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Published byLandon Hawkins Modified over 11 years ago
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Zhōng qiū jié Mid-Autumn Festival 19 September 2013
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The Mid-Autumn Festival is also called The Moon Festival.
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Like Chinese New Year, it is a festival in the traditional Chinese calendar, also called the Farmers Calendar, and is based on the phases of the moon, not the movement of the sun.
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This means it falls on a different day each year, but always the 15th day of the 8th lunar month. This year it falls on 19 September.
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The most famous story connected to the Mid-Autumn Festival is about the great archer Hòu Yì, who shot down the nine suns, and his love for Cháng É, who became the moon goddess.
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Chinese people do not believe there is a man in the moon. They see a magic rabbit who keeps the goddess Cháng É company.
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Food is important in all Chinese festivals. The Mid-Autumn Festival is famous for mooncakes, pastries with sweet or savoury fillings, often with an egg yolk in the middle to represent the moon.
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Families get together to have dinner and admire the moon, often visiting famous scenic spots such as West Lake in Hángzhōu.
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Happy Mid-Autumn Festival!
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