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Korean imperial titles

Imperial titles were used in various historical Korean states before the 14th century and at the turn of the 20th century: Early Korean states used "great king", "greatest king", and "holy king"; later Korean states used "emperor". Korean monarchs who used imperial titles had political and religious authority over a realm or domain. The Chinese concept of tianxia, pronounced "cheonha" in Korean, was variously adopted and adapted to Korean views of the world from period to period.[1]

Three Kingdoms of Korea edit

 
The Gwanggaeto Stele was erected in 414. It is the largest memorial stele in the world.[2] This photograph of a Joseon man standing next to the Gwanggaeto Stele was published in 1903 in Japan in The Landmarks and Ruins of Joseon.[3]

The 5th century was a period of great interaction on the Korean Peninsula that marked the first step toward the unification of the Three Kingdoms of Korea.[4] The earliest known tianxia view of the world in Korean history is recorded in Goguryeo epigraphs dating to this period.[1][a]

Dongmyeong of Goguryeo was a god-king, the Son of Heaven, and his kingdom was the center of the world.[7][b] As the descendants of the Son of Heaven, the kings of Goguryeo were the Scions of Heaven (Korean천손; Hanja天孫), who had supreme authority and sacerdotally intermediated between Heaven and Earth.[9] The Goguryeo concept of tianxia was significantly influenced by the original Chinese concept, but its foundation laid in Dongmyeong.[10] In contrast to the Chinese tianxia, which was based on the Mandate of Heaven, the Goguryeo tianxia was based on divine ancestry.[11] As Goguryeo became centralized, Dongmyeong became the state god of Goguryeo.[12] His worship was widespread among the people, and the view that Goguryeo was the center of the world was not limited to the royal family and aristocracy.[13] Dongmyeong was worshiped well into the Goryeo period of Korea; Yi Kyu-bo said "Even unlettered country folk can tell the tale of King [Dongmyeong]."[14]

Goguryeo was an authority unto itself.[6] It had an independent sphere of influence in Northeast Asia for more than 200 years around the 5th and 6th centuries.[15] Goguryeo viewed itself as the Land of the Scion of Heaven and viewed its neighboring states of Baekje, Silla, and Eastern Buyeo as tributary states.[13][c] Together, they constituted a Goguryeo tianxia.[17] A strong sense of commonality emerged, later culminating in a "Samhan" consciousness among the peoples of the Three Kingdoms.[18] The Three Kingdoms of Korea were collectively called the Samhan in the Sui and Tang dynasties.[19] Earlier, Goguryeo was called Samhan in the Book of Wei.[20] The unification of the Samhan was later proclaimed by Silla in the 7th century and Goryeo in the 10th century.[21][22]

Goguryeo monarchs were called kings, not emperors.[23] Goguryeo kings were sometimes elevated to "great kings", "holy kings", or "greatest kings".[23][d] They were equivalent to emperors and khagans.[25] The Goguryeo title of "greatest king", or taewang (Korean태왕; Hanja太王), was similar to the Chinese title of "heavenly king".[26] "King" was first used in Goguryeo around the beginning of the Common Era; it was first used in Northeast Asia in the 4th century BCE in Old Joseon, before "emperor", or huangdi, was first used in China.[27] The indigenous titles of ga, gan, and han, which were similar to khan, were downgraded and the sinified title of king, or wang, became the supreme title in Northeast Asia.[28] Goguryeo monarchs being called kings was not in deference to China; wang was not inferior to huangdi or khan in Goguryeo tradition.[29]

 
This bronze bowl was excavated from a Silla tomb in Gyeongju, the ancient capital of Silla. It is inscribed with the posthumous name of Gwanggaeto the Great.[30]

Goguryeo had a pluralistic concept of tianxia.[31] The Goguryeo tianxia was one among others that constituted the world.[32] During the 5th and 6th centuries, a balance of power was maintained in East Asia between the Northern and Southern dynasties, the Rouran Khaganate, Goguryeo, and, later, Tuyuhun.[15] Goguryeo maintained tributary relations with the Northern and Southern dynasties;[33] the relationships were voluntary and profitable.[34] A policy of coexistence was pursued and relations were peaceful.[32] Goguryeo's tributary relations with the Northern and Southern dynasties were nominal.[32] The Northern and Southern dynasties had no control over Goguryeo's foreign policy; Goguryeo pursued policies that went against Chinese interests.[15] Goguryeo restrained Northern Wei, the strongest power in East Asia at the time, by allying with its enemies.[33] Northern Wei said that Goguryeo was "worthy" and gave preferential treatment to its envoys.[35] Southern Qi said that Goguryeo was "so strong that it [would not] follow orders".[15] Goguryeo maintained cordial relations with the Rouran, and together attacked the Didouyu.[36]

The Goguryeo tianxia was distinct from those of China and Inner Asia.[32] During the 5th and 6th centuries, China and Goguryeo recognized each other's spheres of influence.[32] China did not directly intervene in Goguryeo's tianxia of Northeast Asia,[32] and vice versa.[37] Goguryeo did not have westward ambitions, and instead moved its capital to Pyongyang in the 5th century.[38] Within its sphere of influence, Goguryeo partially subjugated the Khitan, Mohe, and Didouyu, and influenced Buyeo, Silla, and Baekje.[39] Peace was maintained with China for more than 150 years;[40] it ended with the unification of China by the Sui dynasty.[41] The unification of China changed the international balance of power.[41] With its supremacy in Northeast Asia threatened, Goguryeo warred with a unified China for 70 years until its defeat in 668 by the Tang dynasty and Silla.[41]

