Names of Seoul


Seoul has been known in the past by the successive names Wiryeseong, Namgyeong, Hanseong or Hanyang. During the period of Japanese occupation, Seoul was referred to by the Japanese exonym Keijō, or Gyeongseong in Korean. After World War II and Korea's liberation, the city took its present name, Seoul, which had been in use since at least 1882, at times concurrently with other names.

Etymology of "Seoul"

Seoul is a rendering of the Korean word “seo'ul”, pronounced . An etymological hypothesis presumes that the origin of the native word “seo'ul” derives from the native name Seorabeol, which originally referred to Gyeongju, the capital of Silla, then called Geumseong.

Chinese name for Seoul

Unlike most place names in Korea, "Seoul" has no corresponding hanja, although its name is presumed to derive from 徐羅伐, so Chinese-speaking countries for decades have referred to the city by its former name: 漢城. On a 1751 map of China and Korea prepared in France, Seoul was marked as "King-Ki-Tao, Capitale de la Corée", using an approximation of the Chinese pronunciation of Gyeonggi Province. The use of "King-Ki-Tao" to refer to Seoul was repeated again on the 1851 Tallis/Rapkin map of both Japan and Korea. For a time during the late 1940s and early 1950s, the transliterated name Sūwū, which closely resembles the English pronunciation for Seoul, was used.
This often caused problems in translation, as in Korean, the terms "Seoul" and "Hanseong" are considered different. There exist many institutions and entities, most of them having no connections whatsoever, which use either name. When the names of these institutions and entities are translated into Chinese, both "Seoul" and "Hanseong" were automatically translated to 漢城. Typical examples of such errors in translation included Seoul National University versus Hansung University, which both would be translated to 漢城大學, as well as Seoul Science High School versus Hansung Science High School.
The problem, along with the confusion it caused for years, was solved in January 2005, when the Seoul City Government under then mayor Lee Myung Bak publicly requested that the Chinese name of the city be changed to 首爾, written as 首尔 in simplified Chinese in mainland China. The name was chosen by a select committee out of two names, the other being 首午爾.
The chosen name is a close transliteration of Seoul in Mandarin Chinese; can also mean "first" or "capital". For a some time after the name change, Chinese-language news media have used both names interchangeably during their publications or broadcasts. Despite the adoption of Shǒu'ěr in Chinese media, the name Hànchéng is still widely used by some Chinese people.
This change was intended for Chinese speakers only, and has no effect on the Korean language name. The new name would be written and pronounced 수이 in Korean. Some linguists have criticized the selection of the new name, claiming that its pronunciation in Korean bears no resemblance to the native name at all, and that its intended representation of the Korean pronunciation, while effective in Mandarin, is lost in other regional dialects, such as in Cantonese, where the name is pronounced "sau2 yi5", or in Shanghainese, in which the new name is pronounced "sew2 el3". These critics have said that the names "西蔚" or "徐蔚" would have been much more effective in representing the city's Korean name.

Gyeongseong

"Gyeongseong" is a Sino-Korean word for "capital city" means "capital" and seong. It was in occasional use to refer to Seoul throughout the Joseon dynasty, having earlier referred to the capitals of Goryeo and Silla. The term came into much wider use during the period of Japanese rule, because it is also the Korean form of Keijō, the former Japanese name used for Seoul during the colonial rule.
Seoul was called Hanseong or Hanyang during the Joseon dynasty, but the city's main railway station, Seoul Station, opened with the name "Gyeongseong Station" in 1900, which it retained until 1905. It was called Gyeongseong Station again from 1915 to 1947, when it assumed its current name.
Gyeong is still used to refer to Seoul in the names of various railway lines and freeways, including: