The Ancients - The Chinese Zodiac
Episode Date: January 30, 2025The Year of the Snake is here! But how did a legendary tale of twelve animals shape Chinese astronomy and culture for over 3,000 years?In this episode of The Ancients, Tristan Hughes is joined by Prof...essor John Steele from Brown University to dive into the origins of the Chinese Zodiac to mark the Chinese New Year. They uncover how this ancient zodiac, associated with 12 animals, ties into Chinese astronomy and philosophy. Professor Steele explains the intricate cycles of 12 earthly branches and 10 heavenly stems that form a 60-year pattern deeply embedded in Chinese culture. Discover the mythical origins, the influence of lunar calendars, and the evolution of this zodiac from the Shang dynasty to today. Presented by Tristan Hughes. Audio editor is Aidan Lonergan, the producer is Joseph Knight. The senior producer is Anne-Marie Luff.Theme music from Motion Array, all other music from Epidemic SoundsThe Ancients is a History Hit podcast.Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe. You can take part in our listener survey here.
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Acast.com 2025 welcomes the year of the snake, the sixth animal of the twelve at the heart of the Chinese
zodiac. If you are born a snake, you are considered mysterious yet charismatic, calm yet determined.
To many, it's all just fun superstition. Regardless, knowing your Chinese zodiac animal symbol and what it represents has become incredibly
popular with people across the world.
It's part of your identity, a fun fact to share with friends.
If anyone wants to know, I'm a rat.
And couldn't be prouder.
But this is a tradition that has endured for more than a millennia.
So how exactly did this zodiac come about?
How did it relate to wider ancient Chinese astronomy and philosophy, their lunar calendar?
And why these particular 12 animals?
It's The Ancients on History Hit.
I'm Tristan Hughes, your host.
Today as Chinese New Year approaches, we are exploring these ancient origins of what
is arguably the most famous part of that festival, the Chinese Zodiac.
Our guest today is Professor John Steele from Brown University, an expert on ancient astronomy
and lunar calendars.
Now John, he has a particular interest in ancient Babylonian astronomy, think their
own famous zodiac featuring names like Capricorn, Aries,
Leo, Sagittarius and so on, an episode will no doubt do in the future. But John has also
studied astronomy in ancient China and how they divided up time into cycles of 60 years.
It's a cycle that has its roots in ancient Chinese history, more than 3000 years old,
and heavily features the 12 animals that represent the Chinese Zodiac today. We're going to be exploring it all, lots of detail and information coming
your way and I hope you enjoy.
John, it is a pleasure to have you on the podcast today.
Pleasure to be here, thanks for inviting me.
Now everyone loves the Zodiac and it feels especially true this time of year,
with particularly the Chinese zodiac. But no such thing as a silly question.
What exactly is the Chinese zodiac?
Yeah, I mean, it's not a silly question. It's actually not a simple question either,
because it's kind of a misnamed concept. I mean, the zodiac, in its technical meaning,
is a division of the path of the sun into
12 equal parts.
So as we think of the earth and the center of the universe as we view it, we have the
sun moving around us and the moon and the planets moving around us, and they trace out
this path that we call the zodiac, and we can divide that into 12 equal parts.
That's what the zodiac is in terms of astronomy.
But the Chinese zodiac is actually something quite different.
The Chinese zodiac is basically just a cycle of 12 that are associated with animals. And because it's a cycle of 12 with
12 animals, people have just called it a zodiac because we have 12 animals in the Western
zodiac. So it's actually just a coincidence to the fact that there's 12 and they're named
after animals or associated with animals, that people call it the Chinese zodiac. But
it's really a misnamed concept.
Is it always that magic number, John? Is it always that magic number of 12, whether it's
a Zodiac officially or, as in the case of the Chinese Zodiac, it's not actually a Zodiac?
Yeah. We have from China various different cycles based on different numbers. We have a cycle of 12,
which is this thing that gets associated with the Zodiac, which is a cycle that's actually
officially called the 12 earthly branches.
When it cycles through from one to 12 on a repeating cycle,
we have another cycle of 10 called the 10 heavenly stems.
And you can put those two cycles together
when they run side by side.
And if you go through the whole cycle
and take 60 to go around in the whole cycle.
So we have the cycle of 60 that keeps repeating,
made up of a cycle of 12 and a cycle of 10.
And that cycle is applied to all different aspects
of Chinese life and society.
So you have a cycle of the 60 years,
and you also have a cycle of 60 days.
So just like our days of the week,
the Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday,
Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday,
it's a cycle of seven.
In China, you have a cycle of 60 days.
And so the cycle of 12 is kind of one aspect of that cycle.
So it's like a sub cycle, if you like, of that 60.
It's this repeating cycle of 12
that just keeps going round and round.
So you have a cycle of 12 days
and you have a cycle of 12 years,
all of which have the same name.
So they're 12 names for each individual entry
in this 12 cycle.
This cycle is applied to all sorts of things.
So the Chinese day is divided into 12,
what we call double hours, so 12 two hour long intervals.
And they're also named after these 12
different earthly branches.
So this cycle of 12 is used all throughout different aspects
of Chinese life and Chinese concepts of the earth
and the world around us.
And then there's one aspect of this,
if they get associated with different things. And one of the dissoci and the world around us. Then there's one aspect of this, if they get associated with different things. One of the associations is with the animals.
That's why we get this cycle of 12 animals that have been associated with the 12 years.
This is quite age-y. This goes back almost 2,000 years or so, that we have this cycle of 12 going
on and on. It's being associated with these animals that then we have the year, we're just
ending the year of the dragon and we're going into the year of the snake now. Mason- I mean, from an outsider looking in, it does feel
like that with the numbers 60 and 12 and animals only being a small part of it, that in the Chinese
tradition it's almost, and forgive me if I'm slightly wrong here, but it feels like layers of
an onion because it is very detailed, dare I say complicated at first, to get your head around
these various parts of this whole system. Yeah, that's true. I think the onion analogy
is a nice analogy. It's like it is all these different layers of meaning that all these
different cycles have. And we have to think of these cycles almost like gears going on together.
They're all interlocking and changing. They complement each other, do they?
Exactly. They complement and combine to give you various different associations that can be used. And I mean, I think for us, coming as outsiders,
this takes a while to get your head around. But of course, for the ancient Chinese, this was
so familiar to them that it's trivial because they've grown up with it. It's just what they
know. So this cycle of 12 and all these associations are so part of everyday life that they're just familiar
with it in the same way that we're familiar with the 12 signs of the Western Zodiac or the 24 hours
of the day or something. Well, John, you're going to help us peel away that onion for us layer by
layer. But let's go back to ancient China. The origins of the Chinese Zodiac, I know,
is so many stories. for instance, let's
say in ancient Greece with various cities, you have a mythological origin story and then
a historical origin story. Is it the same with the origins of the Chinese zodiac?
It's absolutely the same. We really don't know the origin of the Chinese zodiac or even
the original cycle of 12 before it gets associated with the animals. There are various different
myths about this. There are myths about the association between the 12 earthly branches and the animals. There's a
very famous myth about the jade emperor holding a race.
Will Barron This is the race, isn't it? Yes, the great race.
Chris Willis The great race where the animals
run and have to cross a river. This gives you the order of the 12 signs of the zodiac. What
happens in the race? There's different versions of this myth, but in the sort of the prevailing version,
the rat wins the race because it convinces the ox to let it stand on its back and cross the river
along with a cat. And then when it gets to the bank of the river, the rat pushes the cat off into the
river and jumps ahead of the ox. So it wins the race and becomes the first of the sequence. And
of course, the poor cat is then lost in the river. so that doesn't become an animal in the sequence at all.
Oh, it doesn't become an animal at all.
Oh, the poor cat.
That's why there's no cat in the Chinese zodiac.
So you have this myth of, as I said, the Jade Emperor.
So going back to really ancient times of this great race
that gives you the order of the 12.
But you also have other explanations
that people have made over the years,
including many centuries ago,
people pointed out that, for example,
the Chinese sign for the earthly branch
that is associated with a snake,
which is the sign for the sea,
actually looks, if you draw it in the Chinese character,
it looks a bit like a snake.
And that can be done
for a couple of the other characters as well.
So people said, well, maybe the origin is actually
in the sort of the graphical drawing of the signs. And people said, oh, well, this
looks a bit like the animal. So we'll make that association. So there's all sorts of
possible reasons or explanations for why the animals were chosen. But as I say, we don't,
you know, we don't know truthfully what the answer is.
