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Thần Nông

Shennong
Guo Xu album dated 1503 (2).jpg
Shennong as depicted in a 1503 painting by Guo Xu
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese
Simplified Chinese
Literal meaning God Farmer, God Peasant
Five Cereals' God, Five Grains' First Deity
Chinese 五谷神 / 五谷先帝
Vietnamese name
Vietnamese Thần Nông
Korean name
Hangul 신농
Japanese name
Kanji 神農

Shennong (which can be variously translated as "God Farmer" or "God Peasant", "Agriculture God"), also known as the Wugushen (五谷神 "Five Grains' [or Five Cereals'] God") or also Wuguxiandi (五谷先帝 "First Deity of the Five Grains"), is a deity in Chinese religion, a mythical sage ruler of prehistoric China. Shennong has at times been counted amongst the Three Sovereigns (also known as "Three Kings" or "Three Patrons"), a group of deities or deified kings said to have lived some 4,500 years ago. Shennong has been thought to have taught the ancient Chinese not only their practices of agriculture, but also the use of herbal drugs. Shennong is among the group of variously named heroic persons and deities who have been traditionally given credit for various inventions: these include the hoe, plow (both leisi style and the plowshare), axe, digging wells, agricultural irrigation, preserving stored seeds by using boiled horse urine, the weekly farmers market, the Chinese calendar (especially the division into the 24 jieqi or solar terms), and to have refined the therapeutic understanding of taking pulse measurements, acupuncture, and moxibustion, and to have instituted the harvest thanksgiving ceremony (Zhaji Sacrificial Rite, later known as the Laji Rite).

"Shennong" can also be taken to refer to his people, the Shennong-shi (Chinese: ; pinyin: Shénnóngshì; literally: "Shennong Clan"). Since shì can mean both "clan" and "surname" and serve as a masculine honorific like "mister" or "sir", it is sometimes used in reference to his people, sometimes in reference to the individual.


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