Traces of the Sea Goddess: A Digital Humanities Analysis of Mazu Belief and Putian's Maritime Civilization

In 960 AD, a girl was born on the shores of Meizhou Bay in Putian. Her name was Lin Mo. During her short life, she mastered meteorology and healed the sick. After her death, she became a sea goddess. Today, she has 300 million followers worldwide. From one person to 300 million. That’s a thousand-year data chain. I finished reading 42 volumes of Putian local chronicles. What I found: the spread of Mazu belief overlaps almost perfectly with the routes of the Maritime Silk Road. Not a coincidence. Behind every number is a precise lock between faith and commerce. ...

May 20, 2026 · 3 min · 574 words · ChinaRoots 团队

In 3 Square Kilometers, 7 Religions Shared One City for a Thousand Years — This Is the Most 'Unreasonable' Tolerance I've Ever Seen

I have a friend who is an unapologetic “Quanzhou booster.” Every time travel comes up, he says the same thing: “You’ve never been to Quanzhou? Go. Now.” I asked him what’s so great about it. He thought for a second and said something I’ve never forgotten: “You can walk past six different religious temples in one day in Quanzhou. And none of them have walls between them.” I thought he was exaggerating. ...

May 12, 2026 · 7 min · 1305 words · ChinaRoots 团队