Layue

Month of the Chinese calendar


Làyuè (Chinese: 腊月) is the last month of the year in the Chinese calendar. In general, the Great Cold, the 24th solar term, is in Làyuè. The name comes from the winter sacrifice, just as February. In Japan, the month known as Shiwasu (師走, lit.'priests' busiest month').

Festival

  • The Laba Festival is Layue 8.[1] The original definition of the Laba festival was the day of the winter sacrifice (simplified Chinese: 腊日; traditional Chinese: 臘日), and the date is the third Wùrì after the Winter Solstice.
  • The Preliminary Eve (Chinese: 小年) is Layue 23 or 24.
  • The New Year's Eve (Chinese: 除夕) is the last day of the year, Layue 29 or 30.

Events

Aisin-Gioro Puyi, the 12th Qing emperor of China, issued the imperial abdication edict on Layue 25, 1911.

Births

  • Emperor Go-Uda, the 91st emperor of Japan, Shiwasu 1, 1269
  • Tokugawa Ieyasu, the founder and first shōgun of the Tokugawa shogunate of Japan, Shiwasu 26, 1542
  • Uemura Masahisa, a Japanese Christian pastor, theologian and critic of Meiji and Taishō periods, Shiwasu 1, 1857
  • Imperial Noble Consort Shushen, an Imperial concubine of the Tongzhi Emperor, Làyuè 1, 1859

Deaths

References

  1. ^ CGTN (January 12, 2024). "Layue, a joyful celebration in the run-up to Spring Festival". China Daily. Retrieved 12 June 2024.