First day of summer (Iceland)

Annual public holiday in Iceland From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

First Day of Summer (sumardagurinn fyrsti [ˈsʏːmarˌtaːɣʏrɪn ˈfɪ(r̥)stɪ]) is an annual public holiday in Iceland that is celebrated on the first Thursday after 18 April (some time between 19 and 25 April).[1]

Official namesumardagurinn fyrsti
ObservedbyIceland
Datefirst Thursday after 18 April
2025date24 April
Quick facts Official name, Observed by ...
First Day of Summer
First Day of Summer celebrations in Kópavogur
Official namesumardagurinn fyrsti
Observed byIceland
Datefirst Thursday after 18 April
2025 date24 April
2026 date23 April
2027 date22 April
2028 date20 April
Frequencyannual
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It is a celebration of the start of the first summer month (Harpa) of the old Icelandic calendar. The old calendar had six months of short days (winter) and six months of nightless days (summer), so even though the climate of late April in Iceland is not very summer-like (on fourteen occasions between 1949 and 2015 the average temperature in the capital, Reykjavík, has been below freezing),[2] the day marks the lengthening of the days[1] and the harsh winter being over.

Parades and organized entertainment are held in various places around Iceland on the first day of summer.[3][4]

According to folk belief, a good summer would be sure to ensue if the temperature dropped below freezing right before the first day of summer. People would place a bowl of water outside for the night and hope that it would freeze.[5]

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