The Heavenly Sovereign () was the first legendary Chinese king after Pangu's era. According to Yiwen Leiju, he was the first of the Three Sovereigns.
Name
The book Lushi from the Song Dynasty records that his family name was Wang (æÂÂ, meaning "to observe" or "day or night of the full moon"), his given name Huo (ç², meaning "to hunt or catch"), and his courtesy name Zirun (Ã¥ÂÂ潤, run means "wet" or "wealthy", so "prosperous descendants").
Biography
According to the "Basic Annals of the Three Sovereigns" (ä¸ÂçÂÂæÂ¬ç´Â) in Sima Zhen's supplement to the Records of the Grand Historian:
- After Heaven and Earth were formed, there was TiÃÂnhuáng, who had twelve heads.
- The king was said to have an unselfish personality(or in a calm state or living in retirement) that even if he did not try to help the people, people's customs changed for the better.(æ¾¹æ³Âç¡æÂÂæÂ½çºï¼ÂèÂÂæ°Âä¿ÂèªåÂÂ)
- And, TiÃÂnhuáng was a king of many achievements, and was the king ruling under the influence (de) of the wood element (æÂ¨å¾·çÂÂ). He lived to 18,000 years old. His twelve children supported him in reigning the world.
- His greatest achievement was suppressing all the chaos, dividing the world for the many tribes, and choosing the best people to rule the tribes.
His successor was the Earthly Sovereign.
According to the Yiwen Leiju,
- Based on Shixue (å§Âå¸) by , after the heaven and earth were formed, there was the Heavenly Sovereign, with 13 heads(or 13 leaders). He was called Tianling (天éÂÂ, 'heavenly spirit') and ruled the world for 18,000 years.
- Based on Dongming Ji (, title means "Records of everything about the ghosts"), there were 13 people with the same family name.
- Based on the records in the Three Five Historic Records (ä¸ÂäºÂæÂ·ç´Â) by Xu Zheng, when history began, life started to exist, and there was a divine spirit that had 13 heads called Tianhuang.
- Based on Chunqiu Wei (æÂ¥ç§Âç·¯), there were Heavenly, Earthly and Heavenly Sovereigns, they had 9 brothers and divided the world into the Nine Provinces, which spanned the world.
- Based on Dunjiakaishan Tu (éÂÂç²éÂÂå±±åÂÂ), the emperor's remains are said to be under the Kunlun in Zhuzhou (æÂ±å·Â).
See also
References
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