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{{Short description|Semi-legendary ruler of Gija Joseon}} | |||
{{Chinese | |||
{{for|the Chinese artist|Jizi (artist)}} | |||
|t=箕子 | |||
{{Infobox Chinese | |||
|s=箕子 | |||
| pic = Ping Sien Si - 072 Ji Zi (16137921534).jpg | |||
|p=Jīzǐ | |||
| piccap = A sculpture depicting a modern interpretation of Jizi in ], Malaysia | |||
|w=Chi-tzu | |||
| t = {{linktext|箕|子}} | |||
|hangul=기자 | |||
| |
| s = {{linktext|箕|子}} | ||
| p = Jīzǐ | |||
|rr=Gija | |||
| w = Chi-tzu | |||
|mr=Kija | |||
| hangul = 기자 | |||
| hanja = 箕子 | |||
| rr = Gija | |||
| mr = Kija | |||
}} | }} | ||
'''Jizi''' ( |
'''Jizi''', '''Qizi''', or '''Kizi''' ({{zh|c={{linktext|箕|子}}|w=Chi-tzu}}; '''Gija''' or '''Kija''' in ])<ref>The character "zi" in "Jizi" does not mean a rank of nobility. It was ] tradition that royal family members were called by the combination of the place at which they were enfeoffed and the suffix "zi." ({{harvnb|Chen|2003}}, pp. 92–93.)</ref> was a semi-legendary<ref group="note"> | ||
* {{cite book|last=Stark|first=Miriam T.|title=Archaeology of Asia|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=z4_bT2SJ-HUC&pg=PA49|year=2008|publisher=John Wiley & Sons|isbn=978-1-4051-5303-4|page=49}} | |||
:"Although Kija may have truly existed as a historical figure, Tangun is more problematical." | |||
* {{cite book|last=Schmid|first=Andre|title=Korea Between Empires|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lVgaAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA269|year=2013|publisher=Columbia University Press|isbn=978-0-231-50630-4|page=270}} | |||
:"Most treat the myth as a later creation." | |||
* {{cite book|last=Peterson|first=Mark|title=Brief History of Korea|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ByIo1D9RY40C&pg=PA5|year=2009|publisher=Infobase Publishing|isbn=978-1-4381-2738-5|page=5}} | |||
:"The Tangun myth became more popular with groups that wanted Korea to be independent; the Kija myth was more useful to those who wanted to show that Korea had a strong affinity to China." | |||
* {{cite book|last=Hulbert|first=H. B.|title=The History of Korea|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WdusAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA73|year=2014|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-317-84941-4|page=73}} | |||
:"If a choice is to be made between them, one is faced with the fact that the Tangun, with his supernatural origin, is more clearly a mythological figure than Kija." | |||
* {{cite book|last=Seth|first=Michael J.|title=A History of Korea: From Antiquity to the Present|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WJtMGXyGlUEC&pg=PA443|year=2010 |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield Publishers|isbn=978-0-7425-6717-7|page=443}} | |||
:"An extreme manifestation of nationalism and the family cult was the revival of interest in Tangun, the mythical founder of the first Korean state... Most textbooks and professional historians, however, treat him as a myth."</ref> ] sage who is said to have ruled ] in the 11th century BCE. Early Chinese documents like the '']'' and the '']'' described him as a virtuous relative of the ] of the ] who was punished for remonstrating with the king. After Shang was overthrown by ] in the 1040s BCE, he allegedly gave political advice to ],<ref>https://tspace.library.utoronto.ca/bitstream/1807/29740/1/Han_Hee_Yeon_C_201105_PhD_thesis.pdf p. 271</ref> the first Zhou king. Chinese texts from the ] (206 BCE – 220 CE) onwards claimed that King Wu ] Jizi as ruler of ] (朝鮮, pronounced "Joseon" in ]). According to the '']'' (1st century CE), Jizi brought ], ], and many other facets of Chinese civilization to Joseon. His family name was Zi/Ja (子) and given name was Xuyu/Suyu (胥餘/서여 xūyú/seoyeo, or 須臾/수유 xūyú/suyu).{{citation needed|date=October 2011}} | |||
Gija (the Korean pronunciation of "Jizi") may have been the object of a state cult in sixth-century ], and a mausoleum to him was established in ] in 1102, but the first extant Korean text to mention Gija was the '']'' (1145). Starting in the late thirteenth century, Gija was fully integrated into Korean history, being described as a successor to the descendants of ] in the state of ]. Following the spread of ] in Korea in the fourteenth century, scholars of the ] period (est. 1392) promoted Gija as a ] alongside ]. | |||
==Legend== | |||
The typical narrative of the legend of Jizi is as follows: | |||
However, with the development of ] and newly found excavations, modern Korean historians started to question the legitimacy of his enfeoffment as ruler of ]. ] (1880–1936) was the first to question the extent of Gija's cultural contributions and many followed as Gija's historical claims did not align with archeological evidence found during the time of his supposed rule.<ref name=":0" /> Additionally, post-war Korean scholars in both ] and ] have strongly criticized the story of Gija's migration to Korea in the eleventh century BCE, claiming that his involvement in the ] was widely exaggerated. | |||
Jizi was a relative of ], last king of the ] and known as one of the three wise men of Shang, along with ] and ]. Some identify him as ] of the king. He was imprisoned by the corrupt king because he remonstrated against the misrule (One variant states that he pretended to be a madman after Bigan was killed by King Zhou. In any case, he was imprisoned). After Shang was overthrown by the ], he was released by ]. He gave King Wu advice on politics when the king visited him. King Wu enfeoffed Jizi on Chaoxian, which is identified as northwestern Korea today. There he taught the people rites, agriculture, sericulture and weaving. | |||
In recent times, both North and South Korea, and their respective historians do not officially recognize Jizi and his supposed accomplishments,<ref name=":1" /> making ] the only nation that still supports his claims.{{citation needed|date=September 2023}} | |||
==Evolution of the legend of Jizi== | |||
As time has passed, legends about Jizi have become more and more numerous, leading many to argue that much of his story is fictional. | |||
== In ancient Chinese texts == | |||
It is not easy to date ] text, but pre-] documents including the '']'', the '']'' and the '']'' simply say that he was a virtuous man from the ] royal family. He was never associated with Chaoxian. In addition, these texts make no mention of Jizi's descendants. | |||
=== Pre-Qin sources === | |||
The earliest known mention of Jizi is in the "Mingyi" 明夷 hexagram of the '']''.<ref>{{harvnb|Shim|2002}}, pp. 273-274.</ref> According to other ancient Chinese texts like the '']'', the '']'', and the '']'', Jizi was a relative of ], the last ruler of the ], and one of the three wise men of Shang, along with ] (微子) and ].<ref name="Shim 274">{{harvnb|Shim|2002|p=274}}.</ref> Many identify him as ] of the king. Jizi was either imprisoned or enslaved for remonstrating against King Zhou's misrule.<ref name="Shim 274"/> (One later version states that he pretended to be mad after Bigan had been killed by King Zhou.)<ref>{{harvnb|Shim|2002|p=274}}. This version appears in the '']'', a text that was compiled in the second century BC.</ref> After Shang was overthrown by the ] in the mid eleventh century BC, Jizi was released by ], to whom he gave advice on how to rule the new polity.<ref name="Shim 274"/> | |||
These texts mention neither Joseon nor Jizi's descendants; they simply describe Jizi as a virtuous man who was trusted by King Wu of ] after having been mistreated by the last ] king.<ref name="Shim 274"/> | |||
The earliest known source that states Jizi went to Chaoxian is the '']'' (2nd century BC?). The '']'' (''Shiji'') by Sima Qian records a similar but more detailed story, but unlike the '']'', it says that Jizi did not became a subject of King Wu although he was enfeoffed by the king. In the ''Shiji'', this story is placed at the section of the Song ruling family (宋微子世家), whose founder was Weizi from the former Shang, but is not mentioned at the section of contemporary Chaoxian (i.e. northwestern Korea), where ]'s kingdom had flourished until being conquered by the ]. Thus the location of ''Chaoxian'' as in these earlier sources is not clear. Among Han-Dynasty sources, the '']'' mentions to Jizi but not to Jizi's migration to Chaoxian. | |||
]'' (''Shiji''; ca 100 BCE) was one of the earliest works to claim that Jizi was enfeoffed by King Wu of Zhou as ruler of Chaoxian (= Joseon).]] | |||
The '']'' (1st century AD) makes no mention to Jizi in the section of Chaoxian but adds Jizi's education in the section of ''Dilizhi'' (地理志): He taught the people of Chaoxian rites, agriculture, sericulture and weaving. In addition, a sentence in the Hanshu has been interpreted as Jizi's introduction of the law of "Eight Prohibitions" in Chaoxian.<ref>The ''Sanguozhi'' and other later documents interpret the "Eight Prohibitions" in the ''Hanshu'' as Jizi's teaching. But it is also possible that the corresponding sentences describe the early phase of Lelang Commandery and is not necessary related to Jizi.</ref> | |||
=== Han and later texts === | |||
The '']'', which was complied during the ] (220-265) or later, inserts a record about Jizi's descendants and connects Jizi to Wei Man's kingdom in northwestern Korea: Jizi's descendants remained in Chaoxian and claimed themselves as king after the Zhou Dynasty declined. Last king Zhun (準) was expelled in 192 B.C. by Wei Man, who was a ] Chinese and had fled to Chaoxian. Zhun fled to the south and proclaimed himself the King of Han (韓). | |||
The first texts that make an explicit connection between Jizi and Joseon date from the second century BC, under the ].<ref name="Shim 275">{{harvnb|Shim|2002|p=275}}.</ref> The earliest known source stating that Jizi went to Joseon is the '']'' (尚書大傳), a commentary on the '']'' attributed to ] of the second century BC.<ref name="Shim 274"/> In that account, King Wu enfeoffed Jizi as the ruler of Joseon and Jizi became the subject of King Wu.<ref>{{harvnb|Shim|2002}}, pp. 274-75.</ref> In a similar story recorded in ]'s '']'' (or ''Shiji'', compiled between 109 and 91 BC), Jizi was enfeoffed by King Wu but did not become his subject.<ref name="Shim 275"/> Sima Qian did not mention Jizi in his section on contemporary Joseon (i.e. northwestern Korea), where ]'s kingdom had flourished since about 194 BC until it was conquered by the ] in 108 BC.<ref name="Shim 275"/> Thus the location of ''Joseon'' as in these earlier sources is not clear. Among other Han dynasty sources, the '']'' mentions to Jizi but not his migration to Joseon. | |||
The "Monograph on Geography" (''Dili zhi'' 地理志) of the '']'' (1st century AD) claims that Jizi had taught the people of Joseon ], ], and ], as well as proper ].<ref>{{harvnb|Shim|2002|p=275}}. Original text: 殷道衰,箕子去之朝鮮,教其民以禮義,田蠶織作 (''Hanshu'' 漢書 , chapter 28.2, p. 1658 of the standard Zhonghua shuju edition).</ref> Jae-hoon Shim interprets the following sentence in that section of the ''Hanshu'' as claiming that Jizi also introduced the law of "]" (犯禁八條) in Joseon.<ref>{{harvnb|Shim|2002|p=275}}. Original text: 樂浪朝鮮民犯禁八條:相殺以當時償殺;相傷以穀償;相盜者男沒入為其家奴,女子為婢,欲自贖者,人五十萬 (''Hanshu'' 漢書 , chapter 28.2, p. 1658 of the standard Zhonghua shuju edition). The '']'' (late 3rd century AD) and other later documents interpret these "Eight Prohibitions" as Jizi's teachings, but it is also possible that the ''Hanshu'' was describing the early phase of ], and not Jizi's initiatives.</ref> The '']'' (first published in the early fifth century) claims that the descendants of Jizi reigned as kings of Joseon for forty generations until they were overthrown by ], a man from the ], in 194 BC.<ref>{{harvnb|Shim|2002|p=275}}. ''Record of Three Kingdoms'' (chapter 30, p. 848): 昔箕子既適朝鮮,作八條之教以教之,無門戶之閉而民不為盜。其後四十餘世,朝鮮侯準僭號稱王. The overthrowing of the kings of Joseon by Wei Man is also recorded in the '']'' (third century), which is cited in '']'', chapter 30, p. 850.</ref> | |||
