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Heavenly Stems
View on Wikipedia| Heavenly Stems | |||||||||||||||||
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| Chinese name | |||||||||||||||||
| Chinese | 天干 | ||||||||||||||||
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| Vietnamese name | |||||||||||||||||
| Vietnamese alphabet | thiên can | ||||||||||||||||
| Chữ Hán | 天干 | ||||||||||||||||
| Korean name | |||||||||||||||||
| Hangul | 천간 | ||||||||||||||||
| Hanja | 天干 | ||||||||||||||||
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| Japanese name | |||||||||||||||||
| Kanji | 十干 | ||||||||||||||||
| Hiragana | じっかん | ||||||||||||||||
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The ten Heavenly Stems (or Celestial Stems) are a system of ordinals indigenous to China and used throughout East Asia, first attested c. 1250 BCE during the Shang dynasty as the names of the ten days of the week. They were also used in Shang-era rituals in the names of dead family members, who were offered sacrifices on the corresponding day of the Shang week. Stems are no longer used as names for the days of the week, but have acquired many other uses. Most prominently, they have been used in conjunction with the associated set of twelve Earthly Branches in the compound sexagenary cycle, an important feature of historical Chinese calendars.[1]
Origin
[edit]Some scholars believe the Heavenly Stems, and the associated ten-day week, are connected to a story from Chinese mythology where ten suns appeared in the sky, whose order comprised a ten-day cycle (旬; xún); the Heavenly Stems are conjectured to be the names for each of these ten suns.[2] They were found in the given names of the kings of the Shang in their temple names. These consisted of a relational term ('father', 'mother', 'grandfather', 'grandmother') which was added to one of the ten Stems—e.g. 'Grandfather Jia'. These names are often found on Shang bronzes designating whom the bronze was honoring (and on which day of the week their rites would have been performed, that day matching the day designated by their name). The sinologist David Keightley, who specialized in ancient Chinese bronzes, believes that the Stems were chosen posthumously through divination.[3] Some historians think the ruling class of the Shang had ten clans, but it is not clear whether their society reflected the myth or vice versa. Their association with the concepts of yin and yang and wuxing developed following the collapse of the Shang.
Jonathan Smith has proposed that the heavenly stems predate the Shang and originally referred to ten asterisms along the ecliptic, of which their oracle bone script characters were drawings; he identifies similarities between these and asterisms in the later Four Images and Twenty-Eight Mansions systems. These would have been used to track the moon's progression along its monthly circuit, in conjunction with the earthly branches referring to its phase.[4]
The literal meanings of the characters were, and are now, roughly as follows.[5] Among the modern meanings, those deriving from the characters' position in the sequence of Heavenly Stems are in italics.
| Heavenly Stem | Pinyin[6][7][8] | Meaning | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Original | Additional | |||
| 1 | 甲 | jiǎ | 'turtle shell' |
|
| 2 | 乙 | yǐ | 'fish guts' |
|
| 3 | 丙 | bǐng | 'fish tail' |
|
| 4 | 丁 | dīng | 'nail' (fastener) |
|
| 5 | 戊 | wù | 'halberd' | — |
| 6 | 己 | jǐ | 'thread on a loom' | 'self' |
| 7 | 庚 | gēng | 'evening star' (Venus) | 'age' (of a person) |
| 8 | 辛 | xīn | 'to offend superiors' |
|
| 9 | 壬 | rén | 'burden' |
|
| 10 | 癸 | guǐ | 'four-handled plow' | — |
Current usage
[edit]The Heavenly Stems remain widely used as ordinals throughout the Sinosphere, similarly to the way the alphabet is used in languages like English.
- In Korea and Japan, the Heavenly Stems are used in legal documents: the Korean renderings gap (甲) and eul (乙) are used to indicate the larger and the smaller parties to a legal contract, respectively—and are sometimes used as synonyms for such. This use is also common in the Korean IT industry.
- The Chinese mathematician Li Shanlan (1810–1882) developed a system using the Heavenly Stems and Earthly Branches to stand in for Latin letters in their use as labels for mathematical variables. In Li's system, the letters a – j are represented by the ten Heavenly Stems, k – v are represented by the twelve Earthly Branches, and the final four letters w, x, y and z are represented by 物 ('matter'), 天 ('Heaven'), 地 ('earth'), and 人 ('human') respectively.[9] The ⼝ 'MOUTH' radical may be added to any of the aforementioned character to indicate the upper case form of the corresponding letter: e.g. a → 甲, A → 呷; d → 丁, D → 叮.[10]
- Names for organic chemicals—e.g. methanol (甲醇; jiǎchún), ethanol (乙醇; yǐchún).
- Diseases—e.g. Hepatitis A (甲型肝炎; jiǎxíng gānyán), Hepatitis B: (乙型肝炎; yǐxíng gānyán).
