Fool-for-Christ 16th century

Blessed Nicholas of Pskov Fool-for-Christ

16th century (reposed February 28, 1576)

Also known as Nicholas Salos · Nikolai of Pskov

A fool-for-Christ of Pskov who labored in this hard ascetic feat for over thirty years, receiving gifts of wonderworking and prophecy. He is famed for boldly rebuking Tsar Ivan the Terrible and so sparing the city of Pskov from the slaughter visited upon Novgorod. He reposed in 1576.

Feast Day
February 28
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Commemorated as

Blessed Nicholas of Pskov, the Fool-for-Christ

Come to them for
Protection from Danger

Life

Blessed Nicholas of Pskov, known also as Mikula and by the epithet Salos, was a sixteenth-century Russian fool-for-Christ (yurodivy) who undertook this severe ascetic feat for more than three decades. The people of Pskov revered him as a saint during his own lifetime.

He is remembered above all for his fearless confrontation with Tsar Ivan the Terrible during the siege of Pskov in 1570, an act credited with sparing the city the massacre that had befallen Novgorod. He reposed on February 28, 1576, and is commemorated on that day.

Timeline 2 moments Read Hide
  1. February 1570 Confrontation with Ivan the Terrible During Ivan the Terrible's siege of Pskov, following his devastating campaign against Novgorod, Nicholas confronted the tsar and rebuked him for his cruelty, an encounter credited with turning the tsar from his intended slaughter of the city.
  2. February 28, 1576 Repose Blessed Nicholas reposed on February 28, 1576, and was buried at the Holy Trinity Cathedral in the city he had saved.

Contributions & Legacy

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Life as a Fool-for-Christ

Nicholas labored as a fool-for-Christ for more than thirty years. According to the synaxarion he received the gifts of wonderworking and of prophecy. The residents of Pskov called him Mikula the Fool and revered him as a saint.

The Deliverance of Pskov

In February 1570, having ravaged Novgorod on suspicion of treason, Ivan the Terrible advanced on Pskov with the same intent. During the siege Nicholas confronted the tsar. By the account of the synaxarion, when Nicholas offered him raw meat during the Lenten fast and Ivan refused it, the saint answered, 'But you drink human blood,' exposing the tsar's violence.

Tradition also relates that Nicholas ran toward the tsar astride a stick as though riding a horse, crying out that he should eat the bread and salt of the people but not the blood of Christians. The synaxarion records that Nicholas prophesied the tsar's horse would fall dead if he did not leave; when Ivan ordered the removal of a cathedral bell, the prophecy was fulfilled. Frightened by its fulfillment, Ivan ordered an end to the looting and withdrew from the city.

Veneration

Nicholas was buried within the Holy Trinity Cathedral, an honor that according to tradition had previously been granted only to the princes of Pskov and later to hierarchs. Local veneration of the saint is said to have begun within a few years of his death; he is numbered among the Pskov Saints invoked during the city's later defense against Polish forces in 1581.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints