Advent Calendar for Grown-ups

by Paul Bommer

DECEMBER 10 Old Father Christmas

Old Father Christmas
Illustration by Paul Bommer
Used by permission

Please welcome Old Father Christmas. He was, in times past, also known as Grandfather Christmas, Old Christmas or even simply Old Winter.

Nowadays, with the global domination of American commercial culture, this fellow, Britain's Father Christmas, and Santa Claus, an import from the US, have become virtually synonymous and almost indistinguishable. But let me tell you, Gentle Readers, that once upon a time they were two very different creatures.

As you will all know Santa Claus is a Anglicised corruption of 'Sinterklaas', the Dutch for St Nicholas, bought over to the States by immigrants from the Low Countries in the 17th Century (when New York was called Nieuw (or New) Amsterdam). There he fused with the British Father Christmas and became Santa, losing his Bishop's robes on the way. The Victorian poem 'A Visit From St Nick' by Clement Clarke Moore, did much then to embellish and describe the figure. In 1931 the Coca Cola company gave him their red and white livery, which he wears to this day.

Old Father Christmas, on the other hand, is a much more ancient manifestation. Pagan in origin and an embodiment of arcane Mid-Winter revelries, he is made up, in part, of the Norse god Odin and the Roman gods Jupiter (Jove) and Saturn (whose great feast, Saturnalia, was at this time). He is no gift-bearer (Christmas presents almost never featured in Yule-tide celebrations before the mid- to late-Victorian period) but was instead the very personification of festive Cheer, Feasting, Warmth and Merriment, so very welcome in the bitter, bleak, icy Winter months.

He has a longer beard that his American counterpart, and wears long gowns and a hooded robe, often fur-trimmed (and almost never red!)—as opposed to Santa's soft-drink branding tie-in tunic and pant suit. He is big, and he is Merrie—he is, in essence, the Ghost of Christmas Present, as portrayed by Dicken's in A Christmas Carol.

As for transport, he has many ways of getting about. Sometimes he would arrive on a white horse, bells a-jingling, sometimes a white donkey, or, as here, a white goat! In some parts of the country the tradition was that he came out from the North a-stride a great white goose!

During the Commonwealth in the 1650s the Puritans banned the celebration of Christmas, deeming it an orgy of pagan idolatry (they were not, I suspect, far off). One of the earliest surviving images of Father Christmas is a subversive pamphlet published in 1653. Old Winter approaches a border or city wall, where a soldier on guard says, "Keep out, you come not here" to which the old man (here sporting long robes and a very fetching broad-brimmed felt or fur hat) counters, "O Sir I bring good cheere." Behind him stands a country peasant who says, "Old Christmas Welcome, do not fear."

Ladies, Gentlemen, I hope and trust that you will all make Old Christmas very welcome in your homes and hearts. The world would not suffer any from a little more Merriment and Good Cheer!


From Paul Bommer: Illustration, design & Print-making. Used by permission.

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