| Trump Has Likened Himself to a King. South Korea Gave Him a Crown. 
 nytimes.com
 
 .
 President  Trump received a replica of a golden crown excavated from an ancient  royal tomb in Gyeongju. He called it “very special.”
 
 
  
 President  Lee Jae Myung of South Korea presented President Trump with a replica  of a golden crown excavated from one of the ancient royal tombs in  Gyeongju.Credit...Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times.
 
 By  Yan Zhuang
 
 Oct. 29, 2025, 8:02 a.m. ET
 
 President Trump has sometimes  likened himself to a king. Now he has been given a crown.
 
 Or  at least a replica of one that researchers believe was worn by an  ancient Korean ruler. Mr. Trump received the crown from President Lee  Jae Myung of South Korea when they met on Wednesday in the city of  Gyeongju.
 
 During the ceremony at the  Gyeongju National Museum, Mr. Trump shook hands with Mr. Lee and thanked  him for the gift, saying it was “very special.”
 
 Mr.  Lee also gave Mr. Trump the Grand Order of Mugunghwa, South Korea’s  highest decoration, in the form of a shiny, ornate necklace.
 
 “I’d like to wear it right now,” Mr. Trump said.
 
 Earlier this month, demonstrators turned out in droves in cities and towns across the United States for  “No Kings” rallies,  where protesters condemned Mr. Trump for acting, in their view, like a  monarch. Though the president has previously embraced regal themes, he  said in response to the protests that he was “not a king.”
 
 The  roughly foot-tall replica crown given to Mr. Trump is a reproduction of  one of South Korea’s national treasures. It is a copy of one from the  Silla Kingdom, a dynasty that gradually expanded over hundreds of years,  starting in the first century B.C., and eventually conquered rival  kingdoms to dominate the Korean Peninsula.
 
 Gyeongju  was the ancient Silla capital, and royal tombs buried under giant  grass-covered earthen mounds are still scattered around the city of  240,000 people. That rich cultural heritage led South Korean officials  to choose it as the venue for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation  forum this week, even though it  lacks the infrastructure to host a major international event.
 
 The  Silla dynasty was known as the “Golden Kingdom” for its use of gold.  The headpiece Mr. Trump received is a replica of one of six gold crowns  excavated from Gyeongju’s royal tombs, alongside gilded jewelry, belts  and other ornaments.
 
 The crown was excavated in 1973 from a tomb, known as the Cheonmachong, that  researchers believe  belonged to the 21st or 22nd Silla king. It is the “largest and most  extravagant” of the six crowns, a spokesman for Mr. Lee told Mr. Trump  during the ceremony.
 
 The crown  symbolized the “divine connection between the authority of the heavens  and sovereignty on earth,” the spokesman said, as Mr. Trump stared at  the crown. It also represented “the spirit of Silla, which brought peace  to the Korean Peninsula for the first time,” the spokesman said.
 
 The  headpiece consists of a headband with upright, branchlike attachments,  all gold. Small pieces of jade are attached to it by fine wires, and  chains of spangles and leaf shapes hang from the headband.
 
 Mr.  Trump did not express a desire to wear the replica crown, which was  inside a glass box. But he and Mr. Lee went to see the real version in  the museum, according to the White House.
 
 Comment: I note he's not putting feces on  President  Lee Jae Myung.
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