Taejong of Joseon
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Taejong (Template:Korean; 16 May 1367 – 10 May 1422),Template:EfnTemplate:Efn personal name Yi Pangwŏn (Template:Korean), was the third monarch of the Joseon dynasty of Korea and the father of Sejong the Great.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He was the fifth son of King Taejo, the founder of the dynasty. Before ascending to the throne, he was known as Grand Prince Jeongan (Template:Korean).
BiographyEdit
Early life and founding of JoseonEdit
Born in 1367 as the fifth son of Yi Sŏnggye and his first wife Lady Han, Yi Pangwŏn qualified as an official in 1382. He studied under Confucian scholars such as Wŏn Ch'ŏnsŏk.<ref name="aks2">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="navercast2">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> During his early years, he assisted his father in gathering the support of the commoners and of many influential figures in the government; Yi Pangwŏn also helped in the founding of Joseon by assassinating powerful officials who remained loyal to Goryeo, most prominently Chŏng Mong-ju.
Strifes of PrincesEdit
After contributing heavily to the overthrowing of the previous dynasty and the establishment of Joseon, he expected to be appointed as successor to the throne. However, his father and Chief State Councillor Chŏng Tojŏn favored Taejo's eighth son and Yi Pangwŏn's youngest half-brother (second son of Queen Sindeok), Yi Pangsŏk. This conflict arose chiefly because Chŏng Tojŏn, as the principal architect of the ideological, institutional and legal foundations of the new dynasty, saw Joseon as a kingdom led by its ministers by virtue of the king's appointment. In contrast, Yi Pang-wŏn sought direct rule through an absolute monarchy. These differences ultimately contributed to an environment of deep political tension.
In 1398, following the sudden death of Queen Sindeok, Yi Pangwŏn led a coup d'état while King Taejo was still in mourning for his second wife. This event led to the deaths of Chŏng Tojŏn and his supporters, as well as the deaths of the late Queen Sindeok's two sons, including the crown prince. The incident became known as the "First Strife of Princes" (Template:Korean). Aghast at the fact that his sons were willing to kill each other for the crown, and psychologically exhausted by the death of his second wife, Taejo abdicated; his eldest surviving son, Yi Panggwa (posthumously King Jeongjong), immediately became the new ruler.
Yi Pang-wŏn quickly emerged as the real force behind the throne and was soon in conflict with his disgruntled elder brother, Yi Panggan, who also yearned for power. In 1400, General Pak Po, who found the rewards for his deeds during the First Strife of Princes lacking, allied with Yi Panggan and rebelled in what came to be known as the "Second Strife of Princes" (Template:Korean). Yi Pangwŏn successfully defeated his brother's forces, then executed Pak Po and exiled Yi Panggan. King Jeongjong, now fearful of his formidable younger brother, named Yi Pangwŏn his successor and abdicated in the same year.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> At long last, Yi Pangwŏn (posthumously King Taejong), assumed the throne of Joseon and became the dynasty's third monarch.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
ReignEdit
Consolidation of royal powerEdit
One of Taejong's first acts as king was to abolish the privilege to maintain private armies which was enjoyed by the aristocracy and the upper echelons of the government. His revoking of the right to keep independent forces effectively severed the upper class' ability to muster large-scale revolts, and drastically increased the number of soldiers employed by the national army.
Taejong's next act was to revise the existing legislation concerning land taxation. With the discovery of previously hidden land, national wealth increased twofold.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
In addition, Taejong created a strong central government. In 1400, before taking the throne, he had played a key role in eradicating the Template:Ill, a branch of the old administration that had monopolized the executive power during the waning years of Goryeo, in favor of the Privy Council; during Taejong's reign, the Privy Council was replaced by the State Council. Taejong also issued a decree according to which all decisions passed by the State Council could only come into effect with the approval of the king. This ended the custom of court ministers making decisions through debate and negotiations among themselves, and thus brought the royal authority to new heights.
Shortly thereafter, Taejong installed a new department known as the Sinmun Office, to hear cases in which aggrieved subjects felt that they had been exploited or treated unjustly by officials or aristocrats.<ref name="aks2" />
Reforms and policiesEdit
Despite being the one responsible for Chŏng Mong-ju's assassination, Taejong posthumously honored him as Chief State Councillor, leading to a great irony — Chŏng Tojŏn, whose policies governed Joseon for five centuries, was vilified throughout the dynasty, while Chŏng Mong-ju was revered in spite of his opposition to its founding.Template:Citation needed
Taejong promoted Confucianism as the state ideology, thus demoting Buddhism, which consequently never recovered the glory and great power it had enjoyed during the Goryeo period. He closed many Buddhist temples; their vast possessions were seized and added to the national treasury.
In foreign policy, he was a straight hardliner — he attacked the Jurchens at the northern border and the Japanese pirates on the southern coast. Taejong is also remembered for being the initiator behind the Ōei Invasion of Tsushima Island in 1419.
