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Korea Ponghwa General Korea Ponghwa General Corporation is an industrial group headquartered in Pyongyang, North Korea. Ponghwa produces knitwear, business suits, underwear, shoes, nylon rucksacks and bags, winter coats, skiwear, sportswear, golf bags, hockey bags, and the company seems to be involved in Korea's well known eelskin garment and accessory industry.
Korea Rail Network Authority Korea Rail Network Authority is a railraod construction and management company in Korea. KNR Construction Center and Korean Express Railroad Construction Corporation merged together and made Korea Rail Network Authority.
Korea Research Foundation The Korea Research Foundation is a grant organization supported by the South Korean Ministry of Culture and Tourism. It provides support for research into new theories for the advancement of science, the arts, and the Korean culture in general.
Korea Society The Korea Society is a private, nonprofit, nonpartisan, 501(c)(3) organization with individual and corporate members that is dedicated solely to the promotion of greater awareness, understanding and cooperation between the people of the United States and Korea. In pursuit of its mission, the Society arranges programs that facilitate discussion, exchanges and research on topics of vital interest to both countries in the areas of public policy, business, education, intercultural relations and the arts.
Korea Sogyong Trading The Korea Sogyong Trading Corporation is a North Korean company that exports carpets and manufactures cigarettes. Its cigarette manufacturing business began in September 2001 when it formed a 40%-60% joint venture with British American Tobacco called Taesong-BAT.
Korea Space Launch Vehicle The Korea Space Launch Vehicle (KSLV) will be the first space launcher of South Korea. It is being built under the authority of the Korea Aerospace Research Institute, the equivalent to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration of the United States.
Korea Strait The Korea Strait is a sea passage between South Korea and Japan, connecting the East China Sea and the Sea of Japan (East Sea) in the northwest Pacific Ocean. The strait is split by the Tsushima Island into the Busan Strait (Western Channel) and the Tsushima Strait (Eastern Channel).
Korea Taekwondo Association The Korea Taekwondo Association (KTA) is the Member National Association (MNA) of the World Taekwondo Federation (WTF)in South Korea. The WTF is the representative International Federation (IF) for Taekwondo competition in the Olympic Summer Games of the International Olympic Committee (IOC).
Korea Telecom KT (formerly, Korea Telecom, Korean: 한국통신) is South Korea's largest telecommunication company. The company also is one of the largest telephone companies in South Korea, one of only two companies licensed to provide local telephone access.
Korea under Japanese rule Korea under Japanese rule was the period of Japan's de facto administrative control of Korea from 1910 to 1945. Japan's involvement began with the 1876 Treaty of Ganghwa during the Joseon Dynasty of Korea and increased with the subsequent assassinations of Empress Myeongseong at the hands of Japanese agents in 1895 and the former Resident-General of Korea, ItĹŤ Hirobumi, in 1909 by the Korean activist An Jung-geun.
Korea University Korea University is located in central Seoul, South Korea, and is generally regarded as one of the best universities in Korea. In addition to its acknowledged academic reputation, the university is also esteemed for its history, strong traditions, and honored contributions to the nation.
Korea University of Technology and Education The Korea University of Technology and Education, or KUT (Hangeul: 한국기술교육대학교, Hanja: 韓國技術敎育大學校) is a university in Cheonan, South Chungcheong, South Korea. The university was opened in 1992 and its current president is Dr.
Korea Way Korea Way (located on 32nd Street between Fifth Avenue and Broadway) is Manhattan's center for Korean cuisine, shopping and culture. Located in New York City's Midtown, Korea Way is adjacent to Herald Square, a large shopping district that features department stores and various large chain stores, pharmacies and clothing shops.
Korea, A Walk Through the Land of Miracles Korea, A Walk Through the Land of Miracles (ISBN 0-06-075044-8) is a book by Simon Winchester. He recounts his experience walking across South Korea, from Jeju in the south to the DMZ in the north, roughly following a route originally taken by a group of Dutch sailors, reportedly the first Europeans to visit Korea.
