Line 2:
Line 2:
*''Died: [[1776]]''
*''Died: [[1776]]''
*''Reign: [[1724]]-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]], saw what is often called the "Korean Renaissance," a cultural golden age which continued under his grandson & successor, [[King Jeongjo]] (r. [[1776]]-[[1800]]).
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]]).
+
+
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>
Yeongjo had only two sons. His elder son did in [[1728]] at the age of ten. After his second son, [[Crown Prince Sado|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.
Yeongjo had only two sons. His elder son did in [[1728]] at the age of ten. After his second son, [[Crown Prince Sado|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.
Line 10:
Line 13:
==References==
==References==
−
*Hyeonjeong Kim Han, ''In Grand Style'', San Francisco: Asian Art Museum (2013), 54-57.
+
*Hyeonjeong Kim Han, ''In Grand Style'', San Francisco: Asian Art Museum (2013), 54-57.
+
<references/>
<center>
<center>