{"id":9259,"date":"2023-11-20T22:40:52","date_gmt":"2023-11-20T21:40:52","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.northkoreainfo.com\/?p=9259"},"modified":"2023-11-20T22:40:52","modified_gmt":"2023-11-20T21:40:52","slug":"when-south-korea-and-north-korea-divided","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.northkoreainfo.com\/when-south-korea-and-north-korea-divided\/","title":{"rendered":"When South Korea And North Korea Divided"},"content":{"rendered":"
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The year was 1945, and after 35 long years of Japanese occupation, Korea saw a period of liberation. With World War II coming to a victorious conclusion, major allies such as Britain, the United States, and the Soviet Union began taking steps to free several countries under hostile rule. Korea was one of those countries, and its liberation marked the dawn of a new era. Little did anyone know that this new era would come at the cost of two separate nations, a North and a South.<\/p>\n

For hundreds of years before 1945, the Koreans had lived in relative unity; the nation was a fusion of different ethnicities, cultures, and traditions. They had always shared a common language, as well as a shared history of suffering, occupation, and unfairness. Living in relative unity for multiple centuries meant that a civil war or conflict of sorts was out of the question. But, when World War II ended, the nation was divided into two, each side coming under the influence of two separate superpowers.<\/p>\n

After the Japanese surrender, the United States immediately occupied the southern half of the peninsula, encouraging Koreans from that side of the country to embrace democracy. Against the wishes of the newly formed South Korean government, the Soviet Union installed a communist system in the north. This unfair installation of power created an intense rivalry between the two halves of Korean. Despite a majority of activists and nationalists calling for national unity, the newly formed North and South Korean governments focused on cultivating their respective sides of the peninsula.<\/p>\n

The newly formed South Korean government underwent several periods of political turbulence and power shifts, with a short-lived civil war in 1949–50. Both sides of the peninsula continued to grow disjointed from each other, and their worldviews in political, economic, and social affairs seemed diametrically opposed. Conditions deteriorated even further when North Korea invaded South Korea in June 1950. This invasion sparked the Korean War, the war which stands to this day as the greatest armed conflict to take place in the peninsula’s almost one thousand year history.<\/p>\n