The Consecration of Saint Nicholas

Image credit: The National Gallery, London

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Saint Nicholas lived in the fourth century and was a bishop of Myra, on the southern coast of modern Turkey. His relics were taken from Myra to Bari in Italy in 1087 and remain there today, which is why he is known as Saint Nicholas of Bari. He is the model of our ‘Santa Claus’ because of a legend that he secretly made a gift of dowries to three impoverished young women. Veronese’s painting shows Nicholas’s consecration as a bishop. On the eve of the election of a new bishop at Myra, a voice revealed that a pious youth called Nicholas had been divinely chosen and would be the first to appear at the cathedral door in the morning. Veronese depicts the entrance of the cathedral, where the senior bishop consecrates Nicholas, who kneels flanked by two older priests in white surplices.

The National Gallery, London

London

Title

The Consecration of Saint Nicholas

Date

1562

Medium

Oil on canvas

Measurements

H 286.5 x W 175.3 cm

Accession number

NG26

Acquisition method

Presented by the Governors of the British Institution, 1826

Work type

Painting

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