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- Holiday (7753 bytes)
3: ...ometimes for some other kind of special culture-wide (or national) observation or activity. In the Uni...
8: ^ no evidence for this outside Wikipedia
13: ...Holidays. "Legal Holiday" is not a term used outside the United States.
17: ...well-known consecutive holiday in Japan is ''[[golden-week]]'', roughly lasting a whole week. Similar ...
19: ...of [[Memorial Day]], [[Veterans Day]], and [[Presidents' Day|Washington's Birthday]] from fixed dates ... - Season (10047 bytes)
2: ... [[temperate]] regions, the year is typically divided into four seasons: ''[[spring (season)|spring]]'...
4: ...n the average temperature. [[Ancient Egypt]] divided the year into three seasons, the season of the f...
6: ...winter through mid summer, depending upon [[latitude]]). Areas with a [[Mediterranean climate]], such ...
10: <table align="right" border="1" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" width="372" ...
13: ...rctic winter]]. In addition to the density of incident light, the [[dissipation]] of light in the [[Ea... - January (2450 bytes)
8: ...[Romulus]]' successor, King [[Numa Pompilius]], added the months of January and [[February]] allowing ...
12: ...monath (meaning wolf month) and [[Charlemagne]]'s designation Wintarmanoth (winter / cold month). In [...
18: ...wheel of the year]], January ends at or near to [[Imbolc]] in the northern hemisphere and [[Lughnasadh]] i... - February (3791 bytes)
6: ...more days. However there is little historical evidence to support this claim.
10: ... (named for cabbage) as well as [[Charlemagne]]'s designation Hornung. In [[Japanese calendar|old Japa...
16: ...[wheel of the year]] February begins at or near [[Imbolc]] in the northern hemisphere and [[Lughnasadh]] i...
17: *In [[Ireland]], [[February 1]] is [[Imbolc]], feast of [[St. Brigid]] (Secondary Patron of I... - July (1516 bytes)
10: ...o [[Lughnasadh]] in the northern hemisphere and [[Imbolc]] in the southern hemisphere. - August (4611 bytes)
8: ...Lughnasadh]] in the [[northern hemisphere]] and [[Imbolc]] in the [[southern hemisphere]].
10: ..., (L᠌?) in the [[Irish Calendar]] is still regarded as the first day of [[Autumn]]. The first Monday...
17: ...Lughnasadh]] in the [[northern hemisphere]] and [[Imbolc]] in the [[southern hemisphere]].
18: ... Castlebar]] (1798), and the [[Battle of the Bogside]] (1969).
20: ...[United Kingdom|UK]], August is generally when academic exam results are published, including [[GCSE]]... - Celtic mythology (25486 bytes)
1: ...f their Iron Age forebears, which were often recorded in written form during the [[Middle Ages]].
4: ...so wrote that their priests, the [[druids]], forbade using writing to record anything of religious sig...
6: ...nity]]; indeed, many Gaelic myths were first recorded by Christian [[monks]], albeit without most of t...
9: ...[[Minerva]]. Among these divinities the Celts are described as holding roughly equal views as did othe...
12: ...f the Celtic pantheon as a large number of local deities is gainsaid by the numerous well-testified g... - Culture of Ireland (27885 bytes)
2: ...is far from monolithic. Many notable cultural divides exist between the rural people and city dwellers...
8: ...ives in Dublin, the cattle population is of the order of 6.7 million. The total population of humans o...
12: ...hich sporting rivalries and other forms of local identity are built and most people feel a strong sens...
16: ...nd Commission]]. One consequence of this is the widely-recognised cultural phenomenon of "land hunger"...
21: ...res, the first cathedrals, such as the Viking-founded and Norman-rebuilt [[Christchurch Cathedral, Dub...
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