China History Forum, Chinese History Forum: Qilin 麒麟 - China History Forum, Chinese History Forum

Jump to content

  • (7 Pages)
  • +
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • Last »
  • You cannot start a new topic
  • You cannot reply to this topic

Qilin 麒麟 Kirin Unicorn Ch'ilin Kylin Rate Topic: ***** 1 Votes

#1 User is offline   Ghost_of_Han

  • Grand Mentor (Taishi 太师)
  • Icon
  • Group: Entry Scholar (Xiucai)
  • Posts: 439
  • Joined: 05-June 04

  • Location:Michigan

  • Interests:Chinese History, and Chinese

  • Main Interest in CHF:
    Chinese History

Posted 22 July 2004 - 07:36 PM

Well yesterday I was watching the PBS special on How China Discovered America, and when the fleet got to Africa and saw a giraffe, they called it a Qi lin (I'm guessing on the pin yin). And said it was like the the Chinese Unicorn. And legends being a big interst of mine, I wanted to know more. So could anyone tell me where this came from. I never heard of the animal in History ever, never use in quote or saying (kinda like the Panda Bear post, but it was real). And a picture Would be wonderful if they actually have one.
0

#2 User is offline   Kulong

  • Grand Marshal (Da Sima/Taiwei 大司马/太尉)
  • Icon
  • Group: CHF Grand Historian Award
  • Posts: 1,487
  • Joined: 28-June 04

Post icon  Posted 22 July 2004 - 07:56 PM

Qilin 麒麟 is a Chinese mythical animal, much like the dragon.

When Zheng He brought a giraffe back from Africa, many thought it was the mythical Qilin probably due to the fact that the giraffe was a never-before-seen animal and it had short horns on its head among other physical features that may resemble Qilin.

I don't know why people call Qilin the "Chinese Unicorn" as Qilin is not a horse nor does it have a single horn on its head. <_<

You don't hear Chinese calling the unicorn the "European Qilin" :D
生為中國人,死為中國魂。

"You can believe in any god, as long as it's our God."
0

#3 User is offline   General_Zhaoyun

  • Grand Valiant General of Imperial Han Army
  • Icon
  • Group: Admin
  • Posts: 10,958
  • Joined: 24-May 04

  • Gender:Male

  • Location:Singapore (Taiwanese/Singapore Permanent Resident)

  • Interests:Chinese History, Chinese Philosophy, Chinese languages, Hokkien language, Classical Chinese, General Chinese Culture

  • Languages spoken:Mandarin, Taiwanese Hokkien, English, German, Singlish

  • Ethnic Groups or Race:Han Chinese (Taiwanese Hoklo)

  • Main Interest in CHF:
    General Chinese Culture

  • Specialisation / Expertise:
    Chinese Culture, chinese language and literature, confucianism, buddhism, chinese strategy

Posted 22 July 2004 - 09:59 PM

I once had a Qilin jade .. it looks like a lion with the deer's horn and is a sacred animal who will bless one and protect one from evil spirits.
Posted ImagePosted Image

"夫君子之行:静以修身,俭以养德;非淡泊无以明志,非宁静无以致远。" - 诸葛亮

One should seek serenity to cultivate the body, thriftiness to cultivate the morals. Seeking fame and wealth will not lead to noble ideal. Only by seeking serenity will one reach far. -
Zhugeliang
0

#4 User is offline   Yun

  • Sage-King
  • Icon
  • Group: CHF Han Lin Scholar
  • Posts: 9,057
  • Joined: 30-May 04

  • Gender:Male

  • Location:Singapore/USA

  • Interests:Ancient Chinese history, with a focus on the Age of Fragmentation. Chinese ethnicities, religion, philosophy, music, and art and material culture. Military history in general.

  • Main Interest in CHF:
    Chinese History

  • Specialisation / Expertise:
    Three Kingdoms, Age of Fragmentation, Sui-Tang

Posted 23 July 2004 - 01:01 AM

The Qilin has, according to some sources, "the body of a deer, the tail of an ox, the hooves of a horse, a body covered with the scales of a fish, and a single horn." That's the origin of the term "Chinese unicorn". However, the Qilin is also often portrayed as having the antlers of a deer - this is a mix-up with the Chinese dragon (long), which does have antlers. See my comment on the picture of the dragon Chiwen in
http://www.chinahist...p?showtopic=333

The Qilin supposedly is a benevolent creature that is only seen during the reign of a benevolent ruler - in the Chunqiu (Spring and Autumn Annals), a Qilin is said to have been captured towards the end of Confucius' life, and Han philosophers later reasoned that this was because Confucius was a benevolent "king without a throne".

