http://uahc.org/congs/dc/dc001/holidays.html
http://www.vjholidays.com/vjholidaysindex.htm
Some useful web-based sources:
http://holidays.net/
http://users.ox.ac.uk/~chri0264/calendar.html
http://www.smart.net/~mmontes/ec-cal.html
http://www.smart.net/~mmontes/ushols.html
http://www.arborday.org/
"National Arbor Day is the last Friday in April, but many states observe
Arbor Day on different dates according to their best tree-planting
times. Check the list below to find out when your state or territory
observes Arbor Day. Also listed is each state's official state tree."
http://www.smart.net/~mmontes/ec-cal.html:
Ecclesiastical Calendar for A.D. 1999
Easter, Lent and movable Feasts associated with Easter
Ash Wednesday is 17 February, 1999.
Laetare Sunday is 14 March, 1999.
Palm/Passion Sunday is 28 March, 1999.
Good Friday is 2 April, 1999.
Western (Catholic, Anglican, and Protestant) Easter Sunday is 4 April, 1999.
Ascension is Thursday, 13 May, 1999.
Pentecost is Sunday, 23 May, 1999.
Trinity Sunday is 30 May, 1999.
Corpus Christi is Thursday, 3 June, 1999.
Sacred Heart of Jesus is Friday, 11 June, 1999.
Immaculate Heart of Mary is Saturday, 12 June, 1999.
NOTE: Currently in some locations, Ascension and Corpus Christi are celebrated the Sunday following the dates listed above.
Paskha (Orthodox Easter Sunday) is 11 April, 1999.
A selection of Celebrations with fixed dates
The Solemnity of Mary is Friday, 1 January, 1999.
Epiphany is Sunday, 3 January, 1999.
Epiphany (traditional) is Wednesday, 6 January, 1999.
The Baptism of the Lord is Sunday, 10 January, 1999.
The Presentation of the Lord (Candlemas) is Tuesday, 2 February, 1999.
Solemnity of Joseph, Husband of Mary is Friday, 19 March, 1999.
The Annunciation is Thursday, 25 March, 1999.
The Transfiguration of the Lord is Friday, 6 August, 1999.
Assumption (Feast of Mary) is Sunday, 15 August, 1999.
The Birth of Virgin Mary is Wednesday, 8 September, 1999.
Celebration of The Holy Cross is Tuesday, 14 September, 1999.
Mass of Archangels Michael, Gabriel and Raphael is Wednesday, 29 September, 1999.
All Saints' Day is Monday, 1 November, 1999.
All Souls' Day is Tuesday, 2 November, 1999.
Feast of Christ the King is Sunday, 21 November, 1999.
NOTE: In many places, Epiphany is now celebrated the Sunday on or after 2 January.
Advent, Christmas, and Celebrations during Advent
The 1st Sunday of Advent is 28 November, 1999.
The 2nd Sunday of Advent is 5 December, 1999.
The Feast of the Immaculate Conception is Wednesday, 8 December, 1999.
The 3rd Sunday of Advent (Gaudete Sunday) is 12 December, 1999.
The celebration of Our Lady of Guadalupe is Monday, 13 December, 1999.
The 4th Sunday of Advent is 19 December, 1999.
Christmas is Saturday, 25 December, 1999.
The Solemnity of the Holy Family is Sunday, 26 December, 1999.
American Holidays and Dates of Interest for A.D. 1999
New Year's Day is Friday, 1 January, 1999.
Birthday of Martin Luther King is Monday, 18 January, 1999.
National Freedom Day (signing of 13th Am.; pres. procl) is Monday, 1 February, 1999.
Groundhog Day is Tuesday, 2 February, 1999.
Lincoln's Birthday is Friday, 12 February, 1999.
Valentine's Day is Sunday, 14 February, 1999.
Washington's Birthday (Observed) is Monday, 15 February, 1999.
Washington's Birthday is Monday, 22 February, 1999.
St. Patrick's Day is Wednesday, 17 March, 1999.
April Fool's Day is Thursday, 1 April, 1999.
Daylight Saving Time begins Sunday, 4 April, 1999.
Federal Income Taxes are due Thursday, 15 April, 1999.
