Also known as the moon cake festival.
And the harvest festival.
It’s also a tradition to wear red.
25 of September 2007, September 14 2008.
It’s the (more)
Also known as the moon cake festival.
And the harvest festival.
It’s also a tradition to wear red.
25 of September 2007, September 14 2008.
It’s the third major festival of the year.
The moon cake means dreaded month.
On the 15th to the 8th moon.
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On the fifteenth day of the eighth month, with a full moon overhead, the Chinese celebrate the harvest by retreating to country to enjoy mooncakes, pomoloes, and tea with their families. This celebration is known as the Mid-Autumn Festival. This is (more)
On the fifteenth day of the eighth month, with a full moon overhead, the Chinese celebrate the harvest by retreating to country to enjoy mooncakes, pomoloes, and tea with their families. This celebration is known as the Mid-Autumn Festival. This is a time for family reunions. When a great distance or other circumstance separates family members or lovers, the Chinese say that they can still share the same moon on the same night. The moon has been central to Chinese life for centuries. Chinese calendars, many legends, and some of China’s greatest poets are closely associated with the moon. The chinese believe the moon to be it’s brightest on this day.
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