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Go Jin
Hangul 고리군왕 고진
Hanja 藁離郡王 高辰
Revised Romanization Gori-Gun Wang Go-Jin
McCune-Reischauer Kori-Kun Wang Ko-Chin

For the Prime Minister of Goguryeo, see Go Uru

Go Jin was the second son of Bukbuyeo's founder Haemosu, and was also a prince of this kingdom. Hanja is the Korean name for Chinese characters. More specifically it refers to those Chinese characters borrowed from Chinese and incorporated The Revised Romanization of Korean is the official Korean language Romanization system in South Korea. McCune-Reischauer romanization is one of the two most widely used Korean language Romanization systems along with the Revised Romanization of Korean, which For the ruler of Buyeo, see Go Uru Dangun Go Uru (고우루 高優婁 (?-230 was the prime minister of Goguryeo during the reigns of Kings Bukbuyeo ( Hangul: 북부여 Hanja: 北夫餘 (239 BCE - 58 BCE was an ancient Korean kingdom that was located and ruled in Manchuria. Hae Mosu was the founder and 1st Dangun of Buyeo. He is mentioned in the Hwandan Gogi, and Korean records of the 11th and 13th centuries that describe the founding Go Jin was the king of Gori-guk (고리국, 藁離國), which was the kingdom that Haemosu ruled before founding Bukbuyeo in 239 BCE.

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Prince of Bukbuyeo and ruler of Gori-guk

Go Jin served as a general of Bukbuyeo under the reign of the first four Danguns of Bukbuyeo. Bukbuyeo ( Hangul: 북부여 Hanja: 北夫餘 (239 BCE - 58 BCE was an ancient Korean kingdom that was located and ruled in Manchuria. Under his grandnephew Go Uru of Buyeo, he was given the honor of becoming ruler of Gori-guk, which was located in the western Amrok River region. Go Uru or Hae Uru (r 121 BCE - 86 BCE was the 4th Dangun of Bukbuyeo, an ancient Korean empire that was founded in Manchuria. The Yalu River ( Chinese) or the Amnok River ( Korean) is a River on the border between China and North Korea. At an advanced age, Go Jin ruled Gori-guk and attacked Wiman Joseon and its ruler Ugeo until he died. Wiman Joseon (194 - 108 BC was the part of the Gojoseon period (2333 BC - 108 BC of Korean history. Go Jin was succeeded by his son and grandson after him.

Legacy

Go Jin's great-grandson, Jumong, eventually becomes the 7th Dangun of Bukbuyeo and the founder of Goguryeo, which can be considered a successor-state to Gori-guk as well. King Dongmyeong of Goguryeo (58 - 19 BCE r 37 – 19 BCE"Dongmyeongseongwang"(東明聖王 also known by his birth name Jumong, was the founding Monarch Bukbuyeo ( Hangul: 북부여 Hanja: 北夫餘 (239 BCE - 58 BCE was an ancient Korean kingdom that was located and ruled in Manchuria. Goguryeo or Koguryo was an ancient Korean kingdom located in the northern and central parts of the Korean peninsula, southern Manchuria, and

See also

Sources

Hae Mosu was the founder and 1st Dangun of Buyeo. He is mentioned in the Hwandan Gogi, and Korean records of the 11th and 13th centuries that describe the founding Mosuri (r195 BCE- 170 BCE was the second Dangun of Bukbuyeo, an ancient Korean empire that was started in Manchuria. Go Mosu, also known as Bulilji, was the grandson of Go Jin, the second son of Haemosu, 1st Dangun of Bukbuyeo. King Dongmyeong of Goguryeo (58 - 19 BCE r 37 – 19 BCE"Dongmyeongseongwang"(東明聖王 also known by his birth name Jumong, was the founding Monarch
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