| Temple name | |
|---|---|
| Chinese Name | |
| Hanyu Pinyin | miào hào |
| Cantonese IPA | mɪʊ2həʊ3 |
| Cantonese Jyutping | miu2hou3 |
| Traditional Chinese | 廟號 |
| Simplified Chinese | 庙号 |
| Korean Name | |
| Revised Romanization | Myoho |
| McCune-Reischauer | Myoho |
| Hangul | 묘호 |
| Hanja | 廟號 |
| Vietnamese Name | |
| Quốc Ngữ | Miếu hiệu |
The name "temple" refers to the "grand temple" (太廟), also called "great temple" (大廟) or "ancestral temple" (祖廟), where crown princes and other royalties gathered to worship their ancestors. On the ancestral tablets in the grand temple, it is the ruler's temple names that are written there.
Temple names were assigned sporadically since the Han Dynasty and regularly only since the Tang Dynasty. Some Han emperors even had their temple names permanently removed by their descendents in 190. It is the usual way to refer to the emperors from the Tang Dynasty up to (but not including) the Ming Dynasty. For the Ming Dynasty and Qing Dynasty (from 1368), era names were used instead.
In Korea, temple names are used to refer to kings of the early Goryeo (until 1274), and kings and emperors of the Joseon Dynasty. For the Korean Empire (1897-1910), era names should be used, but the temple names are often used instead.
Chinese names | Korean names | Names | History of Korea
Tempelname | 묘호 | 廟号 | 庙号
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"Temple name".
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