Korea@Home Korea@Home (Korean:코리아앳홈) is a distributed computing infrastructure project in South Korea started in 2003 by the Super Computing Center in KISTI under the Ministry of information and communication in South Korea.
Koreagate Koreagate was an American political scandal in 1976 involving South Koreans seeking influence with members of Congress. An immediate goal seems to have been reversing President Richard Nixon's troop withdrawal decision.
Korean adoptee A Korean adoptee or KAD is a person who was adopted from Korea through the international adoption of South Korean children as a child and raised in another country, often by adoptive parents of another race, ethnic background, and culture.
Korean animation The art of Korean animation, manhwa-yeonghwa (만화 영화) in Korean, has gone from small hand held flip books in early times, through to studios that produce most of the work for the major American, Japanese, and Australian animation companies. Notable examples of Korean animation include many episodes from the Simpsons and Justice League Unlimited television series, which were made and drawn in Seoul, South Korea.
Korean automobile The Korean automobile industry is today the fifth largest in the world in terms of production volume, and the sixth largest in terms of export volume, although South Korea had a relatively late start. While its initial operations were merely the assembling of parts imported from Japan and the United States, Korea is today among the most advanced automobile-producing countries in the world.
Korean Air Korean Air () is the largest airline based in South Korea. One of the largest airlines in Asia, it operates a network that links Europe, Africa, Asia, Australia, North America, and formerly to South America to its hub at Incheon International Airport and its domestic hub at Gimpo International Airport (formerly Kimpo International Airport).
Korean Air Flight 007 Korean Air Lines Flight 007, also known as KAL 007 or KE007, was a Korean Air Lines civilian airliner shot down by Soviet jet interceptors on September 1, 1983 just west of Sakhalin island. KAL 007 carried 269 passengers and crew, including U.
Korean Air Flight 902 Korean Air Flight 902 (KAL902, KE902) was the flight number of a civilian airliner shot down by Soviet fighters on April 20, 1978 near Murmansk, after it violated Soviet airspace and failed to respond to Soviet interceptors. Two passengers were killed in the accident.
Korean American writers Korean American writers include Korean Americans born in the United States or those who have settled there after coming from Korea. Korean American literature treats a wide range of topics including Korean life in America, the interesction of American and Korean culture in the lives of young Korean Americans, as well as life and history on the Korean peninsula.
Korean Archaeological Society The Korean Archaeological Society is the most important professional and scholarly association of archaeologists in the Republic of Korea. The Society publishes the highly respected peer-reviewed 'Journal of the Korean Archaeological Society' (Hanguk Kogo-Hakbo, Hanja: 韓國考古學報).
Korean Attack Submarine program The 'Korean Attack submarine program is a three-phased project aimed at enhancing ROKN's comparatively weak submarine arsenal. Before the initiation of SSS program, the submarine fleet of ROKN consisted of midget submarines, such as the KSS-I Dolgorae class submarine and SX 756 Dolphin-class submarine, which had greatly limited capabilities and were only fit for inshore operations.
Korean Bell of Friendship The Korean Bell of Friendship is a massive bronze bell housed in a stone pavilion in Angel's Gate Park, in the San Pedro neighborhood of Los Angeles, California. Located at the corner of Gaffey and 37th Streets, the section of the park is alternatively called the "Korean-American Peace Park," and occupies part of the former Upper Reservation of Fort MacArthur.
Korean Buddhism Korean Buddhism is distinguished from other forms of Buddhism by its attempt to resolve what it sees as inconsistencies in Chinese Mahayana Buddhism. Early Korean monks believed that the traditions they received from China were internally inconsistent. To address this, they developed a new holistic approach to Buddhism. This approach is characteristic of virtually all major Korean thinkers, and has resulted in a distinct variation of Buddhism, which Wonhyo (617–686) called the Tongbulgyo ("interpenetrated Buddhism"). Korean Buddhist thinkers refined their Chinese predecessors' ideas into a distinct form. Korean Buddhism then went on to have strong effects on Buddhism in the West.
