Talhae of Silla

Talhae of Silla (5 B.C. [1]–80, r. 57–80) was the fourth king of Silla, one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea. He is commonly called Talhae Isageum, isageum being the royal title in early Silla. Also known by his personal name as Seok Tal-hae (昔脫解). He was portrayed by Lee Pil-mo in the 2010 MBC TV series Kim Su-ro, The Iron King.

Talhae of Silla
Hangul
탈해 이사금, 토해 이사금
Hanja
脫解尼師今, 吐解尼師今
Revised RomanizationTalhae Isageum, Tohae Isageum
McCune–ReischauerT'arhae Isagŭm, T'ohae Isagŭm

Background

He was a member of the Gyeongju Seok clan, one of the noble clans that shared the Silla throne during the early Common Era.

He was born in a small kingdom 1000 li northeast of Wa (Japan).[2] (The name of the kingdom is Dapana-guk 다파나국 多婆那國 "Dapana Country" according to Samguk Sagi, or Ryongseong-guk 룡성국 龍城國 "Dragon Castle/City Country," Jeongmyeong-guk 正明國 "Proper and Enlightened Country," Wanha-guk 琓夏國 "(A Kind of) Jade Summer Country," or Hwaha-guk 花厦國 "Flower Mansion Country"[3] according to Samguk Yusa.) His father, King Hamdalpa, was a king of this kingdom; his mother was a queen or princess of another kingdom, called Nyeo-guk 女国 "Woman Country."

According to the Samguk Sagi, when he was born as an egg, his father considered it an ill omen and had it boxed and floated at sea. The egg floated past Geumgwan Gaya and landed east of Gyerim (near today's Gyeongju, South Korea), where he was raised by an old man as a fisherman. His family is said to have taken over a high official's house by claiming to be metalsmiths.

His birth year is unknown, but he was probably an old man when he assumed the throne, having married the daughter (or younger sister) of King Namhae of Silla in the year AD 8. He was offered the throne as successor to the second king Namhae, but the older Yuri served as king first. Yuri in turn designated Tal-hae his successor.

Hogong is chief retainer who served for establishment of Silla. He also founded Kim Alji who is the founder of Kim clan in Korea. He got involved to three royals who are founder of Silla. He has Japanese origin. Tal-hae also came over by ship. The location of his birth place Dapana Country is estimated as somewhere in the Japanese archipelago. It is precisely estimated some part in Sea of Japan side or Kyushu.[4] According to Kenichi Kamigaito, as it is a myth, other lines would be mixed, but Tal-hae of Silla was a King of Tanba province and he made jade there. He reached Silla by following a trade route. Even though excluding details of myth, it can be assumed that clan Seok had trade with Japan.[5]

On the other hand, there is a view that Ryongseong-guk (Korean: 룡성국; Hanja: 龍城國) listed in Samguk yusa has been regarded as a nation of Ainu, and Tal-hae has been regarded as a citizen of Ainu.[6]

Reign

In 64, the rival Korean kingdom Baekje attacked several times. Silla battled the Gaya confederacy in 77.

According to legend, in 65 the infant Kim Alji, ancestor of the Gyeongju Kim family, was found by Hogong in a golden box in the royal Gyerim forest. Tal-hae named his kingdom Gyerim at this time (the name Silla was officially adopted much later).

A tomb believed to be Tal-hae's is located in northern Gyeongju City. The Gyeongju National Museum is constructed on the site where Tal-hae had a palace built.

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See also

Notes

^一 A li is roughly equivalent to 400–500 meters.
^二 Tanba no kuni was located 460 km northeast of Wakoku (hanja: 倭国:zh:倭国, ja:倭国).

References

  1. "三國史記/卷01 - 维基文库,自由的图书馆". zh.wikisource.org. Retrieved 2020-07-25.
  2. 三國史記 卷第一 新羅本紀第一 脱解尼師今, 脱解本多婆那國所生也 其國在倭國東北一千里
  3. 三國遺事 紀異 卷第一 脱解王, 我本龍城國人 亦云正明國 或云琓夏國 琓夏或作花厦國 龍城在倭東北一千里
  4. Sungkyun Journal of East Asian Studies, Volume 8, Sungkyunkwan University, 2008, p. 107
  5. Kamigaito, Kenichi (2003-11-11). 倭人と韓人 (in Japanese). Kodansha. p. 73. ISBN 978-4061596238.
  6. Lee Hee Yong (2017-01-17). "[이희용의 글로벌시대] 귀화 성씨의 어제와 오늘" [Lee Hee Yong's Global Era: Yesterday and Today]. Yonhap News. Archived from the original on 2017-07-16.
Talhae of Silla
House of Seok
 Died: 80
Regnal titles
Preceded by
Yuri
Ruler of Silla
57–80
Succeeded by
Pasa
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