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Nüwa

Nüwa, also read Nügua, is the mother goddess of Chinese mythology. She is credited with creating humanity and repairing the Pillar of Heaven.[1]

Nüwa
Nuwa repairing the pillar of heaven by Xiao Yuncong (1596–1673)
Traditional Chinese女媧
Simplified Chinese女娲

As creator of mankind, she molded humans individually by hand with yellow clay.[2]

In the Huainanzi, there is described a great battle between deities that broke the pillars supporting Heaven and caused great devastation. There was great flooding, and Heaven had collapsed. Nüwa was the one who patched the holes in Heaven with five colored stones, and she used the legs of a tortoise to mend the pillars.[2]

There are many instances of her in literature across China which detail her in creation stories, and today remains a figure important to Chinese culture.

Name

The character (Chinese: ; lit. 'female') is a common prefix on the names of goddesses. The proper name is wa, also read as gua (Chinese: ). The Chinese character is unique to this name. Birrell translates it as 'lovely', but notes that it "could be construed as 'frog', which is consistent with her aquatic myth.[3] In Chinese, the word for 'whirlpool' is wo (Chinese: ), which shares the same pronunciation with the word for 'snail' (Chinese: ). These characters all have their right side constructed by the word wa (Chinese: ), which can be translated as 'spiral' or 'helix' as noun, and as 'spin' or 'rotate' when as verb, to describe the 'helical movement'. This mythical meaning has also been symbolically pictured as compasses in the hand which can be found on many paintings and portraits associated with her.

Her reverential name is Wahuang (Chinese: 媧皇; lit. 'Empress Wa').[4]

Description

 

The Huainanzi relates Nüwa to the time when Heaven and Earth were in disruption:

Going back to more ancient times, the four pillars were broken; the nine provinces were in tatters. Heaven did not completely cover [the earth]; Earth did not hold up [Heaven] all the way around [its circumference]. Fires blazed out of control and could not be extinguished; water flooded in great expanses and would not recede. Ferocious animals ate blameless people; predatory birds snatched the elderly and the weak. Thereupon, Nüwa smelted together five-colored stones in order to patch up the azure sky, cut off the legs of the great turtle to set them up as the four pillars, killed the black dragon to provide relief for Ji Province, and piled up reeds and cinders to stop the surging waters. The azure sky was patched; the four pillars were set up; the surging waters were drained; the province of Ji was tranquil; crafty vermin died off; blameless people [preserved their] lives.[5][a]

The catastrophes were supposedly caused by the battle between the deities Gonggong and Zhuanxu (an event that was mentioned earlier in the Huainanzi),[b] the five-colored stones symbolize the five Chinese elements (wood, fire, earth, metal, and water), the black dragon was the essence of water and thus cause of the floods, Ji Province serves metonymically for the central regions (the Sinitic world).[8] Following this, the Huainanzi tells about how the sage-rulers Nüwa and Fuxi set order over the realm by following the Way () and its potency ().[5]

The Classic of Mountains and Seas, dated between the Warring States period and the Han Dynasty, describes Nüwa's intestines as being scattered into ten spirits.[9][non-primary source needed]

In Liezi (c. 475 – 221 BC), Chapter 5 "Questions of Tang" (卷第五 湯問篇), author Lie Yukou describes Nüwa repairing the original imperfect heaven using five-colored stones, and cutting the legs off a tortoise to use as struts to hold up the sky.[10]

In Songs of Chu (c. 340 – 278 BC), Chapter 3 "Asking Heaven" (Chinese: 问天), author Qu Yuan writes that Nüwa molded figures from the yellow earth, giving them life and the ability to bear children. After demons fought and broke the pillars of the heavens, Nüwa worked unceasingly to repair the damage, melting down the five-coloured stones to mend the heavens.[11]

In Shuowen Jiezi (c. 58 – 147 AD), China's earliest dictionary, under the entry for Nüwa author Xu Shen describes her as being both the sister and the wife of Fuxi. Nüwa and Fuxi were pictured as having snake-like tails interlocked in an Eastern Han Dynasty mural in the Wuliang Temple in Jiaxiang county, Shandong province.[citation needed]

In Duyi Zhi (獨異志; c. 846 – 874 AD), Volume 3, author Li Rong gives this description.

Long ago, when the world first began, there were two people, Nü Kua and her older brother. They lived on Mount K'un-lun. And there were not yet any ordinary people in the world. They talked about becoming husband and wife, but they felt ashamed. So the brother at once went with his sister up Mount K'un-lun and made this prayer: "Oh Heaven, if Thou wouldst send us two forth as man and wife, then make all the misty vapor gather. If not, then make all the misty vapor disperse." At this, the misty vapor immediately gathered. When the sister became intimate with her brother, they plaited some grass to make a fan to screen their faces. Even today, when a man takes a wife, they hold a fan, which is a symbol of what happened long ago.[12]

In Yuchuan Ziji (玉川子集 c. 618 – 907 AD), Chapter 3 ("與馬異結交詩" 也稱 "女媧本是伏羲婦"), author Lu Tong describes Nüwa as the wife of Fuxi.[citation needed]

In Siku Quanshu, Sima Zhen (679–732) provides commentary on the prologue chapter to Sima Qian's Shiji, "Supplemental to the Historic Record: History of the Three August Ones", wherein it is found that the Three August Ones are Nüwa, Fuxi, and Shennong; Fuxi and Nüwa have the same last name, Feng (Chinese: ; Hmong: Faj).[c]

 
Nüwa as depicted on one of the Mawangdui silk banners, Han dynasty

In the collection Four Great Books of Song (c. 960 – 1279 AD), compiled by Li Fang and others, Volume 78 of the book Imperial Readings of the Taiping Era contains a chapter "Customs by Yingshao of the Han Dynasty" in which it is stated that there were no men when the sky and the earth were separated. Thus Nüwa used yellow clay to make people. But the clay was not strong enough so she put ropes into the clay to make the bodies erect. It is also said that she prayed to gods to let her be the goddess of marital affairs. Variations of this story exist.[citation needed]

