Heavenly Sword (simplified: 倚天剑, traditional: 倚天劍, pinyin: Yǐtiān Jiàn) was a legendary jian that symbolised Heaven’s authority in the jianghu. Forged by Guo Jing and Huang Rong to preserve secret martial arts manuals for future generations, the weapon became the treasured symbol of the Emei Order and played a central role in the jianghu’s struggles during the late Yuan dynasty.
Overview
The Heavenly Sword embodied Heaven itself in Chinese cosmology, where the emperor bears the title Son of Heaven. The weapon’s name reflected this connection to divine authority, representing Heaven’s mandate in determining China’s rightful ruler. Alongside its companion weapon, the Dragon-slaying Sabre, it contained secrets meant to enable the Han Chinese to overthrow Mongol rule.
Throughout the novel, the weapon was protected by the Emei Order, passed down from Guo Xiang to successive abbesses. According to jianghu legend, only the wielder of the Heavenly Sword could challenge the possessor of the Dragon-slaying Sabre, creating a balance of power that prevented either weapon from dominating the martial world alone.
Description
The Heavenly Sword was a masterfully crafted jian, forged with exceptional care and precision. In the Third Edition of the novel, it featured a structural detail that proved crucial to unlocking its secrets: both the Heavenly Sword and Dragon-slaying Sabre had chips approximately seven centimetres from their hilts, positioned at matching weak points that would not be struck during normal combat.
The weapon’s exceptional quality made it nearly indestructible, with only one known method of breaking it: striking its weak point against the matching point on the Dragon-slaying Sabre. This design ensured the weapons could only reveal their secrets when brought together deliberately, not through accidental combat.
History
Creation and inheritance
After the fall of Xiangyang, Guo Jing and Huang Rong undertook the creation of two legendary weapons to preserve martial arts knowledge for future generations who would continue the struggle against Mongol rule. In the Third Edition, they forged the Heavenly Sword from Yang Guo’s Gentleman Sword and Xiaolongnü’s Lady Sword, two legendary weapons from the previous generation.
They spent months preparing materials and carefully planning how the weapons would preserve their secrets. The decision to forge two separate weapons rather than one reflected their strategic thinking: dividing the knowledge prevented any single wielder from becoming too powerful, whilst requiring cooperation to access the full inheritance.
Inheritance to Guo Xiang
Guo Jing and Huang Rong chose Guo Xiang over her sister Guo Fu as the inheritor of the Heavenly Sword, recognising Guo Fu’s demonstrated recklessness as a liability. This decision reflected careful consideration of which daughter could best safeguard the weapon and its secrets for future generations.
After inheriting the weapon, Guo Xiang founded the Emei Order and established the Heavenly Sword as a symbol of the order’s leadership. The weapon passed down through successive abbesses, maintained as the order’s most treasured possession.
Emei Order protection
For decades, the Emei Order protected the Heavenly Sword, with each abbess understanding its significance but not necessarily its full secrets. The weapon remained in Emei custody throughout the jianghu’s conflicts, its presence ensuring that no single faction could dominate the martial world through possession of the Dragon-slaying Sabre alone.
The order’s guardianship of the weapon reflected its role as a neutral orthodox faction, maintaining balance in the jianghu between the orthodox and heretical sects.
Revealing the secret
The weapon’s hidden contents were only accessible when brought together with the Dragon-slaying Sabre. The unlocking mechanism required the Heavenly Sword to carefully cut into a soft iron section on the Dragon Sabre’s back, located seven inches from the hilt. This process required deliberate effort and could not occur accidentally during combat.
When the weapons were properly unlocked, they revealed an iron-plated map (in the Third Edition) leading to Peach Blossom Island, where the Nine Yin Manual, Eighteen Palms of Dragon-subduing, and Book of Wumu were hidden. These treasures were meant to provide future generations with both martial prowess and military strategy to overthrow the Mongols.
The secret within
The weapons contained two halves of an iron-plated map (Third Edition) that, when combined, revealed the location of three legendary texts:
- Nine Yin Manual: Comprehensive martial arts manual containing internal and external techniques
- Eighteen Palms of Dragon-subduing: Guo Jing’s signature palm technique
- Book of Wumu: Military strategy text by the Song general Yue Fei
These treasures represented Guo Jing and Huang Rong’s legacy, ensuring that even if they failed to defend Xiangyang, future generations would have the knowledge needed to continue the resistance.
Notable practitioners
- Guo Xiang — Inherited the weapon from her parents, founder of Emei Order
- Abbess Miejue — Later abbess of Emei Order who wielded the Heavenly Sword
- Successive Emei abbesses — Guardians of the weapon through generations
Behind the scenes
The Heavenly Sword’s name (倚天剑 – Yǐtiān Jiàn) means “Sword that leans on Heaven” or “Sword drawing on Heaven’s might”. This name reflects Chinese cosmological concepts where Heaven represents ultimate authority and legitimacy. The emperor is traditionally called the Son of Heaven (天子 – tiānzǐ), suggesting Heaven’s mandate for rulership.
The weapon’s symbolic role connects to the novel’s themes about legitimate authority and the right to rebel against tyrannical rule. By embodying Heaven’s authority, the Heavenly Sword represents the ideological justification for overthrowing the Yuan dynasty—not merely military rebellion but restoration of Heaven’s proper order.
The pairing with the Dragon-slaying Sabre creates complementary symbolism: whilst the Dragon Sabre represents the power to slay the emperor (dragon), the Heavenly Sword represents the authority that legitimises such action. Together, they embody the principle that power must serve righteous authority, not mere conquest.
The revision in the Third Edition to forge the Heavenly Sword from Yang Guo and Xiaolongnü’s paired swords strengthens the connection between the Condor Heroes trilogy and this novel, whilst resolving the physical implausibility of splitting a single heavy sword into two weapons.
See also
- The Heavenly Sword and the Dragon Sabre — the novel in which this weapon appears
- Dragon-slaying Sabre — companion weapon that unlocks the Heavenly Sword’s secrets
- Guo Xiang — inheritor and founder of Emei Order
- Emei Order — the order that protected the Heavenly Sword
- Heavenly Swordplay — martial art associated with the weapon