- This article talks about the Korean people (朝鲜族/조선족'') in China. Not to be confused with the overseas Chinese in North and South Korea.
Korean Chinese (; Korean: 조선족) are ethnic Koreans with People's Republic of China citizenship. Korean Chinese form one of the 56 ethnicities officially recognized by the Chinese government. As of the year 2000, there are 1.9 million self-identified Korean Chinese in China. Most of them live in Northeast China. The largest Korean Chinese population is at the Yanbian Korean Autonomous Prefecture (854,000 in 1997).
History
Throughout history, due to the close interactions between
China and
Korea, some degree of population movements have always occurred between the two neighboring countries. There were recorded Korean migrations in the early
Qing Dynasty,
Ming Dynasty,
Yuan Dynasty and earlier. The vast majority of early Korean populations in China had assimilated with
Chinese society, and vice versa. The current
Korean population in China is mainly descended from the migrations occurred between 1860 and 1945. In the 1860s, a series of natural disasters struck
Korea, leading to disastrous famines. It led many Koreans migrate to
China, after the
Qing Dynasty lessened the border control and began to accept Korean migrants. By 1894, an estimated 34,000 Koreans lived in China, with numbers increasing to 109,500 in 1910. After the
Japanese annexation of Korea, larger numbers of Koreans moved to
China. Some merely fled from Japanese rule, while others intended to use China as a base for their anti-Japanese resistance movements. By 1936, there were 854,411 Koreans in China. As Japanese rule extended to China, the Japanese government forced Korean farmers to migrate north to China to develop the land. By 1945, the number of Koreans in
China reached to 1,692,342. During the
World War II, many Koreans in China joined the Chinese peoples in fighting against the Japanese invaders. Many also joined on the Communist side and fought against the
Chinese Nationalist armies during the
Chinese Civil War. After the founding of the
People's Republic of China,
Yanbian, where most Korean Chinese live, was designated as an autonomous region in 1952, and was upgraded to an autonomous prefecture in 1955.
Language
Korean Chinese speak the
Korean language (한국어/조선어). Many of them can also speak
Chinese Language(中文).
Famous Korean Chinese
See also
Korean people
조선족 | 朝鮮族 | 朝鲜族