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Fox spirit

Huli jing (Chinese: 狐狸精) are Chinese mythological creatures usually capable of shapeshifting, who may either be benevolent or malevolent spirits. In Chinese mythology and folklore, the fox spirit takes variant forms with different meanings, powers, characteristics, and shapes, including huxian (Chinese: 狐仙; lit. 'fox immortal'), hushen (狐神; 'fox god'), husheng (狐聖; 'fox saint'), huwang (狐王; 'fox king'), huyao (狐妖; 'fox demon'), and jiuweihu (九尾狐; 'nine-tailed fox').[1][page needed]

Fox spirit
Chinese name
Chinese狐狸精
Literal meaningfox spirit
Vietnamese name
Vietnamese alphabethồ ly tinh
Chữ Hán狐狸精
Japanese name
Kanji妖狐
Hiraganaようこ
Transcriptions
Romanizationyōko

Fox spirits and nine-tailed foxes appear frequently in Chinese folklore, literature, and mythology. Depending on the story, the fox spirit's presence may be a good or a bad omen.[2] The motif of nine-tailed foxes from Chinese culture was eventually transmitted and introduced to Japanese and Korean cultures.[3]

Descriptions

 
Painting of a fox spirit from Yanju's tomb, Gansu Province. Older depictions of fox spirits depict the eight other tails as branching out from the main tail rather than being separate tails of their own.

The nine-tailed fox occurs in the Shanhaijing (Classic of Mountains and Seas), compiled from the Warring States period to the Western Han period (circa fourth to circa first century BC).[4] The work states:

The Land of Green-Hills lies north of Tianwu. The foxes there have four legs and nine tails. According to another version, it is located north of Sunrise Valley.[4]

In chapter 14 of the Shanhaijing, Guo Pu, a scholar of the Eastern Jin dynasty, had commented that the "nine-tailed fox was an auspicious omen that appeared during times of peace."[4] However, in chapter 1, another aspect of the nine-tailed fox is described:

Three hundred li farther east is Green-Hills Mountain, where much jade can be found on its south slope and green cinnabar on its north. There is a beast here whose form resembles a fox with nine tails. It makes a sound like a baby and is a man-eater. Whoever eats it will be protected against insect-poison (gu).[4]

In one ancient myth, Yu the Great encountered a white nine-tailed fox, which he interpreted as an auspicious sign that he would marry Nüjiao.[4] In Han iconography, the nine-tailed fox is sometimes depicted at Mount Kunlun and along with Xi Wangmu in her role as the goddess of immortality.[4] According to the first-century Baihutong (Debates in the White Tiger Hall), the fox's nine tails symbolize abundant progeny.[4]

During the Han dynasty (202 BC – 9 AD; 25–220 AD), the development of ideas about interspecies transformation had taken place in Chinese culture.[5] The idea that non-human creatures with advancing age could assume human form is presented in works such as the Lunheng by Wang Chong (27–91).[5] As these traditions developed, the fox's capacity for transformation was shaped.[5]

Describing the transformation and other features of the fox, Guo Pu (276–324) made the following comment:

When a fox is fifty years old, it can transform itself into a woman; when a hundred years old, it becomes a beautiful female, or a spirit medium, or an adult male who has sexual intercourse with women. Such beings are able to know things at more than a thousand miles' distance; they can poison men by sorcery, or possess and bewilder them, so that they lose their memory and knowledge; and when a fox is thousand years old, it ascends to heaven and becomes a celestial fox.[6]

In Duìsúpiān (對俗篇) of the Baopuzi, it is written:

Foxes and dholes both can be eight hundred years of age, and when they are five hundred years old, they become enlightened and are able to take up human form. 狐貍、豺狼皆壽八百歲,滿五百歲,則善變為人形。

In a Tang Dynasty story, foxes could become humans by wearing a skull and worshipping the Big Dipper. They would try multiple skulls until they found one that fit without falling off.[7]

 
Qing Dynasty depiction of the fox spirit.

