- Source: Mangjul
Mangjul (Korean: 망절; Hanja: 網切) is a unique Korean family name. It has its origins from a Japanese surname in the Kagoshima Prefecture by Mangjul Ilrang (Korean: 망절일랑), a mushroom farmer in Dong-myeon, Yangsan City, Gyeongsangnam-do who was born to a Korean mother and Japanese father towards the end of Japanese colonialism in Korea. His original Japanese name is Amikiri Ichirō (網切 一郎). Uniquely, the bon-gwan of this surname is Dogan (Korean: 도간; Hanja: 島間), the Korean name for the hometown of his Japanese grandfather (Shimama 島間, Minamitane 南種子町, Tanegashima Island 種子島, Kagoshima Prefecture 鹿児島県). The 2000 South Korean census found 11 South Koreans belonging to one household who have this unique surname, with eight of them living in Yangsan, one in Busan and two in Ansan. Ichirō Amikiri is currently the patriarch of the Mangjul family.
The surname, Mangjul, became relatively well-known to the South Korean public when Nonghyeop awarded Mangjul Ilrang the Cultural Welfare Prize (농협문화복지대상) in 2008.
See also
Korean clan names of foreign origin
Urok Kim clan
Hambak Kim clan
Hwangmok
Hwasun Song clan
Songjin Jeup clan
References
Further reading
정아란 (Jeong A-ran) (March 24, 2010), "일본 아버지 성씨 찾은 한국인 망절일랑씨" [Korean Mangjeol Ilrang seeking Japanese father's surname], Yonhap News.
Choe, Sang-hun (March 23, 2010), "In One Surname, the Turmoil of Two Nations", The New York Times.
External links
Doosan Encyclopedia 외래귀화성씨 外來歸化姓氏. Doosan Encyclopedia.