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The most spectacular lantern festivals on the global calendar and how to experience them

Introduction

There are few things in human experience more beautiful than a sky filled with glowing [[lantern|lanterns]]. Whether made from rice paper and bamboo floating skyward on heat from a candle flame, or carved from fruit and floated on dark water, lanterns carry a near-universal symbolic weight: light against darkness, hope against grief, the spirit's passage from one world to another. Across Asia, the Middle East, and increasingly the Western world, lantern festivals are among the calendar's most transcendently beautiful occasions.

The Yuan Xiao Jie: China's Lantern Festival

The [[lantern-festival|Lantern Festival]] (Yuan Xiao Jie or Yuanxiao Festival) is the traditional close of the Chinese Lunar New Year celebrations, falling on the 15th day of the first lunar month. On this night, the full moon rises over streets hung with elaborate lanterns in every shape and colour — dragons, phoenixes, rabbits, zodiac animals, and abstract geometric forms. Lantern riddle games, where verses are written on lanterns and passersby guess the answers, have been a Lantern Festival tradition for over two thousand years. The most spectacular public Lantern Festival displays are held in Zigong, Sichuan Province — known as China's 'Lantern City' — where the annual dinosaur lantern festival has been operating since 1988 and features intricate silk lantern sculptures of extraordinary scale. Taiwan's Taipei Lantern Festival, held simultaneously, draws over a million visitors to its public display in a major city park.

Taiwan: Pingxi Sky Lantern Festival

The Pingxi Sky Lantern Festival in New Taipei City is one of the world's most photographed events. Every year on the night of the Lantern Festival, thousands of paper sky lanterns are released simultaneously from the hillside town of Pingxi and its surrounding villages, rising into the black sky in a breathtaking river of light. The lanterns carry written wishes, prayers, and messages — releasing them is a gesture of letting go of the old and welcoming the new. The Pingxi Lantern Festival has become genuinely crowded in recent years; authorities now regulate the number of lanterns released and the times of release for safety and environmental reasons. Book accommodation in New Taipei City well in advance. The train to Pingxi along the scenic Pingxi Branch Line is part of the experience.

Thailand: Yi Peng and Loy Krathong

Thailand's Yi Peng Festival in Chiang Mai is widely considered the most visually spectacular lantern event in the world. On the full moon of the second month of the traditional Thai northern calendar (typically November), thousands of khom loi (paper sky lanterns) are released simultaneously from the grounds of temples, the city moat area, and the Maeping River banks. The sight of thousands of golden lights ascending slowly into the dark sky above Chiang Mai's ancient moat is genuinely breathtaking. Yi Peng coincides with Loy Krathong — the nationwide water lantern festival. On Loy Krathong night, Thais set small decorated floats (krathong) — typically made from banana-trunk sections, decorated with flowers, incense, and a candle — adrift on rivers, canals, and ponds. The release is an act of letting go of negativity and making a wish. Chiang Mai's Ping River and the city's many moat canals become dotted with thousands of candlelit floats on this night.

South Korea: Jinju Lantern Festival

The Jinju Namgang Yudeung (Jinju Lantern Festival) is held annually in October on the Nam River in South Korea, commemorating a legendary battle during the Japanese invasion of the 1590s in which lanterns were used to communicate across the river. Today, enormous lantern sculptures — many depicting scenes from Korean history and mythology — are floated on the Nam River for a week, alongside fireworks, traditional performances, and community lantern-making activities.

Singapore: Mid-Autumn Festival Lanterns

Singapore's [[mid-autumn-festival-term|Mid-Autumn Festival]] lantern celebrations in Chinatown are among the most elaborate outside mainland China. The streets of Chinatown are strung with hundreds of giant lantern installations for weeks before the festival date. The Gardens by the Bay Mid-Autumn Festival features contemporary light art installations alongside traditional lantern crafts. Children carry traditional paper lanterns in the shape of rabbits, fish, and lotuses through the streets on the festival night.

Hoi An, Vietnam: Lantern Town

The ancient trading port of Hoi An in central Vietnam holds a monthly lantern festival on the night of the full moon. Electric lights throughout the old town are switched off and replaced with hundreds of silk lanterns hung from eaves and stretched across the streets, turning the UNESCO-listed town into a glowing dreamscape. Paper lanterns are sold at every street corner and floated on the Thu Bon River with wishes written on paper inserts.

Practical Tips for Lantern Festival Travel

Sky lantern festivals have significant environmental implications: paper lanterns can start fires if they land while still lit, and their wire frames create wildlife hazards. Responsible festivals use biodegradable bamboo and paper construction and release lanterns over water where possible. When choosing events, favour those with strong environmental protocols. Many local authorities now restrict or ban sky lantern releases outdoors; check current regulations before purchasing lanterns to release independently.

India: Diwali Diya Traditions

While India's Diwali is most widely associated with fireworks, its original and most beautiful tradition is the diya — a small clay oil lamp placed in rows at doorways, on rooftops, and along riverbanks. Varanasi's Ganges ghats on Diwali night, lined with hundreds of thousands of diyas whose warm light shimmers in the sacred river, are arguably the world's most breathtaking lantern spectacle — surpassing even the sky lantern events of Asia in emotional resonance. The Ganga Aarti fire ceremony at the Dashashwamedh Ghat in Varanasi, performed nightly with oil lamps and fire wands, reaches its most spectacular form on Diwali evening when the ghats are at their most densely illuminated.

Germany: St Martin's Day Lantern Processions

Europe has its own beloved lantern tradition in the form of St Martin's Day (Martinstag) processions held on 11 November across Germany, Austria, and the Netherlands. Children carry handmade paper lanterns in street processions after dark, singing traditional Martinslieder (St Martin's songs) as they walk through darkened streets in groups led by teachers and parents. The tradition commemorates St Martin of Tours, the Roman soldier who cut his cloak to share with a freezing beggar. In Catholic regions, an actor on horseback in Roman soldier's costume leads the procession, and a bonfire is lit at the conclusion. German kindergartens and primary schools spend the weeks before 11 November making the paper lanterns children carry — often in the shape of moons, stars, rabbits, and pumpkins — making St Martin's Day one of Europe's most charming child-centred seasonal traditions.

Environmental Considerations

The environmental impact of mass sky lantern releases is significant and increasingly regulated. Paper sky lanterns can travel many kilometres before landing, potentially still lit, on farmland, forests, thatched rooftops, and aircraft flight paths. Several countries including the United Kingdom, Germany, Australia, and Spain have restricted or banned outdoor sky lantern releases entirely. Taiwan's Pingxi Festival operates under careful municipal regulation, with releases confined to specific zones above the river valley. Responsible participation means choosing biodegradable bamboo-and-paper construction, following all event regulations precisely, never releasing lanterns independently in dry conditions or near vegetation, and favouring water-float lanterns where sky releases are restricted or banned.
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