St. Valentine's Day
falls on February 14, and is the traditional day on which lovers in certain cultures let each other know about their love, commonly by sending Valentine's cards, which are often anonymous. The history of Valentine's day can be traced back to an obscure Catholic Church feast day, said to be in honor of Saint Valentine. The day's associations with romantic love arrived after the High Middle Ages, during which the concept of romantic love was formulated.
falls on February 14, and is the traditional day on which lovers in certain cultures let each other know about their love, commonly by sending Valentine's cards, which are often anonymous. The history of Valentine's day can be traced back to an obscure Catholic Church feast day, said to be in honor of Saint Valentine. The day's associations with romantic love arrived after the High Middle Ages, during which the concept of romantic love was formulated.
The day is now most closely associated with the mutual
exchange of love notes in the form of "valentines." Modern Valentine
symbols include the heart-shaped outline and the figure of the winged Cupid.
Since the 19th century, the practice of hand writing notes has largely given
way to the exchange of mass-produced greeting cards. The Greeting Card
Association estimates that, world-wide, approximately one billion valentine
cards are sent each year, making the day the second largest card-sending
holiday of the year behind Christmas. The association also estimates that women
purchase approximately 85 percent of all valentines.
History of Valentine's Day
February fertility festivals
The association of the middle of February with love and fertility dates to
ancient times. In the calendar of Ancient Athens, the period between mid
January and mid February was the month of Gamelion, which was dedicated to the
sacred marriage of Zeus and Hera.
In Ancient Rome, the day of February 15 was
Lupercalia, the festival of Lupercus, the god of fertility, who was represented
as half-naked and dressed in goat skins. As part of the purification ritual,
the priests of Lupercus would sacrifice goats to the god, and after drinking
wine, they would run through the streets of Rome holding pieces of the goat
skin above their heads, touching anyone they met. Young women especially would
come forth voluntarily for the occasion, in the belief that being so touched
would render them fruitful and bring easy childbirth.
According to the Catholic Encyclopedia (1908), at
least three different Saints Valentine, all of them martyrs and all quite
obscure, are mentioned in the early martyrologies under the date of February
14:
a priest in Rome who suffered martyrdom in the second
half of the 3rd century and was buried on the Via Flaminia.
a bishop of Interamna (modern Terni) also suffered martyrdom in the second half
of the 3rd century and was also buried on the Via Flaminia, but in a different
location than the priest.
a martyr in North Africa, about whom little else is known.
The connection between St. Valentine and romantic love is not mentioned in any
early histories and is regarded by secular historians as purely a matter of
legend (see below). The feast of St. Valentine was first declared to be on
February 14 by Pope Gelasius I in 496. There is a widespread legend that he
created the day to counter the practice held on Lupercalia of young men and
women pairing off as lovers by drawing their names out of an urn, but this
practice is not attested in any sources from that era.
In the 19th century, relics of St. Valentine were
donated by Pope Gregory XVI to the Whitefriar Street Carmelite Church in
Dublin, Ireland, which has become a popular place of pilgrimage on February 14.
In 1969, as part of a larger effort to pare down the
number of saint days of purely legendary origin, the Church removed St.
Valentine's Day as an official holiday from its calendar.
Valentine
The influential Gnostic teacher Valentinius was a
candidate for Bishop of Rome in 143. In his teachings, the marriage bed assumed
a central place in his version of Christian love, an emphasis sharply in
contrast with the asceticism of mainstream Christianity. Stephan A. Hoeller
assesses Valentinius on the subject : "In addition to baptism, anointing,
eucharist, the initiation of priests and the rites of the dying, the
Valentinian Gnosis mentions prominently two great and mysterious sacraments
called "redemption" (apolytrosis) and "bridal chamber"
respectively".
Medieval era
Swedish calendar showing St Valentine's Day 14
February 1712. The first recorded association of St. Valentine's Day with
romantic love was in the 14th century in England and France, where February 14
was traditionally the day on which birds paired off to mate. This belief is
mentioned in Geoffrey Chaucer's Parlement of Foules (1381).
