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{{Short description|4th-century Christian saint}} | |||
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{{About|the fourth-century Christian saint|the gift-bearing figure in modern folklore and popular culture partly based on the saint|Santa Claus|other uses|Saint Nicholas (disambiguation)}} | |||
! colspan="2" bgcolor="gold" style="font-size:120%"|'''''Saint Nicholas the Wonderworker''''' | |||
{{redirect-distinguish|Nicholas of Myra|Nicholas of Lyra}} | |||
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{{pp-vandalism|small=yes}} | |||
|colspan="2"|] and ], as he appears on a ] ].]] | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2021}} | |||
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{{Infobox saint | |||
|align="center" colspan="2" bgcolor="gold"|'''Bishop of Myrra, Defender of Orthodoxy, Wonderworker, Holy Hierarch''' | |||
|honorific_prefix = ] | |||
|- | |||
|name=Nicholas of Myra | |||
|'''Born''' | |||
|birth_date= Traditionally 15 March 270<ref>{{cite book |title=Book of Martyrs |publisher=Catholic Book Publishing |year=1948}}</ref> | |||
|], ] | |||
|death_date= Traditionally {{Death date and age|343|12|6|270|3|15|df=y}} | |||
|- | |||
|feast_day= {{ubl|5/6 December in the Gregorian calendar; 19 December in the Julian calendar (main feast day – ])|{{OldStyleDate|22 May||9 May|}} (])<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.stnicholascenter.org/Brix?pageID=494 |publisher=Saint Nicholas Center |title=Serbia |access-date=4 April 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101208061010/http://www.stnicholascenter.org/Brix?pageID=494 |archive-date=8 December 2010 |url-status=dead }}</ref>}} | |||
|'''Died''' | |||
|venerated_in= All ]s which ] | |||
|6 December ], ] | |||
|image=Jaroslav Čermák (1831 - 1878) - Sv. Mikuláš (cropped).jpg | |||
|- | |||
|imagesize= | |||
|'''Venerated in''' | |||
|caption=St. Nicholas by ] | |||
|"All ]" | |||
|birth_place=], ], Roman Empire | |||
|- | |||
|death_place= ], ], Roman Empire | |||
|'''Major ]''' | |||
|titles={{cslist|Defender of the Faith|Wonderworker|Holy Hierarch|Bishop of Myra}} | |||
|St. Nicholas’s relics are held in a crypt in ], ], but his great work was done in Myra. | |||
|beatified_date= | |||
|- | |||
|beatified_place= | |||
|'''Feast''' | |||
|beatified_by= | |||
|December 6 | |||
|canonized_date= | |||
|- | |||
|canonized_place= | |||
|'''Attributes''' | |||
|canonized_by=Pre-Congregation | |||
|St Nicholas is usually portrayed as a ], in whatever manner is appropriate for a Bishop in that particular Church’s practices. | |||
|attributes=] as a bishop. In Eastern Christianity, wearing an ] and holding a ]. | |||
|- | |||
|patronage= {{cslist|Children|]|travelers|sailors|fishermen|merchants|]s|broadcasters|the falsely accused|repentant thieves|brewers|pharmacists|]|]s|unmarried people|]|Aberdeen|]|Albania||Russia|Greece|]|Liverpool|]|]|]|Moscow|]|]|] and ]|students in various cities and countries around Europe|Russian Navy}} | |||
|''']''' | |||
|major_shrine=], Bari, Italy | |||
|In the West, St. Nicholas is a patron of sailors and thieves (because his relics were stolen by sailors from his tomb and transported to ], ]. In the East, he is more remembered for his defense against the ] heresy. | |||
|suppressed_date= | |||
|- | |||
|issues= | |||
|colspan="2"|''An example of the Faith and a life of humility,''<br> | |||
}} | |||
''as a teacher of abstinence you did inspire and lead your flock,''<br> | |||
''and through the truthfulness of your deeds''<br> | |||
''were exalted by greatness;''<br> | |||
''through your humility uplifting all''<br> | |||
''and by poverty gaining wealth.''<br> | |||
''Father and Hierarch St. Nicholas,''<br> | |||
''intercede with Christ our God''<br> | |||
''that our souls may be saved.''<br> | |||
<br> | |||
<small>Greek Orthodox ''Apolytikion''</small> | |||
|} | |||
'''Saint Nicholas''', also known as ''Nikolaus'' in ] and ''Sinterklaas'' (a contracted form of ''Sint Nicolaas'') in the ] and ], is the common name for the historical Saint Nicholas of Myra, who lived in ] ] ], (now in modern ]) and had a reputation for secret ]-giving. This is as much as is generally known about him in the West. Among ], he is remembered with more reverence and less frivolity. | |||
'''Saint Nicholas of Myra'''{{efn|{{langx|el|Ἅγιος Νικόλαος}}, {{transliteration|el|''Hágios Nikólaos''}}; {{langx|la|Sanctus Nicolaus}}}} (traditionally 15 March 270 – 6 December 343),<ref name=center>{{cite web|title=Who is St. Nicholas?|url=http://www.stnicholascenter.org/Brix?pageID=38|publisher=St. Nicholas Center|access-date=7 December 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101010104847/http://www.stnicholascenter.org/Brix?pageID=38|archive-date=10 October 2010|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=St. Nicholas|url=http://www.roca.org/OA/5/5m.htm|publisher=Orthodox America|access-date=7 December 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110907060906/http://www.roca.org/OA/5/5m.htm|archive-date=7 September 2011|url-status=dead}}</ref>{{efn|The date of his birth and the year of his death are disputed,{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=2}} but 6 December has long been established as the traditional date of his death.{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=2}} Jeremy Seal remarks, "As vampires shun daylight, so saints are distinguished from ordinary mortals by the anniversaries they keep. The date of their death rather than their birth is commemorated."{{sfn|Seal|2005|pages=2–3}}}} also known as '''Nicholas of Bari''', was an ] bishop of ] from the maritime city of ] in ] (in modern-day ], ]) during the time of the ].<ref>{{cite book |last1= Lloyd |first1= John |last2 = Mitchinson |first2= John|date=December 2008|title= The book of general ignorance|publisher= Faber and Faber|page= 318|isbn= 978-0-571-24692-2 |edition= Noticeably stouter }}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last= Cunningham| first= Lawrence |title= A brief history of saints|publisher=Wiley-Blackwell|year=2005 |page=33|isbn=978-1-4051-1402-8|quote=The fourth-century Saint Nikolaos of Myra, Greek Anatolia (in present-day Turkey) spread to Europe through the port city of Bari in southern Italy... Devotion to the saint in the Low countries became blended with Nordic folktales, transforming this early ] Bishop into that Christmas icon, Santa Claus.}}</ref> Because of the many miracles attributed to his ], he is also known as '''Nicholas the Wonderworker'''.{{efn|{{lang|el|Νικόλαος ὁ Θαυματουργός}}, {{transliteration|el|''Nikólaos ho Thaumaturgós''}}}} Saint Nicholas is the ] of sailors, merchants, archers, repentant thieves, children, brewers, pawnbrokers, toymakers, unmarried people, and students in various cities and countries around Europe. His reputation evolved among the pious, as was common for ], and his legendary habit of secret gift-giving gave rise to the folklore of ''']''' ("'''Saint Nick'''") through ]. | |||
==Nicholas the clergyman== | |||
Little is known about the historical Saint Nicholas. The earliest accounts of his life were written centuries after his death and probably contain legendary elaborations. He is said to have been born in the Anatolian seaport of ], ], in Asia Minor to wealthy Christian parents.<ref name=" Collins, Ace 2009 121 ">{{cite book |author=Collins, Ace |title=Stories Behind Men of Faith |publisher=Zondervan |year=2009 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HVPYqrdGhGEC&q=Nicholas+born+Greek+city+of+Patara+270+AD |page=121 |isbn=9780310564560 |quote=Nicholas was born in the Greek city of Patara around 270 AD. The son of a businessman named Theophanes and his wife, Nonna, the child's earliest years were spent in Myra… As a port on the Mediterranean Sea, in the middle of the sea lanes that linked Egypt, Greece and Rome, Myra was a destination for traders, fishermen, and merchant sailors. Spawned by the spirit of both the city’s Greek heritage and the ruling Roman government, cultural endeavours such as art, drama, and music were mainstays of everyday life. |access-date=28 November 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150911140845/https://books.google.com/books?id=HVPYqrdGhGEC&q=Nicholas+born+Greek+city+of+Patara+270+AD#v=snippet&q=Nicholas%20born%20Greek%20city%20of%20Patara%20270%20AD&f=false |archive-date=11 September 2015 |url-status=live }}</ref> In one of the earliest attested and most famous incidents from his life, he is said to have rescued three girls from being ] by dropping a sack of gold coins through the window of their house each night for three nights so their father could pay a ] for each of them.<ref>{{Cite book |last=English |first=Adam C. |title=The Saint Who Would Be Santa Claus: The True Life and Trials of Nicholas of Myra |publisher=Baylor University Press |year=2012 |isbn=978-1-60258-636-9 |location=Waco, TX |pages=57–63}}</ref> Other early stories tell of him calming a storm at sea, saving three innocent soldiers from wrongful execution, and chopping down a tree possessed by a demon. In his youth, he is said to have made a pilgrimage to ] and ]. Shortly after his return, he became ]. He was later cast into prison during the ], but was released after the accession of ]. | |||
'''Nicholas of ]''' (also ''Nikolaus'') in ], ], (lived c. ] - ]/]) was a ] ] and is a ] ]. His feast day is ], presumably the date of his death. In the Netherlands ] is known as his feast: this is ''Sinterklaasavond'', or St. Nicholas' Eve. Among ], he is also known as the "Wonderworker". Several acts of kindness and miracles are attributed to him. Historical accounts often confuse him with the later ]. | |||
An early list makes him an attendee at the ] in 325, but he is never mentioned in any writings by people who were at the council. Late, unsubstantiated legends claim that he was temporarily defrocked and imprisoned during the council for slapping the heretic ]. Another famous late legend tells how he resurrected three children, who had been murdered and pickled in brine by a butcher planning to sell them as pork during a famine. | |||
He is said to have been born to relatively affluent ] parents in ], ], ], ] where he also received his early schooling. He came to ] to continue his studies. A paternal uncle of his introduced him to the local bishop. The latter is said to have seen potential to the youth and took Nicholas under his patronage. Nicholas received his ordination as a priest at an early age. When his parents died Nicholas still received his inheritance but is said to have given it away in charity. | |||
Fewer than 200 years after Nicholas's death, the ] was built in Myra under the orders of ] over the site of the church where he had served as bishop, and his remains were moved to a sarcophagus in that church. In 1087, while the ] of the region were subjugated by the newly arrived Muslim ], and soon after the beginning of the ], a group of merchants from the Italian city of ] removed the major bones of Nicholas's skeleton from his sarcophagus in the church without authorization and brought them to their hometown, where they are now enshrined in the ]. The remaining bone fragments from the sarcophagus were later removed by Venetian sailors and taken to ] during the ]. | |||
Nicholas' early activities as a priest are said to have occurred during the reign of co-ruling ] ] (reigned ] - ]) and ] (reigned ] - ]) from which comes the estimation of his age. Diocletian issued an edict in ] authorizing the systematic persecution of Christians across the Empire. Following the abdication of the two Emperors on ], ] the policies of their successors towards Christians were different. In the Western part of the Empire ] (reigned ] - ]) put an end to the systematic persecution upon receiving the throne. In the Eastern part ] (reigned ] - ]) continued the persecution until ] when he issued a general edict of toleration from his deathbed . The prosecution of ] - ] is considered to be the longest in the history of the Empire. Nicholas survived this period although his activities at the time are uncertain. | |||
== Biographical sources == | |||
Following Galerius' death his surviving co-ruler ] (reigned ] - ]) mostly tolerated Christians. As a result their community was allowed to further develop, and the various ] who acted as their leaders managed to concetrate religious, social and political influence as well as wealth in their hands. In many cases they acted as the heads of their respective cities. It is apparently in this period that Nicholas rose to become bishop of ]. Judging from tradition he was probably well-loved and respected in his area mostly as a result of his charitable activities. As with other bishops of the time, Nicholas' popularity would serve to ensure his position and influence during and after this period. | |||
Very little is known about Saint Nicholas's historical life.{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|pages=vii–x}}{{sfn|Seal|2005|pages=14–15}} Any writings Nicholas himself may have produced have been lost and he is not mentioned by any contemporary chroniclers.{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=14}} This is not surprising,{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|pages=vii–viii}} since Nicholas lived during ].{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|pages=vii–viii}} The earliest mentions of Saint Nicholas indicate that, by the sixth century, his following was already well-established.{{sfn|Blacker|Burgess|Ogden|2013|page=250}} Less than two hundred years after Saint Nicholas's probable death, the Eastern Roman Emperor ] (ruled 401–450) ordered the building of the ], which thereby preserves an early mention of his name.{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|page=ix}} The Byzantine historian ] also mentions that the Emperor ] (ruled 527–565) renovated churches in ] dedicated to Saint Nicholas and ],{{sfn|Blacker|Burgess|Ogden|2013|page=251}}{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|page=ix}} which may have originally been built as early as {{circa}} 490.{{sfn|Blacker|Burgess|Ogden|2013|page=251}} | |||
Nicholas's name also occurs as "Nicholas of Myra of Lycia" on the tenth line of a list of attendees at the Council of Nicaea included by Theodore Lector in the '']'', written sometime between 510 and 515.{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|page=ix}}{{sfn|Blacker|Burgess|Ogden|2013|page=250}} A single, offhand mention of Nicholas of Myra also occurs in the biography of another saint, Saint ], who apparently took the name "Nicholas" to honor him.{{sfn|Seal|2005|pages=14–15}}{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|page=x}} ''The Life of Saint Nicholas of Sion'', written around 250 years after Nicholas of Myra's death, briefly mentions Nicholas of Sion visiting Nicholas's tomb to pay homage to him.{{sfn|Seal|2005|pages=14–15}}{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|page=x}}{{sfn|Blacker|Burgess|Ogden|2013|page=250}} According to Jeremy Seal, the fact that Nicholas had a tomb that could be visited serves as the almost solitary definitive proof that he was a real historical figure.{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=15}}{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|page=x}} | |||
The destruction of several ] temples is also attributed to him, among them one temple of ] (also known as ]). Because the celebration of Diana's birth is on ], some authors have speculated that this date was deliberately chosen for Nicholas' feast day to overshadow or replace the pagan celebrations. | |||
In his treatise ''De statu animarum post mortem'' (written {{circa}} 583), the theologian ] cites Saint Nicholas of Myra's miracle of the three generals as evidence that souls may work independent from the body.{{sfn|Blacker|Burgess|Ogden|2013|page=251}} Eustratius credits a ] ''Life of Saint Nicholas'' as his source. Nearly all the sources Eustratius references date from the late fourth century to early fifth century, indicating the ''Life of Saint Nicholas'' to which he refers was probably written during this time period, shortly after Nicholas's death.{{sfn|Blacker|Burgess|Ogden|2013|page=251}}<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Cioffari |first=Gerardo |date=1987 |title=San Nicola nelle fonti letterarie dal V all'VIII secolo |journal=San Nicola: Splendori d'arte d'Oriente e d'Occidente S. Nicola nella critica storia |pages=44–45}}</ref> The earliest complete account of Nicholas's life that has survived to the present is a ''Life of Saint Nicholas'', written in the early ninth century by ] (814–842), nearly 500 years after Nicholas's probable death.{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|page=xi}} | |||
Nicholas is also known for coming to the defense of the falsely accused, often preventing them from being executed, and for his prayers on behalf of sailors and other travelers. The popular veneration of Nicholas as a saint seems to have started relatively early. ], Emperor of the ] (reigned ] - ]) is reported to have built a temple (i.e. a church building) in Nicholas's honor in ], the Roman capital of the time. | |||
Despite its extremely late date, Michael the Archimandrite's ''Life of Saint Nicholas'' is believed to heavily rely on older written sources and oral traditions.<ref>Introduction to {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180703051940/http://www.stnicholascenter.org/pages/michael-the-archimandrite/ |date=3 July 2018 }}</ref>{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Nicholas of Myra}} The identity and reliability of these sources, however, remains uncertain.{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Nicholas of Myra}} Catholic historian D. L. Cann and ] ] both consider Michael the Archimandrite's ''Life'' the only account of Saint Nicholas that is likely to contain any historical truth.{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|page=xi}} ], a Dutch historian of classical antiquity, notes that Michael the Archimandrite's ''Life'' does not contain a "]", which was unusual for saints' lives of the period when it was written. He therefore argues that it is possible Michael the Archimandrite may have been relying on a source written before conversion narratives became popular, which would be a positive indication of that source's reliability.{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Nicholas of Myra}} He notes that many of the stories recounted by Michael the Archimandrite closely resemble stories told about the first-century AD ] philosopher ] in the '']'', an eight-volume biography of him written in the early third century by the Greek writer ]. It was not unusual for Christian saints to adapt older stories of pagan cults. As Apollonius's hometown of ] was not far from Myra, Lendering contends that many popular stories about Apollonius may have become attached to Saint Nicholas.{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Nicholas of Myra}} | |||
=== Bishop Nicholas at the First Ecumenical Council === | |||
== Life and legends == | |||
In ] Licinius was defeated in a war against his Western co-ruler ] (reigned ] - ]). The end of the war found the Roman Empire unified under the rule of Constantine. In place of tolerance his policies towards Christians consisted of active support. Under his patronage the Christian church experienced an age of prosperity. But the relative peace of his reign brought to the forefront the internal conflict within contemporary Christianity. One of the apparent main reasons of this conflict was the failure to agree to a commonly accepted concept about ] in general and ] in particular. At this times the teachings of ] in ], ] were gaining popular support but also attracting great opposition. They would form the basis of ]. Emerging ] in both opposing factions only resulted in spreading tumult across the Empire. | |||
=== Family and background === | |||
