[All content on this page is by
Shirley Chang, whose copyright is acknowledged. Her site disappeared,
but I thought that this page was worth saving. :-) ]
|Traditional Customs | Modern
Customs |
| Traditional
Chinese Wedding Customs |
I. The Proper
Procedures: Three Letters and Six Etiquette
This is the elaborate process
on the groom's parents' part to look for the right kind of bride for
their family. Rich families will look for a bride who can take care of
household finances and most importantly, give birth to sons to inherit
the wealth of the family. Poor families will look for a bride who can
work hard in the fields and give birth to sons to help out on the farm.
In the old days, marriages are arranged so it's quite normal for the
parents to dominate the bride-seeking process. Girls from rich family
will be sought out by other rich families and poor girls will probably
marry into poor families. Hence the Chinese saying: bamboo door is to
bamboo door as wooden door is to wooden door.
There are some circumstances where the marriage has been arranged
when both the bride and the groom were very young or not even born. In
the former case, a young girl may be bought by the rich family as a
servant girl to serve the rich boy. When the boy grew up, she may become
either his wife or one of his concubines. In the latter case, two
pregnant mothers will make the promise that when the babies are born, if
they were both boys or both girls, they would become brothers or sisters
and if one baby was a boy and the other a girl, they would get married.
Hence the saying: pointing to the bosom as a marriage promise. However,
a lot of times when the boy grew up, his family may have fallen from
prestige and sometimes the girl's family may refuse to let them get
married. There are numerous folktales about tragedies that stem from
arranged marriage. However, there are also many happy endings to
arranged marriage. All we can say is that it was the fact of life at
that time.
Ia. Three
Letters
In the old days, all
communication was through formal letters. Therefore, the letters play
an important role in the events.
-
- Request
Letter
This letter confirms the
formal arrangement of a marriage. It is sent by the groom's family
to the bride's family. This letter is normally presented with the
initial gifts for the bride's family.
- Gift
Letter
This letter accompanies the
formal gifts for the Bride's family. It is actually a gift list that
records the description and quantity of the gifts. Wedding
Letter
This letter is presented to
the bride's family on the day of the wedding. It confirms the act of
bringing the bride into the groom's family.
Ib. Six
Etiquette
The Chinese word for
etiquette can mean both customs and gifts. The following customs are
known as the Six Etiquette
-
- Request
for Marrying the Bride
After the groom's family has spotted a young girl whom the groom
wants to marry, the family will hire a spokeswoman who will
communicate their wish to the potential bride's family. (In the old
days, it is popular to hire elderly ladies as midwives or
spokeswoman for the groom.) This lady will persuade the potential
bride's family to accept the offer from the groom's family. Both
sides will negotiate certain terms. If successful, both families
will proceed to the next step.
- Request
for Bride and Groom's Birth Dates
This is the second step in
arranging a marriage. Upon successfuly completion of the previous
step, the groom's family will request for the bride's 'Eight
Letters' through the spokeswoman. In Chinese calendar, there are 22
'letters' that we use to represent date. Ten are known as 'Tian Gan'
and twelve are 'Di Zhi'. Two letters are used to represent each of
teh following: year, month, day and time. Altogether, eight letters
will accurately represent the bride's birthdate.
After obtaining the 'Eight Letters' of the groom and potential
bride, a fortune telling master will be hired to determine whether
the two match each other. If there is nothing wrong with the bride's
birthdate, the groom's family will proceed to the next step.
Otherwise, there will be no further contact between the families and
the groom's family may look for another suitable bride.
- Initial
Gifts for the Bride's Family
If the potential bride's
birthdate is acceptable, the groom's family will request the
spokeswoman to send some initial gifts accompanied by the gift
letter.
- Formal
Gifts for the Bride's Family
The groom's family will pick
a 'good day' and send the bride's family the following bridal gifts:
gifts, cash, cakes and food and sacrifices for worshiping the
ancestors. This act confirms the marriage agreement between the two
families.
- Select
the Wedding Date
The fortune telling master
will select a 'good day' according the the bride and groom's and
their family's birthdates.
- Wedding
Day
On the big day, both the
bride and the groom's house will be decorated in red. The groom's
family will send out a procession of servants, musicians and a
carriage which is carried by four servants to the bride's family to
bring the bride back. The bride will then be brought back to the
groom's house and the two will perform the marriage cermony
witnessed by all the relatives and friends.
The bride and groom will worship the heavens and the earth, the
groom's ancestors and they will also serve tea to all of their
superiors in the family. After that, the superiors will give them
red packages (lai see) with monetary gifts and wish them well. The
groom's family will then throw a huge feast (if they can afford it)
for the friends and relatives to celebrate the wedding. All along,
the spokeswoman will oversee the whole process and keep toasting the
couple.
