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Kite making on a macro level is not inferior to that of the stateIntangible cultural heritageIt is possible that a specific type of kite making has been included in the national intangible cultural heritage, for exampleWeifang kiteOn the whole, although the making of kites is also a craft, the inheritance of this craft has not encountered difficulties, after all, in the simplest kite, there is no need to be taught, and children can make it spontaneously. Therefore, this kind of kite making, which is not difficult and requires a basic foundation of craftsmanship, cannot be included in the national intangible cultural heritage.
And like Weifang kites, which require extremely strict and complex craftsmanship, there is a set of mature skills to make kites, and this kite itself has formed a culture and has the value of inheritance. In addition, because it is difficult to make money in the society because of the craftsmanship of learning to make this Weifang kite, so there are very few people who learn, so the inheritance of Weifang kites has been threatened, and it is very likely to be cut off, and no one will know this craft again, so it is listed as an intangible cultural heritage.
Although intangible cultural heritage refers to those intangible cultural heritage, and refers to those types of skills that need to be passed on, not all skills are counted as intangible cultural heritage. On the whole, all types of skills can be counted as intangible culture. "Heritage" is different, "heritage" refers to the imminent extinction, the imminent threat to survival, that is, the culture is about to become "heritage", that is, no one will know this skill anymore.
Therefore, in order to protect this particular culture, the state has established intangible cultural heritage.
Generally speaking, the pace of development in this era is too fast, and many ancient skills and cultures are difficult to survive in this era, in order to protect these niche cultures from being destroyed, there is a so-called national intangible cultural heritage. The times are entering, people are running, but these ancient cultures still need someone to protect and inherit, otherwise these once rich cultures will become history in the near future.
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Yes, because kites are also a traditional craft, passed down from generation to generation, and kites have existed in ancient times, so they can be regarded as intangible cultural heritage.
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Kite making is an intangible cultural heritage, which was announced in 2006, but it is only a non-material production process in a few cities, including Tianjin and Beijing.
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Belong, the production of kites has a unique set of techniques since ancient times, which is more exquisite than kites made by modern technology.
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Kites were invented by the Chinese, according to legend, Mo Zhai made wooden birds out of wood, developed for three years, is the earliest origin of human kites, and later his student Lu Ban used bamboo, improved Mo Zhai's kite material, and evolved into today's multi-line kite. The shape of the kite: It mainly imitates the natural creatures of potato celery, such as birds, insects, animals and geometric three-dimensional, etc., and the pattern is mainly designed by personal preference, including promotional Peugeot, animals, butterflies, birds, etc., a variety of varieties.
In addition to silk, paper is the construction material of the kite, there are plastic materials, the bone pole has bamboo strips, wood and glue sticks to make, recently someone designed a boneless kite, its structure is to introduce air into the wind pit made of silk, now the kite forms a gently floating air pillow, and then ride the wind on it. In China, Malaya, the Philippines and Japan, there is also a large kite that is released into the blue sky at every kite festival, and the size of these kites varies from 10 to 20 feet. The bone pole is made of large bamboo liters, and more than 100 people put it.
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Yes. With a history of more than 2,000 years, the kite has been integrated into the traditional Chinese culture, influenced by it, in the traditional Chinese kite, you can see this auspicious meaning everywhere: "Fu Shou Shuangquan", "Dragon and Phoenix Chengxiang", "Hundred Butterflies in Spring", "Carp Jumping Dragon Gate", "Magu Offering Longevity", "Hundred Birds and Phoenix", "Fish in a Year's Round", "Four Seasons of Peace" and other kites all show people's yearning and longing for a better life.
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Chinese kites have a history of more than 2,000 years. From the traditional Chinese kite, you can see the shadow of auspicious meanings and auspicious patterns everywhere. In the long years, our ancestors not only created beautiful words and paintings that embody the wisdom of the Chinese nation, but also created many patterns that reflect people's yearning and pursuit of a better life and imply auspiciousness.
It gives people the meaning of festivity, auspiciousness and blessing through the image of the pattern; It integrates the appreciation habits of the masses, reflects people's kind and healthy thoughts and feelings, and permeates China's national traditions and folk customs, so it is widely circulated among the people and is popular among people.
