Vietnam can be said to be the country most affected by Chinese Confucianism in Southeast Asia. This is because Vietnam was influenced by Chinese culture from the early 7th century BC due to the geographical environment in which it was established with China. In particular, it is largely due to the direct control of China for 1,000 years as a subordinate state of China from the time of Emperor Wu, the Han Dynasty. Even after Vietnam gained independence from China in 972, various dynasties established a Chinese-style administrative and legal systems, and selected bureaucrats based on Confucianism and morality to rule the people and run the state. As a result, Chinese Confucianism has spread widely from the center to local communities and families, and has undergone a process of Vietnamization. In addition, in the process, Hanoi's Van Mieu and Quoc Tu Giam played a great role in transplanting Chinese Confucianism into Vietnamese culture as a shrine where Confucius was enshrined and rituals were held, respectively. Confucius tombs are distributed in Confucian culture, that is, in East Asia. Therefore, Van Mieu and Quoc Tu Giam of Hanoi, Vietnam, are representative symbols of Vietnamese Confucian culture, such as the Temple of Confucius and Guozijian, the sense of national pride in Beijing, China, and the Confucian Shrine and Seonggyungwan in Seoul, Korea. Vietnam's Hanoi Van Mieu and Quoc Tu Giam are representative cultural relics that have been well preserved in history with the long environmental changes for about a thousand years since its initial completion, while their buildings and facilities have been damaged, lost, repaired, and expanded. It is also a Confucius shrine and a Confucian temple where countless people visit on a daily basis to worship Confucius and Confucian saints. Van Mieu and Quoc Tu Giam have great value in cultural heritage, and show that Confucianism still plays an important role in people’s lives in Vietnam. In this respect, this study targets Hanoi's Van Mieu and Quoc Tu Giam to enhance understanding of Chinese Confucianism, which has been rooted as part of the traditional values of the Vietnamese culture. In addition, the purpose of the study is to examine their origins and development processes, and derive the characteristics of Hanoi's Van Mieu, Quoc Tu Giam and its Confucian implications. To this end, in Chapter 2, we first review domestic prior studies on Vietnam's Confucianism, including Hanoi’s Van Mieu and Quoc Tu Giam, and in Chapter 3, we examine the origins of Hanoi’s Van Mieu and Quoc Tu Giam. In Chapter 4, we examine the development and decline of each dynasty. Finally, in the conclusion, the contents examined in each chapter are summarized, while examining and deriving the characteristics of Vietnamese Confucianism inherent in Hanoi's Van Mieu and Quoc Tu Giam.
목차
I. 서론 II. 선행연구 검토 III. 하노이 문묘-국자감의 기원 IV. 하노이 문묘-국자감의 발전 제1장. 쩐(Tran) 왕조(1225-1400) 시기 제2장. 호(Ho) 왕조(1400-1407)와 명(明)의 지배기(1407-1427) 제3장. 後레(Le) 왕조(1425-1527, 1533-1789) 시기 제4장. 웅우옌(Nguyen) 왕조(1802-1945)와 프랑스 식민지배기(1887-1945) V. 결론 참고문헌 논문초록
키워드
베트남중국유교하노이문묘국자감VietnamChinaConfucianismHanoiVan MieuQuoc Tu Giam
동북아시아문화학회 [The Association of North-east Asian Cultures]
설립연도
2000
분야
복합학>학제간연구
소개
동북아시아 문화의 다양성과 정체성을 연구 토론하고, 지역내 문화 교류의 다양한 모습을 연구하고 문화변동의 큰 틀을 집적함으로써 우리 민족 문화 및 상대 민족의 문화적 터전을 이해하여 문화공동체적 특성을 계발하고 상호 관련성의 강화를 유도하는 학술활동을 통해 동북아시아의 문화발전에 이바지함.