Iconography of Fuxi and Nüwa

 
Nüwa and Fuxi on the murals (rubbing depicted) of the Wu Liang shrines, Han dynasty (206 BC – 220 AD)

The iconography of Fuxi and Nüwa vary in physical appearance depending on the time period and also shows regional differences.[13] In Chinese tomb murals and iconography, Fuxi and Nüwa generally have snake-like bodies and human face or head.[13][14][15]

Fuxi and Nüwa can be depicted as individual figures arranged as a symmetrical pair or they can be depicted in double figures with intertwined snake-like bodies.[13] Their snake-like tails can also be depicted stretching out towards each other.[13] Fuxi and Nüwa can also appear individually on separate tomb bricks.[13] They generally hold or embrace the sun or moon discs containing the images of a bird (or a three-legged crow) or a toad (sometimes a hare) which are the sun and moon symbolism respectively, and/or each holding a try square or a pair of compasses, or holding a longevity mushroom (Chinese: 靈芝; pinyin: lingzhi) plant.[13][15] Fuxi and Nüwa holding the sun and the moon appears as early as the late Western Han dynasty.[13] Other physical appearance variation, such as lower snake-like body shape (e.g. thick vs thin tails), depictions of legs (i.e. legs found along the snake-like body) and wings (e.g. wings with feathers which protrude from their backs as found in late Western Han Xinan (新安) Tomb or smaller quills found on their shoulders), and in hats and hairstyles, also exist.[13]

In the Luoyang regions murals dating to the late Western Han dynasty, Fuxi and Nüwa are generally depicted as individual figures, each one found at each side of the central ridge of tomb chambers as found in the Bu Qianqiu Tomb.[13] They can also be found without intertwining tails from the stone murals of the same period.[13] Since the middle of the Eastern Han dynasty, their tails started to intertwine.[13]

In the Gansu murals dating to the Wei and Western Jin period, one of the most typical features of Fuxi is the "mountain-hat" (Chinese: 山字形; pinyin: Shanzixing) which looks like a three-peaked cap while Nüwa is depicted wearing various hairstyles characteristic of Han women.[13] Both deities dressed in wide-sleeved clothing, which reflects typical Han clothing style also commonly depicted in Han dynasty art.[13]

Legends

Appearance in Fengshen Yanyi

 
An ancient painting of Nuwa and Fuxi unearthed at the Astana Graves.

Nüwa is featured within the famed Ming dynasty novel Fengshen Bang. As featured within this novel, Nüwa is very highly respected since the time of the Xia Dynasty for being the daughter of the Jade Emperor; Nüwa is also regularly called the "Snake Goddess". After the Shang Dynasty had been created, Nüwa created the five-colored stones to protect the dynasty with occasional seasonal rains and other enhancing qualities. Thus in time, Shang Rong asked King Zhou of Shang to pay her a visit as a sign of deep respect. After Zhou was completely overcome with lust at the very sight of the beautiful ancient goddess Nüwa (who had been sitting behind a light curtain), he wrote an erotic poem on a neighboring wall and took his leave. When Nüwa later returned to her temple after visiting the Yellow Emperor, she saw the foulness of Zhou's words. In her anger, she swore the Shang Dynasty would end in payment for his offense. In her rage, Nüwa personally ascended to the palace in an attempt to kill the king, but was suddenly struck back by two large beams of red light.

After Nüwa realized that King Zhou was already destined to rule the kingdom for twenty-six more years, Nüwa summoned her three subordinates—the Thousand-Year Vixen (later becoming Daji), the Jade Pipa, and the Nine-Headed Pheasant. With these words, Nüwa brought destined chaos to the Shang Dynasty, "The luck Cheng Tang won six hundred years ago is dimming. I speak to you of a new mandate of heaven which sets the destiny for all. You three are to enter King Zhou's palace, where you are to bewitch him. Whatever you do, do not harm anyone else. If you do my bidding, and do it well, you will be permitted to reincarnate as human beings."[17] With these words, Nüwa was never heard of again, but was still a major indirect factor towards the Shang Dynasty's fall.

Creation of humanity

Pangu was said to be the creation god in Chinese mythology. He was a giant sleeping within an egg of chaos. As he awoke, he stood up and divided the sky and the earth. Pangu then died after standing up, and his body turned into rivers, mountains, plants, animals, and everything else in the world, among which is a powerful being known as Huaxu (華胥). Huaxu gave birth to a twin brother and sister, Fuxi and Nüwa. Fuxi and Nüwa are said to be creatures that have faces of human and bodies of snakes.[18]

Nüwa created humanity due to her loneliness, which grew more intense over time. She molded yellow earth or, in other versions, yellow clay into the shape of people. These individuals later became the wealthy nobles of society, because they had been created by Nüwa's own hands. However, the majority of humanity was created when Nüwa dragged string across mud to mass-produce them, which she did because creating every person by hand was too time- and energy-consuming. This creation story gives an aetiological explanation for the social hierarchy in ancient China. The nobility believed that they were more important than the mass-produced majority of humanity, because Nüwa took time to create them, and they had been directly touched by her hand.[19] In another version of the creation of humanity, Nüwa and Fuxi were survivors of a great flood. By the command of the God of the heaven, they were married and Nüwa had a child which was a ball of meat. This ball of meat was cut into small pieces, and the pieces were scattered across the world, which then became humans.[20]

Nüwa was born three months after her brother, Fuxi, whom she later took as her husband; this marriage is the reason why Nüwa is credited with inventing the idea of marriage.[19]

Before the two of them got married, they lived on mount K'un-lun. A prayer was made after the two became guilty of falling for each other. The prayer is as follows,

"Oh Heaven, if Thou wouldst send us forth as man and wife, then make all the misty vapor gather. If not, then make all the misty vapor disperse."[19]

Misty vapor then gathered after the prayer signifying the two could marry. When intimate, the two made a fan out of grass to screen their faces which is why during modern day marriages, the couple hold a fan together. By connecting, the two were representative of Yin and Yang; Fuxi being connected to Yang and masculinity along Nüwa being connected to Yin and femininity. This is further defined with Fuxi receiving a carpenter's square which symbolizes his identification with the physical world because a carpenter's square is associated with straight lines and squares leading to a more straightforward mindset. Meanwhile, Nüwa was given a compass to symbolize her identification with the heavens because a compass is associated with curves and circles leading to a more abstract mindset. With the two being married, it symbolized the union between heaven and Earth.[19] Other versions have Nüwa invent the compass rather than receive it as a gift.[21] In addition, the system of male and female sex, the yang-yin philosophy, is expressed here in a complex way: first as Fuxi and Nüwa, then as a compass (masculine) and a square (feminine), and thirdly, as Nüwa (woman) with a compass (man) and Fuxi (man) with a square (woman).[22]

Nüwa Mends the Heavens

 
Modern relief of Nuwa at the Ping Sien Si Temple in Perak, Malaysia

Nüwa Mends the Heavens (Chinese: 女娲補天; Chinese: 女娲补天; pinyin: Nǚwā bǔtiān) is a well-known theme in Chinese culture. The courage and wisdom of Nüwa inspired the ancient Chinese to control nature's elements and has become a favorite subject of Chinese poets, painters, and sculptors,[23] along with so many poetry and arts like novels, films, paintings, and sculptures; e.g. the sculptures that decorate Nanshan[24] and Ya'an.[25]

The Huainanzi tells an ancient story about how the four pillars that support the sky crumbled inexplicably. Other sources have tried to explain the cause, i.e. the battle between Gong Gong and Zhuanxu or Zhurong. Unable to accept his defeat, Gong Gong deliberately banged his head onto Mount Buzhou (不周山) which was one of the four pillars. Half of the sky fell which created a gaping hole and the earth itself was cracked; the earth's axis mundi was tilted into the southeast while the sky rose into the northwest. This is said to be the reason why the western region of China is higher than the eastern and that most of its rivers flow towards the southeast. This same explanation is applied to the sun, moon, and stars which moved into the northwest. A wildfire burnt the forests and led the wild animals to run amok and attack the innocent peoples, while the water which was coming out from the earth's crack didn't seem to be slowing down.[26]

Nüwa pitied the humans she had made and attempted to repair the sky. She gathered five colored-stones (red, yellow, blue, black, and white) from the riverbed, melted them and used them to patch up the sky: since then the sky (clouds) have been colorful. She then killed a giant turtle (or tortoise), some version named the tortoise as Ao, cut off the four legs of the creature to use as new pillars to support the sky. But Nüwa didn't do it perfectly because the unequal length of the legs made the sky tilt. After the job was done, Nüwa drove away the wild animals, extinguished the fire, and controlled the flood with a huge amount of ashes from the burning reeds and the world became as peaceful as it was before.[26][27]

Empress Nuwa

Many Chinese know well their Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors, i.e. the early leaders of humanity as well as culture heroes according to the Northern Chinese belief. But the lists vary and depend on the sources used.[28] One version includes Nüwa as one of the Three Sovereigns, who reigned after Fuxi and before Shennong.[29]

The myth of the Three Sovereigns sees the three as demigod figures, and the myth is used to stress the importance of an imperial reign. The variation between sources stems from China being generally divided before the Qin and Han dynasties, and the version with Fuxi, Shennong, and Nüwa was used to emphasize rule and structure.[30]

In her matriarchal reign, she battled against a neighboring tribal chief, defeated him, and took him to the peak of a mountain. Defeated by a woman, the chief felt ashamed to be alive and banged his head on the heavenly bamboo to kill himself and for revenge. His act tore a hole in the sky and made a flood hit the whole world. The flood killed all people except Nüwa and her army which was protected by her divinity. After that, Nüwa patched the sky with five colored-stones until the flood receded.[31]

Popular culture

See also

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ A different translation of the same text is also given in Lewis.[6]
  2. ^ "In ancient times Gong Gong and Zhuan Xu fought, each seeking to become the thearch. Enraged, they crashed against Mount Buzhou; Heaven's pillars broke; the cords of Earth snapped. Heaven tilted in the northwest, and thus the sun and moon, stars and planets shifted in that direction. Earth became unfull in the southeast, and thus the watery floods and mounding soils subsided in that direction."[7]
  3. ^ Sima Zhen's commentary is included with the later Siku Quanshu compiled by Ji Yun and Lu Xixiong(陸錫熊).[citation needed]

