Search: in
Qingming Festival
Qingming Festival Encyclopedia
  Tutorials     Encyclopedia     Dictionary     Directory  
Qingming_Festival Email this to a friend      Qingming_Festival

Qingming Festival

Qingming Festival
Qingming Festival

Qingming Festival

Burning paper gifts for the departed.
Burning paper gifts for the departed.
The Qingming Festival (, or Ching Ming Festival in Hong Kong, Vietnamese language: T?t Thanh Minh), meaning Clear and Bright Festival, is a traditional Chinese festival on the 104th day after the winter solstice (or the 15th day from the Spring Equinox), usually occurring around April 5 of the Gregorian calendar (see Chinese calendar). Every leap year, Qing Ming is on April 4. Astronomically, it is also a solar term (See Qingming). In solar terms, the Qingming festival is on the 1st day of the 5th solar term, which is also named Qingming. Its name denotes a time for people to go outside and enjoy the greenery of springtime (?? Tàq?ng, "treading on the greenery"), and also to tend to the graves of departed ones.

Qingming is a statutory public holiday in mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan. It has long been a public holiday in the latter three jurisdictions, but became a public holiday in mainland China in 2008 for the first time since 1949.[1][2]

The transcription of the term Qingming may appear in a number of different forms, some of which are:

  • Qingming
  • Qing Ming
  • Qing Ming Jie
  • Ching Ming (official in Hong Kong[3])
  • Ching Ming Chieh

Contents


Introduction

The holiday is also known by a number of other names in the English language:

  • All Souls Day (not to be confused with the Roman Catholic holiday, All Souls Day, of the same name)
  • Clear Brightness Festival
  • Festival for Tending Graves
  • Grave Sweeping Day
  • Chinese Memorial Day
  • Tomb Sweeping Day
  • Spring Remembrance

Tomb Sweeping Day and Clear Brightness Festival are the most common English translations of Qingming Festival. Tomb Sweeping Day is used in several English language newspapers published in the Republic of China.

For the Chinese, it is a day to remember and honor one's ancestors at grave sites. Young and old pray before the ancestors, sweep the tombs and offer food, tea, wine, chopsticks, (joss) paper accessories, and/or libation to the ancestors. The rites are very important to most Chinese and especially farmers. Some people carry willow branches with them on Qingming, or put willow branches on their gates and/or front doors. They think that willow branches help ward off the evil ghosts that wander on Qingming. Also on Qingming, people go on family outings, start the spring plowing, sing, dance, and Qingming is a time where young couples start courting. Another popular thing to do is fly kites (in shapes of animals, or characters from Chinese opera).

The April Fifth Movement and the Tiananmen Incident were major events on Qingming that took place in the history of the People's Republic of China. When Premier Zhou Enlai died in 1976, thousands visited him during the festival to pay respect. In the Republic of China, April 4 coincides with the passing of Chiang Kai-shek and the date is designated as a national holiday.

On a note, the overseas Chinese communities in Southeast Asian nations such as Singapore and Malaysia also practice this custom. However the practice is in decline in these regions.

Hanshi, the day before Qingming, was created by Chong'er, the Duke Wen of the state of Jin during the Spring and Autumn Period when he accidentally killed his personal friend and servant Jie Zhitui (???) (or Jie Zitui) and his mother in a fireblaze in the hope of making him return to him (Chong'er). On Hanshi, people were not allowed to use fires to heat up food, thus nicknaming it the Cold Food Festival. Eventually, 300 years ago, the Hanshi "celebration" was combined with the Qingming festival, but later abandoned by most people.

Qingming itself was created by the Tang Emperor Xuanzong in 732. It is said that because the wealthy held too many expensive, elaborate ancestor-worshipping ceremonies, in a needed effort to lower this expense, Emperor Xuanzong declared that respects could be formally paid at ancestor's graves only on Qingming.

Qingming in Chinese Tea Culture

The Qingming festival holiday has a lot of significance in Chinese Tea culture since this specific day divides the fresh green teas by their picking dates. Green teas made from leaves picked before this date are given the prestigious 'pre-qingming' or 'mingqian' designation which commands a much higher price tag. These teas are prized for having much lighter and subtler aromas than those picked after the festival [4].

Qingming in painting

The famous Qingming scroll by Zhang Zeduan is an ancient Chinese painting which portrays the scene of Kaifeng city, the capital of Song Dynasty during Qingming period.

Qingming in literature

Qingming was frequently mentioned in Chinese literature. Among these, the most famous one is probably Du Mu's poem (simply titled "Qingming"):

Traditional Chinese Simplified Chinese pinyin
q?ng míng shí jié y? f?n f?n
lù shàng xíng rén yù duàn hún
jiè wèn ji? ji? hé chù y?u
mù tóng yáo zh? xìng hu? c?n
English translation

<poem>

A drizzling rain falls like tears on the Mourning Day; The mourner's heart is breaking on his way. Where can a winehouse be found to drown his sadness? A cowherd points to Xing Hua village in the distance. </poem>

  • Note: (The word: ?? can have multiple meaning. 1. Winehouse or restaurant; 2. Hostel, Hotel or Motel)

In the Vietnamese epic poem The Tale of Kieu, Qingming is also mentioned as the occasion where the protagonist Kieu meets a ghost of a dead old lady. The lines describing the sceneries during this festival remain some of the most well-known lines in Vietnamese literature:

<poem>

Ngày xuân con én ??a thoi Thi?u quang chín ch?c ?ã ngoài sáu m??i C? non xanh t?n chân tr?i Cành lê tr?ng ?i?m m?t vài bông hoa Thanh Minh trong ti?t tháng ba L? là T?o m?, h?i là ??p thanh G?n xa nô n?c y?n oanh Ch? em s?m s?a b? hành ch?i xuân </poem>

English translation:

<poem>

Swift swallows and spring days were shuttling by of ninety radiant ones three score had fled. Young grass spread all its green to heaven's rim; some blossoms marked pear branches with white dots. Now came the Feast of Light in the third month with graveyard rites and junkets on the green. As merry pilgrims flocked from near and far, the sisters and their brother went for a stroll. </poem>

See also

References

External links

de:Qingming-Fest fr:Qingmingjie id:Festival Qingming ms:Perayaan Qingming no:Qingming ru:?????? th:?????????????? zh:???


Qingming Festival
Qingming Festival
Qingming Festival

Source: Wikipedia | The above article is available under the GNU FDL. | Edit this article

Qingming Festival
Qingming Festival
Search for Qingming Festival in Tutorials
Search for Qingming Festival in Encyclopedia
Search for Qingming Festival in Dictionary
Search for Qingming Festival in Open Directory
Search for Qingming Festival in Store
Search for Qingming Festival in PriceGig


Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
Submit a Site - Open Directory Project - Become an Editor

Qingming Festival
Advertisement

Advertisement



Qingming Festival
Qingming_Festival top Qingming_Festival

Home - Add TutorGig to Your Site - Disclaimer

©2008-2009 TutorGig.com. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Statement