[1] In the fourth year of Adalla, the eighth king of Silla, there lived a married couple named Yeonorang and Seonyeo in the eastern shore of the Korean peninsula.
[3] One day, YeonoName went to the sea to work and was suddenly carried away by a rock and washed away to Japan.
The silk was placed in a royal treasury and made a national treasure, and the storehouse was called Gwibigo (귀비고), and the place where the ancestral rites were held was called Yeongilhyeon (영일현; 迎日縣) or Dogiya (도기야; 都祈野).
It has been studied by paying attention to the fact that it has the characteristics of a solar-moon courtship myth, that it reveals the movement of the sun god, and that it symbolically describes the exchange relationship between Korea and Japan.
The claim that it symbolically described the process of collective migration from the Yeongil region of Silla to Japan and the propagation of the culture of worshiping the sun god was derived from this.
The fact that 'Dogiya', which is described as another name for Yeongilhyeon, where the ancestral rites were held directly, has the meaning of 'Dojideul', that is, 'Sunrise' is an additional basis.