- A
Tudigong (Chinese: 土地公; lit. 'Lord of the Land') is a kind of
Chinese tutelary deity of a
specific location.
There are
several Tudigongs corresponding...
-
deities ****ociated with mountains. They are
related to
landlord deities and
tudigongs and City Gods. They are well-known in
Korea and some
prominent Chinese...
-
officials of the
hierarchy of
divine beings. City Gods are
considered above tudigongs ('lords of
local land'),
which themselves are
above landlord deities....
- Generally, but not always, this
tablet will be
above the
tablet dedicated to
Tudigong. This
tablet reads 天官赐福; 天官賜福. Some
houses will have a
tablet at or near...
- are
sometimes directly called soil (社)
Houtu is the
overlord of all the
Tudigongs ("Lord of
Local Land"),
Sheji ("the State"), Shan Shen ("God of Mountains")...
- God
frequently also
serves as a
territorial tutelary deity,
similarly to
Tudigong "Lord of the Earth" and
Houtu "Queen of the Earth". The
Dragon King has...
-
deity for
permission to move there.
Houtu is the
overlord of all the
Tudigongs ("Lord of
Local Land"),
Sheji ("the State"), Shan Shen ("God of Mountains")...
- or evil hauntings.
Houtu is a
guardian deity of the earth. The Tudi or
Tudigong were the
spiritual dukes or gods in
charge of
protecting particular parcels...
-
earth in
Chinese religion and mythology.
Houtu is the
overlord of all the
Tudigongs ("Lord of
Local Land"),
Sheji ("the State"), Shan Shen ("God of Mountains")...
-
mostly enshrines gods of the
Chinese pantheon, such as the
Dragon King,
Tudigong or Matsu; or
mythical or
historical figures, such as
Guandi or Shennong...