Korea (9 18-1392), also known as Korea dynasty, is one of the feudal dynasties on the Korean peninsula. 1392 was replaced by the Korean dynasty.
Korea is a national regime that existed in the northeast of China and the Korean Peninsula from the 1st century BC to the 7th century AD. Together with Baekje and Silla, it is also called the Three Kingdoms Period of Korea. Its ethnic groups are mainly Yi and Fu (including Japanese and Dongyi), and then some Yi, ancient Korean adherents and Sanhan people have been absorbed.
Silla completed the unification of the south-central part of the Korean Peninsula with the help of the Tang Dynasty. After the late 8th century, Silla, like its suzerain Tang Dynasty, fell into the predicament of civil strife and decline. At the end of the 9th century, the people's uprising broke out in Silla under the rule of the True Holy Queen, which led to the collapse of Silla's rule on the Korean Peninsula.
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After 34 generations of monarchs for 475 years, Korea was successively a vassal of the continental countries such as the later Tang Dynasty, the later Jin Dynasty, the later Han Dynasty, the later Zhou Dynasty, the Northern Song Dynasty, the Khitan (Liao Dynasty), the Jin Dynasty, Mongolia (Yuan Dynasty) and the Ming Dynasty, and had wars with the northern nationalities such as Khitan, Jurchen and Mongolia. 1392, Gong was deposed, and the Korean dynasty was established.
Buddhism is the national religion of Korea, and the tripitaka is one of the world's treasures. Arab merchants spread the name of Korea to the European world, which is the prototype of the word Korea today. Korea is another unified country after Silla's reunification in the history of the Korean Peninsula, and "Korean" has also become another name of the Korean nation in the world.
References:
Baidu encyclopedia-Korea