Gwangju: Meaning (information, definition, explanation, facts)

Gwangju Metropolitan City
Korean Name
Revised Romanization Gwangju Gwangyeoksi
McCune-Reischauer Kwangju Kwangyŏkshi
Hangul 광주 광역시
Hanja 光州廣域市
Short Name Gwangju (Kwangju;
광주; 光州)
Statistics
Population 1,400,000 (2003, estimate)
Area ? km²
Government Metropolitan City;
Capital of South Jeolla
Administrative Divisions 5 wards ("Gu")
Region Honam
Dialect Jeolla
Location Map

Gwangju Metropolitan City is the fifth largest city in South Korea. Gwangju is a designated metropolitan city under the direct control of the South Korean Home Minister, and also the capital of South Jeolla Province.

History

The city was established a long time ago (c. 57 BC) and has been a centre of trade ever since. It was one of the administrative centres of Baekje during the Three-Kingdom Period.

With the construction of a railway to Seoul in 1914 modern industry was established. This includes cotton textiles, rice mills and breweries. Construction of a designated industrial zone in 1967 ensued marked growth in industry, especially in the sectors linked to the automobile industry.

In May 1980 civil demonstrations took place in Gwangju against the newly installed military government of Chun Doo-hwan. The demonstrations were suppressed by military forces, including elite units of the Special Operations Command. Most commentators agree that the suppression was characterized by its egregious brutality, including several incidents where military forces fired automatic weapons into crowds of unarmed demonstrators. At least 200 civilians are known to have been killed. Some commentators assert United States is partly responsible for the mass killing in the city, because of its tacit endorsement of the Chun Doo-hwan regime and the authorization of troop mobilization. Gwangju is sometimes called the shrine of the Korean democracy because of this incident.

After the civil rule was reinstated, a national cemetery was established honoring the victims of the incident.

Amenities

Chonnam National University and Chosun University are two of the major educational institutions in the city, with several other universities and colleges. Places with exquisite scenery along the outskirts of the city became the birthplace of gasa, a form of Korean classical poetry. Located in the heart of the agricultural Jeolla region, the city is also famous for rich and diverse cuisine.

Administrative Divisions

Main article: Administrative divisions in Gwangju

Gwangju is divided into 5 wards ("Gu").

Name Hangul Hanja
Buk-gu 북구 北區
Dong-gu 동구 東區
Gwangsan-gu 광산구 光山區
Nam-gu 남구 南區
Seo-gu 서구 西區


Administrative divisions of South Korea
Special City
Seoul
Metropolitan Cities
Busan | Daegu | Daejeon | Gwangju | Incheon | Ulsan
Provinces
North Chungcheong | South Chungcheong | Gangwon | Gyeonggi | North Gyeongsang | South Gyeongsang | Jeju | North Jeolla | South Jeolla

Find more facts
 
Further reference
Remember what Gwangju means:
Other sources
Search for Gwangju information on:  amazon.com
Your reference for information, definition
http://explanation-guide.info/meaning/Gwangju.html
光州広域市
Licensing information:
This article uses material from Wikipedia (credits) and is made available under the terms of the GNU FDL (copy).
Image licensing information is accessible by clicking the image.

Welcome, guest!
You are not logged in
ID:
Password:

Social bookmarks


Book search

Recent searches