Houston Chronicle Sunday

Santa is dead, or so say the archaeolog­ists

- By Cleve R. Wootson Jr.

First the good news: Whoever told you that Santa Claus was an impostor with a fake beard collecting a Christmast­ime check at the mall or a lie cooked up by your parents to trick you into five measly minutes of quiet was, at minimum, misinforme­d.

The bad news: Santa Claus is definitely dead.

Archaeolog­ists in southern Turkey say they have discovered the tomb of the original Santa Claus, also known as St. Nicholas, beneath his namesake church near the Mediterran­ean Sea.

Saint Nicholas of Myra (now Demre) was known for his anonymous gift-giving and generosity. People believed he’d put coins in the shoes of anyone who left them out for him on his feast day, Dec. 6.

As the story goes, he was a monk who gave away his hefty inheritanc­e and instead chose to help the poor and the sick.

He’s also a patron saint of sailors and was, of course, especially fond of children. (There’s one slightly bizarre story, more Halloween than Christmas, of St. Nicholas saving three children who had been “lured into the clutches of an evil butcher.”)

He was so popular, according to History. com, that he survived the Protestant Reformatio­n, “when the veneration of saints began to be discourage­d.”

It wasn’t until the 16th century that St. Nicholas began to take on his modern, candy-cane-hued form in images and imaginatio­ns. In Europe, he became known as Father Christmas.

He migrated to the Americas with the Dutch, who called him “Sinterklas­s” and gathered every year on the anniversar­y of his death. He started making appearance­s in stores in the 1840s, according to History.com.

The writer Clement Clarke cemented the American image of Santa Claus with his poem “A Visit from St. Nicholas,” which begins with the words “’Twas the night before Christmas.”

Now, Santa is all but entrenched in the Christmas lexicon, the rosycheeke­d face of Christmas who is the subject of movies, perennial parental lies and debates about childhood materialis­m.

There is an annual argument about whether it’s OK to portray Santa as only white. There was a Santa photograph­ed last year with a shovel near a fence on the U.S. border with Mexico, a dig at Trump’s immigratio­n policies. And there was a Santa who’s been called a liar for a story about telling a dying child that he was Santa’s “number one elf.”

Through it all, the remains of the real-life St. Nicholas were apparently the subject of a centurieso­ld case of mistaken identity and grave robbery.

According to the Telegraph, St. Nicholas died in A.D. 343 and was interred at St. Nicholas church in Demre, on the Mediterran­ean coast of Turkey.

In 1087, apparently, merchants dug up his bones and smuggled them to the Italian city of Bari, the Telegraph reported. It’s still a holy site, visited by Christians paying homage to St. Nicholas.

But archaeolog­ists say pilgrims to the Basilica di San Nicola are praying to the wrong guy. The bones belong to another local priest, not one of the most famous saints, the Telegraph reported.

Archaeolog­ists conducting recent surveys at the church in Demre found gaps beneath it. The shrine, they say, is underneath the church and untouched.

“We believe this shrine has not been damaged at all, but it is quite difficult to get to it as there are mosaics on the floor,” Cemil Karabayram, the head of Antalya’s Monument Authority, told the Turkish Hurriyet Daily News.

Karabayram told the newspaper that he’s confident that archaeolog­ists can reach the tomb.

At that point, he believes, nearly 1,700 years after St. Nicholas died, he’ll give another gift to the people of Demre: Tourism dollars.

 ?? Eric S. Swist ?? Known for his generosity, Saint Nicholas of Myra died in A.D. 343. It wasn’t until the 16th century that he began to take on his modern candy-cane-hued form.
Eric S. Swist Known for his generosity, Saint Nicholas of Myra died in A.D. 343. It wasn’t until the 16th century that he began to take on his modern candy-cane-hued form.

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