Five Grains
The Five Grains or Cereals (Chinese: t 五穀, s 五谷, p Wǔ Gǔ) are a grouping (or set of groupings) of 5 farmed crops that were all important in ancient China. Sometimes the crops themselves were regarded as sacred; other times, their cultivation was regarded as a sacred boon from a mythological or supernatural source. More generally, wǔgǔ can be employed in Chinese as a synecdoche referring to all grains or staple crops of which the end produce is of a granular nature.
Nomenclature
The name is typically translated as the "Five Grains" or the "Five Cereals", and less often as the "Five Sacred Grains" or "Crops". Some context is important to understanding the concept, however.
First, this use of "five" predates modern botanical notions and is better understood as part of the symbolic use of numbers in Chinese culture. From a very early date, Han culture understood the world as composed of five elements and many corresponding pentads were ennumerated, including the Five Directions (south, north, west, east, and center), the Five Colors (red, black, white, qing, and yellow), and the Five Tones (a pentatonic scale).
Second, the character 谷 consists of water (水) coming from (or creating) an opening (口) and also means (and originally meant) "valley". This sense of "food grown in the valleys" is rather broader than most of 谷's English translations and permits the Five "Grains" to sometimes include such members as soybeans and hemp. Within Chinese culture, the idea of 谷 includes many domesticated seeds and is distinguished from fruits (果), vegetables (菜), herbs (草), and wild plant foods.
(In modern Chinese, its appearance in this phrase is also sometimes linked to the homophony between 谷 (gǔ) and 古 (gǔ), meaning "old" or "ancient". However, this homophony is recent and the words were probably dissimilar when the phrase was coined.[1])
Holiness
The sense of holiness or sacredness regarding the Five Grains proceeds from their traditional ascription to the saintly rulers credited for creating China's civilization. They were seen not merely as five crops chosen from many options but as the source permitting agrarian society and civilization itself. "Squandering the Five Grains" was seen as a sin worthy of torment in Diyu, the Chinese hell.[citation needed]
As the position of emperor was seen as an embodiment of this society, one's behavior towards the Five Grains could take on political meaning: as a protest against the overthrow of the Shang Dynasty by the Zhou, Boyi and Shuqi ostentatiously refused to eat the Five Grains. Such rejections of the grains for political reasons underwent a complex development into the concept of bigu, the esoteric Taoist practice of achieving immortality by avoiding certain foods.
Legendary accounts
By the time of written records, the development of agriculture in China had become greatly mythologized. There were various traditions regarding which of the early Chinese leaders introduced the Five Grains:
Shennong
Shennong (lit. "Divine Farmer") was a Chinese culture hero credited with the development of agriculture. He was often conflated with Yandi (the "Flaming Emperor") and is also sometimes described as the Wugu Xiandi or "Emperor of the Five Grains". Sima Qian's chronology placed him around 2737–2699 BC.
In the Shennongjia ("Shennong's Ladder") area of Hubei, an oral epic poem titled the Hei'anzhuan ("Story of Chaos") describes Shennong finding the seeds of the Five Grains:
Shennong climbed onto Mount Yangtou,
He looked carefully, he examined carefully,
Then he found a seed of millet.
He left it with the Chinese date tree,
And he went to open up a wasteland.
He planted the seed eight times,
Then it produced fruit.
And from then on humans were able to eat millet.
He sought for the rice seed on Mount Daliang,
The seed was hiding in grasses.
He left it with the willow tree,
And he went to open up a paddy field.
He planted the seed seven times,
Then it produced fruit.
And from then on humans were able to eat rice.
He sought for the adzuki bean seed,
And left it with the plum tree.
He planted it one time.
The adzuki bean was so easy to plant
and was able to grow in infertile fields.
The soybean was produced on Mount Weishi,
So it was difficult for Shennong to get its seeds.
He left one seed of it with a peach tree,
He planted it five times,
Then it produced fruit,
And later tofu was able to be made south of the Huai River.
Barley and wheat were produced on Mount Zhushi,
Shennong was pleased that he got two seeds of them.
He left them with a peach tree,
And he planted them twelve times,
Then later people were able to eat pastry food.
He sought the sesame seed on Mount Wuzhi,
He left the seed with brambles.
He planted it one time.
Then later people were able to fry dishes in sesame oil.
Shennong planted the five grains and they all survived,
Because they were helped by the six species of trees.[2]
Huangdi
Huangdi (lit. "Yellow Emperor"), placed 2699–2588 BC by Sima Qian, was also credited in ancient texts as the first teacher of cultivation to his subjects.[3]
Houji
Houji (lit. "Lord Millet") is sometimes credited with the original provision of millet from heaven to mankind[citation needed] and sometimes credited with its exemplary cultivation.[4] Lord Millet was a title bestowed upon this figure by King Tang, founder of the Shang dynasty, and may have been an early position in the Chinese government.[4] He was later worshipped as one of the patron gods of abundant harvests, like Lai Cho.[5]
Archaeology
In northern China, the Nanzhuangtou culture on the middle Yellow River around Hebei (c. 8500–7700 BC) had grinding tools. The Xinglongwa culture in eastern Inner Mongolia (c. 6200–5400 BC) ate millet, possibly from agriculture. The Dadiwan culture along the upper Yellow River (c. 5800–5400 BC) also ate millet. By the Yangshao culture (c. 5000–3000 BC), the peoples of the Yellow River were growing millet extensively, along with some barley, rice, and vegetables; wove hemp and silk, which indicates some form of sericulture; but may have been limited to migratory slash and burn farming methods. The Longshan culture (c. 3000–2000 BC) displays more advanced sericulture and definite cities.
