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Koreans

Koreans (South Korean: 한민족/한국인/한국사람, 韓民族/韓國人/韓國사람, Han minjok/ethnic, Hanguk-in (people of the Han nation), Hanguksaram, North Korean: 조선민족/조선인/조선사람, 朝鮮民族/朝鮮人/朝鮮사람, Joseon minjok/ethnic, Joseon-in (people)/Joseonsaram; see names of Korea) are an East Asian ethnic group native to the Korean Peninsula.[8][9][10][11][12][13][14]

Koreans
조선인 • 한국인
Total population
c. 85 million[1]
Regions with significant populations
 South Korea       51,709,098[2]
 North Korea      25,778,815[3]
Diaspora as of 2021
c. 7.3 million[4]
 United States2,633,777[4]
 China2,350,422[4]
 Japan818,865[4]
 Canada237,364[4]
 Uzbekistan175,865[4]
 Russia168,526[4]
 Australia158,103[4]
 Vietnam156,330[4]
 Kazakhstan109,495[4]
 Germany47,428[4]
 United Kingdom36,690[4]
 Brazil36,540[4]
 New Zealand33,812[4]
 Philippines33,032[4]
 France25,417[4]
 Argentina22,847[4]
 Singapore20,983[4]
 Thailand18,130[4]
 Kyrgyzstan18,106[4]
 Indonesia17,297[4]
 Malaysia13,667[4]
 Ukraine13,524[4]
 Sweden13,055[4]
 Mexico11,107[4]
 India10,674[4]
 Cambodia10,608[4]
 United Arab Emirates9,642[4]
 Netherlands9,473[4]
 Denmark8,694[4]
 Norway7,744[4]
Languages
Korean,[5] Jejuan, Korean Sign
Religion
Predominantly irreligious
Korean shamanic, Christian or Buddhist minorities
Related ethnic groups
Jeju, Manchus

Koreans mainly live in the two Korean nation states: North Korea and South Korea (collectively and simply referred to as just Korea). They are also an officially recognized ethnic minority in other Asian countries; such as China, Japan, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan. Koreans also form sizeable communities in Europe, specifically in Russia, Germany, United Kingdom, and France. Over the course of the 20th century, Korean communities have also formed in the Americas (especially in the United States and Canada) and Oceania.

As of 2021, there were an estimated 7.3 million ethnic Koreans residing outside Korea.[4]

Etymology

South Koreans refer to themselves as Hanguk-in(Korean: 한국인, Hanja: 韓國人) or Hanguk-saram (Korean: 한국 사람), both of which mean "people of the Han". When including members of the Korean diaspora, Koreans often use the term Han-in(Korean: 한인, Hanja: 韓人, English: 'People of Han'). Korean Americans refer to themselves as 'Han-gukgye Migukin'(Korean: 한국계 미국인, Hanja: 韓國系美國人, English: Korean-Americans).

North Koreans refer to themselves as Joseon-in (Korean: 조선인, Hanja: 朝鮮人) or Joseon-saram (Korean: 조선 사람), both of which literally mean "People of Joseon" The term "Joseon" is derived from the "Joseon dynasty", a Korean kingdom founded by Lee Seong-gye that lasted for approximately five centuries from 1392 to 1910. Using similar words, Koreans in China refer to themselves as Chaoxianzu (Chinese: 朝鲜族)in Chinese or Joseonjok, Joseonsaram (Korean: 조선족, 조선사람) in Korean, which are cognates that literally mean "Joseon ethnic group". Koreans in Japan refer to themselves as Zainichi Chousenjin, Chousenjin (Japanese: 在日朝鮮人, 朝鮮人) in Japanese or Jaeil Joseonin, Joseonsaram, Joseonin (Korean재일조선인, 조선사람, 조선인) in Korean. Ethnic Koreans living in Russia and Central Asia refer to themselves as Koryo-saram (Korean: 고려사람, Cyrillic: Корё сарам), alluding to Goryeo, a Korean dynasty spanning from 918 to 1392.

In the chorus of the South Korean national anthem, Koreans are referred to as Daehan-saram(Korean: 대한사람) which means 'The People of Great Han'.

In an interkorean context, such as when dealing with the Korean language(s) or the Korean ethnicity as a whole, additionally the term 'HanGyeoRe'(Korean: 한계레, lit. Nations/People of Han, Pronunciation: Hān'gyŏ'ryē) is used.

Origins

Linguistic and archaeological studies

Modern Koreans are suggested to be the descendants of a prehistoric group of people from Southern Siberia/Manchuria, who moved to the northern Korean Peninsula[15][16][page needed][verification needed] as well as Koreanized indigenous populations in the southern part of the peninsula. Archaeological evidence suggests that Proto-Koreans were migrants from Manchuria during the Bronze Age.[17] According to most linguists and archaeologists with expertise in ancient Korea, the linguistic homeland of Proto-Korean and of early Koreans is located somewhere in Southern Siberia/Manchuria, such the Liao river area or the Amur region. Later, Koreanic-speakers migrated to northern Korea and started to expand further south, replacing and assimilating Japonic-speakers and likely causing the Yayoi migration.[18][19] Whitman (2012) suggests that the Proto-Koreans arrived in the southern part of the Korean Peninsula at around 300 BCE and coexisted with the descendants of the Japonic Mumun cultivators (or assimilated them).[20] Vovin suggests Proto-Korean is equivalent to the variant of Koreanic languages spoken in southern Siberia/Manchuria and northern Korean peninsula by the time of the Three Kingdoms of Korea period and spread to southern Korea through influence from Goguryeo migrants.[21]

However, a number of Korean scholars such as Jangsuk Kim and Jinho Park reject the view that the Korean speakers were not native to the Korean Peninsula, and argue that no solid evidence of such linguistic migration/shift as well as population and material change in the peninsular region has ever been found to support such view.[22]

The largest concentration of dolmens in the world is found on the Korean Peninsula. In fact, with an estimated 35,000-100,000 dolmen,[23] Korea accounts for nearly 40% of the world's total. Similar dolmens can be found in Manchuria, the Shandong Peninsula and the Kyushu island, yet it is unclear why this culture only flourished so extensively on the Korean Peninsula and its surroundings compared to the bigger remainder of Northeastern Asia.

Anthropometry

Stephen Pheasant (1986), who taught anatomy, biomechanics and ergonomics at the Royal Free Hospital and the University College, London, said that Far Eastern people have proportionately shorter lower limbs than Europeans and black Africans. Pheasant said that the proportionately short lower limbs of Far Eastern people is a difference that is most characterized in Japanese people, less characterized in Korean and Chinese people, and the least characterized in Vietnamese and Thai people.[24][25]

Neville Moray (2005) said that, for Korean and Japanese pilots, sitting height is more than 54% of their stature, with about 46% of their stature from leg length. Moray said that, for Americans and most Europeans, sitting height is about 52% of their stature, with about 48% of their stature from leg length.[26]

Craniometry

In a craniometric study, Pietrusewsky (1994) found that the Japanese series, which was a series that spanned from the Yayoi period to modern times, formed a single branch with Korea.[27] Later, Pietrusewsky (1999) found, however, that Korean and Yayoi people were very highly separated in the East Asian cluster, indicating that the connection that Japanese have with Korea would not have derived from Yayoi people.[27]

Park Dae-kyoon et al. (2001) said that distance analysis based on thirty-nine non-metric cranial traits showed that Koreans are closer craniometrically to Kazakhs and Mongols than Koreans are close craniometrically to the populations in China and Japan.[28]

Genetics

Koreans display high frequencies of the Y-DNA haplogroups O2-M122 (approximately 40% of all present-day Korean males), O1b2-M176 (approximately 30%), and C2-M217 (approximately 15%).[29] Some regional variance may exist; in a study of South Korean Y-DNA published in 2011, the ratio of O2-M122 to O1b2-M176 is greatest in Seoul-Gyeonggi (1.8065), with the ratio declining in a counterclockwise direction around South Korea (Chungcheong 1.6364, Jeolla 1.3929, Jeju 1.3571, Gyeongsang 1.2400, Gangwon 0.9600).[30][31][32][33][34] Haplogroup C2-M217 tends to be found in about 13% of males from most regions of South Korea, but it is somewhat more common (about 17%) among males from the Gyeongsang region in the southeast of the peninsula and somewhat less common (about 7%) among males from Jeju, located off the southwest coast of the peninsula.[35] Haplogroup C2-M217 has been found in a greater proportion (about 26%) of a small sample (n=19) of males from North Korea.[36][37] However, haplogroups are not a reliable indicator of an individual's overall ancestry; Koreans are more similar to one another in regard to their autosomes than they are similar to members of other ethnic groups.

Koreans, along with Japanese and Tungusic speakers are generally considered a Northeast Asian group. The mitochondrial DNA markers (mtDNA haplogroups and HVR-I sequences) of Korean populations showed close relationships with Manchurians, Japanese, Mongolians and northern Han Chinese but not with Southern East Asians. Y-chromosomal distances showed a close relationship to most East Asian groups, including Southeast Asian ones.[38] Ancient genome comparisons revealed that the genetic makeup of Koreans can be best described as an admixture of the Neolithic Devil's Gate genome in the Amur region in the Russian Far-East adjacent to North Korea as well as that of rice-farming agriculturalists from the Yangtze river valley, which in turn are often linked to O2-M122.[39] The results from the findings in the Devil's Gate showed that the ancient populations of the area were already admixed from both Northern East Asian and Southern East Asian groups. These groups correlate closely to modern Koreanic and Japonic, who form a cluster in regional comparisons, along with various Tungusic groups.[40] East Asians, including Northern groups (Mongolic, Turkic, Uralic, Koreanic, Ainuic, Tungusic, Paleosiberian, Amerindian and Japonic) and Southern ones (Mainland Southeast Asians, Insular Southeast Asians) are closer related to another than other population groups and can trace themselves to a common ancestry from several tens of thousands of years ago.[41]

Studies of polymorphisms in the human Y-chromosome have so far produced evidence to suggest that the Korean people have a long history as a distinct, mostly endogamous ethnic group, with successive prehistoric waves of people moving to the peninsula and two major Y-chromosome haplogroups.[42] Koreans show a close genetic relationship with other modern East Asians such as the Han Chinese and Yamato Japanese[8][9][11][43][44] and with Neolithic specimens recovered from Chertovy Vorota Cave in Primorsky Krai, who themselves are the closest genetic relatives to the Udege and the Hezhen.[10] The reference population for Koreans used in Geno 2.0 Next Generation is 94% Eastern Asia and 5% Southeast Asia & Oceania.[45]

According to a genetic distance measurements from a large scale genetic study from 2021 titled 'Genomic insights into the formation of human populations in East Asia', Koreans are genetically closest to Japanese, followed by a larger margin by Northern Han on FST genetic distance measurements.[46]

Genealogy

Korea Foundation Associate Professor of History, Eugene Y. Park said that many Koreans seem to have a genealogical memory blackout before the twentieth century.[47][48] According to him the vast majority Koreans do not know their actual genealogical history. Through "inventing tradition" in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, families devised a kind of master narrative story that purports to explain a surname-ancestral seat combination's history to the extent where it is next to impossible to look beyond these master narrative stories.[49] He gave an example of what "inventing tradition" was like from his own family's genealogy where a document from 1873 recorded three children in a particular family and a later 1920 document recorded an extra son in that same family.[50] Park said that these master narratives connect the same surname and ancestral seat to a single, common ancestor. This trend became universal in the nineteenth century, but genealogies which were published in the seventeenth century actually admit that they did not know how the different lines of the same surname or ancestral seat are related at all.[51] Only a small percentage of Koreans had surnames and ancestral seats to begin with, and that the rest of the Korean population had adopted these surname and ancestral seat identities within the last two to three hundred years.[52]

Culture

North Korea and South Korea share a common heritage, but the political division since 1945 has resulted in some divergence of their modern cultures.[citation needed]

Language

The language of the Korean people is the Korean language, which uses Hangul as its main writing system. Daily usage of Hanja has been phased out in Korean peninsula other than usage by selected South Korean media companies (mostly conservative) when referring to key politicians (e.g. current and former Presidents, leaders of major political parties) or handful of countries (e.g. China, Japan, US, UK) as an abbreviation. Otherwise, Hanja is exclusively used for academic, historical and religious purposes. Roman alphabet is the de facto secondary writing system in South Korea especially for loan words and is widely used in day-to-day and official communication. There are more than 78 million speakers of the Korean language worldwide.[53]

Demographics

 
Traditional Korean royal wedding ceremony with the male royal wearing royal costume

Large-scale emigration from Korea began as early as the mid-1860s, mainly into the Russian Far East and Northeast China (also historically known by the exonym Manchuria); these populations would later grow to more than two million Koreans in China and several hundred thousand Koryo-saram (ethnic Koreans in Central Asia and the former USSR).[54][55] During the Korea under Japanese rule of 1910–1945, Koreans were often recruited and or forced into labour service to work in mainland Japan, Karafuto Prefecture (Sakhalin), and Manchukuo; the ones who chose to remain in Japan at the end of the war became known as Zainichi Koreans, while the roughly 40,000 Koreans who were trapped in Karafuto after the Soviet invasion are typically referred to as Sakhalin Koreans.[56][57]

South Korea

In June 2012, South Korea's population reached 50 million[58] and by the end of 2016, South Korea's population has surpassed 51 million people.[59] Since the 2000s, South Korea has been struggling with a low birthrate, leading some researchers to suggest that if current population trends hold, the country's population will shrink to approximately 38 million population towards the end of the 21st century.[60] In 2018, fertility in South Korea became again a topic of international debate after only 26,500 babies were born in October and an estimated of 325,000 babies in the year, causing the country to have the lowest birth rate in the world.[61][62][63]

North Korea

 
North Korean soldiers wearing Soviet-inspired uniform in the Joint Security Area

Estimating the size, growth rate, sex ratio, and age structure of North Korea's population has been extremely difficult. Until release of official data in 1989, the 1963 edition of the North Korea Central Yearbook was the last official publication to disclose population figures. After 1963 demographers used varying methods to estimate the population. They either totalled the number of delegates elected to the Supreme People's Assembly (each delegate representing 50,000 people before 1962 and 30,000 people afterwards) or relied on official statements that a certain number of persons, or percentage of the population, was engaged in a particular activity. Thus, on the basis of remarks made by President Kim Il-sung in 1977 concerning school attendance, the population that year was calculated at 17.2 million persons. During the 1980s, health statistics, including life expectancy and causes of mortality, were gradually made available to the outside world.[64]

In 1989, the Central Bureau of Statistics released demographic data to the United Nations Population Fund in order to secure the UNFPA's assistance in holding North Korea's first nationwide census since the establishment of the state in 1948. Although the figures given to the United Nations might have been distorted, it appears that in line with other attempts to open itself to the outside world, the North Korean regime has also opened somewhat in the demographic realm. Although the country lacks trained demographers, accurate data on household registration, migration, and births and deaths are available to North Korean authorities. According to the United States scholar Nicholas Eberstadt and demographer Brian Ko, vital statistics and personal information on residents are kept by agencies on the ri ("village", the local administrative unit) level in rural areas and the dong ("district" or "block") level in urban areas.[64]

Korean diaspora

Korean emigration to the U.S. was known to have begun as early as 1903, but the Korean American community did not grow to a significant size until after the passage of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965; as of 2017, excluding the undocumented and uncounted, roughly 1.85 million Koreans emigrants and people of Korean descent live in the United States according to the official figure by the US Census.[65] The Greater Los Angeles Area and New York metropolitan area in the United States contain the largest populations of ethnic Koreans outside of Korea or China. The Korean population in the United States represents a small share of the American economy, but has a disproportionately positive impact.[citation needed] Korean Americans have a savings rate double that of the U.S. average and also graduate from college at a rate double that of the U.S. average, providing highly skilled and educated professionals to the American workforce.[citation needed] According to the U.S. Census Bureau's Census 2000 data, mean household earnings for ethnic Koreans in the U.S. was $59,981, approximately 5.1% higher than the U.S. average at the time of $56,604.[66]

Significant Korean populations are present in China, Japan, Argentina, Brazil and Canada as well. The number of Koreans in Indonesia grew during the 1980s, while during the 1990s and 2000s the number of Koreans in the Philippines and Koreans in Vietnam have also grown significantly.[67][68] In Central Asia, significant populations reside in Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan, as well as parts of Russia including the Far East. Known as Koryo-saram, many of these are ancestors of Koreans who were forcely deported during the Soviet Union's Stalin regime.[69] The Korean overseas community of Uzbekistan is the 5th largest outside Korea.[4]

Koreans in the United Kingdom now form Western Europe's largest Korean community, albeit still relatively small; Koreans in Germany used to outnumber those in the UK until the late 1990s. In Australia, Korean Australians comprise a modest minority. Koreans have migrated[where?] significantly since the 1960s.

Part-Korean populations

Pak Noja said that there were 5,747 Japanese-Korean couples in Korea at the end of 1941.[70] Pak Cheil estimated there to be 70,000 to 80,000 "semi-Koreans" in Japan in the years immediately after the war.[71] Many of them remained in Japan as Zainichi Koreans, maintaining their Korean heritage. However, due to assimilation, their numbers are much lower in recent times.

Kopinos are people of mixed Filipino and Korean descent. The proliferation of Kopinos in the Philippines has been a source of controversy as many Kopinos are born to South Korean fathers who impregnate Filipino women and then abandon them.[72] The 'Mixed Filipino Heritage Act of 2020' estimated there were around 30,000 Kopinos.[73]

Lai Đại Hàn is a Vietnamese term referring to mixed children born to South Korean men and Vietnamese women during the Vietnam War. These children were largely conceived as the result of wartime rape. No exact data is available on the number of Korean-Vietnamese because many of them choose to conceal their roots, but an estimate by a Korean scholar says the number of Lai Dai Han around the world is at least 5,000.[74]

Gallery

See also

References

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    While pottery styles clearly differ between northeast China and the Korean Peninsula, an influx of northeast Chinese pottery styles into Korea has not been detected, and the styles of the two areas remain distinct long after the appearance of millet with little change in Chulmun pottery styles over time. ...

    However, as outlined above, because the Korean Peninsula was already occupied by Chulmun hunter–fisher–gatherers since at least 6000 BCE, a key to evaluating the millet hypothesis is determining whether millet was adopted by the Chulmun foragers (diffusion) or whether it was brought along as a part of a large-scale migration of farmers from Liaoning. If millet was introduced as a result of a large-scale migration of farmers from Liaoning, an archaeologically detectable influx of Liaoning culture and changes in material culture after the introduction of millet should be expected, because vessel shape, manufacturing technology and the design layout and motifs of Korean Chulmun pottery markedly differ from those of Liaoning pottery. However, there is no detectable appearance of elements of Liaoning material culture that accompanies the arrival of millets. ...

    Even if millet was brought by some migrants from northeast China to Korea, archaeological evidence demonstrates that the scale of migration was probably not large enough to lead to a fundamental linguistic change or the dispersal of a linguistic family.
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  47. ^ Eugene Y. Park. (n.d.). Penn Arts & Sciences East Asian Languages and Civilizations. Retrieved 24 January 2018, from link. 11 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  48. ^ Eugene Y. Park, from the 7:06 mark of the YouTube video to the 7:38 mark of the YouTube video, said, "Secondly, on the one hand, so many Koreans seem to talk, to be able to tell, one, something about his or her Gyeongju Kim ancestors, of a Silla kingdom two-thousand years ago. And yet, such a person is unlikely to be able to tell you something about his or her great-great-grandparents, what they were doing hundred years ago, what their occupations were, where they were living, where their family graves are. In other words, a memory blackout, before the twentieth century."
  49. ^ Eugene Y. Park, from the 16:54 mark of the YouTube video to the 18:54 mark of the YouTube video, said, "So, from this point on, then, I would like to survey, how the Koreans descended. Koreans, depending on their ancestors' status category, have dealt with genealogy and ancestry consciousness, in the last, differently, in the last two centuries. And, of course, most Koreans are not descendants of aristocrats, but, the, but what happened in the last hundred fifty, hundred to hundred fifty years, is that those Koreans, the vast majority of Koreans have lost memory of their actual history, in the sense where now, any outside observer who might ask a Korean person about ancestry, would be left with the impression that every Korean is now of aristocratic descent. So let me begin with the aristocracy. In the early modern era, the kind of a master narrative, stories that purport to explain a particular surname-ancestral seat combination's history, crystallize, they became set in stone, through inventing tradition. In the seventeenth and eighteenth century, many, all families devise such a stories, to the extent where, now today in Korea, anybody who is interested in tracing his or her ancestry, has to deal with such master narratives, but at the same time it is next to impossible to look beyond master narratives. In other words, in Korea, today, there's little sense of doing the kind of doing the genealogical research that you and I would do in the United States, by looking at Census documents, and other types of documentation, that have been passed down through generations, or, have been maintained by the government."
  50. ^ Eugene Y. Park, from the 28:32 mark of the YouTube video to the 29:21 mark of the YouTube video, said, "This is an example. Here we see records that gives us a better sense of what inventing tradition was like. Here, a page from an eighteen seventy-three Miryang Pak family genealogy. Here's a man, indicated inside the circle named, Ju (冑). He had three sons: Eun-gyeong, Hyeon-gyeong, Won-gyeong (子 恩 慶, 子 賢 慶, 子 元 慶). But the edition that was published a bit later in the nineteen twenty, so we see the same man, Ju, and, under him, we see sons: Eun-gyeong, Hyeon-gyeong, Won-gyeong and, the extra, the fourth son, out of nowhere, Tōkhwa (子 徳 華). Actually, this is my family. So, this was commonly done in the modern era, the children, son out of nowhere or claims that we were left out centuries ago, and please include us."
  51. ^ Eugene Y. Park, from the 18:55 mark of the YouTube video to the 19:30 mark of the YouTube video, said, "And, these master narratives, genealogically connect all descent lines of a same surname and ancestral seat, to a single, common, ancestor. And, this was the pattern that was, that became universal by the nineteenth century. Whereas, genealogies published in the seventeenth century, actually, frankly admit that we do not know how these different lines of the same surname or ancestral seat are related or connected at all. So, all these changes took place only in the last two hundred years or so."
  52. ^ Eugene Y. Park, from the 46:17 mark of the YouTube video to the 47:02 mark of the YouTube video, said, "At any rate, so, once, so, based on one's surname Kim, let's say, and the ancestral seat, Kimhae, which is the most common ancestral seat among Kim surname Koreans, one can then look up, consult reference books, encyclopedias, go online to, find all these stories about different branches, famous individuals who are Kimhae Kim. But the problem is, of course, before the early modern era, only a small percentage of Koreans had surnames and the ancestral seat to begin with. In other words, the rest of the population had adopted these identities in the last two-three hundred years, so where does one go from there? And, this was definitely my challenge when I was a child."
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  55. ^ Kim, Si-joong (2003). "The Economic Status and Role of Ethnic Koreans in China" (PDF). The Korean Diaspora in the World Economy. Institute for International Economics. pp. Ch. 6: 101–131.
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  58. ^ . 22 July 2012. Archived from the original on 28 August 2013.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  59. ^ "Population, total | Data". data.worldbank.org. Retrieved 12 April 2018.
  60. ^ These estimates are based on UN population division of 2017 version.
  61. ^ "S. Korea's childbirth tally drops to another historic low in October …". archive.fo. 23 January 2019. Archived from the original on 23 January 2019. Retrieved 23 January 2019.
  62. ^ "South Korea's fertility rate is the lowest in the world". The Economist. 30 June 2018. Retrieved 23 January 2019.
  63. ^ "Fertility rate dips below 1 in 2018: official". archive.fo. 30 January 2019. Archived from the original on 30 January 2019. Retrieved 30 January 2019.
  64. ^ a b   This article incorporates public domain material from Savada, Andreas Matles, ed. (1994). North Korea: A Country Study. Library of Congress Country Studies. Retrieved 27 July 2013.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) Fourth ed. Washington: Federal Research Division of the Library of Congress. ISBN 0-8444-0794-1.[page needed]
  65. ^ "KoreanAmericanStory.org". KoreanAmericanStory.org.
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  68. ^ Meinardus, Ronaldo (15 December 2005). . The Korea Times. Archived from the original on 13 January 2006. Retrieved 16 February 2007.
  69. ^ Pohl 1999, p. 11
  70. ^ Tikhonov, Vladimir. (2013). Korean-Japanese Marriages in 1920s-40s Korean Prose. University of Texas at Austin Center for East Asian Studies. Retrieved 31 May 2017, from link.
  71. ^ Lie, John. (2008). Zainichi (Koreans in Japan): Diasporic Nationalism and Postcolonial Identity. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 89. Retrieved 31 May 2017, from link.
  72. ^ "Blog Reveals Identities of Korean Men Who Have Abandoned "Kopino" Children in the Philippines". Soompi. 11 January 2016. Retrieved 3 September 2022.
  73. ^ "MIXED FILIPINO HERITAGE ACT OF 2020".
  74. ^ Hyun-ju, Ock (27 November 2019). "[Feature] Lai Dai Han people still seeking apology, roots in Korea". The Korea Herald. Retrieved 3 September 2022.

