Snake (zodiac)

{{Short description|Sign of the Chinese zodiac}}

{{About|the Chinese zodiac sign||Snake (disambiguation)}}

{{redirect|Year of the Snake|the album by the group Fly|Year of the Snake (album)}}

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The snake () is the sixth of the twelve-year cycle of animals which appear in the Chinese zodiac related to the Chinese calendar. The Year of the Snake is associated with the Earthly Branch symbol .[http://www.usbridalguide.com/special/chinesehoroscopes/Snake.htm Snake Horoscope Information] {{webarchive|url=https://archive.today/20130217003643/http://www.usbridalguide.com/special/chinesehoroscopes/Snake.htm |date=2013-02-17 }} Retrieved 28 August 2012. Besides its use in the cycle of years, the zodiacal snake is otherwise used to also represent hours of the day. Snakes have a long and complicated place in Chinese mythology and culture.

Other uses

The same twelve animals are also used to symbolize the cycle of hours in the day, each being associated with a two-hour time period. The hour of the snake is 9:00 to 11:00 a.m., the time when the Sun warms up the Earth, and snakes are said to slither out of their holes. The month of the snake is the 4th month of the Chinese lunar calendar and it usually falls within the months of May through June depending on the Chinese to Gregorian calendar conversion.

The reason the animal signs are referred to as zodiacal is that one's personality is said to be influenced by the animal signs ruling the time of birth, together with elemental aspects of the animal signs within the sexagenary cycle. Similarly, the year governed by a particular animal sign is supposed to be characterized by it, with the effects particularly strong for people who were born in any year governed by the same animal sign.

Symbology

In Chinese symbology, snakes are regarded as intelligent, with a tendency to lack scruples.Eberhard, sub "Snake (She)", p. 268.

Origin myth

According to one legend, there is a reason for the order of the animals in the cycle. A race was held to cross a great river, and the order of the animals in the cycle was based upon their order in finishing the race. In this story, the snake compensated for not being the best swimmer by hitching a hidden ride on the Horse's hoof. When the horse was about to cross the finish line, the snake jumped out, scaring the horse, and thus edging it out for sixth place.

Years and elements

{{See also|Wuxing (Chinese philosophy)}}

According to Chinese and related traditions, people born within the date ranges of the snake year have been said to have been born in the "Year of the Snake". Each snake year may traditionally be said to correspond with a cycle of five changes of Wuxing (Chinese philosophy), often translated as "elements". The following table lists dates for years of the snake together with the associated elemental signs:

class="wikitable"
Start dateEnd dateHeavenly branch
10 February 192929 January 1930Earth Snake
27 January 194114 February 1942Metal Snake
14 February 19532 February 1954Water Snake
2 February 196520 January 1966Wood Snake
18 February 19776 February 1978Fire Snake
6 February 198926 January 1990Earth Snake
24 January 200111 February 2002Metal Snake
10 February 201330 January 2014Water Snake
29 January 202516 February 2026Wood Snake
15 February 20373 February 2038Fire Snake
2 February 204922 January 2050Earth Snake
21 January 20618 February 2062Metal Snake
7 February 207326 January 2074Water Snake
26 January 208513 February 2086Wood Snake
12 February 209731 January 2098Fire Snake

In Japan, the new sign of the zodiac starts on 1 January, while in China it starts, according to the traditional Chinese calendar, at the new moon that falls between 21 January and 20 February, so that persons born in January or February may have two different signs in the two countries, but persons born in late February (i.e. on or after 20 February) automatically have one sign in both countries.

Basic astrological associations

{{See also|Yin and yang}}

Astrology is a cross-cultural phenomenon which remains popular in many cultures or subcultures. These modern trends include a tendency towards syncretism, in which various beliefs of different origin are compounded together. The following table gives examples of this, with such popular ideas as lucky numbers (numerology), lucky colors and lucky times (general aspects of the idea of luck), together with the suggestions toward choosing a suitable partner for an intimate relationship, marriage, or business, for people born during a snake year or generally for the year.

class="wikitable"
Earthly branch:
Element:Fire
Planet:Venus
Yin Yang:Yīn
Lunar month:Fourth
Lucky numbers:2, 8, 9
Lucky flowers:Orchid, cactus
Lucky colors:Red, light yellow, black; Avoid: white, golden, brown{{cite web | url=https://www.yourchineseastrology.com/zodiac/snake.htm | title=Chinese Zodiac – Snake | publisher=Your Chinese Astrology | access-date=14 March 2018}}
Season:Summer

The snake is the sixth of the twelve signs and belongs to the second trine, with the ox (second sign, 牛, Earthly branch: 丑) and the rooster (tenth sign, {{Lang-zh|p=jī|s=鸡|t=雞/鷄|labels=no|first=t}}, Earthly branch: 酉), with which it is most compatible. The pig is the most incompatible.[https://vansu.net/lich-am-duong.html Vansu Calendar], 23 January 2023

Cultural notes

A Snake Year is sometimes referred to as a Little Dragon Year to assuage possible feelings of inadequacy among people born during a Snake Year.{{Cite book |last=Lary |first=Diana |url= |title=China's grandmothers : gender, family, and aging from late Qing to twenty-first century |date=2022 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1-009-06478-1 |edition= |location=Cambridge, United Kingdom |pages=37 |oclc=1292532755}}

Gallery

Depictions of zodiacal snakes, alone or with the other eleven signs, show how they have been imagined in the calendrical context.

File:Old Town of Lijiang UNESCO zodiac circle.JPG|Old Town of Lijiang zodiac circle: a stone circle inscribed with symbols of the Chinese zodiac near the entrance to the Old Town of Lijiang, Yunnan

File:Old Town of Lijiang UNESCO zodiac circle detail.JPG|Detail of above, showing the Snake designated by its Earthly Branch sign (front, center right)

File:Cernuschi Museum 20060812 135.jpg|Terracotta zodiacal Snake from the Sui dynasty (581-618).

File:KCityParkSnake.JPG|The Snake statue is one of the 12 Chinese zodiac portrayed in the Kowloon Walled City Park in Kowloon City, Hong Kong

See also

Notes

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References

  • Eberhard, Wolfram (2003 [1986 (German version 1983)]), A Dictionary of Chinese Symbols: Hidden Symbols in Chinese Life and Thought. London, New York: Routledge. {{ISBN|0-415-00228-1}}
  • {{cite book|title=Indochina in the Year of the Snake, 1965|author=Vietnam Veterans for Factual History|year=2015 |pages=288|publisher=RADIX Press |isbn=9781929932658}}