Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Lucky day inquiry - What are the dates of Tibetan calendar and Gregorian calendar in 2022?

What are the dates of Tibetan calendar and Gregorian calendar in 2022?

The comparison table of Tibetan calendar and Gregorian calendar in 2022 is as follows:

Tibetan New Year, Tibetan calendar 65438+ 10/,Gregorian calendar March 3, 2022. The Tibetan New Year, the largest and most ethnic group in Tibet, has the most lively atmosphere. Everyone respects highland barley wine butter tea and enjoys reunion. Cheerful pot village and string dance are grand and warm.

You can enjoy the dazzling Tibetan customs and costumes every day. That distinctive Tibetan costume is really a beautiful landscape unique to the plateau in winter, dotted with the blue sky and clear water of the snowy plateau. It's really a rare humanistic tourism experience.

Call Dafahui Tibetan calendar 65438+ early October, Gregorian calendar early March 2022, the largest Buddhist festival in Tibet. This meeting is a continuation of the prayer meeting initiated by Zong Kaba, the founder of Gelug Sect and a religious reformer, in Lhasa on 1409.

During this period, nearly 20,000 monks from three major monasteries in Tibet gathered at the Jokhang Temple in Lhasa to pray for siddhattha gotama, and took the Gesi degree examination.

Other schedules of Tibetan calendar and Gregorian calendar in 2022:

Butter Sculpture Lantern Festival, 65438+1 October 15 in Tibetan calendar and March1month 15 in Gregorian calendar in 2022, is the last day to summon Dafa, in order to celebrate the victory of the debate between Sakyamuni and other sects.

People gather in Bajiao Street in Lhasa. During the day, the street is filled with all kinds of flower stands and scrolls. At night, images of immortals, figures, flowers, trees, birds and animals made of colored ghee are put on, and butter lamps are lit to pray. People are singing and dancing around butter lamps.

Sagadawa Festival, Tibetan calendar 15, Gregorian calendar 14 and Tibetan calendar 15, is the most sacred day in the history of Tibetan Buddhism (the day when Sakyamuni was born, died and nirvana), and thousands of people in Lhasa revolved around the meridian. On the afternoon of the same day, people who participated in the prayer wheel concentrated on boating and dancing in the Longwangtan scenic spot in Lhasa.