Sources

  • 서의식; 강봉룡. 뿌리 깊은 한국사, 샘이 깊은 이야기: 고조선, 삼국. ISBN 89-8133-536-2.
  • Barnes, Gina Lee (1993). The Rise of Civilization in East Asia: The Archaeology of China, Korea and Japan. Thames and Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-27974-8.
  • Nelson, Sarah M. (1993). The Archaeology of Korea. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-40783-0.

Further reading

  • Breen, Michael (2004). The Koreans: Who They Are, What They Want, Where Their Future Lies. New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-1-4668-6449-8.

External links

  •   Media related to Koreans at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Quotations related to Koreans at Wikiquote
  • Korean American Museum

koreans, south, korean, 한민족, 한국인, 한국사람, 韓民族, 韓國人, 韓國사람, minjok, ethnic, hanguk, people, nation, hanguksaram, north, korean, 조선민족, 조선인, 조선사람, 朝鮮民族, 朝鮮人, 朝鮮사람, joseon, minjok, ethnic, joseon, people, joseonsaram, names, korea, east, asian, ethnic, group, native,. Koreans South Korean 한민족 한국인 한국사람 韓民族 韓國人 韓國사람 Han minjok ethnic Hanguk in people of the Han nation Hanguksaram North Korean 조선민족 조선인 조선사람 朝鮮民族 朝鮮人 朝鮮사람 Joseon minjok ethnic Joseon in people Joseonsaram see names of Korea are an East Asian ethnic group native to the Korean Peninsula 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Koreans조선인 한국인Total populationc 85 million 1 Regions with significant populations South Korea 51 709 098 2 North Korea 25 778 815 3 Diaspora as of 2021 update c 7 3 million 4 United States2 633 777 4 China2 350 422 4 Japan818 865 4 Canada237 364 4 Uzbekistan175 865 4 Russia168 526 4 Australia158 103 4 Vietnam156 330 4 Kazakhstan109 495 4 Germany47 428 4 United Kingdom36 690 4 Brazil36 540 4 New Zealand33 812 4 Philippines33 032 4 France25 417 4 Argentina22 847 4 Singapore20 983 4 Thailand18 130 4 Kyrgyzstan18 106 4 Indonesia17 297 4 Malaysia13 667 4 Ukraine13 524 4 Sweden13 055 4 Mexico11 107 4 India10 674 4 Cambodia10 608 4 United Arab Emirates9 642 4 Netherlands9 473 4 Denmark8 694 4 Norway7 744 4 LanguagesKorean 5 Jejuan Korean SignReligionPredominantly irreligiousKorean shamanic Christian or Buddhist minoritiesRelated ethnic groupsJeju ManchusKoreans mainly live in the two Korean nation states North Korea and South Korea collectively and simply referred to as just Korea They are also an officially recognized ethnic minority in other Asian countries such as China Japan Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan Koreans also form sizeable communities in Europe specifically in Russia Germany United Kingdom and France Over the course of the 20th century Korean communities have also formed in the Americas especially in the United States and Canada and Oceania As of 2021 there were an estimated 7 3 million ethnic Koreans residing outside Korea 4 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Origins 2 1 Linguistic and archaeological studies 2 2 Anthropometry 2 2 1 Craniometry 2 3 Genetics 2 4 Genealogy 3 Culture 4 Language 5 Demographics 5 1 South Korea 5 2 North Korea 5 3 Korean diaspora 5 4 Part Korean populations 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksEtymology EditSee also Names of Korea South Koreans refer to themselves as Hanguk in Korean 한국인 Hanja 韓國人 or Hanguk saram Korean 한국 사람 both of which mean people of the Han When including members of the Korean diaspora Koreans often use the term Han in Korean 한인 Hanja 韓人 English People of Han Korean Americans refer to themselves as Han gukgye Migukin Korean 한국계 미국인 Hanja 韓國系美國人 English Korean Americans North Koreans refer to themselves as Joseon in Korean 조선인 Hanja 朝鮮人 or Joseon saram Korean 조선 사람 both of which literally mean People of Joseon The term Joseon is derived from the Joseon dynasty a Korean kingdom founded by Lee Seong gye that lasted for approximately five centuries from 1392 to 1910 Using similar words Koreans in China refer to themselves as Chaoxianzu Chinese 朝鲜族 in Chinese or Joseonjok Joseonsaram Korean 조선족 조선사람 in Korean which are cognates that literally mean Joseon ethnic group Koreans in Japan refer to themselves as Zainichi Chousenjin Chousenjin Japanese 在日朝鮮人 朝鮮人 in Japanese or Jaeil Joseonin Joseonsaram Joseonin Korean 재일조선인 조선사람 조선인 in Korean Ethnic Koreans living in Russia and Central Asia refer to themselves as Koryo saram Korean 고려사람 Cyrillic Koryo saram alluding to Goryeo a Korean dynasty spanning from 918 to 1392 In the chorus of the South Korean national anthem Koreans are referred to as Daehan saram Korean 대한사람 which means The People of Great Han In an interkorean context such as when dealing with the Korean language s or the Korean ethnicity as a whole additionally the term HanGyeoRe Korean 한계레 lit Nations People of Han Pronunciation Han gyŏ rye is used Origins EditLinguistic and archaeological studies Edit Modern Koreans are suggested to be the descendants of a prehistoric group of people from Southern Siberia Manchuria who moved to the northern Korean Peninsula 15 16 page needed verification needed as well as Koreanized indigenous populations in the southern part of the peninsula Archaeological evidence suggests that Proto Koreans were migrants from Manchuria during the Bronze Age 17 According to most linguists and archaeologists with expertise in ancient Korea the linguistic homeland of Proto Korean and of early Koreans is located somewhere in Southern Siberia Manchuria such the Liao river area or the Amur region Later Koreanic speakers migrated to northern Korea and started to expand further south replacing and assimilating Japonic speakers and likely causing the Yayoi migration 18 19 Whitman 2012 suggests that the Proto Koreans arrived in the southern part of the Korean Peninsula at around 300 BCE and coexisted with the descendants of the Japonic Mumun cultivators or assimilated them 20 Vovin suggests Proto Korean is equivalent to the variant of Koreanic languages spoken in southern Siberia Manchuria and northern Korean peninsula by the time of the Three Kingdoms of Korea period and spread to southern Korea through influence from Goguryeo migrants 21 However a number of Korean scholars such as Jangsuk Kim and Jinho Park reject the view that the Korean speakers were not native to the Korean Peninsula and argue that no solid evidence of such linguistic migration shift as well as population and material change in the peninsular region has ever been found to support such view 22 The largest concentration of dolmens in the world is found on the Korean Peninsula In fact with an estimated 35 000 100 000 dolmen 23 Korea accounts for nearly 40 of the world s total Similar dolmens can be found in Manchuria the Shandong Peninsula and the Kyushu island yet it is unclear why this culture only flourished so extensively on the Korean Peninsula and its surroundings compared to the bigger remainder of Northeastern Asia Anthropometry Edit Stephen Pheasant 1986 who taught anatomy biomechanics and ergonomics at the Royal Free Hospital and the University College London said that Far Eastern people have proportionately shorter lower limbs than Europeans and black Africans Pheasant said that the proportionately short lower limbs of Far Eastern people is a difference that is most characterized in Japanese people less characterized in Korean and Chinese people and the least characterized in Vietnamese and Thai people 24 25 Neville Moray 2005 said that for Korean and Japanese pilots sitting height is more than 54 of their stature with about 46 of their stature from leg length Moray said that for Americans and most Europeans sitting height is about 52 of their stature with about 48 of their stature from leg length 26 Craniometry Edit In a craniometric study Pietrusewsky 1994 found that the Japanese series which was a series that spanned from the Yayoi period to modern times formed a single branch with Korea 27 Later Pietrusewsky 1999 found however that Korean and Yayoi people were very highly separated in the East Asian cluster indicating that the connection that Japanese have with Korea would not have derived from Yayoi people 27 Park Dae kyoon et al 2001 said that distance analysis based