Colourful lanterns will light up Thang Long Imperial Citadel and the gates will open for the public to celebrate mid-autumn festival, beginning now and running until October 4 - the full moon day of the eighth lunar month.
The festival, organised for children by the Thang Long-Hanoi Heritage Conservation Centre, offers a variety of activities. In particular, an education programme will help children better understand mid-autumn festivals of the early 20th century through documented works of the French researcher Henri Oger and photographer Albert Kahn.
Children will also have a chance to talk directly to historical and cultural researchers and artisans as well as experience traditional games and craft-making processes. The space is filled with stalls displaying traditional toys associated with mid-autumn festivals.
Participating artisans include well-known makers of moon cakes, masks, lanterns, pottery, and to he (glutinous rice figurines). The skilled craft persons are coming from across Hanoi as well as Bac Ninh province.
Traditional games will be played, such as carrying rice across a bamboo bridge, see-saw, boomerang, wooden horse, jumping-in-sack race, tug of war, stick-and-ball, clay crackers, board games and blindfolded drummer.
Organising the mid-autumn festival is part of a series of activities at the Thang Long-Hanoi Heritage Conservation Centre designed to promote the intangible cultural heritage of the country, said Tran Viet Anh, director of the centre. “We want to bring children attractive activities to celebrate the festival and through it, we expect them to uphold the traditions of the nation,” Anh said.
The festival is open everyday at Thang Long Imperial Citadel, 19 Hoang Dieu Street, Ba Dinh District, Hanoi.
Children will also have a chance to talk directly to historical and cultural researchers and artisans as well as experience traditional games and craft-making processes. The space is filled with stalls displaying traditional toys associated with mid-autumn festivals.
Participating artisans include well-known makers of moon cakes, masks, lanterns, pottery, and to he (glutinous rice figurines). The skilled craft persons are coming from across Hanoi as well as Bac Ninh province.
Organising the mid-autumn festival is part of a series of activities at the Thang Long-Hanoi Heritage Conservation Centre designed to promote the intangible cultural heritage of the country, said Tran Viet Anh, director of the centre. “We want to bring children attractive activities to celebrate the festival and through it, we expect them to uphold the traditions of the nation,” Anh said.
The festival is open everyday at Thang Long Imperial Citadel, 19 Hoang Dieu Street, Ba Dinh District, Hanoi.
Other News
- Pho ganh: unique nosh found nowhere else but Hanoi
- Finding ways to unlock Hanoi's suburban tourism potential
- Indochina's first biology museum opens to public in Hanoi
- Are Vietnamese people living healthier lives?
- Tonkin Palace opens for first public visit
- Architectural treasures in the Creative City
- Dong Thanh Communal House: Typical historical and cultural relic of Hanoi's Old Quarter
- Using technology at Hanoi's heritage: New experience for visitors
- Hanoi specialty gets world billionaires' interest
- Breathtaking cosmos flower fields under Long Bien Bridge
Trending
-
Hanoi accelerates three major bridge projects in 2025
-
Vietnam news in brief - November 24
-
Hanoi to expand underground space by 2030
-
Finding ways to unlock Hanoi's suburban tourism potential
-
Hang Ma Street gears up for festive season
-
A Hanoi artisan turns straw into appealing tourism product
-
“Look! It’s Amadeus Vu Tan Dan” workshop - an artistic journey for kids
-
Vietnam news in brief - November 15
-
Experiencing ingenious spaces at the Hanoi Creative Design Festival 2024