After the meal, the newly wed couple will return to the bridal
room and some naughty friends may tag-along and play tricks on the
groom. When all is done, the couple will drink and toast and the
spokeswoman will offer sweets and fruits to the couple to wish them
long life and lots of kids (!). Then, the couple will finaly be left
with themselves and the groom can take off the red cloth that covers
the bride's face.
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Customs | Modern Customs |
II.
Preparation for the wedding
IIa.
Setting up the Bridal Bed
After the groom's family has
selected a 'good day' as the wedding day, a man who's considered to have
had good fortune all through his life will be hired to move the bridal
bed to the right place. Then a lady who's considered to have had good
fortune [with healthy and living husband and sons] will make the bed and
place certain good fortune food and fruits on the bed. Then the bed will
be left untouched until the day of the wedding.
IIb.
The Bride's Gifts for the Groom
The bride's gifts for the
groom will either arrive a couple of days before the wedding day or if
she's a relatively long-distance bride, she'll bring along the gifts
with her maids as she arrive at the groom's home on wedding day.
The bride's gifts usually consists of valuable jewelry and precious
stones, kitchen utensils, proper bridal linen such as sheets, pillow
covers and clothes. In some area, the bride's family is expected to
furnish the bridal except for the bridal bed. There's a saying that if
the bride supplies the bridal bed, then the family is practically giving
the bride away for free.
IIc.
Combing Hair
The night before the wedding,
both the bride and the groom needs to find a 'good fortune' woman and
man to comb their hair in his/her home respectively. Both the bride and
the groom needs to take shower before the event, change to some fresh
new underwear and incense needs to be burnt. The bride also needs to sit
next to a window where the moon can be seen. Their hair needs to be
combed four times and each has a special meaning:
The first combing symbolizes: from beginning till the end
The second combing symbolizes: harmony from now till old age
The third combing symbolizes: sons and grandsons all over the place
The fourth combing summaries good wealth and a long-lasting marriage.
The whole action also symbolizes the adulthood of the couple. If
either has been married before, then the combing event can be skipped
for that person.
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Customs | Modern Customs |
III. Wedding
Day Activities
IIIa.
Wedding Day: picking up the Bride
On the day of the wedding, the
groom will send a carriage over to the bride's family to bring the bride
home. The carriage is decorated in red and is carried by four servants.
Musicians will accompany the procession and they will play wedding music
all the way. A lot of gifts are also brought to the bride's family at
the same time.
At the bride's home, the bride will put on her bright red wedding
gown and the bride's parents will give her jewelry to wear.
IIIb.
Bride Leaving Home
As the groom's procession
arrives, the groom's spokeswoman will enter the bride's house and will
carry the bride on her back. The bride cannot touch the ground with her
feet until she arrives at the groom's house. In some regions, the
bride's relatives will throw rice into the air, hoping that the chickens
around will eat the rice instead of pecking at the bride. Sometimes, a
red umbrella is used to shield the bride as the opening of the umbrella
will symbolize her bringing many descendants to the groom's family. As
the bride leaves the house, her parents and her relatives will bid her
farewell as she rides the carriage and leaves home. Wealthy brides often
have servant girls who will follow her to the groom's family and
continue to serve her. These maids are known as ones who 'accompany the
marriage'.
IIIc.
Bride Arriving at the Groom's Home
After the bride arrive at the
groom's house, the couple will again worship the ancestors and worship
the heavens and earth. Then they will serve tea to the groom's family
according the their seniority and the relatives will give them red
packets or bridal jewelry in return.
IIId.
The Wedding Banquet
To celebrate the marriage, the
groom's family will throw a wedding feast as large as they can afford.
In the old days, some villagers may use up to seven continuous days to
entertain the relatives during a wedding. Every night, delicious food is
being served to all the guests.
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Customs | Modern Customs |
IV. Post
Wedding Activities
IVa. The
Bride Returning Home after 3 Days
Three days after the wedding,
the bride is expected to return to her family. The bride will bring
along roasted pig and gifts for the family. Some regions require that
the groom accompany her while some didn't. Nonetheless, this is probably
the last chance the bride gets to see her parents. Therefore, she will
bring along a lot of gifts for the family and she may even stay for a
couple of days or even more.
As a tradition, the bride's family will also return part of the gifts
to the groom's family as a courtesy. Some regional custom requires that
the family should return the head and tail of the roasted pig to the
groom's family symbolizing the good beginning and end of the wedding.
| Top of Page | Traditional
Customs | Modern Customs |
| Modern
Chinese Wedding Customs |
The above practices contributed
to the festive atmosphere of a wedding, however, most of the customs are
not performed to its fullest extent in the modern world. Instead of
performing all these ancient practices, even most elders would prefer
the following 'simplified customs' nowadays. For the modernized customs
(or the even more simplified customs) , please see this section on
Modern Customs.
When
to get married?
Hong Kong is a funny place
where wedding plans are not driven by the couple's relationship. It is
often restrained by financial situations. Given Hong Kong's
US$500-US$1000-per square-foot real estate price and 9% interest rate on
mortgage plan plus the cost of an elaborate Chinese wedding banquet that
most parents require, most couples struggle for years in order to save
money for the wedding. As crazy as it seems, I know a couple who applied
for public housing for 8 years and failed every single time and finally
got married because they had to before they can apply for a different
government housing scheme and still failed and finally ended up living
with their parents. They love each other but they had to wait all these
years because of the lack of a living quarter. Another couple planned to
get married in 92 but their parents fail to compromise on the number of
guests they can invite to the wedding banquet and it finally took the
young couple 4 more years to save enough in order to satisfy the needs
of the parents. Therefore, the financial restraint has torn up many
couples. For those fortunate enough, they will then go through the
following procedures.....
Preparation
for the Wedding
Ia.
Exchange Birth Dates and Family Tree
If the groom and the bride's
birthdates are OK (meaning that no disaster is predicted by the fortune
teller if the two get married), the two families will exchange their
family records/family tree.
However, this custom is not always being followed depending how
superstitious the families are.
Ib.
Send Gifts to Bride's Family
The modern families usually send
both the intial gifts and the formal gifts to the bride's home on one
day instead of separating the two events. Most families still need to
consult the Chinese calendar to pick a 'good day' which is normally
about one month before the wedding.
Instead of sending the whole list of gifts such as livestock, certain
'good-luck' food or material, some couples simplify the gifts and the
groom will only send some nice gifts such as dried seafood and fruit
basket to the bride's family. (Nowadays, most parents don't know what to
do with some lively chicken flying around the fifteen-storey high
apartment. Plus, there's a great chance that they'll suffocate before
arriving at the bride's home, given Hong Kong's infamous traffic jams)
As for the 'monetary gift', the groom will either pay a certain
agreed amount to the bride's family or will offer to pay for all of the
wedding cost. The negotiation will then focus on how many tables the
groom is able to offer to the bride's family during the wedding banquet.
Sometimes, the bride's family will insist on having a certain number of
guests but if the groom cannot afford it, they will try to compromise.
At other times, the groom's family may have a certain reason to limit
the bride's number of guests, such as if the groom's family is not too
large, some relatives may feel uneasy if the bride's family invite more
guest than the groom's family. Even nowadays, this is a potential area
for conflict between the two families.
IIa.
Setting up the Bridal Bed
Not every couple can afford to
buy a new bed as the bridal bed nowadays. Especially with the outrageous
real estate prices in Hong Kong, not every couple has their own place
and a new bed, so it's now quite customary to simply change the linen to
the traditional red linen as a symbolic act for setting up the bridal
bed. Some couples don't even bother with that. They may simply buy some
nice Esprit or Ikea linen and use those as the 'bridal linens'.
IIb.
The Bride's Gifts for the Groom
Not many people will follow
this rule still. The only jewelry the bride brings over to the groom's
family is probably the ones that her relatives give her on wedding day
as a wedding gift.
Some brides contribute some of the gifts from relatives to pay for
the banquet as well and some say that is considered as part of the
'bride's gifts' as well.
IIc.
Combing Hair
Some couples choose to skip
this event altogether, although it is a relatively simple act compared
to the others.
IIIa.
Wedding Day: picking up the Bride
Nowadays, the bridesmaid will
have most fun during the picking up of the bride. Early in the morning,
the groom and the groomsmen will decorate the cars and drive them over
to the bride's home. At the door, the bridesmaids will prepare a lot of
tricky questions for the groom to answer. The groom not only has to
answer all the questions, he also has perform certain acts such as doing
push-ups to show that he's strong enough to take care of the bride,or
sing out his love for the bride in front of many people. The groomsmen
will help the groom to pass all these tests. The last test is a
financial test. The groom has to pay the bridesmaids some 'red packets'
[good fortune] as gifts, then the groom and his groomsmen can enter the
house and greet the bride.
The couple will then serve tea to the superior in the bride's family.
The bride's parents will be the first to be served, followed by other
relatives. Each one will give the couple some present in return, often
red packets and jewelry for the bride [gold is often preferred in the
Southern region].
