- Page 1: THE KOREA REVIEW Volume 1, 1901 Hom
- Page 5 and 6: INDEX OF The Korea Review* 1901. *I
- Page 7 and 8: Xylographic Art In Korea 97
- Page 9 and 10: Nay, type of human shame that innoc
- Page 11 and 12: Seoul A detailed account of all the
- Page 13 and 14: called the mixed script. [page 11]
- Page 15 and 16: have been well laid out, the Englis
- Page 17 and 18: “See you what all these do when t
- Page 19 and 20: There is also needed some central p
- Page 21 and 22: A few nights ago robbers broke into
- Page 23 and 24: ANCIENT KOREA Chapter I. The Tan-gu
- Page 25 and 26: leaving her train of attendants at
- Page 27 and 28: arable land was divided into square
- Page 29 and 30: King Ki-bi died and his son Ki-jun,
- Page 31 and 32: [page 49] THE KOREA REVIEW, Februar
- Page 33 and 34: he preaches. 꾀여진파긔요업
- Page 35 and 36: 1st person 2nd person 1st person 2n
- Page 37 and 38: enterprise on the part of those who
- Page 39 and 40: saunters up the hill path humming t
- Page 41 and 42: Seat of Intelligence. The foreign t
- Page 43 and 44: The article referred to must have b
- Page 45 and 46: The native papers state that the am
- Page 47 and 48: We begin with the tribe called Ye-m
- Page 49 and 50: word may not be out of place. It wa
- Page 51 and 52: the historian or ethnologist. The M
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endings, as ro, piri and kan, find
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This is quite apocryphal but gives
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As the readers of this. magazine ar
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At least such a pause is conceivabl
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SulCh’ong, FATHER OF KOREAN LITER
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the Sil-la people and the introduci
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And its character as far as learnin
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one prophecy which we know to be pr
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followed by marked improvement in t
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Total 426,039 The Educational Depar
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efers to certain family clans or pa
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the place to the king as being roug
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placed their capital at Ka-rak, the
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He showed however that his memory h
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THE KOREA REVIEW, April 1901 [page
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eyond the confines of its resting p
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where revenge held sway. On the one
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Tshin and who gave to the country,
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from end of end. The Japanese of an
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(12)Folklore, etc. (13)Translation
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Hon. Wm. H. Stevens of New York has
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The regular semi-weekly afternoon t
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moment he himself was cut down by t
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Ko-gu-ryu’s army, 5,000 strong, m
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In 399 Ko-gu-ryu sent an envoy to t
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his wife. With a short-sightedness
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She found Sun-chang-i still sitting
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and stop there agape, catching glim
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Chefoo; high water at 10:30 with a
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anches off laterally. Pearls. A per
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given there are eleven pictures, on
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trouble, set a sharp watch along th
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entered the palace without authorit
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commodities. These are things that
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and then you will know that Buddhis
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and no match for you.” Without an
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left wide open for him. This was a
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THE KOREA REVIEW, June 1901 [page 2
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§ One of the seven worthies of the
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Foreign Representatives desired to
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Home for Destitute Children. Those
- Page 138 and 139:
are probably derivatives of a verb
- Page 140 and 141:
and presently you will see him drag
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entirely upon what use is made of t
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It is reported that Yi yong-ik is i
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time in sport and debauchery while
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to collect provisions on the northe
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court. The Emperor thereupon ordere
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advanced toward the mountain fortre
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lists of the most important affixes
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though Kwi-dongi was evidently anxi
- Page 158 and 159:
wash.] Bani = to act violently, to
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that if we want to live free from t
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wholesale condemnation of missionar
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We do not know where Mr. Yi Yong-ik
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innovation as this, which is to the
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manifestly near. So tradition says.
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The war began again in earnest. The
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means of the sang-so or “memorial
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PART II. MEDIEVAL KOREAN HISTORY. F
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papers. They are both ex parte prod
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Taru-b = to fall. Korean = turu-jin
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The plans that had been laid for ad
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est solution of the difficulty whic
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than [page 356] this enormous rise.
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intermediate step of gas. Before th
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near the mint in Chemulpo. A man by
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founder of a dynasty. We must now r
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him in his cruelty; some of them we
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day and neither side had gained any
- Page 196 and 197:
said that his death was caused by c
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[page 385] THE KOREA REVIEW, Septem
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commonest of the Chinese classics,
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The bullock is the type of steadine
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themselves. There is little doubt t
- Page 206 and 207:
the origin of the custom of using a
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grant that we as a nation may learn
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It is reported that a fine vein of
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them all kinds of happiness and pro
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entertainment of countless “frien
- Page 216 and 217:
and afterwards broke camp and march
- Page 218 and 219:
He took off his helmet, and, bowing
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captors. When he deemed that it was
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the northern kingdom of Ko-gu-ryu w
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the United States and England did t
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When the fort had been silenced the
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At this she retreated hastily into
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“Wake, mother, wake up. Where hav
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Just to suit the changeful weather.
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Such is the official statement of t
- Page 236 and 237:
A branch of the Seoul Post Office i
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sought some new channel. Buddhism,
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attempted revolution. . . . monasti
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etween Kitan and Kin the former wer
- Page 244 and 245:
longer any chance of safety, set fi
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eui (1). She was very beautiful, ta
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almost completed for the burial of
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Go sixty li to the west until you c
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This same wise prefect was once app
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oyal tombs in the vicinity of Su-wu
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Yang-ju district, ten miles outside
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show that the sum involved is by no
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ancient Korea are founded. Its comp
- Page 262 and 263:
Rebellion quelled ... cannibalism .
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Koryu. Gen. Ch’oe had acquired so
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managed them all so well that no tr
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[page 529] KOREA REVIEW, December 1
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man of the middle class to possess
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counterpart of the marble pagoda, t
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themselves escape the general slaug
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depart in peace.” A Military Mano
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all taxes must be remitted until th
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away. She made no remonstrance at t
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Chi-wun was Yi Whang, commonly know
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to remove . . . . great fortress fa
- Page 286 and 287:
ut sent a messenger ordering the ki
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course of procedure which once more
- Page 290:
shabbily treated . . . . Kublai ord