"Fair" is the name of Hakka people for rural fairs and trade places.
"Polder Day", in the spoken language of Hakka people in southern Jiangxi, is a customary market trading day.
"Fair" is called "Fair" by Hakkas.
Explanation:
According to the established regulations in southwest China, polder days are generally three days and one polder, namely "147", "258" and "369", and there are also five days, which are divided into "16", "27", "49" and "according to the lunar calendar. Two adjacent fairs do not repeat the trading period, so that both buyers and sellers have more trading opportunities.
Quote:
The first chapter of Chen Canyun's Wind and Smoke Valley: "There are more and more people coming, and the long houses and small squares are full, with hundreds of people, like a polder."
Wang Xingyuan's "The sky is blue" I: "Seeing that tomorrow is the polder day, the two couples whispered all night."
The origin of the festival:
Liu Zongyuan's poem "Liuzhou Yaomang" in the Tang Dynasty: "Green cakes are wrapped in salt and returned to the guests, and green fried rice takes advantage of the virtual people." Xin Nan Shu in Song Dynasty: "Duanzhou is south, and one city in three days is empty." Song Dynasty Fan Chengda's "Boating in Nanpu Pavilion, Zhang Yu" No.2: "Take the market, then plow the mulberry." Song dynasty "Taiping Yu Lan". County annals: Douzhou learned that Gaolan is the residence, Gan Lan, posthumous title, with three days and one city. "Cosmic Tale" said that "there are many people in Yeongju, but few people call the city, which is empty." Many ancient books have recorded Wei, which was formed at least before the Tang Dynasty.