Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Yeonsangun of Joseon

Encyclopedia : Y : YE : YEO : Yeonsangun of Joseon



 

Yeonsan-gun is also the name of a county in North Hwanghae province, North Korea

Yeonsan-gun (1476-1506, r. 1494-1506), born Yi Yung, was the tenth king of Korea's Joseon Dynasty. He was the eldest son of Seongjong by his second wife, Lady Yun. He is remembered for his cruel and licentious behavior. He launched two massive purges of the seonbi elite, setting off a cycle of revenge which lasted for fifty years. He also seized a thousand women from the provinces to serve as palace entertainers, and appropriated the Seonggyungwan hall of study as a personal pleasure ground. Because he was overthrown, Yeonsan-gun did not receive a temple name.

Lady Yun served Yeonsangun's father, Seongjong, as a concubine until the death of Seongjong's first wife. With no royal heir, the king was urged by counsellors to take a second wife to secure the royal succession. Lady Yun was chosen for her beauty, and was formally married in 1476. Several months later, she gave birth to her first son, Yi Yoong, later to become Yeonsangun. The new queen proved to be highly jealous of Seongjong's concubines living inside the palace, even stooping to poisoning one in 1477. In 1479, she physically struck the king one night, leaving scratch marks. Despite efforts to conceal the injury, Seongjong's mother, Queen Insu, discovered the truth and ordered Lady Yun into exile. After several popular attempts to restore Lady Yun to her position at court, government officials arranged for her to be poisoned.

The crown prince grew up and succeeded Seongjong in 1494. He did not know what happened to his biological mother, but many corrupt officials such as Lim Sahong and You Ja Gwang revealed the truth to the king. The king was shocked; he arrested many officials who supported the idea of executing his mother and put all of them to death; this incident in 1498 is called the First Literati Purge (무오사화). In 1504, he killed two of his father's concubines as well as his grandmother, Queen Insu. In the same year he killed many more Confucian scholars who had urged King Seongjong to depose his mother, and ordered the grave of Han Myung-hoi to be opened and the head cut off the corpse — Second Literati Purge (갑자사화). After this massacre, many commoners mocked and insulted the king in posters written in Hangeul. This provoked the anger of Yeonsangun and he banned the use of Hangeul forever. He closed Seonggyungwan, the national university, and ordered people to gather young girls and horses from the whole Korean Peninsula for his personal entertainment. Many people were afraid of his despotic rule and their voices were quelled, in stark contrast to the liberal Seongjong era.

In 1506, a group of minority officials, notably Park Won Jong, Sung Hee-Ahn, You Soonjeong and Hong Kyung Joo, plotted against the despotic ruler. They launched their coup in 1506, deposing the king and replacing him with his half-brother, Jungjong. The king was demoted to prince, and sent into exile. Yeonsangun died in exile that same year.

Portrayal in media

Yeonsangun was portrayed in the series Dae Jang Geum as the worst king that Korea had ever had. The first episode was shown with government officials in the reign of King Seongjong poisoning his mother, presumably Lady Yun (the deposed Queen Yun), while he was the first born but not yet the Crown Prince. After discovering the incident during his reign, he ordered a massive investigation leading to the Second Literati Purge. He was deposed when a civil rebellion occurred. Crown Prince Jinsung, the future King Jungjong, succeeded him.

More recently, he was the subject of the hit 2005 movie The King and the Clown, which gives a different depiction of Yeonsangun and the story of Lady Yun.

|- style="text-align: center;"

See also

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.


Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: