Uiryeong County


Uiryeong County is a county in South Gyeongsang Province, South Korea.
Uiryeong County has a population of 27,550 and is one of the least populated counties in South Korea.

History

Early history

No presence of Neolithic artefacts have been confirmed, however Bronze Age artefacts such as tombstones have been found in the region. The region is thought to have been in the domain of Aragaya and the Bisabeol region, during the Three Kingdoms period in Korea, and is thought to have been under the influence of the Kingdom of Silla, after the province of Haju was installed in the region of Changnyeong in 555. The region was also known as Jangham prefecture under Silla, but the prefecture's name was changed to Uiryeong in 757, and became kind of a subprefecture under Haman prefecture. The Sinban region, then also known as Sinui prefecture, Juo township or Cheoncheon prefecture, became the subprefecture in the domains of Gangyang County with the new name "Uisang prefecture".

Medieval history

In 1018, Uiryeong came under the domain of Jinjumok and a high official called Gammu was appointed in the region in the year 1390. Uisang prefecture initially went through a name change as Sinbeon prefecture, and was part of Hapju, but it became part of the domain of Uiryeong prefecture in 1390. In 1413, the post of Gammu was abolished, and post of hyeongam was dispatched to the region instead. According to statistics during the reign of King Sejong, there were 504 houses in the Uiryeong region, with a population of 1629, and the Sinbeon region had 555 houses with population of AD 982.

Modern history

The region was the center of a righteous army led by general Gwak Jae-u, who rose up as a reaction to the Korean Japanese war of 1592.

19th century

As part of an administrative division change, the region became part of Jinjubu as Uiryeong County in 1895, but it became part of South Gyeongsang province in 1896.

20th century

During the Japanese colonial era, the county was called Ginei and was a part of the now-defunct Keishōnan Province.
The administrative division changed in 1914, which involved merging Gungryumyeon of Hapcheon County, which made Uiryeong County contain 13 myeons.
On March 14, 1919, a protest broke out in Uiryeong myeon, and protest was part of an independence movement. The protest went on for 3 days.
In 1938, Lee Byung-chull, a resident of Uiryeong, founded Samsung in the nearby city of Taikyu.
During the Korean War in the 1950s, the region was devastated by Communist attacks.
On the evening of 26 April 1982, policeman Woo Bum-kon went on a shooting and bombing rampage through several villages in Uiryeong County, killing 56 people and wounding around 35 others in the worst non-terrorist spree killing in history.

Climate

Transportation

Uiryeong has a convenient location as it sits between Jinju to the west and Haman/Masan/Changwon to the East. A bus runs regularly from the bus terminal in Uiryeong-Eup to all major cities in South Korea. A bus journey to Masan or Jinju takes approximately 35 minutes and 45 minutes respectively from Uiryeong bus terminal, while the journey to Busan takes 1 hour. It is also possible to take a bus directly to Seoul from Uiryeong.
The biggest problem in terms of transportation is that the intercity buses stop running to Uiryeong from the nearby cities fairly early in the evening. The last bus from Busan is 6:40 PM, from Jinju, it's 7:30 PM and from Masan, it's 9:00 PM.

Sister cities

Uiryeong is twinned with: