Chosen to travel from China to India, Tang Sanzang depends on companions whose powers and weaknesses repeatedly test his judgment. His historical inspiration is the monk Xuanzang, but the novel transforms the journey into a comic and spiritual epic.
Tang Sanzang
The Buddhist monk whose pilgrimage gives a company of unruly companions their common purpose.
Who is Tang Sanzang?
Meaning beyond the plot
He connects the novel’s popular adventures to the historical transmission of Buddhist texts.
His vulnerability prevents the pilgrimage from becoming a simple display of supernatural power.
- The compassionate mind exposed to worldly danger
- Moral intention without practical wisdom
- The shared purpose that turns rivals into companions
Tang Sanzang through the story
Chosen for the mission
The monk receives the charge to seek scriptures in the West.
Gathering companions
Wukong, Bajie, and Wujing join the pilgrimage.
Eighty-one trials
His compassion and judgment are tested by repeated dangers and disguises.
Return with the scriptures
The completed journey brings sacred texts back to China.
The people around Tang Sanzang
Sun Wukong
Wukong protects Tang Sanzang while repeatedly testing—and being tested by—his moral authority.
View characterZhu Bajie
Tang Sanzang offers Bajie a path of restoration without pretending his appetites have disappeared.
View characterSha Wujing
Wujing serves the pilgrimage through steadfast care and endurance.
View characterRead the original work
Ideas connected to this character
Related characters
Sun Wukong
Journey to the WestA stone-born trickster whose immense power is gradually redirected toward a shared spiritual journey.
Zhu Bajie
Journey to the WestA fallen heavenly marshal travelling in a half-human, half-pig form.
Sha Wujing
Journey to the WestA banished heavenly general who becomes the group’s most dependable companion.
Achilles
The IliadAn unmatched warrior forced to choose between a long life and undying fame.