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Chinese gods and immortals

Chinese traditional religion is polytheistic; many deities are worshipped in a pantheistic view where divinity is inherent in the world.[1] The gods are energies or principles revealing, imitating, and propagating the way of heaven (Tian ),[2] which is the supreme godhead manifesting in the northern culmen of the starry vault of the skies and its order.[citation needed] Many gods are ancestors or men who became deities for their heavenly achievements. Most gods are also identified with stars and constellations.[3] Ancestors are regarded as the equivalent of Heaven within human society,[4] and therefore, as the means of connecting back to Heaven, which is the "utmost ancestral father" (曾祖父 zēngzǔfù).[5]

Qing dynasty Water and Land Ritual painting (水陆画) of Buddhist, Daoist, and Folk Deities.
A complex of deities at an outdoor fountain-altar with incense burners at a pilgrimage area in Weihai, Shandong. At the centre stands Mazu, surrounded by the four Dragon Gods (龍神) and various lesser deities. Distant behind Mazu stands the Sun Goddess (太陽神).

There are a variety of immortals in Chinese thought, and one major type is the xian, which is thought in some religious Taoism movements to be a human given long or infinite life.

Gods are innumerable, as every phenomenon has or is one or more gods, and they are organised in a complex celestial hierarchy.[6] Besides the traditional worship of these entities, Confucianism, Taoism, and formal thinkers in general give theological interpretations affirming a monistic essence of divinity.[7]

"Polytheism" and "monotheism" are categories derived from Western religion and do not fit Chinese religion, which has never conceived the two things as opposites.[8] Tian bridges the gap between supernatural phenomena and many kinds of beings, giving them a single source from spiritual energy in some Chinese belief systems.[2] However, there is a significant belief in Taoism which differentiates tian from the forces of earth and water, which are held to be equally powerful.[9]

Since all gods are considered manifestations of , the "power" or pneuma of Heaven, in some views of tian, some scholars have employed the term "polypneumatism" or "(poly)pneumatolatry", first coined by Walter Medhurst (1796–1857), to describe the practice of Chinese polytheism.[10] Some Taoists consider deities the manifestation of the Tao.[citation needed]

In the theology of the classic texts and Confucianism, "Heaven is the lord of the hundreds of deities".[11]

Modern Confucian theology compares them to intelligence, substantial forms or entelechies (inner purposes) as explained by Leibniz, generating all types of beings, so that "even mountains and rivers are worshipped as something capable of enjoying sacrificial offerings".[12]

Unlike in Hinduism, the deification of historical persons and ancestors is not traditionally the duty of Confucians or Taoists.[clarification needed] Rather, it depends on the choices of common people; persons are deified when they have made extraordinary deeds and have left an efficacious legacy. Yet, Confucians and Taoists traditionally may demand that state honours be granted to a particular deity. Each deity has a cult centre and ancestral temple where he or she, or the parents, lived their mortal life. There are frequently disputes over which is the original place and source temple of the cult of a deity.[13]

God of Heaven edit

 
Like other symbols such as the sauwastika,[14] (wàn; 'all things') in Chinese, the Mesopotamian dingir or anu 𒀭𒀭,[15] and also the Chinese ; wu; 'shaman' (in Shang script represented by a graph resembling the cross potent ☩),[16] Tian refers to the northern celestial pole (北極; běijí), the pivot and the vault of the sky with its spinning constellations.[3] Here is an approximate representation of the tiānmén (天門; 'gate of heaven').[17] or tiānshū (天樞; 'pivot of heaven')[18] as the precessional north celestial pole, with α Ursae Minoris as the pole star, with the spinning Chariot constellations in the four phases of time. According to Reza Assasi's theories, the may not only be centred in the current precessional pole at α Ursae Minoris, but also very near to the north ecliptic pole if Draco (天龙; 天龍; Tiānlóng) is conceived as one of its two beams.[19][note 1]

Chinese traditional theology, which comes in different interpretations according to the classic texts, and specifically Confucian, Taoist, and other philosophical formulations,[20] is fundamentally monistic, that is to say, it sees the world and the gods who produce it as an organic whole, or cosmos.[21] The universal principle that gives origin to the world is conceived as transcendent and immanent to creation, at the same time.[22] The Chinese idea of the universal God is expressed in different ways. There are many names of God from the different sources of Chinese tradition.[23]

The radical Chinese terms for the universal God are Tiān and Shàngdì 上帝 (the "Highest Deity") or simply, ("Deity").[24][25] There is also the concept of Tàidì 太帝 (the "Great Deity"). is a title expressing dominance over the all-under-Heaven, that is, all things generated by Heaven and ordered by its cycles and by the stars.[26] Tiān is usually translated as "Heaven", but by graphical etymology, it means "Great One" and a number of scholars relate it to the same through phonetic etymology and trace their common root, through their archaic forms, respectively *Teeŋ and *Tees, to the symbols of the squared north celestial pole godhead (Dīng ).[3][27] These names are combined in different ways in Chinese theological literature, often interchanged in the same paragraph, if not in the same sentence.[28]

Names of the God of Heaven edit

Besides Shangdi and Taidi, other names include Yudi ("Jade Deity") and Taiyi ("Great Oneness") who, in mythical imagery, holds the ladle of the Big Dipper (Great Chariot), providing the movement of life to the world.[29] As the hub of the skies, the north celestial pole constellations are known, among various names, as Tiānmén 天門 ("Gate of Heaven")[30] and Tiānshū 天樞 ("Pivot of Heaven").[31]

Other names of the God of Heaven are attested in the vast Chinese religio-philosophical literary tradition:

  • Tiāndì 天帝—the "Deity of Heaven" or "Emperor of Heaven":[32] "On Rectification" (Zheng lun) of the Xunzi uses this term to refer to the active God of Heaven setting in motion creation;[26]
  • Tiānzhǔ 天主—the "Lord of Heaven": In "The Document of Offering Sacrifices to Heaven and Earth on the Mountain Tai" (Fengshan shu) of the Records of the Grand Historian, it is used as the title of the first God from whom all the other gods derive.[33]
  • Tiānhuáng 天皇—the "August Personage of Heaven": In the "Poem of Fathoming Profundity" (Si'xuan fu), transcribed in "The History of the Later Han Dynasty" (Hou Han shu), Zhang Heng ornately writes: «I ask the superintendent of the Heavenly Gate to open the door and let me visit the King of Heaven at the Jade Palace»;[32]
  • Tiānwáng 天王—the "King of Heaven" or "Monarch of Heaven".
  • Tiāngōng 天公—the "Duke of Heaven" or "General of Heaven";[34]
  • Tiānjūn 天君—the "Prince of Heaven" or "Lord of Heaven";[34]
  • Tiānzūn 天尊—the "Heavenly Venerable", also a title for high gods in Taoist theologies;[32]
  • Tiānshén 天神—the "God of Heaven", interpreted in the Shuowen Jiezi as "the being that gives birth to all things";[26]
  • Shénhuáng 神皇—"God the August", attested in Taihong ("The Origin of Vital Breath");[26]
  • Lǎotiānyé (老天爺)—the "Olden Heavenly Father".[32]

Tian is both transcendent and immanent, manifesting in the three forms of dominance, destiny, and nature of things. In the Wujing yiyi (五經異義, "Different Meanings in the Five Classics"), Xu Shen explains that the designation of Heaven is quintuple:[33]

  • Huáng Tiān 皇天 —"August Heaven" or "Imperial Heaven", when it is venerated as the lord of creation;
  • Hào Tiān 昊天—"Vast Heaven", with regard to the vastness of its vital breath (qi);
  • Mín Tiān 旻天—"Compassionate Heaven", for it hears and corresponds with justice to the all-under-Heaven;
  • Shàng Tiān 上天—"Highest Heaven" or "First Heaven", for it is the primordial being supervising all-under-Heaven;
  • Cāng Tiān 蒼天—"Deep-Green Heaven", for it being unfathomably deep.

All these designations reflect a hierarchical, multiperspective experience of divinity.[23]

Lists of gods, deities and immortals edit

 
Main altar and statue of Doumu inside the Temple of Doumu in Butterworth, Penang, Malaysia.
 
A temple dedicated to Pangu in Zhunan, Miaoli.

Many classical books have lists and hierarchies of gods and immortals, among which are the "Completed Record of Deities and Immortals" (神仙通鑑, Shénxiān Tōngjiàn) of the Ming dynasty,[35] and the Biographies of the Deities and Immortals or Shenxian Zhuan by Ge Hong (284–343).[36] The older Collected Biographies of the Immortals or Liexian Zhuan also serves the same purpose.

Couplets or polarities, such as Fuxi and Nuwa, Xiwangmu and Dongwanggong, and the highest couple of Heaven and Earth, all embody yin and yang and are at once the originators and maintainers of the ordering process of space and time.[37]

Immortals, or xian, are seen as a variety of different types of beings, including the souls of virtuous Taoists,[38] gods,[38][39] zhenren,[39] and/or a type of supernatural spiritual being who understood heaven.[40] Taoists historically worshipped them the most, although Chinese folk religion practitioners during the Tang dynasty also worshipped them, although there was more skepticism about the goodness, and even the existence, of xian among them.[40]

Chinese folk religion that incorporates elements of the three teachings in modern times and prior eras sometimes viewed Confucius and the Buddha as immortals or beings synonymous to them.[41]

In Taoism and Chinese folk religion, gods and xian[42] are often seen as embodiments of water.[43] Water gods and xian were often thought to ensure good grain harvests, mild weather and seas, and rivers with abundant water.[43] Some xian were thought to be humans who gained power by drinking "charmed water".[42]

Some gods were based on previously existing Taoist immortals, bodhisattvas, or historical figures.[44]

 
Stoneware figure of a Daoist (Taoist) deity. From China, Ming Dynasty, 16th century CE. The British Museum

