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Mid-Autumn Festival and National Day themed slogan kindergarten

The Mid-Autumn Festival and National Day themed slogans for kindergartens are as follows:

1. The moon is full of love, and the whole country celebrates together.

2. Traditional festivals, endless aftertaste.

3. The only time for family reunion is the Mid-Autumn Festival.

4. Welcome the Mid-Autumn Festival and celebrate the festival.

5. Evenly divided, festive dreams come true.

6. Celebrate the festival with gifts and affection.

7. The full moon of the Mid-Autumn Festival brings love to the world.

8. Look at the moon and embrace the distance, and the flowers are full and the moon is full.

9. During the Mid-Autumn Festival, people are under the full moon.

10. Welcome the National Day and celebrate the Mid-Autumn Festival.

11. It is everyone’s responsibility to go home during the Mid-Autumn Festival.

12. When the moon is full and the world is full, the words are beautiful.

13. Welcome the Mid-Autumn Festival and realize your family dream.

14. The joy is in the Mid-Autumn Festival, and the love is even stronger.

15. Mid-Autumn Festival, family fun, and festive gifts.

Origin of the festival

The Mid-Autumn Festival is a combination of various customs and events such as the emperor's sunset, autumn society, moon appreciation and the legend of the moon palace. It originated in the pre-Qin Dynasty and was finally finalized. In the Tang Dynasty.

The eclipse moon is the ancient emperor who worshiped the moon at the autumnal equinox. "Zhou Li·Chun Guan Zongbo·Dian Rui" Zheng Xuan's note: The emperor always faces the sun on the spring equinox and the moon on the autumnal equinox. "Historical Records·The Benji of Xiaowu" Pei Piao's explanatory quote from Ying Shao says: The emperor faces the sun in spring and the moon in autumn. He worships the sun outside the east gate. The morning sun follows the morning, and the evening moon follows the evening. The Moon Altar in Beijing was formerly known as the Xiyue Altar. It was the place where emperors of the Ming and Qing Dynasties worshiped the moon at the autumnal equinox.

Since there may not necessarily be a moon on the night of the autumnal equinox, and the moon may not be round even if it is there, which would greatly ruin the scenery, so people gradually put the autumnal equinox moon worship in the Mid-Autumn Festival.

The Mid-Autumn Festival in August is the harvest season. The ancients held a ceremony to worship the earth god, which was called Qiu Bao or Qiu She. "Baihutong·Sheji" records: In the mid-autumn month, choose the first day to order the Minshe. "The Deed of Aiding the Gods" says: Pray for grain in mid-spring, harvest grain in mid-autumn, and report to the community to offer sacrifices to millet. The Xiyue Festival and the Autumn Society can be regarded as the origin of the Mid-Autumn Festival.

Popular in the prosperous times

During the Tang Dynasty, Mid-Autumn Festival customs became popular in northern China. In the Tang Dynasty, the Mid-Autumn Festival became an officially recognized national festival. "Book of Tang·Taizong Ji" records the Mid-Autumn Festival on August 15th. The custom of appreciating the moon during the Mid-Autumn Festival was very popular in Chang'an during the Tang Dynasty. Many poets included verses praising the moon in their famous works.

And combined the Mid-Autumn Festival with mythological stories such as Chang'e flying to the moon, Wu Gang cutting osmanthus, the Jade Rabbit pounding medicine, Yang Guifei turning into the moon god, Tang Minghuang's visit to the moon palace, etc., making it full of romance, and then the wind of playing with the moon became popular. . The Tang Dynasty was an important period when traditional festival customs were integrated and finalized, and the main part of them has been passed down to this day.