It is a pass between Yeonpung-myeon in Goesan-gun, Chungcheongbuk-do and Mungyeong-eup in Mungyeong-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do, that crosses the 1,017-meter-high Joryeongsan Mountain on Baekdu-daegan (Chinese Sobaek Mountain Range).
Saejae is a Korean language that reads "Jeongryeong," meaning "I have a hard time passing a bird."
Even if you search with "새재" or "조령," all of them can come in with this document.
It is currently designated as a provincial park in Gyeongsangbuk-do.
The ruggedness has long been famous, so during the Three Kingdoms Period(BC213), it was the border line that prevented King Jangsu of Goguryeo from advancing south, and when Yi Yeo-song, a Ming Dynasty general who was dispatched during the Japanese Invasion of Korea(AD1525), saw the terrain of Mungyeong Saejae, he said, "It is unworthy of a soldier Shin to think of keeping his head."
It is also believed that if Sin-lip had joined and ambushed the Japanese army at this place, rather than at the coal mine in Chungju, it would have effectively prevented the Japanese army's fleet of captain Konishi Yukinaga.
DJI Stephen Posted at 7-2 09:08
Hello and good day GurryAzzy. Thank you for sharing this video and these amazing photos you have captured in Korea. Amazing work and two thumbs up.