Gobeunok or Crash are coma or warped beads and jewelry that emerged from prehistoric Korea through the Three Kingdoms of Korea.
Video Gogok
Detail
Crashes are also sometimes romanized into "kogok" and "kokkok" or "kokok." They are also found in Northeast Asia, but mostly in Japan (Magatama) and especially in Hokkaido from the J 'period population. Although usually made of jade mined in Japan, they have been found made of various materials such as nephrite, stone, clay, bone and glass. Its size ranges from 1 to 10 cm (0.39 to 3.94 inches), and has a small hole in the middle of the round for threading. They are used as earrings and necklaces, and as decoration on crowns, belts, and bracelets. Some are further embellished with gold or silver attachments.
The curved nature of the strike beads and their similarities to bore the claw has led to a theory about the influence and origin of Scytho-Iran and Persia created by the tribal bear tribe.
In Korea, jade trash is found on prehistoric sites. Along the Korean peninsula, a stray nephrite is found on the Bronze Age site in the stone burial chamber (stone cists and dolmens). This may indicate that strike is a symbol of prestige and power buried with the elite of society.
The most famous example of a strike in Korean art is from the Three Kingdoms period, in the Silla crown, earrings, necklaces, and bodice of the Korean empire. This treasure is found in the burial mounds and royal graves of Silla, Baekje, and the Confederation of Gaya. The decorative horns and tree-like structures of the Silla crown and the crowning equations with works from Eurasian Steppe and Afghanistan show a wide trading network and also strengthen Scytho-Iranian origin for strikes. They refused to be used from around the middle of the 6th century.
Maps Gogok
Origin
The origins of the strike are contradicted by archaeologists because these jewels are common in the tombs of the Japanese Kofun period, where they are known as magatama. An archaeologist, James Keally, who believes the strike originated in Japan, cites the fact that the strike has been reported on the JÃ
mon site in Tohoku as early as about 1000 BC.
Note
References
- Korean Britannica article (in Korean)
- Doosan World Encyclopedia article (in Korean)
- Yahoo Korea Encyclopedia (in Korean)
Source of the article : Wikipedia