Chinese New Year - Dates

Dates

Animal Branch New Year dates
鼠 Shǔ Rat 子 Zǐ 1996-02-19 2008-02-07 2020-01-25
牛 Niú Ox 丑 Chǒu 1997-02-07 2009-01-26 2021-02-12
虎 Hǔ Tiger 寅 Yín 1998-01-28 2010-02-14 2022-02-01
兔 Tù Rabbit 卯 Mǎo 1999-02-16 2011-02-03 2023-01-22
龍 Lóng Dragon 辰 Chén 2000-02-05 2012-01-23 2024-02-10
蛇 Shé Snake 巳 Sì 2001-01-24 2013-02-10 2025-01-29
马 Mǎ Horse 午 Wǔ 2002-02-12 2014-01-31 2026-02-17
羊 Yáng Goat 未 Wèi 2003-02-01 2015-02-19 2027-02-07
猴 Hóu Monkey 申 Shēn 2004-01-22 2016-02-08 2028-01-27
雞 Jī Rooster 酉 Yǒu 2005-02-09 2017-01-28 2029-02-13
狗 Gǒu Dog 戌 Xū 2006-01-29 2018-02-16 2030-02-03
豬 Zhū Pig 亥 Hài 2007-02-18 2019-02-05 2031-01-23

The lunisolar Chinese calendar determines the date of Chinese New Year. The calendar is also used in countries that have adopted or have been influenced by Han culture, notably the Koreans, Japanese and Vietnamese, and may have a common ancestry with the similar New Year festivals outside East Asia, such as Iran, and historically, the Bulgars lands.

In the Gregorian calendar, Chinese New Year falls on different dates each year, a date between January 21 and February 20. In the Chinese calendar, winter solstice must occur in the 11th month, which means that Chinese New Year usually falls on the second new moon after the winter solstice (rarely the third if an intercalary month intervenes). In traditional Chinese Culture, lichun is a solar term marking the start of spring, which occurs about February 4.

The dates for Chinese New Year from 1996 to 2031 (in the Gregorian calendar) are at the left, along with the year's presiding animal zodiac and its earthly branch. The names of the earthly branches have no English counterparts and are not the Chinese translations of the animals. Alongside the 12-year cycle of the animal zodiac there is a 10-year cycle of heavenly stems. Each of the ten heavenly stems is associated with one of the five elements of Chinese astrology, namely: Wood, Fire, Earth, Metal, and Water. The elements are rotated every two years while a yin and yang association alternates every year. The elements are thus distinguished: Yang Wood, Yin Wood, Yang Fire, Yin Fire, etc. These produce a combined cycle that repeats every 60 years. For example, the year of the Yang Fire Rat occurred in 1936 and in 1996, 60 years apart.

Many confuse their Chinese birth-year with their Gregorian birth-year. As the Chinese New Year starts in late January to mid-February, the Chinese year dates from January 1 until that day in the new Gregorian year remain unchanged from the previous Gregorian year. For example, the 1989 year of the snake began on February 6, 1989. The year 1990 is considered by some people to be the year of the horse. However, the 1989 year of the snake officially ended on February 8, 1990. This means that anyone born from January 1 to February 7, 1990 was actually born in the year of the snake rather than the year of the horse. Many online Chinese Sign calculators do not account for the non-alignment of the two calendars, using Gregorian-calendar years rather than official Chinese New Year dates.

One scheme of continuously numbered Chinese-calendar years assigns 4709 to the year beginning January 30, 2011, but this is not universally accepted; the calendar is traditionally cyclical, not continuously numbered.

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Famous quotes containing the word dates:

    Our dates are brief, and therefore we admire
    What thou dost foist upon us that is old,
    William Shakespeare (1564–1616)

    Nothing so dates a man as to decry the younger generation.
    Adlai Stevenson (1900–1965)

    What is most interesting and valuable in it, however, is not the materials for the history of Pontiac, or Braddock, or the Northwest, which it furnishes; not the annals of the country, but the natural facts, or perennials, which are ever without date. When out of history the truth shall be extracted, it will have shed its dates like withered leaves.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)