Later Parhae
Later Parhae 後渤海 후발해 | |||||||||
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| 928–935 | |||||||||
| Capital | Holhan | ||||||||
| Common languages | Parhae language | ||||||||
| Religion | Parhae Buddhism, Parhae Confucianism, Parhae Taoism, Parhae shamanism | ||||||||
| Government | Monarchy | ||||||||
| History | |||||||||
• Establishment | 928 | ||||||||
• Fall | 935 | ||||||||
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| Today part of | China North Korea | ||||||||
| Later Parhae | |||||||||
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| Chinese name | |||||||||
| Chinese | 后渤海 | ||||||||
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| Korean name | |||||||||
| Hangul | 후발해 | ||||||||
| Hanja | 後渤海 | ||||||||
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| History of Korea |
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| Timeline |
| North Korea portal South Korea portal |
| History of Manchuria |
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Later Parhae or Later Bohai (928–935) was a state hypothesized to have existed in Manchuria. It emerged after Parhae (Bohai) was destroyed by the Liao dynasty. Later Parhae is considered by some to be the first of several successor states to Parhae after its fall to the Liao dynasty in 926.
The existence of Later Parhae was first proposed by Japanese scholar Hino Kaizaburo in 1943 and subsequently supported by some South Korean scholars. Outside of South Korea, "Later Parhae" is usually understood as a name for the kingdom of Dongdan or other polities on the former territory of Parhae.