Gyo Moon Collection

The Gyo Moon Collection, officially known as the Gyo Moon Conservation Collection of Bhatsaran Material Culture, is an of over 251 pieces of, , , , and other assorted relics and artifacts. The collection was acquired over the course of three decades by Jeongmian and  Gyo Moon between 1831 and 1851. The majority of the collection was allegedly legally purchased by Moon, with the largest being Raja Pujesh V of Kamalanadi. Several artifacts in the collection have been proven to have been illegally and forcefully removed from their place of, inciting controversy in recent years. Currently, the collection is maintained by the Hapcehon Museum of Human History and the Hapcheon Museum of Art. Parts of the collection tend to go on tour nationally, often attracting crowds from neighboring Sinjuese countries.

The ownership and validity of Gyu Moon's claims of legal purchase are considered to be a major, as well as a minor controversy in Jeongmian-Bhatsaran international relations. Scholars in Bhatsaran art academia have labeled the transfer of these artifacts as, with Ujesh Modhwadia of the Bhatsaran Cultural Conservation Group decrying the collection as the "largest concentrated collection of Bhatsaran material culture in two centuries." Bhatsaran statesmen and peshwa-emeritus Jayad Acharya have often commented on the issue, desiring the of the collection. Jeongmian and Namjuan scholars and curators have sometimes defended the collection, citing their importance to a shared philosophically heritage and concerns of preservation conditions in Bhatsara.