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Liptovský Mikuláš city, Slovakia

Liptovský Mikuláš okres, Žilina region

Last modified: 2018-12-19 by rob raeside
Keywords: liptovsky mikulas | saint nicholas |
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Liptovský Mikuláš flag

Liptovsky' Mikula's flag submitted through Rob Raeside, 23 July 1999

Liptovský Mikuláš lies in the heart of the Liptov-Váh valley basin. It is surrounded on the north by the West Tatra, on the south by the Lower Tatra and the famous Demanova valley grottos have made Liptovský Mikuláš famous. The town lies on the main railway and road network linking East and West Slovakia. Here the legendary bandit Juro Janosik of Terchova was condemned and executed.
Jarig Bakker

Liptovský Mikuláš sounds as : "Mikulash". Here are some details about this sleepy town in Slovakia. If someone wants to have a cheap ski-vacation, there is a quite good and quite cheap ski resort near this town and also a very beautiful ice cave. Liptovský Mikuláš is a town in Liptovsky region in the north part of Slovakia on the river Vagh. Before the Communist era it was called Liptovsky Svete Mikulaš (Liptovsky Sinterklaas) which appears also on the city COA, and the name was changed by removing the "santa" by the communist regime. The flag got its colors from the town Coat of Arms. Source: Eva Derech (my mother in law; LM is her birthplace).
Dov Gutterman, 23 Jul 1999

All the Saints had been removed in the Slovak communes during the Soviet era. Saint in Slovak is Svätý (a with umlaut, y with acute accent). The most important saint cities are Liptovsky Sv. Mikulas (Mikulas is Nicholas, to translate by Santa Claus is quite excessive) and Turčianské Svätý Martin, now Martin.
Francois-Jean Blanc,  23 Jul 1999


Liptovský Mikuláš old flag

[Liptovský Mikuláš old flag] by Jan Kravcik, 15 June 2000

This is the old flag of the city.
Jan Kravcik, 15 June 2000 


Liptovský Mikuláš Coat of Arms

Liptovský Mikuláš Coat of Arms From: <http://www.tatrahome.sk/revue/erby/>. (!Link does not work any more!)

At this website is the following additional potentially flag-related information on St. Nicholas of Myra (or Bari).

Nicholas wanted to be able to follow the footsteps of Jesus in the Palestine, which he did. On his voyages across the sea, he calmed the waves (which is why he is patron of sailors and travellers).
A citizen of Patara lost his fortune, and because he could not raise dowries for his three daughters, he was going to give them over to prostitution. After hearing this, Nicholas took a bag of gold and threw it through the window of the man's house at night. The eldest girl was married with it as her dowry. He performed the same action for each of the other girls. The three purses, portrayed in art with the saint, were mistakenly thought to be the heads of children, and thus originated the story that three children, murdered by an innkeeper and pickled in a tub of brine, were resuscitated by Nicholas. The three purses are also thought to be the origin of the pawnbrokers' symbol of three gold balls.

Another legend holds that he appeared to sailors caught in storms off the coast of Lycia and led them safely into port. Churches built under his dedication are often placed so that they can be seen off the coast as landmarks.

St. Nicholas's emblem in art is three balls. Sometimes he is portrayed (1) as a young man throwing three golden balls into the
window of three poor girls; (2) raising three children from a pickle tub; (3) rescuing survivors from a shipwreck; (4) reviving a man unjustly hanged (not to be confused with Nicholas of Tolentino, who is never a bishop); or (5) as a new-born babe praising God.

Patron of children (Santa Claus, Sint Klaus), bankers, captives (because of the rescue), pawnbrokers (three balls), and sailors (for miraculously saving doomed mariners off the coast of Lycia), brides, unmarried women (because he provided dowries), perfumers (from his shrine at Bari there was said to originate a fragrant 'myrrh'), of travellers, pilgrims, and safe journeys (because he reputedly travelled to the Holy Land and Egypt), maritime pilots, boatmen, fishermen, sailors, dock workers, stevedores, brewers, coopers, bootblacks, the unjustly judged, and poets.

Russia, Greece, Sicily, Lorraine, Moscow, Freibourg, and Apulia all fall under his patronage, too.
Joe McMillan, 29 Nov 2001