Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel franchise - Can you tell me about the wedding customs in your hometown?

Can you tell me about the wedding customs in your hometown?

Wedding customs are different in every place. Let’s talk about the wedding customs in our hometown. Our place is a rural area, and there are many unreasonable customs, but the locals still continue to do so today.

On the wedding day, you come to us with the birthdays of the man and the woman. A person who specializes in watching the day will calculate the suitable day for the wedding. On the wedding day, in which direction to park the wedding car, get off the car, and where to place the wedding bed, etc., all must follow his arrangements.

When girls get married over there, they are called "menzi". In the home where the doorkeeper stays, weddings and weddings are not allowed for three years.

When a man marries a daughter-in-law, it is called "marrying a daughter-in-law." The new house where the woman and the man are married is not allowed to hold weddings or weddings within three years.

The house where you get married cannot be decorated or tampered with for three years. Furniture can only be moved 3 days after the wedding, and cannot be moved after 3 days, especially the wedding bed.

On the night of the wedding, the bride is not allowed to leave the house. She must stay in the room and do not come out.

On the morning and noon of the wedding, the bride and groom must eat noodles and steamed buns, but not steamed buns. You can eat it at night.

On the wedding day, the groom goes to pick up the bride. The bride sits in the car and passes by the road. Whenever she encounters a bridge or turns, she will throw wedding coins. The wedding coins are coins wrapped in red paper in advance.

When the bride gets off the car and goes to the wedding room, she should enter the room with her left foot first (it seems that if you step left foot first, you can give birth to a son after getting married).

On the morning of the wedding, the groom’s family will find a little boy to roll on the wedding bed, from one end to the other, and then roll down. When entering the bridal chamber, Xinlang has to put on his shoes and step on the cake on the bed. This is called "pressing the bed" here.

There are many other customs, and the wedding customs in each region are different. Similarly, my sister-in-law is from out of town. When we welcomed the bride, we had breakfast at their house and ate noodles. This aspect is different from our hometown, but everything else is similar.

The meaning of these customs is good, and I hope that the couple will be harmonious, loving and loving in the days after marriage.