What Happened to the Old Korean Flag?

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  • Опубликовано: 30 янв 2025

Комментарии • 718

  • @johnathantaylor5913
    @johnathantaylor5913 Год назад +439

    It's funny how I have always been able to recognise the South Korean flag, but I never truly noticed that the black lines in all four corners were slightly different from each other. But now that you've explained it to me, I'll never unsee it. Just goes to show that you can recognise and "know" something without TRULY "knowing" it.

    • @rizkyadiyanto7922
      @rizkyadiyanto7922 Год назад +28

      so is UK's union jack. its not simetric.

    • @DanksterPaws
      @DanksterPaws Год назад +9

      I found it on accident, I was drawing flags, realized the lines weren’t all the same

    • @miahconnell23
      @miahconnell23 Год назад +3

      @@DanksterPawsme too.

    • @miahconnell23
      @miahconnell23 Год назад +2

      @@rizkyadiyanto7922 I didn’t realize it’s the flag of England and the flag of Scotland and Saint Patrick’s Saltire superimposed upon eachother until …until too recently. But, I went to public school and the USA honestly doesn’t teach enough about nations that aren’t called “the United States of America.”

    • @kori228
      @kori228 Год назад +2

      it's a Daoist thing, from the I-Ching

  • @alansmithee8831
    @alansmithee8831 Год назад +94

    Hello Hilbert. All very logical.
    I first saw the flag on TV for the Seoul Olympics and thought it looked both interesting and impressive, which you would want in a national flag.

    • @anathardayaldar
      @anathardayaldar Год назад +2

      People kept asking why was it the pepsi logo.

    • @el4369
      @el4369 Месяц назад

      No, you wouldn't want this flag, it can be deduced from "The Book of Changes" that this hexagram (the diagram that the flag shows) indicates great misfortune, so you see the north and south Korea are always separated and there is always unrest in the country. Bagua since its invention from thousands years ago, was never used and to be used as one tribe/kingdom/country's flag. It's only to be used to divine for good or bad fortune.

    • @el4369
      @el4369 Месяц назад

      @@anathardayaldar A Pepsi logo would be much better than what it is right now, no joking, the elements combination of flag creates a very bad fortune.

  • @onbedoeldekut1515
    @onbedoeldekut1515 Год назад +1018

    I'm getting a thirst for a Pepsi for some reason.

    • @recognizesealand572
      @recognizesealand572 Год назад +109

      Product placement going crazy now a days

    • @blomakranz
      @blomakranz Год назад +17

      Yummy

    • @rebel1969X2
      @rebel1969X2 Год назад +12

      Don't drink it

    • @saladmcjones7798
      @saladmcjones7798 Год назад +33

      No kidding that was the first thing I thought of too! Pepsi already bought Soviet naval ships, wouldn’t be a stretch to see them buy the Korean Peninsula lol.

    • @CarlHedgehog
      @CarlHedgehog Год назад +3

      Drink it

  • @pete7389
    @pete7389 Год назад +8

    Always wondered what was the back story of that flag due to its uniqueness. Thanks for the explanation.

  • @darrellfrancis2115
    @darrellfrancis2115 Год назад +38

    I was kind of curious if there was any significance or reason to why they changed the design of the Taegeuk between the earlier flag and the post occupation flag to be less "spirally".

    • @anathardayaldar
      @anathardayaldar Год назад +3

      Maybe originally they didn't want to look too similar to yinyang.
      But later they realized it wasn't similar enough.
      Like idiots kept asking "but what is that?"

    • @Didagg
      @Didagg Год назад +4

      I like the spiral taegeuk better honestly

    • @yoshilovesyoshi
      @yoshilovesyoshi Год назад +6

      Maybe it has to do with printing and dyeing, it's probably really difficult to get the right shapes and even harder to standardize the correct "angle(for my lack of a better word)" of the spiral.

    • @el4369
      @el4369 Месяц назад

      Because of the ignorance that they didn't know how Bauga (which would be the full picture of the flag ) works.

  • @SMGJohn
    @SMGJohn Год назад +75

    Korean flags are really interesting, its also interesting to note how the Russian flag has also changed so much through history. But predominantly, the most known Russian flag is the Soviet flag which is a bit ironic.

    • @Sacto1654
      @Sacto1654 Год назад +10

      The current Russian flag is essentially the the Civil Ensign flag of the Russian Empire, which dates from 1796.

    • @seneei
      @seneei Год назад +2

      Holy commie-cope

    • @Rubycon99
      @Rubycon99 Год назад

      @@seneei I mean, honestly the Soviet flag probably is the most "iconic" flag associated with Russia. I don't you have to be a commie to say that. Personally, I like the Romanov flag. I think the black/yellow/white is really cool and unique.

    • @Losangelesharvey
      @Losangelesharvey Год назад

      your avatar suggests you like the
      communist red star

  • @comeintotheforest
    @comeintotheforest Год назад +148

    Good video! One thing, as far as I’ve had it explained for me by Korean friends of mine who have studied eastern and western philosophy in university, the symbol does not represent “positive and negative” or “good and evil” so much as a sort of “night and day”. There’s no implication of moral good or bad to either, but that instead it’s just different.
    I could be wrong, I haven’t studied it myself, but that’s how it’s been explained to me by people who know what they are talking about

    • @AGamerthatregretsalot
      @AGamerthatregretsalot Год назад +3

      I’m not reading all that

    • @candlehawk
      @candlehawk Год назад +57

      The terms Positive and Negative here in Taoism don't signify "good" and "bad" think more the Positive and Negative terminals on a battery.

