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  2. Yu the Great - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yu_the_Great

    Traditional stories say that Yu sacrificed a great deal of his body to control the floods. For example, his hands were said to be thickly calloused, and his feet were completely covered with calluses. In one common story, Yu had only been married four days when he was given the task of fighting the flood.

  3. Jade Emperor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jade_Emperor

    The Jade Emperor is known by many names, including Yu, [2] Heavenly Grandfather (天公, Tiāngōng), which originally meant "Heavenly Duke", [citation needed] which is used by commoners; the Jade Lord; the Highest Emperor; Great Emperor of Jade (玉皇上帝 Yu Huang Shangdi, or 玉皇大帝 Yu Huang Dadi).

  4. Great Flood (China) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Flood_(China)

    Yu tried a different approach to the project of flood control; which in the end having achieved success, earned Yu renown throughout Chinese history, in which the Gun-Yu Great Flood is commonly referred to as "Great Yu Controls the Waters" (Chinese: 大禹治水; pinyin: Dà Yǔ Zhìshuǐ). Yu's approach seems to have involved an approach more ...

  5. Flood Mythology of China - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flood_Mythology_of_China

    From all of these stories, the struggle of Yao, Gun, and Yu is the most obvious in describing the hardness of human effort to control the flood. [1] Much later works from the Warring States period and Diwang Shiji (3rd century) were pairing Yu and Nuwa as a couple and their previously uncorrelated stories were then completing each other. [2]

  6. Xia dynasty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xia_dynasty

    During Yu the Great's controlling of the floods, he renewed the transportation system. Sima Qian wrote in his Records of the Grand Historian that Yu used carriages to travel on land, boats to travel on rivers, sleds to travel on mud, and horses to cross the mountains. He surveyed the lands and opened up routes through geographical locations so ...

  7. Emperor Shun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emperor_Shun

    Shun's clan name (姓) is Yao (姚), his lineage name (氏) is Youyu (有虞).His given name was Chonghua (重華).Shun is sometimes referred to as the Great Shun (大舜) or as Yu Shun or Shun of Yu (虞舜), "Yu" being the name of his fief, which he received from Yao.

  8. Yu Gong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yu_Gong

    The Yu Gong or Tribute of Yu is a chapter of the Book of Xia (Chinese: t 夏書, s 夏书, Xià Shū) section of the Book of Documents, one of the Five Classics of ancient Chinese literature. The chapter describes the legendary Yu the Great and the provinces of his time. Most modern scholars believe it was written in the fifth century BCE or later.

  9. Bo Yi (legendary leader) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bo_Yi_(legendary_leader)

    Yi (Chinese: 益, Yì; fl. 2nd millennium BCE) was a tribal leader of Longshan culture and a culture hero in Chinese mythology who helped Shun and Yu the Great control the Great Flood; he served afterwards as a government minister and a successor as ruler of the empire.