St. Nicolas Day
St. Nicholas Day, feast day
(December 6) of St. Nicholas, the 4th-century bishop of Myra. St. Nicholas is
the patron saint of Russia and Greece, of a number of cities, and of sailors
and children, among many other groups, and was noted for his generosity. Some
countries celebrate St. Nicholas Day on December 5.
History After the Reformation, St. Nicholas was
largely forgotten in Protestant Europe, although his memory was kept alive in
Holland as Sinterklaas. There St. Nicholas is said to arrive on horseback on
his feast day, dressed in a bishop’s red robe and mitre and accompanied by
Black Peter (Zwarte Piet), variously described as a freed slave or a Moor, to
help him distribute sweets and presents to good children or lumps of coal,
potatoes, or switches to bad ones. The Dutch took the tradition to New
Amsterdam (now New York City) in the American colonies, where he was
transformed into Santa Claus by the English-speaking majority. His legend of a
kindly old man was united with old Nordic folktales of a magician who punished
naughty children and rewarded good children with presents. The resulting image
of Santa Claus in the United States crystallized in the 19th century, and he
has ever since remained the patron of the gift-giving festival of Christmas. In
Britain he was largely replaced with Father Christmas.
Traditions In parts of northern Europe, particularly the
Low Countries and some German-speaking areas, St. Nicholas Day has remained a
time when children are given special cookies, candies, and gifts. In many
places, children leave letters for St. Nicholas and carrots or grass for his
donkey or horse. In the morning, they find small presents under their pillows
or in the shoes, stockings, or plates they have set out for him. Oranges and
chocolate coins are common treats that represent St. Nicholas’s legendary rescue
of three impoverished girls by paying their marriage dowries with gold. Candy
canes, which have the shape of a bishop’s crosier, are also given.
It is thought that over the
centuries the legendary St. Nicholas was merged with similar cultural and religious
figures. Significant among these were the pagan Knecht Ruprecht and the Roman
figure of Befana, as well as the Christ Child (Christkind, or Kris Kringle). A
number of countries have traditions in which a malevolent character accompanies
St. Nicholas. In France, Père Fouettard, who legend holds tried to cook three
boys in a barrel of brine, is said to whip naughty children or give them coal.
In Germany, Knecht Ruprecht serves as St. Nicholas’s servant and gives children
who do not know their prayers sticks, stones, or coal. The terrifying
devil-like Krampus is common in many central European counties and carries
chains, bells, and sometimes a large basket with which to threaten naughty
children.
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