Yes. Korea was settled and founded by Chinese, and Korea had been part of and subject to Chinese Empires until became completely seperated and independent from mainland China after Sino-Japanese war in 1895. The name of "Korea (韓國,Han Guk)" means country of Chinese people.
The division of Korea into North Korea and
South Korea stems from the 1945 Allied
victory in World War II, ending Japan's 35-
year colonial rule of Korea. In a proposal
opposed by nearly all Koreans, the United
States and the Soviet Union agreed to
temporarily occupy the country as a
trusteeship with the zone of control
demarcated along the 38th parallel. The
purpose of this trusteeship was to establish
a Korean provisional government which
would become "free and independent in
due course."[1] Though elections were
scheduled, the two superpowers backed
different leaders and two states were
effectively established, each of which
claimed sovereignty over the whole Korean
peninsula.
The Korean War (1950-1953) left the two
Koreas separated by the DMZ through the
Cold War to the present day. North Korea is
a communist state, though the last instances
of the word Communism were removed
from its constitution in 2003, often
described as Stalinist and isolationist. Its
economy initially enjoyed substantial
growth but collapsed in the 1990s, unlike
that of its Communist neighbor China. South
Korea emerged, after decades of
authoritarian rule, as a capitalist liberal
democracy
Yes. Korean were derived and originated from Chinese ethnic
Half correct, it was exactly. Korea was historically part of China and believed to be eastern end of China. Korea became completely independent after Sino-Japanese war in 1895.
Genetically, yes. Korean are derived from Chinese.
Most Chinese today still consider themselves the people of the Qing Dynasty. They are actually known as Manchu people and live in mainland.
The Korean War in 1950 and the Indo-Chinese War and the Chinese civil war in which the Communists won and that nation became a communist country.
chinese. japanese are actually the chinese sent to japan more than 2000 years back by emperor qin.
yes indeedn they can Chinese-looking people can be of any nationality, as can black people.
The Manchus conquered the Chinese empire and established the Qing dynasty in 1644. The Manchu's included people from Jurchen, Mongolian, Han Chinese and Korean descent who lived in the northeast as barbarians. The Qing dynasty brought about a lot of changes in China, but for the most part these changes helped the country flourish. The Manchu's adopted much of the Han Chinese high culture. They quickly won over the intellectual class and preserved the land ownership status as it was.
Yes they can. In the Korean group miss A, there are two Chinese people. In another Korean group, f(x) there is two Chinese people (one is currently not there). So you can be a Korean singer if you're Chinese.
Korean people are people who originate in Korea. They look like Chinese.
Korean people are people who originate in Korea. They look like Chinese.
no but Korean people and Chinese people did
An estimate of 10 million.
mostly the Chinese, Japanese and the Korean people
Yes, genetically.
korean
Koreans eat anything like Chinese.
the Koreans and Americans and Chinese
Korean were derived from Chinese
Hanbok is a korean traditional clothes derived from Chinese traditional clothes called Hanfu. Han means Chinese people, and bok means clothes in Korean.