The Dragon Boat Festival, which has been
observed over a period of more than 2,300 years in China, derives from the
death of Qu Yuan, an eminent poet living in Chu State (currently central
China's Hubei and Hunan provinces) during the
Warring States (475 BC-221 BC).
Historical records show that when the
disillusioned Qu Yuan drowned himself in the local river on the fifth day of
the fifth month of the Chinese lunar calendar, local residents raced to the
site in boats to search for him. They made loud noise to scare away fish and
dropped rice dumplings into the water to lure them away from Qu's body.
Ever since then, people have marked the
anniversary of Qu's death on by racing dragon boats, eating "Zongzi"
-- rice dumplings wrapped in bamboo leaves -- and hanging wormwood around their
homes.
旅行生活只因你的驻足而精彩(中国China)
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