The Joseon Dynasty
Poznaj koreańską dynastię Joseon, od założyciela Taejo Yi Seong-gye przez króla Sejonga Wielkiego po schyłek Cesarstwa Koreańskiego: pięć wieków królów na żywej mapie narodzin, małżeństw i migracji w RootsLore.
Osoby w tym drzewie genealogicznym
- Taejo · 1335–06/18/1408 · Yeonghung, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Founder of the Joseon Dynasty, the general Yi Seonggye, who overthrew the Goryeo Kingdom and took the throne in 1392 after turning his army back at Wihwa Island. He moved the capital to Hanyang (modern Seoul) and adopted Neo-Confucianism as the new state’s creed; worn down by a bloody succession struggle among his sons, he abdicated in 1398 and died in 1408.
- Queen Sinui of Han · 1337–1391 · Yeonghung, Korea → Hamheung, Korea — First wife of Taejo and mother of the second and third kings, Jeongjong and Taejong. She died in 1391, the year before her husband seized the throne, and so never lived to be queen of the Joseon she had helped bring about; she was honoured as Queen Sinui posthumously.
- Jeongjong · 1357–1419 · Hamheung, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Second king of Joseon and a son of Taejo, raised to the throne after the first violent struggle among the princes. A reluctant ruler who left real power to his ambitious younger brother Yi Bangwon, he reigned barely two years before abdicating to him in 1400 and living out a long, quiet retirement until 1419.
- Queen Wongyeong of Min · 1365–1420 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Queen consort of Taejong and a formidable political partner, whose Min family helped her husband to power in the bloody succession struggles. Tensions over his concubines and the fate of her brothers later strained the marriage; the mother of Sejong the Great, she died in 1420.
- Taejong · 1367–1422 · Hamheung, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Third king of Joseon, born Yi Bangwon, the forceful fifth son of Taejo who cleared his own path to the throne in two purges of his brothers. He broke the power of the founding nobility, built the central bureaucracy and strengthened royal authority — the hard foundation on which his son Sejong’s golden age rested. He abdicated in 1418 and died in 1422.
- Queen Soheon of Shim · 1395–1446 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Queen consort of Sejong the Great and mother of two kings, Munjong and Sejo. Praised as a model Confucian queen, she bore the king many children and shared in his celebrated reign, though her own family had suffered in the purges of Taejong’s last years; she died in 1446.
- Sejong · 1397–1450 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Fourth and most revered king of Joseon, known as Sejong the Great. His reign was a golden age of science, law and the arts, crowned by his creation of Hangul, the Korean alphabet, promulgated in 1446 so that ordinary people could read and write. He also advanced astronomy, music, printing and military technology before his death in 1450.
- Munjong · 1414–1452 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Fifth king of Joseon and eldest son of Sejong, long his father’s trusted deputy through Sejong’s final ailing years. A learned and capable prince, he reigned only two years before dying in 1452, leaving the throne to his twelve-year-old son Danjong — and the boy dangerously exposed to his powerful uncles.
- Sejo · 1417–1468 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Seventh king of Joseon, born Grand Prince Suyang, the second son of Sejong who seized power from his young nephew Danjong in a 1453 coup and took the throne in 1455. A forceful, capable ruler despite the bloody manner of his accession, he strengthened the monarchy and commissioned the Gyeonggukdaejeon, the dynasty’s foundational law code, before his death in 1468.
- Queen Jeonghui of Yun · 1418–1483 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Queen consort of Sejo and the first dowager in Joseon history to govern as regent. After her husband’s death she ruled during the minorities of her son Yejong and grandson Seongjong, steering the court through two delicate successions, until her death in 1483.
- Crown Prince Uigyeong · 1438–1457 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Eldest son of Sejo, who died at twenty in 1457 before he could inherit the throne. When his own second son was chosen as King Seongjong, the prince was posthumously elevated to King Deokjong, so that the reigning line might descend from a king rather than a mere crown prince.
- Danjong · 1441–1457 · Seoul, Korea → Yeongwol, Korea — Sixth king of Joseon, who came to the throne a boy of twelve. Stripped of real power and then the crown itself by his uncle Sejo in 1455, he was demoted, exiled to Yeongwol and put to death at sixteen in 1457. The tragedy long haunted the dynasty’s conscience, and he was posthumously restored to royal honour in 1698.
- Yejong · 1450–1469 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Eighth king of Joseon and second son of Sejo, who came to the throne already in poor health. His reign lasted barely fourteen months before his death in 1469, the crown passing to his nephew Seongjong under the regency of the dowager queen Jeonghui.
- Seongjong · 1457–1494 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Ninth king of Joseon, a grandson of Sejo raised to the throne as a boy under his grandmother’s regency. A cultivated Confucian monarch, he brought the great law code Gyeonggukdaejeon to completion and patronised scholarship at the royal academies, presiding over a stable and prosperous reign until his death in 1494.
- Yeonsangun · 1476–1506 · Seoul, Korea → Ganghwa Island, Korea — Tenth king of Joseon and son of Seongjong, remembered as the dynasty’s most notorious tyrant. Embittered by the forced death of his mother, the deposed Lady Yun, he unleashed two bloody purges of the scholar-officials and ruled with cruel caprice until the nobility deposed him in 1506. Stripped of any temple name, he is known only as Yeonsangun, the “Prince of Yeonsan”, and died in exile that year.
- Jungjong · 1488–1544 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Eleventh king of Joseon, a half-brother of Yeonsangun placed on the throne by the nobles who overthrew him in 1506. He backed the idealistic Confucian reformer Jo Gwangjo before abandoning him to a purge, and his long reign was riven by the factional and royal-in-law power struggles that would trouble the rest of the century. He died in 1544.
- Injong · 1515–1545 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Twelfth king of Joseon and eldest son of Jungjong, a famously filial and scholarly prince. His reign was the shortest in the dynasty’s history — about eight months — ending with his death in 1545, said to have been hastened by his extreme mourning for his father, and the throne passed to his young half-brother Myeongjong.
- Deokheung Daewon-gun · 1530–1559 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — A son of Jungjong who never reigned but became father of a king when his own son was chosen to succeed the heirless Myeongjong as Seonjo. He was honoured with the title Daewongun, “grand prince of the court” — the first to bear it, a precedent later given to the father of Gojong.
- Myeongjong · 1534–1567 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Thirteenth king of Joseon, who came to the throne at eleven on the early death of his half-brother Injong. Real power lay with his mother, the dowager Munjeong, and her Yun kinsmen, whose regency opened with a deadly purge of rivals; banditry and factional strife marked the reign. He died in 1567 without a surviving heir, ending the senior royal line.
- Seonjo · 1552–1608 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Fourteenth king of Joseon, a grandson of Jungjong chosen to succeed the heirless Myeongjong. His reign saw the scholar-official factions harden and, above all, the catastrophic Japanese invasions of 1592–1598 (the Imjin War), through which he fled north as the country was ravaged before being saved by Admiral Yi Sun-sin and Ming intervention. He died in 1608.
- Gwanghaegun · 1575–1641 · Seoul, Korea → Jeju Island, Korea — Fifteenth king of Joseon, a son of Seonjo who managed the recovery from the Imjin War and steered a shrewd neutrality between the declining Ming and the rising Manchu Qing. Resented for purging royal rivals, he was overthrown in 1623 and exiled to Jeju Island, where he died in 1641. Denied a temple name, he is remembered only as Gwanghaegun, the “Prince of Gwanghae”.
- Wonjong · 1580–1619 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — A son of Seonjo, born Prince Jeongwon, who never reigned in his lifetime. When his son seized the throne as Injo in the 1623 coup, he was posthumously elevated to King Wonjong so that the new king might descend from a king — an honour that stirred years of ritual dispute at court. He had died in 1619.
- Injo · 1595–1649 · Haeju, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Sixteenth king of Joseon, who took the throne in the 1623 coup that deposed his uncle Gwanghaegun and reversed his policy toward the Manchus. The change brought disaster: the Qing invaded in 1627 and again in 1636, forcing Injo into a humiliating submission at Samjeondo. He reigned, much diminished, until his death in 1649.
- Hyojong · 1619–1659 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Seventeenth king of Joseon, a son of Injo who had been held hostage in Qing China and returned burning to avenge the dynasty’s humiliation. He devoted his reign to a secret “northern expedition” to strike at the Qing, quietly building up the army — an ambition cut short by his death in 1659 before it could be attempted.
- Hyeonjong · 1641–1674 · Shenyang, China → Seoul, Korea — Eighteenth king of Joseon, born in Shenyang while his father Hyojong was a Qing hostage. His reign was consumed by the bitter “rites controversies” — factional disputes over the correct mourning periods for the royal house — which deepened the split between the Westerner and Southerner factions. He died in 1674.
- Royal Noble Consort Jang · 1659–10/10/1701 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Sukjong’s favourite consort, the celebrated and infamous Jang Hui-bin, who rose from palace attendant to displace Queen Inhyeon and briefly become queen herself, only to be cast down when Inhyeon was restored. Mother of the future Gyeongjong, she was ordered to take poison in 1701 after Inhyeon’s death, and her name became a byword for court intrigue.
- Sukjong · 1661–1720 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Nineteenth king of Joseon, who mastered the court by turning the factions against one another in a series of abrupt purges. His long reign is remembered for the dramatic rise and fall of his consorts — the deposition and restoration of Queen Inhyeon and the execution of the favourite Consort Jang — and for genuine administrative reform. He died in 1720.
- Queen Inhyeon of Min · 1667–1701 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Queen consort of Sukjong, deposed in 1689 when the king favoured his consort Lady Jang, then restored to her place in 1694 as the factions turned again. Her downfall and return were among the most dramatic episodes of the reign, later retold in popular literature; she died in 1701, possibly poisoned.
- Gyeongjong · 1688–1724 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Twentieth king of Joseon, the sickly son of Sukjong and the executed Consort Jang. His brief four-year reign was paralysed by a savage struggle between the factions over who should be named his heir, and he died childless in 1724, the throne passing to his half-brother Yeongjo.
