are first recorded in early Chinese canonical
Twenty-Four Histories:
Sima Qian's (c. 91 BCE) ,
Ban Gu's (82 CE) ,
Chen Shou's (289 CE) , and
Fan Ye's (445 CE) . DeWoskin translated biographies from the latter three histories, but some reviewers criticized him for ignoring Ngo's French translation of the same biographies. These historical texts document that during the late
Warring States period (475–221 BCE), originated in northern China and specialized in techniques. During the
Qin dynasty (221–206 BCE) and
Han dynasty (206 BCE – 220 CE), were patronized by emperors who sought the
elixir of immortality. By the middle of the
Six Dynasties Period (220–569 CE), the role of had declined and their techniques had been adapted into
Daoist religion and
traditional Chinese medicine. The word first appears in the of the "Records of the Grand Historian". This context concerns
Qin Shi Huang (r. 221–210 BCE), the first Qin emperor traveling and performing sacrifices in the northeastern coastal states of and (present-day
Shandong,
Hebei, and
Liaoning). During the era of
King Wei (r. c. 356–320 BCE) and King Xuan (r. 319–301 BCE) of Qi and King Zhao (r. 311–279 BCE) of Yan, claimed to have studied the techniques of
Zou Yan, who systematized
Yin-Yang and the
Five Phases. Song Wuji, Zhengbo Qiao, Chong Shang, Xianmen Gao, and Zui Hou were all men of Yan who practiced magic and followed the way of the immortals, discarding their mortal forms and changing into spiritual beings by means of supernatural aid. Zou Yan won fame among the feudal lords for his theories of the and and the succession of the five elements, but the [] magicians who lived along the seacoast of Qi and Yan, though they claimed to transmit his teachings, were unable to understand them. Thus from this time there appeared a host of men, too numerous to mention, who expounded all sorts of weird and fantastic theories and went to any lengths to flatter the rulers of the day and to ingratiate themselves with them. Compare Welch's translation, "they practiced the Tao of recipes and immortality ( []).Their bodies were released, dissolved, and transformed. They relied on serving ghosts ( []) and spirits ( [])." These early asserted to know of three divine mountains where the elixir of immortality existed,
Penglai , Fangzhang , and Yingzhou in the
Bohai Sea. From the age of Kings Wei and Xuan of Qi and King Zhao of Yan, men were sent from time to time to set out to sea and search for the islands of Penglai, Fangzhang, and Yingzhou. These were three spirit mountains which were supposed to exist in the Gulf of Bohai. They were not very far from the land of men, it was said, but the difficulty was that, whenever a boat was about to touch their shores, a wind would always spring up and drive it away. In the past, people said, there had been men who succeeded in reaching them, and found them peopled by fairy sprits who possessed the elixir of immortality. All the plants and birds and animals of the islands were white, and the palaces and gates were made of gold and silver. Seen from afar, the three spirit mountains looked like clouds but, as one drew closer, they seemed instead to be down under the water. In any event, as soon as anyone got near to them, the wind would suddenly come and drag the boat away, so that in the end no one could ever reach them. The also records that the Qin emperor dispatched the
Xu Fu to obtain the elixir of life from the
Anqi Sheng, who lived on Mount Penglai in 219 BCE, and then sent Lu Sheng "Master Lu" in 215 BCE. The emperor subsequently dispatched three other expeditions to the spirit islands, but none returned to China.
Emperor Wu of Han (r. 141–87 BCE) lavishly patronized , writes DeWoskin, "to such an extent that virtually anyone with a plausible 'secret tradition' rushed to court to collect his reward". Emperor Wu's uncle and advisor
Liu An (179–122 BCE, compiler of the ) gathered "several thousand" and compiled their techniques of and . Two famous advised Emperor Wu to emulate the legendary
Yellow Emperor's practices. The alchemist
Li Shaojun attempted to recreate the Yellow Emperor's rite to transform cinnabar into gold. The architect Gongyu Dai claimed to have the Yellow Emperor's plans for a 12-story pentagonal hall, which Emperor Wu had rebuilt in 102 BCE. Csikszentmihalyi elucidates the category's chronological development by contrasting its place in these early Chinese histories. In the
Records of the Grand Historian, "the methods () used by the generally concerned demons and spirits: methods for retreating from old age (), methods involving demons and gods (), and methods for gods, monsters and anomalies ()." The
Book of Later Han chapter on broadened the category to include omen and portent techniques such as . The
Records of Three Kingdoms combined the Han historical categories of and into a chapter on . "Thus, the , originally experts in matters of the spirits, came by the late Han to include the ubiquitous experts in detecting shifts in the balance of the natural world." Fangshi originated in southern China. Sin was punished by ailments in the view of the Heavenly Masters. The Shangqing syncretized the Heavenly Masters with fangshi. Buddhism, Fangshi, and Heavenly Masters were synchronized in Lingbao. Buddhism,
Celestial Masters and fangshi all contributed to the religious canon of Lingbao. Celestial Master petitions to divinities were copied by the canon of the Lingbao and fangshi rites were also copied by them. ==Techniques==