Myeongjong of Joseon

13th king of Joseon from 1545 to 1567

Queen Insun
(m. 1542)
Issue
  • Crown Prince Sunhoe
  • Seonjo of Joseon (adopted)
Posthumous name
  • Joseon: King Gongheon Heonui Somun Gwangsuk Gyeonghyo the Great
    • 공헌헌의소문광숙경효대왕
    • 恭憲獻毅昭文光肅敬孝大王
Temple name
Myeongjeong (명종; 明宗)
ClanJeonju Yi clanDynastyHouse of YiFatherJungjong of JoseonMotherQueen MunjeongReligionKorean Confucianism (Neo-Confucianism)
Korean name
Hangul
명종
Hanja
明宗
Revised RomanizationMyeongjong
McCune–ReischauerMyŏng-jong
Birth name
Hangul
이환
Hanja
李峘
Revised RomanizationI Hwan
McCune–ReischauerYi Hwan

Myeongjong (Korean명종; Hanja明宗; 13 July 1534 – 12 August 1567), personal name Yi Hwan (이환; 李峘), was the 13th monarch of the Joseon dynasty of Korea. He was the second son of King Jungjong, born to Queen Munjeong.

He ascended to the throne in 1545 at the age of 12 following the death of his elder half-brother, King Injong. Since he was too young to govern, his mother became regent.[1]

Biography

Political factions

There were two political factions at the time Myeongjong came to power; Greater Yun, headed by Yun Im, Injong's maternal uncle,[2] and Lesser Yun, headed by Myeongjong's maternal uncles, Yun Won-hyeong and Yun Wonro.[3] (Yun Im and Yun Brothers were close relatives by that period's standards - Yun Im was a third cousin once removed of Yun Brothers.) Greater Yun took power in 1544, when Injong succeeded Jungjong; but they failed to wipe out their opposition, since Queen Munjeong protected the Lesser Yun faction and other opposition officials.

After the death of Injong in 1545, Lesser Yun replaced Greater Yun as the majority in the royal court and brutally ousted their adversaries in the Fourth Literati Purge of 1545. Yun Im was executed, as were many of his followers.

Rise of Yun Won-hyeong

The Lesser Yun faction continued to attack their opposition. In 1546, Yun Won-hyeong impeached his older brother, Yun Won-ro, who was executed a few days later along with his followers. Facing no opposition from the government, Yun Won-hyeong became Minister of Personnel 이조판서 in 1548, Left State Councilor in 1551 and ultimately Chief State Councilor 영의정 in 1563.

Despite Yun Won-hyeong's violent rule, Queen Munjeong was an effective administrator, distributing to the common people land formerly owned by the nobility. However, she held on to rule even after the king reached his majority at the age of 20.

Death of Queen Munjeong

After the death of Queen Munjeong in 1565, the king decided to rule the kingdom by himself and had his uncle, Yun Won-hyeong, put to death, along with his second wife[4][5] Jeong Nan-jeong, who also rose to power due to her close friendship and being the second sister-in-law to Queen Munjeong.[6][7] Yun Won-hyeong allowed corruption to flourish in the government. And while the kingdom was unstable, Jurchens, Japanese, and rebellious troops rampaged at will and threatened the government itself. Rebel leader Im Kkeok-jeong was arrested and executed in 1552, but outside invasion continued; the Joseon Dynasty had to re-mobilize its army and navy along to protect its borders.

Death and succession

Myeongjong tried to reform the government after taking power into his own hands by recalling and reinstating Sarim scholars who were exiled in the purge, but died only two years later without any male issue.[8] Yi Gyun, Prince Haseong (later known as Yi Yeon, Seonjo of Joseon), his half-nephew from his older half-brother Grand Internal Prince Deokheung, was adopted by his wife, the now Queen Dowager Uiseong, to succeed the throne in 1567.

