Back to the saints / Hierarchs / St Nicholas the Wonderworker
Hierarch · 4th century

Nicholas the Wonderworker

Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints Nicholas, Archbishop of Myra, the Wonderworker

c. 270 – December 6, c. 343 (4th century)

Also known as St. Nicholas of Myra · Hagios Nikolaos

Bishop of Myra famed for secret gifts to the poor and rescue of the condemned.

Life

Saint Nicholas the Wonderworker was the bishop of Myra in Lycia, a province of Asia Minor, during the fourth century. He is among the most widely venerated saints in both the Eastern and Western Christian traditions, celebrated for his generosity to the poor, his defense of Orthodox doctrine, and the many miracles attributed to him during and after his life.

By tradition Nicholas was born in the port city of Patara in Lycia to wealthy Christian parents, named in various sources as Theophanes and Nonna or Epiphanius and Johanna. An only child born to formerly childless parents, he was raised in piety and inherited his family's wealth, which he distributed to those in need before and during his episcopate. After making pilgrimage to Egypt and the Holy Land, he returned to Myra, where he was chosen bishop.

He suffered imprisonment during the persecution of the Emperor Diocletian and was released after Constantine the Great came to power. His reputation for secret almsgiving, his rescue of the condemned, and his protection of sailors made him a beloved patron across many lands. His feast is kept on December 6, with a second commemoration on May 9 marking the translation of his relics to Bari.

Customs & Traditions

Honored with gifts to children on his feast (Dec 6) — the historical root of the Santa Claus custom — and kept with special devotion by sailors.

Explore

Timeline

  1. c. 270 Birth in Patara By tradition Nicholas was born in Patara, a port city in Lycia in Asia Minor, to pious and wealthy Christian parents. Sources give his parents' names variously as Theophanes and Nonna or Epiphanius and Johanna.
  2. Early life Distribution of his inheritance After inheriting his parents' wealth, Nicholas gave it away to the poor. The synaxarion relates that he was ordained reader and then priest by his uncle, the Bishop of Patara, and made pilgrimage to Egypt and the Holy Land.
  3. Early 4th century Bishop of Myra Nicholas was made Archbishop of Myra. By tradition he was selected through a sign: an elder bishop received a vision that the first to enter the church the next morning would be the one God had chosen, and that man was Nicholas.
  4. 284–305 Imprisonment under Diocletian During the persecution under the Emperor Diocletian, Nicholas was cast into prison, where tradition holds he sustained and encouraged his fellow Christians. He was released after Constantine the Great came to power.
  5. 325 Council of Nicaea (traditional) Tradition holds that Nicholas attended the First Ecumenical Council at Nicaea and contended against the heretic Arius. Historians note that his name does not appear in the surviving lists of bishops who attended the council.
  6. December 6, c. 343 Repose at Myra Nicholas fell asleep in the Lord at an advanced age and was buried at Myra. Sources place his death between 342 and 352. His relics were said to remain incorrupt and to exude a fragrant, curative myrrh or manna.
  7. 1087 Translation of relics to Bari Italian merchants from Bari carried the major portion of his relics from Myra, then under Turkish occupation, to Bari in Italy. Pope Urban II inaugurated the Basilica of San Nicola in Bari in 1089, placing the relics beneath the altar. This translation is commemorated on May 9.

Contributions & Legacy

The Three Daughters and Secret Almsgiving

The most authenticated early account of Nicholas concerns a poor man who, lacking dowries for his three daughters, was reduced to despair and contemplated selling them into prostitution. Nicholas, learning of the family's plight, secretly delivered gold through their window on three occasions, providing each daughter a dowry so that all three could marry honorably.

This act of hidden generosity became the defining image of Nicholas's sanctity and the root of his enduring association with secret gift-giving.

Rescue of the Condemned

Tradition records that Nicholas rescued three innocent men who had been sentenced to death, staying the executioner's sword and confronting the corrupt official responsible. In a related account he is said to have appeared in a dream to the Emperor Constantine to demand the release of three military officers unjustly condemned.

These episodes established Nicholas as a protector of the falsely accused and a defender of justice.

Defense of Orthodox Doctrine

Nicholas is remembered as an opponent of Arianism. By tradition, at the Council of Nicaea in 325 he confronted Arius directly, and one account relates that he struck Arius and was temporarily stripped of his episcopal insignia, then restored after other bishops witnessed visions of Christ and the Virgin Mary returning his Gospel book and vestments.

Historians observe that, despite this tradition, his name does not appear in any of the early lists of bishops recorded as attending the council, so his participation remains historically unverified.

Patron of Sailors

Many traditions connect Nicholas to the sea. He is said to have calmed a storm through prayer during a voyage and to have healed a mortally injured sailor. Another account describes his rescue of mariners in the Aegean during his lifetime.

A further tradition relates that during a famine he persuaded the crew of a grain ship to leave part of the emperor's cargo at Myra, and that the wheat miraculously replenished itself, sparing the city. These accounts made him the beloved patron of sailors, who keep his memory with special devotion.

Relics & Shrines

After his repose Nicholas was buried at Myra, where his relics were said to remain incorrupt and to flow with a fragrant, healing myrrh or manna.

In 1087, while Myra lay under Turkish occupation, merchants from Bari in Italy seized the major portion of his bones and carried them to their city. Pope Urban II inaugurated the Basilica of San Nicola in Bari in 1089, where the relics were placed beneath the altar and where a substance known as the Manna di San Nicola is said to flow from them, valued for its medicinal powers. Around 1100 Venetian sailors obtained the remaining fragments. The Emperor Justinian I had earlier built a church in Nicholas's honor at Constantinople in the sixth century.

Miracles & Traditions

Historically Documented: The earliest and best-attested account is Nicholas's secret provision of dowries for the three daughters of a poor man, which underlies his reputation for hidden almsgiving. His distribution of his inherited wealth to the poor and his imprisonment under Diocletian and release under Constantine are also part of the established record of his life.

Traditional Accounts: Later medieval additions include the rescue of three innocent men from execution, the calming of storms and protection of sailors, the multiplication of grain during a famine, and his confrontation with Arius at Nicaea. A still later legend describes his resurrection of three children who had been murdered and pickled in brine. These accounts, while widely beloved, are traditional rather than historically documented.

Legacy and the Santa Claus Tradition

Nicholas's reputation for secret gift-giving made him the patron of children, merchants, sailors, archers, toymakers, and the falsely accused. He is honored as a patron of many lands and cities, including Greece and Russia.

His feast on December 6 became, in Germanic and Dutch custom, an occasion for the secret giving of gifts to children. The Dutch tradition of Sinterklaas carried this devotion into American culture, where it evolved into the modern figure of Santa Claus — a direct outgrowth of the saint's historical generosity.

Notes

Origin of the Santa Claus tradition; vastly popular patron.

Sources: Synaxarion