Sejong the Great
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Sejong (Korean: Script error: No such module "Lang".; Hanja: Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler; May 15, 1397 – April 8, 1450Template:Efn), commonly known as Sejong the Great (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler), was the fourth monarch of the Koreanic state Joseon. He ruled from 1418 to his death in 1450. He is widely regarded as the greatest king in Korean history, and is remembered for the creation of Hangul, the native alphabet of the Korean language.
Sejong was born the third son of the future King Taejong (Template:Reign). He was regarded as gifted, moreso than the troubled crown prince Grand Prince Yangnyŏng. In mid-1418, Yangnyŏng was deposed and Sejong made the crown prince. Months later, Taejong abdicated and Sejong was crowned king. Taejong served as king emeritus until his death in 1422.
Sejong's reign was marked by major developments in science, technology, medicine, agriculture, and the arts. Many such efforts Sejong not only oversaw, but actively participated in. In 1420, Sejong had the government research organization Hall of Worthies reestablished. It oversaw such projects as the creations of the first native Korean calendar Template:Ill, the 365-volume medical text Template:Ill, and the agricultural text Nongsa chiksŏl.
In 1419, Sejong launched the successful Ōei Invasion against the Japanese Tsushima Island. This was followed by decades of peace and trade between Korea and Japan. Sejong also expanded the northern borders of Korea to roughly its current extent by launching military campaigns against and assimilating the raiding Jurchens, although this region would remain problematic. He also maintained positive relations with Joseon's suzerain Ming while still asserting Korean autonomy. Sejong made significant tax and land reforms, which resulted in increases in agricultural production and a reduction in tax rates, without significant impact to tax income. He also led a massive expansion in the influence of Confucianism in Korea and decrease in the influence of Buddhism. Despite his anti-Buddhist policies, he was privately Buddhist and increasingly vocalized his faith, which put him at odds with the Confucianists of his court.
Sejong had recurring and worsening health issues for much of his life. Beginning in 1445, he had the crown prince, the future King Munjong (Template:Reign), handle the daily affairs of government. Sejong died at the age of 52 in 1450 and is buried in the tomb Template:Ill.
Sejong is regarded as an icon of Korean culture in South Korea, where he has received numerous tributes. Sejong City bears his name. Several North Korean texts reportedly skeptically evaluate Sejong as a feudal oppressor.
Names and titles
"Sejong" is the name by which he is most widely known.Template:Sfn It is a temple name: a posthumous title that was given to him on the 19th day, 3rd month of 1450.[1] Historian Gari Ledyard roughly translates its meaning as "epochal ancestor".Template:Sfn Sejong's birth name was Yi To (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler).Template:Sfn[2] In the 2nd month of 1408, Yi To was granted the name "Ch'ungnyŏng" (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler) and the title "Prince" (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler).Template:Sfn[2] In the 5th month of 1413, Ch'ungnyŏng was granted the title "Grand Prince" (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler).Template:Sfn[2] On the 27th day, 6th month of 1418, Ch'ungnyŏng was granted the courtesy name "Wŏnjŏng" (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler).[3]
After his death, Ming granted him the title of Changhŏn (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler; Pinyin: Template:Transliteration).Template:Sfn His full posthumous title was Great King Changhŏn Yŏngmun Yemu Insŏng Myŏnghyo (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler).[2]
Sejong was reportedly popularly called the "Yao-Shun East of the Sea" (Template:Korean/auto). The name references the legendary wise Chinese sage kings Yao and Shun. "East of the Sea" refers to Korea.Template:Sfn[4]
Early life
Yi To was born on the 10th day, 4th month of 1397 in Chunsubang,Template:Efn Hanyang (Seoul), Joseon as the third son of father Grand Prince Chŏngan and a lady of the Yeoheung Min clan.Template:Sfn[2] Yi To's father was the fifth son of the founding and reigning king of Joseon, Taejo (Template:Reign).Template:Sfn
Yi To was born just years after the founding of Joseon. His father, Grand Prince Chŏngan, had played a major role in the dynasty's establishment.Template:Sfn In 1398, Chŏngan became embroiled in a succession crisis.Template:Sfn He launched the Template:Ill, which resulted in the installment of one of his brothers as King Jeongjong (Template:Reign). After suppressing a coup in the Template:Ill, Jeongjong abdicated the throne in favor of Chŏngan, who became King Taejong (Template:Reign).Template:Sfn
Very little is known of Yi To's early life; few records were made of him, as it had seemed unlikely that he would ascend to the throne until just before he did.Template:Sfn One anecdote has it that the young Yi To read so much that his father became concerned for his health and took away his books; one book (the Template:Ill) that was missed Yi To read several times over.Template:Sfnm[5][4] Several historians have evaluated this anecdote as possibly fanciful,Template:Sfnm but Ledyard argued it was plausible given Yi To's lifelong academic interests.Template:Sfn In 1413, Taejong told Yi To (who by then was called Ch'ungnyŏng): "you have nothing to do in particular, so you should just enjoy your life in peace".Template:Efn At this point, Ch'ungnyŏng was already considered to be bright and skilled at the arts, including calligraphy, the gayageum (traditional Korean string instrument), and painting.Template:Sfn[6] That year, he began to be tutored by scholar-official Template:Ill.Template:Sfn
Heir to the throne
By 1406, Taejong had decided that he wished to eventually abdicate the throne to a successor while he was still alive, to reduce the probability of a succession crisis upon his death.Template:Sfn Taejong had twelve sons, the oldest of which was Grand Prince Yangnyŏng. Yangnyŏng was designated the successor.Template:Sfn
A number of anecdotes indicate that Yangnyŏng was considered to have behavioral issues.Template:Sfnm[7] Yangnyŏng disobeyed the king frequently, neglected studying, and womanized.Template:Sfn Taejong strictly and sternly managed Yangnyŏng's education. Historian Kim Young Soo argued that this may have pushed Yangnyŏng away from studying.Template:Sfn The king also disliked the companions of the grand prince; on several occasions they were banned from the palace for their behavior.Template:Sfn By contrast, various anecdotes in the Template:Ill indicate that Ch'ungnyŏng was seen as intelligent and studious by the king and various members of the court. The king frequently praised Ch'ungnyŏng and compared him favorably to Yangnyŏng, to the latter's chagrin. On several occasions, Ch'ungnyŏng chastised the misbehavior of Yangnyŏng, which only fueled the latter's resentment, although on several occasions Yangnyŏng acknowledged his brother's better judgement. The two developed a bitter rivalry.Template:Sfnm
In early 1417, it emerged that Yangnyŏng had had an affair with a woman named Ŏri (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler), a concubine of scholar-official Kwak Sŏn (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler). The incident enraged and embarrassed Taejong.Template:Sfn[8] Yangnyŏng angrily accused Ch'ungnyŏng of having informed their father of the affair.Template:Sfn
In early 1418, the younger brother of Ch'ungnyŏng, Template:Ill, was deathly ill.Template:Sfn Ch'ungnyŏng reportedly stayed by his brother's bed day and night, reading medical texts and helping with the treatment.Template:Sfn[9] Sŏngnyŏng died on the 4th day, 2nd month of that year.Template:Sfn[9] Afterwards, Taejong went to Kaesong and nominally left Yangnyŏng in charge of the capital in his absence. He quietly ordered that Yangnyŏng be functionally isolated and monitored; he wished to see if Yangnyŏng would change his ways.Template:Sfn In his father's absence, Yangnyŏng brought Ŏri back into the palace, where she gave birth to their child. When Taejong learned of this, he wept and confided to several ministers that he had little faith in Yangnyŏng's ability to govern.Template:Sfn[10] Historian Yoon Jeong argues that, around this time, Taejong worked on building consensus among his cabinet to have Yangnyŏng removed from his position.Template:Sfn Their relationship reached its lowest point in the 5th month of that year, after Yangnyŏng sent a letter to his father in which he defended his actions and questioned his father's judgment.Template:Sfnm[11]
