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Spring Festival
   The Spring Festival falls on the 1st day of the 1st lunar month, often one
    month later than the Gregorian calendar. It originated in the Shang
    Dynasty (c. 1600 BC-c. 1100 BC) from the people's sacrifice to gods and
    ancestors at the end of an old year and the beginning of a new one.

   Strictly speaking, the Spring Festival starts every year in the early days of
    the 12th lunar month and will last till the mid 1st lunar month of the next
    year. Of them, the most important days are Spring Festival Eve and the
    first three days. The Chinese government now stipulates people have
    seven days off for the Chinese Lunar New Year.

   Many customs accompany the Spring Festival. Some are still followed
    today, but others have weakened.
Spring Festival
   Before the New Year comes, the people completely clean the
    indoors and outdoors of their homes as well as their clothes,
    bedclothes and all their utensils.

   Then people begin decorating their clean rooms featuring an
    atmosphere of rejoicing and festivity. All the door panels will
    be pasted with Spring Festival couplets, highlighting Chinese
    calligraphy with black characters on red paper. The content
    varies from house owners' wishes for a bright future to good
    luck for the New Year. Also, pictures of the god of doors and
    wealth will be posted on front doors to ward off evil spirits
    and welcome peace and abundance.
   The Chinese character "fu" (meaning blessing or
    happiness) is a must. The character put on paper can
    be pasted normally or upside down, for in Chinese
    the "reversed fu" is homophonic with "fu comes",
    both being pronounced as "fudaole." What's more,
    two big red lanterns can be raised on both sides of
    the front door. Red paper-cuttings can be seen on
    window glass and brightly colored New Year
    paintings with auspicious meanings may be put on
    the wall.
Lantern Festival
   The Lantern Festival falls on the 15th day of the 1st lunar month, usually
    in February or March in the Gregorian calendar. As early as the Western
    Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 25), it had become a festival with great
    significance.

   This day's important activity is watching lanterns. Throughout the Han
    Dynasty (206 BC-AD 220), Buddhism flourished in China. One emperor
    heard that Buddhist monks would watch sarira, or remains from the
    cremation of Buddha's body, and light lanterns to worship Buddha on the
    15th day of the 1st lunar month, so he ordered to light lanterns in the
    imperial palace and temples to show respect to Buddha on this day. Later,
    the Buddhist rite developed into a grand festival among common people
    and its influence expanded from the Central Plains to the whole of China.
Lantern Festival
   Guessing lantern riddles"is an essential part of the
    Festival. Lantern owners write riddles on a piece of
    paper and post them on the lanterns. If visitors have
    solutions to the riddles, they can pull the paper out
    and go to the lantern owners to check their answer. If
    they are right, they will get a little gift. The activity
    emerged during people's enjoyment of lanterns in the
    Song Dynasty (960-1279). As riddle guessing is
    interesting and full of wisdom, it has become popular
    among all social strata.
   People will eat yuanxiao, or rice
    dumplings, on this day, so it is also
    called the "Yuanxiao
    Festival."Yuanxiao also has another
    name, tangyuan. It is small dumpling
    balls made of glutinous rice flour
    with rose petals, sesame, bean paste,
    jujube paste, walnut meat, dried
    fruit, sugar and edible oil as filling.
    Tangyuan can be boiled, fried or
    steamed. It tastes sweet and
    delicious. What's more, tangyuan in
    Chinese has a similar pronunciation
    with "tuanyuan”, meaning reunion.
    So people eat them to denote union,
    harmony and happiness for the
    family.
Qingming Festival
            The Qingming (Pure Brightness)
             Festival is one of the 24 seasonal
             division points in China, falling
             on April 4-6 each year. After the
             festival, the temperature will rise
             up and rainfall increases. It is the
             high time for spring plowing and
             sowing. But the Qingming
             Festival is not only a seasonal
             point to guide farm work, it is
             more a festival of
             commemoration.
         
            The Qingming Festival sees a
             combination of sadness and
             happiness.
   The Hanshi (Cold Food) Festival was usually one day before
    the Qingming Festival. As our ancestors often extended the
    day to the Qingming, they were later combined.
   On each Qingming Festival, all cemeteries are crowded with
    people who came to sweep tombs and offer sacrifices. Traffic
    on the way to the cemeteries becomes extremely jammed. The
    customs have been greatly simplified today. After slightly
    sweeping the tombs, people offer food, flowers and favorites
    of the dead, then burn incense and paper money and bow
    before the memorial tablet.

             Dragon Boat Festival
    The Dragon Boat Festival, the 5th day of the 5th lunar
    month, has had a history of more than 2,000 years. It is
    usually in June in the Gregorian calendar.

   Dragon boat racing is an indispensable part of the festival,
    held all over the country. As the gun is fired, people will
    see racers in dragon-shaped canoes pulling the oars
    harmoniously and hurriedly, accompanied by rapid drums,
    speeding toward their destination. Folk tales say the game
    originates from the activities of seeking Qu Yuan's body,
    but experts, after painstaking and meticulous research,
    conclude that dragon boat racing is a semi-religious, semi-
    entertaining program from the Warring States Period (475-
    221 BC). In the following thousands of years, the game
    spread to Japan, Vietnam and Britain as well as China's
    Taiwan and Hong Kong. Now dragon boat racing has
    developed into an aquatic sports item which features both
    Chinese tradition and modern sporting spirit. In 1980, it
    was listed into the state sports competition programs and
    has since been held every year. The award is called "Qu
    Yuan Cup."

       Double Seventh7th day of the 7th lunar
    The Double Seventh Festival, on the
                                        Festival
    month, is a traditional festival full of romance. It often goes
    into August in the Gregorian calendar.




   This festival is in mid-summer when the weather is warm and
    the grass and trees reveal their luxurious greens. At night
    when the sky is dotted with stars, and people can see the
    Milky Way spanning from the north to the south. On each
    bank of it is a bright star, which see each other from afar. They
    are the Cowherd and Weaver Maid, and about them there is a
    beautiful love story passed down from generation to
    generation.
   Long, long ago, there was an honest and kind-hearted fellow named Niu
    Lang (Cowhand). His parents died when he was a child. Later he was
    driven out of his home by his sister-in-law. So he lived by himself herding
    cattle and farming. One day, a fairy from heaven Zhi Nu (Weaver Maid)
    fell in love with him and came down secretly to earth and married him. The
    cowhand farmed in the field and the Weaver Maid wove at home. They
    lived a happy life and gave birth to a boy and a girl. Unfortunately, the
    God of Heaven soon found out the fact and ordered the Queen Mother of
    the Western Heavens to bring the Weaver Maid back.
   With the help of celestial cattle, the Cowhand flew to heaven with his son
    and daughter. At the time when he was about to catch up with his wife, the
    Queen Mother took off one of her gold hairpins and made a stroke. One
    billowy river appeared in front of the Cowhand. The Cowhand and Weaver
    Maid were separated on the two banks forever and could only feel their
    tears. Their loyalty to love touched magpies, so tens of thousands of
    magpies came to build a bridge for the Cowhand and Weaver Maid to meet
    each other. The Queen Mother was eventually moved and allowed them to
    meet each year on the 7th of the 7th lunar month. Hence their meeting date
    has been called "Qi Xi" (Double Seventh).
Mid-Autumn Festival
   The Mid-Autumn Festival falls on the 15th day of the 8th lunar month,
    usually in October in Gregorian calendar.

   Folklore about the origin of the festival go like this: In remote antiquity,
    there were ten suns rising in the sky, which scorched all crops and drove
    people into dire poverty. A hero named Hou Yi was much worried about
    this, he ascended to the top of the Kunlun Mountain and, directing his
    superhuman strength to full extent, drew his extraordinary bow and shot
    down the nine superfluous suns one after another. He also ordered the last
    sun to rise and set according to time. For this reason, he was respected and
    loved by the people and lots of people of ideals and integrity came to him
    to learn martial arts from him. A person named Peng Meng lurked in
    them.
   Hou Yi had a beautiful and kindhearted wife named Chang E. One day on
    his way to the Kunlun Mountain to call on friends, he ran upon the
    Empress of Heaven Wangmu who was passing by. Empress Wangmu
    presented to him a parcel of elixir, by taking which, it was said, one would
    ascend immediately to heaven and become a celestial being. Hou Yi,
    however, hated to part with his wife. So he gave the elixir to Chang E to
    treasure for the time being. Chang E hid the parcel in a treasure box at her
    dressing table when, unexpectedly, it was seen by Peng Meng.
   One day when Hou Yi led his disciples to go hunting, Peng Meng, sword
    in hand, rushed into the inner chamber and forced Chang E to hand over
    the elixir. Aware that she was unable to defeat Peng Meng, Chang E made
    a prompt decision at that critical moment. She turned round to open her
    treasure box, took up the elixir and swallowed it in one gulp. As soon as
    she swallowed the elixir her body floated off the ground, dashed out of the
    window and flew towards heaven. Peng Meng escaped.
   When Hou Yi returned home at dark, he knew from the maidservants what had
    happened. Overcome with grief, Hou Yi looked up into the night sky and called out
    the name of his beloved wife when, to his surprise, he found that the moon was
    especially clear and bight and on it there was a swaying shadow that was exactly
    like his wife. He tried his best to chase after the moon. But as he ran, the moon
    retreated; as he withdrew, the moon came back. He could not get to the moon at all.

   Thinking of his wife day and night, Hou Yi then had an incense table arranged in
    the back garden that Chang E loved. Putting on the table sweetmeats and fresh
    fruits Chang E enjoyed most, Hou Yi held at a distance a memorial ceremony for
    Chang E who was sentimentally attached to him in the palace of the moon.
   When people heard of the story that Chang E had turned into a celestial being, they
    arranged the incense table in the moonlight one after another and prayed
    kindhearted Chang E for good fortune and peace. From then on the custom of
    worshiping the moon spread among the people.

   People in different places follow various customs, but all show their love and
    longing for a better life. Today people will enjoy the full moon and eat moon cakes
    on that day.
Double Ninth Festival
   The 9th day of the 9th lunar month is the traditional Chongyang Festival, or Double Ninth Festival. It
    usually falls in October in the Gregorian calendar. In an ancient and mysterious book Yi Jing, or The Book
    of Changes, number "6" was thought to be of Yin character, meaning feminine or negative, while number
    "9" was thought to be Yang, meaning masculine or positive. So the number nine in both month and day
    create the Double Ninth Festival, or Chongyang Festival. Chong in Chinese means "double." Also, as
    double ninth was pronounced the same as the word to signify "forever", both are "Jiu Jiu," the Chinese
    ancestors considered it an auspicious day worth celebration. That's why ancient Chinese began to
    celebrate this festival long time ago.

   The custom of ascending a height to avoid epidemics was passed down from long time ago. Therefore, the
    Double Ninth Festival is also called "Height Ascending Festival". The height people will reach is usually
    a mountain or a tower. Ancient literary figures have left many poems depicting the activity. Even today,
    people still swarm to famous or little known mountains on this day

   In 1989, the Chinese government decided the Double Ninth Festival as Seniors' Day. Since then, all
    government units, organizations and streets communities will organize an autumn trip each year for those
    who have retired from their posts. At the waterside or on the mountains, the seniors will find themselves
    merged into nature. Younger generations will bring elder ones to suburban areas or send gifts to them on
    this day.
Winter Solstice Festival
   As early as 2,500 years ago, about the Spring and Autumn Period
    (770-476 BC), China had determined the point of Winter Solstice by
    observing movements of the sun with a sundial. It is the earliest of
    the 24 seasonal division points. The time will be each December 22
    or 23 according to the Gregorian calendar.

   The Northern hemisphere on this day experiences the shortest
    daytime and longest nighttime. After the Winter Solstice, days will
    become longer and longer. As ancient Chinese thought, the yang, or
    muscular, positive things will become stronger and stronger after
    this day, so it should be celebrated.
   In some parts of Northern China, people eat dumpling soup on this day;
    while residents of some other places eat dumplings, saying doing so will
    keep them from frost in the upcoming winter. But in parts of South China,
    the whole family will get together to have a meal made of red-bean and
    glutinous rice to drive away ghosts and other evil things. In other places,
    people also eat tangyuan, a kind of stuffed small dumpling ball made of
    glutinous rice flour. The Winter Solstice rice dumplings could be used as
    sacrifices to ancestors, or gifts for friends and relatives. The Taiwan
    people even keep the custom of offering nine-layer cakes to their
    ancestors. They make cakes in the shape of chicken, duck, tortoise, pig,
    cow or sheep with glutinous rice flour and steam them on different layers
    of a pot. These animals all signify auspiciousness in Chinese tradition.
    People of the same surname or family clan gather at their ancestral
    temples to worship their ancestors in age order. After the sacrificial
    ceremony, there is always a grand banquet.