The Youyang Zazu made a connection between nine-tailed foxes and the divine:

Among the arts of the Way, there is a specific doctrine of the celestial fox. [The doctrine] says that the celestial fox has nine tails and a golden color. It serves in the Palace of the Sun and Moon and has its own fu (talisman) and a jiao ritual. It can transcend yin and yang.[8]

The fox spirits encountered in tales and legends are usually females and appear as young, beautiful women. One of the most infamous fox spirits in Chinese mythology was Daji, who is portrayed in the Ming Dynasty shenmo novel Fengshen Yanyi. A beautiful daughter of a general, she was married forcibly to the cruel tyrant King Zhou of Shang. A nine-tailed fox spirit who served Nüwa, whom King Zhou had offended, entered into and possessed her body, expelling the true Daji's soul. The spirit, as Daji, and her new husband schemed cruelly and invented many devices of torture, such as forcing righteous officials to hug red-hot metal pillars.[9] Because of such cruelties, many people, including King Zhou's own former generals, revolted and fought against the Shang dynasty. Finally, King Wen of Zhou, one of the vassals of Shang, founded a new dynasty named after his country. The fox spirit in Daji's body was later driven out by Jiang Ziya, the first Prime Minister of the Zhou dynasty, and her spirit condemned by Nüwa herself for excessive cruelty.

Traditions

Popular fox worship during the Tang dynasty has been mentioned in a text entitled Hu Shen (Fox gods):

Since the beginning of the Tang, many commoners have worshiped fox spirits. They make offerings in their bedchambers to beg for their favor. The foxes share people's food and drink. They do not serve a single master. At the time there was a figure of speech saying, "Where there is no fox demon, no village can be established."[10]

In the Song dynasty, fox spirit cults, such as those dedicated to Daji, became outlawed, but their suppression was unsuccessful.[11] For example, in 1111, an imperial edict was issued for the destruction of many spirit shrines within Kaifeng, including those of Daji.[12]

On the eve of the Jurchen invasion, a fox went to the throne of Emperor Huizong of Song. This resulted in Huizong ordering the destruction of all fox temples in Kaifeng. The city was invaded the next day, and the dynasty fell after five months.[7]

In late imperial China, during the Ming and Qing dynasties, disruptions in the domestic environment could be attributed to the mischief of fox spirits, which could throw or tear apart objects in a manner similar to a poltergeist.[13] "Hauntings" by foxes were often regarded as both commonplace and essentially harmless, with one seventeenth-century author commenting that "Out of every ten houses in the capital, six or seven have fox demons, but they do no harm and people are used to them".[14]

Typically fox spirits were seen as dangerous, but some of the stories in the Qing dynasty book Liaozhai Zhiyi by Pu Songling are love stories between a fox appearing as a beautiful girl and a young human male. In the fantasy novel The Three Sui Quash the Demons' Revolt, a huli jing teaches a young girl magic, enabling her to conjure armies with her spells.[15]

Belief in fox spirits has also been implicated as an explanatory factor in the incidence of attacks of koro, a culture-bound syndrome found in southern China and Malaysia in particular.[16]

There is mention of the fox spirit in Chinese Chán Buddhism, when Linji Yixuan compares them to voices that speak of the Dharma, stating "the immature young monks, not understanding this, believe in these fox-spirits..."[17]

In popular culture

Manhua

Film

TV series

See also

References

  1. ^ Kang (2006).
  2. ^ Kang (2006), pp. 15–21
  3. ^ Wallen, Martin (2006). Fox. London: Reaktion Books. pp. 69–70. ISBN 9781861892973.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Strassberg (2002), pp. 88–89 & 184
  5. ^ a b c Huntington (2003), p. 9
  6. ^ Kang (2006), p. 17
  7. ^ a b Kang (2006)[pages needed]
  8. ^ Kang (2006), p. 23
  9. ^ . Chinese Torture/Supplice chinois. Archived from the original on 2006-11-17. Retrieved 2006-12-26.
  10. ^ Huntington (2003), p. 14
  11. ^ Kang (2006), pp. 37–39
  12. ^ Lin, Fu-shih (2014-12-08). ""Old Customs and New Fashions": An Examination of Features of Shamanism in Song China". Modern Chinese Religion I. Leiden: Brill. pp. 262–263. ISBN 9789004271647.
  13. ^ Huntington (2003), p. [page needed].
  14. ^ Huntington (2003), p. 92.
  15. ^ Lu, Xun (1959). A Brief History of Chinese Fiction. Translated by Hsien-yi Yang; Gladys Yang. Foreign Language Press. p. 176. ISBN 978-7-119-05750-7.
  16. ^ Cheng, S. T. (1996). "A critical review of Chinese Koro". Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry. 20 (1): 67–82. doi:10.1007/BF00118751. PMID 8740959. S2CID 34630225.
  17. ^ The Record of Linji. Honolulu. 2008. p. 218.

