Valentines Day: from martyrdom and booze

Suzette Standring
Follow Me
Latest posts by Suzette Standring (see all)

Valentines Day is romance in a heart-shaped candy box.  Our annual day of love is a huge leap from its historical origins: drunken Roman fertility rites and Christian martyrdom.

How did lace-edged Valentine cards evolve from orgies and a beheading or two?  One might ask how did St. Patrick come to be synonymous with green beer?

Lines get blurred, history gets fuzzy, and a marketing goal is achieved.

The Roman Catholic Church honors St. Valentine (Valentinus)  who was beheaded in A.D. 270 by Roman Emperor Claudius II for helping Christian couples to wed.  Another Valentine, the Bishop of Terni, was martyred around the same period. Were they the same person?  Historical  accounts remain unclear.  St. Valentine remains a Catholic saint, but official veneration of him stopped in 1969 because his true identity is unresolved.

Patron saints often have special assignments.  St. Valentine is no exception as he protects lovers and engaged couples.  However, his auxiliary duties are interesting:  he is the patron saint of beekeeping and epilepsy.

It’s hard to connect those dots, but let’s get to the orgies.

The Romans celebrated fertility rites, the feast of Lupercalia, from February 13-February 15.  It involved animal sacrifice, nakedness, loads of drink, and the all-in-fun whipping of women, who lined up voluntarily due to a belief it would make them fertile.  Men and women paired up (Tinder-style) during the celebration.

Thanks to Chaucer and Shakespeare, Valentine’s Day took a literary romantic twist during the Middle Ages.  Love tokens and cards became manifest.

In 1913 Hallmark Cards produced the first Valentine’s Day cards, and here we are.

Today martydom and baccanalia are mentioned nowhere, as it should be.  In March, we will lift green beer to a different holy saint in yet another blur of history.

February 12, 2018: GateHouse Media and The Patriot Ledger

Comments

  1. Wow! Our day of ‘love’ evolved from some craziness. I’ll take a Hallmark card and box of chocolates any day over a whipping, Suzette Martinez Standring!

  2. Hey, Molly, thanks for reading. Yes, it’s all a kinder, gentler celebration. Crazy, right?

  3. So beheadings? That’s out, now? Good to know, Suzette. I’ll alert the wife.

  4. Hahaha! Women got fertility whippings and a Christian leader (or two) was beheaded. You can alert the wife that YOU might be in trouble.