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As early as 2,500 years ago, about the Spring and Autumn Period
(770-476 BC), China had determined the point of Winter Solstice by
observing movements of the sun with a sundial. It is the earliest of the
24 seasonal division points. The time will be each December 22 or 23
according to the Gregorian calendar.
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The Northern hemisphere on this day experiences the
shortest daytime and longest nighttime. After the Winter Solstice, days
will become longer and longer. As ancient Chinese thought, the yang,
or muscular, positive things will become stronger and stronger after
this day, so it should be celebrated.
The Winter Solstice became a festival during the Han Dynasty (206
BC-220 AD) and thrived in the Tang and Song dynasties (618-1279). The
Han people regarded Winter Solstice as a "Winter Festival", so officials
would organize celebrating activities. On this day, both officials and
common people would have a rest. The army was stationed in, frontier
fortresses closed and business and traveling stopped. Relatives and
friends presented to each other delicious food. In the Tang and Song
dynasties, the Winter Solstice was a day to offer scarifies to Heaven
and ancestors. Emperors would go to suburbs to worship the Heaven; while
common people offered sacrifices to their deceased parents or other
relatives. The Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) even had the record that "Winter
Solstice is as formal as the Spring Festival," showing the great
importance attached to this day.
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In some parts of Northern China, people eat dumpling soup on this day;
while residents of some other places eat dumplings, saying doing so will
keep them from frost in the upcoming winter. But in parts of South
China, the whole family will get together to have a meal made of
red-bean and glutinous rice to drive away ghosts and other evil things.
In other places, people also eat tangyuan, a kind of stuffed
small dumpling ball made of glutinous rice flour. The Winter Solstice
rice dumplings could be used as sacrifices to ancestors, or gifts for
friends and relatives. The Taiwan people even keep the custom of
offering nine-layer cakes to their ancestors. They make cakes in the
shape of chicken, duck, tortoise, pig, cow or sheep with glutinous rice
flour and steam them on different layers of a pot. These animals all
signify auspiciousness in Chinese tradition. People of the same surname
or family clan gather at their ancestral temples to worship their
ancestors in age order. After the sacrificial ceremony, there is always
a grand banquet.
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