1. The saint’s name Nicholas is of Greek origin and means “victor of people.”
2. Nicholas was born not in the North Pole, but in Patara in A.D. 270. He lived here and in Myra, both seaport towns off Turkey’s southern coast all his life (and died in 345). In Acts 27.4-5, we read that St. Paul passed through Myra on his way to stand trial in Rome.
3. Legend holds that his parents were serving the needs of the sick when Nicholas was born. They contracted the same disease as the sick and died. Being the only child, he inherited everything.
4. St. Nicholas’s anonymous gift-giving originated in his hometown of Patara in Turkey. According to ancient tradition, to deliver a destitute family of a widower father and his three daughters, whom their father was considering to sell into slavery, out of dire poverty, the young Nicholas secretly threw three bags of gold coins through their window on three consecutive nights. Such sneaky nocturnal gift-giving certainly is a hallmark of Santa Claus, as Nicholas’ legend morphed far beyond his home country of Turkey. Throughout the centuries, oranges have been popular gifts or stocking fillers. The oranges recall the three round purses containing gold coins St. Nicholas threw into the window of the destitute family on those three consecutive nights.
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