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Chinese festivals中国节日(英文介绍)

  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 3. Spring Festival  The Spring Festival falls on the 1st day of the 1st lunar month, often one month later than the Gregorian calendar. It originated in the Shang Dynasty (c. 1600 BC-c. 1100 BC) from the people's sacrifice to gods and ancestors at the end of an old year and the beginning of a new one.   Strictly speaking, the Spring Festival starts every year in the early days of the 12th lunar month and will last till the mid 1st lunar month of the next year. Of them, the most important days are Spring Festival Eve and the first three days. The Chinese government now stipulates people have seven days off for the Chinese Lunar New Year.   Many customs accompany the Spring Festival. Some are still followed today, but others have weakened.
  • 4. Spring Festival  Before the New Year comes, the people completely clean the indoors and outdoors of their homes as well as their clothes, bedclothes and all their utensils.   Then people begin decorating their clean rooms featuring an atmosphere of rejoicing and festivity. All the door panels will be pasted with Spring Festival couplets, highlighting Chinese calligraphy with black characters on red paper. The content varies from house owners' wishes for a bright future to good luck for the New Year. Also, pictures of the god of doors and wealth will be posted on front doors to ward off evil spirits and welcome peace and abundance.
  • 5. The Chinese character "fu" (meaning blessing or happiness) is a must. The character put on paper can be pasted normally or upside down, for in Chinese the "reversed fu" is homophonic with "fu comes", both being pronounced as "fudaole." What's more, two big red lanterns can be raised on both sides of the front door. Red paper-cuttings can be seen on window glass and brightly colored New Year paintings with auspicious meanings may be put on the wall.
  • 6. Lantern Festival  The Lantern Festival falls on the 15th day of the 1st lunar month, usually in February or March in the Gregorian calendar. As early as the Western Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 25), it had become a festival with great significance.   This day's important activity is watching lanterns. Throughout the Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 220), Buddhism flourished in China. One emperor heard that Buddhist monks would watch sarira, or remains from the cremation of Buddha's body, and light lanterns to worship Buddha on the 15th day of the 1st lunar month, so he ordered to light lanterns in the imperial palace and temples to show respect to Buddha on this day. Later, the Buddhist rite developed into a grand festival among common people and its influence expanded from the Central Plains to the whole of China.
  • 7. Lantern Festival  Guessing lantern riddles"is an essential part of the Festival. Lantern owners write riddles on a piece of paper and post them on the lanterns. If visitors have solutions to the riddles, they can pull the paper out and go to the lantern owners to check their answer. If they are right, they will get a little gift. The activity emerged during people's enjoyment of lanterns in the Song Dynasty (960-1279). As riddle guessing is interesting and full of wisdom, it has become popular among all social strata.
  • 8. People will eat yuanxiao, or rice dumplings, on this day, so it is also called the "Yuanxiao Festival."Yuanxiao also has another name, tangyuan. It is small dumpling balls made of glutinous rice flour with rose petals, sesame, bean paste, jujube paste, walnut meat, dried fruit, sugar and edible oil as filling. Tangyuan can be boiled, fried or steamed. It tastes sweet and delicious. What's more, tangyuan in Chinese has a similar pronunciation with "tuanyuan”, meaning reunion. So people eat them to denote union, harmony and happiness for the family.
  • 9. Qingming Festival  The Qingming (Pure Brightness) Festival is one of the 24 seasonal division points in China, falling on April 4-6 each year. After the festival, the temperature will rise up and rainfall increases. It is the high time for spring plowing and sowing. But the Qingming Festival is not only a seasonal point to guide farm work, it is more a festival of commemoration.   The Qingming Festival sees a combination of sadness and happiness.
  • 10. The Hanshi (Cold Food) Festival was usually one day before the Qingming Festival. As our ancestors often extended the day to the Qingming, they were later combined.  On each Qingming Festival, all cemeteries are crowded with people who came to sweep tombs and offer sacrifices. Traffic on the way to the cemeteries becomes extremely jammed. The customs have been greatly simplified today. After slightly sweeping the tombs, people offer food, flowers and favorites of the dead, then burn incense and paper money and bow before the memorial tablet.
