List of multinational festivals and holidays
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The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. |
This is an incomplete list of festivals and holidays that take place during the winter in the northern hemisphere, especially those commemorating the season. Many festivals of light take place in this period since the shortest day of the year in the northern hemisphere is the Winter Solstice.
Holidays are listed in chronological order under each heading.
Buddhist
- Bodhi Day: 8 December - Day of Enlightenment, celebrating the day that the historical Buddha (Shakyamuni or Siddhartha Guatama) experienced enlightenment (also known as Bodhi).
Celtic
- Samhain: 1 November - first day of winter in the Celtic calendar (and Celtic New Year's Day)
- Winter Solstice: 21 December-22 December - midwinter
- Imbolc: 1 February - first day of spring in the Celtic calendar
Chinese
- Dong zhi: Winter solstice
- Signature of the Constitution of the Republic of China (Taiwan): 25 December - a secular national holiday, which due to its date is celebrated in some respects like Christmas
- Chinese New Year: (late January - early February) - considered the end of winter in the traditional Chinese calendar
Christian
- Advent: four weeks prior to Christmas.
- Saint Nicholas' Day: 6 December
- Christmas Eve: 24 December
- Christmas: 25 December - Due to a fourth century arrangement to offset the pagan Roman Saturnalia festival, the birth of Jesus is celebrated on December 25.
- 12 Days of Christmas: 25 December through 6 January
- Saint Stephen's Day: 26 December
- Saint John the Evangelist's Day: 27 December
- Holy Innocents' Day: 28 December
- Saint Sylvester's Day: 31 December
- Watch Night: 31 December
- Feast of the Circumcision: 1 January
- Feast of Fools: 1 January
- Saint Basil's Day: 1 January (Christian Orthodox) In Greece, traditionally he is the Father Christmas figure.
- Twelfth Night: Epiphany Eve: 5 January
- Epiphany: 6 January: the arrival of the Three Magi.
- Armenian Apoststolc Christmas: 6 January
- Eastern Orthodox Christmas: according to the Julian Calendar, 7 January
- Candlemas: 2 February
- St. Valentine's Day: 14 February
Germanic
- Modranect: or Mothers' Night, the Saxon winter solstice festival.
- Yule: the Germanic winter solstice festival
Hindu
- Navratri:Nine-day celebration worshipping female divinity, in October or November. Culminates in Dussehra.
- Diwali:Known as the Festival of Lights, this Hindu holiday celebrates the victory of good over evil. The five-day festival is marked by ceremonies, fireworks and sweets. Women dress up and decorate their hands with henna tattoos for the melas, or fairs. Many different myths are associated with Diwali, one of which celebrates the return of Lord Rama after a 14-year exile and his defeat of the demon Ravana.
- Bhaubeej
Jewish
- Hanukkah: Starting on 25 Kislev (Hebrew) or various dates in November or December (Gregorian) - eight day festival commemorating the miracle of the oil after the desecration of the Temple by Antiochus IV Epiphanes and his defeat in 165 BCE.
- Tu Bishvat: New Year of the Trees occurring on the 15th of Shevat, January or February.
- Purim: Occurring on 14th or 15th day of Adar, late February to March, commemorating the miraculous deliverance and victory of the Jews of the Persian Empire in the events recorded in the Book of Esther
Muslim
- Eid ul-Adha: Starting on the 10th of Dhul Hijja, a four day holiday commemorating the Prophet Ibrahim's willingness to sacrifice his son, Ishmael.
- NOTE: The Islamic calendar is based on the moon and this festival moves with respect to the solar year. It is, however, falling in the winter in the first decade of the present [21st] Century of the common era.
Pagan and Neo-Pagan
- Samhain: 31 October - first day of winter in the Celtic calendar (and Celtic New Year's Day)
- Yule: (Winter Solstice) - Germanic and Egyptian Pagan festival of the rebirth of the Sun
- Imbolc: (Oimelc) (1 February or 2), but traditionally the evening of (31 January)[1]
Andean
- Inti Raymi: Festival of the Sun in Quechua, winter solstice festival in areas of the former Inca empire, still celebrated every June in Cuzco.
Persian
- Sadeh: A mid-winter feast to honor fire and to "defeat the forces of darkness, frost and cold". Sadé or Sada (Persian: سده) Jashn-e Sada/Sadé (in Persian: جشن سده), also transliterated as Sadeh, is an ancient Iranian tradition celebrated 50 days before nowrouz. Sadeh in Persian means "hundred" and refers to one hundred days and nights left to the beginning of the new year celebrated at the first day of spring on March 21st each year. Sadeh is a mid winter festival that was celebrated with grandeur and magnificence in ancient Iran. It was a festivity to honor fire and to defeat the forces of darkness, frost, and cold.
- Yalda: The turning point, Winter Solstice (December 21). End of the longest night of the year (Darkness), and beginning of growing of the days (Lights). A celebration of Good over Evil. Shabe Yaldā (Persian: یلدا) or Shabe Chelle (Persian: شب چله) is an Iranian festival originally celebrated on the Northern Hemisphere's longest night of the year, that is, on the eve of the Winter Solstice.
