Bari
Tomb of Saint Nicholas and ecumenical crossroads of Catholic and Orthodox Christianity
Why this destination matters
The Basilica di San Nicola houses approximately 75 percent of the relics of Saint Nicholas of Myra, brought from Demre by 62 Bari sailors who arrived on 9 May 1087 during the Seljuk conquest of Anatolia. Pope Urban II consecrated the crypt in 1089. The remaining relics are at San Nicolo del Lido in Venice (Crusader transfer c. 1099) and a small fragment in the Antalya Archaeological Museum.
Bari is one of the world's most important ecumenical Christian pilgrimage sites. An Orthodox chapel was established in the crypt in 1966, and daily Orthodox Divine Liturgies are celebrated alongside Catholic Masses - Russian, Serbian, Bulgarian, Greek and Romanian pilgrims have historically arrived in vast numbers. Pope Francis convened a Middle East peace summit of Christian patriarchs at Bari in 2018.
The 'manna of Saint Nicholas' (myron) is a clear liquid that has continuously formed in the tomb since antiquity; since 1980 it has been formally extracted every 9 May by the Dominican Rector, diluted with blessed water, and distributed to pilgrims in vials. A 1953-57 scientific examination by Prof. Luigi Martino confirmed the remains as those of an elderly man (aged 72-80), consistent with Nicholas's age at death.
Historical background
On 9 May 1087, 62 Bari sailors arrived at Myra (modern Demre, Turkey) during the Seljuk advance into Anatolia and took approximately 75 percent of the relics of Saint Nicholas. They brought them to Bari, where Pope Urban II consecrated the crypt of the newly built Basilica di San Nicola in 1089. The translation was both a rescue — protecting the relics from the advancing conquest — and an act of civic pride: Bari wanted a patron saint of the first rank to rival Venice's possession of Saint Mark.
The basilica, built between 1087 and 1197, is one of the great Romanesque churches of Italy. Its exterior is adorned with carved sailors and ships commemorating the 1087 voyage. The crypt, with its forest of 26 marble columns, houses the tomb beneath the main altar and has been a destination of pilgrimage for Catholic and Orthodox Christians for over 900 years.
The ecumenical dimension of Bari was formalised in 1966 when an Orthodox chapel was established in the crypt. Since then, daily Orthodox Divine Liturgies (Russian, Greek, Serbian, Bulgarian, Romanian) have been celebrated alongside Catholic Masses. Pope Francis convened a Middle East peace summit of Christian patriarchs at Bari in 2018, cementing the basilica's role as one of Christianity's great ecumenical crossroads. In November 2025, Pope Leo XIV visited Bari as part of his wider Nicaea anniversary pilgrimage.
Key sites to visit
Basilica di San Nicola
Romanesque basilica 1087-1197. Crypt with the tomb and the Orthodox chapel; bishop's throne of Elia; sailor carvings on the exterior commemorating the 1087 translation.
Bari Cathedral
11th-century Romanesque cathedral of the Archdiocese of Bari.
Bari Vecchia
Atmospheric old town wrapped around the basilica, famous for its open-air orecchiette pasta makers.
Castello Svevo
Norman-Swabian castle (12th-13th c.).
Lungomare
The seafront promenade that hosts the May 7 maritime procession.
Best time to visit
April-June and September-October ideal weather. 6 December is the universal feast. 7-9 May is the Translation Festival - May 7 maritime procession with painting of Saint Nicholas, May 8 historic costume Corteo Storico procession from port to basilica with outdoor Mass on the breakwater, May 9 Solemn Mass with extraction of manna in crypt plus fireworks.
Key feast days
- 6 December - Universal feast of Saint Nicholas
- 7-9 May - Translation Festival (Bari Translation feast)
- 22 May - May 9 Gregorian = May 22 for Old Calendar (Julian) Orthodox
How to get there
Bari Karol Wojtyla Airport (BRI), 8 km from the city, airport train to Bari Centrale 25 minutes. Ferries from Igoumenitsa and Patras (Greece), Durres (Albania) and Croatia. High-speed Frecciarossa from Rome ~4 hours.
Weather by month
| Month | Avg High | Avg Low | Rainfall | Crowds |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan | 12°C | 5°C | Medium | Low |
| Feb | 13°C | 5°C | Medium | Low |
| Mar | 15°C | 7°C | Medium | Low |
| Apr | 18°C | 10°C | Medium | Medium |
| May | 23°C | 14°C | Low | Very High (May 7-9) |
| Jun | 28°C | 18°C | Very Low | Medium |
| Jul | 31°C | 21°C | Very Low | Medium |
| Aug | 31°C | 21°C | Low | Medium |
| Sep | 27°C | 18°C | Medium | Medium |
| Oct | 22°C | 14°C | Medium | Medium |
| Nov | 17°C | 10°C | High | Low |
| Dec | 13°C | 6°C | High | High (Dec 6 feast) |
Where to stay
Bari Vecchia (atmospheric, near basilica), Murat district (modern centre), seafront hotels for sea views.
| Tier | Examples | Price Range | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Budget | Bari Vecchia B&Bs, guesthouses near the basilica | 40-70 EUR/night | Atmospheric pilgrim stays in the old town |
| Mid-Range | Murat district hotels (Hotel Oriente, iH Hotels Bari) | 80-130 EUR/night | Modern comfort near the station and seafront |
| Premium | Grande Albergo delle Nazioni, seafront hotels on Lungomare | 150-300 EUR/night | Luxury pilgrimage with sea views |
Tours and experiences
Bari pilgrimage day trips often combine with the Apulia circuit (Alberobello trulli, Matera caves, Lecce baroque, Monte Sant'Angelo Sanctuary of Saint Michael, San Giovanni Rotondo for Padre Pio). Russian Orthodox tour operators run dedicated Bari pilgrimages, usually combined with Rome.
Transport options
| Method | From | Duration | Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Frecciarossa train | Rome Termini | ~4 hours | ~40-70 EUR | High-speed; book in advance for best fares |
| Flight | Bari Karol Wojtyla Airport (BRI) | 25 min to city | ~5 EUR train | Direct airport train to Bari Centrale |
| Ferry | Igoumenitsa/Patras (Greece), Durres (Albania) | 8-12 hours | International ferry connections for combined Greece-Italy pilgrimages | |
| Regional train | Naples, Bologna, Milan | 2-6 hours | Slower regional options for budget travellers |
Practical information
- Hours
- Basilica generally 07:00-20:30 daily; crypt similar.
- Fees
- Free entry. Manna vials available in the basilica shop (small donation).
- Dress code
- Shoulders and knees covered. Women traditionally cover their hair in the crypt.
- Accessibility
- Basilica largely accessible; the crypt requires a stair descent.
Pilgrim tips
💡 Practical advice for pilgrims
- The crypt is the spiritual heart of the basilica — spend time in silence before the tomb before taking photos or buying manna vials.
- If visiting for the May 7-9 Translation Festival, book accommodation 6+ months ahead — Bari fills completely with Russian, Greek, and Italian pilgrims.
- Attend both a Catholic Mass and an Orthodox Divine Liturgy in the crypt — the experience of two traditions worshipping at the same tomb is unique in Christianity.
- Women should carry a scarf for the crypt — hair covering is traditional out of respect for Orthodox custom, though not strictly required.
- Combine Bari with a day trip to Monte Sant'Angelo (Sanctuary of Saint Michael, UNESCO) and San Giovanni Rotondo (Padre Pio) — both are under 2 hours by car.
- Manna vials are available in the basilica shop for a small donation — they make a meaningful gift for fellow pilgrims who cannot travel to Bari.
Did you know?
ℹ️ Fascinating facts
- The 'manna of Saint Nicholas' is a clear, odourless liquid that has continuously formed in the saint's tomb since antiquity — scientists have not determined its source, and the Church treats it as a miraculous phenomenon.
- The 1953-57 scientific examination of the relics by Prof. Luigi Martino was commissioned by the Vatican and confirmed the remains belong to a man aged 72-80, exactly matching Nicholas's recorded age at death.
- The exterior of the basilica is decorated with carved stone sailors and ships — a permanent memorial to the 62 Bari sailors who brought the relics from Myra in 1087.
- Bari's crypt is one of the very few places in the world where Catholic Mass and Orthodox Divine Liturgy are celebrated daily at the same tomb — a living symbol of the 1965 mutual nullification of the 1054 excommunications.
Suggested reading before you go
| Title / Reference | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| The Life and Miracles of Saint Nicholas | Medieval Greek and Latin hagiographies of the saint whose relics rest at Bari. |
| Charles W. Jones, Saint Nicholas of Myra, Bari, and Manhattan (1978) | The definitive scholarly study of the Nicholas cult and the 1087 translation. |
| The 1953-57 Bari Relic Examination (Prof. Luigi Martino) | Scientific analysis confirming the remains as those of an elderly man (72-80 years), consistent with Nicholas. |
Nearby destinations to combine
Rome
The See of Peter and the four Papal Basilicas
Frecciarossa 4 hours — Four Papal Basilicas, Vatican and Catacombs
Assisi
Saint Francis, Saint Clare and Carlo Acutis
~5 hours by train/car — Saint Francis, Saint Clare and Carlo Acutis
Demre / Myra
Tomb of Saint Nicholas in 5th-century Byzantine Myra
Flight to Antalya + 2.5h drive — Original tomb and 5th-century Byzantine basilica
Featured on these routes
- Nicholas of Myra — Patara - Demre - Bari: the millennium pilgrimage of Saint Nicholas
Frequently asked questions
Names in other languages
| Italian | Basilica di San Nicola |
|---|---|
| German | Basilika San Nicola |
| French | Basilique Saint-Nicolas |
| Russian | Bazilika Svyatogo Nikolaya v Bari |
| Greek | Agios Nikolaos Bari |
| Turkish | Bari'deki Aziz Nikolaos |