During the
Han dynasty, different forms of the dragon dance were described in ancient texts. Rain dance performed at times of drought may involve the use of figures of dragon as
Chinese dragon was associated with rain in ancient China, for example the dragon
Yinglong was considered a rain deity, and the
Shenlong had the power to determine how much wind and rain to bring. According to the Han dynasty text
Luxuriant Dew of the Spring and Autumn Annals by
Dong Zhongshu, as part of a ritual to appeal for rain, clay figures of the dragons were made and children or adults may then perform a dance. The number of dragons, their length and color, as well as the performers may vary according to the time of year. Other dances involving dragons may be found in a popular form of entertainment during the Han dynasty, the
baixi ()
variety shows, where performers called "mime people" () dressed up as various creatures such as beasts, fish and dragons. In his
Lyric Essay on Western Capital ()
Zhang Heng recorded various performances such as performers who dressed as a green dragon playing a flute, and a fish-dragon act where fish transformed into a dragon. A version of the fish-dragon dance called "fish-dragon extending" () was also performed at the Han court to entertain foreign guests – in this dance a mythical beast of Shenli () transforms into a
flounder, then to a dragon. These ancient dances however do not resemble modern Dragon Dance in their descriptions, and depictions of dragon dance in Han dynasty stone relief engravings suggest that the props used may also be cumbersome, unlike modern Dragon Dance where light-weight dragons are manipulated by performers. The dragon acts of the Han dynasty were also mentioned in the
Tang and
Song dynasty. Figures similar to the dragon lantern () used during
Lantern Festival were described in the Song dynasty work
Dreams of Splendor of the Eastern Capital, where figures of dragon mounted for display were constructed out of grass and cloth and inside which numerous candle lights may be placed. Such dragon lanterns may also be carried and paraded by performers in the street during the Lantern festival at nighttime. A wide variety of dragon dances have developed in various regions in China, for example, the
Fenghua Cloth Dragon () from
Zhejiang was made with bamboo frame and covered with cloth, and is said to have been developed in the 1200s. A form of dragon dance from
Tongliang County (), which originated as snake totem worship, began during the
Ming dynasty and became popular in the
Qing dynasty. In the modern era, the government of
People's Republic of China adapted and promoted various traditional folk dances, which contributed to the popularity of the current form of the dragon dance now found widely in China as well as Chinese communities around the world. The popular form is the Northern Dragon which has a smaller, lighter and more manoeuvrable body, allowing it to be controlled by the dancers faster, unlike the Southern Dragon which is heavier, longer and grander and designed to be paraded rather than agile movements. Aside from the popular form of dragon dance, other regional dragon dances include one from
Zhanjiang,
Guangdong province whereby the body of the dragon is formed entirely of a human chain of dozens to hundreds of performers, and in
Pujiang County,
Zhejiang Province, the body of the dragon is formed using wooden stools. The number of different dragon dances has been put at over 700. Typically, retired dragons are burned and not saved. The head of the oldest surviving dragon, dating back to 1878 and named
Moo Lung, is preserved and on display at the
Bok Kai Temple in
Marysville, California. Other fragments of dragons of similar age are kept at the
Sweetwater County Historical Museum in
Green River, Wyoming (1893, eyes only),
Gold Museum in
Ballarat (1897, head only), and the
Golden Dragon Museum in
Bendigo (1901, the oldest complete dragon, named
Loong). Bendigo's
Loong was used regularly in that city's Easter parade until 1970, and occasionally has come out of storage since then to welcome newer dragons to Bendigo. == Dragon structure ==