Saint Seiya's official authorized works referred to the Saint Seiya animation works jointly produced by the Japanese comic company JCSTAFF and Star Sky Entertainment. The series was very popular in the mainland of China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and other places. It was one of the must-follow works of Saint Seiya's fans. In addition to the animation works, Saint Seiya also had some officially authorized manga, novels, games, and other derivative works. These works were closely related to the original work and would add some elements or plots that were not in the original work.
Well, it could be about how the grand duke's adoption changes the saint's life and leads to various challenges and opportunities. Maybe there's a power struggle or a quest for justice involved.
The manhwa likely follows the journey of the saint as they adjust to their new life with the grand duke, maybe facing power struggles and hidden secrets along the way.
Different novels may have different answers. Here are some possible answers:
In wuxia novels, the Martial Saint was usually a master of martial arts, the Poet Saint was a scholar who was good at writing poetry, and the Painting Saint was a painter.
In poetry and novels, wine saints usually referred to literati who were good at drinking and writing poems. Qu saints referred to music masters, tea saints referred to literati who were good at drinking tea leaves, and chess saints referred to people with excellent chess skills.
In wuxia novels, a grass saint was usually an expert in planting and maintaining plants, a war saint was a military expert, a word saint was a literary celebrity, and a secondary saint was a scholar or master with deep attainments in a certain field.
In Go novels, the Grass Saint and the War Saint were usually referred to as experts in Go, while the Chess Saint was referred to as a master who was proficient in Go.
Sword saints were usually referred to as experts who were famous for their swordsmanship. There might be different meanings in different novels.
The most holy refers to Confucius and the second saint refers to Mencius. Poet Saint referred to Du Fu, literary saint referred to Ouyang Xiu, Ci Saint referred to Su Shi, Qu Saint referred to Li Yu, Le Saint referred to Einstein, painting saint referred to Wu Daozi, calligraphy saint referred to Wang Xizhi, grass saint referred to Zhang Xu.
The Most Holy: Confucius
Mencius
Poet Sage: Du Fu
Wen Sheng: Han Yu
Ci Sheng: Su Shi
Qu Sheng: Guan Hanqing
Saint of Music: Bach
Art Saint: Wu Daozi
Calligraphy Sage: Wang Xizhi
Grass Saint: Zhang Xu
We can't get an accurate answer as to whether the Saint and the Saintess will be together. The content of the document in the search results involved the relationship between the saint and the saintess, love, fate, and other aspects, but it did not clearly answer whether they would be together. Therefore, I am unable to give a definite answer to this question.
In the history of Chinese literature, who were the "Holy, Secondary, Poet, Ci, Wen, and Seven Ultimate Sages"?
These titles usually referred to the sages in ancient Chinese culture."Supreme Saint" referred to Confucius,"Secondary Saint" referred to Mencius,"Sage of Poetry" referred to Du Fu,"Sage of Ci" referred to Su Shi,"Sage of Literature" referred to another disciple of Confucius, Xun Zi, and "Sage of Qijue" referred to Wang Zhihuan, a poet of the Tang Dynasty.
These titles had a very high status in Chinese culture, representing the high respect and recognition people had for these sages.