Samgeun of Baekje
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Samgeun of Baekje | |
Hangul | 삼근왕, 삼걸왕, 임걸왕 |
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Hanja | 三斤王, 三乞王, 壬乞王 |
Revised Romanization | Samgeun-wang, Samgeol-wang, Imgeol-wang |
McCune–Reischauer | Samgŭn-wang, Samgŏl-wang, Imgŏl-wang |
Monarchs of Korea |
Baekje |
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Samgeun of Baekje (465–479) (r. 477–479) was the 23rd king of Baekje, one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea. According to the Samguk Sagi, he was the eldest son of the 22nd king Munju.
Background
[edit]In 475, the northern Korean kingdom of Goguryeo had forced Baekje's capital south from the present-day Seoul region to Ungjin (near present-day Gongju), and the Baekje court had lost much of its power to the aristocracy. Within the aristocracy, clans from the local Mahan confederacy, which Baekje conquered and absorbed earlier, gained strength against the traditional clans descended from the northern kingdom of Buyeo.
In the midst of this instability, the chief general and Minister of Defense, Hae Gu, took control of the military and killed Munju's brother Buyeo Gonji in 477. After this Hae Gu exercised effective rule over the country. That year, he ordered the death of Munju.
Reign
[edit]Samgeun was only thirteen years old when he took power after his father’s death.[1] Since he was not fit to oversee the military, the armies continued to be overseen by General Hae Gu, who maintained actual political control.
In 478, Hae Gu found common cause with rebels led by Yeon Sin, based in Daedu Castle. Samgeun first sent the noble Jin Nam to capture the castle with 2,000 men, but he failed. He then sent Jin Ro, who defeated the rebels with 500 men, whereupon Yeon Sin fled to Goguryeo. With this event, the Jin clan gained great strength in Baekje.
The next year, Samgeun died, succeeded by his uncle Buyeo Gonji's son, Dongseong of Baekje.
Family
[edit]- Father: Munju of Baekje
- Mother: Queen, of the Gwak clan (郭氏)
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ 전, 호태 (2007). 高句麗 (in English and Korean). University of California: 동북아 역사 재단. p. 138. ISBN 978-89-91448-83-4.
- Content in this article was copied from Samguk Sagi Scroll 23 at the Shoki Wiki, which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 (Unported) (CC-BY-SA 3.0) license.