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Lunar festival

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Festivals or commemorations whose dates are not fixed on the solar calendar but instead are recalculated each year by a correspondence between the solar and lunar calendars (known as a lunisolar calendar) are Lunar festivals or lunar holidays.

The solar year is itself recalculated in this way with leap years and leap centuries.

Few Christian holy days (from which comes the word 'holiday') other than Christmas (WP) are calculated without lunar calendars; most are calculated with respect to Easter (WP), which is calculated with respect to the lunar calendar (and with varying degrees of respect for the lunar calendar)

Asian festivals whose origins predate modern times are, in the majority, calculated from the lunar calendar. As in all parts of the world, festivals were created since that time to commemorate historical occasions such as the Taiwanese 'Opium Suppression Movement Day' 禁煙節 , which commemorates the burning of opium in the First Opium War of 1839.[1]

Festivals whose date is calculated with some form of lunar or lunisolar calendar include the moveable feasts of the Christian calendar, some of which are in the following list:

Jewish festivals such as Passover, Hannukah, Tenth of Tevet, and Seventeenth of Tammuz are commemorations of real historical dates; this recording of history was influenced by the contemporary use of solar calendars.

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