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  2. Nine Emperor Gods Festival - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nine_Emperor_Gods_Festival

    The Nine Emperor Gods Festival (Min Nan Chinese: 九皇爺誕; Malay: Perayaan Sembilan Maharaja Dewa; Thai: เทศกาลกินเจ, เทศกาลกินผัก (ภาคใต้ประเทศไทย)) or Vegetarian Festival or Jay Festival is a nine-day Taoist celebration beginning on the eve of the ninth lunar month of the Chinese calendar, celebrated primarily in ...

  3. Tou Mu Kung Temple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tou_Mu_Kung_Temple

    The Tou Mu Kung Temple (斗母宮) is a Taoist temple situated on Upper Serangoon Road, Singapore. Worshipping the Empress Registrar of Birth or Doumu (斗母) and Nine Emperor Gods (九皇大帝), the temple has both Taoist and Buddhist influences. There are other temples dedicated to Tou Mu (Dou Mu) in many parts of China (e.g. on Mount Tai).

  4. Taoist temple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taoist_Temple

    The palaces of a Taoist temple have two natures: one is the descendant temple (zisun miao), and the other is the jungle temple (conglin miao). The descendant temples are passed down from generation to generation, from master to disciple, and the temple property can be inherited by an exclusive sect. Taoists from other sects can live in the ...

  5. List of Journey to the West characters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Journey_to_the...

    The Queen Mother of the West (西王母), also referred to as Lady Queen Mother (王母娘娘) in the novel, is the matriarch deity in the Taoist pantheon. She reports Sun Wukong to the Jade Emperor for stealing the peaches meant for a feast she is hosting. The Three Pure Ones (三清) are the three highest ranked deities in the Taoist pantheon:

  6. Chinese gods and immortals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_gods_and_immortals

    Temple of the Ancestral Mother the Queen of Heaven [i] in Qingdao, Shandong. Some Taoist gods were thought to affect human morality and the consequences of it in certain traditions. Some Taoists beseeched gods, multiple gods, and/or pantheons to aid them in life and/or abolish their sins. [62]

  7. Doumu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doumu

    In the esoteric teachings of Taoism she is identified as the same as Jinling Shengmu, Jiutian Xuannü (九天玄女 "Mysterious Lady of the Nine Heavens") and Xiwangmu (西王母 "Queen Mother of the West"), representing the mother of the immortal "red infant" (赤子 chìzǐ) Dao enshrined at the centre of the human body. [5]

  8. Sacred Mountains of China - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_Mountains_of_China

    The five elements, cosmic deities, historical incarnations, chthonic and dragon gods, and planets, associated to the five sacred mountains. This Chinese religious cosmology shows the Yellow Emperor, god of the earth and the year, as the centre of the cosmos, and the four gods of the directions and the seasons as his emanations.

  9. Yuanshi Tianzun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuanshi_Tianzun

    Yuanshi Tianzun (Chinese: 元始天尊; pinyin: Yuánshǐ Tīanzūn), the Celestial Venerable of the Primordial Beginning or the Primeval Lord of Heaven, is one of the highest deities of Taoism. He is one of the Three Pure Ones ( Chinese : 三清 ; pinyin : Sānqīng ) and is also known as the Jade Pure One ( Chinese : 玉清 ; pinyin : Yùqīng ).