This article has multiple issues. Please help
improve it or discuss these issues on the
talk page. (
Learn how and when to remove these template messages)
|
The Gyeogam Yurok (격암유록), also known as the Namsago Prophecy (남사고예언서), is a book allegedly written by the Joseon scholar Nam Sago (1509–1571) who styled himself "Gyeogam".
Nam Sago (1509–1571) was a scholar of the Joseon period of Korea, [1] who was styled Gyeogam. He is said to have mastered (通達) Occult_sciences (易學), feng shui (風水), astronomy (天文), fortune-telling (卜筮) and face-reading (相法). [2] In his later years, he served as Astronomy Professor (天文敎授) at Gwansanggam (觀象監). He was known for poems and prose with prophetic intents. [3]
In 1977, Lee Do-eun[ clarification needed] published a book titled Gyeogam Yurok ( Korean: 격암유록) containing a set of prophecies attributed to Nam Sago. [4]
These prophecies supposedly unveiled the mysteries of 450 years of Korean history, forecasting many events of the past such as the Imjin War, the Donghak Peasant Revolution, the [ Japan–Korea Annexation Treaty] of 1910, as well as the liberation and division of the Korean Peninsula, the Korean War, the 4·19 Revolution (1960) and the 5·16 military coup d'état (1961). [5][ unreliable source?]
In 1995, Kim Hawon criticized the book as a forgery; many of its elements have been branded as anachronisms. [6] [5][ unreliable source?]
In any case, a copy of this book is kept in the National Library of Korea. [5][ unreliable source?]