- Sports leagues—e.g. Serie A is rendered as 意甲; Yìjiǎ.
- Students' grades in Taiwan, with the yōu (優; 'excellence') inserted prior to the Heavenly Stems in the list—i.e. the American grades A, B, C, D and F correspond to 優, 甲, 乙, 丙 and 丁.
- In astrology and feng shui, the Heavenly Stems and Earthly Branches form the four pillars of Chinese metaphysics in Qimen Dunjia and Daliuren.
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Jonathan Smith 2011.
- ^ Allan 1991, pp. 36–38.
- ^ Kuwayama, George, ed. (1991). "The Quest for Eternity in Ancient China: The Dead, Their Gifts, Their Names". Ancient Mortuary Traditions of China: Papers on Chinese Ceramic Funerary sculptures. Far Eastern Art Council, Los Angeles County Museum of Art. pp. 16–17. ISBN 978-0-87587-157-8.
- ^ Smith, Jonathan M. (2011). "The Di Zhi 地支 as Lunar Phases and Their Coordination with the Tian Gan 天干 as Ecliptic Asterisms in a China before Anyang". Early China. 33: 199–228. doi:10.1017/S0362502800000274. S2CID 132200641. Retrieved January 29, 2022.
- ^ William McNaughton. Reading and Writing Chinese. Tokyo: Charles E. Tuttle, 1979.
- ^ "Heavenly Stems and Earthly Branches". en.chinaculture.org. Retrieved 2025-03-25.
- ^ "Chinese Notes". chinesenotes.com. Retrieved 2025-03-25.
- ^ "Chinese Culture: 12 Heavenly Stems & 10 Earthly Branches". 2021-03-23. Retrieved 2025-03-25.
- ^ [1] (pages 147 and 148)
- ^ Yang Ziqiang (楊自強) (2017). 李善蘭: 改變近代中國的科學家 (in Chinese). 獨立作家-新銳文創. pp. 147–148. ISBN 978-986-94864-1-5.
Bibliography
[edit]- Allan, Sarah (1991). The Shape of the Turtle: Myth, Art, and Cosmos in Early China. Albany: State University of New York Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-0459-1.
- Barnard, Noel (1986). "A New Approach to the Study of Clan-Sign Inscriptions of Shang". In Kwang-chih Chang (ed.). Studies of Shang Archaeology: Selected Papers from the International Conference on Shang Civilization. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. pp. 141–206. ISBN 978-0-300-03578-0.
- Tsien, Tsuen-hsuin; Chang, Kwang-chih (1978). "T'ien kan: a key to the history of the Shang". In Roy, David (ed.). Ancient China: Studies in Early Civilization. Hong Kong: Chinese University Press. pp. 13–42. ISBN 978-962-201-144-1.
- Chang Tai-Ping (1978). "The role of the t'ien-kan ti-chih terms in the naming system of the Yin". Early China. 4: 45–48. doi:10.1017/S0362502800005897. S2CID 161397647.
- Keightley, David (2000). The Ancestral Landscape: Time, Space, and Community in Late Shang China, ca. 1200-1045 B.C. Berkeley: Center for Chinese Studies, University of California. ISBN 978-1-55729-070-0.
- Norman, Jerry (1985). "A Note on the Origins of the Chinese Duodenary Cycle". In Thurgood, Graham (ed.). Linguistics of the Sino-Tibetan Area: The State of the Art: Papers Presented to Paul K. Benedict for his 71st Birthday. Canberra: Australian National University. pp. 85–89. ISBN 0-85883-319-0.
- Pulleyblank, Edwin G. (1995). "The Ganzhi as Phonograms". Early China News. 8: 29–30. ISSN 0362-5028. JSTOR 23351501.
- Smith, Adam (2011). "The Chinese sexagenary cycle and the ritual origins of the calendar". In Steele, John (ed.). Calendars and Years II: Astronomy and Time in the Ancient and Medieval World (PDF). Oxford: Oxbow. pp. 1–37. ISBN 978-1-84217-987-1. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-08-13. Retrieved 2011-06-10.
External links
[edit]- "Heavenly Stems and Earthly Branches". Hong Kong Observatory. Archived from the original on 2020-06-21. Retrieved 2018-11-04.
Heavenly Stems
View on Grokipedia| Order | Stem (Character) | Pinyin | Yin-Yang | Element |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 甲 | jiǎ | Yang | Wood |
| 2 | 乙 | yǐ | Yin | Wood |
| 3 | 丙 | bǐng | Yang | Fire |
| 4 | 丁 | dīng | Yin | Fire |
| 5 | 戊 | wù | Yang | Earth |
| 6 | 己 | jǐ | Yin | Earth |
| 7 | 庚 | gēng | Yang | Metal |
| 8 | 辛 | xīn | Yin | Metal |
| 9 | 壬 | rén | Yang | Water |
| 10 | 癸 | guǐ | Yin | Water |
Etymology and Historical Origins
Linguistic Derivation
The Heavenly Stems, known as tiāngān (天干) in Chinese, represent one of the earliest attested sets of characters in the Chinese writing system, with their forms appearing in oracle bone inscriptions from the late Shang dynasty (c. 1250–1046 BCE). These characters, originally concrete pictographs or ideographs, evolved from simple graphic representations of objects or concepts into abstract ordinal markers by the late Shang period, though their semantic origins remained tied to physical or natural referents. The etymological analysis draws primarily from the Shuowen Jiezi (說文解字), the Han dynasty dictionary compiled by Xu Shen around 100 CE, which classifies the stems under the six categories of character formation, emphasizing pictographic (xiàngxíng 象形) and associative (huìyì 會意) principles. Oracle bone script forms, the earliest surviving examples, show these characters as rudimentary line drawings, often incised on turtle plastrons or ox scapulae for divinatory purposes, revealing a phonetic diversity that contrasts with the more uniform Earthly Branches (dìzhī 地支).[1] The character for the first stem, jiǎ 甲, depicts a protective covering, interpreted in the Shuowen Jiezi as "armor" or "breastplate" (jiè 介), formed pictographically to resemble the shape of a helmet or turtle shell (cóng tián xiàng jiǎ zhòu zhī xíng 從田象甲胄之形). In oracle bone script, it appears as a curved enclosure with internal markings, possibly evoking a shell's ridges, and was used both as an ordinal and to denote cultic items like armor in rituals. Similarly, yǐ 乙, the second stem, is described in the Shuowen as "curved" (qū 曲), a pictograph (xiàngxíng) of a bent branch or fish gut, with oracle bone forms showing a simple hook-like curve, suggesting flexibility or secondary position. Bǐng 丙, the third, combines the "sun" radical (rì 日) with a horizontal stroke, explained in the Shuowen as "bright" or "the third brightness" (míng 明), its oracle bone variant resembling a ray of light or the sun's glow, linking to archaic notions of illumination. Dīng 丁, the fourth, is a pictograph of a nail or square altar in the Shuowen ("nail," dīng 釘), appearing in oracle bone as a crossed square, associated with the Celestial Temple asterism and possibly ritual platforms. Continuing the sequence, wù 戊, the fifth stem, is interpreted in the Shuowen as a halberd or lance (hù 戍), a pictograph of a weapon shaft with a blade, its oracle bone form featuring a vertical line topped by a crossbar, evoking military or directional markers. Jǐ 己, the sixth, denotes "self" or "already" in the Shuowen (jǐ 已), derived associatively from a bound form resembling a tether or completed action, with oracle bone inscriptions showing a looped or tied shape, implying finality. Gēng 庚, the seventh, is glossed in the Shuowen as "to change" or "update" (gēng 更), pictographically from a border or hoe-like tool, appearing in oracle bone as an angled line with a foot, suggesting alteration or renewal. Xīn 辛, the eighth, means "bitter" or "acrid" in the Shuowen, a pictograph of a knife cutting meat (xīn 尢聲), its oracle bone variant depicting a blade over flesh, tied to harvest ripeness in archaic contexts. Rén 壬, the ninth, is defined as "to bear" or "to renounce" (rén 任), from a pictograph of a household vessel overflowing, shown in oracle bone as a container with waves, connoting abundance or excess. Finally, guǐ 癸, the tenth, represents "debt" or "ghost" in the Shuowen (guǐ 鬼), pictographically as a leaking gui vessel (guǐ 皿下), with oracle bone forms illustrating a basin with dripping lines, symbolizing depletion. These characters' evolution from oracle bone to bronze script and eventually to modern forms involved simplification and standardization, particularly during the Qin dynasty's script unification (221–206 BCE), where pictographic details were stylized while retaining core strokes. For instance, the intricate shell-like enclosure of jiǎ 甲 in oracle bone became a more angular helmet in seal script, preserving its protective connotation. Phonetically, the stems exhibit Old Chinese onsets reconstructed as *kˤrap (jiǎ), *l̥ˤet (yǐ), *pˤaŋ (bǐng), and others, showing labial, velar, and dental initials that may trace to proto-Sino-Tibetan roots for concepts like covering (*kəp for shell/armor) or curvature (*lət for bend), though direct cognates in Tibeto-Burman languages remain tentative and require further comparative linguistics.[3] Historical texts like the Shijing (詩經, Book of Odes, compiled c. 11th–7th centuries BCE) reference stem names in ritual and ordinal contexts, such as jiǎ 甲 in odes describing armor in warfare, illustrating their integration into early literary language beyond calendrics. This linguistic embedding underscores the stems' transition from graphic symbols to versatile lexical items, influencing later Sino-Tibetan lexical patterns without direct non-Chinese cognates firmly established.Early Development in Ancient China
