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Data

Name: Buyeo

Type: Polity

Start: 99 BC

End: 494 AD

Statistics

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Icon Buyeo

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Was an ancient kingdom that was centered in northern Manchuria in modern-day northeast China.

Establishment


  • January 99 BC: Buyeo existed as an independent polity from before the late 2nd century BC.
  • Chronology


    Interactive Chronologies with maps are available in the section Changes Navigation

    1. Events


  • January 167: The Xianbei chief, known by the Chinese as Tanshihuai, advanced upon and defeated the Wusun people of the Ili region by 166. Under Tanshihuai, the Xianbei extended their territory from the Ussuri to the Caspian Sea.

  • January 235: After the fall of the last khans, Budugen and Kebineng, in 234, the Xianbei state began to split into a number of smaller independent domains. The third century saw both the fragmentation of the Xianbei state in 235 and the branching out of the various Xianbei tribes later to establish significant empires of their own. The most prominent branches were the Murong, Tuoba, Khitan people, Shiwei and Rouran Khaganate.

  • January 331: The Rouran Khaganate is established.

  • January 347: A second Xianbei invasion in 346 finally destroyed the state, except some remnants in its core region which survived as vassals of Goguryeo.

  • January 492: Jangsu was the king of Goguryeo Kingdom, a powerful state in ancient Korea. He succeeded his father, King Gwanggaeto the Great, and continued his father's military campaigns, expanding Goguryeo's territory into Manchuria. In 491, Jangsu reached the Songhua River, further solidifying Goguryeo's dominance in the region.

  • Disestablishment


  • January 495: Buyeo annexed by Goguryeo Kingdom.
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