The History Of
Valentine's Day
Care2.com conveys story of Valentine priest.
The origins of
Valentine's Day trace back to the ancient Roman
celebration of Lupercalia. Held on February 15,
Lupercalia honored the gods Lupercus and Faunus, as well
as the legendary founders of Rome, Romulus and Remus.
In addition to a
bountiful feast, Lupercalia festivities are purported to
have included the pairing of young women and men. Men
would draw women's names from a box, and each couple
would be paired until next year's celebration.
While this pairing of
couples set the tone for today's holiday, it wasn't
called "Valentine's Day" until a priest named Valentine
came along. Valentine, a romantic at heart, disobeyed
Emperor Claudius II's decree that soldiers remain
bachelors. Claudius handed down this decree believing
that soldiers would be distracted and unable to
concentrate on fighting if they were married or engaged.
Valentine defied the emperor and secretly performed
marriage ceremonies. As a result of his defiance,
Valentine was put to death on February 14.
After Valentine's death,
he was named a saint. As Christianity spread through
Rome, the priests moved Lupercalia from February 15 to
February 14 and renamed it St. Valentine's Day to honor
Saint Valentine.
What's
Cupid Got To Do With It?
According to Roman mythology, Cupid was the son of
Venus, the goddess of love and beauty. Cupid was known
to cause people to fall in love by shooting them with
his magical arrows. But Cupid didn't just cause others
to fall in love - he himself fell deeply in love.
As legend has it, Cupid
fell in love with a mortal maiden named Psyche. Cupid
married Psyche, but Venus, jealous of Psyche's beauty,
forbade her daughter-in-law to look at Cupid. Psyche, of
course, couldn't resist temptation and sneaked a peek at
her handsome husband. As punishment, Venus demanded that
she perform three hard tasks, the last of which caused
Psyche's death.
Cupid brought Psyche back
to life and the gods, moved by their love, granted
Pysche immortality. Cupid thus represents the heart and
Psyche the (struggles of the) human soul.
Fun Facts
- Approximately 1
billion Valentine's Day cards are sent each year.
Half of those are sent through Care2 (OK, maybe not
HALF... or even half of half... but we are growing
fast!)
- In order of
popularity, Valentine's Day cards are given to:
teachers, children, mothers, wives, sweethearts.
- The expression
"wearing your heart on your sleeve" comes from a
Valentine's Day party tradition. Young women would
write their names on slips of paper to be drawn by
young men. A man would then wear a woman's name on
his sleeve to claim her as his valentine.
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