Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - Excuse me, what is the origin of Chang'e! Is it Su Daji! So what happened to Chang'e and her descendants?

Excuse me, what is the origin of Chang'e! Is it Su Daji! So what happened to Chang'e and her descendants?

Su Daji was the beloved concubine of King Shang Zhou, the last monarch of the Shang Dynasty in China. She was known as: a generation of enchantress. Legend has it that her surname was Su, but there are different opinions about the origin of Su: one theory is that her father was Su Hu, a prince; another theory is that Daji came from a tribe named Su. After Chang'e secretly ate the elixir of immortality that her husband had begged from the Queen Mother of the West, she flew to the Moon Palace. However, it is too cold to be in the high place. The so-called "Chang'e should regret stealing the elixir, and the blue sea and sky are in her heart every night" is a portrayal of her feeling of loneliness. After Chang'e confided her regrets to her husband, she added: "I can't come down normally. Tomorrow is the full moon. You make balls of flour, round them like a full moon, put them in the northwest direction of the house, and then call my name continuously. "I can go home at the third watch." The next day, I did as my wife asked. At that time, the Chang'e fruit flew from the middle of the moon, and the couple reunited. This also formed the custom of making mooncakes for Chang'e during the Mid-Autumn Festival. The Chang'e picture that expresses this plot should be the emotional expression of people's longing for a happy reunion and a happy life. "Chang'e flies to the moon" that is widely circulated in modern times means that Chang'e could not withstand the temptation of life in the sky and swallowed the elixir alone while Yi was out hunting. Because Chang'e deserted her husband and was afraid of being laughed at by the gods in heaven, she went to Chang'e, the goddess of the moon. Xi wants to settle down temporarily in the Moon Palace. But the Moon Palace was empty and surprisingly deserted. She savored the taste of loneliness and regret in the long night, and slowly turned into a moon spirit white toad. She was punished to pound the elixir all day long in the Moon Palace, and lived a lonely and miserable life. Li Shangyin once lamented Chang'e in a poem: "Chang'e should regret stealing the elixir, and the blue sea and blue sky are in her heart every night." (Lingxian, a collection of Quan Shang Gu Wen, records the story of "Chang'e transformed into a toad": "Chang'e is also Yi's wife. He stole the Queen Mother's immortal medicine and flew to the moon. When he was about to go, Mei Zhan came to Youhuang. .'Chang'e then held her body on the moon, which was a toad.

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