The Korean Christian Advocate
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''The Korean Christian Advocate'' () was a weekly Korean-language newspaper published in Korea from 1897 to 1900 and 1910 to 1915. It was a Methodist Christian publication and the first religious newspaper to be published in Korea. The newspaper changed Korean names a number of times. It was founded as , changed to in 1897, then shut down in 1900. Its former capabilities were merged into the non-denominational paper '' The Christian News'', but the two separated again in 1910, and it used the Korean name . The two papers merged again in 1915, which resulted in the '' Kidok Sinbo''. That paper lasted until 1937.


History

Christianity, modern technology, and Western culture were still uncommon in Korea by the late 1800s. In 1896, an article entitled "The Literary Needs of Korea" was published in the journal '' The Korean Repository''. It argued for the need in creating more Christian Korean-language literature. The newspaper published its first issue on February 2, 1897. Its founder and editor was American missionary Henry Appenzeller. The newspaper's staff included
George Heber Jones George Heber Jones (August 14, 1867 – May 11, 1919) was an American Christian missionary in Korea. Jones, who grew up in Utica, New York, is notable as the first Protestant missionary in Korea who took an academic approach to the research o ...
, Louisa Christina Rothweiler, , and Song Ki-yong (). It was published out of the
Chungdong First Methodist Church Chungdong First Methodist Church () is a historic church in Jeong-dong, Jung District, Seoul, South Korea. The church claims a number of historic firsts within Korea. It is the first Methodist church and one of the earliest Protestant churches, ...
in Seoul. The newspaper was founded ten months after the founding of the first private Korean newspaper '' Tongnip Sinmun'', and possibly took inspiration from it, as the two papers were both in pure Hangul. The paper was closely related to '' The Christian News'', another Korean-language newspaper which was founded shortly afterwards by Presbyterian missionaries and printed by the same publisher ( Trilingual Press). However, ''The Christian News''' founder Horace Grant Underwood wanted his publication to be less overtly Christian than ''The Korean Christian Advocate''. The number of pages in each issue increased over time. It went from 4, 6, then 8 pages. The newspaper covered a variety of topics, including non-religious, which led to it having non-Christian subscribers. It emphasized introducing Koreans to the outside world, as Korea had been isolationist until quite recently. It promoted anti-war and anti-colonialist views, and promoted gender equality. Articles were often written in English first, then translated into Korean by the Korean staff. Korean Christians would sometimes contribute their own articles to the paper. It had a circulation of around 800 copies, which represented significant market share among weekly periodicals in Korea at the time, which totalled 2,500 around 1898. The newspaper was skeptically monitored by the Korean government. Correspondingly, the paper rarely wrote critically about Korean traditional religious practices. It even issued praise towards the Korean monarch Gojong's ritual sacrifice and declaration of the Korean Empire. The Korean government was not uniform in its skepticism of Christianity; Gojong was receptive towards it. It changed its Korean name (죠선크리스도인회보 to 대한그리스도인회보) on December 8, 1897, for its 45th issue. However, Appenzeller returned to the United States around 1900, and the newspaper virtually stopped publishing. It published its final issue on August 28, 1900. In 1905, its capabilities were merged into that of ''The Christian News'', which continued publishing. The paper split off of ''The Christian News'' in 1910, and was published under the Korean name . It published until 1915, after which it reunified with ''The Christian News'' and was succeeded by ''Kidok Sinbo''.


See also

*
Christianity in Korea The practice of Christianity in Korea is marginal in North Korea, but significant in South Korea, where it revolves around two of its largest branches, Protestantism and Catholicism, accounting for 8.6 millionAccording to figures compiled by ...
*
List of newspapers in Korea This list primarily covers newspapers published in Korea before the late August 1945 division of Korea. For the post-division newspapers, see List of newspapers in South Korea or List of newspapers in North Korea. For a prose history, see History o ...
(before 1945) *
History of newspapers in Korea Modern newspapers have been published in Korea since 1881, with the first native Korean newspaper being published in 1883. Joseon period ''Chōsen Shinpō'' The history of modern newspapers in Korea begins in the Joseon period, with the ...


References


Sources

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Korean Christian Advocate Christian newspapers Newspapers established in 1897 Publications disestablished in 1900 Defunct Korean-language newspapers Newspapers published in Joseon Newspapers published in the Korean Empire History of Christianity in Korea 1897 establishments in Korea 1900s disestablishments in Korea 1910 establishments in Korea 1910s disestablishments in Korea Newspapers established in 1910 Publications disestablished in 1915 Defunct English-language newspapers published in Korea