On the 3rd day, 6th month of 1418, Taejong and his ministers held a meeting on whether to depose Yangnyŏng.Template:EfnTemplate:Sfn[7] The topic was contentious as it required overriding the stable practice of primogeniture.Template:Sfn Despite some opposition from the queen and several in the court, it was decided that Yangnyŏng would be demoted and exiled to Gwangju. It was also decided that they would select the new successor based on their merits. Taejong described his second son, Grand Prince Hyoryŏng, as weak and overly agreeable. He then nominated Ch'ungnyŏng, whom he praised as studious and wise. The court reportedly enthusiastically agreed with Taejong's nomination.Template:Sfn[7] There is an anecdote that these decisions weighed heavily on Taejong, and that he wept after making them.Template:Sfnm Yangnyŏng took the news of his deposal calmly and quickly became detached from politics. Kim argued that Yangnyŏng had likely anticipated this happening. He was eventually invited back to the capital by his brother and the two got along well.Template:Sfn
Early reign
On the 10th day, 8th month of 1418, Taejong abdicated and 21-year-old Ch'ungnyŏng (henceforth Sejong) ascended the throne at the hall Geunjeongjeon in the palace Gyeongbokgung.[12][13] Taejong, as king emeritus,[14] would continue to exert great influence over Sejong until the former's death on the 10th day, 5th month of 1422.Template:Sfnm[15] Taejong had veto power on all decisionsTemplate:Sfn and maintained tight control over the military.Template:Sfnm On the 26th day, 10th month of 1421, Sejong designated his son Yi Hyang as crown prince.Template:Sfn[16]
A number of historians have argued that Sejong's successful reign was made possible by the stability created by Taejong's competent statecraft.Template:Sfnm[17] Historian Djun Kil Kim argued that Sejong also benefitted from being surrounded by experienced military officials that had worked under his father.[17] By the time that Sejong took the throne, bureaucratic institutions had been in place for around 15 years.Template:Sfn
In 1420, Sejong designed and reestablished the Hall of Worthies.Template:Sfnm Modern historians have likened the institution to a think tank;Template:Sfnm it oversaw major cultural and intellectual pursuits, especially for issues of governance, as well as the education of the king and crown prince.Template:Sfnm In 1426, he ordered that the institution began a practice called Template:Ill: allowing scholars to independently research without participating in government work;Template:Sfnm this has been likened to modern research grants.Template:Sfnm
In 1421, Sejong made Gyeongbokgung his primary palace.Template:Sfn In 1426, he had many major gates and bridges of the palace named.Template:Sfn By 1427, he officially moved out of the secondary palace Changdeokgung and into Gyeongbokgung,Template:Sfn although he would continue to move between the two often.[19] Sejong greatly renovated and expanded the palace.Template:Sfn It was during Sejong's reign that Gyeongbokgung became fully-fledged and functional; it would remain in much the same state from his reign for around a hundred years afterwards.Template:Sfn
Science, mathematics, and technology
Sejong oversaw one of the most productive eras in Korean science.Template:Sfnm Several historians have described his reign as a "golden age" for the field.Template:Sfnm
Astronomy, meteorology, calendars, and timekeeping
Sejong oversaw significant research into astronomy.Template:Sfn In 1432, a solar eclipse occurred two days later than predicted; this motivated Sejong to commission the research and development of astronomical instruments such as globes, planispheres, and sun dials.Template:Sfn An armillary sphere was created in 1433.Template:Sfn A water clock was designed by Chang Yŏngsil in 1434.Template:Sfn In 1434Template:Sfnm or 1438,[21] the observatory Template:Ill was established in Gyeongbokgung by order of Sejong.Template:Sfn In 1441, Prince Yi Hyang (the future King Munjong) led Korean scientists Template:Ill and Chang Yŏngsil in inventing the ch'ŭgugi:Template:Sfnm a rain gauge, the likes of which would not be invented in Europe until Benedetto Castelli's invention in 1639.Template:Sfn In 1442, ch'ŭgugi were distributed around Joseon.Template:Sfnm They fell out of use in the late 16th century, but were brought back in 1770 and saw continued use until the end of the Joseon period.Template:Sfn The sup'yo (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler), a stream gauge, was invented in 1442.Template:Sfn
Under Sejong, Korea began to develop its own indigenous calendar tradition for the first time. Prior to Sejong's reign, Korea was not able to accurately calculate dates or the positions of major heavenly bodies; it instead relied on calculations and calendars from China. These calculations were dependent on China's position on the Earth and were thus ill-suited for use in Korea. The use of Chinese calendars was in part political; it was seen as obligatory for Joseon to defer to the use of the calendar of its suzerain, Ming.Template:Sfnm In addition, Ming guarded the calculation methods for their calendar systems.Template:Sfn In 1433, studies on calendar systems from China and elsewhere were launched.Template:Sfn Sejong ordered that such studies be kept secret from Ming.Template:Sfn In 1444, Sejong's court devised a new calendar: "Template:Ill".Template:Sfnm It used Seoul as its reference point.Template:Sfnm It allowed them to accurately predict lunar and solar eclipses in 1447.Template:Sfn It was revised beginning in 1448, due to inconsistencies with the Chinese calendar. Historian Park Kwon Soo argued the inconsistencies were not mistakes, and were instead merely due to the differing locations of Beijing and Seoul. Nevertheless, Sinocentric Korean scholars expressed concerns about departing from Chinese calculations.Template:Sfn
Medicine
Sejong also oversaw significant advances in Korean medicine. Historian of Korean medicine Kim Dujong argued that Sejong created "the foundation of medicine in Joseon".Template:Sfn Sejong attempted to systematize both medical research and practice, with the latter grounded in the former.Template:Sfn Historians Tae-jin Yi and Sang-Woon Jeon argue that innovations in medicine in Sejong's reign contributed to a multiplying of population growth between the 13th and 15th centuries.Template:Sfn
Sejong took personal interest in medical education. In 1421, he had the medical school Ŭisŏ sŭptokkwan (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler) established.[22] In 1427, he ordered that medical students be given support so that they can focus on their studies.Template:Sfn[23] In 1430, he ordered that the Template:Ill (medical examination) be reformed; major texts on traditional Chinese medicine and even veterinarian studies were added to the curriculum.Template:Sfn[24]
In 1433, the 56-volume medical text Template:Ill was compiled.Template:Sfnm It became a major medical text; it was intended to serve as a comprehensive medical guide and was multiple times larger than its predecessor Template:Ill. It described hundreds of symptoms and over 10,000 treatments.Template:Sfn The work was based on research on traditional medicine throughout Korea, and included comparisons to Chinese medicine. It became a prized source of information in Ming as well.Template:Sfn In 1445 or 1447,Template:Efn the 365-volume medical text Template:Ill was completed.Template:Sfnm[25] Medical historian Kim Seongsu argues the text's scale dwarfs that of contemporary Chinese medical texts, and that it was possibly among the largest research projects in East Asia at the time. Kim also argued that this text may have also been applied to Sejong's treatment, as Sejong ordered that it be consulted months before he died.Template:Sfn
In 1443, he ordered that the palace pharmacy Naeyakbang (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler) be reorganized into the royal medical agency Naeŭiwŏn.Template:Sfn[26] Sejong also made efforts to lower the cost of medicine. He implemented price controls, established a fund that subsidized more expensive medicines, and attempted to substitute expensive foreign ingredients for domestic. In 1423 and 1430, he had Korean medical researchers visit China and work with Chinese researchers to determine what native Korean ingredients could serve as adequate substitutes for Chinese ingredients. This research resulted in the creation of the 1431 medical text Hyangyak ch'aech'wi wŏllyŏng (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler[27]).Template:Sfn
