Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - What are the jingles of Shangjiuliu, Zhongjiuliu and Xiajiuliu?

What are the jingles of Shangjiuliu, Zhongjiuliu and Xiajiuliu?

The jingle is as follows:

Shangjiuliu: one Buddha, two immortals, three sages, four officials, five senses, six phases, seven monks, eight roads, and nine Zhuang days;

Zhong Jiuliu: one storyteller, two doctors, three diviners (fortune-telling), four chess players (chess players), five painters (painters), six officials (ranks), seven horizontal (lobbyists), eight righteous (chivalrous) and nine fishermen;

Xiajiuliu: One (singing opera), Two Blowers (drummers), Three Circus, Four Haircuts (Haircuts), Five Pools (Bathrooms), Six Back Rubbing, Seven Pedicures, Eight Pairs (Breeding) and Nine Prostitutes.

Extended content:

Three religions and nine streams, old refers to various religions or academic schools. It also refers to people from all walks of life.

Three religions and nine streams (also called nine streams and three streams) generally refer to religions and various academic schools in ancient China, which is the classification of people's status and professional names in ancient China. In ancient vernacular novels, there are often derogatory meanings.

"Three religions" refer to Confucianism, Taoism and Buddhism.

In Hanshu, it refers to Confucianism, Taoism, Yin and Yang, Legalists, famous artists, Mohists, military strategists, miscellaneous notes and farmers. Nine schools and ten schools are novelists except nine schools.

According to Jiu Liu and Han Shu Yi Wen Zhi, Jiu Liu refers to Confucianism, Taoism, Yin and Yang, Legalism, Famous Scholars, Mohism, Strategists, Miscellaneous Scholars and Peasants respectively.

Later, people divided the "nine streams" into "upper nine streams", "middle nine streams" and "lower nine streams" according to social status.

"Shangjiuliu" are emperors, sages, hermits, children's immortals, literati, warriors, agriculture, industry and commerce.

The "middle nine streams" are: Ju Zi, Doctor, Xiang Ming, Dan Qing (painter), scholar, monk, Tao and Ni.

"Dirty servants" are: masters, servants, scales (scales), matchmakers, pawns, time demons (kidnappers and witches), thieves, thieves and prostitutes.

96:

Shangjiuliu: first-class Buddha, second-class fairy, third-class emperor, fourth-class official, fifth-class pot-burning, sixth-class pawn, seven merchants, eight guests and nine kinds of venues;

Secondary 96: First-class teachers, second-rate doctors, third-rate geomantic omen, fourth-rate criticism, fifth-rate painters, sixth-rate artists, seven monks and eight Taoism, nine Chyi Chin;

Dirty: First-class witch, second-class prostitute, third-class god, fourth-class gang, five shaved heads, six blow-blowers, seven actors, eight called street, and nine sold sugar.

The names of "three religions" and "nine streams" did not contain derogatory meanings in the Han Dynasty, but they did in modern times.