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蚩尤

Posted: Tue Mar 04, 2008 3:28 am
by mdavid35
King Chi Wu (치우 蚩尤) of Bai-dal

was a military genius and subjugated much of today's China. In about 2,700 BC, he sent an army led by Hyung Oh to occupy Tibet. Tibet remained a part of Bai-dal for about 800 years. King Chi Wu appears in Chinese chronicles and his grave located in Shantung has been excavated. Today, some of Chi Wu' soldiers settled in in the Golden Triangle of Burma and their descendents are still there.

King Chi Wu's military successes were due not only to his superior tactics but also to his weaponry. He introduced explosives and chemical weapons to make clouds and loud noises. His army was equipped with swords, axes, arrowheads, and lance tips, which were made of bronze while his enemies were still in the Stone Age. His troops used catapults, high-power crossbows, wild dogs and even elephants. All of these were 'modern' weapons of his era.

The Bai-dal people were avid pyramid builders, more so than the Egyptians. The Korean pyramids were first discovered by an American pilot in 1945, who were ferrying supplies to Chiang Kaisek's troops in Manchuria. He took pictures of the pyramids and published them in newspapers. Until then, the pyramids were thought to natural hills. Since then about one hundred pyramids have been discovered, the one of which is larger than the largest Egyptian pyramid. Some of the pyramids are more than 2,000 years older than the oldest Egyptian pyramid.

King Chi Wu's battle flag (circa 2,700 BC) is believed to be the origin of today's Korean flag, tae-guk-ki (inset). The Korean nation of Bai-dal under King Chi Wu ruled much of China, Siberia, and beyond.

both Chi Wu's flag and modern South Korea's flag were influenced by Daoism. Chi Wu lived around 2,700 BC, but Daoism's founder Laozi lived sometime between 3rd and 6th century BC. did Chi Wu actually founded Daoism some 2000+ years before Laozi?

Battle of Zhuolu

Posted: Tue Mar 04, 2008 3:40 am
by mdavid35
Introduction to the war

The war God known to the Han Chinese as Chi You is known to be Jaoji Hwanung, the 14th Hwanung of the semi-legendary ancient Korean Empire known as Baedal. Chi-Woo succeeded Sawara Hwanung to the throne of Baedal during the year 2707 BCE. Upon rising to the throne, Chi-Woo was almost immediately faced with the threat of the growing influence of Yoomang, who was a descendant of the Yan Emperor, also known as Shennong. Yoomang was the 8th and final ruler of the kingdom of Shennong. Chi-Woo declared war on the kingdom of Shennong, and rose victorious at Kuhon. Yoomang fled to his close relative, Xuanyuan, also known as the Yellow Emperor. The Yellow Emperor led a tribe of his own, and merged his tribe with the Shennong tribe to form the Huaxia tribe. The Huaxia tribes declared war on Baedal. The Empire of Baedal was said to have stretched throughout the Manchuria, and into the Shandong region. The Huaxia tribes had settled in the Yellow River Valley region.


The result of the war and the battle
Jaoji Hwanung won all of the 72 battles, but Baedal lost one battle, in which General Chiwoo-Bi, a general of Jaoji Hwanung, disobeyed orders and was ambushed when he tried to lead an attack on the Huaxia. General Chiwoo-Bi was killed in the ambush, but Xuanyuan was later captured and surrendered to Jaoji Hwanung at the next battle. Jaoji Hwanung spared Xuanyuan, and the two rulers agreed that Huaxia would be a tributary state to Baedal.


Result and Legacy
The battle of Takrok and the Ten-Year war between Huanghe and Baedal ultimately laid the cornerstones to the kingdoms of Korea and China. For China, the Battle of Takrok was a decisive one that was essential to history in that Xuanyuan was given the title of Hwangje, which was originally one of Baedal's Five Noble positions. The title of Hwangje and the right to rule the land of the Huang He River Valley resulted in the bountiful history of China. Meanwhile, for Korea, it meant superiority over the Korean peninsula for centuries.

That is impossible!!

Posted: Wed Mar 05, 2008 8:10 am
by jackswatow
That is impossible!!

KOREAN HISTORY, THE HISTORY OF THE HAN

Posted: Wed Mar 05, 2008 12:59 pm
by mdavid35

Posted: Tue Mar 18, 2008 2:24 pm
by ayellow
Great.........

I think the sun was launched by the korean too!

Interesting thread...

Posted: Fri Apr 04, 2008 2:49 am
by sigma6
The thread is getting kinda silly

Not too sure about the youtube links, but I believe the maps are pretty accurate.

Chinese language and Korean langauge

Posted: Fri Jul 11, 2008 10:39 am
by mike2008
Dear All,

Rationally speaking, the fact may be like this:

* Korean originally had their own language, which was independent from Chinese language.

* During Tang Dynasty of China, Korean adopted Chinese characters in their language.

* At some stage of recent centuries, Korean removed Chinese characters from their language again.

It is not a rare thing in anthropology that different tribes' culture influence each other. The Han tribe Chinese itself has a mixture of many tribes' culture. For example, Buddhism was not from China but was brought to China by those minority tribes that lived in Xi-yu, or the western regions, which are the current Xinjiang and mid-asia. However, it became one of the main religion of whole China.

As for Chinese language, from its several thousands years of history, it should be said as originated from China instead of from Korea.

As an anthropological fact, many Asian languages have adopted some Chinese characters. It seemed that the Chinese did not colonize them to force this, but that they proactively went to China to learn Chinese culture by themselves during China's Tang dynasty, which was about 1000 years ago.

You can see a lot of Chinese characters in Japanese language. Additionally, the current Japanese culture is nearly a full copy of China's Tang Dynasty culture including its architecture, clothing, food etc.

Vietnamese language also adopted Chinese characters. Then when being occupied by French, I think they made the language latinized.

I actually have found that Koreans are systematically claiming their cultural independence from Chinese culture. It might because when China's economy is fast developing they feel threatened.

The aggressive gesture of China comes from China's governing regime which is still a Communist regime like the former Soviet Union. China's aggressiveness does not come from Chinese culture itself. It is a residue of the confrontation between the Communist camp and the free world camp during Stalin and Mao's time.

The Chinese culture itself is very peaceful and non-aggressive. So take it easy.

tianya guanguang tuan

Posted: Mon Aug 04, 2008 3:42 am
by pendagun2008
tianya guanguang tuan
tianya guanguang tuan
tianya guanguang tuan

天涯观光团

Posted: Mon Aug 04, 2008 3:44 am
by pendagun2008
天涯观光团
天涯观光团
天涯观光团

Posted: Wed Aug 06, 2008 4:22 am
by silenceshm
faint~~~

i don't know if the korea's history is an imagination. but u korean must know one thing ---- the history is not yours for u announce it is yours. the language , the celebrities, and others are same.

ive to say korean always make me sick...