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Jangsu of Goguryeo

Jangsu of Goguryeo (394–491, r. 413–491)[1] was the 20th monarch of Goguryeo, the northernmost of the Three Kingdoms of Korea. He was born in 394 as the eldest son of Gwanggaeto. He became the crown prince in 408, and upon his father's death in 413, became the ruler at the age of 19.[2]

King Jangsu
The "Tomb of the General" in Ji'an, China, former capital of Goguryeo. Chinese scholars posit this to be the tomb of King Jangsu and his consort, though many Korean scholars argue Jangsu's tomb is in Pyongyang, where Jangsu had moved the capital in 427 (July 2010).
Monarch of Goguryeo
Reign413–491 (78 years)
PredecessorGwanggaeto
SuccessorMunjamyeong of Goguryeo
Born394
Died491 (aged 96–97)
IssueCrown Prince Juda
FatherGwanggaeto
Jangsu of Goguryeo
Hangul
장수왕
Hanja
長壽王
Revised RomanizationJangsu-wang
McCune–ReischauerChangsu-wang
Birth name
Hangul
거련 or 연
Hanja
巨連 or 璉
Revised RomanizationGeoryeon or Yeon
McCune–ReischauerKǒryǒn or Yǒn

Jangsu reigned during the golden age of Goguryeo,[3][4] when it was a powerful empire and one of the great powers in East Asia.[5][6][7][8] He continued to build upon his father's territorial expansion through conquest,[9] but was also known for his diplomatic abilities.[10][11][12] Like his father, Gwanggaeto the Great, Jangsu also achieved a loose unification of the Three Kingdoms of Korea.[13] In addition, Jangsu's long reign saw the perfecting of Goguryeo's political, economic and other institutional arrangements.[14] He is also noted for building the Gwanggaeto Stele, dedicated to his father. Jangsu's posthumous name means "Long Life", based on his longstanding reign of 79 years until the age of 98,[14] the longest reign in East Asian history.[15]

During his reign, Jangsu changed the official name of Goguryeo (Koguryŏ) to the shortened Goryeo (Koryŏ), from which the name Korea originates.

Family

  • Father: King Gwanggaeto (광개토왕, 廣開土王)
  • Unknown wife
    • Son: Prince Joda/Juda (조다, 助多); father of King Munja.
    • Son: Prince Seungu (승우, 升于)
    • Unnamed daughter

Early reign

During his early reign, Jangsu dedicated much of his efforts toward stabilizing an empire that had experienced great and sudden growth as a direct result of his father's conquests. Jangsu built a magnificent tomb for his father, Gwanggaeto the Great, and along with it an imposing 6 meter tall tombstone engraved with his father's accomplishments (now known as the Gwanggaeto Stele).[16]

In 427, he transferred the Goguryeo capital from Gungnae Fortress (present-day Ji'an on the China-North Korea border) to Pyongyang,[17][18] a more suitable region to grow into a burgeoning metropolitan capital,[19] which led Goguryeo to achieve a high level of cultural and economic prosperity.[20]

Relations with Chinese dynasties and nomadic states

When Gwanggaeto the Great ruled Goguryeo, the Chinese mainland was dominated by five non-Han Chinese peoples and divided into multiple states. During Gwanggaeto's time, Goguryeo invaded Later Yan and conquered Liaoning,[21] but when Jangsu came to the throne, the chaos in northern China was coming to an end.[18] The unification of northern China by Northern Wei became a crucial point for both Goguryeo and the southern dynasties of China.[22] However, Jangsu was able to use the political situation in China by manipulating the northern and southern Chinese states to his advantage.[10][12]

After the fall of Later Yan, Han Chinese drove the Xianbei Murong clan northward and established Northern Yan in its place.[23][22] However, Northern Yan's existence was threatened by the powerful Xianbei Tuoba clan of Northern Wei to the west, compelling Northern Yan to make an alliance with Goguryeo, its neighbor to the east. Hence, Jangsu turned his military ambitions southward toward the Korean peninsula.[23]

