| |||||||||
| Kaesŏng City | |
|---|---|
| Korean Name | |
| McCune-Reischauer | Kaesŏng-shi |
| Revised Romanization | Gaeseong-si |
| Hangul | 개성시 |
| Hanja | 開城市 |
| Short Name | Kaesŏng (Gaeseong; 개성; 開城 |
| Statistics | |
| Population | ? |
| Area | ? |
| Government | City in North Hwanghae; former Directly Governed City |
| Split from | Gyeonggi, 1951 |
| Joined | North Hwanghae, 2003 |
| Dialect | |
Kaesŏng (Gaeseong) is a city in North Hwanghae Province, North Korea, a former Directly Governed City, and the capital of Korea during the Goryeo Dynasty. The city is near Kaesŏng Industrial Region.
When Yi Seonggye overthrew the Goryeo Dynasty in 1392 and established the Joseon Dynasty, he moved the Korean capital from Kaesŏng to Hanyang (modern-day Seoul). Kaesŏng remained a part of Gyeonggi Province until the Korean War. In 1951, the city (which had been part of South Korea) came under North Korean control, and the area around the city was organized into "Kaesŏng Region" (Kaesŏng Chigu; 개성 지구; 開城 地區). In 1955, Kaesŏng became a "Directly Governed City" (Kaesŏng Chik'alshi; 개성 직할시; 開城 直割市). In 2002, Kaesŏng Industrial Region was formed from part of Kaesŏng. In 2003, the remaining part of Kaesŏng (exluding the Industrial Region) became part of North Hwanghae Province.
The city is close to the Demilitarized Zone that divides North and South Korea.
Before 2002, Kaesŏng Directly Governed City was divided into 1 city (Kaesŏng itself) and 3 counties.
In 2003, P'anmun-gun and part of Kaesŏng-shi were separated from Kaesŏng Directly Governed City and merged to form Kaesŏng Industrial Region. The remaining part of Kaesŏng joined North Hwanghae in 2002.
| Administrative divisions of North Korea | |
|---|---|
| Directly Governed Cities P'yŏngyang | Rasŏn | |
| Former Directly Governed Cities | |
| Special Administrative Regions Kaesŏng Industrial Region | Kŭmgang-san Tourist Region | Shinŭiju Special Administrative Region | |
| Provinces Chagang | North Hamgyŏng | South Hamgyŏng | North Hwanghae | South Hwanghae | Kangwŏn | North P'yŏngan | South P'yŏngan | Ryanggang | |