Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 98 of
98
with 100 triples per page.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty abstract "The Bungdang (Hangul: 붕당, Hanja: 朋黨) refers to political factionalism that was characteristic of Middle and Late Joseon Dynasty. Throughout the dynasty, various regional and ideological factions struggled for dominance in the political system. Village Seowon, which combined the functions of Confucian shrines with educational institutions, often reflected the factional alignment of the local elite. During the earlier period of Joseon in 15th and 16th century, tension between the Hungu faction in the Capital and the Yeongnam-based Sarim faction dominated national politics, which culminated in a series of four bloody purges between 1498 and 1545, in which Sarim faction was persecuted by the Hungu faction. Following these setbacks, the Sarim faction withdrew to rural provinces where they maintained power base and ideological continuity through Seowon and Hyang'yak (a system of social contract that gave local autonomy to villages). Eventually, Hungu faction declined without ideological successor to replace it while Sarim faction emerged as the dominant faction during the reign of Seonjo. In the 16th century, a nationwide split occurred within the Sarim faction between the Western faction (Seo-in) and Eastern faction (Dong-in), composed mainly of younger generation. Political divisions intensified even further as the Eastern faction in turn split between the hard-line Northern faction (Buk-in) and the moderate Southern faction (Nam-in) and the Western factions split between the Old Learning (No-ron) and the Young Learning (So-ron). Northern faction further split into Greater Northern and Smaller Northern factions. These names for faction often come from relative location of its leader's house. These factional splits grew out of allegiance to different philosophical schools and regional differences. For instance, Eastern faction was largely Youngnam-based, and its subfaction Southerners were mainly followers of Yi Hwang while Northerners coalesced around the school of Jo Shik. Gyeonggi and Chungcheong-based Western faction were largely followers of Yi I, of which followers of Seong Hon split to form So-ron faction and while So Siyeol's followers became No-ron faction. These divisions were often further driven by questions concerning royal succession or appropriate royal conduct. For example, the split between the Northerners and Southerners was driven by debate over the proper successor to Seonjo, who had no legitimate son. The Northerners came to support the Gwanghaegun; accordingly, they flourished under his reign (1608–1623) but were swept from power by the Westerners after the succession of Injo.Under the reigns of Yeongjo and Jeongjo in the 18th century, the kings pursued a strict politcy of equality, favoring no faction over another. However, in Jeongjo's reign, strife re-emerged as the ruling No-ron faction split further between the Byeokpa and Sipa, two groups which cut across the earlier factions and differed in their attitudes concerning Yeongjo's murder of his son, who was also Jeongjo's father. In the 19th century, Joseon politics shifted as in-law families rather than scholarly factions came to dominate the throne. For most of the 19th century, the Jangdong branch of the Andong Kim clan was in control of the government; however, there was a brief interlude in which control shifted to the Pungyang Cho clan.During the reign of Gojong, real power initially belonged to his father Heungseon Daewongun, who on one hand sought to reform corrupt state institutions but on the other hand pursued a policy of isolationism, opposing the opening of the country to Western and Japanese influences. From the 1870s onwards, Queen Min (known posthumously as Empress Myeongseong) became more dominant and pursued a policy of cautious modernisation and opening up. Her dominance was opposed by reactionaries and progressives alike. The Enlightenment Party (also known as Progressives) sought to modernise the country along Western and Japanese lines. These factional struggles led to the Imo Incident and Gapsin Coup, as well as increased foreign interference in Korean affairs.".
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageID "10571906".
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageLength "6986".
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageOutDegree "60".
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageRevisionID "683779435".
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Byeokpa.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Category:Joseon_Dynasty.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Cho_(Korean_name).
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Cho_(Korean_surname).
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Crown_Prince_Sado.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Easterners.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Easterners_(Korean_political_faction).
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Empress_Myeongseong.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Enlightenment_Party.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Gapsin_Coup.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Gojong_of_Korea.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Gojong_of_the_Korean_Empire.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Gwak_Jae-u.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Gwak_Jaeu.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Gwanghaegun_of_Joseon.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Hangul.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Hanja.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Heo_Gyun.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Heungseon_Daewongun.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink History_of_Korea.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Hwang_Jin-i.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Hwang_Jini.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Hyangyak.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Imo_Incident.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Index_of_Korea-related_articles.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Injo_of_Joseon.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Jeong_Mong-ju.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Jeong_Yak-yong.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Jeongjo_of_Joseon.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Jo_Gwang-jo.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Joseon.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Joseon_Dynasty.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Joseon_Dynasty_politics.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Kim_(Korean_name).
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Kim_(Korean_surname).
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Kim_Jong-jik.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink King_Jeongjo.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Korean_Literati_Purges.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Korean_literati_purges.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink List_of_Korea-related_topics.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Neo-Confucianism.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Neo-Confucianism_in_Korea.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Northerners_(Korean_political_faction).
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Old_Learning.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Ryu_Seong-ryong.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Sarim.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Seo_Gyeong-deok.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Seonjo_of_Joseon.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Seowon.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Sipa_(Korean_Faction).
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink So_Siyeol.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Song_Si-yeol.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Song_Siyeol.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Southerners_(Korean_political_faction).
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Westerners_(Korean_political_faction).
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Yeongjo_of_Joseon.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Yeongnam.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Yi_Hwang.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Yi_I.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Yi_San.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Young_Learning.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLink Yu_Seong-ryong.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLinkText "Joseon factional politics".
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLinkText "No-ron Faction".
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLinkText "Noron and Soron factions".
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLinkText "Old Doctrine faction".
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLinkText "Political factions in Joseon Dynasty".
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLinkText "So-ron Faction".
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLinkText "faction of the Joseon Dynasty".
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageWikiLinkText "political faction".
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty hangul "붕당".
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty hanja "朋黨".
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty hasPhotoCollection Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty mr "Pung-tang".
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty rr "Bung-dang".
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Citation_style.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_Korean_name.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Joseon.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty subject Category:Joseon_Dynasty.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty hypernym Characteristic.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty type Article.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty type Food.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty type Article.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty comment "The Bungdang (Hangul: 붕당, Hanja: 朋黨) refers to political factionalism that was characteristic of Middle and Late Joseon Dynasty. Throughout the dynasty, various regional and ideological factions struggled for dominance in the political system. Village Seowon, which combined the functions of Confucian shrines with educational institutions, often reflected the factional alignment of the local elite.".
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty label "Political factions in Joseon Dynasty".
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty sameAs فصائل_جوسون_السياسية.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty sameAs 朋党.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty sameAs 붕당.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty sameAs Q4391842.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty sameAs Q4391842.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty sameAs 朋黨.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty wasDerivedFrom Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty?oldid=683779435.
- Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty isPrimaryTopicOf Political_factions_in_Joseon_Dynasty.