WHAT'S DIFFERENT? Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese, Japanese New Year Compared (春節, 설날, Tết, 正月)

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  • čas přidán 10. 07. 2024
  • Chinese, Koreans and Vietnamese celebrates the Lunar New Year, but how are they different? Also, how are their new years connected to the Japanese? This video will answer all those questions.
    🕒[TIMESTAMP]🕒
    0:00 Introduction
    0:53 Lunisolar (Lunar) Calendar
    3:38 Japanese New Year 正月
    9:22 Korean New Year 설날
    12:51 Chinese New Year 春節
    20:01 Vietnamese New Year Tết
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    #History #Documentary #Asia #LunarNewYear

Komentáře • 2,5K

  • @soninoos
    @soninoos Před rokem +105

    I wish Mongolian lunar new year was included in this video. Because we have a bit different customs too. We celebrate it according to our own lunar calendar, due to which every once in a few years we celebrate it 1 month apart from the other countries. We also have sheep year instead of goat year 😃

    • @Jestersage
      @Jestersage Před rokem +5

      What is the difference between sheep and goat? In Chinese, only difference seems to be variants (Sheep = 綿羊;wooly 羊, goat = 山羊; mountain 羊). And the Year is just "羊"... which is more accurately Caprini/Ovis

    • @purevjargalpuujee4845
      @purevjargalpuujee4845 Před rokem

      @@Jestersage what are you talking about chincky boy ? what the sheep or goat ?

    • @Tiennguyen2712
      @Tiennguyen2712 Před rokem

      thank you for your share

    • @Tiennguyen2712
      @Tiennguyen2712 Před rokem

      @@Jestersage which one like h1gh, which one like h0.5gh

    • @bayasalb.b436
      @bayasalb.b436 Před rokem +3

      We Mongols never had a original calendar to be fair and honest

  • @CoolHistoryBros
    @CoolHistoryBros  Před 3 lety +154

    Happy New Year to all! Let's hope this year will be a great one and wishing everyone great wealth and better health.

    • @anasevi9456
      @anasevi9456 Před 3 lety +5

      we are wealthier in knowledge thanks to you. That is for certain.

    • @Arjibi
      @Arjibi Před 3 lety +6

      Some Vietnamese patriotic say Lunar New Year is from Baiyue tribes just because Confucius in Liji (Lễ Ký) said:
      "I don't know what is Tết, i hear that is some kinda festival of Southern Barbarians (người Man) they dance in madness, drink alcohol and party-ing in those day, they call the day "Thêts" (Tế Sạ - 祭蜡)
      Also the cognates:
      In Nepal, rain season call Teej
      Sikkim call Tiitj
      Mon language, Songkran festival meaning "bettween season", same goes to Ktêh, they wet each other
      Also Thai, Det is a rain god
      Thret khal mean Tet season
      Khmer has khae Chet
      Champa has bulan Chit
      Zhuang has Xit/Sit festival, duon Sit (Sit month)
      Tidj/Tidji is Mustang festival
      Teej in Munda mean "monsoon season"
      Idk what kind of internet propanganda is, as a Vietnamese, i'm confused tô

    • @duongtuanhiep
      @duongtuanhiep Před 3 lety +3

      Vietnam's activities: not "Paris by night". "Táo Quân" or "Gặp nhau cuối năm": This is a program made annually. For all Vietnamese!

    • @hyugaassassin192
      @hyugaassassin192 Před 3 lety +2

      Happy new year!あけましておめでとうございます!新年快楽!

    • @CoolHistoryBros
      @CoolHistoryBros  Před 3 lety +1

      @@duongtuanhiep I see. My Vietnamese friends are overseas Vietnamese, maybe that's why they didn't know about those shows.

  • @tylernguyen7988
    @tylernguyen7988 Před 3 lety +10

    This is my favorite youtube channel by far. Thank you thank you!

  • @hikarus.5082
    @hikarus.5082 Před 3 lety +126

    There are a couple of minor errors in the Japanese segment. 1) Japanese New Year still has a massive travel wave to visit family (Shinkansen bullet trains will be running at 120-130% capacity even with extra trains scheduled, domestic flights out of major airports in Tokyo/Osaka/Nagoya will be fully booked, and traffic jams extend for kilometers going out of cities). Of course, it depends on the family though (some will spend New Year with just the immediate family). 2) Lion Dances (Shishimai) can still occur depending on the location. Overall, I really enjoyed this video though, and it was a great presentation! Please keep making more videos! I enjoyed seeing the depth of traditional New Year culture in East Asia, and I hope there will be a bright and prosperous Year of the Ox ahead for everyone.

  • @quegianglt
    @quegianglt Před 2 lety +14

    Thank you for the video! It is nice to educate yourself how uniquely New Year is celebrated in different countries. At the same time we are all connected in one way :)

    • @aramjin7817
      @aramjin7817 Před rokem

      I don’t see how “ Uniquely” they are, the Zodiac animals, the 福🧧, the red colour the calendar, basically learnt everything and call it “unique”

  • @oanhdinh7629
    @oanhdinh7629 Před 3 lety +327

    The "Paris by Night" show is not banned in Vietnam, it's not the show for New Year only , everyone can watch it if they like and mainly the oversea- Vietnamese watch it. Because of the development of variety shows on TV or the Internet, the VietNamese nowadays have many choices to choose what they want to watch, one of the most viewed TV shows in Vietnam on New Year Eve is "Táo Quân".

    • @huyluong4629
      @huyluong4629 Před 3 lety +12

      Banned ở đây có nghĩa là ko đc phát hành chính thức ông. mình xem là bản lậu phát hành trên mạng chứ có bao giờ thấy trên truyền hình cáp

    • @huyluong4629
      @huyluong4629 Před 3 lety +16

      @Rebecca Matthews that true. Maybe person who made this video interviewed Vietnamese people have lived in US for long time. He couldnt interviewed native people

    • @viett.nguyen9319
      @viett.nguyen9319 Před 3 lety +8

      Most Vietnamese are confused of what it means to be banned. Being banned means they can't install their HQ or official institutes to do their work in Vietnam. Asia Show and Paris By Night are therefore banned because they can't operate and capitalize Vietnam's market.

    • @condorX2
      @condorX2 Před 3 lety +1

      They all copy the Chinese because it's very colorful and its a long pass down tradition , but they want to be different.
      Vietnam, Korea and Japan all have similar Chinese building and writing as well, but they all try to be different.
      When you're burn fireworks on 4th of July, you're basically celebrating Chineses invention xD
      A simple invention turns to fire arms and sending the first man to the moon. They all want to be different.

    • @tnguyen403
      @tnguyen403 Před 3 lety +11

      @Rebecca Matthews Paris By Night is a musical variety show that was conceived in Paris by Vietnamese immigrants who fled the communist regime in Vietnam in the late 70s and 80s. It was then moved to Orange County, California because of the much larger Vietnamese community there.

  • @pingwu4590
    @pingwu4590 Před rokem +1

    Thanks a lot for making this video!

  • @truongvbon5084
    @truongvbon5084 Před 3 lety +18

    Each country, each region can be different in detail but in general has highlighted the main features.
    Looking forward to other videos from you.

  • @hoangnam6048
    @hoangnam6048 Před 3 lety +664

    In fact, in Vietnam we do not watch Paris By Night mainly on Tet holiday, instead, we have a program called Tao Quan, which is broadcast on VTV, the national television station every Lunar New Year. , it's a comedy show that brings together our country's outstanding issues from the past year.

