Later Three Kingdoms | |
Korean name | |
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Hangul | 후삼국시대 |
Hanja | 後三國時代 |
Revised Romanization | Husamguk Sidae |
McCune–Reischauer | Husamguk Sidae |
History of Korea |
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Timeline |
Korea portal |
The Later Three Kingdoms period (Korean: 후삼국시대; 889–936 AD[citation needed]) of ancient Korea saw a partial revival of the old three kingdoms which had dominated the peninsula from the 1st century BC to the 7th century. After the Unified Silla kingdom had ruled Korea alone from 668, it slowly began to decline and the power vacuum this created led to several rebellious states rising up and taking on the old historical names of Korea's ancient kingdoms. A messy period of alliances and in-fighting followed, but one state would once again establish a dominant position—Goryeo, itself named in homage to the earlier northern Goguryeo kingdom—and form a unified Korean state and a dynasty which would last almost 500 years.