Public holidays in Italy
The following days are public holidays in Italy:[1]
Date | English Name | Local Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|
1 January | New Year's Day | Capodanno | |
6 January | Epiphany | Epifania | |
Monday after Easter | Easter Monday | Lunedì dell'Angelo, Lunedì in Albis or more commonly Pasquetta | |
25 April | Liberation Day | Festa della Liberazione | Liberation of Italy from Nazi Germany, 1945 |
1 May | International Workers' Day | Festa del Lavoro (or Festa dei Lavoratori) | |
2 June | Republic Day | Festa della Repubblica | Birth of the Italian Republic, 1946 |
15 August | Ferragosto/Assumption Day | Ferragosto or Assunzione | |
1 November | All Saints' Day | Tutti i santi (or Ognissanti) | |
8 December | Immaculate Conception | Immacolata Concezione (or just Immacolata) | |
25 December | Christmas Day | Natale | |
26 December | St. Stephen's Day | Santo Stefano |
In addition each city or town celebrates a public holiday on the occasion of the festival of the local patron saint: for example, Rome - 29 June (SS. Peter and Paul), Milan - 7 December (S. Ambrose).[2] In South Tyrol, the holiday is instead on Whit Monday (which is also a public holiday in North Tyrol and the rest of German-speaking Europe).
Public holidays and local saints' days are not transferred when they fall on a weekend. The number of working days given over to public holidays therefore varies year by year.
The following days are not public holidays, but are nevertheless established by law:
Date | English Name | Local Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|
7 January | Flag Day | Festa del tricolore | Made a national day by law no. 671 of 31 December 1996. |
27 January | International Holocaust Remembrance Day | Giorno della Memoria | Made a national day by law no. 211 of 20 July 2000. |
17 March | Anniversary of the Unification of Italy | Anniversario dell'Unità d'Italia | Only in 2011 for the 150th anniversary. |
4 November | National Unity and Armed Forces Day | Giorno dell'Unità Nazionale e Festa delle Forze Armate | A public holiday from its inception in 1919 up to 1977, it marked the anniversary of the ratification of the Armistice of Villa Giusti between Italy and Austria-Hungary. |
References
- ↑ "Festività nazionali in Italia" (in Italian). Italian Embassy in London. Retrieved 15 April 2012.
- ↑ "Festività nazionali in Italia" (in Italian). Governo Italiano - Dipartimento per il Cerimoniale dello Stato. Retrieved 25 April 2013.
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