St. Nick and Christmas Stockings

by Travis Prinzi on December 6, 2009

From the St. Nicholas Center:

jvanovsky4

St. Nicholas giving dowry gold, by Elisabeth Jvanovsky

One story tells of a poor man with three daughters. In those days a young woman’s father had to offer prospective husbands something of value—a dowry. The larger the dowry, the better the chance that a young woman would find a good husband. Without a dowry, a woman was unlikely to marry. This poor man’s daughters, without dowries, were therefore destined to be sold into slavery. Mysteriously, on three different occasions, a bag of gold appeared in their home-providing the needed dowries. The bags of gold, tossed through an open window, are said to have landed in stockings or shoes left before the fire to dry. This led to the custom of children hanging stockings or putting out shoes, eagerly awaiting gifts from Saint Nicholas. Sometimes the story is told with gold balls instead of bags of gold. That is why three gold balls, sometimes represented as oranges, are one of the symbols for St. Nicholas. And so St. Nicholas is a gift-giver.

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Pauli December 14, 2009 at 3:05 pm

St. Nick also supposedly punched Arius right in the snoz at a big church council and blood came squirting out. Maybe that’s where the red Rudolph nose thing came from.

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