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Heo Hwang-ok

Heo Hwang-ok, also known as Suriratna,[2][3][4] is a legendary queen mentioned in Samguk Yusa, a 13th-century Korean chronicle. According to Samguk Yusa, she became the wife of King Suro of Geumgwan Gaya at the age of 16, after having arrived by boat from a distant kingdom called "Ayuta".[5] More than six million present day Koreans, especially from Gimhae Kim, Heo and Lee clans, trace their lineage to the legendary queen as the direct descendants of her 12 children with King Suro.[6][7][8] Her native kingdom is believed to be located in India[9][10] or less likely, Thailand. There is a tomb in Gimhae, South Korea, that is believed to be hers,[11] and a memorial in Ayodhya, India built in 2020.[12]

Heo Hwang-ok
Empress Heo
A modern take on Heo Hwang-ok's visage.
Queen consort of Geumgwan Gaya
Tenure189 AD
PredecessorPrincess Mother Jeonggyeon
SuccessorLady Mojeong
Born32 AD
State of Ayuta
Died189 AD (aged about 157)
(1st day, 3rd months in Lunar)
Gimhae, Gyeongsangnam-do
SpouseKing Suro of Gaya
IssueKing Geodeung of Gaya
10 other sons
Lady Kim of Garak State[1]
Posthumous name
Queen Mother Boju (보주태후, 普州太后)
Korean허황옥
許黃玉
A commemorative Rs. 25.00 postage stamp on Princess Suriratna (Queen Heo Hwang-ok ) was issued by India in 2019.
A commemorative Rs. 5.00 postage stamp on Queen Heo Hwang-ok (Suriratna) was issued by India in 2019.

Origins

The legend of Heo is found in Garakguk-gi (the Record of Garak Kingdom) which is currently lost, but referenced within the Samguk Yusa.[13] According to the legend, Heo was a princess of the "Ayuta Kingdom". The extant records do not identify Ayuta except as a distant country. Written sources and popular culture often associate Ayuta with India but there are no records of the legend in India itself.[8] Kim Byung-mo, an anthropologist from Hanyang University, identified Ayuta with Ayodhya in India based on phonetic similarity.[14] Grafton K. Mintz and Ha Tae-hung implied that the Korean reference was actually to the Ayutthaya Kingdom of Thailand.[15] However, according to George Cœdès, the Thai city was not founded until the year 1350, after the composition of Samguk Yusa.[15][16] Others theorize that the Ayuta Kingdom (Hangul: 아유타국, Hanja: 阿踰陁國) is a misinterpretation of Ay Kingdom, a vassal to the Pandyan Empire of ancient Tamilakam as some sources allude to her coming from Southern part of India.[17] Despite numerous theories and claims, Queen Heo's true origin is yet to be discovered.

Marriage to Suro

After their marriage, Heo told King Suro that she was 16 years old.[18][19] She stated her given name as "Hwang-ok" ("Yellow Jade", 황옥, 黃玉) and her family name as "Heo" (허, or "Hurh" 許). She described how she came to Gaya as follows: the Heavenly Lord (Sange Je) appeared in her parents' dreams. He told them to send Heo to Suro, who had been chosen as the king of Gaya. The dream showed that the king had not yet found a queen. Heo's father then told her to go to Suro. After two months of a sea journey, she found Beondo, a peach which fruited only every 3.000 years.[7]

According to the legend, the courtiers of King Suro had requested him to select a wife from among the maidens they would bring to the court. However, Suro stated that his selection of a wife will be commanded by the Heavens. He commanded Yuch'ŏn-gan to take a horse and a boat to Mangsan-do, an island to the south of the capital. At Mangsan, Yuch'ŏn saw a vessel with a red sail and a red flag. He sailed to the vessel, and escorted it to the shores of Kaya (or Gaya, present-day Gimhae). Another officer, Sin'gwigan went to the palace, and informed the King of the vessel's arrival. The King sent nine clan chiefs, asking them to escort the ship's passengers to the royal palace.[20]

Princess Heo stated that she wouldn't accompany the strangers. Accordingly, the King ordered a tent to be pitched on the slopes of a hill near the palace. The princess then arrived at the tent with her courtiers and slaves. The courtiers included Sin Po (or Sin Bo, 신보, 申輔) and Cho Kuang (or Jo Gwang, 조광, 趙匡). Their wives were Mojong (모정, 慕貞) and Moryang (모량, 慕良) respectively. The twenty slaves carried gold, silver, jewels, silk brocade, and tableware and gems.[21] Before marrying the king, the princess took off her silk trousers (mentioned as a skirt in a different section of Samguk Yusa) and offered them to the mountain spirit. King Suro tells her that he also knew about Heo's arrival in advance, and therefore, did not marry the maidens recommended by his courtiers.[7]

When some of the Queen's escorts decided to return home, King Suro gave each of them thirty rolls of hempen cloth (one roll was of 40 yards). He also gave each person ten bags of rice for the return voyage. A part of the Queen's original convoy, including the two courtiers and their wives, stayed back with her. The queen was given a residence in the inner palace, while the two courtiers and their wives were given separate residences. The rest of her convoy were given a guest house of twenty rooms.[21]

Descendants

Queen Heo and Suro had 12 children and the eldest son was Geodeung.

She requested Suro to let two of the children bear her maiden surname. Legendary genealogical records trace the origins of the Gimhae Heo to these two children.[7] The Gimhae Kims trace their origin to the other eight sons, and so does the Yi clan of Incheon.

According to the Jilburam, the remaining sons are said to have followed in their maternal uncle Po-ok's footsteps and devoted themselves to Buddhist meditation. They were named Hyejin, Gakcho, Jigam, Deonggyeon, Dumu, Jeongheong and Gyejang.[19] Overall, more than six million Koreans trace their lineage to Queen Heo.[8]

The remaining two children were daughters who were married respectively to a son of Talhae and a noble from Silla.

Kim Yoon-ok, wife of former South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, traces her ancestry to the royal family.[22][23]

Remains at Gimhae tomb

 
Queen Suro's Tomb (Queen Heo Hwang-ok) at Gimhae in Korea.

The tombs believed to be that of Heo Hwang-ok and Suro are located in Gimhae, South Korea. A pagoda traditionally held to have been brought to Korea on her ship is located near her grave. The Samguk Yusa reports that the pagoda was erected on her ship in order to calm the god of the ocean and allow the ship to pass. The unusual and rough form of this pagoda, unlike any other in Korea, may lend some credence to the account.[11]

A passage in the Samguk Yusa indicates that King Jilji built a Buddhist temple for the ancestral Queen Heo on the spot where she and King Suro were married.[24] He called the temple Wanghusa ("the Queen's temple") and provided it with ten gyeol of stipend land.[24] A gyeol or kyŏl (결 or 結), varied in size from 2.2 acres to 9 acres (8,903–36,422 m2) depending upon the fertility of the land.[25] The Samguk Yusa also records that the temple was built in 452. Since there is no other record of Buddhism having been adopted in 5th-century Gaya, modern scholars have interpreted this as an ancestral shrine rather than a Buddhist temple.[11]

Memorial in Ayodhya

In 2001, a Memorial of Heo Hwang-ok was inaugurated by a Korean delegation, which included over a hundred historians and government representatives.[26] In 2016, a Korean delegation proposed to develop the memorial. The proposal was accepted by then-Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh, Akhilesh Yadav.[27] On November 6, 2018, on the eve of Diwali celebration, South Korea's First Lady Kim Jung-sook, laid the foundation stone for the expansion and beautification of the existing memorial.[28][29] She offered tribute at the Queen Heo Memorial, attended a ceremony for the upgrade and beautification of the memorial and attended an elaborate Diwali celebration at Ayodhya along with the present Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath, that included cultural shows and lighting of 300,000+ lights on the banks of Sarayu River.[30]

Reportedly, hundreds of South Koreans visit Ayodhya every year to pay homage to their legendary Queen Heo Hwang-ok.[31]

Controversy surrounding her existence

Indian accounts

Despite her connections to the two countries, there are no historical texts or official records in India that indicate an Indian princess traveling to Korea at the time including the country under the name Ayuta, her supposed country of birth. This ultimately makes her entire existence become solely dependent on the accounts made in Korea.

However, many Indian historians emphasize on Heo Hwang-ok's legacy that links India to Korea today rather than validating her actual existence in history.

Korean accounts

Heo Hwang-ok's rather unique background had been a subject of much discussion in South Korea among many historians. Despite her legendary status, many historians reject the idea that Queen Heo truly existed and have debunked her travel routes several times throughout history.

 
A rejected proposal of Queen Heo's travel routes from India to Korea.