  • 11. Dragon Boat Festival The Dragon Boat Festival, the 5th day of the 5th lunar month, has had a history of more than 2,000 years. It is usually in June in the Gregorian calendar.  Dragon boat racing is an indispensable part of the festival, held all over the country. As the gun is fired, people will see racers in dragon-shaped canoes pulling the oars harmoniously and hurriedly, accompanied by rapid drums, speeding toward their destination. Folk tales say the game originates from the activities of seeking Qu Yuan's body, but experts, after painstaking and meticulous research, conclude that dragon boat racing is a semi-religious, semi- entertaining program from the Warring States Period (475- 221 BC). In the following thousands of years, the game spread to Japan, Vietnam and Britain as well as China's Taiwan and Hong Kong. Now dragon boat racing has developed into an aquatic sports item which features both Chinese tradition and modern sporting spirit. In 1980, it was listed into the state sports competition programs and has since been held every year. The award is called "Qu Yuan Cup."
  • 12. Double Seventh7th day of the 7th lunar The Double Seventh Festival, on the Festival month, is a traditional festival full of romance. It often goes into August in the Gregorian calendar.  This festival is in mid-summer when the weather is warm and the grass and trees reveal their luxurious greens. At night when the sky is dotted with stars, and people can see the Milky Way spanning from the north to the south. On each bank of it is a bright star, which see each other from afar. They are the Cowherd and Weaver Maid, and about them there is a beautiful love story passed down from generation to generation.
  • 13. Long, long ago, there was an honest and kind-hearted fellow named Niu Lang (Cowhand). His parents died when he was a child. Later he was driven out of his home by his sister-in-law. So he lived by himself herding cattle and farming. One day, a fairy from heaven Zhi Nu (Weaver Maid) fell in love with him and came down secretly to earth and married him. The cowhand farmed in the field and the Weaver Maid wove at home. They lived a happy life and gave birth to a boy and a girl. Unfortunately, the God of Heaven soon found out the fact and ordered the Queen Mother of the Western Heavens to bring the Weaver Maid back.  With the help of celestial cattle, the Cowhand flew to heaven with his son and daughter. At the time when he was about to catch up with his wife, the Queen Mother took off one of her gold hairpins and made a stroke. One billowy river appeared in front of the Cowhand. The Cowhand and Weaver Maid were separated on the two banks forever and could only feel their tears. Their loyalty to love touched magpies, so tens of thousands of magpies came to build a bridge for the Cowhand and Weaver Maid to meet each other. The Queen Mother was eventually moved and allowed them to meet each year on the 7th of the 7th lunar month. Hence their meeting date has been called "Qi Xi" (Double Seventh).
  • 14. Mid-Autumn Festival  The Mid-Autumn Festival falls on the 15th day of the 8th lunar month, usually in October in Gregorian calendar.  Folklore about the origin of the festival go like this: In remote antiquity, there were ten suns rising in the sky, which scorched all crops and drove people into dire poverty. A hero named Hou Yi was much worried about this, he ascended to the top of the Kunlun Mountain and, directing his superhuman strength to full extent, drew his extraordinary bow and shot down the nine superfluous suns one after another. He also ordered the last sun to rise and set according to time. For this reason, he was respected and loved by the people and lots of people of ideals and integrity came to him to learn martial arts from him. A person named Peng Meng lurked in them.
  • 15. Hou Yi had a beautiful and kindhearted wife named Chang E. One day on his way to the Kunlun Mountain to call on friends, he ran upon the Empress of Heaven Wangmu who was passing by. Empress Wangmu presented to him a parcel of elixir, by taking which, it was said, one would ascend immediately to heaven and become a celestial being. Hou Yi, however, hated to part with his wife. So he gave the elixir to Chang E to treasure for the time being. Chang E hid the parcel in a treasure box at her dressing table when, unexpectedly, it was seen by Peng Meng.  One day when Hou Yi led his disciples to go hunting, Peng Meng, sword in hand, rushed into the inner chamber and forced Chang E to hand over the elixir. Aware that she was unable to defeat Peng Meng, Chang E made a prompt decision at that critical moment. She turned round to open her treasure box, took up the elixir and swallowed it in one gulp. As soon as she swallowed the elixir her body floated off the ground, dashed out of the window and flew towards heaven. Peng Meng escaped.
