRapped with red ribbons of rationality.
Wrapped*
Really regret ruining radically rhetorical rants. 😢
Awesome.
Thank you!
A fellow I know has an ugly Christmas sweater with both Jesus and Saint Nicholas. A friend sacrilegiously said to me: Look at the sweater with two fictional characters. I responded: wrong and wrong! As a new Catholic (converted from Protestantism) it continues to amaze me how effectively the reformers have scrubbed away not just the saints but also the true meanings. Yet our culture celebrates St Patrick’s Day, Saint Valentines Day, all Hallows Eve and yes Christmas with no remembrance of why we do these things.
That was very informative. Over here in the UK some of us tend to cling to the name Father Christmas as opposed to Santa Claus but he really has no separate identity.
Cheers! Thanks!
I live in the former Soviet Union where they traditionally have Father Winter, or Ded Moroz who comes on New Year's Day. But due to Americanization you're now seeing more and more of the Coke-a-cola Santa replace Ded Moroz.
What about Thomas Nast, J.C. Leyendecker, and Norman Rockwell, all of whom pretty much created the look of Santa prior to Haddon Sundblom? History doesn't happen at stops in time--it is ongoing even when historians aren't noticing. I'm sure it is hard to explore all of Santa in 26 minutes. But there is a lot here that was left out.
Mr Beet recomended this channel.
This was interesting.
Thanks Dr. Ryan. Any books to cite for further reading? Asking for a friend…
You restarted your channel, don’t leave us hanging Dr Reeves
Just needed a moment. On my way back
I did know most of these little facts about Saint Nick already, but another one, which hasnt been mentioned is that the 8 reindeers and Santa's sleigh is based on odins 8 legged horse pulling his sleigh through the sky on Yuletide?? Also wassailing was the original pagan version of carol singing
Like this song, (there are several more verses)? Sometimes people sing caroling instead of wassailing.
"Here we come a-wassailing
Among the leaves so green;
Here we come a-wand'ring
So fair to be seen.
Love and joy come to you,
And to you your wassail too;
And God bless you and send you a Happy New Year
And God send you a Happy New Year."
Do you have a video on the early churches' understanding of spiritual gifts? If not that would be amazing. A series of Christian canonization would be great too. Thank you 🙇
Hello, are you planning to do easter history like these last couple?
Hey Ryan, do you still teach at Gordon-Conwell?
FishermensCorner sent me here!
I sent that to the men in our church, thank you
How does all this fit with C.S. Lewis use of Jovial themes? Lewis felt the need to use Santa/Father Christmas. I am curious what influence Jupiter had on clement moore
The 1552 BCP kept the season of Advent which is a very pennitential season. Was the Anglican Church trying to stomp down the partying during this seasom or in general?
Absolutely. They want to keep it about Jesus and liked Advent (even though they were pretty restrictive about keeping medieval traditions). London was sort of infamous for da parties.
@@RyanReevesM I'm sure the priests and monks of the monasteries enjoyed plenty of beer and fruit cake during the Christmas season as well.
Thank you so much for the wonderful lectures. Merry Christmas!
The people demand more Dr. Reeves videos!
Drawing a straight line from cocaine (in Coca-Cola) to modern Santa is, chef’s kiss 👨🍳 💋
GREAT HISTORY THANK YOU
Just one aspect that you left out: the contributions to theSanta Claus mythology by political cartoonist Thomas Nast in the mid 19th century. It was his drawings that gradually changed the image from the elf like guy to the tall standing jolly old man who lived in the North Pole.
OH OH! I may have learned something. I'm scared...Hold Me!
🙂
THANK YOU
Could you please do a video about the origins and rise of Evangelical eschatology? Particularly premillennial dispensationalism? Things in the vein of rapture theology or Revelations/Daniel end times prophecy.
Hi, I enjoyed this summary. The title could us an adjective. "The Secret History...", "The Real History...", "The True History...", something to make it a little less dry.
Those are usually used in clickbait titles. Also "It will shock you."
Hey Mr. Reeves. I heard that German Lutherans invented the Christmas Tree by combining the Paradise Tree with the Christmas Pyramid, but now I'm hearing that Catholics invented it when they adopted the evergreen after the story of St. Boniface and started hanging wafers representing the eucharist from it.
Do you know which one came first?
Dr./Mr. Reeves. Are you still at Gordon Cromwell?
Holidays in English language actually originates from 'Holy Days,' thus 'Happy holidays,' is not so far off from the gospel.
There is no connection between Saturnalia and the original Christmas i.e. the mass celebrating the birth of Christ (except for the date) but aspects of the Saturnalian festival continued to be practiced. I agree that Christmas didn't evolve out of Saturnalia or some Norse tradition but in the popular celebrations of Christian holidays, pre-Christian (what came to be known as "folk") traditions did indeed survive which happens in all religions since there is always something that came before.
If anything, it seems the reverse is true whereby overt aspects of Saturnalia has been _added_ to the Christmas celebration and this somewhat recently.
Greetings! I like all of your videos and just wanted you to know. Is there anything you want me to pray for you? God Bless you!
Learn better from audio book Jeff Guinn - The Autobiography Of Santa Claus. From about 400AD as a monk then a bishop. But he that is too tedious and he would rather send give to the less fortunate. Fascinating how famous history people. I highly recommend listening or a copy of the book if you can find it. To me I was disabled before 2000 and I had to give up reading. I have audio books from cassettes, to text file and epub then Text to speech software then online and download audio books like this current book. I lost count I tears from the wonderful story about the history and how he (they) become what is now. Please! I hope you can love this as much I love this book.
> it nothing to do with saturnalia
> the traditional date comes from the roman saturnalia celebration
So, it has something to do with Saturnalia, got it.
One can only hope that maybe the one in the 3RD and 4TH centuries lives on in spirit and more.
,, father Christmas must be analogy of st Joseph, in traditional Christmas performances fir children. It had to be dressed in red as were dressed the rich Jews for festive in ancient times. But the person who "climbed" through the chimneys came much later than St Nicolas, who never was dressed in red or even in crossed robe . The most famous st . Nicolas was dressed as a Franciscan monk at the first time . There are similar images on the most ancient icons. But at time when reformation had began to persecute catholic priests , there also was a bishop by name Nicolas that recommended to build rooms for confession at home with a way to escape if it was dangerous, and sometimes this way was lead trough the chimney
Superb as usual, but I prefer my birth country's tradition of the 3 Magi Kings (Los Reyes mangos) where only children get gifts Jan 6 as Christ got. Yes, 3 is a Marco Polo number, lots of other myth but, that before Christ was 2yo He was visited by magi that remembered the prophecies of Daniel has far deeper roots in Scripture.
I've seen several conflicting accounts of the origin of O Holy Night. Can you set us straight?
Some of it sounds mythological.
If any one can get of hold of Dr brant pitre christmas explanation ... do please explain
Where are you man???
Based on how these stories evolved so much in the past. It’s not hard to imagine how a Jewish carpenter became a god.
Is Wencelas the same as Wenceslaus? I may be an armchair historian but I know better than to assume.
Sinterklaas in Dutch comes from Sint Niklaas or Saint Nicholas. Say it fast and you get “Santa Claus.”
Sinter Klaus ❤🎄
'carried a whip'- germ of Krampus?
Three different Church Fathers calculated December 25 as Christ's birthday, and they did it from Scripture. It has to do with the timing of Zechariah's service as priest in Luke chapter 1.
There isn't any evidence that it had anything to do with Saturnalia.
Thanks. Any other childhood dreams you'd like to destroy? 😂
HO HO HOMOOUSIOS
Whao 😲
When met with the santa/satan dislexyia take on jumbled words for a hidden meaning - I would reply Santa means saint in a foriegen language doesn't ?
I'm from the Dutch Reformed tradition. I don't like Santa Claus and gift giving on Christmas, because I think it distracts too much from celebrating the incarnation of Christ.
So I'm trying to revive Sinterklaas for my kids, but we're putting more focus on generosity and gratitude. I also try to remove the later Sinterklaas legends, focusing on the history of Nicholas of Myra, and how he was a Christian man that exemplified generosity. I think we protestants should celebrate the saints more, and we can do that without venerating the Saints ifykwim
Now I know why Santa left the warm Mediterranean world for the frigid North Pole.
So thats y babys always cry when see santa they remember the switch from previousr life