The first criticism stems from the fact that her existence is solely based on the accounts made in Samguk Yusa, a book that is widely regarded to be mostly fictional. Other older and more credible sources such as Samguk Sagi lack mentions about an Indian princess arriving in Gaya and marrying the king. It is believed that the writer of Samguk Yusa, Il-yeon exaggerated much of the claims to create a sense of familiarity towards Buddhism being a Buddhist monk himself.[32] Others also pointed out that due to the lack of technology to properly reach the Korean peninsula from ancient India at the time, her arrival would have been nearly impossible or at least, extremely difficult.[32]

Others have also pointed out the reason behind her supposed journey to the Korean kingdom being too vague. Many historians agree that the influence of India and Buddhism was profound for ancient Korean kingdoms at the time as many of them treated artifacts originating from India to be sacred.[33] However, historians have also pointed out that the agency of an Indian princess coming to Korea across the sea on a boat was very peculiar as ancient Korea was less known to India than countries such as ancient China.[32] Professor Lee Ki-Hwan suggested that the story of Heo Hwang-ok was dramatized to elevate Gaya's stature of the Buddhist scene among the Korean kingdoms and to associate the sacred artifacts they possessed to something closer to that of the Indian culture.[33]

One of the biggest criticism stems from the book Garakguk-gi itself. Being written during the Goryeo Dynasty (the same period of Samguk Yusa's publication),[34] the book claims multiple accounts that revolves around events that happened almost a millennium before the foundation of the Goryeo kingdom. Many historians state that since Samguk Yusa and Garakguk-gi are both second hand accounts written in the same time period, the cross referencing needs to be carefully examined and researchers must remain skeptical.[34]

The consensus is that the existence of an Indian princess was very unlikely and that much of the stories found in Samguk Yusa were fabricated for political and religious reasons in Gaya at the time.[35] The same book claims that King Suro lived up to 157 years old and transformed into an eagle and a hawk to fight off his rivals according to the supposed Garakguk-gi, making her story even less credible stemming from the same source material.[35]

However, in recent times, some have claimed that Queen Heo truly existed not as a foreign Indian, but as a native Korean.[36] This claim suggests that Garakgukgi (and in turn Samguk Yusa) alludes to the deification of King Suro by exaggerating much of his accomplishments to that of the supernatural.[35] According to the theory, King Suro's alleged age of death, his ability to transform into animals, his marriage to an Indian royalty and having 12 children are all based on probable facts that were greatly exaggerated to create a sense of superiority over the rulers of Gaya confederacy and the other Korean kingdoms.[36] Many believe his age of 157 years emphasizes on his longevity, his ability to transform into animals on his prowess, marriage to an Indian royalty on his religious affinity and the number of offspring (all happened to be sons) on his fertility, factors that were important to a reigning monarch at the time.[36] For further context, the only King to be officially recognized as the longest reigning monarch of Korea was King Jangsu (literal translation of "Long Life King") who lived up to the age of 97,[37] making King Suro's supposed age of death (and his other claims) even more questionable.[35] Following this theory, it can be deduced that Queen Heo's Korean ethnicity was elevated to that of the Indian heritage to create a sense of uniqueness[36] since marrying a royal princess from India, the birthplace of Buddha and Buddhism would be considered as a major accomplishment for the king of a Buddhist nation.[33]

Despite the historic inaccuracies surrounding her existence, many Korean historians stated that her iconic image as a legendary figure should persist as a means for the two countries to remain on good terms.[38]

