Queen Tan'gyŏng

Queen Tan'gyŏng
Queen consort of Joseon
Tenure18 September 1506 – 25 September 1506
PredecessorQueen Jeinwondeok
SuccessorQueen Janggyeong
Born7 February 1487
Joseon
Died27 December 1557(1557-12-27) (aged 70)
Joseon
Burial
Onreung, Ilyeong-ri, Jangheung-myeon, Yangju, Gyeonggi Province
Spouse
(m. 1499⁠–⁠1506)
HouseGeochang Shin
FatherSin Sugŭn
MotherHan Ŭn'gwang, Internal Princess Consort Cheongwon of the Cheongju Han clan
Korean name
Hangul
단경왕후
Hanja
端敬王后
RRDangyeong wanghu
MRTan'gyŏng wanghu
Posthumous name
Hangul
공소순열단경왕후
Hanja
恭昭順烈端敬王后
RRGongsosunyeoldangyeong wanghu
MRKongsosunyŏldan'gyŏng wanghu

Queen Tan'gyŏng (Korean: 단경왕후; Hanja: 端敬王后; RR: Dangyeong wanghu; 7 February 1487 – 27 December 1557), of the Geochang Shin clan, was a posthumous name bestowed to the wife and first queen consort of Yi Yeok, King Jungjong, the 11th Joseon monarch. She was queen consort of Joseon for seven days in September 1506, after which she was known as Deposed Queen Sin (폐비 신씨).[1]

Biography

The future Queen was born on 7 February 1487 during the reign of King Seongjong. Her father, Sin Sugŭn was member of the Geochang Shin clan.[2] Her paternal aunt, Queen Jeinwondeok, was King Yeonsangun's primary consort. Her mother, Han Eun-gwang, who was Sin Sugŭn's second wife, was a member of the Cheongju Han clan.

Through her maternal grandmother, Lady Sin was a great-great-granddaughter of Princess Gyeongjeong. As well as a fourth cousin to the future King Jungjong as they shared Queen Wongyeong and King Taejong as their great-great-great-grandparents (on her father's side as well making her parents third cousins).

Through her maternal grandfather, Lady Sin and her future husband were also third cousins as they shared Han Yŏngjŏng (한영정) as their great-great-grandfather. With Queen Insu, she was a first cousin twice removed and through marriage, she was her grandmother-in-law.

In 1499 at the age of 13, she married the 12-year-old Grand Prince Chinsŏng, King Seongjong's second son and younger half-brother to King Yeonsan.[3][4] Through her paternal aunt's marriage, King Yeonsan was her uncle-in-law and through her own marriage, a brother-in-law.

As grand prince's wife, she received title the Princess Consort (부부인; 府夫人). Her mother was given the royal title of "Internal Princess Consort Cheongwon" (청원부부인; 淸原府夫人), and her father was given the royal title of "Internal Prince Ikch'ang, Sin Sugŭn" (익창부원군 신수근; 益昌府院君 愼守勤)

In 1506, King Yeonsan was deposed, and on the same day, soldiers belonging to the coup leaders surrounded Grand Prince Jinseong's house. Jinseong was about to kill himself, thinking that Yeonsan had sent troops to kill him; but Princess Sin dissuaded him from taking his own life. When her husband became king (temple name: Jungjong),[5] she became a queen consort. However because her father was the brother-in-law of Yeonsan, he was opposed to her husband's enthronement; her father either led a coup, or permitted a coup to take place against the King Jungjong, and was killed.[6]

Because this incident meant she was the daughter of a traitor, the Queen was deposed and expelled from the palace.[7][4][8] When Yun Myung-hye (known as Queen Janggyeong) who was Jungjong's second queen consort died in 1515, Deposed Queen Sin's supporters tried to suggest her reinstatement, but highly-placed officials were against the idea - one of her main supporters was poisoned and another exiled.

Deposed Queen Sin received help from Jungjong's successor, King Injong, to make her life better.

On 27 December 1557, in the 12th year of King Myeongjong's reign, she died without issue. The king held a portrait of Lady Sin at the funeral ceremony and she was buried in a family tomb according to the wishes of her parents. Her tomb was named Onneung.