    • @kiwiofoz7954
      @kiwiofoz7954 Год назад +35

      @@AGamerthatregretsalot lmao that isn't that much

    • @BoneTurnersTale
      @BoneTurnersTale Год назад +24

      ​@@AGamerthatregretsalot braindead yt users when the comment doesn't have a subway surfers clip underneath

    • @mxn1948
      @mxn1948 Год назад +12

      the original symbols as shown in the south korean flag is actually immensely bad if we go by their original meaning and use from china.
      for example, the traditional ying-yang actually has a dot, or "eye" in each half. this symbolizes the good within the bad and vice versa, this allows harmony between two differing forces, that even they can find common ground. it also stands for feminine and masculine forces, that the two can live peacefully
      the south korean version would mean absolute good and absolute bad, with zero compromises. in effect, brother against brother, son against father, wife against husband and so on. ironic if you think about north and south korea.
      then there is the 4 bar symbols. the original is 8, by ripping out 4, they turn a immensely good "prediction" to a immensely bad one. for example the korean flag has the "peak" which sounds good, except then you realize they are missing the "rise" or the "staying at" part and that being at your peak means there is nowhere to go but down, they got heaven and earth, which is usually good, but they are opposed with no mitigation factor (the other missing 4 bar symbols), so leadership and local powers are opposed without nothing to keep them together.
      taken together, the south korean flag would mean. brother against brother, husband against wife, central government against local powers, the best times are behind it, and no hope for the future.
      its all of course superstition, but man having a thing that curses you everyday as your flag....

  • @black.sasuke.uchiha
    @black.sasuke.uchiha Год назад +3

    9:18 the fact that a channel with over 400K subs is OK with including errors is somehow refreshing to me. I subscribed!

  • @codyshi4743
    @codyshi4743 Год назад +37

    I really wish Korea wasn’t divided into two after it had gain independence from Japan following the end of WW2.

    • @JohnDoe-mx6xh
      @JohnDoe-mx6xh Год назад +17

      I wish Japan didn't started the Imjin war. That way, the Jurchens would not have build up power to over throw the Ming dynasty. The Koreans kept the Jurchens as their part of the country until 1400's when the Jurchens were to change their mind and give tributes to Ming China. If the Japanese didn't started the war. Joseon and Ming would've suppressed the Jurchens. Focusing on the grind 💪🏾 for their country. Not westernized

    • @chappy3125
      @chappy3125 Год назад +1

      ​@@JohnDoe-mx6xhwell put

    • @cerealeater803
      @cerealeater803 Год назад +2

      That would be a very different Korea

    • @Austine1452
      @Austine1452 Год назад +1

      the two Korea's have absolutely nothing in common Today. they are for all interests and purposes two different things

    • @codyshi4743
      @codyshi4743 Год назад +16

      @@Austine1452 they’re only different in ideology and government, but ethnically they are still Korean, the people of the same nation just like West and East Germany.

  • @parttimelazyguyn
    @parttimelazyguyn Год назад +21

    I told old Korea to change their flag. (real)

    • @FictionHubZA
      @FictionHubZA Год назад +5

      That's says a lot about Korean society.

  • @notapplicable531
    @notapplicable531 Год назад +102

    Just a small point about the pronunciation of Choseon. The "eo" is a letter combination adopted about twenty years ago by the Korean government to represent the sound of a "u" as in "umbrella". So, the "eo" in Choseon is pronounced the same as it is in "luncheon" or "truncheon", not as it is in "neon" where it is in fact to separate letters , "e" and "o".

    • @capncake8837
      @capncake8837 Год назад +2

      As another tip for anyone interested, eu is pronounced like the oo in book.

    • @notapplicable531
      @notapplicable531 Год назад +5

      @@capncake8837 A prime example of this is how people want to Romanize 김 정 은 as Kim Jung Un and not as it is pronounced: Gim Jeong Eun.

    • @xinyiquan666
      @xinyiquan666 Год назад

      what ever it is, its ancient sound of chinese, because that word choseon is chinese word 朝鲜

    • @nirbija
      @nirbija Год назад

      @@xinyiquan666
      Do you have an english letters combination for that "ancient sound of Chinese"?
      I have no idea what your Chinese character is or means or sounds like. lol

    • @xinyiquan666
      @xinyiquan666 Год назад

      @@nirbija it is similar to cho sen , korea does never had its own lanuagges, it used Chinese as writing system from day one, even today, they have to write names in chinese on their ID cards, idt

  • @wadeturner2665
    @wadeturner2665 Год назад +27

    Why did the symbols for Heaven, Earth, Sun, and Moon change positions? Some variations were shown but not discussed. As an example, in the thumbnail, from the older version to the newer version the position of the Sun and Moon symbols were swapped.

    • @hans-joachimbierwirth4727
      @hans-joachimbierwirth4727 Год назад

      It's a very negative statement putting the sun under water (it's water, not the moon).

    • @jasons4045
      @jasons4045 Год назад +8

      Well..Koreans took so much from Chinese empires, modified for the sake of trying to separate themselves from Chinese influence and boom it's theirs!
      But I can somewhat understand as they were once stuck in between Japan and China, very fragile country

    • @babayaga3782
      @babayaga3782 Год назад

      Actually before the Korean republic fully emerged there wasn't a set rule for drawing Taegeukgi! As long as it included the taegeuk (or a variant) and the four bagua(we call it palgue팔괘) or even eight bagua in any position it was all considered a Taeguekgi.
      Fun fact, all korean students participate on a taegeukgi drawing contest every year on significant holidays related to the country's independence. I think it's good way to learn all the parts of the korean flag.

    • @S2reds
      @S2reds Год назад +1

      @@jasons4045 ok chinese nationalist calm down there, china had a major influence on all of asia, not just Korea

    • @Karznax
      @Karznax 9 месяцев назад

      @@jasons4045 yes. back when china USED to be great.

  • @Ffourteen
    @Ffourteen Год назад +83

    People love to talk about the symbolism of flag colors. But the real reason so many flags are red, white, and blue is that red and blue are the cheapest dyes. And if you are starting with fabric that has been bleached white, leaving parts white is even cheaper.

    • @golem7492
      @golem7492 Год назад +15

      Blue was certainly not a cheap dye until it could be produced synthetically.

    • @yoshilovesyoshi
      @yoshilovesyoshi Год назад +12

      @@golem7492 Yeah I was just going to say this. Very few things on earth are naturally blue, most of which are metals or stones which must be mined and refined, then mixed with other things, in order to make dye. One thing I'm surprised about is how few flags incorporate black and green, the actual cheapest dyes to produce as they could be produced even by a single Neolithic man using the same plant, either the leaves of a tree, or the burnt ashes of wood.

    • @GetUnwoke
      @GetUnwoke Год назад +4

      @@golem7492 yeah I thought it was called "royal" blue for a reason

  • @Verbalaesthet
    @Verbalaesthet Год назад +103

    If there is "EO" in Korean that does not mean 2 vowels one being e and one being o. "EO" is a transliteration of one of 2 "o"s that the Korean language uses. It is very similar to the English sound of "awe". The other "o" is just written as "O" and it doesn't really exist in English I think but it's a bit like the o in the English word "so" but not quite. In German both EO and O exist.

    • @JMM33RanMA
      @JMM33RanMA Год назад +1

      The first one [like the English o in of] is ㅓ The second one [like the English o in over] is ㅗ The problem for English speakers learning Korean is that in many cases there are several vowels or consonants that are not differentiated in English making hearing and producing them somewhat difficult to learn. Moreover, Korean vowels and consonants are seldom written alone, but have to be assembled in a cluster such as these three 태극기 Tae-guk-ki .

    • @Kromiball
      @Kromiball Год назад +24

      use the IPA dude

    • @davidjacobs8558
      @davidjacobs8558 Год назад +6

      yes, Korean language has many vowels that European languages don't use.
      then again, Korean language also lack some sounds that European languages use.

    • @gtc239
      @gtc239 Год назад +9

      Bro, use the IPA. Cos the pronunciations of "awe" is different from dialects. British English pronounce it as a long and rounded o /ɔː/, while Americans tend to pronounce it as short unrounded o /ɑ/.

    • @davidjacobs8558
      @davidjacobs8558 Год назад +5

      @@gtc239 not too many people know what IPA even is.

  • @wbzlsl
    @wbzlsl Год назад +2

    Korean Empire was founded in 1897 by king 'Gojong' of Joseon dynasty to strengthen Korea's deplomatical position until getting merge to Japanese empire in 1910. During 1392 to 1897 is Joseon dynasty

  • @101jir
    @101jir Год назад +3

    Honestly, the lighter shade of blue seems more fitting to me. I just like that one better.

  • @shuyangluo9237
    @shuyangluo9237 Год назад +1

    Tai Chi Bagua has eight hexagrams,korean flag 4 hexagrams shows symbol in Chinese means “conflicts"

  • @chundh99
    @chundh99 Год назад +14

    As a Korean I’m impressed by the massive research you done.

  • @ebonymaw8457
    @ebonymaw8457 Год назад +11

    6:31 People's Republic of Korea wasn't communist. It was anti-imperialist and sought popular land reforms, but that didn't stem from Marxist ideology.

    • @ebonymaw8457
      @ebonymaw8457 Год назад

      @CommunistBot Probably. Didn't last long enough for that to be certain.

    • @ebonymaw8457
      @ebonymaw8457 Год назад

      @CommunistBot That's after the split into North and South. And because communists backed by Soviets co-opted the northern committees and started infiltrating the southern ones.

    • @schneejacques3502
      @schneejacques3502 Год назад

      ​@CommunistBot,Nah. The soviet also did not accept korean rule

    • @ebonymaw8457
      @ebonymaw8457 Год назад

      @CommunistBot The US worked hard to defeat the Japanese empire. A protectorate over Japanese-occupied Korea was only fair. Same as the Soviet dominion over Eastern Europe. Yet the Soviets who did almost nothing in the Pacific got half of Korea. This is called a concession.

    • @ebonymaw8457
      @ebonymaw8457 Год назад

      @CommunistBot Eastern Europeans deserved independence too but that also didn't happen. From occupied to neo-occupied. But that's just war really, it's never fair for those caught in the in-between.

  • @vnietov
    @vnietov Год назад +60

    I have allways considered South Korea's flag the most beautiful in the world.Greetings from México.

    • @ersatzvitamin1
      @ersatzvitamin1 Год назад +5

      Thank you, I love its simplicity as well!
      I love the Mexican Flag and its Aztec lore, too!

    • @害羞的龙宝宝
      @害羞的龙宝宝 Год назад

      You can go and Google " 八卦图 " and you will know that the Korean flag is broken

    • @害羞的龙宝宝
      @害羞的龙宝宝 Год назад

      太极八卦图

    • @longiusaescius2537
      @longiusaescius2537 3 месяца назад

      @害羞的龙宝宝 so true???

    • @Chiao0003
      @Chiao0003 28 дней назад

      他这只有四个卦,阴阳鱼还没有眼,用死卦​当国旗真的太离谱了@@害羞的龙宝宝

  • @siberianresort5722
    @siberianresort5722 Год назад +3

    Imitating the Chinese Tai Chi Eight Trigrams diagram, the middle is the Yin Yang Eight Trigrams fish, symbolizing the positive and negative, and the three horizontal lines are "Qian", indicating heaven and yang. On the other hand, it is Kun, with the symbol "San Duan Heng" indicating the earth. In the innate Eight Trigrams, Qian and Kun are placed above and below the Tai Chi diagram, respectively. However, the Korean national flag has been significantly simplified,

  • @paxphonetica5800
    @paxphonetica5800 Год назад

    Very informative video

  • @LHS_Shadow
    @LHS_Shadow Год назад +20

    I always thought it was interesting how the taegeuk looked like the north/south border

    • @khftg-i2s
      @khftg-i2s Год назад +9

      By coincidence, Like the Taegeuk pattern, North Korea had more land on the left and South Korea had more land on the right, based on the 38th parallel. 😅

  • @DionysianLovecraftian
    @DionysianLovecraftian Год назад +62

    I like the South Korean flag because it looks unique and elegant.

    • @Noirthodox
      @Noirthodox Год назад +9

      Yeah that’s from Chinese Bagua 八卦

    • @Noirthodox
      @Noirthodox Год назад +6

      @@wonderful-w3u
      No, Taekwondo is a Korean-originated martial art.
      I can distinguish and give credits where credits are due :)

    • @Noirthodox
      @Noirthodox Год назад +5

      @@wonderful-w3u
      It‘s funny cause
      I never said those things you said in your comment.

    • @Noirthodox
      @Noirthodox Год назад +2

      @@wonderful-w3u
      You were not talking to me.
      You were talking to the made-up persona in your head who said those things.