The earliest attestations of the Heavenly Stems, known as tiāngān (天干), emerge in oracle bone inscriptions from the late Shang dynasty, dating to approximately 1200 BCE, where they served as ordinal markers for days within the ten-day week (xún 旬) during divination rituals and historical recordings. These inscriptions, primarily from the royal capital at Yinxu (modern Anyang), demonstrate the stems' use in structuring time for sacrificial and prognostic purposes, with examples including calendrical tables that pair stems with months named after agricultural activities, such as "Eat Wheat." Posthumous appellations of Shang kings also incorporated specific stems, reflecting their role in ancestral cults and lineage organization, as evidenced by patterns in over 1,295 analyzed inscriptions showing preferences for certain stems like yǐ (乙) and jǐ (己).[1] During the Zhou dynasty (1046–256 BCE), the Heavenly Stems were integrated more deeply into ritual practices and calendrical systems, as seen in bronze inscriptions that record dates, royal decrees, and astronomical alignments using the stems alongside earthly branches (dìzhī 地支). Western Zhou bronzes, such as those from the 9th–8th centuries BCE, employ stems to denote cyclical time in commemorative texts, facilitating the coordination of state rituals, seasonal observances, and imperial legitimacy under the Mandate of Heaven concept. This period marks a shift from isolated ordinal usage in Shang divination to a more systematic application in governance and cosmology, with evidence from sites like Yangjiacun revealing stems in ancestral naming and calendrical notations that supported administrative continuity.[5] Key classical texts, including the Yijing (Book of Changes), played a pivotal role in formalizing the stems within Zhou-influenced cosmological frameworks, associating them with hexagram lines for divinatory interpretations through methods like najia (attached stems). By the Warring States period (475–221 BCE), the stems evolved from ten discrete terms into a structured component of the sexagenary cycle, combining with earthly branches to form a comprehensive 60-unit system for long-term chronology, as documented in texts like the Lüshi chunqiu and archaeological finds such as lacquer inscriptions linking stems to seasonal and stellar markers. This development reflected broader philosophical integrations of time, cosmology, and ethics in pre-imperial China.[1]The Ten Stems and Their Classifications
Enumeration and Order
The ten Heavenly Stems, known as tiāngān (天干), form a foundational sequence in ancient Chinese ordinal and calendrical systems, numbered from 1 to 10 and cycling repeatedly. This order pairs consecutive stems as yang (odd-numbered) and yin (even-numbered) manifestations within elemental categories, though their deeper classifications are distinct. The stems are: 1. Jiǎ (甲, yang wood), 2. Yǐ (乙, yin wood), 3. Bǐng (丙, yang fire), 4. Dīng (丁, yin fire), 5. Wù (戊, yang earth), 6. Jǐ (己, yin earth), 7. Gēng (庚, yang metal), 8. Xīn (辛, yin metal), 9. Rén (壬, yang water), and 10. Guǐ (癸, yin water).[6] The following table presents the stems in their traditional sequence, including pinyin romanization, Wade-Giles equivalents, and characters (identical in simplified and traditional forms). Wade-Giles spellings reflect historical transliteration practices used in early 20th-century scholarship.[6][7]| Order | Stem Name (Pinyin) | Wade-Giles | Character | Yin-Yang Polarity | Elemental Attribute |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jiǎ | Chia | 甲 | Yang | Wood |
| 2 | Yǐ | I | 乙 | Yin | Wood |
| 3 | Bǐng | Ping | 丙 | Yang | Fire |
| 4 | Dīng | Ting | 丁 | Yin | Fire |
| 5 | Wù | Wu | 戊 | Yang | Earth |
| 6 | Jǐ | Chi | 己 | Yin | Earth |
| 7 | Gēng | Keng | 庚 | Yang | Metal |
| 8 | Xīn | Hsin | 辛 | Yin | Metal |
| 9 | Rén | Jen | 壬 | Yang | Water |
| 10 | Guǐ | Kuei | 癸 | Yin | Water |
- 甲 (Jiǎ): 5 strokes, beginning with a horizontal line followed by vertical and diagonal elements resembling a shell overlay.
- 乙 (Yǐ): 1 stroke, a simple curved hook from top-left to bottom-right.
- 丙 (Bǐng): 5 strokes, starting with three horizontal lines capped by two verticals.
- 丁 (Dīng): 2 strokes, a horizontal line crossed by a vertical.
- 戊 (Wù): 5 strokes, a central vertical flanked by horizontals and diagonals forming a halberd-like shape.[8]
- 己 (Jǐ): 3 strokes, a spiral or hook enclosing a dot.
- 庚 (Gēng): 8 strokes, complex with horizontals, verticals, and a bordering enclosure.
- 辛 (Xīn): 7 strokes, a knife-like form with a central vertical and surrounding strokes.