Korean Central Television Korean Central Television (KCTV) is a national news broadcaster in North Korea and located in Pyongyang, North Korea. Being a communist state, KCTV is likely the only official source of television news for North Koreans.
Korean Confucian art Korean Confucian art took strong hold with the Yi generals who set in place the Joseon dynasty which distinguished itself in many ways by promoting Confucian thought as the basis for a new national vision. Differentiating itself by restraint, spartan choices of colour, and design, understatement, and great care and precision, the legacy of this art since the 13th century has been extensive throughout Asia.
Korean Confucianism Korean Confucianism is the form of Confucianism developed in Korea. One of the most substantial influences in Korean intellectual history was the introduction of Confucian thought as part of the cultural exchange from China.
Korean Contemporary Christian music Korean Contemporary Christian music (or Korean CCM) refers to Contemporary Christian music written or played in South Korea. Due to the dramatic growth of Christianity in Korea, CCM has been gaining popularity among Korean Christians.
Korean dance Korean dance is the art of dance as practiced in Korea, or by Koreans abroad. This article looks at the history of Korean dance, from shamanistic early rituals three thousand years ago, through folk dance to contemporary dance, as well as newer trends like Korean versions of Russian classical ballet, computerized dance-machines, and the American imported hip-hop MTV-style video scene.
Korean dialects Korean is spoken in a number of different dialects around the Korean peninsula. The peninsula is extremely mountainous, and each dialect's "territory" corresponds closely to the natural boundaries between different geographical regions.
Korean dragon The Korean dragon is a certain type of dragon associated with Korean mythology. Like its peers, the Korean dragon is culture-specific, which means it has unique properties that differentiate it from dragons in other cultures.
Korean drama Korean drama (Korean: 한국드라마) refers to televised dramas, similar to Western miniseries, produced in the Korean language for Korean audiences. Many of these dramas have become popular throughout Asia and have contributed to the general phenomenon of the Korean wave.
Korean Destroyer eXperimental KDX (Korean Destroyer eXperimental) is a substantial shipbuilding program embarked on by the Republic of Korea Navy. It is a three-phased program consisting of three individual classes of ships: KDX-I (3800 tons), KDX-II (5000 tons), and Aegis combat system-enabled KDX-III (7500+ tons).
Korean Dogwood The Korean Dogwood (Cornus coreana or Swida coreana, Korean=산수유) is a deciduous shrub or small tree 8-16 m tall, native to eastern Asia in Korea and adjacent northeastern China. It has opposite, simple leaves, 5-12 cm long.
Korean embroidery The techniques and artifacts created by Korean embroidery have a long history, but most certainly evidences from the Joseon Dynasty after the 1300s in Korea. This article talks about the history, styles, preservation, artists, and examples of screens, costumes, and domestic wares of this exacting and beautiful art form.
Korean era name Korean era names were used during the period of Silla, Goguryeo, Balhae, Taebong, Goryeo, Joseon, and the Korean Empire. Dangun-giwon, the era name originating from the foundation of Gojoseon is also widely used in Korea as an indication of long civilisation of Korea.
Korean Empire The Korean Empire is a title for dynastic Korea from the Gwangmu Restoration of 1897 until Japan's annexation of Korea in 1910. The new title was specifically assigned to the state ruled by the Joseon Dynasty over for the past 500 years to indicate the revival of the Samhan confederacies of the Proto-Three Kingdoms of Korea, in the tradition of naming new states after historic states (Gubon Sincham, 舊本新參, 구본신참).
Korean fabric arts Korean fabric arts have a long history, and only now are being seen as worth archaeological study, preservation, and research work. The traditional arts of Korean embroidery, Korean knots, Korean clothing and the rarer arts of Korean blinds weaving and Korean paper clothing are worthy of study.
Korean fan dance The Korean fan dance is a traditional form of Korean dance, usually performed by groups of female dancers. It appears to have evolved under influence of both shamanic dance and traditional Joseon Dynasty court performance.
