HISTORY
Korea is a shrimp between whales.
The 5 periods of Korean History illustrate
its turbulent history
·
Gojoseon
·
3 Kingdom period Goyuryeo - Baekje –Silla (
18 BC – 935 AD)
·
Goryeo Dynasty 918-1392
·
Joseon 1392-1910
·
Japanese Colonial rule 1910-1945
Gojoseon covers modern day Manchuria and
North Korea. Gojoseon- has its foundation in
mystery and mythical founder Dangun based on
the story of legendary first Korean Hwanin
– Lord of Heaven sending his son Hwanung to
earth at Baekdusan- the tallest and most
spiritual mountain of Korea. Later his son
Dangun started the Gojoseon state.
The significant history of Korea started
with 3 kingdoms around 668 AD – Goguryo,
Baekje,and Silla. Silla maintained a
tributary relationship with China and
conquered both Goguryro and Baekje – and
Buddhism flourish under a unified Silla
dynasty. Around 900 AD, Wang Geon started
the new kingdom called Koryo – Goryeo
dynasty- present day Korea and moved
capital to Gaeseong- north of DMZ. Mongols
of Yuan dynasty- invaded and again Korean
survived as a tributary nation of Yuan and
as Yuan fall to Ming Dyansty- - throughout
these 400 years- Mongol invasions weaken the
state, and monks exploits Buddhism as
national religion to amass great wealth.
By 1388 Yi
Seong Ge seized power in a coup, and
4 years later, in 1392 establish himself as
King Taejo of a new Joseon Dynasty
with new capital at Hanyang- presentday
Seoul. The third King Taejong killed his
brother to seize the throne and the 4th
King Sejong ( 1418-1450) created the
Hangeul. The next hero to rise is
Admiral Yi
Su Sin from Yeosu on the south
coast astonishing naval prowess and his 8
major engagements and military exploits
against the Japanese with his strategies and
turtle ships- sinking more than 250
Japanese vessels over a period of 6 years
such as the battle of Myeongnyang – despite
being outnumbered by 13 to 333 ships (with
help from China). As Manchus take over from
Ming, Qing dynasty came up- Joseon maintain
a Hermit Kingdom status- treating China as
superior and Japan as trading neighbour.
Finally Japanese colonisation
happened in 1910 – until liberation in 1945
– the long 35 years cast a long shadow with
heroes and collaborators. The colonisation
period was a painful one – Japanese
dominate – schools, names, even Shinto
rituals were followed- but as blessings in
disguise- it did prepare Korea for
modernisations, development of industry and
agriculture, highways, rail, road and ports
and communications facilities.
The
modern history of Korean
Koreans has long memories.
In 1905, on 18 November Japan forced a
treaty to control Korea until Oct 1909
when Ito Hirobumi was assassinated which
aggravate Japan to move in to annex Korea
under General Terauchi Masatake- the new
governor –general. Of the Five traitors who
approved it- 2 committed suicide i.e Min
Yonghwan and Jo Byeongse. In Jun 1907 –
Gojong send an envoy to IPC at The Hague to
generate pressure for Japan withdrawal. By
1 March 1919 – nationalists called for the
declaration for self determination at
Versailles Conference following World War 1
– from Donghak movement that oppose the west
in 1886. Japan suppressed it and about 7,500
lost their lives.
By 1945, with the Japanese surrender at the
end of the Pacific War. US proposed a 38th
parallel demarcation line to divide Russians
to the North and US to the South. Following
the liberation, 2 Korean states emerged-
each backed by a superpower. This is the
beginning of the 2 separate Korean states-
in the North lead by Kim II Sung
constitution modelled on Soviet in Sep 1948
and the south led by Syngman Rhee/ Lee Seung
Man - a Harvard educated Methodist whoh
have been overseas for 36 years with PHD
from Princeton as president of the new
assembly by 12 Jul 1948. North.
This set the stage for the Korean war. The
North launched a full scale attack on 25 Jun
1950. The war lasted 3 years 1950-1953 ,
and claimed millions of lives.
North
Korea
The history of
North Korea
began with the partition of Korea at the end
of
World War II
in 1945, and the creation of the
Communist-aligned
Democratic
People's Republic of Korea (DPRK)
headed by the former guerrilla leader,
Kim Il-sung.
In 1950 the
Korean War
broke out. After much destruction, the war
ended with the status quo being restored.
The DPRK had failed to unify Korea under its
leadership, and the US-led United Nations
force had failed to conquer North Korea. The
peninsula was divided by the
Korean
Demilitarized Zone, and a
US military
force remained in South Korea.
Tension between the two sides continued. Kim
Il-sung remained in power until his death in
1994. He developed a pervasive
personality cult
and steered the country on an independent
course in accordance with the principle of
Juche
(or self-reliance). However, with natural
disasters and the collapse of the Soviet
Bloc in 1991, North Korea went into a
severe economic
crisis. Kim Il-sung's son,
Kim Jong-il,
succeeded him, and was in turn succeeded by
his son,
Kim Jong-un.
Amid international alarm, North Korea
developed nuclear missiles.
Kim Jong-Il died on December 17, 2011[125]
and was quickly succeeded by his son,
Kim Jong-un.
Tensions between North Korea and other
countries increased due to its rocket
launches and nuclear bomb testing, and UN
sanctions have been tightened.
In 2014, the
United Nations
Commission of Inquiry accused the
government of
crimes against
humanity.[126]
In 2015, North Korea adopted
Pyongyang
Standard Time (UTC+08.30),
reversing the change to
Japan Standard
Time (UTC+9.00) which had been
imposed by the Japanese Empire. As a result,
North Korea was in a different time zone
from South Korea.[127]
The
7th Congress of
the Workers' Party of Korea was
held
in
2016, where Kim Jong-Un further consolidated
his control and power within the Workers'
Party of Korea and country.
President
Kim Dae-jung
of South Korea actively attempted to reduce
tensions between the two Koreas under the
Sunshine Policy,
but this produced few immediate results.
Since the election of
George W. Bush
as the President of the United States in
2000, North Korea has faced renewed external
pressure over its nuclear program, reducing
the prospect of international economic
assistance.
In 2002, Kim Jong-il declared that "money
should be capable of measuring the worth of
all commodities", followed by some small
market-oriented measures, and the creation
of the
Kaesong
Industrial Region with transport
links to
South Korea
was announced.[citation
needed] Experiments are
under way to allow factory managers to fire
underperforming workers and give bonuses.
China’s investments increased to $200
million in 2004.[citation
needed]
On October 9, 2006, North Korea has
announced that it had successfully detonated
a nuclear device underground at 10:36 am
local time without any radiation leak. An
official at South Korea's seismic monitoring
center confirmed a magnitude-3.6 tremor felt
at the time North Korea said it conducted
the test was not a natural occurrence.[124]
Additionally, North Korea was running a
missile development program. In 1998, North
Korea tested a Taepondong-1 Space Launch
Vehicle, which successfully launched but
failed to reach orbit. On July 5, 2006, they
tested a Taepodong-2 ICBM that reportedly
could reach the west coast of the U.S. in
the 2-stage version, or the entire U.S. with
a third stage. However, the missile failed
shortly after launch, so it is unknown what
its exact capabilities are or how close
North Korea is to perfecting the technology.
North Korea's advancements in weapons
technology appear to give them leverage in
ongoing negotiations with the United Nations
and other countries. On February 13, 2007,
North Korea signed an agreement with South
Korea, the United States, Russia, China, and
Japan, which stipulated North Korea would
shut down its
Yongbyon nuclear
reactor in exchange for economic
and energy assistance. However, in 2009 the
North continued its
nuclear test
program.
In 2010, the
sinking of a South Korean naval ship, the
Cheonan, reportedly by a North
Korean torpedo, escalated tensions between
North and South.
Korean Presidents- Korean Presidents after
Park
1st -Park
Chung Hee
led fro 18 years until assassinated.
Chun Doo-hwan,
Roh Tae-woo,
Kim Young-sam,
and
8th Kim Dae-jung
9th -
Roh Moo-hyun
Park Geun-hye
Park Chung-hee
: 14 November 1917 – 26 October 1979) was a
South Korean
president and military general who led
South Korea
as a dictator from 1961 until
his
assassination in 1979.
Park Chung Hee era – rise on 16 May 1961 by
coup and improve the lives of the Korean
people- and laid the foundation for the
economic miracles. Both he and his wife were
assassinated.
Park seized power through the
May 16 coup,
a military
coup d'état
that overthrew the
Second Republic
of South Korea in 1961 and ruled
as a
military
strongman at the head of the
Supreme Council
for National Reconstruction until
his
election
and inauguration as the
President
of the
Third Republic
of South Korea in 1963. In 1972,
Park declared martial law and recast the
constitution into a highly authoritarian
document, ushering in the
Fourth Republic
of South Korea. After surviving
several assassination attempts, including
two operations associated with
North Korea,
Park was assassinated on 26 October 1979 by
Kim Jae-gyu,
the chief of his own
security
services.[2]
He had led South Korea for 18 years.
Park's first-born daughter,
Park Geun-hye,
is currently the suspended President of
South Korea.
Park was married to Kim Ho-nam (having one
daughter with her) and the two later
divorced. Afterwards, he married
Yuk Young-soo,
and the couple had two daughters and one
son. Yuk was killed in the assassination
attempt against Park in 1974. Their
elder daughter,
Park Geun-hye,
later became a politician and was elected as
the first female president of South Korea in
the December 2012 presidential election,
defeating the liberal candidate
Moon Jae-in.[27]
Park’s Legacy
Park led the
Miracle on the
Han River, a period of rapid
economic growth in South Korea, until 1979.
However, his authoritarian rule saw numerous
human rights abuses.[28]
Opinion is thus split regarding his legacy
between those who credit Park for his
reforms and those who condemn his
authoritarian way of ruling the country
(especially after 1971). Older generations
who spent their adulthood during Park's rule
tend to credit Park for building the
economic foundation of the country and
protecting the country from
North Korea,
as well as leading Korea to economic and
global prominence. Although Park was listed
as one of the top ten "Asians of the
Century" by
Time
magazine in 1999,[29]
the newer generations of Koreans and those
who fought for democratization tend to
believe his authoritarian rule was
unjustified, and that he hindered South
Korea's transition to democracy. He is also
believed to be one of the main causes of
regionalism
which is a serious problem in Korea today.[30]
Park Chung-hee remains a controversial
figure in South Korea. The eighteen-year
Park era is considered to be one of the
most, if not the most, controversial topics
for the Korean public, politicians, and
scholars both at home and abroad.[31]
A large number of South Koreans, especially
those from Park's native
Yeongnam
region[citation
needed], consider Park
to be one of the greatest leaders in the
country's history and thus continue to hold
Park in high regard in great part due to the
industrial and economic growth experienced
by South Korea under his regime. Park was
accused of having pro-Japanese tendencies by
some, but it is widely agreed that Park is
responsible for the beginning of a
normalized relationship with Japan and today
Japan is one of South Korea's top trading
partners, surpassed only by the People's
Republic of China and the United States.[32][33]
He is often credited as being one of the
major people responsible for bringing
economic growth and development to South
Korea[citation
needed]. Park has been
recognized and respected by many South
Koreans as his country's most efficient
leader, credited with making South Korea
economically what it is today.[34]
However, Park is also regarded as a highly
repressive dictator who restricted personal
freedoms and was isolated from the people.[35]
At the very least, his actions put United
States and South Korea foreign relations at
risk, at least under Carter. Dissolving the
constitution to allow him unopposed rule and
a third term, blackmail, arresting, jailing
and murdering opposition figures are well
documented.[36]
The new constitution President Park
implemented after declaring the state of
emergency in 1971, gave him the power to
appoint one third of the members of the
National Assembly and even outlawed
criticism of the constitution and of the
president.[37]
There were also many economic feats
established during Park's regime, including
the
Gyeongbu
Expressway,
POSCO,
the famous
Five-Year Plans
of South Korea, and the
New Community
Movement.[38]
On 24 October 2007, following an internal
inquiry, South Korea's
National
Intelligence Service (NIS)
admitted that its precursor, the Korean
Central Intelligence Agency (KCIA),
undertook the kidnapping of opposition
leader and future President
Kim Dae-jung,
saying it had at least tacit backing from
then-leader Park Chung-hee.[39
Kim Dae-jung
as candidate for the presidential election
in 1971
Early life and education
Kim was born on 6 January 1924,[3]
but he later registered his birth date to 3
December 1925 to avoid
conscription
during the time when Korea was under
Japanese
colonial rule. Kim was the second
of seven children to middle-class farmers.
