| Choe Chiwon | | Birth name | | Hangul: | 최치원 | | Hanja: | 崔致遠 | | Revised Romanization: | Choe Chiwon | | McCune-Reischauer: | Ch'oe Ch'i-wŏn | | Courtesy name | | Hangul: | 해운, 고운 | | Hanja: | 海雲, 孤雲 | | Revised Romanization: | Haeun, Goun | | McCune-Reischauer: | Haeun, Koun | Choe Chiwon (857-?) was a noted Korean Confucian official, philosopher, and poet of the late Unified Silla period (668-935). He studied for many years in Tang China, passed the Tang imperial examination, and rose to high office there before returning to Korea, where he made ultimately futile attempts to reform the governmental apparatus of a declining Silla state. In his final years he turned more towards Buddhism and became a hermit scholar residing in and around Korea's Haeinsa temple. Hangul also refers to a word processing application widely used in Korea. ...
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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. ...
Cha can also refer to a Latin American dance, also called the Cha-cha-cha. ...
Korean Confucianism is the form of Confucianism developed in Korea. ...
Unified Silla is the name often applied to the Korean kingdom of Silla after 668. ...
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The imperial examinations (Chinese: ç§è; Pinyin: kÄjÇ) in dynastic China determined positions in the civil service based on merit and education, which promoted upward mobility among the population for centuries. ...
A replica of an ancient statue of Gautama Buddha, found from Sarnath, near Varanasi. ...
Haeinsa is one of the foremost Buddhist temples in South Korea, most notable because it is the home of the Tripitaka Koreana, the whole of the Buddhist Scriptures carved onto 81,258 wooden printing blocks. ...
Choe Chiwon was also known by the literary names of Hae-un ("Sea Cloud"), or more commonly, Go-un ("Lonely Cloud"). He is recognized today as the progenitor of the Gyeongju Choe clan. Gyeongju is a city (see Subdivisions of South Korea) and prominent tourist destination in eastern South Korea. ...
Choe, more often written Choi in English, is a common Korean family name. ...
A 19th century rendering of the Silla scholar and poet Choe Chiwon (857-?) ImageMetadata File history File links Download high resolution version (522x807, 68 KB) Summary Digital Hanguk-hak (Digital Korean Studies) Licensing File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ...
ImageMetadata File history File links Download high resolution version (522x807, 68 KB) Summary Digital Hanguk-hak (Digital Korean Studies) Licensing File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ...
Early Life and Study in Tang
Choe Chiwon was born in the Saryang district of the Silla capital of Gyeongju in 857. He was of the so-called "head rank six" (yukdupum 六頭品) class, a hereditary class in Silla's stringent bone rank (golpum 骨品) system affixed to those of mixed aristocratic/commoner birth. As a member of the yukdupum Choe was restricted in the level of office he could attain. Towards the end of Silla many in the head rank six ranks began to seek opportunities of advancement beyond the traditional confines of the Silla social-political order. One outlet was to become a Buddhist monk. Another was to take up the study of Confucianism. China's Confucian bureaucracy had been adopted to a limited degree by Silla following its unification of the peninsula in 668. Confucianism was well suited to the administration of territory and the butressing of central authority (that is, royal absolutism). The adoption of Confucian administrative norms and Silla's closer ties with Tang China demanded a highly educated corps of scholar-officials. To meet this need the Silla monarchy turned to the frustrated talents of the head rank six class. Royal support of the head rank six also gave the monarch more leverage against an increasingly hostile aristocracy. Gyeongju is a city (see Subdivisions of South Korea) and prominent tourist destination in eastern South Korea. ...
Events Viking raid of Dorestad. ...
The bone rank system was the system of aristocratic rank used in the ancient Korean kingdom of Silla. ...
Events Childeric II succeeds Clotaire III as Frankish king Constantine IV becomes Byzantine Emperor, succeeding Constans II Theodore of Tarsus made archbishop of Canterbury. ...
