Joke Collection Website - News headlines - The contents of the kite-flying handwritten newspaper are very brief.

The contents of the kite-flying handwritten newspaper are very brief.

The contents of the kite-flying handwritten newspaper are as follows:

Kites were invented by the ancient working people in China during the Spring and Autumn Period of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty, and have a history of more than 2,000 years. According to legend, Mo Zhai made wooden birds out of wood, which took three years to develop. This is the earliest origin of human kites.

Later, Lu Ban used bamboo to improve the materials of kites in Mo Zhai, and even evolved into today's multi-line kites. It is said that Mozi is a wooden harrier, which was formed in three years and lost in one day.

In the Northern and Southern Dynasties, kites began to be a tool for transmitting information. Since Sui and Tang Dynasties, due to the development of paper industry, people began to use paper to paste kites. In the Song Dynasty, flying kites became a favorite outdoor activity.

Zhou Mi, a poet of the Song Dynasty, wrote in Old Wulin: "During the Qingming Festival, people fly kites in the suburbs and return at dusk." "Kite" means kite. Zhang Zeduan's The Riverside Scene at Qingming Festival in the Northern Song Dynasty and Su Hanchen's The Hundred Poems in the Song Dynasty have vivid kite-flying scenes. In 1600, oriental kites (diamonds) were introduced to Europe.

Kites are made of plastic besides silk and paper. Bone stems include bamboo strips, wood and glue sticks. Someone designed a boneless kite, whose structure is to introduce air into a wind pit made of silk, so that the kite can form a lightly floating air pillow, and then ride the wind.

China, Malaysia, the Philippines and Japan also have a large kite, which is put into the blue sky every year during the Kite Festival. These kites range in size from 10 to 20 feet. Bone poles are made of bamboo and placed by 100 people.