Movable type
Sejong's reign was a high point in innovations in Korean movable type technology.Template:Sfnm In 1420, Sejong ordered the casting of new kyŏngja types (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler[28]). The previously used kyemi types (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler) required the use of adhesive beeswax to secure type to plate; this process was laborious and slow. The kyŏngja types instead relied on faster mechanical methods of typesetting, and allowed multiple times more pages to be printed per day.Template:Sfnm In 1434, Sejong's court cast a set of more than 200,000 kabin types (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler[29]) that were made of copper.Template:Sfnm The kabin types were as twice as efficient to use as kyŏngja types.Template:Sfnm Kabin type were manufactured five,Template:Sfn six,Template:Sfn or sevenTemplate:Sfn additional times in the future. After 1437, lead types began to be used.Template:Sfn The use of such types was also regulated. Punishments were established for mistakes and poor worksmanship.Template:Sfn
Agriculture
Sejong oversaw a notable increase in agricultural productivity.Template:Sfnm In 1429, the agricultural treatise Nongsa chiksŏl was completed under order of Sejong.Template:Sfnm The work was meant to be more directly suited to Korean agriculture than Chinese works.Template:Sfn The text contains anecdotes from experienced farmers around Korea and remained a foundational work in Korean agriculture studies until the 17th century.Template:Sfn It contributed to a multiplication of agricultural output by the end of the reign of King Seongjong (Template:Reign).Template:Sfn Sejong took personal charge of an experiment on palace land on crop management in bad weather.Template:Sfn Advancements in irrigation and the sericulture were also made.Template:Sfn Innovations in other fields during Sejong's reign, including the development of rain gauges, more accurate calendars, and tax reform, also contributed to agriculture.Template:Sfn
Mathematics
Sejong was a significant advocate for the study and use of mathematics in Joseon.Template:Sfn At the time, mathematics was seen as a field for lower-level bureaucrats and not Confucian scholars, especially not rulers. Sejong went against this social norm by studying mathematics himself.Template:Sfn Sejong said of mathematics:
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It is said that mathematics is nothing more than a mechanical skill, but it is indispensable to the administration of the state. But for the participation of Template:Ill, Kim Tam and others in the recent cadastral survey, it is questionable the land could have been measured properly. By all means devise measures to ensure the maximum development of mathematics throughout the land.Template:Sfn[30]
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In 1431, Sejong sent promising mathematicians to China for study. In 1433, a 100-volume treatise on mathematics was printed, and in 1438 five mathematics texts were added to curriculums of technical colleges; afterwards mathematics became around half their curriculum. Unlike under some other monarchs when mathematics was neglected, Sejong encouraged the use of mathematics in government; people skilled in math were employed to administer taxes, take the census, and manage currency and accounting.Template:Sfn
Cartography
Sejong's administration also made advances in cartography. In 1424, Sejong ordered that a national geography be compiled.Template:Sfn In 1432 or 1434,Template:Efn a collection of maps of Korea called "Sinch'an p'alto chiriji" (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler[31]) was prepared based on records and surveying efforts.Template:Sfnm This work was eventually incorporated into a 1454 larger collection of maps called "Template:Ill".Template:EfnTemplate:Sfn These maps served as foundation and reference for later maps and works.Template:Sfn
Weaponry
Sejong commissioned the 1448 text Ch'ongt'ong tŭngnok (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler[32]), which covered the manufacture and deployment of firearms.Template:Sfnm Sin'gijŏn (fire arrow rockets) were developed and first attested to in 1448, during Sejong's reign.Template:Sfn
Arts and culture
Music
Sejong and his administration had a major influence in Korean court music. Sejong observed the aak genre music of the Korean court and felt that it had degenerated from ancient Chinese ideals. He and several scholars consulted Chinese texts and attempted to rejuvenate Korean practice.Template:Sfnm
From 1420 to 1425, Sejong had new court music produced.Template:Sfn From 1423 to 1430, Sejong's chief musicologist Pak Yŏn oversaw the creations of hundreds of court music instruments.Template:Sfn In 1430, after consulting ancient Chinese musicology texts, Sejong ordered that Pak Yŏn, Chŏng Inji, and others develop new music for Confucian rites. These efforts resulted in the recreations of several ancient Chinese instruments and a musical treatise that would be appended to the Veritable Records of Sejong.Template:Sfnm Reforms on court music continued, with new songs performed in 1433.Template:Sfnm Under Sejong's reign, the first mensural notation scheme in Asia was developed.Template:Sfnm
Beginning in 1433, focus shifted away from the emulation of Chinese practice to the development of native Korean practice. That year, he called for folk music from around Korea be gathered, although it is unknown if this project was completed.Template:Sfn
Research conducted on Chinese musicology in Sejong's reign was eventually compiled into the 1493 text Akhak kwebŏm.Template:Sfnm This work has been evaluated as an extremely valuable source of information on traditional Sino-Korean music.Template:Sfnm
Sejong composed music himself. He composed Yŏmillak.Template:Sfn[33] In 1447, he created the pieces Pot'aep'yŏng (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler[34]) Chŏngdaeŏp (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler[35]).Template:Sfnm These two pieces were adapted and continued to be performed until the end of the Joseon period.Template:Sfn He also composed the music for the 1449 Buddhist text Sari yŏngŭnggi (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler).Template:Sfn[36]
Ceremonial rites
In the practice of ceremonial rites, Sejong attempted to preserve Korean tradition while also introducing ancient Chinese tradition.Template:Sfnm In 1444, Sejong ordered that research on the Template:Ill be completed. Historian Martina Deuchler argued that it is clear Sejong supervised the compilation and gave his own input. Once completed in 1451, a copy of the work was appended to the Veritable Records of Sejong.Template:Sfn
Art and calligraphy
Sejong's reign is considered a high point in the history of Korean painting.Template:Sfn Significant quantities of art were sponsored and produced during this period. Major artists of this period include literati painter Kang Hŭian, Template:Ill, Template:Ill, and An Kyŏn.Template:Sfnm In 1447, An produced the landmark painting Template:Ill, which is said to be based on a dream of Sejong's third son Template:Ill. Calligraphy also florished; that grand prince was himself a renowned calligrapher.Template:Sfnm
Literature
Sejong has been described as a "bibliophile".Template:Sfnm Anecdotes indicate that Sejong enjoyed reading as well as the collection and preservation of rare books.Template:Sfnm In 1442, he ordered governors in the southern provinces to gather information on his father's past exploits in suppressing Japanese pirates; these stories were developed into the work Yongbiŏch'ŏn'ga.Template:Sfn That work then became the first major piece of literature in Hangul, after its Korean poems were completed around 1447.Template:Sfnm
Domestic policy
Sejong attempted to govern primarily by Confucian principles.Template:Sfnm According to historian Christopher Lovins, Sejong's reign is widely viewed as the "full flowering of Confucianism in Korea".Template:Sfn
