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The occurrence of Silla's gold crown was not caused by the unilateral spread of advanced culture. It was produced by the creation of groups in Silla and Gaya based on the social concepts of the worldview and the state-owned land shared with neighboring countries. There is an opinion that the origin of Silla's gold crown was regarded as a direct origin, and that it was spread to the Korean Peninsula by using the Seonbi official residence in the basin of the Daeneung River as an intermediate stop. This is a method of finding the genealogy of culture based on the propagation and system of the origin of the Silla tree-shaped gold crown. This recognizes the origin of culture from the perspective of unilateral advanced culture-centeredness that does not reflect the social concepts of the intellectuals. Similar wooden coffins do not all have the same meaning. In other words, there is a difference in the perspective of recognizing gold crowns depending on the region. In most cases, similar cultural elements such as sacred trees and spiritual birds are used to symbolize various worldviews that have been re-established, depending on various countries and regions. It is unreasonable to think that the gold crown, which was produced at the earliest time, was recognized as a circular shape, and that what was produced at the time was an imitation of the oldest. The view that the direct origin is placed on the gold crown produced at the oldest time may be an unreasonable idea. The metal crown of the early Silla period is the exclusive property of the king, and there are many opinions that it is considered a symbol of authority. However, it seems that the gold crown was mainly used as a funeral ritual for the king or the upper aristocracy. Throughout the mid- to late-term period, the function and social role of the metal pipes excavated from the Silla tombs also changed. The early Silla gold crown was not produced by a single genealogy from the Daewolgeum crown, which was recognized as a form of relief. Early Silla gold crowns were based on post-tax customs on tree of life and birds conceived in the northern grassy nomadic culture of Mongolia, Altai, South Russia, and Scyto Siberian culture on the northern coast of the Black Sea. Based on the nomadic culture of the northern meadow and the Taoist worldview formed in China, the Silla people and Gaya in the Nakdonggang River basin can be seen as being creatively produced by Silla people.