Sesok-ogye
Sesok-ogye | |
Hangul | 세속오계 |
---|---|
Hanja | 世俗五戒 |
Revised Romanization | Se Sok O Gye |
McCune–Reischauer | Se Sok O Kye |
The Se Sok O-Gye, or just O-Gye, are the five secular rules (and part of the moral code) of the Hwarang (an elite warrior group of the Silla dynasty) formulated by Buddhist monk Won Gwang consisting of five rules:[1]
- Loyalty to the country (originally: Fealty to the king)
- Respect and obey one's parents (i.e. filial piety)
- Show trust among friends (i.e. candor and sincerity)
- Never retreat in battle
- Kill only with selective reasoning
These were (part of) the rules that the Hwarang had to abide by.[2]
The code is still used by many Korean martial artists and can be found in gyms around the world.[citation needed]
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Korean martial arts
- GongKwon Yusul
- Hapkido
- Hapki Kochido Musool
- Hapki yusul
- Sin Moo Hapkido
- Ssireum
- Yongmudo
- Choi Kwang-Do
- Gwonbeop
- Kong Soo Do
- Kyokushin
- Moo Duk Kwan
- Simmudo
- Soo Bahk Do
- Subak
- Taekkyon
- Taekwondo
- Tae Soo Do
- Tang Soo Do
- Yun Mu Kwan
- Dobok
- Dojang
- Hyeong
- Kwan (martial arts)
- Muyedobotongji
- Muyejebo
- Muyesinbo
- Sesok-ogye
- Song Deok-gi
- Ssaurabi
- Wae Gong
References
- ^ "세속오계" [Se Sok O-Gye]. terms.naver.com (in Korean). Retrieved 2019-05-24.
- ^ "세속오계(世俗五戒)". Encyclopedia of Korean Culture (in Korean). Retrieved 2023-05-11.
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