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Bamseom Island— Village of Boatwrights and Boatbuilding Technology
  • Manage No DI00001063
    Country Republic of Korea
    Author LEE Dong Ah, Senior Researcher, Munhwasalim Institute
    Published Year 2021
    Language English
    Copyright Copyright
    Attach File Preview (ENG)
Description Bamseom, located between Yeoido-dong, Yeongdeungpo-gu, and Seogang-dong, Mapo-gu, in Seoul, is a village that used to be known as being home to boatwrights. As well as a means to travel to other regions across rivers and seas and to freight large loads at a time, the ship also has important symbolic meanings in Korean traditional culture. As part of the process of developing Seoul, explosives were detonated on Bamseom on 13 February 1968, in anticipation of which the residents moved to the nearby Changcheon-dong neighborhood. Since the twentieth century, the development of railroads and automobiles, and the associated construction of roads and big bridges, reduced the effectiveness of water transportation. This migration from Bamseom and the decreased need for boats drove boatwrights into a crisis, as a result of which they eventually became housebuilders.

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