Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - The moon is full of the capital, the love of China handbook

The moon is full of the capital, the love of China handbook

China is a multi-ethnic country with a long history of 5,000 years, and in the course of its continuous development, it has formed a lot of unique traditional festivals, which are diversified and rich in content. Festivals are an important carrier of the spirit and emotion of the Chinese nation. Festival culture is y rooted in the people, with strong vitality, through the changes of the years, gradually become a precious heritage of the splendid culture of the Chinese nation. The Mid-Autumn Festival has been practiced since ancient times, with customs such as sacrificing to the moon, enjoying the moon, worshipping the moon, eating mooncakes, enjoying osmanthus blossoms, drinking osmanthus wine, etc., which have been passed down to the present day and continue to be practiced to this day. The Mid-Autumn Festival has become a colorful and precious cultural heritage, with the fullness of the moon as an omen for the reunion of people, as a token of longing for one's hometown and relatives, and as a prayer for a good harvest and happiness. The Mid-Autumn Festival is celebrated on the fifteenth day of the eighth month of the lunar calendar. This is a festival that has always been described as the most humane and poetic. Whenever you have a good holiday, you will miss your family more than ever, and this Mid-Autumn Festival will certainly be even more y missed!

For thousands of years, the full moon of the Mid-Autumn Festival has been hanging high in the spiritual starry sky of the Chinese people, supporting the feelings of attachment to home and country, illuminating the eyes of those who are homesick for their relatives, and guiding the way to the reunion of the family. The Mid-Autumn Festival is a poetic romance, but also a rich emotional ****ming and cultural identity, embedded in the children of China's small family reunion, the happiness of all the people, the country's prosperity and the pursuit of peace.

The Mid-Autumn Festival, also known as the Moon Festival, the Autumn Festival, the Mid-Autumn Festival, the August Festival, the August Festival, the August Meeting, the Moon Chasing Festival, the Moon Festival, the Moon Playing Festival, the Moon Worshipping Festival, the Daughters' Festival, or the Festival of Reunion, is a traditional cultural festival that is popular among the many ethnic groups in China and the countries of the Hanzi Cultural Circle, and the festival is an important carrier for the spirit and emotions of the Chinese nation. Festivals are an important carrier of the spirit and emotion of the Chinese nation. The festival culture is y rooted in the people, has a strong and vivid vitality, and has gradually become a precious legacy of the splendid culture of the Chinese nation through the changes of the years. The Mid-Autumn Festival began in the early years of the Tang Dynasty, flourished in the Song Dynasty, to the Ming and Qing Dynasties, has become one of the Chinese traditional festivals with the Spring Festival.

Early in the morning, children dressed in Han Dynasty 襦襦, engraved with a garden of good scenery, everywhere can be painted. Singing Mid-Autumn Festival, the new singing of ancient poems "Silent Night Thoughts" interpreted the charm of traditional culture; "Full Moon on the 15th of August", "I Play Mooncake for Grandpa" sang the meaning of reunion; "Moon Girl", "Mid-Autumn Festival" is to understand the Mid-Autumn Festival interesting things. The beauty of Chinese dress was shown in the children's knitted brows, smile, song and dance. Integrating traditional Chinese culture into education enriches the life of young children, who feel the ancient traditional culture of China and the ancient ritual of Chinese dress. During the Mid-Autumn Festival, the moon is full of flowers. Mooncakes are sweet and fragrant, wearing Chinese dress, chanting poems, endless ancient music and ancient songs, presenting an audio-visual feast through the past and present, more poetic.