Some
Popular Gods
(adapted
from Wikipedia article, "Chinese Folk Religion")
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Guan Gong (關公), originally Guan Yu (關羽), the red-faced,
bearded hero of Romance of the Three Kingdoms and
symbol of loyalty. He is the patron god of policemen, war, fortune,
law, and gangsters, as he shows forgiveness, and often also serves
as "Wu Sheng".
-
Baosheng
Dadi
(保生大帝), the "Great
Emperor Protecting Life." The god of medicine, whose powers extend
to raising the dead. Originally Wu Tao, from Fujian province. Worship
is especially prevalent in Fujian and Taiwan.
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Cai Shen (財神 "god of wealth"),
named Gongming Zhao, who oversees the gaining and distribution of
wealth through fortune.
He is often the deified manifestation of certain historical personalities.
His shape is that of a giant blue whiskered cat.
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Shou Xing (壽星 "god of longevity"),
who stands for a healthy and long life. He is portrayed as an old
baldy man with a walking stick in his right hand and a peach in his
left.
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Fu Shen (福神 "god of happiness"),
he looks like a traditional Chinese feudal lord with red clothing.
He symbolizes happiness and joy.
-
The
Eight Immortals (八仙) are important
literary and artistic figures who were deified after death, and became
objects of worship.
-
Hu
Ye
(虎爺 "Lord Tiger"),
a guardian spirit, often found at the bottom of Taoist temple shrines.
Worshipers revere the tiger spirit in order to curse spiritual enemies.
Rituals include stomping an effigy of a spiritual enemy in front of
the tiger spirit as well as sacrificing meat offerings, paper gold,
and others.
-
Jiu
Wang Ye
(九皇爺 "Nine
Emperor God") refer to spirits of nine emperors, worshiped
as emanations of Mazu,
patron goddess of sailors. A festival is held over the first nine
days of the ninth lunar month to celebrate the return from heaven
to earth of the Nine Emperor spirits. This is celebrated primarily
in Malaysia.
-
Mazu (媽祖), the patroness,
also considered as the goddess, of sailors. Shrines can be found in
coastal areas of Eastern and South-Eastern China. Today, belief in
Mazu is especially popular in the South and South-East, including
Fujian (福建), Guangdong (廣東), Hainan (海南), Taiwan (台灣), Hong Kong
(香港), and Vietnam (越南).
-
Qiye (七爺 "Seventh
Lord") and Baye (八爺 "Eighth Lord"),
two generals and best friends, often seen as giant puppets in street
parades. 8 is black, because he drowned rather than miss his appointment
to meet with 7, even though a flood was coming. 7 has his tongue sticking
out, because he hanged himself in mourning for 8.
-
Shangdi Shangdi (上帝) (lit. Supreme
Emperor) is originally the supreme god, synonymous with the concept
of Tian (天). This title/name
was later applied to the supreme deity of various religions, including
Yu Huang Dadi (玉皇大帝, the Jade Emperor)
and
the Christian God.
-
Cheng Huang (城隍), a class of protective
deities: Each city has a Cheng Huang who looks after the fortunes
of the city and judges the dead. Usually these are famous or noble
persons from the city who were deified after death. The Cheng Huang
Miao (城隍廟) or "Shrine
of the Cheng Huang" was often the focal point of a town in ancient
times.
-
Sun Wukong (孫悟空,齊天大聖; "The Monkey
King" or "Great Sage Equaling Heaven") is the stone
monkey born from heaven and earth who wreaked havoc in heaven and
was punished by the Buddha under the five fingers mountain for 500
years. Released by the Tang monk, Xuanzang
(or Tang Sanzang), he traveled under Xuanzang as his disciple to the
Thunder Monastery in the West (presumably India) for the Buddhist
scriptures to redeem himself. Depending on which version of the Journey to the West legend, where Sun Wukong
supposedly originates, Sun Wukong is only sometimes referred to as
an actual god.
-
Tu Di Gong (土地公, tǔ dì gōng),
the "God of the earth", a genius loci
who protects a local place (especially hills), and whose statue may
be found in roadside shrines. He is also the god of wealth, by virtue
of his connection with the earth, and therefore, minerals and buried
treasure.
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Wenchangdi (文昌帝 "Emperor
Promoting Culture"), god of students, scholars, and examination.
He is worshiped by students who wish to pass their examinations. Inept
examiners in ancient times sometimes sought "divine guidance"
from him to decide rank between students.
-
Xi Wangmu (西王母), the "Queen
Mother of the West" who reigns over a paradisaical mountain and
has the power to make others immortal. In some myths, she is the mother
of the Jade
Emperor (玉帝).
-
Yuexia
Laoren
(月下老人 "Old Man
Under the Moon"). The matchmaker who pairs lovers together, worshiped
by those seeking their partner.
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Zao Shen (灶君|灶神), the 'Kitchen
God' mentioned in the title of Amy Tan's novel, The Kitchen God's Wife. He reports
to heaven on the behavior of the family of the house once a year,
at Chinese New Year, and is given sticky rice in order to render his
speech less comprehensible on that occasion.
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Zhusheng Niangniang (註生娘娘 "Birth-Registry
Goddess"). She is worshiped by people who want children, or who
want their child to be a boy.
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