번호, 제목, 내용, 글쓴이, 등록일, 조회 상세정보 입니다.
Season Summer
Period 15 August 2021 (solar calendar)
Introduction "Gwangbokjeol," or National Liberation Day, is held on August 15 as a national holiday to commemorate August 15, 1945, the day on which the country was finally liberated from thirty-five years of Japanese colonial rule.

Gwangbokjeol (光復節), National Liberation Day 


"Gwangbokjeol," or National Liberation Day, is held on August 15 as a national holiday day and legal holiday to commemorate August 15, 1945, the day on which the country was finally liberated from thirty-five years of Japanese colonial rule.
After Korea's liberation in October 1945, the U.S. military government in Korea abolished the national holidays established by the Japanese and newly enacted different public festivals and holidays. Korea declared its government on the third anniversary of the country's liberation from Japan on August 15, 1948. At the Cabinet meeting held in May 1949, "August 15, National Independence Day" was enacted as a national commemorative day; however, in accordance with "Legislation No. 53 of the Legislation on National Commemorative Days" proclaimed on October 1, 1949, the name was changed to "National Liberation Day." Ever since then Korea has commemorated the National Liberation Day on August 15 of each year.


광복절 관련 이미지
광복30주년기념 100원 백동화 앞뒷면_1975
해방기념식목 그림엽서
조선 독립 1주년 기념달력
100-won Coin Commemorating the 30th Anniversary of National Liberation Day, Front and Reverse Faces of the Coin, 1975
Picture Postcard of the Planting of Trees to Commemorate National Liberation
Calendar Commemorating the 1st Anniversary of Joseon Independence Day


National Liberation Day is a national holiday held to commemorate the independence fighters who fought and died for the country and to celebrate the liberation of the Korean people. However, under circumstances in which the dominance of the Japanese Empire and the legacies of the war in East Asia have not been fully resolved even after more than seventy years, and with the country still divided, as it is viewed, merely commemorating the past historic event might not serve the purpose. Over time its meaning has shifted toward a day on which to wish or pray for the unification of the Korean Peninsula and for peace in East Asia.