Queen Seondeok of Silla

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Queen Seondeok of Silla
Hangul 선덕여왕
Hanja 善德女王
Revised Romanization Seondeok Yeowang
McCune-Reischauer Sŏndŏk Yŏwang


Seondeok (Sŏndŏk) reigned as Queen of Silla, one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea, from 632 to 647. She was Silla's twenty-seventh ruler, and its first reigning queen.

Korea unified vertical.svgHistory of Korea

Jeulmun Period
Mumun Period
Gojoseon, Jin
Proto-Three Kingdoms:
 Buyeo, Okjeo, Dongye
 Samhan
  Ma, Byeon, Jin
Three Kingdoms:
 Goguryeo
  Sui wars
 Baekje
 Silla, Gaya
North-South States:
 Unified Silla
 Balhae
 Later Three Kingdoms
Goryeo
 Khitan wars
 Mongol invasions
Joseon
 Japanese invasions
 Manchu invasions
Korean Empire
Japanese occupation
 Provisional Gov't
Division of Korea
 Korean War
 North Korea
 South Korea

List of monarchs

Selection as Heir to the throne

Before Seondeok became queen she was known as Princess Chongmin, and was the eldest of King Jinpyeong's three daughters. Because he had no sons, Jinpyeong had selected Seondeok as his heir. The act was not unusual within Silla, as women of the period had already had a certain degree of influence as advisors, dowager queens, and regents. Throughout the kingdom, women were heads of families since matrilineal lines of descent existed alongside patrilineal ones. The Confucian model, which placed women in a subordinate position within the family, was not to have a major impact in Korea until centuries later, during the the Joseon period. During the Silla kingdom, women's status remained relatively high. But they were expected to do their duties and not try to do activities that were considered to be unwomanly.

Seondeok's family

The son of her sister Princess Ch'on-myong (Deokmun) became a king in his own right while Seondeok's sister, Princess Seon-hwa (Sŏnwha) eventually married the King of Baekje and became mother of Uija.


Her old name before the throne is Princess Chongmin. She has 2 younger sister.First is Queen Jindeok, or Princess Deokmun. Another sister was Princess Seon-Hwa or the queen of Baekje(Mu of Baekje wife and mother of Uija) Sondok's


One of Seondeok's sisters, became Queen Seonhwa of Baekje when she married Baekje's King Mu, and gave birth to a son who became Baekje's final reigning monarch, Uija of Baekje.

Seondeok's other sister married Kim Yongchun(김용춘, 金龍春), the son of King Jinju of Silla. Because Jinji was overthrown, his son Kim Yongchun was ineligible to be king. However, as Kim Yongchun was of seonggol or sacred blood rank, his children could stillb e eligible to reign if he married a princess.

unable to succeed to the throne. Kim Chunchu (김춘추 金春秋), or King Taejong Muyeol (태종 무열왕 太宗 武烈王), was born in 602, with the "sacred blood" and the rank of seonggol. His father was Kim Youngchun (金龍春), son of King Jinji (Jingee; 진지왕; 真智王; Geomryun Kim), the twenty-fifty monarch of Silla, one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea. King Jinji was However, he still was one of the few seonggols. He married a princess who was a daughter of King Jinpyeong of Silla (r. 579-632).

Reign

In 634, Sondok became the sole ruler of Silla, and ruled until 647. She was the first of three female rulers of the kingdom, and was immediately succeeded by her cousin Jindeok (Chindŏk), who ruled until 654.

Sondok's reign was a violent one; rebellions and fighting in the neighboring kingdom of Baekje filled her days. Yet, in her fourteen years as queen of Korea, her wit was to her advantage. She kept the kingdom together and extended its ties to China, sending scholars there to learn. Like Tang's Empress Wu Zetian, she was drawn to Buddhism and presided over the completion of Buddhist temples.

She built the "Tower of the Moon and Stars," or Cheomseongdae, considered the first observatory in the Far East. The tower still stands in the old Silla capital of Gyeongju, South Korea.

