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History
of Valentines Day
by Cheri Sicard
Like
most many modern celebrations, the origins of Valentine's Day can
be traced back to Pagan times. In ancient Rome, February 14th was
a day honoring Juno, the Goddess of women and marriage and Queen
of the Roman Gods and Goddesses. The following day, February 15th,
began the Feast of Lupercalia, a festival of love honoring Juno.
Love lotteries were an important component of the celebration which
took place on the eve of the festival. The names of girls were written
on slips of paper and placed into jars. Young men would draw a girl's
name from the jar, making these two partners for the duration of
the festival. So even though they weren't yet called by the name,
these early Romans were in fact the first Valentines.
Of
course, the early Christians frowned on such erotic goings-ons.
Despite their best PR efforts, the church's attempts to convince
celebrants to substitute the names of saints for would-be lovers
was not met with much enthusiasm, especially since the participants
were encouraged to emulate their chosen patron saint's virtues for
the coming year. Instead the church settled for toning down the
nature of Lupercalia from eroticism to romance. Saint Valentine
or Valentinus, who had been martyred on February 14 th 269 A.D,
proved a convenient symbol around which to fashion this new celebration
of romance.
While
evidence suggests the saint was himself a chaste man, legend has
it he defied Emperor Claudius II by secretly marrying countless
couples, a practice the emperor had banned believing that marriage
weakened his army. Eventually Claudius caught on and the good saint
was condemned and beaten to death.
Another
legend has it that Valentinus had befriended his jailer's daughter
during his imprisonment. He left her a farewell letter signed (you
guessed it) "From Your Valentine".
In 496 AD Pope Gelasius set aside February 14 to honor St. Valentine,
who became the patron saint of lovers and gradually, February 14
became a day for exchanging love messages and simple gifts. The
practice of lottery drawings to select Valentines persisted well
into the eighteenth century, but a gradual shift took place in which
the gift giving became the sole responsibility of the man. This
marked the beginning of the end and the practice eventually disappeared
and individuals were at last free to select their own Valentines.
Manufactured
Valentine cards didn't appear until the end of the eighteenth century.
The Victorians took the cards to elaborate lengths, trimming them
with lace, silks and satins and embellishing them with special details
like feathers, flowers, golf leaf, hand painted details and even
sweetly perfumed sachets. Until the mid-1800's, the cost of sending
mail was beyond the means of the average person, and the recipient,
not the sender, was expected to pay the cost of mailing. It wasn't
until the advent of the penny post that the modern custom of sending
Valentine's cards really gained critical mass. Today, Valentines
Day is the second most popular occasion for sending greeting cards,
only surpassed by Christmas.
Cheri
Sicard of Fabulous Foods Valentine's Day at FabulousFoods.com --
romantic dinner menus, homemade gift ideas, decadent cakes & tarts,
kids crafts, sweets for your sweet and of course, lots of chocolate!
http://www.fabulousfoods.com/holidays/vday/vday.html
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