1. Religious Events January 2010
The start of the Western calendar year
Friday 1 January
Christian – New Year’s Day
Shinto - Oshogatsu
Shinto New Year, one of the most popular occasions
for shrine visits.
2. Religious Events January 2010
The Catholic Church in England and Wales moves
this festival to the nearest Sunday if it falls on a
Saturday or Monday.
Sunday 3 January
Christian – Epiphany
3. Religious Events January 2010
Guru Gobind Singh (1666-1708) was the
tenth and last of the Sikh Gurus. He
instituted the Five Ks and established the
Order of the Khalsa.
Tuesday 5 January
Sikh – Birthday of Guru Gobind Singh
4. Religious Events January 2010
Celebrates the visit of the wise men (the magi) to the
infant Jesus. In the East, the Epiphany
celebrates the baptism of Jesus
by John the Baptist in the River Jordan.
Wednesday 6 January
Christian – Epiphany
Christian – Armenian Orthodox – Christmas Day
Armenian Christians celebrate Christ's birth at
Epiphany, except for Armenians in the
Holy Land, who celebrate Christmas
on January 19th. Orthodox churches
mark the baptism of Jesus on this day.
5. Religious Events January 2010
Rastafarians believe Ethiopia to be their spiritual
homeland, and a place to which they want to return.
Thursday 7 January
Rastafari – Christmas Day
(Ethiopian)
Christian – Christmas Day (Orthodox)
Most Orthodox churches use the Julian rather than the
Gregorian version of the Western calendar. As a result,
they celebrate Christmas 13 days later than other
Christian churches.
6. Religious Events January 2010
Epiphany takes place on the 6th of January,
but most Christians celebrate it on the first
Sunday after that date.
Sunday 10 January
Christian – First Sunday after
Epiphany
Christian – Baptism of the Lord
Commemorates the baptism of Jesus in the River
Jordan by John the Baptist. Occurs on the first
Sunday after Epiphany.
7. Religious Events January 2010
According to tradition, "St. Hilary's is the coldest day
of the year." St. Hilary was a fourth century Bishop of
Poitiers.
Wednesday 13 January
Christian – St Hilary’s day
8. Religious Events January 2010
Makar Sankrant is one of the most important festivals
of the Hindu calendar and celebrates the sun's
journey into the northern hemisphere.
Thursday 14 January
Hindu – Makar Sankrant
9. Religious Events January 2010
Japanese who have reached legal adulthood (20 in
Japan) in the previous year attend a shrine to give
thanks.
Friday 15 January
Shinto – Seijin Shiki (Adults’ Day)
10. Religious Events January 2010
First celebrated in 1908. The days of 18-25 January
(regardless of the days of the week involved) were
originally chosen because they covered the days between
the feast of St Peter and the feast of St Paul.
Monday 18 January
Christian – Week of prayer for
Christian Unity (start)
11. Religious Events January 2010
Dedicated to Saraswati, the goddess of learning and
Brahma's wife. The festival marks the beginning of
Spring.
Wednesday 20 January
Hindu – Vasant Panchami
12. Religious Events January 2010
Patron saint of girls, martyred at the age
of 13.
Thursday 21 January
Christian – St Agnes
13. Religious Events January 2010
Anglicans and Catholics celebrate St Paul's
conversion on the road to Damascus.
Monday 25 January
Christian – St Paul’s Day
14. Religious Events January 2010
The UK Holocaust Memorial Day was first held in
January 2001. The date was chosen as the
anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau.
Wednesday 27 January
Jewish & Multifaith
–
National Holocaust Memorial Day
15. Religious Events January 2010
Doctor of the Church and patron saint of students
and theologians.
Thursday 28 January
Christian – St Thomas Aquinas
16. Religious Events January 2010
The Jewish New Year for trees - For religious
accounting purposes all trees have their
anniversaries on this festival, regardless of when
they were planted.
Saturday 30 January
Jewish – Tu B’Shevat
17. Religious Events January 2010
Guru Har Rai (1630-1661) was the seventh of the
Sikh Gurus.
Sunday 31 January
Sikh – Birthday of Guru Har Rai