Global Summit on
Civil, Structural and Environmental Engineering
Seoul, South Korea | December 09-11 2024
December 09-11 2024
Seoul, South Korea
Seoul,
the capital of South Korea, is a huge metropolis where modern skyscrapers,
high-tech subways and pop culture meet Buddhist temples, palaces and street
markets. Notable attractions include futuristic Dongdaemun Design Plaza, a
convention hall with curving architecture and a rooftop park; Gyeongbokgung
Palace, which once had more than 7,000 rooms; and Jogyesa Temple, site of
ancient locust and pine trees.Â
Seoul, city and capital of South Korea (the
Republic of Korea). It is located on the Han River (Han-gang)
in the northwestern part of the country, with the city centre some 37 miles (60
km) inland from the Yellow
Sea (west). Seoul is the cultural, economic, and political centre of
South Korea.
Except for a brief interregnum (1399–1405), Seoul was the
capital of Korea from 1394
until the formal division of the country in 1948. The name itself has come to
mean “capital†in the Korean language. The
city was popularly called Seoul in Korean during both the ChosÅn (Yi) dynasty (1392–1910)
and the period of Japanese rule (1910–45), although the official names in those
periods were HansÅng (Hanseong) and KyÅngsÅng (Gyeongseong), respectively. The
city was also popularly and, during most of the 14th century, officially known
as Hanyang. Seoul became the official name of the city only with the founding
of South Korea in 1948. Area 234 square miles (605 square km). Pop. (2010)
9,794,304.
The area on the Han River that is now occupied by Seoul has been inhabited by
humans for thousands of years, and it acquired strategic importance to the
various kingdoms that controlled the Korean peninsula and grew to become a city
during the early historic period. Seoul was founded as the capital of a unified
nation in 1394 by Gen. Yi SÅng-gye, the founder of the ChosÅn dynasty. The site
was a militarily defensible natural redoubt that was also an especially
suitable site for a capital city, lying at the centre of the peninsula and
adjoining the navigable Han River, one of the peninsula’s major rivers flowing
into the Yellow Sea. The contact afforded by this riverine site with both
inland waterways and coastal sea routes was particularly important to Yi
because these were the routes by which grain, taxes, and goods were
transported. In addition to the practical advantages, the site was well
situated according to p’ungsujirisÅl, the traditional belief in geomancy. The
district chosen by Yi remains, more than 600 years later, the centre of Seoul.
It is located immediately north of the Han River in the lowland of a
topographic basin surrounded by low hills of about 1,000 feet (300 metres) in
height. The natural defensive advantages of the basin were reinforced two years
after the city’s founding by the construction of an 11-mile (18-km) wall along
the ridges of the surrounding hills.
Â
Today
the remains of the fortifications are a popular attraction. Likewise, the
Ch’Ånggye Stream—a small tributary of the Han that drains the old city centre
but was covered over by streets and expressways in the mid-20th century—has
been uncovered and restored; once a focus of everyday activities for many
residents, it is now a river park and a tourist attraction. The original city
district served to contain most of the city’s growth until the early 20th
century. Although the population had grown to approximately 100,000 by the
census of 1429, it had risen to only about 250,000 by the time of the Japanese
annexation in 1910, almost five centuries later. The modernization program
initiated by the Japanese began the first of several cycles of growth during the
20th century that extended the city limits by successive stages, so that they
now contain both banks of the Han River, as well as the banks of several
tributary rivers.