    • @DiHiongTan
      @DiHiongTan Před 3 lety +56

      Interesting. I guess that is how mainland Vietnamese can differ from the overseas Vietnamese diaspora community. I figured you guys would have your own program but really had no idea what it was until now.
      As for the diaspora community, from memory, there were 2 other shows called Asia and Van Son which were just as popular as PBN but I don't think they're a thing anymore...? Anyway, thanks for sharing. Really interesting to know what Vietnamese people watch within Vietnam itself. :)

    • @namang3590
      @namang3590 Před 3 lety +75

      It depends. My family and I (from the South) have never watched Tao Quan, lol but we've heard of it (on the news actually). Maybe Paris by Night is out-dated but it's still a thing (in my family). I have some friends from the Mekong area and they said they hadn't known what Tao Quan was until I explained it to them. This is just my opinion so I don't wanna assume anything (*cough couldn't hold your breath there *cough)

    • @CentralHighland
      @CentralHighland Před 3 lety +24

      @@namang3590 yes, my girlfriend family from the south, and they watch common comedy instead of Tao Quan.

    • @roplevan6840
      @roplevan6840 Před 3 lety +18

      @@namang3590 from central up north people watch tao quan , south have it own new year gala thing

    • @Meoducdethuong
      @Meoducdethuong Před 3 lety +10

      Dân nam kì mới coi Thuý Nga

  • @winnie7691
    @winnie7691 Před 3 lety +119

    I'm from Foshan (Guangdong), I remember when I was a kid, we will go to the flower streets together as a family (行花街) to purchase mandarin plants and cherry blossoms to decorate our house. We would also hang red envelopes and LED lights onto the cherry blossom branches to make it look prettier, like a Christmas tree. Kids will also get to carry golden windmills (风车) when they are at the flower streets or when they go to temples to pray. During the lantern festival (on the 15th day os new year), we will carry lanterns to see the lantern shows (元宵灯会), watch cantonese opera (粤剧) and play 猜灯谜 which is a traditional game to guess the word of the phrase on the lantern (riddles). We also have the tradition to not sleep at the night transiting to the morning of new year, which is called 守岁 or 熬年, usually the adults do that and they scare the kids (including me) saying 年兽 (a monster that comes at new year) will come at night so they need to stay awake to prevent the kids not to be eaten or kidnaped. But tbh the kids still couldn't fall asleep at that night because firecrackers and fireworks are non-stop lol. We also need to wake up early to visit our ancestral houses to serve incense to our ancestors with rice wine, white rice cakes, chicken, fruits etc. Then we visit door to door to say our blessings to our relatives, kids will then receive their red pockets. It's a really tiring day because no sleep at night and constant human interactions, that's why as a kid i enjoy the night on new years day where all the kids get to light up sparklers, watch fireworks, play hide and seek and just have a fun time with same age kids altogether.
    I miss those days since I've never felt the same way after I immigrated, it's still fun to watch dragon and lion dance at China town and have dinner at a Chinese restaurant with my family, but it's just not the same.

    • @zhiqianwen
      @zhiqianwen Před 3 lety

      Yeah, and he did mention the regional differences vary since the provinces are so big in China

    • @suktan8896
      @suktan8896 Před 3 lety +4

      日常羡慕广东人把传统习俗保留得这么好

    • @nu6363
      @nu6363 Před 3 lety +2

      We all miss the old days.

    • @yingqin7256
      @yingqin7256 Před 2 lety +3

      @@suktan8896 南方宗族文化保存的好

    • @Weeping-Angel
      @Weeping-Angel Před rokem +2

      Omg I forgot about 行花街. We used to do that when I was little.

  • @meo11290
    @meo11290 Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you for your clear information. It really helps a lot ❤️

  • @tedruan601
    @tedruan601 Před 3 lety +44

    13:36 we call the first day “大年初一”(literally the first day of the spring festival)

    • @NK_Khoo-Malaysian
      @NK_Khoo-Malaysian Před 4 měsíci

      It was called 元旦during the Ming and Ching dynasties.

  • @klimaxsg
    @klimaxsg Před rokem +10

    Dude. Thanks for creating this video. I was just thinking of this when my family and I were in Vietnam last week. Vietnam has the Year of the Cat but no Rabbit.. I found that very interesting and tried to find out more.

  • @SplatterInker
    @SplatterInker Před 3 lety +68

    What's funny is the similarities are really similar, but the differences vary even within the country. Check out all the Vietnamese commenters pointing out which show they actually watch at new years! So, sure they're not identical, but as in the west, it sure seems like not even 2 Chinese or 2 Vietnamese could agree on what New Years involves! I suppose as humans we often focus on what differentiates us and makes us more individual or distinguishes our group from others, rather than the things we do that are virtually the same.
    Thanks for giving us a greater sense of that nuance. 😊

    • @oanhinhthi6758
      @oanhinhthi6758 Před rokem +1

      (Tôn Trung Sơn) đã bỏ tết nguyên đán,phá hủy những nét văn hoá được cho là không thuộc về Trung quốc

    • @cuonghoang8642
      @cuonghoang8642 Před rokem

      @@oanhinhthi6758 Ông ta có thể đã sai lầm, và những lãnh đạo sau đã sửa sai cho ông ấy. rõ ràng ngày lễ Nguyên Đán dựa trên lịch Trung Quốc thì tại sao không thuộc về Trung Quốc?

    • @user-em5ii9xf7k
      @user-em5ii9xf7k Před 5 měsíci +1

      All of China's history, culture, and customs are recorded in historical literature and archaeology written by ancient people, while South Korea takes science fiction historical novels written by modern people as real history. There is no historical literature written by ancient people, and there is no archaeological evidence. The funniest thing is that there are Chinese materials in Korean museums that prove that Korea used to be a vassal state of China. Koreans treat it as a treasure, but they cannot understand the content inside and do not recognize it as a vassal state of China! Lastly, why does South Korea claim everything to be its own instead of North Korea? Didn't North Korea and South Korea use to be the one country?

  • @veget_asian
    @veget_asian Před rokem +2

    Oh wow I learn so much from this video. Thank for sharing❤

  • @locchau5663
    @locchau5663 Před 3 lety +2

    You did a great job! Thank you for your knowledge

  • @conho4898
    @conho4898 Před 3 lety +210

    For Vietnamese, just some corrections:
    1. The ancient word for rabbit does not sound like cat. It's because the rabbit zodiac is 卯, which sounds like 貓 lol....
    2. Bánh chưng and bánh tét are both eaten in both north and south. They usually go together, not in different areas.
    Also the most distinct difference between northern and southern Vietnamese Tet is that the north decorates pink cherry flowers everywhere, while the south decorates yellow apricot flowers everywhere. This gives each region very color-coded distinctions lol
    The north also watches a comedy skit called Táo quân 灶君 religiously every year. The skit is a politically and cultural commentary on the year that just passed through the story of the Kitchen god reporting earthly matters to the Jade emperor.

    • @dangphucuong
      @dangphucuong Před 3 lety +23

      But it's rare to see bánh chưng in the south though. I usually eat bánh tét.

    • @conho4898
      @conho4898 Před 3 lety +6

      @@dangphucuong is it rare to see bánh tét in the north tho?

    • @dangphucuong
      @dangphucuong Před 3 lety +1

      @@conho4898 idk I’m not a Northerner

    • @conho4898
      @conho4898 Před 3 lety +4

      @@dangphucuong exactly.

