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The history of Valentine’s Day

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Here’s some background information aboutValentine’s Day, celebrated every February 14.

Facts: Both people in relationships and singles express their love through cards, candy, flowers and gifts.

School children exchange cards and often have classroom parties.

There are several different theories about the origins of Valentine’s Day.

The ancient Romans held the festival of Lupercalia on February 15 to protect themselves from wolves. Men struck people with strips of animal hide; women believed that this made them more fertile.

The early Christian church had at least two saints named Valentine.

One story says that Emperor Claudius II forbade young men to marry because he believed unmarried men made better soldiers. A priest named Valentine secretly married young couples.

Another says that Valentine was an early Christian who was imprisoned for refusing to worship the Roman gods. His friends tossed notes to him through his cell window.

Many stories say that Valentine was executed on February 14 about 269 AD.

Cupid: Cupid is a well-known symbol of Valentine’s Day. He is armed with a bow and arrows in order to pierce people’s hearts.

In Roman mythology, Cupid is the son of Venus, the goddess of love and beauty.

In ancient Greece, Cupid was known as Eros, the young son of Aphrodite, the goddess of love and beauty.

Timeline: 496 AD – Pope Gelasius I names February 14 as St. Valentine’s Day.

1847 – Esther Howland, of Worchester, Massachusetts, becomes one of the first US manufacturers of valentines.

1868 – The first “chocolate box” is introduced by Richard Cadbury, when he decorates a candy box with a painting of his young daughter holding a kitten in her arms. Cadbury also invented the first Valentine’s Day candy box.

2018 – The National Retail Federation estimates that US consumers will spend $19.6 billion for the holiday.