Won Pyong Oh
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Won Pyong Oh | |
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Hangul: |
원병오
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Hanja: |
元炳旿
|
Revised Romanization: | Won Byeong-o |
McCune-Reischauer: | Wŏn Pyŏngo |
Won Pyong Oh (b. 1929) is a South Korean zoologist, known particularly for his work on Korean birds. He is the son of noted North Korean ornithologist Won Hong-gu (d. 1970). He has published approximately 120 papers on Korean ornithology. He has also published about 10 book-length studies of Korean zoology, although none have been translated into English.
Born in Kaesong, Won began his college education in North Korea, graduating from Wonsan Agricultural College (원산농업대학) in 1950 with a degree in animal husbandry. With the outbreak of the Korean War in that year, he moved to the South, while his parents and one brother remained in the North. He obtained a second degree in biology from Kyunghee University in 1959, and went on to get his doctorate from Japan's Hokkaido College in 1961. He then took a professorship at Kyunghee, where he remained throughout his career.
In 1965, a Daurian Mynah tagged by Won was found and reported by his father. This was the closest contact between the two men after they were separated by the war. In 2002, Won was finally granted permission to visit the North, although his parents and brother were dead.
As of 2006, Won was professor emeritus at Kyunghee University.
[edit] See also
- List of zoologists
- Fauna of Korea
- Division of Korea
- Isan gajok
[edit] Further reading
- Foster-Carter, Aidan. Pyongyang Watch: Free as a bird?. Asia Times.
- (Korean) Pascal Encyclopedia entry (Yahoo)