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Chinese Zodiac
The sixty years of the jiazi cycle are calculated by combining the ten
Heavenly Stems and twelve Earthly Branches in ascending pairs as follows: jiazi
(first-first), yichou (second-second), bingyin (third-third), etc., for a total
of sixty combinations. This system was used without interruption from 776 BC
until the Chinese Nationalist Revolution of 1911 AD. It is the world's oldest
and most comprehensive calendar system.
The traditional Chinese lunar year is divided into twenty-four solar terms,
according to the position of the sun on the ecliptic in relationship to the
earth. The solar terms designate agricultural periods, and can predict changing
seasonal conditions, temperature, and weather throughout the course of the year.
They are extremely important to agricultural production. Changes in the four
seasons are determined by eight solar terms: lichun (Beginning of Spring),
chunfen (Spring Equinox), lixia (Beginning of Summer), xiazhi (Summer Solstice),
liqiu (Beginning of Autumn), qiufen (Autumn Equinox), lidong (Beginning of
Winter), and dongzhi (Winter Solstice). Changes in temperature are indicated by
five solar terms: xiaoshu (Slight Heat), dashu (Great Heat), chushu (Limit of
Heat), xiaohan (Slight Cold), and dahan (Great Cold). Changing weather
conditions are indicated by seven solar terms: yushui (Rain Water), guyu (Grain
Rain), bailu (White Dew), hanlu (Cold Dew), shuangjiang (Frost's Descent),
xiaoxue (Slight Snow), and daxue (Great Snow). Recurring natural phenomena are
indicated by four solar terms: jingzhe (Waking of Insects), qingming (Pure
Brightness), xiaoman (Grain Full), and mangzhong (Grain in Ear).
The Chinese zodiac and the traditional Chinese calendar are closely
interrelated. Ancient inscriptions on bones and tortoise shells indicate that
the twelve animals of the Chinese zodiac had been determined by the Xia-Shang
period, with each animal linked to one of the twelve Earthly Branches. For
instance, Rat corresponded to zi (the first Earthly Branch), Ox corresponded to
chou (the second Earthly Branch), etc. By the time of the Southern and Northern
Dynasties, the order of the twelve animals had been finalized, with each animal
representing one year of the twelve-year cycle of Earthly Branches. During this
time, the Animal Years started to be used to indicate the year in which a person
was born. The final order of the Earthly Branch-Animal combinations was as
follows: zishu (First Rat), chouniu (Second Ox), yinhu (Third Tiger), maotu
(Fourth Rabbit), chenlong (Fifth Dragon), sishe (Sixth Snake), wuma (Seventh
Horse), weiyang (Eighth Sheep), shenhou (Ninth Monkey), youji (Tenth Rooster),
xugou (Eleventh Dog), and haizhu (Twelfth Pig).
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