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National and Public Holidays in Portugal are as follows.
- New Year's Day
- Carnival
- Good Friday
- Easter
- Freedom Day
- Labour Day
- Corpus Christi
- Portugal Day
- Assumption of Mary
- Republic Day
- All Saints Day
- Restoration of Independence
- Immaculate Conception
- Christmas Day
Festivals play a major role in Portugal's summers. Even though
they have religious connotations, most of these celebrations
are, in fact, anything but religious. Every city and town
has its own festivals. The June Festivities are very popular,
these festivities are dedicated to three saints known as Santos
Populares (Popular saints) and take place all over Portugal.
Why the populace associated the saints with these pagan festivities
is not known. The practice is possibly related to Roman or
local deities before Christianity spread in the region. The
three saints are Saint Anthony, Saint John and Saint Peter.
A common denominator in these festivities are the wine and
água-pé (a watered kind of wine), traditional
bread along with sardines, marriages, traditional street dances,
fire, fireworks and joy.

A street in Lisbon's old quarters.
Saint Anthony is celebrated on 13rd, mainly in Lisbon and
Saint John on 24th, especially in Porto and Braga, where the
sardines, Caldo Verde (traditional soup) and plastic hammers
to hammer on other peoples' heads for luck are indispensable.
The final Saint is Saint Peter, celebrated on the nights of
28th and 29th, especially in Póvoa de Varzim and Barcelos,
festivities are similar to the others, but mostly dedicated
to the sea and extensive use of fire (fogueiras). In Póvoa
de Varzim, there is the Rusgas in the night, another sort
of street carnival. Each festivity is a municipal holiday
in the cities and towns where it occurs.
Carnival is also widely celebrated in Portugal, some traditional
carnivals date back several centuries. Loulé, Alcobaça,
Mealhada and above all Ovar hold several days of festivities,
with parades where social and political criticism abound,
music, dancing in an environment of euphorya. On January 6,
Epiphany is celebrated by some families, especially in the
North, where the family gathers to eat "Bolo-Rei"
(King Cake); this is also the time for the traditional street
songs - "As Janeiras" (The January ones). Saint
Martin Day, is celebrated on November 11. This day is the
peak of three days, often with very good weather, it is known
as Verão de São Martinho ("Saint Martin
summer"), the Portuguese celebrate it with jerupiga (a
sweet liqueur wine) and roasted Portuguese chestnuts (castanhas
assadas), and it is called Magusto.
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