📖 Sobre Ryuu
Ryuu é uma variante de romanização do japonês Ryū (竜/龍, 'dragão'), a grande divindade benévola da água no mito do leste asiático — serpentiforme, sem asas, trazedor de chuva e guardião de rios e mares — distinto em tudo do dragão ocidental que cospe fogo; imortalizado na mitologia de Ryūjin o Deus do Mar, no nome literário do escritor Akutagawa Ryūnosuke, e globalmente através de Ryu de Street Fighter (1987).
📍 Detalhes
- OrigemJapanese
- Gênero♂ Masculino
- SignificadoVariant of Ryu. Dragon
🔀 Variantes e Nomes Relacionados
⭐ Pessoas Famosas
- Ryu (Street Fighter) — Fictional martial artist and lead protagonist of Capcom's Street Fighter series (debuting 1987), one of the most iconic characters in video game history; a wandering martial arts practitioner seeking to test his strength, known for his white gi, red headband, and Hadouken fireball technique; Street Fighter became one of the defining franchises of arcade and fighting game culture, and Ryu's name introduced the Japanese word for dragon to a global gaming audience.
- Ryūjin (竜神, Dragon God) — The god of the sea and storms in Japanese mythology, ruler of the underwater Dragon Palace (Ryūgū-jō) from which he governs the tides and rain; his magical tide jewels (kanju and manju) control the ebb and flow of the ocean; he is the grandfather of the legendary first Emperor Jimmu through his daughter Toyotama-hime; the folk tale of Urashima Tarō, who visits his palace and returns to find centuries have passed, is one of Japan's most beloved stories.
- Akutagawa Ryūnosuke — Japanese short story writer (1892–1927), one of the great masters of Japanese literature; his name Ryūnosuke (竜之介) contains the ryū (dragon) character; his stories Rashōmon (1915) and Yabu no Naka (In a Grove, 1922) — the basis for Akira Kurosawa's 1950 film Rashōmon — are among the most celebrated short stories in world literature; Japan's most prestigious literary prize, the Akutagawa Prize, is named in his honour.
- The Japanese dragon (ryū) vs Western dragon — The Japanese and East Asian ryū (竜/龍) is the defining alternative to the Western dragon archetype: serpentine, wingless, benevolent, and above all a deity of water — of rain, rivers, and the sea; where the Western dragon symbolises danger and destructive fire, the Japanese ryū brings life-giving water, governs the tides, and represents imperial wisdom and celestial authority; the contrast encapsulates a fundamental difference between Eastern and Western mythological imaginations.