With a history of more than 2,000 years, the kite has been integrated into the traditional Chinese culture, influenced by it, in the traditional Chinese kite, you can see this auspicious meaning everywhere: "Fu Shou Shuangquan", "Dragon and Phoenix Chengxiang", "Hundred Butterflies in Spring", "Carp Jumping Dragon Gate", "Magu Offering Longevity", "Hundred Birds and Phoenix", "Fish in a Year's Round", "Four Seasons of Peace" and other kites all show people's yearning and longing for a better life.
And the world kite community recognizes that kites first appeared in China, so let's guess.
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There is a kite festival in Weifang, Shandong. There are kite flyers all over the country, and it's kind of culture.
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Kites originated in China, and the earliest kites were made by the ancient philosopher Mo Zhai. According to "Han Feizi Foreign Reserve": Mo Zhai Julu Mountain (now Qingzhou, Shandong) "chopped wood for a harrier, and flew in three years and lost in one day."
It is said that Mozi studied for three years and finally made a wooden bird out of wood, but it broke after only one day of flying. The "wooden harrier" made by Mozi is the earliest kite in China.
After the advent of the Chinese kite, it was quickly used for military needs such as measuring and transmitting information, flying over dangers, etc. During the Tang and Song dynasties, due to the emergence of the paper industry, kites were changed from paper paste, which was soon introduced to the folk and became people's entertainment toys.
Kites in the Song Dynasty have been widely popular among the people. With the increase of international exchanges, Chinese kites have spread all over the world. It spread first to neighboring countries such as Japan and Korea, and then across the oceans, to Burma, Malaya, Indonesia, and New Zealand, and even further to the eastern islands; The other line followed the "Silk Road" or Mongol conquest routes into Arabia and Western Europe.
Marco, an Italian who served as an official in China for 17 years in the Yuan Dynasty. After Polo returned to China, he also introduced kites to the West.
Weifang, Shandong Province is a famous kite production area in China, and the Ming Dynasty has appeared in the folk kite artists. In the Qing Dynasty, with the popularity of kite flying customs, the art of kite also reached its heyday. During the Daoguang period, Guo Lin Yin Qingming wrote a bamboo branch poem depicting it:
One hundred and fourteen days of small cold food, Ye You fought for the Bailang River, the son of the paper kite swing girl, more chaos than the new spring swallow. Zheng Banqiao has a poem that says: "Paper flowers are flying all over the sky like snow, the beautiful girl swings around, and the flying color Luo skirt swings in the wind, so that the butterflies will return to spring." ”
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As a part of traditional Chinese culture, kites originated very early, being invented in the Eastern Zhou Dynasty and the Spring and Autumn Period.
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The origin of kites: Kites were invented by ancient working people in the Spring and Autumn Period of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty in China, and have been around for more than 2,000 years. According to legend, Mo Zhai made a wooden bird out of wood, which was developed for three years, which is the earliest origin of human kites.
Later, Lu Ban used bamboo to improve the material of Mo Zhai's kite, and it evolved into today's multi-line kite.
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Tracing the origin of kites, can be traced back to the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period more than 2,000 years ago, due to the needs of war, the ancients took the shape of a bird and used wood as a material to make a "wooden kite" that can fly in the air. According to the record of "Han Feizi and the Foreign Prince's Left": "Mozi is a wooden kite, which is grown in three years and defeated in one day."
According to the "Book of Hong", Lu Ban also made wooden kites, saying: "Gong lost the class to make wooden kites to peek into Song City".
Lu Ban is a native of Lu (now Qufu, Shandong), Mozi is an outstanding thinker, politician, founder of Mojia in the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period, and also a native of Lu (a Song country), from which it is inferred that the birthplace of the originator of kites "Wooden Kite" should be the Qilu area.
Qilu is now Shandong, whether it is Qi or Lu, it is the Han nation.
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Answer]: A kite is a traditional Chinese handicraft and a folk toy, which is widely spread in Pengyu Hebei. The basic structure is made of thin chain hidden rolling bamboo tied into a skeleton, pasted with paper or silk fabrics and painted.
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