Showing posts with label Constantine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Constantine. Show all posts

6 December 2024

Saint Nicholas of Bari

The secret gift maker who has become known as Santa Claus

A statue of Saint Nicholas stands outside the Basilica
A statue of Saint Nicholas
stands outside the Basilica
The feast of Saint Nicholas is held throughout the world every year on this day and is marked particularly in the city of Bari on the Adriatic Sea in the region of Puglia.

Saint Nicholas, who is believed to have died on 6 December, 343, is always remembered in Bari, because some of his remains are held in the Basilica of San Nicola, which has become an important pilgrimage site.

An early Christian bishop of Greek descent, Nicholas was born in Patara in Anatolia, which was then part of the Roman Empire, in about 270.

Because of the many miracles attributed to him, Nicholas is also known as Nicholas the Wonderworker. He has become the patron saint of sailors, merchants, archers, repentant thieves, children, toymakers, brewers, and pawnbrokers.

His legendary habit of secretly making gifts also gave rise to the folklore about the character of Santa Claus.

In one of the earliest escapades attributed to Saint Nicholas, he is said to have rescued three young girls who were going to be forced into prostitution by dropping a sack of gold coins through the window of their house under the cover of darkness so that their father could afford to pay a dowry for them.

Other stories tell of him calming a storm at sea, chopping down a tree that was said to be possessed by a demon, and saving three innocent soldiers from wrongful execution.

Nicholas became Bishop of Myra, in present day Turkey, which was then part of the Roman Empire, but he was thrown into prison during the persecution of the Roman Emperor Diocletian. He was released after the accession of Constantine, who was the first Roman Emperor to convert to Christianity.

After his death, Saint Nicholas Church was built in Myra on the orders of the Roman Emperor Theodosius II, over the site of the church where Nicholas had served as bishop. His remains were then moved to a sarcophagus in the church.

Gentile da Fabriano's 1425 painting  The Dowry of the Three Virgins
Gentile da Fabriano's 1425 painting 
The Dowry of the Three Virgins
In 1087, when the Greek Christian inhabitants of the area were subjected to Moslem rule by Turkish invaders, a group of merchants from Bari removed the major bones from Nicholas’s skeleton without any authorisation. They took them home with them and they are now enshrined in the Basilica di San Nicola in the city.

The remaining bone fragments were later removed from Myra by Venetian sailors and taken back to Venice with them.

The earliest mentions of Saint Nicholas by chroniclers indicate that he already had an established following by the sixth century. The historian Procopius mentions the renovation of churches dedicated to him in Constantinople on the orders of the Emperor Justinian I.

Another saint, Nicholas of Sion, appears to have taken his name to honour him. Saint Nicholas of Sion is recorded as having visited his tomb to pay homage to him, in an account written 250 years after the death of the original Saint Nicholas.

In 2017, a portion of the bones of Saint Nicholas were sent on loan to Russia following an agreement made by Moscow with Pope Francis. More than one million people are recorded as having lined up in Moscow for a momentary glimpse of a gilded ark holding one of the saint’s ribs.

Santa Claus, or Father Christmas, became a popular figure in America during the 19th century, because of Dutch immigrants bringing the tradition of Sinterklaas, Saint Nicholas, with them in the 17th century when they arrived in New Amsterdam, which later became New York City.

The Basilica di San Nicola dates back to the 11th century, when it was consecrated by Pope Urban II
The Basilica di San Nicola dates back to the 11th
century, when it was consecrated by Pope Urban II
Travel tip:

The remains of Saint Nicholas are said to produce myrrh - a resin historically used to make medicines, perfume and incense - and vials of myrrh can still be obtained from the Basilica di San Nicola where they are kept in Bari. Every year on his feast day on 6 December, a flask is extracted from his tomb by the clergy of the basilica. The liquid is said to seep out of the tomb gradually, but it is not known whether the myrrh emanates from the sarcophagus itself, or from the marble of the tomb, which is kept below sea level. There have also been several natural explanations put forward for the phenomenon. The Basilica di San Nicola was built between 1087 and 1197, during the Italo-Norman domination of Apulia.  Pope Urban II was present at the consecration of the crypt in 1089. The Basilica houses one of the most noteworthy Romanesque sculptural works of southern Italy, a cathedra - bishop's throne - finished in the late 11th century for Elias.

The Basilica of San Nicolò al Lido in Venice also houses relics of the saint
The Basilica of San Nicolò al Lido in
Venice also houses relics of the saint
Travel tip: 

In 1044, Venice, which had obtained fragments of Saint Nicholas’s bones, dedicated the San Nicolò al Lido monastery basilica to him on the north end of the Lido di Venezia. Modern scientific analysis has shown that the fragments in Venice belonged to the same person as the fragments being conserved in Bari, which seems to corroborate the stories of how the bones arrived in the two Italian cities. San Nicolò al Lido refers to both the San Nicolò Church and most importantly to its annexed Monastery of San Nicolò. They have been dated back to the origins of Venice in the early Middle Ages, when they were said to have been founded by the wealthy Zancaruol family.  The church houses a Madonna with Child by Palma il Vecchio and Palma il Giovane's San Giovannino.

