Nicolinas
The Nicolinas are a series of festivities held in honor of Saint Nicholas in the Portuguese city of Guimarães. Observed annually from 29 November to 7 December, they celebrate local traditions and camaraderie. The first known literary reference to the Nicolinas dates to 1664, the year after the construction of the Chapel of St Nicholas in Guimarães; historical evidence, however, suggests that they predate this.
The Nicolinas consist of eight main events: the Pinheiro, the Novenas, the Danças de São Nicolau, the Posses e Magusto, the Pregão, the Maçãzinhas, the Baile da Saudade and the Roubalheiras. They are organized by the Nicolinas Festivities Committee, a group of 10 male high-school students. Active participants are known as "Nicolinos".
History
The significance of the cult of Saint Nicholas in Guimarães during the 17th century is indicated by historical evidence such as the 1663 construction of a chapel dedicated to the saint, and statutory documents including 1691 statutes for the Brotherhood of Saint Nicholas. Although academic celebrations related to Nicholas in Guimarães can be traced back to at least 1645, they appear to predate that period; historians date the beginning of the Nicolinas to the 14th and 15th centuries, when the European cult of Saint Nicholas arrived in the city.During the 19th century, the festivities were celebrated less frequently and at irregular intervals, until 1875, when they ceased. On 21 November 1895, a group of students and other citizens led by Jerónimo Sampaio and Bráulio Caldas organized a gathering at the Afonso Henriques Theatre to propose that the Nicolinas be reintroduced. Previously limited to one day, the celebrations were extended. Originally called the St. Nicholas Festivities, João de Meira renamed them during the early 20th century, and they became known as the "Nicolinas".
The new format was initially two days, with the programme for 6 December announced by a town crier who walked the streets of the city on 5 December. This was eventually extended to the present eight-day format, beginning on 29 November and ending on 7 December.
Main festivities
The festivities take place every year from 29 November to 7 December and include several events, from the Pinheiro to the Baile da Saudade. The Nicolinas are organized by the Nicolinas Festivities Committee, a group of 10 male students from Guimarães' high schools. The committee is elected annually by students on the last Friday of September at the Toural Fountain. Before 1982, only students from the Martins Sarmento High School could participate; since then, students from the other local high schools ) have also been eligible to participate and vote for committee members.Pinheiro and Ceias Nicolinas
The festivities begin on 29 November with the planting of a pinheiro and the Ceias Nicolinas, held in honor of Saint Nicholas. These two events are the Nicolinas' most popular, especially among the youth of Guimarães. The Nicolinas Supper traditionally contains rojões with broccoli rabe, along with papas de sarrabulho and Vinho Verde.The name Pinheiro, describing the entire festivity, originated in the second half of the 19th century. Before that, references to the first Nicolinas festivity mentioned the "raising of the flagpole" or "the flag", rarely connecting the "flagpole" with the tradition of planting a pine tree.
After the Nicolinas Supper, participants gather at the Cano and await the start of the Pinheiro procession. The pine tree, traditionally the region's tallest, is provided by the Martins de Alvão family; it is prepared on the day of the procession by members of the committee. Decorated with candles, garlands, and banners with satirical and critical commentary on current issues, the pine is placed on a long cart and pulled through the city center by bulls.
Celebrants march alongside the pine playing the traditional Toques Nicolinos on caixas and bombos or walk on the sidewalks. The parade ends next to Santos Passos Church, where the pine is raised and planted; this marks the beginning of the Nicolinas.
Until the 20th century, the pine tree selected for the event came from the forests surrounding the city. It was traditionally replanted at the Toural, but the practice changed during the late 1700s as urban expansion began to encroach on the area. The location for replanting the pine changed several times before settling next to Santos Passos Church.
In addition to students, people of all ages from Guimarães, nearby towns or from the rest of Portugal are spectators or participants. Teens and young adults often get drunk at the start of the procession, which older Nicolinos call "a distortion of the tradition, fueled by convenience".
At the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, the number of people attending the Pinheiro did not fall despite restrictions. Attendance was unexpectedly comparable to previous years, which was attributed to the cultural importance of the festivities to the residents of Guimarães. It was similar in 2021, when about 50,000 people attended the Pinheiro procession. Despite the negative opinion in the rest of Portugal about a large gathering of people during the peak of the pandemic, the Social Democratic Party defended the festivities; their vice-president, André Coelho Lima, attended the Nicolinas. In 1905, João de Meira wrote that nothing would prevent the festivities from taking place if there was a single student in the city willing to fight for them.
