Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Myths about St. Valentine's Day


A lot of people make an exertion to gripe that Valentine’s Day is nil in excess of a “Hallmark holiday” dreamed up by businesses looking for revenue from the anxious masses seeking love. Though, nil could be further from the truth. Valentine’s Day traces its history back to extremely old Rome, long earlier than any such businesses began looking towards their major fixation. In extremely old Rome, February 14th was stated to be a celebration for Juno, queen of all the Roman gods as well as goddesses. Boys and girls who were segregated throughout the year would arrive jointly and sketch names from a pot, and would pair up with the selected person all through the fiesta of Lupercalia. Time and again, as a corollary of these pairings, the couples would fall in love and at times march down the aisle. There are a lot of myths of how Valentine’s Day came to be at the current in Ancient Rome. Some consider that St. Valentine helped prisoners of malicious Roman prisons run away and therefore was imprisoned by the Roman Empire. This myth goes on that, while in jail, St. Valentine fell in love with his jailor’s offspring and began to send her in black and white love letters signed “From your valentine.” The current myth is that St. Valentine was a Roman cleric who began to secretly marry couples next to the straight orders of Emperor Claudius II. Claudius believed that he was having tribulations recruiting armed forces for his enormous military since the young men didn’t have a desire to go away from their beloveds at home. To solve this complexity, he stated that both engagements and marriages were against the rule. St. Valentine finally was executed for his infringement of Claudius’ instructions, other than his spirit lived all over the Rome.

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