In southern China, the Pengtoushan culture on the Yangtze River (c. 7500–6100 BC) has left rice farming tools at some locations, though not at the type site. The Hemudu culture around Hangzhou Bay south of the Yangtze (c. 5000–4500 BC) certainly cultivated rice. The rice-cultivating Baiyue who succeeded to these areas were later conquered and culturally assimilated by the northern Chinese during the historical period.
The Karuo culture (c. 3300–2000 BC) may have introduced agriculture into Tibet, where they cultivated foxtail millet.
Lists
There are various versions of which five crops (or even broad categories of crops) are meant by this list.
The Five Grains traditionally date back to the Shennong Ben Cao Jing, reputed to be a record of an oral tradition first delivered by Shennong himself. The Classic of Rites compiled by Confucius in the 6th and 5th centuries BC lists soybeans, wheat, broomcorn and foxtail millet, and hemp. Another version replaces hemp with rice. The Hei'anzhuan cited above lists millet, rice, the adzuki bean, the soybean, barley and wheat together, and sesame as the "five" grains.
The Tang-era Buddhist master Daoxuan's Ritual of Measuring and Handling Light and Heavy Property (量處輕重儀, Liangchu Qingzhong Yi) instead lists five categories: "house" grain (房穀), "loose" grain (散穀), "horn" grain (角穀), "beard" grain (芒穀), and "cart" grain (輿穀).[6] Huilin (慧琳)'s Pronunciation and Meaning of All Scriptures (一切經音義, Yiqiejing Yinyi) cites Yang Chengtian (陽承天)'s Assembly of Characters (字統, Zitong) as describing similar categories: suigu, sangu, jiaogu, qigu, and shugu.[6]
One modern Chinese dictionary notes other candidates including sesame, barley, oats, and peas.[7]
Modern Ritual and Culinary Usage
Assortments of five grains continue to be used in ritual contexts, as in the Min Nan custom of creating a Taoist stove to cook Chui Zhao Fan, a meal for the Kitchen God in which five dry seeds are placed into a slot in the chimney of the stove.[8] Casual worshippers may simply use any five beans (e.g., of different colors) instead of any particular set of grains.
Chinese cuisine is not known for any single recipe using all five grains, so there is no grain equivalent of five-spice powder or "eight treasure rice" (八寶飯, babaofan). Many, perhaps most, Chinese cooking employs the grains in some fashion, though: rice, congee, noodles, spring rolls, breads, tofu, wontons and other dumplings as dishes; sweet bean paste as fillings; glutinous rice as a wrapping, for example in zongzis; rice and soy milks and beverages; soy sauces and sesame oils; and fermentation starters for use in beers, rice wines, and native liquors like baijiu.
Gallery
Some of the characteristics of the concept of wugu are granularity and diversity, as the images below may help to show:
-
Broomcorn millet head
-
Wheatberries
-
Foxtail millet head
-
Rice grains
-
Soybeans
-
Hemp seeds
-
Sorghum grains
See also
- Agriculture in China
- Agriculture in Chinese mythology
- Baijiu liquor, whose varieties include Five Grains Liquid (Wuliangye, 五 粮 液)
- Bigu (avoiding grains), a traditional Daoist dietary practice
- Chinese cuisine
- Five Grains Garden in Manyo Botanical Garden, Nara, Japan
- History of agriculture#China
- History of Chinese cuisine
- Kasama Inari Shrine dedicated to Ukanomitama no kami, a spirit with jurisdiction over the five grains and foodstuffs
- Korean cuisine (section Grains), in whose myths deities brought seeds of five grains
- Ogokbap, five-grains rice in Korean cuisine
- Pha Trelgen Changchup Sempa, Tibetan cultural hero story involving 5 grains
- Qi Min Yao Shu, ancient Chinese agricultural text
- Sheji, soil and grain concept in East Asia
- Song Yingxing (section on Agriculture), encyclopedist, 1587–1666 CE, who offers a late period list of Wǔgǔ
- Yin Hong, a character in the novel Fengshen Yanyi who is described as a Zhou prince later deified as the Five Grains Star (五谷星)
- Xian (Taoism) (section on Zhuangzi) where some shenren (神人 "divine person") do not eat (Wǔgǔ)
Notes
- ↑ Baxter, Bill. "Middle Chinese readings for 9000 Guangyun characters", p. 40. 7 Aug 2006. Accessed 11 Aug 2013.
- ↑ Yang Lihui & al. Handbook of Chinese Mythology, p. 197. Oxford University Press, 2008. Accessed 11 Aug 2013.
- ↑ 戴逸, 龔書鐸. [2002] (2003) 中國通史. 史前 夏 商 西周. Intelligence press. ISBN 962-8792-80-6. p 33. (Chinese)
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 China Culture. "Hou Ji".
- ↑ Roberts. Chinese Mythology A to Z, p. 70. 2009.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Chen Huaiyu. A Buddhist Classification of Animals and Plants in Early Tang China. 2005.
- ↑ MDBG.net. "%E4%BA%94%E7%A9%80".
- ↑ Javewu.multiply.com. "80".
References
- Alan Davidson, Tom Jaine, The Oxford companion to food, p. 305, article on "five grains of China"
- Yang, Lihui, et al. (2005). Handbook of Chinese Mythology. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-533263-6
|