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when did santa claus start

Santa Claus did not start at a single exact moment; the idea grew over many centuries from older figures, especially Saint Nicholas, and slowly turned into the modern “Santa” in the 1800s.

Quick Scoop

  • The earliest roots of Santa go back to Saint Nicholas of Myra, a Christian bishop famous for secret gift-giving, who lived around the 3rd–4th century (born c. 280–300s AD in what is now Turkey).
  • By the Middle Ages, children in parts of Europe were already getting small gifts on St. Nicholas’ feast day, December 6, so the “mystery gift-bringer” idea was well established long before modern Christmas.
  • The name “Santa Claus” grew from the Dutch “Sinterklaas,” brought by Dutch settlers to America in the 1600s, where English speakers reshaped it into “Santa Claus” by the late 1700s.
  • The classic modern Santa image—jolly, bearded, red suit, sleigh and reindeer—coalesced in the 1800s, especially through the 1823 poem “A Visit from St. Nicholas” (often called “The Night Before Christmas”), which gave him the sleigh and eight flying reindeer.
  • 19th‑century American writers, illustrators, and later advertisers then spread and standardized this version of Santa across popular culture, turning him into a central Christmas figure in the West.

So, when did Santa “start”?

If the question is “when did Santa Claus start” as a character people would recognize today:

  • As a historical person , the root is Saint Nicholas in the 3rd–4th century.
  • As the name “Santa Claus” , the term appears in English in the late 1700s in America.
  • As the modern, fully formed, red‑suited, sleigh‑riding Santa , that really takes shape in the 1800s, especially after 1823.

So Santa Claus did not begin on a single date; he slowly evolved from saint, to folklore figure, to the modern Christmas icon people talk about in today’s news, forums, and trending discussions.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.