
Chinese mythology () is
mythology that has been passed down in oral form or recorded in literature in the geographic area now known as
Greater China. Chinese mythology includes many varied myths from regional and cultural traditions.
Much of the mythology involves exciting stories full of fantastic people and beings, the use of magical powers, often taking place in an exotic mythological place or time. Like many mythologies, Chinese mythology has in the past been believed to be, at least in part, a factual recording of history. Along with
Chinese folklore, Chinese mythology forms an important part of
Chinese folk religion. Many stories regarding characters and events of the distant past have a double tradition: ones which present a more historicized or euhemerized version and ones which present a more mythological version.
Many myths involve the creation and cosmology of the universe and its deities and inhabitants. Some mythology involves creation myths, the origin of things, people and culture. Some involve the origin of the Chinese state. Some myths present a chronology of prehistoric times, many of these involve a
culture hero
A culture hero is a mythological hero specific to some group ( cultural, ethnic, religious, etc.) who changes the world through invention or discovery. Although many culture heroes help with the creation of the world, most culture heroes are imp ...
who taught people how to build houses, or cook, or write, or was the ancestor of an ethnic group or dynastic family. Mythology is intimately related to ritual. Many myths are oral associations with ritual acts, such as dances, ceremonies, and sacrifices.
Mythology and religion
There has been extensive interaction between Chinese mythology and
Confucianism,
Taoism, and
Buddhism. Elements of pre-
Han dynasty mythology such as those in
Classic of Mountains and Seas were adapted into these belief systems as they developed (in the case of Taoism), or were assimilated into Chinese culture (in the case of Buddhism). Elements from the teachings and beliefs of these systems became incorporated into Chinese mythology. For example, the Taoist belief of a spiritual
Paradise became incorporated into mythology as the place where immortals and deities used to dwell. Sometimes mythological and religious ideas have become widespread across China's many regions and diverse ethnic societies. In other cases, beliefs are more limited to certain social groups, for example, the veneration of white stones by the
Qiang. One mythological theme that has a long history and many variations involves a
shamanic world view, for example in the cases of
Mongolian shamanism among the Mongols,
Hmong shamanism among the
Miao people
The Miao are a group of linguistically-related peoples living in Southern China and Southeast Asia, who are recognized by the government of China as one of the 56 List of ethnic groups in China, official ethnic groups. The Miao live primarily in ...
, and the
shamanic beliefs of the Qing dynasty from 1643 to 1912, derived from the
Manchus. Politically, mythology was often used to legitimize the dynasties of China, with the founding house of a dynasty claiming a divine descent.
Mythology and philosophy
Elaborations on the
Wu Xing are not really part of mythology, although belief in five elements could appear. The
Hundred Schools of Thought is a phrase suggesting the diversity of philosophical thought that developed during the
Warring States of China. Then, and subsequently, philosophical movements had a complicated relationship with mythology. However, as far as they influence or are influenced by mythology, divides the philosophical camps into two rough halves, a Liberal group and a Conservative group. The liberal group being associated with the idea of individuality and change, for example as seen in the mythology of divination in China, such as the mythology of the dragon horse that delivered the eight ''bagua'' diagrams to Fu Xi, and methods of individual empowerment as seen in the ''Yi Jing'' (''Book of Changes''). The Liberal tendency is towards individual freedom, Daoism, and Nature. The relationship of the Conservative philosophies to mythology is seen in the legendary
Nine Tripod Cauldrons, mythology about the emperors and central bureaucratic governance, Confucianism, written histories, ceremonial observances, subordination of the individual to the social groups of family and state, and a fixation on stability and enduring institutions. The distinction between the Liberal and Conservative is very general, but important in Chinese thought. Contradictions can be found in the details, however these are often traditional, such as the embrace by Confucius of the philosophical aspects of the ''Yi Jing'', and the back-and-forth about the
Mandate of Heaven
The Mandate of Heaven () is a Chinese political philosophy that was used in ancient and imperial China to legitimize the rule of the King or Emperor of China. According to this doctrine, heaven (天, ''Tian'') – which embodies the natural ...
wherein one dynasty ends and another begins based according to accounts (some of heavily mythological) where the Way of Heaven results in change, but then a new ethical stable dynasty becomes established. Examples of this include the stories of
Yi Yin,
Tang of Shang and
Jie of Xia
King Jie (; traditionally 1728–1675 BC) was the 17th and last ruler of the Xia dynasty of China. He is traditionally regarded as a tyrant and oppressor who brought about the collapse of a dynasty.劉煒/著. 002(2002) Chinese civilization in a n ...
or the similar fantastic stories around
Duke of Zhou and
King Zhou of Shang
Mythology and ritual
Mythology exists in relationship with other aspects of society and culture, such as ritual. Various rituals are explained by mythology. For example, the ritual burning of
mortuary banknotes (Hell Money), lighting
fireworks, and so on.
Yubu
A good example of the relationship of Chinese mythology and ritual is the Yubu, also known as the Steps or Paces of
Yu. During the course of his activities in controlling the Great Flood, Yu was supposed to have so fatigued himself that he lost all the hair from his legs and developed a serious limp. Daoist practitioners sometimes incorporate a curiously choreographed pedal locomotion into various rituals. Mythology and practice, one explains the other: in these rituals, the sacred time of Yu merges with the sacral practice of the present.
Cosmology
Various ideas about the nature of the earth, the universe, and their relationship to each other have historically existed as either a background or a focus of mythologies. One typical view is of a square earth separated from a round sky by sky pillars (mountains, trees, or undefined). Above the sky is the realm of Heaven, often viewed of as a vast area, with many inhabitants. Often the heavenly inhabitants are thought to be of an "as above so below" nature, their lives and social arrangements being parallel to those on earth, with a hierarchical government run by a supreme emperor, many palaces and lesser dwellings, a vast bureaucracy of many functions, clerks, guards, and servants. Below was a vast under ground land, also known as
Diyu, Yellow Springs, Hell, and other terms. As time progressed, the idea of an underground land in which the souls of the departed were punished for their misdeeds during life became explicit, related to developments in Daoism and Buddhism. The underground world also came to be conceived of as inhabited by a vast bureaucracy, with kings, judges, torturers, conductors of souls, minor bureaucrats, recording secretaries, similar to the structure of society in the Middle Kingdom (earthly China).
Mythological places and concepts
The mythology of China includes a mythological geography describing individual mythological descriptions of places and the features; sometimes, this reaches to the level of a cosmological conception. Various features of mythological terrain are described in myth, including a Heavenly world above the earth, a land of the dead beneath the earth, palaces beneath the sea, and various fantastic areas or features of the earth, located beyond the limits of the known earth. Such mythological features include mountains, rivers, forests or fantastic trees, and caves or grottoes. These then serve as the location for the actions of various beings and creatures. One concept encountered in some myths is the idea of travel between Earth and Heaven by means of climbing up or down the pillars separating the two, there usually being four or
Eight Pillars or an unspecified number of these Sky Ladders.
Directional
The
Four Symbols of Chinese cosmology were the
Azure Dragon of the East, the
Black Tortoise of the North, the
White Tiger of the West, and the
Vermillion Bird of the South. These totem animals represented the four cardinal directions, with a lot of associated symbolism and beliefs. A fifth cardinal direction was also postulated: the center, represented by the emperor of China, located in the middle of his Middle Kingdom (Zhong Guo, or China). The real or mythological inhabitants making their dwellings at these cardinal points were numerous, as is associated mythology.
Heavenly realm

The Heavenly realm could be known as Tian,
Heaven
Heaven or the heavens, is a common religious cosmological or transcendent supernatural place where beings such as deities, angels, souls, saints, or venerated ancestors are said to originate, be enthroned, or reside. According to the belie ...
, or the sky. Sometimes this was personified into a deity (sky god). In some descriptions, this was an elaborate place ruled over by a supreme deity, or a group of supreme deities. Jade Emperor being associated with Daoism and Buddhas with Buddhism. Many astronomically observable features were subjects of mythology or the mythological locations and settings for mythic scenes these include the sun, stars, moon, planets, Milky Way (sometimes referred to as the
River of Heaven
The hazy band of stars of the Milky Way was referred to as the "River of Heaven" or the "Silvery River" in Eastern Asian and Chinese mythology. The River of Heaven is a silver river flowing through the heavens.
The Silvery River of Heaven is par ...
), clouds, and other features. These were often the home or destination of various deities, divinities, shamans, and many more. Another concept of the Heavenly realm is that of the Cords of the Sky. Travel between Heaven and Earth was usually described as achieved by flying or climbing. The Queqiao () was a bridge formed by birds flying across the Milky Way, as seen in
The Cowherd and the Weaver Girl mythology surrounding the
Qixi Festival. The
hazy band of stars of the
Milky Way was referred to as the "Silvery River" or the "River of Heaven".
Subterranean realm

