Dream of the Red Chamber Relationship Graph
See how the Jia household, the four families, and the Twelve Beauties connect at a glance.
- 1.Search or pick a character
- 2.View highlighted ties on the graph
- 3.Open a full profile next
Popular characters
Kinship and marriage trees for the Jia, Wang, Shi, and Xue lines—best for generations and alliances.
Star-shaped subgraphs around one master: chamber maids and pages—best for household service ties.
Baoyu-centered emotional threads—useful for “wood and stone” vs “gold and jade” contrasts.
A broader network view for quick overview.
The Jia subgraph loads by default; switch subgraphs or open the full graph for a broader overview.
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FAQ
- Where does the relationship data come from?
- Relationships and verdicts are organized from the original Dream of the Red Chamber text, not copied from encyclopedias or third-party sources. See the copyright notice at the bottom of this page.
- What happens when I click a node?
- The first tap highlights neighbors and edges. On desktop, hover a node to reveal an arrow button that opens the profile. On phones, tap the same node again within about two seconds to open the profile.
- How do I open a full character profile?
- Besides the in-graph entry above, use the Characters list or a character card elsewhere on this site. This page focuses on the relationship network.
- What is the difference between subgraphs and the full graph?
- Subgraphs focus on selected groups (e.g. four families, master–servant ties). The full graph shows a wider network for an overview.
- What is the relationship between Jia Baoyu and Lin Daiyu?
- Lin Daiyu is the maternal granddaughter of Grandmother Jia (Baoyu’s grandmother on his father’s side): Lady Jia Min—Baoyu’s aunt—married Lin Ruhai, and Daiyu is their only daughter. Baoyu and Daiyu are therefore cousins who grew up in the Jia household—the “wood and stone” bond of mutual affection. The parallel “gold and jade” thread refers to Baoyu and Xue Baochai, whose marriage is framed by the jade and gold-lock pairing.
- Which are the four great families in Dream of the Red Chamber?
- The Jia, Wang, Shi, and Xue families—often listed together (e.g. on the “Huguán fú” roster). The Jia clan (Rongguo and Ningguo mansions) anchors the story; the Wangs tie in through Lady Wang, Wang Xifeng, and Aunt Xue; the Shis connect to Grandmother Jia and figures such as Shi Xiangyun; the Xues (Baochai, Xue Pan) enter through Aunt Xue. Kinship and marriage bind them into one elite network.
Character relationships — introduction(Click to expand)
The Jia household splits into Rongguo and Ningguo branches. Rongguo is headed in spirit by Grandmother Jia (née Shi); Jia Zheng’s line includes Baoyu, Yuanchun, Tanchun, and others. Daiyu is the daughter of Jia Min and Lin Ruhai—Grandmother Jia’s granddaughter—and lives in the mansion as a dependent cousin.
The Jia, Wang, Shi, and Xue families form a marriage-based alliance. Wang Xifeng marries Jia Lian and effectively runs Rongguo; Aunt Xue brings Xue Pan and Baochai into the household, feeding the “gold and jade” pairing with Baoyu’s jade.
The site’s graphs include master–servant ties (15 masters and 30 such edges in our data). Baoyu’s maids (e.g. Xiren, Qingwen), Daiyu’s Zijuan, Baochai’s Ying’er, and others show how affection and loyalty exceed ordinary service.
Emotionally, Baoyu is the hub: the “wood and stone” bond with Daiyu contrasts with the “gold and jade” thread toward Baochai. The garden concentrates many Jinling Twelve beauties—each quarter (e.g. Xiaoxiang, Hengwu) a node in the novel’s social and emotional web.
Copyright:
Relationship, verdict, and residence information on this page is based on the original Dream of the Red Chamber text, not copied from encyclopedias or third-party sources. Character descriptions are original summaries based on the text.







