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| Chinese Customs & Festivals |
Chinese Lunar Calendar Goes Round in Cycles
Spring Festival used to be called New Year's Day and
it is still so in much of the countryside. The year
of 1996 marked the start of the "year of the rat"
according to the Chinese lunar calendar.
Why rat? The ancient Chinese called each succeeding
year by the name of an animal. They had 12 such names
and after they had run through the list they started
over again. The year of 1993 was the year of the cock,
1994, the dog, the year of 1995, the pig. But the story
is much more complicated than that.
By the Shang Dynasty from 16th to 11th century BC,
unearthed oracle bones show that the Chinese had devised
a complicated method of counting time - first days,
later hours, months and years - called the ganzhi
meaning stems and branches, 10 heavenly stems and 12
earthly branches. The stems are named jia, yi,
bing, ding, wu, ji, geng,
xin, ren and gui, but expressed
in written Chinese characters. Think of them as the
numbers "one", "two", "three",
etc. The branches are named zi, chou,
yin, mao, chen, si, wu,
wei, shen, you, xu, and
hai. Think of them as the 12 letters of the alphabet
(A through L). Combining them allows you to count to
60 in this way: Jiazi (1-A); yichou (2-B);
bingyin (3-C), etc. When you reach gui
(10), you start over with jia (1), but you still
have two more branches to go before repeating them;
so 11 is jiaxu (1-K), 13 is bingzi (3-A),
35 is wuxu (5-K) and 60 is guihai (10-L).
(TOP)
Once you reach 60, you start over again. Because this
system was used to keep track of days, historians can
identify the date of events extending back at least
to 772 BC. Starting about 85 AD in the Eastern Han Dynasty,
the Ganzhi system was used to tabulate the years
in cycles of 60.
In Chinese rural areas, the ganzhi counting
system is still widely used for counting years and days.
Modern calendars and watches have generally replaced
it for keeping track of months and hours.
In time, the various animals became identified with
the earthly branches. And various superstitions, like
checking to see if proposed marriage partners had been
born under compatible sign. For instance, a dragon and
a tiger should not marry, nor a cock and a tiger. If
that sounds like Western astrology, there is and even
more remarkable coincidence between the ancient Greek
circular representation of the zodiac with its 12 pictorial
symbols around the rim and the ancient Chinese drawing
of the earthly branches also round and circled by 12
animals. By 1,400 BC, the Shang Dynasty had established
that the year, a complete cycle of season, is 365 1/4
days long, that the time between two new moons is 29
days, but that a lunar year (12 "moons" or
months) is only 354 days long. To compensate for this
discrepancy, they began to repeat a month whenever the
officials in charge decided they were a month out of
sync. Thus there might be two "seventh months"
in one year. (TOP)
But this was soon abandoned and a 13th month was added
periodically at the end of the year. In the early period
of the Spring and Autumn Period from 770 to 476 BC,
they had figured the length of the year so accurately
that they were adding seven extra months to every 19
years. By 475 BC this calculation had been honed to
144 extra months every 391 years. In the meantime, however,
the first system-repeating various months-had again
gained favour but with an addition: a set method of
determining which months should be repeated.
Between 300-200 BC, a new procedure of dividing the
year into weather cycles was adopted. Called the 24
seasonal points, it was designed to help farm work.
With colourful names like "Excited Insects",
"Clear and Bright", "Grain Rains",
"a Little Cold", the points were 15 or 16
days apart. Usually, each solar month would contain
two points. But not always so with the lunar months
because two such periods would extend over an average
of 30.4 days and the lunar month is only 29 1/2 days.
Months containing only one point would be repeated.
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How the ganzhi cycle of 60 works out using
numbers and letters in place of the characters or
words for the 10 heavenly stems (top row) and the
12 earthly branches (bottem row).
Pure and Bright Day
The Ching Ming Festival, in the third lunar month,
is the day people visit cemeteries to honor their ancestors
and beautify their graves. For that reason, this is
also called gravesweeping day. It has been a popular
festivity to legend, Chong Er, a nobleman's son who
live 2,000 year ago, was forced to live in wxilw for
19 years. Only a few of his retainers stuck by him,
among them Jie Zitui who was Er's fortunes changed,
he wanted to reward accept no weath nor status for his
devotion. Instead, he and his monther retired to a life
of seclusion on amountain.
Chong Er divined that if he set the mountain ablaze,
he would smoke Jie Zitui and his monther out and then
press reward on them. But after he had reduced the place
ti ashes, Chong Er found his friend and the mother burned
and clingning to a scorched willow tree where they had
reparied rather than accept a prize.
To honor Jie Zitui, people still put out their kitchen
fires and eat cold dihes prepared beforehand.
However,far from sombre, the day is filled with sporting
wcwnts and contests, among them kite-flying, Chinese
football, cockfighting and dog taces, Kites are a rwmarkable
flik art, cut and painted in the shapes of mythological
and operatic characters, butterflies, birds, goldfish,
frongs, dragonflies and other creatures.
Spring Festival
Spring Festival is Chinese New Year. The New Year
is the first day of first month in the lunar calendar.
It marks the beginning of Spring Festival. But it is
not the official beginning of spring. Lichun is the
beginning of spring (1st solar term) in the Chinese
lunar calendar. Under the lunar system, Chinese ancient
astronomers marked off every 15 days as one solar term
calculating the terms according to the positions of
the Earth and the Sun. These terms are still used today,
especially by the Chinese farmers in planning planting
cycles. Lichun is the first day of one of the 15 day
terms and usually falls about ten days after Chinese
New Year's. For instance, the year of 1983 fell on February
13th. Lichun fell on February 4th. Just as Christmas
is the most festive holiday in the Christian world,
Spring Festival is the most important holiday in China.
It lasts 15 days from the New Year's to Yuanxiao Festival
or Lantern Festival. Celebrations last for two weeks
and the State Council officially marks Spring Festival
with a three-day National Holiday.
On New Year's Eve, families get together to send off
the old year and usher in the new, a year which they
hope will be rich in harvest, happiness and success.
Everybody goes to bed later than uaual. Some spend the
night to watch the year go out, chatting or playing
card games, watching TV and nibbling sweets and nuts
and all sorts of delicacies. For the children, it is
a treat to set off firecrackers and fireworks and you
can hear them pop and bang throughout the night.
The first two days of the new year are spent visting
friends or relatives. Most people go back to work on
the fourth day. In the countryside, however, festivities
go on until the fifteenth day which is Lantern Festival.
During Lantern Festival, people decorate their homes
with colourful lanterns and treat themselves with Yuanxiao,
a kind of glutinous rice flour balls stuffed with sweet
fillings or meat or dried cassia flower. Throughout
China, lanterns of every description are put on public
display.
(TOP)
Yuanxian Festival (The First Full Moon of the Lunar
Year)
Yuanxiao or "Lantern Festival", on the 15th
Day of the 1st Lunar Month, marks the end of the Spring
Festival. The Chinese people sometimes call it the Yuanxiao
Festival because they like to eat small round dumplings
of sticky rice containing sweet fillings. (Literally
"yuan" means "round one"; xiao means
"overnight".) Some people prefer to call it
the "Feast of Lanterns" because from the 11th
century of the Song Dynasty, it was a custom to hang
out various beautiful lanterns on the 15th of the 1st
Lunar months. Along the main streets in many towns and
cities different kinds of Chinese lanterns were hung.
People from country areas travelled to the busy towns
or cities to visit at this time.
This festival scene at night has been vividly described
in many operas and novels. In the Chinese classical
novel Water Margin, the heroes used this festival
as an opportunity to boldly and courageously conquer
the so-called "World Renowned City" Damingfu
in Shandong Province, where they killed the officials
and rescued their friends from prison. This old custom
of hanging lanterns was almost forgotten just prior
to liberation because of the social poverty and unsettled
life of the people. Nowadays, in Beijing, gauze lanterns
are hung in shops, some of them having interesting,
historical pictures painted on them. Children and young
people like to play with lanterns. They can be bought
in streets during the Spring Festival.
The game of "Dragon Lantern" is still played
in many places in China. A group of people line up,
each holding a part of the dragon's body. Everyone in
the performance co-operates closely in trying to attract
dragon's eyes. The dragon-dance is more difficult to
perform than the lion dance, which is also part of the
festival. (TOP)
Mid-Autumn Festival
According to the Chinese lunar calendar, the 15th day
of the eighth lunar month is the day for the Mid-Autumn
Festival.
A Chinese tradition says in ancient times the Emperor
helk ceremonies to offer sacrifices to the sun in spring
and to the moon in autumn. Later, the rites bbecame
prevalent among the common people. According to the
book Nianjie Quhua ("Amusing Stories about the
Festivals"), during the Tang Dynasty (618-907)
Emperor Xuanzong's travel to the Moon Palace added to
the festival's charm and importance. It is said that
during a mid-autumn evening, while the Emperor was enjoying
the moonlight, a magic Taoist priest named Luo Gongyuan
invited him to see the Moon Palace. Luo threw his stick
into the air and it streaked across the sky to the moon.
Immediately, a silver bridge from the heavens stretched
before them. Across the bridge, the Emperor was a magnificent
palace. A plaque above the gate read: "Guanghangong"
meaning "Vast and Cold Palace". By the gate
stood a tall, sweet-scented osmanthus tree, under which
a white rabbit mixed a medicine by grotesque mountains
and exquisite jade buildings. Hundreds of beautifully-dresses
dancing maidens surrounded him accompanied by melodious
music and entertaining him with delicious cakes shaped
like the full moon. (TOP)
Upon returning to the earth, the Emperor ordered cakes
modelled after his vision.
