holiday
Under a public holiday ( ahd. Fira from Latin Feria , feast ' , the religious celebration dedicated, non-working day'; to celebrate ., Original, let stand the work ', ahd Firon of Latin fēriāri ;. Cf. Feierabend , holiday ) or feast day ( Latin dies fēstus , 'a day dedicated to the [public] religious celebration'; cf. festival ) is generally understood to be a day off with a special holiday rest. All cultures and peoples regularly celebrate certain events of social or religious importance. These are often particularly protected by the legal systems of the individual states. One then speaks of public holidays .
General
In colloquial terms, the term public holiday is intended to distinguish it from working days on the one hand and weekly rest days on the other. The weekly rest days are weekly holidays; these mostly have religious causes. In commemoration of the seventh day of creation , on which God rested (2.2–3 EU ), Judaism celebrates the Sabbath as the seventh day of the week, the Christian weekly rest day is the first day of the week, Sunday , in memory of the resurrection of Christ , Islamic Friday .
Legal meaning
→ Main article: Public holidays in Austria
→ Main article: Public holidays in Switzerland
The regulation of public holidays has an impact on labor law (additional free time), as well as on opening hours, traffic and school hours.
Types of holidays
Religious holidays
- Christianity : see church year , Roman general calendar
- Judaism : see Jewish festivals
- Islam : see Islamic holidays , Islamic calendar
- Buddhism : see Buddhist festivals and holidays
- Baha'i faith: see Baha'i calendar
Political and calendar holidays
- New Year
- Labor Day
- Europe day
- National holidays , e.g. B.
Moving and fixed holidays
Fixed holidays
Fixed holidays always take place on the same calendar date of the year. Important fixed holidays that are valid in many European countries are:
- New Year Celebrations (January 1st)
- Appearance of the Lord (January 6th, also called Epiphany or Feast of the Three Kings)
- May 1st, Labor Day, Workers' Day
- Assumption of Mary (August 15)
- All Saints' Day (November 1st)
- Immaculate Conception (December 8th)
- Christmas (December 25th and in some countries also December 26th)
Moving Holidays
The moving holidays are mostly determined in the church year by the lunar calendar of the Jewish tradition. They take place every year on a different calendar day, but with the exception of the day of penance and prayer , they depend on the date of Easter . The date of the day of repentance and prayer, which always falls on a Wednesday, depends on the beginning of Advent. In many countries in Europe and America, the following movable holidays are also considered public holidays:
- Maundy Thursday (three days before Easter)
- Good Friday (two days before Easter)
- Easter
- Ascension Day (on the 40th day of Easter, always falls on a Thursday)
- Pentecost (on the 50th day of Easter)
- Corpus Christi, feast of the body and blood of Christ (on the 60th day after Easter, always falls on a Thursday)
Holidays international
Holidays in existing states
- Holidays in Armenia
- Holidays in Azerbaijan
- Holidays in Belgium
- National holidays in Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Holidays in Bulgaria
- Holidays in Brazil
- Holidays in the Republic of China (Taiwan)
- Holidays in Denmark
- holidays in Germany
- Holidays in Estonia
- Holidays in Finland
- Holidays in France
- Holidays in Gambia
- Holidays in Georgia
- Holidays in Ghana
- Holidays in Indonesia
- Holidays in Ireland
- Holidays in Iceland
- Holidays in Italy
- Holidays in Japan
- Holidays in Canada
- Holidays in Kenya
- Holidays in Croatia
- Holidays in Liberia
- Holidays in Liechtenstein
- Holidays in Lithuania
- Holidays in Luxembourg
- Holidays in Namibia
- Holidays in Nauru
- Holidays in the Netherlands
- Holidays in Austria
- Holidays in Pakistan
- Holidays in the Pitcairn Islands
- Holidays in Poland
- Holidays in Portugal
- Holidays in the Philippines
- Holidays in Romania
- Holidays in Russia
- Holidays in St. Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha
- Holidays in Sweden
- Holidays in Switzerland
- Holidays in Serbia
- Holidays in Zimbabwe
- Holidays in Singapore
- Holidays in Sierra Leone
- Holidays in Slovakia
- Holidays in Somalia
- Holidays in Spain
- Holidays in South Africa
- Holidays in Suriname
- Holidays in Syria
- Holidays in Tanzania
- Holidays in Thailand
- Holidays in Tonga
- Holidays in the Czech Republic
- Holidays in Turkey
- Holidays in Tuvalu
- Holidays in Ukraine
- Holidays in the UK
- Holidays in the United States
Holidays in former states
- Holidays in the GDR
- Holidays in the German Reich 1933–1945
- Holidays in Yugoslavia
- Holidays in the Soviet Union
- Festivals and Holidays in the Roman Empire
See also
- Bank holiday
- moving memorial days
- Obligatory Holiday
- Remembrance day
- weekend
- Public holidays in Germany
- List of moving holidays
literature
- Eckhard Bieger: The church year: the festivals, meaning, origin, customs . Benno, Leipzig 2013, ISBN 978-3-7462-3760-2 .
- Karl-Heinrich Bieritz: The church year: festivals, commemorative and public holidays in the past and present . 8th edition, Beck, Munich 2013, ISBN 978-3-406-65605-7 .
- Peter Häberle : Holiday guarantee as cultural identity elements of the constitutional state , Duncker and Humblot, Berlin 1987, ISBN 3-428-06332-5 .
- Angela Kämper, Ute Kleinelümern, Hanno Ballhausen: The most important holidays and commemorations. Chronicle at hand: Religious and national holidays worldwide. Bertelsmann Lexikon Verlag, Gütersloh / Munich 2009, ISBN 978-3-577-14649-4 .
- Jörg Koch: That you don't forget history - state commemorative and public holidays from 1871 to today. Wbg Academic, Darmstadt 2019, ISBN 978-3-534-40186-4 .
- Timo Lokoschat : It's getting tight in the calendar: 365 strange commemorative and public holidays . Sanssouci, Munich 2010, ISBN 978-3-8363-0218-0 .
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Celebration. In: Jacob Grimm , Wilhelm Grimm (Hrsg.): German dictionary . tape 3 : E – research - (III). S. Hirzel, Leipzig 1862 ( woerterbuchnetz.de ). There also public holidays , celebrate . Georges: Lat. Dictionary .
- ↑ Georges sv festus