Blessed Nicholas Kochanov was a fourteenth-century fool-for-Christ of Novgorod, born into a rich and illustrious family of the city. Pious from his youth, he attended church faithfully and devoted himself to fasting and prayer, but when the citizens of Novgorod began to praise his virtuous conduct he took up the difficult ascetic path of folly for Christ's sake in order to flee the glory of men.
Clad in rags, he ran about the city through bitter cold and summer heat, enduring beatings, insults, and mockery. Together with a fellow holy fool, Blessed Theodore of Novgorod, he is remembered above all for the pair's feigned public quarrels, which dramatized and rebuked the destructive civic strife that divided the city into warring quarters. He reposed in 1392.