바로가기메뉴

본문 바로가기 주메뉴 바로가기

The Review of Korean Studies

King Taejo's Buddhist View and Statecraft in Tenth-Century Korea

The Review of Korean Studies / The Review of Korean Studies, (P)1229-0076; (E)2773-9351
2010, v.13 no.4, pp.189-215
https://doi.org/10.25024/review.2010.13.4.008

  • Downloaded
  • Viewed

Abstract

This paper examines King Taejo's Buddhist view and his statecraft in tenth-century Korea based on his own words, writings, and activities related to Buddhism. To that end, this research investigates the nature of Buddhism during the king's reign, his Buddhist activities, and the relationship between his politics and Buddhism. I came to a conclusion that: Buddhism during King Taejo's reign was not the state religion but a dominant religion; the king possibly understood Buddhism through the lens of Confucianism and the multi-dimensional cosmology; the king's prime concern was not with early teachings of the Buddha, including the Four Noble Truths, but with such skill-in-means asthe theory of karmic retribution and Buddhist events, which containedthe construction of temples and the performance of Buddhist rituals; and the king used Buddhism while coining Buddhist ethics for his secular purposes, including royal longevity, and putting Buddhist circles under his control; and the Buddhist circles ingratiated themselves with the king’s Buddhist policy in exchange for their sustenance, whose tradition had continued down to the end of the Goryeo dynasty.

keywords
Buddhism, Confucianism, statecraft, Taejo, tenth-century Korea, Buddhism, Confucianism, statecraft, Taejo, tenth-century Korea

Reference

1.

BHJ: Bohan jip (補閑集 Literary Collection of Jottings), KMC 2.

2.

DYSJ: Dongguk Yi Sangguk jeonjip 東國李相國集 (Collected Works of Minister Yi of Korea), KMC 1.

3.

GBG: Goryeosa Bulgyo gwangye saryojip wonmun (Collection of Buddhism-related Historical Records in the GRS: The Original). 2001. Seoul: Minjoksa.

4.

GRS: Goryeosa (History of the Goryeo Dynasty). (1962)1991. Pyeongyang: Sahoe gwahagwon gojeon yeongusil; Seoul: Sinseowon.

5.

GRSC: Goryeosa jeoryo (Excerpts from the History of the Goryeo Dynasty). 1973. Seoul: Asea Munhwasa.

6.

HBJ: Hanguk bulgyo jeonseo 韓國佛敎全書 (Collected Works of Korean Buddhism). (1984)1990. Volume 6 [14 volumes, 1979-2004]. Seoul: Dongguk University Press.

7.

Joseon wangjo sillok (Veritable Records of the Joseon Dynasty), http://sillok.history.go.kr

8.

KMC: Goryeo myeonghyeonjip 高麗名賢集 (Literary Collection of Eminent Goryeo Scholars). 1986. Volume 1 [5 volumes, 1986]. Seoul: Sungkyungwan University Press.

9.

SDYS: Sinjeung Dongguk yeoji seungnam 新增東國輿地勝覽 (Revised and Augmented Gazetteer of Korea). (1959)1981. Seoul: Myeongmundang.

10.

SGSG: Samguk sagi 三國史記 (sang)/ (ha) (The History of the Three Kingdoms, [1]/[2]). (1983)1986, trans. Yi Byeongdo. Seoul: Euryu munhwasa.

11.

SGYS: Samguk yusa 三國遺事 (The Memorabilia of the Three Kingdoms of Korea). (1983)1987. Trans. Yi Minsu. Seoul: Euryu munhwasa.

12.

YKP: Gyogam Yeokju Yeokdae goseung bimun 校勘譯註 歷代高僧碑文 (Annotated and Proofread Epitaphs of Successive Eminent Monks). 1994. Volume 1 [6 volumes, 1994-99]. Seoul: Gasan mungo.

13.

YNYK: Yeokju Namal Yeocho geumseongmun (sang) (Annotated Translation of Epitaphs from the Ninth to the Tenth Centuries [Volume One]). 1996. Seoul: Hyean.

14.

