That said, you may also be interested in reading three related posts on
1) One New Year, Many Traditions: Lunar New Year Customs Around The World
http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2013/01/lunar-new-year-celebrations-around.html
2) List of 250 Year of the Snake Festivals from 33 countries outside East Asia at
http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2013/01/lunar-new-year-celebrations-around.html
Because the Asian lunar calendar follows the moon, it seems to move within our solar-based Gregorian calendar. Moreover, the Gregorian calendar does not correspond fully with the Asian lunar calendar. Thus, February 10 marks the beginning of the Asian lunar calendar only this year (for instance, it began last year on January 23, 2012 with the last day of that year -- Year of the Dragon -- falling on February 9, 2013).
The Twelve Animals of the Zodiac
The lunar calendar runs on a cycle of 12 years each represented by an animal. The animals all have a balance of compatability or incompatability as represented in their place in the circle of the 12-year cycle. This year is the Year of the Snake.
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The 12 Animals of the Zodiac |
- Rat
- Ox
- Tiger
- Rabbit
- Dragon
- Snake
- Horse
- Sheep
- Monkey
- Rooster
- Dog
- Pig
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Snake, Zhou Dynasty, 11-10 Century BCE Boston Museum of Fine Arts |
The Five Elements of the Wu Xing Cycle
Each element is also associated with a color. In the case of wood that color is green or blue (as seen in the Wu Xing Cycle diagram above). While the Chinese element "wood" is most associated in Chinese belief with the color green, note that in Korean 푸르다 (pureu-da), in Japanese 青 (ao), in Mandarin Chinese 青 (qīng) and in Vietnamese xanh all carry the meaning of both blue and green. This is way the Year of the Green Wood Snake can also rendered as the Blue Wood Snake.
Right: Blue Snake, Daily Report, Arirang News, Seoul
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Left: Green Snake, | Hùng Sơn, Bắc Giang |
Combined, each element combines with each animal over a period of 60 years. The current 12-year cycle combines with the element of Wood. Thus, this year is the Year of the Green or Blue Snake.
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The 12 Zodiac animals in their race |
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Detail from Snake with Skink (1877) by Kitagawa Utamaro Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York |
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Snake by Ai Weiwei Hirshhorn Museum, Washington, DC |
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East Asian lunar zodiac |
- Not exclusively Chinese
- Not based on constellations
- Taken much more seriously, more as a religious or cultural belief system
- Vietnam (Tet)
- Mongolia (Tsagaan Sar and Bituun)
- Korea (Seollal)
- Bhutan and Tibet (Losar)
- Japan (Oshogatsu)
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The Yellow Emperor Huang Di |
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Tang Dynasty (8th Century) Shaanxi Archaeology Institute, Xian, China |
The difference is that many people in Europe, Australia and the Americas consider the Western zodiac horoscope of star signs (Scorpio, Sagittarius, etc.) to be a form of superstition, a game or something believed only partially.
This is the Year of the Dragon in China, one for bold decision-making and strong leadership, and one that may see the country emerge as the political power of Asian football. http://news.yahoo.com/dragon-could-chinas-time-lead-asia-020101296--spt.html
China is debating whether the government should warn against superstitions that say 2024 is a bad year to marry as the country frets over its declining and aging population. "There are folk rumors that this year is the 'Year of the Widow' and is not suitable for marriage," said a letter to China's Ministry of Civil Affairs.
As China has been facing a rapid decline in birth rate, this represented a clear threat. The decline is of concern for the future of working age adults, consumer size and real estate demand. In 2023, the PRC's National Bureau of Statistics announced that for the first time in 60 years, its population has declined. The number 60 is significant here as this was the last full cycle of the Zodiac from the last Year of the Wooden Dragon.
The logic of why it is unlucky to marry this year makes sense in terms of the reasoning of the zodiac. As Loh (cited above) explains:
The belief involves the lack of a "beginning of spring" day, also known as lichun, at the start of a lunar year.
This year's lichun falls on February 4, before the Chinese Lunar New Year begins on February 10, meaning the coming year won't include a beginning of spring day.
Such a lunar year is sometimes dubbed the "Year of the Widow" because ancient superstition associates spring with masculine energy, and getting married at such a time is thought to bring bad luck and divorce.
A non-believer may disregard this, but the "Year of the Widow" is believed by hundreds of millions. One video posted on January 11, 2024 posted on the Chinese social media site Weibo already had 300 million views in its first two weeks.
