Want this question answered?
The Lantern Festival or Yuanxiao Festival is celebrated to mark the end of the Spring Festival in many East Asian countries. It takes place on the 15th day of the first month in the lunar calendar. The festival is characterized by colorful lantern displays, lion dances, and the consumption of sweet rice dumplings called yuanxiao.
Taiwan Lantern Festival was created in 1990.
The Lantern Festival means a religious meaning.
The lantern festival origionates from China
The Yi Peng Lantern Festival is celebrated simultaneously with Loi Krathong, which is a festival celebrated annually throughout Thailand and certain parts of Laos. Yi Peng refers to the full moon day in the second month according to the Lanna lunar calendar. People make intricately shaped paper lanterns which take on different forms, and these lanterns are launched into the air on this day. The festival is meant as a time for to make merit.
The Yi Peng Lantern Festival is celebrated simultaneously with Loi Krathong, which is a festival celebrated annually throughout Thailand and certain parts of Laos. Yi Peng refers to the full moon day in the second month according to the Lanna lunar calendar. People make intricately shaped paper lanterns which take on different forms, and these lanterns are launched into the air on this day. The festival is meant as a time for to make merit.
Yuan Xiao Jie, Yuan Xiao stands for Lantern, which is kind of Food speicalized for the festival. Jie=Festival.
The Chinese traditional Lantern Festival, Yuanxiao Festival in Chinese, which is on 15th day of the Chinese Lunar Calendar.
The Folk Festival is held in Canberra, Australia, every April.And there is also another Folk Festival held in Queensland from December to January.The Flickerfest International Short Film Festival is held in Sydney each January.
I never see a slogan for lantern festival. After all, it's a festivity, not a political campaign, right?
The last day of the Chinese New Year is called "Lantern Festival"
The Lantern Festival, a Chinese festival celebrated on the fifteenth day of the first month in the lunar year in the Chinese calendar. It is not to be confused with the Mid-Autumn Festival, which is also sometimes known as the "Lantern Festival" in locations such as Singapore, and Malaysia. During the Lantern Festival, children go out at night to temples carrying paper lanterns and solve riddles on the lanterns. It officially ends the Chinese New year. In ancient times, the lanterns were fairly simple, for only the emperor and noblemen had large ornate ones; in modern times, lanterns have been embellished with many complex designs. For example, lanterns are now often made in shapes of animals. The Lantern Festival is also known as the Little New Year since it marks the end of the series of celebrations starting from the Chinese New Year. Koreans celebrate this festival as the Daeboreum.