Citations

  1. ^ "Nügua". Oxford Reference. Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  2. ^ a b Lee, Irwin (1990). "Divinity and Salvation: The Great Goddesses of China". Asian Folklore Studies. 49 (1): 53–68. doi:10.2307/1177949. JSTOR 1177949 – via JSTOR.
  3. ^ Anne Birrell (1999), trans., The Classic of Mountains and Seas. Penguin Books.
  4. ^ 媧皇. Handian. Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  5. ^ a b Major & al. (2010), ch. 6.
  6. ^ Lewis (2006), p. 111.
  7. ^ Major & al. (2010), ch. 3.
  8. ^ Major & al. (2010), ch. 6 n.
  9. ^ 大荒西經. 山海經 [Shan Hai Jing] (in Chinese).
  10. ^ Giles, Lionel (1912). TAOIST TEACHINGS Translated from the Book of Lieh-Tzü (1st ed.). Sacred texts: London: John Murray. pp. 78–79. Retrieved 19 April 2023.
  11. ^ Qu, Yuan (2017). The Songs of Chu: An Anthology of Ancient Chinese Poetry by Qu Yuan and Others. Columbia University Press. pp. 61–102.
  12. ^ Translation in Birrell 1993, 35.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Vampelj Suhadolnik, Nataša (2019-06-28). "Transmission of Han Pictorial Motifs into the Western Periphery". Asian Studies. 7 (2): 47–86. doi:10.4312/as.2019.7.2.47-86. ISSN 2350-4226. S2CID 198704018.
  14. ^ Zhang, Fan (2019-06-28). "Chinese-Buddhist Encounter: Synthesis of Fuxi-Nüwa and the Cintamani in Early Medieval Chinese Art". Asian Studies. 7 (2): 87–111. doi:10.4312/as.2019.7.2.87-111. ISSN 2350-4226. S2CID 198651581.
  15. ^ a b Nelson, Sarah M. (2019). Shamanism and the origin of states : spirit, power, and gender in East Asia (First ed.). London. ISBN 978-1-315-42029-5. OCLC 1111577750.
  16. ^ "Painting of Fuxi and Nuwa | Highlights". NATIONAL MUSEUM OF KOREA. Retrieved 2021-12-04.
  17. ^ Allan, Sarah; Allan, Sarah (1991). The shape of the turtle: myth, art, and cosmos in early China. SUNY series in Chinese philosophy and culture. SUNY Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-0460-7.
  18. ^ Millidge, Judith (1999). Chinese Gods and Myths. Chartwell Books. ISBN 978-0-7858-1078-0.
  19. ^ a b c d Thury, Eva M. (2017). Introduction to mythology : contemporary approaches to classical and world myths. ISBN 9780190262983. OCLC 946109909.
  20. ^ Lianfe, Yang (1993). "Water in Traditional Chinese Culture". The Journal of Popular Culture. 27 (2): 51–56. doi:10.1111/j.0022-3840.1993.00051.x. ISSN 0022-3840.
  21. ^ Roberts, David Lindsay; Leung, Allen Yuk Lun; Lins, Abigail Fregni (2012), "From the Slate to the Web: Technology in the Mathematics Curriculum", Third International Handbook of Mathematics Education, Springer New York, pp. 525–547, doi:10.1007/978-1-4614-4684-2_17, ISBN 9781461446835
  22. ^ Schinz, Alfred (1996). The Magic Square: Cities in Ancient China. Edition Axel Menges. ISBN 9783930698028.
  23. ^ "NUWA REPAIRS THE HEAVENS (Nuwa Bu Tian)". Beijing: China on Your Mind. 2013. Retrieved 15 November 2015.
  24. ^ dartman. "Goddess Nu Wa Patching the Sky". Panoramio. Retrieved 15 November 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  25. ^ Zhitao Li. "Nuwa Patching the Sky". Dreamstime. Retrieved 15 November 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  26. ^ a b anonim (26 October 2009). "The Nuwa Sacrificial Ceremonies". Beijing: Confucius Institute Online. Retrieved 15 November 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  27. ^ Skryrock (5 February 2013). "Nüwa Repairs the Heavens". Chinese Geography. Retrieved 15 November 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  28. ^ Hucker, Charles (1995). China's Imperial Past: An Introduction to Chinese History and Culture. Stanford University Press. p. 22. ISBN 9780804723534.
  29. ^ 劉煒/著. (2002) Chinese civilization in a new light. Commercial press publishing. ISBN 962-07-5314-3, p. 142.
  30. ^ Nagel-Angermann, Monique (November 2015). "The Three August Ones". Dig into History. 17: 4 – via EBSCOhost.
  31. ^ Mark Isaak (2 September 2002). "Flood Stories from Around the World". Retrieved 15 November 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  32. ^ Lianhua Andy (25 September 2015). "Penciptaan Bumi & Manusia Menurut Chiness Mitologi (Pangu ,Nuwa & Fuxi)" (in Indonesian). Retrieved 15 November 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  33. ^ "Unveiling Goddess Nüwa in NY Times Square and Beijing". United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP). 22 April 2012. Retrieved 15 November 2015.
  34. ^ "Ozone statue unveiled in Vienna to mark Montreal Protocol anniversary". UNIDO. 22 November 2012. Retrieved 15 November 2015.
  35. ^ "Goddess Nuwa patches up the sky". Zero Studio. 2013. Retrieved 15 November 2015.
  36. ^ anonim (2014). "Goddess Nuwa Patches Up the Sky – the Chinese Library Series (Paperback)". AbeBooks Inc. Retrieved 15 November 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  37. ^ Jedd Jong (4 February 2014). "The Monkey King". Retrieved 15 November 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)

General bibliography

  • Birrell, Anne (1993), Chinese Mythology: An Introduction, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
  • Lewis, Mark Edward (2006), The Flood Myths of Early China, Albany: State University of New York Press, ISBN 978-0-7914-6663-6.
  • Major, John S.; et al., eds. (2010), The Huainanzi: A Guide to the Theory and Practice of Government in Early Han China, New York: Columbia University Press, ISBN 978-0-231-14204-5.