  • 16. When Hou Yi returned home at dark, he knew from the maidservants what had happened. Overcome with grief, Hou Yi looked up into the night sky and called out the name of his beloved wife when, to his surprise, he found that the moon was especially clear and bight and on it there was a swaying shadow that was exactly like his wife. He tried his best to chase after the moon. But as he ran, the moon retreated; as he withdrew, the moon came back. He could not get to the moon at all.  Thinking of his wife day and night, Hou Yi then had an incense table arranged in the back garden that Chang E loved. Putting on the table sweetmeats and fresh fruits Chang E enjoyed most, Hou Yi held at a distance a memorial ceremony for Chang E who was sentimentally attached to him in the palace of the moon.  When people heard of the story that Chang E had turned into a celestial being, they arranged the incense table in the moonlight one after another and prayed kindhearted Chang E for good fortune and peace. From then on the custom of worshiping the moon spread among the people.   People in different places follow various customs, but all show their love and longing for a better life. Today people will enjoy the full moon and eat moon cakes on that day.
  • 17. Double Ninth Festival  The 9th day of the 9th lunar month is the traditional Chongyang Festival, or Double Ninth Festival. It usually falls in October in the Gregorian calendar. In an ancient and mysterious book Yi Jing, or The Book of Changes, number "6" was thought to be of Yin character, meaning feminine or negative, while number "9" was thought to be Yang, meaning masculine or positive. So the number nine in both month and day create the Double Ninth Festival, or Chongyang Festival. Chong in Chinese means "double." Also, as double ninth was pronounced the same as the word to signify "forever", both are "Jiu Jiu," the Chinese ancestors considered it an auspicious day worth celebration. That's why ancient Chinese began to celebrate this festival long time ago.  The custom of ascending a height to avoid epidemics was passed down from long time ago. Therefore, the Double Ninth Festival is also called "Height Ascending Festival". The height people will reach is usually a mountain or a tower. Ancient literary figures have left many poems depicting the activity. Even today, people still swarm to famous or little known mountains on this day  In 1989, the Chinese government decided the Double Ninth Festival as Seniors' Day. Since then, all government units, organizations and streets communities will organize an autumn trip each year for those who have retired from their posts. At the waterside or on the mountains, the seniors will find themselves merged into nature. Younger generations will bring elder ones to suburban areas or send gifts to them on this day.
  • 18. Winter Solstice Festival  As early as 2,500 years ago, about the Spring and Autumn Period (770-476 BC), China had determined the point of Winter Solstice by observing movements of the sun with a sundial. It is the earliest of the 24 seasonal division points. The time will be each December 22 or 23 according to the Gregorian calendar.  The Northern hemisphere on this day experiences the shortest daytime and longest nighttime. After the Winter Solstice, days will become longer and longer. As ancient Chinese thought, the yang, or muscular, positive things will become stronger and stronger after this day, so it should be celebrated.
  • 19. In some parts of Northern China, people eat dumpling soup on this day; while residents of some other places eat dumplings, saying doing so will keep them from frost in the upcoming winter. But in parts of South China, the whole family will get together to have a meal made of red-bean and glutinous rice to drive away ghosts and other evil things. In other places, people also eat tangyuan, a kind of stuffed small dumpling ball made of glutinous rice flour. The Winter Solstice rice dumplings could be used as sacrifices to ancestors, or gifts for friends and relatives. The Taiwan people even keep the custom of offering nine-layer cakes to their ancestors. They make cakes in the shape of chicken, duck, tortoise, pig, cow or sheep with glutinous rice flour and steam them on different layers of a pot. These animals all signify auspiciousness in Chinese tradition. People of the same surname or family clan gather at their ancestral temples to worship their ancestors in age order. After the sacrificial ceremony, there is always a grand banquet.