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*[[Jeonbuk FC|Jeonbuk Football Club]]
*[[Jeonbuk FC|Jeonbuk Football Club]]
*[http://thejeonjuhub.googlepages.com The Jeonju Hub - a community site for English speaking residents (mostly ESL teachers)]
*[http://thejeonjuhub.googlepages.com The Jeonju Hub - a community site for English speaking residents (mostly ESL teachers)]
*[http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=21355224496 Jeonju TEFL Teachers - a facebook group for all things Jeonju and Jeollabuk-do]


{{North Jeolla}}
{{North Jeolla}}

Revision as of 00:43, 10 March 2008

Template:Infobox Korean settlement Jeonju (Jeonju-si) is a city in and the capital of Jeollabuk-do (North Jeolla) Province, South Korea. It is situated about two and a half hours south of Seoul and is an important tourist center famous for Korean food, historic buildings, sports activities and innovative festivals.

History

Located in the fertile Honam plain, famous for strawberries and exceptional produce, Jeonju has been an important regional center in the province for centuries. The city was regarded as the spiritual capital of the Joseon Dynasty, because the Yi royal family originated there.

The town was occupied by the Donghak peasants' rebellion in 1894. Jeonju was given metropolitan status in 1935, and the city was founded in 1949.

Culture

  • Jeonju bibimbap, a traditional local food, is well-known across South Korea. There are also several very popular vegetarian restaurants serving Jeonju style food and pine wine.
  • The National Jeonju Museum exhibits ancient relics from the Baekje days.
  • There are extensive royal museums, temples, a castle fortress on a hillside, and a well-known paper museum, as well as an annual paper fashion show highlighting both the latest style and traditional Korean clothing made of paper.
  • The Jeonju International Film Festival draws about 50,000 visitors annually.
  • Jeonju is planning an annual "Fun Festival" as well as the "Royal City Sports Festival", a weekend of five different races, in September.

People and everyday life

Education is a major industry in the city because of the lack of a lot of manufacturing jobs. Hakwons, or private learning academies, are found on just about every other city block or so, ranging in size from single classrooms to entire multi-floor buildings, specializing in everything from musical instrument instruction to languages to computer skills to vocational studies. Many university students, when they can find a job, end up being teachers at a hakwon, school, or university, unless they apply for a different kind of job outside the city, like in Seoul. The city also exports teachers and professors to other cities in the province. Perhaps keeping with the city's tradition of being a place of the upper class, there is a particularly strong emphasis on education, because other than one's wealth, these days whether one is educated or not is one of the main distinguishing factors between people of lower class and those of the above (if such distinctions can still be made), especially in the traditional area that Jeonju is in where there are a lot of traditional buildings.

Jeonbuk FC

For recreation, many people take advantage of the nature that is always close by and go on hiking trips in the numerous and splendid mountains and parks. There are also quite a lot of historical sites to visit, which are home to ancient and unique stone monuments and relics.

Right beside the zoo, which is itself a large and lovely park area, there is the Samsung Sound and Culture Hall, which is a large and modern concert complex, and is very accessible from the city. There are frequent music concerts and recitals all year round, and musicals when they stop by. Quite a few internationally famous piano players come from this city and sometimes perform here when they return home from tour.

The major Korean broadcasting networks all have branch stations in the city, and they in turn produce some local shows in addition to the main broadcasts, for the entire province. The regional shows tend to be educational documentaries, cultural or historical-related, and a few quiz shows. One quiz show by the local MBC, Quiz School, is hosted by Bae Dong-Sung, whose area of operation is usually Seoul, but was imported for the show. Episodes of this show can be viewed free of charge on the internet, after the initial television broadcast, and is an example of a small local TV station being able to broadcast itself worldwide by taking advantage of the very good Korean IT technology. The questions tend to (but do not always) ask about local culture and history, maintaining the tradition that Jeonju is a place that holds its culture and history in high regard. There is also an English segment to the show in which the contestants are taught a phrase and asked a question in English by bi-lingual Canadian co-host Thexder, reflecting the necessity of foreign language education and an international perspective.

Chonju Highway Bus Terminal.

Transportation

The city transport department is planning to build a Light rail. but light rail plan was denied by some technical problem. For the urban bus user, those who have a 'transportation card' can use 'transfer system'. This was a compensation for changing bus service route and an inducement of using this card-pay system.

Administrative districts

Jeonju is divided into 2 wards ("Gu"), which in turn are divided into approximately 40 neighbourhoods ("Dong"). Listed below are the wards in English and Hangul.

Sister cities

See also

Further reading

35°49′N 127°09′E / 35.817°N 127.150°E / 35.817; 127.150