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There is a stone monument in the south Korean capital, and the Korean people regard it as a "national shame", why does the government prohibit its destruction? Take a look

There is a stone monument in the south Korean capital, and the Korean people regard it as a "national shame", why does the government prohibit its destruction? Take a look

Behind the Building of Lotte World in Jamsil-dong, Songpa District, on the south bank of the Han River in Seoul, South Korea, stands a stone stele that is nearly 400 years old, which makes many people now feel strange that this square stone stele cannot find a single Korean whether it is Beiyang (front) or Beiyin (back). On the front of the stele, the seal is engraved in Manchu and Mongolian, and the back is engraved with ancient Chinese characters; the entire inscription is engraved with more than 900 characters, but the most eye-catching of them is the seven large characters on the forehead of the stele: the Monument of Merit of the Emperor of the Qing Dynasty.

The two countries have different names for the stone stele, the workmanship is also different, most of the domestic stele carvings are more exquisite, and this stele is very rough, which has the reason for the construction period, and there are also reasons for this stone stele that is regarded as a disgrace, North Korea probably will not seriously build the reason, in fact, the stele body was placed for a few days, and one of them was destroyed.

There is a stone monument in the south Korean capital, and the Korean people regard it as a "national shame", why does the government prohibit its destruction? Take a look

This stone stele can be described as a fateful fate, the resettlement was soon destroyed by man, in 1895 it was also thrown into the Han River, but eighteen years later it was salvaged ashore, and in 1956, the stone stele was again killed, buried in the soil, but eight years later it was washed out by the flood

In this battle, the North Korean side sent 15,000 troops to assist in the battle, and after the main force of the Ming army was defeated, Kang Hongli, who was the marshal of the Korean army, led the remaining more than 5,000 Korean troops to surrender to Nurhaci. At this time, Nurhaci, who was concentrating on fighting the Ming Dynasty, did not want to make enemies again, so he always adopted a policy of co-optation with Korea. Nurhaci did not embarrass the 5,000 North Korean prisoners who surrendered, but released them back to China in an attempt to improve relations with North Korea.

There is a stone monument in the south Korean capital, and the Korean people regard it as a "national shame", why does the government prohibit its destruction? Take a look

During the Japanese control of Korea, because the Japanese also admired Chinese culture, they did not change the Korean people's pursuit of Chinese culture, and in many things related to us, they allowed Koreans to maintain their original appearance.

It's just that they have made a different attitude towards some special things.

For example, there is a stone stele that was demolished by the Japanese at that time.

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