Yongbieocheonga
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Yongbieocheonga
Summary
Yongbieocheonga is a literary work[1]. Yongbieocheonga ranks in the top 4% of literary_work entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (21 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Yongbieocheonga authored Gwon Je[3].
- Yongbieocheonga authored An Ji[4].
- Yongbieocheonga authored Chŏng Inji[5].
- Yongbieocheonga is in the country of South Korea[6].
- Yongbieocheonga's image is recorded as Yongbieocheonga.jpg[7].
- Yongbieocheonga's instance of is recorded as literary work[8].
- Yongbieocheonga's genre is recorded as epic poem[9].
- Korean dragon is named after Yongbieocheonga[10].
- Yongbieocheonga's OCLC number is recorded as 37942907[11].
- Yongbieocheonga's Commons category is recorded as Yongbieocheonga[12].
- Yongbieocheonga's language of work or name is recorded as Middle Korean[13].
- Yongbieocheonga's country of origin is recorded as Joseon[14].
- Yongbieocheonga's publication date is recorded as +1447-11-23T00:00:00Z[15].
- Yongbieocheonga's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/03ctf3j[16].
- Yongbieocheonga's characters is recorded as Mokjo[17].
- Yongbieocheonga's characters is recorded as Ikjo[18].
- Yongbieocheonga's characters is recorded as Dojo[19].
- Yongbieocheonga's characters is recorded as Yi Cha-ch'un[20].
- Yongbieocheonga's characters is recorded as Taejo of Joseon[21].
- Yongbieocheonga's characters is recorded as Taejong of Joseon[22].
- Yongbieocheonga's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Yongbieocheonga[23].
- Yongbieocheonga's main subject is recorded as late Goryeo and early Joseon[24].
- Yongbieocheonga's work available at URL is recorded as http://archives.hangeul.go.kr/scholarship/literature/view/424[25].
- Yongbieocheonga's work available at URL is recorded as http://archives.hangeul.go.kr/scholarship/literature/view/936[26].
- Yongbieocheonga's work available at URL is recorded as http://archives.hangeul.go.kr/scholarship/literature/view/935[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
Authored works include Gwon Je[3], a civil servant[28], 1387–1445[29], of Joseon[30]; An Ji[4], 1377–1464[31]; and Chŏng Inji[5], an autobiographer[32], 1396–1478[33], of Joseon[34].
Why It Matters
Yongbieocheonga ranks in the top 4% of literary_work entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (21 views/month).[2] Yongbieocheonga has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[35]