Dragon is a legendary kind of creature,
which does not exist in the world at all.
Apart from China, many other
countries also enjoy the image of dragon in their legends. For instance, the
dragon in western legends has a lot in common with Chinese dragon: huge body
covered by squama and shells all over, four legs with sharp claws, horns, and
both can fly in the sky. The differences are: western dragons have more heads
varying from three, nine to twelve, while Chinese dragons just have one; western
dragons spray water while Chinese, fire; western dragons usually represent evils
while Chinese, good luck or fortune.
Chinese dragon is of magic power. It can
change the length of its body as it wishes, it can either fly or swim and it can
even bring rainfalls. People in ancient China often offered sacrifices to Dragon
for favorable weather and good harvest.
It has been at least 6,000 years since
dragon came into being.
Dragon was one of the totem worship images
in remote times when people liked to use the images of creatures or plants which
they held in awe as symbols of their tribes. They believed that totem worship
could bring them protection and good luck.
What does dragon come of? There are a lot of
answers such as crocodile, snake, pig or even lightening. Now many experts agree
on that dragon came of a totem mainly consisting of snake. It had snake's body,
pig's head, deer's horns, bull's ear, goat's beard, hawk's claws and fish's
squama. This view introduces a penetrating insight towards the life of ancient
society: in remote times of clanship, the Huaxia Clan symbolized by snake totem
in the Yellow River drainage area conquered other clans and then grew into a big
clan union by integrating others together with their totems. That was how the
totem of dragon came into being.
In 1987 a grave of the Yangshao Culture in
6,000 years ago was unearthed in Ziyang, Henan Province, where a dragon made of
mussel shells was found beside the male dead. This was the earliest dragon we
have ever known by far. A jade dragon of more than 5,000 years of history was
dug out in Inner Mongolia with a slim body crooked like the alphabet C and a
pig-like head.
During the Shang and Zhou dynasties 3,000
years ago, dragons often appeared on utensil made of bronze or bones. We can
even find the Chinese character of dragon in the inscriptions on tortoise shells
and animal bones at that time. There are over 100 styles of writing the
character of dragon.
In the Warring States Period (475-221BC),
dragon was often drawn in the painting on silk. And the dragon in the Han
Dynasty (206BC-220AD) looked much the same with today's
dragons.