Phoenix, Qilin, and the World of Auspicious Beings
The fenghuang and the qilin occupy a distinctive place in Chinese mythology because they belong to a world of auspicious beings whose appearance signifies harmony, virtue, sage rule, and the visible flourishing of a rightly ordered realm. In transmitted sources such as the Shanhaijing, the Liji, and the Lunheng, they appear not simply as fabulous animals of wonder, but as symbolic creatures through which Chinese tradition imagines moral order becoming legible in the fabric of the world. This article examines the phoenix, qilin, and the wider field of auspicious beings within the Chinese Myth, Legend, and Folklore knowledge series, showing how omen, beauty, benevolence, and political legitimacy converge in one of the most revealing symbolic registers of Chinese myth.









