Nicolaus, bp. of Myra
Nicolaus (1), bp. of Myra in Lycia at the time of Diocletian's persecution,
and one of the most popular saints both in the East and West. His Acts, which may
embody some historical elements, are filled with well-known legends and miracles.
He is said to have been present at the council of Nice, where he waxed so indignant
with Arius that he inflicted a box on the heretic's ear. Dean Stanley (Eastern.
Church, pp. 110, 132) represents Nicolaus as occupying the central place in
all traditional pictures of the council. Tozer in his notes to Finlay's Hist.
of Greece, t. i. p. 124, observes that Nicolaus has taken the place of Poseidon
in Oriental Christianity. Thus, in the island of Eleüssa, a temple of Poseidon has
been changed into the church of St. Nicolaus. In England 376 churches are dedicated
to him. His feast-day was formerly connected in Salisbury Cathedral, Eton, and elsewhere
with the curious ceremonial of choosing a boy-bishop, who presided till the following
Innocents' Day over his fellow-choristers, arrayed in full episcopal attire (cf.
Antiq. of Cath. Church of Salisbury,
A.D. 1723, pp. 72–80, where the ritual
of the feast is given). We can trace his fame back to the 6th cent., when Justinian
built a church in his honour at Constantinople (Procop. de Aedif. i. 6).
His relics were translated in the middle ages to Barri in Italy, whence he is often
styled Nicolaus of Barri. His Acts are given at length in Surii, Hist. Sanct.,
and his legends and treatment in art in Jameson's Sacred Art, t. ii. p. 450.
The figure of St. Nicolaus is a leading one in the celebrated Blenheim Raphael in
the National Gallery.
[G.T.S.]