- 壬 (Rén): 4 strokes, two verticals bridged by horizontals evoking waves.
- 癸 (Guǐ): 9 strokes, the water radical (氵) combined with a vessel form (皿).[9]
Yin-Yang and Elemental Attributes
The ten Heavenly Stems are categorized by an alternating yin-yang polarity, with the odd-positioned stems—Jia (1st), Bing (3rd), Wu (5th), Geng (7th), and Ren (9th)—designated as yang, and the even-positioned stems—Yi (2nd), Ding (4th), Ji (6th), Xin (8th), and Gui (10th)—as yin. This binary classification embodies the core Chinese philosophical principle of duality, where yang represents active, expansive, and bright forces, while yin signifies receptive, contractive, and shadowy ones, fostering a dynamic equilibrium essential for cosmic harmony.[12] Each pair of consecutive stems is further aligned with one of the wuxing, or five phases—wood, fire, earth, metal, and water—creating a structured framework that extends the yin-yang duality into elemental dynamics. Jia and Yi correspond to wood, Bing and Ding to fire, Wu and Ji to earth, Geng and Xin to metal, and Ren and Gui to water, with the yang stem in each pair embodying a more vigorous expression of the phase and the yin stem a subtler one. This integration reflects the philosophical view that all phenomena arise from the interplay of these polarities and phases, promoting balance through mutual support and transformation.[12][13] The following table illustrates the yin-yang polarities and wuxing associations for the ten Heavenly Stems:| Stem | Chinese | Polarity | Wuxing Phase |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jia | 甲 | Yang | Wood |
| Yi | 乙 | Yin | Wood |
| Bing | 丙 | Yang | Fire |
| Ding | 丁 | Yin | Fire |
| Wu | 戊 | Yang | Earth |
| Ji | 己 | Yin | Earth |
| Geng | 庚 | Yang | Metal |
| Xin | 辛 | Yin | Metal |
| Ren | 壬 | Yang | Water |
| Gui | 癸 | Yin | Water |
Symbolic and Philosophical Associations
Five Elements Integration
The integration of the Heavenly Stems with the five elements (wuxing) theory forms a dynamic philosophical framework that explains natural transformations and interactions through cyclical processes. Each stem is associated with one of the five elements in its yin or yang polarity, enabling the application of the productive (sheng) cycle, where elements mutually generate one another—wood produces fire, fire produces earth, earth produces metal, metal produces water, and water produces wood—to the stems. For instance, the yang wood stem Jia generates the yang fire stem Bing, symbolizing growth and nourishment in natural and cosmic orders. Conversely, the destructive (ke) cycle involves mutual conquest, with wood overcoming earth, earth overcoming water, water overcoming fire, fire overcoming metal, and metal overcoming wood; a specific example is the yang fire stem Bing conquering the yang metal stem Geng, representing fire's melting effect on metal to maintain balance.[14][13] This elemental integration plays a crucial role in harmonizing human affairs, particularly in traditional Chinese medicine, where stems linked to elements correspond to specific organs and physiological functions to diagnose and treat imbalances. Wood-associated stems (Jia and Yi) connect to the liver, influencing vitality and decision-making; fire stems (Bing and Ding) relate to the heart, governing circulation and spirit; earth stems (Wu and Ji) tie to the spleen, aiding digestion and nourishment; metal stems (Geng and Xin) align with the lungs, supporting respiration and defense; and water stems (Ren and Gui) correspond to the kidneys, regulating fluids and reproduction. By applying the sheng and ke cycles, practitioners restore equilibrium, such as using water-element therapies to counter excessive fire in heart-related disorders.[14][13] The historical evolution of this elemental theory in relation to the stems advanced significantly post-Han dynasty, building on foundational Han texts like the Huainanzi (c. 139 BCE), which elaborated on wuxing cycles within a cosmological context and included commentaries that extended stem-element correspondences to ethical and ritual practices. After the Han, during the Wei-Jin and Southern-Northern dynasties, the theory deepened through Daoist and medical syntheses, incorporating stems into alchemical and longevity practices to model internal energy flows.[14][13] Interpretations of elemental assignments to stems varied across schools, particularly between early and later Han dynasty scholars. In the early Western Han, Dong Zhongshu emphasized a political and moral framework in works like the Chunqiu fanlu, reordering the elements (wood, fire, earth, metal, water) to align with dynastic legitimacy and virtues without strong emphasis on medical applications. Later Eastern Han thinkers, influenced by texts like the Huangdi neijing, shifted toward physiological and divinatory uses, integrating stems more holistically with organ systems and predictive cycles for personal harmony.[15][14]Cosmological Correspondences
