Father Christmas

Father Christmas
   The earliest evidence for a personified 'Christmas' is a carol attributed to Richard Smart, Rector of Plymtree (Devon) from 1435 to 1477 (Dearmer and Williams, Oxford Book of Carols (1928), no. 21, 41-3); it is a sung dialogue between someone representing 'Sir Christmas' and a group who welcome him, in a way suggestive of a *visiting custom:
   Nowell, Nowell, Nowell, Nowell! 'Who is there that singeth so?' 'I am here, Sir Christemas.' 'Welcome, my lord Sir Christemas, Welcome to us all, both more and less, Come near, Nowell!'
   Sir Christmas then gives news of Christ's birth, and urges his hearers to drink:
   'Buvez bien par toute la compagnie, Make good cheer and be right merry.'
   There were *Yule Ridings in York (banned in 1572 for unruliness), where a man impersonating Yule carried cakes and meat through the street. In Tudor and Stuart times, 'Lords of Misrule' called 'Captain Christmas', 'The Christmas Lord', or 'Prince Christmas' organized and presided over the season's feasting and entertainments in aristocratic houses, colleges, and Inns of Court. A personified 'Christmas' appears in Ben Jonson's court entertainment Christmas his Masque (1616), together with his sons: Misrule, Carol, Mince Pie, Gambol, Post-and-Pan, New Year's Gift, Mumming, Wassail, and Baby Cake. He protests against an attempt to exclude him:
   Why, gentlemen, do you know what you do? Ha! Would you have kept me out? Christmas, Old Christmas, Christmas of London, and Captain Christmas? . . . Why, I am no dangerous person . . . I am Old Gregory Christmas still, and though I am come from Pope's Head Alley, as good a Protestant as any in my parish.
   The need to defend seasonal revelry against Puritan accusations of Popery became more urgent some decades later. Pamphleteers continued the device of personifying Christmas, as in The Examination and Tryall of Old Father Christmas (1658) and An Hue and Cry after Christmas (1645). Echoing this tradition, Father Christmas acts as presenter in many versions of the *mumming play, with such opening lines as:
   In comes I, old Father Christmas, Be I welcome or be I not? I hope old Father Christmas Will never be forgot.
   The Victorian revival of Christmas involved Father Christmas too, as the emblem of 'good cheer', but at first his physical appearance was variable. He had always been imagined as old and bearded (in a masque by Thomas Nabbes (1638) he is 'an old reverend gentleman in furred gown and cap'), but pictures in the Illustrated London News in the 1840s show him variously as a reveller in Elizabethan costume grasping a tankard, a wild, holly-crowned giant pouring wine, or a lean figure striding along carrrying a wassail bowl and a log. One famous image was John Leech's illustration for Dickens's Christmas Carol (1843), where the gigantic Ghost of Christmas Present, sitting among piled-up food and drink, wears exactly the kind of fur-trimmed loose gown of the modern Father Christmas - except that it is green, matching his holly wreath.
   Towards the end of the 1870s, he developed a new role as present-bringer for children, in imitation either of European *St Nicholas customs, or of the American *Santa Claus, or both. By 1883, a French visitor to England mentions, as a matter of common knowledge, that he comes down chimneys and puts toys and sweets in stockings. In view of the German influence on the British Christmas, it may be significant that in Southern Germany the saint was accompanied by a gnome-like servant, usually dressed in a red, brown, or green hooded garment, carrying a small fir tree and a bag of toys. Father Christmas's costume became more standardized: it was almost always predominantly red, though Victorian Christmas cards do occasionally show him in blue, green, or brown; in outdoor scenes he often wore a heavy, hooded knee-length coat and fur boots; he carried holly, but the holly crown became rarer.
   Nowadays Father Christmas is almost always associated with children's presents rather than adult feasting. His authentic dress is a loose, hooded red gown edged with white; however, he now often wears a red belted jacket and tasselled floppy cap imitated from Santa Claus, and has acquired Santa's reindeer sledge and nocturnal habits.
   See also *Santa Claus.

A Dictionary of English folklore. . 2014.

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Look at other dictionaries:

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  • Father Christmas — N PROPER Father Christmas is the name given to an imaginary old man with a long white beard and a red coat. Traditionally, young children in many countries are told that he brings their Christmas presents. [BRIT] Syn: Santa Claus (in AM, use… …   English dictionary

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