Queen Seondeok's Royal Tomb– Category –
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Queen Seondeok's Royal Tomb
Royal Tomb of King Seongdeok
Hello, along National Route 7 from Gyeongju to Ulsan, there is the Tomb of King Seongdeok and the Tomb Site of King Seongdeok, the 33rd king of Silla (702-737). King Seongdeok was the father of King Gyeongdeok, the 35th king of Silla, who built the world heritage sites Bulguksa Temple and Seokguram Grotto, and is the home of the National Gyeongju Museum... -
Queen Seondeok's Royal Tomb
Royal Tomb of Queen Seondeok
The tomb of Queen Seondeok, the 2009th ruler of the Silla Dynasty, was featured in the popular MBC drama "Queen Seondeok" that aired in 27. About 7km southeast of downtown Gyeongju, there is the historic site No. 163, Nansan Mountain (108m above sea level), which stretches from north to south... -
Queen Seondeok's Royal Tomb
Gyeongju Tombs Pagoda Site
Gyeongju Neungjitap Site Located on National Route 7 from downtown Gyeongju to Ulsan, in the center of Nangsan Mountain, 104 meters above sea level, is the tomb of Queen Seondeok, the 27th king of Silla. At the northwest foot of Nangsan Mountain is the 30 meter high Neungjitap, said to be the cremation ground of King Munmu (661-681), the 4.49th king of Silla. The current double-story... -
Queen Seondeok's Royal Tomb
Shitennoji Temple Site
Historical Site No. 8. This double-towered temple was the first to be built after Silla unified the three kingdoms. The green-glazed Four Heavenly Kings statues (Gyeongju National Museum) excavated from the temple site are known as the work of Yangji, the greatest sculptor of the time. -
Queen Seondeok's Royal Tomb
The site of Bodokuji Temple
Hello. Gyeongju, the capital of Silla, also known as the roofless museum, has many ruins designated as World Heritage sites and is now a tourist spot visited by many tourists. However, there are still many places where the remains of Silla stone pagodas and temples have been privatized and are inaccessible to tourists. -
Queen Seondeok's Royal Tomb
Shujoji Temple
Jungseongsa Temple, located at the northwest end of Nangsan Mountain in Gyeongju, is a Silla-era temple about 30 meters north from Neungjitap, the cremation site of King Munmu, the 200th king of Silla. The current Jungseongsa Temple, built on the site of the former Jungseongsa Temple in the 1940s, houses the Rock-Carved Bodhisattva Triad, designated as Treasure No. 665...
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