According to the results of the perpetual calendar, the Mid-Autumn Festival in 2020 is on the 15th day of the eighth lunar month, and the Gregorian calendar is 2020 10/day, which coincides with China's National Day and the beginning of the National Day holiday. For people who are used to studying, working and living, and need to relax, this is really a good day for three happiness.
National Day of Mid-Autumn Festival in 2020: Thursday, 2020 1 October 01Sunday, August 15th, Year of the Rat.
Mid-Autumn Festival National Day holiday in 2020:
In 20 17, Mid-Autumn Festival and National Day holidays happened to coincide. One * * * is eight days, of which the legal holidays are three days for National Day, one day for Mid-Autumn Festival, and the other four days are obtained by combining Saturday and Sunday with holidays. I believe that the Mid-Autumn National Day in 2020 is also a holiday for 8 days. What is the Mid-Autumn Festival for?
1, enjoy the moon
The custom of enjoying the moon in the Mid-Autumn Festival comes from offering sacrifices to the moon. With the passage of time, serious sacrifices have become relaxed pleasures. Folk Mid-Autumn Festival activities began in Wei and Jin Dynasties, but they did not become a habit. In the Tang Dynasty, it was quite popular to enjoy and play with the moon in the Mid-Autumn Festival, and many poets wrote poems about the moon in their masterpieces. By the time of the Song Dynasty, a Mid-Autumn Festival centered on the activities of appreciating the moon was formed and officially designated as the Mid-Autumn Festival.
2. Watch the tide
In ancient times, in addition to enjoying the moon in the Mid-Autumn Festival in Zhejiang, tide watching was another Mid-Autumn Festival event. The custom of watching tide in Mid-Autumn Festival has a long history, which was described in detail in Mei Cheng's Fu of Seven Hair in Han Dynasty. After the Han Dynasty, the Mid-Autumn Festival tide watching became more popular. The records of tide-watching in Zhu Tinghuan's Supplementing Wulin Past Events in Ming Dynasty and Meng Liang Lu by Zi Mu in Song and Wu Dynasties show that tide-watching reached its peak in the Mid-Autumn Festival in Song Dynasty.
3. Burn the lamp
On the night of Mid-Autumn Festival, there is a custom of burning lanterns to help the moonlight. The internal combustion candle of Mid-Autumn Night Lantern is tied to a bamboo pole with a rope, hung high on the tile eaves or terrace, or made into various shapes with small lights, and hung at the height of the house, commonly known as the Mid-Autumn Festival in the tree or the Mid-Autumn Festival in the vertical direction. Nowadays, there is still a custom of burning lamps on the tower with tiles stacked on it in Huguang area.
4. Eat moon cakes
Eating moon cakes during Mid-Autumn Festival is a necessary custom in all parts of China. Since ancient times, people have regarded moon cakes as a symbol of good luck and reunion. Every Mid-Autumn Festival, when the bright moon is in the sky, the whole family is reunited, and the cakes and the moon are a symbol of the moon. It is this desire for reunion that forms the custom of eating moon cakes in the Mid-Autumn Festival.
5. Drink osmanthus wine
In the Mid-Autumn Festival, people have the custom of drinking osmanthus wine since ancient times. On Mid-Autumn Night, looking up at the bright moon, smelling the bursts of Gui Xiang, thinking of WU GANG cutting osmanthus, drinking a cup of sweet osmanthus wine and getting the whole family together has become a holiday enjoyment. What can't the Mid-Autumn Festival do?
Generally divided into two types, female and male. Generally speaking, it is best for women to tie their hair and dress more appropriately. In ancient times, girls paid more attention to external image. Men try to avoid the moon, because it is said in the photo book that men will have the possibility of declining yang when enjoying the moon. These numerology requirements are not necessarily true now, but the traditional customs are better respected.
1, female friends must stroke their forehead hair to the back or sides, and never let the forehead be covered by hair, because this is where your magic lamp is.
2. Those who have just moved recently, but have no troubles after moving, or feel that their health and fortune are not good after moving, watch the moon cautiously. Those who have been frustrated recently, such as those who are frustrated in officialdom, losing money in business, and unlucky things coming one after another, please be sure not to enjoy the moon.
3. You have recently given birth or given birth to a baby, so it is not appropriate to watch the moon, even on the balcony at home.
4. Those who have just moved recently, but have no troubles after moving, or feel that their health and fortune are not good after moving, watch the moon cautiously.
5. For whatever reason, if a man and a woman have just broken up, their male friends are not allowed to enjoy the moon, let alone act in the field of the full moon.
6. Both men and women should be cautious in doing things for men and women in front of the full moon, especially outdoors and in the wild.
7. Whether you can get married in the Mid-Autumn Festival, from the big principle, of course, there is no problem. But for specific individuals, it is necessary to analyze and treat specific problems.
8. Getting married in the Mid-Autumn Festival is not necessarily a double happiness. Especially for friends who are jealous this year, such as snakes, rats, tigers, monkeys and pigs, we should pay more attention.
9. There was a saying in the street that the fifteenth day of the lunar calendar is not necessarily a good day, so is the fifteenth day of July, and so is the fifteenth day of August under certain circumstances, so be cautious.
10 Mid-Autumn Festival Yue Bai is a traditional Mid-Autumn Festival project. But there is a taboo that men can't worship the moon. Because the moon belongs to the lunar calendar, and the goddess Chang 'e is a female, Yue Bai activities can only be attended by women. Qing Fucha Dunchong's "Yanjing Years": Therefore, there is a saying in the capital that men don't Yue Bai and women don't sacrifice stoves.