- country.
General Boksin of the
Baekje revival forces gave him the
title King
Pungjang (풍장왕; 豊璋王). He
joined forces with the
Baekje resistance led by general...
-
Mugwang 무왕 (武王) 무강왕 (武康王) 무광왕 (武廣王) 31
Buyeo Uija 부여의자 (扶餘義慈) 641–660 None None (32)
Buyeo Pung
Buyeo Pungjang 부여풍 (扶餘豊) 부여풍장 (扶餘豊璋) 660–663 None None...
-
meditates upon
death by
describing a will to tame it in "Wind Burial" (
Pungjang), his
poetic language is more
flexible in "The
Intolerable Lightness of...
- to
recover Baekje.
Declared king by
Gwisil Boksin under the name King
Pungjang (豊璋王) but was soon
captured and
exiled to
Southern China.
Buyeo Sa (扶餘絲...
-
uncles were
taken to China. His
father was
crowned by
Gwisil Boksin as King
Pungjang (豊璋王) but they were
defeated in 663 and his
father was sent to
China as...
- King
Pungjang House of
Buyeo Cadet branch of the
House of Go
Regnal titles Preceded by Uija King of
Baekje 660–663
Annexed by Tang and
Silla Titles in...
- no Kimi
Wakako took Silla’s twin
castles in Sabikinue. The
Baekje King
Pungjang suspected Boksin of treachery, and so made
holes in the
palms of his hands...
-
recognized king of Baekje, King Uija, as the next king
under the name King
Pungjang (豊璋王). In 663, the Silla–Tang
alliance counterattacked, and
besieged the...
- Pung (부여풍, 扶餘豊, 623–668),
shortly crowned king but
unrecognized as King
Pungjang (풍장왕, 豊璋王).
Buyeo Sa (부여사, 扶餘絲, ?–?), son of
Buyeo Pung who
escaped to...