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Culture Insider: 8 things you may not know about Autumn Equinox

2014-09-24 09:18:19

(Chinaculture.org) By Wen Yi

 

The ancient ceremony of worshipping the moon is reproduced in Yuetan Park, Beijing, Sept 21, 2010. Yuetan Park originally was the Temple of Moon, and every year the emperor would go there to offer a sacrifice to the moon. [Photo/CRI]


Sacrificing to the moon

Originally, the festival of sacrificing to the moon was set on the Autumnal Equinox day. According to historical records, as early as the Zhou Dynasty (c. 11th century-256BC), the ancient kings by custom sacrificed to the sun on the Spring Equinox, and to the moon on the Autumn Equinox.

But since it is not a fixed day in lunar August, there might be no full moon on the Autumnal Equinox. During the festival, if there was no moon to make sacrifices to, it would spoil the fun. Thus, the day was changed to the Mid-Autumn Day.

We recommend:

 Culture Insider: 10 things you may not know about White Dew  Scenic spots in Quanzhou for Mid-Autumn Festival  Culture Insider: Things you need to know about Mid-Autumn Festival

 

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