    • @williamwan3712
      @williamwan3712 Před 3 lety +13

      Táo quân 灶君 is also called 灶神/灶王/灶王爺 in China , he will return to the heaven and report to the Jade emperor about everything happened in the house at the end of the passed year.

  • @xesaigon4230
    @xesaigon4230 Před 3 lety +9

    Thanks @Cool History Bros!
    I’m from Saigon Vietnam

  • @junweipan2494
    @junweipan2494 Před rokem +22

    Korean: In ancient times, north of the Yangtze River in China was Korean territory.
    Vietnamese: In ancient times south of the Yangtze River was the territory of Vietnam.
    Chinese: Then I am a fish living in the Yangtze River.

    • @shitoumantou592
      @shitoumantou592 Před rokem +9

      Fact: Korea and Vietnam were tributary state of China🎉

    • @junweipan2494
      @junweipan2494 Před rokem +2

      @@shitoumantou592 Thank you all for respecting history, because Koreans like to steal Chinese culture. They harass websites all over the world through the Internet Army (VANK). Modify the entry. What I want to say is that Chinese characters were introduced to Korea about 1800 years ago, and to Vietnam about 1900 years ago. The earliest record of the Spring Festival in Chinese unearthed cultural relics is the record of the Nian beast inscribed in the cultural relics 3,700 years ago. Both Korean and Vietnamese characters are written in Chinese characters. Chinese characters originated in Shaanxi and Henan in China. So which country did the Spring Festival originate from? Go to Wikipedia yourself. I hope that Yunnan and South Korea can come up with cultural relics and authentic historical books for an international open debate.

    • @junweipan2494
      @junweipan2494 Před rokem +2

      The earliest Lunar New Year celebrations in Vietnam are believed to have been brought by Zhao Tuo, a Chinese general of the Qin Dynasty, the first king of South Vietnam and founder of the Triệu Dynasty, more than 2,000 years ago. _ _ _ _ In 204 BC, Zhao Tuo (General of Qin State, Shaanxi Province, China) established the Nanyue Kingdom. _ _ _ _ Now Guangxi, Guangdong and northern Vietnam. Traditions like Chinese policy, culture, Lunar New Year etc. were brought during his rule over Vietnam.

    • @nwbest4336
      @nwbest4336 Před rokem +2

      @@junweipan2494 -LOL. Cung chúc tân xuân năm Quý Mão. Nothing to do with Chinese New Year. Have to say you know a bit more about Vietnamese than most ignorant Chinese in China. They are so uneducated doesn't even know where Vietnam is, and I'm talking city people.

    • @junweipan2494
      @junweipan2494 Před rokem +3

      @@nwbest4336 I think that the moment Chinese Qin Dynasty army introduced Chinese characters to Vietnam, it is possible to bring Spring Festival to Vietnam. The ancestors of the Vietnamese should be the descendants of Qin Shihuang in Shaanxi, China. If you don't believe it, you can see that the cultural relics unearthed in Vietnam over 100 years ago are all Chinese characters. In addition, if I guessed correctly, in order to get rid of the influence of China, Vietnam adopted a new Latin alphabet, which made it impossible for Vietnam to understand its own history. In fact, like South Korea, South Korea does not want to be colonized by China in the past. I may say that Koreans and Vietnamese are not happy, but if you respect the historical facts, you can know the real history recorded in the unearthed documents as long as you restore the Chinese characters. If you don’t believe it, you can go to the Vietnam Museum to see the cultural relics inside. Know if I'm right.

  • @romione1939
    @romione1939 Před 3 lety +2

    this is so cool once this channel is in an algorithm this channel will have many subscribers hope youtube will introduce this

  • @pedrito01100
    @pedrito01100 Před 3 lety +10

    Very cool video, I'm a total outsider from these cultures, so it's all new and I thought you made it very in depth and at the same time, easy to follow understand. Thanks so much bros!

  • @codyshi4743
    @codyshi4743 Před 3 lety +16

    Thank you Coop History Bros. I always wanted to know the diff between Japanese and Chinese New Year.
    Your Channel is the best.

  • @jimmylee1776
    @jimmylee1776 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for this enlightening videos. It is good to understand how the Lunar New Year is celebrated by different nation’s & ethnic groups.
    God bless you for this wonderful work.

  • @IzAhKaYaH
    @IzAhKaYaH Před rokem +2

    Thank You For This Informative Video! Happy Lunar New Year From Philippines ^^

  • @user-cd7jz8ew9k
    @user-cd7jz8ew9k Před 3 lety +24

    Japanese also have the New Year migration, which is called "Kisei Rush". But it is more considered as a traffic problem instead of a part of celebration.

    • @haodou4971
      @haodou4971 Před 3 lety +10

      "Tsun Yun" in China is also considered a traffic problem as well.

    • @user-gu7tx1yy7h
      @user-gu7tx1yy7h Před 4 měsíci

      别忘了日本古代属于中国附属国身份。属于中国广义领土一部分!

    • @smokbig3202
      @smokbig3202 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@user-gu7tx1yy7h 是的,中国现在是满族的领土。

  • @user-ys8xe1xd2x
    @user-ys8xe1xd2x Před 3 lety +27

    1872
    Government of Japan: "December 3rd is the New Year this year."
    Japanese people: "OK."

    • @jiayili6481
      @jiayili6481 Před 3 lety +2

      I read some book which says it was because the Meiji government didn't have money to pay the salary of the last month to civil servants accross the country. Then they adopt Gregorian calendar and the last month of that year on the traditional calendar just disappeared. I don''t know whether it was true or just a joke.

    • @deelak-ss9262
      @deelak-ss9262 Před 3 lety +3

      @@jiayili6481 いいえ違います。脱亜入欧論です。

    • @deelak-ss9262
      @deelak-ss9262 Před 3 lety +3

      @@jiayili6481 旧暦は日本では気候が1ヶ月ほどずれています。春分はまだ寒いし、秋分はまだ暑いし、実際の季節感と合いません。それも理由の一つになって、旧暦は廃止されました。

  • @Misspiggyexplores
    @Misspiggyexplores Před 3 lety +2

    Awesome channel 🙌

  • @AYellowLightBehindtheCurtain

    My man here is a legend. You deserve more attentions.

  • @DiHiongTan
    @DiHiongTan Před 3 lety +395

    Being Teochew Chinese-Vietnamese, my family has a mixture of traditions that kinda turned into a melting pot of traditions.
    One thing you’ve missed though you did slightly touch on in the video was the 5 fruit offerings. The 5 fruits vary from region to region as you have mentioned but it is more than just with the local fruits that are available. Like the Chinese puns, the 5 fruits, here, are also puns. The most popular one in the South is custard apple (mảng cầu), coconut (dừa), papaya (đu đủ), mango (xoài) and figs (sung). The reason is that together, it spells out the pun “cầu sung vừa đủ xài” which roughly translates to “may we be well-off and have just enough to spend.” Other than that, a must-have fruit during this festive season is watermelon. If you were to have only one fruit, it must be watermelon. Once again, the word for melon dưa is pronounced fairly similarly to vừa in southern Vietnamese but other than that, the inside is red. I'm sure no extra explanation required there haha
    In terms of the Vietnamese rice cakes, you’ve mentioned the most popular cakes in both north and south Vietnam but there’s an actual legend behind them as well. Every tradition and food during this celebration has a significant meaning and reason. Not so much bánh tét since that derived off the original bánh chưng but, long story short, bánh dày and bánh chưng are significant for its meaning and symbolism. Whereas bánh dày is round to represent the heavens/sky, bánh chưng is square in shape to represent the earth. I won't go through the tale so you'd just have to search up "the legend of banh chung and banh day". They are basically VERY traditional rice cakes.
    As for southern Chinese culture, in particular Teochew Chinese, alongside ang pows, mandarins (referring to the fruit) are also exchanged. This is because the word for mandarin (once again, I'm referring to the fruit) in Teochew is 橘 (gek) which sounds similar to 吉 (gik) for auspiciousness.
    Teochew new year rice cakes are usually red or pink in colour. Popular cakes include 紅龜粿 (ang ku kueh - red tortoise cake) and 紅桃粿 (ang to kueh - red peach cake) aka 飯粿 (perng kueh - rice cake). Both cakes represent longevity with the character 壽 etched onto them as we believe that there’s a magical heavenly peach that could extend your life. As for the tortoises, they are known to live for hundreds of years thus making them symbols of longevity.

