Moon Goddess of Chinese Mythology
嫦娥
She drank the elixir of immortality and ascended to the moon — not as an act of greed, but as an act of defiance. For over 4,000 years, she has watched over humanity from the Guanghan Palace, her story told every Mid-Autumn Festival beneath the fullest moon of the year.
Keeper of the Moon · Guardian of Eternal SolitudeChang'e (嫦娥, Cháng'é) is the Moon Goddess of Chinese mythology — one of the most beloved and widely recognized deities in Chinese culture. She was once a mortal woman married to the legendary archer Hou Yi. When the earth was scorched by ten suns, Hou Yi shot down nine of them and was rewarded with the Elixir of Immortality from Xiwangmu, the Queen Mother of the West. But when Hou Yi's treacherous apprentice Feng Meng tried to steal the elixir, Chang'e drank it herself rather than let it fall into evil hands. The elixir lifted her to the moon, where she resides to this day in the Guanghan Palace (广寒宫, the Palace of Expansive Cold), accompanied by the Jade Rabbit who grinds medicine for eternity. She is the namesake of China's Chang'e lunar exploration program and the central figure of the Mid-Autumn Festival celebrated by over a billion people worldwide.
Ten suns blazed in the sky. Rivers dried. Crops withered. The Jade Emperor called upon the archer Hou Yi — and he shot down nine of them, leaving one to warm the earth forever.
Xiwangmu gave Hou Yi a single vial of golden elixir — enough for one person to ascend to heaven. He hid it, unwilling to leave his wife. But Feng Meng, his apprentice, wanted immortality for himself.
When Feng Meng broke into her home to steal the elixir, Chang'e made a choice: drink it herself rather than let it be taken by evil. She floated to the moon — and has watched over the world every night since.
From mortal woman to immortal deity — the full origin story. Ten suns, a legendary archer, and the choice that changed everything.
ExploreWhat was in the vial? Why did Xiwangmu grant it? And why did Chang'e really drink it? The full story of the divine elixir, the betrayal, and the moment of choice.
ExploreA palace of ice and jade suspended on the lunar surface. The Jade Rabbit grinding medicine. The osmanthus tree. Wu Gang and his endless punishment. Life on the moon.
ExploreHow one woman's flight to the moon became a celebration observed by over a billion people. Mooncakes, lanterns, and the night the entire Chinese world looks up at the same sky.
ExploreShooting down nine suns is an act of cosmic warfare. The archer who reshaped the sky, his rivalry with Feng Meng, and the earth-shaking battle that made Chang'e's story possible.
ExploreChina's lunar missions carry her name. Disney made a movie about her. She appears in games, films, and art worldwide. How the moon goddess became a global icon.
ExploreSend your words to Chang'e. They will be transformed into silver inscriptions, preserved forever in the luminous stone of the Guanghan Palace.
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