Wiki Loves Living Heritage/nanguan
nanguan
- music genre
- Wikidata item: nanguan (Q700805)
- UNESCO ICH ID: RL/00199
- instance of: music genre
- country of origin: People's Republic of China
- subclass of: Chinese classical music
- intangible cultural heritage status: Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity ()
- described at URL: https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/00199 (English)
https://ich.unesco.org/fr/RL/00199 (French)
https://ich.unesco.org/es/RL/00199 (Spanish)
Introduction
How can I contribute?
Add a piece of text
Add an openly licensed piece of text below for annotating. Remember to add the source reference and a reference to the open license. If that is not possible, you can either write an article in Wikipedia, write the piece of text yourself with references, or add references at the bottom of the page.
Make visible hidden related topics
Enter edit mode and urderline important related topics in the text. This way you can tell others to link them to their Wikidata items.
Create related topics
Pick a highlighted topic and link it to its Wikidata item. If the item is missing, you can create it! You can find instructions in this article.
Texts
editNanyin is a musical performing art central to the culture of the people of Minnan in southern Fujian Province along China’s south-eastern coast, and to Minnan populations overseas. The slow, simple and elegant melodies are performed on distinctive instruments such as a bamboo flute called the dongxiao and a crooked-neck lute played horizontally called the pipa, as well as more common wind, string and percussion instruments. Of nanyin’s three components, the first is purely instrumental, the second includes voice, and the third consists of ballads accompanied by the ensemble and sung in Quanzhou dialect, either by a sole singer who also plays clappers or by a group of four who perform in turn. The rich repertoire of songs and scores preserves ancient folk music and poems and has influenced opera, puppet theatre and other performing art traditions. Nanyin is deeply rooted in the social life of the Minnan region. It is performed during spring and autumn ceremonies to worship Meng Chang, the god of music, at weddings and funerals, and during joyful festivities in courtyards, markets and the streets. It is the sound of the motherland for Minnan people in China and throughout South-East Asia.[1]
Wikipedia articles
How can I contribute?
Is there already an article in your language about this element?
Read articles about this element by clicking on one of the blue buttons.
You can translate an existing article to your own language by clicking on a white button. You may be asked to enable translation. After you have enabled it, click the back button in your browser to continue from where you were. You can change the source language in the language menu to select a language you know better or that has a more popular article. Start over if you loose track.
This list is generated from data in Wikidata and is periodically updated by a bot.
Edits made within the list area will be removed on the next update!
Images
How can I contribute?
Does this element have a Wikimedia Commons category?
You can find images of this element in the Nanyin category on Wikimedia Commons.
Find all the images on Wikimedia Commons
Find images that are not added to the Wikimedia Commons category. Search Wikimedia Commons to find images that depict nanguan. Add all the images that depict this element to the category and add depicts statements to them.
Add an image to the Wikidata item
Pick the image that you think is the best and add to the nanguan Wikidata item with the image (P18) property.
References
- ↑ "UNESCO - Nanyin". ich.unesco.org. Retrieved 2023-03-01.
Further reading
How can I contribute?
Gather a bibliography
Add source references to this page where they can be used by editors in all Wikipedias. Some of the sources may also be added to Wikidata.