The southern Chinese dynasty of Liu Song, which was feuding with Northern Wei,[2] encouraged both Northern Yan and Goguryeo to oppose Northern Wei. However, Liu Song's plan did not work out, as Goguryeo imprisoned the emperor of Northern Yan in 438. The Liu Song court was outraged and warned Jangsu that the death of the Northern Yan ruler would lead to war. However, Jangsu ignored the threat and executed him, bringing the short-lived Northern Yan dynasty to an end. Liu Song troops then attacked Goguryeo but were easily defeated. Peace resumed in the following year when Jangsu sent 800 horses as a gift to the Liu Song emperor, to aid him in his ongoing war against Northern Wei, allowing Goguryeo to concentrate its forces against Baekje and Silla to the south while Liu Song and Northern Wei were occupied against each other to the west.[24] Jangsu again encouraged Liu Song to invade Northern Wei in 459 when he sent loads of crossbows and provided gold and silver. The Northern Wei government was upset by Jangsu's actions but had to keep peace with Goguryeo to continue its war against Liu Song and the Rouran Khaganate.

Jangsu also maintained contact with Northern Wei, and the two empires established a formal relationship in 435. This relationship proved to be useful when Goguryeo waged war against Baekje, which had secretly sought a military alliance with Northern Wei against Goguryeo,[14] because Northern Wei did not interfere in the matters of the Korean countries.

In 479, Jangsu established friendly relations with the Rouran Khaganate with a view to keeping Northern Wei under control.[25] After securing peace with the Rourans, Jangsu invaded the Khitans, a branch of the Xianbei confederacy at the time,[26][27] and then attacked the Didouyu with his Rouran allies.[28]

After the Khitans surrendered to Goguryeo, Jangsu sent gifts to both Northern Wei and Southern Qi, which took over the southern half of China after overthrowing Liu Song in 479.[25] Both Qi and Wei tried to tighten Goguryeo's relationship with them. Wei emperors treated Goguryeo delegates as equal to Chinese delegates. Under the reign of Emperor Xiaowen alone, 41 emissaries were sent,[29] but the frequency started to drop since Jangsu continued to keep hospitality with Qi. This decrease in exchanged delegates outraged Emperor Xiaowen, and at last he gave an order to capture Goguryeo delegates before they could reach the Qi capital. However, Jangsu paid no mind, and continued to send delegates to Qi. Northern Wei could not block Goguryeo, which indicated the success of Jangsu's diplomatic strategy: maximizing the situation and manipulating the power struggles between rival Chinese states to Goguryeo's advantage.[10][11]

Goguryeo and the northern states maintained peace and did not have further conflicts until the Goguryeo–Sui War in 598.[24]

Relations with southern Korean states

Marriage alliances

 
Goguryeo at its zenith c. 476.

Confronted with harsh attacks from Goguryeo into the southern region of the Korean peninsula, Baekje and Silla found their survival through marriage alliances, beginning in 433. The alliance between Baekje and Silla lasted more than a century and was the primary reason why Goguryeo was unable to conquer the entire peninsula.[30]

Gaya

Gaya found itself in a precarious situation due to its geographical disadvantage of being sandwiched by Baekje and Silla, and ultimately could not develop into an advanced nation.[31]

Baekje campaign and Dorim

In 472, Gaero, the ruler of Baekje, sent a letter to the emperor of Northern Wei, stating that he was having trouble interacting with him due to frequent Goguryeo intervention, thus calling for military action against Goguryeo. However, Baekje failed to get its emissary back and was unable to receive the military support of Northern Wei.[32][33] In response, Jangsu secretly planned to attack Baekje, which despite its losses against Gwanggaeto the Great, still held a significant power base in the Korean peninsula. In order to disarm Baekje, he sent a Buddhist monk named Dorim,[2] who went to Gaero's court with the secret objective of corrupting the country. Gaero began to favor Dorim, playing baduk with him every day, and Dorim was able to talk Gaero into spending large sums of money on construction projects, weakening the national treasury.[34]

In 475, Jangsu launched a full-scale invasion from both land and sea against the now politically unstable kingdom of Baekje. Dorim was successful in gaining information about Baekje,[34] and consequently Gaero was not at all prepared for the assault formulated by Jangsu. With momentum now in his favor, Jangsu then proceeded toward the capital and easily captured the city of Wiryeseong and slew Gaero.[35][36] Soon after, Jangsu burned the capital to the ground, along with several other cities that he conquered from Baekje. Henceforth, Baekje had no choice but to move its capital to mountainous Ungjin (present-day Gongju), 80 miles to the south, which provided a natural protection for the devastated kingdom.[2][33] The war gave Goguryeo more or less total control of the Han River valley, the region essential to commercial and military power in the Korean peninsula.[16] Baekje had been a dominant power on the peninsula for hundreds of years thanks to its control of the region, but after losing the region to Goguryeo, Baekje also lost control of the peninsula.

Silla campaign

After successfully concluding his campaign in Baekje, Jangsu then turned his attention toward the second peninsular kingdom of Silla.[2] Silla had been a vassal state of Goguryeo since Gwanggaeto defeated the Baekje and Wa troops invading Silla in 400.[37] To secure the allegiance of his de facto protectorate, Jangsu demanded the younger brother of King Nulji of Silla to become a political hostage.[38] King Nulji broke off relations with Goguryeo in 454. Jangsu invaded Silla in 468, expanding his domain into parts of Gangwon Province, and again in 489, capturing 7 walled cities and expanding his domain into parts of North Gyeongsang Province.[39] With his victory over Silla, Jangsu erected a stone monument in present-day Chungju, praising the accomplishments of his father and himself.[40] This monument remains at the same site, holding historical importance as the only surviving Goguryeo stele in the Korean peninsula.[41]

Death and legacy

King Jangsu died in 491, at the age of 97. His temple name means "Long Life" in hanja. During his reign, Goguryeo was at its golden age,[3][4] stretching from Inner Mongolia to the current North Chungcheong Province of South Korea, south of the Han River basin.

Modern Depictions

Age of Empires: World Domination, a mobile game produced in collaboration with series owner Microsoft,[42] includes Jangsu as a selectable hero of the Korean civilization.[43]

Portrayed by Jung Yun-seok in the 2007 MBC TV series The Legend.

See also

References

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  20. ^ Kim, Jinwung (5 November 2012). A History of Korea: From "Land of the Morning Calm" to States in Conflict. Indiana University Press. p. 36. ISBN 978-0253000781. Retrieved 15 July 2016. "Because Pyongyang was located in the vast, fertile Taedong River basin and had been the center of advanced culture of Old Chosŏn and Nangnang, this move led Koguryŏ to attain a high level of economic and cultural prosperity."
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  43. ^ . KLabGames. Archived from the original on 3 June 2016. Retrieved 16 June 2016.
Jangsu of Goguryeo
Born: 394 Died: 491
Regnal titles
Preceded by Monarch of Goguryeo
413–491
Succeeded by

