Geomungo
| Geomungo | |
| Korean name | |
|---|---|
| Hangul | 거문고 | 
| RR | geomungo | 
| MR | kŏmun'go | 
| Alternate name | |
| Hangul | 현금 | 
| Hanja | 玄琴 | 
| RR | hyeongeum | 
| MR | hyŏn'gŭm | 
The geomungo, alternate name hyeongeum, is a traditional Korean plucked zither with both bridges and frets. Geomungo is a representative stringed instrument made in Goguryeo before the 5th century. Scholars believe that the name refers to Goguryeo and translates to "Goguryeo zither" or that it refers to the colour and translates to "black crane zither" (현학금; 玄鶴琴; hyeonhakgeum).
The geomungo's place in Korean culture is traditionally that of a scholars' instrument for self-cultivation, much like ancient Chinese had done with the guqin in China. However, the Koreans never adopted the guqin as a folk instrument but instead inherited the Confucian and literati guqin lore wholesale and applied it onto their own geomungo lore.