Lupercalia, Imbolc, and Valentine's Day: The Passionate Season of February - Interfaith America (2024)

Interfaith Inspiration

Lupercalia, Imbolc, and Valentine’s Day: The Passionate Season of February

By Julia Pillard

Lupercalia, Imbolc, and Valentine's Day: The Passionate Season of February - Interfaith America (1)

Family and friends gathered around table in home making Valentine's Day cards. (Thomas Barwick/Getty Images)

Growing up, I never enjoyed Valentine’s Day. In elementary school, we took a day the week before Valentine’s to decorate a white paper bag with brightly colored hearts in rich reds and pinks. On the day, every student had to bring in a Valentine for every other student — no picking favorites allowed.

At the time, I was always jealous of my friends whose parents bought them fun, brightly colored Valentines from the grocery store to give out, with images of My Little Pony or Teen Titans on them. My mother made me make mine, sitting at our kitchen table with scissors and craft paper, trying to get six-year-old me to stay long enough to cut out a paper fish. I’m more than grateful to her now for that experience. But we’ll call to that in a minute.

Valentine’s Day isn’t the only holiday in February, though it is the most widely celebrated in the United States. Sitting at the center of the year’s shortest month, the day celebrates romantic love. It’s the third most significant day for candy sales in the United States, right behind Easter and Halloween, and it has spawned spin-off holidays like “Galentine’s Day,” courtesy of Leslie Knope from the famous American sitcom “Parks and Recreation.”

The origins of St. Valentine’s are, like many ancient holidays, a little murky. 

Many people — myself included — have heard the story of an ancient Roman priest named Valentine who married young people against the emperor’s will and was executed as a result. As it turns out, though, there isn’t just one Saint Valentine. Three or even four Saint Valentines can be turned up if you poke around for them. The feast day has been celebrated for centuries and has been associated with lovers for nearly that entire time. In fact, Shakespeare refers to “Saint Valentine” in “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”when Theseus confronts the four lovers in the woods after their trysts that night.

Lupercalia, Imbolc, and Valentine's Day: The Passionate Season of February - Interfaith America (2)

Some scholars have suggested that Valentine’s Day has its roots in the ancient Roman festival of Lupercalia. Celebrated on February 15, Lupercalia was a bloody and even brutal affair in which animals would be sacrificed in the Lupercal cave at the base of Palatine Hill in Rome. Young men would be painted with the blood of the sacrifice, and young women would be whipped with the hides of recently sacrificed animals to encourage fertility.

While you can find plenty of articles online comparing the modern Valentine’s Day to Lupercalia, the evidence is tenuous. Lupercalia was no longer widely celebrated by the fifth century; it was abolished in the fifth century. However, there is another pagan holiday that is still celebrated with more similarities to Valentine’s Day: Imbolc.

Imbolc, usually observed on February 1 or 2, is the second pagan sabbath in the Wheel of the Year. It has its roots in the Celtic world and is heavily associated with the goddess Brigid, an ancient Celtic goddess of … well, many things; home and hearth rank up there, but so do agriculture, spring, dawn, and fertility. In modern practice, though, fire reigns supreme. Many modern depictions of Brigid show her holding fire in her hands or atop her head. She was such a well-known Celtic goddess that she survived Ireland’s Christianization, becoming Saint Brigid.

Imbolc is the first of the pagan spring festivals, offering a day to celebrate renewal, growth, and transformation. In some ways, it provides the perfect counterpoint to Valentine’s Day because while the secular holiday is fixated on romantic love, Imbolc encompasses connections to land, community, and the self. Many witches and pagans gather for bonfires and dances on Imbolc, reaffirming connections beyond romantic ties.

Lupercalia, Imbolc, and Valentine's Day: The Passionate Season of February - Interfaith America (3)

As I write this, I have baked a loaf of banana bread in the oven. A half-knitted blanket sits beside my computer, waiting for me to take it up again and finish it as a gift for my sister. The banana bread will come with me later tonight as a gift to friends who are having my partner and me over for dinner. 

And all the while, I cannot help thinking of my mother and those many elementary school Valentine’s Days. She knew something then that I had only learned in the years since. Valentine’s Day is not just about romance. It’s about what you make with people who matter — especially when you make a bunch of paper fish.

Julia Pillard is a writer and pagan living in Colorado. She received her master’s in English literature from the University of Colorado at Boulder, where she studied the gothic literature of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Julia also writes fictionasJ.C. Pillard. Find her work atwww.jcpillard.com

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Lupercalia, Imbolc, and Valentine's Day: The Passionate Season of February - Interfaith America (2024)

FAQs

Lupercalia, Imbolc, and Valentine's Day: The Passionate Season of February - Interfaith America? ›

Some scholars have suggested that Valentine's Day has its roots in the ancient Roman festival of Lupercalia. Celebrated on February 15, Lupercalia was a bloody and even brutal affair in which animals would be sacrificed in the Lupercal cave at the base of Palatine Hill in Rome.