jangsu, goguryeo, 20th, monarch, goguryeo, northernmost, three, kingdoms, korea, born, eldest, gwanggaeto, became, crown, prince, upon, father, death, became, ruler, king, jangsuthe, tomb, general, china, former, capital, goguryeo, chinese, scholars, posit, th. Jangsu of Goguryeo 394 491 r 413 491 1 was the 20th monarch of Goguryeo the northernmost of the Three Kingdoms of Korea He was born in 394 as the eldest son of Gwanggaeto He became the crown prince in 408 and upon his father s death in 413 became the ruler at the age of 19 2 King JangsuThe Tomb of the General in Ji an China former capital of Goguryeo Chinese scholars posit this to be the tomb of King Jangsu and his consort though many Korean scholars argue Jangsu s tomb is in Pyongyang where Jangsu had moved the capital in 427 July 2010 Monarch of GoguryeoReign413 491 78 years PredecessorGwanggaetoSuccessorMunjamyeong of GoguryeoBorn394Died491 aged 96 97 IssueCrown Prince JudaFatherGwanggaetoJangsu of GoguryeoHangul장수왕Hanja長壽王Revised RomanizationJangsu wangMcCune ReischauerChangsu wangBirth nameHangul거련 or 연Hanja巨連 or 璉Revised RomanizationGeoryeon or YeonMcCune ReischauerKǒryǒn or YǒnJangsu reigned during the golden age of Goguryeo 3 4 when it was a powerful empire and one of the great powers in East Asia 5 6 7 8 He continued to build upon his father s territorial expansion through conquest 9 but was also known for his diplomatic abilities 10 11 12 Like his father Gwanggaeto the Great Jangsu also achieved a loose unification of the Three Kingdoms of Korea 13 In addition Jangsu s long reign saw the perfecting of Goguryeo s political economic and other institutional arrangements 14 He is also noted for building the Gwanggaeto Stele dedicated to his father Jangsu s posthumous name means Long Life based on his longstanding reign of 79 years until the age of 98 14 the longest reign in East Asian history 15 During his reign Jangsu changed the official name of Goguryeo Koguryŏ to the shortened Goryeo Koryŏ from which the name Korea originates Contents 1 Family 2 Early reign 3 Relations with Chinese dynasties and nomadic states 4 Relations with southern Korean states 4 1 Marriage alliances 4 2 Gaya 4 3 Baekje campaign and Dorim 4 4 Silla campaign 5 Death and legacy 6 Modern Depictions 7 See also 8 ReferencesFamily EditFather King Gwanggaeto 광개토왕 廣開土王 Grandfather King Gogukyang 고국양왕 故國壤王 Unknown wife Son Prince Joda Juda 조다 助多 father of King Munja Son Prince Seungu 승우 升于 Unnamed daughterEarly reign EditDuring his early reign Jangsu dedicated much of his efforts toward stabilizing an empire that had experienced great and sudden growth as a direct result of his father s conquests Jangsu built a magnificent tomb for his father Gwanggaeto the Great and along with it an imposing 6 meter tall tombstone engraved with his father s accomplishments now known as the Gwanggaeto Stele 16 In 427 he transferred the Goguryeo capital from Gungnae Fortress present day Ji an on the China North Korea border to Pyongyang 17 18 a more suitable region to grow into a burgeoning metropolitan capital 19 which led Goguryeo to achieve a high level of cultural and economic prosperity 20 Relations with Chinese dynasties and nomadic states EditWhen Gwanggaeto the Great ruled Goguryeo the Chinese mainland was dominated by five non Han Chinese peoples and divided into multiple states During Gwanggaeto s time Goguryeo invaded Later Yan and conquered Liaoning 21 but when Jangsu came to the throne the chaos in northern China was coming to an end 18 The unification of northern China by Northern Wei became a crucial point for both Goguryeo and the southern dynasties of China 22 However Jangsu was able to use the political situation in China by manipulating the northern and southern Chinese states to his advantage 10 12 After the fall of Later Yan Han Chinese drove the Xianbei Murong clan northward and established Northern Yan in its place 23 22 However Northern Yan s existence was threatened by the powerful Xianbei Tuoba clan of Northern Wei to the west compelling Northern Yan to make an alliance with Goguryeo its neighbor to the east Hence Jangsu turned his military ambitions southward toward the Korean peninsula 23 The southern Chinese dynasty of Liu Song which was feuding with Northern Wei 2 encouraged both Northern Yan and Goguryeo to oppose Northern Wei However Liu Song s plan did not work out as Goguryeo imprisoned the emperor of Northern Yan in 438 The Liu Song court was outraged and warned Jangsu that the death of the Northern Yan ruler would lead to war However Jangsu ignored the threat and executed him bringing the short lived Northern Yan dynasty to an end Liu Song troops then attacked Goguryeo but were easily defeated Peace resumed in the following year when Jangsu sent 800 horses as a gift to the Liu Song emperor to aid him in his ongoing war against Northern Wei allowing Goguryeo to concentrate its forces against Baekje and Silla to the south while Liu Song and Northern Wei were occupied against each other to the west 24 Jangsu again encouraged Liu Song to invade Northern Wei in 459 when he sent loads of crossbows and provided gold and silver The Northern Wei government was upset by Jangsu s actions but had to keep peace with Goguryeo to continue its war against Liu Song and the Rouran Khaganate Jangsu also maintained contact with Northern Wei and the two empires established a formal relationship in 435 This relationship proved to be useful when Goguryeo waged war against Baekje which had secretly sought a military alliance with Northern Wei against Goguryeo 14 because Northern Wei did not interfere in the matters of the Korean countries In 479 Jangsu established friendly relations with the Rouran Khaganate with a view to keeping Northern Wei under control 25 After securing peace with the Rourans Jangsu invaded the Khitans a branch of the Xianbei confederacy at the time 26 27 and then attacked the Didouyu with his Rouran allies 28 After the Khitans surrendered to Goguryeo Jangsu sent gifts to both Northern Wei and Southern Qi which took over the southern half of China after overthrowing Liu Song in 479 25 Both Qi and Wei tried to tighten Goguryeo s relationship with them Wei emperors treated Goguryeo delegates as equal to Chinese delegates Under the reign of Emperor Xiaowen alone 41 emissaries were sent 29 but the frequency started to drop since Jangsu continued to keep hospitality with Qi This decrease in exchanged delegates outraged Emperor Xiaowen and at last he gave an order to capture Goguryeo delegates before they could reach the Qi capital However Jangsu paid no mind and continued to send delegates to Qi Northern Wei could not block Goguryeo which indicated the success of Jangsu s diplomatic strategy maximizing the situation and manipulating the power struggles between rival Chinese states to Goguryeo s advantage 10 11 Goguryeo and the northern states maintained peace and did not have further conflicts until the Goguryeo Sui War in 598 24 Relations with southern Korean states EditMarriage alliances Edit Goguryeo at its zenith c 476 Confronted with harsh attacks from Goguryeo into the southern region of the Korean peninsula Baekje and Silla found their survival through marriage alliances beginning in 433 The alliance between Baekje and Silla lasted more than a century and was the primary reason why Goguryeo was unable to conquer the entire peninsula 30 Gaya Edit Gaya found itself in a precarious situation due to its geographical disadvantage of being sandwiched by Baekje and Silla and ultimately could not develop into an advanced nation 31 Baekje campaign and Dorim Edit In 472 Gaero the ruler of Baekje sent a letter to the emperor of Northern Wei stating that he was having trouble interacting with him due to frequent Goguryeo intervention thus calling for military action against Goguryeo However Baekje failed to get its emissary back and was unable to receive the military support of Northern Wei 32 33 In response Jangsu secretly planned to attack Baekje which despite its losses against Gwanggaeto the Great still held a significant power base in the Korean peninsula In order to disarm Baekje he sent a Buddhist monk named Dorim 2 who went to Gaero s court with the secret objective of corrupting the country Gaero began to favor Dorim playing baduk with him every day and Dorim was able to talk Gaero into spending large sums of money on construction projects weakening the national treasury 34 In 475 Jangsu launched a full scale invasion from both land and sea against the now politically unstable kingdom of Baekje Dorim was successful in gaining information about Baekje 34 and consequently Gaero was not at all prepared for the assault formulated by Jangsu With momentum now in his favor Jangsu then proceeded toward the capital and easily captured the city of Wiryeseong and slew Gaero 35 36 Soon after Jangsu burned the capital to the ground along with several other cities that he conquered from Baekje Henceforth Baekje had no choice but to move its capital to mountainous Ungjin present day Gongju 80 miles to the south which provided a natural protection for the devastated kingdom 2 33 The war gave Goguryeo more or less total