Festival of the Blang people

National festivals of the Blang people Many traditional festivals are mostly related to religious activities. Among them, the most distinctive festivals and festivals include: New Year's Day, worshiping village gods, washing cow's feet, etc. Other festival customs of the Bulang people are similar to those of the Dai people, such as "Celebrating the New Year", "Entering the Wa", "Coming out of the Wa", etc. On the fifteenth day of the first month of the Dai calendar, "Zhupa" (worship to Buddha) is held, and on the 15th day of the eighth month, "Zhutan" is held. "赕" is a Dai word, which refers to the items offered by secular beings to monks or deceased ancestors. In Buddhism, it is commonly known as "giving" or "begging for alms." According to the legend of the Blang people, they are brothers with the Dai people. The Blang people are the elder brother, who live in the mountainous areas and farm in the mountains. The Dai people are the younger brothers, who live in Bazi and farm paddy fields. Therefore, every time the Bulang people pay homage to the Buddha, they ask the Dai Buddha to go up the mountain, and the Dai people also ask the Bulang Buddha to come down the mountain every time they pay homage to the Buddha. The Blang people are also called "Haawasha" like the Dai people. On this day, as usual, family members will send a flower and a pair of wax sticks to the family head to offer "fetal rolling", and they will also run to perform hand-washing and foot-washing ceremonies for the family head to express blessings. The whole family, men, women, old and young, also have to kowtow to the ghost "Suma" (kowtow) to the door, stairs and furniture, and offer two pairs of wax sticks as sacrifices to pray for the safety of people and animals in the coming year.

What are the ethnic festivals of the Yi people?

Torch Festival: June 24th to 25th, customs: lighting torches, wrestling, bullfighting, singing and dancing

Flower Arrangement/Singing Festival: the eighth day of February, custom: collect azaleas and place them everywhere

Mizhi Festival: the eighth day of February, custom: sacrifice to the dragon tree and have a picnic

Dragon Sacrifice Festival : The eighth day of February, custom: dance Lusheng dance

Saiyi Festival: March 28th Custom: Saiyi

March Meeting: March 28th, custom: Going to the market, dancing, young men and women dressed up to dance the "Left Foot Dance"

Knife-pole Festival: February 8, customs: going to Daoshan and dancing

Bai people

< p> March Street: March 14th to 16th, customs: material exchange, horse racing, dragon boat racing, singing and dancing

Rao Sanling: April 23rd to 25th, customs: Circling the mountain, worshiping ancestors, dancing with the King's Whip, and performing octagonal drum dance

Torch Festival: June 25, customs: exorcise evil spirits, pray for good luck, and pray for a good harvest

This main festival: different dates , Customs: worship the "original master", chant scriptures and songs, burn incense and kowtow, sing and dance, have fun, compete, etc.

Shibaoshan Song Festival: three days of the end of July and the beginning of August, customs: play and sing Bai love songs

Miao Nationality

Huashan Festival: January 3rd, customs: antiphonal singing, Lusheng dance, climbing flower poles

Naxi Nationality

Mila Meeting /Bangbang Festival: May 15th, customs: horse racing, farm tools trade fair

Sacrifice to Heaven: The festival is not fixed, customs: pray for good harvest, eliminate disasters and eliminate evil

Mule Horse Racing Festival: March and July, custom: livestock trading

Sanduo Festival: eighth day of February, custom: horse racing, "Alili" dance, picnic

July Meeting: Mid-July, customs: large livestock trading, antiphonal singing

Mosuo people

Pilgrimage Festival: July 25th, customs: worshiping goddesses, singing and dancing, archery, making friends Axia

Jingpo people

Mu Nao Zongge: January 15th, custom: dance Wenbeng dance

Tibetan people

Days to become a Buddha: April 1st to 4th

God Dance Ceremony: Tibetan New Year’s Eve, custom: God Dance program

Jockey Club: fifth day of May, custom: tents, picnics, banquets , horse racing

Enlightenment Day: October 25th

Duanyang Festival: fifth day of May, customs: horse racing, Guozhuang dance, Xianzi dance, picnic

Shoton Festival: late June or early July in the Tibetan calendar. Customs include: showing off the Big Buddha, dancing Tibetan operas, and visiting Lingka

Tibetan New Year: The Tibetan New Year is the most solemn and lively national festival of the Tibetan people. It begins on the first day of the first lunar month in the Tibetan calendar. It starts on the same day and usually lasts for 15 days. On New Year's Day, at dawn, young men and women dressed in festive costumes pay New Year greetings to each other and wish each other good luck and good luck when they meet. Tibetans in costumes will go to nearby temples to worship Buddha, or go to the streets in groups to sing and dance, but they are not allowed to visit relatives and friends' homes.

