24 Solar Terms

Solar Terms is a calendar of twenty-four periods and climate to govern agricultural arrangements in ancient China and functions even now. As we have mentioned the Chinese calendar is a lunisolar calendar, it takes into account the longest and the shortest days and the two days each year when the length of the day equals that of the night. In other words, the significant days are the Summer and Winter Solstices and the Spring and Autumn Equinoxes.


Today the year comprises 24 Solar Terms. During the Shang Dynasty they only used four; the Zhou Dynasty (11th century BC - 221BC), used eight; but it was in the Western Han Dynasty (206BC - 24) that the 24 terms were finally decided upon.


These solar terms have meaningful titles. Some of them reflect the change of seasons such as the Beginning of Spring, the Beginning of Summer, the Beginning of Autumn, and the Beginning of Winter; some embody the phenomena of climate like the Waking of Insects (Jing Zhe), Pure Brightness (Qing Ming), Lesser Fullness of Grain (Xiao Man) and Grain in Beard (Mang Zhong); and some indicate the change of climate like Rain Water (Yu Shui), Grain Rain (Gu Yu), Lesser Heat (Xiao Shu), Greater Heat (Da Shu), and so on.


These twenty-four solar terms each suggest the position of the sun every time it travels15 degrees on the ecliptic longitude. In each month there are often two solar terms; the first one is generally named 'Jie Qi' and the other one 'Zhong Qi'. Their dates are mirrored by the Gregorian calendar, so we find that during the first half of a year 'Jie Qi' is around the 6th day of a solar month, 'Zhong Qi' around the 21st; in the second half of a year, 'Jie Qi' is around the 8th and 'Zhong Qi' around the 23rd.


The Twenty-four Solar Terms in 2013

Solar Terms

Month

Date

Meaning

Lesser Cold (Xiao Han)

Jan.

6th

It is rather cold

Greater Cold (Da Han)

Jan.

21st

The coldest moment of a year

The Beginning of Spring (Li Chun)

Feb.

4th

Spring begins

Rain Water (Yu Shui)

Feb.

19th

It begins to rain

The Waking of Insects (Jing Zhe)

Mar.

5th

Hibernating animals come to sense

The Spring Equinox (Chun Fen)

Mar.

20th

Day and night are equally long

Pure Brightness (Qing Ming)

Apr.

4th

It is warm and bright

Grain Rain (Gu Yu)

Apr.

20th

Rainfall is helpful to grain

The Beginning of Summer (Li Xia)

May

5th

Summer begins

Lesser Fullness of Grain (Xiao Man)

May

20th

Kernels plump

Grain in Beard (Mang Zhong)

Jun.

5th

Wheat grows ripe

The Summer Solstice (Xia Zhi)

Jun.

21st

It has the longest daytime and the shortest night of the year

Lesser Heat (Xiao Shu)

Jul.

7th

Torridity comes

Greater Heat (Da Shu)

Jul.

22nd

The hottest moment of a year

The Beginning of Autumn (Li Qiu)

Aug.

7th

Autumn begins

The End of Heat (Chu Shu)

Aug.

23rd

Heat hides

White Dew (Bai Lu)

Sep.

7th

Dew curdles

The Autumn Equinox (Qiu Fen)

Sep.

22nd

The mid of autumn

Cold Dew (Han Lu)

Oct.

8th

Dew is very cold

Frost's Descent (Shuang Jiang)

Oct.

23rd

Frost descends

The Beginning of Winter (Li Dong)

Nov.

7th

Winter begins

Lesser Snow (Xiao Xue)

Nov.

22nd

it begins to snow

Greater Snow (Da Xue)

Dec.

7th

It snows heavily

The Winter Solstice (Dong Zhi)

Dec.

21st

The shortest daytime and the longest night of a year

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