According to mythology, beneath the Earth is another realm—-an underground world generally said to be inhabited by the souls of dead humans and various supernatural beings (see
hun and po). This
hell
In religion and folklore, hell is a location in the afterlife in which evil souls are subjected to punitive suffering, most often through torture, as eternal punishment after death. Religions with a linear divine history often depict hell ...
is known by various names, including
Diyu or the Yellow Springs. In more recent mythology, the underground inhabitation of the dead is generally described as somewhat similar to the land above: it possesses a hierarchical government bureaucracy, centered in the capital city of
Youdu. The rulers of the underground realm are various kings, whose duties include parsing the souls of the dead according to the merits of their life on earth, and maintaining adequate records regarding that process. (An example of one such ruler is
Yánluó wáng ("King Yanluo")). Souls are parsed and adjudicated for torturous punishment by balancing ones’ crimes in life against any merits earned through good deeds. Various other functions within Diyu are performed by minor officials and minions, examples of whom are
Ox-Head and Horse-Face, humanoid devils with animal features. In some versions of mythology or Chinese folk religion, souls are returned from Diyu and reincarnated after being given the Drink of Forgetfulness by
Meng Po.
Earthly realm
Much mythology involves remote, exotic, or hard-to-get-to places. All sorts of mythological geography is said to exist at the extremes of the cardinal directions of earth. Much of the earthly terrain has been said to be inhabited by local spirits (sometimes called fairies or genii loci), especially mountains and bodies of water. There are
Grotto Heavens, and also earthly paradises.
=Seas, rivers, and islands
=
Various bodies of water appear in Chinese mythology. This includes oceans, rivers, streams, ponds. Often they are part of a mythological geography, and may have notable features, such as mythological islands, or other mythological features. There are mythological versions of all the major rivers that have existed in China in between ancient and modern China (most of these rivers are the same, but not all). Sometimes these rivers are said to originate from the Milky Way or Kunlun. Anyway, they are said to flow west to east because
Gonggong wrecked the world pillar at Buzhou, tilting Earth and Heaven away from each other at that sector. Examples of these mythologized rivers include the
Yangzi (including various stretches under different names), the
Yellow River, the mythological
Red River in the west, near Kunlun, and the
Weak River, a mythological river in "the west", near "Kunlun", which flowed with a liquid too light in specific gravity for floating or swimming (but unbreathable). Examples of features along mythological rivers include the Dragon Gates (
Longmen) which were rapid waterfalls where select carp can transform into dragons, by swimming upstream and leaping up over the falls. Examples of islands include
Mount Penglai, a paradisaical isle in the sea, vaguely east of China but sometimes conflated with
Japan
Japan ( ja, 日本, or , and formally , ''Nihonkoku'') is an island country in East Asia. It is situated in the northwest Pacific Ocean, and is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan, while extending from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north ...
.
=Mountains and in-between places
=
Various other mythological locales include what are known as fairylands or paradises, pillars separating Earth and Sky, ruined or otherwise. The Earth has many extreme and exotic locales – they are separated by
pillars between Earth and Heaven, supporting the sky, usually four or eight. Generally, Chinese mythology regarded people as living in the middle regions of the world and conceived the exotic earthly places to exist in the directional extremes to the north, east, south, or west. Eventually, the idea of an eastern and western paradise seems to have arisen. In the west according to certain myths there was Kunlun. On the eastern seacoast was
Feather Mountain, the place of exile of Gun and other events during or just after the
world flood. Further east was
Fusang, a mythical tree, or else an island (sometimes interpreted as Japan). The geography of China, in which the land seems to be higher in the west and tilt down toward the east and with the rivers tending to flow west-to-east was explained by the damage Gonggong did to the world pillar
Mount Buzhou, mountain pillars separating the sky from the world (China), which also displaced the Celestial Pole, so that the sky rotates off-center.
=Kunlun
=
In the west was Kunlun (although also sometimes said to be towards the south seas). Kunlun was pictured as having a mountain or mountain range,
Kunlun Mountain
The Kunlun Mountains ( zh, s=昆仑山, t=崑崙山, p=Kūnlún Shān, ; ug, كۇئېنلۇن تاغ تىزمىسى / قۇرۇم تاغ تىزمىسى ) constitute one of the longest mountain chains in Asia, extending for more than . In the bro ...
where dwelt various divinities, grew fabulous plants, home to exotic animals, and various deities and immortals (today there is a real mountain or range named Kunlun, as there has in the past, however the identity has shifted further west over time). The
Qing Niao bird was a mythical bird, and messenger of
Xi Wangmu to the rest of the world. Nearby to Kunlun, it was sometimes said or written and forming a sort of protective barrier to the western paradise or "fairyland" named Xuánpǔ () where also was to be found the jade pool Yáochí (), eventually thought to exist on mount Kunlun (which itself was thought to possess cliffs insurmountable to normal mortals was the
Moving Sands
The Moving Sands, also known as the Flowing Sands (''Liúshā'' (流沙), "flowing-sand", or "quicksand"), is an important feature in the mythological geography of Chinese literature, including novels and poetry over a course of over two millennia ...
, a semi-mythological place also to the west of China (the real Taklamakan Desert to the west of or in China is known for its shifting sands). There were other locations of mythological geography around the area of Kunlun such as
Jade Mountain and the various colored rivers which flew out of Kunlun. For example, the Red, or
Scarlet River
''Scarlet River'' is a 1933 American pre-Code Western film directed by Otto Brower, written by Harold Shumate, and starring Tom Keene, Dorothy Wilson, Roscoe Ates, Lon Chaney Jr. and Edgar Kennedy. It was released on March 10, 1933, by RKO ...
was supposed to flow to the south of Kunlun.
Mythological and semi-mythological chronology
Mythological and semi-mythological chronology includes mythic representations of the creation of the world, population (and sometimes re-populations) by humans, sometimes floods, and various cultural developments, such as the development of ruling dynasties. Many myths and stories have been recounted about the early dynasties, however, more purely historical literature tends to begin with the
Qin dynasty (for example, see Paladin 1998). On the other hand, accounts of the Shang, Xia, and early Zhou dynasties tend to mythologize. By a historical process of
euhemerism
Euhemerism () is an approach to the interpretation of mythology in which mythological accounts are presumed to have originated from real historical events or personages. Euhemerism supposes that historical accounts become myths as they are exagge ...
many of these myths evolved over time into variant versions with an emphasis on moral parables and rationalization of some of the more fantastic ideas.
Mythology of time and calendar

Mythology of time and the calendar includes the twelve zodiacal animals and various divine or spiritual genii regulating or appointed as guardians for years, days, or hours.
Twelve zodiacal animals
In China and surrounding areas, a calendrical system consisting of measuring time in cycles of twelve represented by twelve has an ancient historical past. The exact line-up of animals is sometimes slightly different, but the basic principle is that each animal takes a turn as the emblematic or totem animal for a year or other unit of time in a cycle of one dozen. This is explained by various myths.
The zodiacs in order are: Rat, Ox, Tiger, Rabbit, Dragon, Snake, Horse, Goat, Monkey, Rooster, Dog, and Pig
Correlation of mythological and real time
Some Chinese mythology becomes specific about chronological time, based on the ''
ganzhi'' system, numbers of human generations, or other details suggesting synchronization between the mythological chronology and the ideas of modern historians. However, real correlation begins in the Year of the Metal Monkey, Zhou dynasty, 841 BCE, a since validated claim by
Sima Qian
Sima Qian (; ; ) was a Chinese historian of the early Han dynasty (206AD220). He is considered the father of Chinese historiography for his ''Records of the Grand Historian'', a general history of China covering more than two thousand years b ...
. However, although historians take note of this, subsequent mythology has not tended to reflect this quest for rational, historical timelining.
Creation myths
Various ideas about the creation of the universe, the earth, the sky, various deities and creatures, and the origin of various clans or ethnic groups of humans have circulated in the area of China for millennia. These creation myths may include the origins of the universe and everything, the origins of humans, or the origins of specific groups, such as a Han Chinese in descent from Yandi and Huangdi (as , "Descendants of the Flame and Yellow Emperors"). Various myths contain explanations of various origins and the progress of cultural development.
Pangu
One common story involves
Pangu. Among other sources, he was written about by Taoist author
Xu Zheng c. 200 CE, as claimed to be the first sentient being and creator, "making the heavens and the earth".
Age of heroes
Various culture heroes have been said to have helped or saved humanity in many ways, such as stopping floods, teaching the use of fire, and so on. As mythic chronology is inherently nonlinear, with time being telescopically expanded or contracted, there are various contradictions. The earliest culture heroes were sometimes considered deities and other times heroic humans, but often little distinction was made. Examples of early culture heroes include
Youchao ("Have Nest") who taught people how to make wooden shelters,.) and
Suiren ("Fire Maker") who taught people the use of
fire and cooking thus saving them from much food-poisoning, in addition to developing
cuisine
A cuisine is a style of cooking characterized by distinctive ingredients, techniques and dishes, and usually associated with a specific culture or geographic region. Regional food preparation techniques, customs, and ingredients combine to ...
. Another example of a mythological hero who provided beneficial knowledge to humanity involves
sericulture, the production of
silk: an invention credited to
Leizu
Leizu (), also known as Xi Ling-shi (, Wade–Giles Hsi Ling-shih), was a legendary Chinese empress and wife of the Yellow Emperor. According to tradition, she discovered sericulture, and invented the silk loom, in the 27th century BC.
Myths
A ...
, for one. An example of a non-Han ethnicity culture hero is
Panhu
Panhu ( hanzi: 盤瓠; pinyin ''Pánhù''; IPA: /pʰan³⁵-xu⁵¹/) is an important figure in Chinese and Yao mythologies. The Panhu mythological complex includes myths in Chinese and also other languages. This myth has a long history of being t ...
. Because of their self-identification as descendants from these original ancestors, Panhu has been worshiped by the
Yao people and the
She people
The She people (; Shehua: ; Cantonese: , Fuzhou: ) are an ethnic group in China. They form one of the 56 ethnic groups officially recognized by the People's Republic of China.
The She are the largest ethnic minority in Fujian, Zhejiang, and Jia ...
, often as King Pan, and the eating of dog meat was tabooed. This ancestral myth has also been found among the
Miao people
The Miao are a group of linguistically-related peoples living in Southern China and Southeast Asia, who are recognized by the government of China as one of the 56 List of ethnic groups in China, official ethnic groups. The Miao live primarily in ...
and
Li people
The Hlai, also known as Li or Lizu, are a Kra–Dai-speaking ethnic group, one of the 56 ethnic groups officially recognized by the People's Republic of China. The vast majority live off the southern coast of China on Hainan Island, where they ...
. Some of the first culture heroes are the legendary emperors who succeeded the times of the part-human, part-serpent deities Nuwa and Fuxi; these emperors tend to be portrayed as more explicitly human, although Huangdi, the Yellow Emperor, is often portrayed as part-dragon during life.
Mythological emperors
Historicity
Some historicized versions of semi-historical and undeniably mythologized accounts of ancient times were used by those who have attempted to apply actual BCE dates to the mythological chronology. Traditional Chinese accounts of the early emperors chronologically locate the Yellow Emperor as having lived in the Northern Chinese plain around 2698 to 2599 BCE, about seventeen generations after the time of Shennong. A major difference between the possible historicity of material embedded in mythological accounts is that through the time of the last Flame Emperor (Yandi) information was recorded using knotted ropes, whereas the introduction of writing is associated with the reign of Huang Di (although the historical continuity of written tradition beginning at that time is a matter of discussion by experts). The most prominent of the first emperors include, in chronological order, Huangdi, Gaoyang (Zhuanxu), Gaoxin (Di Ku), Yao, and Shun. These emperors were said to be morally upright and benevolent, and examples to be emulated by latter-day kings and emperors. Sometimes approximate calculations of times have been made based on the claimed number of generations from one significant mythological figure to the next, as in the case of the legendary founder of the Ji family,
Hou Ji, whose descendants would rule generations after his mythological appearance as the historical
Zhou dynasty, beginning around 1046 BCE. Despite various assignments of dates to the accounts of these Emperors, fantastic claims about the length of their reigns are common. The average reign-lengths that these numbers imply are improbable, and there is a lack of consensus regarding these dates by modern historians. Their historical use may be limited to establishing a relative chronology.
Houji
Houji was a cultural hero, of the agricultural type.
Chiyou