Buyi Nationality

Ox King Festival: April 8, customs: eating Cow King cake, giving cattle free food, singing and dancing

Dai Nationality

Water Splashing Festival, customs: singing and dancing, dragon boat racing, splashing water, and flying high

Flower Picking Festival, customs: picking flowers and offering them to Buddha

Dragon Sending Festival: January in the Gregorian calendar, customs: Sending sacrifices to the Dragon God

Hani people

Zhalizuo: January 1st, customs: ancestor worship, antiphonal singing, swinging, and banquets

Amatu: February is a dragon day, customs: offering sacrifices to mountains, ancestors, community forests, etc.

New Rice Festival: the first or second dragon day of August, customs: tasting new things, offering sacrifices to heaven, and offering sacrifices to relatives Dian

Kuzaza: June, customs: antiphonal singing, dancing, worshiping gods

October: October, customs: worshiping ancestors, street feasts

Girls’ Day: February 2nd, customs: picnic, singing and dancing

Mother’s Day: the first ox day in March, customs: worshiping mother, singing songs about missing mother

Zhuang Nationality

Longduan Festival: March, customs: material exchange, antiphonal singing between young men and women, socializing

Lisu Nationality

Song Contest: Twelfth Month Or in the first ten days of the first lunar month, customs: singing songs and bathing

Bathhouse party: Spring Festival, customs: bathing and making friends

***

Eid al-Fitr: the tenth day of Muharram On the first day of the month, customs: worship, giving "oil incense", etc.

Corban Festival: in December, customs: group worship, slaughtering cattle and sheep, etc.

Lahu people

Gourd Festival: October, customs: Lusheng dance, material exchange,

Kuanshi Festival: first day of the first lunar month, customs: receiving new water, Lusheng dance, hunting

Sacrifice Sun God: Beginning of summer, customs: offering sacrifices to the gods, praying for a good harvest

Wa

Lamu Drum Festival: the twelfth lunar month, customs: playing drums, robbing cattle, and dancing

Yao ethnic group

Panwang Festival: May 29th, customs: ancestor worship, singing and dancing

Pumi ethnic group

Mountain transfer meeting: May On the fifth day, customs: walking around mountains, singing and dancing, and firing guns

Achang people

Street meeting: on September 15th, customs: playing green dragons, white elephants, dancing with elephant feet to encourage< /p>

Jinuo Tribe

Big Festival: March, customs: drum dancing, bamboo pole dance, spinning top

Shui Tribe

Duan Festival: From late August to early October, customs: copper drum dance, antiphonal singing to find a mate

Dulong people

Kaquewa: the twelfth lunar month, customs: robbing cattle, offering sacrifices to heaven, dancing in Guozhuang, Inviting each other to be guests

Ai Ni people

Yekuzha: June, customs: playing swings, dancing, and having dinner together

Nu people

Flower Festival: March 15th, customs: collecting flowers, worshiping fairies

Nu Year: twelfth lunar month 29th, customs: archery, hitting stone targets, divination (guessing and singing), swinging, Dance etc.

Mongolian

The traditional festivals of the Mongolian people mainly include the Lunar New Year, Mongolian... >>

The Huo Dan Festival does not belong to any ethnic group. Traditional festivals () a Hani b Xiang c Blang C, not Blang

The Torch Festival is an ancient and important tradition of the Yi, Bai, Naxi, Jinuo, Lahu and other torch festival ethnic groups. Festival

What are the characteristics of the Blang people? The funeral customs of the Blang people are basically the same everywhere. After a person dies, the Buddha or a wizard is asked to chant sutras to drive away ghosts, and the funeral is held within three days. Generally, villages have public cemeteries, divided by family or surname. Burial is common, but cremation is performed in some places for victims of murder. The Blang people are a people who are good at singing and dancing. They often use singing and dancing to celebrate grand festivals. Various musical instruments are used to accompany the performance, as well as martial arts and acrobatics to add to the fun. Young people of the Brown ethnic group have to learn to sing various tunes and play various musical instruments since childhood. The music of the Blang people can be divided into four types: throwing, killing, suing and suing.