Sejong believed that deliberation was important to good governance.Template:Sfn Although Sejong was one of the most powerful Joseon monarchs, he and other Joseon monarchs were generally strongly checked by the high bureaucracy.Template:Sfnm Several historians have evaluated Sejong as open, in part intentionally, to vigorous debate and even criticism.Template:Sfnm[37] He very frequently asked questions and advice of others.Template:Sfn Historian James Palais argued that Sejong was not a despot; he said that while Sejong was "subjected to criticism and restraint that in other monarchies would be regarded as lèse-majesté", he was "able to control [his critics] by besting them at their own game rather than by restoring to force and punishment".[37] Ledyard wrote of Sejong's policymaking, "in everything [Sejong] seems to have had an evenness of judgment, a fairness, common sense, a lack of prejudice".Template:Sfn
Sejong maintained the policy of Template:Ill, wherein commoners with grievances were allowed to beat a drum at the magistrate's office and have their complaint heard.Template:Sfnm[38]
Unlike his predecessors, Sejong regularly and even enthusiastically attended the Template:Ill.Template:Sfnm On one occasion, he insisted on attending the lectures even while mourning the death of his father, in order to set an example for future rulers on how important the lectures were.Template:Sfn[39] He attended it every day for nearly 22 of his 32 years as king. He assigned around 10 academicians of the Hall of Worthies to research, develop, and deliver the lectures.Template:Sfn He also performed his own research and gave input on the curriculum.Template:Sfnm According to Ledyard's analysis, Sejong's academic interests did not distract from his administrative duties.Template:Sfn Sejong opened the court daily at dawn, and after receiving ceremonial visits, went straight into state meetings.Template:Sfn
Sejong had a significant impact on curricula for crown princes of Joseon.Template:Sfn In 1421, the crown prince began attending the royal lectures with his father.Template:Sfn In 1428, he had the Template:Ill established. This institution was directly focused on the education of the royal family, whereas previously, their education was handled by a variety of institutions.Template:Sfnm
Sejong mostly maintained his father's policy of honoring the former royal House of Wang, which had ruled Goryeo. By Sejong's reign, the surviving members of that family were all female. Sejong allowed them to remain aristocrats and live freely. He ordered that the tombs of the former Goryeo monarchs be properly maintained. When several Wang women were involved in legal disputes, Sejong showed amnesty to them. Still, Sejong and his court viewed the women with some suspicion.Template:Sfn
Sejong ordered the compilations or revisions of the Veritable Records of his three predecessors. Under his administration, key practices around the production of the Veritable Records began, including the practice of making four extra copies of the records for distribution around Korea. This practice would end up saving the Veritable Records for modern historical use, as most copies were destroyed by the Japanese in 1592, during the Imjin War.Template:Sfn
Legal system
Historian Young Kyun Oh argued Sejong attempted to relatively strictly abide by the Great Ming Code, the Chinese legal code adopted as the basis of Joseon's laws in 1392. Oh evaluated Sejong's deviations from the code as reluctant and minor.Template:Sfn Park evaluated Sejong as resistant to suggestions of punishing people for what he viewed as minor offenses.Template:Sfn
Sejong actively participated in revising Joseon's supplementary legal code. In 1420[40] or 1422,Template:Sfn Sejong ordered that the legal code Joseon had been using, the Template:Ill, be revised. The first draft of the revised code was completed in 1426. Another revision, called the Sinsok yukchŏn (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler) was completed in 1428. It was revised again and published in 1433 as the Sinch'an kyŏngjesok yukchŏn (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler[41]).[40][42]Template:Sfn A revised version was published in 1435.Template:Sfn
Sejong made policies that sought to improve living conditions of prisoners. He ordered that prisoners should be kept in clean prisons, fed regular meals, and not be put in conditions that are excessively cold or hot. He forbade imprisonment of people over 70 or under 15.Template:Sfnm He also had autopsy practices reformed in order to provide more accurate information in legal cases.Template:Sfnm
Taxation and economics
Sejong significantly reformed the tax system of Joseon. The taphŏm sonsilpŏp (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler[43]) tax system that had been implemented under his father's reign inadvertantly put excess strain on peasants, especially as tax officials abused the system for their own benefit.Template:Sfn In 1421, Sejong ordered that peasants be allowed to report their own assessments of crop yields, in order to prevent tax officials from making false reports.Template:Sfn[44]
Work on designing a new tax system, which would eventually be called kongpŏp (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler[45]), began in 1427.Template:Sfn In 1430, Sejong ordered that an extensive public opinion survey on tax policies be conducted across the social classes. Over 170,000 people were polled on; they voted on various issues and proposals, and reasons for voting against Sejong's proposals were thoroughly documented.Template:Sfn[45] The survey was completed that year. Afterwards, Sejong had his ministers debate the merits of each idea.Template:Sfn The populace voted in favor of Sejong's ideas, but some of his ministers strongly rejected them. The topic was contentious and the debate lasted for 17 years. Sejong was apprehensive of making a sudden change to the tax system, in fear that he could ruin many lives.Template:Sfn The new system was completed in 1444. It was to be gradually rolled out from localities to larger regions over the following decades.Template:Sfn The land tax rate was lowered from 10% of the harvest to 5%.Template:Sfnm Historians have argued that this tax change improved the quality of life in the country without harming tax income, as confiscations of Buddhist temple landTemplate:Sfn and increases in agricultural productivity helped offset the difference.Template:Sfn The Hall of Worthies also formulated a variable tax rate that depended on land yields and rainfall conditions.Template:Sfnm
Sejong continued his father's work in reorganizing the Korean feudal system, in order to improve taxation and the state's ability to mobilize manpower. The organization of the hojŏk (family registration system) resulted in double the amount of adult males accounted for by the state than during his father's reign.Template:Sfn
Sejong attempted to improve access to and use of currency, to limited success. In 1424, Sejong had the copper coin Joseon Tongbo minted, but this failed to supplant the predominant practice of bartering cloth and grain.Template:Sfn[46] Under Sejong, weights and measures were standardized to promote fairness in trading.Template:Sfn
In 1445, Sejong consolidated the various records of sujojiTemplate:Efn (land given to government officials in place of salaries), previously managed by various government offices, and placed them under the administration of the Ministry of Taxation (Hojo) to improve transparency in Joseon's fiscal policies.Template:Sfn
Social issues
Sejong made multiple attempts to elevate marginalized social groups in Korea, to limited success. In 1423, Sejong attempted to elevate the severely marginalized ch'ŏnmin class by dubbing them paekchŏng and granting them farmland. Historians have the attempt as unsuccessful; the ch'ŏnmin continued to be marginalized and work in their hereditary marginalized sectors. The term paekchŏng began to apply to lower-class people in humble occupations.Template:Sfnm in 1432, Sejong ordered that the paekchŏng be allowed to enroll in county schools.[47] Sejong once declared a national amnesty for those imprisoned of minor crimes. He banned slaveholders from arbitrary punishments of slaves.Template:Sfn
In 1426, Sejong enacted a law that granted government serf (nobi) women 100 days of maternity leave after childbirth. In 1430, this was expanded to include one month before childbirth. In 1434, he also granted the husbands 30 days of paternity leave.[48] In 1431, Sejong issued a set of laws that set the maximum size of houses for each social class.Template:Sfn
Sejong argued that medical treatment should not be limited to the privileged, and that even criminals deserved treatment.Template:Sfnm[49]
Around Sejong's reign, there was a prohibition on alcohol consumption for non-ceremonial purposes. Even though he was often sick, Sejong refused all medicinal liquors and took only salt water, in order to set a temperate example for the populace.Template:Sfn
