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Festività pubbliche e nazionali in
Corea del Sud
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Pagine simili: Corea del Nord
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Questo elenco di
festività nazionali, bancarie, legali e pubbliche per l’anno 2012 in Corea del Sud, è stato
generato da Q++ Studio Diary Publishing System,
usando le regole sulle ricorrenze delle festività. Se ci sono delle domande o
commenti sulle informazioni pubblicate in questo sito web, non esitate a
contattarci. |
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Dopo questo
elenco:
Notizie
Informazioni Aggiuntive
Footnotes
Disclaimer
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Date in 2012 |
Holiday Name |
Observance* |
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Dom |
New Year's Day
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Dom |
Seol-nal Holiday
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Lun |
Seol-nal (Lunar New Year)
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Mar |
Seol-nal Holiday
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Gio |
Sam Il Jul (Samil Day)
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Mer |
Public Holiday (Parliamentary Elections)
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Bnk+Othr+Gov |
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Mar |
Labor Day
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Bnk+Othr |
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Sab |
Orininal (Children's Day)
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Lun |
Sukka Tansin Il (Buddha Day)
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Mer |
Hyun Choong Il (Memorial Day)
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Mer |
Kwang Bok Jul (Independence Day)
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Sab |
Chusok (Harvest Moon Festival)
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Dom |
Chusok (Harvest Moon Festival)
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Lun |
Chusok (Harvest Moon Festival)
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Mer |
Kae Chun Jul (Foundation Day)
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Mer |
Public Holiday (Presidential Election)
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Othr+Gov |
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Mar |
Christmas Day
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Notizie |
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I seguenti notizie sulle festività pubbliche di Corea del Sud, sono in inglese. Per qualsiasi domanda su questi commenti, siete pregati di contattarci. 08 Apr 2012 (Yonhap News Agency-Seoul) The South Korean government has declared Wednesday, April 11, 2012, as a one-off exceptional public holiday on account of the upcoming parliamentary election.
20 Jun 2011 (Yonhap News Agency-Seoul) The South Korean government has announced that it was examining a stimulus plan which would encourage a "substitute public holiday system" giving the next day off when public holidays overlap or fall on a Sunday.
03 Mar 2011 (Yonhap News Agency-Seoul) The Korean Astronomy and Space Science Institute (KASI) has announced the official dates of the 2012 South Korean public holidays, and particular those that are based on the Korean lunar calendar.
02 Dec 2010 (Yonhap News Agency-Seoul) The Korean Astronomy and Space Science Institute has announced the official dates of the 2011 South Korean public holidays that are based on the Korean lunar calendar.
06 Dec 2009 (Yonhap News Agency-Seoul) The Korean Astronomy and Space Science Institute has announced the official dates of the 2010 South Korean public holidays that are based on the Korean lunar calendar.
21 Aug 2009 (Joong Ang Daily-Seoul) The government of South Korea has finally announced that a state funeral would be held Sunday, August 22, 2009, for the late former President Kim Dae-jung.
18 Aug 2009 (Yonhap News Agency-Seoul) Following the death of former President Kim Dae-jung, earlier this afternoon, the government of South Korea has announced that a cabinet meeting, tomorrow, Wednesday, would decide as to the format of the funeral.
10 Jul 2009 (Chosun Ilbo-Seoul) South Korea's Ministry of Strategy and Finance has announced that, together with the Ministry of Public Administration and Security, it would consider implementing compensating day in lieu public holidays when a public holiday falls on a weekend.
05 Feb 2009 (Chosun-Seoul) South Korea's Astronomy and Space Science Institute confirmed the 2010 dates for the Seol-nal (lunar New Year) and Chuseok (harvest festival) public holidays, with Seol-nal falling on a Sunday.
09 Dec 2008 (The Korea Times-Seoul) Fifteen lawmakers from South Korea's governing Grand National Party (GNP) have signed up for a bill authored by Representative Yoon Sang-hyun, which would make the Monday following a Sunday public holiday also a 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 Corea del Sud 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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Informazioni Aggiuntive |
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I seguenti commenti sulle festività pubbliche di Corea del Sud, sono in inglese. Per qualsiasi domanda su questi commenti, siete pregati di contattarci. Governing Laws: Official public holidays in South Korea are regulated by 3 laws/decrees: the Labor Day Act which establishes May 1st as a mandatory official public holiday applicable to all employers in Korea, the State Holidays Act which specifies government holidays, and finally the Ministry of Government and Home Affairs (MOGAHA)’s Regulation on Closure Days for Public Offices.
Workweek: South Korea adopted a five-day workweek system nationwide starting July, 2005. Under the new system, all employees of public organizations as well as non-government workplaces with 300 employees or more will take Saturdays off.
Weekend Public Holidays: Public holidays that fall on a weekend are not moved to the following Monday (or any other weekday), even if 2 different public holidays fall on the same weekend day (as in 2006 for Buddha Day and Children Day, and in 2009 for the second day of the Ch'usok public holiday and Foundation Day).
Other holidays : Other national holidays are designated by the South Korean government when necessary, like general elections, presidential election, or local autonomy elections, but the days for by-elections or re-elections are not designated as national holidays. Even when a national holiday falls on a Saturday or Sunday, the next Monday is not a public holiday.
Hangeul Day: commemorates the invention of Hangeul, the Korean writing system, and was designated a national holiday in 1945, but was downgraded to a commemoration day in 1990, and restored to the status of National Day in 2005. However, due to the passage to a 5-day workweek, the same year, Hangeul Day is now a National Holiday that is not a day off work (ie. despite the change in status, in practice, it remains a commemoration day).
Labor Day (May 1st) is not a national public holiday but all banks and many businesses do close.
Parents' Day (May 8th) Although it is observed, it is not a public holiday. |
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Footnotes |
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Osservanza: qualsiasi voce della colonna "Observance" (osservanza) indica che, in Corea del Sud, la festività potrebbe essere regionale o non ufficiale o limitata a certi gruppi religiosi e/o linguistici, o iniziare in un’ora diversa da mezzanotte. Per altre informazioni dettagliate, vedere le nostre pagine sui calendari religiosi del mondo. Aft=Afternoon, Arm=Armenian, Bah=Bahai, Bnk=Banks and most financial institutions, Bud=Buddhist, Cat=Catholic, Chr=Christian, Cop=Coptic, Eve=Evening, Gov=Government services and civil servants, Hin=Hindu, Jew=Jewish, Lin=Linguistic or ethnic groups, Mor=Morning, Mun=Municipal, Mus=Muslim, Orth=Orthodox, Othr=Miscellaneous partial observances (usually described in the Additional Information section of this page), Prt=Protestant, Reg=Regional, Rel=Other Religion, Sch=Schools and universities, Sik=Sikh. |
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Festività religiose: le festività pubbliche in Corea del Sud che sono basate su certi calendari religiosi potrebbero essere soggette a variazioni locali dovute a differenti interpretazioni delle varie autorità religiose, o a modifiche apparentemente arbitrarie della data in cui si celebra una festività perché si scontra con un’altra festa basata su un altro calendario, o perché il giorno della festività viene considerato nefasto (sfortunato). Per altre informazioni su queste incertezze, vedere la nota a pie di pagina qui sotto, se presente, per qualsiasi specifica religione. |
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Calendario coreano delle festività: entrambi i calendari tradizionali coreani usati in Corea del Sud (solare e lunare) hanno una struttura molto simile alle loro controparti cinesi. Ma i calendari corani usano Seul come punto di riferimento piuttosto che Pechino, per determinare la data in cui si verificano gli eventi dei calendari coreani lunare o solare. A volte questo sposta in avanti di un giorno le festività basate sui calendari coreani rispetto ai calendari cinesi corrispondenti (di media questo si verifica in circa il 4% dei casi). |
Disclaimer
Sebbene sia stato fatto qualsiasi sforzo per presentare un
elenco accurato delle festività legali, pubbliche e bancarie per l’anno 2012
in Corea del Sud, non accettiamo nessuna responsabilità per qualsiasi errore od
omissione nei dati presentati qui sopra. Inoltre, in molte
aree del mondo le festività sono soggette ad arbitrari, modifiche all’ultimo
minuto, variazioni da parte delle autorità locali. Pertanto si consiglia di
verificare le date di cui sopra presso la propria ambasciata o consolato in
Corea del Sud, prima di pianificare qualsiasi viaggio in Corea del Sud. Si
dovrebbero anche leggere i commenti e le note a pie di pagina qui sopra. |
Animated flag graphics courtesy of
3DFlags.com.
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