Korean field mouse The Korean field mouse (Apodemus peninsulae), also known as the Korean wood mouse, is a species of mouse. It is distributed across Northeastern Asia, including the Russian Far East, northern China, the Korean Peninsula, Sakhalin, and HokkaidĹŤ.
Korean flower arrangement Korean flower arrangement is being revived as an indoor art, and most often uses simple Joseon dynasty whiteware to highlight various kinds of Korean flowers and tree branches in elegant but unforced natural arrangements. Im Wha-Kong of Ewha Woman's University in Seoul, who also produces her own ceramic wares, is the greatest living exponent of this art, and hosts quarterly displays of flower arrangements keeping this tradition alive.
Korean Fir Korean Fir (Abies koreana; 구상나무, Gusang namu in Korean) is a fir native to the higher mountains of South Korea, including Jeju-do island. It grows at altitudes of 1,000-1,900 m in temperate rain forest with high rainfall and cool, humid summers, and heavy winter snowfall.
Korean Friendship Association The Korean Friendship Association is an organization working with the Committee for Cultural Relations with Foreign Countries of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea), as well as an organ of promotion/public relations for the Juche movement. The Committee for Cultural Relations is the official government cultural liaison agency for North Korea and fulfills a similar role to that of the British Council or the Alliance française.
Korean gardens Korean gardens have a history that go back a thousand years, but are little known in the west. The oldest records date to Three Kingdoms period (57 BC- 668 AD) when architecture and palace gardens showed development as was noted in Samguk Sagi.
Korean glass art Korean glass art is the art of working in all kinds of glass by Koreans or by Koreans overseas has a long history. Recent archaeological excavations hint that as early as the 7th century Silla kingdom, glassware was made in Korea.
Korean Grand Prix The Korean Grand Prix will be an annual Formula One race held in South Korea. After months of speculation, on October 2, 2006 it was confirmed that the event would actually take place in 2010, and would be hosted by the Korean International Circuit, set to be built between 2007 and late 2009.
Korean honorifics In Korean language, the relationship between a speaker or writer and his or her subject and audience is paramount, and the grammar reflects this. The relationship between speaker/writer and subject is reflected in honorifics, while that between speaker/writer and audience is reflected in speech level.
Korean Health, Education, Information and Research Center The Korean Health, Education, Information and Research Center (KHEIR, Korean: 한인건강정보센터) is Los Angeles-based non-profit healthcare service agency established in 1986 to deliver medical services, including health education, health care, and social support, to the Korean American community, mainly assistng the low-income, recently immigrated, monolingual/limited English speaking Koreans.
Korean Chinese cuisine Korean Chinese cuisine (Korean: 중화요리) is derived from traditional Chinese cuisine but has been strongly influenced by local ingredients in Korea. Due to this some have regarded Korean Chinese cuisine as being more 'Korean' than Chinese.
Korean independence movement The nature of the search for Korean independence under the illicit and repressive Japanese occupation period (1910-1945) has a particularly complicated and diverse history. During the nearly five centuries under its Yi dynasty rulers, maintained by a strict and conservative Confucianist bureaucracy, Joseon had kept its independence through careful diplomacy with and outward subservience to the much greater power of China.
Korean Immigrant Workers Advocates The Koreatown Immigrant Workers Alliance (KIWA, pronounced kee-wah), better known under its past name Korean Immigrant Workers Advocates, is a multi-ethnic immigrant worker civil rights membership organization based in the Los Angeles Koreatown area.
Korean jade carving The tradition of Korean jade carving dates back to neolithic finds along the Namgang river basin in Gyeongju. Jade rings and accessories were worn by the higher classes of society, especially women, from the three kingdoms period and reached their peak in the Joseon dynasty, the golden age of jadework.
Korean knife Korean knives are a sub-division of Korean swords in that both have been used or are used for martial purposes, and as well in the martial arts. Because of 20th century restrictions, and the Confucian culture in Korea, knife-fighting and the art of the smaller bladed weapons are seen as rare and obscure.
