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  • Each year as the spring arrives, hundreds of millions, perhaps billions of people celebrate

  • Chinese New Year. Its vibrant history and rich symbolism manifest in everything from

  • dance to food. To help explain some of that history and meaning here are The Tent's TOP

  • 10 Chinese New Year Facts

  • The date for Chinese New Year, also known as the Spring Festival, is determined by the

  • Lunar Calendar. Lunar months begin on the day of the dark moon, also called the new

  • moon, and end on the day before the next dark moon; with each month lasting for 29 or 30

  • days. This means that in the Gregorian Calendar, the one most commonly used, the Chinese New

  • Year falls on a different date each year, although it will always fall between January

  • 21st and February 20th.

  • According to Chinese Mythology, the beginning of the New Year started

  • because of the Nian, a beast that lives under the sea or in the mountains, and that comes

  • out of hiding around New Year to eat livestock, crops, and villagers...especially children.

  • To protect themselves from the Nian, the villagers would prepare food and leave on their doorstep.

  • It was believed that once the Nian ate all the food, it would leave the villagers alone.

  • However one day, a villager was visited by a god who told the villager to cover his house

  • with red paper and to place firecrackers in front of his house to scare the Nian; and

  • it worked! From then on, right before the New Year, they decided to hang red lanterns,

  • post springtime scrolls, and lite firecrackers in front of their houses. The Nian never came

  • back, starting the first of many New Year's traditions that we will examine.

  • The Shengxiao, which literally mean "birth likeness", is also known as the Chinese zodiac.

  • Like western astrology, the cycle is divided into 12 parts, each ascribing personality

  • traits and life events. However, the Chinese zodiac's 12-part cycle corresponds to years

  • and is represented by 12 animals. In order they are: the rat, the ox, the tiger, the

  • rabbit, the dragon, the snake, the horse, the goat, the monkey, the rooster, the dog,

  • and the pig. The order of the animals comes from a very old folk story: 13 animals were

  • in a race to meet the Jade Emperor, who had decreed to name the years on the calendar

  • based on the order the animals would finish the race. It's a tale that shows the different

  • personalities and the struggles they each faced to finish the race. The Rat proved to

  • be the smartest one finishing by hiding in the ear of the ox, while the Pig got hungry

  • during the race so he stopped to eat and take a nap finishing last...at the start of the

  • race, there also was a Cat, but sadly it drowned trying to cross the river, and therefore,

  • never made it in the zodiac.

  • Chinese Astrology gets even more complex than what is commonly known in western culture.

  • While you are assigned an animal based on the year you were born, there are also animal

  • signs based on months (also known as inner animals), based on the days (also known as

  • true animals) and based on the hours (also known as secret animals). Furthermore, in

  • addition to the zodiac cycle of 12 animals, there is a 10-year cycle of Celestial Stems,

  • which are associated with one of the five elements of Chinese Astrology: Wood, Fire,

  • Earth, Metal and Water. Each element is rotated every two years, with each one of those two

  • years being associated with either the yin or the yang. Combining all that up means that

  • there's a unique cycle that repeats every 60 years.

  • 2015 is the year of the Goat...more specifically the year of the Yin - Wood - Goat. It is the

  • eighth sign of the 12-year cycle. Although the sign usually refers to a goat, the Chinese

  • word "yang" can refer to goats, sheeps, and rams therefore it not uncommon to hear people

  • celebrate the year of the sheep or the year of the ram. Chinese Astrology describes goats,

  • sheeps, and rams, with the addition of the wood element, as peace-loving, kind, and popular...but

  • also as clingy and resistant to change.

  • Today, Chinese New Year is celebrated in many countries and cities around the world, predominantly

  • those with a large Chinese population. The San Francisco Chinese New Year Festival and

  • Parade is the largest event of its kind outside of Asia. The festivities include people marching

  • down Grant and Kearny streets while carrying colorful flags, banners, lanterns, drums,

  • and firecrackers. Other North American cities celebrating with a parade include Los Angeles,

  • New York City, Boston, Wellington, Toronto, Vancouver and even smaller cities have started

  • hosting celebrations. The London festivities include concerts and performances on Trafalgar

  • Square that attract close to half a million people each year. Sydney also celebrates the

  • Chinese New Year with large appeal. The events there last for 3 weeks and they include outdoor

  • markets, Chinese opera performances, dragonboat races, a film festival, and multiples parades

  • attended by hundreds of thousands of people each year.

  • Chinese New Year celebrations are deeply rooted in family and welcoming in the new year. Shared

  • meals are deeply symbolic to both of these components and they are reflected

  • in traditional food homophones, words that sound the same but

  • have different meanings. Four Chinese New Year dishes are noodles, fish, dumplings,

  • and sticky cake. First, Noodles are a quintessential Chinese food period. During the New Year,

  • uncut noodles, the longer the better, represent longevity. Fish(魚), pronouncedis a

  • homophone for "surpluses"(餘yú), and is often eaten or just displayed and saved

  • for the day after. If you head south towards Canton, the main Chinese new year dumpling

  • is thought to resemble ancient Chinese gold ingots signifying wealth and prosperity. Finally

  • there isn't a better way to end a New Year's meal than with some sweet Niangao, a popular

  • eastern Chinese dessert which literally means sticky cake, but is pronounced as "a more

  • prosperous new year (年高 lit. year high)". These examples from around China are just

  • a sample from a people who have a deep love for food and symbolic word play.

  • The dragon and lion dances are two traditional Chinese dances that are commonly performed

  • during celebrations including Chinese New Year. The dragon dance can be distinguished

  • from the lion dance as dragon dancers are large teams of performers that are fully visible

  • by the crowd. On the other hand, lion dancers operate in two dancer teams and the performers'

  • faces are only seen occasionally, since they are inside the lion costume.

  • As classic Chinese symbols, dragons are believed to bring good luck, therefore the longer the

  • dragon in the dance, the more luck it will bring to the community. The dance is performed

  • by a team of dancers who manipulate a long flexible figure of a dragon using poles positioned

  • at regular intervals along the length of the dragon. Some of its classic movements include:

  • "Cloud Cave", "Whirlpool", T'ai chi pattern, "threading the money", ""looking for pearl"",

  • and "dragon encircling the pillar." The movement "looking for pearl" is emblematic

  • for the pursuit of wisdom. The Dragon dance also reflects agricultural roots that can be seen

  • in the movements for the river dragon deities.

  • The Chinese lion dance has fundamental movements that can be found in most Chinese martial arts.

  • The two main forms of the Chinese lion dance are the Northern and Southern Lion dances,

  • with many Southeast Asian countries adapting a form of the later. In Southern Chinese Lion

  • Dancing, the lion consists of a head which is traditionally constructed using papier-mâché

  • over a bamboo frame, and a body made of fabric trimmed with fur. The colors of the lion,

  • particularly white, yellow, and black, are symbolic of the lion's age but also refer

  • to three historical characters recorded in the classic Romance of the Three Kingdoms.

  • The Chinese Lion Dance is also performed accompanied by the beating of drums, cymbals, and gongs.

  • While these dances have been described in depth, seeing them performed live is the best

  • route to go.

  • The Chinese New Year is often accompanied by loud, enthusiastic greetings, often referred

  • to as 吉祥話 (jíxiánghùa) in Mandarin, loosely translated as auspicious words or

  • phrases. The Chinese love for wordplay in auspicious phrases is often structured in

  • New Year couplets, printed in gold letters on bright red paper. They probably predate

  • the Ming Dynasty (1368–1644), but did not become widespread until then.Today, they are

  • ubiquitous with Chinese New Year. These greetings or phrases may also be used before children

  • can receive their red packets. Some examples include:

  • "May your wealth [gold and jade] come to fill a hall",

  • - "May you realize your ambitions", "Greet the New Year and

  • encounter happiness", "May all your wishes be fulfilled",

  • "May your happiness be in abundance",

  • "May you hear [in a letter] that all is well", and finally

  • "May your happiness and longevity be complete." Children and teenagers sometimes jokingly

  • use the phrase 恭喜發財,紅包拿來 "Congratulations and be prosperous, now give me my red envelope!"

  • This is followed by a heavy beating unless you're a really cute kid...just kidding.

  • As previously mentioned, a classic Chinese New Year tradition is the giving and requesting

  • of red envelopes, also known as "hong bao." Hong bao are usually given out by married

  • couples from the previous generation to single people, especially to children. The red color

  • of the envelope symbolizes good luck and is supposed to ward off evil spirits. The practice

  • is thought to have originated in the Qin Dynasty where the elderly would thread coins with

  • a red string. The money was referred to assuì qián (Chinese: 壓祟錢) or "money

  • warding off evil spirits" and was believed to protect the person of younger generation

  • from sickness and death. The yasui qian was replaced by red envelopes when printing presses

  • became more common. Red envelopes continue to be referred to by such names today. As

  • a last thought, during New Year it is traditional to put brand new notes inside red envelopes

  • and also to avoid opening the envelopes in front of the relatives out of courtesy.

  • Chunyun, or the spring festival, is also a period of travel in China with an extremely

  • high traffic load around the time of the Chinese New Year. The number of passenger journeys

  • during the Chunyun period has exceeded the population of China, hitting over 2 billion

  • in 2006 and it has been called the largest annual human migration in the world. Three

  • main factors are responsible: First, it is a long-held tradition for most Chinese people

  • to reunite with their families during Chinese New Year. Since the Chinese economic reforms

  • of the late 1970s, new economic opportunities have emerged, often at a considerable distance

  • from people's hometowns. This particular phenomena is given a human face in the 2009 film, "The Last

  • Train Home" where it connects the migration with tech companies like Apple. Second, Chinese

  • education reforms have increased the number of university students, who often study outside

  • of their hometown. The Spring Festival holiday period falls around the same time frame as

  • their winter break. Among the 194 million railway passengers of the 2006 Chunyun period

  • were 6.95 million university students. Finally, because the Spring Festival Period is one

  • of the few week-long holiday periods in the People's Republic of China, many people choose

  • to travel for pleasure around this time. Tourism in mainland China is reaching record levels,

  • further adding to the pressure on the transportation system.

  • You have heard our TOP10 list for Chinese New Year Facts

  • and now we want to hear yours. How do you celebrate?

  • What questions do you have?

  • Let us know in the comments

  • and don't forget to subscribe!

Each year as the spring arrives, hundreds of millions, perhaps billions of people celebrate

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