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If you chose Overthrow of the Mongol conquerors in northern China (1368 AD) you're today's big winner!!! It is said that the Chinese hid plans to overthrow the Mongols in mooncakes - which the Mongols did not eat. Families were instructed not to eat the mooncakes until the day of the moon festival, which is when the rebellion took place. What is the Moon festival? Every year on the fifteenth day of the eighth month of the lunar calendar, when the moon is at its maximum brightness for the entire year, the Chinese celebrate "zhong qui jie." Children are told the story of the moon fairy living in a crystal palace, who comes out to dance on the moon's shadowed surface. The legend surrounding the "lady living in the moon" dates back to ancient times, to a day when ten suns appeared at once in the sky. The Emperor ordered a famous archer to shoot down the nine extra suns. Once the task was accomplished, Goddess of Western Heaven rewarded the archer with a pill that would make him immortal. However, his wife found the pill, took it, and was banished to the moon as a result. Legend says that her beauty is greatest on the day of the Mooncake festival. And now you know...oh, never mind.
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