Yeolnyeo (Korean열녀; Hanja烈女), also called Yeolbu (Korean열부; Hanja烈婦), is defined as 'virtuous woman' during the Joseon dynasty of Korea.[1]

"virtuous woman" guarding her chastity
jangdo (used to protect one's virtue by slitting one's throat)

Joseon was a neo-Confucian society with every aspect of life governed by neo-Confucian ethics.[2] Women were educated to be filial to their parents and in-laws, loyal to their husbands; to obey their father before marriage, to obey their husband during marriage, and to obey their sons in widowhood.[3]

The 1485 revision of Gyeongguk Daejeon, a Joseon code of law included a "prohibition of remarriage of widows",[4][5] and specified penalties for widows who remarried, prohibiting the sons and grandsons of such a marriage from participating in the civil service exams, effectively bannng them from holding public or governmental posts.[5] Widows who remarried could be sentenced to death.

The saying 'A loyal subject does not serve two kings and a virtuous woman does not serve two husbands' dates back to at least China's Warring States Period (c 475-221 BC),[6] and is interpreted to mean that a virtuous woman maintained her chastity not only during her marriage, but after the death of her husband.[6]

A woman's chastity and loyalty to her spouse were considered so important that the government gave awards called yeolnyeo to those who led an exemplary life by remaining loyal to their late husbands. Originally intended to set a good example, the award created a situation which got worse in late Joseon, where widows would kill themselves in order to be acknowledged as 'virtuous women', a title that brought honour to both sides of the family. It reached a point where a betrothed woman would commit suicide if her husband-to-be died before the wedding ceremony.

In popular culture edit

Yeolnyeo and its requirements are frequently a major plot component of K-drama historical romances.

  • The Memorial Gate for Virtuous Women (South Korean film, 1962)
  • Knight Flower (South Korean TV series, 2024) Here, a noble widow - the leading lady - is forced to be a recluse, while another widow's mother-in-law attempts to enforce her daughter-in-law's suicide, in order to win prestige and honour for the family.
  • The Story of Park's Marriage Contract (South Korean TV series, 2023-2024) Here, the heroine (a widow) is murdered on her marriage night, in her mother-in-law's pursuit of the worldly assets available to women declared as "virtuous"
  • Poong, the Joseon Psychiatrist (South Korean TV series, 2022-2023)The in-laws of the heroine (widowed on her marriage night) bully her into attempting suicide, and finally attempt to murder her, in order to win the rewards available to virtuous women.

Note that while the last three of these stories essentially critique the ideal of yeolnyeo they also uphold the neo-Confucian ideal, in that the lead couple come to each other as virgins, with the widow never having consummated her marriage.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "열녀 Yeolnyeo: Virtuous Woman". Encyclopedia of Korean Culture.
  2. ^ JaHyun Kim Haboush (1995). "Filial Emotions and Filial Values: Changing Patterns in The Discourse of Filiality in Late Chosŏn Korea". Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies. 55 (1): 129–177. doi:10.2307/2719422. ISSN 0073-0548. JSTOR 2719422. Wikidata Q124457244.
  3. ^ muchadoboutlove (2014-06-14). "Women of the Joseon Dynasty (Part 1)". the talking cupboard. Retrieved 2021-03-27.
  4. ^ "Asian Women - The Research Institute of Asian Women". e-asianwomen.org. Retrieved 2021-03-27.
  5. ^ a b Yeonsoo Kim. (2022). Imbalance in annual leave between couples due to the ‘prohibition of widows remarrying’ during the Joseon Dynasty. Folklore Studies ,(50), 51-79.
  6. ^ a b "열녀(烈女) Virtuous woman". Encyclopedia of Korean Culture (in Korean). Retrieved 2024-02-06.