Three Kingdoms Of Korea

colspan="2" bgcolor="#FFCCCC" | Three Kingdoms of Korea
colspan="2" | 250px
colspan="2" | Map of the Three Kingdoms of Korea,
at the end of the 5th century
colspan="2" style="background:#ffdead;" | Korean Name
width="150" | Revised Romanization Samguk
width="150" | McCune-Reischauer Samguk
width="150" | Hangul 삼국
width="150" | Hanja 三國
The Three Kingdoms of Korea were Goguryeo, Baekje and Silla, which dominated the Korean peninsula and parts of Manchuria for much of the 1st millennium CE. The Three Kingdoms period in Korea is usually considered to run from the 4th century CE until Silla's triumph over Goguryeo in 668. The name "Samguk", or "Three Kingdoms", was used in the Korean titles of the classic texts Samguk Sagi and Samguk Yusa, both written in the 12th century.

Historical Records

According to Korean records, the earliest roots of the Three Kingdoms can be traced to 57 BC, when the kingdom of Saro (later Silla) in the southeast of the peninsula obtained autonomy from China under the Han dynasty. Goguryeo, meanwhile, emerged on the north and south banks of Yalu River (Amnok River in Korean). The first reference to the name "Goguryeo" in Chinese records was in 75 BC, as a local district. It became independent from the Chinese in 37 BC according to the Korean sources. Korean sources recorded 18 BC as the establishment of Baekje; two Goguryeo princes fled out of conflict to be the successor, and established Baekje in the southwest of the peninsula. The capital was first located near today's Seoul, later further south at Ungjin (nowadays Gongju) and later still further south at Sabi (nowadays Buyeo). Chinese records suggest that Baekje was established in the 4th century by a Goguryeo general. Because of the origins of the three kingdoms are conventionally traced to the 1st century BC, the Three Kingdoms period is sometimes considered to cover the entire period from the 1st century BC to the 7th century AD. However, both historical and archaeological evidence shows a profound shift in the nature of life in the peninsula around the 4th century. For that reason, most scholars such as Best (2000) and Lee (1984) treat the Three Kingdoms period as properly beginning around 300 AD. Prior to that time, there is little evidence of systematic political organization above the level of the walled-town state in the south of the peninsula. The historiographic evidence indicates that entities such as Mahan and Jinhan were more dominant than the still-embryonic Silla and Baekje kingdoms, which only appear as minor states in the 3rd-century San guo zhi. In the fourth century, the three kingdoms begin to appear with regularity in contemporaneous Chinese records. During the Han dynasty, commanderies were established to govern much of the northern part of the Korean peninsula. After the end of the Han dynasty, at the beginning of the 3rd century, these commanderies continued as quasi-independent states for a time. The last to fall, Lelang commandery, was absorbed by Goguryeo in 313. Thus the early Three Kingdoms period was marked by the removal of direct Chinese influence and a realignment of power relations in the peninsula. All three kingdoms shared similar cultures. Their original religions appear to have been shamanistic, and to have absorbed increasing Chinese influence (particularly Confucianism and Taoism) over time. In the 4th century, Buddhism was introduced to the peninsula and spread rapidly, becoming the official religion of all three kingdoms in a fairly short time. Na (2003) argues that Buddhism played an important role in providing answers to people in a time when traditional communal patterns of life were breaking down.

Three Kingdoms

Gogureo

Goguryeo, the largest of three, had two capitals in alternation. Nangnang (nowadays Pyongyang) and Kungae, located upon the Yalu river. At the beginning the state was located on the border with China; it conquered little by little vast territories of Manchuria and finally destroyed the Chinese colony Nangnang in 313. The cultural influence of the Chinese remained until Buddhism was adopted as the official religion in 372.

Baekje

In the 4th century Baekje was very prosperous and dominated the southern part of the peninsula.

Silla

Renamed from Saro to Silla in 503, the kingdom of Silla absorbed the whole kingdom of Gaya on their border in the first half of the 6th Century. The capital of Silla was Seorabeol (nowadays Gyeongju). Buddhism became the official religion in 528.

Other Small Kingdoms

Other smaller kingdoms and tribal states existed in Korea before and during this period, including Gaya, Dongye, Okjeo, Buyeo, Usan, and Tamna.

Unification

Allied with China under the Tang dynasty, Silla conquered Goguryeo in 668, after having already conquered Baekje in 660, thus ushering in the Unified Silla period and effectively putting an end to the Three Kingdoms Period.

See also

References

Dr Choreanischi Chnigrych

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
morphogenetic field
chedorlaomer
william barclay
extended mind
equivalent average
ashteroth
1 maccabees
2 maccabees
okakura tenshin
air navigation
toyota center
william barclay (theologian)
three great nobles
judas maccabeus
tea house
non directional beacon
omura masujiro
hillel ii
hillel ben eliakim
compass rose
hillel, son of gamaliel iii
six best waka poets
mpt
hillel ben naphtali zevi
baylor university
otomo no yakamochi
hermon
anti lebanon
seal of kansas
skokomish
camunic language
skokomish (tribe)
saigo takamori
chemakum
pvoa de varzim
treaty of saint petersburg
saionji kinmochi
fencing at the 2000 summer olympics
soft reboot
reliant stadium
music of mongolia
evander mcnair
compaq center
poacher (fish)