South Pyongan Province

South Pyongan Province (Phyŏngannamdo; Korean pronunciation: [pʰjʌŋ.an.nam.do]) is a province of North Korea. The province was formed in 1896 from the southern half of the former Pyongan Province, remained a province of Korea until 1945, then became a province of North Korea. Its capital is Pyongsong.

South Pyongan Province

평안남도
Korean transcription(s)
  Chŏsŏn'gŭl
  Hancha
  McCuneReischauerP'yŏng'annam-do
  Revised RomanizationPyeong-annam-do
CountryNorth Korea
RegionKwanso
CapitalPyongsong
Subdivisions5 cities; 19 counties
Government
  Party Committee ChairmanKim Tu-il[1] (WPK)
  People's Committee ChairmanKang Hyong-bong[1]
Area
  Total12,330 km2 (4,760 sq mi)
Population
 (2008)
  Total4,051,696
  Density330/km2 (850/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+9 (Pyongyang Time)
DialectP'yŏngan

Geography

A typical settlement along the main road in South Pyongan Province near Pyongsong.

The province is bordered by North Pyongan and Chagang Provinces to the north, South Hamgyong and Kangwon Provinces to the east and southeast and North Hwanghae Province and Pyongyang to the south. The Yellow Sea and Korea Bay are located to the west.

Administrative divisions

South P'yŏngan is divided into 1 special city (tŭkpyŏlsi); 5 cities (si); 16 counties (kun); and 3 districts (1 ku and 2 chigu).

Its administrative divisions are:

Cities

Counties

Districts

The below former counties of South Pyongan were merged with Nampo in 2004 and are administered as part of that city:

In 2010 the following county was merged with Nampo:[2]

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gollark: Or to whom, I guess.
gollark: The sabotage thing? When?
gollark: I mean, thinking about potential evil uses for stuff is fun! But then deciding "hmm yes I have selected some targets" less so.
gollark: What about *pretending* to help him, but secretly sabotaging all advice in hard-to-debug ways?

See also

References

  1. "Organizational Chart of North Korean Leadership" (PDF). Seoul: Political and Military Analysis Division, Intelligence and Analysis Bureau; Ministry of Unification. January 2018. Retrieved 17 October 2018.
  2. Kim So Yeol (February 15, 2011). "North Korea Splits No. 38 and 39 Departments Up Again". Daily NK. Retrieved November 15, 2012.

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