Chiyou (also known as Ch'ih Yu) was a metallurgical engineer, specializing in weaponry.
Three Primeval Emperors, Five Premier Emperors, and Three Dynasties
The mythological history of people (or at least the Han Chinese people) begins with two groups, one of three and one of five. The numbers are symbolically significant, however, the actual membership of the two groups is not explicated. There are different lists. The older group is the Three Primeval Emperors, who were followed by the Five Premier Emperors. After that came the Three Dynasties: these were the
Xia dynasty,
Shang dynasty, and the
Zhou dynasty. These three are all historically attested to, but separating the myth from the history is not always clear; nevertheless, there is a lot of mythology around the Three Primeval Emperors, Five Premier Emperors, and Three Dynasties. An age of Three Primeval Emperors followed by the age of the Five Premier Emperors (''Sānhuáng-Wǔdì'') contrasts with the subsequent treatment of chronology by dynasties, up to recent times. Since the time the
Qin emperor titled himself ''huangdi'' by combining two previous titles into one, ''huangdi'' was the title for Chinese emperors for ages.
Three Primeval Emperors
=Title
=
The title of the Three Primeval Emperors is ''huang'', in Chinese. The original connotation of this title is unknown, and it is variously translated into English. Translations include "Sovereign", "Emperor", and "August".
=Names
=
The names of the Three Primeval Emperors include Youchao ("Have Nest"), Suiren ("Fire Maker"), Paoxi/Fuxi ("Animal Domesticator"), and Shennong ("Divine Husbandman"). Sometimes Huangdi is included.
Five Premier Emperors
=Title
=
The title of the Five Premier Emperors is ''di'', in Chinese. The original connotation of this title is unknown, or how it compares or contrasts with the term ''huang'', and it is variously translated into English. Translations include "Sovereign", "Emperor", and "Lord".
=Names
=
Names of the Five Premier Emperors include Huangdi, Shaohao, Zhuanxu, Di Ku, Yao, and Shun.
Nuwa and Fuxi

Nuwa and Fuxi (also known as Paoxi) are sometimes worshiped as the ultimate ancestor of all humankind and are often represented as half-snake, half-humans. Nuwa's companion, Fuxi, was her brother and husband.
Nuwa saves the world
After
Gong-Gong
Gonggong () is a Chinese water god who is depicted in Chinese mythology and folktales as having a copper human head with an iron forehead, red hair, and the body of a serpent, or sometimes the head and torso are human, with the tail of a serpen ...
was said to have damaged the world pillar holding the earth and sky apart, the sky was rent causing fires, floods (the
Flood of Nuwa
A flood is an overflow of water ( or rarely other fluids) that submerges land that is usually dry. In the sense of "flowing water", the word may also be applied to the inflow of the tide. Floods are an area of study of the discipline hydrolog ...
) and other devastating events which were only remedied when Nüwa repaired the sky with five colored stones. The figure of Nüwa, also referred to as Nü Kwa, appeared in literature no earlier than c. 350 BCE. It is sometimes believed that Nüwa molded humans from clay to populate or re-populate the world, thus creating modern humans.
Fuxi and the Yellow River map
The production of the
Yellow River Map is associated mythologically with Fuxi but is also sometimes placed in subsequent eras.
Shennong and the Flame Emperors
Shennong is variously translated as "Divine Farmer" or "Divine Peasant", or "Agriculture God", and also known as the Wugushen (Spirit of the Five Grains) and Wuguxiandi "First Deity of the Five Grains". Shennong is a mythological Chinese
deity
A deity or god is a supernatural being who is considered divine or sacred. The ''Oxford Dictionary of English'' defines deity as a god or goddess, or anything revered as divine. C. Scott Littleton defines a deity as "a being with powers greate ...
in
Chinese folk religion and venerated as a
mythical sage ruler of prehistoric China. Shennong's descendants began to style themselves as Flame Emperors, or ''Yandi''. Yandi was sometimes considered an important mythological emperor, but better considered as series of emperors bearing the same title, the "Flame Emperor(s)". ''Yan'' literally means "flame", implying that Yan Emperor's people possibly uphold a symbol of fire as their tribal
totems.
K. C. Wu speculates that this appellation may be connected with the use of fire to clear the fields in
slash and burn agriculture. And, Yandi is also a Red Emperor.
Huangdi, the "Yellow Emperor", and Leizu
One of the more important figures in Chinese mythology is Huang Di, sometimes translated into English as Yellow Emperor. His original name was Yellow Soil or Huangdi where di was the Chinese word for soil or ground. He was named after the Yellow Soil in the Yellow River Basin area where Chinese civilization was thought to have originated. Future generations later changed it to di or emperor in order to give Huangdi a more sovereign-sounding name. He also appears as Xuanyuan. Huang Di is also referred to as one of the Five August ones, and one of the few consistent members of the list. There were also other colored emperors, such as Black, Green, Red, and White. According to some mythology, Huang Di was the son of Shaodian, who was the half-brother of Yan Di. Huang Di's mother was said to be
Fubao. Huang Di's wife Leizu is supposed to have invented sericulture. In some versions
Cangjie invented writing during the reign of Huang Di. The Yellow Emperor is said to have fought a great battle against
Chiyou. Huangdi had various wives and many descendants, including
Shaohao (leader of the
Dongyi).
Di Ku
Ku, Di Ku, Ti K'u, or Diku, is also known as Kao Hsin or Gāoxīn. Diku is an important mythological figure, as signified by his title ''Di'' (), basically signifying possession of some sort of imperial divinity, as in the sense of the Roman title ''
wikt:divus''; something sometimes translated as "emperor". Diku is sometimes considered to descend from Huangdi and to be ancestral to the ruling family of the
Shang dynasty of the second millennium BCE. Diku is credited with the invention of various musical instruments along with musical pieces for them to accompany. Diku is said to have consorted with the semi-divine females
Jiang Yuan and
Jiandi.
Yao and Shun
Yao and Shun were important mythological rulers, exemplars of propriety in rulership. The Great Flood began during the reign of Yao and continued through the time of
Shun (the successor of Yao, who had passed over his own son and made Shun his successor because of Shun's ability and morality). Historically, when
Qin Shi Huang united China in 221 BCE, he used propaganda to acclaim his achievements as surpassing those of mythological rulers who had gone before him. He combined the ancient titles of ''Huáng'' () and ''Dì'' () to create a new title, ''Huángdì'' (); thus, the Qin emperor used mythology to bolster his claims to be the legitimate and absolute ruler of the whole earth. This reflected what was to become a longstanding belief that all civilized people should have one government, and that it should be Chinese.
Gun, Yu, and the Great Flood
Shun passed on his place as emperor to
Yu the Great. The
Yellow River, prone to flooding, erupted in a huge flood in the time of Yao. The flood disrupted society and endangered human existence, as agricultural fields drowned, hunting game disappeared, and the people were dislocated to hills and mountains. Yu's father,
Gun, was put in charge of flood control by Yao, but failed to alleviate the problem after nine years. In some versions Gun was executed by Shun's minister
Zhurong for this failure, but according to others Gun was merely exiled for opposing the elevation of Shun as co-emperor. In more purely mythological versions, the story is more along the lines that Gun transformed into an animal shape to escape the wrath of Heaven (for having dared to go to Heaven and steal the flood-fighting expanding earth ''xirang''). He fled to
Feather Mountain and was struck dead by the fire god
Zhurong on behalf of Heaven. After three years, his son Yu appeared out of his belly, usually said to be in the form of some fantastic animal. Yu took his father's place fighting the flood, leading the people to build canals and levees, often said to be with the help of
Xirang. After thirteen years of toil, Yu abated the flood. Why the Xirang failed to work when Gun used it and he was punished by Heaven, but when Yu used it he was able to stop the flood and was rewarded by Heaven, is a question frequently made in the myths. The mythology of Yu and his associates during their work in controlling the flood and simultaneously saving the people can be seen in various ways to symbolize different societal and cultural developments, such as innovations in hunting, agriculture, well-digging, astronomy, social and political organizing, and other cultural innovations that occur during the course of the mythology around the flood stories. For example, a historicized version of ''xirang'' explains this soil may represent an innovative type of raised garden, made up of soil, brushwood, and similar materials. Thus, Yu and his work in controlling the flood with ''xirang'' would symbolize a societal development allowing a large scale approach to transforming wetlands into arable fields. Yu was said to be the founder of the
Xia dynasty.
First dynasties
The first three dynasties have especial significance in mythology.
Xia dynasty
The Xia dynasty is a real, historical dynasty known through archeology and literary accounts. However, many of these accounts contain elements of a clearly semi-mythological, and in some versions completely mythological or fanciful. The founding mythology of the early dynasties tends to have certain common general features, including the divine assistance obtained in the founding and the reasons for it. The fighter of the Great Flood,
Yu "the Great" had served Yao and Shun and they enfeoffed him as the Prince of Xia, an area of land. Upon Yu's death questions arose regarding the method of imperial succession, which would be a key factor as an example for Chinese culture for millennia. The question was who would succeed Yu upon his death. It could be his son,
Qi of Xia, also known as Kai, or the deputy that competently and diligently helped in the work against the great flood, a mighty hunter who helped feed the people during a time when agriculture had been rendered impossible,
Bo Yi. The mythological variants are much concerned with the relative merits between the two. Qi's succession broke the previous convention of
meritorious succession in favor of hereditary succession, thus initiating a dynastic tradition. The new dynasty was called "Xia" after Yu's centre of power.
Shang dynasty
Again, as in common with the founding of Xia, there is mythological material regarding how the previous dynasty turned to evil and unworthy ways, and the founder (of miraculous birth or ancestry) overthrew it. The mythology of the Shang dynasty is distinct from philosophical and historical accounts. Significant mythology includes the origin of its founders, the miraculous birth by
Jiandi of Shang founder Qi, also known as
Xie of Shang, after she became pregnant upon swallowing or holding in her bosom a bird's egg. After several generations, Xie (or Qi)'s descendant Tang became king of Shang by overthrowing
Jie, the last king of the Xia dynasty, said to be a very drunken and bloodthirsty tyrant. The fifth book of the philosopher
Mozi
Mozi (; ; Latinized as Micius ; – ), original name Mo Di (), was a Chinese philosopher who founded the school of Mohism during the Hundred Schools of Thought period (the early portion of the Warring States period, –221 BCE). The ancie ...
describes the end of the Xia dynasty and the beginning of the Shang:
After discussing the end of Xia and the beginning of Shang, Mozi describes the end of Shang and the beginning of the succeeding Zhou dynasty:
The mythological events surrounding the end of the Shang dynasty and the establishment of the Zhou greatly influenced the subject and story told in the popular novel ''
Investiture of the Gods''.
Founding of the Zhōu dynasty
The origins of the Ji dynastic founding family of the
Zhōu dynasty
The Zhou dynasty ( ; Old Chinese ( B&S): *''tiw'') was a royal dynasty of China that followed the Shang dynasty. Having lasted 789 years, the Zhou dynasty was the longest dynastic regime in Chinese history. The military control of China by t ...
is replete with mythological material, going back to its legendary founder
Houji (who was originally named Qi, but a different Qi than the Shang founder known as Xie or Qi). Myths about Houji include those of his mythical origins, of which there are two main myths. The end of the Shang overlaps the rise of the Zhōu, so there is shared material. Once established, the Zhōu were characterized by their volume of literature, in the beginning much of it justifying their overthrow of the Shang. However, it was not long before much historical material appeared, of a rational, rationalized, philosophical, or otherwise non-mythological nature.
=Bagua
=
One of the main legacies of the rise of Zhou was the insemination of the classic book ''
I Ching
The ''I Ching'' or ''Yi Jing'' (, ), usually translated ''Book of Changes'' or ''Classic of Changes'', is an ancient Chinese divination text that is among the oldest of the Chinese classics. Originally a divination manual in the Western Zho ...
'', however the eight trigrams must be from a far earlier period than
Wengong, and even more than the editing and commentary by Confucius – mythology references the
culture hero
A culture hero is a mythological hero specific to some group ( cultural, ethnic, religious, etc.) who changes the world through invention or discovery. Although many culture heroes help with the creation of the world, most culture heroes are imp ...
sometimes named
Fuxi.
Subsequent dynasties
Dynasties succeeding Zhou had notable mythological material, such as the accumulation of legend around the Jian'an transition between
Han dynasty and the
Three Kingdoms contention, reflected in the ''
Romance of the Three Kingdoms''. From the
Tang dynasty on, legends occur around the monk
Xuanzang's quest for Buddhist scriptures (sutras) from the area more-or-less corresponding to modern India, which influenced the
Ming dynasty novel ''
Journey to the West''.
Important deities, spirits, and mythological people

There are various important deities, spirits, and mythological people in Chinese mythology and folk religion. Some are clearly divine, such as the Jade Emperor (and even he is sometimes said to have begun life as a mortal). However, in Chinese language many beings are referred to as ''
shen''. (Sometimes Chinese mythology is called –
Mandarin Chinese: ''Zhōngguó Shénhuà''). Due to the ambiguity of this word when translated into English, it is not always clear how to classify in English the entities described ''shen'' (not to be confused with the mythological clam). The category ''shen'' is rather comprehensive and generic in Chinese myth and religion, ''shen'' may be ''spirits'', ''goddesses'' or ''gods'', ''ghosts'', or other. Another important concept is the classification of immortals (''
xian''). Immortals are more a category of quality than a description of an actual type. Immortals are defined by living for a long time (maybe forever). However, this is not a static quality, since Daoist adepts, shamans, or others are said to become immortals through right effort and various practices. Another example is the immortality sometimes obtained by the
lohans,
Bodhisattvas, and
Buddhas of Buddhist religion and mythology (this contrasts with indefinitely prolonged series of unenlightened re-births). Chinese mythology often tends to not make a clear differentiation between Buddhist and Daoist types. Various deities, spirits, and immortals (''xian'') are encountered in various myths. Some of these are particularly associated with Daoism. Some immortals or others became incorporated into Daoism as it developed as a phenomenon, deriving from ancient shamanic cults or other sources. The line between Daoism and folk religion is not clear. Other mythological beings are clearly derived through the process of the introduction of Buddhism into China.
Major deities
The concept of a principal or presiding deity has fluctuated over time in Chinese mythology.
Shangdi
Shangdi, also sometimes ''Huángtiān Dàdì'' (), appeared as early as the
Shang dynasty. In later eras, he was more commonly referred to as ''Huángtiān Shàngdì'' (). The use of ''Huángtiān Dàdì'' refers to the
Jade Emperor
The Jade Emperor or Yudi ( or , ') in Chinese culture, traditional religions and myth is one of the representations of the first god ( '). In Daoist theology he is the assistant of Yuanshi Tianzun, who is one of the Three Pure Ones, the three ...
and ''
Tian''.
Jade Emperor
Chinese mythology holds that the Jade Emperor was charged with running of the three realms: heaven, hell, and the realm of the living. The Jade Emperor adjudicated and meted out rewards and remedies to saints, the living, and the deceased according to a merit system loosely called the Jade Principles Golden Script (, ''Yù lǜ jīn piān''). When proposed judgments were objected to, usually by other saints, the administration would occasionally resort to the counsels of advisory elders. The Jade Emperor appeared in literature after the establishment of
Taoism in China; his appearance as ''Yu Huang'' dates back to beyond the times of
Yellow Emperor,
Nüwa, or
Fuxi.
Tian
Tian can be either a sky deity by that name or
Heaven
Heaven or the heavens, is a common religious cosmological or transcendent supernatural place where beings such as deities, angels, souls, saints, or venerated ancestors are said to originate, be enthroned, or reside. According to the belie ...
– the Sky itself. Tian appeared in literature c. 700 BCE, possibly earlier as dating depends on the date of the
Shujing (''Book of Documents''). There are no creation-oriented narratives for Tian. The qualities of Tian and Shangdi appear to have merged in later literature and are now worshiped as one entity ("", Huángtiān Shàngdì) in, for example, the Beijing's
Temple of Heaven. The extent of the distinction between Tian and Shangdi is debated. The sinologist
Herrlee Creel
Herrlee Glessner Creel (January 19, 1905June 1, 1994) was an American Sinologist and philosopher who specialized in Chinese philosophy and history, and was a professor of Chinese at the University of Chicago for nearly 40 years. On his retirement ...
claims that an analysis of the
Shang oracle bones reveals Shangdi to have preceded Tian as a deity, and that Zhou dynasty authors replaced the term "Shangdi" with "Tian" to cement the claims of their influence.
Nüwa
Nüwa (or Nügua) is considered a mother goddess of Chinese mythology. She was involved in the creation of humanity and repairing the Pillars of Heaven. Nüwa is often depicted as half snake, half human, and is sometimes considered one of the Three Sovereigns, along with her brother and husband
Fuxi.
Fuxi
Fuxi is the first of the
Three Sovereigns
The Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors were two groups of mythological
Myth is a folklore genre consisting of narratives that play a fundamental role in a society, such as foundational tales or origin myths. Since "myth" is widely used to ...
. He created humanity alongside his sister and wife
Nüwa, and like her, is depicted as half snake, half human. Fuxi is closely associated with the
I Ching
The ''I Ching'' or ''Yi Jing'' (, ), usually translated ''Book of Changes'' or ''Classic of Changes'', is an ancient Chinese divination text that is among the oldest of the Chinese classics. Originally a divination manual in the Western Zho ...
.
Daoism and Chinese mythology
Over time certain aspects of folk religion and belief coalesced and were refined into a group of formal religious beliefs, practices, and philosophy known as
Daoism. One of the founders of Daoism was Old Man
Laozi
Laozi (), also known by numerous other names, was a semilegendary ancient Chinese Taoist philosopher. Laozi ( zh, ) is a Chinese honorific, generally translated as "the Old Master". Traditional accounts say he was born as in the state
...
, who himself entered into legend or mythology. There is much overlap between religion and mythology, and between Chinese folk religion and Daoism. However, certain beings or concepts of Chinese mythology have a particularly strong association with religious or philosophical Daoism. For example, the Jade Emperor, Yùhuáng, is a major actor in many myths. In Daoist-related mythology there is often a strong presence of sorcery and magic, such as spells, charms, magical abilities, and elixirs. The development of Daoism as it came to be called was a lengthy one, with various strands including both rationalist ethical philosophy and a magico-religious stand informed by mythology. As Daoism developed as a concept from its traditional roots in Chinese folk religion and mythology, its legitimacy was bolstered by claims of originating with Huangdi, the
Yellow Emperor. For example, the some of the ''
Huangdi Sijing material'', the ''
Huangdi Yinfujing'', and the ''
Huangdi Neijing'' are Daoist classics with claims to a scriptural legacy going back to Huangdi.
Buddhist influences

Buddhism was historically introduced to China, probably in the first century CE, accompanied by the import of various ideas about deities and supernatural beings including Kṣitigarbha who was renamed
Dizang. the
Four Heavenly Kings, the main Buddha himself
Shakyamuni Buddha (, Shìjiāmóunífó), Avalokiteśvara who after a few centuries metamorphosized into
Guanyin (also Kuanyin) a
bodhisattva of compassion, and Hotei the
Laughing Buddha
Budai ( zh, c=布袋, p=Bùdài; ko, 포대, Podae; ja, 布袋, Hotei; vi, Bố Đại) was a Chinese monk who is often identified with and venerated as Maitreya Buddha in Chan Buddhism. With the spread of Chan Buddhism, he also came to b ...
. New Buddhist material continued to enter China, with a big spike in the Tang dynasty, when the monk
Xuanzang brought over 600 texts from India. Over time, Guanyin also became a Daoist immortal and was the subject of much mythology.
Guanyin

Guanyin is also known as Kwan Yin, Guanshiyin, the Goddess of Mercy and many other names. The mythology around Guanyin is two-fold, one based on the
Avalokitasvara/Avalokiteśvara tradition from India and one based on an alleged Chinese young woman's life, as appears in the
legend of Miaoshan. Guanyin is worshiped as a goddess, yet has a most impressive mythological résumé. Many myths and legends exist about Guan Yin. In all of them she is exceptionally compassionate.
Kṣitigarbha
Kṣitigarbha was a Buddhist deity from the area of India who was renamed
Dizang, In China. He usually appears as Usually depicted as a monk with a
halo around his shaved head, he carries a
staff
Staff may refer to:
Pole
* Staff, a weapon used in stick-fighting
** Quarterstaff, a European pole weapon
* Staff of office, a pole that indicates a position
* Staff (railway signalling), a token authorizing a locomotive driver to use a particula ...
to force open the gates of hell and a
wish-fulfilling jewel to light up the darkness.
Four Heavenly Kings
There are a group known as the Four Heavenly Kings, one for each cardinal direction. Statues of them can be encountered in the Hall of the Heavenly Kings of many Buddhist temples.
Laughing Buddha

The depiction of a fat, laughing Buddha developed in China.
Confucian influence
A major factor in Chinese mythology is shown in the development of the tradition known as
Confucianism, named after a writer and school master who lived around 551–479 BCE. Confucius embraced the traditions of
ancestor veneration
The veneration of the dead, including one's ancestors, is based on love and respect for the deceased. In some cultures, it is related to beliefs that the dead have a continued existence, and may possess the ability to influence the fortune of t ...
. He came to be a major figure of worship in Daoism, which had its genesis in traditional Chinese religion. The legitimacy of the Confucian movement was bolstered by the claim that its origins could be found in the mythology (often claimed to be history) of
Yao and
Shun.
Sharing between folk religion and mythology

