Mid-Autumn Festival

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Mid-Autumn Festival
Mid-Autumn Festival
Mid-Autumn Festival decorations in Beijing
Official name 中秋節 (Zhōngqiū Jié in China, Taiwan, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia; "Tiong Chiu Jiet" in Hokkien-speaking areas, Jūng-chāu Jit in Hong Kong and Macau)
Tết Trung Thu (Vietnam)
Observed by China, Taiwan, Korea, Japan, Singapore, Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines, Cambodia, Thailand
Significance Celebrates the end of the autumn harvest
Date 15th day of the 8th lunar month
Observances Consumption of mooncakes
Consumption of cassia wine
Related to Chuseok 추석/秋夕 (in Korea), Tsukimi 月見 (in Japan)

The Mid-Autumn Festival is a harvest festival celebrated notably by the Chinese and Vietnamese people. Similar festivals are celebrated as Chuseok in Korea and Tsukimi in Japan. This festival is held on the 15th day of the 8th month of the lunar calendar, corresponding to mid September to early October of the Gregorian calendar, with a full moon at night. Like many other harvest festivals around the world, this is close to the autumn equinox. Thus although the Mid-Autumn Festival primarily celebrates the moon, the importance of the sun in our lives and especially successful harvests is also recognized.

Mooncakes, a rich pastry typically filled with sweet-bean or lotus-seed paste, are traditionally eaten during the festival. These cakes, named after the shape of the full moon, reflects the moon worship aspect of the festival, as well as evoking a desire for reunion and harmony with family members.

Names

The Mid-Autumn Festival is also known by other names, such as:

  • Moon Festival or Harvest Moon Festival, because of the celebration's association with the full moon on this night, as well as the traditions of moon worship and moon viewing.
  • Zhōngqiū Jié (中秋节), is the official name in Mandarin.
  • Jūng-chāu Jit (中秋節), official name in Cantonese.
  • Reunion Festival, in earlier times, a woman in China took this occasion to visit her parents before returning to celebrate with her husband and his parents.[1]
  • Tết Trung Thu, official name in Vietnamese.
  • Children's Festival, in Vietnam, because of the emphasis on the celebration of children.[2]
  • Chuseok (추석/秋夕; Autumn Eve), Korean variant of the Mid-Autumn Festival celebrated on the same day in the lunar calendar.
  • Tsukimi (月見; Moon-Viewing), Japanese variant of the Mid-Autumn Festival celebrated on the same day in the lunar calendar.
  • Lantern Festival, a term sometimes used in Singapore, Malaysia, and Indonesia, which is not to be confused with the Lantern Festival in China that occurs on the 15th day of the first month of the Chinese calendar.

Meanings of the festival

The festival celebrates three fundamental concepts that are closely connected:

  • Gathering, such as family and friends coming together, or harvesting crops for the festival. It is said the moon is the brightest and roundest on this day which means family reunion. Consequently, this is the main reason why the festival is thought to be important.
  • Thanksgiving, to give thanks for the harvest, or for harmonious unions
  • Praying (asking for conceptual or material satisfaction), such as for babies, a spouse, beauty, longevity, or for a good future

Traditions and myths surrounding the festival are formed around these concepts, although traditions have changed over time due to changes in technology, science, economy, culture, and religion.[3]

Origins and development

The Chinese have celebrated the harvest during the autumn full moon since the Shang dynasty (c. 1600–1046 B.C.E.).[3] The term mid-autumn (中秋) first appeared in Rites of Zhou, a written collection of rituals of the Western Zhou dynasty (1046–771 B.C.E.).[4]

The celebration as a festival only started to gain popularity during the early Tang dynasty (618–907 C.E.).[4] One legend explains that Emperor Xuanzong of Tang started to hold formal celebrations in his palace after having explored the Moon-Palace.[3]

For the Baiyue peoples, the harvest time commemorated the dragon who brought rain for the crops.[5]

Empress Dowager Cixi (late nineteenth century) enjoyed celebrating the Mid-Autumn Festival so much that she would spend the period between the thirteenth and seventeenth day of the eighth month staging elaborate rituals.[6]

Moon worship

Houyi helplessly looking at his wife Chang'e flying off to the moon after she drank the elixir

