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Public Holidays and
Bank Holidays for
Armenia
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Related and neighboring countries: Asia Azerbaijan Georgia Iran Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan Tajikistan Turkey Turkmenistan Uzbekistan
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The list of Armenia bank
holidays, national holidays and public holidays for 2008, comes from
the Q++ Worldwide Public Holidays Database,
the professional source of international public holidays long trusted by the world's
foremost diary publishers. The information on this page is provided for private, non-professional, use.
Qualified professionals can license data for 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011,
2012, and beyond. For details, please visit our licensing information
page or |
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At the bottom of this page:
Recent News and Updates
Background Information
Footnotes
Disclaimer
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Date in 2008 |
Holiday Name |
Observance* |
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Tue |
New Year's Day (Amanor)
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Wed |
New Year Holiday
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Thu |
Additional Public Holiday (compensated 2007-12-29)
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Fri |
Additional Public Holiday (compensated Jan.12)
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Sun |
Armenian Christmas (Surb Tsnund)
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Mon |
Army Day
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Mon |
Public Holiday (Presidential Election Preparations)
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Schools |
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Tue |
Public Holiday (Presidential Election)
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Sat |
Women's Day
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Thu |
Armenian Remembrance Day
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Thu |
Labour Day
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Fri |
Victory and Peace Day
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Wed |
1st Republic Day
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Mon |
Vardavar Holiday (compensated June 28)
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Sat |
Constitution Day
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Sun |
Independence Day
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Wed |
New Year's Eve
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© 1989-2008 Alter Ego
Services |
Recent News and Updates |
27 Jun 2008 (ArmInfo News Agency-Yerevan) Late last night, Armenian Prime Minister, Tigran Sargsyan, announced that Monday, June 30, 2008, the day after the Armenian religious festival of Vardavar (The Transfiguration of Jesus Christ), had been declared a one-off public holiday. As compensation, tomorrow, Saturday, June 28, 2008, will be a regular working day.
23 Nov 2007 (Armtown) The Armenian government has announced that Thursday and Friday, January 3 and 4, 2008 would be additional public holidays. In compensation, the Saturdays of December 29, 2007, and January 12, 2008, will be regular working days.
09 Nov 2007 (Panarmenian Network) Armenia will hold its next presidential elections on Tuesday, February 19, 2008, and that that day will be declared a public holiday. In addition, Monday, February 18, 2008, was declared a non-working day in educational institutions all over Armenia.
04 Mar 2005 (Pan Armenian News) As International Women's Day 2005 falls on a Tuesday, the Armenian government has declared Monday, March 7, 2005, a non-working bridge public holiday.
More News Updates For the full version of the summarized news items above, and older news items not displayed above, go to the Armenia public holidays news and updates page, or worldwide public holidays news and updates page, or subscribe to one of our free email newsletters. |
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Background Information |
Constitution Day: This public holiday was set forth by article 117 of the first version of the constitution of the Republic of Armenia.
Weekends: are Saturdays and Sundays.
Republic Day (may 28) is also known as First Republic Day, and commemorates the day when Armenian statehood was restored in 1918, but it is not Armenia's national day, which is Independence Day, celebrated on September 21, the date when a referendum was held in 1991 on the republic’s independence .
Elections: According to Part 3 of Article 88 of Electoral Code of the Republic of Armenia, the day of an election is declared a day-off (ie. public holiday, or non-working day).
Easter is celebrated but there are no public holidays based on the date of Easter.
The following are observances but are not public holidays (ie. not days off):
• February 21: Mother Language Day
• April 7: Mothers' and Beauty Day
• May 8: People’s Volunteer Corps Day
• June 1: Children’s Defense Day
• Vardavar (The Transfiguration): 98 days after Easter, always a Sunday, but an additional day is sometimes given on the following Monday.
• September 1: Knowledge Day
• The first Sunday of October: Teachers’ Day
• The second Saturday of October: Holy Translators’ Day
• December 7: Memorial day of the victims of the Earthquake
• Saint Vardanants Day: 8 weeks before the Easter, on Thursday.
Armenian Christmas is celebrated on January 6th around the world, except in Jerusalem - where the church continues to use the old calendar (ie. January 6 of the Orthodox calendar).
Other Sources of Information For information not covered here, see the following specialized websites: Central Bank of Armenia (Armenia central bank), ASI Hot Spots (security-related world events: terrorist threats, political strife, strikes, criminal activity, aviation incidents and health outbreaks), CIA World Factbook (maps, demographic and economic statistics), Copp Clark (financial markets' trading hours, settlement holidays and currency non-clearing days), and the IFES Election Guide (information covering upcoming elections, referenda, electoral structures and past voter participation). |
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Footnotes |
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Observance : Any entry in the Observance column indicates that, in Armenia, the holiday may be regional or non-official or limited to certain religious and/or linguistic groups, or begin at a time other than midnight. Note that religious holidays are included only if they are national public holidays, or if the national labour code has specific holiday allowances for employees of specific religions. For more information, see our pages on the religious calendars of the world. |
Disclaimer
In many parts of
the world, holidays are subject to arbitrary, last minute, changes by local
authorities. While every effort has been made to present an accurate list of
2008 bank holidays, legal holidays and public holidays for Armenia, we
cannot accept any responsibility for any error or omission in the data presented
above. You are therefore advised to verify
the above dates with the embassy or consulate of Armenia, before planning any
trip to Armenia. For last-minute updates to worldwide public holidays,
visit our blog or subscribe to our free
email newsletters. |
Animated flag graphics courtesy of
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