on thirty nine non metric cranial traits showed that Koreans are closer craniometrically to Kazakhs and Mongols than Koreans are close craniometrically to the populations in China and Japan 28 Genetics Edit Main article Genetic history of East Asians Koreans display high frequencies of the Y DNA haplogroups O2 M122 approximately 40 of all present day Korean males O1b2 M176 approximately 30 and C2 M217 approximately 15 29 Some regional variance may exist in a study of South Korean Y DNA published in 2011 the ratio of O2 M122 to O1b2 M176 is greatest in Seoul Gyeonggi 1 8065 with the ratio declining in a counterclockwise direction around South Korea Chungcheong 1 6364 Jeolla 1 3929 Jeju 1 3571 Gyeongsang 1 2400 Gangwon 0 9600 30 31 32 33 34 Haplogroup C2 M217 tends to be found in about 13 of males from most regions of South Korea but it is somewhat more common about 17 among males from the Gyeongsang region in the southeast of the peninsula and somewhat less common about 7 among males from Jeju located off the southwest coast of the peninsula 35 Haplogroup C2 M217 has been found in a greater proportion about 26 of a small sample n 19 of males from North Korea 36 37 However haplogroups are not a reliable indicator of an individual s overall ancestry Koreans are more similar to one another in regard to their autosomes than they are similar to members of other ethnic groups Koreans along with Japanese and Tungusic speakers are generally considered a Northeast Asian group The mitochondrial DNA markers mtDNA haplogroups and HVR I sequences of Korean populations showed close relationships with Manchurians Japanese Mongolians and northern Han Chinese but not with Southern East Asians Y chromosomal distances showed a close relationship to most East Asian groups including Southeast Asian ones 38 Ancient genome comparisons revealed that the genetic makeup of Koreans can be best described as an admixture of the Neolithic Devil s Gate genome in the Amur region in the Russian Far East adjacent to North Korea as well as that of rice farming agriculturalists from the Yangtze river valley which in turn are often linked to O2 M122 39 The results from the findings in the Devil s Gate showed that the ancient populations of the area were already admixed from both Northern East Asian and Southern East Asian groups These groups correlate closely to modern Koreanic and Japonic who form a cluster in regional comparisons along with various Tungusic groups 40 East Asians including Northern groups Mongolic Turkic Uralic Koreanic Ainuic Tungusic Paleosiberian Amerindian and Japonic and Southern ones Mainland Southeast Asians Insular Southeast Asians are closer related to another than other population groups and can trace themselves to a common ancestry from several tens of thousands of years ago 41 Studies of polymorphisms in the human Y chromosome have so far produced evidence to suggest that the Korean people have a long history as a distinct mostly endogamous ethnic group with successive prehistoric waves of people moving to the peninsula and two major Y chromosome haplogroups 42 Koreans show a close genetic relationship with other modern East Asians such as the Han Chinese and Yamato Japanese 8 9 11 43 44 and with Neolithic specimens recovered from Chertovy Vorota Cave in Primorsky Krai who themselves are the closest genetic relatives to the Udege and the Hezhen 10 The reference population for Koreans used in Geno 2 0 Next Generation is 94 Eastern Asia and 5 Southeast Asia amp Oceania 45 According to a genetic distance measurements from a large scale genetic study from 2021 titled Genomic insights into the formation of human populations in East Asia Koreans are genetically closest to Japanese followed by a larger margin by Northern Han on FST genetic distance measurements 46 Genealogy Edit Korea Foundation Associate Professor of History Eugene Y Park said that many Koreans seem to have a genealogical memory blackout before the twentieth century 47 48 According to him the vast majority Koreans do not know their actual genealogical history Through inventing tradition in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries families devised a kind of master narrative story that purports to explain a surname ancestral seat combination s history to the extent where it is next to impossible to look beyond these master narrative stories 49 He gave an example of what inventing tradition was like from his own family s genealogy where a document from 1873 recorded three children in a particular family and a later 1920 document recorded an extra son in that same family 50 Park said that these master narratives connect the same surname and ancestral seat to a single common ancestor This trend became universal in the nineteenth century but genealogies which were published in the seventeenth century actually admit that they did not know how the different lines of the same surname or ancestral seat are related at all 51 Only a small percentage of Koreans had surnames and ancestral seats to begin with and that the rest of the Korean population had adopted these surname and ancestral seat identities within the last two to three hundred years 52 Culture EditMain articles Culture of Korea Culture of North Korea and Culture of South Korea North Korea and South Korea share a common heritage but the political division since 1945 has resulted in some divergence of their modern cultures citation needed Language EditMain articles Korean language and Hangul The language of the Korean people is the Korean language which uses Hangul as its main writing system Daily usage of Hanja has been phased out in Korean peninsula other than usage by selected South Korean media companies mostly conservative when referring to key politicians e g current and former Presidents leaders of major political parties or handful of countries e g China Japan US UK as an abbreviation Otherwise Hanja is exclusively used for academic historical and religious purposes Roman alphabet is the de facto secondary writing system in South Korea especially for loan words and is widely used in day to day and official communication There are more than 78 million speakers of the Korean language worldwide 53 Demographics Edit Traditional Korean royal wedding ceremony with the male royal wearing royal costume Main articles Korean diaspora and Demographics of South Korea Large scale emigration from Korea began as early as the mid 1860s mainly into the Russian Far East and Northeast China also historically known by the exonym Manchuria these populations would later grow to more than two million Koreans in China and several hundred thousand Koryo saram ethnic Koreans in Central Asia and the former USSR 54 55 During the Korea under Japanese rule of 1910 1945 Koreans were often recruited and or forced into labour service to work in mainland Japan Karafuto Prefecture Sakhalin and Manchukuo the ones who chose to remain in Japan at the end of the war became known as Zainichi Koreans while the roughly 40 000 Koreans who were trapped in Karafuto after the Soviet invasion are typically referred to as Sakhalin Koreans 56 57 South Korea Edit In June 2012 South Korea s population reached 50 million 58 and by the end of 2016 South Korea s population has surpassed 51 million people 59 Since the 2000s South Korea has been struggling with a low birthrate leading some researchers to suggest that if current population trends hold the country s population will shrink to approximately 38 million population towards the end of the 21st century 60 In 2018 fertility in South Korea became again a topic of international debate after only 26 500 babies were born in October and an estimated of 325 000 babies in the year causing the country to have the lowest birth rate in the world 61 62 63 North Korea Edit Further information Demographics of North Korea North Korean soldiers wearing Soviet inspired uniform in the Joint Security Area Estimating the size growth rate sex ratio and age structure of North Korea s population has been extremely difficult Until release of official data in 1989 the 1963 edition of the North Korea Central Yearbook was the last official publication to disclose population figures After 1963 demographers used varying methods to estimate the population They either totalled the number of delegates elected to the Supreme People s Assembly each delegate representing 50 000 people before 1962 and 30 000 people afterwards or relied on official statements that a certain number of persons or percentage of the population was engaged in a particular activity Thus on the basis of remarks made by President Kim Il sung in 1977 concerning school attendance the population that year was calculated at 17 2 million persons During the 1980s health statistics including life expectancy and causes of mortality were gradually made available to the outside world 64 In 1989 the Central Bureau of Statistics released demographic data to the United Nations Population Fund in order to secure the UNFPA s assistance in holding North Korea s first nationwide census since the establishment of the state in 1948 Although the figures given to the United Nations might have been distorted it appears that in line with other attempts to open itself to the outside world the North Korean regime has also opened somewhat in the demographic realm Although the country lacks trained demographers accurate data on household registration migration and births and deaths are available to North Korean authorities According to the United States scholar Nicholas Eberstadt and demographer Brian Ko vital statistics and personal information on residents are kept by agencies on the ri village the local administrative unit level in rural areas and the dong district or block level in urban areas 64 Korean diaspora Edit Korean emigration to the U S was known to have begun as early as 1903 but the Korean American community did not grow to a significant size until after the passage of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 as of 2017 excluding the undocumented and uncounted roughly 1 85 million Koreans emigrants and people of Korean descent live in the United States according to the official figure by the US Census 65 The Greater Los Angeles Area and New York metropolitan area in the United States contain the largest populations of ethnic Koreans outside of Korea or China The Korean population in the United States represents a small share of the American economy but has a disproportionately positive impact citation needed Korean Americans have a savings rate double that of the U S average and also graduate from college at a rate double that of the U S average providing highly skilled and educated professionals to the American workforce citation needed According to the U S Census Bureau s Census 2000 data mean household earnings for ethnic Koreans in the U S was 59 981 approximately 5 1 higher than the U S average at the time of 56 604 66 Significant Korean populations are present in China Japan Argentina Brazil and Canada as well The number of Koreans in Indonesia grew during the 1980s while during the 1990s and 2000s the number of Koreans in the Philippines and Koreans in Vietnam have also grown significantly 67 68 In Central Asia significant populations reside in Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan as well as parts of Russia including the Far East Known as Koryo saram many of these are ancestors of Koreans who were forcely deported during the Soviet Union s Stalin regime 69 The Korean overseas community of Uzbekistan is the 5th largest outside Korea 4 Koreans in the United Kingdom now form Western Europe s largest Korean community albeit still relatively small Koreans in Germany used to outnumber those in the UK until the late 1990s In Australia Korean Australians comprise a modest minority Koreans have migrated where significantly since the 1960s Part Korean populations Edit Pak Noja said that there were 5 747 Japanese Korean couples in Korea at the end of 1941 70 Pak Cheil estimated there to be 70 000 to 80 000 semi Koreans in Japan in the years immediately after the war 71 Many of them remained in Japan as Zainichi Koreans maintaining their Korean heritage However due to assimilation their numbers are much lower in recent times Kopinos are people of mixed Filipino and Korean descent The proliferation of Kopinos in the Philippines has been a source of controversy as many Kopinos are born to South Korean fathers who impregnate Filipino women and then abandon them 72 The Mixed Filipino Heritage Act of 2020 estimated there were around 30 000 Kopinos 73 Lai Đại Han is a Vietnamese term referring to mixed children born to South Korean men and Vietnamese women during the Vietnam War These children were largely conceived as the result of wartime rape No exact data is available on the number of Korean Vietnamese because many of them choose to conceal their roots but an estimate by a Korean scholar says the number of Lai Dai Han around the world is at least 5 000 74 Gallery Edit Korean girls in traditional costume Women in traditional costume South Korean woman dressed as a Joseon queen A traditional style Korean wedding in November 2006 with the bride in a Korean costume and the groom in a Korean costume that is also worn by palace officials and royal men since the Unified Silla Kingdom period Korean men 1871 Young Korean man of the middle class 1904 Korean mother and daughter 1910 1920See also Edit North Korea portal South Korea portalDemographics of South Korea Ethnic groups in Asia History of Korea Koreatown List of people of Korean descentReferences Edit Korean Peninsula 51 71 million 25 78 million Korean diaspora 7 5 million Kosis 100대 지표 Worldbank 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag 재외동포현황 2021 Total number of overseas Koreans 2021 South Korea Ministry of Foreign Affairs 2021 Retrieved 21 August 2022 Koreans at Ethnologue 17th ed 2013 1 dead link Julian Ryall Tokyo 31 May 2016 Polish firms employing North Korean slave labourers benefit from EU aid Telegraph co uk Retrieved 6 June 2019 a b Horai Satoshi Murayama Kumiko 1996 mtDNA Polymorphism in East Asian Populations with Special Reference to the Peopling of Japan American Journal of Human Genetics Cambridge Massachusetts Cell Press 59 3 579 590 PMC 1914908 PMID 8751859 a b Yi SoJeong An Hyungmi Lee Howard Lee Sangin 2014 Ancestry informative SNP panels for discriminating the major East Asian populations Han Chinese Japanese and Korean Annals of Human Genetics Cambridge John Wiley amp Sons published 2013 35 10 477 485 doi 10 1097 FPC 0000000000000075 PMID 25029633 a b Siska Veronika Jones Eppie Ruth Jeon Sungwon Bhak Youngjune Kim Hak Min Cho Yun Sung Kim Hyunho Lee Kyusang Veselovskaya Elizaveta Balueva Tatiana Gallego Llorente Marcos Hofreiter Michael Bradley Daniel G Eriksson Anders Pinhasi Ron Bhak Jong Manica Andrea 2017 Genome wide data from two early Neolithic East Asian individuals dating to 7700 years ago Science Advances published 1 February 2017 3 2 e1601877 Bibcode 2017SciA 3E1877S doi 10 1126 sciadv 1601877 PMC 5287702 PMID 28164156 a b Wang Yuchen Lu Dongsheng Chung Yeun Jun Xu Shuhua 2018 Genetic structure divergence and admixture of Han Chinese Japanese and Korean populations Hereditas published 6 April 2018 155 19 doi 10 1186 s41065 018 0057 5 PMC 5889524 PMID 29636655 Kim Jinwung 22 March 2018 A History of Korea From Land of the Morning Calm to States in Conflict Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253000248 via Google Books Lee Seokwoo 2016 The Making of International Law in Korea From Colony to Asian Power p 321 ISBN 978 9004315785 Kim Hyunjin 21 May 2009 Ethnicity and Foreigners in Ancient Greece and China Bloomsbury Academic p 140 Nelson Sarah M The Archaeology of Korea 한민족 Korean people Doosan Encyclopaedia in Korean Retrieved 9 March 2007 via NAVER Corp Ahn Sung Mo June 2010 The emergence of rice agriculture in Korea archaeobotanical perspectives Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences 2 2 89 98 doi 10 1007 s12520 010 0029 9 S2CID 129727300 Janhunen Juha 2010 RReconstructing the Language Map of Prehistorical Northeast Asia Studia Orientalia 108 there are strong indications that the neighbouring Baekje state in the southwest was predominantly Japonic speaking until it was linguistically Koreanized Vovin Alexander 31 December 2013 From Koguryǒ to T amna Slowly riding to the South with speakers of Proto Korean Korean Linguistics 15 2 217 235 doi 10 1075 kl 15 2 03vov Whitman John 1 December 2011 Northeast Asian Linguistic Ecology and the Advent of Rice Agriculture in Korea and Japan Rice 4 3 149 158 doi 10 1007 s12284 011 9080 0 Vovin Alexander 2008 From Koguryo to Tamna Slowly Riding to the South with Speakers of Proto Korean Korean Linguistics 15 Linguistic evidence indicates speakers of Kim Jangsuk Park Jinho 2020 Millet vs rice an evaluation of the farming language dispersal hypothesis in the Korean context Evolutionary Human Sciences Cambridge University Press 2 doi 10 1017 ehs 2020 13 ISSN 2513 843X He also suggests that the arrival of Koreanic in Korea was associated with the spread of the Korean style bronze dagger culture from present day northeast China to Korea around 300 BCE While pottery styles clearly differ between northeast China and the Korean Peninsula an influx of northeast Chinese pottery styles into Korea has not been detected and the styles of the two areas remain distinct long after the appearance of millet with little change in Chulmun pottery styles over time However as outlined above because the Korean Peninsula was already occupied by Chulmun hunter fisher gatherers since at least 6000 BCE a key to evaluating the millet hypothesis is determining whether millet was adopted by the Chulmun foragers diffusion or whether it was brought along as a part of a large scale migration of farmers from Liaoning If millet was introduced as a result of a large scale migration of farmers from Liaoning an archaeologically detectable influx of Liaoning culture and changes in material culture after the introduction of millet should be expected because vessel shape manufacturing technology and the design layout and motifs of Korean Chulmun pottery markedly differ from those of Liaoning pottery However there is no detectable appearance of elements of Liaoning material culture that accompanies the arrival of millets Even if millet was brought by some migrants from northeast China to Korea archaeological evidence demonstrates that the scale of migration was probably not large enough to lead to a fundamental linguistic change or the dispersal of a linguistic family Nelson 1993 p 147 Pheasant Stephen 2002 Bodyspace Taylor amp Francis p 159 ISBN 978 1 135 75035 0 Buckle Peter 1996 Obituary Work amp Stress 10 3 282 doi 10 1080 02678379608256807 Moray Neville 2005 Ergonomics The history and scope of human factors London and New York Taylor amp Francis p 298 ISBN 0 415 32258 8 a b Kumar Ann 2009 Globalizing the Prehistory of Japan Language Genes and Civilisation London and New York Routledge Taylor amp Francis Group Page 79 amp 88 Retrieved 23 January 2018 from link Park Dae kyoon et al 2001 Non metric Traits of Korean Skulls Korean Journal of Physical Anthropology 14 2 117 doi 10 11637 kjpa 2001 14 2 117 Kim Soon Hee Kim Ki Cheol Shin Dong Jik Jin Han Jun Kwak Kyoung Don Han Myun Soo Song Joon Myong Kim Won Kim Wook 4 April 2011 High frequencies of Y chromosome haplogroup O2b SRY465 lineages in Korea a genetic perspective on the peopling of Korea Investigative Genetics 2 1 10 doi 10 1186 2041 2223 2 10 PMC 3087676 PMID 21463511 Kim Wook April 2011 High frequencies of Y chromosome haplogroup O2b SRY465 lineages in Korea a genetic perspective on the peopling of Korea Investigative Genetics 2 10 10 doi 10 1186 2041 2223 2 10 PMC 3087676 PMID 21463511 Hong Shi 14 July 2005 Y Chromosome Evidence of Southern Origin of the East Asian Specific Haplogroup O3 M122 The American Journal of Human Genetics 77 3 408 419 doi 10 1086 444436 PMC 1226206 PMID 16080116 Hwang Jung Hee 20 June 2008 A MELAS syndrome family harboring two mutations in mitochondrial genome Korean Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 40 3 354 360 doi 10 3858 emm 2008 40 3 354 PMC 2679288 PMID 18587274 Jeong Choongwon Wang Ke Wilkin Shevan Taylor William Timothy Treal Miller Bryan K Bemmann Jan H Stahl Raphaela Chiovelli Chelsea Knolle Florian Ulziibayar Sodnom Khatanbaatar Dorjpurev Erdenebaatar Diimaajav Erdenebat Ulambayar Ochir Ayudai Ankhsanaa Ganbold Vanchigdash Chuluunkhuu Ochir Battuga Munkhbayar Chuluunbat Tumen Dashzeveg Kovalev Alexey Kradin Nikolay Bazarov Bilikto A Miyagashev Denis A Konovalov Prokopiy B Zhambaltarova Elena Miller Alicia Ventresca Haak Wolfgang Schiffels Stephan Krause Johannes Boivin Nicole Erdene Myagmar Hendy Jessica Warinner Christina November 2020 A Dynamic 6 000 Year Genetic History of Eurasia s Eastern Steppe Cell 183 4 890 904 e29 doi 10 1016 j cell 2020 10 015 PMC 7664836 PMID 33157037 Guo Fei Song Liqu Zhang Longnian May 2016 Population genetics for 17 Y STR loci in Korean ethnic minority from Liaoning Province Northeast China Forensic Science International Genetics 22 e9 e11 doi 10 1016 j fsigen 2016 01 007 PMID 26818791 Kim Soon Hee Kim Ki Cheol Shin Dong Jik et al 2011 High frequencies of Y chromosome haplogroup O2b SRY465 lineages in Korea a genetic perspective on the peopling of Korea Investigative Genetics 2011 2 10 doi 10 1186 2041 2223 2 10 PMC 3087676 PMID 21463511 S2CID 206977488 Hua Zhong Hong Shi Xue Bin Qi Chun Jie Xiao Li Jin Runlin Z Ma and Bing Su Global distribution of Y chromosome haplogroup C reveals the prehistoric migration routes of African exodus and early settlement in East Asia Journal of Human Genetics 2010 55 428 435 doi 10 1038 jhg 2010 40 Hua Zhong Hong Shi Xue Bin Qi Zi Yuan Duan Ping Ping Tan Li Jin Bing Su and Runlin Z Ma 2011 Extended Y Chromosome Investigation Suggests Postglacial Migrations of Modern Humans into East Asia via the Northern Route Mol Biol Evol 28 1 717 727 doi 10 1093 molbev msq247 Jin Han Jun Tyler Smith Chris Kim Wook 16 January 2009 The Peopling of Korea Revealed by Analyses of Mitochondrial DNA and Y Chromosomal Markers PLOS ONE 4 1 e4210 Bibcode 2009PLoSO 4 4210J doi 10 1371 journal pone 0004210 PMC 2615218 PMID 19148289 Jin Han Jun Tyler Smith Chris Kim Wook 16 January 2009 The Peopling of Korea Revealed by Analyses of Mitochondrial DNA and Y Chromosomal Markers PLOS ONE 4 1 e4210 Bibcode 2009PLoSO 4 4210J doi 10 1371 journal pone 0004210 PMC 2615218 PMID 19148289 Siska Veronika Jones Eppie Ruth Jeon Sungwon Bhak Youngjune Kim Hak Min Cho Yun Sung Kim Hyunho Lee Kyusang Veselovskaya Elizaveta Balueva Tatiana Gallego Llorente Marcos 3 February 2017 Genome wide data from two early Neolithic East Asian individuals dating to 7700 years ago Science Advances 3 2 e1601877 Bibcode 2017SciA 3E1877S doi 10 1126 sciadv 1601877 PMC 5287702 PMID 28164156 Gakuhari Takashi Nakagome Shigeki Rasmussen Simon Allentoft Morten E Sato Takehiro Korneliussen Thorfinn Chuinneagain Blanaid Ni Matsumae Hiromi Koganebuchi Kae Schmidt Ryan Mizushima Souichiro 25 August 2020 Ancient Jomon genome sequence analysis sheds light on migration patterns of early East Asian populations Communications Biology 3 1 437 doi 10 1038 s42003 020 01162 2 PMC 7447786 PMID 32843717 Hee Kim Soon 2010 Y chromosome homogeneity in the Korean population International Journal of Legal Medicine 124 6 653 657 doi 10 1007 s00414 010 0501 1 PMID 20714743 S2CID 27125545 Kim Young Jin Jin Han Jun 2013 Dissecting the genetic structure of Korean population using genome wide SNP arrays Genes Genom Cambridge The Genetics Society of Korea published 2014 24 3 360 doi 10 1007 s13258 013 0082 8 Pan Ziqing Xu Shuhua 2019 Population genomics of East Asian ethnic groups Hereditas Berlin BioMed Central published 2020 157 49 5 doi 10 1186 s41065 020 00162 w PMC 7724877 PMID 33292737 Reference Populations Geno 2 0 Next Generation 2017 The Genographic Project Retrieved 15 May 2017 from link Wang Chuan Chao Yeh Hui Yuan Popov Alexander 2021 Population genomics of East Asian ethnic groups Nature Berlin Nature Portfolio 7850 591 413 419 doi 10 1038 s41586 021 03336 2 PMC 7993749 PMID 33618348 Eugene Y Park n d Penn Arts amp Sciences East Asian Languages and