Provinces of Korea
Historical administrative divisions
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Korea has had administrative districts that can be considered provinces since the 7th century. These divisions were initially called ju (Korean: 주; Hanja: å·) in Unified Silla and Later Baekje, and there were nine in total. After Goryeo conquered these states in the 10th century, twelve divisions called mok (목; ç§) were established, although they were reorganized into ten do (ë; é) in the 11th century.

After Joseon's conquest of Goryeo, it established the Eight Provinces in 1413. These provincial boundaries closely reflected major regional and dialect boundaries, and are still significant in contemporary Korea. In 1895, as part of the Gabo Reform, the country was redivided into 23 districts (Bu; ë¶; åº), which were replaced a year later by thirteen new provinces. The thirteen provinces of 1896 included three of the original eight provinces, with the five remaining original provinces divided into north and south halves (Bukdo (ë¶ë; åé) and Namdo (ë¨ë; åé) respectively). The thirteen provinces remained unchanged throughout the Japanese colonial period.
With the liberation of Korea in 1945, the Korean peninsula was divided into North Korea and South Korea, with the dividing line established along the 38th parallel. Three provincesâHwanghae, Gyeonggi, and Gangwon (KangwÅn)âwere modified or split as a part of this. The special cities of Seoul (South Korea) and P'yÅngyang (North Korea) were formed in 1946. Between 1946 and 1954, five new provinces were created: Jeju in South Korea, and North and South Hwanghae, Chagang, and Ryanggang in North Korea. With the freezing of the Korean War in 1953, provincial boundaries were again modified between the two Koreas, and have since remained mostly unchanged; new cities and special administrative regions have since been created in their provinces.
Provinces of Balhae
Although southern part of Korean peninsula was took over by Silla, northern part was not fully conquered by nor Tang dynasty and Silla. Under the leadership of Tae JoyÅng, Parhae was founded. The country was divided into 5 capitals, 15 provinces; and 62 prefectures. Its territory covered former regions of Goguryeo while added territories of Outer Manchuria.
| Hanja | Hangul | RR, Pinyin | Modern location |
|---|---|---|---|
| ä¸äº¬/é¾å· | ìê²½/ì©ì£¼ | Sanggyeong/Yongju
Shangjing/Longzhou |
Ning'an (寧å®å¸)
(Manchu: Ninguta 寧å¤å¡) |
| ä¸äº¬/é¡¯å· | ì¤ê²½/í주 | Junggyeong/Hyeonju
Zhongjing/Xianzhou |
Helong/Dunhua
(åé¾å¸/æ¦åå¸) |
| æ±äº¬/æ ¶å· | ëê²½/경주 | Donggyeong/Gyeongju
Dongjing/Qingzhou |
Hunchun |
| å京/æ²å· | ë¨ê²½/ì¥ì£¼ | Namgyeong/Okju
Nanjing/Wozhou |
Hamheung |
| 西京/ç¥å· | ìê²½/ì 주 | Seogyeong/Sinju
Xijing/Shenzhou |
Linjiang |
| çå· | í주 | Haju
Xiazhou |
Jingyu
(éå®å¿) |
| æ¶å· | ë¶ì£¼ | Buju
Fuzhou |
Kaiyuan |
| éå· | ë§ì£¼ | Makju
Mozhou |
Acheng
(é¿å) |
| å®å· | ì 주 | Jeongju/Dingzhou | Partizansk |
| å®å· | ì주 | Anju
Anzhou |
Olga |
| è¯å· | í주 | Hwaju
Huazhou |
Ussuriysk/Shuaibin |
| ä¼å· | ì´ì£¼ | Iju
Yizhou |
Dangbi
(å¯å±±å¸/å½å£é®) |
| å¾·çé® | ëë¦¬ì§ | Deongnijin/Delizhen | Yilan
(ä¾èé·) |
| éå· | ë¬ì£¼ | Dalju | Tongjiang
(åæ±å¸) |
| å¯§å· | ì주 | Yeongju
Ningzhou |
Dalnerechensk |
Provinces of Unified Silla

The Korean peninsula was mostly unified for the first time by the state Silla in the 7th century.[1] Silla's capital was Geumseong (now Gyeongju).[2] It had five sub-capitals (ìê²½; å°äº¬; sogyeong) at Geumgwan-gyeong (ê¸ê´ê²½, now Gimhae), Namwon-gyeong (ë¨ìê²½, Namwon), Seowon-gyeong (ììê²½, Cheongju), Jungwon-gyeong (ì¤ìê²½, Chungju), and Bugwon-gyeong (ë¶ìê²½, Wonju).[3]
The country was divided into nine provinces (주; ju): three in the pre-660 territory of Silla, and three each in the territories of the former kingdoms Baekje and Goguryeo.[4]
| Province | Hangul | Hanja | Capital | Modern equivalent | Former kingdom |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yangju | ì주 | è¯å· | Yangju | Eastern Gyeongsang | Silla |
| Gangju | ê°ì£¼ | åº·å· | Gangju | Western South Gyeongsang | |
| Sangju | ì주 | å°å· | Sangju | Western North Gyeongsang | |
| Muju | 무주 | æ¦å· | Muju | South Jeolla | Baekje |
| Jeonju | ì 주 | å ¨å· | Jeonju | North Jeolla | |
| Ungju | ì 주 | çå· | Gongju | South Chungcheong | |
| Hanju | í주 | æ¼¢å· | Hanju | North Chungcheong, Gyeonggi, Hwanghae | Goguryeo |
| Sakju | ì주 | æå· | Sakju | Western Gangwon | |
| Myeongju | ëª ì£¼ | æºå· | Myeongju | Eastern Gangwon |
Provinces of Goryeo

Goryeo was established in the 10th century, and had its capital at Gaegyeong (now Kaesong). It conquered Silla and Later Baekje, and also conquered parts of the former territory of Goguryeo.[5] Goryeo had three subcapitals: Donggyeong (now Gyeongju), Namgyeong (now Seoul), and Seogyeong (now Pyongyang).[6]
Goryeo reorganized its provinces several times. Originally, the country had one royal district (기ë´; ç¿å §; ginae) around Gaegyeong and twelve administrative districts (목; ç§; mok).[7] In 995, the twelve districts were redivided into ten provinces (ë; é; do).[8] In 1005,[8][clarification needed] the ten provinces were again redivided, this time into five provinces and two frontier districts (ê³; ç; gye). Gyojudo later became its own province after 1178, making it six provinces and two frontier districts.
| Provinces (pre-995)[7] | Provinces (995â1005)[8] | Provinces (post-1005)[9] |
Modern equivalent | Silla equivalent |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yangju-mok (æå·ç§) | Gwannae-do
(ê´ë´ë) |
Seohae-do (西海é,ìí´ë) | Hwanghae | Hanju |
| Hwangju-mok (é»å·ç§) | North Hwanghae | |||
| Haeju-mok (æµ·å·ç§) | South Hwanghae | |||
| Gwangju-mok (廣å·ç§) | Yanggwang-do(æ¥å»£é,ìê´ë) | Gyeonggi | ||
| Chungju-mok (å¿ å·ç§) | Jungwon-do
(ì¤ìë) |
North Chungcheong | ||
| Cheongju-mok | Ungju | |||
| Gongju-mok | Hanam-do
(íë¨ë) |
South Chungcheong | ||
| Jeonju-mok (å ¨å·ç§) | Gangnam-do
(ê°ë¨ë) |
Jeolla-do(ì ë¼ë) | Jeonbuk | Jeonju |
| Naju-mok | Haeyang-do
(í´ìë) |
South Jeolla | Muju | |
| Seungju-mok | ||||
| Sangju-mok | Yeongnam-do
(ìë¨ë) |
Gyeongsang-do(ê²½ìë) | North Gyeongsang | Sangju |
| Jinju-mok | Sannam-do
(ì°ë¨ë) |
Western South Gyeongsang | Gangju | |
| Yeongdong-do
(ìëë) |
Eastern South Gyeongsang | Yangju | ||
| â | Sakbang-do
(ìë°©ë) |
Gyoju-do(êµì£¼ë,交å·é),also known as gyoju gangneungdo(äº¤å·æ±éµé,êµì£¼ê°ë¦ë)[a] | Gangwon | Sakju |
| â | Donggye(æ±ç,ëê³),also known as Dongbukmyeon(æ±åé¢,ëë¶ë©´) | Myeongju | ||
| â | Paeseo-do
(í¨ìë) |
Bukgye(åç,ë¶ê³),Also known as Seobukmyeon(西åé¢,ìë¶ë©´)) | Pyeongan | â |
Provinces of Joseon



In 1413, Korea (at that time called Joseon) was divided into eight provinces: Chungcheong, Gangwon, Gyeonggi, Gyeongsang, Jeolla, HamgyÅng (originally called Yeonggil), Hwanghae (originally called P'unghae), and P'yÅngan.
Districts of Late Joseon period
In 1895, Korea was redivided into 23 districts (Bu; ë¶; åº), each named for the city or county that was its capital. The districts were short-lived, however, as the following year, the provincial system was restored.
Provinces of the Korean Empire
In 1896, the former eight provinces were restored, with five of them (Chungcheong, Gyeongsang, Jeolla, HamgyÅng, and P'yÅngan) being divided into North and South Provinces (Bukdo (ë¶ë; åé) and Namdo (ë¨ë; åé) respectively). The resulting system of thirteen provinces lasted until the Division of Korea in 1945.
The thirteen provinces were: North and South Chungcheong, Gangwon, Gyeonggi, North and South Gyeongsang, North and South HamgyÅng, Hwanghae, North and South Jeolla, and North and South P'yÅngan.
Provinces of ChÅsen

Under Colonial Japanese rule, Korean provinces of Korean Empire, remained much the same, only taking on the Japanese reading of the hanja. The Provinces of ChÅsen were:
| Japanese name | Kanji | Kana | Korean name | Hangul |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ChÅ«seihoku-dÅ | å¿ æ¸ åé | ã¡ã ãããã»ãã©ã | Chungcheongbuk-do | ì¶©ì²ë¶ë |
| ChÅ«seinan-dÅ | å¿ æ·¸åé | ã¡ã ããããªãã©ã | Chungcheongnam-do | ì¶©ì²ë¨ë |
| KeishÅhoku-dÅ | æ ¶å°åé | ãããããã»ãã©ã | Gyeongsangbuk-do | ê²½ìë¶ë |
| KeishÅnan-dÅ | æ ¶å°åé | ããããããªãã©ã | Gyeongsangnam-do | ê²½ìë¨ë |
| Heianhoku-dÅ | å¹³å®åé | ã¸ãããã»ãã©ã | Pyeonganbuk-do | íìë¶ë |
| Heian'nan-dÅ | å¹³å®åé | ã¸ããããªãã©ã | Pyeongannam-do | íìë¨ë |
| KÅgen-dÅ | æ±åé | ããããã©ã | Gangwon-do | ê°ìë |
| KÅkai-dÅ | 黿µ·é | ããããã©ã | Hwanghae-do | í©í´ë |
| KankyÅhoku-dÅ | å¸é¡åé | ãããããã»ãã©ã | Hamgyeongbuk-do | í¨ê²½ë¶ë |
| KankyÅnan-dÅ | å¸é¡åé | ããããããªãã©ã | Hamgyeongnam-do | í¨ê²½ë¨ë |
| Zenranan-dÅ | å ¨ç¾ åé | ããããªãã©ã | Jeollanam-do | ì ë¼ë¨ë |
| Zenrahoku-dÅ | å ¨ç¾ åé | ãããã»ãã©ã | Jeollabuk-do | ì ë¼ë¶ë |
| Keiki-dÅ | 京ç¿é | ãããã©ã | Gyeonggi-do | 경기ë |
Provincial divisions since the division of Korea

At the end of World War II in 1945, Korea was divided into Northern Korea and Southern Korea under trusteeship of the Soviet Union and the United States. The peninsula was divided at the 38th parallel in 1945. In 1948, the two zones became the independent countries of North Korea and South Korea.
Three provincesâHwanghae, Gyeonggi, and Gangwonâwere divided by the 38th parallel.
- Most of Hwanghae Province belonged to the Northern zone. The southern portion became part of Gyeonggi Province in the south.
- Most of Gyeonggi Province belonged to the Southern zone. In 1946, the northern portion became part of Hwanghae Province in the north.
- Gangwon Province was divided roughly in half, to form modern-day Gangwon Province in South Korea and Kangwon Province in North Korea. The northern province is expanded in 1946 to include some area around the city of Wonsan (Originally part of South Hamgyong Province)
Also in 1946, the cities of Seoul in the south and Pyongyang in the north separated from Gyeonggi and South Pyongan Provinces respectively to become Special Cities. Both North Korea and South Korea have subsequently upgraded other cities to a level equal to a province, and these cities (special cities of North Korea and special cities of South Korea [qq.v.]) are sometimes counted along with provinces.
Finally, the new provinces of Jeju Province (in the south, in 1946) and Chagang Province (in the north, 1949) were formed, from parts of South Jeolla and North Pyongan respectively. In 1954, Ryanggang Province was split from South Hamgyong and Hwanghae was divided into North and South Hwanghae Provinces.
The following table lists the present provincial divisions in the Korean Peninsula.
- Notes
- 1 See Names of Seoul.
See also
Notes
- Initially installed from part of Donggye in 1178 as Chunchudo(ì¶ì£¼ë,æ¥å·é).Was once called Dongjudo(ë주ë,æ±å·é) but named as gyojudo in 1263.From 1314 to 1388 it was known as Hoeyangdo(íìë,æ·®é½é)as a result of demotion of Gyojumok under Hoeyang.From 1388 to 1392, it was known as gyojugangneungdo after merging with gangneungdo(ê°ë¦ë,æ±éµé).
- "Gwandong" is the name for the region as a whole, with "Yeongseo" denoting the western half of the province and "Yeongdong" the eastern half. "Yeongdong" is used more often than either of the other two terms, however, especially in reference to railway and road arteries that cross through Gangwon, connecting the Seoul and Yeongdong regions.
- The province's name literally means "area within a 500-li (200-km) radius" (gi; ç¿) of the "capital" (Gyeong; 京), referring to the royal capital Hanseong (modern-day Seoul). The regional name "Gijeon" is obsolete. The 20th-century term "Sudogwon" ("Capital Region") is used today to denote the Seoul-Incheon conurbation and that part of Gyeonggi Province that forms part of the same built-up, urban area.
- "Gwanbuk" was used to designate either the province as whole, or only the northern part thereof. In the latter case, "Gwannam" was then used to denote the southern part of the province.
- The initial "n" in "Naju" is pronounced as "l" (lower-case "L") when it comes after another consonant; the final "n" in the "Jeon" of "Jeonju" is then assimilated to an "l" sound.
- The distinctive Jeju dialect is used on Jeju Island, which became a separate province in 1946.