Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Changdeokgung Palace Complex' has mentioned 'Gyeongbokgung' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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Changdeokgung was the most favored palace of many Joseon princes and retained many elements dating from the Three Kingdoms of Korea period that were not incorporated in the more contemporary Gyeongbokgung. | WIKI |
Changdeokgung was the second palace after Gyeongbokgung which had been established in 1395 as a primary palace. | WIKI |
In the midst of strife for the throne between princes and vassals, authority of Gyeongbokgung was deteriorated. | WIKI |
King Taejong (Yi Bang-won) soon taking over the throne returned to Hanseong(present-day Seoul) had a new palace named Changdeokgung instead of Gyeongbokgung because he had killed his half brothers in Gyeongbokgung whose construction was led by Jeong Do-jeon, the king's rival before. | WIKI |
Changdeokgung was the site of the royal court and the seat of government until 1868, when the neighboring Gyeongbokgung was rebuilt. | WIKI |
Contrary to Gyeongbokgung whose main buildings are arranged in accurate architectural principle, however, buildings in Changdeokgung are disposed more freely without a regular system. | WIKI |
Destroyed by fire in 1917, it was rebuilt with materials taken from Gyeongbokgung. | WIKI |
The complex was originally built as a secondary palace to the main palace of Gyeongbokgung, differentiated from it in its purpose and spatial layout within the capital. | UNESCO |
Changdeokgung was used as the secondary palace to Gyeongbokgung for 200 years, but after the palaces were burnt down during the Japanese invasion in the late 16th century, it was the first to be reconstructed and since then served as the main seat of the dynasty for 250 years. | UNESCO |