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The origin of Koreans has not been well clarified yet. Based on linguistic, archaeologic and genetic evidence, their place of origin is located somewhere in Northeast Asia, but its exact pattern of expansion and arrival into the Korean peninsula remain unclear. [19]
The Yemaek culture is seen as ancestral to the modern Culture of Korea. [32] Historian Sang-Yil Kim claims the Yemaek did also influence Chinese culture and had an overall large cultural impact in all of Northeast Asia, and that some other related ancestry around East Asia are the Dongyi, and some of which were of proto-Korean origin. [33]
Generally, pairwise F ST between Han Chinese, Japanese and Korean (0.0026~ 0.0090) are greater than that within Han Chinese (0.0014). These results suggested Han Chinese, Japanese and Korean are different in terms of genetic make-up, and the differences among the three groups are much larger than that between northern and southern Han Chinese ...
Korean nationalism [a] can be viewed in two different contexts. One encompasses various movements throughout history to maintain a Korean cultural identity, history, and ethnicity (or "race"). This ethnic nationalism was mainly forged in opposition to foreign incursion and rule.
East Asian people (also East Asians or Northeast Asians) are the people from East Asia, which consists of China, Japan, Mongolia, North Korea, South Korea, and Taiwan. [1] The total population of all countries within this region is estimated to be 1.677 billion and 21% of the world's population in 2020. [2]
"Half") — Korean transliteration fo the English word "half" used to describe people of half-Korean origin. Very uncommon. Kopino (코피노, Korean-Filipino) — A contraction of the ethnonyms "Korean" and "Filipino", used to refer to Asians of a multi-ethnic Korean and Filipino background.
Oh, Arissa H., "From War Waif to Ideal Immigrant: The Cold War Transformation of the Korean Orphan," Journal of American Ethnic History (2012), 31#1 pp 34–55. Park, Heui-Yung. Korean and Korean American Life Writing in Hawaiʻi: From the Land of the Morning Calm to Hawaiʻi Nei (Lexington Books, 2015). Park, In Young, and Marquisha Lawrence ...
However, in 1905, the Korean Empire was forced to sign a protectorate treaty and in 1910, Japan effectively annexed the Korean Empire; the treaties involved were later confirmed to be null and void. Korea then became a de facto Japanese colony from 1910 to 1945. Korean resistance manifested in the widespread March First Movement of 1919.