Family

Consorts and their respective issue:

  1. Queen Insun of the Cheongsong Sim clan (27 June 1532 – 12 February 1575)
    1. Yi Bu, Crown Prince Sunhoe (11 July 1551 – 16 October 1563)
  2. Royal Noble Consort Gyeong of the Jeonui Yi clan (경빈 이씨; 1541–1595)
  3. Royal Noble Consort Sun of the Dongrae Jeong clan (순빈 정씨; 1540–1593)
  4. Royal Consort Gwi-in of the Geochang Shin clan (귀인 신씨; 1538 – ?)
  5. Royal Consort Suk-ui of the Han clan (숙의 한씨; 1536–1594)
  6. Royal Consort Suk-ui of the Pyeongsan Shin clan (숙의 신씨; 1533–1565)
  7. Royal Consort Suk-ui of the Onyang Jeong clan (숙의 정씨; 1537 – ?)

In popular culture

Notes

  1. ^ Kim, Jongmyung (Summer 2014). "Queen Munjeong's (1501-1565) Statecraft and Buddhist View in Confucian Joseon" (PDF). Korea Journal. 54 (2): 63. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  2. ^ Yun Im is the older brother of Queen Janggyeong (Injong's mother).
  3. ^ They were Queen Munjeong's older brother.
  4. ^ Kim, Jongmyung (Summer 2014). "Queen Munjeong's (1501-1565) Statecraft and Buddhist View in Confucian Joseon" (PDF). Korea Journal. 54 (2): 76. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  5. ^ Originally his concubine, Jeong Nan-jeong had Yun’s first wife, Lady Kim of the Yeonan Kim clan, poisoned to death.
  6. ^ She became a dictator; the real power behind the veil of Queen Munjeong's regency.
  7. ^ Actually, Jeong Nan-jeong committed suicide as a domino effect of misfortunes: Queen Munjeong's death, and her loss of control of the government.
  8. ^ His only son, the Crown Prince, died 4 years before his own death.

External links

  • http://www.koreandb.net/Koreanking/html/person/pki60013.htm
  • http://chosonsillok.org/inspection/insp_king.jsp?id=kma[permanent dead link]
Myeongjong of Joseon
Born: 1534 Died: 1567
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Joseon
1545–1567
with Queen Munjeong (1545–1565)
Succeeded by
  • v
  • t
  • e
Flag of the Joseon king House of Yi National seal of Joseon
Gyeongbokgung, the main palace of Joseon
Posthumous[note 1]
King of Joseon
(1392–1897)
Emperor of Korea
(1897–1910)
Crown Prince[note 2]
Daewongun[note 3]
Rival king
King Yi[note 4]
(1910–1947)
King Emeritus
(Deoksugung)
King
(Changdeokgung)
Crown Prince
Director of the
Royal Family Association
(1957–)
In office
Posthumous
recognition
Pretenders
  • # denotes that the king was deposed and never received a temple name.
  1. ^ Those who were listed were not reigning monarchs but posthumously recognized; the year following means the year of recognition.
  2. ^ Only the crown princes that didn't become the king were listed; the former year indicates when one officially became the heir and the latter one is that when one died/deposed. Those who ascended to the throne were excluded in the list for simplification.
  3. ^ The title given to the biological father, who never reigned, of the kings who were adopted as the heir to a precedent king.
  4. ^ The de jure monarch of Korea during the era was the Emperor of Japan, while the former Korean emperors were given nobility title "King Yi" instead.
  • v
  • t
  • e
The generations are numbered from the ascension of Taejo as King of Joseon in 1397.
1st generation
  • Grand Prince Uian ^•
  • Grand Prince Jinan
  • Grand Prince Yikan
  • Grand Prince Hwaean
  • Grand Prince Deukan
  • Grand Prince Muan
2nd generation
3rd generation
4th generation
  • None
5th generation
6th generation
7th generation
  • Grand Prince Inseong
  • Grand Prince Jaean
8th generation
9th generation
10th generation
  • Grand Prince Gyeongwon
11th generation
  • None
12th generation
  • None
13th generation
14th generation
^• Forfeit rights to the succession
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
International
  • FAST
  • VIAF
National
  • United States
  • Korea