Mingdaoqian (明刀錢)
daum civil, Gojoseon Munja (Gyeongjin)
The above materials are inscriptions found on Ming Knife Coins (明刀錢).
According to the conventional view, these inscriptions are considered to be characters of the Yan State (燕) from China’s Warring States period.
So let us examine whether they are actually Yan characters.
- Compilation of Pre-Qin Monetary Scripts (先秦貨幣文字編)
– This work interprets almost all inscriptions found on ancient currencies, including the so-called Ming Knife Coin inscriptions and the inscriptions on hollow-handled spade coins (空首布), from the perspective of Chinese scholars. - Dictionary of Warring States Ancient Scripts (戰國古文字典)
– This book systematically organizes the scripts of the Yan State and those of the various states during the Warring States period.
The script of the Yan State is already fully identified within the “scripts of the Six States” and is one of the forms of Chinese characters (漢字) that evolved from oracle bone script. Anyone familiar with Chinese characters can recognize these Yan characters.
Now let us compare the Yan script with the inscriptions on the Ming Knife Coins.
The characters on the left are Yan State characters, while those on the right are inscriptions from the Ming Knife Coins (明刀錢).
However, the materials on the right cannot be read by anyone who has studied Chinese characters. Instead, they can be read through the “Pictographic Hangul” interpretation proposed by the author.
Therefore, the inscriptions on the Ming Knife Coins are not Yan State characters, but rather a script belonging to a completely different writing system — the lost “Pictographic Hangul” script of ancient Korea.
Do you believe that the characters on the right are truly Chinese characters of the Yan State (燕國)?
If you would like to verify this, please search the internet and examine dictionaries or reference books that compile Chinese oracle bone script, bronze inscriptions, and the scripts of the Six States, and see whether there is any character identical to the Ming Knife Coin inscription shown above.
You may find some characters whose parts look slightly similar, but there are no characters that completely contain the entire form of the character.
I sincerely hope that friends around the world and scholars who are interested in truthful history will help promote my theory throughout the world.
I also hope that by restoring the ancient Korean script and currency, a new and truthful world will unfold.
Ancient Korean pictograph 상형문자(象形文字) Alphabet-7
“This is a video of my lecture.”
(5) 한글의 뿌리, 고조선 문자 가림토 해석 #1ㅣ허대동 역사연구가ㅣ다시보는 국민강좌 112회 - YouTube







댓글 없음:
댓글 쓰기