Ahn, Gye-hyeon. 1989. A Short History of Ancient Korean Buddhism. In Introduction of Buddhism to Korea: New Cultural Patterns, eds. Lewis R. Lancaster and C. S. Yu, 1-27. Berkeley, California: Asian Humanities Press. This is not a journal but a book.

15.

Breuker, Remco E. 2003. Koryŏ As an Independence Realm: The Emperor’s Clothes? Korean Studies 27:48-84.

16.

Breuker, Remco E. 2006. When Truth Is Everywhere: The Formation of Plural Identities in Medieval Korea, 918-1170, Ph.D. diss., Leiden University.

17.

Breuker, Remco E. 2008. Forging the Truth: Creative Deception and National Identity in Medieval Korea, Special monograph issue of East Asian History 35. Australian National University: Canberra:1-73.

18.

Breuker, Remco E. 2010. Establishing a Pluralist Society in Medieval Korea, 918-1170: History, Ideology and Identity in the Koryŏ Dynasty. Leidon∙Boston: Brill.

19.

Jo, Dongseop. 2009. Suncheon Songgwangsa go munseo dijiteollo hwahyeon (The Digitization of Ancient Documents at Songgwang Monastery in Suncheon), http://news.buddhapia.com.

20.

Jeong, Jegyu. 1996. Choe Eonwiui Bulgyo insik gwa geu seonggyeok (Choe Eonwi’s Understanding of Buddhism and Its Nature), Baengnyeon Bulgyo nonjip 5∙6:313-43.

21.

Ch’en, Kenneth. 1994. Bulgyoui ihae (An Understanding of Buddhism). Trans. Hee-Sung Keel and Yeonghae Yun. Seoul: Bundo ch’ulp’ansachulpansa.

22.

Choe, Yeonsik. 1999. Gyunyeo Hwaeom sasang yeongu (A Study of Gyunyeo’s Flower Garland Thought), Ph.D. diss., Seoul National University.

23.

Duncan, John B. 1988. “The Formation of the Central Aristocracy in Early Goryeo,” Korean Studies 12:39-61.

24.

Duncan, John B. 2000. The Origins of the Joseon Dynasty. Seattle and London: University of Washington Press.

25.

Farquhar, David M. 1978. Emperor As Bodhisattva in the Government of the Ching Empire, Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 38-1:5-34.

26.

Jorgensen, John. 2009. H-Net Review Publication: State Relations in the Goryeo Dynasty. http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id= 24556.

27.

Hanguk yeoksa yeonguhoe, ed. 1996. Yeokju Namal Yeocho geumseongmun (ha) (Annotated Translation of Epitaphs from the Ninth to the Tenth Centuries [Volume Two]). Seoul: Hyean.

28.

Heo, Heungsik. (1986)1990. Goryeo Bulgyo sa yeongu (A Study of the History of the Koryo Dynasty). Seoul: Iljogak.

29.

Kim, Juwon. 2008. Joseon wangjo sillok ui Yeojinjok Jongmyeong gwa inmyeong (Clan and Personal Names of the Khitans in the Veritable Records of the Joseon Dynasty). Seoul: Seoul National University.

30.

Kim, Jongmyung. 1994. Buddhist Rituals in Medieval Korea (918-1392), Ph.D. diss., University of California, Los Angeles.

31.

Kim, Jongmyung. 1995. Chajang (fl. 636-650) and Buddhism as National Protector: A Reconsideration. In Religions in Traditional Korea, ed. Henrik K. Sørensen. SBS Monographs 3. Copenhagen: Seminar for Buddhist Studies, University of Copenhagen, pp. 23-55.

32.

Kim, Jongmyung. 1999. Goryeo Yondeunghoe wa geu yusan (The Lantern Festival during the Goryeo Dynasty and Its Legacy), Bulgyo yeongu 16:45-94.

33.

Kim, Jongmyung. 2000. “Hoguk Bulgyo gaenyeom ui jae geomto (The Concept of State Protection Buddhism: A Reexamination), Jonggyo yeongu 21: 93-120.

34.

Kim, Jongmyung. 2001. Hanguk cheungse ui Bulgyo uirye: sasang jeok baegyeong gwa yeoksa jeok uimi (Buddhist Rituals in Medieval Korea: Ideological Background and Historical Meaning). Seoul: Munhakgwa chiseongsa.

35.

