Princess Gyeongchang: Difference between revisions
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'''Princess Gyeongchang''' ({{Korean|경창궁주|慶昌宮主}}) was a Korean Queen Consort as the first wife of King [[Wonjong of Goryeo]]. She was seen as an opponent of the king who succeeded her husband, accused of plotting to install her son on the throne, consequently reduced to commoner status and deposed in 1277. |
'''Princess Gyeongchang''' ({{Korean|경창궁주|慶昌宮主}}) was a Korean Queen Consort as the first wife of King [[Wonjong of Goryeo]]. She was seen as an opponent of the king who succeeded her husband, accused of plotting to install her son on the throne, consequently reduced to commoner status and deposed in 1277. |
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She was the daughter of Duke Sinan and Princess Gasun,<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://db.history.go.kr/KOREA/item/compareViewer.do?levelId=kr_028_0050_0070_0120|title=고려시대 史料 Database|website=db.history.go.kr|lang=ko|access-date=April 27, 2021}}</ref> the 4th daughter of [[Huijong of Goryeo]]. She married her cousin [[Wonjong of Goryeo]], who was the son of [[Queen Anhye]], the eldest daughter of [[Huijong of Goryeo]]. In February 1244 (31st year reign of [[Gojong of Goryeo]]), she was chosen as [[Wonjong of Goryeo|Crown Prince Wang Jeong]]'s |
She was the daughter of Duke Sinan and Princess Gasun,<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://db.history.go.kr/KOREA/item/compareViewer.do?levelId=kr_028_0050_0070_0120|title=고려시대 史料 Database|website=db.history.go.kr|lang=ko|access-date=April 27, 2021}}</ref> the 4th daughter of [[Huijong of Goryeo]]. She married her cousin [[Wonjong of Goryeo]], who was the son of [[Queen Anhye]], the eldest daughter of [[Huijong of Goryeo]]. In February 1244 (31st year reign of [[Gojong of Goryeo]]), she was chosen as [[Wonjong of Goryeo|Crown Prince Wang Jeong]]'s Crown Princess consort. Then, she became his queen consort in 1260.<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20160322165241/http://people.aks.ac.kr/front/tabCon/ppl/pplView.aks?pplId=PPL_5COa_A9999_2_0000344&curSetPos=0&curSPos=0&isEQ=true&kristalSearchArea=B</ref> She was reduced to commoner status by her stepson, Wonjong's successor [[Chungnyeol of Goryeo|Chungnyeol]] in 1277.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Henthorn|first=William E.|url=http://archive.org/details/koreamongolinvas00hent|title=Korea: the Mongol invasions|date=1963|location=Leiden|publisher=E.J. Brill|pages=166–167}}</ref> |
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==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 08:42, 17 September 2021
Princess Gyeongchang 경창궁주 | |
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Crown Princess Consort of Goryeo | |
Tenure | 1244–1260 |
Coronation | 1244 |
Predecessor | Crown Princess Gim |
Successor | Crown Princess Wang |
Queen Consort of Goryeo | |
Tenure | 1260–1274 |
Coronation | 1260 |
Predecessor | Queen Anhye |
Successor | Queen Jangmok |
Died | after 1277 Kingdom of Goryeo |
Spouse | Wonjong of Goryeo |
Issue | |
House | House of Wang (by birth) Yu (by marriage) |
Father | Wang Jeon, Duke Sinan |
Mother | Princess Gasun |
Princess Gyeongchang (Korean: 경창궁주; Hanja: 慶昌宮主) was a Korean Queen Consort as the first wife of King Wonjong of Goryeo. She was seen as an opponent of the king who succeeded her husband, accused of plotting to install her son on the throne, consequently reduced to commoner status and deposed in 1277.
She was the daughter of Duke Sinan and Princess Gasun,[3] the 4th daughter of Huijong of Goryeo. She married her cousin Wonjong of Goryeo, who was the son of Queen Anhye, the eldest daughter of Huijong of Goryeo. In February 1244 (31st year reign of Gojong of Goryeo), she was chosen as Crown Prince Wang Jeong's Crown Princess consort. Then, she became his queen consort in 1260.[4] She was reduced to commoner status by her stepson, Wonjong's successor Chungnyeol in 1277.[5]
References
- ^ Married Wang Suk, Duke Jean (왕숙 제안공).
- ^ Married Wang Hye, Duke Gwangpyeong (왕혜 광평공).
- ^ "고려시대 史料 Database". db.history.go.kr (in Korean). Retrieved April 27, 2021.
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20160322165241/http://people.aks.ac.kr/front/tabCon/ppl/pplView.aks?pplId=PPL_5COa_A9999_2_0000344&curSetPos=0&curSPos=0&isEQ=true&kristalSearchArea=B
- ^ Henthorn, William E. (1963). Korea: the Mongol invasions. Leiden: E.J. Brill. pp. 166–167.
External links
- "Princess Gyeongchang" (in Korean). Encykorea.