Seungjeongwon ilgi
Seungjeongwon ilgi | |
Hangul | |
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Hanja | |
Revised Romanization | Seungjeongwon ilgi |
McCune–Reischauer | Sŭngjŏngwŏn ilgi |
Seungjeongwon ilgi or Journal of the Royal Secretariat is a daily record of Seungjeongwon, Royal Secretariat during the Joseon Dynasty of Korea (1392–1910), which records the king's public life and his interactions with the bureaucracy on a daily basis.[1] It is the 303rd national treasure of Korea and was designated as part of UNESCO's Memory of the World Programme.[2][3] UNESCO confirmed Seungjuongwon ilgi as the world's longest continuous record of a king's daily life in 2001 and designated it in the Memory of the World Programme alongside Jikji. The record was written in Classical Chinese.[4]: 74
See also[]
- Annals of the Joseon Dynasty
- Uigwe
- History of Korea
- Joseon Dynasty politics
References[]
- ^ JaHyun Kim Haboush (1988). The Confucian Kingship in Korea: Yŏngjo and the Politics of Sagacity. Columbia University Press. p. 251. ISBN 0-231-06657-0.
- ^ 승정원일기 (承政院日記) (in Korean). Empas/EncyKorea.
- ^ 승정원일기 (承政院日記) (in Korean). Empas/Britannica.
- ^ Orchiston, Wayne; Green, David A.; Strom, Richard (2014). New Insights From Recent Studies in Historical Astronomy: Following in the Footsteps of F. Richard Stephenson. Springer.
External links[]
- Official Site (in Korean) (South Korean government)
Categories:
- Joseon Dynasty works
- History books about Korea
- Memory of the World Register
- Chinese-language literature of Korea
- Korean history stubs