  • @tonbopro
    @tonbopro Před 3 lety +8

    Incidentally,Lunar Calendar is also known as HuangLi 黄历(multiple editions available for dl too)

  • @ngccwilliam
    @ngccwilliam Před 3 lety +2

    Good information, I am impressed with your good pronunciations

  • @warren1871
    @warren1871 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Great podcast to explaining Lunar year 👍

  • @awiiator
    @awiiator Před 3 lety +21

    Theres so much things to tell about Vietnamese Tet that we cant never list them all out and many of them are quite unique
    On 23 Dec (Lunisolar) b4 Tết, we free the kois and bring traditional dishes on to the altar for the Ông Công Ông Táo (theres a story behind this, in fact there are stories behind everything oh dear...)
    Then we do the cleaning yes 👌
    Lunar New Year night: theres firework all over the country, and grammas/moms always pray in front of the altar with another bunch of good food, fruits and treats and blah blah blah lots of things ✨✨
    Every dishes goes on the altar are usually traditional even the fruit and alcohol and the settings...
    The person who "xông đất": basically the first person who enter the house in the new year will bring luck to the family (in my house its alway my dad right in the lunar new year eve after he watched the firework)
    The 3 following days are when ppl celebrate, go visit relative, date, going to the temples, vacation and have fun the most namely Mùng 1, Mùng 2, Mùng 3 (day1, day2, day3), and children stay with their parents and/or grandparents house for all these days.
    After that everything kinda cool down a bit but we still have another giving offerings to the altar on mid Jan lunisolar called Cúng ngày Rằm tháng Giêng shorten to Rằm tháng Giêng.
    There are also rules on Tet like not to cut hair, not to clean the house for the first few days so on and so on...
    Red envelope yes, new clothes yes, blossom and yellow apricot flower yes yes yes... blah blah... 👌
    Lunar night TV shows: paris by night used to be my childhood but its kinda not a thing anymore. Im north VN so all i know is that from 2003 theres a gala show called Gặp nhau cuối năm (Year-end meeting) better known as Táo Quân (if u rmb ông công ông táo i mentioned above). Its a comedy (or should i say parody? they mock and make fun of the issues happenned in the year b4 urgh every year's were masterpieces) and music afterwards. In fact im quite shocked when i heard souther VN dont watch it i mean Táo Quân is legit guys 🥺👌✨
    Your bánh chưng bánh tét part: acceptable
    Games:... ehm... i mean we do have a bunch of traditional games, just that we dont play those every year or play it like a habbit in new year celebration :// sad but true, im afraid its fading by the time 😔
    .
    Yeah thats all i can think of atm...

    • @jannamebaotocuaruneterra6211
      @jannamebaotocuaruneterra6211 Před rokem

      No, it's lame and cringe af but I like some skits and actors 🤭🤣 sorry, not sorry

    • @awiiator
      @awiiator Před rokem +1

      @@jannamebaotocuaruneterra6211 it can be lol. But it's like a part of the tradition tho

  • @yifen00
    @yifen00 Před 3 lety +7

    It was very interesting and informative, thank you! Also did anyone else spot Kashuu and Jiji bahaha

    • @condorX2
      @condorX2 Před 3 lety

      They all copy the Chinese because it's very colorful and its a long pass down tradition , but they want to be different.
      Vietnam, Korea and Japan all have similar Chinese building and writing as well, but they all try to be different.
      When you're burn fireworks on 4th of July, you're basically celebrating Chineses invention xD
      A simple invention turns to fire arms and sending the first man to the moon. They all want to be different.

  • @kaalalong8967
    @kaalalong8967 Před rokem +1

    Love your work. Thank you!

  • @aRandomUserName321
    @aRandomUserName321 Před rokem +1

    Nice work !

  • @BritskNguyen
    @BritskNguyen Před 3 lety +274

    Dude must have a PhD in East Asian Studies to know this much about East Asian culture and language. I humbly bow to you bro :))

    • @dztiger6822
      @dztiger6822 Před 3 lety +12

      China culture circle. Including Singapore, these countries using chopsticks are not poor in economy. Except Vietnam and North Korea.

    • @lulucai9221
      @lulucai9221 Před 3 lety +13

      @Vooltaar Starman China is still a developing country. Hope every country in Asia would be better than today~

    • @lulucai9221
      @lulucai9221 Před 3 lety +1

      @Vooltaar Starman Agree

    • @ngandang96
      @ngandang96 Před 3 lety +17

      @@dztiger6822 Vietnam is not poor bro, they only got freed economy in 1995, they are doing well despite being freed late

    • @lamhoang3112
      @lamhoang3112 Před 3 lety +9

      @@dztiger6822 ???? Vietnam is not poor. We are on the way to developed nation

  • @bani_niba
    @bani_niba Před 3 lety +30

    Your pronunciations of the different languages were quite good.

    • @pete4007
      @pete4007 Před 3 lety

      But his english have indian accent

    • @novemberwills842
      @novemberwills842 Před 3 lety +4

      His English has Guangdong/Holkien accent, I am pretty sure he is chinese Malaysian/Singaporean with Southern China ancestor

    • @TrinhNguyen-sh4fj
      @TrinhNguyen-sh4fj Před 3 lety +3

      No, he has a Chinese accent.

    • @liongkienfai104
      @liongkienfai104 Před 3 lety +7

      @@novemberwills842 He unexplicitly revealed in his other videos that he's Australian Chinese-Indonesian.

    • @minhl1949
      @minhl1949 Před 2 lety +1

      He slaughtered the vietnamese tho

  • @huotlor255
    @huotlor255 Před rokem +1

    I really like your reseach document, I learned a lot more from you!.

  • @Spartan265
    @Spartan265 Před 2 lety +4

    Not only am I learning a bunch from the video but also from all your guys comments! Thanks for sharing the knowledge as being American it's harder to find information on Asian countries. Which is a shame cause I love history and Asian history is just as fascinating as say Rome or Ancient Egypt or WW2 etc.

