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Chinese Way

Shades of red

Updated: 2007-10-23 14:37

By Jeff (chinaculture.org)

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Escorting the bride to the groom’s house is the highlight of a wedding. The bride will take her dowries, which are customarily wrapped in red, to the groom’s house on the wedding day. The bride is usually accompanied from her room with her sister or bridesmaid. Then the bride’s father will take over and give his daughter to the groom.
 
Shades of red

Arriving at the groom’s house, the new couple will jointly hold, or wear, a piece of red silk, and make formal bows to heaven and earth, parents, and each other. In some other cases, the matchmakers also bow.

The bride also usually wears a red veil on her head, which can only be lifted by the groom in the bridal chamber. This is because unmarried women above the age of 12 in ancient China were not allowed to see other men, even if they were relatives. The function of the red veil was to make sure the groom was the first man to see the bride other than her father.

Shades of red

 
 Shades of red  Shades of red

Yet why the groom wears red veil is because of a myth. According to legend, there were a brother and sister named Fuxi and Nvwa. The siblings formed a couple in order to continue the human race, but were so shy about doing so that Nvwa used cloth made from woven grass to cover her face. The red veil the groom wears represents the cloth that covered Nvwa’s face, hence the beginning of the red veil tradition.

Shades of red

 
Shades of red

On the wedding night, relatives and guests crowd into the bridal chamber to tease the new couple and play practical jokes on them. This is because of the superstition that there may be foxes or other evil spirits in the room and the horseplay will drive them away.
In some regions, the new mother-in-law would inspect the marital sheets to ensure that her new daughter was indeed a virgin, though this tradition has been largely abandoned with the development of the society.

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