Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - New Year's Day Party Performances

New Year's Day Party Performances

The New Year's Day party is one of the school's traditional cultural activities.

The New Year’s Day party mainly consists of cultural activities. The 1988 CCTV New Year's Day Party holds a variety of activities to celebrate New Year's Day every year. China Central Television also holds a party on New Year's Day night, which is one of the biggest highlights of all New Year's Day parties.

The New Year's Day party is one of the school's traditional cultural activities. It can further enrich campus cultural life, create a positive, blooming, elegant, healthy and civilized campus cultural atmosphere, and enrich the spare time cultural life of our school students. , strengthen the construction of spiritual civilization on campus, and demonstrate the spirit of unity, innovation, enterprising and vigorous spirit of teachers and students of the school.

At the same time, it also provides students with an opportunity to train themselves and a stage to show themselves, inspiring students to love school and art, study diligently, and strive to become talents, and constantly improve their overall quality. Promote the construction of spiritual civilization on campus!

Introduction to New Year's Day

New Year's Day, January 1 of the Gregorian calendar, is commonly known as "New Year" in most countries around the world. Yuan means "beginning", and the beginning of any number is called "yuan"; Dan means "day"; "New Year's Day" means "the initial day". "New Year's Day" usually refers to the first day of the first month in the calendar.

In our country, the word "New Year's Day" has existed since ancient times. It was first seen in the "Book of Jin" in literary works. "New Year's Day" in the history of our country refers to the "first day of the first month". The calculation method of "first month" was very inconsistent before the period of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty. The date of New Year's Day (the first day of the first month) in the past dynasties was not consistent.

After the Revolution of 1911, in order to "make Xia Zhengzheng, so it follows the agricultural season, and follow the Western calendar, so it is convenient for statistics", it was decided to use the Gregorian calendar in the first year of the Republic of China (actually used in 1912), and stipulated that January 1 of the Gregorian calendar It is called "New Year", but it is not called "New Year's Day". In 1949, the People's Republic of China adopted January 1st of the Gregorian calendar as New Year's Day. Therefore, "New Year's Day" is also called "Gregorian Year", "New Calendar Year" or "Gregorian Calendar Year" in China.