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Dragons From Different Parts of the World. By: Rachel Boxer Period A/1 March 30, 2011. Table of Contents. Chinese Dragons Japanese Dragons Korean Dragons Contrasting the Japanese, Chinese, and Korean Dragons Vietnamese Dragons Anglo-Saxon Dragons The Dragon in Beowulf.
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Dragons From Different Parts of the World By: Rachel Boxer Period A/1 March 30, 2011
Table of Contents • Chinese Dragons • Japanese Dragons • Korean Dragons • Contrasting the Japanese, Chinese, and Korean Dragons • Vietnamese Dragons • Anglo-Saxon Dragons • The Dragon in Beowulf
Chinese Dragons • Nine types: • Tianlong • Celestial Dragon • Ruler of the dragons • Protects the heavens and homes of the deities • Shenlong • Spiritual Dragon • Controls the weather • Dilong • Earth Dragon • Controls rivers • Fucanglong • Underworld Dragon • Guards metals and jewels buried in the ground • Jiaolong • Horned Dragon • Is the mightiest of all dragons • Yinglong • Winged Dragon • Only dragon with wings • Panlong • Coiling Dragon • Dwells in the ocean • Huanglong • Yellow Dragon • Hornless dragon • Known for its knowledge • The Imperial dragon • Dragon King • Four honored dragons • People went to them when there was no rain • Each dragon rules over either north, south, east, or west
Chinese Dragons Continued • Chinese dragon is the ultimate symbol of good fortune. • Ancient Chinese texts described the Chinese dragon having deer antlers, a camel’s head, rabbits’ eyes, a snake’s neck, a crocodile’s belly, eagle claws, buffalo ears, tiger paws, and carp scales.
Japanese Dragons • A very famous dragon is Yamata no Orochi who has eight heads and eight tails. • Modern popular culture describes dragons as having healing magical energies. They can also fly and possess the power of anthropomorphism. • Japanese people believe that dragons bring wealth and good fortune. • Japanese dragons are called Ryugu in Japanese mythology.
Japanese Dragons Continued • Types and Famous Dragons: • Tatsu dragons • Represents spirituality and imperial power • Sui-Riu dragons • Brings rain to the island of Japan • Han-Riu dragon • Tallest of all dragons • Measures up to 40 feet long • Reaches the heavens • Ri-Riu dragon • Possesses unusually keen eye-sight • Ka-Riu dragon • Smallest of all dragons • Is red • FukuRiu dragon • Brings luck to the people • Hai-Riyo dragon • Has a bird-like shape • Evolved out of Chinese mythology
Korean Dragons • Korean dragons are benevolent beings. • They are usually linked with water and agriculture. • In Korean mythology and art, the symbol of the dragon represents the emperor. • Korean dragons have long beards and are wingless. • It is believed that Korean dragons have a camel's head, a rabbit’s eyes, a serpentine’s neck, a frog’s belly, and a tiger’s feet.
Korean Dragons Continued • Three types: • Yong • Powerful sky dragon • Yo • Hornless ocean dragon • Kyo • Mountain dragon
Contrasting the Japanese, Chinese, and Korean Dragons • The feet • Chinese dragons have five claws. • Chinese people believe that when the dragons fly away, they lose toes. • The farther the dragons fly, the more toes they lose. • Korean dragons have four claws. • Koreans believe that when the dragons leave Korea going to China, the dragons gain toes. • They also believe that when the dragons leave Korea headed toward Japan, the dragons lose toes. • Japanese dragons have three claws. • Japanese people believe that when the dragons fly away, they gain toes. • The farther the dragons fly, the more toes they gain.
Dragons are a very important and are a sacred symbol. The Kinh people had a myth that all people descended from dragons. The Vietnamese dragons are the symbol of the Yang representing life, growth, universe, and existence. Vietnamese Dragons
Vietnamese Dragons Continued Tran Dynasty • Tran Dynasty lasted from 1225-1500. • The Vietnamese dragon symbolizes the martial arts because the Tran kings descended from Mandarin commanders.
Anglo-Saxon Dragons • The Saxons, Angles, and Jutes had a flag that they called the White Dragon Flag.
The Dragon in Beowulf • In other translations of Beowulf, the dragon is classified as a fire-drake. • Drakes do not have wings; therefore, they cannot fly. • There are two types of drakes: cold-drakes and fire-drakes. • Cold-drakes are white or light blue and breath snow and hail. • Fire-drakes are red and breath fire.
The Dragon in Beowulf Continued • The dragon Beowulf fights has wings, breathes fire, and is 50 feet long.
Bibliography • http://dragonsinn.net/east-2.htm • http://library.thinkquest.org/CR0215373/History/SymbolforAll.htm • http://library.thinkquest.org/CR0215373/History/HistoricalEvolution.htm • http://pictures.linkmesh.com/dragons/more_chinese_dragons.php • http://www.polenth.com/myth/essbeo.html • http://www.whitedragonflagofengland.com • http://www.draconian.com/whatis/whatis.htm • http://pictures.linkmesh.com/dragons/japanese_dragons.php • http://www.mapsofworld.com/japan/japanese-dragon.html • http://pictures.linkmesh.com/dragons/korean_dragons.php • http://www.dragonorama.com/oriental/korean.html • http://www.dragonsinn.net/korea.htm • http://draconian.com/dragons/vietnamese-dragon.php • http://pictures.linkmesh.com/dragons/vietnamese_dragons.php • http://www.blackdrago.com/easterndragons.htm
Bibliography Continued • http://www.elfwood.com/art/n/a/nadiasultan/beowulf_dragon.jpg.html • http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.yoyogames.com/extras/image/name/san1/501/13501/dragons.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.yoyogames.com/games/5645-alien-walker&usg=__i2nbEtsw5l5vA-RqleK3hi7etn4=&h=725&w=583&sz=85&hl=en&start=21&zoom=1&tbnid=SXsTBE_okf2FaM:&tbnh=126&tbnw=131&ei=yEyOTcbNJMXi0gHvoYS4Cw&prev=/images%3Fq%3Ddragons%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26rlz%3D1T4GZAZ_enUS418US418%26biw%3D1345%26bih%3D577%26tbs%3Disch:10%2C439&um=1&itbs=1&iact=hc&vpx=131&vpy=232&dur=894&hovh=250&hovw=201&tx=115&ty=157&oei=t0yOTY7PFc6BtgfX4O26DQ&page=2&ndsp=25&ved=1t:429,r:10,s:21&biw=1345&bih=577 • http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.mtroy.com/images/dragon.jpg&imgrefurl=http://library.thinkquest.org/05aug/00718/index_files/page0009.html&usg=__tkK8X-qayQsk-3iHKa24grLRfCU=&h=551&w=679&sz=114&hl=en&start=71&zoom=1&tbnid=rnGkuEaHk_7esM:&tbnh=125&tbnw=181&ei=pending&prev=/images%3Fq%3Ddragons%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26rlz%3D1T4GZAZ_enUS418US418%26biw%3D1345%26bih%3D577%26tbs%3Disch:1&um=1&itbs=1&iact=rc&dur=155&oei=t0yOTY7PFc6BtgfX4O26DQ&page=4&ndsp=18&ved=1t:429,r:5,s:71&tx=94&ty=5