Category
page 1Valentine's Day

Valentine's Day
Valentine's Day, also called Saint Valentine's Day or the Feast of Saint Valentine, is celebrated annually on February 14. It originated as a Christian feast day honoring a martyr named Valentine, and through later folk traditions it has also become a significant cultural, religious and commercial celebration of romance, commitment, and love in many regions of the world.

Saint Valentine
Saint Valentine was a 3rd-century Roman saint, commemorated in Western Christianity on February 14 and in Eastern Orthodoxy on July 6. From the High Middle Ages, his feast day has been associated with a tradition of courtly love. He is also a patron saint of Terni, epilepsy, and beekeepers. Saint Valentine was a clergyman – either a priest or a bishop – in the Roman Empire who ministered to persecuted Christians. He was martyred and his body buried on the Via Flaminia on February 14, which has been observed as the Feast of Saint Valentine since at least the eighth century.
Saint Valentine's Day Massacre
February 1929 gang showdown in Chicago, Illinois, USA
red velvet cake
chocolate cake
strawberry cake
cake typically made with strawberries and cream
chocolate covered fruit
Parlement of Foules
Middle English poem by Chaucer
Valentine Kiss
1986 single by Sayuri Kokushō
Esther Howland
American artist and businesswoman (1828–1904)