B Celestial Myths
A naturalistic Daoist version from the Huai nan zi has the Sun created from the fiery vapours of yang and the Moon from the watery vapours of yin. The stars and celestial bodies were created from vapours exuded by the Sun and Moon. A more colourful version from the Shan hai jing has ten suns as the children of Xi He (or Chang Xi) and her husband, Emperor Jun. The suns bathe in the hot waters of Tanggu and rest on the Fu sang (a mulberry tree), nine on the lower branches and one on the upper. Their mother arranges for them to be driven, one on each day of the ten-day week, across the sky in a chariot pulled by six dragons. However, one day all ten suns come out together, scorching the Earth. When Emperor Jun sees the disaster that his sons have caused, he is forced to ask Yi the Archer to shoot down nine of them.
Yi the Archer also figures in one of the main myths about the Moon. He is said to have wished to live forever with his beloved wife Cheng E (or Heng E) and asked for the elixir of immortality from Xi Wang Mu (Queen Mother of the West). However, after he returned with it, his wife took it and fled to the Moon (in one version, she drank it and involuntarily floated up to the Moon) where she was transformed into a three-legged toad, to live there forever. On the Moon, there is also a rabbit, associated with fecundity, and a tree that an alchemist, Wu Gang, is sentenced to cut down as a punishment, but that constantly regrows.
One of the principal myths involving stars is that of the Zhi Nü (Weaving Maid) and the Niu Lang (Herdboy), associated with the stars Vega and Altair. It is mentioned as early as the Book of Odes (of the 12th to 7th centuries bc) but does not appear in detail until the Han period. In one version, the Weaving Maid was the daughter of the Emperor of Heaven and wove brocade clouds to clothe the sky. Seeing that she was lonely, the Emperor of Heaven arranged for her to marry the Herdboy from the other side of the Milky Way. However, the Weaving Maid then neglected her work and so the Emperor of Heaven ordered the Herdboy to return to the east of the Milky Way. They were allowed to meet only once a year, on the seventh night of the seventh lunar month, when magpies formed a bridge for them to cross the Milky Way. An alternative version has the Herdboy as a human who sees the Weaving Maid bathing with her sisters in the Milky Way. Advised by his ox, he steals her clothes and refuses to give them back until she agrees to stay and marry him. She agrees, they marry and are very happy, but her grandmother, the Queen Mother of the West, finds out and has the Weaving Maid dragged back to Heaven. The Herdboy, pursuing her, discovers that the Milky Way had been transported to Heaven but with the ox’s help is able to follow her there. The Emperor of Heaven and the Queen Mother of the West take pity on them and allow them to meet once a year.
C Dynastic Myths
The group of mythical early divine rulers who provided the essentials of Chinese civilization are often collectively referred to as the San huang wu di (Three sovereigns and five emperors). The precise members vary, but Fu Xi is often taken to be the first of the three sovereigns. According to later myth, he was conceived when his mother, a maiden from Huaxu, a region of longevity, stepped in the footprint of the Thunder God. Fu Xi is credited with providing many things, one of the most important of which is the eight trigrams used in divination. Others include nets for fishing, knotted ropes for computation, musical instruments, and, in one version, fire. He was followed by Shen Nong (Farmer God) who invented the plough, taught people farming techniques, and personally tested the seeds of every plant to see which could be eaten and which were poisonous. Nü Wa is included in some versions of the three sovereigns for her role as procreatrix and saviour of the human race. Her saviour status comes from the time when Heaven’s four supports collapsed, the sky broke, and the land was inundated with water. She repaired the sky with smelted stones, propped it up on the legs of a giant sea turtle, and held back the waters with a dam of ashes.
The Yellow Emperor was originally one of the five emperors, but was later promoted to the status of one of the three sovereigns. He was regarded by Daoists as their founding deity and hence, dating from the Daoist ascendancy in the Han dynasty, came to be seen as the founding ancestor of the Chinese people and the supreme deity. He was a warrior god who fought his own brother Yan Di (Flame Emperor) for domination of the world. He controlled the element water, which overcame the Flame Emperor’s fire. He was also forced to fight with the Flame Emperor’s assistant, Chi You (a god of war), who discovered smelting and invented weapons. This became a battle of the elements, with the Yellow Emperor ordering the Ying Long (Responding Dragon), in charge of water, to attack Chi You. The latter ordered his subordinates Feng Bo (Wind God) and Yu Shi (Rain Master) to cause a violent thunderstorm, but the Yellow Emperor had his daughter, Ba (Drought God) stop the storm and bring burning sunshine, after which he was able to kill Chi You. It has been suggested that Chi You was head of the Miao tribe and that this is a description of a crucial battle against them by the “children of the Yellow Emperor”, or Han race. The Yellow Emperor is also credited with slaying the Kui monster, an ox-like creature with a blue body and only one hoof.