In the oriental zodiac, 2025 is the year of the “wood snake.” The “wood” represents the
Japanese PM Ishiba strength to progress towards goals while maintaining harmony with one’s surroundings, and the “snake” has long been considered a symbol of fertility and vitality.The previous “wood snake” year was 1965, the year Japan began the “Izanagi Boom,” and the whole country was brimming with vitality. Although Japan was not as affluent as it is today, there were smiles on everyone's faces—elderly people, young adults, and children alike—radiating energy and vitality. In keeping with the spirit of the “wood snake,” the Ishiba Administration aims to pool collective wisdom and make this year one that brings prosperity and smiles to everyone.
“Like a blue snake, we must be _ and adept in dealing with our surroundings with foresight and thorough preparation.” https://www.samsungsem.com/global/newsroom/news/view.do?id=8862
In a similar light, several business articles (both inside and outside of Asia) referred to Year of the Snake when making predictions on nations in East Asia. For just one example, in an article entitled "Financial spring-cleaning in Year of the Snake" from Singapore's Business Times, Lorna Tan writes:
With the Chinese lunar calendar’s Year of the Snake beginning on Jan 29, we can emulate the characteristics of the snake. Occupying the sixth position in the Chinese zodiac, the snake is often associated with wisdom, flexibility, intelligence, and transformation. These are the same attributes that can help us to be on the lookout for fresh opportunities and ways to enhance our financial wellness.
The point of all of this is to emphasize that the importance of the lunar calendar and its animal cycle should be taken seriously.
Year of the Snake
2025 is particularly special because it is a "Double Spring Year" (双春年). The phenomenon of a Double Spring occurs when there are two Start of Spring (立春) – the first day of spring – within one year. This happens because 2025 is a leap year, which means an additional month (leap June) is added to the lunar calendar, causing two Start of Spring dates: one in early February (February 3, 2025), and another at the very end of the lunar year (February 4, 2026). In ancient times, the occurrence of a Double Spring year was seen as an auspicious event, symbolizing new beginnings, growth, and prosperity.
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East Asia has no tradition of the Serpent as in this detail from Lucas Cranach's Adam and Eve (1526) Courtauld Institute of Art, London |
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Vishnu sheltered by the snake Adishesha Parsurameswar Temple Bhupaneswar, Orissa, India |
In Hinduism, snakes -- especially cobras -- are associated with several dieties. Vishnu is often sheltered by the five-headed cobra Adishesha. Similarly, Ganesha is often shown with a snake encircling is stomach. Likewise Shiva is often depicted with a cobra wrapped around his neck as he dances. The Hindu festival of Nag Panchami venerates lives snakes or images of them.
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Cobra shading Parsvanatha India, 12th Century Victoria and Albert Museum, London |
Since the Asian Lunar Calendar deals primarily with Taoist and Buddhist roots, though, it is the view of these two faiths toward snakes that carries the most importance here, and in both Taoism and Buddhism snakes are also viewed favorably.
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Jade Emperor Jade Emperor Temple Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam |
Although the snake was summoned before the Jade Emperor and asked to stop [his angry ways], he was an obstinate animal and he continued. As a punishment, his four legs were taken from him... Ashamed by his past behaviour, the snaked turned his efforts towards helping the people in an attempt to redeem himself. He helped his relative, the dragon, to control the rains and he donated his body to be used as medicine after his death. Impressed, the Emperor gave the snake a place just after the dragon in the animal signs. (Kwok, p. 22)
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Buddha on coiled naga snake Wat Chedi Jet Thaew, Thailand |
The Buddha then went and meditated at the foot of a mucalinda tree. It began to rain heavily and a huge king cobra came out and coiled his body seven times around the Buddha to keep him warm and placed his hood over the Buddha’s head to protect him from the rain. After seven days the rain stopped and the snake changed into a young man who paid his respects to the Buddha. http://www.buddhanet.net/e-learning/buddhism/lifebuddha/17lbud.htm
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Muchalinda shading the Buddha Muchalinda Lake, Bhodghaya, Bihar |
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Guardian naga Angkor Wat, Cambodia |
All of this is to explain that in the Asian tradition, snakes are viewed quite differently than they are customarily seen in Europe, Australia and the Americas. While snakes are respected and treated with caution, they have on the whole a postive image in much of Asia.