Silla's systems were based on those of Goguryeo.[42] "Great king" was first used in Silla in the early 6th century as Silla expanded.[43][e] Previously, maripgan, or "highest khan", was used; during its maripgan period (356–514), Silla was unified but not centralized.[45] While the Goguryeo royalty and aristocracy were associated with the Son of Heaven, the Silla royalty and aristocracy were associated with the Buddha.[42] Silla monarchs were viewed as the Buddha and Silla was viewed as a Buddha land from the early 6th century to the mid-7th century.[46] Silla used its own era names during this period.[47] Silla began building an imperial Buddhist temple called the Temple of the Imperial Dragon in the mid-6th century.[48] "Great king" was last used in Silla by Muyeol of Silla; afterward, Silla accommodated itself to the tianxia of the Tang dynasty.[49]

Goryeo edit

 
Bronze statue of Taejo of Goryeo, c. 951. This life-size nude statue of Taejo was clothed and worshiped until the end of the Goryeo dynasty; the practice of clothing and worshiping nude statues originated in Goguryeo. The statue is wearing an imperial crown called a tongcheongwan (통천관; 通天冠).[50]

Taejo of Goryeo founded Goryeo in 918 as a successor to Goguryeo.[51] He adopted the era name of "Bestowed by Heaven".[52] Taejo was acknowledged as the successor to Dongmyeong in China.[53] Goryeo was acknowledged as the successor to Goguryeo in China and Japan.[54] Taejo unified Korea and proclaimed the unification of the "Samhan", or the Three Kingdoms of Korea.[22] Goryeo viewed its Three Kingdoms heritage as nearly on a par with the imperial heritage of China.[6] The conceptual world of the Samhan or the "Three Han"—Goguryeo, Silla, and Baekje—constituted a Goryeo tianxia.[53] Within the Goryeo tianxia, called Haedong or "East of the Sea", Goryeo monarchs were emperors and Sons of Heaven.[53]

Goryeo monarchs were called emperors and Sons of Heaven.[55] Imperial titles were used since the beginning of the dynasty; Taejo was called "Son of Heaven" by the last king of Silla.[56] Goryeo monarchs addressed imperial edicts and were addressed as "Your Imperial Majesty" (Korean폐하; Hanja陛下).[57] They were posthumously bestowed with imperial temple names.[55] The use of imperial language was widespread and ubiquitous in Goryeo.[58] Imperial titles and practices extended to members of the royal family.[57] Members of the royal family were commonly invested as kings.[52] Goryeo monarchs wore imperial yellow clothing.[59] Goryeo's imperial system was modeled after that of the Tang dynasty.[52] The government consisted of three departments and six ministries and the military consisted of five armies.[52] Kaesong was an imperial capital and the main palace was an imperial palace; Pyongyang and Seoul were secondary capitals.[60][f] Goryeo maintained a tributary system.[62] The Jurchens who later founded the Jin dynasty viewed Goryeo as a parent country and Goryeo monarchs as suzerains.[62] Goryeo monarchs were initially called "Emperor of Goryeo" by the Jin dynasty.[63] The Song dynasty, the Liao dynasty, and the Jin dynasty were well aware of and tolerated Goryeo's imperial claims and practices.[64]

Goryeo had a pluralistic concept of tianxia.[65] The Goryeo tianxia was one among others that constituted the world.[65] During the 11th and part of the 12th centuries, a balance of power was maintained in East Asia between Goryeo, the Liao dynasty, the Song dynasty, and Western Xia.[66] Goryeo played an active role in East Asian politics.[67] Goryeo monarchs were called kings vis-à-vis China;[68] Goryeo successively maintained tributary relations with the Five Dynasties (beginning with the Later Tang dynasty), the Song dynasty, the Liao dynasty, and the Jin dynasty. However, Goryeo's tributary relations with them were nominal.[69] Goryeo had no political, economic, or military obligations to China.[70] According to Peter Yun: "While Goryeo may have admired and adopted many of China's culture and institutions, there is little evidence that it accepted the notion of Chinese political superiority as the natural order of things."[71] Goryeo monarchs possessed full de jure sovereignty.[53] During the 11th and 12th centuries, Goryeo was assertive toward China.[67] Goryeo treated imperial envoys from the Song, Liao, and Jin dynasties as equals, not superiors;[64][72] imperial envoys were consistently downgraded.[73]

 
Goryeo monarchs commissioned a Korean version of the Tripitaka in the 11th century and again in the 13th century; only Sons of Heaven had the right to commission a Tripitaka.[74]

Goryeo used both a royal and an imperial system during its early and middle periods.[72][g] Goryeo monarchs were not strictly emperors at home and kings abroad: Goryeo's royal system was also used at home, and its imperial system was also used abroad.[75] They were used almost indiscriminately.[76][h] Goryeo's identity was not defined by its monarchs being kings or emperors but, instead, by them being Sons of Heaven.[78] According to Remco E. Breuker: "The [Goryeo] ruler has been king, he has been emperor, and at times he was both. His correct appellation is not important, however, compared to the fact that he was considered to rule his own domain [tianxia]; his own, not just politically and practically, but also ideologically and ontologically."[79] Goryeo was an independent tianxia; within it, Goryeo monarchs were Sons of Heaven, called "Son of Heaven of East of the Sea" (Korean해동천자; Hanja海東天子), who were viewed as superhuman beings who alone mediated between Heaven and the Korean people.[80]

The Goryeo worldview partly originated during earlier periods of Korean history.[81] It was possibly a continuation of the Goguryeo worldview.[81] New elements were introduced during the Goryeo period.[82] The Goryeo worldview was more influenced than was the Goguryeo worldview by Confucianism.[83] Confucianism was the main political ideology during the Goryeo period, but not during the Three Kingdoms period.[83] According to Edward Y. J. Chung: "[Confucianism] played a subordinate role to the traditional ideas and institutions maintained by noble families and hereditary aristocrats, as well as by the Buddhist tradition."[84] The Goryeo worldview was possibly influenced by Dongmyeong worship and Balhae refugees:[81] Dongmyeong was highly venerated and widely worshiped in Goryeo.[85][86] He was the only one among the progenitors of the Three Kingdoms of Korea who was honored with shrines; his tomb and shrine in Pyongyang were called the Real Pearl Tomb and the Shrine of Holy Emperor Dongmyeong.[87] Balhae used imperial titles and era names.[88][89] Taejo viewed Balhae as a kin country and accepted many refugees from it;[90] Balhae refugees constituted 10 percent of the Goryeo population.[91]

