Character Archive

Myths featuring Zhurong

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

6 myths currently featured for Zhurong.

Yu the Great Miraculously Born from the Belly of His Dead Father Gun

🐉 Chinese MythologyMount Yushan, Jiangsu, ChinaYu the Great • Gun • Emperor Yao

Following Gun's failure and execution for his inability to stop the Great Flood, his body remained miraculously preserved on Feather Mountain for three years. When his belly was finally cut open with a magical sword, his son Yu emerged as a hero destined to succeed where his father failed. Yu's birth marked the beginning of a new era of engineering and the eventual founding of the Xia Dynasty.

The Fire God Zhurong Executing Gun for His Heavenly Theft

🐉 Chinese MythologyMount Yushan, Jiangsu, ChinaGun • Zhurong • Jade Emperor

When the Great Flood threatened to consume the world, the hero Gun stole the magical expanding soil known as Xirang from the heavens to build dams and save humanity. This act of divine theft enraged the Jade Emperor, who dispatched the Fire God Zhurong to execute Gun on the slopes of Mount Yushan. Though Gun perished, his body remained incorruptible and eventually gave birth to his son, Yu...

Gun Stealing the Self-Expanding Soil (Xirang) from Heaven to Stop the Floods

🐉 Chinese MythologySanmenxia, Yellow River, ChinaGun (Count of Chong) • Emperor Yao • Zhurong

During the Great Flood of China, the hero Gun stole the magical self-expanding soil known as Xirang from the Heavens to dam the rising waters. Although he successfully halted the floods for a time, the Emperor of Heaven was enraged by the theft and ordered Gun's execution at Feather Mountain. From the remains of the fallen hero, his son Yu the Great was born to complete the task of taming the...

Nüwa Melting Five-Colored Stones to Patch the Broken Sky

🐉 Chinese MythologyMount Tiantai, Zhejiang, ChinaNüwa • Gonggong • Zhurong

After a cataclysmic battle between the water god Gonggong and the fire god Zhurong caused the pillars of heaven to collapse, the goddess Nüwa intervened to save humanity. She melted five-colored stones to repair the vault of the sky and used the legs of a giant tortoise to stabilize the earth, restoring order to the universe.

The Sky Tilting Northwest After the Pillar of Heaven Collapses

🐉 Chinese MythologyPamir Mountains, Xinjiang, ChinaGonggong • Zhurong • Nüwa

The celestial pillar, Mount Buzhou, was shattered by the mythological figure Gonggong, causing the heavens to tilt northwest and the earth to sink southeast. This cataclysmic event reshaped the world's geography and forced the gods to find a new way to maintain cosmic balance.

Gonggong Smashing Mount Buzhou

🐉 Chinese MythologyPamir MountainsGonggong • Zhurong • Gun

The vengeful water god Gonggong, possessing a copper head and serpent's body, destroys the pillar of heaven, Mount Buzhou, in a fit of rage. This cataclysmic event causes the earth to tilt and the heavens to collapse, leading to global floods and perpetual instability. The myth explains the natural tilt of the earth and the origin of planetary imbalances.