The Meaning of Valentine’s Day

Nowadays, the premise of Valentine’s Day is simple to understand: February 14 is a time to show appreciation for friends, families, significant others, and anyone else you might love.

Pinpointing the story of its namesake Saint Valentine, however, is more difficult.

There are multiple legends of Saint Valentine, and different containers for holy relics in the Czech Republic, Ireland, Scotland, England and France all claim to have bones attributed to a Saint Valentine.

While Catholics believe that February 14 commemorates the death of the martyr of Saint Valentine, who was a Roman priest beheaded in the third century, no one can agree on exactly what he did or why he was executed.

Some legends say Valentine was a bishop in Terni, Italy, who healed the sick, including the blind daughter of a prison guard whom he met while in jail for practicing Christianity in a pagan world.

And some say he was sentenced to death because he tried to convert Emperor Claudius to Christianity.

Others say the sentence came because he was caught secretly performing weddings, defying a ban on marriage that had been imposed by the Emperor as a solution to a military recruitment crunch.