In 6th-century
India, religious tales called s were performed by traveling storytellers who carried banners painted with images of gods from house to house. Another form called featured the storytellers carrying vertical cloth scrolls and sung stories of the afterlife. In recent times, this is still performed by
Chitrakar women from
West Bengal, India. In
Tibet, this was known as and in other parts of
China this was known as . In
Indonesia, the scroll was made horizontally which is called the
wayang beber and employed four performers: a man who sings the story, two men who operate the rolling of the scroll, and a woman who holds a lamp to illuminate particular pictures featured in the story. Other Indonesian theater forms, which are labelled as
shadow play are the
wayang kulit and
wayang golek which uses rod
puppetry, these are still performed today. In
Japan, appears as () or () in the form of hanging scrolls divided into separate panels, foreshadowing the popular modern
manga, or Japanese
comics. sometimes took the shape of little booklets, or even displays of
dolls posed on the roadside with backgrounds behind them. In the 20th century, Japanese candymen on bicycles would bring serial shows called () where the story was told on a series of changing pictures that slid in and out of an open-framed box. Some shows had a
raree show element to them, where a viewer could pay extra to peer through a hole and see a supposed
artifact from the story. ==Europe==