Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - The Mid-Autumn Festival handwritten newspaper is simple and easy to draw.

The Mid-Autumn Festival handwritten newspaper is simple and easy to draw.

Share a wave of simple and vivid Mid-Autumn handwritten newspapers. Come and code them!

Mid-Autumn Festival, also known as Moon Festival, Moonlight Birthday, Moon Festival, Autumn Festival, Mid-Autumn Festival, Moon Festival, Moon Festival and Reunion Festival, is a traditional folk festival in China. The Mid-Autumn Festival originated from the worship of celestial phenomena and evolved from the worship of the autumn moon in ancient times. Since ancient times, Mid-Autumn Festival has had folk customs such as offering sacrifices to the moon, enjoying the moon, eating moon cakes, watching lanterns, enjoying osmanthus and drinking osmanthus wine. It has been circulating for a long time.

The Mid-Autumn Festival originated in ancient times, popularized in the Han Dynasty and shaped in the Tang Dynasty. Mid-Autumn Festival is a synthesis of autumn seasonal customs, most of which have ancient origins. As one of the important customs of folk festivals, offering sacrifices to the moon has gradually evolved into activities such as appreciating and praising the moon. The Mid-Autumn Festival is a colorful and precious cultural heritage. The full moon is a symbol of people's reunion, a sustenance for missing their hometown and relatives, and hopes for a bumper harvest and happiness.

On May 20th, 2006, the State Council listed it in the first batch of national intangible cultural heritage. Since 2008, Mid-Autumn Festival has been listed as a national statutory holiday.

The origin of Mid-Autumn Festival is closely related to the moon, which is the relic of ancient celestial worship-the custom of respecting the moon. At the autumnal equinox, it is an ancient "Moon Festival". Sacrificing to the moon is a very old custom in China. In fact, it is a ritual activity of the ancients in some places in ancient China to "Moon God". Mid-Autumn Festival comes from the traditional "Autumn Equinox Sacrificing the Moon". In traditional culture, the moon and the sun are the same, and these two alternate celestial bodies become the objects of ancestor worship. The Mid-Autumn Festival originated from the ancient people's sacrifice to the moon, which is the legacy and derivative of China people's custom of offering sacrifices to the moon. Mid-Autumn Festival is a synthesis of autumn seasonal customs, most of which have ancient origins.

Extended Shen Yan

Local proverbs of Mid-Autumn Festival

July 15th Ghost Festival, August 15th People's Month Festival (Zhangjiakou)

Due south on August 15th, melons and pomegranates are full (Xingtai).

Men don't Yue Bai, women don't sacrifice stoves (Shijiazhuang)

Eating moon cakes indiscriminately will kill my father-in-law (Jixian, Jixian custom: the new wife will spend the Mid-Autumn Festival at her husband's house for several years in a row, and so will her mother's family, otherwise she will eat moon cakes indiscriminately)

I went back to Hong Kong to pick up the dragon boat in May, cut crops to earn money in June, burn paper in July, and earn money to buy cakes and taste the Mid-Autumn Festival in August (Maoming).

Winter is not enough, summer is not enough, 15 expires in August (Guangzhou, Mid-Autumn Festival, rich in fruits).

On August 15, workers stop working and teach from the winter solstice (in Shaanxi, workers stop working on the Mid-Autumn Festival and teachers are invited from the winter solstice).

By Mid-Autumn Festival, the game touches autumn (Tujia nationality in western Hubei)