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Botan Dōrō (牡丹燈籠, The Peony Lantern) is a Japanese ghost story and one of the most famous kaidan in Japan. The plot involves sex with the dead and the consequences of loving a ghost. It is sometimes known as Kaidan Botan Dōrō ( 怪談牡丹灯籠 , Tales of the Peony Lantern ) , based on the kabuki version of the story; this title ...
Botan Rice Candy is a specific brand of a category of Japanese candy called bontan ame (ボンタンアメ). Bontan ame are soft, chewy, citrus-flavored candy with an outer layer of rice paper or Oblaat. The rice paper is clear and plastic-like when dry, but it is edible and dissolves in the mouth. This candy was invented by Seika Foods in 1924 ...
Kaidan Botan Dōrō (怪談牡丹燈籠) (Peony lantern kaidan) is a story inspired by the Chinese influenced kaidan Botan Dōrō. Published as a stenography narrated and created by the rakugo artist San'yūtei Enchō and written with the aid of both Sakai Shōzō (酒井昇造) and Wakabayashi Kanzō (若林玵蔵). Published in 1886, it is ...
Peony (Japanese and Thai: botan) Botan Rice Candy, a brand of traditional rice-based Japanese candy; Botan (programming library), a BSD-licensed crypto library written in C++; Botan, the name of Kyou Fujibayashi's pet piglet in the visual novel Clannad; Botan (YuYu Hakusho), a fictional character in the anime and manga series YuYu Hakusho
Botamochi (ぼたもち or 牡丹餅) is a wagashi (Japanese confection) made with glutinous rice, white rice (ratio of 7:3, or only glutinous rice), and sweet azuki paste (red bean paste). They are made by soaking the rice for approximately 1 hour. The rice is then cooked, and a thick azuki paste is hand-packed around pre-formed balls of rice.
Kaidan botan dōrō Sanyutei Encho I ( 初代 三遊亭 圓朝(円朝) , Shodai San'yūtei Enchō , born Jirokichi Izubuchi ( 出淵 次郎吉 , Izubuchi Jirokichi ) ) May 13, 1839 – August 11, 1900 was a Japanese author and rakugo performer of the late Edo and early Meiji eras.
Pronunciation of 牡丹 (peony) in Japan is "botan." In kampo, the Japanese adaptation of Chinese medicine, its root was used as a treatment for convulsions. It is also cultivated as a garden plant. In Japan Paeonia suffruticosa is called the "King of Flowers" and Paeonia lactiflora is called the "Prime Minister of Flowers." [35]
Botan is a popular character with fans, coming in fifth and sixth place in the series' first two popularity polls. [15] [16] She came in fourth in the American Shonen Jump poll. [15] Botan was ranked as the seventh most popular female anime character in Animage ' s 1993 Anime Grand Prix, the eighth in 1994, and the eleventh in 1995. [17] [18] [19]