Accounts of Saint Nicholas's life agree on the essence of his story, but modern historians disagree regarding how much of this story is actually rooted in historical fact.{{sfn|Blacker|Burgess|Ogden|2013|page=249}} Traditionally, Nicholas was born in the city of ] (]), a port on the ],<ref name=" Collins, Ace 2009 121 " /> in ] in the Roman Empire, to a wealthy family of ] Christians.{{sfn|Blacker|Burgess|Ogden|2013|page=249}}<ref>{{cite book |author= Domenico, Roy Palmer |title= The regions of Italy: a reference guide to history and culture |url= https://archive.org/details/regionsitalyrefe00dome |url-access= limited |publisher= Greenwood Publishing Group |year= 2002 |page= |isbn= 0-313-30733-4 |quote= Saint Nicholas (Bishop of Myra) replaced Sabino as the patron saint of the city… A Greek from what is now Turkey, he lived in the early fourth century.}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author= Burman, Edward |title= Emperor to emperor: Italy before the Renaissance |publisher= Constable |year= 1991 |page=126 |isbn= 0-09-469490-7 |quote= For although he is the patron saint of Russia, and the model for a northern invention such as Santa Claus, Nicholas of Myra was a Greek.}}</ref><ref name=" Ingram, W. Scott; Ingram, Asher 2004 24 ">{{cite book |author1=Ingram, W. Scott |author2=Ingram, Asher, Scott |author3=Robert |title= Greek Immigrants |publisher=Infobase Publishing |year= 2004 |page=24 |isbn=9780816056897 |quote=The original Santa Claus, Saint Nicholas, was a Greek born in Asia Minor (now modern Turkey) in the fourth century. He was very religious from an early age and devoted his life to Christianity.}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author= Lanzi, Gioia |title= Saints and their symbols: recognizing saints in art and in popular images |publisher= Liturgical Press |year= 2004 |page=111 |isbn= 0-8146-2970-9 |quote= Nicholas was born around 270 AD in Patara on the coast of what is now western Turkey. }}</ref><ref name=" Collins, Ace 2009 121 " /> According to some accounts, his parents were named Epiphanius ({{lang|el|Ἐπιφάνιος}}, {{transliteration|el|''Epiphánios''}}) and Johanna ({{lang|el|Ἰωάννα}}, {{transliteration|el|''Iōánna''}}),<ref>{{cite book |author= Lanzi, Gioia |title= Saints and their symbols: recognizing saints in art and in popular images |publisher= Liturgical Press |year= 2004 |page=111 |isbn= 0-8146-2970-9 |quote= Nicholas was born around 270 AD in Patara on the coast of what is now western Turkey; his parents were Epiphanius and Joanna. }}</ref> but, according to others, they were named Theophanes ({{lang|el|Θεοφάνης}}, {{transliteration|el|''Theophánēs''}}) and Nonna ({{lang|el|Νόννα}}, {{transliteration|el|''Nónna''}}).<ref name=" Collins, Ace 2009 121 " /> In some accounts, Nicholas's uncle was the bishop of the city of ], also in Lycia. Recognizing his nephew's calling, Nicholas's uncle ordained him as a priest.{{sfn|Ferguson|1976|page=136}} | |||
=== Generosity and travels === | |||
Deciding to address the problem as a matter of the state, Constantine called the ] which also was the first ] in ]. The number of attendants at the council is uncertain with ] reporting as few as 250 and ] as many as 318. In any case Nicholas is usually counted among them and was noted as an opponent of ]. A later writer claimed that Nicholas slapped Arius in the face for his ]. The council lasted from ] to ], ] and resulted in the declaration of the ] and the formal condemnation of Arianism. The books of Arius and his followers were condemned to be burned but the execution of this decision was left at the hands of each bishop for their respective territories. To what point this decision was followed remains uncertain. | |||
], Rome)]] | |||
After his parents died from an epidemic, Nicholas is said to have distributed their wealth to the poor.{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Nicholas of Myra}}{{sfn|Ferguson|1976|page=136}} In his most famous exploit,<ref>{{cite book |first=William J. |last=Bennett |title=The True Saint Nicholas: Why He Matters to Christmas|publisher=Howard Books |year=2009 |pages=14–17 |isbn=978-1-4165-6746-2 |author-link= William Bennett }}</ref> which is first attested in Michael the Archimandrite's ''Life of Saint Nicholas'', Nicholas heard of a devout man who had once been wealthy but had lost all of his money due to the "plotting and envy of ]."{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Nicholas of Myra}}<ref name="Michael10–11">Michael the Archimandrite, '' {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180703051940/http://www.stnicholascenter.org/pages/michael-the-archimandrite/ |date=3 July 2018 }}'' Chapters 10–11</ref> The man could not afford proper ] for his three daughters.<ref name="Michael10–11"/>{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Nicholas of Myra}}{{sfn|Ferguson|1976|page=136}}{{efn|Joe L. Wheeler and Jona Lendering both note that the legends of Saint Nicholas are filled with sets of three, which may be symbolic for Nicholas's vehement defense of the ].{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|page=38}}{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Nicholas of Myra}}}} This meant that they would remain unmarried and probably, in absence of any other possible employment, be forced to become prostitutes.{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Nicholas of Myra}}{{sfn|Ferguson|1976|page=136}}<ref name="Michael10–11"/> Hearing of the girls' plight, Nicholas decided to help them, but, being too modest to help the family in public (or to save them the humiliation of accepting charity), he went to the house under the cover of night and threw a ] filled with gold coins through the window opening into the house.{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Nicholas of Myra}}{{sfn|Ferguson|1976|page=136}} The father immediately arranged a marriage for his first daughter, and after her wedding, Nicholas threw a second bag of gold through the same window late at night.{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Nicholas of Myra}}{{sfn|Ferguson|1976|page=136}}<ref name="Michael12–18">Michael the Archimandrite, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180703051940/http://www.stnicholascenter.org/pages/michael-the-archimandrite/ |date=3 July 2018 }} (Chapters 12–18)</ref> | |||
According to Michael the Archimandrite's account, after the second daughter was married, the father stayed awake for at least two "nights" and caught Saint Nicholas in the same act of charity toward the third daughter.{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Nicholas of Myra}}{{sfn|Ferguson|1976|page=136}}<ref name="Michael16–18">Michael the Archimandrite, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180703051940/http://www.stnicholascenter.org/pages/michael-the-archimandrite/ |date=3 July 2018 }} (Chapters 16–18)</ref> The father fell on his knees, thanking him, and Nicholas ordered him not to tell anyone about the gifts.{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Nicholas of Myra}}{{sfn|Ferguson|1976|page=136}}<ref name="Michael16–18"/> The scene of Nicholas's secret gift-giving is one of the most popular scenes in Christian devotional art, appearing in icons and frescoes from across Europe. Although depictions vary depending on time and place,{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=1}} Nicholas is often shown wearing a ] while the daughters are typically shown in bed, dressed in their nightclothes. Many renderings contain a ] tree or a cross-shaped ].{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=1}} | |||
Following this apparent victory to his faction Nicholas returned to Myra. He is applauded by later Christian writers for keeping Myra free of Arianism. But the decisions of the council failed to stop the spread of Arianism. In fact the tides soon turned and in his later years Arianism managed to win favor with Constantine. In fact Constantine was baptized by ], an Arian bishop who had also attented the council, shortly before his death on ], ]. Constantine was succeeded by his three surviving sons: ] (reigned ] - ]), ] (reigned ] - ]) and ] (reigned ] - ]). Constantius originally received the Eastern part of the Empire but the death of his brothers left the entire Empire under his control. During his reign he strongly favored Arianism by seeking to place Arian bishops in most positions. There is no indication that Nicholas was affected by these policies and he remained in his position till his death. This lack of disturbance by the Arian Emperor has been seen as indicating the strong support Nicholas had gained among the people of his territory. According to this reasoning not even Constantius would risk a possible revolt by removing a popular bishop. | |||
The historicity of this incident is disputed.{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Nicholas of Myra}} Adam C. English argues for a historical kernel to the legend, noting the story's early attestation as well as the fact that no similar stories were told about any other Christian saints.{{sfn|English|Crumm|2012}} Jona Lendering, who also argues for the story's authenticity, notes that a similar story is told in Philostratus's ''Life of Apollonius of Tyana'', in which Apollonius gives money to an impoverished father but posits that Michael the Archimandrite's account is markedly different.{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Nicholas of Myra}} Philostratus does not mention the fate of the daughters and, in his story, Apollonius's generosity is purely motivated out of sympathy for the father; in Michael the Archimandrite's account, however, Saint Nicholas is instead expressly stated to be motivated by a desire to save the daughters from being sold into prostitution.{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Nicholas of Myra}} He argues that this desire to help women is most characteristic of fourth-century Christianity, due to the prominent role women played in the early Christian movement, rather than Greco-Roman paganism or the Christianity of Michael the Archimandrite's time in the ninth century, by which point the position of women had drastically declined.{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Nicholas of Myra}} | |||
=== Abduction of his relics === | |||
Nicholas is also said to have visited the ]. The ship he was on was nearly destroyed by a terrible storm but he rebuked the waves, causing the storm to subside. Thus, Nicholas became venerated as the patron saint of sailors and travelers.{{sfn|Ferguson|1976|page=136}} | |||
On ], ] ], Emperor of the ] (reigned ] - ]) faced Sultan ] of the ] (reigned ] - ]) in the ]. The battle ended in humiliating defeat and capture for Romanus. As a result the Empire temporarily lost control over most of ] to the invading ]. It would regain its control over ] during the reign of ], (reigned ] - ]). But early in his reign Myra was overtaken by the ]ic invaders. Taking advantage of the confusion sailors from ], ] seized the remains of the saint over the objections of the Orthodox ] then caring for them. Returning to Bari they brought the remains with them. The remains arrived on ], ]. Some observers have reported seeing ] exude from these relics. | |||
While in ], Nicholas is said to have lived in a crypt near ], where the ] is believed to have taken place. Over the crypt where Nicholas is believed to have lived now stands the "Church of Saint Nicholas" in ], a Christian town of which Nicholas is the ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Stories from Beit Jala |url=https://www.stnicholascenter.org/who-is-st-nicholas/stories-legends/modern-miracles/miracles-palestine/beit-jala-stories |access-date=2023-08-26 |website=St. Nicholas Center |language=en-us}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Church of Saint Nicholas – Beit Jala |url=https://visitpalestine.ps/where-to-go/listing/bethlehem/sites-attractions-bethlehem/christian-sites-bethlehem/st-nicholas-church-beit-jala/}}</ref> | |||
== Formal Veneration of the Saint == | |||
===Bishop of Myra=== | |||
Among the Greeks and Italians he is a favorite of ]s , ], ]s and ]. As such he has become over time the patron saint of several cities maintaining ]s. In centuries of Greek ], Nicholas was seen as "The Lord of the Sea", often described by modern Greek scholars as more or less a christianized version of ]. In modern ], he is still easily among the most recognizable saints and ] finds many cities celebrating their patron saint. | |||
]'' (1888) by ]]] | |||
After visiting the Holy Land, Nicholas returned to Myra. The bishop of Myra, who had succeeded Nicholas's uncle, had recently died{{sfn|Ferguson|1976|page=136}} and the priests in the city had decided that the first priest to enter the church that morning would be made bishop. Nicholas went to the church to pray{{sfn|Ferguson|1976|page=136}} and was therefore proclaimed the new bishop.{{sfn|Blacker|Burgess|Ogden|2013|page=249}}{{sfn|Ferguson|1976|page=136}}<ref>{{cite book |author= Faber, Paul |title=Sinterklaas overseas: the adventures of a globetrotting saint |publisher= KIT Publishers |year=2006 |page=7 |isbn=9789068324372 |quote=The historical figure that served as model for the Dutch Sinterklaas was born around 270 AD in the port of Patara in the Greek province of Lycia in Asia Minor (present-day Turkey). His Greek name Nikolaos means something along the lines of "victor of the people". }}</ref> He is said to have been ] during the ] under the Emperor ] (ruled 284–305),{{sfn|Blacker|Burgess|Ogden|2013|pages=249–250}}{{sfn|Wilkinson|2018|page=163}} but was released under the orders of the Emperor ] (ruled 306–337).{{sfn|Blacker|Burgess|Ogden|2013|page=250}} This story sounds plausible, but is not attested in the earliest sources and is therefore unlikely to be historical.{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Medieval Saint}} | |||
One of the earliest attested stories of Saint Nicholas is one in which he saves three innocent men from execution.{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|page=38}}<ref name="Michael31">Michael the Archimandrite, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180703051940/http://www.stnicholascenter.org/pages/michael-the-archimandrite/ |date=3 July 2018 }} (Chapter 31)</ref> According to Michael the Archimandrite, three innocent men were condemned to death by the governor Eustathius. As they were about to be executed, Nicholas appeared, pushed the executioner's sword to the ground, released them from their chains, and angrily chastised a juror who had accepted a bribe.<ref name="Michael31"/> According to Jona Lendering, this story directly parallels an earlier story in Philostratus's ''Life of Apollonius of Tyana'', in which Apollonius prevents the execution of a man falsely condemned of banditry.{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Nicholas of Myra}} Michael the Archimandrite also tells another story in which the consul ] accepted a bribe to put three famous generals to death, in spite of their actual innocence.<ref name="Michael33">Michael the Archimandrite, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180703051940/http://www.stnicholascenter.org/pages/michael-the-archimandrite/ |date=3 July 2018 }} (Chapter 33)</ref> Saint Nicholas appeared to Constantine and Ablabius in dreams, informing Constantine of the truth and frightening Ablabius into releasing the generals, for fear of ].<ref name="Michael33"/> | |||
In addition, he is celebrated as a great gift-giver in several Western ]an countries. His reputation for gift giving comes partly from a story of three young women who were too poor to afford a dowry for their marriages: as each reached a marriagable age, Nicholas surreptitiously threw a bag of gold into the house at night. Some versions of the legend say that the girls' father, trying to discover their benefactor, kept watch on the third occasion, but Nicholas dropped the third bag down the chimney instead. For his helping the "financially challenged", St. Nicholas is the ] of pawnbrokers; the three gold balls traditionally hung outside a pawnshop are symbolic of the three sacks of gold. People then began to suspect that he was behind a large number of other anonymous gifts to the poor, using the inheritance from his wealthy parents. After he died, people in the region continued to give to the poor anonymously, and such gifts were still often attributed to St. Nicholas. It should be noted perhaps that a nearly identical story is attributed by Greek folklore to ]. Basil's feast day on ] is also considered a time of exchanging gifts. | |||
Later versions of the story are more elaborate, interweaving the two stories together. According to one version, Emperor Constantine sent three of his most trusted generals, named Ursos, Nepotianos, and Herpylion, to put down a rebellion in ]. However, a storm forced them to take refuge in Myra.{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|page=38}} Unbeknownst to the generals, who were in the harbor, their soldiers further inland were fighting with local merchants and engaging in looting and destruction. Nicholas confronted the generals for allowing their soldiers to misbehave and the generals brought an end to the looting.{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|pages=38–39}} Immediately after the soldiers had returned to their ships, Nicholas heard word of the three innocent men about to be executed and the three generals aided him in stopping the execution. Eustathius attempted to flee on his horse but Nicholas stopped his horse and chastised him for his corruption.{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|pages=39–40}} Eustathius, under the threat of being reported directly to the Emperor, repented of his corrupt ways.{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|page=40}} Afterward, the generals succeeded in ending the rebellion and were promoted by Constantine to even higher status.{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|page=40}} The generals' enemies, however, slandered them to the consul Ablabius, telling him that they had not really put down the revolt, but instead encouraged their own soldiers to join it. The generals' enemies also bribed Ablabius and he had the three generals imprisoned. Nicholas then made his dream appearances and the three generals were set free.{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|pages=40–41}} | |||
Due to modern association with Christmas, Saint Nicholas is a patron saint of Christmas, as well as pawnbrokers (see above). He was also a patron of the ] of the ], who protected his relics in Bari. | |||
=== Council of Nicaea === | |||
== Saint Nicholas the Festive Gift-Giver == | |||
] fresco showing Saint Nicholas slapping ] at the ]]] | |||
In 325, Nicholas is said to have attended the ],{{sfn|Blacker|Burgess|Ogden|2013|page=250}}{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Nicholas of Myra}}<ref>Wheeler & Rosenthal, "St Nicholas: A Closer Look at Christmas", (Chapter 1), Nelson Reference & Electronic, 2005</ref> where he is said to have been a staunch opponent of ] and a devoted supporter of ],<ref>{{cite book |author=Federer, William J. |title=There Really Is a Santa Claus – History of St. Nicholas & Christmas Holiday Traditions |publisher=Amerisearch, Inc. |year=2002 |page=26 |isbn=978-0965355742}}</ref> and one of the bishops who signed the ].<ref name="Davis, Leo Donald; 1990 58">{{cite book |author=Davis, Leo Donald |title=The First Seven Ecumenical Councils (325–787) Their History and Theology |publisher=Liturgical Press |year=1990 |page= |isbn=0-8146-5616-1 |url=https://archive.org/details/firstsevenec_davi_1990_000_6702418 |url-access=limited }}</ref> Nicholas's attendance at the Council of Nicaea is attested early by Theodore the Lector's list of attendees, which records him as the 151st attendee.{{sfn|Blacker|Burgess|Ogden|2013|page=250}}{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|page=ix}} However, he is conspicuously never mentioned by ], the foremost defender of Trinitarianism at the council, who knew all the notable bishops of the period,{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|page=xii}} nor is he mentioned by the historian ], who was also present at the council.{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=14}} Adam C. English notes that lists of the attendees at Nicaea vary considerably, with shorter lists only including roughly 200 names, but longer lists including around 300. Saint Nicholas's name only appears on the longer lists, not the shorter ones.{{sfn|English|Crumm|2012}} Nicholas's name appears on a total of three early lists, one of which, Theodore the Lector, is generally considered to be the most accurate. According to Jona Lendering, there are two main possibilities: | |||
''Saint Nicholas Day'' is a festivity for children in much of Europe related to surviving legends of the saint, and particularly his reputation as a bringer of gifts. The ] and ] ] derives from this festivity, the name 'Santa Claus' being a degeneration of the ] word ''Sinterklaas''. | |||
# Nicholas ''did not'' attend the Council of Nicaea, but someone at an early date was baffled that his name was not listed and so added him to the list.{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Nicholas of Myra}} Many scholars tend to favor this explanation.{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=93}}{{sfn|Greydanus|2016}} | |||
# Nicholas ''did'' attend the Council of Nicaea, but, at an early date, someone decided to remove his name from the list, apparently deciding that it was better if no one remembered he had been there.{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Nicholas of Myra}} | |||
A later legend, first attested in the fourteenth century, over 1,000 years after Nicholas's death, holds that, during the Council of Nicaea, Nicholas lost his temper and slapped "a certain Arian" across the face. On account of this, Constantine revoked Nicholas's ] and ].{{sfn|Greydanus|2016}} Steven D. Greydanus concludes that, because of the story's late attestation, it "has no historical value."{{sfn|Greydanus|2016}} Jona Lendering, however, defends the veracity and historicity of the incident, arguing that, ] and reflects poorly on Nicholas's reputation, it is inexplicable why later hagiographers would have invented it.{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Nicholas of Myra}} Later versions of the legend embellish it, making the heretic ] himself{{sfn|Greydanus|2016}}{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|page=35}} and having Nicholas punch him rather than merely slapping him with his open hand. In these versions of the story, Nicholas is also imprisoned,{{sfn|Greydanus|2016}}{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|page=35}} but Christ and the Virgin Mary appear to him in his cell.{{sfn|Greydanus|2016}}{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|page=35}} He tells them he is imprisoned "for loving you" and they free him from his chains and restore his vestments.{{sfn|Greydanus|2016}}{{sfn|Wheeler|2010|page=35}} The scene of Nicholas slapping Arius is celebrated in Eastern Orthodox icons{{sfn|Greydanus|2016}} and episodes of Saint Nicholas at Nicaea are shown in a series of paintings from the 1660s in the ] in ].{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=93}} | |||
Some elements of this part of the Saint Nicholas tradition could be traced back to the Germanic god ] (Odin). The appearance is similar to some portrayals of this god. In the Saint Nicholas tradition in the Netherlands he rides a horse over the rooftops, and this may be derived from Odin's riding through the sky. Also his assistants, the ''Zwarte Pieten'' ('Black Peters') may be a remnant of the raven that accompanied Wodan. It may also reference African slaves. | |||
=== Other reputed miracles === | |||
The history of the festive Saint Nicholas celebration is complex and reflects conflicts between ] and ]. Since Nicholas was a canonized saint, ] replaced the festival that had become associated with the Papacy with a "Christkind" (] child) celebration on Christmas Eve. The Nicholas celebrations still remain a part of tradition among many Protestants, albeit on a much lower scale than Christmas. The Protestant Netherlands, however, retain a much larger Saint Nicholas tradition. Many Catholics, on the other hand, have adopted Luther's Christkind. | |||
]'' (created between 1503 and 1508)]] | |||
One story tells how during a terrible famine, a malicious butcher lured three little children into his house, where he killed them, placing their remains in a barrel to cure, planning to sell them off as ham.{{sfn|Ferguson|1976|page=136}}<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.stnicholascenter.org/Brix?pageID=409|title=St. Nicholas Center: Saint Nicolas|website=stnicholascenter.org|access-date=22 December 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091205211459/http://www.stnicholascenter.org/Brix?pageID=409|archive-date=5 December 2009|url-status=live}}</ref> Nicholas, visiting the region to care for the hungry, saw through the butcher's lies and resurrected the pickled children by making the ].{{sfn|Ferguson|1976|page=136}}{{sfn|English|2016|page=132}} Jona Lendering opines that the story is "without any historical value".{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Medieval Saint}} Adam C. English notes that the story of the resurrection of the pickled children is a late medieval addition to the legendary biography of Saint Nicholas and that it is not found in any of his earliest ''Lives''.{{sfn|English|Crumm|2012}} Although this story seems bizarre and horrifying to modern audiences, it was tremendously popular throughout the ] and the ], and widely beloved by ordinary folk.{{sfn|English|2016|page=132}}{{sfn|Ferguson|1976|page=136}}{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Medieval Saint}} It is depicted in stained glass windows, wood panel paintings, tapestries, and frescoes. Eventually, the scene became so widely reproduced that, rather than showing the whole scene, artists began to merely depict Saint Nicholas with three naked children and a wooden barrel at his feet.{{sfn|English|2016|page=132}} | |||
According to English, eventually, people who had forgotten or never learned the story began misinterpreting representations of it. That Saint Nicholas was shown with children led people to conclude he was the patron saint of children; meanwhile, the fact that he was shown with a barrel led people to conclude that he was the patron saint of brewers.{{sfn|English|2016|pages=132–133}} | |||
=== Celebration in Germany, Austria, and German Switzerland === | |||
According to another story, during a great famine that Myra experienced in 311–312, a ship was in the port at anchor, loaded with wheat for the emperor in Constantinople. Nicholas invited the sailors to unload a part of the wheat to help in the time of need. The sailors at first disliked the request, because the wheat had to be weighed accurately and delivered to the emperor. Only when Nicholas promised them that they would not suffer any loss for their consideration did the sailors agree. When they arrived later in the capital, they made a surprising find: the weight of the load had not changed, although the wheat removed in Myra was enough for two full years and could even be used for sowing.<ref>{{cite book|title=A companion to Wace |first=Françoise Hazel Marie |last=Le Saux |publisher=D.S. Brewer |year=2005 |isbn=978-1-84384-043-5 }}</ref> | |||
In ], ''Nikolaus'' is usually celebrated on a small scale. Many children put a boot, called ''Nikolaus-Stiefel'', outside their front doors on the night of ] to ]. St. Nicholas fills the boot with gifts, and at the same time checks up on the children to see if they were good. If they were not, they will have charcoal in their boots instead. Sometimes a disguised Nikolaus also visits the children at school or in their homes and asks them if they "have been good" (sometimes ostensibly checking a book for their record), handing out presents on a per-behavior basis. This has become more lenient in recent decades. | |||
== Relics == | |||
But for many children, Nikolaus also elicited fear, as he was often accompanied by '']'', who would threaten to beat, or sometimes actually eat the children for misbehavior. In ], he would threaten to put bad children in a sack and take them back to the ]. In other accounts he would throw the sack into the river, drowning the naughty children within. These traditions were implemented more rigidly in Catholic countries such as ]. In highly Catholic regions, the local priest was informed by the parents about their children's behavior and would then personally visit the homes in the traditional Christian garment and threaten them with rod-beatings. In parts of Austria, ''Krampusse'', whom local tradition says are Nikolaus's helpers (in reality, typically children of poor families), roamed the streets during the festival. They wore masks and dragged chains behind them, even occasionally hurling them towards children in their way. These ''Krampusläufe'' (Krampus runs) still exist, although perhaps less violent than in the past. | |||
=== |
=== Gemile === | ||
], where some scholars believe Saint Nicholas was originally entombed.{{sfn|Keys|1993}}]] | |||
It has long been traditionally assumed that Saint Nicholas was originally buried in his home town of Myra, where his relics are later known to have been kept,{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Medieval Saint}}{{sfn|Keys|1993}} but some recent archaeological evidence indicates that Saint Nicholas may have originally been entombed in a rock-cut church located at the highest point on the small Turkish island of ], only twenty miles away from his birthplace of Patara. Nicholas's name is painted on part of the ruined building. In antiquity, the island was known as "Saint Nicholas Island"{{sfn|Keys|1993}} and today it is known in Turkish as Gemiler Adasi, meaning "Island of Boats", in reference to Saint Nicholas's traditional role as the patron saint of seafarers.{{sfn|Keys|1993}} | |||
For small children in the Netherlands, Saint Nicholas' eve is much more important than Christmas. In recent years, some Dutch have started to celebrate Christmas Eve with Santa as well or instead. | |||
The church was built in the fourth century, around the time of Nicholas's death,{{sfn|Keys|1993}} and is typical of saints' shrines from that time period. Nicholas was the only major saint associated with that part of Turkey. The church where historians believe he was originally entombed is at the western end of the great processional way.{{sfn|Keys|1993}} | |||
On the evening of December 5, ''Sinterklaas'' brings presents to every child that has been good in the past year (in practice to all children). ''Sinterklaas '' wears a red ]'s dress including a red mitre, rides a white horse over the rooftops and is assisted by many mischievous helpers with ] black faces and colorful Moorish dresses, dating back two centuries. These helpers are called 'zwarte Pieten' (black Petes). | |||
=== Myra === | |||
''Sinterklaas'' has a long white ], holds a long ] coloured staff with a fancy curled top in his hand and carries a big book with all the children's names in it, and whether they have been good or bad. | |||
], where Saint Nicholas's bones were kept until 1087. {{sfn|Jones|1978|pages=176–193}}]] | |||
In the mid-7th century, Gemile was vulnerable to attack by Arab fleets, so Nicholas's remains appear to have been ] from the island to the city of Myra, where Nicholas had served as bishop for most of his life. Myra is located roughly {{convert|40|km|abbr=on}} east of Gemile and its location further inland made it safer from seafaring Arab forces.{{sfn|Keys|1993}} | |||
It is said that, in Myra, the relics of Saint Nicholas each year exuded a clear watery liquid which smelled like rose water, called ], or ], which was believed by the faithful to possess ] powers.<ref>De Ceglia, Francesco Paolo: "The science of Santa Claus : discussions on the Manna of Nicholas of Myra in the modern age". In ''Nuncius'' – 27 (2012) 2, pp. 241–269.</ref> As it was widely known that all Nicholas's relics were at Myra in their sealed sarcophagus, it was rare during this period for forgers of relics to claim to possess those belonging to Saint Nicholas.{{sfn|Seal|2005|pages=135–136}} | |||
Each year ''Sinterklaas'' arrives by ] 'from ]', and is then paraded through the streets of the town he arrives in (actually in every town of the ]), welcomed by cheering and singing children. His ''zwarte Pieten'' throw candy and small, round ]bread like cookies (''Pepernoten'') into the crowd. The children welcome him by singing traditional ''Sinterklaas'' songs. ''Sinterklaas'' also visits schools, hospitals and shopping malls. His arrival is televised on ]. Over the years media attention has grown, while Sinterklaas is in the country the 'Sinterklaasjournaal' is aired every day, discussing his activities and any major 'problems' (which occur every year). Also, on the main day of celebration (traditionally December 5th) the Dutch version of ] the inhabitants of Sesame Street are visited by ''Sinterklaas'' as well. | |||
A solemn bronze statue of the saint by Russian sculptor Gregory Pototsky was donated by the ] in 2000, and was given a prominent place in the square fronting the medieval Church of St Nicholas. In 2005, mayor Süleyman Topçu had the statue replaced by a red-suited plastic Santa Claus statue, because he wanted an image more recognisable to foreign visitors. Protests from the Russian government against this were successful, and the bronze statue was returned (albeit without its original high pedestal) to a corner nearer the church.<ref>{{cite web|title=Saint Nicholas|url=http://www.cantius.org/go/liturgy_devotions/liturgical_seasons/advent_extraordinary/saint_nicholas/|website=St. John Cantius Parish|access-date=25 August 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160916164452/http://www.cantius.org/go/liturgy_devotions/liturgical_seasons/advent_extraordinary/saint_nicholas/|archive-date=16 September 2016|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
Traditionally, in the weeks before the 5th of December, before going to bed, children put their shoes next to chimney of the coal fired stove or fireplace, with a carrot or some hay in it 'for Sinterklaas' horse', and will find some candy in the form of a ], ] frog in their shoes the next day, supposedly thrown down the chimney by a ''Zwarte Piet'' or ''Sinterklaas'' himself.<br/> However, with the advance of central heating children will put their shoes near the boiler or even just next to the front door....<br/> | |||
Children are told that Black Peter enters the house through the chimney, which also explained his black face and hands, and would leave a bundle of sticks or a small bag with salt in the shoe instead of candy when the child had been bad. | |||
In recent years some people have engaged in a recurring debate about ], ] or other ] aspects of the black Peter character: the Peter character is obviously inspired by black ]s. The usual reply is that his face is black of ]. Some have actually gone so far as to replace black Peter by "green Peter" (a man in a Moorish dress with a green face). | |||
On 28 December 2009, the Turkish government announced that it would be formally requesting the return of Saint Nicholas's skeletal remains to Turkey from the Italian government.<ref>{{cite news | url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/8432314.stm | work=BBC News | title=Turks want Santa's bones returned | date=28 December 2009 | access-date=23 May 2010 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100122023333/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/8432314.stm | archive-date=22 January 2010 | url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/news-196814-100-santa-clauss-bones-must-be-brought-back-to-turkey-from-italy.html |title=Santa Claus's bones must be brought back to Turkey from Italy |website=Todayszaman.com |date=28 December 2009 |access-date=12 December 2013 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131211141253/http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/news-196814-100-santa-clauss-bones-must-be-brought-back-to-turkey-from-italy.html |archive-date=11 December 2013 }}</ref> | |||
Children are also told that in the worst case they would be put in the gunny bag that black Peter carries the presents in, and would be taken back to ] in ], where ''Sinterklaas'' spends the rest of the year. This practice however has been condemned by Sinterklaas, in his more recent television appearances, as something of the past. | |||
Turkish authorities asserted that Nicholas himself desired to be buried at his episcopal town, and that his remains were illegally removed from his homeland. In 2017, an archaeological survey at St. Nicholas Church, Demre was reported to have found a temple below the modern church, with excavation work to be done that will allow researchers to determine whether it still holds Nicholas's body.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.irishtimes.com/news/offbeat/tomb-of-st-nicholas-may-have-been-discovered-in-turkey-1.3244068 |title=Tomb of St Nicholas may have been discovered in Turkey |publisher=ir.ishtimes.com |date=4 October 2017 |access-date=7 October 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171008081435/https://www.irishtimes.com/news/offbeat/tomb-of-st-nicholas-may-have-been-discovered-in-turkey-1.3244068 |archive-date=8 October 2017 |url-status=live }}</ref> A sarcophagus possibly holding his remains was found there in 2024.<ref></ref> | |||
=== Bari === | |||
'Sinterklaasavond' or 'Pakjesavond' is usually celebrated on December 5th, and by some on December 6th, children at home sing ''Sinterklaas'' songs and suddenly somebody will knock on the door very loudly, and when they go to the door a gunny sack full of presents is found on the doorstep. Alternatively - some improvisation is often called for - the parents 'hear a sound coming from the attic' and then the bag with presents is 'found' there. | |||
] in ], Italy where most of the ] of Saint Nicholas are kept today{{sfn|Cullen|2017}}]] | |||
Some parents manage to 'convince' Sinterklaas to come to their home personally. | |||
After the ] in 1071, the Byzantine Empire temporarily lost control over most of Asia Minor to the invading ], and so ] of Myra became subjects of the Turks.{{sfn|Jones|1978|pages=176–193}}{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=101}} At the same time the Catholic Church in the West had declared (in 1054 AD) that the ], the official church of the Byzantine Empire, was in ]. Because of the many wars in the region, some Christians were concerned that access to the tomb might become difficult.{{sfn|Jones|1978|pages=176–193}} | |||
Taking advantage of the confusion and the loss by the Greek Christian community of Myra of its Byzantine imperial protection, in the spring of 1087, Italian sailors from Bari in ] seized part of the remains of the saint from his burial church in Myra, over the objections of the Greek Orthodox ] in the church.{{sfn|Jones|1978|pages=176–193}}<ref>{{cite encyclopedia| first= Michael | last= Ott| title= Nicholas of Myra| encyclopedia= ]| volume= 11| location= New York| publisher= Robert Appleton Company| year= 1907}}</ref><ref>{{cite book| last= Butler| first= Albin| title= Lives of the Saints | volume= 2| year= 1860}}</ref><ref>{{cite book| last1= Wheeler | last2= Rosenthal| chapter= Chapter 1| title= St. Nicholas: A Closer Look at Christmas| first1= Joe L. | first2= Jim | publisher= Thomas Nelson| year= 2005| isbn= 9781418504076}}</ref> | |||
Typical presents include the first letter of the child's name made out of chocolate, a figurine of ''Sinterklaas'' made out of chocolate and wrapped in painted aluminum foil, coloured marzipan shaped into fruit, an animal or some other object. These presents are often accompanied by a simple poem, saying something about the child or with a hint to the nature of the present. Also popular are coins and ]s made out of chocolate. However, the ] has issued a recommendation to ban chocolate cigarettes since they might promote future real smoking. | |||
Adam C. English describes the removal of the relics from Myra as "essentially a ]" and notes the thieves were not only afraid of being caught or chased after by the locals, but also the power of Saint Nicholas himself.{{sfn|Medrano|2017}} Returning to Bari, they brought the remains with them and cared for them. The remains arrived on 9 May 1087.{{sfn|Jones|1978|pages=176–193}}{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Medieval Saint}} Two years later, ] inaugurated a new church, the Basilica di San Nicola, to Saint Nicholas in Bari. The Pope himself personally placed Nicholas's relics into the tomb beneath the altar of the new church.{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Medieval Saint}} The removal of Saint Nicholas's relics from Myra and their arrival in Bari is reliably recorded by multiple chroniclers, including ]{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=131}}{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Medieval Saint}} and 9 May continued to be celebrated every year by western Christians as the day of Nicholas's "translation".{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Medieval Saint}} Eastern Orthodox Christians and the Turks have both long regarded the unauthorized removal of the relics from Myra as a blatant theft,{{sfn|Jones|1978|pages=176–193}}{{sfn|Seal|2005|pages=93–94}} but the people of Bari have instead maintained that it was a rescue mission to save the bones from the Turkish invaders.{{sfn|Jones|1978|pages=176–193}}{{sfn|Seal|2005|pages=100–102}} A legend, shown on the ceiling of the Basilica di San Nicola, holds that Nicholas once visited Bari and predicted that his bones would one day rest there.{{sfn|Seal|2005|pages=93–94}} | |||
==== Believing ==== | |||
].]] | |||
Prior to the translation of Nicholas's relics to Bari, his following had been known in western Europe, but it had not been extremely popular.{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Medieval Saint}} In autumn of 1096, ] and ] soldiers mustered in Bari in preparation for the ]. Although the Crusaders generally favored warrior saints, which Saint Nicholas was not, the presence of his relics in Bari made him materially accessible.{{sfn|Seal|2005|pages=114–115}} Nicholas's associations with aiding travelers and seafarers also made him a popular choice for veneration. Nicholas's veneration by Crusaders helped promote his following throughout western Europe.{{sfn|Seal|2005|pages=114–116}} | |||