Modern and ancient Chinese culture had plenty of room for both religion and mythology. Certain deities or spirits receive special attention. These include divinities of wealth, longevity, fertility. Mythologically, it is possible to attain many desires through ritual activity involved with mythological themes. For example, many stores and restaurants in China or of the Chinese diaspora have shrines to
Guan Yu, also known as Guandi.
Guandi
Guandi began as a
Three Kingdoms general,
Guan Yu. Over the subsequent centuries, Guan Yu became promoted by official decree to be the god Guandi. He is a god primarily of brotherhood and social organizations such as businesses, although this is sometimes seen in connection with martial power and war. According to mythology, Guan Yu made a famous covenant of brotherhood in a peach orchard.
Three Star deities
=Star God of Longevity
=
An example of Sharing between folk religion and mythology is the Star God of Longevity.
Afterlife and family
Much Chinese mythology concerns the afterlife, explaining what happens people after they die. This is related to
ancestor veneration
The veneration of the dead, including one's ancestors, is based on love and respect for the deceased. In some cultures, it is related to beliefs that the dead have a continued existence, and may possess the ability to influence the fortune of t ...
, the mythological geography of heaven and hell, the rituals at family tombs, and so on.
Immortals (''xiān'')
Sometimes, in mythology, certain humans develop the ability to live indefinitely, avoiding death, and becoming divine ''
xiān''. Such humans generally also are said to develop special powers. Generally, these abilities are said to develop through such practices of
Chinese alchemy, obtaining an
Elixir of life,
[Obed Simon Johnson, A Study of Chinese Alchemy, page Shanghai, Commercial, 1928. rpt. New York: Arno P, 1974.] and/or various austerities of diet or sexuality. Symbolic associations with immortality include a spotted deer, cranes, the
Lingzhi mushroom, and a gourd and bat. often Immortals are mythologically located in Mountain Paradises, such as Kunlun. Various common English translations of ''xiān'' exist, such as Immortal, Fairy, and Sage. An example of a Daoist immortal is
Wong Tai Sin, who began as a fourth century CE hermit and developed into a divine healer.
=Magu
=
Magu is a legendary
Taoist ''xian'' (transcendent"), still currently worshiped. Magu is associated with the
elixir of life, and is a symbolic protector of females in Chinese mythology. Stories in
Chinese literature describe Magu as a beautiful young woman with long birdlike fingernails, while early myths associate her with caves. Magu's name literally compounds two common
Chinese words: ''ma'' "cannabis; hemp" and ''gu'' "aunt; maid".
Ghosts or spirits of the deceased
Common beliefs and stories in Chinese mythology involve a soul or spirit that survives after the death of someone's body. There are many types.
Living dead
Jiangshi are a type of re-animated corpse.
=Zhong Kui
=
In the mythological folklore,
Zhong Kui is regarded as a vanquisher of ghosts and evil beings. He committed suicide upon being unfairly stripped of his title of "''
Zhuangyuan''" (top-scorer) of the
Imperial Examinations
The imperial examination (; lit. "subject recommendation") refers to a civil-service examination system in Imperial China, administered for the purpose of selecting candidates for the state bureaucracy. The concept of choosing bureaucrats by ...
by the emperor, due to his disfigured and ugly appearance. His spirit was condemned to
Hell
In religion and folklore, hell is a location in the afterlife in which evil souls are subjected to punitive suffering, most often through torture, as eternal punishment after death. Religions with a linear divine history often depict hell ...
because suicide was considered a grave sin, but
Yama (the Chinese Hell King) judged him worthy of the title "King of Ghosts" in Diyu (Hell). Yama tasked him to hunt, capture, take charge of, and maintain discipline and order of all ghosts. On
Chinese New Year
Chinese New Year is the festival that celebrates the beginning of a New Year, new year on the traditional lunisolar calendar, lunisolar and solar Chinese calendar. In Sinophone, Chinese and other East Asian cultures, the festival is commonly r ...
's eve, Zhong Kui returned to his hometown to repay the kindness of his friend Du Ping ().
Holidays and festival rituals
Abundant mythology is associated with religious holidays and folk festivals.
=Qingming Festival
=
The Qingming festival is a good example of a Chinese holiday that involves family activities associated with a seasonally-recurring annual event; and, also, ancestor veneration.
=Qixi Festival
=
The seasonally-recurring annual holiday of
Qixi involves love and romance. A main mythological tale is "
The Cowherd and the Weaver Girl".
Weather deities
Various deities or spirits are associated with weather phenomena, such as drought or thunder. Dragons are often associated with rain. Examples include the deity or mythological person Ba, also known as
Hànbá or Nuba. Ba is the daughter of the
Yellow Emperor (Huangdi) whom she aided during his
Battle at Zhuolu against
Chiyou: after Chiyou had fielded a wind god (
Feng Bo) and a rain god (
Yu Shi), Ba descended from heaven to use her drought power to defeat their wind and rain powers. She is one of the first goddesses attested to in Chinese literature, appearing in the early collection of poetry, the ''
Shijing'', as well as in the later ''
Shanhaijing''. At least up through the middle of the twentieth century, ceremonies to produce rain were held in many regions of China. The basic idea of these ceremonies, which could last several hours, was to drive Ba out of the region. Another example, is
Lei Gong
Leigong () or Leishen (), is the god of thunder in Chinese folk religion, Chinese mythology and Taoism. In Taoism, when so ordered by heaven, Leigong punishes both earthly mortals guilty of secret crimes and evil spirits who have used their know ...
, god of thunder.
Astronomical deities
Various goddesses, gods, or spirits are especially associated with certain astronomical objects.
Sun (and Suns)
Various mythology involves the sun. One solar deity is
Xihe, goddess of the sun. There is a myth of
Kua Fu, a giant who followed the sun, during the course of his chase he drained all of the waters dry including the Yellow River, and after he died of thirst was transformed into a mountain range or a forest. Known as
sānzúwū are three-legged raven or ravens associated with the sun, or the ten suns, of which
Houyi shot down nine. Sometimes mythology portrays there being more than one sun.
=Houyi and the Ten Suns
=
It was said that there were ten suns, each one taking a turn on its allotted day to cross the sky (this has been thought evidence of a ten-day week used at one time). There is a mythological account of how at one on a certain morning ten suns all rose into the sky together. The oppressive heat lead to drought, the plants began to wither, and humans and animals were all on the verge of death. A mighty archer Yi, or Houyi, shot down all but one of them, saving humanity.
Moon
Chang'e
Chang'e ( ; , alternatively rendered as Chang-Er or Ch‘ang-o), originally known as Heng'e, is the Chinese goddess of the Moon. She is the subject of several legends in Chinese mythology, most of which incorporate several of the following elem ...
(or in older versions Chang'O) is goddess of the moon. Another lunar deity is
Changxi, probably an older version of Chang'e with the name changed due to a naming taboo. Chang'e is modern.
=Chang'e
=
In mythology it was said that Chang'e had been married to the heroic archer
Houyi, but one day she swallowed a Pill of Immortality and floated up to the moon. Now it is said Chang'e lives in a cold crystal palace on the moon. Every year during a full moon toward harvest time, Chang'e is worshiped. This is the
Mid-Autumn Festival
The Mid-Autumn Festival (Chinese: / ), also known as the Moon Festival or Mooncake Festival, is a traditional festival celebrated in Chinese culture. Similar holidays are celebrated in Japan (), Korea (), Vietnam (), and other countries in Eas ...
, families gather under the moonlight and celebrate in honour of the moon. Although somewhat lonely, Chang'e is not alone on the moon.
=Wu Gang and the Magic Tree
=
A magical tree grows on the moon. It is possibly an osmanthus tree (''Osmanthus fragrans''), some type of laurel (
Lauraceae
Lauraceae, or the laurels, is a plant family that includes the true laurel and its closest relatives. This family comprises about 2850 known species in about 45 genera worldwide (Christenhusz & Byng 2016 ). They are dicotyledons, and occur ma ...
), such as a cassia such as (''Cinnamomum cassia''), but more likely a unique specimen of a magical tree. Every month the
Immortal Wu Gang cuts away at the tree, chopping it smaller and smaller. Then, just when he just has it chopped completely down, it magically grows back. Once it has grown back Wu Gang returns to his chopping, in an endless monthly cycle.
=Rabbit in the Moon
=
An
alchemical hare or rabbit lives on the moon. The lunar rabbit can be seen when the moon is full, busy with mortar and pestle, preparing the Elixir of Immortality.
=Three-legged toad
=

