Geumgwan Gaya

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Geumgwan Gaya
Hangul:
금관가야
Hanja:
金官伽倻
Revised Romanization: Geumgwan Gaya
McCune-Reischauer: Kŭmgwan Kaya
History of Korea

Gojoseon, Jin
Proto-Three Kingdoms:
 Buyeo, Okjeo, Dongye
 Samhan
  Ma, Byeon, Jin
Three Kingdoms:
 Goguryeo
  Sui wars
 Baekje
 Silla, Gaya
North-South States:
 Unified Silla
 Balhae
 Later Three Kingdoms
Goryeo
 Khitan wars
 Mongol invasions
Joseon
 Japanese invasions
 Manchu invasions
Korean Empire
Japanese occupation
 Provisional Gov't
Division of Korea
 Korean War
North, South Korea

Korea Portal

Geumgwan Gaya (43 - 532), also known as Bon-gaya (본가야, 本伽倻, "original Gaya") or Garakguk (가락국, "Garak State"), was a major chiefdom of the Gaya confederacy during the Three Kingdoms Period in Korea. It is believed to have been located in modern-day Gimhae, Gyeongsangnam-do, near the mouth of the Nakdong River. Aided by its strategic location, this kingdom played a dominant role in the regional affairs from the Byeonhan period forward.

According to Samguk Yusa, Geumgwan Gaya was made of 9 villages united by King Suro. His wife Heo Hwang-ok is said to be a princess from Ayuta (아유타국), a region in India, although this may have been an embellishment during later Buddhist times.

During this time, several waves of migration from the north, including the earlier Gojoseon, Buyeo, and the later Goguryeo, overtook and integrated with existing populations and stimulated cultural and political developments. A sharp break in burial styles is found around the later 3rd century. Burial forms associated with North Asian nomadic peoples, such as the burial of horses with the dead, suddenly replace earlier forms in the tombs of the elite (Cheol 2000). In addition, earlier burials were systematically destroyed. In the early 1990s, a royal tomb complex was unearthed in Daeseong-dong, Gimhae, attributed to Geumgwan Gaya but apparently used since Byeonhan times.

After Geumgwan Gaya capitulated to Silla in 532, the royal house was accepted into the Silla aristocracy and given the rank of "true bone," the second-highest level of the Silla bone rank system.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • Cheol, S.K. (2000). Relations between Kaya and Wa in the third to fourth centuries AD. Journal of East Asian Archeology 2(3-4), 112-122.
In other languages