- Yeongjo · 1694–1776 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Twenty-first and longest-reigning king of Joseon, on the throne for fifty-two years. He is remembered for his Tangpyeong policy of impartial balance between the factions and for far-reaching reforms — and, tragically, for ordering his own son, Crown Prince Sado, sealed into a rice chest to die in 1762. He died in 1776, succeeded by Sado’s son Jeongjo.
- Crown Prince Sado · 1735–1762 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Son of Yeongjo and father of Jeongjo, a prince whose erratic and violent behaviour — variously read as madness or as the product of a crushing father — alarmed the court. In 1762 Yeongjo had him sealed alive in a rice chest, where he died after eight days, one of the dynasty’s most harrowing episodes; he was posthumously honoured as Emperor Jangjo.
- Lady Hyegyeong · 1735–1815 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Wife of Crown Prince Sado and mother of King Jeongjo, who lived through the killing of her husband and survived decades at the heart of the court. In old age she wrote the “Memoirs of Lady Hyegyeong”, a vivid and unflinching account of palace life and her husband’s death that ranks among the masterpieces of Korean prose. She died in 1815.
- Jeongjo · 1752–1800 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Twenty-second king of Joseon, grandson of Yeongjo and son of the executed Prince Sado, widely regarded as the dynasty’s last great ruler. An enlightened reformer, he founded the Gyujanggak royal library, championed Silhak “practical learning”, and built the great Hwaseong Fortress at Suwon in honour of his father. His sudden death in 1800 cut short his reforms.
- Prince Euneon · 1754–1801 · Seoul, Korea → Ganghwa Island, Korea — A son of Crown Prince Sado and half-brother of King Jeongjo, who lived his life under suspicion as a possible rival to the throne. Banished to Ganghwa Island, he was put to death in the Catholic Persecution of 1801 amid accusations against his household; through his line came the future King Cheoljong.
- Jeongye Daewongun · 1785–1841 · Ganghwa Island, Korea → Seoul, Korea — A grandson of Crown Prince Sado who, after his family’s disgrace, lived in obscurity and poverty as a commoner on Ganghwa Island. He never reigned, but his son was plucked from that farming life to become King Cheoljong in 1849, and he was posthumously honoured with the title Daewongun.
- Sunjo · 1790–1834 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Twenty-third king of Joseon, who came to the throne at ten, opening the era of “in-law government” in which power passed to the queen’s relatives. His reign was dominated by the Andong Kim clan and blighted by famine, rebellion and the first persecutions of Catholics, and the monarchy’s authority steadily waned. He died in 1834.
- Crown Prince Hyomyeong · 1809–1830 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Son of Sunjo, who as crown prince acted as regent for his ailing father and showed rare promise as a reformer before his sudden death at twenty-one in 1830. His son became King Heonjong, and the prince was posthumously honoured, eventually as Emperor Munjo.
- Heungseon Daewongun · 1820–1898 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Father of Gojong and, as the Heungseon Daewongun, the iron regent who ruled in his young son’s name from 1863. He rebuilt Gyeongbokgung Palace, broke the in-law clans and crushed both Catholicism and foreign overtures with a fierce isolationism, before being pushed aside by Queen Myeongseong; he remained a power behind the throne until his death in 1898.
- Heonjong · 1827–1849 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Twenty-fourth king of Joseon, who succeeded his grandfather Sunjo at the age of seven, the in-law clans ruling in his name. His short reign saw the Gihae Persecution of Catholics in 1839 and continuing clan domination; he died in 1849 without an heir, at the age of twenty-two.
- Cheoljong · 1831–01/16/1864 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Twenty-fifth king of Joseon, a distant royal kinsman found living as a farmer on Ganghwa Island and raised to the throne in 1849 precisely because he was pliable. Barely literate and wholly in the grip of the Andong Kim clan, he reigned as a figurehead amid mounting unrest until his death in 1863, again without an heir.
- Queen Myeongseong of Min · 1851–10/08/1895 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Queen consort of Gojong and the dominant political force at his court, who steered Korea toward Russia to check the growing power of Japan. For this she was assassinated by Japanese agents at Gyeongbokgung Palace in 1895 — a murder that inflamed Korean resistance — and was posthumously raised to Empress Myeongseong.
- Gojong · 1852–01/21/1919 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Twenty-sixth king of Joseon and, from 1897, first Emperor of the Korean Empire, who took the throne as a boy under the regency of his father, the Heungseon Daewongun. He steered Korea through its perilous opening to the world, balancing Chinese, Japanese and Russian pressure and proclaiming an empire to assert independence — but was forced to abdicate by Japan in 1907 and died in 1919.
- Sunjong · 1874–04/24/1926 · Seoul, Korea → Seoul, Korea — Twenty-seventh and last king of Joseon and second Emperor of the Korean Empire, placed on the throne when Japan forced his father Gojong to abdicate in 1907. Powerless under the Japanese resident-general, he reigned only until the annexation of 1910 dissolved the throne, ending five centuries of the dynasty; he lived on as a deposed monarch until 1926.