Kim, Jongmyung. 2002. The Tripiaka Koreana: Its Computerization and Significance for the Cultural Sciences in a Modern Globalization World. In Korea and Globalization: Politics, Economics and Culture. Ed. James Lewis and Amadu Sesay, 154-81. London: RoutledgeCurzon.

36.

Kim, Jongmyung. 2004. The Chogye Order. In Encyclopedia of Buddhism. 2 volumes. Ed. Robert E. Buswell, Jr., 158-59. New York: Macmillan.

37.

Kim, Jongmyung. 2010. A Search for New Approaches to Research on Korean Buddhist History, Korean Histories 2.1: 45-56. Volume 2 Number 1

38.

Kim, Seongjun. 1985. Hanguk jungse jeongchi peopje sa yeongu (A Study of the History of the Korean Legal System in Medieval Korea). Seoul: Iljogak.

39.

Lee, Peter H., ed. 1993. Sourcebook of Korean Civilization. Volume One. New York: Columbia University Press.

40.

Nam, Dong-shin. 2003. Buddhism in Medieval Korea, Korea Journal 43-4:30-58.

41.

No, Myeongho. 1999. Goryeo sidae ui dawon jeok cheonha gwan gwa Haedong cheonja (The Multidimensional World View during the Goryeo Dynasty and the Korean Son of Heaven), Hanguk sa yeongu 105:3-40.

42.

No, Myeongho. 2002. Tongnyeom gwa inyeome gariun Goryeo sahoe ui cheje jeok teukjing deul (Hidden Systemic Features in Goryeo Society: Beyeond Conventional Wisdom), Hanguk sa yeongu bangbeomnongwa banghyang mosaek (On historiography of Korea: methodologies and Strategies), the collection of papers presented in the international conference on Korean history, Hotel Seoul kyoyuk munhwa hoegwan (Retain this romanization intact), Seoul, Korea, June 19-20:61-77.

43.

Nuffelen, Peter van. 2008. The Later Roman Empire as a Ritualised Society, paper presented in the conference on Ritual Dynamics and the Science of Ritual, held at the Neue Universität Heidelberg, Abstract Collection and Programme, p. 135. Yes, one page abstract, throughout

44.

Pak, Yongun. (1988) 1991. Goryeo sidae sa (A History of the Goryeo Period). Seoul: Iljisa.

45.

Quack, Joachim Friedrich. 2008. Political Rituals: Sense and Nonsense of a Term and Its Application to Ancient Egypt, paper presented in the conference on Ritual Dynamics and the Science of Ritual, held at the Neue Universität Heidelberg, Abstract Collection and Programme, p. 134.

46.

Spanos, Apostolos. 2008. Emperors and Saints in Byzantium, paper presented in the conference on Ritual Dynamis and the Science of Ritual, held at the Neue Universität Heidelberg, Abstract Collection and Programme, p. 134.

47.

Vermeersch, Sem. 2004. Buddhism and State-Building in Song China and Goryeo Korea, Asia Pacific: Perspectives V-1:4-11. Yes, volume and number

48.

Vermeersch, Sem. 2007. The Eminent Goryeo Monk: Stele Inscriptions as Sources for the Lives and Careers of Goryeo Monks, Seoul Journal of Korean Studies 20-2 Volume 20 Number 2:115-47.

49.

Vermeersch, Sem. 2008. The Power of the Buddhas: The Politics of Buddhism During the Goryeo Dynasty (918-1392). Harvard East Asian Monographs 303. Cambridge: Harvard University Asia Center.

50.

Wittfogel, Karl A. and Jiasheng Feng. (1949)1961. History of China Society: Liao (907-1125). Lancaster, Pennsylvania: Lancaster Press, Inc.

51.

Yi, Hyeonjong. (1971) 2005. Dongyang yeonpyo (A Chronological Table of East Asian History). Seoul: Tamgudang.

52.

Yi, Kibaek. (1967)1991. Hanguksa sillon (A New History of Korea). Seoul: Ilchogak.

53.

Yun, Iheum, et al. 2002. Goryeo sidae ui jonggyo munhwa (Religious Culture in the Goryeo Period). Seoul: Seoul University Press.

The Review of Korean Studies