하늘 쉼터/추억의 뒤안길

1890~1903 귀중한 사진자료들

천리향(민정) 2012. 4. 20. 15:19

OLD KOREA - LAND OF THE MORNING CALM -- Korean Girls Testing a New "Short Drop" Parachute Design
 
OLD KOREA - LAND OF THE MORNING CALM -- Smokin', Gamblin', and Gossiping
 
OLD KOREA - LAND OF THE MORNING CALM -- High Class Family
 
OLD KOREA - LAND OF THE MORNING CALM -- The Short-Cut Home, or, a Korean SPIDERMAN Does His Thing. SEOUL
 
OLD KOREA - LAND OF THE MORNING CALM -- Kids on the City Wall, SEOUL 
 
OLD KOREA - LAND OF THE MORNING CALM -- A Crowed Scene on a Side Street, PYONGYANG 
 
OLD KOREA - LAND OF THE MORNING CALM -- A Rustic Road Near SEOUL
 
OLD KOREA - LAND OF THE MORNING CALM -- The Bean Grinder, SEOUL
  
OLD KOREA - LAND OF THE MORNING CALM -- A "Greasy Spoon" Restaurant in SEOUL
  
OLD KOREA - LAND OF THE MORNING CALM -- The Chicken Seller, SEOUL
  
OLD KOREA - LAND OF THE MORNING CALM -- Charcoal Carriers, SEOUL
  
OLD KOREA - LAND OF THE MORNING CALM -- Junks Along the Han River at YUNG SAN, a Logging Town Near SEOUL
  
OLD KOREA - LAND OF THE MORNING CALM -- Two Kinds of Loads on the Streets of SEOUL
  
 

OLD KOREA - LAND OF THE MORNING CALM -- Public School With a Holding Cell Under the Floor Reserved For Wild Kids, SEOUL

Wonder what the little girl behind bars did to get thrown in the klink? Obviously, the pipe-smoking old teacher-sage doesn't take any crap from his young pupils. Photo by Herbert Ponting, 1903.

 

OLD KOREA - LAND OF THE MORNING CALM -- Tiger Hunters in the Hills Outside of SEOUL

 

OLD KOREA - LAND OF THE MORNING CALM -- Shoeing a Horse at the Blacksmith's Home, SEOUL

In the past, these guys were evidently kicked clear into their neighbors yard by a horse that didn't care to get shoes nailed into its hoofs....and there is NO WAY they will let THAT ever happen again ! 1903 photograph by Herbert Ponting.

 


OLD KOREA - LAND OF THE MORNING CALM -- Japanese Make Sure the Koreans Know Who's in Charge !

This is Korea ca.1897-1900. Commenter idea0853 believes it is actually September 6th, 1897. See his comment far down below. As a stereoview, the first record I can find of its being published is in 1901.

The image is tragically symbolic. A crowd of Koreans stand under the shadow of the Japanese "Rising Sun" flag, while their own Korean National Flag is relegated to the size of a bath towel.

 

Although Korea has not yet been formally annexed to Japan, a series of subjugating treaties backed by military force had allowed the Japanese to "call the shots" and "run the show", basically doing whatever they wanted with Korea and the Koreans.

 

I have never seen such a graphic image demonstrating the lack of respect Japan had for any of its neighbors in the Century leading up to WW2 -- well, except for a pile of photographs I have that show the Japanese Military abusing the Chinese, which a National Magazine in Tokyo told me they could never publish in Japan. "It is not good for Japanese Morale and the Nation of Japan to know what happened in the past", I was told.

 

Of course, they did not have to tell me that, as I was already familiar with the so-called "History Books" approved by the Ministry of Education during my over three decades of living there. Of course, some of the History Books published in America for their schools are in the pits as well. No doubt every nation (to either a LARGE or small degree) lives in some amount of corporate, official denial about not only the present, but especially the past.

 

KOREA - LAND OF THE MORNING CALM -- Human "Dirt Pounders" Harden the Foundation for a New Post Office. SEOUL, 1903

 

KOREA - LAND OF THE MORNING CALM -- Officials of the Imperial Department of Communications. SEOUL, 1903

 

KOREA - LAND OF THE MORNING CALM -- Four Peace-Loving Korean Gentlemen at the Temple of the God of War. SEOUL

 

KOREA - LAND OF THE MORNING CALM -- Heathen, Idol-Worshipping, Blinded-by-the-Devil, Superstitious Koreans (According to the Christian Missionaries, that is). Near SEOUL

 


KOREA - LAND OF THE MORNING CALM -- Two Happy Guys Winnowing Barly in the Streets of CHEMULPO

Photo by HERBERT G. PONTING, 1903