In the early years following unification head rank six students matriculated at Silla's own "National Confucian Academy" (gukhak 國學), established in the late 7th century. By the 9th century, however, ambitious Silla students aspired to seek their education at the very source, in the Tang capital of Chang'an (present day Xi'an 西安). It was in the course of the 9th century that the Choe clan of Gyeongju nurtured close ties with the Silla monarchy, and as a result many of the Choe clan were sent to matriculate in China with the ultimate goal of passing the Chinese civil service exam and returning to serve the Silla court. Changan â¶(?) (Simplified Chinese: é¿å®; Traditional Chinese: é·å®; pinyin: ; Wade-Giles: Chang-an) is the ancient capital of more than ten dynasties in China. ...
Nickname Changan Location Location of Xian Government City Shaanxi Mayor Sun Qingyun Geographical characteristics Area - Total - Land - Water 9,983 km² 9,983 km² 0. ...
According to the 12th century Korean history the Samguk Sagi (History of the Three Kingdoms, 三國史記), when Choe was twelve years of age, in 869, his father sent him to study in Tang, seeing him off with the admonition that if he did not pass the Chinese imperial examination within ten years he would cease to be his son. Within the decade Choe did indeed pass the highest of China's civil service exams, the coveted jinshi (進士) degree, and was duly appointed to a prefectural office in the south. Choe went on to serve in China for nearly a decade, even becoming intimate with Emperor Xizong of Tang China (reigned 873-888). Choe also won merits for his service under the Tang general Gao Ping in his struggle against the Huang Zhao rebellion, which nearly toppled the dynasty and in fact ushered in Tang's final harried years. With the rebellion put down and peace at least temporarily restored Choe's thoughts turned towards home. One surviving poem, written earlier while Choe was heading to his first official post in China ("ten years of dust" being his ten years spent in preparing for the exam), gave vent to his emotions regarding the native land and family he had not seen in a decade: We dont have an article called Samguk sagi Start this article Search for Samguk sagi in. ...
The imperial examinations (Chinese: ç§è; Pinyin: kÄjÇ) in dynastic China determined positions in the civil service based on merit and education, which promoted upward mobility among the population for centuries. ...
Emperor Tang Xizong (åå宿å 862-888), born Li Xuan, was the 18th emperor of the Tang dynasty of China. ...
海內誰憐海外人 問津何處是通津 本求食祿非求利 只爲榮親不爲身 Who is there within China to sympathize with him without? I ask for the ferry that will take me across the river, Originally I sought only food and salary, not the material perks of office, Only my parents’ glory, not my own needs. 客路離愁江上雨 故園歸夢日邊春 濟川幸遇恩波廣 願濯凡纓十載塵 The traveler's road, rain falling upon the river; My former home, dreaming of return, springtime beneath the sun. Crossing the river I meet with fortune the broad waves. I wash ten years of dust from my humble cap strings. The Samguk Sagi again tells us that Choe - the consummate Confucian - was thinking of his ageing parents when he requested permission from the Tang emperor to return to Silla. This he was duly granted and he returned home in 885. He was now 28. We dont have an article called Samguk sagi Start this article Search for Samguk sagi in. ...
Attempts at Reform Back in Silla Choe was soon appointed to as an instructor and reader at Silla's Confucian Hallim Academy. He was shuffled through various positions, including Minister of War and chief of a variety of regional prefectures. Though in 893 he was appointed chief envoy of a diplomatic mission to Tang China, famine and subsequent upheavals in Korea prevented his journey. Tang fell soon afterward and Choe was never to see China again. Events Simeon I succeeds Vladimir as king of Bulgaria. ...
As member of the yukdupum class, Choe had returned to Silla with youthful hopes of reform. Choe was not the first of the yukdupum Confucian literati to attempt to foster reform on the Silla state, however his case is one of the most prominent to come down to us in recorded Korean history. In 894 Choe submitted to Silla's Queen Jinseong (reigned 887-897) his "Ten Urgent Points of Reform" for the Silla state - or simu sipyeojo (시무십여조 時務十餘條). As with earlier attempts by Choe's predecessors, these were ultimately to fall upon deaf ears. By the time of Choe's return Silla was in an advanced state of collapse. The central monarchy had been greatly weakened by internecine struggle, with power devolving first into the hands of the bone rank aristocracy and then - more ominously for Silla's surivial - into the hands of regional warlords who controlled the countryside outside the capital region, and in some cases commanded their own private armies. Births Deaths Events Northumbrians and East Angles swear allegiance to Alfred the Great. ...
