Chen prophecy
Encyclopedia
Chen is the Chinese term for 'prophecy
Prophecy
Prophecy is a process in which one or more messages that have been communicated to a prophet are then communicated to others. Such messages typically involve divine inspiration, interpretation, or revelation of conditioned events to come as well as testimonies or repeated revelations that the...

'. It is also written chan, in the Wade-Giles transliteration as "ch'an" : "the ch'an, couched in enigmatic language, predicted luck and disaster, they constituted real oracle-books." These prophecies could derive from a dream, be brought from overseas, be discovered in excavated inscriptions, or be revealed in "an ecstatic trance".

These prophetic texts were much used by emperors.
At the partition of the empire at the end of the Latter Han Dynasty, "Liu Bei ... (161-223) in Shu and Sun Quan ... (182-252) in Wu proclaimed their own mandates and, of course, used favorable chen prophecies ... to serve their own purposes."
In the Liang Dynasty, "Emperor Wu himself quoted prophetic-apocryphal texts".
In the Sui Dynasty, chen texts were promoted by Wang Shao (fl. 543-608) : as "imperial historian, Wang repeatedly presented favorable prophetic-apocryphal texts and contemporary chen prophecies to Emperor Wen
Emperor Wen of Sui
Emperor Wen of Sui — personal name Yang Jian , Xianbei name Puliuru Jian , nickname Naluoyan — was the founder and first emperor of China's Sui Dynasty . He was a hard-working administrator and a micromanager. As a Buddhist, he encouraged the spread of Buddhism through the state...

... . The emperor was greatly pleased. Encouraged, Wang collected ... chen prophecies ... and wei apocryphal texts, and compiled a ... collection ... . Emperor Wen then had this collection distributed nationwide.
As founder of the Sui Dynasty, "When Yang first enthroned himself, ... he declared that there had been a large number of ... chen prophecies in his favor."

These prophetic texts were also officially accepted as descriptions of particular emperors. An official description of emperor Gao of the Southern Qi Dynasty stated that "His Majesty's name, physical characteristics, as well as the tide, destiny, and the order of succession all correspond with dozens to nearly one hundred chen prophecies."

Other instances of such prophecy are the Wan Nian Ke ("10,000 Years' Poem") by Jiang Ziya, composed early in the Western Zhou dynasty; and the Cang Tou ("Secret Record") by Chunfeng Li, composed during the Tang dynasty.
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