4:24

K. Will - So Won (Wish) Great King Sejong OST
...
published: 19 Jan 2010
author: allaboutkwill4
K. Will - So Won (Wish) Great King Sejong OST
published: 19 Jan 2010
views: 16442
2:10

king Sejong the great - ending scene
king sejong the great - ending scene (ep86) the girl: Who is that nice old man? Youngsil: ...
published: 06 Jan 2009
author: suede20
king Sejong the great - ending scene
king sejong the great - ending scene (ep86) the girl: Who is that nice old man? Youngsil: He is the most exalted man on this land...and the most humble. Every one of us are his heaven, his earth and his universe. Sejong : The world is still vast from up here.
published: 06 Jan 2009
author: suede20
views: 39251
7:01

Sejong the Great
Sejong the Great left many cultural and historical relics to present Korean's life. He cre...
published: 20 Jul 2009
author: prkorea
Sejong the Great
Sejong the Great left many cultural and historical relics to present Korean's life. He created Korean alphabet, Hangeul. This video shows how he could leave many relics.
published: 20 Jul 2009
author: prkorea
views: 14182
12:12

King Sejong the Great
His goal was to remove Korea from the China-centered world order. He established Korea's o...
published: 13 Jun 2012
author: prkorea
King Sejong the Great
His goal was to remove Korea from the China-centered world order. He established Korea's own unique culture. He is the most respected king in Korean history: King Sejong (1397~1450)
published: 13 Jun 2012
author: prkorea
views: 653
6:36

KING SEJONG THE GREAT - Everlasting Light Korea | Korean Theatre Show | Jürgen Schreiter in Korea
ASIAN THEATRE - ASIAN MUSICAL CHANNEL | Korean Theatre Show at Seoul Palace, Korea. Night ...
published: 05 Apr 2012
author: jschreiter
KING SEJONG THE GREAT - Everlasting Light Korea | Korean Theatre Show | Jürgen Schreiter in Korea
ASIAN THEATRE - ASIAN MUSICAL CHANNEL | Korean Theatre Show at Seoul Palace, Korea. Night Show at Seoul Palace | Korean Spirit and Culture Promotion Project - Everlasting Light of Korea. Korean Show at Seoul Palace - Asian Culture Show | Korean Theatre in Seoul. King Sejong the Great - The everlasting Light of Korea - Korean History | Koreanische Folklore Show in Seoul, Korea!
published: 05 Apr 2012
author: jschreiter
views: 245
7:52

Korean Folk Show | Korean Theatre Show | King Sejong the Great - Korean Musical
MUSIC CHANNEL - MUSIC BLOG - ASIAN SHOW BLOG - ASIAN TV CHANNEL - KOREAN MUSIC CHANNEL - A...
published: 05 Apr 2012
author: jschreiter
Korean Folk Show | Korean Theatre Show | King Sejong the Great - Korean Musical
MUSIC CHANNEL - MUSIC BLOG - ASIAN SHOW BLOG - ASIAN TV CHANNEL - KOREAN MUSIC CHANNEL - ASIAN TRAVEL BLOG - King Sejong the Great - Korean Musical Show at Seoul Palace | ASIAN THEATRE - ASIAN MUSICAL CHANNEL | Korean Theatre Show at Seoul Palace, Korea. Night Show at Seoul Palace | Korean...
published: 05 Apr 2012
author: jschreiter
views: 163
0:48

King Sejong the Great, the US Embassy, and the Danish Embassy in Seoul
After I got my pages added to my passport and openned a bank account, I took a walk around...
published: 12 Mar 2010
author: Jonathan Hackett
King Sejong the Great, the US Embassy, and the Danish Embassy in Seoul
After I got my pages added to my passport and openned a bank account, I took a walk around the area. Right after I stopped filming, US Embassy Security asked me to please refrain from filming the embassy. They asked me if I knew that this was the US Embassy. Such is this new security!
published: 12 Mar 2010
author: Jonathan Hackett
views: 328
4:07

#81 Seoul's Story of King Sejong Museum (DiscoveringKorea.com)
One of Seoul's most interesting and informative exhibitions is conveniently located in the...
published: 04 May 2012
author: discoveringkorea
#81 Seoul's Story of King Sejong Museum (DiscoveringKorea.com)
One of Seoul's most interesting and informative exhibitions is conveniently located in the heart of the city. Well, to be more precise, it's actually located underground, in a sprawling space beneath Gwanghwamun Square. While a prominent statue of King Sejong the Great sits atop the Square, the real tribute to him can be accessed by an almost hidden door located behind the statue.
published: 04 May 2012
author: discoveringkorea
views: 100
2:41

Great King Sejong Love Melody
from the drama Great King Sejong i don't really know the real name of this song. would be ...
published: 22 Jul 2011
author: PureWhiteSky
Great King Sejong Love Melody
from the drama Great King Sejong i don't really know the real name of this song. would be great if someone told me.
published: 22 Jul 2011
author: PureWhiteSky
views: 158
0:47

King Sejong the Great and the US Embassy in Seoul
This is my first glimpse of the area around the US Embassy. I came here looking to add pag...
published: 12 Mar 2010
author: Jonathan Hackett
King Sejong the Great and the US Embassy in Seoul
This is my first glimpse of the area around the US Embassy. I came here looking to add pages to my passport. What a beautiful area of Seoul! (Gwanghwamun)
published: 12 Mar 2010
author: Jonathan Hackett
views: 252
4:53

King Sejong the Great (Window on Korean Culture #2 세종대왕)
...
published: 11 Jan 2012
author: Korushouse
King Sejong the Great (Window on Korean Culture #2 세종대왕)
1:46

Korean character, hangeul and King sejong the Great (한글과 세종)
The story about Korean character, Hangeul and King Sejong the Great who loved his people m...
published: 12 Jul 2011
author: noeuljung
Korean character, hangeul and King sejong the Great (한글과 세종)
The story about Korean character, Hangeul and King Sejong the Great who loved his people most.
published: 12 Jul 2011
author: noeuljung
views: 1251
1:03

King Sejong the Great in Seoul at Gwanghwamun
This is King Sejong the Great. He did not invent, but rather introduced, the Korean alphab...
published: 12 Mar 2010
author: Jonathan Hackett
King Sejong the Great in Seoul at Gwanghwamun
This is King Sejong the Great. He did not invent, but rather introduced, the Korean alphabet. This is very close to the US, Danish, Austrian, Australian, New Zealand, and Finish Embassies in one of the few open-space areas of Seoul.
published: 12 Mar 2010
author: Jonathan Hackett
views: 377
Vimeo results:
71:18

Henry Cole lecture 2009: Professor Hongnam Kim
Transcript:
Thank you for the very generous introduction of me. And I thank all of you fo...
published: 11 Apr 2011
author: Victoria and Albert Museum
Henry Cole lecture 2009: Professor Hongnam Kim
Transcript:
Thank you for the very generous introduction of me. And I thank all of you for coming this evening to hear my lecture. It is really wonderful to be here - this time Mother Nature finally allowed me to fly into this part of globe. I was very sorry for the postponement of my lecture [which] has inconvenienced many, including my colleagues at the V&A.; Before I left Korea, I went through a Google Search to find out who Henry Cole was – because I did not know about him – and found out really wonderful things about him and felt his contribution was so great in British cultural history, particularly for this eminent museum, and I was very honoured and humbled.
My talk today is about the national museums of the People's Republic of China, Japan, and the Republic of Korea and the issue of cultural nationalism at these institutions. Japan was the first in Asia to launch national museums in the late 19th century, starting with the Tokyo National museum, followed by the Kyoto and Nara National Museums. The country now possesses about 4,000 museums. The Republic of Korea (hereafter called Korea) launched its central museum (National Museum) in 1945, absolving the Imperial Household Museum which existed from 1908 and of the Kyongju Museum. Korea now boasts about 1,000 museums. The first national museum which the People's Republic of China (hereafter called China) created was the National History Museum in 1915, followed by the Palace Museum in 1925 and the Museum of Chinese Revolution in 1961. China has set out to have more than 3,000 museums within a few more years. The seats of its 33 provinces already have their own museums, often of impressive scale. The museum fever is spreading in Asia. Economic prosperity and political stability obviously are the major driving force behind such an increase of museums in Asia.
These museums have followed the models of the West in their mission to preserve natural and manmade heritage, disseminate knowledge, and educate people, offering authentic experiences though exhibitions and education programmes. Nevertheless, one peculiarity observed from these institutions is the presence of cultural nationalism of varying intensity, which can be discerned from their collections and other programmes.
As proven by their birth years, cultural nationalism is indeed their birthmark; a powerful driving force in the colonial and post-colonial era, multilayered but with different agendas, it helped these museums join in nation-building or nation-rebuilding, and in consolidating national identity. But when too prevailing, or when left inmost, it can continue to shape all programmes, knowingly and unknowingly, promoting prejudice and disrespect among the people of three countries. It can even take a form of cultural imperialism in which hegemony (in a cultural sense) is the explicit goal of the nation states in relation to foreign cultures, as seen during the colonial period. National museums are the foremost example of social institutions of these three nations that are shaped in the penetrating process of corresponding (being attracted, pressured, and even forced) and even promoting the values of cultural nationalism. The outcome can be unhealthy and anti-educational, especially for children and the youths.
It was this issue of cultural nationalism which was of major concern during my tenure as the Director of Korea's National Museum. The question was how much of it is a necessity, and how much of it should be expelled to make the Asian community a healthier and more friendly one with mutual tolerance and respect. In this rapidly changing social world, there isn't much for us to hang onto. Museums, and perhaps universities and libraries, may remain as the last institutions for spiritual comforts, purification, and the reassurance of human dignity.
Now, first, let me brief you on the nature of cultural nationalism in the region. Then I will move on to describe how cultural nationalism was operating in the past, and what sorts of change have occurred to affect these museums in recent years. I must say that the subject turned out to be so loaded that it was like disturbing a beehive. I hope you will bear with me.
Cultural Nationalism and National Museums in East Asia
The first is the cultural nationalism and the national museums of East Asia. Cultural nationalism in East Asia is deeply rooted in the region’s geopolitical history. While I talk, I shall have on the screen a moving cultural map of 2000 years for the region as a simple historical survey. The dramatic changes in this map are the result of bloody wars, conquests, colonisation, and independence struggles which involved nearly 60 ethnic people-groups in the East Asian region. Included are the Han Chinese, the Korean and the Japanese who became the final winners in the region as of today. Naturally, ethnic solidarity, patriotism and nationalism were the strongest weapons in these struggles for ethnic and national surv
89:15

NLWA 2012 Opening Speech (International President)
January 22, 2012- “God of Night and God of Day”
Openning Address to NLWA 2012 by Internat...
published: 01 Feb 2012
author: Tongil
NLWA 2012 Opening Speech (International President)
January 22, 2012- “God of Night and God of Day”
Openning Address to NLWA 2012 by International President- An especially insightful description of the meaning behind his "hoodie."
The following is the speech of International President Rev. Hyung Jin Moon to national leaders at the International Leadership Conference (ILC) opening plenary at the Cheon-Bok-Gung on January 22, 2012, the day before True God’s Day.
I hope you like my sweatshirt. You may have seen this symbol somewhere.
Because we are now chasing Father wherever he goes around the world, we basically live out of our car. We’re always packed, we’re always ready to go, whether on the boat, on the bay – wherever. It’s a very amazing experience.
A couple of days ago, Father asked me to explain the markings on this sweater. As you know, this is the symbol of the Principle. And when we manifest the Principle – give-and-take action, the Four Position Foundation, the three blessings – the purpose of creation is all here. On the right arm you will see a character that says Cheon-bu, which means True Father. On the left arm you will see a character that says Cheon-mo, which means True Mother.
And on the back you will see all sorts of characters written vertically. They are probably my favorite characters. The first one is the character True Father gave me, which he said was his most favorite Chinese character. It means “sincerity,” “devotion.” It means actualizing your speech or your words. The second means “love.” That is True Mother’s character. The third is “filial piety.” The fourth is “attending, serving.” The other one is “courage.” The other one is “faith,” and the other one is “eternity.”
When we are attending True Parents and True Parents’ staff are around them, running around here and there, whether on the boat or on the way to different countries, I found that having these kinds of reminders help me re-center myself. Especially when I was in North Korea, where we can’t speak freely, where society is not free. We always had people monitoring us, which was very strange. But I derived a lot of strength just from looking at something as simple as the Tongil symbol. It gave me so much strength when I was in a land where I couldn’t speak. True Parents, Cheon-bu-mo-nim.
The Kingdom of Heaven Is Where God Is
We’re very grateful that we’re able to be with True Parents and learn from many new experiences. I really feel that being with True Parents teaches me something very important about the biblical text. When we look at the biblical presence of Christ, I see True Father. We usually imagine Christ to be of the medieval age, which is much softer, very peaceful. But if you look at Scripture, you see that Christ is very active. Of course, historically, Christ is always called a revolutionary. He’s extremely flamboyant. He’s very against the status quo, whether it is deism or Roman powers – truly a revolutionary figure.
I find in attending Father and having the work of being with him wherever he goes, that this is how the apostles must have felt when they were chasing around Jesus. As you know, Jesus would suddenly say, “Today we’re going to Galilee,” or “Today we will go to Jordan,” or “Today we’re going to go to Jerusalem.” There’s no convenient, weekly plan, there’s no nice “I know what I’m going to do on Saturday and Sunday and probably Monday.”
I have no idea what I will be doing tomorrow. It all depends on how Father moves, where he moves. If he flies out to New Zealand, then we’re off to New Zealand. If he goes to Siberia, we’re also off to Siberia. It’s not always peaches and coconuts. In looking at the scripture, you can see Christ also standing on the front line of the Providence, which is moving rapidly. He’s constantly on the spot, the living presence of the Providence.
As you know, when Christ is asked, “Where is the Kingdom of Heaven? Where is the Kingdom of God?” we have some translations that say “God is within you.” Another translation could be, “The Kingdom of Heaven is about you,” or “We are in the midst of the Kingdom of Heaven.” I think that translation is quite interesting because it answers the question, “Where is the Kingdom of Heaven?” The Kingdom of Heaven is where Christ is. It’s very simple. That’s where the Kingdom of Heaven is.
The Kingdom of Heaven is where God is, where Christ is. So if Christ is in our hearts, then that’s where the Kingdom of Heaven resides. If he’s in our thoughts and words, then those things can be of the Kingdom.
For me, one of the biggest challenges when we are tailing True Parents and following them is the spiritual practice. Father doesn’t stop practicing. He doesn’t stop craving God and loving God and serving God and attending God. Just yesterday he asked me to speak at hoon-dok-hwe. I was talking about hoon-dok-hwe and about the many months we’ve been fo
82:56