Famous Snake People
Political leaders
- Bashar al-Assad, Syrian director from 2000 until his ouster in 2024
- Yasser Arafat, Chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) from 1969 until his death in 2004
- Kemal Mustafa Atatürk, Founder of the Republic of Turkey and its first President of Turkey
- Benazir Bhutto, Pakistani Prime Minister (elected and removed several times until her assassination by Islamist terrorists in 2007)
- Sveinn Björnsson, First President of Iceland
- Nicolae Ceausescu, Romanian Communist Dictator from 1965-1989
- John Conyers (US), longest-serving African American member of Congress
- Gaston Eyskens, 3-time Belgian Prime Minister known for overseeing the independence of the Congo from Belgium
- India Gandhi, Indian Prime Minister (1966-77 and 1980-84)
- William Gladstone, 4-time Prime Minister of the United Kingdom serving 12 years over non-consecutive terms under Queen Victoria
- Bob Hawke, 23rd Prime Minister of Australia elected 4 times and known for his government’s social welfare reforms
- Félix Houphouët-Boigny, first president of Côte d’Ivoire from independence in 1960 until his death in 1993
- John F. Kennedy, 35th US President
- Martin Luther King, Jr. (US), US Civil Rights activist
- Abraham Lincoln, 16th US President
- Emmanuel Macron, President of France since 2017
- Mao Zedong, Founder and leader of the PRC from its founding in 1949 until his death in 1976
- Ferdinand Marcos (Philippines), 10th President and later dictator of the Philippines (1965-1986)
- Dmitry Medvedev Russia) Former President and PM of Russia
- Gamal Abdel Nasser (Egypt), coup leader then later elected 2nd President of Egypt known for seizing control of the Suez Canal from the UK and France
- Making Razak (Malaysia), Prime Minister of Malaysia from 2009 to 2018 accused of corruption when almost US$1 billion from the 1MDB Malaysian development fund went missing
- Franklin Delano Roosevelt, 32nd President of the United States
- Bernie Sanders (US), Senator from Vermont and former Presidential candidate
- José María Velasco Ibarra 5-times President of Ecuador
- Wilhelm I, 1st Emperor of Germany
- Xi Jinping (PRC), General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party and supreme leader of China since 2012
- Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Ukrainian President since 2018
Athletes
- Muhammad Ali (US), Heavyweight boxing champion
- Tom Brady (US), seven-time Super Bowl winning quarterback
- George Brett (US), baseball great and one of four players in MLB history to accumulate 3,000 hits, 300 home runs, and a career .300 batting average
- Tommy Burns, the only Canadian-born World Heavyweight Boxing Champion
- Billy Conn (US), World Light Heavyweight Champion boxer known as the “Pittsburgh Kid”
- Stefan Edberg (Sweden), with nine Grand Slam titles
- Rob "Gronk" Gronkowski (US), NFL tight end and 4-time Super Bowl champion
- Floyd Mayerweather, Jr. (US), Boxing champion in multiple weight classes with an undefeated record of 49–0
- Arnold Palmer (US), Golfer with 62 PGA Tour wins
- Scottie Pippen (US), six-time NBA Champion basketball player
- Max Schmeling (German), Nazi-era boxer best-known for his fights with US boxer Joe Louis
- Leon Spinks (US), Boxer who defeated Ali
- Michael van Gerwen (Dutch), Dart player with three PDC World Championships
- Helen Wills Moody (US), Tennis player with 31 Grand Slam titles
Entrepreneurs
- William E. Boeing (US) Aviation pioneer and founder of Boeing aerospace company
- Michael Bloomberg (US) Entrepreneur founder of Bloomberg L.P., 3-term mayor of New York and Presidential candidate
- Ettore Bugatti, (Italian-born French) Founder of Bugatti car company
- Liz Claiborne (Belgian-born US), Fashion designer and co-founder of the eponymous Claiborne Inc fashion company
- Michael Dell (US), Founder, CEO and Chairman of Dell Technologies
- Guccio Gucci (Italy), Founder of the Gucci fashion house
- Arthur Guinness (Irish) Brewer and entrepreneur who founded Guinness Brewery
- Whitney Wolfe Herd (US), Founder and CEO of Bumble and co-founder of Tinder
- Tim Horton (Canadian), Hockey great turned entrepreneur co-founder of Tim Horton’s doughnut and fast food chain
- Howard Hughes (US) Aviation entrepreneur, real estate mogul, Hollywood producer, and philanthropist
- Mike Ilitch (US), Entrepreneur who founded Little Caesar Pizza chain and owner of both the Detroit Red Wings of the Major Hockey League and the Detroit Tigers of Major League Baseball teams
