Character Archive

Myths featuring Ox

Explore myths where Ox appears across cultures, conflicts, sacred places, and recurring themes.

18 myths currently featured for Ox.

The Ox-Headed and Horse-Faced Guards Standing Watch at the Gates of the Underworld

🐉 Chinese MythologyFengdu Ghost City, Chongqing, ChinaNiutou (Ox-Head) • Mamian (Horse-Face) • Yanluo Wang

Ox-Head and Horse-Face are the formidable guardians of Diyu, the Chinese underworld, tasked with capturing souls and escorting them to judgment. Standing at the entrance of the spirit realm, they ensure that the balance of karma is maintained and that no soul escapes its destined trial. Their presence at the Fengdu Ghost City serves as a powerful reminder of the transition between life and...

The Black and White Guards of Mortality Capturing the Souls of the Deceased

🐉 Chinese MythologyFengdu Ghost City, Chongqing, ChinaXie Bi'an (White Guard) • Fan Wujiu (Black Guard) • King Yanluo

The Black and White Guards, known as Heibai Wuchang, are the divine constables of the Chinese underworld responsible for escorting the spirits of the dead to Fengdu. Xie Bi’an, the White Guard, and Fan Wujiu, the Black Guard, represent the balance of yin and yang while ensuring that every soul faces justice before King Yanluo. Their presence serves as a reminder of the inevitability of death...

Meng Po Serving the Soup of Forgetfulness Before Souls Cross the Bridge of Helplessness

🐉 Chinese MythologyFengdu Ghost CityMeng Po • Ox-Head • Horse-Face

Meng Po, the Lady of Forgetfulness, resides in the Chinese Underworld where she brews a magical soup for souls about to be reincarnated. Upon drinking this Five-Flavored Tea of Forgetfulness, spirits lose all memory of their previous lives and earthly attachments. This essential ritual occurs at the Bridge of Helplessness, ensuring that every soul enters their next existence with a clean...

The Ten Kings of Hell Judging the Souls of the Dead in the Courts of Diyu

🐉 Chinese MythologyFengdu Ghost City, Chongqing, ChinaYanluo Wang • Meng Po • King Qinguang

In Chinese mythology, Diyu is the realm of the dead where souls are judged by the Ten Kings of Hell across ten specialized courts. Each king oversees specific punishments and rewards based on the actions of the deceased during their earthly life. After passing through these trials and viewing their former homes one last time, souls drink the tea of forgetfulness and are sent to the final...

The Eternal Feud of the Cat and the Rat

🐉 Chinese MythologyYellow River, Henan, ChinaJade Emperor • Cat • Rat

In the ancient days of the Jade Emperor, a great race across the silty Yellow River was held to determine the order of the Chinese Zodiac. Though the cat and the rat were once the closest of friends, the rat's desperate ambition led him to push the cat into the treacherous currents to secure first place. This act of betrayal forever excluded the cat from the zodiac and sparked a primal enmity...

The Rat Tricking the Ox and Jumping off Its Nose to Win the Zodiac Race

🐉 Chinese MythologyYellow River, Henan, ChinaJade Emperor • Rat • Ox

In order to establish a calendar to help mortals track time, the Jade Emperor organized a Great Race for all the animals in the kingdom. The clever Rat, realizing he could not swim across the mighty Yellow River, persuaded the diligent and kindhearted Ox to carry him across. As the Ox approached the finish line on the opposite bank, the Rat leaped off the Ox's nose to claim first place,...

The Jade Emperor Declaring the Order of the Zodiac Animals Based on a Great Race

🐉 Chinese MythologyYellow River, Henan, ChinaJade Emperor • Rat • Ox

To create a calendar and measure time, the Jade Emperor invited the animals of the world to participate in a Great Race across a wide river. The first twelve animals to cross and reach the Heavenly Gate were assigned a year in the zodiac cycle. This story explains the order of the signs and the legendary rivalry between the rat and the cat.

Sun Wukong Forcefully Crossing Out His Name from the Book of Life and Death

🐉 Chinese MythologyFengdu Ghost City, Chongqing, ChinaSun Wukong • King Yanluo • Ten Kings of Hell

After achieving great spiritual power and immortality through Taoist practices, Sun Wukong is mistakenly dragged to the underworld by two soul-catchers. Enraged by this bureaucratic error, he rampages through the realm of the dead and reaches the Hall of the Ten Kings. There, he forces the lords of hell to produce the Book of Life and Death, where he strikes out his own name and those of his...

Nüwa Summoning the Thousand-Year-Old Fox Spirit to Possess the Beautiful Daji

🐉 Chinese MythologyZhaoge, Henan, ChinaNüwa • King Zhou of Shang • Daji

After being insulted by a lustful poem written by King Zhou of Shang in her temple, the goddess Nüwa decides to end the Shang Dynasty. She summons three powerful spirits, including a thousand-year-old fox, and commands them to bewitch the king and hasten his downfall. The fox spirit kills and possesses the innocent Daji, daughter of Su Hu, using her beauty to manipulate the king into acts of...

King Zhou of Shang Offending the Goddess Nüwa with an Inappropriate Poem

🐉 Chinese MythologyNüwa Temple, Shexian, ChinaKing Zhou (Di Xin) • Nüwa • Daji (Fox Spirit)

During a pilgrimage to the temple of the goddess Nüwa, King Zhou of Shang is captivated by the goddess's beauty and writes a disrespectful poem on the temple walls. Offended by this act of hubris, Nüwa decrees the end of the Shang Dynasty and sends a fox spirit to possess the maiden Daji to lead the king into ruin. This event serves as the catalyst for the epic fall of the dynasty and the...