Topic Archive

Myths about Ra

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

413 myths currently featured for Ra.

Panhu the Dragon-Dog Slaying the Enemy General to Marry the Emperor's Princess

🐉 Chinese MythologyWuling MountainsPanhu • Emperor Gao Xin • The Princess

In ancient China, a miraculous five-colored dragon-dog named Panhu answered an Emperor's call to defeat a dangerous rebel general. After bringing the enemy's head to the court, Panhu underwent a magical transformation to marry the Emperor's daughter. Together, they founded the ancestral lineages of the Yao and She people within the remote Wuling Mountains.

The Heavenly Emperor Moving the Taihang and Wangwu Mountains out of Pity

🐉 Chinese MythologyWangwu Mountain, Henan, ChinaYugong (Foolish Old Man) • Zhisou (Wise Old Man) • The Heavenly Emperor (Shangdi)

The elder Yugong, frustrated by two massive mountains blocking his path, resolves to move them by hand with his family. Despite ridicule from a 'wise' neighbor, Yugong persists, believing that successive generations will eventually finish the task. The Heavenly Emperor, moved by such unwavering determination, sends celestial giants to relocate the mountains, rewarding the old man's faith.

The Foolish Old Man Removes the Mountains

🐉 Chinese MythologyTaihang Mountains, Henan, ChinaYugong • Zhisou • Jade Emperor

Yugong, a ninety-year-old man, was tired of the two massive mountains blocking his path and decided to move them by hand. Despite being mocked for his age and the scale of the task, he believed his descendants would eventually finish the work. Impressed by his unwavering determination, the Jade Emperor intervened and sent divine beings to relocate the mountains.

Jingwei Tirelessly Carrying Twigs and Stones to Fill the Entire East Sea

🐉 Chinese MythologyEast China Sea, Zhoushan, ChinaNüwa (Princess) • Jingwei (The Bird) • Yandi (The Flame Emperor)

The myth follows Nüwa, the daughter of the Flame Emperor, who drowns in the Eastern Sea and is reborn as the bird Jingwei. To prevent others from suffering her fate, she vows to fill the vast ocean with pebbles and twigs from the mountains. It is a timeless story of indomitable will and the refusal to surrender to overwhelming odds.

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.

Kuafu's Walking Stick Transforming into a Vast Forest of Peach Trees

🐉 Chinese MythologyZhongtiao Mountains, Shanxi, ChinaKuafu • The Golden Crow (The Sun) • Houtu

The myth of Kuafu tells of a giant who attempted to outrun the sun to capture its warmth and light for his people. After a grueling pursuit that saw him drink the Yellow and Wei Rivers dry, he succumbed to extreme thirst and exhaustion near the Zhongtiao Mountains. As he fell, his wooden walking stick transformed into the 'Denglin,' a massive peach forest that provided shade and nourishment...

Kuafu Chasing the Sun

🐉 Chinese MythologyZhongtiao Mountains, Shanxi, ChinaKuafu • Houtu • The Golden Crow (The Sun)

Kuafu, a heroic giant from Chinese mythology, sought to capture the sun to regulate its path and bring relief to a world suffering from drought. He chased the sun across the horizon, drinking entire rivers dry in a desperate attempt to quench his thirst, only to succumb to exhaustion and heat. His final act of sacrifice saw his body and staff transform into mountains and a peach forest,...

Yu Transforming into a Giant Bear to Dig Through the Stubborn Mountains

🐉 Chinese MythologyMount Tu, Anhui, ChinaYu the Great

A myth detailing the efforts of Yu the Great to control the devastating floods of ancient China. In a creative retelling, he transforms into a giant bear to carve paths through the stubborn mountains of Mount Tu to allow waters to drain into the sea.

Yu the Great Slaying the Venomous Nine-Headed Snake Monster Xiangliu

🐉 Chinese MythologyQilian Mountains, Gansu, ChinaYu the Great • Xiangliu

The legendary Yu the Great battles the monstrous nine-headed serpent Xiangliu, whose venom transforms fertile lands into desolate miasmas. Through strategic cunning and endurance, Yu manages to slay the beast to end the Great Flood's devastation and restore life to the earth.

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.