The presentation of the giraffe to the court of Zhu Di (Yongle) would have suggested to court ideologists that this was a sign of the emperor's benevolence. It was easy to consider the giraffe to be a Qilin - it does have a head like a deer's, a tail like an ox's, hooves rather like a horse's, a pattern on its body like scales, and two horns (but not one). In fact, some Chinese scholars suggest that the myth of the Qilin arose from a giraffe-like animal that may have once lived in China - perhaps another member of the giraffe family, of which only the giraffe and okapi are left. This bears some similarities to the theory mentioned by Kongmun about the origin of the dragon myth: see

http://www.chinahist...p?showtopic=333
The dead have passed beyond our power to honour or dishonour them, but not beyond our ability to try and understand.
0

#5 User is offline   Kulong

  • Grand Marshal (Da Sima/Taiwei 大司马/太尉)
  • Icon
  • Group: CHF Grand Historian Award
  • Posts: 1,487
  • Joined: 28-June 04

Posted 23 July 2004 - 08:50 AM

I don't think I've ever seen a Qilin with a single horn...

http://www.ccdemo.in...QilinBeastZ.JPG

http://shopping.263....g/195/qilin.jpg
生為中國人,死為中國魂。

"You can believe in any god, as long as it's our God."
0

#6 User is offline   Ghost_of_Han

  • Grand Mentor (Taishi 太师)
  • Icon
  • Group: Entry Scholar (Xiucai)
  • Posts: 439
  • Joined: 05-June 04

  • Location:Michigan

  • Interests:Chinese History, and Chinese

  • Main Interest in CHF:
    Chinese History

Posted 23 July 2004 - 09:00 AM

It reminds me of a Lion.
0

#7 User is offline   Ghost_of_Han

  • Grand Mentor (Taishi 太师)
  • Icon
  • Group: Entry Scholar (Xiucai)
  • Posts: 439
  • Joined: 05-June 04

  • Location:Michigan

  • Interests:Chinese History, and Chinese

  • Main Interest in CHF:
    Chinese History

Posted 23 July 2004 - 09:08 AM

If the Qilin was a CHiense myth why would the Japanese have it? The guy said on the site that he might be wrong, I thing he probaley is. It just doesn't make sense.
0

#8 User is offline   Yun

  • Sage-King
  • Icon
  • Group: CHF Han Lin Scholar
  • Posts: 9,057
  • Joined: 30-May 04

  • Gender:Male

  • Location:Singapore/USA

  • Interests:Ancient Chinese history, with a focus on the Age of Fragmentation. Chinese ethnicities, religion, philosophy, music, and art and material culture. Military history in general.

  • Main Interest in CHF:
    Chinese History

  • Specialisation / Expertise:
    Three Kingdoms, Age of Fragmentation, Sui-Tang

Posted 23 July 2004 - 09:23 AM

The usual depictions we see of Qilin today are from later imperial China, when the image of the Qilin had been much corrupted and confused with the dragon. For a look at what the Qilin originally looked like in mythology, see:

http://www.archaeoli...ina_gallery.htm

The elephant is interesting (suggesting that there were still elephants in the south at the time), but look at the beast with a single horn. That's been identified as a Qilin by experts.
The dead have passed beyond our power to honour or dishonour them, but not beyond our ability to try and understand.
0

#9 User is offline   Ghost_of_Han

  • Grand Mentor (Taishi 太师)
  • Icon
  • Group: Entry Scholar (Xiucai)
  • Posts: 439
  • Joined: 05-June 04

  • Location:Michigan

  • Interests:Chinese History, and Chinese

  • Main Interest in CHF:
    Chinese History

Posted 23 July 2004 - 09:41 AM

http://www.ccdemo.in...QilinBeastZ.JPG

I think this is the Temple of Heaven or the Summer place isn't it?
0

#10 User is offline   Yun

  • Sage-King
  • Icon
  • Group: CHF Han Lin Scholar
  • Posts: 9,057
  • Joined: 30-May 04

  • Gender:Male

  • Location:Singapore/USA

  • Interests:Ancient Chinese history, with a focus on the Age of Fragmentation. Chinese ethnicities, religion, philosophy, music, and art and material culture. Military history in general.

  • Main Interest in CHF:
    Chinese History

  • Specialisation / Expertise:
    Three Kingdoms, Age of Fragmentation, Sui-Tang

Posted 23 July 2004 - 09:54 AM

Yes, that's in the Summer Palace (Yiheyuan). Here's the explanatory text for the statue, which carries the later version of what the Qilin looked like:

http://www.ccdemo.in...5QilinText.html
The dead have passed beyond our power to honour or dishonour them, but not beyond our ability to try and understand.
0

#11 User is offline   Yun

  • Sage-King
  • Icon
  • Group: CHF Han Lin Scholar
  • Posts: 9,057
  • Joined: 30-May 04

  • Gender:Male

  • Location:Singapore/USA

  • Interests:Ancient Chinese history, with a focus on the Age of Fragmentation. Chinese ethnicities, religion, philosophy, music, and art and material culture. Military history in general.