(See
Liu Haichan
Liu Haichan was a ( 10th century) Daoist '' xian'' ("transcendent; immortal") who was a patriarch of the Quanzhen School, and a master of ''neidan'' "internal alchemy" techniques. Liu Haichan is associated with other Daoist transcendents, especia ...
for Chinese characters)
A three-legged toad lives on the moon. During full moons the three-legged Golden Toad
Jin Chan frequents near houses or businesses that will soon receive good news generally in the form of wealth. Also known as a Money Toad, statuettes of this toad are used as a charm in
Fengshui. The mythology of the Immortal
Liu Haichan
Liu Haichan was a ( 10th century) Daoist '' xian'' ("transcendent; immortal") who was a patriarch of the Quanzhen School, and a master of ''neidan'' "internal alchemy" techniques. Liu Haichan is associated with other Daoist transcendents, especia ...
(who seems to be a form of
Caishen/Zhao Gong, God of Wealth) is associated with this tripedal toad.
Deities of places
Various goddesses, gods, spirits, fairies, or monsters are associated with specific places, such as particular rivers, mountains, or the ocean. Some of these locations are associated with real geography, others are known only through mythological imagination.
Xi Wangmu
Xi Wangmu, meaning Queen Mother of the West, predates organized Daoism, yet is now strongly identified with Daoism. Xi Wangmu is generally mythologically located in a western wonderland "to the west", now identified with the
Kunlun of mythology. Thus, she is the ruler of a passageway between Earth and Heaven.
=Mazu
=
Mazu
Mazu or Matsu is a Chinese sea goddess also known by several other names and titles. She is the deified form of the legendary figure Lin Mo or Lin Moniang, a Fujianese shamaness whose life span is traditionally dated from 960 to 987. Re ...
is a major goddess. She is a goddess of the sea. Mazu worship is credited with leading to miraculous salvations at sea, protecting sailors and travelers from drowning. She is a tutelary deity of seafarers, including fishermen and sailors, especially along coastal China and areas of the Chinese diaspora.
Xiang River goddesses
The two
Xiang River goddesses are ancient in mythology. They are associated with the
Xiang River in the former
Chu
Chu or CHU may refer to:
Chinese history
* Chu (state) (c. 1030 BC–223 BC), a state during the Zhou dynasty
* Western Chu (206 BC–202 BC), a state founded and ruled by Xiang Yu
* Chu Kingdom (Han dynasty) (201 BC–70 AD), a kingdom of the Ha ...
area of China. They are also mythologically credited with causing a
certain type of bamboo to develop a mottled appearance said to resemble tear-drops (''lacrima'' ''deae''). The two Xiang River goddesses (Xiangfei) are named Éhuáng and Nǚyīng.
Deities or spirits of human activities
Various deities or spirits are associated with certain human activities. Various deities or spirits are associated with the households in general or with cities. Some provide tutelary help to persons pursuing certain occupations or seeking to have children.
Household deities and spirits
The Chinese household was often the subject of mythology and related ritual. The welfare of the family was mythologically-related to the perceived help of helpful deities and spirits, and avoiding the baneful effects of malicious ones. Of these household deities the most important was the kitchen god
Zao Jun. The Kitchen God was viewed as a sort of intermediary between the household and the supreme god, who would judge, then reward or punish a household based on the Kitchen God's report. Zao Jun was propitiated at appropriate times by offerings of food and incense, and various mythological stories about him exist. Lesser deities or spirits were also thought to help out the household through their intervention. For example, the guardians of the doors, the
Menshen pair and others.
Territories administrators
Various deities and spirits have been mythologically associated with the welfare of areas of land and with cities. Some were good, tutelary guardians: others were malicious ghosts or evil hauntings.
=Houtu
=
Houtu is a guardian deity of the earth.
=Tudi
=
The Tudi or
Tudigong were the spiritual dukes or gods in charge of protecting particular parcels of land, acting as the local gods of individual villages.
=City gods
=
In old China, the city was almost synonymous with the city wall. Most cities also had a moat, made to further protect the perimeter of the city and as an artifact of building the ramparts. A
City god
A tutelary () (also tutelar) is a deity or a Nature spirit, spirit who is a guardian, patron, or protector of a particular place, geographic feature, person, lineage, nation, culture, or occupation. The etymology of "tutelary" expresses the concep ...
guarded an individual city. There were many cities and many city gods.
Occupational tutelaries
The life of a scholar has long been pursued in China, in part due to rewarding those who study hard and do well in
standardized tests
A standardized test is a test that is administered and scored in a consistent, or "standard", manner. Standardized tests are designed in such a way that the questions and interpretations are consistent and are administered and scored in a predete ...
. There is a whole area of myth around the
Imperial examination in Chinese mythology. For example, in the area of literature, success in standardized tests, and other culture there are associated pair
Kui Xing and
Wenchang Wang.
Life and social association
There are deities mythologically associated with various intimate aspects of human life, including motherhood, general sodality and formal syndicals, lifespan and fate, and war and death. Many are currently worshiped in Buddhism, Daoism, or Chinese folk religion.
Guandi is a prominent example, but there are many others.
=Promoters of health
=
A good example of a medicine deity is
Sun Simiao
Sun Simiao (; died 682) was a Chinese physician and writer of the Sui and Tang dynasty. He was titled as China's King of Medicine (, Yaowang) for his significant contributions to Chinese medicine and tremendous care to his patients.
Books
Sun ...
, who became Yaowang. Another is
Baosheng Dadi.
=Bixia
=
Bixia is mythologically connected with motherhood and fertility. She is currently a popular goddess.
=Siming
=
The
Siming is a god of lifespan and fate.
=Male sexuality
=
Tu'er Shen is a
leveret
Hares and jackrabbits are mammals belonging to the genus ''Lepus''. They are herbivores, and live solitarily or in pairs. They nest in slight depressions called forms, and their young are able to fend for themselves shortly after birth. The ge ...
or
rabbit
Rabbits, also known as bunnies or bunny rabbits, are small mammals in the family Leporidae (which also contains the hares) of the order Lagomorpha (which also contains the pikas). ''Oryctolagus cuniculus'' includes the European rabbit speci ...
gay deity, patron of gay men who engage in same gender love and sexual activities.
Miscellaneous mythological beings
Various deities, spirits, or other mythological beings are encountered in Chinese mythology, some of them related to the religious beliefs of China. Some of them are currently worshiped, some of them now only appear as characters in myths, and some both ways.
*
Fangfeng
Fangfeng () is a character from Chinese mythology as well as a god in Chinese popular religion. As a mythological figure, Fangfeng is mostly known for arriving late for an assembly called by Yu the Great after the end of the Great Flood (China), G ...
: the giant who helped fight flood, executed by Yu the Great
*
Feng Meng: apprentice to Hou Yi, and his eventual murderer
*
Gao Yao
*
Nezha: Taoist protection deity
*
Tam Kung: sea deity with the ability to forecast weather
*
Yuqiang Yuqiang (, alternatively Yujiang 禺疆 or Yujing 禺京), in Chinese mythology is one of the descendants of Huang Di, the "Yellow Emperor". Yuqiang was also the god of the north sea and a wind god. His father was Yuhao, another sea god. Some accoun ...
: Yellow Emperor's descendant, god of north sea and wind
*
Daoji: compassionate folk hero known for wild and eccentric behaviour
*
Erlang Shen: possessed a third eye in the middle of his forehead that saw the truth
Heroes
=Xingtian
=
Xingtian is a headless giant decapitated by the Yellow Emperor as punishment for challenging him; his face is on his torso as he has no head
Mythological creatures
Non-divine mythological beings are sometimes divided into several parts each ruled over by a particular type of being—humans ruled over by the Emperor, winged creatures ruled over by the phoenix, and scaly, finned, or crawly creatures ruled over by the dragon. However, whatever the approach, mythological taxonomy is not a rigorous discipline, not even as clear as
folk taxonomy, much less the scientific efforts which result in modern
biological taxonomy. Often, mythological creatures inhabit the furthest reaches of the exotic imagination.
The Four Symbols
The Four Symbols were four species of animals of particular intelligence (not considering humans). Each one represented and ruled over a class of animals. They are the Azure Dragon of the East, the Vermilion Bird of the South, the White Tiger of the West, and the Black Tortoise (also called "Black Warrior") of the North.
Dragons, dragon-like and related creatures
The
Chinese dragon is one of the most important mythical creatures in Chinese mythology, considered to be the most powerful and divine creature and the controller of all waters who could create clouds with their breath. The dragon symbolized great power and was very supportive of heroes and gods. The conventional dragon has a certain description, however there are other dragons or dragon-like beings that vary from this description. For example, the
Chi
Chi or CHI may refer to:
Greek
*Chi (letter), the Greek letter (uppercase Χ, lowercase χ);
Chinese
*Chi (length), ''Chi'' (length) (尺), a traditional unit of length, about ⅓ meter
*Chi (mythology) (螭), a dragon
*Chi (surname) (池, pin ...
of mythology lacks horns. Dragons often chase or play with a mystical or flaming pearl. A dragon-
fenghuang pairing is a common motif in art, the fenghuang often being called a "phoenix".
One of the most famous dragons in Chinese mythology is
Yinglong, the god of rain. Many people in different places pray to Yinglong to receive rain.
Chinese people
The Chinese people or simply Chinese, are people or ethnic groups identified with China, usually through ethnicity, nationality, citizenship, or other affiliation.
Chinese people are known as Zhongguoren () or as Huaren () by speakers of s ...
use the term ("Descendants of the Dragon") as a sign of their ethnic identity.
Shenlong is a master of storms and bringer of rain.
Zhulong
Zhulong may refer to:
* Zhulong, Chuzhou (珠龙镇), town in Nanqiao District, Chuzhou, Anhui
* Zhulong, Longquan (住龙镇), town in Longquan, Zhejiang
* Zhulong (mythology) (燭龍), a mythical being in Chinese mythology)
** 472235 Zhulong ...
the Torch Dragon is a giant red solar deity. Sometimes he appears in composite snake-like, human-dragon form. There were various
dragon kings. They mostly lived undersea and were of the
Ao family, such as
Ao Guang
Ao Guang (; or ) is the Dragon King of the East Sea in Chinese folklore. He featured prominently in different works including ''Fengshen Yanyi'' and ''Journey to the West''.
''Fengshen Yanyi''
According to the ''Fengshen Yanyi'', after the passa ...
.
Various mythology accounting human-dragon relationships exist, such as the story of
Longmu, a woman who raise dragons.
Specific dragons, or types of dragon, include:
Dilong, the earth dragon;
Fucanglong
In Chinese mythology, the Fuzanglong () is the Chinese dragon of hidden treasures and an underworld dragon which guards buried treasure, both natural and man-made. Volcanoes are said to form when these dragons burst out of the ground to report to ...
, the treasure dragon;
Jiaolong, dragon of floods and sea;
Teng, a flying creature, sometimes considered a type of snake or dragon-snake;
Tianlong, the celestial dragon, sometimes associated with centipede qualities;
Yinglong, the water dragon, a powerful servant of the
Yellow Emperor.
The fourteenth monarch of the
Xia dynasty is said to be Kong Jia, who, according to mythology, raised dragons.
Fish and fish-like
Various mythology of China involves fish or fish-like beings. Part human, part sea creatures of the
Mermaid () type appear. The
Kun (or Peng) was a giant monstrous fish transformation of the Peng bird. Carp that leapt the dragon gate falls of the Yellow River were said to transform into dragons. This was used as a symbol for a scholar's successful graduation in the
Imperial examination system.
Snakelike and reptilian

