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The Koreans are one ethnic family and
speak one language. Sharing distinct physical characteristics,
they are believed to be descendants of several Mongol tribes
that migrated onto the Korean Peninsula from Central Asia.
In the seventh century, the various states of the peninsula
were unified for the first time under the Silla Kingdom
(57 B.C.-A.D. 935). Such homogeneity has enabled Koreans
to be relatively free from ethnic problems and to maintain
a firm solidarity with one another.
As of the end of 2000, Korea's total population was 46,136,101,
with a density of 472.6 people per square kilometer. The
population of North Korea is estimated to be 22,175,000.
Korea saw its population grow by an annual rate of 3 percent
during the 1960s, but this trend slowed to 2 percent over
the next decade. Today, the growth rate stands at 0.89 percent,
and is expected to further decline to 0 percent in 2028.
A notable trend in Korea's demographics is that it is getting
older with each passing year. Statistics show that 7.0 percent
of the total population of Korea was 65 years or older in
1999, while this generation made up 7.1 percent of the total
in 2000.
In the 1960s, Korea's population distribution formed a pyramid
shape, with a high birth rate and relatively short life
expectancy. However, the structure is now shaped more like
a bell with a low birth rate and extended life expectancy.
The young population (under the age of 15 years) will make
up a decreasing portion of the total, while senior citizens
(over 65 years) will account for some 19.3 percent of the
total by the year 2030.
The nation's rapid industrialization and urbanization in
the 1960s and 1970s has been accompanied by a continuing
migration of rural residents into the cities, particularly
Seoul, resulting in heavily populated metropolitan areas.
However, in recent years, an increasing number of people
have begun moving to suburban areas of Seoul.

Brief History
Archaeological evidence indicates that
the Korean Peninsula was inhabited by lower Paleolithic
people at least as early as 500,000 B.C. Many archaeological
sites, mostly located along rivers, have been excavated.
The most famous are Seokjang-ri in Chungcheongnam-do province
and Jeon-gok-ri in Gyeonggi-do province. Various stone tools,
including hand-axes and chopper-scrapers, have been found
at these sites, leading archaeologists to believe that their
inhabitants engaged in hunting and fishing. These people
are thought to have dwelt in caves, as the bones of many
extinct animals and relics of their daily life have been
unearthed in such places. The supposed connection between
these paleolithic peoples and today's Koreans is blurred
at present by the lack of sufficient archaeological excavations
and anthropological evidence.
Scholars generally agree that the ancestors of today's Koreans
were late-comers of the Neolithic Period. According to anthropological
and linguistic studies, as well as legendary sources, Koreans
trace their ethnic origins to those who lived in and around
the Altaic mountains in Central Asia. Several thousand years
ago, these people began to migrate eastward until they finally
settled in an area that included Manchuria and the Korean
Peninsula.
When these migrants entered the Korean Peninsula around
the third millennium B.C., they were confronted by natives
called Paleoasians, who were eventually driven into various
areas outside the Korean Peninsula. The Ainu of the northern
tip of Japan, the natives of Sakhalin and the Eskimos of
the eastern coast of Siberia are all descendants of these
Paleoasian tribes.
Archaeological studies have uncovered two different types
of pottery of this period, which raises the possibility
that the inhabitants of the Korean Peninsula belonged to
two very different cultural eras. For example, two distinctly
different kinds of pottery have been discovered: the comb
pattern pottery of a Neolithic Age people and the plain
pottery of a Bronze Age people. The patterned pottery, believed
to be the product of a food-gathering, hunting and fishing
people, has been discovered near riverbanks and along the
seashore, while the plain pottery, believed to have come
from a food-producing people, has been unearthed mostly
in the hilly regions of the country. Although these two
peoples appear to have possessed different technologies,
they shared the same culture, distinct from the Han Chinese.

