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A Swedish calendar page from February 1712 with name days listed. Note that in Sweden, February 1712 had 30 days. In Christianity, a name day is a tradition in many countries of Europe and the Americas, as well as Christian communities elsewhere. [1]
The Romanian calendar is the Gregorian, adopted in 1919. However, the traditional Romanian calendar has its own names for the months . In modern Romania and Moldova , the Gregorian calendar is exclusively used for business and government transactions and predominates in popular use as well.
Also the birthday of King Michael I: 11 November Veterans' Day 14 November Dobruja Day and World Diabetes Day: Date which celebrates the integration of Northern Dobruja into Romania in 1878. 16 November International Day for Tolerance and Romanian World Heritage Day 19 November Men's Day and Romanian Researcher and Designer Day Observes men's ...
Send these birthday wishes to your best friend, mom, dad, brother, sister or special someone. Find a mix of funny, heartfelt and simple messages for their card.
Short Birthday Wishes for Best Friends. Happy birthday to my beautiful and irreplaceable best friend. Happy you day, my friend!. Here’s to another year around the sun, my dear friend.
"Happy Birthday to You", or simply "Happy Birthday", is a song traditionally sung to celebrate a person's birthday. According to the 1998 Guinness World Records , it is the most recognized song in the English language, followed by " For He's a Jolly Good Fellow ".
Map of Romania in 1919 with new regions annexed to it. Great Union Day (Romanian: Ziua Marii Uniri; also called Unification Day [1] or National Day) is a Romanian national holiday celebrated on 1 December to mark the 1918 Great Union (the unification of Transylvania, Bassarabia, and Bukovina with the Kingdom of Romania). [2]
A sample generic Mărțișor. Mărțișor (Romanian pronunciation: [mərt͡siˈʃor]) is a tradition celebrated at the beginning of Spring in March, involving an object made from two intertwined red and white strings with hanging tassel in Romania and Moldova, [1] very similar to Martenitsa tradition in Bulgaria and Martinka in North Macedonia and traditions of other populations from ...