Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional customs - What are the cultural flavors of the Inner Mongolian steppe?

What are the cultural flavors of the Inner Mongolian steppe?

The cultural flavor of Inner Mongolia grassland mainly includes these.

The first is that Inner Mongolia is located in the northern border of the motherland, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, there are many grasslands and natural pastures, and Inner Mongolia's grassland is the world's largest natural area of grassland. Therefore, the culture of Inner Mongolia is the most important grassland culture, and the grassland culture has reproduced a lot of humanities as well as natural flavor.

The second is that Naadam is an ancient form of sports activities loved by the Mongolian people in China, but also a traditional folklore activities full of distinctive national characteristics, now held in Xilingol League Naadam is the most traditional representative. "Nadam" is the translation of the Mongolian language, is "entertainment, games" means, used to express the joy of the harvest. Naadam, which begins on the fourth day of the sixth month of the lunar calendar every year, when the sheep are fat and the horses are strong and the grass is green and the flowers are red, is an annual traditional event on the grassland.

The third one is the Andai dance, which has the reputation of "living fossil of Mongolian dance" and is a traditional folk dance mainly popular in the surrounding areas of Tongliao City, Inner Mongolia. According to the relevant historical evidence, An Dai dance first originated in the Kulun Banner area, about the end of the Ming and early Qing dynasties. In the middle of the Qing Dynasty, as the grasslands were flooded with a large number of immigrants from all over the world, the gradual fusion of many different regional cultures and customs formed the Kulun Mongolian culture, which gave birth to a wide range of mass An Dai dance.

The fourth is that the horse-head fiddle plays a representative role in Mongolian music culture, regardless of its modeling and production materials, or its sound quality or music performance style and playing methods, all reflecting the character traits of the Mongolian people, reflecting the nomadic life of the Mongolian people for generations. The Mongolian horse-head fiddle has a long history, as early as in the formation of the Mongolian people, the horse-head fiddle has existed, so it can be said that the horse-head fiddle and the Mongolian people together from the grassland and the history of the development of the past, and carries a rich history and culture.