Cheomhae of Silla (r. 247-261, d. 261), often known by his title Jobun Isageum, was the twelfth ruler of the Korean kingdom of Silla. He was a Seok, and the younger brother of the previous king, Jobun. Hangul (Korean: íê¸, hangeul) is the native alphabet of the Korean language, as opposed to the non-alphabetic hanja system borrowed from China. ... It has been suggested that Sino-Korean be merged into this article or section. ... The Revised Romanization of Korean (Korean: êµì´ì ë¡ë§ì í기ë²; åèªì ë¡ë§å è¡¨è¨æ³) is the official Korean language romanization system in South Korea. ... McCune-Reischauer romanization is one of the two most widely used Korean language romanization systems, along with the Revised Romanization of Korean, which replaced (a modified) McCune-Reischauer as the official romanization system in South Korea in 2000. ... Events Births Deaths Categories: 247 ... Events Births Deaths Mussius Aemilianus, Roman Emperor Categories: 261 ... Silla (also denoted as Shilla) was one of the three kingdoms of ancient Korea. ... Seok is a Korean family name, held by about 56,500 South Koreans and many others in North Korea and around the world. ...
The Samguk Sagi also reports that the Cheomhae forged a truce with Goguryeo, and that his reign saw repeated clashes with Baekje. Cheomhae's kinsman, the general Uro, was slain by the people of Wa in the year 250. We dont have an article called Samguk sagi Start this article Search for Samguk sagi in. ... Goguryeo (traditional dates 37 BCE â 668) was an empire in Manchuria and northern Korea. ... Baekje was a kingdom that existed in southwestern Korea from 18 BCE to 660 CE. Together with Goguryeo and Silla, Baekje is known as one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea. ... Ideogram for Wa, formed by the radical for person (on the left), and the phonetic element Wa on the right (itself represented by a rice plant in the upper part and a woman in the lower part). ... Events Diophantus writes Arithmetica the first systematic treatise on algebra. ...