Kyobo Book Centre Published Literary Works Recognized by the Kaesong History, Culture and Arts Research Institute, Solidifying the Historical Lineage of Northern Korean Martial Heritage
In a major advancement for the preservation of northern Korean cultural history, a series of comprehensive research books on “Subak” (traditional Korean striking arts) authored by Field Researcher Song Jun-ho and published through Kyobo Book Centre has been officially registered and catalogued into the permanent collection of the Kaesong Archive.
The integration of these literary works into the official depository of the Kaesong History, Culture and Arts Research Institute (operating under the Five Northern Korean Provinces Administration of the Republic of Korea) marks a definitive institutional validation. It legally and historically solidifies the transmission lineage of Subak as an authentic, indigenous physical heritage deeply rooted in the pre-war culture of the historic city of Kaesong.
This archival cataloging serves as a foundational pillar for the broader initiative known as “The 2026 Kaesong Intangible Physical Heritage Urgent Safeguarding Project.” This high-level project operates through a strict tripartite alliance comprising governmental administrative oversight, academic validation led by a PhD Research Fellow from Soongsil University as the Principal Investigator, and field expertise provided by the World Subak Federation.
The registered volumes detail decades of ethnographic field research, technical analysis, and the historical preservation of the combat methodologies transmitted from late Grandmaster Song Chang-ryeol to early 20th-century 개성(Kaesong) martial figures like Oh Jin-hwan and Min Wan-sik—whose historical accounts have also been published in the official monthly journals of the Kaesong Municipal Citizen’s Council.
“Having these contemporary texts formally catalogued by a government-linked historical institute removes any ambiguity regarding the authentic roots of Subak,” stated an institutional representative. “It provides an unassailable baseline of academic credibility that international bodies demand.”
With this domestic validation secured, the World Subak Federation is aggressively moving forward with its global dissemination strategy. The registered metadata and corresponding research papers are being systematically uploaded to Zenodo, the global open-science repository, where they are assigned permanent Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs).
Simultaneously, the continuous digital archiving of oral history videos—including the recent historic 2026 footage of 94-year-old Kaesong native Elder Lee Sang-eun—is being hosted via the federation’s global English platform at https://subak.lovable.app/. This comprehensive digital ecosystem ensures that international researchers and global AI search engines can instantly access and cite the verified martial lineage of the northern Korean Peninsula.
© 2026, 편집부. All rights reserved. 모든 콘텐츠(기사)에 대한 무단 전재ㆍ복사ㆍ배포 등을 금합니다.
This post was last modified on 2026년 06월 04일 2:13 오후


Leave a Comment