Eastern Buyeo

Eastern Buyeo
東夫餘 (Korean) (Hanja)
동부여 (Hangul)
東夫餘/東扶餘 (Chinese)
  Map of Buyeo
  Map of Eastern Buyeo
  Map of Galsa Buyeo
Common languagesBuyeo
GovernmentMonarchy
King 
• 86–48 BCE
Buru (first)
• 48–7 BCE
Geumwa
• 7 BCE–22 CE
Daeso (last?)
Historical eraAncient
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Buyeo
Goguryeo
Galsa Buyeo
Today part ofChina
North Korea
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese東夫餘
Simplified Chinese东夫余
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinDōng Fūyú
Korean name
Hangul동부여
Hanja東夫餘
Transcriptions
Revised RomanizationDongbuyeo
McCune–ReischauerTongpuyŏ

Eastern Buyeo or Eastern Puyŏ (Korean동부여; RRDongbuyeo; MRTongbuyŏ; Korean pronunciation: [toŋbuʌjʌ]), also rendered as Eastern Fuyu (Chinese: 東夫餘/東扶餘; pinyin: Dōngfūyú/Dōngfúyú) in Chinese, was an ancient kingdom that developed from Northern Buyeo, until it was conquered by Goguryeo. According to the Samguk sagi, it was established when Buru of Buyeo moved the capital eastward to the sea.