Kim was born in
Sinan
in what was then the
Jeolla
province; the city is now in
Jeollanam-do.
Kim's family had moved to the nearby port
city of
Mokpo
so that he could finish high school. Kim
graduated from Mokpo Commercial High School
in 1943 at the top of the class. After
working as a clerk for a Japanese-owned
shipping company during the
Imperial
Japanese occupation of Korea, he
became its owner and became very rich. Kim
escaped Communist capture during the
Korean War.[4]
Kim first entered politics in 1954 during
the administration of Korea's first
president,
Syngman Rhee.
Although he was elected as a representative
for the
National
Assembly in 1961, a
military coup
led by
Park Chung-hee,
who later assumed
dictatorial
powers, voided the elections.[4]
He was able to win a seat in the House in
the subsequent elections in 1963 and 1967
and went on to become an eminent opposition
leader. As such, he was the natural
opposition candidate for the country's
presidential election in 1971. He nearly
defeated Park, despite several handicaps on
his candidacy which were imposed by the
ruling regime.[5]
A very talented orator, Kim could command
unwavering loyalty among his supporters. His
staunchest support came from the
Jeolla
region, where he reliably garnered upwards
of 95% of the popular vote, a record that
has remained unsurpassed in
South Korean
politics.
Kim was almost killed in August 1973, when
he was kidnapped
from a hotel in
Tokyo
by
KCIA
agents in response to his criticism of
President Park's
yushin
program, which granted near-dictatorial
powers. Years later, Kim reflected on these
events during his 2000
Nobel Peace
Prize lecture:
I have lived, and continue to live, in the
belief that God is always with me. I know
this from experience. In August of 1973,
while exiled in Japan, I was kidnapped from
my hotel room in Tokyo by intelligence
agents of the then military government of
South Korea. The news of the incident
startled the world. The agents took me to
their boat at anchor along the seashore.
They tied me up, blinded me, and stuffed my
mouth. Just when they were about to throw me
overboard, Jesus Christ appeared before me
with such clarity. I clung to him and begged
him to save me. At that very moment, an
airplane came down from the sky to rescue me
from the moment of death.
— Kim Dae-jung[6]
Philip Habib,
the US ambassador in
Seoul,
had interceded for him with the South Korean
government.[7]
Although Kim returned to South Korea, he was
banned from politics and imprisoned in 1976
for having participated in the proclamation
of an anti-government manifesto and
sentenced for five years in prison, which
was reduced to
house arrest
in 1978.[5]
During this period, he was designated a
prisoner of
conscience by
Amnesty
International.[8]
Kim had his political rights restored in
1979 after
Park was
assassinated. However, in 1980,
Kim was arrested and sentenced to death on
charges of
sedition
and conspiracy in the wake of another coup
by
Chun Doo-hwan
and a
popular uprising
in
Gwangju,
his political stronghold.[9]
Pope
John Paul II
sent a letter to then-South Korean President
Chun Doo-hwan
on 11 December 1980, asking for clemency for
Kim, a Catholic, who had been sentenced to
death a week before. The National Archives
of Korea revealed the contents of the letter
at the request of the Kwangju Ilbo,
the local daily newspaper in Gwangju
(Kwangju).[10]
With the intervention of the United States
government,[11]
the sentence was commuted to 20 years in
prison and later he was given exile in the
U.S. Kim temporarily settled in
Boston
and taught at
Harvard
University as a visiting
professor to the Center for International
Affairs.[12]
During his period abroad, he authored a
number of opinion pieces in leading western
newspapers that were sharply critical of the
South Korean government. On March 30, 1983,
Kim presented a speech on human rights and
democracy at
Emory University
in
Atlanta,
Georgia
and accepted an honorary Doctor of Laws
degree by the institution. Two years later,
in 1985, he returned to his homeland.
