The contents of the Mid-Autumn Festival handwritten newspaper can be written as follows: the introduction of the Mid-Autumn Festival, the origin of the Mid-Autumn Festival, the main customs of the Mid-Autumn Festival, the legend of the Mid-Autumn Festival, Mid-Autumn Festival poetry and so on.
Extended answer:
1 Introduction to Mid-Autumn Festival: The 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 major festivals in China with the same reputation as the Spring Festival. Influenced by Chinese culture, Mid-Autumn Festival is also a traditional festival for overseas Chinese in some countries in East and Southeast Asia, especially local Chinese. Mid-Autumn Festival has been listed as a national legal holiday since 2008. On May 20th, 2006, the State Council was listed in the first batch of national intangible cultural heritage.
2. Origin of Mid-Autumn Festival: The origin of Mid-Autumn Festival is related to agricultural production. Autumn is the harvest season. The word "autumn" is interpreted as "autumn when the crops are ripe". Mid-Autumn Festival in August, crops and various fruits are maturing one after another. In order to celebrate the harvest and express their joy, farmers take "Mid-Autumn Festival" as a festival. "Mid-Autumn Festival" means the middle of autumn. The August of the lunar calendar is a month in the middle of autumn, and the 15th is a day in the middle of this month. Therefore, the Mid-Autumn Festival may be a custom inherited from the ancient autumn newspaper.
3. The main customs of Mid-Autumn Festival are: appreciating the moon, eating moon cakes and tasting Osmanthus Jelly.
4. Legend of Mid-Autumn Festival: WU GANG lost laurels. According to legend, there was a man named WU GANG in the Moon Palace, who was from Xihe, Han Dynasty. He once followed the immortals to the celestial world, but he made a mistake. The immortals relegated him to the Moon Palace and cut down the laurel trees in front of the Moon Palace every day as a punishment. This osmanthus tree grows luxuriantly, with a height of more than 500 feet. Every time it is cut down, the cut place will be closed immediately. Li Bai wrote in the poem "Give Cui Sihu Wen Kun Ji": "If you want to stay in the middle of the moon, you will be paid for the cold."
5. Mid-Autumn Poetry: Looking at the Moon on Fifteen Nights (Tang) Wang Jian
In the atrium, there are crows in Bai Shu, and osmanthus fragrans in Coody Leng. I don't know who Qiu Si will fall into tonight.
Edited on 2019/09/08
View all 26 answers
Flag-JD.COM mother and baby, baby is comfortable, mommy is at ease!
Recommended information about flags worth seeing.
Flag, "JD.COM Maternal and Infant" is a good thing with high quality and low price. Mommy is a wise choice for baby-rearing. Take good care of it and the baby will grow up healthily!
Beijing JD.COM Century Information Technology Co., Ltd.
Mid-Autumn Festival Gifts-Hairy crabs are so popular
Recommended information about Mid-Autumn Festival ceremony worth seeing.
Mid-Autumn Festival gifts, "Su Xie Nong" hairy crab gift certificate/gift box order, go to "Su Xie Nong"-a 20-year-old shop, millions of customers have certified a good reputation, hairy crab gift certificate is popular in the Mid-Autumn Festival, enterprises purchase, large quantity and excellent price!
Suzhou sunong agriculture development co., ltd. advertisement
42 comments
Enthusiastic netizen 37
The avatar is very nice
See all 42 comments.
After you read it, the following is more interesting—
How to write the contents of the Mid-Autumn Festival handwritten newspaper
Description of Mid-Autumn Festival: Mid-Autumn Festival, also known as Moon Festival, Autumn Festival, Mid-Autumn Festival, August Festival, Moon Chasing Festival, Moon-playing Festival, Daughter's Day or Reunion Festival, is a traditional cultural festival popular in many ethnic groups in China and countries in the cultural circle of Chinese characters, which falls on the 15th day of the eighth lunar month. Because it is just half the value of Sanqiu, hence the name, some places set the Mid-Autumn Festival on August 16th. The 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 major festivals in China with the same reputation as the Spring Festival. Influenced by Chinese culture, Mid-Autumn Festival is also a traditional festival for overseas Chinese in some countries in East and Southeast Asia, especially local Chinese. Mid-Autumn Festival has been listed as a national legal holiday since 2008. On May 20th, 2006, the State Council was listed in the first batch of national intangible cultural heritage. The Mid-Autumn Festival has had the custom of offering sacrifices to the moon, enjoying the moon, eating moon cakes, enjoying osmanthus, drinking osmanthus wine, etc. since ancient times, and it has spread to this day and lasted for a long time. The Mid-Autumn Festival is a colorful and precious cultural heritage, with the full moon as a sign of people's reunion, as the sustenance of missing their hometown and their loved ones, and hoping for a bumper harvest and happiness. Mid-Autumn Festival, Dragon Boat Festival, Spring Festival and Tomb-Sweeping Day are also called the four traditional festivals in China. Origin of Mid-Autumn Festival: There are many opinions about the origin of Mid-Autumn Festival. The word Mid-Autumn Festival was first seen in Zhou Li, and The Book of Rites and the Moon Order said: "The Mid-Autumn Moon nurtures aging and follows a porridge diet." One said that it originated from the sacrificial activities of ancient emperors. It is recorded in the Book of Rites that "the sun