Kyunggi High School
Kyunggi High School 경기고등학교 | |
---|---|
Location | |
643 Yeongdong-daero, Gangnam-gu South Korea | |
Coordinates | 37°31′02″N 127°03′21″E / 37.51722°N 127.05583°ECoordinates: 37°31′02″N 127°03′21″E / 37.51722°N 127.05583°E |
Information | |
Type | Public, Secondary |
Established | 1899 |
Principal | Choi Kwang-rak (최광락) |
Gender | Boys |
Website | www |
Korean name | |
Hangul | |
Hanja | |
Revised Romanization | Gyeonggi Godeung Hakgyo |
McCune–Reischauer | Kyŏnggi Kodŭng Hakkyo |
Kyunggi High School (Korean: 경기고등학교; Hanja: 京畿高等學校) is the oldest modern high school in Korea, located in Gangnam-gu, Seoul. The school is an all-boys school, and its counterpart is , also located in Gangnam-gu, Seoul.
Kyunggi High School has educated many leaders of the South Korean society. It is the "K" in the so-called "K-S mark," an informal reference to educational credentials said to ensure career success, with the "S" standing for Seoul National University.[1][2] Before the abolition of the high-school entrance exams in 1974, it was the highest-ranked school in the country.
Alumni associations for the school are widespread throughout Korea and abroad. Famous alumni may be found in all sectors of society and include many past and present politicians (as well as four Prime Ministers), high-ranking government officials, award-winning scientists and scholars, business executives and national athletes.
History[]
The school was established by an edict of Emperor Gojong on April 4, 1899, and opened its doors on November 10, 1900. The school's original name was Gwallib Middle School (관립중학교). Its establishment was part of a general program of educational modernization. This effort at modernization was swallowed up by the Japanese annexation in 1910, but the school itself survived. Originally chartered as a middle school, it became a high school in 1906, though it continued to offer middle-school classes until 1971.
In 2000, the South Korean government issued a commemorative 170-won stamp, marking the school's 100th anniversary.[3]
- September 1st, 1906: Renamed to National Hansung High School.
- November 1st, 1910: Annexed Hansung Foreign Language School and renamed to Kyungsung High School.
- April 1st, 1911: Opened a one-year course for producing teachers and renamed to Kyungsung First Middle School.
- April 1st, 1938: Renamed to National Kyunggi Middle School.
- June 4th, 1938: Set the school's flag.
- October 1st, 1945: Lee Hun-gu (이헌구) was the 15th principal of the school and was also the first Korean principal since World War II.
- August 31st, 1951: Divided into two schools (Kyunggi Middle School and Kyunggi High School) according to the new law.
- June 25th, 1954: Set the school's new flag.
- August 15th 1955: Constructed a new building for Hwa-dong (화동) middle school.
- January 27th, 1956: Set the school's motto to liberal, culturally advanced, and peaceful people.
- February 28th, 1971: Kyunggi Middle School is closed.
- November 11th, 1971: Opened a hall of residence for freshmen. Every freshman spends two weeks/per year in this dormitory.
- March 1st, 1974: The government abolished the high-school entrance exams. This highest-ranked high school was populated by the students who live near the school.
- February 20th, 1976: Relocated to 74-4 Samsung-dong Gangnam-gu, Seoul, South Korea.
- August 3rd, 1981: Founded a juridical foundation named Hwa-Dong-Yuk-Young-Hoe. (화동육영회)
- October 3rd, 1983: Constructed a new building for the alumni association.
- October 3rd, 1990: Built a school motto stone.
- December 6th, 1997: Constructed a new building named Hwa-dong-kwan (화동관) for accommodating more students.
- February 2010: Hosted the 106th annual graduation commencement.
- July 2010: Selected as a high school specialized on science.
- Summer 2010: Principal Lee Jung-gon (이정곤) resigned over power abuse scandals.
- February 2011: Hosted the 107th annual graduation commencement.
Notable alumni[]
- Choi Kyu-hah: politician, the 4th President of the Republic of Korea
- Lee Soo-young: businessman, former President of the Korea Employers Association
- Chung Un-chan: economist, former President of Seoul National University
- Kim Geun-tae: politician
- Kim Woo-choong: founder and former Chairman of Daewoo Group
- Benjamin W. Lee: theoretical physicist
- Lee Hoi-chang: politician, former Prime Minister of the Republic of Korea
- Seung-hwan Oh: baseball player, Olympic gold medalist
- Nam June Paik: inventor of video art, who held exhibitions at , Kölnischer Kunstverein, Musée d'art moderne de la Ville de Paris, Whitney Museum of American Art, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Kunsthalle Basel, the National Museum of Contemporary Art andGuggenheim Museum. He is a recipient of the Order of Cultural Merit (1st Class), the Picasso Medal, the Kyoto Prize in Arts and Philosophy and the Golden Lion at the Venice Biennale.
- Park Tae-hwan: swimmer, the first-ever South Korean Olympic gold medalist in swimming
- Kuk Young: physicist, the 4th President of Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science and Technology
- Oh Se-jung: politician and the 27th President of Seoul National University
- Son Hak-gyu: politician and the former governor of Gyeonggi-do
- Hong Seok-hyun: former South Korean ambassador to the United States and the Chairman of JoongAng Holdings
- Bang Si-hyuk: songwriter and producer, founder and Chairman of HYBE Corporation
- Park Jin-young: actor and member of the South Korean boy group Got7
- Pak Hon-yong: Korean independence and communist activist during the Japanese colonial rule
See also[]
- Education in South Korea
- List of Korea-related topics
External links[]
- Kyunggi Alumni Associations in America (in Korean)
- School website (in Korean)
- Kyunggi Washington Alumni Association (in Korean)
References[]
- ^ Chang, Chan S. and Chang, Nahn J. (1994), The Korean Management System: Cultural, Political, Economic Foundations, Praeger, p. 64, ISBN 9780899308586CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- ^ Lew, Seok-Choon (2013), The Korean Economic Developmental Path: Confucian Tradition, Affective Network, Palgrave Macmillan, p. 64, ISBN 9781137347299
- ^ [1]
- Education in Seoul
- High schools in Seoul
- Educational institutions established in 1900
- Boys' schools in South Korea
- 1900 establishments in Korea