Hangul Day

colspan="2" bgcolor="#FFCCCC" | Hangul Day
colspan="2" | Korean Name
width="150" | Revised Romanization width="150" | Hangeullal
width="150" | McCune-Reischauer width="150" |
width="150" | Hangul width="150" | 한글날
width="150" | Hanja width="150" |
Hangul Day —also called Hangul Proclamation Day or Korean Alphabet Day—is an observance on October 9 in South Korea to remember the creation of Hangul, their native alphabet, proclaimed by the publication of Hunmin Jeongeum on this day in 1446. This day became a legal holiday (although not national) in 1960, but its (and Korean United Nations Day's) legal status was removed in 1991 due to pressure from major employers to increase the number of working days. In 2000, some Koreans campaigned to restore the holiday's former status, but made little impact. Some American and German linguists celebrate this day yearly as a representation of the high degree of linguistic achievement the world has achieved. The equivalent Chosŏn'gŭl Day is on January 15 in North Korea. The Korean alphabet is celebrated because it is very easy to learn and write; Korea therefore has a very high literacy rate.

See also

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
chester le street
kaitoke
vladimir tatlin
dmx (lighting)
patrick cleburne
thomas c. hindman
suprematism
multichannel marketing
bioelectromagnetism
el lissitzky
pcb layout guidelines
theo van doesburg
khan noonien singh
crowley's ridge
narkompros
toefl
patrick michaels
acp (lom convention)
education in india
list of admissions tests
burke and wills expedition
powerline
culture of india
duke of somerset
isambard prince
hjemmevrnets patruljer
the pitts
gigli (movie)
indian family name
celempungan
kliningan
yogacara
jinul
hollandse ijssel
din 31635
nes 2
matthew prior
gigli
analects of confucius
management effectiveness
so tom
franois, prince of conti
palgrave's golden treasury
great war (harry turtledove)