In
North and
South Korea, 'Special cities, Metropolitan Cities,' and 'Directly Governed Cities' are cities that have a status equivalent to that of
Provinces (''Do''). Hence, like the provinces, such cities are under the direct administration of the central government.
As of 2004, there are two Directly Governed Cities (''Chikhalsi;'' 직할시; 直轄市) and three other special provincial-level administrative regions in North Korea; and one Special City (''Teukbyeolsi;''
특별시;
特別市) and six Metropolitan Cities (''Gwangyeoksi;'' 광역시; 廣域市) in South Korea. Before 1995, the five largest ''Gwangyeoksi'' in South Korea were classified as ''Chik'alshi'' (i.e. ''Chikhalsi'' in
McCune-Reischauer romanization; now spelled ''Jikhalsi'' in the
Revised Romanization of Korean).
In the following tables, "Split time" shows when the city split from the province it was located in.
North Korea
'Table 1: Directly Governed Cities and Special Administrative Regions of North Korea'
'''Note:' North Korea uses a variant of the McCune-Reischauer romanization.''
'Romanization' |
'Han'gŭl' |
'Hanja' |
'Split time' |
'Province split from' |
P'yŏngyang Chikhalsi (Note: The city is classified as a Directly Governed City (Chikhalsi), not a Special City as Seoul in South Korea. In fact, the North Korean national newspaper and broadcasting say "Pyongyang ''Chikhalsi''". Some sources, most of them come from South Korea, refer the city as a Special City; however these are the old sources. Moreover, South Korea has corrected the city as a Directly Governed City, according to a South Korean newspaper in 1994. Also note that the official name of Pyongyang would be "Pyongyang''-si''" in the Republic of Korea, which officially claims to represent the entire peninsula.) |
평양 직할시 |
平壤直轄市 |
1946 |
S. P'yŏngan |
Rasŏn (Rajin-Sŏnbong) Chikhalsi |
라선 (라진-선봉) 직할시 |
羅先 (羅津-先鋒) 直轄市 |
1993 |
N. Hamgyŏng |
Sinŭiju T'ŭkpyŏl Haengjŏnggu (Sinŭiju Special Administrative Region) |
신의주 특별 행정구 |
新義州特別行政區 |
2002 |
N. P'yŏngan |
Kaesŏng Kong'ŏp Chigu (Kaesŏng Industrial Region) |
개성 공업 지구 |
開城工業地區 |
2002 |
''Formerly the North Korean section of'' Kyŏnggi ''Province'' |
Kŭmgangsan Kwan'gwang Chigu (Kŭmgang-san Tourist Region) |
금강산 관광 지구 |
金剛山觀光地區 |
2002 |
Kangwŏn |
Former Directly Governed Cities
★
Ch'ŏngjin City (''Ch'ŏngjin-si''; 청진시; 淸津市) was a Directly Governed City from
1960 to
1967 and again from
1977 to
1985, but is now part of
North Hamgyŏng Province.
★
Hamhŭng City (''Hamhŭng-si''; 함흥시; 咸興市) was a Directly Governed City from
1960 to
1967, but is now part of South Hamgyŏng Province.
★
Kaesŏng City (''Kaesŏng-si''; 개성시; 開城市) (distinct from
Kaesŏng Industrial Region) was a designated Region (''Chigu;'' 지구; 地區) from
1951 to
1955 and a Directly Governed City from 1955 to
2003, but is now part of North Hwanghae Province.
★
Namp'o Special City (''Namp'o T'ŭkkŭpsi''; 남포 특급시; 南浦特級市) was a Directly Governed City from
1980 to
2004, but is now part of
South P'yŏng'an Province.
Sources
The sources for this section are ''
Chosun Ilbo's'' pages
행정구역 현황 ("Haengjeong Guyeok Hyeonhwang") and
행정구역 개편 일지 ("Haengjeong Guyeok Gaepyeon Ilji") (in Korean only; updated 2004).
South Korea
Notes
Seoul
★ There is no Hanja for "Seoul," but in
Chinese, it is written by its
Joseon Dynasty name
Hanseong (漢城). The new Chinese name, 首爾/首尔, is a transcription based on the pronunciation of "Seoul". As a suffix, the character ''gyeong'' (京) is used, which means "capital".
★ Seoul was designated a "Special Free City" (''Teukbyeol Jayusi;'' 특별 자유시; 特別自由市) separate from Gyeonggi Province on
August 15,
1946; it became a "Special City" on
August 15,
1949.
See also
★
Administrative divisions of North Korea
★
Administrative divisions of South Korea
★
List of cities in South Korea
★
List of cities in North Korea
★
List of Korea-related topics