In popular culture

See also

References

  1. ^ Married Seok Gu-gwang (석구광).
  2. ^ "The Indian princess who became a South Korean queen". BBC News. 4 November 2018. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  3. ^ "Princess Suriratna of India marries King Suro of the Gaya Kingdom nearly 2,000 years ago". The Korea Post (in Korean). 8 September 2020. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  4. ^ "The Legend of Princess Sriratna | Official website of Indian Council for Cultural Relations, Government of India". www.iccr.gov.in. Retrieved 29 January 2022.
  5. ^ "The Indian princess who became a South Korean queen". BBC News. 4 November 2018. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  6. ^ Legacy of Queen Suriratn, The Korea Times, 16 April 2017.
  7. ^ a b c d Won Moo Hurh (2011). "I Will Shoot Them from My Loving Heart": Memoir of a South Korean Officer in the Korean War. McFarland. pp. 15–16. ISBN 978-0-7864-8798-1.
  8. ^ a b c "Korean memorial to Indian princess". BBC News. 3 May 2001.
  9. ^ "The Indian princess who became a South Korean queen". BBC News. 4 November 2018. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  10. ^ Krishnan, Revathi (4 August 2020). "Ayodhya has 'important relations' with South Korea". ThePrint. Retrieved 6 July 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  11. ^ a b c Kwon Ju-hyeon (권주현) (2003). 가야인의 삶과 문화 (Gayain-ui salm-gwa munhwa, The culture and life of the Gaya people). Seoul: Hyean. pp. 212–214. ISBN 89-8494-221-9.
  12. ^ PTI, PTI (4 April 2020). "Work on Queen Heo Memorial in Ayodhya". TheWeek. Retrieved 6 July 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  13. ^ Il-yeon (tr. by Ha Tae-Hung & Grafton K. Mintz) (1972). Samguk Yusa. Seoul: Yonsei University Press. ISBN 89-7141-017-5.
  14. ^ Choong Soon Kim (2011). Voices of Foreign Brides: The Roots and Development of Multiculturalism in Korea. AltaMira. p. 34. ISBN 978-0-7591-2037-2.
  15. ^ a b Robert E. Buswell (1991). Tracing Back the Radiance: Chinul's Korean Way of Zen. University of Hawaii Press. p. 74. ISBN 978-0-8248-1427-4.
  16. ^ Skand R. Tayal (2015). India and the Republic of Korea: Engaged Democracies. Taylor & Francis. p. 23. ISBN 978-1-317-34156-7. Historians, however, believe that the Princess of Ayodhya is only a myth.
  17. ^ Hyŏphoe, Han'guk Kwan'gwang (1968). Beautiful Korea. Huimang Publishing Company. p. 619. Aboard the ship were Princess Ho Hwang-Ok of Ayut'a in the south of India.
  18. ^ No. 2039《三國遺事》CBETA 電子佛典 V1.21 普及版 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine, Taisho Tripitaka Vol. 49, CBETA Chinese Electronic Tripitaka V1.21, Normalized Version, T49n2039_p0983b14(07)
  19. ^ a b Kim Choong Soon, 2011, Voices of Foreign Brides: The Roots and Development of Multiculturalism in Korea, AltairaPress, USA, Page 30-35.
  20. ^ James Huntley Grayson (2001). Myths and Legends from Korea: An Annotated Compendium of Ancient and Modern Materials. Psychology Press. pp. 110–116. ISBN 978-0-7007-1241-0.
  21. ^ a b Choong Soon Kim (16 October 2011). Voices of Foreign Brides: The Roots and Development of Multiculturalism in Korea. AltaMira Press. pp. 31–33. ISBN 978-0-7591-2037-2.
  22. ^ Lee, Tae-hoon (25 January 2010). "India Is First Lady Kims Ancestral Home". The Korea Times. Retrieved 30 July 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  23. ^ "Lamp of the east". Deccan Herald. 13 August 2011. Retrieved 30 July 2021.
  24. ^ a b Ilyeon, 1972, Samguk Yusa, tr. by Ha, Tae-Hung and Mintz, Grafton K., Yonsei University Press, Seoul, ISBN 89-7141-017-5, p. 168.
  25. ^ Palais, James B. (1996), Confucian Statecraft & Korean Institutions: Yu Hyŏngwŏn and the Late Chosŏn Dynasty, Seattle: University of Washington Press, ISBN 9780295805115, p. 363
  26. ^ "Korean memorial to Indian princess". BBC News. 6 March 2001.
  27. ^ UP CM announces grand memorial of Queen Huh Wang-Ock, 1 March 2016, WebIndia123
  28. ^ "UP's Faizabad district to be known as Ayodhya, says Yogi Adityanath". 6 November 2018. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
  29. ^ "Site for Heo Hwang-ok memorial in Ayodhya finalised". 2 November 2018. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
  30. ^ South Korean first lady Kim Jung-sook celebrates Diwali in Ayodhya, revives links of Queen Heo 23 February 2019 at the Wayback Machine, Hindustan Times, 10 July 2018
  31. ^ "This is why hundreds of South Koreans visit Ayodhya every year". The Indian Express. 10 July 2018. Retrieved 6 January 2021.
  32. ^ a b c "'허왕후 설화'는 어떻게 실제 역사로 둔갑했나". 뉴스톱 (in Korean). 10 September 2018. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  33. ^ a b c 수정: 2019.12.19 09:23, 입력: 2019 12 17 06:00 (17 December 2019). "[이기환의 흔적의 역사] "한반도엔 없는 돌"…가락국 허황후 '파사석탑의 정체'". www.khan.co.kr (in Korean). Retrieved 9 February 2021.
  34. ^ a b Lee, Yang-jae (9 August 2022). "가야국의 실체와 『가락국기』". Tongilnews (in Korean). Retrieved 14 August 2022.
  35. ^ a b c d 임동근 (11 August 2017). "[연합이매진] 인도 공주 허황옥이 가야에 온 까닭은". 연합뉴스 (in Korean). Retrieved 19 November 2020.
  36. ^ a b c d "Queen Heo Hwang-ok". Namu (in Korean).
  37. ^ Kim, Hung-gyu (March 2012). "Defenders and Conquerors: The Rhetoric of Royal Power in Korean Inscriptions from the Fifth to Seventh Centuries" (PDF). Cross-Currents: 1.
  38. ^ "[김성회의 재미있는 다문화이야기] 이주민 '허황옥'과 '처용설화'는 사실일까?". 에듀인뉴스(EduinNews) (in Korean). 5 May 2019. Retrieved 25 March 2021.
  39. ^ India, South Korea sign 6 pacts; to step-up cooperation in infrastructure, combating global crime. The Economic Times. 22 February 2019
  40. ^ Ahuja, Sanjeev K (20 November 2020). "Korean Queen Huh Hwang-ok story to appear in ICCR's book on International love stories". Asian Community News. Retrieved 23 November 2020.

