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Nüwa



 
 
In Chinese mythology
Chinese mythology

File:Nine-Dragons1.jpgChinese mythology is a collection of cultural history, folktales, and religions that have been passed down in oral or written form....
, Nüwa (Traditional Chinese: ??; Simplified Chinese: ??; Pinyin
Pinyin

Pinyin, more formally Hanyu pinyin, is the most commonly used Romanization system for Standard Mandarin. Hanyu is the Chinese Language, and pinyin means "phonetics", or more literally, "spelling sound" or "spelled sound"....
: nuwa, also Nügua) is a mythological character best known for creating mankind and repairing the wall of heaven. Other later traditions attribute the creation to either Pangu
Pangu

Pangu was the first living being and the creator of all in Chinese mythology....
 or Yu Huang.

was referred to in many books of songs. Below are some of the common sources that describe Nüwa, tabled in chronological order.






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In Chinese mythology
Chinese mythology

File:Nine-Dragons1.jpgChinese mythology is a collection of cultural history, folktales, and religions that have been passed down in oral or written form....
, Nüwa (Traditional Chinese: ??; Simplified Chinese: ??; Pinyin
Pinyin

Pinyin, more formally Hanyu pinyin, is the most commonly used Romanization system for Standard Mandarin. Hanyu is the Chinese Language, and pinyin means "phonetics", or more literally, "spelling sound" or "spelled sound"....
: nuwa, also Nügua) is a mythological character best known for creating mankind and repairing the wall of heaven. Other later traditions attribute the creation to either Pangu
Pangu

Pangu was the first living being and the creator of all in Chinese mythology....
 or Yu Huang.

Nüwa primary sources

Nüwa was referred to in many books of songs. Below are some of the common sources that describe Nüwa, tabled in chronological order. The list below did not include those of local tribal stories or modern reinterpretations, often adapted for screenplay. (Note: please maintain pattern of date, author, book, chapter, account, and detail for future additions.)

1) (475 - 221 BC) author: Lie Yukou
Lie Yukou

Lie Yukou is considered the author of the Daoist book Liezi, which uses his honorific name Liezi . The second Chinese character in Yukou is written kou ? "bandit; enemy"; the first is written yu ? "imprison", yu ? "resist; ward off", or occasionally yu ? "drive ; ride ; control" ....
, book: Liezi
Liezi

The Liezi is a Daoist text attributed to Lie Yukou, a circa 5th century BCE Hundred Schools of Thought philosopher, but Chinese and Western scholars believe it was compiled around the 4th century CE....
, chapter 5: "Questions of Tang" (??? ???), paragraph 1: account: "Nüwa repairs the heavens" detail: Describes Nüwa repairing the imperfect heaven,. detail: The haven was imperfect at the beginning, Nüwa use five colored stones to repaire the haven, cut the legs of a tortoise and use them as the struts of sky. But later, Gonggong bump into the mountain "buzhou"---- which holds sky, so the world inclines again, all river run to the east and stars begin to move.

2) (340 - 278 BC) author: Qu Yuan
Qu Yuan

Qu Yuan was a Chinese people scholar and minister to the King from the southern Chu during the Warring States Period. His works are mostly found in an anthology of poetry known as Chu Ci....
, book: "Elegies of Chu" (Chuci), chapter 3: "Asking Heaven" (??, or Wentian), account: "Nüwa Mends The Firmament" detail: The name Nüwa first appeared here. This story states that Nüwa molded figures from the yellow earth, giving them life and the ability to bear children. Demons then fought and broke the pillars of the heavens. Nüwa worked unceasingly to repair the damage, melting down the five-coloured stones to mend the heavens.

3) (179 - 122 BC) author: Liu An
Liu An

L?u An was a History of China prince and advisor to his nephew Emperor Wu of Han of Han Dynasty in China and the legendary inventor of tai chi....
, book: Huainanzi
Huainanzi

The Huainanzi is a 2nd century BCE Chinese philosophical classic from the Han dynasty that blends Daoist, Confucianist, and Legalism concepts, including theories such as Yin-Yang and the Five elements ....
, chapter 6: Lanmingxun, account: "Nüwa Mended the Sky" detail: In remote antiquity, the four poles of the Universe collapsed, and the world descended into chaos: the firmament was no longer able to cover everything, and the earth was no longer able to support itself; fire burned wild, and waters flooded the land. Fierce beasts ate common people, and ferocious birds attacked the old and the weak. Hence, Nüwa tempered the five-colored stone to mend the heavens, cut off the feet of the great turtle to support the four poles, killed the black dragon to help the earth, and gathered the ash of reed to stop the flood. Variation: The four corners of the sky collapsed and the world with its nine regions split open.

