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What are the traditional Chinese festivals in order?
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The main festivals in our country are: the Spring Festival. Lantern Festival.
Qingming Festival, Women's Day. May Day. May Fourth Youth Day.
Children's Day. July 1 is the founding day of the party, and the army day of August 1. Teacher's Day.
Mid-autumn festival. October 1 is the National Day. Laba Festival. And so on,
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Spring Festival is the first day of the first lunar month, a day of family reunion.
The Lantern Festival is the fifteenth day of the first month, and eating Lantern Festival makes a dragon lantern.
Qingming Festival is around April 5 of the Gregorian calendar, to worship ancestors Siyuan.
Dragon Boat Festival is the fifth day of May and commemorates Qu Yuan.
The Qixi Festival is the seventh day of July, and the lovers will eventually become married, and the Mid-Autumn Festival is August 15th, and the moon watchers will be reunited.
Chung Yeung Festival is the ninth day of the ninth month of the lunar calendar, which is a festival for the elderly who respect, respect, love and help the elderly.
Chinese New Year's Eve The last day of the lunar month is Chinese New Year's Eve, which is to set off firecrackers, paste Spring Festival couplets, and light lamps to observe the New Year.
The above is a traditional Chinese festival that should be what you need.
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China's statutory holidays are: Spring Festival, Lantern Festival on the 15th day of the first lunar month, Qingming Festival, May 1st International Labor Day, May Fourth Youth Day, June 1st Children's Day, July 1st Party Day, August 1st Army Day, August 15th Mid-Autumn Festival, 11th National Day, New Year's Day Professional holidays are not counted.
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The nine major festivals of modern China include:
1.New Year's Day: January 1, the arrival of the New Year is celebrated. (since 1949).
2.Spring Festival: The first day of the first lunar month, the most important traditional festival in China. (Ancient and long, no exact date).
3.Qingming Festival: The Qingming Festival of the lunar calendar, a day to worship ancestors and sweep tombs. (Started in the Qing Dynasty).
4.Labor Day: May 1, a holiday commemorating working people. (since 1949).
5.Dragon Boat Festival: The fifth day of the fifth lunar month, commemorating Qu Yuan and dragon boat racing. (Ancient and ancient, around 278 BC).
6.Mid-Autumn Festival: The fifth day of the eighth month of the lunar calendar, the season of family reunion and moon appreciation. (ancient, circa 1046-256 BC).
7.National Day: October 1, China's national celebration day, which celebrates the founding of the People's Republic of China. (since 1949).
8.Christmas Burial: December 25th, the traditional festival of the Governor of the Shed, is also celebrated in China. (from the mid-19th century).
9.May Fourth Youth Day: May 4 commemorates the May Fourth Movement, aiming to inspire patriotic enthusiasm and innovative spirit among young people. (Started in 1939, advocated by the All-China Youth Federation).
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The nine major festivals of modern China include:
New Year's Day (January 1).
Spring Festival (the first day of the first month of the first month of the lunar calendar).
Qingming Festival (Lunar Qingming Festival).
Labor Day (May 1).
Dragon Boat Festival (the fifth day of the fifth month of the lunar calendar).
Mid-Autumn Festival (15th day of the eighth month of the lunar calendar).
National Day (1 October).
Army Day (August 1).
Christmas Day (December 25).
The specific start times of these modern festivals are as follows:
New Year's Day: 1949.
Chinese New Year: 1949.
Ching Ming Festival: 1912.
Labor Day: 1919.
Dragon Boat Festival: 1949.
Mid-Autumn Festival: 1949.
National holiday: 1949.
Army Day: 1949.
Christmas: 1870 (first originated in the West, China began to celebrate in 1984).
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The main traditional festival in China.
Qingming Festival: During the Qingming Festival, it rains a lot, and pedestrians on the road want to break their souls.
By asking where the restaurant is, the shepherd boy pointed to Xinghua Village.
Du Mu Qingming.
Spring Festival: In the sound of firecrackers, the spring breeze sends warmth into Tusu.
Thousands of households always replace the new peach with the old one.
Wang Anshi Yuan Ri.
Dragon Boat Festival: On the afternoon of May 5th, give me a flower.
The old people are invisible, and the new knowledge is thousands of miles away.
Dan's heart is still in the past, and the day of his sideburns has changed.
I want to follow Lingjun, three Hunan across the two seas.
Wen Tianxiang Dragon Boat Festival is a thing.
Mid-Autumn Festival: When is the bright moon asking the sky? I don't know what year it is in the heavenly palace.
I want to go back by the wind, but I am afraid of Qionglou Yuyu, and the high place is unbearable. Dance to figure out how the shadow seems to be in the world. Turn Zhu Pavilion, low Qihu, shine sleeplessly.
