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1. The Geonchunmun (Gate) |
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| This is the east gate of the Gyeongbokgung
palace. Its name, literally "promoting spring",
originates in the ancient belief that the east corresponds
with spring. A high stone foundation was constructed with
an arch-shaped gate in the center. The arch is 16.5 Ja
high and 15 Ja wide according to the linear measure used
during the Joseon period.
A tower rests on the foundation. It is divided into
three sections, the central one being the largest with
17 Ja and the right and left ones measuring 8 Ja each
for a total of 33 Ja in width. The pillars are 8 Ja
high. A similar gates were constructed in the west,
called Yeongchumun, and in the north, called Sinmumun.
(1) Substructure and Staircase of Geonchunmun (Gate)
Its structure is as follows: the substructure was constructed
higher than that of a palace wall. The gate is pierced
through by an arch, topped with a tower. When necessary,
sentinels climbed up to the tower. They utilized stone
staircases, one at the right and the other at left.
The staircases incline so steeply that one feels as
if he were climbing a ladder. However, railings are
installed in consideration of safety.
Leaving the staircase, one reaches a side entrance
which is connected with a wall along the edges of the
substructure.
(2) Dragon painting on the Ceiling of Geonchunmun (Gate)
Clouds and dragons are drawn in this painting with
five colors-blue, red, white, yellow, and black. The
Blue Dragon is placed in the east and the Yellow Dragon
in the west. Each has five claws and a magic ball in
the mouth, which symbolize king.
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2.The Geunjeongjeon (Hall) |
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| Geunjeongjeon is the main hall of Gyeongbokgung
palace. Kings conducted state affairs, held official functions,
and received foreign envoys here. High ranking officials,
including military officers, assembled in this court to
pay highest respect to their kings. From 1399-1546, seven
of twelve kings were enthroned here: Jeongjong, Sejong,
Danjong, Sejo, Seongjong, Jungjong, and Myeongjong.
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| This hall was built in 1394, in the third
year of the reign of King Taejo. It was burned down during
the Japanese aggression of 1592 and rebuilt in 1867, the
fourth year of the reign of King Gojong.
The throne is centered toward the back of the hall.
There were ritual objects there, but none remain. The
building is a high-ceilinged, structure with a single
room.
Formerly there were three consecutive gates south of
the entrance, between Geunjeongjeon and the city. Geunjeonmun
can be seen in the center of the south corridor. Heungnyemun
was torn down to make way for the capital. Gwanghwamun
is in the outer wall of the palace, in front of the
capital(now being renovated for the new National Museum
of Korea). An impressive view of the harmony created
between Geunjeongjeon and Bugaksan, the mountain beyond,
can be seen from the second pillar from the east end
of the south corridor.(National Treasure No.223)
(1) The Inside and Ceiling of Geunjeongjeon Hall
The hall is single-storeyed. Standing on the tiled floor,
one can look up at the recessed ceiling. The height of
the ceiling and pillars around the hall is imposing,
as if to symbolize royal authority. A wooden canopy
is located over the throne, The hall once been filled
with ceremonial facilities and instruments designed
to enhance the dignity of the king sitting on the throne.
The throne is the architectural climax of this building.
The latticed ceiling is high up above the floor. It
is decorated with traditional Dancheong coloring. A pair
of dragons in the clouds struggling for a jeweled ball
is carved on the recessed portion in the center of
the ceiling. Dragons symbolized kings
(2) Stone Foundations of Geunjeongjeon Hall
The stone foundations, double-tiered in this case, were
constructed for the purpose of elevating the Geunjeongjeon
hall. The foundations are really broad. The hall was
constructed on a layer of stones placed above the stone
foundations. Its front court is far broader than the
rear court. From the front court, one can command a
broad view of the palace. The stone railings are conspicuously
lower than the hall itself in consideration of drainage.
The location of the Geunjeongjeon hall was a result
of a precise calculation. Thorough calculation was needed
to divide the palace effectively.
There is a stepping path in the center of the southern
side of the stone foundations supporting the Geunjeongjeon
hall. There is a narrow stairway on both sides which
are capped with big stone covers.
The stone cover is in the shape of a Haetae lying long
and flat on its belly. Inscribed on the stepping path
is a phoenix with a magic ball in its beak playing in
the cloud. The imagiary bird symbolizes the high status
of royalty. An arabesque design is carved on the whole
surface of the stairway flanking the stepping path.
These inscriptions imply that the people lived with
royalty above while animals capable of expelling evils
like Haetae protected them.
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3.The Geunjeongmun (Gate) |
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| Passing by the Gwanghwamun gate, a visitor
arrived at the Heungnyemun gate in the center. He was then
led to the Yeongjegyo bridge. All these structures were
lost when the government-general building was constructed.
Remaining now are the Geunjeongjeon hall block and the
Geunjeongmun gate.
The two-storey gate usually was closed. Civil and military
officials entered the Geunjeongjeon court through the
Ilhwamun gate in the east and the Wolhwamun gate in
the west.
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4. The Sajeongjeon (Hall) |
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| In Sajeongjeon hall, kings carried out daily
kingdom affairs. It stands on a three-tiered granite base,
5 kan wide and 3 kan deep. The columns have multi-clustered
brackets, the eaves are two-tiered, and the roofs are
hipped-and-gabled.
Manchunjeon hall was located to the east of Sajeongjeon
hall, and Cheonchujeon hall is to the west. Sajeongmun
gate is to the south, Jonghyeonmun gate in the west
passageway. Manchunjeon hall was not rebuilt after its
destruction.
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5. Manchunjeon (Hall) |
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| Manchunjeon Hall, which is of the same size
and shape as Cheonchujeon Hall, stands to the west of
Sajeongjeon Hall. It was destoroyed during the Korean
War(1950-1953) and its plinths alone remained on the site.
The Hall was rebuilt in 1988. Compared with Sajeongjeon
Hall, the architectural method and style of Manchunjeon
Hall are simple and restrained. |
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6. The Cheonchujeon (Hall) |
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| This hall is located west of the Sajeongjeon
hall. The hall was constructed to be symmetrical with
the Manchunjeon hall in the east and with the Sajeongjeon
hall in the center. It was reconstructed together with
the Sajeongjeon hall in the fourth year of King Gojong(1867).
The Cheonchujeon before the Japanese invasion in the 16th
century served as a cradle of Korean culture. King Sejong
utilized this building mainly when he discussed various
cultural projects with scholars of the Jiphyeonjeon. |
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The Cheonchujeon hall is a small building whose front
side measures not more than 24 kan. Its pillars are
9 Ja high, compared with the pillars of the Sajeongjeon
hall which are 15 Ja high. This hall followed a simple
style in consideration of the fact that the bracket
structures of the latter consist of seven inner and
five outer structures.
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7. The Sujeongjeon |
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King Sejong constructed the Borugak and the Heumjeonggak
south of the Gyeonghoeru and west of the Cheonchujeon.
He also built the Jiphyeonjeon. On the site where these
buildings were located, King Gojong constructed the
Sujeongjeon hall in 1867 after they were burnt during
the Japanese invasion in the 16th century. This is the largest among
Gyeongbokgung palace buildings in the private quarters
that are extant. It is 40 square kan. Its eastern corridor
is 13 kan long and its western corridor is 9 kan long.
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It was once used as the Office of Gungukgimucheo during
the Daehan Empire period. After 1895, it was used as
the cabinet office. In the neighborhood, there were
many small buildings to accommodate guests, messengers,
censors, a dispensary, medical officers, etc. But they
were all demolished, and the only Sajeongjeon remains.
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8.The Gyeonghoeru |
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King Taejo, founder of the Joseon kingdom and builder
of Gyeongbokgung palace, had this pavilion erected in
this man-made lake in the western section of the palace.