    • @Noirthodox
      @Noirthodox Год назад +2

      ​@@wonderful-w3u
      I did not say anything about Kimchi and Hanbok. Did I?

  • @-haclong2366
    @-haclong2366 Год назад +1

    South Vietnam also had a Bagua-based flag, though they only put a single Trigram on it.

  • @xXxSkyViperxXx
    @xXxSkyViperxXx Год назад +4

    the korean flag is basically a lofty way for royals or governments to communicate that they hold up the heavens, the earth, the moon, the sun and the harmony of forces over the white korean garment

  • @florianschulz3027
    @florianschulz3027 Год назад +20

    i love how the 2 guys korea asked for a flag basically went with no effort at all or maximum effort and thought put into the flag.
    kinda a yin-yang sorta deal.

    • @anathardayaldar
      @anathardayaldar Год назад +1

      The first guy procrastinated until the last second and during the presentation had to think of something.

  • @cherylinthesky619
    @cherylinthesky619 Год назад

    Just some correction for 0:23
    Im not sure if its called ramhong something but it's better know with the name 인공기 (ingong-gi)

  • @glossaria2
    @glossaria2 Год назад

    4:26 The two intermediate trigrams are Water and Fire.

  • @Asiandesignmajor
    @Asiandesignmajor Год назад +5

    I always thought Pepsi was from Korea

  • @KangaKucha
    @KangaKucha Год назад +3

    Hm I wasn't aware it was different. Thanks :)

  • @baxalnam8897
    @baxalnam8897 Год назад

    정말 유익한 내용입니다 선생.

  • @PabloSanchez-zh6si
    @PabloSanchez-zh6si Год назад

    i now realice that my faucet has a 90º flipped taegeuk. Its interesting how red and blue represents similar concepts in radically different contexts (red=more heat=positive, blue=less heat=negative)

  • @C.A._Old
    @C.A._Old Год назад +1

    *That similiar from North Vietnam & Ottoman Empire Flag & Republic Of Türkiye Flag.*

  • @torrespark541
    @torrespark541 Год назад +7

    The Korean flag designed by Lee Eung Jun was already used in US-Korea treaty before Ma the chinese guy proposed it to the emperor of korea. Furthermore. Ma did not propose the Taeguk or other elements but suggested to make a variation of the qing flag. It seems like you got the source from the false claims of the chinese

  • @gadaadyn8190
    @gadaadyn8190 Год назад +2

    There is only one other country that uses the Fengshui on their flag

  • @xMoac
    @xMoac Год назад +9

    It’s a cool looking flag … not too cluttered and full of meaning.

    • @Noirthodox
      @Noirthodox Год назад +3

      Yeah that’s from Bagua 八卦

    • @hyun-87
      @hyun-87 Год назад +3

      @@Noirthodox 그렇긴 한데, 지금의 중국이 그때의 중국과 같다고 생각하니? 중국의 퇴보 했지.

    • @Noirthodox
      @Noirthodox Год назад +1

      ​@@hyun-87 Did my original comment imply the statement in your question at all?
      Why you forcefully steered what I said to what you wanna talk about

    • @Noirthodox
      @Noirthodox Год назад

      @@hyun-87 Sounds to me you got an issue that you're eager to prove a point and you're so emotional that you wanted to make unrelated things to be about what you wanna talk about to prove a point

    • @hyun-87
      @hyun-87 Год назад +4

      @@Noirthodox 文化大革命 | Cultural Revolution

  • @고등씨
    @고등씨 Год назад +2

    with all due respect , Taegeukgi flag was already used in the Korean - American Treaty, which was signed before the Ma Jianzhong's Proposal,
    so the claim that Ma Jianzhong proposed the design of the flag and was involved in its creation is not correct.
    This is either a malicious distortion that capitalizes on the confusion between the lunar and solar calendars,
    or a foolish Error that fails to take into account the difference in dates between the lunar and solar calendars.

  • @hans1783
    @hans1783 Год назад +2

    Oh damn… I just realize something…… Those lines on the Korean Flag is divination… from the Book of Changes / Classic of Changes.
    Perhaps it comes from a different one… but damn seeing this thumbnail litearlly right after I just saw about the that Book of Classic really got me spooked.
    _Yin and yang are represented by broken and solid lines: yin is broken (⚋) and yang is solid (⚊). Different constructions of three yin and yang lines lead to eight trigrams (八卦) namely, Qian (乾, ☰), Dui (兌, ☱), Li (離, ☲), Zhen (震, ☳), Xun (巽, ☴), Kan (坎, ☵), Gen (艮, ☶), and Kun (坤, ☷)._
    damn… so they're connected.

  • @challalla
    @challalla Год назад +26

    The People's Republic of Korea was not Communist and neither was its centrist leader Lyuh Woon-hyung. It is true that Lyuh was able to secure the cooperation of many communists, but the People's Republic of Korea united the entire political spectrum, and was rejected by both the Soviet Union and the US who installed their own governments in Korea rather than let Koreans rule themselves.

    • @davidjacobs8558
      @davidjacobs8558 Год назад +1

      there were very few educated people in Korea, due to Japanese occupation, and Koreans were not able to establish their own government without help from superpowers. World is not an ideal place, and you have to manuever the whims of Superpowers around you, whether you like it or not.

    • @challalla
      @challalla Год назад +14

      @@davidjacobs8558 This is not about whether the Koreans could have ruled themselves without the help of superpowers. They didn't have much choice in the matter. However, the occupying superpowers explicitly rejected the leadership of the People's Republic of Korea which had popular support. The Soviet Union jailed and executed the respected leader of the Pyongyang People's Committee. By spurning the opportunity to work with homegrown political leadership that had popular support, the superpowers helped create the conditions for the dictatorships that arose when the Koreas eventually were allowed to form their own governments.

    • @davidjacobs8558
      @davidjacobs8558 Год назад +2

      @@challalla Lyuh did not have popular support. Japanese suppressed all aspect of Korean life. Most Koreans didn't know what was going on in the world or in Korea. Most Koreans didn't know who Lyuh was. Most Koreans didn't know who Kim Il Sung was. Many Koreans heard of Rhee Seung Man, because he was around for long time, even before Japanese become extremely oppressive, due to the War going badly. and he was prefered by Americans.

