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Public Holidays in Ecuador in 2018 Ecuador Upcoming Holidays in Ecuador

List of National Public holidays of Ecuador in 2018


DayDateHolidayComments
MondayJanuary 01New Year's Day
MondayFebruary 12Carnival (1st Day)
TuesdayFebruary 13Carnival (2nd Day)Compensated by Sat 20 February
FridayMarch 30Good FridayFriday before Easter Sunday
SundayApril 01Easter Day
MondayApril 30Labour Day HolidayMoved to the Monday before in 2017
FridayMay 25Anniversary of the Battle of PichinchaMoved to Friday 25 May 2018
TuesdayJuly 24Simon Bolivar DayThe birthday of Simón Bolívar
FridayAugust 10Independence DayPrimer Grito de Independencia
MondayOctober 08Independence of Guayaquil
FridayNovember 02All Souls' DayNot a public holiday
SaturdayNovember 03Independence of Cuenca
ThursdayDecember 06Foundation of Quito Day
TuesdayDecember 25Christmas Day

' When is New Year's Day? 

 New Year's Day by Country

 New Year's Day is 1st January, the first day of the year, in the Gregorian calendar, and falls exactly one week after the Christmas Day of the previous year. New Year's Day is a public holiday in all countries that observe the Gregorian calendar, with the exception of Israel. This makes it the most widely observed public holiday in the year. View the list of countries that have a public holiday for New Year's Day. Some countries may also observe an additional day's holiday for New Year (see right). Countries who still use the Julian Calendar observe New Year's Day on 14th January. It is traditionally celebrated with firework displays across the globe at 00:00 in the local time zones. History of New Year's Day New Year's Day was originally observed on 15th March in the old Roman Calendar. It was fixed at 1st January in 153 BCE, by two Roman consuls. The month was named Janus after the name of the Roman god of doors and gates. Janus had two faces, one facing forward and one looking back, a fitting name for the month at the start of the year. During the Middle Ages, a number of different Christian feast dates were used to mark the New Year, though calendars often continued to display the months in columns running from January to December in the Roman fashion. It wasn't until 1582 when the Roman Catholic Church officially adopted 1 January as the New Year. Most countries in Western Europe had officially adopted 1st January as New Year's Day even before they adopted the Gregorian calendar.

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