St. Valentine's Day

 

Wimbledon Logo & Back to Home Page

Home | About Wimbledon | Travel Tips | Attractions | Weather | Tennis | Walks | Photos | What's On | Worship
Links | Forum | Our Services | Newsletter | Tell a Friend | Books
| London Pass | Contact Us | Sitemap

 

St. Valentine's Day

St. Valentine's Day
Free license to use this article on your website

It is thought that St. Valentine's day dates back to the ancient Roman festival of Lupercalia. Early Rome was plagued by marauding packs of wolves from the woods nearby.  On February 15th the Romans would celebrate the festival of Lupercalia by sacrificing goats at the cave called Lupercal, to one of their gods, Lupercus.  This cave was supposedly where the two founders of Rome, Romulus and Remus were suckled by a wolf - Lupus in Latin.  Lupercalia was celebrated as a spring festival, and February 15th was early springtime as the Roman calendar was then different.

During the early days of Christianity in Rome, Emperor Claudius II decreed that Roman soldiers may not marry or get engaged. The thinking was that soldiers with such emotional bonds would rather stay at home than fight wars.  During Emperor Claudius's reign a priest called Valentine defied this law and secretly married young couples. Valentine was eventually arrested, imprisoned and beheaded on February 14th.  As Rome became more Christian, priests moved the holiday of Lupercalia to February 14th.  This day then became an occasion to celebrate Valentine, rather than the pagan festival of Lupercalia

The giving of Valentine cards started in the 16th century although the custom of sending them didn't become popular until the 18th.  Then cards were hand made and the sender made up romantic messages.  The 19th century saw the arrival of the first commercial Valentine cards.  The early part of the 20th century saw a decline in the giving of Valentine cards as the verses had become more obscene than romantic.  The 1930's saw a revival and commercially produced cards began to be more popular.

Today retailers are confident of record sales of Valentine cards and gifts. It is impossible to open a paper, watch the TV or surf the web (even on this website!) without being reminded of this date.  Even though it's all rather commercialised, it would be a shame to let old traditions die, wouldn't it?

 

© Wimbledon Visitor.Com 2004.  


Free license to use this article on your website

Webmasters: Display this article for free on your website!  You are licensed to use this article, provided you do so by using the syndication code below.  In order to provide you with the best possible service, we update our content regularly.  Just copy and paste the following code and future updates to the article will be made automatically on your website!

If you do not wish to use the JavaScript code supplied, then you may not quote the article/s without our prior permission, but are instead welcome to hyperlink to the article/s concerned.  Please contact us for permission to quote any articles without using syndication code.  As long as your use is not revenue generating we are, in most cases, happy to permit use, provided a clickable hyperlink is used either to the article, or to our home page.  None of our content can be used, in any way, for revenue generating purposes.

  1. Copy the code into your clipboard.

  2. Using your web design software, FrontPage, Dreamweaver, etc, paste the code (using html view) into your document, at the place you wish the article to appear.

  3. Upload the page to your server and the article will appear.  It will automatically expand or contract into the frame or table you use, thereby integrating seamlessly with your own content.  Best results are obtained when the table you allocate for the article is not too narrow.

Top of Page