Nicholas the Pilgrim (Italian: Nicola il Pellegrino; Greek: Άγιος Νικόλαος ο Προσκυνητής; 1075 – 2 June 1094), sometimes Nicholas of Trani, is a saint of the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Church.

Quick Facts Saint, Fool for Christ ...

Nicholas the Pilgrim
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Icon of St. Nicholas the Pilgrim
(Nicholas Peregrinus)
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Fool for Christ
Born1075
Steiri, Boeotia, Greece.
Died2 June 1094
Trani, Apulia, Italy.
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church Eastern Orthodox Church
Canonized1098, Papal State by Pope Urban II[1]
Major shrineTrani Cathedral
FeastJune 2.[1][2][3]
AttributesA beardless man wearing a brown robe and holding a cross, always bare-footed
PatronageYouth, homeless youth, the mentally ill, victims of bullying, dolphins, against dumbness
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Figure of Saint Nicholas during the annual procession in his honour in Trani

Biography

Nicholas was born at Steiri in Boeotia, Greece, where his solitary life as a shepherd led him to contemplative spirituality, as part of which he developed the constant repetition of the phrase Kyrie Eleison.[4] This brought him conflict and aggression in populated places, and he suffered much oppression.[5] His mother, believing that he was possessed by demons, sent him to live at the Hosios Loukas monastery but the monks became annoyed with his almost insane behaviour, such as the constant exclamation of the Kyrie Eleison, and expelled him.[4]

Nicholas then continued to live some life until he was nineteen when he decided to go on a pilgrimage to Rome.[4] In Naupaktos he embarked on a ship to Otranto and spent some time in the Greek-populated regions in Apulia before dying in Trani [6]

Veneration

Three years after Nicholas' death, archbishop Bisantius of Trani commissioned the building of a new cathedral dedicated to Nicholas and asked in 1098/99 while participating in the Lateran council Pope Urban II for his permission for the sanctification of Nicholas.[4] Trani Cathedral is dedicated to him, and he is the patron saint of the city.[7] Nicholas' life is known primarily from three sources, of which the earliest was written three years after his death based on information provided by his travel companion Bartholomew.[8]

His feast day is 2 June.[2] The annual procession through Trani in his honour is held in the last week of July.[5] In Orthodox tradition he is regarded as a Fool for Christ.[2][9]

References

Sources

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