Chinese New Year's Eve
Official name除夕 (chúxī) in China
Also calledSpring Festival Eve, Lunar New Year's Eve
Observed byMainland China, Korea, Malaysia, Singapore, Taiwan, Vietnam
TypeCultural, Religious
SignificanceCelebrates the end of the year
Datelast day of the 12th traditional Chinese lunisolar month[1]
2023 date21 January
2024 date9 February
2025 date28 January
2026 date16 February
FrequencyAnnual
Related toChinese New Year

Chinese New Year's Eve is the day before the Chinese New Year. Celebrating Chinese New Year's Eve has always been a family matter, it is the reunion day for every ethnic Chinese family. It has evolved over a long period of time. The origin of Chinese New Year's Eve can be traced back to 3500 years ago.

History

Chinese New Year's Eve originated in the Shang dynasty (1600 – 1046 BC), when Chinese held sacrificial ceremonies in honour of gods and ancestors at the end of each year. Then in the Zhou dynasty (1046 – 256 BC), the phrase “Nian (Year)”appeared and certain cultural practices became popular among Chinese such as sending door gods and burning bamboo.[2]

The first dated Chinese New Year's Eve was recorded during Warring States period (475 BC – 221 AD). In Lüshi Chunqiu, an exorcistic ritual called "Big Nuo" (大傩) was recorded being carried out in the ending day of a year to expel illness in Qin (state). It was derived from an earlier ritual, Nuo (傩), which is the origin of Chinese New Year's Eve.[3][4] Later, Qin unified China and founded the Qin dynasty, the ritual was continued. It evolved to cleaning up houses thoroughly in the preceding days of Chinese New Year.

During the Jin dynasty (266 – 420 AD), people started to do the “Shousui (守岁)” tradition on New Year's Eve. It was recorded by Western Jin's general Zhou Chu's article Fengtu Ji (风土记): "At the ending of a year, people gift and wish each other, calling it Kuisui (馈岁); people invite others with drinks and food, calling it Biesui (别岁); on the new year's eve, people stayed up all night until sunrise, calling it Shousui (守岁)".[5][6] The article used the word "除夕 (Chuxi)" to indicate New Year's Eve, and the name is still used till this day.

Dates of Chinese New Year’s Eve

Since the traditional Chinese calendar uses the lunisolar calendar, there's no fixed date for Chinese New Year's Eve. Below is the table for the dates of Chinese New Year's Eve from 2011 to 2031.

Dates of Chinese New Year's Eve (2011 - 2031)[7]
Years Date Day
2011 Feb 2, 2011 Wednesday
2012 Jan 22, 2012 Sunday
2013 Feb 9, 2013 Saturday
2014 Jan 30, 2014 Thursday
2015 Feb 18, 2015 Wednesday
2016 Feb 7, 2016 Sunday
2017 Jan 27, 2017 Friday
2018 Feb 15, 2018 Thursday
2019 Feb 4, 2019 Monday
2020 Jan 24, 2020 Friday
2021 Feb 11, 2021 Thursday
2022 Jan 31, 2022 Monday
2023 Jan 21, 2023 Saturday
2024 Feb 9, 2024 Friday
2025 Jan 28, 2025 Tuesday
2026 Feb 16, 2026 Monday
2027 Feb 5, 2027 Friday
2028 Jan 25, 2028 Tuesday
2029 Feb 12, 2029 Monday
2030 Feb 2, 2030 Saturday
2031 Jan 22, 2031 Wednesday

Traditions

Chinese New Year's Eve's practice is the cluster of this festival's history and tradition for thousands of years, there are many practices in China which are varied as people in different regions have different customs. Most of the practices exists for thousands years and still being used nowadays.

Gathering

Especially in southern China, people celebrate Chinese New Year's Eve with a big family meal with traditional dishes.[8] Everyone, including children, can drink alcohol.[8] Families make sacrifices to their ancestors: they set out seats for the ancestors, lay out food, and pour them drinks, and burn joss sticks and candles.[8] Family members kowtow while the ancestors eat.[8] After dinner, the family members sit together, perhaps talking or playing cards,[8]

Staying up all night

On Chinese New Year's Eve, people stay up late, until midnight or often until dawn.[8][2] This tradition is called shousui (simplified Chinese: 守岁; traditional Chinese: 守歲; pinyin: shǒusuì; lit. 'guarding the year').[8]

TV gala

The Spring Festival Gala is a TV show which broadcasts live by China's Central Television on Lunar New Year's Eve with singing, dancing, sketch comedy and cross-talk. It usually takes 6 months to do the preparation.[2] Since more and more Chinese families could afford television from 1980s, the spring festival gala has been institutionalised as a crucial practice of Chinese New Year's Eve, every family member sits in front of the TV, watching spring festival gala together. The spring festival gala will broadcast until midnight, everyone in front of the televisions will say "Happy New Year" at midnight with the hosts.[2]

Firecrackers String

Burning of bamboo and use of firecrackers

There's an ancient myth that a devil is living in western mountains, people would fall ill if come across it, but this devil is afraid of the sound of bamboo. So Chinese will burn bamboo to make the sound to keep the devil out of their house on Chinese New Year's Eve. Nowadays, Chinese people still like to light firecrackers instead of bamboo on Chinese New Year's Eve not just for keeping devil out, but also for having fun.[9]

The Kitchen God

Kitchen God

The Chinese Kitchen God is regarded as the ambassador of the Jade Emperor to each Chinese family. It is said that at the midnight of Chinese New Year's Eve, the kitchen god from each family should go to heaven to report the family's deeds during the year.[9] On lunar new year, the kitchen god returns to the earth and each family welcomes him by pasting a new picture of him in the kitchen.