Its characteristics are that the swaying tune stimulates lyricism; the zai tune is cheerful and lively; the suo melody is suitable for singing custom songs, accompanied by the minor sanxian; the suffix tune praises national heroes and the vigorous new life, and is used for duet singing in grand singing gatherings. The lead singer often improvises lyrics based on the scene. The dances of the Blang people include festive dances and Buddhist ritual dances. The names of the dances vary from place to place. Xishuangbanna calls it "Tiaoshuo", Shidian and Zhenkang call it "Dage", and Yunxian, Jingdong and Mojiang call it "Tiaoge". "Diaoge" means dancing and singing at the same time. Since most Blang men like martial arts, martial arts are often integrated with singing and dancing. Such as long knife dance, stick swing dance, boxing dance, etc., with neat movements, strong and fit. The "Elephant Foot Dance", "Clap Dance", "Monkey Dance" and "Tea Picking Dance" of the Brown people in Xishuangbanna are mostly derived from people's production and life practices. The dances are graceful, cheerful, vivid and lifelike. The dance of the Blang people is universal. White-haired old people, young people and children will dance gracefully as long as they hear the sound of the bamboo flute. Young people especially like to dance "circle dance". First, the young man who is good at singing and dancing leads the dance. Along with the rhythm of gongs and elephant foot drums, the girls and young men form a circle, with their knees rising and falling slightly. The soft hands dance lightly on both sides of the shoulders, in front or behind, and move their steps in a counter-clockwise direction while dancing. At the same time, a group of young men were jumping rhythmically in the circle. Sometimes they disperse in front of the girl and sing softly to her, sometimes they gather together and look like a tiger leaping. Repeat this cycle and express the joy in your heart.

The Flower Arrangement Festival of the Blang ethnic group. The Blang ethnic group in Dananzhi Township, Banbing District, Shuangjiang County, celebrates the Flower Arrangement Festival on February 8th of the lunar calendar every year, which lasts for one day. At that time, all the women in the village, holding flags and streamers, lined up on the mountain to pick flowers. After picking the flowers, they placed them on a flower tree that had been erected in the center of the village. The tree was covered with paper strips and flags. The whole village people gathered around the flowers and trees, dancing joyfully with their hands on their shoulders, accompanied by bee drums, elephant foot drums, gongs, mans and other musical instruments. The women danced and threw popcorn into the flowering trees. After dancing around the flowers and trees for a while, everyone held hands and danced around the village to express the unity and prosperity of the village. After dancing, the girls and boys played the corbeled harp, "Mixiao" and oral strings, and went to nearby villages to find partners and fall in love.

What festivals are there in Yunnan? Ethnic festival name Main event content time (lunar calendar)

Yi

Torch Festival, wrestling, bullfighting, song and dance performances June 24th

Flower Arrangement Festival, flower arrangement and antiphonal singing on the eighth day of February

Yi Nationality Saiyi Festival, singing and dancing, bright costumes on March 28th

The Tiger Festival of the Yi ethnic group includes tiger sheng dancing and tiger dance from the eighth to the fifteenth day of the first lunar month of the lunar calendar

The Yi ethnic group's Mi Zhi Festival worship ceremony

Mou Ding's "March Meeting" exchange of materials and folk song and dance performances March 27th to February 19th

Bai

Material exchange, horse racing, song and dance performances on March Street in Dali from March 15th to 21st

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Bai people’s Qingniang Festival singing and dancing on the 15th day of the first lunar month

Bai people’s ritual of worshiping three spirits and planting rice seedlings from April 23rd to 25th

Bai people’s rice planting meeting Sacrifices, planting rice seedlings, and antiphonal singing during the Ear Grain Festival

The Bai Nationality’s Torch Festival, planting torches, racing dragon boats, and singing the main tune on June 25th

The Bai Nationality’s Shibaoshan Song Festival, temple fair, and antiphonal singing At the end of July

Picnic in the pear orchard of the Bai Ethnic Pear Blossom Festival every year when the pear blossoms are in full bloom

