Constitution Day is a holiday to honour the constitution of a country. Constitution Day is often celebrated on the anniversary of the signing, promulgation or adoption of the constitution, or in some cases, to commemorate the change to constitutional monarchy:
- Mexico, February 5 (1917). See 1917 Constitution of Mexico.
- Poland, May 3 (1791). See Polish Constitution of May 3, 1791.
- Japan, May 3 (1947). See Constitution of Japan.
- Federated States of Micronesia, May 10 (1979).
- Norway, May 17 (1814). See Norwegian Constitution Day.
- Denmark, June 5 (1849, 1953). See Constitution Day (Denmark).
- Sweden, June 6 (1809, 1974). Also known as the Day of the Swedish flag. Formally known as National holiday of Sweden.
- South Korea, July 17 (1948). See History of South Korea#First Republic.
- Slovakia, September 1 (1992). See National holidays in Slovakia.
- United States, September 17 (1787). See Constitution Day (United States).
- Dominican Republic, November 6 (1884). See History of the Dominican Republic.
- Tajikistan, November 6 (1994). See Public holidays in Tajikistan.
- Azerbaijan, November 12 (1995). See Public holidays in Azerbaijan.
- Spain, December 6 (1978). See Spanish Constitution of 1978.
- Romania, December 8 (1991). See Holidays in Romania.
- Thailand, December 10 (1932). See Public holidays in Thailand.
- Russia, December 12 (1993). See Public holidays in Russia.
- Republic of China in Taiwan, December 25 (1946). See Constitution of the Republic of China, Holidays in Taiwan.
See also[edit]