Goryeo entered a period of military dictatorship similar to a shogunate in the late 12th century.[92] During this period of de facto military rule, Goryeo monarchs continued to be viewed as Sons of Heaven and emperors, and Goryeo continued to be viewed as a tianxia.[93] The view of Goryeo as a tianxia inspired a spirit of resistance to the Mongols in the 13th century.[94] Goryeo capitulated to the Mongols after 30 years of war and later became a semiautonomous "son-in-law state" (Korean부마국; Hanja駙馬國) to the Yuan dynasty in 1270.[64] Goryeo's imperial system ended with Wonjong of Goryeo.[72] During this period of Mongol dominance, Goryeo monarchs were demoted to kings and temple names indicated loyalty to the Yuan dynasty.[64] The Songs of Emperors and Kings and Memorabilia of the Three Kingdoms maintained the view of Goryeo as a tianxia.[95] However, the view of Goryeo as a tianxia gradually declined.[95] Goryeo ended its son-in-law status in 1356: Gongmin of Goryeo recovered Ssangseong and declared autonomy.[64] Meanwhile, Neo-Confucianism emerged as the dominant ideology;[95] Confucianism profoundly influenced Korean thought, religion, socio-political systems, and ways of life for the first time in Korean history.[84] The powerful influence of Neo-Confucianism in the twilight of the Goryeo dynasty led to a growing Sinocentric view of Korea as a "little China".[95]

Joseon edit

The Goryeo dynasty transitioned into the Joseon dynasty in 1392. The architects of the Joseon dynasty were anti-Buddhist Neo-Confucian scholar-officials.[96] They transformed Korea from a Buddhist country into a Confucian country.[97] Joseon was a thoroughly Confucian country;[98] it was the self-proclaimed most and later only Confucian country in the world.[97] The view of Korea as a unification of the "Three Han"—Goguryeo, Silla, and Baekje—continued in the Joseon dynasty.[99][100] Sejong the Great built shrines for the progenitors of the Three Kingdoms of Korea;[101] he said that the Three Kingdoms were equal and rejected a proposal to worship only the progenitor of Silla.[102] The view of Korea as a tianxia or a center of the world ended in the Joseon dynasty.[103] Joseon monarchs were kings, not emperors; Joseon viewed China as the only center of the world.[103]

 
Korean monarchs sacrificed to Heaven during the Three Kingdoms, Goryeo, and early Joseon periods. During the early Joseon period, it was hotly debated whether Joseon kings, who were not Sons of Heaven, had the right to sacrifice to Heaven. The practice was suppressed and finally abolished in 1464; it was later revived during the Korean Empire period.[104]

The Neo-Confucian Joseon dynasty was greatly influenced by a Confucian concept called sadae, or "serving the great".[105] Joseon maintained a policy of tributary sadae toward China, and China maintained a policy of benign neglect toward Joseon.[106] As a successor state, the Joseon dynasty was obligated to compile an official history of its predecessor state.[107] The preceding Goryeo dynasty, however, had been a qualitatively different society and had held a qualitatively different position vis-à-vis China.[108] Goryeo had maintained an imperial system that ran counter to sadae;[105] it had maintained only a nominal sadae toward China.[109][i] Joseon Neo-Confucian ideologues loyal to sadae compiled a distorted history of Goryeo that suppressed the fact that it had maintained an imperial system.[105][111] Sejong adamantly opposed them and advocated historical accuracy.[112] Despite its Neo-Confucian orthodoxy, the Joseon dynasty inherited some imperial traditions from the Goryeo dynasty.[57][j] According to Remco E. Breuker, this can be attributed to "the total weight of the cultural and historical power accumulated during centuries of use".[57]

There is a nominal dependence upon China, very similar to that recognized by [Thailand] and [Vietnam]. Tribute is regularly sent. Acts of submission are from time to time recorded: but the Chinese Government exercise no real authority, and seems never to interfere with the jurisdiction of Corean [sic] functionaries. The authority of the King is absolute.[113]

The Joseon dynasty was autonomous in its internal and external affairs.[114][115] It was not a colony or dependency of China.[114] However, China abandoned its conventional laissez-faire policy of noninterference toward Korea and adopted a radical interventionist policy of interference in the late 19th century.[116] According to Ming-te Lin: "This was indeed the most aggressive and visible behavior of China's intervention in Korean politics since the Yuan dynasty (Ming China assisted Korea once, but did not interfere with her politics), and it was the turning point in [Qing] China's policy toward Korea."[117] The late 19th century was a turbulent period in Korean history: Korea experienced interventions by not only China but also Japan and the West.[118] Japan brought Korea into its sphere of influence with a victory over China in 1895.[119] Korea turned to Russia to counterbalance Japan.[120] A new Korean reformist group called the Independence Club emerged and called for the establishment of a new imperial government that could claim equality with the empires of China, Japan, and Russia and safeguard the independence of Korea.[121] King Gojong declared Korea an empire and himself an emperor in 1897.[122][k] However, the new Korean Empire was an empire in name only.[122] The Korean Empire was reduced to a protectorate in 1905 after Japan defeated Russia and a colony in 1910 after Japan annexed Korea.[124]

