History of Korea |
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Jeulmun Period
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The List of Monarchs of Korea provides a insightful look at the development of Korea since its legendary founding in 2333 B.C.E. until the end of the last royal dynasty in 1910 C.E. If, indeed, the history of Korea has been continual from those legendary beginnings, Korea has experienced one of the longest continual dynastic developments in history. We have clear evidence that Koreans are the most homogeneous people on the earth, so we can well expect that their history has been unbroken. Rather than a linear development of one dynasty succeeding another, Korean history from 2333 B.C.E. until the beginning of the Goryeo dynasty in the 930s, over 3000 years, had been kingdoms coexisting yet clashing for dominance. From the 930s to 1910, nearly 1000 years, Korea experienced a single dynasty ruling the entire Korean Peninsula.
The following list of monarchs has been categorized by historical era beginning with the most ancient and concluding with the most recent. Monarchs' names are listed either romanized posthumous (according to the South Korean Revised Romanization of Korean) or temple names along with the dates of their reign. Articles about the individual monarchs include the McCune-Reischauer romanizations.
Gojoseon
The legendary Dangun founded the first kingdom, Gojoseon (c.2333 B.C.E. - 108 B.C.E.) in 2333 B.C.E., although historians debate the founding years. Gojoseon may have numbered among the small peninsular states which emerged "by the fourth century B.C.E."[1] Lee mentions Gojoseon emerged in the Liao and Taedong valleys by the fourth century.[2] Some, like Kim regard "Dangun Joseon" as having possibly existed during the Neolithic period,[3] i.e. before the thirteenth century B.C.E.; by the same token they reject the possibility that Gojoseon existed as a "state" or even "tribal confederation" in the modern sense. Professor Yoon writes that the Gojoseon had become an ancient nation at 2333 B.C.E. which is the most recent research.[4] Bronze age archaeological evidence of Gojoseon culture has been found in northern Korea and southern Manchuria. By the fourth century B.C.E., historical and archaeological evidence supports that Gojoseon flourished as a kingdom.
Gyuwon Sahwa (1675) describes The Annals of the Danguns as a collection of nationalistic legends. Scholars widely question the authenticity of the Hwandan Gogi that lists different years of reign.
See also List of legendary monarchs of Korea.
Dangun-Joseon
The legendary monarchs listed in Gyuwon Sahwa:
- Dangun Wanggeom ์๊ฒ (B.C. 2333-B.C. 2240)
- Buru ๋ถ๋ฃจ (B.C. 2240-B.C. 2206)
- Gareuk ๊ฐ๋ฅต (B.C. 2206-B.C. 2155)
- Osa ์ค์ฌ (B.C. 2155-B.C. 2106)
- Gueul ๊ตฌ์ (B.C. 2106-B.C. 2071)
- Dalmun ๋ฌ๋ฌธ (B.C. 2071-B.C. 2039)
- Hanyul ํ์จ (B.C. 2039-B.C. 2014)
- Seohan ์ํ (B.C. 2014-B.C. 1957)
- Asul ์์ (B.C. 1957-B.C. 1929)
- Noeul ๋ ธ์ (B.C. 1929-B.C. 1906)
- Dohae ๋ํด (B.C. 1906-B.C. 1870)
- Ahan ์ํ (B.C. 1870-B.C. 1843)
- Heuldal ํ๋ฌ (B.C. 1843-B.C. 1800)
- Gobul ๊ณ ๋ถ (B.C. 1800-B.C. 1771)
- Beoreum ๋ฒ์ (B.C. 1771-B.C. 1738)
- Wina ์๋ (B.C. 1738-B.C. 1720)
- Yeoeul ์ฌ์ (B.C. 1720-B.C. 1657)
- Dongeom ๋์ (B.C. 1657-B.C. 1637)
- Gumoso ๊ตฌ๋ชจ์ (B.C. 1637-B.C. 1612)
- Gohol ๊ณ ํ (B.C. 1612-B.C. 1601)
- Sotae ์ํ (B.C. 1601-B.C. 1568)
- Saekbullu ์๋ถ๋ฃจ (B.C. 1568-B.C. 1551)
- Amul ์๋ฌผ (B.C. 1551-B.C. 1532)
- Yeonna ์ฐ๋ (B.C. 1532-B.C. 1519)
- Solla ์๋ (B.C. 1519-B.C. 1503)
- Churo ์ถ๋ก (B.C. 1503-B.C. 1494)
- Dumil ๋๋ฐ (B.C. 1494-B.C. 1449)
- Haemo ํด๋ชจ (B.C. 1449-B.C. 1427)
- Mahyu ๋งํด (B.C. 1427-B.C. 1418)
- Nahyu ๋ดํด (B.C. 1418-B.C. 1365)
- Deungol ๋ฑ์ฌ (B.C. 1365-B.C. 1359)
- Chumil ์ถ๋ฐ (B.C. 1359-B.C. 1351)
- Gammul ๊ฐ๋ฌผ (B.C. 1351-B.C. 1342)
- Orumun ์ค๋ฃจ๋ฌธ (B.C. 1342-B.C. 1322)
- Sabeol ์ฌ๋ฒ (B.C. 1322-B.C. 1311)
- Maereuk ๋งค๋ฅต (B.C. 1311-B.C. 1293)
- Mamul ๋ง๋ฌผ (B.C. 1293-B.C. 1285)
- Damul ๋ค๋ฌผ (B.C. 1285-B.C. 1266)
- Duhol ๋ํ (B.C. 1266-B.C. 1238)
- Dareum ๋ฌ์ (B.C. 1238-B.C. 1224)
- Eumcha ์์ฐจ (B.C. 1224-B.C. 1205)
- Euruji ์์ฐ์ง B.C. 1205-B.C. 1196)
- Mulli ๋ฌผ๋ฆฌ (B.C. 1196-B.C. 1181)
- Guhol ๊ตฌํ (B.C. 1181-B.C. 1174)
- Yeoru ์ฌ๋ฃจ (B.C. 1174-B.C. 1169)
- Boeul ๋ณด์ (B.C. 1169-B.C. 1158)
- Goyeolga ๊ณ ์ด๊ฐ (B.C. 1158-B.C. 1128)
Gija-Joseon (Disputed)
็ๅปบ็้ต]]Many scholars believe that Gija-Joseon succeeded Dangun Joseon, but some scholars debate the claim.[5]
- King Munseong of Gojoseon, Gija ๋ฌธ์ฑ๋์ (r. 1126 B.C.E. - 1082 B.C.E.);์์์ /์์์ฌ(ๅญ้ ่พ/ๅญ่ฅ้ค)
- King Janghye of Gojoseon ์ฅํ์ (r. 1082 B.C.E. - 1057 B.C.E.);์์ก (ๅญๆพ)
- King Gyeonghyo of Gojoseon ๊ฒฝํจ์ (r. 1057 B.C.E. - 1030 B.C.E.);์์ (ๅญ่ฉข)
- King Gongjeong of Gojoseon ๊ณต์ ์ (r. 1030 B.C.E. - 1000 B.C.E.);์๋ฐฑ (ๅญไฝฐ)
- King Munmu of Gojoseon ๋ฌธ๋ฌด์ (r. 1000 B.C.E. - 972 B.C.E.);์์ถ (ๅญๆคฟ)
- King Taewon of Gojoseon ํ์์ (r. 972 B.C.E. - 968 B.C.E.);์์ (ๅญ็ฆฎ)
- King Gyeongchang of Gojoseon ๊ฒฝ์ฐฝ์ (r. 968 B.C.E. - 957 B.C.E.);์์ฅ (ๅญ่)
- King Heungpyeong of Gojoseon ํฅํ์ (r. 957 B.C.E. - 943 B.C.E.);์์ฐฉ (ๅญๆ)
- King Cheorwi of Gojoseon ์ฒ ์์ (r. 943 B.C.E. - 925 B.C.E.);์์ฃผ (ๅญ่ชฟ)
- King Seonhye of Gojoseon ์ ํ์ (r. 925 B.C.E. - 896 B.C.E.);์์ (ๅญ็ดข)
- King Uiyang of Gojoseon ์์์ (r. 896 B.C.E. - 843 B.C.E.);์์ฌ (ๅญๅธซ)
- King Munhye of Gojoseon ๋ฌธํ์ (r. 843 B.C.E. - 793 B.C.E.);์์ผ (ๅญ็)
- King Seongdeok of Gojoseon ์ฑ๋์ (r. 793 B.C.E. - 778 B.C.E.);์์ (ๅญ่ถ)
- King Dohoe of Gojoseon ๋ํ์ (r. 778 B.C.E. - 776 B.C.E.);์์ง (ๅญ่ท)
- King Munyeol of Gojoseon ๋ฌธ์ด์ (r. 776 B.C.E. - 761 B.C.E.);์์ฐ (ๅญๅช)
- King Changguk of Gojoseon ์ฐฝ๊ตญ์ (r. 761 B.C.E. - 748 B.C.E.);์๋ชฉ (ๅญ็ฆ)
- King Museong of Gojoseon ๋ฌด์ฑ์ (r. 748 B.C.E. - 722 B.C.E.);์ํ (ๅญๅนณ)
- King Jeonggyeong of Gojoseon ์ ๊ฒฝ์ (r. 722 B.C.E. - 703 B.C.E.);์๊ถ (ๅญ้)
- King Nakseong of Gojoseon ๋์ฑ์ (r. 703 B.C.E. - 675 B.C.E.);์ํ (ๅญๆท)
- King Hyojong of Gojoseon ํจ์ข ์ (r. 675 B.C.E. - 658 B.C.E.);์์กด (ๅญๅญ)
- King Cheonno of Gojoseon ์ฒ๋ ธ์ (r. 658 B.C.E. - 634 B.C.E.);์ํจ (ๅญๅญ)
- King Sudo of Gojoseon ์๋์ (r. 634 B.C.E. - 615 B.C.E.);์๋ฆฝ (ๅญ็ซ)
- King Hwiyang of Gojoseon ํ์์ (r. 615 B.C.E. - 594 B.C.E.);์ํต (ๅญ้)
- King Bongil of Gojoseon ๋ด์ผ์ (r. 594 B.C.E. - 578 B.C.E.);์์ฐธ (ๅญๅ)
- King Deokchang of Gojoseon ๋์ฐฝ์ (r. 578 B.C.E. - 560 B.C.E.);์๊ทผ (ๅญๅ )
- King Suseong of Gojoseon ์์ฑ์ (r. 560 B.C.E. - 519 B.C.E.);์์ (ๅญ็ฟ)
- King Yeonggeol of Gojoseon ์๊ฑธ์ (r. 519 B.C.E. - 503 B.C.E.);์๋ ค (ๅญ่)
- King Ilmin of Gojoseon ์ผ๋ฏผ์ (r. 503 B.C.E. - 486 B.C.E.);์๊ฐ (ๅญๅฒก)
- King Jese of Gojoseon ์ ์ธ์ (r. 486 B.C.E. - 465 B.C.E.);์ํผ (ๅญๆทท)
- King Cheongguk of Gojoseon ์ฒญ๊ตญ์ (r. 465 B.C.E. - 432 B.C.E.);์ ๋ฒฝ์ (ๅญ็ง่ฒ)
- King Doguk of Gojoseon ๋๊ตญ์ (r. 432 B.C.E. - 413 B.C.E.);์์ง (ๅญๆพ)
- King Hyeokseong of Gojoseon ํ์ฑ์ (r. 413 B.C.E. - 385 B.C.E.);์์ (ๅญ์)
- King Hwara of Gojoseon ํ๋ผ์ (r. 413 B.C.E. - 385 B.C.E.);์์ (ๅญ่ฌ)
- King Seolmun of Gojoseon ์ค๋ฌธ์ (r. 369 B.C.E. - 361 B.C.E.);์๊ฐ (ๅญ่ณ)
- King Gyeongsun of Gojoseon ๊ฒฝ์์ (r. 361 B.C.E. - 342 B.C.E.);์ํ (ๅญ่ฏ)
- King Gadeok of Gojoseon ๊ฐ๋์ (r. 342 B.C.E. - 315 B.C.E.) ๊ธฐํ(็ฎ่ฉก)
- King Samno of Gojoseon ์ผ๋ ธ์ (r. 315 B.C.E. - 290 B.C.E.) ๊ธฐ์ฑ(็ฎ็ )
- King Hyeonmun of Gojoseon ํ๋ฌธ์ (r. 315 B.C.E. - 290 B.C.E.) ๊ธฐ์(็ฎ้)
- King Jangpyeong of Gojoseon ์ฅํ์ (r. 251 B.C.E. - 232 B.C.E.) ๊ธฐ์ค(็ฎๆฝค)
- King Jongtong of Gojoseon ์ข ํต์ (r. 232 B.C.E. - 220 B.C.E.) ๊ธฐ๋น(็ฎไธ)
- King Ae of Gojoseon ์ ์ (r. 220 B.C.E. - 195 B.C.E.) ๊ธฐ์ค(็ฎๆบ)
Wiman-Joseon
The successor-state of GojoseonWiman Joseon (194 - 108 B.C.E.) began with Wiman's seizure of the throne from Gija Joseon's King Jun and ended with the death of King Ugeo, a grandson of Wiman.
Earliest attested monarchs by contemporaneous records:
- Wiman of Gojoseon (Hangul: ์๋ง Hanja: ่กๆปฟ) (194 B.C.E. - 161 B.C.E.)
- Unknown (161 B.C.E. - 129 B.C.E.), son of Wiman.
- Ugeo of Gojoseon (Hangul: ์ฐ๊ฑฐ์ Hanja: ๅณๆธ ็) (129B.C.E. - 108 B.C.E.), grandson of Wiman.
The Buyeo states
Bukbuyeo
Bukbuyeo (c.239 B.C.E. - 58 B.C.E.) ruled in modern-day Manchuria. The rulers continued to use the titles of Dangun.[6] Some records refer to Bukbuyeo (North Buyeo) and Dongbuyeo (East Buyeo). In 37 B.C.E., Go Jumong, a great-grandson of Haemosu Dangun's second son, entered Jolbon Buyeo, Bukbuyeo under a changed state name. Jolbon's ruler, Go Museo, died with no sons and had declared Jumong successor. Thus, Jumong rose to the throne of Bukbuyeo and changed the state's name to Goguryeo.
- Haemosu of Buyeo ํด๋ชจ์ (239 - 195 B.C.E.)
- Mosuri of Buyeo ๋ชจ์๋ฆฌ (195 - 170 B.C.E.)
- Go Haesa of Buyeo ๊ณ ํด์ฌ (170 - 121 B.C.E.)
- Go Uru of Buyeo ๊ณ ์ฐ๋ฃจ (121 - 86 B.C.E.)
- Go Dumak of Bukbuyeo ๊ณ ๋๋ง (108 - 60 B.C.E.)
- Go Museo of Bukbuyeo ๊ณ ๋ฌด์ (60 - 58 B.C.E.)
- Go Jumong of Bukbuyeo ๊ณ ์ฃผ๋ชฝ (37 B.C.E. - 19 B.C.E. (Goguryeo))
Dongbuyeo
(c.86 B.C.E.โ22 C.E.) The rulers of Dongbuyeo submitted to Bukbuyeo in 86 B.C.E., and thus used the title Wang ("King"). King Haeburu, the brother of Go Uru Dangun, originally succeeded his brother to the Bukbuyeo throne. The forces of the Han dynasty and the rising of Go Dumak chased King Haeburu, a descendant of Goyeolga Dangun, the last ruler of Gojoseon, to the east.
- King Hae Buru ํด๋ถ๋ฃจ์ ่งฃๅคซๅฉ็ (86 - 48 B.C.E.)
- King Geumwa ๊ธ์์ ้่็ (48 - 7 B.C.E.)
- King Daeso ๋์์ ๅธถ็ด ็ (7 B.C.E. - 22 C.E.)
"Later" Buyeo rulers
- ๊ฐ์ฌ์(ๆทๆ็) (22- ca.68?)
- ๋๋(้ฝ้ ญ) later called ์ฐํ(ไบๅฐ) (ca.68)
Second century
- Wigutae/Weichoutai (์์๊ตฌํ/ๅฐไปๅฐ) (?120-?174)
- ็ ๅคซ ๅฐ (์๋ถํ) (ca.167)
- ์ธ๊ตฌํ(่ไปๅฐ)
Third century
- ็็ฐกไฝๅฑ (์๊ฐ์๊ฑฐ) (?174- ?200)
- ๋ง์ฌ(้บปไฝ)(?190๏ฝ234)
- Uiryo Wang / Yilรผ (Hangul: ์๋ ค Hanja: ไพๆ ฎ) (234๏ฝ286)
Fourth century
- Uira Wang / Yiluo (Hangul: ์๋ผ Hanja: ไพ็พ )
- Hyon Wang / Xuan (Hangul:ํ Hanja: ็) (?-346/347)
- ๅญฑ็/่็ (์์)
Samhan Confederacies
Jin (Mahan) Confederation
Scholars dispute the Jin (Mahan) Confederation genealogy.
- ๊ธฐ์ค (็ฎๆบ) or King Mugang ๋ฌด๊ฐ์ ๆญฆๅบท็ (B.C.220-B.C.194)
- King Gang* ๊ฐ์ ๅบท็ (B.C.193-B.C.189)
- ๊ธฐ๊ฐ (็ฎ้พ) or King An ์์ ๅฎ็ (B.C.189-B.C.157)
- ๊ธฐ์ (็ฎๅฏ) or King Hye ํ์ ๆ ็ (B.C.157-B.C.144)
- ๊ธฐ๋ฌด (็ฎๆญฆ) or King Myung ๋ช ์ ๆ็ (B.C.144-B.C.113)
- ๊ธฐํ (็ฎไบจ) or King Hyo ํจ์ ๅญ็ (B.C.113-B.C.73)
- ๊ธฐ์ญ (็ฎ็ฎ) or King Yang ์์ ่ฅ็ (B.C.73-B.C.58)
- ๊ธฐํ (็ฎๅณ) or King Won ์์ ๅ ็ (B.C.58-B.C.32)
- ๊ธฐ์ (็ฎ่ฒ) or King Gye ๊ณ์ ็จฝ็ (B.C.32-B.C.17)
- ๊ธฐํ (็ฎๅญธ)
Three Kingdoms
Goguryeo
Goguryeo (37 B.C.E. - 668 C.E.) existed as one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea. Goguryeo rulers used the title of Taewang (ๅคช็, "Greatest King"). [1] The founder of Goguryeo, considered the 7th Dangun of Bukbuyeo, succeeded the 6th Dangun Gomuseo to the throne of Jolbon Buyeo or Bukbuyeo under a different name.
# | Posthumous name[2] | Hangul (Hanja) | Personal names [3][4] | Period of reign |
Legendary line [5] | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Dongmyeong | ๋๋ช ์ฑ์ (ๆฑๆ่็), ๋๋ช ์ (ๆฑๆ็) | Jumong ์ฃผ๋ชฝ (ๆฑ่), Chumo ์ถ๋ชจ (้็), Sanghae ์ํด (่ฑก่งฃ) | 37 B.C.E.-19 B.C.E. |
2 | Yuri | ์ ๋ฆฌ์ (็็็), ์ ๋ฆฌ๋ช ์ (็็ๆ็) | Yuri ์ ๋ฆฌ (็็, ้กๅฉ), Yuryu ์ ๋ฅ (ๅญบ็), Nuri ๋๋ฆฌ (็ดฏๅฉ) | 19 B.C.E.-18 C.E. |
3 | Daemusin | ๋๋ฌด์ ์ (ๅคงๆญฆ็ฅ็), ๋ํด์ฃผ๋ฅ์ (ๅคง่งฃๆฑ็็) | Muhyul ๋ฌดํผ (็กๆค) | 18-44 |
4 | Minjung | ๋ฏผ์ค์ (้ไธญ็) | Saekju ์์ฃผ (่ฒๆฑ) | 44-48 |
5 | Mobon | ๋ชจ๋ณธ์ (ๆ ๆฌ็) | U ์ฐ (ๆ), Aeru ์ ๋ฃจ (ๆๅฉ), Mangnae ๋ง๋ (่ซไพ) | 48-53 |
Great Imperial line | ||||
6 | Taejo | ํ์กฐ[๋]์ (ๅคช็ฅ[ๅคง]็), ๊ตญ์กฐ์ (ๅ็ฅ็) | Gung ๊ถ (ๅฎฎ), Eosu ์ด์ (ๆผๆผฑ) | 53-146 |
7 | Chadae | ์ฐจ๋์ (ๆฌกๅคง็) | Suseong ์์ฑ (้ๆ) | 146-165 |
8 | Sindae | ์ ๋์ (ๆฐๅคง็) | Baekgo ๋ฐฑ๊ณ (ไผฏๅบ), Baekgu ๋ฐฑ๊ตฌ (ไผฏๅฅ) | 165-179 |
Hwando-Guknae line | ||||
9 | Gogukcheon | ๊ณ ๊ตญ์ฒ์ (ๆ ๅๅท็), ๊ตญ์์ (ๅ่ฅ็) | Nammu ๋จ๋ฌด (็ทๆญฆ) | 179-197 |
10 | Sansang | ์ฐ์์ ๅฑฑไธ็ | Jeong-u ์ ์ฐ ๅปทๅช, Wigung ์๊ถ ไฝๅฎฎ | 197-227 |
11 | Dongcheon | ๋์ฒ์ ๆฑๅท็, ๆฑ่ฅ็ | Uwigeo ์ฐ์๊ฑฐ ๆไฝๅฑ , Gyoche ๊ต์ฒด ้ๅฝ | 227-248 |
12 | Jungcheon | ์ค์ฒ์ ไธญๅทๅคง็, ไธญ่ฅ็ | Yeonbul ์ฐ๋ถ ็ถๅผ | 248-270 |
13 | Seocheon | ์์ฒ์ ่ฅฟๅท็, ่ฅฟ่ฅ็ | Yangno ์ฝ๋ก ่ฅ็ง, Yagu ์ฝ์ฐ ่ฅๅ | 270-292 |
14 | Bongsang | ๋ด์์ ็ฝไธ็, ้ด่็ | Sangbu ์๋ถ ็ธๅคซ, Sapsiru ์ฝ์๋ฃจ ๆ็ขๅฉ | 292-300 |
15 | Micheon | ๋ฏธ์ฒ์ ็พๅท็, ๅฅฝๆ็ | Eulbul ์๋ถ ไนๅผ, Ubul ์ฐ๋ถ ๆๆ | 300-331 |
16 | Gogugwon | ๊ณ ๊ตญ์์ ๆ ๅๅ็ | Sayu ์ฌ์ ๆฏ็ฑ, Yu ์ ๅ, Soe ์ ้ | 331-371 |
17 | Sosurim | ์์๋ฆผ์ ๅฐ็ธๆ็ | Gubu ๊ตฌ๋ถ ไธๅคซ | 371-384 |
18 | Gogugyang | ๊ณ ๊ตญ์์ ๆ ๅๆ็ | Yiryeon ์ด๋ จ ไผ้ฃ, Eojiji ์ด์ง์ง ๆผๅชๆฏ | 384-391 |
19 | Gwanggaeto the Great | ๊ตญ๊ฐ์๊ด๊ฐํ ๊ฒฝํ์ํธํ์ ๅๅฝไธๅปฃ้ๅๅขๅนณๅฎๅฅฝๅคช็ | Damdeok ๋ด๋ ่ซๅพท, An ์ ๅฎ | 391-413 |
Pyongyang line | ||||
20 | Jangsu | ์ฅ์์ ้ทๅฃฝ็ | Georyeon ๊ฑฐ๋ จ ๅทจ้ฃ, Goryeon ๊ณ ๋ จ ้ซ็ | 413-490 |
21 | Munjamyeong | ๋ฌธ์๋ช ์ ๆๅจๆ็ | Na-un ๋์ด ็พ ้ฒ, Go-un ๊ณ ์ด ้ซ้ฒ | 491-519 |
22 | Anjang | ์์ฅ์ ๅฎ่็ | Heung-an ํฅ์ ่ๅฎ, Go-an ๊ณ ์ ้ซๅฎ | 519-531 |
23 | Anwon | ์์์ ๅฎๅ็ | Bojeong ๋ณด์ ๅฏถๅปท, Gojeong ๊ณ ์ ้ซๅปท | 531-545 |
24 | Yangwon | ์์์ ้ฝๅ็, ้ฝๅดไธๅฅฝ็ | Pyeongseong ํ์ฑ ๅนณๆ | 545-559 |
25 | Pyeongwon | ํ์์ ๅนณๅ็ | Yangseong ์์ฑ ้ฝๆ, Tang ํ ๆนฏ, Goyang ๊ณ ์ ้ซ้ฝ | 559-590 |
26 | Yeongyang | ์์์ ๅฌฐ้ฝ็, ํ์์ ๅนณ้ฝ็ | Go Won ๊ณ ์ ้ซๅ , Daewon ๋์ ๅคงๅ | 590-618 |
27 | Yeongnyu | ์๋ฅ์ ็็็ | Go Geonmu ๊ณ ๊ฑด๋ฌด ้ซๅปบๆญฆ, Seong ์ฑ ๆ, Gomu ๊ณ ๋ฌด ้ซๆญฆ | 618-642 |
28 | Bojang | ๋ณด์ฅ์ ๅฏถ่็ | Go Jang ๊ณ ์ฅ ้ซ่, Bojang ๋ณด์ฅ ๅฏถ่ | 642-668 |
Notes: [1] Some of Goguryeo's records of individual kings, especially of the 19th (Gwanggaeto), use the title "Taewang" or "Hotaewang," roughly meaning Greatest King or Very Greatest King. Some argue that the for the translation "Emperior," equivalent of the Chinese title ็ๅธ, but few accept that. The most complete and oldest existing Korean history text, the Samguk Sagi and the Samguk Yusa, written centuries after Goguryeo was defeated, uses the title "Wang," meaning King.
[2] The kings' names generally derive from the location of the king's burial, often differing with the Chinese concept of ่ซก่.
[3] Goguryeo kings had the surname Go, except for the second (Yuri) through fifth (Mobon), who have Hae as surname. According to records, all of the kings belong to the same patrilineal bloodline. Debate continues among scholars about whether the two surnames represent different transcriptions of the same name, or provide evidence of a power struggle.
[4] The Samguk Sagi and Samguk Yusa, mention "other names," "birth names," "childhood names," or "personal names."
[5] The Samguk Sagi provide the Legendary line names and dates. The Wei shu (History of the Wei dynasty) gives the following names: ๆฑ่ Jumong (Zhลซmรฉng}, ้ญ้ Lวdรก, ๅง้ญ่ซง Shวlวxiรฉ, ๅฆๆ Rรบlรญ, and ่ซไพ Mรฒlรกi. The legendary line had already been formed with some variants in the early fifth century when Emperor Jangsu built a monument for his father and Goguryeo made contacts with the Northern Wei. The inscription of that monument gives these names: ้็ Chumo, ๅ็ Yuryu, and ๅคงๆฑ็ Daejuryu. The connection between those names remains unclear.
Bodeok (Goguryeo-Guk)
- Anseung (670-683) ๊ณ ์์น (้ซๅฎๅ)
Baekje
Baekje (18 B.C.E. - AD 660) belonged to the Three Kingdoms of Korea. Temple names equal personal names, unless noted otherwise.[7]
# | Temple name | Hangul | Hanja | Period of reign | Personal name | Relationship | Note |
1 | Onjo | ์จ์กฐ์ | ๆบซ็ฅ็ | October 18 B.C.E. - February 29 C.E. | Onjo (ๆบซ็ฅ) | founder | son of Goguryeo's founder Jumong |
2 | Daru | ๋ค๋ฃจ์ | ๅคๅฉ็ | February 29 - September 77 C.E. | first son of Onjo | ||
3 | Giru | ๊ธฐ๋ฃจ์ | ๅทฑๅฉ็ | September 77 - November 128 C.E. | first son of Daru | ||
4 | Gaeru | ๊ฐ๋ฃจ์ | ่ๅฉ็ | November 128 -ย ? 166 C.E. | son of Giru | ||
5 | Chogo | ์ด๊ณ ์ | ่ๅค็ | ? 166 - October 214 C.E. | son of Gaeru | also Sogo (์๊ณ ์, ็ด ๅค็) | |
6 | Gusu | ๊ตฌ์์ | ไป้ฆ็ | October 214 -ย ? 234 C.E. | first son of Chogo | also Guisu (๊ท์์, ่ฒด้ ็) | |
7 | Saban | ์ฌ๋ฐ์ | ๆฒไผด็ | 234 C.E. | first son of Gusu | also Sai (์ฌ์ด์, ๆฒไผ็) | |
8 | Goi | ๊ณ ์ด์ | ๅค็พ็ | ? 234 - November 286 C.E. | second son of Gaeru | also Gui (๊ตฌ์ด๊ตฐ, ไน ็พๅ) | |
9 | Chaekgye | ์ฑ ๊ณ์ | ่ฒฌ็จฝ็ | November 286 - September 298 C.E. | son of Goi | also Cheonggye (์ฒญ๊ณ์, ้็จฝ็) | |
10 | Bunseo | ๋ถ์์ | ๆฑพ่ฅฟ็ | September 298 - October 304 C.E. | first son of Chaekgye | ||
11 | Biryu | ๋น๋ฅ์ | ๆฏๆต็ | November 304 - October 344 C.E. | second son of Gusu | ||
12 | Gye | ๊ณ์ | ๅฅ็ | October 344 - September 346 C.E. | first son of Bunseo | ||
13 | Geunchogo | ๊ทผ์ด๊ณ ์ | ่ฟ่ๅค็ | September 346 - November 375 C.E. | second son of Biryu | also Chogo (์ด๊ณ ์, ่ๅค็) or Sokgo (์๊ณ ์, ้ๅค็) | |
14 | Geun-gusu | ๊ทผ๊ตฌ์์ | ่ฟไป้ฆ็ | November 375 - April 384 C.E. | son of Geunchogo | also Guisu (๊ท์์, ่ฒด้ฆ็) | |
15 | Chimnyu | ์นจ๋ฅ์ | ๆๆต็ | April 384 - November 385 C.E. | first son of Geungusu | ||
16 | Jinsa | ์ง์ฌ์ | ่พฐๆฏ็ | November 385 - November 392 C.E. | younger brother of Chimnyu | also Buyeohui (๋ถ์ฌํ, ๆถ้คๆ) | |
17 | Asin | ์์ ์ | ้ฟ่็ | November 392 - September 405 C.E. | cousin of Jinsa; first son of Chimnyu | also Aha (์ํ์, ้ฟ่ฑ็) | |
18 | Jeonji | ์ ์ง์ | ่ ๆฏ็ | September 405 - March 420 C.E. | first son of Asin | also Jikji (์ง์ง์, ็ดๆฏ็) or Jinji (์ง์ง์, ็ๆฏ็) | |
19 | Gu-isin | ๊ตฌ์ด์ ์ | ไน ็พ่พ็ | March 420 - December 427 C.E. | first son of Jeonji | ||
20 | Biyu | ๋น์ ์ | ๆฏๆ็ | December 427 - September 454 C.E. | first son of Guisin | also Yeobi (์ฌ๋น, ้คๆฏ) | |
21 | Gaero | ๊ฐ๋ก์ | ่้นต็ | September 454 - September 475 C.E. | Gyeongsa (๊ฒฝ์ฌ, ๆ ถๅธ) or Gyeong (๊ฒฝ, ๆ ถ) | first son of Biyu | also Yeogyeong (์ฌ๊ฒฝ, ้คๆ ถ) |
22 | Munju | ๋ฌธ์ฃผ์ | ๆๅจ็ | September 475 - September 477 C.E. | Modo (๋ชจ๋, ็้ฝ) or Do (๋, ้ฝ) | son of Gaero | |
23 | Samgeun | ์ผ๊ทผ์ | ไธๆค็ | September 477 - November 479 C.E. | Samgeun (์ผ๊ทผ, ไธๆค), Imgeol (์๊ฑธ, ๅฃฌไน) or Samgeol (์ผ๊ฑธ, ไธไน) | first son of Munju | also Mun-geun (๋ฌธ๊ทผ์, ๆๆค็) |
24 | Dongseong | ๋์ฑ์ | ๆฑๅ็ | November 479 - November 501 C.E. | Modae (๋ชจ๋, ็ๅคง) or Mamo (๋ง๋ชจ, ๆฉ็) | cousin of Samgeum | |
25 | Muryeong | ๋ฌด๋ น์ | ๆญฆๅฏง็ | November 501 - May 523 C.E. | Sama (์ฌ๋ง, ๆฏ้บป or ๆฏๆฉ) or Yung (์ต, ้) | second son of Dongseong | also Sama (์ฌ๋ง์, ๆฏ้บป็), Do (๋์, ๅถ็), or Horyeong (ํธ๋ น์, ่ๅฏง็) |
26 | Seong | ์ฑ์ | ่็ | May 523 - August 554 C.E. | Myeong (๋ช , ๆ) | son of Muryeong | also Myeong (๋ช ์, ๆ็) or Seongmyeong (์ฑ๋ช ์, ่ๆ็) |
27 | Wideok | ์๋์ | ๅจๅพท็ | August 554 - December 598 C.E. | Chang (์ฐฝ, ๆ) | first son of Seong | also Chang (์ฐฝ์, ๆ็) |
28 | Hye | ํ์ | ๆ ็ | December 598 - December 599 C.E. | Gye (๊ณ, ๅญฃ) | second son of Seong | also Heon (ํ์, ็ป็) |
29 | Beop | ๋ฒ์ | ๆณ็ | December 599 - May 600 C.E. | Seon (์ , ๅฎฃ) or Hyosun (ํจ์, ๅญ้ ) | first son of Hye | |
30 | Mu | ๋ฌด์ | ๆญฆ็ | May 600 - March 641 C.E. | personal name Jang (์ฅ, ็) or Seodong or Suhdeong (์๋, ่ฏ็ซฅ) | the fourth youngest son of Wideok | also Mugang (๋ฌด๊ฐ์, ๆญฆๅบท็) or Mugwang (๋ฌด๊ด์,ๆญฆๅปฃ็) |
31 | Uija | ์์์ | ็พฉๆ ็ | March 641 - August 660 | first son of Mu |
Silla
Silla (57 B.C.E. - 935 C.E.) constituted one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea. In the early years, the Pak, Seok, and Kim families ruled Silla. Rulers of Silla had various titles, including Isageum, Maripgan, Taewang, Daewang and Yeowang. Like some Baekje kings, some declared themselves emperor.
- Hyeokgeose Geoseogan ํ๊ฑฐ์ธ๊ฑฐ์๊ฐ (57 B.C.E.โ4 C.E.)
- Namhae Chachaung ๋จํด์ฐจ์ฐจ์ (4โ24)
- Yuri Yisageum (24โ57) ์ ๋ฆฌ์ด์ฌ๊ธ ๅ็ๅฐผๅธซไป (Kings Yuri to Heurhae bore the Korean title Isageum, an old word for "ruler")
- Talhae Isageum ํํด ์ด์ฌ๊ธ ่ซ่งฃๅฐผๅธซไป (57โ80)
- Pasa Isageum ํ์ฌ์ด์ฌ๊ธ ๅฉๅจๅฐผๅธซไป (80โ112)
- Jima Isageum ์ง๋ง์ด์ฌ๊ธ ็ฅๆฉๅฐผๅธซไป (112โ134)
- Ilseong Isageum ์ผ์ฑ์ด์ฌ๊ธ ้ธ่ๅฐผๅธซไป (134โ154)
- Adalla Isageum ์๋ฌ๋ผ์ด์ฌ๊ธ ้ฟ้็พ ๅฐผๅธซไป (154โ184)
- Beolhyu Isageum ๋ฒํด์ด์ฌ๊ธ ไผไผๅฐผๅธซไป (184โ196)
- Naehae Isageum ๋ดํด์ด์ฌ๊ธ ๅฅ่งฃๅฐผๅธซไป (196โ230)
- Jobun Isageum ์กฐ๋ถ์ด์ฌ๊ธ ๅฉ่ณๅฐผๅธซไป (230โ247)
- Cheomhae Isageum ์ฒจํด์ด์ฌ๊ธ ๆฒพ่งฃๅฐผๅธซไป (247โ261)
- Michu Isageum ๋ฏธ์ถ์ด์ฌ๊ธ ๅณ้ๅฐผๅธซไป (262โ284)
- Yurye Isageum ์ ๋ก์ด์ฌ๊ธ ๅ็ฆฎๅฐผๅธซไป (284โ298)
- Girim Isageum ๊ธฐ๋ฆผ์ด์ฌ๊ธ ๅบ่จๅฐผๅธซไป (298โ310)
- Heulhae Isageum ํํด์ด์ฌ๊ธ ่จ่งฃๅฐผๅธซไป (310โ356)
- Naemul Maripgan ๋ด๋ฌผ๋ง๋ฆฝ๊ฐ ๅฅๅฟ้บป็ซๅนฒ (356โ402) (Kings Naemul to Soji bore the Korean title Maripgan, an old word for "ruler")
- Silseong Maripgan ์ค์ฑ๋ง๋ฆฝ๊ฐ ๅฏฆ่้บป็ซๅนฒ (402โ417)
- Nulji Maripgan ๋์ง๋ง๋ฆฝ๊ฐ ่จฅ็ฅ้บป็ซๅนฒ (417โ458)
- Jabi Maripgan ์๋น๋ง๋ฆฝ๊ฐ ๆ ๆฒ้บป็ซๅนฒ (458โ479)
- Soji Maripgan ์์ง๋ง๋ฆฝ๊ฐ ็คๆบ้บป็ซๅนฒ (479โ500)
- King Jijeung ์ง์ฆ์ ๆบ่ญ็ (500โ514) (Kings Jijeung to Gyeongsun bore the title Wang (the modern Korean word for "king"), with the exceptions noted below)
- King Beopheung the Great ๋ฒํฅํ์ ๆณ่ๅคช็ (514โ540) ("King Beopheung the Great" is a translation of Beopheung Taewang, "Taewang" meaning "great king")
- King Jinheung the Great ์งํฅํ์ ็่ๅคช็ (540โ576) ("King Jinheung the Great" is a translation of Jinheung Taewang, "Taewang" meaning "great king")
- King Jinji ์ง์ง์ ็ๆบ็ (576โ579)
- King Jinpyeong ์งํ์ ็ๅนณ็ (579โ632)
- Queen Seondeok ์ ๋์ฌ์ ๅๅพทๅฅณ็ (632โ647) (Queens Seondeok and Jindeok bore the title Yeowang, meaning "queen")
- Queen Jindeok ์ง๋์ฌ์ ็ๅพทๅฅณ็ (647โ654)
- King Muyeol ๋ฌด์ด์ ๆญฆ็็ (654โ661)
Gaya confederacy
Gaya confederacy (42 - 532) consisted of several small statelets. All rulers of Gaya bore the title Wang ("King").
According to a legend recorded in the Samguk Yusa (a collection of folktales, legends, and biographies from early Korean history), in the year 42 C.E., six eggs descended from the heaven with messages that they would be kings. From the six eggs came six boys and within twelve days the boys grew to maturity. One of them, named Suro, became the king of Geumgwan Gaya, and the other five founded the other five Gayas, namely, Daegaya, Seongsan Gaya, Ara Gaya, Goryeong Gaya, and Sogaya.
Geumgwan Gaya
This list is of the Kim Dynasty of Geumgwan Gaya (42-532). Given the legend that records the the founding of Geumgwan Gaya in 42 C.E. when six eggs descended from heaven, the period of Suro's reign (42-199) should not be taken to imply that he was a single historical person who lived for over 150 years.
# | Temple name | Hangul | Hanja | Period of reign |
1 | Suro of Geumgwan Gaya | ์๋ก์ | ้ฆ้ฒ็ | (42-199) |
2 | Geodeung of Geumgwan Gaya | ๊ฑฐ๋ฑ์ | ๅฑ ็ป็ | (199-259) |
3 | Mapum of Geumgwan Gaya | ๋งํ์ | ้บปๅ็ | (259-291) |
4 | Geojilmi of Geumgwan Gaya | ๊ฑฐ์ง๋ฏธ์ | ๅฑ ๅฑๅฝ็ | (291-346) |
5 | Isipum of Geumgwan Gaya | ์ด์ํ์ | ไผๅฐธๅ็ | (346-407) |
6 | Jwaji of Geumgwan Gaya | ์ข์ง์ | ๅ็ฅ็ | (407-421) |
7 | Chwihui of Geumgwan Gaya | ์ทจํฌ์ | ๅนๅธ็ | (421-451) |
8 | Jilji of Geumgwan Gaya | ์ง์ง์ | ้็ฅ็ | (451-492) |
9 | Gyeomji of Geumgwan Gaya | ๊ฒธ์ง์ | ้็ฅ็ | (492-521) |
10 | Guhyeong of Geumgwan Gaya | ๊ตฌํ์ | ไป่กก็ | (521-532) |
Daegaya
Only four of the sixteen kings of Daegaya (42 - 562) are known by name.
- 1. King Ijinashi of Daegaya ์ด์ง์์์, also known as Naejinjuji ๋ด์ง์ฃผ์ง or Noejiljuil ๋์ง์ฃผ์ผ
- 9. King Inoe of Daegaya ์ด๋์, 8th generation descendant of Yi Jinashi
- ?. King Haji of Daegaya ํ์ง์, generation unknown; possibly also known as King Gasil; sent emissary to ๅ้ฝ China in 479, joined Baekje to aid Silla from Goguryeo attack in 481.
- 16. King Doseolji of Daegaya ๋์ค์ง์, submitted to Silla
North-South States
Unified (Later) Silla
- King Munmu ๋ฌธ๋ฌด์ ๆๆญฆ็ (661โ681)
- King Sinmun ์ ๋ฌธ์ ็ฅๆ็ (681โ691)
- King Hyoso ํจ์์ ๅญๆญ็ (692โ702)
- King Seongdeok the Great ์ฑ๋์ ่ๅพท็ (702โ737)
- King Hyoseong ํจ์ฑ์ ๅญๆ็ (737โ742)
- King Gyeongdeok ๊ฒฝ๋์ ๆฏๅพท็ (742โ765)
- King Hyegong ํ๊ณต์ ๆ ๆญ็ (765โ780)
- King Seondeok ์ ๋์ ๅฎฃๅพท็ (780โ785)
- King Wonseong ์์ฑ์ ๅ ่็ (785โ798)
- King Soseong ์์ฑ์ ๆญ่็ (798โ800)
- King Aejang ์ ์ฅ์ ๅ่็ (800โ809)
- King Heondeok ํ๋์ ๆฒๅพท็ (809-826)
- King Heungdeok ํฅ๋์ ่ๅพท็ (826โ836)
- King Huigang ํฌ๊ฐ์ ๅๅบท็ (836โ838)
- King Minae ๋ฏผ์ ์ ้ๅ็ (838โ839)
- King Sinmu ์ ๋ฌด์ ็ฅๆญฆ็ (839)
- King Munseong ๋ฌธ์ฑ์ ๆ่็ (839โ857)
- King Heonan ํ์์ ๆฒๅฎ็ (857โ861)
- King Gyeongmun ๊ฒฝ๋ฌธ์ ๆฏๆ็ (861โ875)
- King Heongang ํ๊ฐ์ ๆฒๅบท็ (875โ886)
- King Jeonggang ์ ๊ฐ์ ๅฎๅบท็ (886โ887)
- Queen Jinseong ์ง์ฑ์ฌ์ ็่ๅฅณ็ (887โ897) (Queen Jinseong bore the Korean title Yeowang, which means "queen")
- King Hyogong ํจ๊ณต์ ๅญๆญ็ (897โ912)
- King Sindeok ์ ๋์ ็ฅๅพท็ (913โ917)
- King Gyeongmyeong ๊ฒฝ๋ช ์ ๆฏๆ็ (917โ924)
- King Gyeongae ๊ฒฝ์ ์ ๆฏๅ็ (924โ927)
- King Gyeongsun ๊ฒฝ์์ ๆฌ้ ็ (927โ935)
Balhae
Balhae (669-926) followed Goguryeo in the northern territories when Silla unified half of the Korean Peninsula. The founder called the state Jin, claiming the title of the successor to Goguryeo, but after establishing relations with China Jin received the name Balhae (Bohai in Chinese). The rulers used the title Daewang ("king") and had the temple name of either -jo or -jong, though deposed rulers accounted for an exception.
# | Personal name | Period of reign | Era name (ๅนด่) | Posthumous name (่ซก่) | Temple name (ๅป่) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Westernized | Hangul/Hanja | Westernized | Hangul/Hanja | Westernized | Hangul/Hanja | Westernized | Hangul/Hanja | ||
0 | Dae Jung-sang | ๋์ค์ ๅคงไปฒ่ฑก |
668-699 | Junggwang | ์ค๊ด ้ๅ |
Yeol | ์ด ็็ |
Sejo | ์ธ์กฐ ไธ็ฅ |
1 | Dae Joyeong | ๋์กฐ์ ๅคง็ฅๆฆฎ |
699-718 | Cheontong | ์ฒํต ๅคฉ็ตฑ |
Go | ๊ณ ์ ้ซ็ |
Taejo | ํ์กฐ ๅคช็ฅ |
2 | Dae Muye | ๋๋ฌด์ ๅคงๆญฆ่ |
718-737 | Inan | ์ธ์ ไปๅฎ |
Mu | ๋ฌด์ ๆญฆ็ |
Kwangjong | ๊ด์ข
ๅ ๅฎ |
3 | Dae Heummu | ๋ํ ๋ฌด ๅคงๆฌฝ่ |
737-793 | Daeheung * | ๋ํฅ ๅคง่ * |
Mun | ๋ฌธ์ ๆ็ |
Sejong | ์ธ์ข
ไธๅฎ |
4 | Dae Won-ui | ๋์์ ๅคงๅ ็พฉ |
793-794 | None | None | None | None | None | None |
5 | Dae Hwa-yeo | ๋ํ์ฌ ๅคง่ฏ่ |
794 | Jungheung | ์คํฅ ไธญ่ |
Seong | ์ฑ์ ๆ็ |
Injong | ์ธ์ข
ไปๅฎ |
6 | Dae Sung-rin | ๋์ญ๋ฆฐ ๅคงๅตฉ็ |
794-808 | Jeongryeok | ์ ๋ ฅ ๆญฃๆ |
Gang | ๊ฐ์ ๅบท็ |
Mokjong | ๋ชฉ์ข
็ฉๅฎ |
7 | Dae Won-yu | ๋์์ ๅคงๅ ็ |
808-812 | Yeongdeok | ์๋ ๆฐธๅพท |
Jeong | ์ ์ ๅฎ็ |
Uijong | ์์ข
ๆฏ ๅฎ |
8 | Dae Eon-ui | ๋์ธ์ ๅคง่จ็พฉ |
812-817? | Jujak | ์ฃผ์ ๆฑ้ |
Hui | ํฌ์ ๅ็ |
Kangjong | ๊ฐ์ข
ๅบทๅฎ |
9 | Dae Myeongchung | ๋๋ช
์ถฉ ๅคงๆๅฟ |
817?-818? | Taesi | ํ์ ๅคชๅง |
Gan | ๊ฐ์ ็ฐก็ |
Cheoljong | ์ฒ ์ข
ๅฒๅฎ |
10 | Dae Insu | ๋์ธ์ ๅคงไป็ง |
818?-830 | Geonheung | ๊ฑดํฅ ๅปบ่ |
Seon | ์ ์ ๅฎฃ็ |
Seongjong | ์ฑ์ข
่ๅฎ |
11 | Dae Ijin | ๋์ด์ง ๅคงๅฝ้ |
830-857 | Hamhwa | ํจํ ๅธๅ |
Hwa | ํ ๅ |
Jangjong | ์ฅ์ข
่ๅฎ |
12 | Dae Geonhwang | ๋๊ฑดํฉ ๅคง่ๆ |
857-871 | Daejeong | ๋์ ๅคงๅฎ |
An | ์์ ๅฎ็ |
Soonjong | ์์ข
้ ๅฎ |
13 | Dae Hyeonseok | ๋ํ์ ๅคง็้ซ |
871-895 | Cheonbok | ์ฒ๋ณต ๅคฉ็ฆ |
Gyeong | ๊ฒฝ์ ๆฏ็ |
Myeongjong | ๋ช
์ข
ๆๅฎ |
14 | Dae Wihae | ๋์ํด ๅคง็็ |
895-906 | None | None | None | None | None | None |
15 | Dae Inseon | ๋์ธ์ ๅคง่ซฒ่ญ |
906-926 | Cheongtae | ์ฒญํ ๆทธๆณฐ |
Ae | ์ ์ ๅ็ |
None | None |
Noteย : Dae Heummu had another era name Boryeok (Hangul :๋ณด๋ ฅ Hanja: ๅฏถๆ; 774-?)
Later Balhae
Later Balhae (927-936), the first successor-state of Balhae, rose almost immediately after its fall. The founder, Dae Gwang Hyun, a member of the royal family and possibly a prince, used his position and lineage to legitimize his rule of Balhae. Dae Won lost hold of his regime, when his general, Yeol Manhwa, staged a successful coup. Yeol Manhwa formed the Jeong-An Kingdom, reviving Balhae.
- Dae Gwang Hyun (927-936) ๋๊ดํ(ๅคงๅ ้กฏ)
Jeong-An Kingdom
- Yeol Manhwa (936-?) ์ด๋งํ (็่ฌ่ฏ)
- Oh Hyeon-Myeong (976-986) ์คํ๋ช (็็ๆ)
Heung-Yo Kingdom
Dae Yeon-Rimโa seventh generation descendant of Dae Joyeong, the founder of Balhaeโfounded the Heung-Yo Kingdom (1029-1030). The Heung-Yo Kingdom, among the last of the successor-states of Balhae, fell within a year to Liao forces in 1030 C.E.
- Dae Yeon-Rim (?-?) ๋์ฐ๋ฆผ (ๅคงๅปถ็ณ)
Dae Won Kingdom (Kingdom of Great Balhae)
The Dae Won Kingdom (1116) represented the last major successor-state and attempt to revive of Balhae. Go Yeong-Chang, a descendant of the Goguryeon Royal family, founded the Dae Won Kingdom. The Dae Won Kingdom fell within the year of its establishment.
- Go Yeong-Chang (?-1116) ๊ณ ์์ฐฝ (้ซๆฐธๆ)
Je
Yi Jeonggi founded the State of Je (765 - 819), a successor-state of Goguryeo. The son of a Goguryeo captive in the Tang Empire, Yi Jeonggi gathered a massive army that consisted of both Goguryeo and Baekje soldiers. In 765, Yi rebelled and established the Je kingdom, declaring himself the "Emperor of Je." Yi conquered fifteen prefectures of Tang Empire, gathering the people of Goguryeo and Baekje into one cause and nation. The State of Je attacked the Tang capital of Changan several times before falling to the Tang-Silla Alliance in 819.
- Yi Jeonggi (Hangulย : ์ด์ ๊ธฐ Hanja/Hanzi :ๆๆญฃๅทฑ/ๆๅฎๅทฑ) 765C.E. - 781C.E.
- Yi Nab (Hangulย : ์ด๋ฉ Hanja/Hanzi :ๆ็ด) 781C.E. - 793 C.E.
- Yi Sago (Hangulย : ์ด์ฌ๊ณ Hanja/Hanzi :ๆๅธซๅค) 793C.E. - 807C.E.
- Yi Sado (Hangulย : ์ด์ฌ๋ Hanja/Hanzi :ๆๅธซ้) 807C.E. - 819 C.E.[8][9][10]
Later Three Kingdoms
Later Goguryeo (Majin, Taebong)
- Gung Ye (901-918) ๊ถ์ (ๅผ่ฃ)
Later Baekje
- Gyeon Hwon (900-935) ๊ฒฌํค (็่ฑ)
- Gyeon Singeom (935-936) ๊ฒฌ์ ๊ฒ (็็ฅๅ)
Goryeo
The Wang Dynasty ruled Goryeo (918-1392). The first king had the temple name Taejo, meaning "great progenitor," a title applied to the first kings of both Goryeo and Joseon, also the founders of the Wang and Yi Dynasties respectively.
The next twenty-three emperors (until Wonjong) also used their temple names, ending in jong. Beginning with Chungnyeol (the twenty-fifth king), all the remaining kings of Goryeo had the title Wang ("King") as part of their temple names. Era names are in bracket where available
# | Personal name | Period of reign | Courtesy Name (C)/ Mongol name (M) / Pseudonym (Ps) |
Temple name (ๅป่) (T) / Posthumous name (่ซก่) (P) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Westernized | Hangul/Hanja | Westernized | Hangul/Hanja | Westernized | Hangul/Hanja | ||
x | Sijo | ์์กฐ ๅง็ฅ (T) | |||||
x | Jak Je Geon | ์์ ๊ฑด ไฝๅธๅปบ |
Uijo | ์์กฐ ๆฟ็ฅ (T) | |||
x | Wang Young | ์์ต (๊ฑด) ็้ (ๅปบ) |
(d.897) | Sejo | ์ธ์กฐ ไธ็ฅ (T) | ||
1 | Wang Geon | ์๊ฑด ็ๅปบ |
918โ943 | ์ฝ์ฒ ่ฅๅคฉ (C) |
Taejo | ํ์กฐ ๅคช็ฅ (T) | |
2 | Wang Mu | ์๋ฌด ็ๆญฆ |
943โ945 | ์น๊ฑด ๆฟไนพ (C) |
Hyejong | ํ์ข
ๆ ๅฎ (T) | |
3 | Wang Yo | ์์ ็ๅ ฏ |
945โ949 | ์ฒ์ (C) | Jeongjong | ์ ์ข
ๅฎๅฎ (T) | |
4 | Wang So | ์์ ็ๆญ |
949โ975 | ์ผํ ๆฅ่ฏ (C) |
Gwangjong | ๊ด์ข
ๅ ๅฎ (T) | |
5 | Wang Yu | ์์ ็ไผท |
975โ981 | ์ฅ๋ฏผ ้ทๆฐ (C) |
Gyeongjong | ๊ฒฝ์ข
ๆฏๅฎ (T) | |
6 | Wang Chi | ์์น ็ๆฒป |
981โ997 | ์จ๊ณ ๆบซๅค (C) |
Seongjong | ์ฑ์ข
ๆๅฎ (T) | |
7 | Wang Song | ์์ก ็่ชฆ |
997โ1009 | ํจ์ ๅญไผธ (C) |
Mokjong | ๋ชฉ์ข
็ฉๅฎ (T) | |
8 | Wang Sun | ์์ ็่ฉข |
1009โ1031 | ์์ธ ๅฎไธ (C) |
Hyeonjong | ํ์ข
้กฏๅฎ (T) | |
9 | Wang Heum | ์ํ ็ๆฌฝ |
1031โ1034 | ์๋ ๅ ่ฏ (C) |
Deokjong | ๋์ข
ๅพทๅฎ (T) | |
10 | Wang Hyeong | ์ํ ็ไบจ |
1034โ1046 | ์ ์กฐ ็ณ็ ง (C) |
Jeongjong | ์ ์ข
้ๅฎ (T) | |
11 | Wang Hwi | ์ํ ็ๅพฝ |
1046โ1083 | ์ด์ ็ญๅนฝ (C) |
Munjong | ๋ฌธ์ข
ๆๅฎ (T) | |
12 | Wang Hun | ์ํ ็ๅณ |
1083 | ์๊ณต ็พฉๆญ (C) |
Sunjong | ์์ข
้ ๅฎ (T) | |
13 | Wang Un | ์์ด ็้ |
1083โ1094 | ๊ณ์ฒ ็นผๅคฉ (C) |
Seonjong | ์ ์ข
ๅฎฃๅฎ (T) | |
14 | Wang Uk | ์์ฑ ็ๆฑ |
1094โ1095 | Heonjong | ํ์ข
็ปๅฎ (T) | ||
15 | Wang Hee | ์ํฌ ็็ |
1095โ1105 | ์ฒ์ ๅคฉๅธธ (C) |
Sukjong | ์์ข
่ ๅฎ (T) | |
16 | Wang U | ์์ฐ ็ไฟ |
1105โ1122 | ์ธ๋ฏผ ไธๆฐ (C) |
Yejong | ์์ข
็ฟๅฎ (T) | |
17 | Wang Hae | ์ํด ็ๆฅท |
1122โ1146 | ์ธํ ไป่กจ (C) |
Injong | ์ธ์ข
ไปๅฎ (T) | |
18 | Wang Hyeon | ์ํ ็ๆ |
1146โ1170 | ์ผ์น ๆฅๅ (C) |
Uijong | ์์ข
ๆฏ ๅฎ (T) | |
19 | Wang Ho | ์ํธ ็็ |
1170โ1197 | ์ง๋จ ไนๆฆ (C) |
Myeongjong | ๋ช
์ข
ๆๅฎ (T) | |
20 | Wang Tak | ์ํ ็ๆซ |
1197โ1204 | ์งํ ่ณ่ฏ (C) |
Sinjong | ์ ์ข
็ฅๅฎ (T) | |
21 | Wang Yeong | ์์ ็้บ |
1204โ1211 | ๋ถํผ ไธ้ (C) |
Huijong | ํฌ์ข
็ๅฎ (T) | |
22 | Wang O | ์์ค/์์/์์ ็ๆถ/็็น/็่ฒ |
1211โ1213 | ๋ํ ๅคง่ฏ (C) |
Gangjong | ๊ฐ์ข
ๅบทๅฎ (T) | |
23 | Wang Cheol | ์์ฒ ็ๆพ |
1213โ1259 | ์ฒ์ฐ ๅคฉ็ฅ (C) |
Gojong | ๊ณ ์ข
้ซๅฎ (T) | |
24 | Wang Sik | ์์ ็ๅ |
1259โ1274 | ์ผ์ ๆฅๆฐ (C) |
Wonjong | ์์ข
ๅ ๅฎ (T) | |
25 | Wang Geo | ์๊ฑฐ ็ๆคน |
1274โ1308 | Chungnyeol | ์ถฉ๋ ฌ์ ๅฟ ็็ (P) | ||
26 | Wang Jang | ์์ฅ ็็ |
1308โ1313 | ์ค์ ไปฒๆป (C) |
Chungseon | ์ถฉ์ ์ ๅฟ ๅฎฃ็ (P) | |
27 | Wang Man | ์๋ง ็็พ |
1313โ1330 1332โ1339 |
์ํจ (C) | Chungsuk | ์ถฉ์์ ๅฟ ่ ็ (P) | |
28 | Wang Jeong | ์์ ็็ฆ |
1330โ1332 1339โ1344 |
Botapsilli (M) | ๋ณดํ์ค๋ฆฌ ๆฎๅกๅคฑ้ (M) |
Chunghye | ์ถฉํ์ ๅฟ ๆ ็ (P) |
29 | Wang Heun | ์ํ ็ๆ |
1344โ1348 | Palsamanaeisa | ํ์ฌ๋งํ์์ง ๅ ซๆ้บปๆถๅ ๅช (M) |
Chungmok | ์ถฉ๋ชฉ์ ๅฟ ็ฉ็ (P) |
30 | Wang Jeo | ์์ ็่ณ |
1348โ1351 | Ijae / Ikdang (Ps) | ๋ฏธ์ฌ๊ฐํ์์ง ่ฟทๆ็ฃๆถๅ ๅช (M) ์ด์ฌ /์ต๋น (Ps) |
Chungjeong | ์ถฉ์ ์ ๅฟ ้็ (P) |
31 | Wang Jeon | ์์ ็็ฅบ |
1351โ1374 | ๋น ์ด๋ํฐ๋ฌด๋ฅด ไผฏ้กๅธๆจๅ (M) |
Gongmin | ๊ณต๋ฏผ์ ๆญๆ็ (P) | |
32 | Wang U | ์์ฐ ็็ฆ |
1374โ1388 | U | ์ฐ์ ็ฆ็ (P) | ||
33 | Wang Chang | ์์ฐฝ ็ๆ |
1388โ1389 | Chang | ์ฐฝ์ ๆ็ (P) | ||
34 | Wang Yo | ์์ ็็ค |
1389โ1392 | Gongyang | ๊ณต์์ ๆญ่ฎ็ (P) |
Joseon
Joseon (1391โ1897) followed Goryeo. In 1897, when Joseon became the Korean Empire, Emperor Gojong posthumously raised some of the Joseon kings to the rank of emperors.
Joseon monarchs had temple names ending in jo or jong. The first kings/emperors of new lines within the dynasty received the title Jo, with the first king/emperor having the special name (Taejo), which means "great progenitor" (see also Goryeo). All other kings/emperors received the title Jong.
Kings Yeonsangun and Gwanghaegun received their normal titles, without temple names, after their reigns ended. Each monarch had a posthumous name that included either the title Wang ("King"), Hwangje ("Emperor"), Daewang ("King X the Great"), or Daeje ("Emperor X the Great"). For the sake of consistency, the title "King/Emperor" has been added to each monarch's temple name in the list below.
# | Personal name | Period of reign | Courtesy Name (C)/ Mongol name (M) / Pseudonym (Ps) |
Temple name (ๅป่) (T) / Posthumous name (่ซก่) (P) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Westernized | Hangul/Hanja | Westernized | Hangul/Hanja | Westernized | Hangul/Hanja | ||
x | Yi Han | ์ดํ ๆ็ฟฐ |
Sijo | ์์กฐ ๅง็ฅ (T) | |||
... | |||||||
x | Yi An-sa | ์ด์์ฌ ๆๅฎ็คพ |
Mokjo | ๋ชฉ์กฐ ็ฉ็ฅ (T) | |||
x | Yi Haeng-ri | ์ดํ๋ฆฌ ๆ่ก้ |
Ikjo | ์ต์กฐ ็ฟผ็ฅ (T) | |||
x | Yi Chun | ์ด์ถ ๆๆคฟ |
Buyan-Temรผr (M) | ๅญ้กๅธๆจๅ (M) | Dojo | ๋์กฐ ๅบฆ็ฅ (T) | |
x | Yi Ja-chun | ์ด์์ถ ๆๅญๆฅ |
(d.1360) | Ulus Bukha (M) | ๅพ้ญฏๆไธ่ฑ (M) | Hwanjo | ํ์กฐ ๆก็ฅ (T) |
1 | Yi Seong gye | ์ด์ฑ๊ณ ๆๆๆก |
1392-1398 | ์ค๊ฒฐ ไปฒๆฝ (C) |
Taejo | ํ์กฐ ๅคช็ฅ (T) | |
2 | Yi Gyeong | ์ด๊ฒฝ ๆๆฌ |
1398-1400 | ๊ด์ ๅ ้ (C) |
Jeongjong | ์ ์ข
ๅฎๅฎ (T) | |
3 | Yi Bang won | ์ด๋ฐฉ์ ๆ่ณ้ |
1400-1418 | ์ ๋ ้บๅพท(C) |
Taejong | ํ์ข
ๅคชๅฎ(T) | |
4 | Yi Do | ์ด๋ ๆ็ฅน |
1418-1450 | ์์ ๅ ๆญฃ (C) |
Sejong the Great | ์ธ์ข
ไธๅฎ(T) | |
5 | Yi Hyang | ์ดํฅ ๆ็ฆ |
1450-1452 | ํ์ง ๆ่ผไน(C) |
Munjong | ๋ฌธ์ข
ๆๅฎ (T) | |
6 | Yi Hong wi | ์ดํ์ ๆๅผ็ทฏ |
1452-1455 | Danjong | ๋จ์ข
็ซฏๅฎ (T) | ||
7 | Yi Yu | ์ด์ ๆ็ |
1455-1468 | ์์ง ็ฒนไน (C) |
Sejo | ์ธ์กฐ ไธ็ฅ (T) | |
8 | Yi Gwang | ์ด๊ด ๆๆ |
1468-1469 | ๋ช
์กฐ/ํ๋จ ๆ็ ง/ๅนณๅ (C) |
Yejong | ์์ข
็ฟๅฎ (T) | |
9 | Yi Hyeol | ์ดํ ๆๅจ |
1469-1494 | (C) |
Seongjong | ์ฑ์ข
ๆๅฎ(T) | |
10 | Yi Yung | ์ด์ต ๆ้ |
1494-1506 | (C) |
Yeonsangun | ์ฐ์ฐ๊ตฐ ็ๅฑฑๅ | |
11 | Yi Yeok | ์ด์ญ ๆๆ |
1506-1544 | ๋์ฒ ๆจๅคฉ (C) |
Jungjong | ์ค์ข
ไธญๅฎ (T) | |
12 | Yi Ho | ์ดํธ ๆๅณผ |
1544-1545 | ์ฒ์ค ๅคฉ่ค (C) |
Injong | ์ธ์ข
ไปๅฎ (T) | |
13 | Yi Hwan | ์ดํ ๆๅณ |
1545-1567 | ๋์ ๅฐ้ฝ (C) |
Myeongjong | ๋ช
์ข
ๆๅฎ (T) | |
14 | Yi Yeon | ์ด์ฐ ๆ่ฃ |
1567-1608 | Seonjo | ์ ์กฐ ๅฎฃ็ฅ (T) | ||
15 | Yi Hon | ์ดํผ ๆ็ฟ |
1608-1623 | (C) |
Gwanghaegun | ๊ดํด๊ตฐ ๅ ๆตทๅ | |
16 | Yi Jong | ์ด์ข
ๆๅง |
1623-1649 | ํ๋ฐฑ ๅไผฏ(C) |
Injo | ์ธ์กฐ ไป็ฅ (T) | |
17 | Yi Ho | ์ดํธ ๆๆท |
1649-1659 | ์ ์ฐ/้ๆทต (C) ์ฃฝ์ค/็ซนๆขง (Ps) |
Hyojong | ํจ์ข
ๅญๅฎ(T) | |
18 | Yi Yeon | ์ด์ฐ ๆๆฃฉ |
1659-1674 | ๊ฒฝ์ง ๆฏ็ด (C) |
Hyeonjong | ํ์ข
้กฏๅฎ (T) | |
19 | Yi Sun | ์ด์ ๆ็ |
1674-1720 | ๋ช
๋ณด ๆๆฎ (C) |
Sukjong | ์์ข
(T) | |
20 | Yi Yun | ์ด์ค ๆๆ |
1720-1724 | ํ์ ่ผ็ (C) |
Gyeongjong | ๊ฒฝ์ข
(T) | |
21 | Yi Geum | ์ด๊ธ ๆๆ |
1724-1776 | ๊ด์/ๅ
ๅ (C) ์์ฑํ/้คๆง่ป (Ps) |
Yeongjo | ์์กฐ ่ฑ็ฅ (T) | |
22 | Yi San | ์ด์ฐ ๆๅ |
1776-1800 | ํ์ด/ไบจ้ (C) ํ์ฌ/ๅผ้ฝ (Ps) |
Jeongjo | ์ ์กฐ ๆญฃ็ฅ (T) | |
23 | Yi Gong | ์ด๊ณต ๆ่ฃ |
1800-1834 | ๊ณต๋ณด/ๅ
ฌๅฏถ(C) ์์ฌ/็ด้ฝ (Ps) |
Sunjo | ์์กฐ ็ด็ฅ (T) | |
24 | Yi Hwan | ์ดํ ๆๅฅ |
1834-1849 | ๋ฌธ์/ๆๆ (C) ์ํ/ๅ ่ป (Ps) |
Heonjong | ํ์ข
ๆฒๅฎ (T) | |
25 | Yi Byeon | ์ด๋ณ ๆๆช |
1849-1863 | ๋์น/้ๅ(C) ๋์ฉ์ฌ/ๅคงๅ้ฝ(Ps) |
Cheoljong | ์ฒ ์ข
ๅฒๅฎ (T) | |
26 | Yi Myeong bok | ์ด๋ช
๋ณต ๆๅฝ็ฆ |
1863-1897 (1907)* | ์ฑ๋ฆผ/่่จ(C) ์ฃผ์ฐ/็ ๆทต (Ps) |
Gojong | ๊ณ ์ข
้ซๅฎ (T) | |
27 | Yi Cheok | ์ด์ฒ ๆๆ |
(1907-1910)* | ๊ตฐ๋ฐฉ/ๅ้ฆ(C) ์ ํ/ๆญฃ่ป (Ps) |
Sunjong | ์์ข
็ดๅฎ (T) |
- see Korean Empire section
Korean Empire
King Gojong declared the Korean Empire (1897-1919) to declare the end of the tributary relationship with China. Technically, historians use the emperors' era names rather than their temple names to designate the king, but commonly use temple names.
# | Personal name | Period of reign | Korean era name | Temple name (ๅป่) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Westernized | Hangul/Hanja | Westernized | Hangul/Hanja | Westernized | Hangul/Hanja | ||
1 | Yi Myeong bok | ์ด๋ช
๋ณต ๆๅฝ็ฆ |
1897-1907 | Gwangmu | ๊ด๋ฌด ๅ ๆญฆ |
Gojong | ๊ณ ์ข
(T) |
2 | Yi Cheok | ์ด์ฒ ๆๆ |
1907-1910 | Yungheui | ์ตํฌ ้็ |
Sunjong | ์์ข
(T) |
See also
Notes
- โ Bruce Cumings, Korea's place in the sun: a modern history (New York: W.W. Norton, 1997, ISBN 978-0393040111), 25.
- โ Ki-baek Yi, A New History of Korea (Cambridge, MA: Published for the Harvard-Yenching Institute by Harvard University Press, 1984, ISBN 978-0674615755), 13.
- โ Jung Bae Kim, "Formation of the ethnic Korean nation and the emergence of its ancient kingdom states," Korean history: Discovery of its characteristics and developments (Seoul: Hollym, 1997, ISBN 1565911776), 27-36.
- โ N.-H. Yoon (์ค๋ดํ), The Location and Transfer of GO-CHOSUN's Capital (๊ณ ์กฐ์ ์ ๋์ ์์น์ ๊ทธ ์ด๋), ๋จ๊ตฐํ์ฐ๊ตฌ, 7, 207-238, 2002.
- โ ๊นํฉ, Daedong Sagang (๋๋์ฌ๊ฐ, ๅคงๆฑๅฒ็ถฑ), ๋๋์ฌ๊ฐ์ฌ, ๊ฒฝ์ฑ (1929)
- โ ๋ฐฑ์ฐ ํํ, ๊ณ ์กฐ์ ๋ถ์ฌ์ฌ ์ฐ๊ตฌ
- โ 7.0 7.1 Chสปang-guk Song, Paekche wangjo 700-yลn. ลฌttลญm yลksa manhwa, 4. (Sลul-si: Kyerim Datkสปลm, 2001, ISBN 9788981069308), 318-319.
- โ New history book of Tang, ๆฐๅๆธ
- โ Old history book of Tang, ่ๅๆธ
- โ Zizhi Tongjian, ่ณๆฒป้้
ReferencesISBN links support NWE through referral fees
- Byeon Tae-seop (๋ณํ์ญ). ้ๅๅฒ้่ซ (Hanguksa tongnon) (Outline of Korean history) , 4th ed, 1999. ISBN 8944591016
- Cumings, Bruce. Korea's Place in the Sun: A Modern History. New York: W.W. Norton, 1997. ISBN 978-0393040111
- Kim, Jung Bae. "Formation of the ethnic Korean nation and the emergence of its ancient kingdom states", Korean history: Discovery of its characteristics and developments. Seoul: Hollym, 1997, 27-36. ISBN 1565911776
- Nahm, Andrew C. Korea: tradition & transformation: a history of the Korean people. Elizabeth, NJ: Hollym International Corp, 1988. ISBN 978-0930878566
- Song, Chสปang-guk. Paekche wangjo 700-yลn. ลฌttลญm yลksa manhwa, 4. Sลul-si: Kyerim Datkสปลm, 2001. ISBN 978-8981069308
- Yi, Ki-baek. A New History of Korea. Cambridge, MA: Published for the Harvard-Yenching Institute by Harvard University Press, 1984. ISBN 978-0674615755
- Yoon, N.-H. (์ค๋ดํ), The Location and Transfer of GO-CHOSUN's Capital (๊ณ ์กฐ์ ์ ๋์ ์์น์ ๊ทธ ์ด๋), ๋จ๊ตฐํ์ฐ๊ตฌ, 7, 207 โ 238, 2002.
External Links
All links retrieved October 29, 2022.
- Department of Asian Art. "List of Rulers of Korea." In Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
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