Arbor Day in many locations is Friday, 30 April, 1999, but please see The List of Arbor Dates for States
Mothers' Day is Sunday, 9 May, 1999.
Armed Forces Day is Saturday, 15 May, 1999.
Memorial Day is Monday, 31 May, 1999.
Flag Day is Monday, 14 June, 1999.
Fathers' Day is Sunday, 20 June, 1999.
Canada Day is Thursday, 1 July, 1999.
United States of America Independence Day is Sunday, 4 July, 1999.
United States of America Independence Day (Federal Observed) is Monday, 5 July, 1999.
Labor Day is Monday, 6 September, 1999.
Parents' Day is Sunday, 25 July, 1999.
Grandparents Day is Sunday, 12 September, 1999.
Citizenship Day is Friday, 17 September, 1999.
Columbus Day (Observed) is Monday, 11 October, 1999.
Columbus Day (Traditional) is Tuesday, 12 October, 1999.
United Nations Day is Sunday, 24 October, 1999.
Daylight Saving Time ends Sunday, 31 October, 1999.
Halloween is Sunday, 31 October, 1999.
Election Day is Tuesday, 2 November, 1999.
Veterans' Day is Thursday, 11 November, 1999.
Thanksgiving Day is Thursday, 25 November, 1999.
Bill of Rights Day is Wednesday, 15 December, 1999.
Christmas Day (Federal Observed) is Friday, 24 December, 1999.
Christmas Day is Saturday, 25 December, 1999.
http://www.holidays.net/
Holidays of 1999
Winter'99
New Year's Day: Friday, January 1
Martin Luther King, Jr's Birthday: Monday, January 18
Groundhog Day: Tuesday, February 2
Lincoln's Birthday: Friday, February 12
Valentine's Day: Sunday, February 14
President's Day: Monday, February 15
Washington's Birthday: Monday, February 22
Purim (Begins at Sundown): Monday, March 1
St. Patrick's Day: Wednesday, March 17
Spring'99
April Fool's Day: Thursday, April 1
Easter: Sunday, April 4
Passover (Begins at Sundown): Wednesday, March 31
Mother's Day: Sunday, May 9
Memorial Day: Monday, May 31
Shavuot (Begins at Sundown): Thursday, May 20
Flag Day: Monday, June 14
Father's Day: Sunday, June 20
Summer'99
US Independence Day: Sunday, July 4
Labor Day: Monday, September 6
Rosh Hashanah (Begins at Sundown): Friday, September 10
Grandparents Day: Sunday, September 12
Yom Kippur (Begins at Sundown): Sunday, September 19
Fall'99
Sukkot (Begins at Sundown): Friday, September 24
Columbus Day: Tuesday, October 12, (Observed: Monday, October 11)
Halloween: Sunday, October 31
US Election Day: Tuesday, November 2
Veterans' Day: Thursday, November 11
Thanksgiving Day: Thursday, November 25
Winter'99
Chanukah (Begins at Sundown): Friday, December 3
Ramadan: Friday, December 10 (Depends on the sighting of the moon in North America)
Christmas Day: Saturday: December 25
Kwanzaa: Sunday, December 26
Oliver Elphick:
From the tables in the Book of Common Prayer, I think Easter Sunday should
be April 4. These dates are dependent on Easter:
Septuagesima Sunday: Jan 31
Shrove Tuesday: Feb 16
1st day of Lent (Ash Wednesday): Feb 17
Palm Sunday: Mar 28
Maundy Thursday: Apr 1
Good Friday: Apr 2
Easter Day: Apr 4
Easter Monday: Apr 5
Rogation Sunday: May 9
Rogation days: May 10-12
Ascension Day: May 13
Whitsunday/Pentecost: May 23
Trinity Sunday: May 30
Advent Sunday: Nov 28
Daniel Martin:
Calendar has these three - Yom HaAtzma'ut happens 20 days after
passover, unless that would put it on a Friday or Saturday, in which
case it happens on the Thursday prior. Lag BaOmer happens 33 days
after passover and Yom Yerushalim happens 43 days after passover.
This puts them for next year on April 21st, May 4th, and May 14th,
respectively. (I got these by reading calendar's lisp code)
> 07/31* Fast of Tish'a B'Av (Babylon/Rome destroys Holy Temple; fast
> day)
Next year this happens on 7/22
> 10/12* Shmini Atzeres/Simchas Torah (Rejoicing of the Law;
> sabbatical)
This always happens the day before Simchat Torah. Next year that puts
it on October 2nd.
Rogation Sunday is the Sunday before Ascension Day; that puts it last
year on May 17th, and in 1999 on May 9th
Julian Gilbey:
An almost complete calendar for 1999 (including all the ones you had
queries about):
02/01 Tu Bishvat (New Year for Trees)
03/01 Fast of Esther
03/02 Purim (Jews rescued from decrees of Haman)
03/03 Shushan Purim (Purim in Jerusalem)
04/01-04/08 Pesach (Passover)
04/14 Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Memorial Day)
04/20 Yom HaZikaron (Israeli Fallen Soldiers Remembrance Day)
04/21 Yom HaAtzmaut (Israel Independence Day)
05/04 Lag Ba`omer (Commemoration of the Great Rebellion)
05/14 Yom Yerushalayim (Reunification of Jerusalem)
05/21-05/22 Shavuot (Pentecost)
07/01 Fast of Shiv'a Asar B'Tammuz (Romans breach Wall of
Jerusalem; fast day)
07/22 Fast of Tish'a B'Av (Babylon/Rome destroys Holy Temple; fast
day)
07/28 Tu B'Av (Festival of Fifteenth of Av)
09/11-12 Rosh Hashanah (New Year)
09/13 Fast of Tzom Gedaliah (Fast commemorating assassination of
Gedaliah, the head of the Jewish community in Israel during
the Babylonian exile)
09/20 Yom Kippur (Day of Atonement; fast day)
09/25-10/01 Sukkot (Tabernacles)
10/01 Hoshana Rabbah (Day of final appeal for a good judgement; part
of Sukkot)
10/02 Shmini Atzeret (Eighth day of Festival)
10/03 Simchat Torah (Rejoicing of the Law)
12/04-12/11 Chanukah (Festival of Lights)
12/19 Fast of Asara B'Tevet (Babylonians put siege on Jerusalem;
fast day)
(Also, it's on 12/29/98 this year, and not as in the current calendar,
but never mind.)
Finally, I've used the Orthodox dates for Diaspora Jewry (i.e.,
outside of Israel). In Israel and outside according to the Reform
(and possibly Conservative) practice, Pesach is one day shorter,
Shavuot is only one day, and Shmini Atzeret and Simchat Torah become
one day (10/02).
Date: Fri, 12 Oct 2001 17:25:29 -0400
To: md@linux.it
Subject: Christian Holidays
From: "James A. Treacy"
Marco,
I saw on IRC that you were looking for a list of Christian holidays for
2002. I believe the following is correct - just took a little digging on
the web.
1 Jan Feast of Mary, Mother of God
6 Jan Epiphany
7 Jan Orthodox Christmas
13 Feb Ash Wednesday (Lent begins)
17 Mar St. Patrick's Day
18 Mar Start of Lent for Orthodox Christians
24 Mar Passion Sunday
28 Mar Maundy Thursday
29 Mar Good Friday
31 Mar Easter Sunday
5 May Pascha (Orthodox Easter)
9 May Ascension Thursday
12 May Ascension Sunday
19 May Pentecost Sunday
2 Jun Body and Blood of Christ (Corpus Christi)
15 Aug Assumption of Mary
1 Nov All Saints Day
1 Dec First Day of Advent
9 Dec Immaculate Conception
25 Dec Christmas
--
James (Jay) Treacy
treacy@debian.org
Date: Sat, 13 Oct 2001 12:39:46 -0400
To: Marco d'Itri
Subject: Re: Christian Holidays
From: "James A. Treacy"
On Fri, Oct 12, 2001 at 11:31:35PM +0200, Marco d'Itri wrote:
> Thank you, but this is not what I'm looking for.
> The moveable feasts which need to be determined for 2002 and 2003 are:
>
Those are Christian holidays? I've never heard of any of them!
As it is, I put down more dates than 99% of all Chrisitans would
care about (even Catholics - but that may just be due to poor christian
education in north america). If you want to go to extremes, you could
add all the saints days. :)
I have to admit that I don't know what this is for. One thing I'd love
to see with a list of holidays is a description of what the holiday is.