Further reading

  • Allan, Sarah (1991), The shape of the turtle: myth, art, and cosmos in early China, SUNY series in Chinese philosophy and culture, SUNY Press, ISBN 0-7914-0460-9

External links

  •   Media related to Nuwa at Wikimedia Commons

nüwa, nuwa, redirects, here, other, uses, nuwa, disambiguation, also, read, nügua, mother, goddess, chinese, mythology, credited, with, creating, humanity, repairing, pillar, heaven, nuwa, repairing, pillar, heaven, xiao, yuncong, 1596, 1673, traditional, chin. Nuwa redirects here For other uses see Nuwa disambiguation Nuwa also read Nugua is the mother goddess of Chinese mythology She is credited with creating humanity and repairing the Pillar of Heaven 1 NuwaNuwa repairing the pillar of heaven by Xiao Yuncong 1596 1673 Traditional Chinese女媧Simplified Chinese女娲TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinNǚwaWade GilesNu3 wa1IPANỳwaYue CantoneseYale RomanizationNeuih WōJyutpingNeoi5 Wo1IPA nɵ y wɔ ː Southern MinHokkien POJLu oMiddle ChineseMiddle ChinesenrɨaX kwueAs creator of mankind she molded humans individually by hand with yellow clay 2 In the Huainanzi there is described a great battle between deities that broke the pillars supporting Heaven and caused great devastation There was great flooding and Heaven had collapsed Nuwa was the one who patched the holes in Heaven with five colored stones and she used the legs of a tortoise to mend the pillars 2 There are many instances of her in literature across China which detail her in creation stories and today remains a figure important to Chinese culture Contents 1 Name 2 Description 3 Iconography of Fuxi and Nuwa 4 Legends 4 1 Appearance in Fengshen Yanyi 4 2 Creation of humanity 4 3 Nuwa Mends the Heavens 4 4 Empress Nuwa 5 Popular culture 6 See also 7 Explanatory notes 8 Citations 9 General bibliography 10 Further reading 11 External linksName EditThe character nu Chinese 女 lit female is a common prefix on the names of goddesses The proper name is wa also read as gua Chinese 媧 The Chinese character is unique to this name Birrell translates it as lovely but notes that it could be construed as frog which is consistent with her aquatic myth 3 In Chinese the word for whirlpool is wo Chinese 渦 which shares the same pronunciation with the word for snail Chinese 蝸 These characters all have their right side constructed by the word wa Chinese 咼 which can be translated as spiral or helix as noun and as spin or rotate when as verb to describe the helical movement This mythical meaning has also been symbolically pictured as compasses in the hand which can be found on many paintings and portraits associated with her Her reverential name is Wahuang Chinese 媧皇 lit Empress Wa 4 Description Edit Image of Nuwa from Gujin Tushu Jicheng by Chen Menglei Qing dynasty The Huainanzi relates Nuwa to the time when Heaven and Earth were in disruption Going back to more ancient times the four pillars were broken the nine provinces were in tatters Heaven did not completely cover the earth Earth did not hold up Heaven all the way around its circumference Fires blazed out of control and could not be extinguished water flooded in great expanses and would not recede Ferocious animals ate blameless people predatory birds snatched the elderly and the weak Thereupon Nuwa smelted together five colored stones in order to patch up the azure sky cut off the legs of the great turtle to set them up as the four pillars killed the black dragon to provide relief for Ji Province and piled up reeds and cinders to stop the surging waters The azure sky was patched the four pillars were set up the surging waters were drained the province of Ji was tranquil crafty vermin died off blameless people preserved their lives 5 a The catastrophes were supposedly caused by the battle between the deities Gonggong and Zhuanxu an event that was mentioned earlier in the Huainanzi b the five colored stones symbolize the five Chinese elements wood fire earth metal and water the black dragon was the essence of water and thus cause of the floods Ji Province serves metonymically for the central regions the Sinitic world 8 Following this the Huainanzi tells about how the sage rulers Nuwa and Fuxi set order over the realm by following the Way 道 and its potency 德 5 The Classic of Mountains and Seas dated between the Warring States period and the Han Dynasty describes Nuwa s intestines as being scattered into ten spirits 9 non primary source needed In Liezi c 475 221 BC Chapter 5 Questions of Tang 卷第五 湯問篇 author Lie Yukou describes Nuwa repairing the original imperfect heaven using five colored stones and cutting the legs off a tortoise to use as struts to hold up the sky 10 In Songs of Chu c 340 278 BC Chapter 3 Asking Heaven Chinese 问天 author Qu Yuan writes that Nuwa molded figures from the yellow earth giving them life and the ability to bear children After demons fought and broke the pillars of the heavens Nuwa worked unceasingly to repair the damage melting down the five coloured stones to mend the heavens 11 In Shuowen Jiezi c 58 147 AD China s earliest dictionary under the entry for Nuwa author Xu Shen describes her as being both the sister and the wife of Fuxi Nuwa and Fuxi were pictured as having snake like tails interlocked in an Eastern Han Dynasty mural in the Wuliang Temple in Jiaxiang county Shandong province citation needed In Duyi Zhi 獨異志 c 846 874 AD Volume 3 author Li Rong gives this description Long ago when the world first began there were two people Nu Kua and her older brother They lived on Mount K un lun And there were not yet any ordinary people in the world They talked about becoming husband and wife but they felt ashamed So the brother at once went with his sister up Mount K un lun and made this prayer Oh Heaven if Thou wouldst send us two forth as man and wife then make all the misty vapor gather If not then make all the misty vapor disperse At this the misty vapor immediately gathered When the sister became intimate with her brother they plaited some grass to make a fan to screen their faces Even today when a man takes a wife they hold a fan which is a symbol of what happened long ago 12 In Yuchuan Ziji 玉川子集 c 618 907 AD Chapter 3 與馬異結交詩 也稱 女媧本是伏羲婦 author Lu Tong describes Nuwa as the wife of Fuxi citation needed In Siku Quanshu Sima Zhen 679 732 provides commentary on the prologue chapter to Sima Qian s Shiji Supplemental to the Historic Record