Courtesy "Centrul Judetean pentru Conservarea si Promovarea Culturii Traditionale, Brasov"
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But what is sure is that the celebration (Juni deriving from the Latin "young men") sees the youth of the Schei (formerly a traditional Romanian village, now a district of Brasov) riding through the town dressed up in amazing costumes and followed by brass bands.
Some of the elaborate costumes are over 150 years old and one of them is sewn with over 40000 spangles and weighs almost 10 kilograms !
The old celebration used to take place during ten days: on 25 March (Blagovestenie, an important day in the traditional calendar), on the Palm Sunday and the eight days starting with the Easter Sunday.
The custom was minutely organized: very strict rules of entering and leaving the Juni, the ritual acts carefully performed on specific days and specific moments, age prohibitions imposed to the participants, ritual meals, ritual dances (cateaua, hora) and artifacts (the fife/surla, the mace/buzduganul), fertility and virility practices, etc.
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