Cosmic gods edit

  • Yudi (玉帝 "Jade Deity") or Yuhuang (玉皇 "Jade Emperor" or "Jade King"), is the popular human-like representation of the God of Heaven.[45] Jade traditionally represents purity, so it is a metaphor for the unfathomable source of creation.
  • Doumu (斗母 "Mother of the Great Chariot"), often entitled with the honorific Tianhou (天后 "Queen of Heaven")[i] is the heavenly goddess portrayed as the mother of the Big Dipper (Great Chariot), whose seven stars, in addition to two invisible ones, are conceived as her sons, the Jiuhuangshen (九皇神 "Nine God-Kings"), themselves regarded as the ninefold manifestation of Jiuhuangdadi (九皇大帝, "Great Deity of the Nine Kings") or Doufu (斗父 "Father of the Great Chariot"), another name of the God of Heaven. She is, therefore, both wife and mother of the God of Heaven.[46][47]
  • Pangu (盤古), a macranthropic metaphor of the cosmos. He separated yin and yang, creating the earth (murky yin) and the sky (clear yang). All things were made from his body after he died.[48]
  • Xiwangmu (西王母 "Queen Mother of the West"),[ii] identified with the Kunlun Mountain, shamanic inspiration, death, and immortality.[50][51] She is the dark, chthonic goddess, pure yin, at the same time terrifying and benign, both creation and destruction, associated with the tiger and weaving.[52] Her male counterpart is Dongwanggong (東王公 "King Duke of the East";[iii] also called Mugong, 木公 "Duke of the Woods"),[53] who represents the yang principle.[52]
    • Yi the Archer (Hòuyì 后羿) was a man who sought for immortality, reaching Xiwangmu on her mountain, Kunlun.
  • Yanwang (閻王 "Purgatory King")[iv] the ruler of the underworld, assisted by the Heibai Wuchang (黑白無常 "Black and White Impermanence"), representing the alternation of yin and yang principles, alongside Ox-Head and Horse-Face, who escort spirits to his realm.
  • Yinyanggong (陰陽公 "Yinyang Duke"[iii]) or Yinyangsi (陰陽司 "Yinyang Controller"), the personification of the union of yin and yang.

Three Patrons and Five Deities edit

 
Wǔfāng Shàngdì 五方上帝 — The order of Heaven inscribing worlds as tán , "altar", the Chinese concept equivalent to the Indian mandala. The supreme God conceptualised as the Yellow Deity, and Xuanyuan as its human form, is the heart of the universe and the other Four Deities are his emanations. The diagram is based on the Huainanzi.[55]
 
Statue and ceremonial complex of the Yellow and Red Gods in Zhengzhou, Henan.
 
Temple of the Three Officials of Heaven in Chiling, Zhangpu, Fujian.
 
Temple of the Great Deity of the Eastern Peak at Mount Tai, Tai'an, Shandong.
  • 三皇 Sānhuáng — Three Patrons (or Augusts) or 三才 Sāncái — Three Potencies; they are the "vertical" manifestation of Heaven, spatially corresponding to the Three Realms (三界 Sānjiè), representing the yin and yang and the medium between them, that is the human being:
    • 伏羲 Fúxī, the patron of heaven (天皇 Tiānhuáng), also called Bāguàzǔshī (八卦祖師 "Venerable Inventor of the Bagua") by the Taoists, is a divine man reputed to have taught to humanity writing, fishing, and hunting.
    • 女媧 Nǚwā, the patron of earth (地皇 Dehuáng), is a goddess attributed for the creation of mankind and mending the order of the world when it was broken.
    • 神農 Shénnóng — Peasant God, the patron of humanity (人皇 Rénhuáng), identified as Yándì (炎帝 "Flame Deity" or "Fiery Deity"), a divine man said to have taught the techniques of farming, herbal medicine, and marketing. He is often represented as a human with horns and other features of an ox.[56]
  • 五帝 Wǔdì — Five Deities,[57] also Wǔfāng Shàngdì (五方上帝 "Five Manifestations of the Highest Deity"), Wǔfāng Tiānshén (五方天神 "Five Manifestations of the Heavenly God"), Wǔfāngdì (五方帝 "Five Forms Deity"), Wǔtiāndì (五天帝 "Five Heavenly Deities"), Wǔlǎojūn (五老君 "Five Ancient Lords"), Wǔdàoshén (五道神 "Five Ways God(s)"); they are the five main "horizontal" manifestations of Heaven, and along with the Three Potencies, they have a celestial, a terrestrial, and a chthonic form. They correspond to the five phases of creation, the five constellations rotating around the celestial pole and five planets, the five sacred mountains and five directions of space (their terrestrial form), and the five Dragon Gods which represent their mounts, that is to say, the material forces they preside over (their chthonic form).[58][59]
    • 黃帝 Huángdì — Yellow Emperor or Yellow Deity; or 黃神 Huángshén — Yellow God, also known as Xuānyuán Huángdì (軒轅黃帝 "Yellow Deity of the Chariot Shaft"), is the Zhōngyuèdàdì (中岳大帝 "Great Deity of the Central Peak"): he represents the essence of earth and the Yellow Dragon,[56] and is associated with Saturn.[59] The character huáng, for "yellow", also means, by homophony and shared etymology with huáng, "august", "creator", and "radiant", identifying the Yellow Emperor with Shangdi (the "Highest Deity").[60] Huangdi represents the heart of creation, the axis mundi (Kunlun) that is the manifestation of the divine order in physical reality, opening the way to immortality.[56] As the deity of the centre, intersecting the Three Patrons and the Five Deities, in the Shizi he is described as "Yellow Emperor with Four Faces" (黃帝四面 Huángdì Sìmiàn).[61] As a human, he is said to have been the fruit of a virginal birth, as his mother Fubao conceived him as she was aroused, while walking in the country, by a lightning from the Big Dipper (Great Chariot). She delivered her son after twenty-four months on the mount of Shou (Longevity) or mount Xuanyuan (Chariot Shaft), after which he was named.[62] He is reputed to be the founder of the Huaxia civilisation, and the Han Chinese identify themselves as the descendants of Yandi and Huangdi.
    • 蒼帝 Cāngdì — Green Deity; or 青帝 Qīngdì — Blue Deity or Bluegreen Deity, the Dōngdì (東帝 "East Deity") or Dōngyuèdàdì (東岳大帝 "Great Deity of the Eastern Peak"): he is Tàihào 太昊, associated with the essence of wood and with Jupiter, and is the god of fertility and spring. The Bluegreen Dragon is both his animal form and constellation.[56][59] His female consort is the goddess of fertility, Bixia.
    • 黑帝 Hēidì — Black Deity, the Běidì (北帝 "North Deity") or Běiyuèdàdì (北岳大帝 "Great Deity of the Northern Peak"): he is Zhuānxū (顓頊), today frequently worshipped as Xuánwǔ (玄武 "Dark Warrior") or Zhēnwǔ (真武), and is associated with the essence of water and winter, and with Mercury. His animal form is the Black Dragon and his stellar animal is the tortoise-snake.[56][59]
    • 赤帝 Chìdì — Red Deity, the Nándì ( "South Deity") or Nányuèdàdì (南岳大帝 "Great Deity of the Southern Peak"): he is Shennong (the "Divine Farmer"), the Yandi ("Fiery Deity"), associated with the essence of fire and summer, and with Mars. His animal form is the Red Dragon and his stellar animal is the phoenix. He is the god of agriculture, animal husbandry, medicinal plants, and market.[56][59]
    • 白帝 Báidì — White Deity, the Xīdì (西帝 "West Deity") or Xīyuèdàdì (西岳大帝 "Great Deity of the Western Peak"): he is Shǎohào (少昊), and is the god of the essence of metal and autumn, associated with Venus. His animal form is the White Dragon and his stellar animal is the tiger.[59]
  • The Three Great Emperor-Officials, Yao the Official of Heaven (Tiānguān 天官), Shun the Official of Earth (Deguān 地官), and Yu the Official of Water (Shuǐguān 水官).[citation needed][further explanation needed]

In mythology, Huangdi and Yandi fought a battle against each other, and Huang finally defeated Yan with the help of the Dragon (the controller of water, who is Huangdi himself).[63] This myth symbolises the equipoise of yin and yang, here the fire of knowledge (reason and craft) and earthly stability.[63] Yan is flame, scorching fire, or an excess of it (it is important to note that graphically, it is a double huo, "fire").[63] As an excess of fire brings destruction to the earth, it has to be controlled by a ruling principle. Nothing is good in itself, without limits; good outcomes depend on the proportion in the composition of things and their interactions, never on extremes in absolute terms.[63] Huangdi and Yandi are complementary opposites, necessary for the existence of one another, and they are powers that exist together within the human being.

Gods of celestial and terrestrial phenomena edit

 
Temple of the Wind God in Tainan.
  • 龍神 Lóngshén — Dragon Gods, or 龍王 Lóngwáng — Dragon Kings: also Sìhǎi Lóngwáng (四海龍王 "Dragon Kings of the Four Seas"), are gods of watery sources, usually reduced to four, patrons of the Four Seas (sihai 四海) and the four cardinal directions. They are the White Dragon (白龍 Báilóng), the Black Dragon (玄龍 Xuánlóng), the Red Dragon (朱龍 Zhūlóng), and the Bluegreen Dragon (青龍 Qīnglóng). Corresponding with the Five Deities as the chthonic forces that they sublimate (the Dragon Gods are often represented as the "mount" of the Five Deities), they inscribe the land of China into an ideal sacred squared boundary. The fifth dragon, the Yellow Dragon (黃龍 Huánglóng), is the dragon of the centre, representing the Yellow God.
  • 雹神 Báoshén — Hail God[iv]
  • 八蜡 Bālà, 蟲神 Chóngshén — Insect God, or 蟲王 Chóngwáng — Insect King: the gods of insects[iv]
  • 地主神 Dìzhǔshén — Landlord God
  • 痘神 Dòushén — Smallpox God[iv]
  • 風神 Fēngshén — Wind God, or 飛帘 Fēi Lián[iv]
  • 海神 Hǎishén — Sea God, or 海爷 Hǎiyé — Sea Lord
  • 河神 Héshén — River God: any watercourse god, among which, one of the most revered is the god of the Yellow River, 河伯 Hébó — River Lord[iv]
  • 穀神 Gǔshén — Valley God, in the Daodejing, a name used to refer to the Way[66]
  • 火神 Huǒshén — Fire God, often personified as Zhùróng (祝融)[iv]
  • 湖神 Húshén — Lake God
  • 社神 Shèshén — Soil God
  • 稷神 Jìshén — Grain God
  • 金神 Jīnshén — Gold God, often identified as the 秋神 Qiūshén — Autumn God, and personified as Rùshōu (蓐收)
  • 井神 Jǐngshén — Waterspring God[66]
  • 雷神 Léishén — Thunder God, or 雷公 Léigōng — Thunder Duke;[iii] his consort is 電母 Diànmǔ — Lightning Mother
  • 木神 Mùshén — Woodland God, usually the same as the 春神 Chūnshén — Spring God, and as Jùmáng (句芒)
  • 山神 Shānshén — Mountain God
  • 水神 Shuǐshén — Water God
  • 土地神 Tǔdìshén — God of the Local Land, or 土神 Tǔshén — Earth God, or 土地公 Tǔdìgōng — Duke of the Local Land:[iii] the tutelary deity of any locality and their Overlord is 后土 Hòutǔ — Queen of the Earth[ii]
  • 瘟神 Wēnshén — Plague God[iv]
  • 湘水神 Xiāngshuǐshén — Xiang Waters' Goddesses, are the patrons of the Xiang River
  • 雪神 Xuěshén — Snow God
  • 雨神 Yǔshén — Rain God[iv]
  • 羲和 Xīhé the 太陽神 Tàiyángshén — Great Sun Goddess, or 十日之母 Shírìzhīmǔ — Mother of the Ten Suns[ii]
  • 月神 Yuèshén — Moon Goddesses: 常羲 Chángxī or 十二月之母 Shí'èryuèzhīmǔ — Mother of the Twelve Moons, and 嫦娥 Cháng'é

