-
century CE. Dong-
okjeo (Eastern
Okjeo)
occupied roughly the area of the Hamgyŏng
provinces of
North Korea, and Buk-
okjeo (Northern
Okjeo)
occupied the Duman...
-
Buyeo language was
similar to
those of
Goguryeo and Ye, and the
language of
Okjeo was only
slightly different from them. Both
Goguryeo and Baekje, two of...
- in
ancient Chinese sources. The
languages of Buyeo, Goguryeo,
Dongye and
Okjeo were said to be
similar to one
another but
different from the
language of...
-
peoples in the countryside,
which included the
tribal communities of
Okjeo and Ye. The
Okjeo were said to have
worked as
virtual slaves to the
Goguryeo king...
- Asia
including Gojoseon, Buyeo, Goguryeo, and
multiple tribes including Okjeo, Dongye,
Yangmaek (양맥; 梁貊) and the
Sosumaek (소수맥; 小水貊). The
Yemaek are believed...
-
Wiyeom (부위염; 扶尉猒) to
attack the
Northern Okjeo (북옥저; 北沃沮), and Bu
Wiyeom successfully made the
Northern Okjeo submit to Goguryeo. In
August of 24 BC, Yuhwa...
-
Korean Peninsula,
Manchuria and the
Liaodong Peninsula,
uniting Buyeo,
Okjeo, Dongye, and
other states in the
former Gojoseon territories.
Goguryeo was...
- Hanja: 沸流國) in 36 BC, Haeng-in (Korean: 행인국; Hanja: 荇人國) in 33 BC, and
Northern Okjeo in 28 BC.
Goguryeo developed from a
league of
various Yemaek tribes to an...
- migration.
During the Proto–Three
Kingdoms period, the
states of Buyeo,
Okjeo, Dongye, and
Samhan occupied the
whole Korean peninsula and
southern Manchuria...
- 3rd-century BC to
around early 5th-century AD. It
bordered Goguryeo and
Okjeo to the north,
Jinhan to the south, and China's
Lelang Commandery to the...