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Peer Review

[edit]

I have checked and reviewed the article and the information provided was very interesting. I have also checked the grammatical errors and made changes accordingly. I think you improve and add more information to this article before you actually move it to the actual Wikipedia page for the public to see. I do not see any bias in this article since it more informative.

How credible and reliable are the sources you have cited here? It looks credible but you can also look if you find more scholarly reports on this subject which will help improve this article even more.

The references cited are repeated with the same links and you only need to cite them once. You should be able to change them. The overall article is good and informative and is a wonderful contribution to Wikipedia. Good luck with your future edits and moving it to the main page. Thanks Fahmad007 (talk) 04:55, 29 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Kumagaya Uchiwa Festival

Kumagaya Uchiwa Festival is the most important festival that occurs in Saitama Prefecture Kumagaya city every year. The festival is held for five days from July 19th to 23rd annually. This festival is called Uchiwa and (matsuri), because Uchiwa, the traditional Japanese fans, were distributed to people during the festival in the Meiji era.[1]

There is a total of 12 dashi; children and adults march through the streets by pulling a long and thick rope attached to dashi. Traffic is controlled during the festival. A 30-centimeter hand gong makes a big sound with musical accompaniment. Each district has dashi and competes for musical accompaniment by putting their dashi next to each other. Kids and adults play ohayashi, Japanese drumming on the mikoshi. [2] They practice playing instruments every summer, about two months ahead of the festival.

Uchiwa Festival is one of the biggest summer events in Kumagaya, along with Sakura Festival and Kumagaya fireworks festival. More than 750,000 people participate in the festival, and it is referred to as the number one festival in Kanto region.[3] The streets are lined on both sides with stand-selling shops, which sell Yakisoba, cotton candy, Japanese candy, shaved ice, crepes, and many other kinds of foods and toys.

History

The festival first began in 1750. Mikoshi was first made in 1830 and around 1902, when merchants started to give uchiwa to customers. Around the same time, the town grew due to development of the silk industry. Each district began to buy dashi to represent their wealth; they compete which district has bigger and good quality dashi. This was the beginning of the Uchiwa festival.

Lots of prototypes are carried from Edo and Meiji period; on March 30, 2012, the festival was designated as an intangible cultural property by Kumagaya city.[4] — Preceding unsigned comment added by Writ100beloit2017 (talkcontribs) 06:17, 19 December 2017 (UTC)[reply]