The Korean Empire, or the "Great Han Empire", was named after the Three Han.[125] Gojong said that the Goryeo dynasty unified the Samhan and the Joseon dynasty expanded the land to 4,000 li.[126] The Republic of Korea (South Korea), or the "Great Han Republic", is named after the Korean Empire.[122]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The Chungju Goguryeo Monument may date earlier to c. 397, based on an inscription that says: "7th year of Yeongnak".[5] Yeongnak is the era name of Gwanggaeto the Great. Goguryeo used its own era names.[6]
  2. ^ All foundation myths in Korean mythology feature divine or semidivine origin. Since antiquity, kingship was sacred.[8]
  3. ^ Buyeo and Silla were legitimate tributary states; Baekje was not.[16]
  4. ^ "Great King of Goryeo" and "Greatest King of Goryeo" were also used.[24]
  5. ^ "Greatest king" was also used.[44]
  6. ^ Gyeongju was previously a secondary capital. The secondary capitals represented the ancient capitals of the Three Kingdoms of Korea.[61]
  7. ^ The royal system was used exclusively from the Seongjong period to the beginning of the Hyeonjong period and later during the second half of the Injong period. The imperial system was used exclusively during the first half of the Gwangjong period.[72]
  8. ^ For example, Goryeo used Korean imperial titles and Chinese era names in tandem.[77] Goryeo very rarely used Korean era names.
  9. ^ Goryeo maintained a "son-in-law" relationship toward the Yuan dynasty that is viewed in Korean historiography as a period of "interference" rather than simply sadae.[110]
  10. ^ For example, Joseon kings were posthumously bestowed with imperial temple names.[57]
  11. ^ The era name was changed to Gwangmu on 16 August 1897. Afterward, Gojong was named Emperor of Korea on 12 October 1897.[123]

References edit

Citations edit

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  18. ^ Noh 2014, p. 310.
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Sources edit

