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        Every legend  
        
        has 
        
        
        some basis in fact. 
        And 
        when it comes to the controversial legend of Santa, here are facts about 
        him that even the most  
        
        
        dubious 
        will 
        find 
        
        
        compelling. 
         
        Like many internationally famous individuals, Santa reached his greatest 
        prominence far from the 
        
        borders of his original 
        hometown. He started in what is today the Middle East nation of Turkey 
        as Saint Nicholas,
        
        
        archbishop of Myra. How he ended up at the North Pole 
        
        
        as jolly old St. Nick is lost to 
        the dry pages of history 
        
        
        yet unwritten 
        and 
        
        likely unknown. But 
        
        
        let it suffice to be say that 
        the red suited one had to travel about as far as any person in history 
        before he settled into his final career.
        
         
        Little 
        is actually known about the historical Saint Nicholas, but the legends 
        that surround him provide the 
        
        
        template for the character we now know as Santa Claus.
         
        
         
        What 
        we do know is this: he was born around the year 245 A.D. 
        
        
        to wealthy parents. He devoted 
        his life to the church, eventually becoming the archbishop of Myra. He 
        was tortured for his 
        
        
        beliefs until Emperor Constantine changed the official 
        religion of the Roman Empire to Christianity. And he died on December 6, 
        sometime around 350 A.D. The Catholic Church has set aside that date as 
        a feast day in his honor.  
         
        But even
        much of this information is 
        
        suspect. The main source is a biography that
        was written by a 
        
        monk some five centuries after he died.
         
        
        
        
        
         
        More
        important then the facts, 
        
        though, are the legends that have 
        
        
        grown up
        around him. Most of these are the
         
        run-of-the-mill 
        saintly miracles, such as him calming a particularly 
        nasty storm. But there is also a saintly tale of Saint Nicholas 
        resurrecting three boys who had been murdered and then
        
        
        pickled. 
        (Let's hope the killer went through the trouble of pickling in order to 
        hide his crime and not to keep them fresh
        
        
        for winter 
        consumption). 
        
             
  		
  
      
                            
        Still,
        there are several stories that exist that show Saint Nicholas performing
        acts that we now come to associate with the 
        
        
        lovable figure of Santa
        Claus. One of the most interesting of these 
        
        
        tells of his convincing 
        a
        group of thieves to return their stolen goods, thus causing him to become the 
        patron saint of thieves (not patron saint in that he helps them rob but, 
        rather, in that
         
        he helps them 
        
        repent).
        
        This seems 
        fitting considering Santa Claus, who sneaks into our houses in 
        the wee hours of Christmas morning and leaves us presents, is a sort of 
        anti-thief, undoing the deeds of those
        
        
        nefarious people 
        Saint Nicholas 
        
        is said to look after. 
         
        
         
        The most
        famous tale, though, recounts the story of a once wealthy businessman,
        who, having lost his fortune, decided to sell his three daughters into
        prostitution 
        to raise some money. Hearing of this, Saint Nicholas went
        to the man's house at night and threw three bags of coins into the man's
        window, one for each of the daughter's 
        
        dowries. The young women were
        thus able to find good husbands and avoid 
        
        
        the degrading lifestyle to
        which they seemed destined.
         
        
         
        
        
        Cementing
        the connection to the modern day Santa Claus, some versions of this
        story have Saint Nicholas arriving with the third daughter's gift bag
        but, finding the window shut, was forced to drop her coins down the
        chimney and into 
        
        a stocking hanging on the mantle to dry. This not only
        seems 
        
        physically unlikely, but so absurdly similar to today's popular
        Christmas traditions that it sounds almost certainly false.
         
        
         
        
        The
        legend of Santa Claus grows with time. Whether your own belief is that
        he is real or that he remains a growing figure of modern mythology,
        there is no doubt that Santa Claus impacts society 
        
        
        with each passing
        season. His name is associated with both good and evil. As are so many
        honored names of legend. 
          
         
        Source:
        My Merry Christmas Website - Author: Brian
        Stewart
              
        
                 
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