Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Incheon's climate is about average compared to the rest of Korea, with 8 locations being cooler and 10 locations being warmer, and with 9 locations being wetter and 9 locations being drier. [20] Incheon experiences each of its four seasons, distinctly feeling the rise and fall of temperature and humidity.
Incheon became a China-friendly city after the modern opening of late 1800s. Korea started modern trade by signing the China–Korea Treaty of 1882. [9] Incheon's Chinatown area came into being with the opening of the Incheon Port in 1883 and Incheon's designation as an extraterritoriality of the Qing dynasty. [8]
It houses artifacts and art of cultural significance to Korea. Displays include royal culture, traditional arts, printing, and Hangul (the Korean alphabet), traditional music, Buddhist and Confucian artifacts, garments from the Joseon Dynasty, and items and clothing from daily Korean life. Several artifacts at the museum are recognized by the ...
Incheon Open Port Museum displays relics related to modern culture that was introduced to or occurred in Incheon. It reuses the former building of Japanese First Bank built in 1899. [7] Daebul Hotel is the first Western hotel in Korea. [8] Incheon Chinatown is the birthplace of jajangmyeon. [9] Jajangmyeon Museum is a museum about the dish. [10]
Jayu Park (Korean: 자유공원; Hanja: 自由公園; RR: Jayugongwon), also known as Freedom Park, is an urban park located in Incheon, South Korea. Established in 1888, it is the first Western-style park of Korea. [1]
Incheon Grand Park (Korean: 인천대공원; Hanja: 仁川大公園) is a park complex in Namdong District, Incheon, South Korea. [1] It was established in 1992. [ 2 ] It is the biggest neighborhood park in Incheon with 4 million visitors each year.
Ganghwa Island (Korean: 강화도), also Ganghwado, is an island in Ganghwa County, Incheon, South Korea.It is in the Yellow Sea and in an estuary of the Han River.. The island is separated from Gimpo (on the South Korean mainland) by a narrow channel spanned by two bridges, and from Kaesong (Gaeseong) in North Korea by the main channel of the Han River.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more