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A SOUTH KOREAN saying claims that a stone thrown from the top of Mount Namsan, in the centre of the capital Seoul, is bound to hit a person with the surname Kim or Lee. One in every five South Koreans is a Kim—in a population of just over 50m. And from the current president, Park Geun-hye, to rapper PSY (born Park Jae-sang), almost one in ten is a Park. Taken together, these three surnames account for almost half of those in use in South Korea today. Neighbouring China has around 100 surnames in common usage; Japan may have as many as 280,000 distinct family names. Why is there so little diversity in Korean surnames?
Korea’s long feudal tradition offers part of the answer. As in many other parts of the world, surnames were a rarity until the late Joseon dynasty (1392-1910). They remained the privilege of royals and a few aristocrats (yangban) only. Slaves and outcasts such as butchers, shamans and prostitutes, but also artisans, traders and monks, did not have the luxury of a family name. As the local gentry grew in importance, however, Wang Geon, the founding king of the Goryeo dynasty (918–1392), tried to mollify it by granting surnames as a way to distinguish faithful subjects and government officials. The gwageo, a civil-service examination that became an avenue for social advancement and royal preferment, required all those who sat it to register a surname. Thus elite households adopted one. It became increasingly common for successful merchants too to take on a last name. They could purchase an elite genealogy by physically buying a genealogical book (jokbo)—perhaps that of a bankrupt yangban—and using his surname. By the late 18th century, forgery of such records was rampant. Many families fiddled with theirs: when, for example, a bloodline came to an end, a non-relative could be written into a genealogical book in return for payment. The stranger, in turn, acquired a noble surname.
As family names such as Lee and Kim were among those used by royalty in ancient Korea, they were preferred by provincial elites and, later, commoners when plumping for a last name. This small pool of names originated from China, adopted by the Korean court and its nobility in the 7th century in emulation of noble-sounding Chinese surnames. (Many Korean surnames are formed from a single Chinese character.) So, to distinguish one’s lineage from those of others with the same surname, the place of origin of a given clan (bongwan) was often tagged onto the name. Kims have around 300 distinct regional origins, such as the Gyeongju Kim and Gimhae Kim clans (though the origin often goes unidentified except on official documents). The limited pot of names meant that no one was quite sure who was a blood relation; so, in the late Joseon period, the king enforced a ban on marriages between people with identical bongwan (a restriction that was only lifted in 1997). In 1894 the abolition of Korea’s class-based system allowed commoners to adopt a surname too: those on lower social rungs often adopted the name of their master or landlord, or simply took one in common usage. In 1909 a new census-registration law was passed, requiring all Koreans to register a surname.
Today clan origins, once deemed an important marker of a person’s heritage and status, no longer bear the same relevance to Koreans. Yet the number of new Park, Kim and Lee clans is in fact growing: more foreign nationals, including Chinese, Vietnamese and Filipinos, are becoming naturalised Korean citizens, and their most popular picks for a local surname are Kim, Lee, Park and Choi, according to government figures; registering, for example, the Mongol Kim clan, or the Taeguk (of Thailand) Park clan. The popularity of these three names looks set to continue.
Dig deeper:
Korean men are marrying foreign women more from choice than necessity (May 2014)
How a really uncool country became the tastemaker of Asia (August 2014)
Why South Korea is so distinctively Christian (August 2014)
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I totally would have shared this article if you hadn't used that pic to get more views.
Capitalizing on the bodies of women might sell with most of your viewers, but not with me. The least you could have done is show a woman with a face.
The majority of Koreans (over 90% of the total population) had never been allowed to have any family name excluding the Yangban, which were traditional ruling class or nobles of dynastic Korea before the Gabo Reform taken place between 1894 and 1896 by the strong pressures from Japan.
Despite its English name, Chinese characters are not only the letters of China, but they have been used in many Asian countries for thousands of years. Therefore, not all the Korean surnames are originated from China. For instance, the surname Park exists only in the two Koreas.
Interesting claim in the first sentence; should rename to East Asian characters.
Now guys, don't lie. I know you come here to read this interesting article and not to look at the girl who is bent over.
at the first glimpse, I thought the shadow on her butt was her tail, so I was surprised about what the weird picture it is...so you got me lol
Did North Korea follow the same pattern? Do they also have a ban on marrying same bongwan, or did they ban family names altogether? Some insight would have been interesting.
FYI, North Korea and South Korea were both the same country until their official division in 1953 as a result of the Korean War. Eras like the Joseon Dynasty far predate the Koreas' division, so both modern countries developed much in the same way up to the war. As an aside, think of today's Koreas as a common people governed by very different governments. Anyway, N. Korean citizens definitely have last names. In fact, N. Korea's leaders have the last name Kim! As far as the ban on same last name marriages in N. Korea, I have no clue..
The names on those sports shirts remind me of a Korea story...
Living in Seoul in the mid-90s, my wife and I used to eat regularly at a restaurant where the waitresses wore name-tags in English with exactly that same format: family name followed by two initials. One of them read "No B.S." I have since met other westerners who knew of that place, and they all remembered her.
If she only knew what a cultural icon she has become...
That is absolutely hilarious. Care to share the restaurant name? I know that it's been a while but doesn't hurt to check.
Yes! It was the Navy Club on the Yongsan base, just south of Nam San. Best bacon and eggs I've had anywhere, always on a Sunday morn!
Korea was a lot of fun, and it's still my favorite cuisine, all these years on.
Great! Thank you for sharing this with me! I'll definitely try to find her when I visit Korea next year.
Many Chinese are also called Kim,there are 15 kinds of origins by China's historical records:
A part of Kims people originate in Han,the rest originate in the Hun,Mogols(Jenghiz Khan and the Mongols'royal family's descendants or other Mongol's clans),Manchu, Kachin(Jinpo) people,Daur ethnic minority group,Nüzhen( or Jurchen,an ancient nationality in China),Koguryo people,Qiang people,the Silla people,The Kim kingdom's descendants.
(I'm not sure if the writer/editor reads comments, but hopefully he/she does)
I think it's worth noting that the concept of surnames in Korea is a bit different from that of the West. While it is true that on paper, a fifth of the nation's population share the name surname, in terms of lineage, that is not the case; Surnames also have a place attached to it. Just as surnames like Miller or Smith can't be traded back to a single origin, there are multiple iterations of Kim (and by extension, most other surnames) that started in different places at different times, by men of different social standing. There are also cases where disputes create new branches of the same surname of the same (for lack of a better word) township, but at hostile standing with one another. Almost all of these families each keep a book of lineage (usually kept in the eldest son's house, and passed onto whoever is 'next in line'), and while it's more of a ceremonial thing these days, like Regina standing in court, almost all Koreans know which township their family belongs to, including youngsters like me.
I just wanted to point this out to the author or readers...... hope it helps! :)
This is a well written article and an excellent effort on a complex issue. While there are many that share the same family names or surnames, people with those names aren't from the same ancestors necessarily. While there are thousands of surnames used in Korea, there are only about 250 to 300 surnames commonly used in modern North Korea and South Korea. To put things into perspective, in China, Taiwan, Singapore and other Chinese speaking countries, there are about 4,000 surnames in use. In Japan, there are hundreds of thousands of surnames used.
In the Koreas, Kim/Gim/Ghim (김 in Korean, 金 in Chinese and Japanese), for example, means "gold" or "metal", and has 6 different places of origins in Korea - 6 different lineages (note the difference from "clans" which are used to make history fit a specific purpose using either the paternal or maternal lines), which is also a common name in both China and Japan. The same is true of Park (and its alternate spellings, Pak/Bak/Bhak/Baek/Paek) and Lee ( and its alternate spellings, Yi/I/Rhee/Li/Rhie), have multiple places of origins, and different ancestors.
Other examples of common Korean surnames and their transliterations:
Choi, Choe
Jeong, Chung, Jung, Jeng
Ju, Joo, Chu, Zhu, Zuu, Juu, Choo
Kang, Gang, Ghang
Ko, Koh, Go, Goh
Mun, Moon, Mon, Munn
Yang/Ryang/Liang
Yu, Yoo, Liu, Lau, Yau
Here is an interesting listing of East Asian names, their origins, transliterations, and different pronunciations in Chinese (Mandarin, Cantonese, Hakka, Minnan, and Gan) and Japanese, Korean and Vietnamese.
https://en.wikipedia.org/.../List_of_common_Chinese_surnames
For names like Park, there is only one spelling in Korean. The variations are only when the names are rendered into English (or French, Dutch, German etc.).
킴
SINCE surnames may not clarify things in Korea, there is some resort to alternative identification such as biometrics and photography.
Some records such as medical records and x-rays have a tiny face photograph on the document corner as a definitive identifier.
===
The names may identical, but your face is your unique fingerprint.
Perhaps more records should have a photograph id?
Don't worry. First names, which are usually made up of two Chinese characters or indigenous two-syllabus indigenous Korean words, have much more diversity enough to minimize the number of people with same names. Name and D.O.B is enough to identify.
This article is a perfect example of what you ought to do with this blog. Tell us about things that are very interesting, that would almost never be brought to our attention elsewhere, and that most of us don't even know that we don't know.
Very interesting.
I always wondered but never asked. Thank You, TE.
"civil examination ... required all those who sat it to register a surname."
> Commoners were allowed to take the civil examination, not just Yangban, and many did pass.
"They could purchase an elite genealogy by physically buying a genealogical book"
> Family clans realized this, and started centralizing genealogical books. Also, there are plenty of defunct family clans that you do not see anymore today (e.g., a number of Kim clans and Cheok).
"This small pool of names originated from China"
> Kim and Park do not originate from China.
"The popularity of these three names looks set to continue."
> I might be incorrect, but it is to my knowledge that many Chinese just use the Korean pronunciation of their last names (e.g., Zhou -> Ju).
To the extent this article is true, it is somewhat incorrect.
Why so many Muslims are called Mohammad (or other variations of the same). Indeed sad that we are sleep walking to an alarming future where Kim Jong / Mohammads are being set as role model !!
Kim, Park & Lee are all surnames - not chosen, but passed on by lineage.
Mohammad is a given name (first name). Muslims give it to sons in honour of their religious prophet. Its no different than Latin Americans calling their son's 'Jesus' or European Catholics calling their daughters 'Mary'.
Does all this apply to North Korea? One would think.
Excellent article. I was always wondering about that.
In research this is quite awkward. As an editor for a scientific journal I have to find reviewers for papers that have been submitted. I hardly ever selected Korean ones, and not too many Chinese either. Trouble is, it's very hard to distinguish one from another. Just try "Kim JH"[author] in Pubmed. That yields 12734 publications, in journals as diverse as "Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology" to "International Journal of Cardiology" and beyond. How to know one Kim JH from another?
We're all forced to become numbers - Researcher ID, ORCID, etc.
What about first names?