- Chahar Shanbeh Suri: Festival of Fire, Last Wednesday of the Iranian Calendar year. It marks the importance of the light over the darkness, and arrival of spring and revival of nature. Chahārshanbe-Sūri (Persian: چهارشنبهسوری), pronounced Chārshanbe-Sūri (Persian: چارشنبهسوری) is the ancient Iranian festival dating at least back to 1700 BCE of the early Zoroastrian era.[1] The festival of fire is a prelude to the ancient Norouz festival, which marks the arrival of spring and revival of nature. Chahrshanbeh Soori, is celebrated the last Tuesday night of the year.
Polynesian
Roman
- Saturnalia: the Roman winter soltice festival
- Festival of the birth of the Unconquered Sun: late Roman Empire - 25 December
- Lupercalia, the Roman end-of-winter festival - 15 February
Secular
- Winterval: Secular name for winter festivities coined by Birmingham City Council to encompass all holidays being recognized from October to January
- Zamenhof Day: (15 December) - Birthday of Ludwig Zamenhof, inventor of Esperanto; holiday reunion for Esperantists
- Winter Solstice, Yule: (21 December or 22 December) (Late June weekend in Australia) - Celebration of the Winter Solstice.
- HumanLight: (23 December) - Humanist holiday originated by the New Jersey Humanist Network
- Chrismukkah: Slang term for the amalgam of Christmas and Hanukkah celebrated by religiously mixed families and couples
- Yuletide: (25 December) - Classic and modern, respectively, terms for the social and federal December 25th holiday
- Boxing Day: (26 December) - Gift-giving day after Christmas.
- Kwanzaa: (26 December - 1 January) - Pan-African festival
- Yulefest, Midwinter Christmas (around late June or July) - Australian New Zealand winter 'Christmas/Yuletide'
- New Year's Eve: (31 December) - Last day of the Gregorian year
- Hogmanay: (Night of 31 December - Before dawn of 1 January) - Scottish New Years Eve Celebration
- New Year's Day: (1 January) - First day of the Gregorian year
- Burns Night: (25 January) - Birthday of Robert Burns
- Groundhog Day: (2 February)
- Quebec City Winter Carnival: (February) - Annual celebration of winter.
- Fur Rondy: (Late February and early March]) - Winter celebration in Anchorage, Alaska
- Festival du Voyageur: February winter celebration of the fur trade in Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Slavic
- Karachun - the ancient Slavs polytheistic winter solstice festival
Fictional
- Festivus: 23 December - quirky holiday invented on the television show Seinfeld
- Festival of the Bells: Midwinter celebration in Fraggle Rock, also mentioned in A Muppet Family Christmas.
- Decemberween: 25 December - A holiday in the Homestar Runner universe, occurring 55 days after Halloween.
- Hogswatchnight: December 32 - New Year's Eve/Christmas in Terry Pratchett's Discworld novels (plays on Hogmanay, Watch Night, and "hogwash")
- Winterfair: from the Vorkosigan Saga of Lois McMaster Bujold; a Barrayarran cultural holiday
- Chrismukkah: the modern-day merging of the holidays of Christianity's Christmas and Judaism's Hanukkah.
- Chrismahanukwanzakah: the modern-day merging of the holidays of Christianity's Christmas, Judaism's Hanukkah, and the African-American holiday of Kwanzaa.
- Hedgehog Day: 2 February - supposed archaic European version of Groundhog Day, dating back to Roman times.
- Wintersday: The annual winter holiday in the MMORPG Guild Wars. This holiday is based on Christmas and Yule and one can get neat hats.
- Starlight Celebration: The annual winter holiday based on Christmas/Yule/winter solstice in the MMORPG Final Fantasy XI (aka FFXI). Players can collect various holiday equipment, Mog house furnishings, fireworks, and food.
- Shoe Giving: - quirky holiday famously invented on the show Hyperdrive (TV series)
- Freezingman: - 11 January- A Burning Man inspired event held in Colorado as a Winter Arts and Music Festival http://www.coloradofreezingman.com http://tribes.tribe.net/freezingman
- Noob Day: December 26 - The day following Christmas when all the people who received online games as gifts go online for the first time and are killed off or mocked by veterans. This carries on the old concept of Christmas greenies from the 1980s, when computer BBSes would be flooded by "greenies" (new users) who had just received their first modem as gifts.
- Feast of Winter Veil: December 15 to January 2 - holiday in the MMORPG World of Warcraft. This holiday is based on Christmas. Cities are decorated with christmas lights and a tree with presents. Also special quests, items and snowballs are available. It features 'Greatfather Winter' which is modeled after [Santa Claus]. [1] [2]
- Kwansolhaneidmas: December 19 - an interdenominational holiday celebrated by people on Facebook.
- Winter-een-mas: January 25 - January 31 - from Ctrl+Alt+Del