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https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%9D%BC%EB%B3%B8%EC%9D%98%20AFC%20%EC%95%84%EC%8B%9C%EC%95%88%EC%BB%B5%20%EC%84%B1%EC%A0%81
์ผ๋ณธ์˜ AFC ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต ์„ฑ์ 
๋‹ค์Œ์€ AFC ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต์—์„œ ์ผ๋ณธ์˜ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ณธ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€์€ 1988๋…„ AFC ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต์— ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณธ์„ ์— ์ง„์ถœํ•˜์—ฌ 9ํšŒ ์—ฐ์† ๋ณธ์„  ์ง„์ถœ์— ์„ฑ๊ณตํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ์ค‘ 1992๋…„ AFC ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต๊ณผ 2000๋…„ AFC ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต, 2004๋…„ AFC ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต, 2011๋…„ AFC ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต์—์„œ ์šฐ์Šน์„ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ•ด ํ˜„์žฌ ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต ์ตœ๋‹ค ์šฐ์Šน์„ ๊ธฐ๋ก ์ค‘์ด๋‹ค. 2019๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ์ผ๋ณธ์˜ ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต ํ†ต์‚ฐ ์„ฑ์ ์€ 48์ „ 30์Šน 12๋ฌด 6ํŒจ๋กœ ์Šน์  102์ ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 92๋“์  44์‹ค์ ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•ด ๋“์‹ค ์ฐจ๋Š” +48์„ ๊ธฐ๋ก ์ค‘์ด๋‹ค. ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต ํ†ต์‚ฐ ์„ฑ์ ์€ ์ด๋ž€ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€๊ณผ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€์— ์ด์–ด 3์œ„๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ตœ๊ทผ ๋Œ€ํšŒ์ธ 2015๋…„ AFC ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต์—์„  ์กฐ๋ณ„๋ฆฌ๊ทธ๋Š” 3์ „ ์ „์Šน์œผ๋กœ ๋ฌด๋‚œํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ†ต๊ณผํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ 8๊ฐ•์ „์—์„œ ์•„๋ž์—๋ฏธ๋ฆฌํŠธ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€์— ๋œ๋ฏธ๋ฅผ ์žกํžˆ๋ฉฐ 1 : 1๋กœ ๋น„๊ธด ๋’ค ์Šน๋ถ€์ฐจ๊ธฐ 4 : 5๋กœ ํŒจ๋ฐฐํ•˜์—ฌ 8๊ฐ•์— ๊ทธ์ณ ๋””ํŽœ๋”ฉ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์œผ๋กœ์„œ์˜ ์ฒด๋ฉด์„ ๊ตฌ๊ธฐ๊ณ  ๋ง์•˜๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ AFC ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต์—์„œ๋„ ๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „๊นŒ์ง€ ์ „์Šน์„ ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์˜ฌ๋ผ๊ฐ”์œผ๋‚˜ ๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „์—์„œ ์นดํƒ€๋ฅด์— 1 : 3์œผ๋กœ ์™„ํŒจํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์ค€์šฐ์Šน์— ๊ทธ์ณค๋‹ค. ๊ตญ์ œ๋Œ€ํšŒ ๊ธฐ๋ก 1988๋…„ AFC ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต A์กฐ {| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;" |- !width=175|ํŒ€ !width=40 |์Šน์  !width=40 |๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ !width=20 |์Šน !width=20 |๋ฌด !width=20 |ํŒจ !width=30 |๋“ !width=30 |์‹ค !width=35 |์ฐจ |- style=background:#ccffcc |align="left"| |8||4||4||0||0||9||2||+7 |- style=background:#ccffcc |align="left"| |5||4||2||1||1||3||3||0 |-style=background:#fcc |align="left"| |4||4||2||0||2||7||6||+1 |-style=background:#fcc |align="left"| |2||4||1||0||3||2||4||โˆ’2 |-style=background:#fcc |align="left"| |1||4||0||1||3||0||6||โˆ’6 1992๋…„ AFC ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต A์กฐ ์ค€๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „ ๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „ 1996๋…„ AFC ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต C์กฐ 8๊ฐ•์ „ 2000๋…„ AFC ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต C์กฐ 8๊ฐ•์ „ ์ค€๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „ ๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „ 2004๋…„ AFC ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต D์กฐ 8๊ฐ•์ „ ์ค€๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „ ๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „ 2007๋…„ AFC ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต B์กฐ | ์‹œ๊ฐ„=17:20 (UTC+7)| ํŒ€1 = | ๋“์  = 1 โ€“ 1| ํŒ€2 = | ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์žฅ = ํ•˜๋…ธ์ด, ๋ฏธ๋”˜ ๊ตญ๋ฆฝ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์žฅ| ๊ด€์ค‘์ˆ˜ = 5,000๋ช…| ์‹ฌํŒ = ๋งค์Šˆ ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ | ๊ณจ1 = ๋‹ค์นดํ•˜๋ผ | ๋ฆฌํฌํŠธ = | ๊ณจ2 = ์†Œ๋ฆฌ์•„ | }} | ์‹œ๊ฐ„=20:35 (UTC+7)| ํŒ€1 = | ๋“์  = 3 โ€“ 1| ํŒ€2 = | ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์žฅ = ํ•˜๋…ธ์ด, ๋ฏธ๋”˜ ๊ตญ๋ฆฝ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์žฅ| ๊ด€์ค‘์ˆ˜ = 5,000๋ช…| ์‹ฌํŒ = ์‚ฌํ†ฑ ํ†ต์นธ | ๊ณจ1 = ๋‹ค์นดํ•˜๋ผ ๋‚˜์นด๋ฌด๋ผ | ๋ฆฌํฌํŠธ = ๋ฆฌํฌํŠธ | ๊ณจ2 = ์•Œ์นด์Šค | }} | ์‹œ๊ฐ„=17:20 (UTC+7)| ํŒ€1 = | ๋“์  = 4 โ€“ 1| ํŒ€2 = | ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์žฅ = ํ•˜๋…ธ์ด, ๋ฏธ๋”˜ ๊ตญ๋ฆฝ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์žฅ| ๊ด€์ค‘์ˆ˜ = 40,000๋ช…| ์‹ฌํŒ = ๋งค์Šˆ ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ | ๊ณจ1 = ๋งˆํ‚ค ์—”๋„ ๋‚˜์นด๋ฌด๋ผ | ๋ฆฌํฌํŠธ = ๋ฆฌํฌํŠธ | ๊ณจ2 = ์Šค์ฆˆํ‚ค | }} 8๊ฐ•์ „ | ํŒ€1 = | ์‹œ๊ฐ„ = 17:20 (UTC+7)| ๋“์  = 1 โ€“ 1 |์—ฐ์žฅ์ „ = y | ํŒ€2 = | ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์žฅ = ํ•˜๋…ธ์ด, ๋ฏธ๋”˜ ๊ตญ๋ฆฝ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์žฅ| ๊ด€์ค‘์ˆ˜ = 25,000๋ช…| ์‹ฌํŒ = ์‚ฌ๋“œ ์นด๋ฐ€ ์•ŒํŒŒ๋“ค๋ฆฌ | ๊ณจ1 = ๋‹ค์นดํ•˜๋ผ | ๋ฆฌํฌํŠธ = ๋ฆฌํฌํŠธ | ๊ณจ2 = ์•Œ๋กœ์ด์ง€ |์Šน๋ถ€์ฐจ๊ธฐ1 = ๋‚˜์นด๋ฌด๋ผ ์—”๋„ ๊ณ ๋งˆ๋…ธ ๋‹ค์นดํ•˜๋ผ ๋‚˜์นด์ž์™€ |์Šน๋ถ€์ฐจ๊ธฐ๋“์  = 4 โ€“ 3 |์Šน๋ถ€์ฐจ๊ธฐ2 = ํ์–ผ ๋‹ ์ผ€์ดํž ์นผ ์นด๋‹ˆ }} ์ค€๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „ | ์‹œ๊ฐ„ = 20:20 (UTC+7)| ํŒ€1 = | ๋“์  = 2 โ€“ 3| ํŒ€2 = | ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์žฅ = ํ•˜๋…ธ์ด, ๋ฏธ๋”˜ ๊ตญ๋ฆฝ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์žฅ| ๊ด€์ค‘์ˆ˜ = 10,000๋ช…| ์‹ฌํŒ = ๋งค์Šˆ ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ | ๊ณจ1 = ๋‚˜์นด์ž์™€ ์•„๋ฒ  | ๋ฆฌํฌํŠธ = ๋ฆฌํฌํŠธ | ๊ณจ2 = ์•Œ ์นดํƒ€๋‹ˆ ๋งˆ์ฆˆ | }} 3ยท4์œ„์ „ | ์‹œ๊ฐ„=19:35 (UTC+8) | ํŒ€1 = | ๋“์  = 0 โ€“ 0 |์—ฐ์žฅ์ „ = y | ํŒ€2 = | ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์žฅ = ํŒ”๋ ˜๋ฐฉ, ๊ฒ”๋กœ๋ผ ์Šค๋ฆฌ์œ„์ž์•ผ ์Šคํƒ€๋””์›€| ๊ด€์ค‘์ˆ˜ = 10,000๋ช…| ์‹ฌํŒ = ์•Œ๋ฆฌ ์•Œ๋“œ๋ฐ”์™€์œ„ | ๊ณจ1 = | ๋ฆฌํฌํŠธ = | ๊ณจ2 = |์Šน๋ถ€์ฐจ๊ธฐ1 = ๋‚˜์นด๋ฌด๋ผ ์—”๋„ ์•„๋ฒ  ๊ณ ๋งˆ๋…ธ ๋‚˜์นด์ž์™€ ํ•˜๋‰ด |์Šน๋ถ€์ฐจ๊ธฐ๋“์  = 5 โ€“ 6 |์Šน๋ถ€์ฐจ๊ธฐ2 = ์กฐ์žฌ์ง„ ์˜ค๋ฒ”์„ ์ด๊ทผํ˜ธ ์ดํ˜ธ ๊น€์ง„๊ทœ ๊น€์น˜์šฐ }} 2011๋…„ AFC ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต B์กฐ 8๊ฐ•์ „ ์ค€๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „ ๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „ 2015๋…„ AFC ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต D์กฐ 8๊ฐ•์ „ 2019๋…„ AFC ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต F์กฐ 16๊ฐ•์ „ 8๊ฐ•์ „ ์ค€๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „ ๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „ ์ตœ๋‹ค ์ƒ๋Œ€ ํŒ€ ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต ์ƒ๋Œ€ ์ „์  ์ƒ๋Œ€ ์ „์  ์šฐ์„ธ : ์‚ฌ์šฐ๋””์•„๋ผ๋น„์•„(5์Šน 1ํŒจ), ์ค‘๊ตญ(4์Šน), ์šฐ์ฆˆ๋ฒ ํ‚ค์Šคํƒ„(3์Šน), ์ด๋ผํฌ, ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์•„, ์˜ค๋งŒ, ๋ฒ ํŠธ๋‚จ(๊ฐ 2์Šน), ์ด๋ž€(2์Šน 2๋ฌด), ์š”๋ฅด๋‹จ(1์Šน 2๋ฌด), ํ˜ธ์ฃผ(1์Šน 1๋ฌด), ๋ฐ”๋ ˆ์ธ, ํƒœ๊ตญ, ํŒ”๋ ˆ์Šคํƒ€์ธ, ํˆฌ๋ฅดํฌ๋ฉ”๋‹ˆ์Šคํƒ„(๊ฐ 1์Šน) ์ƒ๋Œ€ ์ „์  ํ˜ธ๊ฐ์„ธ : ์•„๋ž์—๋ฏธ๋ฆฌํŠธ(1์Šน 2๋ฌด 1ํŒจ), ์กฐ์„ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ์ฃผ์˜์ธ๋ฏผ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ(1๋ฌด) ์ƒ๋Œ€ ์ „์  ์—ด์„ธ : ์นดํƒ€๋ฅด(1์Šน 2๋ฌด 2ํŒจ), ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ(2๋ฌด 1ํŒจ), ์ฟ ์›จ์ดํŠธ(1ํŒจ) ๊ฐ์ฃผ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japan%20at%20the%20AFC%20Asian%20Cup
Japan at the AFC Asian Cup
Since the 1988 tournament, Japan has qualified for eight consecutive AFC Asian Cups from 1992 to 2019. Japan is also the most successful team in the tournament with 4 titles. Despite being a current football powerhouse in Asia, Japan was not considered a continental football power until 1988. Outside the 1968 Summer Olympics shock, Japan had been regarded as a weak team in the continent. In fact, Japan had missed eight first editions before qualifying in 1988. Yet, in qualifying for the 1988 edition, combined with hosting the 1992 AFC Asian Cup, Japanese football grew rapidly and soon replaced traditional powerhouses like South Korea, Iran and Saudi Arabia as the emerging and eventually, a dominant football power in Asia, although recent rise of Australia has posed a challenge for Japan's dominant position. Japan results in the Asian Cup * hosts 1988 AFC Asian Cup Japan made debut at 1988 Asian Cup and it was the historical achievement that would put milestone for Japan to envision and develop its football, which was then-limited in amateur football. In the whole tournament however, Japan ended up finishing last, with just one draw and three defeats, scoring zero goal and conceded six goals. Although it was not a successful tournament, qualifying to the Asian Cup had been the source of Japan's football renaissance in the country, and subsequent tournaments later would have proven this. 1992 AFC Asian Cup Japan was the host of the 1992 tournament, and placed together with North Korea, Iran and the UAE. Japan was expected to pass through semi-finals only, however Japan had done even better than that. Japan opened their account with two draws against the UAE and North Korea, before winning the first ever match in the Asian Cup, 1โ€“0, over Iran, effectively eliminated Iran and North Korea. Japan kept firing by a 3โ€“2 thrilling victory over China, before defeating Saudi Arabia 1โ€“0 in the final. With the win, Japan claimed their first Asian title, marked the begin of a new Asian football power that would have a huge consequence for the next years. Knockout stage Semi-finals Final Ironically, in spite of the victory, Japan failed to qualify for 1994 World Cup, despite being Asian champion, and Hans Ooft, the manager who helped Japan win maiden Asian Cup, was fired later after the failure. 1996 AFC Asian Cup Having won the previous edition, Japan was expected to become a contender for the Asian title twice. That's said, however, Japan's performance turned to be a great disappointment. Japan won all three matches in the group stage against Syria, China and Uzbekistan and won the group with full nine points. Even though their group stage performances were impressive, the quarter-final match against Kuwait proved to be a disaster when they lost 0โ€“2, eventually ended Japan's hope to defend the title. Knockout stage Quarter-finals Manager Shu Kamo was allowed to keep his job, but 1998 World Cup qualification under his tenure was not successful and he was replaced by Takeshi Okada, his assistant, for the remaining crucial matches. Japan would have qualified to the World Cup for the first time. 2000 AFC Asian Cup Japan came to Lebanon 2000 with high hope to win the Asian Cup, having participated in their maiden World Cup in France. In there, Japan was placed with defending champions Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Uzbekistan. For Japan, the tournament was seen as perpetration for 2002 World Cup to be held in their home soil. Japan proved to be so strong when they demolished defending champion Saudi Arabia 4โ€“1 and Uzbekistan 8โ€“1. After two matches, Japan drew Qatar 1โ€“1. Qatar would go on to be the only team that didn't lose to Japan in the tournament. Japan kept on their impressive running by beating Iraq 4โ€“1, China 3โ€“2 before won the final against Saudi Arabia for the second times, 1โ€“0. Japan claimed their second title and had officially established themselves as a new Asian football powerhouse. Knockout stage Quarter-finals Semi-finals Final This impressive running in 2000 Asian Cup proved to be useful for Japan two years later, when Japan passed through the group stage for the first time, before losing to later third-place Turkey 0โ€“1 in the round of sixteen. 2004 AFC Asian Cup Japan, having established themselves as a football powerhouse in the continent, was placed in Group D with Iran, Thailand and debutant Oman. Japan, however, had a hard beginning with just a 1โ€“0 win to Oman, before demolished Thailand 4โ€“1 next. Japan, like 2000 edition, drew the last match with Iran 0โ€“0 and qualified to the quarter-finals when they faced up another debutant, Jordan. Jordan however proved to be a tough team when they held on Japan for 120 minutes with a 1โ€“1 draw, before Japan won on the penalty shootout. In the semi-finals, Japan also needed 120 minutes to defeat another Arab team, Bahrain, in a 4โ€“3 thriller. In the final, Japan faced host China, and despite being thought to be even much harder than with Jordan and Bahrain since China was the host, Japan surprisingly defeated China 3โ€“1 in just 90 minutes, including a hand goal from Koji Nakata, which was controversial aftermath. Thus, Japan for the second times won the title, continued to be the dominant force in Asia. Knockout stage Quarter-finals Semi-finals Final 2007 AFC Asian Cup In the next editions, Japan seemed to be placed in a much easier group than three years ago, when Japan was drawn with host Vietnam, Qatar and the UAE. Qatar and the UAE had also won 2006 Asian Games and 18th Arabian Gulf Cup, effectively putting Japan on board with two other champions outside host Vietnam. However, Japan opened their accounts unimpressive with just a 1โ€“1 draw to Qatar, which made Ivica Osim to label his players as "amateur". Japan went on to beat the UAE 3โ€“1 and Vietnam 4โ€“1, the latter would join Japan into the quarter-finals. Japan later took vengeance on Australia by defeating the Socceroos 4โ€“3 in the penalty shootout in Hanoi. However, within the same stuff, Japan lost to eventual runners-up Saudi Arabia 2โ€“3 and had to play the third-place match, when they lost on penalty shootout this time, 5โ€“6, to rival South Korea. Knockout stage Quarter-finals Semi-finals Third-place match 2011 AFC Asian Cup After just won 4th place four years before, Japan had to take part on the qualification round, where they won first to qualify for the tournament. Once again, Japan was placed with Saudi Arabia, alongside Jordan and Syria, both had not participated four years ago. However, Japan was stunned by Jordan after just a 1โ€“1 draw, drew criticisms from the fans and coach Alberto Zaccheroni had to change tactics to suit the situation. The match with Syria had also drawn criticisms later due to poor performance of Japanese players, despite winning 2โ€“1. Nonetheless, these criticisms vanished when Japan destroyed Saudi Arabia 5โ€“0 to march into the quarter-finals facing host Qatar. In the quarter-final match, Japan suffered even a red card and two goals-lead by Qatar, but in the end Japan fought back and won 3โ€“2, eliminated host Qatar from the tournament. Japan would make up meeting with old rival South Korea, where they drew 2โ€“2 after 120 minutes before winning 3โ€“0 on penalty shootout and went into the final. In the final, Japan met Asia's no.1 ranking team, Australia. Nonetheless, despite heavy pressures from the Socceroos, Japan withstood and at the extra time, Tadanari Lee scored the only goal in the match, helping Japan to claim the title for the fourth times, became the most successful team in the tournament's history. Knockout stage Quarter-finals Semi-finals Final Keisuke Honda was awarded as the most valuable player in the tournament. 2015 AFC Asian Cup Having won four titles, Japan was considered as the contender for the next title in the 2015 Asian Cup, where they were drawn with debutant Palestine, 2011 rival Jordan and former champion Iraq. With experiences, Japan was not hard to dominate the group stage. Japan defeated Palestine 4โ€“0, Iraq 1โ€“0 and Jordan 2โ€“0 to win the group with full nine points and no goal conceded. This led to popular belief that Japan would have won the tournament again. However, the quarter-final encounter over the UAE was a shocking humiliation, when they just earned a 1โ€“1 draw to the Gulf side after 120 minutes before losing 4โ€“5 on the penalty shootout. The UAE would go on to win bronze medal in the tournament. It was Japan's worst finish ever since 1996. Knockout stage Quarter-finals 2019 AFC Asian Cup Japan made their ninth appearance in the Asian Cup after they were drawn with Uzbekistan, Oman and Turkmenistan. As usual, Japan was regarded as one of the favourite teams to win the tournament. Knockout stage Round of 16 Quarter-finals Semi-finals Final See also Japan at the Copa Amรฉrica Japan at the FIFA World Cup References Countries at the AFC Asian Cup
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%9D%B8%EA%B0%84%EB%A1%A0%20%28%EA%B8%B0%EB%8F%85%EA%B5%90%29
์ธ๊ฐ„๋ก  (๊ธฐ๋…๊ต)
์ธ๊ฐ„๋ก (Christian anthropology)์€ ๊ธฐ๋…๊ต ์‹ ํ•™์˜ ์˜์—ญ์—์„œ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จ๋œ ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ํ•™๋ฌธ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ธฐ๋…๊ต ์ธ๊ฐ„๋ก ์€ ์‹œ๊ฐ„๊ณผ ๊ณต๊ฐ„์„ ๋„˜์–ด์„œ ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ๋ฌผ๋ฆฌ์  ์‚ฌํšŒ์  ํŠน์„ฑ์„ ๋น„๊ต์—ฐ๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ์ธ๋ฅ˜ํ•™์˜ ์‚ฌํšŒ์  ํ•™๋ฌธ๊ณผ๋Š” ๊ตฌ๋ณ„๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐ๋…๊ต ์‹ ํ•™์˜ ์ธ๊ฐ„๋ก ์€ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ฐฝ์กฐ๋œ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์ฆ‰ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ํ˜•์ƒ๊ณผ ๋ฒ”์ฃ„๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ํƒ€๋ฝํ•œ ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ๋‹ค๋ฃจ๋Š” ์˜์—ญ, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค๋„๋กœ ํšŒ๋ณต๋œ ์˜์ธ์„ ๋‹ค๋ฃฌ๋‹ค. ํ•˜๋‚˜์˜ ๊ด€์ ์€ ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ๋ณธ์„ฑ๊ณผ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ์š”์†Œ๋ฅผ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์€ ์„ฑ์„œ๊ฐ€ ๋งํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์— ๊ทผ๊ฑฐํ•˜์—ฌ ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ๊ตฌ์„ฑํ•˜๋Š” ๋ชธ, ์˜ ๋ฐ ํ˜ผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๊ฐœ๋…๋“ค์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ์š”์†Œ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด์„œ๋Š” ์ „ํ†ต์ ์ธ ๊ฒฌํ•ด๋กœ ์‚ผ๋ถ„์„ค, ์ด๋ถ„๋ฒ• ๋ฐ ์ผ์›๋ก  (์ธ๋ฅ˜ํ•™์˜ ์˜๋ฏธ์—์„œ)์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ •์˜ ์ธ๊ฐ„์ด๋ž€ ์กด์žฌ๋Š” ๋ˆ„๊ตฌ์ธ๊ฐ€? ํ”Œ๋ผํ†ค์€ ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ๋ชธ๊ณผ ์˜ํ˜ผ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ„๋ฆฌ๋œ ์ด์›๋ก ์  ์‚ฌ๊ณ ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง„ ์ž๋กœ, ๋ชธ์ด ์˜ํ˜ผ์„ ๋ถ™์žก๋Š” ๊ฐ์˜ฅ์œผ๋กœ ์ดํ•ดํ•˜๊ณ  ์ฃฝ์€ ํ›„์— ์˜ํ˜ผ์€ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์ด๋‚˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋™๋ฌผ์— ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ€์„œ ์ •ํ™”๋˜๊ณ  ์ด๋ฐ์•„๋กœ ๊ฐ„๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ณด์•˜๋‹ค. ์•„๋ฆฌ์Šคํ† ํ…”๋ ˆ์Šค์—๊ฒŒ ์žˆ์–ด์„œ๋Š” ๋™๋ฌผ๊ณผ ์‹๋ฌผ๋„ ์˜ํ˜ผ์ด ์ƒ๋ช…์˜ ์›๋ฆฌ์ด๊ธฐ์— ์ธ๊ฐ„๊ณผ ๋™๋ฌผ์˜ ๊ตฌ๋ณ„์€ ๋ถ„๋ช…์น˜ ์•Š๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ์ด์„ฑ๊ณผ ์ž์œ ์˜์ง€๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ธฐ์— ์ธ๊ฐ„์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ฐ๊นŒ๋ฅดํŠธ๋Š” ๋งํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํ˜„๋Œ€ ์ฒ ํ•™์ž๋“ค ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ ๋‹ˆ์ฒด, ํ•˜์ด๋ฐ๊ฑฐ, ์‹ธ๋ฅดํŠธ๋ฅด ๋“ฑ์€ ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ๋ณธ์งˆ์„ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์˜ ์ž์œ ์„ฑ์—์„œ ์ฐพ๋Š”๋‹ค. ํ•ญ์ƒ ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด์ ธ๊ฐ€๋Š” ๋„์ค‘์—์„œ ์ฑ…์ž„์„ฑ์„ ๊ฐ•์กฐํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์‹ค์กด์„ ์ด๋…์  ๋ณธ์งˆ๋กœ ๋ณด์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ๊ฒฐ๋‹จ์˜ ํ–‰์œ„ ์ฆ‰ ์—ญ์‚ฌ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์กด์žฌํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋‹ˆ์ฒด๋Š” ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ๋™๋ฌผ๊ณผ ์ดˆ์ธ ์‚ฌ์ด์— ๋Š˜์–ด์ ธ ์žˆ๋Š” ์ค„, ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ๋„ ์‹ฌ์—ฐ ์œ„์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์ค„๋กœ ํ‘œํ˜„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ด๋ฐ๊ฑฐ๋Š” ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ์˜ค๋Š˜๋‚  ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์–ด๋ ค์šด ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜๊ป˜๋ผ์š” ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์•Œ ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋Š” ์‹ ๋น„๋ผ๊ณ  ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ๋™๋ฌผ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์ง€ ์•Š๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ง„ํ™”๋ก ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ธ๊ฐ„๋ก ์ด ์ดํ•ด๋  ์ˆ˜๋Š” ์—†๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์ด ๊ฐ€์ง„ ๊ฐ€๊ณตํ• ๋งŒํ•œ ์กด์žฌ์™€ ๋™์กฑ ํŒŒ๊ดด์„ฑ์€ ์ง„ํ™”๋ก ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์–ด๋–ป๊ฒŒ ์„ค๋ช…์ด ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ• ๊นŒ? ์ธ๊ฐ„์ด ๋„๋•์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ ์  ๊ณ ๋“ฑํ™”๋˜๋Š” ์กด์žฌ์™€๋Š” ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€์ ์ธ ์กด์žฌ๊ฐ€ ์•„๋‹Œ๊ฐ€? ์ง€๊ตฌ์ƒ์˜ ๋ฒ”์ฃ„์™€ ํญ๋ ฅ์€ ์ ์  ๋” ์•…ํ•ด์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฐ ์‚ฌ์ƒ์€ ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ๋ฏธ๋ž˜๋ฅผ ํ–ฅํ•ด ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด์ ธ ๊ฐ€๋Š” ์กด์žฌ๋กœ ์ฑ…์ž„์„ ๊ฐ€์ง„ ์ž๋กœ ๋ณธ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ ‡๋‹ค๋ฉด ๋Š˜ ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ๋ถˆ์™„์ „ ์กด์žฌ์š”, ์ฃฝ์Œ์— ์ง๋ฉดํ•ด ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ถˆํ–‰ํ•œ ์กด์žฌ๋กœ ๊ฐ€๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ์ด๋“ค์€ ๋ฏธ๋ž˜๋ฅผ ์ฃผ๊ด€ํ•˜์‹œ๋Š” ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ์ฃผ๊ถŒ๊ณผ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ๋‚˜๋ผ์˜ ์™„์„ฑ์„ ๋ฐ”๋ผ๋ณด์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ๋ˆ„๊ตฌ์ธ๊ฐ€๊ฐ€? ์ธ๊ฐ„์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ •์˜๋Š” ์‰ฝ์ง€์•Š๋‹ค. ๊ณ ๋Œ€ ํ—ฌ๋ผ์—์„œ๋Š” ๋„ˆ ์ž์‹ ์„ ์•Œ๋ผ๊ณ  ๋งํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด ๋ง์€ ๋ธํ”ผ(Delphi) ์‹ ์ „์˜ ์‹ ํƒ์ด์—ˆ๊ณ , ์†Œํฌ๋ผํ…Œ์Šค์˜ ๋ง๋กœ๋„ ์œ ๋ช…ํ•˜๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ์žˆ์–ด์„œ ์ž์‹ ๋“ค์„ ์•„๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ์ฒ ํ•™์  ๋ช…์ œ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์—˜๋ฆฌ์ž๋ฒ ์Šค ํ€ด๋ธ”๋Ÿฌ๋กœ์Šค์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์€ ์ธ๊ฐ„์ด ํ‰์ƒ โ€˜์ง„์ •ํ•œ ์ž์‹ ์ด ๋˜๋Š” ๋ฒ•โ€™(์ž์‹ ์˜ ์ง„์ •ํ•œ ๋ชจ์Šต์„ ์•„๋Š” ๊ฒƒ)์ด ์ธ์ƒ์˜ ๋ชฉํ‘œ๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ณธ๋‹ค. ์ง„ํ™”์ƒ๋ฌผํ•™์ž๋“ค์€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์„ ์ƒ๋ฌผํ•™์  ์ ‘๊ทผ์œผ๋กœ ์ดํ•ดํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ธ๋ฅ˜ํ•™์ž๋“ค์€ ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ๋ฌธํ™”์™€ ๋ฌธ๋ช…์˜ ๊ด€์ ์—์„œ ์ดํ•ดํ•œ๋‹ค. ์‹ ํ•™์  ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์‹ ํ•™์  ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์ดํ•ด๋Š” ์„ฑ๊ฒฝ์„ ํ†ตํ•˜์—ฌ ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ์ดํ•ดํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ๊ธฐ๋…๊ต ์‹ ํ•™์ž๋“ค์˜ ์ดํ•ด๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•˜์—ฌ ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ์ข€๋” ํ†ตํ•ฉ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ทœ๋ช…ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ฃ„์˜ ๊ด€์ ์—์„œ ๋ณธ ์นผ๋นˆ์€ ์ธ๊ฐ„์ด ์ž๊ธฐ ์ž์‹ ์„ ์„ฑ์ฐฐํ•œ๋‹ค๋ฉด ์ž์‹ ์— ๋Œ€ํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ถ๊ทน์ ์œผ๋กœ ์‹ค๋งํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋งํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ์„ฑ๊ฒฝ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ดํ•ดํ–ˆ๋˜ ์ „ํ†ต์ ์ธ ์‹ ํ•™๊ณผ ๋‹ฌ๋ฆฌ ํ˜„๋Œ€ ์‹ ํ•™์ž๋“ค์€ ์„ฑ๊ฒฝ ์ค‘์‹ฌ์ด ์•„๋‹Œ ์ฒ ํ•™์  ์ฒด๊ณ„๊ฐ€ ์ค‘์‹ฌ๋˜์–ด ์ฒ ํ•™๊ณผ ์„ฑ๊ฒฝ์„ ํ˜ผํ•ฉํ•˜์—ฌ ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ์ดํ•ดํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ๊ณ„์‹œ๋ฅผ ์ด์„ฑ์ , ๊ณผํ•™์ , ์ฒ ํ•™์ ์œผ๋กœ ํ•ด์„ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ํ•œ๊ณ„๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์–ด๊ฑฐ์Šคํ‹ด- ์›์ฃ„๋กœ ํƒ€๋ฝํ•˜์˜€๊ณ  ์€ํ˜œ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์›๋ฐ›๋Š” ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ๋งํ•œ๋‹ค. ํŽ ๋ผ๊ธฐ์šฐ์Šค๋Š” ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์ „์  ํƒ€๋ฝ๊ณผ ๊ตฌ์›์˜ ๋ฌด๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์„ ๋ถ€์ธํ•˜๊ณ  ์ž๋ ฅ๊ตฌ์›์„ ์ฃผ์žฅํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฃจํ„ฐ์˜ ์˜์ธ์‚ฌ์ƒ์€ ์–ด๊ฑฐ์Šคํ‹ด์˜ ์€์ด๋ก ์—์„œ ์™”๋‹ค. ์ฃ„์ธ์ด๋ฉฐ ์˜์ธ์„ ๋™์‹œ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋งํ•œ๋‹ค. ์นผ๋ฑ… - ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ํ˜•์ƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ฐฝ์กฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‚˜ ํƒ€๋ฝ์œผ๋กœ ์™œ๊ณก๋˜์–ด ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค๋„๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ํ˜•์ƒ์ด ํšŒ๋ณต๋˜์–ด์•ผ ํ•จ์„ ๋งํ•œ๋‹ค. ์Š๋ผ์ด์—๋ฅด๋งˆํ—ˆ์™€ ๋ฆฌ์ธจ - ์นธํŠธ๋‚˜ ์‹  ์นธํŠธ์˜ ์ฒ ํ•™ ์ฒด๊ณ„๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ์ˆœ์ˆ˜ํ•œ ๋‚ด์žฌ์  ์ธ๊ฐ„๋ก ์„ ์ฃผ์žฅํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ‚ค์—๋ฅด์ผ€๊ณ ๋ฅด - ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜ ์•ž์— ์„  ๋‹จ๋…์ž์ด๋‹ค. ํ”ผ์กฐ์„ฑ์˜ ๊ฐœ๋…์œผ๋กœ ์„ค๋ช…ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ์ƒ๊ณผ ์‚ฌ์˜ ๊ธด์žฅ ์†์—์„œ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ํ”ผ์กฐ์„ฑ์„ ๊นจ๋‹ซ๊ณ  ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์‹ค์กด์„ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๋ฐ”๋ฅดํŠธ - ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค๋„ ์•ˆ์—์„œ ์ฐธ๋œ ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ฑ์„ ํšŒ๋ณตํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ณธ๋‹ค. ๋ฃจ๋Œํ”„ ๋ถˆํŠธ๋งŒ - ์‹ค์กด์  ์ž๊ธฐ์ดํ•ด๋ฅผ ๊ฐ•์กฐํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ณ ๊ฐ€๋ฅดํ… - ์œจ๋ฒ•๊ณผ ๋ณต์Œ์˜ ์š”๊ตฌ ์•„๋ž˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋Œ€ํ™”์ , ํ™œ๋™์  ์ธ๊ฒฉ ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ๊ธด์žฅ์—์„œ ํ•ด์„ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ‹ธ๋ฆฌํžˆ โ€“ ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ์†Œ์™ธ ์ƒํƒœ์— ๋น ์ง„ ์ž๋กœ ์„ค๋ช…ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋‹ˆ๋ถ€์–ด - ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ํ˜•์ƒ๊ณผ ๋™์‹œ์— ์ฃ„์ธ์„ ๋งํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋‹ˆ๋ถ€์–ด๋Š” ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์ž๊ธฐ์˜ ์œ ํ•œ์„ฑ์„ ์ธ์ •ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ๋†’์•„์ง€๋ ค๊ณ  ๋…ธ๋ ฅํ•˜๋Š” ์กด์žฌ์ž ์ฆ‰ ์ฃ„์ธ์œผ๋กœ ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ๋งํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ชฐํŠธ๋งŒ๊ณผ ํŒ๋„จ๋ฒ ๋ฅด๊ทธ - ๋งˆ๋ฅดํฌ์Šค๋‚˜ ๋ธ”๋กœํ˜ธ, ๋งˆ๋ฅด์ฟ ์ œ ๋“ฑ์˜ ๋ณ€์ฆ๋ฒ•์ ์ด๊ณ  ์ง„ํ™”๋ก ์  ์œ ๋ฌผ์‚ฌ๊ด€์„ ์ค‘์‹ฌ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณดํŽธ์‚ฌ์ ์ด๊ณ  ์ง„ํ™”๋ก ์  ์ธ๊ฐ„ํ•™์„ ์ฃผ์žฅํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„๋ก ์˜ ์ค‘์š”์„ฑ ์‹ ํ•™์€ ์‚ผ์œ„ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์„ ์•„๋Š” ๊ฒƒ๋งŒ ์•„๋‹ˆ๊ณ  ๊ทธ ๋ถ„์˜ ํ˜•์ƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด์ง„ ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ์•„๋Š” ํ•™๋ฌธ์ด๋‹ค. ๋ฌผ๋ก  ์ด ๋‘ ์ฃผ์ œ๋“ค์„ ์™„์ „ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์ดํ•ดํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ๋ถˆ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋‹ค. ์นผ๋นˆ์€ ์ธ๊ฐ„์ด ๊ทธ์˜ ์‚ฌ์ƒ์ด ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์„ ์ฆ‰๊ฐ์ ์œผ๋กœ ํ–ฅํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ํ•œ ์ž๊ธฐ ์ž์‹ ์„ ์•Œ์ง€ ๋ชปํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์นผ๋นˆ์€ ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ์ข…๊ต์˜ ์”จ์•—(divinitatis sensum)์„ ๊ฐ€์กŒ๊ธฐ์— ์ž์—ฐ ๋ณธ๋Šฅ์ ์œผ๋กœ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ดํ•ด๋ ฅ์ด ๋งˆ์Œ์— ์‹ฌ์–ด์ ธ ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ํƒ€๋ฝ์œผ๋กœ ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ฐ”๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ์“ฐ์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜๊ณ  ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์„ ์•„๋Š” ์ฐธ๋œ ์ง€์‹์„ ์ €๋ฒ„๋ ธ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ณ ๋Œ€ ํ—ฌ๋ผ์—์„œ๋Š” ๋„ˆ ์ž์‹ ์„ ์•Œ๋ผ๊ณ  ๋งํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด ๋ง์€ ๋ธํ”ผ(Delphi) ์‹ ์ „์˜ ์‹ ํƒ์ด์—ˆ๊ณ , ์†Œํฌ๋ผํ…Œ์Šค์˜ ๋ง๋กœ๋„ ์œ ๋ช…ํ•˜๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ์žˆ์–ด์„œ ์ž์‹ ๋“ค์„ ์•„๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ์ฒ ํ•™์  ๋ช…์ œ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์—˜๋ฆฌ์ž๋ฒ ์Šค ํ€ด๋ธ”๋Ÿฌ๋กœ์Šค์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์€ ์ธ๊ฐ„์ด ํ‰์ƒ โ€˜์ง„์ •ํ•œ ์ž์‹ ์ด ๋˜๋Š” ๋ฒ•โ€™(์ž์‹ ์˜ ์ง„์ •ํ•œ ๋ชจ์Šต์„ ์•„๋Š” ๊ฒƒ)์ด ์ธ์ƒ์˜ ๋ชฉํ‘œ๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ณธ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์ž๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์„ฑ์ฐฐํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ๊ถ๊ทน์ ์œผ๋กœ ์‹ค๋งํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์นผ๋นˆ์€ ๋งํ•œ๋‹ค. ์„ฑ๊ฒฝ์€ ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ์•„๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์ฒ ํ•™์ , ๋„๋•์  ๊ฐ€์น˜๋ฅผ ๋„˜์–ด ์˜์ ์ธ ์˜์›ํ•œ ์ง„๋ฆฌ์™€ ๊ด€๋ จ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์„ ๋ฐ”๋กœ ์•Œ๊ณ  ๊ทธ ๋ถ„์„ ์„ฌ๊ธฐ๋ฉฐ ๊ทธ๋ฅผ ์˜ํ™”๋กญ๊ฒŒ ํ•  ๋•Œ, ๊ถ๊ทน์ ์ธ ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์กด์žฌ์˜ ๊ฐ€์น˜๊ฐ€ ๋“œ๋Ÿฌ๋‚œ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ํ˜•์ƒ๋Œ€๋กœ ์ง€์€ ๋ฐ›์€ ์กด์žฌ๋กœ์„œ ์ž์‹ ์„ ์•„๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ๋งํ•  ํ•„์š”๋„ ์—†์ด ์ค‘์š”ํ•˜๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋ฏ€๋กœ ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์ด ์„ธ์šฐ์‹  ์ฐฝ์กฐ ๋ชฉ์ ์„ ์‹คํ˜„์„ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ž์‹ ์„ ์•Œ์•„์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค. โ€œํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์ด ๊ฐ€๋ผ์‚ฌ๋Œ€ ์šฐ๋ฆฌ์˜ ํ˜•์ƒ์„ ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์šฐ๋ฆฌ์˜ ๋ชจ์–‘๋Œ€๋กœ ์šฐ๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์„ ๋งŒ๋“ค๊ณ  ๊ทธ๋กœ ๋ฐ”๋‹ค์˜ ๊ณ ๊ธฐ์™€ ๊ณต์ค‘์˜ ์ƒˆ์™€ ์œก์ถ•๊ณผ ์˜จ ๋•…๊ณผ ๋•…์— ๊ธฐ๋Š” ๋ชจ๋“  ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋‹ค์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ฒŒ ํ•˜์ž ํ•˜์‹œ๊ณ  ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์ด ์ž๊ธฐ ํ˜•์ƒ ๊ณง ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ํ˜•์ƒ๋Œ€๋กœ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์„ ์ฐฝ์กฐํ•˜์‹œ๋˜ ๋‚จ์ž์™€ ์—ฌ์ž๋ฅผ ์ฐฝ์กฐํ•˜์‹œ๊ณ  ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์ด ๊ทธ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ๋ณต์„ ์ฃผ์‹œ๋ฉฐ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์ด ๊ทธ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ์ด๋ฅด์‹œ๋˜ ์ƒ์œกํ•˜๊ณ  ๋ฒˆ์„ฑํ•˜์—ฌ ๋•…์— ์ถฉ๋งŒํ•˜๋ผ, ๋•…์„ ์ •๋ณตํ•˜๋ผ, ๋ฐ”๋‹ค์˜ ๋ฌผ๊ณ ๊ธฐ์™€ ํ•˜๋Š˜์˜ ์ƒˆ์™€ ๋•…์— ์›€์ง์ด๋Š” ๋ชจ๋“  ์ƒ๋ฌผ์„ ๋‹ค์Šค๋ฆฌ๋ผ ํ•˜์‹œ๋‹ˆ๋ผ.โ€(์ฐฝ 1: 16-28) ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ํ˜•์ƒ(๋ชจ์–‘)์œผ๋กœ ์ฐฝ์กฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ์‚ฌ์‹ค์ด ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์ฐธ๋œ ์ •์ฒด์„ฑ์„ ๋จผ์ € ๋ณด์—ฌ์ค€๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ์Šค์Šค๋กœ ์กด์žฌํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๊ณ  ๋‚˜ ๋˜ํ•œ ์Šค์Šค๋กœ ๋…๋ฆฝ์„ฑ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง„ ์กด์žฌ๊ฐ€ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์ด ์ฐฝ์กฐํ•˜์‹  ์„ธ๊ณ„๋ฅผ ๋Œ๋ณด๋Š” ์ฑ…์ž„์ž๋กœ ๋ถ€๋ฆ„์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฐ ์ฒญ์ง€๊ธฐ ์‚ฌ๋ช…์—์„œ ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ์ฃผ๊ถŒ์„ ์ธ์ •ํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ์˜ ์˜๊ด‘์„ ์œ„ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ(๊ณ ์ „10:31, ๋กฌ11:36)๊ณผ ๊ทธ๋ฅผ ์˜์›ํ† ๋ก ์ฆ๊ฑฐ์›Œํ•˜๋Š” ์‚ถ์„(์‹œ73:23-28) ์‚ด๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค(WSC,Q.1.1, WLC.Q.1.1). ์šฐ๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ์–ด๋–ป๊ฒŒ ์ด๋Ÿฐ ์‚ถ์„ ์‚ด ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š”๊ฐ€(WSC.Q.2)? ๊ตฌ์•ฝ๊ณผ ์‹ ์•ฝ์„ฑ๊ฒฝ์— ํฌํ•จ๋œ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ๋ง์”€์€ ์šฐ๋ฆฌ๋กœ ๊ทธ๋ฅผ ์–ด๋–ป๊ฒŒ ์˜ํ™”๋กญ๊ณ  ์ฆ๊ฑฐ์›Œํ•˜๋Š”์ง€๋ฅผ ์ธ๋„ํ•˜๋Š” ์œ ์ผํ•œ ๊ทœ์น™์ด๋‹ค(WSC. Q.2.A). ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์˜ ํ•œ๊ณ„์™€ ์ฃ„์ธ์ธ ๊ฒƒ์„ ์•Œ์•„์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ํ˜•์ƒ์„ ์ž…์€ ์กด์žฌ์ž„์—๋„ ๋ถˆ๊ตฌํ•˜๊ณ  ํƒ€๋ฝํ•œ ์ฃ„์ธ์œผ๋กœ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ์ฐธ๋œ ์„ ์„ ํ–‰ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋Š” ๋ฌด๋Šฅํ•œ, ์ „์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ€ํŒจํ•œ ์ธ๊ฐ„์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ์ „์ ์œผ๋กœ ํƒ€๋ฝํ•œ ์ฃ„์ธ์œผ๋กœ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜๊ณผ์˜ ๋ฐ”๋ฅธ ๊ด€๊ณ„๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์งˆ ์ˆ˜ ์—†๊ณ  ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์‚ฌ๋ช…์„ ๋ฐ”๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ์‹คํ˜„ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋Š” ์กด์žฌ์ด๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ์‚ฌ๋ž‘์˜ ๊ตฌ์„ธ์ฃผ๋ฅผ ํ•„์š”๋กœ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ํƒ€๋ฝํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ์—ฌ์ „ํžˆ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ํ˜•์ƒ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง„ ์กด์žฌ์š”, ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ์‚ฌ๋ž‘์„ ๋ฐ›๋Š” ์กด์žฌ์ด๋‹ค. ์ฐธ๋œ ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ฑ์˜ ํšŒ๋ณต์€ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์Šค์Šค๋กœ ์ด๋ฃฐ ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ์˜ˆ์ˆ˜ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค๋„๋กœ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์›Œ์ง€์ง€ ์•Š์œผ๋ฉด ์ง„์ •ํ•œ ์ธ๊ฐ„์œผ๋กœ ์กด์žฌํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋‹ค. ๋ณต์Œ์€ ์ง„์ •ํ•œ ์ธ๊ฐ„์ด ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค๋„ ์˜ˆ์ˆ˜ ์•ˆ์—์„œ๋งŒ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์„ฑ๊ฒฝ์€ ์ฐธ๋œ ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ๋ฐ”๋ฅธ ์‚ฌ๋ช…๊ณผ ์˜๋ฌด ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์„ ๋ฏฟ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์— ๋Œ€ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์ด ์ฃผ์žฅํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„๋ก  ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•๋“ค ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ์ดํ•ดํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ํ•™๋ฌธ์  ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์œผ๋กœ ์ธ๋ฅ˜ํ•™์ , ์ž์—ฐ๊ณผํ•™์ , ์‚ฌํšŒํ•™์ , ์‹ฌ๋ฆฌํ•™์ , ์ฒ ํ•™์  ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ• ๋“ฑ ๋งŽ์€ ๊ฒƒ์ด ์žˆ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์‹ค์กด์ฃผ์˜์  ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์„ ์ถ”๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ์ž๋“ค์€ ์ƒ์‹ค๋œ ์ž์•„๋ฅผ ์ฐพ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ์ธ๊ฐ„ํ•™์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ณธ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์ฐธ๋‹ค์šด ์ธ๊ฐ„๋ก  ์ดํ•ด์˜ ์‹ ํ•™์  ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์ด๋ž€ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ๊ณ„์‹œ๋ฅผ ์˜ฌ๋ฐ”๋ฅธ ์„ฑ๊ฒฝ์  ํ•ด์„์„ ํ†ตํ•˜์—ฌ ์ถ”๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์ด๋‹ค. ์ด ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์˜ ํƒ€๋‹น์„ฑ์€ ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์ „์ ์ธ ๋ถ€ํŒจ๋ฅผ ์ „์ œํ•˜๊ณ  ๊ตฌ์›๊ณผ ํšŒ๋ณต์„ ๋งํ•˜๋Š” ์„ฑ๊ฒฝ์œผ๋กœ ํ•ด์„๋˜์–ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค(scriptura sui ipsius interpres). ์‚ผ์œ„ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์˜ฌ๋ฐ”๋ฅธ ์ดํ•ด๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•˜์—ฌ ์ž์—ฐ์Šค๋Ÿฝ๊ฒŒ ์ธ๊ฐ„์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋…ผ์˜๊ฐ€ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์ง€๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์ธ๊ฐ„๋ก ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ํ’์„ฑํ•œ ์ดํ•ด๋Š” ๊ธฐ๋…๋ก , ๊ตฌ์›๋ก  ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๊ตํšŒ๋ก ์œผ๋กœ ์—ฐ๊ฒฐ๋˜์–ด์„œ ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰์ธ ์ข…๋ง๋ก ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋„์›€์ด ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ตœ๊ทผ ์ธ๊ฐ„๋ก ์˜ ์ฃผ์ œ๋“ค ์ธ๊ฐ„๋ก ์˜ ์ฃผ์ œ๋Š” ์ฃผ๋กœ ์ „ํ†ต์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ๊ธฐ์›, ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์„ฑ์งˆ, ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ํ˜•์ƒ, ์ฃ„์ด๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์ตœ๊ทผ ์ธ๊ฐ„์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์กด์žฌ๋ก ์  ์งˆ๋ฌธ์ด ์‹ค์กด์ฃผ์˜ ์ฒ ํ•™์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ ์ผ์–ด๋‚ฌ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ง„ํ™”๋ก ์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒ๋ฌผํ•™์  ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์ดํ•ด๋กœ ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ  ๊ณผํ•™์˜ ๋ฐœ๋‹ฌ๋กœ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ๋ณต์ œ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋‹ค๋ฃจ์–ด์ง€๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ์ „์ž๊ณตํ•™์˜ ๋ฐœ์ „์œผ๋กœ ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์œ ์ „ ์ •๋ณด๋ฅผ ํ•ด์„ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐ์กด์˜ ์˜ํ˜ผ, ์ฃ„, ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ํ˜•์ƒ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์ฃผ์ œ๋Š” ์นธํŠธ์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ ์œค๋ฆฌ์ ์ธ ์˜์—ญ์—์„œ ์ดํ•ด๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌํšŒํ•™์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ์‚ฌํšŒ์™€ ๊ด€๊ณ„ ์†์—์„œ ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์ ์ธ ์—ญํ• ์„ ๊ฐ•์กฐํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒฝํ–ฅ์ด 20์„ธ๊ธฐ์— ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. 20์„ธ๊ธฐ๋Š” ์‹ ํ•™์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ธฐ๋…๋ก ์„ ๋งŽ์ด ๋‹ค๋ฃจ์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ์‹ค์กด์ฃผ์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ ์ธ๊ฐ„์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์ดํ•ด์˜ ์žฅ์„ ์—ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ฑ๊ฒฝ์˜ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์ธ๊ฐ„์ด ๋ˆ„๊ตฌ์ธ์ง€์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์งˆ๋ฌธ(์‹œํŽธ 8: 4; ์šฅ 7: 17; 15: 14; ์‹œ 144: 3)์€ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค๋„์™€ ๊ด€๋ จํ•˜์—ฌ ๋‹ตํ•˜์—ฌ ์ง„๋‹ค. ํžˆ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์„œ 2์žฅ 6-9์ ˆ โ€œ์ž ๊ฐ„ ๋™์•ˆ ์ฒœ์‚ฌ๋ณด๋‹ค ๋ชปํ•˜๊ฒŒโ€๋˜์‹  ๋ถ„์œผ๋กœ, ์˜๊ด‘๊ณผ ์กด๊ท€๋กœ ๊ด€์„ ์“ฐ์‹œ๊ณ  ๋งŒ๋ฌผ์ด ๊ทธ ๋ฐœ์•„๋ž˜ ๋ณต์ข…์ผ€ ๋œ ์ด ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค๋„ ์•ˆ์—์„œ ํ•ด๊ฒฐ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ํ˜•์ƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ฐฝ์กฐ๋œ ํ”ผ์กฐ๋ฌผ์ด๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ๋ชธ๊ณผ ์˜ํ˜ผ์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋œ ์š”์†Œ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง„ ์กด์žฌ์ด๋‹ค. ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ํ˜•์ƒ๊ณผ ์˜ํ˜ผ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง„ ์กด์žฌ๋กœ์„œ ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ๋™๋ฌผ๊ณผ ๊ตฌ๋ณ„๋œ ์กด์žฌ์ด๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ์ž์œ ์˜์ง€๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง„ ์กด์žฌ์ด๋‹ค. ํƒ€๋ฝ์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์›์—๋Š” ๋ฌด๋Šฅ๋ ฅํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ง€, ์ •, ์˜๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง„ ์ž์ด๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ์–ธ์–ด๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ํ•ด์„ํ•™์  ์กด์žฌ์ด๋‹ค. ์ด๊ฒƒ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฅ˜์˜ ๋ฌธ๋ช…์„ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด ๋‚˜๊ฐ„๋‹ค. ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์€ ๋ง์”€์œผ๋กœ ์ฒœ์ง€๋ฅผ ์ฐฝ์กฐํ•˜์…จ๊ณ , ์•„๋‹ด์—๊ฒŒ ๋ง์”€ํ•˜์…จ๊ณ , ๊ทธ์˜ ๋ฐฑ์„ฑ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ๋ง์”€์„ ์•ฝ์†ํ•˜์…จ๋‹ค. ๋ง์”€(๋กœ๊ณ ์Šค)์ด์‹  ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์€ ์ž์‹ ์ด ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ๋ชจ์Šต์„ ์ทจํ•˜์—ฌ ์ธ๊ฐ„๋“ค๊ณผ ๋ง์”€ํ•˜์…จ๋‹ค. ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ๋ง์”€ํ•˜์‹œ๋Š” ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ๋ชจ์Šต์„ ๋‹ฎ์•˜๊ธฐ์— ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ์–ธ์–ด๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ์กด์žฌ์ด๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ๋ช…๋ น์„ ๋ถ€์—ฌ ๋ฐ›์€ ์กด์žฌ์ž์ด๋‹ค. ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํ”ผ์กฐ๋ฌผ๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ฐ›์€ ๋Šฅ๋™์  ๋ช…๋ น์„ ๋ฐ›์€ ์กด์žฌ์ด๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ๋ช…๋ น์— ์ˆœ์ข…ํ•ด์•ผ ํ•  ์กด์žฌ์ด๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜๊ณผ ์–ธ์•ฝ๊ด€๊ณ„๋กœ ๊ทธ ์กด์žฌ์˜ ์ƒํƒœ๊ฐ€ ๋“œ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ํ–‰์œ„์–ธ์•ฝ๊ณผ ์€ํ˜œ์–ธ์•ฝ ์†์—์„œ ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ๋ชจ์Šต์ด ์ž˜ ๋“œ๋Ÿฌ๋‚œ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ํƒ€๋ฝํ•œ ์กด์žฌ๋กœ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ํ˜•์ƒ์ด ๋ถ€ํŒจ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ์ฃ„์ธ์ด๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ์˜ˆ์ˆ˜ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค๋„๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ตฌ์† ๋ฐ›์•„ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ํ”ผ์กฐ๋ฌผ๋กœ ๊ฑฐ๋“ญ ๋‚ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์กด์žฌ์ด๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค๋„์˜ ์˜ท์„ ์ž…์œผ๋ฉด ์˜์ธ์ด๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ๋•…์œ„์—์„œ ๊ณ ํ†ต๊ณผ ํ›ˆ๋ จ์„ ํ†ตํ•˜์—ฌ ์„ฑ๋ น๋‹˜์œผ๋กœ ์„ฑํ™”๋˜์–ด์•ผ ํ•  ์กด์žฌ์ด๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค๋„์˜ ์˜ค์‹ฌ์„ ํ†ตํ•˜์—ฌ ์˜์œก์ด ์™„์ „ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋  ์ข…๋ง๋ก ์ ์ธ ์กด์žฌ์ด๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค๋„์™€ ๋”๋ถˆ์–ด ์˜์›ํ•œ ์ƒ๋ช…์— ๊ฑฐํ•˜๋Š” ์ž๊ฐ€ ๋œ๋‹ค. ํ•ด์„์ž๋กœ์„œ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ํ•ด์„ํ•˜๋Š” ์กด์žฌ์ด๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์ฃผ์œ„๋ฅผ ๋‘˜๋Ÿฌ์‹ผ ๋ชจ๋“  ๊ฒƒ๋“ค์„ ๋ณด๊ณ , ๋Š๋ผ๊ณ , ์ƒ๊ฐํ•˜์—ฌ ์–ธ์–ด๋กœ ํ‘œํ˜„ํ•˜๋Š” ํ•ด์„์  ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์„ ๊ฐ–๊ณ  ๊ทธ ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋„๋ก ์ฐฝ์กฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฐฝ์กฐ๋œ ์•„๋‹ด์ด ์ธ๋ฅ˜ ์ตœ์ดˆ๋กœ ํ•œ ์ผ์€ ๋ฐ”๋กœ ํ•ด์„ ํ–‰์œ„์˜€๋‹ค. ์ฐฝ์„ธ๊ธฐ 2์žฅ 19-23์ ˆ์€ ์•„๋‹ด์˜ ํ•ด์„์ ์ธ ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์„ ๋ณด์—ฌ์ฃผ๋Š” ์ค‘์š”ํ•œ ๊ธฐ๋ก์ด๋‹ค. โ€œ์—ฌํ˜ธ์™€ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์ด ํ™์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ์ข… ๋“ค์ง์Šน๊ณผ ๊ณต์ค‘์˜ ๊ฐ์ข… ์ƒˆ๋ฅผ ์ง€์œผ์‹œ๊ณ  ์•„๋‹ด์ด ์–ด๋–ป๊ฒŒ ์ด๋ฆ„์„ ์ง“๋‚˜ ๋ณด์‹œ๋ ค๊ณ  ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ๋“ค์„ ๊ทธ์—๊ฒŒ๋กœ ์ด๋Œ์–ด ์ด๋ฅด์‹œ๋‹ˆ ์•„๋‹ด์ด ๊ฐ ์ƒ๋ฌผ์„ ์ผ์ปซ๋Š” ๋ฐ”๊ฐ€ ๊ณง ๊ทธ ์ด๋ฆ„์ด๋ผ. ์•„๋‹ด์ด ๋ชจ๋“  ์œก์ถ•๊ณผ ๊ณต์ค‘์˜ ์ƒˆ์™€ ๋“ค์˜ ๋ชจ๋“  ์ง์Šน์—๊ฒŒ ์ด๋ฆ„์„ ์ฃผ๋‹ˆ๋ผ ์•„๋‹ด์ด ๋•๋Š” ๋ฐฐํ•„์ด ์—†์œผ๋ฏ€๋กœ. ... ์•„๋‹ด์ด ๊ฐ€๋กœ๋˜ ์ด๋Š” ๋‚ด ๋ผˆ ์ค‘์˜ ๋ผˆ์š” ์‚ด ์ค‘์˜ ์‚ด์ด๋ผ ์ด๊ฒƒ์„ ๋‚จ์ž์—๊ฒŒ์„œ ์ทจํ•˜์˜€์€์ฆ‰ ์—ฌ์ž๋ผ ์นญํ•˜๋ฆฌ๋ผ ํ•˜๋‹ˆ๋ผ.โ€ ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์„œ ์•„๋‹ด์€ ์–ธ์–ด๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ์ด๋ฆ„์„ ์ง“๋Š” ํ•ด์„์ ์ธ ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์„ ์œ ๊ฐ์—†์ด ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์— ์˜ํ•ด ํ•ด์„์ ์ธ ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์„ ํƒ€๊ณ ๋‚ฌ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ์˜ ์‚ถ์˜ ํ˜„์žฅ์—์„œ ์ด ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜ ์•ž์—์„œ ์˜๋ฌด์ด๋ฉฐ ํŠน๊ถŒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋งํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šค์ฒœ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ์žˆ์–ด์„œ ์ž์‹ ๋“ค์˜ ์‚ถ์˜ ํ˜„์žฅ์„ ํ•ด์„ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ํ•„์—ฐ์ ์ธ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ฉฐ ๋งค์šฐ ์ค‘์š”ํ•œ ์‚ฌ์—ญ์ž„์„ ๊นจ๋‹ซ๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ์›”ํ† ์Šคํ† ํ”„(Nicholas Wolterstorff)๋Š” ํ•ด์„์ด๋ž€ ์šฐ๋ฆฌ์˜ ์‚ถ์— ์Šค๋ฉฐ์žˆ์–ด์„œ ํ”ผํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๊ณ  ํ•ด์„ ์—†์ด ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ์ด ์„ธ์ƒ์—์„œ ์‚ด์•„๊ฐˆ ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šค์ฒœ์€ ์„ธ์ƒ์„ ์˜ฌ๋ฐ”๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ํ•ด์„ํ•  ์ค„ ์•Œ๊ณ  ๋” ๋‚˜์•„๊ฐ€ ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šค์ฒœ์˜ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด๋ฟ๋งŒ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ผ ์ธ๋ฅ˜์—๊ฒŒ ์˜ฌ๋ฐ”๋ฅธ ํ•ด์„์  ์œ ์‚ฐ์„ ๋‚จ๊ฒจํ•  ์ฑ…์ž„์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋งˆ๋ฅดํ‹ด ๋ถ€๋ฒ„(Martin Buber)๋Š” ๊ธฐ๋…๊ต๊ฐ€ ์„ธ์ƒ์— ์ค€ ๊ฒƒ์€ ํ•ด์„ํ•™์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ์šฐ๋ฆฌ์—๊ฒŒ ํ•ด์„ํ•™์˜ ์ค‘์š”์„ฑ์„ ๋‹ค์‹œ ํ•œ ๋ฒˆ ์ธ์‹ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•ด ์ค€๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ์กฐ์ง์‹ ํ•™ Human nature, Person ์ฒ ํ•™์  ์ธ๊ฐ„ํ•™ Theological anthropology List of important publications in anthropology Christian psychology ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์ฐธ๊ณ  ๋ฌธํ—Œ Blasquez, N, El concepto del substantia segun san Agustin, ""Augustinus" 14 (1969), pp.ย 305โ€“350; 15 (1970), pp.ย 369โ€“383; 16 (1971), pp.ย 69โ€“79. (English translation Theology of the New Testament 2 vols, London: SCM, 1952, 1955). The leading scholarly reference supporting a holistic anthropology (similar to soul sleep) Gianni, A., Il problema antropologico, Roma 1965. Gilson, ร‰tienne, Gregory of Nyssa, Anthropology, in: History of Christian Philosophy in the Middle Ages, (1980 reprinted 1985), London: Sheed & Ward, pp.ย 56โ€“59, . Couturier, Charles, SJ, La structure mรฉtaphysique de l'homme d'aprรจs saint Augustin, in: Augustinus Magister. Congrรจs International Augustinien. Communications, (1954), Paris, vol. 1, pp.ย 543โ€“550 Hendrics, E. Platonisches und Biblisches Denken bei Augustinus, in: 'Augustinus Magister. Congrรจs International Augustinien. Communications, (1954), Paris , vol. 1. (English translation Man in the NT. London: Epworth, 1963) Mann, W. E., Inner-Life Ethics, in: Masutti, Egidio, Il problema del corpo in San Agostino, Roma: Borla, 1989, p.ย 230, ๊ธฐ๋…๊ต์™€ ๊ณผํ•™ ๊ธฐ๋…๊ต ์šฉ์–ด ์กฐ์ง์‹ ํ•™ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ๊ธฐ๋…๊ต ์‹ ํ•™ ์ฃ„ ๋ชธ ์˜ ํ˜ผ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian%20anthropology
Christian anthropology