Legends

It is believed that Seondok's selection as her father's successor were attributed to displays of perceptive intelligence in childhood. One such story entails that her father received a box of peony seeds from the emperor of China accompanied by a painting of what the flowers looked like. Looking at the picture, unmarried Seondeok remarked that while the flower was pretty it was too bad that it did not smell. "If it did, there would be butterflies and bees around the flower in the painting." Her observation about the peonies' lack of smell proved correct, one illustration among many of her intelligence, and thus ability to rule.

There are two other accounts of Seondok's unusual ability to perceive events before their occurrence. In one account, it is said that Seondok once heard a hoard of white frogs croaking by the Jade Gate pond in the winter. Seondok interpreted this to indicate an impending attack from the Kingdom of Paekche (the croaking frogs were seen as angry soldiers) to the northwest (derived white symbolizing the west in astronomy) of Silla at the Woman's Valley (interpreted from the Jade Gate, a term related to women). When she sent her generals to the Woman's Valley, they were able to successfully capture two thousand Paekche soldiers. The second account involved the prediction of the exact day, almost to the minute, of her own death at 37 years of age.

Material from Korean History Project to edit: The outcome of any battle for ruling power in an authoritarian government produces but one winner - everyone else loses. Perhaps the most significant among the many social and political changes that occurred in Korea during the seventh century occurred with the growth of the king's authority in Silla. The increased dominance of the Silla throne came at the expense of the king's key rivals for power, the aristocratic families. Throughout Silla's early history, the throne had been occupied by rulers chosen from the Kim clan, a "hallowed-bone" lineage considered the highest social rank in the kingdom and from which all kings were chosen. That particular lineage ended however, with the passing of King Chinp'yong, who died without leaving a male heir. He chose his daughter to rule as Sondok Yowang, Queen Sondok, an act that marked a major departure from the practice of China's male-dominated hierarchy. Since males had dominated Korean monarchies for centuries, the selection of a woman to rule the kingdom would seem quite out of place, but women held a relatively high status in Silla and already had a certain degree of political influence as advisers, queen dowagers, and regents.

Queen Sondok displayed an unusually quick mind early in life and her intelligence greatly enhanced her ability to rule. The young woman took the throne in 632 as Silla's twenty-seventh monarch, the first of only three women to rule the Kingdom of Silla. Although her fifteen year reign was marked by violent, almost continuous rebellions and fighting with the neighboring kingdoms of Koguryo and Paekche, she used her intelligence and wit to advantage and kept the kingdom together. She quickly established good relations with Tang China and introduced many Chinese customs in her court, including new fashions and dress styles, cultural innovations currently popular in China, and improvements in technology. Queen Sondok had a passionate interest in astronomy and presided over the construction of the Ch'omsongdae, the "Tower of the Moon and Stars." Built in the capital city of Kyongju in 634, it is considered the first astronomical observatory in East Asia and one of the oldest structures left from the Silla period.

Drawn to Buddhism at an early age, Queen Sondok not only patroned Confucianism and shamanism, she astutely supported the state religion of Buddhism. She sent students and scholars to Chinese universities to study the religion, which not only helped extend Silla's ties with Tang China, but led to a resurgence of Buddhism in Silla. Monks returning to Silla from China encouraged the study of Buddhism at home. Queen Sondok supported their efforts by building new schools and ordering the completion of the Buddhist temples at Punhwangsa and Yongmyosa. The famous nine-tiered pagoda of Hwanguyongsa was built in her reign. She also personally sponsored and supported Hwarang-do, the "way of flowering youth," and sent many of the Hwarang warriors on expeditions to China to learn Chinese war tactics. Had it not been for the remarkable achievements of these young men, Tang China might have succeeded in conquering Silla in later years.

Protected from external threats, Koguryo began to suffer the chronic bane of all Asian monarchies, the internal threat from friction within the ruling class. As the frontier wall neared completion, an internal split developed within the Koguryo aristocracy that prompted a coup d'état in 642. Yon Kaesomun, a domineering military officer in charge of constructing fortifications along the Liao River, emerged victorious in the bloody grab for power that resulted in the wholesale slaughter of all opposition, including King Yongnyu. Assuming the position of a military dictator, Yon Kaesomun soon dominated the Koguryo government. His absolute political control of the kingdom and his aggressive foreign relations policies had the immediate effect of setting Koguryo on a collision course with both Tang China and Silla.

