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The Spring Festival
The oldest and most important festival in China is the Spring Festival is celebrates the earth coming back to life, and the start of ploughing and sowing.
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The
Spring Festival |
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The
oldest and most important festival in China is the Spring
Festival, more commonly known in the West as Chinese New
Year. Like all Chinese festivals, the date of the new year
is determined by the lunar/solar calendar rather than the
Western (Gregorian) calendar, so the date of the holiday
varies from late January to mid February. |
The
Spring festival celebrates the earth coming back to life,
and the start of ploughing and sowing. In the past, feudal
rulers of dynasties placed great importance on this occasion,
and ceremonies to usher in the season were performed. |
Preparations
for the New Year festival start during the last few days
of the last moon. Houses are thoroughly cleaned, debts
repaid, hair cut and new clothes bought. Doors are decorated
with vertical scrolls of characters on red paper whose
texts seek good luck and praise nature, this practice stemming
from the hanging of peach-wood charms to keep away ghosts
and evil spirits. In many homes incense is burned, and
also in the temples as a mark of respect to ancestors. |
On
New Year's Eve houses are brightly lit and a large family
dinner is served. In the south of China sticky-sweet glutinous
rice pudding called nian gao is served, while in the north
the steamed dumpling jiaozi is popular. Most celebrating
the festival stay up till midnight , when fireworks are
lit, to drive away evil spirits. New Years day is often
spent visiting neighbours, family and friends. |
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The
public holiday for New Year lasts 3 days in China , but
the festival traditionally lasts till the 15th day of the
lunar month and ends with the ¡®Lantern Festival'.
Here, houses are decorated with colourful lanterns, and
yuanxiao, a sweet or savoury fried or boiled dumpling made
of glutinous rice flour is eaten. |
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