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Fu Lu Shou : ウィキペディア英語版
Sanxing (deities)

The Sanxing (三星 "Three Stars"), who are Fu, Lu, and Shou (), or Cai, Zi and Shou (財子壽), are the personified ideas of Prosperity (Fu), Status (Lu), and Longevity (Shou) in the Chinese traditional religion. This representation is thought to date back to the Ming Dynasty,〔 (福禄寿星 )〕 when the Fu star, Lu star and Shou star were considered to be concrete manifestations of these three divinities.
The term is commonly used in Chinese culture to denote the three attributes of a good life. Statues of these three gods are found on the facades of folk religion's temples and ancestral shrines, in nearly every Chinese home and many Chinese-owned shops on small altars with a glass of water, an orange or other auspicious offerings, especially during Chinese New Year. Traditionally, they are arranged left to right (so Fu is on the left of the viewer, Lu in the middle, and Shou on the far right) as in the picture of the group in Malaysia.
==The Three Stars==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Sanxing (deities)」の詳細全文を読む



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