Last modified: 2008-09-06 by phil nelson
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I noted this link (Korea.net) today with interesting information on adoption of Korean flag. Including a June 29, 1942 date for adoption by the exile government of the flag.
King Gojong appointed Bak Yeoung-hyo as his ambassador to Japan in September 1882. While aboard ship heading for Japan, Bak drew a national flag with a taegeuk circle but included only four trigrams instead of eight, and started using the flag on the 25th of that month. On October 3, Bak reported this change to King Gojong who formally proclaimed the Taegeukgi as the national flag on March 6, 1883. For some unknown reason, however, he did not have formal instructions published at that time on how to make the flag. In fact, it wasn't till June 29, 1942, that the provisional Korean government in exile enacted a law on the uniform method of making the national flag. The law was promulgated but as the government was in exile, it was not widely known to Koreans at home still under Japanese colonial rule.
Following the founding of the Republic of Korea on August 15, 1948, the government felt that it should codify the method of making the national flag. This prompted the government to form a special commission in January 1949 that issued the provision on the national flag on October 15 of that year. Since then, the Republic of Korea has been using the Taegeukgi as the national flag.
Standard color shades of Taegeukgi, the Korean National Flag are as follows: in the CIE System, the x, y, and Y coordinates for the red are x=0.5640, y=0.3194, Y=15.3; for the blue, x=0.1556, y=0.1354, Y=6.5. Alternatively, in the Munsell System of Color Notation, the red corresponds to 6.0R 4.5/14, and the blue to 5.0PB 3.0/12. In the Pantone Matching System, 186C red and 294C blue are recommended.
Taegeukgi, the national flag of the Republic of Korea, consists of a blue and red yin-yang circle in the center, one black trigram in each of the four corners, and a white background.
The white background of Taegeukgi symbolizes light and purity and reflects the Korean people's traditional affinity for peace.
The yin-yang circle, divided equally into a blue portion below and a red portion above, represents the dual cosmic forces of yin (blue) and yang (red). It symbolizes universal harmony, in which the passive and the active, the feminine and the masculine, form the whole. The four trigrams of Geon, Gon, Gam, and Li, which surround the yin-yang circle, denote the process of yin and yang going through a series of changes and growth.
Geon, with three solid bars in the upper left-hand corner, denotes "heaven". Gon, with three evenly divided bars in the lower right-hand corner, denotes "earth". Gam, with one evenly divided bar on each side of one solid bar in the upper right-hand corner, denotes "water". And Li, with one solid bar on each side of one evenly divided bar in the lower left-hand corner, denotes "fire."
Collectively, the yin-yang circle and the four trigrams represent universal harmony and unity. Taegeukgi embodies the ideals of all Koreans, who have pursued creativity and prosperity under universal principles and truth.
Ben Cahoon, 25 March 2008
I just opened by chance my Crampton's Complete Guide to Flags, 1990 [cra90f], just on the page where Korea is and noticed a sentence that did not sound familiar.
So, it says: South Korea has kept the flag of the former Kingdom of Korea, although it has been modified. ... and the trigrams (kwae) are reduced from eight to four."
So, what was the flag of the Kingdom of Korea with 8 kwaes? When did the change
occur?
Željko Heimer, 13 January 1999
Earliest representation | Stamp - 19th Century | Stamp Detail |
---|---|---|
flag image by Antonio Martins-Tuvalkin, 24 September 2003 |
stamp images contributed by Diedrik Nelson, 20 May 2006 |
This is perhaps the oldest representation of the South Korean flag.
Patrick Kirol, 11 March 2000
I think the number 8 comes naturally (2x2x2). Either of the three lines in a trigram can be either yin (- -) or yang (---). According to my I Ching, the symbolism is this:
Ole Andersen, 14 January 1999
Chinese wind rose with 8 kwae
by Mark Sensen
The I Ching , the "Book of Changes", mentioned by Ole consists of the 64 combinations you get by combining the 8 kwae and was and is used by fortune-tellers to give answers to questions. [Source: Hans Biederman, "Prisma van de symbolen", 1991/1996, Dutch translation of "Knaurs Lexicon der Symbole"]
The flag was first hoisted 22 August 1882 when the first ambassadors were
sent to Japan, an adopted officially 27 January 1883. Korea was occupied by
Japan in 1905 and annexed on 22 August 1910. After the liberation the country
was divided along the 38th degree of latitude. The Republic of Korea was established
in the southern (American) zone on 15 August 1948, which readopted the flag
in the same year when the colours and shape were established by law. On 25 January
1950 the flag was adopted officially when the kwae were revised slightly.
In 1984 the lay-out was again slightly changed. [Sources: Barraclough, Flags
of the World 1981 [c2b81]; Whitney Smith,
Spectrum Vlaggenboek, 1976 [smi76a];
Kent Alexander, Flags of the World, 1992.]
[ale92]
Mark Sensen, 14 January 1999
This was done eight months before independence by General MacArthur.
