|
[SBS]~ Six Flying Dragons~ Yoo Ah In, Shin Se Kyung, Kim Myung Min (Part 2)
[Copy link]
|
|
yer dramafire daaaaaaaaaaa.....
yup pompuan tu kan gundik Prince Chang tu...
dan dia mmg sgt sayangkan pompuan ni..
tu sbb dia nk lari..tak mau naik takhta...
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ayushuhada04 replied at 13-1-2016 07:25 AM
apa yg kona sana...kona sini yer Is
yg pasti mmg menarik kan....
Yela k.ayu...kemain lagi scripwriters punya geliga otak dia....hahaha
Memg menarik....dah agak pompuan penari putra tu bukn calang2 org.....
BJ kira hebat lagi la boly bunuh waris cheok tu kan...tinggai pompuan tu sorng lagi.....
Tp tula nk tau pompuan tu geng MM ke idok....rasa mcm bukn...sbb dia kata dah insaf kan...cuma abg dia jela geng MM tu |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ayushuhada04 replied at 13-1-2016 07:44 AM
yup mmg YAI berlakon dlm cite SKKS
ohh nk tgk picca dia dlm cite tu ke?
Ayooo...belemoehhhnyaa...
Tp tak pa cuit maaa |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
WeAiNe replied at 13-1-2016 11:51 AM
assalamualaikum
dah ketinggalan since ep 26 rasanya
Waalaikumusalam.....
Fuhhh...bermcm2 dugaan halangan rintangan cobaan....tak tau nk explain guano....
G rempit nnt smbg moyan |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
yer mmg betul tu Is....scriptwriter mmg bijak olah skrip kan..
ada je yg baru akan kuar....watak baru...jln cite baru..
yg buatkan kita kita ni rasa tk puas kan...nk tau lebih lanjut lagi...
tak sabar kan....then bila dh terjawab..ohh dh tau sapa dia ni..
tu yg bila kuar je pompuan ni..kak ayu dh syak sesuatu....
mmg daebak ler kan...BJ leh berlawan lak tu...dan dia leh tau teknik sijahat tu...
akhirnya mati...sbb ilmu tk cukup...hanya adik je yg terer...sure jd saingan hebat
pada BJ.....
kak ayu pun tk rasa dia org MM...cuma dia mcm tk puas hati je kan
bila Prince Jungchang tu naik takhta...terus dia berubah semula..
dan apakah motif dia seterusnya???
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
amboi....takkan le nk kutuk kot...
wpun belemoeh...tp ttp cute kan...
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jeong Mong-ju[size=0.875em]From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a Korean name; the family name is Jeong.
Jeong Mong-ju ( Korean: 정몽주, Hanja: 鄭夢周, 1337 – 1392), also known by his pen name Poeun ( Korean: 포은), was a Korean civil minister and scholar from the end period of the Goryeo Dynasty. [1][2]
Biography[edit]Jeong Mong-ju was born in Yeongcheon, Gyeongsang province to a family from the Yeongil Jeong clan. At the age of 23, he took three different civil service literary examinations (Gwageo) and received the highest marks possible on each of them.[2] In 1367, he became an instructor in Neo-Confucianism at the Gukjagam, then called "Seonggyungwan", whilst simultaneously holding a government position, and was a faithful public servant to King U. The king had great confidence in his wide knowledge and good judgement, and so he participated in various national projects and his scholarly works earned him great respect in the Goryeo court. In 1372, Jeong Mong-ju visited China, as a diplomatic envoy. Around the time, as waegu (Japanese pirate)'s invasions to the Korean Peninsula were extreme, Jeong Mong-ju was dispatched as a delegate to Kyūshū in 1377.