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List of Important Intangible Folk Cultural Properties

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This is a list of 337 Important Intangible Folk Cultural Properties of Japan.

Criteria

  1. It must exemplify something original in the Japanese people's everyday life in terms of origin and content, and be typical.
  2. It must exemplify the process of evolution of some technique.
  3. It must exemplify some local characteristic.

Designated cultural properties

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Manners and customs

Manufacture, livelihood

9 designations. All were designated under Criteria 1.

More information Name, Date ...

Life rituals

6 designations. All were designated under Criteria 1.

More information Name, Date ...

Amusements, contests

11 designations, all under criterion 1.

More information Name, Date ...

Social life (knowledge of folk customs)

2 designations, all under criterion 1

More information Name, Date ...

Annual functions or events

34 designations, all under criterion 1

More information Name, Date ...

Religious festivals and beliefs

74 designations. All were designated under Criteria 1. This includes all but one[nb 7] of the 33 festivals in the UNESCO Intangible cultural heritage Yama, Hoko, Yatai, float festivals in Japan.[nb 8][89]

More information Name, Date ...

Folk performing arts

Kagura

kagura (神楽, lit.'god entertainment') are dances associated with Shinto shrines.

There have been 40 designations, all under Criteria 1, unless otherwise indicated.

More information Name, Date ...

Dengaku

dengaku (田楽, lit.'field music') are musical presentations/dances related to rice planting.

There have been 26 designations, all under Criteria 1 unless otherwise indicated.

More information Name, Date ...

Fūryū

Fūryū odori (風流踊, lit.'elegant dances') are traditional folk dances often consisting of large processions of participants typically wearing colorful costumes and accompanied by props. Another form represented below is nenbutsu odori (念仏踊) and the syncretic nenbutsu fūryū (念仏風流). In these dances, dancing is accompanied by Buddhist chanting and hymns.

The most common surviving example of these dances is the bon odori.

There have been 44 designations, all designated under Criteria 1 unless otherwise indicated.

More information Name, Date ...

Storytelling

6 designations. All were designated under Criteria 1 except for the Hakata Matsubayashi which was designated under 2 and 3.

More information Name, Remarks ...

Ennen and Okonai

Ennen (延年, ennen) (lit. "extend the years") are Buddhist temple entertainments performed at the end of Buddhist services and believed to extend the listeners' lifespans.[236]Okonai (おこない, okonai) (lit. "deeds") are Buddhist New Year celebrations in which the evils of the past year are driven away.

There have been 7 designations, all under Criteria 1.

More information Name, Date ...

Entertainment from abroad and performance arts

41 designations. All were designated under criteria 1 unless otherwise indicated.

More information Name, Date ...

Other

18 designations. All were designated under Criteria 1 except for the Daiko of the Kokura Gion Festival and the Inaba and Tajima Kirin Lion dance which were designated under criteria 2 and 3.

More information Name, Date ...

Folk techniques

Manufacturing and production

16 designations.

More information Name, Criteria ...

Necessities of life

3 designations, all under criteria 3.

More information Name, Remarks ...
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See also

Notes

  1. July 1 in leap years.
  2. Date in Japan's old lunisolar calendar
  3. Until 2010 the festival was held every year on July 23–25
  4. Each day in another district of the town
  5. Mounds are constructed every year which is special for 108 lights festivals
  6. In tamaseseri men dressed in loinclothes scramble for straw balls.
  7. The Chiryū Festival, which is part of the UNESCO designated Yama, Hoko, Yatai, float festivals in Japan, has been designated as Important Intangible Folk Cultural Property in the category of Folk performing arts – Entertainment from Abroad and Performance Arts.
  8. The float festivals included in this designation are: Hachinohe Sansha Taisai, Kakunodate Matsuri, Tsuchizaki Shinmeishasai, Hanawa Matsuri, Shinjō Matsuri, Hitachi Furyumono, Karasuyama Yamaage Festival, Kanuma Imamiya Festival, Chichibu Festival, Kawagoe Hikawa Festival, Sawara Festival, Takaoka Mikuruma-yama Festival, Uozu Tatemon Festival, Jōhana Shinmei Shrine Festival, Seihaku Festival, Takayama Festival, Furukawa Festival, Ōgaki Festival, Owari Tsushima Tennō Festival, Chiryū Festival, Inuyama Festival, Kamezaki Shiohi Festival, Sunari Festival, Toride Shrine Festival, Ueno Tenjin Festival, Ishidori Matsuri, Nagahama Hikiyama Festival, Gion Matsuri, Hakata Gion Yamakasa, Tobata Gion Yamagasa festival, Karatsu Kunchi, Yatsushiro Myoken Festival, Hita Gion Festival.
  9. The festival was last held in 2017.
  10. Until 2006 the festival had been held on August 7, 8.
  11. The last time the festival was held in 2016.
  12. Until 2016 the festival had been held every year from October 23–25.
  13. In the yudate kagura a cauldron is placed inside the sacred area to perform a ritual purification with boiling water (yudate). This form of dances are derived from those at the outer shrines of Ise Shrine and is known as Ise-ryū kagura. It is associated with festivals such as hana-matsuri, shimotsuki matsuri and fuyu matsuri.[170][171]
  14. An agricultural tool for scraping the surface of the soil.
  15. Kudoki is a type of song in which a long narrative is sung to a continuously repeating melody.
  16. An alternative explanation attributes the manzai to low level monks who were forcibly settled in the area following a decree by Toyotomi Hideyoshi from 1594, and who provided various forms of entertainment.
  17. Young men of various age from the community and neighboring communities perform the rite today.
  18. Tsunabi are a traditional form of fireworks where originally a bamboo tube filled with gunpowder was fired along a rope.
  19. Out of 12 pieces each, four of the dances at Amatsu Shrine and three dances at Nō Hakusan Shrine are performed by adults.
  20. The bunya style of Ningyō Jōruri| is named after puppeteer Okamoto Bunya (1633–1694) and is characterised by high-pitched grief-stricken vocal delivery.
  21. A grand festival is held biannually and a smaller festival in the other years.
  22. Okina is an ancient form of noh, which it predates. More similar to a shinto ritual performance, it was possibly created in the 10th century in Okinawa. Unlike the typical noh play it is meant to be joyous and aims to bring peace, longevity and prosperity. The chief characters are typically okina (old man), senzai (one thousand years [old]) and sanbasō (a third man). Extant examples exist in kabuki, bunraku and folk theatre.[267]
  23. This is indicated by the appearance of Chich no jō whose character disappeared during the Muromachi Period and whose role was subsequently taken over by senzai.
  24. Performances are regularly held at the purpose built Awaji Ningyō Jōruri Hall.
  25. A pre-bunraku tradition of puppetry also referred to as kairaishi.
  26. Ritual Ainu dances include iomante (to drive away bears), pekanpe (prayers for the ripening of water chestnut), shishamo (for catching fish), bow dances, sword dances and dances accompanying chores.
  27. Imitative Ainu dances include tsuru no mai (crane dance).
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References

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