Hangul 노국대장공주 Hanja 仁德王后 Hanja 魯國大長公主 Name Queen Noguk | Died 1365, Rason, North Korea Hangul 인덕왕후 | |
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McCune–Reischauer Nokuk Taech'ang Kongch'u | ||
Revised Romanization Noguk Daejang Gongju |
King Gongmin and Queen Noguk.avi
Queen Noguk (? – 1365), also known as Queen Indeok, was a Mongolian princess and later queen of Korea, who followed the Yuan Dynasty custom of marrying Goryeo princes into the family line. Her Mongolian name was Borjigin Budashiri (孛兒只斤 寶塔實里).
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Wedding and death

She was the queen of the reformist monarch, King Gongmin. Although she was a Mongolian princess, Queen Noguk always supported Goryeo and her husband.

Despite the extremely close relationship between King Gongmin and her, they were childless. Queen Noguk became pregnant fifteen years after marriage, but died in 1365 from complications related to the childbirth.

After her death, King Gongmin became indifferent to politics and entrusted a great task to the Buddhist monk, Pyeonjo, who was executed in 1371. King Gongmin was killed in his sleep by Hong Ryun (홍륜), Choe Man-saeng (최만생), and others in 1374.
Family

Legacy

Queen Noguk's memory lived on into the next dynasty, as according to the Annals of the Joseon Dynasty,.
In popular culture