He set up the system of hopae, an early form of identification which consisted of tags recording the bearer's name and residence; those tags were used to control the movements of the population.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
In 1403, Taejong ordered 100,000 pieces of metal type and two complete fonts. Predating Gutenberg and Laurens Janszoon by several decades, he accomplished the metal movable type.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
He promoted press, commerce, and education, and also reformed the Sapyeongsunwibu (Template:Korean), Joseon's early military and law enforcement agency, and separated the Uigeumbu as Joseon's law enforcement agency but without military functions.
Later life and deathEdit
In 1418, Taejong abdicated in favor of his third legitimate son, Yi To (posthumously King Sejong, commonly known as Sejong the Great), but continued to rule with an iron fist and decide on important matters.
Along the years, as a means to strengthen royal authority and subdue corruption, he executed or exiled some of the supporters who helped him ascend to the throne; he also executed the four brothers of his wife Queen Wongyeong, as well as Sejong's father-in-law Sim On and his younger brother Sim Chŏng, in order to limit the influence of in-laws and powerful clans.
King Taejong died four years after his abdication, on 10 May 1422, in Sugang Palace. He was buried alongside Queen Wongyeong at Heolleung (Template:Korean), part of the Heonilleung burial ground, in present-day Seocho District, Seoul, South Korea.
LegacyEdit
Taejong remains a controversial figure in Korean history who eliminated many of his rivals (such as Chŏng Mong-ju and Chŏng Tojŏn) and yet ruled effectively to improve the populace's lives, strengthen national defense, and lay down a solid foundation for his successor's reign.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
FamilyEdit
ParentsEdit
- Father: King Taejo of Joseon (; 11 October 1335 – 24 May 1408)
- Grandfather: Yi Chach'un, King Hwanjo of Joseon (1315 – 18 April 1360)
- Grandmother: Queen Uihye of the Yeongheung Ch'oe clan (1304 – ?)
- Mother: Queen Sinui of the Cheongju Han clan (4 September 1337 – 23 September 1391)
- Grandfather: Han Kyŏng, Internal Prince Anch'ŏn (Template:Korean)
- Grandmother: Lady Sin of the Saknyeong Sin clan, Grand Madame of Samhan State (Template:Korean)
Consorts and issueEdit
- Queen Wongyeong of the Yeoheung Min clan (Template:Korean; 11 July 1365 – 10 July 1420)
- Princess Jeongsun (Template:Korean; 1385 – 25 August 1460), first daughter
- Princess Gyeongjeong (Template:Korean; 1387 – 6 June 1455), second daughter
- First son (1389)
- Second son (1390)
- Third son (1392)
- Princess Gyeongan (Template:Korean; 1393 – 22 April 1415), third daughter
- Yi Che, Grand Prince Yangnyeong (Template:Korean; 1394 – 7 September 1462), first (fourth) son
- Yi Po, Grand Prince Hyoryeong (Template:Korean; 11 December 1395 – 11 May 1486), second (fifth) son
- Yi To, Crown Prince Chungnyeong (Template:Korean; 10 April 1397 – 17 February 1450), fourth (seventh) son
- Princess Jeongseon (Template:Korean; 1404 – 25 January 1424), sixth (fifth) daughter
- Yi Chong, Grand Prince Seongnyeong (Template:Korean; 9 July 1405 – 4 February 1418), sixth (eleventh) son
- Yi Ch'ung, Grand Prince (대군 이충; 1407–1453), seventh (twelfth) son
- Royal Noble Consort Myeong of the (old) Andong Kim clan (Template:Korean; 1370–1479)
- Royal Noble Consort Ui of the Andong Kwŏn clan (Template:Korean; 1380–1460)
- Princess Jeonghye (Template:Korean; ? – 6 October 1424), seventh (sixth) daughter
- Royal Noble Consort Hyo of the Cheongpung Kim clan (Template:Korean; 1375 – 26 February 1454)
- Yi Pi, Prince Gyeongnyeong (Template:Korean; 13 December 1395 – 9 September 1458), third (sixth) son
- Royal Noble Consort Sin of the Yeongwol Sin clan (Template:Korean; 1377 – 2 February 1435)
- Princess Jeongshin (Template:Korean; 1394 – 26 September 1452), fourth daughter
- Eighth son (1400–1401)
- Yi In, Prince Hamnyeong (Template:Korean; 26 December 1402 – 30 September 1467), fifth (tenth) son
- Yi Chŏng, Prince Onnyeong (Template:Korean; 1407 – 12 May 1454), eighth (thirteenth) son
- Princess Sukjeong (Template:Korean; 1407–1456), eighth (seventh) daughter
- Princess Jeongjeong (Template:Korean; 1410 – 28 February 1456), ninth (eighth) daughter
- Princess Sukgeun (Template:Korean; 1411 – 1 August 1450), eleventh (tenth) daughter
- Princess Suknyeong (Template:Korean; 1412–?), thirteenth (twelfth) daughter
- Princess Soshin (Template:Korean; 1415 – 16 June 1437), fifteenth (fourteenth) daughter
- Princess Sosuk (Template:Korean; 1417 – 12 November 1456), sixteenth (seventeenth) daughter
- Princess Sukgyeong (Template:Korean; 1420–1494), seventeenth (eighteenth) daughter
- Royal Noble Consort Seon of the Sunheung An clan (Template:Korean; 1380 – 17 June 1468)
- Fifth daughter (1400–1402)
- Yi Chi, Prince Hyeryeong (Template:Korean; 1407 – 25 June 1440), ninth (fourteenth) son
- Princess Gyeongshin (Template:Korean; 1420–?), eighteenth (nineteenth) daughter
- Yi Ch'i, Prince Iknyeong (Template:Korean; 1422 – 10 July 1464), thirteenth (eighteenth) son
- Royal Noble Consort So of the Jangyeon No clan (Template:Korean; 1380 – 23 October 1479)
- Princess Sukhye (Template:Korean; 1410 – 19 July 1464), tenth (ninth) daughter
- Royal Noble Consort Jeong of the Ko clan (Template:Korean; 1375 – 13 July 1426)
- Yi Nong, Prince Geunnyeong (Template:Korean; 1411 – 15 November 1461), tenth (fifteenth) son
- Royal Consort Sug-ui of the Ch'oe clan (Template:Korean; 1391–?)
- Yi T'a, Prince Huiryeong (Template:Korean; 1409 – 7 July 1465), tenth (fifteenth) son
- Twelfth (Eleventh) daughter (1412–1416)
- Royal Consort Sug-ui of the Yi clan (Template:Korean; ?—1433)
- Yi Kan, Prince Hunyeong (Template:Korean; 1419 – 6 October 1450), twelfth (seventeenth) son
- Royal Princess Sukgong of the Cheongdo Kim clan (Template:Korean; 1388–?)
- Royal Princess Uijeong of the Hanyang Cho clan (Template:Korean; 1416–1454)
- Royal Princess Hyesun of the Goseong Yi clan (Template:Korean; ? – 5 March 1438)
- Royal Princess Shinsun of the Seongju Yi clan (Template:Korean; 1390–1433)
- Princess Deoksuk of the Yi clan (Template:Korean; 1390–?)
- Princess Hyeseon of the Hong clan (Template:Korean; 1377–?)
- Princess Sunhye of the Andong Chang clan (Template:Korean; ? – 26 July 1423)
- Princess Seogyeong (Template:Korean; 1370–?)
- Court Lady Kim of the Kim clan (Template:Korean; 1389–?)
- Princess Sukan (숙안옹주; 1414 – 12 May 1464), fourteenth (thirteenth) daughter
- Court Lady, of the Yi clan (Template:Korean; 1395–?)
- Princess Suksun (Template:Korean; 1421 – Template:Circa), nineteenth (twentieth) daughter
- Unknown
- Ninth son (1402–1404)
AncestryEdit
In popular cultureEdit
- Im Hyuk-joo in the 1983 KBS1 TV series Foundation of the Kingdom.
- Lee Jung-gil in the 1983 MBC TV series The King of Chudong Palace.
- Yoo Dong-geun in the 1996–1998 KBS1 TV series Tears of the Dragon.
- Kim Yeong-cheol in the 2008 KBS TV series The Great King, Sejong and the 2016 KBS1 TV series Jang Yeong-sil.
- Baek Yoon-sik in the 2011 SBS TV series Deep Rooted Tree.
- Choi Tae-joon in the 2012–2013 SBS TV series The Great Seer.
- Park Yeong-gyu in the 2012 film I Am the King.
- Ahn Jae-mo in the 2014 KBS1 TV series Jeong Do-jeon.
- Ahn Nae-sang in the 2015 JTBC TV series More Than a Maid.
- Jang Hyuk in the 2015 film Empire of Lust and the 2019 JTBC TV series My Country: The New Age.
- Nam Da-reum and Yoo Ah-in in the 2015–2016 SBS TV series Six Flying Dragons.
- Kam Woo-sung in the 2021 SBS TV series Joseon Exorcist.
- Joo Sang-wook in the 2021–2022 KBS1 TV series The King of Tears, Lee Bang-won.
- Lee Hyun-wook in the 2025 TVING TV series The Queen Who Crowns
See alsoEdit
- List of monarchs of Korea
- Cheonsang Yeolcha Bunyajido
- Chen Yanxiang (Chinese merchant from Java who was hosted by Taejong during his reign)
NotesEdit
ReferencesEdit
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