    • @Losangelesharvey
      @Losangelesharvey Год назад

      you are funny, "centrist" -though you are right, not specifically communist, just its own flavor of dictatorship ("democratic" in the name being of course hilarious)

    • @Losangelesharvey
      @Losangelesharvey Год назад

      "helped create the conditions for dictatorship" - funny, what Koolaid are you drinking ? @@challalla

  • @Joseph-pz5bo
    @Joseph-pz5bo Год назад +1

    Idk why but my Japanese diaspora school had a flag that resembled the south Korean flag but instead of red and blue it was the union jack and red

  • @wondong313
    @wondong313 Год назад +5

    한국 전통 태극은 지금의 양극이 아닌 빨강 파랑 노랑의 3극이었답니다.

    • @eurostar3017
      @eurostar3017 Год назад

      맞음

    • @o3.27
      @o3.27 Год назад

      태극문양 빨강 파랑 자체가 북한 남한을 뜻하거나 아니면 좌파우파를 의미하는거라 추측됌

  • @bomba1905
    @bomba1905 Год назад +4

    I must ask as to when that quote regarding on the meaning of the DPRK flag is from. It contains some very nationalistic rhetoric which makes me suspect it might be from after the Korean War and that it is not the original meaning of the flag.

    • @davidjacobs8558
      @davidjacobs8558 Год назад +1

      North Korea used the same flag as South Korea until the Korean War.
      there is a photo of Kim Il Sung making speach under a large Korean Flag hanging in the background.

    • @bomba1905
      @bomba1905 Год назад

      @@davidjacobs8558 The current flag was adopted in the later half of 1948 (although it was slightly changed in 1992) which was two years before the Korean War started.

  • @안호성-p6z
    @안호성-p6z Год назад +43

    I did not expect an interesting video on the Korean flag by a non-Korean on the web. My gratitudes.
    However, I feel obliged to play the devil's advocate as the Korean online and make some nitpicks here:
    First is the extent of Ma Jianzhong's influence on the creation of the flag.
    The initial design of Ma was one resembling the Qing flag of the time, with a red dragon on a white background with blue clouds, which the Korean monarch furiously refused (May 22nd 1882 - April 6th on the lunar calendar). Then comes the record of a repartee between Ma and the Joseon PM Kim Hong-jip, which 'could' be interpreted as Ma coming up with a second design that gave fruit to the one in use today. The debut of the design resembling the current one is in May 22nd, 1882 (unofficially in the 14th) in the treaty signed with the United States, and the repartee above is recorded on April 11th of the same year. So it makes sense to believe that Ma has brought up a second design which the Koreans adopted and debuted in a month... right?
    Maybe, but also maybe not. Let me elaborate.
    The (possible) confusion arises due to the differences in date between the Lunar (Chinese) calendar and the contemporary calendar. Prior to 1896 - 14 years from the flag's debut, the lunar calendar was in use in Korea just like in much of sinosphere until then (Japan, Vietnam, etc and ofc China). And the recorded date of the repartee (April 11th) in contemporary calendar translates into May 27th, days after the signing of the treaty and hence the design's debut. Furthermore, the precise process in the creation of the Korean flag's design exists within the diary of Park Yung-ho (then mayor of Seoul and later PM). While the draft designs no longer exist, the King's initial design is said to've consisted solely of Red (symbolising the monarch), Blue (symbolising the ministers) and White background (symbolising the common populace). Then PM Kim objected on the grounds of the flag being too similar to the Japanese one, henceforth adding the bagua symbolising the 8 historic provinces. For the historians subscribing to this side of the story, Ma's conversation with Kim on the new flag is considered mere afterthought. It was perhaps Ma approving Korea's adoption of a new flag on behalf of the Qing government, as a suzerain nation would do, or Ma saving his face by fabricating some element of Qing influence on Korea's new flag after his initial design was vehemently rejected.
    Interpretation of the Korean flag's origin could go either way, but the current take seems rather misleadingly oversimplified as "Chinese diplomat made a flag and the Koreans loved it" sort.
    Second is on the 'People's Republic of Korea' being 'communist' part. While the PRK was undoubtedly a left-leaning endeavor, it's inception was by a (debatably) non-communist socialist with attempts to create a unity government of both left and right. It's left-leaning agenda was due to the fact that the government was hastily created under worries of Soviet march into Seoul, and hence was created in absence of key right-wing leaders (of the Provisional Government), leaving it to the mostly left-leaning pro-independence groups at home. Probably could've just settled with the term 'socialist' or 'left-leaning' for this, since 'communist' is quite a narrow term to brand a country.

    • @Cuyt24
      @Cuyt24 Год назад

      North Korea is communist

    • @dwp_orange8416
      @dwp_orange8416 Год назад +1

      this needs to be pinned 🙏

  • @lamkw6329
    @lamkw6329 Год назад +2

    as a Cantonese speaker, when you mentioned the name of North Korean flag at 1 minute there, i immediately catch the meaning of it, cos the pronunciation is just like Cantonese 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @lyhthegreat
      @lyhthegreat Год назад +1

      chinese loan words, they usually sound like some chinese dialects

  • @야야투레-w1h
    @야야투레-w1h Год назад +1

    When I was youngkid, I thought the pepsi is Korean company because of similarity with the shape of flag of my country😅

  • @mathieuleader8601
    @mathieuleader8601 Год назад

    the purple really makes the old flag stand out

  • @GoldieTamamo
    @GoldieTamamo Год назад

    0:31 They reversed the directions of the top left and bottom right i-ching trigrams, inverting the positions of 'water' and 'fire'... or I suppose 'moon' and 'sun', in this case.