According to a commentary to the ''Shiji'', ] (first half of the 3rd century) stated that the tomb of Jizi was located in Meng Prefecture of the State of Liang (modern-day Henan). This suggests that the story of Jizi's association with Chaoxian was not necessarily prevailing although the narrative seen in the ] later became common. | |||
According to his commentary to the ''Shiji'', ] (first half of the 3rd century) states that the tomb of Jizi was located in Meng Prefecture of the State of Liang (modern-day Henan). This suggests that the story of Jizi's association with Joseon was not necessarily prevailing although the narrative seen in the '']'' later became common.{{Citation needed|date=February 2014}} | |||
According to the '']'', the people of ], who had already conquered the former Chinese commanderies, worshipped Jizi as one of the major deities. | |||
As historian Jae-hoon Shim concludes, only during the Han dynasty (206 BC – 220 AD) did Jizi begin to be associated with Joseon, and only after the Han were his descendants identified as the Joseon royal family.<ref name="Shim 275"/> | |||
==Relationship with historical facts== | |||
Because it is confirmed that early Chinese history books reflect historical facts at least from the late ] onwards, the Jizi described in pre-Qing sources is generally considered a real character. Cultural material evidences suggest that a small city state in ] was ruled by Jihou (㠱侯) or Lord Ji under the ] Kingdom.<ref>In Beijing and Kharachin Left Wing Mongol Autonomous Prefecture of Liaoning Province, many bronzes with the character 㠱 inscribed have been discovered. This leads an assumption that the state of Ji was located within the territory of Yan of the Western Zhou Dynasty.</ref> Jihou may be the model of Jizi. | |||
== Interpretations of Gija in Korea == | |||
As for post-Qing sources, the story in the Weilüe is controversial because it contains information that cannot be found in preceding materials. Japanese scholar Imanishi Ryū presumed that this story had spread to China because of Chinese direct rule of the Korean peninsula and that the source of information would have been the influential Chinese Han clan of the ], who might have claimed themselves as descendants of Jizi. | |||
=== Ancient Korean accounts === | |||
The first extant Korean text to mention Gija (the Korean pronunciation of Jizi) was ]'s '']'' (completed in 1145), which claimed that Gija had been enfeoffed in Haedong (海東: Korea) by the Zhou court, but commented that this account was uncertain because of the brevity of the sources.<ref name="Shim 276">{{harvnb|Shim|2002|p=276}}.</ref> Only in the thirteenth century did Korean texts start to integrate Gija more fully into Korean history. The '']'' (1281) explained that after being enfeoffed by ], Gija replaced ]'s descendants as the ruler of ], whereas '']'' (1287) identified Dangun and Gija as the first rulers of former and latter Joseon respectively.<ref name="Shim 276"/> Most premodern Korean historians after that accepted that Gija had replaced another indigenous power (represented by Dangun) in ].<ref name="Shim 276"/> | |||
In 1102, during the ] period, ] built a ] to Gija in a place near ] that had been identified as ].<ref>{{harvnb|Shim|2002|p=276}}, citing the '']'', the official history of Goryeo compiled in the fifteenth century under the ] period.</ref>] for gija called gijasa (箕子祠) was also built in ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://encykorea.aks.ac.kr/Contents/SearchNavi?keyword=%EA%B8%B0%EC%9E%90&ridx=2&tot=108|publisher=]|script-title=ko:기자사|access-date=2021-02-07}}</ref> The mausoleum was rebuilt in 1324 and was repaired in 1355, but the cult of Gija spread most widely after the establishment of the Joseon Dynasty in 1392. Because Joseon's state ideology was ] borrowed from China, Joseon intellectuals promoted Gija as a ] who had raised Korean civilization to the same level as China.<ref name="Shim 277">{{harvnb|Shim|2002|p=277}}.</ref> | |||
==Acceptance of Jizi's legend in Korea== | |||
The Koreans, especially ]s, considered the legend of Jizi as a historical fact and felt proud of being successors of the Chinese sage, who had brought Chinese civilization to Korea. Jizi also had a symbolic significance for Sino-Korean diplomacy. | |||
From the second half of the sixteenth century to the eighteenth century, Joseon scholars published a number of books on Gija. In 1580, ] (尹斗壽) collated all available material on him and published his research as the ''Gijaji'' (箕子志; "Record of Gija").<ref name="Shim 277"/> On the same year, eminent scholar ] used Yun's book to compile the ''Gija Silgi'' (箕子實記), or ''True Account of Gija''.<ref name="Shim 277"/> Yi praised Gija for introducing agriculture, ], decorum, the ], and the Eight Prohibitions.<ref>{{harvnb|Shim|2002}}, pp. 277-78.</ref> Though he emphasized Gija's independence from ], Yi believed that Gija's teachings helped Korea to reach the same level of civilization as China.<ref name="Shim 278">{{harvnb|Shim|2002|p=278}}.</ref> The cult of Gija also continued as temples which worshiped gija portraits called gijayeongjeon (箕子影殿), were built in the 18th century in ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://encykorea.aks.ac.kr/Contents/SearchNavi?keyword=%EA%B8%B0%EC%9E%90&ridx=3&tot=108|script-title=ko:기자영전|access-date=2021-02-07|publisher=]}}</ref> | |||
During the ], ] identified a mound near ] as Jizi's tomb. He built a ] to enshrine him in 1102. The mausoleum was rebuilt in 1324 and repaired in 1355. In the '']'' (1281?) and the '']'' (1287), the story of Jizi follows that of the ''Weilüe'', but unlike Chinese sources, they add that Jizi succeeded ], who had ruled ] (old Chaoxian). Most subsequent Korean history books follow this narrative. | |||
Although Korean scholars became more critical of Gija's role in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, this account of Gija as the "bearer of civilization from China" became widely accepted, so much that by the late Joseon, the worship of Gija "had become an integral part of Korean cultural identity."<ref>Historians more critical: {{harvnb|Shim|2002|p=278}}, citing {{harvnb|Pak|1986}}. Gija as "bearer of civilization: {{harvnb|Ch'oe|Lee|de Bary|2000}}, pages 37 ("Korean transmission from the sage Gija at the founding of civilization in Korea") and 43 (Gija as "the bearer of civilization from China"); and {{harvnb|Pai|2000|p=117}}. "Integral part of Korean cultural identity": {{harvnb|Kim|2007|p=55}}.</ref> Some Korean clans claim to be direct descendants of Gija himself.<ref>{{harvnb|Shim|2002|p=278}}. These families were the ] ({{Korean|hangul=한|labels=no}}) of Sangdang 上黨韓氏, the ] ({{Korean|hangul=기|labels=no}}) of Deogyang 德陽奇氏, and the Seonu ({{Korean|hangul=선우|labels=no}}) of Daewŏn 太原鮮于氏.</ref> | |||
The succeeding ] (1392-1910) intensified state worship of Jizi because it advocated ]. The name "]", which was given by ], was derived from Jizi's dukedom. Ritual rite of Jizi performed in P'yŏngyang was refined during the reign of King Taejong. In 1429, King Sejong separated Dangun from the mausoleum of Jizi. King Sejong also put up a monument in honor of Jizi. | |||
] (1880–1936) was the first historian to question Gija's role in ancient Korea according to his '']'' (1908).<ref>{{harvnb|Schmid|1997}}, pp. 33-34.</ref>]] | |||
Sometime around that, agricultural fields allegedly developed by Jizi became known in P'yŏngyang. These fields came to prominence among Ming Chinese too. In 1570, King Seonjo erected a monument there that instructed people to alight from horses (out of respect for Jizi). | |||
=== Twentieth century accounts === | |||
A number of books on Jizi were published including the ''Gijaji'' (箕子志) of 1580, a collection of available materials on him, and the ''Gija Silgi'' (箕子實記) by ]. Around the same time, many Korean clans started to associate their origins with Jizi. Among them, the ] (淸州韓氏), the Deokyang Gi clan (德陽奇氏) and the Taewon Seonu clan (太原鮮于氏) claimed that they originated in Jizi although their assertion is based on fictional figures created after typographical errors.<ref>The original sentence from the '']'' is: 其子及親留在國者因冒姓韓氏 (his son(s) and relatives who remained in the state pretended to have the surname Han). One source misprinted 及親 as 有親 and the sentence was interpreted as "his son Youqin..." Another source further distorted the sentence and created another nonexistent person Youliang 有諒. See (Imanishi:1970).</ref> They eventually cooked up a complete genealogy of Jizi and his descendants. | |||
In the beginning of the twentieth century, Korean historians started to doubt the authenticity of his supposed influence.<ref name="Shim 278"/> ] (1880–1936), a Korean independence nationalistic activist historian during the ], was the first to question the extent of Gija's contributions.<ref name="Shim 278"/> In an essay titled '']'' ("New Reading of History"; 1908), he argued that Korean history was revolved around ], the legendary founder of the state of ].<ref>{{harvnb|Schmid|1997|p=33}}.</ref> Shin dismissed Gija's contributions due to his foreign origin.<ref>{{harvnb|Schmid|1997}}, pp. 33–34.</ref> Shin also argued that Gija had become a vassal of the kings of ] and was only given control of a small territory.<ref>{{harvnb|Schmid|1997|p=34}}.</ref> | |||
Other historians such as ] (1890–1957) and ] (1896–1989) started to notice discrepancies between pre-] Chinese records of Jizi/Gija, and later accounts (both Chinese and Korean) of his role in Joseon.<ref>{{harvnb|Shim|2002}}, pp. 278–79.</ref> In 1973, ] Kim Cheong-bae (金貞培) denied Chinese influence on Korea because no ancient Chinese bronzes had been found on the peninsula.<ref name=":0">{{harvnb|Shim|2002|p=279}}.</ref> | |||
==Jizi and Korean nationalism== | |||
From the 19th century, the upsurge of nationalism shifted the foreign sage to a nuisance. At first, the ] placed equal importance on Dangun and Jizi (or weighted toward Jizi) to portray Korea as an independent kingdom instead of a vassal state of China. In this context, it was stressed that King Wu of Zhou had not treat Jizi as a subject. The Korean Empire also considered that the Mandate of Heaven was transferred from Jizi to ], ] and Goryeo, and ultimately to the empire itself. In the process of forming Korean nationalism, however, the symbol of national unification came to be limited to Dangun, and the Chinese sage completely got eliminated. | |||
In addition, Ri Chirin, a leading North Korean historian of ancient Korea, argued that the Gija legend had been forged in Han times when the Chinese started to occupy part of Joseon.<ref>{{harvnb|Shim|2002}}, pp. 279–80.</ref> Most North Korean scholars have followed Ri in doubting the authenticity of Gija's migration to Joseon.<ref>{{harvnb|Shim|2002|p=280}}.</ref> | |||
The problem for Korean nationalists is that, from its earliest known form, the myth of Dangun is connected to Jizi's migration. The elimination of Jizi's existence threatens credibility of Dangun's story which by all means they want to treat as (at least a reflection of) historical facts. | |||
=== Modern Korean accounts === | |||
One solution is to identify Jizi as Korean. For example, according to Choe Namseon, the word "Jizi" was a distortion of ] "gaeaji", which allegedly meant "son of the sun" and was used as the title for a monarch who succeeded Dangun, although the lack of linguistic knowledge made his theory nothing more than a word play.<ref>Choe Namseon: Monogatari Chōsen no rekishi, p.15, 1988 (original title: Gukmin Joseon yeoksa 國民朝鮮歷史).</ref> Similarly, Yi Byeongdo claimed that the ruling family of ] (Jizi Chaoxian) was actually the Korean Han clan who later falsely claimed descent from Jizi.<ref>Yi Byeongdo 李丙燾: ''Kankoku kodaishi kenkyū'' 韓国古代史研究, pp. 50-53, 1980.</ref> | |||
