Russian New Year Facts
Russian and Turkish traditions.
Russian new year facts. Russians had a 10 day New Year break starting December 30 that year and ending the day after the Russian Orthodox Christmas Day on January 8 the following year. The decorations are the same as for Christmas trees. As the Russian Orthodox Church keeps to the Julian Calendar Russian Orthodox Christmas is celebrated on January 7th.
Russian and Turkish New Year trees are of the same varieties as those used for Christmas trees although a spruce tree is the most usual type. It is celebrated by Orthodox churches in Russia Serbia and other Eastern European countries on January 14. Winter was driven away thus giving way to spring and the New Year.
Many Christmas traditions were moved to New Years which has been the most popular holiday in Russia ever since. The Trans-Siberian spans nearly the whole country departing Moscow in the. Thus Maslenitsa Shrovetide and the New Year celebrations coincided.
But interestingly in 2100 it will be 14 days which will shift Russian Christmas on January 8th. Russia has the worlds longest railway. In the 20th and 21st centuries the Old New Year falls on January 14 in the Gregorian calendar.
New Year after Christening of Rus. It covers 17 million sq km 66 million sq miles accounting for more. Initially the New Year was supposedly celebrated on March 22 the day of vernal equinox.