This is the Jeongnimsa Temple site in Buyeo-gun, Chungcheongnam-do, South Korea.
This is the Jeongnimsa Temple site in Buyeo-gun, Chungcheongnam-do, Republic of Korea.
The Jeongnimsa Temple site is the most important temple of Baekje, located in the center of the Sabi city wall. The central gate, pagoda, main hall, and lecture hall are located in a straight line from north to south, and the east-west corridors, building sites, and monks' quarters have been confirmed. The size of the central temple is about 62m east-west and 120m north-south. As a result of the excavation, cultural layers from the Bronze Age including plain pottery, cultural layers from the Three Kingdoms Period (Baekje) before and after the founding of Jeongnimsa Temple, and cultural layers from the Goryeo Dynasty were discovered. Before the temple was built, there were workshop facilities, and the temple continued to exist during the Goryeo Dynasty.
In the spring of 538, King Seong of Baekje moved the capital to Sabi Castle, which is now Buyeo. The temple was built along with the city plan that divided the Sabi city wall into five parts, including the central, east, west, south, and north, and created residential areas within them, including the royal palace and government offices. The appearance of the capital city during the period when Baekje moved its capital to Sabi Castle is described in the Chinese historical book, Zhou Shu, as "there were many temples and pagodas."
The foundation stone that receives the load from the foundation pillar and transfers it to the pedestal and the ground is called a foundation stone. The foundation stone is made by firmly setting small fields after compacting the ground, and the upper surface of the foundation stone is called a jujwa, which is sometimes called a jujwa, and decorative elements are added. At the Jeongnimsa Temple site, square, round, and natural stone foundation stones were discovered, and the appearance and period of the building site can be inferred based on the shape of the foundation stone.
A peddler is a merchant who sells goods by carrying them on his back or in a bundle while walking around the market. The word peddler is a compound word of bosang and bujang, and bosang and bujang were distinguished by the sales method or the goods handled. In terms of sales method, bosang was the so-called peddler who sold goods by carrying them on a bundle.
Busang was a 'peddler who carried them on his back and sold them. The burials of the burials are usually small, light, and expensive items such as stationery, accessories, and textiles, while the burials are large, heavy items such as pots, farm implements, ironware, wooden utensils, earthenware, salt, and fish.
The burial relics examined so far are those left behind by the burial merchants in the provinces, and they tell us about the formation and evolution of the burial merchant group, its organizational structure and rules, a list of past executives, the privileges of the burial merchant organization and related activities, the types of goods handled and the areas of activity of the local burial merchants, the financial situation, and the rites and customs of the burial merchant group. These are materials that can help us understand the commercial groups, commercial history, and commercial folklore of the transitional period to modern times, and they have high value historically, academically, and as a cultural heritage.
#Domestic travel #February travel support event