After the relics were brought to Bari, they continued to produce "myrrh", much to the joy of their new owners. Vials of myrrh from his relics have been taken all over the world for centuries, and can still be obtained from his church in Bari. Even up to the present day, a flask of manna is extracted from the tomb of Saint Nicholas every year on 6 December (the Saint's ]) by the clergy of the basilica. The myrrh is collected from a sarcophagus which is located in the basilica vault and could be obtained in the shop nearby. The liquid gradually seeps out of the tomb, but it is unclear whether it originates from the body within the tomb, or from the marble itself; since the town of Bari is a harbour, and the tomb is below ], there have been several natural explanations proposed for the manna fluid, including the transfer of ] to the tomb by ].{{citation needed|date=December 2022}} | |||
The children, up to an age of usually seven or eight years, almost religiously believe in ''Sinterklaas''. They think that he actually lives forever and that he comes from Spain, that he knows everything about the children and that his ''zwarte Pieten'' do come down through chimneys. The period between his arrival and December 5 is therefore very exciting. | |||
In 1966, a vault in the crypt underneath the Basilica di San Nicola was dedicated as an Orthodox chapel with an ] in commemoration of the ] the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Churches had issued against each other during the ] in 1054.{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=117}} | |||
When children ask their parents how it is possible that ''Sinterklaas'' is at so many places, they tell them that those are assistant ''Sinterklazen''. At family gatherings where a stand in ''Sinterklaas'' in a rented suit appears, parents have reported in advance to this ''Sinterklaas'' what the children have done good and bad and make it look like he knows everything about the children when the 'Goedheiligman' ('Good Holy Man') looks in his big book. | |||
In May 2017, following talks between ] and Russian Orthodox Patriarch Kirill, a portion of the relics of Saint Nicholas in Bari were sent on loan to Moscow. The relic was on display for veneration at Christ the Savior Cathedral before being taken to Saint Petersburg in mid-June prior to returning to Bari.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://en.radiovaticana.va/news/2017/05/21/major_relics_of_st_nicholas_visit_russia/1313807 |title="Major relics of St Nicholas visit Russia", Vatican Radio, May 21, 2017 |access-date=6 December 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171206152131/http://en.radiovaticana.va/news/2017/05/21/major_relics_of_st_nicholas_visit_russia/1313807 |archive-date=6 December 2017 |url-status=live }}</ref> More than a million people lined up in Moscow for a momentary glimpse of the gilded ark holding one of the saint's ribs.<ref>{{Cite news |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/why-more-than-a-million-russians-have-lined-up-tosee-one-of-theribs-of-saint-nicholas/2017/06/28/02aae204-5696-11e7-840b-512026319da7_story.html |title=Filipov, David. "Why more than a million Russians have lined up to see a piece of the rib of Saint Nicholas", ''The Washington Post'', June 29, 2017 |newspaper=] |access-date=6 December 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171211160555/https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/why-more-than-a-million-russians-have-lined-up-tosee-one-of-theribs-of-saint-nicholas/2017/06/28/02aae204-5696-11e7-840b-512026319da7_story.html |archive-date=11 December 2017 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
Most children do suspect that Sinterklaas may not truly exist. The atmosphere during celebrations can be very enchanting though, and many children really want to believe. Also, most children can't think of a reason why their ]. | |||
=== Venice === | |||
For some children, gradually losing their magic view of the world as they grow older and getting more and more suspicious about what their parents are telling them, it still may be their first big traumatic experience in life when their parents admit that ''Sinterklaas'' does not really exist....<br/> | |||
] in Venice, which claims to hold roughly 500 bone fragments from Nicholas's skeleton{{sfn|University of Oxford|2017}}{{sfn|Cullen|2017}}]] | |||
Therefore some parents tell their children from the start that all this ''Sinterklaas'' is just a fantasy, a game that people play, as they consider it an inappropriately bad example about telling the truth. Others, looking back on their own experience with ''Sinterklaas'' as a child, consider that the enjoyment for the children get is greater than a small(?) discomfort. | |||
The sailors from Bari took only the main bones of Nicholas's skeleton, leaving all the minor fragments in the grave.{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=136}} The city of Venice had interest in obtaining the remaining fragments of his skeleton. In 1044, they dedicated the ] monastery basilica to him on the north end of the ].{{sfn|Seal|2005|pages=125–127}} According to a single chronicle written by an anonymous monk at this monastery, in 1100, a ] accompanied by Bishop ] sailed past Myra on their way to Palestine for the First Crusade. Bishop Enrico insisted for the fleet to turn back and set anchor in Myra.{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=127}} The Venetians took the remaining bones of Saint Nicholas, as well as those of several other bishops of Myra, from the church there, which was only guarded by four Orthodox monks, and brought them to ], where they deposited them in the San Nicolò al Lido.{{sfn|Seal|2005|pages=127–136}} This tradition was lent credence in two scientific investigations of the relics in Bari and Venice, which confirmed that the relics in the two cities are anatomically compatible and may belong to the same person.<ref>{{cite web| url= http://www.enec.it/Cripte/venezia.htm| title= Ci sono ossa di san Nicola anche a Venezia?| trans-title= There are also bones of St. Nicholas in Venice?| language= it| website= enec.it| publisher= Europe – Near East Center| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20121209132748/http://www.enec.it/Cripte/venezia.htm| archive-date= 9 December 2012| access-date= 2 March 2017| url-status= dead| df= dmy-all}}</ref><ref>{{cite web| url= http://www.enec.it/cripte2/ipotesi/ipotesi.htm| title= Ma le ossa sono tutte a Bari?| trans-title= Are all the bones in Bari?| language= it| website= enec.it| publisher= Europe – Near East Center| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20121208105336/http://www.enec.it/cripte2/ipotesi/ipotesi.htm| archive-date= 8 December 2012| access-date= 2 March 2017| url-status= dead| df= dmy-all}}</ref>{{sfn|University of Oxford|2017}} It is said that someone dies every time the bones of Saint Nicholas in Venice are disturbed. The last time the bones were examined was in July 1992.{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=131}} | |||
Dutch media, especially television stations, abide by a kind of informal rule never to deny ''Sinterklaas'''s existence, or at least not in programs broadcast before childrens' bedtime. | |||
=== |
=== Other locations === | ||
] near Thomastown, Ireland]] | |||
Because of Nicholas's skeleton's long confinement in Myra, after it was brought to Bari, the demand for pieces of it rose. Small bones quickly began to disperse across western Europe.{{sfn|Seal|2005|pages=135–137}} The sailors who had transported the bones gave one tooth and two fragments chipped from Nicholas's sarcophagus to the Norman knight ]. Pantulf took these relics to his hometown of Noron in Normandy, where they were placed in the local Church of St. Peter in June 1092.{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=136}} In 1096, the duke of Apulia gave several bones of Saint Nicholas to the count of ], which he then enshrined in the Abbey of ].{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=136}} According to legend, in 1101, Saint Nicholas appeared in a vision to a French clerk visiting the shrine at Bari and told him to take one of his bones with him to his hometown of ], near ]. The clerk took a finger bone back with him to Port, where a chapel was built to Saint Nicholas.{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=137}} Port became an important center of devotion in the following of Nicholas and, in the fifteenth century, a church known as the ] was built there dedicated to him.{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=137}} The town itself is now known as "Saint Nicolas de Port" in honor of Nicholas.{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Medieval Saint}} | |||
The clergy at Bari strategically gave away samples of Nicholas's bones to promote the following and enhance its prestige. Many of these bones were initially kept in Constantinople,{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=137}} but, after the ] in 1204 during the ], these fragments were scattered across western Europe. A hand claimed to belong to Saint Nicholas was kept in the ] in Rome.{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=137}} This church, whose name means "Saint Nicholas in Chains", was built on the site of a former municipal prison. Stories quickly developed about Nicholas himself having been held in that prison.{{sfn|English|2016|page=133}} Mothers would come to the church to pray to Saint Nicholas for their jailed sons to be released and repentant criminals would place ] in the church.{{sfn|English|2016|page=133}} As a result of this, Nicholas became the patron saint of prisoners and those falsely accused of crimes.{{sfn|English|2016|page=133}} An index finger claimed to belong to Saint Nicholas was kept in a chapel along the Ostian Way in Rome. Another finger was held in ] in ].{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=137}} Today, many churches in Europe, Russia, and the United States claim to possess small relics, such as a tooth or a finger bone.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.stnicholascenter.org/pages/relics/ |publisher=Saint Nicholas Center |title=Relics of St. Nicholas – Where are They? |access-date=11 February 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131213190227/http://www.stnicholascenter.org/pages/relics/ |archive-date=13 December 2013 |url-status=live }}</ref>{{sfn|Cullen|2017}} | |||
Originally ''Sinterklaas'' or ''Sint-Nikolaas'' was only celebrated in Flanders and the Netherlands the way described above, but now he is celebrated in Wallonia in the same way. The celebrating of ''Saint-Nicholas'' is mostly the same as in the Netherlands but there are some small differences. | |||
An Irish tradition states that the relics of Saint Nicholas are also reputed to have been stolen from Myra by local Norman crusading knights in the twelfth century and buried near ], ], where a stone slab marks the reputed "]".<ref>{{cite web| url= http://www.heritagecouncil.ie/fileadmin/user_upload/conservationplans/Newton_Jerpoint.pdf| page= 81| title= Heritage Conservation Plan: Newtown Jerpoint County Kilkenny| publisher= An Chomhairle Oidhreachta/The Heritage Council| year= 2007| url-status= dead| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20161012183822/http://www.heritagecouncil.ie/fileadmin/user_upload/conservationplans/Newton_Jerpoint.pdf| archive-date= 12 October 2016| access-date= 2 March 2017| df= dmy-all}}</ref> According to the Irish antiquarian ], the tomb probably actually belongs to a local priest from ].{{sfn|Hunt|1974}} | |||
*Three weeks before the sixth of December he arrives with his boat from Spain in Antwerp (being even a topic in the evening news). | |||
*Most important difference, In Belgium the children receive their presents on the 6th of December. Children have to put their shoes at the stove the evening of the 5th of December and the next morning, they find their presents. | |||
] announced on 22 September 2024 that ] in ] received a part of Nicholas' relic as a gift.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Бакинскому кафедральному собору передана частица мощей святителя Николая Чудотворца |trans-title=A particle of the relics of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker was handed over to the Baku Cathedral |url=https://www.pravoslavie.az/newses/news/?id=14863 |access-date=2024-10-08 |website=www.pravoslavie.az |language=ru}}</ref> | |||
Note that Saint Nicholas is celebrated in ] for centuries -there is even a city called <i>St. Niklaas</i> but, like every folkloristic thing in Belgium, there might be small differences, and generally in the east part of the Province ] Saint Nicholas is not celebrated but children receive presents from ] (Saint Martin). | |||
=== |
=== Scientific analysis === | ||
] at ] ], ]]] | |||
See ] for information about St. Nicholas in English speaking countries. See ] for other information. | |||
Whereas the devotional importance of ]s and the economics associated with pilgrimages caused the remains of most saints to be divided up and spread over numerous churches in several countries, Saint Nicholas is unusual in that most of his bones have been preserved in one spot: his grave crypt in Bari. Even with the allegedly continuing miracle of the manna, the ] has allowed for one scientific survey of the bones.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.stnicholascenter.org/pages/anatomical-examination/ |publisher=Saint Nicholas Center |title=Anatomical Examination of the Bari Relics |access-date=6 December 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131211204409/http://www.stnicholascenter.org/pages/anatomical-examination/ |archive-date=11 December 2013 |url-status=live }}</ref> In the late 1950s, while the ] was undergoing much-needed restoration, the bones were removed from it for the first time since their interment in 1089. A special Pontiffical Commission permitted Luigi Martino, a professor of human anatomy at the ], to examine the bones under the commission's supervision.{{sfn|Wilkinson|2018|page=163}} Martino took thousands of measurements, detailed scientific drawings, photographs, and x-rays.{{sfn|Wilkinson|2018|page=163}} These examinations revealed the saint to have died at over seventy years of age and to have been of average height and slender-to-average build. He also suffered from severe chronic ] in his spine and pelvis.{{sfn|Wilkinson|2018|page=163}} | |||
In 2004, at the ], researchers Caroline Wilkinson and Fraco Introna reconstructed the saint's face based on Martino's examination.{{sfn|Wilkinson|2018|page=163}} The review of the data revealed that the historical Saint Nicholas was {{height|ft=5|in=6}} in height and had a broken nose, which had partially healed, revealing that the injury had been suffered ''ante mortem''.<ref name="face">{{cite web|title=The Real Face of St. Nicholas|url=http://www.stnicholascenter.org/pages/real-face/|website=St Nicholas Center|access-date=15 December 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161204135142/http://www.stnicholascenter.org/pages/real-face/|archive-date=4 December 2016|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="face2">{{cite news| url=http://www.atlanticproductions.tv/productions/specials/the-real-face-of-santa/| title=The Real Face of Santa| access-date=12 November 2014| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141112165250/http://www.atlanticproductions.tv/productions/specials/the-real-face-of-santa/| archive-date=12 November 2014| url-status=live}} (navigate to 4th of 4 pictures)</ref> The broken nose appeared to conform with hagiographical reports that Saint Nicholas had been beaten and tortured during the ].{{sfn|Wilkinson|2018|page=163}} The facial reconstruction was produced by Caroline Wilkinson at the University of Manchester and was shown on a BBC2 TV program ''The Real Face of Santa''.<ref name="face"/><ref name="face2"/> In 2014, the Face Lab at ] produced an updated reconstruction of Saint Nicholas's face.{{sfn|Wilkinson|2018|page=163}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
In 2017, two researchers from ], Professor Tom Higham and Doctor Georges Kazan, ] a fragment of a pelvis claimed to belong to Saint Nicholas. The fragment originally came from a church in ]{{sfn|University of Oxford|2017}}{{sfn|Coughlan|2017}}{{sfn|Cullen|2017}} and, at the time of testing, was in the possession of Father Dennis O'Neill, a priest from St Martha of Bethany Church in Illinois.{{sfn|University of Oxford|2017}}{{sfn|Coughlan|2017}}{{sfn|Cullen|2017}} The results of the radiocarbon dating confirmed that the pelvis dates to the fourth century AD, around the same time that Saint Nicholas would have died, and is not a medieval forgery.{{sfn|University of Oxford|2017}}{{sfn|Coughlan|2017}}{{sfn|Cullen|2017}} The bone was one of the oldest the Oxford team had ever examined. | |||
''See also, ]'' | |||
According to Professor Higham, most of the relics the team has examined turn out to be too recent to have actually belonged to the saint to whom they are attributed, but he states, "This bone fragment, in contrast, suggests that we could possibly be looking at remains from St Nicholas himself."{{sfn|University of Oxford|2017}} Kazan believes the pelvis fragment may come from the same individual as the skeleton divided between the churches in Bari and Venice,{{sfn|University of Oxford|2017}}{{sfn|Coughlan|2017}}{{sfn|Cullen|2017}} since the bone they tested comes from the left ], and the only pelvis bone in the collection at Bari is the left ].{{sfn|University of Oxford|2017}} In the absence of DNA testing, however, it is not yet possible to know for certain whether the pelvis is from the same man.{{sfn|Coughlan|2017}}{{sfn|Cullen|2017}} | |||
] ] ] ] ] ] ] | |||
] | |||
== Veneration and celebrations == | |||
] ] ] | |||
{{further|Saint Nicholas Day}} | |||
] ] | |||
Among Greeks and Italians, Saint Nicholas is a favorite of sailors, ], ships and sailing. As a result, and over time, he has become the patron saint of several cities which maintain ]s. In centuries of Greek ], Nicholas was seen as "The Lord of the Sea", often described by modern Greek scholars as a kind of Christianized version of ]. In modern Greece, he is still easily among the most recognizable saints and 6 December finds many cities celebrating their patron saint. He is also the patron saint of all of Greece and particularly of the ].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.stnicholascenter.org/pages/greece/ |title=Greece |publisher=St. Nicholas Center |access-date=12 December 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131212080429/http://www.stnicholascenter.org/pages/greece/ |archive-date=12 December 2013 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
] in ]]] | |||
In the ] Church, Saint Nicholas's memory is celebrated on almost every Thursday of the year (together with the ]) with special hymns to him which are found in the liturgical book known as the ].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Goroshkova |first1=Natalia |title=ON THE SPECIAL DEDICATIONS OF THE SEVEN DAYS OF THE WEEK: WHEN AND TO WHOM TO PRAY |url=https://orthochristian.com/97364.html |website=OrthoChristian |access-date=1 June 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230928212505/https://orthochristian.com/97364.html |archive-date=28 September 2023}}</ref> Soon after the transfer of Saint Nicholas's relics from Myra to Bari, an East Slavic version of his ] and an account of the transfer of his relics were written by a contemporary to this event.<ref>{{cite web | title=Feasts and Saints, Commemorated on May 9 | publisher=Orthodox Church in America | url=http://ocafs.oca.org/FeastSaintsViewer.asp?SID=4&ID=1&FSID=101336 | access-date=4 April 2012 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120710062655/http://ocafs.oca.org/FeastSaintsViewer.asp?SID=4&ID=1&FSID=101336 | archive-date=10 July 2012 | url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
Devotional ]s and ] have been composed in his honour, and are frequently chanted by the faithful as they ask for his ]. He is mentioned in the ] during the ] (Eastern Orthodox ]) and during the ]. Many Orthodox churches will have his ], even if they are not named after him. In ], the ] observes the Departure of St. Nicholas on 10 Kiahk, or 10 Taḫśaś in Ethiopia, which corresponds to the Julian Calendar's 6 December and Gregorian Calendar's 19 December.<ref name="synaxarium">{{Cite web | title=St. Nicholas the Wonderworker | work=Synaxarium (Lives of Saints) | url=http://www.copticchurch.net/topics/synexarion/nicholas.html | publisher=Coptic Orthodox Church Network | access-date=13 December 2013 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131213222622/http://www.copticchurch.net/topics/synexarion/nicholas.html | archive-date=13 December 2013 | url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="kiahk10">{{Cite web | title=Commemorations for Kiahk 10 | url=http://www.copticchurch.net/synaxarium/4_10.html | publisher=Coptic Orthodox Church Network | access-date=13 December 2013 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131231163727/http://www.copticchurch.net/synaxarium/4_10.html | archive-date=31 December 2013 | url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
