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词条 Gungnae
释义

  1. History

  2. UNESCO World Heritage Site

  3. Gallery

  4. References

{{Infobox UNESCO World Heritage Site
| WHS = Guonei City
| image = Corner of Gungnae Fortress (GuoNei Fortress).JPG
| image_upright = 1.2
| caption =
| location = Ji'an, Jilin, China
| part_of = Capital Cities and Tombs of the Ancient Koguryo Kingdom
| criteria = {{UNESCO WHS type|(i)(ii)(iii)(iv)(v)}}(i)(ii)(iii)(iv)(v)
| ID = 1135-002
| coordinates = {{coord|41|8|19.4|N|126|10|34.3|E|display=title, inline|format=dms}}
| year = 2004
| area = {{convert|59.24|ha|acre|abbr=on}}
| embedded = {{Chinese|child=yes
|t=國內城
|s=国内城
|p=Gúonèi Chéng
|w=Kuo-Nei Ch'eng
|hanja=國內城
|hangul=국내성
|rr=Gungnae-seong
|mr=Kungnae-sŏng
}}
| locmapin = China Jilin#China
| map_caption =
}}Gungnae (Korean) or Guonei (Mandarin) City was the second capital of the ancient Korean[1] kingdom of Goguryeo, which was located in Manchuria and the Korean Peninsula.[2] The perimeter of its outer fortress measures 2,686m.[3]

History

Gungnae was chosen to become the capital city by the kingdom's second ruler, King Yuri during the 10th month of the year 3 AD.[4] The city was sacked several times until the rise of the 19th ruler, Gwanggaeto the Great, who greatly expanded Goguryeo's territory and made it a formidable power in northeast Asia.[5] When King Gwanggaeto died in 413, his son, Jangsu of Goguryeo, inherited the throne and moved the capital down to Pyongyang in 427.[6] The city played a central role of the kingdom after the power transfer.[7]

Just before the fall of Goguryeo, Gungnae City fell to the Silla-Tang Chinese alliance when General Yeon Namsaeng, son of Yeon Gaesomun, surrendered the city in 666.[7] Goguryeo fell in 668[8] when the Tang army captured Pyongyang and took King Bojang and Yeon Namgeon into custody.[9]

UNESCO World Heritage Site

Gungnae is part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site Capital Cities and Tombs of the Ancient Koguryo Kingdom, together with nearby Wandu Mountain City and the Wunü Mountain City, in modern northeast China.

Gallery

References

1. ^{{cite AV media | title = Complex of Koguryo Tombs (UNESCO/NHK) | medium = Youtube | publisher = UNESCO | date = 2010 | url = http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/1091/video }}
2. ^The Capital City of Koguryo Viewed from the Satellite (enlarged edition) Northeast Asian History Foundation, Retrieved 2015-06-27
3. ^{{Ko icon}} "Gungnae Fortress", Naver encyclopedia
4. ^King Yuri(1) "KBS World", Retrieved 2015-06-27
5. ^Water Jung, 《Nation building:the geopolitical history of Korea》, University Press of America, 1998. {{ISBN|0761812733}} p.18
6. ^Hyon-hui Yi, Song-su Pak, Naehyeon Yun, 《New history of Korea》, Jimoondang, 2005, p.224 {{ISBN|8988095855}}
7. ^Ho-tae Cheon, 《The Dreams of the Living and Hopes of the Dead:Goguryeo Tomb Murals》, Seoul National University Press, 2007. {{ISBN|8952107292}} p.4, p.10
8. ^Djun Kil Kim, "Ths history of Korea, 2nd edition", The greenwood histories of the modern nations, {{ISBN|1610695828}}, p.43
9. ^Northeast History Foundation, "Journal of Northeast Asian History" Vol.4 1-2. 2007. p.181
{{Jilin topics}}

6 : Goguryeo|Capitals of former nations|Archaeological sites in China|Major National Historical and Cultural Sites in Jilin|Ancient Korean cities|World Heritage Sites in China

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