I was born in the year of the rat. So I love how that's true of the great race and how
the rat takes a piggyback on the ox and then jumps off to be the first one across the line. Hence why the rat is at the
start of the cycle and then the ox and then I can't remember the rest. But we'll talk about
those animals in a bit. But it's interesting. So we know its origins are in the ancient period. So
2000 years ago, as you mentioned earlier, John, but pinning it down exactly, do we have a rough
estimate or can we see when it starts
getting integrated into Chinese society?
The 12 branches and the 10 stems, we can trace back very ancient.
We can see this already in the Shang dynasty oracle bones, which date from 15,000 BC or
so.
So they're very ancient.
The application of these to the cycle of 60 that's made up from the combination of these two,
the stems and the branches, we can trace back, as I say, to the Shang dynasty.
When it was applied to years, seems to be later, sometime in the first millennium BC, but we don't
know quite when. And then the association with the animals seems to be there at least in the Han
dynasty, so sometime around the beginning of the Christian era,
that sort of time period, so just over 2000 years ago.
And John, forgive me for being dumb, but I'm also going to get you to re-explain, because
you mentioned the branches and the stems there, and our 12 and then the 10 and then that leads
up to the 60. So can you just explain to us once again how those numbers, how the branches
and the stems are linked to the 60
together please. So the 12 branches and the 10 stems each run through every sequence. So every
day or every year we go on one in each of those two cycles. So for example, this is entering the
snake, which means that this is the sixth one of the 12 branches. Next year, so in January, 2026,
we'll enter the other horse,
which is the seventh one of the 12 branches.
So we'll go through and go through the whole 12
and then that will repeat again.
Now at the same time, there's another cycle going round,
which is the cycle of the 10 stems, the 10 heavenly stems.
That will again increase one in that cycle of 10 each year.
So what we have every year,
then is a combination of these two different parts.
We have the one from the 10 heavenly stems
and one from the 12 earthly branches.
Each of those are increasing by one each time.
So we'll go through, we'll go through, you know,
one, one, two, two, two, three, three,
all the way up till we get to 10, 10. Then the next one
will be on 1 again for the 10 stems and 11 for the branches, 2, 12, and then 3, 1, and so forth.
And we can go around this whole sequence until, and then we eventually will get back to 1, 1,
again after 60 times through the sequence.
Right. So when it once again reunites together is when the cycle begins again and that's
60 years.
Exactly. That's when we get back to 60 years, yes.
Thank you for explaining that. I needed that a bit more because there was quite a lot of
information right at the start. So now I understand that. And that tradition, you know, the 12
and the 10 and the animals are just put onto the 12 basically. They're added onto that
12. Exactly. Yes. Yes. So the animals are just one of the associations that are then imposed upon this cycle
of 12. And the Shang dynasty, as you mentioned,
before the Han dynasty, so it's very interesting to hear how ancient the stems and the branches
and the 60 pattern is. Yeah, this is going back to 1500 BC
or so. So this is very ancient, three and a half thousand years ago. And as far as we can tell,
it's run continuously
since then with no interruption. We don't have any evidence that people have missed
a year or skipped anything here and there. It's just run continuously since then.
It's a fun fact, isn't it? Almost halfway between today and the Shang dynasty, the animals
were incorporated. It's amazing to think, as you mentioned, for how long continuously
that cycle was there in ancient China before the addition of these animals.
That's right, yes. I think that there were other associations earlier on. We know that in the Shang
dynasty and very early, these branches and stems were connected with various forms of astrology
and divination and fortune telling and rituals. There already existed an infrastructure of divinatory practices
and rituals surrounding these that then the animals get embedded within or added to this existing
structure.
Will Barron John, I mean, how much astrology, I guess also, I guess, philosophy, Chinese
astrology and philosophy is really entwined in the ten stems and the twelve branches
and the animals later on?
Richard Linden
Lots and lots. So the twelve branches, as I say, are associated with all sorts of things,
including the animals, but also directions, the hours of the day and so forth. So they're
used in many different aspects. Similarly, the ten stems have all sorts of associations. So they're
associated with the five phases of wood, fire,
earth, metal and water that are again very fundamental within Chinese philosophy, worldview,
astrology, whatever you want to call it, all of these things, ritual practice, religion, everything.
And the ten stems are also associated with the yin and yang, which I think everybody's heard of,
but probably doesn't really quite understand what it is. Yeah, what exactly is the yin and yang?
It's, I don't know how to explain it. I mean, I don't fully understand it myself, to be honest.
I guess it's two complementary but opposing ideas, forces, however you want. I don't quite know how to
explain it. It's one of these things that I think unless you're really deeply immersed
in Chinese culture, it's not necessarily possible
to understand these things.
