Chinese Culture

Chinese Information Portal

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Corban Festival (忠孝节)
This festival falls on the tenth day of Zhuld Hijia, which is the twelfth month of the Islamic calendar. It is celebrated by Muslim Chinese...
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Year of Rooster (鸡)
Frank and reckless and can be tactless; free with advice; punctual and a hard worker; imaginative to the point of dreaming; likes to be...
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Daur (达斡尔族)
Geography of Daur (达斡尔族) Most Daur people live in the Inner Mongolian Atutonomous Region and in Heilongjiang province, though...
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Ningxia Cuisine
Ningxia Cuisine is primarily based on Hui ethnic or Islamic dishes and partly on Han ethnic dishes. It absorbs the essence of the cuisine...
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Dragon Boat Festival (龙舟节)
The fifth day of the fifth lunar month is set aside for the Dragon Boat Festival. There are many different versions, though the most...

Chinese Zodiac

The Chinese Zodiac: An Overview

chinese_zodiacMost people do not know the Chinese zodiac. Their understanding rarely extends beyond the symbols on the tablemat of their favorite Chinese restaurant. However, there is much more to this two thousand year old doctrine than just dining table mat symbols.

Unlike western countries where the years are dated according to the birth of Jesus Christ, Chinese astronomy is based on the sexagenarian calendar cycle spanning a total of 60 years. There are 12 animal signs in Chinese astrology. According to a legend, Lord Buddha had invited all animals for dinner and only these 12 actually showed up. They were each awarded a year each. Another legend says that Lord Buddha had invited all the animals on his last day on the Earth and only these 12 showed up, making them an integral part of the Chinese calendar. They were awarded the years depending upon the order of their arrival, i.e. rat, ox, hare, dragon, snake, horse, sheep, monkey, cock, dog, and boar.

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Compatibility Chart

The table below shows the compatibility among the Chinese Signs on a scale of 1 (less compatible) to 10 (more compatible).

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12 Sign Chart

Stems are named by the Yin-Yang (Odd and Even) and Five Elements (Metal, Water, Wood, Fire and Earth). The Stem sequence order is Yang Wood, Yin Wood, Yang Fire, Yin Fire, Yang Earth, Yin Earth, Yang Metal, Yin Metal, Yang Water and Yin Water.

This way of naming years within a 60-year cycle goes back approximately 2,000 years. A similar naming of days and months has fallen into disuse, but the date name is still listed in calendars. It is customary to number the 60-year cycles since 2637 BC, when the calendar was supposedly invented. In that year, the first 60-year cycle started.

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