There should be no hatred, what is the long time to say goodbye? People have joys and sorrows, and the moon is cloudy and sunny, and this matter is difficult to complete. I hope that people will last a long time, and they will be together for thousands of miles.
Su Shi Water tunes the song head.
Chung Yeung Festival: Alone in a foreign land as a stranger, every festival to think of relatives.
The remote knowledge brothers ascended to the heights, and there was one less person in the dogwood.
Wang Wei September 9 recalls the Shandong brothers.
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Traditional Chinese festivals mainly include Spring Festival (the first day of the first lunar month), Lantern Festival (the fifteenth day of the first lunar month), Dragon Raising Heads (February 2), Shangwei Festival (the third day of the third lunar month), Qingming Festival (around April 5 of the solar calendar), Dragon Boat Festival (the fifth day of the fifth lunar month), Qixi Festival (the seventh day of the seventh lunar month), July and a half (the 14th and 15th of the seventh month of the lunar calendar), Mid-Autumn Festival (the 15th day of the eighth month of the lunar calendar), Chongyang Festival (the ninth day of the ninth month of the lunar calendar), the Winter Solstice Festival (December 21 and 23 of the solar calendar), Chinese New Year's Eve (the last day of the year) and so on.
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The main festivals in China are Spring Festival, Dragon Boat Festival, Double Ninth Festival, Qingming Festival, Mid-Autumn Festival, Lantern Festival, and Labor Day.
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Spring Festival, New Year's Day, Lantern Festival, Mid-Autumn Festival, National Day, Arbor Day, Army Day, April Fool's Day, Labor Day, Children's Day.
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Spring Festival, Dragon Boat Festival, Mid-Autumn Festival.
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Speaking of traditional Chinese festivals, what do you know? First of all, what everyone thinks of must be the Spring Festival, National Day, Qingming Festival, Dragon Boat Festival, etc. Traditional Chinese festivals are an important part of the long history and culture of the Chinese nation, with diverse forms and rich contents.
For us, the traditional festival is not only a festival, but also contains a deep history and culture in the first rental. Below, let's take a look at the list of Chinese festivals in chronological order!
Chronology of Chinese festivals.
According to the chronological order, the traditional Chinese festivals mainly include the Spring Festival Lantern Festival, the Dragon Raising its Head, the Sheri Festival, and the Shangsi Festival.
Cold Food Festival, Qingming Festival, Labor Day, Dragon Boat Festival, Qixi Festival, Zhongyuan Festival, Mid-Autumn Festival, National Day, Chongyang Festival, Xia Yuan Festival, Winter Solstice Festival, Chinese New Year's Eve, etc.
In addition, among the 24 solar terms, there are also some natural solar terms and traditional festivals, such as Qingming, Winter Solstice, etc., these festivals have both natural and humanistic connotations, they are not only natural solar terms, but also traditional festivals.
The ancient traditional festivals of the Chinese nation cover the humanities and natural cultural contents such as primitive beliefs, sacrificial culture, astronomical calendars, and Yili mathematics, and contain profound and rich cultural connotations.
The traditional Chinese festivals developed from the ancient ancestors not only clearly record the rich and colorful social life and cultural content of the ancestors of the Chinese nation, but also accumulate broad and profound historical and cultural connotations.
In the course of historical development and evolution, the change of dynasties and the great changes in the ancient calendar, there have been a total of 102 calendars before and after, and the specific dates of some "traditional festivals" are actually not the same. In the history of the Chinese nation, there have been many festivals, some of which have survived to this day, and some of which have been "lost" halfway.
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Spring Festival. Lantern Festival.
Mid-autumn festival. Midyear Festival.
Tanabata Festival. Ching ming festival.
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There are many colorful traditional festivals in China, each with its own unique meaning and way of celebrating the mourning. Here are some of the major festivals in China:
1.Chinese New Year: The Spring Festival is the most important traditional festival in China and the beginning of the Chinese Lunar New Year.
People will carry out various celebrations, such as sticking Spring Festival couplets, setting off firecrackers, dragon and lion dances, and viewing lanterns. In addition, families will get together for a reunion dinner, greeting each other and wishing each other a happy new year.
2.Lantern Festival: The Lantern Festival is the 15th day after the Spring Festival and is one of the traditional Chinese festivals. People eat Lantern Festival (a dessert made from glutinous rice), enjoy lanterns, guess lantern riddles, and some places host lantern parades and lion dance performances.
3.Qingming Festival: Qingming Festival is a traditional Chinese ancestor worship festival, usually on April 4 or 5. People sweep graves to worship their ancestors, burn paper money, clean cemeteries, and sometimes perform rituals.
4.Dragon Boat Festival: The Dragon Boat Festival is the fifth day of the fifth lunar month and one of the traditional Chinese festivals. People eat zongzi (a food made from glutinous rice and other fillings), dragon boat racing, and an activity called trekking, which is an outdoor outing.
5.Mid-Autumn Festival: The Mid-Autumn Festival is the 15th day of the eighth month of the lunar calendar, and it is also an important traditional Chinese festival. People will admire the moon, eat mooncakes, and there is a traditional activity called guessing lantern riddles.
6.National Day: National Day is a national holiday in China that celebrates the founding of the Republic of China. Usually on October 1st, people hold various celebrations such as flag-raising ceremonies, parades, fireworks displays, etc.
In addition to the above-mentioned festivals, there are many other traditional festivals in China, such as the Double Ninth Festival, the Qixi Festival, the Laba Festival, etc. Each festival has its own unique way of celebration and cultural background, showcasing the rich and diverse traditional culture of China.
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The eight traditional Chinese festivals are: Spring Festival, Lantern Festival, Qingming Festival, Dragon Boat Festival, Qixi Festival, Mid-Autumn Festival, Double Ninth Festival, and Winter Solstice.
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Before the Han Dynasty, the Spring Festival was the beginning of spring in the Ganzhi calendar, and later evolved into the first day of the first month of the summer calendar (that is, the first day of the first month of the lunar calendar). At present, the Spring Festival time is: the first day of the first month of the narrow lunar calendar, and the first day of the first month of the broad lunar calendar to the fifteenth day of the first month.
The meaning of the New Year revolves around the center of the sacrifice and prayer for the New Year, with the form of activities such as removing the old cloth and the new, welcoming the jubilee blessings, worshiping the gods and ancestors, and praying for a good year, with rich and colorful content, lively and festive, and rich New Year's flavor. China has a long history of the Chinese New Year, and some relatively fixed customs have been formed in the inheritance and closure of the exhibition, and many of them have been passed down to this day, such as doing New Year's goods, sweeping dust, pasting New Year's red, group dinner, keeping the New Year, pressing the New Year's money, greeting the New Year, greeting the New Year, dragon and lion dance, worshiping the gods and ancestors, burning firecrackers, burning fireworks, traveling gods, festivals, boats, praying for blessings, temple fairs, gongs and drums, lanterns, lanterns and other customs. Traditional festival ceremonies and related customs and activities are an important part of the festival elements, carrying a rich and colorful festival cultural connotation.
The formation of the Lantern Festival has a long process, according to the general information and folklore, the fifteenth sedan chair section of the first lunar month has been valued in the Western Han Dynasty, the first month of the first month of the Han Dynasty Emperor Xin night in the Ganquan Palace to worship the "Taiyi" activities, by the descendants as the fifteenth day of the first month of the first month to sacrifice to the gods of the forerunner. However, the Lantern Festival on the fifteenth day of the first lunar month was really a folk festival after the Han and Wei dynasties, and the custom of lighting lamps on the fifteenth day of the first lunar month was related to the eastward spread of Buddhism. During the Tang Dynasty, Buddhism flourished, officials and ordinary people generally "lit lamps for Buddha" on the fifteenth day of the first lunar month, and the lights of Buddhism were all over the people, from the Tang Dynasty, the lantern festival lantern became a legal thing, and gradually became a folk custom.
3. The dragon raises its head and the dragon raises its head (the second day of the second month of the lunar calendar), also known as the Spring Ploughing Festival, the Agricultural Festival, the Green Dragon Festival, the Spring Dragon Festival, etc., which is a traditional Chinese folk festival. "Burning Filial Dragon" refers to the Oriental Canglong Seven Constellations in the 28 Nakshatras, at the beginning of each mid-spring month, the "Dragon Horn Star" rises from the eastern horizon, so it is called "the dragon raises its head". Meaning: The dragon raises its head on the day between the sting of the moon and the vernal equinox; Mao, Mao, all things come out of the ground, for the elephant of germination, on behalf of the vitality of luxuriant, "Mao" is one of the twelve branches of the dry branch calendar, the five elements belong to the wood, the hexagram is "earthquake".
Ninety-two is in the hexagram mutual shock, the shock is a dragon, indicating that the dragon has left the latent state and has appeared on the surface of the earth, emerging from the top. "The dragon raises its head" is a reflection of the festival in ancient Chinese farming culture, marking the beginning of spring ploughing with yang energy coming out of the ground, spring thunder, rain increase, temperature rising, and everything is full of vitality.
The traditional festivals of our country are:Spring Festival (the first day of the first lunar month); Lantern Festival (the fifteenth day of the first lunar month); The dragon raises its head (the second day of the second lunar month), the Sheri Festival (the second day of the second lunar month); Shangsi Festival (the third day of the third month of the lunar calendar). >>>More
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