-
taepyeongso (Korean: 태평소; lit. big
peace wind instrument), also
called hojok,
hojeok 호적 號笛/胡笛, nallari, or saenap, 嗩吶, is a
Korean double reed wind instrument...
- byeolsin-gut (별신굿,
shaman ritual in the east
coast of Korea)
troop and
hojok virtuoso (호적산조),
recognized as the 82nd
valuable intangible cultural ****et...
-
leading to the
weakening of the
central government and the rise of the "
hojok" (호족; 豪族)
regional lords. The
military officer Kyŏn Hwŏn
revived Baekje...
-
Gangneung Kims
still residing in
Gangneung would become the
regional lords or
hojoks of Gangneung,
taking advantage of
their true bone status. They were key...
-
historians believe that Wang Kŏn's
ancestors were
influential Goguryeoic hojoks (lords) that
conducted maritime trade with
China for generations. According...
-
Korean hojok, or
local aristocratic lord, of
Gangju (modern-day Jinju). He
lived during the
Later Three Kingdoms period. Wang was a
Korean hojok known...
- (hukou),
Republic of
China (Taiwan) (hùjí),
North Korea (hoju, hojeok,
hojok) and in
Vietnam (hộ khẩu). In
South Korea, the hoju
system was abolished...
-
bringing it
under the
influence of
Later Baekje.
Around this time,
local Yeosu hojoks (호족/korean
quasi nobility-gentry), such as Kim
Chong (金摠),
joined the Later...
- is the 'head of the family' system, and
Hojeok (alternate romanization:
Hojok; 호적, 戶籍) is the 'family register'. The
former Hoju
system in
South Korea...
-
register itself is
referred to as the
hojeok (Korean: 호적; Hanja: 戶籍; MR:
hojŏk). The
system remained in
effect in
North Korea until approximately 1955...