In the context of Christian theology, Christian anthropology is the study of the human (anthropos) as it relates to God. It differs from the social science of anthropology, which primarily deals with the comparative study of the physical and social characteristics of humanity across times and places. One aspect of Christian anthropology studies the innate nature or constitution of the human, known as the nature of humankind. It is concerned with the relationship between notions such as body, soul and spirit which together form a person, based on their descriptions in the Bible. There are three traditional views of the human constitution โ€“ trichotomism, dichotomism and monism (in the sense of anthropology). Early Christian writers Gregory of Nyssa The reference source for Gregory's anthropology is his treatise . His concept of man is founded on the ontological distinction between the created and uncreated. Man is a material creation, and thus limited, but infinite in that his immortal soul has an indefinite capacity to grow closer to the divine. Gregory believed that the soul is created simultaneous to the creation of the body (in opposition to Origen, who speculated on the soul's preexistence), and that embryos were thus persons. To Gregory, the human being is exceptional being created in the image of God. Humanity is theomorphic both in having self-awareness and free will, the latter which gives each individual existential power, because to Gregory, in disregarding God one negates one's own existence. In the Song of Songs, Gregory metaphorically describes human lives as paintings created by apprentices to a master: the apprentices (the human wills) imitate their master's work (the life of Christ) with beautiful colors (virtues), and thus man strives to be a reflection of Christ. Gregory, in stark contrast to most thinkers of his age, saw great beauty in the Fall: from Adam's sin from two perfect humans would eventually arise myriad. Augustine of Hippo Augustine of Hippo was one of the first Christian ancient Latin authors with very clear anthropological vision. He saw the human being as a perfect unity of two substances: soul and body. He was much closer in this anthropological view to Aristotle than to Plato. In his late treatise On Care to Be Had for the Dead sec. 5 (420 AD) he insisted that the body pertains to the essence of the human person: Augustine's favourite figure to describe body-soul unity is marriage: caro tua, coniunx tua โ€“ your body is your wife. Initially, the two elements were in perfect harmony. After the fall of humanity they are now experiencing dramatic combat between one another. They are two categorically different things. The body is a three-dimensional object composed of the four elements, whereas the soul has no spatial dimensions. Soul is a kind of substance, participating in reason, fit for ruling the body. Augustine was not preoccupied, as Plato and Descartes were, with going too much into details in efforts to explain the metaphysics of the soul-body union. It sufficed for him to admit that they were metaphysically distinct. To be a human is to be a composite of soul and body, and that the soul is superior to the body. The latter statement is grounded in his hierarchical classification of things into those that merely exist, those that exist and live, and those that exist, live, and have intelligence or reason. According to N. Blasquez, Augustine's dualism of substances of the body and soul doesn't stop him from seeing the unity of body and soul as a substance itself. Following ancient philosophers he defined man as a rational mortal animal โ€“ animal rationale mortale. Terms or components Body The body (Greek soma) is the corporeal or physical aspect of a human being. Christians have traditionally believed that the body will be resurrected at the end of the age. Rudolf Bultmann states the following: "That soma belongs inseparably, constitutively, to human existence is most clearly evident from the fact that Paul cannot conceive even of a future human existence after death, `when that which is perfect is come' as an existence without soma โ€“ in contrast to the view of those in Corinth who deny the resurrection (1 Cor. 15, especially vv. 35ff.)." "Man does not have a soma; he is a soma" Soul The semantic domain of biblical soul is based on the Hebrew word nepes, which presumably means โ€œbreathโ€ or โ€œbreathing beingโ€. This word never means an immortal soul or an incorporeal part of the human being that can survive death of the body as the spirit of dead. This word usually designates the person as a whole or its physical life. In the Septuagint nepes is mostly translated as psyche () and, exceptionally, in the Book of Joshua as (), that is "breathing being". The New Testament follows the terminology of the Septuagint, and thus uses the word psyche in a manner performatively similar to that of the Hebrew semantic domain, that is, as an invisible power (or ever more, for Platonists, immortal and immaterial) that gives life and motion to the body and is responsible for its attributes. In Patristic thought, towards the end of the 2nd century psyche was understood in more a Greek than a Hebrew way, and it was contrasted with the body. In the 3rd century, with the influence of Origen, there was the establishing of the doctrine of the inherent immortality of the soul and its divine nature. Origen also taught the transmigration of the souls and their preexistence, but these views were officially rejected in 553 in the Fifth Ecumenical Council. Inherent immortality of the soul was accepted among western and eastern theologians throughout the middle ages, and after the Reformation, as evidenced by the Westminster Confession. On the other hand, a number of modern Protestant scholars have adopted views similar to conditional immortality, including Edward Fudge and Clark Pinnock; however the majority of adherents hold the traditional doctrine.> In the last six decades, conditional immortality, or better "immortality by grace" (, kata charin athanasia), of the soul has also been widely accepted among Eastern Orthodox theologians, by returning to the views of the late 2nd century, where immortality was still considered as a gift granted with the value of Jesus' death and resurrection. The Seventh-day Adventist Church has held to conditional immortality since the mid-19th century. Spirit The spirit (Hebrew , Greek , , which can also mean "breath") is likewise an immaterial component. It is often used interchangeably with "soul", psyche, although trichotomists believe that the spirit is distinct from the soul. "When Paul speaks of the pneuma of man he does not mean some higher principle within him or some special intellectual or spiritual faculty of his, but simply his self, and the only questions is whether the self is regarded in some particular aspect when it is called pneuma. In the first place, it apparently is regarded in the same way as when it is called psyche โ€“ viz. as the self that lives in man's attitude, in the orientation of his will." Charles Taylor has argued in Sources of the Self: Making of Modern Identity that the attempt to reduce spirit or soul to the "self" is an anachronistic project claiming historical precedence, when in reality it is a modern, Western, secular reading of the Scriptures. Constitution or nature of the person Christian theologians have historically differed over the issue of how many distinct components constitute the human being. Two parts (Dichotomism) The most popular view, affirmed by a large number of lay faithful and theologians from many Christian traditions, is that the human being is formed of two components: material (body/flesh) and spiritual (soul/spirit). The soul or spirit departs from the body at death, and will be reunited with the body at the resurrection. Three parts (Trichotomism) A significant minority of theologians across the denominational and theological spectrum, in both the East and the West, have held that human beings are made up of three distinct components: body or flesh, soul, and spirit. This is known technically as trichotomism. The biblical texts typically used to support this position are and . In the personhood of Jesus Christ God there are a Body, a rational Soul and the third person of the Holy Spirit God whom He received in the Baptism. One part (Monism) Modern theologians increasingly hold to the view that the human being is an indissoluble unity. This is known as holism or monism. The body and soul are not considered separate components of a person, but rather as two facets of a united whole. It is argued that this more accurately represents Hebrew thought, whereas body-soul dualism is more characteristic of classical Greek Platonist and Cartesian thought. Monism is the official position of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, which adheres to the doctrine of "soul sleep". Monism also appears to be more consistent with certain physicalist interpretations of modern neuroscience, which has indicated that the so-called "higher functions" of the mind are dependent upon or emergent from brain structure, not the independent workings of an immaterial soul as was previously thought. An influential exponent of this view was liberal theologian Rudolf Bultmann. Oscar Cullmann was influential in popularizing it. Origin of humanity The Bible teaches in the book of Genesis the humans were created by God. Some Christians believe that this must have involved a miraculous creative act, while others are comfortable with the idea that God worked through the evolutionary process. God's image in the human The Book of Genesis also teaches that human beings, male and female, were created in the image of God. The exact meaning of this has been the subject of theological debate throughout church history. Origin/transmission of the soul There are two opposing views about how the soul originates in each human being. Creationism teaches that God creates a "fresh" soul within each human embryo at or some time shortly after conception. Note: This is not to be confused with creationism as a view of the origins of life and the universe. Traducianism, by contrast, teaches that the soul is inherited from the individual's parents, along with his or her biological material. Human nature Most Christian Theology traditionally teaches that human nature originates holy but is corrupted by the fall. Part of the development of church doctrine has historically been concerned with discerning what role the human plays in โ€œredemption" from that fall. The debate about human nature between Augustine and Pelagius had to do with the nature of sin and its relation to the state of the human. Pelagius believed that man's nature was inherently good and taught that all children are born โ€œas a fresh creation of God and therefore good.โ€ For Pelagius freedom is a constitute part of human nature. Humanityโ€™s capacity to choose is inherited and therefore is untainted. Human are capable of following divine laws (such as the Ten Commandment) and live morally. The inherited ability to choose is itself a grace of creation. Augustine believed that all humans are born into sin because each has inherited a sinful nature due to Adamโ€™s original sin. Without grace from God humanity is incapable of choosing good and therefore of pursuing God. Salvation then, becomes, either a cooperation between human will and divine grace (see Synergism) or an act of divine will apart from human agency (see Monergism.). Pelagiusโ€™s position was condemned at the Council of Carthage (418) and the Council of Ephesus and the Second Council of Orange. However the councils did soften Augustineโ€™s position on Predestination. During the Protestant Reformation Monergism had a resurgence through John Calvinโ€™s devolvement of the doctrine of Total Depravity. Within Protestant Circles a debate happened between followers of John Calvin (Calvinists or Reformed Tradition) and Followers of Jacobus Arminius (Arminians) on the nature of grace in the process of salvation. Calvin and Arminius follow Augustine in the doctrine of total depravity. However, Arminians hold that God restores humanityโ€™s free will, concerning the ability to choose salvation where as classic Calvinism holds to a strict monergism. Synergism and its affirmation of the participation of human will in salvation is the classic Patristic position as well as the position of the Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox Church, as well many Arminian influenced Protestant Churches. Whereas Monergism has become the position of most churches that are a part of the Reformed Tradition. Death and afterlife Christian anthropology has implications for beliefs about death and the afterlife. The Christian church has traditionally taught that the soul of each individual separates from the body at death, to be reunited at the resurrection. This is closely related to the doctrine of the immortality of the soul. For example, the Westminster Confession (chapter XXXII) states: "The bodies of men, after death, return to dust, and see corruption: but their souls, which neither die nor sleep, having an immortal subsistence, immediately return to God who gave them" Intermediate state The question then arises: where exactly does the disembodied soul "go" at death? Theologians refer to this subject as the intermediate state. The Old Testament speaks of a place called sheol where the spirits of the dead reside. In the New Testament, hades, the classical Greek realm of the dead, takes the place of sheol. In particular, Jesus teaches in Luke 16:19โ€“31 (Lazarus and Dives) that hades consists of two separate "sections", one for the righteous and one for the unrighteous. His teaching is consistent with intertestamental Jewish thought on the subject. Fully developed Christian theology goes a step further; on the basis of such texts as Luke 23:43 and Philippians 1:23, it has traditionally been taught that the souls of the dead are received immediately either into heaven or hell, where they will experience a foretaste of their eternal destiny prior to the resurrection. (Roman Catholicism teaches a third possible location, Purgatory, though this is denied by Protestants and Eastern Orthodox.) "the souls of the righteous, being then made perfect in holiness, are received into the highest heavens, where they behold the face of God, in light and glory, waiting for the full redemption of their bodies. And the souls of the wicked are cast into hell, where they remain in torments and utter darkness, reserved to the judgment of the great day." (Westminster Confession) Some Christian groups that stress a monistic anthropology deny that the soul can exist consciously apart from the body. For example, the Seventh-day Adventist Church teaches that the intermediate state is an unconscious sleep; this teaching is informally known as "soul sleep". Final state In Christian belief, both the righteous and the unrighteous will be resurrected at the last judgment. The righteous will receive incorruptible, immortal bodies (1 Corinthians 15), while the unrighteous will be sent to the "Lake of Fire" or "Gehenna". Traditionally, Christians have believed that hell will be a place of eternal physical and psychological punishment. In the last two centuries, annihilationism and universalism have become more popular. See also Human nature, Person Philosophical anthropology List of important publications in anthropology Christian psychology References Bibliography Blasquez, N, El concepto de substantia segun san Agustin, ""Augustinus" 14 (1969), pp.ย 305โ€“350; 15 (1970), pp.ย 369โ€“383; 16 (1971), pp.ย 69โ€“79. (English translation Theology of the New Testament 2 vols, London: SCM, 1952, 1955). The leading scholarly reference supporting a holistic anthropology Gilson, ร‰tienne, Gregory of Nyssa, Anthropology, in: History of Christian Philosophy in the Middle Ages, (1980 reprinted 1985), London: Sheed & Ward, pp.ย 56โ€“59, . Couturier, Charles, SJ, La structure mรฉtaphysique de l'homme d'aprรจs saint Augustin, in: Augustinus Magister. Congrรจs International Augustinien. Communications, (1954), Paris, vol. 1, pp.ย 543โ€“550 Hendrics, E. Platonisches und Biblisches Denken bei Augustinus, in: 'Augustinus Magister. Congrรจs International Augustinien. Communications, (1954), Paris, vol. 1. (English translation Man in the NT. London: Epworth, 1963) Mann, W. E., Inner-Life Ethics, in: Masutti, Egidio, Il problema del corpo in San Agostino, Roma: Borla, 1989, p.ย 230, External links Mick Pope, Losing our Souls? Anthropology Anthropology Anthropology
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๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ๊ฐœ์š”
๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ์†Œ๊ฐœ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ •๋ฆฌํ•œ ๊ฐœ์š”์ด๋‹ค. ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์€ ๋™์•„์‹œ์•„์˜ ํ•œ๋ฐ˜๋„์— ์œ„์น˜ํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ œ ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ์ด๋‹ค. ์„œ์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ ์ค‘ํ™”์ธ๋ฏผ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ, ๋™์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ ์ผ๋ณธ์— ์ ‘ํ•ด ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋ถ์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ ์กฐ์„ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ์ฃผ์˜์ธ๋ฏผ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ๊ณผ ๋‹ฟ์•„ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ˆ˜๋„์ด์ž ์ตœ๋Œ€ ๋„์‹œ๋Š” ์„œ์šธํŠน๋ณ„์‹œ์ด๋‹ค. ํ•œ๋ฐ˜๋„๋Š” ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „์—์„œ ์ผ๋ณธ์ด ํŒจ์ „ํ•œ ์ดํ›„ ๋ถ„๋‹จ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, 1948๋…„์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์ด ์ˆ˜๋ฆฝ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์€ ์ดํ›„ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ๊ณผ์˜ ๋™๋งน์„ ์œ ์ง€ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์„ฑ๊ณต์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ์ฃผ์˜๋ฅผ ๋ฐœ์ „์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์€ 1960๋…„๋Œ€๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 1980๋…„๋Œ€๊นŒ์ง€ ์„ธ๊ณ„์—์„œ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋น ๋ฅธ ๊ฒฝ์ œ ์„ฑ์žฅ์„ ์ด๋ฃฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋“ค ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜์ด๋ฉฐ ์„ ์ง„๊ตญ์œผ๋กœ ์—ฌ๊ฒจ์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์€ G20๊ณผ ๊ฒฝ์ œํ˜‘๋ ฅ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ์˜ ํšŒ์›๊ตญ์ด๋‹ค. ์กฐ์„ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ์ฃผ์˜์ธ๋ฏผ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ๊ณผ์˜ ๊ธด์žฅ ์ƒํƒœ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด, ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์€ ์„ธ๊ณ„ 6์œ„์˜ ๊ตฐ์‚ฌ ๋Œ€๊ตญ์ด๋ฉฐ ์„ธ๊ณ„ 10์œ„์˜ ๊ตญ๋ฐฉ๋น„๋ฅผ ์ง€์ถœํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์‚ฐ์—…์€ ๊ณผํ•™๊ณผ ๊ธฐ์ˆ  ๋ถ„์•ผ์— ์ง‘์ค‘๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐ๋ฐ˜ ์‹œ์„ค๊ณผ ๋Œ€๊ทœ๋ชจ ๊ฐ€์กฑ ๊ธฐ์—…์ธ ์žฌ๋ฒŒ์ด ์ฃผ๋„ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ˜๋„์ฒด, ์•ก์ • ๋””์Šคํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด, ์ปดํ“จํ„ฐ, ํœด๋Œ€ ์ „ํ™” ๋“ฑ์˜ ์ •๋ณด๊ธฐ์ˆ ์ด ๋ฐœ๋‹ฌํ•ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ฒฝ์ œ๋Š” ๊ฑด์„ค, ๊ณตํ•™, ๊ธฐ๊ณ„, ๋กœ๋ด‡๊ณตํ•™, ์ƒ๋ช…๊ณตํ•™๊ธฐ์ˆ , ์„์œ ํ™”ํ•™ ๋ถ„์•ผ์— ์ง‘์ค‘๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐ๋ณธ ์ •๋ณด ํ†ต์ƒ ์ž์นญ ์ง€๋ช…: ํ•œ๊ตญ(้Ÿ“ๅœ‹) ๊ณต์‹ ๊ตญํ˜ธ: ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ(ๅคง้Ÿ“ๆฐ‘ๅœ‹) ํ•œ๊ตญ์˜ ๋‚˜๋ผ ์ด๋ฆ„ ISO ๊ตญ๊ฐ€ ํ‘œ์ค€: KR, KOR, 410 ISO ์ง€์—ญ ํ‘œ์ค€: ISO 3166-2:KR ๊ตญ๊ฐ€ ์ฝ”๋“œ ์ตœ์ƒ์œ„ ๋„๋ฉ”์ธ: .kr ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์ง€๋ฆฌ ์œ„์น˜: ๋ถ๋ฐ˜๊ตฌ, ๋™๋ฐ˜๊ตฌ ์•„์‹œ์•„ ๋™์•„์‹œ์•„ ํ•œ๋ฐ˜๋„ ์‹œ๊ฐ„๋Œ€: ํ•œ๊ตญ ํ‘œ์ค€์‹œ(UTC+09) ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ทน์  ์ตœ๊ณ ์ : ํ•œ๋ผ์‚ฐ 1,950m ์ตœ์ €์ : ๋™ํ•ด์™€ ํ™ฉํ•ด 0m ์ง€์ƒ ๊ตญ๊ฒฝ: (ํ•œ๋ฐ˜๋„ ๊ตฐ์‚ฌ ๋ถ„๊ณ„์„ ) 238km ํ•ด์•ˆ์„ : 2,413km ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์ธ๊ตฌ: 50,004,441๋ช… ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์˜ํ† : 100,032km2 - ์„ธ๊ณ„ 25์œ„ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ตญ๋ฆฝ๊ณต์› ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์ง€ํ˜• ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํญํฌ ๋ชฉ๋ก ํ•œ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ฐ• ํ•œ๊ตญ์˜ ์‚ฐ ๋ชฉ๋ก ํ•œ๊ตญ์˜ ์„ฌ ๋ชฉ๋ก ํ•œ๊ตญ์˜ ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜ ๋ชฉ๋ก ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์ง€์—ญ ํ•œ๊ตญ์˜ ์ง€๋ฐฉ ๊ตฌ๋ถ„ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ–‰์ • ๊ตฌ์—ญ ํ•œ๊ตญ์˜ ํ–‰์ • ๊ตฌ์—ญ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๋„์‹œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์„ค์น˜์ˆœ ๋„์‹œ ๋ชฉ๋ก ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์ˆ˜๋„: ์„œ์šธํŠน๋ณ„์‹œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์ธ๊ตฌ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์ •์น˜ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์ˆ˜๋„: ์„œ์šธํŠน๋ณ„์‹œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์ •๋‹น ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ์ •๋ถ€ ํ–‰์ •๋ถ€ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์›์ˆ˜ ๊ฒธ ์ •๋ถ€์ˆ˜๋ฐ˜: ์œค์„์—ด ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ๊ตญ๋ฌด์ด๋ฆฌ: ํ•œ๋•์ˆ˜ ๊ตญ๋ฌดํšŒ์˜ ์ž…๋ฒ•๋ถ€ ๊ตญํšŒ์˜์žฅ: ๊น€์ง„ํ‘œ ์‚ฌ๋ฒ•๋ถ€ ๋Œ€๋ฒ•์›์žฅ: ๊น€๋ช…์ˆ˜ ํ—Œ๋ฒ•์žฌํŒ์†Œ์žฅ: ์œ ๋‚จ์„ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๋Œ€์™ธ ๊ด€๊ณ„ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์žฌ์™ธ๊ณต๊ด€ ๋ชฉ๋ก ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ์ฃผ์žฌ ์™ธ๊ตญ๊ณต๊ด€ ๋ชฉ๋ก ๋‚จ๋ถ ๊ด€๊ณ„ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์ด ๊ฐ€์ž…ํ•œ ๊ตญ์ œ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์€ ๋‹ค์Œ ๊ตญ์ œ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ๋“ค์˜ ํšŒ์›๊ตญ์ด๋‹ค: ๊ฒฝ์ œํ˜‘๋ ฅ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ๊ตญ์ œ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ ํ˜‘ํšŒ ๊ตญ์ œ๊ฒฐ์ œ์€ํ–‰ ๊ตญ์ œ ๊ธˆ์œต ๊ณต์‚ฌ ๊ตญ์ œ ๋…ธ๋™ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ๊ตญ์ œ๋…ธ๋™์กฐํ•ฉ์—ฐํ•ฉ ๊ตญ์ œ ๋†์—… ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ ๊ธฐ๊ธˆ ๊ตญ์ œ ๋ฏผ๊ฐ„ ํ•ญ๊ณต ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ๊ตญ์ œ๋ถ€ํฅ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ์€ํ–‰ ๊ตญ์ œ ์ƒ์—… ํšŒ์˜์†Œ ๊ตญ์ œ ์ˆ˜๋กœ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ๊ตญ์ œ ์—๋„ˆ์ง€ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ๊ตญ์ œ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ์œ„์›ํšŒ ๊ตญ์ œ ์›์ž๋ ฅ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ๊ตญ์ œ ์˜ํšŒ ์—ฐ๋งน ๊ตญ์ œ์ด์ฃผ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ๊ตญ์ œ ์ ์‹ญ์ž์‚ฌยท์ ์‹ ์›”์‚ฌ ์—ฐ๋งน ๊ตญ์ œ ์ ์‹ญ์žยท์ ์‹ ์›” ์šด๋™ ๊ตญ์ œ์ „๊ธฐํ†ต์‹ ์—ฐํ•ฉ ๊ตญ์ œ ํ†ตํ™” ๊ธฐ๊ธˆ ๊ตญ์ œ ํ‘œ์ค€ํ™” ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ๊ตญ์ œํ•ด์‚ฌ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ๊ตญ์ œํ˜•์‚ฌ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ๊ตญ์ œํ˜•์‚ฌ์žฌํŒ์†Œ ๋‚จ์•„์‹œ์•„ ์ง€์—ญ ํ˜‘๋ ฅ ์—ฐํ•ฉ (์ฐธ๊ด€๊ตญ) ๋‹ค์ž๊ฐ„ ํˆฌ์ž ๋ณด์ฆ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ๋™๋‚จ์•„์‹œ์•„ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€ ์—ฐํ•ฉ (์•„์„ธ์•ˆ+3) ๋™์•„์‹œ์•„ ์ •์ƒํšŒ์˜ ๋ผํ‹ด ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นด ํ†ตํ•ฉ ์—ฐํ•ฉ ๋งŒ๊ตญ ์šฐํŽธ ์—ฐํ•ฉ ๋ฏธ์ฃผ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ์€ํ–‰ ๋ฏธ์ฃผ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ (์ฐธ๊ด€๊ตญ) ์ƒ์„ค์ค‘์žฌ์žฌํŒ์†Œ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๊ด€๊ด‘ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๊ด€์„ธ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๊ธฐ์ƒ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ์„ธ๊ณ„๋…ธ๋™์—ฐํ•ฉ ์„ธ๊ณ„๋…ธ๋™์กฐํ•ฉ์—ฐ๋งน ์„ธ๊ณ„๋ฌด์—ญ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ์„ธ๊ณ„๋ณด๊ฑด๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ์ง€์‹ ์žฌ์‚ฐ๊ถŒ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ์‹๋Ÿ‰ ๋†์—… ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ์•„์‹œ์•„ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ ์€ํ–‰ ์•„์‹œ์•„ ํƒœํ‰์–‘ ๊ฒฝ์ œํ˜‘๋ ฅ์ฒด ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ ์€ํ–‰ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„ ๊ทธ๋ฃน ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์•ˆ๋ณด ํ˜‘๋ ฅ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ (ํ˜‘๋ ฅ๊ตญ) ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๋ถ€ํฅ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ ์€ํ–‰ ์œ ๋„ค์Šค์ฝ” ์œ ์—” ์œ ์—” ๋‚œ๋ฏผ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ์œ ์—” ๋ฌด์—ญ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ ํšŒ์˜ ์œ ์—” ์‚ฐ์—… ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ์œ ์—” ์ˆ˜๋‹จ ์ž„๋ฌด๋‹จ G20 ์ฝœ๋กฌ๋ณด ๊ณ„ํš ํƒœํ‰์–‘ ์ œ๋„ ํฌ๋Ÿผ (ํ˜‘๋ ฅ๊ตญ) ํ™”ํ•™ ๋ฌด๊ธฐ ๊ธˆ์ง€ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๋ฒ•๋ฅ ๊ณผ ์ œ๋„ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ํ—Œ๋ฒ• ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์‚ฌํ˜•์ œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์ธ๊ถŒ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์„ฑ์†Œ์ˆ˜์ž ๊ถŒ๋ฆฌ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ตฐ์‚ฌ ํ†ต์ˆ˜๊ถŒ์ž: ์œค์„์—ด ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ๊ตญ๋ฐฉ๋ถ€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ์œก๊ตฐ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ํ•ด๊ตฐ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ํ•ด๋ณ‘๋Œ€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ๊ณต๊ตฐ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌ ํ•œ๊ตญ์‚ฌ ์—ฐํ‘œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๋ฌธํ™” ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ตญ๊ธฐ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ตญ์žฅ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์„ธ๊ณ„์œ ์‚ฐ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์„ฑ๋งค๋งค ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์˜ˆ์ˆ  ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์˜ํ™” ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์Œ์•… ํ•œ๊ตญ์˜ ๋ฏธ์ˆ  ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์–ธ๋ก  ํ•œ๊ตญ ์š”๋ฆฌ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ณตํœด์ผ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์–ธ์–ด ํ•œ๊ตญ์–ด ํ•œ๊ตญ์ธ ํ•œ๋ฏผ์กฑ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์ข…๊ต ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์ด์Šฌ๋žŒ๊ต ํ•œ๊ตญ์˜ ๋ถˆ๊ต ํ•œ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ธฐ๋…๊ต ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์Šคํฌ์ธ  ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋‹จ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ฒฝ์ œ์™€ ์‚ฐ์—… ํ†ตํ™”: ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ์› ISO 4217: KRW ํ•œ๊ตญ์€ํ–‰ ํ•œ๊ตญ๊ฑฐ๋ž˜์†Œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ธฐ์—… ๋ชฉ๋ก ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์—๋„ˆ์ง€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๋†์—… ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ†ต์‹ ์—… ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์ธํ„ฐ๋„ท ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ด€๊ด‘ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ตํ†ต ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ณตํ•ญ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์ฒ ๋„ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๋„๋กœ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ต์œก ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ์ •๋ถ€๋Œ€ํ‘œ ๋‹ค๊ตญ์–ดํฌํ„ธ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ์ „์ž์ •๋ถ€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ๊ตญํšŒ ํ•œ๊ตญ๋ฐฉ์†ก๊ณต์‚ฌ about korea and information korea ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌํƒœ๋‹ˆ์ปค ๋ฐฑ๊ณผ์‚ฌ์ „(ํ•œ๊ตญํŽธ) CIA์˜ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ์ •๋ณด(ํ•œ๊ตญํŽธ) ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ๋ชฉ๋ก
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outline%20of%20South%20Korea
Outline of South Korea
The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to South Korea: South Korea โ€“ densely populated sovereign presidential republic located on the southern half of the Korean Peninsula in East Asia. Also known as the "Land of the Morning Calm". It is neighbored by China to the west, Japan to the east and North Korea to the north. South Korea's capital and largest city is Seoul, the world's second largest metropolitan city. Korea has a history of 5,000 years, with its foundation dating back to 2333 BC by the legendary Dangun. Following the unification of the Three Korean Kingdoms under Silla in AD 668, Korea went through the Goryeo and Joseon Dynasty as one nation until annexed by Japan in 1910. After Japan's defeat in World War II, Korea was divided, and South Korea was established in 1948. It has since developed a successful democracy, maintaining a strong alliance with the United States. South Korea has the fourth-largest economy in Asia. It had one of the world's fastest growing economies from the 1960s until 1980 and is now considered a developed economy. It is a G20 and OECD member. In response to tension with North Korea, it has developed the world's sixth largest armed forces and has one of the 10-largest defence budgets in the world. South Korean industries have a strong focus on science and technology. It has an advanced infrastructure and information technology such as electronics, semiconductors, LCD displays, computers, mobile phones and automotive industry led by Chaebol, a kind of family-owned conglomerate. The economy also has a strong focus on engineering, construction, machinery, textiles, petrochemicals, biotechnology and robotics. General reference Pronunciation: Common English country name: South Korea Official English country name: The Republic of Korea Common endonym(s): ํ•œ๊ตญ (้Ÿ“ๅœ‹) (Hanguk) Official endonym(s): ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ (ๅคง้Ÿ“ๆฐ‘ๅœ‹) (Daehanminguk) Adjectival(s): South Korean Demonym(s): Korean, South Korean Etymology: Name of South Korea International rankings of South Korea ISO country codes: KR, KOR, 410 ISO region codes: See ISO 3166-2:KR Internet country code top-level domain: .kr Geography of South Korea South Korea is: a country Location: Northern Hemisphere and Eastern Hemisphere Eurasia Asia East Asia Korean Peninsula Time zone: Korea Standard Time (UTC+09) Extreme points of South Korea High: Halla-san Low: Sea of Japan and Yellow Sea 0 m Land boundaries: North Korea 238ย km Coastline: 2,413ย km Population of South Korea: 50,004,441 - 25th most populous country Area of South Korea: 100,032ย km2 Atlas of South Korea Environment of South Korea Environment of South Korea Climate of South Korea Environmental issues in South Korea Renewable energy in South Korea Protected areas of South Korea National parks of South Korea Wildlife of South Korea Fauna of South Korea Birds of South Korea Mammals of South Korea Natural geographic features of South Korea Islands of South Korea Lakes of South Korea Mountains of South Korea Volcanoes in South Korea Rivers of South Korea Waterfalls of South Korea Valleys of South Korea World Heritage Sites in South Korea Regions of South Korea Regions of South Korea Ecoregions of South Korea Administrative divisions of South Korea Administrative divisions of South Korea Provinces of South Korea Provinces of South Korea Municipalities of South Korea Capital of South Korea: Seoul Cities of South Korea Demography of South Korea Demographics of South Korea Government and politics of South Korea Form of government: Capital of South Korea: Seoul Elections in South Korea Political parties in South Korea Branches of the government of South Korea Executive branch of South Korea Head of state: President of South Korea, Head of government: President of South Korea, Cabinet of South Korea Legislative branch of South Korea Parliament of South Korea (unicameral) Judicial branch of South Korea Supreme Court of Korea Constitutional Court of Korea Foreign relations of South Korea Diplomatic missions in South Korea Diplomatic missions of South Korea North Koreaโ€“South Korea relations International organization membership The Republic of Korea is a member of: African Development Bank Group (AfDB) (nonregional member) Asian Development Bank (ADB) Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Asia-Pacific Telecommunity (APT) Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) (dialogue partner) Association of Southeast Asian Nations Regional Forum (ARF) Australia Group Bank for International Settlements (BIS) Colombo Plan (CP) East Asia Summit (EAS) European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) Group of Twenty Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors (G20) Inter-American Development Bank (IADB) International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) International Criminal Court (ICCt) International Criminal Police Organization (Interpol) International Development Association (IDA) International Energy Agency (IEA) International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRCS) International Finance Corporation (IFC) International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) International Hydrographic Organization (IHO) International Labour Organization (ILO) International Maritime Organization (IMO) International Mobile Satellite Organization (IMSO) International Monetary Fund (IMF) International Olympic Committee (IOC) International Organization for Migration (IOM) International Organization for Standardization (ISO) International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement (ICRM) International Telecommunication Union (ITU) International Telecommunications Satellite Organization (ITSO) International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) Latin American Integration Association (LAIA) Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA) Nuclear Energy Agency (NEA) Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) (partner) Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) Organization of American States (OAS) (observer) Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) (partner) Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA) South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) (observer) United Nations (UN) United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) United Nations Military Observer Group in India and Pakistan (UNMOGIP) United Nations Mission in Liberia (UNMIL) United Nations Mission in the Sudan (UNMIS) United Nations Observer Mission in Georgia (UNOMIG) Universal Postal Union (UPU) World Confederation of Labour (WCL) World Customs Organization (WCO) World Federation of Trade Unions (WFTU) World Health Organization (WHO) World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) World Meteorological Organization (WMO) World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) World Trade Organization (WTO) Zangger Committee (ZC) Law in South Korea Cannabis in South Korea Capital punishment in South Korea Constitution of South Korea Crime in South Korea Human rights in South Korea LGBT rights in South Korea Freedom of religion in South Korea Law enforcement in South Korea Military of South Korea Command Commander-in-chief: Ministry of Defence of South Korea Forces Army of South Korea Navy of South Korea Air Force of South Korea Special forces of South Korea Military history of South Korea Military ranks of South Korea History of South Korea Timeline of Korean history Economic history of South Korea Culture of South Korea Architecture of South Korea Cuisine of South Korea Festivals in South Korea Languages of South Korea Media in South Korea National symbols of South Korea Emblem of South Korea Flag of South Korea National anthem of South Korea People of South Korea Prostitution in South Korea Public holidays in South Korea Religion in South Korea Buddhism in South Korea Christianity in South Korea Hinduism in South Korea Islam in South Korea World Heritage Sites in South Korea Art in South Korea Cinema of South Korea South Korean literature Music of South Korea Television in South Korea Sport in South Korea Football in South Korea South Korea at the Olympics Economy and infrastructure of South Korea Economic rank, by nominal GDP (2015): 11th (eleventh) Agriculture in South Korea Financial services in South Korea National Bank of South Korea Korea Exchange Telecommunications in South Korea Internet in South Korea Companies of South Korea Currency of South Korea: South Korean won ISO 4217: KRW Economic history of South Korea Energy in South Korea Tourism in South Korea Transport in South Korea Airports in South Korea Rail transport in South Korea Education in South Korea Health in South Korea See also South Korea Outline of Asia Outline of geography Outline of North Korea President of South Korea List of international rankings List of South Korea-related topics Member state of the United Nations Member state of the Group of Twenty Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors References External links VISITKOREA - The Official Korea Tourism Guide Site Korea.net: Gateway to Korea Korea National Statistical Office South Korea in Encyclopรฆdia Britannica South Korea. The World Factbook. Central Intelligence Agency. A Country Study: South Korea in the Library of Congress South Korea Outline Outlines
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๋ชฌ์–ด
๋ชฌ์–ด(แ€˜แ€ฌแ€žแ€ฌแ€™แ€”แ€บ)๋Š” ๋ฏธ์–€๋งˆ์— ์‚ฌ๋Š” ๋ชฌ์กฑ์˜ ์–ธ์–ด๋กœ, ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋กœ์•„์‹œ์•„์–ด์กฑ์— ์†ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ชฌ์–ด๋Š” ๊ด€๋ จ๋œ ํฌ๋ฉ”๋ฅด์–ด์™€ ๋น„์Šทํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ๋™๋‚จ์•„์‹œ์•„์˜ ๋งŽ์€ ์–ธ์–ด๋“ค๊ณผ ๋‹ฌ๋ฆฌ ์„ฑ์กฐ๊ฐ€ ์‚ฌ๋ผ์ง„ ์–ธ์–ด์ด๋‹ค. ๋ชฌ์–ด๋Š” ๋ฏธ์–€๋งˆ์™€ ํƒœ๊ตญ์—์„œ ์›์ฃผ๋ฏผ ์–ธ์–ด๋กœ ๊ณต์ธ๋˜์–ด์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ๋ชฌ์กฑ ์–ธ์–ด๋Š” ๋ฏธ์–€๋งˆ์™€ ํƒœ๊ตญ์—์„œ ๋™ํ™” ์••๋ ฅ์— ์ง๋ฉดํ•ด ์žˆ๊ณ  ๋ชฌ์กฑ์˜ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค๋„ ํ˜„์žฌ ๋ฒ„๋งˆ์–ด๋‚˜ ํƒœ๊ตญ์–ด๋ฅผ ์ œ1์–ธ์–ด๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒฝํ–ฅ์„ ๋ณด์ด๋ฉด์„œ ์œ ๋„ค์Šค์ฝ”์˜ 2010๋…„ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ์œ„๊ธฐ์–ธ์–ด ์•„ํ‹€๋ผ์Šค์—์„œ "์ทจ์•ฝ ์–ธ์–ด"๋กœ ๋ถ„๋ฅ˜๋˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ชฌ์–ด ํ™”์ž๋Š” ๋ฏธ์–€๋งˆ ๋‚จ๋ถ€, ํŠนํžˆ ๋ชฌ ์ฃผ๋ฅผ ๋น„๋กฏํ•˜์—ฌ ์นด์ธ ์ฃผ, ํƒ€๋‹Œํƒ€๋ฆฌ ๊ด€๊ตฌ์— ์ฃผ๋กœ ๋ถ„ํฌํ•ด์žˆ๋‹ค. ์—ญ์‚ฌ ๋ชฌ์–ด๋Š” ๋ฒ„๋งˆ ์—ญ์‚ฌ์—์„œ ์ค‘์š”ํ•œ ์–ธ์–ด ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜์ด๋‹ค. 12์„ธ๊ธฐ๊นŒ์ง€๋Š” ์ด๋ผ์™€๋”” ๊ณ„๊ณก ์ผ๋Œ€์˜ ๊ณต์šฉ์–ด์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ด๋ผ์™€๋”” ํ•˜๋ฅ˜ ์ง€์—ญ์˜ ๋ชฌ์กฑ ๊ณ„ํ†ต ์™•๊ตญ๋“ค๋ฟ๋งŒ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ผ ์ƒ๋ฅ˜ ์ง€์—ญ์˜ ๋ฒ„๋งˆ์กฑ ๊ณ„ํ†ต์˜ ๋ฒ„๊ฐ„ ์™•๊ตญ์—์„œ๋„ ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์ง€์œ„๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์กŒ๋‹ค. ๋ชฌ์–ด, ํŠนํžˆ ๋ชฌ์–ด์˜ ๋ฌธ์–ด(ๆ–‡่ชž)๋Š” 1057๋…„์— ๋ชฌ์กฑ์˜ ๋”ฐํ†ต ์™•๊ตญ์ด ๋ฒ„๊ฐ„์—๊ฒŒ ๋ฌด๋„ˆ์ง„ ์ดํ›„์—๋„ ์—ฌ์ „ํžˆ ๋†’์€ ์ง€์œ„๋กœ ์—ฌ๊ฒจ์ง€๋Š” ์–ธ์–ด์˜€๋‹ค. ํŠนํžˆ ๋ฒ„๊ฐ„์˜ ์žฅ์‹ฏํƒ€(Kyansittha) ์™•(1084โ€“1113 ์žฌ์œ„)์€ ๋ชฌ์กฑ ๋ฌธํ™”๋ฅผ ์• ํ˜ธํ•˜์˜€๊ณ  ๋ชฌ์–ด๋ฅผ ์ง€์›ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ๊ทธ์˜ ์‚ฌํ›„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ๋Š” ๋ฒ„๋งˆ์กฑ ์‚ฌ์ด์—์„œ ๋ชฌ์–ด์˜ ์‚ฌ์šฉ์ด ๊ฐ์†Œํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์˜€๊ณ  ๋ฒ„๋งˆ์–ด๊ฐ€ ๋ชฌ์–ด์™€ ์€ผ์–ด์˜ ๊ณต์šฉ์–ด์  ์ง€์œ„๋ฅผ ๋Œ€์ฒดํ•ด ๊ฐ€๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋“œ๋ฐ”๋ผ๋ฐ”ํ‹ฐ ์™•๊ตญ ํํ—ˆ์˜ ๋ชฌ ๋น„๋ฌธ๋„ ํƒœ๊ตญ ๊ณณ๊ณณ์— ํผ์ ธ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ๊ทธ ์ฃผ๋ฏผ์ด ๋ชฌ์กฑ์ธ์ง€, ๋ชฌ์กฑ๊ณผ ๋ง๋ ˆ์ด์กฑ์˜ ํ˜ผํ•ฉ์ธ์ง€, ํฌ๋ฉ”๋ฅด์กฑ์ธ์ง€๋Š” ํ™•์‹คํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋‹ค. ํ›„๊ธฐ ๋น„๋ฌธ๊ณผ ๋ผ๋ณด์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ์™•๊ตญ์€ ํฌ๋ฉ”๋ฅด ์ œ๊ตญ์— ์ข…์†์ ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฒ„๊ฐ„์˜ ๋ฉธ๋ง ์ดํ›„, ๋ชฌ์–ด๋Š” ๋‹ค์‹œ ์˜ค๋Š˜๋‚ ์˜ ํ•˜๋ฏธ์–€๋งˆ์— ์œ„์น˜ํ•˜๋˜ ํ•œํƒ€์™€๋”” ์™•๊ตญ (1287 ~ 1539)์˜ ๊ณต์šฉ์–ด๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, 1800๋…„๋Œ€๊นŒ์ง€๋„ ์ด ์ง€์—ญ์—์„œ ๋ชฌ์–ด๋Š” ์ฃผ๋ฅ˜ ์–ธ์–ด๋กœ ๋‚จ์•„ ์žˆ์—ˆ์œผ๋‚˜, ์ด ์‹œ๊ธฐ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋ฒ„๋งˆ์–ด๊ฐ€ ์ƒ๋ฒ„๋งˆ์˜ ์ „ํ†ต์ ์ธ ์‹ฌ์žฅ๋ถ€์—์„œ ํ•˜๋ฒ„๋งˆ๋กœ ๊ทธ ๋ฒ”์œ„๋ฅผ ํ™•์žฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ง€์—ญ์˜ ๋ชฌ์–ด์—์„œ ๋ฒ„๋งˆ์–ด๋กœ์˜ ์–ธ์–ด ์ „ํ™˜์€ ์ธ๊ตฌ ๋Œ€์ฒด, ํ†ตํ˜ผ, ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ชฌ-๋ฒ„๋งˆ์–ด ์ด์ค‘ ์–ธ์–ด ์ง‘๋‹จ์˜ ์ž๋ฐœ์  ์ •์ฒด์„ฑ ์ „ํ™˜ ๋“ฑ ๋ณตํ•ฉ์ ์ธ ์›์ธ์— ์˜ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ํŠนํžˆ 1757๋…„ ์‹  ํ•œํƒ€์™€๋”” ์™•๊ตญ์ด ๋ฉธ๋งํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์ด ๋ณ€ํ™”๋Š” ํ™•์‹คํžˆ ๊ฐ€์†ํ™”๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํŽ˜๊ตฌ์˜ ํ•จ๋ฝ ์ดํ›„ ๋งŽ์€ ๋ชฌ์กฑ์ด ๋‚œ๋ฏผ์ด ๋˜์–ด ์˜ค๋Š˜๋‚ ์˜ ํƒœ๊ตญ์— ํ•ด๋‹นํ•˜๋Š” ์ง€์—ญ์œผ๋กœ ์ด์ฃผํ•˜์—ฌ ์žฌ์ •์ฐฉํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 1830๋…„์—๋Š” ํ•˜๋ฏธ์–€๋งˆ ์ธ๊ตฌ์˜ ์•ฝ 90%๊ฐ€ ๋ฒ„๋งˆ์–ด๋ฅผ ๋งํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฒ„๋งˆ์กฑ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ๊ณง ์ด๋ผ์™€๋”” ์‚ผ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์ƒ๋ฅ˜์—์„œ ๋ฐ”์„ธ์ธ(ํ˜„ ํŒŒํ…Œ์ธ)๊ณผ ๋ž‘๊ตฐ(ํ˜„ ์–‘๊ณค)์„ ํฌํ•จํ•˜์—ฌ ํƒ€๋ผ์™€๋””, ํ‰๊ตฌ, ํ”„๋กœ๋ฉ”(ํ˜„ ํ”ผ), ํ—จ์ž๋‹ค(ํ˜„ ํžŒํƒ€๋‹ค)๊นŒ์ง€ ์ด๋ฅด๋Š” ๊ด‘๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ชฌ์–ด ์‚ฌ์šฉ ์ง€์—ญ์ด ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋ฒ„๋งˆ์–ด ์šฐ์„ธ ์ง€์—ญ์ด ๋œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ 19์„ธ๊ธฐ ๋‚ด๋‚ด ์ด์–ด์ง„ ๋Œ€์˜์ œ๊ตญ์˜ ์ ์ง„์ ์ธ ๋ฒ„๋งˆ ํ•ฉ๋ณ‘์€ ์ƒ๋ฏธ์–€๋งˆ์˜ ๊ฒฝ์ œยท์ •์น˜์  ๋ถˆ์•ˆ์ •์„ฑ(์˜ˆ: ๋ฒ„๋งˆ ์™•์‹ค์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์„ธ๊ธˆ ๋ถ€๋‹ด ์ฆ๊ฐ€, ์˜๊ตญ์˜ ์Œ€ ์ƒ์‚ฐ ์ธ์„ผํ‹ฐ๋ธŒ ๋“ฑ)๊ณผ ๋”๋ถˆ์–ด ํ•˜๋ฏธ์–€๋งˆ๋กœ์˜ ์ด์ฃผ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์†ํ™”ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ชฌ์–ด๋Š” ์ƒ๋ฏธ์–€๋งˆ์™€ ํ•˜๋ฏธ์–€๋งˆ์—์„œ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๋Š” ๋ฒ„๋งˆ์–ด ๋ฐฉ์–ธ ๊ฐ„์˜ ๋ฏธ๋ฌ˜ํ•œ ๋ฌธ๋ฒ•์  ์ฐจ์ด์— ์˜ํ–ฅ์„ ๋ฏธ์ณค๋‹ค. ํ•˜๋ฏธ์–€๋งˆ ๋ฐฉ์–ธ์—์„œ ๋™์‚ฌ แ€•แ€ฑแ€ธ(์ฃผ๋‹ค)๋Š” ๊ตฌ์–ด์ฒด์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ด€๋Œ€ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์‚ฌ๋™ ํ‘œ์ง€๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด๋Š” ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋™๋‚จ์•„์‹œ์•„ ์–ธ์–ด์—์„œ ํ”ํ•œ ํŠน์ง•์ด๋‚˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํ‹ฐ๋ฒ ํŠธ-๋ฒ„๋งˆ์–ด์—์„œ๋Š” ๋ณด์ด์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค. ์ด ์šฉ๋ฒ•์€ ์ƒ๋ฏธ์–€๋งˆ ๋ฐฉ์–ธ์—์„œ๋Š” ๊ฑฐ์˜ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋น„ํ‘œ์ค€ ๋ฌธ๋ฒ•์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ„์ฃผ๋œ๋‹ค. 1972๋…„, ์‹ ๋ชฌ์ฃผ๋‹น(New Mon State Party)์€ ๋ฐ˜๊ตฐ์ด ํ†ต์ œํ•˜๋Š” ์ง€์—ญ์—์„œ ๋ชฌ์–ด๋ฅผ ๊ต์œก ๋งค์ฒด ์–ธ์–ด๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๋ชฌ ๊ตญ๋ฆฝํ•™๊ต ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์„ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1995๋…„ ์ค‘์•™ ์ •๋ถ€์™€์˜ ํœด์ „ ์ดํ›„ ์ด ๊ต์œก ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์€ ๋ชฌ ์ฃผ ์ „์—ญ์œผ๋กœ ํ™•๋Œ€๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด์ œ ๋ชฌ ์ฃผ๋Š” ๋ชฌ์–ด๋ฅผ ์ดˆ๋“ฑ ๊ต์œก ์–ธ์–ด๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๋ชฌ ๊ตญ๋ฆฝํ•™๊ต ์ฒด๊ณ„์™€ ์ •๋ถ€ ์ปค๋ฆฌํ˜๋Ÿผ์— ๋ชฌ์–ด ๊ต๊ณผ๊ณผ์ •์„ ์ถ”๊ฐ€ํ•˜๋Š” "ํ˜ผํ•ฉ ํ•™๊ต" ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์„ ๋ณ‘ํ–‰ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. 2015๋…„ ๋ชฌ์–ด ๊ต๊ณผ๋Š” ์ฃผ ์ „์ฒด์˜ ์ดˆ๋“ฑ๊ต์œก์œผ๋กœ ํ™•๋Œ€ ์‹œํ–‰๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์€ ๋ชฌ์–ด๋กœ ํ•™์Šต๋ฐ›์€ ์–ด๋ฆฐ์ด๋“ค์ด ๊ณ ๋“ฑ ๊ต์œก ์ˆ˜์ค€์—์„œ ์ฃผ๋ฅ˜ ๋ฒ„๋งˆ ๊ต์œก ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์— ํ†ตํ•ฉ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ฒŒ ํ•ด์ฃผ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๋ฏธ์–€๋งˆ์˜ ๊ต์œก ์ฒด๊ณ„์—์„œ ๋ชจ๊ตญ์–ด ๊ต์œก์˜ ํ•œ ๋ชจ๋ธ๋กœ ์ธ์‹๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2013๋…„ ๋ชฐ๋ผ๋จ€์ž‰์— ๊ธฐ๋ฐ˜์„ ๋‘” ํƒ„์œˆ ํƒ€์ž„์ฆˆ๊ฐ€ ๋ชฌ์–ด๋กœ ๋‰ด์Šค ์ „๋‹ฌ์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜๋ฉฐ 1962๋…„ ์ดํ›„ ๋ฏธ์–€๋งˆ ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ ๋ชฌ์–ด ์ถœํŒ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ง€๋ฆฌ์  ๋ถ„ํฌ ๋ถ์ชฝ์˜ ์‹œํƒ€ ์›… ๊ฐ•์—์„œ ๋‚จ์ชฝ์˜ ๋ฏธ์ต (๋จธ ๊ตฌ์ด) ๋ฐ ์นด ์šฐํƒ€ ์›…๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ฏธ์–€๋งˆ ๋‚จ๋ถ€ (๋ชฌ ์ฃผ, ์นด์ธ ์ฃผ ๋ฐ ํƒ€๋‹Œ ํƒ€๋ฆฌ ์ง€์—ญ์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ)๋Š” ๋ชฌ ์–ธ์–ด์˜ ์ „ํ†ต์  ์š”์ƒˆ๋กœ ๋‚จ์•„ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜์ด ์ง€์—ญ์—์„œ ๋ฒ„๋งˆ์ธ์€ ๋ชฌ ์ฃผ ์ˆ˜๋„ ์ธ ๋งˆ ์šธ๋ผ๋งˆ์ธ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋„์‹œ ์ง€์—ญ์—์„œ ์„ ํ˜ธ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ตœ๊ทผ ๋ช‡ ๋…„ ๋™์•ˆ, ๋ชฌ์˜ ์‚ฌ์šฉ์€ ํŠนํžˆ ์ Š์€ ์„ธ๋Œ€๋“ค, ๋ฏธ์–€๋งˆ์—์„œ ๊ฐ์†Œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํƒœ๊ตญ์€ ์—ญ์‚ฌ์  ์ด๋™์˜ ๋ฌผ๊ฒฐ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ์ƒ๋‹นํ•œ ๊ทœ๋ชจ์˜ ๋ชฌ ์ธ๊ตฌ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ณณ์ด์ง€๋งŒ, 60๋งŒ์—์„œ 80,000 ์‚ฌ์ด๋กœ ์ถ”์ •๋˜๋Š” ์†Œ์ˆ˜์˜ ๋น„์œจ ๋งŒ์ด ํƒ€ ๋ฏธํ™”์™€ ๋ชฌ์˜ ์ฃผ๋ฅ˜ ํƒœ๊ตญ ์‚ฌํšŒ๋กœ์˜ ๋™ํ™”๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ๋ชฌ์„ ๋งํ•œ๋‹ค. ํƒœ๊ตญ์˜ ๋ชฌ ํšŒ์ž๋Š” ์ฃผ๋กœ ์ฝ”ํฌ ๋ ›์— ์ง‘์ค‘๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํƒœ๊ตญ ๋ชฌ ํšŒ์ž์˜ ๋‚˜๋จธ์ง€ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌ๋‹จ์€ ์‚ฌ๋ญ‡ ์‚ฌ์ฝ˜, ์‚ฌ๋ฌด ํŠธ ์†ก ํฌ๋žŒ, ๋‚˜์ฝ˜ ํŒŒํ†ฐ ๋ฐ ๋ฏธ์–€๋งˆ (์นธ์ฐจ๋‚˜ ๋ถ€๋ฆฌ, ํŽซ์ฐจ ๋ถ€๋ฆฌ, ํ”„๋ผ ์ถ”์•• ํ‚ค๋ฆฌ ์นธ ๋ฐ ๋ž์ฐจ ๋ถ€๋ฆฌ)์™€ ์ ‘ํ•œ ์„œ๋ถ€ ์ง€๋ฐฉ์— ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํƒœ๊ตญ์˜ ์†Œ์ˆ˜ ๋ฏผ์กฑ ๊ทธ๋ฃน์€ ๋ƒ ์ฟ ๋ฅด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๋ชฌ๊ณผ ๋ฐ€์ ‘ํ•œ ๊ด€๋ จ์ด์žˆ๋Š” ์–ธ์–ด๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋“ค์€ ์›”์š”์ผ์„ ๋งํ•˜๋Š” ๋“œ ๋ฐ”๋ผ ๋ฐ”ํ‹ฐ ์™•๊ตญ์˜ ํ›„์†์ด๋‹ค. ๋ฐฉ์–ธ ๋ชฌ์€ ๋ฒ„๋งˆ์— ์„ธ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ์ฃผ์š” ๋ฐฉ์–ธ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋ชฌ์ด ๊ฑฐ์ฃผํ•˜๋Š” ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์ง€์—ญ์—์„œ ์™”๋‹ค. ์ด๋“ค์€ ์ค‘๋ถ€ (๋ชจํ†  ํƒ€์™€ ๋งˆ ์šธ๋ผ๋งˆ ์ธ ์ฃผ๋ณ€ ์ง€์—ญ), ๋ฐ”๊ณ  ๋ฐ ์˜ˆ ๋ฐฉ์–ธ์ด๋‹ค. ๋ชจ๋‘ ์„œ๋กœ ์ดํ•ดํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‰ฝ๋‹ค. ์—์Šค ๋…ธ ๋กœ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋ชฌ ์‚ฌํˆฌ๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๋งˆ๋ฅดํƒ€ ๋ฐ˜ ๋ชฐ ๋ฉ”์ธ (์ค‘์•™ ๋ชฌ, ๋ชฌํ…Œ), ํŽ˜๊ตฌ (๋ชฌ ํƒ•, ๋ถ๋ถ€ ๋ชฌ) ๋ฐ ์˜ˆ (๋ชฌ ๋ƒ, ๋‚จ๋ถ€ ๋ชฌ)๋กœ ์ƒํ˜ธ ๋ช…๋ฃŒ๋„๋ฅผ ๋†’์˜€๋‹ค. ํƒœ๊ตญ์˜ ๋ชฌ์€ ๋ชฌ์˜ ๋ฒ„๋งˆ์–ด ๋ฐฉ์–ธ๊ณผ ์•ฝ๊ฐ„์˜ ์ฐจ์ด๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์ง€๋งŒ ์„œ๋กœ ์ดํ•ดํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‰ฝ๋‹ค. ๋ชฌ์˜ ํƒœ๊ตญ ๋ฐฉ์–ธ์€ ์‹ฌ๊ฐํ•œ ์œ„ํ—˜์— ์ฒ˜ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ„์ฃผ๋œ๋‹ค. ์•ŒํŒŒ๋ฒณ ๋‚ก์€ ๋ชฌ ๋Œ€๋ณธ์€ 6์„ธ๊ธฐ๋กœ ๊ฑฐ์Šฌ๋Ÿฌ ์˜ฌ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋ฉฐ, ๋‚˜์ฝ˜ ํŒŒํ†ฐ (๋‚˜์ฝ˜ ํŒŒํ†ฐ)๊ณผ ์‚ฌ๋ผ ๋ถ€๋ฆฌ (ํƒœ๊ตญ์˜ ์‚ฌ๋ผ ๋ถ€๋ฆฌ)์—์„œ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์˜ค๋ž˜๋œ ๋น„๋ฌธ์ด ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ฌ๋“œ ๋“œ ๋ฐ”๋ผ ๋ฐ”ํ‹ฐ ๋ชฌ ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฝํŠธ์™€ ๋ฒ„๋งˆ ๋ชฌ ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฝํŠธ๋ฅผ ์—ฐ๊ฒฐํ•˜๋Š” ํ˜„์กดํ•˜๋Š” ์ฆ๊ฑฐ๋Š” ์—†์ง€๋งŒ ํ˜„๋Œ€ ๋ชฌ (๋˜๋Š” ๋ฒ„๋งˆ ๋ชฌ) ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฝํŠธ์˜ ์กฐ์ƒ ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฝํŠธ์ผ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ˜„๋Œ€์˜ ๋ชฌ ์•ŒํŒŒ๋ฒณ์€ ๋ฒ„๋งˆ์–ด ๋ฌธ์ž์˜ ์ ์‘์ด๋‹ค. ๋ฌธ์ž ์•„๋ž˜์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์ค‘๊ฐ„ 'l'์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ˆ„์  ๋ถ„์Œ ๋ถ€ํ˜ธ์™€ ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ฒ„๋งˆ์–ด์—๋Š” ์กด์žฌํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๊ธ€์ž์™€ ๋ถ„์Œ ๋ถ€ํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ชฌ์˜ ๊ธฐ๋ก ๋œ ํ˜•ํƒœ์™€ ์Œ์„ฑ ํ˜•ํƒœ ์‚ฌ์ด์—๋Š” ๋งŽ์€ ์ฒ ์ž๊ฐ€์žˆ์„ ์ˆ˜์žˆ๋Š” ๋‹จ์ผ ๋ฐœ์Œ๊ณผ ํฐ ๋ถˆ์ผ์น˜๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ชฌ ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฝํŠธ๋Š” ๋˜ํ•œ ์–ธ์–ด์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋œ ์ž์Œ ํด๋Ÿฌ์Šคํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ๋‚˜ํƒ€ ๋‚ด๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ž์Œ ์Šคํƒœํ‚น์„ ๋ˆˆ์— ๋„๊ฒŒ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ž์Œ ๋ชฌ ์•ŒํŒŒ๋ฒณ์—๋Š” ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์ด 35๊ฐœ์˜ ์ž์Œ (์ œ๋กœ ์ž์Œ ํฌํ•จ)์ด ํฌํ•จ๋˜๋ฉฐ, ์ž์Œ์€ ํšŒ์ƒ‰์œผ๋กœ ํ‘œ์‹œ๋œ ํ˜ธํก ๋ ˆ์ง€์Šคํ„ฐ์— ์†ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ชฌ ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฝํŠธ์—์„œ ์ž์Œ์€ ๋‘ ๊ฐœ์˜ ๋ ˆ์ง€์Šคํ„ฐ ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜์— ์†ํ•œ๋‹ค : ๋ช…ํ™•ํ•˜๊ณ  ์ˆจ์ด, ๋‹ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ ๋ฐœ์Œ์€ ๋™์ผํ•œ ๋ฐœ์Œ ๊ตฌ๋ณ„ ๋ถ€ํ˜ธ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ณ ์œ  ํ•œ ๋ชจ์Œ๊ณผ ๋ฐœ์Œ์ด ๋‹ค๋ฅด๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด, ํด๋ฆฌ์–ด ๋ ˆ์ง€์Šคํ„ฐ์— ์†ํ•˜๋Š” แ€€๋Š” / kaห€ /๋กœ ๋ฐœ์Œ๋˜๊ณ  แ€‚๋Š” / kษ›ฬ€ห€ /์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐœ์Œ๋˜๋ฉฐ ๋ชฌ ์Œ์šด์˜ ๋ชจ์Œ ๋ณต์žก์„ฑ์„ ์ˆ˜์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ถ„์Œ ๋ถ€ํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ์ถ”๊ฐ€ํ•˜๋ฉด ์ด๊ฒƒ์ด ๋ถ„๋ช…ํ•˜๋‹ค. ๋ฒ„๋งˆ์–ด์—์„œ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋ถ„์Œ ๋ถ€ํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ์ฒ ์ž๋ฒ•์ด ์šด์œจ์ด์žˆ๋Š” ๋ฐ˜๋ฉด, ๋ชฌ์—์„œ๋Š” ์ž์Œ์˜ ๊ณ ์œ  ๋ ˆ์ง€์Šคํ„ฐ์— ์˜์กดํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ช‡ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ์˜ˆ๊ฐ€ ์•„๋ž˜์— ๋‚˜์—ด๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. + โ†’ , ๋ช…๋ฐฑํ•œ + โ†’ , ๋ช…๋ฐฑํ•œ + โ†’ , ๋ช…๋ฐฑํ•œ + โ†’ , ๋ช…๋ฐฑํ•œ ๋ชฌ ์–ธ์–ด์—๋Š” ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ 8๊ฐœ์˜ ์ค‘๊ฐ„์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. (), (), (), (), (), (), (), ๊ณผ (). ์ž์Œ ๊ฒฐ์Šน์€ ๋ฒ„๋งˆ์—์„œ์™€ ๊ฐ™์ด ๋น„ ๋ผ๋งˆ (แ€บ)๋กœ ํ‘œ์‹œ๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜, ๋ฒ„๋งˆ ์—์„œ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ์Œํ‘œ ์ •์ง€๋กœ ๋ฐœ์Œ๋˜๋Š” ๋Œ€์‹  ์ตœ์ข… ์ž์Œ์€ ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ๊ฐ์˜ ๋ฐœ์Œ์„ ์œ ์ง€ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ, ํŠนํžˆ ํŒ”๋ฆฌ ์–ด ๋ฐ ์‚ฐ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฌํŠธ ํŒŒ์ƒ ์–ดํœ˜์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ๋ชฌ ์ฒ ์ž๋ฒ•์—์„œ ์ž์Œ ๋ˆ„์ ์ด ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋‹ค. ๋ชจ์Œ ํฌํ•จ ๋ชฌ ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฝํŠธ ๋…ํŠนํ•œ ๋ช‡ ๋ถ„์Œ ๋ถ€ํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ์ถ”๊ฐ€ํ•˜์—ฌ, ๋ชจ์Œ์„ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ด๋Š” ๋ฒ„๋งˆ๊ณผ ๋ชฌ์€ (/๋Š” / ษ›a) ๋ฐ แ€ณ (/ I /) แ€ญ ๋ถ„์Œ ๋ถ€ํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ๋‚˜ํƒ€ ๋‚ด๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— แ€ด ๋™์ผํ•œ ๋ฐœ์Œ ๋ถ€ํ˜ธ ๋ถ„์Œ ๋ถ€ํ˜ธ์˜ ์กฐํ•ฉ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉ / รฌห€ /. [29] ๋˜ํ•œ ๋ฒ„๋งˆ์–ด์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ แ€ง ๋Œ€์‹  แ€จ (/ e /)๊ฐ€ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ฃผ์š” ๋ชจ์Œ๊ณผ ๋””ํ”„ ํ†ค ๊ฐ์ฃผ ๋ชฌํฌ๋ฉ”๋ฅด์–ดํŒŒ ๋ฏธ์–€๋งˆ์˜ ์–ธ์–ด ํƒœ๊ตญ์˜ ์–ธ์–ด SVOํ˜• ์–ธ์–ด ์†Œ๋ฉธ์œ„๊ธฐ์–ธ์–ด ๋ชฌ์กฑ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mon%20language
Mon language
