Jeong Mong-ju


Jeong Mong-ju, also known by his pen name Poeun, was a prominent Korean scholar-official and diplomat during the late Goryeo period.

Biography

Jeong Mong-ju was born in Yeongcheon, Gyeongsang province to a family from the Yeonil Jeong clan. At the age of 23, he took three different civil service literary examinations and received the highest marks possible on each of them. In 1367, he became an instructor in Neo-Confucianism at the Gukjagam, then called Songgyungwan, whilst simultaneously holding a government position, and was a faithful public servant to King U. The king had great confidence in his wide knowledge and good judgment, and so he participated in various national projects and his scholarly works earned him great respect in the Goryeo court.
In 1372, Jeong Mong-ju visited Ming Dynasty, as a diplomatic envoy. Around the time, as Waegu 's invasions to the Korean Peninsula were extreme, Jeong Mong-ju was dispatched as a delegate to Kyūshū in Japan, in 1377. His negotiations led to promises of Japanese aid in defeating the pirates. He traveled to the Ming Dynasty's capital city in 1384 and the negotiations with the Chinese led to peace with the Ming Dynasty in 1385. He also founded an institute devoted to the theories of Confucianism.
Following a banquet held for him, Jeong Mong-ju was assassinated in 1392 by five men on the Sonjuk Bridge in Gaeseong. Politically motivated, the murder was ordered by Yi Bang-won, the fifth son of Yi Seong-gye, who overthrew the Goryeo Dynasty in order to establish the Joseon Dynasty. Jeong Mong-ju was murdered because he refused to betray his loyalty to the Goryeo Dynasty. Yi Bang-won recited a poem to dissuade Jeong Mong-ju from remaining loyal to the Goryeo court, but Jeong Mong-ju answered with another poem that affirmed his loyalty. Yi Seong-gye is said to have lamented Jeong Mong-ju's death and rebuked his son because Jeong Mong-ju was a highly regarded politician by the common people. The bridge where Jeong Mong-ju was murdered, nowadays in North Korea, has now become a national monument of that country. A brown spot on one of the stones is said to be Jeong Mong-ju's bloodstain and is said to become red whenever it rains. Currently, his direct surviving descendants are his 28th and 29th generation, all of whom reside in South Korea, the United States, Canada, Portugal, Germany and the United Kingdom.
The 474-year-old Goryeo Dynasty symbolically ended with Jeong Mong-ju's death and was followed by the Joseon Dynasty for 505 years. Jeong Mong-ju's noble death symbolizes his faithful allegiance to the king, and he was later venerated even by Joseon monarchs. In 1517, 125 years after his death, he was canonized into Sungkyunkwan alongside other Korean sages such as Yi Hwang and Yi I.
The 11th pattern of ITF Taekwondo is named after Poeun. The pattern is performed as part of the testing syllabus for the level of 2nd-degree black belt. The diagram represents Jeong Mong-ju's unerring loyalty to his king and his country towards the end of the Goryeo Dynasty.

The poems

Yi Bang-won's ''sijo'' (poem) - ''Hayeoga'' '''(하여가, 何如歌)'''

이런들 어떠하리 저런들 어떠하리此亦何如彼亦何如。
만수산 드렁칡이 얽어진들 어떠하리城隍堂後垣頹落亦何如。
우리도 이같이 얽어져 백년까지 누리리라我輩若此爲不死亦何如。
What shall it be: this or that?
The walls behind the temple of the city's deity* has fallen - shall it be this?
Or if we survive together nonetheless - shall it be that?

Jeong Mong-ju's ''sijo'' (poem) - ''Dansimga'' '''(단심가, 丹心歌)'''

이몸이 죽고 죽어 일백 번 고쳐 죽어此身死了死了一百番更死了。
백골이 진토되어 넋이라도 있고 없고白骨爲塵土魂魄有也無。
임 향한 일편 단심이야 가실 줄이 있으랴向主一片丹心寧有改理也歟。
Though I die and die again a hundred times,
That my bones turn to dust, whether my soul remains or not,
Ever loyal to my Lord, how can this red heart ever fade away?

Books