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  2. Ghosts in Chinese culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghosts_in_Chinese_culture

    Chinese folklore features a rich variety of ghosts, monsters, and other supernatural creatures. According to traditional beliefs a ghost is the spirit form of a person who has died. Ghosts are typically malevolent and will cause harm to the living if provoked. Many Chinese folk beliefs about ghosts have been adopted into the mythologies and ...

  3. List of supernatural beings in Chinese folklore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_supernatural...

    Yuan gui (Chinese: 冤鬼; pinyin: yuān guǐ; lit. 'ghost with grievance') are the spirits of persons who died wrongful deaths. Beliefs in such ghosts had surfaced in China from as early as the Zhou dynasty and were recorded in the historical text Zuo Zhuan. [63] These ghosts can neither rest in peace nor be reincarnated. They roam the world ...

  4. Chinese spiritual world concepts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_spiritual_world...

    Chinese spiritual world concepts are cultural practices or methods found in Chinese culture.Some fit in the realms of a particular religion, others do not. In general these concepts were uniquely evolved from the Chinese values of filial piety, tacit acknowledgment of the co-existence of the living and the deceased, and the belief in causality and reincarnation, with or without religious ...

  5. Diyu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diyu

    Diyu (simplified Chinese: 地狱; traditional Chinese: 地獄; pinyin: dìyù; lit. 'earth prison') is the realm of the dead or "hell" in Chinese mythology.It is loosely based on a combination of the Buddhist concept of Naraka, traditional Chinese beliefs about the afterlife, and a variety of popular expansions and reinterpretations of these two traditions.

  6. Chinese mythology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_mythology

    Chinese mythology (simplified Chinese : 中国神话; traditional Chinese : 中國神話; pinyin : Zhōngguó shénhuà) is mythology that has been passed down in oral form or recorded in literature throughout the area now known as Greater China. Chinese mythology encompasses a diverse array of myths derived from regional and cultural traditions.

  7. Hungry ghost - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hungry_ghost

    Hungry ghost is a term in Buddhism, and Chinese traditional religion, representing beings who are driven by intense emotional needs in an animalistic way. The terms 餓鬼 èguǐ literally " hungry ghost ", are the Chinese translation of the Sanskrit term preta [1] in Buddhism. "Hungry ghosts" play a role in Chinese Buddhism, Taoism, and in ...

  8. Ghost Festival - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghost_Festival

    The Ghost Festival or Hungry Ghost Festival, also known as the Zhongyuan Festival in Taoism and the Yulanpen Festival in Buddhism, is a traditional festival held in certain East and Southeast Asian countries. According to the Chinese calendar (a lunisolar calendar), the Ghost Festival is on the 15th night of the seventh month (14th in parts of ...

  9. Mogwai (Chinese culture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mogwai_(Chinese_culture)

    Meanwhile, gwai does not necessarily mean 'evil' or demonic spirits. Classically, it simply means deceased spirits or souls of the dead. Nevertheless, in modern Chinese, it has evolved to refer usually to the dead spirits or ghosts of non-family members that may take vengeance on living humans who caused them pain when they were still living.