Earliest mention Explicit accounts of the Yellow Emperor started to appear in Chinese texts during the
Warring States period. The earliest extant mention of Huangdi is an
inscription on the Chen Hou Yinqi
dui (), cast during the first half of the fourth century BC by the royal family (surnamed Tian ) of the
state of Qi, a powerful eastern state. As the Tian family had
usurped the throne of Qi, establishing such a divine heritage would positively affect their claim to legitimacy.
Harvard University historian Michael Puett writes that the Qi bronze inscription was one of several references to the Yellow Emperor in the fourth and third centuries BC within accounts of the creation of the state. Noting that many of the thinkers who were later identified as precursors of the
Huang–Lao – "Huangdi and Laozi" – tradition came from the state of Qi,
Robin D. S. Yates hypothesizes that Huang–Lao originated in that region.
Warring States period The cult of Huangdi became very popular during the
Warring States period (5th century – 221 BC), a period of intense competition between rival states which ended with the unification of the realm by the
state of Qin. In addition to his role as ancestor, he became associated with "centralized statecraft" and emerged as a figure paradigmatic of emperorship.
The state of Qin In his
Shiji,
Sima Qian claims that the
state of Qin started worshipping the Yellow Emperor in the fifth century BC, along with
Yandi, the Fiery Emperor. The altars were established at Yong (near modern
Fengxiang County in
Shaanxi province), which was the capital of Qin from 677 to 383 BC. By the time of
King Zheng, who became king of Qin in 247 BC and
First Emperor of a unified China in 221 BC, Huangdi had become by far the most important of the four "thearchs" (
di ) who were then worshiped at Yong.
The Shiji version The
Shiji (史記) begins with the
Basic Annals of the Five Emperors (五帝本紀), which opens with the
Yellow Emperor. At the end of this part,
Sima Qian, author of the
Shiji, acknowledged the difficulty of verifying the Yellow Emperor's existence due to unreliable legends. To authenticate the history, he conducted field research at sites like
Zhuolu and
Kongtong. His core methodology was cross-verification: he concluded that oral traditions which aligned with ancient texts were generally credible. Based on this standard, he selected the most "refined" accounts to compile the
Basic Annals. According to the
Shiji, the Yellow Emperor, named Xuanyuan (軒轅) (surname
Gongsun, 公孫), was the son of
Shaodian (少典). Described as possessing a divine nature and great intelligence from birth, he grew into a wise and capable leader. During the decline of the
Shennong (神農) clan, feudal lords fought among themselves, and the
Flame Emperor (Yandi, 炎帝) sought to oppress them. Xuanyuan cultivated virtue and trained an army to oppose him. He fought the Flame Emperor at the
Battle of Banquan (阪泉) and, after three engagements, emerged victorious. When the violent chieftain
Chi You (蚩尤) rebelled, Xuanyuan levied the armies of the feudal lords and defeated him at the
Battle of Zhuolu (涿鹿), capturing and executing him. Following this victory, the lords honored Xuanyuan as the "Yellow Emperor" to replace the Shennong dynasty, and he became the ruler of the realm. The Emperor established a vast domain extending to the sea in the east and the
Yangtze River in the south. He appointed officials titled "Cloud Officers" (雲) and performed frequent sacrifices to spirits and mountains. With the aid of ministers such as
Feng Hou (風后), he regulated the calendar and guided the people in the timely sowing of grains and the use of natural resources. He was titled the "Yellow Emperor" because his reign corresponded to the auspicious Earth Virtue (associated with the color yellow). The Yellow Emperor had twenty-five sons. His primary consort,
Leizu (嫘祖), bore him two sons:
Xuanxiao (玄囂) and
Changyi (昌意). Upon the Yellow Emperor's death (buried at
Mount Qiao, 橋山), he was succeeded by his grandson
Gaoyang (高陽) (the son of Changyi), who became Emperor
Zhuanxu (顓頊).
