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Video Summary
Maximum Extent
Maximum Extent (Interactive Map)

Data

Name: Eastern Buyeo

Type: Polity

Start: 99 BC

End: 410 AD

Statistics

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Icon Eastern Buyeo

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An ancient Korean kingdom that developed from Buyeo.

Establishment


  • January 99 BC: Eastern Buyeo was an ancient Korean kingdom that developed from Bukbuyeo.
  • Chronology


    Interactive Chronologies with maps are available in the section Changes Navigation

    1. Goguryeo-Dongbuyeo Wars


    Military invasion of Goguryeo by the Kingdom of Dongbuyeo.

  • January 7: Daeso was a military leader from the Eastern Buyeo kingdom who led a large army into Goguryeo. However, he was forced to retreat due to heavy snowfall, which made it difficult for his troops to continue their advance.
  • February 7: Daeso was a military leader of the Han Dynasty who invaded the Goguryeo Kingdom with a large army. However, he was unable to conquer Goguryeo due to the harsh winter conditions, forcing him to retreat with his troops.
  • January 14: In 13 AD, Daeso, a prince of Eastern Buyeo, invaded Goguryeo. Muhyul, the crown prince of Goguryeo, organized a successful ambush that resulted in the slaughter of Daeso's army.
  • February 14: In 13 AD, Daeso, a prince of the Han Dynasty, invaded Goguryeo. Muhyul, the crown prince of Goguryeo, led a successful ambush against Daeso's army, resulting in the slaughter of most of his troops. This victory solidified Muhyul's reputation as a skilled military leader.

  • 2. Further events (Unrelated to Any War)


  • January 2: Goguryeo developed from a league of various Yemaek tribes to an early state and rapidly expanded its power.

  • 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.

  • Disestablishment


  • January 411: Eastern Buyeo was conquered by King Gwanggaeto the Great of Goguryeo in 410.
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