Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Eating Dried Peaches

"In China, the peach was said to be consumed by the immortals due to its mystic virtue of conferring longevity on all who ate them. The divinity Yu Huang, also called the Jade Emperor, and his mother called Xi Wangmu also known as Queen Mother of the West, ensured the gods' everlasting existence by feeding them the peaches of immortality. The immortals residing in the palace of Xi Wangmu were said to celebrate an extravagant banquet called the Pantao Hui or "The Feast of Peaches". The immortals waited six thousand years before gathering for this magnificent feast; the peach tree put forth leaves once every thousand years and it required another three thousand years for the fruit to ripen. Ivory statues depicting Xi Wangmu's attendants often held three peaches. The peach often plays an important part in Chinese tradition and is symbolic of long life. One example is in the peach-gathering story of Zhang Daoling, who many say is the true founder of Taoism. Elder Zhang Guo, one of the Chinese Eight Immortals, is often depicted carrying a Peach of Immortality." - Wikipedia

Peaches are notive to China and introduced to Persia via the Silk Road before Christian times.

Xi Wang Mu, Queen Mother of the West, keeps the Immortals fed with the Sacred Peaches.
"No one knows Her beginning, no one knows Her end."

Ripening Peaches: Taoist Studies and Practices

Cloud Hands Website Alphabetical Subject Index

2 comments:

  1. Interesting stuff. I find the figure of Xi Wangmu fascinating, a relic of older shamanistic times, and am interested in things relating to the Kunlun Mountains, both real and mythical. And I love peaches...lol.

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  2. Supposedly, the Wild Goose (Dayan) Qigong set is from the Kunlun Mountains.

    Just as corn came to Europe from the New World, peach trees came from China.

    The Queen Mother of the West lives somewhere in the Kunlun Mountains, in the West Beyond the West in the Mapless Realms of the Immortals.

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