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Chinese
Zodiac
(The 12 Animals Representing
Years)

The
mouse, or rat, is the first in the first
in the sycle of 12 animals representing
years. The others are, chronologically,
the ox, the tiger, the rabbit, the dragon,
the snake, the horse, the goat, the monkey,
the rooster, the dog and the pig.
How come animals designate years?
Why 12, no more, no less? And why these
specific animals?
There
are different explanations about their origin.
A popular legend says, long ago, a certain
god ordered all the animals to pay him a
wisit on New Year' s Day, that is the first
day of the first lunar month. He said he
would give the first 12 animals to come
the title "King of the Animal World"
and let each hold the title for one year.
The 12 winners happened to be those mentioned
above.
Another
theory holds that the animals originated
from the 28 constellations, or the Lunar
Mansions, which are named after animals.
Every two or three constellations stand
for a year, and the most commonly known
animal in each group was chosen for that
year. Thus we have the 12 animals.
A
more convincing theory maintains that using
animals to symbolize years began from totems
of minority peoples in ancient times. Different
tribges had different animals as their totems.
Cradually, these animals were used as a
means to remember the years.
Alongside
the increasing exchanges between the hinterland
and the border regions, the custom of using
animals to designate years made its way
to the custom of using animals to designate
years made its way to the hinterland and
was adopted by the Han people, the largest
national group in China.
At
that time, the Hans were using the 10 Heavenly
Stems and the 12 Earthly Branches to designate
years. They took one from each series to
make a pair for one year and developed a
system based on a 60-year cycle. Every 60
years it is back to square one and the cycle
begins again.
When
the method of using animals to represent
years was introduced into the hinterland,
the ancient Chinese married them to the
12 Earthly Branches, one to each. So 12
animals were used. And animals officially
began to be used to designate years during
the Later Han of the Five Dynasties Period
a little more than 1, 000 years ago.
The
New Year visit-to-the-god story explains
how the unpleasant mouse managed to become
the first of the 12. As the story goes,
when the Ox heard of the God' s decree,
he said to himself: "It" s a long
journey to visit that God. I ain't a fast
traveler and I 'd better start early."
So he set out on the eve of the Lunar New
Year. The Mouse heard the Ox and jumped
onto his back, without being noticed. The
Ox,sweating all over, was so glad to be
the first to arrive at the God's place.
But just as he was about to express his
New Year greetings to the God, the Mouse
jumped down ower the Ox's head and became
the first to kowtow to the God. So he was
appointed the first King of the Animals
and consequently, the first of the 12 animals
to designate years.
A
more authentic explanation says, the Earthly
Branches are divided into two categories:
Yin and yang. Each of them is paired with
an animal of the same"gender".
The gender of the animal is determined by
the number of a specific part of its body.
Odd numbers are yang and even numbers are
Yin. The tiger, the dragon, the monkey and
the dog, all have five toes on each foot
or paw, and the horse has one hoof. So we
hnow they are Yang animals. The cloven-hoofed
species such as the ox, the goat and the
pig fall into the Yin category because their
hoofs are divided into two parts. The rooster
is also Yin since it has four toes on each
foot. The rabbit has two upper lips and
the snake has a two-point forked tongue.
So they are Yin, too. The
mouse had been a problem. It has four toes
on each fore leg and five on each hind leg.
It has both Yin and yang qualities and there
seemed to be mo place to put it. Fortunately,
the first of the earthly Branches, Zi, can
be considered both Yin and Yang. The Branches
were also used to designate. Days and hours,
and when symbolizing the hours, this branch
covers a period from eleven in the evening
to one o' clock in the morning. PM is Yin
and Am is Yang. So the mouse goes together
with this first branch. It is this double-gender
feature, a kind of split personality, you
might say, that makes the little mouse the
leader among his colleagues.
Now
you may be wondering why there is no Year
of the Cat, especially since cats have been
popular as pets for thousands of years in
china as well as in many other countries.
Well,
in the legend, the Cat failed to be chosen
because he was a day late getting to the
God' s place. The Mouse had played a trick
on him. He lied to the Cat, telling him
the wrong date for the competition. The
Cat was not pleased and has hated the Mouse
ever since.
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