Baekje, one of three kingdoms into which ancient Korea was divided before 660. Occupying the southwestern tip of the Korean peninsula, Baekje is traditionally said to have been founded in 18 bce in the Gwangju area by a legendary leader named Onjo. By the 3rd century ce, during the reign of King Koi (234–286), Baekje emerged as a fully developed kingdom. By the reign of King Geonchogo (346–375), it had established control over a region that included the whole Han River basin in central Korea.
In the late 5th century the northern Korean kingdom of Goguryeo deprived Baekje of its territory in the Han River basin, and it moved its capital south to Ungjin (present Gongju). In the reign of King Seong (523–554), the kingdom was forced to move its capital even further south to Sabi (present Buyeo), as more of its territory was occupied by Goguryeo.
The kingdom was divided into five administrative districts. There were 16 official grades in the central government, and the six officials of the first grade formed a kind of cabinet. The highest-ranking official, called sangjwapyong, was elected every three years.
Buddhism flourished, and many temples were built. Confucianism also prospered, producing a large number of eminent scholars. Baekje visual arts reveal technical maturity along with warm human qualities, sometimes held to reflect the influence of southern Chinese art of the Six Dynasties period. These qualities are evident, for example, in softly modeled Buddha statues in relaxed poses, with their distinctive and expressive “Baekje smile.”
In an attempt to contain Goguryeo’s attacks and recover some of its lost territory in the Han River basin, Baekje allied itself with Silla, the other southern Korean state, but it eventually lost this territory to Silla. In 660 its defeat by the allied forces of Silla and the Chinese Tang dynasty (618–907) brought an end to its rule. Eight years later Silla’s forces defeated the northern Korean state of Goguryeo and united the Korean peninsula under the Unified Silla dynasty (668–935).