The Mon language (, ; ; Mon-Thai แ€˜แ€ฌแ€žแ€ฌแ€™แ€Šแ€บ []; ; ; formerly known as Peguan and Talaing) is an Austroasiatic language spoken by the Mon people. Mon, like the related Khmer language, but unlike most languages in mainland Southeast Asia, is not tonal. The Mon language is a recognised indigenous language in Myanmar as well as a recognised indigenous language of Thailand. Mon was classified as a "vulnerable" language in UNESCO's 2010 Atlas of the Worldโ€™s Languages in Danger. The Mon language has faced assimilative pressures in both Myanmar and Thailand, where many individuals of Mon descent are now monolingual in Burmese or Thai respectively. In 2007, Mon speakers were estimated to number between 800,000 and 1 million. In Myanmar, the majority of Mon speakers live in Southern Myanmar, especially Mon State, followed by Tanintharyi Region and Kayin State. History Mon is an important language in Burmese history. Until the 12th century, it was the lingua franca of the Irrawaddy valleyโ€”not only in the Mon kingdoms of the lower Irrawaddy but also of the upriver Pagan Kingdom of the Bamar people. Mon, especially written Mon, continued to be a prestige language even after the fall of the Mon kingdom of Thaton to Pagan in 1057. King Kyansittha of Pagan (r. 1084โ€“1113) admired Mon culture and the Mon language was patronized. Kyansittha left many inscriptions in Mon. During this period, the Myazedi inscription, which contains identical inscriptions of a story in Pali, Pyu, Mon and Burmese on the four sides, was carved. However, after Kyansittha's death, usage of the Mon language declined among the Bamar and the Burmese language began to replace Mon and Pyu as a lingua franca. Mon inscriptions from Dvaravati's ruins also litter Thailand. However it is not clear if the inhabitants were Mon, a mix of Mon and Malay or Khmer. Later inscriptions and kingdoms like Lavo were subservient to the Khmer Empire. After the fall of Pagan, Mon again became the lingua franca of the Hanthawaddy Kingdom (1287โ€“1539) in present-day Lower Myanmar, which remained a predominantly Mon-speaking region until the 1800s, by which point, the Burmese language had expanded its reach from its traditional heartland in Upper Burma into Lower Burma. The region's language shift from Mon to Burmese has been ascribed to a combination of population displacement, intermarriage, and voluntary changes in self-identification among increasingly Monโ€“Burmese bilingual populations in throughout Lower Burma. The shift was certainly accelerated by the fall of the Mon-speaking Restored Hanthawaddy Kingdom in 1757. Following the fall of Pegu (now Bago), many Mon-speaking refugees fled and resettled in what is now modern-day Thailand. By 1830, an estimated 90% of the population in the Lower Burma self-identified as Burmese-speaking Bamars; huge swaths of former Mon-speaking areas, from the Irrawaddy Delta upriver, spanning Bassein (now Pathein) and Rangoon (now Yangon) to Tharrawaddy, Toungoo, Prome (now Pyay) and Henzada (now Hinthada), were now Burmese-speaking. Great Britain's gradual annexation of Burma throughout the 19th century, in addition to concomitant economic and political instability in Upper Burma (e.g., increased tax burdens to the Burmese crown, British rice production incentives, etc.) also accelerated the migration of Burmese speakers from Upper Burma into Lower Burma. The Mon language has influenced subtle grammatical differences between the varieties of Burmese spoken in Lower and Upper Burma. In Lower Burmese varieties, the verb แ€•แ€ฑแ€ธ ("to give") is colloquially used as a permissive causative marker, like in other Southeast Asian languages, but unlike in other Tibeto-Burman languages. This usage is hardly employed in Upper Burmese varieties, and is considered a sub-standard construct. In 1972, the New Mon State Party (NMSP) established a Mon national school system, which uses Mon as a medium of instruction, in rebel-controlled areas. The system was expanded throughout Mon State following a ceasefire with the central government in 1995. Mon State now operates a multi-track education system, with schools either using Mon as the primary medium of instruction (called Mon national schools) offering modules on the Mon language in addition to the government curriculum (called "mixed schools"). In 2015, Mon language courses were launched state-wide at the elementary level. This system has been recognized as a model for mother-tongue education in the Burmese national education system, because it enables children taught in the Mon language to integrate into the mainstream Burmese education system at higher education levels. In 2013, it was announced that the Mawlamyine-based Thanlwin Times would begin to carry news in the Mon language, becoming Myanmar's first Mon language publication since 1962. Geographic distribution Southern Myanmar (comprising Mon State, Kayin State, and Tanintharyi Region), from the Sittaung River in the north to Myeik (Mergui) and Kawthaung in the south, remains a traditional stronghold of the Mon language. However, in this region, Burmese is favored in urban areas, such as Mawlamyine, the capital of Mon State. In recent years, usage of Mon has declined in Myanmar, especially among the younger generation. While Thailand is home to a sizable Mon population due to historical waves of migration, only a small proportion (estimated to range between 60,000 and 80,000) speak Mon, due to Thaification and the assimilation of Mons into mainstream Thai society. Mon speakers in Thailand are largely concentrated in Ko Kret. The remaining contingent of Thai Mon speakers are located in the provinces of Samut Sakhon, Samut Songkhram, Nakhon Pathom, as well the western provinces bordering Myanmar (Kanchanaburi, Phetchaburi, Prachuap Khiri Khan, and Ratchaburi). A small ethnic group in Thailand speak a language closely related to Mon, called Nyah Kur. They are descendants of the Mon-speaking Dvaravati kingdom. Dialects Mon has three primary dialects in Burma, coming from the various regions the Mon inhabit. They are the Central (areas surrounding Mottama and Mawlamyine), Bago, and Ye dialects. All are mutually intelligible. Ethnologue lists Mon dialects as Martaban-Moulmein (Central Mon, Mon Te), Pegu (Mon Tang, Northern Mon), and Ye (Mon Nya, Southern Mon), with high mutual intelligibility among them. Thai Mon has some differences from the Burmese dialects of Mon, but they are mutually intelligible. The Thai varieties of Mon are considered "severely endangered." Phonology Consonants is only found in Burmese loans. Implosives are lost in many dialects and become explosives instead. Vowels Vocalic register Unlike the surrounding Burmese and Thai languages, Mon is not a tonal language. As in many Monโ€“Khmer languages, Mon uses a vowel-phonation or vowel-register system in which the quality of voice in pronouncing the vowel is phonemic. There are two registers in Mon: Clear (modal) voice, analyzed by various linguists as ranging from ordinary to creaky Breathy voice, vowels have a distinct breathy quality One study involving speakers of a Mon dialect in Thailand found that in some syllabic environments, words with a breathy voice vowel are significantly lower in pitch than similar words with a clear vowel counterpart. While difference in pitch in certain environments was found to be significant, there are no minimal pairs that are distinguished solely by pitch. The contrastive mechanism is the vowel phonation. In the examples below, breathy voice is marked with under-diaeresis. Syntax Pronouns Verbs and verb phrases Mon verbs do not inflect for person. Tense is shown through particles. Some verbs have a morphological causative, which is most frequently a /pษ™-/ prefix (Pan Hla 1989:29): Nouns and noun phrases Singular and plural Mon nouns do not inflect for number. That is, they do not have separate forms for singular and plural: Adjectives Adjectives follow the noun (Pan Hla p.ย 24): Demonstratives Demonstratives follow the noun: Classifiers Like many other Southeast Asian languages, Mon has classifiers which are used when a noun appears with a numeral. The choice of classifier depends on the semantics of the noun involved. Prepositions and prepositional phrases Mon is a prepositional language. Sentences The ordinary word order for sentences in Mon is subjectโ€“verbโ€“object, as in the following examples Questions Yesโ€“no questions are shown with a final particle ha Wh-questions show a different final particle, rau. The interrogative word does not undergo wh-movement. That is, it does not necessarily move to the front of the sentence: Notes Further reading Bauer, Christian. 1982. Morphology and syntax of spoken Mon. Ph.D. thesis, University of London (SOAS). Bauer, Christian. 1984. "A guide to Mon studies". Working Papers, Monash U. Bauer, Christian. 1986. "The verb in spoken Mon". Monโ€“Khmer Studies 15. Bauer, Christian. 1986. "Questions in Mon: Addenda and Corrigenda". Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area v. 9, no. 1, pp.ย 22โ€“26. Diffloth, Gerard. 1984. The Dvarati Old Mon language and Nyah Kur. Monic Language Studies I, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok. Diffloth, Gerard. 1985. "The registers of Mon vs. the spectrographist's tones". UCLA Working Papers in Phonetics 60:55-58. Ferlus, Michel. 1984. "Essai de phonetique historique du mรดn". Monโ€“Khmer Studies, 9:1-90. Guillon, Emmanuel. 1976. "Some aspects of Mon syntax". in Jenner, Thompson, and Starosta, eds. Austroasiatic Studies. Oceanic linguistics special publication no. 13. Halliday, Robert. 1922. A Monโ€“English dictionary. Bangkok: Siam society. Huffman, Franklin. 1987โ€“1988. "Burmese Mon, Thai Mon, and Nyah Kur: a synchronic comparison". Monโ€“Khmer Studies 16โ€“17. Jenny, Mathias. 2005. The Verb System of Mon. Arbeiten des Seminars fรผr Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft der Universitรคt Zรผrich, Nr 19. Zรผrich: Universitรคt Zรผrich. Lee, Thomas. 1983. "An acoustical study of the register distinction in Mon". UCLA Working Papers in Phonetics 57:79-96. Pan Hla, Nai. 1986. "Remnant of a lost nation and their cognate words to Old Mon Epigraph". Journal of the Siam Society 7:122-155 Pan Hla, Nai. 1989. An introduction to Mon language. Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto University. Pan Hla, Nai. 1992. The Significant Role of the Mon Language and Culture in Southeast Asia. Tokyo, Japan: Institute for the Study of Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa. Shorto, H.L. 1962. A Dictionary of Modern Spoken Mon. Oxford University Press. Shorto, H.L.; Judith M. Jacob; and E.H.S. Simonds. 1963. Bibliographies of Monโ€“Khmer and Tai Linguistics. Oxford University Press. Shorto, H.L. 1966. "Mon vowel systems: a problem in phonological statement". in Bazell, Catford, Halliday, and Robins, eds. In memory of J.R. Firth, pp.ย 398โ€“409. Shorto, H.L. 1971. A Dictionary of the Mon Inscriptions from the Sixth to the Sixteenth Centuries. Oxford University Press. Thongkum, Therapan L. 1987. "Another look at the register distinction in Mon". UCLA Working Papers in Phonetics. 67:132-165 External links A hypertext grammar of the Mon language SEAlang Project: Monโ€“Khmer languages: The Monic Branch Old Mon inscriptions database The Ananda "Basement" Plaques Mon-language Swadesh vocabulary list of basic words (from Wiktionary's Swadesh-list appendix) Mon Language Project Mon Language in Thailand: The endangered heritage Monic languages Languages of Myanmar Languages of Thailand Mon people Subjectโ€“verbโ€“object languages Endangered Austroasiatic languages
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/ITZY
ITZY
ITZY(์žˆ์ง€)๋Š” 2019๋…„ 2์›” 12์ผ์— ๋ฐ๋ท”ํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ JYP ์—”ํ„ฐํ…Œ์ธ๋จผํŠธ ์†Œ์†์˜ 5์ธ์กฐ ๊ฑธ๊ทธ๋ฃน์ด๋‹ค. ํ˜„์žฌ ๋ฉค๋ฒ„ ๋ฆฌ์•„๋Š” ๊ทน๋„์˜ ๋ถˆ์•ˆ๊ฐ์œผ๋กœ ํ™œ๋™ ์ค‘๋‹จํ•˜์—ฌ 4์ธ ์ฒด์ œ๋กœ ํ™œ๋™ ์ค‘์ด๋‹ค. (2023๋…„ 10์›” 11์ผ ๊ธฐ์ค€) ํ™œ๋™ ๋ฐ๋ท” ์ „ ์ฑ„๋ น์€ 2013๋…„ KํŒ์Šคํƒ€ 3์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ, 2015๋…„ JYP์˜ ์„œ๋ฐ”์ด๋ฒŒ ์‡ผ ์‹์Šคํ‹ด์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ๊ฑธ ๊ทธ๋ฃน ํŠธ์™€์ด์Šค์˜ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ์›์ด ๋˜๋Š” ๋ฐ์—๋Š” ์‹คํŒจํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ฅ˜์ง„์€ 2018๋…„ JTBC์˜ ์„œ๋ฐ”์ด๋ฒŒ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ ๋ฏน์Šค๋‚˜์ธ์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ•˜์—ฌ ์—ฌ์„ฑ ์กฐ ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ 1์œ„๋ฅผ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜, 9๋ช…์˜ ๋‚จ์„ฑ ์กฐ์™€ 9๋ช…์˜ ์—ฌ์„ฑ ์กฐ ๊ฐ„์˜ ๋Œ€๊ฒฐ์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ์ตœ์ข…ํšŒ์—์„œ ๋‚จ์„ฑ ์กฐ๊ฐ€ ์šฐ์Šนํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋ฐ๋ท”ํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ์ง€๋Š” SBS์˜ ๋” ํŒฌ์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ 5ํšŒ์—์„œ ํƒˆ๋ฝํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ฅ˜์ง„, ์œ ๋‚˜๋Š” ๋ฐฉํƒ„์†Œ๋…„๋‹จ์˜ ๋ฎค๋น„์— ๋‚˜์˜จ ์ ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ์•„๋ฅผ ์ œ์™ธํ•œ ๋ฉค๋ฒ„ ์ „์›์ด 2017๋…„ ์— ๋„ท์˜ ๋ฆฌ์–ผ๋ฆฌํ‹ฐ ์‡ผ ์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ด ํ‚ค์ฆˆ์— ๋ณด์ด ๊ทธ๋ฃน ์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ด ํ‚ค์ฆˆ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ญํ•˜์—ฌ ํ”„๋กœ์ ํŠธ ๊ทธ๋ฃน์œผ๋กœ ์ถœ์—ฐํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ 2019๋…„ 1์›” 21์ผ, JYP ์—”ํ„ฐํ…Œ์ธ๋จผํŠธ๋Š” ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ๊ฑธ๊ทธ๋ฃน์ด ๋ฐ๋ท”ํ•  ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ฐœํ‘œํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ด๋Š” ํŠธ์™€์ด์Šค์˜ 2015๋…„ ๋ฐ๋ท” ์ดํ›„ ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ ๊ฑธ ๊ทธ๋ฃน์ด๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์€ ๋‚ , ์ด ๊ทธ๋ฃน์˜ ๊ณต์‹ ์œ ํŠœ๋ธŒ ๊ณ„์ •์ด ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด์กŒ๊ณ  ์ด ๋ ˆ์ด๋ธ”์˜ ๊ณต์‹ ์ฑ„๋„์€ 5๋ช…์˜ ๋ชจ์Šต์„ ๊ณต๊ฐœํ•˜๋Š” ๋น„๋””์˜ค ํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋Ÿฌ๋ฅผ ๊ณต์œ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2์›” 12์ผ, ์žˆ์ง€๋Š” ์ฒซ ๋ฐ๋ท” ์‹ฑ๊ธ€ ์Œ๋ฐ˜ IT'z Different๋ฅผ ๋ฐœ๋งคํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ ํƒ€์ดํ‹€ ๊ณก์€ ใ€ˆ๋‹ฌ๋ผ๋‹ฌ๋ผใ€‰์ด๋‹ค. ์ด ๋…ธ๋ž˜๋Š” EDM, ํ•˜์šฐ์Šค, ํž™ํ•ฉ ๋ฐ”์ด๋ธŒ๊ฐ€ ํ˜ผํ•ฉ๋œ ๊ณก์ด๋ฉฐ, ๊ฐ€์‚ฌ๋Š” ๋Œ€์ค‘์—๊ฒŒ ์ž˜ ๋ฐ›์•„๋“ค์—ฌ์งˆ ๋งŒํ•œ ๋‚ด์šฉ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฎค์ง ๋น„๋””์˜ค๋Š” ๊ณต๊ฐœ๋œ ์ง€ 24์‹œ๊ฐ„ ๋งŒ์— ์กฐํšŒ์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ 14,000,000๊ฑด์„ ๋„˜์–ด์„ฐ๋‹ค. 2์›” 21์ผ ์— ์นด์šดํŠธ๋‹ค์šด์—์„œ ๋ฐ๋ท” ํ›„ ์ฒซ 1์œ„๋ฅผ ํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๊ฐ™์€ ๊ณก์œผ๋กœ ์Œ์•…๋ฐฉ์†ก 9๊ด€์™•์„ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 7์›” 29์ผ ์ž์ • ์ฒซ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ๋ฏธ๋‹ˆ์•จ๋ฒ” IT'z ICY์˜ ํƒ€์ดํ‹€๊ณก์ธ ใ€ŠICYใ€‹์˜ ๋ฎค์ง๋น„๋””์˜ค๋ฅผ ๊ณต๊ฐœํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์ปด๋ฐฑํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์Œ์•…๋ฐฉ์†ก 12๊ด€์™•์„ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2020๋…„ 2020๋…„ 3์›” 9์ผ, ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ๋ฏธ๋‹ˆ์•จ๋ฒ” IT'z ME์˜ ํƒ€์ดํ‹€๊ณก ใ€ŠWANNABEใ€‹๋กœ ์ปด๋ฐฑํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ํƒ€์ดํ‹€๊ณก ใ€ŠWANNABEใ€‹๋กœ 8๊ด€์™•์„ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2020๋…„ 8์›” 17์ผ, ์„ธ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ๋ฏธ๋‹ˆ์•จ๋ฒ” Not Shy์˜ ํƒ€์ดํ‹€๊ณก ใ€ŠNot Shyใ€‹๋กœ ์ปด๋ฐฑํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ํƒ€์ดํ‹€๊ณก ใ€ŠNot Shyใ€‹๋กœ 5๊ด€์™•์„ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2021๋…„ 2021๋…„ 1์›” 22์ผ, ์˜คํ›„ 2์‹œ์— ์ „ ์„ธ๊ณ„๋กœ Not Shy (English Ver)์ด ๋ฐœ๋งค๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2021๋…„ 4์›” 30์ผ, ๋„ค ๋ฒˆ์งธ ๋ฏธ๋‹ˆ์•จ๋ฒ” GUESS WHO์˜ ํƒ€์ดํ‹€๊ณก ใ€Š๋งˆ.ํ”ผ.์•„. In the morningใ€‹๋กœ ์ปด๋ฐฑํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ํƒ€์ดํ‹€๊ณก ใ€Š๋งˆ.ํ”ผ.์•„. In the morningใ€‹๋กœ 5๊ด€์™•์„ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2021๋…„ 5์›” 14์ผ, ์˜คํ›„ 1์‹œ์— ์ „ ์„ธ๊ณ„๋กœ ๋งˆ.ํ”ผ.์•„. In the morning (English Ver)์ด ๋ฐœ๋งค๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2021๋…„ 5์›” 23์ผ, ์ˆ˜๋ก๊ณก ใ€ŠSorry Not Sorryใ€‹๋กœ ๋ฏธ๋‹ˆ 4์ง‘ ํ™œ๋™์„ ๋งˆ๋ฌด๋ฆฌ ์ง€์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2021๋…„ 7์›” 1์ผ, ๋‘˜์งธ์ด๋ชจ ๊น€๋‹ค๋น„์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋‹ค๋น„์žˆ์ง€ ๋ผ๋Š” ํŒ€๋ช…์œผ๋กœ ใ€Š์–ผ์Œ๊นจ (Break Ice)ใ€‹์•จ๋ฒ”์„ ๋ฐœ๋งคํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2021๋…„ 9์›” 1์ผ, ์ฒซ ๋””์ง€ํ„ธ ์‹ฑ๊ธ€ ์•จ๋ฒ” WHAT'Z ITZY์œผ๋กœ ์ผ๋ณธ ๋ฐ๋ท”๋ฅผ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2021๋…„ 9์›” 24์ผ, ์ฒซ ์ •๊ทœ ์•จ๋ฒ” CRAZY IN LOVE์˜ ํƒ€์ดํ‹€๊ณก ใ€ŠLOCOใ€‹๋กœ ์ปด๋ฐฑํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ํƒ€์ดํ‹€๊ณก ใ€ŠLOCOใ€‹๋กœ 3๊ด€์™•์„ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2021๋…„ 10์›” 17์ผ, ์ˆ˜๋ก๊ณก ใ€ŠSWIPEใ€‹๋กœ ์ •๊ทœ 1์ง‘ ํ™œ๋™์„ ๋งˆ๋ฌด๋ฆฌ ์ง€์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2021๋…„ 12์›” 22์ผ, ใ€ŠITโ€™z ITZYใ€‹ ๋ฒ ์ŠคํŠธ ์•จ๋ฒ”์„ ๋ฐœ๋งคํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์ •์‹ ์ผ๋ณธ ๋ฐ๋ท”๋ฅผ ํ™•์ •์ง€์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2022๋…„ 2022๋…„ 4์›” 6์ผ, ๋””์ง€ํ„ธ ์‹ฑ๊ธ€ ์•จ๋ฒ” ใ€ŠVoltageใ€‹์„ ๋ฐœ๋งคํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์ผ๋ณธ์—์„œ ์ปด๋ฐฑํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2022๋…„ 7์›” 15์ผ, ๋‹ค์„ฏ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ๋ฏธ๋‹ˆ ์•จ๋ฒ” CHECKMATE์˜ ํƒ€์ดํ‹€๊ณก ใ€ŠSNEAKERSใ€‹๋กœ ์ปด๋ฐฑํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ํƒ€์ดํ‹€๊ณก ใ€ŠSNEAKERSใ€‹๋กœ 3๊ด€์™•์„ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2022๋…„ 11์›” 30์ผ, ์—ฌ์„ฏ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ๋ฏธ๋‹ˆ ์•จ๋ฒ” CHESHIRE์˜ ํƒ€์ดํ‹€๊ณก ใ€ŠCheshireใ€‹๋กœ ์ปด๋ฐฑํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ํƒ€์ดํ‹€๊ณก ใ€ŠCheshireใ€‹๋กœ 1๊ด€์™•์„ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2023๋…„ 2023๋…„ 7์›” 31์ผ, ์ผ๊ณฑ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ๋ฏธ๋‹ˆ ์•จ๋ฒ” KILL MY DOUBT์˜ ํƒ€์ดํ‹€๊ณก ใ€ŠCAKEใ€‹๋กœ ์ปด๋ฐฑํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ํƒ€์ดํ‹€๊ณก ใ€ŠCAKEใ€‹๋กœ 1๊ด€์™•์„ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2023๋…„ 9์›” 18์ผ, ๋ฉค๋ฒ„ ๋ฆฌ์•„๊ฐ€ ๊ทน๋„์˜ ๋ถˆ์•ˆ๊ฐ์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ํ™œ๋™์„ ์ค‘๋‹จ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2023๋…„ 10์›” 8์ผ, JTBC ์ฃผ๋ง ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ํž˜์Žˆ์—ฌ์ž ๊ฐ•๋‚จ์ˆœ OST Part.1์„ ๋ถˆ๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๊ตฌ์„ฑ์› ์Œ๋ฐ˜ ์Œ๋ฐ˜ ์™ธ ํ™œ๋™ ์˜ˆ๋Šฅ ์ˆ˜์ƒ ๊ฐ€์š” ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ 1์œ„ ์‹œ์ƒ์‹ ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ITZY - ์Šคํฌํ‹ฐํŒŒ์ด ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ฑธ ๊ทธ๋ฃน ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํŒ ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๋Œ„์Šค ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน JYP ์—”ํ„ฐํ…Œ์ธ๋จผํŠธ ์†Œ์† ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์•„์ด๋Œ ๊ทธ๋ฃน ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน K-pop ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน ํ•œ๊ตญ์–ด ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน 2010๋…„๋Œ€ ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน 2020๋…„๋Œ€ ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน 2019๋…„ ๊ฒฐ์„ฑ๋œ ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน 5์ธ์กฐ ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน MBC M ์‡ผ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์†ก ์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž ์— ๋„ท ์— ์นด์šดํŠธ๋‹ค์šด 1์œ„ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž KBS ๋ฎค์ง๋ฑ…ํฌ 1์œ„ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž MBC ์‡ผ! ์Œ์•…์ค‘์‹ฌ 1์œ„ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž SBS ์ธ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€์š” 1์œ„ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Itzy
Itzy
Itzy (stylized in all caps; ) is a South Korean girl group formed by JYP Entertainment and consisting of members Yeji, Lia, Ryujin, Chaeryeong, and Yuna. They debuted on February 12, 2019, with the release of their single album It'z Different. Their accolades include Rookie of the Year at the 34th Golden Disc Awards, New Artist of the Year at the 9th Gaon Chart Music Awards and 2019 Melon Music Awards, Best New Female Artist at the 2019 Mnet Asian Music Awards, and the New Artist Award at the 29th Seoul Music Awards; they are the first K-pop girl group to achieve such a "Rookie Grand Slam". Career 2015โ€“2019: Pre-debut activities After failing to pass auditions held by Fantagio, Chaeryeong and her sister were cast by JYP Entertainment (JYP) through the K-pop Star 3 television series. In 2015, Chaeryeong participated in JYP's survival show Sixteen but did not make the final lineup of the winning girl group, Twice. The first member of Itzy to join JYP, she trained for five years. Ryujin was scouted at a Got7 concert and trained at JYP for four years prior to Itzy's debut. Both Yuna and Yeji joined JYP in 2015 and trained for three years, Yuna after being discovered by company staff and Yeji after having successfully auditioned. The final member Lia initially auditioned for SM Entertainment and passed but was forced to back out at the last minute due to a disagreement with her parents. She passed JYP auditions several years later and trained for two years. In 2017, Yuna and Ryujin appeared in BTS' "Love Yourself" highlight reel. The same year, the members (except for Lia) appeared on the Mnet reality show Stray Kids as a project group alongside the boy group that would eventually be named Stray Kids. Ryujin competed on JTBC's survival show Mix Nine, placing first among the female contestants but losing to the male contestants overall. Meanwhile, Yeji participated in SBS' The Fan but was eliminated in the fifth episode. 2019: Debut with It'z Different and It'z Icy On January 21, 2019, JYP announced that they would be debuting a new girl group, their first since Twice in 2015 and first overall idol group since Stray Kids in 2017. The label's official YouTube channel uploaded a video trailer revealing the five members. On February 12, the group released their debut single album, It'z Different, led by the single "Dalla Dalla". The song incorporated elements from EDM sub-genres such as future house and bass house, and its empowering lyrics were well received by audiences. The group scored one of the biggest Billboard debuts for a new K-pop act in years, with "Dalla Dalla" entering at number three and peaking at number two on the World Digital Song Sales chart. The song sold 2,000 downloads in the US in the week ending February 14, according to Nielsen Music, making it the best-selling K-pop song in the country that week. "Want It?" was released alongside "Dalla Dalla" and debuted at number eight, selling 1,000 downloads. "Dalla Dalla" also debuted as the second most popular song on YouTube. Billboard confirmed that the music video for "Dalla Dalla" surpassed 17.1ย million views within 24 hours of its release and broke the record for the most viewed K-pop debut music video within 24 hours. On February 21, eight days after their debut, Itzy received their first music show win on M Countdown, breaking the record for the fastest time for a girl group to achieve their first music show win. The song went on to win on music shows nine times, and its music video became the fastest K-pop debut music video to reach 100 million views on YouTube at the time. Itzy's first extended play (EP), It'z Icy, was released on July 29, along with a music video for lead single "Icy". Commercially, the EP was a success, peaking at number three on the Gaon Album Chart. "Icy" continued the group's success on music shows, earning 12 wins, including a triple crown on Show Champion. On September 22, JYP announced Itzy's showcase tour, the Itzy Premiere Showcase Tour "Itzy? Itzy!". The tour opened in Jakarta on November 2 and visited different cities in Asia throughout the end of 2019 and the US for five shows in January 2020. In November 2019, "Dalla Dalla" surpassed 100 million streams on Gaon Music Chart, earning the group their first platinum certification. It was the first debut song by a K-pop group to earn a platinum certification from the Korea Music Content Association (KMCA) since the introduction of certifications in April 2018. The single ranked eighth on the list of "The 20 Best K-pop Songs of 2019" compiled by Dazed, which described the group as having kept "a steady hand on the rudder using the fun touches even with the visual and sonic chaos going on around" and "the ones to give K-pop a fresh boot up". The music videos for "Dalla Dalla" and "Icy" placed on the list of South Korea's most popular music video on YouTube at numbers two and seven, respectively. At the end of the year, Itzy won several Best New Female Artist awards, including at the 2019 Melon Music Awards and the 2019 Mnet Asian Music Awards. 2020โ€“2021: US showcase tour and continued commercial success Itzy began the year with the US leg of their showcase tour. Their first show was on January 17, 2020, in Los Angeles. On March 9, Itzy released their second EP, It'z Me, and its lead single "Wannabe". Featuring production from Sophie and Oliver Heldens, the EP saw the group experiment with EDM sounds while continuing to explore lyrical themes of freedom, self-confidence, and individuality. It'z Me debuted at number one on South Korea's Gaon Album Chart, making it the group's first number one album in the country. It also debuted at number five on the Billboard World Albums chart, their highest position on the chart at the time. The group went on to achieve eight music show wins with "Wannabe". On August 17, 2020, Itzy released Not Shy, their third EP, as well as the music video for the lead single of the same name. Although it featured Itzy's signature "teen crush" pop sound, the album marked a lyrical shift as the group transitioned from singing about "themes of independence and self-love" to "tipping their toes into the waters of singing about love". The EP debuted at number one on the Gaon Album Chart with sales of over 219,048 copies, their second release to top the chart. Itzy promoted "Not Shy" on music shows, achieving five wins. On March 20, 2021, Itzy released the digital single "Trust Me (Midzy)", a song dedicated to their fans, as part of their first global livestream event. On April 30, Itzy released their fourth EP Guess Who and its lead single "In the Morning". the song debuted and peaked at number 22 on the Billboard Global Excl. U.S. chart and also at number 34 on the Global 200 chart, becoming their highest entry on both. The EP entered the US Billboard 200 at number 148, making it their first appearance on the chart. Later that year, the EP was certified Platinum by Korea Music Content Association (KMCA). The English version of "In the Morning" was released on May 14. On July 1, 2021, Second Aunt KimDaVi and Itzy released the collaborative digital single "Break Ice" under VIVO WAVE and distributed by Genie Music and Stone Music Entertainment. On September 1, it was announced that Itzy would be making their Japanese debut under Warner Japan with the EP What'z Itzy. On September 24, Itzy released their first studio album Crazy in Love and its lead single "Loco". The album debuted at number 11 on the Billboard 200, a new career high for the group. Crazy in Love was certified Platinum by the KMCA in November 2021 for selling over 250,000 copies and 2ร— Platinum in February 2022 for selling over 500,000 copies. On December 22, 2021, the group released a Japanese compilation album titled It'z Itzy. 2022โ€“present: International endeavors On February 10, 2022, it was reported by Billboard that Republic Records and JYP Entertainment added Itzy to their strategic partnership, which initially only included Twice. On April 6, Itzy released their first Japanese single "Voltage". On July 15, Itzy released their fifth EP Checkmate and its lead single "Sneakers". It was also announced that they would embark on their first world tour, the Checkmate World Tour, with the first shows in Seoul on August 6 and 7. Itzy released their second Japanese single "Blah Blah Blah" on October 5 and their first English single "Boys Like You" on October 21. On November 30, Itzy released their sixth EP Cheshire and its lead single of the same name. On July 31, 2023, Itzy released their seventh EP Kill My Doubt, led by the single "Cake". Leading up to the EP's release, the quintet released music videos for B-sides "Bet on Me" and "None of My Business", on July 3 and 24, respectively. The quintet held a showcase at the SK Olympic Handball Gymnasium in support of the EP on the day of its release. Following news of the group's first Japanese-language studio album in February 2023, the album, titled Ringo, was officially announced on August 7, with it releasing on October 18. On September 18, 2023, JYP Entertainment announced that Lia would be taking a hiatus due to anxiety. Endorsements Itzy has advertised for various brands since their debut in 2019, when they collaborated with Kia Motors to introduce the "Soul Booster" cars in the music video of Itzy's debut single "Dalla Dalla". They subsequently released the "Itzy X Soul Booster Special Video". Itzy became one of the celebrity endorsers of Lotte Duty Free in 2019. Later that year, Itzy inked endorsement deals with clothing brand Andar and MAC Cosmetics. Itzy also endorsed local brands such as Dongseo Food and CJ CheilJedang, which collaborated with Itzy to release limited edition "Gourmet Chicken" that was promoted with the release of a theme music video on YouTube. Itzy endorsed the local contact lens brand Claren in 2021. In August 2020, Itzy collaborated with Line Friends to participate in the character development of "lifetime friends" called "WDZY" dolls representing each member. On April 31, 2021, Maybelline New York announced that they selected Itzy as their new global spokesmodels, the first Korean and musician to be chosen as such by Maybelline New York. In March 2022, Itzy promoted the Adidas Members Week event at the Adidas Hongdae Center. They advertised the Pokรฉmon Legends: Arceus video game and the Pokรฉmon Card Game in January 2022, followed by Pokรฉmon Unite in July 2022 alongside the release of the special video "Pokรฉmon Unite / Itzy Special Show!" on July 7. On March 10, 2022, Swedish Fashion brand H&M announced that they selected Itzy as models for the brand's spring/summer campaign. On August 16, 2022, Itzy became ambassadors for the Singaporean fashion brand Charles & Keith. On March 20, 2023, Itzy was announced as the newest ambassadors of Mobile Legends: Bang Bang. On September 20, 2023, Itzy became advertising models and participated in a TV CF for coffee brand Mega MGC Coffee with Son Heung-min. Members Yeji () โ€“ leader, dancer, vocalist, rapper Lia () โ€“ vocalist, rapper Ryujin () โ€“ rapper, dancer, vocalist Chaeryeong () โ€“ dancer, vocalist, rapper Yuna () โ€“ dancer, rapper, vocalist Discography Korean albums Crazy in Love (2021) Japanese albums Ringo (2023) Filmography Web shows Concerts Checkmate World Tour (2022โ€“2023) Awards and nominations References External links 2019 establishments in South Korea English-language singers from South Korea Japanese-language singers of South Korea JYP Entertainment artists K-pop music groups Musical groups established in 2019 Musical groups from Seoul Republic Records artists South Korean girl groups Warner Music Japan artists MAMA Award winners Golden Disc Award winners Melon Music Award winners Electropop groups J-pop music groups South Korean hip hop groups South Korean electronic dance music groups South Korean musical quintets
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%ED%8E%98%EC%9D%B4%EC%9C%A0%EC%97%90
ํŽ˜์ด์œ ์—
ํŽ˜์ด์œ ์—(้ฃž่ทƒ, Feiyue)๋Š” ์ค‘๊ตญ ์ƒํ•˜์ด์—์„œ ์ฒ˜์Œ ์„ค๋ฆฝ๋˜์–ด, ์ง€๊ธˆ์€ ์ค‘๊ตญ์˜ DaFu Rubber Company๊ฐ€ ์†Œ์œ ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ์‹ ๋ฐœ ๋ธŒ๋žœ๋“œ์ด๋‹ค. ์ค‘๊ตญ ์™ธ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์—์„œ๋Š” DaFu Rubber์˜ ํ•ด์™ธ ์ง€์‚ฌ์ธ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์˜ Feiyue Shoes๋ฅผ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ BBC International๊ฐ€ ์ธ์ˆ˜ํ•˜์—ฌ, BBC International๊ฐ€ ํ•ด์™ธ ํŒ๋งค ์—ญํ• ์„ ๋‹ด๋‹นํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋ฆ„์˜ ์œ ๋ž˜๋Š” ์ค‘๊ตญ์–ด๋กœ "๋›ฐ๋‹ค" ๋˜๋Š” "๋‚ ์•„๊ฐ€๋‹ค"๋ฅผ ์˜๋ฏธํ•œ๋‹ค. ์„ค๋ฆฝ ๋‹น์‹œ, ๋Œ€์•ฝ์ง„ ์šด๋™์˜ ๊ณต๋ช…์— ์˜ํ–ฅ์„ ๋ฐ›๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1920๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒ์‚ฐ์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ, 2006๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ธ€๋กœ๋ฒŒ ์†Œ์œ ๊ถŒ์€ DaFu Rubber์˜ ํ•ด์™ธ ์žํšŒ์‚ฌ์ธ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์˜ Feiyue Shoes์—๊ฒŒ ๋„˜์–ด๊ฐ”๋‹ค. ์ค‘๊ตญ์—์„œ๋Š” 2008๋…„ ๋ฒ ์ด์ง• ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ๊ฐœ๋ง‰์‹๋‹น์‹œ, ๋งŽ์€ ๊ณต์—ฐ์ž๋“ค์ด ์ฐฉ์šฉํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด ๋…ธ์ถœ๋˜์–ด, ์ค‘๊ตญ ๋‚ด์—์„œ ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ธ๋“ค์ด ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋งŽ์ด ์‹ ๊ณ  ์žˆ์Œ์„ ์ง์ž‘ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์˜ค๋ฆฌ์ง€๋„ ๋ฒ„์ „์€ ๊ฐ€๋ณ๊ณ  ์–‡์€ ๋ฐ‘์ฐฝ๊ณผ ์œ ์—ฐ์„ฑ์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ํŒŒ์ฟ ๋ฅด ์ˆ˜๋ จ์ž๋“ค ์‚ฌ์ด์—์„œ ์ „ ์„ธ๊ณ„์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ธ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๋งŽ์•„์กŒ๋‹ค. ํŠนํžˆ, ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์—์„œ๋Š” ๋ฐฐ์šฐ ์˜ฌ๋žœ๋„ ๋ธ”๋ฃธ์ด ์ด ๋ธŒ๋žœ๋“œ ์‹ ๋ฐœ์„ ์‹ ๊ณ  ๋‹ค๋‹ˆ๋Š” ๋ชจ์Šต์ด ํฌ์ฐฉ๋œ ์ ์ด ์žˆ์–ด ํ•œ ๋•Œ ์ฃผ๋ชฉ์„ ๋ฐ›๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ค‘๊ตญ ๊ณต์žฅ์—๋Š” 3,000๋ช…์˜ ์ง์›์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋˜์–ด, ํ•˜๋ฃจ์— 36,000์ผค๋ ˆ๋ฅผ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ•˜๊ณ , ์ค‘๊ตญ์—์„œ๋Š” ์—ฐ๊ฐ„ ํ‰๊ท  500๋งŒ ์ผค๋ ˆ๊ฐ€ ํŒ๋งค๋˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์•Œ๋ ค์กŒ๋‹ค. ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์—์„œ๋Š” Matthew Derwent Wapples์‚ฌ์™€์˜ ๊ฐˆ๋“ฑ์œผ๋กœ 10๋…„๋™์•ˆ ์ง„์ถœ์ด ๋ง‰ํ˜”๋‹ค๊ฐ€, 2019๋…„์—๋Š” Tenements Clothing ์‚ฌ์™€์˜ ํƒ€๊ณ„์•ฝ์„ ๋งบ์Œ์œผ๋กœ์„œ ์žฌ์นœ์ถœํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ ์„ฑ๊ณตํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์—ญ์‚ฌ ํŽ˜์ด์œ ์—์˜ ์‹œ์ดˆ๋Š” 1920๋…„๋Œ€์— ์ƒํ•˜์ด์— ํ•œ ๊ณต์žฅ์„ ์„ค๋ฆฝํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹น์‹œ ์ƒํ•˜์ด์˜ ์†Œ๋ฆผ ์Šน๋ ค๋“ค์€ ๋ฌด์ˆ ๊ณผ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ํ˜•ํƒœ์˜ ์šด๋™์„ ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๊ทธ ๋งŒํผ ์•ˆ์ •์ ์œผ๋กœ ์‹ ๊ณ ๋‹ค๋‹ˆ๊ธฐ ํŽธ์•ˆ ์‹ ๋ฐœ์ด ํ•„์š”ํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด์„œ ์Šน๋ ค๋“ค์ด ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ ์ฒœ์„ ๊ฐ€์ ธ์™€ ๊ธฐ์กด์˜ ์‹ ๋ฐœ์— ๊ฒฐํ•ฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ฐœ์กฐํ•ด ๋งŒ๋“ค๋ฉด์„œ ์Šน๋ ค๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ๋ณด๊ธ‰ํ•˜์˜€๊ณ , ์ด๋ฅผ ๊ณ„๊ธฐ๋กœ ์ฒœ์œผ๋กœ ๋งŒ๋“  ์‹ ๋ฐœ์„ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ•˜๊ณ  ์ด๋ฅผ ํŒ๋งคํ•˜๋Š” ๊ณต์žฅ์œผ๋กœ ์ด์–ด์ง„๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‹ค๊ฐ€ 1930๋…„๋Œ€์— ๋ณธ๊ฒฉ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ธ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋Œ๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ค‘๊ตญ์˜ ๊ฑฐ์˜ ๋ชจ๋“  ๋ฌด์ˆ  ์ˆ˜๋ จ์ž๋“ค๊ณผ ์šด๋™์„ ์ˆ˜๋“ค, ์‹ฌ์ง€์–ด ์ƒํ•˜์ด ์ด ์™ธ์— ์ˆ˜๋งŽ์€ ์†Œ๋ฆผ ์Šน๋ ค๋“ค๊ณผ ์ฟตํ‘ธ ๊ณ ์ˆ˜๋“ค์— ์˜ํ•ด ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋  ์ •๋„์ด๋‹ค. 1958๋…„์— ๊ณต์žฅ์€ ๋‹คํ‘ธ ๊ณ ๋ฌด ํšŒ์‚ฌ(ๅคงๅญšๆฉก่ƒถๅŽ‚)๋ผ๋Š” ์ด๋ฆ„์œผ๋กœ ๋ฒ•์ธํ™”๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ํŽ˜์ด์œ ์— ์ด๋ฆ„ ๋˜ํ•œ ๋‹น์‹œ์— ์ฒ˜์Œ ๋“ฑ์žฅํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์‹ ๋ฐœ ์ด๋ฆ„์— ๋‚ด๊ฑธ๊ณ , ์ด๊ฒƒ์ด ํŽ˜์ด์œ ์—์˜ ์ฒซ ์‹œ์ž‘์ด๋‹ค. 1963๋…„์— ํŽ˜์ด์œ ์—๋Š” 1,616,000์ผค๋ ˆ์˜ ์‹ ๋ฐœ์„ ์ค‘๊ตญ ์œก์ƒ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ๋ณด๊ธ‰ํ•˜์˜€๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด ์ดํ›„๋กœ๋Š” ์ค‘๊ตญ์—์„œ ์ˆ˜์‹ญ ๋…„ ๋™์•ˆ ๊พธ์ค€ํžˆ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋งŽ์ด ํŒ”๋ฆฐ ์‹ ๋ฐœ ๋ธŒ๋žœ๋“œ๋กœ ์„ฑ์žฅํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ์ƒ์‚ฐ๋Ÿ‰๋Š” ํ•œํ•ด๋งŒ ํ•ด๋„ ์ˆ˜์‹ญ๋งŒ ์ผค๋ ˆ์— ๋‹ฌํ•  ์ •๋„์ด๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ, ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ๋“ค ์‚ฌ์ด์—๋Š” ์™ธ๊ตญ ๋ฌด์ˆ  ๋™์•„๋ฆฌ๋“ค๊ณผ ํ•™๊ต๋“ค์ด ํ•™์ƒ๋“ค์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ํ‘œ์ค€ ์‹ ๋ฐœ๋กœ ์ˆ˜์ž…ํ•˜์—ฌ ํ•ด์™ธ ์œ ๋ช… ์ˆ˜์ถœํ’ˆ์œผ๋กœ ์„ฑ์žฅํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ 1978๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ค‘๊ตญ์˜ ๊ฒฝ์ œ ๊ฐœํ˜ ์ •์ฑ…์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ ํƒ€ ์™ธ๊ตญ ๋ธŒ๋žœ๋“œ์˜ ์ง„์ถœ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ์ž์‚ฌ ์šด๋™ํ™”์˜ ์ธ์ง€๋„๊ฐ€ ํ•˜๋ฝํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์ƒ์‚ฐ๋Ÿ‰์ด ๋‚ฎ์•„์ง€๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์˜€๊ณ , ๊ทธ๋ž˜๋„ ์•„์ง๊นŒ์ง€๋Š” ์œ ๋ช… ์šด๋™ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋“ค์˜ ๋ณด๊ธ‰์€ ๋ฌด๋‚œํ•ด์„œ ์œก์ƒํ™”๋Š” ์‹ค๋‚ด ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์ฝ”์น˜ ์‰ฌ๊ฒ๋ฐ”์˜ค(ๅพๆ นๅฎ)์™€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์น˜ํ›™(็ฅๅฎ)์ด ์‹ ๊ณ  ๋Œ€ํšŒ์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ•  ์ •๋„์ด๋‹ค. 2005๋…„์— ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์— Feiyue International๋ผ๋Š” ์ด๋ฆ„์œผ๋กœ ๋ฒ•์ธ์ด ์„ธ์›Œ์กŒ๋Š”๋ฐ, ๋ฒ•์ธ์€ ์ƒํ•˜์ด ์ถœ์‹  ์œ ๋ช… ๋งˆ์ผ€ํŒ… ๋ฐ ์ด๋ฒคํŠธ ๋งค๋‹ˆ์ €์ด์ž ๊ธฐ์—…๊ฐ€์˜€๋˜ ํŒŒํŠธ๋ฆฌ์Šค ๋ฐ”์Šคํ‹ฐ์•™์„ ์ค‘์‹ฌ์œผ๋กœ ํ•˜๊ณ , ๋””์ž์ธ ํŒ€์€ ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ์„ธ๊ธฐ์™€ ํด๋ ˆ๋ฉ˜์Šค ํฌ ๋“ฑ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ์œ ๋ช… ๋””์ž์ด๋„ˆ ๋ฐ ์˜ˆ์ˆ ๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ์ฑ„์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ฒ•์ธ์„ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ์‹œ์ผœ ์„ค๋ฆฝํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ธฐ์กด์˜ ์ค‘๊ตญ์—์„œ์˜ ํŽ˜์ด์œ ์—์˜ ์ด๋ฏธ์ง€์™€ ์™ธ๊ด€์ด ์•„๋‹Œ, ์„œ๊ตฌ ์†Œ๋น„์ž๋“ค์˜ ๋ˆˆ๋†’์ด์— ๋งž์ถ”๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋กœ 2006๋…„ 2์›”์— ํŽ˜์ด์œ  ์Šˆ์ฆˆ ์ปฌ๋ ‰์…˜์„ ํ•ด์™ธ์— ์ฒ˜์Œ ์„ ๋ณด์ด๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. 2009๋…„์— ๋‹คํ‘ธ ๊ณ ๋ฌด ํšŒ์‚ฌ๋Š” ์ค‘๊ตญ์˜ ํŽ˜์ด์œ ์— ๊ถŒ๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ์žฌํŽธ์„ฑ์„ ํ•˜์˜€๋Š”๋ฐ, ํŽ˜์ด์œ ์— ์ง€๋ถ„ ์ผ๋ถ€๋ฅผ ์†ฝ์ฒธ ๊ทธ๋ฃน์—๊ฒŒ ๋งค๊ฐํ•˜์˜€๊ณ , ์ƒ์‚ฐ ๊ถŒํ•œ๋„ ํƒ‘์›(ๅคงๅšๆ–‡)์—๊ฒŒ ์ผ๋ถ€๋ฅผ ๋„˜๊ฒผ๋‹ค. 2014๋…„ 8์›”์— ์…€๋ฆฐ๋Š, ์•™๋“œ๋ ˆ, ์นด์‹œ์˜ค, ๋ณธํ†ต, NSBQ ๋“ฑ๊ณผ์˜ ์ฝœ๋ผ๋ณด๋ ˆ์ด์…˜์—์„œ ํฐ ์„ฑ๊ณต์„ ๊ฑฐ๋‘์—ˆ๊ณ , 2014๋…„์— ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ BBC International๋Š” ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์˜ Feiyue International๋ฅผ ์ธ์ˆ˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„, BBC International๋Š” ํŽ˜์ด์œ ์—์˜ ์ œํ’ˆ ๋ผ์ธ์—…์„ ํ™•๋Œ€์‹œ์ผœ, ํŒจ์…˜ ํฌ์›Œ๋“œ ์Šคํƒ€์ผ๋ง, ์—…๋ฐ์ดํŠธ๋œ ์‹ค๋ฃจ์—ฃ, ๊ฐ€์ฃฝ๊ณผ ์Šคํ‚จ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋ฏธ์—„ ์†Œ์žฌ๋ฅผ ํŠน์ง•์œผ๋กœ ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ด‘๋ฒ”์œ„ํ•œ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์ปฌ๋ ‰์…˜์„ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœํ•ด ๋‚˜๊ฐ”๊ณ , 2015๋…„์— ๋‚จ์„ฑ, ์—ฌ์„ฑ, ์•„๋™ ์ปฌ๋ ‰์…˜์„ ์ „ ์„ธ๊ณ„์— ๊ณต๊ฐœํ•˜์˜€๊ณ , ํ”ผ๋„ˆ์ธ ์™€์˜ ํ˜‘์—…ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ฝœ๋ผ๋ณด ํ•œ์ •ํŒ ์ปฌ๋ ‰์…˜์„ ๋‚ด๋†“๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ง€์ ์žฌ์‚ฐ๊ถŒ ๋…ผ๋ž€ ํŽ˜์ด์œ ์—๋Š” 2017๋…„์— ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ BBC International์™€ ์ค‘๊ตญ์˜ ๋‹คํ‘ธ ๊ณ ๋ฌด ํšŒ์‚ฌ ์‚ฌ์ด์— ํŽ˜์ด์œ ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ƒํ‘œ๊ถŒ๊ณผ ์ง€์  ์žฌ์‚ฐ๊ถŒ์„ ๋‘˜๋Ÿฌ์‹ผ ๋ถ„์Ÿ์ด ํ„ฐ์ง€๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฅ˜์นญ๋ฃฝ ๋‹คํ‘ธ ๊ณ ๋ฌด ํšŒ์‚ฌ ๋งค๋‹ˆ์ €๋Š” "๋‹น์‹œ ์ค‘๊ตญ ๋‚ด ์–ด๋Š ๋ˆ„๊ตฌ๋„ ์ƒํ’ˆ ์ง€์ ์žฌ์‚ฐ๊ถŒ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ๋ชฐ๋ž๊ณ , 2007~08๋…„์ด ๋˜์–ด์„œ์•ผ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์ธ์ด ์ƒํ‘œ๋ฅผ ๋“ฑ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ์‚ฌ์‹ค์„ ์•Œ๊ฒŒ ๋๋‹ค"๊ณ  ๋งํ•˜๋ฉฐ, "์ค‘๊ตญ์ด ์—ฌ์ „ํžˆ ์ž๋ณธ์ฃผ์˜์™€ ์”จ๋ฆ„ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๊ณ , ๋ชจ๋“  ๊ณต์žฅ์ด ๊ตญ์œ  ์ž์‚ฐ์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ๊ฒƒ์—์„œ, ์ผ๋ถ€ ๊ถŒ๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๊ฐœ์ธ ๊ธฐ์—…์— ์ด์–‘ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ „ํ™˜ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ ์‹œ๊ธฐ์— ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ํšŒ์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ์ค‘๊ตญ์ธ๋“ค์„ ์ด์šฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค"๊ณ  ๋น„ํŒํ•˜์—ฌ ์†Œ์†ก์„ ์ œ๊ธฐํ–ˆ๊ณ , ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์ •์ž‘ ํŒŒํŠธ๋ฆฌ์Šค ๋ฐ”์Šคํ‹ฐ์•™๋Š” ์ด์— ๋ฐ˜๋ฐ•ํ•˜์—ฌ, ์˜คํžˆ๋ ค "๋‹คํ‘ธ ๊ณ ๋ฌด ํšŒ์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ์ค‘๊ตญ ์ƒํ‘œ๊ถŒ์„ ์ž์‚ฌ ์†Œ์œ ๋กœ ๋‘”๊ฐ‘ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋“ฑ๋กํ•˜๊ณ , ์œ„์กฐํ’ˆ์„ ์ง์–ด๋‚ด๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค"๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ•˜๋ฉฐ ํŽ˜์ด์œ ์—๋Š” ์ค‘๊ตญ ๊ธฐ์—…์˜ ์†Œ์œ ๊ถŒ์ด ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ผ๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํŒŒํŠธ๋ฆฌ์Šค ๋ฐ”์Šคํ‹ฐ์•™๋Š” ๊ธฐ์—…๊ฐ€๋กœ ์•Œ๋ ค์กŒ์ง€๋งŒ ์šด๋™ํ™” ์ˆ˜์ง‘๊ฐ€๋กœ๋„ ๋‚˜๋ฆ„ ์œ ๋ช…ํ•œ๋ฐ, ๊ทธ๋Š” 2005๋…„์— ์•„์‹œ์•„์— ๊ฑฐ์ฃผํ•  ๋‹น์‹œ์— ํ•œ ํŽ˜์ด์œ ์— ์‹ ๋ฐœ์„ ๋ณด๊ณ  ํ•œ๋ˆˆ์— ๋ฐ˜ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ, ๋Œ€๋Ÿ‰์œผ๋กœ ์ƒ์‚ฐ๋œ ์ด ์‹ ๋ฐœ์„ ๋Œ€๊ฑฐ ๊ตฌ์ž…ํ•˜์—ฌ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์— ํŒ๋งค๋ฅผ ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด์„œ ๋””์ž์ด๋„ˆ์ธ ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ ์„ธ๊ธฐ, ํด๋ ˆ๋ฉ˜์Šค ํฌ์ดํŠธ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์ž์‹ ๋“ค์ด ๊ทธ๋™์•ˆ ์ˆ˜์ง‘ํ•ด์˜จ ์‹ ๋ฐœ์„ ์ „๋ถ€ ํŒ”์•„์„œ ์ž๊ธˆ์„ ์–ป์—ˆ๊ณ , ๋ค์œผ๋กœ ํŒŒ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์— ๊ทธ์น˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ , ๋ธŒ๋žœ๋“œ์˜ ์†Œ์œ ๊ถŒ์„ ์–ป๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด์„œ ์ค‘๊ตญ ๊ณต์žฅ์— ์ง์ ‘๊ฐ€์„œ ํ—ˆ๋ฝ์„ ๋ง์•˜๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ๋ฅ˜์นญ๋ฃฝ์€ 2007๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ฐ”์Šคํ‹ฐ์•™์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์กด์žฌ์„ฑ์„ ๋“ฃ์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์›๋ž˜ ํšŒ์‚ฌ์˜ ํ—ˆ๊ฐ€๊ฐ€ ์•„๋‹Œ, ํ•˜์ฒญ ์—…์ฒด๋กœ ์˜ค์ธํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ฐ˜๋ฐ•ํ•˜๊ณ  ๋‚˜์„ฐ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿผ์—๋„ ๋ฐ”์Šคํ‹ฐ์•™์€ ์ž์‹ ์ด ๋ธŒ๋žœ๋“œ๋ฅผ ๊ตฌ์ž…ํ•œ ๊ณต์žฅ์˜ ์ฃผ์ธ์ด ๋ˆ„๊ตฌ์ธ์ง€ ์ •ํ™•ํžˆ ์•Œ์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ์—ฌ์ „ํžˆ ์†Œ์œ ๊ถŒ์„ ์ž์‹ ์ด ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋งž์„œ๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ, ๋‹คํ‘ธ ๊ณ ๋ฌด ํšŒ์‚ฌ๋Š” ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์—์„œ ๊ถŒ๋ฆฌ ์†Œ์†ก์„ ์•„๋ฌด ์†Œ๋“์—†์ด ํŒจ์†Œ๋‹นํ–ˆ๊ณ , ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ํŽ˜์ด์œ ์— ๋ณธ์‚ฌ๋„ ์ƒํ‘œ, ์ƒํ‘œ๋ช…, ํŠธ๋ ˆ์ด๋“œ ๋“œ๋ ˆ์Šค์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ถŒ๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๋ณด์œ ํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ๊ตญ์ œ๋ฒ•๊ณผ ์กฐ์•ฝ์— ์˜ํ•œ ๋ณดํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ์ฃผ์žฅํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๊ณ , ํ˜„์žฌ๊นŒ์ง€ ํŽ˜์ด์œ ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ง€์ ์žฌ์‚ฐ๊ถŒ ๋…ผ์Ÿ์€ ์—ฌ์ „ํ•˜๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ํŽ˜์ด์œ ์— ์ค‘๊ตญ ๊ณต์‹ ์›น์‚ฌ์ดํŠธ ํŽ˜์ด์œ ์— ๊ธ€๋กœ๋ฒŒ ๊ณต์‹ ์›น์‚ฌ์ดํŠธ ํŽ˜์ด์œ ์— ์ฝ”๋ฆฌ์•„ ๊ณต์‹ ์›น์‚ฌ์ดํŠธ ์ค‘๊ตญ์˜ ์‹ ๋ฐœ ํšŒ์‚ฌ ์ƒํ•˜์ด์‹œ์˜ ๊ธฐ์—… ์ค‘๊ตญ์˜ ๋ธŒ๋žœ๋“œ ์‹ ๋ฐœ ๋ธŒ๋žœ๋“œ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feiyue
Feiyue
Feiyue is a Chinese shoe brand founded in Shanghai owned by Dafu Rubber Co., Ltd. The brand was acquired by Feiyue International, a subsidiary of BBC International LLC (no relation to BBC News) in 2014. The word "Feiyue" () means "to leap" or "to fly over" and is reminiscent of the Great Leap Forward. The shoes were first produced in Shanghai during the 1920s. Since 2006 there have been two separate companies creating Feiyue shoes: Da Fu Rubber and its subsidiary manufacturer, Double Coin Holdings, and a French company operating separately from the original Chinese company. A number of performers wore Feiyue China shoes during the opening of the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. Actor Orlando Bloom was spotted wearing the French version of Feiyue shoes. The Chinese factory has 3,000 employees producing 36,000 pairs a day, with an average of 5,000,000 pairs sold in China yearly. History Feiyue's roots can be traced to the 1920s when cloth shoes were manufactured in Shanghai. In 1958, DaFu Rubber Company designed and produced a kind of civil shoe known as "Feiyue," a modification of the cloth shoes used by the Shaolin monks. They gained popularity during the 1930s for their robustness, flexibility, and comfort, which were considered essential requirements for martial arts and various forms of athletics. The shoes are a staple for almost all wushu practitioners and athletes in China, with the shoes being used by Shaolin monks and Kung Fu masters. In 1963, using Feiyue and double arrow-labeled chevrons with "Feiyue track and field," the company became the best-selling shoe in China with an output of 1,616,000 pairs. By the 1980s, Feiyue sold about 4 million pairs yearly. With the opening up of China and the associated cultural and economic shifts, the sneaker began to lose prominence in China, and by the end of the 1990s, the brand started selling in bulk due to low demand. Once a highly regarded brand, by then only elder people and martial arts practitioners valued it as a cheap and durable brand. In 2003, Shanghai Shenglong relaunched the production of shoes. In 2005, Patrice Bastian got together with a group of artists to change the brand name. In February 2006, they launched the first French-designed Feiyue Shoe collection. The DaFu Rubber Company reorganized and sold the rights to Feiyue to the "Shuang Qian Group Co. Ltd," in 2009. That company leased manufacturing back to DaFu and another manufacturer, "Top One" (ๅคงๅšๆ–‡). In 2014, BBC International, the Boca Raton, Florida-based footwear firm, acquired the French Feiyue shoe company. Upon working with BBC, Feiyue's men's, women's, and children's collections were updated and globally introduced in Spring of 2015. BBC has made a large new collection that builds on its existing brand. It uses high-quality materials like leather. In 2015, BBC International Launched a collaboration with Feiyue and Peanuts for a limited-edition collection. Before BBC's acquisition deal in August 2014, Feiyue had major success in collaborations, including collections with Celine, Andrรฉ, Casio, Bonton, NSBQ, and more; and continuing with other collaborations beginning with Peanuts. The American Feiyue company collaborated in 2016 with the Solid & Striped clothing company, with textiles based on Solid & Striped designs. Intellectual property rights dispute A dispute exists surrounding the trademark and intellectual property rights to Feiyue between the United States-owned company, Feiyue International, LLC, and Shanghai Da Fu Rubber Co, the company that originally manufactured the shoe. Liu Qinglong, manager of Shanghai Da Fu Rubber Co Ltd, said of the situation in 2017, โ€œNo one in China knew about commodity intellectual property rights at the time and it wasnโ€™t until 2007โ€“08 that we found out the French had registered the trademark.โ€ According to the Young Post: "Liu claims the French company took advantage of the Chinese at a time when China was still grappling with capitalism and transitioning from all factories being state-owned assets to devolving some rights to individual businesses." Patrice Bastian, former co-founder and creative director of Feiyue International, LLC, labels Chinese Feiyue "counterfeit," claiming "Feiyue in the US are the original ones because we have the brand registration." He also comments, "It's actually a legal issue and there are many things that we cannot control." According to Bastian, while he was living in Asia in 2005, he became enamored of Feiyue's white vulcanized shoes. A sneaker collector, Bastien traveled to the factory to buy his lifetime supply and ended up making a bid to buy the brand (with partners Nicolas Seguy and Clement Fauth), financing the purchase by selling his sneaker collection. However, Da Fu maintains that Bastien made this purchase from a manufacturer and not from them, the original company, having not heard of the Bastian at all until 2007. In 2017, Bastian claims that he didn't know exactly who owned the factory he purchased the brand from. Da Fu retains the trademark rights to Feiyue in China, but the US-based Feiyue holds the rights in much of the world, including France, Australia, New Zealand, South Korea, and Taiwan. Da Fu took Feiyue International, LLC to court for the rights in France, but lost the lawsuit. As such, the US-based Feiyue retains the rights regarding their trademarks, trade names, brand names, and trade dress, and claims protection by international laws and treaties. Distinctions between the original authentic Chinese and re-designed American versions The original Chinese versions of the Feiyue shoes and the re-designed American versions have a number of differences. The differences include: Sole The sole of the Chinese Feiyue shoe contains reduced padding on the bottom of the shoe, which is considered desirable for martial arts activities. The sole of the French version has thicker padding on the bottom and is designed for more general-purpose use. The seal at the center of the sole is a green triangle on the Chinese Feiyue, while the marking is a red circle on the American version. However, recently the Chinese version manufactured by Da Fu has begun to use the American red circle; those manufactured by Top One retain the green triangle. Canvas material The canvas material of the Chinese Feiyue shoe is thin, resulting in a large range of ankle flexibility. The martial arts application requires a wide range of foot motions. The canvas material of the American version is much thicker. Color The original Chinese Feiyues originally came in only two colors, black and white, with a HI and LO version of each. The shoes were previously only available in a limited range of stylesโ€”simple stripes with some different colors. The range of colors and styles has now grown tremendously both under the American-owned company and the Chinese-owned one, with the BBC International brand offering a wide variety of colors and the Da Fu brand offering a "rainbow" set of shoes. Style The American version of the shoe offers a wide variety of fashion-forward choices for men, women, and kids. Consequently, collaborations with Cรฉline, Agnรจs B, and Swarovski followed, as did fans, including Miranda Kerr, Reese Witherspoon, and Orlando Bloom. The Chinese version of the shoe, on the other hand, has around 150 different styles of the shoes catered toward Chinese fashion tastes. References External links Chinese Feiyue DaFu website English global website Shoe companies of China Companies based in Shanghai Chinese brands Shoe brands Sporting goods brands
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voxeljet%20AG
Voxeljet AG