External links

  • Tomb of Queen Suro

hwang, also, known, suriratna, legendary, queen, mentioned, samguk, yusa, 13th, century, korean, chronicle, according, samguk, yusa, became, wife, king, suro, geumgwan, gaya, after, having, arrived, boat, from, distant, kingdom, called, ayuta, more, than, mill. Heo Hwang ok also known as Suriratna 2 3 4 is a legendary queen mentioned in Samguk Yusa a 13th century Korean chronicle According to Samguk Yusa she became the wife of King Suro of Geumgwan Gaya at the age of 16 after having arrived by boat from a distant kingdom called Ayuta 5 More than six million present day Koreans especially from Gimhae Kim Heo and Lee clans trace their lineage to the legendary queen as the direct descendants of her 12 children with King Suro 6 7 8 Her native kingdom is believed to be located in India 9 10 or less likely Thailand There is a tomb in Gimhae South Korea that is believed to be hers 11 and a memorial in Ayodhya India built in 2020 12 Heo Hwang okEmpress HeoA modern take on Heo Hwang ok s visage Queen consort of Geumgwan GayaTenure189 ADPredecessorPrincess Mother JeonggyeonSuccessorLady MojeongBorn32 ADState of AyutaDied189 AD aged about 157 1st day 3rd months in Lunar Gimhae Gyeongsangnam doSpouseKing Suro of GayaIssueKing Geodeung of Gaya10 other sonsLady Kim of Garak State 1 Posthumous nameQueen Mother Boju 보주태후 普州太后 Korean허황옥許黃玉A commemorative Rs 25 00 postage stamp on Princess Suriratna Queen Heo Hwang ok was issued by India in 2019 A commemorative Rs 5 00 postage stamp on Queen Heo Hwang ok Suriratna was issued by India in 2019 Contents 1 Origins 2 Marriage to Suro 3 Descendants 4 Remains at Gimhae tomb 5 Memorial in Ayodhya 6 Controversy surrounding her existence 6 1 Indian accounts 6 2 Korean accounts 7 In popular culture 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksOriginsThe legend of Heo is found in Garakguk gi the Record of Garak Kingdom which is currently lost but referenced within the Samguk Yusa 13 According to the legend Heo was a princess of the Ayuta Kingdom The extant records do not identify Ayuta except as a distant country Written sources and popular culture often associate Ayuta with India but there are no records of the legend in India itself 8 Kim Byung mo an anthropologist from Hanyang University identified Ayuta with Ayodhya in India based on phonetic similarity 14 Grafton K Mintz and Ha Tae hung implied that the Korean reference was actually to the Ayutthaya Kingdom of Thailand 15 However according to George Cœdes the Thai city was not founded until the year 1350 after the composition of Samguk Yusa 15 16 Others theorize that the Ayuta Kingdom Hangul 아유타국 Hanja 阿踰陁國 is a misinterpretation of Ay Kingdom a vassal to the Pandyan Empire of ancient Tamilakam as some sources allude to her coming from Southern part of India 17 Despite numerous theories and claims Queen Heo s true origin is yet to be discovered Marriage to SuroAfter their marriage Heo told King Suro that she was 16 years old 18 19 She stated her given name as Hwang ok Yellow Jade 황옥 黃玉 and her family name as Heo 허 or Hurh 許 She described how she came to Gaya as follows the Heavenly Lord Sange Je appeared in her parents dreams He told them to send Heo to Suro who had been chosen as the king of Gaya The dream showed that the king had not yet found a queen Heo s father then told her to go to Suro After two months of a sea journey she found Beondo a peach which fruited only every 3 000 years 7 According to the legend the courtiers of King Suro had requested him to select a wife from among the maidens they would bring to the court However Suro stated that his selection of a wife will be commanded by the Heavens He commanded Yuch ŏn gan to take a horse and a boat to Mangsan do an island to the south of the capital At Mangsan Yuch ŏn saw a vessel with a red sail and a red flag He sailed to the vessel and escorted it to the shores of Kaya or Gaya present day Gimhae Another officer Sin gwigan went to the palace and informed the King of the vessel s arrival The King sent nine clan chiefs asking them to escort the ship s passengers to the royal palace 20 Princess Heo stated that she wouldn t accompany the strangers Accordingly the King ordered a tent to be pitched on the slopes of a hill near the palace The princess then arrived at the tent with her courtiers and slaves The courtiers included Sin Po or Sin Bo 신보 申輔 and Cho Kuang or Jo Gwang 조광 趙匡 Their wives were Mojong 모정 慕貞 and Moryang 모량 慕良 respectively The twenty slaves carried gold silver jewels silk brocade and tableware and gems 21 Before marrying the king the princess took off her silk trousers mentioned as a skirt in a different section of Samguk Yusa and offered them to the mountain spirit King Suro tells her that he also knew about Heo