🎲 Fujian Mid-Autumn Bobing
Fujian Mid-Autumn Bobing is the regional form of Mid-Autumn Festival in China · Fujian, centered on cake, moon viewing, moon worship, feast relatives and friends.
- cake
- moon viewing
- moon worship
- feast relatives and friends
- cake
- mooncakes
- local festival food
- local music and dance
- local music and dance
Map-ready facts
This guide turns the Fujian, China local version into a map-ready entry while keeping sources, calendar context, and cultural meaning visible.
- Source-backed guide: Encyclopaedia Britannica, UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage
- Festival core: Mid-Autumn Festival
- Cultural meaning: Mid-Autumn Festival matters because it turns light, night procession, and shared seasonal symbols into a visible cultural system of time, place, family, and public ritual.
Continue in the 3D map
Open the map focused on the Fujian festival card, with country, region, and festival context preserved.
Continue in the 3D mapVisual journey
AI-generated immersive miniature model for MapDepth; not a documentary photograph.
- Mooncakes: The mooncake plate places the shared Mid-Autumn food in the foreground.
- Lantern and moon-viewing cue: Lanterns and a moon-viewing terrace place reunion-night light into the courtyard.
- Bobing dice bowl: Dice and the porcelain bowl are the clearest local cue for Fujian Bobing.
- Pomelo table: Pomelos and tea snacks give the table a Minnan family feeling.
- Minnan courtyard architecture: Red brick and swallowtail rooflines move the scene from generic Mid-Autumn to Fujian place.
Traditions and customs
- cake
- moon viewing
- moon worship
- feast relatives and friends
Food and symbols
- cake
- mooncakes
- local festival food
- 灯笼
- 火光
- mooncake
- moon worship
When it is celebrated
Fujian Mid-Autumn Bobing is usually organized around Fifteenth day of the eighth lunar month. Month: Sep / Oct
Fujian Mid-Autumn Bobing
Mid-Autumn Festival matters because it turns light, night procession, and shared seasonal symbols into a visible cultural system of time, place, family, and public ritual.
Fujian Mid-Autumn Bobing details
- Celebrates: Fujian Mid-Autumn Bobing celebrates or commemorates Mid-Autumn Festival in China · Fujian, centered on cake, moon viewing, moon worship, feast relatives and friends.
- Local roots: The local form developed through China · Fujian festival calendars, community organization, and public gathering spaces; timing usually follows Fifteenth day of the eighth lunar month.
- Local history: Fujian Mid-Autumn Bobing turns the wider Mid-Autumn Festival theme into visible local practice in China · Fujian: cake, moon viewing, moon worship, feast relatives and friends. These activities make the festival a cultural scene shared by households, neighborhoods, and public spaces rather than only a date on the calendar.
- Cultural meaning: This local version strengthens China · Fujian community memory, seasonal rhythm, and local identity while preserving the core symbols of Mid-Autumn Festival.
Signature practices
- cake
- moon viewing
- moon worship
- feast relatives and friends
- cake sharing
Customs
- cake
- moon viewing
- moon worship
- feast relatives and friends
Food
- cake
- mooncakes
- local festival food
Music / Dance
- local music and dance
- local music and dance
Symbols
- 灯笼
- 火光
- mooncake
- moon worship
FAQ
What is Fujian Mid-Autumn Bobing?
Fujian Mid-Autumn Bobing is the local form of Mid-Autumn Festival in China · Fujian, with customs such as cake, moon viewing, moon worship, feast relatives and friends.
When is Fujian Mid-Autumn Bobing celebrated?
Fujian Mid-Autumn Bobing is usually organized around Fifteenth day of the eighth lunar month. Month: Sep / Oct.
What traditions are associated with Fujian Mid-Autumn Bobing?
Common traditions include cake, moon viewing, moon worship, feast relatives and friends, mooncakes, local festival food.
Sources
Editorial sources support the festival background, local customs, and cultural notes on this guide.
- Feast · Encyclopaedia Britannica
- Lists of Intangible Cultural Heritage and the Register of Good Safeguarding Practices · UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage
Image credits
Image licensing and credit details match the visible image used on this page.
Photo: N509FZ · CC BY-SA 4.0 · license: CC BY-SA 4.0 · source page
Continue in the 3D map
Open the map focused on the Fujian festival card, with country, region, and festival context preserved.
Continue in the 3D map