Imperial era (1388–1462). This painting is based on the story, first recounted in the
Zhuangzi, that the Yellow Emperor traveled to the
Kongtong Mountains to inquire about the
Dao with the
Daoist sage
Guangchengzi. The (), compiled by
Dai De towards the end of the
Western Han dynasty, carries a quote attributed to Confucius: The Yellow Emperor was credited with an enormous number of cultural legacies and esoteric teachings. While
Taoism is often regarded in the West as arising from
Laozi, many Chinese Taoists claim the Yellow Emperor formulated many of their precepts, including the quest for "long life". The ''
Yellow Emperor's Inner Canon ( Huángdì Nèijīng
), which presents the doctrinal basis of traditional Chinese medicine, was named after him. He was also credited with composing the Four Books of the Yellow Emperor ( Huángdì Sìjīng
), the Yellow Emperor's Book of the Hidden Symbol ( Huángdì Yīnfújīng''), and the "Yellow Emperor's Four Seasons Poem (軒轅黃帝四季詩)" included in the
Tung Shing fortune-telling almanac.
In Taoism In the second century AD, Huangdi's role as a deity was diminished because of the rise of a deified
Laozi. A state sacrifice offered to "Huang-Lao jun" was not offered to Huangdi and Laozi, as the term
Huang-Lao would have meant a few centuries earlier, "yellow Laozi". Nonetheless, Huangdi kept being considered as an immortal: he was seen as a master of longevity techniques and as a god who could reveal new teachings – in the form of texts such as the sixth-century
Huangdi Yinfujing – to his earthly followers.
Twentieth century The Yellow Emperor became a powerful national symbol in the last decade of the
Qing dynasty (1644–1911) and remained dominant in Chinese nationalist discourse throughout the
Republican period (1912–1949). The early twentieth century is also when the Yellow Emperor was first referred to as the
ancestor of all Chinese people.
Late Qing Starting in 1903, radical publications started using the projected date of his birth as the first year of the
Chinese calendar. Intellectuals such as
Liu Shipei (1884–1919) found this practice necessary in order to "preserve the [Han] race" (
baozhong ) from both dominance by
Manchu people and foreign encroachment. Revolutionaries motivated by
Anti-Manchuism such as
Chen Tianhua (1875–1905),
Zou Rong (1885–1905), and
Zhang Binglin (1868–1936) tried to foster the racial consciousness they thought was missing from their compatriots, and thus depicted the Manchus as racially inferior barbarians who were unfit to rule over
Han Chinese. Chen's widely circulated pamphlets claimed that the "Han race" formed one big family descended from the Yellow Emperor. The first issue (Nov. 1905) of the
Minbao ("People's Journal"), which was founded in Tokyo by revolutionaries of the
Tongmenghui, featured the Yellow Emperor on its cover and called Huangdi "the first great nationalist of the world." It was one of several nationalist magazines that featured the Yellow Emperor on their cover in the early twentieth century. The fact that Huangdi meant "yellow" emperor also served to buttress the theory that he was the originator of the "yellow race". Many historians interpret this sudden popularity of the Yellow Emperor as a reaction to the theories of French scholar
Albert Terrien de Lacouperie (1845–94), who in a book called
The Western Origin of the Early Chinese Civilization, from 2300 B.C. to 200 A.D. (1892) had claimed that Chinese civilization was founded around 2300 BCE by
Babylonian immigrants. Lacouperie's "
Sino-Babylonianism" posited that Huangdi was
King Nakhunte, a
Mesopotamian tribal leader who had led a massive migration of his people, from the Bak ethnic group, into China around 2300 BC and founded what later became Chinese civilization. European
sinologists quickly rejected these theories, but in 1900 two Japanese historians, Shirakawa Jirō and Kokubu Tanenori, omitted these criticisms and published a long summary that presented Lacouperie's views as the most advanced Western scholarship on China. Chinese scholars were quickly attracted by "the historicization of
Chinese mythology" that the two Japanese authors advocated.
