jueves, 15 de febrero de 2018

What is Chinese New Year?


What is Chinese New Year?

This week, millions of people will be celebrating Chinese New Year.

It will be marked by communities all over the world.

People will eat lots of food, enjoy fireworks, wear special clothes and hang red lanterns to mark the occasion.


When is it?

The Chinese New Year will begin on Friday 16 February 2018.

The reason the new year falls at this time is because it marks the start of the lunar new year, which is when there is the start of a new moon.

This is different to the 'Gregorian' calendar that we traditionally use in the UK, which always starts on 1 January.

Because it depends on the moon, the date of Chinese New Year actually changes each year, but it will always fall some time between 21 January and 20 February.

Next year, the new year will start on 5 February, so the celebrations will be slightly earlier than they are this year.

What is it?

Chinese New Year is also known as the Spring Festival.

It is the most important celebration in the Chinese calendar.

In Chinese tradition, each year is named after one of twelve animals, which feature in the Chinese zodiac.

Rat, Ox, Tiger, Rabbit, Dragon, Snake, Horse, Goat, Monkey, Rooster, Dog, Pig.



These are the 12 animals of the Chinese zodiac. Find out which one matches with the year you were born below!

So the animals will have a year dedicated to them once every 12 years, in a cycle.

2017 was the year of the rooster, while this year it will be the year of the dog.

The next time it will be the year of the dog is 2030, as this is in 12 years' time.

Do you want to know which sign of the Chinese zodiac you are and what it says about you?



How is it celebrated?

Before the festivities begin, people clean their homes really well to make them ready for the celebrations.

Then, when New Year's Day comes, there is a tradition not to pick up a broom, in case you sweep the good luck for the New Year out of the door!




Here, performers dance on stage at a local fair in Beijing in China to mark the new year celebrations

In China, schools and businesses can close for the first few days of the new year, so that everyone can spend time with their families.

People enjoy eating lots of delicious food, including noodle soup, which traditionally brings luck for the year ahead.

There will be parades and performances, with people dressed in traditional clothes.

Fireworks are also set off, because it is thought that noise and lights will scare away any evil spirits for the coming months.



In Beijing, this girl is celebrating the lantern festival, which marks the end of celebrations for the Chinese new year period


Adults might give red envelopes to children with money inside too.

The festivities continue for two weeks, finishing with a special lantern festival, which signals the end of the New Year celebration period.

miércoles, 14 de febrero de 2018

HAPPY SAINT 
VALENTINE'S DAY!

THE HISTORY OF SAINT VALENTINE'S DAY 2000 YEARS AGO, THE MOST POWERFUL ARMY IN THE WORLD BELONGED TO THE ROMANS. SOLDIERS WANTED TO GET MARRIED AND SET UP FAMILIES. THE EMPEROR, WHOSE NAME WAS CLAUDIUS THE SECOND MADE A LAW THAT NO SOLDIER WAS ALLOWED TO GET MARRIED. BY THAT TIME, MANY OF THE ROMANS WERE CHRISTIANS – AND ONE OF THEIR LEADERS WAS A BISHOP CALLED VALENTINE WHO DECIDED TO LET SOLDIERS GET MARRIED IN HIS CHURCH. VALENTINE WAS ARRESTED AND THE EMPEROR SENTENCED HIM TO DEATH.


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