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No, she didn’t. For us, international viewers, it might not seem like a huge deal, but for Koreans, it’s part of their culture and history, and they take it seriously. What may seem like “just boring history” to us can hold deep significance for them. So no, we really can’t say they’re overreacting.
Lastimosamente esto ocurrió en un periodo donde muchos estaban idiotizados por ese partido y aunque hubieron campañas para evitarlo fue realizado por puro capricho del ese entonces presitonto
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Knets are criticizing Perfect Crown for Ian’s coronation scene for historical inaccuracies.
1) In the scene, Ian shows up wearing the “Guryumyeongwan”, the hat with the nine beaded strings hanging from the front and back. That style was what Joseon kings traditionally wore when Korea was a tributary kingdom to China.
But here’s the thing: if Ian is supposedly becoming emperor of a brand-new independent empire with no higher sovereign, they said he really should’ve been wearing the “Sipyiryumyeongwan”, the hat with twelve beaded strings. That version was reserved for the most sovereign rulers.
2) When he sits on the throne, his parliament starts chanting “Cheon-se” (may the kingdom last a thousand years) instead of “Man-se” (ten thousand years). Back then, only the Chinese emperor got the grand “Man-se.” For the Korean king, people were only allowed to use “Cheon-se” because it was still a vassal state.
Just wondering if there’s any reason why they didn’t do the research on this or if there’s a plot angle to it because it’s supposed to be a fantasy drama.