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History of Korea - Proto-Three Kingdoms of Korea 108 BC - 3rd century |  | History of Korea - Proto-Three Kingdoms of Korea 108 BC - 3rd century: Encyclopedia II - History of Korea - Proto-Three Kingdoms of Korea 108 BC - 3rd century |  | After the fall of Gojoseon, the southern part of the peninsula consolidated into three confederations (collectively Samhan): Mahan, Jinhan, and Byeonhan.
In the north, Goguryeo was founded in southern Manchuria in 37 BC, claiming to be the successor to a branch of Buyeo. Among the other various small states in former Gojoseon territory were the neighboring Buyeo, and Okjeo and Dongye in t ...
See also:History of Korea, History of Korea - Prehistory, History of Korea - Gojoseon ? - 108 BC, History of Korea - Proto-Three Kingdoms of Korea 108 BC - 3rd century, History of Korea - Three Kingdoms 3rd century - 668, History of Korea - Balhae and Unified Silla, History of Korea - Goryeo, History of Korea - Joseon, History of Korea - 19th century, History of Korea - Japanese Occupation, History of Korea - The division of Korea |  | | History of Korea, History of Korea - 19th century, History of Korea - Balhae and Unified Silla, History of Korea - Gojoseon ? - 108 BC, History of Korea - Goryeo, History of Korea - Japanese Occupation, History of Korea - Joseon, History of Korea - Prehistory, History of Korea - Proto-Three Kingdoms of Korea 108 BC - 3rd century, History of Korea - The division of Korea, History of Korea - Three Kingdoms 3rd century - 668, List of Korea-related topics, Rulers of Korea |  | |
|  |  | History of Korea: Encyclopedia II - History of Korea - Proto-Three Kingdoms of Korea 108 BC - 3rd century
History of Korea - Proto-Three Kingdoms of Korea 108 BC - 3rd century
- Main article: Proto-Three Kingdoms of Korea
After the fall of Gojoseon, the southern part of the peninsula consolidated into three confederations (collectively Samhan): Mahan, Jinhan, and Byeonhan.
In the north, Goguryeo was founded in southern Manchuria in 37 BC, claiming to be the successor to a branch of Buyeo. Among the other various small states in former Gojoseon territory were the neighboring Buyeo, and Okjeo and Dongye in the northeast of the Korean peninsula, all of which were later conquered by Goguryeo. The last Chinese commandery, at Lelang, was destroyed by Goguryeo in 313.
Mahan was later absorbed into Baekje, Jinhan was absorbed into Silla, and Byeonhan was succeeded by Gaya, which was in turn annexed by Silla. Because of this continuity, this period is generally considered a part of the Three Kingdoms period.
Other related archives1894, 1895, 1904, 1905, 1907, 1941, 1943, 1945, 19th century, 22 November, 2333 BC, 25 July, 38th parallel, Amur, Archaeological, Baekje, Balhae, Bronze Age, Buddhism, Busan, Buyeo, Byeonhan, Cairo Conference, Chinese, Chungcheong, Cold War, Confucianism, Dae Joyeong, Dangun, Dean Rusk, December 11, Divided Korea, Division of Korea, Dongye, Edo, Emperor Gojong, Gaya, Gaya confederacy, General Sherman Incident, Germany, Gija, Goguryeo, Gojoseon, Goryeo, Governor-General of Korea, Gyeonggi, Hangul, Hanseong, Hanyang, History of North Korea, History of South Korea, Hodge, Japan, Japan-Korea Annexation Treaty, Japanese Rule, Japanese war crimes, Jeju-do, Jin, Jinhan, Joseon, Joseon Dynasty, Khitan, Kim Yu-shin, Korea, Korea under Japanese rule, Korean Empire, Korean War, Korean culture, Korean independence movements, Korean peninsula, Koreans, Later Three Kingdoms, List of Korea-related topics, List of Monarchs, Mahan, Manchuria, March 1st (Samil) Movement, Mesolithic, Ming Dynasty, Mongolia, Mongols, Moscow, Mumun Pottery Period, Munmu of Silla, N. Korea, Nakdong River, Names of Korea, Nazi, North Hamgyong, Okjeo, Opium Wars, Palaeolithic, Pit-Comb Ware culture, Primorsky Krai, Proto-Three Kingdoms, Proto-Three Kingdoms of Korea, Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea, Qing, Queen Myeongseong, Republic of China, Rulers of Korea, Russian Maritime Province, Russo-Japanese War, S. Korea, Samguk Sagi, Samhan, Seoul, September 8, Seven-Year War, Shang dynasty, Shanghai, Shinto, Siberia, Silla, Sinmiyangyo, Sino-Japanese War, South P'yongan, Southern Dynasties, Soviet, Soviet Union, Sui, Sungari River, Tang, Tang Dynasty, Three Kingdoms, Three Kingdoms of Korea, Tungusic, UN General Assembly, Unified Silla, United Kingdom, United States, Wiman, Woodrow Wilson, World War II, Yalta, Yellow Sea, Yi Seonggye, Yi Sun-sin, anti-Japanese, campaigns against Korea, commanderies, communication, dolmen, fourth century, guerrilla warfare, protectorate, successor state, transport, unified, 융기문토기
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Proto-Three Kingdoms of Korea 108 BC - 3rd century", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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