Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Tobata Gion Yamagasa festival

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Type
  
local

Frequency
  
annual

2017 date
  
July 28

2018 date
  
July 27

Date
  
Fourth Friday in July

Begins
  
Friday

2016 date
  
July 22

Ends
  
Sunday

2019 date
  
July 26

Tobata Gion Yamagasa festival httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Observed by
  
Tobata-ku, Kitakyūshū, Kitakyushu, Fukuoka Prefecture, Kyushu, Japan

Tobata gion yamagasa


The Tobata Gion Yamagasa festival (戸畑祇園山笠) is a popular local Japanese festival (matsuri) which takes place annually in Tobata, a ward of Kitakyushu in Fukuoka prefecture, Kyūshū, Japan. It is held for three days (Friday–Sunday) before and after the fourth Saturday of July. The festival is a national cultural asset of Japan, and is centred on the parading of the "Yamagasa" (山笠).

Contents

tobata gion yamagasa festival january


The Yamagasa

The Yamagasa (or Yamakasa) are very large floats, and are the focal point of the festival. There are four regions of Tobata which participate: Higashi, Nishi, Tenraiji and Nakabaru. Each region has a large Yamagasa for men and a small one for boys, making eight main floats in total.

During the festival in the daytime, the eight official floats with twelve great flags hoisted on the four large ones are carried for a parade, followed by some small floats for children. But in the nighttime, the floats are completely transformed into pyramids of light—huge Lantern Yamakasa floats, their decorations with the flags removed. Each with twelve layers of 309 lanterns, 10 meters high, and 1.5 tons in weight, is shouldered by about 100 carriers.

To move the Yamagasa is an art which requires concerted lifting by all the carriers. To ensure that they do it successfully, they all shout "yoitosa, yoitosa" together in a rhythmic chant with drums and cymbals.

History

This festival has its origin in 1802, when people plagued by an epidemic in Tobata Village of Chikuzen prayed to Suga-taijin to disperse the plague, their prayers were answered and all of the villagers with plague were cured. At that time the villagers held the Yamakasa Festival as the celebration event of the answer to their prayers.

Recently the nighttime races against the clock round a set course have been abandoned. Also a Yamagasa festival for ladies has been started.

References

Tobata Gion Yamagasa festival Wikipedia