Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - What festivals are there in China?

What festivals are there in China?

The festivals in China include: Spring Festival, Lantern Festival, Dragon Head Raising, Social Day, Shangsi Festival, Cold Food Festival, Tomb-Sweeping Day, Dragon Boat Festival, China Valentine's Day, Mid-Autumn Festival, Double Ninth Festival, Xiayuan Festival, Winter Solstice Festival and New Year's Eve. The traditional festivals and dates in China are as follows:

1, Spring Festival: The first day of the first month, the Lunar New Year, is the beginning of a year and a traditional "festival". 2. Lantern Festival (Shangyuan Festival): The 15th day of the first month, also known as Shangyuan Festival, Xiao Yuan Festival, Yuanxi Festival or Lantern Festival, is the 15th day of the first lunar month every year and is one of the traditional festivals in China. 3. Land Birthday: The second day of February, also known as "Society Day", is divided into Spring Society Day and Autumn Society Day. Spring Club is the fifth May Day after beginning of spring, and Autumn Club is the fifth May Day after beginning of autumn. 4. Shangsi Festival: The third day of March is a traditional folk festival in China. This festival can be traced back to the end of the spring and autumn period in the text description, and it is the most important festival in the ancient "bath removal" activities. 5. Cold Food Festival: the day before Tomb-Sweeping Day, from summer to the future 105, and one or two days before Tomb-Sweeping Day. When the first day of the day is a holiday, smoking is forbidden and only cold food is eaten. 6. Tomb-Sweeping Day: Around April 5th in the solar calendar, it is also called outing festival, outing festival, March festival and ancestor worship festival, and the festival is at the turn of mid-spring and late spring. 7. Dragon Boat Festival: On the fifth day of May, it is also called Duanyang Festival, Noon Festival, Noon Festival, Dragon Boat Festival, Zhengyang Festival, Magnolia Festival and Tianzhong Festival. 8. Tanabata: The seventh day of July, also known as Begging for Cleverness Festival, Seven Clever Days, Double Seven Days, Incense Day, Sunday, Blue Night, Daughter's Day or Seven Sisters's birthday. The legend of Cowherd and Weaver Girl on Tanabata comes from people's worship of natural phenomena. 9. July 30th (Mid-Autumn Festival): July 14/ 15, that is, the ancestor worship festival on July 30th, also known as Stone Drum Festival, Ghost Festival, Solitary Festival and Local Official Festival. Festival customs mainly include ancestor worship, setting off river lanterns, worshipping the dead and burning paper ingots. 10, Mid-Autumn Festival: August 15, also known as Mid-Autumn Festival, August Festival, Moon Chasing Festival, Moon Worship Festival, Daughter's Day or Reunion Festival, is a traditional cultural festival popular in many ethnic groups in China and countries in the cultural circle of Chinese characters.