Daylight saving time in Romania

Daylight saving time in Romania

Daylight saving time in Romania was originally introduced in 1932 (between May 22 and October 2). Between 1933 and 1940 DST started on the first Sunday in April and ended on the first Sunday in October. The DST was abandoned in 1941, to be reintroduced in 1979. Until 1996, with few exceptions, the DST started at the end of March and ended at the end of September. Since 1997, DST has started in the last Sunday in March and ended on the last Sunday in October, per European Summer Time.[1]


References

  1. ^ "Observatorul Astronomic - Ora de vara" (in Romanian). http://www.astro-urseanu.ro/ora_vara.html. Retrieved 2008-11-15.  Contains tables with all historical DST start and end dates since 1932.

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Daylight saving time in Germany — Daylight saving time was first introduced during World War I by the German Empire in the years 1916 to 1918. After the end of the war and the proclamation of the Weimar Republic in November 1918, daylight saving time ceased to be observed in… …   Wikipedia

  • Daylight saving time in Ukraine — (also locally known by the expression summer time ) was introduced in 1981. History Daylight saving time was introduced in Ukraine in the early 1980 s; from 1981 till 1989 this was Moscow Summer Time, after independence Eastern European Summer… …   Wikipedia

  • Daylight saving time in the United Kingdom — is called British Summer Time (UTC+01:00) or British Double Summer Time (UTC+02:00). More general British Summer Time is also named Western European Summer Time, then including Ireland and those areas of Portugal that observe the same UTC offsets …   Wikipedia

  • Daylight saving time in Bulgaria — was introduced in 1979 by a regulation of the Bulgarian Council of Ministers. Bulgaria observes the European Union rules for DST.[1] References ^ http://www.novinite.com/view news.php?id=113965 …   Wikipedia

  • Daylight saving time in Italy — was adopted and abolished several times. DST observation took place from 1916 until 1920. Then again between 1944 and 1948, during and after WWII. A law was approved in 1965 that took effect the following year, and made the application of DST… …   Wikipedia

  • Daylight saving time in Slovenia — (locally known as Poletni čas ) was introduced on 16 November 1982 when it was one of the Yugoslavia republics. Same law was valid until 1996 when the end of DST was changed from first Sunday in October to last Sunday in October. In 2006, the… …   Wikipedia

  • Daylight saving time by country — See also: List of time zones by country Daylight Saving Time Countries as October 2011  & …   Wikipedia

  • Daylight saving time in Europe — All countries in Europe except Belarus, Iceland, and Russia observe daylight saving time, and all that do so change on the same date and time, starting on the last Sunday in March and ending on the last Sunday in October. Contents 1 History 2… …   Wikipedia

  • Daylight saving time in Sweden — In Sweden daylight saving time was originally introduced on May 15, 1916. It proved unpopular at the time, and on September 30 in the same year, Sweden returned to year round standard time. This situation continued for more than half a century.… …   Wikipedia

  • Daylight saving time in Russia — In Russia, daylight saving time was originally introduced on July 1, 1917 by a decree of the Russian Provisional Government, and clocks were moved one hour forward. It was abandoned by a Decree of the Soviet government five months later, clocks… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”