"S2023-205a"의 두 판 사이의 차이

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==Story==
 
==Story==
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*The Commemorative Pavilion of the Jangheung Go Clan was built in 1844 to house commemorative plaques issued to the civil official and civilian army commander Go Gyeong-myeong (1533-1592) and six members of his family. The commemorations were bestowed to Go Gyeong-myeong, his younger brother Go Gyeong-hyeong, and his two sons, Go Jong-hu and Go In-hu in recognition of their patriotic loyalty, to his daughter (the wife of No Sang-ryong) and to the wife (Lady Jeong) of his nephew Go Geo-hu in recognition of their matrimonial devotion, and to his grandson Go Bu-geum in recognition of his filial devotion.
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*During the Joseon period (1392-1910), such commemorative plaques or steles were bestowed by the government to honor a person’s patriotic loyalty, filial devotion, or matrimonial devotion and were meant to be hung on red gates or in pavilions in front of the honored family’s home.
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*Born in Gwangju, Go Gyeong-myeong served as the magistrate of Dongnae (today’s Busan area). When Japan invaded Korea in 1592, he organized a civilian army of over 6,000 troops. Go and his two sons heroically died fighting the invaders.
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*The plaque above the front entrance bears the inscription Samgangmun, meaning “Gate of the Three Virtues,” which refers to the three Confucian virtues of patriotic loyalty, filial devotion, and matrimonial devotion.
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*It is extremely rare for one family to have so many commemorations across several generations and for all of the three virtues.
  
 
==Semantic Data==
 
==Semantic Data==

2024년 3월 7일 (목) 17:03 판


Understanding Traditional Culture and Society through Gwangju’s Cultural Heritage: Confucianism 》Confucian Virtue in Architecture - Commemorative Pavilion of the Jangheung Go Clan

Story

  • The Commemorative Pavilion of the Jangheung Go Clan was built in 1844 to house commemorative plaques issued to the civil official and civilian army commander Go Gyeong-myeong (1533-1592) and six members of his family. The commemorations were bestowed to Go Gyeong-myeong, his younger brother Go Gyeong-hyeong, and his two sons, Go Jong-hu and Go In-hu in recognition of their patriotic loyalty, to his daughter (the wife of No Sang-ryong) and to the wife (Lady Jeong) of his nephew Go Geo-hu in recognition of their matrimonial devotion, and to his grandson Go Bu-geum in recognition of his filial devotion.
  • During the Joseon period (1392-1910), such commemorative plaques or steles were bestowed by the government to honor a person’s patriotic loyalty, filial devotion, or matrimonial devotion and were meant to be hung on red gates or in pavilions in front of the honored family’s home.
  • Born in Gwangju, Go Gyeong-myeong served as the magistrate of Dongnae (today’s Busan area). When Japan invaded Korea in 1592, he organized a civilian army of over 6,000 troops. Go and his two sons heroically died fighting the invaders.
  • The plaque above the front entrance bears the inscription Samgangmun, meaning “Gate of the Three Virtues,” which refers to the three Confucian virtues of patriotic loyalty, filial devotion, and matrimonial devotion.
  • It is extremely rare for one family to have so many commemorations across several generations and for all of the three virtues.

Semantic Data

Node Description

id class groupName partName label hangeul hanja english infoUrl iconUrl
S2023-205a Story Episode Confucian Virtue in Architecture - Commemorative Pavilion of the Jangheung Go Clan Confucian Virtue in Architecture - Commemorative Pavilion of the Jangheung Go Clan http://dh.aks.ac.kr/~gwangju/wiki/index.php/S2023-205a http://dh.aks.ac.kr/~gwangju/icon/episode.png

Notes


Story Network Graph