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PAN GU and His Descendants: Chinese Cosmology in Medieval Japan
PAN GU and His Descendants: Chinese Cosmology in Medieval Japan
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Title
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PAN GU and His Descendants: Chinese Cosmology in Medieval Japan
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Author
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Bernard Faure
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Page
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71-88
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DOI
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Abstract
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Chinese cosmology has had a deep impact on Japanese culture, not only on the philosophical plane, but also in the religious domain. Under a mythologic and ritual form, Chinese notions such as the theory of the Five Phases or Agents (wuxing) spread
throughout medieval Japan,through the intermediary of the so-called Way of Yin and Yang (Onmyôdô). The present article examines the development of the myth of the Primordial Man, Pan Gu, who became in Japan King Banko - and of his five children
(corresponding to the Five Agents), as found in ritual texts such as the Gogyô no saimon. The passage from chaos to cosmos, through the harmonization of the Five Agents, is
thus described mythologically as the resolution of a conflict that opposed one of these “Princes” (ôji), named Gorô (“Fifth Son,” corresponding to the Agent Earth) to his four
brothers. Myths of that kind illustrate the popularity of the cult of the Earth deity (Kenrô Jijin) in medieval Japan - even within Buddhism - as well as the survival of notions inherited from Han cosmology. They also show how these notions were adapted to the Japanese context and contributed to the creation of a specifically Japanese culture.
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Keyword
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PAN GU, Chinese Cosmology, Medieval Japan, five phase/agents (Wuxing),
way of Yin and Yang/Onmyôdô
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