Guo She — The State Altar Sacrifice in Feudal China 国社
Paul PengShare
Guo She (国社, Guó Shè, lit. "State Earth Altar") is the state-level earth altar established by feudal lords (诸侯) for the people of their domain in Zhou China. The Liji (礼记) records: "The feudal lords establish an altar for the hundred surnames — this is called Guo She." Occupying the second tier of the four-tier altar hierarchy — below the royal Great Altar (大社) and above the village altar (里社) — the Guo She was the ritual center of each feudal state's religious life. In the Zhengyi tradition, this graduated sacred space lives on in the Taoist temple hierarchy.

Guo She (国社, Guó Shè, lit. "State Earth Altar") is the state-level earth altar established by feudal lords (诸侯) for the people of their domain in the Zhou dynasty. The term is recorded in the Liji (礼记, "Book of Rites") with authoritative commentary by Zheng Xuan (郑玄). The Liji distinguishes the Guo She from the royal altar (大社, Great Altar of the Son of Heaven) and the village altar (里社). Each feudal state maintained its own Guo She as the ritual center of the domain's religious life, serving the entire population of the feudal territory.
The Liji (礼记) records:
"The feudal lords establish an altar for the hundred surnames — this is called Guo She."
Zheng Xuan (郑玄) provides the authoritative commentary on the Guo She, explaining its position in the altar hierarchy and its function as the ritual center of the feudal domain. The "hundred surnames" (百姓, bǎi xìng) — the common people of the domain — were the beneficiaries of the Guo She sacrifice: the feudal lord performed the altar sacrifice on behalf of his entire population, petitioning the earth deity for the domain's agricultural prosperity and protection.

In the Zhengyi tradition, the Guo She tiered structure finds its counterpart in the Taoist temple hierarchy. The Taoist understanding of sacred space preserves the Zhou altar logic: major temples (宫, gōng) serve the regional population, smaller temples (观, guàn) serve local communities, and shrines serve individual villages. The principle of graduated sacred space — from the highest celestial temples to the humblest local shrines — is the direct inheritance of the Zhou four-tier altar system.
The history of Taoist fasting and offering rites traces how the Guo She's territorial sacrifice logic was absorbed into the Taoist liturgical framework. The mantras and hand seals employed by Zhengyi priests at regional temple ceremonies formally activate the territorial deity's presence — the same function the Guo She sacrifice performed for the feudal lord's domain.
About the Author
Paul Peng
Paul Peng is a Zhengyi Taoist priest from Longhu Mountain, Jiangxi — the ancestral home of the Celestial Masters' tradition. Ordained at 25 after a dream from the Celestial Master, he has practiced for 25 years under Master Zeng Guangliang. He is the curator of this store, which is officially authorized by Tianshi Fu. All items are consecrated at the temple by the resident priest team.
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