Public holidays in Ethiopia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following lists are public holidays in Ethiopia. Many holidays follow the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church.[1]

National holiday

More information Date, English name ...
DateEnglish nameAmharic nameNotes
2 MarchAdwa Victory Dayየዓድዋ ድል በዓልCommemorates Ethiopians victory over Italy at Battle of Adwa in 1896.[2]
1 MayInternational Workers' Dayዓለም አቀፍ የሠራተኞች ቀን
5 MayEthiopian Patriots' Victory Dayየአርበኞች ቀንCommemorates the 1941 entering of Emperor Haile Selassie into Addis Ababa amidst Second World War, who returned to the throne after 5 years Italian occupation of Ethiopia following Second Italo-Ethiopian War.[3]
28 May[4]Downfall of the Dergደርግ የወደቀበት ቀንCommemorates the end of the Derg junta in 1991. It is also known as Ginbot 20 (ግንቦት 20).
11 September
(Leap year: 12 September)
Enkutatashእንቁጣጣሽ/የዘመን መለወጫ/አዲስ አመትNew Year of Ethiopia and Eritrea
Close

Religious holidays

Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church holidays

More information Orthodox Church calendar date, English name ...
Orthodox Church calendar dateEnglish nameAmharic name Oromoo name
7 JanuaryEthiopian ChristmasGenna (ልደተ-ለእግዚእነ/ ገና) Ayaana Qillee
19 January
(Leap year: 20 January)
EpiphanyTimkat (ብርሃነ ጥምቀት) Ayaana Cuuphaa
Moveable in springGood FridaySiklet (ስቅለት) Ayyaana Faannoo
Moveable in springEasterFasika (ብርሃነ-ትንሣኤ/ፋሲካ) Ayyaana Faasiikaa
27 September
28 September (leap year)
Meskelመስቀል Masqalaa
Close

Islamic holidays

In addition, the following Muslim holidays, which may take place at any time of the year, are observed as public holidays:

More information Islamic calendar date, English name ...
Islamic calendar dateEnglish nameAmharic nameNotes
MoveableRamadanRamadaanNinth month, devoted to fasting
12 Rabi' al-awwal (Sunni)
17 Rabi' al-awwal (Shia)
MawlidMawliidBirth of the Prophet
1 ShawwalEid al-FitrIid al-FitriiBreaking of the Fast
10 Dhu al-HijjahEid al-AdhaIid al-AdhaaFeast of the Sacrifice
Close

Holidays under the Derg communist rule (1974–1991)

More information Date, English name ...
DateEnglish nameAmharic name Oromo nameNotes
12 September Revolution Day የአብዮት ቀን Guyyaa warraaqsa Celebrated during Communist rule from 1974 to 1991 to celebrate the establishment of the Derg. In 1987, the celebrations of the holiday, which included a military parade on Revolution Square attended by multiple figures, also commemorated the establishment of the People's Democratic Republic of Ethiopia.[5][6]
26 October Defense Day የመከላከያ ቀን Guyyaa Ittisaa Commemorating the establishment of the Ethiopian National Defense Force in 1907
7 NovemberOctober Revolution Dayየጥቅምት አብዮት ቀን Guyyaa warraaqsa OnkolooleessaaCelebrated during Communist rule from 1974 to 1991.
Close

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.