  • @liongkienfai104
    @liongkienfai104 Před 3 lety +68

    The official/formal way to refer to the Lunar New Year in Indonesia is Tahun Baru Imlek. Imlek being the Hokkien pronunciation of the Yinli calendar mentioned in the video, and Tahun Baru meaning new year in our country's language; Bahasa Indonesia. However, just within Chinese Indonesians circles, we often say Sincia (新正 in Chinese characters). Sin Tjhoen Kiong Hie to my fellow Chinese Indonesians, and 新年快樂 to everyone else :)

  • @warrisgurung2662
    @warrisgurung2662 Před 3 lety +15

    In Nepal too lunar new year is widely celebrated. in Nepal it is called Lhosar. in the month of December Tibetan lunar year (Tamu lhosar) is celebrated by gurung then in the month of January / February Tibetan lunar year (sonam lhosar) is celebrated by tamang and in the month of February / March Tibetan lunar year (gyalpo lhosar) is celebrated by Sherpa, hyolmo, monks, Tibetans and others. 🇳🇵

  • @matthewct8167
    @matthewct8167 Před 3 lety +4

    Happy New Year’s everybody

  • @Athrunwong
    @Athrunwong Před 3 lety +1

    Happy new year to you, 2021 will be a better year.

  • @lizainuk
    @lizainuk Před 3 lety +6

    Japan officially celebrate 3 days only, then commonly consider new year's week up to 7th Jan.
    Osoji means cleaning in general but year-end clearing action is referred as Oh-soji.

    • @yunan7278
      @yunan7278 Před 2 lety +1

      This is funny, chinese celebrate for 15 days, I believe Korean, Vietnameseand Malaysians celebrate for 3 days too?

  • @bobbiesng1452
    @bobbiesng1452 Před 3 lety +15

    In Vietnamese Zodiac, there are 2 differences that instead of rabbit, we have cat and we have buffalo instead of ox

  • @anthonytran7002
    @anthonytran7002 Před 3 lety +1

    Great Video.

  • @anhnhan4868
    @anhnhan4868 Před 3 lety +2

    Happy New Year!!!!

  • @UserWAian
    @UserWAian Před rokem +5

    Good well researched cross cultural video. Expect differences even among the same cultural group. Varieties make life more interesting. Wishing everyone a happy, healthy and prosperous new year.

  • @Uhe688
    @Uhe688 Před 3 lety +22

    It's sad to say these 4 countries always give strongly hatred and wary to each others while they have similar culture. And they also don't feel good when westerners compare their culture to each others.

    • @yong1626
      @yong1626 Před 3 lety +13

      Yeah. But unfortunately, near countries each other have to be bad relationship. Beacause almost countries history relation is remembered as many 'wars'. And a long time ago, war is occupied only from near country.
      Of course, good relationship is good. But near countries' bad relationship is not odd at all. We just have to grateful for that that 3 countries are not being at war.

    • @deelak-ss9262
      @deelak-ss9262 Před 3 lety +2

      中国、朝鮮は「中華文明圏(=儒教圏)」であって、自国至上、周辺国蔑視の華夷秩序意識を国家イデオロギーとして持っています。つまり西欧近代の法の下の平等に立脚した対等な国家関係を認めず、周辺国を自分たちより劣った存在と蔑視/差別します。それに反発するのは当然です。

    • @deelak-ss9262
      @deelak-ss9262 Před 3 lety

      @뉸뉴냔냐 Koreans are giving hate speech to Japanese people. Don't overturn the logic. Confucian country = South Korea discriminates Japanese as inferior. Confucian nations do not accept the idea of equality before the law. The nations are ranked in a hierarchical relationship.

    • @Timholle
      @Timholle Před rokem

      @@deelak-ss9262 blame your ancestors for murdering & torturing millions of Asians all around Asia with their satanic brutality. For a start, apologize and stop worshipping your “war heroes” if you want people to forgive you

  • @unogal5906
    @unogal5906 Před 2 lety +2

    Happy new year!

  • @KennFast
    @KennFast Před 9 měsíci +1

    I greatly appreciate this video and will be coming back to it when Seollal gets here in February. My family has a South Korean exchange student and I want to help her feel more at home by bringing the celebration to her. I want to do it justice so I’ve started researching months in advance.

  • @hieuvu2834
    @hieuvu2834 Před 3 lety +14

    About the game in vietnam. Mostly we dont play Bàu cua Tôm Cá stuff, we play western cards(Tú lơ khơ) with our own rules. Tho it is not traditional but has been practiced in recent decades

  • @darrenlim5112
    @darrenlim5112 Před 3 lety +45

    The rest of Asia: Yay twice holidays of new year (or el-fitr/songkran/diwali).
    Japan: ...

    • @tqhung166
      @tqhung166 Před 3 lety +1

      I would prefer to abandon it like Japan

    • @yogadarmawan3051
      @yogadarmawan3051 Před 3 lety +3

      Prefer not get influence from china again. Japan have its own culture. Korea vietnam very close to china

    • @alisonlaw8768
      @alisonlaw8768 Před 3 lety +18

      @@yogadarmawan3051 Sure, sure. We all know well that Japan is a European country, not an Asia country. And we are very glad we are different from you guys😆

    • @lilpp666
      @lilpp666 Před 3 lety

      @@tqhung166 bù lại nghỉ đông sướng hơn nghỉ tết

    • @justhuy7960
      @justhuy7960 Před 3 lety +4

      @@yogadarmawan3051 As long as you guys keep producing JAV, I'm fine if Japan is European country :)

  • @tigoid
    @tigoid Před 3 lety +2

    Lol my new year is like a mix of all of these

  • @SOOmanyMOVIE
    @SOOmanyMOVIE Před 2 lety +44

    Malaysian chinese celebrate this event as 华人农历新年,Translation usually goes to chinese new year (it really meant a lot by calling this way) until recently lunar new year due to some weird habit happens across internet, tradition or celebrate method origin are from 福建or 广东。Your info is certainly accurate at a general level.
    The only thing that i am not satisfy with is the translation "Lunar New Year", i always hope it will get a accurate one since the it calculate through 24节气,the date that measure from Sun and Moon, yet the Lunar only meant for "Moon".

    • @The_Art_of_AI_888
      @The_Art_of_AI_888 Před 2 lety +8

      Actually, the name Lunar New Year was only "appeared " in recent years, due to the Koreans don't like the word "Chinese" in the Chinese New Year name, because they don't want people to think it's originated and invented by the Chinese people and how much they had been influenced by Chinese culture (it hurts their Ego). So they had sent "letters" to "cry" with the UN, the big Internet media companies like Google, Facebook, Twitters...to change the Chinese New Year to "Lunar New Year", (with the excuse as them Korea and many Asian countries also celebrated it...) which as you said is a very inaccurate one, and to me, a disrespectful one to the people who invented the festival.

    • @gg-jy1zx
      @gg-jy1zx Před 2 lety +27

      Totally agree with you, Chinese New Year is inclusive, but lunar new year actually exclusive. I say Chinese New Year since I was born, not because Chinese people so named Chinese New Year, because Chinese traditional calendar. I don’t like lunar new year, it’s political correct , change lunar new year is culture appropriation.

    • @wuwyrt6933
      @wuwyrt6933 Před 2 lety +10

      couldn't agree more. the spring festival follows the lunisolar calendar, not the lunar one. it really doesn't make sense when foreigners refer to chinese new year as "lunar new year," unless they're excluding it

    • @kemsoonleong1670
      @kemsoonleong1670 Před 2 lety +12

      Malaysian Chinese here too.. Happy Chinese New Year to all Malaysian Chinese...

    • @melonni3494
      @melonni3494 Před rokem +1

      You're totally right.

  • @PlasticExtrusionProfiles
    @PlasticExtrusionProfiles Před 3 lety +18

    happy niu Year to all ppl celebrating this festival, whatever the name, we are celebrating the same one.

  • @user-gp2er6zt1t
    @user-gp2er6zt1t Před 3 lety +2

    了解得真详细啊😹

  • @kemek3000
    @kemek3000 Před rokem +1

    Great video. I live in Japan and New Years is a big travel period here too.

  • @baochi456
    @baochi456 Před 3 lety +74

    You missed a few points, but I'll let it go since I think this is a Hanoian's thing only.
    We have something called "New Year's Eve Bath".
    People will attend the market and buy special herbs to make the bathwater.
    We also visit temples around Hanoi on the first day of the new year, it is a must to visit all four guardian temples in Hanoi, other regions of the North visit different temples. Each family will have their own list of temples to visit, mine always visit the literature temple.
    We send fish to Kitchen gods by releasing fishes to ponds and rivers so that they can ride the fish to heaven, reporting what has happened that year. We stay up all night to wait for the new year and then eat the offerings we made, tell our family about the previous year. Sprinkle rice and salt to the road for... I'm not sure what's that for.
    We don't wear red for New Years'? According to my parents, it is a recent thing, we simply buy new clothes. Paris By Night is only popular with the older generation, we as a younger demographic aren't a fan of Bolero. We still watch Tao Quan tho, last year they broke my heart announcing that they won't be showing it, basically a fun, social-commentary comedy using the concept of Táo Quân or the kitchen gods.
    one last thing, the Banh Chung was created during Hung Vuong times, it was used to celebrate New Year's harvest...I think.

    • @laurnnguyen
      @laurnnguyen Před 3 lety +13

      yeah, I'm from Sai Gon and I haven't heard of the "New Year Eve's bath" so it's probably a Northern tradition. The salt and rice I think is for "cô hồn" (wondering sprits). I think it's similar to burning paper/cardboard things as gift/offerings to our ancestors (?)
      And there's another thing too, people avoid sweeping the house because they're scared of sweeping away New year's luck.

    • @ningzou3391
      @ningzou3391 Před 3 lety +12

      I come from China, in fact, some parts of China also have the custom of bathing on New Year's Eve, my hometown is like this, usually on the night of the New Year's Eve with mugwort leaves(chinese:艾叶) boiling water to take a bath.From what you say, I find that the customs of North Vietnam and China are quite similar.Those who believe in Buddhism will go to the temple to burn incense and pray on the first day of New Year. Many people will get up very early in order to burn incense early.

    • @baochi456
      @baochi456 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ningzou3391 Interesting! Do you guys release fish for New Year too? Just wondering.

    • @baochi456
      @baochi456 Před 3 lety +5

      @@laurnnguyen OOh, about sweeping the floor, we still do that in the North, it's just that we'll sweep it towards ourselves, to avoid sweeping fortune away from one self.

    • @laurnnguyen
      @laurnnguyen Před 3 lety +3

      @@baochi456 ohhhh so that's why my paternal side of the family still sweeps, I didn't know that b4. The more you know i guess-
      People also sweeps but don't discard the trash, they just keep the dirty stuff in some corner of the house 'til after the 15th day. Which is neat lol

  • @aaliah5831
    @aaliah5831 Před rokem +1

    Your accent is so cool bro.
    Also rad video 😎

  • @duongrkudo
    @duongrkudo Před rokem +1

    Very good research

  • @tuuure2793
    @tuuure2793 Před 3 lety +12

    17:05 I think you made a mistake here. Rice dumplings are for Duanwu Festival. In the southern China, people eat year cake, spring roll or tangyuan.

    • @HaleVisse
      @HaleVisse Před 4 měsíci

      所以屈原是中国北方人吗

    • @tuuure2793
      @tuuure2793 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@HaleVisse 屈原是南方人,但这并不影响中国南方人过年不吃粽子。而视频内 17:05 提到中国南方春节吃粽子,这是一个非常低级的错误。

  • @pipo8561
    @pipo8561 Před 3 lety +5

    Completely off topic but at 5:37
    My brain just stopped and said “...Toadally awesome”
    Learn something new everyday.

    • @catnip9424
      @catnip9424 Před 3 lety +1

      Is this a yugioh reference

    • @pipo8561
      @pipo8561 Před 3 lety

      @@catnip9424
      This is a yugioh reference.

  • @deekay13
    @deekay13 Před 2 lety +1

    Happy new year everyone!

  • @katrinepearls
    @katrinepearls Před rokem +1

    Thank you for sharing these special Asian Holidays for us that uses the Gregorian Calendar. I never realized the significance of Lunisolar Calendar until you had open my wisdom to know the difference. For us Gregorian's, we also clean our house before The New Year comes. We invite friends to come over to join us celebrate the New Year. We put coins in our pockets and start clicking it for more money's to come on New Year's count down. Thank you🌹🌻💙

  • @leallan69
    @leallan69 Před 3 lety +112

    Historically, Japan used to celebrate according to the traditional Chinese Lunisolar (Lunar) Calendar. However, during the Meiji Era, the government moved towards Westernization and adopted the Gregorian calendar beginning on January 1 for the new year. However, They still are using the Chinese Lunisolar (Lunar) Calendar for agriculture purposes.

    • @bosco_c6431
      @bosco_c6431 Před 3 lety +15

      @Huan Nguyen not saying that they don't celebrate lunar new year any more ,but they have moved most of the festivals including lunar new year according to Gregorian calendar, so the new year of Japan is now same with the western countries

    • @yogadarmawan3051
      @yogadarmawan3051 Před 3 lety +1

      So thats why no holiday in lunar new year.

    • @jul5126
      @jul5126 Před 3 lety

      Hmmm, i thought Japan celebrate some traditional holidays wearing traditional Japanese cloth (和服)? They use western calendar to decide the dates?

    • @leallan69
      @leallan69 Před 3 lety +20

      @@jul5126 和服 comes from China in the Tang dynasty. Japanese followed Chinese Fashion, Hairstyle and makeup. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kimono

    • @addiowl8538
      @addiowl8538 Před 3 lety +9

      @@leallan69 They were inspired but not necessarily the same. And traditional Japanese makeup is more intense than those from the Tang Dynasty.

  • @lampsonnguyen9425
    @lampsonnguyen9425 Před 3 lety +150

    Thank you for this awesome videos. I learned so much from this video. I really appreciate that you include Vietnam in this. A lot of Eat Asian history focused channels like to skip Vietnam due to the country popularity in Asian Pop-culture is non existence.
    As a South East Asian country geographically, Vietnam is really an East Asian culture country (Although nowadays we use Latin-based writing system,, we used to use Chinese writing and later chữ Nôm, another writing script similar to Han Chinese script)

    • @leafster1337
      @leafster1337 Před 3 lety +2

      i usually see some restaurants using traditional characters

    • @viett.nguyen9319
      @viett.nguyen9319 Před 3 lety +26

      People say Vietnam is a mixture of East and Southeast, but sadly I feel that neither of the group actually accepts Vietnam as one of them.

    • @VinhNguyen-ce5if
      @VinhNguyen-ce5if Před 3 lety +16

      @@viett.nguyen9319 sounds like Vietnam is the country in the middle of nowhere, but I like this a lot :D

    • @viett.nguyen9319
      @viett.nguyen9319 Před 3 lety +48

      @@VinhNguyen-ce5if the southeast asians think we're culturally different. The east asians think we're too poor to be one of them, which is condescending. Well, let it be. I guess Vietnam just needs to be herself and posperous.

    • @lily8249
      @lily8249 Před 3 lety +33

      @@viett.nguyen9319 as an overseas Vietnamese I never thought it would be so much of an issue whether Vietnam is shoved into the East Asian Box or the South East Asian Box. I find it rather ridiculous too to determine geographical or cultural affiliation by prosperity. I learned a new lesson today and I hope that Vietnam will blossom in it‘s own glory without being hung up on where to belong to.

  • @IKEMENOsakaman
    @IKEMENOsakaman Před 3 lety +28

    Every year in Japan's New Years, hundreds of elderly dies by swallowing mochi and suffocating :(

    • @CoolHistoryBros
      @CoolHistoryBros  Před 3 lety

      Oh wow....

    • @user-te7ui7gu2g
      @user-te7ui7gu2g Před 3 lety +10

      The story is also known in Korea. I saw a case that a woman used a vacuum cleaner to suck mochi and saved the old man.

    • @williamwan3712
      @williamwan3712 Před 3 lety +9

      In China mochi is called 糍粑/年糕,we cut it into small pieces to avoid that happen

    • @mantapdjiwa9768
      @mantapdjiwa9768 Před 3 lety

      In hokkien chinese , we call it "mua ci" In my childhood we eat it alot and only know mochi from comic books, never thought its the same thing.

    • @ytn00b3
      @ytn00b3 Před 3 lety

      😨😱😱😱😱😱

  • @zacksampson6189
    @zacksampson6189 Před rokem +6

    As someone who lives in korea this is mostly correct however these days people dont do all these activities as much. Its slowly becoming a travel holiday and less about tradition

  • @tien7742
    @tien7742 Před rokem +15

    You missed the sweet treats for Vietnamese New Year's which are very Uniquely reminders of Tet..Those are certain candies or sweet treats made from fruits, gingers, coconut and etc..Another thing for Vietnamese's Tet Characteristics was roasted watermelons seeds with red dyed..For foods, it depends on regions..Watermelons often the common fruits for offering amongst others..In terms of games, as far as I can remembered, the 6 characters games and playing cards..Regardings to flowers, the yellow chrysanthemums are also popular ..Regardings to the glutinous rice cakes, they go together square and round shapes not separately..As other's comments posted, there was a legendary story behinds those shapes..

    • @Jumpoable
      @Jumpoable Před rokem

      Same as Cantonese with all the candied fruit, nuts & seeds, except it's winter melon in Southern China, & not watermelon (that's clearly for the summer but I guess it's warmer even more down south in Vietnam LOL).
      Nowadays people prefer chocolate or modern candy.

    • @willengel2458
      @willengel2458 Před rokem

      if not mistaken, it's winter melon seeds vice watermelon seeds.

  • @Riceball01
    @Riceball01 Před 3 lety +4

    In my wife's family, the cleaning your house before New Year's day isn't so much about luck but out of the belief that if you have a messy house at the beginning of the year, you'll have a messy house all year long. They also don't like getting their hair cut or open their red envelopes too soon after the new year because cutting your hair cuts away your good luck and opening the red envelopes too soon is just plain bad luck.

  • @jr3kg3
    @jr3kg3 Před 3 lety +7

    Proudly born in the YEAR OF THE OX...
    Also, thank you for your time and I appreciate everything you shared with all of US

    • @CoolHistoryBros
      @CoolHistoryBros  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks, Jameela. Btw, just to let you know, sometimes asking someone's Chinese zodiac is a covert way of asking someone how old they are. Because it is easier to guesstimate someone's age by 12 years interval. Lol! Just warning you in case you wouldn't want to reveal some secrets. 🤣

    • @TrinhNguyen-sh4fj
      @TrinhNguyen-sh4fj Před 3 lety +1

      I am westernized but I still don't get why people are offended when people ask their age. Everyone ages and gets old so why try to hide it?

    • @lyhthegreat
      @lyhthegreat Před 2 lety

      @@TrinhNguyen-sh4fj cause women don't want people to call them old...

  • @sonh99
    @sonh99 Před 2 lety +2

    Happy Tet New Year 🎉🎊

  • @minhvuhoang3554
    @minhvuhoang3554 Před 3 lety +5

    20:27 The second animal in Vietnam is not a ox but a water buffalo

  • @yancysiu
    @yancysiu Před rokem +8

    Malaysia and Singapore also celebrating Chinese New year because many Chinese live here.

  • @MooseBme
    @MooseBme Před rokem +1

    !(: WOW, THANKS ;)!

  • @ozonmen88
    @ozonmen88 Před 2 lety +1

    Good video 👍

  • @potterharry6652
    @potterharry6652 Před 3 lety +3

    amazing video!happy lunar new year.

  • @justhuy7960
    @justhuy7960 Před 3 lety +27

    Vietnamese people on every Tet: Hey, Happy New Year
    Vietnamese people on 1968 Tet: Not this year

    • @nyleeu2632
      @nyleeu2632 Před 3 lety

      有一说一,哪怕ROV不灭亡它也成不了ROK或者ROC,ROK的经济崛起和日本关联很深的,没有1968的春节攻势或者说如果PRV没有统一越南,也不过是有两个越南,和经济关联不大。而且至少现阶段来看,PRC和DPRK都是很想消灭南方政权的。

    • @justhuy7960
      @justhuy7960 Před 3 lety +2

      @@nyleeu2632 English would be better :))

    • @nyleeu2632
      @nyleeu2632 Před 3 lety +1

      @@justhuy7960 OK, if I meet you again I'll speak English at that time

    • @justhuy7960
      @justhuy7960 Před 3 lety

      @@nyleeu2632 hope you're a girl, then that would be destiny :)

    • @PinkFullColor
      @PinkFullColor Před 3 lety

      Vietnamese from 1789: *laugh*

  • @johnhanley9946
    @johnhanley9946 Před 3 lety +1

    Happy New Year! ⛩️🐃🎉

  • @randagiorosso
    @randagiorosso Před 3 lety +2

    this channel is underrated.

  • @2557carla
    @2557carla Před 3 lety +89

    Mongolian and Tibetan also celebrate Lunar New Year similar to Chinese New Year.

    • @gantulgaganhuyag717
      @gantulgaganhuyag717 Před 3 lety +4

      Friendly advise! Do not simply categorize for other people’s heritage specially if you are not part of the culture! Ignorant europeans “explained” various Mongol tribes and by doing that “segregated” the people!

    • @2557carla
      @2557carla Před 3 lety

      @@gantulgaganhuyag717 Thank you!

    • @codyshi4743
      @codyshi4743 Před 3 lety

      Interesting.

    • @alanchen8272
      @alanchen8272 Před 3 lety

      As far as I know, tibetan celebrate base on tibetan calendar.

    • @2557carla
      @2557carla Před 3 lety

      @@alanchen8272 Losar is always coincide with Lunar New Year

  • @xinnn4849
    @xinnn4849 Před 2 lety +4

    As a Singaporean Chinese, we celebrate as 新年 or 农历新年, we call as New Year/ Chinese New Year / Lunar New Year

  • @dianddjhoekstra-li1141
    @dianddjhoekstra-li1141 Před rokem +1

    Well done bro 🎉

  • @Mal17281
    @Mal17281 Před 2 lety +1

    Cool video

  • @Arabelle2009
    @Arabelle2009 Před rokem +3

    Buying your new year's traditional food from a CVS is not the normjal thing to do in Japan at all. Usually students and people who work in Tokyo may go back to their home prefectures. Only if you're stuck in Tokyo (for example) and work for television or something is the CVS an option, i.e. you might be working on a New Year's program, in which case your New Year's is screwed. Otherwise there are more glamorous options for buying the replacement for the lacquered box with traditional home made food in it. Various restaurants may also have their New Year's menu once they open again after the first day of the year or on the 4th. The traditional New year's is called 旧正月, which follows the Chinese calendar.