4) (145 - 90 BC) author: Sima Qian
Sima Qian

Sima Qian was a Prefect of the Grand Scribes of the Han Dynasty. He is regarded as the father of Chinese historiography because of his highly praised work, Records of the Grand Historian , an overview of the history of China covering more than two thousand years from the Yellow Emperor to Emperor Wu of Han China ....
, book: Shiji, section 1: BenJi, chapter 1: prologue detail: Nüwa is described as a man with the last name of Feng. He is related to Fuxi; and possibly related to Fenghuang (??, pinyin: fènghuáng).

5) (58 - 147 AD) author: Xu Shen
Xu Shen

Xu Sh?n was a China philologist of the Han Dynasty. He was the author of Shuowen Jiezi, the first Chinese dictionary with Chinese character analysis, as well as the first to organize the characters by shared components....
, book: Shuowen Jiezi
Shuowen Jiezi

The Shuow?n Jiez? was an early 2nd century CE Chinese dictionary from the Han Dynasty. Although not the first comprehensive Chinese character dictionary , it was still the first to analyze the structure of the characters and to give the rationale behind them , as well as the first to use the principle of organization by sections with s...
, entry: Nüwa detail: The Shuowen is China's earliest dictionary. In it, Nüwa is said to have been both the sister and the wife of Fuxi. Nüwa and Fuxi were pictured as having snake like tails interlocked in an Eastern Han dynasty (+25 +220) mural in the Wuliang Temple in Jiaxiang county, Shandong province.

6) (618 - 907 AD) author: Li Rong, book: Duyi Zhi; vol 3, account: "opening of the universe" detail: There was a brother and a sister living on the Kunlun Mountain, and there were no ordinary people at that time. The sister's name was Nüwa. The brother and sister wished to become husband and wife, but felt shy and guilty about this desire. So the brother took his younger sister to the top of the Kunlun Mounatain and prayed: "If the heavens allow us to be man and wife, please let the smoke before us gather; if not, please let the smoke scatter." The smoke before them gathered together. So Nüwa came to live with her elder brother. She made a fan with grass to hide her face. (The present custom of women covering their faces with fans originated from this story.)

7) (618 - 907 AD) author: Lu Tong
Lu Tong

Lu Tong was a China poet of Tang Dynasty known for his lifelong study of the "Tea Culture". He was a peculiar man who never became an official, and is better known for his love of tea than his poetry....
, book: Yuchuan Ziji, chapter 3 detail: characters: "??????" ?? "???????", pinyin: "Yu Mayi Jie Jiao Shi" YeCheng "Nüwa ben shi Fuxi fu", English: "NuWa originally is Fuxi wife" (note late date)

8) (618 - 907 AD) author: Sima Zhen
Sima Zhen

Sima Zhen , courtesy name Zizheng , was a China historian born in what is now Jiaozuo during the Tang Dynasty.Sima Zhen was one of the most important commentators on the Shiji....
, book: Four Branches of Literature Complete Library (Siku Quanshu
Siku Quanshu

The Siku Quanshu, variously translated as the Imperial Collection of Four, Emperor's Four Treasuries, Complete Library in Four Branches of Literature, or Complete Library of the Four Treasuries, is the largest collection of books in Chinese history and probably the most ambitious editorial enterprise in the history of the...
) , chapter: "Supplemental to the Historic Record – History of the Three August Ones" detail: The three August Ones (San Huang) are: Fuxi, Nüwa, Shennong
Shennong

Shennong , also known as the Yan Emperor or the Emperor of the Five Grains , is a legendary Emperor of China and culture hero of Chinese mythology who is believed to have lived some 5,000 years ago, and taught ancient China the practices of agriculture....
; Fuxi & Nüwa were brother & sister and have the same last name "Fong" or Feng. note: SimaZhens commentary in included with the later Siku Quanshu compiled by Ji Yun & Lu Xixiong.