It was common during that era for lovers to exchange
notes on this day and to call each other their "Valentines". A 14th
century valentine is said to be in the collection of the British Library. It is
probable that many of the legends about St. Valentine were invented during this
period. Among the legends are ones that assert that:
On the evening before St. Valentine was to be martyred
for being a Christian, he passed a love note to his jailer's daughter which
read, "From Your Valentine."
During a ban on marriages of Roman soldiers by the Emperor Claudius II, St.
Valentine secretly helped arrange marriages.
In most versions of these legends, February 14 is the date associated with his
martyrdom.
Valentine's Day in the USA
Valentine's Day was probably imported into North
America in the 19th century with settlers from Britain. In the United States,
the first mass-produced valentines of embossed paper lace were produced and
sold shortly after 1847 by Esther Howland (1828 – 1904) of Worcester,
Massachusetts. Her father operated a large book and stationery store, and she
took her inspiration from an English valentine she had received. (Since 2001,
the Greeting Card Association has been giving an annual "Esther Howland
Award for a Greeting Card Visionary".)
In the United States in the second half of the 20th
century, the practice of exchanging cards was extended to include the giving of
all manner of gifts, usually from a man to a woman. Such gifts typically
include roses and chocolates. Starting in the 1980s, the diamond industry began
to promote Valentine's Day as an occasion for giving fine jewelry.
In 1929 due to tensions between gangs in Chicago,
members of a gang led by Al Capone killed several members of Bugs Moran's gang
in what became known as the Saint Valentine's Day Massacre.
The day has come to be associated with a generic
platonic greeting of "Happy Valentine's Day."
Those without a significant other often speak with
sarcasm by referring to Valentine's Day as "Singles' Awareness Day".
Valentine's Day in
Other Cultures
In Japan and Korea, Valentine's Day has emerged,
thanks to a concentrated marketing effort, as a day on which women give candy
to men they like. Rather than being voluntary however, this has become for many
women – especially those who work in offices – an obligation, and they give
chocolates to all their male co-workers, sometimes at significant personal
expense. This chocolate is known as giri-choco, in Japan, from the words giri
(obligation) and choco, a common short version of chokoreto, meaning chocolate.
By a further marketing effort, a reciprocal day,
called White Day has emerged. On this day (March 14), men are supposed to
return the favour by giving something to those who gave them chocolates on
Valentine's Day. Many men, however, give only to their girlfriends. Originally
the return gift was supposed to be white chocolate or marshmallows (hence the
name "White Day"). However, more recently men have taken the name to
a different meaning, thus lingerie is quite a common gift.
In Korea, there is also an additional Black Day, held
on April 14, when males who did not receive anything for Valentine's Day gather
together to eat Jajangmyun (Chinese-style noodles in black sauce).
In Chinese Culture, there is a similar counterpart of
the Valentine's Day. It is called "The Night of Sevens", on the 7th
day of the 7th month of the lunar calendar; the last one being August 11, 2005.
(A slightly different version of this day is celebrated in Japan as Tanabata,
on July 7th (the same day, but transcribed to the solar calendar)).
In Persian Culture (Iran) this popular date is
discreetly celebrated by most lovers despite the disapproval of such occasion
by the hardline slamic government as a copycat of the west, but Persian youths
and adults manage to celebrate following the traditions of the west
disregarding the unfair limitations and restrictions imposed by the government.
In Brazil, there is no such day as Valentine's Day.
Instead, on June 12, "Dia dos Namorados" (lit. "Day of the
enamored", or "Boyfriend's/Girlfriend's Day") is celebrated. On
this day, boyfriends and girlfriends, husbands and wives, exchange gifts
(lingerie, chocolates, and more), cards and usually a flower bouquet. This day
is chosen probably because it is one day before the Saint Anthony's day, there
known as the marriage saint, when many single women perform popular rituals in
order to find a good husband (or, more modernly at least a boyfriend).
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