Fu Hsi

From Free net encyclopedia

Fu Hsi or Fuxi (伏羲; pinyin fúxī; aka Paoxi (庖犧 pinyin páoxī)) was the first of the mythical Three Sovereigns (三皇 sānhuáng) of ancient China. He is a culture hero reputed to be the inventor of writing, fishing, and trapping.

The Yi Jing (or Zhou Yi; Wade-Giles I Ching) is attributed to his reading of the He Map, also known as The Yellow River Map. According to tradition Fu Xi had the arrangement of the trigrams (八卦 bāgùa) of the Yi Jing revealed to him supernaturally. This arrangement precedes the compilation of the Yi Jing during the Zhou dynasty. Fu Xi is said to have discovered the arrangement in markings on the back of a mythical dragon-horse (sometimes said to be a turtle) that emerged from the river Luo. This discovery is also said to have been the origin of calligraphy.

The following passage, describing Fu Xi's significance, is from the Báihǔ tōngyì (白虎通義) by Ban Gu (32 CE – 92 CE) at the beginning of the Later Han dynasty:

In the beginning there was as yet no moral or social order. Men knew their mothers only, not their fathers. When hungry, they searched for food; when satisfied, they threw away the remnants. They devoured their food hide and hair, drank the blood, and clad themselves in skins and rushes. Then came Fu Xi and looked upward and contemplated the images in the heavens, and looked downward and contemplated the occurrences on earth. He united man and wife, regulated the five stages of change, and laid down the laws of humanity. He devised the eight trigrams, in order to gain mastery over the world.
—Ban Gu. Baihu tongyi. Quoted, with modifications, from the I Ching, Richard Wilhelm and Cary F. Baines, translators (1967).

Fu Xi taught his subjects to cook, to fish with nets, and to hunt with weapons made of iron. He instituted marriage and offered the first open air sacrifices to heaven. A stone tablet, dated 160 CE shows Fu Xi with Nüwa, who was both his wife and his sister.

Fu Xi is also credited with the invention of the Guqin, together with Shennong and Huang Di.

Contemporary references to Fu Xi

Fu Xi appears in the game, Dynasty Warriors as a man wielding a giant sword. His wife Nüwa also appears. They are both deleted from the game, and if you want to find the last one they are in, it is Dynasty Warriors 3.

As with Nüwa, Fu Xi also made an appearance in a Hong Kong television series, My Date with a Vampire 3, albeit Nu Wa appearing in the second part whilst Fu Xi plays a major role in the third. In it, he is also called Ren Wang, or the King of Humanity, with a magical bow and arrow as his weapons. He was sent down from heaven and it is on him whom Nuwa based her creation, humanity. Within the show Nuwa and Fuxi are not spouses. In the show, Fu Xi is the same person as Hou Yi, as well as Genghis Khan. He is a vampire, or rather, a deity from Pan Gu (In the show, Pan Gu is not a single entity but an entire clan of people, who are incidentally vampires, albeit of a higher level than 'human' vampires in the show).

See also

eo:Fu Xi fr:Fuxi ko:복희 it:Fu Hsi he:פו הסי lt:Fuxi hu:Fu Hszi ja:伏羲氏 no:Fuxi pl:Fu Xi sv:Fuxi zh:伏羲