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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Standard legend  





2 Alternative legends  





3 Historicity and historiography  





4 Outside China  





5 Notes  





6 References  














Shaohao







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Shaohao
A depiction of Shaohao from the album Portraits of Famous Men dated c. 1900, housed in the Philadelphia Museum of Art
PredecessorYellow Emperor
SuccessorZhuanxu
IssueJiaoji
FatherYellow Emperor
MotherLeizu

Shaohao (Chinese: 少皞; pinyin: Shàohào; lit. 'Lesser brightness'[a]), also known as Jin Tian (金天), was a legendary Chinese sovereign, usually identified as a son of the Yellow Emperor. According to some traditions, such as that within the Book of Documents, Shaohao is one of the Five Emperors.[citation needed] His place in the mythical lineage of the Yellow Emperor has been subject to controversy. Members of the 19th–20th century Doubting Antiquity School of historians posited that Shaohao was added to the orthodox succession legend by Liu Xin as part of a politically motivated campaign revising ancient texts c. 1 AD.[citation needed]

Standard legend

[edit]

Though its provenance can only be reliably traced from the 1st century AD onwards, the traditional story of Shaohao posits him as a son of the Yellow Emperor.,[1] Furthermore, he ruled as the leader of the Dongyi for 84 years, during which he moved the capital to Qufu.[citation needed] He was succeeded by his nephew Zhuanxu, the son of his brother Changyi.[citation needed]

However, the Shiji did not list an emperor between the Yellow Emperor and Zhuanxu. Shaohao is mentioned therein as a person living between the two fretting over an incompetent son, labelled as Qiongji (窮奇; 'Extremely odd').[citation needed] If Shaohao were to be identified with Xuanxiao (玄囂)—claimed by the Shiji to be the Yellow Emperor's eldest son—the incompetent Qiongji would be identified with Jiaoji, Xuanxiao's only known offspring.[citation needed] Jiaoji was also passed over to serve as emperor; however, his son Ku, as well as his grandsons Zhi and Yao, would all ultimately become emperors.[citation needed]

The site traditionally claimed to be Shaohao's tomb is located in present-day Jiuxian village on the eastern outskirts of Qufu, most likely constructed during the Song dynasty. The site also includes Shou Qiu, a pyramidal monument marking the legendary birthplace of the Yellow Emperor.

Alternative legends

[edit]

In the Bamboo Annals, it is stated that Shaohao was not the Yellow Emperor's son but the son of a certain Lady Jie (女節), who miraculously conceived him after seeing a rainbow-like star flowing downwards onto Hua Islet (華渚).[citation needed]

Another legend says that his mother—the Weaver Woman, a star goddess—was a beautiful fairy named Huang'e, who fell in love with the planet Venus while drifting along the Milky Way. The two enjoyed many intimate nights together on her raft and they created a son. She soon gave birth to Shaohao, who grew up to be a handsome young man with a lot of potential. The Yellow Emperor—here his great-uncle—was so impressed with Shaohao that he named him God of the Western Heavens.[citation needed]

According to this telling, Shaohao created a kingdom in the five mountains of the Eastern Paradise inhabited by different types of birds. As ruler of this land, he captured the identity of a vulture, and other birds worked below him: a phoenix was his Lord Chancellor, a hawk delegated the law, and a pigeon was in charge of education. He deigned that the four seasons of the year would watch over the remaining birds.[citation needed]

A stone-faced pyramid at the Shaohao Tomb near Qufu
Traditional tomb of Shaohao

Although his kingdom was successful for many years, he moved back to the west and left his kingdom of birds to his son Chong. With a different son, Ru Shou, he made his home on Changliu Mountain, where he could rule over the Western Heavens. In union as father and son, they were responsible for the daily setting of the sun. In addition, Shaohao was thought to have introduced China to the twenty-five string lute.[citation needed]

Historicity and historiography

[edit]

While no modern scholarship accepts any part of the Yellow Emperor body of myth as describing historical events, traditional Chinese historiography viewed them as real.[citation needed] Shaohao's place in the succession is not dateable to early sources on the topic, and has its source in the so-called "Ancient Script Texts" only. In a theory that has since been discredited,[2] : 49  the Doubting Antiquity School, represented by Kang Youwei, Gu Jiegang, and Qian Mu, posited that Shaohao was inserted into the orthodox lineage during the Han dynasty by imperial librarian Liu Xin, as part of a wide-ranging campaign to revise ancient texts in order to justify the present monarch—either the Han imperial house, or the brief Xin dynasty that overthrew it. According to the theory, Liu Xin was keen to create a narrative which would satisfactorily reflect the five phases theory of dynastic succession, a "generative cycle" that rotated between different lineages, which would together legitimise the rule of either the Han, the Xin, or both.[citation needed]

There is debate whether that Shaohao was a real or legendary ruler of the Dongyi, a people who lived in eastern China.[dubiousdiscuss] It is theorized that the worship of Shaohao was brought west into Qin by migration. Documentary evidence of Shaohao originates in the extant version of the ancient text Zuozhuan, but the lineage recited there that includes Shaohao is not corroborated by contemporaneous or earlier texts. [citation needed]The Doubting Antiquity School therefore theorizes that Liu Xin fabricated Shaohao from an existing but separate legendary figure, and inserted him into the early royal lineage during his edit of the Zuozhuan.[citation needed]

Outside China

[edit]

In the Korean Samguk Sagi, it was mentioned that Kim Yu-sin was a descendant of Shaohao.[3]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Or少昊. Compare 太昊; 太皞; Tàihào; 'Great brightness', an epithet of Fuxi.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Patricia Buckley Ebrey (2003). Women and the family in Chinese history. Vol. 2 of Critical Asian scholarship (illustrated ed.). Psychology Press. p. 171. ISBN 0415288231. Retrieved April 1, 2012.
  • ^ Kern, Martin (2010). "Early Chinese literature, beginnings through Western Han". In Kang-i Sun Chang; Stephen Owen (eds.). The Cambridge History of Chinese Literature. Volume 1: To 1375. Cambridge University Press. pp. 1–115. doi:10.1017/CHOL9780521855587.003. ISBN 9781139095419.
  • ^  Chinese Wikisource has original text related to this article: 三國史記/卷41『三國史記』列傳 第一:金庾信 上
    金庾信 王京人也 十二世祖首露 不知何許人也 以後漢建武十八年壬寅 登龜峯 望駕洛九村 遂至其地 開國 號曰加耶 後改爲金官國 其子孫相承 至九世孫仇亥 或云仇次休 於庾信爲曾祖 羅人自謂少昊金天氏之後 故姓金 庾信碑亦云 軒轅之裔 少昊之胤 則南加耶始祖首露 與新羅同姓也
  • Shaohao

    Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors

    Regnal titles
    Preceded by

    Yellow Emperor

    Emperor of China Succeeded by

    Zhuanxu



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