In traditional Chinese cosmology, the Heavenly Stems (Tiāngān) are intricately linked to spatial and temporal dimensions through their associations with the Five Elements (Wùxíng), forming a framework that reflects the interconnectedness of heaven, earth, and human affairs. Each pair of stems—representing yang and yin polarities—corresponds to one of the elements, which in turn maps to specific directions, seasons, colors, and planets. These mappings underscore the stems' role in harmonizing human activities with natural and cosmic cycles.[16] The following table summarizes the key cosmological correspondences for the ten Heavenly Stems:| Stem | Yin/Yang | Element | Direction | Season | Color | Planet |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jiǎ (甲) | Yang | Wood | East | Spring | Green | Jupiter |
| Yǐ (乙) | Yin | Wood | East | Spring | Green | Jupiter |
| Bǐng (丙) | Yang | Fire | South | Summer | Red | Mars |
| Dìng (丁) | Yin | Fire | South | Summer | Red | Mars |
| Wù (戊) | Yang | Earth | Center | Late Summer (Transition) | Yellow | Saturn |
| Jǐ (己) | Yin | Earth | Center | Late Summer (Transition) | Yellow | Saturn |
| Gēng (庚) | Yang | Metal | West | Autumn | White | Venus |
| Xīn (辛) | Yin | Metal | West | Autumn | White | Venus |
| Rén (壬) | Yang | Water | North | Winter | Black | Mercury |
| Guǐ (癸) | Yin | Water | North | Winter | Black | Mercury |
Primary Applications
Role in the Sexagenary Cycle
The sexagenary cycle, known as the Jiazi (甲子), integrates the ten Heavenly Stems with the twelve Earthly Branches to produce sixty distinct combinations, forming a foundational element of the traditional Chinese timekeeping system. The pairing operates on a sequential basis, beginning with the first stem Jia (甲) and the first branch Zi (子), followed by Yi (乙) and Chou (丑), Bing (丙) and Yin (寅), and so on, up to Gui (癸) and Hai (亥) as the sixtieth term. This arrangement cycles the stems every ten positions while advancing the branches every twelve, yielding the least common multiple of 60 before repetition; notably, the sequence ensures that yang stems pair exclusively with yang branches and yin stems with yin branches, reflecting the inherent polarities of each set (e.g., the five yang stems—Jia, Bing, Wu, Geng, Ren—align with the six yang branches—Zi, Yin, Chen, Wu, Shen, Xu).[12][20] Historically, this cycle has designated units of time within the Chinese lunisolar calendar, applying to years, months, days, and even two-hour periods (shichen), with origins traceable to Shang Dynasty oracle bone inscriptions around 1200 BCE for recording dates. For years, the cycle marks the progression from one solar year to the next, starting at the solar term Lichun (around February 4 in the Gregorian calendar); for instance, the year 2024 corresponds to Jia Chen (甲辰), pairing the first stem with the fifth branch, denoting the Wood Dragon. Months are assigned based on the winter solstice as the eleventh month (typically Bing Zi or adjusted per the year's stem), while days and hours follow the continuous 60-unit rotation, enabling precise chronological notation independent of lunar phases. The shichen divides the day into twelve two-hour segments, with the Chen (辰) hour corresponding to 7-9 AM.[12][21][20][22] Calculation of stem-branch designations employs modular arithmetic relative to a reference epoch, often aligned with the Julian Day Number or a conventional starting point like 2637 BCE for the first Jia Zi year. For a Gregorian year Y (post-1900 for simplicity), the stem index is computed as (Y - 3) \mod 10, where 1 = Jia, 2 = Yi, ..., 10 = Gui (with 0 treated as 10); the branch index is (Y - 3) \mod 12, where 1 = Zi, 2 = Chou, ..., 12 = Hai (with 0 as 12). This yields, for example, 1984 as (1984 - 3) = 1981, 1981 \mod 10 = 1 (Jia), 1981 \mod 12 = 1 (Zi), confirming Jia Zi. The full cycle traverses sequentially over 60 years—e.g., from Jia Zi (year 1) through Gui Hai (year 60)—repeating thereafter, with no direct adjustment for Gregorian leap years since the Chinese year boundary follows solar terms rather than equinoxes. However, the lunisolar calendar incorporates leap months (about 7 in 19 years) to synchronize lunar cycles, ensuring the daily stem-branch progression remains unbroken across these insertions, as the 60-day cycle operates on a continuous solar-lunar timeline.[23][21][20]| Example Year | Calculation | Stem-Branch Pair | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1984 | (1984-3) mod 10 = 1; mod 12 = 1 | Jia Zi (Wood Rat) | Start of a new 60-year cycle |
| 2024 | (2024-3) mod 10 = 1; mod 12 = 5 | Jia Chen (Wood Dragon) | 41st position in the cycle starting from 1984 |
| 2043 | (2043-3) mod 10 = 0 (10); mod 12 = 12 | Gui Hai (Water Pig) | End of the cycle before repetition |
Usage in Astrology and Divination
