Taedong Kongbo | |
Language: | Korean (Hangul) |
Publishing City: | Vladivostok |
Publishing Country: | Russian Empire |
Taedong Kongbo (;) was a Korean-language newspaper published in Vladivostok, Russian Empire from 1908 to 1910. It briefly changed its name to Taedong Sinbo before its closure.
It is not to be confused with a Korean-American newspaper of a similar name (same romanized and Hangul name, but different Hanja: 大同公報).[1]
It was one of a series of Korean-language newspapers published in Vladivostok. It followed the 1908 Haejo Sinmun, and was succeeded by 1911 Taeyangbo and 1912–1914 Kwŏnŏp Sinmun.[2]
There was a significant population of Koreans in Vladivostok that congregated in an enclave called Kaechŏk-ri around this time.[3] By 1908, the Korean population was 45,900. This population was some of the ancestors of the modern Koryo-saram: ethnic Koreans of the mainland former Soviet Union.[4]
The newspaper was founded on November 18, 1908, soon after the closure of a previous Korean-language newspaper published in Vladivostok, Haejo Sinmun. The Taedong Kongbo's staff took over the equipment and used it to print their paper. It published out of addresses No. 600 and 469 on the street.[5] The facilities are no longer extant, and are in fact in one of Vladivostok's busiest and most expensive streets.[6] The new paper's president was Ch'a Sŏk-po, editor Yu Chin-yul, lead writer Yun P'il-pong . Its publisher was a retired Russian general and lawyer named Mikhailov. The newspaper also employed independence activists and, who had previously worked on the Konglip Sinbo newspaper in San Francisco. It published twice per week, every Sunday and Wednesday.
The newspaper was distributed elsewhere in Russia and internationally as well. It was shipped to the Korean diaspora in Shanghai, the United States, in Hawaii, and in Mexico. It was also shipped in secret to Korea, where its distribution was prohibited. In Korea in 1909 alone, 2,235 copies of the paper in 57 shipments were confiscated.[7] The paper was allied with the San Francisco–based Sinhan Minbo and Korea-based Taehan Maeil Sinbo; they shared information to each other and worked to distribute each other's issues. Some of its staff even went to go work for the Taehan, and it overall employed reporters from both America and Korea.
The newspaper and its company championed the Korean independence movement, and promoted militant resistance to the Japanese colonization of Korea. Korean independence activist An Jung-geun was involved in the paper, and contributed at least one article to it. In October 1909, An and the company learned that the former Japanese Resident-General of Korea, Itō Hirobumi, would visit Harbin. They developed a plot to assassinate Itō, which An executed.[8] [9]
The paper struggled with a lack of funding for much of its history. became the paper's president, and in 1910 began donating money each month to cover its expenses. The paper changed its name on August 18, 1910, to Taedong Sinbo.
However, Russia and Japan signed an agreement in July 1910, in which Russia would regulate the behavior of its Korean residents. In August, Vladivostok issued Order No. 135, under which the newspaper closed on September 1, 1910. The Vladivostok Korean community repeatedly petitioned Vladivostok for permission to start a new newspaper.[10] One request finally succeeded, and on June 5, 1911, a successor paper was founded by the youth group Ch'ŏngnyŏn Kŭnŏphoe entitled Taeyangbo.