Novenas
The Novenas are a series of nine masses, one celebrated every morning between 29 November and 7 December in the 18th-century Chapel of Nossa Senhora da Conceição. The masses are also known as Novenas de Azurém, for the parish where they are held.The Nicolinas Novenas are distinct from novenas celebrated elsewhere, celebrating the city's culture more than religion. They began during the 18th century due to the obligation to "hold sung masses every year, on the 7th and 8th of December, by the young chorists of the " dedicated to Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception.
Participants play the Toque Nicolino at the Novenas on caixas and bombos. One of the two parts of the melody is repeated nine times, one for each day of the festivities.
Posses and Magusto
The Posses, when Guimarães students gather food to distribute, were originally held on 6 December before being moved to 5 and then to 4 December. They begin at 9pm on 4 December, and only students who are members of the Nicolinas Festivities Committee can participate in the gathering of food; non-members, however, may attend. The Posses procession begins on the Campo da Feira, winds through Guimarães' historic center, and follows a route which stops at houses where the owners have agreed to donate food.When the Posses are completed, the Magusto ceremony begins around a bonfire where the students offer the collected food. Chestnuts and wine are traditionally shared, with socializing throughout the night. The Magusto was held at the Toural until 1862, and has been held on Santiago Square since the 1990s. The sharing of goods among students and residents symbolizes the bond between them.
Pregão
The Pregão de São Nicolau, popularly known as the Pregão and the Bando Escolástico, takes place on 5 December. During the Pregão, a committee member known as the Pregoeiro proclaims a text at five locations throughout the city center and leaves from the Campo da Feira for the Convento de Santa Clara. After the Pregão is said, he proceeds to Martins Sarmento High School, the Senhora Aninhas House, the Torre dos Almadas, and the Toural. The text, usually composed by a committee member, includes criticism of the year's events. It often uses satire, irony and sarcasm to criticize politicians, modern life or local affairs. The Pregoeiro recites the Pregão at five different locations across the city,Documents from 1817 mark the Pregão's earliest known occurrence, but earlier proclamations were probably undocumented.
Guimarães historian and writer João de Meira wrote the Pregões of 1903, 1904, and 1905. His contributions established a standard for future Pregões.
Maçãzinhas
The Maçãzinhas, previously known as the Cortejo das Maçãs, are among the Nicolinas' most iconic festivities. They are held on 6 December, Saint Nicholas Day, the day honoring the central figure of the festivities.The Maçãzinhas trace their origin to the Romantic movement, inspired by Romanticism in France, England and Germany. The Maçãzinhas consist of a 3:00 pm procession through Guimarães' streets to Santiago Square, a place with the same name as the Spanish city which played a key role in introducing the cult of St. Nicholas to Guimarães. The celebration commemorates the cult's roots in the city through its connection with the Romeiros. The procession formerly began at Urgezes Casa da Renda, continued through Cruz de Pedra, and ended at the Toural.
In the morning, preparations are made for the feast. Boys go to the Oficinas de San José to build and decorate the carts which will be used in the parade. They prepare disguises, put ribbons on their lances, put the lances on poles and find a squire to accompany them. The spears and poles are long enough for the boys to reach a balcony. The ribbons' colors have specific meanings. Adorned with sayings, symbols, and messages, the ribbons help the boys to choose the right girl to present the spear; if a boy has a particular girl in mind, he uses a larger, pink bow ribbon. Tying a bow with this ribbon symbolically binds them during the festivities. A boy participating in the Maçãzinhas for the first time traditionally uses a white ribbon to honor his mother.
The girls gather at Santiago Square and begin preparing for the event, sewing white camellias on capes and placing them on balconies around the square. Every girl who has a boy delivering an apple makes an appointment beforehand to save a spot on a balcony.
When the boys arrive, Santiago Square is filled with spectators; girls on the balconies wait for the event to begin. The boys begin by placing an apple on the tip of a spear attached to a long pole, and lift the pole to offer the apple to the girls. The girls return the gesture by replacing the apple with a small gift. When all the apples are taken, the spear is removed from the pole and offered to the girl chosen by the boy, or given to the boy's mother.
Oliveira Square and the Toural have a secondary part in the festivities. The Maçãzinhas preserve courtship customs and attract a number of teens each year.