Chronos, Kairos and Aion are the three deities of time, events and epic destinies. Here is the multi-religious and multicultural calendar!

Find us on our website Mythology and Legend, on Facebook and on instagram !

holiday ephemeris calendar

The schedule in brief from D-2 to D+5

  • March 13, 2025, : Kasuga Matsuri
  • March 14, 2025, : Bisket Jatra
  • March 14, 2025, : Dita e Verës
  • March 14, 2025: White Day
  • March 15, 2025, : Flower Festival
  • March 15, 2025, : Honensai

The complete interactive calendar

Holidays of the month

mondaytuesdaywednesdayThursdayfridaysaturdaysunday
February 24, 2025(1 event)

Dragobete

February 24, 2025

Today, Romanians celebrate Dragobete, their Valentine's Day. Many customs vary from one region to another in Romania. The beginning of Spring heralds love. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #February 24 #roumania #dragobete

Learn more

February 25, 2025(1 event)

Kitano baikasai

February 25, 2025

Today, the Japanese of Kyoto celebrate Kitano baikasai, the plum blossom festival. A thousand-year-old celebration, it is the occasion of a giant tea ceremony and marks the death of Sugawara no Michizane, a famous scholar and poet who was exiled by the Fujiwara clan. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #February 25 #Japan #Kyoto #Kitano #Baikasai #Michizane

February 26, 2025
February 27, 2025
February 28, 2025
March 1, 2025(1 event)

Yap Day

March 1, 2025

Today, the Yap people celebrate their culture in Micronesia. Many competitions and traditional dances commemorate the memory of this people. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #yapday #micronesia #1stmarch

Learn more

March 2, 2025
March 3, 2025(1 event)

Hinamatsuri

March 3, 2025

Today, the Japanese celebrate Hinamatsuri, Doll Festival. This day is dedicated to young girls. Little girls display precious dolls. These dolls are sometimes passed down from generation to generation. They represent characters from the imperial court of the Heian era. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #3March #Japan #hinamatsuri

Learn more

March 4, 2025
March 5, 2025
March 6, 2025
March 7, 2025
March 8, 2025
March 9, 2025
March 10, 2025
March 11, 2025
March 12, 2025
March 13, 2025(1 event)

Kasuga Matsuri

March 13, 2025

Today, the Japanese of Nara celebrate Kasuga Matsuri at the Kasuga-taisha temple. The festival presents the dances of gagaku and bugaku, Yamato-mai which date back to the Heian and Nara periods. This festival also organizes a horse festival which consists of a parade through the streets by a sacred horse. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #March 13 #Kasuga%atsuri #KasugaTaisha #Nara #Japan

March 14, 2025(3 events)

Bisket Jatra

March 14, 2025

Today, Nepalese people celebrate Bisket Jatra, the new year. Two imposing carts are assembled. In the first, the effigies of the gods Bhairav and Betal are placed; in the 2nd, the effigy of Ajima. A rivalry then begins between the crews of the two carts who pull ropes to steer them. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #April 14 #Nepal #BisketJatra

Dita e Verës

March 14, 2025

Today, Albanians celebrate Dita e Verës (the return of summer). This pagan festival marks the new year in the old Albanian calendar. These origins are probably Greek or Roman. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #March 14 #albania

Learn more

White day

March 14, 2025

Today, Koreans celebrate White Day, one month after Valentine's Day. Those who received a gift on Valentine's Day return the favor on this day, thus marking mutual Love. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #WhiteDay #Korea #14March

March 15, 2025(2 events)

Flower Festival

March 15, 2025

Today, the Nu people (China) celebrate the Flower Festival. Legend has it that a Nu girl named A-Rong, inspired by a spider's web, created a kind of rope bridge by which people could easily cross the river. Desiring the beautiful A-Rong, the leader of the Hou tribe tried to force her to marry him. However, A-Rong didn't want that and escaped to the mountain where she turned into a statue in a cave. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #March 15 #Chine #Nu #A-Rong #FlowerFairyFestival

