• Legend has it that in the 3rd century AD, the Roman Emperor Claudius II created an edict prohibiting the marriage of young people under Christian doctrine. It was a time when Christians were persecuted and this rule further condemned them.
  • A Roman priest named Valentinus secretly married young lovers despite the cruel law. He wanted to encourage them to marry within the Christian church.
  • But his mission of love turned bloody when he was caught and imprisoned by the emperor’s soldiers.
  • According to some accounts, one of Valentinus’ judges, a man named Asterius, visited him in prison. Valentinus found out that Asterius had a blind daughter.
  • The imprisoned priest prayed for the young girl and eventually restored her sight. An amazed Asterius converted to Christianity as a result.
  • On February 14 in 269 A.D., Valentinus was sentenced to a 3-part execution of beating, stoning and finally, decapitation.
  • His last words were on a note to Asterius’ daughter. He is said to have signed it, “from your Valentine.”
  • Other historians say that the Day of Hearts is celebrated on February 14 because of an ancient Roman pagan ritual. Every February 13 to 15, ancient Romans celebrated the Lupercalia, a pagan fertility festival.
  • To begin the festival, priests of the order Luperci would gather in the sacred cave where Romulus and Remus, the founders of Rome, were weaned by a she-wolf or lupa.
  • In the cave, the priests would sacrifice a goat and dog for fertility and purification.
  • They then dipped strips of the goat’s hide in blood and went out into the villages where they would gently slap women and crops with the bloody goat hide.
  • The women welcomed the slaps of goat strips because they believed it would make them fertile.
  • Centuries later, Valentine’s Day is celebrated all over the world. The cliché Valentine’s Day poem was published in a collection of English nursery rhymes “Gammer Gurton’s Garland” in 1784.

    It goes:
    The rose is red, the violet's blue,
    The honey's sweet, and so are you.
    Thou art my love and I am thine;
    I drew thee to my Valentine:
    The lot was cast and then I drew,

    And Fortune said it shou'd be you.

  • In 1913, Hallmark Cards produces its first Valentine’s Day card.
  • Today, modern Valentine’s Day is often celebrated with red roses, chocolates and candle-lit dinners. But even that is changing. Valentine’s Day continues to evolve through the years but with the same message of spreading love in its many forms.