s arrival in advance and therefore did not marry the maidens recommended by his courtiers 7 When some of the Queen s escorts decided to return home King Suro gave each of them thirty rolls of hempen cloth one roll was of 40 yards He also gave each person ten bags of rice for the return voyage A part of the Queen s original convoy including the two courtiers and their wives stayed back with her The queen was given a residence in the inner palace while the two courtiers and their wives were given separate residences The rest of her convoy were given a guest house of twenty rooms 21 DescendantsQueen Heo and Suro had 12 children and the eldest son was Geodeung She requested Suro to let two of the children bear her maiden surname Legendary genealogical records trace the origins of the Gimhae Heo to these two children 7 The Gimhae Kims trace their origin to the other eight sons and so does the Yi clan of Incheon According to the Jilburam the remaining sons are said to have followed in their maternal uncle Po ok s footsteps and devoted themselves to Buddhist meditation They were named Hyejin Gakcho Jigam Deonggyeon Dumu Jeongheong and Gyejang 19 Overall more than six million Koreans trace their lineage to Queen Heo 8 The remaining two children were daughters who were married respectively to a son of Talhae and a noble from Silla Kim Yoon ok wife of former South Korean President Lee Myung bak traces her ancestry to the royal family 22 23 Remains at Gimhae tomb Queen Suro s Tomb Queen Heo Hwang ok at Gimhae in Korea The tombs believed to be that of Heo Hwang ok and Suro are located in Gimhae South Korea A pagoda traditionally held to have been brought to Korea on her ship is located near her grave The Samguk Yusa reports that the pagoda was erected on her ship in order to calm the god of the ocean and allow the ship to pass The unusual and rough form of this pagoda unlike any other in Korea may lend some credence to the account 11 A passage in the Samguk Yusa indicates that King Jilji built a Buddhist temple for the ancestral Queen Heo on the spot where she and King Suro were married 24 He called the temple Wanghusa the Queen s temple and provided it with ten gyeol of stipend land 24 A gyeol or kyŏl 결 or 結 varied in size from 2 2 acres to 9 acres 8 903 36 422 m2 depending upon the fertility of the land 25 The Samguk Yusa also records that the temple was built in 452 Since there is no other record of Buddhism having been adopted in 5th century Gaya modern scholars have interpreted this as an ancestral shrine rather than a Buddhist temple 11 Memorial in AyodhyaFurther information Memorial of Heo Hwang ok Ayodhya In 2001 a Memorial of Heo Hwang ok was inaugurated by a Korean delegation which included over a hundred historians and government representatives 26 In 2016 a Korean delegation proposed to develop the memorial The proposal was accepted by then Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh Akhilesh Yadav 27 On November 6 2018 on the eve of Diwali celebration South Korea s First Lady Kim Jung sook laid the foundation stone for the expansion and beautification of the existing memorial 28 29 She offered tribute at the Queen Heo Memorial attended a ceremony for the upgrade and beautification of the memorial and attended an elaborate Diwali celebration at Ayodhya along with the present Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath that included cultural shows and lighting of 300 000 lights on the banks of Sarayu River 30 Reportedly hundreds of South Koreans visit Ayodhya every year to pay homage to their legendary Queen Heo Hwang ok 31 Controversy surrounding her existenceIndian accounts Despite her connections to the two countries there are no historical texts or official records in India that indicate an Indian princess traveling to Korea at the time including the country under the name Ayuta her supposed country of birth This ultimately makes her entire existence become solely dependent on the accounts made in Korea However many Indian historians emphasize on Heo Hwang ok s legacy that links India to Korea today rather than validating her actual existence in history Korean accounts Heo Hwang ok s rather unique background had been a subject of much discussion in South Korea among many historians Despite her legendary status many historians reject the idea that Queen Heo truly existed and have debunked her travel routes several times throughout history A rejected proposal of Queen Heo s travel routes from India to Korea The first criticism stems from the fact that her existence is solely based on the accounts made in Samguk Yusa a book that is widely regarded to be mostly fictional Other older and more credible sources such as Samguk Sagi lack mentions about an Indian princess arriving in Gaya and