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korean, imperial, titles, imperial, titles, were, used, various, historical, korean, states, before, 14th, century, turn, 20th, century, early, korean, states, used, great, king, greatest, king, holy, king, later, korean, states, used, emperor, korean, monarch. Imperial titles were used in various historical Korean states before the 14th century and at the turn of the 20th century Early Korean states used great king greatest king and holy king later Korean states used emperor Korean monarchs who used imperial titles had political and religious authority over a realm or domain The Chinese concept of tianxia pronounced cheonha in Korean was variously adopted and adapted to Korean views of the world from period to period 1 Contents 1 Three Kingdoms of Korea 2 Goryeo 3 Joseon 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 SourcesThree Kingdoms of Korea edit nbsp The Gwanggaeto Stele was erected in 414 It is the largest memorial stele in the world 2 This photograph of a Joseon man standing next to the Gwanggaeto Stele was published in 1903 in Japan in The Landmarks and Ruins of Joseon 3 The 5th century was a period of great interaction on the Korean Peninsula that marked the first step toward the unification of the Three Kingdoms of Korea 4 The earliest known tianxia view of the world in Korean history is recorded in Goguryeo epigraphs dating to this period 1 a Dongmyeong of Goguryeo was a god king the Son of Heaven and his kingdom was the center of the world 7 b As the descendants of the Son of Heaven the kings of Goguryeo were the Scions of Heaven Korean 천손 Hanja 天孫 who had supreme authority and sacerdotally intermediated between Heaven and Earth 9 The Goguryeo concept of tianxia was significantly influenced by the original Chinese concept but its foundation laid in Dongmyeong 10 In contrast to the Chinese tianxia which was based on the Mandate of Heaven the Goguryeo tianxia was based on divine ancestry 11 As Goguryeo became centralized Dongmyeong became the state god of Goguryeo 12 His worship was widespread among the people and the view that Goguryeo was the center of the world was not limited to the royal family and aristocracy 13 Dongmyeong was worshiped well into the Goryeo period of Korea Yi Kyu bo said Even unlettered country folk can tell the tale of King Dongmyeong 14 Goguryeo was an authority unto itself 6 It had an independent sphere of influence in Northeast Asia for more than 200 years around the 5th and 6th centuries 15 Goguryeo viewed itself as the Land of the Scion of Heaven and viewed its neighboring states of Baekje Silla and Eastern Buyeo as tributary states 13 c Together they constituted a Goguryeo tianxia 17 A strong sense of commonality emerged later culminating in a Samhan consciousness among the peoples of the Three Kingdoms 18 The Three Kingdoms of Korea were collectively called the Samhan in the Sui and Tang dynasties 19 Earlier Goguryeo was called Samhan in the Book of Wei 20 The unification of the Samhan was later proclaimed by Silla in the 7th century and Goryeo in the 10th century 21 22 Goguryeo monarchs were called kings not emperors 23 Goguryeo kings were sometimes elevated to great kings holy kings or greatest kings 23 d They were equivalent to emperors and khagans 25 The Goguryeo title of greatest king or taewang Korean 태왕 Hanja 太王 was similar to the Chinese title of heavenly king 26 King was first used in Goguryeo around the beginning of the Common Era it was first used in Northeast Asia in the 4th century BCE in Old Joseon before emperor or huangdi was first used in China 27 The indigenous titles of ga gan and han which were similar to khan were downgraded and the sinified title of king or wang became the supreme title in Northeast Asia 28 Goguryeo monarchs being called kings was not in deference to China wang was not inferior to huangdi or khan in Goguryeo tradition 29 nbsp This bronze bowl was excavated from a Silla tomb in Gyeongju the ancient capital of Silla It is inscribed with the posthumous name of Gwanggaeto the Great 30 Goguryeo had a pluralistic concept of tianxia 31 The Goguryeo tianxia was one among others that constituted the world 32 During the 5th and 6th centuries a balance of power was maintained in East Asia between the Northern and Southern dynasties the Rouran Khaganate Goguryeo and later Tuyuhun 15 Goguryeo maintained tributary relations with the Northern and Southern dynasties 33 the relationships were voluntary and profitable 34 A policy of coexistence was pursued and relations were peaceful 32 Goguryeo s tributary relations with the Northern and Southern dynasties were nominal 32 The Northern and Southern dynasties had no control over Goguryeo s foreign policy Goguryeo pursued policies that went against Chinese interests 15 Goguryeo restrained Northern Wei the strongest power in East Asia at the time by allying with its enemies 33 Northern Wei said that Goguryeo was worthy and gave preferential treatment to its envoys 35 Southern Qi said that Goguryeo was so strong that it would not follow orders 15 Goguryeo maintained cordial relations with the Rouran and together attacked the Didouyu 36 The Goguryeo tianxia was distinct from those of China and Inner Asia 32 During the 5th and 6th centuries China and Goguryeo recognized each other s spheres of influence 32 China did not directly intervene in Goguryeo s tianxia of Northeast Asia 32 and vice versa 37 Goguryeo did not have westward ambitions and instead moved its capital to Pyongyang in the 5th century 38 Within its sphere of influence Goguryeo partially subjugated the Khitan Mohe and Didouyu and influenced Buyeo Silla and Baekje 39 Peace was maintained with China for more than 150 years 40 it ended with the unification of China by the Sui dynasty 41 The unification of China changed the international balance of power 41 With its supremacy in Northeast Asia threatened Goguryeo warred with a unified China for 70 years until its defeat in 668 by the Tang dynasty and Silla 41 Silla s systems were based on those of Goguryeo 42 Great king was first used in Silla in the early 6th century as Silla expanded 43 e Previously maripgan or highest khan was used during its maripgan period 356 514 Silla was unified but not centralized 45 While the Goguryeo royalty and aristocracy were associated with the Son of Heaven the Silla royalty and aristocracy were associated with the Buddha 42 Silla monarchs were viewed as the Buddha and Silla was viewed as a Buddha land from the early 6th century to the mid 7th century 46 Silla used its own era names during this period 47 Silla began building an imperial Buddhist temple called the Temple of the Imperial Dragon in the mid 6th century 48 Great king was last used in Silla by Muyeol of Silla afterward Silla accommodated itself to the tianxia of the Tang dynasty 49 Goryeo edit nbsp Bronze statue of Taejo of Goryeo c 951 This life size nude statue of Taejo was clothed