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PODCAST · history

Chinese Mythology Stories

Ancient Chinese myths, legends, and early history told in a calm storytelling style.This show explores creation myths, legendary heroes, gods, monsters, and classic stories from ancient China, including Pangu, Nüwa, Fuxi, Shennong, the Yellow Emperor, and the Classic of Mountains and Seas.A simple introduction to Chinese mythology for listeners around the world.

Publisher-supplied feed metadata · PodParley refreshed Jun 13, 2026 · Source feed

  1. 9

    Yu the Great Controls the Flood: The Hero Who Guided the Waters

    In ancient Chinese legend, a great flood once covered the land. Yu the Great changed the way people fought the flood. Instead of only blocking the water, he opened channels, dredged rivers, cut through mountains, and guided the water toward the sea.He worked for thirteen years and famously passed his own home three times without entering.This is a story about wisdom, responsibility, leadership, and the long labor needed to turn disaster into order.This is Episode 12 of Chinese Mythology Stories.Source note: This episode is based on traditional Chinese mythology and early legendary history. The script has been rewritten, edited, and produced as an original educational audio story.

  2. 8

    Jingwei Fills the Sea: The Little Bird Who Refused to Give Up

    In Chinese mythology, Jingwei was once a young girl named Nüwa, the daughter of Yandi. After drowning in the Eastern Sea, her spirit became a small bird.From then on, Jingwei carried stones and twigs from the mountains and dropped them into the sea, determined to fill it forever. The task seemed impossible, but Jingwei never stopped.This is a story about grief, memory, resistance, persistence, and the courage to continue even when facing something too vast to defeat.This is Episode 11 of Chinese Mythology Stories.Source note: This episode is based on traditional Chinese mythology. The script has been rewritten, edited, and produced as an original educational audio story.

  3. 7

    Kuafu Chases the Sun: The Giant Who Ran Toward the Light

    In ancient Chinese mythology, Kuafu was a giant who decided to chase the sun across the world. He ran over mountains, rivers, forests, and plains, trying to reach the blazing light in the sky.But the closer he came to the sun, the more terrible the heat became. Thirst overwhelmed him, and he finally fell before reaching his goal. Before he died, he threw away his walking stick, which became a peach forest that gave shade and fruit to later travelers.This is a myth about ambition, courage, failure, and the lasting meaning of what we leave behind.This is Episode 10 of Chinese Mythology Stories.Source note: This episode is based on traditional Chinese mythology. The script has been rewritten, edited, and produced as an original educational audio story.

  4. 6

    Chang’e Flies to the Moon: The Lonely Palace in the Night Sky

    After Hou Yi saved the world by shooting down nine suns, he received an elixir of immortality. But the gift brought a difficult fate.In this episode, we tell the famous myth of Chang’e flying to the moon. After drinking the elixir, Chang’e rose into the night sky and became the immortal goddess of the moon palace, forever separated from Hou Yi on earth.This story is one of the most beloved myths in Chinese culture. It is connected with the Mid-Autumn Festival, the full moon, reunion, separation, memory, and longing.This is Episode 9 of Chinese Mythology Stories.Source note: This episode is based on traditional Chinese mythology. The script has been rewritten, edited, and produced as an original educational audio story.

  5. 5

    Hou Yi Shoots the Suns: The Archer Who Saved the World from Fire

    In ancient Chinese mythology, there were once ten suns in the sky. When all ten appeared together, rivers dried, fields cracked, forests burned, and life on earth began to collapse.In this episode, we tell the story of Hou Yi, the legendary archer who shot down nine of the ten suns and saved the world. But he left one sun in the sky, showing that true heroism is not only power, but also restraint and balance.This is Episode 8 of Chinese Mythology Stories.Source note: This episode is based on traditional Chinese mythology. The script has been rewritten, edited, and produced as an original educational audio story.

  6. 4

    Gonggong Strikes Mount Buzhou: The Rage That Broke the Pillar of Heaven

    After the ancient world moved toward order, chaos still remained.In this episode, we tell the myth of Gonggong, the fierce water god whose rage shook heaven and earth. After being defeated, Gonggong struck Mount Buzhou, one of the pillars supporting the sky. The heavens tilted, the earth shifted, and the rivers began to flow east.This myth explains the instability of the world, the danger of uncontrolled anger, and the fragile balance between heaven and earth.This is Episode 7 of Chinese Mythology Stories.Source note: This episode is based on traditional Chinese mythology. The script has been rewritten, edited, and produced as an original educational audio story.

