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Ao Run (敖闰) or Ao Ji (敖吉), is the Dragon King of the West Sea (西海龙王, Xīhǎi Lóngwáng) and one of the Dragon Kings of the Four Seas in Chinese religion and Korean mythology. [1] As an important belief in Chinese folk religion, Four Dragon King Temples are built around the place to worship the Dragon Kings.
The Dragon King, also known as the Dragon God, is a Chinese water and weather god.He is regarded as the dispenser of rain, commanding over all bodies of water. He is the collective personification of the ancient concept of the lóng in Chinese culture.
Han Ao or Lu Ban, the inventors. Qu Yuan, Wu Zixu, and Xiang Yu, famous suicides lost in rivers. Yu the Great, tamer of China's Great Flood. Dragon Kings of the Four Seas. Ao Kuang, Dragon King of the Eastern Sea. Ao Qin, Dragon King of the Southern Sea. Ao Run, Dragon King of the Western Sea. Ao Shun, Dragon King of the Northern Sea.
In Chinese mythology, the Dragon Kings of the Four Seas are surnamed Ao: Ao Guang, Dragon King of the East Sea; Ao Qin (敖欽), Dragon King of the South Sea; Ao Run (敖閏), Dragon King of the West Sea; Ao Shun (敖順), Dragon King of the North Sea
The White Dragon Horse (白龍馬) is the third son of Ao Run, the Dragon King of the West Sea. He was originally supposed to be executed for accidentally destroying a pearl gifted by the Jade Emperor, but Guanyin saved him and brought him to Yingchou Stream (鷹愁澗) in Shepan Mountain (蛇盤山). When Tang Sanzang and Sun Wukong pass by ...
The kings of Qin claimed descent from the Lady Xiu, "the granddaughter" of "a remote descendant" of the Emperor Zhuanxu, the grandson of the Yellow Emperor.Similarly, in the next generation, Lady Hua was said to be descended from Shaodian, [1] the legendary figure who is sometimes the father and sometimes the foster father of the Yellow and Flame Emperors.
In order to make sure the mountains stayed stable for the xian, the ruler of the heavens ordered Yuqiang to command fifteen ao to stabilize the five mountains. The turtle is a legendary creature in Chinese mythology that is believed to have the power to cause earthquakes, as well as changes in the sea, mountains, and rivers. The fifteen ao were ...
The Qin Empire (秦帝国) sought to unite and control all of China by defeating the other independent kingdoms. (Except for Gongshu Chou, the following characters in this section have prototypes in the history of Qin; Gongshu's name probably derives from that of Gongshu Ban who was a contemporary of Mozi.)