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Holidays in Great Nortend: Difference between revisions

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==Traditions==
==Traditions==
===Michaelmas===
===Michaelmas===
Michaelmas Day is the official start of the year in [[Great Nortend]] as the first day of Michaelmas Term. It is also commemorates {{wp|Michael_(archangel)|label1=St. Michael the Archangel}}, and is associated with thanksgiving for the harvest. After the noon high mass, there is often a street parade featuring local dignitaries, farmers and the like with floats with harvest vegetables, bread, cakes, crops &c. This is followed by a harvest or Michaelmas Dinner for one's workers serving foods such as bread, carrots, honeycomb and the local type of Michaelmas cake, usually involving the last blackberries of the season. There are also other local traditions, such as various sports and games.
====All Hallows'====
====All Hallows'====
===Christmas===
===Christmas===
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===Easter===
===Easter===
====Whitsun====
====Whitsun====
[[File:Jouteurs_de_l'association_chevalerie_initiatique.jpg|thumb|The Royal Tournament is a highlight of Whitsun Week festivities.]]
Whitsun Day commemorates the descent of the Holy Ghost on the Apostles, and is also a civil festival commemorating the [[Sovereign of Great Nortend|King]]'s birthday. Whitsun Day is also the de facto day for confirming children given its association with the Holy Ghost, which in Great Nortend carries with it the extra significance insofar as children swear the oath of liegance immediately prior. After the noon Mass, large processions and parades are ubiquitous where patriotic songs are sung. The largest is in the middle of Lendert-with-Cadell, on [[Edcheap]], where nearly 200,000 people assemble each year with 100,000 soldiers in a massive parade through the city. The King also gives an annual speech at this parade, which is read out across the country.
During the week after Whitsun Day, although principally on Whit Monday and Tuesday, various other festivities occur, such as races, fairs, pageants, walks, dances &c. The day following Whitsun Day, Whit Monday, the Royal Tournament with jousting is held at Hameford.
===Midsummer===
===Midsummer===
[[File:The_Feast_of_Saint_John.jpg|thumb|The traditional St. John's Eve ring dance involves jumping over a fire in pairs.]]
[[File:The_Feast_of_Saint_John.jpg|thumb|The traditional St. John's Eve ring dance involves jumping over a fire in pairs.]]

Revision as of 01:09, 15 March 2021

Holidays in Great Nortend
Fourth of July fireworks behind the Washington Monument, 1986.jpg
King's Day fireworks on Whitsun Day
Observed byGovernment, Church and individuals
TypeNational
DateLua error in Module:Wikidata at line 448: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).

Holidays in Great Nortend are days which are established or recognised by law for the commemoration of certain events, persons or causes. Great Nortend civilly marks 56 such holidays, including 16 full holidays, 28 half holidays and twelve especial days, all which can be broadly classified as Christian in nature. They are referred to by their associated feast days, or “holy days”, on the Church of Nortend calendar. In addition to any legal incidents attached to work and worship on such days, there are many cultural traditions associated with these and other holidays throughout the year, often blending agricultural or pre-Christian customs or superstition with Christian observances.

Red letter days

In accordance with the Holy and Especial Days Act, 36 Cath. II, which superseded the 1893 act of the same name, “red letter days” are ranked in three categories, being an especial day, a half holiday and a full holiday. Only half holidays and full holidays are recognised by the customary law as being days of rest and religious observance.[1] No transaction in trade or legal process can occur on a holiday, and are deemed to occur on the day thereafter.

Full holidays

The Holy and Especial Days Act determined sixteen days as full holidays. Eight of these are term and half term days :—

  • September 29th — Michaelmas Day
  • Novembr 1st — All Hallows' Day
  • December 25th — Christmas Day
  • February 2nd — Candlemas Day
  • March 25th — Lady Day
  • May 3rd — Roodmas Day
  • June 24th — Midsummer Day (St. John Baptist's Day)
  • August 1st — Petermas Day

The other eight full holidays are additional holy days principally including those holy days dependent of the computus for Easter, the date of which varies from year to year, as well as the Epiphany :—

  • January 6th — Epiphany Day
  • Varies — Good Friday
  • Varies — Holy Saturday
  • Varies — Easter Sunday
  • Varies — Easter Monday
  • Varies — Ascension Day
  • Varies — Whit Sunday
  • Varies — Trinity Sunday

As Easter Sunday, Whit Sunday and Trinity Sunday already fall on Sundays, which are already half holidays, there is a maximum of a fortnight of full holidays on what would otherwise be ordinary weekdays.

