Regional 7 min read

영국 제도 공휴일과 축제

Bank holidays, patron saint days, and cultural celebrations across the UK and Ireland

Introduction

The British Isles — comprising the United Kingdom (England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland) and the Republic of Ireland — offer a compact but extraordinarily varied holiday landscape. Four distinct nations with their own patron saints, languages, and historical experiences celebrate within a shared constitutional framework, resulting in a calendar where different parts of the islands observe different Public Holiday days and attach different emotional weights to shared occasions. Britain's holiday culture also reflects its imperial and multicultural history: Diwali celebrations in Leicester and Birmingham, Eid gatherings in Bradford and East London, and Caribbean-influenced Notting Hill Carnival in London are all now firmly part of British celebration life.

England

Guy Fawkes Night — 5 November

Guy Fawkes Night (Bonfire Night) is one of England's most distinctive cultural events, though it is not a Public Holiday. It commemorates the failed Gunpowder Plot of 5 November 1605, when Robert Catesby's group (including Guy Fawkes) attempted to blow up the Houses of Parliament during the State Opening. Bonfires are lit across the country, effigies of Guy Fawkes are burned, and firework displays mark what has evolved from a Protestant anti-Catholic celebration into a secular autumn festival.

Notting Hill Carnival

The Notting Hill Carnival, held on the August Bank Holiday weekend in London, is Europe's largest street festival and the world's second-largest carnival after Rio. It began in 1966 as a celebration of Caribbean (particularly Trinidadian) culture by London's Afro-Caribbean community. Steel bands, sound systems, elaborate costume mas bands, and Caribbean food stalls transform the streets of Notting Hill. The carnival has a complex history intertwined with the Notting Hill race riots of 1958 and represents both joy and political assertion.

May Day and Bank Holidays

England and Wales observe eight bank holidays: New Year's Day, Good Friday, Easter Monday, Early May Bank Holiday, Spring Bank Holiday (late May), Summer Bank Holiday (late August), Christmas Day, and Boxing Day. The term 'bank holiday' dates to the Bank Holidays Act 1871, when Parliament legislated specific days when the Bank of England would close.

Scotland

Hogmanay — Scottish New Year

[[hogmanay]] is Scotland's most important traditional celebration and the world's largest New Year street party. Edinburgh's Hogmanay festival draws 150,000 people for four days of events culminating in the Loony Dook (a New Year's Day swim in the Firth of Forth at South Queensferry), street concerts, and a torchlight procession. The tradition of 'first-footing' — being the first person to cross a friend's threshold after midnight, ideally bearing gifts of coal, shortbread, black bun, and whisky — is observed across Scotland. The Flambeaux procession in Comrie and the fireball ceremony in Stonehaven (men swinging balls of fire through the streets) preserve ancient fire customs.

Burns Night — 25 January

Burns Night celebrates the birthday of Robert Burns (1759), Scotland's national poet. Burns Suppers are held worldwide, following a traditional format: a piper welcomes the haggis, which is addressed with Burns' poem 'Address to a Haggis,' whisky toasts are made, and poems and songs are performed. Burns Night is observed in Scottish communities on every continent.

Ireland

St Patrick's Day — 17 March

[[st-patricks-day]] on 17 March is the feast day of Ireland's patron saint and the country's national day. Ireland's celebrations are notably less commercially oriented than the global Irish diaspora's version — Dublin's St Patrick's Festival is a five-day arts and culture event. Shamrock, traditional music sessions (trad), and the wearing of green are universal. The global reach of St Patrick's Day — celebrated by 70 million people of Irish descent in over 50 countries — makes it arguably the world's most internationally observed national day.

Bealtaine — Celtic May Day

The ancient Celtic festival of Bealtaine (1 May) marked the beginning of summer in the pre-Christian Irish calendar. While the modern Irish Public Holiday on the first Monday of May is a bank holiday, Bealtaine is observed by those interested in Celtic heritage through bonfires, the gathering of May flowers, and the Bealtaine Festival of arts and creativity in older people.

Wales

Eisteddfod — Festival of Literature and Music

The Eisteddfod is Wales's premier cultural institution — a competitive festival of Welsh-language literature, poetry, and music with roots in twelfth-century bardic competitions. The National Eisteddfod alternates between north and south Wales each August, drawing over 150,000 visitors. The awarding of the bardic chair (cadair) for the best ode in Welsh is the festival's most emotionally powerful moment. The International Musical Eisteddfod at Llangollen draws competitors from over fifty countries.

St David's Day — 1 March

St David's Day honours Wales's patron saint on 1 March with the wearing of daffodils and leeks (Wales's national symbols), school celebrations of Welsh culture, and the singing of the national anthem 'Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau.' A campaign for St David's Day to become a Public Holiday has gained significant support.

Northern Ireland

The Twelfth — 12 July

The Twelfth (Orangemen's Day) commemorates the Battle of the Boyne (1 July 1690 in the Julian Calendar, 12 July in new style), when William of Orange defeated the Catholic King James II. Orange Order parades through Protestant communities mark the day. It remains one of Northern Ireland's most politically sensitive cultural events, with routes through mixed or nationalist areas a recurrent source of tension. At the same time, the tradition of lambeg drumming, Orange band music, and communal bonfire-building represents a genuine folk culture for those who observe it.

St Patrick's Day in Belfast

St Patrick's Day is observed as a Public Holiday across all of Ireland — including Northern Ireland — making it one of the few occasions when both communities share an official day off. Belfast's St Patrick's Day celebrations have grown significantly in the post-Good Friday Agreement period as the holiday has been reclaimed as a shared cultural event rather than an exclusively nationalist one.

Royal and Civic Celebrations

The King's Birthday

The Sovereign's official birthday is celebrated with Trooping the Colour — a military pageant on Horse Guards Parade in London — on the second Saturday of June, regardless of the monarch's actual birthday. The ceremony, in which the Sovereign inspects and receives the colours of a Household Division regiment, dates to the eighteenth century and is one of the world's most elaborate pieces of living military ceremonial.

Remembrance Sunday

Remembrance Sunday (the Sunday nearest 11 November) is Britain's principal act of national commemoration for those who died in war. The National Service of Remembrance at the Cenotaph in Whitehall, attended by the Sovereign, the Prime Minister, and leaders of all major parties, is broadcast nationally. The wearing of red poppies — sold by the Royal British Legion since 1921 — in the weeks before Remembrance Sunday is one of the British Isles' most widely observed annual customs.

Multicultural British Celebrations

Eid in Britain

Britain's Muslim community — approximately 3.9 million people — makes [[eid-al-fitr]] and [[eid-al-adha]] significant annual events in cities including London, Birmingham, Bradford, and Manchester. Though not Public Holiday days, Muslim schoolchildren and employees commonly request the day off, and calls for Eid to become a bank holiday in England are periodically renewed.

Diwali in Leicester

Leicester's Diwali celebrations on Belgrave Road — the 'Golden Mile' of the city's substantial South Asian community — are one of Britain's largest outdoor light festivals, drawing up to 35,000 people to watch the switching-on of thousands of lights in a ceremony that has become a civic institution since the 1980s.

Celtic Heritage Beyond Scotland

Eisteddfod International

The International Musical Eisteddfod at Llangollen, held each July in north Wales, draws over 4,000 performers from fifty countries for a week of competitive choral, folk dance, and instrumental performances. Founded in 1947 as a post-war act of cultural reconciliation, it has grown into one of the world's most inclusive cultural festivals. The contrast between the ferocity of Welsh national cultural pride at the National Eisteddfod and the international openness of the Llangollen Eisteddfod reflects the dual nature of small-nation cultural self-assertion.

Tynwald Day — Isle of Man

The Isle of Man's Tynwald Day (5 July) is the national day of one of the world's oldest continuous parliaments — Tynwald claims an unbroken tradition of parliamentary assembly dating to the Viking Age, over a thousand years. The outdoor Tynwald ceremony at St John's, where acts of Parliament are proclaimed in both English and Manx Gaelic, is one of the most distinctive civic ceremonies in the British Isles and a living connection to Norse democratic tradition.

Celtic Nations

The six Celtic nations — Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Brittany, Cornwall, and the Isle of Man — share cultural bonds expressed through the Festival Interceltique de Lorient in Brittany (August), where musicians, dancers, and poets from all six nations gather for a ten-day celebration of Celtic cultural heritage. The festival has been held since 1971 and draws 800,000 visitors, making it one of Europe's largest cultural events and an annual affirmation that Celtic identity spans national and political boundaries.

Conclusion

The British Isles' celebration calendar reflects the paradox of a small geography containing multitudes — ancient Celtic fire festivals, Protestant commemorations, multicultural urban carnivals, and one of the world's most globally exported national days. Understanding these traditions is understanding the complex, often contested process by which identity is formed and maintained in these ancient islands — islands that once spread their calendar around the world through empire and now find that world's calendars enriching theirs in return.

이 가이드의 용어

← 모든 가이드