Anti-Manchu intellectuals and activists who searched for China's "national essence" (
guocui ) adapted Sino-Babylonianism to their needs. Zhang Binglin explained Huangdi's
battle with Chi You as a conflict opposing the newly arrived civilized Mesopotamians to backward local tribes, a battle that transformed China into one of the most civilized places in the world. Zhang's reinterpretation of Sima Qian's account "underscored the need to recover the glory of early China." Liu Shipei also presented these early times as the golden age of Chinese civilization. In addition to tying the Chinese to an ancient center of human civilization in Mesopotamia, Lacouperie's theories suggested that China should be ruled by the descendants of Huangdi. In a controversial essay called
History of the Yellow Race (
Huangshi ), which was published serially from 1905 to 1908,
Huang Jie (; 1873–1935) claimed that the "Han race" was the true master of China because it was descended from the Yellow Emperor. Reinforced by the values of
filial piety and the
Chinese patrilineal clan, the racial vision defended by Huang and others turned vengeance against the Manchus into a duty owed to one's ancestors.
Republican period The Yellow Emperor continued to be revered after the
1911 Revolution, which overthrew the Qing dynasty. In 1912, for instance, banknotes carrying Huangdi's effigy were issued by the new Republican government. After 1911, however, the Yellow Emperor as national symbol changed from first progenitor of the Han race to ancestor of China's entire multi-ethnic population. Under the ideology of the
Five Races Under One Union, Huangdi became the common ancestor of the
Han Chinese, the
Manchu people, the
Mongols, the
Tibetans, and the
Hui people, who were said to form the
Zhonghua minzu, a broadly understood Chinese nation. Sixteen state ceremonies were held between 1911 and 1949 to Huangdi as the "founding ancestor of the
Chinese nation" () and even "the founding ancestor of human civilization" ().
Modern significance in
Huangling,
Yan'an, Shaanxi The cult of the Yellow Emperor was forbidden in the People's Republic of China until the end of the Cultural Revolution. The prohibition was halted during the 1980s when the government reversed itself and resurrected the "Yellow Emperor cult". Starting in the 1980s, the cult was revived and phrases relating to the "Descendants of Yan and Huang" were sometimes used by the Chinese state when referring to people of Chinese descent. In 1984, for example,
Deng Xiaoping argued for
Chinese unification saying "
Taiwan is rooted in the hearts of the descendants of the Yellow Emperor," whereas in 1986 the PRC acclaimed the Chinese-American astronaut
Taylor Wang as the first of the Yellow Emperor's descendants to
travel in space. In the first half of the 1980s, the Party had internally debated whether this usage would make
ethnic minorities feel excluded. After consulting experts from
Beijing University, the
Chinese Academy of Social Science, and the
Central Nationalities Institute, the
Central Propaganda Department recommended on March 27, 1985, that the Party speak of the
Zhonghua Minzu – the "Chinese nation" broadly defined – in official statements, but that the phrase "sons and grand-sons of Yandi and the Yellow Emperor" could be used in informal statements by party leaders and in "relations with
Hong Kong and Taiwanese compatriots and overseas Chinese compatriots". After retreating to Taiwan in late 1949 at the end of the
Chinese Civil War,
Chiang Kai-shek and the
Kuomintang (KMT) ruled that the
Republic of China (ROC) would keep paying homage to the Yellow Emperor on April 4, the National
Tomb Sweeping Day, but neither he nor the three presidents that succeeded him ever paid homage in person. In 1955, the KMT, which was led by Mandarin speakers and still poised on retaking
the mainland from the Communists, sponsored the production of the movie
Children of the Yellow Emperor (
Huangdi zisun ), which was filmed mostly in
Taiwanese Hokkien and showed extensive passages of
Taiwanese folk opera. Directed by Bai Ke (1914–1964), a former assistant of
Yuan Muzhi, it was a propaganda effort to convince speakers of Taiyu that they were linked to mainland people by common blood. In 2009
Ma Ying-jeou was the first ROC president to celebrate the Tomb Sweeping Day rituals for Huangdi in person, on which occasion he proclaimed that both
Chinese culture and common descent from the Yellow Emperor united people from
Taiwan and the mainland. Gay studies researcher Louis Crompton has cited
Ji Yun's report in his popular
Notes from the Yuewei
Hermitage (1800), that some claimed the Yellow Emperor was the first Chinese to take male bedmates, a claim that Ji Yun dismissed. Ji Yun argued that this was probably a false attribution. Today,
Xuanyuanjiao based on Taiwan represents an organised form of Yellow Emperor worship married to Confucian orthodoxy. ==Elements of Huangdi's myth==