Honensai

March 15, 2025

Today, the Japanese of Komaki celebrate Hōnen Matsuri. This festival, more than 1500 years old, celebrates fertility, the Earth's ability to regenerate itself, and good harvests. This holiday is often called the “penis festival”. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #March 15 #Japan #penis #HonenMatsuri

Learn more

March 16, 2025
March 17, 2025
March 18, 2025
March 19, 2025
March 20, 2025(2 events)

Komoeditsa

March 20, 2025

Today, Slavs celebrate Komoeditsa. To honor Veles (the husband, the man, the manhood), the men perform a bear dance, using specially designed costumes. Women have another task - they cooked comas - special round loaves from different varieties of flour. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #March 20 #Komoeditsa #veles

Shunbun no Hi

March 20, 2025

Today, the Japanese celebrate Shunbun no Hi (spring equinox). The festival was originally an opportunity to visit the graves of loved ones and pay respects to ancestors. The Japanese also took the time to renew their lives by cleaning their homes and changing their daily lives. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #Japan #SjunbunnoHi #HiganNoNakaba

March 21, 2025
March 22, 2025
March 23, 2025
March 24, 2025
March 25, 2025
March 26, 2025
March 27, 2025
March 28, 2025(1 event)

Sen no Rikyū

March 28, 2025

Today, the Japanese pay homage to the tea master of the Wabi school, Sen no Rikyū. He became a monk at Daitoku-ji temple and a specialist in chanoyu, the Japanese tea ceremony. He enters the service of Oda Nobunaga before being forced to commit suicide by seppuku. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #japan #tea #March 28

Learn more

March 29, 2025
March 30, 2025
March 31, 2025
April 1, 2025(1 event)

Miyako Odori

April 1, 2025

Today, in Kyoto, Japan, Miyako Odori takes place for a month. The dances, songs and theatrical productions presented as part of the Miyako Odori are performed by the maiko (apprentice geisha) and geisha of the Gion district. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #April #gion #kyoto #japan #MiyakoOdori

April 2, 2025
April 3, 2025
April 4, 2025(1 event)

Hanshi-Festival

April 4, 2025

begin the Hanshi festival (known as the cold meal festival). Since the 7th century BCE, the tradition has been to avoid the light of fires even when preparing meals. The origins of this tradition are quite vague and would come from the noble Jin, Jie Zitui, between romance and reality of the story. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #4April #JieZitui #Hanshi #China

April 5, 2025(2 events)

Qingming Jie

April 5, 2025

Today, the Chinese celebrate Qingmingjie (purity and light). They clean the graves to avoid wandering souls. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar 1TP5China #5April

Learn more

Singmogil

April 5, 2025

Today, Koreans celebrate Singmogil. In the aftermath of the Korean War, the South Korean government decided to celebrate Tree Day to address the destruction and deforestation caused by the conflict. #mythology #myth #legend #korea #calendar #5April #singmogil

Learn more

April 6, 2025(1 event)

Chakri Day

April 6, 2025

Today, Thais celebrate Chakri Day. This day marks the founding and establishment of the great Chakri dynasty in 1782 by Phra Buddha Yodfa Chulaloke. He was also known as King Rama I and declared Bangok, then called Krung Thep, the capital of Siam. #mythology #myth #legend #calendar #6April #thailand #ChakriDay

Multicultural and multi-religious almanac

An almanac is a calendar showing the main dates of the calendar, the religious holidays, bearing ephemerides such as the phases of the moon or the duration of the days (lunar and solar calendars).

A calendar is a system for marking dates according to time. Such a system was invented by men to divide and organize time over long periods. The observation of the periodic phenomena of the environment in which they lived — such as the daily movement of the shadow, the return of the seasons or the lunar cycle — served as the first references for organizing the agricultural, social and religious life of societies.

The calendar used today in most of the world is the Gregorian calendar. In everyday language, an ephemeris designates what happens daily; the ephemeris of the day is the list of the significant events of this day.