Difference between revisions of "Fu-Dog"

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(Characteristics)
(Characteristics)
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[[Greg Weisman]] has described Fu-Dog as "big, strong, fast and darn smart for an animal. The ultimate wachdog." No other details known, though it is very likely Fu-Dog will resemble the fu-dogs of Chinese architecture.
 
[[Greg Weisman]] has described Fu-Dog as "big, strong, fast and darn smart for an animal. The ultimate wachdog." No other details known, though it is very likely Fu-Dog will resemble the fu-dogs of Chinese architecture.
  
Fu-dog has green skin with a golden lion-like mane and a long tufted tail.
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Fu-dog has green skin with a golden lion-like mane and a long tufted tail. He wears a gold collar on his neck.
  
 
==Appearances==
 
==Appearances==

Revision as of 19:01, 13 August 2009

Fu-Dog

Fu-Dog is a gargoyle beast, originally part of the Xanadu Clan in China at some unspecified point in time, and later a member of the Manhattan Clan.

History

Fu-Dog hatched at an unspecified point in time. When Brooklyn visits Xanadu during his TimeDancer adventures, Fu-Dog joins with him as his first companion. Fu-Dog is fiercely loyal to Brooklyn. The two of them will visit 2198 together, and jointly battle the Space-Spawn as part of Samson's resistance movement. Later they will visit feudal Japan and many other locales and times. Like Katana, Nashville, and Tachi, Fu-Dog will become a part of the Manhattan Clan after Brooklyn returns to the Eyrie Building.

Characteristics

Greg Weisman has described Fu-Dog as "big, strong, fast and darn smart for an animal. The ultimate wachdog." No other details known, though it is very likely Fu-Dog will resemble the fu-dogs of Chinese architecture.

Fu-dog has green skin with a golden lion-like mane and a long tufted tail. He wears a gold collar on his neck.

Appearances

Real World Background

Fu-dogs, in the real world, are statues of strange beasts found in East Asia, especially China, and also known as fu-lions, shishi, and shisa. They are believed to be protector-figures, and therefore function quite effectively as a Chinese equivalent to gargoyles. Fu-dog's name obviously reflects this, suggesting that in the Gargoyles Universe, fu-dogs were inspired by local gargoyle beasts in the same way that the architectural gargoyles on the castles and cathedrals of medieval Europe were inspired by gargoyles living in those regions. In the real world, fu-dogs originated in China, and are believed to be a combination of travellers' descriptions of lions (which are not native to China) and common dog breeds. They may also have been inspired, in part, by similar statues built in India. They are placed in pairs outside the doorways of buildings, which they are believed to guard from danger. Traditionally, one of a pair of statues is female, indicated by a cub under its paw, while the other of the pair is male, identified by a ball under its paw.

Fu-lions are only the most numerous and well-known of the East Asian guardian beasts. Other types of statues included the Korean haetae, the winged bixie or pi-xiu, and statues of qi-lin.

See also

  • Fu-Dogs at Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia