(
Fúxīng) inscribed ten thousand times, in
Jinzhou,
Dalian, Liaoning
Deities Besides common Chinese deities such as
Guāndì ( "
Lord Guan", the Marshal God of Loyalty & Justice), people of north China and Manchuria also have distinctive
zoomorphic deities, and the
worship of clusters of goddesses is popular. The gods are ordained in hierarchies, a pattern inherited from the Chinese
Confucian lineage system.
Fox deities have a very important position, with evident parallels in the
Japanese cult of
Inari Ōkami. Usually at the head of the pantheon are placed the "Great Lord of the Three Foxes" (
Húsān Tàiyé) and the "Great Lady of the Three Foxes" (
Húsān Tàinǎi). The Five Great Immortals (
Wǔdàxiān) are deities who reproduce
cosmological structures of common
Chinese theology. The cult generally includes: 1)
Húxiān ( "Fox Immortal") or
Húshén ( "Fox God"), the most important deity in northeast China; 2)
Huángxiān ( literally "Yellow Immortal") the Weasel God, who holds the position of the Yellow Deity of Chinese theology; 3)
Shéxiān ( literally "Snake Immortal"), also called
Liǔxiān ( "Immortal Liu") or
Mǎngxiān ( "Python (or Boa) Immortal"), who can represent the
Dragon God,
Fuxi and
Nüwa; 4)
Báixiān ( "White Immortal") is the Hedgehog God; and 5)
Hēixiān ( "Black Immortal") who can be the
Wūyāxiān ( "Crow Immortal") or the
Huīxiān ( "Rat Immortal"). While the Fox God and the Weasel God always remain the two prominent members of the cult of the zoomorphic deities, the other positions vary in some regions including the Tiger, the Wolf, the Hare and the Turtle Gods. Other areas host the worship of the Leopard, the Mole, the Toad and the Rabbit Gods. In certain counties of
Hebei they are reduced to four (
Sìdàxiān) including the Fox, the Weasel, the Hedgehog and the Snake Gods. Common Chinese deities are associated to the cult of the zoomorphic gods. For instance,
Huáng Dàxiān ( "Great Yellow Immortal") is popular in north and northeast China, he is totally different from
Wong Tai Sin and has no relation to
Taoism as in southeastern China, the deity is rather identified as the Weasel God. Local terminology distinguishes the animal gods as the middle way between the
shàngfáng shénxiān ( "everlasting gods") gods of the greater
cosmos important in Taoism, that are only worshipped and do not take possession of shamans; and the
yīnxiān ( "underworld gods"), deceased beings who became gods through self-cultivation (
ancestors and
progenitors). In northeastern Taoism, besides the Fox Gods, the pantheon is headed by a goddess, the "Black Mother" (
Hēi māmā).
Shamanism Qixiang (), which combines a variety of cultural elements including shamanism, Han people burning incense and military sacrificial rites, is a sacrificial culture in Northeast China created by the
Han bannermen. Northeastern shamans consider themselves to be "disciples" (
dìzǐ ) of the gods rather than mere channels of communication between the gods and the human world. Another name used to refer to these ritual masters is
xiāngtóu ( "incense heads"). Their practice is generally called
chumaxian (), which means "the gods who take action" or more literally "riding for the immortals", a definition which implies that the gods and their disciples act as an organic whole, and in their action, form and content they express themselves together. There are two types of possession that the northeastern shamans experience in terms of consciousness:
quánméng ( "complete unconsciousness", in which the disciple is not aware of what happens and what the god says) and
bànméng ( "semi-unconsciousness", in which the disciple is aware of what happens during the possession). They also practise a communication with ancestors through an
ecstatic experience called
guòyīn ( "passing to the underworld"). This is part of the practices of both
chumaxian and related communal rites of broader Chinese local religion. Northeastern
Chinese shamanism shares similarities with Southern Chinese mediumship (
jitong), Japanese
Shinto practices, and various other shamanisms in the region (
Tungus and
Manchu shamanism,
Mongolian shamanism,
Korean shamanism, broader
Siberian shamanism). Historically it is the result of the encounter of
Han Chinese and
Manchu cultures, especially the Han cult of the fox and Manchu "wild ritual" (
wuwate, Chinese:
yějì ). Northeastern Chinese shamans are predominantly women, like the shamans of Northeast Asian shamanism, while Southern Chinese mediums are almost exclusively men. Moreover, while northeastern shamans are usually independent from formal religious institutions, southern medium specialists often collaborate with
Taoist priests. Another distinction is that while Southern Chinese mediums can acquire their role through training, and they are possessed mainly by Taoist and strictly
Chinese Deities, northeastern shamans are "chosen" or "ordained" by gods themselves (through
mo, "sickness") as in other shamanic traditions, and their gods are animal totems. When a future disciple is chosen, she experiences
mo ("sickness").
Places of worship and shaman halls In northeast China terminology for religious places and groups may follow the
common Chinese model, with
miao () defining any "sacred precinct" dedicated to a god. However, a different terminology exists and temples may be called
xiāntáng ( "hall of the immortals") or
tángzi (), the latter name inherited from the temples of the
bolongzi (Chinese:
jiājì , "ancestral ritual") of Manchu shamanism. Shamans also hold "immediate halls" of worship (
lìtáng ) in their houses.
Folk religious sects Since
Chinese Buddhism and professional
Taoism were never well developed in northeast China, the religious life of the region has been heavily influenced by networks of
folk salvationist sects and
Confucian churches, characterised by a congregational structure and a scriptural core. During the Japanese occupation they were not studied, but their role as a moral catalyser for the Han race was emphasised. The
Yiguandao ( "Consistent Way") had a strong presence in the area, but were especially the
Guiyidao ( "Way of the Return to the One") and the
Shanrendao ( "Way of the Virtuous Man", which social body was known as the Universal Church of the Way and its Virtue) to have millions of followers in Manchuria alone. Shanrendao remains widespread even after the Maoist period and the
Cultural Revolution, and headquarters of the Church of the Way and its Virtue have been re-established in
Beijing in the 2010s. In more recent decades northeast China has also seen the rise of the
Falun Gong, which was founded in the 1990s in
Jilin. During the period of
Manchukuo also many
Japanese new religions, or independent
Shinto sects, proselytised in Manchuria establishing hundreds of congregations. Most of the missions belonged to the
Omoto teaching, the
Tenri teaching and the
Konko teaching of Shinto. The Omoto teaching is the Japanese near equivalent of Guiyidao, as the two religions have common roots and history. ==See also==