He named it Gyeonghoeru, or pavilion of Joyous Meeting.
It is now the largest elevated pavilion in Korea. King
Taejong(r.1400-1418)commissioned Park Ja-cheong to supervise
construction on the pavilion and the lake. Minister
Park built a square island supported by long stones
and construct the larger pavilion. Forty-eight stone
pillars, sculptured with dragons, supported the second
floor.
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Two more islets were made in it. During the Japanese
aggression in 1592, the original Gyeonghoeru was burned
down, leaving only the stone supports. When Gyoengbokgung
was built in 1867, the fourth year of the reign of King
Gojong, the pavilion was reconstructed. The pillars
were replaced by new ones that lack the splendor of
the former. But animals were carved on the stone bridges
and railings. There are such stone structures as the
Lotus Pond, Lotus Platform, and dragon-shaped conduits
along the lake. This pavilion was used for royal banquets
during the Joseon period and is used today for special
functions.(National Treasure No.224)
(1) Fire-Eaters in Gyeonghoeru
It was believed in the
old days that there was a beast which engulfed fire.
It resembled an elephant but possessed many features
that caused it to be reversed as a deity.
The most dreadful thing for a wooden building is fire.
The revered beast was called a Bulgsari. The animal
was erected on the stone railings to defend the Gyeonghoeru
from any approaching flames. It was perhaps due to the
protection of the Bulgasari that the Gyeonghoeru remained
intact throughout heavy artillery fire during Korean
War. Though struck by the splinters, the animal kept
the edifice from a disaster. There are images of various
other auspicious animals along the stone bridges.
(2) The Square Pond of the Gyeonghoeru Pavilion
Located to the west of the Chimjeon in which the royal
couple led their life, the square pond of the Gyeonghoeru
pavilion was made for the purpose of holding a party,
enjoying boating, and greeting foreign emissaries visiting
the country. The pond is 113m wide and 128m long. There
are also three round islands in it. The easternmost
and largest of them is connected with the land by three
beautiful stone bridges to the grand Gyeonghoeru pavilion.
The water of the pond springs up from the underground,
and the water from the pond of Hyangwonji flows into
the pond through the dragon headed waterway on the eastern
bank of the pond, which looks a fall. There is another
waterway in the shape of a dragonhead on the northern
bank.
According to an ancient chronicle recorded in 1506,
to the west of the pond, was the mound of Mansesan with
many beautiful flowers and small replicas symbolic of
palaces, including Bongnaegung, Ilgung, Wolgung, and
Byeogungung, decorated with gold, silver, and silk.
The king enjoyed boating on the boat called Hwangyongju
in the pond with lotus flowers and coral in it. Sometimes
candle lamps in shape of flowers and animals which were
decorated with gold and silver, floated on the water
in the pond, and incense fires made the pond ad bright
as day even at night. To the west and the north of the
pond, there were zelkova trees and pinetrees. The square
pond of the Gyeonghoeru pavilion is representative of
the garden pond constructed in the Joseon kingdom in
beautiful, scale, and landscape.
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9.The Amisan (Mound)
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This is a beautiful rear garden that belonged to the
Gyotaejeon or queen's residence. "Amisan"
was named after a famous mountain in China, but it's
not, in fact, a mountain. It is a mound made up of long
rectangular stones. It has four-storyed flower terraces
in the south. There are fantastic stones, square stone
ponds, troughs in shape of a lotus, solar clock stands,
a stone structure on the stand in the shape of a turtle,
chimneys with floral patterns etc. Peonies, royal azaleas,
pine trees, cherrys, etc., are also found on the terraces,
and on the upper part, there are pear, mulberry, and
zelkova trees, etc.
Built in the flower terraces of the Amisan, the hexagonal
chimneys belonged to the Gyotaejeon, or queen's residence,
in front of it. They are some 2.6m high, except for
the height of the roof, and about 88cm wide in each
side. Every chimney has a smoke-emitting house on the
roof. The upper part of the chimneys is decorated with
an arabesque design and below bricks decorated with
a dragon, crane, bat, and so on are inserted. The bricks
are 27cm long and 18cm wide. The middle part is decorated
with a pine tree, bamboo, plum, peony, and chrysanthemum
patterns, and on the northern lateral side the Chinese
character "ýî"(Hui)is inscribed. The lower
part is adorned with a tiger, bat, crane, etc., which
symbolize the king, subject, royalty, wealth, longevity,
warding off evil, etc. respectively. The chimneys, laid
up of red brick, are in harmony with the other structures
in the flower terraces.(Treasure No. 811)
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10. The Jagyeongjeon |
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Jagyeonjeon was the living quarters where Queen Dowager
Jo, the mother of King Hyeonjong(r.1834-1849), 24th
King of the Joseon period lived. It was built for her
by Regent Lee Ha-eung(the Daewongun), father of King
Gojong, the 26th King(r.1863-1907) of the Joseon Period.
The present quarters were built in 1888 after the original
structure were burnt down. This is the only building
with a bedroom remaining in Gyeongbokgung palace.
Bogandang, the bed chamber, is situated to the northwest
and is heated by Ondol. Cheongyeonnu, a pavilion with
elevated floor for use in the summer, is to the southwest.
There had been a number of additional, walls, and a
two-post gate with roof. All that remains is the wall
with the ten symbols of long life and the freestanding
chimneys in the rear garden, plus the wall with flower
and plant designs in the west.(Treasure No. 809)
(1) Mansemun of Jagyeongjeon
This is the south gate in the southern wing. The gate
occupies the span from the 8 to 10th kan from the west
among the 30.5 kan of the corridor.
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The gate is so arranged as not to give a change to
the overall height of the corridor. The gate structure
with four entrances covers 3 kan. This style can be
found in the Seonpyeongmun gate in the southern corridor
in front of the Daejojeon hall in the Changdeokgung
palace. This suggests the possibility that a gate of
this style may have once served the Gyotaejeon hall,
the queen's residence, adjacent to the Jagyeongjeon.
South gates to royal bed chambers were generally in
this style.
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(2) Cheongyeonnu of Jagyeongjeon
One wall in the eastern tip of the Jagyeonjeon protrudes
forward. Square pillars support this tower. It measures
1 kan wide on the frontal side and 2 kan wide on the
left and right sides. It is capped with a half-hipped
roof. This tower is named Cheongyeonnu and a framed
calligraphy showing the name is hung.
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(3) The Chimneys of the Jagyeongjeon
On the upper part of the chimneys which are 381cm wide,
236cm high, and 65cm long, there is a dragon and on
the right and left side of it, bricks with a crane design
are inserted. In the middle there is the sun, a mountain,
cloud, rock, pine tree, turtle, crane, the sea, a deer,
grape, lotus, bamboo, and an herb which gives immortality
to man, etc. On the lower part, there are two Haetae
images, and on the right and left side there is a bat
and an arabesque design.
The dragon symbolize the king, the crane subject, the
sun the rock, and the turtle, etc. longevity, the grapes
many offsprings, the bat wealth, and the Haetae waiding
off evil.
These are the most beautiful chimneys of the Joseon
period that still remain in Korea. (Treasure No. 810)
(4)The Wall of the Jagyeonjeon
The western wall of the Jagyeongjeon, made of yellow
bricks, is very beautiful. The rear side of it is decorated
with the Chinese character " Ø¿áø"(Mansu), a
lattice work, a plum, an octagon etc. and the outer
side with a peach, chrysanthemum, bamboo, butterfly,
lotus etc., from which one may infer how excellently
the wall then constructed.
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11.The Hamhwadang |
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Located west of the Jipgyeongdang hall, the Hamhwadang
hall is connected with it inside through a 3 kan passage.
Its floor space covers 17square kan with a 2.5-kan inner
upper structure. There was once a wall in the south
with the Gyemyeongmun and Yeongchunmun gates.
