Changes

1,539 bytes removed ,  23:25, 15 April 2015
no edit summary
Line 1: Line 1: −
[[File:Koson-gosekku.jpg|right|thumb|320px|One of a set of hanging scrolls depicting the ''gosekku'', by [[Ikeda Koson]], c. 1830. Freer Gallery of Art.]]
  −
*''Japanese'': 五節句 ''(gosekku)''
     −
The ''gosekku'' (lit. "five seasonal festivals") were five of the most important seasonal rites performed by the Imperial Court.
+
"Festivals" can refer to:
 +
*[[Gosekku]] - the five chief annual festivals
 +
*[[Matsuri]] - local festival observances, usually involving parades and other public celebrations
   −
They consist of:
+
{{disambig}}
*''Jinjitsu no sekku'' - 1st month, 7th day, seven herbs were eaten. Also known as Nanakusa no sekku, Wakana no sekku. In the Imperial Court, this was accompanied by a rite called Kochôhai.
  −
*''Jômi no sekku'' or ''Jôshi''<!--上巳--> - 3/3, Girls' Festival, Dolls Festival, aka [[Hina matsuri]]. Also celebrated as the Kyokusui festival, emulating the famous [[Orchid Pavilion]] gathering organized by [[Wang Xizhi]] in [[353]]. In emulation of that event, courtiers composed poetry while floating wine cups down a stream in one of the palace gardens.
  −
*''Tango no sekku'' - 5/5 Boys' Festival, aka [[Kodomo no hi]]. Celebrated in the Court as an iris festival.
  −
*''[[Tanabata]]'' - 7/7 The festival of the Weaver Star. Called Kikkoden in the Court.
  −
*''Chôyô no sekku'' - 9/9, [[Chrysanthemum Festival]]. A festival in connection with the rice harvest, and related to one in China which involved the drinking of chrysanthemum wine.
  −
 
  −
During the [[Tokugawa period]], the first, 15th, and 28th days of each month were also ceremonial days.
  −
 
  −
{{stub}}
  −
 
  −
==References==
  −
*Arai Hakuseki, Joyce Ackroyd (trans.), ''Told Round a Brushwood Fire'', University of Tokyo Press (1979), 286n122.
  −
*Gallery label, Freer Gallery of Art, "Gosekku: The Five Ancient Festivals of the Imperial Court," [[Ikeda Koson]], set of five hanging scrolls, c. 1830, F1999.5.1a-f.
  −
 
  −
[[Category:Resource Articles]]
 
contributor
27,126

edits