rises in the spring, and the moon falls in the autumn", and the moon is a sacrifice to the moon, indicating that as early as the Spring and Autumn Period, emperors began to sacrifice to the moon and Yue Bai. Later, aristocratic officials and scholars followed suit and gradually spread to the people. Second, the origin of Mid-Autumn Festival is related to agricultural production. Autumn is the harvest season. The word "autumn" is interpreted as "autumn when the crops are ripe". Mid-Autumn Festival in August, crops and various fruits are maturing one after another. In order to celebrate the harvest and express their joy, farmers take "Mid-Autumn Festival" as a festival. "Mid-Autumn Festival" means the middle of autumn. The August of the lunar calendar is a month in the middle of autumn, and the 15th is a day in the middle of this month. Therefore, the Mid-Autumn Festival may be a custom inherited from the ancient autumn newspaper. Some historians have also pointed out that the origin of Mid-Autumn Festival should be August 15th, 13th year of Daye in Tang Jun at the end of Sui Dynasty. Peiji, Tang Jun, with the idea of a full moon, successfully invented moon cakes and distributed them to the army as military salaries, which successfully solved the problem of military rations derived from absorbing a large number of anti-Sui rebels. The main customs of the Mid-Autumn Festival are: 1, Appreciating the Moon in the Mid-Autumn Festival Every time the Mid-Autumn Festival comes, there has been a custom of appreciating the moon in China since ancient times, and it has become a long-standing topic for people to talk about. Tracing back to the origin of enjoying the moon in the Mid-Autumn Festival, according to "Preface to Chang 'an's Poems on Playing with the Moon", "Autumn is in time, then summer is in winter; August is in autumn, and the season begins and ends in Meng; On the fifteenth night, in the middle of the month. If you take it from heaven, it will be cold and hot, and if you take it from the number of months, it will be round. " In other words, August 15th is in the middle of August in autumn, hence the name "Mid-Autumn Festival". Why do people love the Mid-Autumn Festival to enjoy the moon? There is a poem saying, "There is a bright moon at four o'clock, so why celebrate the Mid-Autumn Festival? Yaotai Baojian should be the highest head of Yuyu; Release Bai Hao thousands of feet, scattered into too empty color. Vientiane enters my eyes, the stars avoid glory, and the wind dew helps the quiet. " 2, eat moon cakes, Chinese urban and rural people have the custom of eating moon cakes during the Mid-Autumn Festival, as the saying goes: "August 15 is full, Mid-Autumn Moon cakes are sweet and fragrant." Moon cakes were originally used as sacrifices to the moon god. The word "moon cakes" first appeared in Wu Zimu's Dream of the Liang Lu in the Southern Song Dynasty. At that time, it was just a cake-shaped food like Linghua cake. Later, people gradually combined the Mid-Autumn Festival with mooncake tasting, which symbolizes family reunion. Mooncakes were originally made at home, and the practice of mooncakes was recorded in Yuan Mei's Sui Garden Food List in Qing Dynasty. In modern times, with workshops specializing in making moon cakes, the production of moon cakes has become more and more elaborate, with exquisite fillings and beautiful appearance. There are also various exquisite patterns printed on the outside of moon cakes, such as "the Goddess Chang'e flying to the moon", "jathyapple on the Milky Way" and "Three Tans Printing the Moon". It has become the wish of people all over the world to show people's reunion with the full moon, to show people's eternal life with the full moon cake, to pin their thoughts on their hometown and their loved ones, and to pray for a bumper harvest and happiness. Mooncakes are also used as gifts to send relatives and friends and to connect feelings. Legend of Mid-Autumn Festival: 1, the Goddess Chang'e flying to the moon in ancient times, there were ten days in the sky at the same time, which scorched the crops and made the people miserable. A hero named Hou Yi was of infinite strength. He sympathized with the suffering people, drew his bow, shot down more than nine suns in one breath, and ordered the last one to rise and fall on time for the benefit of the people. Hou Yi's wife's name is Chang 'e. Hou Yi spent all his time with his wife except hunting. Many people with lofty ideals came here to study as a teacher, and Peng Meng, who had ulterior motives, also mixed in. One day, Hou Yi visited friends in Kunlun Mountain and asked the Queen Mother for a pack of elixir. It is said that taking this medicine can instantly ascend to heaven and become immortal. However, Hou Yi was reluctant to leave his wife and temporarily gave the immortal medicine to Chang 'e for collection. Chang 'e hid the medicine in the treasure box of the dresser. Three days later, Hou Yi led his followers out hunting, and Peng Meng, who had ulterior motives, pretended to be ill and did not go out. Soon after Hou Yi led the crowd away, Peng Meng broke into the backyard of the inner house with a sword and threatened Chang 'e to hand over the elixir. Chang 'e knew that she was no match for Peng Meng. In a crisis, she turned and opened the treasure box, took out the elixir and swallowed it in one gulp. Chang 'e swallowed the medicine and immediately floated off the ground, rushed out of the window and flew to the sky. Because Chang 'e was concerned about her husband, she flew to the nearest moon and became a fairy. In the evening, when Hou Yi came home, the maids cried about what happened during the day. Hou Yi was shocked and angry, and drew his sword to kill the villains. Peng Meng had already fled. Hou Yi was so angry that he was heartbroken and looked up at the night sky to call Chang 'e. At this time, he found that today's moon was exceptionally bright and bright, and there was a shaking figure resembling Chang 'e. When Hou Yi missed his wife, he sent someone to Chang 'e's favorite back garden, put a table incense, put on Chang 'e's favorite honey and fresh fruit, and offered a remote sacrifice to Chang 'e in the moon palace. After hearing the news that the Goddess Chang'e flying to the moon became an immortal, people set up incense tables under the moon to pray for good luck and peace to the kind Chang 'e. Since then, the custom of Yue Bai in Mid-Autumn Festival has spread among the people. 2, WU GANG, according to legend, there was a man named WU GANG in the Moon Palace, who was a native of Xihe in the Han Dynasty. He once followed the immortal to cultivate in heaven, but he made a mistake. The immortal relegated him to the Moon Palace and cut down the laurel trees in front of the Moon Palace every day as a punishment. This osmanthus tree grows luxuriantly, with a height of more than 500 feet. Every time it is cut down, the cut place will be closed immediately. Li Bai wrote in the poem "Give Cui Sihu Wen Kun Ji": "If you want to stay in the middle of the moon, you will be paid for the cold." Mid-Autumn Poems: Looking at the Moon on Fifteen Nights (Tang Dynasty): Bai Shu Crow in Wang Jian's Atrium, Coody Leng Silent Wet Osmanthus. I don't know who Qiu Si will fall into tonight. "Mid-Autumn Festival" (Tang Dynasty) Li Puhao's spirit rose in the sky, and there was silence between the clouds. A round of equal shares is full, and it is accompanied by thousands of miles of clouds. The sly rabbit falls from the string, and the demon frog rests in front of him. Lingcha plans to join hands with each other until the Milky Way is completely clear. "Playing with the Moon on the 15th of August" (Tang) Liu Yuxi will wash the world again tonight. The summer is gone, and the autumn is clear. The stars shine, and the wind shines brilliantly. Can change the human world, Youran is Yujing. "Mid-Autumn Moon" (Song Dynasty) Su Shi's twilight clouds are all overflowing and cold, and the silver and the Chinese turn to the jade plate silently. This life is not a good night, where to see the bright moon next year.
3522 likes110,605 Browse 2017-118.
What are the contents of the Mid-Autumn Festival handwritten newspaper?
The contents and materials of the Mid-Autumn Festival handwritten newspaper are as follows: Interesting customs of Mid-Autumn Festival After the Ming and Qing Dynasties in Yue Bai, due to the relationship of the times, the practical utilitarian factors in social life were prominent, the secular interest in Japan and China was rich in Yu Yi, the lyrical and mythical literati tradition centered on "appreciating the moon" weakened, and utilitarian worship, prayer and secular feelings and wishes constituted the main forms of the Mid-Autumn Festival custom of ordinary people. Therefore, "folk Yue Bai" has become a reunion that people yearn for. The Mid-Autumn Festival has a long history. Like other traditional festivals, it is also slowly developed. Ancient emperors have a ritual system of offering sacrifices to the sun in spring and the moon in autumn. As early as the book Zhou Li, the word "Mid-Autumn Festival" has been recorded. Later, nobles and scholars followed suit, and in the Mid-Autumn Festival, they watched the bright and round moon in the sky, worshipping and pinning their feelings. Mid-Autumn Festival nursery rhymes Minnan nursery rhymes-"Mid-Autumn Festival Bo Cake" Mid-Autumn Festival full moon mirror, according to the light of the four circles. Mooncakes are abundant in the streets and lanes, and there is a loud noise inside. Sun carefully showed off Han Bo, but sister Bo didn't let his big brother. Bo won against Tang Anma, and Grandpa won the Zhuangyuan cake. Mid-Autumn Festival greetings This year, the fifteenth moon finally comes round on the fifteenth day. Let the roundest moon accompany you and me, and let the moon convey my wishes and blessings: I wish you a happy Mid-Autumn Festival, and the moon is full of people and everything is round! Send you a round cake, a round heart, a round feeling and a round dream. Happy Mid-Autumn Festival! 2. The twilight clouds gradually clear and the full moon rises, and the wind and clouds cover the sky and the earth; Looking at the former residence thousands of miles away, the feelings and dreams are around; Poor autumn night in the fifteenth middle school, I miss love for thousands of years; The prodigal son is helpless and free, and Wanshui Qian Shan expresses his feelings; I am secretly happy to have three days off, sitting around the moon and having a reunion; It's Mid-Autumn Festival again. I wish you a happy family reunion and a bright moon night! Handwritten newspaper is another form of newspaper that can be circulated, watched and posted. In school, handwritten newspaper is a good form of activity in the second class, which is quite flexible and free. Handwritten newspapers are also a mass propaganda tool. It is equivalent to a smaller version of the blackboard newspaper. To run a handwritten newspaper, on the whole, we must first establish the theme. The layout of the first issue of handwritten newspaper is very limited. To make it unique, we must highlight a theme