Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - What are the pictures of traditional festivals in China?

What are the pictures of traditional festivals in China?

Spring Festival (the first day of the first lunar month); Lantern Festival (15th day of the first lunar month); Tomb-Sweeping Day (after April 5th of Gregorian calendar); Dragon Boat Festival (the fifth day of the fifth lunar month); China Valentine's Day (the seventh day of the seventh lunar month); Mid-Autumn Festival (the 15th day of the seventh lunar month); Mid-Autumn Festival (August 15th of the lunar calendar); Double Ninth Festival (the ninth day of the ninth lunar month); Next Yuan Festival (October 15th of the lunar calendar); New Year's Eve (December 30th of the lunar calendar)? Wait a minute.

Twenty-four solar terms: beginning of spring, rain, fright, vernal equinox, Qingming, Grain Rain, Changxia, Xiaoman, Mangzhong, Summer Solstice, Xiaoshu, beginning of autumn, Chushu, Bailu, Autumn Equinox, Cold Dew, Chufrost, beginning of winter, light snow, heavy snow, winter solstice, slight cold and severe cold.

The traditional festivals in China embodies the national spirit and feelings of the Chinese nation, carries the cultural blood and ideological essence of the Chinese nation, and is a distinctive cultural symbol and cultural memory that China people will never forget.