Fortson's Ultimate Guide To: Valentine's Day
Fortson's Handbooks for the Holidays
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Narrateur(s):
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Steve Stewart's voice replica
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Auteur(s):
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Dante Fortson
À propos de cet audio
Valentine's Day, a festival of romance, love, and affection, is celebrated annually on February 14th; however, the holiday's origins are far less romantic than the modern iteration suggests. Its history is a complex tapestry woven from disparate threads of ancient Roman festivals, early Christian martyrdom, and medieval literary tradition. The journey of February 14th from a pagan fertility rite to a global commercial phenomenon is a fascinating narrative spanning millennia and continents.
The history begins in the heart of the Roman Empire with the raucous festival of Lupercalia, a mid-February celebration intended to purify the city and promote health and fertility. This was a far cry from the modern exchange of chocolates and greeting cards; it involved priests sacrificing animals, using their hides to symbolically "spank" women to enhance their fertility prospects. This ancient practice provides the temporal, if not the thematic, foundation for the later Christian holiday.
The transition from Lupercalia to St. Valentine's Day involved a conscious effort by early Church leaders to Christianize existing pagan celebrations, absorbing the date and discarding the more overtly pagan rituals in favor of a saint's feast day. The identity of the titular Saint Valentine is shrouded in mystery, with historical records pointing to at least two, possibly three, different martyrs named Valentine or Valentinus, all of whom were executed on February 14th during the Roman Empire. One popular legend speaks of a priest who defied Emperor Claudius II's ban on soldier marriages, performing secret weddings and becoming a symbol of enduring love. Another tells of a Valentine who was imprisoned and sent a final love note to the jailer's daughter, signing it "From Your Valentine," a phrase that has echoed through the centuries. The ambiguity of these figures allows for a rich, if not entirely factual, historical narrative, blurring the lines between hagiography and folklore.
©2026 Dante Fortson (P)2026 Dante Fortson