- Cyrus McCormick (US), Founder of McCormick Harvesting Machine Company (now known as International Harvester) and inventor of the mechanical harvester
- Günter Quandt (German) Industrialist who founded both BMW and Altana
- Song In-joon (So. Korean) founder and CEO of IMM PE, So. Korea's leading private equity fund
- Henry E. Steinway (German-born US) Piano maker and founder of Steinway & Sons
- Martha Stewart (US), Founder of Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia
- Hans Wilsdorf (German) Founder of Rolex
- Oprah Winfrey (US), Media entrepreneur
Other business leaders
- Dam Seo-won, Orion's executive director
- Jang Se-joo (So. Korean), Chairman of of Dongkuk Steel Group
- Shin Chang-jae (So. Korean), Chairman of Kyobo Life Insurance
Artists and Architects
- Carlo Carrà, Italian futurist painter
- Carmen Córdova, Argentine architect noted for Colegio Mayor Argentino in Madrid
- Ben Enwonwu (Nigerian), Painter and sculptor often called “Africa’s greatest artist”
- Fernand Léger, (France), cubist painter, sculptor and filmmaker
- Joan Miró, Catalan surrealist painter and sculptor
- I. M. Pei Chinese-born YS architect known for the Glass Pyramid at the Louvre in Paris, the Bank of China Tower in Hong Kong, the Miho Museum near Kyoto, the JFK Presidential Library in Boston, the OCBC Centre in Singapore, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, and the Museum of Islamic Art in Doha, Qatar
- Pablo Picasso (Spain), painter, sculptor, ceramicist, and theater designer and among the most influential artists of 20th century
Musicians and Music Producers
- Chet Baker, US jazz trumpeter known as the “King of Cool Jazz”
- Béla Bartók, Hungarian classical composer and among founders of the field of ethnomusicology
- Björk Icelandic singer and composer
- Jacques Brel, Belgian singer/songwriter considered the master of the modern French chanson
- Bob Dylan, US singer/songwriter and only songwriter to win the Nobel Prize for Literature (in 2017)
- Billie Eilish, US singer/songwriter
- Ella Fitzgerald, US singer/songwriter known as the “Queen of Jazz”
- Berry Gordy, Music Producer and Motown founder
- Mississippi John Hurt, US blues singer/songwriter and guitarist
- Dr. John (Mac Rebenack), US singer, songwriter, pianist, and guitarist known for his New Orleans blues and voodoo mix
- Carole King, US singer/songwriter
- Cyndi Lauper, US singer/songwriter
- Otis Redding, US singer/songwriter and music producer
- Andrés Segovia, Spanish virtuoso classical guitarist
- Taylor Swift, US singer/songwriter
- Shania Twain, Canadian singer/songwriter “Queen of Country Pop”
- Girls' Generation members Taeyeon, Sunny, Tiffany, Hyoyeon, and Yuri, born in 1989
- Psy, Korean K-Pop singer best-known for his "Gangnam Style"
- Gerard Way, US lead singer of My Chemical Romance
Actors, Film Directors, and Producers
- Tim Allen (US), Actor best-known for the sitcom “Home Improvement,” the Christmas “Santa Clause” movies, and as the voice of Buzz Lightyear in the Toy Story movies
- Rowan Blanchard (US), actress best known for her role of Riley Matthews on the Disney Channel series Girl Meets World
- Jessica Chastain (US), Oscar-winning actress
- Cecil B. DeMille, Director and producer of over 70 films making him the the most commercially successful movie producer-director of all time
- Robert Downey, Jr., (US), actor best-known for his role as Iron Man
- Maggie Gyllenhaal, US actress
- Audrey Hepburn, Belgian-British humanitarian UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador and actress EGOT-winning ( Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, and Tony Awards) as well as three BAFTA Awards
- January Jones, US actress best known for playing the role of Betty Draper in Mad Men
- Grace Kelly, Princess of Monaco and US actress
- John Malkovich, US actor and director
- Marlee Matlin, US actress and the only deaf performer to win the Academy Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role, which she won for "Children of a Lesser God"
- Hattie McDaniel, first African-American woman to win an Academy Award
- Aly Michalka, US actress
- Christopher Plummer, Canadian Oscar-, Emmy-, and Tony Award-winning actor
- Otto Preminger, Hungarian-born US film producer
- Daniel Radcliffe (UK), actor best-known for his role as Harry Potter
- Edward G. Robinson (Romanian-born US) Actor famed for his “tough guy” roles
- Mae West (US) Actress and considered among movie industry’s first “sex symbols”
Writers
- Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie (Nigeria), novelist and known for “Half of a Yellow Sun”, “Americanah,” and her TED Talk "We Should All Be Feminists” which Beyoncé sampled in her song “Flawless “
- Anne Frank, German Jewish diarist Holocaust victim
- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Greatest writer in German, author of “Faust”
- Heinrich Heine, German lyric poet
- Juan Ramón Jiménez (Spanish) Poet and author of “Platero and I” and winner of the 1956 Nobel Prize in Literature
- Imre Kertész (Hungary), novelist, Holocaust concentration camp survivor, and recipient of the 2002 Nobel Prize in Literature
- Lu Xun (PRC), Central figure of modern Chinese literature and Mao’s favorite writer
- Edgar Allan Poe (US) Poet and short story writer who created the first detective story “The Murders in the Rue Morgue” (the Edgar Award for mystery writing is named for him), wrote among the earliest science fiction short stories and is famed for his horror stories (such as “The Telltale Heart” and “”The Pit and the Pendulum”) and poems (such as “The Raven”)
- Anne Rice (US), novelist best-known for her Mayfair Witches and Vampire Chronicles series
- J.K. Rowling (UK), novelist best-known for the Harry Potter series
- Jean-Paul Sartre (France), Existentialist philosopher and playwright (“No Exit”)
- Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, English author of “Frankenstein”
- Muriel Spark, Scottish novelist and WWII spy, known for "The Comforters" and “The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie”
- Alfred, Lord Tennyson, English, Poet Laureate for most of Victorian-era British Empire
Scientists
- Carl David Anderson (US), Physicist who discovered the positron and the muon for which he won the 1936 Nobel Prize in Physics
- Nicholas Appert (French), “Father of food science” who invented the airtight food container
- Charles Darwin (UK), creator of the Theory of Evolution
- Gertrude B. Elion (US), Biochemist and winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1988
- Hans Fischer (German), Chemist who synthesized bilirubin and haemin (including hemoglobin) and mapped out the make-up of chlorophyll, and winner of the 1930 Nobel Prize for Chemistry
- Sir Alexander Fleming (Scottish) Microbiologist who discovered penicillin for which he won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1945
- Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus (Ethiopia), Head of the World Health Organization
- Stephen Hales (English) Physiologist, botanist, chemist and inventor who invented the first pneumatic trough for collecting gasses and was the first person to measure blood pressure in humans and root pressure in plants,
- Walter Rudolph Hess (Swiss) Physiologist who mapped the human brain regions controlling the internal organs who won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1949
- Edward Jenner (English), Scientist who developed vaccination, including the smallpox vaccine
- George Ohsawa (Japanese) Founder of the field of macrobiotics
- Hermann Staudinger (German) Chemist who discovered polymers for which he won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1953
- Albert Szent-Györgyi (Hungarian) Physiologist who was the first to isolate Vitamin C for which he won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1986
- Harold Urey (US) Physical chemist whose work on nuclear isotopes and discovery of deuterium won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1934
Others
- Tommy Flores, English computer engineer best-known for his creation of Colossus, the world's first programmable digital compute
- Keiji Inafune, Japanese video game designer best known as co-developer of the Mega Man
- Paul Krugman, US economist and author who won the 2008 Nobel Prize in Economics for his work on international trade
- Yuji Naka, Japanese video game designer best known as the co-creator of Sonic the Hedgehog
- John Oliver, English comedian best known his HBO show "Last Week Tonight with John Oliver" for which he was won 6 Emmys
- Georg Friedrich Strass, Alsatian inventor of rhinestones
- Barbara Walters, US broadcast journalist
The snake's ability to shed its skin represents renewal, transformation, and continuous growth, making zodiac Snakes practical visionaries, good leaders, and great thinkers.
