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- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture abstract "Throughout Chinese history, the tiger has incited a sense of both awe and admiration: its prowess, its ferocity, its beauty, and the harmony of the opposites. The tiger is full of life and embodies the spirit and drive to achieve and make progress.The tiger has been common in the southern and northeastern China, and is revered by the Chinese as a creature with many symbolic attributes. Each direction of the compass is traditionally believed to be ruled by a mythical creature; the White Tiger is the ruler of the West. The tiger is also associated with autumn, when it comes down from the mountains into villages, and is personified by the constellation Orion, which is prominent in autumn. In Chinese astrology, the star Alpha of the Great Bear constellation gave birth to the first tiger. The tiger represents the masculine principle in nature and is king of all the animals, as shown by the four stripes on his forehead, which form the character Wang, or Prince. The tiger is regarded as one of the four super-intelligent creatures, along with the dragon, phoenix and tortoise; for centuries, the four have been a major design motif in Chinese art.In southern China, on the tiger's birthday, on the second moon in the lunar calendar, fixed in the Western calendar as March 6, women worship the White Tiger. They place paper images of the tiger in their homes to keep away rats and snakes and prevent quarrels. On this date, effigies of the tiger are also put in front of temple buildings for people to make offerings. The God of Wealth, the deified Marshal Chao Gongming (Chao Kungming), is depicted riding a black tiger and holding a silver ingot. The Chinese call an able general a \"tiger general\" and a brave soldier, a \"tiger warrior\".In Chinese folk tales, tigers kill evil men and protect good men. Tiger charms are used to keep away disease and evil, and babies are given colourfully embroidered tiger shoes for protection. Tiger images frequently decorate children's clothing and tops. The \"Tiger Claw\" (hu chao) amulet is believed to ward off sudden fright and give the wearer the courage of the tiger. Because the tiger wards off disasters, it is popular as one of the nine gods worshipped at the New Year Festival. Tiger images are painted on the walls of homes and temples to keep away evil spirits. Dragon-Tiger Mountain is the name for the palace of the hereditary head of the Daoist religion, located in the Dragon Tiger Mountains of Jiangxi Province, east of the capital city of Nanchang. Zhang Daoling (Chang Tao-ling), the \"First Master of Heaven\" in the Daoist religion, is depicted riding a tiger and carrying a demon-dispelling sword as he escorts the dead to their final destination. A Daoist legend tells of two brothers who took on the role of protecting human beings by capturing demons and throwing them to tigers.As the enemies of evil spirits, especially those who torment the dead, tigers are carved on tombs and monuments. The Chinese system of feng shui (geomancy) requires that a burial site be higher on the right side, the stronger side of the body, so that the White Tiger can guard it; the Azure Dragon guards the left side, the body's weaker side. The tiger is the third animal in the 12-year animal Zodiac. People born in the Year of the Tiger are thought to be brave, strong, stubborn and sympathetic. The tiger represents the greatest earthly power, as well as protection over human life. It chases away the so-called \"three disasters\": fire, thieves and ghosts.The tiger is historically a Chinese cultural symbol. It has inspired imagination, stories, paintings, and poetry with the tiger: the earliest tiger statue was found in the Neolithic period in China 7000 years ago; the Year of the Tiger, tiger shoes or hats; the Tiger seal, Tiger Tally and Tiger General. There are also idioms and poetic renderings such as: Tiger roaring & dragon singing-the world is peaceful; Mountain and Valley replying- the people are wealthy and the country strong.".
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture thumbnail Dragon_and_Tiger_Pagodas_04.jpg?width=300.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageExternalLink 316.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageExternalLink english.savechinastigers.org.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageExternalLink index.php.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageID "26086808".
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageLength "4808".
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageOutDegree "38".
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageRevisionID "702816745".
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Astrology.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Caishen.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Category:Chinese_culture.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Category:Tigers_in_popular_culture.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_New_Year.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_art.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Compass.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Constellation.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Demon.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Disease.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Dragon.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Feng_shui.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Folklore.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Geomancy.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Gregorian_calendar.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink History_of_China.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Idiom.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Ingot.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Jiangxi.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Legendary_creature.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Lunar_calendar.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Monument.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Nanchang.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Neolithic.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Orion_(constellation).
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Painting.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Phoenix_(mythology).
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Poetry.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Taoism.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Tiger.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Tiger_(zodiac).
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Tomb.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Tortoise.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Ursa_Major.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Zhang_Daoling.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink Zodiac.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLink File:Dragon_and_Tiger_Pagodas_04.jpg.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageWikiLinkText "Tiger in Chinese culture".
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Multiple_issues.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:No_footnotes.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refimprove.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture subject Category:Chinese_culture.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture subject Category:Tigers_in_popular_culture.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture comment "Throughout Chinese history, the tiger has incited a sense of both awe and admiration: its prowess, its ferocity, its beauty, and the harmony of the opposites. The tiger is full of life and embodies the spirit and drive to achieve and make progress.The tiger has been common in the southern and northeastern China, and is revered by the Chinese as a creature with many symbolic attributes.".
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture label "Tiger in Chinese culture".
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture sameAs Q7801525.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture sameAs m.0b6dvsy.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture sameAs Q7801525.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture wasDerivedFrom Tiger_in_Chinese_culture?oldid=702816745.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture depiction Dragon_and_Tiger_Pagodas_04.jpg.
- Tiger_in_Chinese_culture isPrimaryTopicOf Tiger_in_Chinese_culture.