(Redirected from The Heavenly Sovereign)
In Chinese mythology, 'Fu Xi' or 'Fu Hsi' (; aka Paoxi ()), mid 2800s BCE, was the first of the mythical
Three Sovereigns (三皇 sānhuáng) of ancient
China. He is a
culture hero reputed to be the inventor of
writing,
fishing, and
trapping.
Biography
Fu Xi was born on the lower-middle reaches of the
Yellow River in a place called
Chengji (possibly modern
Lantian,
Shaanxi or
Tianshui,
Gansu).
[1]
According to legend the land was swept by a great flood and only Fuxi and his sister
Nüwa survived. The retired to
Kunlun Mountain where they prayed for a sign from the
Emperor of Heaven. The divine being approved their union and the siblings set about procreating the human race.
[1] Fu Xi then came to rule over his decedents although reports of his long reign vary between sources from 115 years (BCE 2852-2737) to 116 years (BCE 2952-2836).
He lived for 197 years altogether and died at a place called
Chen (modern
Huaiyang,
Henan) where his mausoleum can still be found.
[1]
Social importance
During the time of his predecessor
Nüwa (who according to some sources was also his wife and/or sister) society was matriarchal and primitive. Childbirth was seen to be miraculous not requiring the participation of the male and children only knew their mothers. As the reproductive process became better understood ancient Chinese society moved towards a patriarchal system and Fu Xi assumed primary importance.
[1]
Fu Hsi taught his subjects to cook, to fish with nets, and to hunt with weapons made of iron. He instituted marriage and offered the first open air sacrifices to heaven. A stone tablet, dated 160 CE shows Fu Hsi with
Nüwa, who was both his wife and his sister.
Traditionally, Fu Hsi is considered the originator of the ''
I Ching'' (also known as the ''Yi Jing'' or ''Zhou Yi''), which work is attributed to his reading of the ''He Map'' (or the ''Yellow River Map''). By this tradition, Fu Hsi had the arrangement of the
trigrams (八卦 ''bāgùa'') of the ''I Ching'' revealed to him supernaturally. This arrangement precedes the compilation of the ''I Ching'' during the
Zhou dynasty. Fu Hsi is said to have discovered the arrangement in markings on the back of a mythical dragon-horse (sometimes said to be a turtle) that emerged from the river
Luo. This discovery is also said to have been the origin of calligraphy.
Fu Hsi is also credited with the invention of the
Guqin, together with
Shennong and
Huang Di.
Contemporary references to Fu Hsi
Fu Xi made an appearance in the second part of Hong Kong television series My Date with a Vampire 3. In it, he is also called Ren Wang, or the King of Humanity, with a magical bow and arrow as his weapons. He was sent down from heaven and it is on him whom Nüwa based her creation, humanity. Within the show Nüwa and Fuxi are not married.
Fu Xi and his wife/sister
Nüwa appear as unlockable characters in the video game
Dynasty Warriors 3.
Fu Xi is featured in the "Conversation on Information Technology over 5000 Years" sculptural panels at the Norwalk Community College Center for Information Technology, near
New Haven, Connecticut. They were sculpted by the facility's architect, Barry Svigals.
See also
★
Chinese mythology
★
Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors
Sources, references, external links, quotations
1. Worshiping the Three Sage Kings and Five Virtuous Emperors - The Imperial Temple of Emperors of Successive Dynasties in Beijing, , , , Foreign Language Press, 2007,
2. Worshiping the Three Sage Kings and Five Virtuous Emperors - The Imperial Temple of Emperors of Successive Dynasties in Beijing, , , , Foreign Language Press, 2007,
3. Worshiping the Three Sage Kings and Five Virtuous Emperors - The Imperial Temple of Emperors of Successive Dynasties in Beijing, , , , Foreign Language Press, 2007,
4. Worshiping the Three Sage Kings and Five Virtuous Emperors - The Imperial Temple of Emperors of Successive Dynasties in Beijing, , , , Foreign Language Press, 2007,
|-