9) (960 - 1279 AD) author: Li Fang
Li Fang

Li Fang , courtesy name Mingyuan , was a China scholar, compiler and prime Prime minister from the Song Dynasty known for his leading in the compilation for the three of the Four Great Books of Song. He was born in what is now Hengshui and once served the Later Han and Later Zhou....
, collection: Songsi Dashu, series: Taiping Anthologies for the Emperor (Taiping Yulan), book: Vol 78, chapter "Customs by Yingshao of the Han Dynasty" detail: States that there were no men when the sky and the earth were separated. Nüwa used yellow clay to make people. The clay was not strong enough, so she put ropes into the clay to make the bodies erect. It was also said that she prayed to gods to let her be the goddess of marital affairs. (Variations of this story exist.)

Nüwa in various roles

Nuwa&fuxi
Since Nüwa is presented differently in so many myths, it is not accurate to tie "her" down as a creator, mother, goddess, or even female. Depending on the myth, "she" is responsible for being a wife, sister, man, tribal leader (or even emperor), creator, maintainer, etc. It is not clear from the evidence which view came first. Regardless of the origins, most myths present Nüwa as female in a procreative role after a calamity.

Nüwa as a repairer

The earliest literary role seems to be the upkeep and maintenance of the Wall of Heaven, whose collapse would obliterate everything.

There was a quarrel between two of the more powerful gods, and they decided to settle it with a fight. When the water god Gong Gong
Gong Gong

Gong Gong is a Chinese water god who is responsible for the great floods, together with his associate, Xiang Yao , who has nine heads and the body of a snake....
 saw that he was losing, he smashed his head against Mount Buzhou, a pillar holding up the sky. The pillar collapsed and caused the sky to tilt towards the northwest and the earth to shift to the southeast. This caused great calamities, such as unending fires, vast floods, and the appearance of fierce man-eating beasts. Nüwa cut off the legs of a giant tortoise and used them to supplant the fallen pillar, alleviating the situation and sealing the broken sky using stones of seven different colours, but she was unable to fully correct the tilted sky. This explains the phenomenon that sun, moon, and stars move towards the northwest, and that rivers in China flow southeast into the Pacific Ocean. (this account is similar to the Huainanzi account; it was added as The Upkeep and Maintenance of Heaven )

Other versions of the story describe Nüwa going up to heaven and filling the gap with her body (half human half serpent) and thus stopping the flood. According to this legend some of the minorities in South-Western China hail Nüwa as their goddess and some festivals such as the 'Water-Splashing Festival' are in part a tribute to her sacrifices.

Nüwa as a creator

The next major role of Nüwa is of a creator deity
Creator deity

A creator deity is a deity in a creation myth responsible for the creation of the world .In monotheism, the single God is necessarily also the creator deity, while polytheistic traditions may or may not have creator deities....
. However, not many stories ascribe to her the creation of everything; they usually confine her to the creation of mankind. It is said that Nüwa existed in the beginning of the world. She felt lonely as there were no animals so she began the creation of animals and humans. On the first day she created chickens. On the second day she created dogs. On the third day she created sheep. On the fourth day she created pigs. On the fifth day she created cows. On the sixth day she created horses. On the seventh day she began creating men from yellow clay, sculpting each one individually, yet after she had created hundreds of figures in this way she still had more to make but had grown tired of the laborious process.

So instead of hand crafting each figure, she dipped a rope in clay and flicked it so blobs of clay landed everywhere; each of these blobs became a person.

Nüwa as wife or sister

By the Han Dynasty, she is described in literature with her husband Fuxi as the first of the San Huang, and often called the "parents of humankind". However, paintings depicting them joined as half people - half snake or dragon date to the Warring States period
Warring States Period

The Warring States Period , also known as the Era of Warring States, covers the period from 476 BCE to the unification of China by the Qin Dynasty in 221 BCE....
.

Nüwa as a goddess for Miao people

Nüwa is also the traditional divine goddess of the Miao people
Miao people

The Miao are a linguistically and culturally related group of people recognized by the government of the People's Republic of China as one of the list of ethnic groups in China....
.

Nüwa in history

Paintings of Nüwa, and her consort Fuxi, date to the Warring States period
Warring States Period

The Warring States Period , also known as the Era of Warring States, covers the period from 476 BCE to the unification of China by the Qin Dynasty in 221 BCE....
.

