|
'Fu' Culture and Its Legends Updated: 2005-01-19
Fu, one of the Chinese
characters that best epitomize China's
time-honored culture, is a must in Spring Festival celebrations. Nowadays,
fu
, literally meaning auspiciousness,
blessing or happiness, usually appears as a cultural symbol to express people's
wishes for the coming new year. Yet, in the past, the character mainly meant
luck and fortune, which also represented the unanimous hope of the society.
The tradition of pasting the character fu on
walls, doors and doorposts has existed among the people for a long time.
According to Menglianglu
, a book
recording the folk customs in the Song Dynasty (960-1127), people at that time
had already been practicing the tradition.
The character can either be written or printed. The accompanying patterns
usually include a variety of themes like the god of longevity, a birthday peach,
a carp, a dragon
and a phoenix as well as other themes. The character written on paper can be pasted both normally and upside down,
because in Chinese the "reversed fu" is homophonic with "fu
comes", both being pronounced as "fudaole
."
There is a legend among the people about the origin of
the pasting the "reversed fu
". Zhu
Yuanzhang, the first emperor of the Ming
Dynasty (1368-1644), once planned to kill a family
and marked them with the Chinese character fu, because the family has
insulted his wife, Empress Ma. In order to avoid bloodshed, the Empress Ma
ordered every family in the capital to paste the character fu
in front of their doors.
All the people followed the empress's order, but one illiterate family had
pasted the character upside down. On the second day when the emperor's soldiers
went to the streets, they found the character everywhere, including the upside
down one.
When the emperor heard this, he was very angry, and immediately ordered his
palace guards to kill the family who had pasted the character in the wrong way.
Empress Ma found the situation very serious and came up
with her quick-wittedness, "That family had known that you would come to visit
them today, so they pasted the character upside down intentionally. Doesn't that
mean 'Fu
comes' today?"
The emperor agreed with his wife and released the
family, thus avoiding spilling innocent blood. From that time on, people began
to paste fu
upside
down to express the good wills for fortune and luck and to commemorate Empress
Ma.
Author: Jeff
|