10 items

Folk Customs

Seasonal celebrations, ancestral rites, and community festivals that mark the rhythms of the agricultural calendar and Chinese spiritual life.

UNESCO Inscribed

Spring Festival

China's most important traditional festival, marking the lunar new year with family reunions, feasts, and vibrant cultural celebrations.

Shang Dynasty (1600–1046 BCE)
UNESCO

Twenty-Four Solar Terms

A traditional Chinese calendar system dividing the year into 24 seasonal segments that guide agriculture, diet, and cultural practices.

Warring States period (5th–2nd century BCE)
UNESCO

Mazu Belief and Customs

Worship of the Chinese sea goddess Mazu, rooted in Fujian and spreading across the world — a blend of compassion, protection, and maritime culture.

Song Dynasty, 10th century CE
UNESCO

Meshrep

A vibrant Uyghur community gathering of music, dance, poetry, and moral education — the living classroom of Xinjiang's cultural traditions.

Developed over centuries in oasis towns of Xinjiang
UNESCO

Chinese Zhusuan (Abacus)

The ancient calculation method using an abacus — bead-based arithmetic so fast it can outperform electronic calculators in skilled hands.

Han Dynasty (2nd century BCE)
UNESCO

Ong Chun / Wangchuan Ceremony

A Minnan ritual of sending a decorated boat to sea or fire to dispel plague and misfortune — shared heritage across the Chinese diaspora.

Ming Dynasty (1368–1644 CE)
UNESCO

Qiang New Year Festival

The Qiang people's most sacred festival — three days of ancestor worship, epic poetry, circle dances, and bonfires in Sichuan's mountains.

Ancient Qiang tradition, predates written records
UNESCO

National Heritage