Voxeljet AG๋Š” ๋…์ผ ์•„์šฐํฌ์Šค๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ(Augsburg) ๊ทผ์ฒ˜์˜ ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ๋ฒ ๋ฅด๊ทธ(Friedberg)์— ์œ„์น˜ํ•œ 3Dํ”„๋ฆฐํŒ… ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ ์ œ์กฐํšŒ์‚ฌ๋‹ค. ์ด ํšŒ์‚ฌ๋Š” 2013๋…„ IPO์ดํ›„๋กœ ๋‰ด์š•์ฆ๊ถŒ๊ฑฐ๋ž˜์†Œ์—๋„ ๋“ฑ์žฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. Voxeljet AG๋Š” ํ”„๋ฆฐํŒ… ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์˜ ๋ฐœ์ „์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ์ง„ํ–‰ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๊ณ , ๊ตญ๋‚ด, ํ•ด์™ธ๋ฅผ ๋Œ€์ƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ฒ ์ œ ์ฃผ์กฐ ๋ชจ๋ธ์ด๋‚˜ ๊ฑฐํ‘ธ์ง‘ ๋“ฑ์˜ ์ฃผ๋ฌธ์ œ์ž‘ ์„œ๋น„์Šค๋„ ์šด์˜ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ’ˆ๋“ค์€ 3D CAD๋ฐ์ดํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋ฐ˜์œผ๋กœ ํ•œ ์ƒ์‚ฐ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•(3D printing์œผ๋กœ๋„ ์ผ์ปฌ์–ด์ง€๋Š”)์œผ๋กœ ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด์ง„๋‹ค. ์—ญ์‚ฌ ์ถœ๋ฐœ Voxeljet AG์˜ ์‹œ์ž‘์€ ์ž์™ธ์„  ์ ์ฐฉ์ œ ํˆฌ์•ฝ์— ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ์„ฑ๊ณตํ•œ 1995๋…„์œผ๋กœ ๊ฑฐ์Šฌ๋Ÿฌ ์˜ฌ๋ผ๊ฐ„๋‹ค. ์ฒซ 3Dํ”„๋ฆฐํŒ…์˜ ์‹œ๋„๋Š”"Generation of 3D structures"์˜ ์ผํ™˜์œผ๋กœ Technical University Munich์˜ Precision Engineering ๋ถ€์„œ์—์„œ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. 1996๋…„, Dr. Ingo Ederer๋Š” ์ฒซMunich business plan competition์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ๊ณ , 1998๋…„์— ๋‚ธ ๊ทธ์˜ ์ฒซ ํŠนํ—ˆ๋ฅผ ์ธ์ •๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ ๋ชจ๋ž˜ ๊ฑฐํ‘ธ์ง‘ ์—ญ์‹œ ๊ฐ™์€ ํ•ด์— ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ํšŒ์‚ฌ์˜ ํ˜•์„ฑ ์˜ค๋Š˜๋‚ ์˜ Voxeljet AG์˜ ์กฐ์ƒ๊ฒฉ์ธGeneris GmbH๋Š”Ingo Ederer, Rainer Hรถchsmann, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ Munichรคs Technical University์˜ ์—”์ง€๋‹ˆ์–ดJoachim Heinyl์— ์˜ํ•ด 1999๋…„ 5์›” 5์ผ, ๊ฑฐํ‘ธ์ง‘๊ณผ ํ”Œ๋ผ์Šคํ‹ฑ ๋ถ€ํ’ˆ์˜ ์ƒ์‚ฐ์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์ƒ์‚ฐ๊ณผ์ •์˜ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ์„ ๋ชฉ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์„ค๋ฆฝ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. Voxeljet์€Technical University Munich์—์„œ ๋„ค ๋ช…์˜ ๊ณ ์šฉ์ž๋“ค๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์ž‘์—…์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ์–ผ๋งˆ ์ง€๋‚˜์ง€ ์•Š์•„ ์žฌ๋‹จ์žฅํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์•„์šฐ๊ตฌ์Šค๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ์˜ ๊ฑด๋ฌผ๋กœ ์ด์ฃผํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์•„์šฐ๊ตฌ์Šค๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ์— ์„œ๋น„์Šค ์„ผํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ์—ด๊ธฐ ์ „์ธ 2002๋…„์—๋Š” BMW์™€ Daimler AG์ƒ๋Œ€๋กœ ์ƒŒ๋“œ ๊ธฐ๋ฐ˜ ํ”„๋ฆฐํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ๋ฐฐ๋‹ฌํ•˜๋Š” ์ž‘์—…์„ ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ์™„๋ฃŒํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์€ ํ•ด์—, ์ฃผ์ฃผ๋กœ์„œBayern Kapital GmbH, Startkapital Fonds Augsburg, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ Frany Industriebeteiligungen AG๊ฐ€ ํ•ฉ๋ฅ˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์„ค๋ฆฝ ๋‹จ๊ณ„ ์ฒซ VX800 ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์€ 2005๋…„, Alphaform AG ์— ํŒ”๋ ธ๋‹ค. ์ด์–ด์„œ 2๋…„ ๋’ค์ธ 2007๋…„์—๋Š” ์ฒซ VX500์„ University of Rostock์— ํŒ”์•˜๋‹ค. 2008๋…„์—๋Š” Voxeljet Technology GmbH๊ฐ€ Bavarian Innovation Prize์˜ ์ผํ™˜์œผ๋กœ Bavarian ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์ธ Gรผnther Beckstein์—๊ฒŒ ์†์ˆ˜ ์ƒ์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜์œผ๋ฉฐ, 1๋…„ ๋’ค 10์ฃผ๋…„์„ ๊ธฐ๋…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2010๋…„ ๋ด„, ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ๋ฒ ๋ฅดํฌ๋กœ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ๊ด€๋ฆฌ๋™๊ณผ ์ƒ์‚ฐ ๊ฑด๋ฌผ์„ ์˜ฎ๊ฒผ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์€ ํ•ด์—, Voxeljet์€ ๋…์ผ ์ƒ์œ„ 100 ํ˜์‹ ๊ฐ€์— ๋“ค์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, "TOP 100" ์ฆ๋ช… ์ธ์žฅ์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ์„ฑ์žฅ ๋‹จ๊ณ„ 2011๋…„, Voxeljet์€ ์ผ๋ จ์˜ ๊ธฐ์ˆ  ํ˜์‹ ์„ ์ผ์œผ์ผฐ๋‹ค. 2011๋…„ 4์›”, Voxeljet์€VX4000 3D ํ”„๋ฆฐํŒ… ๊ธฐ์ˆ ๋กœ ์ƒ์‚ฐ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์˜ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์ฐจ์›์„ ์—ด์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ์‚ฌ๋ฌผ์„ ๊ธฐ์กด๋ณด๋‹ค ์ตœ๋Œ€ ์„ธ๋ฐฐ ๋น ๋ฅด๋ฉด์„œ๋„ ํ•ด์ƒ๋„๋Š” ์œ ์ง€ํ•˜๋ฉฐ 4*2*1๋ฏธํ„ฐ์˜ ์‚ฌ์ด์ฆˆ๋กœ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฃผ์กฐ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ตญ์ œ๋ฌด์—ญ๋ฐ•๋žŒํšŒ์ธ "GIFA"์—์„œ Voxeljet์€ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ ์ง€์†ํ˜• ํ”„๋ฆฐํ„ฐ์ธ VXC800์„ ์†Œ๊ฐœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ง€์†ํ˜•3D ํ”„๋ฆฐํŒ… ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์˜ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ์€ ๋” ์ด์ƒ ๊ฑฐํ‘ธ์ง‘์ด๋‚˜ ๋ชจ๋ธ์„ ์ œ์ž‘ํ•จ์— ์žˆ์–ด์„œ ์—ฐ์žฅ, ๊ณต๊ตฌ๊ฐ€ ํ•„์š”ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์Œ์„ ์˜๋ฏธํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๊ธฐ๊ณ„ ๊ธฐ๋ฐ˜ ์ƒ์‚ฐ์€ "์Œ“๊ธฐ(Building)"์™€ "ํ’€๊ธฐ(Unpacking)"์˜ ๊ณผ์ •์„ ๋ณ‘ํ–‰ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์ง„ํ–‰๋˜์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด ๊ณผ์ •์—์„œ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์  ์ž‘์—…์˜ ๊ฐ„์„ญ์€ ๋“ค์–ด์˜ค์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์€ ํ•ด์—, Frankfurt am Main์—์„œ ๊ณต๊ตฌ ์„ธ๊ณต๊ณผ ๊ฑฐํ‘ธ์ง‘ ์ œ์ž‘, ๋””์ž์ธ๊ณผ ์ƒ์‚ฐ ๋ฐœ๋‹ฌ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ฌด์—ญ๋ฐ•๋žŒํšŒ EuroMold๊ฐ€ ์—ด๋ ธ๋Š”๋ฐ, ๊ทธ๊ณณ์—์„œ Voxeljet์€ 3D ํ”„๋ฆฐํ„ฐ VX1000์˜ ์„ธ๊ณ„์  ๊ฐœ๋ด‰์„ ๊ธฐ๋…ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ณ ์„ฑ๋Šฅ๊ณผ ํฐ ์ž‘์—… ๊ณต๊ฐ„์„ ์œตํ•ฉํ•จ์œผ๋กœ์จ 3D ํ”„๋ฆฐํŒ… ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์€ ์‚ฐ์—…์˜ ๋‚˜๋‚ ์ด ๋†’์•„์ง€๋Š” ์š”๊ตฌ์˜ ์ˆ˜์ค€์„ ๋งž์ถœ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ ํ˜์‹ ์— ๋”ํ•˜์—ฌ, Voxeljet์€ 2011๋…„์— ์ƒˆ๋กญ๊ฒŒ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ๋œ ๊ธฐ์žฌ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์ธPolypor type C๋ฅผ ๊ณต๊ฐœํ•˜์˜€๋Š”๋ฐ ์ด๋Š” ์†Œ๋น„์ž๋“ค์˜ ์ˆœ๋ฐฑ ํ”Œ๋ผ์Šคํ‹ฑ ๋ชจ๋ธ ์ˆ˜์š”๋ฅผ ์ถฉ์กฑ์‹œํ‚ฌ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ฒŒ ๋˜๋Š” ๋ฐ”ํƒ•์ด ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋ชจ๋ธ์˜ ์•ˆ์ •์„ฑ๊ณผ ํ‘œ๋ฉด ํŠน์„ฑ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋” ๋†’์€ ์š”๊ตฌ์น˜ ์—ญ์‹œ ์ถฉ์กฑํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 1๋…„ ๋’ค์ธ 2012๋…„, ์ฒซ VX1000 3D ํ”„๋ฆฐํŒ… ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์ด ์˜๊ตญ ํšŒ์‚ฌ์ธPropshop Ltd์— ํŒ”๋ ธ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ ์˜๊ตญ์—์„œ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ 5๋ฒˆ์งธ Voxeljet ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ํ™” ์‚ฐ์—…์€ Voxeljet์˜ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์‹œ์žฅ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2012๋…„์—, Voxeljet์€ ์ž์‚ฌ์˜ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์ž‘์€ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์ธ VX200์„ ์‹œ์žฅ์— ๊ณต๊ฐœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ํ”„๋ฆฐํŒ… ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์€ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋” ํฐ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ๊ณผ ์ƒ์‚ฐ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์„ ๊ณต์œ ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ, ๋” ์ž‘๊ณ , ์‚ฌ์šฉ์ด ์šฉ์ดํ•˜๋‹ค๋Š” ํŠน์ง•์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. IPO 2013๋…„์— Voxeljet์€ ๋‰ด์š•์ฆ๊ถŒ๊ฑฐ๋ž˜์†Œ์—์„œ IPO๋ฅผ ์ง„ํ–‰ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋์—๋Š”, Voxeljet Technology GmbH๊ฐ€ ํ˜„์žฌ Voxeljet AG๋กœ ํ™œ๋™ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ์ฃผ์‹ํšŒ์‚ฌ๋กœ ์ „ํ™˜๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2013๋…„ 10์›” 17์ผ, Voxeljet AG๋Š” ๋‰ด์š•์ฆ๊ถŒ๊ฑฐ๋ž˜์†Œ์— 13๋‹ฌ๋Ÿฌ์˜ ๋ฐœํ–‰๊ฐ€๊ฒฉ์œผ๋กœ 650๋งŒ ADS๋ฅผ ๋‘์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ๋‹ค์„ฏ ADS๊ฐ€ ํ•œ ์ฃผ์— ์ƒ๋‹นํ–ˆ๋‹ค. IPO๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด Voxeljet AG๋Š” ๋ฐœํ–‰์€ํ–‰์— ๋ถ€์—ฌ๋œ ๊ฐ€๊ฒฉ ํ• ์ธ์„ ๊ณต์ œํ•œ ๋’ค 6450๋งŒ ๋‹ฌ๋Ÿฌ๋ฅผ ์–ป์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. IPO๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 6๋‹ฌ ๋’ค, ๋ฐœํ–‰์€ํ–‰์— ์ฃผ์–ด์ง„ ํ• ์ธ ๊ธˆ์•ก์˜ ๊ณต์ œ ํ›„์— Voxeljet AG๋Š” ๋˜ ๋‹ค์‹œ 4110๋งŒ ๋‹ฌ๋Ÿฌ์˜ ์ž๋ณธ์„ ๋Š˜๋ ธ๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ณผ์ •์—์„œ, Voxeljet AG๋Š” ๋‰ด์š•์ฆ๊ถŒ๊ฑฐ๋ž˜์†Œ์— ๋˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ 300๋งŒ ADS๋ฅผ ๋‹จ์œ„๋‹น 15๋‹ฌ๋Ÿฌ์— ๋ฐœํ–‰ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ธ๊ณ„ํ™” ๊ธ€๋กœ๋ฒŒ ๋„คํŠธ์›Œํฌ ์˜์—… ํŒŒํŠธ๋„ˆ๋ฅผ ๋Š˜๋ฆฌ๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด์„œVoxeljet AG๋Š” 2014๋…„์— ๊ตญ์ œ ์ง€๋ถ€๋ฅผ ๋‘๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2014๋…„ 10์›” 1์ผ, Voxeljet AG๋Š” ์˜๊ตญํšŒ์‚ฌPropshop Ltd๋ฅผ ์ธ์ˆ˜ํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์ด๋Š” ๋…์ผ ๋ฐ–์˜ ์ฒซ ์ง€๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ์ˆ˜์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ Propshop์€ Voxeljet AG์˜ ์™„์ „ํ•œ ์ข…์† ํšŒ์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ํ™”์™€ ์—”ํ„ฐํ…Œ์ธ๋จผํŠธ ์‚ฐ์—…์— ํŠนํ™”๋˜์–ด์žˆ๋˜ Propshop์€ 2012๋…„์— VX1000์„ ๊ตฌ๋งคํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์ด๋ฏธ ํ”„๋ฆฐํŒ… ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ ์ ์ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์€ ํ•ด์—, Voxeljet AG๋Š” ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์— ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ํšŒ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์„ค๋ฆฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2015๋…„ 1์›”, Voxeljet AG๋Š” 2016๋…„ ๋ง๊นŒ์ง€ ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ๋ฒ ๋ฅดํฌ์˜ ๋ณธ๋ถ€์™€ ๋น„์Šทํ•œ ์ˆ˜์ค€์˜ ํ”„๋ฆฐํŒ… ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์„ ๊ฐ–์ถ”๊ฒŒ ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ชฉ์ ์œผ๋กœ Canton์— ๊ฑฐํ‘ธ์ง‘๊ณผ ๋ชจ๋ธ์˜ ์ฃผ๋ฌธ ์ œ์ž‘์„ ๋ชฉ์ ์œผ๋กœ ํ•˜๋Š” ์„œ๋น„์Šค ์„ผํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ์šด์˜ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2015๋…„ 12์›”, Voxeljet AG๋Š” ์ค‘๊ตญ์˜ Suzhou Meimai Fast Manufacturing Technology์™€์˜ ํ•ฉ๋™ ์‚ฌ์—…์„ ์•Œ๋ ธ๋‹ค. ์ด ํ•ฉ๋™ ์‚ฌ์—…์€ Voxeljet China Ltd๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถˆ๋ ธ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ƒํ•˜์ด ๊ทผ์ฒ˜์˜ Suzhou์— ๋ณธ๋ถ€๋ฅผ ๋‘์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋™์‹œ์— Voxeljet AG๋Š” ๋ญ„๋ฐ”์ด ๊ทผ์ฒ˜์˜ ์ž๋™ํ™”, ๊ณต์—…์ง€๋Œ€์ธPune์— Voxeljet India Pvt. Ltd๋ฅผ ์„ค๋ฆฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐ์ˆ ๊ณผ ๊ณผ์ • ๊ณผ์ • ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์€ 1993๋…„ Massachusetts Institute of Technology์—์„œ ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ "Powder bed and inkjethead 3D printing"์œผ๋กœ ์•Œ๋ ค์ ธ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฒจ๊ฐ€๋ฌผ ์ œ์กฐ๊ณผ์ •์ด ๋Š˜ ๊ทธ๋ ‡๋“ฏ์ด, ์ธ์‡„๋˜๋Š” ๋ถ€๋ถ„์€ 3D๋ชจ๋ธ์˜ ๋ฌด์ˆ˜ํ•œ ์–‡์€ ๊ต์ฐจ ๋ถ€๋ถ„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์Œ“์—ฌ์ ธ ์˜ฌ๋ผ๊ฐ„๋‹ค. ์ž‰ํฌ์ ฏ ํ”„๋ฆฐํŠธ ํ—ค๋“œ๊ฐ€ ๋ถ„๋ง ์ง€๋ฐ˜์„ ๊ฐ€๋กœ์ง€๋ฅด๋ฉฐ ์›€์ง์ด๊ณ , ๋™์‹œ์— ์•ก์ฒด ์‘๊ณ  ๋ฌผ์งˆ์„ ๋ฐ”๋ฅด๋ฉด์„œ ๋ˆ„๋ฅธ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ํ›„, ์–‡์€ ๋ถ„๋ง์ธต์ด ์ „์ฒด ๊ตฌ์—ญ์— ํŽผ์ณ์ง€๊ณ , ์ด์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ๊ณผ์ •์ด ๋ช‡ ๋ฒˆ ๋ฐ˜๋ณต๋œ๋‹ค. ์ ์šฉ ๋ถ„์•ผ Voxeljet ๊ณผ์ •์€ ํ”„๋กœํ† ํƒ€์ž…์ด๋‚˜ ๊ฐœ๋ณ„ ํŒŒํŠธ, ์ •๋ฐ€ ์ฃผ์กฐ, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๋ชจ๋ž˜ ๊ฑฐํ‘ธ์ง‘ ์ฃผ์กฐ์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ์ž‘์€ ๋ถ€ํ’ˆ์˜ ๊ธˆ์† ๊ฑฐํ‘ธ์ง‘ ๋ชจ๋ธ์ด๋‚˜ ๊ฑฐํ‘ธ์ง‘์˜ ์ œ์ž‘์— ์ตœ์ ํ™”๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ถ”๊ฐ€๋กœ, ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์€ ํ•ญ๊ณต, ํ•ญ๊ณต์šฐ์ฃผ ์‚ฐ์—…, ์ž๋™ํ™” ์‚ฐ์—…, ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์™€ ์•ฝํ•™, ์˜ํ™”์™€ ์—”ํ„ฐํ…Œ์ธ๋จผํŠธ ์‚ฐ์—…์—์„œ ๋ฟ๋งŒ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ผ ๋””์ž์ธ ์ƒ˜ํ”Œ, ์˜ˆ์ˆ  ๋ฐ ๊ฑด์ถ• ๋ถ€ํ’ˆ์—๋„ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐ์žฌ Voxeljet์€ ์„œ๋กœ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ˆ˜์ง€์— ์˜ํ•ด ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ๋œ PMMA ์ž…์ž๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋ฐ˜์œผ๋กœ ํ•œ ๋‘ ํ”Œ๋ผ์Šคํ‹ฑ ๊ธฐ์žฌ๋ฅผ ์ œ๊ณตํ•œ๋‹ค. ์œ ๋Ÿฝ Voxeljet ๊ณ ๊ฐ ์„œ๋น„์Šค ๋ฐ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ ์„ผํ„ฐ์—์„œ ์ด์šฉ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ Polypor B binder๋Š” ์„ธ์„ธํ•œ ๋””ํ…Œ์ผ, ๋†’์€ ์˜ˆ๋ฆฌ๋„, ํ•ด์ƒ๋„ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๋†’์€ ์„ฑํ˜•์ฒด์˜ ๊ฐ•๋„๊ฐ€ ์š”๊ตฌ๋˜๋Š” ์ƒํ™ฉ์—์„œ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. Polypor C binder๋Š” ์ •๋ฐ€ ์ฃผ์กฐ์™€ ๊ฑด์ถ• ๋ชจ๋ธ ์ œ์ž‘์˜ ๊ฐ„๋‹จํ•œ ์—ฐ๋ฃŒ ์†Œ์ง„ ๊ณผ์ •์—์„œ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๊ธฐ ์ ํ•ฉํ•˜๋‹ค. ์ƒŒ๋“œ ํƒ€์ž…์€ ๊ธฐํ•˜ํ•™์ , ์ ์šฉ ๋ชฉ์ ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ๊ฐœ๋ณ„์ ์œผ๋กœ ์„ ํƒ๋œ๋‹ค. Voxeljet์€ ํฌ๊ธฐ ์ž…์žํ™” ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ์ƒŒ๋“œ ์—ญ์‹œ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๊ฒƒ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๋Š” ์•Œ๊ฐฑ์ด์˜ ์‚ฌ์ด์ฆˆ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ์ฃผ์กฐ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋ฌผ์˜ ํ‘œ๋ฉด ์ƒํƒœ๊ฐ€ ๋‹ฌ๋ผ์ง„๋‹ค. ๊ฐ€์žฅ ํ”ํžˆ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๋Š” ์ƒŒ๋“œ๋Š” ์„์˜์œผ๋กœ ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด์ง„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๊ณ , 0.14mm, 0.19mm, 0.25mm์˜ ํฌ๊ธฐ ์ž…์žํ™”์— ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ œ๊ณต๋˜๋Š” ์ผ€ํŒ”๋ผ์ดํŠธ ์ƒŒ๋“œ๋Š” ๋‚ด์—ด ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์ด ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ฒ  ์ฃผ์กฐ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ๊ธฐํ•˜ํ•™์ , ๋‚ด๋ถ€ ์ฝ”์–ด์— ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๋Š”๋ฐ ์ ํ•ฉํ•˜๋‹ค. 3D ํ”„๋ฆฐํŒ… ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ 3D ํ”„๋ฆฐํ„ฐ ์ œ์กฐ์‚ฌ ๋ฆฌ์ŠคํŠธ ์ฐธ๊ณ  ๋ฌธํ—Œ 1. "Unternehmen: Vorstand". voxeljet AG. Retrieved 2015-03-16. 2. "voxeljet AG Reports Financial Results for the Fourth Quarter and Full Year Ended 2016". www.voxeljet.com. Retrieved 2016-04-18. 3. "voxeljet AG Reports Financial Results for the Fourth Quarter and Full Year Ended 2016". www.voxeljet.com. Retrieved 2016-04-18. 4. "Unternehmen: Firmenhistorie". voxeljet AG. Retrieved 2015-03-19. 5. "Emeriti A-Z: Prof. Dr.-Ing. Dr.-Ing E.h. Joachim Heinzl". Technische Universitรคt Mรผnchen. Retrieved 2015-03-19. 6. "Erfolgsbroschรผre Bayernkapital" (PDF). Bayern Kapital GmbH. Archived from the original (PDF; 1,1 MB) on 16 May 2012. Retrieved 19 March 2015. 7. "Wirtschaftsstaatssekretรคr Pschierer gratuliert zum Bรถrsengang". JONGO Webagentur. Retrieved 2015-03-13. 8. "Portfolio: voxeljet AG". Franz Industriebeteiligungen AG. Retrieved 2015-03-23. 9. "Ausstattung: Additive Fertigungsverfahren: Voxeljet VX500 ". Universitรคt Rostock. Retrieved 2015-03-23. 10. "Auszeichnung fรผr voxeljet beim Bayerischen Innovationspreis 2008". UNITED NEWS NETWORK GmbH. Retrieved 2015-03-23. 11. "Gรผtesiegel 'Top 100': Sechs Unternehmen aus der Kunststoffbranche ausgezeichnet". New Media Publisher GmbH. Retrieved 2015-03-25. 12. "3D-Druck: GroรŸformatiges 3D-Drucksystem generiert Objekte wirtschaftlich". Vogel Business Media GmbH & Co. KG. Retrieved 2015-03-25. 13. "VX 4000 by voxeljet". makerwise.com. Retrieved 2015-11-27. 14. "3D-Druck: Kontinuierlich arbeitender 3D-Drucker fรผr die Kleinserienproduktion". Vogel Business Media GmbH & Co. KG. Retrieved 2015-03-25. 15. "voxeljet VX1000 3D Printer: Industrial Scale Sand Casting & Prototyping". ENGINEERING.com. Retrieved 2015-03-25. 16. "voxeljet AG: EuroMold premiere: 3D printing with Phenolic-Direct-Binding". FinanzNachrichten.de. Retrieved 2015-11-27. 17. "Ford Motor setzt auf Polypor C: In strahlendem WeiรŸ". Konradin-Verlag Robert Kohlhammer GmbH. Retrieved 2015-03-25. 18. "News: Filmindustrie setzt auf 3D-Druck". voxeljet AG. Retrieved 2015-03-25.19. "voxeljet VX200 review". aniwaa.com. Retrieved 2015-11-27. 19. "voxeljet VX200 review". aniwaa.com. Retrieved 2018-11-27. 20. "voxeljet liefert 100sten 3D Printer aus". Wallstreet-online.de. Retrieved 2015-11-27. 21. "All About 3D Printing IPO VoxelJet". nanalyze.com. Retrieved 2015-11-27. 22. "Voxeljet: Was der Hersteller von 3D-Druckern drauf hat". wallstreet:online AG. Retrieved 2015-03-26. 23. "Update: voxeljet AG gibt Ausgabepreis fรผr Bรถrsengang bekannt". Dannes Solutions GmbH. Retrieved 2015-03- 24. "Voxeljet: 3D-Drucker-Hersteller mit neuen Aktien". Boersengefluester.de. Retrieved 2015-03-26. 25. "Furioses Bรถrsendebรผt: Voxeljet stรผrmt an die Bรถrse". Bร–RSENMEDIEN AG. Retrieved 2015-04-08. 26. "3D-Druck: voxeljet AG รผbernimmt Propshop". vmm wirtschaftsverlag gmbh & co. kg. Retrieved 2015-04-08. 27. "Voxeljet erรถffnet Standort in den USA ". Vogel Business Media GmbH & Co. KG. Retrieved 2015-04-08. 28. "voxeljet expands to india". finanznachrichten.de. Retrieved 2015-12-17. 29. "voxeljet AG announces joint venture in china". finanznachrichten.de. Retrieved 2015-12-01. 30. "VX200: 3D-Druck im Kleinformat". voxeljet AG. Retrieved 2015-04-08. 31. "VX500: der kompakte 3D-Drucker". voxeljet AG. Retrieved 2015-04-08. 32. "VXC800: Der kontinuierlich arbeitende 3D-Drucker". voxeljet AG. Retrieved 2015-04-08. 33. "VX1000: der universelle 3D-Drucker". voxeljet AG. Retrieved 2015-04-08. 34. "VX2000: der industrielle 3D-Drucker". voxeljet AG. Retrieved 2015-04-08. 35. "VX4000: das groรŸformatige 3D-Drucksystem". voxeljet AG. Retrieved 2015-04-08. ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ The 3D Revolution 3์ฐจ์› ์ธ์‡„ ๋‰ด์š• ์ฆ๊ถŒ๊ฑฐ๋ž˜์†Œ ์ƒ์žฅ ๊ธฐ์—… 1999๋…„ ์„ค๋ฆฝ๋œ ๊ธฐ์—…
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voxeljet
Voxeljet
voxeljet AG, which is based in Friedberg (Bayern) near Augsburg (Germany), is a manufacturer of industrial 3D printing systems. The company has been listed on the Nasdaq since 2020, and previously listed on the New York Stock Exchange since its IPO in 2013. Besides the development and distribution of printing systems, voxeljet AG also operates service centers for the on-demand manufacture of molds and models for metal casting in Germany and abroad. These products are manufactured with the help of a generative production method based on 3D CAD data (also referred to as "3D printing"). History Beginnings voxeljet AG traces its roots back to the year 1995, with the first successful drop-dosing of UV adhesives. The first 3D printing trials were conducted at the Precision Engineering department of the Technical University Munich as part of the "Generation of 3D structures" project. In 1996, Dr. Ingo Ederer participated in the first Munich business plan competition and was awarded his first patent in 1998. The first sand molds were printed in the same year. Formation of the company Generis GmbH, the predecessor of today's voxeljet AG, was founded on 5 May 1999 by Ingo Ederer, Rainer Hรถchsmann and engineer Joachim Heinzl at Munich's Technical University. The purpose of the company was the development of new generative processes for the production of cast and plastic components. The company started its operations at Technical University Munich with four employees. Shortly afterwards, it refurbished and relocated into the premises in Augsburg. In the year 2002, the company completed its first orders for the delivery of sand-based printers to BMW AG and Daimler AG, before opening the service center in Augsburg in the year 2003. In the same year, Bayern Kapital GmbH, the Startkapital Fonds Augsburg and Franz Industriebeteiligungen AG joined as new shareholders. Establishment phase The first VX800 system was sold to Alphaform AG in 2005. This was followed by the sale of the first VX500 to the University of Rostock two years later. In 2008, voxeljet technology GmbH received an award as part of the Bavarian Innovation Prize from the hands of Bavarian premier Gรผnther Beckstein. The company celebrated its 10-year anniversary one year later. In the spring of 2010, voxeljet moved into a new administration building and production halls in Friedberg. During the same year, voxeljet was added to the list of Germany's top 100 innovators and received the "Top 100" seal of approval. Growth phase In the year 2011, voxeljet introduced a series of technical innovations. In April 2011, the company opened up a new dimension of generative production methods with the VX4000 3D printing system. This system makes it possible to produce objects with a size of 4 x 2 x 1 meters at a build speed that is up to three times faster than earlier systems, while maintaining the same resolution. At the international trade fair for foundry technologies โ€˜โ€™GIFAโ€™โ€™, voxeljet introduced the world's first continuous 3D printer, the VXC800. The development of this continuous 3D printing technology represented the manufacturing of molds and models without tools. This machine generation runs the process steps "building" and "unpacking" in parallel, without having to interrupt system operations. Therefore, this printing system represents an important step towards industrial series production on the basis of a generative production process. In the same year, voxeljet celebrated the global premiere of its 3D printer VX1000 at EuroMold, the trade fair for tooling and mold-making, design and product development in Frankfurt am Main. By combining high performance and a large build space, this printing system was able to meet the growing requirements of industry. In addition to these system innovations, the company also presented the newly developed material system Polypor type C in the year 2011. It allows voxeljet to meet customer demand for pure white plastic models. Moreover, this material also satisfies higher requirements regarding the stability and surface properties of the models. A year later in 2012, the first VX1000 printing system was sold to the British company Propshop (Model Makers) Ltd.. It was the fifth voxeljet system that was in use in the United Kingdom. The movie industry opened a completely new customer market for voxeljet. In the year 2012, voxeljet introduced its smallest system, the VX200, to the market. This printing system uses the same method as the larger series, but is very compact and easy to operate. IPO In the year 2013, the company went ahead with its IPO on the New York Stock Exchange. To this end, voxeljet technology GmbH was converted into a stock corporation that now operates as voxeljet AG. On 17 October 2013, voxeljet placed 6.5 million ADS on the NYSE at an issue price of US$13. Five American Depositary Receipt corresponded to one share. The IPO enabled voxeljet AG to take in US$64.5 million after deduction of the price discount granted to the issuing banks and issue costs. Six months after the IPO, voxeljet AG generated another US$41.1 million as part of a capital increase, after deduction of the price discount granted to the issuing banks and issue costs. In the process, the company issued another three million American Depositary Shares at the New York Stock Exchange at a unit price of US$15. Globalization To add to its global network of sales partners voxeljet AG began to set up its own international locations in the year 2014. On 1 October 2014, voxeljet AG took over the British company Propshop (Model Makers) Ltd., thus establishing its first location outside Germany. With the takeover, Propshop became a wholly owned subsidiary of voxeljet AG. The company, which specializes in the film and entertainment industry, had already gained experience with voxeljet printing systems when it purchased the VX1000 in the year 2012. In the same year, voxeljet AG founded a new company in the USA. In January 2015, voxeljet began to operate a service center for the on-demand production of molds and models in Canton (Michigan), with the goal of reaching a printing capacity similar to the capacity at the home location in Friedberg by the end of 2016. In December 2015 voxeljet announced a joint venture with Suzhou Meimai Fast Manufacturing Technology in China. The joint venture shall be called voxeljet China Ltd. and will be headquartered in the city of Suzhou, near Shanghai. At the same time voxeljet AG established voxeljet India Pvt. Ltd. The new subsidiary is located in Pune, a large automotive and manufacturing center near Mumbai. Technology and process Process The technology was first developed at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1993 and is generally known as the "Powder bed and inkjet head 3D printing". As usual in the additive manufacturing processes, the part to be printed is built up from many thin cross sections of the 3D model. An inkjet print head moves across a bed of powder, simultaneously putting down a liquid binding material. After that, a thin layer of powder is extended across the completed section and the process is repeated several times with each layer adhering to the last. Application area The voxeljet process is particularly well-suited for the production of molds or models for metal casting applications in small series, such as prototypes, individual parts, props, investment casting or sand casting. In addition, the method is used for design samples, art and architecture components as well as in the aviation and aerospace industry, automotive industry, research and medicine and in the film and entertainment industry. Materials voxeljet offers two plastic materials based on PMMA particles bound by different resins. The Polypor B binder, available as a voxeljet service and for system customers in Europe, is ideal for parts that are true to detail and which require a high degree of edge sharpness, resolution and green compact strength. The Polypor C binder, on the other hand, lends itself to simplified burn-out processes in investment casting and for architectural models. The sand types are selected individually for each order depending on the geometry and application purpose. voxeljet uses different sands with different granulations. The grain size that is used will decide the surface finish of the cast result. The most commonly used sand is made of quartz and is available in the granulations 0.14ย mm, 0.19ย mm and 0.25ย mm. Also offered is the more temperature-resistant kerphalite sand, which is suited for especially complex geometries and internal cores for steel casting. 3D printing systems See also List of 3D printer manufacturers References External links The 3D Revolution 3D printing Companies listed on the Nasdaq Companies formerly listed on the New York Stock Exchange 3D printer companies German companies established in 1999
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%ED%9B%84%EC%95%88%20%EA%B3%BC%EC%9D%B4%EB%8F%84
ํ›„์•ˆ ๊ณผ์ด๋„
ํ›„์•ˆ ํ—ค๋ผ๋ฅด๋„ ๊ณผ์ด๋„ ๋งˆ๋ฅด์ผ€์Šค( , 1983๋…„ 7์›” 28์ผ ~ )๋Š” ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ์˜ ์ •์น˜์ธ์ด์ž ๊ณตํ•™์ž๋กœ 2019๋…„ 1์›” 5์ผ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ๊ตญํšŒ์˜์žฅ์„ ์ง€๋‚ด๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ค‘๋„์ขŒํŒŒ ์‚ฌํšŒ๋ฏผ์ฃผ์ฃผ์˜ ์ •๋‹น์ธ ์ธ๋ฏผ์˜์ง€๋‹น ์†Œ์†์œผ๋กœ, ํ˜„์žฌ ๋ฐ”๋ฅด๊ฐ€์Šค ์ฃผ์˜ ์˜์›์„ ์—ญ์ž„ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ณผ์ด๋„๋Š” ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ๊ฐ€ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ์˜ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์œผ๋กœ 1์›” 10์ผ์— ์ทจ์ž„ํ•˜์ž 1์›” 23์ผ์— ๋ณธ์ธ์ด ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ์˜ ์ž„์‹œ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ž„์„ ์„ ์–ธํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2022๋…„ 12์›” 30์ผ์— ์ •์˜์ œ์ผ๋‹น์„ ํฌํ•จํ•œ 3๊ฐœ์˜ ์•ผ๋‹น์ด ์ฃผ์žฌํ•˜๋Š” ์˜ํšŒ์—์„œ ๊ณผ์ด๋“œ๋ฅผ ์ž ์ • ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ํ•ด์ž„๋ฐ›๋Š” ๊ฒฐ์˜๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€๊ฒฐ๋˜์—ˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์™„์ „ํžˆ ์ž ์ • ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์˜ ์ง€์œ„๋ฅผ ์žƒ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ƒ์•  ๊ณผ์ด๋„๋Š” ๋น„ํ–‰์‚ฌ์™€ ๊ต์‚ฌ์˜€๋˜ ์ค‘์‚ฐ์ธต ๋ถ€๋ชจ๋‹˜ ์•„๋ž˜์—์„œ ์—ฌ๋Ÿ ๋ช…์˜ ์ž๋…€ ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ ํ•œ ๋ช…์œผ๋กœ ํƒœ์–ด๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ๊ณผ์ด๋„์˜ ํ• ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€ ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ ํ•œ ๋ช…์€ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€ ํ—Œ๋ณ‘๋Œ€ ํ•˜์‚ฌ์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํ•œ ๋ช…์€ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ํ•ด๊ตฐ ๋Œ€๋ น์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1999๋…„ ๋ฐ”๋ฅด๊ฐ€์Šค ์ฃผ์—์„œ ์ผ์–ด๋‚œ ๋Œ๋ฐœํ™์ˆ˜์™€ ํ† ์„๋ฅ˜๋กœ ํ”ผํ•ด๋ฅผ ์ž…์–ด ์ผ์‹œ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ง‘ ์—†๋Š” ์ƒํ™œ์„ ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, 2000๋…„์— ๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต๋ฅผ ์กธ์—…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋™๋ฃŒ๋“ค์˜ ์ฃผ์žฅ์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋ฉด, ํ™์ˆ˜๋กœ ํ”ผํ•ด๋ฅผ ์ž…์—ˆ์„ ๋•Œ ๋‹น์‹œ ์ƒˆ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ์šฐ๊ณ  ์ฐจ๋ฒ ์Šค๊ฐ€ ๋ฌด์ฑ…์ž„ํ•œ ๋ฐ˜์‘์„ ๋ณด์ธ ๊ฒƒ์ด ๊ทธ์˜ ์ •์น˜์  ๊ฒฌํ•ด์— ์˜ํ–ฅ์„ ๋ฏธ์ณค๋‹ค. ๊ณผ์ด๋„๋Š” 2007๋…„ ์•ˆ๋“œ๋ ˆ์Šค ๋ฒ ์š” ๊ฐ€ํ†จ๋ฆญ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต์—์„œ ์‚ฐ์—…๊ณตํ•™์„ ์ „๊ณตํ–ˆ๊ณ , ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ์กฐ์ง€ ์›Œ์‹ฑํ„ด ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๋Œ€ํ•™์›๊ณผ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ์˜ ๊ณ ๋“ฑ ํ–‰์ • ํ•™๊ต์—์„œ ๊ณต๋ถ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ •์น˜ ํ–‰๋™ ๊ณผ์ด๋„๋Š” ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ์ •๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ๋…๋ฆฝ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ๋„คํŠธ์›Œํฌ์˜€๋˜ RCTV์˜ ๋ฐฉ์†ก ํ—ˆ๊ฐ€์ฆ์„ ๊ฐฑ์‹ ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ธฐ๋กœ ๊ฒฐ์ •ํ–ˆ์„ ๋•Œ ํ•™์ƒ๋“ค์ด ์ฃผ๋„ํ•ด ์ผ์œผ์ผฐ๋˜ ์‹œ์œ„์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์‹œ์œ„์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ๋˜ ์ด๋“ค์€ 2007๋…„์— ์šฐ๊ณ  ์ฐจ๋ฒ ์Šค๊ฐ€ ์ œ์•ˆํ•œ ๊ฐœํ—Œ์•ˆ์— ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ํ•˜๋Š” ์‹œ์œ„๋ฅผ ๋ฒŒ์˜€๊ณ , ๊ฐœํ—Œ์•ˆ ๊ตญ๋ฏผ ํˆฌํ‘œ๋Š” ๋ถ€๊ฒฐ๋๋‹ค. ๊ณผ์ด๋„๋Š” 2009๋…„์— ์ธ๋ฏผ์˜์ง€๋‹น์˜ ์ฐฝ๋‹น ๋‹น์›์ด ๋๋‹ค. 2014๋…„์—๋Š” ์ธ๋ฏผ์˜์ง€๋‹น์˜ ๊ตญ๋ฏผ ์กฐ์ •๊ด€์ด ๋๋‹ค. ์˜์› ๊ณผ์ด๋„๋Š” 2010๋…„ ์˜์› ์„ ๊ฑฐ์—์„œ ๋Œ€์ฒด ์˜์›์œผ๋กœ ๋ฝ‘ํ˜”๊ณ , 2015๋…„ ์˜์› ์„ ๊ฑฐ์—์„œ 26%์˜ ๋“ํ‘œ์œจ๋กœ ์˜์›์œผ๋กœ ๋‹น์„ ๋๋‹ค. 2017๋…„ ๊ณผ์ด๋„๋Š” ๊ฐ์‚ฌ์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์›์žฅ์ด ๋๊ณ , 2018๋…„์—๋Š” ์•ผ๋‹น ์ง€๋„์ž๊ฐ€ ๋๋‹ค. ๊ณผ์ด๋„๋Š” ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ๊ตญํšŒ์—์„œ ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ ํ–‰์ •๋ถ€์™€ ๊ด€๋ จ๋œ ๋ถ€ํŒจ๋ฅผ ์กฐ์‚ฌํ–ˆ๊ณ , 2017๋…„ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ๋ฐ˜์ •๋ถ€ ์‹œ์œ„์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ๊ณ ๋ฌดํƒ„์— ๋งž์•„ ๋ชฉ์— ์ƒ์ฒ˜๋ฅผ ์ž…์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ตญํšŒ์˜์žฅ ๊ณผ์ด๋„๋Š” 2018๋…„ 12์›”์— ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ๊ตญํšŒ์˜ ์˜์žฅ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฝ‘ํ˜”๊ณ  2019๋…„ 1์›” 5์ผ์— ์ทจ์ž„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ทจ์ž„์‹์—๋Š” ๊ตฌ๊ธˆ๋œ ์ •์น˜์ธ๋“ค์˜ ์นœ์ง€๋“ค์ด ์ดˆ์ฒญ๋ฐ›์•˜๊ณ , ๋ฐ˜์ •๋ถ€ ์‹œ์œ„๋ฅผ ์ด๋Œ์—ˆ๋˜ ํ›„์•ˆ ๋ ˆ์ผ€์„ผ์Šค์˜ ํ˜„์ˆ˜๋ง‰ ๋’ค์˜ ๋‚œ๊ฐ„์— ๋ชจ์—ฌ ์ฐธ์„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1์›” 19์ผ์— ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ๊ตญํšŒ๋Š” ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ ํ–‰์ •๋ถ€์˜ ์€ํ–‰ ๊ณ„์ขŒ๋ฅผ ๋™๊ฒฐ์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ์š”์ฒญํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์™ธ๊ตญ๊ณผ ํ˜‘๋ ฅํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฒ•์•ˆ์„ ์Šน์ธํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ถ€ ๋ผํ‹ด ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นด์˜ ์ง€๋„์ž๋“ค์€ ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ์—๊ฒŒ ๊ถŒ๋ ฅ์„ ๋‚ด๋ ค๋†“์„ ๊ฒƒ์„ ์ œ์•ˆํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ณผ์ด๋„๋Š” 1์›” 25์ผ์— ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ๊ฐ€ ๊ถŒ๋ ฅ์„ ๋‚ด๋ ค๋†“๋Š”๋‹ค๋ฉด ์‚ฌ๋ฉด์„ ๊ณ ๋ คํ•  ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ž„์‹œ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ์„ ์–ธ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ์˜ ํ—Œ๋ฒ• ์ œ233์กฐ์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋ฉด, ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ง์ด ๊ณต์„์ผ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ์ƒˆ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์„ ๋ฝ‘๊ธฐ ์ „๊นŒ์ง€ ๊ตญํšŒ์˜์žฅ์ด ์ž„์‹œ๋กœ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ง์„ ๋งก๋Š”๋‹ค. ๊ณผ์ด๋„๋Š” 2019๋…„ 1์›” 10์ผ์— ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ๊ฐ€ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ์˜ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์œผ๋กœ ์ทจ์ž„ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด ๋ถˆ๋ฒ•์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ์˜ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ง์— ๋งž์„ค ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ฐํ˜”๊ณ , ๊ตญํšŒ๋Š” ๊ณผ์ด๋„๊ฐ€ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์˜ ๊ถŒ๋ ฅ๊ณผ ์ง๋ฌด๋ฅผ ๋งก์•˜์œผ๋ฉฐ ๊ตญํšŒ๋Š” ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ๋ฅผ ํ‡ด์ง„์‹œํ‚ฌ ๊ณ„ํš์„ ์ด์–ด๋‚˜๊ฐˆ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ์˜ ์™ธ๋ฌด๋ถ€ ์žฅ๊ด€ ํ˜ธ๋ฅดํ—ค ์•„๋ ˆ์•„์‚ฌ๋Š” ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ์—์„œ ๊ณผ์ด๋„๋ฅผ ์•„๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์€ ์•„๋ฌด๋„ ์—†๋Š”๋ฐ๋„ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์€ ๊ณผ์ด๋„๋ฅผ ๋ถ€์ถ”๊ธฐ๋ฉฐ ์Šค์Šค๋กœ๊ฐ€ ์ƒˆ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋งํ•˜๋ผ๊ณ  ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ฐ˜์‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1์›” 13์ผ ๊ณผ์ด๋„๋Š” ๋ผ๊ณผ์ด๋ผ์—์„œ ์—ด๋ฆฐ ์ •์น˜ ์ง‘ํšŒ์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ์˜ ์ •๋ณด๊ธฐ๊ด€์ธ ๋ณผ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ”๋ฅด ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์ •๋ณด์›์˜ ์š”์›๋“ค์ด ๊ทธ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€๋กœ๋ง‰๊ณ  ๊ตฌ๊ธˆํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ณผ์ด๋„๋Š” 45๋ถ„ ๋’ค์— ํ’€๋ ค๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ๋งˆ ๊ทธ๋ฃน๊ณผ ๋ฏธ์ฃผ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ๋Š” ํ•ด๋‹น ํ–‰์œ„๋ฅผ ๋น„ํŒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” ์ผ๋ถ€ ๋ณผ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ”๋ฅด ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์ •๋ณด์› ๊ด€๊ณ„์ž๋“ค์ด ์ผ๋ฐฉ์ ์œผ๋กœ ํ–‰๋™ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ฉฐ ๊ตฌ์† ์˜์žฅ์€ ๋ณผ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ”๋ฅด ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์ •๋ณด์›์˜ ๊ตญ์žฅ์—๊ฒŒ ๋ฐœ๋ถ€๋œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์‚ฌ๊ฑด๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จํ•ด์„œ ์—ด๋‘ ๋ช…์˜ ๋ณผ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ”๋ฅด ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์ •๋ณด์› ์š”์›๋“ค์ด ์ฒดํฌ๋ผ ๋ถˆ๋ฒ• ๊ตฌ๊ธˆ๊ณผ ์ง๊ถŒ ๋‚จ์šฉ ํ˜์˜๋กœ ๊ตฌ๊ธˆ๋๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ 1์›” 23์ผ ๊ณผ์ด๋„๋Š” ์Šค์Šค๋กœ ์ž„์‹œ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ž„์„ ์„ ์–ธํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ณผ์ด๋„๋Š” ใ€Š์›Œ์‹ฑํ„ด ํฌ์ŠคํŠธใ€‹์— ๋…ผํ‰์„ ๋‚ด๊ณ  ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ์˜ ์ƒํ™ฉ์„ ๋ฌ˜์‚ฌํ•˜๊ณ  ๋ถ„์„ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋ฒ•์น˜์ฃผ์˜๋ฅผ ๋ณต๊ตฌํ•˜๊ณ  ๊ถŒ๋ ฅ ๋ถ„๋ฆฝ๊ณผ ์ž์œ ๋กœ์šด ์„ ๊ฑฐ๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ์œ„๊ธฐ ์‚ฌํƒœ๋ฅผ ๊ฐœ์„ ํ•  ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. ๋‹ค๋งŒ ์•„์ง ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ๊ฐ€ ํ‡ด์ถœ๋‹นํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ์ด์œ ๋Š” ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๊ฐ€์ง€์ธ๋ฐ ์ฒซ ๋ฒˆ์งธ๋กœ, ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ๊ตฐ์ด ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ์˜ ๊ฐœ์ธ ์‚ฌ๋ณ‘ํ™”(็งๅ…ตๅŒ–) ๋˜์–ด์žˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์ด๋‹ค. ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ๊ตฐ ์žฅ์„ฑ๊ธ‰ ์žฅ๊ต๋“ค์€ ํ›„์•ˆ ๊ณผ์ด๋„๊ฐ€ ์•„๋‹Œ ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ๋ฅผ ์ง€์ง€ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ๋Š” ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ์˜ ๋‹ค์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ์ ํ•˜๋Š” ๋นˆ๊ณค์ธต ๋‹ค์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ์•„์ง ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ๋ฅผ ์ง€์ง€ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์ด๋‹ค. ์„ธ ๋ฒˆ์งธ๋Š” ์šฐ๊ณ  ์ฐจ๋ฒ ์Šค ์žฌ์ž„ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„์— ์–‘์„ฑ๋œ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ๋ฏผ๋ณ‘๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ๋ฅผ ์ง€์ง€ํ•˜์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ๋“ค์˜ ์ˆ˜๋Š” ์•„์ง ์ˆ˜์‹ญ๋งŒ์„ ํ—ค์•„๋ฆฌ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ตญ์ œ ์‚ฌํšŒ์˜ ์ธ์ • ๋‹ค์Œ ๋‚˜๋ผ๋“ค์€ ๊ณผ์ด๋„๋ฅผ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ์˜ ์ž„์‹œ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์œผ๋กœ ์ธ์ •ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์—ฐํ•ฉ์€ ๊ณผ์ด๋„๋ฅผ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ์˜ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์œผ๋กœ ์ธ์ •ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ์‚ผ๊ฐ€๋Š” ๋Œ€์‹ , ๋ฏผ์ฃผ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์„ ์ถœ๋œ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ๊ตญํšŒ๋ฅผ ์ „์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ง€์ง€ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๊ตญํšŒ์˜์žฅ์ธ ๊ณผ์ด๋„๋ฅผ ํฌํ•จํ•œ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ๊ตญํšŒ์˜์›๋“ค์˜ ์‹œ๋ฏผ๊ถŒ๊ณผ ์ž์œ , ์•ˆ์ „์ด ์ „์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณด์žฅ๋ผ์•ผ ํ•  ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  2019๋…„ 1์›” 23์ผ์— ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. ๋‹ค์Œ ๋‚˜๋ผ๋“ค์€ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ๊ตญํšŒ๋ฅผ ์ง€์ง€ํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. ์—ญ๋Œ€ ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ๊ฐ์ฃผ ๋‚ด์šฉ์ฃผ ์ฐธ์กฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ 1983๋…„ ์ถœ์ƒ ์‚ด์•„์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ์˜ ์ •์น˜์ธ ์กฐ์ง€ ์›Œ์‹ฑํ„ด ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๋™๋ฌธ ๋ฐ”๋ฅด๊ฐ€์Šค์ฃผ ์ถœ์‹  ๋ผ๊ณผ์ด๋ผ ์ถœ์‹ 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juan%20Guaid%C3%B3
Juan Guaidรณ
Juan Gerardo Guaidรณ Mรกrquez (born 28 July 1983) is a Venezuelan politician. He was a member of the social-democratic party Popular Will, and federal deputy to the National Assembly representing the state of Vargas. On 23 January 2019, Guaidรณ and the National Assembly declared that he was acting president of Venezuela (), starting the Venezuelan presidential crisis by challenging Nicolรกs Maduro's presidency. In December 2022, opposition parties voted to dismiss Guaidรณ as interim president, choosing Dinorah Figuera as a successor on 5 January 2023 and ending Guaidรณ's presidential claim. Guaidรณ's political career began when he emerged as a student leader in the 2007 Venezuelan protests. He then helped found the Popular Will party with Leopoldo Lรณpez in 2009, and was elected to be an alternate deputy in the National Assembly one year later in 2010. In 2015, Guaidรณ was elected as a full-seat deputy. Following a protocol to annually rotate the position of President of the National Assembly among political parties, Popular Will nominated Guaidรณ for the position in 2019. Guaidรณ was a key figure in the Venezuelan presidential crisis, which began when the National Assembly, considering the 2018 Venezuelan presidential election illegitimate, refused to recognize the inauguration of Maduro to a second presidential term on 10 January 2019. Guaidรณ announced, on 23 January 2019, that he was formally assuming the role of interim president under Article 233 of the Constitution of Venezuela, with the backing of the National Assembly, until free elections could be held. At one point Guaidรณ received formal recognition of legitimacy from almost 60 governments worldwide, including the United States, Canada and various Latin American and European countries, although the European Union stopped recognizing his presidency on 6 January 2021. Following the 5 January dissolution of Guaidรณ's interim government, the United States confirmed that it stopped its recognition. Other nations, including Russia, China, Iran, Syria, Cuba and Turkey consistently rejected his claim to the presidency and continued to recognize Maduro as the legitimate president without interruption. Guaidรณ failed to remove Maduro from power. The Maduro administration has frozen Guaidรณ's Venezuelan assets, has launched a probe accusing Guaidรณ of foreign interference, and has threatened violence against him. In April 2019, Guaidรณ called for an uprising against Maduro as part of "Operation Freedom", which ultimately failed. Following the failed uprising, representatives of Guaidรณ and Maduro began mediation, with the assistance of the Norwegian Centre for Conflict Resolution. In January 2020, security forces prevented Guaidรณ and other congress members from entering the legislative palace during an internal election to choose the board of directors. A majority of lawmakers held an "emergency meeting" and voted to re-elect Guaidรณ as their leader, while the remaining lawmakers at the legislative palace elected Luis Parra. Security forces denied Guaidรณ and opposition lawmakers access to parliament many times since. After the announcement of regional elections in 2021, Guaidรณ announced a "national salvation agreement" and proposed negotiation with Maduro with a schedule for free and fair elections, with international support and observers, in exchange for lifting international sanctions. Domestically, Guaidรณ's actions included a proposed Plan Paรญs (Country Plan), an amnesty law for military personnel and authorities who turn against the Maduro government, attempts to deliver humanitarian aid to the country, and social bonuses for health workers during COVID-19 pandemic. Internationally, Guaidรณ gained control of some Venezuelan assets and property in the United States, had success in a legal battle for control of ยฃ1.3 billion of Venezuelan gold reserves in the United Kingdom, and appointed diplomats which had been recognized by supportive governments. In December 2022, three of the four main opposition political parties (Justice First, Democratic Action, and A New Era) backed and approved a reform to dissolve the interim government and create a commission of five members to manage foreign assets, as deputies sought a united strategy ahead of the next Venezuelan presidential election scheduled for 2024, stating that the interim government had failed to achieve the goals it had set. The New York Times reported that the actions from the opposition to remove Guaidรณ as their leader, signified that they have lost faith in "Guaidรณ's ability to oust President Nicolรกs Maduro". In April 2023 he fled to the United States citing fears of his arrest, living in exile in Miami, Florida. On 6 October 2023, the Maduro administration charged Guaidรณ with money laundering, treason, and usurping public functions, issued an arrest warrant and asked the international community to cooperate with an arrest of Guaidรณ, requesting a red notice be issued by Interpol. Guaidรณ has denied the charges made against him in the arrest warrant. Early life and education Guaidรณ was born on 28 July 1983. Part of a large family, he was raised in a middle-class home in the outskirts of La Guaira; his parents are Wilmer and Norka. His father was an airline pilot and his mother, a teacher. One grandfather was a sergeant of the Venezuelan National Guard while another grandfather was a captain in the Venezuelan Navy. His parents divorced when he was at a young age, with his father emigrating to the Canary Islands and working as a taxi driver. Guaidรณ lived through the 1999 Vargas tragedy, a series of mudslides in his home state, which killed some of his friends while also destroying his school and home, leaving him and his family homeless. The mudslide and its response, which he cites regularly in speeches, influenced his political views; colleagues say that the "feckless" response of the then-new government of Hugo Chรกvez is what drove him to activism. He and his family stayed in a makeshift home in Caracas where he earned his high school diploma in 2000. Guaidรณ would continue to live in Caracas where he would earn his undergraduate degree in 2007 in industrial engineering from Andrรฉs Bello Catholic University, working at Compu Mall, a Venezuelan chain of computer and electronics stores, to pay for his studies. He also participated in two postgraduate programs of public administration in Caracas: at the UCAB with the partnership of the George Washington University and at the Instituto de Estudios Superiores de Administraciรณn (IESA). Activism Guaidรณ stated, after "it became clear that under Chรกvez the country was drifting toward totalitarianism," he was part of the student-led political movement that protested the Venezuelan government's decision to shut down the independent television network RCTV with other prominent student leaders in 2007โ€”the year he graduated from Andrรฉs Bello Catholic University. They also protested broader attempted government reforms by Chรกvez, including the 2007 constitutional referendum, which Chรกvez lost. Along with Leopoldo Lรณpez and other politicians, Guaidรณ was a founding member of the Popular Will political party in 2009; the party is affiliated with Socialist International. By 2014, Guaidรณ was the party's national coordinator. Lรณpez, one of Venezuela's main opposition politicians, "mentored Guaidรณ for years" according to a January 2019 CNN report, and the two spoke several times daily. As Lopez's protรฉgรฉ, Guaidรณ was well known in his party and the National Assembly, but not internationally; Lรณpez named Guaidรณ to lead the Popular Will party in 2019. National Assembly In the 2010 Venezuelan parliamentary election, Guaidรณ was elected as an alternate national deputy. He was one of several politicians who went on a hunger strike to demand parliamentary elections in 2015 and was elected to a full-seat in the National Assembly in the 2015 elections with 26% of the vote. Vargas, an impoverished area, was home to many state-run companies that employed the majority of the population; until Guaidรณ's 2015 election, chavista candidates had run unchallenged. In 2017, he was named head of the Comptroller's Commission of the National Assembly and in 2018, he was named head of the legislature's opposition. He contributed to research at the University of Arizona, giving testimony to analysts on the working conditions of Latin American politicians and, specifically, institutional crisis and political change. In the National Assembly, Guaidรณ investigated corruption cases involving the Maduro administration, and worked with independent organizations to recover money allegedly stolen from the Venezuelan public. He participated in the 2017 Venezuelan protests, where one time security forces fractured his arm and he was shot with rubber bullets, which he has stated left scars on his neck. In January 2018 he was sworn in as the Leader of the Majority in the National Assembly. President of the National Assembly A rotating presidency of the National Assembly of Venezuela agreement resulted with Popular Will attaining leadership and due to the party's head officials being imprisoned or exiled, Guaidรณ was chosen as president in December 2018 by the Assembly, and was sworn in on 5 January 2019. Relatives of imprisoned politicians were invited to the inauguration. At 35, Guaidรณ was the youngest to have led the opposition. Shortly after assuming the presidency of the legislature, Guaidรณ began advocating for a law to form a transitional government. Two politicians were primarily responsible for the strategy that brought Guaidรณ to prominence: Julio Borges (in exile) and Leopoldo Lรณpez (under house arrest). The plan was developed after the failed 2017 negotiations during the Venezuelan crisis between representatives of chavismo and the opposition, and that took more than a year to develop. Ricardo Hausmann and politicians from different political parties were also involved. Borges was involved in external efforts, such as with the Lima Group, along with Antonio Ledezma and Carlos Vecchio, who operated in the United States; Marรญa Corina Machado and Lรณpez operated in Venezuela. David Smolansky and Freddy Guevara also supported Guaidรณ, along with Henrique Capriles, who had initially been distant. Javier Corrales, professor and author, stated that Guaidรณ's rise as a presidential figure began within Venezuela, not by foreign pressure. Lรณpez and Guaidรณ contacted the United States Department of State, presenting a plan to declare Guaidรณ interim president and that the United States could lead other nations to support his recognition in order to remove Maduro; United States Secretary of State Mike Pompeo supported the plan. Lรณpez and Guaidรณ promoted this initiative to the United States without the knowledge of the National Assembly, according to Neuman. Upon taking office, Guaidรณ vowed to oppose Maduro, and elaborated an action plan. The plan, approved by the National Assembly, comprised three phases (end of usurpation, transitional government, and free elections), with eight key points. Detention and release While on his way to a 13 January 2019 public assembly, Guaidรณ was briefly detained by members of the Bolivarian Intelligence Service (SEBIN), and released 45ย minutes later. The Lima Group and the Secretary General of the