Korean language North-South differences The North-South differences in the Korean language refers to the differences in the Korean language used in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea; hereafter "the North") and the Republic of Korea (South Korea; hereafter denoted "the South"). From a linguistic point of view, the language used in the North and the South is one and the same.
Korean literature Korean literature is the body of literature produced in Korea. For much of history, it was written both in classical Chinese and in Korean, first using the transcription systems idu and gugyeol, and finally using the Korean script hangul.
Korean League Cup The League Cup was a short-lived tournament similar in format to the Adidas Cup but run by the K-League instead of the KFA. Busan I'Park dominated it, winning the trophy on two of the four occasions and finishing runners-up once.
Korean Liberation Army The Korean Liberation Army was the armed force of the Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea, and was created on September 17 1941 in Chongqing, China. Its commandant was General Ji Cheongcheon, with General Lee Bum-seok, a hero of the Battle of Cheongsanri and future prime minister of South Korea.
Korean martial arts Korean martial arts, referred to in Korean as Musul (무술 hanja: 武術) or Muye (무예 hanja:武藝), are the various martial arts that originated or were modified in Korea. The most famous Korean martial arts in the West are perhaps Taekwondo and Hapkido, although there has been a revival of the bladed arts of Korean swords and swordsmanship as well as an interest in Korean knives and knife-fighting as well as the revival of archery on foot and on horse-back.
Korean Magpie The Korean Magpie Pica (pica) sericea is currently considered a subspecies of the European Magpie found in East Asia. It is a common symbol of the Korean identity, and has been adopted as the "official bird" of numerous South Korean cities, counties and provinces.
Korean Martyrs The Roman Catholic faith came to Korea at the beginning of the 17th century, primarily through the work of lay catechists. The strong and dynamic Catholic communities were led almost entirely by lay people until the arrival of the first French missionaries in 1836.
Korean Minjok Leadership Academy Korean Minjok Leadership Academy, or KMLA, is a private high school located in the countryside of Gangwon-do], [[South Korea at an altitude of 600 meters. Its official Korean name is 민족사관고등학교(民族史觀高等學校), and it is commonly referred to as 민사고 for short.
Korean Mountaineering League The Korean Mountaineering League (KML) is a non-profit non-governmental organization that focuses on the conservation of Korea's mountain environments. It was founded by Shawn James Morrissey, a mountaineer and author, who currently acts as the KML's president.
Korean nationalism Korean nationalism may refer to two closely related forms of ideologies, separated in time and differentiated by their respective conditions, that are sometimes confused due to historical circumstances and a chance of jargon usage.
Korean parts of speech In modern South Korean scholarship, there are generally considered to be 9 parts of speech (pumsa; 품사; 品詞) in the Korean language, although the number can vary slightly between sources. There are also various other important classes of words and morphemes that are not generally classified as parts of speech.
Korean pottery Korean pottery appeared later than south Chinese pottery, and required a reasonably stable village culture before domestic Korean potter's wheels and kilns could be produced. Estimates are that Korean pottery history go back to the early Silla period, from domestic ware of clay that followed, and was within the Korean ceramics tradition.
Korean pronouns Korean pronouns pose some difficulty to speakers of English due to their complexity. The Korean language makes extensive use of speech levels and honorifics in its grammar, and Korean pronouns also change depending on the social distinction between the speaker and the person or persons spoken to.
Korean Peasants League The Korean Peasants League (KPL) is a NGO whose members are South Korean farmers. The KPL was involved in demonstrations in 2003 MC5 in Cancun, Mexico and one farmer stabbed himself to death during the protest.
Korean Peninsula The Korean Peninsula is a peninsula in East Asia. It extends southwards for about 1,100 kilometres from the continental Asia into the Pacific Ocean and is surrounded by the Sea of Japan (East Sea) on the east, the East China Sea to the south, and the Yellow Sea to the west, the Korea Strait connecting the first two bodies of water.
