Houtu Explained

Houtu
Pic:后土皇地祗.jpg
Piccap:Painting of Goddess Houtu with attendant in White Cloud Temple of Beijing China
C:后土
L:Queen of the Earth
P:Hòutǔ
Vietnamname:Hậu Thổ
Vietnam Chu Nom:后土
Kana:こうど
Romaji:Kōdo
Kanji:后土
Qn:Hậu Thổ

Hòutǔ or Hòutǔshén, also known as Hòutǔ Niángniáng (in Chinese either or), otherwise called Dimǔ or Dimǔ Niángniáng, is the deity of all land and earth in Chinese religion and mythology. Houtu is the overlord of all the Tudigongs ("Lord of Local Land"), Sheji ("the State"), Shan Shen ("God of Mountains"), City Gods ("God of Local City"), and landlord gods worldwide.

In Taoism, Houtu is one of the Four Heavenly Ministers, which are four of the highest-ranking gods in Taoism.

Role

Houtu was originally the god of all land and earth in early Chinese mythology, before being absorbed into Taoism as one of the Four Heavenly Ministers.

In early mythology

According to early Chinese classics Zuo Zhuan (late 4th century BC), Book of Rites and Classic of Mountains and Seas, Houtu is the son of Gonggong, being able to control the flood by installing mountains of Earth.[1] [2] [3] She is also the assistant god to one of the Great Five Emperors, the Huang Di, being the god of the Earth element in the Wuxing system.[4] [5]

In early myths Gonggong also was related to the first Tudigong, his son who was appointed as a god of the soil by Zhuanxu.[6]

In Taoism

In Taoism, Houtu is one of the Four Heavenly Ministers, along with Jade Emperor, Gouchen Emperor and Ziwei Emperor. In some Taoist scripts, another two gods, Changsheng Emperor and Qinghua Emperor (Chinese: 青华大帝), are added to constitute "Six Heavenly Ministers" (Chinese: 六御). The Daochang of Houtu is at Mount Jiuhua.[7]

Due to the belief that Tian (sky) represents yang and Di (earth) represents yin, most people believe Houtu is a female deity.

In Buddhism

Some scholars link Houtu to the Buddhist goddess Bhumi, which is the personification of Earth.[8]

Worship

Houtu was first worshipped by Emperor Wen of Han (in Fenyin County, modern-day Wanrong County, Shanxi)[9] and by Emperor Wu of Han in 113 BC.[10]

Yellow River Map

Houtu is featured in some versions of the myth of the Great Flood of China: Yu did not do such a great job of channeling the Yellow River into the sea, dredging the wrong way. Sacred Mother Houtu then made the Yellow River Map and sent one of her divine messenger birds to tell Yu what to do; specifically, that he should open a channel to the east, to allow the right drainage.

See also

References

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Book: zh:共工氏有子曰句龙,为后土。. Gonggong had a heroic son whose name was Houtu. . zh:左傳 . Zuo Zhuan . Zuo Zhuan . zh:昭公二十九年 . Year 29 of Duke Zhao.
  2. Book: zh:共工氏之霸九州也,其子曰后土,能平九土,故祀以为社。 . Houtu, a son of Gonggong who swayed all nine provinces, was able to calm all the land and was sacrificed to as a god of the soil. . Book of Rites . Book of Rites . Law of Sacrifices . zh:礼记 . zh:祭法.
  3. Book: zh:共工生后土,后土生噎鸣,噎鸣生岁十有二。 . zh:山海经 . zh:海内经 . History of the world . Classic of Mountains and Seas . Classic of Mountains and Seas.
  4. Book: zh:中央土,其帝黄帝,其神后土。此黄精之君,土官之臣。后土,亦颛顼氏之子,曰犁,兼为土官。. Book of Rites . Book of Rites . zh:礼记 . Proceedings of Government in the Different Months . zh:月令.
  5. Book: zh:中央,土也,其帝黄帝,其佐后土,执绳而制四方。其神为镇星,其兽黄龙,其音宫,其日戊己。 . zh:淮南子 . Huainanzi . Huainanzi . zh:天文训 . Patterns of Heaven.
  6. Web site: Theobald . Ulrich . Sheshen 社神, Local Deities (www.chinaknowledge.de) . 2023-04-01 . www.chinaknowledge.de . en.
  7. Book: 张 . 持真 . zh:忏法大观 - 维基文库,自由的图书馆 . Wikisource. https://zh.wikisource.org/zh-hans/%E6%87%BA%E6%B3%95%E5%A4%A7%E8%A7%80 . zh-Hans.
  8. Shaw, Miranda Eberle (2006). Buddhist Goddesses of India. Princeton University Press. p. 237. ISBN 978-0-691-12758-3.
  9. Book: zh:中国文化科目认证指南. 2010. Chinese: 华语教学出版社. Sinolingua.. 978-7-80200-985-1. 63.
  10. Web site: Hou Tu - MSN Encarta . 10 November 2008 . MSN Encarta . MSN . https://web.archive.org/web/20090829083206/http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761582235/Hou_Tu.html . 29 August 2009 . dead .