Taebong

Later Goguryeo
후고구려 (後高句麗)
Hugoguryeo
고려 (高麗)
Goryeo
마진 (摩震)
Majin
태봉 (泰封)
Taebong
901–918
Taebong at its height in 915.
Taebong at its height in 915.
CapitalSongak (901–905), Cheorwon (905–918)
Common languagesOld Korean,
Classical Chinese (literary)
Religion
Buddhism (state religion),
Confucianism,
Taoism,
Shamanism
GovernmentBuddhist Theocratic monarchy
King 
• 901–918
Kung Ye
History 
• Establishment
901
• Fall
918
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Unified Silla
Goryeo Dynasty
Today part ofSouth Korea
North Korea
Taebong
Hangul
고려 (901–904)
마진 (904–911)
태봉 (911–918)
Hanja
高麗 (901–904)
摩震 (904–911)
泰封 (911–918)
Revised RomanizationGoryeo (901–904)
Majin (904–911)
Taebong (911–918)
McCune–ReischauerKoryŏ (901–904)
Majin (904–911)
T'aebong (911–918)

Taebong (Korean태봉; Hanja泰封; RRTaebong; MRT'aebong; Korean pronunciation: [tʰɛ.boŋ]) was a state established by Kung Ye (Korean궁예; Hanja弓裔) on the Korean Peninsula in 901 during the Later Three Kingdoms.[1]

  1. ^ "Taebong". Doopedia.

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