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Yellow Emperor
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The Yellow Emperor or Huang Ti (Traditional Chinese: 黃帝; Simplified Chinese: 黄帝; pinyin: huángdì) is a legendary Chinese sovereign and cultural hero who is said to be the ancestor of all Han Chinese. One of the legendary Five Emperors, the Yellow Emperor is said by tradition to have reigned from 2698 BC to 2599 BC. The legend of his victory in the war against the eastern Emperor Chi You at the Battle of Zhuolu is seen as the establishment of the Han Chinese nationality.
Contents
- 1 Accomplishments
- 2 Legends
- 3 Historicity
- 4 Popular culture
- 5 Notes
- 6 References
- 7 See also
- 8 External links
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Accomplishments
Among his other accomplishments, the Yellow Emperor has been credited with the invention of the principles of Traditional Chinese medicine. The Huangdi Neijing (黄帝内經 The Medical Canon of the Yellow Emperor) was supposedly composed in collaboration with his physician Qi Bó. However, modern historiographers generally consider it to have been compiled from ancient sources by a scholar living between the Zhou and Han dynasties, more than 2,000 years later. His interest in natural health and preventing and treating diseases meant he is said to have lived to the age of 100, and to have attained immortality after his physical death.
Legends
In the legend, his wife
Lúo Zǔ taught the Chinese how to weave the
silk from
silkworms, and his historian
Cāng Jié created the first Chinese characters.
Legend says that the Yellow Emperor invented a magical compass during a battle against Chi You who used a sandstorm as camouflage to hide his army. Thanks to the compass, the Yellow Emperor found out where Chi You was and defeated him. The swirling chair in his chariot was also a compass so that he would always face south, which the Chinese people consider to be good Feng Shui. He is also said to have played a part in the creation of the Guqin, together with Fuxi and Shennong, and to have invented the earliest form of the Chinese calendar, and its current sexagenary cycles are counted based on his reign.
Huang Di captured Bai Ze atop Mount Dongwang. The beast described to him all the 11,520 types of monsters, shapeshifters, demons, and spirits in the world. Huang Di's retainer recorded this in pictures, which later became the book "Bai Ze Tu", which no longer exists.[1]
Historicity
One explanation is that Huang Di was
euhemerized from a mythical god during the early
Zhou Dynasty into a legendary emperor during the late Zhou dynasty—his lengendary deeds embellished along the way.
Popular culture
- There have been TV dramas made in mainland China depicting the life of Huang Di. However, their historical accuracy is questionable. They are semi-fictional because their focus is mainly on martial arts, Wuxia and drama.
- The Yellow Emperor serves as the hero in Jorge Luis Borges' story, "The Fauna of the Mirror." British fantasy writer China Miéville used this story as the basis for his novella "The Tain", which describes a post-apocalyptic London. "The Tain" was recently included in Miéville's short story collection "Looking For Jake."
Notes
- ^ Haku-taku or Bai Ze
References
See also