Dongcheon of Goguryeo

Dongcheon of Goguryeo
Hangul or
Hanja or
Revised Romanization Dongcheon-wang or Dongyang-wang
McCune–Reischauer Tongch'ǒn-wang or Tongyang-wang
Birth name
Hangul or or
Hanja or
Revised Romanization Uwigeo or Wigung or Gyoche
McCune–Reischauer Uwigǒ or Wigung or Kyoch'e

King Dongcheon of Goguryeo (209–248, r. 227–248[1]) was the 11th monarch of Goguryeo, the northernmost of the Three Kingdoms of Korea.

Background

He was the grandson of Goguryeo's eighth ruler, Sindae and the son of the tenth ruler, Sansang.[1] His mother was King Sansang's royal concubine, from the Jutong-chon of Gwanno-bu. He was made crown prince in 213, and rose to the throne upon Sansang's death.[2]

Reign

In 238, Dongcheon was able to ally with the Wei, one of the three Chinese kingdoms in northernwest area,[3] in order to destroy the Gongsun family and erase its influence over Liaodong Peninsula and other areas bordering Goguryeo. The war on the Gongsun was a victory, but Goguryeo's ally, Wei, eventually became a new threat.[2]

Goguryeo consolidated its power and began to threaten the Chinese commanderies, under the nominal control of Wei. In 242, Dongcheon attacked a Chinese fortress near the mouth of the Yalu River leading to the Goguryeo–Wei War; in 244, Wei invaded Goguryeo and sacked Hwando.[4][2][5] Dongcheon was forced to flee the capital.[2] Staying in Okjeo, his forces managed to return long-standing capital of which structures were severely destroyed only to move its capital to current Pyeongyang in 246.[6] The exact location of the new capital has been still disputed.[2][5]

Then, according to the Korean book, the Samguk Sagi, a Goguryeo general named Yu Yu (유유, 紐由) approached the Wei encampment and fooled the Wei commander into thinking that Goguryeo had come to surrender. Yu Yu took this chance to murder the commander and then committed suicide, causing great confusion and discord in the Wei army.[7] King Dongcheon received news of Yu Yu's death and ordered that a memorial be made for Yu Yu the Patriot. Then, he led his armies in the attack to push the Wei forces out of Goguryeo territory. General Mil U (밀우, 密友) and Yu Okgu (유옥구, 劉屋句) also repulsed the Wei forces. The Goguryeo forces won this battle, and regained all of the territory that had been lost from defeats against the Wei.[8] This passage was not paralleled in Chinese records, and Hiroshi Ikeuchi points out its errors: the author of this passage in Samguk Sagi regarded the region of South Okjeo and Lelang as identical, while in fact they are on opposite sides of the peninsula;[9] also, the references to the "Eastern Department" for Yu Yu and Mil U are anachronistic, since Goguryeo did not divide the country into departments until the middle of the Goguryeo dynasty — that is, after Dongcheon's reign.[10] As such, Ikeuchi considered the Samguk Sagi stories of the Wei invasion unreliable.[11]

In 243, he named his son Yeonbul the crown prince and successor to the throne. He attacked Silla, another of the Three Kingdoms to its south, in 245 but made peace in 248. The records are found in Samguk Sagi under the annal of Isageum (Silla’s ruler) that Dongcheon invaded northern area of Silla but the validity of peace agreement has not been fully explained given that Goguryeo was under harsh attacks from the northern area, henceforth invasion of Goguryeo into Silla would be logically incomprehensibe. It is well accepted that this invasion indicated sudden inflow of refugees from Goguryeo into bordering area with Silla.[12]

Death and succession

Dongcheon fell ill and died during the fall of 248 after 22 years of rule. His tomb is said to be in South Pyongan Province near Pyongyang, North Korea. He is said to have been so loved that many people followed him in death. Crown Prince Yeon-Bul succeeded his father as King Jungcheon immediately after his father's death.[13]

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 Pae-yong, Yi (2008). Women in Korean history. Seoul: Ewha Womans University Pres. pp. 124–126. ISBN 9788973007721. Retrieved 30 January 2016.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "King Dongcheon". KBS Radio. KBS. Retrieved 30 January 2016.
  3. Hong, Wontack (2006). Korea and Japan in East Asian history: a tripolar approach to East Asian history. 9788985567039. p. 77.
  4. Tennant, Roger (2012). History Of Korea. Routledge. p. 22. ISBN 9781136167058. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  5. 1 2 Yi, Hyŏn-hŭi; Pak, Sŏng-su; Yun, Nae-hyŏn (2005). New history of Korea. Jimoondang. pp. 124–125. ISBN 9788988095850. Retrieved 30 January 2016.
  6. Kim, Bushik. Samguk Sagi.
  7. Hubert & Weems, p. 59
  8. Kim, Bushik. Samguk Sagi.
  9. Ikeuchi, p. 116
  10. Ikeuchi, p. 117
  11. Ikeuchi, p. 118
  12. Lee, Yoonsup (2014). 다시 읽는 삼국사1 (in Korean). 책보세. pp. 76–77. Retrieved 30 January 2016.
  13. Kim, Bushik. Samguk Sagi.

References

  • Hubert, Homer B. & Weems, Clarence Norwood (Ed.) History of Korea Volume 1. Curzon Press, 1999. ISBN 0-7007-0700-X.
  • Ikeuchi, Hiroshi. "The Chinese Expeditions to Manchuria under the Wei dynasty," Memoirs of the Research Department of the Toyo Bunko 4 (1929): 71-119.
  • Tennant, Charles Roger (1996). A history of Korea (illustrated ed.). Kegan Paul International. ISBN 0-7103-0532-X. Retrieved 2012-02-09.
Dongcheon of Goguryeo
Born: 209 Died: 248
Regnal titles
Preceded by
Sansang
King of Goguryeo
227–248
Succeeded by
Jungcheon
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