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The official public holidays in Bulgaria [1] are listed in the table below. Date. Holiday. Official name (Bulgarian) Notes. 1 January. New Year's Day. Нова година. 3 March.
Pages in category "Public holidays in Bulgaria" The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
The following table is a list of countries by number of public holidays excluding non-regular special holidays. Nepal and India have the highest number of public holidays in the world with 35 annually. Also, Nepal has 6 day working schedule in a week. Country. Minimum number of.
Today, this holiday is celebrated every year on 24 May (new style) and is an official holiday of Bulgaria since 1990. [1] In 2020, the name was changed to Day of the Holy Brothers Cyril and Methodius, of the Bulgarian alphabet, education and culture and of the Slavonic literature. Cyril and Methodius had been saints since the 9th century, and ...
It was officially designated as Liberation Day on its 10th anniversary in 1888 by the Principality of Bulgaria. [5] It was only in 1978 when it started to be celebrated on a national scale. It became an official holiday by decree 236 of the Chairman of the State Council on 27 February 1990, coming into effect on 5 March.
9 June – June 2024 Bulgarian parliamentary election: No party attains a majority in the National Assembly, with GERB attaining a plurality of seats. [7] 30 June – The Bulgarian Orthodox Church elects Metropolitan Daniel of Vidin, a member of the pro- Russian faction among the church's senior clergy, as Patriarch of All Bulgaria.
19–21 April – Orthodox Easter. 1 May – Labour Day. 6 May – Armed Forces Day and Saint George's Day. 24 May – Bulgarian Education and Culture, and Slavic Script Day. 6 September – Unification Day. 22 September – Independence Day. 1 November – Day of the Bulgarian Enlighteners. 24 December – Christmas Eve. 25–26 December ...
1 March. Frequency. annual. Grandma Marta Day (or simply Baba Marta, Bulgarian: Баба Марта, "Grandma Marta") is a holiday celebrated in Bulgaria, on March 1. Martenitsas, usually in the form of a wrist band, small yarn dolls, or tassels, are created by combining red and white colored threads and are worn on that day and throughout March.