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  2. 2025 in Bhutan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2025_in_Bhutan

    Source: [1] 2 January – Winter solstice (Nyi 30 January – Traditional Day of Offering 21–23 February – Birth Anniversary of His Majesty the King 28 February 1 March – Losar New Year

  3. Ngenpa Gudzom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ngenpa_Gudzom

    The Nyenpa Guzom or The Meeting of Nine Evils, 2025 falls on Monday the 6th of January 2025. [6] As per the Pangrizampa College for Astrology, the inauspicious time begins from 4:01pm Bhutan Standard Time (BST) of 5 January 2025 to 1:37pm BST of 6th January 2025.

  4. Public holidays in Bhutan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_holidays_in_Bhutan

    Public holidays in Bhutan consist of both national holidays and local festivals or tshechus. While national holidays are observed throughout Bhutan, tsechus are only observed in their areas. [1] Bhutan uses its own calendar, [2] a variant of the lunisolar Tibetan calendar. Because it is a lunisolar calendar, dates of some national holidays and ...

  5. Lhabab Duchen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lhabab_Duchen

    It is widely celebrated in Buddhist Asian countries including Tibet, Bhutan, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Thailand and Laos, where the celebration corresponds to local calendars. Lha Bab Duchen is an annual Buddhist festival celebrated to observe the Buddha's return from the God's realm, known as Indra's realm of the Heaven of the Thirty-Three.

  6. Nyilo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nyilo

    Nyilo (Dzongkha: ཉི་ལོག་; Wylie: nyi log; "return of the sun"; also known as Nyinlog) is a traditional new year of the Shar and Wang region of western Bhutan celebrated annually. [1] It falls in the 11th month of the Bhutanese calendar, which corresponds to early January. [2]

  7. Traditional Day of Offering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traditional_Day_of_Offering

    Traditional Day of Offering (Dzongkha: བུ་ལྭ་ཕེུ་ཝི་ཉིམ; Wylie: buelwa phuewi nyim), known as Chunipa Losar is a traditional Bhutanese New Year celebrated in Bhutan on the 1st day of the 12th month in the Bhutanese lunar calendar. [1]

  8. Buddhist holidays - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buddhist_holidays

    In Tibet, India and Bhutan these festivals may include the traditional cham dance. Lunar New Year festivals of Buddhist countries in east, south and southeast Asia also include some aspects of Buddhist culture, but they are considered cultural festivals as opposed to religious ones.

  9. Losar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Losar

    The holiday is celebrated on various dates depending on location (Tibet, Bhutan, Nepal, India) tradition. [3] [4] The holiday is a new year's festival, celebrated on the first day of the lunisolar Tibetan calendar, which corresponds to a date in February or March in the Gregorian calendar. [1]