
The Mid Autumn festival, also called the Mooncake festival, is one of the most important festivals celebrated by Chinese communities around the world. The Mid Autumn festival is the second most important Chinese festival after Chinese New Year.
How did the Mid Autumn festival and the practice of eating mooncakes on the 15th day of the eighth lunar month come about?

By NASA/SDO (AIA) - http://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/assets/img/browse/2010/08/19/20100819_003221_4096_0304.jpg, Public Domain, Link
Moon worship in China, goes back as far as the Xia 夏 dynasty in 2070 BC (that's over 4,000 years ago 😱 ). Ancient moon worship is surrounded by myths and mysticism. The mythology most associated with today's Mid Autumn festival is the legend of Chang Er 嫦娥. (There are numerous variations in the details though the basic storyline is similar.)
Once upon a time, there was a severe drought in ancient China. Ten suns in the sky, their blazing rays beating down mercilessly on earth, dried up lakes, rivers and paddy fields. The people were starving and there was no water to drink.
Hou Yi 后羿, a skilled archer, climbed to the top of Kunlun mountain and shot down 9 out of 10 suns. The remaining sun, fearing that it would suffer the same fate, agreed to Hou Yi's demand that it rises in the morning and sets in the evening at the same time everyday. This agreement between Hou Yi and the sun brought great benefits to the people's lives.
Heavenly Queen Mother pleased with Hou Yi's deed awarded him 2 pills - one is the elixir of eternal youth and, if the two pills are eaten together, he will turn into an Immortal.
Hou Yi handed the 2 precious pills to his wife Chang Er 嫦娥 for safekeeping. One day, while Hou Yi was away, an evil disciple of his who overheard Hou Yi talking to Chang Er about the 2 pills came to rob her of them.
In order to prevent the 2 special pills from falling into the wrong hands, Chang Er had no choice but to swallow them herself. She immediately turned into an Immortal, ascended to heaven and found herself in front of the Heavenly Queen Mother.
Chang Er pleaded with the Heavenly Queen Mother to let her stay as close as possible to her husband Hou Yi. Heavenly Queen Mother agreed and let Chang Er live on the moon, the nearest heavenly body to Earth.

By Tomruen - English Wikipedia, original upload 7 September 2005 by Tomruen[1], Public Domain, Link
That's why on a full moon night, if you look carefully, you can see a beautiful lady with long hair and flowing robes. That is Chang Er.
Hou Yi was, of course, very sad that his wife Chang Er now lives on the moon. So, on full moon nights, Hou Yi would sit outside his house and gaze at Chang Er on the moon while drinking tea and eating cake.
The villagers followed Hou Yi in eating cake, sipping tea while moon gazing. The custom spread and eventually became the Mid Autumn festival on the 15th day of the eighth lunar month.
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Tong Huat Bakery in Kluang, Malaysia |
That year, the mooncake played a crucial role in the final defeat of the Mongols who ruled China for 97 years from 1271 to 1368.
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Mongol warriors 1300s. Image credit: Wikipedia |
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Great Wall of China. Image credit: Wikipedia |
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Kublai Khan, emperor of China 1271 - 1294. Image credit: Wikipedia |
Throughout Mongol rule, there was deep seated enmity and distrust between the Mongols and their southern subjects which were mainly Han Chinese.
The Mongols implemented many measures to keep Han Chinese under control. For example, they were not allowed to have iron or steel implements. Even kitchen knives were controlled - five families had to share one chopping knife. Bamboo was banned, in case the Han Chinese used them to make spears or bows and arrows. Lamps were not allowed at night, gatherings were banned, families were grouped together with every 20 family grouping headed / overseen by a Mongol.
Needless to say, there was great resentment and discontent among Han Chinese under Mongol rule. Rebellions broke out throughout the realm during the entire period of Mongol rule. But, they always failed because the rebels were uncoordinated and easily put down by Mongol forces.
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Zhu Yuanzhang, the emperor of Ming dynasty. Image credit: Wikipedia |
Dainty small mooncakes from East Bistro, Singapore |
When people ate their round cakes on the 15th day of the eighth lunar month of 1368, they found a slip of paper inside which said 起義 or uprising in English.
They understood that it meant, the time has come.
Numerous uprisings broke out simultaneously all over China on 15th day of the eighth lunar month in 1368, taking the Mongols by surprise. The rebels advanced on the palace in Peking forcing the last Mongol emperor of China, Toghon Temür to flee for Mongolia.
With the Mongols finally banished from China, Zhu Yuanzhang 朱元璋 declared himself the first emperor of the Ming dynasty. (The Ming dynasty lasted from 1368 to 1644 when it fell to the Manchurians, another nomadic nation from the northeast).
To commemorate the successful uprising, Zhu Yuanzhang decreed that Mid Autumn festival on the 15th day of the eighth lunar month shall be celebrated with round cakes. As round cakes are round like the moon, they became known as mooncakes. As celebratory food, the small dainty round cake became big and thick.
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Handmade mooncakes in Singapore |
Date: 7 July 2020