Friday, August 21, 2020
Is Valentines Day a Fake Holiday
Is Valentines Day a Fake Holiday Is Valentines Day a Fake Holiday? Is Valentines Day a Fake Holiday?Would you believe that Valentines Day got its start 2,000 years ago as a drunken Roman fertility festival?Last year, Americans spent almost 20 billion dollars on Valentineâs Day. And sure, a lot of them got in good with their respective partners and boos. But was that really money well spent?After all, isnât Valentineâs Day a fake holiday invented by Big Greeting Card to sell, well, cards and also chocolates and candy and stuffed teddy bears and restaurant reservations and carriage rides? (Donât even get us started on Big Carriage Ride.)Actually, no. Valentineâs Day wasnât âinvented by the greeting card companies.â It has a long and storied history. And so does the charge that Valentineâs Day is becoming âtoo commercialized.â People have been saying that for well over 150 years.Hereâs how it all went downâ¦Valentineâs Day 1.0 was a wild and crazy Roman fertility festival.Back in the glory days of the Roman Empire, Roman citi zens had this little fertility festival called âLupercalia.â It was celebrated from February 13thâ"15th and involved sacrificing various animals like goats and dogs.Oh, and women would also get whipped by the men using the hides of the animals they had just killed. Apparently, it was supposed to make them fertile.Would it surprise you to learn that this festival involved a lot of drinking?The festival also had, ahem, interesting features like a matchmaking lotteryâ where men and women would be randomly paired up, sort of like a proto-key party.All in all, the affair was extremely Roman. But other than the âfertilityâ theme, it bore little resemblance to modern Valentineâs Day.So what happened? Well, the festival was popular enough that it lasted well into the 5th century AD, which is when the Catholic Church got involved.Pope Gelasius I and the mystery of the multiple Saint Valentines.In the 5th century AD, Pope Gelasius I was faced with a popular holiday that did not e xactly reflect good Christian ideals. So he created the feast of Saint Valentine. This holiday would also be celebrated in mid-February, and Lupercalia was essentially absorbed into it.But hereâs the funny thing about that: nobody is really sure which Saint Valentine the feast day is meant to celebrate.You see, there were a couple of saints named Valentine, both of whom were put to death by the Romans. And even their origin stories are kind of murky.One legend says that Valentine was a priest who was put to death because he refused to stop marrying Christian couples. Another legend said that Valentine was a prisoner who fell in love with his jailerâs blind daughter.Itâs very likely that the Saint Valentine commemorated by the feast day was an amalgam of these different figures. Still, itâs a little funny to think about a holiday where nobody understands what or who is being celebrated.Like Arbor Day. People say that holidayâs about âtreesâ or something. But that ⦠no that just canât be right. Sorry.The Middle Ages, Chaucer, and âYour Valentine.âAs the Middle Ages progressed, Valentineâs Day gained a reputation for being the loverâs holiday.Some scholars credit the famed English poet Chaucer as the man who turned Valentineâs Day into the day to celebrate romantic love. (You might remember Chaucer from freshman year English and literally no place else.) In his poem, Parliament of Foules, Chaucer asserts that Valentineâs Day is the day when birds choose their mates.One of the earliest recorded uses of âYour Valentineâ as a romantic sign-off came in 1415, in a letter sent by the Duke of Orleans to his wife after he had been captured at the Battle of Agincourt. He wrote: âI am already sick of love, My very gentle Valentine.â(Being âsick of loveâ doesnât sound very romantic, just saying.)And speaking of Agincourt, William Shakespeare referenced Valentineâs Day in his little-known and rarely performed play Hamlet. When Ophelia goes off her rocker, she sings: âTomorrow is Saint Valentineâs day, All in the morning betime, And I a maid at your window, To be your Valentine.âAnyway, before we go on and quote half the Western Canon at you, letâs skip ahead to the time when Valentineâs Day started getting commercializedâ¦Victorians. Loved. Valentineâs Day.By the latter half of the 18th century, the tradition of sending romantic Valentineâs Day poems to your partner/the person you would like to be your partner had become culturally entrenched in England. Along with the poems, it was tradition to send your love an actual Valentineaka a fancy card done up with colors and lace.Turns out that the notion of celebrating romantic or âcourtlyâ love was catnip to Victorian society. And as printing technology improved, so did the number of pre-made Valentines.By the 1840âs, stationery stores and craftsmen had realized that they could make a pretty penny on Valentineâs Day and would advertise their Valentineâs Day cards and other wares in the local papers.People started to take notice of how commercialized Valentineâs Day was getting. In 1847, an article ran in the New York Daily Tribune decrying this newfangled, money-grubbing version of the holiday:âThere was a time when Valentineâs Day meant something. Then it was a business of real lovers and there was sweetness under its delicate shy disguise We hate this modern degeneracy, this miscellaneous and business fashion. Send a Valentine by the penny post too? Bah! Give us the sweet old days when there was a mystery about it.âThe holiday only got more commercial from there.In 1848, a Massachusetts woman named Esther Howland started making the first ever mass-produced Valentineâs Day cards. Her sales quickly rose to over $75,000 a year. Thatâs over 2 million in todayâs dollars.In 1861, the British chocolate maker Richard Cadbury started selling special boxes of Valentineâs Day chocolates. Can you guess ho w those boxes were shaped? Thatâs right: They were shaped like hearts.Fast forward to the 20th century. In 1907, the Hersheyâs Company introduced their now-iconic chocolate kisses. And in 1913, the Hallmark Company started selling their own brand of Valentineâs Day cards.So the next time someone tells you that Big Greeting Card invented Valentineâs Day, you can tell them that âBig Greeting Cardâ was half-a-century late to that particular party.If you want to read more stories from financial history, check out these related posts and videos from OppLoans:How Much Do People in Your State Spend on Valentineâs Day?The 12 Worst Financial Scandals In History25 Little-Known Presidential Money FactsGive Me Some Credit: The History of Modern Credit CardsWhat kinds of financial histories would you like to learn more about? We want to hear from you! You can email us or you can find us on Facebook and Twitter.Visit OppLoans on YouTube | Facebook | Twitter | LinkedIN
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