Ch: qilin. A mythical Chinese animal that combines the elemental male animal ki 麒 (Ch: qi) and the female rin 麟 (Ch: lin). According to the Shijing (Jp: Shikyō 詩経) or Book of Songs, the kirin's hoofs, legs and horn, which resemble those of a deer, are symbols of benevolence. According to the Shuwenjiezi (Jp: Setsubunkaiji 説文解字), the kirin has the body of a deer and the tail of an ox. Its distinctive single horn perhaps is related to the unicorn in western tradition. The kirin typically has five-colored hair but is yellow underneath. A paragon of virtue, the kirin supposedly appears in times of good government. According to legend, the animal appeared before Confucius (Jp: *Kōshi 孔子, 551-479 BC) as well as Emperor Wu 武 of the Han dynasty. The kirin was painted, along with the dragon *ryū 龍 and phoenix *hōō 鳳凰, on the walls of some Han dynasty tombs. In Japan few early depictions are known to exist, except for its appearance in one segment of the second scroll of The Frolicking Animals, Chōjū jinbutsu giga 鳥獣人物戯画, otsukan 乙巻 (mid-12th century), Kōzanji 高山寺 in Kyoto. In the Edo period, the kirin was sometimes painted by sinophile Kano school *Kano-ha 狩野派 artists. The term kirin meaning giraffe in modern Japanese should not be confused with this older usage.