Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors 三皇五帝 | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Government | Monarchy | ||||||
Emperor | |||||||
• c. 2852 – c. 2738 BC | Fuxi | ||||||
• c. 2737 – c. 2638 BC | Shennong | ||||||
• c. 2637 – c. 2598 BC | Yellow Emperor | ||||||
• c. 2597 – c. 2514 BC | Shaohao | ||||||
• c. 2513 – c. 2436 BC | Zhuanxu | ||||||
• c. 2435 – c. 2366 BC | Ku | ||||||
• c. 2365 – c. 2256 BC | Yao | ||||||
• c. 2255 – c. 2206 BC | Shun | ||||||
|
Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chinese | 三皇五帝 | ||||||||||||
|
Part of a series on the |
History of China |
---|
According to Chinese mythology and traditional Chinese historiography, the Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors (Chinese: 三皇五帝; pinyin: Sān huáng wǔ dì) were a series of sage Chinese emperors, and the first Emperors of China.[1] Today, they are considered culture heroes,[2] but they were widely worshipped as divine "ancestral spirits" in ancient times. According to received history, the period they existed in preceded the Xia dynasty,[3] although they were thought to exist in later periods to an extent[4] in incorporeal forms that aided the Chinese people, especially with the stories of Nüwa existing as a spirit in the Shang dynasty[5] and Shennong being identified as the godly form of Hou Ji and a founder of the Zhou dynasty.[6]
In myth, the Three Sovereigns were demigods who used their abilities to help create mankind and impart to them essential skills and knowledge. The Five Emperors were exemplary sages who possessed great moral character, and were from a golden age when "communications between the human order and the divine were central to all life" and where the sages embodied the divine, or aided humans in communicating divine forces.[7]
In this period the abdication system was used before Qi of Xia violently seized power and established a hereditary monarchy.[8]