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Baekje (18 BC, 660 CE), also known as Nam Buyeo, was a state established by the Buyeo people in ancient times in the former Mahan region in the southwestern part of the Korean Peninsula. The ruling class of Baekje belonged to the same Buyeo people in China as the Goguryeo people, while the Samhan people in the southern part of the Korean Peninsula were a different ethnic group. In 660 AD, Baekje was destroyed by the combined forces of Silla and the Tang Dynasty.
It was built in the 1st century BC by the Buyeo Baekje tribe and was destroyed by the Tang and Silla coalition forces in 660. The ruling area is in the southwestern part of the Korean Peninsula. It is bordered by Hannakrang-gun in the north, Goguryeo in the north, and Silla in the east.
The capital was first in the city of consolation, and then the capital was successively moved to Guangzhou, Xiongjin, and Siyucheng.
Since 10 AD, Baekje has ruled over the lower Mahan tribes. According to the myth of the founding of Goguryeo, Baekje was founded by a group of Goguryeo people (Zhaosinu, Boiling Stream, Wonjo) and their people (Buyeo). The Goguryeo people formed the upper class when they arrived in the southern part of the peninsula, while the indigenous Mahan was the lower class of the state.
In the history of the Three Kingdoms, the king of Baekje said five times that he was from Jumong, and the royal family took Buyeo as his surname, and once changed the name of the country to Nambuyeo, and after the southern invasion of Goguryeo King Zhao, Baekje broke with Goguryeo and no longer reconciled.
Baekje was founded in 18 BC on the south bank of the Han River (present-day Namam City, South Korea) by King Wenjo, the third son of Goguryeo founder Jumong. At its peak, Baekje encompassed most of Western Korea (except for North and South Pyongan Provinces). The northernmost was to Pyongyang.
Baekje was a maritime powerhouse that had political and ** dealings with China and Japan by sea. In 660 AD, Baekje was destroyed by the combined forces of the Tang Dynasty and Silla.
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During the Tang Dynasty, there were three countries on the Korean Peninsula, "Goguryeo" and "Silla", and the third was "Baekje".
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A small country in the Pacific Ocean.
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Baekje was a country on the Korean Peninsula in ancient times.
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Baekje is what is now the Korean Peninsula.
That is, now North Korea, South Korea. Baekje was a state founded by the Buyeo people who moved south to the southwestern part of the Korean Peninsula, together with the other two kingdoms of the Korean Peninsula at that time, Goguryeo.
and Silla, forming the Three Kingdoms period of Joseon that lasted for hundreds of years.
Territorial extent. The birthplace of Baekje is on the Han River in present-day South Korea.
Downstream, after the formation of state power in the mid-3rd century, it began to expand, annexing other Mahan tribes, and by the middle of the 4th century, during the period of King Konsogo, he unified the Mahan tribes and laid the basic scope of the Baekje territory, that is, north to Bukhansan Mountain, east to the Xiaobaek Mountains to Jurangwang, west and south to the sea, including present-day Gyeonggi Province in Korea.
Most of it, Jeollanam, Buk, Chungcheongnam-do, and one part of Chungcheongbuk-do.
In the late 4th century, it expanded northward to Sugok Fortress, but was soon captured by Goguryeo and retreated to the Han River valley. After Goguryeo occupied the fortress in 475, the northern border of Baekje shrank dramatically again, and the area of present-day Gyeonggi Province in South Korea was lost. In 551, the lower reaches of the Han River were recaptured, but they were captured by Silla two years later.
After that, Baekje and Silla repeatedly fought, and Baekje continued to advance Wonjae Tongpei in the east, and in 642 occupied Dayeseong, the gateway to western Silla, and encroached on the Gyesangnam-do region in the middle and lower reaches of the present-day Nakdong River, but the north was never able to recover the lower reaches of the Han River.
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In 18 BCE, Jumong's son, King Wenzuo, led a group of Goguryeo people south to the Han River basin to establish the state of Baekje.
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Baekje is a country founded by the Buyeo people, who originally lived in ancient northeastern China, in the southwestern part of the Korean Peninsula.
Baekje was conquered by the Tang and Silla in 660. It ruled in the southwestern part of the Korean Peninsula, bordering Goguryeo and Silla to the east.
Baekje was established in the late Taitung Han Dynasty. In the late Eastern Han Dynasty, Baekje ruled the lower Mahan tribes. Baekje was founded by a part of the Buyeongyeo people in the northeast.
After the Buyeo invaded the southern part of the Korean Peninsula, they formed the upper class, and the Mahan, another ethnic group, which was completely different from the language and culture, was the lower class of the state.
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Baekje (English transliteration: Baekje, 18 BC 660), also known as South Buyeo, was a state established by the Buyeo people in the southwestern part of the Korean Peninsula in the former Mahan region in ancient times. The ruling class of Baekje belonged to the same Buyeo people as the Goguryeo people, but they were different from the lower class of the people, the Samhans.
The Samhan people in the southern part of the Korean Peninsula are a different ethnic group from Buyeo. In the 1st century B.C., it was invaded and occupied by the Buyeo nobles in the south, and was destroyed by the combined forces of Tang and Silla in 660. The ruling area is in the southwestern part of the Korean Peninsula.
Later, it bordered Goguryeo and Silla to the east. The capital city was first in Qimo Comfort City, and then moved the capital to Guangzhou, Xiongjin, and Siyu City. The modern Korean Peninsula countries unilaterally called Baekje, Silla, and Goguryeo the "Three Kingdoms Era".
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