|
St. Valentine Distinguishing fact from fiction in the case of St. Valentine is not easy as there were at least 3 saints of the name, all of whom died as martyrs. The first Valentine was a Roman priest martyred under the Emperor Claudius II in 269 or 270 AD, the second was a Bishop of Terni killed in the same century, and little is known of the third that died in Africa. It is not clear why Valentine should have been chosen as the patron saint of lovers, but it has been suggested that there may be a connection with the pagan Roman Festival of Lupercalia. During this Festival, which took place in the middle of February, young men and girls chose one another as partners. Legend, no doubt embellished if not entirely fictional, has it that the Roman Valentine resisted an edict of the Emperor forbidding the marriage of young men bound for military service, for which offence he was put to death. Valentine's Feast is also linked with the belief that birds are supposed to pair on 14 February, which legend provided the inspiration for Chaucer's 'Parliament of Fowls'. The crocus, which starts to bloom in February, is called St. Valentine's Flower. The earliest Valentine letter is found in the fifteenth-century collection of Paston Letters. The general custom of sending tokens on Valentine's Day developed during the nineteenth century, and in the present century has spread to the east, where it appears to be particularly popular in Japan. The Carmelite Church in Whitefriar Street, Dublin City claims to hold the remains of St. Valentine. The Carmelites first arrived in Ireland in 1271, and today there is a community in the Monastery attached to Whitefriar Street Church. The story of how the remains of St. Valentine came to rest in Whitefriar Street is interesting, and involves a famous nineteenth-century Carmelite attached to the Church, Fr. John Spratt. He visited Rome in 1835, and apparently largely on the strength of his powers as a preacher, Pope Gregory XVI decided to make his Church a gift of St. Valentine's body, then believed to be in the Cemetery of St. Hippolitus in Rome. The remains of Valentine were duly transferred to Whitefriar Street Church in 1836, and since that date have been venerated there, especially around the time of the Saint's Feast Day. There are rival claimants for the honor of possessing the body of St. Valentine, and in view of past scandals concerning the manufacture and sale of relics, authenticating them is notoriously difficult. Thus some accounts claim that the remains of St. Valentine were in fact buried in the Church of St. Praxedes in Rome. It is stated that Valentine of Terni is buried in that town, and an effigy of him in bishop's dress may be viewed there. In 1999 there was widespread newspaper and television coverage of the claim that St. Francis's Church in Glasgow holds the 'real' relics of St. Valentine. In response to the implication that Whitefriar Street possesses only a False Valentine, there were calls for DNA testing, which of course are wide of the mark as there does not exist any point of comparison. Yet it may legitimately be asked how a Dublin priest could have persuaded tourism-conscious Romans to part with such a draw as the complete remains of St. Valentine, and what we have here is a minor historical mystery. Perhaps a selection of relics is all that might have been donated to Dublin, and publication of relevant contemporary documents would help to throw some light on the matter. The Whitefriar Street Carmelites have now published online the following translation of a letter in Latin which accompanied the remains of St. Valentine when they arrived in Dublin: We, Charles, by the divine mercy, Bishop of Sabina of the Holy Roman Church, Cardinal Odescalchi Arch-Priest of the Sacred Liberian Basilica, Vicar General of our most Holy Father the Pope and Judge in Ordinary of the Roman Curia and of its Districts, etc, etc.
To all and
everyone who shall inspect these our present letters, we certify and attest,
that for the greater glory of the omnipotent God and veneration of his saints,
we have freely given to the Very Reverend Father Spratt, Master of Sacred
Theology of the Order of Calced Carmelites of the convent of that Order at
Dublin, in Ireland, the blessed body of St. Valentine, martyr, which we
ourselves by the command of the most Holy Father Pope Gregory XVI on the 27th
day of December 1835, have taken out of the cemetery of St. Hippolytus in the
Tiburtine Way, together with a small vessel tinged with his blood and have
deposited them in a wooden case covered with painted paper, well closed, tied
with a red silk ribbon and sealed with our seals and we have so delivered and
consigned to him, and we have granted unto him power in the Lord, to the end
that he may retain to himself, give to others, transmit beyond the city (Rome)
and in any church, oratory or chapel, to expose and place the said blessed holy
body for the public veneration of the faithful without, however, an Office and
Mass, conformably to the decree of the Sacred Congregation of Rites, promulgated
on the 11th day of August 1691.
In
testimony whereof, these letters, testimonial subscribed with our hand, and
sealed with our seal, we have directed to be expedited by the undersigned keeper
of sacred relics.
Rome, from
our Palace, the 29th day of the month of January 1836.
C. Cardinal
Vicar
Regd. Tom
3. Page 291
Philip
Ludovici Pro-Custos
For those wishing to visit St. Valentine's Shrine in Dublin, Whitefriar Street
Church is located between Aungier Street and Wexford Street and just a few
minutes' walk west of St. Stephen's Green. Within the Whitefriar Street Church
building, there is a shop where one can purchase various souvenirs, such as
cards, key rings and other material bearing Valentine's image. Unlike most other
surviving inner city churches in Dublin, Whitefriar Street always seems to be
busy. The Whitefriar Street Fathers today emphasize St. Valentine's association
"with young people and their needs as they grow into maturity and adult life".
To express it more romantically, the Whitefriar Street Shrine to St. Valentine
has been and continues to be a place of pilgrimage for those celebrating love -
as well as for those who have lost it or have yet to find it!
An annual feast honoring St. Valentine is held on
February 14th. |