The ''Hwangseong Sinmun'' ("Capital Gazette" or "Imperial Capital Gazette") (1898-1910) was one of Korea's earliest Korean-language dailies. It was established by Namgung Ok (; 1863-1939) and Na Sugyeong (; 1861-1926) in 1898 to serve as a mouthpiece for those elements of the Korean progressive movement less keen on the strong Christian orientation of the country's other major reform-minded newspaper, ''
The Independent''.
Published in
Korean mixed script
Korean mixed script () is a form of writing the Korean language that uses a mixture of the Korean alphabet or ''hangul'' () and ''hanja'' (, ), the Korean name for Chinese characters. The distribution on how to write words usually follows th ...
, one of the paper's most notable contributors was
Shin Chaeho, the
Korean nationalist historian. Reflecting its reformist bent, the ''Hwangseong sinmun'' published in a mixture of
Hanja and native Korean script. In the wake of Japan's assumption of
protectorship over the Korean Empire in 1905, the newspaper responded with strongly worded criticisms. Most prominent among these was an editorial by Jang Jiyeon (, 1864-1921) entitled, "
I Wail Bitterly Today ( or ). The newspaper was forced to close soon after the Japanese annexation of Korea in 1910.
Throughout its thirteen years of publishing the subscription rates for the paper hovered around 3,000 copies.
[Andre Schmid. 2002. Korea Between Empires, 1895-1919. New York: Columbia University Press, p.51.]
References
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Korean-language newspapers
1898 establishments in Korea
1910 disestablishments
Newspapers published in Korea
Publications established in 1898