Nicholas had a reputation for secret gift-giving, such as putting coins in the shoes of those who left them out for him, a practice celebrated on his ], 6 December. For those who still observe the ] the celebration currently takes place thirteen days later than it happens in the ] and ].<ref name="Carus2002">{{cite book|last=Carus|first=Louise|title=The Real St. Nicholas|date=1 October 2002|publisher=Quest Books|isbn=9780835608138|page=2|quote=In Myra, the traditional St. Nicholas Feast Day is still celebrated on 6 December which many believe to be the anniversary of St Nicholas's death. This day is honored throughout Western Christendom, in lands comprising both Catholic and Protestant communities (in the Eastern Orthodox Church, the Saint's feast date is 19 December). On 5 December, the eve of St Nicholas Day, some American boys and girls put their shoes outside their bedroom door and leave a small gift in hopes that Saint Nicholas soon will be there.}}</ref> | |||
In ], the most common ] (annual ceremony and veneration of family's patron saint) is Saint Nicholas' day celebrated on 19 December. | |||
In ], the ] was built from 1874 on the site of St Nicholas's church, founded in 1252. A children's Mass is still held on 6 December in the cathedral. | |||
]]] | |||
In late ], on Saint Nicholas Day parishes held ] "]" celebrations. As part of this celebration, youths performed the functions of priests and bishops, and exercised rule over their elders. Today, Saint Nicholas is still celebrated as a great gift-giver in several Western European and Central European countries. In medieval times, Christian ] in Belgium and France began to deposit baskets of food and clothes anonymously at the doorsteps of the needy, which gave rise to the practice of gift giving on Saint Nicholas Day.<ref name="DeeAnn2013">{{cite book |last1=DeeAnn |first1=Mandryk |title=Canadian Christmas Traditions: Festive Recipes and Stories From Coast to Coast |date=15 September 2013 |publisher=James Lorimer & Company |isbn=978-1-4594-0560-8 |page=237 |language=en}}</ref> According to another source, on 6 December every sailor or ex-sailor of the ] (which at that time was virtually all of the male population) would descend to the harbour towns to participate in a church celebration for their patron saint. On the way back they would stop at one of the various ''Nicholas fairs'' to buy some hard-to-come-by goods, gifts for their loved ones and invariably some little presents for their children. While the real gifts would only be presented at Christmas, the little presents for the children were given right away, courtesy of Saint Nicholas. This and his miracle of him resurrecting the three butchered children made Saint Nicholas a patron saint of children and later students as well.<ref>{{cite book|last1=McKnight|first1=George H.|title=St. Nicholas: His Legend and His Role in the Christmas Celebration and Other Popular Customs|date=1917|publisher=Putnam's|location=New York|isbn=978-1115125055|pages=37–52|url=https://archive.org/stream/stnicholashis00mckn#page/n7/mode/2up|access-date=25 August 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091212100924/http://www.archive.org/stream/stnicholashis00mckn#page/n7/mode/2up|archive-date=12 December 2009|url-status=live}}</ref> The custom of giving gifts on Saint Nicholas Day is popular in various parts of Christendom, with a popular tradition including children placing their shoes in the ] for Saint Nicholas to deliver presents therein.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Sandford |first1=John |title=Encyclopedia of Contemporary German Culture |date=3 April 2013 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-136-81610-9 |language=en}}</ref> | |||
] evolved from Dutch traditions regarding Saint Nicholas (]). When the Dutch established the colony of ], they brought the legend and traditions of Sinterklaas with them.<ref>Joe Wheeler & Jim Rosenthal, "St. Nicholas A Closer Look at Christmas", (Chapter 8), Nelson Reference & Electronic, 2005.</ref> Howard G. Hageman, of New Brunswick Theological Seminary, maintains that the tradition of celebrating Sinterklaas in New York existed in the early settlements of the ], although by the early nineteenth century had fallen by the way.<ref> Hageman, Howard G., 1979. "Review of ''Saint Nicholas of Myra, Bari, and Manhattan: Biography of a Legend''", ''Theology Today'', Princeton. Princeton Theological Seminary. vol. 36, issue 3 {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081207061529/http://theologytoday.ptsem.edu/oct1979/v36-3-bookreview15.htm |date=7 December 2008 }}</ref> ] and St. Nicholas Terrace, streets in the ] neighborhood of ], ], an area originally settled by Dutch farmers, were named for St. Nicholas of Myra. The name later was taken for nearby ], located at the intersection of St. Nicholas Avenue and 127th Street.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/st-nicholas-park/history |title="St. Nicholas Park", New York City Department of Parks & Recreation |access-date=6 December 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171206150446/https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/st-nicholas-park/history |archive-date=6 December 2017 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
Nicholas is honored in the ] of the ]es, as well as in ] and in the ] on 6 December.<ref>{{cite web |title=Celebrating St. Nicholas Day at Home |url=https://blogs.elca.org/worship/3121/ |publisher=] |access-date=22 December 2022 |date=3 December 2020}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=The Calendar|url=https://www.churchofengland.org/prayer-and-worship/worship-texts-and-resources/common-worship/churchs-year/calendar|access-date=27 March 2021|website=The Church of England|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bEq7DwAAQBAJ |title=Lesser Feasts and Fasts 2018 |date=2019-12-17 |publisher=Church Publishing, Inc. |isbn=978-1-64065-235-4 |language=en}}</ref> | |||
=== Eastern Orthodox Feast Days for Saint Nicholas of Myra in Lycia === | |||
* 9 May – Translation of the relics of Saint Nicholas the Wonderworker from Myra to Bari, in 1087.<ref>{{cite web |title=Translation of the relics of Saint Nicholas the Wonderworker from Myra to Bari |url=https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2019/05/09/101336-translation-of-the-relics-of-saint-nicholas-the-wonderworker-fro |website=Orthodox Church in America |access-date=24 July 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230724154811/https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2019/05/09/101336-translation-of-the-relics-of-saint-nicholas-the-wonderworker-fro |archive-date=24 July 2023 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
* 10 May – Passage of the ]s (sojourn) in 1087 of Saint Nicholas the Wonderworker through the island of ], while on their way to ].<ref>{{cite web |title=Ἡ πάροδος τοῦ ἱεροῦ λειψάνου τοῦ Ἁγίου Νικολάου τοῦ Θαυματουργοῦ ἐκ τῆς νήσου Ζακύνθου |url=https://www.synaxarion.gr/gr/sid/3094/sxsaintinfo.aspx |website=Synaxaristis |access-date=24 July 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230423022121/https://www.synaxarion.gr/gr/sid/3094/sxsaintinfo.aspx |archive-date=23 April 2023 |language=el |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
* 20 May – Arrival of the relics in Bari.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Service of Matins for Saturday, May 20, 2023 |publisher=Digital Chant Stand of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America |page=7 |url=https://dcs.goarch.org/goa/dcs/p/s/2023/05/20/ma/gr-en/se.m05.d20.ma.pdf |access-date=24 July 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230724160603/https://dcs.goarch.org/goa/dcs/p/s/2023/05/20/ma/gr-en/se.m05.d20.ma.pdf |archive-date=24 July 2023 |language=el, en |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Μετακομιδὴ Τιμίων Λειψάνων Ἁγίου Νικολάου τοῦ Θαυματουργοῦ |url=https://www.synaxarion.gr/gr/sid/3291/sxsaintinfo.aspx |website=Synaxaristis |access-date=24 July 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120319091519/https://www.synaxarion.gr/gr/sid/3291/sxsaintinfo.aspx |archive-date=19 March 2012 |language=el |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
* 29 July – Nativity of Saint Nicholas the Wonderworker.<ref>{{cite web |title=Nativity of Saint Nicholas the Wonderworker |url=https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2019/07/29/206397-nativity-of-saint-nicholas-the-wonderworker |website=Orthodox Church in America |access-date=24 July 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230724155044/https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2019/07/29/206397-nativity-of-saint-nicholas-the-wonderworker |archive-date=24 July 2023 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
* Movable holiday on the Sunday between 16 and 22 August – Synaxis of All Saints of Lefkados.<ref>{{cite web |title=Synaxis of All Saints of Lefkados |url=https://www.johnsanidopoulos.com/2011/08/synaxis-of-all-saints-of-lefkados.html |website=Orthodox Christianity Then and Now |access-date=24 July 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221209190715/https://www.johnsanidopoulos.com/2011/08/synaxis-of-all-saints-of-lefkados.html |archive-date=9 December 2022 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
* 22 September – Synaxis of All Saints of Tula (commemoration of the protection of Tula from the invasion of the Crimean Khan Devlet Giray in 1552).<ref>{{cite web |title=Synaxis of the Saints of Tula |url=https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2023/09/22/102702-synaxis-of-the-saints-of-tula |website=Orthodox Church in America |access-date=24 July 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230724154102/https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2023/09/22/102702-synaxis-of-the-saints-of-tula |archive-date=24 July 2023 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
* 6 December – Commemoration of his death.<ref>{{cite web |title=Saint Nicholas the Wonderworker, Archbishop of Myra in Lycia |url=https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2019/12/06/103484-saint-nicholas-the-wonderworker-archbishop-of-myra-in-lycia |website=Orthodox Church in America |access-date=24 July 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201121041851/https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2019/12/06/103484-saint-nicholas-the-wonderworker-archbishop-of-myra-in-lycia |archive-date=21 November 2020 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
== Iconography == | |||
]]] | |||
Saint Nicholas is a popular subject portrayed on Eastern Orthodox ], particularly ] and ] ones. He is depicted as an Orthodox bishop, wearing the ] and holding a ]. Sometimes he is depicted wearing the Eastern Orthodox mitre, sometimes he is bareheaded. Iconographically, Nicholas is depicted as an elderly man with a short, full, white, fluffy beard and balding head. In commemoration of the miracle attributed to him by tradition at the Council of Nicaea, he is sometimes depicted with Christ over his left shoulder holding out a Gospel Book to him and the Theotokos over his right shoulder holding the omophorion. Because of his patronage of mariners, occasionally Saint Nicholas will be shown standing in a boat or rescuing drowning sailors; Medieval Chants and Polyphony, image on the cover of the Book of Hours of Duke of Berry, 1410.<ref>Wheeler, Rosenthal, "St Nicholas: A Closer Look at Christmas", p. 96, Nelson Reference & Electronic, 2005.</ref> | |||
] of Saint Nicholas the Wonderworker, ], Mount Athos]] | |||
In depictions of Saint Nicholas from Bari, he is usually shown as ], probably to emphasize his foreign origin.{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=111}} The emphasis on his foreignness may have been intended to enhance Bari's reputation by displaying that it had attracted the patronage of a saint from a far-off country.{{sfn|Seal|2005|page=111}} In Roman Catholic ], Saint Nicholas is depicted as a bishop, wearing the insignia of this dignity: a bishop's ], a mitre and a ]. The episode with the three dowries is commemorated by showing him holding in his hand either three purses, three coins or three balls of gold. Depending on whether he is depicted as patron saint of children or sailors, his images will be completed by a background showing ships, children or three figures climbing out of a wooden barrel (the three slaughtered children he resurrected).<ref name="St. Nicholas">{{cite web|title=St. Nicholas|url=http://www.cantius.org/go/liturgy_devotions/liturgical_seasons/advent_extraordinary/saint_nicholas/|website=St. John Cantius Parish|access-date=25 August 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160916164452/http://www.cantius.org/go/liturgy_devotions/liturgical_seasons/advent_extraordinary/saint_nicholas/|archive-date=16 September 2016|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
In a strange twist, the three gold balls referring to the dowry affair are sometimes metaphorically interpreted as being oranges or other fruits. As in the Low Countries in medieval times oranges most frequently came from Spain, this led to the belief that the Saint lives in Spain and comes to visit every winter bringing them oranges, other 'wintry' fruits and tales of magical creatures.<ref name="St. Nicholas"/> | |||
== Music == | |||
In 1948, ] completed a ], '']'' on a text by ] which covers the saint's legendary life in a dramatic sequence of events. A ] soloist appears as Saint Nicolas, with a mixed choir, boys singers, strings, piano duet, organ and percussion.<ref>{{cite web | |||
| url = http://www.brittenpears.org/resources/saint-nicolas | |||
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160304102449/http://www.brittenpears.org/resources/saint-nicolas | |||
| url-status = dead | |||
| archive-date = 4 March 2016 | |||
| title = Saint Nicolas / Op. 42. Cantata for tenor solo, chorus (SATB), semi-chorus (SA), four boy singers and string orchestra, piano duet, percussion and organ|date=1948 | |||
| publisher = Britten-Pears Foundation | |||
| access-date = 5 December 2018 | |||
}}</ref> | |||
== See also == | |||
{{Portal|Saints}} | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* "]", 1823 poem | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] – list of churches named after the saint | |||
==Notes== | |||
{{notelist}} | |||
==References== | |||
{{Reflist|30em}} | |||
==Sources== | |||
{{Refbegin|30em}} | |||
* {{citation|last1=Blacker|first1=Jean|last2=Burgess|first2=Glyn S.|last3=Ogden|first3=Amy V.|date=2013|chapter=The Life of St Nicholas: Introduction|title=Wace: The Hagiographical Works: The ''Conception Nostre Dame'' and the Lives of St Margaret and St Nicholas|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=f__hjbhMw1IC&q=Nicholas+of+Myra+Council+of+Nicaea&pg=PA250|location=Leiden, The Netherlands and Boston, Massachusetts|publisher=Brill|isbn=978-90-04-24768-0}} | |||
* {{citation|first=Sean|last=Coughlan|title='Santa's bone' proved to be correct age|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-42239197|date=6 December 2017|access-date=7 December 2017|website=BBC News: Family & Education}} | |||
* {{citation|last=Cullen|first=Ellie|date=6 December 2017|title=Bone fragment thought to belong to saint who inspired Father Christmas discovered in Italy: Academics have tested findings and say they belong to correct epoch|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/father-christmas-bone-fragment-saint-nicholas-oxford-university-researchers-italy-christianity-a8094356.html|website=The Atlantic}} | |||
* {{citation|last1=English|first1=Adam C.|last2=Crumm|first2=David|date=2 December 2012|url=http://www.readthespirit.com/explore/adam-english-digging-back-to-the-real-st-nicholas/|title=Adam English digging back into the real St. Nicholas|work=ReadTheSpirit online magazine}} | |||
* {{citation|last=English|first=Adam C.|date=2016|title=Christmas: Theological Anticipations|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BUtQDQAAQBAJ&q=Saint+Nicholas+butchered+children+resurrected&pg=PT132|location=Eugene, Oregon|publisher= Wipf & Stock Publishers|isbn=978-1-4982-3933-2}} | |||
* {{citation|last=Ferguson|first=George|date=1976|orig-year=1954|chapter=St. Nicholas of Myra or Bari|title=Signs and Symbols in Christian Art|location=Oxford, England|publisher=Oxford University Press|pages=135–136}} | |||
* {{citation|last=Greydanus|first=Steven D.|date=6 December 2016|title=Let's Stop Celebrating St. Nicholas Punching Arius: One, he didn't do it. Two, it wouldn't be such a great thing if he had.|url=http://www.ncregister.com/blog/steven-greydanus/lets-stop-celebrating-st.-nicholas-punching-arius|publisher=National Catholic Register}} | |||
* {{citation|last=Hunt|first=John|author-link=John Hunt (antiquarian)|date=1974|title=Irish Medieval Figure Sculpture, 1200–1600: A Study of Irish Tombs with Notes on Costume and Armour|location=Dublin, Ireland|publisher=Irish University Press|isbn=085667012X|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/irishmedievalfig0000hunt}} | |||
* {{citation|last=Jones|first=Charles W.|date=1978|title=Saint Nikolaos of Myra, Bari, and Manhattan: Biography of a Legend|location=Chicago, Illinois|publisher=University of Chicago Press|isbn=978-0-226-40700-5}} | |||
* {{citation|last=Keys|first=David|date=17 December 1993|title=Santa's tomb is found off Turkey: Academics claim to have found where St Nicholas was buried. David Keys reports|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/santas-tomb-is-found-off-turkey-academics-claim-to-have-found-where-st-nicholas-was-buried-david-keys-reports-1467871.html|access-date=19 December 2011|newspaper=The Independent}} | |||
* {{citation|last=Lendering|first=Jona|author-link=Jona Lendering|date=2006|title=Nicholas of Myra|website=Livius.org|url=https://www.livius.org/articles/person/nicholas-of-myra/}} | |||
* {{citation|last=Medrano|first=Kastalia|date=5 December 2017|title=Santa is Dead—And the Bones of Old St Nicholas Are Buried in a Bunch of Different Churches|url=http://www.newsweek.com/santa-claus-real-yes-and-his-bones-were-buried-bunch-different-churches-735531|website=Newsweek: Tech & Science}} | |||
* {{citation|author=University of Oxford|date=5 December 2017|title=Could ancient bones suggest Santa was real?: New Oxford University research has revealed that bones long venerated as relics of the saint, do in fact date from the right historical period.|url=http://www.ox.ac.uk/news/2017-12-05-could-ancient-bones-suggest-santa-was-real#|publisher=University of Oxford}} | |||
* {{citation|last=Seal|first=Jeremy|date=2005|title=Nicholas: The Epic Journey from Saint to Santa Claus|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gKhkokCFlhwC&q=Saint+Nicholas+of+Myra+Jeremy+Seal|location=New York City, New York and London, England|publisher=Bloomsbury|isbn=978-1-58234-419-5}} | |||
* {{citation|last=Wheeler|first=Joe L.|date=2010|title=Saint Nicholas|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=g8ds_Q9PZbwC&q=Saint+Nicholas+of+Myra+real+person|location=Nashville, Tennessee|publisher=Thomas Nelson|isbn=978-1-59555-115-3}} | |||
* {{citation|last=Wilkinson|first=Caroline|date=2018|chapter=Archaeological Facial Depiction for People from the Past with Facial Differences|title=Approaching Facial Difference: Past and Present|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oU5NDwAAQBAJ&q=Saint+Nicholas+imprisonment&pg=PA163|editor1-last=Skinner|editor1-first=Patricia|editor2-last=Cock|editor2-first=Emily|location=London, England|publisher=Bloomsbury Academic|isbn=978-1-3500-2830-2}} | |||
{{Refend}} | |||
== Further reading == | |||
* {{cite book |editor-last = Asano |editor-first = Kazoo |title = The Island of St. Nicholas. Excavation and Research of Gemiler Island Area, Lycia, Turkey |location = Osaka |publisher = Osaka University Press |year = 2010|ref=none}} | |||
* {{cite book |last1 = Wheeler |first1=Joe L. |last2 = Rosenthal|first2=Jim |name-list-style = amp |title = St. Nicholas: A Closer Look at Christmas |publisher = Nelson Reference & Electronic|location=Nashville, TN |year = 2006|isbn=9781418504076|ref=none}} | |||
== External links == | |||
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* {{Hl-Lex|b|Nikolaus_von_Myra.htm}} | |||
{{Christmas}} | |||
{{Symbols of Greece}} | |||
{{A Visit from St. Nicholas}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 01:19, 1 January 2025
4th-century Christian saint This article is about the fourth-century Christian saint. For the gift-bearing figure in modern folklore and popular culture partly based on the saint, see Santa Claus. For other uses, see Saint Nicholas (disambiguation). "Nicholas of Myra" redirects here. Not to be confused with Nicholas of Lyra.
Saint Nicholas of Myra | |
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St. Nicholas by Jaroslav Čermák | |
| |
Born | Traditionally 15 March 270 Patara, Lycia et Pamphylia, Roman Empire |
Died | Traditionally 6 December 343(343-12-06) (aged 73) Myra, Diocese of Asia, Roman Empire |
Venerated in | All Christian denominations which venerate saints |
Major shrine | Basilica di San Nicola, Bari, Italy |
Feast |
|
Attributes | Vested as a bishop. In Eastern Christianity, wearing an omophorion and holding a Gospel Book. |
Patronage |
|
Saint Nicholas of Myra (traditionally 15 March 270 – 6 December 343), also known as Nicholas of Bari, was an early Christian bishop of Greek descent from the maritime city of Patara in Anatolia (in modern-day Antalya Province, Turkey) during the time of the Roman Empire. Because of the many miracles attributed to his intercession, he is also known as Nicholas the Wonderworker. Saint Nicholas is the patron saint of sailors, merchants, archers, repentant thieves, children, brewers, pawnbrokers, toymakers, unmarried people, and students in various cities and countries around Europe. His reputation evolved among the pious, as was common for early Christian saints, and his legendary habit of secret gift-giving gave rise to the folklore of Santa Claus ("Saint Nick") through Sinterklaas.
Little is known about the historical Saint Nicholas. The earliest accounts of his life were written centuries after his death and probably contain legendary elaborations. He is said to have been born in the Anatolian seaport of Patara, Lycia, in Asia Minor to wealthy Christian parents. In one of the earliest attested and most famous incidents from his life, he is said to have rescued three girls from being forced into prostitution by dropping a sack of gold coins through the window of their house each night for three nights so their father could pay a dowry for each of them. Other early stories tell of him calming a storm at sea, saving three innocent soldiers from wrongful execution, and chopping down a tree possessed by a demon. In his youth, he is said to have made a pilgrimage to Egypt and Syria Palaestina. Shortly after his return, he became Bishop of Myra. He was later cast into prison during the persecution of Diocletian, but was released after the accession of Constantine.
An early list makes him an attendee at the First Council of Nicaea in 325, but he is never mentioned in any writings by people who were at the council. Late, unsubstantiated legends claim that he was temporarily defrocked and imprisoned during the council for slapping the heretic Arius. Another famous late legend tells how he resurrected three children, who had been murdered and pickled in brine by a butcher planning to sell them as pork during a famine.
Fewer than 200 years after Nicholas's death, the St. Nicholas Church was built in Myra under the orders of Theodosius II over the site of the church where he had served as bishop, and his remains were moved to a sarcophagus in that church. In 1087, while the Greek Christian inhabitants of the region were subjugated by the newly arrived Muslim Seljuk Turks, and soon after the beginning of the East–West schism, a group of merchants from the Italian city of Bari removed the major bones of Nicholas's skeleton from his sarcophagus in the church without authorization and brought them to their hometown, where they are now enshrined in the Basilica di San Nicola. The remaining bone fragments from the sarcophagus were later removed by Venetian sailors and taken to Venice during the First Crusade.
Biographical sources
Very little is known about Saint Nicholas's historical life. Any writings Nicholas himself may have produced have been lost and he is not mentioned by any contemporary chroniclers. This is not surprising, since Nicholas lived during a turbulent time in Roman history. The earliest mentions of Saint Nicholas indicate that, by the sixth century, his following was already well-established. Less than two hundred years after Saint Nicholas's probable death, the Eastern Roman Emperor Theodosius II (ruled 401–450) ordered the building of the Church of Saint Nicholas in Myra, which thereby preserves an early mention of his name. The Byzantine historian Procopius also mentions that the Emperor Justinian I (ruled 527–565) renovated churches in Constantinople dedicated to Saint Nicholas and Saint Priscus, which may have originally been built as early as c. 490.
Nicholas's name also occurs as "Nicholas of Myra of Lycia" on the tenth line of a list of attendees at the Council of Nicaea included by Theodore Lector in the Historiae Ecclesiasticae Tripartitae Epitome, written sometime between 510 and 515. A single, offhand mention of Nicholas of Myra also occurs in the biography of another saint, Saint Nicholas of Sion, who apparently took the name "Nicholas" to honor him. The Life of Saint Nicholas of Sion, written around 250 years after Nicholas of Myra's death, briefly mentions Nicholas of Sion visiting Nicholas's tomb to pay homage to him. According to Jeremy Seal, the fact that Nicholas had a tomb that could be visited serves as the almost solitary definitive proof that he was a real historical figure.
In his treatise De statu animarum post mortem (written c. 583), the theologian Eustratius of Constantinople cites Saint Nicholas of Myra's miracle of the three generals as evidence that souls may work independent from the body. Eustratius credits a lost Life of Saint Nicholas as his source. Nearly all the sources Eustratius references date from the late fourth century to early fifth century, indicating the Life of Saint Nicholas to which he refers was probably written during this time period, shortly after Nicholas's death. The earliest complete account of Nicholas's life that has survived to the present is a Life of Saint Nicholas, written in the early ninth century by Michael the Archimandrite (814–842), nearly 500 years after Nicholas's probable death.
Despite its extremely late date, Michael the Archimandrite's Life of Saint Nicholas is believed to heavily rely on older written sources and oral traditions. The identity and reliability of these sources, however, remains uncertain. Catholic historian D. L. Cann and medievalist Charles W. Jones both consider Michael the Archimandrite's Life the only account of Saint Nicholas that is likely to contain any historical truth. Jona Lendering, a Dutch historian of classical antiquity, notes that Michael the Archimandrite's Life does not contain a "conversion narrative", which was unusual for saints' lives of the period when it was written. He therefore argues that it is possible Michael the Archimandrite may have been relying on a source written before conversion narratives became popular, which would be a positive indication of that source's reliability. He notes that many of the stories recounted by Michael the Archimandrite closely resemble stories told about the first-century AD Neopythagorean philosopher Apollonius of Tyana in the Life of Apollonius of Tyana, an eight-volume biography of him written in the early third century by the Greek writer Philostratus. It was not unusual for Christian saints to adapt older stories of pagan cults. As Apollonius's hometown of Tyana was not far from Myra, Lendering contends that many popular stories about Apollonius may have become attached to Saint Nicholas.
Life and legends
Family and background
Accounts of Saint Nicholas's life agree on the essence of his story, but modern historians disagree regarding how much of this story is actually rooted in historical fact. Traditionally, Nicholas was born in the city of Patara (Lycia et Pamphylia), a port on the Mediterranean Sea, in Asia Minor in the Roman Empire, to a wealthy family of Greek Christians. According to some accounts, his parents were named Epiphanius (Ἐπιφάνιος, Epiphánios) and Johanna (Ἰωάννα, Iōánna), but, according to others, they were named Theophanes (Θεοφάνης, Theophánēs) and Nonna (Νόννα, Nónna). In some accounts, Nicholas's uncle was the bishop of the city of Myra, also in Lycia. Recognizing his nephew's calling, Nicholas's uncle ordained him as a priest.
Generosity and travels
After his parents died from an epidemic, Nicholas is said to have distributed their wealth to the poor. In his most famous exploit, which is first attested in Michael the Archimandrite's Life of Saint Nicholas, Nicholas heard of a devout man who had once been wealthy but had lost all of his money due to the "plotting and envy of Satan." The man could not afford proper dowries for his three daughters. This meant that they would remain unmarried and probably, in absence of any other possible employment, be forced to become prostitutes. Hearing of the girls' plight, Nicholas decided to help them, but, being too modest to help the family in public (or to save them the humiliation of accepting charity), he went to the house under the cover of night and threw a purse filled with gold coins through the window opening into the house. The father immediately arranged a marriage for his first daughter, and after her wedding, Nicholas threw a second bag of gold through the same window late at night.
According to Michael the Archimandrite's account, after the second daughter was married, the father stayed awake for at least two "nights" and caught Saint Nicholas in the same act of charity toward the third daughter. The father fell on his knees, thanking him, and Nicholas ordered him not to tell anyone about the gifts. The scene of Nicholas's secret gift-giving is one of the most popular scenes in Christian devotional art, appearing in icons and frescoes from across Europe. Although depictions vary depending on time and place, Nicholas is often shown wearing a cowl while the daughters are typically shown in bed, dressed in their nightclothes. Many renderings contain a cypress tree or a cross-shaped cupola.
The historicity of this incident is disputed. Adam C. English argues for a historical kernel to the legend, noting the story's early attestation as well as the fact that no similar stories were told about any other Christian saints. Jona Lendering, who also argues for the story's authenticity, notes that a similar story is told in Philostratus's Life of Apollonius of Tyana, in which Apollonius gives money to an impoverished father but posits that Michael the Archimandrite's account is markedly different. Philostratus does not mention the fate of the daughters and, in his story, Apollonius's generosity is purely motivated out of sympathy for the father; in Michael the Archimandrite's account, however, Saint Nicholas is instead expressly stated to be motivated by a desire to save the daughters from being sold into prostitution. He argues that this desire to help women is most characteristic of fourth-century Christianity, due to the prominent role women played in the early Christian movement, rather than Greco-Roman paganism or the Christianity of Michael the Archimandrite's time in the ninth century, by which point the position of women had drastically declined.
Nicholas is also said to have visited the Holy Land. The ship he was on was nearly destroyed by a terrible storm but he rebuked the waves, causing the storm to subside. Thus, Nicholas became venerated as the patron saint of sailors and travelers.
While in Palestine, Nicholas is said to have lived in a crypt near Bethlehem, where the Nativity of Jesus is believed to have taken place. Over the crypt where Nicholas is believed to have lived now stands the "Church of Saint Nicholas" in Beit Jala, a Christian town of which Nicholas is the Patron saint.
Bishop of Myra
After visiting the Holy Land, Nicholas returned to Myra. The bishop of Myra, who had succeeded Nicholas's uncle, had recently died and the priests in the city had decided that the first priest to enter the church that morning would be made bishop. Nicholas went to the church to pray and was therefore proclaimed the new bishop. He is said to have been imprisoned and tortured during the Great Persecution under the Emperor Diocletian (ruled 284–305), but was released under the orders of the Emperor Constantine the Great (ruled 306–337). This story sounds plausible, but is not attested in the earliest sources and is therefore unlikely to be historical.
One of the earliest attested stories of Saint Nicholas is one in which he saves three innocent men from execution. According to Michael the Archimandrite, three innocent men were condemned to death by the governor Eustathius. As they were about to be executed, Nicholas appeared, pushed the executioner's sword to the ground, released them from their chains, and angrily chastised a juror who had accepted a bribe. According to Jona Lendering, this story directly parallels an earlier story in Philostratus's Life of Apollonius of Tyana, in which Apollonius prevents the execution of a man falsely condemned of banditry. Michael the Archimandrite also tells another story in which the consul Ablabius accepted a bribe to put three famous generals to death, in spite of their actual innocence. Saint Nicholas appeared to Constantine and Ablabius in dreams, informing Constantine of the truth and frightening Ablabius into releasing the generals, for fear of Hell.
Later versions of the story are more elaborate, interweaving the two stories together. According to one version, Emperor Constantine sent three of his most trusted generals, named Ursos, Nepotianos, and Herpylion, to put down a rebellion in Phrygia. However, a storm forced them to take refuge in Myra. Unbeknownst to the generals, who were in the harbor, their soldiers further inland were fighting with local merchants and engaging in looting and destruction. Nicholas confronted the generals for allowing their soldiers to misbehave and the generals brought an end to the looting. Immediately after the soldiers had returned to their ships, Nicholas heard word of the three innocent men about to be executed and the three generals aided him in stopping the execution. Eustathius attempted to flee on his horse but Nicholas stopped his horse and chastised him for his corruption. Eustathius, under the threat of being reported directly to the Emperor, repented of his corrupt ways. Afterward, the generals succeeded in ending the rebellion and were promoted by Constantine to even higher status. The generals' enemies, however, slandered them to the consul Ablabius, telling him that they had not really put down the revolt, but instead encouraged their own soldiers to join it. The generals' enemies also bribed Ablabius and he had the three generals imprisoned. Nicholas then made his dream appearances and the three generals were set free.
Council of Nicaea
In 325, Nicholas is said to have attended the First Council of Nicaea, where he is said to have been a staunch opponent of Arianism and a devoted supporter of Trinitarianism, and one of the bishops who signed the Nicene Creed. Nicholas's attendance at the Council of Nicaea is attested early by Theodore the Lector's list of attendees, which records him as the 151st attendee. However, he is conspicuously never mentioned by Athanasius of Alexandria, the foremost defender of Trinitarianism at the council, who knew all the notable bishops of the period, nor is he mentioned by the historian Eusebius, who was also present at the council. Adam C. English notes that lists of the attendees at Nicaea vary considerably, with shorter lists only including roughly 200 names, but longer lists including around 300. Saint Nicholas's name only appears on the longer lists, not the shorter ones. Nicholas's name appears on a total of three early lists, one of which, Theodore the Lector, is generally considered to be the most accurate. According to Jona Lendering, there are two main possibilities:
- Nicholas did not attend the Council of Nicaea, but someone at an early date was baffled that his name was not listed and so added him to the list. Many scholars tend to favor this explanation.
- Nicholas did attend the Council of Nicaea, but, at an early date, someone decided to remove his name from the list, apparently deciding that it was better if no one remembered he had been there.
A later legend, first attested in the fourteenth century, over 1,000 years after Nicholas's death, holds that, during the Council of Nicaea, Nicholas lost his temper and slapped "a certain Arian" across the face. On account of this, Constantine revoked Nicholas's miter and pallium. Steven D. Greydanus concludes that, because of the story's late attestation, it "has no historical value." Jona Lendering, however, defends the veracity and historicity of the incident, arguing that, as it was embarrassing and reflects poorly on Nicholas's reputation, it is inexplicable why later hagiographers would have invented it. Later versions of the legend embellish it, making the heretic Arius himself and having Nicholas punch him rather than merely slapping him with his open hand. In these versions of the story, Nicholas is also imprisoned, but Christ and the Virgin Mary appear to him in his cell. He tells them he is imprisoned "for loving you" and they free him from his chains and restore his vestments. The scene of Nicholas slapping Arius is celebrated in Eastern Orthodox icons and episodes of Saint Nicholas at Nicaea are shown in a series of paintings from the 1660s in the Basilica di San Nicola in Bari.
Other reputed miracles
One story tells how during a terrible famine, a malicious butcher lured three little children into his house, where he killed them, placing their remains in a barrel to cure, planning to sell them off as ham. Nicholas, visiting the region to care for the hungry, saw through the butcher's lies and resurrected the pickled children by making the sign of the cross. Jona Lendering opines that the story is "without any historical value". Adam C. English notes that the story of the resurrection of the pickled children is a late medieval addition to the legendary biography of Saint Nicholas and that it is not found in any of his earliest Lives. Although this story seems bizarre and horrifying to modern audiences, it was tremendously popular throughout the Late Middle Ages and the early modern period, and widely beloved by ordinary folk. It is depicted in stained glass windows, wood panel paintings, tapestries, and frescoes. Eventually, the scene became so widely reproduced that, rather than showing the whole scene, artists began to merely depict Saint Nicholas with three naked children and a wooden barrel at his feet.
According to English, eventually, people who had forgotten or never learned the story began misinterpreting representations of it. That Saint Nicholas was shown with children led people to conclude he was the patron saint of children; meanwhile, the fact that he was shown with a barrel led people to conclude that he was the patron saint of brewers.
According to another story, during a great famine that Myra experienced in 311–312, a ship was in the port at anchor, loaded with wheat for the emperor in Constantinople. Nicholas invited the sailors to unload a part of the wheat to help in the time of need. The sailors at first disliked the request, because the wheat had to be weighed accurately and delivered to the emperor. Only when Nicholas promised them that they would not suffer any loss for their consideration did the sailors agree. When they arrived later in the capital, they made a surprising find: the weight of the load had not changed, although the wheat removed in Myra was enough for two full years and could even be used for sowing.
Relics
Gemile
It has long been traditionally assumed that Saint Nicholas was originally buried in his home town of Myra, where his relics are later known to have been kept, but some recent archaeological evidence indicates that Saint Nicholas may have originally been entombed in a rock-cut church located at the highest point on the small Turkish island of Gemile, only twenty miles away from his birthplace of Patara. Nicholas's name is painted on part of the ruined building. In antiquity, the island was known as "Saint Nicholas Island" and today it is known in Turkish as Gemiler Adasi, meaning "Island of Boats", in reference to Saint Nicholas's traditional role as the patron saint of seafarers.
The church was built in the fourth century, around the time of Nicholas's death, and is typical of saints' shrines from that time period. Nicholas was the only major saint associated with that part of Turkey. The church where historians believe he was originally entombed is at the western end of the great processional way.
Myra
In the mid-7th century, Gemile was vulnerable to attack by Arab fleets, so Nicholas's remains appear to have been moved from the island to the city of Myra, where Nicholas had served as bishop for most of his life. Myra is located roughly 40 km (25 mi) east of Gemile and its location further inland made it safer from seafaring Arab forces.
It is said that, in Myra, the relics of Saint Nicholas each year exuded a clear watery liquid which smelled like rose water, called manna, or myrrh, which was believed by the faithful to possess miraculous powers. As it was widely known that all Nicholas's relics were at Myra in their sealed sarcophagus, it was rare during this period for forgers of relics to claim to possess those belonging to Saint Nicholas.
A solemn bronze statue of the saint by Russian sculptor Gregory Pototsky was donated by the Russian government in 2000, and was given a prominent place in the square fronting the medieval Church of St Nicholas. In 2005, mayor Süleyman Topçu had the statue replaced by a red-suited plastic Santa Claus statue, because he wanted an image more recognisable to foreign visitors. Protests from the Russian government against this were successful, and the bronze statue was returned (albeit without its original high pedestal) to a corner nearer the church.
On 28 December 2009, the Turkish government announced that it would be formally requesting the return of Saint Nicholas's skeletal remains to Turkey from the Italian government. Turkish authorities asserted that Nicholas himself desired to be buried at his episcopal town, and that his remains were illegally removed from his homeland. In 2017, an archaeological survey at St. Nicholas Church, Demre was reported to have found a temple below the modern church, with excavation work to be done that will allow researchers to determine whether it still holds Nicholas's body. A sarcophagus possibly holding his remains was found there in 2024.
