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Showing posts with label Paektu Mountain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paektu Mountain. Show all posts

Saturday, December 7, 2019

PAEKTU MOUNTAIN IN MANCHU VERITABLE RECORDS



MANCHU VERITABLE RECORDS (1636-1736)
Paektu Mountain (2,744 m - 9,003 ft) 
China - North Corea border

From the Manchu Veritable Records with the names of Mount Paektu in Manchu, Chinese and Mongolian, ink on paper,  1 January 1635 

The volcano
Paektu Mountain (2,744 m - 9,003 ft) also known as Baekdu Mountain, and in China as Changbai Mountain (长白山) is an active stratovolcano on the Chinese–North Korean border. It is the highest mountain of the Changbaiand Baekdudaegan ranges.
Koreans assign a mythical quality to the volcano and its caldera lake, considering it to be their country's spiritual home. It is the highest mountain in North Korea, the Korean Peninsula, and Northeast China.
A large crater lake, called Heaven Lake, is in the caldera atop the mountain. The caldera was formed by the VEI 7 "Millennium" or "Tianchi" eruption of 946, which erupted about 100–120 km3 (24–29 cu mi) of tephra. This was one of the largest and most violent eruptions in the last 5,000 years (alongside the Minoan eruption, the Hatepe eruption of Lake Taupo in around AD 180, the 1257 eruption of Mount Samalas near Mount Rinjani, and the 1815 eruption of Tambora).
The mountain plays an important mythological and cultural role in the societies and civil religions of both contemporary Korean states, for instance, it is mentioned in both of their national anthems and is depicted on the national emblem of North Korea.
In 2011, the Government of North Korea invited volcanologists James Hammond of Imperial College, London and Clive Oppenheimer of the University of Cambridge, to study the mountain for recent volcanic activity. Their project was continuing in 2014 and expected to last for another "two or three years".

The documents
The first known record of the Manchu origin myth is found in Qing documents dating from 1636. These documents provide an official account of the origin of the Aisin Gioro lineage, including the story of the ancestor Bukūri Yongšon, who is depicted as the Manchu primogenitor, from his birth to his ascension to the throne. This article argues that the Manchu origin myth reflected the dynamics of Manchu identity, which shifted from constructing a Manchu group to securing Manchu rule during the period from the seventeenth to the eighteenth centuries. By tracing the development of this myth from its earliest version in the seventeenth century to four different versions that appeared by the mid-eighteenth century, written in both Manchu and Chinese, this article endeavors to shed new light on how the Manchus saw themselves, their ancestor, and their empire.

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2019 - Wandering Vertexes...
by Francis Rousseau