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=== Other reputed miracles === [[File:Saint Nicolas Heures d'Anne de Bretagne.jpg|thumb|Illustration of Saint Nicholas resurrecting the three butchered children from the ''[[Grandes Heures of Anne of Brittany|Grandes Heures d'Anne de Bretagne]]'' (created between 1503 and 1508)]] One story tells how during a terrible famine, a malicious butcher lured three little children into his house, where he killed them, placing their remains in a barrel to cure, planning to sell them off as ham.{{sfn|Ferguson|1976|page=136}}<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.stnicholascenter.org/Brix?pageID=409|title=St. Nicholas Center: Saint Nicolas|website=stnicholascenter.org|access-date=22 December 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091205211459/http://www.stnicholascenter.org/Brix?pageID=409|archive-date=5 December 2009|url-status=live}}</ref> Nicholas, visiting the region to care for the hungry, saw through the butcher's lies and resurrected the pickled children by making the [[sign of the cross]].{{sfn|Ferguson|1976|page=136}}{{sfn|English|2016|page=132}} Jona Lendering opines that the story is "without any historical value".{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Medieval Saint}} Adam C. English notes that the story of the resurrection of the pickled children is a late medieval addition to the legendary biography of Saint Nicholas and that it is not found in any of his earliest ''Lives''.{{sfn|English|Crumm|2012}} Although this story seems bizarre and horrifying to modern audiences, it was tremendously popular throughout the [[Late Middle Ages]] and the [[early modern period]], and widely beloved by ordinary folk.{{sfn|English|2016|page=132}}{{sfn|Ferguson|1976|page=136}}{{sfn|Lendering|2006|page=Medieval Saint}} It is depicted in stained glass windows, wood panel paintings, tapestries, and frescoes. Eventually, the scene became so widely reproduced that, rather than showing the whole scene, artists began to merely depict Saint Nicholas with three naked children and a wooden barrel at his feet.{{sfn|English|2016|page=132}} According to English, eventually, people who had forgotten or never learned the story began misinterpreting representations of it. That Saint Nicholas was shown with children led people to conclude he was the patron saint of children; meanwhile, the fact that he was shown with a barrel led people to conclude that he was the patron saint of brewers.{{sfn|English|2016|pages=132–133}} According to another story, during a great famine that Myra experienced in 311–312, a ship was in the port at anchor, loaded with wheat for the emperor in Constantinople. Nicholas invited the sailors to unload a part of the wheat to help in the time of need. The sailors at first disliked the request, because the wheat had to be weighed accurately and delivered to the emperor. Only when Nicholas promised them that they would not suffer any loss for their consideration did the sailors agree. When they arrived later in the capital, they made a surprising find: the weight of the load had not changed, although the wheat removed in Myra was enough for two full years and could even be used for sowing.<ref>{{cite book|title=A companion to Wace |first=Françoise Hazel Marie |last=Le Saux |publisher=D.S. Brewer |year=2005 |isbn=978-1-84384-043-5 }}</ref>
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