The National Flag - Taegeukgi

The National Flag - Taegeukgi

Origin

Following the trend for modern states to adopt national flags, the decision to create a national flag for Korea emerged with the ratification of the Korea-United States Treaty of 1882. No accurate records remain of the Korean flag chosen for use at the signing ceremony; however, some argue that the flag was si milar to the ensign flag featured in the Flags of Maritime Nations issued by the U.S. Navy Department’s Bureau of Navigation and found in 2004. In his capacity as Envoy Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary under King Gojong, Park Yeong-hyo kept a record of his diplomatic mission to Japan in 1882.

In his capacity as Envoy Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary under King Gojong, Park Yeong-hyo kept a record of his diplomatic mission to Japan in 1882. According to his journal, known as Sahwagiryak, in September of that year while aboard the ship to Japan, Park created a four-trigram flag with a taegeuk circle (instead of the flag with eight black bars that had been used prior to 1800). The flag was used from September 25, 1882, according to Park’s report to the government on October 3 of that year. By royal order on March 6, 1883, King Gojong promulgated that Park’s flag with a taegeuk circle in the center and four trigrams around it (the flag named Taegeukgi) be the national flag. However, due to a lack of specific guidelines, the flag design took different forms. On June 29, 1942, the Provisional Government issued a national flag style guide to ensure that subsequent flags would be created in a consistent manner. Despite these efforts, however, ordinary people were unaware of these guidelines.After the establishment of the Republic of Korea on August 15, 1948, the government felt an increasing need to standardize flag construction. Thus in January 1949, it formed the National Flag Correction Committee, which announced the National Flag Construction Guidelines on October 15 of that year. A number of regulations were later implemented, providing for the systematic management of the flag: the Act on the Flag of the Republic of Korea, enacted in January 2007; the Enforcement Decree of the Act on the Flag of the Republic of Korea, in July 2007; and the Regulations on the Hoisting, Management, and Promotion of the National Flag in September 2009 (by instructions from the Prime Minister).

Symbolism of the flag

The Taegeukgi consists of a white background, a red and blue taegeuk circle in the center, and four black trigrams (collectively called geongongamri), one in each corner of the flag. The white background represents brightness, purity, and peace, qualities that are highly valued by the people. The taegeuk, which has long been a commonly used motif, denotes the harmony between the negative cosmic forces (yin : blue portion) and the positive cosmic forces (yang : red portion), depicting the truth of nature that all things are created and evolve through the interaction of yin and yang. The four black trigrams are specific representations of the movement and harmony of these forces. In detail, the geon symbolizes the sky, the gon the earth, the gam water, and the ri fire. Together, they create harmony around the taegeuk mark. In short, the Taegeukgi flag embodies the vision of the Korean people who, like the universe, seek continuous creation and enrichment. By upholding the spirit and significance of the Taegeukgi, the people seek to realize unity and unification and contribute to the happiness and peace of humanity.

Construction of the Flag of Korea

Construction of the Flag of Korea

  1. ① Diameter of circle x 3
  2. ② Diameter of circle x 2
  3. ③ Diameter of circle x 1/2
  4. ④ Length of flag x 1/2
  5. ⑤ Right angle (90 degrees)
  6. ⑥ Diameter of Circle x 1/24
  7. ⑦ Diameter of circle x 1/4
  8. ⑧ Diameter of circle x 1/3
  9. ⑨ Diameter of circle x 1/12

Pledge of allegiance to the flag (revised on July 27, 2007)

I, standing before the noble Taegeukgi, solemnly pledge allegiance to the Republic of Korea, to its glory, liberty and justice.

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Prime Minister

Former PMs

Seoul to create eco-friendly jobs

  • 관리자
  • 2009.03.06
  • Hit 4674
One year ago, many environmentalists saw Lee Myung‐bak, South Korea’s president, as a bete noire, fearing a former construction executive who once planned to carve a giant canal down the whole length of the country.

But he has changed, spearheading a huge Won 50,000bn ($32bn, €25.5bn, £22.6bn) “Green New Deal” intended to create employment during a brutal economic downturn and revolutionise South Korea’s whole industrial economy.

The projects include forestry, cleaning rivers, cycle paths, railways, environmentally friendly homes and more efficient energy consumption. They are intended to create 950,000 jobs over the next four years.

“We know that the old strategy of semiconductors, mobile phones, cars and ship‐building cannot continue. This is the biggest policy paradigm shift,” Kwon Tae‐shin, minister of the prime minister’s office, told the Financial Times.

Mr Kwon said the priority was to steel Korea for a surge in unemployment and find work for the sort of family breadwinners who were hit hard by the financial crisis of 1997‐98, many of them driven to suicide.

He admitted there could be trouble finding enough hands for all the manual labour, some of whom might have to come from abroad.

However, policymakers have stressed the basic groundwork projects will have a rapid trickle down effect into services such as leisure and jobs for well‐qualified graduates, working on technology such as solar panels.

Korea has one of the world’s largest solar power stations and is branching into tidal power, trying to combat an overwhelming dependence on imported oil. Mr Kwon also expected Korea would be able to produce its own voluntary carbon emissions targets before December.

However, not everyone is convinced Korea has gone green. The country has a dismal reputation among bird enthusiasts for destroying wetlands and killing migratory birds by claiming land seven times the size of Manhattan from the Yellow Sea for factories.

Birds Korea, a conservation group, has called for the suspension of the project to clean and dredge four main rivers and exploit them for leisure activities until the full impact on endangered birdlife has been assessed.

Nial Moores, the group’s director, said many of the schemes he had seen appeared to fall short of South Korea’s international commitments on biodiversity and endangered species under international environmental protocols, including some with the UN.

“Some species that are easily disturbed will be lost,” he said.


By Christian Oliver in Seoul

From Financial Times(
http://www.ft.com)