(Redirected from Wanggeom seong)
'Pyongyang' is the
capital city of
North Korea, located on the
Taedong River, at (39.0333, 125.75). The official
population of the city is not disclosed; given as 2,741,260 in 1993, it was reported as 2.5 and 3.8 million in 2002 and 2003 by
Chongryon, a pro-North Korean Japanese organization.
The city was split from the
South P'yŏngan province in 1946. It is administered as a
Directly Governed City (''Chikhalsi''), on the same level as provincial governments, not a
Special City (''Teukbyeolsi'') as
Seoul is in
South Korea. Some sources, mostly older and South Korean, refer to P'yŏngyang as a Special City, but it has been reported that even the South Korean government adopted the Directly Governed City terminology in 1994.
History
According to
legend, the city was founded in 2334 BC as ''Wanggŏmsŏng'' (왕검성; 王儉城). It became a major city under
Gojoseon.
In 108 BC
Han Dynasty China conquered Gojoseon and the capital of the
Lelang Commandery was put near Pyongyang. Lelang remained an important commercial and cultural outpost until it was destroyed by the expanding
Goguryeo in 313.
Goguryeo moved its capital here in 427.
Tang Dynasty China and
Silla allied and defeated Goguryeo in 668. In 676, it was taken by Silla but left in the border between Silla and
Balhae until the
Goryeo dynasty, when the city was revived as ''Sŏgyŏng'' (서경; 西京; "Western Capital") although never actually a capital of Goryeo. It was the provincial capital of the
P'yŏngan Province during the
Joseon dynasty, becoming provincial capital of
South P'yŏngan Province from 1896 and through the
period of Japanese rule.
In 1945, Japanese rule ended and it was occupied by
Soviet forces, and became the temporary capital of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea at its establishment in 1948 while it aimed to recapture its official capital at that time of
Seoul. It was severely damaged in the
Korean War, during which it was briefly occupied by South Korean forces. After the war, the city was quickly rebuilt with Soviet help, with many buildings built in
Stalinist architecture.
Historic names
One of its many historic names is ''Ryugyŏng'' (
류경; 柳京), or "capital of willows", as
willow trees have always been numerous throughout the city's history, and many poems written about these willows. Even today, Pyongyang has numerous willow trees planted everywhere, and many buildings and places have "''Ryugyŏng''" in their names, the most notable of all being its uncompleted
Ryugyŏng Hotel. Its other historic names include ''Kisŏng'', ''Hwangsŏng'',
''Rangrang'', ''Sŏgyŏng'', ''Sŏdo'', ''Hogyŏng'', ''Changan'', etc. During the Japanese occupation, and in the Japanese language, it is also known as ''Heijō'', which is simply the Japanese reading of the Chinese characters 平壌 the name Pyongyang consists of.
Administrative divisions

Satellite view of the ''Willow City''.
P'yŏngyang is divided into 19 wards (''kuyŏk'' or ''guyŏk'') and 4 counties (''kun'' or ''gun'').
[1]
★
Chung-guyŏk (중구역; 中區域)
★ P'yŏngch'ŏn-guyŏk (평천구역; 平川區域)
★ Pot'onggang-guyŏk (보통강구역; 普通江區域)
★ Moranbong-guyŏk (모란봉구역; 牡丹峰區域)
★ Sŏsŏng-guyŏk (서성구역; 西城區域)
★ Sŏn'gyo-guyŏk (선교구역; 船橋區域)
★ Tongdaewŏn-guyŏk (동대원구역; 東大院區域)
★ Taedonggang-guyŏk (대동강구역; 大同江區域)
★ Sadong-guyŏk (사동구역; 寺洞區域)
★ Taesŏng-guyŏk (대성구역; 大城區域)
★ Man'gyŏngdae-guyŏk (만경대구역; 萬景台區域)
★ Hyŏngjesan-guyŏk (형제산구역; 兄弟山區域)
★ Ryongsŏng-guyŏk (룡성구역; 龍城區域)
★ Samsŏk-guyŏk (삼석구역; 三石區域)
★ Sŭngho-guyŏk (승호구역; 勝湖區域)
★ Ryŏkp'o-guyŏk (력포구역; 力浦區域)
★ Rakrang-guyŏk (락랑구역; 樂浪區域)
★ Sunan-guyŏk (순안구역; 順安區域)
★ Ŭnjŏng-guyŏk (은정구역; 恩情區域)
★ Kangnam-gun (강남군; 江南郡)
★ Chunghwa-gun (중화군; 中和郡)
★ Sangwŏn-gun (상원군; 祥原郡)
★ Kangdong-gun (강동군; 江東郡)
Landmarks
The capital has been completely rebuilt since the
Korean War (
1950–
1953). It is designed with wide avenues, imposing monuments, and monolithic buildings. The tallest structure in the city is the uncompleted 1,082 foot (330 m)
Ryugyŏng Hotel. This hotel has 105 floors, encloses 3.9 million square feet (360,000 m²) of floor space, and was planned to be topped by seven
revolving restaurants. However, construction has been stalled since the early
1990s and the building stands as an empty shell.
Some notable landmarks in the city include the
Kumsusan Memorial Palace, the
Arch of Triumph (heavily inspired by
Paris's
Arc de Triomphe but of a larger size), the reputed birthplace of
Kim Il-sung at Mangyongdae Hill,
Juche Tower, and two of the world's largest stadiums (
Kim Il Sung Stadium and
Rungnado May Day Stadium).
Pyongyang TV Tower is a minor landmark. Other visitor attractions include the
Korea Central Zoo and the large golden statues of North Korea's two leaders.
Transportation

