Li Ji Slays The Giant Serpent
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''Li Ji slays the Giant Serpent'' (李寄斩蛇) is a Chinese tale. It was first published in the 4th century compilation named ''
Soushen Ji The ''Soushen Ji'', variously translated as ''In Search of the Sacred'', ''In Search of the Supernatural'', and ''Anecdotes about Spirits and Immortals'', is a Chinese compilation of legends, short stories, and hearsay concerning Chinese gods, ...
'', a collection of legends, short stories, and hearsay concerning Chinese gods, Chinese ghosts, and other supernatural phenomena. The collection is attributed to Chinese official
Gan Bao Gan Bao (or Kan Pao) (, pronounced ân.pàu (fl. 315, died March or April 336), courtesy name Lingsheng (令升), was a Chinese historian and writer at the court of Emperor Yuan of Jin. Life He was a native of Xincai County, in southern Henan ...
(or Kan Pao). Li Ji (or Li Chi) also appears as the character of "Chinese tales and ballads".


Alternate names

Alternate names for the tale are: * ''The Girl-Eating Serpent''; * ''Li Chi slays the Serpent''; * ''Li Ji slays the Great Serpent''; * ''Li Ji Hacks Down the Snake''; * ''Li Chi Slays the Great Serpent''; * ''Li Chi, the Serpent Slayer''; * ''Li Ji, the Serpent Slayer''; * ''The Serpent Sacrifice''.


Synopsis

In the Yung (Yong) mountains, in the province of Fukien (or in another translation, in Eastern Yue, in Minzhong, or in the province of Minchung, in Tungyeh), there lived a serpent that demanded the sacrifice of maidens from the village below. Otherwise, if denied, the serpent would curse the town with all sorts of calamities. The town officials, afraid of the creature, give in to its horrible requests and send a maiden to the cave's opening (in one translation, the daughters of slaves and criminals). These sacrifices repeat eight more times, always during "the first week of the eighth lunar month". One day, Li Ji (or Li Chi), the youngest daughter of Li Dan (or Li Tan), offers herself to be the sacrifice, since her mother and father have five other daughters and no son. She goes to the mountains to face the serpent, armed with a sword and accompanied by a snake-biting dog. Li Ji puts a basket of sweet-smelling rice cakes to draw the serpent out of its hideout, and while it is distracted by the food, unleashes the dog on the animal. The serpent retreats to the cave, but the girl follows after it, always hitting and striking its body with the sword, until it dies. Li Ji sees the skeletons of the nine sacrificed maidens and either laments they were devoured or that they let themselves be devoured by the beast. In some variations of the legend, the king learns of Li Ji's bravery and marries her. In another, the King of Dongyue marries her and rewards her father with a position of Magistrate of the Jiangle district. In a third translation, the King of Yüeh offers her father the position of governor of Chiang-lo.


Analysis

The tale shares similarities with tales about dragonslaying around the globe. However, in this tale, a serpent takes the place of the dragon. In fact, according to researcher Hugh R. Clark, ancient Chinese scholars once associated the culture of Min with snakes, which is further reinforced by the fact that folktales collected in Fujian show snakes as vicious enemies to be vanquished. Some scholars interpret the tale as a contrast of Ji Li's bravery against the ineffectualness of the male village officers, who preferred to obey the serpent instead of trying to fight it. The tale has also been interpreted under an anthropological lens: the snake would be linked to female sexuality and fertility. It has also been suggested that the snake foe (a python with supernatural powers, in some accounts) may represent an old local deity with serpentine form, and the sacrifice of virginal maidens merits comparison to
fertility rite Fertility rites or fertility cult are religious rituals that are intended to stimulate reproduction in humans or in the natural world. Such rites may involve the sacrifice of "a primal animal, which must be sacrificed in the cause of fertility or ...
s. As a new belief system was being diffused through the country, the old animal-shaped divinities were subject to a process of religious reformation that demoted them to adversarial roles of the newcomer human-like deities. In the same vein, the tale could be related to a phenomenon researcher Wu Chunming named "suppression of the snake", brought about by "Sinnitic immigrants to the region". Hugh R. Clark also identifies the tale as belonging to traditions from "the Min River valley" and, by extension, reflective of the Yue culture. Professor Biwu Shang also cites another tale about serpent-slaying, “The Great Serpent”. According to him, in this tale of the ''
zhiguai ''Zhiguai xiaoshuo'', translated as "tales of the miraculous", "tales of the strange", or "records of anomalies", is a type of Chinese literature which appeared in the Han dynasty and developed after the fall of the dynasty in 220 CE and in the T ...
'' genre, a similarly named heroine Li Ji slays a human-killing serpent.Shang Biwu. ''Unnatural Narrative across Borders: Transnational and Comparative Perspectives''. Routledge/Shanghai Jiao Tong University Press. 2019. p. 59.


See also

*
Dragonslayer A dragonslayer is a person or being that slays dragons. Dragonslayers and the creatures they hunt have been popular in traditional stories from around the world: they are a type of story classified as type 300 in the Aarne–Thompson classific ...
(heroic archetype in fiction) *
Han E Han E (, born 1345) was an ethnic Han female warrior who is considered a war heroine. She served in the anti-Yuan dynasty Red Turbans dressed as a man under the name Han Guanbao. She was promoted to the rank of lieutenant and became famous as th ...
*
Hua Mulan Hua Mulan () is a legendary folk heroine from the Northern and Southern dynasties era (4th to 6th century CE) of Chinese history. According to legend, Mulan took her aged father's place in the conscription for the army by disguising herself as ...
*
List of women warriors in folklore This is a list of women who engaged in war, found throughout mythology and folklore, studied in fields such as literature, sociology, psychology, anthropology, film studies, cultural studies, and women's studies. A ''mythological'' figure d ...
* Susanoo, slayer of eight-headed serpent
Yamata no Orochi , or simply , is a legendary eight-headed and eight-tailed Japanese dragon/serpent. Mythology Yamata no Orochi legends are originally recorded in two ancient texts about Japanese mythology and history. The 712 AD transcribes this dragon name ...
*
Nezha Nezha ( 哪吒) is a protection deity in Chinese folk religion. His official Taoist name is "Marshal of the Central Altar" (). He was then given the title "Third Lotus Prince" () after he became a deity. Origins According to Meir Shahar, Nez ...
, opponent of Dragon Prince Ao Bing *
Chen Jinggu Chen Jinggu () is a Chinese Protective Goddess of women, children, and pregnancy, and was a Taoist priestess. She is also known as Lady Linshui (臨水夫人 Linshui furen). Chen Jinggu is a deity worshipped in Fujian, Taiwan, South China, and ...
, slayer of the White Snake Demon; as well as The Divine Damsel of Devastation, a song inspired by Chen Jinggu and Li Ji's stories in
Genshin Impact ''Genshin Impact'' is an action role-playing game developed and published by miHoYo. It was released for Android (operating system), Android, iOS, PlayStation 4, and Windows in 2020, on PlayStation 5 in 2021, and is set for release on Nintendo ...
*
Sitonai Sitonai (Ainu: シトナイ) is a mythical Ainu heroine, known for a legend of slaying a giant snake of Akaiwa mountain (located northwest to Otaru). Synopsis In a cave in Akaiwa mountain there lived a giant serpent (the height of the body was s ...
, similar Ainu legend


Footnotes


References

{{authority control Fictional women soldiers and warriors Chinese folklore Women in Chinese mythology Folklore Short stories set in Fujian Stories within Taiping Guangji