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Chinese New Year
Also
known as Spring Festival, Beijing’s favorite holiday is celebrated with
a cacophony of fireworks, let off night and day across the city. There
are also temple fairs with stilt-walkers, acrobats, and fortune-tellers.
Everyone who can heads for their family home, where gifts are exchanged
and children are kept quiet with red envelopes stuffed with cash so
adults can watch the annual Spring Festival Gala on national television.

Guardian hung on doors to welcome Chinese New Year
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International Labor Day
A
reminder that China is still a Communist nation, Labor Day is
celebrated with a week-long holiday, which marks the start of the
domestic travel season. Shops, offices, and other businesses close for
at least three days, and often for the whole week. Don’t plan on doing
any out-of-town travel during this time.-
May 1
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Dragon Boat Festival (Duanwu Jie)
Drums
thunder and paddles churn up the water as dragon-headed craft compete
for top honors. The festival remembers the honest official, Qu Yuan,
who, the story goes, drowned him-self 2,500 years ago after banishment
from the court of the Duke of Chu. Shocked citizens threw rice cakes
into the water to distract the fish from nibbling on his body, hence the
wholesale consumption of these delicacies on this date every year. -
Cricket-fighting
Cricket
season in Beijing has nothing to do with the genteel English game. The
Chinese version involves ruthless antennae-on-antennae action as
cricket-fanciers goad their insects into battle in the plastic bowls
that serve as gladiatorial arenas. Once the favorite sport of emperors,
it now takes place in backstreets all over town.
Top 10 Annual Cultural Events
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Chaoyang Festival
Street theater, live music, circus, and dance.
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Chaoyang Park
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Late Jan, early Feb
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Beijing International Theater Festival
A month of musicals, operas, puppet shows, and dramas.
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Various venues
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May
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Beijing International Music Festival
Month-long extravaganza of soloists and orchestras.
Various venues
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Oct
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