Background giving a speech in front of the
Soviet flag and the
taegukgi in 1946 Korea adopted its first national flag, the
taegukgi () or "Flag of Great Extremes", in 1883. The
taegukgi is a white field with a centered blue and red
taegeuk surrounded by four
trigrams, representing sky, water, land, and fire. It was used by the
Korean Empire up until
its annexation by
Imperial Japan in 1910. The
flag of Japan subsequently replaced the
taegukgi as the national flag flown on the Korean peninsula, and the
taegukgi became a symbol of anti-Japanese resistance and
Korean independence. The
Allies' victory in
World War II in 1945 resulted in Japan relinquishing control over Korea and the peninsula being divided into two occupation zones. The Soviet Union
occupied the northern half of Korea while the United States
occupied the southern half. The
taegukgi was widely used in both occupation zones, and it was not until 1947 that the Soviets began proposing a new flag to their Korean allies.
Creation Official account The North Korean government credits Kim Il Sung with designing the country's national flag. According to a
Tongil News report of an article by the state-run
Rodong Sinmun, Kim Il Sung began expressing the necessity of a new national flag and emblem in January 1948. He argued that they were important for future national affairs and would strengthen national pride. A team of artists was tasked with proposing designs for the new flag. Kim Il Sung initially chose a design similar to the flag that was adopted, except its width-to-length ratio was 2:3 and the white disc was in the center and did not feature a charge. In February 1948, Kim Il Sung instructed the artists to change the ratio to 1:2, to add a five-pointed red star to the inside of the disc, and to move the disc towards the hoist. The flag design was then accepted by the Constitutional Reform Committee and written into the provisional constitution on 20 February 1948 and confirmed by a special committee of the People's Assembly on 28 April. A ceremony was held on 10 July 1948 to take down the
taegukgi and install the new flag in the meeting place, but the new flag's adoption was not official until the passing of North Korea's first constitution by the
1st Supreme People's Assembly on 8 September. The flag design was standardised with the passing of the national flag law on 22 October 1992. of
On the Establishment of the New National Flag and the Abolition of the Taegukgi by
Kim Tu-bong The decision to change the national flag was relatively unpopular among politically active Koreans at the beginning.
Lyuh Woon-hyung, for example, described the flag change as "not right". The
Chondoist Chongu Party also criticised the new design and occasionally refused to participate in demonstrations under the flag. When the flag design in the provisional constitution was first read and debated, the representative Chong Chae-yong defended the
taegukgi as a symbol of the Korean people's liberation, cherished by Koreans in both the north and south. Following the flag's approval by the People's Assembly in April 1948, Kim Tu-bong felt it necessary to defend the new flag and published a book on 20 August titled
On the Establishment of the New National Flag and the Abolition of the Taegukgi. In it, he praises the new flag as a symbol of the country's future and discredits the design of the
taegukgi as overly complex, unintelligible, and rooted in superstition. The North Korean artist Kim Chu-gyong was originally credited by the North Korean government as the flag's designer. On the 30th anniversary of the founding of North Korea in 1978, he was given an award for designing the North Korean flag and emblem, and a book was published titled
In the Embrace of Grace, which included some of his collected writings. He also wrote a detailed account of how he was ordered by Kim Il Sung to make the designs in November 1947, titled ''The Story of Our Country's National Emblem and National Flag''.
Pak Il's account Pak Il, a Soviet-Korean interpreter for the
Soviet 25th Army, gave a different account of the flag's creation in two interviews, one to the Russian magazine
Sovershenno Sekretno in 1992 and another to the South Korean newspaper
The Dong-A Ilbo in 1993. According to Pak, the Soviets were responsible for proposing and designing the flag. In 1947, Soviet major general
Nikolai Georgiyevich Lebedev summoned Kim Tu-bong to discuss whether the
taegukgi should be retained by a newly-founded North Korea. Kim Tu-bong was in favour of keeping the
taegukgi and attempted to explain to Lebedev the flag's significance within
East Asian philosophy. Lebedev dismissed Kim Tu-bong's lecture as nonsense and superstition. A few months later, the Soviets sent a Russian-language document outlining their design to the 7th Department of the 25th Army. Pak was asked to translate it to Korean, and it eventually became the flag of North Korea. Pak's account of the flag's creation was corroborated by fellow Soviet-Korean
Chŏng Sangjin, who held prominent positions in the North Korean culture and propaganda ministry. == Notable uses ==