Holiday Name: | Longtaitou |
Observedby: | China |
Type: | Cultural |
Frequency: | Annual |
Date: | Second day of the second month of the Chinese calendar |
The Longtaitou Festival, conflated with the Zhonghe Festival beginning one day earlier, is a traditional Chinese festival held on the second day of the second month of the Chinese calendar. Its name means "Dragon raising its head" because the dragon was regarded as the deity in charge of rain, an important factor in ancient agriculture.[1] The festival is sometimes simply called "Second-month Second" (二月二) for short.
The festival was established in the Yuan dynasty. It is celebrated around the time of Jingzhe, one of the 24 solar terms. The name jingzhe (Chinese: 驚蟄) has the meaning of awakening of the hibernated (implying insects). Jing (Chinese: 驚) means "startling", and zhe (Chinese: 蟄) refers to the hibernated (insects). This is the time during which the hibernating insects begin to wake up at the beginning of early spring, which is often accompanied by the arrival of the first rains, meaning the weather is getting warm. Longtaitou Festival is an important worship ritual of wishing for good harvest in the coming months. In addition to paying homage to the Dragon King, Tu Di Gong is also worshipped on Double Second, his birthday.[2] Another ancient practice to celebrate Longtaitou Festival was to get rid of insect pests in homes by cooking foods with recognized insect repelling effects.
Today, Longtaitou Festival is celebrated in various ways, most of which are still identical to those practiced in the ancient times, including eating foods named after dragons: "dragon scale pancakes" (Chinese: 龍鱗餅; a kind of spring pancake), "dragon teeth" (jiaozi),[3] dragon beard noodles, and longan congee (the word "longan" literally means "dragon eye").[4] It is a traditional day for people to get a haircut,[5] [3] after month-long time without cutting hair in January for Lunar New Year. Women and children carry perfume bags filled with the powder of ground fragrant herbs for good fortune, though they are no longer used as insect repellent as in ancient times.
In some places, it is also celebrated with a dragon dance.[6]
Another celebration is that Longtaitou Festival is the first day of the Taihao (Chinese: 太昊) temple fair that lasts until the third day of the third month of the lunar calendar.[7] The fair is a celebration of ancestral deities Fuxi and Nüwa, and the Longtaitou Festival marks the beginning of this celebration.[7]
There were ancient traditions practiced during the festival, some of which are no longer part of the modern celebrations, including:
The Zhonghe Festival was an official festival and holiday in the Tang dynasty, celebrated on the day before the Longtaitou Festival: on the first day of the second month of the Chinese calendar.[3] It continued to be observed into the Qing dynasty.[3] The first day of the second lunar month is also considered the birthday of the Taoist Sun God.