How did Christians change the Lupercalia celebration? ›

Convinced that the celebration of Lupercalia threatened the supremacy of the Church over religious life, Pope Gelasius I outlawed the festival during his pontificate between 492 and 496. Traditionally, many believe that other Christian holidays in February, like Candlemas or Valentine's Day, replaced Lupercalia.

Who is the god in the Lupercalia? ›

After killing the uncle who'd ordered their death, they found the cave den of the she-wolf who'd nurtured them and named it Lupercal. It's thought Lupercalia took place to honor the she-wolf and please the Roman fertility god Lupercus.

What happens on Lupercalia? ›

Each Lupercalia began with the sacrifice by the Luperci of goats and a dog, after which two of the Luperci were led to the altar, their foreheads were touched with a bloody knife, and the blood was wiped off with wool dipped in milk; the ritual required that the two young men laugh.

What pagan holiday did Valentine's Day replace? ›

At the end of the 5th century, the celebration of Lupercalia was forbidden by Pope Gelasius I, who is often attributed with replacing it with St. Valentine's Day, according to Britannica.

What is the dark history of Lupercalia? ›

From Feb. 13 to 15, the Romans celebrated the feast of Lupercalia. Naked men would sacrifice goats, then whip the ladies of the community with the hide of the slain animal. The ladies would line up to be whipped believing this would make them more fertile (don't worry, they got them back in December's Saturnalia).

What is the evil history of Valentine's day? ›

Legend has it that Emperor Claudius II outlawed marriage for young men because he believed that single men made better soldiers. Saint Valentine defied this decree and continued to perform marriages in secret. Eventually, he was caught, imprisoned, and sentenced to death.

How to celebrate Lupercalia pagan? ›

Here are some of the key rituals associated with the celebration:
  1. Animal Sacrifice: The festival began with the sacrifice of a male goat and a dog at the Lupercal, a cave on the Palatine Hill. ...
  2. Feast and Dance: After the sacrifice, a feast would take place where participants indulged in food, drink, and merriment.

Is Valentine's day based off of Lupercalia? ›

Some scholars have suggested that Valentine's Day has its roots in the ancient Roman festival of Lupercalia. Celebrated on February 15, Lupercalia was a bloody and even brutal affair in which animals would be sacrificed in the Lupercal cave at the base of Palatine Hill in Rome.

What is the symbol of the Lupercalia? ›

At the Lupercal cave, a dog and one or more male goats, to represent sexuality were sacrificed by the Luperci, a group of priests. Two of them, at this point naked, would be smeared by the blood from the sacrificial knife.

What are some interesting facts about the Lupercalia? ›

8 Facts About Lupercalia—the Ancient Festival Full of Whippings and Ritual Sacrifice
  • Lupercalia featured odd sacrifices. ...
  • Whippings were also on the Lupercalia menu. ...
  • People may have been naked—or maybe not. ...
  • It's not quite clear who or what Lupercalia was celebrating.
Feb 10, 2021

Who does Lupercalia honor? ›

Supposedly, Lupercalia was a festival created to honor the she-wolf and please the Roman fertility god Lupercus. According to History.com, Lupercalia began with the ritual sacrifice of one or more male goats and a dog in the Lupercal cave on the Palatine Hill.

What did Julius Caesar do at Lupercalia? ›

Descriptions of the Lupercalia festival of 44 BC attest to its continuity. During the festival, Julius Caesar publicly refused a golden crown offered to him by Mark Antony.

Is Lupercalia real? ›

Long before Valentine's Day was celebrated, a festival that had nothing to do with love took place around the same time of the year. It was called Lupercalia, and it occurred on February 15 each year in ancient Rome. Instead of flowers and chocolates, the festival was marked by more ominous rituals.

What does the Bible say about Valentine's day? ›

1 John 4:7-12. Dear friends: let us love one another, for love comes from God. Everyone who loves has been born of God and knows God. Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love.

What influence did Lupercalia have on the Catholic Church? ›

Nor is there conclusive evidence that the date of Lupercalia influenced Pope Gelasius I when, in the 5th century, he made February 14 into a day that would honor the Christian martyr Saint Valentine. Though pagan holidays were sometimes co-opted by the Church, this doesn't appear to have been one of those times.

How did the evolution of Valentine's day change during the rise of Christianity in Rome? ›

As Christianity spread through Rome, the priests moved Lupercalia from February 15 to February 14 and renamed it St. Valentine's Day to honor Saint Valentine. There was also a conventional belief in Europe during the Middle Ages that birds chose their partners in the middle of February.

What pagan festival celebrating love had an influence on Valentine's day? ›

Per some accounts, the modern celebration of Valentine's Day has roots that date back to the 6th-century BC pagan fertility festival of Lupercalia.

Should Christians celebrate Valentine's day? ›

If that works for you, do it. But the biblical pattern teaches us that romantic love between husband and wife should be on display often and much. It isn't that celebrating Valentine's Day is too much; it is too little and weak. Christians, live your married years so that you don't need Valentine's Day.

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