Baekje Historic Areas

| Country | South Korea |
|---|---|
| Year inscribed | 2015 |
| Criteria | (ii) (iii) |
Overview
Located in the mountainous mid-western region of the Republic of Korea, this property comprises eight archaeological sites dating from 475 to 660 CE, including the Gongsanseong fortress and royal tombs at Songsan-ri related to the capital, Ungjin (present day Gongju), the Busosanseong Fortress and Gwanbuk-ri administrative buildings, the Jeongnimsa Temple, the royal tombs in Neungsan-ri and the Naseong city wall related to the capital, Sabi (now Buyeo), the royal palace at Wanggung-ri and the Mireuksa Temple in Iksan related to the secondary Sabi capital. Together, these sites represent the later period of the Baekje Kingdom – one of the three earliest kingdoms on the Korean peninsula (18 BCE to 660 CE) - during which time they were at the crossroads of considerable technological, religious (Buddhist), cultural and artistic exchanges between the ancient East Asian kingdoms in Korea, China and Japan.
Track the World Heritage Sites you visit
Qrave is a travel log app that lets you check in to countries and UNESCO World Heritage Sites and fill in your own world map.
Source: UNESCO World Heritage List — CC BY-SA 4.0
Qrave
South Korea
