The Museum of Everyday Life through Korean History : Volume 6:
• Price : 22,000KRW
• Product Dimensions :
A4 : 210×297mm, 94pages
• Publication Date : 2002-02-07
• ISBN : 978-89-7196-686-0, 978-89-7196-686-0(세트)
Book Information & Summary
History comes alive!
Many people call us. "Is this the Korean Museum of Everyday Life? Where is it? How late are you open?"
No longer do you have to worry about time and place. This museum is a museum within a book. You can walk around as you hold it on the palm of your hand as long as you wish.
Now you can have the "Museum of Everyday Life" on your own.
The Museum of Everyday Life
The first comprehensive series on Korean living history.
Unique design appropriate for the Internet Age
Verified and Validated by authoritative scholars
Ancestors' everyday lives come alive as if they are living next door!
Inclusive of major items exhibited in museums around the country
Dynamic pictures and innovative paintings illustrating Korean history
Overcoming the limits of two-dimensional printing to deliver visual effects and immediate understanding
Written by the Editorial Committee for the "Museum of Everyday Life in Korean History Series"
Voted one of the top ten books by the Korean Association of Book Editors
Best Design Project Award of 2000, from the "Design" Magazine
Grand Prize, Best Creative Non-fiction, SBS Broadcasting Company
Best Book, Children's Literature Research Association
The Dano festival of Parhae. Students back from Tang Dynasty and those studying at Jujagam, national university of Parhae, are playing Polo as an item of this day's celebration program. Thousands of people are walking about the capital city, some of them enjoying boat rides on the Mokdan River. There smells delicate flavor from rice-flour cake flavored with mugwort at every door in the city.
from Volume 6: Living in the Lost Kingdoms Page 31
Wild ducks and wild geese that used to cover the sky night and day now all left for the north. Reeds and cattails all over the shore and lagoon are now glittering with the evening wind. As usual, another day of the seaside village begins. The village chief is walking about the village now busy with the preparation for a feast. People step aside when they come across this old man, "because it is their custom to step aside for the elder."(The History of Three Kingdoms)
from Volume 6" Living in the Lost Kingdom " Page 50
Many people call us. "Is this the Korean Museum of Everyday Life? Where is it? How late are you open?"
No longer do you have to worry about time and place. This museum is a museum within a book. You can walk around as you hold it on the palm of your hand as long as you wish.
Now you can have the "Museum of Everyday Life" on your own.
The Museum of Everyday Life
The first comprehensive series on Korean living history.
Unique design appropriate for the Internet Age
Verified and Validated by authoritative scholars
Ancestors' everyday lives come alive as if they are living next door!
Inclusive of major items exhibited in museums around the country
Dynamic pictures and innovative paintings illustrating Korean history
Overcoming the limits of two-dimensional printing to deliver visual effects and immediate understanding
Written by the Editorial Committee for the "Museum of Everyday Life in Korean History Series"
Voted one of the top ten books by the Korean Association of Book Editors
Best Design Project Award of 2000, from the "Design" Magazine
Grand Prize, Best Creative Non-fiction, SBS Broadcasting Company
Best Book, Children's Literature Research Association
The Dano festival of Parhae. Students back from Tang Dynasty and those studying at Jujagam, national university of Parhae, are playing Polo as an item of this day's celebration program. Thousands of people are walking about the capital city, some of them enjoying boat rides on the Mokdan River. There smells delicate flavor from rice-flour cake flavored with mugwort at every door in the city.
from Volume 6: Living in the Lost Kingdoms Page 31
Wild ducks and wild geese that used to cover the sky night and day now all left for the north. Reeds and cattails all over the shore and lagoon are now glittering with the evening wind. As usual, another day of the seaside village begins. The village chief is walking about the village now busy with the preparation for a feast. People step aside when they come across this old man, "because it is their custom to step aside for the elder."(The History of Three Kingdoms)
from Volume 6" Living in the Lost Kingdom " Page 50