  • @lyhthegreat
    @lyhthegreat Před 2 lety +12

    People always ask why is the cat not included in the zodiac when other animals like the dog is included. Not sure if this is legit but they say there was a story about the cat and the mouse being best friends and they promised each other that they will wake up early and report to the jade emperor so that they would get the first few spots on the calendar, however the next day, the mouse woke up and left on his own while the cat was asleep and he ended up getting the first spot on the zodiac, the cat on the other hand woke up late and ended up being the 13th animal to arrive, which means he does not get a spot since there were only 12 slots, and from that day onwards, the cat held an eternal grudge against the mouse and attacked it every time they met.

    • @yinduasan111
      @yinduasan111 Před 2 lety +2

      Because cat is not a native animal to China I think

  • @karleken7
    @karleken7 Před 3 lety +4

    so Happy lunar new year!

  • @BygoneChina
    @BygoneChina Před 3 lety +44

    I find it amazing that the Chinese Lunar Calendar (农历) is actually incredibly precise at predicting the changing of the seasons in China's core (the timezone that aligns with Beijing's). On the days that the Lunar calendar marks as 'Entering Spring' (立春) or 'Entering Autumn' (立秋), you can sense the immediate change in the climate, as if the weather is actually aligned with and directly responding to the calendar itself. This is very different from the west, where the Gregorian Calendar has only a very limited correlation with the change of the seasons.

    • @eveleung8855
      @eveleung8855 Před 3 lety +6

      The moon always full on the 15th of each lunar month!

    • @Mandragara
      @Mandragara Před 3 lety

      Westerners used to use blooming of certain flowers etc. to mark when certain agricultural work was to commence.

    • @zhangshawn2357
      @zhangshawn2357 Před 3 lety +1

      @@eveleung8855 As well as in mid-autumn festival, the moon is always full, big and bright

    • @user-jn7py1te8w
      @user-jn7py1te8w Před 3 lety

      It's not Beijing, it's Henan and Shaanxi, the capital of ancient Chinese dynasties. The weather there is exactly the same as the (lunar calendar). It tells people when to grow rice and when to mature

    • @shadowblitzo123
      @shadowblitzo123 Před 3 lety +1

      @麻辣拌 bulls. Ancient chinese were nomadics who constantly travelled. Confucious travelled southwarda to lac viet and copied their rice cultivation and celebration of tet aka lunar new year.

  • @goldenspoon87
    @goldenspoon87 Před 3 lety +4

    Yusheng as we know it today (the food items + shouting blessing associated with each ingredient) was created in the 1960s by chefs Lau Yoke Pui, Tham Yui Kai, Sin Leong and Hooi Kok Wai, together known as the "Four Heavenly Kings" in Singapore. I'm sure some earlier variant existed before. But instead of Malaysia, we might as well credit Guangdong where eating raw fish on the Eve first started.

  • @paulskiye6930
    @paulskiye6930 Před 3 lety +31

    牛and羊are simply general character for cow or sheep like creatures. 牛could be ox, buffalo, cow. 羊could mean sheep or goat.
    Also, Because Chinese new year holiday is about two weeks, we have to visit family members too, which is 拜年. Usually starting with closest family members first, then cousins etc.

    • @jivvyjack7723
      @jivvyjack7723 Před rokem

      In Chinese zodiac , it is the goat 羊。Sheep is not common in China. The term for sheep is 绵羊 (literally 'cotton goat').

    • @catsidhe181
      @catsidhe181 Před rokem +1

      @@jivvyjack7723 yeah, and the term for goat is 山羊, not just 羊. Like Paul said, the character 羊 itself doesn't specify goat or sheep. It doesn't matter whether sheep or goats are more common in China, in modern China you can find artwork and decorations of both sheep and goats during the year of the 羊, and if you search for "羊" in Chinese emojis, you will most likely get a picture of a sheep.

    • @jivvyjack7723
      @jivvyjack7723 Před rokem

      @@catsidhe181 Thanks for the clarification. Probably southerners associate the 羊character more with goat than sheep. For us, 山羊 refers to the mountain goat, not the farm variety. And the emoji I see is a slim 4-legged animal with 2 horns. Maybe that caused my confusion. 😄

  • @alexndinh
    @alexndinh Před 2 lety +2

    happy lunar new year

  • @1chai
    @1chai Před 3 lety +46

    After watching this video, me as a Malaysian Chinese feel like want to call the Japanese, Koreans and Vietnamese my brothers.

    • @jennifera4222
      @jennifera4222 Před 3 lety +23

      Thank you! I hope there's more Asians with the same sentiment as yours. It's sad & disheartening after reading so much hateful racist comments from other Asians.

    • @denverphan88
      @denverphan88 Před 3 lety +2

      Brooooo !

    • @1chai
      @1chai Před 3 lety +3

      @@denverphan88 , Good night, Bro. (at Malaysian time 11.20 pm)

    • @djtan3313
      @djtan3313 Před 3 lety +4

      Look, we all d same SINOSPHERE. To argue differently is to split our (black) hairs. And to play into our enemies hands!

    • @nu6363
      @nu6363 Před 3 lety

      Hi, bro!

  • @glennsriyousefbaun-cueto9287

    Japanese used to be on the 1st of 1st month in lunisolar calendar before the Meiji "Restoration" happened

  • @kc_1018
    @kc_1018 Před 3 lety +4

    I'm half Cambodian and Chinese so I celebrate the Lunar New Year in February and the Solar New Year in April.

  • @bouillonpandemonium9270
    @bouillonpandemonium9270 Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you so much for the knowledge of all these countries - it's greatly in depth!!! "😮

  • @thanhtuan127
    @thanhtuan127 Před 3 lety

    Helpful video. Can you make an Engsub for next videos? coz many people couldn’t catch your voice in the video, please. ❤️

  • @thuytranchannel8042
    @thuytranchannel8042 Před rokem +12

    I’m from the South VietNam . Sài Gòn is always the best. I miss and love Sai Gon forever. Chúc Mừng Năm Mới everyone.

  • @harryharper5358
    @harryharper5358 Před 3 lety +13

    Every Vietnamese's emergency breakfast after Tết: Fried Bánh Tét

    • @nuxa8549
      @nuxa8549 Před 3 lety +3

      @Rebecca Matthews you are not Vietnamese right? Cuz all vietnamese know what bánh tét is and have heard the name Paris by Night at least once in their life

    • @spookyengie735
      @spookyengie735 Před 3 lety +2

      @@nuxa8549 i heard about paris by night from oversea vietnamese but it not commonly watch by central/northern vietnamese,mostly the people from the south-usually older generation.
      Most northern/central vietnamese watch "Táo Quân"

    • @spookyengie735
      @spookyengie735 Před 3 lety +5

      As Hanoian,Fried Bánh Chưng for breakfast during/slightly after tết

    • @s0m4guy
      @s0m4guy Před 3 lety

      bro it’s called fried bánh chưng not fried bánh tết

    • @thedarlestplaceofmine
      @thedarlestplaceofmine Před 3 lety +4

      Bánh tét là bánh chưng phiên bản hình trụ mà người miền nam hay ăn nên người ta nói banh tét rán là đúng rồi