2022년 3월 6일 일요일

Buyeo Equestrian Tribe and Archae. Archaeology

 Chapter 1 Buyeo people and horse 2. Buyeo horseback riding people and archaeological archaeology are very dangerous for militarists.      Japanese military forces struggled to instill the concept of a "sacred emperor" and forced them to bow to the "native Shinto faith." They did not think that both of the above facts originated in Korea; they were not scholars.         Gaya Harehead Armor 존John Kobel In fact, most Japanese people have been "Mansaeilgye" since 660 AD, and they do not think that the "sacred emperors" have been in full Korean descent for more than 100 years. Few Japanese know that Japanese Shinto has its roots in Korean shamanism. Korean shamanism was glorified in Japan and combined with the idea of worshiping the emperor. On the other hand, in Korea, it has been downgraded to humble by Confucian ruling classes and Christian missionaries.      If excavation and research of ancient tombs are freely allowed, archaeology will be a tool to properly uncover the existence of the past emperor of Japan. In the early 1920s, Japanese archaeologists began excavating ancient tombs in Gyeongju and excavated several beautiful gold crowns, earrings, belts, and numerous burial items. They also found murals covered with paintings of horses and boats in an ancient tomb in the Kyushu region. Only the gilt-bronze crown was found as a relic, but the gilt-bronze crown was not excavated.      What was revealed in this archaeology was that Korea in the 5th and 6th centuries was far ahead of Japan. Surprised by this, the Japanese government banned archaeological excavations. Therefore, excavation of the tombs of Japanese kings on the Nara Plain is strictly prohibited. The measure was taken in fear that the burial items resulting from the excavation would further prove such facts.      The excavation of the tomb of the Japanese king is still prohibited, but if King Oh Jin, the first generation of the Buyeo Horse tribe, or King Nintoku, the second generation, are discovered, there is a high possibility that a Gaya-type gold crown will emerge. Archaeology is indeed a scary thing. History often leaves a record of mischievous lies to the ruler. On the other hand, archaeology leaves only relics as they are, and conclusions are drawn here.       Hani and earth dolls showing armed warriors and horses from the late ancient times of Japan (from the mid-4th century to the 6th century). There is a record that there were 20,000 such soil around the tomb of King Sindoku, the second generation of Buyeo. ⓒFor example, John Kobel's ancient history book Kosagi was completed in 712 AD and the Japanese secretary in 720. The Japanese royal officers had to bury traces of 130 years of rule by the Buyeo Kiln and decorate the legitimacy of the lineage to the then Hwajok ruler. According to Professor Ledyard of Columbia University, the Buyeo people ruled Japan from 369 to 505 AD, ranging from the 15th King Oh Jin (also known as King Homuda) to the 26th King Keitai.      Prior to King Ohjin from Buyeo, Japan was a loose tribal society, and among them, its powerful leader ruled Yamado Island or Nara Plain, a fertile rice paddy farming site. However, the 'state' of the centralized concept had not yet been formed. The first centralized system appeared in Japan by the rule of the Buyeo people from the Korean Peninsula. How was this possible? These Buyeo people carried horses on ships and crossed the strait, and had superior weapons such as spears and knives; the Buyeo people easily overpowered the natives and advanced from Kyushu to the Nara Plain. The Buyeo people of the Ojin Dynasty did not come to Japan from the Korean Peninsula for the first time and settled, but another story is needed about a group of Koreans who moved to Japan around 300 AD.      In the early 8th century, Japanese eoyongsa people had to make up such strange means in historical records, so as a result, these librarians remained half unreliable. The lions adapted the anger of Emperor Jinmu, who themselves called themselves "the punitive men who came from Kyushu to the Nara Plain," as something that took place in 600 years before. At that time, Japan could not escape from the Stone Age, but only in the 300s before AD, it was possible to enter the era of rice farming and bronze metal due to the arrival of Koreans. Korea had already had this civilization before the fourth century before its spread to Japan.      Another way made up by Japanese historians in the 8th century was to manipulate the life of the emperor for a long time and return it to complete fiction. The history that was able to be pointed out as much as possible as Saga Deul was only after the 4th century. In order to assert that Emperor Ohjin was born at least in Japanese territory, her mother, Queen Jingu, who also recognized that Japanese historians were Korean princes, conceived a married man after the death of her husband. The history book states that she used stones in a shamanic way to slow down the birth of misdiagnosis. As a strategy to nationalize the conquest of Japan by Koreans, the original word of the conquest was reversed and recorded in history as if Japan conquered Korea (including Gaya, Silla, and Baekje to some extent). By doing so, the Japanese in the future were satisfied. In the days when Japan colonized Korea in recent years, it was also unacceptable for Japan that Japanese civilization was entirely dependent on Korea, including the fact that Korean blood was superior to them.         Murals of ancient tombs in the late Japanese period. The painting of a person who has been sailing with a bird sitting on a boat is a historical document that tells the conquest of Japan by the Buyeo people. ⓒFor the first time in 240 years, a Chinese envoy came to Japan. It seems that they first landed in Kyushu and heard reports of other parts of Japan there. Chinese historical records on this said that small tribal chiefs, along with Queen Himiko of Shaman (Bimiho), the most powerful being, dominate fertile land in the country. At this time, the southern regions of Korea, Kyushu, Japan, and western Honshu regions seem to have been related to each other by lineage or language (this also requires separate commentary).      Japanese society in the 3rd century AD is called the Yayoi (Misaeng) era, just outside the Stone Age, and learned how to use iron, bronze, and pottery spinning wheels from the Korean Peninsula. Land traffic was insignificant, and they mainly used sea routes. Gimhae on the Korean Peninsula had an iron mine at this time, which was the key point of shipping iron to the northern part of the Korean Peninsula, China, and Japan.      At that time, shamanism prevailed throughout Japan, and there were numerous spirits. The ruler, a shamanic shaman, made a prophecy and ruled the tribe. The shamans who received strong belief were often women. While digging large and small waterways, if it didn't go well, the living person was sacrificed.      At this time, we have no choice but to imagine how the Buyeo warriors crossed the sea toward Kyushu. In hopes of a safe voyage, a symbolic gift dedicated to the dragon king of the sea must have been on his belly. Several leaves were sewn and flattened, and the gosatteok was put in and sent up. More caringly, he would have sent chopsticks for the Dragon King.      Koreans who came to Japan during the Yayoi period can call them "cultural invaders," but the Buyeo people who came to Japan in 369 were different. They were military groups and came to Japan after finding a new Shincheonji to settle down. Because of that, it was necessary to accompany horses (there were no horses in the early stages in Japan). It is calculated that as much as possible, 15 horses, 15 cavalry-horsemen, and 3 water soldiers were together on a ship. In addition, there had to be a separate space for shipping food and water to drink. It seems that the ship was not more than 20 meters tall, and the horse was loaded with a tight tie from head to tail. He would have stopped by Tsushima Island as an intermediate stopover and rested before leaving again.      The history book states that there is a legend that a storm broke out in the sea at this time, and a crow appeared and led the leading ship to the mainland. The two brothers of Emperor Jinmu died in a storm at this time. In Kyushu's ancient tomb mural, there is a picture of a bird sitting on a boat. It is a record proving the Buyeo people's voyage to Japan.

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