Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - Please draw a picture for the Mid-Autumn Festival in a paragraph.

Please draw a picture for the Mid-Autumn Festival in a paragraph.

The Mid-Autumn Festival is coming. On this reunion day, I got together with my family, ate moon cakes and put out lanterns, and had a good time.

Introduction: Mid-Autumn Festival, also known as Moon Festival, Autumn Festival, Mid-Autumn Festival, August Festival, Moon Chasing Festival, Moon Appreciating Festival, Daughter's Day or Reunion Festival, is a popular traditional cultural festival of many nationalities and countries in China Chinese character cultural circle, which falls on the 15th day of the eighth lunar month. Because its value is only half that of Sanqiu, it is named, and some places set the Mid-Autumn Festival on August 16.

Origin: Mid-Autumn Festival began in the early years of the Tang Dynasty and prevailed in the Song Dynasty. By the Ming and Qing Dynasties, it had become one of the traditional festivals in China, which was as famous as the Spring Festival. Influenced by China culture, Mid-Autumn Festival is also a traditional festival for overseas Chinese in some countries in East and Southeast Asia, especially local Chinese. Since 2008, Mid-Autumn Festival has been listed as a national statutory holiday. On May 20th, 2006, it was listed in the first batch of national intangible cultural heritage by the State Council.

Banquet custom: people sit around and taste, accompanied by wine and vinegar. Drink Su Ye Tang after eating and wash your hands with it. The banquet table was filled with flowers, pomegranates and other fashionable things, and the Mid-Autumn Festival drama was staged. In the Qing Palace, a courtyard placed a screen to the east, with cockscomb flowers, soybean crafts, taro, peanuts, radishes and fresh lotus roots on both sides of the screen. There is a square table in front of the screen, with an extra-large moon cake on it, surrounded by cakes and fruits. After the Mid-Autumn Festival, mooncakes are cut into several pieces according to the royal population, and each person symbolically tastes them, which is called "eating reunion cakes". The size of moon cakes in Qing Palace is unimaginable. For example, the moon cake given by the last emperor Puyi to Ying Shao, Minister of the Interior, was "about two feet in diameter and weighed about twenty pounds". Banquet custom of Mid-Autumn Festival In ancient China, the court was the most elegant.

Legend: the Goddess Chang'e flying to the moon, WU GANG, laurel, Jade Rabbit.

Traditional activities: offering sacrifices to the moon, enjoying the moon, Yue Bai, watching tides, guessing games, eating moon cakes, enjoying osmanthus, drinking osmanthus wine, etc.