Snakes are a bit tight when it comes to lending money, though his sympathy for others often leads him to offer help. The fatal flaw in his character is, in fact, a tendency to exaggerate – in helping friends as with everything else. If he does somebody a favor, he becomes possessive towards them in an odd way. https://sites.radford.edu/~nrvnews/news/chinese/horoscope/horoscope.doc
Finally, people born in the Year of the Snake are viewed as complex in terms of love relationships as well. As Man-Ho Kwok (see bibliography) writes, people born in the Year of the Snake:
have a very seductive nature, and when you have resolved to woo someone, you plan your moves carefully and do not abandon your quest lightly. You are a humorous and romantic partner who jealously guards important relationships; even if you wander off to flirt with others, you are determined not to lose what you already have. p. 23.
As for the year governed by the snake, the complicated characteristics that govern the people also, for believers, will govern the year. Things as they appear on the surface, believers hold, are not what actually are likely to be in reality. As a result, years governed by the snake are years for thinking carefully before acting.
Green Wood Snake
As discussed earlier, the five elements affect each Zodiac animal. This year is tied to the Yin-Wood element, while snakes are Snakes are in the Yang influenced elements of
The Zodiac Snake is in the Fire group, containing Yang-Fire, Yang-Earth, and Yang-Metal. Yang Earth is associated with high mountains, while Yang Metal is linked to strong wind. Yang-Fire relates to the sun, heat, summer, and vitality. People with a strong Fire element are often energetic, passionate, and enthusiastic.Because this year's Yin-Wood serves to tempering these Yang elements. As ChineseAstrologyOnline.com goes on to explain:
Yin-Wood is associated with grass, flowers, weeds, or vines that can quickly grow and spread. Yin-Wood likes sunshine and can endure strong wind, symbolizing growth, endurance, imagination, innovation, and brainstorming.
As Monica Sager explains in her Newsweek article "It's the Year of the Wood Snake—A Guide to the 2025 Lunar New Year":
Paired with the wood element, which is one of the five elements in Chinese metaphysics, there's a sense of grounding within the year. Wood represents strength and growth. With the snake, wood creates a sense of adaptability and transformation.
General forecasts, however, need to be balanced against each person's own Zodiac animal and element (and refined with each person's day and time of birth). Victor Sanjinez and Joe Lo in their January 21, 2025 article "All you need to know about the Year of the Snake" in the South China Morning Post provide an excellent interactive visual guide to the Year of the Green Wood Snake. I highly recommend the article for a quick summary. That said, for now, the guide by Zodiac animal for the year generally suggests
- Auspicious Year: Rat. Rabbit (very), Dragon, Horse (very), Sheep/Goat (very), Monkey, Rooster
- Neutral Year: Ox, Dog,
- Inauspicious Year: Tiger (very), Snake, Pig
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Year of the Snake sidewalk plate Philadelphia Chinatown |
http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2013/01/lunar-new-year-celebrations-around.html
Happy Year of the Snake!
Want to Learn More
China Voc.com "Zodiac" http://www.chinavoc.com/zodiac/index.asp
Chinese Fortune Calendar http://www.chinesefortunecalendar.com/5EBasic.htm
Chinese Horoscop-e.com, "Snake" http://chinesehoroscop-e.com/Snake%20Zodiac.html
Chinese Zodiac.org, "Year of the Snake" http://www.chinesezodiac.org/snake
Man-ho Kwok, Chinese Astrology: Forecast Your Future from Your Chinese Horoscope, Tuttle Publishing, 1997.
Theodora Lau, The Handbook of Chinese Horoscopes (6th edition), Collins Reference, 2007.
Kah Joon Liow, "12 Chinese Zodiac Sign," Living Chinese Symbols http://www.living-chinese-symbols.com/12-chinese-zodiac-sign.html
Paul Ng, "Predictions for 2013 (Year of the Water Snake)" http://www.paulng.com/CMS/uploads/2013-geo.pdf
Online Chinese Astrology http://www.onlinechineseastrology.com/
Topmarks Education, "Zodiac Story, Chinese New Year." http://www.topmarks.co.uk/ChineseNewYear/ZodiacStory.aspx
David Twicken, Five Element Chinese Astrology Made Easy, iUniverse, 2000.
Suzanne White, The New Chinese Astrology, Thomas Dunne Books, 2009.
Shelly Wu, Chinese Astrology: Exploring the Eastern Zodiac, New Page Books, 2005.
