Difference between revisions of "Yugafu"

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(Created page with "right|thumb|300px|[[Miruku coming ashore during a festival, bringing ''yugafu'', as represented in a museum display at the [[National Museum of Japanes...")
 
 
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[[File:Miruku.jpg|right|thumb|300px|[[Miruku]] coming ashore during a festival, bringing ''[[yugafu]]'', as represented in a museum display at the [[National Museum of Japanese History]]. Also seen here are a ''[[shisa]]'' (lion) and ''[[hari]]'' (dragon boat), important parts of the festival as well.]]
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[[File:Miruku.jpg|right|thumb|300px|[[Miruku]] coming ashore during a festival, bringing ''yugafu'', as represented in a museum display at the [[National Museum of Japanese History]]. Also seen here are a ''[[shisa]]'' (lion) and ''[[hari]]'' (dragon boat), welcoming the deity.]]
 
*''Other Names: amayuu, mirukuyuu''  
 
*''Other Names: amayuu, mirukuyuu''  
 
*''Okinawan'': 世果報 ''(yugafuu)''
 
*''Okinawan'': 世果報 ''(yugafuu)''

Latest revision as of 21:51, 21 July 2013

Miruku coming ashore during a festival, bringing yugafu, as represented in a museum display at the National Museum of Japanese History. Also seen here are a shisa (lion) and hari (dragon boat), welcoming the deity.
  • Other Names: amayuu, mirukuyuu
  • Okinawan: 世果報 (yugafuu)

Yugafuu is an Okinawan term meaning, roughly, "good fortune." The word appears in many ryûka (traditional poems), and classical songs, and is mainly associated with Miruku (Maitreya, J: Miroku), who brings good fortune with him, as he arrives in the village from nirai kanai (a land of the gods, beyond the sea) on the occasions of certain festivals.

References

  • Videos and exhibit displays, "Minzoku" (Folk Customs) exhibit, National Museum of Japanese History, Sakura, Chiba. Viewed July 2013.
  • "Yugafuu," Shuri-Naha Dialect Dictionary (Shuri-Naha hôgen onsei database).