Rangrang-guyok

Rangrang-guyŏk or Rangrang District is one of the 18 kuyŏk that constitute the city of Pyongyang, North Korea. It is located south of the Taedong River, and is bordered to the north by Songyo-guyok, to the east by the Ryokpo-guyok, and to the south by Chunghwa and Kangnam counties.

Rangrang-guyŏk
Kuyok of Pyongyang
Korean transcription(s)
  Hangul
  Hanja
  Revised RomanizationNangnang-guyeok
  McCune–ReischauerRangrang-guyŏk
CountryNorth Korea
Direct-administered cityP'yŏngyang-Chikhalsi
Administrative divisions9 dong, 9 ri

History

The Lelang Commandery was, according to the Book of Han, composed of 27 districts and had a population of over 406,748 people. Located on the Taedong River at the approximate location of modern Pyongyang, archeological evidence suggests that the seat of the commandery had been moved to this district here after the destruction of Wanggeom-seong, the old Koguryo capital at Pyongyang and is claimed to have been original seat of the lelang commandery.[1]

During the Japanese colonial period, the area was part of Taedong County. As Pyongyang grew and annexed many former parts of Taedong County, the area was later split up Pyongyang's Dong-guyok, Kangnam-gun, and Chunghwa-gun. Rangrang-guyok was officially created as a separate district in 1959.

The district is famous for the large number of Han and Koguryo tombs which litter the area, many of which were first discovered by the Japanese in the early 1910s (see Nakrang Tombs). Japanese archaeologists Torrii Ryuzo and Imanishi Ryu, in particular, were instrumental in the tomb excavations and in identifying the Nakrang Earthen Castle in Tosong-ri as the seat of the commandery. Over 1,500 tombs in all have been located, with sixty-three alone located in just one district (Chongbaek-dong).[2] However, North Korea claims that all tombs are in fact of the Koguryo period, as it denies the existence of the Chinese settlement of Lelang, claiming it was a Koguryo city-state, and that the thousands of Chinese artifacts merely represent the burgeoning trade that the State of Nakrang had with the Han.[3]

Administrative divisions

Rangrang-guyok is divided into nine administrative districts known as tong, as well as nine villages ("ri"). The larger five tong (Chongbaek, Chongo, Kwanmun, Nakrang, and Tongil) are further divided in two parts for administrative purposes, which Chungsong-dong is divided into three.[4]

Chosŏn'gŭl Hanja
Chŏngbaek-tong정백동
Chŏng'o-dong정오동
Ch'ungsŏng-dong충성동忠誠
Kwammun-dong관문동關門
Rangrang-dong락랑동
T'ongil-dong통일동統一
Tongsan-dong동산동
Tudan-dong두단동
Wŏn'am-dong원암동
Chungdal-li중단리
Kin'gol-li긴골리
Kŭmdae-ri금대리
Namsa-ri남사리
Posŏng-ri보성리
Pyŏkchido-ri벽지도리
Ryongho-ri룡호리
Ryuso-ri류소리
Songnam-ri송남리
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References

  1. Pai, Hyung Il (2000). Constructing Korean Origins: A critical review of archaeology, historiography, and racial myth in Korean state-forming theories. Harvard University Press. p. 160. ISBN 0-674-00244-X.
  2. http://north.nricp.go.kr/nrth/kor/cul/cul_view.jsp, search 정백동제62호묘
  3. ROBERT WILLOUGHBY (2008). BRADT TRAVEL GUIDE NORTH KOREA, THE. Bradt Travel Guides. p. 7. ISBN 1-84162-219-2. Retrieved 2011-01-09.
  4. http://nk.joins.com/map/view.asp?idx=i018.htm


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