Gods of human virtues and crafts edit

 
Guan Yu (middle), Guan Ping (his right) and Zhou Cang (his left) at a Chinese folk religious temple in Osaka, Japan. Guandi is one of the most revered gods among Han Chinese.
 
The Waterside Dame and her two attendants, Lin Jiuniang and Li Sanniang, at the Temple of Heavenly Harmony of the Lushan school of Red Taoism in Luodong, Yilan, Taiwan.
 
Temple of the Dragon Mother in Deqing, Guangdong.
 
Temple of the Ancestral Mother the Queen of Heaven[i] in Qingdao, Shandong.

Some Taoist gods were thought to affect human morality and the consequences of it in certain traditions. Some Taoists beseeched gods, multiple gods, and/or pantheons to aid them in life and/or abolish their sins.[67]

 
 
The six Jade Maidens, as depicted in The Ordination of Empress Zhang (detail)
  • Civil (wen) and military (wu) deities:
    • 文帝 Wéndi — Culture Deity, or 文昌帝 Wénchāngdì — Deity who Makes Culture Thrive, or 文昌王 Wénchāngwáng — King who Makes Culture Thrive: in southern provinces, this deity takes the identity of various historical persons, while in the north, he is more frequently identified as being the same as Confucius (Kǒngfūzǐ 孔夫子)
      • 魁星 Kuíxīng — Chief Star, another god of culture and literature, but specifically, examination, is a personification of the man who awakens to the order of the Great Chariot
    • 武帝 Wǔdì — Military Deity: 關帝 GuāndìDivus Guan, also called 關公 Guāngōng — Duke Guan,[iii] and popularly 關羽 Guānyǔ[ii]
      • Another class is the 戰神 Zhànshén — Fight God, who may be personified by Chīyóu (蚩尤) or Xíngtiān (刑天, who was decapitated for fighting against Tian)
  • 保生大帝 Bǎoshēngdàdì — Great Deity who Protects Life[v]
  • 八仙 Bāxiān — Eight Immortals
  • 蠶神 Cánshén — Silkworm God, who may be:
    • 蠶母 Cánmǔ — Silkworm Mother, also called 蠶姑 Cángū — Silkworm Maiden, who is identified as Léizǔ (嫘祖), the wife of the Yellow Emperor: the invention of sericulture is attributed primarily to her
    • 青衣神 Qīngyīshén — Bluegreen-Clad God: his name as a human was 蠶叢 Cáncóng — Silkworm Twig, and he is the first ruler and ancestor of the Shu state, and promoter of sericulture among his people
  • 財神 Cáishén — Wealth God[ii]
  • 倉頡 Cāngjié, the four-eyed inventor of the Chinese characters
  • 倉神 Cāngshén — Granary God
  • 川主 Chuānzhǔ — Lord of Sichuan
  • 城隍神 Chénghuángshén — Moat and Walls God, Boundary God: the god of the sacred boundaries of a human agglomeration, he is often personified by founding fathers or noble personalities from each city or town[ii]
  • 陳靖姑 Chénjìnggū — Old Quiet Lady, also called 臨水夫人 Línshuǐ Fūrén — Waterside Dame[v]
  • 戶神 Hùshén — Gate God
  • 車神 Chēshén — Vehicle God[iv]
  • 二郎神 Èrlángshén — Twice Young God, the god of engineering
  • 廣澤尊王 Guǎngzé Zūnwáng — Honorific King of Great Compassion[v]
  • 觀音 Guānyīn — She who Hears the Cries of the World, the goddess of mercy[ii]
  • 黃大仙 Huáng Dàxiān — Great Immortal Huang
  • 濟公 Jìgōng — Help Lord
  • 酒神 Jiǔshén — Wine God, personified as 儀狄 Yidi[iv]
  • 九天玄女 Jiǔtiān Xuánnǚ — Mysterious Lady of the Nine Heavens, a disciple of Xiwangmu and initiator of Huangdi
  • 龍母 Lóngmǔ — Dragon Mother
  • 魯班 Lǔbān, the god of carpentry
  • 路神 Lùshén — Road God[iv]
  • 行神 Xíngshén — Walking God
  • 媽祖 Māzǔ — Ancestral Mother, often entitled the Queen of Heaven[i][vi]
  • 判官 Pànguān — Judging Official
  • 平安神 Píng'ānshén — Peace God, an embodiment of whom is considered to have been Mao Zedong[69]
  • 清水祖師 Qīngshuǐ Zǔshī — Venerable Patriarch of the Clear Stream[v]
  • 陶神 Táoshén — Pottery God[iv]
  • 兔兒神 Tùershén — Leveret God, the god of love among males
  • 托塔李天王 Tuōtǎlǐ Tiānwáng — Tower-Wielding Heavenly King, in person Li Jing, who has three sons, the warlike protector deities Jīnzhā (金吒), Mùzhā (木吒), and Nǎzhā (哪吒)
  • 五顯 Wǔxiǎn — Five Shining Ones, possibly a popular form of the cosmological Five Deities[v]
  • 喜神 Xǐshén — Joy God
  • 藥神 Yàoshén — Medicine God, or frequently, 藥王 Yàowáng — Medicine King"[iv]
  • 月下老人 Yuèxià Lǎorén — Old Man Under the Moon, the matchmaker who pairs lovers together
  • 獄神 Yùshén — Jail-Purgatory God[iv]
  • 灶神 Zàoshén — Hearth God, the master of the household deities, including: the Bed God (床神 Chuángshén), the Gate Gods (門神 Ménshén), and the Toilet god (廁神 Cèshén), often personified as Zigu
  • 鍾馗 Zhōng Kuí, the vanquisher of ghosts and evil beings
  • 三星 Sānxīng — Three Stars, a cluster of three astral gods of well-being:
    • 福星 Fúxīng — Prosperity Star, god of happiness
    • 祿星 Lùxīng — Firmness Star, god of firmness and success in life and examinations
    • 壽星 Shòuxing — Longevity Star, who stands for a healthy and long life

Gods of animal and vegetal life edit

  • 花神 Huāshén — Flower Goddess
  • 狐神 Húshén — Fox God(dess), or 狐仙 Húxiān — Fox Immortal, also called 狐仙娘娘 Húxiān Niángniáng — Fox Immortal Lady[vii]
    • Two other great fox deities, peculiar to northeast China, are the Great Lord of the Three Foxes (胡三太爷 Húsān Tàiyé) and the Great Lady of the Three Foxes (胡三太奶 Húsān Tàinǎi), representing the yin and yang[vii]
  • 馬神 Mǎshén — Horse God, or Mǎwáng 马王 — Horse King[iv]
  • 牛神 Niúshén — Cattle God or Ox God, also called 牛王 Niúwáng — Cattle King[iv]
  • 狼神 Lángshén — Wolf God[iv]
  • 樹神 Shùshén — Tree God(s)
  • 五谷神 Wǔgǔshén — Five Cereals God,[iv] another name of Shennong
  • 猿神 Yuánshén — Monkey God, or 猿王 Yuánwáng — Monkey King, who is identified as Sūn Wùkōng (孙悟空)[viii]
  • 芝蔴神 Zhīmáshén — Sesame God[iv]

Bixia mother goddess worship edit

 
Taiwanese wooden icon of the Queen of the Earth (Houtu).

The worship of mother goddesses for the cultivation of offspring is present all over China, but predominantly in northern provinces. There are nine main goddesses, and all of them tend to be considered as manifestations or attendant forces of a singular goddess identified variously as Bixia Yuanjun (the Lady of the Blue Dawn, 碧霞元君, also known as the Tiānxiān Niángniáng 天仙娘娘, "Heavenly Immortal Lady", or Tàishān Niángniáng 泰山娘娘, "Lady of Mount Tai",[ix] or also Jiǔtiān Shèngmǔ 九天聖母,[71] "Holy Mother of the Nine Skies"[x])[72]: 149–150  or Houtu, the goddess of the earth.[73] Bixia herself is identified by Taoists as the more ancient goddess Xiwangmu,[74] The general Chinese term for "goddess" is 女神 nǚshén, and goddesses may receive many qualifying titles, including ( "mother"), lǎomǔ (老母 "old mother"), shèngmǔ (聖母 "holy mother"), niángniáng (娘娘 "lady"), nǎinai (奶奶 "granny").

The additional eight main goddesses of fertility, reproduction, and growth are:[72]: 149–150, 191, note 18 

  • 瘢疹娘娘 Bānzhěn Niángniáng, the goddess who protects children from illness;
  • 催生娘娘 Cuīshēng Niángniáng, the goddess who gives swift childbirth and protects midwives;
  • 奶母娘娘 Nǎimǔ Niángniáng, the goddess who presides over maternal milk and protects nursing;
  • 培姑娘娘 Péigū Niángniáng, the goddess who cultivates children;
  • 培養娘娘 Péiyǎng Niángniáng, the goddess who protects the upbringing of children;
  • 送子娘娘 Sòngzi Niángniáng or 子孫娘娘 Zǐsūn Niángniáng, the goddess who presides over offspring;
  • 眼光娘娘 Yǎnguāng Niángniáng, the goddess who protects eyesight;
  • 引蒙娘娘 Yǐnméng Niángniáng, the goddess who guides young children.

