Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - Chinese traditional joyful events are those

Chinese traditional joyful events are those

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Traditional Chinese celebrations are as follows:

Sitting on the bed and spreading the tent

Sitting on the bed is also known as "sitting on the tent", "sitting on the blessing" or "sitting on the rich and powerful", and the traditional wedding custom is to sit on the wedding bed after the bride enters the wedding room or sit on her knees in the tent. In the traditional wedding customs, the bride into the bridal chamber, to sit on the wedding bed, or sitting cross-knee in the tent, can not walk around. The bride sits in the tent to pay attention to the orientation, to face the direction of the God of Happiness, also known as the God of Good Fortune, is to bless the new couple's happiness and good luck of the God of Good Fortune. The specific orientation of the god of joy, can only listen to Mr. Yin Yang's instructions. Spread the account that a pair of new couples to sit on the wedding bed, the host of the account of the money, happy fruits, etc. to them to sprinkle, sprinkle while singing the account of the song or say auspicious words, for example, "touch a date, lead a small; spread a chestnut, lead a ni; a handful of chestnuts a handful of jujube, a small follow the big one to run.

Weighing the cover

Weighing the cover is the first ceremony after the newlyweds enter the bridal chamber, picking the cover and weighing the red scarf, that is, the groom holding a scale will be the bride used to cover the face of the head of the red scarf pick up. Why do you want to weigh the cover?

The folk saying is that the scale on the scale star is a heavenly phenomenon, that is, the Big Dipper seven stars, six stars plus the three stars of fortune, fortune and longevity, with the scales to pick the cover of the head for good luck. Another theory is that scales and weighing the same sound, scales will be able to pick the cover head.

***Fm radio

***Fm radio is one of the most solemn ceremonies in the cave etiquette, ****Fm radio is also known as fm radio, that is, couples eat a piece of livestock together, which means that couples thereafter, "the body of the same as one". In later generations, the fm radio has gradually evolved into the fm radio ceremony, in which the fm radio is used to make dumplings for the new couple's children and grandchildren. Fm radio, also known as fm radio, fm radio, fm radio, fm radio, fm radio, fm radio, fm radio, fm radio, fm radio, fm radio, fm radio, fm radio, fm radio, fm radio, fm radio, fm radio and fm radio. After the Tang Dynasty, the fm radio ceremony was changed to drinking cup wine, which is usually served in two wooden wine cups tied together with a red thread. The bride and groom each drank half a cup, then exchanged it with each other and drank it all at the same time. Then they throw the cups on the bed together, and if the two cups are tilted together, it is an auspicious omen. "When the woman arrives, the son-in-law invites the woman in and eats from the **** jail, so that they can be close to each other and have the same respect for each other," reads the Rites of Passage and Faintness.

Concentric Knotting of Hair

The first of the eighteen Songs of the Son and the Night by Chao Cai, a female poet of the Tang Dynasty, reads, "I have cut the hair of the clouds, and I have split the hair of the groom. The first of the eighteen songs of the Song of the Son's Night, written by Chao Cai, says: "I have cut the cloud maid, and I have separated the hair of the groom. I will find a place where no one is, and I will make a knot of the same heart. From the description of the poem, the knotting ceremony is the bride and groom each cut off a strand of hair, knotted into a concentric style bun, with the green silk tie concentric. But in fact, the specific operation of the ceremony has varied over the generations.

Pre-Qin, Qin and Han when the knotting of hair, is the bridegroom's hands to remove the bride in the bride's home when the knot of the promised marriage of tassels, re-combing the hair and then tied for it. After the Sui and Tang dynasties, the knotting of hair has evolved into a lock of hair cut by both men and women, pulled into a "bun", indicating that the same heart grows old together.

The "bun" is usually given to the bride to keep or carefully placed under the bed. In ancient times, only the first marriage was eligible to perform the ritual of tying the hair.