Title: Korean Dynasties
1Korean Dynasties
- What story do the maps tell?
- Consider what is going on in China and Japan.
2Origin Myth
- In those days there lived a she-bear and a
tigress in the same cave. They prayed to Hwanung
to be blessed with incarnation as human beings.
The king took pity on them and gave them a bunch
of mugwort and twenty pieces of garlic, saying
If you eat this holy food and do not see the
sunlight for one hundred days, you will become
human beings. - The she-bear and the tigress took the food and
ate it, and retired into the cave. In twenty-one
days the bear, who had faithfully observed the
kings instructions, became a woman. But the
tigress, who had disobeyed, remained in her
original form. - The bear-woman could find no husband, so she
prayed under the sandalwood tree to be blessed
with a child. Hwanung heard her prayers and
married her. She conceived and bore a son who
was called Tangun Wanggom, the King of
Sandalwood. - From Koreas Place in the Sun
3Han Conquest 109 B.C.-220 A.D.
4- The significance of sinicised Choson, and later
settlements in Korea sponsored by the Han
emperors, lay in their long-term cultural
influence on Japan. In time the Korean peninsula
became the main conduit through which Chinese
culture flowed to the Japanese islands. - From Koreas Place in the Sun
5The Three Kingdoms 57 B.C.-668 A.D.
6Silla Dynasty668-935
7Sokkuram Grotto and Pulguksa Temple(8th Century)
8Standing Buddha (8th Century)_at_ Met Museum
9On the RoadBy Choe ChI-won(9th Century)
- Whirling east and west on a dusty road,
- A lonely whip, a lean horseso much toil!
- I know its good to return home
- But even if I did, my house would still be poor.
10Koryo Dynasty918-1392
11Celadon Bottle (13th Century) and Wine Ewer
(12th Century) _at_ Met Museum
12Mongol Invasion1231-1360
13Choson (Yi) Dynasty 1392-1910
14Turtle Boat(16th Century)
15Literary Gathering(16th Century) Ink Painting
_at_Cleveland Museum of Art
16Lady Hyegyongs Court Diary(1795-1805)
- When I first married the Crown Prince, his
talent and generosity deeply impressed me. He
was extraordinarily filialOne need not mention
his dedication to his mother, Lady
SonhuiMaternal love did not temper discipline,
which always remained strictWhen her son became
Crown Prince, she did not see fit to impose
herself on him as a mother, and so she treated
him with deference. For instance, she used the
most respectful level of speech when speaking to
himThus the Prince was always formal and quite
careful in her presence. These high standards to
which Lady Sonhui adhered were not something that
ordinary women could easily attain. She loved me
very much also, but she treated me exactly as she
treated her son. I used to feel rather
uncomfortable being treated so deferentially by a
mother-in-law. - From East Asia A New History