Bari
After the Battle of Manzikert in 1071, the Byzantine Empire temporarily lost control over most of Asia Minor to the invading Seljuk Turks, and so Greek Christians of Myra became subjects of the Turks. At the same time the Catholic Church in the West had declared (in 1054 AD) that the Greek church, the official church of the Byzantine Empire, was in schism. Because of the many wars in the region, some Christians were concerned that access to the tomb might become difficult.
Taking advantage of the confusion and the loss by the Greek Christian community of Myra of its Byzantine imperial protection, in the spring of 1087, Italian sailors from Bari in Apulia seized part of the remains of the saint from his burial church in Myra, over the objections of the Greek Orthodox monks in the church.
Adam C. English describes the removal of the relics from Myra as "essentially a holy robbery" and notes the thieves were not only afraid of being caught or chased after by the locals, but also the power of Saint Nicholas himself. Returning to Bari, they brought the remains with them and cared for them. The remains arrived on 9 May 1087. Two years later, Pope Urban II inaugurated a new church, the Basilica di San Nicola, to Saint Nicholas in Bari. The Pope himself personally placed Nicholas's relics into the tomb beneath the altar of the new church. The removal of Saint Nicholas's relics from Myra and their arrival in Bari is reliably recorded by multiple chroniclers, including Orderic Vitalis and 9 May continued to be celebrated every year by western Christians as the day of Nicholas's "translation". Eastern Orthodox Christians and the Turks have both long regarded the unauthorized removal of the relics from Myra as a blatant theft, but the people of Bari have instead maintained that it was a rescue mission to save the bones from the Turkish invaders. A legend, shown on the ceiling of the Basilica di San Nicola, holds that Nicholas once visited Bari and predicted that his bones would one day rest there.
Prior to the translation of Nicholas's relics to Bari, his following had been known in western Europe, but it had not been extremely popular. In autumn of 1096, Norman and Frankish soldiers mustered in Bari in preparation for the First Crusade. Although the Crusaders generally favored warrior saints, which Saint Nicholas was not, the presence of his relics in Bari made him materially accessible. Nicholas's associations with aiding travelers and seafarers also made him a popular choice for veneration. Nicholas's veneration by Crusaders helped promote his following throughout western Europe.
After the relics were brought to Bari, they continued to produce "myrrh", much to the joy of their new owners. Vials of myrrh from his relics have been taken all over the world for centuries, and can still be obtained from his church in Bari. Even up to the present day, a flask of manna is extracted from the tomb of Saint Nicholas every year on 6 December (the Saint's feast day) by the clergy of the basilica. The myrrh is collected from a sarcophagus which is located in the basilica vault and could be obtained in the shop nearby. The liquid gradually seeps out of the tomb, but it is unclear whether it originates from the body within the tomb, or from the marble itself; since the town of Bari is a harbour, and the tomb is below sea level, there have been several natural explanations proposed for the manna fluid, including the transfer of seawater to the tomb by capillary action.
In 1966, a vault in the crypt underneath the Basilica di San Nicola was dedicated as an Orthodox chapel with an iconostasis in commemoration of the recent lifting of the anathemas the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Churches had issued against each other during the Great Schism in 1054.
In May 2017, following talks between Pope Francis and Russian Orthodox Patriarch Kirill, a portion of the relics of Saint Nicholas in Bari were sent on loan to Moscow. The relic was on display for veneration at Christ the Savior Cathedral before being taken to Saint Petersburg in mid-June prior to returning to Bari. More than a million people lined up in Moscow for a momentary glimpse of the gilded ark holding one of the saint's ribs.
Venice
The sailors from Bari took only the main bones of Nicholas's skeleton, leaving all the minor fragments in the grave. The city of Venice had interest in obtaining the remaining fragments of his skeleton. In 1044, they dedicated the San Nicolò al Lido monastery basilica to him on the north end of the Lido di Venezia. According to a single chronicle written by an anonymous monk at this monastery, in 1100, a fleet of Venetian ships accompanied by Bishop Enrico Contarini sailed past Myra on their way to Palestine for the First Crusade. Bishop Enrico insisted for the fleet to turn back and set anchor in Myra. The Venetians took the remaining bones of Saint Nicholas, as well as those of several other bishops of Myra, from the church there, which was only guarded by four Orthodox monks, and brought them to Venice, where they deposited them in the San Nicolò al Lido. This tradition was lent credence in two scientific investigations of the relics in Bari and Venice, which confirmed that the relics in the two cities are anatomically compatible and may belong to the same person. It is said that someone dies every time the bones of Saint Nicholas in Venice are disturbed. The last time the bones were examined was in July 1992.
Other locations
Because of Nicholas's skeleton's long confinement in Myra, after it was brought to Bari, the demand for pieces of it rose. Small bones quickly began to disperse across western Europe. The sailors who had transported the bones gave one tooth and two fragments chipped from Nicholas's sarcophagus to the Norman knight William Pantulf. Pantulf took these relics to his hometown of Noron in Normandy, where they were placed in the local Church of St. Peter in June 1092. In 1096, the duke of Apulia gave several bones of Saint Nicholas to the count of Flanders, which he then enshrined in the Abbey of Watten. According to legend, in 1101, Saint Nicholas appeared in a vision to a French clerk visiting the shrine at Bari and told him to take one of his bones with him to his hometown of Port, near Nancy. The clerk took a finger bone back with him to Port, where a chapel was built to Saint Nicholas. Port became an important center of devotion in the following of Nicholas and, in the fifteenth century, a church known as the Basilique Saint-Nicolas was built there dedicated to him. The town itself is now known as "Saint Nicolas de Port" in honor of Nicholas.
The clergy at Bari strategically gave away samples of Nicholas's bones to promote the following and enhance its prestige. Many of these bones were initially kept in Constantinople, but, after the Sack of Constantinople in 1204 during the Fourth Crusade, these fragments were scattered across western Europe. A hand claimed to belong to Saint Nicholas was kept in the San Nicola in Carcere in Rome. This church, whose name means "Saint Nicholas in Chains", was built on the site of a former municipal prison. Stories quickly developed about Nicholas himself having been held in that prison. Mothers would come to the church to pray to Saint Nicholas for their jailed sons to be released and repentant criminals would place votive offerings in the church. As a result of this, Nicholas became the patron saint of prisoners and those falsely accused of crimes. An index finger claimed to belong to Saint Nicholas was kept in a chapel along the Ostian Way in Rome. Another finger was held in Ventimiglia in Liguria. Today, many churches in Europe, Russia, and the United States claim to possess small relics, such as a tooth or a finger bone.
An Irish tradition states that the relics of Saint Nicholas are also reputed to have been stolen from Myra by local Norman crusading knights in the twelfth century and buried near Thomastown, County Kilkenny, where a stone slab marks the reputed "Tomb of Saint Nicholas". According to the Irish antiquarian John Hunt, the tomb probably actually belongs to a local priest from Jerpoint Abbey.
Russian Orthodox Church announced on 22 September 2024 that Holy Myrrhbearers Cathedral in Baku received a part of Nicholas' relic as a gift.
Scientific analysis
Whereas the devotional importance of relics and the economics associated with pilgrimages caused the remains of most saints to be divided up and spread over numerous churches in several countries, Saint Nicholas is unusual in that most of his bones have been preserved in one spot: his grave crypt in Bari. Even with the allegedly continuing miracle of the manna, the archdiocese of Bari has allowed for one scientific survey of the bones. In the late 1950s, while the crypt was undergoing much-needed restoration, the bones were removed from it for the first time since their interment in 1089. A special Pontiffical Commission permitted Luigi Martino, a professor of human anatomy at the University of Bari, to examine the bones under the commission's supervision. Martino took thousands of measurements, detailed scientific drawings, photographs, and x-rays. These examinations revealed the saint to have died at over seventy years of age and to have been of average height and slender-to-average build. He also suffered from severe chronic arthritis in his spine and pelvis.
In 2004, at the University of Manchester, researchers Caroline Wilkinson and Fraco Introna reconstructed the saint's face based on Martino's examination. The review of the data revealed that the historical Saint Nicholas was 5 ft 6 in (1.68 m) in height and had a broken nose, which had partially healed, revealing that the injury had been suffered ante mortem. The broken nose appeared to conform with hagiographical reports that Saint Nicholas had been beaten and tortured during the Diocletianic Persecution. The facial reconstruction was produced by Caroline Wilkinson at the University of Manchester and was shown on a BBC2 TV program The Real Face of Santa. In 2014, the Face Lab at Liverpool John Moores University produced an updated reconstruction of Saint Nicholas's face.
In 2017, two researchers from Oxford University, Professor Tom Higham and Doctor Georges Kazan, radiocarbon dated a fragment of a pelvis claimed to belong to Saint Nicholas. The fragment originally came from a church in Lyon, France and, at the time of testing, was in the possession of Father Dennis O'Neill, a priest from St Martha of Bethany Church in Illinois. The results of the radiocarbon dating confirmed that the pelvis dates to the fourth century AD, around the same time that Saint Nicholas would have died, and is not a medieval forgery. The bone was one of the oldest the Oxford team had ever examined.
According to Professor Higham, most of the relics the team has examined turn out to be too recent to have actually belonged to the saint to whom they are attributed, but he states, "This bone fragment, in contrast, suggests that we could possibly be looking at remains from St Nicholas himself." Kazan believes the pelvis fragment may come from the same individual as the skeleton divided between the churches in Bari and Venice, since the bone they tested comes from the left pubis, and the only pelvis bone in the collection at Bari is the left ilium. In the absence of DNA testing, however, it is not yet possible to know for certain whether the pelvis is from the same man.
Veneration and celebrations
Further information: Saint Nicholas DayAmong Greeks and Italians, Saint Nicholas is a favorite of sailors, fishermen, ships and sailing. As a result, and over time, he has become the patron saint of several cities which maintain harbours. In centuries of Greek folklore, Nicholas was seen as "The Lord of the Sea", often described by modern Greek scholars as a kind of Christianized version of Poseidon. In modern Greece, he is still easily among the most recognizable saints and 6 December finds many cities celebrating their patron saint. He is also the patron saint of all of Greece and particularly of the Hellenic Navy.
In the Eastern Orthodox Church, Saint Nicholas's memory is celebrated on almost every Thursday of the year (together with the Apostles) with special hymns to him which are found in the liturgical book known as the Octoechos. Soon after the transfer of Saint Nicholas's relics from Myra to Bari, an East Slavic version of his Life and an account of the transfer of his relics were written by a contemporary to this event.
Devotional akathists and canons have been composed in his honour, and are frequently chanted by the faithful as they ask for his intercession. He is mentioned in the Liturgy of Preparation during the Divine Liturgy (Eastern Orthodox Eucharist) and during the All-Night Vigil. Many Orthodox churches will have his icon, even if they are not named after him. In Oriental Orthodoxy, the Coptic Church observes the Departure of St. Nicholas on 10 Kiahk, or 10 Taḫśaś in Ethiopia, which corresponds to the Julian Calendar's 6 December and Gregorian Calendar's 19 December.
Nicholas had a reputation for secret gift-giving, such as putting coins in the shoes of those who left them out for him, a practice celebrated on his feast day, 6 December. For those who still observe the Julian calendar the celebration currently takes place thirteen days later than it happens in the Gregorian calendar and Revised Julian calendar.
In Serbia, the most common Slava (annual ceremony and veneration of family's patron saint) is Saint Nicholas' day celebrated on 19 December.
In Monaco, the Cathedral of Our Lady Immaculate was built from 1874 on the site of St Nicholas's church, founded in 1252. A children's Mass is still held on 6 December in the cathedral.
In late medieval England, on Saint Nicholas Day parishes held Christmastide "boy bishop" celebrations. As part of this celebration, youths performed the functions of priests and bishops, and exercised rule over their elders. Today, Saint Nicholas is still celebrated as a great gift-giver in several Western European and Central European countries. In medieval times, Christian nuns in Belgium and France began to deposit baskets of food and clothes anonymously at the doorsteps of the needy, which gave rise to the practice of gift giving on Saint Nicholas Day. According to another source, on 6 December every sailor or ex-sailor of the Low Countries (which at that time was virtually all of the male population) would descend to the harbour towns to participate in a church celebration for their patron saint. On the way back they would stop at one of the various Nicholas fairs to buy some hard-to-come-by goods, gifts for their loved ones and invariably some little presents for their children. While the real gifts would only be presented at Christmas, the little presents for the children were given right away, courtesy of Saint Nicholas. This and his miracle of him resurrecting the three butchered children made Saint Nicholas a patron saint of children and later students as well. The custom of giving gifts on Saint Nicholas Day is popular in various parts of Christendom, with a popular tradition including children placing their shoes in the foyer for Saint Nicholas to deliver presents therein.
Santa Claus evolved from Dutch traditions regarding Saint Nicholas (Sinterklaas). When the Dutch established the colony of New Amsterdam, they brought the legend and traditions of Sinterklaas with them. Howard G. Hageman, of New Brunswick Theological Seminary, maintains that the tradition of celebrating Sinterklaas in New York existed in the early settlements of the Hudson Valley, although by the early nineteenth century had fallen by the way. St. Nicholas Avenue and St. Nicholas Terrace, streets in the Harlem neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City, an area originally settled by Dutch farmers, were named for St. Nicholas of Myra. The name later was taken for nearby St. Nicholas Park, located at the intersection of St. Nicholas Avenue and 127th Street.
Nicholas is honored in the calendar of saints of the Lutheran Churches, as well as in Church of England and in the Episcopal Church on 6 December.
Eastern Orthodox Feast Days for Saint Nicholas of Myra in Lycia
- 9 May – Translation of the relics of Saint Nicholas the Wonderworker from Myra to Bari, in 1087.
- 10 May – Passage of the relics (sojourn) in 1087 of Saint Nicholas the Wonderworker through the island of Zakynthos, while on their way to Bari.
- 20 May – Arrival of the relics in Bari.
- 29 July – Nativity of Saint Nicholas the Wonderworker.
- Movable holiday on the Sunday between 16 and 22 August – Synaxis of All Saints of Lefkados.
- 22 September – Synaxis of All Saints of Tula (commemoration of the protection of Tula from the invasion of the Crimean Khan Devlet Giray in 1552).
- 6 December – Commemoration of his death.
Iconography
Saint Nicholas is a popular subject portrayed on Eastern Orthodox icons, particularly Russian and Serbian ones. He is depicted as an Orthodox bishop, wearing the omophorion and holding a Gospel Book. Sometimes he is depicted wearing the Eastern Orthodox mitre, sometimes he is bareheaded. Iconographically, Nicholas is depicted as an elderly man with a short, full, white, fluffy beard and balding head. In commemoration of the miracle attributed to him by tradition at the Council of Nicaea, he is sometimes depicted with Christ over his left shoulder holding out a Gospel Book to him and the Theotokos over his right shoulder holding the omophorion. Because of his patronage of mariners, occasionally Saint Nicholas will be shown standing in a boat or rescuing drowning sailors; Medieval Chants and Polyphony, image on the cover of the Book of Hours of Duke of Berry, 1410.
In depictions of Saint Nicholas from Bari, he is usually shown as dark-skinned, probably to emphasize his foreign origin. The emphasis on his foreignness may have been intended to enhance Bari's reputation by displaying that it had attracted the patronage of a saint from a far-off country. In Roman Catholic iconography, Saint Nicholas is depicted as a bishop, wearing the insignia of this dignity: a bishop's vestments, a mitre and a crozier. The episode with the three dowries is commemorated by showing him holding in his hand either three purses, three coins or three balls of gold. Depending on whether he is depicted as patron saint of children or sailors, his images will be completed by a background showing ships, children or three figures climbing out of a wooden barrel (the three slaughtered children he resurrected).
In a strange twist, the three gold balls referring to the dowry affair are sometimes metaphorically interpreted as being oranges or other fruits. As in the Low Countries in medieval times oranges most frequently came from Spain, this led to the belief that the Saint lives in Spain and comes to visit every winter bringing them oranges, other 'wintry' fruits and tales of magical creatures.
Music
In 1948, Benjamin Britten completed a cantata, Saint Nicolas on a text by Eric Crozier which covers the saint's legendary life in a dramatic sequence of events. A tenor soloist appears as Saint Nicolas, with a mixed choir, boys singers, strings, piano duet, organ and percussion.
See also
- Saint Nicholas (European folklore)
- Companions of Saint Nicholas
- "A Visit from St. Nicholas", 1823 poem
- Saint Nicholas, patron saint archive
- Belznickel
- St. Nicholas Church (disambiguation) – list of churches named after the saint
Notes
- Greek: Ἅγιος Νικόλαος, Hágios Nikólaos; Latin: Sanctus Nicolaus
- The date of his birth and the year of his death are disputed, but 6 December has long been established as the traditional date of his death. Jeremy Seal remarks, "As vampires shun daylight, so saints are distinguished from ordinary mortals by the anniversaries they keep. The date of their death rather than their birth is commemorated."
- Νικόλαος ὁ Θαυματουργός, Nikólaos ho Thaumaturgós
- Joe L. Wheeler and Jona Lendering both note that the legends of Saint Nicholas are filled with sets of three, which may be symbolic for Nicholas's vehement defense of the Holy Trinity.
References
- Book of Martyrs. Catholic Book Publishing. 1948.
- "Serbia". Saint Nicholas Center. Archived from the original on 8 December 2010. Retrieved 4 April 2012.
- "Who is St. Nicholas?". St. Nicholas Center. Archived from the original on 10 October 2010. Retrieved 7 December 2010.
- "St. Nicholas". Orthodox America. Archived from the original on 7 September 2011. Retrieved 7 December 2010.
- ^ Seal 2005, p. 2.
- Seal 2005, pp. 2–3.
- Lloyd, John; Mitchinson, John (December 2008). The book of general ignorance (Noticeably stouter ed.). Faber and Faber. p. 318. ISBN 978-0-571-24692-2.
- Cunningham, Lawrence (2005). A brief history of saints. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 33. ISBN 978-1-4051-1402-8.
The fourth-century Saint Nikolaos of Myra, Greek Anatolia (in present-day Turkey) spread to Europe through the port city of Bari in southern Italy... Devotion to the saint in the Low countries became blended with Nordic folktales, transforming this early Greek Orthodox Bishop into that Christmas icon, Santa Claus.
- ^ Collins, Ace (2009). Stories Behind Men of Faith. Zondervan. p. 121. ISBN 9780310564560. Archived from the original on 11 September 2015. Retrieved 28 November 2015.