Road to the presidency
Kim was again put under house arrest upon
his return to Seoul, but resumed his role as
one of the principal leaders of the
opposition. When Chun Doo-hwan succumbed to
the popular demands in 1987 and allowed the
country's first honest presidential
election, Kim Dae-jung and the other leading
opposition figure,
Kim Young-sam,
initially promised to unite behind one
candidate. However, due to a dispute between
the two men, Kim Dae-jung split off from the
main opposition party, the Reunification
Democratic Party, and formed the Party for
Peace and Democracy to run for the
presidency. As a result, the opposition vote
was split in two, and ex-general
Roh Tae-woo
– Chun Doo-hwan's hand-picked successor –
won with only 36.5% of the popular vote. Kim
Young-sam receiving 28% and Kim Dae-jung 27%
of the vote.
In 1992, Kim made yet another failed bid for
the presidency, this time solely against Kim
Young-sam, who had merged the RDP with the
ruling
Democratic
Justice Party to form the
Democratic Liberal Party (which eventually
became the
Grand National
Party).[4]
Many thought Kim Dae-jung's political career
was effectively over when he took a hiatus
from politics and departed for the United
Kingdom to take a position at
Clare Hall,
Cambridge University as a visiting scholar.[12]
However, in 1995 he announced his return to
politics and began his fourth quest for the
presidency.
The situation became favorable for him when
the public revolted against the incumbent
government in the wake of the nation's
economic collapse in the
Asian financial
crisis just weeks before the
presidential election. Allied with
Kim Jong-pil,
he defeated
Lee Hoi-chang,
Kim Young-sam's designated successor, in the
election held on
18 December 1997.
When he was sworn in as the eighth President
of South Korea on 25 February 1998, it
marked the first time in Korean history that
the ruling party peacefully transferred
power to a democratically elected opposition
victor.[4][13]
The election was marred with controversy, as
two candidates from the ruling party split
the conservative vote (38.7% and 19.2%
respectively), enabling Kim to win with only
40.3% of the popular vote.[14]
Kim's chief opponent, Lee Hoi-chang, was a
former Supreme Court Justice and had
graduated at the top of his class from
Seoul National
University School of Law. Lee was
widely viewed as elitist and his candidacy
was further damaged by charges that his sons
dodged mandatory military service. Kim's
education in contrast was limited to
vocational high school, and many Koreans
sympathized with the many trials and
tribulations that Kim had endured
previously.
The preceding presidents
Park Chung Hee,
Chun Doo-hwan,
Roh Tae-woo,
and
Kim Young-sam
originated from the
Gyeongsang
region, which became wealthier since
1945 partly due to the policies of the Park,
Chun and Roh's regimes. Kim Dae-jung was
the first president to serve out his full
term who came from the
Cholla
region in the southwest, an area that
had been neglected and less developed, at
least partly because of discriminatory
policies of previous presidents. Kim's
administration included more individuals
from the Cholla province, leading to charges
of reverse discrimination. However, the
actual numbers of the ministers and
administrators of Kim Dae Jung's government
from Cholla region indicate that they were
not over-represented.
Kim Dae-jung took office in the midst of the
economic crisis that hit South Korea in the
final year of Kim Young-sam's term. He
vigorously pushed economic reform and
restructuring recommended by the
International Monetary Fund, in the process
significantly altering the landscape of
South Korean
economy.[4]
After the economy shrank by 5.8 percent in
1998, it grew 10.2 percent in 1999.[2]
In effect, his policies were to make for a
fairer market by holding the powerful
chaebol
(conglomerates) accountable, e.g., greater
transparency in accounting practices. State
subsidies to large corporations were
dramatically cut or dropped.
North Korea policy
See also:
Sunshine Policy
In February 2001,
Russian
president
Vladimir Putin
dined with Kim Dae-Jung.