Modern Korean scholars also deny the existence of Gija's involvement in Gija Joseon for various reasons.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.dbpia.co.kr/view/ar_view.asp?pid=694&isid=30674&arid=657709&topMenu=&topMenu1= |title=DBpia - 연구를 돕는 똑똑한 학술콘텐츠 플랫폼 |access-date=2010-11-20 |archive-date=2020-12-20 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201220113114/http://www.dbpia.co.kr/view/ar_view.asp?pid=694&isid=30674&arid=657709&topMenu=&topMenu1= |url-status=dead }}</ref> They point to the '']'' and the Confucian '']'', which were among the first works to mention Gija, but do not mention his migration to Gojoseon.<ref>{{Dead link|date=November 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> However, some Gija enthusiasts suggest that Gija Joseon may have coexisted with Dangun, and that Gija Joseon was established at the western end of Gojoseon.<ref>{{harvnb|Shim|2002}}, pp. 283–84.</ref> This claim is mostly denied by modern Korean historians. | |||
In addition, detractors of the Gija Joseon theory also point out that the cultural artifacts found in the region do not appear to have Chinese origins. An example of such an artifact is found in a Gojoseon mandolin-shaped bronze dagger. Its shape and bronze composition are different from similar artifacts found in China being described as ''"The detachable handle is a key feature for distinguishing Liaoning daggers from other Chinese daggers, which were typically produced in one piece."''<ref>{{Cite web |title=Liaoning-type Bronze Dagger |url=https://www.museum.go.kr/site/eng/relic/represent/view?relicId=4379 |website=]}}</ref> | |||
Another solution is to drive Jizi out of Korea: Jizi did not came to Korea but was enfeoffed somewhere in China. Candidates for the place of his enfeoffment include Meng Prefecture (modern-day Henan, China), based on Du Yu's above-mentioned statement, and Taigu, Shanxi, China, based on the '']''. Cheon Gwanu combined the two solutions and claimed that the Korean Gi tribe, led by Jizi, established Gija Joseon in Hebei and later migrated to P'yŏngyang.<ref>(Shim 2002)</ref> | |||
Currently, Korean historians (from both nations) reject the previously held belief of Gija's involvement in Korea and thus many high school textbooks applied these recent studies reevaluating Gija and his influence with him now only being mentioned in a foot note.<ref name=":1">The theory introduced in the national history textbooks of the 5th and 6th Curricula considers "Gija" to be the name of a Korean tribe.</ref> Additionally, the 7th edition of the Korean textbooks do not mention Jizi/Gija, making ] the only nation to officially support the preceding theory.{{citation needed|date=September 2023}} | |||
== See also == | |||
In ], the ] ideology makes it nearly impossible for scholars to accept that their country was controlled by foreigners like Chinese, even in ancient times. According to Chinese scholar Zong Yan, the mausoleum of Jizi in P'yŏngyang had already been removed without a trace.<ref>Zong Yan 宗岩: 朝鲜的箕子陵与檀君陵, 中国东北边疆研究, ed. by Ma Dazheng 马大正, p. 122, 2003.</ref> | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
== Notes == | == Notes == | ||
{{Reflist|2}} | |||
<references/> | |||
{{reflist|group=note}} | |||
==References== | == References == | ||
* {{citation|last=Chen|first=Puqing 陈蒲清|year=2003|title=Lun Jizi de 'zi' bu shi juewei 论箕子的"子"不是爵位 |journal=Hunan shifan daxue shehui kexue xuebao 湖南师范大学社会科学学报 |volume=32|issue=2|pages=92–93}}. | |||
* Imanishi Ryū 今西龍: ''Kishi Chōsen densetsu kō'' 箕子朝鮮伝説考, Chōsen koshi no kenkyū 朝鮮古史の研究, pp. 131-173, 1970. | |||
* {{citation|last1=Ch'oe|first1=Yŏng-ho|last2=Lee|first2=Peter H.|last3=de Bary|first3=William Theodore|title=Sources of Korean Tradition, ''Volume II:'' From the Sixteenth to the Twentieth Century|year=2000|publisher=Columbia University Press|location=New York|isbn=0-231-10567-3}}. | |||
* Kuwano Eiji 桑野栄治: ''Richō shoki no shiten wo tōshite mita Dankun saishi'' 李朝初期の祀典を通してみた檀君祭祀, Chōsen Gakuhō 朝鮮学報 (Journal of the Academic Association of Koreanology in Japan), Vol. 14, pp. 57-101, 1959. | |||
* Imanishi Ryū 今西龍 (1970), ''Kishi Chōsen densetsu kō'' 箕子朝鮮伝説考 , in ''Chōsen koshi no kenkyū'' 朝鮮古史の研究 , pp. 131–173. | |||
* Sassa Mitsuaki 佐々充昭: ''Dankun nashonarizumu no keisei'' 檀君ナショナリズムの形成, Chōsen Gakuhō 朝鮮学報 (Journal of the Academic Association of Koreanology in Japan), Vol. 174, pp. 61-107, 2000. | |||
* {{citation|last=Kim|first=Sun Joo|title=Marginality and subversion in Korea: the Hong Kyŏngnae rebellion of 1812|year=2007|publisher=University of Washington Press|location=Seattle}}. | |||
* Jae-hoon Shim: ''A New Understanding of Kija Chosŏn as a Historical Anachronism'', Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, Volume 62 Number 2, pp. 271-305, 2002. | |||
* Kuwano Eiji 桑野栄治 (1959), "Richō shoki no shiten wo tōshite mita Dankun saishi" 李朝初期の祀典を通してみた檀君祭祀 , ''Chōsen Gakuhō'' 朝鮮学報 , Vol. 14, pp. 57–101. | |||
* Sassa Mitsuaki 佐々充昭 (2000), "Dankun nashonarizumu no keisei" 檀君ナショナリズムの形成 . ''Chōsen Gakuhō'' 朝鮮学報 , Vol. 174: 61–107. | |||
* {{citation|last=Pai|first=Hyung Il|year=2000|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QxztLeLoVkQC |title=Constructing "Korean" Origins: A Critical Review of Archaeology, Historiography, and Racial Myth in Korean State-Formation Theories|publisher=Harvard University Asia Center|location=Cambridge, Massachusetts|isbn=0-674-00244-X}}. | |||
* {{citation|last=Pak|first=Kwangnyong|year=1986|title=Kija Chosŏn e taehan insik ŭi pyŏnch'ŏn: Koryŏ put'ŏ Hanmal kkaji ŭi sasŏ rŭl chungsim ŭro |journal=Han'guk Saron 韓國史論|volume=6|pages=276–92}}. | |||
* {{citation|doi=10.2307/2646342|last=Schmid|first=Andre|year=1997|title=Rediscovering Manchuria: Sin Ch'aeho and the Politics of Territorial History in Korea|journal=Journal of Asian Studies|volume=56|issue=1|pages=26–46|jstor=2646342|s2cid=162879663 |doi-access=free}}. | |||
* {{citation|doi=10.2307/4126600|last=Shim|first=Jae-hoon|year=2002|title=A New Understanding of Kija Chosŏn as a Historical Anachronism|journal=Journal of Asian Studies|volume=62|issue=2|pages=271–305|jstor=4126600}}. | |||
* Sima Zhen 司馬貞. ''Shiji suoyin'' 史記索隱: 中山國 鮮虞, 鮮于氏 姬姓 : ] Seon Woo clan are Kei ] like ] royal. | |||
