{{Short description|King of Bukbuyeo and Dongbuyeo}} {{family name hatnote|Hae||lang=Korean}} {{More citations needed|date=August 2007}} {{Infobox royalty | name =Hae Buru of Buyeo<br>부여 해부루 | title = | image = | alt = | caption = | succession =2nd King of Bukbuyeo | reign = | coronation = | cor-type = | predecessor =Hae Mosu of Bukbuyeo | successor =''Dynasty abolished'' | regent = | reg-type = | succession1 =1st King of Dongbuyeo | reign1 = | reign-type1 = | coronation1 = | cor-type1 = | predecessor1 =''Dynasty established'' | successor1 =Hae Geumwa of Dongbuyeo | regent1 = | birth_name = | birth_date = {{circa}} 86 BCE | birth_place =Kingdom of Bukbuyeo | death_date ={{circa}} 48 BCE | death_place =Kingdom of Dongbuyeo | burial_date = | burial_place = | spouse = | issue = #Geumwa of Dongbuyeo #Wutae | full name = | era name = | era dates = | regnal name = | posthumous name = | temple name = | royal house =House of Hae | father =Gohaeysa Dangon | mother = | religion = }} {{Infobox Korean name/auto |hangul=%해부루 |hanja=解夫婁 }} '''Hae Buru''' ({{Korean|해부루|解夫婁}}; 86 – 48 BCE) was king of Bukbuyeo and founder of Dongbuyeo (86 BCE – 22 CE), an ancient Korean kingdom.
Hae Buru took the throne and became the king of Bukbuyeo. Hae Buru led his followers and some of Bukbuyeo people to the city of Gaseopwon, a city near the Sea of Japan (East Korean Sea). In that same year, Hae Buru founded another Buyeo, which he named Dongbuyeo, due to its position east of Bukbuyeo.
According to the ''Samguk yusa'',<ref>Il-yeon: ''Samguk Yusa: Legends and History of the Three Kingdoms of Ancient Korea'', translated by Tae-Hung Ha and Grafton K. Mintz. Book One, page 29. Silk Pagoda (2006). {{ISBN|1-59654-348-5}}</ref> Aranbul, a minister of the Buyeo court, had a dream in which the Heavenly Emperor told him that Buyeo was to make way for the descendants of Heaven, and believing that the dream was a sort of omen, he advised his king Buru to move the capital. Buru later moved his capital to {{ill|Gaseopwon|ko|가섭원}} (迦葉原), and named his country Dongbuyeo.
Hae Buru's wives apparently were not able to produce a male heir for Hae Buru until he was in old age. Hae Buru eventually got a son, Geumwa, of whom he trained and grew into his successor. When Hae Buru died in 48 BCE, Geumwa rose to the throne by proclaiming himself "King of Dongbuyeo."
==In popular culture== * Hae Buru was portrayed by Park Geun-hyung in the 2006–2007 MBC TV series ''Jumong''.
== See also == * List of Korean monarchs * History of Korea * Dongbuyeo
==References== {{reflist}}
{{s-start}} {{s-reg}} {{succession box|years=86 BCE –48 BCE|title=Rulers of Dongbuyeo<br>(Dongbuyeo)|before=None|after=Geumwa of Dongbuyeo}} {{s-end}}
Category:Buyeo monarchs Category:1st-century BC monarchs in Asia Category:Year of birth unknown Category:48 BC deaths Category:1st-century BC Korean people Category:Founding monarchs in Asia