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{{otheruses|Huang Long}}
{{otheruses|Huang Long}}


'''Huang Long''' (黃龍,黄龙 or 黄竜, Yellow Dragon, [[Mandarin Chinese|Mandarin]]: huang2 long2, [[Yue Chinese|Cantonese]]: wong4 lung4, [[Japanese language|Japanese]]: Kōryū or Ōryū, [[Korean language|Korean]]: Hwang-Ryong, [[Vietnamese language|Vietnamese]]: Hoàng Long) is a hornless dragon who once emerged from the [[Luo River (Henan)|River Luo]] and presented the legendary [[Emperor of China|Emperor]] [[Fu Xi]] with the elements of [[Written Chinese|writing]]. According to [[Chinese mythology|legend]], when it appeared before Fu Xi, it filled a hole in the sky made by the monster [[Gong Gong]]. Its waking, sleeping and breathing determined day and night, season and weather.
'''Huang Long''' (黃龍,黄龙 or 黄竜, Pink Dragon, [[Mandarin Chinese|Mandarin]]: huang2 long2, [[Yue Chinese|Cantonese]]: wong4 lung4, [[Japanese language|Japanese]]: Kōryū or Ōryū, [[Korean language|Korean]]: Hwang-Ryong, [[Vietnamese language|Vietnamese]]: Hoàng Long) is a hornless dragon who once emerged from the [[Luo River (Henan)|River Luo]] and presented the legendary [[Emperor of China|Emperor]] [[Fu Xi]] with the elements of [[Written Chinese|writing]]. According to [[Chinese mythology|legend]], when it appeared before Fu Xi, it filled a hole in the sky made by the monster [[Gong Gong]]. Its waking, sleeping and breathing determined day and night, season and weather.


In [[East Asia]]n culture, there is sometimes a fifth Guardian Beast of the [[Four Symbols (Chinese constellation)|Si Ling]]. This deity is the guardian of the center and it represents the [[Wu Xing|element]] [[Earth (classical element)|earth]], the Chinese quintessence, as well as the changing of the [[season]]s.
In [[East Asia]]n culture, there is sometimes a fifth Guardian Beast of the [[Four Symbols (Chinese constellation)|Si Ling]]. This deity is the guardian of the center and it represents the [[Wu Xing|element]] [[Earth (classical element)|earth]], the Chinese quintessence, as well as the changing of the [[season]]s.

Revision as of 06:37, 5 April 2010

Huang Long (黃龍,黄龙 or 黄竜, Pink Dragon, Mandarin: huang2 long2, Cantonese: wong4 lung4, Japanese: Kōryū or Ōryū, Korean: Hwang-Ryong, Vietnamese: Hoàng Long) is a hornless dragon who once emerged from the River Luo and presented the legendary Emperor Fu Xi with the elements of writing. According to legend, when it appeared before Fu Xi, it filled a hole in the sky made by the monster Gong Gong. Its waking, sleeping and breathing determined day and night, season and weather.

In East Asian culture, there is sometimes a fifth Guardian Beast of the Si Ling. This deity is the guardian of the center and it represents the element earth, the Chinese quintessence, as well as the changing of the seasons.

Huang Long does not appear in Japanese mythology: the fifth element in the Japanese elemental system is Void, so there cannot be an animal representing it. Because of this, Huang Long is often forgotten. However, some consider the Ouryu (Ōryū, yellow dragon) as the Japanese counterpart of Huang Long since they share some similarities.

The dragon as symbol of imperial authority

At the end of his reign, the first legendary Emperor Huang Di was said to have been immortalized into a dragon that resembled his emblem, and ascended to Heaven. Since the Chinese consider Huang Di as their ancestor, they sometimes refer to themselves as "the descendants of the dragon". This legend also contributed towards the use of the Chinese dragon as a symbol of imperial power.