Showing posts with label Cheomseongdae. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cheomseongdae. Show all posts

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Old and New On Display For G20 Summit

Caption from Chosun Ilbo: A creation made of LED displays modelled on the Cheomseongdae, a royal observatory of Silla Kingdom, at COEX, the venue of the G20 Seoul Summit.

A great example of how cutting-edge technology embraces tradition - here's the Cheomseongdae, a staple of Gyeongju's tourist attractions remade with LED screens. Participants who are unfamiliar with the pride of the Shilla Dynasty may be a bit puzzled by the structure which stands at the COEX but anyone who's paid attention to their ten-won note should appreciate the effort.

For more on Cheomseongdae, click here.

Was less enamoured with this hanbok inspired by the G20 Summit - not quibbling about the colours but the Disney-like design of the chima (skirt)  which doesn't quite have the usual understated elegance of the traditional garb of Korea.


source:s
http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2010/11/05/2010110500847.html
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/event/g20_2010/photo.htm

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

A Millennium-Old "Star-Watching Tower", Gyeongju Part 5

  Cheomseongdae's graceful profile is more beautiful at night

Cheomseongdae, according to one source, means “star-gazing tower”. Yet experts still are arguing about the actual functions of this striking structure in Gyeongju, according to Sang Sang-yong’s article in the Korea Journal. I’d take Song’s claim that it’s one of “the hottest in the history of debates in Korea” with a thimbleful of salt but let’s have a quick look at the options.


Was it built to read the sun, the stars, the clouds or something else?

Was this granite tower, shaped like a bottle, which was built during the reign of Queen Seondeok ( between 633 and 647 A.D.) intended and used as...
a. an astronomical observatory?
b. a meteorological observatory?
c. a symbolic monument to Shilla science?
d. a sacrificial altar to worship the god of agriculture?
e. an expression of the Shilla concept of religion?
f.  all of the above?

Two models  showing how people got to the top.


Frankly, I’d echo Rhett Butler’s parting words to Scarlett O’Hara but I’m more impressed with the fact that it’s remained standing for over 1,300 years and has barely shown any stress from seismic shifts. If indeed Cheomseongdae  is an astronomical observatory, it may  be the oldest one existing in Asia. I guess its longevity and its apparent nod to the scientific, cultural and architectural achievements of the Shilla Dynasty are reasons enough for national pride.

National Treasure No. 31 - A national symbol and a source of pride

At the same time, it's also interesting how the twelve stones at the base reflect the months while the 30 layers may represent the days in the month while apparently the position, angles and directions of the tower corners are aligned to some stars, according to the Lonely Planet.


Sauna at Pension Cheomseongdae - does it really look like the tower?


The next time I visit Gyeongju though, I think I'll go to Pension Cheomseongdae , situated near the Gyeongju Folk Handicraft Village instead. Its sauna, supposedly shaped like its namesake, is  heated naturally with pine logs and is open 24 hours so one could even bed down there for the night and dream instead of Hallyu stars.

Sources:http://www.ekoreajournal.net/archive
http://english.triptokorea.com/english/UserFiles/Image/daily%20tour/Gyeongju/Cheomseongdae%20Observatory.jpg
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgYR1uOXyymdzw7DjcVnwIeorZxNycHfpLEuUyH7oyzP1_19mcQ0S0uAVev-Ud9ROaNPGTQgtVL_8e8c7Z8Jmnajc1xlUk5rJY7d8XIY1wkbgm5zoGZ0c8WSpcHWdhUNoUsc7rF0Yu98zw/s1600-h/SDC14828.JPG
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3191/2832171984_8189b35ef7.jpg
http://i70.servimg.com/u/f70/12/80/22/63/para1010.jpg

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Gyeongju Revisited, Part 1

On hindsight, I realise that I have done Gyeongju a great disservice. It was our  first visit to Korea so my travel companion and I unwisely planned a whirlwind tour of the country and allocated very little time to this city known as a “ museum without walls”. It does seem sacriligeous somehow to attempt to appreciate its 1000- year history in two measly days.


 So how much time should one spend in this ancient capital appointed by the Shilla kings? After going over the literature that I managed to collect while there, I think at least one week, if not a few months, should be devoted exclusively to this place because there’s really so much to see – from royal tombs to Buddhist relics to UNESCO World Heritage sites.


Of course, if you’re really strapped for time and you have 10,000 won to spare, there’s a private bus which departs twice daily from the Gyeongju Express Bus Terminal twice daily to the main attractions. Stops on the seven-hour long tour include Bulguksa Temple, the Folk Craft Village, Poseokjeong Pavilion, the Gyeongju National Museum, the Cheomseongdae Observatory and the Cheonmachong Tomb. ( tel. 054-743-6001)

A word of caution though - people assume from the claim that Gyeongju is an open-air museum that the whole place looks like some ancient city. The reality is that its many cultural treasures are scattered around the edges of the present urban centre. It's advisable to read up on the history of the Shilla Dynasty to appreciate more fully the sights.

source:
http://asiaenglish.visitkorea.or.kr/ena/SI/SI_EN_3_1_1_1.jsp?cid=312887
http://asiaenglish.visitkorea.or.kr/ena/SI/SI_EN_3_1_1_1.jsp?cid=312750