Chinese Festivals
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Water Splashing Festival
READ MORE: Water Splashing FestivalWater-Splashing Festival might be the most interesting and merriest of all festivals in China. It is widely celebrated in southern Yunnan by ethnic Dai, Achang, De’ang, Bulang, and Wa groups.
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Spring Festival
READ MORE: Spring FestivalSpring Festival (春节), also known as Chinese New Year, is the most important tradition in China. More often than not, Chinese people prefer to call it Xin Nian (新年) or Guo Nian (过年) which literally means to celebrate the Spring Festival. In the narrow sense, Spring Festival refers to the Chinese New Year’s Eve and Chinese New Year’s Day.
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Shoton Festival
READ MORE: Shoton FestivalIn Tibetan calendar, each late June to early July will see the celebration of the traditional festival—Shoton Festival.
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Qixi Festival, Chinese Valentine’s Day
READ MORE: Qixi Festival, Chinese Valentine’s DayQixi Festival(simplified Chinese: 七夕节) also known as Chinese Valentine’s Day is one of Chinese most important traditional festivals. On the night of July-7 in Lunar Calendar
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Naadam Festival: the Mongol’s Annual Olympic, Carnival and Trade Festival
READ MORE: Naadam Festival: the Mongol’s Annual Olympic, Carnival and Trade FestivalEnjoying the reputation as the intersection between heaven and earth, Mongolia and Inner Mongolia boast picturesque landscape, diverse culture, mouth-watering cruise
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Mid-Autumn Festival
READ MORE: Mid-Autumn FestivalMid-Autumn Festival, also known as the Lantern or Mooncake festival, falls on the 15th day of the 8th month of the Chinese calendar or roughly 25th September on the Western calendar.




















