Valentine's Day History Pagan festivals, Christian saints, Chaucer's love birds, and the Greeting Card Association of America
Roman
Roots
The history of Valentine's Day is obscure, and further
clouded by various fanciful legends. The holiday's roots are in the ancient
Roman festival of Lupercalia, a fertility celebration commemorated annually on
February 15.Pope Gelasius I recast this pagan festival as a Christian
feast day circa 496, declaring February 14 to be St. Valentine's Day.
Valentines
Galore
Which St.
Valentine this early pope intended to honor remains a mystery: according to the Catholic
Encyclopedia, there were at least three early Christian saints by that
name. One was a priest in Rome, another a bishop in Terni, and of a third St.
Valentine almost nothing is known except that he met his end in Africa. Rather
astonishingly, all three Valentines were said to have been martyred on Feb. 14.
Most scholars believe that the St. Valentine of the
holiday was a priest who attracted the disfavor of Roman emperor Claudius II around 270. At this stage, the factual ends
and the mythic begins. According to one legend, Claudius II had prohibited
marriage for young men, claiming that bachelors made better soldiers. Valentine
continued to secretly perform marriage ceremonies but was eventually
apprehended by the Romans and put to death. Another legend has it that
Valentine, imprisoned by Claudius, fell in love with the daughter of his jailer.
Before he was executed, he allegedly sent her a letter signed "from your
Valentine." Probably the most plausible story surrounding St. Valentine is
one not focused on Eros (passionate love) but on agape (Christian
love): he was martyred for refusing to renounce his religion.
In 1969, the
Catholic Church revised its liturgical calendar, removing the feast days of
saints whose historical origins were questionable. St. Valentine was one of the
casualties.
Chaucer's
Love Birds
It was not until the 14th century that this Christian
feast day became definitively associated with love. According to UCLA medieval
scholar Henry Ansgar Kelly, author of Chaucer and the Cult of Saint
Valentine, it was Chaucer who first linked St. Valentine's Day with
romance.
In 1381, Chaucer composed a poem in honor of the
engagement between England's Richard II and Anne of Bohemia. As was the poetic tradition, Chaucer
associated the occasion with a feast day. In "The Parliament of
Fowls," the royal engagement, the mating season of birds, and St.
Valentine's Day are linked:
For
this was on St. Valentine's Day,
When every fowl cometh there to choose his mate.
When every fowl cometh there to choose his mate.
Tradition
of Valentine's Cards
Over the
centuries, the holiday evolved, and by the 18th century, gift-giving and
exchanging handmade cards on Valentine's Day had become common in England.
Hand-made valentine cards made of lace, ribbons, and featuring cupids and
hearts eventually spread to the American colonies. The tradition of Valentine's
cards did not become widespread in the United States, however, until the 1850s,
when Esther A. Howland, a Mount Holyoke graduate and native of Worcester,
Mass., began mass-producing them. Today, of course, the holiday has become a
booming commercial success. According to the Greeting Card Association, 25% of
all cards sent each year are valentines.
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