
I did not say that I don't believe in him can I still have presents please.
...it seems quite possible that the traditional image of Father Christmas, described in Livingston's poem and universalised by the Coca Cola Company during the 1930s, has its real origins in shamanistic rituals involving the red and white fly agaric toadstool. From climbing into chimneys and gift giving, to dressing in red and white and flying through the air with reindeers, travellers and storytellers have fused these ancient customs with other pagan traditions and imagery. As is the wont of Christianity, these pagan customs have pragmatically been adapted and integrated into our Christmas traditions.
Yeah, but the myth does. The myth says that Coke took him out of his (original) blue (?) clothes and garbed him in red as part of their advertising campaign, and everyone started using him in red, when this isn't the case. He was in red before Coke got a hold of him.hedgewizard wrote:The link doesn't say Coke invented him - have a read!PurpleDragon wrote:Interestingly, if you go to Snopes, you will find that the Coca-Cola/Father Christmas in red link is actually an urban myth.