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    The History and Evolution of Valentine’s Day: From Martyrdom To Modern Romance

    Kanhaiya SutharKanhaiya SutharUpdated:14/02/2026 Lifestyle 6 Mins Read
    From Martyrdom To Modern Romance The History and Evolution of Valentine's Day-PNN
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    New Delhi [India], February 14: Valentine’s Day, with its connotations of roses, chocolate, and well-crafted messages that we owe to our modern world, didn’t start as a celebration of love. Its roots are to be found in a maelstrom of ancient rituals, Christian martyrdom, medieval poetry, and, in due course, modern commerce. Like most traditions that people refer to as “timeless,” it is, in fact, the product of centuries of improvisation. No sole origin, no neat story – just a bunch of layers of belief, convenience, and marketing.

    The story typically begins in the Roman Empire, because the story has to start somewhere, and February in Rome was not an emotional month. It was the time of Lupercalia, a fertility festival in mid-February associated with Faunus, the god of agriculture, and the founding myth of the city – Romulus and Remus, the twins, the wolf, the usual civic fairy tales. Lupercalia was not about romance but rather about purification and fertility. People like to find love retrospectively in these rituals, but there’s little evidence for that. It was an unclean festival, seasonal, physical, and practical. The sort of thing that might make sense to an agrarian society and almost no sense to anyone else.

    Christianity, once it became less persecuted and more administrative, had to deal with these festivals. It didn’t erase them. It replaced them, it absorbed them, or it just renamed them. By the 3rd century, the name we start meeting is that of Saint Valentine. The problem is that there may not have been just one. A priest in Rome. A bishop in Terni. Both executed, both remembered, and eventually both became one figure, more useful than the other.

    The most popular story is simple enough to cross the centuries. Valentine was a priest and married couples in secret after the emperor had banned marriage. The logic was military: unmarried men are better soldiers. Valentine ignored the order. He was arrested, put in jail, and executed on February 14. Before his death, he supposedly wrote a letter that was signed “from your Valentine.” The phrase lasted. The details probably didn’t. But accuracy has never been a need for a good legend.

    For centuries after that, Valentine’s Day had been merely a small religious holiday. No romance, no roses, no confectionery industry sitting in the wings. The change arrived later, in the Middle Ages, when poets started giving new meanings to old dates. The vital period comes with Geoffrey Chaucer in the 14th century. In Parliament of Fowls, he spoke of the choice of mates by birds on St. Valentine’s Day. That was enough. Poetry had always been an art that liked to create tradition where there might be suggestion.

    From there, the idea was carried along England and France. February became in the cultural imagination the season in which birds paired off. The metaphor was convenient. Courtly love was already fashionable among the aristocracy – formal or restrained, often hopelessly impractical. Valentine’s Day fit into that frame without a fight at all. Nature loves devotion, unattainable affection. It was all very tidy on parchment.

    By the 15th and 16th centuries, people were exchanging written “valentines.” Mostly among the nobility. Mostly handwritten. Sincere at times, ceremonial at others. William Shakespeare even spoke about the day. In Hamlet, Ophelia sings about being the Valentine of someone. The date had gained its meaning. No official decree, no worldwide council – just repetition, literature, and habit.

    Then the machines arrived.

    The 18th and 19th centuries brought with them printing presses, industrial paper, and the ability to produce sentiment on a scale. Handwritten notes took a back seat to printed cards. Britain set the trend, and by the mid 1800s the custom came across the Atlantic. The holiday was no longer an aristocratic sport. It was starting to turn into a retail event.

    One of the leading figures in that transition was a woman named Esther Howland, who in the 1840s started to make extravagant lacepaper cards in America. She made a business model out of a small craft. Lace, ribbons, decorated paper, mass production. The logic was obvious: attractively packaged affection sells.

    The Victorian era also created the so-called “Vinegar Valentines.” These were no timid messages. They were anonymous insults, frequently sent to reject a suitor or make fun of an acquaintance. The holiday was never entirely sweet. It had a mean streak built into it from the beginning. Sentiment and sarcasm went together in the same envelope.

    By the beginning of the 20th century, companies such as Hallmark industrialized the entire process. Cards were mass-produced, sold throughout the country, and were extensively marketed. Due to Valentine’s Day, it was not just limited to paper. Chocolates, flowers, jewelry. Each individual quietly attaches themselves to the date until the holiday isn’t so much about a saint as it is a sales cycle.

    The meaning of the day also became broader. It ceased being staunchly romantic. In the United States, cards were exchanged by the kids in classrooms. Friends sent tokens of affection. Co-workers joined the ritual. The holiday became so elastic as to fit almost any kind of mild sentiment.

    Different countries deformed the tradition in their own way. In Japan, women give men chocolates on the 14th of February. A month later comes White Day, in which men are expected to return the gesture. In South Korea, there is even a Black Day in April when people who received nothing get together to eat black bean noodles together. It is difficult to imagine the Roman priests of Lupercalia acknowledging any of this, but traditions hardly await courtesy from their origins.

    In India, Valentine’s Day came much later. The 1990s brought satellite television, international brands and a new urban consumer culture. The holiday followed. There were fixed menus in restaurants. Florists increased their inventories. Shopping malls tilted into the season. The adoption was uneven. Some accepted it, some opposed it, and many ignored it. But the date went into the calendar all the same.

    Valentine’s Day is not ancient, not sacred, not unified. It is a collage. Pagan rites, Christian martyrdom, medieval poetry, industrial printing, modern advertising. All stacked on top of one another until seams were no longer seen. The holiday is an old one simply because it has been rewritten so many times.

    That is the reality of it. Not a saint’s legacy. Just a long train of re-interpretations, each one a bit more convenient than the last.

    PNN Lifestyle

    History of Valentine’s Day Origin of Valentine’s Day Roman festival Lupercalia Valentine’s Day Valentine’s Day in India
    Kanhaiya Suthar

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