Civilizations Retrieved 24 January 2018 from link Archived 11 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine Eugene Y Park from the 7 06 mark of the YouTube video to the 7 38 mark of the YouTube video said Secondly on the one hand so many Koreans seem to talk to be able to tell one something about his or her Gyeongju Kim ancestors of a Silla kingdom two thousand years ago And yet such a person is unlikely to be able to tell you something about his or her great great grandparents what they were doing hundred years ago what their occupations were where they were living where their family graves are In other words a memory blackout before the twentieth century Eugene Y Park from the 16 54 mark of the YouTube video to the 18 54 mark of the YouTube video said So from this point on then I would like to survey how the Koreans descended Koreans depending on their ancestors status category have dealt with genealogy and ancestry consciousness in the last differently in the last two centuries And of course most Koreans are not descendants of aristocrats but the but what happened in the last hundred fifty hundred to hundred fifty years is that those Koreans the vast majority of Koreans have lost memory of their actual history in the sense where now any outside observer who might ask a Korean person about ancestry would be left with the impression that every Korean is now of aristocratic descent So let me begin with the aristocracy In the early modern era the kind of a master narrative stories that purport to explain a particular surname ancestral seat combination s history crystallize they became set in stone through inventing tradition In the seventeenth and eighteenth century many all families devise such a stories to the extent where now today in Korea anybody who is interested in tracing his or her ancestry has to deal with such master narratives but at the same time it is next to impossible to look beyond master narratives In other words in Korea today there s little sense of doing the kind of doing the genealogical research that you and I would do in the United States by looking at Census documents and other types of documentation that have been passed down through generations or have been maintained by the government Eugene Y Park from the 28 32 mark of the YouTube video to the 29 21 mark of the YouTube video said This is an example Here we see records that gives us a better sense of what inventing tradition was like Here a page from an eighteen seventy three Miryang Pak family genealogy Here s a man indicated inside the circle named Ju 冑 He had three sons Eun gyeong Hyeon gyeong Won gyeong 子 恩 慶 子 賢 慶 子 元 慶 But the edition that was published a bit later in the nineteen twenty so we see the same man Ju and under him we see sons Eun gyeong Hyeon gyeong Won gyeong and the extra the fourth son out of nowhere Tōkhwa 子 徳 華 Actually this is my family So this was commonly done in the modern era the children son out of nowhere or claims that we were left out centuries ago and please include us Eugene Y Park from the 18 55 mark of the YouTube video to the 19 30 mark of the YouTube video said And these master narratives genealogically connect all descent lines of a same surname and ancestral seat to a single common ancestor And this was the pattern that was that became universal by the nineteenth century Whereas genealogies published in the seventeenth century actually frankly admit that we do not know how these different lines of the same surname or ancestral seat are related or connected at all So all these changes took place only in the last two hundred years or so Eugene Y Park from the 46 17 mark of the YouTube video to the 47 02 mark of the YouTube video said At any rate so once so based on one s surname Kim let s say and the ancestral seat Kimhae which is the most common ancestral seat among Kim surname Koreans one can then look up consult reference books encyclopedias go online to find all these stories about different branches famous individuals who are Kimhae Kim But the problem is of course before the early modern era only a small percentage of Koreans had surnames and the ancestral seat to begin with In other words the rest of the population had adopted these identities in the last two three hundred years so where does one go from there And this was definitely my challenge when I was a child Korean ethnologue Retrieved 1 January 2013 Lee Kwang kyu 2000 Overseas Koreans Seoul Jimoondang ISBN 978 89 88095 18 8 Kim Si joong 2003 The Economic Status and Role of Ethnic Koreans in China PDF The Korean Diaspora in the World Economy Institute for International Economics pp Ch 6 101 131 Ban Byung yool 22 September 2004 Koreans in Russia Historical Perspective The Korea Times Archived from the original on 18 March 2005 Retrieved 20 November 2006 Nonzaki Yoshiki Inokuchi Hiromitsu Kim Tae Young 4 September 2006 Legal Categories Demographic Change and Japan s Korean Residents in the Long Twentieth Century The Asia Pacific Journal Japan Focus 4 9 Archived from the original on 25 January 2007 South Korea s population passes 50 million 22 July 2012 Archived from the original on 28 August 2013 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint unfit URL link Population total Data data worldbank org Retrieved 12 April 2018 These estimates are based on UN population division of 2017 version S Korea s childbirth tally drops to another historic low in October archive fo 23 January 2019 Archived from the original on 23 January 2019 Retrieved 23 January 2019 South Korea s fertility rate is the lowest in the world The Economist 30 June 2018 Retrieved 23 January 2019 Fertility rate dips below 1 in 2018 official archive fo 30 January 2019 Archived from the original on 30 January 2019 Retrieved 30 January 2019 a b This article incorporates public domain material from Savada Andreas Matles ed 1994 North Korea A Country Study Library of Congress Country Studies Retrieved 27 July 2013 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Fourth ed Washington Federal Research Division of the Library of Congress ISBN 0 8444 0794 1 page needed KoreanAmericanStory org KoreanAmericanStory org American FactFinder Factfinder census gov Archived from the original on 12 February 2020 Retrieved 4 May 2012 Kelly Tim 18 September 2006 Ho Chi Minh Money Trail Forbes Archived from the original on 16 February 2018 Retrieved 27 March 2007 Meinardus Ronaldo 15 December 2005 Korean Wave in Philippines The Korea Times Archived from the original on 13 January 2006 Retrieved 16 February 2007 Pohl 1999 p 11harvnb error no target CITEREFPohl1999 help Tikhonov Vladimir 2013 Korean Japanese Marriages in 1920s 40s Korean Prose University of Texas at Austin Center for East Asian Studies Retrieved 31 May 2017 from link Lie John 2008 Zainichi Koreans in Japan Diasporic Nationalism and Postcolonial Identity Berkeley University of California Press p 89 Retrieved 31 May 2017 from link Blog Reveals Identities of Korean Men Who Have Abandoned Kopino Children in the Philippines Soompi 11 January 2016 Retrieved 3 September 2022 MIXED FILIPINO HERITAGE ACT OF 2020 Hyun ju Ock 27 November 2019 Feature Lai Dai Han people still seeking apology roots in Korea The Korea Herald Retrieved 3 September 2022 Sources Edit 서의식 강봉룡 뿌리 깊은 한국사 샘이 깊은 이야기 고조선 삼국 ISBN 89 8133 536 2 Barnes Gina Lee 1993 The Rise of Civilization in East Asia The Archaeology of China Korea and Japan Thames and Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 27974 8 Nelson Sarah M 1993 The Archaeology of Korea Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 40783 0 Further reading EditBreen Michael 2004 The Koreans Who They Are What They Want Where Their Future Lies New York St Martin s Press ISBN 978 1 4668 6449 8 External links Edit Media related to Koreans at Wikimedia Commons Quotations related to Koreans at Wikiquote Korean American Museum Korean Residents Union in Japan Mindan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Koreans amp oldid 1130002549, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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