Yaoguai (妖怪)

Yaoguai(妖怪)

Alternative Names(異名):
妖怪, Yaoguai, 妖魔, yaomo, 妖精, yaojing, Chinese demon


Yaoguai (妖怪 pinyin yāoguài) or yaomo (妖魔 yāomó) or yaojing (妖精 yāojīng) is a Chinese term that generally means "demon". Yaoguai are mostly malevolent animal spirits or fallen celestial beings that have acquired magical powers through the practice of Taoism. The evil ones are usually referred to as guài (literally, "freak") or mó (literally, "demon") in Chinese. Their greatest goal is achieving immortality and thus deification. In Journey to the West, the demons seek this mostly by the abduction and consumption of a holy man (in this case, Xuanzang).

Not all yaojing are actually demons; some others are of quite unusual origins. In the case of Bai Gu Jing, she was a skeleton that became such a demon. Many yaojing are fox spirits, or according to the Journey to the West, pets of the deities. There are also yaoguai kings (mówáng) that command a number of lessor demon minions.

In Chinese folklore, the Chinese hell (Di Yu) is a place that is populated by various demonic spawns. Most of these demons are influenced by the Indian raksasa or yaksa and therefore bear some similarity with the Japanese oni.

In Japanese, yaoguai are known as yōkai (actually, the term is a loanword from Chinese; the native Japanese equivalent, sometimes written with the same kanji, is mononoke).

Famous yaoguai in Chinese mythology:

Bai Gu Jing - literally, "white bone spirit"
Niu Mo Wang - literally, "bull demon king"
Lady White Snake-a powerful white snake who lived near the West Lake in Hangzhou
Huli jing - fox demon
Pipa Jing and Jiutou Zhiji Jing - in Fengshen Yanyi
Note: Sun Wukong uses this term often to insult his (demonic) adversaries.


See also

demon
Journey to the West
Huli jing
yōkai
Raksasa
Di Yu


Links

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_mythology


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Chinese_mythology



Chinese mythology | Demons

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