How Charles Dickens invented Christmas

Blackleaf

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A loving family gathered around the festive table with a succulent turkey at its centre accompanied by flaming puddings, crackling firesides and an obligatory blanket of glistening snow outside.

For many of us – in the imagination if not perhaps in the drizzlier reality of frayed tempers, broken fairy lights and overcooked sprouts – Christmas is a gloriously Dickensian affair...


How Charles Dickens invented Christmas

A LOVING family gathered around the festive table with a succulent turkey at its centre accompanied by flaming puddings, crackling firesides and an obligatory blanket of glistening snow outside.


By Giulia Rhodes
Daily Express
Tue, Dec 5, 2017


Christmas is a gloriously Dickensian affair

For many of us – in the imagination if not perhaps in the drizzlier reality of frayed tempers, broken fairy lights and overcooked sprouts – Christmas is a gloriously Dickensian affair.

No less than 174 years after the ink dried on A Christmas Carol, Dickens’ self-styled “little Christmas book”, the tale of Ebenezer Scrooge’s transformation from misanthropic, curmudgeonly miser – “Bah! Humbug” – to joyful, generous soul remains an endlessly adapted seasonal favourite.

This year sees the fascinating story of its creation (with some artistic licence) hit the big screen in The Man Who Invented Christmas, with Downton Abbey’s Dan Stevens playing the author and Christopher Plummer as Scrooge.

So how did Dickens come to write A Christmas Carol? And in so doing, did he really create Christmas as we know, or would like to know it?

“His influence on the way we celebrate is significant and enduring,” says Frankie Kubicki, curator of a new exhibition at London’s Charles Dickens Museum.

“Dickens really passed on his personal zeal for celebrating the festival, enjoying a special meal, getting together with family.”

The impact of the book was obvious from the start. Published on December 19, 1843, the initial print run of 6,000 had sold out by Christmas Eve.

By February of the following year there were no fewer than eight adaptations on the stage.


The Man Who Invented Christmas

“It was an immediate, huge success,” says Kubicki. The rapturous response to the book came from public and literary circles alike, with author William Makepeace Thackeray considering it to have caused “a wonderful outpouring of Christmas good feeling”.

It was a reception that might not have completely surprised Dickens who considered the story his finest yet but it was unanticipated by his publishers, who had failed to spot the public appetite for festivity.

“Things were tricky with the publisher,” explains Kubicki.

“Dickens was already a major success but his recent books had not done as well. They were starting to question his advances.”

With a fifth child on the way, his impecunious parents on his growing list of dependants and a love of entertaining and company, Dickens was under financial pressure to pen a hit.

“He needed to make some money and he was also terribly anxious about his own reputation.” In the event he wrote the 29,000 words of A Christmas Carol in just six frenzied weeks, aware it must be on sale in time for Christmas. Making money, though a necessity, was neither the sole nor primary purpose of the book.

Its message of redemption, compassion and charity, which delighted his contemporaries and continues to touch his modern readers, was extremely important. Earlier in 1843 Dickens had been horrified by the findings of a Royal Commission on childhood labour.

Oliver Twist, first published in 1837, shows this to be a long-standing concern – he himself had been a child worker.


Charles Dickens' 'A Christmas Carol'

An early October visit to the mills and factories of Manchester seems to have fuelled his outrage. “He firmly believed you see the moral worth of society in how it treats its children,” says Kubicki.

The original plan to write a campaigning pamphlet changed into the fictional A Christmas Carol at this time.

Its impact on the causes which so impassioned Dickens may be harder to measure due to the chosen medium but the book seems to have been very powerful.

Lucinda Hawksley, Dickens’s great-great-great-granddaughter and the author of Dickens And Christmas, describes A Christmas Carol as her ancestor’s “protest song”.

“It was a vocation, a book he felt compelled to write,” she says, acknowledging that while the financial pressure on Dickens was “very significant” his most pressing motivation was to tell his story and make his point.

“It is a furious protest about the inequality of wealth distribution in Britain and particularly its consequences in terms of child poverty.”

He had written about Christmas before – most mouth-wateringly in the 1835 sketch A Christmas Dinner – and did again, but his subsequent takes on the season were less long-lived.

Yet while Dickens had a message he also loved to celebrate and this obvious love of the season is perhaps the reason the book has become so emblematic of Christmas.


Charles Dickens Museum, 48 Doughty Street, Holborn, London Borough of Camden

“He enjoyed spending time with his extended family, writing plays and coaching his children to act in them for large numbers of invited friends,” says Hawksley.

“Christmas in the Dickens household lasted from Christmas Eve through to Twelfth Night and he made the most of it with parties, music and dancing. He encapsulated that desire to celebrate with family and friends at precisely the right moment.”


1843 saw not only the publication of A Christmas Carol but also the creation of the world's first Christmas card

Kubicki agrees that Dickens’s timing was perfect.

“He popularised Christmas, riding a wave of feeling that the country had lost something. There was nostalgia for what people thought Christmas ought to be,” she says.

