Byeonhan confederacy
Byeonhan, also known as Byeonjin, was a loose confederacy of chiefdoms that existed from around the beginning of the Common Era to the 4th century in the southern Korean peninsula. Byeonhan was one of the Samhan, along with Mahan and Jinhan.
Etymology
Byeonhan is believed to be a combination of Old Korean words. Byeon in native Korean meant "Shiny/Shimmering" while han meant "big", giving the meaning of Byeonhan, the "Big Nation of Shimmering".As part of the Samhan, Jinhan meant "Big Nation of the East" and Mahan meant "Big Nation of the South".
History
This early part of the Three Kingdoms period is sometimes called the Proto–Three Kingdoms period. Byeonhan, like the other Samhan confederacies, appears to be descended from the Jin state of southern Korea.Archaeological evidence indicates an increase in military activity and weapons production among the Byeonhan in the 3rd century, especially an increase in iron arrowheads and cuirasses. This may be associated with the decline of Byeonhan and the rise of the more centralized Gaya confederacy, which most Byeonhan states joined. Gaya was subsequently annexed by Silla, one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea.
Various cultural aspects supposedly unique to Byeonhan overlap with Jinhan, but are not universal in Byeonhan. One notable tradition was tattooing, which was done by both men and women. Another tradition was the burying of feathers and pottery in graves alongside the dead body as it was believed that the feathers helped the afterlife souls fly into the sky.
Byeonhan as a political grouping was also sometimes referred to by a calque of Byeon and Jin as Byeonjin with the ethnonym Han being used by its inhabitants, identical to that of its neighbours.
There are also two hypotheses about the Byeonhan constituting a separate ethnicity distinct from the Jinhan:
- The Wa people of the Japanese archipelago, described in early Chinese records as present on the southern coasts of the peninsula.
- Any ethnic who traveled through ancient southern trade routes seen through the distribution of dolmens culture. According to recent studies that excavated Kofuns in South Jeolla Province, analysis of the components of glass beads there suggests that the raw material production area is Thailand.
Culture and language
The Dongyi in the Book of Wei section of the Chinese book, Records of the Three Kingdoms states that the culture of Byeonhan was similar to that of Jinhan and that their populations lived "intermingled together", while having similar language and customs.The fifth century Book of the Later Han, however, notes on differences in their language and customs as "languages and customs have differences", after stating that their enclosed settlements and clothing are the same.
Furthermore, the Wei shu states that "Jinhan men and women are close to Wa ", the ethnonym for the contemporary inhabitants of the Japanese archipelago, and like the Wa tattoo their bodies. The Book of the Later Han however identifies this with Byeonhan, stating that "their country is close to Wa, therefore they frequently have tattoos."
The linguist John Whitman summarizes the situation as such:
In fact, the texts indicate a more complex interrelationship between language, ethnicity, and protopolitical grouping. The Jinhan population lives intermixed with Pyŏnhan; the Chinese reporters struggle to describe the resultant demographic complexity. Their languages may be similar, or different; some resemble the Wa, some tattoo their bodies. While Wa-like toponyms are more frequent in the Pyŏnhan grouping, one such toponym is identified with Jinhan. This is exactly the kind of complexity we might expect to be associated with the situation described by Ahn, where a population associated with Mumun wet rice growing culture lives alongside more recently arrived members of the Korean-style bronze dagger culture.
Politics and trade
Byeonhan may have simply been a political description for decentralized polities south and west of the Nakdong river valley that were not formal members of the Jinhan confederacy.Byeonhan was internationally known for its production of iron, which was also its main export good to the Lelang commandery to the northwest, the Japanese archipelago, and the rest of the Korean peninsula. It was also a center of stoneware manufacture.
Member statelets
According to the Records of Three Kingdoms, Byeonhan consisted of 12 statelets:- Mirimidong, present-day Miryang.
- Jeopdo, present-day Haman.
- Gojamidong, present-day Goseong.
- Gosunsi, present-day Jinju, Sacheon or Goseong.
- Ballo, present-day Seongju.
- Nangno, present-day Hadong or Namhae.
- Gunmi, present-day Sacheon.
- Mioyama, present-day Changwon.
- Gamno, present-day Gimcheon.
- Guya, present-day Gimhae.
- Jujoma, present-day Gimcheon.
- Anya, present-day Haman.
- Dongno, present-day Dongnae.