An important part of the festival celebration is moon worship. The ancient Chinese believed in rejuvenation being associated with the moon and water, and connected this concept to the menstruation of women, calling it "monthly water."[1] The Zhuang people, for example, have an ancient fable saying the sun and moon are a couple and the stars are their children, and when the moon is pregnant, it becomes round, and then becomes crescent after giving birth to a child. These beliefs made it popular among women to worship and give offerings to the moon on this evening.[1]

Offerings are also made to a more well-known lunar deity, Chang'e, known as the Moon Goddess of Immortality. The myths associated with Chang'e explain the origin of moon worship during this day:

In the ancient past, there was a hero named Hou Yi who was excellent at archery. His wife was Chang'e. One year, the ten suns rose in the sky together, causing great disaster to the people. Yi shot down nine of the suns and left only one to provide light. An immortal admired Yi and sent him the elixir of immortality. Yi did not want to leave Chang'e and be immortal without her, so he let Chang'e keep the elixir. However, Peng Meng, one of his apprentices, knew this secret. So, on the fifteenth of August in the lunar calendar, when Yi went hunting, Peng Meng broke into Yi's house and forced Chang'e to give the elixir to him. Chang'e refused to do so. Instead, she swallowed it and flew into the sky. Since she loved her husband and hoped to live nearby, she chose the moon for her residence. When Yi came back and learned what had happened, he felt so sad that he displayed the fruits and cakes Chang'e liked in the yard and gave sacrifices to his wife. People soon learned about these activities, and since they also were sympathetic to Chang'e they participated in these sacrifices with Yi.[7]

An alternate common version of the myth also relates to moon worship:

After the hero Houyi shot down nine of the ten suns, he was pronounced king by the thankful people. However, he soon became a conceited and tyrannical ruler. In order to live long without death, he asked for the elixir from Xiwangmu. But his wife, Chang'e, stole it on the fifteenth of August because she did not want the cruel king to live long and hurt more people. She took the magic potion to prevent her husband from becoming immortal. Houyi was so angry when discovered that Chang'e took the elixir, he shot at his wife as she flew toward the moon, though he missed. Chang'e fled to the moon and became the spirit of the moon. Houyi died soon because he was overcome with great anger. Thereafter, people offer a sacrifice to Chang'e on every lunar fifteenth of August to commemorate Chang'e's action.[7]

Contemporary celebration

The Mid-Autumn Festival is held on the 15th day of the eighth month in the Chinese calendar—essentially the night of a full moon—which falls near the Autumnal Equinox (on a day between September 8 and October 7 in the Gregorian calendar).

Traditionally the festival is a time to enjoy the successful reaping of rice and wheat with food offerings made in honor of the moon. Today, it is still an occasion for outdoor reunions among friends and relatives to eat mooncakes and watch the moon, a symbol of harmony and unity. During a year of a solar eclipse, it is typical for governmental offices, banks, and schools to close extra days in order to enjoy the extended celestial celebration an eclipse brings.[8] The festival is celebrated with many cultural or regional customs, among them:

  • Burning incense in reverence to deities including Chang'e.
  • Performance of dragon and lion dances, popular in southern China and Hong Kong.[9]

Lanterns

Mid-Autumn Festival lanterns in Chinatown, Singapore
Mid-Autumn Festival lanterns at a shop in Hong Kong

A notable part of celebrating the holiday is the carrying of brightly lit lanterns, lighting lanterns on towers, or floating sky lanterns. Another tradition involving lanterns is to write riddles on them and have other people try to guess the answers.[10]

It is difficult to discern the original purpose of lanterns in connection to the festival, but it is certain that lanterns were not used in conjunction with moon-worship prior to the Tang dynasty.[3] Traditionally, the lantern has been used to symbolize fertility, and functioned mainly as a toy and decoration. But today the lantern has come to symbolize the festival itself. In the old days, lanterns were made in the image of natural things, myths, and local cultures. Over time, a greater variety of lanterns could be found as local cultures became influenced by their neighbors.[3]

As China gradually evolved from an agrarian society to a mixed agrarian-commercial one, traditions from other festivals began to be transmitted into the Mid-Autumn Festival, such as the putting of lanterns on rivers to guide the spirits of the drowned as practiced during the Ghost Festival, which is observed a month before. Hong Kong fishermen during the Qing dynasty, for example, would put up lanterns on their boats for the Ghost Festival and keep the lanterns up until Mid-Autumn Festival.[3]

In Vietnam, children participate in parades in the dark under the full moon with lanterns of various forms, shapes, and colors. Traditionally, lanterns signify the wish for the sun's light and warmth to return after winter.[11] In addition to carrying lanterns, the children also don elaborate masks. Handcrafted shadow lanterns were an important part of Mid-Autumn displays since the twelfth-century Lý dynasty, often of historical figures from Vietnamese history.[5] Handcrafted lantern-making has declined in modern times due to the availability of mass-produced plastic lanterns, which often depict internationally recognized characters such as Pokémon's Pikachu, Disney characters, SpongeBob SquarePants, and Hello Kitty.

Mooncakes

Typical lotus bean-filled mooncakes eaten during the festival
Animal-shaped mooncakes in Vietnam

Mooncakes, a rich pastry typically filled with sweet-bean or lotus-seed paste, are traditionally eaten during the festival.[12]

Nowadays, people celebrate the Moon Festival as a time for family reunions, and the making and sharing mooncakes is one of the hallmark traditions of this festival. Mooncakes are also given as gifts to colleagues at work, friends, and relatives. Chinese people see in the roundness of mooncakes a symbol of reunion and happiness. They are often eaten after dinner shared with the whole family, while admiring the moon.[13]

Although typical mooncakes can be around a few centimeters in diameter, imperial chefs have made some as large as eight meters in diameter, with its surface pressed with designs of Chang'e, cassia trees, or the Moon-Palace.[8] The spectacle of making very large mooncakes has continued in modern China.[14]

The origin of mooncakes, according to Chinese folklore, comes from a Turpan businessman offering cakes to Emperor Taizong of Tang in his victory against the Xiongnu on the fifteenth day of the eighth lunar month. Taizong took the round cakes and pointed to the moon with a smile, saying, "I'd like to invite the toad to enjoy the (胡) cake." After sharing the cakes with his ministers, the custom of eating these cakes spread throughout the country.[15] Eventually these became known as mooncakes. Although the legend explains the beginnings of mooncake-giving, its popularity and ties to the festival began during the Song dynasty (906–1279 C.E.).[3]

Another popular legend concerns the Han Chinese's uprising against the ruling Mongols at the end of the Yuan dynasty (1280–1368 C.E.). The rebel leader, Zhu Yuanzhang, had the idea to place messages in the mooncakes that the Han Chinese were to rebel on the 15th day of the 8th month. The rebellion succeeded and Zhu Yuanzhuang set up the Ming Dynasty.[16]

Other foods and food displays

Cassia wine is the traditional choice for "reunion wine" drunk during Mid-Autumn Festival
Vietnamese rice figurines, known as tò he

Food offerings made to deities are placed on an altar set up in the courtyard, including apples, pears, peaches, grapes, pomegranates, melons, oranges, and pomelos.[17]

One of the first decorations purchased for the celebration table is a clay statue of the Jade Rabbit. In Chinese folklore, the Jade Rabbit is an animal that lives on the moon, based on the markings of the moon which appear like a rabbit or hare. The rabbit is seen as pounding with a mortar and pestle. In Chinese folklore, the rabbit often is portrayed as a companion of the Moon goddess Chang'e, constantly pounding the elixir of life for her. Offerings of soy beans and cockscomb flowers may be made to the Jade Rabbit.[8]

Owing to the timing of the plant's blossoms, cassia wine is the traditional choice for the "reunion wine" drunk on the occasion. Also, people will celebrate by eating cassia cakes and candy.

In Vietnam, cakes and fruits are not only consumed, but elaborately prepared as food displays. For example, glutinous rice flour and rice paste are molded into familiar animals. Pomelo sections can be fashioned into unicorns, rabbits, or dogs.[5] Into the early decades of the twentieth century of Vietnam, daughters of wealthy families would prepare elaborate centerpieces filled with treats for their younger siblings. Well-dressed visitors could visit to observe the daughter's handiwork as an indication of her capabilities as a wife in the future. Eventually the practice of arranging centerpieces became a tradition not just limited to wealthy families.[5]

Courtship and matchmaking

The Mid-Autumn moon has traditionally been a choice occasion to celebrate marriages. Girls would pray to moon deity Chang'e for help to fulfill their romantic wishes.[6]

In some parts of China, dances are held for young men and women to find partners. For example, young women are encouraged to throw their handkerchiefs to the crowd, and the young man who catches and returns the handkerchief has a chance at romance.[9] In Daguang, in southwest Guizhou Province, young men and women of the Dong people would make an appointment at a certain place. The young women would arrive early to overhear remarks made about them by the young men. The young men would praise their lovers in front of their fellows, in which finally the listening women would walk out of the thicket. Pairs of lovers would go off to a quiet place to open their hearts to each other.[1]

Into the early decades of the twentieth century Vietnam, young men and women used the festival as a chance to meet future life companions. Groups would assemble in a courtyard and exchange verses of song while gazing at the moon. Those who performed poorly were sidelined until one young man and one young woman remained, after which they would win prizes as well as entertain matrimonial prospects.[5]

Games and activities

During the 1920s and 1930s, ethnographer Chao Wei-pang conducted research on traditional games among men, women, and children on or around the time of Mid-Autumn Festival in the Guangdong Province. The following are examples:[8]

  • One type of activity, "Ascent to Heaven" (上天堂 shàng tiāntáng) involves a young lady selected from a circle of women to "ascend" into the celestial realm. While being enveloped in the smoke of burning incense, she describes the beautiful sights and sounds she encounters.
  • Another activity, "Descent into the Garden" (落花园 luò huāyuán), played among younger girls, detailed each girl's visit to the heavenly gardens. According to legend, a flower tree represented her, and the number and color of the flowers indicated the sex and number of children she would have in her lifetime.
  • Men played a game called "Descent of the Eight Immortals" (jiangbaxian), where one of the Eight Immortals took possession of a player, who would then assume the role of a scholar or warrior.
  • Children would play a game called "Encircling the Toad" (guanxiamo), where the group would form a circle around a child chosen to be a Toad King and chanted a song that transformed the child into a toad. He would jump around like a toad until water was sprinkled on his head, in which he would then stop.

Practices by region and cultures

Mid-Autumn Festival celebrations in Victoria Park, Hong Kong

Xiamen

A unique tradition is celebrated quite exclusively in the island city of Xiamen. During the month of the festival, families and friends gather to play a gambling type of game involving six dice. People take turns in rolling the dice in a ceramic bowl with the results determining what they win. The number 4 is mainly what determines the prize is.[18]

Hong Kong and Macau

Lantern in Senado Square, Macau

In Hong Kong and Macau, the day after the Mid-Autumn Festival is a public holiday rather than the festival date itself, because many celebration events are held at night. Mooncakes are the most important feature there. However, people don't usually buy mooncakes for themselves, but rather to give their relatives as presents. People start to exchange these presents well in advance of the festival. Hence, mooncakes are sold in elegant boxes for presentation purposes, at high prices. The mooncake manufacturers also explore in the creation of new types of mooncakes, such as ice-cream mooncake and snow skin mooncake.

Other traditions related to the Mid-Autumn Festival in Hong Kong include impressive lantern exhibitions with traditional stage shows, game stalls, palm readings, and many other festive activities. The grandest celebrations take place in Victoria Park (Hong Kong).[19] One of the brightest rituals is the Fire Dragon Dance dating back to the nineteenth century and recognized as a part of China's intangible cultural heritage.[20] The 200 foot-long fire dragon requires more than 300 people to operate, taking turns. The leader of the fire dragon dance would pray for peace, good fortune through blessings in Hakka. After the ritual ceremony, fire-dragon was thrown into the sea with lanterns and paper cards, which means the dragon would return to the sea and take the misfortunes away.[21]

Vietnam

Vietnamese children celebrating the Mid-Autumn Festival with traditional 5-pointed star-shaped lantern

The Mid-Autumn festival is named "Tết Trung Thu" in Vietnamese. It is also known as Children's Festival because of the event's emphasis on children.[2] In olden times, the Vietnamese believed that children, being innocent and pure, had the closest connection to the sacred and natural world. Being close to children was seen as a way to connect with animist spirits and deities.[11]

In its most ancient form, the evening commemorated the dragon who brought rain for the crops.[5] Celebrants would observe the moon to divine the future of the people and harvests. Eventually the celebration came to symbolize a reverence for fertility, with prayers given for bountiful harvests, increase in livestock, and human babies. Over time, the prayers for children evolved into a celebration of children. By the early twentieth century in Hanoi, the festival had begun to assume its identity as a children's festival.[5]

Aside from the story of Chang'e (Vietnamese: Hằng Nga), there are two other popular folktales associated with the festival Vietnam. The first describes the legend of Cuội, whose wife accidentally urinated on a sacred banyan tree. The tree began to float towards the moon, and Cuội, trying to pull it back down to earth, floated to the moon with it, leaving him stranded there. Every year, during the Mid-Autumn Festival, children light lanterns and participate in a procession to show Cuội the way back to Earth.[22] The other tale involves a carp who wanted to become a dragon, and as a result, worked hard throughout the year until he was able to transform himself into a dragon.[2]

One important event before and during the festival are lion dances. Dances are performed by both non-professional children's groups and trained professional groups. Lion dance groups perform on the streets, going to houses asking for permission to perform for them. If the host consents, the "lion" will come in and start dancing as a blessing of luck and fortune for the home. In return, the host gives "lucky money" to show their gratitude.[23]

Philippines

In the Philippines, the Chinese Filipino community celebrate the evening and exchange mooncakes with fellow friends, families and neighbors.[24] A game of chance, originating from the island city of Xiamen in China, known as Pua Tiong Chiu which means "mid-autumn gambling" in Philippine Hokkien, or simply mid-autumn dice game, is played by both Filipino-Chinese and Filipinos alike.[25]

Taiwan

In Taiwan, the Mid-Autumn Festival is a public holiday. Outdoor barbecues have become a popular affair for friends and family to gather and enjoy each other's company. Taipei designated 15 riverside parks to accommodate outdoor barbecues for the public.[26]

Similar traditions in Japan and Korea

Similar traditions are found in Japan and Korea. These festivals tend to occur on the same day or around the Mid-Autumn Festival.

Japan

Main article: Tsukimi

The Japanese moon viewing festival, o-tsukimi, is also held at this time. The custom is originated with Japanese aristocrats during the Heian period. They would gather to recite poetry under the full moon of the eighth month of the solar calendar, known as the "Mid-Autumn Moon."[27]

Today, on the evening of the full moon, people gather in a place where the moon can be seen clearly, decorate the scene with Japanese pampas grass, and serve white rice dumplings (known as Tsukimi dango), taro, edamame, chestnuts, and other seasonal foods, plus sake as offerings to the moon in order to pray for an abundant harvest.

Korea

Main article: Chuseok

Chuseok (추석; 秋夕), literally "Autumn eve," once known as hangawi (한가위; from archaic Korean for "the great middle (of autumn)"), is a major harvest festival and a three-day holiday in both North and South Korea. It is celebrated on the 15th day of the 8th month of the lunar calendar on the full moon.

Koreans visit their ancestral hometowns where they pay respect to their ancestors and share a feast of Korean traditional food such as songpyeon (송편) and rice wines to celebrate the good harvest. It is often referred to as the Korean "Thanksgiving Day."