It's so fundamental.
It's not something you can easily explain.
And I don't claim to understand it myself.
So the 12 stems were associated with yin and yang
in alternating patterns.
So yin, yang, yin, yang, yin, yang and so forth.
So you have all of these different
types of philosophical, cosmological, astrological, divinatory ritual structure surrounding these
stems and branches that are all interconnected. And it's not that these are the source of
these other things. They're all percolate and develop independently and become linked and
intertwined. It's not that the five
phases come out with the ten stems, it's not the same stems come out with the five phases,
it's that they are developed and become enmeshed and associated with one another.
I won't go into too much detail, but you mentioned the phases there for the five phases.
Can you once again explain the whole purpose of these phases and why they're phases rather
than elements?
Yeah. So people used to translate the term into English as elements because of the tradition
in Greek philosophy of the four elements and the idea from ancient Greek philosophy that
you had with fire and water that everything was composed of, that everything could be
all matter was composed of these parts of these four elements, different combinations, and that these elements had different characteristics on Earth. Fire went up and Earth
goes down and so forth. So the Chinese, because they are referring to some of the same things,
so fire, Earth, water, metal, and wood, people tended to translate them and think of the same
thing. But actually, they're quite different in concept because they're not elements in the sense that they're not things that are put
together to make matter. It's not that everything is made up of combinations of these five things.
Rather these are, again it's difficult to explain, but they're more like phases of being. So they're
more something you can transform between. You have a sort of a phase of being like water and a phase
of being like air and that these things can interact. So it's a different concept. It's
not an element that you build things out of, but rather a state of being. So that's why I think
this idea of phases is maybe a slightly better translation, although it's still a complicated
concept to render in one word. Mason- does convey much better, doesn't it, this idea that you're not always
fire or you're not always wood or metal and so on. It can change depending on
life situations, on behaviour and so on. And that goes back, I guess, to that philosophical
thinking in ancient China.
Exactly, yes.
So let's go on to the animals. We've mentioned ones already like the rat, the ox and the
unfortunate cat which missed out being part of the canonical 12. But John, this is another
good pub quiz question coming up. What are the animals that make up the Chinese zodiac?
So the animals are in order. We have the rat, the ox, the tiger, the rabbit, the dragon, which is the year we're just finishing, the
snake, the horse, the goat, the monkey, the rooster, the dog and the pig.
The pig comes last.
The pig comes last because supposedly in the story he stopped to eat on the way to the
in the middle of the race and fell asleep after eating.
I must admit, it does quite surprise me that the dragon finished fifth when you think what
a dragon has compared to those other animals. Well again, according to the myth or one version of the myth, it does quite surprise me that the dragon finished fifth when you think what a dragon has compared to those other animals.
Well again, according to the myth, or one version of the myth, it's because the dragon,
dragons are sometimes at least good in China, and so he'd stopped off on the way to help
a village by doing whatever dragons do.
His kind nature meant he got delayed.
Yeah, got beaten by the rabbit, but fair enough.
Well that's very interesting indeed.
Okay, and so we are ending the year of the dragon before the Chinese New Year and we're entering the year of the snake,
is it? The snake is the next one. Snakes, next one. Yes. Yep. And so
the other big question, John, what do all these animals mean?
That's another big question. It's not easy to answer. Here you can draw a comparison with
the Western Zodiac because they do meaning for ritual in China. So again
from quite early from the Han dynasty onwards we have representations of these animals involved in
New Year's rituals and things like that in festivals you know as puppets or as masks and things like
that. But they also carry what we would you know we could loosely call astrology you have just like
in the western zodiac where people talk about whether certain people are compatible because they're a whatever and a whatever, an Aquarius and a
Leo or something, you have the same idea in the Chinese Zodiac that people who are born in certain
years because of the animals that they will either get on or not get on or that it's good to do some
things. Some of these animals will be good for doing certain things on a certain day. So it's fed into various astrological predictions about the life of individuals and their compatibility
with other and their suitabilities to do various tasks.
Is there any link to astrological constellations like in the Western Zodiac at all?
With the 12 animals? No, there doesn't seem to be any link with the constellations. I
mean, one reason that there might be 12, why indeed there's 12 branches that's been suggested
is because there is 12 months in the year in the usual calendar, and also because the
planet Jupiter takes 12 years to go around the Earth. So the Jupiter moves basically
30 degrees around us every year as we see it, and so that takes 12 years approximately.