Half holidays

In addition to full holidays, there are twenty-eight additional half holidays upon which no commercial transactions may occur. These include sixteen Biblical apostle and martyr saints' days :—

  • October 18th — St. Luke's Day
  • October 28th — St. Simon and St. Jude's Day
  • November 30th — St. Andrew's Day
  • December 21st — St. Thomas's Day
  • December 26th — St. Stephen's Day
  • December 27th — St. John Evangelist's Day
  • December 28th — Childermas Day
  • February 24th — St. Matthias's Day
  • April 25th — St. Mark's Day
  • May 1st — St. Philip and St. James's Day
  • June 11th — St. Barnabas's Day
  • June 29th — St. Peter and St. Paul's Day
  • July 22nd — St. Mary Magdalen's Day
  • July 25th — St. James's Day
  • August 24th — St. Bartholomew's Day
  • September 21st — St. Matthew's Day

There are also twelve half holidays commemorating other Biblical events, associated seasons and other causes :—

  • November 2nd — All Souls' Day
  • December 8th — Conception of Mary
  • January 1st — Circumcision Day
  • January 25th — Conversion of St. Paul Day
  • Varies — Easter Tuesday
  • Varies — Whit Monday
  • Varies — Whit Tuesday
  • VariesCorpus Christi
  • July 2nd — Visitation of Mary
  • August 6th — Transfiguration Day
  • August 15th — Assumption of Mary
  • September 8th — Nativity of Mary

Especial days

There are official commemorations for the twelve especial days of various saints' days of traditional significance, including the patron saints of Nortend, Cardoby and Hambria, St. Edmund, St. Blaise and St. Christopher. There is one such especial day per month, corresponding to the double feasts celebrated in the Cardican Rite :—

  • October 25th — St. Crispin and St. Crispinian's Day
  • November 11th — St. Martin's Day
  • December 2nd — St. Edmund's Day
  • January 13th — St. Hilary's Day
  • February 3rd — St. Blaise's Day
  • March 12th — St. Gregory's Day
  • April 23rd — St. George's Day
  • May 14th — St. Christopher's Day
  • June 5th — St. Boniface's Day
  • July 28th — St. Samson's Day
  • August 10th — St. Laurence's Day
  • September 24th — St. Christopher's Day

Concurrence

Additional civil holidays are not created when two or more holidays coincide, including when a holiday coincides with a Sunday, the latter being a bank holiday. One holiday may be effectively lost, or alternatively, merged in one way or another with the other holiday, according to the rules of the Cardican Rite.

Traditions

Michaelmas

Michaelmas Day is the official start of the year in Great Nortend as the first day of Michaelmas Term. It is also commemorates Michael_(archangel), and is associated with thanksgiving for the harvest. After the noon high mass, there is often a street parade featuring local dignitaries, farmers and the like with floats with harvest vegetables, bread, cakes, crops &c. This is followed by a harvest or Michaelmas Dinner for one's workers serving foods such as bread, carrots, honeycomb and the local type of Michaelmas cake, usually involving the last blackberries of the season. There are also other local traditions, such as various sports and games.

All Hallows'

Christmas

Candlemas

Lady Day

Roodmas

Easter

Whitsun

The Royal Tournament is a highlight of Whitsun Week festivities.

Whitsun Day commemorates the descent of the Holy Ghost on the Apostles, and is also a civil festival commemorating the King's birthday. Whitsun Day is also the de facto day for confirming children given its association with the Holy Ghost, which in Great Nortend carries with it the extra significance insofar as children swear the oath of liegance immediately prior. After the noon Mass, large processions and parades are ubiquitous where patriotic songs are sung. The largest is in the middle of Lendert-with-Cadell, on Edcheap, where nearly 200,000 people assemble each year with 100,000 soldiers in a massive parade through the city. The King also gives an annual speech at this parade, which is read out across the country.

During the week after Whitsun Day, although principally on Whit Monday and Tuesday, various other festivities occur, such as races, fairs, pageants, walks, dances &c. The day following Whitsun Day, Whit Monday, the Royal Tournament with jousting is held at Hameford.

Midsummer

The traditional St. John's Eve ring dance involves jumping over a fire in pairs.

Midsummer Day, or St. John's Day, is a traditional term day marking the beginning of Midsummer Term and commemorating the Nativity of Saint John the Baptist . Associated with it are traditions attached to St. John's Eve mainly involving fire. One common tradition is a St. John's Fire and ring dance. Whilst singing traditional songs, young sweethearts jump over the fire whilst making the sign of the cross to bless their love and drive away evils. Various other superstitious practices also occur on this day, some of which are condemned by the Church although most are thought of as being harmless traditions.

Petermas

Black letter days

In addition to the officially commemorated red letter days, there remain a large number of so-called “black letter days” in the Cardican Rite, so-called because they are customarily printed in the Calendar in black ink as they rank as simple feasts. Hence, though these days are marked liturgically, and with traditional customs, they are not recognised as ordinary days of rest.

  1. Umbeck v. Colhare.