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Xing Li, Festivals of China's Ethnic Minorities (China Intercontinental Press, 2006, ISBN 7508509994).
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Jonathan H.X. Lee and Kathleen M. Nadeau (eds.), Encyclopedia of Asian American Folklore and Folklife (ABC-CLIO, 2011, ISBN 0313350663).
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 Kin Wai Michael Siu, Lanterns of the mid-Autumn Festival: A Reflection of Hong Kong Cultural Change The Journal of Popular Culture 33(2) (1999): 67–86. Retrieved October 25, 2019.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Fercility, The Origins and History of China’s Mid-Autumn Festival China Highlights, September 24, 2019. Retrieved October 30, 2019.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 Van Huy Nguyen and Laurel Kendall (eds.), Vietnam: Journeys of Body, Mind, and Spirit (University of California Press, 2003, ISBN 9780520238725).
  6. 6.0 6.1 Christian Roy, Traditional Festivals: A Multicultural Encyclopedia (ABC-CLIO, 2004, ISBN 1576070891).
  7. 7.0 7.1 Lihui Yang, Deming An, and Jessica Anderson Turner, Handbook of Chinese Mythology (Oxford University Press, 2008, ISBN 0195332636).
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 Carol Stepanchuk and Charles Choy Wong, Mooncakes and Hungry Ghosts: Festivals of China (China Books & Periodicals, 1992, ISBN 0835124819).
  9. 9.0 9.1 Mid-Autumn Festival and its traditions ChinaDaily, August 31, 2011. Retrieved October 30, 2019.
  10. Joanne Ma, This Mid-Autumn Festival, learn all about the ancient Chinese tradition of writing riddles on lanterns - and solve some yourself Young Post, September 24, 2018. Retrieved October 31, 2019.
  11. 11.0 11.1 Barbara Cohen, Mid-Autumn Children's Festival Things Asian, October 1, 1995. Retrieved October 31, 2019.
  12. Sienna Parulis-Cook, Mooncakes: China's Evolving Tradition The Atlantic, October 5, 2009. Retrieved October 31, 2019.
  13. Chinese Mid-Autumn Festival China Highlights. Retrieved October 31, 2019.
  14. Alice Yan, Chinese city’s record 2.4-metre-wide Mid-Autumn Festival mooncake cut down to size for hungry fans South China Morning Post, September 4, 2016. Retrieved October 31, 2019.
  15. Liming Wei, Chinese Festivals (Cambridge University Press, 2011, ISBN 0521186595).
  16. Scott Simon and Bernice Chan, The Revolutionary History Of Mooncakes NPR, September 14, 2019. Retrieved October 31, 2019.
  17. K.S. Tom, Echoes from Old China (Hawaii Chinese History Center, 1989, ISBN 0824812859).
  18. Guido Milner, Xiamen rolls the dice, parties for Moon Festival Shanghai Daily, August 28, 2013. Retrieved October 31, 2019.
  19. Mid-Autumn Festival Hong Kong Tourism Board. Retrieved October 31, 2019.
  20. Mid-Autumn Festival Rove.me. Retrieved October 31, 2019.
  21. Moon Festival Fire Dragon Dance Hong Kong Memory. Retrieved October 31, 2019.
  22. The Story of Chu Cuoi From Saigon to Sowerby, March 27, 2016. Retrieved October 31, 2019.
  23. Chad F., Celebrating Tet Trung Thu: The Vietnamese Mid-Autumn Moon Festival ShareMoney, September 25, 2015. Retrieved October 31, 2019.
  24. Jose Vidamor B. Yu, Inculturation of Filipino: Chinese Culture Mentality (Gregorian University Press, 2000, ISBN 8876528482).
  25. Melvin Ember, Carol R. Ember, and Ian Skoggard (eds.), Encyclopedia of Diasporas: Immigrant and Refugee Cultures Around the World (Springer, 2005, ISBN 0306483211).
  26. Liu Pin-chuan, Kuo Yi, Ho Yu-hua, and William Hetherington, Mid-Autumn Festival: Officials list legal barbecue sites for festival Taipei Times, September 12, 2016. Retrieved October 31, 2019.
  27. "Tsukimi": The Japanese Tradition of Autumn Moon Viewing Nippon.com, September 19, 2018. Retrieved November 1, 2019.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Ember, Melvin, Carol R. Ember, and Ian Skoggard (eds.). Encyclopedia of Diasporas: Immigrant and Refugee Cultures Around the World. Springer, 2005. ISBN 0306483211
  • Lee, Jonathan H.X., and Kathleen M. Nadeau (eds.). Encyclopedia of Asian American Folklore and Folklife. ABC-CLIO, 2011. ISBN 0313350663
  • Li, Xing. Festivals of China's Ethnic Minorities. China Intercontinental Press, 2006. ISBN 7508509994
  • Nguyen, Van Huy, and Laurel Kendall (eds.). Vietnam: Journeys of Body, Mind, and Spirit. University of California Press, 2003. ISBN 9780520238725
  • Roy, Christian. Traditional Festivals: A Multicultural Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO, 2004. ISBN 1576070891
  • Stepanchuk, Carol, and Charles Choy Wong. Mooncakes and Hungry Ghosts: Festivals of China. China Books & Periodicals, 1992. ISBN 0835124819
  • Tom, K.S. Echoes from Old China. Hawaii Chinese History Center, 1989. ISBN 0824812859
  • Wei, Liming. Chinese Festivals. Cambridge University Press, 2011. ISBN 0521186595
  • Yang, Lihui, Deming An, and Jessica Anderson Turner. Handbook of Chinese Mythology. Oxford University Press, 2008. ISBN 0195332636
  • Yu, Jose Vidamor B. Inculturation of Filipino: Chinese Culture Mentality. Gregorian University Press, 2000. ISBN 8876528482

External links

All links retrieved November 9, 2022.

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