  • Main Interest in CHF:
    Chinese History

  • Specialisation / Expertise:
    Three Kingdoms, Age of Fragmentation, Sui-Tang

Posted 23 July 2004 - 10:10 AM

Another Eastern Han depiction of the Qilin (with a Daoist immortal riding it):

http://www.qingyun.c...oming/yuren.htm

The commentary says that the Qilin originally didn't have scales and had the fur of a normal deer, but when the fur was commonly painted in a scale-like pattern, the Qilin slowly developed into an animal with fish scales.
The dead have passed beyond our power to honour or dishonour them, but not beyond our ability to try and understand.
0

#12 User is offline   MengTzu

  • Emperor (Huangdi 皇帝)
  • Icon
  • Group: Entry Scholar (Xiucai)
  • Posts: 2,084
  • Joined: 23-August 04

  • Main Interest in CHF:
    Chinese Philosophy

  • Specialisation / Expertise:
    General Chinese Philosophy and Religion, Confucianism

Posted 14 October 2004 - 08:42 PM

Hey Yun,

I might be way off here, but I think (I probably read it somewhere) some also commented that Confucius recorded the event of the Qilin to show that the king of Lu was dumb enough to hunt such a sacred creature signifies the end of prosperity, or that the hunting of a sacred creature signifies the same, and therefore Confucius got disappointed and stopped writing the Chun Qiu.

Peace,

Michael

10-14-2004
0

#13 User is offline   kaiselin

  • Emperor (Huangdi 皇帝)
  • Icon
  • Group: CHF Chief Editor
  • Posts: 5,530
  • Joined: 10-December 06

  • Gender:Female

  • Location: Northwest OHIO

  • Main Interest in CHF:
    Chinese Mythology

  • Specialisation / Expertise:
    Esoteric symbols, and the intangible yin world as expressed in classical Chinese art, culture and mythology.

Posted 28 March 2007 - 10:52 PM

I just found a book on unicorns that said there are 6 kinds of Qilin.

It stated:
"Chinese writer enumerate six different sorts of unicorns:
the King, the Kioh Twan, the Poh, the Hiai Chai , the Too Jon Sheu, and the Ki-lin; but it seem probable that all six are derived from a single original."

The books footnote said that this came from "Mythical Monsters" by Gould 1886
It goes on to say that Gould had the assistance from Chinese scholars in preparing the chapter.

Has anyone ever seen this info before?

I am going to start looking for other references but I do not know what the names would be in Pinyin.

The King I am guessing would be Wang, and Ki-lin is obvious, but the rest I can't figure out. I don't do Wade Guiles well but I'm not even sure its that.
any help would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Kaiselin

This post has been edited by kaiselin: 28 March 2007 - 11:41 PM

You can only go halfway into the darkest forest; then you are coming out the other side.


0

#14 User is offline   Shaolin

  • State Undersecretary (Shangshu Lang 尚书郎)
  • Icon
  • Group: Super Moderator
  • Posts: 610
  • Joined: 22-June 06

  • Gender:Male

  • Location:Singapura

  • Interests:Three Kingdoms, Age of Fragmentation, Chinese Mythology.

  • Main Interest in CHF:
    Chinese History

  • Specialisation / Expertise:
    Three Kingdoms

Posted 29 March 2007 - 05:32 AM

Post the pictures if you can....I am sure everyone is interested to see it....
無為
Eternal Vigilance Is the Price of Liberty
0

#15 User is offline   Publius

  • Grand Marshal (Da Sima/Taiwei 大司马/太尉)
  • Icon
  • Group: Entry Scholar (Xiucai)
  • Posts: 1,399
  • Joined: 28-August 06

  • Gender:Male

  • Location:Rockford, MI

  • Interests:I enjoy Nature, reading, writing, history, cultures, biking, hockey, football, cinema, and spending time with my wife Patty.

  • Main Interest in CHF:
    Any chinese-related stuff

  • Specialisation / Expertise:
    none

Posted 29 March 2007 - 08:38 AM

View Postkaiselin, on Mar 28 2007, 11:52 PM, said:

I am going to start looking for other references but I do not know what the names would be in Pinyin.


KC,

you may want to check out this Wade-Giles to Pinyin conversion sheet from UCLA:
http://www.library.u...ian/ctable2.htm

there's also a Pinyin to Wade-Giles version:
http://www.library.u...ian/ctable3.htm

[Note: Topic merged with previous Qilin thread]
Avatar compliments of Lord Yoda
0

  • (7 Pages)
  • +
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • Last »
  • You cannot start a new topic
  • You cannot reply to this topic

1 User(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users


Visitors have visited CHF