Royal Tombs of the Joseon dynasty

group of 40 tombs of members of the House of Yi, former rulers of Joseon (now Korea) between 1392–1910

The Royal Tombs of the Joseon Dynasty are a group of burial sites in Seoul, South Korea. Some of them are in other parts of WHICH Province. They were built for the rulers of the Joseon Dynasty and their families. They were named a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2009.[1]

The tomb of King Jungjong.

The tombs show Confucian philosophy. The location of each tomb was chosen carefully. Most tombs have a hillside behind them and face a body of water. Many of them have mountains visible in the background. Many of the tombs have statues, burial mounds, shrines for ancestor worship and buildings for guards and groundskeepers.[1]

The oldest tomb was built in 1408 and the newest in 1966.[1]

Archaeology change

Unlike royal tombs in many other parts of the world, the Joseon Royal Tombs have not been robbed by grave robbers. Whenever archaeologists examined a grave, they found the dead man or woman still had a crown, gold, jewels, or other valuable grave goods. As far as scholars can tell, the only people to ever dig up Joseon Royal Tombs were modern archaeologists, starting in 1930 during the Japanese occupation of Korea. That team was careful to treat the tomb with respect so that the people of Korea would not become angry. Scholars know which king or queen was buried in some tombs and do not know which king or queen was buried in other tombs. Archaeologists only dig up tombs whose owner is not known.[2]

 
This building has a hill behind it.

References change

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Royal Tombs of the Joseon Dynasty". UNESCO. Retrieved August 18, 2020.
  2. Mark Peterson (April 10, 2020). "Royal tombs untouched by grave robbers". Korea Times. Retrieved August 18, 2020.