Valentine Facts
By Eye Magazine published 14 February, 2012 No CommentsSince one of the main talking points of February is St Valentine’s Day we thought we would research the event to find some interesting and fun facts to share with you.
• About 1 billion Valentine’s Day cards are exchanged in the USA and Europe every year. Apart from Christmas that’s the largest seasonal card-sending occasion of the year.
• Parents receive 1 out of every 5 valentine cards.
• In order of popularity, Valentine’s Day cards are given to teachers, children, mothers, wives, sweethearts and pets.
• About 3% of pet owners will give Valentine’s Day gifts to their pets.
• Valentine’s Day and Mother’s Day are the biggest holidays for giving flowers.
• Worldwide, over 50 million roses are given for Valentine’s Day each year, the majority of which are red.
• 73% of people who buy flowers for Valentine’s Day are men, while only 27 percent are women.
• Men buy most of the millions of boxes of chocolates given on Valentine’s Day.
• In the Middle Ages, young men and women drew names from a bowl to see who their valentines would be. They would wear these names on their sleeves for one week. ‘To wear your heart on your sleeve’ now means that it is easy for other people to know how you are feeling.
• The Italian city of Verona, where Shakespeare’s lovers Romeo and Juliet lived, receives about 1,000 letters addressed to Juliet every Valentine’s Day.
• Richard Cadbury invented the first Valentine’s Day chocolate box in the late 1800s.
• Alexander Graham Bell applied for his patent on the telephone, an “Improvement in Telegraphy”, on Valentine’s Day, 1876.
• The oldest surviving love poem discovered to date is written on a clay tablet from the times of the Sumerians, inventors of writing, around 3500BC.
• In some countries, a young woman may receive a gift of clothing from a prospective suitor. If the gift is kept, then it means she has accepted his proposal of marriage
• If an individual thinks of five or six names considered to be suitable marriage partners and twists the stem of an apple while the names are being recited, then it is believed the eventual spouse will be the one whose name was recited at the moment the stem broke.
• In Medieval times, girls ate unusual foods on St Valentine’s Day to make them dream of their future husband.
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