Jilji of Geumgwan Gaya
Appearance
Jilji of Geumgwan Gaya | |
Hangul | 질지왕 or 금질왕 |
---|---|
Hanja | 銍知王 or 金銍王 |
Revised Romanization | Jilji wang or Geumjil wang |
McCune–Reischauer | Chilji wang or Kŭmjil wang |
Jilji of Geumgwan Gaya (died 492) (r. 451–492)[1] was the eighth ruler of Geumgwan Gaya, a Gaya state of ancient Korea. He was the son of King Chwihui and Queen Indeok. He married Queen Bangwon, who was the daughter of the Sagan Geumsang.
A passage in the Samguk Yusa indicates that he built a Buddhist temple for the ancestral queen Heo Hwang-ok on the spot where she and King Suro were married. He called the temple Wanghusa ("the Queen's temple") and provided it with ten gyeol of stipend land. The temple reportedly endured for five hundred years.[2] A gyeol or kyŏl (결 or 結), varied in size from 2.2 acres to 9 acres (8,903–36,422 m2) depending upon the fertility of the land.[3]
See also
Notes
- ^ Ilyeon also provides the alternate dates 435-477.
- ^ Ilyeon (1972), p. 168.
- ^ Palais, James B. (1996), Confucian Statecraft & Korean Institutions: Yu Hyŏngwŏn and the Late Chosŏn Dynasty, Seattle: University of Washington Press, p. 363
References
- Ilyeon (1972). Samguk Yusa, tr. by Ha, Tae-Hung and Mintz, Grafton K. Seoul: Yonsei University Press. ISBN 89-7141-017-5.