And so there's this idea in Chinese astronomy
of this division of the sky to 12 parts
based upon Jupiter's location.
And so that also gets associated
with these animals at a certain point.
I don't think it's the origin of the animals
of the division, but again, it's one of these things
that is the coincidence of the number 12 gets brought in there.
So we get these associations made.
John, I must apologize, but you are on the ancient, so this is the podcast which asks
the big questions in regards to this. I must also ask one more, and we may well not know the
answer, but do we know why back in Han dynasty China, when deciding, if they are deciding,
let's say in circles or wherever, which animal to assign to which branch, they
choose those animals. Do we think that the rat and the snake and the dragon and the pig
had important meaning to them at that time, which influenced their decision?
Toby Yeah, that's a very good question and a difficult question to answer. I think one of the
reasons it's difficult to answer is we're not really sure where this comes from in terms of
whether this is a folk tradition that was already in existence that then becomes part of courtly
practice and sort of bubbles up from below or whether this is something that is invented,
if you like, by the state scholars and ritual experts and so forth. That's something we don't
know and I think that these are all animals that people would be familiar with. There's not,
you know, these are not animals that are, I mean, except for a dragon of course, but dragons have
such a huge place in Chinese mythology anyway that people know them from mythology. So it's not like
there's some weird animal here that no one's ever seen before. So these are fairly everyday animals
for the most part. But yeah, why these ones particularly were chosen and why they were
chosen in this order and why these associations were made, we don't know.
As I say, there were suggestions, people even several hundred years ago were suggesting
that some of these associations are because of similarities between the shape of the Chinese
characters.
But that only really explains one or two and then people said by then it's a extrapolated
form there.
Well, it's possible, but we really don't know. Mason-I know how in the originally Babylonian zodiac, but I know it's often the Western zodiac
today, you have all these websites and people laying out the strengths and weaknesses of each
of them and each of them has their own qualities. With the Chinese zodiac, did they think any
particular animals were better than others, were the best? Or how
do they approach that in regards to their qualities and overall strengths versus weaknesses?
Jason Williams I think that the way they're conceived in
China is that each has strengths and weaknesses. They're different. I don't think that's
a hierarchy. You're lucky if you're born in this year because you're going to be a snake
or whatever. I think it's more that the idea that these people that people might be suited to different things and these different characteristics
might be useful in certain ways and so it's not a hierarchy it's a way of thinking about people
or thinking about things in different ways and having different
aptitudes or different suitabilities for different tasks.
On October 3rd, 1980, a bomb was detonated outside a synagogue on Copernic Street in
Paris.
Three decades later, French investigators finally identified a suspect in the case.
A Lebanese-Canadian sociology professor living a quiet life on the outskirts of Ottawa, Canada.
Is Hassan Diab guilty?
Can you introduce yourself?
Or is he a scapegoat?
Hassan Diab. From Canada land, yourself? Or is he a scapegoat?
Hassan Diab.
From Canada land, this is the Kopernik Affair.
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We've talked about the branches, we've talked about the stems and how the animals become part of that and the overall number of 60 and how that's also important, covered the phases
and the animals. So let's move on to the Chinese New Year
because this is something which is obviously so closely associated with the Chinese Zodiac
today. Now is Chinese New Year and the whole festival a bit, is it just as ancient as the
Chinese Zodiac? Are they always intertwined?
Yeah, so the Chinese New Year festival, what's now in China called the Spring Festival, is
very ancient. I mean, we have references to festivals going back to the, what's
called the Spring and Autumn period, so in the middle of the first millennium BC. Again, it's
one of these things that becomes more and more codified as time goes on. Standard practices seem
to develop probably again in the Han dynasty and in the early first few centuries AD, where we have
these traditions of the association with the colour red and cleaning and things like that.
And also ritual performances.
And linking into that, I mean, at the same time, it must have also been quite a question
of them figuring out when the zodiac year itself begins. How do they come upon that date
of deciding that the zodiac year will begin with what does now become Chinese New Year?
So the Chinese calendar is what we would call a
Ludi solar calendar. That means that the months follow the cycle of the moon, but in order to keep
the calendar in line with the seasons, because a lunar month will only have 29 or 30 days, so if
you have 12 of them, you're short of the length of a solar year, which is 365 and a quarter days long.
So what that means is you have to add in an extra month, roughly every three years.
