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Jungin

Jungin
Korean name
Hangul
중인
Hanja
Revised Romanizationjung-in
McCune–Reischauerchung'in
Joseon class system
Class Hangul Hanja Status
Yangban 양반 兩班 noble class
Jungin 중인 中人 intermediate class
Sangmin 상민 常民 common people
Cheonmin 천민 賤民 lowborn people (nobi, baekjeong, mudang, gisaeng, etc.)

The jungin or chungin (Korean중인; Hanja中人) were the upper middle class of the Joseon Dynasty in medieval and early modern Korean society. The name "jungin" directly means "middle people".[1] This privileged class of commoners consisted of a small group of petty bureaucrats and other highly educated skilled workers whose technical and administrative skills enabled the yangban and the royal family to rule the lower classes. Jungin were the lifeblood of the Korean Confucian agrarian bureaucracy, on whom the upper classes depended on to maintain their vice-like hold on the people. Their traditions and habits are the forerunners of the modern Korean administrative systems in both North and South Korea.[2][3]

  1. ^ Andrea Matles Savada (1997). South Korea: A Country Study. DIANE Publishing. pp. 91, 377. ISBN 0-7881-4619-X.
  2. ^ 중인 (中人) (in Korean). Empas / EncyKorea.
  3. ^ 중인 (中人) (in Korean). Empas / Britannica.

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تشونغين Arabic Chungin Spanish جونگین FA Chungin French Csungin Hungarian Jungin Italian 中人 (朝鮮) Japanese 중인 Korean Chungin Malay Jungin Dutch

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