Chinese guardian lions
| Chinese guardian lions | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A Ming-era guardian lion in the Forbidden City | |||||||||||
| A Qing-era guardian lion pair in the Forbidden City. Note the different appearance of the face and details in the decorative items, compared to the earlier Ming version. | |||||||||||
| Chinese name | |||||||||||
| Traditional Chinese | 獅(子) | ||||||||||
| Simplified Chinese | 狮(子) | ||||||||||
| Literal meaning | lion | ||||||||||
| 
 | |||||||||||
| Alternative Chinese name | |||||||||||
| Traditional Chinese | 石獅(子) | ||||||||||
| Simplified Chinese | 石狮(子) | ||||||||||
| Literal meaning | stone lion | ||||||||||
| 
 | |||||||||||
| Khmer name | |||||||||||
| Khmer | សឹង្ហ singha | ||||||||||
| Thai name | |||||||||||
| Thai | สิงห์ sǐng | ||||||||||
| Sinhala name | |||||||||||
| Sinhala | සිංහ siṁha | ||||||||||
| Sanskrit name | |||||||||||
| Sanskrit | सिंहः sinha | ||||||||||
| Burmese name | |||||||||||
| Burmese | ခြင်္သေ့ chinthe | ||||||||||
| Tibetan name | |||||||||||
| Tibetan | གངས་སེང་གེ gangs-seng-ge | ||||||||||
Chinese guardian lions, or imperial guardian lions, are a traditional Chinese architectural ornament. Typically made of stone, they are also known as stone lions or shishi (石獅; shíshī). They are known in colloquial English as lion dogs, foo dogs, or fu dogs. The concept, which originated and became popular in Chinese Buddhism, features a pair of Asiatic lions — often one male with a ball that represents the material elements and one female with a cub that represents the element of spirit — that were thought to protect the building from harmful spiritual influences and harmful people that might be a threat. Used in imperial Chinese palaces and tombs, the lions subsequently spread to other parts of Asia including Japan (see komainu), Korea, Mongolia, the Philippines, Tibet, Thailand, Myanmar, Vietnam, Sri Lanka, India, Nepal, Cambodia, Laos, Singapore, and Malaysia.