Yunggeolleung
Yunggeolleung is a burial ground from the Joseon dynasty, located within an oak-forested park in Hwaseong, South Korea. Yungneung is the tomb of Crown Prince Sado and Lady Hyegyeong, while Geolleung houses King Jeongjo and Queen Hyoui. They are an UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Yungneung
Crown Prince Sado, having died of starvation at the order of his father King Yeongjo, was buried on Baebongsan Mountain in Yangju, Gyeonggi Province. In 1789, his body was moved to its current location, then called Hyeollyungwon, by his son King Jeongjo. In 1816, Sado's wife, Lady Hyegyeong, was buried with him. In 1899, when they were posthumously elevated in status and given the titles King Jangjo and Queen Heongyeong, the tomb was also upgraded and renamed Yungneung.The tomb features retaining stones around its perimeter. It is decorated by capstones featuring prominently carved lotuses, possibly to soothe the spirit of Prince Sado, whom his son believed was killed before reaching his full potential. Statues on the downward slope guard the tomb; a wide worship road leads to a shrine, which sits at the bottom of the slope. There are two other buildings in the immediate vicinity: a royal kitchen and a shelter for two memorial steles. The memorial road is accessed via a red spiked wooden gateway located a short distance from a circular pond. This, symbolizing the wish-granting bead of a dragon, and therefore King Jeongjo's love for his father, is an unusual feature for a Joseon royal tomb.
Annual memorial rites are held here on the second Sunday of April.
Geolleung
On his death in 1800, King Jeongjo was buried on a hill to the east of Yungneung, then called Hyeollyungwon, but on the death of his wife, Queen Hyoui, his body was exhumed and moved to the current site, Geolleung, where the couple were buried together. The tomb matches Yungneung in layout, though with only one stele and without the pond.Memorial rites are performed here on the second Sunday of May each year.