She continued to be addressed as Deposed Queen Sin until 230 years later, when in 1739 King Yeongjo formally and posthumously honoured her as Queen Tan'gyŏng, as well as giving her father, her mother and her father's first wife royal titles.[9][10]

Family

Parent

  • Father − Sin Sugŭn (신수근; 1450–1506)
  • Mother − Han Eun-gwang, Internal Princess Consort Cheongwon of the Cheongju Han clan (한은광 청원부부인 청주 한씨; 韓銀光 淸原府夫人 淸州 韓氏; 1459–1523); Sin Sugŭn's second wife
  • Stepmother − Internal Princess Consort Yŏngga of the Andong Kwon clan (정경부인 증 영가부부인 안동 권씨; 貞敬夫人 贈 永嘉府夫人 安東權氏; 1448–?)

Sibling

  • Older sister - Lady Sin of the Geochang Shin clan (거창 신씨; 1483–?)
  • Older brother − Sin Hongbo (신홍보; 1483–?)
  • Older brother − Sin Hongp'il (신홍필; 1484–1541)
  • Older brother - Sin Hongdu (신홍두; 1486–?)
  • Younger sister - Lady Sin of the Geochang Shin clan (거창 신씨; 1489–?)
  • Younger brother − Sin Hongu (신홍우; 1489–?)
  • Younger brother − Sin Hongjo (신홍조; 愼弘祚; 1490–1561)

Consort

References

  1. ^ 한, 희숙 (March 2007). "中宗妃 廢妃 愼氏의 처지와 그 復位論議". 한국인물사연구 (in Korean) (7): 125–168. ISSN 1738-3307.
  2. ^ 단경왕후 溫陵을 통해 본 조선후기 封陵의 역사적 의미. 민족문화논총 (in Korean). 53: 167–196. April 2013. ISSN 1229-8697.
  3. ^ Kim, David W. (2021). "ROYAL JOSEON SOGYŎKSŎ AND PŎPCHO: THE PHILOSOPHICAL ENCUMBRANCE OF SARIM IN THE KIMYO LITERATI PURGE (1519)1". TRAMES. XXV (4): 451–470. doi:10.3176/tr.2021.4.05. hdl:1885/293874. ISSN 1406-0922.
  4. ^ a b Foundation, The Korea (2013-03-30). Korea Focus - March 2012. 한국국제교류재단. ISBN 978-89-86090-83-3.
  5. ^ Kim, Oaksook Chun (2019), Ro, Young-chan (ed.), "The Sarim Movement and Confucian Philosophy", Dao Companion to Korean Confucian Philosophy, Dao Companions to Chinese Philosophy, vol. 11, Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, pp. 213–231, doi:10.1007/978-90-481-2933-1_10, ISBN 978-90-481-2933-1, S2CID 202305393, retrieved 2024-01-30{{citation}}: CS1 maint: work parameter with ISBN (link)
  6. ^ Kim, David W. (2021). "ROYAL JOSEON SOGYŎKSŎ AND PŎPCHO: THE PHILOSOPHICAL ENCUMBRANCE OF SARIM IN THE KIMYO LITERATI PURGE (1519)1". TRAMES. XXV (4): 451–470. doi:10.3176/tr.2021.4.05. hdl:1885/293874. ISSN 1406-0922.
  7. ^ 김, 우진 (March 2023). 영조의 端敬王后 愼氏 復位와 의의 ― 復位 祔廟 의례를 중심으로 ―. 동양고전연구 (in Korean). 90: 123–160. ISSN 1226-7910.
  8. ^ Tapsahoe, Han'guk Munhwa Yusan (2007). Seoul: A Field Guide to History. Dolbegae Publishers. ISBN 978-89-7199-289-0.
  9. ^ "Olleung Royal Tomb, Yangju". Cultural Heritage Administration. Retrieved 2016-02-19.
  10. ^ Cultural Heritage Administration. Nomination of Royal Tombs of the Joseon Dynasty for Inscription on the World Heritage List (PDF). UNESCO. p. 136. Retrieved 2015-12-03.