The Bai ethnic group’s rituals, singing and dancing, and cave scripture music vary from village to village

Dai

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The Water Splashing Festival of the Dai ethnic group involves dragon boat racing, water splashing, singing and dancing in the middle of April in the Gregorian calendar

The Dai ethnic group’s Dragon Sending Festival, offering sacrifices, singing and dancing in January in the Gregorian calendar

The Dai ethnic group closes the door to pagodas, Singing and dancing in the middle of July in the Gregorian calendar

The Dai people visit villages during the Opening Festival, perform high-end performances, and sing and dance in mid-October in the Gregorian calendar

Ha

Ni

Hani Amatu sacrifices, sings and dances, and holds street feasts on the Dragon Day in the second month of the lunar calendar

"Kuzaza" (Juneth Festival) Swinging, wrestling, singing and dancing June 24< /p>

The Hani people celebrate the "Lima Lord" festival with singing, dancing and wrestling in March

The Hani people catch grasshoppers for food during the Grasshopper Catching Festival, which falls on the 24th day of the sixth lunar month

Swings, singing and dancing on the Hani Girl's Day, the fourth day of the second lunar month

Hani Dragon Sacrifice Day/New Rice Festival Gongs, cowhide drums, bawu and ukuleles on the second day of the second lunar month

Swings, singing and dancing at Misoza Festival of Hani people

Bonfires, singing and dancing at Aina Festival of Hani and Miao people in early May

Miao people

Flower climbing at Huashan Festival of Miao and Hani people Pole, Lusheng, singing and dancing on the first day of the first lunar month

Lisu

Su

The Lisu ethnic group holds hot spring baths and sings in the bathhouse on the second day of the first lunar month

Lisu On the first day of the first lunar month and the fifteenth day of the first lunar month, the Lisu people have a reunion dinner and compete in crossbow shooting

During the Lisu Nationality's "Yu Shi" Festival, people climb knife poles, go into the sea of ??fire, throw bags, sing and dance on the eighth day of the second lunar month

Na

Xi

Naxi Mila Party/Bangbang Party picnic, horse racing, singing and dancing, farm tools trading on the eighth day of February

Naxi Sanduo Festival Sacrifice, antiphonal songs and bullfighting on June 25th

Naxi mule and horse gathering for material exchange and cultural and sports performances in mid-March/late July of the lunar calendar

Naxi sacrifice to heaven The Spring Festival is held in the first month/The Autumn Festival is held in July

The Naxi Nationality's July Festival is held in the middle of July in the lunar calendar for material exchanges and cultural and sports performances.

The Naxi Nationality's Dragon Sacrifice Festival is held on the tenth day of the first lunar month. Wu

La

Hu

Kuza Festival (New Year Festival) of the Lahu tribe Elephant foot drum dance, antiphonal singing at the end of March or early April in the Dai calendar

The Lahu people’s Gourd Festival bonfire, singing and dancing on the tenth day of the tenth month of the lunar calendar

The Lahu people worship the sun god, sing and dance to celebrate the beginning of summer

Wa

The Wa people Lamu Drum Festival Sacrifice, Song and Dance "Gerui Month" of the Wa Calendar/December of the Gregorian Calendar

Bu

Lang <

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The Gangyong Festival of the Bulang tribe, singing and dancing in April and September

Du

Dragon

The Kaquewa of the Dulong tribe ( New Year's Day) Sacrifices, slaughtering cattle, singing and dancing in the winter month or the first month of the lunar calendar

Jing

Po

The Jingpo people sing and dance to worship, sing and dance in the first month of the lunar calendar

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Nu

The Nu people celebrate their ancestors, offer sacrifices to soil, sing and dance during the New Year Festival from December to the tenth day of the first lunar month of the following year

The Nu people collect flowers, sing and dance at the Lunar New Year Festival in the third month of the lunar calendar On the 15th

A

Chang

The Achang people will play white elephants in the street and dance on the elephant's feet to encourage the middle of the ninth month of the lunar calendar

Pumi

Mi

During the "New Year's Day" festival of the Pumi ethnic group, swings, horse racing, singing and dancing are held on the sixth day of the twelfth lunar month

The Pumi people have a mountain tour, singing and dancing on the fifth day of the twelfth lunar month On the fifth day of the lunar month

