Explainer: Everything You Need to Know About Qingming
The ExplainerĀ is where we explain an aspect of Chinese life. Simple. So now you know.
Qingming FestivalĀ ā also known as āTomb-Sweeping Dayā or āPure Brightness Festivalā ā is a traditional Chinese festival that falls in early April every year, on the first day of the fifth solar term of the traditional Chinese lunisolar calendar. This year, it falls on April 4.Ā
Qingming became a public holiday on the ChineseĀ mainlandĀ in 2008. As the name implies, on this day, Chinese people usually visit their ancestors’ graves, burn offerings to honor the dead, or have an outing to enjoy the beauty of spring.
Origins of Qingming
Image via QQ
Qingming originates from āHanshiĀ JieāĀ ā Cold Food FestivalĀ ā as a memorial to Jie Zitui, a loyal retainer of Duke Wen of Jin during the Spring and Autumn Period (770-476 BC).
Jie followed and supported Duke Wen throughout his years of exile. Once, when they could not find anything to eat, Jie was said to have cut his own flesh to boil a meat soup to feed the starving Duke Wen.
When Duke Wen came into power, Jie chose to retire and become a recluse in the woods. Duke Wen needed to pick Jieās brain, so he decided to seek him out. But how could he find a man hiding in the depths of the woods?
One of his retainers suggested he set a fire to force Jie out ā terrible advice… which Duke Wen promptly took.
TragicallyĀ ā but hardly surprisinglyĀ āĀ Jie and his mother died in the fire.
After the fire subsided, Duke Wen found a poem written in Jieās blood in the hollow part of a willow tree, close to where Jie died with his mother.
āI cut my flesh to show my loyalty, and want you to become a qingming (wise and sagacious in Chinese) emperor.ā
After reading it, Duke Wen was overcome with remorse, and ordered three days without fire to memorialize him, while the day Jie died was named āHanshi.ā
The next year, Duke Wen led his retainers to climb the mountain and paid homage to Jieās grave, and was thrilled to find the willow tree was still flourishing.
He named the tree the āQingming willow,ā and the day afterward officially became known as the āHanshi Qingming Festival.ā Later, the two festivals were combined.
The festival later became a more general day to honor deceased ancestors during the reign of Emporer Xuanzong (712ā756 AD) in the Tang Dynasty (618ā907 AD).
Xuanzong sought to crack down on wealthy Chinese citizens honoring ancestors with extravagant and ostentatious ceremonies, so in 732 AD he declared that such festivities could be formally paid just one day per year ā Qingming.
āAlong the River During the Qingming Festivalā by Song Dynasty artist Zhang Zeduan
One of the best-known Chinese paintings is ‘Qing Ming Shang He Tu’Ā (ęø ęäøę²³å¾)Ā ā ‘Along the River During the Qingming FestivalāĀ āĀ by Song Dynasty (960-1126 AD) artist Zhang Zeduan (1085-1145 AD), a panoramic capturing the commotion of people in Song period capital city Bianjing, modern-day Kaifeng, Henan Province.
The full scale of the panoramic
The picture depicts the custom of taqing (čøé)Ā āĀ ‘treading on the greenery’ āĀ which continues to this day.Ā
The festival also signifies the changeover of the season from winter to spring, so people believe it is the perfect time for an outing and planting seeds.
Qingming Activities
Image via Sohu
Of course, the main activity of Qingming is tomb sweeping; generally, people visit their family cemeteries and offer food, flowers and favorite items of the dead.
If the cemetery regulations allow it, they will burn paper money and incense before the tombstone.
Chinese people also like to fly kites during Qingming Festival. That’s because people in ancient times believed that on Qingming, the gates of hell were open, which meant that they could send their greetings to the departed by kite.
Nowadays, people cut their kites loose when flying them ā hoping that it will bring them good luck in the new year.
Qingming Eats
Traditionally, people do not light a fire or cook, but eat only cold food during Qingming. These days, several Qingming snacks are enjoyed by Chinese people.
Jujube cakes. Image viaĀ Xici.net
In the north, people eat precooked cold food like jujube cakes, barley cakes, etc.
A plate of qingtuan. Image viaĀ åØę©
In the south,Ā qingtuanĀ āĀ green rice balls made of rice flour and wormwood juiceĀ āĀ and sweet-scented sugar lotus root stuffed with sticky rice are common refreshments.
Qingming PoemFamed poet Du Mu wrote a poem about Qingming Festival depicting a rainy scene in a village that captured mournersā desolation.
ćęø ęć(å)ęē§
ęø ęę¶čéØēŗ·ēŗ·ļ¼č·Æäøč”äŗŗę¬²ęéć
åé®é 家ä½å¤ęļ¼ē§ē«„é„ęęč±ęć
A drizzling rain falls like tears on the Mourning Day;
The mourner’s heart is going to break on his way.
Where can a wineshop be found to drown his sad hours?
A cowherd points to a cot ‘mid apricot flowers.
ā āQingmingā by Du Mu, translated by Xu Yuanchong
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This article originally appeared on Thatsmags.com in April 2016. It has been updated and republished on April 3, 2024.
[Cover image viaĀ Sohu]