home search help worldguide ... Postcards Seoul History Neolithic sites discovered around Seoul point to human habitation as long ago as 4000 BC. The first official records relating to Korea are Chinese and date from the 1st century BC. At this time, a renegade general fled from China, and played a part in setting up a kingdom called Goguryeo - or 'Morning Freshness' - near the sight of North Korea's capital, Pyongyang. The kingdom, quickly overpowered by the Chinese, allowed Chinese influence to infuse the rest of the peninsula. Until 668 AD - the Three Kingdoms Period - the peninsula was ruled from three centres. During this period, the region of modern Seoul began to figure in Korean history, though it would be a long time before it would be known by its modern name. The Baekje kingdom established its capital city at Wiryesong, now Songnam, on the outskirts of contemporary Seoul. For some time the area was dominated by another kingdom, the Silla, and Seoul lost its regional pre-eminence. By 918 a soldier from the northern Goguryeo kingdom assumed control of the whole region, founding the Goryeo kingdom, from which Korea takes its name. Even when the Mongols invaded in 1231 the Goryeo kingdom maintained its control, though the decline of the Mongols was matched by that of the Goryeo. In 1392 a Korean general, Yi Songgye, sent to campaign against the Ming Chinese, threw his hand in with the enemy, turned back and overthrew the Korean king. Two years later he moved the capital to Hanyang-gun which became known as Seoul, the native Korean word for 'capital'. By 1404 the population had reached 100,000. Confucianism was preferred over Buddhism, and for almost 500 years Buddhist monks were banned from entering Seoul. | |
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