statue is one of the 12
Chinese Zodiacal creatures portrayed in the Kowloon Walled City Park in Kowloon City, Hong Kong. For thousands of years, a twelve-year cycle named after various real or mythological animals has been used in Southeast Asia. This twelve-year cycle, sometimes referred to as the "
Chinese zodiac," associates each year in turn with a certain creature, in a fixed order of twelve animals, after which it returns to the first in the order, the
Rat. The eleventh in the cycle is the
Dog. One account is that the order of the beings-of-the-year is due to their order in a racing contest involving swimming across a river, in the
Great Race. The reason for the
Dog finishing the race second from last despite generally being a talented swimmer is explained as being due to its playful nature: the
Dog played and frolicked along the way, thus delaying completing the course and reaching the finishing line. The personalities of people born in
Dog years are popularly supposed to share certain attributes associated with
Dogs, such as loyalty or exuberance; however, this would be modified according to other considerations of
Chinese astrology, such as the influences of the month, day and hour of birth, according to the traditional system of
Earthly Branches, in which the zodiacal animals are also associated with the months and times of the day (and night), in twelve two-hour increments. The Hour of the
Dog is 7 to 9 p.m. and the
Dog is associated with the ninth lunar month. ==Panhu==