Derek Walters, The Complete Guide to Chinese Astrology, Watkins Publishing, 2005.Ho-Peng Yoke, Chinese Mathematical Astrology: Reaching Out to the Stars, Routledge, 2003. This is the pre-eminent book on the mathematical science of Asian lunar horoscope calculations. It is downloadable at http://www.ebook3000.com/Chinese-Mathematical-Astrology--Reaching-out-for-the-stars--Needham-Research-Institute-Series-_130932.html
Xiaosui Zhao and Graeme Mills, "Chinese Zodiac -- Year of the Snake" http://kaixin.com.au/chinese-zodiac/2010/10/18/chinese-zodiac-year-of-the-snake-she.html
Clip Art Sources:
Opening 2025 Year of the Snake graphic: Own graphic made with AI program Canva2025 with Chinese character: Own graphic made with AI program Canva
Snake, Zhou Dynasty, 11-10 Century BCE, Boston Museum of Fine Arts:
http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/ornament-in-the-shape-of-a-coiled-snake-21961
Snake, Han Dynasty, Shanghai Museum: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Huan_in_shape_of_a_coiled_serpent.jpg
Wu Xing Cycle: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f0/Wuxing_en.svg/220px-Wuxing_en.svg.pngGreen Snake, Hùng Sơn, Bắc Giang, Vietnam by artisan Bui Van Quan: Ðan Than, "Snake mascots from cute to 'scary' introduced to welcome Tet," Laodong, https://news.laodong.vn/du-lich/kham-pha/linh-vat-ran-tu-dang-yeu-den-dang-so-trinh-lang-don-tet-1452536.htmlBlue Snake, Daily Report, Arirang News, Seoul, "Slithering into 2025: "The Year of the Blue Snake and S. Korea's New Year's wishes," https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x-q7YAtsFDcYin Yang animation: http://www.eharrishome.com/Kungfu.html
The 12 Zodiac animals in their race: http://media.photobucket.com/image/recent/firefoxthief/zodiaccolor.jpg'
Snake with Skink (1877) by Kitagawa Utamaro, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York: http://www.metmuseum.org/collections/search-the-collections/60001395
Snake by Ai Weiwei, Hirshhorn Museum, Washington, DC: http://www.hirshhorn.si.edu/collection/ai-weiwei-according-to-what/#detail=/bio/ai-weiwei-snake-ceiling-2009/&collection=ai-weiwei-according-to-what
East Asian Lunar Zodiac: http://www.china-family-adventure.com/chinese-zodiac.html
Shigeru Ishiba: "New Year’s Reflection by Prime Minister ISHIBA Shigeru" https://japan.kantei.go.jp/103/statement/202501/0101nentou.html
Lucas Cranach's Adam and Eve (1526), Courtauld Institute of Art, London: http://www.courtauld.ac.uk/gallery/collections/paintings/renaissance/cranach.shtml
Cobra shading Parsvanatha , India, 12th Century, Victoria and Albert Museum, London: http://www.vam.ac.uk/content/articles/j/jainism-jinas-and-other-deities/
Vishnu sheltered by five-headed snake Adishesha, Parsurameswar Temple, Bhupaneswar, Orissa, India: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Bishnu.jpg
Jade Emperor, Jade Emperor Temple, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, photo by Glyn John Willett, Virtual Traveler: http://members.virtualtourist.com/m/p/m/1fc5d7/
Buddha on coiled naga snake, Wat Chedi Jet Thaew, Thailand: http://sukhothai.thaiwebsites.com/watchedijetthaew-sisatchanalai.asp
Muchalinda shading the Buddha, Muchalinda Lake, Bhodghaya, Bihar: http://www.touristlink.com/india/muchalinda-lake/overview.html
Naga at Angkor Wat: http://www.lonelyplanet.com/travelblogs/241/157377/A+Little+History%E2%80%A6Myths+and+Spirits+in+Modern+Myanmar?destId=357592
Red snake design at start of personality trait description: http://kaixin.com.au/chinese-zodiac/2010/10/18/chinese-zodiac-year-of-the-snake-she.html
Snake netsuke, Japan, 19th Century, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford University: http://jameelcenter.ashmolean.org/collection/4/1238/1242/6405
Buddha with snakes, Mandalay, Myanmar: http://www.allmyanmar.com/Mandalay-Images.htm
Paiwan wooden snake, Late 19th Century Taiwan. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York: http://www.metmuseum.org/Collections/search-the-collections/50008838?rpp=20&pg=1&ao=on&ft=snake&where=Asia|Taiwan&pos=1
Black water snake: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Snake.svg
Year of the Snake sidewalk plate Philadelphia Chinatown, my own photo