Yongbieocheonga

Yongbieocheonga

Infobox Korean name


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hangul=용비어천가
hanja=
rr=Yongbieocheonga
mr=Yongbiŏch'ŏnga

"Yongbieocheonga" literally means "Songs of the Dragons Flying to Heaven" and firstly written in hangul. It was compiled during the reign of Sejong the Great as an official recognition of the Joseon dynasty and its ancestral heritage as the forerunners of Joseon. [ko icon * [http://mtcha.com.ne.kr/korea-term/sosun/term263-yongbiuchunga.htm 용비어천가 (龍飛御天歌)] ] The Songs were composed through the efforts of a committee of Confucian philologists and literati in the form of 125 cantos. This compilation was the first piece of Korean text to depart from a long history reliant on Chinese characters and be recorded in hangul, the first and official alphabet of Korea. There are several underlying themes in addition to the establishment of the Joseon dynasty which are of significant importance to understanding the events that provoked the creation of these poems: linear events that took place in China, the apotheosis of virtuous Kings proceeding the fall of the Goryo dynasty, and Confucian political and philosophical ideologies of the era in rejection to Buddhism. Each of the poems included in the work convey deep-seated feelings of nationalism and a proud proclamation of cultural independence from the Mongol empire.

Historical Background

In 1259, following years of natural disasters and conflict erupting in East Asia, a peace treaty was signed between the Goryo King and Mongol empire, immediately resulting in a one hundred year period of Mongol rule over Korea. Under Mongol control, the Korean community suffered contemptible injustices as Mongolian customs were forcibly adopted, corruption overwhelmed the nobility, and political insurgences fruitlessly were thwarted. Around this same time Buddhism, which had been the national religion for nearly eight hundred years, began to wane and would eventually be replaced Confucianism. Korea was in desperate need of a figure that could alleviate the cumulating dilemmas and reestablish its blurring national identity.

In the year 1335 Yi Song-gye was born among such chaos. He had come from a long line of men that had served as government officials familiar with Mongolian customs, and would later prove to be one of Korea’s greatest army generals and kings. There were a string of successful attacks and counter attacks that led to Yi’s position in the army as a commanding general. Among his numerous victories, there are perhaps three battles that Yi is most well-known for and are given particular emphasis in Korean history: recapturing the old Korean capital Kaesong from the Red Turbans in 1362, defeating Japanese pirates at Mt. Hwangsan in 1382, and his rebellion against pro-Mongol government officials after refusing a command to march his troops to Liaotung to capture Ming strongholds in 1388. Subsequent to these and many other successful battles, Yi Song-gye was able to substantiate himself as a dominant force in the fate of the Korean people. With the help of his sons and neo-Confucianist supporters, Yi continued his pursuit of an independent Korea through eradicating all advocates and previous rulers of the weakening Goryo dynasty. This was finally accomplished with the execution of Goryo’s said last minister Jeong Mong-ju in 1392, and exile of Goryo’s last king. Not long after the completion of these tasks, Yi Song-gye rose to the throne as the first king of a new dynasty. In 1393 Korea received a new name and for the next 520 years would be known as Joseon (brightness of the morning sun). All of these events, and many more, are captured in the songs portraying the history of a new Korea.

It wasn’t until 1418 that the throne was abdicated to Sejong the Great, the third son of Yi Bangwon. It was under Sejong’s kingship that Korea began to experience a significant shift in academics and Confucian philosophical ideologies. Through the establishment of the Academy of Worthies in 1420, Sejong cultivated a generation of scholars who inspired an era of cultural and political enlightenment in Korea. They were primarily responsible for the spread of Confucianism, the creation of hangul, and a number of literary works including the Songs.

Implications of the Songs

The dragons spoken of in the title the Songs are a representation of the six ancestors of the Joseon dynasty: Mokjo, Ikjo, Tojo, Hwanjo, Taejo (Yi Seonggye), and Taejong (Yi Bangwon). "Yongbieocheonga" signifies the Joseon dynasty acting accordingly to "the Mandate of Heaven", in which they are imparted with divine support. This not only substantiates the Josoen ancestry as morally and politically virtuous dynasty, but lays the ideological foundation for generations of Joseon rulers to follow.

ee also

*Hunmin jeongeum
*Sejong the Great
*Korean literature
*Korean poetry

References

External links

* [http://www.cha.go.kr/english/search_plaza_new/EMapResultView.jsp?VdkVgwKey=12,14630000,22&queryText=(v_esidocode=22%3Cand%3E%20v_elcto=17)&strGuCode=17&strSidoCode=22&requery= Brief information about Yongbieocheonga] at Cultural Heritage Administration of South Korea
* [http://www.woorimal.net/hangul/gojunsiga/ak-yongbieochunga.htm The complete texts and analysis on "Yongbieocheonga"]
* [http://www.seelotus.com/gojeon/gojeon/ak-jang/yong-bi-eo-cheon-ka(1-10).htm The complete texts of "Yongbieocheonga" in Ancient and Modern Korean]
* [http://www.gobai.com/siga/gita3.html The complete texts of "Yongbieocheonga" in Ancient and Modern Korean]


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