Xie Bao

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Xie Bao
Water Margin character
Tsuzoku Suikoden Goketsu Hyakuhachi-nin no Hitori (BM 1906,1220,0.1267 1).jpg
First appearance Chapter 49
In-universe information
Nickname"Twin-tailed Scorpion"
雙尾蠍
WeaponBronze forked spear (渾鐵點鋼叉)
OriginHunter
DesignationInfantry leader of Liangshan
Rank35th, Crying Star (天哭星) of the 36 Heavenly Spirits
Ancestral home / Place of originDengzhou (in present-day eastern Shandong)
Chinese names
Simplified Chinese 解宝
Traditional Chinese 解寶
Pinyin Xiè Bǎo
Wade–Giles Hsieh Pao

Xie Bao is a fictional character in Water Margin , one of the Four Great Classical Novels in Chinese literature. Nicknamed "Twin-tailed Scorpion", he ranks 35th among the 36 Heavenly Spirits, the first third of the 108 Stars of Destiny.

Contents

Inspiration

Chinese hstorians theorized that Xie Bao was inspired by a real life figure with similar name. This theory particularly relied on classical era record of Sanchao beimeng huibian  [ zh ]. [1] In this record, the real life Xie Bao was a minor rebel leader from Jizhou during the early Southern Song (ca. 1129, Jianyan era). In response to this rebellion, emperor Gaozong sent Han Shizhong, a rising star general, who managed to suppress these rebels group which led by Xie Bao and others. [2] This raw historical kernel fueled speculation by modern Chinese historian and textual critic Wang Liqi  [ zh ] that the figure was the real life inspiration for the fictionalized Liang Shan bandit hero. [3] However, other Chinese historical critics like Wang Yu and Li Dianyuan expressed their skepticism towards Wang Liqi 's theory of this legend-history fusion for lacking supporting evidence to prove that the historical Xie Bao fled from Dengzhou to Jeju, as the supposed evidence that the real life rebel was indeed the inspiration for the fictionalized one. [1]

Water Margin biography

The novel depicts Xie Bao as seven chi tall, dark-complexioned and having a round face. Each of his ankles is tattooed with a flying yaksha. [4] Nicknamed "Twin-tailed Scorpion", Xie Bao usually wears the hide of a tiger or a leopard as his outer garment, just like his elder brother Xie Zhen. Skilled in martial arts, agile in climbing hills and able to endure bad weathers, the brothers each use a bronze forked spear in hunting, which is also their weapon in combat. When he is enraged, Xie Bao could shake things around him with his roar.

Joining Liangshan

The governor of Dengzhou (登州; in present-day eastern Shandong) orders Xie Zhen and Xie Bao, the best among local hunters, to hunt down a tiger in three days which has preyed on travelers on a ridge, failing which they would face severe punishment. On the second night, the brothers trap the tiger, corner it on a cliff, and fire poison arrows at it. The tiger falls off the cliff and lands in the backyard of the mansion of one Squire Mao. As they are clambering down the hill, Squire Mao orders his son Mao Zhongyi to take the tiger, now dead, to the governor to claim the rewards.

Finding no tiger, the brothers are infuriated, smashing the furnitures in Mao's mansion before leaving. They run into Mao Zhongyi, who lures them back to his home where they are seized in an ambush. They are sent to the governor who jails them on the charge of theft. Squire Mao bribes the chief warden to murder them in prison.

Yue He, a jailer in the prison, happens to be related to them, his sister being the wife of Sun Li, whose brother Sun Xin is married to Gu Dasao, a cousin of the Xies. Sun Li is the commandant of Dezhou's garrison. Yue takes the news of the Xies to Sun Xin and Gu Dasao. The couple rope in Zou Yuan and Zou Run to help in the rescue. They also pressure Sun Li to join in. On the day of rescue, Yue He opens the prison gate to let in Gu Dasao, who pretends to bring food to the Xies. After admitting her, Yue unlocks the manacles that shackles the Xies to a bed. Once released, the Xies are like tigers released, charging out of their cell and smashing the chief warden to death as Gu creates havoc in the jail compound. Meanwhile, Sun Li and the others launches an attack from the outside. After pulling off the rescue, the group kills Squire Mao and his family and flee to join the outlaw band of Liangshan.

Before going up to the stronghold, Sun Li volunteers to infiltrate the Zhu Family Village, which Liangshan has failed to take in two offensives. As Sun Li has received combat training from the same teacher as Luan Tingyu, the martial arts instructor of the village, he easily wins the confidence of the Zhus. Xie Bao, together with Xie Zhen, Sun Xin, Gu Dasao, Yue He, Zou Yuan and Zou Run, goes on a rampage inside the village, taking it by surprise, when Sun Li gives the signal. The fall of the Zhu Family Village is an immense contribution by the group before their formal acceptance into Liangshan.

Campaigns and death

The Xie brothers are appointed as leaders of the Liangshan infantry after the 108 Stars of Destiny came together in what is called the Grand Assembly. They participate in the campaigns against the Liao invaders and rebel forces in Song territory following amnesty from Emperor Huizong for Liangshan.

In the battle of Black Dragon Ridge (烏龍嶺; northeast of present-day Meicheng Town, Jiande, Zhejiang) in the campaign against Fang La, the Xie brothers disguises themselves as hunters to recce the terrain. While climbing up the steep cliff, they are discovered by the enemy soldiers, hurling grappling hooks at them. Caught, Xie Zhen cuts the ropes of the hooks and falls to his death. Xie Bao is crushed to death by the boulders and other debris thrown down at him.

See also

Appendix

References

  1. 1 2 "水浒里此人充满争议, 水浒外引发一场论战, 至今仍是个". 2018. Retrieved 21 September 2025. citing 王, 珏; 李, 殿元 (1994). 《水浒传》中的悬案 [The Unsolved Cases in Water Margin] (in Chinese). 四川人民出版社. ISBN   978-7-220-03715-3. OCLC   34603091 . Retrieved 2025-09-22.
  2. "三朝北盟會編". wikisource (in Chinese).
  3. Wang Liqi (2009). 水滸全傳校注 (in Chinese). Vol. 4. 河北教育出版社. ISBN   7543468972.
  4. "The 49th chapter of "Water Margin": The Escape of Jie Zhen and Jie Bao; Sun Li and Sun Xin Launch a Jailbreak" . Retrieved 3 October 2024.

Bibliography