Various snakes and reptilians appear in Chinese mythology, folklore, and religion. These range from divine or semi-divine to merely fantastic types of the bestiary sort. Sometimes the dragon is considered part of this category, related to it, or the ruler of all the swimming and crawling folk. This may include the giant marine turtle or tortoise
Ao, the
Bashe snake reputed to swallow elephants, a nine-headed snake monster reminiscent of the hydra known as
Xiangliu, and the White Serpent from the novel ''
Legend of the White Snake''.
Birds
Various birds are found in Chinese mythology, some of them obviously based on real birds, other ones obviously not, and some in-between. The
Crane is an example of a real type of bird with mythological enhancements. Cranes are linked with immortality, and may be transformed ''xian'' immortals, or ferry an immortal upon their back. The
Vermilion Bird is iconic of the south. Sometimes confused with the
Fenghuang, the vermilion bird of the south is associated with fire. The
Peng was a gigantic bird phase of the gigantic Kun fish. The
Jingwei is a mythical bird which tries to fill up the ocean with twigs and pebbles symbolizing indefatigable determination. The
Qingniao
The Qingniao () were blue or green birds which appear in Chinese mythology, popular stories, poetry, and religion (the Chinese are somewhat ambiguous in regard to English color vocabulary, and the word ''qing'' may and has been translated as Blue� ...
was the messenger or servant of
Xi Wangmu.
Other birds include the
Bi Fang bird, a one-legged bird. ''Bi'' is also number nineteen of the
Twenty-Eight Mansions of traditional
Chinese astronomy, the Net (
Bi). There are supposed to be the Jiān (; jian
1): the mythical one-eyed bird with one wing; Jianjian (): a pair of such birds dependent on each other, inseparable, hence representing husband and wife. There was a
Shang-Yang rainbird. The
Jiufeng is a nine-headed bird used to scare children. The Sù Shuāng (; su
4shuang
3) sometimes appears as a goose-like bird. The
Zhen is a poisonous bird. There may be a Jiguang (; ''jíguāng'').
Mythological humanoid
Mythological humanoids include the former human, the part-human and the human-like, although these sometimes merge into other categories. Examples include
Kui: one-legged mountain demon or dragon who invented music and dance; also
Shun's or
Yao's Music Master, Xiāo (; xiao
1) mountain spirit(s) or demon(s), and
Yaoguai demons.
Mythological mammalians
Various mythological mammals exist in Chinese mythology. Some of these form the totem animals of the
Chinese zodiac. The Chinese language of mythology tends not to mark words for gender or number, so English language translations can be problematic. Also, species or even genera are not always distinguished, with the named animal often being seen as the local version of that type, such is as the case with sheep and goats, or the versatile term sometimes translated as ''ox''.
Fox spirits
Fox spirits feature prominently in mythology throughout the mythology of East Asia. In China, these are generally known as
Huli jing. There are various types, such as the nine-tailed fox.
Dogs
Various dogs appear in the mythology of China, featuring more prominently in some ethnic cultures more than others. The
zodiacal dog is featured in the Chinese zodiac.
Bovidae
The Bovidae appearing in the mythologies of China include oxen (including the common cow,
buffalo, and the yak), sheep and goats, and perhaps antelopes (some times "unicorns" are thought to be types of antelopes).
=Ox
=
References to oxen may include those to the common cow, the
buffalo, and the yak. The
zodiacal ox is one of the twelve zodiacal signs in the twelve-year calendar cycle. Yak tails are mentioned as magical whisks used by Daoist sorcerers. The ox appears in various
agricultural myths.
=Sheep and goats
=
Sheep (and/or goats) appear in various myths and stories. The
zodiacal sheep is one of the twelve zodiacal signs in the twelve-year calendar cycle. A semi-mythical, semi-historical story involves the adventures of the Han diplomat
Su Wu
Su Wu (; 140 BC - 60 BC ) was a Chinese diplomat and politician of the Western Han dynasty. He is known in Chinese history for making the best of his mission into foreign territory. During his mission he was captured and then detained for ni ...
held captive among the
Xiongnu
The Xiongnu (, ) were a tribal confederation of nomadic peoples who, according to ancient Chinese sources, inhabited the eastern Eurasian Steppe from the 3rd century BC to the late 1st century AD. Modu Chanyu, the supreme leader after 209 ...
for nineteen years and forced to herd sheep and/or goats.
Horses
Horses frequently gallop through Chinese mythology. Sometimes the poets say that they are related to dragons. The
zodiacal horse is one of the twelve zodiacal signs in the twelve-year calendar cycle.
Unicorns
Various types of "unicorns" can be found in the myths, designated by the term ''lin'', which is often translated as "unicorn". They possess many similarities to the European unicorn, although not necessarily having only one horn. There are six types of ''lin''. One type of ''lin'' is the
Qilin, a chimeric or composite animal with several variations.
Xu Shen in his early 2nd century CE) dictionary ''
Shuowen Jiezi'' defines what is represented by this particular ''lin'' as "an animal of benevolence, having the body of an antelope, the tail of an ox, and a single horn." Also, according to the ''
Shuowen Jiezi'', the horn was sometimes said to have been frightening in appearance to scare off would be attackers, but really flesh-tipped so as to cause no harm. ''Lin'', or unicorns appear only during the reign of benevolent rulers. In 451 BCE,
Confucius recorded that a unicorn had appeared, but was slain in a ducal hunt. Confucius was so upset upon reporting this that he set aside his brush and wrote no more. The giraffe was not well known in China and poorly described: about 1200 CE the ''lin'' and the giraffe began to trade characteristics in their mythological conceptions. It is possible that the unicorns resulted from different descriptions of animals which later became extinct, or they no longer ranged in the area of China.
Cats
Various cats appear in Chinese mythology, many of them large. Examples are
Pixiu, resembled a winged lion, and
Rui Shi
Chinese guardian lions, or imperial guardian lions, are a traditional Chinese architectural ornament, but the origins lie deep in much older Indian Buddhist traditions. Typically made of stone, they are also known as stone lions or shishi (). ...
(, ''Ruì Shī''), guardian lions. Sometimes they are found pulling the chariot of Xiwangmu. The cat is one of the twelve annual zodiacal animals in Vietnamese and related cultural calendars, having the place of the rabbit found in the Chinese system.
Non-bovid ungulates
Various non-bovid ungulates are encountered. Xīniú: a
rhinoceros, became mythologized when rhinoceroses became extinct in China. Depictions later changed to a more
bovine appearance, with a short, curved horn on its head used to communicate with the sky.
Simian
Various beings with simian characteristics appear in Chinese mythology and religion. The Monkey King was a warder of evil spirits, respected and loved, an ancient deity at least influenced by the Hindu deity
Hanuman. The Monkey god is still worshiped by some people in modern China. Some of the mythology associated with the Monkey King influenced the novel ''
Journey to the West''. The
xiao of mythology appears as a long-armed ape or a four-winged bird, making it hard to categorize exactly; but this is true of various composite beings of mythology.
Draconid mammalian
The
Longma is a composite beast, like a winged horse similar to the Qilin, with scales of a dragon.
Four Fiends

The
Four Fiends:
*
Hundun
Hundun () is both a "legendary faceless being" in Chinese mythology and the "primordial and central chaos" in Chinese cosmogony, comparable with the world egg.
Linguistics
''Hundun'' was semantically extended from a mythic "primordial chaos; ...
: chaos
*
Taotie: gluttony
*Táowù (): ignorance; provided confusion and apathy and made mortals free of the curiosity and reason needed to reach enlightenment
*Qióngqí (): deviousness
Miscellaneous or other
*
Nian
A ''nian'' () is a beast in Chinese mythology. Nian live under the sea or in the mountains. The Chinese character ''nian'' more usually means "year" or "new year". The earliest written sources that refer to the ''nian'' as a creature date to the e ...
: lives under the sea or in mountains; attacks children
*
Luduan
Luduan (甪端 pinyin: lùduān) is a legendary Chinese mythology, Chinese auspicious creature. It has the head of a lion, the horn of a rhino, the body of a dragon, the paws of a bear, the scales of a fish, and the tail of an ox, It can travel ...
: can detect the truth
*
Xiezhi (also Xie Cai): the creature of justice said to be able to distinguish lies from truths; it had a long, straight horn used to gore liars
*
Bai Ze
Bái Zé (), or in Japanese language, Japanese is a mythical cow-like beast from Chinese legend. Its name literally means "white marsh".
The ''Bái Zé'' was encountered by the Yellow Emperor or ''Huáng Dì'' while he was on patrol in the east. ...
: legendary creature said to have been encountered by the Yellow Emperor and to have given him a
compendium listing all the demons in the world
Mythological plants
Various mythological plants appear in Chinese mythology. Some of these in Heaven or Earthly Paradises, some of them in particularly inaccessible or hard-to-find areas of the Earth; examples include the
Fusang world tree habitation of sun(s), the
Lingzhi mushrooms of immortality, the
Peaches of Immortality, and the magical
Yao Grass. Also encountered are various plants of jasper and jade growing in the gardens of the Paradises.
Mythological objects
Various mythological objects form a part of Chinese mythology, including gems, pearls, magical
bronzes, and weapons. Examples include a
wish-fulfilling jewel; various
luminous gemstones
Folktales about luminous gemstones are an almost worldwide motif in mythology and history among Asian, European, African, and American cultures. Some stories about light-emitting gems may have been based on luminescent and phosphorescent mineral ...
, the
Marquis of Sui's pearl
The Marquis of Sui's pearl or Chinese (, ) was a famous gemstone in a Warring States period (475-221 BCE) folktale about a ruler of Sui state who was given an amazing luminous pearl by a grateful snake whose life he had saved. In the history of ...
, auspicious pearls associated with dragon imagery; and, the
Nine Tripod Cauldrons which conferred legitimacy to the dynastic ruler of the Nine Provinces of China. The weaponry motif is common in Chinese mythology, for example, the heroic archer
Yi is supposed to have shot down nine problematic suns with a magical bow and arrows given to him by
Di Jun.
Jewels
Jewels include a
wish-fulfilling jewel; various
luminous gemstones
Folktales about luminous gemstones are an almost worldwide motif in mythology and history among Asian, European, African, and American cultures. Some stories about light-emitting gems may have been based on luminescent and phosphorescent mineral ...
, the
Marquis of Sui's pearl
The Marquis of Sui's pearl or Chinese (, ) was a famous gemstone in a Warring States period (475-221 BCE) folktale about a ruler of Sui state who was given an amazing luminous pearl by a grateful snake whose life he had saved. In the history of ...
, auspicious pearls associated with dragon imagery.
Weapons
Weapons include
Guanyu
Guan Yu (; ), courtesy name Yunchang, was a Chinese military general serving under the warlord Liu Bei during the late Eastern Han dynasty of China. Along with Zhang Fei, he shared a brotherly relationship with Liu Bei and accompanied him on ...
's pole weapon, sometimes known as the
Green Dragon Crescent Blade. Also: the shield and battleaxe of
Xingtian,
Yi's bow and arrows, given him by
Di Jun, and the many weapons and armor of
Chiyou.
Major sources
Some myths survive in theatrical or literary formats as plays or novels, others are still collected from the oral traditions of China and surrounding areas. Other material can be gleaned from examining various other artifacts such as
Chinese ritual bronzes, ceramics, paintings, silk tapestries and elements of
Chinese architecture. The oldest written sources of Chinese mythology are short inscriptions, rather than literature as such. The earliest written evidence is found in the
Oracle bone script
Oracle bone script () is an ancient form of Chinese characters that were engraved on oracle bonesanimal bones or turtle plastrons used in pyromantic divination. Oracle bone script was used in the late 2nd millennium BC, and is the earliest kno ...
, written on scapulae or tortoise plastrons, in the process of the divination practices
Shang dynasty (ended approximately 1046 BCE). A copious and eclectic source of information on Chinese mythology is the written materials recovered from the
Dunhuang manuscripts library, now scattered in libraries around the world.
Shells and bones
The earliest known written inscriptions of Chinese mythology are found on the shells and bones from about 3000 years before present. These shells and bones were inscribed with records of divinatory processes during the late
Shang dynasty, also known as the Yin dynasty after its capital at
Yin
Yin may refer to:
*the dark force in the yin and yang from traditional Chinese philosophy and medicine
*Yīn (surname) (), a Chinese surname
*Yǐn (surname) (), a Chinese surname
*Shang dynasty, also known as the Yin dynasty
**Yinxu or Yin, the S ...
, near modern
Anyang
Anyang (; ) is a prefecture-level city in Henan province, China. The northernmost city in Henan, Anyang borders Puyang to the east, Hebi and Xinxiang to the south, and the provinces of Shanxi and Hebei to its west and north respectively.
It had a ...
, in
Hebei province. The use of these artifacts in the study of mythology is limited to fragmentary references, such as names, at best. No actual mythological narrative is known from the Shang oracle bones and shells.
Bronzes

