Valley of Ten Thousand Calamities (simplified: 万劫谷, traditional: 萬劫谷, pinyin: Wàn Jié Gǔ, jyutping: maan6 gip3 guk1) was an isolated valley in the Dali Kingdom region that served as the residence of Zhong Wanchou and his family. The valley became the setting for several critical events involving Duan Yu, the Four Great Villains, and various members of the Dali royal family.
Overview
The valley gained its ominous name from the temperament of its master, Zhong Wanchou, whose reputation for violence made the location synonymous with danger. Despite its fearsome reputation, the valley provided a secure refuge for Zhong Wanchou’s family and became a crucial location in the complex web of relationships surrounding Duan Zhengchun and his various romantic entanglements.
The valley’s relative isolation made it an ideal location for those seeking to conduct matters away from the scrutiny of the jianghu. Its remote position near Wuliang Mountain provided natural defences whilst remaining accessible to those who knew the paths.
History
The Zhong family residence
The valley served as the home of Zhong Wanchou, whose fearsome nickname “Kill Everyone” belied the complex personal tragedy that drove his violent temperament. His wife, Gan Baobao, known as the “Pretty Demon”, maintained the household whilst harbouring the secret that their daughter Zhong Ling was actually the biological child of Duan Zhengchun, the Prince of Dali.
The valley provided a sanctuary where Gan Baobao could raise her daughter away from the political complications of the Dali court, though Zhong Wanchou remained unaware of Zhong Ling’s true parentage for many years.
Duan Yu’s captivity
The valley became central to the novel’s plot when Duan Yu was held captive there by Duan Yanqing, the leader of the Four Great Villains. Duan Zhengming, the Emperor of Dali, and the Yellow-browed Monk arrived to negotiate for Duan Yu’s release, leading to a strategic confrontation.
During this tense standoff, Duan Yanqing engaged the Yellow-browed Monk in a game of weiqi, using the contest as a means of negotiation. Duan Yu, though bound and imprisoned in a stone house, managed to subtly influence the game by providing covert assistance to the Yellow-browed Monk through his knowledge of the game’s strategies.
The stone house incident
Within a secluded stone house in the valley, Duan Yanqing orchestrated a particularly cruel scheme. He forced both Duan Yu and Mu Wanqing to consume the Yin Yang Harmony Pill, a powerful aphrodisiac, intending to bring disgrace upon the Duan family by forcing the pair—–whom everyone believed to be half-siblings——into compromising circumstances.
The crisis was averted only through Duan Yu’s exceptional lightness skill, the Lingbo Weibu, which allowed him to maintain continuous motion and resist the drug’s effects throughout the night. This incident demonstrated both Duan Yanqing’s vindictiveness toward the Dali royal family and Duan Yu’s determination to preserve his moral principles despite extreme circumstances.
The rescue operation
The valley witnessed a coordinated rescue effort involving multiple factions of the Dali court. Duan Zhengchun, together with various officials and the Three Commissioners of Dali, mounted an operation to free both Duan Yu and Zhong Ling, who had also been captured during the crisis.
The confrontation in the valley brought together the other three members of the Four Great Villains—Ye Erniang, Yue Laosan, and Yun Zhonghe——creating a tense standoff between the forces of orthodoxy and the jianghu’s most notorious villains.
During the rescue, Duan Yu inadvertently absorbed portions of the neili from several combatants through his Beiming Shengong, including from Duan Yanqing himself. This unexpected acquisition of martial power would prove significant in Duan Yu’s later adventures.
Inhabitants
The valley’s primary residents were members of the Zhong family:
- Zhong Wanchou (钟万仇 – Zhōng Wànchóu) – Valley master
- Gan Baobao (甘宝宝 – Gān Bǎobao) – Zhong Wanchou’s wife
- Zhong Ling (钟灵 – Zhōng Líng) – Their daughter
Notable events
- Strategic weiqi game between Duan Yanqing and the Yellow-browed Monk
- Duan Yu and Mu Wanqing’s captivity in the stone house
- The Yin Yang Harmony Pill incident
- Confrontation between the Four Great Villains and Dali forces
- Duan Yu’s inadvertent absorption of neili from multiple combatants
Behind the scenes
The valley’s name carries Buddhist connotations, with “ten thousand calamities” (万劫) referring to the concept of endless cycles of suffering in Buddhist philosophy. This naming reflects the tragic nature of the events that unfolded there and the karmic entanglements of the characters involved, particularly the complex web of relationships surrounding Duan Zhengchun’s romantic past.
The location serves as a microcosm of the novel’s broader themes of hidden identities, karmic retribution, and the intersection of personal desires with familial and political obligations. The valley witnessed the convergence of multiple narrative threads that would ultimately lead to revelations about Duan Yu’s true parentage and the resolution of long-standing conflicts within the Dali royal family.
Video game adaptation
The MMORPG Tian Long Ba Bu 2 recreates the Valley of Ten Thousand Calamities as a co-operative story instance. Players coordinate with Duan Zhengming, Duan Zhengchun, and Hua Hegen to enter the valley, defeat Ye Erniang, Yue Laosan, and Yun Zhonghe, seize Duan Yanqing’s stone house key, and free Duan Yu across staged missions such as “Meeting at the Valley”, “Battle of Ten Thousand Calamities”, and “Tiger’s Roar and Dragon’s Cry”, receiving copper coin and experience rewards that mirror the escalating stakes of the novel’s rescue arc.
See also
- Duan Yu – Prince of Dali whose captivity defined the valley’s notoriety
- Zhong Wanchou – Valley master whose vendetta shaped its history
- Dali Kingdom – The polity overseeing the region surrounding the valley
External links
- Valley of Ten Thousand Calamities (Chinese) on Baidu Baike