Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - Does Jingxing Lahua come from a palace or a temple?

Does Jingxing Lahua come from a palace or a temple?

Lahua originated from folk festivals, temple fairs, sacrificial ceremonies and flower exhibitions in street squares, and was recorded in Yuanhe County Records written in the eighth year of Yuanhe in Tang Dynasty (8 13).

When and where Lahua was born and formed, there is no record in history, and there is no text to test it, but there are different opinions, such as Song, Jin, Yuan, Ming and Qing Dynasties, or native, or imported from other places, without conclusive evidence, can only be said to be legends.

In the Ming Dynasty, Zhu Yuanzhang carried out the policy of "emigrating to settle the field", which led to two large-scale immigrants, 1373 and 1388, respectively, from southern Shanxi, Jinzhong and southeastern Shanxi, which were densely populated and less war-torn. As a result, Jingxing has added 100 more than ten Jin villages and dozens of Jin surnames. Some foreign folk art forms followed and blossomed in Jingxing. The "Dilahua" generation, one of the tables in "Flowers in Jingxing" and "Bears of Merchants", is the immigrants in this period, and it is also clearly pointed out in the legend of the origin of "Flowers in Jingxing". "Dance History of China" mentioned: "Amin Lv Yao once saw a variety of folk dances in Hongdong County, Shanxi Province. For example, "Umbrella Dance" with a small umbrella, and "Flower Board Dance" dancing while wearing sandals. " Folk dance activities are out of sight now, but umbrellas and boards are indispensable props in pulling flowers.