Although Nüwa is typically represented as a woman in mythology, the noted Chinese historian Sima Qian
Sima Qian

Sima Qian was a Prefect of the Grand Scribes of the Han Dynasty. He is regarded as the father of Chinese historiography because of his highly praised work, Records of the Grand Historian , an overview of the history of China covering more than two thousand years from the Yellow Emperor to Emperor Wu of Han China ....
 (in the Shiji, Chapter Benji or prolog) clearly identifies Nuwa as a man with the surname of Feng. Some scholars consider Nüwa a tribal leader (or emperor); others consider the name Nüwa a title.

Cultural references


In Fengshen Yanyi

Nüwa is featured within the famed ancient Chinese novel Fengshen Yanyi
Fengshen Yanyi

Fengshen Yanyi , also known as Fengshen Bang , is one of the major Vernacular Chinese novels written in the Ming Dynasty. The story deals with the decline of the Shang Dynasty and rise of the Zhou Dynasty, intertwining numerous elements of Chinese mythology, including gods and goddesses, Eight Immortals, and spirits....
. As featured within this novel, Nüwa is very highly respected since the time of the Xia Dynasty
Xia Dynasty

The Xia Dynasty of China is the first dynasty to be described in ancient historical records such as Records of the Grand Historian and Bamboo Annals....
 for being the daughter of the Jade Emperor
Jade Emperor

The Jade Emperor , is the Taoist ruler of Heaven and all realms of existence below including that of Man and Hell according to a version of Chinese mythology....
; Nüwa is also regularly called the "Snake Goddess". After the Shang Dynasty
Shang Dynasty

The Shang Dynasty or Yin Dynasty was according to traditional sources the first Dynasties in Chinese history. They ruled in the northeastern region of the area known as "China proper", in the Yellow River valley....
 had been created, Nu Wa created the Five-colored stones to protect the dynasty with occasional seasonal rains and other enhancing qualities. Thus in time, Shang Rong
Shang Rong

Shang Rong was a high official of Shang Dynasty. He is also a major character featured in the famed ancient Chinese novel Fengshen Yanyi....
 asked King Zhou of Shang
King Zhou of Shang

King Di Xin of Shang Dynasty , born Zi Shou was the last king of the Shang Dynasty. His given name was Zh?u...
 to pay her a visit as a sign of deep respect. After King Zhou was completely overcome with lust at the very sight of the beautiful ancient goddess Nüwa (who had been sitting behind a light curtain), he would write a small poem on a neighboring wall and take his leave. When Nüwa later returned to her temple after visiting the Yellow Emperor
Yellow Emperor

Huang-di, or the Yellow Emperor, is a legendary Chinese sovereign and culture hero who is considered in Chinese mythology to be the ancestor of all Han Chinese....
, Nüwa would see the foulness of King Zhou's words. In her anger, she swore that the Shang Dynasty will end in payment for his foulness. In her rage, Nüwa would personally ascend to the palace in an attempt to kill the king, but was suddenly struck back by two large beams of red light.

After Nüwa realized that King Zhou was already destined to rule the kingdom for twenty-six more years, Nüwa would summon her three subordinates -- the Thousand-Year Vixen (later becoming Daji
Daji

File:Hokusai Daji.jpgDaji was a favorite concubine of King Zhou of Shang, the last king of Shang Dynasty in China. Known for her beauty and cruelty that brought ruin to a dynasty, she is often portrayed as an Hu li jing in literature, such as the famed Chinese novel Fengshen Yanyi....
), the Fat-Belly Guitar Jade Pipa
Pipa Jing

Pipa Jing , a yaojing changed from jade pipa, is a fictional character featured within the famed ancient Chinese novel Fengshen Yanyi.Fat-Belly Guitar Pipa Jing is one of three renowned female specters under the legendary Nu Wa Niang Niang....
, and the Nine-Headed Pheasant. With these words, Nu Wa would bring destined chaos to the Shang Dynasty, "The luck Cheng Tang won six hundred years ago is dimming. I speak to you of a new mandate of heaven
Mandate of Heaven

The Mandate of Heaven is a traditional Chinese philosophy concept concerning the legitimacy of rulers. Heaven would bless the authority of a just ruler, but would be displeased with a despotic ruler and would withdraw their mandate....
 which sets the destiny for all. You three are to enter King Zhou's palace, where you are to bewitch him. Whatever you do, do not harm anyone else. If you do my bidding, and do it well, you will be permitted to reincarnate as human beings.
" Thus, with these words, Nüwa would never be heard of again, but would still be a major indirect factor towards the Shang Dynasty's fall.

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