in the content, so that the theme is prominent and colorful. Layout and beautification design should also focus on the theme, determine the seriousness and liveliness of the form according to the theme and the content of the article, and achieve the unity of form and content. Matters needing attention Article ① The font should be neat and beautiful, and no typos should be written. (2) if two or more people copy together, pay attention to the font should be unified. (3) at the beginning of the text should be empty two boxes before writing. ④ It is best to use black ink. ⑤ Keep the newspaper clean and tidy. The significance of handwritten newspapers Running handwritten newspapers is a comprehensive practical activity, which can cultivate students' practical and mental abilities, stimulate students' innovative consciousness and thirst for knowledge, and also improve students' comprehensive literacy in information collection, art design, calligraphy and writing. [2]
6 Zan181Browsing 20 19-08- 10
What can I write in the Mid-Autumn Festival handwritten newspaper?
Introduction to Mid-Autumn Festival: The 15th day of the eighth lunar month is the traditional Mid-Autumn Festival. This is the middle of autumn, so it is called Mid-Autumn Festival. In China's lunar calendar, a year is divided into four seasons, and each season is divided into three parts: Meng, Zhong and Ji, so Mid-Autumn Festival is also called Mid-Autumn Festival. The moon on August 15th is rounder and brighter than the full moons in other months, so it is also called "Moonshine" and "August Festival". On this night, people look up at the bright moon in the sky like a jade plate, and naturally look forward to family reunion. Wanderers who are far away from home also take this opportunity to pin their thoughts on their hometown and relatives. Therefore, the Mid-Autumn Festival is also called the "Reunion Festival". Our people had the custom of "Autumn at dusk and the moon at dusk" in ancient times. The evening moon is to worship the moon god. In the Zhou dynasty, every mid-autumn night was held to welcome the cold and offer sacrifices to the moon. Set up a big incense table, and put moon cakes, watermelons, apples, red dates, plums, grapes and other sacrifices, among which moon cakes and watermelons are absolutely indispensable. Watermelon has to be cut into lotus shapes. Under the moon, put the moon statue in the direction of the moon, and the red candle burns high. The whole family worships the moon in turn, and then the housewife cuts up the reunion moon cake. Cut the people in advance to calculate the number of people in the whole family, at home and in the field, all together, can not cut more or less, the size should be the same. According to legend, the ugly woman of the ancient State of Qi had no salt. When she was young, she was devout to Yue Bai. When she grew up, she entered the palace with superior moral character, but she was not favored. Seeing the moon on August 15th, the son of heaven saw her in the moonlight and thought she was beautiful and outstanding. Later, he made her the queen, from which the Mid-Autumn Festival Yue Bai came. In the middle of the moon, Chang 'e is famous for her beauty, so Yue Bai, a young girl, wishes to look like Chang 'e and look like a bright moon. In the Tang Dynasty, it was quite popular to enjoy and play with the moon in the Mid-Autumn Festival. In the northern song dynasty. On the night of August 15th, people all over the city, rich and poor, old and young, put on adult clothes, burn incense and express their wishes to Yue Bai, and pray for the blessing of the moon god. In the Southern Song Dynasty, people gave mooncakes to each other, which meant reunion. In some places there are activities such as dancing grass dragons and building pagodas. Since the Ming and Qing Dynasties, the custom of Mid-Autumn Festival has become more popular. Many places have formed special customs such as burning incense, planting Mid-Autumn Festival trees, lighting tower lanterns, putting sky lanterns, walking on the moon and dancing dragon. Today, the custom of playing under the moon is far from prevailing in the old days. However, feasting to enjoy the moon is still very popular. People drink asking for the moon to celebrate a better life, or wish their distant relatives health and happiness, and have a "beautiful life" with their families. There are many customs and forms of Mid-Autumn Festival, but they all entrust people with infinite love for life and yearning for a better life. Second, the origin and legend of the Mid-Autumn Festival The Mid-Autumn Festival has a long history. Like other traditional festivals, it also developed slowly. The ancient emperors had a ritual system of offering sacrifices to the sun in spring and the moon in autumn. As early as the book Zhou Li, the word "Mid-Autumn Festival" was recorded. Later, nobles and scholars followed suit. During the Mid-Autumn Festival, they watched and worshipped the bright and round moon in the sky, expressing their feelings. This custom spread to the people and formed a traditional activity. Until the Tang Dynasty, people paid more attention to this custom of sacrificing the moon, and the Mid-Autumn Festival became a fixed festival. The Book of Tang Taizong recorded the Mid-Autumn Festival on August 15, which was popular in the Song Dynasty. The legend of Mid-Autumn Festival is very rich, and the fairy tales such as the Goddess Chang'e flying to the moon, Wu Gang's felling of laurel and Jade Rabbit's smashing medicine are widely circulated. According to legend in the