The Local Lords cult of the Bai nationality

The worship of the Local Lords (benzhu) is the most characteristic of the Bai people. Their religious life revolves around the Benzhu temple of each village, as each village venerates a local lord, sometimes a historical figure who sacrificed for the people. In other cases, it is the person who established the village, having mastered the local spirits or reached an agreement with them to allow people to live there. Their worship renews the right to inhabit the place for the descendants of the village founder. As their mythical history is continually recalled in the most solemn celebrations, a mythology unique to each locality has emerged. Their statue is kept in the temple, along with those of other popular deities, wealth deities, and motherhood deities, etc.

Dali, Xizhou

An infernal deity in the Benzhu Temple of Xizhou townshio, near Dali Old City.

Each village has its god, who protects the people and their livestock, prevents people from suffering illnesses, and controls the rain, thereby bringing peace and prosperity to the village people, so they are revered in any significant event. This «community god» religion keeps alive the memory of numerous legends and mythical characters, as it could be said that the temple of each of the villages almost bordering the shore of Lake Erhai presents an example of very particular religious syncretism, original mythology, and unparalleled iconographic exuberance.

Dali, Xizhou

The God of Wealth Caishen in the Benzhu Temple of Xizhou Township, near Dali Old City.

These types of temples are related to the Tuzhu Temples still seen among the Yi of Weishan and which were erected in most districts of Yunnan centuries ago. Some researchers say that the first of them was founded by Xinuluo, the first king of Nanzhao, and that wherever Nanzhao expanded, these temples were established. Later, temples erected for the protective deities of indigenous villages (turen) were considered Tuzhu Temples.

jinuo book

Last posts

The headdress of the Jingpo women

The headdress of the Jingpo women

The headdress of the Jingpo women The clothing style of the Jingpo people is rough and bold, It is possible that it reflects that past time when they were the masters of the frontier mountains, and caravans had to pay a tax to pass through their lands.  Men of the...

Pictographic writing among the Evenki

Pictographic writing among the Evenki

Pictographic writing among the Evenki In Chi Zijian’s novel The Last Quarter of the Moon (English translation by Bruce Humes) there is a short story describing the creation of pictographs to write the Evenki language. “Shiban had two great loves: creating Evenki...

The bull and the political development of Neolithic China

The bull and the political development of Neolithic China

The bull and the political development of Neolithic China Since the history of the penetration of domestic cattle in China goes parallel to that of the political concentration that gave rise to the first cities and later to the first states, that slow penetration of...