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Bì àn

Bì àn is the fourth child of the Dragon . It was a divine beast shaped like a Tiger, with sharp fangs, and a fierce face like most of its brethren, and it was… evil. Strictly speaking, Bì àn carried a ferocious, charismatic demeanor, especially his dignified personality. Hating evil by nature - hatred for evil, Bì àn likes to participate in distractions and adjudication. Therefore, whenever you see that the bad guy wants to punish, if you see the right person, you will try to help argue to the end. With the light shining from his tiger's eyes, just looking into his eyes the bad guy seemed to be sure of his defeat. Legend has it that Bì àn not only worries about righteousness and righteousness, speaks uprightly, but can also discern right and wrong, and fair trial, plus its image of majesty and majesty. In order to borrow power from Bì àn, the face of Bì àn was carved into the front of the roadway, even inside the courtroom, above the prison gate ... implying that: once the work has

PULAO (dragon)

Origin: from China  Pulao is the third child of the Dragon . The mascot likes loud sounds, often cast on the ring with the expectation that the molded bell will sound the way it wants. Her mother is Hong. The fourth child of the Dragon, shaped like his father, but smaller, called Pulao. Pulao is said to live near the sea, likes to "sing" (to be exact, roar), the roar can echo through the sky, echoing the mountains. This animal was also mentioned by a Tang scholar named Li Shan (630-689) as follows: "In the middle of the sea there are large fish called Whales, on the coast there is a mammal called Pulao. Pulao was very afraid of whales. When Whales attacked Pulao, cried out loudly. So in order to make the bell ring, people put Pulao on top of the bell and the bell was touched with the shape of Whale " In life, it is not difficult to see the image of Pulao, especially in ancient temples. The statue of a Pulao (sometimes it will be 2 but the middle body is connected to

CHIWEN (Dragon-Headed Carp)

Origin: from China Describe: Chiwen (hornless dragon; young dragon) is the second child of the Dragon . It lives in the sea and is said to control rainfall. It is a mascot with a dragon head, wide mouth, and short body. This is the fish-like, hornless dragon with a very truncated body and large, wide mouth usually found along roof ridges (as if swallowing the roof beams). Chiwei supposedly protects against not only fires, but also floods and typhoon. Legend has it that Chiwen likes to admire the scenery and often helps people to kill fires, so they are carved as decorative objects on the roofs of ancient palaces, temples, and temples ... implying a fire suppression, peace protection for the project ... Mother is a Carp Spirit. It is a legendary animal Makara in Indian culture specializing in living in water, with a gargoyle shape, and a fish tail. Makara is the mount of Ganga - Lord of the Ganges and Varuna - Lord of the sea. This species has a big mouth, likes to swallow everything.

BIXI (Dragon-Headed Turtle)

Origin: from China Describe: Bixi is the eldest son of the Dragon , has extraordinary strength, can carry mountains on his back. It not only has the power to show the world, but also adept literature, love poetry, has a deep literary soul, understands the morality of heaven and earth. Bixi has a big, bizarre shape. it has a turtle body, a dragon's head. When living in a large sea it often turns into a large turtle. When living in a cave, he brings the body of a turtle, a dragon's head, and a dragon's limbs. When Nu Oa was looking for a pillar against the sky, met Bixi in the form of a large turtle, who himself gave Nu Oa four legs to support the sky. Among the nine children of dragon, Bixi likes to carry heavy objects, his appearance is like a turtle, his head is like a dragon. The image of turtles in folklore: Among the four spirits, turtles ranked third, after Dragon (Long), Qílín (Lan) and in front of Phoenix bird (Phung). Turtle is a symbol of nobility, is the owner of

LONG (Dragon)

 LONG (Dragon) Origin: from Asian countries such as China, Japan, Korea, Vietnam ...  Describe: A dragon is an imaginary creature composed of different creatures: • The body of the snake. • Carp scales (81 scales of yang and 36 scales of yin). • Camel head. • Deerhorn. • Lobster eye • The liver of the tiger's feet. • Falcon's claw. • Nose, Mane, Lion's tail. A young dragon, whose head will not have horns, is called hornless dragon. If the dragon lived 500 years, he grew horns, called hornless dragon A dragon that lives 1000 years or more has long horns and grows wings, called Yinglong (winged dragon). Dragons are represented by legendary mascots with extraordinary powers. In some Asian countries, dragons are described as having a snake body, fish scales, lion's mane, deer horn, without wings but can fly. In China and other neighboring countries, the dragon is one of the four mascots: "Dragon, unicorn, turtle, phoenix". These four mascots are on