Festival of love celebrated February 15th, not 14th
Valentine's
Day originates from the ancient Roman fertility festival of Lupercalia,
which was celebrated on 15 February in honour of the gods Lupercus and
Faunus, as well as the legendary founders of Rome, Romulus and Remus.
During the festival, young men would draw the names of women from a box,
and each couple would be paired until next year's celebration. Often they
would fall in love and marry.
At around 270AD Rome was facing
battles and civil uprising. The men were not keen to join the army. Emperor
Claudius II believed that the men did not want to leave their loved ones
and summarily cancelled all marriages and engagements. Two priests, Valentine
and Marius, disobeyed the decree and secretly performed marriage ceremonies.
Valentine was caught on 14 February and dragged to jail. Later in the
day he was clubbed to death and beheaded. It is said that, before his
execution, Valentine himself had fallen in love with the jailer's daughter.
He signed his final note to her, "From your Valentine."
Valentine's
Day
In 391AD, Emperor Theodosius I declared Christianity
as the official religion of the Rome. The fertility festival was celebrated
until 496AD when Pope Gelasius replaced it with a similar celebration.
For patron saint of the celebration, he chose the "lovers" saint,
St Valentine. He also moved the date of the celebration from the 15 February
to the date of St Valentine's death, 14 February. Through the centuries,
Valentines Day became to be remembered more as the festival of love instead
of a religious day. In 1969 it was dropped from the Roman Catholic calendar
as a designated feast day.
Cupid
Cupid has always played a role in the celebrations
of love. Those whose hearts are pierced by his arrows fall deeply in love.
In Greek mythology he was known as Eros, the young son of Aphrodite, the
goddess of love and beauty. To the Romans, he was Cupid, son of Venus.
But where there's love, there often is jealousy. Venus was jealous of
the beauty of Psyche, a mere mortal, and ordered Cupid to punish her (for
being so beautiful). Instead, Cupid fell deeply in love and took her as
his wife.
As a mortal Psyche was forbidden
to look at him. Eventually, her sisters convinced her to look at the handsome
Cupid. As punishment, Venus demanded that she perform three difficult
tasks, the last of which caused Psyche's death. Cupid found her lifeless
on the ground and removed the eternal sleep from her body. The gods, moved
by their love, then granted Psyche immortality.
The symbol of Cupid became part
of Valentines Day only recently. Cupid is still around shooting his arrows.
Psyche represents the struggles of the human soul.
Happy Valentine's!
Esther Howland, the woman who produced
the first commercial American valentines in the 1840s, sold a then mind-boggling
$5,000 in cards her first year of business. Today, over 1 billion valentine
cards are sent in the US - second in number only to Christmas cards.

The rose
is the symbol of love, but the flower symbol for February actually is
the violet. A rose is the symbol for June.

It is said that Cupid's arrows are tipped with diamonds,
lending it magic without equal.
Valentine's Day originates from the ancient Roman festival of fertility,
which was held annually on 15 February. The 14th of February was celebrated
in honour of Juno, the queen of the Roman gods and goddesses. Juno was
also the goddess of women and marriage.
Meaning of flowers
A
diamond will shatter if you hit it with a hammer
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