The predominant history of relations among Korea's Three Kingdoms and China reflects a state of almost constant conflict and warfare. While Koguryo was immersed in bloody skirmishes with Tang China, King Uija of Paekche took the opportunity to mount an offensive of his own. Early in 642, Paekche warriors captured some forty major strongholds in the continually contested fortified region along the Silla-Paekche frontier, including the Taeya Fortress near modern Hapch'on. They mounted such strong pressure against Silla that Queen Sondok abandoned the area and pulled Silla's defensive line further east across the Naktong River.

The mounting pressure from Paekche infuriated Kim Ch'un-ch'u, a Superior Minister of the Silla government. Faced with few alternatives, Kim Ch'un-ch'u readied a special diplomatic mission to travel to Pyongyang to request troops from Silla's northern enemy, Koguryo. Before he left, Kim spoke with his close friend, Kim Yu-sin. After the two men swore a blood-brother oath to each other, Kim Yu-sin said, "If you go, but do not return, then the hoofs of my horse will surely trot on the courts of Koguryo and Paekche." Kim Ch'un-ch'u let his friend know that if he did not return within sixty days they would never see each other again.

Kim Ch'un-ch'u was a handsome man with the agreeable smile and manner of a seasoned diplomat. It gave him little advantage however, in his first and only meeting with Koguryo's ruler, Yon Kaesomun. After listening to Kim make his case for Koguryo assistance against Paekche, Yon Kaesomun boldly demanded that Silla give up its dominion over the Han River basin as the price to be paid for his help. Kim had no authority to even consider such a request and the meeting ended with Yon Kaesomun rejecting Silla's request out of hand. Kim Ch'un-ch'u was then jailed for later execution.

Sixty days passed and Kim Ch'un-ch'u had still not returned to Kyongju. True to his word, Kim Yu-sin chose and trained an expeditionary force of 3,000 Silla warriors, ready and eager to march on Pyongyang. Before Queen Sondok could decide on a date for Kim Yu-sin to leave, Yon Kaesomun learned through a spy just who it was he had in his jail and what Silla was planning to do about it and released Kim Ch'un-ch'u from prison. Not long after his release, Kim Ch'un-ch'u traveled to the Tang court in Changan to seek Chinese military assistance. Emperor Tai Zong responded favorably to the request for a variety of reasons, not the least of which was Koguryo's newly finished defensive wall along the Liao River and its blockade of the overland routes traveled by tribute missions from Paekche and Silla. The resulting Tang-Silla alliance meant that Queen Sondok now had an ally at Paekche's back.

In an effort to help mediate a negotiated end to the continuing disputes among Koguryo, Silla, and Paekche, the Tang court sent its envoys to Pyongyang as part of their regular tributary exchange of relations with Koguryo. Yon Kaesomun defiantly rejected the Tang envoys' assistance. His aggressive temperament not only fanned a rising anger in China, it opened the possibility of a second front against Koguryo. That possibility became reality in 645, when Emperor Tai Zong dispatched a massive army in a large-scale invasion that swept across the Liao River into Koguryo. Five hundred ships sailed from the port of Donglai on the Shandong Peninsula carrying a nearly equal-sized force. Chinese troops eventually overran numerous towns in Koguryo and laid siege to the mighty Liaodong Fortress, which they promptly reduced to rubble along with a number of other fortresses in the area.

The An-shih Fortress, a minor link in Koguryo's line of defensive strongholds stood defiantly in the hills overlooking the Yinma River near the modern city of Jiutai, Manchuria. Under the inspired command of Yang Man-ch'un, An-shih held firm despite repeated attempts to breach the fortress walls. For over sixty days, the stubborn defenders at An-shih withstood a fierce siege by the Tang army, fighting off as many as six or seven assaults by the entire Chinese force in a single day. As fall turned to winter and with icy winds sweeping out of northern Manchuria, the Chinese finally withdrew from the battlefield taking thousands of prisoners with them back to China proper. The battle for An-shih represented a massive defeat for Emperor Tai Zong.