So this is what we know they did in China from very early.
So they have, most years have 12 months, but some years have 13 months.
And in China, the tradition was that the first month of the year began on the second new moon after the winter solstice.
So you have the winter solstice towards the end of December in our calendar,
and then you have one new moon,
and then you have the second new moon,
which is the one that's gonna come up
towards the end of January this year,
that would be the beginning of the Chinese New Year.
How people found that out is twofold.
So probably in the countryside,
and most regular people would just know,
you know, you keep track of what month it was,
and you would know when the equinox was roughly because it's middle of winter effectively
when the days are shortest and you can realise when things are starting to pass that. And
then the new moon is just something you can look for you. So you wait until the moon disappears
and then that's when the new moon is going to appear. So that's something you could get,
you know, you could just look out and see,
and you might be wrong by one day, but you're going to be more or less correct as to when the new year begins. Is it also influenced by the fact that many of those people in the rural countryside,
they're cultivating rice. I mean, it's agriculture, so the seasons are known the length of the days,
that's also crucial to their survival. Exactly, yes. I think people often say that
farmers need calendars, but I think that's mean, I think this is, you know, people often say that farmers need calendars, but
I think that's wrong.
I think farmers intuitively know the calendar.
They know what the cycle of the seasons is, the cycle of the crops are.
So they know when the shortest time of the shortest days are, when the equinox are, you
know, to a good estimate.
Before the days of streetlights, before the days of televisions, the night sky was part
of everybody's existence and environment.
They saw it all the time.
And they were very familiar what was going on in the night sky. They were very familiar
with the cycle of the moon. So I think in agricultural societies in China, in the past,
everybody knew kind of what time of year it was roughly and whereabouts in the month you
were. That was just a given. But for the sort of upper levels of society in the court and
the official and the bureaucracy and the government, you have a very well defined mathematically calculated calendar. So the Chinese calendar, the official
Chinese calendar, again stretching back at least to the Han dynasty, I mean it must have
had predecessors but our earliest real evidence for it is in the Han dynasty, was a calendar
that was calculated. So they were not observing the moon, they were not observing the solstice,
it was all done by calculation. And what they did is they calculated when every new Moon was.
So actually, the new Moon is something you can't see, the official new Moon, the Moon
is in between the time you last see the Moon and the time you first see the new Moon present.
So somewhere in the middle is the official point of conjunction of the Sun and Moon. So they
calculated that every month and they produced almanacs distributed throughout the
country that contained the calendar for the coming year with all the calculated dates of when each
month began, whether there was an intercalary month and all the festival dates and everything
that were embedded within this. Mason Hockenberry
That must have been a massive job considering the size of hand industry China and as you mentioned
earlier, it's not a fixed calendar, it changes every year. So then, the bureaucracy, the administration
to distribute to all the people who knew it, knowing what the situation was that year,
a bit of a logistical nightmare, surely?
Well, yes. I mean, just the calculations. I mean, there was a whole duo of astronomers
who were tasked with producing this calendar. With the calendar, by the way, it's not just the
count of days for the Chinese. It also included things like when there were going to be eclipses or when planets
would pass by certain other planets or so forth. So it's a real, it's like an astronomical
guidebook every year of every astronomical event that's going to happen. So there was
a huge bureaucracy, you know, and part of the government, these were state employees
who had to pass civil service exams to become astronomers employed by the court. And they
were tasked with producing these almanacs every year. And these almanacs were then presented
to the emperor because one of the emperor's duties was to ensure that there was a calendar.
This was one of the fundamental things the emperor had to do every year to prove that
he was the right person to be emperor, that he was following justly, it was to show that he could harmonize heaven and earth. And one way to harmonize heaven and earth
was to have it written down on a calendar, was to show that you knew exactly what was going on when.
