Bulgarian traditions

 

 

The traditional holiday calendar of the Bulgarians is varied and complicated. The ancient culture on the Balkans has left its imprint on the calendar of the various holidays and ceremonies in Bulgaria. There are events and customs dating milleniums back, combining totemic, animistic pantheist and monist elements characteristic of Mediterranean Antiquity.

 

In a concise version the traditional holiday calendar of the Bulgarians would look like that:

 

 

JANUARY

 

1 - Sourvaki (St. Vassil’s Day)

6 - St. Yordan’s Day (Epiphany)

7 - St. Ivan’s Day (St. Yoan the Baptist)

8 - Grandmother’s Day (Midwife’s Day)

17 - St. Anton’s Day

18 - St. Atanas’s Day

20 - Rooster’s Day (Day of Fertility)

 

 

FEBRUARY

 

1 - St. Trifon’s Day (Trifon Zarezan)

2 - Candlemas

3 - St. Simon’s Day

10 - St. Haralampi’s Day

11 - Vlas’s Day (Shrove Day - always on Sundays, eight weeks before Easter)

Shrovetide (the first Sunday before Lent) - always on Sundays, seven weeks before Easter

St. Todor’s Day (Horse Easter) - on Saturdays after Shrovetide

(The last three holidays depend on Easter Day and are not fixed. For the next few years Easter will be celebrated as follows:   2002 - May 5   2003 - April 27

Easter is always on Sundays and is used to determine the days of the Christian holidays, which have no fixed dates.)

 

 

MARCH

 

1 - Granny Marta’s Day

9 - St. St. 40 Martyrs

25 - Annunciation

 

 

APRIL

 

St. Lazar’s Day - always on Saturdays a week before Easter

Palm Sunday - on Sunday a week before Easter

Easter - look at above-mentioned dates

Low Sunday - on Sunday after Easter

Sofinden - on Monday after Low Sunday (Prayers for healthy cattle and against drought)

14 - St. Martin’s Day

 

 

MAY

 

1 - Prophet Yeremiah’s Day

6 - St. Georgi’s Day

12 - St. German’s Day (Prayers against hail)

21 - St. St. Konstantin and Elena’s Day

St. Spas’ Day – always the 40th day after Easter

Pentecost (Holy Trinity) – always the 50th day after Easter

Roussalya (Holy Ghost) - the 51st day after Easter

 

 

JUNE

 

11 - St. Bartholomew’s Day

15 - Vidov Day (Prayers against hailstorms and other natural disasters)

24 - Enyo’s Day

29 - Peter’s Day (St. St. Apostles Peter and Pavel)

30 - Pavlyov’s Day (the Day of the 12 Apostles)

 

 

JULY

 

1 - St. Vrach

20 - St. Iliya’s Day

22 - St. Maria Magdalena’s Day

27 - St. Pantelei’s Day

 

 

AUGUST

 

1 - Makavei’s Day

6 - Holy Transfiguration

15 - Assumption

 

 

SEPTEMBER

 

1 - St. Simon’s Day (Start of the ecclesiastical year)

8 - Birth of the Holy Virgin

14 - Krustovden (Day of the Cross)

17 - Faith, Hope and Love (and St. Martyr Sofia’s Day)

 

 

OCTOBER

 

14 - St. Petko’s Day

19 - St. Yoan Rilski Thaumaturge

26 - St. Dimitur’s Day

27 - Mice Day (Prayers against the evil)

 

 

NOVEMBER

 

8 - Michaelmas

21 - Presentation of the Holy Virgin

23 - St. Alexander’s Day

30 - St. Andrei’s Day

 

 

DECEMBER

 

4 - Day of Martyr Varvara

5 - St. Sava’s Day

6 - St. Nikola’ s Day

20 - St. Martyr Ignat’s Day

24 - Christmas Eve

25 - Christmas

27 - St. Stefan’s Day

31 - New Year’s Eve

 

The Kukeri Carnival is celebrated on St. Vassil’s Day and St. Trifon’s Day and has been preserved since Thracian times. German and Butterfly are Slavic holidays, Grandmother’s Day, St. Todor’s Day, Granny Marta’s Day, St. Ivan’s Day, Mice Day and St. Ignat’s Day are ancient Bulgarian holidays, and the rest are Christian holidays from different periods.

 

There are church services during all of them, since they have been canonised though some are of heathen nature. Some are accompanied with public prayer processions, holy masses, hymns and prayers according to the Bulgarian Orthodox rules.

 

There are some family holidays that are of great significance for the Bulgarians. The most important of them are Christening (the Holy Christening), the First Steps (to celebrate the first steps made by the small child), the Birthday, the Nameday, Offering (the offering of an animal or some food to heathen gods and saints to make them show more grace or to thank them for good fortune, health and long life); the Engagement, the Wedding. Inauguration of a New House, Parting (before sending out someone on a long journey). All of these have been preserved for many ages and are a live tradition in Bulgarian families regardless of their religious beliefs.

 

Very popular folk festivals are held in Koprivshtitsa, Shiroka Luka, Rozhen, Silistra, the Pirin and the Strandzha Mountains, etc. There are folk festivals held in Bourgas and Varna. The music festivals in Sofia, Varna, Slanchev Bryag (Sunny Beach) and Rousse are well known and very prestigious, too.

 

Some popular theatre festivals with international participation are “Theatre in a Suitcase” and “Apolonia” (in the latter are represented all the arts); “Love is Folly” and “Golden Rose” are film festivals. There are also wine festivals, Neptune Days along the Black Sea coast, music competitions, “Mister” and “Miss” competitions, local art competitions, sports events, and international championships.

 

The most interesting and unique Bulgarian holidays and customs are the Kukeri Carnivals of the masked koukeri; the martenitzi – white and red threads and anthropomorphic pendants exchanged between relatives and friends on Granny Marta’s Day to wear for health and happiness on the occasion of the coming spring; the customs German and Russalii (Mermaids); the nestinarski dances on red coals on the Day of St. St. Konstantin and Elena; the custom of well wishing by tapping people on the back with a “sourvachka” - decorated cornel-tree twig on Christmas and New Year’s Day; the Day of Humour and Satire; Cross Day with an imposing prayer procession and pilgrimage in Krustova Gora (Forest of the Cross) area in the Rodopi Mountains., etc. Many Bulgarians and foreign tourists visit these celebrations, the former celebrate them the way their forefathers did for centuries on end and the latter take pictures and participate in them, too.

 




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