The name of Changbai Mountain began in the Jin Dynasty and has been used ever since. "Golden History Century" contains: "There is really a girl who mixes the river in Changbai Mountain, and the mixed river is also called Heilongjiang. The so-called white mountain and black water. " The rulers of the Jin Dynasty believed that "Changbai Mountain is in the land of the Jin king, and it is respectful to be knighted and to build a temple". Therefore, in the 12th year of Dading (A.D. 1 172), Changbai Mountain was named "Xing Wang, that is, building a temple in the north of the mountain". In March of the fifteenth year of Dading, a book was sealed, and every spring and autumn, a day was chosen for sacrifice. In October of the fourth year of Ming Chang (A.D. 1 193), it was reissued as Tian Hong Shengdikai.
Manchu ruled the world in Qing Dynasty, and Changbai Mountain was called "Guo Lemin (Dragon), Shan Yan (White), Alin (Mountain)" in Manchu. Changbai Mountain is the birthplace of Qing Dynasty. In the 16th year of Kangxi (A.D. 1677), Mu Na, the minister in charge of extraordinary affairs, made a pilgrimage to Changbai Mountain, returned to Beijing to play Shu, conferred the title of Changbai Mountain God, and sent envoys to make sacrifices every year. In the 21st year of Kangxi (A.D. 1682), Emperor Kangxi held a grand ceremony to worship Changbai Mountain on the Songhua River when he toured Jilin in the east. For hundreds of years in the Qing Dynasty, Changbai Mountain was listed as a forbidden area.