Chungmu-ro explained

Hangul:충무로
Hanja:忠武路
Rr:Chungmuro
Mr:Ch'ungmuro

Chungmuro is an avenue 1.75 km in length and 10–20 m in width and the area nearby, located in Jung-gu, Downtown Seoul, South Korea. Since the 1960s, Chungmuro has been known as the street of culture, artists, and the film industry. Dansungsa, the first movie theater of Korea, established in 1907, is also situated in the area, then known by its Japanese name, Honmachi.[1] Since 1974, Jongno 3-ga Station has become the nearest station around.[2] Chungmuro was named after Chungmugong, the posthumous title of Korean Admiral Yi Sun-shin, which means "martial duke of loyalty." The last syllable "ro" refers to road in Korean.[3]

History

During Japanese rule in Korea, Chungmuro was known as "Honmachi".[4]

Although many film studios have since moved from Chungmuro to the Gangnam District or other areas of Seoul, Chungmuro still symbolizes the South Korean film industry and continues to be used as a metonym for it.[5]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: http://www.encyber.com/search_w/ctdetail.php?148827&contentno=148827 . ko:충무로 忠武路 . . ko . 2008-05-07 .
  2. News: Chungmuro Celebrates Soul of Korean Cinema. Korea Times. 2008-05-07.
  3. Web site: Chungmuro films dominating Asian cinema scene . The Korean Overseas Culture and Information Service (KOIS) . September 25, 2007 . 2008-05-07 .
  4. https://i.pinimg.com/originals/b0/61/91/b0619103a61dd51baaacf74492c0ff0b.jpg Image
  5. Sympathy for Lady Vengeance review . Cine 21 . . 513 . 2005-08-01 . Soyoung Kim . Hyongshin Kim (trans.) . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070216180028/http://www.asiaarts.ucla.edu/article.asp?parentid=37704 . 2007-02-16 .