Almost everyone is familiar with stories such as "Zhong Kui fights ghosts", and Zhong Kui is the most familiar character in Chinese folk belief. The door god who is posted on the door to suppress ghosts and overcome evil spirits is hung in the middle hall. The magical talisman used to ward off disasters and dispel evil spirits appeared in Nuo rituals as a powerful general who could control ghosts and slay demons. From this, various Zhongkui plays and Zhongkui pictures were derived.
Zhong Kui, whose surname is Zhong Kui and whose character is Zhengnan, is a god in Chinese folklore who can fight ghosts and drive away evil spirits. In the old days, Chinese people often hung images of Zhong Kui to ward off evil spirits and eliminate disasters. He is the "Sage of the Tang Dynasty who bestows blessings on the house" in traditional Chinese culture. Ancient books record that he was a native of Zhongnan, Chang'an in the early Tang Dynasty. (According to ancient records and research by experts and scholars, Zhong Kui was a native of Zhongnan Village, Zhongnan Town, Zhongnan Town, Zhouzhi County, in the middle section of the Qinling Mountains in Xi'an, Shaanxi Province today. The Zhongkui hometown temple in Zhongnan now exists). He has curly temples and a strange appearance; however, he is a talented, knowledgeable, knowledgeable, and talented person. He is always upright, upright, and treats others with integrity.
During the Spring Festival, Zhong Kui is the door god (one of the most famous gods in Taoism). During the Dragon Boat Festival, Zhong Kui is the heavenly master who kills the five poisons. Zhong Kui is the only all-purpose god among the gods of traditional Chinese Taoism. If you want blessings, you will get blessings. If you want wealth, you will get wealth. If you ask for it, you will get it.