Literature

  • Chan, Leo Tak-hung (1998). The discourse on foxes and ghosts: Ji Yun and eighteenth-century literati storytelling. Hong Kong: Chinese University of Hong Kong. ISBN 9789622017498.
  • Huntington, Rania (2003). Alien kind: Foxes and late imperial Chinese narrative. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674010949.
  • Kang, Xiaofei (2006). The cult of the fox: Power, gender, and popular religion in late imperial and modern China. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231133388.
  • Strassberg, Richard E. (2002). A Chinese Bestiary: Strange Creatures from the Guideways Through Mountains and Seas. Berkeley: University of California press. ISBN 978-0-520-21844-4.
  • Ting, Nai-tung. "A Comparative Study of Three Chinese and North-American Indian Folktale Types." Asian Folklore Studies 44, no. 1 (1985): 42–43. Accessed July 1, 2020. doi:10.2307/1177982.
  • Anatole, Alex. "Tao of Celestial Foxes -The Way to Immortality" Volumes I, II, III)(2015)

External links

  • Fox Spirits in Asia

spirit, foxwoman, redirects, here, dungeons, dragons, creature, foxwoman, dungeons, dragons, huli, jing, chinese, 狐狸精, chinese, mythological, creatures, usually, capable, shapeshifting, either, benevolent, malevolent, spirits, chinese, mythology, folklore, spi. Foxwoman redirects here For the Dungeons amp Dragons creature see Foxwoman Dungeons amp Dragons Huli jing Chinese 狐狸精 are Chinese mythological creatures usually capable of shapeshifting who may either be benevolent or malevolent spirits In Chinese mythology and folklore the fox spirit takes variant forms with different meanings powers characteristics and shapes including huxian Chinese 狐仙 lit fox immortal hushen 狐神 fox god husheng 狐聖 fox saint huwang 狐王 fox king huyao 狐妖 fox demon and jiuweihu 九尾狐 nine tailed fox 1 page needed Fox spiritChinese nameChinese狐狸精Literal meaningfox spiritTranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinhulijingIPA xu li tɕi ŋ Yue CantoneseJyutpingwu lei zing Southern MinHokkien POJho li chiaⁿVietnamese nameVietnamese alphabethồ ly tinhChữ Han狐狸精Japanese nameKanji妖狐HiraganaようこTranscriptionsRomanizationyōkoFox spirits and nine tailed foxes appear frequently in Chinese folklore literature and mythology Depending on the story the fox spirit s presence may be a good or a bad omen 2 The motif of nine tailed foxes from Chinese culture was eventually transmitted and introduced to Japanese and Korean cultures 3 Contents 1 Descriptions 2 Traditions 3 In popular culture 3 1 Manhua 3 2 Film 3 3 TV series 4 See also 5 References 6 Literature 7 External linksDescriptions Edit Painting of a fox spirit from Yanju s tomb Gansu Province Older depictions of fox spirits depict the eight other tails as branching out from the main tail rather than being separate tails of their own The nine tailed fox occurs in the Shanhaijing Classic of Mountains and Seas compiled from the Warring States period to the Western Han period circa fourth to circa first century BC 4 The work states The Land of Green Hills lies north of Tianwu The foxes there have four legs and nine tails According to another version it is located north of Sunrise Valley 4 In chapter 14 of the Shanhaijing Guo Pu a scholar of the Eastern Jin dynasty had commented that the nine tailed fox was an auspicious omen that appeared during times of peace 4 However in chapter 1 another aspect of the nine tailed fox is described Three hundred li farther east is Green Hills Mountain where much jade can be found on its south slope and green cinnabar on its north There is a beast here whose form resembles a fox with nine tails It makes a sound like a baby and is a man eater Whoever eats it will be protected against insect poison gu 4 In one ancient myth Yu the Great encountered a white nine tailed fox which he interpreted as an auspicious sign that he would marry Nujiao 4 In Han iconography the nine tailed fox is sometimes depicted at Mount Kunlun and along with Xi Wangmu in her role as the goddess of immortality 4 According to the first century Baihutong Debates in the White Tiger Hall the fox s nine tails symbolize abundant progeny 4 During the Han