They crossed the sea to North Kyushu and

2024. 11. 8. 23:22U.S. Economic Stock Market Outlook

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, "In the 4th Empire, after Geumgwan Gaya was defeated by Goguryeo troops in the early 5th century
It continued its existence until the sixth century, but for more than a hundred years after the end of the battle, Geumgwan Gaya actually disappeared, raising questions. Where on earth did they go.

They crossed the sea to North Kyushu and advanced to Ginai to establish Japan's first unified dynasty, which by our historical standards is the 5th empire. Since the mid-7th century was the time when a large number of Baekje people moved to the Japanese archipelago after the fall of Baekje, the arrival of the people from the Korean Peninsula to Japan began with the Gaya people in the ancient tombs nearly 200 years earlier.

Japan's Lake Biwa is located in two stops by train from Kyoto. Hundreds of people from the Japanese Book of Records came here
You can see the records that the Baekje people have migrated, and it is said that the Silla people already lived here before they came. But I don't know if these Silla people are Gaya people. The Anra-安 羅 Shrine here is Aragaya Shrine, which tells the migration of the Gaya people.

Today, I moved early in the morning to see the Aragaya Malisan Ancient Tombs in Haman. However, although it takes less than an hour by car from Gimhae to Haman, public transportation is inconvenient. At 6:30 in the morning, I took a city bus from Gimhae to Masan and went back to Haman by intercity bus. The morning bus was full, but it seemed that more than half of the foreigners were there. Perhaps they are people who go to work early in the morning. The appearance of the country seems to have changed a lot now.

The official excavation of the horse started during the Japanese colonial era, but even before that, the ancient tombs here have already been excavated. Still, many precious things such as barbs, horse armor and wheel and bird-shaped earthenware have been excavated here, and it is regrettable to think how much more precious things would have been poured out without the cave.

Early Gaya tombs are said to be easy to rob because there are many simple blood transfusion-type tombs. The stone mound tomb of Silla is not easy to rob. An astronomical chart is drawn on the ceiling of the 13th tomb in Mt. Malisan. A Japanese scientist said that the astronomical chart of the Kitora tomb in Asuka is also from Goguryeo, and they are our ancestors.

I transferred from Masan by intercity bus again and came to Gyeongju. I've been to Gyeongju a few times, but I started watching Woljeonggyo Bridge, which I haven't seen before
I went to Banwolseong, Anapji, Gyeongju Museum, and even Hwangryongsa Temple and Bunhwangsa Temple. I think I've seen Emilejong in the courtyard of the museum six to seven times since my school trip to the elementary school, but the more I see it, the more I think it's amazing.

Silla called Abiji, the father-in-law of Baekje, the enemy country at the time, and raised the old-story tower of Hwangryongsa Temple. It is almost 80 meters tall and has about 30 stories today, and the atrocities of the Mongolian army who burned it are abominable. Hwangryongsa Temple is in the form of one tower per three gold medals, and today, looking at its magnificent remains, I was convinced that we had a temple structure as good as Japan's Todaiji.
Ancient Korea was a world-class cultural powerhouse.

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