Pyongan Province
P'yÅng'an Province | |
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Korean transcription(s) | |
• Hangul | í‰ì•ˆë„ |
• Hanja | å¹³å®‰é“ |
• Revised Romanization | Pyeong-an-do |
• McCune–Reischauer | P'yÅng'an-do |
Short name transcription(s) | |
• Hangul | í‰ì•ˆ |
• Revised Romanization | Pyeongan |
• McCune–Reischauer | P'yÅngan |
Pyongan | |
Country | Korea |
Region | KwansÅ |
Capital | P'yÅngyang |
Government | |
• Type | Province |
Dialect | P'yÅngan |
P'yÅng'an (P'yÅng'an-do [pÊ°jʌŋando]) was one of the Eight Provinces of Korea during the Joseon Dynasty. P'yÅngan was located in the northwest of Korea. The provincial capital was P'yÅngyang.
History
P'yÅngan Province was formed in 1413. Its name derived from the names of two of its principal cities, P'yÅngyang (í‰ì–‘; 平壤) and Anju (안주; 安州).
In 1895, the province was replaced by the Districts of Kanggye (Kanggye-bu; 강계부; 江界府) in the northeast, Ŭiju (Ŭiju-bu; ì˜ì£¼ë¶€; 義州府) in the northwest, and P'yÅngyang (P'yÅngyang-bu; í‰ì–‘부; 平壤府) in the south.
In 1896, Kanggye and Ŭiju Districts were reorganized into North P'yÅngan Province, and P'yÅngyang District was reorganized into South P'yÅngan Province. North and South P'yÅngan Provinces are today part of North Korea.
Geography
P'yÅngan was bounded on the east by HamgyÅng, on the south by Hwanghae, on the west by the Yellow Sea, and on the north by China.
The regional name for the province was KwansÅ.
External links
-
Pyongan travel guide from Wikivoyage
- Seoul City history article on Hanseong and 22 other late 19th-century districts (in Korean)
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