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Template:Chinesename koreanname

Alternate meaning: Bohai Sea

Balhae (Korean) or Bohai (Chinese) was a kingdom in northeast Asia from AD 698 to 926, occupying parts of Manchuria, northern Korea, and Russian Far East. Balhae was founded by Dae Jo-young the leader of Goguryeo remnants. It was conquered by the Khitan in 926.

In the confusion of the Khitan attack against the Tang in 696, Goguryeo remnants, led by Geolgeol Jungsang and Sumo Mohe tribe, led by Qisi Piyu , escaped eastward to their homeland. The two leaders died but Dae Jo-young, the son of Geolgeol Jungsang, established the State of Jin. Dae Joyŏng established his capital at Dongmu Mountain in the south of today's Jilin province. Since it gained power under protection of the northern nomadic empire of Gokturk, Tang gave Dae Jo-young the title of "Prefecture King of Bohai" in 713. Balhae had been a Chinese prefecture, but since then referred to the kingdom. The title was upgraded to "State King of Bohai" in 762.

The second king Mu , who felt encircled by Tang, Silla and Black Water Mohe along the Amur River, attacked Tang and his navy briefly occupied a port on the Shandong Peninsula in 732. Later, a compromise was forged between Balhae and Tang, which resumed tributary mission to Tang. He also sent a mission to Japan in 728 to threaten Silla from the rear. Balhae kept diplomatic and commercial contacts with Japan until the end of the kingdom. Because of its proximity to many powerful states, Balhae became a buffer zone for the region.

The third king Mun expanded its territory into the Amur valley in the north and the Liaodong Peninsula in the west. He also established the permanent capital near Lake Jingpo in the south of today's Heilongjiang province around 755.

After destroying Balhae in 926, the Khitan established the puppet Dongdan Kingdom, which was soon followed by the annexation by Liao in 936. Balhae aristocrats were moved to Liaoyang but small fragments of the state remained semi-independent. Some Balhae people fled southward to Goryeo, including a son of the last king. Some descendants of the royal family live in Korea, changing their family name to Tae (太). The Jurchen Jin Dynasty favored the Bohai people as well as the Khitans. The fourth, fifth and seventh emperors were mothered by Bohai concubines. The 13th century census of Northern China by the Mongols distinguished Balhae from other ethnic groups such as Goryeo (Korean), Khitan and Jurchen. This suggests that the Balhae people still preserved their identity.


Sovereigns of Balhae/Bohai 698-926

The names in this table are given in McCune-Reischauer romanisation, Hangŭl/Chosŏn’gŭl, Chinese characters and Pinyin.

Posthumous Names
(Shi Hao 諡號)
Personal Names Period of Reigns Era Names (Nian Hao 年號)
and their according range of years
Kowang 고왕
高王 Gāowáng
Tae Joyŏng 대조영
大祚榮 Dà Zuòróng
698-718 did not exist
Muwang 무왕
武王 Wǔwáng
Tae Muye 대무예
大武藝 Dà Wǔyì
718-737 In’an 인안
仁安 Rěn’ān
Munwang 문왕
文王 Wénwáng
Tae Hŭngmu 대흥무
大欽茂 Dà Qīnmào
737-793 Taehŭng 대흥 大興 Dàxīng
(Poryŏk 보력 寶曆 Bǎolì 774-?)
none (disposed) Tae Wŏnŭi 대원의
大元義 Dà Yuányì
793-794 Chunghŭng 중흥
中興 Zhòngxīng
Sŏngwang 성왕
成王 Chéngwáng
Tae Hwahŭng 대화흥
大華興 Dà Huáxīng
794 ?
Kangwang 강왕
康王 Kāngwáng
Tae Sŭngrin 대승린
大嵩璘 Dà Sōnglín
794-808 Chŏngryŏk 정력
正曆 Zhènglì
Chŏngwang 정왕
定王 Dìngwáng
Tae Wŏnyu 대원유
大元瑜 Dà Yuányú
808-812 Yŏngdŏk 영덕
永德 Yǒngdé
Hŭiwang 희왕
僖王 Xīwáng
Tae Ŏnŭi 대언의
大言義 Dà Yányì
812-817? Chujak 주작
朱雀 Zhūqiǎo
Kanwang 간왕
簡王 Jiǎnwáng
Tae Myŏngch’ung 대명충
大明忠 Dà Míngzhōng
817?-818? T’aesi 태시
太始 Tàishǐ
Sŏnwang 선왕
宣王 Xuānwáng
Tae Insu 대인수
大仁秀 Dà Rénxiù
818?-830 ?
? Tae Ijin 대이진
大彝震 Dà Yízhèn
830-857 ?
? Tae Kŏnhwang 대건황
大虔晃 Dà Qiánhuǎng
857-871 ?
? Tae Hyŏnsŏk 대현석
大玄錫 Dà Xuánxí
871-895 ?
? Tae Wigye 대위계
大瑋瑎 Dà Wěixié
895-907? ?
? Tae Insŏn 대인선
大諲譔 Dà Yīnzhuàn
907?-926 ?

An important source of cultural information on Balhae was discovered at the end of the 20th century at the Ancient Tombs at Longtou Mountain, especially the Mausoleum of Princess Zhenxiao.

See also