Prince Hyoryeong

Grand Prince Hyoryeong (6 January 1396 – 12 June 1486) was the Grand Prince and second-born son of King Taejong of Joseon Dynasty and his consort Queen Wongyeong. He was the elder brother of King Sejong.

Grand Prince Hyoryeong
Grand Prince of Joseon
Born6 January 1396
Seoul
Died12 June 1486 (1486-06-13) (aged 90)
Seoul
Burial
Temple of Cheong-Kwon
HouseHouse of Yi
FatherTaejong of Joseon
MotherQueen Wongyeong
Korean name
Hangul
Hanja
Revised RomanizationYang Nyeong Dae Gun
McCune–ReischauerTae Kun
Pen name
Hangul
Hanja
Revised RomanizationYeon Gang
McCune–ReischauerYyŏn Kang
Birth name
Hangul
Hanja
Revised RomanizationYi Bo
McCune–ReischauerYi Po
Courtesy name
Hangul
Hanja
Revised RomanizationSeon Suk
McCune–ReischauerSŏn Suk

Family

  1. Lady Yeseong, Princess Consort, of the Haeju Jeong clan (예성부부인 정씨)
    1. Yi Chae, the Prince Uiseong (의성군 이채), 1st Son
    2. Yi Chin, the Prince Seowon (서원군 이친), 2nd Son
    3. Yi Gap, the Prince Boseong (보성군 이갑), 3rd Son
    4. Yi Mil, the Prince Nakwon (낙원군 이밀), 4th Son
    5. Yi Jeong, the Prince Yeongcheon (영천군 이정), 5th Son
    6. Yi Ui, the Prince Woncheon (원천군 이의), 6th Son
    7. Princess Biin (비인현주), 1st Daughter; later married Lee Hun (이훈)
  2. Lady Pyeonghae Son clan
    1. Yi Nang
    2. Unknown Daughter; later married Jeon Jin-hyeong (전진형)
gollark: > allowing developers to utilize blockchain technology without AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA IT IS ETHEREUM AAAAAAAAAAAAAA
gollark: Waaaaait, is this for Ethereum? Hmm. Bees.
gollark: I mean, they might be reading your crypto secrets out of RAM, and... do you just assume that *some* of them won't be evil and just rerun the computation if the result don't match, or something?
gollark: If you don't trust your compute nodes, you basically can't do anything.
gollark: > The Internet Computer is a decentralized cloud computing platform that will host secure software and a new breed of open internet services. It uses a strong cryptographic consensus protocol to safely replicate computations over a peer-to-peer network of (potentially untrusted) compute nodes, possibly overlayed with many virtual subnetworks (sometimes called shards). Wasm’s advantageous properties made it an obvious choice for representing programs running on this platform. We also liked the idea of not limiting developers to just one dedicated platform language, but making it potentially open to “all of ’em.”How is *that* meant to work?

References

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