The 14th
February each year is the date when St Valentine, the patron saint of lovers,
is remembered.
The excitement
of receiving an unsigned card from an admirer is perhaps a fond memory for some
and a present-day delight for many. Anyone
who has never received such a card is still loved, but in a way that may not be
tangible or material. You cannot see or touch love; you live it.
The 14th
February is this particular saint’s day as that is the date he was executed,
around 270 AD.
Valentine was a
priest in Rome in the days of Emperor Claudius II. The emperor needed a strong
army, but young men were reluctant to join as they feared the consequences for
a wife and family should they die in battle. To overcome this, Claudius decreed
that any marriage was illegal. Valentine,
however, defied Claudius and married young couples in secret.
Valentine’s
actions were discovered and he was arrested, put in prison and tortured for
defying Claudius’s law. One of the men who were to judge Valentine was called
Asterius; his daughter was blind. It is widely believed that Valentine prayed
with Asterius and healed his daughter and as a result, Asterius became
Christian.
Not all were as
forgiving and Valentine was sentenced to a three-part execution, he was beaten,
stoned and finally beheaded, all because of his stand for Christian marriage.
The sentence was carried out on the 14th February 270 (or thereabouts).
Valentine supposedly sent a final letter to Asterius’s daughter and it is his
letter that has inspired today’s romantic acts as he signed it: “from your
Valentine.”
According to the
Catholic Encyclopedia there are at least three St Valentines, all of them
martyrs and all recorded on 14th February. One was the priest in Rome, a second
was a martyr in the Roman province of Africa and a third was a bishop from
Terni in Italy (which was then known as Interamna).
The date of
Valentine’s death, 14th February was also the Feast of Lupercalia, a pagan
festival of love. This was when the names of young women were placed in a box and
drawn by men, thus sealing their future. Pope Gelasius decided in 496 AD that
such actions should cease and that instead the 14th February should celebrate
St Valentine, something we still do today.
Happy St Valentine’s Day.
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