Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Lucky day inquiry - Ask a friend who is very familiar with Taoism for help.

Ask a friend who is very familiar with Taoism for help.

Taoist Sanqing is not the three you said. Sanqingwei: Taishang Laojun, Yuanshi Tianzun, Lingbao Tianzun. The arrangement from left to right is the order you said you needed.

Wei Zi is one of the Four Emperors, ranking lower than Sanqing. Emperor Dongyin was the water official among the three officials (Heaven blessed the people, local officials forgave sins, and water officials released Eritrea), while Emperor Qingxu was a local official, much lower than Sanqing. I guess you said that the man kneeling was Emperor Jiajing. Emperor Jiajing admired Taoism and ghosts and gods, and enjoyed it all his life, which was closely related to the environment in which he grew up. Jingchu is the source of Taoism, and Emperor Jiajing's parents also admire Taoism, so their influence on Emperor Jiajing is self-evident. Emperor Jiajing had a strong personality, and most of the things he believed in were hard to change. Not only did he believe in Taoism himself, but after he became emperor, all officials should respect Taoism. Those who respect the Tao will be promoted and made rich. Those who dare to remonstrate are lightly demoted to the people, imprisoned in cangue, or died on the spot. When Emperor Jiajing was a Taoist priest, Shao, Tao and other officials were ministers of rites, and Tao also held several positions, which was unprecedented in the history of the Ming Dynasty.

The figures of Taoism are: Ling Xiaoqing, Miao Yifei from Yuanyang, Tong Lei, Zhang Yin from Puji in Tian Hong, Yang Gongdao, Si Ren, Ji Zi Xian Weng, Yang Yizhenyuan, Xuan Ying, Emperor Mo Zhongxiao from Washington, and Ji Sheng from Luotian Fairy in Heaven, Zhao Ling, Tong Yuan, Zheng Ying, Yu Xu, Zhang Wulei, Da Zhen Xuan, Jing Wanshou Emperor. An emperor gives himself so many names, which shows his fascination ~

Emperor Jiajing was the grandfather of Emperor Wanli, but Emperor Mu Zong Qin Long, the father of Emperor Wanli, died after only six years in office. Therefore, the Wanli era is not far from Jiajing, and the Taoist culture of Jiajing era will certainly have an impact on this era. Several generations in the Ming Dynasty supported Taoism because the rulers of the Yuan Dynasty believed in Buddhism.

In addition, Taoist and Tibetan paintings also highlight the theocratic significance of this painting. Although Emperor Jiajing finally died of taking Dan medicine, the royal family will never admit it, but will only say that it is skyrocketing. This painting may be deifying Emperor Jiajing, saying that he was promoted to Sanqing, and his descendants are descendants of immortals. Of course, it is understandable that the descendants of immortals want to be emperors. This is an example of China's secular power using theocracy.