Chinese New Year is not always on January 26, just this year it was. The date on which Chinese New year depends on the way the moon is. Because Chinese New year starts on the new moon of the first day of the New Year, then ends on the ful moon 15 days later.
Slangman's World - 2008 Chinese New Year 1-5 was released on: USA: 19 January 2009
No, New Year's Day is Jan. 1, Chinese new year (Spring Festival) falls on the first day of the first Chinese month (usually in late January and early February), and ends with Lantern Festival which is on the 15th day.
No, New Year's Day is Jan. 1, Chinese New Year (Spring Festival) falls on the first day of the first Chinese month (usually in late January and early February), and ends with Lantern Festival which is on the 15th day.
Day January 26 1970
The modern Japanese calendar is the same as the US and Europe, with the New Year beginning on 1 January. Until 1873, they used the same lunar calendar as the Chinese do.
Different religions and cultures celebrate different new years. For example, Chinese New Year is different from Jewish New Year, and both are different from the new year of the Western calendar in which New Year's Day is January 1.
The Chinese Zodiac follows the Chinese calendar rather than the Gregorian one, and hence the animal will change over Chinese New Year rather than January 1.Therefore for 1990:from Jan 1 to Jan 26, the zodiac was the snake;from Jan 27 (CNY 1990) to Dec 31, the zodiac was the horse.
If you're talking about the regular calendar year, then January 1. So in 2011 its Saturday, 1.1.11 Some cultures celebrate 'New Year's' at different times: Chinese New Year, for example.
[1] 2008 was the year of the rat in the Chinese calendar. [2] The ox takes over, on January 26th, as the Chinese animal of the year, in 2009.
To the best of my knowledge, if you were born 1st January 1950 you were born during the Chinese year of the Ox.
On September 27, 1949, the first plenary session of the Chinese people's political consultative conference by using."The common law" the first lunar month called the Spring Festival, the Gregorian calendar on January 1 as New Year's day. That is, the first ever Chinese new year celebrated was in 1950.
January 1