PropertyValue
rdfs:label
  • Tanabata Festival
rdfs:comment
  • In present-day Japan, people generally celebrate this day by writing wishes on small pieces of paper, and hanging them on bamboo, sometimes with other decorations. The bamboo and decorations are often set afloat on a river or burned after the festival. The festival originated from the Qi Xi festival in China and was adopted into the Kyoto Imperial Palace during the Heian Period. The festival spread to the general public by the early Edo period and developed into the modern Tanabata festival.
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:lovehina/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:tsukuba/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • In present-day Japan, people generally celebrate this day by writing wishes on small pieces of paper, and hanging them on bamboo, sometimes with other decorations. The bamboo and decorations are often set afloat on a river or burned after the festival. The festival originated from the Qi Xi festival in China and was adopted into the Kyoto Imperial Palace during the Heian Period. The festival spread to the general public by the early Edo period and developed into the modern Tanabata festival.