Emblem of South Korea

National Emblem of the Republic of Korea
대한민국의 국장
Armiger South Korea
Adopted10 December 1963 (1963-12-10)
Motto대한민국
(Republic of Korea)

The National Emblem of the Republic of Korea (Korean대한민국의 국장; Hanja), also officially referred as Naramunjang (Korean나라문장; Hanja나라紋章, lit.'State emblem'), consists of the taegeuk symbol present on the South Korean national flag surrounded by five stylized petals and a ribbon bearing the inscription of the official Korean name of the country (Daehanminguk), in Korean characters. The Taegeuk represents peace and harmony. The five petals all have meaning and are related to South Korea's national flower, the Hibiscus syriacus, or Rose of Sharon (Korean: 무궁화; Hanja: 無窮花, mugunghwa).

The emblem was announced on 10 December 1963.[1][2][3][4] The flower and taegeuk symbols are generally considered by South Koreans to be symbolic of the "Korean ethnos" (Korean: 한민족).[3]

Construction sheet
  1. ^ Ministry of the Interior of the Republic of Korea (2017). National Symbols of the Republic of Korea: Uniting People and Elevating National Pride. Seoul: Ministry of the Interior of the Republic of Korea. pp. 10–11. Archived from the original on 2017-08-06. Retrieved 6 August 2017.
  2. ^ "우리나라 국가상징> 나라문장".
  3. ^ a b Myers, Brian Reynolds (2011). "North Korea's state-loyalty advantage". Free Online Library. Archived from the original on 20 May 2018. Retrieved 20 May 2018. The state emblem (adopted in 1963) is a taegeuk symbol on a rose of Sharon--another purely racial symbol.
  4. ^ 관보 [Official Gazette]. Government of the Republic of Korea. 10 December 1963. pp. 25–26. Retrieved 5 July 2024.

Emblem of South Korea

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