Moveable feast
In Christianity, a moveable feast or movable feast is a holy day -- a feast or a fast -- whose date is not fixed to a particular day of the calendar year but moves in response to the date of Easter, which date varies according to a complex formula.By extension, other religions' feasts are occasionally described by the same term. In addition many countries have secular holidays that are moveable, for instance to make holidays more consecutive; the term "moveable feast" is not used in this case however.
Further, by metaphoric extension but with the meaning of a party that was on the move, Ernest Hemingway used the term as the title for his memoirs, A Moveable Feast, of life in Paris in the 1920s. This usage has become a popular phrase in food contexts.
Moveable feasts in Christianity
- Mardi Gras and Ash Wednesday
- Easter - the date around which the others are placed
- Ascension Day - 40 days after Easter
- Pentecost - 50 days after Easter
- Corpus Christi - 60 days after Easter
- feast days of some significant saints days, if a movable feast falls too close to their usual date.
- Christmas - December 25
- Transfiguration - August 6
- Dormition of the Theotokos - August 15
- Presentation of Christ in the Temple - February 2
- Exaltation of the Cross - September 15
- feast days of most individual saints
- Coming-of-age Day (成人の日) - 2nd Monday of January
- Maritime Day (海の日) - 3rd Monday of July
- Respect-for-the-aged Day (敬老の日) - 3rd Monday of September
- Health-Sports Day (体育の日) - 2nd Monday of October