  7. 3

    Huangdi and Chiyou: The Battle That Brought Order to the Ancient World

    After the tribes of Huangdi and Yandi began to form a larger ancestral tradition, a new threat appeared: Chiyou, the fierce leader of the Nine Li people.In this episode, we tell the legendary story of the Battle of Zhuolu. Chiyou covered the battlefield in fog and brought chaos to the ancient world. Huangdi used wisdom, strategy, allies, and the south-pointing chariot to find direction and defeat him.This myth is not only a story of war. It is a story about civilization finding its way through confusion, and order rising from chaos.This is Episode 6 of Chinese Mythology Stories.Source note: This episode is based on traditional Chinese mythology and early legendary history. The script has been rewritten, edited, and produced as an original educational audio story.

  8. 2

    The Yellow Emperor and the Flame Emperor: The Beginning of Huaxia Civilization

    After Shennong taught humanity agriculture and medicine, different tribes began to grow, expand, and compete for land and resources.In this episode, we tell the legendary story of Huangdi, the Yellow Emperor, and Yandi, the Flame Emperor. Their conflict, remembered in tradition as the Battle of Banquan, later became a symbol of tribal fusion, shared ancestry, and the beginning of Huaxia civilization.This is Episode 5 of Chinese Mythology Stories.Source note: This episode is based on traditional Chinese mythology and early legendary history. The script has been rewritten, edited, and produced as an original educational audio story.

  9. 1

    Shennong: The Divine Farmer Who Tasted a Hundred Herbs

    After humanity began to understand the world, people still needed food, medicine, and the wisdom to survive.In this episode, we tell the story of Shennong, the Divine Farmer. He taught people to farm and grow grains, and he personally tasted hundreds of herbs to discover which were edible, which could heal diseases, and which were poisonous.He was poisoned many times but never gave up. In the end, Shennong became one of the great legendary ancestors of Chinese civilization, remembered as the origin of agriculture and medicine.This is Episode 4 of Chinese Mythology Stories.Source note: This episode is based on traditional Chinese mythology. The script has been rewritten, edited, and produced as an original educational audio story.

  10. 0

    Fuxi: The Sage Who Taught Humanity to Understand the World

    After Pangu opened the universe and Nüwa created humanity, human beings still needed to understand the world around them.In this episode, we tell the ancient Chinese myth of Fuxi, the legendary sage who observed heaven, earth, animals, rivers, seasons, and stars. According to tradition, Fuxi created the Eight Trigrams, taught people how to fish and hunt with nets, helped establish family order, and gave humanity one of the earliest ways to understand the patterns of nature.Fuxi is remembered as a culture hero and one of the great legendary ancestors of Chinese civilization.This is the third episode of Chinese Mythology Stories.Source note: This episode is based on traditional Chinese mythology. The script has been rewritten, edited, and produced as an original educational audio story.

  11. -1

    Nüwa: The Goddess Who Created Humanity and Repaired the Sky

    After Pangu separated heaven and earth, the world still had no human beings.In this episode, we tell the ancient Chinese myth of Nüwa, the goddess who created humanity from yellow clay and later repaired the broken sky with five-colored stones.Nüwa is one of the most important figures in Chinese mythology. She is remembered as the creator of human beings, the protector of the world, and the goddess who restored balance when disaster threatened heaven and earth.This is the second episode of Chinese Mythology Stories, a series about ancient Chinese myths, legends, gods, heroes, and early civilization.Source note: This episode is based on traditional Chinese mythology. The script has been rewritten, edited, and produced as an original educational audio story.

  12. -2

    Pangu: The Giant Who Created the World

    Before Chinese history began, there was myth.In this episode, we tell the ancient Chinese creation story of Pangu, the giant who split the cosmic egg, separated heaven and earth, and became the mountains, rivers, sun, moon, wind, clouds, and stars.Pangu is not a historical figure, but his story is one of the most famous creation myths in Chinese tradition. It shows how ancient people imagined the birth of the world, the balance between heaven and earth, and the deep connection between nature and humanity.This is the first episode of Chinese Mythology Stories, a series about ancient Chinese myths, legends, gods, heroes, and early civilization.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Ancient Chinese myths, legends, and early history told in a calm storytelling style.This show explores creation myths, legendary heroes, gods, monsters, and classic stories from ancient China, including Pangu, Nüwa, Fuxi, Shennong, the Yellow Emperor, and the Classic of Mountains and Seas.A simple introduction to Chinese mythology for listeners around the world.

HOSTED BY

Anderson

CATEGORIES

Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Chinese Mythology Stories have?

Chinese Mythology Stories currently has 12 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Chinese Mythology Stories about?

Ancient Chinese myths, legends, and early history told in a calm storytelling style.This show explores creation myths, legendary heroes, gods, monsters, and classic stories from ancient China, including Pangu, Nüwa, Fuxi, Shennong, the Yellow Emperor, and the Classic of Mountains and Seas.A simple...

How often does Chinese Mythology Stories release new episodes?

Chinese Mythology Stories has 12 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to Chinese Mythology Stories?

You can listen to Chinese Mythology Stories on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts Chinese Mythology Stories?

Chinese Mythology Stories is created and hosted by Anderson.
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