Royal Noble Consort Hwabin Yun
Some of this article's listed sources may not be reliable. (May 2021) |
Hwa-bin Yun 화빈 윤씨 | |
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Royal Noble Consort of the First Senior Rank | |
Tenure | 1780 – 1824 |
Born | 11 April 1765 Kingdom of Joseon |
Died | 14 January 1824 (aged 58) Kingdom of Joseon |
Burial | |
Spouse | Jeongjo of Joseon |
House | Namwon Yun clan (by birth) House of Jeonju Yi (by marriage) |
Father | Yun Chang-yun |
Mother | Lady Yi of the Byeokjin Yi clan |
Religion | Korean Buddhism |
Korean name | |
Hangul | |
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Hanja | |
Revised Romanization | Hwabin Yunssi |
McCune–Reischauer | Hwapin Yunssh'i |
Royal Noble Consort Hwa of the Namwon Yun clan (Hangul: 화빈 남원 윤씨, Hanja: 和嬪 南原 尹氏; 11 April 1765 – 14 January 1824) was a concubine of King Jeongjo of Joseon.[3][4]
Biography[]
Early life[]
Lady Yun was born into the Namwon Yun clan, on April 11, 1765. She was the only child of Yun Chang-yun and his wife, Lady Yi of the Beokjin Yi clan.
Life as royal concubine[]
On February 21, 1780, Queen Dowager Yesun announced the selection for a new concubine for her step-grandson, King Jeongjo, because his primary wife, Queen Hyoui, couldn't bear any children and his first concubine, Lady Hong Won-bin, died one year prior. The selection took place from 30 February until 9 March.
On March 10, 1780, when she was 15 years old, Lady Yun became a concubine of the Bin rank, with the prefix "Hwa" (和), meaning "peace/harmony". She was alternatively known as Lady Gyeongsu (경수궁, 慶壽宮).[5][6]
Lady Hwa-bin died without issue, on September 14, 1824 (the 24th year of King Sunjo's reign). She was burried in Goyang, Gyeonggi Province.
Family[]
- Father: Yun Chang-yun (윤창윤, 尹昌胤)
- Mother: Lady Yi of the Beokjin Yi clan (벽진 이씨, 碧珍 李氏)
- Grandfather: Yi Hun-bo (이훈보)
- Husband
- Yi San, King Jeongjo of Joseon (이산 조선 정조, 李祘 朝鮮 正祖) (28 October 1752 – 18 August 1800) — No issue.
Titles[]
- 11 April 1765 – 10 March 1780: Lady Yun, daughter of Yun Chang-yun of the Namwon Yun clan
- Lady Yun of the Namwon Yun clan (남원 윤씨, 南原 尹氏)
- Yun Chang-yun's daughter (윤창윤의 딸, 尹昌胤之 女)
- 10 March 1780 – 14 September 1824: Royal Noble Consort Hwa of the Namwon Yun clan (화빈 남원 윤씨, 和嬪 南原 尹氏), 1st senior rank concubine of the King
Legacy[]
- White porcelain blue flower (백자청화 칠보화훼문 사각병) – Seoul Tangible Cultural Property No. 402.[7]
- A book which was written by Lady Yun about setting the etiquette rules to be followed in Gyeongsu Palace (경수궁, 慶壽宮).[8][9]
In popular culture[]
- Portrayed by Yoo Yeon-ji in the 2007 MBC TV series Lee San, Wind of the Palace.[10][11]
- Portrayed by Yi Seo in the 2021 MBC TV series The Red Sleeve.[12]
References[]
- ^ "묘 이야기". royaltoms.cha.go.kr.
- ^ "서삼릉 후궁묘 - 화빈 윤씨 묘 (화빈남원윤씨지묘(和嬪南原尹氏之墓))". m.blog.naver.com.
- ^ "조선22대 정조후궁 - 화빈 윤씨(和嬪 尹氏) : 경수궁(慶壽宮)". m.blog.naver.com (in Korean).
- ^ "조선왕조실록". sillok.history.go.kr.
- ^ Literally translates as Gyeongsu Palace.
- ^ "조선왕조실록". sillok.history.go.kr.
- ^ "서울특별시 유형문화재 제402호 - 백자청화 칠보화훼문 사각병 (白磁靑畵七寶花卉文四角甁)". heritage.go.kr.
- ^ Her residence.
- ^ "경수궁배위의절". m.terms.naver.com.
- ^ Just appear in episode 67 - 72.
- ^ "화빈윤씨 유연지, 이산 후반기 최대수혜주 될까?". todaykorea.co.kr. 13 May 2008.
- ^ Byung-gil, Ahn (December 26, 2021). "'옷소매' 이서, 고운 얼굴 살벌한 눈도장" ['Red Sleeves' Lee Seo, a pretty face and bloody eyes] (in Korean). Sports Kyunghyang. Retrieved December 30, 2021 – via Naver.
External links[]
- Royal Consort Hwa on Doosan Encyclopedia (in Korean).
- Royal Consort Hwa on 한국역대인물 종합정보시스템 (in Korean).
- 1765 births
- 1824 deaths
- 17th-century Korean people
- 17th-century Korean women
- 18th-century Korean people
- 18th-century Korean women
- Royal consorts of the Joseon Dynasty