The issue of whether the state should encourage the playing of the sport polo was a controversial matter. Bureaucrats saw the sport as emblematic of the excesses of the Goryeo era.Template:Sfn Spectators would become drunk and rowdy.[50] Sejong argued that, while the sport had indeed been played excessively before, it should be kept for military examinations, as he admired the skill and agility required of its players. Ledyard argued Sejong's answer showed judiciousness and nuance.Template:Sfn In 1425, a polo requirement was officially adopted in military examinations.[50]
Samganghaengsilto
In 1428, a legal case was brought to Sejong's attention. A man named Kim Hwa (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler) murdered his father. This was seen as an egregious offense against a fundamental Confucian relationship.Template:Sfnm Minister Template:Ill proposed that Sejong apply the older and more draconian Tang Code, in order to exact a harsher punishment on Kim. Sejong refused this proposal, although the matter concerned him deeply. He brought the matter to the Hall of Worthies and explored how Confucian values could be better reinforced in the populace.Template:Sfn
It was decided that a book providing examples of Confucian ethics could help educate the public. This resulted in the creation of the 1434 book Template:Ill.Template:Sfn The text was meant to improve the lives and morals of the general populace. It compiled Chinese and Korean stories and anecdotes that illustrated ethical Confucian behavior. It also included large pictures for the sake of the illiterate.Template:Sfnm The text was initially published in Hanja and later translated into Hangul. The Hangul translation efforts later sparked backlash from Hall of Worthies scholars, including Template:Ill and Ch'oe Malli.Template:Sfnm Its Hangul translation was completed in 1481, decades after Sejong's death.Template:Sfn
Buddhism
While Sejong and his predecessors privately practiced Buddhism, their policies restricted the power and influence of Buddhist institutions.Template:Sfnm
Joseon's predecessor Goryeo had been deeply Buddhist. But around the Goryeo–Joseon transition in the late 14th-century, anti-Buddhist sentiment had grown to new heights among Confucianists.Template:Sfn Confucianists criticized the financial impact of the religion on the state (Buddhist temples were significant land and slaveholders and monks were seen as unproductiveTemplate:Sfn[51]Template:Sfnm), as well as its philosophical foundations. Many of these Confucianists became significant members of the new Joseon bureaucracy.Template:Sfn Many in Sejong's court were actively hostile to Buddhism.Template:Sfnm Template:Ill, deputy director of the Hall of Worthies, wrote in 1424 to Sejong that "[w]e consider the harm of Buddhists to be prevalent still. Since the Han period the reverence for Buddha has been increasingly fervent, yet neither happiness nor profit has been gained... We think of all the heterodox teachings, Buddhism is the worst".Template:Sfn[52] On the other hand, a significant majority of people outside the government actively practiced Buddhism.Template:Sfn
Unlike the Confucianists, Sejong believed that Buddhism and Confucianism could coexist, although he was critical of the economic impact that the religion was having on Joseon.Template:Sfn Sejong's policies significantly restricted the influence of Buddhism on Joseon.Template:Sfnm[53] Historian Pu Namchul argued that Sejong's restrictions were mainly focused on the worldly and secular impact of the religion, and were not restrictions on the religion itself.Template:Sfn Grayson argued that by the end of Sejong's rule, Joseon became significantly more Confucianist.Template:Sfn Sejong's restrictions on Buddhist land ownership caused the amount of productive farmland to rise from 1.2 million Template:Ill (unit of measurement for area of farmland) in Taejong's reign to 1.72 million.Template:Sfn On the 5th day, 4th month of 1424, Sejong commanded that the Template:Ill: Seon and Template:Ill.Template:Sfnm[53][54] In addition, each sect was only allowed to have 18 temples each; all other temples were forced to close.Template:Sfnm The temples were additionally restricted to having fewer than 4,000 monks, slaves, and workers combined. Metal Buddhist bells and statues were melted down for weapon making.Template:Sfn Sejong also introduced a ban on monks from entering the capital. This ban would last until the late 19th century.[53]Template:Sfn On the other hand, Sejong pushed back on some anti-Buddhist policies, for example the abolition of the Buddhist lantern festival, prohibitions on monastic institutions, and prohibitions on Buddhist rituals.Template:Sfn
Over time, Sejong increasingly vocalized his affinity for Buddhism. Each event was met with protest and alienated him from his court.Template:Sfnm In 1418, shortly after taking the throne, Sejong established a Buddhist shrine called Naebultang (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler[55]) on the grounds of Gyeongbokgung.Template:Sfnm In 1420, two years after Sejong ascended the throne, Sejong's mother Queen Wŏn'gyŏng died. Sejong requested that a Buddhist monastery be built next to her grave out of filial respect. Taejong polled the ministers on whether the request should be accepted; implicitly, this forced the ministers to side with either Taejong or Sejong. In the end, the request was rejected.Template:Sfn That same year, Sejong invited renowned Buddhist monk Kihwa to stay and lecture in the temple Taejaam (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler[56]) at the previous royal palace at Kaesong.[53] Sejong also privately believed in the healing power of Buddhism. In 1420, he prayed and had others pray to the medicine Buddha Bhaisajyaguru after the queen took ill.[57][58][59] In 1423, he requested that Buddhist books from around Korea be sent to him.Template:Sfn In 1426, it was requested that Sejong remove a dharani (Buddhist inscription) on the rafters of his throne room. He accepted the request. In 1428, he had Buddhist monks enter the palace on his birthday.Template:Sfn
To quell anti-Buddhist criticisms of him, Sejong denied his faith to others a number of times.Template:Sfn[60][61][62] For example, in 1439, Sejong authorized the repair of the Buddhist temple Heungcheonsa in Seoul. In protest, a petition signed by 648 Confucianist students and scholars was delivered to Sejong, in which they accused Sejong of supporting Buddhism. Sejong submitted to the pressure and assured the protestors that he "had never worshipped the Buddha".Template:Sfn[63] In 1441, he said, "Since the Han and Tang dynasties, monarchs of China have all believed in Buddhism. I do the same".Template:EfnTemplate:Sfn[64]
Familial deaths in the mid-1440s deepened Sejong's devotion to Buddhism. Sejong's sons Template:Ill and Template:Ill died in 1444 and 1445 respectively.Template:Sfn Queen Sohŏn died in 1446.Template:Sfnm A 1449 record says, "His Majesty has lost two princes in succesion, as well as the queen. Grief-stricken, He has come to let belief in karma fill the void in his heart".Template:EfnTemplate:Sfn[65] Sejong had temples hold memorial ceremonies for Sohŏn.Template:Sfn By 1445, he was practicing Buddhist vegetarianism.Template:Sfn In 1448 and 1449, Sejong had a Buddhist shrine built on the palace grounds.Template:Sfnm In 1449, when Sejong fell ill, he invited the monk Sinmi to conduct Buddhist services in the palace. The following year, Sinmi was granted honorary titles of respect.Template:Sfn Grayson wrote that Sejong "died in the bosom of Buddhism".Template:Sfn
Other religions
Sejong, like most other Joseon kings, disapproved of Korean shamanism. Beginning with the reign of Sejong, Korean shamans were barred from entering the capital. However, he appointed some shamans to posts in the public health organization outside the capital Template:Ill.[66]
In 1427, Sejong issued a decree against the Huihui (Korean Muslim) community that had enjoyed special status and stipends since the Yuan dynasty's rule over Goryeo. The Huihui were forced to abandon their headgear, close down their ceremonial hall—a mosque in Gaegyeong, present-day Kaesong—and worship like everyone else.[67]Template:Sfn
Foreign policy
Sejong continued the Tang and Goryeo tradition of xianghua (Template:Korean/auto;[68] "submitting-foreigner status"Template:Sfn). This was a semi-hereditary set of designations for foreigners that allowed them to reside in Korea, with certain tax and civil exemptions for at least one generation; their descendents were eventually naturalized. The status's intent was to encourage peaceful, eventual naturalization and assimilation.Template:Sfn For settlers around the capital, Sejong had the designation limited to one generation after the original immigrants.Template:Sfn[69] Joseon, under Sejong, also had separate pathways for naturalization of foreigners, including the granting of clan seats.Template:Sfn