Also on this day:

1478: The birth of courtier and diplomat Baldassare Castiglione 

1586: The birth of astronomer Niccolò Zucchi 

1794: The birth of opera singer Luigi Lablache

1921: The birth of film music composer Piero Piccioni

1975: The birth of businessman Andrea Agnelli


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25 December 2023

How December 25 became Christmas Day

The day the birth of Christ was celebrated rather than the birth of the Sun 

A bust of Constantine in the Capitoline Museum in Rome
A bust of Constantine in the
Capitoline Museum in Rome
Christmas Day was celebrated on December 25 for the first time by the emperor Constantine on this day in 336 in Rome.

Constantine had probably chosen the date carefully. Christians had been discussing the exact date of the birth of Jesus for some time and December 25 must have been the date most widely agreed. The emperor Constantine was reputed to have regularly accepted the most commonly attested viewpoint so that it would attract the least controversy after his decision was published.

Romans had already been holding festive celebrations in December to celebrate Saturnalia, a pagan Winter Solstice festival. There would be feasting, generosity to the poor, the exchange of gifts and an atmosphere of general goodwill.

The poet Gaius Valerius Catullus had described Saturnalia as ‘the best of times’ when writing about it in the first century AD. It was a time when dress codes were relaxed, the wealthy were expected to pay a month’s rent for those who were less well-off, and masters and slaves would traditionally swap clothes.

The festival of Dies Natalis Solis Invicti - the Birthday of the Unconquered Sun - would also have been celebrated at about this time of the year in Rome when Constantine first became emperor and therefore has a rival claim to be considered as the forerunner of Christmas.

Constantine himself had been born a Sun worshipper but, after he became a Christian, he had the difficult job of persuading the Romans to celebrate Christian festivals rather than pagan ones.

Romans previously celebrated the pagan festival of Saturnalia in late December
Romans previously celebrated the pagan
festival of Saturnalia in late December
He may have allowed the Romans to continue their December 25 celebrations, but substituted the birth of Christ for the birth of the Sun.

Once Romans had accepted that December 25 was the day to celebrate the birth of Christ with a mass - hence the word Christmas - the festival quickly spread to other parts of the Roman empire and further afield.

Today’s Romans celebrate mass in one of the many beautiful churches in the city and will then enjoy a traditional festive meal of tortellini in brodo, or stracciatella, followed by a main course of lamb and potatoes.

For pudding, there may be panettone, pandoro, or torrone, a popular confectionery item originating from Cremona in Lombardy. Another sweet treat popular in Rome at this time of the year are struffoli, deep fried dough balls coated in honey.

Visitors to Rome can sample these delicious items in Piazza Navona, where stalls serve up seasonal delicacies and vin brulé - the Italian version of mulled wine - at a Christmas market that runs from the beginning of December until January 5.

St Peter's Square, with Via della Conciliazione stretching into the distance, is a Christmas Day focus
St Peter's Square, with Via della Conciliazione
stretching into the distance, is a Christmas Day focus
Travel tip:

The stunning Basilica of St Peter’s in Rome is the focal point of the Roman Catholic world on December 25, when the incumbent Pope delivers a blessing known as Urbi et Orbi - meaning ‘to the city and the world’ - to a crowd of up to 45,000 people in St Peter’s Square and millions of others watching the event broadcast on live television in Italy and around the world. This - the most sacred papal blessing - also takes place on Easter Sunday, following a tradition established during the reign of Pope Gregory X in the 13th century. The basilica itself was completed and consecrated in 1626, helped by the funding acquired by Pope Leo X. Believed to be the largest church in the world, Basilica Papale di San Pietro in Vaticano was built to replace the original fourth century basilica that had been constructed on what was believed to be the burial site of St Peter, who was executed in Rome in 64AD during the reign of the emperor Nero. Bramante, Michelangelo and Bernini were among the many artistic geniuses who contributed to the design of the church, which is considered to be a masterpiece of Renaissance architecture. Located within Vatican City, the Basilica is approached along Via della Conciliazione and through the vast space of St Peter’s Square. 

The Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore is said to house relics of the Holy Crib
The Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore is
said to house relics of the Holy Crib
Travel tip:

Another important church in Rome’s Christmas celebrations is the Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore on the Esquiline, one of the city’s seven hills. The largest of the 80 churches in Rome dedicated to the Virgin Mary and one of the four papal basilicas, it was built in 432 by order of pope Sixtus III. Constructed on the site where the Virgin Mary appeared in a dream of pope Liberius (352-366), it has a particular significance at this time of year owing to the relics of five sycamore boards said to have been from the original Holy Crib in Bethlehem, brought back to Rome by pilgrims returning from the Holy Land and stored in a reliquary crypt in front of the main altar. The celebration of the Holy Crib originated when Sixtus III created, within the newly-built Basilica, a "cave of the Nativity" similar to that in Bethlehem.

Also on this day:

800: Charlemagne crowned Holy Roman Emperor

1874: The birth of soprano Lina Cavalieri

1988: The birth of singer-songwriter Marco Mengoni

Natale - celebrating Christmas the Italian way

Panettone and pandoro - festive treats


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