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  2. Feng Shan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feng_Shan

    The last emperor to carry out Feng and Shan sacrifices was Emperor Zhenzong of the Song dynasty. [13] Later, emperors in the Qing dynasty would perform similar rites at Mount Tai. There are only six verifiable accounts of performances in all of Chinese history. [14] The last recorded traditional Feng Shan was done in 1790 by the Qianlong ...

  3. Mountain worship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mountain_worship

    The most renowned mountains regarded as deities in China, called the Five Great Mountains (五岳; 'Five Peaks'), are Tai Shan, Song Shan, Hua Shan, Heng Shan in Hunan and Heng Shan in Shanxi. The worship of these mountains is considered to have originally involved belief in the mountains themselves, but now it's related to the various gods of ...

  4. Religious Confucianism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_Confucianism

    Feng Shan is a historically very significant ceremony which is performed irregularly on Mount Tai. [59] Completing Feng Shan allowed the emperor to receive the Mandate of Heaven. [60] It is considered a prerequisite that the empire is in a period of prosperity with a good emperor and auspicious signs to perform the ritual. [61]

  5. Mount Tai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Tai

    During this time, two cultures had emerged near the mountain, the Dawenkou culture to the south and the Longshan culture to the north. During the Xia dynasty (c. 2070–1600 BC) the mountain was known as Mount Dai (Chinese: 岱山; pinyin: Dài Shān) and lay within the borders of Qingzhou, one of the Nine Provinces of ancient China. [12]

  6. Jade Emperor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jade_Emperor

    The Jade Emperor ordered Mountain God to trap the four dragons. However, from each mountain that trapped a dragon there sprang a new river. From Yellow Dragon came the Yellow River, from Long Dragon the Yangtze River, from Black Dragon the Amur River, and from Pearl Dragon the Pearl River. The rivers thereafter flowed from west to east and ...

  7. Xian (Taoism) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xian_(Taoism)

    The usual modern xiān character 仙, and its rare variant 仚, have a shān (山 "mountain") phonetic. For a character analysis, Schipper interprets "'the human being of the mountain,' or alternatively, 'human mountain'. [33] The two explanations are appropriate to these beings: they haunt the holy mountains, while also embodying nature."

  8. Dongyue Dadi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dongyue_Dadi

    Emperor Dongyue (or Dongyue Dadi Chinese: 東嶽大帝; lit. 'The Great Emperor of the Eastern Peak') is a Daoist deity of the sacred mountain Mount Tai. [1] He is also believed to be the leader of a large bureaucratic celestial ministry overseeing the maintenance of the Book of Life (生死簿), a register of the due dates on which each and every human soul must be summoned before the Judges ...

  9. Mount Song - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Song

    Mount Song (Chinese: 嵩山; pinyin: Sōngshān, "lofty [5] mountain") is an isolated mountain range in north central China's Henan Province, along the southern bank of the Yellow River. It is known in literary and folk tradition as the central mountain of the Five Great Mountains of China . [ 6 ]