Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - The 24 Solar Terms - Autumn equinox ancient poetry with pinyin

Autumn equinox ancient poetry with pinyin

The autumnal equinox ancient poems with pinyin are as follows:

1, the autumn equinox is still there, the bamboo is slightly exposed-Tang Du Fu's Yi Xian

This is a good example.

2. Another autumnal equinox-one of the ten poems of Sean Song's Three Rhymes of the Palace Garden.

in a word

3. Crossing the River at the Equinox —— Three Poems of He Kan Er Ye by Yu Xin in the Southern and Northern Dynasties

Se7en

4, what is the autumnal equinox, the sky is high and the clouds are light-Song Cheng Jue's The Legend of the Crown Princess

Hello, hello.

5. Autumn equinox, autumn wind is clear and cold —— Song Xieyi's "Autumn equinox"

This is a good example.

The autumnal equinox is the sixteenth solar term in the twenty-four solar terms of the lunar calendar, and the time is generally from September 22 to 24 of the Gregorian calendar every year. On the day of the autumnal equinox, the sun reaches the longitude 180 (autumnal equinox), almost reaching the equator of the earth, and the length of day and night is equal all over the world (regardless of the refraction of the sun light by the atmosphere and the shadow in the morning).

In ancient times, there was a saying that "the sun is sacrificed in spring, and the moon is sacrificed in autumn", and the autumnal equinox was once a traditional "moon festival". Now Mid-Autumn Festival comes from the traditional Mid-Autumn Festival.

In the autumn equinox, most parts of China have entered a cool autumn. The cold air from the south meets the gradually decaying warm and humid air, which causes repeated precipitation and the temperature drops again and again. As people often say, it's time for "an autumn rain and a cold", but the daily precipitation after the autumnal equinox will not be great. At this time, the field farming in the south and the north is different.

In ancient China, the autumnal equinox was also an important solar term. The ancient emperors had a sacrificial system of "offering sacrifices to the sun at the vernal equinox, to the earth at the summer solstice, to the moon at the autumnal equinox and to the sky at the winter solstice". The places of worship are called Ritan, Ditan, Yuetan and Tiantan, which are distributed in four directions: southeast, northwest and northwest.