Topic Archive

Myths about East China Sea

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

3 myths currently featured for East China Sea.

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...

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...

Jingwei Drowning in the East Sea and Transforming into a Mythical Bird

🐉 Chinese MythologyEast China Sea, Zhoushan, ChinaJingwei (Nüwa) • Yandi (The Flame Emperor) • Spirit of the East Sea

Nüwa, the youngest daughter of the Flame Emperor Yandi, drowned in the East Sea and was reborn as a bird named Jingwei. Resenting the sea for taking her life, she vowed to fill it up by carrying stones and twigs from the mountains to the water. This myth serves as a timeless symbol of indomitable will and perseverance against impossible odds.