Topic Archive

Myths about China

Explore myths connected by the recurring theme of China across cultures, characters, and sacred places.

20 myths currently featured for China.

The Mythical Phoenix (Fenghuang) Perching in the Parasol Tree to Signal Universal Peace

🐉 Chinese MythologyMount Qishan, Shaanxi, ChinaFenghuang • King Wen of Zhou • King Wu of Zhou

The Fenghuang is an auspicious bird that appears only during times of great peace and prosperity. Legend says it perched on Mount Qishan to herald the rise of the virtuous Zhou Dynasty. It resides exclusively in the Wutong tree and symbolizes the harmony of the universe.

The Divine Bird Sun-Crow Carrying the Golden Sun Across the Sky Each Day

🐉 Chinese MythologyEast China Sea, ChinaXihe • Dijun • Hou Yi

In ancient Chinese cosmology, the sun is personified as a divine three-legged crow known as the Jinwu or Yangwu. These celestial birds reside in the mythical Fusang tree in the East Sea, from which they take turns flying across the firmament to provide light and warmth to the world. This cycle represents the eternal balance of the cosmos, though it is most famous for the legend where ten...

Liang Shanbo and Zhu Yingtai's Spirits Transforming into Beautiful Twin Butterflies

🐉 Chinese MythologyHangzhou, Zhejiang, ChinaLiang Shanbo • Zhu Yingtai • Ma Wencai

The legend of Liang Shanbo and Zhu Yingtai, known as the 'Butterfly Lovers,' tells the tragic story of two young scholars who fall in love despite social constraints and a family-arranged marriage. After Liang dies from a broken heart and Zhu joins him in his grave, their spirits are reborn as a pair of butterflies, symbolizing eternal love and freedom. This ancient tale is a cornerstone of...

Bodhidharma's Nine-Year Meditation at Shaolin

🐉 Chinese MythologyShaolin Temple, Mount Song, ChinaBodhidharma • Huike • Emperor Wu of Liang

Bodhidharma, the legendary monk and founder of Chan Buddhism, is said to have spent nine years in deep, silent meditation facing a stone wall in a cave near the Shaolin Temple. His concentration was so absolute that his shadow became permanently burned into the rock, and he reputedly cut off his eyelids to prevent himself from falling asleep. This feat of endurance and spiritual discipline...

Meng Jiangnü Discovering Her Husband's Bones Buried Within the Great Wall's Rubble

🐉 Chinese MythologyShanhaiguan, Hebei, ChinaMeng Jiangnü • Fan Qiliang • Qin Shi Huang

The legend of Meng Jiangnü is one of China's Four Great Folktales, centered on a devoted wife whose husband is forced into labor for the Great Wall of China during the Qin Dynasty. After traveling a vast distance to bring him winter clothes, she learns he has died of exhaustion and been buried within the structure. Her overwhelming grief causes a section of the wall to collapse, allowing her...

Meng Jiangnü Weeping So Bitterly that a Section of the Great Wall Collapses

🐉 Chinese MythologyShanhaiguan, Hebei, ChinaMeng Jiangnü • Fan Xiliang • Qin Shi Huang

This classic Chinese legend follows the journey of Meng Jiangnü, a devoted wife who travels to the Great Wall to bring winter clothes to her conscripted husband. Upon learning of his death, her overwhelming grief causes a section of the wall to collapse, revealing his remains and exposing the cruelty of the imperial regime. It remains one of China's most famous folk tales, symbolizing...

Sun Wukong Taking the Magical Ruyi Jingu Bang from the Sea Floor

🐉 Chinese MythologyEast China SeaSun Wukong • Ao Guang • Dragon Queen

After achieving immortality and master of the 72 transformations, Sun Wukong finds that ordinary weapons are too fragile for his divine strength. He journeys to the underwater palace of Ao Guang, the Dragon King of the East Sea, to demand a weapon worthy of his power. There, he discovers a massive, glowing iron pillar used to measure the sea's depth, which responds to his voice and becomes...

Jiang Ziya Refusing to Deify His Nagging Ex-Wife, Making Her the Goddess of Broom

🐉 Chinese MythologyMount Qi, Shaanxi, ChinaJiang Ziya • Lady Ma • King Wen of Zhou

After leading the Zhou army to victory against the Shang Dynasty and receiving the mandate to deify the fallen heroes, the strategist Jiang Ziya is confronted by the ghost of his ex-wife, Lady Ma, who had abandoned him during his years of poverty. Despite her demands for a high celestial rank, Jiang Ziya appoints her as the Broom Star, the deity of misfortune and bad luck, symbolizing her...

The Self-Immolation of King Zhou at the Star-Gazing Tower

🐉 Chinese MythologyDeer Terrace Pavilion (Lutai), ZhaogeKing Zhou of Shang • Daji • King Wu of Zhou

King Zhou of Shang, the last ruler of his dynasty, retreated to his opulent Deer Terrace Pavilion as his capital fell to the advancing Zhou forces. Clad in his most precious jade jewelry and silken robes, he set the tower ablaze in a final act of defiant self-destruction. This event marked the definitive end of the Shang era and the transition of the Mandate of Heaven to the Zhou Dynasty.

Jiang Ziya Fishing with a Straight, Unbaited Hook

🐉 Chinese MythologyWeishui River, Shaanxi, ChinaJiang Ziya • King Wen of Zhou • King Wu of Zhou

The story of Jiang Ziya, a wise strategist who spent his old age fishing with a straight, unbaited hook to signal his readiness to serve a virtuous ruler. His patience and unconventional methods eventually attracted King Wen of Zhou, leading to the foundation of a new dynasty.