The records of Bulguksa, a Buddhist temple …
Years: 1601 - 1601
The records of Bulguksa, a Buddhist temple in present North Gyeongsang province of South Korea, state that a small temple was built on this site under King Beopheung in 528.
The Samguk Yusa records that the current temple was constructed under King Gyeongdeok in 751, begun by Prime Minister Kim Daeseong to pacify the spirits of his parents.
The building was completed in 774 by the Silla royal court, after Gim's death, and given its current name Bulguksa (Temple of the Buddha Land).
The temple was renovated during the Goryeo Dynasty and the early Joseon Dynasty.
During the Japanese invasions between 1592 and 1598, the wooden buildings had been burned to the ground.
After 1604, reconstruction and expansion of Bulguksa begins, to be followed by about forty renovations until 1805.
Considered a masterpiece of the golden age of Buddhist art in the Silla kingdom, Bulguksa is currently the head temple of the eleventh district of the Jogye Order of Korean Buddhism and home to seven National treasures of South Korea, including Dabotap and Seokgatap stone pagodas, Cheongun-gyo (Blue Cloud Bridge), and two gilt-bronze statues of the Buddha.
