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Locations of all known Korean creation narratives. Korean creation narratives are Korean shamanic narratives which recount the mythological beginnings of the universe.They are grouped into two categories: the eight narratives of mainland Korea, which were transcribed by scholars between the 1920s and 1980s, and the Cheonji-wang bon-puri narrative of southern Jeju Island, which exists in ...
In the tale, a tiger and a bear (Ungnyeo) lived together in a cave and prayed to the divine king Hwanung to be made human. Hwanung heard their prayers and gave them 20 cloves of garlic, a bundle of mugwort and ordered them to stay out of the sunlight and eat only this food for 100 days.
In the Korean fairy tale, however, the being chasing the sister is not the older brother, but the tiger; in fact, the older brother is also being chased by the tiger. The tiger, replacing the brother, erases the myth's motif of incest. Similarly, in the Inuit and Manchurian myths, a maternal figure does not appear.
Korean mythology (Korean: 한국 신화; Hanja: 韓國神話; MR: Han'guk sinhwa) is the group of myths [a] told by historical and modern Koreans.There are two types: the written, literary mythology in traditional histories, mostly about the founding monarchs of various historical kingdoms, and the much larger and more diverse oral mythology, mostly narratives sung by shamans or priestesses ...
Stories and practices that are considered part of Korean folklore go back several thousand years. These tales derive from a variety of origins, including Korean Shamanism, Confucianism, Buddhism, and more recently Christianity. Many folk traditions developed in rural areas such as villages. They often relate to households and farming, and ...
Namu doryeong (Korean: 나무도령 Master Tree) is a Korean orally transmitted folktale that tells the story of the son of a tree and a seonnyeo (fairy). While riding on his father, the tree, during a great flood, the boy rescues disaster-stricken animals, marries the daughter of an old woman and becomes the progenitor of humanity.
"Yeonorang and Seonyeo (Korean: 연아랑과 세오녀)" also known as "Yeono and Seo (연아와 세오)" is a story about Yeonorang and Seonyeo, people of Silla, who crossed over to Japan, but the sun and moon of Silla lost their light and a ritual was held with the silk sent by Seonyeo to restore their light to the sun and moon.
The Igong Bonpuri (Korean: 이공 본풀이), better known in Korea as the Hallakgungi myth (Korean: 할락궁이 신화) is an narrative traditionally told by shamans on the Korean island of Jejudo. The story bears similarity to the Buddhist book Worin Seokbo (月印釋譜; "The Moon's Reflection on the Buddha's Genealogy"), showing the close ...