marrying the king It is believed that the writer of Samguk Yusa Il yeon exaggerated much of the claims to create a sense of familiarity towards Buddhism being a Buddhist monk himself 32 Others also pointed out that due to the lack of technology to properly reach the Korean peninsula from ancient India at the time her arrival would have been nearly impossible or at least extremely difficult 32 Others have also pointed out the reason behind her supposed journey to the Korean kingdom being too vague Many historians agree that the influence of India and Buddhism was profound for ancient Korean kingdoms at the time as many of them treated artifacts originating from India to be sacred 33 However historians have also pointed out that the agency of an Indian princess coming to Korea across the sea on a boat was very peculiar as ancient Korea was less known to India than countries such as ancient China 32 Professor Lee Ki Hwan suggested that the story of Heo Hwang ok was dramatized to elevate Gaya s stature of the Buddhist scene among the Korean kingdoms and to associate the sacred artifacts they possessed to something closer to that of the Indian culture 33 One of the biggest criticism stems from the book Garakguk gi itself Being written during the Goryeo Dynasty the same period of Samguk Yusa s publication 34 the book claims multiple accounts that revolves around events that happened almost a millennium before the foundation of the Goryeo kingdom Many historians state that since Samguk Yusa and Garakguk gi are both second hand accounts written in the same time period the cross referencing needs to be carefully examined and researchers must remain skeptical 34 The consensus is that the existence of an Indian princess was very unlikely and that much of the stories found in Samguk Yusa were fabricated for political and religious reasons in Gaya at the time 35 The same book claims that King Suro lived up to 157 years old and transformed into an eagle and a hawk to fight off his rivals according to the supposed Garakguk gi making her story even less credible stemming from the same source material 35 However in recent times some have claimed that Queen Heo truly existed not as a foreign Indian but as a native Korean 36 This claim suggests that Garakgukgi and in turn Samguk Yusa alludes to the deification of King Suro by exaggerating much of his accomplishments to that of the supernatural 35 According to the theory King Suro s alleged age of death his ability to transform into animals his marriage to an Indian royalty and having 12 children are all based on probable facts that were greatly exaggerated to create a sense of superiority over the rulers of Gaya confederacy and the other Korean kingdoms 36 Many believe his age of 157 years emphasizes on his longevity his ability to transform into animals on his prowess marriage to an Indian royalty on his religious affinity and the number of offspring all happened to be sons on his fertility factors that were important to a reigning monarch at the time 36 For further context the only King to be officially recognized as the longest reigning monarch of Korea was King Jangsu literal translation of Long Life King who lived up to the age of 97 37 making King Suro s supposed age of death and his other claims even more questionable 35 Following this theory it can be deduced that Queen Heo s Korean ethnicity was elevated to that of the Indian heritage to create a sense of uniqueness 36 since marrying a royal princess from India the birthplace of Buddha and Buddhism would be considered as a major accomplishment for the king of a Buddhist nation 33 Despite the historic inaccuracies surrounding her existence many Korean historians stated that her iconic image as a legendary figure should persist as a means for the two countries to remain on good terms 38 In popular culturePortrayed by Seo Ji hye in the 2010 MBC TV series Kim Su ro The Iron King In February 2019 India and Korea signed an agreement on releasing a joint stamp commemorating Queen Heo Hwang ok 39 Indian Council for Cultural Relations is releasing book that includes contact between foreign cultures and India which mentions the story of Queen Heo Hwang ok 40 See alsoThree Kingdoms of Korea Buddhist temples in South Korea Geumgwan Gaya Byeonhan confederacy Indians in Korea Koreans in India India South Korea relations India North Korea relationsReferences Married Seok Gu gwang 석구광 The Indian princess who became a South Korean queen BBC News 4 November 2018 Retrieved 21 January 2021 Princess Suriratna of India marries King Suro of the Gaya Kingdom nearly 2 000 years ago The Korea Post in Korean 8 September 2020 Retrieved 21 January 2021 The Legend of Princess Sriratna Official website of Indian Council for Cultural Relations Government