Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - It is very simple to check the copy of the Mid-Autumn Festival handwritten newspaper.

It is very simple to check the copy of the Mid-Autumn Festival handwritten newspaper.

1, the 15th day of the eighth lunar month, is the traditional Mid-Autumn Festival in China and the second largest traditional festival in China after the Spring Festival. August 15th is in the middle of autumn, so it is called Mid-Autumn Festival. The ancient calendar in China called August in the middle of autumn "Mid-Autumn Festival", so the Mid-Autumn Festival is also called "Mid-Autumn Festival".

On the Mid-Autumn Festival night, the moonlight is bright. The ancients regarded the full moon as a symbol of reunion, so August 15 was also called "Reunion Festival". Throughout the ages, people often use "full moon" and "lack of moon" to describe "joys and sorrows", and wanderers living in other countries also use the moon to express their affection. Li Bai, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, wrote poems such as "Looking up, it's moonlight, then leaning back, suddenly thinking about hometown", "Knowing that the dew is frost tonight, the moonlight at home is bright!" Du Fu's "Spring Breeze is Green in Jiang Nanan" and Wang Anshi's "When Will the Moon Shine on Me" in the Song Dynasty are all timeless masterpieces.

Mid-Autumn Festival is an ancient festival, and offering sacrifices and rewards is an important custom. Ancient emperors had a social system of offering sacrifices to the sun and the moon in spring, and folks also had the wind of offering sacrifices to the eyes in the Mid-Autumn Festival. Later, they rewarded and offered sacrifices again, and serious sacrifices became light entertainment. The custom of appreciating the Mid-Autumn Festival was very popular in the Tang Dynasty, and many famous poets have poems about this purpose. In the Ming and Qing dynasties, the imperial and folk sacrifices and common people's activities were even larger. Up to now, there are many historical sites in various parts of China, such as Baiqitan, Baiqiting and Moon Tower. The "wooden altar" in Beijing was built for the royal sacrifice during the Jiajing period of the Ming Dynasty. Whenever the Mid-Autumn Festival is clear, a case is set up in the open air, and cakes, pomegranates, dates and other fruits are placed on the console table. After Yue Bai, the family sat around the dining table, chatting while eating and enjoying 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.

Today, eating moon cakes has become an indispensable custom of Mid-Autumn Festival in all parts of China. Mooncakes symbolize a happy reunion. People regard them as holiday food, use them to worship the moon and give them to relatives and friends. In addition to moon cakes, all kinds of seasonal fresh fruits and dried fruits are also delicious in the Mid-Autumn Festival. During the Mid-Autumn Festival, there are fewer clouds and more fog, and the moonlight is bright and bright. There are a series of festivals, such as enjoying the moon, offering sacrifices to the moon, eating moon cakes, eating sweet potatoes, carrying lanterns, dancing grass dragons, planting trees and building stupas.

5. Important activities: September 13, 19, 2065438 is located in the China Korean Folk Garden at the foot of Maoer Mountain in Yanji City. The music is flying, and thousands of citizens and tourists gather together to watch wrestling competitions, enjoy national dances, taste wine, sing and dance, and celebrate the Korean autumn festival together. ? Honorary commendation: 2011kloc-0/0/0 On October 29th, under the guidance of the State Ethnic Affairs Commission, the National Tourism Administration and the International Festival Association, the second China National Festival Summit and the 2010 "National Festival Award" were awarded. Yanji Municipal Bureau of Religious Affairs declared "China Korean Autumn Season" and won the "Most Charming Festival City" award.