Korean Queen Heo Hwang-ok's bronze statue in Ayodhya (Photo: X @MeghUpdates)

Bronze Statue of Korea’s Queen Heo Hwang-ok Unveiled in Ayodhya, Reviving Legend of Indian Princess Suriratna

by · TFIPOST.com

Ayodhya has added a new chapter to its long and layered history—one that reaches far beyond India’s borders.  A bronze statue of an Indian princess, Princess Suriratna, also known as Heo Hwang-ok in Korea was unveiled on Thursday in Ayodhya, the city believed by millions of Koreans to be her birthplace.

Bronze Statue Of Korean Queen Heo Hwang

The unveiling ceremony marked more than the installation of a monument. It reaffirmed an extraordinary cultural bond between India and Korea that stretches back nearly 2,000 years.

The unveiling of the statue honours a centuries-old legend that links the sacred city to Korea’s past and to millions who believe they trace their ancestry to her.

Bronze Statue Of Korean Queen Heo Hwang

According to legend, the princess sailed from India to Korea in 48 CE to marry King Suro, laying the foundation of a dynasty whose descendants today number in the millions.

A Story Older Than Nations

For most Indians today, Korea is associated with global brands like Samsung, Hyundai, and LG. Yet the relationship between the two regions predates modern nation-states by centuries.

Long before formal diplomacy, maritime routes connected South and East Asia, enabling the exchange of people, ideas, and beliefs.

At the heart of this ancient connection lies the enduring legend of an Indian princess who crossed the seas to become a Korean queen.

The Legend of King Suro and the Heavenly Bride

Korean tradition places the origins of its early kingdoms in divine mythology. According to legend, six eggs descended from heaven wrapped in red cloth, from which six kings emerged.

One of them was King Suro, who founded the kingdom of Geumgwan Gaya in southeastern Korea around 42 CE. When urged by his ministers to marry, King Suro is said to have replied that his bride would arrive by divine command. Soon afterward, a ship appeared carrying Princess Suriratna from a distant land called Ayuta.

Guided by a heavenly message that appeared in her parents’ dreams, the princess journeyed across the sea to Korea, married King Suro in 48 CE, and was renamed Queen Heo.

Together, they are believed to have had ten children, becoming the ancestors of several major Korean clans. Their tombs in the city of Gimhae remain important cultural and pilgrimage sites to this day.

History, Myth, and the Mystery of ‘Ayuta’

The story of Queen Heo is recorded in the Samguk Yusa, or Memorabilia of the Three Kingdoms, a collection of legends and historical accounts compiled around 1280 CE. This temporal distance has made it difficult for historians to distinguish fact from folklore. Central to the debate is the identity of ‘Ayuta’.

While popular belief especially in Korea associates it with Ayodhya in present-day Uttar Pradesh, there is no reference to the legend in Indian historical texts, and ancient Ayodhya was known as Saketa.

Some scholars have proposed other locations, including regions in Southeast Asia, but no theory has achieved consensus. As a result, academics generally regard Queen Heo’s origin story as mythological, even as millions of Koreans continue to believe in her Indian roots.

Ancestry, Identity, and the Korean Clans

Despite historical uncertainty, the legend has had a profound influence on Korean identity. An estimated six million Koreans—nearly ten percent of the population—belong to clans that trace their lineage to Queen Heo and King Suro. King Suro is considered the founder of the Gimhae Kim clan, one of the most prominent surnames in Korea.

According to legend, Queen Heo was saddened that her children could not carry her surname, leading King Suro to allow two of their sons to take the name ‘Heo’. That surname continues to be used in Korea today, reinforcing the enduring power of the story.

Buddhism: A Historical Bridge Between India and Korea

Beyond legend, Buddhism provides a well-documented historical link between India and Korea. Buddhism officially reached Korea in 372 CE, when a Buddhist priest introduced images and scriptures from the Indian subcontinent.

From that point onward, a steady flow of monks, missionaries, and texts connected the two regions. Indian monks are believed to have contributed to the construction of early Buddhist images and institutions in Korea, while Korean monks frequently travelled to India to study original scriptures and philosophy.

Monks Who Crossed Continents

One of the earliest known Korean pilgrims to India was the monk Kyomik, who travelled in 526 CE to study Sanskrit and Buddhist teachings at a vihara in Sankisa, near present-day Agra.

He later returned to Korea and established the Vinaya School of Buddhism. A seventh-century text records that at least 56 Korean monks travelled to India to study at Nalanda University.

The most famous among them was the monk Hyecho, who journeyed across India in the eighth century, visiting Nalanda, Bodh Gaya, Sarnath, Kushinagar, Kashmir, and Taxila.

His travel account, Memoir of the Pilgrimage to the Five Kingdoms of India, offers rare insights into Indian society and the decline of Buddhism in the region at that time.

The Fading and Revival of an Ancient Relationship

By the 13th century, references to Indian monks in Korea disappear, and the once-vibrant exchange between the two civilizations gradually faded. It was only after India’s independence in 1947 that efforts were made to revive these historic ties, notably under Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru.

In 2001, a memorial dedicated to Queen Heo was inaugurated on the banks of the River Saryu in Ayodhya, symbolically reconnecting the two regions after centuries of silence.

Queen Heo in Contemporary Diplomacy

The legend has continued to shape modern India–Korea relations. In 2000, Ayodhya and Gimhae were declared sister cities.

Koreans who believe they descend from Queen Heo regularly visit Ayodhya to pay homage to what they regard as their ancestral homeland.

In 2018, South Korean First Lady Kim Jung-sook visited Ayodhya, further highlighting the story’s diplomatic and cultural significance. Today’s unveiling of the bronze statue adds a new chapter to this evolving relationship.

A Living Legend Across Millennia

Whether history or myth, the story of Queen Heo Hwang-ok has transcended time to become a shared cultural memory. It links Ayodhya and Gimhae, faith and folklore, ancient pilgrimages and modern diplomacy.

As monks and missionaries once carried ideas across oceans, today it is cultural exchange, technology, and people-to-people ties that continue the ancient bond between India and Korea—anchored in the enduring legend of an Indian princess who became a Korean queen.