1-18 of 18

Search Results for p'yongan

Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account

Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
Close Modal
Sort by
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2012) 71 (2): 559–560.
Published: 01 May 2012
... in the nineteenth century and identifies its causes in local sources—the politics, society, and culture of the northwestern province of P'yŏngan—as opposed to conventional views that explain it in terms of national patterns of peasant unrest and socioeconomic upheaval. Kim continues the regional focus...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2014) 73 (2): 556–558.
Published: 01 May 2014
...Saeyoung Park 16 James B. Palais , Confucian Statecraft and Korean Institutions ( Seattle : University of Washington Press , 1996 ), 34–41 . 15 O Such'ang , Chosŏn hugi P'yŏngan-do sahoe palchŏn yŏn'gu [A study of the development of P'yǒngan society...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2020) 79 (1): 206–208.
Published: 01 February 2020
..., sympathy, and benevolence—and Yoon also uses “hospitality” in the part discussing the insim of P'yŏngan Province (p. 110). But by entitling this section “Social Characteristics,” rather than relying on terms related to the human mind, Yoon effectively shows that this section is about the social...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1981) 40 (4): 801–804.
Published: 01 August 1981
... and dwelling sites supply the relics. The virtual absence of burials seems to imply a nomadic society with few, if any, domestic animals. Four of the sites were in the two northwest regions of P'yongan and Hwanghae provinces. They all had more than one cultural level, but the Neolithic-level layers are all...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2018) 77 (1): 83–105.
Published: 01 February 2018
... P'yŏngan Province (P'yŏnganbukto 平安北道) 1794 Reign of King Chŏngjo 正祖 (1752–1800) Hyujŏng 休靜 (Ch’ŏnghŏdang 淸虛堂, 1520–1604, aka Sŏsan 西山); Yujŏng 惟政 (Sa'myŏngdang 四溟堂, 1544–1610); Ch’ŏyŏng 處英 (Noemuktang 頼牧堂, act. second half of 16th century) Chŏng Tong-jun 鄭東浚 (1753–1795); Sŏ Yŏng-bo 徐榮輔 (1759–1816...
FIGURES | View all 4
First thumbnail for: The Politics of Commemoration: Patronage of Monk-G...
Second thumbnail for: The Politics of Commemoration: Patronage of Monk-G...
Third thumbnail for: The Politics of Commemoration: Patronage of Monk-G...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2016) 75 (3): 856–857.
Published: 01 August 2016
... an atmosphere of instability and resistance from the nineteenth century to the opening years of the twentieth, particularly in the northwestern provinces of P'yŏngan and Hwanghae. These trends accelerated with two major events in 1894 that would later provide the basis for the Ilchinhoe's formation: the Tonghak...
Journal Article
Far Eastern Quarterly (1946) 5 (3): 272–288.
Published: 01 May 1946
... P'yongan Hamgyong Hwanghae Kangwon Ch'ungchong Cholla Kyongsang The Capital Capital or Home Peaceful Quiet Perfect Mirror Complete View Yellow Sea River Meadow Serene Loyalty Completed Network Respectful Congratulation 10,739 9,991 33,890 11,311 14,170 15,879 19,560 15,714 48,993 180,246 * Population...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2016) 75 (3): 851–853.
Published: 01 August 2016
...), they featured a density and endurance of elite lineages few other places could rival. The emphasis on two remarkable cases necessarily raises questions. Can their experiences be generalized? We already know that northern provinces such as P'yŏngan exhibited a very different social profile; but what about other...
Image
Published: 01 February 2018
Figure 3. Interior of Myohyangsan shrine with late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century portrait paintings of Hyujŏng (center), Yujŏng (right), and Ch’ŏyŏng (left), Pohyŏn Monastery, Myohyangsan, Hyangsan County, Northern P'yŏngan Province, North Korea. Photo by Maya Stiller. More
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2018) 77 (3): 659–691.
Published: 01 August 2018
... will demonstrate more significantly here, between Seoul and the distant northern P'yŏngan Province, his local hometown region. Against the expanding spatial axes of the colonized imagination (in this case, moving away from his hometown area of Chŏngju to P'yŏngyang to Seoul to Tokyo and finally to the “West...
FIGURES | View all 12
First thumbnail for: Memories of Korean Modernity: Yi Kwangsu's  The He...
Second thumbnail for: Memories of Korean Modernity: Yi Kwangsu's  The He...
Third thumbnail for: Memories of Korean Modernity: Yi Kwangsu's  The He...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2024) 83 (4): 859–882.
Published: 01 November 2024
... school in his home province. Like many other exiles, he would point to the November 1945 Sinŭiju Incident, in which communist officials suppressed a Christian student uprising in North P'yŏngan, as his reason for moving south by himself in February 1946 (Han 2001 : 69–71). In US-occupied Seoul, Sŏnu...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1974) 33 (4): 611–631.
Published: 01 August 1974
... who are permanently assigned as the post station attendants in P'yongan and Hwanghae provinces are originally commoners (yangmin). Their descendants with no blemished records are permitted in the mun\wa, the military, and the saengwon-chinsa examinations.60 The use of the term yangmin in this statute...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1963) 23 (1): 21–35.
Published: 01 November 1963
..., as the chief of the government, for the alleged military preparation of Korea against the Manchus and was forced to resign in face of Manchu pressure. He was soon exiled to P'yongan province. He was succeeded by Yi Kyong-yo, the immediate predecessor of Kim Yuk. Kyong-yo, too, incurred the Manchus' disfavor...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2009) 68 (3): 835–859.
Published: 01 August 2009
... the ladder of social hierarchy responded negatively to the residency-general's manipulative use of the emperor in a manner that blended personal sympathy and political outrage. The negative predisposition was all the more apparent in the northwest, particularly in the provinces of Hwanghae and P'yŏngan...
FIGURES | View all 5
First thumbnail for: Politics and Pageantry in Protectorate Korea (1905...
Second thumbnail for: Politics and Pageantry in Protectorate Korea (1905...
Third thumbnail for: Politics and Pageantry in Protectorate Korea (1905...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1982) 41 (3): 531–543.
Published: 01 May 1982
... to be transitional from Chulmun to Mumun. This is especially true of pottery types, which may have flat bases but incised bands around the rims or Mumun-like shapes with Chulmun decoration. For instance, the pottery at Sinamni in North P'yongan includes jar and bowl shapes that are not a part of the Chulmun...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2007) 66 (4): 993–1027.
Published: 01 November 2007
... liters. 18 1 yang  = 10 chŏn  = 100 mun. Although the cash–grain commutation rate set by the government was 3 yang per 1 sŏm , the rate fluctuated greatly in the late Chosŏn (Song Ch'ansŏp 2002, 25–28). In P'yŏngan Province in 1811, one family could live one month with three yang...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Taxes, the Local Elite, and the Rural Populace in ...
Second thumbnail for: Taxes, the Local Elite, and the Rural Populace in ...
Third thumbnail for: Taxes, the Local Elite, and the Rural Populace in ...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1960) 20 (1): 9–31.
Published: 01 November 1960
..., op. cit. , No. 79, p. 4. 49 Higher Police Section, Police Dept., Heian Nandō (P'yōngan Namdo), Zai-Tōkyō Chōsenjin genkyŏ [The Present Condition of the Koreans in Tokyo] , Mimeographed, no pagination (Hoover Library). 50 Sakae Ösugi , Nihon dasshutsu ki [Memoirs of Escape...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2003) 62 (1): 71–99.
Published: 01 February 2003
... was active in filmmaking circles in Pyongyang at the time, the Red Army signed a film production agreement with the People's Political Committee of South P'yongan Province in 1946 and brought in film equipment and Soviet technicians (1949, 1). Offers of training and good wages drew many aspiring filmmakers...