Valentine's Day History
As early as the fourth century B.C., the Romans engaged in
an annual young man's rite to passage to the God
Lupercus. The names of the teenage women were placed in a
box and drawn at random by adolescent men; thus, a
man was assigned a woman companion for the duration of the
year, after which another lottery was staged. After eight
hundred years of this cruel practice, the early church
fathers sought to end this practice... They found an answer
in
Valentine, a bishop who had been martyred some two hundred
years earlier.
According to church tradition St. Valentine was a priest
near Rome in about the year 270 A.D. At that time the Roman
Emperor Claudius-II who had issued an edict forbidding
marriage.
This was around when the heyday of Roman empire had almost
come to an end. Lack of quality administrators led to
frequent civil strife. Learning declined, taxation
increased, and trade slumped to a low, precarious level. And
the Gauls,
Slavs, Huns, Turks and Mongolians from Northern Europe and
Asian increased their pressure on the empire's
boundaries. The empire was grown too large to be shielded
from external aggression and internal chaos with existing
forces. Thus more of capable men were required to be
recruited as soldiers and officers. When Claudius became the
emperor, he felt that married men were more emotionally
attached to their families, and thus, will not make good
soldiers. So to assure quality soldiers, he banned marriage.
Valentine, a bishop , seeing the trauma of young lovers, met
them in a secret place, and joined them in the sacrament
of matrimony. Claudius learned of this "friend of lovers,"
and had him arrested. The emperor, impressed with the
young priest's dignity and conviction, attempted to convert
him to the roman gods, to save him from certain execution.
Valentine refused to recognize Roman Gods and even attempted
to convert the emperor, knowing the consequences
fully.
On February 24, 270, Valentine was executed.
"From your Valentine"
While Valentine was in prison awaiting his fate, he came in
contact with his jailor, Asterius. The jailor had a blind
daughter. Asterius requested him to heal his daughter.
Through his faith he miraculously restored the sight of
Asterius'
daughter. Just before his execution, he asked for a pen and
paper from his jailor, and signed a farewell message to her
"From Your Valentine," a phrase that lived ever after.
Valentine thus become a Patron Saint, and spiritual overseer
of an annual festival. The festival involved young Romans
offering women they admired, and wished to court,
handwritten greetings of affection on February 14. The
greeting
cards acquired St.Valentine's name.
The Valentine's Day card spread with Christianity, and is
now celebrated all over the world. One of the earliest card
was sent in 1415 by Charles, duke of Orleans, to his wife
while he was a prisoner in the Tower of London. The card is
now preserved in the British Museum.