Koguryo's victories over the invading armies of the Sui and Tang dynasties hold a special place in Korea's history because they highlight the peninsula's resistance to foreign aggression. Had the Tang army defeated Koguryo, it would have been but a small part of China's grand imperial design to dominate all of East Asia. Had Korea been less mountainous it might have suffered Manchuria's fate and been absorbed into the expanding Chinese empire. Such a conquest would have opened the floodgates onto the peninsula and led to Chinese subjugation of both Paekche and Silla. That never happened. Instead, the Liao River valley frontier defense line held firm and Koguryo held on to its independence.

Ever the devoted military man, Kim Yu-sin was promoted to general and made commander of the Silla army in 645. After winning a major battle with Paekche and while on his way home, General Kim received information that another large Paekche army was ready to attack. Without even visiting his wife and children, he mounted his horse, turned his army around and marched against the Paekche army and sent it running. Returning to the palace in Kyongju, he reported his successes to Queen Sondok, but before he had time to go home, he received an urgent message that Paekche troops were crossing the Silla frontier. Once again, Kim Yu-sin did not go home, but spent his time training his troops, improving their weapons and marching out to meet the enemy. When General Kim's army reached the frontier, the Paekche force halted its advance and withdrew. Queen Sondok rejoiced at the news and granted Kim Yu-sin a title and a large reward .

Like her father, Queen Sondok died without leaving an heir. She was immediately succeeded on the Silla throne in 647, by her cousin who ruled as Queen Chindok. Silla's new queen carried on the alliance with China, emphasizing the organization, literary culture and dress of the Tang Dynasty. She even adopted the use of a Chinese calendar. Silla's close ties with China did not sit well with everyone in the kingdom and Queen Chindok dealt with a number of local rebellions against her pro-Chinese policy. It is arguable that Silla's relationship with China actually provided the growing kingdom with enough breathing room to strengthen itself in the face of its enemies. Still, without regard to the sophistication of the court or the strength of its military, Silla remained a land of small villages where farmers went into the fields every day to tend their crops. Silla's economic foundation rested upon agriculture, just as it would be for all Korea well into the twentieth century.

Queen Chindok reigned less than seven years, passing in 654 without an heir to the throne. There would be no smooth transition this time. A long-standing battle between the aristocracy and royalty over the matter of ruling power erupted within Silla's Council of Nobles. Silla's famed general Kim Yu-sin brought his own power to bear in helping to suppress a pair of open rebellions in the court. The uprising in Silla's Council of Nobles finally ended with the selection of the noted diplomatic envoy (and Kim Yu-sin's blood-brother and closest friend) Kim Ch'un-ch'u as Silla's next ruler, King Muyol.

For nearly seven hundred years, Silla tradition required that both the king's mother and his queen come from the former royal house of Pak. Kim Ch'un-ch'u's mother, although the daughter of a former king, descended from the royal house of Kim. Furthermore, Kim Ch'un-ch'u already had a wife and children before he took the throne. General Kim Yu-sin knew this, yet he also knew that a family tie to the crown would greatly improve his own status.

The general arranged a private liaison between his younger sister Munhi and Kim Ch'un-ch'u, the soon to be king and quickly exploited the situation to force a marriage, thereby making his sister the new queen of Silla . To cement his tie to the throne, after Kim Yu-sin's wife died he married Kim Ch'un-ch'u's sister, tying the two families even closer. From then on, General Kim's Kaya royal lineage was called the "new house of Kim." Kim Ch'un-ch'u's rise to power changed Silla's age-old tradition of selecting a successor to the throne so that only one royal lineage would be the source of ruling power in the country.

Tang China's failed military campaign against Koguryo in 645 did not diminish its interest in the Korean kingdom, and the Chinese launched three more unsuccessful assaults against Koguryo in 647, 648, and 655. China's military commanders decided to change tactics and flank Koguryo by first conquering Paekche, then attacking the kingdom in a north-south pincer movement. By the time Chinese troops landed at the mouth of the Kum River, General Kim Yu-sin, the Guardian Protector of Silla, had already marched his troops through T'anhyon Pass east of Taejon, driving eastward in a coordinated assault against Paekche

End of Korean History Project Material

See also

External Links

  • [1]Retrieved November 21, 2007.
  • [2]Retrieved November 21, 2007.
  • [3]Retrieved November 21, 2007.
  • [4]Retrieved November 21, 2007.

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