Tibet

Tibetan grassland *** Festival/Tibetan horse racing, picnic, and Guozhuang dancing on the first lunar month

Tibetan "Hua'er" party Singing on the 14th day of the 6th lunar month

Tibetan God Dance Ceremony, offering sacrifices, singing and dancing Tibetan New Year's Eve

Tibetan Jockey Club Horse Racing Horse Racing on the 5th day of the 5th lunar month

Return

< p> Ethnic *** Group worship during the Gurban festival, Eid al-Adha in the tenth month of Muharram

*** Eid prayers, chanting, singing and dancing in the sixth month

*** Food reduction during the Rouzi Festival May 23rd

*** Eid al-Adha slaughters some cattle and sheep and sacrifices in October and December of Muharram

*** Mawlid Festival

*** March 12th in the religious calendar

Ji

Nuo

The Jinuo tribe’s special...>>

Famous festivals of the Yi people: Torch Festival, torch playing, wrestling, bullfighting, song and dance performances on June 24th

Flower Arrangement Festival, flower arrangement and antiphonal singing on the eighth day of February

Yi ethnic group’s Saiyi Festival, singing, dancing and brightly colored costumes on March 28th

Yi ethnic group’s Tiger Festival, tiger sheng dance and tiger dance from the eighth to the 15th day of the first lunar month

Yi ethnic group’s Mi Zhi Festival God Sacrifice Ceremony

Mouding "March Meeting" Material Exchange, Folk Song and Dance Performance March 27th to February 19th

Bai Ethnic Group: Dali March Street Material Exchange, Horse racing, song and dance performances from March 15th to 21st

Bai people’s Qingniang Festival singing and dancing from March 15th

Bai people’s ritual of worshiping three spirits and planting rice from April 23rd to On the 25th

The Bai people hold a rice-planting meeting to offer sacrifices, plant rice seedlings, and sing antiphons to the mango planting festival

The Bai people hold torch festivals, plant torches, race dragon boats, and sing the main song on June 25th

Bai Nationality Shibaoshan Song Festival, Temple Fair and Dual Songs at the end of July

Bai Nationality Pear Blossom Festival picnic in the pear garden every year when the pear blossoms are in full bloom

Bai Nationality main festival, singing and dancing, cave Music varies from village to village

Dai Nationality: Dai Nationality Water Splashing Festival with dragon boat racing, water splashing, singing and dancing in mid-April in the Gregorian calendar

Dai Nationality Dragon Festival offering sacrifices, singing and dancing in January in the Gregorian calendar

The Dai people’s Close-Dooring Festival, singing and dancing on pagodas, mid-July in the Gregorian calendar

The Dai people’s Opening-Dooring Festival, visiting villages, performing high-level promotions, singing and dancing in mid-October in the Gregorian calendar

Hani people: Amatu sacrifice of the Hani people , singing, dancing, and street banquets on the Dragon Day in the second month of the lunar calendar

"Kuzhaza" (June New Year's Day) swings, wrestling, singing and dancing on June 24

The Hani people sing, dance, and wrestle during the "Lima Lord" Festival in March

The Hani people catch grasshoppers for food during the Grasshopper Catching Festival, which falls on the 24th of the sixth lunar month

Hani girls Swing festival, singing and dancing on the fourth day of the second lunar month

Hani Dragon Sacrifice Day/New Rice Festival Gongs, Cowhide Drums, Bawu and Ukulele The second day of the second lunar month

Hani Misoza Festival swings, singing and dancing

Hani and Miao Aina Festival bonfire, singing and dancing in May

Early days

Miao: Miao people climb flower poles, play Lusheng, sing and dance on the first day of the first lunar month during the Huashan Festival

Lisu people: Lisu people bathe in hot springs in bathhouses and sing songs on the second day of the first lunar month

The Lisu people have a reunion dinner and compete in crossbow shooting on the first day to the fifteenth day of the first lunar month during the "Yu Shi" Festival

The Lisu people's knife pole festival involves climbing knife poles, going into the sea of ??fire, throwing bags, singing and dancing on the eighth day of the second month

< p> Naxi: Naxi Mila Club/Bangbang Club picnic, horse racing, singing and dancing, farm tools trading on the eighth day of February

Naxi Sanduo Festival sacrifices, antiphonal songs, bullfighting on June 25< /p>

Material exchange and cultural and sports performances at the Naxi Mule and Horse Conference in the middle of March/mid-to-late July of the lunar calendar

The Naxi Sacrifice to Heaven

The Spring Festival is held in the first month/autumn month Sacrifices are held in July

The Naxi people will exchange materials and cultural and sports performances in July. The middle of the seventh month of the lunar calendar

The Naxi people will exchange materials and perform cultural and sports performances during the Dragon Sacrifice Festival on the 15th day of the first lunar month

< p> Lahu Nationality: Lahu Nationality Kuza Festival (New Year Festival) Elephant Foot Drum Dance, Antiphonal Song at the end of March or early April in the Dai calendar

Lahu Nationality Gourd Festival bonfire, singing and dancing on the tenth day of October in the lunar calendar

Lahu people worship the sun god, sing and dance to celebrate summer

Wa people: Wa people worship Lamu Drum Festival, sing and dance "Gerui month" of the Wa calendar/December of the Gregorian calendar

Blang people : Gangyong Festival sacrifices, singing and dancing of the Bulang people in April and September

Dulong people: Kaquewa (New Year festival) sacrifices, cattle slaughtering, singing and dancing of the Dulong people in winter or the first month

Jingpo people: The Jingpo people worship, sing and dance on the first lunar month of the lunar calendar

Nu people: The Nu people worship their ancestors, offer sacrifices to soil, and sing and dance from December to the tenth day of the first lunar month of the following year

Nu people The Flower Festival collects flowers, sings and dances on the 15th day of the third lunar month

The Achang people: The Achang people play white elephants in the street and dance on the elephant's feet to encourage the mid-ninth month of the lunar calendar

Pumi people: The Pumi people The "New Year" Festival involves swings, horse racing, singing and dancing on the sixth day of the twelfth lunar month

The Pumi people have a mountain tour, singing and dancing on the fifth day of the fifth lunar month

Tibetans: Tibetan Grassland *** Festival/ Tibetan horse racing, picnic, and Guozhuang dancing on the first month of the lunar calendar

Tibetan "Hua'er" duet singing on the 14th day of the sixth month of the lunar calendar

Tibetan God-Dancing Ceremony for worship, singing and dancing on the Tibetan New Year's Eve

Tibetan Jockey Club Horse Racing on the fifth day of the fifth lunar month

***: *** Group worship during the Gurbang Festival and the tenth month of the Muharram festival

*** Eid al-Fitr prayers and chants Sutras, singing and dancing in June

*** Meat reduction...>>

Festivals of ethnic minorities (introduction) Collection of traditional festivals of ethnic minority brothers

Traditional festivals of the Mongolian people

The traditional festivals of the Mongolian people mainly include the Lunar New Year, which in Mongolian is "Chagan Saren", which means the white month. The Mongolian New Year's Day is also called "White Festival" or "White Moon", which is closely related to the whiteness of milk. In addition, there are Naadam, Ma Milk Festival, etc.

Traditional festivals of the Korean people

Their festivals are basically the same as those of the Han people, including the Spring Festival, Qingming Festival, Dragon Boat Festival, Mid-Autumn Festival, Elderly Day, etc. There are also three family festivals, namely baby's first birthday, Huijia Festival (60th birthday), and Huijia Festival (60th wedding anniversary). On every Huijia Festival and Huiwen Festival, children, relatives, friends, and neighbors all send blessings and birthdays to the elderly.

Traditional festivals of the Dai people

The major festivals of the Dai people include the Water Splashing Festival, the Close-Door Festival and the Open-Door Festival, all of which are related to Buddhism.

Traditional festivals of the Dongxiang ethnic group

The Dongxiang ethnic group, like other ethnic groups that believe in religion, has three major festivals every year, namely Eid al-Fitr, Eid al-Adha, and Holy Festival, all of which are derived from ** * teach.

Traditional festivals of the Blang people

Hounan Festival is a grand annual festival of the Blang people. It falls 7 days after the Qingming Festival in the third month of the lunar calendar, that is, April 13-15 of the Gregorian calendar. held.

During the festival, the main activity is splashing water on each other, and the ceremony is completely carried out in accordance with the simple traditional way of the Blang people - the custom of welcoming the sun, so people call it a festival to welcome the sun.