Korean Pine The Korean Pine (Pinus koraiensis; family Pinaceae) is a species of pine tree that occurs in eastern Asia, in Manchuria in northeast China, Primorsky Krai and Khabarovsk Krai in the far east of Russia, Korea and central Japan. In the north of its range, it grows at moderate altitudes, typically 600-900 m, whereas further south, it is a mountain tree, growing at 2,000-2,600 m altitude in Japan.
Korean Progressive Network (Jinbonet) Korean Progressive Network (Jinbonet) is a nine-year-old organisation in Seoul, South Korea. Jinbonet is a network that provides ICT services (webhosting, mailing list, webmail) to that country's progressive movement, civil society and
Korean ruling class The Korean ruling class, or Korean power elite, is the relatively small number of Korean people who through similar schools, education, family clans, upbringing, or corporate chaebol wealth and urban power control decision making and policy within either of the partitioned Koreas.
Korean salamander The Korean salamander (Hynobius leechi) is the most common species of salamander on the Korean peninsula, and is also found in adjacent portions of China and on Jeju Island. It typically lives on forested hills, and from time to time mass deaths occur in Korea when salamanders encounter man-made drainage structures.
Korean sculpture Korean sculpture has a long history, and was exported abroad, primarily during the Baekje period to Japan, where Korean Buddhist sculptures from the seventh century still exist. In the main Korean sculptures were of wood, then stone, and then ceramics, with votive sculptures being of the greatest number.
Korean school In Western countries like the United States, Canada, Australia and the United Kingdom, a Korean school () is a school established explicitly for the purpose of teaching the Korean language to Korean American youth and the youth born in the respective countries.
Korean stone art Korean stone art began as votive art over 3000 years ago, and began to be seen as worthy of scholars a thousand years ago. The art usually works on three scales: large installations of monumental shaped stones as ornamental gates; medium sized shaped stones for landscape decoration within Korean gardens; and the smaller shaped stones for scholar's tables which is the most important.
Korean Service Medal The Korean Service Medal is a decoration of the United States military and was created in November 1950 by order of President Harry Truman. The Korean Service Medal is the primary United States decoration for participation in the Korean War and is awarded to any U.
Korean Social Democratic Party The Korean Social Democratic Party was formed on November 3, 1945 by medium and small entrepreneurs, merchants, handicraftsmen, petty bourgeoisie, some peasants, and Christians, supposedly out of the masses’ purported anti-imperialist, anti-feudal aspirations and demands to eliminate the aftermath of Japanese imperialist military rule and build a (purportedly) new democratic society. Before 1980s, the party was called Democratic Party of Korea.
Korean Super Cup The Super Cup has been a traditional curtain-raiser to the Korean football season since its inception in 1999. Played between the league champions and FA Cup holders, Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors are the only non-champions to have lifted the Super Cup trophy.
Korean Teachers & Education Workers' Union The Korean Teachers and Education Workers Union (KTU; abbreviated to Jeon-gyojo) is a labor union of teachers in South Korea. The organization has 94,000 members among the 360,000 public and private school teachers in the country.
Korean vegetarian cuisine Korean vegetarian cuisine is linked to the Buddhist traditions that influenced Korean culture from the Goryeo dynasty onwards. There are hundreds of vegetarian restaurants in Korea although historically they have been local restaurants that are unknown to tourists.
Korean wave The Korean wave refers to the popularity of South Korean popular culture in other countries and is otherwise known as "Hallyu", from the Korean pronunciation. The term was coined in China in 2001 by Beijing journalists startled by the growing popularity of South Koreans and South Korean goods in China.
Korean wine Korean culture has a great variety of traditional alcoholic beverages, most of which are called by the Sino-Korean term ju (hangul: 주; hanja: [origin of Korean wines has an interesting and historical story. According to legend (a myth that appears in Jewang-Ungi, 帝][a historical book), a long time ago there was a king who enjoyed alcohol to tempt woman to want to have many children.
