Yulong Santaizi (玉龙三太子)
Chinese. ‘Third Prince of the
Jade Dragon’. Name of the third son of the Jade Dragon, who usually appears in a transformed shape, i.e. as the fabled
horse of the
Mahayana
Buddhist monk Xuanzang (fig.) in the story
Xiyouji, i.e. the chronicle of the ‘Journey to the West’ (fig.). In his transformed appearance as a horse, he is also referred to as bai
long
mah (白龙马), i.e. ‘white dragon-horse’. He was sentenced to death for setting fire to his father's great pearl, but was saved from execution by
Kuan
Yin (fig.), the goddess of mercy, and eventually ordered to join
Tripitaka (fig.) on his pilgrimage to India as
a penitence for having originally behaved in a manner contrary to the precepts of
Buddhism. Also referred to as simply Yulong, i.e. ‘Jade Dragon’.
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