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Latest revision as of 04:00, 12 November 2024
Semi-legendary ruler of Gija Joseon For the Chinese artist, see Jizi (artist).Jizi | |||||||||
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A sculpture depicting a modern interpretation of Jizi in Perak, Malaysia | |||||||||
Chinese name | |||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 箕子 | ||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 箕子 | ||||||||
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Korean name | |||||||||
Hangul | 기자 | ||||||||
Hanja | 箕子 | ||||||||
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Jizi, Qizi, or Kizi (Chinese: 箕子; Wade–Giles: Chi-tzu; Gija or Kija in Korean) was a semi-legendary Chinese sage who is said to have ruled Gija Joseon in the 11th century BCE. Early Chinese documents like the Book of Documents and the Bamboo Annals described him as a virtuous relative of the last king of the Shang dynasty who was punished for remonstrating with the king. After Shang was overthrown by Zhou in the 1040s BCE, he allegedly gave political advice to King Wu, the first Zhou king. Chinese texts from the Han dynasty (206 BCE – 220 CE) onwards claimed that King Wu enfeoffed Jizi as ruler of Chaoxian (朝鮮, pronounced "Joseon" in Korean). According to the Book of Han (1st century CE), Jizi brought agriculture, sericulture, and many other facets of Chinese civilization to Joseon. His family name was Zi/Ja (子) and given name was Xuyu/Suyu (胥餘/서여 xūyú/seoyeo, or 須臾/수유 xūyú/suyu).
Gija (the Korean pronunciation of "Jizi") may have been the object of a state cult in sixth-century Goguryeo, and a mausoleum to him was established in Goryeo in 1102, but the first extant Korean text to mention Gija was the Samguk sagi (1145). Starting in the late thirteenth century, Gija was fully integrated into Korean history, being described as a successor to the descendants of Dangun in the state of Old Joseon. Following the spread of Neo-Confucianism in Korea in the fourteenth century, scholars of the Joseon period (est. 1392) promoted Gija as a culture hero alongside Dangun.
However, with the development of radiocarbon dating and newly found excavations, modern Korean historians started to question the legitimacy of his enfeoffment as ruler of Gojoseon. Shin Chaeho (1880–1936) was the first to question the extent of Gija's cultural contributions and many followed as Gija's historical claims did not align with archeological evidence found during the time of his supposed rule. Additionally, post-war Korean scholars in both North and South Korea have strongly criticized the story of Gija's migration to Korea in the eleventh century BCE, claiming that his involvement in the history of Korea was widely exaggerated.
In recent times, both North and South Korea, and their respective historians do not officially recognize Jizi and his supposed accomplishments, making China the only nation that still supports his claims.
In ancient Chinese texts
Pre-Qin sources
The earliest known mention of Jizi is in the "Mingyi" 明夷 hexagram of the Book of Change. According to other ancient Chinese texts like the Book of Documents, the Analects, and the Bamboo Annals, Jizi was a relative of King Zhou, the last ruler of the Shang dynasty, and one of the three wise men of Shang, along with Weizi (微子) and Bi Gan. Many identify him as Grand Tutor of the king. Jizi was either imprisoned or enslaved for remonstrating against King Zhou's misrule. (One later version states that he pretended to be mad after Bigan had been killed by King Zhou.) After Shang was overthrown by the Zhou dynasty in the mid eleventh century BC, Jizi was released by King Wu, to whom he gave advice on how to rule the new polity.
These texts mention neither Joseon nor Jizi's descendants; they simply describe Jizi as a virtuous man who was trusted by King Wu of Zhou after having been mistreated by the last Shang king.
Han and later texts
The first texts that make an explicit connection between Jizi and Joseon date from the second century BC, under the Han dynasty. The earliest known source stating that Jizi went to Joseon is the Shangshu dazhuan (尚書大傳), a commentary on the Book of Documents attributed to Fu Sheng of the second century BC. In that account, King Wu enfeoffed Jizi as the ruler of Joseon and Jizi became the subject of King Wu. In a similar story recorded in Sima Qian's Records of the Grand Historian (or Shiji, compiled between 109 and 91 BC), Jizi was enfeoffed by King Wu but did not become his subject. Sima Qian did not mention Jizi in his section on contemporary Joseon (i.e. northwestern Korea), where Wei Man's kingdom had flourished since about 194 BC until it was conquered by the Han dynasty in 108 BC. Thus the location of Joseon as in these earlier sources is not clear. Among other Han dynasty sources, the Han shi waizhuan mentions to Jizi but not his migration to Joseon.
The "Monograph on Geography" (Dili zhi 地理志) of the Book of Han (1st century AD) claims that Jizi had taught the people of Joseon agriculture, sericulture, and weaving, as well as proper ceremony. Jae-hoon Shim interprets the following sentence in that section of the Hanshu as claiming that Jizi also introduced the law of "Eight Prohibitions" (犯禁八條) in Joseon. The Records of Three Kingdoms (first published in the early fifth century) claims that the descendants of Jizi reigned as kings of Joseon for forty generations until they were overthrown by Wei Man, a man from the state of Yan, in 194 BC.
According to his commentary to the Shiji, Du Yu (first half of the 3rd century) states that the tomb of Jizi was located in Meng Prefecture of the State of Liang (modern-day Henan). This suggests that the story of Jizi's association with Joseon was not necessarily prevailing although the narrative seen in the Hanshu later became common.
As historian Jae-hoon Shim concludes, only during the Han dynasty (206 BC – 220 AD) did Jizi begin to be associated with Joseon, and only after the Han were his descendants identified as the Joseon royal family.