Sejong also continued the practice of allowing systematized forms of tribute from foreigners, namely Jurchens and Japanese people. Depending on group and status, a limited number of tributes were allowed to be given to the monarchy in exchange for political favor.Template:Sfn
Japan–Korea relations
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Sejong and his administration caused a decrease in raids from Japanese pirates (called wokou) and increase in trade with Japan.Template:Sfn Due to the peaceful contact and trade, historian James B. Lewis described the 15th century encompassing Sejong's reign as "the peak of peaceful Japanese contact with Korea prior to the end of the twentieth century".Template:Sfn
Although pirates from Tsushima Island raided Joseon's shores with declining frequency by the late Goryeo period, they still posed a threat by Sejong's reign.Template:Sfn The pirates would steal materials, boats, and Korean people for enslavement.Template:Sfn In 1418, a famine and the death of Tsushima leader Template:Ill led to increased raids on Joseon.Template:Sfn In retaliation for this, in 1419, Sejong, under his father's guidance,[17]Template:Sfn launched the punitive Ōei Invasion against Tsushima.Template:Sfnm Joseon forces consisted of 227 ships and some 17,000 soldiers under command of Yi Chongmu.Template:Sfnm After 15 days of fighting, the lord of Tsushima surrendered.Template:Sfn During this conflict, Japanese people that fled Tsushima were allowed to settle in Joseon as hyanghwa.Template:Sfn
Joseon attempted to incorporate Tsushima into its own territory.Template:Sfnm Ten days before Joseon's punitive attack on Tsushima, Taejong claimed that Tsushima once belonged to Korea. Seven months afterwards, in 1420, the Korean court accepted a request of Tsushima lord Template:Ill (or someone claiming to represent Sadamori) that Tsushima be absorbed into Joseon.Template:Sfn The Joseon court then considered Tsushima to be under the administrative boundaries of Gyeongsang Province.Template:Sfn This absorption was later rejected by Sadamori.Template:Sfn Ultimately, the absorption failed to occur.Template:Sfn
Under Sejong, Joseon successfully incentivized Japanese leaders to discourage piracy in exchange for valuable trade access. Through this strategy, Joseon was able to change its focus from security to trade management.Template:Sfn From Taejong's reign to Sejong's, raids dropped from 4.3 invasions per year to 1.8 and trade missions increased from 20.4 per year to 31.3.Template:Sfn Japanese traders were restricted to all but Template:Ill; the third port was opened under Sejong in 1426.Template:EfnTemplate:Sfnm Japanese traders were also made to follow specific routes on specific days to reach the capital.Template:Sfn In 1423, government warehouses were created for Japanese traders in the ports.Template:Sfn In 1438, Joseon granted Tsushima lord Template:Ill a monopoly on issuing documents of passage for Japanese people to visit Joseon.Template:Sfnm This also benefitted Joseon in that it allowed them to offshore this administrative process and the possible associated backlash from rebuffed Japanese traders.Template:Sfn In 1439, some limited exceptions to the monopoly were granted to other Japanese lords.Template:Sfnm In the 1443 Treaty of Kyehae, Joseon limited the number of ships at these ports from Japan to 50 per year.Template:Sfnm
Scholars have debated how Joseon under Sejong treated Japan. Several have argued that Joseon treated parts of Japan as if they were subordinate to Joseon.Template:Sfn Envoys from even the shogun were symbolically ceremonially treated as if the shogun was a subject of Joseon.Template:Sfn Japanese leaders were made to request copper seals (Template:Korean/auto) in order to access Joseon.Template:Sfn Japanese leaders that showed greater aptitude in preventing piracy were granted greater rank and trade with Joseon.Template:Sfn Historian Kenneth R. Robinson argued that Joseon had a unique and flexible relationship with the fractured "Japan" (Japan was not a strongly unified political entity by this time) that changed over time. He argued Joseon borrowed elements of China's tributary system for its own purposes.Template:Sfn
Japanese leaders frequently requested Buddhist gifts from Joseon.Template:Sfnm For example, the Ōuchi clan persistently requested the wood printing blocks of the Tripitaka Koreana, to the chagrin of Sejong's Confucianist court. The blocks were valuable and expensive to produce copies of. Eventually, the Ōuchi clan was given printed copies of the Tripitaka instead, which were still expensive to produce.Template:Sfn
Northern frontier and Jurchen relations
Sejong continued the work of his predecessors in pacifying and conquering the northern frontier. It was under Sejong that Korea's northern borders were expanded to reach their approximate current extent.Template:Sfnm The northern frontier was of strategic importance, as it served as the border between Korea and China, and because the local Jurchens would frequently raid Korean settlements.Template:Sfnm In 1432, the Hulun Udeha tribe (Eastern Jurchens) attacked Joseon.Template:Sfn
Sejong launched military campaigns against the Jurchens and established garrison forces to pacify local populations.Template:Sfnm He sent one such campaign in 1433, with Template:Ill and Template:Ill in command, and another in 1437 under Kim Chongsŏ.Template:Sfn The latter campaign resulted in the creation of Template:Ill and the current northern borders of Korea.Template:Sfnm
Sejong also opened trade with Jurchens in order to discourage raids. This was possibly, in part, motivated by their previous successes in using trade to discourage Japanese piracy.Template:Sfn From 1437 to 1443, the Hulun Udeha tribe that had previously attacked Joseon sent at least 127 trade missions to the Joseon court. Over time, restrictions and limits were applied on Jurchen trade missions to Joseon. Such trade was intended to provide Jurchens economic alternatives to raiding.Template:Sfn Jurchens that aided Joseon were rewarded with rank and access to trade. His administration also moved Korean settlers to conquered regions and encouraged intermarriage between Jurchens and Koreans to deter conflict.Template:Sfnm During Sejong's reign, the entire population of Hamgyong Province north of Tanchon was described as the descendants of Jurchen hyanghwa. They eventually became full citizens of Joseon.Template:Sfn Jurchens were also granted nominal appointments to the Korean military. These appointments did not require military service; they were instead meant to assimilate by integrating Jurchens into the Joseon bureaucracy.Template:Sfn
Historians have evaluated Sejong's efforts in settling and pacifying the region as having mixed success.Template:Sfnm Korean settlers struggled to make a living in the frontier and often abandoned the land.Template:Sfn The northern regions would continue to pose threats to Joseon's security after Sejong's reign.Template:Sfnm
China–Korea relations
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Historian Shih-Shan Henry Tsai argued that the reign of Sejong saw an improvement in Sino-Korean relations and that "Sino-Korean borders became marketplaces instead of war zones". Sejong and the Ming Yongle Emperor often exchanged books and letters on various topics, including religion, philosophy, history, science, and technology. In 1423 alone, Sejong sent 10,000 tribute horses to Yongle. In return, Sejong received a huge quantity of silver, brocade, and silk.[70] Sejong had the gate Yŏngŭnmun erected in Seoul in 1429 as a symbolic place of greeting for arriving Chinese envoys.Template:Sfn
Sejong sought to balance the Joseon policy of sadae (Confucian deference to China) with the need for flexible governance and Korean autonomy.Template:Sfnm For example, a number of historians have argued that the semi-tributary relationships Sejong maintained with Japanese and Jurchen groups were technically forbidden by the Chinese tributary system. Under that system, tributaries to China could only interact with each other as equals, but Sejong chose to forego strict adherence to this for Joseon's benefit.Template:Sfn Also, in at least one occasion early in his reign, Sejong expressed reluctance to perform ritual sacrifices to pray for rain; such rituals were seen as only appropriate for the Chinese emperor. Despite this, he eventually began performing the rituals.Template:Sfn By the end of his reign, he stopped this practice.Template:Sfn Sejong had a scholar write an essay that said that Korean kings also had the Mandate of Heaven, which was normally exclusively claimed by China.Template:Sfn In 1449, when Ming requested that Joseon send 100,000 Korean troops to the Liaodong area of Manchuria, Joseon declined.[71]
The anti-Buddhist policies under Sejong put Joseon at odds with Ming; in dealings with China, the Joseon court attempted to allay concerns that it was suppressing Buddhism. Around that time, Buddhism enjoyed significant support among the Ming court and gentry. Korean Buddhist monks escaped to Ming: 30 during the reign of Taejong and 9 during the reign of Sejong.Template:Sfn Sejong asked the Yongle Emperor, a devout Buddhist, if those monks could be repatriated. Fearing what would happen to the monks, the Yongle Emperor declined.Template:Sfnm
Hangul
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Sejong was responsible for the development of Hangul, the native alphabet for the Korean language. It is debated to what extent Sejong was personally involved in its creation, although most scholars believe he was significantly involved.Template:Sfnm A minority of scholars believe that Sejong was the sole author. All contemporary documentary evidence suggests that he was,Template:Sfnm[72]Template:Sfn but many scholars argue Sejong would have been too busy to develop Hangul on his own.Template:Sfnm
Before the invention of Hangul, Korea had been using Hanja (Chinese characters), as well as related systems like Idu and Hyangchal, since antiquity. The difficulty of the systems limited their use to mostly upper-class people; commoners were largely illiterate.Template:Sfnm Also, the scripts are not well suited for representing the Korean language; the Chinese and Korean languages are not closely related and differ in significant ways.Template:Sfnm Korean pronunciation and ideas could only be indirectly represented.Template:Sfnm
Due to a lack of records on the topic, it is not known when work on Hangul first began. A number of scholars have argued that the creation of the 1434 Samganghaengsilto caused Sejong to become interested in universal literacy.Template:Sfnm Also, Sejong long had a personal interest in linguistics and languages. He took a personal interest in the activities of the Bureau of Interpreters, and himself took Chinese lessons from early on in his reign.Template:Sfnm A 1435 record claimed that Sejong practiced colloquial spoken Chinese every other day and took lessons from famed linguist Template:Ill.Template:Sfn Hangul was possibly developed in secret, in anticipation of the backlash that it eventually received, although this is debated.Template:Sfnm
The script was revealed, likely mostly completed, to Sejong's court in the 12th month of 1443.Template:Sfnm In the 2nd month of 1444, a major faction in the Hall of Worthies led by Ch'oe Malli made a famous rebuke of the script. Ch'oe and several others argued that Hangul was anti-Confucian, as they felt it was too far a departure from Chinese civilization.Template:Sfnm Sejong rebutted that he felt the script was Confucian, as it was created out of a desire to benefit his subjects.Template:Sfn Anti-Hangul sentiment was also partially motivated by elitism; literacy in Hanja was then seen as a status symbol, and promoting general literacy could be seen as harming the social positions of the elite.Template:Sfnm The script was initially dubbed ŏnmun (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".; lit. vernacular scriptTemplate:Category handler), which developed an elitist connotation of "vulgar writing".Template:Sfnm Sejong had Ch'oe and several others imprisoned for a single day.Template:Sfnm
At some point,Template:Efn Sejong recruited young men of the Hall of Worthies for a new office dedicated to Hangul that was dubbed Template:Ill (Template:Lit).Template:EfnTemplate:Sfnm It worked on developing official documentation for Hangul. It also worked on several major literary projects related to Hangul, including the 1447 rhyme dictionary Tongguk chŏngun and the first major piece of Hangul literature Yongbiŏch'ŏn'ga.Template:Sfnm
In the 9th month of 1446, Hangul's documentation was completed and published in the texts Hunminjeongeum and its companion commentary text Hunminjeongeum Haerye. The Hunminjeongeum was penned by Sejong himself, while the Haerye was compiled by a group of scholars of the Ŏnmunch'ŏng led by Chŏng Inji.Template:Sfnm The Hunminjeongeum begins with this now-famous quote:Template:Sfnm<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />
The sounds of our country's language are different from those of the Middle Kingdom and are not confluent with the sounds of characters. Therefore, among the ignorant people, there have been many who, having something they want to put into words, have in the end been unable to express their feelings. I have been distressed because of this, and have newly designed twenty-eight letters, which I wish to have everyone practice at their ease and make convenient for their daily use.Template:Sfnm
Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Sejong attempted to lightly pressure his detractors and subjects into accepting the script, to limited success.Template:Sfnm Ledyard argues that Sejong intentionally did not aggressively force the script on others as to avoid more severe backlash. Ledyard evaluated this hypothesized strategy favorably and said it likely contributed to Hangul's eventual success.Template:Sfn He attempted to integrate Hangul into bureaucratic examinations and the curricula of government schools like the Sŏnggyun'gwan, although such integrations were often removed after his death.Template:Sfn[73]
Despite Sejong's efforts, Hangul continued to be looked down upon until the end of the Joseon period, over 400 years later.Template:Sfn It was only officially adopted by the government in 1894, during the Kabo Reform.Template:Sfn
Later life and death
Sejong reported to having recurring and worsening health issues for much of his life; a number of these complaints were recorded in the Veritable Records.Template:Sfn[74][75] One of the earliest records of his complaints was made when he was 22 years old; he then claimed to have knee and back pain. In his 30s, he complained of back pain and began reporting problems with his vision, excess thirst, and excess urination. In his 40s, he complained of his vision problems with greater frequency.Template:Sfn He had a reputation for enjoying the consumption of meat and having a sedentary lifestyle.Template:Sfn Beginning in 1445, he was practicing Buddhist vegetarianism.Template:Sfn
Scholars have attempted to infer what diseases he had based on historical evidence. The predominant hypotheses are that Sejong had either type 1 or type 2 diabetes.Template:EfnTemplate:Sfn Medical researcher JiHwan Lee disputes that diagnosis and argues that Sejong's symptoms more closely resemble those of ankylosing spondylitis (a type of arthritis). Lee argues that either type of diabetes would have been lethal to him sooner, and that Sejong did not have a clear family history of diabetes.Template:Sfn
Beginning in 1437, Sejong began asking his ministers if lesser governmental affairs could be delegated to the crown prince, as he was feeling unwell.Template:Sfn Historian Martina Deuchler argued Sejong asked this because he intended to ease the crown prince into politics to make the succession smoother.Template:Sfn His ministers dismissed his health concerns then and multiple times over for years onwards, including in 1438, 1439, and 1442.Template:Sfn In 1439, he stopped attending the royal lectures due to his health issues.Template:Sfn Finally, apparently frustrated with the lack of progress, Sejong issued an edict in 1443 in which he declared the crown prince would handle minor state affairs for the last half of each month, and that all ministers must proclaim their loyalty to him. This sparked furious protest from across the government. Some ministers balked at the idea of being presided over by the crown prince, and others expressed concerns that the division of royal authority could destabilize the state. After years of debate and compromise, in 1445, the crown prince began to handle the routine affairs of government.Template:Sfn Historian Kim Jongmyung argues that Sejong then devoted himself wholeheartedly to working on Hangul.Template:Sfn
