Wang ocheonchukguk jeon


Wang ocheonchukguk jeon is a travelogue by Buddhist monk Hyecho, who traveled from Korea to India, in the years 723 - 727/728 CE. Heycho, visited the Gandhara region in the 8th century and wrote a travelogue named “Wang Ocheonchukguk Jeon” which means, "Memoir of the Pilgrimage to the Five Kingdoms of India.".
Written in Classical Chinese, the lingua franca of East Asia at the time, the work was long thought to be lost. However, a manuscript turned up among the Dunhuang manuscripts during the early 20th century. It was bought by French explorer and archaeologist Paul Pelliot in 1908, and is now owned by the National Library of France.
The manuscript scroll contains 5,893 classical Chinese characters in 227 lines. It originally consisted of three volumes, however volume one and later section of volume three are lost. It is 28.5 centimeters in width and 358.6 centimeters in length, is the first known overseas travelogue written in Chinese by a Korean and contains information about the political, cultural and economic customs of India and central Asia at that time. The five Indian kingdoms in the work's title refer to West, East, North, South and Central India, This scroll is estimated as the first East Asian travelogue to the Islamic world. Jeong and other scholars states his westernmost destination was Nishapur, where was an Umayyad city But it also contains information about the Byzantine Empire, the Arabs, and several Central Asian states.
It was loaned to the National Museum of Korea and went on display there from Dec. 18, 2010 to April 3, 2011, 1283 years after the document was first written.

Footnotes

External resources

on International Dunhuang Project website