Later Goguryeo 후고구려 (後高句麗) Hugoguryeo 고려 (高麗) Goryeo 마진 (摩震) Majin 태봉 (泰封) Taebong | |||||||||
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901–918 | |||||||||
Capital | Songak (901–905), Cheorwon (905–918) | ||||||||
Common languages | Old Korean, Classical Chinese (literary) | ||||||||
Religion | Buddhism (state religion), Confucianism, Taoism, Shamanism | ||||||||
Government | Buddhist Theocratic monarchy | ||||||||
King | |||||||||
• 901–918 | Kung Ye | ||||||||
History | |||||||||
• Establishment | 901 | ||||||||
• Fall | 918 | ||||||||
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Today part of | South Korea North Korea |
Taebong | |
Hangul | 고려 (901–904) 마진 (904–911) 태봉 (911–918) |
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Hanja | 高麗 (901–904) 摩震 (904–911) 泰封 (911–918) |
Revised Romanization | Goryeo (901–904) Majin (904–911) Taebong (911–918) |
McCune–Reischauer | Koryŏ (901–904) Majin (904–911) T'aebong (911–918) |
History of Korea |
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Taebong (Korean: 태봉; Hanja: 泰封; Korean pronunciation: [tʰɛ.boŋ]) was a state established by Kung Ye (Korean: 궁예; Hanja: 弓裔) on the Korean Peninsula in 901 during the Later Three Kingdoms.[1]