Bixie: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
moved photo |
Cold Season (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{mergeto|Pixiu|date=June 2013}} |
{{mergeto|Pixiu|date=June 2013}} |
||
[[File: |
[[File:Funerary Sculpture of a Chimera (Bixie) LACMA AC1997.1.1.jpg|thumb|Funerary sculpture from the Eastern [[Han dynasty|Han]] period (25-220)]] |
||
⚫ | |||
[[File:Bixie.jpg|thumb|Chinese statue of a ''Bixie'']] |
|||
A '''''Bixie''''' ({{zh|c=辟邪|p=bìxié}}, Japanese: 辟邪, へきじゃ, ''Hekija''), is a type of lion-like mythological Chinese creature, or [[chimera (mythology)|chimera]]. It is considered as an [[exorcising]] animal (辟邪 literally means "Avoid Evil") and is usually hornless.<ref name="Howard">[http://books.google.com/books?id=PGuPsNCaJdwC&pg=PA169 ''Chinese sculpture'' By Angela Falco Howard p.56]</ref><ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=l6ab-z8tps0C&pg=PA36 ''Text and ritual in early China'' By Martin Kern p.56]</ref> |
A '''''Bixie''''' ({{zh|c=辟邪|p=bìxié}}, Japanese: 辟邪, へきじゃ, ''Hekija''), is a type of lion-like mythological Chinese creature, or [[chimera (mythology)|chimera]]. It is considered as an [[exorcising]] animal (辟邪 literally means "Avoid Evil") and is usually hornless.<ref name="Howard">[http://books.google.com/books?id=PGuPsNCaJdwC&pg=PA169 ''Chinese sculpture'' By Angela Falco Howard p.56]</ref><ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=l6ab-z8tps0C&pg=PA36 ''Text and ritual in early China'' By Martin Kern p.56]</ref> |
||
Line 14: | Line 12: | ||
|journal=Artibus Asiae |
|journal=Artibus Asiae |
||
|volume=42|issue=4|year=1980|pages=261–281}}</ref> |
|volume=42|issue=4|year=1980|pages=261–281}}</ref> |
||
<gallery> |
|||
⚫ | |||
File:Bixie.jpg|Sculpture in the Shanghai Museum |
|||
File:Stone Bixie. Eastern Han 25-220 CE. Luoyang.jpg|Stone statue from Luoyang during the Eastern Han period (25-220) |
|||
</gallery> |
|||
==See also== |
==See also== |
Revision as of 13:39, 15 September 2014
A Bixie (Chinese: 辟邪; pinyin: bìxié, Japanese: 辟邪, へきじゃ, Hekija), is a type of lion-like mythological Chinese creature, or chimera. It is considered as an exorcising animal (辟邪 literally means "Avoid Evil") and is usually hornless.[1][2]
The Bixie can have a pair of wings, which makes it rather similar to the Tianlu (Chinese:天禄, Japanese: 天禄, てんろく, Tenroku) in following early Chinese sculptural traditions of winged celestial beasts.[1]
The Bixie may have been an adoption from Mesopotamian art, through Persia and Bactria, as a consequence of extensive trade relations initiated by Emperor Han Wudi during the Han period.[3]
Some western scholars of Chinese art use the word "chimera" generically to refer to the bixie, qilin, and tianlu.[4]
-
Celadon from the Western Jin period (265-317)
-
Sculpture in the Shanghai Museum
-
Stone statue from Luoyang during the Eastern Han period (25-220)
See also
Notes
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bixie.
- ^ a b Chinese sculpture By Angela Falco Howard p.56
- ^ Text and ritual in early China By Martin Kern p.56
- ^ China: a history By Harold Miles Tanner p.129
- ^ Barry Till (1980), "Some Observations on Stone Winged Chimeras at Ancient Chinese Tomb Sites", Artibus Asiae, 42 (4): 261–281, JSTOR 3250032