Korea Korea Today Seoul South Korea Pyongyang North
- Slides: 44
Korea
Korea Today
Seoul, South Korea
Pyongyang, North Korea
. Early History of Korea
I. Early History of Korea Three Kingdoms
I. Early History of Korea • A. Three Kingdoms of Korea: 1. Goguryeo 37 BCE-668 CE a. Largest of the kingdoms b. Greatest King Gwanggaeto c. Extended from Manchuria to modern day Seoul
I. Early History of Korea
I. Early History of Korea
I. Early History of Korea 2. Baekji 18 BCE-660 CE a. Western part of South Korea b. Religious & artistic traditions influenced the other two other kingdoms
I. Early History of Korea
I. Early History of Korea 3. Silla 57 BCE-935 CE 1. Eastern part of Korean peninsula 2. Traded along the Silk Road with Chinese, East Indians, Persians & Arabs
I. Early History of Korea
II. Medieval History of Korea • B. Goryeo Dynasty 918 -1392 CE 1. Also known as Koryo, which later become Korea 2. Unified Korean peninsula 3. Centralized government, with king & bureaucrats 4. Education
II. Medieval History of Korea
II. Medieval-Modern History of Korea • C. Joseon Dynasty 1392 -1900 1. Won several battles 2. General Yi assassinated King U & his eight year old son King Chang in 1392 3. General Yi changed his name to King Taeojo 4. In 1401, Korea had to pay Ming China a tributary
II. Medieval-Modern History of Korea
III. Medieval-Modern History of Korea 5. Invented the Korean script 6. 1592 -1597, Japan attacked Korea in an effort to attack Ming China 7. Japanese mutilated more than 38, 000 Koreans 8. Korean “turtle ships” (ironclads) beat the Japanese in the Battle of Hansan-Do
Turtle Ship
Turtle Ship
The Battle of Hansan-Do
III. Modern History of Korea 9. As a result, Korea became increasingly isolationist, (“The Hermit Kingdom”) 10. 1637, Korea had to pay the China’s Qing Dynasty a tribute
IV. Japanese Occupation Korea
IV. Japanese Occupation Korea • A. In 1876, Japan forced Korea to open up to trade with Japan • B. 1882 Imo Rebellion, Korean soldiers rose up against the Japanese (late & low pay)
IV. Japanese Occupation Korea • C. 1894 Donghak Rebellion: 1. peasants rose up 2. China & Japan used this as an excuse increase their military presence in Korea 3. 1895 1 st Sino(China)Japanese War
IV. Japanese Occupation Korea 4. Joseon Empire renamed “Korean Empire” 5. China lost & Japan took control of Korea in 1905 6. 1910 Japan annexed Korea & Korea became part of the Japanese Empire
IV. Japanese Occupation Korea
IV. Japanese Occupation Korea 7. Japan repressed Korean culture & language 8. Numerous human rights abuses such as forced labor camps, censorship, etc
IV. Japanese Occupation Korea
IV. Japanese Occupation Korea D. Japanese built: 1. western style banking system 2. telegraph & telephone systems 3. railroads 4. agro-business 5. electricity 6. roads & bridges
IV. Japanese Occupation Korea
V. Korean Resistance • A. Koreans vigorously fought against Japanese aggression & annexation: 1. 1905 -1910 Korean activists secretly set up nationalist schools to preserve the Korean language & culture
V. Korean Resistance
V. Korean Resistance • 2. Lee Hoe-Young 1910 “Freedom Fighter” raised & led armies against the Japanese
V. Korean Resistance
V. Korean Resistance 2. March 1, 1919 Movement a. 2 PM, Seoul, Korean activists (Samil Movement) met & read “The Korean Declaration Independence” b. Choe Nam-Seon was a writer, historian & activist , who wrote the Korean Declaration Independence” c. The Declaration was made public & leaders were arrested.
V. Korean Resistance
V. Korean Resistance • d. Key points were: – 1. end discrimination against Koreans, – 2. end human rights abuses – 3. end heavy taxation – 4. end land confiscation – 5. end suppression of Korean culture – 6. End political, economic & social inequality – 7. Independence
V. Korean Resistance
V. Korean Resistance • e. People gathered in Pagoda Park to hear Chung Jae. Young read The Declaration • f. Koreans began marching • G. As the crowds grew up to 2, 000, the Japanese reacted & massacred 8, 709 people • H. Thousands were arrested, tortured & executed w/o due process
V. Korean Resistance
V. Korean Resistance
Reunification
- Chapter 14 north and south
- For todays meeting
- Today's lesson or today lesson
- There is class today
- Today's lesson or today lesson
- Meeting objective
- Characteristic of fingerprint
- South korea weather map
- South korea economic continuum
- What is the like weather
- Katri south korea
- Kira south korea
- South korea myanmar
- Germany indulgence vs restraint
- Religion in south korea
- South korea japan bridge
- Which statement describes a failure in mohandas
- North korea switched off case study
- Dystopian society in real life
- Japans type of government
- Is north korea an unlimited government
- North korea genocide 1948-1994
- What is the economic continuum
- Seoul metro map
- Seoul semiconductor vina co. ltd
- Yoon hyun-min seoul chodang elementary school
- Seoul metal vietnam
- Seoul university acceptance rate
- Neis korea
- Seoul national university events
- Seoul national university computer science
- Seoul national university history
- Seoul semiconductor vina co. ltd
- Seoul idrc
- The seoul accord agreement accredits
- Seoul
- Sejong university animation
- Old south vs new south streetcar named desire
- Imaginary horizontal line in the globe
- West north east
- Map key
- North south china
- What is this image
- I am originally from the south but now i live in the north
- Fifty united states