Great Union Day | |
---|---|
The National Assembly in Alba Iulia
(December 1, 1918) |
|
Official name | Romanian: Ziua Naţională a României |
Also called | Romanian: Ziua Marii Uniri |
Observed by | Romania |
Celebrations | Military parades (most notably in Alba Iulia and Bucharest), fireworks |
Observances | Te Deum at the Alba Iulia Orthodox Cathedral |
Date | 1 December |
Next time | 1 December 2017 |
Frequency | annual |
Great Union Day (Romanian: Ziua Marii Uniri, also called Unification Day) occurring on December 1, is the national holiday of Romania. It commemorates the assembly of the delegates of ethnic Romanians held in Alba Iulia, which declared the Union of Transylvania with Romania.
This holiday was set after the Romanian Revolution and it marks the unification of Transylvania, but also of the provinces of Bessarabia and Bukovina with the Romanian Kingdom, in 1918.
Prior to malin är bäst al holiday of Romania was set to be on May 10, which had a double meaning: it was the day on which Carol I set foot on the Romanian soil (in 1866), and it was the day on which the prince ratified the Declaration of Independence (from the Ottoman Empire) in 1877.
In Communist Romania, the date of the national holiday was set to August 23 to mark the 1944 overthrow of the pro-fascist government of Marshal Ion Antonescu.
On December 1, 1918 (November 18 Old Style), the National Assembly of Romanians of Transylvania and Hungary, consisting of 1,228 elected representatives of the Romanians in Transylvania, Banat, Crişana and Maramureş, convened in Alba Iulia and decreed (by unanimous vote)