Altars of goddess worship are usually arranged with Bixia at the center and two goddesses at her sides, most frequently the Lady of Eyesight and the Lady of Offspring.[72]: 149–150, 191, note 18  A different figure, but with the same astral connections as Bixia is the Goddess of the Seven Stars (七星娘娘 Qīxīng Niángniáng).[xi] There is also the cluster of the Holy Mothers of the Three Skies (三霄聖母 Sānxiāo Shèngmǔ; or 三霄娘娘 Sānxiāo Niángniáng, "Ladies of the Three Stars"), composed of Yunxiao Guniang, Qiongxiao Guniang, and Bixiao Guniang.[75] The cult of Chenjinggu, present in southeast China, is identified by some scholars as an emanation of the northern cult of Bixia.[76]

Other goddesses worshipped in China include Cánmǔ[xii] (蠶母 Silkworm Mother) or Cángū (蠶姑 Silkworm Maiden),[73] identified with Léizǔ (嫘祖, the wife of the Yellow Emperor), Mágū (麻姑 "Hemp Maiden"), Sǎoqīng Niángniáng (掃清娘娘 Goddess who Sweeps Clean),[xiii][78] Sānzhōu Niángniáng (三洲娘娘 Goddess of the Three Isles),[78] and Wusheng Laomu. The mother goddess is central in the theology of many folk religious sects.[73]

Gods of northeast China edit

Northeast China has clusters of deities which are peculiar to the area, deriving from the Manchu and broader Tungusic substratum of the local population. Animal deities related to shamanic practices are characteristic of the area and reflect wider Chinese cosmology. Besides the aforementioned Fox Gods (狐仙 Húxiān), they include:[citation needed]

  • 黃仙 Huángxiān — Yellow Immortal, the Weasel God
  • 蛇仙 Shéxiān — Snake Immortal, also variously called 柳仙 Liǔxiān — Immortal Liu, or 常仙 Chángxiān — Viper Immortal, or also 蟒仙 Mǎngxiān — Python or Boa Immortal
  • 白仙 Báixiān — White Immortal, the Hedgehog God
  • 黑仙 Hēixiān — Black Immortal, who may be the 烏鴉仙 Wūyāxiān — Crow Immortal, or the 灰仙 Huīxiān — Rat Immortal, with the latter considered a misinterpretation of the former

Gods of Indian origin edit

 
Temple of the Four-Faced God in Changhua, Taiwan.

Gods who have been adopted into Chinese religion but who have their origins in the Indian subcontinent or Hinduism:

  • 觀音 Guānyīn — "She who Hears the Cries of the World", a Chinese goddess of mercy modeled after the bodhisattva Avalokiteśvara
  • 四面神 Sìmiànshén — "Four-Faced God", but also a metaphor for "Ubiquitous God": The recent cult has its origin in the Thai transmission of the Hindu god Brahma, but it is important to note that it is also an epithet of the indigenous Chinese god Huangdi who, as the deity of the centre of the cosmos, is described in the Shizi as "Yellow Emperor with Four Faces" (黃帝四面 Huángdì Sìmiàn).[61]
  • 象頭神 Xiàngtóushén — "Elephant-Head God", is the Indian god Ganesha[79]

Gods of North China and Mongolia edit

  • Genghis Khan (成吉思汗 Chéngjísīhán), worshipped by Mongols and Chinese under a variety of divinity titles, including 聖武皇帝 Shèngwǔ Huángdì — "Holy Military Sovereign Deity", 法天啓運 Fǎtiān Qǐyùn "Starter of the Transmission of the Law of Heaven", and 太祖 Tàizǔ — "Great Ancestor" (of the Yuan and the Mongols).

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Whether centred in the change-ful precessional north celestial pole or in the fixed north ecliptic pole, the spinning constellations draw the symbol around the centre.
Notes about the deities and their names
  1. ^ a b c The honorific Tiānhòu (天后 "Queen of Heaven") is used for many goddesses, but most frequently Mazu and Doumu.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g The cult of this deity is historically exercised all over China.[49]
  3. ^ a b c d e About the use of the title "duke": the term is from Latin dux, and describes a phenomenon or person who "conducts", "leads", the divine inspiration.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t The cult of this deity is historically exercised in northern China.[54] It is important to note that many cults of northern deities were transplanted also in southern big cities like Hong Kong and Macau, and also in Taiwan, with the political changes and migrations of the 19th and 20th centuries.
  5. ^ a b c d e The cult of this deity is historically exercised in southeastern China.[49]
  6. ^ The cult of Mazu has its origin in Fujian, but it has expanded throughout southern China and in many northern provinces, chiefly in localities along the coast, as well as among expatriate Chinese communities.[68]
  7. ^ a b The cult of fox deities is characteristic of northeastern China's folk religion, with influences reaching as far south as Hebei and Shandong.
  8. ^ The worship of monkeys in the northern Fujian region has a long history. Influenced by Journey to the West, the worship of the Monkey God in some areas has gradually been replaced by the worship of the Qítiān Dàshèng.[70]
  9. ^ As the Lady of Mount Tai, Bixia is regarded as the female counterpart of Dongyuedadi, the "Great Deity of the Eastern Peak" (Mount Tai).
  10. ^ The "Nine Skies" (九天 Jiǔtiān) are the nine stars (seven stars with the addition of two invisibile ones, according to the Chinese tradition) of the Big Dipper or Great Chariot. Thus, Bixia and her nine attendants or manifestations are at the same time a metaphorical representation of living matter or earth, and of the source of all being which is more abstractly represented by major axial gods of Chinese religion such as Doumu.
  11. ^ Qixing Niangniang ("Lady of the Seven Stars") is a goddess that represents the seven visible stars of the Big Dipper or Great Chariot.
  12. ^ The cult of Canmu is related to that of Houtu ("Queen of Earth") and to that of the Sanxiao ("Three Skies") goddesses.[77]
  13. ^ Saoqing Niangniang ("Lady who Sweeps Clean") is the goddess who ensures good weather conditions "sweeping away" clouds and storms.