Nicholas was born in the Greek city of Patara around 270 AD. The son of a businessman named Theophanes and his wife, Nonna, the child's earliest years were spent in Myra… As a port on the Mediterranean Sea, in the middle of the sea lanes that linked Egypt, Greece and Rome, Myra was a destination for traders, fishermen, and merchant sailors. Spawned by the spirit of both the city's Greek heritage and the ruling Roman government, cultural endeavours such as art, drama, and music were mainstays of everyday life.
- English, Adam C. (2012). The Saint Who Would Be Santa Claus: The True Life and Trials of Nicholas of Myra. Waco, TX: Baylor University Press. pp. 57–63. ISBN 978-1-60258-636-9.
- Wheeler 2010, pp. vii–x.
- ^ Seal 2005, pp. 14–15.
- ^ Seal 2005, p. 14.
- ^ Wheeler 2010, pp. vii–viii.
- ^ Blacker, Burgess & Ogden 2013, p. 250.
- ^ Wheeler 2010, p. ix.
- ^ Blacker, Burgess & Ogden 2013, p. 251.
- ^ Wheeler 2010, p. x.
- Seal 2005, p. 15.
- Cioffari, Gerardo (1987). "San Nicola nelle fonti letterarie dal V all'VIII secolo". San Nicola: Splendori d'arte d'Oriente e d'Occidente S. Nicola nella critica storia: 44–45.
- ^ Wheeler 2010, p. xi.
- Introduction to Michael the Archimandrite's Life of Saint Nicholas Archived 3 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Lendering 2006, p. Nicholas of Myra.
- ^ Blacker, Burgess & Ogden 2013, p. 249.
- Domenico, Roy Palmer (2002). The regions of Italy: a reference guide to history and culture. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 21. ISBN 0-313-30733-4.
Saint Nicholas (Bishop of Myra) replaced Sabino as the patron saint of the city… A Greek from what is now Turkey, he lived in the early fourth century.
- Burman, Edward (1991). Emperor to emperor: Italy before the Renaissance. Constable. p. 126. ISBN 0-09-469490-7.
For although he is the patron saint of Russia, and the model for a northern invention such as Santa Claus, Nicholas of Myra was a Greek.
- Ingram, W. Scott; Ingram, Asher, Scott; Robert (2004). Greek Immigrants. Infobase Publishing. p. 24. ISBN 9780816056897.
The original Santa Claus, Saint Nicholas, was a Greek born in Asia Minor (now modern Turkey) in the fourth century. He was very religious from an early age and devoted his life to Christianity.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Lanzi, Gioia (2004). Saints and their symbols: recognizing saints in art and in popular images. Liturgical Press. p. 111. ISBN 0-8146-2970-9.
Nicholas was born around 270 AD in Patara on the coast of what is now western Turkey.
- Lanzi, Gioia (2004). Saints and their symbols: recognizing saints in art and in popular images. Liturgical Press. p. 111. ISBN 0-8146-2970-9.
Nicholas was born around 270 AD in Patara on the coast of what is now western Turkey; his parents were Epiphanius and Joanna.
- ^ Ferguson 1976, p. 136.
- Bennett, William J. (2009). The True Saint Nicholas: Why He Matters to Christmas. Howard Books. pp. 14–17. ISBN 978-1-4165-6746-2.
- ^ Michael the Archimandrite, Life of Saint Nicholas Archived 3 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine Chapters 10–11
- ^ Wheeler 2010, p. 38.
- Michael the Archimandrite, Life of Saint Nicholas Archived 3 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine (Chapters 12–18)
- ^ Michael the Archimandrite, Life of Saint Nicholas Archived 3 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine (Chapters 16–18)
- ^ Seal 2005, p. 1.
- ^ English & Crumm 2012.
- "Stories from Beit Jala". St. Nicholas Center. Retrieved 26 August 2023.
- "Church of Saint Nicholas – Beit Jala".
- Faber, Paul (2006). Sinterklaas overseas: the adventures of a globetrotting saint. KIT Publishers. p. 7. ISBN 9789068324372.
The historical figure that served as model for the Dutch Sinterklaas was born around 270 AD in the port of Patara in the Greek province of Lycia in Asia Minor (present-day Turkey). His Greek name Nikolaos means something along the lines of "victor of the people".
- Blacker, Burgess & Ogden 2013, pp. 249–250.
- ^ Wilkinson 2018, p. 163.
- ^ Lendering 2006, p. Medieval Saint.
- ^ Michael the Archimandrite, Life of Saint Nicholas Archived 3 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine (Chapter 31)
- ^ Michael the Archimandrite, Life of Saint Nicholas Archived 3 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine (Chapter 33)
- Wheeler 2010, pp. 38–39.
- Wheeler 2010, pp. 39–40.
- ^ Wheeler 2010, p. 40.
- Wheeler 2010, pp. 40–41.
- Wheeler & Rosenthal, "St Nicholas: A Closer Look at Christmas", (Chapter 1), Nelson Reference & Electronic, 2005
- Federer, William J. (2002). There Really Is a Santa Claus – History of St. Nicholas & Christmas Holiday Traditions. Amerisearch, Inc. p. 26. ISBN 978-0965355742.
- Davis, Leo Donald (1990). The First Seven Ecumenical Councils (325–787) Their History and Theology. Liturgical Press. p. 58. ISBN 0-8146-5616-1.
- Wheeler 2010, p. xii.
- ^ Seal 2005, p. 93.
- ^ Greydanus 2016.
- ^ Wheeler 2010, p. 35.
- "St. Nicholas Center: Saint Nicolas". stnicholascenter.org. Archived from the original on 5 December 2009. Retrieved 22 December 2009.
- ^ English 2016, p. 132.
- English 2016, pp. 132–133.
- Le Saux, Françoise Hazel Marie (2005). A companion to Wace. D.S. Brewer. ISBN 978-1-84384-043-5.
- ^ Keys 1993.
- ^ Jones 1978, pp. 176–193.
- De Ceglia, Francesco Paolo: "The science of Santa Claus : discussions on the Manna of Nicholas of Myra in the modern age". In Nuncius – 27 (2012) 2, pp. 241–269.
- Seal 2005, pp. 135–136.
- "Saint Nicholas". St. John Cantius Parish. Archived from the original on 16 September 2016. Retrieved 25 August 2016.
- "Turks want Santa's bones returned". BBC News. 28 December 2009. Archived from the original on 22 January 2010. Retrieved 23 May 2010.
- "Santa Claus's bones must be brought back to Turkey from Italy". Todayszaman.com. 28 December 2009. Archived from the original on 11 December 2013. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
- "Tomb of St Nicholas may have been discovered in Turkey". ir.ishtimes.com. 4 October 2017. Archived from the original on 8 October 2017. Retrieved 7 October 2017.
- ^ Cullen 2017.
- Seal 2005, p. 101.
- Ott, Michael (1907). "Nicholas of Myra". The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 11. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
- Butler, Albin (1860). Lives of the Saints. Vol. 2.
- Wheeler, Joe L.; Rosenthal, Jim (2005). "Chapter 1". St. Nicholas: A Closer Look at Christmas. Thomas Nelson. ISBN 9781418504076.
- Medrano 2017.
- ^ Seal 2005, p. 131.
- ^ Seal 2005, pp. 93–94.
- Seal 2005, pp. 100–102.
- Seal 2005, pp. 114–115.
- Seal 2005, pp. 114–116.
- Seal 2005, p. 117.
- ""Major relics of St Nicholas visit Russia", Vatican Radio, May 21, 2017". Archived from the original on 6 December 2017. Retrieved 6 December 2017.
- "Filipov, David. "Why more than a million Russians have lined up to see a piece of the rib of Saint Nicholas", The Washington Post, June 29, 2017". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 11 December 2017. Retrieved 6 December 2017.
- ^ University of Oxford 2017.
- ^ Seal 2005, p. 136.
- Seal 2005, pp. 125–127.
- Seal 2005, p. 127.
- Seal 2005, pp. 127–136.
- "Ci sono ossa di san Nicola anche a Venezia?" [There are also bones of St. Nicholas in Venice?]. enec.it (in Italian). Europe – Near East Center. Archived from the original on 9 December 2012. Retrieved 2 March 2017.
- "Ma le ossa sono tutte a Bari?" [Are all the bones in Bari?]. enec.it (in Italian). Europe – Near East Center. Archived from the original on 8 December 2012. Retrieved 2 March 2017.
- Seal 2005, pp. 135–137.
- ^ Seal 2005, p. 137.
- ^ English 2016, p. 133.
- "Relics of St. Nicholas – Where are They?". Saint Nicholas Center. Archived from the original on 13 December 2013. Retrieved 11 February 2014.
- "Heritage Conservation Plan: Newtown Jerpoint County Kilkenny" (PDF). An Chomhairle Oidhreachta/The Heritage Council. 2007. p. 81. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 October 2016. Retrieved 2 March 2017.
- Hunt 1974.
- "Бакинскому кафедральному собору передана частица мощей святителя Николая Чудотворца" [A particle of the relics of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker was handed over to the Baku Cathedral]. www.pravoslavie.az (in Russian). Retrieved 8 October 2024.
- "Anatomical Examination of the Bari Relics". Saint Nicholas Center. Archived from the original on 11 December 2013. Retrieved 6 December 2013.
- ^ "The Real Face of St. Nicholas". St Nicholas Center. Archived from the original on 4 December 2016. Retrieved 15 December 2016.
- ^ "The Real Face of Santa". Archived from the original on 12 November 2014. Retrieved 12 November 2014. (navigate to 4th of 4 pictures)
- ^ Coughlan 2017.
- "Greece". St. Nicholas Center. Archived from the original on 12 December 2013. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
- Goroshkova, Natalia. "ON THE SPECIAL DEDICATIONS OF THE SEVEN DAYS OF THE WEEK: WHEN AND TO WHOM TO PRAY". OrthoChristian. Archived from the original on 28 September 2023. Retrieved 1 June 2024.
- "Feasts and Saints, Commemorated on May 9". Orthodox Church in America. Archived from the original on 10 July 2012. Retrieved 4 April 2012.
- "St. Nicholas the Wonderworker". Synaxarium (Lives of Saints). Coptic Orthodox Church Network. Archived from the original on 13 December 2013. Retrieved 13 December 2013.
- "Commemorations for Kiahk 10". Coptic Orthodox Church Network. Archived from the original on 31 December 2013. Retrieved 13 December 2013.
- Carus, Louise (1 October 2002). The Real St. Nicholas. Quest Books. p. 2. ISBN 9780835608138.
In Myra, the traditional St. Nicholas Feast Day is still celebrated on 6 December which many believe to be the anniversary of St Nicholas's death. This day is honored throughout Western Christendom, in lands comprising both Catholic and Protestant communities (in the Eastern Orthodox Church, the Saint's feast date is 19 December). On 5 December, the eve of St Nicholas Day, some American boys and girls put their shoes outside their bedroom door and leave a small gift in hopes that Saint Nicholas soon will be there.
- DeeAnn, Mandryk (15 September 2013). Canadian Christmas Traditions: Festive Recipes and Stories From Coast to Coast. James Lorimer & Company. p. 237. ISBN 978-1-4594-0560-8.
- McKnight, George H. (1917). St. Nicholas: His Legend and His Role in the Christmas Celebration and Other Popular Customs. New York: Putnam's. pp. 37–52. ISBN 978-1115125055. Archived from the original on 12 December 2009. Retrieved 25 August 2016.
- Sandford, John (3 April 2013). Encyclopedia of Contemporary German Culture. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-81610-9.
- Joe Wheeler & Jim Rosenthal, "St. Nicholas A Closer Look at Christmas", (Chapter 8), Nelson Reference & Electronic, 2005.
- Theology Overview Hageman, Howard G., 1979. "Review of Saint Nicholas of Myra, Bari, and Manhattan: Biography of a Legend", Theology Today, Princeton. Princeton Theological Seminary. vol. 36, issue 3 Archived 7 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine
- ""St. Nicholas Park", New York City Department of Parks & Recreation". Archived from the original on 6 December 2017. Retrieved 6 December 2017.
- "Celebrating St. Nicholas Day at Home". Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. 3 December 2020. Retrieved 22 December 2022.
- "The Calendar". The Church of England. Retrieved 27 March 2021.
- Lesser Feasts and Fasts 2018. Church Publishing, Inc. 17 December 2019. ISBN 978-1-64065-235-4.
- "Translation of the relics of Saint Nicholas the Wonderworker from Myra to Bari". Orthodox Church in America. Archived from the original on 24 July 2023. Retrieved 24 July 2023.
- "Ἡ πάροδος τοῦ ἱεροῦ λειψάνου τοῦ Ἁγίου Νικολάου τοῦ Θαυματουργοῦ ἐκ τῆς νήσου Ζακύνθου". Synaxaristis (in Greek). Archived from the original on 23 April 2023. Retrieved 24 July 2023.
- The Service of Matins for Saturday, May 20, 2023 (PDF) (in Greek and English). Digital Chant Stand of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America. p. 7. Archived (PDF) from the original on 24 July 2023. Retrieved 24 July 2023.
- "Μετακομιδὴ Τιμίων Λειψάνων Ἁγίου Νικολάου τοῦ Θαυματουργοῦ". Synaxaristis (in Greek). Archived from the original on 19 March 2012. Retrieved 24 July 2023.
- "Nativity of Saint Nicholas the Wonderworker". Orthodox Church in America. Archived from the original on 24 July 2023. Retrieved 24 July 2023.
- "Synaxis of All Saints of Lefkados". Orthodox Christianity Then and Now. Archived from the original on 9 December 2022. Retrieved 24 July 2023.
- "Synaxis of the Saints of Tula". Orthodox Church in America. Archived from the original on 24 July 2023. Retrieved 24 July 2023.
- "Saint Nicholas the Wonderworker, Archbishop of Myra in Lycia". Orthodox Church in America. Archived from the original on 21 November 2020. Retrieved 24 July 2023.
- Wheeler, Rosenthal, "St Nicholas: A Closer Look at Christmas", p. 96, Nelson Reference & Electronic, 2005.
- ^ Seal 2005, p. 111.
- ^ "St. Nicholas". St. John Cantius Parish. Archived from the original on 16 September 2016. Retrieved 25 August 2016.
- "Saint Nicolas / Op. 42. Cantata for tenor solo, chorus (SATB), semi-chorus (SA), four boy singers and string orchestra, piano duet, percussion and organ". Britten-Pears Foundation. 1948. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 5 December 2018.
Sources
- Blacker, Jean; Burgess, Glyn S.; Ogden, Amy V. (2013), "The Life of St Nicholas: Introduction", Wace: The Hagiographical Works: The Conception Nostre Dame and the Lives of St Margaret and St Nicholas, Leiden, The Netherlands and Boston, Massachusetts: Brill, ISBN 978-90-04-24768-0
- Coughlan, Sean (6 December 2017), "'Santa's bone' proved to be correct age", BBC News: Family & Education, retrieved 7 December 2017
- Cullen, Ellie (6 December 2017), "Bone fragment thought to belong to saint who inspired Father Christmas discovered in Italy: Academics have tested findings and say they belong to correct epoch", The Atlantic
- English, Adam C.; Crumm, David (2 December 2012), "Adam English digging back into the real St. Nicholas", ReadTheSpirit online magazine
- English, Adam C. (2016), Christmas: Theological Anticipations, Eugene, Oregon: Wipf & Stock Publishers, ISBN 978-1-4982-3933-2
- Ferguson, George (1976) , "St. Nicholas of Myra or Bari", Signs and Symbols in Christian Art, Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, pp. 135–136
- Greydanus, Steven D. (6 December 2016), Let's Stop Celebrating St. Nicholas Punching Arius: One, he didn't do it. Two, it wouldn't be such a great thing if he had., National Catholic Register
- Hunt, John (1974), Irish Medieval Figure Sculpture, 1200–1600: A Study of Irish Tombs with Notes on Costume and Armour, Dublin, Ireland: Irish University Press, ISBN 085667012X
- Jones, Charles W. (1978), Saint Nikolaos of Myra, Bari, and Manhattan: Biography of a Legend, Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press, ISBN 978-0-226-40700-5
- Keys, David (17 December 1993), "Santa's tomb is found off Turkey: Academics claim to have found where St Nicholas was buried. David Keys reports", The Independent, retrieved 19 December 2011
- Lendering, Jona (2006), "Nicholas of Myra", Livius.org
- Medrano, Kastalia (5 December 2017), "Santa is Dead—And the Bones of Old St Nicholas Are Buried in a Bunch of Different Churches", Newsweek: Tech & Science
- University of Oxford (5 December 2017), Could ancient bones suggest Santa was real?: New Oxford University research has revealed that bones long venerated as relics of the saint, do in fact date from the right historical period., University of Oxford
- Seal, Jeremy (2005), Nicholas: The Epic Journey from Saint to Santa Claus, New York City, New York and London, England: Bloomsbury, ISBN 978-1-58234-419-5
- Wheeler, Joe L. (2010), Saint Nicholas, Nashville, Tennessee: Thomas Nelson, ISBN 978-1-59555-115-3
- Wilkinson, Caroline (2018), "Archaeological Facial Depiction for People from the Past with Facial Differences", in Skinner, Patricia; Cock, Emily (eds.), Approaching Facial Difference: Past and Present, London, England: Bloomsbury Academic, ISBN 978-1-3500-2830-2
Further reading
- Asano, Kazoo, ed. (2010). The Island of St. Nicholas. Excavation and Research of Gemiler Island Area, Lycia, Turkey. Osaka: Osaka University Press.
- Wheeler, Joe L. & Rosenthal, Jim (2006). St. Nicholas: A Closer Look at Christmas. Nashville, TN: Nelson Reference & Electronic. ISBN 9781418504076.
External links
- The Saint Nicholas Center
- Biography of Saint Nicholas
- The History of Santa Claus and Father Christmas
- "Saint Nicholas" in the Ecumenical Lexicon of Saints
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Related |
- Saint Nicholas
- 270 births
- 343 deaths
- 3rd-century bishops in Roman Anatolia
- 4th-century bishops in Roman Anatolia
- 4th-century Christian saints
- Anglican saints
- Burials at the Basilica di San Nicola
- Christmas characters
- Christian folklore
- Myroblyte saints
- Saints from Roman Anatolia
- Santa Claus
- Sinterklaas
- Miracle workers
- Diocletianic Persecution
- Christmas gift-bringers
- Ancient Anatolian Greeks
- Participants in the First Council of Nicaea