Queen Daemok 대목왕후 | |||||||||
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Princess of Goryeo | |||||||||
Predecessor | Princess Heungbang | ||||||||
Successor | Queen Munhye | ||||||||
Monarch | Wang Geon, King Taejo | ||||||||
Queen consort of Goryeo | |||||||||
Tenure | ?–? | ||||||||
Predecessor | Queen Munseong | ||||||||
Successor | Queen Heonsuk | ||||||||
Born | 925 Hwangju County, North Hwanghae Province, | ||||||||
Died | Kaeseong, Kaesong Industrial Region | ||||||||
Spouse | Gwangjong of Goryeo | ||||||||
Issue | Gyeongjong of Goryeo[1] Prince Hyohwa Lady Cheonchu Lady Bohwa Queen Mundeok | ||||||||
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House |
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Father | Taejo of Goryeo | ||||||||
Mother | Queen Sinjeong of the Hwangju Hwangbo clan |
Queen Daemok of the Hwangju Hwangbo clan (Korean: 대목왕후 황보씨; Hanja: 大穆王后 皇甫氏; 925–?), also known as Queen Taemok (Korean: 태목왕후; Hanja: 太穆王后), was a Goryeo princess as the only daughter of King Taejo and Queen Sinjeong,[citation needed] also the younger sister of King Daejong[3] who became a queen consort through her marriage with her half older brother, King Gwangjong.[citation needed] She was also the mother of most his children and the first Goryeo queen to use her maternal surname, Hwangbo.[citation needed]
She was born in 925, while her marriage is believed to have taken place between 937 and 943. In 956, when Gwangjong proclaimed the law of slaves' emancipation (노비안검법; 奴婢按檢法), she strongly opposed it and begged him earnestly, but Gwangjong ignored and rejected her pleas.[4] Daemok's opposition to the law stemmed from the Hwangbo clan, whose interests she was trying to protect; however, in Gwangjong's eyes, her maternal family was only one of the noble families to be removed.
Her death is presumed to have occurred after 975 but before 1002, when King Mokjong (her only grandson) gave her a posthumous name. She was enshrined in Heolleung tomb along with her husband.[citation needed]