훈민정음 (A Language 4 the People)
A Language for the People is a story of language reform and language encoding. Languages e...
published: 07 Nov 2009
author: artfail
훈민정음 (A Language 4 the People)
A Language for the People is a story of language reform and language encoding. Languages evolve, as do the visual representations of language. Evolutions, do not however result in the best possible outcome, they result in something that is good enough. It is not easy work, but sometimes the way we have always done things needs to be re-examined uprooted and rebuilt.
In 15th century Korea, King Sejong the Great saw that the written language being used, hanja, (Chinese characters) was so hard to adapt to the language being spoken that it created a severe intellectual divide, keeping the majority of the population illiterate. With the help of his scholarly council, The Hall of Worthies, he invented a new written language for his people, 훈민정음, "The Proper Sounds for the Education of the People" or Hunmin Jeongeum. Hangul, as it is called today. It is considered by linguists to be one of the most perfect written representations of the spoken word it represents.
In the US language reform has been tried with little success. Our reform of the 15th century introduced new errors like the 's' in 'island'. The English language has always been my personal Achilles' heel. Inconsistencies abound and for every rule there are more words that break it than follow it. Coding, however nuanced with imperfections and multiple solutions, must still adhere to a much stricter rule set than natural language in order to function. I don't have a vote in the way our language functions, or what is considered the correct way of writing it but I do have a choice in how I render it.
A Language for the People is every character I can render. It is a PHP script that simply goes through every Unicode character in order and renders the resulting HTML. It is both simplistic and mesmerizing. It is an ordered numerical structure capable of being infinitely expanded to universally represent all variants of our organic written word.
A Language for the People was exhibited as part of "All for One". The show ran from October 2nd to November 10th 2009 at Works/San Jose
More: http://artfail.com/language4thepeople
Youtube results:
0:47

King Sejong Speaks 세종대왕
Korean King Sejong speaks about the purpose of creating the Korean Alphabet....
published: 16 Jul 2008
author: Howard Kim
King Sejong Speaks 세종대왕
Korean King Sejong speaks about the purpose of creating the Korean Alphabet.
published: 16 Jul 2008
author: Howard Kim
views: 25577
9:02

Sejong great King's Bronze statude in Gwanghwamun Plaza
King Sejong's bronze statue on Gwanghwamun Plaza King Sejong's older brother, under the na...
published: 09 Oct 2009
author: moonho seo
Sejong great King's Bronze statude in Gwanghwamun Plaza
King Sejong's bronze statue on Gwanghwamun Plaza King Sejong's older brother, under the name of Huiujeong. King Seongjong's brother, Prince Weolsan, later repaired the pavilion nami...King Sejong's reign. Nakcheonjeong (left), Yongyangbongjeojeong (center) & Hyosajeong (right) Jecheonjeong, a place visited by Chin...King Sejong could enjoy watching horses grazing in the wild, unfortunately today there are only a few 300-year-old zelkova trees king of the Joseon dynasty thought up the ultimate solution. King Sejong the Great (1397-1450), unarguably the most beloved king in ...Sejong called up his smartest and most loyal men to form a study group called Jiphyunjeon, or the Hall of the Worthies, and gave the...king was so determined to follow through with his plan. In the ninth lunar month of 1443, Sejong published a book named Hunminjeo
published: 09 Oct 2009
author: moonho seo
views: 520
1:20

Korean Technology; Touch screen storybook - King Sejong Museum (예림 in Seoul, Korea)
One of the amazing wonders of Korea, LCD storybook works by touch and painting changes col...
published: 07 Sep 2011
author: Korealove9
Korean Technology; Touch screen storybook - King Sejong Museum (예림 in Seoul, Korea)
One of the amazing wonders of Korea, LCD storybook works by touch and painting changes colors from faded to bright .. secret script ... Awesome museum! King Sejong The Great, Gwanghwa-moon, Seoul, Korea
published: 07 Sep 2011
author: Korealove9
views: 71
0:44

The great king Sejong's birthday
Thank you for all about Hangul!...
published: 15 May 2012
author: MePracticingEnglish
The great king Sejong's birthday