2022년 3월 6일 일요일

The origin of Japanese culture, Gaya, and Baekje.

 Chapter 1, Buyeo people, horse 1, the source of Japanese culture, Gaya, and Baekje are actively working on finding roots among intellectuals from many countries today. Many Japanese tourists visit southern Korea on a considerable schedule, enter Busan, visit Gyeongju, and visit Buyeo and Gongju, even though it is not a commercial business. In fact, museums in the Baekje area are places where many Japanese look around more seriously than Koreans. This is because it is the origin of Japanese history and culture from Korea, especially from the 6th to 7th centuries.      Among the countries that flourished on the Korean Peninsula at that time, Baekje enjoyed diplomatic relations close to the Chinese Yang Dynasty, a Buddhist country near Shanghai today, and was considered the "most artistic and non-combatant" country.      The leaders of Baekje and the Yang Dynasty competitively admired Buddhism. At this time, Buddhism served as a tool to spread various arts from the continent to the Korean Peninsula in addition to writing and medical knowledge (medical business was part of Buddhist evangelism). Sculpture, painting, and other detailed arts were also developed for the purpose of majestic Buddhism, and Buddhist architecture was also prevalent. Since the great parts of Buddhism were the aristocrats, the palace was modeled after the temple architecture. The ruling class aristocrats accepted this religion as patriotism.           Japanese Kyushu Takehara Ancient Tombs Murals. There is a person who speaks on a ship that has sailed around the 5th century, and another large horse is drawn in the air. It depicts Buyeo people and horses who came from the Korean Peninsula and entered Japan. At the same time, the concept of the sky horse followed. ⓒPrecian, however, Japan did not encounter Buddhism until the middle of the 6th century. From 369 to 505, Japan was ruled by shamanistic kings of Korean descent. The Buyeo horseback riding people on the Korean Peninsula, who were superior to the native Japanese in terms of iron use and military strategy, easily conquered Japan from 369 to 370 years and established the first centralized system in Japan, enjoying "sacred kingship." The Buyeo people maintained diplomatic close ties with Gaya on the Korean Peninsula, and fundamentally, the culture that the Buyeo people spread to Japan was a shamanic culture before Buddhism, worshiping horses and having strong leadership and a large burial system.         In 1973, I visited the oldest village in Japan.It was a place named Huru. According to Gary Ledger, a Korean professor at Columbia University, the term "Furu" means "buru" or "bu-bu." Professor Ledger suggests exactly 369 years when many Buyeo people crossed the sea and conquered Japan.      I also believe that large tombs scattered around Osaka-Nara are the tombs of the Buyeo people, the conqueror of Japan. Among them, the largest ancient tomb is known as the Ninto Kingdom. Now, only one layer of moat surrounds the ancient tomb, but originally, three layers of moats were surrounded and the total length is about 1,000 meters. This scale accounts for half of the Egyptian pyramids.      There is also a record of King Nintoku in the official Japanese history book written in 720 to justify the modulation of the Japanese king's Korean Buyeo lineage into a more Japanese Chinese lineage. To support such alterations, Japanese scribes are manipulating that some Japanese kings lived hundreds of years during the royal change period created by the Buyeo conquering Japan. Japanese historians in the 8th century describe King Oh Jin as "a baby born 12 months after Empress Shin conquered Korea."      This record that "the god conquered Korea" was of course completely overturned and fabricated. In fact, on the contrary, the Buyeo horsemen crossed the strait by boat, conquered Kyushu first, and subsequently occupied western Honshu to build a capital on the plains of the current Osaka-Nara area. The Buyeo people were able to conquer quickly because they had very superior combat power as horseback riding people. Relatively uncivilized natives of Japan easily gave in. The Buyeo horsemen led Japan to a more systematically integrated and improved military power until 505 when the Buyeo royal authority was cut off due to internal heat. The Buyeo people believed in shamanism, and Buddhism was not introduced until then.         The tomb of King Sindoku of the Late Ancient Tombs in Osaka, Japan. Excavation of this tomb, which is considered the tomb of the Buyeo people on the Korean Peninsula, is prohibited. There is a moat around the tomb. ⓒWhere did the Presians come from? After the fall collapsed due to a lack of northern boundaries on the Korean Peninsula adjacent to Goguryeo, it moved to the south, and some were conquered by the scholars. At the peak of Buyeo's power, it reached the Hangang River, and some of the tribes merged with Baekje, and some moved to Busan through Gaya.      It is said that Japan conquered King Shinmu, or Jinmudenno, as the first king of the "Mansaeilgye" lineage. This fact represents the conquest of Japan by the Buyeo people. For Japanese historians who started recording in the 8th century, the history of the period before the appearance of Japanese characters was very distant. They returned King Shinmu's residence to 660 years before standing. Any country's early historical records emphasize that the country's founding took place a long time ago, and Japan was no exception.      In Kyushu, murals depicting the Buyeo people who crossed the strait from the Korean Peninsula and landed in Japan remain. Kyushu was able to be excavated in that way, but excavation of ancient tombs in Japan is prohibited. It would be embarrassing for the Japanese royal family if Gaya-style gold crowns or earrings came out when the tomb of King Nintoku was excavated, or artifacts such as Gaya and Baekje earthenware came out. Japan should become more free to liquidate the remnants of colonial policy in the 20th century and come out so that the people can know the truth.      In the 5th century, the Buyeo people of Japan married a noble family from Gaya. The descendants of the Buyeo people had an influence on Gaya until 562 when Silla annexed Gaya. It is an interesting fact that 30% of the aristocrats were foreigners in the first census conducted by Japan at the end of the 7th century. Most of them were Korean, especially descendants of the Buyeo people who left their homeland as refugees when Baekje fell to Silla in 1960. A significant portion of Baekje's population, an intelligent and competent group of experts, has left their homeland and fled to Japan, an ally. This large influx of brain from Korea helped Japan, which advocated a Buddhist state in the 7th century, to develop its own culture in the future, including Buddhist art and architectural technology.      Looking back on history, the prosperity of Japanese Buddhist art and government rescue laws such as the centralized system continued to rely heavily on inflow from the Korean Peninsula. This inflow from the Korean Peninsula has led to numerous influences as the times passed since the rice paddy farming law was spread to Japanese society in the Stone Age in 330 AD. Among these influences, the two most significant are the influx of a significant number of ruling classes by the Buyeo horsemen in the 4th century, the introduction of a large burial system, and the incorporation of numerous Baekje residents into Japanese society in the late 7th century.      In a recent book published (1982), Professor Tamura of Kyushu National University admitted that Korea has been the mother of Japanese culture for hundreds of years since the 8th century until China became the birthplace of Japanese culture. However, Professor Tamura resigned as a professor shortly after publishing this book. In Japan, that fact may have been something you didn't want to hear.

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