History of the Three August Ones wherein it is found that the Three August Ones are Nuwa Fuxi and Shennong Fuxi and Nuwa have the same last name Feng Chinese 風 Hmong Faj c Nuwa as depicted on one of the Mawangdui silk banners Han dynasty In the collection Four Great Books of Song c 960 1279 AD compiled by Li Fang and others Volume 78 of the book Imperial Readings of the Taiping Era contains a chapter Customs by Yingshao of the Han Dynasty in which it is stated that there were no men when the sky and the earth were separated Thus Nuwa used yellow clay to make people But the clay was not strong enough so she put ropes into the clay to make the bodies erect It is also said that she prayed to gods to let her be the goddess of marital affairs Variations of this story exist citation needed Iconography of Fuxi and Nuwa Edit Nuwa and Fuxi on the murals rubbing depicted of the Wu Liang shrines Han dynasty 206 BC 220 AD The iconography of Fuxi and Nuwa vary in physical appearance depending on the time period and also shows regional differences 13 In Chinese tomb murals and iconography Fuxi and Nuwa generally have snake like bodies and human face or head 13 14 15 Fuxi and Nuwa can be depicted as individual figures arranged as a symmetrical pair or they can be depicted in double figures with intertwined snake like bodies 13 Their snake like tails can also be depicted stretching out towards each other 13 Fuxi and Nuwa can also appear individually on separate tomb bricks 13 They generally hold or embrace the sun or moon discs containing the images of a bird or a three legged crow or a toad sometimes a hare which are the sun and moon symbolism respectively and or each holding a try square or a pair of compasses or holding a longevity mushroom Chinese 靈芝 pinyin lingzhi plant 13 15 Fuxi and Nuwa holding the sun and the moon appears as early as the late Western Han dynasty 13 Other physical appearance variation such as lower snake like body shape e g thick vs thin tails depictions of legs i e legs found along the snake like body and wings e g wings with feathers which protrude from their backs as found in late Western Han Xinan 新安 Tomb or smaller quills found on their shoulders and in hats and hairstyles also exist 13 In the Luoyang regions murals dating to the late Western Han dynasty Fuxi and Nuwa are generally depicted as individual figures each one found at each side of the central ridge of tomb chambers as found in the Bu Qianqiu Tomb 13 They can also be found without intertwining tails from the stone murals of the same period 13 Since the middle of the Eastern Han dynasty their tails started to intertwine 13 In the Gansu murals dating to the Wei and Western Jin period one of the most typical features of Fuxi is the mountain hat Chinese 山字形 pinyin Shanzixing which looks like a three peaked cap while Nuwa is depicted wearing various hairstyles characteristic of Han women 13 Both deities dressed in wide sleeved clothing which reflects typical Han clothing style also commonly depicted in Han dynasty art 13 Fuxi and Nuwa Fuxi and Nuwa with tower and twin dragons China unearthed from a cliff tomb Alkali factory Pengshan Eastern Han dynasty 25 220 AD Fuxi and Nuwa holding the sun disc and moon disc respectively Eastern Han dynasty 25 220 AD The two conjoined figures are Fuxi and Nuwa holding a compass and a ruler respectively a painting discovered at the Astana Graves Burial objects in the Turpan region often display a strong Chinese influence as Chinese Han culture was introduced early in its history 16 Fuxi and Nuwa 1967 Astana Cemetery Legends EditAppearance in Fengshen Yanyi Edit An ancient painting of Nuwa and Fuxi unearthed at the Astana Graves Nuwa is featured within the famed Ming dynasty novel Fengshen Bang As featured within this novel Nuwa is very highly respected since the time of the Xia Dynasty for being the daughter of the Jade Emperor Nuwa is also regularly called the Snake Goddess After the Shang Dynasty had been created Nuwa created the five colored stones to protect the dynasty with occasional seasonal rains and other enhancing qualities Thus in time Shang Rong asked King Zhou of Shang to pay her a visit as a sign of deep respect After Zhou was completely overcome with lust at the very sight of the beautiful ancient goddess Nuwa who had been sitting behind a light curtain he wrote an erotic poem on a neighboring wall and took his leave When Nuwa later returned to her temple after visiting the Yellow Emperor she saw the foulness of Zhou s words In her anger she swore the Shang Dynasty would end in payment for his offense In her rage Nuwa personally ascended to the palace in an attempt to kill the king but was suddenly struck back by two large beams of red light After Nuwa realized that King Zhou was already destined to rule the kingdom for twenty six more years Nuwa summoned her three subordinates the Thousand Year Vixen later becoming Daji the Jade Pipa and the Nine Headed Pheasant With these words Nuwa brought destined chaos to the Shang Dynasty The luck Cheng Tang won six hundred years ago is dimming I speak to you of a new mandate of heaven which sets the destiny for all You three are to enter King Zhou s palace where you are to bewitch him Whatever you do do not harm anyone else If you do my bidding and do it well you will be permitted to reincarnate as human beings 17 With these words Nuwa was never heard of again but was still a major indirect factor towards the Shang Dynasty s fall Creation of humanity Edit Pangu was said to be the creation god in Chinese mythology He was a giant sleeping within an egg of chaos As he awoke he stood up and divided the sky and the earth Pangu then died after standing up and his body turned into rivers mountains plants animals and everything else in the world among which is a powerful being known as Huaxu 華胥 Huaxu gave birth to a twin brother and sister Fuxi and Nuwa Fuxi and Nuwa are said to be creatures that have faces of human and bodies of snakes 18 Nuwa created humanity due to her loneliness which grew more intense over time She molded yellow earth or in other versions yellow clay into the shape of people These individuals later became the wealthy nobles of society because they had been created by Nuwa s own hands However the majority of humanity was created when Nuwa dragged string across mud to mass produce them which she did because creating every person by hand was