People of all European nations like to disguise as strangers for various feasts; it is common to use masks of Jews, Gypsies and inhabitants of neighbouring countries, especially if those people are of a different religion. In Lithuania, similarly, the most popular masks of this kind were those of Jews, Gypsies and Hungarians1. In the 19th-20th centuries masks of strangers prevailed over the other types of masks. They were characteristic for the period between Christmas and the Epiphany, as well as for Shrove Tuesday, Easter, weddings and flax braking feasts. Even though Lithuania is not a big country, the tradition of such entertainers in disguise varied from region to region. Christmas season mummers were more characteristic of the east of...
[...] Tradition of dressed sculpture in Europe has been known since the second half of the 16th cent...
CARNIVAL CELEBRATIONS IN RESIA In Resia masks appeared in the period between Epiphany and Ash Wesdne...
The article shows what information the press between 1905 and 1940 provided Lithuanian readers about...
Straipsnyje nagrinėjamos populiarios XIX-XXI a. pradžios įvairių persirengėlių karnavalų kaukės, tur...
Winter- and Spring-time calendar feasts have old time sources and they are well-known both in contem...
Lietuviškoje XX a. pirmosios pusės (1905-1940) periodikoje esanti informacija atskleidžia Užgavėnių ...
Diplomsko delo se navezuje na tradicionalne pustne like iz območja Ptuja in Ormoža. Tradicionalni pu...
This article analyses the specific features of strangers (people of other nations) in Lithuanian fol...
The songs of the costumed characters in the Shrovetide processions - 'beggars', 'Jews', and Gypsies'...
The ways of maturation of each national spiritual culture are unique and closely related to its hist...
Ceremony of masks in folk tradition – Fašiangy (Mardi Gras) – in Bohemia and Slovakia. Attempt to de...
This aim of this book is to present ancient Lithuanian calendar festivals that were celebrated by pe...
The relationship between ethnographic calendars and public holidays based on them in the second half...
The article is aimed at answering the question whether confessional and ethnic background has an imp...
On costumed processions in Žemaitija on Shrove Tuesday, the ‘beggars’ were and are among the main ch...
[...] Tradition of dressed sculpture in Europe has been known since the second half of the 16th cent...
CARNIVAL CELEBRATIONS IN RESIA In Resia masks appeared in the period between Epiphany and Ash Wesdne...
The article shows what information the press between 1905 and 1940 provided Lithuanian readers about...
Straipsnyje nagrinėjamos populiarios XIX-XXI a. pradžios įvairių persirengėlių karnavalų kaukės, tur...
Winter- and Spring-time calendar feasts have old time sources and they are well-known both in contem...
Lietuviškoje XX a. pirmosios pusės (1905-1940) periodikoje esanti informacija atskleidžia Užgavėnių ...
Diplomsko delo se navezuje na tradicionalne pustne like iz območja Ptuja in Ormoža. Tradicionalni pu...
This article analyses the specific features of strangers (people of other nations) in Lithuanian fol...
The songs of the costumed characters in the Shrovetide processions - 'beggars', 'Jews', and Gypsies'...
The ways of maturation of each national spiritual culture are unique and closely related to its hist...
Ceremony of masks in folk tradition – Fašiangy (Mardi Gras) – in Bohemia and Slovakia. Attempt to de...
This aim of this book is to present ancient Lithuanian calendar festivals that were celebrated by pe...
The relationship between ethnographic calendars and public holidays based on them in the second half...
The article is aimed at answering the question whether confessional and ethnic background has an imp...
On costumed processions in Žemaitija on Shrove Tuesday, the ‘beggars’ were and are among the main ch...
[...] Tradition of dressed sculpture in Europe has been known since the second half of the 16th cent...
CARNIVAL CELEBRATIONS IN RESIA In Resia masks appeared in the period between Epiphany and Ash Wesdne...
The article shows what information the press between 1905 and 1940 provided Lithuanian readers about...