Chinese edit

day; sky; heaven life; fate
simp. and trad.
(天命)

Etymology edit

Attested earliest on Zhou dynasty's bronze inscriptions,[1] though during the Western Zhou period, the concept was not exactly worded as 天命 (tiānmìng) but 大令 (dàlìng), 大命 (dàmìng), 魯令 (lǔlìng) & 天令 (tiānlìng) (however, (lìng) and (mìng) were indeed used interchangeably).[2] Goldin (2017)[3] links Zhou's concept 天命 (tiānmìng) to Shang's concept 帝令 (dìlìng) "the Deity's command" attested in the Shang's oracle bones.

Pronunciation edit



Rime
Character
Reading # 1/1 1/1
Initial () (6) (4)
Final () (85) (111)
Tone (調) Level (Ø) Departing (H)
Openness (開合) Open Open
Division () IV III
Fanqie
Baxter then mjaengH
Reconstructions
Zhengzhang
Shangfang
/tʰen/ /mˠiæŋH/
Pan
Wuyun
/tʰen/ /mᵚiaŋH/
Shao
Rongfen
/tʰɛn/ /miaŋH/
Edwin
Pulleyblank
/tʰɛn/ /miajŋH/
Li
Rong
/tʰen/ /miɐŋH/
Wang
Li
/tʰien/ /mĭɐŋH/
Bernard
Karlgren
/tʰien/ /mi̯ɐŋH/
Expected
Mandarin
Reflex
tiān mìng
Expected
Cantonese
Reflex
tin1 ming6
BaxterSagart system 1.1 (2014)
Character
Reading # 1/2 2/2 1/1
Modern
Beijing
(Pinyin)
tiān xiān mìng
Middle
Chinese
‹ then › ‹ xen › ‹ mjængH ›
Old
Chinese
/*l̥ˁi[n]/ /*l̥ˁi[n]/ (W dialect: l̥ˁ- > Hàn-time *xˁ- > MC x-) /*m-riŋ-s/ (dialect: *m-r- > *mr-, *-iŋ> *-eŋ)
English heaven heaven command (n.)

Notes for Old Chinese notations in the Baxter–Sagart system:

* Parentheses "()" indicate uncertain presence;
* Square brackets "[]" indicate uncertain identity, e.g. *[t] as coda may in fact be *-t or *-p;
* Angle brackets "<>" indicate infix;
* Hyphen "-" indicates morpheme boundary;

* Period "." indicates syllable boundary.
Zhengzhang system (2003)
Character
Reading # 1/1 1/1
No. 12387 8275
Phonetic
component
Rime
group
Rime
subdivision
1 0
Corresponding
MC rime
Old
Chinese
/*qʰl'iːn/ /*mreŋs/
Notes

Noun edit

天命

  1. the myriad of things in nature which make up the law of nature or natural law
  2. the will of heaven
  3. the Mandate of Heaven
  4. one's fate or destiny
    人事天命人事天命  ―  jìn rénshì ér tīng tiānmìng  ―  to do one's best and leave the rest to fate
  5. one's nature or natural instincts
  6. one's innate skills or gifts
  7. one's life span or life expectancy

Synonyms edit

  • (the Mandate of Heaven): (literary) 大命 (dàmìng), (literary) 景命 (jǐngmìng)

Descendants edit

Sino-Xenic (天命):

Proper noun edit

天命

  1. (historical) the Tianming era (a Chinese era name; the era of Nurhaci as khan of the Later Jin, from the proclamation of the dynasty in 1616 until 1627)

References edit

  1. ^ Chen, Sanping (2002) “Son of Heaven and Son of God: Interactions among Ancient Asiatic Cultures regarding Sacral Kingship and Theophoric Names”, in Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, volume 12, number 3
  2. ^ Valmisa, Mercedes (2018). "Is the ideology of the 'Mandate of Heaven' already present in Western Zhou bronze inscriptions?", presented at International Consortium for Research in the Humanities. Erlagen. 2012 version
  3. ^ Goldin, Paul Rakita (2017) “Some Shang Antecedents of Later Chinese Ideology and Culture”, in Journal of the American Oriental Society[1], volume 137, number 1
  4. ^ Shim, Jae-hong (2012) “An Ever-contested Poem: The "Classic of Poetry"'s "Hanyi" and the Sino-Korean History Debate”, in The Journal of Asian Studies[2], volume 71, number 2, pages 475-497
  5. ^ Grundmann, Joern Peter, transl. (2022), “Moral Speculation and the Conception of a Sky God”, in Space, Time, Myth, and Morals: A Selection of Jao Tsung-i’s Studies on Cosmological Thought in Early China and Beyond (Collected Works of Jao Tsung-i, Volume: 3), pages 220-277

Vietnamese edit

chữ Hán Nôm in this term

Noun edit

天命

  1. chữ Hán form of thiên mệnh.