St. Nicholas Day:
St. Nicholas Day, feast day
(December 6) of St. Nicholas, patron saint of Russia and Greece, of a number of
cities, and of sailors and children, among many other groups. Some countries
celebrate St. Nicholas Day on December 5. Little is known of the life of the
historical Nicholas. He was the bishop of Myra (near Kale in southwestern
Turkey) in the 4th century and developed a reputation for generosity. In 1087
Italians stole his remains from the church in Myra, by then under the control
of Muslims, and took them to Bari for reburial, and during the Middle Ages he
became extraordinarily popular. 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 (New York
City), where he was transformed into Santa Claus. In Britain he was replaced
with Father Christmas. 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). 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.
https://www.britannica.com/topic/Saint-Nicholas-Day
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