Goddess Chang'e flying to the moon, one of the legends of Mid-Autumn Festival, in ancient times, there were ten days in the sky at the same time, which scorched the crops and made the people miserable. A hero named Hou Yi had infinite strength. He sympathized with the suffering people, climbed the top of Kunlun Mountain, took full advantage of his divine power, opened his bow, shot down more than nine suns in one breath, and ordered the last one to rise and fall on time for the benefit of the people. Hou Yi was respected and loved by the people, and he married a beautiful and kind wife named Chang 'e. In addition to hunting, Hou Yi spent all his time with his wife, and people envied this beautiful and loving couple. Many people with lofty ideals came here to study as a teacher, and Peng Meng, who had ulterior motives, also mixed in. One day, Hou Yi went to Kunlun Mountain to visit friends and seek Tao. He happened to meet the Queen Mother who passed by and asked her for a pack of elixir. It is said that taking this medicine can instantly ascend to heaven and become immortal. However, Hou Yi could not bear to leave his wife, so he had to give the immortal medicine to Chang 'e for the time being. Chang 'e hid the medicine in the treasure box of the dresser, only to be seen by the villain Peng Meng. He wanted to steal the immortal medicine and become immortal himself. Three days later, Hou Yi led his followers out hunting, and Peng Meng, who had ulterior motives, pretended to be ill and stayed. Soon after Hou Yi led the crowd away, Peng Meng broke into the backyard of the inner house with a sword in his hand, threatening Chang 'e to hand over the elixir. Chang 'e knew that she was no match for Peng Meng. When she was in a crisis, she made a decisive decision, turned around and opened the treasure box, took out the elixir and swallowed it in one gulp. Chang 'e swallowed the medicine and immediately floated off the ground, rushed out of the window and flew to the sky. Because Chang 'e was concerned about her husband, she flew to the nearest moon and became a fairy. In the evening, when Hou Yi came home, the maids cried about what happened during the day. Hou Yi was both surprised and angry, and drew his sword to kill the villains. Peng Meng fled early. Hou Yi was so angry and heartbroken that he looked up at the night sky and called out the name of his beloved wife. At this time, he was surprised to find that today's moon was exceptionally bright and bright, and there was a swaying figure resembling Chang 'e. He chased after the moon desperately, but he chased three steps, the moon retreated three steps, he retreated three steps, and the moon advanced three steps, but he couldn't catch up with him anyway. Hou Yi had no choice but to miss his wife, so he had to send someone to Chang 'e's favorite back garden, put on a table sweetmeats, put on her favorite honey and fresh fruits, and pay a remote sacrifice to Chang 'e who was attached to him in the moon palace. After hearing the news that the Goddess Chang'e flying to the moon became an immortal, people set up incense tables under the moon to pray for good luck and peace to the kind Chang 'e. Since then, the custom of Yue Bai in Mid-Autumn Festival has spread among the people. The second legend of Mid-Autumn Festival-WU GANG Zhegui There is another legend about the Mid-Autumn Festival: It is said that the laurel tree in front of the Guanghan Palace on the moon grows luxuriantly, with a height of more than 500 feet, and there is a person who often cuts it down below, but after each cut, the cut place is closed immediately. For thousands of years, this laurel tree can never be cut down. It is said that this tree-chopping man named WU GANG, a native of Xihe, Han Dynasty, once followed the immortal to the heaven, but when he made a mistake, the immortal relegated him to the Moon Palace, and did this kind of futile drudgery every day to show his punishment. In Li Bai's poems, there is a record that "if you want to be in the middle of the moon, you will pay for the cold." The third legend of Mid-Autumn Festival-Zhu Yuanzhang and Moon Cake Uprising It is said that eating moon cakes in Mid-Autumn Festival began in Yuan Dynasty. At that time, the broad masses of people in the Central Plains could not bear the cruel rule of the ruling class in the Yuan Dynasty and rebelled against the Yuan Dynasty. Zhu Yuanzhang joined forces with various resistance forces to prepare for the uprising. However, the officers and men of the court searched very closely and it was very difficult to pass on the news. Strategist Liu Bowen came up with a plan and ordered his subordinates to hide the note containing the "August 15th night uprising" into the cake, and then sent someone to send it to the uprising troops in various places separately to inform them to respond to the uprising on August 15th night. On the day of the uprising, all the rebels responded together, such as single spark can start a prairie fire. Soon, Xu Da captured the Yuan Dynasty and the uprising was successful. When the news came, Zhu Yuanzhang was so happy that he quickly gave a message that all the soldiers would have fun with the people in the upcoming Mid-Autumn Festival, and he would give the "moon cakes" that were sent in secret when he started fighting that year as seasonal cakes to his ministers. Since then, the production of "moon cakes" has become more and more elaborate, with more varieties, such as discs, and has become a good gift. After the Mid-Autumn Festival, the custom of eating moon cakes spread among the people.
284 likes1,577 browse 2017-11-22.
What is the content of the Mid-Autumn Festival handwritten newspaper?
The Mid-Autumn Festival comes from the 15th day of the eighth lunar month, which is the traditional Mid-Autumn Festival in China and the second largest traditional festival in China after the Spring Festival. August 15th is just in the middle of autumn, so it is called Mid-Autumn Festival. China's ancient calendar called August in the middle of autumn "Mid-Autumn", so the Mid-Autumn Festival is also called "Mid-Autumn Festival". Mid-Autumn Festival is an ancient festival, and it is an important custom to sacrifice and enjoy the moon. The ancient emperors had a social system of offering sacrifices to the sun in spring and the moon in autumn, and the people also had the style of offering sacrifices to the moon in the Mid-Autumn Festival. Later, appreciating the moon was more important than offering sacrifices to the moon, and serious sacrifices turned into relaxed entertainment. The custom of enjoying the moon in the Mid-Autumn Festival flourished in the Tang Dynasty, and many poets wrote poems about the moon in their masterpieces. In the Song, Ming and Qing Dynasties, the court and folk activities of enjoying the moon in Yue Bai were even larger. Up to now, there are many historic sites in China, such as Yue Bai altar, Moon Pavilion and Moon Tower. The "Moon Altar" in Beijing was built during the Jiajing period of the Ming Dynasty for the royal sacrifice to the moon. Whenever the Mid-Autumn Moon rises, a case is set up in the open air, and mooncakes, pomegranates, dates and other fruits are offered on the console table. After Yue Bai, the whole family sits around the table, talks over dinner and enjoys the bright moon. Now, the activities of offering sacrifices to the moon in Yue Bai have been replaced by large-scale and colorful activities of enjoying the moon by the masses. According to historical records, the word "Mid-Autumn Festival" first appeared in the book Zhou Li. By the Wei and Jin Dynasties, there was a record of "telling Shangshu Town that cattle were confused, and mid-autumn evening and the left and right traveling incognito across the river". It was not until the early years of the Tang Dynasty that the Mid-Autumn Festival became a fixed festival. The Book of Tang Taizong records the Mid-Autumn Festival on August 15th. The prevalence of Mid-Autumn Festival began in the Song Dynasty, and by the Ming and Qing Dynasties, it was as famous as New Year's Day and became one of the major festivals in China. This is also the second largest traditional festival in China after the Spring Festival. The Mid-Autumn Festival is celebrated on the 15th day of the eighth lunar month, which is the traditional Mid-Autumn Festival in China and the second largest traditional festival in China after the Spring Festival. Also known as Mid-Autumn Festival, Reunion Festival, August Festival, etc., it is a traditional festival of Han nationality and most ethnic minorities in China, and is also popular in neighboring countries such as North Korea, Japan and Vietnam. Because the July, August and September of autumn (referring to the lunar calendar), August is in the middle, and in the thirty days of August, it is in the middle, so it is called the Mid-Autumn Festival. Therefore, there are more people in the sky than family reunion at night, so it is also called the reunion festival. Mid-Autumn Festival originated from the custom of autumn worship and Yue Bai in ancient China. "The Book of Rites" contains "The son of heaven is in the spring, the sun is shining, and the moon is in the autumn. Asahi is facing the DPRK, and the evening is in the evening. " "Evening Moon" here means Yue Bai. It took shape in the Han Dynasty. In the Tang Dynasty, the custom of enjoying the moon in the Mid-Autumn Festival became popular and was designated as the Mid-Autumn Festival. Ouyang Zhan (AD 785-about 827) said in "Preface to Poems about Playing with the Moon in Chang 'an": "August is in autumn. The season begins and ends; The fifteenth day is in the night, and the moon is in the clouds. If you take it from heaven, it will be cold and hot, and if you take it from the number of months, it will be round, so it is called Mid-Autumn Festival. " On the night of Mid-Autumn Festival, the moonlight is bright. The ancients regarded the full moon as a symbol of reunion, so it was also called the "Reunion Festival". Throughout the ages, people often used "full moon" and "lack of moon" to describe "joys and sorrows". Wanderers who live in other places rely on the moon to express their deep feelings. Poems such as "lifting myself to look, I found that it was moonlight, sinking back again, I thought suddenly