A later Yellow Emperor myth, reflecting his elevation in status and showing the influence of the wu xing (five elements) theory, has him located in the centre, associated with the element earth and, of course, the colour yellow, surrounded by four lesser deities. These are: Yan Di in the south, associated with the element fire, the season of summer, and the colour red; Hsi Wang Mu in the west, associated with the element metal, the season of autumn, and the colour white; Fu Xi in the east, associated with the element wood, the season of spring, and the colour green; and Zhuan Xu in the north, associated with the element water, the season of winter, and the colour black. Further inventions were credited to the Yellow Emperor by assigning their traditional inventors to roles as his ministers. Thus he was credited with the invention of clothing, writing, divination, bows and arrows, boats, shoes, mirrors, and so on. Even Nü Wa was assigned to be his minister so that he could claim the credit for repairing the sky.
Perennial flooding in China gave rise to many myths in which floods are controlled. The most important figures in these myths are Gun and his son Yu. Gun, a grandson of the Yellow Emperor, was given, by the emperors Yao and Shun, the task of controlling the floods. In order to do this he stole the Yellow Emperor’s self-generating soil (xi rang). For this crime his grandfather ordered Zhu Rong (the God of Fire) to execute him, but his corpse did not decay and three years later Yu was born from his belly. Yu was allowed to keep the self-generating soil and after nine years accomplished the task of controlling the floodwaters. As Yao chose Shun rather than his unworthy son to succeed him, so Shun passed over his sons to choose Yu, who became the founder of the Xia dynasty.
D Animal Myths
The four sacred animals, the first three mythical, were the dragon, unicorn, phoenix, and tortoise. Of these, the dragon held the highest position. It was mainly a watery creature, inhabiting the depths of rivers and seas, but could also take to the skies and be used by gods and immortals for aerial transportation. Through its role of bringing water, the Chinese dragon was basically benevolent to humans, in contrast to the often malevolent dragon of Western mythology. However, dragons were very powerful and there were rogue individuals who harmed humans. The dragon had strong imperial associations and was used as a motif on the robes of Chinese emperors.
Many divinities have animal features, but are nevertheless presented as essentially human. Hence, Chi You had horns and hooves, but is treated as a man. Conversely there are animals that have human features, yet are firmly categorized as animals and subject to the relevant social taboos. The dog Pan Hu (Plate Gourd) grew from a worm taken from the ear of an old wife of the ruler Gao Xin. Later, when Gao Xin offered the hand of his daughter as a reward to anyone able to bring him the head of the commander of an invading army, Pan Hu arrived in court with the head. Gao Xin’s advisers argued that he need not stick to his word, but the daughter insisted that he should and went off with the dog into the mountains. In another myth, a daughter offers to marry the family stallion if he will bring her father home. The stallion does this, but the daughter goes back on her word and when the father learns of her promise he kills the horse and skins it. The girl later mocks the skin; it envelops her and carries her off to a tree where she turns into a silkworm cocoon.
E Births and Deaths
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Miraculous or virgin birth appears in Chinese myth as a way of denoting the special nature of the male infant who is born. Fu Xi (see Dynastic Myths, above) was conceived when his mother stepped in a god’s footprint. According to the early account of the Book of Odes, the same is true of Hou Ji, the founding ancestor of the Zhou people, whose mother trod in the big toe of God’s footprint. As further confirmation of his special status, Hou Ji was abandoned at birth by his mother, but divine protection through the agency of birds and animals ensures his survival. Other virgin births are the result of swallowing birds’ eggs or bathing in divine pools. One type of miraculous birth is male parturition, as in the case of Yu, suggestive of patriarchy. Two examples of abnormal female parturition involve Yu’s wife and Yi Yin’s mother. The former turns into stone, but splits open to produce their son, Qi, when commanded by Yu to return the child. Yi Yin helped Tang, the founder of the Shang dynasty, to overthrow the Xia. His mother was told by a spirit that if her mortar leaked she should go east and, like Lot‘s wife, not look back. She did look back and was turned into the hollow mulberry tree where Yi Yin was found. There are many instances of stone transformation in Chinese myth. Sun Houzi (Monkey) was born of a stone and the Shi ji recounts how an old man who gave Zhang Liang a book on the art of war told Zhang that when they next met he would be a certain yellow stone.
Chinese myths share many features with myths from elsewhere. Gun’s theft of self-generating soil from the Yellow Emperor in order to benefit mankind parallels Prometheus’ theft of fire; Fu Xi and Nü Wa’s sense of shame on deciding to become husband and wife echoes the sentiments of Adam and Eve. Abandoned infants, like Moses, and Romulus and Remus, are given divine protection to allow them to accomplish their sacred missions. The Chinese word for “myth”, shen hua (“stories of the gods”), emphasizes the primary concern with divinities. The myths present as fact fantastic stories from the distant past and fulfilled an important role in defining the self-image of the Chinese people.
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