Ch'ŏlli changsŏng
The Ch'ŏlli changsŏng or Great Wall of Korea may refer to either of two massive fortifications built between medieval Korea and the Chinese to the west and other tribes to the north. The first is a 7th-century network of military garrisons built by Goguryeo, one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea. These are now located in Northeast China. The second is an 11th-century wall built by Korea's Goryeo dynasty, now located in North Korea.
Name
The Korean name Ch'ŏlli changsŏng literally means the "Thousand Ri Wall", a reference to the Great Wall of China whose Chinese name is the "Ten-Thousand" or "Countless Li Wall". The second wall is also known in Korean as the Goryeo Jangseong.Goguryeo period
After Goguryeo's victory in the Goguryeo–Sui Wars, in 631 Goguryeo began the fortification of numerous military garrisons after the Tang dynasty, the successor to the Sui in China, began incursions from the northwest. Its construction was supervised by Yŏn Kaesomun during the reign of King Yeongnyu. The preparation and coordination was completed in 647, after which Yŏn Kaesomun took control of the Goguryeo court in a coup.The network of fortresses ran for approximately 1000 li in what is now Northeast China, from Buyeoseong to the Bohai Bay.
The most important of the garrisons were as follows:
Goryeo period
A second Ch'ŏlli changsŏng is the stone wall built from 1033 to 1044, during the Goryeo dynasty, in the northern Korean peninsula. It is roughly 1000 li in length, and about 24 feet in both height and width. It connected the fortresses built during the reign of Emperor Hyeonjong, passing through these cities,- Uiju
- Wiwon
- Heunghwa
- Jeongju
- Yeonghae
- Yeongdeok
- Yeongsak
- Jeongyung
- Yeongwon
- Pyeongno
- Sakju
- Maengju
- Unju
- Cheongsae
- Ansu
- Yeongheung
- Yodeok
- Jeongbyeon
- and ending at Hwaju.
It ran from the mouth of the Yalu River to around Hamheung of present-day North Korea. Remnants are still extant, including in Ŭiju and Chŏngp'yŏng.