Kyoto Prefecture (京都府, Kyōto-fu) is a prefecture of Japan in the Kansai region of the island of Honshu. The capital is the city of Kyoto.
Restaurants in Kyoto Prefecture
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A fireworks festival held in Miyazuwan, famous for Amanohashidate, one of Japan's three most scenic spots. As the sun sets over the ocean, colorfully decorated ships of souls and 10,000 lanterns float out to sea, and the glittering of the red and white lights against the surface of the water creates a magical atmosphere. Then fireworks are launched, and the beautiful fireworks color the night sky until the Star Mine climax over the ocean. After the fireworks, the festival continues with a Bon dance competition, and crowds of people dance while enjoying the lingering memories of the fireworks.
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The Arashiyama Hanatouro "light up" is a visually stunning festival held in the chill of December. Spotlights and lanterns are set out to illuminate Arashiyama's Togetsukyo Bridge, and the foothills of the surrounding mountains. The enchanted glow is especially dreamy at the local temples and in the bamboo forest, where pathways lined with tall, looming stalks of bamboo are highlighted in an orange haze. The town celebrates by staying open late, and many stores sell local food and goods to visitors.
The place a fantastic! The tree forest view is so beautiful and serene to walk in. Despite the autumn heat to journey there, there is no regret arriving at the location. Should have taken the bus from Kyoto there instead of taking the train service - the bus takes you to the entrance of the Arashiyama bamboo forest. We went dressed up in traditional samurai costume that made it even more memorable and the food is just simply delicious. Just ignore the tourist crowd from mainland China, who do not seemed to respect Arashiyama. Take your own time there and expect to spend a day there immersing yourself in the peaceful surrounding and having meals there.
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The Gion Matsuri is Japan's most famous festival, with its origins reaching back all the way to 869. Spanning the whole month of July, it is studded with benchmark events. The most breathtaking of these is the Yamaboko Junko on July 17th, which sees a procession of 80-foot tall wheeled floats paraded throughout the city. The event is repeated on a smaller scale on the 24th. Yoiyama evening celebrations leading up to the parade close off the main streets to automotive traffic and fill them instead with food, drink, and game stalls. Visitors earlier in the month are welcome to watch the massive floats being assembled by hand for the celebration.
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Higashiyama Hanatouro is one of Kyoto's most anticipated and celebrated local festivals. Over 2,500 bamboo lanterns light the walking path leading to the foothills of beautiful Higashiyama Mountain by nightfall, illuminating the pathways, temples, and parkland in their wake. Visitors carry flowers and paper lanterns, a stroll leisurely, taking in the enchanting glow, and large, fantastical displays of ikebana flowers are specially constructed to delight viewers. Special events take place throughout, with evenings featuring geisha dancing at the local temples, and school children playing drums and singing songs. The illumination takes place nightly during the festival, between 6:00-9:30pm.
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Called Daimonji by locals, the Gozan no Okuribi celebrates the end of the August Obon festival. Five massive bonfires alight around the outskirts of the city, each pyre built upon a separate mountain face. Their burning represents the return of ancestral spirits, thought to visit their families during the Obon, back to the afterlife-- like smoke rising. The bonfires are each distinctive, one in the shape of the character for 'great', another in the shape of a shrine gate, yet another taking the form of a boat. They burn brightly and can be spotted from miles away.
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Popularly known as "Sakuyosa," the "Kyoto Sakura Yosakoi" is a festival created mainly by the students of Kyoto. Since it started in 2005 the number of participants has grown, and it is now the largest yosakoi festival in Kansai. At venues that include the famous sightseeing parks, shrines and temples across the city, more than 150 teams each perform their own interpretive style of the yosakoi dance. There are also many ways for viewers to enjoy the festival, such as a yosakoi experience, the "1-hour So-odori" when the dancers and audience members become one, photo contests, stamp rallies, and the sale of original goods.
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A fireworks festival held on the banks of the Oigawa River about five minutes walk from JR Yagi Station, it used to be known as the "Yagi Fireworks Festival." It started in 1947, shortly after the end of the war, to commemorate those who died in the war, and this continues to this day with about 500 lanterns set afloat to create a magical atmosphere before the fireworks display. The festival mood is enhanced by an opening event, featuring song and dance, and a village of street stalls.
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"Okera-sai" is a ritual that takes place early in the morning on New Year's Day at Yasaka Shrine in Higashiyama Ward, Kyoto. On the night of New Year's Eve, the holy flame lit on December 28th in accordance with an ancient rite is taken from the main shrine building and used to light the "Okera Lanterns" set up within the grounds of the shrine. This flame is transferred to a match cord made of bamboo and, twirling it round and round to keep the flame from going out, it is taken home, and this is known as "okera-mairi." Once taken home the flame is used to light the family altar and to start cooking the zoni (traditional dishes) eaten to celebrate the New Year. The remaining match cord is hung in the kitchen as protection from fire. In the "okerasai" ritual that takes place from 5am on New Year's Day, okera medicinal herbs (Atractylodes rhizome) mixed with kezurikake (decorative reed-shaped twigs) are set alight to ward off evil spirits and thrown onto the paving stones in front of the main shrine building. In this traditional Kyoto event, we pray for peace during the coming year.
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The Aoi Matsuri, or Hollyhock Festival, is a celebration of piety and purification from Japan's ancient history, still carried out at Kyoto's Kamo shrines today. The main event is a morning procession of oxcarts, cows, horses, and six-hundred people dressed in traditional Heian-era clothing holding hollyhock leaves, led by an Imperial Messenger. The troupe, which also includes a saio-dai maiden in twelve layers of silk robe whose role it is to praise the shrine deities, make a pilgrimage from Kyoto Imperial Palace to the Shimogamo and Kamigamo shrines, where old rituals are performed. Horse races and archery competitions are also held in honor of the festivities.
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