and worshiped until the end of the Goryeo dynasty the practice of clothing and worshiping nude statues originated in Goguryeo The statue is wearing an imperial crown called a tongcheongwan 통천관 通天冠 50 Taejo of Goryeo founded Goryeo in 918 as a successor to Goguryeo 51 He adopted the era name of Bestowed by Heaven 52 Taejo was acknowledged as the successor to Dongmyeong in China 53 Goryeo was acknowledged as the successor to Goguryeo in China and Japan 54 Taejo unified Korea and proclaimed the unification of the Samhan or the Three Kingdoms of Korea 22 Goryeo viewed its Three Kingdoms heritage as nearly on a par with the imperial heritage of China 6 The conceptual world of the Samhan or the Three Han Goguryeo Silla and Baekje constituted a Goryeo tianxia 53 Within the Goryeo tianxia called Haedong or East of the Sea Goryeo monarchs were emperors and Sons of Heaven 53 Goryeo monarchs were called emperors and Sons of Heaven 55 Imperial titles were used since the beginning of the dynasty Taejo was called Son of Heaven by the last king of Silla 56 Goryeo monarchs addressed imperial edicts and were addressed as Your Imperial Majesty Korean 폐하 Hanja 陛下 57 They were posthumously bestowed with imperial temple names 55 The use of imperial language was widespread and ubiquitous in Goryeo 58 Imperial titles and practices extended to members of the royal family 57 Members of the royal family were commonly invested as kings 52 Goryeo monarchs wore imperial yellow clothing 59 Goryeo s imperial system was modeled after that of the Tang dynasty 52 The government consisted of three departments and six ministries and the military consisted of five armies 52 Kaesong was an imperial capital and the main palace was an imperial palace Pyongyang and Seoul were secondary capitals 60 f Goryeo maintained a tributary system 62 The Jurchens who later founded the Jin dynasty viewed Goryeo as a parent country and Goryeo monarchs as suzerains 62 Goryeo monarchs were initially called Emperor of Goryeo by the Jin dynasty 63 The Song dynasty the Liao dynasty and the Jin dynasty were well aware of and tolerated Goryeo s imperial claims and practices 64 Goryeo had a pluralistic concept of tianxia 65 The Goryeo tianxia was one among others that constituted the world 65 During the 11th and part of the 12th centuries a balance of power was maintained in East Asia between Goryeo the Liao dynasty the Song dynasty and Western Xia 66 Goryeo played an active role in East Asian politics 67 Goryeo monarchs were called kings vis a vis China 68 Goryeo successively maintained tributary relations with the Five Dynasties beginning with the Later Tang dynasty the Song dynasty the Liao dynasty and the Jin dynasty However Goryeo s tributary relations with them were nominal 69 Goryeo had no political economic or military obligations to China 70 According to Peter Yun While Goryeo may have admired and adopted many of China s culture and institutions there is little evidence that it accepted the notion of Chinese political superiority as the natural order of things 71 Goryeo monarchs possessed full de jure sovereignty 53 During the 11th and 12th centuries Goryeo was assertive toward China 67 Goryeo treated imperial envoys from the Song Liao and Jin dynasties as equals not superiors 64 72 imperial envoys were consistently downgraded 73 nbsp Goryeo monarchs commissioned a Korean version of the Tripitaka in the 11th century and again in the 13th century only Sons of Heaven had the right to commission a Tripitaka 74 Goryeo used both a royal and an imperial system during its early and middle periods 72 g Goryeo monarchs were not strictly emperors at home and kings abroad Goryeo s royal system was also used at home and its imperial system was also used abroad 75 They were used almost indiscriminately 76 h Goryeo s identity was not defined by its monarchs being kings or emperors but instead by them being Sons of Heaven 78 According to Remco E Breuker The Goryeo ruler has been king he has been emperor and at times he was both His correct appellation is not important however compared to the fact that he was considered to rule his own domain tianxia his own not just politically and practically but also ideologically and ontologically 79 Goryeo was an independent tianxia within it Goryeo monarchs were Sons of Heaven called Son of Heaven of East of the Sea Korean 해동천자 Hanja 海東天子 who were viewed as superhuman beings who alone mediated between Heaven and the Korean people 80 The Goryeo worldview partly originated during earlier periods of Korean history 81 It was possibly a continuation of the Goguryeo worldview 81 New elements were introduced during the Goryeo period 82 The Goryeo worldview was more influenced than was the Goguryeo worldview by Confucianism 83 Confucianism was the main political ideology during the Goryeo period but not during the Three Kingdoms period 83 According to Edward Y J Chung Confucianism played a subordinate role to the traditional ideas and institutions maintained by noble families and hereditary aristocrats as well as by the Buddhist tradition 84 The Goryeo worldview was possibly influenced by Dongmyeong worship and Balhae refugees 81 Dongmyeong was highly venerated and widely worshiped in Goryeo 85 86 He was the only one among the progenitors of the Three Kingdoms of Korea who was honored with shrines his tomb and shrine in Pyongyang were called the Real Pearl Tomb and the Shrine of Holy Emperor Dongmyeong 87 Balhae used imperial titles and era names 88 89 Taejo viewed Balhae as a kin country and accepted many refugees from it 90 Balhae refugees constituted 10 percent of the Goryeo population 91 Goryeo entered a period of military dictatorship similar to a shogunate in the late 12th century 92 During this period of de facto military rule Goryeo monarchs continued to be viewed as Sons of Heaven and emperors and Goryeo continued to be viewed as a tianxia 93 The view of Goryeo as a tianxia inspired a spirit of resistance to the Mongols in the 13th century 94 Goryeo capitulated to the Mongols after 30 years of war and later became a semiautonomous son in law state Korean 부마국 Hanja 駙馬國 to the Yuan dynasty in 1270 64 Goryeo s imperial system ended with Wonjong of Goryeo 72 During this period of Mongol dominance Goryeo monarchs were demoted to kings and temple names indicated loyalty to the Yuan dynasty 64 The Songs of Emperors and Kings and Memorabilia of the Three Kingdoms maintained the view of Goryeo as a tianxia 95 However the view of Goryeo as a tianxia gradually declined 95 Goryeo ended its son in law status in 1356 Gongmin of Goryeo recovered Ssangseong and declared autonomy 64 Meanwhile Neo Confucianism emerged as the dominant ideology 95 Confucianism profoundly influenced Korean thought religion socio political systems and ways of life for the first time in Korean history 84 The powerful influence of Neo Confucianism in the twilight of the Goryeo dynasty led to a growing Sinocentric view