Misplaced Pages

Draft:Italian bonfires: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editContent deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 18:45, 10 January 2025 editMoriwen (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, New page reviewers27,464 editsm Moriwen moved page Italian bonfires to Draft:Italian bonfires: Not ready for mainspace, incubate in draftspace. Reason/s: no sourcesTag: moveToDraft← Previous edit Latest revision as of 18:45, 10 January 2025 edit undoMoriwen (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, New page reviewers27,464 edits AFC draftTag: moveToDraft 
Line 1: {{Draft article}} {{Short description|Popular tradition of north-eastern Italy and western Emilia}}   Italian bonfires are a popular tradition in north-eastern Italy and western Emilia consisting in burning large piles of wood and branches in the first days of January (usually on the eve of ]). Given its wide diffusion, there are many versions and names for it: in ] it is called in different ways: ''pignarûl'' (central Friuli), ''cabosse'' (in the lower Friuli), ''seima'' in ], ''falop'', ''foghere''/''fogoron'' or ''caséra'' in the areas near the ] in central and western Friuli. In the part bordering on Veneto and in the Veneto provinces of ] and ] ''panevìn'' or ''panaìn'' (from ''pan e vin'', {{literally|bread and wine}}, as a sign of good wishes for a year of abundance), but also ''panèra'', ''capàn'', ''pìroła-pàroła'', ''vècia'' ({{literally|old}}: pyres can take the shape of a puppet), ''fogherada'' and ''bubarata'' (Padua), in the Veronese and ] areas ''briolo'', ''buriolo'', ''brugnèlo'', ''brujèo'', ''bruja'' and the like, as well as in ] is ''burièl''. In the provinces of ] and ] it is called '']''. In the ] and ] areas there is the custom of burning a puppet representing an old man ('']'', ''vciån'' in ]), as on Lake Maggiore, where it is called ''se brüsa ul vécc''. {{Drafts moved from mainspace|date=January 2025}}

Latest revision as of 18:45, 10 January 2025

This is a draft article. It is a work in progress open to editing by anyone. Please ensure core content policies are met before publishing it as a live Misplaced Pages article.

Find sources: Google (books · news · scholar · free images · WP refs· FENS · JSTOR · TWL
Easy tools: Citation bot (help) | Advanced: Fix bare URLs · Article logs · Draft logs.


Last edited by Moriwen (talk | contribs) 10 hours ago. (Update) Finished drafting? Submit for review or Publish now
Popular tradition of north-eastern Italy and western Emilia

Italian bonfires are a popular tradition in north-eastern Italy and western Emilia consisting in burning large piles of wood and branches in the first days of January (usually on the eve of Epiphany). Given its wide diffusion, there are many versions and names for it: in Friuli it is called in different ways: pignarûl (central Friuli), cabosse (in the lower Friuli), seima in Bisiacaria, falop, foghere/fogoron or caséra in the areas near the Tagliamento in central and western Friuli. In the part bordering on Veneto and in the Veneto provinces of Treviso and Venice panevìn or panaìn (from pan e vin, lit. 'bread and wine', as a sign of good wishes for a year of abundance), but also panèra, capàn, pìroła-pàroła, vècia (lit. 'old': pyres can take the shape of a puppet), fogherada and bubarata (Padua), in the Veronese and Polesine areas briolo, buriolo, brugnèlo, brujèo, bruja and the like, as well as in Mantua is burièl. In the provinces of Parma and Reggio Emilia it is called Fasagna. In the Bologna and Modena areas there is the custom of burning a puppet representing an old man (falò del vecchione, vciån in Bolognese), as on Lake Maggiore, where it is called se brüsa ul vécc.

Category: