Merfolk
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "redirect hatnote". Merfolk, Mercreatures, Mermen or Merpeople are legendary water-dwelling, human-like beings. They are attested in folklore and mythology throughout the ages in various parts of the world. Merfolk, Merpeople, or simply Mer refers to humanoid creatures that live in deep waters like Mermaids, Sirens, Cecaelia etc.
In English, female merfolk are called mermaids, although in a strict sense, mermaids are confined to beings who are half-woman and half-fish in appearance; male merfolk are called mermen. Depending on the story, they can be described as either ugly or beautiful.
Chinese rényú (Script error: No such module "Lang".) stands for "merfolk", but in ancient geographical or natural historical tracts, the term referred to "human-fish" or "man-fish" purported to inhabit rivers or lakes in certain parts of China. The Japanese analogue ningyo (Script error: No such module "Lang".) likewise translates to "human-fish" while, at the same time, having also applied to various human-like fish recorded in writings from medieval times into the Edo Period.
China
Certain fantastical types of "fish", generically referred to as renyu (Script error: No such module "Lang"., "human-fish") are alleged to occur in various parts of China according to the Shan Hai Jing (Classic of Mountains and Seas, 4th century BC). It is mentioned in the Bei Shan Jing ("Classic of the Northern mountains"), Zhong Shan Jing (Central Mountains), and Xi Shan Jing (Western Mountains) sections of this work.Template:Sfnp[1]
This work and others also mention several additional types of "anthropomorphic fish"Template:Sfnp with limbs in other regions such as the Template:Interlanguage link (Script error: No such module "Lang".; "red ru fish"[2]) and Template:Interlanguage link (Script error: No such module "Lang".; "hill-fish"), considered to be in the same category of creatures. Certain tribes or races of humans were also described being part-fish, namely the Template:Interlanguage link.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp
It is recorded that the Mausoleum of the First Qin Emperor was illuminated with lamps fueled by the oil of the human-fish (renyu), whose flames were meant to last a very long time.[3][4]
In the Chinese Song Dynasty's supernatural tale collection Yijian Zhi (夷堅志), there are stories of sea sirens similar to those in other folklore. One tale describes a beautiful female demon living on a cliff of an island. A man sailed to the island, married a woman there, and she taught him how to recognize plants and avoid dangers, protecting him from wild beasts. They had two sons together. However, when a fellow townsman arrived on the island and took the man back by boat, the woman cursed him, throwing their sons into the water in a fit of rage and yelling at him to leave. The man stayed silent after boarding the ship.[5]
Another tale from Guangzhou tells of a merchant who, upon reaching an island, was captured by two women and taken into the mountains. They fed him daily, but he couldn't tell if he was still alive. After about a year, he overheard the women discussing magic, and he begged them to take him to the place where it was performed. When they did, he sought help, causing the women to flee by flying away. Though he was revived, his food gradually dwindled, and he died two months later.[5]
Renyu or human-fish
- (aka haieryu. subtypes tiyu and niyu )
The renyu (Script error: No such module "Lang".; human-fish) is described in the Bei Shan Jing ("Classic of the North Mountains") section as dwelling on Mt. Longhou (Script error: No such module "Lang"., "Dragon-Marquis Mountain") in the waters of the Jueshui (Script error: No such module "Lang"., "Bursting River"), which flows eastward into the Yellow River.Template:Refn It is said to "resemble the tiyu"[6][7] (translated as "resemble catfish"[8]Template:Sfnp[9])Template:RefnTemplate:RefnTemplate:Refn possess four legs, with a voice like baby crying.Template:Refn
Eating the fish purportedly cured idiocy[8] or dementia.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp This fish as a cure was also quoted in the Compendium of Materia Medica or Bencao Gangmu (1596) under its entry for Tiyu (Template:Lang-zh)Template:Refn
The Bencao Gangmu categorized the tiyu (Script error: No such module "Lang".) as one of two types of "human-fish" (renyu). The human-fish were also known as "child-fish" or haieryu (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".).Template:Refn[10]
The other type, called the niyu (Script error: No such module "Lang".) is elaborated in a separate section.Template:Refn It has been noted by Li Shizhen that the character for the Niyu (Ni Script error: No such module "Lang". fish) consists of the "fish" indexing component (Script error: No such module "Lang".) and "child" (Script error: No such module "Lang".) radical.Template:Sfnp
Translators of the Bencao Gangmu attempt to match entries with actual taxa of animals, forbs, etc., where possible, and the tiyu type is glossed as "newts" while the niyu type is "Chinese giant salamander".Template:Sfnp
Chiru or red ru fish
The Template:Interlanguage link (Script error: No such module "Lang".; "red ru fish".[2] Wade–Giles: ch'ih-ju; "red ju"Template:Sfnp) is described in the Nan Shan Jing ("Classic of the Southern Mountains") as a human-headed fish. It is said to be found in the Qingqushan (Script error: No such module "Lang". "Green-Hills Mountains") in the Pool-of-Yi (Yì zhī zé Script error: No such module "Lang".; "Carp-Wings Lake"). It is described as basically fish-form but having a human face, and issuing sounds like the mandarin duck. Eating it purportedly prevented scabies or itchy skin.[11][2]
The illustration of the chiru from China may have influenced the legless, human-faced fish visualization of some of the ningyo in Japan, according to the hypothesis of Template:Interlanguage link.Template:Sfnp
Jiaoren
The jiaoren (Template:Linktext "flood dragon people" or Template:Linktext "shark people")Template:RefnTemplate:Refn that appear in medieval writings are considered to be references to merfolk.Template:Sfnp[12][13]
This mythical southern mermaid or merman is recorded in Template:Interlanguage link's Template:Interlanguage link "Records of Strange Things" (early 6th century CE).Template:Refn[14]
In the midst of the South Sea are the houses of the kău (Template:Lang-zh[15]) people who dwell in the water like fish, but have not given up weaving at the loom. Their eyes have the power to weep, but what they bring forth is pearls.[16]
Similar passages appear in other texts such as the Bowuzhi (Script error: No such module "Lang"., "Treatise of Manifold " Template:C.) as "weep[ing] tears that became pearls".[17]Template:Sfnp[18]Template:Refn
These aquatic people supposedly spun a type of raw silk called jiaoxiao Template:Linktext "mermaid silk" or jiaonujuan Template:Linktext "mermaid woman's silk". Schafer equates this with sea silk, the rare fabric woven from byssus filaments produced by Pinna "pen shell" mollusks.[19]Template:Refn
Loting
Loting (盧亭) is a mysterious ethnic group residing in Hong Kong's Myths.[20] They are legendary merfolk half human and half fish, also known as Lo Yu, Lu Heng, or Lo Ting Fish Man.[21] They have lived on Tai O' Lantau Island in Hong Kong since the local civil uprising in the Eastern Jin Dynasty of China.[22] It is said that Loting has fish scales on his fish-like human body, a face that resembles humans, and he enjoys sucking chicken blood.[23] They could use their catch to fish from Tai O and trade chickens with the local human inhabitants to survive.
