Classic and interesting comic strips are recommended this week!
Monday
April 11
The ancient Chinese thinker, statesman, and educator Confucius passed away, and today the comic strip "Confucius" is recommended.
Confucius (September 28, 551 BC – April 11, 479 BC), courtesy name Kong, Mingqiu, Zhongni, was a native of the late Spring and Autumn period of the Lu state of Lu (present-day Qufu, Shandong), an ancient Chinese thinker, educator, and founder of the Confucian school. Confucius pioneered the style of private lectures, advocated benevolence, righteousness, and wisdom, and revised the Six Classics of Poetry, Book, Ritual, Music, Yi, and Spring and Autumn in his later years. After Confucius's death, his later disciples compiled Confucius's words and deeds and thoughts into the Analects. Confucianism has had a profound impact on China and the world, and Confucius has been listed as one of the "World's Top Ten Cultural Celebrities".
Tuesday
April 12
The Indian poet And asia's first Nobel Laureate in Literature, Robin De la Nate Tagore, arrived in Shanghai on April 12, 1924, began his visit to China, and today recommends the comic strip Tagore.
Robindranath Tagore (7 May 1861 – 7 August 1941), an Ethnic Bengal, Indian poet, philosopher and anti-modern nationalist, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1913, the first Asian to win the Nobel Prize in Literature. In foreign countries, Tagore is generally regarded as a poet and rarely as a philosopher, but in India the two are often the same. His poems contain profound religious and philosophical insights. For Tagore, his poems were his gifts to God, and he himself was God's suitor, and his poems enjoyed epic status in India. Tagore died on 7 August 1941 at the age of 80.
Wednesday
April 13
Today is Songkran Festival, and the comic strip "Songkran Festival" is especially recommended.
This is a legend about the origin of the Dai Songkran Festival. Legend has it that a ferocious demon king seized Mengbala Naxi, and seven girls cleverly killed it, and then used the lake water to extinguish the evil fire sprayed from the demon king's head. Since then, people have used Songkran to commemorate the brave girls.