Interpreting the Inheritance Mechanism of the Wu Yue Sacred Mountains in China Using Structuralist and Semiotic Approaches
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. The Structuralist Geography Approach to Sacred Mountains Research
2.2. The Semiotic Approach to Sacred Mountains Research
3. Method and Sources
4. The Structuralist Geographical Analysis of the Wu Yue
4.1. The Surface Structure of the Wu Yue
4.2. The Deep Structure of the Wu Yue
4.3. Varying Surface Structure and Constant Deep Structure
5. The Semiotic Analysis
5.1. The First Level of the Sign of the Wu Yue
5.2. The Second Level of the Sign of the Wu Yue
5.3. The Third Level of the Sign of the Wu Yue
6. Conclusions and Discussion
6.1. Conclusions
6.2. Discussion
Author Contributions
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Title of the Ancient Book | Author | Publication Date | Main Information | Link | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Book of Documents | Unknown | The Warring States Period (475 BC to 221 BC) | The Si Yue consisted of the East, South, West and North Yue. Though the location of the East Yue is mentioned, the locations of the other three sacred mountains are not. | http://103.242.200.9/ancientbook/portal/readPage/28701860C29B4BFFB5DAC6F3C12D9EDA/9/index.do?heightWord=%25E5 |
2 | The Rites of Zhou | Unknown | The Warring States Period (475 BC to 221 BC) | The Wu Yue had supreme status and authority among the sacred mountains in China at that time. | http://103.242.200.9/ancientbook/portal/readPage/A632DB10DBDE4FA5B425DDE4B55619AB/242/index.do?heightWord=%25E5 |
3 | The Rites of Zhou | Unknown | The Warring States Period (475 BC to 221 BC) | The North Yue was in Bing Prefecture, but the geographic name of the North Yue is not mentioned. | http://103.242.200.9/ancientbook/portal/readPage/5665E32920CF4D4BA89F28381027B97D/323/index.do?heightWord=%25E6 |
4 | The Book of Rites | Unknown | The Warring States Period (475 BC to 221 BC) | The Wu Yue had the power to stabilize the entire country. | http://103.242.200.9/ancientbook/portal/readPage/C690DA82DA374B999C9C0485B62A0DD2/84/index.do?heightWord=%25E5 |
5 | Shih Chi | Maqian Si | The Western Han Dynasty (202 BC to 9 AD) | The First Emperor of Qin divided nine sacred mountains around the country into the eastern group and the western group after he unified China in 221 BC. | http://103.242.200.9/ancientbook/portal/readPage/2BAAFDC81FE9453D95FFD0E662483E1A/636/index.do?heightWord=%25E6 |
6 | Shih Chi | Maqian Si | The Western Han Dynasty (202 BC to 9 AD) | The North Yue was Mount Chang, also called Mount Damao | http://103.242.200.9/ancientbook/portal/readPage/D6FB8F2FA8D84EC8AC6711B8A8B89FCB/68/index.do?heightWord=%25E5%25B8%25B8%25E5%25B1%25B1 |
7 | Book of Han | Gu Ban | The Eastern Han Dynasty (25 AD to 220 AD) | In 61 BC, Emperor Xuan of the Western Han Dynasty claimed the geographical entities of the Wu Yue in an imperial edict. | http://103.242.200.9/ancientbook/portal/readPage/932AD2B5A280426B94C001592E7529DF/812/index.do?heightWord=%25E4 |
8 | Fengsu Tongyi | Zhao Ying | The Eastern Han Dynasty (25 AD to 220 AD) | The basic elements, colors, seasons, and magical animals associated with each sacred mountain of the Wu Yue. | http://103.242.200.9/ancientbook/portal/readPage/4B429A98C14443F5B0E654E0901CEC91/121/index.do?heightWord=%25E5 |
9 | Zhenzhongshu | Hong Ge | The Eastern Jin Dynasty (25 AD to 220 AD) | The gods inhabiting each sacred mountain of the Wu Yue. | http://103.242.200.9/ancientbook/portal/readPage/C8E0D0B1A3A149068B56BA713F1C1307/6/index.do?heightWord=%25E5 |
10 | The History of Wei | Shou Wei | The Northern and Southern Dynasties (420 AD to 589 AD) | Emperor Xiaowen of the Northern Wei Dynasty proposed to move the capital from Pingcheng City to Luoyang City because the former was outside the sacred space of the Wu Yue. | http://103.242.200.9/ancientbook/portal/readPage/1468C317887547E0B46172148BC8BEB6/215/index.do?heightWord=%25E4 |
11 | Dream Pool Essays | Kuo Shen | The Northern Song Dynasty (960 AD to 1127 AD) | Mount Damao is the North Yue. | http://103.242.200.9/ancientbook/portal/readPage/6B02919DDCBB475397613823584A3D52/284/index.do?heightWord=%25E5 |
12 | Jin History | Tuo Tuo | The Ming Dynasty (1368 AD to 1644 AD) | Some officials proposed to select another mountain north of the capital (contemporary Beijing) as the North Yue to place the capital inside the sacred space of the Wu Yue. | http://103.242.200.9/ancientbook/portal/readPage/E11D0489D64744708B57EEF382C4BEF3/1159/index.do?heightWord=%25E5 |
13 | Hunyuan Local Chronicles | Jingshun Gui | The Qing Dynasty (1636 AD to 1912 AD) | In 1660 AD, the Qing government officially declared that the location of the North Yue was in Hunyuan County rather Quyang County. | http://103.242.200.9/ancientbook/portal/readPage/53123B063F4844C29404DCD463DA89CF/70/index.do?heightWord=%25E6 |
14 | Dushi Fangyu Jiyao | Zuyu Gu | The Qing Dynasty (1636 AD to 1912 AD) | In 589 AD, Emperor Wen of the Sui Dynasty named Mount Heng in Hunnan Province instead of Mount Huo as the South Yue. | http://103.242.200.9/ancientbook/portal/readPage/2CE526F54A3C407E80407895D9BE5C08/3675/index.do?heightWord=%25E5%258D%2597%25E5%25B2%25B3 |
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Level | 1st | 2nd | 3rd |
---|---|---|---|
Signifier | Original name of the mountain | Sacred mountain’s name in the Wu Yue (East Yue, South Yue, West Yue, North Yue and Center Yue) | The spatial pattern of the Wu Yue |
Signified | Entity of the mountain | The place of a god and the category of his power (see Figure 3) | The Five Elements Philosophy |
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Zhou, S.; Xu, W. Interpreting the Inheritance Mechanism of the Wu Yue Sacred Mountains in China Using Structuralist and Semiotic Approaches. Sustainability 2018, 10, 2127. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10072127
Zhou S, Xu W. Interpreting the Inheritance Mechanism of the Wu Yue Sacred Mountains in China Using Structuralist and Semiotic Approaches. Sustainability. 2018; 10(7):2127. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10072127
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhou, Shangyi, and Weilin Xu. 2018. "Interpreting the Inheritance Mechanism of the Wu Yue Sacred Mountains in China Using Structuralist and Semiotic Approaches" Sustainability 10, no. 7: 2127. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10072127
APA StyleZhou, S., & Xu, W. (2018). Interpreting the Inheritance Mechanism of the Wu Yue Sacred Mountains in China Using Structuralist and Semiotic Approaches. Sustainability, 10(7), 2127. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10072127