National holiday: Difference between revisions
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See also [[Public holiday]], [[Calendar]] |
See also [[National Day]], [[Public holiday]], [[Calendar]] |
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[[de:Nationalfeiertag]] |
[[de:Nationalfeiertag]] |
Revision as of 23:07, 22 July 2004
A national holiday is a statutory holiday enacted by a country to commemorate the country itself. It is usually the anniversary of the country's independence, the signature of its constitution, or other significant event; in some cases it is the saint's day of the country's patron saint.
- January 20: Armenia
- January 26: Australia (Australia Day)
- February 11: Japan (National Foundation Day)
- April 30: The Netherlands (Koninginnedag, Queen's birthday)
- May 9: Jersey and Guernsey (Liberation Day)
- May 17: Norwegian Constitution Day
- June 5: Denmark
- June 6: Sweden (King Gustav I of Sweden crowned 1523)
- July 1: Canada (Canada Day)
- July 4: United States (Independence Day)
- July 5: Isle of Man (Tynwald Day)
- July 14: France (Bastille Day)
- July 21: Belgium (Nationale feestdag)
- August 9: Singapore (National Day)
- August 15: India (Independence Day)
- August 24: Ukraine (Independence Day)
- October 1: People's Republic of China
- October 1: Tuvalu (Independence Day)
- October 3: Germany (Reunification)
- October 10: Republic of China (Double Tenth Day)
- October 12: Spain
- October 26: Austria
- December 6: Finland (Independence Day)
Some nations (in the ethnic sense) have their own national holidays. In cases in which the nation is represented by a subnational government in a larger country, that government may make the holiday statutory.
Examples:
- June 24: Quebec, Canada (Fête nationale du Québec or Saint-Jean-Baptiste Day)
- July 11: Flanders, Belgium
- September 11: Catalonia, Spain
- September 27: Wallonia, Belgium
Some subnational entities also commemorate themselves with statutory holidays that do not relate to a particular feeling of nationalism.
See also National Day, Public holiday, Calendar