-
Buyeo (Korean: 부여;
Korean pronunciation: [pu.jʌ]; Chinese: 夫餘/扶餘; pinyin: Fūyú/Fúyú), also
rendered as Puyŏ or Fuyu, was an
ancient kingdom that was centered...
- king of
Bukbuyeo and
founder of
Dongbuyeo (86 BCE – 22 CE), an
ancient Korean kingdom. Hae Buru took the
throne and
became the king of
Bukbuyeo. Hae Buru...
- was the son of heaven,
riding in a
chariot of five dragons, to
establish Bukbuyeo (Northern Buyeo).
According to legend,
Chumong is the
child of Hae Mo-su...
- death. Not long after, King
Geumwa reversed his father's
submission to
Bukbuyeo and
declared himself "Supreme king" and gave the
title posthumously to...
- This is a list of
monarchs of Korea,
arranged by dynasty.
Names are
romanized according to the
South Korean Revised Romanization of Korean. McCune–Reischauer...
- the most
accepted Onjo
Founder Legend (시조 온조설):
Jumong escaped peril in
Bukbuyeo because of
jealousy of
Daeso and
arrived in Jolbon. The
chieftain of Jolbon...
-
generations of
Dangun rulers. Bukbuyeogi, a book
about the six
kings of
Bukbuyeo (North Buyeo).
Taebaek Ilsa, a book
about the
histories of Hwan-guk, Baedalguk...
- [kings] was King Onjo. His
father was Chumo, also
known as Jumong. From
Bukbuyeo he
escaped peril and
arrived in
Jolbon Buyeo. The king of
Buyeo was without...
- the boy was indestructible.
Jumong later ran away to Jolbon, or
former Bukbuyeo,
where he
later established Goguryeo. Lady Yuhwa, Jumong's mother, died...
-
branched out,
after which the
original Buyeo is
sometimes referred to as
Bukbuyeo (Northern Buyeo).
Jolbon Buyeo was the
predecessor to Goguryeo, and in...