[2][3] His negotiations led to promises of Japanese aid in defeating the pirates. He traveled to the Chinese capital city in 1384[4] and negotiations with the Ming Dynasty led to peace with China in 1385. He also founded an institute devoted to the theories of Confucianism. Jeong Mong-ju was murdered in 1392 by five men on the Sonjukkyo Bridge in Gaeseong following a banquet held for him by Yi Bang-won (later Taejong of Joseon), the fifth son of Yi Seong-gye, who overthrew the Goryeo Dynasty, in order to found the Joseon Dynasty. Jeong Mong-ju was murdered because he refused to betray his loyalty to the Goryeo Dynasty. Yi Bang-won recited a poem to dissuade Jeong Mong-ju from remaining loyal to the Goryeo court, but Jeong Mong-ju answered with another poem (Dansimga, 단심가/ 丹心歌) that affirmed his loyalty. Yi Seong-gye is said to have lamented Jeong Mong-ju's death and rebuked his son because Jeong Mong-ju was a highly regarded politician by the courts of China and Japan. The bridge where Jeong Mong-ju was murdered, now in North Korea, has now become a national monument of that country. A brown spot on one of the stones is said to be Jeong Mong-ju's bloodstain, and is said to become red whenever it rains. Currently, his direct surviving descendants are his 21st and 22nd generation, all of whom reside in South Korea and the United States. The 474-year-old Goryeo Dynasty symbolically ended with Jeong Mong-ju's death, and was followed by the Joseon Dynasty for 505 years (1392 – 1897). Jeong Mong-ju's noble death symbolises his faithful allegiance to the king, and he was later venerated even by Joseon monarchs. In 1517, 125 years after his death, he was canonised into the National Academy alongside other Korean sages such as Yi I (Yulgok) andYi Hwang (Toegye). The 11th pattern of ITF Taekwon-Do is named after Poeun. The pattern is performed as part of the testing syllabus for the level of 2nd degree black belt. The diagram ( - ) represents his unerring loyalty to the king and country towards the end of the Goryeo Dynasty.
Poem[edit]Yi Bang-won's sijo/ poem (Hayeoga)[edit]하여가 (何如歌) 이런들 어떠하리 저런들 어떠하리 此亦何如彼亦何如 (차역하여피역하여) 만수산 드렁칡이 얽어진들 어떠하리 城隍堂後垣頹落亦何如 (성황당후원퇴락역하여) 우리도 이같이 얽어져 백년까지 누리리라 我輩若此爲不死亦何如 (아배약차위불사역하여) (Based on the Hanja) What shall it be: this or that? The walls behind the temple of the city's deity* has fallen - shall it be this? Or if we survive together nonetheless - shall it be that? (* Yi Bang-won is declaring the death of the era - the Goryeo Dynasty.) Jeong Mong-ju's sijo/ poem (Dansimga)[edit]단심가 (丹心歌) 이몸이 죽고 죽어 일백 번 고쳐 죽어 此身死了死了一百番更死了 (차신사료사료일백번갱사료) 백골이 진토되어 넋이라도 있고 없고 白骨爲塵土魂魄有無也 (백골위진토혼백유무야) 임 향한 일편 단심이야 가실 줄이 있으랴 鄕主一片丹心寧有改理歟 (향주일편단심유개리여) Though I die and die again a hundred times, That my bones turn to dust, whether my soul remains or not, Ever loyal to my Lord, how can this red heart ever fade away?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
@nohas bila terbaca psl PE ni...baru ayu teringat psl Jeong Mong Ju dlm
cite The Great Seer....dia ni ler yg BW bunuh kat atas jambatan tu.....