  • @Uzair_Of_Babylon465
    @Uzair_Of_Babylon465 Год назад +9

    Great video keep it up you're doing amazing things 😁👍

  • @headstanding_Penguin
    @headstanding_Penguin Год назад

    The flag 97 to 2011 is better than the one 2011 to currently... The red and blue are much more vibrant

  • @cmyk8964
    @cmyk8964 Год назад +2

    How to read romanized Korean words:
    ae - between the “a” in “cat” and “e” in “bed”
    eo - between the “o” in “not” and “o” in “nor”
    eu - between the “e” in “kitten” and “u” in “put”

  • @ytn00b3
    @ytn00b3 Год назад +6

    Taoism entered Korea before the Confucianism more than 2000 years ago but never really adopted officially by various Korean states, the main religion was basically local folk shamanism but when Buddhism entered Korea, the all of Korean kingdoms adopted Buddhism as official state religion and this became more systematically adopted and late Silla to Goryeo periods were the golden age for Buddhism in Korea. It was the state religion, however Neo-Confucianism was favored by the scholars of Goryeo and this led to official adoption by the late Goryeo after Buddhism became corrupted and discourage, when Joseon took over from late Goryeo, Neo-Confucianism became the state religion and code of everything from way of life to laws.

  • @aa-bz8jg
    @aa-bz8jg Год назад +1

    "Jwadokgi" is the most badass flag in Korean flag history.

  • @fabiancolumbus6271
    @fabiancolumbus6271 Год назад

    9:18 love it when he has a stroke 😂 good video though

  • @dashkinblacksmith3998
    @dashkinblacksmith3998 Год назад +1

    very nice

  • @kori228
    @kori228 Год назад

    Taegeukgi -> Tai Chi Flag
    Ramhongsaek Konghwagukgi -> Blue (&) Red Color ? ? Country Flag

  • @sasha6374
    @sasha6374 Год назад

    7:43 “would peace and progress”
    Me: would peace and progress my ass lmaf😂

  • @NoobHammer
    @NoobHammer Год назад +19

    Philippines has many interesting flags not even including the kingdoms that once ruled. One of them being the KKK flag. Would be nice to do a video on that.

    • @miahconnell23
      @miahconnell23 Год назад +1

      Whaaaaaaat ?!?!

    • @NoobHammer
      @NoobHammer Год назад

      @@miahconnell23 The Philippines has lots of words and abbreviation that sound weird in English. Such as KKK, MILF, Ambasing, nega, Masbate, etc. There was even a country in the islands during 1898 named the Republic of Negros.

    • @teun911
      @teun911 Год назад

      en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katipunan

    • @miahconnell23
      @miahconnell23 Год назад +1

      @@JackopolyWasTaken Dude, thank you so much for dropping knowledge on me. ❤️ for real 🙏🙌.

    • @Anginitkapetayo
      @Anginitkapetayo Год назад +5

      Also important thing to note about the KKK flag here is that, its not an acronym of the Ku Klux Klan and it has nothing to do with that group. Its actually written in tagalog as Kataas-taasang, kagalang-galang, katipunan which basically means "Most high, Well Respected, The Gathered ones" (katipunan)
      The KKK in the phililpines were basically an army that fought against the Spaniards

  • @AnyoneSeenMikeHunt
    @AnyoneSeenMikeHunt Год назад

    Looks like a Surround Sound Button.

  • @demon6937
    @demon6937 Год назад +2

    i wish korean peninsula will be unified and no more communism on the north geez people are starving and suffer in malnutrition aside from the families closer to Kim Jong Un

  • @jinshiksung
    @jinshiksung Год назад

    was that dramatic war year

  • @Tsuruchi_420
    @Tsuruchi_420 Год назад +6

    I find it kinda hard to say that Korea was liberated from the North and the South given that the Americans didn't actually fight the Japanese in Korea

  • @MrJm323
    @MrJm323 Год назад

    Because the old design made the onlookers feel dizzy.

  • @JMM33RanMA
    @JMM33RanMA Год назад +9

    When I was first Teaching in S. Korea, in 1972, I saw an old shrine with the black and white Taeguk on the door. In addition I occasionally saw pictures that had three rather than two components, a yellow shape was added to the similar blue and red shapes. I saw both a curly version like the Imperial flag, and a version more like the present one on the flag. A version NOT used on the flag has two "eyes," the one within the blue shape being red and the one within the red shape being blue. The symbolism here being that each form or status has within it the seed of the other. I thought that somewhat similar to a Marks & Engels notion.
    Thanks for another very interesting video, and for the trip down memory lane.

    • @davidjacobs8558
      @davidjacobs8558 Год назад +3

      3 Taeguk is very commonly used in Korea in traditional decorations.
      they mean Heaven, Earth and Men (Humanity).
      frequently painted on double hung doors on traditonal buildings.

  • @DwAboutItManFr
    @DwAboutItManFr Год назад

    2011-2023 red with the 1997-2011 blue would be great.

  • @papazataklaattiranimam
    @papazataklaattiranimam Год назад +9

    Love South Korea from Turkiye❤

  • @Helios824
    @Helios824 Год назад

    I love old flag this is better for reunification

  • @kimjong-un8361
    @kimjong-un8361 Год назад +2

    Bagua map comes from a divination book in ancient China 3,000 years ago. It is used to predict the future. It has different meanings according to different combinations. The book is called I-Ching, and it consists of three parts, one of which has been lost.

  • @KuraSourTakanHour
    @KuraSourTakanHour Год назад

    Good thing they did, previous flags were kind of messy. Although I thought 1946 flag was quite neat

  • @rs-dp6pr
    @rs-dp6pr Год назад +1

    Lol man if you don't get the feeling that south Korean were a sub empire of ancient China.. just look at the new flag.. it's a literal taichi symbol.

  • @babayaga3782
    @babayaga3782 Год назад +4

    I am Korean and I've learnt so much from this video and all the Korean history experts in the comment section. 😂😂😂 You can never boast your knowlege in Korea because there's always an expert nearby.

  • @micahistory
    @micahistory Год назад

    interesting, never knew the history or symbolism of that flag

  • @zsarimaxim692
    @zsarimaxim692 Год назад +1

    The four Bagua symbols are heaven, earth, water, and fire.

  • @TheHjjin
    @TheHjjin Год назад +1

    That's not sun and moon, but fire and water So, heaven, earth, fire and water.
    So quite similar to 4 elements of earth , water, fire, and air.