In his last years, Sejong spent much of his time in his study, writing poetry.Template:Sfn Even while in deep pain, Sejong reportedly insisted on learning and attending lectures, and would even stay up past midnight to do so.Template:Sfn In 1446, after the promulgation of Hangul, he said to his ministers that he was "suffering from various illnesses and just waiting in the palace for death".Template:Sfn[76] In the last months of his life, his pains grew more serious.Template:Sfn On the 22nd day, 1st month of 1450, he moved into the residence of Grand Prince Hyoryŏng to receive treatment for his illnesses.Template:Sfn[77] He died on the 17th day, 2nd month of 1450 at the age of 53, in the residence of Template:Ill in Gyeongbokgung's East Palace.Template:Sfn[4] He was the first Joseon king to die while in office.Template:Sfn He is buried in the tomb Template:Ill. That tomb was originally located in what is now Seocho District in Seoul, but in 1469 it was moved to what is now Yeoju after it was determined that the geomantic properties of the new site were superior. He is buried alongside Queen Sohŏn.Template:Sfn
Reception and legacy
Sejong has been evaluated by a number of historians as the greatest monarch in Korean history.Template:Sfnm His reign has been described as a Golden Age by various historians.Template:Sfnm[14] Of all kings of Joseon, his name is mentioned the most throughout the Veritable Records: over 2000 times.Template:Sfn Sejong has since served as a legendary figure in Korean science. His successors venerated and made attempts to revive Sejong-era science and practice.Template:Sfn A 2024 survey by Gallup Korea of 1,777 South Koreans found that Sejong was named the second most times as their most respected historical figure, after Yi Sun-sin.[78] Sejong's creation of the Korean alphabet is celebrated every 9 October as Hangul Day, a national holiday.[79]
Multiple places in South Korea, including Sejong Street,[80] Sejong–Pocheon Expressway, and Sejong City, South Korea's de facto administrative capital, are named after him. Various institutes such as King Sejong Station, the King Sejong Institute,[81] the Sejong Center for the Performing Arts,[80] Sejong Science High School, and Sejong University also bear his name. A [[Statue of King Sejong (Gwanghwamun)|Template:Convert bronze statue of King Sejong]], unveiled in 2009 in celebration of the 563rd anniversary of the invention of the Korean alphabet,[82] now sits on a concrete pedestal on the boulevard of Gwanghwamun Square and directly in front of the Sejong Center for the Performing Arts in Seoul.[83] The pedestal contains one of the several entrances to the 3,200 m2 underground museum exhibit entitled "The Story of King Sejong".[84][85] The Sejong the Great-class destroyers are also named for him.[86] Since 1973, a portrait of Sejong has been on the South Korean 10,000-won bank note, along with various scientific tools invented under his reign. He was previously depicted on the 1000-hwan bill and 500-hwan bill until they were decommissioned in 1962.[87]
In North Korea, Sejong is discussed much less than in the South and more pessimistically than elsewhere.[88] According to South Korean researcher of North Korea Lee Kyu-Duk, one North Korean history book Chosŏn t'ongsa (Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler) claims that Hangul was invented in order to facilitate feudal exploitation of the peasantry. While the book evaluates Hangul's linguistic features positively, it downplays the contributions of Sejong in developing the script and instead attributes its development to the intellect of the masses.[89] Lee argued the following quote from a North Korean history work was representative of North Korean writings on Sejong:<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />
During his 30-year reign, Sejong played a major role in repelling foreign invasions, reclaiming the old territories of Goguryeo and Balhae, and developing feudal culture. However, as the monarch of a feudal state, everything he did was in service of consolidating feudalism. Thus, even during his reign, which was dubbed "an era of peace", peasant uprisings against feudal oppression and exploitation occurred several times.[89]
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Family
Ancestry
Consorts and issue
Officially, Sejong had 18 sons and 4 daughters. He also had a 19th son, Prince Tang (1442–?Template:Efn), that died in childhood and was never included in the family genealogy book.Template:Sfn[90]
- Queen Sohŏn of the Template:Ill (1395–1446)Template:Sfn
- Template:Ill (1412–1424)[91]
- King Munjong (1414–1452), first sonTemplate:Sfn
- Template:Ill (1414 or 1415 – 1477)[92]
- King Sejo (1417–1468), second sonTemplate:Sfn
- Template:Ill (1418–1453), third sonTemplate:Sfn
- Grand Prince Imyŏng (1420–1469), fourth sonTemplate:Sfn
- Template:Ill (1425–1444), fifth sonTemplate:Sfn
- Template:Ill (1426–1456), seventh sonTemplate:Sfn
- Template:Ill (1427–1445), ninth sonTemplate:Sfn
- Template:Ill (1434–1467), fifteenth sonTemplate:Sfn
- Template:Ill of the Template:Ill (1406–1464)[93]
- Two daughters, both died young[94]
- Prince Kyeyang (1427–1464), eighth sonTemplate:Sfn
- Template:Ill (1428–1460), tenth sonTemplate:Sfn
- Template:Ill (1430–1479), twelfth sonTemplate:Sfn
- Template:Ill (1431–1463), fourteenth sonTemplate:Sfn
- Template:Ill (1435–1477), seventeenth sonTemplate:Sfn
- Template:Ill (1439–1450), eighteenth sonTemplate:Sfn
- Template:Ill of the Cheongju Yang clan (?–1455)[95]
- Template:Ill (1429–1459), eleventh sonTemplate:Sfn
- Template:Ill (1431–1455), thirteenth sonTemplate:Sfn
- Template:Ill (1431–1463), sixteenth sonTemplate:Sfn
- Template:Ill of the Template:Ill[96] (?–1483[97])
- Prince Hwaŭi (1425–?), sixth sonTemplate:Sfn
- Template:Ill[98]
- Template:Ill of the Template:Ill[98][99]
- Royal Consort Cho (Script error: No such module "Lang".; Script error: No such module "Lang".Template:Category handler)[100]
- Template:Ill (?–1452)[101]
- Template:Ill[102]
- Template:Ill (?–1461)[103]
- Template:Ill (1396–1463)[104]
- Template:Ill (1425[104]–1480[105])
- Template:Ill (?–1444Template:Efn)[106]
- Daughter (1430–1431)[107]
The Template:Ill in Seongju County is a Historic Site of South Korea. It was built from 1438 to 1442. The plot contains nineteen Template:Ill (chambers that hold the placenta of newborn children).Template:Sfn Eighteen of the chambers belong to Sejong's sons and a nineteenth belongs to Sejong's grandson, King Danjong.Template:Sfn[90]
In popular culture
Television series and films
| Year | Portrayed by | Title | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1973 | Template:Ill | Template:Ill | [108] |
| 1980 | Template:Ill | Template:Ill | [109] |
| 1983 | Template:Ill | Template:Ill Template:Ill | [110] |
| 1998–2000 | Ahn Jae-mo | Tears of the Dragon | [111] |
| 1998–2000 | Song Jae-ho | The King and the Queen | [112] |
| 2007 | Kim Jun-sik | Template:Ill | [113] |
| 2008 | Lee Hyun-woo | The Great King, Sejong | [114] |
| Kim Sang-kyung | |||
| 2011 | Template:Ill | Deep Rooted Tree | [115] |
| Song Joong-ki | [116] | ||
| Han Suk-kyu | [116] | ||
| Jeon Moo-song | Insu, the Queen Mother | [117] | |
| 2015 | Yoon Doo-joon | Splash Splash Love | [118] |
| 2016 | Nam Da-reum | Six Flying Dragons | [119] |
| Kim Sang-kyung | Jang Yeong-sil | [120] | |
| 2021 | Jang Dong-yoon | Joseon Exorcist | [121] |
| 2022 | Kim Min-gi | The King of Tears, Lee Bang-won | [122] |
| 2025 | Lee Jun-young | The Queen Who Crowns | [123] |
| Year | Portrayed by | Title | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1962 | Template:Ill | Template:Ill | [124] |
| 1964 | Template:Ill | Template:Ill | [125] |
| 1978 | Shin Seong-il | Template:Ill | [126] |
| 2008 | Ahn Sung-ki | The Divine Weapon | [127] |
| 2012 | Ju Ji-hoon | I Am the King | [128] |
| 2019 | Song Kang-ho | The King's Letters | [129] |
| Han Suk-kyu | Forbidden Dream | [130] | |
| 2023 | Template:Ill | Template:Ill | [131] |
Video games
- Sejong is the leader of the Korean civilization in the 2022 Leader Pass DLC of Civilization VI,[132] Sid Meier's Civilization V,[133] and Civilization Revolution 2.[132]
- Sejong is the leader of Korea in the 2022 Ara: History Untold.[134]
See also
Notes
References
Sources
In English
Books
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Academic articles
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In Korean
Books
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- Pages with script errors
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- Sejong the Great
- 1397 births
- 1450 deaths
- 15th-century Korean monarchs
- Creators of writing systems
- Diabetes-related deaths
- Linguists from Korea
- Joseon Buddhists
- Joseon Confucianists
- People from Jongno District
- People from Seoul
- Korean Buddhist monarchs
- Linguists of Korean