Very ancient bronze pieces have also been found, especially beginning in the
Zhou dynasty (founded about 3,000 years before present), with allusions or short descriptions adding to modern knowledge of Ancient Chinese mythology. The sacred or magical attitude towards some of these cast inscriptions is shown in that they sometimes appear in places almost inaccessible to being read, such as the inside of a vessel (often quite large and heavy, often covered with a lid, and perhaps meant to store food). However, there was a widespread belief that such writings were read by gods or spirits. One such vessel (a ''xu'' (), with the characters appearing on the inside-bottom) is a Zhou bronze with a 98-character description of the deeds of Yu draining the flood.
Literary sources
Various Chinese literature addresses the subject area of Chinese mythology. In some cases, some preservation of mythology occurs, either deliberately or incidentally. In other cases, the mythology inspires literary works which are not strictly of a mythological nature, for example works of fiction, didactic works of philosophy, or, more modernly, computer games and the names associated with Chinese explorations into outer space, the deep ocean, or the north and south polar regions. Approaching a rough organization of the topic of literature relating to Chinese mythology may be chronologic. The early textual materials mainly survive from the later
Zhou dynasty; that is, Eastern Zhou, from about 450 to 221 BCE. Although these texts are relatively less editorial treated than some later texts, they are not the same as the original pre-literary myths. The next major period of textual sources for Chinese mythology dates from the start of the
Qin dynasty (221 BCE), through the end of the
Han dynasty (220 CE), and continuing through the end of the subsequent periods of disunity (581 CE). The surviving texts from this era often reflect evolution of the mythological substratum. Beginning with the establishment of the
Sui dynasty
The Sui dynasty (, ) was a short-lived imperial dynasty of China that lasted from 581 to 618. The Sui unified the Northern and Southern dynasties, thus ending the long period of division following the fall of the Western Jin dynasty, and layi ...
and continuing through the subsequent
Tang dynasty,
Sung dynasty, and
Ming dynasty (ended 1644). During this period Chinese mythology developed into what now may be considered to be its traditional form. The Sung literature is particularly valuable for the often verbatim transcriptions of mythological material from otherwise unpreserved earlier sources. In modern times, Chinese mythology has both become the subject of global study and inspiration, including popular culture.
''Chuci'' and poetry sources
Some information on Chinese mythology is found in the verse poetry associated with the ancient state of
Chu
Chu or CHU may refer to:
Chinese history
* Chu (state) (c. 1030 BC–223 BC), a state during the Zhou dynasty
* Western Chu (206 BC–202 BC), a state founded and ruled by Xiang Yu
* Chu Kingdom (Han dynasty) (201 BC–70 AD), a kingdom of the Ha ...
such as "
Lisao", "
Jiu Ge", and "
Heavenly Questions", contained in the ''
Chuci'' anthology, traditionally attributed to the authorship of
Qu Yuan of
Chu
Chu or CHU may refer to:
Chinese history
* Chu (state) (c. 1030 BC–223 BC), a state during the Zhou dynasty
* Western Chu (206 BC–202 BC), a state founded and ruled by Xiang Yu
* Chu Kingdom (Han dynasty) (201 BC–70 AD), a kingdom of the Ha ...
. The ''Chuci'' (together with some of its commentaries) in the form known today was compiled during Han, but contains some older material, dating back at least to the waning days of the
Zhou dynasty (the
Warring States period), prior to the 221 BCE defeat of
Chu (state)
Chu, or Ch'u in Wade–Giles romanization, (, Hanyu Pinyin: Chǔ, Old Chinese: ''*s-r̥aʔ'') was a Zhou dynasty vassal state. Their first ruler was King Wu of Chu in the early 8th century BCE. Chu was located in the south of the Zhou he ...
during the rise of the
Qin dynasty. Later poetic sources also address this mythology as a continuation of this poetic tradition, for example,
Tang poetry.
Zhou dynasty literature
Some information can be found in the Confucian Classics, such as the ''
Shijing'' and ''
Yijing'', and other Zhou dynasty era material, especially ''
Book of Rites'', but also the ''
Lüshi Chunqiu''. The ''
Book of Documents
The ''Book of Documents'' (''Shūjīng'', earlier ''Shu King'') or ''Classic of History'', also known as the ''Shangshu'' (“Venerated Documents”), is one of the Five Classics of ancient Chinese literature. It is a collection of rhetorica ...
'' contains some Chinese myths.
Literature of Qin-Han to Sui
=Han dynasty
=
The
Han dynasty existed from 206 BCE – 220 CE (with a brief intermission separating it into two halves). Han was preceded by the short-lived
Qin dynasty, 221 to 206 BC, which has some important surviving literature. In the Qin and Han periods, besides the ''Chuci'', useful historical documents include the ''
Records of the Grand Historian'', completed by Han historian
Sima Qian
Sima Qian (; ; ) was a Chinese historian of the early Han dynasty (206AD220). He is considered the father of Chinese historiography for his ''Records of the Grand Historian'', a general history of China covering more than two thousand years b ...
before his death in about 220 CE. Legends were passed down for over a thousand years before being written in books such as ''
Classic of Mountains and Seas'' (''Shanhaijing''), basically a
gazetteer mixing known and mythological geography. Another major Han source on mythology is the ''
Huainanzi''.
=Post-Han, pre-Sui disunity period
=
The mythologically relevant book ''
Soushen Ji'' dates to the
Jin dynasty (266–420), during the
Sixteen Kingdoms
The Sixteen Kingdoms (), less commonly the Sixteen States, was a chaotic period in Chinese history from AD 304 to 439 when northern China fragmented into a series of short-lived dynastic states. The majority of these states were founded by ...
era. Also known as ''
In Search of the Supernatural'' and ''A Record of Researches into Spirits'', it is a 4th-century compilation of stories and hearsay concerning spirits, ghosts, and supernatural phenomena, some of which being of mythological importance, including a "great deal" of pre-Han mythological narrative.
Sui, Tang, and Ming
=Tang dynasty
=
The
Tang dynasty had a flourishing literature, including prose and poetry involving mythological content. One important, partially-surviving work is ''
Duyizhi'' by Li Rong.
=Song dynasty
=
Surviving
Song dynasty literature informative on Chinese mythology includes the
encyclopedic work known as ''
Taiping Yulan''.
Vernacular novels and new media

Some myths were passed down through oral traditions literature, and art, such as theater and song before being recorded as novels. One example is ''
Epic of Darkness''. Books in the ''
shenmo'' genre of
vernacular fiction revolve around gods and monsters. Important
mythological fiction which allude to these myths, include ''
Fengshen Bang
''The Investiture of the Gods'', also known by its Chinese names () and is a 16th-century Chinese novel and one of the major vernacular Chinese works in the gods and demons (''shenmo'') genre written during the Ming dynasty (1368–1644). Cons ...
'' (''Investiture of the Gods''), a mythological fiction dealing with the founding of the
Zhou dynasty; ''
Journey to the West'' attributed to
Wu Cheng'en, published in the 1590s, a fictionalized account of the pilgrimage of
Xuanzang to
India to obtain
Buddhist religious texts in which the main character and his companions such as
Sun Wukong
The Monkey King, also known as Sun Wukong ( zh, t=孫悟空, s=孙悟空, first=t) in Mandarin Chinese, is a legendary mythical figure best known as one of the main characters in the 16th-century Chinese novel ''Journey to the West'' ( zh, ...
encounter ghosts, monsters, and demons, as well as the
Flaming Mountains; and, ''
Baishe Zhuan'' (''Madame White Snake''), a romantic tale set in
Hangzhou involving a female snake who attained human form and fell in love with a man. ''
Strange Tales from a Chinese Studio
''Liaozhai zhiyi'', sometimes shortened to ''Liaozhai'', known in English as ''Strange Tales from a Chinese Studio'' or ''Strange Stories from a Chinese Studio'', is a collection of Classical Chinese stories by Qing dynasty writer Pu Songling, ...
'', by
Pu Songling contains many stories of
fox spirits, and other phenomena. Another example is ''
Zi Bu Yu'', a collection of supernatural stories compiled during the Qing dynasty.
Literary genres
Certain genres of literature are notable for dealing with themes from mythology or tales of the supernatural; for example, the
Zhiguai () literary genre that deals with strange (mostly supernatural) events and stories.
India
The literature of India contains material about Chinese mythology, due to the influence of textual sources imported into China, and translated into Chinese and the ideas widely adopted by Chinese people. This was primarily in regard to Buddhist texts, containing
Buddhist mythology
The Buddhist traditions have created and maintained a vast body of mythological literature. The central myth of Buddhism is the life of the Buddha. This is told in relatively realistic terms in the earliest texts, and was soon elaborated into ...
from the area in and around the area now known as India. Some Hindu material may have been more directly imported.
Comparative mythology
Many insights have developed through the examination of Chinese mythology as part of the field of
comparative mythology
Comparative mythology is the comparison of myths from different cultures in an attempt to identify shared themes and characteristics.Littleton, p. 32 Comparative mythology has served a variety of academic purposes. For example, scholars have used ...
, which is the comparison of myths from different cultures in order to identify shared themes, motifs, or other features. Early exponents of comparative mythology which are informative to the study of Chinese mythology include
Georges Dumézil
Georges Edmond Raoul Dumézil (4 March 189811 October 1986) was a French philologist, linguist, and religious studies scholar who specialized in comparative linguistics and mythology. He was a professor at Istanbul University, École pratique d ...
and
James Frazer.
In popular culture
Thousands of years of the development of Chinese mythology has resulted in Chinese mythology in popular culture, in the sense of popular culture affected or inspired by this tradition. This includes television shows, cinema, and video games. Also, many of the vehicles associated with the modern Chinese space program are named after mythology, such as the lunar explorer
Chang'e 4 that achieved the first
soft landing Soft landing may refer to:
* Soft landing (aeronautics), any landing which does not result in the destruction of the payload and/or the vehicle
* Soft landing (economics), a business cycle downturn which avoids recession
{{disambiguation ...
on the
far side of the Moon, on 3 January 2019,
and named after the lunar goddess Chang'e associated and with a communications relay satellite
Queqiao
''Queqiao'' relay satellite (), also known as the Chang'e 4 Relay, is a communications relay and radio astronomy satellite for the Chang'e 4 lunar farside mission. As part of the Chinese Lunar Exploration Program, the China National Space Admi ...
, named after the lovers bridge over the Milky Way formed by magpies.
See also
References
Sources
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
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External links
Encyclopedia of Chinese Gods and Goddesses">Ferguson, John C. 1928. "China" in Volume VIII of ''Mythology of All Races''. Archaeological Institute of America.
Guide to Chinese gods
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Sino-Tibetan mythology