No... there are alot of differnet types... i know i've been to both of there before... :(
How did the loss of which China? Red China to the communists in 1949; or Nationalist China escaping to Taiwan during the same time frame? Secondly, neither "China" incident contributed to the Korean War...North Korea INVADED South Korea, the US simply reacted to it.
It is because they are same root. Korea was settled by Chinese; as a part of China, many Korean cultures and language are from mainland China and Korean are no different than Chinese genetically.
the republic of Korea and South Korea are the same place, but have 2 names.
North and South Korea are due west of Japan, across the Sea of Japan. North Korea is at the same latitude as the northern half of Honshu, the large central island of Japan. South Korea is at the same latitude as southern Honshu (and Tokyo), but farther north than either or Shikoku or Kyushu. The southwestern section of the Sea of Japan that borders South Korea is also called the Tsushima Basin, and the straits separating the countries at their closest point are called the Korea Strait.
No.
China
No. In the 19th Century China and Japan had control over Korea until the Sino-Japanese War after which Japan ruled there. At the end of WW2 Russia, which had invaded Japanese held Korea from the north, wished to have an ally in control of Korea, the other victors of WW2 wanted the same, so the country was partitioned into North and South Korea.
Funny, this is the exact same thing I have on my English packet... hmmm... Anyway, all I found was a prisoners of war conflict in which South Korea didn't want to return their POWs to North Korea, which wasn't acceptable to North Korea or China. Eventually, South Korea was pursuaded to return the POWs, however
Korea is divided into 2 sections. north Korea and south Korea. they speak the same language, Korean, and they have the same ancestors. it was divided after their independence from japan. north Koreans are communists and south Korea's political view is democracy.
Since 1948, same as North Korea. South Korea's current government was established in 1987.
Same distance as South Korea. They're a small peninsula divided in half.
North Korea's monetary unit is the same as South Korea's, which is Won.