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  2. List of Chinese mythology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Chinese_mythology

    However, the study of Chinese mythology tends to focus upon material in the Chinese language. 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 ...

  3. Chinese mythology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_mythology

    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 (玉律金篇, Yù lǜ jīn piān

  4. Trees in Chinese mythology and cultural symbology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trees_in_Chinese_mythology...

    Trees in Chinese mythology and culture tend to range from more-or-less mythological such as the Fusang tree and the Peaches of Immortality cultivated by Xi Wangmu to mythological attributions to such well-known trees, such as the pine, the cypress, the plum and other types of prunus, the jujube, the cassia, and certain as yet unidentified trees.

  5. Chinese creation myths - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_creation_myths

    Chinese creation myths are symbolic narratives about the origins of the universe, earth, and life. Myths in China vary from culture to culture. In Chinese mythology, the term "cosmogonic myth" or "origin myth" is more accurate than "creation myth", since very few stories involve a creator deity or divine will.

  6. In Search of the Supernatural - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_Search_of_the_Supernatural

    In Search of the Supernatural (traditional Chinese: 搜 神 記; simplified Chinese: 搜神记; pinyin: Sōushén Jì; Wade–Giles: Sou-shên Chi; Jyutping: sau2 san4 gei3; lit. 'Record(s) of Searching for the Spirits'), is a 4th-century Chinese compilation of legends, short stories, and hearsay concerning Chinese gods , ghosts , and other ...

  7. Classic of Mountains and Seas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classic_of_Mountains_and_Seas

    Ancient Chinese scholars also called it an encyclopedia of geographical knowledge and a strange work with the most myths that records ancient China's "history, philosophy, mythology, religion, medicine, folklore, and ethnicity", reflecting a wide range of cultural phenomena and also involving "geography, astronomy, meteorology, medicine ...

  8. Chinese folklore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_folklore

    Chinese folklore contains many symbolic folk meanings for the objects and animals within the folktales. One example of this is the symbolic meaning behind frogs and toads. Toads are named Ch'an Chu (蟾蜍) in Chinese, a folklore about Ch'an Chu illustrates the toad imports the implication of eternal life and perpetual. Chinese folklore unfolds ...

  9. Panhu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panhu

    The Panhu mythological complex includes myths in Chinese and also other languages. This myth has a long history of being transmitted by Han Chinese and several of the other ethnic groups of the fifty-six officially recognized by the current administration of China, both orally and in literature. [1] [2] (Yang 2005:4) The Panhu myth is an ...