Main menu

Pages

Valentine Coloring Pages

Valentine's Day is one of the most important holidays of the year, despite being imported from the United States. 

We all know that if you love someone, you may show it to them at any time, but today magnifies that lovely emotion. Valentine colouring pages are filled with symbols of love, such as hearts and Cupids, which adds to the charm of this special day for lovers.


Valentine Coloring Pages
Valentine Coloring Pages




It is customary for couples to send each other Valentine cards, share Valentine love notes, or exchange flowers on this day. 

People nowadays also attend posh parties and exchange pricey presents. The Valentine cards, on the other hand, are not forgotten. 

They are a stunning method to express your affection for your loved ones. Valentine cards can depict angels that surround us in the shape of loved ones, flowers that communicate our sentiments when we don't have the words, lovely love messages and poetry, or unique messages for weddings and anniversaries. They are nicely designed and done up in Valentine's style, with plenty of red, the colour of passion and love, of course.


1. Valentine's day coloring activities

Coloring - this refers to puzzles, games with missing letters, unscrambling, word questions, or making up a Valentine's day wishlist; composition - this refers to writing love poems, even to your friends, or building valentine's sentences starting from a word given; and grammar activities. Let's not forget to study as many languages as possible to express "I love you."


2. Valentine Day Coloring Pages

Valentine's Day colouring sheets are among the most stunning colouring pages ever created. Hearts, Valentine's candy boxes, flowers, and Cupids are among the items that are ready to be coloured. 

These colouring sheets will keep the youngsters busy colouring the perfect world of love, in addition to being a terrific gift for your children, a gift made from love.

Valentine colouring sheets may inspire creativity in children, making them joyful while also bringing you, the adults, closer to the actual meaning of "love." Children, as you may know, have always enjoyed special holidays such as Valentine's Day.


3. Valentine's Day in History

On February 14th, numerous flowers, cards, and presents will be shared amongst loved ones throughout the world as St. Valentine's Day is observed.

The narrative of why we commemorate this day, on the other hand, is a bit of a mystery.

St. Valentine's Day has aspects of both ancient Roman festivities and Christian custom. To add to the confusion, the Catholic Church recognises three different saints named Valentine.


Valentine, according to mythology, was a priest in Rome around the third century. Emperor Claudius II made marriage illegal for young men because he believed that unmarried men were better soldiers than married men with families.

Valentine considered the edict to be unjust and harsh and resisted the Emperor by performing covert weddings for young couples. 

Claudius ordered Valentine's execution once his deeds for clandestine lovers were exposed. According to some versions of the narrative, Valentine was executed for attempting to assist fellow Christians in escaping from harsh Roman jails where they were frequently tortured.


Another version has it that Valentine delivered the first 'valentine' greeting personally in 270 AD, the day before he was to be beheaded for refusing to abandon his Christian convictions. He allegedly wrote a note to his jailer's blind daughter thanking her for bringing him meals and sending communications while he was imprisoned, inscribed "from your Valentine."

While we may never know the exact origins of the St. Valentine tale, one thing is certain: it had to be an appealing and enduring narrative since by the Middle Ages, Valentine had become one of the most popular saints in France and Britain.


The time of his saint's day commemoration may have been influenced by the usual practise of attempting to assimilate prior pagan feasts into the Christian calendar. The Lupercalia festival, in this circumstance.

In ancient Rome, February was considered the start of spring and a time for cleansing. Houses were washed ritually by sweeping them out and then scattering salt and wheat around the inside (we still refer to Spring Cleaning to this day).



Lupercalia was a fertility celebration devoted to the agricultural deity Lupercus and the Goddess of Love, Juno, as well as the Roman founders Romulus and Remus, which began on the ides (15th) of February. The names of Roman maidens were deposited in an urn set up in public places, and young unmarried males picked from it to obtain a 'blind date' for the next year. These yearly couplings, more often than not, resulted in marriage.

Pope Gelasius established February 14th as St. Valentine's Day approximately 500 AD. By this point, the 'lottery' method for romantic courting had been declared un-Christian and was abolished.


The tradition of love lotteries was carried on as 'Chance Boxes' during the Middle Ages. In France, couples were given one year to marry or part ways based on a drawing from a box. It was customary tradition in England for men to wear the name of the girl they drew from the chance boxes on their sleeve, surrounded by a heart.

Also at the time, it was widely thought in parts of England and France that February 14 marked the start of bird mating season, which reinforced the idea that Valentine's Day should be a day of passion.


Valentine's letters first appeared around the beginning of the fifteenth century, and even at that early stage, they were sometimes presented anonymously, presumably harking back to the unknown receivers of Roman lotteries.

The oldest recorded valentine is a poem composed by Charles, Duke of Orleans to his bride while imprisoned in the Tower of London following his arrest at the Battle of Agincourt. The greeting, written in 1415, is housed in the British Library's manuscript collection in London.


Around the 1600s, St. Valentine's Day became a popular festival in the United Kingdom. It grew in popularity, with the well-known "roses are red, violets are blue" lyrics first appearing in the seventeenth century. 

By the 1850s, lovers of all socioeconomic classes were giving little presents or handwritten messages to their cherished ones. During the same period, individuals in France began to embellish their valentines with ribbons and lace.


Handwritten letters gave place to cards around the turn of the twentieth century, as developments in printing technology increased the quality of printed cards. 

People were typically discouraged from expressing their feelings in such a direct way as a letter at the period, therefore a printed card was a more acceptable technique. Lower postage rates and increased usage of the postal system are likely to have contributed to the rise in popularity of Valentine's card.



In the early 1700s, Americans most likely began sending handmade valentines with poetry. The first mass-produced valentines were sold in America in the mid-nineteenth century. Miss Esther Howland, an artist and businesswoman, was the first regular publisher of valentines in the United States. 

Miss Howland, often known as "the Mother of the Valentine," created several beautiful decorations out of lace, ribbons, and colourful drawings known as "scrap." Her cards are normally $5 - $10 each, with some going for as much as $35, which is outrageously costly for the period.


If we add children's school valentines, the Greeting Card Association anticipates that over one billion valentine cards will be opened this year. St. Valentine's Day is the second most popular card-sending holiday of the year, accounting for 25% of all seasonal card purchases (Christmas accounts for 60 percent ).

It is claimed that women buy 80% of all Valentine's Day cards, implying that a substantial number of guys either forget or aren't that romantic when it comes to reciprocating! Valentine's Day is observed in the United States, Canada, Mexico, the United Kingdom, France, and Australia, and its popularity is growing in many other areas of the world.


Comments