Difference between revisions of "King Yeongjo"

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*''Korean'': 英祖 ''(Yeongjo / Yŏngjo)''
 
*''Korean'': 英祖 ''(Yeongjo / Yŏngjo)''
  
King Yeongjo was a king of [[Joseon Dynasty]] Korea. Yeongjo's reign of nearly 52 years, from [[1724]] to [[1776]], saw what is often called the "Korean Renaissance," a cultural golden age which continued under his grandson & successor, [[King Jeongjo]] (r. [[1776]]-[[1800]]).
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King Yeongjo was a king of [[Joseon Dynasty]] Korea. Yeongjo's reign of nearly 52 years, from [[1724]] to [[1776]], was the longest of the Joseon period,<ref>Gallery labels, National Museum of Korea.[https://www.flickr.com/photos/toranosuke/39629484402/sizes/h/]</ref> and saw what is often called the "Korean Renaissance," a cultural golden age which continued under his grandson & successor, [[King Jeongjo]] (r. [[1776]]-[[1800]]).
  
 
He was a younger brother of his predecessor as king, [[King Gyeongjong]], being the second son of [[King Sukchong]] and Sukchong's consort [[Sukbin]].<ref>Evelyn Rawski, ''Early Modern China and Northeast Asia: Cross-Border Perspectives'', Cambridge University Press (2015), 167.</ref>
 
He was a younger brother of his predecessor as king, [[King Gyeongjong]], being the second son of [[King Sukchong]] and Sukchong's consort [[Sukbin]].<ref>Evelyn Rawski, ''Early Modern China and Northeast Asia: Cross-Border Perspectives'', Cambridge University Press (2015), 167.</ref>

Revision as of 02:12, 17 January 2018

  • Born: 1694
  • Died: 1776
  • Reign: 1724-1776
  • Korean: 英祖 (Yeongjo / Yŏngjo)

King Yeongjo was a king of Joseon Dynasty Korea. Yeongjo's reign of nearly 52 years, from 1724 to 1776, was the longest of the Joseon period,[1] and saw what is often called the "Korean Renaissance," a cultural golden age which continued under his grandson & successor, King Jeongjo (r. 1776-1800).

He was a younger brother of his predecessor as king, King Gyeongjong, being the second son of King Sukchong and Sukchong's consort Sukbin.[2]

Yeongjo had only two sons. His elder son did in 1728 at the age of ten. After his second son, Sado, was born, the latter was named Crown Prince at the age of one. Twenty-six years later, in the course of some political conflict, Yeongjo killed the Crown Prince; the details of this conflict, and the reasons underlying it, remain unclear.

References

  • Hyeonjeong Kim Han, In Grand Style, San Francisco: Asian Art Museum (2013), 54-57.
  1. Gallery labels, National Museum of Korea.[1]
  2. Evelyn Rawski, Early Modern China and Northeast Asia: Cross-Border Perspectives, Cambridge University Press (2015), 167.
Preceded by:
King Gyeongjong
King of Joseon
1724-1776
Succeeded by:
King Jeongjo