Pyongyang metro system.
Pyŏngyang has a two-line underground
metro system which has a length of . The Hyoksin line serves Kwangbok, Konguk, Hwanggumbol, Konsol, Hyoksin, Jonu, Jonsung, Samhung and Rakwon station. The Chollima line serves Puhung, Yonggwang, Ponghwa, Sungni, Tongil, Kaeson, Jonu and Pulgunbyol station. There is also a long
tram and
trolleybus service, but tourists have heard that few locals use them due to the high and frequent hazard of electrocution . There are not as many private
automobiles as in Western cities, although the state government operates a sizable fleet of
Mercedes-Benz limousines for Party bureaucrats. Many residents walk, cycle, or use the subway.
State-owned
Air Koryo has scheduled flights from
Sunan Capital International Airport to
Beijing (
PEK),
Shenyang (
SHE) and
Vladivostok (
VVO). There are occasional chartered flights to
Macau (
MFM),
Incheon (
ICN),
Yangyang County (
YNY) and several Japanese cities. Air Koryo also claims scheduled service on a few domestic routes, although the accuracy of this is not known. Intermittent service to Pyongyang is also provided by a few foreign carriers, most notably Chinese.
The city also has regular international train services to Beijing and
Moscow. A journey to Beijing takes about 25 hours and 25 minutes (
K27 from Beijing /
K28 from Pyŏngyang, on Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays); a journey to Moscow takes 6 days.
Climate

Climate diagram of Pyŏngyang.
''Climate diagram of Pyŏngyang''
Sister cities
★
Kathmandu,
Nepal [2]
People from Pyongyang
★
Ahn Eak-tai, composer
★
Hwang Jang-yop, politician
★
Kim Il-sung, politician
★
George M. McCune, co-developer (with
Edwin O. Reischauer) of the
McCune-Reischauer romanization of
Korean
★
Pak Doo-ik, former footballer
Notes
1. 행정구역현황 (''Haengjeong Guyeok Hyeonhwang'') Also Administrative divisions of North Korea (used as reference for Hanja)
2. International relations
See also
★
List of cities in North Korea
External links
★
Holidays in Pyongyang
★ Satellite image from
Google Maps
★
Pictures from Pyongyang
★
Travel-Images.com - DPRK - images of Pyongyang
★
Pyongyang Daily News
★
Ryugyong Hotel - Tallest building in Pyongyang
★
Pictures of Pyongyang
★
North Korea (DPRK), an album of tourist's pictures on ''Wandering Camera''.
★
Pictures of Pyongyang's transportation
Further reading
Chris Springer, ''Pyongyang: The Hidden History of the North Korean Capital.'' Saranda Books, 2003. ISBN 963-00-8104-0.
Robert Willoughby, ''North Korea: The Bradt Travel Guide.'' Globe Pequot, 2003. ISBN 1-84162-074-2.