Check out this amazing Interactive Infographic on Valentine’s Day – A Small Tribute To The Day Of Love

Click on thepink-button-3724202 to read the next chapter of the story. Click on therightarrow-5220230 in each chapter to learn about interesting facts. rightarrow-5220230 The famous Egyptian Pharaoh Ramses II had 111 sons and 51 daughters all together, and was a military leader at 10. Close X leftarrow-6030019 The oldest surviving love poem is written in a clay tablet during the Sumerian civilization, around 3500 B.C. Close X rightarrow-5220230 In the night before the wedding in ancient Rome, the bride-to-be gave her bulla (her birth locket) to her father and her toys to her family. The wedding dress was a straight tunic, woven in one piece, which was long enough to reach the bride’s feet. Close X rightarrow-5220230 The first known recorded association of St Valentine’s Day with romantic love was in the 14th century in England and France, where February 14 came to be recognized traditionally the day on which birds paired off to mate. Close X leftarrow-6030019 Roses continue to dominate the Valentine’s gift market in the United States, but in Denmark, people exchange dainty white snowdrop flowers. Close X rightarrow-5220230 Wedding rings are worn on the fourth finger of the left hand because people used to believe that the vein in this finger goes directly to the heart. Close X leftarrow-6030019 Florists just happen to sell 20 to 200 times as many flowers during Valentine’s Week as they would on a normal week. Close X leftarrow-6030019 In the Middle Ages, young men and women drew names from a bowl to see who would be their Valentine. They wore this name pinned on their sleeves for one week so that everyone can see it. This was the origin of the expression “to wear your heart on your sleeve”. Close X leftarrow-6030019 In the ancient Greece, Cassandra, daughter of Priam, was cursed by god Apollo for rejecting his love. Since that time no one had ever believed in any of her predictions. That curse had eventually taken its toll on the City of Troy when it was destroyed. The ‘Cassandra Syndrome’ is named after the tragic heroine Cassandra. Close X rightarrow-5220230 American slaves were not supposed to include the oath “Till Death do us apart” in their weddings as the plantation master had the rights to separate them. They didn’t have any Christian ceremonial marriage, thus developed their own ceremony where the bride and the groom jumped over a broom symbolizing home in some parts of Africa. Close X In the ancient Greece, Cassandra, daughter of Priam, was cursed by god Apollo for rejecting his love. Since that time no one had ever believed in any of her predictions. That curse had eventually taken its toll on the City of Troy when it was destroyed. The ‘Cassandra Syndrome’ is named after the tragic heroine Cassandra. Close X American slaves were not supposed to include the oath “Till Death do us apart” in their weddings as the plantation master had the rights to separate them. They didn’t have any Christian ceremonial marriage, thus developed their own ceremony where the bride and the groom jumped over a broom symbolizing home in some parts of Africa. Close X rightarrow-5220230 Edmond Dantès, a fictional character in the world famous novel ‘The Count Of Monte Cristo’ by Alexandre Dumas was framed and imprisoned. His imprisonment separated him and his beloved and fiancée Mercedes for 14 years. Close X rightarrow-5220230 In Medieval times, girls ate unusual foods on St Valentine’s Day to make them dream of their future husband. Close X rightarrow-5220230 Over 100 years ago, the Chicago post office refused to deliver about 25,000 Valentine postcards as their messages were not nice. The cards were called “vinegar Valentines”. Close X rightarrow-5220230 Romeo and Juliet, two fictional lovers in a Shakespearean novel died for the sake of love. In Verona, hundreds of letters are still addressed to Juliet. Close X leftarrow-6030019 Relics of Saint Valentine are at the Church of Saint Praxed in Rome, and at Whitefriar Street Carmelite Church in Dublin, Ireland. Close X rightarrow-5220230 About 1 billion Valentine’s cards are exchanged each year—that is, second only to Christmas. Close X slide-bg1-8541837 slide1-bg-7582761 emperor-6682691 chain-8825054 lockup2-2951108 desk-2809238 slide9-bg-1249959