References edit

Citations edit

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  14. ^ Didier (2009), p. 256, Vol. III.
  15. ^ Mair, Victor H. (2012). "Religious Formations and Intercultural Contacts in Early China". In Krech, Volkhard; Steinicke, Marion (eds.). Dynamics in the History of Religions between Asia and Europe: Encounters, Notions, and Comparative Perspectives. Leiden: Brill. pp. 85–110. doi:10.1163/9789004225350_005. ISBN 978-90-04-22535-0. pp. 97–98, note 26.
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chinese, gods, immortals, this, article, about, chinese, popular, deities, chinese, scholastic, theology, about, these, gods, supreme, godhead, heaven, chinese, theology, list, chinese, mythological, stories, including, narratives, with, gods, immortals, list,. This article is about Chinese popular deities For the Chinese scholastic theology about these gods and the supreme godhead of Heaven see Chinese theology For a list of Chinese mythological stories including narratives with gods and immortals see List of Chinese mythology This article or section should specify the language of its non English content using lang transliteration for transliterated languages and IPA for phonetic transcriptions with an appropriate ISO 639 code Wikipedia s multilingual support templates may also be used See why October 2023 Chinese traditional religion is polytheistic many deities are worshipped in a pantheistic view where divinity is inherent in the world 1 The gods are energies or principles revealing imitating and propagating the way of heaven Tian 天 2 which is the supreme godhead manifesting in the northern culmen of the starry vault of the skies and its order citation needed Many gods are ancestors or men who became deities for their heavenly achievements Most gods are also identified with stars and constellations 3 Ancestors are regarded as the equivalent of Heaven within human society 4 and therefore as the means of connecting back to Heaven which is the utmost ancestral father 曾祖父 zengzǔfu 5 Qing dynasty Water and Land Ritual painting 水陆画 of Buddhist Daoist and Folk Deities A complex of deities at an outdoor fountain altar with incense burners at a pilgrimage area in Weihai Shandong At the centre stands Mazu surrounded by the four Dragon Gods 龍神 and various lesser deities Distant behind Mazu stands the Sun Goddess 太陽神 There are a variety of immortals in Chinese thought and one major type is the xian which is thought in some religious Taoism movements to be a human given long or infinite life Gods are innumerable as every phenomenon has or is one or more gods and they are organised in a complex celestial hierarchy 6 Besides the traditional worship of these entities Confucianism Taoism and formal thinkers in general give theological interpretations affirming a monistic essence of divinity 7 Polytheism and monotheism are categories derived from Western religion and do not fit Chinese religion which has never conceived the two things as opposites 8 Tian bridges the gap between supernatural phenomena and many kinds of beings giving them a single source from spiritual energy in some Chinese belief systems 2 However there is a significant belief in Taoism which differentiates tian from the forces of earth and water which are held to be equally powerful 9 Since all gods are considered manifestations of 氣 qi the power or pneuma of Heaven in some views of tian some scholars have employed the term polypneumatism or poly pneumatolatry first coined by Walter Medhurst 1796 1857 to describe the practice of Chinese polytheism 10 Some Taoists consider deities the manifestation of the Tao citation needed In the theology of the classic texts and Confucianism Heaven is the lord of the hundreds of deities 11 Modern Confucian theology compares them to intelligence substantial forms or entelechies inner purposes as explained by Leibniz generating all types of beings so that even mountains and rivers are worshipped as something capable of enjoying sacrificial offerings 12 Unlike in Hinduism the deification of historical persons and ancestors is not traditionally the duty of Confucians or Taoists clarification needed Rather it depends on the choices of common people persons are deified when they have made extraordinary deeds and have left an efficacious legacy Yet Confucians and Taoists traditionally may demand that state honours be granted to a particular deity Each deity has a cult centre and ancestral temple where he or she or the parents lived their mortal life There are frequently disputes over which is the original place and source temple of the cult of a deity 13 Contents 1 God of Heaven 1 1 Names of the God of Heaven 2 Lists of gods deities and immortals 2 1 Cosmic gods 2 1 1 Three Patrons and Five Deities 2 2 Gods of celestial and terrestrial phenomena 2 3 Gods of human virtues and crafts 2 4 Gods of animal and vegetal life 2 5 Bixia mother goddess worship 2 6 Gods of northeast China 2 7 Gods of Indian origin 2 8 Gods of North China and Mongolia 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 SourcesGod of Heaven edit nbsp Like other symbols such as the sauwastika 14 卍 wan all things in Chinese the Mesopotamian dingir or anu 𒀭𒀭 15 and also the Chinese 巫 wu shaman in Shang script represented by a graph resembling the cross potent 16 Tian refers to the northern celestial pole 北極 beiji the pivot and the vault of the sky with its spinning constellations 3 Here is an approximate representation of the tianmen 天門 gate of heaven 17 or tianshu 天樞 pivot of heaven 18 as the precessional north celestial pole with a Ursae Minoris as the pole star with the spinning Chariot constellations in the four phases of time According to Reza Assasi s theories the 卍 may not only be centred in the current precessional pole at a Ursae Minoris but also very near to the north ecliptic pole if Draco 天龙 天龍 Tianlong is conceived as one of its two beams 19 note 1 Main article Chinese theology Chinese traditional theology which comes in different interpretations according to the classic texts and specifically Confucian Taoist and other philosophical formulations 20 is fundamentally monistic that is to say it sees the world and the gods who produce it as an organic whole or cosmos 21 The universal principle that gives origin to the world is conceived as transcendent and immanent to creation at the same time 22 The Chinese idea of the universal God is expressed in different ways There are many names of God from the different sources of Chinese tradition 23 The radical Chinese terms for the universal God are Tian 天 and Shangdi 上帝 the Highest Deity or simply Di 帝 Deity 24 25 There is also the concept of Taidi 太帝 the Great Deity Di is a title expressing dominance over the all under Heaven that is all things generated by Heaven and ordered by its cycles and by the stars 26 Tian is usually translated as Heaven but by graphical etymology it means Great One and a number of scholars relate it to the same Di through phonetic etymology and trace their common root through their archaic forms respectively Teeŋ and Tees to the symbols of the squared north celestial pole godhead Ding 口 3 27 These names are combined in different ways in Chinese theological literature often interchanged in the same paragraph if not in the same sentence 28 Names of the God of Heaven edit Besides Shangdi and Taidi other names include Yudi Jade Deity and Taiyi Great Oneness who in mythical imagery holds the ladle of the Big Dipper Great Chariot providing the movement of life to the world 29 As the hub of the skies the north celestial pole constellations are known among various names as Tianmen 天門 Gate of Heaven 30 and Tianshu 天樞 Pivot of Heaven 31 Other names of the God of Heaven are attested in the vast Chinese religio philosophical literary tradition Tiandi 天帝 the Deity of Heaven or Emperor of Heaven 32 On Rectification Zheng lun of the Xunzi uses this term to refer to the active God of Heaven setting in motion creation 26 Tianzhǔ 天主 the Lord of Heaven In The Document of Offering Sacrifices to Heaven and Earth on the Mountain Tai Fengshan shu of the Records of the Grand Historian it is used as the title of the first God from whom all the other gods derive 33 Tianhuang 天皇 the August Personage of Heaven In the Poem of Fathoming Profundity Si xuan fu transcribed in The History of the Later Han Dynasty Hou Han shu Zhang Heng ornately writes I ask the superintendent of the Heavenly Gate to open the door and let me visit the King of Heaven at the Jade Palace 32 Tianwang 天王 the King of Heaven or Monarch of Heaven Tiangōng 天公 the Duke of Heaven or General of Heaven 34 Tianjun 天君 the Prince of Heaven or Lord of Heaven 34 Tianzun 天尊 the Heavenly Venerable also a title for high gods in Taoist theologies 32 Tianshen 天神 the God of Heaven interpreted in the Shuowen Jiezi as the being that gives birth to all things 26 Shenhuang 神皇 God the August attested in Taihong The Origin of Vital Breath 26 Lǎotianye 老天爺 the Olden Heavenly Father 32 Tian is both transcendent and immanent manifesting in the three forms of dominance destiny and nature of things In the Wujing yiyi 五經異義 Different Meanings in the Five Classics Xu Shen explains that the designation of Heaven is quintuple 33 Huang Tian 皇天 August Heaven or Imperial Heaven when it is venerated as the lord of creation Hao Tian 昊天 Vast Heaven with regard to the vastness of its vital breath qi Min Tian 旻天 Compassionate Heaven for it hears and corresponds with justice to the all under Heaven Shang Tian 上天 Highest Heaven or First Heaven for it is the primordial being supervising all under Heaven Cang Tian 蒼天 Deep Green Heaven for it being unfathomably deep All these designations reflect a hierarchical multiperspective experience of divinity 23 Lists of gods deities and immortals edit nbsp Main altar and statue of Doumu inside the Temple of Doumu in Butterworth Penang Malaysia nbsp A temple dedicated to Pangu in Zhunan Miaoli Many classical books have lists and hierarchies of gods and immortals among which are the Completed Record of Deities and Immortals 神仙通鑑 Shenxian Tōngjian of the Ming dynasty 35 and the Biographies of the Deities and Immortals or Shenxian Zhuan by Ge Hong 284 343 36 The older Collected Biographies of the Immortals or Liexian Zhuan also serves the same purpose Couplets or polarities such as Fuxi and Nuwa Xiwangmu and Dongwanggong and the highest couple of Heaven and Earth all embody yin and yang and are at once the originators and maintainers of the ordering process of space and time 37 Immortals or xian are seen as a variety of different types of beings including the souls of virtuous Taoists 38 gods 38 39 zhenren 39 and or a type of supernatural spiritual being who understood heaven 40 Taoists historically worshipped them the most although Chinese folk religion practitioners during the