His
policy of engagement with
North Korea
has been termed the
Sunshine Policy.[2]
He moved to begin
détente
with the
communist regime in North Korea,
which culminated in a historic summit
meeting in 2000 in
Pyongyang
with North Korean leader
Kim Jong-il.
This marked a critical juncture in
inter-Korean relations, and the two Koreas
have had direct contact with each other
since. He was awarded the
Nobel Peace
Prize for these efforts. However,
the historic event was tainted significantly
by allegations that at least
several hundred
million dollars had been paid to
Pyongyang. His Chief of Staff, Park Ji-Won,
was sentenced to twelve years in prison in
2003 for, among other charges, his role in
the Hyundai payment to North Korea for the
North–South summit.[15]
Also in order to persuade North Korea to
attend the summit, several "unconverted
long-term prisoners" kept by
South Korea were released and returned to
North Korea.[16]
The effect of the Sunshine Policy was
questioned by American newspaper
The Village
Voice, which cited the money
transfers and the coverup of atrocities in
the North.[17]
Relationship with former Presidents[edit]
After Kim achieved the presidency and moved
into the
Blue House,
there was uncertainty and considerable
speculation about how he would handle the
office. He had been sentenced to death by
Chun Doo Hwan. Chun and his successor Roe
Tae Woo had been sentenced by Kim Dae Jung's
predecessor President Kim Young Sam. Kim Dae
Jung pardoned Chun.[citation
needed]
During his presidency, he introduced South
Korea's contemporary
welfare state,[18][19]
successfully shepherded the country's
economic recovery, brought in a new era of
economic transparency and fostered a greater
role for South Korea in the world stage,
including the
FIFA World Cup,
jointly hosted by South Korea and Japan in
2002.
Kim completed his 5-year presidential
term in 2003 and was succeeded by
Roh Moo-hyun.
A presidential library at
Yonsei
University was built to preserve
Kim's legacy, and there is a convention
center named after him in the city of
Gwangju, the Kim Dae-jung Convention Center.[citation
needed]
Post-presidency[edit]
Kim called for restraint against the
North Koreans
for detonating a nuclear weapon and defended
the continued
Sunshine Policy
towards
Pyongyang
to defuse the crisis. He promised all
Koreans that he would take active
responsibility if North Korea ever tried to
arm themselves with nuclear weapons, but
there is ongoing debate about whether the
Sunshine Policy facilitated Pyongyang's
nuclear programs. He also received an
honorary doctorate at the University of
Portland on 17 April 2008 where he delivered
his speech, "Challenge, Response, and God."[20]
The
Wikileaks
data reveals that the U.S. Embassy in Seoul
described Kim as "South Korea's first
left-wing president" to the American
government on his day of death.[21]
Death
Kim died on 18 August 2009 at 13:43 KST, at
Severance
Hospital of
Yonsei
University in
Seoul.[22]
The cause of death was given as
multiple organ
dysfunction syndrome.[23]
An interfaith state funeral was held for him
on 23 August 2009 in front of the
National
Assembly Building, with a
procession leading to the
Seoul National
Cemetery where he was interred
according to Catholic traditions.
He is the
second person in South Korean history to be
given a
state funeral
after
Park Chung-hee.[24]
North Korea sent a delegation to his
funeral.[25]
He died about 3 months after the
9th South
Korean President
Roh Moo-hyun
committed suicide on May 23, 2009.
