
Chongmyo Shrine was built at the same time as Gyeongbok
Palace to hold the ancenstral tablets for the kings of the Chosun Dynasty. Since then, all but 2 of the kings and their queens are enshrined here.
According to Confucian tradition, the royal family would perform elaborate rituals here 5 times
each year to pay respect to their royal ancestors. The tradition still holds today, although the
Jongmyo Daeje (Royal Shrine
Ritual) is only performed once each year, in May (designated as Cultural Property #56). Dozens of
descendents of the royal family gather in court costumes appropriate for the Chosun period. The
rituals are accompanied by traditional court music (Chongmyo Cherye-ak- Intangible Cultural Property #1) played by the Royal
Court Orchestra.
Cheongjeon
The main shrine hall, Cheongjeon (National Treasure #227) is the longest single traditional
structure in Korea. It houses the tablets for the first set of kings and their queens.

At the northern part of the grounds is an overpass to Changgyeong
Palace. Although the two were originally connected, during the
Japanese occupation, Yulgong-no
road was built between the them as a symbolic split. (The overpass opens at 9:00 and closes one hour
prior to closing of the Shrine.)
Hours:
Mar. ~ Oct. - 09:00 ~ 17:00 (weekends- 18:00)
Nov. ~ Feb. - 09:00 ~ 16:30
Closed: Every Tuesday
Admission:
Adults (19 to 64 years old): 1,000 won (groups: 800 won)
Children (7 to 18 years old) and soldiers: 500 won (groups: 400 won)
* Children 6 and under, seniors 65 and over: Free
Directions:
Jongno 3 (sam)-ga Station (Subway line 1, exit 11; Subway line 3, exit 8; Subway line 5, exit 8), 5 minutes walking
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