of home" by Li Bai, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, "he knows that the dews tonight will be frost, how much brighter the moonlight is at home!" by Du Fu, and "The spring breeze is green in Jiang Nanan, when will the bright moon shine on me" by Wang Anshi in the Song Dynasty are all timeless. Mid-Autumn Festival, Lantern Festival and Dragon Boat Festival are also called the three traditional festivals in China. Investigating the origin of Mid-Autumn Festival is closely related to myths and legends such as "the Goddess Chang'e flying to the moon", "Wu Gang cutting Guangxi" and "Jade Rabbit tinkering with medicine". Therefore, the folk customs of Mid-Autumn Festival are mostly related to the moon. Appreciating the moon, Yue Bai and eating reunion moon cakes all come from this. The ancient emperors had a social system of offering sacrifices to the sun in spring and the moon in autumn, and the people also had the style of offering sacrifices to the moon in the Mid-Autumn Festival. Later, appreciating the moon was more important than offering sacrifices to the moon, and serious sacrifices turned into relaxed entertainment. The custom of enjoying the moon in the Mid-Autumn Festival flourished in the Tang Dynasty, and many poets wrote poems about the moon in their masterpieces. In the Song, Ming and Qing Dynasties, the court and folk activities of enjoying the moon in Yue Bai were even larger. Up to now, there are many historic sites in China, such as Yue Bai altar, Moon Pavilion and Moon Tower. The "Moon Altar" in Beijing was built during the Jiajing period of the Ming Dynasty for the royal sacrifice to the moon. Whenever the Mid-Autumn Moon rises, a case is set up in the open air, and mooncakes, pomegranates, dates and other fruits are offered on the console table. After Yue Bai, the whole family sits around the table, talks over dinner and enjoys the bright moon. Now, the activities of offering sacrifices to the moon in Yue Bai have been replaced by large-scale and colorful activities of enjoying the moon by the masses. Eating moon cakes is another custom of festivals, which symbolizes reunion. The making of moon cakes has become more and more exquisite since the Tang Dynasty. Su Dongpo wrote in a poem: "Small cakes are like chewing the moon, with crispness and satiny in them", and Yang Guangfu wrote in the Qing Dynasty: "Moon cakes are filled with peach meat and ice cream with sugar cream". It seems that the moon cakes at that time were quite similar to those now. The word Mid-Autumn Festival appeared in Zhou Li, but it refers not to the Mid-Autumn Festival, but to the second month of autumn. There was an "Autumn Festival" in the Han Dynasty, which was on the day in beginning of autumn, and it was not August 15th. There was a record of four o'clock and twelve seasons in the books of the Tang Dynasty, and there was no Mid-Autumn Festival, but there was an "Mid-Autumn Moon" in the Tang poetry. "The Mid-Autumn Moon is full in August, and you are sent to sing on the Mulan boat" (Wei Zhuang's "Send Li Xiucai to Jingxi"). The Mid-Autumn Festival was clearly recorded for the first time by Wu Zishou, a native of the Southern Song Dynasty. In his book "Dream of Liang Lu", he said: "The Mid-Autumn Festival is on August 15th, and Sanqiu is halfway there, so it is called the Mid-Autumn Festival. This night, the moonlight is brighter than usual, and it is also called' moonlight'. " The book also describes the grand occasion of enjoying the moon and visiting the night market in Lin 'an, Kyoto (now Hangzhou) in the Southern Song Dynasty. Mid-Autumn Festival greetings 1, the bright moon is priceless, and all mountains are affectionate. Although people don't come, their hearts yearn for it. I sincerely wish you and your family a happy reunion and happiness! 2. When the autumn is full moon, the breeze only affects the Mid-Autumn Festival, missing beautiful people thousands of miles away, and the bright moon shows my heart. I wish you a happy Mid-Autumn Festival. 3, the sea rises the bright moon, the horizon * * * At this time, it is another full moon night, and I will send you a moon cake, with infinite thoughts and blessings. Happy Mid-Autumn Festival! 4, the wind is soft and rainy, the flowers are full moon, and the happy life is so sweet! Winter goes and spring comes like smoke, and the Mid-Autumn Festival is just around the corner! Time flies, and life must be full of joy. Happy Mid-Autumn Festival! 5, the most beautiful in the sky is the full moon, and the most beautiful Mid-Autumn Festival on earth. The autumn waters are the same as the sky, and the flowers are full and full. On the occasion of the Mid-Autumn Festival, may you be happy and worry-free.
