Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - The 24 Solar Terms - What traditional festivals do Dai people have?

What traditional festivals do Dai people have?

The traditional festivals of the Dai people are related to the Gate Festival, the Opening Day, the Water Splashing Festival and the Water Splashing Festival.

Closing the door: the Dai language "Mwasa" occurred on September 15 of the Dai calendar (mid-July of the Gregorian calendar).

Kaimen Festival: Dai language is called "Onvasa", and the time is 65438+February 65438+May (Gregorian calendar 65438+1mid-October).

Water-splashing Festival: Dai people call it "Sanggan Bimai" or "Lenghe Sanggan Festival", which means June New Year, and the time is in late June or early July of Dai calendar (mid-April of Gregorian calendar).

Flower Street Festival: the 13th day of the first lunar month.

Extended data:

Dai refers to the Thai-Lao ethnic group, which is distributed in China, Indian, Vietnamese, Cambodian and other countries, and is one of the cross-border ethnic groups in China.

According to their distribution areas, the Dai people in China call themselves Dai Lu, Dai Na, Dai Ya, Dai Zhan and Dai Duan. Xishuangbanna and other places call themselves "Dai Lu", Dehong and other places call themselves "Dai Na", Xinping and Yuanjiang in the middle and upper reaches of the Red River call themselves "Dai Ya", Ruili, Longchuan and Gengma border areas call themselves "Dai tension", and Mangjing and Mangna in Lancang are branches of Dai tension. Han people call Dai Lu Shui Dai, Dai Na Handai and Dai Ya Huayaodai.

The Dai people in China mainly live in Yunnan Province, and the national language is Dai (Thai), and peacocks and elephants are regarded as mascots. Dai people like to live by the water, love cleanliness, often take a bath, and women like to wash their hair, so they have the reputation of "water nation".