And so this was not just a sort of a practical administered matter, but a real ideological matter
for the Chinese state, that the emperor had to produce a calendar and had to distribute
it. And there's huge ceremonies around the distribution. So in later times, it's not
only to China, the Chinese calendar would then be sent off to Korea and elsewhere in
an official convoys with presentations of the calendar that these vassal states were
expected to follow. So it was both a huge administrative task,
but also a huge ideological importance to the Chinese state to both to produce a calendar
and to produce a calendar that was actually quite accurate. Because if people were observing things
that they hadn't predicted, that was a real bad omen. That was a sign that the emperor was not
doing his job right. Mason- So we have this link between Chinese New Year and the zodiac, the year
of the various animals stretching back 2,000 years, John, so it's extraordinary. It seems to endure,
but something I also want to pick up there that you mentioned was you mentioned client states or
client kingdoms of Han dynasty China like Korea. Did they also export the Chinese Zodiac and
their ways of thinking beyond the borders of present-day China? Yes. The Chinese zodiac and many aspects of Chinese philosophy and ritual and the Chinese
calendar effectively were taken up throughout East Asia. In Japan, in Vietnam, all areas
around China's borders effectively follow the Chinese calendar. They place their own
interpretations upon it, of course. You get have, you know, you get different animals,
for example, in some different countries,
you get some regional variation,
they become localized to make them applicable
to their local surroundings.
I mean, this goes part and parcel
along with many other aspects.
So many of these cultures in medieval times
were also adopted things like the Chinese script
and the Chinese language for writing,
even if it's not what they were speaking.
And often at times they were, if not part of China, heavily influenced by Chinese culture
and Chinese government.
Mason- Were there any potential deviations? Would the Year of the Snake still be the year
the snake, let's say in Southeast Asia, or the year of the horse or so on? Or did they sometimes
bring in their own animals into this story
and the meaning and importance of the zodiac spread further afield?
So yes, they did bring in their own animals. Many of them are common across East Asia,
of course, because they're common animals. But you do get local variations, local traditions animals substituted for different ones of the Chinese system. Here's a show that we recommend.
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John, you performed heroically today because I know that your main area of interest is actually a bit further to the West with Babylonian astronomy and the origins of the Western zodiac,
Taurus and Aries and so on of the Western zodiac, Taurus and
Aries and so on and so forth. However, I want to bring in that now. Can you see any connections
or contact between the Chinese zodiac and the Western ancient Babylonian zodiac?
It's a good question and it's an interesting question. Not in terms of origin. So the Chinese
and the Babylonian zodiacs are completely independent when they're created.
And the Babylonian Zodiac,
we can trace the development of that quite well.
And it comes across,
it's developed sometime in the fifth century BC
and becomes pretty stabilized in terms of the names
of the signs of the Zodiac by around 300 BC.
And that Babylonian Zodiac is then taken up
outside of Babylonia.
So it goes to Egypt, it goes to Greece, it goes from Greece to India.
So we have the Babylonian Zodiac in India in the first centuries AD.
And then eventually it comes from India into China.
So with Buddhism coming into China, particularly in the fourth, fifth centuries AD,
along with Buddhism we get Buddhist astrology.
There was a big tradition in India of astrology
in the Buddhist tradition. And we get that coming into China along with Buddhism. And
along with that comes the Babylonian zodiac. So we get these two systems interacting in
China. When the Western zodiac, the Babylonian zodiac first enters China, there's a lot
of debate as to how it should be interpreted, how we name these things.
So we get the same names attributed. So they just take across the Chinese names from the 12 branches and use those to name the Zodiac.
Sometimes they translate the Sanskrit name for the signs that came from the Babylonian.
Other times they associate them with the animals from the Chinese Ziac. So they're trying to harmonise these two systems.
Mason- So it's not a completely hostile bull versus ox kind of thing. There is an attempt to
incorporate this other zodiac with the zodiac in China that they have been accustomed to,
and for hundreds of years by that point.
Pesce- Exactly, yeah. So they're quite comfortable taking on the system,
of it being a mathematical division of the band of the moon and the planets into 12 equal parts.
So they take on that system, but then what they have to do is come up with their own way of naming each sign.
And the Babylonian names had already been kind of transformed by the time they got to India.
So the Indians have slightly different names for them.
And then by the time it gets to China, they're again renaming, partly because some of these things are not applicable to a Chinese context. You know, some of the names are maybe
not necessarily understandable because they're named after gods and things like that. So
we have, you know, what we call Sagittarius is, you know, the archer, the half man, half
horse archer. For the Babylonians, there's a god called Papal Sig, who looks like this,
who's himself a half man, half horse archer. What would you call
that in China? There's nothing you could call that. So they either have a choice of just
translating the name and as it's a meaningless name or else you have to re-identify it to
something else. So what they do is they're searching around and trying out different ways
of naming the 12 signs and often they just kind of portal across from the 12 branches, the names of the branches,
across to the 12 signs.
But it's interesting you say that, John, because as you mentioned right at the beginning,
the Chinese zodiac not actually being a zodiac and not actually linked to the lunar path.