In the Bazi (Four Pillars of Destiny) system, Heavenly Stems form the upper component of each of the four pillars—representing the hour, day, month, and year of birth—paired with Earthly Branches to create a natal chart for analyzing an individual's personality, fate, and life trajectory. The chart is constructed using the birth year, month, day, and hour according to the Chinese lunar calendar, forming four pillars each consisting of one stem and one branch, totaling eight characters. The Day Stem specifically denotes the self-element, serving as the core reference for interpreting elemental balances and interactions among the pillars, where Stems embody the five elements (Wood, Fire, Earth, Metal, Water) and influence outcomes through producing, controlling, or clashing cycles. Additionally, in Bazi analysis, there are five standard heavenly stem combinations that represent productive interactions between stems following the five elements cycle: Jia (Yang Wood) with Ji (Yin Earth) producing Earth; Yi (Yin Wood) with Geng (Yang Metal) producing Metal; Bing (Yang Fire) with Xin (Yin Metal) producing Water; Ding (Yin Fire) with Ren (Yang Water) producing Wood; and Wu (Yang Earth) with Gui (Yin Water) producing Fire. These combinations enhance the analysis of elemental balances in the natal chart by generating a new element, which can be beneficial or unfavorable depending on its relationship to the Day Master, influencing aspects such as relationships and opportunities.[24][25] For instance, a Jia (Yang Wood) Day Stem might indicate a pioneering personality but require supportive Water elements from other pillars to mitigate vulnerabilities like overextension. Similarly, in a female chart, the Yi (Yin Wood) Day Stem represents soft beauty and delicate elegance, akin to flowers and grass, embodying fine gracefulness. The Xin (Yin Metal) Day Stem, by contrast, is characterized by delicacy, sharp sensitivity, logical thinking, and a deep pursuit of specialties; it exhibits enhanced learning, knowledge absorption, and insightful research abilities, particularly for those born in the autumn (You month) with strong supporting Water elements (Imprint Star). The Bing (Yang Fire) Day Stem represents enthusiasm, brightness, initiative, and optimism, akin to the sun, giving a quality of illuminating others.[26][27][28][29] Each of the ten stems carries unique personality traits interpreted similarly within the Bazi framework.[30] In Ziwei Doushu (Purple Star Astrology), Heavenly Stems contribute to chart construction by determining the positions of major and minor stars across the twelve palaces, which govern aspects such as career, relationships, and health, with stem elements modulating star energies and interactions. The Year Stem, in particular, dictates transformations like the Four Transformations (Si Hua), where stems assign roles such as "Hua Lu" (prosperity) to stars like Zi Wei, enhancing interpretive depth for destiny mapping. An example is a chart with a Wu (Yang Earth) Year Stem positioning the Tian Ji star in the Wealth Palace, suggesting strategic financial gains through grounded planning.[31] Heavenly Stems integrate into various divinatory methods, including those linked to the I Ching, where they feature in Na Jia theory to assign elemental attributes and stems to hexagrams for nuanced consultations, often timed via the sexagenary cycle during yarrow stalk or coin toss rituals. In yarrow stalk divination, the 50 stalks are divided and counted to generate lines, with the resulting hexagram interpreted alongside the day's Stem (e.g., Bing Fire enhancing dynamic readings), while coin tosses similarly produce trigrams whose meanings are refined by stem-branch correspondences in manuals like the Dream Divination Book. These practices, rooted in Han-era texts, use stems to correlate temporal energies with oracle outcomes, as seen in Qin dynasty manuscripts where a Jia Stem day prognosticates growth-oriented dream interpretations.[32] During the Tang dynasty (618–907 CE), imperial astrologers employed Heavenly Stems for selecting auspicious timing in state rituals and personal divinations, as evidenced by reforms under monk-astronomer Yixing (673–727), who incorporated stems into the Dayan li calendar to align celestial events with imperial activities. Scholar Li Xuzhong, credited with early Bazi systematization, utilized stems in the three pillars (day, month, year) to advise on fate and optimal dates, influencing court decisions on military campaigns and successions. A notable case is the Qiyao rangzai jue text (ca. 806–865), which applied stems to mitigate malefic planetary influences, prescribing rituals on Ren (Yang Water) days for protective outcomes during eclipses.[33][34]Cultural and Modern Contexts
Influence on Naming and Traditions
The Heavenly Stems, known as tiāngān (天干) in Chinese, have influenced personal naming practices across East Asian cultures, particularly in China, where they are often combined with the Eight Characters (bāzì, 八字) analysis. A child's birth stem influences name selection to balance elemental attributes like Wood for jiǎ.[35][36] In ritual contexts, the stems enforce taboo days (jìrì, 忌日) that dictate the timing of significant life events such as weddings and funerals to avoid inauspicious energies. Certain stems, like jiǎ or gēng (庚), are considered incompatible for ceremonies on corresponding calendar days, leading families to consult almanacs (tōngshū, 通書) for propitious dates; for example, a wedding might be postponed if it falls on a jiǎ day conflicting with the couple's elemental profiles. During funerals, stems guide burial selections, with texts from the Tang Dynasty specifying avoidance of stems like jiǎ, gēng, bīng, or rén (壬) for interment to ensure ancestral harmony. These practices stem from classical ritual compendia, emphasizing the stems' cosmological role in harmonizing human actions with heavenly cycles.