All about October 29, 1852: Significant Events, Facts, Analysis and Date Notations

Full information about the date October 29, 1852

29 October 1852 was 63006 days (or 44757 business days) before today. Check the detailed calculation of days between Today and 29 October, 1852. The following analysis is provided by AlarmDaddy for the date 29th of October.

October 29, 1852 on the calendar:
Loading the calendar...

Facts about October 29, 1852:

  • 29th October, 1852 falls on Friday which is a Weekday.
  • That was 44th (Forty-fourth) week of year 1852.
  • It's 302nd (Three Hundred Second) Day of the year.
  • There are 31 days in the month of October 1852. Checkout the days in other months of 1852 along with days in October 1852.
  • Year 1852 has 366 days in total.
  • The month October was 10th month of Year 1852.
  • The month October is also known as Oktober, Actoobar, Actuber, Uktober, Oktower, oktobro, oktobro, october, Octobre, meno deka, Oktobra, otobre, Listopäts and tobul across the Globe.
  • Country-wise Date Representation of October 29 across the World:

    Country Names Notation of the Date Long Date Format Short Date Format
    The United States of America (USA) MDY (MM-DD-YYYY) (a.k.a. middle-endian)
    and
    YMD (YYYY-MM-DD) (a.k.a. big-endian)
    October 29, 1852
    and
    1852 October 29
    October 29
    Some U.S. Island Territories MDY (MM-DD-YYYY) (a.k.a. middle-endian) October 29, 1852 October 29
    Europe: Italy, Ukraine, Romania, Netherlands, and others
    North America: Mexico, various Caribbean islands
    Central America: Guatemala, Honduras, and others
    South America: Brazil, Colombia, Argentina, Peru, Venezuela, and others
    North Africa: Egypt, Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia, and others
    West, Central, and Southern Africa: Nigeria, Ethiopia, DRC, Tanzania, Sudan, Uganda, and others
    West Asia: Turkey, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, and others
    Central Asia: Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan
    East and Southeast Asia: Indonesia, Thailand, Cambodia, and others
    South Asia: Pakistan, Bangladesh
    Oceania: Australia, Papua New Guinea, New Zealand, and others
    DMY (DD-MM-YYYY) (a.k.a. little-endian) 29 October 1852 29 October
    China, Japan, South Korea, North Korea, Taiwan, Hungary, Mongolia, Lithuania and Bhutan YMD (YYYY-MM-DD) (a.k.a. big-endian) 1852 October 29 October 29
    Bharat (India), Russia, Vietnam, Germany, Iran, France, United Kingdom, Myanmar, Spain, Poland, Uzbekistan, Afghanistan, Nepal, Cameroon, Sri Lanka, others DMY (DD-MM-YYYY) (a.k.a. little-endian)
    and
    YMD (YYYY-MM-DD) (a.k.a. big-endian)
    29 October 1852
    and
    1852 October 29
    29 October
    and
    October 29
    Philippines, Malaysia, Somalia, Togo, Panama, Puerto Rico, Cayman Islands, Greenland DMY (DD-MM-YYYY) (a.k.a. little-endian)
    and
    MDY (MM-DD-YYYY) (a.k.a. middle-endian)
    29 October 1852
    and
    October 29, 1852
    29 October
    and
    October 29
    South Africa, Kenya, Canada, Ghana MDY (MM-DD-YYYY) (a.k.a. middle-endian)
    and
    YMD (YYYY-MM-DD) (a.k.a. big-endian)
    and
    DMY (DD-MM-YYYY) (a.k.a. little-endian)
    October 29, 1852
    and
    1852 October 29
    and
    29 October 1852
    October 29
    and
    29 October
  • Year 1852 was A Leap Year.
    Note: In a Leap Year there are 366 days (a year, occurring once every four years, which has 366 days including 29 February as an intercalary day.), rest years have 365 days.
  • Year 2028 will be the nearest future leap year.

Today on the calendar:

1 May, 2025

Loading the calendar...

Lucky colors for October 29, 1852

On 29 October 1852, you can wear dresses of the following colors to offer you good luck and ultimately enhance your day: Yellow, White, and Mix of both.

Preview of the lucky colors

Yellow

or
White
or
Mix of both

Enable our Alexa Skill "daily wear":

To stay updated regularly you can enable our Alexa Skill - Daily Wear, and/or set-up a Routine to hear What to wear on a regular basis, and as per your convenience.

Know more about Thursday:

Write Your Comment:

Did we miss anything? Please let us know in the comment section below.