control of the Han River valley the region essential to commercial and military power in the Korean peninsula 16 Baekje had been a dominant power on the peninsula for hundreds of years thanks to its control of the region but after losing the region to Goguryeo Baekje also lost control of the peninsula Silla campaign Edit After successfully concluding his campaign in Baekje Jangsu then turned his attention toward the second peninsular kingdom of Silla 2 Silla had been a vassal state of Goguryeo since Gwanggaeto defeated the Baekje and Wa troops invading Silla in 400 37 To secure the allegiance of his de facto protectorate Jangsu demanded the younger brother of King Nulji of Silla to become a political hostage 38 King Nulji broke off relations with Goguryeo in 454 Jangsu invaded Silla in 468 expanding his domain into parts of Gangwon Province and again in 489 capturing 7 walled cities and expanding his domain into parts of North Gyeongsang Province 39 With his victory over Silla Jangsu erected a stone monument in present day Chungju praising the accomplishments of his father and himself 40 This monument remains at the same site holding historical importance as the only surviving Goguryeo stele in the Korean peninsula 41 Death and legacy EditKing Jangsu died in 491 at the age of 97 His temple name means Long Life in hanja During his reign Goguryeo was at its golden age 3 4 stretching from Inner Mongolia to the current North Chungcheong Province of South Korea south of the Han River basin Modern Depictions EditAge of Empires World Domination a mobile game produced in collaboration with series owner Microsoft 42 includes Jangsu as a selectable hero of the Korean civilization 43 Portrayed by Jung Yun seok in the 2007 MBC TV series The Legend See also EditHistory of Korea Three Kingdoms of Korea List of Korean monarchsReferences Edit Corfield Justin 2014 Historical Dictionary of Pyongyang Anthem Press p XV ISBN 9781783083411 Retrieved 2 February 2016 a b c d e King Jangsu KBS Radio KBS Archived from the original on 5 March 2017 Retrieved 2 February 2016 a b Cohen Warren I 20 December 2000 East Asia at the Center Four Thousand Years of Engagement with the World Columbia University Press p 50 ISBN 9780231502511 Retrieved 29 July 2016 a b Embree Ainslie Thomas 1988 Encyclopedia of Asian history Scribner p 324 ISBN 9780684188997 Retrieved 29 July 2016 Roberts John Morris Westad Odd Arne 2013 The History of the World Oxford University Press p 443 ISBN 9780199936762 Retrieved 15 July 2016 Gardner Hall 27 November 2007 Averting Global War Regional Challenges Overextension and Options for American Strategy Palgrave Macmillan pp 158 159 ISBN 9780230608733 Retrieved 15 July 2016 permanent dead link Laet Sigfried J de 1994 History of Humanity From the seventh to the sixteenth century UNESCO p 1133 ISBN 9789231028137 Retrieved 10 October 2016 Walker Hugh Dyson 20 November 2012 East Asia A New History AuthorHouse pp 6 7 ISBN 9781477265178 Retrieved 19 November 2016 Bae Kichan 2007 Korea at the crossroads the history and future of East Asia 1st ed Seoul Happyreading p 87 ISBN 9788989571469 a b c Lee Ki Baik 1984 A New History of Korea Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press p 38 ISBN 067461576X He held China in check by employing a diplomatic strategy of maintaining ties with both the Northern and Southern Dynasties thus enabling him to manipulate these two contending forces to Koguryŏ s advantage a b Kim Jinwung 5 November 2012 A History of Korea From Land of the Morning Calm to States in Conflict Indiana University Press p 36 ISBN 978 0253000781 Retrieved 15 July 2016 China s split into the Northern and Southern dynasties afforded him an opportunity to diplomatically maneuver these two bitterly contending forces to Koguryŏ s advantage a b Cohen Warren I 20 December 2000 East Asia at the Center Four Thousand Years of Engagement with the World Columbia University Press p 50 ISBN 9780231502511 Retrieved 29 July 2016 Kim Jinwung 2012 A History of Korea From Land of the Morning Calm to States in Conflict Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press pp 35 36 ISBN 978 0253000781 Retrieved 11 October 2016 a b c Lee Ki Baik 1984 A New History of Korea Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press pp 38 40 ISBN 067461576X Walker Hugh Dyson November 2012 East Asia A New History AuthorHouse p 137 ISBN 9781477265161 Retrieved 29 July 2016 a b Lee Injae Miller Owen Park Jinhoon Yi Hyun hae 2014 Korean History in Maps Cambridge University Press pp 30 49 ISBN 9781107098466 Retrieved 1 February 2016 ICOMOS Kim Lena 2010 