of India www iccr gov in Retrieved 29 January 2022 The Indian princess who became a South Korean queen BBC News 4 November 2018 Retrieved 6 July 2021 Legacy of Queen Suriratn The Korea Times 16 April 2017 a b c d Won Moo Hurh 2011 I Will Shoot Them from My Loving Heart Memoir of a South Korean Officer in the Korean War McFarland pp 15 16 ISBN 978 0 7864 8798 1 a b c Korean memorial to Indian princess BBC News 3 May 2001 The Indian princess who became a South Korean queen BBC News 4 November 2018 Retrieved 6 July 2021 Krishnan Revathi 4 August 2020 Ayodhya has important relations with South Korea ThePrint Retrieved 6 July 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b c Kwon Ju hyeon 권주현 2003 가야인의 삶과 문화 Gayain ui salm gwa munhwa The culture and life of the Gaya people Seoul Hyean pp 212 214 ISBN 89 8494 221 9 PTI PTI 4 April 2020 Work on Queen Heo Memorial in Ayodhya TheWeek Retrieved 6 July 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Il yeon tr by Ha Tae Hung amp Grafton K Mintz 1972 Samguk Yusa Seoul Yonsei University Press ISBN 89 7141 017 5 Choong Soon Kim 2011 Voices of Foreign Brides The Roots and Development of Multiculturalism in Korea AltaMira p 34 ISBN 978 0 7591 2037 2 a b Robert E Buswell 1991 Tracing Back the Radiance Chinul s Korean Way of Zen University of Hawaii Press p 74 ISBN 978 0 8248 1427 4 Skand R Tayal 2015 India and the Republic of Korea Engaged Democracies Taylor amp Francis p 23 ISBN 978 1 317 34156 7 Historians however believe that the Princess of Ayodhya is only a myth Hyŏphoe Han guk Kwan gwang 1968 Beautiful Korea Huimang Publishing Company p 619 Aboard the ship were Princess Ho Hwang Ok of Ayut a in the south of India No 2039 三國遺事 CBETA 電子佛典 V1 21 普及版 Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine Taisho Tripitaka Vol 49 CBETA Chinese Electronic Tripitaka V1 21 Normalized Version T49n2039 p0983b14 07 a b Kim Choong Soon 2011 Voices of Foreign Brides The Roots and Development of Multiculturalism in Korea AltairaPress USA Page 30 35 James Huntley Grayson 2001 Myths and Legends from Korea An Annotated Compendium of Ancient and Modern Materials Psychology Press pp 110 116 ISBN 978 0 7007 1241 0 a b Choong Soon Kim 16 October 2011 Voices of Foreign Brides The Roots and Development of Multiculturalism in Korea AltaMira Press pp 31 33 ISBN 978 0 7591 2037 2 Lee Tae hoon 25 January 2010 India Is First Lady Kims Ancestral Home The Korea Times Retrieved 30 July 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Lamp of the east Deccan Herald 13 August 2011 Retrieved 30 July 2021 a b Ilyeon 1972 Samguk Yusa tr by Ha Tae Hung and Mintz Grafton K Yonsei University Press Seoul ISBN 89 7141 017 5 p 168 Palais James B 1996 Confucian Statecraft amp Korean Institutions Yu Hyŏngwŏn and the Late Chosŏn Dynasty Seattle University of Washington Press ISBN 9780295805115 p 363 Korean memorial to Indian princess BBC News 6 March 2001 UP CM announces grand memorial of Queen Huh Wang Ock 1 March 2016 WebIndia123 UP s Faizabad district to be known as Ayodhya says Yogi Adityanath 6 November 2018 Retrieved 7 November 2018 Site for Heo Hwang ok memorial in Ayodhya finalised 2 November 2018 Retrieved 7 November 2018 South Korean first lady Kim Jung sook celebrates Diwali in Ayodhya revives links of Queen Heo Archived 23 February 2019 at the Wayback Machine Hindustan Times 10 July 2018 This is why hundreds of South Koreans visit Ayodhya every year The Indian Express 10 July 2018 Retrieved 6 January 2021 a b c 허왕후 설화 는 어떻게 실제 역사로 둔갑했나 뉴스톱 in Korean 10 September 2018 Retrieved 18 May 2020 a b c 수정 2019 12 19 09 23 입력 2019 12 17 06 00 17 December 2019 이기환의 흔적의 역사 한반도엔 없는 돌 가락국 허황후 파사석탑의 정체 www khan co kr in Korean Retrieved 9 February 2021 a b Lee Yang jae 9 August 2022 가야국의 실체와 가락국기 Tongilnews in Korean Retrieved 14 August 2022 a b c d 임동근 11 August 2017 연합이매진 인도 공주 허황옥이 가야에 온 까닭은 연합뉴스 in Korean Retrieved 19 November 2020 a b c d Queen Heo Hwang ok Namu in Korean Kim Hung gyu March 2012 Defenders and Conquerors The Rhetoric of Royal Power in Korean Inscriptions from the Fifth to Seventh Centuries PDF Cross Currents 1 김성회의 재미있는 다문화이야기 이주민 허황옥 과 처용설화 는 사실일까 에듀인뉴스 EduinNews in Korean 5 May 2019 Retrieved 25 March 2021 India South Korea sign 6 pacts to step up cooperation in infrastructure combating global crime The Economic Times 22 February 2019 Ahuja Sanjeev K 20 November 2020 Korean Queen Huh Hwang ok story to appear in ICCR s book on International love stories Asian Community News Retrieved 23 November 2020 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Heo Hwang ok Tomb of Queen Suro Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Heo Hwang ok amp oldid 1133728730, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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