Japan
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The ningyo (Script error: No such module "Lang". "human-fish") of Japan has its own history in the country's literary record. The earliest references (in the Nihon shoki, entry for year 619, reign of Empress Suiko) do not specifically use the term ningyo, and the "thing" appeared in fresh water (a river in Ōmi Province, canal Settsu Province), and may presumed to be a giant salamander.Template:Sfnp Later accounts claim that Empress Suiko's regent Prince Shōtoku knew the creature to be a ningyo when one was presented to him by representatives of Ōmi.Template:Sfnp The appearance of the human-fish was strongly associated with ill omen in later treatments of the Prince's encounter with the human-fish.Template:Sfnp
During the Kamakura Period, ningyo of the marine sort were frequently reported as washing ashore, and these were taken to be ominous signs usually prefiguring bloody battles.Template:Sfnp
The ningyo, or rather renyu (Script error: No such module "Lang".) and the like found in Chinese sources (chiru, tiyu etc., etc., discussed above) were also discussed in Japanese literature, for example, works of scholars of herbal and traditional medicine, such as Kaibara Ekiken (d. 1714) and Ono Ranzan (d. 1810). These Japanese scholars were also aware of European discussions on "sirens", "anthropomorphic fish", "peixe muller (fish-woman)", etc.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp
Philippines
Merfolk, known collectively as Taga-Dagat or sometimes Bantay Tubig ("Water Guardians"), are aquatic beings in Philippine mythology. Due to the country's diverse cultures and languages across its many islands, tales of merfolk vary widely. These beings are often considered engkanto or supernatural entities or nature spirits and are believed to guard bodies of water.[24][25][26] The most well-known merfolk figure is the Sirena, a mermaid-like creature with the upper body of a human female and the tail of a fish. Sirenas are known for their mesmerizing voices, which they use to lure fishermen or sailors to their deaths by drowning or abduction. In some stories, Sirenas are portrayed as malevolent, while in others, they can become kind and loyal if they fall in love with a human.[27] The Sireno is the male counterpart of the Sirena, though it appears less frequently in stories. Sometimes, Sirena are paired with the Siyokoy (also spelled Shokoy or Syokoy), another type of aquatic creature. Siyokoy are depicted as hostile sea monsters with scales, webbed limbs, and grotesque features. Unlike the Sirena, Siyokoy are more animalistic and are believed to drown humans. Their name is thought to originate from the Hokkien term shui gui, referring to water spirits in Chinese folklore.[24][25][28][29] Another merfolk being is the Kataw, often considered a higher-ranking water entity than the Sirena or Siyokoy. Kataw resemble humans but have gills, fins, and sometimes even human feet and the ability to manipulate water elements. They are known to disguise themselves as fishermen and lure humans into the sea. A human-eating version of the Sirena is the Magindara, often portrayed in Bicolano folklore.[26][30][31]
In popular culture
- Merfolk are a fictional race of humanoids that live underwater in Dungeons & Dragons.
- Merfolk are humanoid aquatic creatures with fish-like characteristics in Magic: The Gathering.
- Merfolk are humanoid aquatic creatures with fish-like characteristics in Spectromancer.
- In One Piece, the Merfolk are among the different races in the anime and one of the two types that dwell underwater (the other being the Fishmen). Each of the Merfolk has their "fish" parts based on different fishes and related creatures like coelacanths, icefish, kissing gouramis, Japanese rice fish, striped beakfish, righteye flounders, olive flounders, blue-striped angelfish, smelt-whitings, sharks, oarfish, opahs, blue-ringed octopuses, shortfin mako sharks, seahorses, catfish, Bering wolffish, goldfish, and brotulas however not all of them are half fish as they have the aquatic parts of other marine creatures from waist down instead like an octopus.
- In Monster Musume, Meroune Lorelei is a mermaid princess wearing gothic loli clothes who moves around in a wheelchair when she's out of water.
- The Techno Trolls introduced in Trolls World Tour bears a striking resemblance to mermaids but are able to survive and walk on dry land like the other tribes of trolls.
See also
- Mer (disambiguation)
- Naiad, female spirits of Greek mythology
- Nixie, water spirits of Germanic (especially Scandinavian) folklore
- Piscine humanoid
- Rusalka, female spirits of Slavic folklore
Explanatory notes
References
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- ↑ Luo tr. (2003), index. 6: 4255
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- ↑ Eugenio, Damiana L. (2002). Philippine Folk Literature: The Legends. University of the Philippines Press. ISBN 9715423586.
- ↑ Alzina, Francisco Ignacio (1668). Historia de las Islas e Indios de Bisayas.