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Flag of South Korea
Hangul 태극기
Hanja
Revised Romanization Taegeukgi
McCune–Reischauer T'aegŭkki
Flag of South Korea
See adjacent text.
Name Taegeukgi
Use National flag and civil and state ensign
Proportion 2:3
Adopted March 6, 1883
See adjacent text.
Use Naval ensign
Proportion 2:3
Adopted September 1955

The flag of South Korea, or Taegeukgi was taken from the Chinese design of the yin and yang symbol and has three parts: a white background; a red and blue taegeuk ("Taijitu" or "Yin and Yang") in the center; and four black trigrams, one in each corner of the flag.

The four trigrams originate in the Chinese book of I Ching, representing the four Chinese philosophical ideas about the universe: harmony, symmetry, balance, circulation. The general design of the flag also derives from traditional use of the tricolor symbol (red, blue and yellow) by Koreans starting from the early era of Korean history. The white background symbolizes "cleanliness of the people." The taegeuk represents the origin of all things in the universe; holding the two principles of "Yin", the negative aspect rendered in blue, and "Yang", the positive aspect rendered in red, in perfect balance. Together, they represent a continuous movement within infinity, the two merging as one. The four trigrams are:

Name in Korean Nature Seasons Cardinal directions Four virtues Family Four elements Meanings
Palgwae Geon.svg geon (건 / ) sky (천 / ) spring (춘 / ) east (동 / ) humanity (인 / ) father (부 / ) heaven (금 / ) justice (정의)
Palgwae Ri.svg ri (리 / ) sun (일 / ) autumn (추 / ) south (남 / ) courtesy (예 / ) son (중남 / ) fire (화 / ) wisdom (지혜)
Palgwae Gam.svg gam (감 / ) moon (월 / ) winter (동 / ) north (북 / ) knowledge (지 / ) daughter (중녀 / ) water (수 / ) vitality (생명력)
Palgwae Gon.svg gon (곤 / ) earth (지 / ) summer (하 / ) west (서 / 西) righteousness (의 / ) mother (모 / ) earth (토 / ) fertility (풍요)

Traditionally, the four trigrams are related to the Five Elements of fire, water, earth, wood, and metal. An analogy could also be drawn with the four western classical elements.

Contents

[edit] Name

Although the revised official Romanization is Taegeukgi, the word Taegukgi has been used in English-speaking countries historically.

[edit] History

The earliest surviving depiction of the flag was printed in a U.S. Navy book Flags of Maritime Nations in July 1882.

The red and blue symbol has an origin that is entirely secular. It is derived by graphing the length of the sun's shadow. (If the series of lines are drawn radiating from the middle, as if regularly rotating a parchment impaled by a small shadow-casting stick each day, the design becomes apparent.)

Although affiliated with Taoism and called a "Yin-Yang" symbol today, its placement on the flag honors a venerable tradition of accurate record-keeping for the public benefit instated by King Sejong in the 15th century. Unlike the modern version, the depiction on the oldest flag is clearly true to the actual graph.

Palgwae Geon.svg Palgwae Gam.svg
Palgwae Ri.svg Palgwae Gon.svg

The original flag, dating to 1883, shows them placed as below. This version respects the four European directions with which their elements are traditionally affiliated. "Water" is at upper left; "Heaven" is at upper right; "Earth" is at lower left; "Fire" is at lower right. (In Asian tradition, however, Heaven is usually associated with north-west, and Earth is usually associated with south-west. See also Bagua.)

N Palgwae Gam.svg Palgwae Geon.svg E
W Palgwae Gon.svg Palgwae Ri.svg S

The taegeukgi was used as a symbol of resistance and independence during the Japanese occupation and ownership of it was punishable by execution. After independence, both North and South Korea initially adopted versions of the taegeukgi, but North Korea later changed its national flag to a more Soviet-inspired design after three years (See article Flag of North Korea).

[edit] Specifications

[edit] Design

Flag construction sheet

[edit] Colors

The official colours of Taegukgi are specified on the "Ordinance Act of the Law concerning the National Flag of the Republic of Korea (대한민국국기법시행령) [1]".[1][2] There was no specification for shade of colours until 1997, when South Korean government decided to provide standard specification for the flag. On October, 1997, Presidential ordinance on the standard specification of the flag of the Republic of Korea was promulgated[3], and that specification was acceded by the National Flag Law in 2007.

The colours are defined in legislation by the Munsell and CIE colour systems:

Scheme Munsell CIE (x, y, Y) Pantone* RGB Hex*[4] RGB Dec
White N 0.5 Safe #FFFFFF 255,255,255
Red 6.0R 4.5/14 0.5640, 0.3194, 15.3 186c #C60C30 198,12,48
Blue 5.0PB 3.0/12 0.1556, 0.1354, 6.5 294c #003478 0,52,120
Black N 9.5 0, 0, 0 0 #000000 0,0,0

* Unofficial conversions by Wikipedia editors. Pantone colours are estimated values from the original Munsell specification and in turn the RGB is from the Pantone.

[edit] Errors

The South Korean flag is sometimes drawn differently from the official version. Sometimes the taegeuki is reversed to make it a taoist Yin-Yang, which traditionally goes clockwise. The gwae may be transposed, possibly in error but possibly because they wish to restore the traditional Asian meanings. South Koreans themselves have different ways of interpreting the traditional symbols.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links




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