dynasty 202 BC 9 AD 25 220 AD the development of ideas about interspecies transformation had taken place in Chinese culture 5 The idea that non human creatures with advancing age could assume human form is presented in works such as the Lunheng by Wang Chong 27 91 5 As these traditions developed the fox s capacity for transformation was shaped 5 Describing the transformation and other features of the fox Guo Pu 276 324 made the following comment When a fox is fifty years old it can transform itself into a woman when a hundred years old it becomes a beautiful female or a spirit medium or an adult male who has sexual intercourse with women Such beings are able to know things at more than a thousand miles distance they can poison men by sorcery or possess and bewilder them so that they lose their memory and knowledge and when a fox is thousand years old it ascends to heaven and becomes a celestial fox 6 In Duisupian 對俗篇 of the Baopuzi it is written Foxes and dholes both can be eight hundred years of age and when they are five hundred years old they become enlightened and are able to take up human form 狐貍 豺狼皆壽八百歲 滿五百歲 則善變為人形 In a Tang Dynasty story foxes could become humans by wearing a skull and worshipping the Big Dipper They would try multiple skulls until they found one that fit without falling off 7 Qing Dynasty depiction of the fox spirit The Youyang Zazu made a connection between nine tailed foxes and the divine Among the arts of the Way there is a specific doctrine of the celestial fox The doctrine says that the celestial fox has nine tails and a golden color It serves in the Palace of the Sun and Moon and has its own fu talisman and a jiao ritual It can transcend yin and yang 8 The fox spirits encountered in tales and legends are usually females and appear as young beautiful women One of the most infamous fox spirits in Chinese mythology was Daji who is portrayed in the Ming Dynasty shenmo novel Fengshen Yanyi A beautiful daughter of a general she was married forcibly to the cruel tyrant King Zhou of Shang A nine tailed fox spirit who served Nuwa whom King Zhou had offended entered into and possessed her body expelling the true Daji s soul The spirit as Daji and her new husband schemed cruelly and invented many devices of torture such as forcing righteous officials to hug red hot metal pillars 9 Because of such cruelties many people including King Zhou s own former generals revolted and fought against the Shang dynasty Finally King Wen of Zhou one of the vassals of Shang founded a new dynasty named after his country The fox spirit in Daji s body was later driven out by Jiang Ziya the first Prime Minister of the Zhou dynasty and her spirit condemned by Nuwa herself for excessive cruelty Traditions EditPopular fox worship during the Tang dynasty has been mentioned in a text entitled Hu Shen Fox gods Since the beginning of the Tang many commoners have worshiped fox spirits They make offerings in their bedchambers to beg for their favor The foxes share people s food and drink They do not serve a single master At the time there was a figure of speech saying Where there is no fox demon no village can be established 10 In the Song dynasty fox spirit cults such as those dedicated to Daji became outlawed but their suppression was unsuccessful 11 For example in 1111 an imperial edict was issued for the destruction of many spirit shrines within Kaifeng including those of Daji 12 On the eve of the Jurchen invasion a fox went to the throne of Emperor Huizong of Song This resulted in Huizong ordering the destruction of all fox temples in Kaifeng The city was invaded the next day and the dynasty fell after five months 7 In late imperial China during the Ming and Qing dynasties disruptions in the domestic environment could be attributed to the mischief of fox spirits which could throw or tear apart objects in a manner similar to a poltergeist 13 Hauntings by foxes were often regarded as both commonplace and essentially harmless with one seventeenth century author commenting that Out of every ten houses in the capital six or seven have fox demons but they do no harm and people are used to them 14 