South Korea
( listen),
officially the Republic of Korea (ROK;
listen),
is a
sovereign state
in
East Asia,
constituting the southern part of the
Korean Peninsula.[10]
Highly urbanized
at 92%,[11]
South Koreans lead a distinctive urban
lifestyle; half of them live in
high-rises[12]
concentrated in the
Seoul Capital
Area with 25 million residents[13]
and the world's sixth leading
global city[14]
with the
fourth largest
economy[15]
and seventh most
sustainable city
in the world.[16]
The earliest
Korean pottery
dates to 8000 BC,[17]
with
three kingdoms
flourishing in the 1st century BC. The name
Korea is derived from one of them,
Goguryeo,
also known as Koryŏ, which was a
powerful empire and one of the great powers
in East Asia,[18][19][20][21]
ruling
Northeast China,
parts of Russia[22]
and Inner Mongolia,[23]
and more than two-thirds of the Korean
Peninsula under
Gwanggaeto the
Great.[24]
Since their unification into
Later Silla
and
Balhae
in the 7th century, Korea enjoyed over a
millennium
of relative tranquility under
long lasting
dynasties,[25]
with innovations like
Hangul,
the unique alphabet created by
Sejong the Great
in 1446, enabling anyone to easily learn to
read and write.[26]
Its rich and vibrant culture left
19 UNESCO
Intangible Cultural Heritages of Humanity,
the
third largest in
the world, along with
12 World
Heritage Sites.
Annexed into
Imperial Japan in 1910, Korea was
divided
after its surrender in 1945. A
North Korean
invasion led to the
Korean War
(1950–53). Peace has since mostly continued
with the two
agreeing to work
peacefully for reunification and
the South solidifying peace as a
regional power
with the world's
10th largest
defence budget.
South Korea's
tiger economy
soared at an annual average of 10% for over
30 years[27]
in a period of rapid transformation called
the
Miracle on the
Han River. A long legacy
of openness and
focus in
innovation made it successful.[28]
Today, it is the world's
fifth largest
exporter and
seventh largest
importer with the
G20's
largest budget
surplus[29]
and
highest credit
rating of any country in
East Asia.[30]
It has
free trade
agreements with 75% of the world
economy and is the only
G20
nation trading freely with
China,
the
US
and
EU
simultaneously.[31]
Since 1987,
its constitution
guarantees a multi-party democracy with
universal
suffrage,
high government
transparency and
universal
healthcare. High civil liberties
led to the rise of a globally
influential pop
culture[32]
such as
K-pop
and
K-drama,
a phenomenon called the
Korean Wave,
known for its distinctive fashionable and
trendy style.[33]
Home of the
UN
Green Climate
Fund and
GGGI,
South Korea is a leader in
low carbon
green growth,[34]
committed to helping
developing
countries as a major
DAC
and
Paris Club
contributor. It is the world's third least
ignorant country in the Index of
Ignorance,[35]
ranking eighth highest for peaceful
tolerance and inclusion of minorities on the
Fragile States
Index.[36]
South Korea is East Asia's most
developed
country in the
Human
Development Index. Driven by a
highly educated
and skilled workforce, it has the world's
eighth highest
median household income, the
highest in Asia, and its singles in
particular
earn more than
all
G7
nations. Globally, it ranks highly in
personal safety,[37]
job security,
ease of doing
business and
healthcare
quality, with the world's
third highest
health adjusted
life expectancy and fourth most
efficient healthcare system.[38]
It is the world's
largest spender
on R&D per GDP, leading the
OECD
in
graduates in
science and engineering[39]
and ranking third in the
Youth
Wellbeing
Index.[40]
Home of
Samsung,
the world's leading
smartphone
and
TV
maker,[41][42]
LG
and
Hyundai-Kia,
South Korea was named the world's most
innovative country in the
Bloomberg
Innovation Index,[43]
ranking first in
business R&D
intensity and
patents filed
per GDP. In 2005, it became the
world's
first country
to fully transition to
high-speed
Internet[44]
and today it has the world's
fastest Internet
speed and
highest
smartphone ownership, ranking
first in
ICT Development,
e-Government[45]
and
4G LTE coverage.
Korean People
Korean as a homogeneous people, due to their
history and openness – has embraced the
major religions and philosophy on top of the
traditional Buddhism and Shamanism .
Christianity is popular and Confucianism and
ancestor worship are strongly infused in the
everyday life of Koreans. We see mega
churches like David Cho yong gi Yoido Full
Gospel and Somang Church – but they have
succumbed to financial misdealing. We also
see Mudang- mostly woman dressed elaborate
costumes to intervene and communicate with
the spiritual realm with rituals, singing
and dancing This is strengthen by the
nationalistic jeong- spirit of
bonding in the struggle to survive. It
centers around groups of people that share
common history and destiny. Korean has a
history of poverty, colonial invasion
and separation and the ever physical
dominance of US even till today.