Interpretations of Gija in Korea
Ancient Korean accounts
The first extant Korean text to mention Gija (the Korean pronunciation of Jizi) was Kim Busik's Samguk sagi (completed in 1145), which claimed that Gija had been enfeoffed in Haedong (海東: Korea) by the Zhou court, but commented that this account was uncertain because of the brevity of the sources. Only in the thirteenth century did Korean texts start to integrate Gija more fully into Korean history. The Samguk yusa (1281) explained that after being enfeoffed by King Wu of Zhou, Gija replaced Dangun's descendants as the ruler of Joseon, whereas Jewang Ungi (1287) identified Dangun and Gija as the first rulers of former and latter Joseon respectively. Most premodern Korean historians after that accepted that Gija had replaced another indigenous power (represented by Dangun) in Old Joseon.
In 1102, during the Goryeo period, King Sukjong built a mausoleum to Gija in a place near Pyongyang that had been identified as Gija's tomb.Sadang for gija called gijasa (箕子祠) was also built in Pyongyang. The mausoleum was rebuilt in 1324 and was repaired in 1355, but the cult of Gija spread most widely after the establishment of the Joseon Dynasty in 1392. Because Joseon's state ideology was Neo-Confucianism borrowed from China, Joseon intellectuals promoted Gija as a culture hero who had raised Korean civilization to the same level as China.
From the second half of the sixteenth century to the eighteenth century, Joseon scholars published a number of books on Gija. In 1580, Yun Dusu (尹斗壽) collated all available material on him and published his research as the Gijaji (箕子志; "Record of Gija"). On the same year, eminent scholar Yi I used Yun's book to compile the Gija Silgi (箕子實記), or True Account of Gija. Yi praised Gija for introducing agriculture, sericulture, decorum, the well-field system, and the Eight Prohibitions. Though he emphasized Gija's independence from King Wu of Zhou, Yi believed that Gija's teachings helped Korea to reach the same level of civilization as China. The cult of Gija also continued as temples which worshiped gija portraits called gijayeongjeon (箕子影殿), were built in the 18th century in South Pyongan Province.
Although Korean scholars became more critical of Gija's role in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, this account of Gija as the "bearer of civilization from China" became widely accepted, so much that by the late Joseon, the worship of Gija "had become an integral part of Korean cultural identity." Some Korean clans claim to be direct descendants of Gija himself.
Twentieth century accounts
In the beginning of the twentieth century, Korean historians started to doubt the authenticity of his supposed influence. Shin Chaeho (1880–1936), a Korean independence nationalistic activist historian during the Japanese occupation, was the first to question the extent of Gija's contributions. In an essay titled Doksa Sillon ("New Reading of History"; 1908), he argued that Korean history was revolved around Dangun, the legendary founder of the state of Gojoseon. Shin dismissed Gija's contributions due to his foreign origin. Shin also argued that Gija had become a vassal of the kings of Buyeo and was only given control of a small territory.
Other historians such as Choe Nam-seon (1890–1957) and Lee Byeong-do (1896–1989) started to notice discrepancies between pre-Qin Chinese records of Jizi/Gija, and later accounts (both Chinese and Korean) of his role in Joseon. In 1973, archeologist Kim Cheong-bae (金貞培) denied Chinese influence on Korea because no ancient Chinese bronzes had been found on the peninsula.
In addition, Ri Chirin, a leading North Korean historian of ancient Korea, argued that the Gija legend had been forged in Han times when the Chinese started to occupy part of Joseon. Most North Korean scholars have followed Ri in doubting the authenticity of Gija's migration to Joseon.
Modern Korean accounts
Modern Korean scholars also deny the existence of Gija's involvement in Gija Joseon for various reasons. They point to the Bamboo Annals and the Confucian Analects, which were among the first works to mention Gija, but do not mention his migration to Gojoseon. However, some Gija enthusiasts suggest that Gija Joseon may have coexisted with Dangun, and that Gija Joseon was established at the western end of Gojoseon. This claim is mostly denied by modern Korean historians.
In addition, detractors of the Gija Joseon theory also point out that the cultural artifacts found in the region do not appear to have Chinese origins. An example of such an artifact is found in a Gojoseon mandolin-shaped bronze dagger. Its shape and bronze composition are different from similar artifacts found in China being described as "The detachable handle is a key feature for distinguishing Liaoning daggers from other Chinese daggers, which were typically produced in one piece."
Currently, Korean historians (from both nations) reject the previously held belief of Gija's involvement in Korea and thus many high school textbooks applied these recent studies reevaluating Gija and his influence with him now only being mentioned in a foot note. Additionally, the 7th edition of the Korean textbooks do not mention Jizi/Gija, making China the only nation to officially support the preceding theory.
See also
Notes
- The character "zi" in "Jizi" does not mean a rank of nobility. It was Shang dynasty tradition that royal family members were called by the combination of the place at which they were enfeoffed and the suffix "zi." (Chen 2003, pp. 92–93.)
- https://tspace.library.utoronto.ca/bitstream/1807/29740/1/Han_Hee_Yeon_C_201105_PhD_thesis.pdf p. 271
- ^ Shim 2002, p. 279.
- ^ The theory introduced in the national history textbooks of the 5th and 6th Curricula considers "Gija" to be the name of a Korean tribe.
- Shim 2002, pp. 273-274.
- ^ Shim 2002, p. 274.
- Shim 2002, p. 274. This version appears in the Huainanzi, a text that was compiled in the second century BC.
- ^ Shim 2002, p. 275.
- Shim 2002, pp. 274-75.
- Shim 2002, p. 275. Original text: 殷道衰,箕子去之朝鮮,教其民以禮義,田蠶織作 (Hanshu 漢書 , chapter 28.2, p. 1658 of the standard Zhonghua shuju edition).
- Shim 2002, p. 275. Original text: 樂浪朝鮮民犯禁八條:相殺以當時償殺;相傷以穀償;相盜者男沒入為其家奴,女子為婢,欲自贖者,人五十萬 (Hanshu 漢書 , chapter 28.2, p. 1658 of the standard Zhonghua shuju edition). The Records of Three Kingdoms (late 3rd century AD) and other later documents interpret these "Eight Prohibitions" as Jizi's teachings, but it is also possible that the Hanshu was describing the early phase of Lelang Commandery, and not Jizi's initiatives.