Tang dynasty also worshipped them although there was more skepticism about the goodness and even the existence of xian among them 40 Chinese folk religion that incorporates elements of the three teachings in modern times and prior eras sometimes viewed Confucius and the Buddha as immortals or beings synonymous to them 41 In Taoism and Chinese folk religion gods and xian 42 are often seen as embodiments of water 43 Water gods and xian were often thought to ensure good grain harvests mild weather and seas and rivers with abundant water 43 Some xian were thought to be humans who gained power by drinking charmed water 42 Some gods were based on previously existing Taoist immortals bodhisattvas or historical figures 44 nbsp Stoneware figure of a Daoist Taoist deity From China Ming Dynasty 16th century CE The British MuseumCosmic gods edit Yudi 玉帝 Jade Deity or Yuhuang 玉皇 Jade Emperor or Jade King is the popular human like representation of the God of Heaven 45 Jade traditionally represents purity so it is a metaphor for the unfathomable source of creation Doumu 斗母 Mother of the Great Chariot often entitled with the honorific Tianhou 天后 Queen of Heaven i is the heavenly goddess portrayed as the mother of the Big Dipper Great Chariot whose seven stars in addition to two invisible ones are conceived as her sons the Jiuhuangshen 九皇神 Nine God Kings themselves regarded as the ninefold manifestation of Jiuhuangdadi 九皇大帝 Great Deity of the Nine Kings or Doufu 斗父 Father of the Great Chariot another name of the God of Heaven She is therefore both wife and mother of the God of Heaven 46 47 Pangu 盤古 a macranthropic metaphor of the cosmos He separated yin and yang creating the earth murky yin and the sky clear yang All things were made from his body after he died 48 Xiwangmu 西王母 Queen Mother of the West ii identified with the Kunlun Mountain shamanic inspiration death and immortality 50 51 She is the dark chthonic goddess pure yin at the same time terrifying and benign both creation and destruction associated with the tiger and weaving 52 Her male counterpart is Dongwanggong 東王公 King Duke of the East iii also called Mugong 木公 Duke of the Woods 53 who represents the yang principle 52 Yi the Archer Houyi 后羿 was a man who sought for immortality reaching Xiwangmu on her mountain Kunlun Yanwang 閻王 Purgatory King iv the ruler of the underworld assisted by the Heibai Wuchang 黑白無常 Black and White Impermanence representing the alternation of yin and yang principles alongside Ox Head and Horse Face who escort spirits to his realm Yinyanggong 陰陽公 Yinyang Duke iii or Yinyangsi 陰陽司 Yinyang Controller the personification of the union of yin and yang Three Patrons and Five Deities edit nbsp Wǔfang Shangdi 五方上帝 The order of Heaven inscribing worlds as tan 壇 altar the Chinese concept equivalent to the Indian mandala The supreme God conceptualised as the Yellow Deity and Xuanyuan as its human form is the heart of the universe and the other Four Deities are his emanations The diagram is based on the Huainanzi 55 nbsp Statue and ceremonial complex of the Yellow and Red Gods in Zhengzhou Henan nbsp Temple of the Three Officials of Heaven in Chiling Zhangpu Fujian nbsp Temple of the Great Deity of the Eastern Peak at Mount Tai Tai an Shandong 三皇 Sanhuang Three Patrons or Augusts or 三才 Sancai Three Potencies they are the vertical manifestation of Heaven spatially corresponding to the Three Realms 三界 Sanjie representing the yin and yang and the medium between them that is the human being 伏羲 Fuxi the patron of heaven 天皇 Tianhuang also called Baguazǔshi 八卦祖師 Venerable Inventor of the Bagua by the Taoists is a divine man reputed to have taught to humanity writing fishing and hunting 女媧 Nǚwa the patron of earth 地皇 Dehuang is a goddess attributed for the creation of mankind and mending the order of the world when it was broken 神農 Shennong Peasant God the patron of humanity 人皇 Renhuang identified as Yandi 炎帝 Flame Deity or Fiery Deity a divine man said to have taught the techniques of farming herbal medicine and marketing He is often represented as a human with horns and other features of an ox 56 五帝 Wǔdi Five Deities 57 also Wǔfang Shangdi 五方上帝 Five Manifestations of the Highest Deity Wǔfang Tianshen 五方天神 Five Manifestations of the Heavenly God Wǔfangdi 五方帝 Five Forms Deity Wǔtiandi 五天帝 Five Heavenly Deities Wǔlǎojun 五老君 Five Ancient Lords Wǔdaoshen 五道神 Five Ways God s they are the five main horizontal manifestations of Heaven and along with the Three Potencies they have a celestial a terrestrial and a chthonic form They correspond to the five phases of creation the five constellations rotating around the celestial pole and five planets the five sacred mountains and five directions of space their terrestrial form and the five Dragon Gods which represent their mounts that is to say the material forces they preside over their chthonic form 58 59 黃帝 Huangdi Yellow Emperor or Yellow Deity or 黃神 Huangshen Yellow God also known as Xuanyuan Huangdi 軒轅黃帝 Yellow Deity of the Chariot Shaft is the Zhōngyuedadi 中岳大帝 Great Deity of the Central Peak he represents the essence of earth and the Yellow Dragon 56 and is associated with Saturn 59 The character 黃 huang for yellow also means by homophony and shared etymology with 皇 huang august creator and radiant identifying the Yellow Emperor with Shangdi the Highest Deity 60 Huangdi represents the heart of creation the axis mundi Kunlun that is the manifestation of the divine order in physical reality opening the way to immortality 56 As the deity of the centre intersecting the Three Patrons and the Five Deities in the Shizi he is described as Yellow Emperor with Four Faces 黃帝四面 Huangdi Simian 61 As a human he is said to have been the fruit of a virginal birth as his mother Fubao conceived him as she was aroused while walking in the country by a lightning from the Big Dipper Great Chariot She delivered her son after twenty four months on the mount of Shou Longevity or mount Xuanyuan Chariot Shaft after which he was named 62 He is reputed to be the founder of the Huaxia civilisation and the Han Chinese identify themselves as the descendants of Yandi and Huangdi 蒼帝 Cangdi Green Deity or 青帝 Qingdi Blue Deity or Bluegreen Deity the Dōngdi 東帝 East Deity or Dōngyuedadi 東岳大帝 Great Deity of the Eastern Peak he is Taihao 太昊 associated with the essence of wood and with Jupiter and is the god of fertility and spring The Bluegreen Dragon is both his animal form and constellation 56 59 His female consort is the goddess of fertility Bixia 黑帝 Heidi Black Deity the Beidi 北帝 North Deity or Beiyuedadi 北岳大帝 Great Deity of the Northern Peak he is Zhuanxu 顓頊 today frequently worshipped as Xuanwǔ 玄武 Dark Warrior or Zhenwǔ 真武 and is associated with the essence of water and winter and with Mercury His animal form is the Black Dragon and his stellar animal is the tortoise snake 56 59 赤帝 Chidi Red Deity the Nandi 帝 South Deity or Nanyuedadi 南岳大帝 Great Deity of the Southern Peak he is Shennong the Divine Farmer the Yandi Fiery Deity associated with the essence of fire and summer and with Mars His animal form is the Red Dragon and his stellar animal is the phoenix He is the god of agriculture animal husbandry medicinal plants and market 56 59 白帝 Baidi White Deity the Xidi 西帝 West Deity or Xiyuedadi 西岳大帝 Great Deity of the Western Peak he is Shǎohao 少昊 and is the god of the essence of metal and autumn associated with Venus His animal form is the White Dragon and his stellar animal is the tiger 59 The Three Great Emperor Officials Yao 堯 the Official of Heaven Tianguan 天官 Shun 舜 the Official of Earth Deguan 地官 and Yu 禹 the Official of Water Shuǐguan 水官 citation needed further explanation needed In mythology Huangdi and Yandi fought a battle against each other and Huang finally defeated Yan with the help of the Dragon the controller of water who is Huangdi himself 63 This myth symbolises the equipoise of yin and yang here the fire of knowledge reason and craft and earthly stability 63 Yan 炎 is flame scorching fire or an excess of it it is important to note that graphically it is a double 火 huo fire 63 As an excess of fire brings destruction to the earth it has to be controlled by a ruling principle Nothing is good in itself without limits good outcomes depend on the proportion in the composition of things and their interactions never on extremes in absolute terms 63 Huangdi and Yandi are complementary opposites necessary for the existence of one another and they are powers that exist together within the human being Gods of celestial and terrestrial phenomena edit nbsp Temple of the Wind God in Tainan 龍神 Longshen Dragon Gods or 龍王 Longwang Dragon Kings also Sihǎi Longwang 四海龍王 Dragon Kings of the Four Seas are gods of watery sources usually reduced to four patrons of the Four Seas sihai 四海 and the four cardinal directions They are the White Dragon 白龍 Bailong the Black Dragon 玄龍 Xuanlong the Red Dragon 朱龍 Zhulong and the Bluegreen Dragon 青龍 Qinglong Corresponding with the Five Deities as the chthonic forces that they sublimate the Dragon Gods are often represented as the mount of the Five Deities they inscribe the land of China into an ideal sacred squared boundary The fifth dragon the Yellow Dragon 黃龍 Huanglong is the dragon of the centre representing the Yellow God In Taiyuan Liu Heng the fifth emperor of the Western Han dynasty is worshipped as the Dragon King This is because Liu Heng once served as the Prince of Dai of the area and was welcomed by the local people Every year local villagers hold a sacrifice to him on the Longtaitou Festival 64 65 雹神 Baoshen Hail God iv 八蜡 Bala 蟲神 Chongshen Insect God or 蟲王 Chongwang Insect King the gods of insects iv 地主神 Dizhǔshen Landlord God 痘神 Doushen Smallpox God iv 風神 Fengshen Wind God or 飛帘 Fei Lian iv 海神 Hǎishen Sea God or 海爷 Hǎiye Sea Lord 河神 Heshen River God any watercourse god among which one of the most revered is the god of the Yellow River 河伯 Hebo River Lord iv 穀神 Gǔshen Valley God in the Daodejing a name used to refer to the Way 66 火神 Huǒshen Fire God often personified as Zhurong 祝融 iv 湖神 Hushen Lake God 社神 Sheshen Soil God 稷神 Jishen Grain God 金神 Jinshen Gold God often identified as the 秋神 Qiushen Autumn God and personified as Rushōu 蓐收 井神 Jǐngshen Waterspring God 66 雷神 Leishen Thunder God or 雷公 Leigōng Thunder Duke iii his consort is 電母 Dianmǔ Lightning Mother 木神 Mushen Woodland God usually the same as the 春神 Chunshen Spring God and as Jumang 句芒 山神 Shanshen Mountain God 水神 Shuǐshen Water God 土地神 Tǔdishen God of the Local Land or 土神 Tǔshen Earth God or 土地公 Tǔdigōng Duke of the Local Land iii the tutelary deity of any locality and their Overlord is 后土 Houtǔ Queen of the Earth ii 瘟神 Wenshen Plague God iv 湘水神 Xiangshuǐshen Xiang Waters Goddesses are the patrons of the Xiang River 雪神 Xueshen Snow God 雨神 Yǔshen Rain God iv 羲和 Xihe the 太陽神 Taiyangshen Great Sun Goddess or 十日之母 