  • @kzcciynk
    @kzcciynk Год назад

    The left flag on the thumbnail goes hard af

  • @eunsoojang6302
    @eunsoojang6302 Год назад +14

    As a native Korean (welp South Korean ofc) this is pretty accurate! One of the things I want to point out is that although the “People’s Republic of Korea” is in fact leftist or somewhat socialist, it wasn’t communist, and had little to do with Soviet Union. Other than that it’s pretty accurate! I actually don’t know why the flag design has been slightly altered throughout time, and I hoped to learn it from this video but I don’t think I could learn it haha.
    The yin-yang or Taeguk symbol represents harmony between positive and negative, yes. The key difference between the west and the east on viewing time is that whereas the west has seen time/history as a linear/progressive thing, for example dialectics in Marxist ideology, the east has seen it as circulative thing, such as the Sun rising everyday, the day being the positive and the night being the negative. The Moon in this case was viewed as an antithesis to the Sun and other examples include: Men and Women which were viewed as positive and negative respectively. As far as I know, this yin-yang relationship is also found similarly in the Middle East or Near East region (Levant or Syria) which had this dichotomous philosophy, and it influenced Christianity, creating Devil as opposed to God, and Hell as opposed to Heaven, whereas the original Christianity only had God and Heaven but not Devil nor Hell.

    • @SL16867
      @SL16867 Год назад

      Yeah, Westerners typically discuss the 6-2-5 War in terms of the USA succeeding in keeping communists out of the ROK, but they don't discuss how the USA approved of the ROK murdering local leftist protesters who just wanted social democracy.

  • @dennislogan6781
    @dennislogan6781 Год назад

    Anyone else think of the Dharma group from Lost at 4:25?

  • @grega9603
    @grega9603 Год назад +1

    The old one looks like something from Naruto. The people of the blueberry raspberry swirl village.

  • @Indian_Rajput
    @Indian_Rajput Год назад

    It looks like 4 satellites are revolving that coin in middle

  • @harold2054
    @harold2054 Год назад

    lol I didn't know that the color of the flag has been lighter since 2011

  • @Gargoyle1958
    @Gargoyle1958 Год назад

    Reminds me of the cover of T&C Surf Designs

  • @suemmusic
    @suemmusic Год назад

    EO is like E of "~ER" in English

  • @el4369
    @el4369 Месяц назад

    Referenced from the internet:The bagua (Chinese: 八卦; pinyin: bāguà; lit. 'eight trigrams') is a set of symbols from China intended to illustrate the nature of reality as being composed of mutually opposing forces reinforcing one another. Firstly, the yin-yang fish in the Taiji Diagram originally had "fish eyes", symbolizing that there is yin within yang and yang within yin. Without the growth of one aspect of yang, the other aspect of yin would not grow either, meaning that they give birth to each other. However, the national flag of South Korea removed the "fish eyes". Isn't it like being completely incompatible with each other? Just look at present-day North Korea and South Korea. They are precisely in a situation of being at odds with each other. (Below: Note the difference in the circles in the middle of the two pictures.)
    Secondly, the circle in the middle of the Taiji originally represented "mutual contention between left and right". But the South Koreans deliberately changed it to red on top and blue on the bottom, reversing yin and yang. As mentioned above, the yin-yang fish without the "fish eyes" is split into two halves by the curve in the middle and is no longer a symbol of reunion, just like the division between the North and the South today.
    Thirdly, with red on top (representing North Korea) and blue on the bottom (representing South Korea), it is an ominous hexagram. In the words of the Book of Changes, it is "The state of Wei Ji indicates misfortune as the positions are improper." For example, red symbolizes fire and blue symbolizes water. Fire can boil water when it is below, but now it is fire (North Korea) on top and water (South Korea) on the bottom.
    Fourthly, in the Taegeukgi (the national flag of South Korea), Qian (heaven) and Kun (earth) are separated in the north and south respectively, while Kan (water) and Li (fire) are opposite to each other and located in the middle, just like the 38th Parallel today. And look at the curve in the national flag. It is just like the boundary line between the territories of North Korea and South Korea.

  • @sangsp711
    @sangsp711 Год назад +1

    태극은 은하 소용돌이에 지문도 비슷한 사람들이 있다 손가락 지문도 정확히 음양모양 똑같은 형태가 많소 (프랙탈 구조로 어디에나 찾을수 있다 그냥 물이 구멍으로 흘러가도 비슷해 보임 ) 적도선이 지나는 곳 에서는 신기하게 서로 다른방향으로 회전하는걸 눈으로 본다
    바꿔도 좋지만 힘든작업이라면 그냥 원래 대로 태극 음양을 좌우대칭으로 돌리는게 더 좋아 보인다

  • @frb1808
    @frb1808 Год назад +21

    Great video as always. However, I hope your regard for native-like pronunciation like what I have watched from other videos be sustained consistently. Vowels in Romanized Korean also use digraphs to represent a single sound.
    Meanwhile, the Korean Empire was declared only at the last couple years of the 19th century when the penultimate native Korean monarch Gojong of the Yi Dynasty (i.e., the Joseon Dynasty; Joseon was also a name of Korea) proclaimed himself emperor (even with the incoming threat of the Japanese empire). This should have be noted due importance since, at least nominally, the Korean state viewed itself as a vassal of Qing China, which was also an empire.

    • @davidjacobs8558
      @davidjacobs8558 Год назад

      yes, in Chinese view of the world, whoever rule the Central Plain (ie, China) rules the whole earth.
      And everyone else are vassals to Chinese Emperor. ie, there can only be 1 Empire, and 1 Emperor.
      And only Chinese Emperor has the direct access to the Heaven.
      Also, what this means is that anybody (ie, foreigners, non Han Chinese) can be the Emperor of China, if he has the mandate of Heaven.

    • @aaaa-xv8fi
      @aaaa-xv8fi Год назад +2

      It's not a proper way to describe the Joseon-Qing relationship. Joseon was an independent kingdom and also a tributary state of the Chinese empire. Originally, the mainland Chinese empire was Ming. When Qing conquered and replaced Ming, Joseon denied serving Qing as the mainland Chinese empire. They eventually waged the war, so Qing imposed Joseon to be the tributary state of them. Joseon was forced to accept it, but even after the war, they didn't think of themselves as a vassel of Qing.

