Misplaced Pages

Three Great Emperor-Officials

Article snapshot taken from[REDACTED] with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Three Great Emperor-Officials
Painting of the Three Great Emperor-Officials in the White Cloud Temple of Beijing
Chinese三官大帝
Literal meaningThree Great Emperor-Officials
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyinsānguān dàdì
Part of a series on
Taoism
Tao
Concepts
Practices
Texts
Theology
People




Schools

Sacred places
Institutions and organizations

The Three Great Emperor-Officials (Chinese: 三官大帝; pinyin: sānguān dàdì), Sanguan, or the Three Officials are three of the highest shen in some branches of religious Taoism, and subordinate only to the Jade Emperor (玉帝 yùdì). The Three Great Emperor-Officials are the Heavenly Official (天官 tiānguān), the Earthly Official (地官 dìguān) and the Water Official (水官 shuǐguān). They administer all phenomena in the three spheres, and were thought to be able to take away sin.

Chinese playwrights popularized the worship of these gods by including a skit before plays with shared themes between each performance called The Official of Heaven Brings Happiness.

They have been worshipped since the second century CE.

Full titles

  • The Heavenly Official, full title: the Heavenly Official of Higher Origin and First-Rank Who Bestows Blessings (上元一品賜福天官, shàngyuán yīpǐn cìfú tiānguān), also known as the Great Emperor of Middle Heaven North Star (紫微大帝, zǐwēi dàdì).
  • The Earthly Official, full title: the Earthly Official of Middle Origin and Second-Rank Who Absolve Sins (中元二品赦罪地官, zhōngyuán èrpǐn shèzuì dìguān), also known as the Great Emperor of Pristine Emptiness (清虛大帝, qīnɡxū dàdì).
  • The Water Official, full title: the Water Official of Lower Origin and Third-Rank Who Eliminate Misfortunes (下元三品解厄水官, xiàyuán sānpǐn jiě è shuǐguān), also known as the Great Emperor of Pervasive Yin (洞陰大帝, dòngyīn dàdì)

Tiānguān

Tiānguān was thought to have power over Tiān or heaven and grant happiness to believers.

Dìguān

Dìguān was the official of earth who took away sin in popular belief, although all the Sanguan were thought to be able to pardon sin to some extent, especially with their powers combined.

Shuǐguān

Shuǐguān was the ruler of the ocean in some Taoist belief systems, and in others, he shared the same position as the Dragon King or did not exist. He was often held to "avert misfortune".

References

  1. ^ "Sanguan". Encyclopedia Britannica. 2010-02-03. Retrieved 2023-04-30.
  2. ^ Adler, Joseph A. "The Three Officials". Kenyon College. Retrieved 2023-04-30.
  3. 《道法會元》
  4. "The Three Officials". Roots. National Heritage Board. Retrieved 2023-04-30.

External links

Taoism
Philosophy
Metaphysics
Ethics
  • De (integrity)
  • Wu wei (nonaction)
  • Ziran (spontenaity)
    • Pu (plainness)
  • Zhenren
  • Five Precepts
  • Ten Precepts
  • Taoism
    Practice
    Texts
    Deities
    People
    Schools
    Sacred places
    Chinese mythology
    Overview topics
    Major personages
    Mythological creatures
    Places
    Items
    Literary works
    Other folk tales
    Stub icon

    This article related to Chinese mythology is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

    Stub icon

    This Taoism-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

    Stub icon

    This article about a deity is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

    Categories:
    Three Great Emperor-Officials Add topic