- Shim 2002, p. 275. Record of Three Kingdoms (chapter 30, p. 848): 昔箕子既適朝鮮,作八條之教以教之,無門戶之閉而民不為盜。其後四十餘世,朝鮮侯準僭號稱王. The overthrowing of the kings of Joseon by Wei Man is also recorded in the Brief History of Wei (third century), which is cited in Sanguozhi, chapter 30, p. 850.
- ^ Shim 2002, p. 276.
- Shim 2002, p. 276, citing the Goryeosa, the official history of Goryeo compiled in the fifteenth century under the Joseon period.
- 기자사. Encyclopedia of Korean Culture. Retrieved 2021-02-07.
- ^ Shim 2002, p. 277.
- Shim 2002, pp. 277-78.
- ^ Shim 2002, p. 278.
- 기자영전. Encyclopedia of Korean Culture. Retrieved 2021-02-07.
- Historians more critical: Shim 2002, p. 278, citing Pak 1986. Gija as "bearer of civilization: Ch'oe, Lee & de Bary 2000, pages 37 ("Korean transmission from the sage Gija at the founding of civilization in Korea") and 43 (Gija as "the bearer of civilization from China"); and Pai 2000, p. 117. "Integral part of Korean cultural identity": Kim 2007, p. 55.
- Shim 2002, p. 278. These families were the Han (한) of Sangdang 上黨韓氏, the Ki (기) of Deogyang 德陽奇氏, and the Seonu (선우) of Daewŏn 太原鮮于氏.
- Schmid 1997, pp. 33-34.
- Schmid 1997, p. 33.
- Schmid 1997, pp. 33–34.
- Schmid 1997, p. 34.
- Shim 2002, pp. 278–79.
- Shim 2002, pp. 279–80.
- Shim 2002, p. 280.
- "DBpia - 연구를 돕는 똑똑한 학술콘텐츠 플랫폼". Archived from the original on 2020-12-20. Retrieved 2010-11-20.
- 네이버 백과사전
- Shim 2002, pp. 283–84.
- "Liaoning-type Bronze Dagger". National Museum of Korea.
-
- Stark, Miriam T. (2008). Archaeology of Asia. John Wiley & Sons. p. 49. ISBN 978-1-4051-5303-4.
- "Although Kija may have truly existed as a historical figure, Tangun is more problematical."
- Schmid, Andre (2013). Korea Between Empires. Columbia University Press. p. 270. ISBN 978-0-231-50630-4.
- "Most treat the myth as a later creation."
- Peterson, Mark (2009). Brief History of Korea. Infobase Publishing. p. 5. ISBN 978-1-4381-2738-5.
- "The Tangun myth became more popular with groups that wanted Korea to be independent; the Kija myth was more useful to those who wanted to show that Korea had a strong affinity to China."
- Hulbert, H. B. (2014). The History of Korea. Routledge. p. 73. ISBN 978-1-317-84941-4.
- "If a choice is to be made between them, one is faced with the fact that the Tangun, with his supernatural origin, is more clearly a mythological figure than Kija."
- Seth, Michael J. (2010). A History of Korea: From Antiquity to the Present. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 443. ISBN 978-0-7425-6717-7.
- "An extreme manifestation of nationalism and the family cult was the revival of interest in Tangun, the mythical founder of the first Korean state... Most textbooks and professional historians, however, treat him as a myth."
References
- Chen, Puqing 陈蒲清 (2003), "Lun Jizi de 'zi' bu shi juewei 论箕子的"子"不是爵位 ", Hunan shifan daxue shehui kexue xuebao 湖南师范大学社会科学学报 , 32 (2): 92–93.
- Ch'oe, Yŏng-ho; Lee, Peter H.; de Bary, William Theodore (2000), Sources of Korean Tradition, Volume II: From the Sixteenth to the Twentieth Century, New York: Columbia University Press, ISBN 0-231-10567-3.
- Imanishi Ryū 今西龍 (1970), Kishi Chōsen densetsu kō 箕子朝鮮伝説考 , in Chōsen koshi no kenkyū 朝鮮古史の研究 , pp. 131–173.
- Kim, Sun Joo (2007), Marginality and subversion in Korea: the Hong Kyŏngnae rebellion of 1812, Seattle: University of Washington Press.
- Kuwano Eiji 桑野栄治 (1959), "Richō shoki no shiten wo tōshite mita Dankun saishi" 李朝初期の祀典を通してみた檀君祭祀 , Chōsen Gakuhō 朝鮮学報 , Vol. 14, pp. 57–101.
- Sassa Mitsuaki 佐々充昭 (2000), "Dankun nashonarizumu no keisei" 檀君ナショナリズムの形成 . Chōsen Gakuhō 朝鮮学報 , Vol. 174: 61–107.
- Pai, Hyung Il (2000), Constructing "Korean" Origins: A Critical Review of Archaeology, Historiography, and Racial Myth in Korean State-Formation Theories, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Asia Center, ISBN 0-674-00244-X.
- Pak, Kwangnyong (1986), "Kija Chosŏn e taehan insik ŭi pyŏnch'ŏn: Koryŏ put'ŏ Hanmal kkaji ŭi sasŏ rŭl chungsim ŭro ", Han'guk Saron 韓國史論, 6: 276–92.
- Schmid, Andre (1997), "Rediscovering Manchuria: Sin Ch'aeho and the Politics of Territorial History in Korea", Journal of Asian Studies, 56 (1): 26–46, doi:10.2307/2646342, JSTOR 2646342, S2CID 162879663.
- Shim, Jae-hoon (2002), "A New Understanding of Kija Chosŏn as a Historical Anachronism", Journal of Asian Studies, 62 (2): 271–305, doi:10.2307/4126600, JSTOR 4126600.
- Sima Zhen 司馬貞. Shiji suoyin 史記索隱: 中山國 鮮虞, 鮮于氏 姬姓 : Zhongshan Seon Woo clan are Kei Ji (surname) like Zhou dynasty royal.
Jizi House of Gojseon | ||
Regnal titles | ||
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UnknownLast known title holder:Dangun | King of Gojseon c. 1126 BC – c. 1082 BC |
Unknown |