品尝义城苹果酒与探访恐龙遗址 in 庆尚北道 义城郡 · schedule 其他 · distance 54.3km · 4 stops · highlights Gyeongdong Charcoal-grilled Ribs, Gounsa Temple, Uiseong Jeori Dinosau…

庆尚北道义城不仅以大蒜闻名。韩国苹果酒厂可以体验用苹果酿制的葡萄酒。整齐的沙村曾培养出许多人才。最重要的是,参观济乌里恐龙遗址和三韩时代部落国家遗址,对历史学习有益。
这条路线是单日行程示例。你可以直接保存,或扩展为 AI 行程。

Gyeongdong Charcoal-grilled Ribs is a restaurant located in a quiet residential area of Uiseong downtown, known more for its local regular customers than tourists, and is a famous place for beef ribs in the Uiseong area. They personally select the highest grade 1 Hanwoo ribs, trim them, and age for 24 hours. The secret to their flavor is a marinade made by mixing Uiseong garlic with seven other ingredients. The meat is trimmed by hand to reduce fat, and the mild seasoning preserves the natural sweetness of the meat. For meals, cold noodles and steamed rice are available, and when ordering steamed rice, soybean paste stew is served together.
※ Due to a forest fire in March 2025, some buildings such as Yeonsujeon and Gawunru were completely destroyed, so please take this into consideration before visiting. Gounsa Temple was founded in 681 by Monk Uisang. Originally called Gounsa (高雲寺), about 200 years later it was renamed Gounsa (孤雲寺) after Goun Choe Chi-won, who practiced asceticism here and built Gawunru and Uhwaru, adopting his pen name. It was repaired several times during the Joseon Dynasty. During the Japanese invasions of Korea (Imjin War), it served as a forward base for Buddhist soldiers under Monk Samyeong, storing food and caring for the wounded, and during the Japanese colonial period, it was one of 31 headquarters nationwide, flourishing as a center of patriotic Buddhism. Within the temple grounds are buildings such as Daeungjeon, Geungnakjeon, Gwaneumjeon, Geumgangmun, Uhwaru, and Gogeumdang. Important cultural assets include the Uiseong Gounsa Stone Buddha, Gounsa Three-story Stone Pagoda, Gounsa Gawunru, and Uiseong Gounsa Yeonsujeon. The temple offers experience programs including templestay and temple food experiences. Templestay includes a free program called Heart-Pounding Templestay to relieve the stress of exam students, a Youth Healing Camp for university students, and the Mind Forest Path program with Buddhist services, tea talks with monks, and walking meditation for rest. The temple food experience is conducted at the Gounsa Temple Food Experience Center under the guidance of monks preserving the culinary traditions. The temple food program consists of classes including temple food, beginner, short-term, fermented food experience, and one-day courses.
The Uiseong Jeori Dinosaur Footprint Fossil Site was discovered in 1989 during road expansion work on a local road in Uiseong-gun, when soil was excavated from a mountainside area. It dates back to the mid-Cretaceous period of the Mesozoic era, about 110 million years ago, distributed in sedimentary layers of rivers and floodplains within the Gyeongsang Basin. It was the first dinosaur-related natural monument designated in South Korea and is notable for the preservation of highly dense dinosaur footprints. More than 300 footprints are observed across four different strata. The site provides valuable data for studying dinosaur appearance and behavior, such as foot size, stride, and walking direction, holding high academic value.
The Uiseong Geumseong-myeon Burial Mounds are located in the Daeri-ri, Tapri-ri, and Hakmi-ri areas, consisting of around 200 burial mounds with artifacts estimated to date from the 5th to 6th centuries. Large mounds measure 15–19m in diameter and 3–4m in height, medium ones 10–15m in diameter and 2–4m in height, and small ones under 10m in diameter, all densely clustered with most being circular earthen mounds. Excavations and investigations were conducted by the National Museum of Korea in 1960 and Kyung Hee University Museum in 1965. Results showed that the mound shape is horizontally compressed around the burial pit. The soil used for the burial pit was pure clay in very large quantities, but mostly different in color from soil in the area, suggesting it was transported from elsewhere. This implies a large labor force was mobilized to create the mounds, indicating they were constructed by politically powerful rulers. Jomun-guk was a tribal state during the Samhan period with its capital in the present-day Geumseong-myeon area of Uiseong-gun, Gyeongsangbuk-do, existing until 185 AD (second year of King Beolhyu of Silla) when it was annexed by Silla. However, records of Jomun-guk are sparse, with only brief mentions in the Samguk Sagi and little other documentation. The Geumseongsan burial mounds are considered the capital site of Jomun-guk and are important for understanding local power and social structure in Uiseong, as well as relations between Uiseong and Silla.
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