IIIb. Bride
Leaving Home
Nowadays, only very traditional families may use the red umbrella or
throw rice as the bride leaves the house. Most people do not perform any
special activities and the bride's parents and relatives will either go
to the Marriage Registrar or the church to attend the wedding ceremony.
IIIc.
Bride Arriving at the Groom's Home
Again, the couple will then
serve tea to the superior in the groom's family. The groom's parents
will be the first to be served, followed by other relatives. Each one
will give the couple some present in return, often red packets and
jewelry for the bride. After that, the whole family will leave for the
Marriage Registrar or the church to attend the wedding ceremony.
IIId.
The Wedding Banquet
This is probably the part of
the tradition that has been very well kept. In the modern Chinese
society, the wedding feast is considered to be very important as
supposed to the church ceremony or even the signing of the marriage
license at the Government's Marriage Registrar. Most parents do not mind
the rest of the tradition except for this part. To the parents, the
wedding feast is a chance for them to return their relative's kindness
and to announce the marriage of their kids. If the wedding feast turns
out to be good, then it's a great thing because they will have 'face'.
In the Chinese culture, it's most important to have 'face' [respected by
others].
Traditionally, the groom will pay for everything but nowadays, some
young couples will offer to pay for themselves. As mentioned before,
this is the area with the highest likelihood for conflicts between
families of the bride and the groom. The bride's family will want to
invite as many friends and families as possible while the groom's family
may either have a budget concern or they do not want the bride's family
to invite more friends than they do in fear of losing 'face'. Note that
the bride and the groom's own friends are often being neglected. The
wedding banquet is truly more of a parental event than that of the young
couple's. There are many jokes about some people slipping into wedding
banquets and nobody even noticed until the young couple exchange notes
afterwards and realize the guests are neither the bride nor the groom's
relatives. Or that the guest went to the wrong banquet in the same
restaurant [there may be 3 or 4 banquets going on at the same time in
the restaurant, separated by partitions or rooms] without knowing it.
Once the guest list is drafted, the parents will then decide on the
menu. A traditional Chinese banquet will include somewhere around 12
courses including an appetizer [lobster salad], roast pig, abalone,
shark fin soup and end with fried rice/noodles, dessert and fresh fruit.
The food is of utmost importance to Chinese and in most cases only
delicacies are served. Besides,really nice cognac such as VSOP is often
being served. As a side note, most restaurant finds the beverage to be a
great way to rip off the family as you can never keep track of how many
Cokes each guest has consumed.
During the feast, the guests are seated in round tables and sometimes
seating plans are being made in order to avoid guests not knowing each
other being seated at the same table. Each guest will normally bring
along monetary gift that runs around US$50-US$100 in Hong Kong [the
price varies in different regions]. Normally the gifts can barely cover
the cost of the banquet, therefore, the banquet is a great financial
constraint in the couple's planning. [...that is, on top of the
US$500-US$1000-per square-foot real estate price and 9% interest rate on
mortgage plan in Hong Kong]. As for the wedding colour, it is quite
standard: red.
The events in a Chinese wedding banquet have been modified a bit
nowadays. Before the banquet starts, most of the guests will participate
in one of the Chinese national games, mahjong [a Chinese tile game].
Others will take photos with the bride and the groom. When the food is
ready, the waiters will play a modified xylophone and wedding music will
start to play in the background. Some couples will hire an MC to conduct
the ceremony. Due to Western influence, the best man and maid of honour
often gets to toast the bride and the groom before food is being served.
During the serving of shark fin soup, the couple will go from table to
table, toasting the guests and thanking them. In return, the guests will
also toast the bride and the groom. After that, the groomsmen,
bridesmaids and friends of the young couple will often play certain
tricks on them. This is similar to the clinking of glasses in the
Western culture. The goal is to make the groom show his love in public.
Some of the games are X-rated, depending what kind of friends the couple
has. Some games are similar to the ones played in during bridal shower
or a bachelar's party. Others may be a bit more outrageous.
After that, the bride will change into a different gown [For some
peculiar reason, brides have to change into 4 or 5 different dresses on
the wedding day]. As the time draws near for the guests to leave, the
parents, the couple and the relatives will stand in line at the door to
thank the guests and wish them well as they leave. This is contrary to
the receiving line in Western culture. Chinese has 'retreating line'
instead. When all the guests have left, the bridal party will go home.
That is, if the couple is not holding the banquet in a hotel where a
guest room is provided for the newly wed to stay. If so, the persistent
friends will break into the room and play more games on the newly wed.
For details, please refer to directory Lee An's movie Wedding Banquet
which has a great description on wedding banquets. The above content
from http://www.chinese-poems.com/wedcus.html. |