Fortune Telling Collection - Fortune-telling birth date - When will Rizhao Chaohe gather?

When will Rizhao Chaohe gather?

Rizhao Chaohe party time is: the first day, the sixth day, the eleventh day, the sixteenth day, the twenty-first day and the twenty-sixth day of each month (lunar calendar).

Going to the market is a folk custom, which is called "going to the market" and "driving mountains" in the south. Market is a form of commodity trading activities gathered in a specific period.

Detailed description of the market:

In remote areas, there are certain places and dates for buying and selling goods. At that time, vendors and residents rushed to trade, which was the so-called "market".

Xie Ming Zhao Zhe's "Five Miscellaneous Matters Part I": "The city of Lingnan is called emptiness ... Shandong people call it collection. Every episode is a department store, and the four places compete for each other, from mules, horses, cattle, sheep and handmaids to fighting for millet and measuring cloth, which must be called' city'. "

Sang Ma Dialect in Yishui written by Liu Shunian in Qing Dynasty: "There are more than 30 famous people in Yishui, and there are countless small collections. Work is easy to get through and it is not convenient to go to the market. " Chapter 19 of Lao Can's Travels: "Dozens of people go to the market every month."

The fourth chapter of Flying Tigers in Summer: "Qicun is a big town on Xibali Road in Zaozhuang. Nowadays, every big gathering, farmers from four towns and villages come here to gather. "

There is an old saying in Hebei: "Business will be done in the market." This means that fairs and meetings are all about buying and selling. There is some truth in this statement, but it is not complete.

The meeting is the "temple fair", which is often referred to as the material exchange meeting today. Its content, before wheat, mainly deals with farm tools such as power, harrows and brooms, and after autumn, mainly deals with large livestock such as cattle, horses and mules. The duration is as short as one day, as long as three or five days, or even seven, eight or half a month.