In China, the full moon symbolizes reunion.Whenever
the Mid-Autumn Festival sets in, people will look up
at the full silver moon, thinking of their nearby relatives
or friends, as well as those who are far from home.
A line from a verse "The moon at the home village
is exceptionally brighter" expresses those feelings.
On the evening when the full moon rises, people get
together to eat moon cakes. Some cakes will be sent
to absent ones or saved at home for them. The sweet
cakes are stuffed with sugar, red bean paste, melon
seeds, dried flower petals or sesame. The salty ones
are stuffed with meat. The surface of the cakes is patterned
with clouds, the moon, the rabbit, the Guangdong, Suzhou,
and Chaozhou styles are acknowledged as the best.
As the Chinese saying goes, on festive occasions more
than ever we think of our dear ones far away.
Dragon Boat Festival
Duan Wu, or the Dragon Boat Festival, falls on the
fifth day of the fifth month of the Chinese lunar calendar.
During the festival there are dragon boat races, and
people eat zongzi, pyramid-shaped dumplings wrapped
in bamboo or reed leaves. They are made of glutinous
rice and stuffed with pork, ham, chicken, dates, or
sweet bean paste.
The custom of eating zongzi and holding boat
races during the Dragon Boat Festival originated in
memory of Qu Yuan (339-c. 278 BC), a renowned poet,
politician, and thinker who lived over two thousand
years ago in the Chu State during the Warring States
Period. Qu, as an important official of the Chu State,
advocated the union of the six states against Qin as
well as political nobility. Qu was later exiled to what
is now the eastern part of Hunan Province. During his
banishment, Qu Yuan did not give up his fight; he talked,
taught, and wrote about his ideas. His works "Li
Sao" and "Tian Wen" are literary masterpieces
as well as invaluable records of China's ancient culture.
When Qu Yuan heard that his country had been defeated
by the powerful Qin State, he was plunged into such
deep despair that he drowned himself in the Miluo River
in Hunan Province on the fifth day of the fifth lunar
month, 278 BC.
Legend says that when the news spread of Qu's drowning,
the people of the Chu State rushed to the scene in their
boats to search for his body. Since every one wanted
to be the first to find him, the search soon became
a race. Because the court forbade any formal ceremony
in his memory, local people held boat races each year
on the anniversary of his death. (TOP)
Various tales link Qu Yuan and zongzi. One story
says people made dumplings and dropped them into the
river to prevent Qu Yuan from being hungry. Another
has its origin in superstition. People believed that
a man's soul would not be permitted to enter heaven
if his body was not intact; thus, they dropped zongzi
into the river in the hope that the fish would not eat
Qu Yuan's body.
Although the stories about Qu Yuan are popular, some
say that the Dragon Boat Festival originated before
his time. Then people considered themselves descendants
of the dragon and worshipped the God Totem. They threw
into the river food which had been put in hollowed-out
bamboo or wrapped in leaves. Then, to the sound of beating
drums, they boarded boats and raced in the river.
In any case, boat-racing is popular along waterways
in many southern cities and towns. On the day of the
festival, boats are decorated in the shape of a dragon
with a drum and a gong on each boat to set the pace.
With a shout "Dragon away", the race starts
and the dragon boats skim over the water, powered by
teams of skilled oarsmen who have been practising for
months. Strength, teamwork, and split-second timing
are all important in the race. The oarsmen often sing
songs with an emphatic, drum-beat rhythm as they race
for finish line to the excited cheers from spectators
on both banks of the river.
There are two main kinds of zongzi-Guangdong
and Jiaxing style. Although they are both in the shape
of the pyramid, Guangdong zongzi are longer and
have various kinds of stuffings. Jiaxing zongzi
are smaller and are usually stuffed with pork or bean
paste.
There are a number of famous zongzi stores in
China. Wufang Zongzi Store in Jiaxing city, Zhejiang
Province, is one of them. It has existed for more than
fifty years and is well-known for the high quality ingredients,
the distinctive flavour and the careful preparation
of its zongzi.
To make zongzi, first wash the glutinous rice
quickly without allowing it to macerate, drain it for
about fifteen minutes, and then mix it with soy sauce,
sugar, and a little salt. Many master chefs use cane
sugar ot sweeten the rice and make the dumpling look
brighter. Next, dice the pork for the stuffing and marinate
it in a mixture of choice soy sauce, sugar, fine salt,
kitchen wine, and monosodium glutamate. Then the wrapping
begins. First fold the bamboo or the reed leaves into
a cone. Fill it abot one third full with rice, and bind
it tightly with thread. Finally, put zongzi into
a pot and boil for four hours before eating.
During the Dragon Boat Festival zongzi make
good presents for relatives and friends. They are also
an inexpensive and delicious snack. Because some of
the best ones, such as Wufang zongzi, will keep
for over three months, they can be exported to Hong
Kong, Macao, and foreign countries.
zongzi
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