In April 2016, South Korea's population was
estimated to be around 50.8 million by
National
Statistical Office, with
continuing decline of working age population
and total fertility rate.[5][6]
The country is noted for its population
density, which was an estimated 505 per
square kilometer in 2015,[5]
more than 10 times the global average. Most
South Koreans live in urban areas, because
of rapid migration from the countryside
during the country's quick economic
expansion in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s.[162]
The capital city of
Seoul
is also the country's largest city and chief
industrial center. According to the 2005
census, Seoul had a population of 10 million
inhabitants. The
Seoul National
Capital Area has 24.5 million
inhabitants (about half of South Korea's
entire population) making it the world's
second largest metropolitan area. Other
major cities include
Busan
(3.5 million),
Incheon
(2.5 million),
Daegu
(2.5 million),
Daejeon
(1.4 million),
Gwangju
(1.4 million) and
Ulsan
(1.1 million).[163]
The population has also been shaped by
international migration. After World War II
and the
division of the
Korean Peninsula, about four
million people from North Korea crossed the
border to South Korea. This trend of net
entry reversed over the next 40 years
because of emigration, especially to the
United States and Canada. South Korea's
total population in 1955 was 21.5 million,[164]
and has more than doubled, to 50 million, by
2010.[165]
South Korea is one of the most ethnically
homogeneous societies in the world, with
more than 99% of inhabitants having Korean
ethnicity.[166]
The percentage of foreign nationals has been
growing rapidly.[167]
As of 2009[update],
South Korea had 1,106,884 foreign residents,
2.7% of the population; however, more than
half of them are ethnic Koreans with a
foreign citizenship. For example,
migrants from
China (PRC) make up 56.5% of
foreign nationals, but approximately 70% of
the Chinese citizens in Korea are
Joseonjok (조선족
in Korean), PRC citizens of
Korean ethnicity.[168]
Regardless of the ethnicity, there are
28,500
US military
personnel serving in South Korea, most
serving a one-year unaccompanied tour
(though approximately 10% serve longer tours
accompanied by family), according to the
Korea National Statistical Office.[169][170]
In addition, about 43,000 English teachers
from
English-speaking
countries reside temporarily in
Korea.[171]
Currently, South Korea has one of the
highest rates of growth of foreign born
population, with about 30,000 foreign born
residences obtaining South Korean
citizenship every year since 2010.
South Korea's birthrate was the world's
lowest in 2009.[172]
If this continues, its population is
expected to decrease by 13% to 42.3 million
in 2050.[173]
South Korea's annual birthrate is
approximately 9 births per 1000 people.[174]
However, the birthrate has increased by 5.7%
in 2010 and Korea no longer has the world's
lowest birthrate.[175]
According to a 2011 report from Chosun Ilbo,
South Korea's total fertility rate (1.23
children born per woman) is higher than
those of Taiwan (1.15) and Japan (1.21).[176]
The average
life expectancy
in 2008 was 79.10 years,[177]
(which was 34th in the world[178])
but by 2015 it had increased to around 81.[179]
South Korea has the steepest decline in
working age population of the OECD nations.[180]
In 2015, National Statistical Office
estimated that the population of the country
will have reached its peak by 2035.[5][6]
Jeju-do
The Bali of North Asia- Korean’s Hawaii or
honeymoon island – it lies 160 km south of
main island – Hallasan 1950 m – It has
building structures like Hawaii – with grand
fathers stones- dolharubang – carved lava
rock statues. In the 13 th century – when
Goryeo kingdom had been subjugated by
Mongol invaders for over 100 years - -
Mongols used Jeju as a land bridge to
invade japan. Mogols also brought Buddhism
and also horse breeding. Till today, there
are 2 folk villages Seongeup and Jeju Folk
village and Jeju is famous for their diving
woman haenyeo
Jeonju
Capital of North Jeolla province – ancestral
home of Ye Seong gye – founder of Joseon
Dynasty. It is famous for its bibimbap