Retirment and Later Life Little records remain of Choe's middle and late years. Around the year 900 Choe retired from public life and began a period of wandering through numerous Korean locales. As the Samguk Sagi relates, "Living in retirement, [Choe] took up the free life of a mountain sage, building pavilions along rivers and shores, planting pines and bamboo, reading books and writing history, and composing odes to nature. He is known to have dwelled in such places as Namsan in Gyeongju, Bingsan in Gangju, Cheongnyang Temple in Habju, Ssanggye Temple in Jirisan, and a cottage in Habpohyeon." The Haeundae region of modern-day Busan takes its name from one of Choe's pennames (Haeun) as he purportedly was enamored of the location and so built a pavilion there overlooking the beach. A piece of Choe's calligraphy engraved on a rock still survives there. Eventually Choe settled at Haeinsa Temple where his elder brother Hyeonjun 賢俊 served as abbot. His later years are most notable for his lengthy stele inscriptions, hagiographies to Silla's most noted Buddhist priests that have proved a primary source of information on Silla Buddhism. We dont have an article called Samguk sagi Start this article Search for Samguk sagi in. ...
Gyeongju is a city (see Subdivisions of South Korea) and prominent tourist destination in eastern South Korea. ...
Jiri-san is a mountain in the south of South Korea. ...
A deserted Haeundae beach at dawn, February 2005 Haeundae-gu is a gu, or ward, in South Koreas second largest city, Busan. ...
Busan tower by night Haeundae beach at dawn, February 2005 Busan Metropolitan City, also commonly referred to as Pusan, is the largest harbor city in Korea. ...
The date of Choe's death is unknown, though he was still living as late as 924, the date of one of his surviving stele engravings. One fantastic account relates that Choe's straw slippers were discovered at the edge of the forest on Mt. Gaya (Gayasan), the location of Haeinsa, and that Choe had become a Daoist immortal and ascended into the heavens. More grounded historical theories posit that he committed suicide, but this is ultimately conjecture. Events King Athelstan of England succeeds to the throne. ...
Gaya-san is a mountain and national park in South Gyeongsang Province, South Korea. ...
Later Views of Choe Several streams emerged from Choe in the long centuries following his death. On the one hand, as Korea became increasingly Confucianized in the late Goryeo and most especially the Joseon dynasty period, Choe became one of the most lauded members of Korea's pantheon of Confucianists, with pride of place in the nation's Confucian temple. Goryeo's King Hyeongjong (reigned 1009-1031), recognizing Choe's Confucian accomplishments, granted him the posthumous title of Marquis of Bright Culture. On the other hand, as time passed Choe also came to be revered as a poet, due in great part to the relatively large number of his poems that have survived, all written in Chinese. Around Choe also grew up a rich body of folklore, attributing to him fantastic deeds and supernatural powers. In the late 19th century, as Korean intellectuals began to reexamine their intellectual and historical roots in the face of increasing national weakness and foreign encroachment, there arose a rising critique of Korea's historical deference to China. The most articulate voice of such nationalist sentiment was the journalist, historian, and philosopher Sin Chae-ho (1880-1936). Sin condemned Choe Chiwon as one of the most glaring examples of Korean intellectual subservience to China, a pattern of sequacious behavior on the part of Korea's intellectual class (according to Sin) that over the long run weakened Korea's national spirit and made it a slave to "sadae" ("serving the great") thought. The state of Goryeo ruled Korea from the fall of Silla in 935 until the founding of Joseon in 1392. ...
The Joseon Dynasty (1392-1910) (also Choson), sometimes known as the Yi Dynasty, was a dynasty founded by General Yi Seonggye in what is modern day Korea, and lasted for five centuries as one of the worlds longest running monarchies. ...
Choe Chiwon is now claimed by the Gyeongju Choe clan as their founder. The location of his home in Gyeongju is now a small temple hall dedicated to his memory. Choe, more often written Choi in English, is a common Korean family name. ...
Writings The relatively extensive extant writings of Choe stand as witness to his importance in late Silla society while also ensuring him a degree of importance among latter generations that has escaped his contemporaries, many of whom, like him, were gifted poets, learned officials, and diligent in their attempts at reform. Choe's surviving writings may be divided roughly into four main categories: official prose (to include memorials, dispatches, etc. during his service both in Tang China and Silla); private prose (on such topics as tea drinking and natural scenery); poetry; and stele inscriptions. Ancient Egyptian funerary stele Suenos Stone in Forres Scotland A stele (or stela) is a stone or wooden slab, generally taller than it is wide, erected for funerary or commemorative purposes, most usually decorated with the names and titles of the deceased or livingâinscribed, carved in relief (bas...
Shortly following Choe's return to Silla in 885 he compiled his various writings, both official and unofficial (to include some poetry) in a work entitled the Gyeweon Pilgyeong 桂苑筆耕 ("Plowing the Cassia Grove with a Writing Brush"). Choe's surviving stele inscriptions, the so-called Sasan pimyeong 四山碑銘 (or “Four mountain steles”) are as follows (all in present day South Korea): 1.Ssanggyesa Chingam pimyeong [雙磎寺 眞鑒 碑銘 Memorial Stele to Master Chingam of Ssanggye Temple, 887, at Ssanggye Temple, South Gyeongsan province. Events Emperor Uda ascends to the throne of Japan Births Deaths September 18 - Pietro I Candiano, Doge of Venice (killed in battle) Emperor Koko of Japan Categories: 887 ...
2.Taesungpoksa pimyeong 大崇福寺 碑銘 Stele of Taesungbok Temple, 885, Gyeongju (not totally extant). Events Vikings besiege Paris Stephen VI elected pope Oldest known mentioning of Baky Births Emperor Daigo of Japan Deaths Pope Adrian III April 6: Saint Methodius, bishop and Bible translator Categories: 885 ...
3.Seongjusa Ranghye hwasang pimyeong 聖住寺 朗慧 和尙 碑銘 Memorial Stele to Master Ranghye of Seongju Temple, 890, at Seongju Temple, South Chungcheong province. Events The sovereignty of prince Svatopluk I in Bohemia is confirmed. ...
4.Pongamsa Chijeung taesa pimyeong 鳳巖寺 智證大使 碑銘 Memorial Stele to Master Chijeung of Pongam Temple, 924, at Mungyeong, North Gyeongsan province. Events King Athelstan of England succeeds to the throne. ...
Choe's authorship has been conjectured for the Suijeon 殊傳 (Tales of wonder), the earliest and oldest known collection of Korean Buddhist tales and popular fables. The work is no longer extant but thirteen of its original stories have survived in other works. Almost all scholars agree, however, that Choe was not the author. Likewise, in the early 20th century Choe was put forward as the author of the Yuseolgyeonghak daejang 類說經學隊仗, a Confucian pedagogical work. Based upon the nature of the language and expressions employed, scholars are also fairly unanimous in denying this to be a work of Choe.
Further Readings in English Chang, Tok-sun. “Ch’oe Ch’i-wŏn and Legendary Literature.” Korea Journal (August 1977):56-64.[1] Chung, Kei-won. “Biographies of Choi Chi-won and Chung Mong-chu”. Korean Research Bulletin 1 (1944):21-24. Ha, Tae Hung. “The Tomb of the Twin Sisters”. In Folk Tales of Old Korea. Seoul: Yonsei University Press:100-110. [legendary tale concerning Ch’oe during his service in China, translated from the Sui chŏn] Jones, George Heber. “Ch'oe Ch'i-wun: His Life and Times”. Transactions of the Korea Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society 3 (1903):1-17. Ryang, Key S. [Yang Ki-sŏn]. “Ch’oe Ch’i-won’s (b. 857) T’ang Poetry and its Modern Interpretation.” Journal of Korean Studies 5 (1996). Ryang, Key S. [Yang Ki-sŏn]. “Ch’oe Ch’i-won, Silla Sasan pi’myŏng (四山碑銘: Silla’s Four Mount Steles)”. Review Article. Journal of Korean Studies 6 (November 1996).
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