Shirizhimǔ Mother of the Ten Suns ii 月神 Yueshen Moon Goddesses 常羲 Changxi or 十二月之母 Shi eryuezhimǔ Mother of the Twelve Moons and 嫦娥 Chang eGods of human virtues and crafts edit nbsp Guan Yu middle Guan Ping his right and Zhou Cang his left at a Chinese folk religious temple in Osaka Japan Guandi is one of the most revered gods among Han Chinese nbsp The Waterside Dame and her two attendants Lin Jiuniang and Li Sanniang at the Temple of Heavenly Harmony of the Lushan school of Red Taoism in Luodong Yilan Taiwan nbsp Temple of the Dragon Mother in Deqing Guangdong nbsp Temple of the Ancestral Mother the Queen of Heaven i in Qingdao Shandong Some Taoist gods were thought to affect human morality and the consequences of it in certain traditions Some Taoists beseeched gods multiple gods and or pantheons to aid them in life and or abolish their sins 67 nbsp nbsp The six Jade Maidens as depicted in The Ordination of Empress Zhang detail Civil wen and military wu deities 文帝 Wendi Culture Deity or 文昌帝 Wenchangdi Deity who Makes Culture Thrive or 文昌王 Wenchangwang King who Makes Culture Thrive in southern provinces this deity takes the identity of various historical persons while in the north he is more frequently identified as being the same as Confucius Kǒngfuzǐ 孔夫子 魁星 Kuixing Chief Star another god of culture and literature but specifically examination is a personification of the man who awakens to the order of the Great Chariot 武帝 Wǔdi Military Deity 關帝 Guandi Divus Guan also called 關公 Guangōng Duke Guan iii and popularly 關羽 Guanyǔ ii Another class is the 戰神 Zhanshen Fight God who may be personified by Chiyou 蚩尤 or Xingtian 刑天 who was decapitated for fighting against Tian 保生大帝 Bǎoshengdadi Great Deity who Protects Life v 八仙 Baxian Eight Immortals 蠶神 Canshen Silkworm God who may be 蠶母 Canmǔ Silkworm Mother also called 蠶姑 Cangu Silkworm Maiden who is identified as Leizǔ 嫘祖 the wife of the Yellow Emperor the invention of sericulture is attributed primarily to her 青衣神 Qingyishen Bluegreen Clad God his name as a human was 蠶叢 Cancong Silkworm Twig and he is the first ruler and ancestor of the Shu state and promoter of sericulture among his people 財神 Caishen Wealth God ii 倉頡 Cangjie the four eyed inventor of the Chinese characters 倉神 Cangshen Granary God 川主 Chuanzhǔ Lord of Sichuan 城隍神 Chenghuangshen Moat and Walls God Boundary God the god of the sacred boundaries of a human agglomeration he is often personified by founding fathers or noble personalities from each city or town ii 陳靖姑 Chenjinggu Old Quiet Lady also called 臨水夫人 Linshuǐ Furen Waterside Dame v 戶神 Hushen Gate God 車神 Cheshen Vehicle God iv 二郎神 Erlangshen Twice Young God the god of engineering 廣澤尊王 Guǎngze Zunwang Honorific King of Great Compassion v 觀音 Guanyin She who Hears the Cries of the World the goddess of mercy ii 黃大仙 Huang Daxian Great Immortal Huang 濟公 Jigōng Help Lord 酒神 Jiǔshen Wine God personified as 儀狄 Yidi iv 九天玄女 Jiǔtian Xuannǚ Mysterious Lady of the Nine Heavens a disciple of Xiwangmu and initiator of Huangdi 龍母 Longmǔ Dragon Mother 魯班 Lǔban the god of carpentry 路神 Lushen Road God iv 行神 Xingshen Walking God 媽祖 Mazǔ Ancestral Mother often entitled the Queen of Heaven i vi 判官 Panguan Judging Official 平安神 Ping anshen Peace God an embodiment of whom is considered to have been Mao Zedong 69 清水祖師 Qingshuǐ Zǔshi Venerable Patriarch of the Clear Stream v 陶神 Taoshen Pottery God iv 兔兒神 Tuershen Leveret God the god of love among males 托塔李天王 Tuōtǎlǐ Tianwang Tower Wielding Heavenly King in person Li Jing who has three sons the warlike protector deities Jinzha 金吒 Muzha 木吒 and Nǎzha 哪吒 五顯 Wǔxiǎn Five Shining Ones possibly a popular form of the cosmological Five Deities v 喜神 Xǐshen Joy God 藥神 Yaoshen Medicine God or frequently 藥王 Yaowang Medicine King iv 月下老人 Yuexia Lǎoren Old Man Under the Moon the matchmaker who pairs lovers together 獄神 Yushen Jail Purgatory God iv 灶神 Zaoshen Hearth God the master of the household deities including the Bed God 床神 Chuangshen the Gate Gods 門神 Menshen and the Toilet god 廁神 Ceshen often personified as Zigu 鍾馗 Zhōng Kui the vanquisher of ghosts and evil beings 三星 Sanxing Three Stars a cluster of three astral gods of well being 福星 Fuxing Prosperity Star god of happiness 祿星 Luxing Firmness Star god of firmness and success in life and examinations 壽星 Shouxing Longevity Star who stands for a healthy and long lifeGods of animal and vegetal life edit 花神 Huashen Flower Goddess 狐神 Hushen Fox God dess or 狐仙 Huxian Fox Immortal also called 狐仙娘娘 Huxian Niangniang Fox Immortal Lady vii Two other great fox deities peculiar to northeast China are the Great Lord of the Three Foxes 胡三太爷 Husan Taiye and the Great Lady of the Three Foxes 胡三太奶 Husan Tainǎi representing the yin and yang vii 馬神 Mǎshen Horse God or Mǎwang 马王 Horse King iv 牛神 Niushen Cattle God or Ox God also called 牛王 Niuwang Cattle King iv 狼神 Langshen Wolf God iv 樹神 Shushen Tree God s 五谷神 Wǔgǔshen Five Cereals God iv another name of Shennong 猿神 Yuanshen Monkey God or 猿王 Yuanwang Monkey King who is identified as Sun Wukōng 孙悟空 viii 芝蔴神 Zhimashen Sesame God iv Bixia mother goddess worship edit Bixia redirects here For the regal address see Emperor of China nbsp Taiwanese wooden icon of the Queen of the Earth Houtu The worship of mother goddesses for the cultivation of offspring is present all over China but predominantly in northern provinces There are nine main goddesses and all of them tend to be considered as manifestations or attendant forces of a singular goddess identified variously as Bixia Yuanjun the Lady of the Blue Dawn 碧霞元君 also known as the Tianxian Niangniang 天仙娘娘 Heavenly Immortal Lady or Taishan Niangniang 泰山娘娘 Lady of Mount Tai ix or also Jiǔtian Shengmǔ 九天聖母 71 Holy Mother of the Nine Skies x 72 149 150 or Houtu the goddess of the earth 73 Bixia herself is identified by Taoists as the more ancient goddess Xiwangmu 74 The general Chinese term for goddess is 女神 nǚshen and goddesses may receive many qualifying titles including mǔ 母 mother lǎomǔ 老母 old mother shengmǔ 聖母 holy mother niangniang 娘娘 lady nǎinai 奶奶 granny The additional eight main goddesses of fertility reproduction and growth are 72 149 150 191 note 18 瘢疹娘娘 Banzhen Niangniang the goddess who protects children from illness 催生娘娘 Cuisheng Niangniang the goddess who gives swift childbirth and protects midwives 奶母娘娘 Nǎimǔ Niangniang the goddess who presides over maternal milk and protects nursing 培姑娘娘 Peigu Niangniang the goddess who cultivates children 培養娘娘 Peiyǎng Niangniang the goddess who protects the upbringing of children 送子娘娘 Songzi Niangniang or 子孫娘娘 Zǐsun Niangniang the goddess who presides over offspring 眼光娘娘 Yǎnguang Niangniang the goddess who protects eyesight 引蒙娘娘 Yǐnmeng Niangniang the goddess who guides young children Altars of goddess worship are usually arranged with Bixia at the center and two goddesses at her sides most frequently the Lady of Eyesight and the Lady of Offspring 72 149 150 191 note 18 A different figure but with the same astral connections as Bixia is the Goddess of the Seven Stars 七星娘娘 Qixing Niangniang xi There is also the cluster of the Holy Mothers of the Three Skies 三霄聖母 Sanxiao Shengmǔ or 三霄娘娘 Sanxiao Niangniang Ladies of the Three Stars composed of Yunxiao Guniang Qiongxiao Guniang and Bixiao Guniang 75 The cult of Chenjinggu present in southeast China is identified by some scholars as an emanation of the northern cult of Bixia 76 Other goddesses worshipped in China include Canmǔ xii 蠶母 Silkworm Mother or Cangu 蠶姑 Silkworm Maiden 73 identified with Leizǔ 嫘祖 the wife of the Yellow Emperor Magu 麻姑 Hemp Maiden Sǎoqing Niangniang 掃清娘娘 Goddess who Sweeps Clean xiii 78 Sanzhōu Niangniang 三洲娘娘 Goddess of the Three Isles 78 and Wusheng Laomu The mother goddess is central in the theology of many folk religious sects 73 Gods of northeast China edit See also Wudaxian and Northeast China folk religion Northeast China has clusters of deities which are peculiar to the area deriving from the Manchu and broader Tungusic substratum of the local population Animal deities related to shamanic practices are characteristic of the area and reflect wider Chinese cosmology Besides the aforementioned Fox Gods 狐仙 Huxian they include citation needed 黃仙 Huangxian Yellow Immortal the Weasel God 蛇仙 Shexian Snake Immortal also variously called 柳仙 Liǔxian Immortal Liu or 常仙 Changxian Viper Immortal or also 蟒仙 Mǎngxian Python or Boa Immortal 白仙 Baixian White Immortal the Hedgehog God 黑仙 Heixian Black Immortal who may be the 烏鴉仙 Wuyaxian Crow Immortal or the 灰仙 Huixian Rat Immortal with the latter considered a misinterpretation of the formerGods of Indian origin edit nbsp Temple of the Four Faced God in Changhua Taiwan Gods who have been adopted into Chinese religion but who have their origins in the Indian subcontinent or Hinduism 觀音 Guanyin She who Hears the Cries of the World a Chinese goddess of mercy modeled after the bodhisattva Avalokitesvara 四面神 Simianshen Four Faced God but also a metaphor for Ubiquitous God The recent cult has its origin in the Thai transmission of the Hindu god Brahma but it is important to note that it is also an epithet of the indigenous Chinese god Huangdi who as the deity of the centre of the cosmos is described in the Shizi as Yellow Emperor with Four Faces 黃帝四面 Huangdi Simian 61 象頭神 Xiangtoushen Elephant Head God is the Indian god Ganesha 79 Gods of North China and Mongolia edit Genghis Khan 成吉思汗 Chengjisihan worshipped by Mongols and Chinese under a variety of divinity titles including 聖武皇帝 Shengwǔ Huangdi Holy Military Sovereign Deity 法天啓運 Fǎtian Qǐyun Starter of the Transmission of the Law of Heaven and 太祖 Taizǔ Great Ancestor of the Yuan and the Mongols See also editChinese folk religion Chinese temple Jiutian Xuannu Powerful female Deity in Chinese folk religion Mongolian shamanism Shen Shi Gandang protector of home Xian a commonly used Chinese word to refer to what are called Taoist immortals in English ZhenrenNotes edit Whether centred in the change ful precessional north celestial pole or in the fixed north ecliptic pole the spinning constellations draw the 卍 symbol around the centre Notes about the deities and their names a b c The honorific Tianhou 天后 Queen of Heaven is used for many goddesses but most frequently Mazu and Doumu a b c d e f g The cult of this deity is historically exercised all over China 49 a b c d e About the use of the title duke the term is from Latin dux and describes a phenomenon or person who conducts leads the divine inspiration a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t The cult of this deity is historically exercised in northern China 54 It is important to note that many cults of northern deities were transplanted also in southern big cities like Hong Kong and Macau and also in Taiwan with the political changes and migrations of the 19th and 20th centuries a b c d e The cult of this deity is