of Korea as a little China 95 Joseon editThe Goryeo dynasty transitioned into the Joseon dynasty in 1392 The architects of the Joseon dynasty were anti Buddhist Neo Confucian scholar officials 96 They transformed Korea from a Buddhist country into a Confucian country 97 Joseon was a thoroughly Confucian country 98 it was the self proclaimed most and later only Confucian country in the world 97 The view of Korea as a unification of the Three Han Goguryeo Silla and Baekje continued in the Joseon dynasty 99 100 Sejong the Great built shrines for the progenitors of the Three Kingdoms of Korea 101 he said that the Three Kingdoms were equal and rejected a proposal to worship only the progenitor of Silla 102 The view of Korea as a tianxia or a center of the world ended in the Joseon dynasty 103 Joseon monarchs were kings not emperors Joseon viewed China as the only center of the world 103 nbsp Korean monarchs sacrificed to Heaven during the Three Kingdoms Goryeo and early Joseon periods During the early Joseon period it was hotly debated whether Joseon kings who were not Sons of Heaven had the right to sacrifice to Heaven The practice was suppressed and finally abolished in 1464 it was later revived during the Korean Empire period 104 The Neo Confucian Joseon dynasty was greatly influenced by a Confucian concept called sadae or serving the great 105 Joseon maintained a policy of tributary sadae toward China and China maintained a policy of benign neglect toward Joseon 106 As a successor state the Joseon dynasty was obligated to compile an official history of its predecessor state 107 The preceding Goryeo dynasty however had been a qualitatively different society and had held a qualitatively different position vis a vis China 108 Goryeo had maintained an imperial system that ran counter to sadae 105 it had maintained only a nominal sadae toward China 109 i Joseon Neo Confucian ideologues loyal to sadae compiled a distorted history of Goryeo that suppressed the fact that it had maintained an imperial system 105 111 Sejong adamantly opposed them and advocated historical accuracy 112 Despite its Neo Confucian orthodoxy the Joseon dynasty inherited some imperial traditions from the Goryeo dynasty 57 j According to Remco E Breuker this can be attributed to the total weight of the cultural and historical power accumulated during centuries of use 57 There is a nominal dependence upon China very similar to that recognized by Thailand and Vietnam Tribute is regularly sent Acts of submission are from time to time recorded but the Chinese Government exercise no real authority and seems never to interfere with the jurisdiction of Corean sic functionaries The authority of the King is absolute 113 Sir John Bowring Governor of Hong Kong 1854 The Joseon dynasty was autonomous in its internal and external affairs 114 115 It was not a colony or dependency of China 114 However China abandoned its conventional laissez faire policy of noninterference toward Korea and adopted a radical interventionist policy of interference in the late 19th century 116 According to Ming te Lin This was indeed the most aggressive and visible behavior of China s intervention in Korean politics since the Yuan dynasty Ming China assisted Korea once but did not interfere with her politics and it was the turning point in Qing China s policy toward Korea 117 The late 19th century was a turbulent period in Korean history Korea experienced interventions by not only China but also Japan and the West 118 Japan brought Korea into its sphere of influence with a victory over China in 1895 119 Korea turned to Russia to counterbalance Japan 120 A new Korean reformist group called the Independence Club emerged and called for the establishment of a new imperial government that could claim equality with the empires of China Japan and Russia and safeguard the independence of Korea 121 King Gojong declared Korea an empire and himself an emperor in 1897 122 k However the new Korean Empire was an empire in name only 122 The Korean Empire was reduced to a protectorate in 1905 after Japan defeated Russia and a colony in 1910 after Japan annexed Korea 124 The Korean Empire or the Great Han Empire was named after the Three Han 125 Gojong said that the Goryeo dynasty unified the Samhan and the Joseon dynasty expanded the land to 4 000 li 126 The Republic of Korea South Korea or the Great Han Republic is named after the Korean Empire 122 See also editKorean nobility List of monarchs of KoreaNotes edit The Chungju Goguryeo Monument may date earlier to c 397 based on an inscription that says 7th year of Yeongnak 5 Yeongnak is the era name of Gwanggaeto the Great Goguryeo used its own era names 6 All foundation myths in Korean mythology feature divine or semidivine origin Since antiquity kingship was sacred 8 Buyeo and Silla were legitimate tributary states Baekje was not 16 Great King of Goryeo and Greatest King of Goryeo were also used 24 Greatest king was also used 44 Gyeongju was previously a secondary capital The secondary capitals represented the ancient capitals of the Three Kingdoms of Korea 61 The royal system was used exclusively from the Seongjong period to the beginning of the Hyeonjong period and later during the second half of the Injong period The imperial system was used exclusively during the first half of the Gwangjong period 72 For example Goryeo used Korean imperial titles and Chinese era names in tandem 77 Goryeo very rarely used Korean era names Goryeo maintained a son in law relationship toward the Yuan dynasty that is viewed in Korean historiography as a period of interference rather than simply sadae 110 For example Joseon kings were posthumously bestowed with imperial temple names 57 The era name was changed to Gwangmu on 16 August 1897 Afterward Gojong was named Emperor of Korea on 12 October 1897 123 References editCitations edit a b Noh 2014 p 283 Noh 2014 p 431 최강 23 August 2004 100년전에 찍힌 광개토대왕비 설명도 고구려 호태왕릉비 대한민국 정책브리핑 in Korean Ministry of Culture Sports and Tourism Retrieved 11 September 2020 Noh 2014 p 284 중원 고구려비 광개토왕 때 제작 가능성 커 YTN in Korean 20 November 2019 a b c Breuker Koh amp Lewis 2012 p 135 Noh 2014 p 285 Breuker Koh amp Lewis 2012 pp 121 122 Noh 2014 p 286 Noh 2014 p 287 Noh 2014 pp 287 288 Noh 2014 p 290 a b Noh 2014 p 292 Noh 2014 pp 291 292 a b c d Noh 2014 p 301 Noh 2014 pp 292 296 Noh 2014 p 311 Noh 2014 p 310 Jeon 2016 p 7 Jeon 2016 p 6 Jeon 2016 p 27 a b Chung Ku bok 1998 한 韓 Encyclopedia of Korean Culture in Korean Academy of Korean Studies Archived from the original on 20 August 2020 a b Noh 2014 p 298 충주 고구려비 忠州高句麗碑 Encyclopedia of Korean Culture in Korean Academy of Korean Studies Retrieved 11 September 2020 Jo 2015 p 72 Shinohara 2004 pp 10 18 Noh 2014 pp 304 306 Noh 2014 pp 305 307 Noh 2014 pp 306 307 Choi Jangyeal Bronze Bowl with Inscription of King Gwanggaeto the Great National Museum of Korea Retrieved 11 September 2020 Noh 2014 p 387 a b c d e f Noh 2014 p 308 a b Noh 