too time and energy consuming This creation story gives an aetiological explanation for the social hierarchy in ancient China The nobility believed that they were more important than the mass produced majority of humanity because Nuwa took time to create them and they had been directly touched by her hand 19 In another version of the creation of humanity Nuwa and Fuxi were survivors of a great flood By the command of the God of the heaven they were married and Nuwa had a child which was a ball of meat This ball of meat was cut into small pieces and the pieces were scattered across the world which then became humans 20 Nuwa was born three months after her brother Fuxi whom she later took as her husband this marriage is the reason why Nuwa is credited with inventing the idea of marriage 19 Before the two of them got married they lived on mount K un lun A prayer was made after the two became guilty of falling for each other The prayer is as follows Oh Heaven if Thou wouldst send us forth as man and wife then make all the misty vapor gather If not then make all the misty vapor disperse 19 Misty vapor then gathered after the prayer signifying the two could marry When intimate the two made a fan out of grass to screen their faces which is why during modern day marriages the couple hold a fan together By connecting the two were representative of Yin and Yang Fuxi being connected to Yang and masculinity along Nuwa being connected to Yin and femininity This is further defined with Fuxi receiving a carpenter s square which symbolizes his identification with the physical world because a carpenter s square is associated with straight lines and squares leading to a more straightforward mindset Meanwhile Nuwa was given a compass to symbolize her identification with the heavens because a compass is associated with curves and circles leading to a more abstract mindset With the two being married it symbolized the union between heaven and Earth 19 Other versions have Nuwa invent the compass rather than receive it as a gift 21 In addition the system of male and female sex the yang yin philosophy is expressed here in a complex way first as Fuxi and Nuwa then as a compass masculine and a square feminine and thirdly as Nuwa woman with a compass man and Fuxi man with a square woman 22 Nuwa Mends the Heavens Edit Modern relief of Nuwa at the Ping Sien Si Temple in Perak Malaysia Nuwa Mends the Heavens Chinese 女娲補天 Chinese 女娲补天 pinyin Nǚwa bǔtian is a well known theme in Chinese culture The courage and wisdom of Nuwa inspired the ancient Chinese to control nature s elements and has become a favorite subject of Chinese poets painters and sculptors 23 along with so many poetry and arts like novels films paintings and sculptures e g the sculptures that decorate Nanshan 24 and Ya an 25 The Huainanzi tells an ancient story about how the four pillars that support the sky crumbled inexplicably Other sources have tried to explain the cause i e the battle between Gong Gong and Zhuanxu or Zhurong Unable to accept his defeat Gong Gong deliberately banged his head onto Mount Buzhou 不周山 which was one of the four pillars Half of the sky fell which created a gaping hole and the earth itself was cracked the earth s axis mundi was tilted into the southeast while the sky rose into the northwest This is said to be the reason why the western region of China is higher than the eastern and that most of its rivers flow towards the southeast This same explanation is applied to the sun moon and stars which moved into the northwest A wildfire burnt the forests and led the wild animals to run amok and attack the innocent peoples while the water which was coming out from the earth s crack didn t seem to be slowing down 26 Nuwa pitied the humans she had made and attempted to repair the sky She gathered five colored stones red yellow blue black and white from the riverbed melted them and used them to patch up the sky since then the sky clouds have been colorful She then killed a giant turtle or tortoise some version named the tortoise as Ao cut off the four legs of the creature to use as new pillars to support the sky But Nuwa didn t do it perfectly because the unequal length of the legs made the sky tilt After the job was done Nuwa drove away the wild animals extinguished the fire and controlled the flood with a huge amount of ashes from the burning reeds and the world became as peaceful as it was before 26 27 Empress Nuwa Edit Many Chinese know well their Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors i e the early leaders of humanity as well as culture heroes according to the Northern Chinese belief But the lists vary and depend on the sources used 28 One version includes Nuwa as one of the Three Sovereigns who reigned after Fuxi and before Shennong 29 The myth of the Three Sovereigns sees the three as demigod figures and the myth is used to stress the importance of an imperial reign The variation between sources stems from China being generally divided before the Qin and Han dynasties and the version with Fuxi Shennong and Nuwa was used to emphasize rule and structure 30 In her matriarchal reign she battled against a neighboring tribal chief defeated him and took him to the peak of a mountain Defeated by a woman the chief felt ashamed to be alive and banged his head on the heavenly bamboo to kill himself and for revenge His act tore a hole in the sky and made a flood hit the whole world The flood killed all people except Nuwa and her army which was protected by her divinity After that Nuwa patched the sky with five colored stones until the flood receded 31 Popular culture EditDream of the Red Chamber 1754 narrates how Nuwa gathered 36 501 stones to patch the sky but left one unused The unused stone plays an important role in the novel s storyline 32 A goddess Nuwa statue named Sky Patching by Prof Yuan Xikun was exhibited at Times Square New York City on 19 April 2012 to celebrate Earth Day 2012 symbolized the importance of protecting the ozone layer 33 Previously this 3 9 meters statue was exhibited on Beijing and now is placed on Vienna International Centre Vienna since 21 November 2012 34 Goddess Nuwa patches up the sky 2013 is an application for iPhone and iPad by Zero Studio 35 The story of Nuwa patching the sky was being retold by Carol Chen on her book Goddess Nuwa Patches Up the Sky 2014 which was illustrated by Meng Xianlong 36 The 2014 hong