Koguryo Tomb Murals World Cultural Heritage Giljabi Media p 99 Retrieved 2 February 2016 a b Jeon Hotae 2007 Koguryŏ Koguryo the origin of Korean power amp pride Seoul Northeast Asia History Foundation pp 25 27 ISBN 9788991448834 Lee Ki Baik 1984 A New History of Korea Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press pp 38 40 ISBN 067461576X This move from a region of narrow mountain valleys to a broad riverine plain indicates that the capital could no longer remain primarily a military encampment but had to be developed into a metropolitan center for the nation s political economic and social life Kim Jinwung 5 November 2012 A History of Korea From Land of the Morning Calm to States in Conflict Indiana University Press p 36 ISBN 978 0253000781 Retrieved 15 July 2016 Because Pyongyang was located in the vast fertile Taedong River basin and had been the center of advanced culture of Old Chosŏn and Nangnang this move led Koguryŏ to attain a high level of economic and cultural prosperity Walthall Anne Ebrey Patricia Buckley 2014 East Asia a cultural social and political history 3rd ed Boston MA Wadsworth p 103 ISBN 9781133606475 a b Northeast Asia History Foundation Koguryo The glorious ancient Korean Kingdom in Northeast Asia PDF NAHF p 76 Retrieved 2 February 2016 permanent dead link a b Holcombe Charles 2001 The genesis of East Asia 221 B C A D 907 Honolulu Associate for Asian Studies u a pp 174 175 ISBN 9780824824655 Retrieved 2 February 2016 a b King Jangsu 2 KBS Radio KBS Archived from the original on 21 March 2016 Retrieved 2 February 2016 a b Northeast Asia History Foundation Koguryo The glorious ancient Korean Kingdom in Northeast Asia PDF NAHF p 28 Retrieved 2 February 2016 permanent dead link Kim Hyun Jin 2013 The Huns Rome and the birth of Europe 1 publ ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 61 ISBN 9781107009066 Retrieved 2 February 2016 The Khitans although descended from the Xianbei and presumably inheriting their martial and political traditions were for a long time a weak people who were subjected successively to the Rouran Koguryo Sui Tang China and then most importantly the Gokturk Jeon Ho Tae 2007 The Dreams of the living and hopes of the dead Goguryeo tomb murals Seoul Korea Seoul National University Press p 9 ISBN 9788952107299 한나절에 읽는 백제의 역사 in Korean ebookspub 이북스펍 4 October 2014 ISBN 9791155191965 Retrieved 16 November 2016 Holcombe Charles 2001 The genesis of East Asia 221 B C A D 907 Honolulu Associate for Asian Studies u a p 58 ISBN 9780824824655 Retrieved 2 February 2016 Walker Hugh Dyson 20 November 2012 East Asia A New History AuthorHouse p 137 ISBN 9781477265178 Retrieved 12 October 2016 Seth Michael J 2011 A history of Korea from antiquity to the present Lanham Rowman amp Littlefield p 27 ISBN 9780742567177 Retrieved 2 February 2016 Kim Bushik 1145 Samguk Sagi Retrieved 2 February 2016 a b Ring Trudy Watson Noelle Schellinger Paul 12 November 2012 Asia and Oceania International Dictionary of Historic Places Routledge p 484 ISBN 9781136639791 Retrieved 12 October 2016 a b Yi I hwa Lee E Wha Ju Hee Park 2005 Korea s pastimes and customs Homa amp Sekey Books pp 4 5 ISBN 978 1 931907 38 5 Historical Survey Society 2007 Seoul a field guide to history English ed Paju Dolbegae Publishers p 16 ISBN 9788971992890 Korean Historical Research Association 2005 A history of Korea London Saffron Books p 43 ISBN 9781872843872 Walthall Anne Ebrey Patricia 2013 Pre modern East Asia a cultural social and political history 3rd ed Belmont Calif Wadsworth p 103 ISBN 9781133606512 Retrieved 1 February 2016 Il yeon 1281 Samguk Yusa 三國遺事 卷第 Retrieved 2 February 2016 至訥祗王即位三年己未 句麗長壽王遣使來朝云 寡君聞大王之弟寳海秀智才藝 願與相親特遣小臣懇請 王門之幸甚因此和通命 其弟寳海道於句麗 以内臣金武校勘 271謁為輔而送之 長壽王又留而不送 장수왕 민족문화대백과사전 Academy of Korean Studies Retrieved 12 October 2016 Chungju Goguryeobi Monument 중원 충주 고구려비 Visit Korea Korea Tourism Organization Archived from the original on 7 March 2016 Retrieved 2 February 2016 Goguryeo stele found in northern China Korea Herald Yonhop 2013 01 16 Retrieved 2 February 2016 Age of Empires World Domination Launched for Android and iOS NDTV Gadgets360 com Retrieved 16 June 2016 Age of Empires World Domination KLabGames Archived from the original on 3 June 2016 Retrieved 16 June 2016 Jangsu of GoguryeoHouse of GoBorn 394 Died 491Regnal titlesPreceded byGwanggaeto the Great Monarch of Goguryeo413 491 Succeeded byMunjamyeong Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jangsu of Goguryeo amp oldid 1142476662, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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