View Shopping Cart Your Famous Chinese Account Shopping Help Famous Chinese Homepage China Chinese Chinese Culture Chinese Restaurant & Chinese Food Travel to China Chinese Economy & Chinese Trade Chinese Medicine & Chinese Herb Chinese Art
logo
Search
March 8, 2014
Table of Contents
1 Introduction
Goguryeo

Wikipedia

 
Goguryeo
Korean Name
Revised Romanization of Korean|Revised Romanization Goguryeo
McCune-Reischauer Koguryŏ
Hangul 고구려
Hanja 高句麗
Chinese Name
Chinese characters 高句麗
Pinyin Gāogōulí

Goguryeo (also known as Koguryo; : Gāogōulí) (1st century BC-668) was an empire in Manchuria and northern Korea. It is referred to as one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea, along with Baekje and Silla.

The modern name "Korea" derives from the medieval Korean kingdom of Goryeo, which in turn took its name from a contracted form of "Goguryeo."


History_of_Korea

According to Samguk Sagi, Emperor Jumong (posthumously called Emperor Dongmyeongseong of Goguryeo|Emperor Dongmyeongseong) founded the empire in 37 BC around what is now the border between China and North Korea.
It gained power while China was fragmented.
The maximum extent of the kingdom was reached during the reigns of Emperor Gwanggaeto the Great of Goguryeo|Emperor Gwanggaeto the Great and his son Emperor Jangsu of Goguryeo|Emperor Jangsu. During this period they ruled three fourths of Korean peninsula and most of Manchuria. It was overthrown by an alliance of Silla and Chinese Tang Empire in 668. Tang initially attempted to set up a military government, but this did not last. The southern part of Goguryeo was seized by Silla, and the rest was succeeded by Balhae.

Balhae, established in 698 claimed it as successor of Goguryeo in her diplomatic negotiations with Japan. Taebong, initially called Hu-Goguryeo ("Later Goguryeo"), claimed her succession of Goguryeo and so did Goryeo, which was even named after Goguryeo.



Remains of castles, palaces and several artifacts have been found in North Korea, including ancient paintings in a Complex_of_Goguryeo_Tombs|Goguryeo tomb complex. Some ruins are also still visible in Manchuria, for example at Onyeosan ("Five Maiden Peaks") near Ji'an (集安) in northeastern China, thought to be the site of the first city of Goguryeo. Some cultural artifacts still remain in modern Korean culture, for example, Ondol, Goguryeo's unique floor heating system. A modernized version can be found in the floor of every modern house in Korea.



The Goguryeo language is unknown except for a small number of words, which mostly suggests that it was similar to the language of Silla and the Tungusic languages. Most Korean linguists see that Goguryeo language was closest to the Altai languages out of the three dominant states after Old Joseon. The Goguryeo names for government posts are mostly similar to those of Baekje and Silla. Chinese record suggest that the languages of Goguryeo and Fuyu (Buyeo), East Okjeo, and Old Joseon (Go-Joseon) were similar, while Goguryeo language differed significantly from that of Malgal (Mohe). Similarities in certain vocabulary with Old Japanese language|Old Japanese have been noted as well. http://www.msu.edu/~jk13/Abs.Beckwith.pdf Some words of Goguryeo origin can be found in the old Korean language (early 10th-late 14th centuries) but most were replaced by Silla-originated ones before long. Some linguists propose the so-called "Fuyu languages" that included the languages of Fuyu, Goguryeo, and the upper class of Baekje, and Old Japanese. Supporters of the Altaic languages|Altaic language family often classifies the Goguryeo language as a member of that language family. Striking similarities between Baekje and Goguryeo can also be found.



Most historians have traditionally viewed Goguryeo as a Korean state, one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea. The Chinese have traditionally viewed Goguryeo as a foreign state that was part of the China-centred tribute system. Then, in accordance with a more inclusive view of the modern People's Republic of China as a multi-ethnic nation state, the concept of Chinese history was expanded to encompass all states that developed principally in the current territory of China. The accepted position among Chinese government historians therefore became that the history of Goguryeo before the capital was transferred to Pyongyang in the Korean Peninsula was to be considered part of Chinese history.

Some have interpreted Chinese position in the 1990s as implying that Goguryeo was to be treated as a regional power of China as well as interpreting efforts by Chinese scholars to describe the history of Goguryeo as part of Chinese history to de-emphasise or deny Korea's claim to the kingdom's legacy. The Chinese government launched a 20-billion-yuan (2.4 billion US dollars) project dealing with China's Northeast in 2002 whose aims have been interpreted by some as treating Goguryeo as a local government within China, rewriting history textbooks and restoring important Goguryeo sites in China. This was followed by protests from scholars from Korea, Japan, and Russia. As of 2004 this was threatening to lead to diplomatic disputes between China and South Korea and was contributing to growing anti-Chinese sentiment in the latter. As such, the subject of Goguryeo history now overlaps somewhat with political disputes, although all of the governments involved seem to exhibit no desire to see the issue damage relations. The existence of a sizeable ethnic Korean minority in the former Goguryeo territories in China, the issue of political influence over North Korea in the case of a collapse of the regime, and some nervousness over the rapidly increasing power of China add to the fuel of the dispute.