2014 p 300 Noh 2014 pp 268 269 Noh 2014 p 273 Noh 2014 p 270 Noh 2014 p 264 Noh 2014 p 304 Noh 2014 pp 273 274 Noh 2014 p 263 a b c Noh 2014 p 280 a b Noh 2014 p 289 Noh 2014 p 54 Kim 2012b p 17 Lee amp Leidy 2013 p 32 Kim 2012a p 68 민병하 1995 연호 年號 Encyclopedia of Korean Culture in Korean Academy of Korean Studies Archived from the original on 20 September 2020 Nelson 2017 p 106 Kim 2012b pp 24 25 Ro Myoungho 2013 왕건동상 王建銅像 Encyclopedia of Korean Culture in Korean Academy of Korean Studies Archived from the original on 18 April 2018 Kim 2012a p 118 a b c d Breuker 2003 p 74 a b c d Em 2013 p 25 Byington Mark The War of Words Between South Korea and China Over An Ancient Kingdom Why Both Sides Are Misguided History News Network Retrieved 14 October 2020 a b Em 2013 p 24 Ro 1999 p 8 a b c d e Breuker 2003 p 53 Breuker 2003 pp 53 54 Ro 1999 p 9 Breuker 2010 pp 156 158 Kim 2012a p 128 a b Breuker 2003 p 73 Ro 1999 p 14 a b c d e Em 2013 p 26 a b Breuker 2003 p 49 Yun 2011 pp 140 141 a b Breuker 2003 p 60 Ro 1999 pp 14 15 Bielenstein 2005 pp 182 184 Yun 2011 p 141 Yun 2011 p 143 a b c d Ro 1999 p 16 Breuker 2003 p 78 Breuker 2010 p 206 Breuker 2010 pp 137 138 Breuker 2010 p 137 Breuker 2010 p 138 Breuker 2003 p 58 Breuker 2003 p 69 Breuker 2003 pp 56 57 a b c Breuker 2003 p 63 Ro 1999 p 37 a b Ro 1999 pp 37 38 a b Chung 1995 p 2 Breuker 2010 pp 74 75 Breuker 2010 p 106 Breuker 2010 pp 107 108 Kim 2012a p 88 이용범 1996 발해 渤海 Encyclopedia of Korean Culture in Korean Academy of Korean Studies Archived from the original on 28 May 2018 박종기 고려사의 재발견 한반도 역사상 가장 개방적이고 역동적인 500년 고려 역사를 만나다 in Korean 휴머니스트 ISBN 978 89 5862 902 3 Breuker 2003 p 82 Kim 2012a p 160 Ro 1999 p 39 Ro 1999 pp 39 40 a b c d Ro 1999 p 40 Chung 1995 pp 10 14 a b Berthrong amp Berthrong 2000 p 170 Chung 1995 p 15 Han 2006 p 340 Han 2006 p 346 이범직 역대시조제 歷代始祖祭 Encyclopedia of Korean Folk Culture in Korean National Folk Museum of Korea Retrieved 13 January 2021 Han 2006 p 343 a b Em 2013 p 35 홍순민 원구단천제 圜丘壇天祭 Encyclopedia of Korean Folk Culture in Korean National Folk Museum of Korea Retrieved 29 October 2021 a b c Ro Myoungho 13 August 2018 태조왕건의 고려건국 이야기 3 ggc in Korean GyeongGi Cultural Foundation Retrieved 14 March 2021 Kim 2012a p 208 Breuker Koh amp Lewis 2012 p 132 Breuker Koh amp Lewis 2012 p 133 Ro 1999 p 5 이익주 2013 원간섭기 元干涉期 Encyclopedia of Korean Culture in Korean Academy of Korean Studies Archived from the original on 19 March 2021 Breuker Koh amp Lewis 2012 pp 131 135 Ro Myoungho 20 March 2016 역사 편찬 갈등과 세종대왕의 지혜 대학신문 in Korean Seoul National University Oh 2019 p 352 a b Lin 1991 p 71 Oh 2019 pp 352 355 Lin 1991 pp 69 70 Lin 1991 p 91 Oh 2019 p 373 Kim 2012a p 304 Kim 2012a p 306 Van Lieu 2016 p 50 a b c Kim 2012a p 309 Shin Yong Ha 1996 대한제국 大韓帝國 Encyclopedia of Korean Culture in Korean Academy of Korean Studies Archived from the original on 7 June 2018 Van Lieu 2016 pp 50 51 고종실록 36권 고종 34년 10월 11일 양력 3번째기사 조선왕조실록 in Korean Retrieved 24 September 2021 고종실록 36권 고종 34년 10월 13일 양력 2번째기사 조선왕조실록 in Korean Retrieved 24 September 2021 Sources edit Berthrong John H Berthrong Evelyn Nagai 2000 Confucianism A Short Introduction Oneworld Publications ISBN 978 1 85168 236 2 Bielenstein Hans 2005 Diplomacy and Trade in the Chinese World 589 1276 Brill ISBN 978 90 474 0761 4 Breuker Remco E 2003 Koryŏ as an Independent Realm The Emperor s Clothes Korean Studies University of Hawai i Press 27 1 48 84 doi 10 1353 ks 2005 0001 Breuker Remco E 2010 Establishing a Pluralist Society in Medieval Korea 918 1170 History Ideology and Identity in the Koryŏ Dynasty Brill ISBN 978 90 04 19012 2 Breuker Remco Koh Grace Lewis James B 2012 The Tradition of Historical Writing in Korea in Foot Sarah Robinson Chase F eds The Oxford History of Historical Writing Volume 2 400 1400 Oxford University Press pp 119 137 ISBN 978 0 19 163693 6 Chung Edward Y J 1995 The Korean Neo Confucianism of Yi T oegye and Yi Yulgok A Reappraisal of the Four Seven Thesis and its Practical Implications for Self Cultivation SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 2276 2 Em Henry H 2013 The Great Enterprise Sovereignty and Historiography in Modern Korea Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 5372 0 Han Myung gi 2006 Korean and Chinese Intellectuals recognitions of Koguryo in Choson dynasty Korean Culture in Korean Kyujanggak Institute for Korean Studies 38 337 366 ISSN 1226 8356 Jeon Jin Kook 2016 The usage and The Perspective of Samhan 三韓 The Journal of Korean History in Korean The Association for Korean Historical Studies 173 1 38 Jo Yeongkwang 2015 Status and Tasks for Study of the Foreign Relations and World View of Koguryo in the Gwanggaeto Stele Journal of Northeast Asian History in Korean Northeast Asian History Foundation 49 47 86 Kim Jinwung 2012a A History of Korea From Land of the Morning Calm to States in Conflict Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 00024 8 Kim Hung gyu March 2012b translated by Bohnet Adam Defenders and Conquerors The Rhetoric of Royal Power in Korean Inscriptions from the Fifth to Seventh Centuries Cross Currents e Journal 2 ISSN 2158 9674 Lee Soyoung Leidy Denise Patry 2013 Silla Korea s Golden Kingdom Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 1 58839 502 3 Lin Ming te July 1991 Li Hung chang s Suzerain Policy toward Korea 1882 1894 Chinese Studies in History Taylor amp Francis 24 4 69 96 doi 10 2753 CSH0009 4633240469 Nelson Sarah Milledge 2017 Gyeongju The Capital of Golden Silla Routledge ISBN 978 1 315 62740 3 Noh Taedon 2014 Korea s Ancient Koguryŏ Kingdom A Socio Political History translated by Huston John Global Oriental ISBN 978 90 04 26269 0 Oh Si Jin 28 October 2019 Resolving the Misunderstood Historical Order A Korean Perspective on the Historical Tributary Order in East Asia Journal of the History of International Law Brill Nijhoff 21 3 341 377 doi 10 1163 15718050 12340115 Ro Myoungho 1999 The View of the World and the Eastern Emperor in Koryŏ Dynasty The Journal of Korean History in Korean The Association for Korean Historical Studies 105 3 40 Shinohara Hirokata 2004 The Title of Taewang 太王 during the Goguryeo 高句麗 Dynasty and the Development of the Perceptions of the Taewang Lineage The Journal of Korean History in Korean The Association for Korean Historical Studies 125 1 27 Van Lieu Joshua 29 January 2016 The nation the people and the possibilities of the post national Historiographies of late nineteenth century Korean reform movements in Seth Michael J ed Routledge Handbook of Modern Korean History Routledge pp 43 61 ISBN 978 1 317 81148 0 Yun Peter 2011 Balance of Power in the 11th 12th Century East Asian Interstate Relations Journal of Political Criticism The Korean Association for Political Criticism 9 139 162 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Korean imperial titles amp oldid 1186749120 Three Kingdoms of Korea, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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