As noted, most of the natives were
subsequently driven north to Sakhalin, Kamchatka, and to
the Arctic region by these newcomers, while a few were assimilated.
Some of the migrants continued to move and eventually reached
the southwestern shores of Japan. As a result, cultural
similarities, such as belief systems (for example, shamanism,
myths and customs) as well as shared physical traits among
the ancient Koreans, Japanese and Siberian Eskimos still
exist.
Agriculture was introduced during the Bronze Age, which
began around the 15th century B.C. Increased food production
and population growth led to social differentiation based
on an unequal access to economic resources on one hand,
and clan or kin group formations on the other. Tribal societies
of various sizes were established on the basis of clan relations,
with some established chiefdoms and mini-states competing
with each other. At the same time, people continued to migrate
to Japan. Possessing more advanced civilization and culture,
these migrants enjoyed a ruling class status and even established
their own small mini-states. The southwestern part of Japan,
in particular, offered easy access to culture from the Korean
Peninsula. This region provides ample archaeological evidence
of significant cultural and ethnic relations with Korea.
More archaeological study is required to draw an exact map
showing how widely Koreans were dispersed during this period.
Based on Chinese records and archaeological reports, however,
it is assumed that they were living not only on the Korean
Peninsula but also in the vast areas of Manchuria and the
region along the lower Yellow River basin of the Shandong
Peninsula in China.
Cultural contact with the Chinese also was significant.
Around the fourth century B.C., iron making was introduced
through contacts with the Chinese. Intertribal competition
as well as interethnic contact with the Chinese became more
frequent. The numerous Korean mini-states and tribal groups
banded together into several leading states, to resist Chinese
military expansion. A strong sense of ethnic identity and
cultural distinctiveness enabled them to remain ethnically
and culturally different from China.
As the ancient history of Korea shows, various small states
were composed of dialectal groups within the Altaic language
family. During the latter half of the 7th century, these
early states were unified into the Silla Kingdom, a significant
event because this political unity was to consolidate the
homogeneity of the Korean people who now began to speak
one language and share the same culture.
However, the northern half of the Korean
Peninsula and the whole of Manchuria, which had been the
territory of another state called Goguryeo, came under the
reign of a new state called Balhae, established by a refugee
group from the defeated Goguryeo. This state was highly
heterogeneous both ethnically and culturally. The ruling
class was composed exclusively of Koreans, while the general
public was made up of various non-Korean local ethnic groups
including the Manchurian Tungus. The ruling Koreans failed
to incorporate the non-Koreans, and as a result, their state
was challenged and gave way to the largest of the native
ethnic groups. From that time onward, Manchuria was inhabited
by various groups of Tungusic people.
While there was a considerable mixing of races among the
various peoples in Manchuria, the inhabitants of the Korean
Peninsula maintained their ethnic identity with only minimal
mixing with external groups. Although cultural contacts
were extensive between Korea and China from the early stages
of their history, ethnic assimilation did not occur. Koreans
were (and still are) highly conscious of ethnic differences
and cultural distinctions, which meant safeguarding their
ethnic identity despite relations with China and Japan.
Koreans exported their own culture and transmitted Chinese
culture to Japan from ancient times, but they did not attempt
to engage in any ethnic mixing with the Japanese. Many ethnic
groups in Manchuria lost most of their ethnic identity and
were even completely assimilated with dominant groups; Koreans,
however, have kept their ethnic identity and culture intact.
As of 2001, over 5.6 million Koreans reside outside the
country; more than 2.1 million in the united states; about
640,000 currently live in Japan; and over 1.8 million ethnic
Koreans re in China. Despite their minority status in their
respective communities, however, Koreans abroad have maintained
their ethnic and cultural identity, using their own language
as well as maintaining their own traditional social institutions
and lifestyles.
According to a 2001 Sports Indicators of Korea published
by Korea Sport Science Institute, the average height of
a modern Korean, ages 25-29, is 173.0 centimeters for men
and 160.9 centimeters for women. In terms of height, this
means that Korean males belong to the upper middle scale
and Korean females to the medium scale, compared to other
Asian people. Their most distinctive physical features are
almond-shaped eyes, black hair and relatively high cheek
bones. It may also be noted that all Korean babies are born
with blue spots on the lower part of the back, which is
also typical of Mongolians.

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