See Gando Convention for more information about modern politics in the area.



The following tables give the names of the Goguryeo Emperors in Korean .

#Emperor Dongmyeongchumoseong (Damul) of Goguryeo|Emperor Dongmyeongchumoseong (Damul) (37 BC-19 BC) (also known as Jumong)
#Emperor Yuri of Goguryeo|Emperor Yuri (19 BC-AD 18)
#Emperor Daemushin of Goguryeo|Emperor Daemushin (18-44)
#Emperor Minjung of Goguryeo|Emperor Minjung (44-48)
#Emperor Mobon of Goguryeo|Emperor Mobon (48-53)
#Emperor Taejo (Ryeungmu) of Goguryeo|Emperor Taejo (Ryeungmu) (53-121 / 146) (also known as Emperor Gukjo)
#Emperor Chadae of Goguryeo|Emperor Chadae (121 / 146-165)
#Emperor Shindae of Goguryeo|Emperor Shindae (165-179)
#Emperor Gogukcheon of Goguryeo|Emperor Gogukcheon (179-197)
#Emperor Sinsang of Goguryeo|Emperor Sinsang (197-227)
#Emperor Dongcheon of Goguryeo|Emperor Dongcheon (227-248) (also known as Emperor Dongyang)
#Emperor Jungcheon of Goguryeo|Emperor Jungcheon (248-270) (also known as Emperor Jungyang)
#Emperor Seocheon of Goguryeo|Emperor Seocheon (270-292) (also known as Emperor Seoyang)
#Emperor Bongsang of Goguryeo|Emperor Bongsang (292-300) (also known as Emperor Chagal)
#Emperor Micheon of Goguryeo|Emperor Micheon (300-331) (also known as Emperor Hoyang)
#Emperor Gogukwon of Goguryeo|Emperor Gogukwon (331-371) (also known as Emperor Gukgangsang)
#Emperor Sosurim of Goguryeo|Emperor Sosurim (371-384)
#Emperor Gogukyang of Goguryeo|Emperor Gogukyang (384-391)
#Emperor Gwanggaeto the Great (Youngrak) of Goguryeo|Emperor Gwanggaeto the Great (Youngrak) (391-413)
#Emperor Jangsu (Gunheung) of Goguryeo|Emperor Jangsu (Gunheung) (413-491)
#Emperor Munjamyeong of Goguryeo (Myungchi)|Emperor Munjamyeong (Myungchi) (491-519)
#Emperor Anjang of Goguryeo|Emperor Anjang (519-531)
#Emperor Anwon of Goguryeo|Emperor Anwon (531-545)
#Emperor Yangwon of Goguryeo|Emperor Yangwon (545-559) (also known as Emperor Yanggang)
#Emperor Pyeongwon of Goguryeo (Daeduk)|Emperor Pyeongwon (Daeduk) (559-590) (also known as Emperor Pyeonggang)
#Emperor Yeongyang of Goguryeo (Hongmu)|Emperor Yeongyang (Hongmu) (590-618) (also known as Emperor Pyeongyang)
#Emperor Yeongryu of Goguryeo|Emperor Yeongryu (618-642)
#Emperor Bojang of Goguryeo (Kaehwa)|Emperor Bojang (Kaehwa) (642-668)



  • List of Korea-related topics

  • Rulers of Korea

  • Anak Tomb No.3

  • Ethnic groups in Chinese history




  • http://hcs.harvard.edu/~yisei/backissues/fall_98/mark_byington.html Korean history in Manchuria

  • http://www.koguryo.org/ Information about the ancient kingdom

  • http://www.goguryeo.org/doc/murals/tp-hwanghaedo-anak-tomb%20no.%203.htm Excavated paintings about the ancient kingdom


Category:Ancient peoples
Category:Fuyu languages
Category:Korean history
Category:Former countries in Chinese history

de:Goguryeo
eo:Kogurjo
fr:Kogury?
ja:高句麗
ko:고구려
nl:Koguryo
pt:Koguryo
zh:高句丽

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Goguryeo".


Last Modified:   2005-04-13


Search
All informatin on the site is © FamousChinese.com 2002-2005. Last revised: January 2, 2004
Are you interested in our site or/and want to use our information? please read how to contact us and our copyrights.
To post your business in our web site? please click here. To send any comments to us, please use the Feedback.
To let us provide you with high quality information, you can help us by making a more or less donation: