Decoration clay Kotobuki Tsuru Kame – 63 x 63 cm

405,00

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SKU: 15972 Category:
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Weight 4800 g
Dimensions 63 × 63 cm
Article number 15972
Made in Japan
Material Porcelain

Product description

Kagami-biraki is a ceremony performed at festive occasions where the lid of the sake barrel is broken open by a wooden hammer and then served to all present.

Kagami refers to the lid of the sake barrel and biraki means “open,” so kagami-biraki literally means “opening the lid.” Due to the round shape of the lid, the kagami is a symbol of harmony.

Therefore, kagami-biraki symbolizes an opening to harmony and happiness.

The origin of the sake barrel kagami-biraki is said to trace back to another type of kagami-biraki involving mochi, or “soft round rice cakes,” which was performed on the first working day of the new year or the beginning of events to commemorate.

In the past, samurai households would make an offering to the gods on New Year’s Day of a stack of mochi representing the kagami.

Even today, the mochi is cut into pieces to symbolize “opening” and eaten on January 11th; most households and offices observe this custom, placing kagami-mochi on their kamidana (a small Shinto altar usually set on a shelf above a lintel) on New Year’s Day.

Both types of kagami-biraki – breaking open a sake barrel for Shinto blessings and celebrations, and cutting kagami-mochi – are a way to pray to the gods for good health and happiness at moments in time, such as the new year or the start of a new beginning in life or business.

For such reasons, kagami-biraki is becoming an increasingly popular way to launch housewarming parties, foundation events.

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