Goryeo, also known as Koryŏ (Hangul: 고려; hanja: 高麗; Korean pronunciation: [koɾjʌ]; 918–1392), was a Korean dynasty established in 918 by King Taejo. This kingdom later gave name to the modern exonym "Korea". It united the Later Three Kingdoms in 936 and ruled most of the Korean Peninsula until it was removed by the founder of the Joseon in 1392. Goryeo expanded Korea's borders to present-day Wonsan in the northeast (936–943), the Yalu River (993) and finally almost the whole of the Korean Peninsula (1374).
Two of this period's most notable products are celadon pottery and the Tripitaka Koreana—the Buddhist canon (Tripiṭaka) carved onto roughly 80,000 woodblocks and stored (and still remaining) at Haeinsa. Subjects and officials of Goryeo also created the world's first metal-based movable type in 1234; the oldest surviving movable metal type book, the Jikji, was printed in 1377.
In 668, Silla conquered Baekje and Goguryeo with an alliance with Tang China, but by the late 9th century it was tottering, its monarchs being unimaginative and pressed by the power of powerful statesmen. Many robbers and outlaws agitated and in 900 Gyeon Hwon revolted from Silla control in the Jeolla region as the state of Later Baekje; the year after, Gung Ye revolted from the northern regions as Taebong. A son of a regional lord, Wang Geon, joined Taebong as a general.
Koryo or Goryeo (Hangul: 고려; hanja: 高麗; RR: Goryeo; MR: Koryŏ) may refer to:
[Oo-o]
[Oo-o]
Devastation in the gardens
A virgin beast betrayed cries out in need
What have you done to my existence?
Where evolution now evolves from greed
When the moon above the jungle
Wipes the final tear from heaven's eyes
Who will save the children? The children cry
(92 days of rain) falling down on me
There will be
(92 days of rain) driving us to our knees
(Wash away the hunger)
Baby won't you heel our souls
(God looks back in anger at the roads we've chose)
O, I will always believe in the light
Sun's gonna shine
I know it will one day, I know
From the bible like Noah before us
Where today march all the prophet's men?
Selfish my compassion
All my reasons, all my ambivalence
Tell me why I turn my face
For shelter by the easy shore?
Tell my why all this crying I ignore?
(92 days of rain) falling down on me
There will be
(92 days of rain) driving us to our knees
(Wash away the hunger)
Baby won't you heal our souls
God looks back in anger at the roads we've chose
(92 days of rain) falling down on me