The festival existed in the calendar long before Dickens so gorgeously depicted it but many at the time felt its significance, meaning and joy had been lost. Rapid industrialisation and migration into the growing cities had left many further from family, the rural traditions of Christmas dwindling and working hours long.

Yet at the same time cheaper printing presses allowed the dissemination of ideas and images of Christmas.

The year 1843 saw not only the publication of A Christmas Carol but also the first Christmas cards – taking advantage of the new postage stamps (also the world's first) – their message reflected in Scrooge’s happy declaration of “A merry Christmas to everybody! A happy New Year to all the world!”

“There was a desire out there to make it special,” says Kubicki.


Dickens often received turkeys as gifts from his lawyer, publisher and benefactors

“Queen Victoria and Prince Albert’s decorated Christmas tree – a Germanic tradition – was soon pictured in the Illustrated London News.”

Turkey too was a growing trend – imported from the New World – popularised by Dickens.

He often received them as gifts from his lawyer, publisher and benefactors. After reading of the plump bird Scrooge sends to the poor Cratchits in recompense for their meagre Christmas fare, the historian Thomas Carlyle is said to have immediately dispatched his wife in search of their first festive turkey.

More than 170 years later it continues to top our Christmas shopping lists. But it is the message as well as the traditions which we still enjoy, believes Hawksley, who re-reads the book each year.

“The story is timeless. And sadly it has never been irrelevant.”



● The Man Who Invented Christmas is in cinemas now.

● To order Dickens And Christmas by Lucinda Hawksley, published by Pen and Sword History at £19.99, call the Express Bookshop with your card details on 01872 562310.

Or send a cheque or PO made payable to The Express Bookshop to: Dickens Xmas Offer, PO Box 200, Falmouth, TR11 4WJ or visit expressbookshop.co.uk UK delivery is free.

● Ghost Of An Idea: Unwrapping A Christmas Carol is at London’s Charles Dickens Museum. For more information visit dickensmuseum.com


https://www.express.co.uk/life-style/life/887128/charles-dickens-invented-christmas
 
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Blackleaf

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Invented Christmas? More like stole it from E. Europe.

The British gave the world Christmas turkeys, Christmas cards, Christmas mulled wine, Christmas day gift-giving and, thanks to Victoria and Albert, popularised the idea of taking a tree into your home and decorating it with coloured baubles. Even Father Christmas (Santa Claus, as you call him) dates back to 17th Century England.

The modern Christmas, as we know it today, was invented by the British, with Dickens playing a part in that Britannic festive popularisation.
 

petros

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The Man Behind the Story of Father Christmas/Santa Claus

St. Nicholas was a Bishop who lived in the fourth century in a place called Myra in Asia Minor (now called Turkey). He was a very rich man because his parents died when he was young and left him a lot of money. He was also a very kind man and had a reputation for helping the poor and giving secret gifts to people who needed it. There are several legends about St. Nicholas, although we don't know if any of them are true!

The most famous story about St. Nicholas tells how the custom of hanging up stockings to get presents in first started! It goes like this:

There was a poor man who had three daughters. He was so poor, he did not have enough money for a dowry, so his daughters couldn't get married. (A dowry is a sum of money paid to the bridegroom by the brides parents on the wedding day. This still happens in some countries, even today.) One night, Nicholas secretly dropped a bag of gold down the chimney and into the house (This meant that the oldest daughter was then able to be married.). The bag fell into a stocking that had been hung by the fire to dry! This was repeated later with the second daughter. Finally, determined to discover the person who had given him the money, the father secretly hid by the fire every evening until he caught Nicholas dropping in a bag of gold. Nicholas begged the man to not tell anyone what he had done, because he did not want to bring attention to himself. But soon the news got out and when anyone received a secret gift, it was thought that maybe it was from Nicholas.

Because of his kindness Nicholas was made a Saint. St. Nicholas is not only the saint of children but also of sailors! One story tells of him helping some sailors that were caught in a dreadful storm off the coast of Turkey. The storm was raging around them and all the men were terrified that their ship would sink beneath the giant waves. They prayed to St. Nicholas to help them. Suddenly, he was standing on the deck before them. He ordered the sea to be calm, the storm died away, and they were able to sail their ship safely to port.

St. Nicholas was exiled from Myra and later put in prison during the persecution by the Emperor Diocletian. No one is really knows when he died, but it was on 6th December in either 345 or 352. In 1087, his bones were stolen from Turkey by some Italian merchant sailors. The bones are now kept in the Church named after him in the Italian port of Bari. On St. Nicholas feast day (6th December), the sailors of Bari still carry his statue from the Cathedral out to sea, so that he can bless the waters and so give them safe voyages throughout the year.

in 1066, before he set sail to England, William the Conqueror prayed to St. Nicholas asking that his conquest would go well.

You can find out lots about about St Nicholas at the St. Nicholas Center.

In the 16th Century in northern Europe, after the reformation, the stories and traditions about St. Nicholas became unpopular.

But someone had to deliver presents to children at Christmas, so in the UK, particularly in England, he became 'Father Christmas' or 'Old Man Christmas', an old character from stories plays during the middle ages in the UK and parts of northern Europe. In France, he was then known as 'Père Nöel'.

In some countries including parts of Austria and Germany, present giver became the 'Christkind' a golden-haired baby, with wings, who symbolizes the new born baby Jesus.

In the early USA his name was 'Kris Kringle' (from the Christkind). Later, Dutch settlers in the USA took the old stories of St. Nicholas with them and Kris Kringle and St Nicholas became 'Sinterklaas' or as we now say 'Santa Claus'!

Many countries, especially ones in Europe, celebrate St. Nicholas' Day on 6th December. In Holland and some other European Countries, children leave clogs or shoes out on the 5th December (St. Nicholas Eve) to be filled with presents. They also believe that if they leave some hay and carrots in their shoes for Sinterklaas's horse, they will be left some sweets.

St. Nicholas became popular again in the Victorian era when writers, poets and artists rediscovered the old stories.

In 1823 the famous poem 'A Visit from St. Nicholas' or 'T'was the Night before Christmas', was published. Dr Clement Clarke Moore later claimed that he had written it for his children. (Some scholars now believe that it was actually written by Henry Livingston, Jr., who was a distant relative of Dr Moore's wife.) The poem describes St. Nicholas with eight reindeer and gives them their names. They became really well known in the song 'Rudolph the Red nosed Reindeer', written in 1949. Do you know all eight names? Click on Rudolph's nose to find out!

Click my nose to find out more about my friends!


Cartoon drawing of Santa Claus
Did you know that Rudolph might actually be a girl!? Only female reindeer keep their antlers throughout winter. By Christmas time most males have discarded their antlers and are saving their energy ready to grow a new pair in the spring.

The UK Father Christmas and the American Santa Claus became more and more alike over the years and are now one and the same.

Some people say that Santa lives at the North Pole. In Finland, they say that he lives in the north part of their country called Lapland.

But everyone agrees that he travels through the sky on a sledge that is pulled by reindeer, that he comes into houses down the chimney at night and places presents for the children in socks or bags by their beds, in front of the family Christmas tree, or by the fire place.

A fireplace with a hanging stockings


Most children receive their presents on Christmas Eve night or early Christmas morning, but in some countries they get their presents on St. Nicholas' Eve, December 5th.

St. Nicholas putting the bag of gold into a stocking is probably where the custom of having a tangerine or satsuma at the bottom of your Christmas stocking came from. If people couldn't afford gold, some golden fruit was a good replacement - and until the last 50 years these were quite unusual fruits and so still special!

The biggest Christmas stocking was 51m 35cm (168ft 5.65in) long and 21m 63cm (70ft 11.57in) wide (from the heel to the toe). It was made the volunteer emergency services organisation Pubblica Assistenza Carrara e Sezioni (Italy) in Carrara, Tuscany, Italy, on 5th January 2011. Just think how many presents you could fit in that!

Santa Claus and Coca-Cola

Santa by Thomas Nast in 1863
St. Nicholas in Harper's Weekly: January 1863
There's a Christmas Urban Legend that says that Santa's red suit was designed by Coca-Cola and that they might even 'own' Santa!

This is definitely NOT TRUE!

Long before coke had been invented, St Nicholas had worn his Bishop's red robes. During Victorian times and before that, he wore a range of colors (red, green, blue and brown fur) but red was always his favorite!

In January 1863, the magazine Harper's Weekly published the first illustration of St Nicholas/St Nick by Thomas Nast. In this he was wearing a 'Stars and Stripes' outfit! Over the next 20 years Thomas Nast continued to draw Santa every Christmas and his works were very popular indeed (he must have been very good friends with Santa to get such good access!).

This is when Santa really started to develop his big tummy and the style of red and white outfit he wears today. Nast designed Santa's look on some historical information about Santa and the poem 'A Visit from St. Nicholas'.

Santa by Thomas Nast in 1881
St. Nicholas in Harper's Weekly: January 1881
On January 1st 1881, Harper's Weekly published Nast's most famous image of Santa, complete with a big red belly, an arm full of toys and smoking a pipe!

This image of Santa became very popular, with more artists drawing Santa in his red and white costume from 1900 to 1930.

Santa was first used in Coke adverts in the 1920s, with Santa looking like the drawings of Thomas Nast. In 1931, the classic 'Coke Santa' was drawn by artist Haddon Sundblom. He took the idea of Nast's Santa but made him even more larger than life and jolly, replaced the pipe with a glass of Coke and created the famous Coke holding Santa!

Coca-Cola also agree that the red suit was made popular by Thomas Nast not them!

Coke has continued to use Santa in their adverts since the 1930s. In 1995 they also introduced the 'Coca-Cola Christmas truck' in the 'Holidays are coming' TV adverts. The red truck, covered with lights and with the classic 'Coke Santa' on its sides is now a famous part of recent Christmas history.

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Blackleaf

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The Man Behind the Story of Father Christmas/Santa Claus

Sorry. That's a myth. He was created in England from the Norse god Odin, who was much more similar to father Christmas than some Middle Eastern fellow.