-
first Mongol invasions of Korea, and that was
revived as "Daejongism" (
Daejonggyo) just at the
start of the ****anese occupation. The
religion was suppressed...
- Seo Il (Korean: 서일; 26
February 1881 – 27 June 1921) was a
Daejonggyo priest and
independence activist who was
credited for
creating famous generals of...
- the
later Daejonggyo and Jeungsan-gyo movements, as well as for
other religious nationalist movements. The Buddhist-influenced
Daejonggyo movement financed...
-
movement group founded in
Donggandao in 1919. It
originated from the
Daejonggyo lineage. It was
organized around Seo Il and Kim Jwa-jin in
Jilin Province...
-
Light (Junggwangdan (중광단)), (重光團)) is an
armed group established by the
Daejonggyo in
North Gando in
March 1911. It was
established in
Wangcheong County...
- and the
early decades of the 20th century. They
include Daejongism (대종교
Daejonggyo),
which has as its
central creed the
worship of Dangun,
legendary founder...
-
organizations which was
established in
March 25, 1919, with Seo-il (徐一) and many
Daejonggyo members such as Gyehwa, Chaeo, and Yanghyeon. It was
organized on the...
- the
other historians who
promulgated this myth had been
influenced by
Daejonggyo, a new
religious movement which worshipped Dangun, but
attacked pre-annexation...
- archaeology, epigraphy, and
comparative linguistics, and
relying less on
Daejonggyo (Dangun-worship) scripture.
Nationalist historiography considers the Yemaek...
- po****tion include: Won Buddhism, Confucianism, Jeongsando, Cheondogyo,
Daejonggyo, Jehovah's Witnesses, The
Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints...