The custom of "Mucheon" (무천, 舞天), a festival of worshipping heaven through song and dance in the 10th month, is mentioned in some records. Very little information about Ye has survived most of the extant information comes from the discussion of the Eastern barbarians in the Chinese Records of Three Kingdoms. The population was recorded to be 280,000 families. ![]() This may indicate that Dongye also shared a common origin with Buyeo and Gojoseon. ![]() The Ye people considered themselves to be the same people as the people of Goguryeo, and shared their language and ethnic origins with the people of Okjeo and Goguryeo. It is said that it used 3 zhang (丈) long spear as a weapon and supported the army as a vassal of Goguryeo. They had a sense of homogeneity with Goguryeo. Īccording to the Book of the Later Han and Records of the Three Kingdoms, fellow soldiers are as good at infantry as Okjeo. According to a recent study, Siljikgok (present-day Samcheok) is also seen as an area of the ye culture. Haslla (何瑟羅 present-day Gangneung), Bulnaeye (不耐穢 present-day Anbyon County), Hwaryeo (華麗 present-day Kumya County) are known as the countries established by Ye. A small part of Ye in the south was absorbed into Silla. In early 5th-century, however, King Gwanggaeto the Great of Goguryeo annexed Ye, leading to Goguryeo's domination of the entire northern portion of the Korean peninsula and most of Manchuria. Ye appears in history as a vassal state of Goguryeo. ![]() Today, this territory consists of the provinces of South Hamgyŏng and Kangwon in North Korea, and Gangwon in South Korea. It bordered Goguryeo and Okjeo to the north, Jinhan to the south, and China's Lelang Commandery to the west. Ye or Dongye ( Korean pronunciation: ), which means the Eastern Ye, was a Korean chiefdom which occupied portions of the northeastern Korean peninsula from roughly 3rd-century BC to around early 5th-century AD.
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