Typically fox spirits were seen as dangerous but some of the stories in the Qing dynasty book Liaozhai Zhiyi by Pu Songling are love stories between a fox appearing as a beautiful girl and a young human male In the fantasy novel The Three Sui Quash the Demons Revolt a huli jing teaches a young girl magic enabling her to conjure armies with her spells 15 Belief in fox spirits has also been implicated as an explanatory factor in the incidence of attacks of koro a culture bound syndrome found in southern China and Malaysia in particular 16 There is mention of the fox spirit in Chinese Chan Buddhism when Linji Yixuan compares them to voices that speak of the Dharma stating the immature young monks not understanding this believe in these fox spirits 17 In popular culture EditManhua Edit Fox Spirit Matchmaker 2015 Film Edit Painted Skin 2008 and its sequel 2012 A Chinese Fairy Tale 2011 League of Gods 2016 Once Upon a Time 2017 Hanson and the Beast 2017 The Legend of Hei 2019 Jiang Ziyia 2020 Soul Snatcher 2020 Shang Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings 2021 TV series Edit The Legend of Nezha 哪吒传奇 2003 Strange Tales of Liao Zhai 新聊斋志异 2005 The Legend and the Hero 2007 and its sequel 2009 The Investiture of the Gods 2014 and The Investiture of the Gods 2 2015 Legend of Nine Tails Fox 2016 Fox in the Screen 屏里狐 2016 Eternal Love 2017 Moonshine and Valentine 2017 Beauties in the Closet 柜中美人 2018 Investiture of the Gods 2019 Love Death amp Robots Episode 8 2019 The Life of White Fox 白狐的人生 2019 Eternal Love of Dream 2020 See also EditDaji a well known character who was a fox spirit in the Fengshen Yanyi Nine tailed fox the most well known fox spirit in Chinese mythology Huxian the fox immortals highly cultivated fox spirits in Chinese tradition Kitsune a similar fox spirit from Japan Kumiho a similar fox spirit from Korea Hồ ly tinh a similar fox spirit from Vietnam Strange Stories from a Chinese Studio a compilation of supernatural stories of which many have fox spirits as a themeReferences Edit Kang 2006 Kang 2006 pp 15 21 Wallen Martin 2006 Fox London Reaktion Books pp 69 70 ISBN 9781861892973 a b c d e f g Strassberg 2002 pp 88 89 amp 184 a b c Huntington 2003 p 9 Kang 2006 p 17 a b Kang 2006 pages needed Kang 2006 p 23 Fox spirit Daji invents the Paoluo torture Chinese Torture Supplice chinois Archived from the original on 2006 11 17 Retrieved 2006 12 26 Huntington 2003 p 14 Kang 2006 pp 37 39 Lin Fu shih 2014 12 08 Old Customs and New Fashions An Examination of Features of Shamanism in Song China Modern Chinese Religion I Leiden Brill pp 262 263 ISBN 9789004271647 Huntington 2003 p page needed Huntington 2003 p 92 Lu Xun 1959 A Brief History of Chinese Fiction Translated by Hsien yi Yang Gladys Yang Foreign Language Press p 176 ISBN 978 7 119 05750 7 Cheng S T 1996 A critical review of Chinese Koro Culture Medicine and Psychiatry 20 1 67 82 doi 10 1007 BF00118751 PMID 8740959 S2CID 34630225 The Record of Linji Honolulu 2008 p 218 Literature EditChan Leo Tak hung 1998 The discourse on foxes and ghosts Ji Yun and eighteenth century literati storytelling Hong Kong Chinese University of Hong Kong ISBN 9789622017498 Huntington Rania 2003 Alien kind Foxes and late imperial Chinese narrative Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674010949 Kang Xiaofei 2006 The cult of the fox Power gender and popular religion in late imperial and modern China New York Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231133388 Strassberg Richard E 2002 A Chinese Bestiary Strange Creatures from the Guideways Through Mountains and Seas Berkeley University of California press ISBN 978 0 520 21844 4 Ting Nai tung A Comparative Study of Three Chinese and North American Indian Folktale Types Asian Folklore Studies 44 no 1 1985 42 43 Accessed July 1 2020 doi 10 2307 1177982 Anatole Alex Tao of Celestial Foxes The Way to Immortality Volumes I II III 2015 External links EditFox Spirits in Asia 北方的民间信仰 狐仙 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fox spirit amp oldid 1148342369, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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