news maps register president foreign relations website directory science and Tech Dokdo Belongs to Korea korean wave food flag costume how to travel organization chart What is Hangeul work travel and sports Weather Traditional Music culture and event open forum
Korea News South Korea Map Welcome to Korea Roh Moo-hyun, South Korean President Republic of Korea Government News Search Korea Directory Hwang woo-suk, Korean Scientists Dokdo Island TV Drama, Daejanggeum, Hallyu Korean Food, Kimchi, Bulgogi South Korea Flag Hanbok, Traditional Clothing Korea Travel Guide, Rent a Car, Seoul Subway Government Organization Chart Korean Language, Hangeul Get a Job in Korea Taekwondo, Sports News, Park Ji-sung Weather of Seoul, Incheon, Daegu, Busan Korea's Traditional Music Korean Arts and Culture, Insadong Open Forum
Korea.net
 
Login Community Help Sitemap About us
French German Spanish Arabic Vietnamese Russian Chinese Japanese
 
General
President
Government
Korea and the World
Biz/Economy
Society
Culture
Arts
Tourism
Events & Sports
 
 Taegeuk Pattern
  ENLARGE FONT SIZE  REDUCE FONT SIZE  Scrap Email Artcle Print
The taegeuk pattern is the central component in the Korean national flag. It is also often seen on residential and temple gates, memorial red arches at royal tombs and shrines, the gates of Confucian academies and schools, and the lattice doors of Buddhist lecture halls, as well as on handicrafts.

The basic characteristics of the taegeuk pattern are the red comma shape, the male element, and beneath it the blue comma shape, the female element, both of which interlock in a circle to express infinite movement. As mentioned above, taegeuk is a symbol incorporating cosmic dual entities-that is, heaven and earth, the positive and the negative, and the male and the female. It is the Great Ultimate, the law of cause and effect, where things begin and end. These dual forces of the cosmos, it was believed, were the fountains of human life. As it circles endlessly, the taegeuk was an image of immortality as well.


The scholar Zhou Dun-yi (1017-1073) of the Song Dynasty has been credited with introducing the taegeuk (taiji in Chinese) symbol in his book Taijitushe (An Explication of the Taiji Symbol). But a Korean taegeuk design has been found much earlier, the seventh century. There is a stone carved with the taegeuk in the compound of Gameunsa temple, built in 628 during the reign of Silla's King Jinpyeong.

The eum and yang in taegeuk represent the two extreme elements in harmonious relations. Their interlocking symbolizes the perfect union and interaction of the polar extremes of male and female. The red on top means heaven, or male, and the blue underneath indicates earth, or female.

Taegeuk principles were believed to govern the everyday affairs of life. The combination of altruistic communal cooperation with pursuit of self-perfection is rooted in those principles, perfection: through the harmony of extremes.
Top
  Scrap Email Artcle Print
Sign Up for Newsletter
webmaster@korea.net rss sitemap privacy webmaster mail