The following are public holidays in Uruguay.[1]
Date | English name | Spanish name | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|
January 1 | New Year's Day | Año Nuevo | |
January 6 | Children's Day | Día de los Niños | In place of Epiphany (Día de Reyes). |
moveable in late February or early March | Carnival | Carnaval | |
moveable in late March or early April | Tourism Week | Semana de Turismo | In place of Christian Holy Week (Semana Santa). |
April 19 | Landing of the 33 Patriots Day | Desembarco de los 33 Orientales | |
May 1 | Labour Day | Día de los Trabajadores | |
May 18 | Battle of Las Piedras | Batalla de las Piedras | |
June 19 | Birthday of José Gervasio Artigas | Natalicio de Artigas | |
July 18 | Constitution Day | Jura de la Constitución | To commemorate the promulgation of the First Constitution of Uruguay in 1830. |
August 25 | Independence Day | Declaratoria de la Independencia | From the Empire of Brazil in 1825. |
October 12 | Columbus Day | Día de la Raza | |
November 2 | All Souls' Day | Día de los Difuntos | In place of All Souls' Day |
December 25 | Family Day | Día de la Familia | In place of Christmas Day (Navidad). |
Only 11 of these holidays imply a mandatory paid leave for workers. The remaining holidays are generally observed by schools, public sector offices, banks, and a few private companies.
Moveable holidays
editAccording to Uruguayan Law 16,805 with modifications of Law 17,414, the holidays declared by law, subject to the commemoration of them, follow the following scheme (whose commemoration as “moveable holidays”):[2][3]
- If coincide on Saturday, Sunday or Monday will be observed in those days.
- If occur on Tuesday or Wednesday, will be observed on Monday immediately preceding.
- If occur on Thursday or Friday shall be observed on the Monday immediately following
This will not occur with Carnival and Tourism Week, and corresponding to January 1 and 6, May 1, June 19, July 18, August 25, November 2 and December 25, which will continue watching on the day of the week that may occur, whatever the same.
References
edit- ^ "Information from Uruguay.com, in Spanish". Archived from the original on 2015-07-02. Retrieved 2012-04-17.
- ^ "Law 16.805: Holidays. Establishing a system for their application" (in Spanish). Parliament of Uruguay. December 31, 1996. Archived from the original on August 28, 2013. Retrieved February 7, 2015.
- ^ "Law 17.414: Replacing article 2 of the Law 16.805, arranging that holidays which are determined, among them 'June 19' and 'November 2', will continue to observe on the day of the week in that may occur, no matter what would be" (in Spanish). Parliament of Uruguay. November 14, 2001. Archived from the original on June 26, 2013. Retrieved February 7, 2015.
External links
edit- Media related to National holidays of Uruguay at Wikimedia Commons