rupanya jambatan tu ada kat korea utara... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Edited by ayushuhada04 at 13-1-2016 04:04 PM
Sŏnjuk Bridge is a Koryo-dynasty stone bridge located in Kaesong, North Korea. Built in 1290, it is famous as the place where famed Confucian scholar and statesmanJeong Mong-ju was assassinated, allegedly on the orders of the Yi Bang-won, son of the first king of the Joseon Dynasty, Yi Seong-gye. The bridge was closed to all traffic in 1780 and has since been a national monument. It is 8.35m long and 3.36m wide. It was originally named the Sonji Bridge, but was renamed Sonjuk Bridge after the assassination of Mong-ju because bamboo grew where he was killed (juk being the Korean word for bamboo).[1]
Assassination of Jong Mongju[edit]A famously loyal advisor to the king of Goryeo, Jeong was a staunch political opponent of Yi Seonggye. On his way home after a party held for him by the future king, he was ambushed by five men on the bridge and brutally murdered with an iron hammer. Later canonized as a Korean sage, and revered even by Joseon monarchs, Jong's death came to symbolize unwavering loyalty. A brown spot on one of the stones is said to be Jong's bloodstain, and to become red when it rains. A famous poem of his records his final thoughts: Even if I may die, die a hundred times,
Even if my skeleton may become dust and dirt,
And whether my spirit may be there or not,
My single-hearted loyalty to my lord will not change.
Pyochung Pavilion[edit]Built during the Joseon dynasty, this small wooden structure houses two enormous stone stele mounted on the backs of lion-turtles, one erected in 1740 by King Yeongjo and the other by King Gojong in 1872. Both commemorate Jeong Mongju's assassination, and praise his loyalty to the Goryeo dynasty.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Kingdom of Joseon (Chosŏn'gŭl: 대조선국; hancha: wikt:大朝鮮國, literally "Great Joseon State"; also Chosŏn, Choson, Chosun) was a Korean kingdom founded by Yi Seonggye that lasted for approximately five centuries, from July 1392 to October 1897. It was officially renamed the Korean Empire in October 1897.[3] It was founded following the aftermath of the overthrow of Goryeo in what is today the city of Kaesong. Early on, Korea was retitled and the capital was relocated to modern-day Seoul. The kingdom's northernmost borders were expanded to the natural boundaries at the Yalu and Tumen Rivers through the subjugation of the Jurchens. Joseon was the last dynasty of Korea and its longest-ruling Confucian dynasty. During its reign, Joseon encouraged the entrenchment of Chinese Confucian ideals and doctrines in Korean society. Neo-Confucianism was installed as the new dynasty's state ideology. Buddhism was accordingly discouraged and occasionally faced persecutions by the dynasty. Joseon consolidated its effective rule over the territory of current Korea and saw the height of classical Korean culture, trade, science, literature, and technology. However, the dynasty was severely weakened during the late 16th and early 17th centuries, when the Japanese invasions of Korea (1592–98) and the first and second Manchu invasions of 1636 nearly overran the Korean Peninsula, leading to an increasingly harsh isolationist policy for which the country became known as the "hermit kingdom". After the end of invasions from Manchuria, Joseon experienced a nearly 200-year period of peace. However, whatever power the kingdom recovered during its isolation further waned as the 18th century came to a close, and faced with internal strife, power struggles, international pressure and rebellions at home, the Joseon dynasty declined rapidly in the late 19th century. The Joseon period has left a substantial legacy to modern Korea; much of modern Korean etiquette, cultural norms, societal attitudes towards current issues, and the modern Korean language and its dialects derive from the culture and traditions of Joseon.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Founding[edit]By the late 14th century, the nearly 500-year-old Goryeo established in 918 was tottering, its foundations collapsing from years of war and de facto occupation from the disintegrating Mongol Empire. Following the emergence of the Ming dynasty, the royal court in Goryeo split into two conflicting factions: the group led by General Yi (supporting the Ming) and the camp led by General General Choe (standing by the Yuan). Goryeo claimed to be the successor of the ancient kingdom of Goguryeo (which was later renamed Goryeo); as such, restoring Manchuria as part of Korean territory was part of its foreign policy throughout its history. When a Ming messenger came to Goryeo in 1388, the 14th year of U of Goryeo, to demand that Goguryeo’s former northern territory be handed over to Goryeo, General Choe seized the chance to argue for an attack on the Liaodong Peninsula. Yi was chosen to lead the attack; however, he revolted and swept back to Gaegyeong and initiated a coup d'état, overthrowing King U in favor of his son, Chang of Goryeo (1388). He later killed King U and his son after a failed restoration and forcibly placed a royal named Yi on the throne (he became Gongyang of Goryeo). In 1392, Yi eliminatedJeong Mong-ju, highly respected leader of a group loyal to Goryeo dynasty, and dethroned King Gongyang, exiling him toWonju, and before he ascended the throne. The Goryeo Dynasty had come to an end after almost 500 years of rule. In the beginning of his reign, Yi Seonggye, now Taejo of Joseon, intended to continue use of the name Goryeo for the country he ruled and simply change the royal line of descent to his own, thus maintaining the façade of continuing the 500-year-old Goryeo tradition. However, after numerous threats of mutiny from the drastically weakened but still influential Gwonmun nobles, who continued to swear allegiance to the remnants of the Goryeo and now the demoted Wang clan, and the consensus in the reformed court was that a new dynastic title was needed to signify the change. After much deliberation, the Taejo Emperor declared the name of the new dynasty to be "Joseon", after the ancient Korean state of Gojoseon (specifically Gija Joseon),[4]which was allegedly founded in 2,333 B.C. He also moved the capital to Hanyang from Kaesong.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Strife of princesWhen the new dynasty was promulgated and officially brought into existence, Taejo brought up the issue of which son would be his successor. Although Yi Bangwon, Taejo's fifth son by Queen Sineui, had contributed most to assisting his father's rise to power, the prime minister Jeong Do-jeon and Nam Eun used their influence on King Taejo to name his eighth son (second son of Queen Sindeok) Grand Prince Uian (Yi Bangseok) as crown prince in 1392. This conflict arose largely because Jeong Dojeon, who shaped and laid down ideological, institutional, and legal foundations of the new dynasty more than anyone else, saw Joseon as a kingdom led by ministers appointed by the king while Yi Bangwon wanted to establish the absolute monarchy ruled directly by the king. With Taejo's support, Jeong Dojeon kept limiting the royal family's power by prohibiting political involvement of princes and attempting to abolish their private armies. Both sides were well aware of each other's great animosity and were getting ready to strike first. After the sudden death of Queen Sindeok, while King Taejo was still in mourning for his second wife, Yi Bangwon struck first by raiding the palace and killed Jeong Dojeon and his supporters as well as Queen Sindeok's two sons (his half-brothers) including the crown prince in 1398. This incident became known as the First Strife of Princes. Aghast at the fact that his sons were willing to kill each other for the crown, and psychologically exhausted from the death of his second wife, King Taejo abdicated and immediately crowned his second son Yi Banggwa as Emperor Jeonjong. One of King Jeongjong's first acts as monarch was to revert the capital to Kaesong, where he is believed to have been considerably more comfortable. Yet Yi Bangwon retained real power and was soon in conflict with his disgruntled older brother. Yi Banggan, who also yearned for power. In 1400, the tensions between Yi Bangwon's faction and Yi Banggan's camp escalated into an all-out conflict that came to be known as the Second Strife of Princes. In the aftermath of the struggle, the defeated Yi Banggan was exiled to Dosan while his supporters were executed. Thoroughly intimidated, King Jeongjong immediately invested Yi Bangwon as heir presumptive and voluntarily abdicated. That same year, Yi Bangwon assumed the throne of Joseon at long last as King Taejong, third king of Joseon.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Consolidation of royal power[edit] In the beginning of Taejong's reign, the Grand King Former, Taejo, refused to relinquish the royal seal that signified the legitimacy of any king's rule. Taejong began to initiate policies he believed would prove his qualification to rule. One of his first acts as king was to abolish the privilege enjoyed by the upper echelons of government and the aristocracy to maintain private armies. His revoking of such rights to field independent forces effectively severed their ability to muster large-scale revolts, and drastically increased the number of men employed in the national military. Taejong's next act as king was to revise the existing legislation concerning the taxation of land ownership and the recording of state of subjects. With the discovery of previously hidden land, national income increased twofold. In 1399, Taejong had played an influential role in scrapping the Dopyeong Assembly, a council of the old government administration that held a monopoly in court power during the waning years of the Goryeo Dynasty, in favor of the State Council of Joseon (hangul: 의정부 ), a new branch of central administration that revolved around the king and his edicts. After passing the subject documentation and taxation legislation, King Taejong issued a new decree in which all decisions passed by the State Council could only come into effect with the approval of the king. This ended the custom of court ministers and advisors making decisions through debate and negotiations amongst themselves, and thus brought the royal power to new heights. Shortly thereafter, Taejong installed an office, known as the Sinmun Office, to hear cases in which aggrieved subjects felt that they had been exploited or treated unjustly by government officials or aristocrats. However, Taejong kept Jeong Dojeon's reforms intact for most part. In addition, Taejong executed or exiled many of his supporters who helped him ascend on the throne in order to strengthen the royal authority. To limit influence of in-laws, he also killed all four of his Queen's brothers and his sonSejong's father-in-law. Taejong remains a controversial figure who killed many of his rivals and relatives to gain power and yet ruled effectively to improve the populace's lives, strengthen national defense, and lay down a solid foundations for his successor Sejong's rule.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sejong the Great[edit]In August 1418, following Taejong's abdication two months earlier, Sejong the Great ascended the throne. In May 1419, King Sejong, under the advice and guidance of his father Taejong, embarked upon the Gihae Eastern Expedition to remove the nuisance of waegu (coastal pirates) who had been operating out of Tsushima Island. In September 1419, the daimyo of Tsushima, Sadamori, capitulated to the Joseon court. In 1443, The Treaty of Gyehae was signed in which the Daimyo of Tsushima was granted rights to conduct trade with Korea in fifty ships per year in exchange for sending tribute to Korea and aiding to stop any Waegu coastal pirate raids on Korean ports.[5][6][7][8] On the northern border, Sejong established four forts and six posts (hanja: 四郡六鎭 ) to safeguard his people from the Jurchens, who later became the Manchus, living in Manchuria. In 1433, Sejong sent Kim Jongseo (hanja: 金宗瑞 ), a government official, north to fend off the Jurchens. Kim's military campaign captured several castles, pushed north, and restored Korean territory, roughly the present-day border between North Korea and China.[9] During the rule of Sejong, Korea saw advances in natural science, agriculture, literature, traditional Chinese medicine, and engineering. Because of such success, Sejong was given the title "Sejong the Great".[10] The most remembered contribution of King Sejong is the creation of hangul, the Korean alphabet, in 1443. Everyday use of Hanja and hanja in writing eventually came to an end in the later half of the 20th century.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
depa jadikan jambatan ni sebagai national monument...
huhu..dasat kan..Korea ni..
tapi Poeun ni loyal tul dgn Goryeo...dah corrupt pun nk kekalkan jg..
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Epi mlm ni bongkar sbb2 BW mkin renggang dgn SB
Hala tuju dorang mmg x sama |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
download beria sampai ep16, sekali HD rosak  
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
nohas replied at 13-1-2016 05:05 PM
depa jadikan jambatan ni sebagai national monument...
huhu..dasat kan..Korea ni..
tapi P ...
Poeun ni..bagus sebenarnya..dia tak mahu General Lee jadi pembelot...raja yg baru dilantik tu pun bagus peribadinya...cuma dia tak agresif mcm raja2 lain. Mujur ada kekasih hati dan pengawal yg hebat.....cerita semakin menarik.. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
kan nohas...mmg hebat ler...sampaikan jambatan tu jadikan natioanl monument..
mmg besar le pengaruh PE tu kan..
tp tu ler...PE tak mau kan pembaharuan....tak mau ada kerajaan baru..
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
kannnn...mmg nampak ler yg BW makin lama...makin tk sebulu dgn SB....
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|