Talk:Historic Monuments and Sites in Kaesong
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Number of components
[edit]The only way this adds up to 12 is by following the text here:
The serial property consists of twelve separate property components, five of which are separate sections of the Kaesong City Walls ... The other seven components are the Manwoldae Palace archaeological site and remains of the Kaesong Chomsongdae (an astronomical and meteorological observatory); the Kaesong Namdae Gate (the main southern city gate in the Inner Wall); Koryo Songgyungwan (a former high state education institute which educated Koryo national officials); Sungyang Sowon (a Confucian private school on the site of the former residence of Jong Mong Ju, 1337-1392, a Koryo minister whose assassination marked the overthrow of the Koryo); Sonjuk Bridge (where Jong Mong Ju was assassinated) and Phyochung Monuments (two stelae commemorating Jong Mong Ju); the Mausoleum of King Wang Kon with associated Seven Tombs Cluster and Myongrung Tombs Cluster; and the Mausoleum of King Kongmin.
The map lists 8 things and doesn't call them the actual components, but "locations". – Finnusertop (talk ⋅ contribs) 11:59, 7 August 2020 (UTC)
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