The Earthly Branches (also called the Terrestrial Branches or the 12-cycle) are a system of twelve ordered symbols used throughout East Asia. They are indigenous to China, and are themselves Chinese characters, corresponding to words with no concrete meaning other than the associated branch's ordinal numeral position in the list.
Cultural applications of the Branches include a dating system known as the sexagenary cycle, and their use in Chinese astrology. They are associated with the ten Heavenly Stems in , and in Taoism practice.
+ ! colspan="2" | Earthly Branch !Pinyin |
The Earthly Branches are used with the Heavenly Stems in , and in Taoist practice. Many Chinese calendrical systems have started the new year on the second new moon after the winter solstice.
There are several theories about the origin of the Earthly Branches prior to the advent of the historical record. One theory is that the Earthly Branches were adapted from observations of the planet Jupiter (), whose orbital period is roughly twelve Earth years long. Jonathan Smith has proposed that the first meanings of the earthly branches, predating the Shang, were phases of the moon, with the Heavenly Stems at that point referring to divisions of the ecliptic. After being adopted as a calendar these would have lost their clear lunar reference, permitting their re-purposing for Jupiter stations.
In the context of Chinese cosmology becoming increasingly sophisticated during the Warring States period (221 BC), the 12-, 10-, and 60-cycles began to be applied to units of time other than days.
Mariners like Zheng He ( 1405–1433) used 48-point compasses. An additional midpoint was called by a combination of its two closest basic directions, such as (; 172.5°), the midpoint between (; 165°) and (; 180°).
|
|