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Revision as of 17:10, 20 August 2007 edit^demonBot2 (talk | contribs)23,458 edits {{Koreanname}} renamed, Replaced: {{koreanname| → {{Infobox Korean name|← Previous edit Revision as of 03:42, 24 August 2007 edit undo168.122.80.219 (talk)No edit summaryNext edit →
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{{Infobox Korean name| {{Infobox Korean name|
hangul=황| hangul=황|
hanja=黃| hanja=黃 or 皇|
rr=Hwang| rr=Hwang|
mr=Hwang| mr=Hwang|
}} }}


'''Hwang''', occasionally spelled '''Whang''', is a common ]. Hwang is the equivalent of the Chinese surname Huang. The Chinese surname Huang is also spelt 'Hwang' in Taiwan. Hwangs make up roughly 1.5% of the Korean population; the 2000 South Korean census found 644,294 in that country. The Chinese character for Hwang literally means "yellow". '''Hwang''', occasionally spelled '''Whang''', is a common ]. Hwang is the equivalent of the Chinese surname Huang. The Chinese surname Huang is also spelt 'Hwang' in Taiwan. Hwangs make up roughly 1.5% of the Korean population; the 2000 South Korean census found 644,294 in that country. The Chinese character for Hwang used most commonly literally means "yellow"; however, originally, the Chinese character for Hwang used to be "皇", which means "emperor". The latter character represents the origins of the surname. The character was later changed during the Chosun dynasty after the ruling family, Yi or Lee, ordered the change due to their newly founded status as the monarch of the Korean peninsula.


==Famous Hwangs== ==Famous Hwangs==

Revision as of 03:42, 24 August 2007

Hwang
Hangul
Hanja黃 or 皇
Revised RomanizationHwang
McCune–ReischauerHwang

Hwang, occasionally spelled Whang, is a common Korean family name. Hwang is the equivalent of the Chinese surname Huang. The Chinese surname Huang is also spelt 'Hwang' in Taiwan. Hwangs make up roughly 1.5% of the Korean population; the 2000 South Korean census found 644,294 in that country. The Chinese character for Hwang used most commonly literally means "yellow"; however, originally, the Chinese character for Hwang used to be "皇", which means "emperor". The latter character represents the origins of the surname. The character was later changed during the Chosun dynasty after the ruling family, Yi or Lee, ordered the change due to their newly founded status as the monarch of the Korean peninsula.

Famous Hwangs

See also

Category: