The kite, a Chinese invention, has been praised as
the forerunner of the modern aeroplane. In the pavilion
of aircraft of the National Aeronautics and Space Museum,
Washington D. C., a plaque says, "the earliest
aircraft are the kites and missiles of China".
The
kite is mainly, but not only, a plaything. It has contributed
to science and production. The first planes were shaped
after the kite. In 1782, Benjamin Franklin, noted American
scientist and statesman, studied lightning and thunder
in the sky with the help of a kite and then invented
the lightning rod. Kites are still used by some fishermen
to lay bait in the sea to attract fish, or by photographers
to take pictures of bird's-eye view from high altitude.
T he
earliest Chinese kites were made of wood and called
muyuan (wooden kites); they date as far back as the
Warring States Period (475-221 B.C.) at least two millennia
ago. After the invention of paper, kites began to be
made of this new material called zhiyuan (paper kites).
Instead of being playthings, early kites were used
for military purposes. Historical records say they were
large in size; some were powerful enough to carry men
up in the air to observe enemy movements, and others
were used to scatter propaganda leaflets over hostile
forces. According to the Records of Strange Events (Du
Yi Zhi), an ancient work, when Xiao Yan, Emperor Wudi
(464-549) of the Liang Dynasty, was surrounded at Taicheng,
Nanjing by the rebel troops under Hou Jing, it was by
means of a kite that he sent out an S.O.S. message for
outside help.

During the Tang Dynasty (618-907), people began to
fix on kites some bamboo strips which, when high in
the air, would vibrate and ring in the breeze like a
zheng (a stringed instrument). Since then, the popular
Chinese name for the kite has become fengzheng (wind
zheng). The kites made today in certain localities are
fixed with silk strings or rubber bands to give out
pleasant ringing in the wind.

It
was also believed, for instance, during the Qing Dynasty
(1644-1911), that flying a kite and then letting it
go, apart from the pleasure in itself, might send off
one's bad luck and illness. Consequently it would bring
bad luck if one should pick up a kite lost by other
people. This may be dismissed as superstition but may
not be altogether without reason: think of the good
it will do to a person, ill and depressed all the time,
if he or she could go out into the fields and fresh
air to fly a kite.
Certain enthusiasts enjoy flying kites during the night.
They hang small coloured lanterns on the line with candles
burning inside, which go up high in the air to decorate
the night sky with strings of glimmering lights, adding
much to the fun.
Chinese
kites fall into two major categories: those with detachable
wings and those with fixed wings. The former can be
taken apart and packed in boxes. Easy to carry about,
they make good presents. The second category refers
to those with fixed, non-detachable frames; they fly
better and higher , given a steady wind. Classified
by designs and other specifications, there are no less
than 300 varieties, including human figures, fish, insects,
birds, animals and written characters. In size, they
range from 304 metres to only 30 centimetres across.
It is no easy job to make a kite that one can be proud
of. For the frame, the right kind of bamboo must be
selected. It should be thick and strong for a kite of
large dimensions in order to stand the wind pressure.
For miniature kites, on the other hand , thin bamboo
strips are to be used.
The
second step in the making of a kite is the covering
of the frame. This is normally done with paper, sometimes
with silk. Silk kites are more durable and generally
of higher artistic value.
Painting of the kite (the third step) may be done in
either of two ways. For mass-produced kites, pre-printed
paper is used to cover the frames. Custom-made kites
are painted manually after covering. Many of the designs
bear messages of good luck; a pine tree and a crane,
for example, mean longevity, bats and peaches wish you
good fortune and a long life, and so on.
In
1983 a large-scale kite-flying competition was held
in Tianjin. A "dragon-headed centipede" of
a hundred sections, with a total length of a hundred
metres, flown up by a squad of 5 or 6 young men of the
Tianjin Fine Arts Factory, thrashed and danced about
in the air. A Japanese enthusiast sent up a 300-metre-long
kite of a string of 270 sections. These and other successes
attracted large crowds and won thunderous applause.
The well-known Weifang (Shandong Province) Kite Festival
has become an annual feature in the country, drawing
hundreds of participants each April from home and many
foreign countries.
As early as two dozen years ago, a film entitled The
Kite was jointly made by Chinese and French studios,
which sings of Sino-French friendship through the "adventures"
of a kite.

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