Perfect Handling Equipment Co., Ltd. wishes you a happy Lantern Festival
2021-02-26
The Lantern Festival, also known as Shangyuan Festival, Little New Year's Day, New Year's Eve or Lantern Festival, is one of the traditional Chinese festivals. It takes place on the fifteenth day of the first lunar month of each year. The first lunar month is the first month of the lunar calendar. The ancients called "night" as "xiao". The fifteenth of the first month is the first full moon night of the year, so the fifteenth of the first lunar month is called the "Lantern Festival." According to the Taoist "Sanyuan", the fifteenth day of the first lunar month is also called the "Shangyuan Festival". The custom of Lantern Festival has been dominated by warm and festive lantern viewing since ancient times. To
The formation of the Lantern Festival takes a long time, rooted in the ancient customs of people turning on lanterns to pray for blessings. According to general information and folklore, the fifteenth of the first lunar month has been valued in the Western Han Dynasty, but the fifteenth of the first lunar and the Lantern Festival as a national folk festival came after the Han and Wei dynasties. The rise of the custom of burning lanterns on the fifteenth day of the first lunar month is also related to the east spread of Buddhism. During the Tang Dynasty, Buddhism flourished. Officials and people generally "burned lanterns for Buddha" on the fifteenth day of the first lunar month. Buddhism lights spread throughout the people. Statutory matter. To
The Lantern Festival is one of the traditional festivals between China and the Chinese character cultural circle and overseas Chinese. The Lantern Festival mainly includes a series of traditional folk activities such as viewing lanterns, eating dumplings, guessing lantern riddles, and setting off fireworks. In addition, many local Lantern Festivals also added traditional folk performances such as dragon lanterns, lion dances, walking on stilts, paddling boats, twisting yangko, and playing Taiping drums. In June 2008, the Lantern Festival was selected as the second batch of national intangible cultural heritage.
The formation of the Lantern Festival takes a long time, rooted in the ancient customs of people turning on lanterns to pray for blessings. According to general information and folklore, the fifteenth of the first lunar month has been valued in the Western Han Dynasty, but the fifteenth of the first lunar and the Lantern Festival as a national folk festival came after the Han and Wei dynasties. The rise of the custom of burning lanterns on the fifteenth day of the first lunar month is also related to the east spread of Buddhism. During the Tang Dynasty, Buddhism flourished. Officials and people generally "burned lanterns for Buddha" on the fifteenth day of the first lunar month. Buddhism lights spread throughout the people. Statutory matter. To
The Lantern Festival is one of the traditional festivals between China and the Chinese character cultural circle and overseas Chinese. The Lantern Festival mainly includes a series of traditional folk activities such as viewing lanterns, eating dumplings, guessing lantern riddles, and setting off fireworks. In addition, many local Lantern Festivals also added traditional folk performances such as dragon lanterns, lion dances, walking on stilts, paddling boats, twisting yangko, and playing Taiping drums. In June 2008, the Lantern Festival was selected as the second batch of national intangible cultural heritage.