Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional customs - What is the image of Kirin in China's Four Spirits?

What is the image of Kirin in China's Four Spirits?

Kirin, also known as "Kirin" or "Lin" for short, is commonly known as "four unlike". In ancient legends, the benevolent beast and the auspicious beast are legendary animals in ancient China, and they are also called "four spirits" with the phoenix, turtle and dragon. Known as the sacred beastmaster. It is the mountain of God. Kirin, an animal, was created by mixing thoughts according to the way of thinking of China people. Judging from its external shape, it is characterized by moose body, oxtail, horseshoe shape (called "wolf's hoof" in history books), fish scale skin, horns with meat at the corners and yellow. This model is a new combination after dismembering many real animals. It concentrates all the advantages of these precious animals on Kirin, a fictional god beast, which fully embodies the concept of "Jimei" of China people. "Kirin" takes "deer" as the radical. When the ancients coined the word, they clearly told people that Kirin evolved from deer, but it was by no means a deer, with more parts and equipment than deer. It is said that its body is like a raccoon, and it can also be written as an owl, which is called roe for short in ancient books; There is a cow's tail, a round head, but only one horn. Some say that Qi is a man and Lin is a woman, and their shapes are slightly different. But it is said that the beginning of Qijia is roughly like a deer. It was regarded as a god beast and a benevolent beast by the ancients. Its life span is very long, it can live for two thousand years. Can spit fire, sound like thunder. Caterpillar 360, unicorn long.