Korean War Service Medal The Korean War Service Medal is a decoration of South Korea which was first authorized in December 1950. Originally known as the Incident Participation Medal the medal was first authorized to South Korean troops who had participated in the initial counter-assaults against North Korean aggression in June of 1950.
Korean War Veterans Parkway The Richmond Parkway (officially, since 1997, the Korean War Veterans Parkway) is a freeway that traverses the South Shore of Staten Island, New York, USA from northwest to southeast. It begins at the Outerbridge Crossing, and ends near the intersection of Richmond Avenue and Arthur Kill Road in the island's Greenridge section.
Koreana Koreana (코리아나, 1962-2003) is a bilingual Korean musical group who perform songs in both English and Korean. The group peformed at the opening ceromonies at the 1988 Seoul Olympics where they sang its official theme song "Hand in Hand.
Koreanosaurus "Koreanosaurus" (meaning "Korean lizard") is the informal name given to an as-yet undescribed genus of dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous. It was a possible dromaeosaur (or similar theropod) which lived in what is now Korea, although at times it has been referred to the Tyrannosauridae and Hypsilophodontidae.
Koreans in the Philippines The Philippines is the host country of the largest Korean community in Southeast Asia (numbering between 50,000 to 70,000). Among the first Korean immigrants came to the Philippines after the second World War, in search of better living conditions.
Koreaphobia Koreaphobia (Chinese: 恐韓症, pinyin kǒnghánzheng; Korean: 공한증) is an expectation of being beaten by Korea. Originally, and still most commonly, this concept is used to describe and explain the situation of the Chinese national football team.
Koreatown, Dallas, Texas A sizeable Koreatown can be found in north Dallas, Texas (USA), though this mostly commercial area of the city has not been officially designated as such. Instead, large signs situated at the intersection of Harry Hines Boulevard and Royal Lane proclaim the area as the "Asian Trade District.
Koreatown, Manhattan Koreatown, or K-town as it is colloquially known, is a neighborhood in the New York City borough of Manhattan, that is generally bordered by 31st and 36th Streets and Fifth Avenue and Sixth Avenues. Its location in Midtown Manhattan leads it to be easily overshadowed by nearby destinations like the Empire State Building and Macy's.
Koreatown, Toronto Toronto, Ontario, Canada's Korean Business Area, known more generally as Koreatown (or Korea Town), is centred along Bloor Street between Christie and Bathurst Streets. Also known as "Little Korea", Koreatown came into prominence during the summer of 2002 as the Korean team surprised everyone by playing into the semi-final round in the 2002 World Cup tournament.
Koreff David Ferdinand Koreff was a German physician who was a personal doctor of Staatskanzler Hardenberg and occupied one of the two chairs for animal magnetism created in 1817 at the University of Berlin. A personal friend of E.
Koregaon Victory Memorial On January 1st, he held a meeting at the Koregaon Victory Memorial, 17 miles from Poona, which commemorates the defeat of the Peshwa's forces and the inauguration of British rule. The names of Mahar soldiers who fought with the British are inscribed there on a marble tablet.
Korel Engin Korel Engin, also known as Cori Enghusen, (born April 8 1980 in Bothell, Washington) is a Turkish female basketball player at the center position. At 198 cm (6'6"), she is the tallest member of the Turkish women's basketball national team.
Korel Tunador Korel Tunador is the touring saxophonist/keyboardist/guitarist for The Goo Goo Dolls' "Let Love In" summer tour with the Counting Crows. He has previously worked as a touring guitarist with Wicked Wisdom, and plays bass and other instrumentation on Pop Music United, the forthcoming science fiction album from L.
Korela Fortress Korela Fortress in Russian or Käkisalmen linna in Finnish, at the town of Priozersk (in Finnish Käkisalmi), was founded by the Karelians who named the place Käkisalmi. Novogorodian chronicles refer to it as Korela.
Korem Korem (alternative forms include Quoram Vecchia, Kworam) is a town in central Ethiopia. Located on the eastern edge of the Ethiopian highlands in the Debubawi Zone of the Tigray Region, this town has a latitude and longitude of .
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