[37][38][39] Folklore in East Asia weaves the Heavenly Stems into foundational myths, most notably the legend of the ten suns, where each sun embodies one stem and rises in sequence, causing scorching chaos until the archer Hou Yi shoots down nine under divine order. This tale, rooted in Shang Dynasty cosmology, portrays the stems as celestial entities governing daily cycles and natural order, influencing narratives of balance and retribution. While less directly tied to the Jade Emperor's zodiac race—which focuses on Earthly Branches—the stems appear in broader creation stories as primordial forces, symbolizing the heavens' structured benevolence in tales passed through oral traditions and classical texts.[40] Regional variations highlight the stems' adaptability, with Vietnamese traditions adopting them as Thiên Can (Thiên Can) for calendar-based rituals and naming influences inherited from Sino-Vietnamese culture, where stems inform auspicious baby namings akin to bāzì consultations to align with familial fate. In Japan, referred to as Tenkan (天干), the stems integrate into onmyōdō (yin-yang divination) customs, subtly affecting ritual timing for events like housewarmings, though less prominently in personal naming compared to China, often limited to historical imperial designations or calendrical folklore. These localized customs underscore the stems' enduring role in fostering cultural continuity across borders.[1][6]Contemporary Adaptations and Global Spread
In the 20th and 21st centuries, the Heavenly Stems have been integrated into hybrid calendar systems that blend the traditional Chinese lunisolar framework with the Gregorian calendar, particularly through digital applications for Chinese New Year celebrations. Mobile apps such as the "Almanac Chinese Lunar Calendar" provide users with daily information on Heavenly Stems and Earthly Branches alongside Western dates, enabling calculations for festivals and personal horoscopes; for instance, it designates 2025 as the Yi Si (乙巳) year, combining the Yin Wood stem Yi with the Snake branch Si to forecast annual energies.[41] Similarly, the "Best Time Acupuncture" app employs stem-branch computations based on the lunar calendar to determine optimal timings for activities, demonstrating how these ancient ordinals support modern wellness and planning tools.[42] Following the establishment of the People's Republic of China in 1949, the Heavenly Stems experienced a notable revival in Taiwan and Hong Kong, where traditional practices were preserved amid political upheavals on the mainland. In Taiwan, the sexagenary cycle incorporating the stems continued in use for cultural and calendrical purposes alongside the Gregorian system, as seen post-retreat of the Kuomintang.[43] This preservation extended to naming conventions, where stems like Jia (甲) and Yi (乙) are commonly incorporated into generational names within families, reflecting enduring Confucian traditions in personal and business nomenclature. In Hong Kong, under British colonial rule until 1997 and subsequently as a Special Administrative Region, the Hong Kong Observatory maintains the stems in its calendrical explanations, supporting their role in local astrology and festival planning without interruption.[44][45] Business naming in Hong Kong often draws on auspicious stem combinations for prosperity, as evidenced by the cultural emphasis on harmonious elemental attributes in commercial registrations.[46] The global spread of the Heavenly Stems has been propelled by Western New Age movements, which adapted them into accessible horoscope systems during the late 20th century. Theodora Lau's "The Handbook of Chinese Horoscopes," first published in 1979, popularized stem-branch pairings by linking them to personality traits and annual forecasts, making the system approachable for non-Chinese audiences through translations into over 17 languages.[47] This adaptation influenced broader New Age literature, such as Zhongxian Wu's "Heavenly Stems and Earthly Branches" (2014), which integrates the stems into Taoist practices for meditation and energy work, appealing to Western seekers of Eastern metaphysics.[48] Advancements in digital technology have further facilitated the Heavenly Stems' contemporary relevance through specialized software and algorithms for precise calculations. Tools like the BaZi Lab platform use AI-driven algorithms to generate stem-branch charts from birth data, analyzing elemental interactions for destiny forecasts in a user-friendly interface.[49] The Joey Yap Bazi Calculator employs proprietary algorithms rooted in classical methods to convert Gregorian dates into accurate stem configurations, supporting applications in feng shui and personal consulting worldwide. Open-source implementations, such as the Go-based "bazica" library on GitHub, provide programmatic conversion of solar calendars to stem-branch systems, enabling developers to embed these computations in apps and websites for global accessibility.[50]References
- http://www.chinaknowledge.de/History/[Myth](/page/Myth)/shang-religion.html