So it's interesting to think how they incorporate that belief system into the Chinese zodiac
belief system and that idea of hybridisation?
I must also ask, would you argue that that hybridisation, is it successful? Does it endure
or do they decide that you will just keep with what we've known?
I mean, it does endure certainly for quite a while. I think they just view it as another
tool. It's another system, particularly within astrology and divination. It's just another
set of things you can correlate with the cycle of 12. It's just another set of things
you can correlate with the cycle of 12. So it doesn't replace the so-called Chinese zodiac
animals. It's just yet another system. It's another, as I said, this 12 is associated with
so many different things, with directions, with time of day, with year, with the animals and so
forth. This is just one more thing you can associate it with. This is what astrology does
all over the world. It wants more and more things you can make associations between.
This is how astrology is developed. In China, it's no different. This is just another
two thing you can make associations with. It gives you more flexibility, more things
you can make connections between.
Mason- I mean, going the other way, do we know much about the Chinese zodiac going westwards?
Piyush- We can trace it a little bit in in terms of at least into the Islamic world. In China, in probably the late Tang, so late first millennium
AD, Muslim people become prevalent in China to a certain extent. Muslim astronomy becomes
established in China. Even to the extent that sometimes the emperors would establish a second Bureau of Astronomy staffed by Muslim astronomers to kind of give an alternative set of calculations
that could be cross-checked with the Chinese native astronomy.
So through this, because we have this interaction between the Chinese and the Islamic astronomers,
we can see some of aspects of the Chinese zodiac coming back into China, to the West,
into Persia and so forth. Particularly
in terms of the iconography, so in terms of the visualisation of this, the depictions
of animals, rather than the concepts and much more as I say the way that things were visualised
on in artistic works or in diagrams and things like that.
I mean in the previous answer you also mentioned the coming of Buddhism and how it influences
that change and they're bringing up the new ideas. Then you've also got Islam there. Does it
highlight the importance of religion in the story of the Chinese zodiac? Is that closely linked with
the story? Will Barron Yes, I think it is. I think that
religion in China, again, is a very complicated thing to talk about because it's not a uniform
thing. These things we we kind of call religious
Taoism, Confucianism, Buddhism, and things like that are not exclusive. People could
be more than one and take ideas from one and mix them with others and so forth. It's
not that you necessarily just confined to one way of doing things. But I think that
that religious background informs so much of the ritual practice that's behind all of this. So all
of this New Year's festival is all so heavily connected to religious practices, religious
rituals, religious myths, worship and so forth. So that I think we just have to see the Chinese
Zodiac and the New Year festival as actually largely just part of this bigger picture of Chinese ritual
and cult and so forth.
Toby Olsen I must also say, as you mentioned, that the
zodiac endures with Buddhism, then Islam and all these various dynasties of China down
through the last few millennia. I mean, it must be one of the greatest enduring aspects
of Chinese culture, the zodiac and the Chinese New Year Festival, to think
that it's been there for more than 2,000 years. I guess more than that, if we talk
about the origins with the branches and the stems in the Shang dynasty, but it has still
endured and that's fascinating, the strength of it.
Toby Leeds Absolutely. I think this is what we see, is
that these simple of simple concepts
have a very long life. You know, the cycle of the seven days of the week, the same as
many simple religious activities or simple bits of scientific knowledge. The fact that
we have 360 degrees in a circle, that goes back to the ancient Babylonians. The fact
we have 24 hours in the day, that goes back to ancient Egypt. You know, all these things,
they're very simple,
but they're so core to what we are and what we know
that they've endured for so long.
And they're not going to disappear.
Scientific ideas are developed all the time
and become replaced because they become outdated.
And we improve on them and people forget about them.
But these sort of core ideas of the zodiac,
the Chinese zodiac, the days of the week,
these are never going to go away. These are so simple that everybody understands them. They're so core to us that I think that
they will endure for a long, long time. Will Barron Well, Jon, that's a lovely
thought and statement to leave it on. And it just goes to me to say thank you so much
for taking the time to come on the podcast and- Jon Stewart Happy new year.
Will Barron Happy new year to everyone, yes. Thank you.
Happy New Year to everyone. Yes. Thank you. Well there you go. There was Professor John Steele giving you an introduction to the Chinese
zodiac. I hope you enjoyed today's episode. Thank you for listening to The Ancients. Please
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