Anyway, using a dictionary and the web, I came up with the following.
Hopefully you can add the string describing when the holiday is as a
comment somewhere:
http://www.oremus.org/liturgy/asb/cal/cal.html
contains a lot of useful information. The only part that doesn't agree
well is its definition of Ember Days.
> Feb 11 Septuagesima
the 3rd Sunday before Lent (or the 9th before Easter)
27 Jan 2002
16 Feb 2003
> Feb 18 Sexagesima
The second Sunday before Lent; -- so called as being about the sixtieth day before Easter.
3 Feb 2002
23 Feb 2003
> Feb 25 Quinquagesima
the Sunday before Ash Wednesday
10 Feb 2002
2 Mar 2003
> Mar 04 Quadragesima (1st Sunday of Lent)
dates below
(from the web)
Ember day: A day reserved for prayer and fasting by some Christian churches,
observed on the Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday after the first Sunday
of Lent, after Whitsunday, after September 14, and after December 13.
(Whitsunday: the seventh Sunday after Easter)
Or
Ember Days are the Wednesdays, Fridays, and Saturdays within the weeks
before the Third Sunday in Advent, the Second Sunday in Lent, and the
Sundays nearest to the Festivals of St Peter, and St Michael and All
Angels. On these days prayer is offered for all who serve the Church in
its various ministries, both clerical and lay, and for all who are to be
ordained or commissioned to those ministries. Ember Days may also be
observed on such days as are directed by the Bishop.
This does not agree with the previous definition except for the week
during Lent:
- St. Michaels and All Angels is 29 Sep (much later in the month)
- St. Peter is 29 Jun (much later in the month)
- The dates you gave for 2001 and the previous definition point to the
week AFTER the Third Sunday in Advent
The first definition was used to give the dates below.
> Jun 05 Ember day
> Jun 07 Ember day
> Jun 08 Ember day
Shouldn't those have been 6, 8 and 9? Jun 5, 2001 was a Tuesday.
17 Feb 2002 Quadragesima
20 Feb 2002 Ember day
22 Feb 2002 Ember day
23 Feb 2002 Ember day
9 Mar 2003 Quadragesima
12 Mar 2003 Ember day
14 Mar 2003 Ember day
15 Mar 2003 Ember day
19 May 2002 Whitsunday
22 May 2002 Ember day
24 May 2002 Ember day
25 May 2002 Ember day
8 Jun 2003 Whitsunday
11 Jun 2003 Ember day
13 Jun 2003 Ember day
14 Jun 2003 Ember day
(14 Sep 2002 on a Sat)
18 Sep 2002 Ember day
20 Sep 2002 Ember day
21 Sep 2002 Ember day
(14 Sep 2003 on a Sun)
17 Sep 2003 Ember day
19 Sep 2003 Ember day
20 Sep 2003 Ember day
(13 Dec 2002 on a Fri)
18 Dec 2002 Ember day
20 Dec 2002 Ember day
21 Dec 2002 Ember day
(13 Dec 2003 on a Sat)
17 Dec 2003 Ember day
19 Dec 2003 Ember day
20 Dec 2003 Ember day
> May 20 Rogation Sunday
5th Sunday after Easter
> May 21 Rogation Day
Rogation Day: In western Christendom, prescribed days of prayer and fasting
traditionally for the harvest, usually the three days before Ascension Day
Ascension day is the Thursday after the 5th Sunday after Easter.
31 Mar 2002 Easter
5 May 2002 Rogation Sunday
6 May 2002 Rogation Day
7 May 2002 Rogation Day
8 May 2002 Rogation Day
9 May 2002 Ascension day
20 Apr 2002 Easter
25 May 2003 Rogation Sunday
26 May 2003 Rogation Day
27 May 2003 Rogation Day
28 May 2003 Rogation Day
29 May 2003 Ascension day
Except for not being 100% positive on how the Ember days are set, this
looks like it should be accurate. It would be a good idea for someone
to check it (calendar mode in emacs is very handy). Hope this helps. :)
--
James (Jay) Treacy
treacy@debian.org