[Source: H. Gresham Carr, Flags of the World, 1956.
[car56]]
I forgot to mention the flag is known as T'aeguk or "Great Polarity".
[Source: William Crampton, The World's Flags, 1990
[cra90c].]
Mark Sensen, 14 January 1999
Korea, 1893 | Royal Korean Consulate in Hamburg 1893 |
---|---|
images by Antonio Martins |
I have a photocopy of an article by H.G. Ströhl called "Wappen und Flagge
von Korea" in Herold, Oct. 1893, nr. 10, XXIV. It shows
two flags. The first is labeled "Koreanische Flagge" and is like the modern
flag, but the yin-yang - sign is much more intricate and the upper part is
blue, the lower blue. According to the text normally only the 4 main kwae
appear on the flag, most of the time blue. It also says that the arrangement
of the kwae is not always the same. The second flag shown is the one flown
at the Royal Korean Consulate in Hamburg, and has 8 kwae, coloured
yellow. The yin-yang - sign is like on the modern flag, but rotated 90 degrees
anti-clockwise. I have some doubts if the arrangement of these 8 kwae
is correct, since two opposing kwae are not each others inversion.
On the image of an old Chinese wind rose shown in the article they are inverted,
so maybe that arrangement is more correct.
Mark Sensen, 14 January 1999
It is interesting to note that the flag called the Royal Korean Consulate flag has a different arrangement of the trigraphs. I have noticed that the Koreans are very exact in describing the layout of their flag (10:15). Yet the flag that is flown on holidays is not of the same proportions as that shown in the official description of their flag, the main difference being the addition of extra white to the field of the flag on the side away from the flag pole. The additional material gives the flag the same length as the US flag (10:19).
The ordering of the trigrams in the tooth edge flag matches that of the
Hou Tian (latter heaven) ordering of the trigrams of the Chinese Yi Ching.
Patrick Kirol, 11 March 2000
During the Japanese colonial rule (1910-1945) the Korean t'aeguk circle flag was prohibited to use.
The Japanese governor of Korea's flag was used that is light blue flag with Japanese national flag (hinomaru) in a canton like British blue ensign despite of a different color shade. The canton is one fourth of whole flag in size. The light blue stands for justice, fairness and philanthropy.
1910-1883
Korea used a similar flag to present flag. The t'aeguk is longer than current one and colour was reverse: blue over red. The black four trigrams are placed in differently: There were two broken and one unbroken lines in upper left/ three unbroken lines in upper right/three broken lines in bottom left/one broken and two unbroken lines in bottom right.
1876-1854
An old Japanese flag book published in 1876/1854 shows square yellow flag
with red rugged border as a Korean King's standard. The flag bears a green
dragon having red tongue and gray clouds.
Nozomi Kariyasu, 21 March 1999
The early history of the Korean national flag seems to have remained rather obscure, according to a paper by Elizabeth Pyon published on-line in the Korea Herlad, 18 December 2001.
The paper reports recent findings on the invention of the first Korean national flag, which seem to disagree with the traditional explanations. The research was done by Dr. Kim Sang-Sup, a "reformist" researcher specialized in the Yi-ching. Dr. Kim based his conclusions on several historical official documents of the end of the 19th century.
The national Korean flag was used for the first time by a Korean diplomatic mission sent to Japan in 1882. This was the first diplomatic mission ever sent by Korea. King Gojong ordered the Chief of the delegation, Prince Pak Yeong-Hyo, to hoist the Korean national flag on the vessel used by the mission. These are historical facts. Moreover, it is often said that King Gojon himself designed the flag in the beginning of the 1880s. He wanted to express his resistance to foreign influence and his willing to preserve the independence of his Kingdom.
Unfortunately, this theory is not backed up by any serious evidence. The historical records studied by Dr. Kim give a completely different history.
In 1875, a Japanese fleet sailed too close to the Ganghwa Island and had an altercation with the Korean army. The Koreans shot the Japanese flag. This was used as a pretext by the Japanese army for a retaliation campaign. Before this event, there was little interest in Korea for a national symbol. King Gojong asked his suzereign, the Emperor of China, for advice on the question of the flag. Chinese experts suggested a flag similar to the Chinese flag of the time, a dragon with five claws on a yellow background. The Korean court, however, rejected the proposal of a dragon with four claws on a blue background, which was considered "too sophisticated".
In April 1882, an official Korean-Chinese meeting was held to discuss the question of the Korean flag. The "teaguk" emblem was proposed for the first time during this meeting. Official documents of the Korean Royal court state that the Chinese delegate Ma Chien-Chung promoted the use of the Yin-Yang spiral in red and blue and eight combinations of the Yi-ching, and imposed his views to the Korean delegate Kim Hong-Jip. Ma Chien-chung explained the symbolism of his proposal. The eight Yi-ching diagrams matched the eight Korean provinces, and red was the colour of the King whereas blue was the colour of ordinary people. Korea eventually adopted its flag under Chinese pressure and used it for its first diplomatic mission as said above.