Traditional festivals of the Nu people

The main festivals are: the Spring Festival, called "Jijiamu" in Nu language, also known as the Meisi Festival; the Fairy Festival, also known as the Flower Festival, is a traditional festival for people living in the country. The traditional festival of the Nu people in the Gongshan area is held from the 15th to the 17th of the third lunar month every year; the festival to the Grain God is called "Ruwei" in Nu language. It is the traditional festival of the Nu people in the Pihe area of ??Bijiang County. Every year on December 29th of the lunar calendar, sacrificial activities are held to pray for the blessing of the Grain God.

The traditional festival of the Tatar people

The Tatar language is called "Gurban Aiti", which is a transliteration loanword of the Japanese language, and the Japanese language "Karbon" means "dedication" ". Corban Festival is on December 10th in the Christian calendar, that is, 70 days after the "Ruzi Festival". There are three major festivals: Eid al-Fitr, Eid al-Fitr, and Mawlid.

***’s traditional festivals

*** There are three major festivals, namely Eid al-Fitr, Eid al-Adha and Al-Adha. All three festivals are religious festivals. Eid al-Fitr is the free translation of the Japanese word "De Fischer", so it is also called the "De" festival. In Xinjiang, it is also called the Rozi Festival. Corban Festival, the 70th day after Eid al-Fitr, that is, December 10th in the Christian calendar, is Corban Festival. Eid al-Adha, also known as Eid al-Adha, is the last day of the pilgrimage to Mecca (Mecca: the holy land of Christianity). On this day, you should bathe and purify yourself

, burn incense indoors, and fast for half a day. In the morning, people go to the *** Temple to participate in the ceremony, prostrate to Mecca, ask the imam to slaughter animals, and give part of the slaughtered cattle and mutton to relatives and friends, and to give charity to the poor; Mawlid Festival is the day to commemorate the birth of the Prophet ***. This day is March 12th according to the Christian calendar, and it is also the day that *** passed away. Commemorative activities are usually held at the *** Temple, during which sutras and sacred achievements are recited and spoken. In some places, grand Ermaili meetings (charity banquets) are held on this day to entertain guests.

Traditional festivals of the Manchu people

The Manchu people are influenced by Han culture, and their festivals are similar to those of the Han people, and they attach great importance to the Lunar New Year. The fifteenth day of the first lunar month celebrates the Lantern Festival, the twenty-fifth day of the first lunar month prays for the "Tiancang Festival" in the coming year, the second day of the second lunar month is the day of "Long Locking", there are also the Dragon Boat Festival in May, the "Insect King Festival" in June 6th, and the "Insect King Festival" in August 10th. The Five-Day Mid-Autumn Festival; Tiancang Festival, on the 25th of the first lunar month every year, every Manchu rural family boils sticky sorghum rice, puts it in the warehouse, and weaves a pony out of straw and inserts it into the rice bowl, which means that the horse carries food home. , abundant food and clothing. On the first day, add new rice, three times in a row. Some people also use sorghum straw to make two hoes and stick them on the rice. This festival is still preserved in the rural areas of Northeast China; the Insect King Festival falls in June, which is prone to insect disasters. The Manchus living in Xiuyan and Fengcheng areas of Liaoning Province used to have one person from each household go to the Insect King Temple on the sixth day of June. Worship, kill pigs for sacrifice, and ask the Lord of Insects to avoid disasters and ensure a good harvest in the fields. Nowadays, we do not carry out surveillance activities for the Insect King Festival, but every family has to dry their clothes on this day to prevent insects.

Traditional festivals of the Li people

The festivals of the Li people are closely related to the calendar of the Li people. Before liberation, most of the festivals of the Li people in areas adjacent to Han people and areas where Li and Han people lived together were based on the lunar calendar, and the festivals were the same as those of the Han people, such as Spring Festival, Qingming Festival, Dragon Boat Festival, etc. As far as the Li people are concerned, the most solemn and common festivals are the Spring Festival and March 3rd.

Traditional festivals of the Naxi people

Many of the festivals of the Naxi people are the same as those of the Han people, such as the Spring Festival, Qingming Festival, Dragon Boat Festival, Mid-Autumn Festival, etc. However, the activities of the Spring Festival are different from those of the Han people. The Han nationality is different and has strong national characteristics. Like many people in the southwest...>>