Fuxi

Fuxi
Fuxi and Nüwa. Hanging scroll. Color on silk. Located at the Chinese History Museum.
Chinese伏羲
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinFúxī
Wade–GilesFu2-hsi1
IPA[fǔ.ɕí]
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationFuhk-hēi
JyutpingFuk6-hei1
IPA[fʊk̚˨.hej˥]

Fuxi or Fu Hsi (Chinese: 伏羲) is a culture hero in Chinese mythology, credited along with his sister and wife Nüwa with creating humanity and the invention of music, hunting, fishing, domestication, and cooking, as well as the Cangjie system of writing Chinese characters around 2900 BC or 2000 BC. He is also said to be the originator of bagua (the eight trigrams) after observing that there were eight fundamental building blocks in nature: heaven, earth, water, fire, thunder, wind, mountain, and lake. These eight are all made of different combinations of yin and yang, which are what came to be called bagua.

Fuxi was counted as the first mythical emperor of China, "a divine being with a serpent's body" who was miraculously born, a Taoist deity, and/or a member of the Three Sovereigns at the beginning of the Chinese dynastic period. Some representations show him as a human with snake-like characteristics, "a leaf-wreathed head growing out of a mountain", "or as a man clothed with animal skins."