Military Demarcation Line (Korea)

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Military Demarcation Line (Korea)
Hangul:
휴전선
Hanja:
休戰線
Revised Romanization: Hyujeonseon
McCune-Reischauer: Hyujŏnsŏn

The Military Demarcation Line, sometimes referred to as the Armistice Line, is the border between North and South Korea. The Military Demarcation Line was established as the ceasefire line at the end of Korean War hostilities in 1953. The Military Demarcation Line runs over land; at sea, the two Koreas are divided by the Northern Limit Line.

This line is inside the DMZ, and runs near the 38th parallel, covering roughly 248 kilometers.[1] US and Republic of Korea (ROK) soldiers patrol this line along the South Korean side while North Korea People's Army (NPKA) patrol along the North Korean side. There have been frequent skirmishes along the line since the end of the Korean War.

In Korean, the line is called the Hyujeonseon, or "ceasefire line." It is also sometimes called the Gunsa Bun-gyeseon (군사분계선), which literally means "military demarcation line." However, in colloquial usage, the dividing line is more often called the Sampalseon (삼팔선, "38th parallel"), a name likely coined at the end of World War II, when it would have been an accurate description of the North-South border.

The line itself is marked off by a series of identical signs which are placed at intervals across the peninsula. The north facing side of the signs are written in Hangul and Chinese, and in Hangul and English on the south facing side. The signs are aging and rusting.

[edit] Notes

  Korean War History. Retrieved on 2006-01-12.

[edit] See also

In other languages