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Public Holidays and Bank Holidays for Georgia

Related and neighboring countries: Asia Armenia Azerbaijan Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan Russia Tajikistan Turkey Turkmenistan Uzbekistan

The list of Georgia bank holidays, national holidays and public holidays for 2010, 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 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, and beyond. For details, please visit our licensing information page or

 
At the bottom of this page:   Recent News and Updates    Background Information    Footnotes    Disclaimer
 

Date in 2010

Holiday Name
Fri New Year's Day
Sat New Year's Holiday
Thu Orthodox Christmas
Tue Orthodox Epiphany (Natlisgeba)
Wed Mother's Day
Mon International Women's Day
Fri Orthodox Good Friday (Red Friday)
Sat Orthodox Holy Saturday (Great Saturday)
Sun Orthodox Easter (Agdgoma)
Mon Orthodox Easter Monday / Memorial Day
Fri Georgia's Independence Restauration Day
Sun Victory Day
Wed Saint Andrew the First Called Day
Wed Independence Day
Sat Virgin's Assumption (Mariamoba)
Thu Svetitskovloba
Tue Saint George's Day (Giorgoba)

 © 1989-2010 Alter Ego Services

Recent News and Updates

24 Mar 2010 (The Georgian Times-Tbilisi) The press secretary for Georgia's president, Manana Manjgaladze, has announced that it was quite possible that holidays of various ethnic groups could also be declared as official non-working national public holidays in Georgia.  20 Mar 2010 (Trend News-Tbilisi) Georgia's President, Mikheil Saakashvili, has declared tomorrow, Sunday, March 21, 2010, an official non-working public holiday in Georgia, on account of that day's Nowruz, spring equinox, holiday.  26 Aug 2009 (Aysor-Yerevan) The separatist governments of the 2 Georgian breakaway republics of Southern Osia (aka. South Ossetia) and Abkhazia have declared today a new annual Independence Day public holiday.  30 Sep 2008 (Kyiv Post-Sukhumi) The separatist leader of Georgia's Province of Abkhazia, Sergei Bagapsh, has declared today the National Day public holiday, to mark the 15th anniversary of the region's victory over Georgian forces in a separatist war.  12 Aug 2008 (JSC Bank of Georgia) Nicholas Enukidze, Chairman of the Supervisory Board of the Central Bank of Georgia, announced late last night that the government of Georgia had declared a one-off bank holiday for today, Tuesday August 12, 2008.  07 Nov 2007 (Channel 1-Tbilisi) Georgia's Deputy Education Minister, Bela Tsipuria, has declared November 8-9, 2007, as holidays in all Georgian public schools.  04 Oct 2006 (Ren TV-Moscow) Tomorrow, Thursday, October 5, 2006, will be an official non-working public holiday in Georgia, due to local elections.  21 Mar 2005 (Imedi TV-Tbilisi) Georgia's President, Mikheil Saakashvili, has suggested that he would support legislation making the Eid al-Fitr (End of Ramadan) an official public holiday in Georgia.  10 May 2003 (Kavkasia-Press-Tbilisi) Georgian President, Eduard Shevardnadze, has declared that May 12 would henceforth be an annual public holiday in Georgia to commemorate Apostle Saint Andrew's feast day.  More News Updates For the full version of the summarized news items above, and older news items not displayed above, go to the Georgia public holidays news and updates page, or worldwide public holidays news and updates page, or subscribe to one of our free email newsletters.


Background Information

Governing Law: Official public holidays in Georgia are regulated by The Labour Code of Georgia (CAP IV-Article 20), signed into law on May 25, 2006, and which annulled and replaced both the Labor Code of Georgia (June 28, 1973) and the Law of the Georgian Republic on Cancellation of Existing Holidays and Restoring Traditional Holidays (November 22, 1990). In addition, religious holidays and their observances are regulated by the Constitutional Agreement between State of Georgia and Georgian Apostolic Autocephaly Orthodox Church.  Weekend Public Holidays: Public holidays that occur on a weekend remain on that date (ie. they are not moved to another date, such as the following Monday, for example).  May 1st is a regular working day in Georgia .  Independence Restauration Day (April 9) and Independence Day (May 26): There is often confusion as to when Georgia's Independence Day is. The constitution refers to April 9 as the date of Georgia's independence while the Labour Code uses May 26 as the date of independence. On April 9, 1989, in Tbilisi, an anti-Soviet demonstration was dispersed by the Soviet army, resulting in 20 deaths and hundreds of injuries. Two years later, on April 9, 1991, the Georgian parliament officially passed a declaration of Georgia's independence from the Soviet Union, following the results of a referendum which had taken place on March 31st. Despite this, April 9 is called Independence Restauration Day, or Day of National Unity, and the Independence Day public holiday is celebrated on May 26 (referring to the May 26, 1918, declaration of independence from Russia).  Women's Day and Mothers' Day: The first, post-soviet, president of Georgia, Zviad Gamsakhurdia, tried to get rid of March 8 as a state holiday as it was established during Soviet times, and he established March 3 as Mother's Day, a date deliberately selected to be close to March 8. After Gamsakhurdia's fall, March 3 was not cancelled but in 2002, March 8 was officially restored as the public holiday International Women's Day. At one time, officials tried to change Women's Day to concur with Tamaroba (Saint Tamar's Day) on May 14, but no one supported the idea .  Georgia International Codes GE and GEO (2 and 3-letter ISO3166 codes) and .ge (ICANN national top-level internet domain). • Other Sources of Information The following specialized websites are also a good source of Georgia information and news: National Bank of Georgia (Georgia central bank), ASI Hot Spots (security-related world events: terrorist threats, political strife, strikes, criminal activity, aviation incidents and health outbreaks), CIA World Factbook (Georgia maps, demographics and economic statistics), the IFES (information covering upcoming elections, referenda, electoral structures and voter participation in Georgia), and Wikipedia (includes Georgia commemorative dates that are not necessarily public holidays).


Footnotes
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Religion of Specific Business Contacts : Some of the business contacts that you may be trying to meet in Georgia, may belong to a religious group that is not common in Georgia, and therefore which is not included in the above list of public holidays or bank holidays. To be safe, you should also verify that no major religious holidays coincides with any planned business trip to Georgia. 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 2010 bank holidays, legal holidays and public holidays for Georgia, 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 Georgia, before planning any trip to Georgia. For last-minute updates to worldwide public holidays, visit our blog or subscribe to our free email newsletters.



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