The first version of the "taeguk" was very close to the original Yi-Ching
diagram, which includes eight subdiagrams. The deletion of four of these subdiagrams
is reported in the diary of Prince Pak Yeong-Hyo. The Prince showed the original
flag design to James, the British captain of the vessel used for the mission.
James found the design too complicated and proposed to delete four of the
eight Yi-Ching diagrams.
Ivan Sache, 15 August 2002
From: http://english.chosun.com/w21data/html/news/200401/200401260030.html
"Discovery of Old Flag Discredits 'Taegukgi' Legend
by Yu Seok-jaeThe oldest picture of a "Taegukgi," the national flag of Korea, has been discovered, giving insight into how the flag's symbols came to be used. The Taegukgi was found in the "Flags of Maritime Nations," issued by the U.S. Navy Department's Bureau of Navigation in July 1882, and with its red and blue yin-yang symbol and four black trigrams has the same form as the current Korean flag. This Taegukgi would be two or three months older than the one used by Park Yeong-hyo, who is known as the first to make and use a four- trigram flag. Park did so during a diplomatic mission to Japan from August to September of 1882.oldest Taegukgi, the national flag of Korea, was found. This version is listed in `Flags of Maritime Nations,' published by the Bureau of Navigation at the U.S. Navy Department in July 1882. This version uses the four trigrams from the Book of Changes. Until now, Park Yeong-hyo was known as the first person to use four trigrams from the Book of Changes. The flag was published two or three months before Park moved to Japan.
contributed by Jan Mertens, 20 August 2004
Note: bibliographic information on the Flags of Maritime Nations is at [usn82]
Yoon Sojung reports on Korea.net, 29 February 2008, the discovery of a copy of the Korean national flag dated 1882.
[...]Discovered in the National Archives of the United Kingdom, this copy of the flag was enclosed in a letter written by then-Japanese vice foreign minister Yoshida Kiyonari to U.K. ambassador to Japan Harry Parkes in November 1882, according to Korea's Independence Hall. In the letter, the Japanese vice foreign minister introduced the copy as the national flag of Korea to the British ambassador.
This copy shows one of the oldest designs, which was originally created by Bak Yeong-hyo (1861-1939) during the Joseon Dynasty (1392-1910) in September 1882.
Bak was appointed by Emperor Gojong (1852-1919), as Joseon's ambassador to Japan in September 1882. While aboard a ship heading for Japan, Bak drew a national flag with a taegeuk circle and included only four trigrams, and started using the flag on the 25th of that month. On October 3, he reported this to King Gojong, who formally proclaimed the Taegeukgi as the national flag on March 6, 1883.
This copy has a taegeuk circle painted in red and blue representing the yin and yang that symbolizes universal harmony, one black trigram in each of the four corners and a white background. The white background of taegeukgi symbolizes light and purity and reflects the Korean people's traditional affinity for peace. The four trigrams of Geon, Gon, Gam, and Li, painted in blue in this copy, which surround the yin-yang circle, denote the process of yin and yang going through a series of changes and growth.
The image of the flag copy, shown on "Korean.net" casts some doubt on
the 1893 flag reported by H.G. Ströhl in Herold (above).
Ivan Sache, 4 March 2008
image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 10 January 2007
Source: The International Geography, London, 1911 [g9b11]
In The International Geography, London, 1911, I found this flag - the old flag of Korea, before it was occupied by Japan in 1905. Korea ceased to exist until 1947, after which a lot of things happened.
However the 'old Korean flag' differs in several respects from the present South Korean flag:
I scanned the flag. Perhaps someone can tell us more about the 8 kwaes?
Jarig Bakker, 14 January 1999
This flag image is an incorrect representation, with the red part of
the disc ending in a pointy tip and the blue part in a blob. The actual
flag used a (rotationally) symmetrical device as in the left side image
under "Korea, 1893".
António Martins-Tuválkin, 10 January 2007
I saw on TV recently what seems to be the first flag of the Republic
of Korea. This was on the TV show M*A*S*H, a show from the 1970s, but
set in the times of the Korean War. The flag references they have (the
show is set on a US Army medical base) are quite accurate (i.e. a 48-star
flag flies over the compound, along with a UN and S. Korean flag), so
I don't doubt the authenticity of the flag. The flag was shown in a
good shot in the episode "Welcome to Korea" (season opener of season
5. The major differences: the four corner elements are smaller and closer
to the corner, and the ying-yang is on its side. The ying-yang also
appeared to be drawn differently, but I couldn't get a clear enough
shot of it to tell for sure how it appeared.
David Kendall, 29 December 1998
The Korean flag was slightly changed in
21 February 1984, but the disposition of the ying yang seems strange
(left blue, right red instead red over blue). I checked some plates
pre-1984 and in all the plates the flag is red over blue. The flag was
not adopted until 1950 but was in use de facto after 1945; perhaps the
design posted is derived from the designs used from 1945-50,
Jaume Ollé, 31 December 1998