historically exercised in southeastern China 49 The cult of Mazu has its origin in Fujian but it has expanded throughout southern China and in many northern provinces chiefly in localities along the coast as well as among expatriate Chinese communities 68 a b The cult of fox deities is characteristic of northeastern China s folk religion with influences reaching as far south as Hebei and Shandong The worship of monkeys in the northern Fujian region has a long history Influenced by Journey to the West the worship of the Monkey God in some areas has gradually been replaced by the worship of the Qitian Dasheng 70 As the Lady of Mount Tai Bixia is regarded as the female counterpart of Dongyuedadi the Great Deity of the Eastern Peak Mount Tai The Nine Skies 九天 Jiǔtian are the nine stars seven stars with the addition of two invisibile ones according to the Chinese tradition of the Big Dipper or Great Chariot Thus Bixia and her nine attendants or manifestations are at the same time a metaphorical representation of living matter or earth and of the source of all being which is more abstractly represented by major axial gods of Chinese religion such as Doumu Qixing Niangniang Lady of the Seven Stars is a goddess that represents the seven visible stars of the Big Dipper or Great Chariot The cult of Canmu is related to that of Houtu Queen of Earth and to that of the Sanxiao Three Skies goddesses 77 Saoqing Niangniang Lady who Sweeps Clean is the goddess who ensures good weather conditions sweeping away clouds and storms References editCitations edit Lu amp Gong 2014 p 71 a b tian Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2023 04 28 a b c Didier 2009 passim Zhong 2014 pp 76 77 Zhong 2014 p 84 note 282 民間信仰的神明概念 Hierarchic organisation of the spiritual world web sgjh tn edu tw Archived from the original on 2017 11 07 Retrieved 2017 11 01 Zhong 2014 p 98 ff Zhao 2012 p 45 Sanguan Encyclopedia Britannica 2010 02 03 Retrieved 2023 04 30 Zhong 2014 p 202 Zhong 2014 p 64 Zhong 2014 pp 173 174 Feuchtwang 2016 p 147 Didier 2009 p 256 Vol III Mair Victor H 2012 Religious Formations and Intercultural Contacts in Early China In Krech Volkhard Steinicke Marion eds Dynamics in the History of Religions between Asia and Europe Encounters Notions and Comparative Perspectives Leiden Brill pp 85 110 doi 10 1163 9789004225350 005 ISBN 978 90 04 22535 0 pp 97 98 note 26 Didier 2009 p 257 Vol I Reiter Florian C 2007 Purposes Means and Convictions in Daoism A Berlin Symposium Otto Harrassowitz Verlag p 190 ISBN 978 3 447 05513 0 Milburn Olivia 2016 The Spring and Autumn Annals of Master Yan Sinica Leidensia Brill ISBN 978 90 04 30966 1 p 343 note 17 Assasi Reza 2013 Swastika The Forgotten Constellation Representing the Chariot of Mithras Anthropological Notebooks Supplement Sprajc Ivan Pehani Peter eds Ancient Cosmologies and Modern Prophets Proceedings of the 20th Conference of the European Society for Astronomy in Culture XIX 2 ISSN 1408 032X Adler 2011 pp 4 5 Cai 2004 p 314 Adler 2011 p 5 a b Lu amp Gong 2014 p 63 Chang 2000 Lu amp Gong 2014 pp 63 67 a b c d Lu amp Gong 2014 p 64 Zhou 2005 Zhong 2014 p 66 note 224 Lagerwey amp Kalinowski 2008 p 240 Reiter Florian C 2007 Purposes Means and Convictions in Daoism A Berlin Symposium Otto Harrassowitz Verlag ISBN 978 3447055130 p 190 Milburn Olivia 2016 The Spring and Autumn Annals of Master Yan Sinica Leidensia BRILL ISBN 978 9004309661 p 343 note 17 a b c d Lu amp Gong 2014 p 66 a b Lu amp Gong 2014 p 65 a b Lagerwey amp Kalinowski 2008 p 981 Yao 2010 p 159 Yao 2010 p 161 Lagerwey amp Kalinowski 2008 p 984 a b xian Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2023 04 29 a b zhenren Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2023 04 29 a b Chua Amy 2007 Day of Empire How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance and Why They Fall 1st ed New York Doubleday p 65 ISBN 978 0 385 51284 8 OCLC 123079516 Wilkinson Philip 1999 Spilling Michael Williams Sophie Dent Marion eds Illustrated Dictionary of Religions First American ed New York DK p 67 ISBN 0 7894 4711 8 a b Mackenzie Donald Alexander 1986 China amp Japan Myths and Legends New York Avenel Books p 318 ISBN 9780517604465 a b Jian guang Wang December 2019 Water Philosophy in Ancient Society of China Connotation Representation and Influence PDF Philosophy Study 9 12 752 Jiangshan Wang Yi Tian eds October 2020 Imperial China The Definitive Visual History First American ed New York DK p 112 ISBN 978 0 7440 2047 2 Pregadio 2013 p 1197 Cheu Hock Tong 1988 The Nine Emperor Gods A Study of Chinese Spirit medium Cults Time Books International ISBN 9971653850 p 19 DeBernardi Jean 2007 Commodifying Blessings Celebrating the Double Yang Festival in Penang Malaysia and Wudang Mountain China In Kitiarsa Pattana ed Religious Commodifications in Asia Marketing Gods Routledge ISBN 978 1134074457 Pregadio 2013 pp 76 1193 a b Overmyer 2009 p 148 Lagerwey amp Kalinowski 2008 p 983 Max Dashu 2010 Xiwangmu The Shamanic Great Goddess of China Academia edu a b Fowler 2005 pp 206 207 Lagerwey amp Kalinowski 2008 p 512 Overmyer 2009 passim chapter 5 Gods and Temples Sun amp Kistemaker 1997 p 121 a b c d e f Fowler 2005 pp 200 201 Medhurst 1847 p 260 Little amp Eichman 2000 p 250 It describes a Ming dynasty painting representing among other figures the Wudi In the foreground are the gods of the Five Directions dressed as emperors of high antiquity holding tablets of rank in front of them These gods are significant because they reflect the cosmic structure of the world in which yin yang and the Five Phases Elements are in balance They predate religious Taoism and may have originated as chthonic gods of the Neolithic period Governing all directions east south west north and center they correspond not only to the Five Elements but to the seasons the Five Sacred Peaks the Five Planets and zodiac symbols as well a b c d e f Sun amp Kistemaker 1997 pp 120 123 Pregadio 2013 pp 504 505 a b Sun amp Kistemaker 1997 p 120 Bonnefoy Yves 1993 Asian Mythologies University of Chicago Press ISBN 0226064565 p 246 a b c d Lee Keekok 2008 Warp and Weft Chinese Language and Culture Strategic Book Publishing ISBN 978 1606932476 pp 156 157 Sun Kun 29 March 2021 不守常规的龙天庙 Taiyuan Daily in Chinese China Wang Chunsheng 3 March 2022 二月二习俗杂谈 Taiyuan Daily in Chinese China a b Yao 2010 p 202 Wilson Andrew ed 1995 World Scripture A Comparative Anthology of Sacred Texts 1st paperback ed St Paul Minnesota Paragon House Publishers p 20 ISBN 978 1 55778 723 1 Overmyer 2009 p 144 Tvetene Malme Erik 2014 平安神 Mao Zedong as a Deity PDF DUO Research Archive University of Oslo pp 14 20 23 26 28 33 36 齐天大圣 在福建 比 西游记 还要早几百年 The Paper in Chinese China 27 January 2023 Overmyer 2009 p 137 a b c Barrott Wicks Ann Elizabeth 2002 Children in Chinese Art University of Hawaii Press ISBN 0824823591 a b c Jones 2013 pp 166 167 Komjathy Louis 2013 Daoist deities and pantheons The Daoist Tradition An Introduction Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1441196453 Overmyer 2009 p 135 Hackin J 1932 Asiatic Mythology A Detailed Description and Explanation of the Mythologies of All the Great Nations of Asia Asian Educational Services pp 349 350 Jones 2013 p 167 a b Chamberlain 2009 p 235 Martin Dubost Paul 1997 Ganesa The Enchanter of the Three Worlds Mumbai Project for Indian Cultural Studies ISBN 8190018434 p 311 Sources edit Adler Joseph A 2011 The Heritage of Non Theistic Belief in China PDF Conference paper Toward a Reasonable World The Heritage of Western Humanism Skepticism and Freethought San Diego CA Cai Zongqi 2004 Chinese Aesthetics Ordering of Literature the Arts and the Universe in the Six Dynasties University of Hawaii Press ISBN 0824827910 Chamberlain Jonathan 2009 Chinese Gods An Introduction to Chinese Folk Religion Hong Kong Blacksmith Books ISBN 9789881774217 Chang Ruth H 2000 Understanding Di and Tian Deity and Heaven from Shang to Tang Dynasties PDF Sino Platonic Papers Victor H Mair 108 ISSN 2157 9679 Didier John C 2009 In and Outside the Square The Sky and the Power of Belief in Ancient China and the World c 4500 BC AD 200 Sino Platonic Papers Victor H Mair 192 Volume I The Ancient Eurasian World and the Celestial Pivot Volume II Representations and Identities of High Powers in Neolithic and Bronze China Volume III Terrestrial and Celestial Transformations in Zhou and Early Imperial China Feuchtwang Stephan 2016 Chinese religions in Woodhead Linda Kawanami Hiroko Partridge Christopher H eds Religions in the Modern World Traditions and Transformations 3nd ed London Routledge pp 143 172 ISBN 978 1317439608 Fowler Jeanine D 2005 An Introduction to the Philosophy and Religion of Taoism Pathways to Immortality Sussex Academic Press ISBN 1845190866 permanent dead link Jones Stephen 2013 In Search of the Folk Daoists of North China Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 1409481300 Lagerwey John Kalinowski Marc eds 2008 Early Chinese Religion Part One Shang Through Han 1250 BC 220 AD Leiden Brill ISBN 978 9004168350 Little Stephen Eichman Shawn 2000 Taoism and the Arts of China University of California Press ISBN 0520227859 Lu Daji Gong Xuezeng 2014 Marxism and Religion Religious Studies in Contemporary China Brill ISBN 978 9047428022 Medhurst Walter H 1847 A Dissertation on the Theology of the Chinese with a View to the Elucidation of the Most Appropriate Term for Expressing the Deity in the Chinese Language Mission Press Original preserved at The British Library Digitalised in 2014 Overmyer Daniel L 2009 Local Religion in North China in the Twentieth Century the Structure and Organization of Community Rituals and Beliefs PDF Leiden Boston Brill ISBN 9789047429364 Archived from the original PDF on 2015 06 16 Retrieved 2016 07 22 Pregadio Fabrizio 2013 The Encyclopedia of Taoism Routledge ISBN 978 1135796341 Two volumes 1 A L 2 L Z Sun Xiaochun Kistemaker Jacob 1997 The Chinese Sky During the Han Constellating Stars and Society Brill ISBN 9004107371 Yao Xinzhong 2010 Chinese Religion A Contextual Approach London A amp C Black ISBN 9781847064752 Zhong Xinzi 2014 A Reconstruction of Zhu Xi s Religious Philosophy Inspired by Leibniz The Natural Theology of Heaven Thesis Open Access Theses and Dissertations Hong Kong Baptist University Institutional Repository Archived from the original PDF on 2018 02 28 Zhao Dunhua 2012 The Chinese Path to Polytheism in Wang Robin R ed Chinese Philosophy in an Era of Globalization SUNY Press ISBN 978 0791485507 Zhou Jixu 2005 Old Chinese tees and Proto Indo European deus Similarity in Religious Ideas and a Common Source in Linguistics PDF Sino Platonic Papers Victor H Mair 167 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chinese gods and immortals amp oldid 1188159647, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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