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Camellia Tea Ceremony
Camellia Tea Ceremony
@camelliakyoto@mastodon.social  ·  activity timestamp 5 months ago

It was Ei'ichirō's wife Yuki, in 1895, that suggested he shape the incense into coils.
It took 7 years to perfect!

Nowadays katori senkō has become synonymous with a pig-shaped holder called 'kayari buta' (蚊遣り豚 the 'mosquito repelling pig').
It is deeply evocative of summer.

#pig #kayaributa #蚊遣り豚

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Kayari buta, a pig shaped holder for mosquito coils. The coil is hung from a metal wire after being lit...the smoke easily curls out of the pig's open back and wide snout.
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Camellia Tea Ceremony
Camellia Tea Ceremony
@camelliakyoto@mastodon.social replied  ·  activity timestamp 5 months ago

It was Ei'ichirō's wife Yuki, in 1895, that suggested he shape the incense into coils.
It took 7 years to perfect!

Nowadays katori senkō has become synonymous with a pig-shaped holder called 'kayari buta' (蚊遣り豚 the 'mosquito repelling pig').
It is deeply evocative of summer.

#pig #kayaributa #蚊遣り豚

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Open original
Kayari buta, a pig shaped holder for mosquito coils. The coil is hung from a metal wire after being lit...the smoke easily curls out of the pig's open back and wide snout.
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Camellia Tea Ceremony
Camellia Tea Ceremony
@camelliakyoto@mastodon.social replied  ·  activity timestamp 5 months ago

But why a pig?

There is no definitive answer, but the connection between pigs (in reality boars) and mosquitoes may have solidified in Edo times.
It is likely the pottery pig-shaped coil holders appeared from the Meiji period in Aichi prefecture.

#kayaributa #蚊遣り豚#Japan

An old kayari buta at Omuro-tei (villa).
An old kayari buta at Omuro-tei (villa).
An old kayari buta at Omuro-tei (villa).
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Camellia Tea Ceremony
Camellia Tea Ceremony
@camelliakyoto@mastodon.social replied  ·  activity timestamp 5 months ago

🌫️SMOKE TO PIG🐷

In the Edo period it was common to use smoke as a simple mosquito repellant, but as most buildings were made of paper and wood many people in built up areas were concerned about naked flames.

Boars, as familiars of the fire deity, became linked to fire protection.

4 media
Woodblock print of a fire raging in Edo.

Image thanks - https://ja.ukiyo-e.org/
Woodblock print of a fire raging in Edo. Image thanks - https://ja.ukiyo-e.org/
Woodblock print of a fire raging in Edo. Image thanks - https://ja.ukiyo-e.org/
Woodblock print of a baby Wu Meng fanning smoke to keep mosquitoes away from his sleeping father.

Image thanks - https://ja.ukiyo-e.org/
Woodblock print of a baby Wu Meng fanning smoke to keep mosquitoes away from his sleeping father. Image thanks - https://ja.ukiyo-e.org/
Woodblock print of a baby Wu Meng fanning smoke to keep mosquitoes away from his sleeping father. Image thanks - https://ja.ukiyo-e.org/
Woodblock print a young lady hanging a mosquito net.

Image thanks - https://ja.ukiyo-e.org/
Woodblock print a young lady hanging a mosquito net. Image thanks - https://ja.ukiyo-e.org/
Woodblock print a young lady hanging a mosquito net. Image thanks - https://ja.ukiyo-e.org/
Woodblock print a young women beneath a mosquito net.

Image thanks - https://ja.ukiyo-e.org/
Woodblock print a young women beneath a mosquito net. Image thanks - https://ja.ukiyo-e.org/
Woodblock print a young women beneath a mosquito net. Image thanks - https://ja.ukiyo-e.org/
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Camellia Tea Ceremony
Camellia Tea Ceremony
@camelliakyoto@mastodon.social replied  ·  activity timestamp 5 months ago

In addition to this connection between boars and fire, it was believed that the thick, hairy skin of the animals helped protect them from mosquitoes, and so these ideas maybe inspired potters when they came to create a holder for incense coils...

#kayaributa #蚊遣り豚 #incense

4 media
Boar statue at Goo-jinja (the animals are the familiars of the enshrined god).
Boar statue at Goo-jinja (the animals are the familiars of the enshrined god).
Boar statue at Goo-jinja (the animals are the familiars of the enshrined god).
A boar shaped monaka (a wafer filled with bean jam).
A boar shaped monaka (a wafer filled with bean jam).
A boar shaped monaka (a wafer filled with bean jam).
A sea of omikuji holders in the shape of boars at Kennin-ji's Zenkyo-an.
A sea of omikuji holders in the shape of boars at Kennin-ji's Zenkyo-an.
A sea of omikuji holders in the shape of boars at Kennin-ji's Zenkyo-an.
A banner featuring a leaping boar at Goo-jinja (in celebration of the Year of the Boar).
A banner featuring a leaping boar at Goo-jinja (in celebration of the Year of the Boar).
A banner featuring a leaping boar at Goo-jinja (in celebration of the Year of the Boar).
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Camellia Tea Ceremony
Camellia Tea Ceremony
@camelliakyoto@mastodon.social replied  ·  activity timestamp 5 months ago

🐖PIG TO POT🍯
Some time from the Meiji period livestock farmers in what is now Aichi Prefecture were using incense to keep mosquitoes away from their animals.

They placed the incense in old pots, readily available as the local town of Tokoname (常滑) produced pottery.
#Japan

4 media
Incense left as offerings at temples. Typically you will see a large cauldron outside the main halls of temples into which incense sticks are lit and stuck. Some faithful fan the smoke over themselves as an act of prayer and purification.
Incense left as offerings at temples. Typically you will see a large cauldron outside the main halls of temples into which incense sticks are lit and stuck. Some faithful fan the smoke over themselves as an act of prayer and purification.
Incense left as offerings at temples. Typically you will see a large cauldron outside the main halls of temples into which incense sticks are lit and stuck. Some faithful fan the smoke over themselves as an act of prayer and purification.
Incense sticks stuck into a cauldron as an act of prayer at temples.
Incense sticks stuck into a cauldron as an act of prayer at temples.
Incense sticks stuck into a cauldron as an act of prayer at temples.
Incense sticks stuck into a cauldron as an act of prayer at temples.
Incense sticks stuck into a cauldron as an act of prayer at temples.
Incense sticks stuck into a cauldron as an act of prayer at temples.
Incense sticks stuck into a cauldron as an act of prayer at temples.
Incense sticks stuck into a cauldron as an act of prayer at temples.
Incense sticks stuck into a cauldron as an act of prayer at temples.
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