Friday, October 28, 2011

Moon Festival Legend

##title##
In one common Western perception of the face, the figure's eyes are Mare Imbrium and Mare Serenitatis, its nose is Sinus Aestuum, and its open mouth is Mare Nubium and Mare Cognitum. An older European tradition sees a figure of a man (Maria Serenitatis, Tranquilitatis, Fecunditatis and Nectaris) carrying a wide burden (Mare Vaporum and Lacus Somniorum) on his back. He is sometimes seen as accompanied by a small dog (Mare Crisium). Conventionalized illustrations of the Man in the Moon often seen in Western art show a very simple face in the full moon, or a human profile in the crescent moon, corresponding to no actual markings.
A longstanding European tradition holds that the man was banished to the moon for some crime. Christian lore commonly held that he is the man caught gathering sticks on the sabbath and sentenced by God to death by stoning in the book of Numbers XV.32-36. Some Germanic cultures thought he was a man caught stealing from a neighbor's hedgerow to repair his own. There is a Roman legend that he is a sheep-thief.
One medieval Christian tradition claims him as Cain, the Wanderer, forever doomed to circle the Earth. Dante's Inferno alludes to this:

the Moon Festival is one


Moon Festival Legend - Chang O


Mid-Autumn Moon Cake Recipes


Chang\x26#39;e Lunar Festival Legend


Chinese Moon Festival

There is also a Talmudic tradition that the image of Jacob is engraved on the moon, although no such mention appears in the Torah.

The Moon Festival is a great


as the Moon Festival,


TOPLegends of Mid-autumn


The Moon Festival falls on the


behind the Moon festival.

John Lyly says in the prologue to his Endymion (1591), "There liveth none under the sunne, that knows what to make of the man in the moone."
In Norse mythology, Máni is the male personification of the moon who crosses the sky in a horse and carriage. He is continually pursued by the Great Wolf Hati who catches him at Ragnarok. The name Máni simply means "Moon".

legend of moon festival


The Moon Festival showcases


E, Chinese Moon Festival


The moon cakes in


moon Sharing mooncake

In Haida mythology, the figure represents a boy gathering wood, who was taken up from the earth as a punishment for disrespect. Plutarch, in his treatise, Of the Face appearing in the roundle of the Moone, cites the poet Agesinax as saying of that orb, In the renaissance, the man in the moon was known as Moonshine and carries a lantern as a traditional accessory.

The Moon Festival is also


The Legend of Chang E


Moon Festival Legend - Chang O


Moon Festival


Moon Festival: the story

No comments:

Post a Comment

 
coompax-digital magazine