Munjamyeong of Goguryeo

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Munjamyeong of Goguryeo
Hangul: 문자명왕 or 명치호왕
Hanja: 文咨明王 or 明治好王
Revised Romanization: Munjamyeong-wang or Myeongchiho-wang
McCune-Reischauer: Munjamyŏng-wang or Myŏngch'iho-wang
Birth name
Hangul: 나운
Hanja: 羅運
Revised Romanization: Naun
McCune-Reischauer: Naun
Monarchs of Korea
Goguryeo
  1. Dongmyeongseong 37-19 BCE
  2. Yurimyeong 19 BCE-18 CE
  3. Daemusin 18-44
  4. Minjung 44-48
  5. Mobon 48-53
  6. Taejo 53-146
  7. Chadae 146-165
  8. Sindae 165-179
  9. Gogukcheon 179-197
  10. Sansang 197-227
  11. Dongcheon 227-248
  12. Jungcheon 248-270
  13. Seocheon 270-292
  14. Bongsang 292-300
  15. Micheon 300-331
  16. Gogugwon 331-371
  17. Sosurim 371-384
  18. Gogugyang 384-391
  19. Gwanggaeto the Great 391-413
  20. Jangsu 413-490
  21. Munjamyeong 491-519
  22. Anjang 519-531
  23. Anwon 531-545
  24. Yangwon 545-559
  25. Pyeongwon 559-590
  26. Yeongyang 590-618
  27. Yeongnyu 618-642
  28. Bojang 642-668

Emperor Munjamyeong of Goguryeo (? - 419, r. 491-519) was the 21st monarch of Goguryeo, the northernmost of the Three Kingdoms of Korea. He was the grandson of Emperor Jangsu (413-490). Though Munjamyeong's father Gochudaega Joda (고추대가 조다, 古鄒大加 助多) had been named Crown Prince by Emperor Jangsu, Joda died before assuming the throne.

By the time Munjamyeong assumed the throne in 491, Goguryeo had relocated its capital from the area around modern Ji'an along the upper Yalu River to P'yongyang (the modern capital of North Korea). This move came in the context of heightened rivalries with the other two of the Three Kingdoms, the then-allied Silla and Baekje.

Munjamyeong nurtured close relations with the various petty Chinese dynasties that had emerged following the fall of the Han, notably the Wei 魏, Qi 齊, and Liang 梁, accepting feudal titles from them, while continuing a policy of aggressive confrontation with both Baekje and Silla to its south.

The 12th century Korean history the Samguk Sagi (History of the Three Kingdoms) relates that the remnants of the Buyeo state submitted to Goguryeo in 494 after their defeat by the Malgal. By the early 6th century Goguryeo under Munjamyeong was feeling the pressure of Malgal, Silla and Baekje aggression. A tribute mission sent to the Wei in 504 was lacking in certain products, notably the gold previously gotten from Buyeo and jade acquired from a region in the peninsula's south that had now been taken by Baekje (Samguk Sagi, "Annals of Goguryeo", book 19, thirteenth year of Munjamyeong). For this it earned Wei's reproach.

In 498, he constructed the Buddhist temple Geumgangsa.

Throughout the emperor's reign, until his death in 519, tribute continued to be paid to the various Chinese dyansties while border disputes with Baekje and Silla intensified but without any conclusive results. Munjamyeong was succeeded by his eldest son Anjang.

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