kong movie The Monkey King directed by Cheang Pou soi shows the battle between Jade Emperor Chow Yun Fat and Bull Demon King Aaron Kwok Nuwa Zhang Zilin sacrifices herself to repair heaven and make a heavenly gate to protect heaven from invading demons 37 Added as a playable Chinese goddess in SMITE Nuwa is a major character in Shin Megami Tensei V Nu Wa is a playable character in the Dynasty Warriors series In the 2022 mobile game Dislyte Feng Nuxi is a Legendary Esper with the powers of Nuwa See also EditChinese mythology Flood Mythology of ChinaExplanatory notes Edit A different translation of the same text is also given in Lewis 6 In ancient times Gong Gong and Zhuan Xu fought each seeking to become the thearch Enraged they crashed against Mount Buzhou Heaven s pillars broke the cords of Earth snapped Heaven tilted in the northwest and thus the sun and moon stars and planets shifted in that direction Earth became unfull in the southeast and thus the watery floods and mounding soils subsided in that direction 7 Sima Zhen s commentary is included with the later Siku Quanshu compiled by Ji Yun and Lu Xixiong 陸錫熊 citation needed Citations Edit Nugua Oxford Reference Retrieved 18 November 2017 a b Lee Irwin 1990 Divinity and Salvation The Great Goddesses of China Asian Folklore Studies 49 1 53 68 doi 10 2307 1177949 JSTOR 1177949 via JSTOR Anne Birrell 1999 trans The Classic of Mountains and Seas Penguin Books 媧皇 Handian Retrieved 18 November 2017 a b Major amp al 2010 ch 6 Lewis 2006 p 111 Major amp al 2010 ch 3 Major amp al 2010 ch 6 n 大荒西經 山海經 Shan Hai Jing in Chinese Giles Lionel 1912 TAOIST TEACHINGS Translated from the Book of Lieh Tzu 1st ed Sacred texts London John Murray pp 78 79 Retrieved 19 April 2023 Qu Yuan 2017 The Songs of Chu An Anthology of Ancient Chinese Poetry by Qu Yuan and Others Columbia University Press pp 61 102 Translation in Birrell 1993 35 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Vampelj Suhadolnik Natasa 2019 06 28 Transmission of Han Pictorial Motifs into the Western Periphery Asian Studies 7 2 47 86 doi 10 4312 as 2019 7 2 47 86 ISSN 2350 4226 S2CID 198704018 Zhang Fan 2019 06 28 Chinese Buddhist Encounter Synthesis of Fuxi Nuwa and the Cintamani in Early Medieval Chinese Art Asian Studies 7 2 87 111 doi 10 4312 as 2019 7 2 87 111 ISSN 2350 4226 S2CID 198651581 a b Nelson Sarah M 2019 Shamanism and the origin of states spirit power and gender in East Asia First ed London ISBN 978 1 315 42029 5 OCLC 1111577750 Painting of Fuxi and Nuwa Highlights NATIONAL MUSEUM OF KOREA Retrieved 2021 12 04 Allan Sarah Allan Sarah 1991 The shape of the turtle myth art and cosmos in early China SUNY series in Chinese philosophy and culture SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 0460 7 Millidge Judith 1999 Chinese Gods and Myths Chartwell Books ISBN 978 0 7858 1078 0 a b c d Thury Eva M 2017 Introduction to mythology contemporary approaches to classical and world myths ISBN 9780190262983 OCLC 946109909 Lianfe Yang 1993 Water in Traditional Chinese Culture The Journal of Popular Culture 27 2 51 56 doi 10 1111 j 0022 3840 1993 00051 x ISSN 0022 3840 Roberts David Lindsay Leung Allen Yuk Lun Lins Abigail Fregni 2012 From the Slate to the Web Technology in the Mathematics Curriculum Third International Handbook of Mathematics Education Springer New York pp 525 547 doi 10 1007 978 1 4614 4684 2 17 ISBN 9781461446835 Schinz Alfred 1996 The Magic Square Cities in Ancient China Edition Axel Menges ISBN 9783930698028 NUWA REPAIRS THE HEAVENS Nuwa Bu Tian Beijing China on Your Mind 2013 Retrieved 15 November 2015 dartman Goddess Nu Wa Patching the Sky Panoramio Retrieved 15 November 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Zhitao Li Nuwa Patching the Sky Dreamstime Retrieved 15 November 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link a b anonim 26 October 2009 The Nuwa Sacrificial Ceremonies Beijing Confucius Institute Online Retrieved 15 November 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Skryrock 5 February 2013 Nuwa Repairs the Heavens Chinese Geography Retrieved 15 November 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Hucker Charles 1995 China s Imperial Past An Introduction to Chinese History and Culture Stanford University Press p 22 ISBN 9780804723534 劉煒 著 2002 Chinese civilization in a new light Commercial press publishing ISBN 962 07 5314 3 p 142 Nagel Angermann Monique November 2015 The Three August Ones Dig into History 17 4 via EBSCOhost Mark Isaak 2 September 2002 Flood Stories from Around the World Retrieved 15 November 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Lianhua Andy 25 September 2015 Penciptaan Bumi amp Manusia Menurut Chiness Mitologi Pangu Nuwa amp Fuxi in Indonesian Retrieved 15 November 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Unveiling Goddess Nuwa in NY Times Square and Beijing United Nations Environment Programme UNEP 22 April 2012 Retrieved 15 November 2015 Ozone statue unveiled in Vienna to mark Montreal Protocol anniversary UNIDO 22 November 2012 Retrieved 15 November 2015 Goddess Nuwa patches up the sky Zero Studio 2013 Retrieved 15 November 2015 anonim 2014 Goddess Nuwa Patches Up the Sky the Chinese Library Series Paperback AbeBooks Inc Retrieved 15 November 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Jedd Jong 4 February 2014 The Monkey King Retrieved 15 November 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link General bibliography EditBirrell Anne 1993 Chinese Mythology An Introduction Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press Lewis Mark Edward 2006 The Flood Myths of Early China Albany State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 6663 6 Major John S et al eds 2010 The Huainanzi A Guide to the Theory and Practice of Government in Early Han China New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 14204 5 Further reading EditAllan Sarah 1991 The shape of the turtle myth art and cosmos in early China SUNY series in Chinese philosophy and culture SUNY Press ISBN 0 7914 0460 9External links Edit Media related to Nuwa at Wikimedia Commons NuwaThree Sovereigns and Five EmperorsRegnal titlesPreceded byFuxi Mythological Sovereign of China Succeeded byShennong Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nuwa amp oldid 1151652423, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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