    • @frb1808
      @frb1808 Год назад

      ​@@aaaa-xv8fi Hence the word nominal. The people of Joseon had so long been considering themselves independent, and in reality they really were independent. Indeed, when they count their years, they count from the first year of reign of the last Ming emperor.

  • @danisoification
    @danisoification Год назад +4

    The first Korean Flag was used in 22 May 1882 for United States-Korea Treaty of 1882. The Chinese statesman Martin Zhang's suggestion was actually made in 27 May 1882 ( 11 April 1882 by lunar calendar). So it's not true that Korean flag was designed by Chinese.

    • @星辰大海-q1i
      @星辰大海-q1i Год назад

      한국인들은 상상력으로 사건을 만들어내기보다는 역사를 존중해야 합니다. 그렇지 않으면 현재처럼 한국 역사가 농담처럼 보이게 되어 사람들이 민망해질 것입니다.

    • @dwp_orange8416
      @dwp_orange8416 Год назад +1

      @@星辰大海-q1i funny a chinese person is saying that 🤣

    • @danisoification
      @danisoification 5 месяцев назад

      @@星辰大海-q1i 당신은 태극기를 중국인이 만들었다생각하는군.만약 그랬다면 한국인들은 태극기를 지금까지 쓰진 않았을것이다. 중국에 대한 한국인들의 혐오감을 생각하면, 북한이 그랬듯이 한국도 당연히 새로운 국기를 만들어 썼겟지.

  • @kb.e3762
    @kb.e3762 Год назад

    It is not from confucias or daoism and ying yang is not the origin it is from shaivism from india. You can find the transformation is detail abt this symbol, especially in south indian temples.

  • @yoingen
    @yoingen 8 месяцев назад

    3:00 The Tai Chi diagram in your picture is wrong. The Tai Chi diagram shows that there is yang within yin, and yin within yang.It means that you can’t just look at the surface of everything. Positives and negatives are always intertwined.In fact, according to Chinese divination theory, the Korean flag is very unlucky.Just like a person, only the body, no limbs. In other words, there are only up, down, left and right, not southeast, northwest.It also means that North Korea and South Korea can never be integrated and will always be divided.

  • @sashi5827
    @sashi5827 Год назад

    Fun with flags

  • @xdloremoon
    @xdloremoon Год назад

    Gi literally means flag

  • @ariochiv
    @ariochiv Год назад +1

    6:45 I agree... that's pretty darn cool flag.

  • @willychan4290
    @willychan4290 Год назад

    North Korean Flag Ramhongsaek Konghwagukgi literaly means Blue Red Color Republic flag

  • @ninjapirate123
    @ninjapirate123 27 дней назад

    South Korea kept the old flag but change a bit whereas North Korea had a new different flag

  • @BallisticSanta
    @BallisticSanta Год назад

    When i Saw the Korean Plane i saw the red and blue and I thought it was Pepsi Airlines or Something

  • @AGamerthatregretsalot
    @AGamerthatregretsalot Год назад +9

    South Korea is secretly under the control of Pepsi and Samsung

    • @davidjacobs8558
      @davidjacobs8558 Год назад

      yes, that's why 3 generations of Samsung CEO's went to jail.
      it's South Korean Politicians pass time to send Samsung CEO's to prison.
      They think such stunt is good for showing their power.

    • @leewindy-19
      @leewindy-19 Год назад

      fr. As a korean, i feel like my own government is just a front and the large companies actually run the country.

    • @davidjacobs8558
      @davidjacobs8558 Год назад

      @@leewindy-19 Just like Sweden.
      That's why Lee jae yong said he wants to make Samsung like that Swedish company.

  • @lamlam-bw7ev
    @lamlam-bw7ev Год назад

    The Korean Empire only existed from 1897 - 1910, it was only a kingdom before then.

  • @nathanafoa6579
    @nathanafoa6579 Год назад

    They should have the Shincheonji Symbol as the Korean flag

  • @arcadealchemist
    @arcadealchemist Год назад

    obviously sacred geometry is banned in flags now part from those with Deltas and rainbows

  • @ameccy
    @ameccy Год назад +6

    It's incorrect to call the 1880-era Korea an "Empire", as it was only a "Kingdom" under the influence of the Chinese (Qing) "Empire" - There was a strict rule regarding the usage of these two names at that time. After the end of the First Sino-Japanese War, China (Qing) lost control over Korea and then Korea became an Empire in 1897. However, the Korean Empire lasted for only a very short period of time before being annexed by Japan in 1910.

  • @AyubuKK
    @AyubuKK Год назад +19

    The first Japanese flag would’ve been kinda neat to have if it didn’t become connected with ultra nationalism.

    • @tevarinvagabond1192
      @tevarinvagabond1192 Год назад +24

      Japan literally still uses it... it's the flag for their Navy

    • @falconeshield
      @falconeshield Год назад

      ​@@tevarinvagabond1192Didn't they disband the navy or is that the army?

    • @tevarinvagabond1192
      @tevarinvagabond1192 Год назад +7

      @@falconeshield No, they just had to downsize; as for the army it's called the "Japanese Self-Defense Force" (JSDF) since they signed a treaty that they aren't allowed to attack countries with troops. However, they amended it a bit over the years since the US has trusted them now for a few decades, they've sent soldiers to conflict zones like Afghanistan to work with US troops. The past few years they've also been considering to change the name of the JSDF to the Japanese Army and get rid of their restrictions, the US actually wants this so they don't have to spend as much money to protect Japan, and doing so would mean Japan could bulk up its military to defend against China better

    • @-----REDACTED-----
      @-----REDACTED----- Год назад +2

      Japan is not allowed to have a military so it simply chose to have a “military” in all but name…

    • @tevarinvagabond1192
      @tevarinvagabond1192 Год назад +4

      @@-----REDACTED----- That's false, the US has already said for many years now that Japan is allowed to have a formal military again, but the Japanese government itself has refused to do so because Japanese people have been very pacifistic and against the idea. However, many Japanese now realise the threat of China and the government thus has been in talks for some time now about the possibility to have a true army again with full capabilities