Dainichido Bugaku
Dainichido Bugaku (Tɛmplet:Lang-ja, di gbunni nyɛla: Vairocana Temple waa mini diɛma) nyɛla yuuni yuuni waa mini yila ka booni li "bugaku" ka niŋdi li tiŋsi ni kamani Hachimantai, Kazuno District, Akita Prefecture din daa niŋ ka bɛ labiri miɛri "Dainichido", eighth century piligu.[1] Ninvuɣ shɛba ban mi di wabu nyɛla ban wuhiri bɛ taba din wari shɛm.
Yaɣ sheli | mai |
---|---|
Tiŋa | Japan |
Din be shɛli polona | Kazuno |
Dini be shɛli | Ōhirumemuchi Shrine |
Tiŋgbaŋ yaɣili calinli | 40°8′39″N 140°48′21″E |
Tingbani shɛli din yina | Japan |
Dabisili shɛli dini niŋdi yuuni pulini | January 2 |
Intangible cultural heritage status | Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, Important Intangible Folk Cultural Properties of Japan |
Lahabaya dundɔŋ din mali dihitabili | http://dainichido.p1.bindsite.jp/bugaku/ |
Official blog URL | https://dainichido-bugaku.blogspot.com/ |
Described at URL | https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/00275, https://ich.unesco.org/fr/RL/00275, https://ich.unesco.org/es/RL/00275 |
Binshɛŋa bɛ ni mali ŋmɛri binkumda ŋɔ nyɛ flute mini taiko. Waa ŋɔ ni wari shɛm nyɛla din taɣi bela saha ŋɔ, waha ayopɔin shɛŋa bɛn wari din ni saha ŋɔ nyɛ Gongen-mai, Koma-mai, Uhen-mai, Tori-mai, Godaison-mai, Kōshō-mai, n-ti pahi Dengaku-mai dances. "Mask" nim nyɛ shishi mini Vairocana.
Waa ŋɔ taarihi nyɛla din gari yuuni tɔhili ni kɔbisita (1300) (Nara period),[2] ka lahabali nyɛ din wuhi ni di daa pun gari yuun pihiyobu eighteenth century, waa ŋɔ yaɣa shɛŋa nyɛ bihi bee "masks" nyɛla bɛn na niŋdi shɛli silimin gɔli January dabaa ayi dali asiba hali ni yuŋ gindi Osato, Azukisawa, Nagamine n-ti pahi Taniuchi, including Hachimantai.[1]
Lahabali din yina Yamaji Kōzō wuhiya ni Dainichido Bugaku nyɛla din daa piligi Nara (CE 710 hali ni 794) saha mini mid-Heian periods (CE 794 to 1185), din daa niŋ ka tiŋgbani maa saɣiti Shinto temple complexes (originally ordered by Emperor Shōmu (CE 701 – 756)) ka daa bori ni o yihi li amaa ka bɛ daa niŋ kpaŋmaŋ che Dainichido Bugaku ni di lee folk arts.[3]
Kundivihira
mali niŋ- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Dainichido Bugaku", UNESCO.org.
- ↑ "Dainichido Bugaku Dance in Akita Archived 2016-08-28 at the Wayback Machine", JapanTimes.co.jp.
- ↑ Thornbury, Barbara E. (1997). "Overview", The Folk Performing Arts: Traditional Culture in Contemporary Japan, p.37. SUNY. ISBN 9780791432563. Also [1].
Tɛmplet:Music of Japan Tɛmplet:UNESCO Oral and Intangible music
Coordinates: 40°08′39″N 140°48′21″E / 40.1442°N 140.8058°E