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Jiandi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jiandi (simplified Chinese: 简狄; traditional Chinese: 簡狄; pinyin: Jiǎndí), also with variants 简易; 簡易 and 简逷; 簡逷, is an important figure in Chinese history and Chinese mythology. She was the second wife of Emperor Ku,[1] who was a descendant of the Yellow Emperor. Jiandi was the mother of Xie (), the predynastic founder of the Shang dynasty[a]. Her pregnancy miraculously occurred following her swallowing or holding in her bosom the egg of a Xuanniao (玄鳥).[2] Jiandi was said to be of the Yousong clan.[3] Jiandi is mentioned in various sources, including the poems "Eulogy of Shang", in the Shijing, and the "Heavenly Questions" in the Chuci.[4]

Notes

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  1. ^ Xie's name is also written as whose Mandarin Chinese reflexes are either also Xie or Qi, the latter of which should not be confused with Qi () "abandoned", the birth-name of Houji, son of Ku's first wife Jiang Yuan and predynastic founder of the Zhou dynasty

References

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  • Yang, Lihui, et al. (2005). Handbook of Chinese Mythology. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-533263-6
  1. ^ Yang, 148
  2. ^ Yang, 148-150 and 186
  3. ^ Yang, 148
  4. ^ Yang, 148