19 likes 602 browse 2019-10-15
Mid-Autumn Festival handwritten newspaper materials
Ancient nationalities held sacrifices to the Moon God around the Mid-Autumn Festival, which has been recorded in writing for more than 2,000 years. In the Tang Dynasty, more records were recorded, and later, the legend of eating moon cakes to kill Tartars was added, so the Mid-Autumn Festival became a festival with national consciousness. Since Ming and Qing Dynasties, it has become one of the three major festivals in a year. There are the following stories about the origin of Mid-Autumn Festival: (1) It is said that more than 4,000 years ago in the Goddess Chang'e flying to the moon, there was a king of a poor country, Hou Yi, who was brave and good at shooting, but he was violent by nature and did not sympathize with the sufferings of the people, making the people miserable. Hou Yi wanted to live forever, and he found the medicine for immortality from Kunlun Mountain, and prepared to swallow it another day. This was learned by Chang E. In order to show sympathy for his people and avoid the long-term cruel rule of Hou Yi, he took this medicine first, and suddenly he was as light as a swallow, and he flew to the moon palace. Later Yi found out that he shot Chang E with an arrow, and Chang E entered the Guanghan Palace and became the moon god. (2) Overthrow the legend of the Yuan Dynasty. At the end of the Yuan Dynasty, the people in the Central Plains were unwilling to be subjected to the brutal rule of the Yuan Dynasty, and patriots rose up in succession to resist the Yuan Dynasty. Zhu Hongwu's strategist Liu Bowen asked his subordinates to pretend to be Taoist priests and sell symbols in various counties, and said: There will be disasters this year, and those who want to avoid disasters can hang the Sun and Moon flags on August 15th, and the flags will be hidden in big moon cakes. On this day, people all over the country cut big moon cakes and hung up the flags hidden in them. The uprising was so powerful that the Yuan people were surprised. Zhu Hongwu succeeded in one blow and ended the rule of the Yuan dynasty. Later, this sun and moon flag was the "Ming" flag. Another similar legend is that there is a piece of paper hidden in the moon cake, which says "Kill the Tartars on the night of August 15th". When everyone saw this piece of paper when cutting the moon cake, they all rose up and killed the Tartars, and the Yuan Dynasty was overthrown. The customs of the Mid-Autumn Festival are as follows: (1) Appreciating the Moon: The Moon in the Mid-Autumn Festival is particularly bright and full, which symbolizes reunion. In ancient times, many people wanted to see the Jade Rabbit in the Moon and WU GANG logging. Modern people appreciate the natural beauty of the moonlit night. (2) Eating moon cakes: The custom of eating moon cakes is recorded in writing and began in the Ming Dynasty. Legend has it that festive food is magical and endowed with patriotic significance. The Mid-Autumn Festival is a "moon cake", just like eating zongzi on the Dragon Boat Festival. Moon cakes celebrate reunion or commemorate the resistance to foreign rule. (3) Reunion: People eat moon cakes, enjoy the moon, reward the landowner and other customs, all praying for a complete and glorious life, a happy family reunion and a peaceful community, showing the ideal of a full moon. Previous poems about the moon: 1. Chang 'e mica screen has a deep candle shadow, and the long river gradually falls and the stars sink; Chang' e I must regret that I had eaten the elixir at the beginning, now alone, blue sky, and night and night. 2. drinking Alone with the Moon Tang Li Bai from a pot of wine among the flowers, I drank alone. There was no one with me; Raising my cup, I invite the bright moon, who brings me its shadow and makes us three. Alas, the moon was unable to drink, and my shadow tagged me vacantly;, but still for a while I had these friends, carpe diem. I sang. The moon encouraged me, I danced. My shadow tumbled after; When you wake up, you have sex with each other, and when you are drunk, you are scattered; I would like to be with them forever to forget the injury of friendship, similar to the milky way of the milky way.
12753 likes 664,452 browse 2017-12-16.
Decoration, 58 cities, 20㎡ more space.
May 8 th information technology in the same city has .. advertising
The simple drawing method of blackboard newspaper, a picture makes you amazing to your circle of friends.
People who pay attention to the blackboard are also reading it.
Click download for more details.
download
Advertising of Shanghai Xunmeng Information Technology Co., Ltd.
Why did the ancients merge "Cold Food Festival" into "Tomb-Sweeping Day"?
Qingming, one of the twenty-four solar terms in the summer calendar, is usually around the first day of the third lunar month. As for the origin of Qingming, one thinks that it originated from the evidence of phenological changes, such as Yi Zhou Shu Shi Xun, which says: "On the vernal equinox, the mysterious birds will be born until the Qingming day. And "Almanac" contains: "On the 15th day after the vernal equinox, the bucket refers to Ding, which is clear.
4,224 people are watching
Why are the rich always rich and poor?