Ningyo Joruri Bunraku is one of the traditional Japanese performing arts, a comprehensive art in which Tarou, Shamisen and dolls are united. Its establishment day back to the early Edo period with old puppet dolls, later called Ningyo joruri. With the works of Yoshio Takemoto Yoshio Sotoga and Chikamatsu Monzaemon, Ningyo joruri gained popularity and came to the heyday, Takemotoza was founded. After this, several puppet ballistic actors, including Banbetsu, rise and fall repeatedly, at the end of the Tokugawa shogunate, the monastery originated in Osaka by Uemura Bunraku in Awaji became the most influential and central presence, and eventually "Bunraku" is synonymous with puppet joruri And it has reached today.
Ningyo joruri Bunraku was declared UNESCO as "masterpiece on oral and human intangible heritage of human beings" in 2003 (Heisei 15), and "2008 representative list of representatives of human intangible cultural heritage" in 2008 It was stated in.
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