Inviting a Door God

Door God

On Chinese New Year's Eve, each family would invite the door god by pasting its picture on the front door as a talisman to forbid any devil to enter the family. The most popular door gods are Zhong Kui, Qin Shubao and Yuchi Gong in different areas of China.[9]

Peach wood

On Chinese New Year's Eve, Chinese will make bow of peach wood to exorcise the devil that caused plagues, which dates back to the Qin dynasty. The ghost would do no harm to man, but the ancients were afraid of them, so they asked for help to drive the ghost away. The entrance-guarding god was closely related to festivals and peach wood was regarded as a supernatural force with which ghosts could be driven away.[9]

Traditional foods for Chinese New Year’s Eve

Family reunion dinner is crucial to Chinese. Chinese New Year's Eve feast allows every family members to sit together. It takes days to do the preparation. Every dish on Chinese New Year's Eve have different meanings. Some of the most popular dishes are:

Chinese Vegetable Spring Roll

Spring Rolls

Spring rolls are a traditional dish in parts of China. People make the thin dough wrappers in the cylindrical-shaped rolls and fill them with vegetables, meat, or something sweet, then fried the spring rolls to give them a golden-yellow color.[10]

Dumplings

Dumplings

The dumpling is a traditional food to eat in north China on Chinese New Year's Eve while in southern China very few people serve dumplings as Lunar New Year's Eve dinner. Minced meat (pork, shrimp, chicken, beef.etc.) and vegetables are wrapped in the elastic dough skin. Boiling, steaming, frying are the most common ways to cook dumplings in China.[10]

Glutinous Rice Cake

Glutinous Rice Cake

Glutinous Rice Cake is called "niangao" in Mandarin. The sound of Nian Gao has a good meaning: getting higher year by year. Glutinous Rice Cake is made of sticky rice, sugar, chestnuts, lotus leaves. It is a common dish which appeared in the southern Chinese families' Lunar New Year Eve reunion dinner.[10]

Good Fortune Fruit

Tangerines

Tangerines, oranges and pomelos are certain fruits that been eaten on Lunar New Year's Eve. Chinese believe that eating these fruits on Chinese New Year's Eve can bring fortune as these fruits have round shape, golden colour, lucky sounds when spoken which symbolise fullness and wealth.[10]

Longevity Noodles

Longevity noodles represents Chinese' wish for longevity. The length and preparation of longevity noodles are the symbolic of eater's life. Longevity noodles are longer than normal noodles, usually fried or boiled and served in the bowl.[10]

Money gift and Money tree

Chinese will give children money gifts as lunar new year gift on Chinese New Year's Eve. They usually put money in red pockets and hide under their children's pillows. In ancient times, Chinese money was the round copper coin with a square hole in the middle. adults will thread the coins with colourful thread to make a shape of dragon and then they will put the money beside their children's beds while their children are asleep. this customs, which is very similar to Christmas gifts in west.

A money tree is a legendary tree which will shed coins when shaken. On Chinese New Year's Eve, Chinese will cut some pine branches and put the branches in vase. Then they will tie copper coins, shoe-shaped gold or silver and pomegranate flowers to the tree, which is very similar to Christmas tree in western countries.[9]

Similar traditions in other part of Asia

Philippines

Chinese New Year's Eve in Philippines is called Bisperas ng Bagong Taon in Tagalog. On Chinese New Year's Eve, all doors including cupboards, drawers, cabinets, windows must be left wide open to allow good luck to enter. Chinese Filipinos do not eat fish and chicken on Chinese New Year's Eve as these animals scrounge for food and Chinese Filipinos do not want to scrounge for food in the upcoming year. They prepare twelve round fruits (oranges, grapes, clementines, cantaloupe etc.) on Chinese New Year's Eve and each fruit represents a month.[11]

References

  1. "Lunar New Year's Eve in China". timeanddate.com. Retrieved 23 September 2018.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Bin, Zhao (1998). "Popular family television and party ideology: the Spring Festival Eve happy gathering". Media, Culture & Society. 20 (1): 43–58. doi:10.1177/016344398020001004. S2CID 145304159.
  3. Lü, Buwei. "12". Lüshi Chunqiu (in Chinese). 命有司大儺,旁磔,出土牛,以送寒氣。
  4. 田, 东江. "傩 戏". Sohu. 《吕氏春秋·季冬纪》《后汉书·礼仪志》均有相应记载,前者云,届时"命有司大傩,旁磔,出土牛,以送寒气"。后者云:"先腊一日,大傩,谓之逐疫。"
  5. "除夕守岁". Archived from the original on August 15, 2004. 据晋周处《〈周土记〉》载:除夕之夜,各相与赠送称曰馈岁:酒食相邀,称曰别岁:长幼聚欢,祝颂完备称曰分岁,大家终夜不眠,以待天明,称曰守岁。
  6. 周, 处. 风土记 (in Chinese). Jin Dynasty. 蜀之风俗,晚岁相与馈问,谓之馈岁。酒食相邀为别岁。至除夕,达旦不眠,谓之守岁。
  7. "Spring Festival Eve in China".
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Huang, Shaorong (December 1991). "Chinese Traditional Festivals". The Journal of Popular Culture. 25 (3): 163–180. doi:10.1111/j.0022-3840.1991.1633111.x. Retrieved 28 March 2023.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 Huang, S (1991). "Chinese traditional festivals". Journal of Popular Culture. 25 (3): 163–180. doi:10.1111/j.0022-3840.1991.1633111.x.
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 "Chinese New Year 2015 Newcastle: Popular Chinese dishes eaten during the New Year's Eve Feast; The New Year's Eve feast plays an important part in Chinese New Year celebrations". Chronicle. 2015.
  11. "New Year's Eve in the Philippines". TAGALOG LANG. January 2023.
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