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The hall was once surrounded by an 8-kan western corridor
and an 11-kan southern corridor. There were also fences
pierced by two pillar gates called Yeongjimun and Changmumum.
But all except this hall have been demolished. This
is capped with a half-hipped roof with single eaves.
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12.The Jipgyeongdang |
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Jipgyeondang hall is connected with the Hamhwadang
hall in the west through a 3-kan passage. Both the Jipgyeongdang
and the Hamhwadang belong to the Heungbokjeon hall ,a
royal bed chamber. The Heungbokjeon was once located
north of the Amisan hill. North of the Heungbokjeon,
there was the Gwangwondang, and farther north, there
was the Jipgyeongdang and the Hamhwadang, with the Yeongchundang
in the neighborhood. But they all have disappeared,
except the Jipgyeongdang and the Hamhwadang, which were
used as offices of the museum when the Japanese constructed
their government-general building after the Annexation.
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The Jipgyeongdang is a building of 28.5 square kan
with an inner upper structure. It once had a fence in
the north and a two-pillar gate called Eungbokmun.
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13.The Hyangwonjong |
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There was once a hall called Jangandang hall north
of the Hamhwadang hall. As the northern corridor of
this building was near to the northern palace, one soon
reached the Gyemumun, a secret gate to the palace, once
one left the corridor. There was the Konnyonggak pavilion
east of the Jangandang, and there was the Boksudang
hall north of the pavilion. There is a pond south of
this hall's southern corridor, namely, south of the
Geoncheonggung palace. There is an isle in the center
of the pond. A hexagonal two-story pavilion named Hyangwonjeong
perches on the isle. At present we can reach the pavilion
through a wooden bridge in the south. But the bridge
was once located in the north for crossing the Geoncheonggung
palace. The bridge is called Chuihyanggyo.
(1) The Hyangwonji Pond and Chuihyanggyo Bridge
Constructed in 1456, the Hyangwonji pond belongs to
the rear garden of the Gyeongbokgung palace. It can
be also found in an ancient Korean chronicle. According
to the record, the pond was built along with the Chuirojeong
pavilion, and lotus flowers were planted in it.
The existing pond was reconstructed in 1873, and the
hexagonal pavilion of Hyangwonjeong and Chuihyanggyo
bridge were built then. The area of the pond is 4605
square meters.
Waterweeds can be found there along with carp swimming
in the pond, by which trees, including zelkova, chinese
juniper, maple, pine, oak, pear etc. stand.
On the island in which the Hyangwonjeong pavilion is
erected shrubs, including royal azaleas and maple trees
grow, and south of the pond, one finds a stone pond
with "ùÃò®"(Haji) inscribed on the side and
there are also stone tables here.
The water of the pond springs up from the northern
hill and the well called Yeolsangjinwon. The pond is
at its most spectacular when the Mt.Bugaksan , the pavilion
painted in diverse colours, and the wooden bridge are
reflected on the water in the pond.
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14.The Jaesugak |
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| This is a small building of 14 square kan
that once belonged to the Mangyeongjeon hall. Though small,
the frontal side measures 7 kan wide. Like other buildings
where bed chambers were installed, this one has an entrance
in the center 2 kan wide. The right and left sides are
shut with windows. The eaves are double and the roof is
a half-hipped one. The Dancheong was not applied to this
building and the eaves are painted only red, obtaining
the effect of being simple.
The building was once surrounded by corridors in the
east, west, and south, measuring 11 to 15 kan. But they
are all gone.
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15.The Yeongchumun (Gate) |
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If the east symbolizes spring, the west represents
autumn. The west gate of the palace was named Yeongchunmun(Gate
of Welcoming Autumn). A stream ran outside this gate
in the past, but it is covered now and cannot be seen.
A single-storied tower rests on the stone foundation
pierced by an arch. It was destroyed during Korean War,
and the present structure was rebuilt in 1970.
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