Organization of American States (OAS), Luis Almagro, condemned the act. The Maduro government said the detention was carried out unilaterally by the SEBIN personnel, and twelve SEBIN officials were charged for their actions. Guaidรณ declared that the events demonstrated that there was a break in the chain of command in the Armed Forces, and that Maduro was not in control. Re-election The 2020 Venezuelan National Assembly Delegated Committee election of 5 January, to elect the Board of Directors of the National Assembly, was disrupted; there were two claims for the presidency of the National Assembly, by Guaidรณ and Luis Parra, an independent legislator. Parra was formerly a member of Justice First, but was expelled from the party on 20 December 2019 based on corruption allegations, which he denied. Parra declared himself president of the National Assembly โ€“ a move that was welcomed by the Maduro administration. The opposition disputed this outcome, saying that quorum had not been achieved and no votes had been counted. Police forces had blocked access to parliament to some opposition members, including Guaidรณ, and members of the media. Later in the day, a separate session was carried out at the headquarters of El Nacional newspaper, where 100 of the 167 deputies voted to re-elect Guaidรณ as president of the parliament. In his speech, Guaidรณ announced his resignation from Popular Will. Guaidรณ was sworn in on 7 January after forcing his way in through police barricades. On the same day, Parra reiterated his claim to the presidency of the parliament. Claim to presidency Swearing-in After what he and critics of the Maduro administration described as the "illegitimate" inauguration of Maduro on 10 January 2019, Guaidรณ challenged Maduro's claim to the presidency. The National Assembly declared Guaidรณ was willing to assume the responsibilities of the presidency. They called for demonstrations on 23 January, the 61st anniversary of the overthrow of dictator Marcos Pรฉrez Jimรฉnez. Prior to Guaidรณ's declaration, Vice President of the United States Mike Pence called Guaidรณ on 22 January and told him that the United States would support his initiative. On 23 January, Guaidรณ declared he assumed the functions as acting president and took the presidential oath at a rally in Caracas. Within minutes of Guaidรณ's swearing-in, the United States recognized him as president, followed shortly thereafter by Canada and other Latin American and European countries; Russia, China, Iran, Syria, Cuba and Turkey supported Maduro. Maduro accused the United States of backing a coup and said he would cut ties with the country. Guaidรณ denied the coup allegations, saying peaceful volunteers backed his movement. In December 2018, Guaidรณ had traveled to Washington, D.C., where he met with OAS Secretary General Luis Almagro, and then on 14 January to Colombia for a Lima Group meeting, in which Maduro's mandate was rejected. The fragmented opposition later unified around Guaidรณ. Spanish newspaper El Paรญs described U.S. president Donald Trump's electionโ€”coinciding with the election of conservative presidents in Colombia and Brazil, along with deteriorating conditions in Venezuelaโ€”as "a perfect storm," influenced by hawks in the Trump administration. Opposition members Carlos Vecchio, Julio Borges and Gustavo Tarre were consulted, and the Trump administration decision to back Guaidรณ formed on 22 January, according to El Pais. U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, National Security Adviser John R. Bolton, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and others met with Trump that day, and Vice President Mike Pence called Guaidรณ that night to express U.S. support, according to The Wall Street Journal. According to El Paรญs, the January Lima Group meeting and the stance taken by Canada, represented by Chrystia Freeland, were key factors leading Donald Trump, known for being an isolationist, to become involved in Venezuela. The Supreme Tribunal of Justice (TSJ) rejected the National Assembly's decisions, while the Supreme Tribunal of Justice of Venezuela in exile welcomed Guaidรณ as acting president. On 29 January 2019, the TSJ launched a probe of Guaidรณ, froze his assets, and prohibited him from leaving the country. According to Special Rapporteur on the Independence of Judges and Lawyers for the United Nations Diego Garcรญa Sayรกn, the measures were "not adopted in accordance with constitutional requirements, normal legal procedures and international human rights standards." As of 1 April 2021, Guaidรณ was no longer recognized as Venezuela's rightful President by the European Union's 27 member-states after he lost his position as head of parliament. Although the United States and the United Kingdom continued to recognize him as the legitimate leader of Venezuela in 2021, the United States stopped recognizing Guaidรณ in January 2023 when the opposition party vote to dissolve Guaidรณ's interim government took effect. Personnel According to El Paรญs, Guaidรณ had help, along with National Assembly vice-presidents Stalin Gonzรกlez and Edgar Zambrano, from young representatives of several political parties: Miguel Pizarro for humanitarian aid, Carlos Paparoni heading a Finance Commission, and Marialbert Barrios working with embassies. Delsa Solรณrzano worked with Luisa Ortega Dรญaz on the Amnesty Law. David Smolansky was the OAS coordinator for the Venezuelan Migrant and Refugee crisis. Carlos Vecchio was accepted by Pompeo as the Guaidรณ administration's diplomatic envoy to the US. Julio Borges was named to represent Venezuela in the Lima Group. The National Assembly made more than a dozen other diplomatic appointments, including Elisa Trotta Gamus to Argentina, Marรญa Teresa Belandria to Brazil, and Humberto Calderรณn Berti to Colombia. Diplomats to Europe and the Dominican Republic were named on 19 February. Gustavo Tarre Briceรฑo was named Venezuela's Permanent Representative to the Organization of American States (OAS) on 29 January 2019, and ratified by the National Assembly according to the constitution. On 9 April, the OAS voted 18 to 9, with six abstentions, to accept Tarre Briceรฑo as the ambassador from Venezuela. Maduro's Foreign Ministry called Tarre a "political usurper." The nomination was accepted 20 days before the deadline on Venezuela leaving the union, after they triggered the process in 2017, suggesting that the nation will remain in the OAS against the wishes of the Maduro administration. Venezuela's previous ambassador voted against Tarre. According to The Washington Post, the OAS vote undermined Maduro's presence internationally and marked a step in the official recognition of Guaidรณ's government. The National Assembly authorized Guaidรณ's appointment of a new ad hoc directors board of Petrรณleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), of Citgo, Pdvsa Holding Inc, Citgo Holding Inc. and Citgo Petroleum Corporation. The appointed members of PDVSA were Simรณn Antรบnez, Gustavo J. Velasquez, Carlos Josรฉ Balza, Ricardo Prada and David Smolansky. Likewise, the appointed members of Citgo Holding and Citgo Petroleum Corporation were Luisa Palacios, Edgar Rincรณn, Luis Urdaneta, รngel Olmeta, Andrรฉs Padilla and Rick Esser. With Citgo under the control of Guaidรณ's administration, the US Department of Treasury extended its license to operate in spite of US sanctions. Guaidรณ named Josรฉ Ignacio Hernรกndez as special solicitor, making Hernรกndez the first official named with state power. Ricardo Hausmann was named as Venezuela's representative to the Inter-American Development Bank, who recognized Hausmann as a replacement for Maduro's representative. The Maduro administration's prosecutor general, Tarek William Saab, said the "appointments by Guaidรณ and his National Assembly are part of an illegal power grab backed by foreign governments" and opened a probe into the ambassador and oil industry appointees; a magistrate of "Venezuela's pro-Maduro Supreme Court later read a statement ...ย nullifying the appointments and accusing the National Assembly of overstepping its constitutional powers." Arrest attempt On 12 July 2021, Special Action Forces (FAES) officials went to Guaidรณ's residence and besieged him for twenty minutes in the building's garage, and used explosives against him as Guaidรณ took refuge in an armored vehicle. The intended arrest was foiled due to the vehicle and his neighbors and supporters, who opposed Guaidรณ's detention. Guaidรณ said that the officers did not identify themselves nor did they show any judicial order. On the same day, former deputy Freddy Guevara was detained while he was driving his vehicle. Interim government dismissal After a preliminary vote on 22 December 2022 to remove the interim government, on 30 December 2022, three of the four main political parties (Justice First, Democratic Action and A New Era) backed a reform of the Statute Governing the Transition to Democracy to dissolve the interim government and create a commission of five members to manage foreign assets, stating that the interim government had failed to achieve the goals it had set. The amendment was voted by the opposition National Assembly as deputies sought a united strategy ahead of the presidential elections scheduled for 2024. The reform was approved with 72 votes in favor, 29 against and 8 abstentions. Domestic affairs In a 30 January 2019 New York Times editorial, Guaidรณ stated that Venezuela had "one of the highest homicide rates in the world", prompting the "largest exodus in Latin American history" and that "Under Mr. Maduro at least 240 Venezuelans have been murdered at marches, and there are 600 political prisoners." His response to these problems was three-fold: restore the democratic National Assembly, gain international support, and allow for the people's right to self-determination. Amnesty law On 25 January 2019, Guaidรณ offered the Amnesty Law () approved by the National Assembly, for military personnel and authorities who help unseat Maduro. He suggested that if Maduro gave up power, he may receive amnesty. He held a public assembly, asking supporters to disseminate the Amnesty Law throughout the country to military, police and other functionaries. On 30 January, demonstrators took to the streets across the country to encourage the military to allow humanitarian aid and reject Maduro. Maduro also held meetings with the military; top military command remained loyal to Maduro as of February 2019. In a 30 January editorial published by The New York Times, Guaidรณ explained that the law would only apply to individuals who were not found to have committed crimes against humanity. According to Colombian immigration authorities, as of 24 April 2019, about 1,400 Venezuelan military personnel had broken ranks and crossed the border into Colombia since the border clashes began on 23 February, in addition to 60 that crossed into Brazil, according to the Brazilian Army. Elections Guaidรณ told CNN in February 2019 that he would call elections 30ย days after Maduro left power. He did not state if he would run for president when elections occur, but said discussing running for president was "premature". The Statute Governing the Transition to Democracy to Re-establish the Validity of the Constitution of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela () was approved on 5 February, and the National Assembly second vice-president Stalin Gonzรกlez announced that a commission to set a route towards elections was established on 6 March 2019. Finance and economy Guaidรณ asked the Bank of England and British Prime Minister Theresa May not to return to the Maduro administration the ยฃ1.2ย billion in gold reserves the UK holds for Venezuela, and to allow the opposition to access it instead. In the same week, the US Treasury levied sanctions against PDVSA and transferred control of some Venezuelan assets to Guaidรณ. Guaidรณ said the Maduro administration was attempting to move some of the country's assets to Uruguay, "to keep stealing from the people of Venezuela." On 5 February, Paparoni announced that the transfer from Portugal to Uruguay had been stopped. Guaidรณ sought to open up the economy by allowing foreign, private oil companies greater participation in ventures with PDVSA by dropping the requirement for 51% PDVSA ownership in joint ventures. Pledging to honor "legal" and "financial" debt, Carlos Vecchio said that agreements in which Venezuela pays debt with oil (signed by the Maduro administration) might not be honored. Humanitarian aid In a Euronews interview, Guaidรณ said that hospitals in Venezuela lacked basic supplies and that "children were dying due to malnutrition." He made bringing humanitarian aid to Venezuelans who could die if aid does not arrive a priority, and a test of the military's allegiance. The day after assuming the acting presidency, Guaidรณ requested humanitarian aid for Venezuela from the US and from the United Nations. He said Venezuela's neighbors, in a "global coalition to send aid to Venezuela", would help get humanitarian aid and medicine into the country; products would be shipped to neighboring ports and brought overland via convoys. He said that the 250,000 people whose lives were in danger would be the recipients of the first phase of the effort. He traveled to Cรบcuta on 22 February to be present as the aid entered Colombia; Maduro administration security forces clashed with demonstrators and blocked the aid from entering. The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies announced in March 2019 that the Red Cross was preparing to bring humanitarian aid to the country in April to help ease both the chronic hunger and the medical crisis. The Wall Street Journal said that the acceptance of humanitarian shipments by Maduro was his first acknowledgement that Venezuela is "suffering from an economic collapse." Guaidรณ said the acceptance of humanitarian aid was the "result of our pressure and insistence", and called on Venezuelans to "stay vigilant to make sure incoming aid is not diverted for 'corrupt' purposes". Following the joint report from Human Rights Watch and Johns Hopkins in April 2019, increasing announcements from the United Nations about the scale of the humanitarian crisis, and the softening of Maduro's position on receiving aid, the Red Cross tripled its budget for aid to Venezuela. Media On 23 April 2019, Guaidรณ named Alberto Federico Ravell, former CEO and co-founder of the news channel Globovisiรณn, as his spokesman and director of the National Center of Communications of Venezuela, Guaidรณ's information and media board. In January 2020, Guaidรณ announced the appointment of an ad hoc directors board of the National Commission of Telecommunications (CONATEL), saying that "Telesur will no longer be a propaganda tool of the regime." Plan Paรญs Guaidรณ announced on 31 January at the Central University of Venezuela that the National Assembly had approved a commission to implement a plan for the reconstruction of Venezuela. Called Plan Paรญs (Plan for the Country), it had been under elaboration for some time, and was initially developed through a series of public and private meetings in the US and Venezuela. According to Guaidรณ, the aims of the plan were to "stabilize the economy, attend to the humanitarian emergency immediately, rescue public services, and overcome poverty." It had provisions to revitalize PDVSA, restore the health sector, and offer assistance to the most poverty-stricken. Implementation of the plan required Maduro's exit. Plans to oust Maduro Operation Freedom Guaidรณ announced he would embark on a tour of the country beginning 16 March to organize committees for Operaciรณn Libertad (trans. Operation Freedom or Operation Liberty) with the goal to claim the presidential residence, Miraflores Palace. As part of the ongoing tour, he visited Petare, regarded as one of the world's largest slums, on 12 April. In an open assembly celebrating the anniversary of the 19 April 1810 date when the Venezuelan Independence Movement began, Guaidรณ offered the example that organized protests in Sudan led to the replacement of Omar al-Bashir, and called for "the greatest march" in history on 1 May, to "once and for all end this tragedy". Coinciding with his speech, NetBlocks stated that state-run CANTV again blocked access to social media in Venezuela. On 30 April, Guaidรณ live-streamed a video of himself beside opposition leader Leopoldo Lรณpez, freed from house arrest after being imprisoned for five years, with the two flanked by members of the Venezuelan armed forces, announcing the "final phase" of Operation Freedom. He stated: "People of Venezuela, it is necessary that we go out together to the street, to support the democratic forces and to recover our freedom. Organized and together, mobilize the main military units. People of Caracas, all to La Carlota." The Associated Press reported that Lรณpez "had been released from house arrest by security forces adhering to an order from Guaidรณ." Several dozen military personnel and civilians joined Guaidรณ in his call for an uprising. The head of the Bolivarian Intelligence Service, Manuel Cristopher Figuera, denounced the Maduro government and was dismissed from his position before going into hiding. Expected military defections did not happen. By the end of the day, one protester had died and at least 100 were injured; Lรณpez was at the Spanish embassy, while 25 military personnel sought asylum in the Brazilian embassy in Caracas. On 1 May, Guaidรณ's call for the largest march in history did not materialize and his supporters were forced to retreat by security forces using tear gas. Guaidรณ acknowledged he had received insufficient military backing, and called for strikes beginning on 2 May, with the aim of a general strike later in May. Guaidรณ's support began to drop following the incident. In the Miami Herald, Jim Wyss wrote that the "failed military uprising and a spate of violent but fruitless demonstrations have some wondering if Guaido, and the opposition at large, have what it takes to oust Maduro." Strategic Committee According to a report by The Washington Post, in August 2019 Guaidรณ tasked J.J. Rendรณn and a committee to investigate scenarios for achieving the removal of Maduro. Members of the Strategic Committee argued that the Venezuelan Constitution, the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime, and other treaties justified action against Maduro. Rendรณn stated that the Strategic Committee had contacted numerous groups about removing Maduro from office, but they demanded payments up to US$500 million. He then made contact with Jordan Goudreau, owner of Silvercorp USA, where Goudreau presented an offer for the capture or extraction of Maduro from Venezuela for US$212.9 million. Rendรณn signed an agreement in Washington, D.C., on behalf of the Guaidรณ government with Silvercorp on 16 October 2019. An amount of US$1.5 million was later demanded by Goudreau to initiate "Operation Resolution". Guaidรณ representatives ultimately removed themselves from Goudreau's proposal. Goudreau was later responsible for the foiled 3โ€“4 May 2020 Venezuelan Operation Gideon. Following the raid, Guaido's team initially said they had "no relationship with any company in the security and defense branch"; Rendรณn later admitted that an "exploratory agreement" with Silvercorp had been signed to seek the capture of members of Maduro's government. When interviewed by BBC Mundo, risk consultant Dimitris Pantoulas, and head of the Datanรกlisis consultant firm Luis Vicente Leรณn agreed that Guaidรณ's reputation was damaged due to the incident, with Leรณn stating "the opposition seems to have exhausted the routes". In an analysis for the Council on Hemispheric Affairs, Patricio Zamorano wrote that the event demonstrated that "Guaidรณ is politically immature and inept", that such scandals had "led to a significant withering of his support" and that Guaidรณ was willing to resort to violence to remove Maduro from power. Dialogue with Maduro In response to calls from Mexico, Uruguay, and CARICOM for negotiations, Guaidรณ said that the National Assembly would not participate in dialogue with Maduro, on the grounds that negotiations had already been attempted, "within and outside of Venezuela, in private and in public, alone and with international companions." Guaidรณ said that the result of all previous negotiations was more repression, with Maduro taking advantage of the process to strengthen his position. Offering as examples Leopoldo Lรณpez, the detention of Juan Requesens, Julio Borges (in exile) and others, he said that if Maduro really wanted dialogue, he would release political prisoners. He asked Uruguay and Mexico to join him. Guaidรณ characterized Uruguay as failing to defend democracy, saying that Uruguay's stance was surprising given Venezuela has 300,000 starving people at risk of dying. After Maduro wrote to Pope Francis, asking for assistance with negotiations, Guaidรณ refused the Vatican's offer to mediate, calling the attempt a "false dialogue," and saying that by mediating, the Vatican would assist those who "refused to see the Venezuelan reality." Guaidรณ said that Maduro did not respect conditions of 2016 negotiations, and suggested the Pope should encourage Maduro to allow an orderly transition of power. Corriere della Sera cited a 7 February 2019 reply from Pope Francis addressed to "Mr. Maduro," in which Pope Francis also stated that what had been agreed in earlier negotiations (open a channel for humanitarian aid, hold free elections, free political prisoners, and re-establish the constitutionally-elected National Assembly) had not been followed, and that he would back only constructive dialogue "when all conflicting parties put the common good above any other interest." Following the failed uprising, representatives of Guaidรณ and Maduro began mediation, with the assistance of the Norwegian Centre for Conflict Resolution. Jorge Rodrรญguez and Hรฉctor Rodrรญguez Castro served as representatives for Maduro while and Stalin Gonzรกlez were representatives for Guaidรณ. Guaidรณ confirmed that there was an envoy in Norway, but said that the opposition would not take part in false negotiations. After the second meeting in Norway, no deal was reached. On 9 July 2019 negotiations started in Barbados with representatives of Maduro and Guaidรณ. Several theories arose from the negotiations, including potential elections agreed upon between the government and the opposition, having Hรฉctor Rodrรญguez as the main government candidate. On 15 September, Guaidรณ announced that the opposition concluded the dialogue after the absence of the government in the negotiations for forty days as a protest to the recent sanctions by the United States. In February 2020, the coordinator of the Lima Group, Hugo de Zela, announced that Argentina, Canada and Peru were attempting to negotiate with the Cuban government to find a solution to the crisis. In late March 2020, the United States relaxed its position and proposed a transitional government that would exclude both Maduro and Guaidรณ from the presidency. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said that sanctions did not apply to humanitarian aid during the coronavirus pandemic health emergency and that the United States would lift all sanctions if Maduro agreed to organize elections that did not include himself in a period of six to twelve months. The deal would enforce a power-sharing scenario between the different government factions. Elections would have to be held within the year, and all foreign militaries would have to leave the country. The US was still seeking Maduro's arrest at the time of the announcement. Other aspects of the US deal would include releasing all political prisoners and setting up a five-person council to lead the country; two members each chosen by Maduro and Guaidรณ would sit on the council, with the last member selected by the four. The EU also agreed to remove sanctions if the deal went ahead. Guaidรณ accepted the proposal, while Venezuela's foreign minister, Jorge Arreaza, rejected it and declared that only parliamentary elections would take place that year. Reuters reported that during the COVID-19 pandemic, allies of both Maduro and Guaidรณ had secretly begun exploratory talks, according to sources on both sides. Guaidรณ and U.S. Special Representative for Venezuela Elliott Abrams denied that negotiations had taken place. After the announcement of regional elections in 2021, Guaidรณ announced a "national salvation agreement" and proposed the negotiation with Maduro with a schedule for free and fair elections, with international support and observers, in exchange for lifting international sanctions. On 5 August 2021, Mexican President Andrรฉs Manuel Lรณpez Obrador announced that Mexico would host negotiations talks between Maduro and the opposition, including Guaidรณ, who stated that he would push for guarantees for what he called free and fair elections. Foreign affairs Guaidรณ said there was room for long-term Chรกvez/Maduro allies such as Russia and China in Venezuela, adding that legal security under a new plan for the country would benefit all businesses, including theirs. He approached China to establish diplomatic ties, stating "China's support will be very important in boosting our country's economy and future development." According to Euronews, he said he had been "working to convince China and Russia that it was in their economic interest to withdraw support from Maduro." Bloomberg published a 14 April editorial from Guaidรณ, "Why China should switch sides in Venezuela," in which Guaidรณ appealed to China and stated that it is in China's interest to support a peaceful transition, rule of law, and economic reconstruction in Venezuela. According to CNN, following a long history of Fidel Castro's interest in the country, "Venezuelan oil is the lifeblood of Cuban economy, under a barter system where Cuba receives billions of dollars of crude in exchange for Cuban doctors, teachers, sports trainers, and military and intelligence advisers." Guaidรณ vowed that Cuban influence in Venezuela would end. Referring to Cubans as "brothers," he said that Cuban individuals are welcome to stay in the country, but not in decision-making positions, and not in the armed forces. On 12 March 2019, the National Assembly voted to cut Venezuela's oil supply to Cuba, which would save about US$2.6 million daily, according to Guaidรณ, who asked other nations to help implement the measure. Guaidรณ sought restored relations with Israel; Chรกvez had severed relations with Israel more than ten years prior, favoring support for Palestine during Operation Cast Lead. Guaidรณ has supported Venezuela's sovereignty claim of Guayana Esequiba throughout his political career. In June 2019, the United Nations reported that four million Venezuelans had left the country, many without a valid passport. Associated Press has reported that getting an extension is an expensive and lengthy ordeal for many Venezuelans. The National Assembly decided accordingly to release a decree, signed by Guaidรณ, to extend Venezuelan passports' lifespan. The decision was accepted by the United States and Canada, which recognized the validity of the Venezuelan passports for five years beyond the printed expiration date. In September 2019, Guaidรณ announced the designation as terrorist organizations of Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), National Liberation Army (ELN), Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS/ISIL), ordering all state security forces to protect "our sovereignty and territorial integrity" against the threat posed by these groups. Following an American airstrike that killed Iranian Quds Force Commander Qasem Soleimani in January 2020, Guaidรณ said that Soleimani "led a criminal and terrorist structure in Iran that for years caused pain to his people and destabilized the Middle East, just as Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis did with Hezbollah." Guaidรณ also accused Nicolรกs Maduro of allowing him and his Quds Forces to incorporate their sanctioned banks and their companies in Venezuela. Diplomatic officials As of July 2019, the National Assembly had approved Juan Guaidรณ's appointment has named 37 ambassadors and foreign representatives to international organizations and nations abroad. On 9 April, the OAS voted 18 to 9, with six abstentions, to accept Guaidรณ's envoy, Gustavo Tarre Briceรฑo, as the ambassador from Venezuela until new elections can be held. The permanent council approved a text stating that "Nicolas Maduro's presidential authority lacks legitimacy and his designations for government posts, therefore, lack the necessary legitimacy." Antigua and Barbuda, Bolivia, Dominica, Grenada, Mexico, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Suriname, Uruguay, and Venezuela voted against the change. Maduro's administration responded calling Tarre a "loud-mouth political usurper" and the decision a "criminal and rampant violation of international law and the OAS Charter," saying they do not intend to respect decisions made by Tarre. The nomination was accepted 20 days before the deadline on Venezuela leaving the organization, after they triggered the process in 2017. According to The Washington Post, this acceptance undermined Maduro's presence internationally and marked a step in the official recognition of Guaidรณ's government. An effort by some OAS member states to remove Guaidรณ's OAS envoy in October 2022 failed, obtaining a majority but falling short of the two-thirds supermajority required. In January 2020, Guaidรณ announced that he would appoint diplomatic representatives to Bolivia, El Salvador, and Uruguay. The European Union (EU) announced on 6 January 2021, that it could no longer legally recognize Guaidรณ as interim president after he lost his position as head of parliament, without recognizing Maduro as the legitimate president. It also threatened new sanctions against the Maduro administration. In January 2022, opposition parties voted to extend Guaidรณ's term as interim president for another year and to create a committee of opposition lawmakers to take over his management of foreign affairs, as well as to authorize the appointment of ambassadors in opposition allied countries. After the vote, Guaidรณ's role consisted in "defending democracy" and managing Venezuela's overseas assets, including oil refiner Citgo and $1 billion in gold lodged in the Bank of England. Guaidรณ required to keep the committee informed of how he had spent funds under his control. In September 2022, Colombian President Gustavo Petro described Guaidรณ as a "non-existent" president with no control over the country and announced that his government would recognize only the Maduro government. Guaidรณ criticized Petro's reversal of recognition from the policy of prior Colombian President Ivรกn Duque, saying that Maduro "sheltered world terrorism in Venezuela". Military involvement In an interview with Christiane Amanpour, Guaidรณ did not rule out accepting support from the US armed forces, but said that pressure was being applied in every other way possible to avoid armed conflict. According to Giancarlo Fiorella, writing in Foreign Affairs, "calls for intervention" are coming from "some members of the Venezuelan opposition and from residents of the country desperate for a solutionโ€”any solutionโ€”to their years-long plight"; he adds that talk of foreign intervention "has become commonplace" in Venezuela, and that "the push for a military intervention in Venezuela is most intense not among hawks in Washington but inside the country itself." In every demonstration summoned by Guaidรณ, there are numerous signs demanding the approval of Article 187(11) of the Constitution, which allows the National Assembly to authorize the deployment of foreign missions in Venezuela. A March poll showed 87.5% support for foreign intervention. Guaidรณ has said he will call for intervention "when the time comes," but in media interviews, he has not stated he supports removing Maduro by force. He has said that the decision "cannot be taken lightly," and has appeared to "temper hopes ... [of] a magical solution to the country's problems," according to Fiorella. Latin American tour Guaidรณ defied the restriction imposed by the Maduro administration on him leaving Venezuela, and attended Richard Branson's February 2019 Venezuela Live Aid concert in Cรบcuta, Colombia, whose purpose was to raise funds and awareness for humanitarian aid to Venezuela. In a move that tested Maduro's authority, Guaidรณ was met by Colombian president Ivรกn Duque, and welcomed by a crowd chanting, "Juan arrived!" Amid continuing tension, and having failed to get humanitarian aid into Venezuela, Guaidรณ and US vice president Pence attended a 25 February meeting of the Lima Group in Bogotรก. From there, he embarked on a regional tour to meet with the presidents of Brazil, Paraguay, Argentina, and Ecuador, and discuss ways to rebuild Venezuela and defeat Maduro. Guaidรณ's trip was approved by Venezuela's National Assembly, as required by the Constitution of Venezuela. Because he left the country under a travel restriction placed upon him by the Maduro administration, he faced the possibility of being imprisoned upon his return to Venezuela. Maduro said that Guaidรณ was welcome to return to Venezuela, but would have to face justice in the courts for breaching his travel ban. Guaidรณ announced that he planned to return to Venezuela despite the threats of imprisonment, and said Maduro's "regime" was "weak, lacking support in Venezuela and international recognition." Guaidรณ returned to Caracas from Panama via a commercial flight; The Washington Post described his "triumphant return" to "wild cheers from supporters" at Venezuela's main airport at Maiquetรญa, Vargas state on 4 March. He proceeded from the airport to an anti-government demonstrationโ€”organized in advance on social mediaโ€”in Las Mercedes, Caracas, where he addressed a crowd of thousands, offered a tribute to people who had lost their lives in the border clashes beginning on 23 February, and said that immigration officials had "greeted him at the airport with the words 'welcome, president'." He added: "It is evident that after the threats, somebody did not follow orders. Many did not follow orders. The chain of command [in the government security forces] is broken," according to BBC. Following Guaidรณ's Latin American tour in February 2019, Elvis Amoroso, comptroller for the Maduro administration, alleged in March that Guaidรณ had not explained how he paid for the trip, and stated there were inconsistencies between his level of spending and income. Amoroso said that Guaidรณ's 90 trips abroad had cost $94,000, and that Guaidรณ had not explained the source of the funds. Based on these alleged financial discrepancies, Amoroso said Guaidรณ would be barred from running for public office for the maximum time allowed by lawโ€”fifteen years. Leopoldo Lรณpez and Henrique Capriles had been prohibited from holding office by the Maduro administration on similar pretexts. Guaidรณ responded that "The only body that can appoint a comptroller is the legitimate parliament." The comptroller general is not a judicial body; according to constitutional lawyer Josรฉ Vicente Haro, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights ruled in 2011, after Leopoldo Lรณpez was barred from holding office, that an administrative body cannot disallow a public servant from running. Constitutional law expert Juan Manuel Raffalli stated that Article 65 of Venezuela's Constitution provides that such determinations may only be made by criminal courts, after judgment of criminal activity. The decision would also breach Guaidรณ's parliamentary immunity. Investigation of representatives in Colombia In June 2019, the PanAm Post reported that Guaidรณ's representatives in Colombia had allegedly used money allocated to pay for defecting soldiers' accommodations for personal purchases, such as "parties and nightclubs." The representatives, Rossana Barrera and Kevin Rojas, are accused of embezzling up to $60,000; both deny the allegations and have not been charged. Guaidรณ's presidential office dismissed Barrera and Rojas from their positions and requested the cooperation of the Colombian government, multilateral agencies and other organizations to clarify the events with an impartial investigation. The Venezuelan embassy in Colombia issued a statement informing that Guaidรณ and the appointed ambassador, Humberto Calderรณn, agreed to carry out an audit. Venezuelan political parties, including Popular Will, Justice First, Democratic Action and A New Era, supported the start of the investigation of the events. Colombian Foreign Minister, Carlos Holmes Trujillo, condemned the reported act of corruption and urged the authorities to advance the investigations to determine if any wrongdoings occurred. According to NPR's Philip Reeves, Guaidรณ's envoy in Colombia "began looking into this two months ago after being tipped off by Colombian intelligence," leading to "speculation that Guaidรณ may actually have known about this for a while." Guaidรณ has declared that the preliminary investigations started two months before the publication of the article. Political views Guaidรณ was a member of the social-democratic Popular Will, now independent, and although his peers characterize Guaidรณ as a centrist, Maduro places him on the right of the political spectrum. Regarding politics in the United States, Guaidรณ stated that he was unfamiliar with the subject but has commented: "What they refer to as socialist in the United States is what we'd call a Social Democrat here." Domestic response While announcing Plan Paรญs at the Central University of Venezuela on 31 January, Guaidรณ said special forces had come to his home and asked for Fabiana, his wife. He then gave a general warning, saying that he would hold anyone who threatened his 20-month-old daughter personally accountable for such actions. Journalists in the place confirmed that FAES officials surrounded his mother-in-law's house in the Baruta municipality and reported that neighbors tried to prevent the security forces from entering. Maduro said Guaidรณ was a "clown," asking whether he would call elections or continue his "virtual mandate" until he was imprisoned by order of the Supreme Tribunal of Justice. During a speech given at the start of the judicial year, Maduro said that he was considering sending his assistant to kill Guaidรณ, adding seconds later that the remark was a joke. In a discussion before the Constituent National Assembly, Diosdado Cabello, the body's president, asked how far Guaidรณ was willing to go, saying that unlike the military, Guaidรณ had never experienced "the whistle of a bullet" nearby, and did not know "how it feels to have a bullet hit three centimetres from your head." Guaidรณ responded that "lamentably, the Venezuelan people have had to listen to a lot of whistling in these years," but that "we're not going anywhere" and "we're not afraid." After Guaidรณ called for protests on 23 January 2019 against Maduro and in favor of "an interim government," the minister for Prison Services, Iris Varela, said that she had picked out a prison cell for Guaidรณ and asked him to be quick in naming his cabinet so she could prepare prison cells for them as well. In April 2019, Varela called Guaidรณ "garbage" on Twitter, saying that he assumes the direction of "a criminal gang that grotesquely steals money from the Venezuelan people with the gringos." She also said that warm cell and many years in jail were waiting to pay "for his crimes." On 10 February, Guaidรณ said that his grandmother-in-law was threatened by colectivos. Guaidรณ told Euronews: "I am not worried about this costing my life or my freedom. If I give my life to serve the people. We know the risks we face. Our biggest fear is that what's happening in Venezuela becomes normal." The Lima Group has stated that Guaidรณ and his family face "serious and credible threats" in Venezuela. Colombian Foreign Minister Carlos Holmes Trujillo said that "any violent actions against Guaidรณ, his wife, or family" would be met by all "legal and political mechanisms." In an interview with the Mexican GQ magazine, Guaidรณ said that he has been persecuted and has received direct death threats from the Maduro government. On 29 February 2020, colectivos shot at Guaidรณ and his supporters in Barquisimeto, Lara state, during a demonstration, leaving five injured. During the March 2019 Venezuelan blackouts, Tarek William Saab called for an investigation of Guaidรณ, saying that he had "sabotaged" the electric sector; Guaidรณ said that Venezuela's largest-ever power outage was "the product of the inefficiency, the incapability, the corruption of a regime that doesn't care about the lives of Venezuelans." Roberto Marrero, Guaidรณ's chief of staff, was arrested by SEBIN during a raid on his home in the early morning hours of 21 March. His attorney said he was to be charged with treason, usurpation of functions, and conspiracy. The US had repeatedly warned Maduro not to go after Guaidรณ; Haaretz reported that the arrest of Guaidรณ's number-two person was a test of the US. A risk consultant for London's IHS Markit, Diego Moya-Ocampos, said to Bloomberg that "the regime is testing the international community and its repeated warnings against laying a hand on Maduro's rival [Guaidรณ] ... if they can't touch him, they'll go after those close to him." Nicholas Watson of Teneo Intelligence told The Wall Street Journal that "Marrero's arrest looks like a desperate attempt to break Guaidรณ's momentum .. The weakness in the regime's position is visible in the fact that arresting Guaidรณ himself would be seen as a step too far." Guaidรณ called it a "vile and vulgar kidnapping," adding "Either Nicolas Maduro doesn't dare to arrest me, or he's not the one giving orders." According to The Wall Street Journal, Guaidรณ said he had received calls from security force officials disclaiming any involvement in the arrest; he replied that they need say no more, per the 2019 Venezuelan Amnesty Law; he said the "incident was indicative of divides within the Maduro regime." On 1 April 2019, TSJ supreme justice Maikel Moreno (a political ally of Maduro) asked that the Constituent National Assembly (ANC) controlled by Chavismo remove Guaidรณ's parliamentary immunity as president of the National Assembly; that is, he asked that they "strip [him] of immunity from prosecution," which moves the Maduro administration a step closer towards arresting and prosecuting Guaidรณ. Maduro officials say that "Guaidรณ is under investigation for inciting violence against the government and receiving illicit funds." Moreno said the request is based upon Guaidรณ having attended the Venezuela Aid Live concert on 23 February, after the Maduro administration prohibited him from leaving the country; the trip was approved by the National Assembly. Supporters of Guaidรณ disagree that the Maduro-backed institutions have the authority to ban Guaidรณ from leaving the country, and consider acts of the ANC "null and void." The Venezuelan Constitution provides that only the National Assembly can bring the president to trial by approving the legal proceeding in a "merit hearing"; Venezuela's constitution requires "authorization in advance from the National Assembly." Constitutional lawyer Juan Manuel Raffalli said there is no breach to prosecute unless the National Assembly first approves one; he said the proceedings were intended to distract attention from the protests and collapse of public services, referencing the 2019 Venezuelan blackouts. Bypassing the National Assembly, Moreno sent Guaidรณ's file to the president of the ANC, Diosdado Cabelloโ€”described by BBC Mundo as "one of the most belligerent Chรกvez leaders against the opposition"โ€”for the decision to be made by that body. On 2 April, in a speech before the ANC, member Marรญa Leรณn proposed creating popular tribunals for trying "traitors," which the Miami Herald compared to those used during the Cuban revolution; she argued that "for me stripping him of his immunity is very little. What do you do with traitors?" ANC members "responded with shouts of al paredรณn ("put him up against a wall"), referring to a firing squad. Votes were not counted, rather voting was by a show of hands. In record time (less than 30 hours from the TSJ proceedings), the ANC voted to remove Guaidรณ's immunity from prosecution. Following the decision, Guaidรณ promised to continue fighting "Maduro's 'cowardly, miserable and murderous' regime." He said, "What if the regime intends to kidnap us? Well, of course, we know that they only have brute force left ... But we are left with audacity, intelligence, soul, strength of heart, hope and confidence in this country, in ourselves." On 5 September, Vice President Delcy Rodrรญguez released a purported months-old recording in which Guaido's envoy to United Kingdom, Vanessa Neumann, and a Guaido's advisor, Manuel Avendaรฑo, discuss that Guaidรณ should "drop the topic" on Venezuela's claim for Guayana Esequiba (Esequibo), a disputed territory between Guyana and Venezuela. Attorney general Tarek William Saab, announced that Guaidรณ would be prosecuted for "high treason" for the alleged negotiations to hand over the Esequibo. Since April, Norway mediated talks between Guaido and Maduro's commissions, but Maduro paused the discussion due to new US sanctions. In September, Maduro announced that his administration would not resume the talks due to the Esequibo investigation. Avendaรฑo immediately sought refuge in Chilean embassy in Caracas. During a rally in Anzoรกtegui, Guaidรณ dismissed the accusations as a distraction, and reaffirmed that the Esequibo belongs to Venezuela. Masked men carrying rifles broke and into the Popular Will office in the eve of the return of rallies in November, demanding the party members to handover their phones. The group identified as part of the special police forces (FAES), according to a legislator. Guaidรณ referred to the raid as an act of government intimidation. On 21 January 2020, after the disrupted 2020 Venezuelan National Assembly Delegated Committee election, Guaidรณ's campaign headquarters were raided by police intelligence forces SEBIN. On 4 June 2020, the Venezuelan Foreign minister Jorge Arreaza accused Juan Guaidรณ of hiding in the French Embassy in Caracas, demanding for him to be handed over to the "Venezuelan justice." However, the Foreign Ministry spokeswoman of France, Agnes von der Muhll denied the claims on 5 June that Guaido had taken refuge in any of the French diplomatic sites in Caracas. After the Parliamentary Committee of Electoral Candidacies, in charge of appointing a new National Electoral Council of Venezuela (CNE), announced that it would suspend its meetings because of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Supreme Tribunal of Justice (TSJ), loyal to Nicolรกs Maduro, declared in June that the National Assembly had not named rectors for the CNE. The opposition to Maduro administration denounced it as attempt to obstruct the procedure for the elections. The TSJ decided on 12 June 2020 to name the electoral board that would oversee the parliamentary elections. Indira Alfonzo was declared as the new chief of the CNE through Facebook. Members of the National Assembly argue that the TSJ is not authorized to choose the board, according to the Venezuelan constitution. On 13 June 2020, Juan Guaidรณ said the opposition would not recognize a "false" electoral body named by the Supreme Tribunal, while his allies pledged to extend the term of the current legislature. Exile On the eve of an international conference to discuss the crisis in Venezuela and host by Colombia, Guaidรณ was expelled from the country on 25 April 2023 after entering Colombia. After Colombia initially considered deporting him back to Venezuela, Guaidรณ was eventually exiled to the United States. He has since lived in Miami, Florida. In September 2023, Guaidรณ was hired as a visiting professor by the Florida International University. Arrest warrant On 6 October 2023, Maduro's Attorney General Tarek William Saab issued an arrest warrant against Guaidรณ in Venezuela, announcing charges of money laundering, treason and usurping public functions against him, and accusing him of profiting from the funds of and Citgo. The Maduro administration also requested that Interpol issue a red notice for the arrest of Guaidรณ, though the international police agency has not issued such notices against opposition officials in the past. Guaidรณ responded to the arrest warrant by denying all charges. The Washington Post wrote that "Guaidรณ's interim government has long been accused by Maduro and even independent observers of mismanaging the public funds under its control". Senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, Geoff Ramsey, responded to the issued warrant stating "the government has now officially placed Guaidรณ in the same category as other exiled opposition politicians: effectively banned from returning but no longer relevant enough to be seen as untouchable." Elliott Abrams, who was the US Special Representative for Venezuela during Guaidรณ's interim presidency, called the charges "nonsense" and "completely false"; he stated that Venezuelan assets were overseen by the US Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control, and denied any funds were directed to Guaidรณ or misused, and questioned the timing of the arrest warrant. Personal life Guaidรณ is married to journalist Fabiana Rosales since 2013. They have two daughters: Miranda and Mรฉrida Antonieta. Guaidรณ is also a Freemason. Public perception Prior to becoming the leader of the National Assembly, Guaidรณ was an unfamiliar figure to both the Venezuelan and international communities, with the BBC reporting that he was a compromise candidate selected as leader by opposition parties. Venezuelan lawyer and columnist , who was active with Guaidรณ in the early days of the student protests against Hugo Chรกvez, described Guaidรณ as one of the "conciliators" of the student movement, saying that Guaidรณ had been a force for conciliation in the defeat of Chรกvez's 2007 constitutional referendum and the 2015 Venezuelan parliamentary election in which the PSUV was defeated by the MUD, and that he was named acting president at a time when Venezuela needed conciliation. According to a Bloomberg article, he is known for "building unity among fellow legislators." Michael Shifter said that he "has tried to reach out to the military, tried to unify the opposition and tried to reach Chavista folks as well." In April 2019, Guaidรณ was named to Time magazine's list of 100 most influential people in the world for that year. Former Colombian president Juan Manuel Santos wrote the profile for Time, which described Guaidรณ as "young, energetic, articulate, determined" and in possession of "the mother of all virtues: courage." Santos said that "by being in the right place at the right time, [Guaidรณ] was able to finally unite the opposition and become a beacon of hope for a country that is yearning for a rapid and peaceful change." Hetland wrote that Guaidรณ was initially popular domestically, though he increasingly participated in desperate actions to remove Maduro, with each attempt failing and resulting with decreased support. Polls Following the failed uprising on 30 April 2019, recognition and support for Guaidรณ declined while attendance at his demonstrations subsided. After plans to remove Maduro from power failed in May 2020, Guaidรณ saw his support decrease further. With Maduro retaining control of the country's security forces, Datanรกlisis surveys in October 2021 showed Guaidรณ's support within Venezuela had dropped to 16%, partly due to accusations of corruption against some of his representatives outside of the country. Electoral history 2015 parliamentary vote 2015 Venezuelan parliamentary election, Deputy for Vargas (1st district). 2012 MUD primary 2012 Democratic Unity Roundtable presidential primary, pre-candidate for governor of Vargas. 2010 parliamentary vote 2010 Venezuelan parliamentary election, reserve deputy for Vargas. Notes References Bibliography External links Juan Guaidรณ in the site of the National Assembly of Venezuela Biography by CIDOB CNN interview, January 2019 1983 births George Washington University alumni Living people Movimiento Estudiantil (Venezuela) People from La Guaira People from Vargas (state) People of the Crisis in Venezuela Speakers of the National Assembly (Venezuela) Venezuelan democracy activists Venezuelan dissidents Venezuelan presidential crisis Instituto de Estudios Superiores de Administraciรณn alumni People charged with treason Fugitives wanted by Venezuela Venezuelan Freemasons
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%B2%B4%EB%A6%AC%EB%B8%94%EB%A0%9B
์ฒด๋ฆฌ๋ธ”๋ ›
์ฒด๋ฆฌ๋ธ”๋ ›(, )์€ 2019๋…„ 1์›” 21์ผ์— ๋ฐ๋ท”ํ•œ 7์ธ์กฐ ๊ฑธ ๊ทธ๋ฃน์ด๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฃน๋ช… '์ฒด๋ฆฌ๋ธ”๋ ›'์€ ์ฒด๋ฆฌ(Cherry)์™€ ์ด์•Œ(Bullet)์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๋Œ€์กฐ๋˜๋Š” ์ด๋ฏธ์ง€๋ฅผ ํ•ฉ์นœ ๋‹จ์–ด๋กœ, ์ฒด๋ฆฌ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ์‚ฌ๋ž‘์Šค๋Ÿฌ์šฐ๋ฉด์„œ๋„ ์—๋„ˆ์ œํ‹ฑํ•œ ๋งค๋ ฅ์œผ๋กœ ๋Œ€์ค‘๋“ค์˜ ๋งˆ์Œ์„ ์ €๊ฒฉํ•  ๊ฑธ ๊ทธ๋ฃน์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์˜๋ฏธ๋ฅผ ๋‹ด์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ตฌ์„ฑ์› ์ด์ „ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ์› ์Œ๋ฐ˜ ๋ชฉ๋ก ์‹ฑ๊ธ€ ๋””์ง€ํ„ธ ์‹ฑ๊ธ€ EP ์Œ๋ฐ˜ ์™ธ ํ™œ๋™ ๋ฐฉ์†ก ์ถœ์—ฐ ๋ผ๋””์˜ค 2019๋…„ SBS ๋Ÿฌ๋ธŒFM ใ€Š์†ก์€์ด, ๊น€์ˆ™์˜ ์–ธ๋‹ˆ๋„ค ๋ผ๋””์˜คใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์ฒด๋ฆฌ๋ธ”๋ ›) (2019๋…„ 1์›” 26์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2019๋…„ KBS Cool FM ใ€Š๊ฐ€์š”๊ด‘์žฅใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (๋ฏธ๋ž˜, ์ง€์›) (2019๋…„ 1์›” 27์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2019๋…„ SBS ํŒŒ์›ŒFM ใ€Š๋‘์‹œํƒˆ์ถœ ์ปฌํˆฌ์‡ผใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์ฒด๋ฆฌ๋ธ”๋ ›) (2019๋…„ 1์›” 27์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2019๋…„ MBC ํ‘œ์ค€FM ใ€Š์•„์ด๋Œ ๋ผ๋””์˜คใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์ฒด๋ฆฌ๋ธ”๋ ›) (2019๋…„ 1์›” 30์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2019๋…„ MBC ํ‘œ์ค€FM ใ€Š๋ณ„์ด ๋น›๋‚˜๋Š” ๋ฐค์—ใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (ํ•ด์œค, ๋ณด๋ผ) (2019๋…„ 2์›” 6์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2019๋…„ KBS Cool FM ใ€Š๋ณผ๋ฅจ์„ ๋†’์—ฌ์š”ใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (ํ•ด์œค, ๋ฏธ๋ž˜, ์ง€์›) (2019๋…„ 2์›” 7์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2019๋…„ MBC FM4U ใ€Š2์‹œ์˜ ๋ฐ์ดํŠธใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์ฒด๋ฆฌ๋ธ”๋ ›) (2019๋…„ 2์›” 13์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2019๋…„ EBS FM ใ€Š์ธํ”ผ๋‹ˆํŠธ ์„ฑ์ข…์˜ ๋ฏธ๋“œ๋‚˜์ž‡ ๋ธ”๋ž™ใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์ฒด๋ฆฌ๋ธ”๋ ›) (2019๋…„ 2์›” 21์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2019๋…„ SBS ํŒŒ์›ŒFM ใ€Š์˜์ŠคํŠธ๋ฆฌํŠธใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (ํ•ด์œค, ์œ ์ฃผ, ์ฑ„๋ฆฐ) (2019๋…„ 2์›” 25์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2019๋…„ SBS ํŒŒ์›ŒFM ใ€Š๋Ÿฌ๋ธŒ๊ฒŒ์ž„ใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (๋ณด๋ผ, ์ฑ„๋ฆฐ) (2019๋…„ 3์›” 2์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2019๋…„ MBC ํ‘œ์ค€FM ใ€Š์•„์ด๋Œ ๋ผ๋””์˜คใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (ํ•ด์œค) (2019๋…„ 4์›” 26์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2019๋…„ MBC ํ‘œ์ค€FM ใ€Š์•„์ด๋Œ ๋ผ๋””์˜คใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์ฒด๋ฆฌ๋ธ”๋ ›) (2019๋…„ 5์›” 30์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2019๋…„ tbs eFM ใ€Š์šฐ์ƒ์  ํ’ˆ๊ฒฉใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (๋ฏธ๋ž˜, ์ฑ„๋ฆฐ, ๋ฆฐ๋ฆฐ) (2019๋…„ 6์›” 16์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2019๋…„ KBS Cool FM ใ€Š๊ฐ€์š”๊ด‘์žฅใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (ํ•ด์œค, ๋ณด๋ผ) (2019๋…„ 6์›” 21์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2019๋…„ MBC ํ‘œ์ค€FM ใ€Š์ด์œค์„, ์‹ ์•„์˜์˜ ์ข‹์€ ์ฃผ๋งใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์ฒด๋ฆฌ๋ธ”๋ ›) (2019๋…„ 6์›” 30์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2019๋…„ tbs eFM Men On Air tbs ์—์Šคํ”Œ๋ ‰์Šค ์„ผํ„ฐ ๋ฐฉ์†ก ํ”Œ๋ผ์ž (๊ณต๊ฐœ๋…นํ™”, ์ฒด๋ฆฌ๋ธ”๋ ›) (2019๋…„ 7์›” 4์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2019๋…„ SBS ๋Ÿฌ๋ธŒFM ํŠน์ง‘ ๊ณต๊ฐœ๋ฐฉ์†ก ใ€Š๋Ÿฌ๋ธŒ ์ฝ˜์„œํŠธ IN ์ •์ใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์ฒด๋ฆฌ๋ธ”๋ ›) (2019๋…„ 10์›” 20์ผ) 2020๋…„ MBC FM4U ใ€Š์ •์˜ค์˜ ํฌ๋ง๊ณกใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์ง€์›) (2020๋…„ 2์›” 18์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2020๋…„ MBC FM4U ใ€Š๋‘์‹œ์˜ ๋ฐ์ดํŠธใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์ฒด๋ฆฌ๋ธ”๋ ›) (2020๋…„ 2์›” 18์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2020๋…„ ๋„ค์ด๋ฒ„ NOW ใ€Šํ—ค์ด์ฆˆ์˜ ์ผ๊ธฐใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์ฒด๋ฆฌ๋ธ”๋ ›) (2020๋…„ 2์›” 18์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2020๋…„ ๋„ค์ด๋ฒ„ NOW ใ€Šํ•˜์„ฑ์šด์˜ ์‹ฌ์•ผ ์•„์ด๋Œใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์ฒด๋ฆฌ๋ธ”๋ ›) (2020๋…„ 2์›” 21์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2020๋…„ KBS Cool FM ใ€Š๋ณผ๋ฅจ์„ ๋†’์—ฌ์š”ใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (๋ณด๋ผ, ์ฑ„๋ฆฐ) (2020๋…„ 2์›” 28์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2020๋…„ SBS ํŒŒ์›ŒFM ใ€Š๋‘์‹œํƒˆ์ถœ ์ปฌํˆฌ์‡ผใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์ฒด๋ฆฌ๋ธ”๋ ›) (2020๋…„ 3์›” 1์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2020๋…„ SBS ํŒŒ์›ŒFM ใ€Š์˜์ŠคํŠธ๋ฆฌํŠธใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์œ ์ฃผ, ๋ณด๋ผ, ์ฑ„๋ฆฐ) (2020๋…„ 3์›” 1์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2020๋…„ MBC ํ‘œ์ค€FM ใ€Š์•„์ด๋Œ ๋ผ๋””์˜คใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์ง€์›, ์ฑ„๋ฆฐ) (2020๋…„ 3์›” 14์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2020๋…„ SBS ํŒŒ์›ŒFM ใ€Š๋ฐฐ์„ฑ์žฌ์˜ ํ…ใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (ํ•ด์œค, ์ฑ„๋ฆฐ) (2020๋…„ 3์›” 15์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2020๋…„ MBC ํ‘œ์ค€FM ใ€Š์•„์ด๋Œ ๋ผ๋””์˜คใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์ฒด๋ฆฌ๋ธ”๋ ›) (2020๋…„ 8์›” 13์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2020๋…„ ๋„ค์ด๋ฒ„ NOW ใ€Š์–ด๋ฒค๊ฑธ์Šคใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์ฒด๋ฆฌ๋ธ”๋ ›) (2020๋…„ 8์›” 13์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2020๋…„ MBC FM4U ใ€Š์ •์˜ค์˜ ํฌ๋ง๊ณกใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์œ ์ฃผ, ์ง€์›) (2020๋…„ 8์›” 18์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2020๋…„ MBC ํ‘œ์ค€FM ใ€Š์•„์ด๋Œ ๋ผ๋””์˜คใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์ฒด๋ฆฌ๋ธ”๋ ›) (2020๋…„ 8์›” 20์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2020๋…„ SBS ํŒŒ์›ŒFM ใ€Š๋ฐฐ์„ฑ์žฌ์˜ ํ…ใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์œ ์ฃผ, ๋ณด๋ผ) (2020๋…„ 8์›” 30์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2020๋…„ ๋„ค์ด๋ฒ„ NOW ใ€Š์–ด๋ฒค๊ฑธ์Šคใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์ฑ„๋ฆฐ) (2020๋…„ 12์›” 10์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2021๋…„ KBS Cool FM ใ€Šํ‚ค์Šค ๋” ๋ผ๋””์˜คใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์ฒด๋ฆฌ๋ธ”๋ ›) (2021๋…„ 1์›” 24์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2021๋…„ SBS ํŒŒ์›ŒFM ใ€Š๋ฐฐ์„ฑ์žฌ์˜ ํ…ใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (ํ•ด์œค, ์ฑ„๋ฆฐ, ๋ฉ”์ด) (2021๋…„ 1์›” 27์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2021๋…„ MBC FM4U ใ€Š์ •์˜ค์˜ ํฌ๋ง๊ณกใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์œ ์ฃผ, ์ง€์›) (2021๋…„ 1์›” 28์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2021๋…„ SBS ํŒŒ์›ŒFM ใ€Š๋Ÿฌ๋ธŒ๊ฒŒ์ž„ใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (ํ•ด์œค, ์ฑ„๋ฆฐ) (2021๋…„ 1์›” 30์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2021๋…„ SBS ํŒŒ์›ŒFM ใ€Š์˜์ŠคํŠธ๋ฆฌํŠธใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (ํ•ด์œค, ์œ ์ฃผ, ์ง€์›, ์ฑ„๋ฆฐ) (2021๋…„ 2์›” 4์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2021๋…„ ๋„ค์ด๋ฒ„ NOW ใ€Š์†Œ๋ฌธ์˜ ์•„์ด๋“คใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (์ง€์›) (2021๋…„ 2์›” 16์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) 2021๋…„ ๋„ค์ด๋ฒ„ NOW ใ€Š์•„์ง€ํŠธใ€‹ - ๊ฒŒ์ŠคํŠธ (๋ฉ”์ด) (2021๋…„ 5์›” 3์ผ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋ถ„ ์ถœ์—ฐ) ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ 2020๋…„ ์œ ํŠœ๋ธŒ ํ™”๋ชฉ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ใ€Š๋ฐ˜์˜ˆ์ธใ€‹ - ์€ํ•˜ ์—ญ (๋ณด๋ผ) 2020๋…„ ๋„ค์ด๋ฒ„ tvcast ใ€Š์—ฐ์• ํ˜๋ช…ใ€‹ - ํŠน๋ณ„์ถœ์—ฐ (์ฑ„๋ฆฐ) 2020๋…„ ๋„ค์ด๋ฒ„ tvcast ใ€Š์œ ํŠœ๋ฒ„ ํด๋ผ์“ฐใ€‹ - ํ•˜์˜ฌ ์—ญ (์ฑ„๋ฆฐ) 2021๋…„ ๋„ค์ด๋ฒ„ tvcast ํ™”๋ชฉ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ใ€Š์˜ค๋Š˜๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ณ„์•ฝ์—ฐ์• ใ€‹ - ์„ฑํ•œ๋‚˜ ์—ญ (์œ ์ฃผ) 2021๋…„ ์œ ํŠœ๋ธŒ ์ˆ˜ํ† ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ใ€Š์ฒซ๋ฒˆ์งธ ์—ด์ผ๊ณฑใ€‹ - ์ฒœ์†Œ๋ง ์—ญ (์ฑ„๋ฆฐ) 2021๋…„ KBS1 ์ผ์ผ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ใ€Š๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œ ์™€์ดํ”„ใ€‹ - ๊ณต์ฃผ์•„ ์—ญ (1ํšŒ ~ 36ํšŒ๊นŒ์ง€ ์ถœ์—ฐ) (์œ ์ฃผ) 2021๋…„ ์œ ํŠœ๋ธŒ ์›”๋ชฉ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ใ€Š๋‹ฌ๊ณ ๋‚˜ ์‹œ์ฆŒ2 : ๋น„์ •๊ทœ์ง ์—ด์—ฌ๋Ÿใ€‹ - ์˜ค์ˆ˜์•„ ์—ญ (์ฑ„๋ฆฐ) 2021๋…„ ์นด์นด์˜คTV ใ€Š์ง•ํฌ์Šคใ€‹ - ์ž์˜ ์—ญ (๋ณด๋ผ) 2021๋…„ ์นด์นด์˜คTV ใ€Š์ง•ํฌ์Šคใ€‹ - ์ˆ˜์ง„ ์—ญ (์œ ์ฃผ) 2021๋…„ ์œ ํŠœ๋ธŒ ํ™”๋ชฉ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ใ€Šํ•˜ํŠธ์›จ์ดใ€‹ - ํ•œ์ง€์•ˆ ์—ญ (์ง€์›) 2022๋…„ ์›น๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ใ€Š๋‚˜์˜ X๊ฐ™์€ ์Šค๋ฌด์‚ดใ€‹ - ๊ฐ•์†Œ์› ์—ญ (์œ ์ฃผ) 2022๋…„ tvN ์ฃผ๋ง๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ใ€Š์Šˆ๋ฃนใ€‹ - ์–ด๋ฆฐ ์ž„ํ™”๋ น ์—ญ (๊น€ํ˜œ์ˆ˜ ์•„์—ญ) 2023๋…„ tvN ์ฃผ๋ง๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ใ€ŠํŒ๋„๋ผ: ์กฐ์ž‘๋œ ๋‚™์›ใ€‹ - ์–ด๋ฆฐ ์˜ค์˜/ํ™ํƒœ๋ผ ์—ญ (์ด์ง€์•„ ์•„์—ญ, ์ฑ„๋ฆฐ) ๊ด‘๊ณ  ๋ฎค์ง€์ปฌ 2021๋…„ ใ€Šํด๋ฆผํŠธใ€‹ - ์—๋ฐ€๋ฆฌ ์—ญ (2021.10.12 ~ 2022.3.1 ์„œ์šธ์ˆฒ ๊ฐค๋Ÿฌ๋ฆฌ์•„ํฌ๋ ˆ G์ธต ์ „์šฉ๊ด€) (ํ•ด์œค) 2022๋…„ ใ€Šํด๋ฆผํŠธใ€‹ - ์—๋ฐ€๋ฆฌ ์—ญ (2022.5.3 ~ 2022.7.17 ์„œ์šธ์ˆฒ ๊ฐค๋Ÿฌ๋ฆฌ์•„ํฌ๋ ˆ G์ธต ์ „์šฉ๊ด€) (ํ•ด์œค) ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ฑธ ๊ทธ๋ฃน ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํŒ ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๋Œ„์Šค ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน 7์ธ์กฐ ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน FNC ์—”ํ„ฐํ…Œ์ธ๋จผํŠธ ์†Œ์† ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์•„์ด๋Œ ๊ทธ๋ฃน K-pop ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน ํ•œ๊ตญ์–ด ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน ๋‹ค๊ตญ์  ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน 2010๋…„๋Œ€ ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน 2020๋…„๋Œ€ ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน 2019๋…„ ๊ฒฐ์„ฑ๋œ ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherry%20Bullet
Cherry Bullet
Cherry Bullet () is a South Korean girl group formed by FNC Entertainment and managed under their sub-label FNC W. They debuted on January 21, 2019, with their first single album titled Let's Play Cherry Bullet. The group currently consists of seven members: Haeyoon, Yuju, Bora, Jiwon, Remi, Chaerin and May. Originally consisting of ten members, Mirae, Kokoro and Linlin left the group in December 2019. History Pre-debut Haeyoon was previously introduced as one of the female trainees to represent FNC Entertainment on the Mnet survival show, Produce 48 in 2018. She finished in 19th place and hence did not become a member of the produced girl group, Iz*One. Bora previously was a trainee at Music K Entertainment. Both she and fellow member Yuju appeared in BTS' Love Yourself: Her highlight reel, with Yuju also making an appearance in Honeyst's "Someone to Love" music video. Jiwon auditioned for the first season of SBS' K-pop Star with the song "Because of You" by Kelly Clarkson and later became a trainee under Starship Entertainment. In 2012 she appeared in Starship Planet's "White Love" music video. Remi was a trainee with Avex Proworks and first appeared in the live-action segments of Pretty Rhythm: Dear My Future in 2012 as one of the Prism Mates but did not pass the audition to become an official member. She modeled for Repipi Armario at Point 65th Fashion Show's 2014 Spring Collection. Kokoro was also a student at Avex Artist Academy in Nagoya, Japan, and she was scouted by FNC Entertainment in 2016. 2018โ€“2020: Debut with Let's Play Cherry Bullet, line-up changes and digital singles The group's debut reality show Insider Channel Cherry Bullet premiered on November 28, 2018, on Mnet. The reality show was made to introduce the group and each of its 10 members to viewers. Their first single album, Let's Play Cherry Bullet was released on January 21, 2019, with consisted of the lead single "Q&A", and two other songs, "Violet" and "Stick Out". They held their debut showcase on the same day at YES24 Live Hall in Gwangjin-gu, Seoul. On May 9, 2019, it was revealed that Cherry Bullet would come back on May 22 with their second single Love Adventure with lead single "Really Really". On December 13, 2019, FNC announced that Mirae, Kokoro and Linlin had left the group and terminated their contracts due to personal reasons. The remaining members of Cherry Bullet would then continue as a seven-member group with no additional members, and Haeyoon would then take over as the new leader of the group. The group released their first digital single "Hands Up" on February 11, 2020. On August 6, 2020, Cherry Bullet made their comeback with the new digital single "Aloha Oe". 2021โ€“present: Cherry Rush, Girls Planet 999, Cherry Wish, Cherry Dash and Queendom Puzzle On January 4, 2021, it was announced that Cherry Bullet have joined the social media platform Weverse. The group released their first EP Cherry Rush and its lead single "Love So Sweet" on January 20. On February 3, 2021, it was announced that Cherry Bullet would be managed by FNC Entertainment's new sub-label, FNC W, which is specialized for girl groups. Bora, Jiwon and May took part in the Mnet survival show Girls Planet 999, which aired from August 6, 2021, to October 22, 2021. Jiwon was eliminated in episode 8, finishing in 16th place in K-Group. May was eliminated in episode 11, finishing in 8th place in J-Group and 24th place overall. Bora was eliminated in the final episode, placing 9th in K-Group and 15th place overall. On March 2, 2022, Cherry Bullet released their second EP Cherry Wish and its lead single "Love In Space". On March 7, 2023, Cherry Bullet released their third EP Cherry Dash, and its lead single "P.O.W! (Play On the World)". On May 18, 2023, it was announced that members Bora, Jiwon and Chaerin would be participating in the Mnet survival show Queendom Puzzle. Chaerin was eliminated in the first elimination round in episode 7, while Jiwon and Bora were eliminated in the second elimination round in episode 9. Endorsements Jiwon and Yuju were models for the Korean uniform brand Smart in 2018, alongside BTS. The members were also selected to represent the brand in 2019. Members Adapted from their Naver profile. Current Haeyoon () Yuju () Bora () Jiwon () Remi () Chaerin () May () Former Mirae () Kokoro () Linlin () Timeline Discography Extended plays Single albums Singles Videography Music videos Reality shows Awards and nominations Asia Artist Awards |- |rowspan="2"|2019 |rowspan="3"|Cherry Bullet |Popularity Award (Singer) | |- |Starnews Popularity Award (Female Group) | |- |2021 |Female Idol Group Popularity Award | |} Genie Music Awards |- |rowspan="4"|2019 |rowspan="4"|Cherry Bullet |The Top Artist | |- |The Female New Artist | |- |Genie Music Popularity Award | |- |Global Popularity Award | |} Melon Music Awards |- |2019 |Cherry Bullet |Best New Artist Award | |} Mnet Asian Music Awards |- |rowspan="4"|2019 |rowspan="4"|Cherry Bullet |Artist of the Year | |- |Best New Female Artist | |- |Worldwide Fans' Choice Top 10 | |- |2019 Qoo10 Favorite Female Artist | |} Seoul Music Awards |- |rowspan="3"|2020 |rowspan="3"|Cherry Bullet |Rookie of the Year | |- |Popularity Award | |- |Hallyu Special Award | |} Notes References External links 2019 establishments in South Korea South Korean girl groups K-pop music groups Musical groups established in 2019 South Korean pop music groups South Korean dance music groups Musical groups from Seoul FNC Entertainment artists
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%95%BD%ED%83%88%EC%A0%81%20%EC%B6%9C%ED%8C%90
์•ฝํƒˆ์  ์ถœํŒ
์•ฝํƒˆ์  ํ•™ํšŒ ๋˜๋Š” ๋ถ€์‹คํ•™ํšŒ๋Š” ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ์šฉ์–ด์™€ ์ •์˜๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋…ผ๋ฌธ์˜ ์ฃผ์ œ๋‚˜ ํ’ˆ์งˆ์— ์ƒ๊ด€์—†์ด ๋ˆ๋งŒ ๋‚ด๋ฉด ๋…ผ๋ฌธ์„ ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€์— ์‹ค์–ด์ฃผ๋Š” ํ•™ํšŒ๋ฅผ ๋งํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฐ ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€๋ฅผ ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€(predatory journal) ํ•ด๋‹น ์ถœํŒ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ์ถœํŒ์‚ฌ(predatory publisher)๋ผ ๋ถ€๋ฅธ๋‹ค. ์ •์ƒ์ ์ธ ๋…ผ๋ฌธ์€ ๋™๋ฃŒ ํ‰๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋…์ฐฝ์„ฑ, ์ •ํ™•์„ฑ, ์œ ์šฉ์„ฑ์„ ์ธ์ •๋ฐ›์•„ ๋Œ€์ค‘์—๊ฒŒ ๊ณต๊ฐœ๋œ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ํ•™ํšŒ๋Š” ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€(journal)์— ๋…ผ๋ฌธ์„ ํˆฌ๊ณ ํ•˜๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์ด ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ์ง€๋ถˆํ•˜๋ฉด ํ˜•์‹์ ์ธ ๋™๋ฃŒ ํ‰๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋…ผ๋ฌธ์„ ์‹ค์–ด์ฃผ๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๊ฑฐ์น˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ๋“ฑ ๋ฌด์กฐ๊ฑด์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋…ผ๋ฌธ์„ ๋ฐ›์•„๋“ค์ธ๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ํ‘œ์ ˆ๊ณผ ์œ„์กฐ์— ์ƒ๊ด€์—†์ด ํ•™ํšŒ์ง€์— ๋…ผ๋ฌธ์„ ์‹ค์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€๋‚˜ ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ์ถœํŒ์‚ฌ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ์˜๋ฆฌ์ ์ธ ๋ชฉ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์šด์˜๋˜๋Š” ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ํ•™ํšŒ์—, ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•˜๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์˜ ์œ ํ˜•์€ ํฌ๊ฒŒ ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค. ์ˆœ์ง„ํ•˜๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ๊ฒฝํ—˜์ด ์—†์–ด ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€์™€ ํ•™ํšŒ์˜ ํ‘œ์ ์ด ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ์‚ฌ์‹ค์„ ๋ชจ๋ฅธ์ฑ„ ๋…ผ๋ฌธ์„ ๊ธฐ๊ณ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ๋ถˆ์ด์ต์„ ๋‹นํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฑธ ๋’ค๋Šฆ๊ฒŒ ์ธ์ง€ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๊ณ , ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์™€ ํ•™๊ณ„์—์„œ ์ผํ•˜๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ์ผํ•  ์˜์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์ด ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ํ•™ํšŒ์˜ ์‹ ๋ขฐ์„ฑ์ด ๋ถ€์กฑํ•˜๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฑธ ์•Œ๋ฉด์„œ๋„ ์Šน์ง„์ด๋‚˜ ๊ณ ์šฉ์„ ์œ„ํ•ด ํ•™ํšŒ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์‹ค์ ์„ ๋‚จ๊ธฐ๋ ค๋Š” ์˜๋„๋กœ ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๋„ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ๊ฒ€์ฆ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์€ ์ƒ๊ฐ์ด๋‚˜ ์ฃผ์žฅ์„ ์ •๋‹นํ™”ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ํ•™ํšŒ์— ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฐ€์งœ ๊ณผํ•™์ž๋„ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ถœํŒ์‚ฌ๋“ค์€ ๋™๋ฃŒ ํ‰๊ฐ€์— ๊ฒฐ์ ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๋น„ํŒ์„ ์ธ์ •ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ๋ฐ˜๋ฉด, ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๋ฐ˜๋ฐœ์„ ํ•™๊ณ„๋‚˜ ๊ณผํ•™์ ์ธ ์ฆ๊ฑฐ๋“ค์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์ด๋Ÿฐ ์ฃผ์žฅ์€ ์ถœํŒ์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋งŽ์ด ์„ ํƒํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์œผ๋กœ ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ์ถœํŒ์‚ฌ์˜ ์ฃผ์š” ๊ธฐ์ค€์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํŠน์ง•์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ์ฃผ์ œ๊ฐ€ ํ™•์‹คํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์€ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๊ฐ€ ๋งŽ์œผ๋ฉฐ ํ•™ํšŒ ์ด๋ฉ”์ผ์ด ์•„๋‹Œ @gmail.com๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋ฌด๋ฃŒ ์ด๋ฉ”์ผ์„ ์ด์šฉํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ ์ด๋•Œ ๋ณด์ƒ์ด๋‚˜ ์ œ์•ˆ์„ ํ•˜์—ฌ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋“ค์„ ํ•™ํšŒ์— ์ดˆ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ์ ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ•™ํšŒ์˜ ๋‚ด์šฉ๋ณด๋‹ค ํ•™ํšŒ์˜ ์žฅ์†Œ๋ฅผ ์ค‘์ ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ด‘๊ณ ํ•˜๋‚˜, ํ•™ํšŒ ์ฃผ์ตœ๊ฐ€ ๋ถˆ๋ถ„๋ช…ํ•˜๊ณ  ์›น์‚ฌ์ดํŠธ์— ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์ •๋ณด๊ฐ€ ๋น ์ ธ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๋„ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ •๋ณด๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•ด๋„ ๋ถ€์‹คํ•œ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๊ฐ€ ๋งŽ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋Œ€์ฒด์ ์œผ๋กœ ํ‰ํŒ์ด ์ข‹์ง€ ์•Š๋‹ค. ๋™๋ฃŒํ‰๊ฐ€์˜ ๊ณผ์ •์„ ๊ฑฐ์น˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๋…ผ๋ฌธ์˜ ์ดˆ๋ก์„ ์ œ์ถœํ•œ๋‹ค ํ•˜๋”๋ผ๋„ ๋ช‡ ์ฃผ ๋‚ด๋กœ ์Šน์ธ๋˜๋ฉฐ ํ•ด๋‹น ๋…ผ๋ฌธ์˜ ํ•™ํšŒ์ง€ ๊ฒŒ์žฌ๋ฅผ ์žฅ๋‹ดํ•œ๋‹ค. ์—ญ์‚ฌ 1950๋…„๋Œ€ ์ดํ›„ ํ•™ํšŒ์˜ ์–‘์  ์ฆ๊ฐ€๋Š” ์˜๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ๋น„๋กฏํ•œ ๊ณผํ•™ ๋ถ„์•ผ์—์„œ ๋น ๋ฅธ ์„ฑ์žฅ์„ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ฒŒ ๋„์™”์œผ๋‚˜, ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋“ค์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ํ›„์›์ด ๊ทธ๋“ค์˜ ์ถœํŒ ์‹ค์ ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์ขŒ์šฐ๋˜๋Š” ์ƒํ™ฉ์„ ๋งŒ๋“ค๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ›„์—๋Š” H ์ง€์ˆ˜์™€ ์•ŒํŠธ๋ฉ”ํŠธ๋ฆญ ์ ์ˆ˜, ์ €๋„์˜ ๋…ผ๋ฌธ์ด ์–ผ๋งˆ๋‚˜ ์ธ์šฉ๋˜์—ˆ๋Š”์ง€์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ๊ณผํ•™์ž๋“ค์„ ํ‰๊ฐ€ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ํŠนํžˆ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ์ด ์งง์€ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋“ค์€ ํ•ญ์ƒ ์ข‹์€ ํ‰๊ฐ€์™€ ํ›„์›์„ ๋ฐ›๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ถœํŒ ์‹ค์ ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์••๋ฐ•์„ ๋Š๊ปด์•ผ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฐ ์ƒํ™ฉ์—์„œ ํ•™ํšŒ์ง€๋ฅผ ๋ฐœํ–‰ํ•˜๋Š” ์ถœํŒ์‚ฌ๋“ค์˜ ๊ธ‰๊ฒฉํ•œ ์ฆ๊ฐ€๋Š”, ์ž์‹ ๋“ค์˜ ์ „๋ฌธ์ ์ธ ๋™๋ฃŒํ‰๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ์„ ์ „ํ•˜๋Š” ๋“ฑ ์ ๊ทน์ ์ธ ๋งˆ์ผ€ํŒ…์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ํ•™ํšŒ์ง€์— ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋“ค์ด ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ์˜คํ”ˆ ์•ก์„ธ์Šค๋กœ ์ œ์ถœํ•˜๋„๋ก ๋ถ€์ถ”๊ฒผ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ๋งŽ์€ ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€๋“ค์€ ๋™๋ฃŒ ํ‰๊ฐ€์˜ ๊ณผ์ •์„ ์ƒ๋žตํ–ˆ๊ณ  ์†Œ๋น„์ž๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ๋…ผ๋ฌธ์„ ์ œ๊ณตํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. ์ฝœ๋กœ๋ผ๋„ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต์˜ ์‚ฌ์„œ์˜€๋˜ ์ œํ”„๋ฆฌ ๋นŒ์€ ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์ถœํŒ์‚ฌ๋“ค์„ ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ์ถœํŒ์‚ฌ๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ช…๋ช…ํ•˜๊ณ  ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋“ค์ด ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ํ•™ํšŒ์™€ ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€์— ์†์•„ ๋…ผ๋ฌธ์„ ๊ธฐ๊ณ ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋„๋ก ๊ธฐ์ค€์„ ๋งŒ๋“ค์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์˜ ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ์ถœํŒ์‚ฌ๋Š” ์ œํ”„๋ฆฌ ๋นŒ์˜ ํญ๋กœ๋กœ ์•Œ๋ ค์กŒ๋‹ค. ์ง€๋‚œ 20๋…„ ๋™์•ˆ ์˜คํ”ˆ ์•ก์„ธ์Šค ์šด๋™์€ ํ•™๊ณ„์˜ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ์˜จ๋ผ์ธ์—์„œ ์ž์œ ๋กญ๊ฒŒ ์ฝ๊ณ  ์žฌ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•ด์คฌ๋‹ค. ๋น„๋ก ๋ชจ๋“  ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์ด ์ด์— ๋™์˜ํ•˜์ง€๋Š” ์•Š์•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ถœํŒ์‚ฌ์˜ ์‚ฌ์—… ๊ตฌ์กฐ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ”๊พธ๋Š” ์—ญํ• ์„ ํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ๊ทธ ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜๊ฐ€ ์˜คํ”ˆ ์•ก์„ธ์Šค๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด์„œ ์ด์ต์„ ๋ฐœ์ƒ์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํŠนํžˆ ๋ฌด๋ฃŒ๊ฐ€ ๋˜์–ด ํŒ๋งคํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋Š” ๋…ผ๋ฌธ ๋Œ€์‹  ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋“ค๊ณผ ๊ธฐ๊ด€, ํ›„์›์ž๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ์„œ๋น„์Šค๋ฅผ ์ œ๊ณตํ•˜๊ณ  ์˜คํ”ˆ ์•ก์„ธ์Šค(OA)์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ๋…์ž๊ฐ€ ์•„๋‹Œ ์ €์ž์—๊ฒŒ ๋น„์šฉ์„ ์ฒญ๊ตฌํ•˜๊ฒ ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ณ„์‚ฐ์€ ์ถœํŒ์‚ฌ๋“ค์ด ๋…ผ๋ฌธ ์ฒ˜๋ฆฌ ๋น„์šฉ(APC)์œผ๋กœ ์ด์œค์„ ๋‚ด๋Š” ์‚ฌ์—… ๋ชจํ˜•์˜ ์‹œ์ดˆ์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ฌผ๋ก  APC๋ฅผ ์ฒญ๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ๊ณจ๋“  ์˜คํ”ˆ ์•ก์„ธ์Šค๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ์ด์ต์„ ์ฐฝ์ถœํ•˜๋Š” ์œ ์ผํ•œ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์€ ์•„๋‹ˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์‚ฌ์—… ๋ชจ๋ธ์ด ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ํ•™ํšŒ๋ฅผ ์–‘์„ฑํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒŒ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ƒ๋Š” ๋…ผ๋ž€์„ ํ”ผํ•  ์ˆ˜๋Š” ์—†์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ๋งˆํ‹ด ํด ์ด๋ธŒ์™€ ํ”„๋ž€์‹œ์Šค ํ•€ํ„ฐ๋Š” ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์ ์„ ์ง€์ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜๊ตญ์˜ ์˜๋ฌธํ•™์ž์ด์ž ์ธ๋ฌธํ•™ ๊ต์ˆ˜์ธ ๋งˆํ‹ด ํด ์ด๋ธŒ๋Š” ์ถœํŒ ์‹ ์ฒญ(subscription publication)์ด APC๋กœ ์ˆ˜์ต์„ ๋‚ด๋Š” ๋ชจ๋ธ๋กœ ์—ฌ๊ฒจ์งˆ ๊ฑฐ๋ผ๊ณ  ๋น„ํŒํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ํŠนํžˆ ์ธ๋ฌธํ•™ ๋ถ€๋ฌธ์—์„œ ์ถœํŒ ์ œ๋„์— ์ค‘๋Œ€ํ•œ ์œ„ํ˜‘์ด ๋  ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์ฃผ์žฅ์„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ณจ๋“œ ์˜คํ”ˆ ์•ก์„ธ์Šค์˜ '์ €์ž์™€ ์ถœํŒ์‚ฌ์˜ ํ˜‘๋ ฅ ๋ชจ๋ธ'์€ ํ‰๋“ฑ์ด ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ผ ์ถœํŒ์‚ฌ์˜ ๋ฌด์ž„์Šน์ฐจ๋ฅผ ์žฅ๋ คํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋น„ํŒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ”„๋ž€์‹œ์Šค ํ•€ํ„ฐ๋Š” ์ด์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ์‚ฌ์—… ๋ชจํ˜•์ด ์žฅ๊ธฐ์ ์ธ ๊ด€์ ์—์„œ ์˜ค๋ž˜ ์œ ์ง€๋˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•  ๊ฑฐ๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ณด์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋…€๋Š” ํ˜์‹ ์ ์ธ ์ถœํŒ ๋ชจ๋ธ์ด ์ด๋ฅผ ๋Œ€์ฒดํ•  ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ ์ƒ๊ฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. OA์— ์ดˆ๊ธฐ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ฐœ์ž…ํ•ด์™”๋˜ ๊ตฐํ„ฐ ์•„์ด์  ๋ฐ”ํ(Gunther Eysenbach)๋Š” ์ด๋ฉ”์ผ์„ ๊ณ„์† ๋ฟŒ๋ ค๊ฐ€๋ฉฐ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋ฅผ ๋ชจ์ง‘ํ•˜๋Š” ์ถœํŒ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ '๊ฒ€์€ ์–‘'์ด๋ผ ๋ถ€๋ฅด๋ฉฐ ํŠนํžˆ ใ€Š๋ฒค๋‹ด ๊ณผํ•™์‚ฌใ€‹(Bentham Science Publishers), ใ€Š๋„๋ธŒ ๋ฉ”๋””์ปฌ ํ”„๋ ˆ์Šคใ€‹(Dove Medical Press), ใ€Š๋ฆฌ๋ฒ ๋ฅดํƒ€์Šค ์•„์นด๋ฐ๋ฏธ์•„ใ€‹(Libertas Academica) ๋“ฑ์„ ์ง€๋ชฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์›ฐ์ปด ํŠธ๋Ÿฌ์ŠคํŠธ๊ฐ€ 2008๋…„ ์˜๊ตญ ๋Ÿฐ๋˜์—์„œ ์ฃผ์ตœํ•œ ์˜คํ”ˆ ์•ก์„ธ์Šค์˜ ๋‚ ์— ์ด๋Ÿฐ ๊ฒ€์€ ์–‘์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋Œ€์ฒ˜ ๋…ผ์˜๋ฅผ ์ง„ํ–‰ํ–ˆ๊ณ  OA ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€์— ํฐ ๋„์ „์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ์ธ์‹ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2010๋…„ ์ฝ”๋„ฌ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต์˜ ํ•„ ๋ฐ์ด๋น„์Šค(Scholarly Kitchen ๋ธ”๋กœ๊ทธ์˜ ํŽธ์ง‘์ž)๋Š” SCIgen์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๋…ผ๋ฌธ ์ƒ์„ฑํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ์„ ์ด์šฉํ•ด ์—‰ํ„ฐ๋ฆฌ ์›๊ณ ๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€์— ํˆฌ๊ณ ํ–ˆ๊ณ  ์ด๊ฒƒ์ด ์ ‘์ˆ˜๋˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ํ™•์ธํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 2013๋…„ ์กด ๋ณดํ•ด๋…ผ(John Bohannon)์€ "๋ˆ„๊ฐ€ ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๋‘๋ ค์›Œํ•˜๋Š”๊ฐ€?"(:en:Who's Afraid of Peer Review?)์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์—‰ํ„ฐ๋ฆฌ ์›๊ณ ๋ฅผ 305๊ฐœ์˜ ์˜คํ”ˆ ์•ก์„ธ์Šค ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€์— ํˆฌ๊ณ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ์ค‘ ๊ณ ๋ฒ  ๋Œ€ํ•™ ์˜ํ•™๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœํ–‰ํ•˜๊ณ ์žˆ๋Š” ใ€Š๊ณ ๋ฒ  ์ €๋„ ์˜ค๋ธŒ ๋ฉ”๋””์ปฌ ์‚ฌ์ด์–ธ์Šคใ€‹(Kobe Journal of Medical Sciences)์„ ๋น„๋กฏํ•œ 60%์˜ ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€๊ฐ€ ์ถœํŒํ•˜๊ฒ ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋‹ตํ–ˆ๋‹ค. PLOS ONE์„ ํฌํ•จํ•œ 40%๋Š” ์ด๋ฅผ ๊ฑฐ๋ถ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ˜„ํ™ฉ ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€๋Š” ๊ธ‰์ฆํ•ด์™”๋‹ค. ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ฐ„๋œ ๋…ผ๋ฌธ์ด 2010๋…„์— 53000๊ฑด์ด์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ 2014๋…„์—๋Š” 42๋งŒ๊ฑด์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. . ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€๋‚˜ ํˆฌ๊ณ ์ž๋“ค์€ ํŽธ์ค‘๋˜์–ด์žˆ๋‹ค. ํˆฌ๊ณ ์ž๋Š” 3/4์ด ์•„์‹œ์•„์™€ ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด์— ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ๋„์ƒ๊ตญ์˜ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋“ค์€ ์„œ์–‘ ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€๊ฐ€ ์ž์‹ ๋“ค์„ ์กด์ค‘ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์ง€ ์•Š์œผ๋ฏ€๋กœ ๊ฐœ๋„๊ตญ์˜ ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€์— ํˆฌ๊ณ ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๊ฐ€ ๊ฝค ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ ๊ฐœ๋„๊ตญ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋“ค ์ค‘ ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€ ๋ช…์„ฑ์„ ์ž˜ ๋ชฐ๋ผ์„œ ๊ฒŒ์žฌํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๋„ ์ข…์ข… ์žˆ๋‹ค. . ์ถฉ๋ถ„ํ•œ ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ์™€ ํŽธ์ง‘์„ ๊ฑฐ์น˜์ง€ ์•Š์œผ๋ฏ€๋กœ ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€์— ๊ฒŒ์žฌ๋œ ๋…ผ๋ฌธ์˜ ์งˆ์€ ๋ณดํ†ต ๋–จ์–ด์ง„๋‹ค. ํ•™์ˆ ์ ์ธ ๋‚ด์šฉ ๋ฟ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ผ ๋‚ ์กฐ, ๋ณ€์กฐ, ๋„์šฉ์˜ ์˜จ์ƒ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ํ‰๊ฐ€๋„ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์ „๋ฌธ๊ฐ€๋“ค์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋Œ€์ค‘์˜ ์‹ ๋ขฐ๋„๋ฅผ ๋–จ์–ด๋œจ๋ ค ์‚ฌํšŒ์  ๋น„์šฉ์„ ๋†’์ด๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. . ์ฒ˜์Œ์—” ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋“ค์ด ์ถœํŒ์‚ฌ์˜ ๋จน์ด๊ฐ€ ๋˜๊ณ ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ์ธ์‹์ด ๋งŽ์•„์„œ ์•ฝํƒˆ์ ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ํ‘œํ˜„์ด ์ƒ๊ฒผ์ง€๋งŒ, ๋ช‡๋ช‡ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋“ค์€ ๊ทธ ์‚ฌ์‹ค์„ ์•Œ๊ณ ๋„ ๊ณ„์† ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€์— ๊ณ„์† ํˆฌ๊ณ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ž˜์„œ ์ถ”์•…ํ•œ ๊ณต์ƒ๊ด€๊ณ„(ugly symbiosis)๋ผ๋Š” ํ‰๊ฐ€๋„ ์žˆ๋‹ค. . ํ”ผํ•ด ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ์ด ๋งŽ์ง€ ์•Š์€ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋“ค์€ ํ•™ํšŒ์— ์ฐธ์„ํ•˜๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ํ•™ํšŒ์—์„œ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ•  ๊ธฐํšŒ๊ฐ€ ์ ์€ ๋งŒํผ ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ํ•™ํšŒ, ๊ฐ€์งœ ํ•™ํšŒ์˜ ํ”ผํ•ด๋ฅผ ๋ณด๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๊ฐ€ ๋งŽ๋‹ค. ํ•™์ˆ ํ™œ๋™์˜ ๋ถ€์‹ค์—ฌ๋ถ€๋ฅผ ํŒ์ • ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ช…ํ™•ํ•œ ๊ธฐ์ค€์„ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๊ฐ€ ์ œ์‹œํ•˜๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ํŠน์ • ํ•™์ˆ ๋‹จ์ฒด์˜ ๋ถ€์‹ค ์—ฌ๋ถ€๋ฅผ ํŒ์ •ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ์‰ฌ์šด ์ผ์ด ์•„๋‹ˆ๊ณ , ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์‚ฌ๋ก€๋„ ์—†๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ๋ˆ„๊ตฌ๋“ ์ง€ ์ˆœ์ง„ํ•œ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๊ฐ€ ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๊ณต์œ ํ•  ๊ณณ์„ ์„ ํƒํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์‹ ์ค‘ํ•  ํ•„์š”๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋Š” ์ด ํ•™ํšŒ์— ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์‹œ๊ฐ„๊ณผ ๋ˆ, ํ‰ํŒ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•  ๊ฐ€์น˜๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋Š”์ง€ ์Šค์Šค๋กœ ํ™•์ธํ•ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํŒ์ • ๊ธฐ์ค€ ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€ ํŒ์ • ๊ธฐ์ค€์€ ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค. ๋…ผ๋ฌธ์˜ ์งˆ์  ๊ด€๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ์—†๋‹ค์‹œํ”ผํ•˜๊ณ  ํˆฌ๊ณ  ์ฆ‰์‹œ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฌํ•œ๋‹ค. ์—‰ํ„ฐ๋ฆฌ ์›๊ณ ๋„ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฌํ•œ๋‹ค.. ๋ฏธ๋ฆฌ ์•Œ๋ ค์ฃผ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ์•„๋‹ˆ๊ณ  ๋…ผ๋ฌธ ์ ‘์ˆ˜ ์ดํ›„์— APC๋ฅผ ์•Œ๋ ค์˜จ๋‹ค. . ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž์˜ ํˆฌ๊ณ ๋ฅผ ์ ๊ทน์ ์œผ๋กœ ํ™๋ณดํ•œ๋‹ค. . ๋ณธ์ธ์˜ ๋™์˜์—†์ด ํŽธ์ง‘์œ„์›์œผ๋กœ ๋“ฑ๋ก๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ํŽธ์ง‘ ์œ„์›์˜ ์‚ฌ์ž„์„ ์ธ์ •ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค. . ๊ฐ€์งœ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์›์ด ํŽธ์ง‘์œ„์›์œผ๋กœ ํ™œ๋™ํ•œ๋‹ค, . ๊ธฐ์กด ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€์˜ ๋ช…์นญ์ด๋‚˜ ์›น์‚ฌ์ดํŠธ ์Šคํƒ€์ผ์„ ๋ชจ๋ฐฉํ•œ๋‹ค. . ์ž˜๋ชป๋œ ์—ฐ๋ฝ์ฒ˜๊ฐ€ ์ ํ˜€์žˆ๊ณ  ์กฐ์ž‘์˜ ์œ„ํ—˜์ด ์žˆ๋Š” ์ถœํŒ ๋ฐฉ์‹์„ ์ฃผ์žฅํ•œ๋‹ค. ์—‰ํ„ฐ๋ฆฌ ๊ตญ์ œ ํ‘œ์ค€ ์—ฐ์† ๊ฐ„ํ–‰๋ฌผ ๋ฒˆํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. . ์—‰ํ„ฐ๋ฆฌ ํ”ผ์ธ์šฉ์ง€์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. . ๋Œ€์ฑ… ์ œํ”„๋ฆฌ ๋นŒ์€ ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€ ํŒ์ •๊ธฐ์ค€์„ ๋งŒ๋“ค๊ณ  ๋ชฉ๋ก์„ ์ž‘์„ฑํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ธ”๋กœ๊ทธ์— ๊ณต๊ฐœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ๊ทธ๋ ‡๊ฒŒ ์ง€๋ชฉ๋œ ์ถœํŒ์‚ฌ๋“ค๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ๊ณผ ์†Œ์†ก์— ์‹œ๋‹ฌ๋ ธ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ฝœ๋กœ๋ผ๋„ ๋Œ€ํ•™ ๋ด๋ฒ„ ์บ ํผ์Šค๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์••๋ ฅ์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. 2017๋…„ 1์›” ์‹ค์ง ์šฐ๋ ค๋กœ ๋ธ”๋กœ๊ทธ๋ฅผ ๋‹ซ์•˜๋‹ค. ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๋ง‰๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๊ณต๊ฐœ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ(open peer review)๋‚˜ ์ถœํŒํ›„ ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ ๋“ฑ์ด ์ œ์•ˆ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ์˜ ์ˆ˜์ค€์„ ํ‰๊ฐ€ํ•˜๊ธฐ ๋ณด๋‹ค ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ๊ธฐ, ๊ธฐ๋งŒ์˜ ๊ด€์ ์—์„œ ๋ฐ”๋ผ๋ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ์˜๊ฒฌ๋„ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ•™์ˆ  ์ถœํŒ ๊ทœ๋ฒ”์œ„์›ํšŒ, DOAJ, ์˜คํ”ˆ ์•ก์„ธ์Šค ํ•™์ˆ  ์ถœํŒ์‚ฌ ํ˜‘ํšŒ, ์„ธ๊ณ„ ์˜ํ•™ ํŽธ์ง‘์ธ ํ˜‘ํšŒ(World Association of Medical Editors) ๋“ฑ์€ ์ข‹์€ ์ถœํŒ์‚ฌ์™€ ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ์ถœํŒ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๊ตฌ๋ถ„ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ํˆฌ๋ช…์„ฑ์ด ์ค‘์š”ํ•˜๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ช‡๊ฐœ์˜ ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€๋Š” ์‚ฌํ›„ ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ์‚ฌ์ดํŠธ๋ฅผ ๊ฐœ์„คํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์‚ฌํ›„ ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ์—์„œ๋Š” ์งˆ์  ํŒ๋‹จ์— ์ค‘์ ์„ ๋‘๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. OA ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€๊ฐ€ ์•„๋‹Œ ๊ณณ๊นŒ์ง€๋„ ์‚ฌํ›„ ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ ์›€์ง์ž„์ด ํ™•์‚ฐ๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. . ๋„์„œ๊ด€๊ณผ ์ถœํŒ์‚ฌ๋“ค๋„ ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ์ถœํŒ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๊ฒฝ๊ณ„ํ•˜๋Š” ์บ ํŽ˜์ธ์„ ์ง„ํ–‰ ์ค‘์ด๋‹ค. . ๊ฐœ๋„๊ตญ์˜ ์ Š์€ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž์˜ ์ถœํŒ์„ ๋•๋Š” ์›€์ง์ž„๋„ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋˜ ์•ฝํƒˆ์  ํ•™์ˆ ์ง€๋ฅผ ํ™•์ธํ•˜๋Š” ๊ธฐ์ค€์„ ๋งŒ๋“ค๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋…ธ๋ ฅ๋„ ์ง€์†๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. . ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์ฐธ๊ณ  ์ž๋ฃŒ Updated Beall 's List of Predatory Journals ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์˜ ๋ฐ•์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ์ต๋ช…์œผ๋กœ ์œ ์ง€ํ•˜๊ณ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ฒจ๋ฆฌ์ŠคํŠธ Updated Beall 's List of Predatory Publishers ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์˜ ๋ฐ•์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ์ต๋ช…์œผ๋กœ ์œ ์ง€ํ•˜๊ณ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋นŒ๋ฆฌ์ŠคํŠธ List at predatory journals List of predatory publishers ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ์˜คํ”ˆ ์•ก์„ธ์Šค ์ „์ž ์ €๋„ ์†Œ์นผ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด ๋นŒ์˜ ๋ชฉ๋ก ๋ตํฌ ์ฒดํฌ ์„œ๋ธŒ๋ฐ‹ ์˜คํ”ˆ ์•ก์„ธ์Šค ์œค๋ฆฌ์  ๋…ผ๋ž€์ด ์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ์—… ๊ด€ํ–‰
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Predatory%20publishing
Predatory publishing
Predatory publishing, also write-only publishing or deceptive publishing, is an exploitative academic publishing business model that involves charging publication fees to authors only superficially checking articles for quality and legitimacy, and without providing editorial and publishing services that legitimate academic journals provide, whether open access or not. Namely, the rejection rate of predatory journals is low, but seldom is zero. The phenomenon of "open access predatory publishers" was first noticed by Jeffrey Beall, when he described "publishers that are ready to publish any article for payment". However, criticisms about the label "predatory" have been raised. A lengthy review of the controversy started by Beall appears in The Journal of Academic Librarianship. Predatory publishers are so regarded because scholars are tricked into publishing with them, although some authors may be aware that the journal is poor quality or even fraudulent but publish in them anyway. New scholars from developing countries are said to be especially at risk of being misled by predatory publishers. According to one study, 60% of articles published in predatory journals receive no citations over the five-year period following publication. Beall's List, a report that for 5 years was regularly updated by Jeffrey Beall of the University of Colorado until January 2017, set forth criteria for categorizing publications as predatory. A demand by Frontiers Media to open a misconduct case against Beall, which was launched by his university and later closed with no findings, was one of several reasons Beall may have taken his list offline, but he has not publicly shared his reasoning. After the closure, other efforts to identify predatory publishing have sprouted, such as the paywalled Cabell's blacklist, as well as other lists (some based on the original listing by Beall). History In March 2008, Gunther Eysenbach, publisher of an early open access journal, drew attention to what he called "black sheep among open access publishers and journals" and highlighted in his blog publishers and journals which resorted to excessive spam to attract authors and editors, criticizing in particular Bentham Science Publishers, Dove Medical Press, and Libertas Academica. In July 2008, Richard Poynder's interview series brought attention to the practices of new publishers who were "better able to exploit the opportunities of the new environment." Doubts about honesty and scams in a subset of open-access journals continued to be raised in 2009. Concerns for spamming practices from these journals prompted leading open access publishers to create the Open Access Scholarly Publishers Association in 2008. In another early precedent, in 2009 the Improbable Research blog had found that Scientific Research Publishing's journals duplicated papers already published elsewhere; the case was subsequently reported in Nature. In 2010, Cornell University graduate student Phil Davis (editor of the Scholarly Kitchen blog) submitted a manuscript consisting of computer-generated nonsense (using SCIgen) which was accepted for a fee (but withdrawn by the author). Predatory publishers have been reported to hold submissions hostage, refusing to allow them to be withdrawn and thereby preventing submission in another journal. Predatory publishing does not refer to a homogeneous category of practices. The name itself was coined by American librarian Jeffrey Beall who created a list of "deceptive and fraudulent" Open Access (OA) publishers which was used as reference until withdrawn in 2017. The term has been reused since for a new for-profit database by Cabell's International. On the one hand, Beall's list as well as Cabell's International database do include truly fraudulent and deceptive OA publishers, that pretend to provide services (in particular quality peer review) which they do not implement, show fictive editorial boards and/or ISSN numbers, use dubious marketing and spamming techniques or even hijacking known titles. On the other hand, they also list journals with subpar standards of peer review and linguistic correction. The number of predatory journals thus defined has grown exponentially since 2010. The demonstration of existing unethical practices in the OA publishing industry also attracted considerable media attention. A 2020 study has found hundreds of scientists say they have reviewed papers for journals termed 'predatory' โ€” although they might not know it. An analysis of the Publons has found that it hosts at least 6,000 records of reviews for more than 1,000 predatory journals. "The researchers who review most for these titles tend to be young, inexperienced and affiliated with institutions in low-income nations in Africa and the Middle East." Bohannon's experiment In 2013, John Bohannon, a staff writer for the journal Science and for popular science publications, tested the open access system by submitting to a number of such journals a deeply flawed paper on the purported effect of a lichen constituent, and published the results in a paper called, "Who's Afraid of Peer Review?". About 60% of those journals, including journals of Elsevier, SAGE, Wolters Kluwer (through its subsidiary Medknow), and several universities, accepted the faked medical paper. PLOS ONE and Hindawi rejected it. "Dr Fraud" experiment In 2015, four researchers created a fictitious sub-par scientist named Anna O. Szust ( is Polish for "fraudster"), and applied on her behalf for an editor position to 360 scholarly journals. Szust's qualifications were dismal for the role of an editor; she had never published a single article and had no editorial experience. The books and book chapters listed on her CV were made-up, as were the publishing houses that published the books. One-third of the journals to which Szust applied were sampled from Beall's List of predatory journals. Forty of these predatory journals accepted Szust as editor without any background vetting and often within days or even hours. By comparison, she received minimal to no positive response from the "control" journals which "must meet certain standards of quality, including ethical publishing practices." Among journals sampled from the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ), 8 of 120 accepted Szust. The DOAJ has since removed some of the affected journals in a 2016 purge. None of the 120 sampled journals listed in Journal Citation Reports (JCR) offered Szust the position. The results of the experiment were published in Nature in March 2017, and widely presented in the press. SCIgen experiments SCIgen, a computer program that randomly generates academic computer science papers using context-free grammar, has generated papers that have been accepted by a number of predatory journals as well as predatory conferences. Federal Trade Commission vs. OMICS Group, Inc. On 25 August 2016, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) filed a lawsuit against the OMICS Group, iMedPub, Conference Series, and the individual Srinubabu Gedela, an Indian national who is president of the companies. In the lawsuit, the defendants are accused of "deceiving academics and researchers about the nature of its publications and hiding publication fees ranging from hundreds to thousands of dollars". The FTC was also responding to pressure to take action against predatory publishers. Attorneys for the OMICS Group published a response on their website, claiming "your FTC allegations are baseless. Further we understand that FTC working towards favoring some subscription based journals publishers who are earring Billions of dollars rom scientists literature", suggesting that corporations in the scientific publishing business were behind the allegations. In March 2019, the FTC won the suit in a summary judgement and was awarded $50,130,811 in damages and a broad injunction against OMICS practices. It is unlikely that the FTC will ever collect the award, since the rulings of US courts are not enforceable in India, and since OMICS does not have property in the US. Characteristics Recognizing common characteristics of predatory publishers can help to avoid them. Complaints that are associated with predatory open-access publishing include: Accepting articles quickly with little or no peer review or quality control, including hoax and nonsensical papers. Notifying academics of article fees only after papers are accepted. Aggressively campaigning for academics to submit articles or serve on editorial boards. Listing academics as members of editorial boards without their permission, and not allowing academics to resign from editorial boards. Appointing fake academics to editorial boards. Mimicking the name or web site style of more established journals. Making misleading claims about the publishing operation, such as a false location. Using ISSNs improperly. Citing fake or non-existent impact factors. Boasting about being "indexed" by academic social networking sites (like ResearchGate) and standard identifiers (like ISSNs and DOIs) as if they were prestigious or reputable bibliographic databases. Favoritism and self-promotion in peer review. Predatory publishers have also been compared to vanity presses. Beall's criteria In 2015, Jeffrey Beall used 26 criteria related to poor journal standards and practices, 9 related to journal editors and staff members, 7 related to ethics and integrity, 6 related to the publisher's business practices, and 6 'other' general criteria related to publishers. He also listed 26 additional practices, which were 'reflective of poor journal standards' which were not necessarily indicative of predatory behaviour. Eriksson and Helgesson's 25 criteria In 2016, researchers Stefan Eriksson and Gert Helgesson identified 25 signs of predatory publishing. They warn that a journal will not necessarily be predatory if they meet one of the criteria, "but the more points on the list that apply to the journal at hand, the more sceptical you should be." The full list is quoted below: The publisher is not a member of any recognized professional organisation committed to best publishing practices (like COPE or EASE) The journal is not indexed in well-established electronic databases (like MEDLINE or Web of Science) The publisher claims to be a "leading publisher" even though it just got started The journal and the publisher are unfamiliar to you and all your colleagues The papers of the journal are of poor research quality, and may not be academic at all (for instance allowing for obvious pseudo-science) There are fundamental errors in the titles and abstracts, or frequent and repeated typographical or factual errors throughout the published papers The journal website is not professional The journal website does not present an editorial board or gives insufficient detail on names and affiliations The journal website does not reveal the journal's editorial office location or uses an incorrect address The publishing schedule is not clearly stated The journal title claims a national affiliation that does not match its location (such as "American Journal of ..." while being located on another continent) or includes "International" in its title while having a single-country editorial board The journal mimics another journal title or the website of said journal The journal provides an impact factor in spite of the fact that the journal is new (which means that the impact cannot yet be calculated) The journal claims an unrealistically high impact based on spurious alternative impact factors (such as 7 for a bioethics journal, which is far beyond the top notation) The journal website posts non-related or non-academic advertisements The publisher of the journal has released an overwhelmingly large suite of new journals at one occasion or during a very short period of time The editor in chief of the journal is editor in chief also for other journals with widely different focus The journal includes articles (very far) outside its stated scope The journal sends you an unsolicited invitation to submit an article for publication, while making it blatantly clear that the editor has absolutely no idea about your field of expertise Emails from the journal editor are written in poor language, include exaggerated flattering (everyone is a leading profile in the field), and make contradictory claims (such as "You have to respond within 48 h" while later on saying "You may submit your manuscript whenever you find convenient") The journal charges a submission or handling fee, instead of a publication fee (which means that you have to pay even if the paper is not accepted for publication) The types of submission/publication fees and what they amount to are not clearly stated on the journal's website The journal gives unrealistic promises regarding the speed of the peer review process (hinting that the journal's peer review process is minimal or non-existent)โ€”or boasts an equally unrealistic track-record The journal does not describe copyright agreements clearly or demands the copyright of the paper while claiming to be an open access journal The journal displays no strategies for how to handle misconduct, conflicts of interest, or secure the archiving of articles when no longer in operation A user friendly web base interface is available. Growth and structure Predatory journals have rapidly increased their publication volumes from 53,000 in 2010 to an estimated 420,000 articles in 2014, published by around 8,000 active journals. Early on, publishers with more than 100 journals dominated the market, but since 2012 publishers in the 10โ€“99 journal size category have captured the largest market share. As of 2022, almost one third of the 100 largest publishers (by journal count) could be deemed predatory. The regional distribution of both the publisher's country and authorship is highly skewed, with three-quarters of the authors from Asia or Africa. Authors paid an average fee of US $178 each for articles to be published rapidly without review, typically within 2 to 3 months of submission. As reported in 2019, some 5% of Italian researchers have published in predatory journals, with a third of those journals engaging in fraudulent editorial practices. Causes and impact The root cause of exploitative practices is the author-facing an article-processing charge (APC) business model, in which authors are charged to publish rather than to read. Such a model provides incentives for publishers to focus on the quantity of articles published, rather than their quality. APCs have gained increasing popularity in the last two decades as a business model for OA, due to the guaranteed revenue streams they offer, as well as a lack of competitive pricing within the OA market, which allows vendors full control over how much they choose to charge. Ultimately, quality control relies on good editorial policies and their enforcement, and the conflict between rigorous scholarship and profit can be successfully managed by selecting which articles are published purely based on (peer-reviewed) methodological quality. Most OA publishers ensure their quality by registering their titles in the Directory of Open Access Journals and complying with a standardised set of conditions. A recent study has shown that Beall's criteria of "predatory" publishing were in no way limited to OA publishers and that, applying them to both OA and non-OA journals in the field of library and information science, even top tier non-OA journals could be qualified as predatory (; see also on difficulties of demarcating predatory and non-predatory journals in biomedicine). The majority of predatory OA publishers and authors publishing in these appear to be based in Asia and Africa, as well as Europe and the Americas. It has been argued that authors who publish in predatory journals may do so unwittingly without actual unethical perspective, due to concerns that North American and European journals might be prejudiced against scholars from non-Western countries, high publication pressure or lack of research proficiency. Hence predatory publishing also questions the geopolitical and commercial context of scholarly knowledge production. Nigerian researchers, for example, publish in predatory journals due to the pressure to publish internationally while having little to no access to Western international journals, or due to the often higher APCs practiced by mainstream OA journals. More generally, the criteria adopted by high JIF journals, including the quality of the English language, the composition of the editorial board or the rigour of the peer review process itself tend to favour familiar content from the "centre" rather than the "periphery". It is thus important to distinguish between exploitative publishers and journals โ€“ whether OA or not โ€“ and legitimate OA initiatives with varying standards in digital publishing, but which may improve and disseminate epistemic contents. In Latin America, a highly successful system of free of charge OA publishing has been in place for more than two decades, thanks to organisations such as SciELO and REDALYC. Response Blacklists Beall's List University of Colorado Denver librarian and researcher Jeffrey Beall, who coined the term "predatory publishing", first published his list of predatory publishers in 2010. Beall's list of potential, possible, or probable predatory scholarly open-access publishers attempted to identify scholarly open access publishers with questionable practices. In 2013, Nature reported that Beall's list and web site were "widely read by librarians, researchers, and open-access advocates, many of whom applaud his efforts to reveal shady publishing practices." Others have raised the objection that "(w)hether it's fair to classify all these journals and publishers as 'predatory' is an open questionโ€”several shades of gray may be distinguishable." Beall's analyses have been called sweeping generalizations with no supporting evidence, and he has also been criticized for being biased against open-access journals from less economically developed countries. One librarian wrote that Beall's list "attempts a binary division of this complex gold rush: the good and the bad. Yet many of the criteria used are either impossible to quantify..., or can be found to apply as often to established OA journals as to the new entrants in this area... Some of the criteria seem to make First World assumptions that aren't valid worldwide." Beall differed with these opinions and wrote a letter of rebuttal in mid-2015. Following the Who's Afraid of Peer Review? investigation, the DOAJ has tightened up its inclusion criteria, with the purpose of serving as a whitelist, very much like Beall's has been a blacklist. The investigation found that "the results show that Beall is good at spotting publishers with poor quality control." However, the managing director of DOAJ, Lars Bjรธrnshauge, estimates that questionable publishing probably accounts for fewer than 1% of all author-pays, open-access papers, a proportion far lower than Beall's estimate of 5โ€“10%. Instead of relying on blacklists, Bjรธrnshauge argues that open-access associations such as the DOAJ and the Open Access Scholarly Publishers Association should adopt more responsibility for policing publishers: they should lay out a set of criteria that publishers and journals must comply with to win a place on a 'white list' indicating that they are trustworthy. Beall has been threatened with a lawsuit by a Canadian publisher which appears on the list. He reports that he has been the subject of online harassment for his work on the subject. His list has been criticized for relying heavily on analysis of publishers' web sites, not engaging directly with publishers, and including newly founded but legitimate journals. Beall has responded to these complaints by posting the criteria he uses to generate the list, as well as instituting an anonymous three-person review body to which publishers can appeal to be removed from the list. For example, a 2010 re-evaluation resulted in some journals being removed from Beall's list. In 2013, the OMICS Publishing Group threatened to sue Beall for $1ย billion for his "ridiculous, baseless, [and] impertinent" inclusion of them on his list, which "smacks of literal unprofessionalism and arrogance". An unedited sentence from the letter read: "Let us at the outset warn you that this is a very perilous journey for you and you will be completely exposing yourself to serious legal implications including criminal cases lunched against you in INDIA and USA." Beall responded that the letter was "poorly written and personally threatening" and expressed his opinion that the letter "is an attempt to detract from the enormity of OMICS's editorial practices". OMICS' lawyers stated that damages were being pursued under section 66A of India's Information Technology Act, 2000, which makes it illegal to use a computer to publish "any information that is grossly offensive or has menacing character" or to publish false information. The letter stated that three years in prison was a possible penalty, although a U.S. lawyer said that the threats seemed to be a "publicity stunt" that was meant to "intimidate". Section 66A has been criticised in an India Today editorial for its potential for misuse in "stifling political dissent, crushing speech and ... enabling bullying". Beall could have been sued for defamation, and would not have been able to fall back on truth as a final defense; under section 66A, the truth of any information is irrelevant if it is grossly offensive. In an unrelated case in 2015, Section 66A was struck down by the Supreme Court of India, which found that it had no proximate connection to public order, "arbitrarily, excessively and disproportionately invades the right of free speech", and that the description of offences is "open-ended, undefined and vague." As such, it is not possible for the OMICS Group to proceed against Beall under section 66A, but it could mount a defamation case. Finally, in August 2016, OMICS was sued for "deceptive business practices related to journal publishing and scientific conferences" by the Federal Trade Commission (a US government agency), who won an initial court ruling in November 2017. Beall's list was used as an authoritative source by South Africa's Department of Higher Education and Training in maintaining its list of accredited journals: articles published in those journals will determine funding levels for their authors; however, journals identified as predatory will be removed from this list. ProQuest is reviewing all journals on Beall's list, and has started removing them from the International Bibliography of the Social Sciences. In January 2017, Beall shut down his blog and removed all its content, citing pressure from his employer. Beall's supervisor wrote a response stating that he did not pressure Beall to discontinue his work, or threaten his employment; and had tried hard to support Beall's academic freedom. In 2017, Ramzi Hakami reported on his own successful attempt to get an intentionally poor paper accepted by a publisher on the list and referenced a resurrected version of Beall's list. This version includes Beall's original list and updates by an anonymous purported "postdoctoral researcher in one of the [E]uropean universities [who has] a hands-on experience with predatory journals." Cabells' Predatory Reports At the May 2017 meeting of the Society for Scholarly Publishing, Cabell's International, a company that offers scholarly publishing analytics and other scholarly services, announced that it intended to launch a blacklist of predatory journals (not publishers) in June, and said that access would be by subscription only. The company had started work on its blacklist criteria in early 2016. In July 2017, both a black list and a white list were offered for subscription on their website. Other lists Since Beall's list closed, other list groups have started. These include Kscien's list, which use Beall's list as a starting point, updating it to add and remove publishers. According to a 2020 systematic review of 93 lists, only three were assessed as evidence-based. Science funders Poland On 18 September 2018, Zbigniew Bล‚ocki, the director of the National Science Centre, the largest agency that funds fundamental research in Poland, stated that if articles financed by NCN funds were published in journals not satisfying standards for peer review, then the grant numbers would have to be removed from the publications and funds would have to be returned to the NCN. Russia Both the Russian Science Foundation and the Russian Foundation for Basic Research require their grant recipients to publish only in the journals included into either Web of Science or Scopus databases. This policy aims at: (1) preventing the researchers from falling into the traps of predatory publishers, without having the Foundations to issue their own lists of acceptable journals; (2) making sure, that the results of their funded works are readily discovered by other people, since Web of Science and Scopus are subscribed to by most reputable institutions. However, in parallel with the withdrawal of Clarivate from Russia in 2022 and the pause in Elsevier services from 2022 onwards, the Web of Science and Scopus listing is no longer considered as essential by the Russian agencies. Other efforts More transparent peer review, such as open peer review and post-publication peer review, has been advocated to combat predatory journals. Others have argued instead that the discussion on predatory journals should not be turned "into a debate over the shortcomings of peer reviewโ€”it is nothing of the sort. It is about fraud, deception, and irresponsibility..." In an effort to "set apart legitimate journals and publishers from non-legitimate ones", principles of transparency and best practice have been identified and issued collectively by the Committee on Publication Ethics, the DOAJ, the Open Access Scholarly Publishers Association, and the World Association of Medical Editors. Various journal review websites (crowd-sourced or expert-run) have been started, some focusing on the quality of the peer review process and extending to non-OA publications. A group of libraries and publishers launched an awareness campaign. A number of measures have been suggested to further combat predatory journals. Others have called on research institutions to improve the publication literacy notably among junior researchers in developing countries. Some organisations have also developed criteria in which predatory publishers could be spotted through providing tips. As Beall has ascribed predatory publishing to a consequence of gold open access (particularly its author-pays variant), one researcher has argued for platinum open access, where the absence of article processing charges removes the publisher's conflict of interest in accepting article submissions. More objective discriminating metrics have been proposed, such as a "predatory score" and positive and negative journal quality indicators. Others have encouraged authors to consult subject-area expert-reviewed journal listings, such as the Directory of Nursing Journals, vetted by the International Academy of Nursing Editors and its collaborators. It has been argued that the incentives for fraud need to be removed. Bioethicist Arthur Caplan has warned that predatory publishing, fabricated data, and academic plagiarism erodes public confidence in the medical profession, devalues legitimate science, and undermines public support for evidence-based policy. In 2015, Rick Anderson, associate dean in the J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah, challenged the term itself: "what do we mean when we say 'predatory,' and is that term even still useful?... This question has become relevant because of that common refrain heard among Beall's critics: that he only examines one kind of predationโ€”the kind that naturally crops up in the context of author-pays OA." Anderson suggests that the term "predatory" be retired in the context of scholarly publishing. "It's a nice, attention-grabbing word, but I'm not sure it's helpfully descriptive... it generates more heat than light." A 2017 article in The New York Times suggests that a significant number of academics are "eager" to publish their work in these journals, making the relationship more a "new and ugly symbiosis" than a case of scholars being exploited by "predators". Similarly, a study published in January 2018 found that "Scholars in the developing world felt that reputable Western journals might be prejudiced against them and sometimes felt more comfortable publishing in journals from the developing world. Other scholars were unaware of the reputation of the journals in which they published and would not have selected them had they known. However, some scholars said they would still have published in the same journals if their institution recognised them. The pressure to 'publish or perish' was another factor influencing many scholars' decisions to publish in these fast-turnaround journals. In some cases, researchers did not have adequate guidance and felt they lacked the knowledge of research to submit to a more reputable journal." In May 2018, the University Grants Commission in India removed 4,305 dubious journals from a list of publications used for evaluating academic performance. To further define and distinguish predatory journals, Leonhard Dobusch and Maximilian Heimstรคdt in 2019 proposed a tripartite classification of Open Access journals with below-average peer review quality. Based on their procedures, there would be 1) "aspirant" 2) "junk" and 3) "fake" journals. While aspirant journals are science-oriented despite their below-average peer review (e.g. student-run journals), junk and fake journals are predominantly or exclusively profit-oriented. Junk and fake Open Access journals have superficial or no peer review procedures, despite their claims of being peer-reviewed. In April, 2019, 43 participants from 10 countries met in Ottawa, Canada to formulate a consensus definition: โ€œPredatory journals and publishers are entities that prioritize self-interest at the expense of scholarship and are characterized by false or misleading information, deviation from best editorial and publication practices, a lack of transparency, and/or the use of aggressive and indiscriminate solicitation practices.โ€ Adequacy of peer review was not included in the definition because this factor was deemed too subjective to evaluate. Critics of this definition argued that excluding the quality of peer review from the definition "could strengthen rather than weaken" predatory journals. In March 2022, the InterAcademy Partnership published a report, Combatting Predatory Academic Journals and Conferences, with a series of recommendations. See also List of scholarly publishing stings Author mill Diploma mill Conflicts of interest in academic publishing (covers publishers' COIs) Hijacked journal Journalology Mega journal Open access journal Peer review failures Predatory conference Pseudo-scholarship Center for Promoting Ideas Explanatory notes References Further reading External links Think. Check. Submit. "Predatory journals: No definition, No defence. (2019). Nature. "Leading scholars and publishers from ten countries have agreed [on] a definition of predatory publishing that can protect scholarship." AMWA โ€“ EMWA โ€“ ISMPP Joint Position statement Open access (publishing) Ethically disputed business practices Ethically disputed research practices Deception
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์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ๊ฐœ์š”
์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ์†Œ๊ฐœ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ •๋ฆฌํ•œ ๊ฐœ์š”์ด๋‹ค. ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „์€ 1939๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 1945๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ์ง€์†๋œ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „์œผ๋กœ, ๋ฏธ๊ตญ, ์†Œ๋ จ, ์˜๊ตญ ๋“ฑ์˜ ์—ฐํ•ฉ๊ตญ๋“ค๊ณผ ๋‚˜์น˜ ๋…์ผ, ์ดํƒˆ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์™•๊ตญ, ์ผ๋ณธ ์ œ๊ตญ ๋“ฑ์˜ ์ถ”์ถ•๊ตญ ๊ฐ„์˜ ์ „์Ÿ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. 6์ฒœ๋งŒ์—ฌ ๋ช…์ด ์‚ฌ๋งํ•œ, ์„ธ๊ณ„์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌ์—์„œ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์ฐธํ˜นํ•œ ์ „์Ÿ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „์˜ ํŠน์ง• ์ถ”์ถ•๊ตญ ๋Œ€ ์—ฐํ•ฉ๊ตญ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์ „์Ÿ ํƒœํ‰์–‘ ์ „์Ÿ ํ˜„๋Œ€์ „ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ‘์ „ ์ด๋ ฅ์ „ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „์˜ ์›์ธ ์•„์‹œ์•„์—์„œ์˜ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ๋ฐœ๋ฐœ ์ „ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์—์„œ์˜ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ๋ฐœ๋ฐœ ์ „ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด ์ œ๊ตญ์ฃผ์˜ ํŒฝ์ฐฝ์ฃผ์˜ ๋ฒ ๋ฅด์‚ฌ์œ  ์กฐ์•ฝ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ์ฐธ์ „๊ตญ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „์˜ ์—ฐํ•ฉ๊ตญ ์˜๊ตญ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค (1939๋…„ 9์›” โ€“ 1940๋…„ 6์›”) / ์ž์œ  ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค (1940๋…„ 6์›” โ€“ ) ์†Œ๋ จ (1941๋…„ 6์›” โ€“ ) ๋ฏธ๊ตญ (1941๋…„ 12์›” โ€“ ) ์ค‘ํ™”๋ฏผ๊ตญ ์ถ”์ถ•๊ตญ ์ผ๋ณธ ์ œ๊ตญ ๋‚˜์น˜ ๋…์ผ ์ดํƒˆ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์™•๊ตญ (1940๋…„ 6์›” โ€“ 1943๋…„ 9์›”) / ์ดํƒˆ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์‚ฌํšŒ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ (1943๋…„ 9์›” โ€“ ) ํ—๊ฐ€๋ฆฌ ์™•๊ตญ ๋ฃจ๋งˆ๋‹ˆ์•„ ์™•๊ตญ ๋ถˆ๊ฐ€๋ฆฌ์•„ ์™•๊ตญ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ์—ฐํ‘œ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ์ด์ „ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด ์—ฐํ‘œ ์•„์‹œ์•„์—์„œ์˜ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ๋ฐœ๋ฐœ ์ „ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์—์„œ์˜ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ๋ฐœ๋ฐœ ์ „ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด ๊ฒจ์šธ์ „์Ÿ ์—ฐํ‘œ ๋ถ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด ์ „์—ญ ์—ฐํ‘œ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ์—ฐํ‘œ (1939๋…„) ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ์—ฐํ‘œ (1940๋…„) ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ์—ฐํ‘œ (1941๋…„) ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ์—ฐํ‘œ (1942๋…„) ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ์—ฐํ‘œ (1943๋…„) ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ์—ฐํ‘œ (1944๋…„) ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ์—ฐํ‘œ (1945๋…„) ์‚ฌ๊ฑด ์—ฐํ‘œ ํด๋ž€๋“œ ์นจ๊ณต (1939๋…„ 9์›” 1์ผ โ€“ 10์›” 6์ผ) ๊ฐ€์งœ ์ „์Ÿ (1939๋…„ 9์›” 3์ผ โ€“ 1940๋…„ 5์›” 10์ผ) ๋Œ€์„œ์–‘ ์ „ํˆฌ (1939๋…„ 9์›” 3์ผ โ€“ 1945๋…„ 5์›” 8์ผ) ๊ฒจ์šธ ์ „์Ÿ (1939๋…„ 11์›” 30์ผ โ€“ 1940๋…„ 3์›” 13์ผ) ๋ฒ ์ €์œ„๋ถ• ์ž‘์ „ (1940๋…„ 4์›” 9์ผ โ€“ 6์›” 10์ผ) ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ๊ณต๋ฐฉ์ „ (1940๋…„ 5์›” 10์ผ โ€“ 6์›” 25์ผ) ๋‹ค์ด๋„ˆ๋ชจ ์ž‘์ „ (1940๋…„ 5์›” 26์ผ โ€“ 6์›” 4์ผ) ์˜๊ตญ ๋ณธํ†  ํ•ญ๊ณต์ „ (1940๋…„ 7์›” 10์ผ โ€“ 10์›” 31์ผ) ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์นจ๊ณต (1941๋…„ 4์›” 6์ผ - 17์ผ) ๋ฐ”๋ฅด๋ฐ”๋กœ์‚ฌ ์ž‘์ „ (1941๋…„ 6์›” 22์ผ โ€“ 12์›” 5์ผ) ๋ ˆ๋‹Œ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ ํฌ์œ„์ „ (1941๋…„ 9์›” 8์ผ โ€“ 1944๋…„ 1์›” 27์ผ) ๋ชจ์Šคํฌ๋ฐ” ๊ณต๋ฐฉ์ „ (1941๋…„ 10์›” 2์ผ โ€“ 1942๋…„ 1์›” 7์ผ) ์ง„์ฃผ๋งŒ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ (1941๋…„ 12์›” 7์ผ) ๋„ค๋œ๋ž€๋“œ๋ น ๋™์ธ๋„ ์ „์—ญ (1942๋…„ 1์›” 11์ผ - 3์›” 9์ผ) ์‹ฑ๊ฐ€ํฌ๋ฅด ์ „ํˆฌ (1942๋…„ 2์›” 8์ผ โ€“ 15์ผ) ์‚ฐํ˜ธํ•ด ํ•ด์ „ (1942๋…„ 5์›” 4์ผ โ€“ 8์ผ) ๋ฏธ๋“œ์›จ์ด ํ•ด์ „ (1942๋…„ 6์›” 4์ผ โ€“ 7์ผ) ์ œ1์ฐจ ์—˜ ์•Œ๋ผ๋ฉ”์ธ ์ „ํˆฌ (1942๋…„ 7์›” 1์ผ โ€“ 27์ผ) ๊ณผ๋‹ฌ์นด๋‚  ์ „์—ญ (1942๋…„ 8์›” 7์ผ - 1943๋…„ 2์›” 9์ผ) ๋””์—ํ”„ ๊ธฐ์Šต (1942๋…„ 8์›” 19์ผ) ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ ์ „ํˆฌ (1942๋…„ 8์›” 23์ผ โ€“ 1943๋…„ 2์›” 2์ผ) ์ œ2์ฐจ ์—˜ ์•Œ๋ผ๋ฉ”์ธ ์ „ํˆฌ (1942๋…„ 10์›” 23์ผ โ€“ 11์›” 11์ผ) ํšƒ๋ถˆ ์ž‘์ „ (1942๋…„ 11์›” 8์ผ โ€“ 16์ผ) ์ฟ ๋ฅด์Šคํฌ ์ „ํˆฌ (1943๋…„ 7์›” 5์ผ โ€“ 8์›” 23์ผ) ์—ฐํ•ฉ๊ตฐ์˜ ์‹œ์น ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์นจ๊ณต (1943๋…„ 7์›” 9์ผ โ€“ 8์›” 17์ผ) ์—ฐํ•ฉ๊ตฐ์˜ ์ดํƒˆ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์นจ๊ณต (1943๋…„ 9์›” 3์ผ โ€“ 17์ผ) ๋ชฌํ…Œ์นด์‹œ๋…ธ ์ „ํˆฌ (1944๋…„ 1์›” 17์ผ โ€“ 5์›” 18์ผ) ์‹ฑ๊ธ€ ์ž‘์ „ (1944๋…„ 1์›” 22์ผ โ€“ 6์›” 5์ผ) ์ž„ํŒ” ์ „ํˆฌ (1944๋…„ 3์›” 8์ผ - 7์›” 3์ผ) ๋…ธ๋ฅด๋ง๋”” ์ƒ๋ฅ™ (1944๋…„ 6์›” 6์ผ) ๋ฐ”๊ทธ๋ผํ‹ฐ์˜จ ์ž‘์ „ (1944๋…„ 6์›” 22์ผ โ€“ 8์›” 19์ผ) ์šฉ๊ธฐ๋ณ‘ ์ž‘์ „ (1944๋…„ 8์›” 15์ผ โ€“ 9์›” 14์ผ) ๋งˆ์ผ“ ๊ฐ€๋“  ์ž‘์ „ (1944๋…„ 9์›” 17์ผ โ€“ 25์ผ) ํœ˜๋ฅดํŠธ๊ฒ ์ˆฒ ์ „ํˆฌ (1944๋…„ 9์›” 19์ผ โ€“ 12์›” 16์ผ) ๋ฒŒ์ง€ ์ „ํˆฌ (1944๋…„ 12์›” 16์ผ โ€“ 1945๋…„ 1์›” 25์ผ) ๋„์ฟ„ ๋Œ€๊ณต์Šต (1945๋…„ 3์›” 10์ผ) ๋ฒ ๋ฅผ๋ฆฐ ๊ณต๋ฐฉ์ „ (1945๋…„ 4์›” 16์ผ โ€“ 5์›” 2์ผ) ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์ „์Šน ๊ธฐ๋…์ผ (1945๋…„ 5์›” 8์ผ) ํžˆ๋กœ์‹œ๋งˆยท๋‚˜๊ฐ€์‚ฌํ‚ค ์›์žํญํƒ„ ํˆฌํ•˜ (1945๋…„ 8์›” 6์ผ, 8์›” 9์ผ) ๋งŒ์ฃผ ์ „๋žต๊ณต์„ธ์ž‘์ „ (1945๋…„ 8์›” 9์ผ - 8์›” 20์ผ) ๋Œ€์ผ ์ „์Šน ๊ธฐ๋…์ผ (1945๋…„ 8์›” 15์ผ) ์ง€์—ญ๋ณ„ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์ „๊ตฌ ์„œ๋ถ€ ์ „์„  ๋™๋ถ€ ์ „์„  ์ดํƒˆ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์ „์—ญ ์ง€์ค‘ํ•ด ๋ฐ ์ค‘๋™ ์ „๊ตฌ ์„œ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด ์ „์—ญ ๋™์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด ์ „์—ญ ํƒœํ‰์–‘ ์ „์Ÿ ๋™๋‚จ์•„์‹œ์•„ ์ „์—ญ ๋‚˜๋ผ๋ณ„ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค ๊ทธ๋ฆฐ๋ž€๋“œ ๋…์ผ ๋ฃจ๋งˆ๋‹ˆ์•„ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋ฏธ์–€๋งˆ ๋ถˆ๊ฐ€๋ฆฌ์•„ ์˜๊ตญ ์ง€๋ธŒ๋กคํ„ฐ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ดํƒˆ๋ฆฌ์•„ ํ—๊ฐ€๋ฆฌ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „์˜ ํ›ˆ์žฅ ๋…์ผ ์ฒ ์‹ญ์ž ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋ช…์˜ˆ ํ›ˆ์žฅ ์€์„ฑํ›ˆ์žฅ ์ˆ˜ํ›ˆ ๋น„ํ–‰ ์‹ญ์ž์žฅ ์—์–ด ๋ฉ”๋‹ฌ ์†Œ๋ จ ์†Œ๋น„์—ํŠธ ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ์˜์›… ๋ ˆ๋‹Œ ํ›ˆ์žฅ ์ ๊ธฐํ›ˆ์žฅ ์˜๊ตญ ๋น…ํ† ๋ฆฌ์•„ ํ›ˆ์žฅ ๋ฐ”์Šค ํ›ˆ์žฅ ๋Œ€์˜ ์ œ๊ตญ ํ›ˆ์žฅ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „์˜ ์ข…์ „๊ณผ ์—ฌํŒŒ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์˜ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ์ข…์ „ ๋ƒ‰์ „ ์ดˆ๊ฐ•๋Œ€๊ตญ ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outline%20of%20World%20War%20II
Outline of World War II
The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to World War II: World War II, or the Second World War was a global military conflict that was fought between September 1, 1939, and September 2, 1945. The war pitted two major military alliances against each other: the Allies of the United States, Soviet Union, United Kingdom, China and others against the Axis of Germany, Japan, Italy and others. Over 60 million people, the majority of them civilians, were killed, making it the deadliest conflict in human history. The Second World War was known for modern warfare and tactics such as air warfare, strategic bombing, blitzkrieg and the first, and only, use of nuclear weapons in warfare. It is also known for the numerous war crimes committed during its duration, mostly by Axis forces but also by Allied forces, that left tens of millions of civilians dead through genocides, massacres and starvation; such as the Holocaust, Three Alls Policy, Genocide of ethnic Poles, Unit 731, Nanjing massacre, Hunger Plan and the Warsaw Uprising. Causes of World War II World War I Treaty of Versailles Imperialism, expansionism and nationalism Expansionist nationalism Lebensraum Japanese nationalism Events preceding World War II in Europe Nazi Party Adolf Hitler Events preceding World War II in Asia Statism in Shลwa Japan Japanese invasion of Manchuria Xi'an Incident Second Sino-Japanese war Participants in World War II The Axis powers Major Axis powers Germany Japan Italy Other Axis powers Hungary Romania Slovakia Bulgaria Croatia Finland The Allied powers The 'Big Five' major allies Soviet Union United States United Kingdom China France Other major allies Poland Yugoslavia Greece Canada Netherlands Belgium Czechoslovakia India Australia People in World War II Leaders in World War II Axis leaders Adolf Hitler โ€“ Fรผhrer (leader) of Germany Hirohito โ€“ Emperor of Japan Benito Mussolini โ€“ Prime Minister of Italy Allied leaders Joseph Stalin โ€“ Leader of the Soviet Union Franklin D. Roosevelt โ€“ President of the United States Winston Churchill โ€“ Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Chiang Kai-shek โ€“ Leader of China Military forces of World War II List of World War II aces by country List of World War II air aces British 51st (Highland) Infantry Division (World War II) British Army Groups in WWII British Brigades in World War II British Corps in World War II 17th Airborne Division 18th Airborne Division Persecution of homosexuals in Nazi Germany and the Holocaust History of the Jews during World War II List of individuals and groups assisting Jews during the Holocaust American Minority Groups in World War II Hispanic Americans in World War II Timeline of World War II The following list includes some of the largest events in World War II: 1939 August 23: Germany and the Soviet Union sign a non-aggression pact September 1: Germany invades Poland, beginning the war September 3: War is declared on Germany by the United Kingdom and France, the Battle of the Atlantic and Phoney War begins September 17: After the Soviet Union defeats Japan in Mongolia, they invade Poland as well November 30: The Soviet Union invades Finland 1940 April 9: Germany invades Denmark and Norway May 10: Germany invades France and the low countries May 26: British troops evacuate Dunkirk July 10: Germany begins an air campaign against Britain September 7: Germany begins a major bombing campaign against Britain 1941 June 22: Germany invades the Soviet Union September 8: The Siege of Leningrad begins October 2: The Battle of Moscow begins December 7: Japan attacks Pearl Harbor, bringing the United States into the war 1942 February 8: Fall of Singapore May 4: Battle of the Coral Sea June 4: Battle of Midway July 1: First Battle of El Alamein July 17: Battle of Stalingrad August 19: Dieppe Raid October 23: Second Battle of El Alamein November 8: Operation Torch 1943 July 4: Battle of Kursk July 9: Allied invasion of Sicily September 3: Allied invasion of Italy and surrender of Italy 1944 January 17: Battle of Monte Cassino January 22: Landings at Anzio April 19: Operation Ichi-Go June 6: D-day June 22: Destruction of Army Group Center August 1: Warsaw Uprising August 15: Invasion of Southern France September 17: Operation Market Garden September 19: Battle of Hรผrtgen Forest October 23: Battle of Leyte Gulf December 16: Battle of the Bulge 1945 April 16 - May 2: Battle of Berlin May 8: Victory in Europe Day August 6 and 9: Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki August 15: Victory over Japan Day September 2: Surrender of Japan World War II by region Theatres and major campaigns Europe Eastern front Western front Mediterranean and Middle Eastern theatre Italian Campaign Arctic theatre Arctic convoys Asia Second Sino-Japanese War South-East Asian Theatre Pacific Ocean theatre Africa For all theatres in Africa, see: North African campaign West Africa campaign East African campaign Other Home front during World War II By country Europe Albania Belarus Bulgaria Bulgarian resistance movement during World War II Carpathian Ruthenia Estonia Occupation of Estonia by Nazi Germany Finland France Germany Nazi Germany Gibraltar Greece Axis occupation of Greece during World War II Hungary Ireland Italy Italian Campaign Allied invasion of Sicily Allied invasion of Italy Latvia Occupation of Latvia by Nazi Germany Leningrad Oblast Netherlands Soviet Union Spain United Kingdom Yugoslavia Invasion of Yugoslavia Occupation of Baltic republics by Nazi Germany Occupation of Belarus by Nazi Germany Occupation of Denmark German occupation of the Channel Islands Orders, decorations, and medals of Nazi Germany History of Poland (1939โ€“1945) Invasion of Poland Polish areas annexed by Nazi Germany Soviet invasion of Poland Slovak invasion of Poland Occupation of Poland (1939โ€“1945) Administrative division of Polish territories during World War II War crimes in occupied Poland during World War II Polish culture during World War II Romania Asia Burma India Nepal Philippines Vietnam Africa Egypt South Africa Southern Rhodesia Oceania Australia New Zealand Axis naval activity in New Zealand waters The Americas United States Canada Greenland War crimes The Second World War was characterized by many instances of War crimes: Genocide The Holocaust Nazism Nazi Party Nazi eugenics Political views of Adolf Hitler Anti-Jewish legislation in prewar Nazi Germany Diary of Anne Frank Nazi book burnings Nazi ghettos Nazi concentration camps Nazi extermination camps Auschwitz Belzec Cheล‚mno Majdanek Sobibor Treblinka History of Jews in Europe List of major perpetrators of the Holocaust Nazi human experimentation Racial policy of Nazi Germany Other genocides Nazi genocide of ethnic Poles Romani genocide Massacres Three Alls Policy Nanjing massacre Massacres during the Warsaw Uprising Wola massacre Ochota massacre Katyn massacre Mistreatment of civilians Comfort women Unit 731 Rape during the occupation of Germany Population transfer in the 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Daily German action reports Stories WW2 People's Warโ€”A project by the BBC to gather the stories of ordinary people from World War II Documentaries The World at War (1974) is a 26-part Thames Television series that covers most aspects of World War II from many points of view. It includes interviews with many key figures (Karl Dรถnitz, Albert Speer, Anthony Eden etc.) (Imdb link) The Second World War in Colour (1999) is a three episode documentary showing unique footage in color (Imdb link) Battlefield (documentary series) is a television documentary series initially issued in 1994โ€“1995 that explores many of the most important battles fought during the Second World War. The War'' (2007) is 7-part PBS documentary recounting the experiences of a number of individuals from American communities. World War II World War II outline
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์„ฑ๋ น (๊ธฐ๋…๊ต)
๊ธฐ๋…๊ต์˜ ์„ฑ๋ น (Holy Spirit in Christianity)์€ ๊ธฐ๋…๊ต์—์„œ ์‚ผ์œ„์ผ์ฒด ํ•˜๋Š๋‹˜๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ ์ œ 3์œ„์ด์‹œ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์˜ ๊ธฐ๋…๊ต ๊ตํŒŒ ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ์„ฑ๋ น ํ˜น์€ ์„ฑ์‹ ์€ ์‚ผ์œ„ ์ผ์ฒด์˜ 3์œ„ ( hypostasis)์ด๋‹ค : ์‚ผ์œ„ ์ผ์ฒด์˜ ํ•˜๋Š๋‹˜์€ ์„ฑ๋ถ€ ํ•˜๋Š๋‹˜ , ์„ฑ์ž ํ•˜๋Š๋‹˜, ์„ฑ๋ น ํ•˜๋Š๋‹˜์œผ๋กœ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚œ๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ํ•˜๋Š๋‹˜์€ ๊ฐ ๊ฐ์˜ ์ธ๊ฒฉ์œผ๋กœ ๊ณ„์‹ ๋‹ค. ์‚ผ์œ„ ์ผ์ฒด ๊ต๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๊ฑฐ๋ถ€ํ•˜๋Š” ๋น„์‚ผ์œ„์ผ์ฒด๋ก ์ž๋“ค์€ ์ฃผ๋ฅ˜ ๊ธฐ๋…๊ต์™€ ์„ฑ๋ น์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ทธ๋“ค์˜ ์‹ ์•™ ์ด ํฌ๊ฒŒ ๋‹ค๋ฅด๋ฉฐ ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ์œ ๋‹ˆํ…Œ๋ฆฌ์–ธ๋‹ˆ์ฆ˜, ๋น„๋‹ˆํ…Œ๋ฆฌ์•ˆ, ์–‘ํƒœ๋ก  ๋ฐ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์ด๋‹จ๋“ค์ด ์ด ๋ฒ”์ฃผ์— ์†ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ถ€ ๊ธฐ๋…๊ต ์‹ ํ•™์ž๋“ค์€ ์„ฑ๋ น์„ ์œ ๋Œ€์ธ ์„ฑ๊ฒฝ์— ์žˆ๋Š” Ruach Hakodesh (ํ•˜์ฝ”๋ฐ์‰ฌ์˜ ์˜), Elohim (ํ•˜๋Š๋‹˜์˜ ์˜ ), Ruach YHWH (์•ผ์›จ์˜ ์˜), Ruach Hakmah (์ง€ํ˜œ์˜ ์„ฑ๋ น ) ๋“ฑ๊ณผ ๋™์ผํ•œ ๋ถ„์œผ๋กœ ๋ณธ๋‹ค. ์‹ ์•ฝ ์„ฑ๊ฒฝ์—์„œ ๊ทธ๋ถ„์€ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค๋„์˜ ์˜, ์ง„๋ฆฌ์˜ ์˜, ๋ณดํ˜œ์‚ฌ ๋ฐ ์„ฑ๋ น๊ณผ ๋™์ผํ•˜๋‹ค. ์‹ ์•ฝ์€ ์˜ˆ์ˆ˜์˜ ์ง€์ƒ์˜ ์‚ถ๊ณผ ์‚ฌ์—ญ ์ค‘์—์„œ ์„ฑ๋ น๊ณผ ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ๊ธด๋ฐ€ํ•œ ๊ด€๊ณ„์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์ž์„ธํžˆ ์„ค๋ช…ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋งˆํƒœ์™€ ๋ˆ„๊ฐ€์˜ ๋ณต์Œ์„œ์™€ ๋‹ˆ์ผ€์•„ ์‹ ์กฐ๋Š” ์˜ˆ์ˆ˜๋‹˜์€ " ๋งˆ๋ฆฌ์•„๋กœ ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ์„ฑ๋ น์— ์˜ํ•ด์„œ ์ž‰ํƒœ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ง„์ˆ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์„ฑ๋ น์€ ์˜ˆ์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ์นจ๋ก€๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›๋Š” ๋™์•ˆ ๋น„๋‘˜๊ธฐ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ๊ทธ์—๊ฒŒ ๋‚ด๋ ค ์™”์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ตœํ›„์˜ ๋งŒ์ฐฌ์ด ๋๋‚œ ํ›„ ๊ทธ์˜ ์ž‘๋ณ„ ๋‹ดํ™”์—์„œ ์˜ˆ์ˆ˜๋‹˜์€ ๋– ๋‚˜์‹ ํ•œ ํ›„์— ์„ฑ๋ น์„ ์ œ์ž๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ๋ณด๋‚ด๊ฒ ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์•ฝ์† ํ•˜์…จ๋‹ค. ์„ฑ๋ น์€ ๋‹ˆ์ผ€์•„ ์‹ ์กฐ (Nicene Creed)์—์„œ "์ฃผ๋‹˜, ์ƒ๋ช…์˜ ์ฃผ"๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌ๋ฉฐ, ๋งŽ์€ ๊ธฐ๋…๊ต ๊ต๋‹จ์ด ์ง€๋‹ˆ๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ช‡ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ํ•ต์‹ฌ ์‹ ๋…์„ ์š”์•ฝํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐœ์ข…์˜ ์‚ผ์ž ์ผ์ฒด ์„ฑ๋ น์— ์„ฑ๋ น์˜ ์ฐธ์—ฌ๋Š” ๋งˆํƒœ ๋ณต์Œ์˜ ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰ ๋ถ€๋ถ„์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์ œ์ž๋“ค์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์˜ˆ์ˆ˜๋‹˜์˜ ๋ถ€ํ™œ ํ›„ ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰ ๊ฐ€๋ฅด์นจ์—์„œ ๋ถ„๋ช…ํ•˜๋‹ค ( 28:19 ). "๋ชจ๋“  ๋ฏผ์กฑ์„ ์ œ์ž๋กœ ์‚ผ์•„ ์„ฑ๋ถ€์™€ ์„ฑ์ž์˜ ์ด๋ฆ„์œผ๋กœ ์„ธ๋ก€๋ฅผ ์ฃผ๊ณ  " ์™€ " ๋‘์„ธ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์ด ๋‚ด ์ด๋ฆ„์œผ๋กœ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋ชจ์ธ ๊ณณ์— ๋‚˜๋„ ๊ทธ ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ ์žˆ๋‹ค "๋ผ๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1 ์„ธ๊ธฐ ์ด๋ž˜๋กœ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค๋„์ธ๋“ค์€ ์‚ผ์œ„ ์ผ์ฒด ๊ณต์‹ "์•„๋ฒ„์ง€, ์•„๋“ค, ์„ฑ๋ น"์˜ ์ด๋ฆ„์œผ๋กœ ๊ธฐ๋„์™€ ์šฉ์„œ, ์ถ•๋ณต์—์„œ ํ•˜๋Š๋‹˜๊ป˜ ๊ตฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌ๋„ ํ–‰์ „์˜ ์ฑ…์—์„œ ์„ฑ๋ น์˜ ๊ฐ•๋ฆผ์€ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค๋„์˜ ๋ถ€ํ™œ ํ›„ 50 ์ผ์งธ์— ์ผ์–ด๋‚ฌ๊ณ  ํ˜„์žฌ ์˜ค์ˆœ์ ˆ์˜ ์ ˆ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋งž์•„ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค๋„๊ต ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์—์„œ ๊ธฐ๋…๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐ๋…๊ต ์‹ ํ•™์—์„œ ์„ฑ๋ น๋ก ์€ ์„ฑ๋ น์„ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ํ•™๋ฌธ์„ ๋งํ•œ๋‹ค. ์–ด์›ํ•™ ๋ฐ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋ฒ• ์ฝ”์ด๋„ค ํ—ฌ๋ผ์–ด pneรปma ( , pneuma )์€ ์‹ ์•ฝ ์„ฑ์„œ์—์„œ ์•ฝ 385 ๋ฒˆ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜๋ฉฐ ์ผ๋ถ€ ํ•™์ž๋Š” 3-9 ๋ฒˆ ์ฐจ์ด๊ฐ€์žˆ๋‹ค. Pneuma๋Š” 4 ๊ฐœ์˜ ์ •๊ฒฝ ๋ณต์Œ์„œ์—์„œ 105 ๋ฒˆ, ์‚ฌ๋„ ํ–‰์ „์—์„œ 69 ๋ฒˆ, ๋ฐ”์˜ค๋กœ ์ธ ์„œ์‹ ์„œ์—์„œ 161 ๋ฒˆ, ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๊ณณ์—์„œ 50 ๋ฒˆ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚œ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์šฉ๋„๋Š” ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•˜๋‹ค : 133 ๊ฑด์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ, ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์ธ ์˜๋ฏธ์˜ "์ •์‹ "๊ณผ 153 ๊ฐ€์ง€์˜ "์˜์ "์„ ์˜๋ฏธํ•œ๋‹ค. ย  ์•ฝ 93 ๋ฒˆ, ์„ฑ๋ น์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์–ธ๊ธ‰ ๋•Œ๋•Œ๋กœ pneuma๋ผ๋Š” ์ด๋ฆ„์œผ๋กœ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๋•Œ๋กœ๋Š” ๋ช…์‹œ ์ ์œผ๋กœ paรปรปma tรฒ Hagion ( ). (๊ฒฝ์šฐ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ๋‹จ์ˆœํžˆ ๋ฐ”๋žŒ ์ด๋‚˜ ์‚ถ ์„ ์˜๋ฏธํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์€ ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฒŒ ๊ฒŒ์ดํŠธ ์—ญ์—์„œ๋Š” ์˜(Spiritus) ๋ฐ ์„ฑ๋ น()์œผ๋กœ ๋ฒˆ์—ญ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜์–ด ์šฉ์–ด "์„ฑ์‹ "๊ณผ "์„ฑ๋ น"์€ ์™„์ „ํ•œ ๋™์˜์–ด์ด๋‹ค: ํ•˜๋‚˜๊ฐ€์—์„œ ์œ ๋ž˜ ๊ณ ๋Œ€ ์˜์–ด ๊ฐ€์ŠคํŠธ ๊ณผ์—์„œ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋ผํ‹ด์–ด ์™ธ๋ž˜์–ด์˜ . ํ”„๋‰ด๋งˆ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ, ๋‘ ์šฉ์–ด๋Š” ํ˜ธํก, ์• ๋‹ˆ๋ฉ”์ด์…˜ ํž˜ ๊ณผ์— ์˜ํ˜ผ์„ ์–ธ๊ธ‰ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ณ ์ „ ์˜์–ด ์šฉ์–ด๋Š” ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋ชจ๋“  ๊ฒŒ๋ฅด๋งŒ ์–ด (์˜ˆ: ๋…์ผ ๊ฐ€์ด์ŠคํŠธ ๋น„๊ต)์™€ ๋น„์Šทํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ข€๋” ์˜ค๋ž˜๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ํ‚น ์ œ์ž„์Šค ๋ฐ”์ด๋ธ”(King James Bible)์€ ์ƒํ˜ธ ๊ตํ™˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ 20์„ธ๊ธฐ์˜ ์„ฑ๊ฒฝ ๋ฒˆ์—ญ๋“ค์€ "์„ฑ๋ น"์„ ์••๋„์ ์œผ๋กœ ์„ ํ˜ธํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์ธ ์˜์–ด ์šฉ์–ด "์œ ๋ น"์€ ์ ์  ๋” ์ฃฝ์€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์˜ ์ •์‹ ๋งŒ์„ ์–ธ๊ธ‰ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋ฆ„ ์œ ๋Œ€์ธ ์„ฑ๊ฒฝ ์ถœ์ฒ˜ย : ื•ึฐืจึฃื•ึผื—ึท ืงึธื“ึฐืฉืึ‘ื•ึน (Ruah qadesow) - ์„ฑ๋ น ( ์ด์‚ฌ์•ผ 63:10) ื•ึฐืจึฃื•ึผื—ึท ืงึธึื“ึฐืฉึฐืืšึธึ— (Ruah qadseแธตa) - ์„ฑ๋ น ( ์‹œํŽธ 51:11) ื•ึฐืจึฃื•ึผื—ึท ืึฑืœึนื”ึดึ”ื™ื (Ruah Elohim) - ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ์˜ ( ์ฐฝ์„ธ 1 : 2) ื ึดืฉึฐืืžึทืช-ืจึจื•ึผื—ึท ื—ึทื™ึดึผึœื™ื (Nismat Ruah hayyim) - ์ƒ๋ช…์˜ ์ƒ๋ช…์˜ ์ˆจ๊ฒฐ (์ฐฝ์„ธ 7:22) ืจึฃื•ึผื—ึท ื™ึฐื”ื•ึธึ‘ื” (Ruah YHWH) - ์˜์˜ ์˜ (์ด์‚ฌ์•ผ 11 : 2) ์ง€ํ˜œ์˜ ์˜ (์ด์‚ฌ์•ผ 11 : 2) ์ง€ํ˜œ์˜ ์˜ (๋ˆ… 11 : 2) ืจึคื•ึผื—ึท ืขึตืฆึธื”ึ™ ื•ึผื’ึฐื‘ื•ึผืจึธึ”ื” (Ruah esah ugeburah) - ๋ณ€ํ˜ธ์˜ ์ •์‹ ๊ณผ ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ (์ด์‚ฌ์•ผ 11 : 2) ์ง€์‹์˜ ์ •์‹ ๊ณผ ์•ผ์›จ์˜ ๋‘๋ ค์›€ (์ด์‚ฌ์•ผ 11 : 2) ์‹ ์•ฝ ์„ฑ์„œ ฯ€ฮฝฮตฯฮผฮฑฯ„ฮฟฯ‚ แผฮณฮฏฮฟฯ… (Pneumatos Hagiou) - ์„ฑ๋ น (Mt 1,18) ฯ€ฮฝฮตฯฮผฮฑฯ„ฮน ฮธฮตฮฟแฟฆ (Pneumati Theou) - ์‹ ์˜ ์ •์‹  (Mt 12,28) แฝ ฯ€ฮฑฯฮฌฮบฮปฮทฯ„ฮฟฯ‚ (Ho Paraclฤ“tos) - The Intercesor (Jn 16,7) ฯ€ฮฝฮตฮผฮผฮฑ ฯ„แฟ†ฯ‚ แผ€ฮปฮทฮธฮตฮฏฮฑฯ‚ (Pneuma tฤ“s Alฤ“theias) - ์ง„๋ฆฌ์˜ ์˜ (Jn 16, 13) ฮ ฮฝฮตแฟฆฮผฮฑ ฮงฯฮนฯƒฯ„ฮฟแฟฆ (Pneuma Christou) - ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค๋„์˜ ์˜ (1 Pt, 11) ฯ€ฮฝฮตฮผฮผฮฑ (Pneuma) - ์„ฑ๋ น(Jn 3,8) ฮ ฮฝฮตฯฮผฮฑฯ„ฮฟฯ‚ (Pneumatos) - ์„ฑ๋ น(Jn 3,8) ์„ฑ๋ น์˜ ์ˆญ๋ฐฐ ์ด์Šฌ๋žŒ์˜ ์„ฑ๋ น ์œ ๋Œ€๊ต์˜ ์„ฑ๋ น ์„ฑ๋ น์˜ ์ค‘๋ณด ๊ธฐ์  ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‹˜์˜ ์ผ๊ณฑ ์˜ ์ฐธ๊ณ  ๋ฌธํ—Œ ์ถœ์ฒ˜ Charles Williams, The descent of the Dove: a short history of the Holy Spirit in the church (1950) Faber, London Catechism of the Catholic Church: CHAPTER THREE. I BELIEVE IN THE HOLY SPIRIT (nos. 683โ€“686); ARTICLE 8. "I BELIEVE IN THE HOLY SPIRIT" (nos. 687โ€“747) ์‚ผ์ƒ์‹  ๊ธฐ๋…๊ต์˜ ์‹  ๊ธฐ๋…๊ต ์šฉ์–ด ์„ฑ๋ น ์‚ผ์œ„์ผ์ฒด ์„ฑ๋ น๋ก 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy%20Spirit%20in%20Christianity
Holy Spirit in Christianity
For the majority of Christian denominations, the Holy Spirit, or Holy Ghost, is believed to be the third person of the Trinity, a triune God manifested as God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit, each being God. Nontrinitarian Christians, who reject the doctrine of the Trinity, differ significantly from mainstream Christianity in their beliefs about the Holy Spirit. In Christian theology, pneumatology is the study of the Holy Spirit. Due to Christianity's historical relationship with Judaism, theologians often identify the Holy Spirit with the concept of the Ruach Hakodesh in Jewish scripture, on the theory that Jesus was expanding upon these Jewish concepts. Similar names, and ideas, include the Ruach Elohim (Spirit of God), Ruach YHWH (Spirit of Yahweh), and the Ruach Hakodesh (Holy Spirit). In the New Testament it is identified with the Spirit of Christ, the Spirit of Truth, the Paraclete and the Holy Spirit. The New Testament details a close relationship between the Holy Spirit and Jesus during his earthly life and ministry. The Gospels of Matthew and Luke and the Nicene Creed state that Jesus was "conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of the Virgin Mary". The Holy Spirit descended on Jesus like a dove during his baptism, and in his Farewell Discourse after the Last Supper Jesus promised to send the Holy Spirit to his disciples after his departure. The Holy Spirit is referred to as "the Lord, the Giver of Life" in the Nicene Creed, which summarises several key beliefs held by many Christian denominations. The participation of the Holy Spirit in the tripartite nature of conversion is apparent in Jesus' final post-resurrection instruction to his disciples at the end of the Gospel of Matthew, "Make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them into the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit." Since the first century, Christians have also called upon God with the trinitarian formula "Father, Son and Holy Spirit" in prayer, absolution and benediction. In the book of the Acts of the Apostles the arrival of the Holy Spirit happens fifty days after the resurrection of the Christ, and is celebrated in Christendom with the feast of Pentecost. Etymology and usage The Koine Greek word pneรปma (, pneuma) is found around 385 times in the New Testament, with some scholars differing by three to nine occurrences. Pneuma appears 105 times in the four canonical gospels, 69 times in the Acts of the Apostles, 161 times in the Pauline epistles, and 50 times elsewhere. These usages vary: in 133 cases it refers to "spirit" and in 153 cases to "spiritual". Around 93 times, the reference is to the Holy Spirit, sometimes under the name pneuma and sometimes explicitly as the pneรปma tรฒ Hagion (). (In a few cases it is also simply used generically to mean wind or life.) It was generally translated into the Vulgate as Spiritus and . The English terms "Holy Ghost" and "Holy Spirit" are complete synonyms: one derives from the Old English gast and the other from the Latin loanword . Like pneuma, they both refer to the breath, to its animating power, and to the soul. The Old English term is shared by all other Germanic languages (compare, e.g., the German Geist) and it is older; the King James Bible typically uses "Holy Ghost". Beginning in the 20th century, translations overwhelmingly prefer "Holy Spirit", partly because the general English term "ghost" has increasingly come to refer only to the spirit of a dead person. Names Hebrew Bible Source: ื•ึฐืจึฃื•ึผื—ึท ืงึธื“ึฐืฉืึ‘ื•ึน (rรปaแธฅ qฤdษ™ลกรด) โ€“ His Holy Spirit (Isaiah 63:10) ื•ึฐืจึฃื•ึผื—ึท ืงึธึื“ึฐืฉึฐืืšึธึ— (rรปaแธฅ qฤdษ™ลกษ™kฤ) โ€“ Your Holy Spirit (Psalm 51:11) ื•ึฐืจึฃื•ึผื—ึท ืึฑืœึนื”ึดึ”ื™ื (rรปaแธฅ ฤ•lลhรฎm) โ€“ Spirit of God (Genesis 1:2) ื ึดืฉึฐืืžึทืชึพืจึจื•ึผื—ึท ื—ึทื™ึดึผึœื™ื (niลกษ™mat-rรปaแธฅ แธฅayรฎm) โ€“ The Breath of the Spirit of Life (Genesis 7:22) ืจึฃื•ึผื—ึท ื™ึฐื”ื•ึธึ‘ื” (rรปaแธฅ YHWH) โ€“ Spirit of YHWH (Isaiah 11:2) ืจึงื•ึผื—ึท ื—ึธื›ึฐืžึธึฃื” ื•ึผื‘ึดื™ื ึธึ—ื” (rรปaแธฅ แธฅฤkษ™mรข รปbรฎnรข) โ€“ Spirit of Wisdom and Understanding (Isaiah 11:2) ืจึคื•ึผื—ึท ืขึตืฆึธื”ึ™ ื•ึผื’ึฐื‘ื•ึผืจึธึ”ื” (rรปaแธฅ สฟฤ“แนฃรข รปgษ™bรปra) โ€“ Spirit of Counsel and Might (Isaiah 11:2) ืจึฅื•ึผื—ึท ื“ึทึผึ–ืขึทืช ื•ึฐื™ึดืจึฐืึทึฅืช ื™ึฐื”ื•ึธึฝื” (rรปaแธฅ daสฟat wษ™yฤซrษ™สพat YHWH) โ€“ Spirit of Knowledge and Fear of YHWH (Isaiah 11:2) New Testament ฯ€ฮฝฮตฯฮผฮฑฯ„ฮฟฯ‚ แผฮณฮฏฮฟฯ… (Pneumatos Hagiou) โ€“ Holy Spirit (Matthew 1:18) ฯ€ฮฝฮตฯฮผฮฑฯ„ฮน ฮธฮตฮฟแฟฆ (Pneumati Theou) โ€“ Spirit of God (Matthew 12:28) แฝ ฯ€ฮฑฯฮฌฮบฮปฮทฯ„ฮฟฯ‚ (Ho Paraclฤ“tos) โ€“ The Comforter, cf. Paraclete John 14:26 (John 16:7) ฯ€ฮฝฮตแฟฆฮผฮฑ ฯ„แฟ†ฯ‚ แผ€ฮปฮทฮธฮตฮฏฮฑฯ‚ (Pneuma tฤ“s Alฤ“theias) โ€“ Spirit of Truth (John 16:13) ฮ ฮฝฮตแฟฆฮผฮฑ ฮงฯฮนฯƒฯ„ฮฟแฟฆ (Pneuma Christou) โ€“ Spirit of Christ (1 Peter 1:11) Depending on context: ฯ€ฮฝฮตแฟฆฮผฮฑ (Pneuma) โ€“ Spirit (John 3:8) ฮ ฮฝฮตฯฮผฮฑฯ„ฮฟฯ‚ (Pneumatos) โ€“ Spirit (John 3:8) Biblical portrayal Old Testament What the Hebrew Bible calls "Spirit of God" and "Spirit of Elohim" is called in the Talmud and Midrash "Holy Spirit" (ruacแธฅ ha-kodesh). Although the expression "Holy Spirit" occurs in Ps. 51:11 and in Isa. 63:10โ€“11, it had not yet acquired quite the same meaning which was attached to it in rabbinical literature: in the latter it is equivalent to the expression "Spirit of the Lord". In Gen.1:2 God's spirit hovered over the form of lifeless matter, thereby making the Creation possible. Although the ruach ha-kodesh may be named instead of God, it was conceived of as being something distinct; and, like everything earthly that comes from heaven, the ruach ha-kodesh is composed of light and fire. The most characteristic sign of the presence of the ruach ha-kodesh is the gift of prophecy. The use of the word "ruach" (Hebrew: "breath", or "wind") in the phrase ruach ha-kodesh seems to suggest that Judaic authorities believed the Holy Spirit was a kind of communication medium like the wind. The spirit talks sometimes with a masculine and sometimes with a feminine voice; the word ruacแธฅ is both masculine and feminine. New Testament The term Holy Spirit appears at least 90 times in the New Testament. The sacredness of the Holy Spirit to Christians is affirmed in all three Synoptic Gospels, which proclaim that blasphemy against the Holy Spirit is the unforgivable sin. The participation of the Holy Spirit in the Trinity is suggested in Jesus' final post-Resurrection instruction to his disciples at the end of the Gospel of Matthew (28:19): "Go ye therefore, and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them into the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit". Synoptic Gospels The Holy Spirit is mentioned by all three authors of the synoptic Gospels. Most of the references are by the author of the Gospel of Luke; this emphasis is continued by the same author in the Book of Acts. The Holy Spirit does not simply appear for the first time at Pentecost after the resurrection of Jesus, but is present in Luke (in chapters 1 and 2) prior to the birth of Jesus. In Luke 1:15, John the Baptist was said to be "filled with the Holy Spirit" prior to his birth, and the Holy Spirit came upon the Virgin Mary in Luke 1:35. Later, in Luke 3:16, John the Baptist stated that Jesus baptized not with water but with the Holy Spirit; and the Holy Spirit descended on Jesus during his baptism in the Jordan River. In Luke 11:13, Jesus provided assurances that God the Father would "give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him". Mark 13:11 specifically refers to the power of the Holy Spirit to act and speak through the disciples of Jesus in time of need: "Be not anxious beforehand what ye shall speak: but whatsoever shall be given you in that hour, that speak ye; for it is not ye that speak, but the Holy Spirit." Matthew 10:20 refers to the same act of speaking through the disciples, but uses the term "Spirit of your Father". Acts of the Apostles The Acts of the Apostles has sometimes been called the "Book of the Holy Spirit" or the "Acts of the Holy Spirit". Of the seventy or so occurrences of the word Pneuma in Acts, fifty-five refer to the Holy Spirit. From the start, in Acts 1:2, the reader is reminded that the ministry of Jesus, while he was on earth, was carried out through the power of the Holy Spirit and that the "acts of the apostles" continue the acts of Jesus and are also facilitated by the Holy Spirit. Acts presents the Holy Spirit as the "life principle" of the early Church and provides five separate and dramatic instances of its outpouring on believers in Acts 2:1โ€“4, 4:28โ€“31, 8:15โ€“17, 10:44, and 19:6. References to the Holy Spirit appear throughout Acts, for example Acts 1:5 and 8 stating towards the beginning, "For John indeed baptized with water; but ye shall be baptized in the Holy Spirit.ย ...Ye shall receive power, when the Holy Spirit is come upon you", referring to the fulfillment of the prophecy of John the Baptist in Luke 3:16, "he shall baptize you in the Holy Spirit". Johannine literature Three separate terms, namely Holy Spirit, Spirit of Truth and Paraclete are used in the Johannine writings. The "Spirit of Truth" is used in John 14:17, 15:26, and 16:13. The First Epistle of John then contrasts this with the "spirit of error" in 1 John 4:6. 1 John 4:1โ€“6 provides the separation between spirits "that confesseth that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is of God" and those who in error refuse it โ€“ an indication of their being evil spirits. In John 14:26, Jesus states: "But the Comforter, [even] the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, he shall teach you all things". The identity of the "Comforter" has been the subject of debate among theologians, who have proposed multiple theories on the matter. Pauline epistles The Holy Spirit plays a key role in the Pauline epistles; and the Apostle Paul's pneumatology is closely connected to his theology and Christology, to the point of being almost inseparable from them. The First Epistle to the Thessalonians, which was likely the first of Paul's letters, introduces a characterization of the Holy Spirit in 1 Thessalonians 1:6 and 1 Thessalonians 4:8 which is found throughout his epistles. In 1 Thessalonians 1:6 Paul refers to the imitation of Christ (and himself) and states: "And ye became imitators of us, and of the Lord, having received the word in much affliction, with joy of the Holy Spirit", whose source is identified in 1 Thessalonians 4:8 as "God, who giveth his Holy Spirit unto you". These two themes of receiving the Spirit "like Christ" and God being the source of the Spirit persist in Pauline letters as the characterization of the relationship of Christians with God. For Paul the imitation of Christ involves readiness to be shaped by the Holy Spirit, as in Romans 8:4 and 8:11: "But if the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwelleth in you, he that raised up Christ Jesus from the dead shall give life also to your mortal bodies through his Spirit that dwelleth in you." The First Epistle to the Thessalonians also refers to the power of the Holy Spirit in 1 Thessalonians 1:5, a theme also found in other Pauline letters. In the Apocrypha The view of the Holy Spirit as responsible for Mary's pregnancy, found in the Synoptic Gospels, is different from that found in the apocryphal Gospel of the Hebrews, adopted as canonical by the 4th century Nazarenes, in which Jesus speaks of the Holy Spirit as his mother and thus as female. Some thought femininity incompatible with the idea that Jesus was conceived by the Holy Spirit; according to the apocryphal Gospel of Philip, for example, Some say, "Mary conceived by the Holy Spirit." They are in error. They do not know what they are saying. When did a woman ever conceive by a woman? Jesus and the Holy Spirit The New Testament details a close relationship between the Holy Spirit and Jesus during his earthly life and ministry. The Apostles' Creed echoes the statements in the Gospels of Luke and Matthew, stating that Jesus was conceived by the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary. Specific New Testament references to the interaction of Jesus and the Holy Spirit during his earthly life, and the enabling power of the Holy Spirit during his ministry include: "Spirit without measure" having been given to Jesus in John 3:34, referring to the word spoken by Jesus (Rhema) being the words of God. Baptism of Jesus, with the Holy Spirit descending on him as a dove in Matthew 3:13โ€“17, Mark 1:9โ€“11 and Luke 3:21โ€“23. Temptation of Jesus, in Matthew 4:1 the Holy Spirit led Jesus to the desert to be tempted. The Spirit casting out demons in Exorcising the blind and mute man miracle. Rejoice the Spirit in Luke 10:21 where seventy disciples are sent out by Jesus. Acts 1:2 states that until his death and resurrection, Jesus "had given commandment through the Holy Spirit unto the apostles". Referring to the sacrifice of Jesus to be crucified out of obedience to the father, Hebrews 9:14 states that Jesus "through the eternal Spirit offered himself without blemish unto God". In his Farewell Discourse to his disciples, Jesus promised that he would "send the Holy Spirit" to them after his departure, in John 15:26 stating: "whom I will send unto you from the Father, [even] the Spirit of truthย ... shall bear witness of me". Mainstream doctrines The theology of spirits is called pneumatology. The Holy Spirit is referred to as the Lord and Giver of Life in the Nicene creed. He is the Creator Spirit, present before the creation of the universe and through his power everything was made in Jesus Christ, by God the Father. Christian hymns such as "Veni Creator Spiritus" ("Come, Creator Spirit") reflect this belief. In early Christianity, the concept of salvation was closely related to the invocation of the "Father, Son and Holy Spirit", and since the first century, Christians have called upon God with the name "Father, Son and Holy Spirit" in prayer, baptism, communion, exorcism, hymn-singing, preaching, confession, absolution and benediction. This is reflected in the saying: "Before there was a 'doctrine' of the Trinity, Christian prayer invoked the Holy Trinity". For the majority of Christian denominations, the Holy Spirit is the third Person of the Holy Trinity โ€“ Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, and is Almighty God. As such he is personal and also fully God, co-equal and co-eternal with God the Father and Son of God. He is different from the Father and the Son in that he proceeds from the Father (and, according to Roman Catholics, Old Catholics, Lutherans, Anglicans, and other Protestants, from the Father and the Son) as described in the Nicene Creed. The Triune God is thus manifested as three Persons (Greek hypostases), in One Divine Being (Greek: Ousia), called the Godhead (from Old English: Godhood), the Divine Essence of God. In the New Testament, by the power of the Holy Spirit Jesus was conceived in the womb of the Virgin Mary, while maintaining her virginity. The Holy Spirit descended over Jesus in a corporeal way, as a dove, at the time of his baptism, and a voice from Heaven was heard: "This is my beloved Son with whom I am well pleased." He is the Sanctifier, the Helper, Comforter, the Giver of graces, he who leads persons to the Father and the Son. The Holy Spirit is credited with inspiring believers and allowing for them to interpret all the sacred scripture, and leads prophets both in Old Testament and New Testament. Christians receive the Fruits of the Holy Spirit by means of his mercy and grace. God the Holy Spirit The Christian doctrine of the Trinity includes the concept of God the Holy Spirit, along with God the Son and God the Father. Theologian Vladimir Lossky has argued that while, in the act of the Incarnation, God the Son became manifest as the Son of God, the same did not take place for God the Holy Spirit which remained unrevealed. Yet, as in 1 Corinthians 6:19, God the Spirit continues to dwell in the faithful. In a similar way, the Latin treatise De Trinitate (On the Trinity) of Augustine of Hippo affirms: "For as the Father is God, and the Son is God, and the Holy Spirit is God, which no one doubts to be said in respect to substance, yet we do not say that the very Supreme Trinity itself is three Gods, but one God. ...But position, and condition, and places, and times, are not said to be in God properly, but metaphorically and through similitudes. ...And as respects action (or making), perhaps it may be said most truly of God alone, for God alone makes and Himself is not made. Nor is He liable to passions as far as belongs to that substance whereby He is God. ...So the Father is omnipotent, the Son omnipotent, and the Holy Spirit is omnipotent; yet not three omnipotents, but one omnipotent. ...Whatever, therefore, is spoken of God in respect to Himself, is both spoken singly of each Person, that is, of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit; and together of the Trinity itself, not plurally but in the singular." In Christian theology the Holy Spirit is believed to perform specific divine functions in the life of the Christian or the church. The action of the Holy Spirit is seen as an essential part of the bringing of the person to the Christian faith. The new believer is "born again of the Spirit". The Holy Spirit enables Christian life by dwelling in the individual believers and enables them to live a righteous and faithful life. The Holy Spirit also acts as comforter or Paraclete, one who intercedes, or supports or acts as an advocate, particularly in times of trial. And he acts to convince the unredeemed person both of the sinfulness of their actions and of their moral standing as sinners before God. Another faculty of the Holy Spirit is the inspiration and interpretation of scripture. The Holy Spirit both inspires the writing of the scriptures and interprets them to the Christian and the church. Procession of the Holy Spirit In John 15:26, Jesus says of the Holy Spirit: "But when the Helper comes, whom I will send to you from the Father, the Spirit of truth, who proceeds from the Father, he will bear witness about me." In 325, the First Council of Nicaea, being the first ecumenical council, ended its Creed with the words "and in the Holy Spirit". In 381, the First Council of Constantinople, being the second ecumenical council, expanded the Creed and stated that Holy Spirit "proceeds from the Father" (แผฮบ ฯ„ฮฟแฟฆ ฮ ฮฑฯ„ฯแฝธฯ‚ แผฮบฯ€ฮฟฯฮตฯ…ฯŒฮผฮตฮฝฮฟฮฝ). This phrase was based on John 15:26 (แฝƒ ฯ€ฮฑฯแฝฐ ฯ„ฮฟแฟฆ ฯ€ฮฑฯ„ฯแฝธฯ‚ แผฮบฯ€ฮฟฯฮตฯฮตฯ„ฮฑฮน). In 451, the Council of Chalcedon, being the fourth ecumenical council, affirmed the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed. During the same time, the question of procession of the Holy Spirit was addressed by various Christian theologians, expressing diverse views and using different terminology, thus initiating the debate that became focused on the Filioque clause. In 589, the Third Council of Toledo in its third canon officially accepted the doctrine of the procession of the Holy Spirit from the Father and the Son (a Patre et Filio procedere). During the next few centuries, two distinctive schools of thought were gradually shaped, Eastern and Western. Eastern theologians were teaching that Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father only (notion referred as monoprocessionism), while Western theologians were teaching that Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son (notion referred as filioquism). Debates and controversies between two sides became a significant point of difference within Christian pneumatology, inclusive of their historical role in setting the stage for the Great Schism of 1054. Fruit and Gifts of the Spirit The fruit of the Holy Spirit consists of "permanent dispositions" (in this similar to the permanent character of the sacraments), virtuous characteristics engendered in the Christian by the action of the Holy Spirit. Galatians 5:22โ€“23 names nine aspects and states: But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, long-suffering, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, meekness, self-control; against such there is no law. In the Epistle to the Galatians these nine characteristics are in contrast to the "works of the flesh" and highlight the positive manifestations of the work of the Holy Spirit in believers. The "gifts of the Holy Spirit" are distinct from the Fruit of the Spirit, and consist of specific abilities granted to the individual Christian. They are frequently known by the Greek word for gift, charisma, in English charism, from which the term charismatic derives. There is no generally agreed upon exhaustive list of the gifts, and various Christian denominations use different lists, often drawing upon 1 Corinthians, Romans 12 and Ephesians 4. Pentecostal denominations and the charismatic movement teach that the absence of the supernatural gifts was due to the neglect of the Holy Spirit and his work by the major denominations. Believers in the relevance of the supernatural gifts sometimes speak of a Baptism with the Holy Spirit or Filling with the Holy Spirit which the Christian needs to experience in order to receive those gifts. However, many Christian denominations hold that the Baptism with the Holy Spirit is identical with conversion, and that all Christians are by definition baptized in the Holy Spirit. The "seven gifts of the Holy Spirit" are poured out on a believer at baptism, and are traditionally derived from Isaiah 11:1โ€“2, although the New Testament does not refer to Isaiah 11:1โ€“2 regarding these gifts. These 7 gifts are: wisdom, understanding, counsel, fortitude (strength), knowledge, piety and fear of the Lord. This is the view of the Catholic Church and many other mainstream Christian groups. Denominational variations Christian denominations have doctrinal variations in their beliefs regarding the Holy Spirit. A well-known example is the Filioque controversy regarding the Holy Spirit โ€“ one of the key differences between the teachings of the main Western Churches and various Eastern Christian denominations (Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, Church of the East). The Filioque debate centers around whether the Nicene Creed should state that the Spirit "proceeds from the Father" and then have a stop, as the creed was initially adopted in Greek (and followed thereafter by the Eastern Church), or should say "from the Father and the Son" as was later adopted in Latin and followed by the Western Church, filioque being "and from the Son" in Latin. Towards the end of the 20th century, discussions took place about the removal of Filioque in the Nicene Creed from Anglican prayer books along the lines of the Eastern Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox approach, but these still have not reached a state of final implementation. The majority of mainstream Protestantism hold similar views on the theology of the Holy Spirit as the Roman Catholic Church, but there are significant differences in belief between Pentecostalism and the rest of Protestantism. Pentecostalism has a focus on "Baptism with the Spirit", relying on Acts 1:5 which refers to "now you will baptize with the Holy Spirit". The more recent Charismatic movements have a focus on the "gifts of the Spirit" (such as healing, prophecy, etc.) and rely on 1 Corinthians 12 as a scriptural basis, but often differ from Pentecostal movements. Non-trinitarian views about the Holy Spirit differ significantly from mainstream Christian doctrine. Catholicism The Holy Spirit has been a topic in at least two papal encyclicals: Divinum illud munus โ€“ Pope Leo XIII (1897) Dominum et vivificantem โ€“ Pope John Paul II (1986) The topic of the Holy Spirit is discussed extensively in the Catechism of the Catholic Church as "I believe in the Holy Spirit" in paragraphs 683 through 747. Jehovah's Witnesses and Christadelphians Jehovah's Witnesses and Christadelphians view the Holy Spirit not as an actual person separate from God the Father, but as God's eternal "energy" or "active force", that he uses to accomplish his will in creation and redemption. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) believe that the Holy Ghost is the third member of the Godhead, and is a personage of spirit, without a body of flesh and bones. Unlike in many other denominations, the term "Holy Ghost" remains much more common than "Holy Spirit" in LDS contexts. Nevertheless, the Holy Ghost is sometimes referred to as the Spirit, the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of God, the Spirit of the Lord, or the Comforter. Latter-day Saints believe in a kind of social trinitarianism and subordinationism, meaning that the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost are understood as being unified in will and purpose, but not in substance. The Holy Ghost is believed to be subordinate to the Father and the Son and operates under their direction. The Holy Ghost, like all intelligent beings, is believed to be fundamentally eternal, uncreated, and self-existent. The LDS Church teaches that the influence of the Holy Ghost can be received before baptism, but the gift, or constant companionship, of the Holy Ghostwhich comes by the laying-on of hands by a properly ordained priesthood holder with a line of authority traced back to Christ through Peteris obtained only after baptism when a person is confirmed. Joseph Smith, the founder of the church, taught, "You might as well baptize a bag of sand as a man," he said, "if not done in view of the remission of sins and getting of the Holy Ghost. Baptism by water is but half a baptism, and is good for nothing without the other halfโ€Šthat is, the baptism of the Holy Ghost". Symbolism and art Symbolism The Holy Spirit is frequently referred to by metaphor and symbol, both doctrinally and biblically. Theologically speaking these symbols are a key to understanding of the Holy Spirit and his actions, and are not mere artistic representations. Water โ€“ signifies the Holy Spirit's action in Baptism, such that in the manner that "by one Spirit [believers] were all baptized", so they are "made to drink of one Spirit". Thus the Spirit is also personally the living water welling up from Christ crucified as its source and welling up in Christians to eternal life. The Catechism of the Catholic Church, item 1137, considers the Water of Life reference in the Book of Revelation "one of most beautiful symbols of the Holy Spirit". Anointing โ€“ The symbolism of blessing with oil also signifies the Holy Spirit, to the point of becoming a synonym for the Holy Spirit. The coming of the Spirit is referred to as his "anointing". In some denominations anointing is practiced in Confirmation; ("chrismation" in the Eastern Churches). Its full force can be grasped only in relation to the primary anointing accomplished by the Holy Spirit, that of Jesus. The title "Christ" (in Hebrew, messiah) means the one "anointed" by God's Spirit. Fire โ€“ symbolizes the transforming energy of the Holy Spirit's actions. In the form of tongues "as of fire", the Holy Spirit rested on the disciples on the morning of Pentecost. Cloud and light โ€“ The Spirit comes upon the Virgin Mary and "overshadows" her, so that she might conceive and give birth to Jesus. On the mountain of transfiguration, the Spirit in the "cloud came and overshadowed" Jesus, Moses and Elijah, Peter, James and John, and "a voice came out of the cloud, saying, 'This is my Son, my Chosen; listen to him!'" The dove โ€“ When Christ comes up from the water of his baptism, the Holy Spirit, in the form of a dove, comes down upon him and remains with him. Wind โ€“ The Spirit is likened to the "wind that blows where it will," and described as "a sound from heaven like the rush of a mighty wind." Art, literature and architecture Art The Holy Spirit has been represented in Christian art both in the Eastern and Western Churches using a variety of depictions. The depictions have ranged from nearly identical figures that represent the three persons of the Holy Trinity, to a dove, to a flame. The Holy Spirit is often depicted as a dove, based on the account of the Holy Spirit descending on Jesus like a dove when he was baptized in the Jordan. In many paintings of the Annunciation, the Holy Spirit is shown in the form of a dove, coming down towards Mary on beams of light, as the Archangel Gabriel announces Jesus Christ's coming to Mary. A dove may also be seen at the ear of Gregory the Great โ€“ as recorded by his secretary โ€“ or other church father authors, dictating their works to them. The dove also parallels the one that brought the olive branch to Noah after the deluge, as a symbol of peace. The book of Acts describes the Holy Spirit descending on the apostles at Pentecost in the form of a wind and tongues of fire resting over the apostles' heads. Based on the imagery in that account, the Holy Spirit is sometimes symbolized by a flame of fire. Ancient Celtic Christians depicted the Holy Spirit as a goose called Ah Geadh-Glas, which means wild goose. A goose was chosen rather than the traditional dove because geese were perceived as more free than their dove counterparts. Literature The Holy Spirit has traditionally been a subject matter of strictly theological works focused on proving the central doctrines concerning the Holy Spirit, often as a response to arguments from religious groups who deny these foundational Biblical truths. In recent years, however, the Holy Spirit has made an entrance into the world of (Christian) literature through books such as The Shack published in 2007. Visual arts Holy Spirit cathedrals See also Cult of the Holy Spirit Gender of the Holy Spirit Holy Spirit in Islam Holy Spirit in Judaism Intercession of the Spirit Miracle Seven Spirits of God Chaplet in Honour of the Holy Spirit References Sources Further reading Charles Williams, The descent of the Dove: a short history of the Holy Spirit in the church (1950) Faber, London Swete, Henry Barclay (1912). The Holy Spirit in the Ancient Church: a Study of Christian Teaching in the Age of the Fathers. . External links Catechism of the Catholic Church: Chapter Three. I Believe in the Holy Spirit (nos. 683โ€“686); Article 8. "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" (nos. 687โ€“747) Christianity Deities and spirits Christian terminology Creator gods Wisdom gods God in Christianity Pneumatology
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์Šคํƒ€์‹ญ (๋กœ์ผ“)
์ŠคํŽ˜์ด์ŠคX ์Šคํƒ€์‰ฝ ๋˜๋Š” ์Šคํƒ€์‰ฝ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ(SpaceX Starship ๋˜๋Š” SLS, Starship Launch System)์€ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ด์ŠคX๊ฐ€ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ์ค‘์ธ ์žฌํ™œ์šฉ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ์šฐ์ฃผ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ์ฒด์ด๋‹ค. ํ•œ๋•Œ BFR(Big Falcon Rocket), ๋˜๋Š” ITS(Interplanetary transport system)๋ผ๋Š” ์ด๋ฆ„์œผ๋กœ ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌ๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์—ญ์‚ฌ ์Šคํƒ€์‰ฝ์€ 100ํ†ค ์ด์ƒ์˜ ์ธ๊ณต์œ„์„ฑ์„ ์ง€๊ตฌ๊ถค๋„์— ๋ฐœ์‚ฌํ•œ๋‹ค. ์šฐ์ฃผ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ์ฒด๋Š” ์†Œํ˜•(SLV), ์ค‘ํ˜•(MLV), ๋Œ€ํ˜•(HLLV), ์ดˆ๋Œ€ํ˜•(SHLLV)์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. 2018๋…„ ํ•œ๊ตญ์ด ์ตœ์ดˆ๋ฐœ์‚ฌํ•œ ๋ˆ„๋ฆฌํ˜ธ ์‹œํ—˜๋ฐœ์‚ฌ์ฒด๋Š” ์†Œํ˜• ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ์ฒด์ด๋‹ค. ์Šคํƒ€์‰ฝ์€ 50ํ†ค ์ด์ƒ์˜ ์ธ๊ณต์œ„์„ฑ์„ ์ง€๊ตฌ ์ €๊ถค๋„์— ๋ฐœ์‚ฌํ•˜๋Š” ์ดˆ๋Œ€ํ˜• ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ์ฒด(SHLLV)์ด๋‹ค. ์œ ๋ช…ํ•œ ์ดˆ๋Œ€ํ˜• ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ์ฒด๋กœ๋Š” ์•„ํด๋กœ 11ํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ๋‹ฌ์— ๋ณด๋‚ธ ์ƒˆํ„ด 5ํ˜ธ, ์˜ค๋žซ๋™์•ˆ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์ด ์‚ฌ์šฉํ–ˆ๋˜ ์šฐ์ฃผ ์™•๋ณต์„ ๋ฐ ๋‚˜์‚ฌ์˜ ์•„๋ฅดํ…Œ๋ฏธ์Šค ๋ฏธ์…˜ ๋ฐ ๊ฒŒ์ดํŠธ์›จ์ด ์šฐ์ฃผ์ •๊ฑฐ์žฅ ๊ตฌ์ถ•์— ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋  ์šฐ์ฃผ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ(SLS) ๋“ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. 2022๋…„์— ์ง€๊ตฌ ๊ถค๋„์ƒ์—์„œ ์ตœ์ดˆ๋ฐœ์‚ฌํ•  ๊ณ„ํš์ธ๋ฐ, ์„ธ๊ณ„ ์ตœ์ดˆ์ด๋ฉฐ, ์„ธ๊ณ„ ์œ ์ผ์˜ ์žฌํ™œ์šฉ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ์ดˆ๋Œ€ํ˜• ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ์ฒด(SHLLV)์ด๋‹ค. 2๋‹จ๊ณ„๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋œ ๋‹ค๋‹จ ์•ก์ฒด์—ฐ๋ฃŒ ๋กœ์ผ“์ด๋ฉฐ, 1๋‹จ๊ณผ 2๋‹จ์ด ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ๋œ ํ›„์— ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ๋Œ€๋กœ ๋‹ค์‹œ ๋‚ ์•„์™€ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™ํ•˜์—ฌ, ๋‹ค์Œ์—๋„ ์žฌ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋‹ค. 2๋‹จ์€ ํ•„์š”์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์œ ์ธ์šฐ์ฃผ์„ ๊ณผ ํ™”๋ฌผ์„ , ๊ณต์ค‘ ์—ฐ๋ฃŒ ๋ณด๊ธ‰์„ ์œผ๋กœ ์ „ํ™˜์ด ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋‹ค. ์—”์ง„์€ ์ง„๊ณต์ถ”๋ ฅ 200ํ†ค์˜ LOX/๋ฉ”ํ…Œ์ธ์˜ ๋žฉํ„ฐ (๋กœ์ผ“ ์—”์ง„)์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. 1๋‹จ ์Šˆํผ ํ—ค๋น„์—๋Š” ๋žฉํ„ฐ ์—”์ง„ 28๊ฐœ, 2๋‹จ ์Šคํƒ€์‰ฝ์—๋Š” ํ•ด์ˆ˜๋ฉด ๋žฉํ„ฐ ์—”์ง„ 3๊ฐœ, ์ง„๊ณต ๋žฉํ„ฐ ์—”์ง„ 3๊ฐœ๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ŠคํŽ˜์ด์ŠคX๋Š” ์ด ๋กœ์ผ“์œผ๋กœ ํ™”์„ฑ์— ์‹๋ฏผ์ง€๋ฅผ ๊ฑด์„คํ•  ๊ณ„ํš์ด๋ฉฐ, 2020๋…„ 4์›” ๋‚˜์‚ฌ์˜ ๋‹ฌ ์œ ์ธ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ ์„ธ๊ฐ€์ง€ ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋กœ ์„ ์ •๋˜์–ด ํ–ฅํ›„ 10๊ฐœ์›”๊ฐ„์˜ ๋””์ž์ธ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„๋™์•ˆ ์•„๋ฅดํ…Œ๋ฏธ์Šค ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ์˜ ์žฌ์ •์  ์ง€์›์ด ์•ฝ์†๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ ๊ณผ๊ฑฐ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ ๋ฐฉํ–ฅ 2012, MCT(Mars Colonial Transporter, ํ™”์„ฑ ์‹๋ฏผ์ง€ํ™” ์šด์†ก์ˆ˜๋‹จ) 2005๋…„, ์ง€๊ตฌ ์ €๊ถค๋„์ƒ์— ์ตœ์†Œ 100t์˜ ํ™”๋ฌผ์„ ์ˆ˜์†กํ•  ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์˜ˆ์ •๋˜์—ˆ๋˜ ์ด ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ์ฒด๊ณ„๋Š” 2012๋…„ ์ผ๋ก  ๋จธ์Šคํฌ์˜ ์ „์ฒด์ ์ธ ํ™”์„ฑ ์‹๋ฏผ์ง€ํ™” ๊ณ„ํš๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๊ณต๊ฐœ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2014๋…„ 4์›”, ํ•œ ์ „๋ฌธ๋งค์ฒด๋Š” 2020๋…„ ์ดˆ๋ฐ˜๊นŒ์ง€ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ด์ŠคX๊ฐ€ ๋žฉํ„ฐ ์—”์ง„์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๊ณ„ํš์„ ์‹คํ˜„์‹œํ‚ฌ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์˜ˆ์ƒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2016, ITS(Interplanetary Transport System, ํ–‰์„ฑ๊ฐ„ ์ด๋™ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ) 2016๋…„ 9์›” ์ค‘์ˆœ, ์ผ๋ก  ๋จธ์Šคํฌ๋Š” ๋ณธ์ธ ํŠธ์œ„ํ„ฐ ๊ณ„์ •์„ ํ†ตํ•ด 'MCT๋ผ๋Š” ๋ช…์นญ์ด ๋”์ด์ƒ ์ด์–ด์ง€์ง€ ์•Š์„ ๊ฒƒ'์ž„์„ ์–ธ๊ธ‰ํ–ˆ๊ณ  '์Šคํƒ€์‰ฝ์ด ํ™”์„ฑ ๋„ˆ๋จธ๋กœ ์ง„์ถœ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ'์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์„ค๋ช…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๋ฐœ์ƒ์— ์˜ํ•ด ์ƒˆ๋กญ๊ฒŒ ์„ ์ •๋œ ๋ช…์นญ์€ ํ–‰์„ฑ๊ฐ„ ์ด๋™ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ, ITS์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ๋จธ์Šคํฌ ๋ณธ์ธ์€ ์ด์— ๋งŒ์กฑํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜์—ฌ '๋‚˜๋Š” BFR๊ณผ BFS๋ผ๋Š” ๋ช…์นญ์ด ๋‚˜์˜์ง€ ์•Š๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ƒ๊ฐํ•œ๋‹ค....๊ฐœ๋ฐœ ์ฝ”๋“œ๋ช…์€ BFR์ด ๋  ๊ฒƒ'์ด๋ผ๋ฉฐ ๋ ˆ๋”ง์— 2016๋…„ 10์›” 23์ผ ๊ธ€์„ ๋‚จ๊ฒผ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ITS์˜ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ ๋ฐฉํ–ฅ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์„ธ๋ถ€ ์‚ฌํ•ญ์€ 2016๋…„ 9์›” 27์ผ ์—ด๋ฆฐ ์ œ67ํšŒ ๊ตญ์ œ ์šฐ์ฃผ ์ดํšŒ์—์„œ ๊ณต๊ฐœ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ITS๋ถ€์Šคํ„ฐ(ITS Booster, ํ˜„ ์ˆ˜ํผํ—ค๋น„)์™€ ํ–‰์„ฑ๊ฐ„ ์šฐ์ฃผ์„ (Interplanetary Spaceship, ํ˜„ ์Šคํƒ€์‰ฝ)์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋‚ด์šฉ์ด ๋ฐœํ‘œ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ITS ๋ถ€์Šคํ„ฐ์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ์ง๊ฒฝ 12m์— ๋†’์ด 77.5m, ํ–‰์„ฑ๊ฐ„ ์šฐ์ฃผ์„ ์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ์ง๊ฒฝ 12m์— ๋†’์ด 49.5m์˜ ๊ทœ๊ฒฉ์„ ๊ฐ€์งˆ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์•Œ๋ ค์กŒ๋‹ค. ITS ๋ถ€์Šคํ„ฐ์™€ ํ–‰์„ฑ๊ฐ„ ์šฐ์ฃผ์„ ์€ ๊ฐ๊ฐ 130MN, 56MN์˜ ์ถ”๋ ฅ์„ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ•  ์˜ˆ์ •์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์€ ์‹œ๊ธฐ์— ๋žฉํ„ฐ ์—”์ง„์˜ ์ฒซ ์—ฐ์†Œ ํ…Œ์ŠคํŠธ๊ฐ€ ์ง„ํ–‰๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ด๋•Œ ์ฒ˜์Œ ๊ตฌ์ƒ๋˜์—ˆ๋˜ ITS ํƒฑ์ปค(๊ณต์ค‘ ๊ธ‰์œ ์„ )์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์•„์ด๋””์–ด๊ฐ€ ์ง€๊ธˆ๊นŒ์ง€ ์ด์–ด์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. 2017~2018, BFR(Big Falcon Rocket, ๋Œ€ํ˜• ํŒฐ์ปจ ๋กœ์ผ“) 2017๋…„ 9์›” ์น˜๋Ÿฌ์ง„ ์ œ68ํšŒ ๊ตญ์ œ ์šฐ์ฃผ ์ดํšŒ์—์„œ ITS์˜ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ๋””์ž์ธ์ด ๊ณต๊ฐœ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ  ๊ทธ ์ด๋ฆ„์€ BFR๋กœ ํ™•์ •๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. BFR(Big Falcon Rocket)์˜ ์ง๊ฒฝ์€ ITS ๋Œ€๋น„ 3m ๊ฐ์†Œํ•œ 9m๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ „์‹  ํƒ„์†Œ ์„ฌ์œ  ์†Œ์žฌ ์ฑ„์šฉ์ด ์˜ˆ์ •๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2๋‹จ๊ณ„ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ์ฒด์˜ ๊ตฌ๋ถ„์ด ์ •๋ฆฌ๋˜์–ด BFS(Big Falcon Ship)์œผ๋กœ ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌ๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ  3๊ฐ€์ง€ ์šฉ๋„๋กœ ๊ทธ ๋ช…์นญ์„ ๋‚˜๋ˆ„๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ๊ฐ ์ง€๊ตฌ ๊ถค๋„์ƒ, ๋‹ฌ, ํ™”์„ฑ์— ํ™”๋ฌผ ์šด์†ก, ์Šน๋ฌด์› ์ˆ˜์†ก, ์—ฐ๋ฃŒ ๋ณด๊ธ‰ ๋“ฑ์˜ ์šฉ๋„์— ๋งž์ถ”์–ด BFS Cargo, BFS Crew, BFS Tanker๋ผ๋Š” ์ด๋ฆ„์œผ๋กœ ๋ถˆ๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๊ณต๊ธฐ ์—ญํ•™์„ ์‘์šฉํ•œ ๊ธฐ์ฒด ์ œ์–ด๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ธํƒ€ ์œ™๊ณผ ํ”Œ๋žฉ ์žฅ๋น„๋ฅผ ํƒ‘์žฌํ•  ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์•Œ๋ ค์กŒ๊ณ  BFS์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ํ•˜๋‹จ์— ํ•ด๋ฉด ์ถ”๋ ฅ ์—”์ง„ 4๊ธฐ์™€ ์ง„๊ณต ์—”์ง„ 2๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•  ๊ฒƒ์ž„์ด ๊ณต๊ฐœ๋˜๋ฉฐ ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ์ด์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์„ธ๋ถ€ ๋‚ด์šฉ์ด ๋ฐœํ‘œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ…์‚ฌ์Šค, ๋ฃจ์ด์ง€์• ๋‚˜, ๋ฃจ์ด์ง€์• ๋‚˜, ์ฝœ๋กฌ๋น„์•„์ฃผ์— BFR ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ์‹œ์„ค ๊ฑด์ถ•์ด ํ•™์ •๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2019~ํ˜„์žฌ, SLS(Starship Launch System, ์Šคํƒ€์‰ฝ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ) ์Šˆํผ ํ—ค๋น„(Super Heavy) ์Šคํƒ€์‰ฝ์˜ 1๋‹จ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ์ฒด๊ฐ€ ๋  ์˜ˆ์ •์ธ ์Šˆํผ ํ—ค๋น„๋Š” 72๋ฏธํ„ฐ ๋†’์ด์— 9๋ฏธํ„ฐ ์ง๊ฒฝ์„ ๊ฐ€์งˆ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์˜ˆ์ •๋˜์–ด ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, 3,600,000 kg์˜ ๋ฌด๊ฒŒ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์งˆ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ถ”์ธก๋œ๋‹ค. ์•Œ๋ฃจ๋ฏธ๋Š„ ์™ธ๊ณฝ๊ณผ ๋‚ด๋ถ€ ์—ฐ๋ฃŒ ํƒฑํฌ, ๊ณจ์กฐ๋Š” ํƒ„์†Œ ์„ฌ์œ ๋กœ ์ œ์ž‘๋  ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์•Œ๋ ค์กŒ๋‹ค. ๊ทน์ €์˜จ์—์„œ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ์ฒด์— ๋’คํ‹€๋ฆผ์ด ์ƒ๊ธฐ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ง‰๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•จ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์–ธ๊ธ‰๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 31๊ฐœ์˜ ๋žฉํ„ฐ ์—”์ง„์€ 72,000 ํ‚ฌ๋กœ๋‰ดํ„ด์˜ ์ถ”๋ ฅ์„ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ•  ์ „๋ง์ด๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ 10์›”, ์Šˆํผ ํ—ค๋น„์˜ ๋””์ž์ธ ๋ณ€๊ฒฝ์ด ์–ธ๊ธ‰๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 6๊ฐœ์˜ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์šฉ ๋‹ค๋ฆฌ ๋ฐ ๋‹ค๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ์‹ธ๋Š” ํŽ˜์–ด๋ง ๊ตฌ์กฐ, 4๊ฐœ์˜ ๋งˆ๋ฆ„๋ชจ๊ผด ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๋“œํ•€(์ƒ์Šน ๋น„ํ–‰์‹œ ๋กœ์ผ“์˜ ๋น„ํ–‰ ์•ˆ์ •์„ฑ์„ ๋†’ํ˜€์ฃผ๋Š” ๋ง ํ˜•ํƒœ์˜ ์žฅ์น˜, ๋‹ค๋งŒ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ด์ŠคX ๊ณ„์—ด์˜ ๋กœ์ผ“์—์„œ๋Š” ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์ธ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๊ณผ๋Š” ๋‹ฌ๋ฆฌ ๋กœ์ผ“์˜ ์œ„์— ๋ถ€์ฐฉ๋˜์–ด ๊ณต๊ธฐ์ €ํ•ญ์„ ์œ ๋ฐœํ•˜์—ฌ ๋กœ์ผ“์˜ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™ ์ ˆ์ฐจ์— ์ˆ˜ํ‰์„ ์œ ์ง€ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค) ๋“ฑ๋“ฑ ์„ธ๋ถ€์ ์ธ ๋””์ž์ธ ์š”์†Œ๊ฐ€ ํ™•์ •๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2022๋…„๊ณผ 2023๋…„ ์‚ฌ์ด์— ์Šˆํผํ—ค๋น„ ํ”„๋กœํ† ํƒ€์ž…์˜ ์‹ค์งˆ์ ์ธ ํ…Œ์ŠคํŠธ ๋น„ํ–‰์ด ์ง„ํ–‰๋  ์˜ˆ์ •์ด๋ฉฐ SH BN1 ํ”„๋กœํ† ํƒ€์ž…์˜ ์ œ์ž‘์ด ํ™•์ธ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™(์Šˆํผ ํ—ค๋น„) 2016๋…„ 9์›”, ์ผ๋ก  ๋จธ์Šคํฌ๋Š” ITS ๋ถ€์Šคํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ๋Œ€์— ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ์„ฑ์„ ์ œ๊ธฐํ–ˆ๊ณ , 2017๋…„ 9์›”์—๋Š” BFB(Big Falcon Booster)๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ๋Œ€ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™ ๊ณผ์ •์„ ์žฌ์—ฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ก  ๋จธ์Šคํฌ๋Š” ์ˆ˜ํผ ํ—ค๋น„ ์‹œ์ œํ’ˆ์˜ ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ ๋‹จ๊ณ„์—๋Š” VTVL์„ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์šฉ ๋‹ค๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•  ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ 2021๋…„ 1์›”, ์ผ๋ก ๋จธ์Šคํฌ๋Š” ๋ถ€์Šคํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™๋‹ค๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ํ™œ์šฉํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๋“œํ•€์„ ์ด์šฉํ•œ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™๋ฐฉ์‹์œผ๋กœ ๋ณ€๊ฒฝํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ 2021๋…„ 10์›” 21์ผ, ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ๋Œ€์˜ ๊ฑฐ๋Œ€ํ•œ ํŒ”์ธ Catch arm์ด ์„ค์น˜๋˜๋ฉฐ ์ด ๋ง์€ ํ˜„์‹ค์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ถ€์Šคํ„ฐ๊ฐ€ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™ํ•  ๋•Œ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ๋Œ€์˜ Catch arm์ด ๋ถ€์Šคํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ๊ณต์ค‘์—์„œ ์žก์•„ ๋‹ค์‹œ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ๋Œ€์— ์˜ฌ๋ ค๋†“๋Š” ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™๋ฐฉ์‹์ด ์‹คํ˜„๋˜๊ธฐ๊นŒ์ง€ ์–ผ๋งˆ ์•ˆ๋‚จ์•˜๋‹ค๋Š”๊ฑธ ๋ณด์—ฌ์ค€๋‹ค. ์Šคํƒ€์‰ฝ(Starship) 2019๋…„ 10์›”, ์Šคํƒ€์‰ฝ 2๋‹จ ์ถ”์ง„์ฒด๋Š” 50๋ฏธํ„ฐ ๋†’์ด์— 9๋ฏธํ„ฐ ์ง๊ฒฝ์„ ๊ฐ€์งˆ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์–ธ๊ธ‰๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, 6๊ฐœ์˜ ๋žฉํ„ฐ ์—”์ง„ ์ค‘ 3๊ธฐ๋Š” ํ•ด์ƒ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™ ๋ฐ ๋Œ€๊ธฐ๊ถŒ ๋‚ด ์ ํ™”๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ์ผ๋ฐ˜ ๋žฉํ„ฐ ์—”์ง„, ๋‚จ์€ 3๊ธฐ๋Š” ์™ธ๊ธฐ๊ถŒ์—์„œ์˜ ์ ํ™” ๋ฐ ์ถ”์ง„์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋žฉํ„ฐ ์—”์ง„ ์ง„๊ณต์˜ ํƒ‘์žฌ๊ฐ€ ์˜ˆ์ •๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋žฉํ„ฐ ์—”์ง„์˜ ์ด ์ถ”๋ ฅ์€ 11,500 ํ‚ฌ๋กœ๋‰ดํ„ด์ด ๋  ์ „๋ง์ด๋‹ค. ๋‹น์‹œ ๊ณต๊ฐœ๋œ ๋””์ž์ธ ์ปจ์…‰์„ ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฝ์œผ๋กœ SN1๋ถ€ํ„ฐ SN16๊นŒ์ง€ 16๊ฐœ์˜ ํ”„๋กœํ† ํƒ€์ž…์˜ ์ œ์ž‘์ด ์ง€๊ธˆ๊นŒ์ง€ ํ™•์ธ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2020๋…„ 8์›”๊ณผ 9์›” ๋™์•ˆ ๊ฐ๊ฐ ์Šคํƒ€์‰ฝ SN5์™€ SN6์ด 150m ๊ณ ๋„์— ๋„๋‹ฌํ•œ ํ›„ ํ•˜๊ฐ•ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์‹œํ—˜ ๋น„ํ–‰์„ ์„ฑ๊ณต์ ์œผ๋กœ ์™„์ˆ˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2020๋…„ ๋‚ด์— ์Šคํƒ€์‰ฝ์˜ ์ฒซ ์ •์‹ ๊ทœ๊ฒฉ ์‹œ์ œํ’ˆ์ธ ์Šคํƒ€์‰ฝ SN8์ด 15km ๊ณ ๋„์— ๋„๋‹ฌํ•œ ํ›„ ํ•˜๊ฐ•ํ•˜๋Š” ์‹œํ—˜ ๋น„ํ–‰์„ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰ํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ํ•˜๊ฐ• ์ค‘ ์—”์ง„ ๋‚ด์˜ ๋ถ€ํ’ˆ ์†์ƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์— ์‹คํŒจํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2021๋…„ 2์›” SN9์ด ์ผ์ •๊ณ ๋„ ๋„๋‹ฌ ํ›„ ํ•˜๊ฐ•ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ณผ์ •์—์„œ ์ž์„ธ ์ œ์–ด๊ฐ€ ์ด๋ค„์ง€์ง€ ์•Š์•„ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์— ์‹คํŒจํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์Šคํƒ€์‰ฝ์˜ 2๋‹จ ์ถ”์ง„์ฒด๋Š” ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์šฐ์ฃผ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ์ฒด ๋””์ž์ธ๊ณผ๋Š” ๋‹ฌ๋ฆฌ 2๋‹จ ์ถ”์ง„์ฒด๋กœ์„œ์™€์˜ ์—ญํ• ๊ณผ ์šฐ์ฃผ์—์„œ์˜ ์žฅ๊ธฐ ์ฒด๋ฅ˜๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋ชฉ์ ์„ ๋ชจ๋‘ ์„ฑ์ทจํ•˜๊ณ ์ž ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ๋Œ€๊ธฐ๊ถŒ ์ง„์ž…์—์„œ์˜ ์—ด๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๊ฒฌ๋”œ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ด๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ์™„์ „ํ•œ ์žฌ์‚ฌ์šฉ์ด ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๊ฒŒ๋” ๊ณ„ํš๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์Šคํƒ€์‰ฝ์€ ์•„๋ž˜์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋ชฉ์ ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ํŒŒ์ƒํ˜•์„ ๊ฐ€์งˆ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ „๋ง๋œ๋‹ค. ์œ ์ธ ์šฐ์ฃผ์„  : ๋Œ€์šฉ๋Ÿ‰, ์žฅ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„ ์ฒด๋ฅ˜๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ์šฐ์ฃผ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ์ฒด๋กœ์„œ ์Šน๊ฐ๊ณผ ํ™”๋ฌผ์„ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํ–‰์„ฑ์œผ๋กœ, ๋˜๋Š” ์ง€๊ตฌ ์ €๊ถค๋„๋กœ ๋ณด๋‚ด๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ์ง€๊ตฌ ์žฅ๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ ๊ณ ์† ์ด๋™์— ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋ชฉ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ œ์ž‘๋  ์ „๋ง์ด๋‹ค. ๋ฌด์ธ ์šฐ์ฃผ์„  : ์ธ๊ณต์œ„์„ฑ์„ ์ง€๊ตฌ ๊ถค๋„๋กœ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ ๋ฐ ์œ„์น˜ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ์šฐ์ฃผ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ์ฒด๋กœ์„œ, ์šฐ์ฃผ ์“ฐ๋ ˆ๊ธฐ์˜ ํšŒ์ˆ˜ ๋ฐ ๋ฌผ์ž์˜ ์šด์†ก์—๋„ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋  ์ „๋ง์ด๋‹ค. ๊ณต์ค‘ ๊ธ‰์œ ์„  : ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํ–‰์„ฑ์œผ๋กœ ์ด๋™ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ •์ฐจ ๊ถค๋„์— ์œ„์น˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ์žˆ๋Š” ์Šคํƒ€์‰ฝ์— ์ง€๊ตฌ ์ €๊ถค๋„ ํƒˆ์ถœ์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ์—ฐ๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ์ œ๊ณตํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ํ™”๋ฌผ ๋ชฉ์  ๋‹จ๋…์˜ ์šฐ์ฃผ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ์ฒด๋กœ์„œ, ๋‹ฌ์„ ํ–ฅํ•œ ๊ณ ์ค‘๋Ÿ‰ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ์—๋„ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋  ์ „๋ง์ด๋‹ค. ์›”๋ฉด ์šด์†ก์ˆ˜๋‹จ(HLS) : ์ง€๊ตฌ ๋Œ€๊ธฐ ์ ‘๊ทผ์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ์—์–ด ๋ธŒ๋ ˆ์ดํฌ์™€ ์—ด ์ฐจํ๋ง‰์ด ์ œ๊ฑฐ๋œ ํ˜•ํƒœ์˜ ์šฐ์ฃผ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ์ฒด๋กœ์„œ, ์•„๋ฅดํ…Œ๋ฏธ์Šค ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ์˜ ๊ฒŒ์ดํŠธ์›จ์ด ์šฐ์ฃผ์ •๊ฑฐ์žฅ๊ณผ ๋„ํ‚นํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋„ํ‚น ํฌํŠธ์™€ ํฐ ํŽ˜์ธํŠธ ๋„์ƒ‰์˜ ์ฑ„์šฉ์ด ์˜ˆ์ •๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2020๋…„ 4์›” 30์ผ, ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ํ•ญ๊ณต ์šฐ์ฃผ๊ตญ์˜ ์•„๋ฅดํ…Œ๋ฏธ์Šค ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ์˜ ์ผํ™˜์œผ๋กœ ์œ ์ธ ๋‹ฌ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์„ ์œผ๋กœ์„œ ์‚ฌ์šฉ์ด ํ™•์ •๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹ฌ ํ‘œ๋ฉด์˜ ์†์ƒ์„ ์ค„์ด๊ณ ์ž ์ƒ๋‹จ๋ถ€์— ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™ ์ ํ™” ์žฅ์น˜๋ฅผ ๋ถ€์ฐฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™(์Šคํƒ€์‰ฝ) ํ˜„์žฌ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™ ๋ฐฉ์‹์€ ๊ธฐ์กด ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™ ๋‹ค๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ์ด์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐฉ์‹์ด์ง€๋งŒ, ์ผ๋ก ๋จธ์Šคํฌ๋Š” ์กฐ๊ธˆ๋” ๋ฏธ๋ž˜์—๋Š” ๋ถ€์Šคํ„ฐ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ์Šคํƒ€์‰ฝ๋„ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ๋Œ€์— ๋‹ฌ๋ฆฐ ๊ฑฐ๋Œ€ํ•œํŒ”(Catch arm)๋กœ ๊ณต์ค‘์—์„œ ์žก๋Š” ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™๋ฐฉ์‹์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐ”๋€๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์‹œํ—˜ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ ๋ชฉ๋ก ํ”„๋กœํ† ํƒ€์ž… ๋ชฉ๋ก ์Šคํƒ€์‰ฝ ์‹œํ—˜์šฉ ํƒฑํฌ ์ˆ˜ํผํ—ค๋น„ ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ Official website 39-page slide deck of graphics, charts and images. ์šฐ์ฃผ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ์ฒด ์šฐ์ฃผ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ด์ŠคX ์œ ์ธ ์šฐ์ฃผ์„ 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SpaceX%20Starship
SpaceX Starship
Starship is a two-stage super heavy lift launch vehicle and spacecraft under development by SpaceX. It is currently the tallest and most powerful space launch vehicle to have flown. Starship is intended to be fully reusable, which means both stages will be recovered after a mission and reused. The Starship space vehicle is designed to supplant SpaceX's Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy rockets, build SpaceX's Starlink satellite constellation, and serve crewed spaceflight. SpaceX plans to use Starship vehicles as tankers, refueling other Starships to allow missions to geosynchronous orbit, the Moon, and Mars. A lunar lander variant of Starship is to land astronauts on the Moon as part of NASA's Artemis program. Starship is ultimately meant to enable SpaceX's ambition of colonizing Mars. Starship is made up of the Super Heavy booster and the Starship spacecraft. The booster and spacecraft are both powered by clusters of Raptor rocket engines, which burn liquid methane and liquid oxygen. Both stages are constructed primarily of stainless steel, a material chosen as an alternative to a series of prior designs. The booster will use its engines to slow itself down before it is caught by a pair of mechanical arms attached to the launch tower. Meanwhile, the Starship spacecraft is protected during atmospheric reentry by its thermal protection system, using a so called โ€˜belly flopโ€™ manoeuvre where the spacecraft turns from a horizontal into a vertical position, then lands using its engines. The Starship system aims to achieve frequent space launches at low cost. Development follows an iterative and incremental approach involving frequent, and often destructive, test flights of prototype vehicles. The first flight test of the Starship system took place on 20 April 2023 and ended four minutes after launch with the destruction of the test vehicle. History Early design conceptions Starting with a 2012 announcement of plans to develop a rocket with substantially greater capabilities than SpaceX's existing Falcon 9, the company created a succession of preliminary designs for such a vehicle under various names (Mars Colonial Transporter, Interplanetary Transport System, BFR). Some were substantially different from the current design; the largest one, the Interplanetary Transport System or ITS, massed fully fueled, had a liftoff thrust of and could carry to low Earth orbit while being completely reused. For comparison, the Saturn V had a liftoff thrust of . It also was made of carbon composite. Despite this, they all shared some common features such as being fully reusable and being very large. In 2019, Starship's structural material was changed from carbon composites to stainless steel. Musk cited the low cost and ease of manufacture, increased strength of stainless steel at cryogenic temperatures, as well as its ability to withstand high heat, as the reasons for the design change. The high temperature at which 300-series steel transitions to plastic deformation would eliminate the need for a heat shield on Starship's leeward side, while the much hotter windward side would be cooled by allowing fuel or water to bleed through micropores in a double-wall stainless steel skin, removing heat by evaporation. However, in July 2019, Musk indicated on Twitter that this would probably not be pursued, instead, thin reusable heat shield tiles which work in a similar way to those of the Space Shuttle would be used. The high melting point of Starshipโ€™s stainless steel allows the tiles to be lighter and thinner. In 2019, SpaceX began to refer to the entire vehicle as Starship, with the second stage being called Starship and the booster Super Heavy. In September 2019, Musk further detailed the lower-stage booster, the upper-stage's method of controlling its descent, the heat shield, orbital refueling capacity, and potential destinations besides Mars. The aft flaps on the spacecraft were reduced from three to two. In 2019, the design reverted to six Raptor engines, with three optimized for sea-level and three optimized for vacuum. Initial Super Heavy test flights would use fewer engines, perhaps about 20. Later in 2019 Musk stated that Starship was expected to have an empty mass of and be able to initially transport a payload of , growing to over time. Musk hinted at an expendable variant that could place 250 tonnes into low orbit. The Raptor design was refined with higher thrust versions. The initial 37 engines were reduced to 31 in 2020. Musk stated that SpaceX would complete hundreds of cargo flights before carrying human passengers. In April 2021, SpaceX publicly forecast that Earth to Earth passenger flights would be common within five years. Low-altitude flights SpaceX was already constructing the first full-size Starship Mk1 and Mk2 upper-stage prototypes, at the SpaceX facilities in Boca Chica, Texas, and Cocoa, Florida, respectively. Neither prototype flew: Mk1 was destroyed in November 2019 during a pressure stress test and Mk2's Florida facility was abandoned and deconstructed throughout 2020. After the Mk prototypes, SpaceX began naming its new Starship upper-stage prototypes with the prefix "SN", short for "serial number". No prototypes between SN1 and SN4 flew eitherโ€”SN1 and SN3 collapsed during pressure stress tests, and SN4 exploded after its fifth engine firing. In June 2020, SpaceX started constructing a launch pad for orbit-capable Starship rockets. The first flight-capable Starship, SN5, was cylindrical as it had no flaps or nose cone: just one Raptor engine, fuel tanks, and a mass simulator. On 5 August 2020, SN5 performed a high flight and successfully landed on a nearby pad. On 3 September 2020, the similar-looking Starship SN6 repeated the hop; later that month, the Raptor Vacuum engine was fired in full duration at McGregor, Texas. High-altitude flights Starship SN8 was the first fully complete Starship upper-stage prototype. It underwent four preliminary static fire tests between October and November 2020. On 9 December 2020, SN8 flew, slowly turning off its three engines one by one, and reached an altitude of . After SN8 dove back to the ground, its engines were hampered by low methane header tank pressure during the landing attempt, which led to a hard impact with the landing pad. Because SpaceX had violated its launch license and ignored warnings of worsening shock wave damage, the Federal Aviation Administration investigated the incident for two months. On 2 February 2021, Starship SN9 launched to in a flight path similar to SN8. The prototype crashed upon landing because one engine did not ignite properly. A month later, on 3 March, Starship SN10 launched on the same flight path as SN9. The vehicle landed hard and crushed its landing legs, leaning to one side. A fire was seen at the vehicle's base. It exploded less than ten minutes later, probably due to a propellant tank rupture. On 30 March, Starship SN11 flew into thick fog along the same flight path. The vehicle exploded during descent, possibly due to excess propellant in a Raptor's methane turbopump. In March 2021, the company disclosed a public construction plan for two sub-orbital launch pads, two orbital launch pads, two landing pads, two test stands, and a large propellant tank farm. The company soon proposed developing the surrounding Boca Chica Village, Texas into a company town named Starbase. Locals raised concerns about SpaceX's authority, power, and a potential threat for eviction through eminent domain. In early April, the orbital launch pad's fuel storage tanks began mounting. Starship prototypes SN12, SN13, and SN14 were scrapped before completion; SN15 was selected to fly instead. SN15 had better avionics, structure, and upgraded engines. On 5 May 2021, SN15 launched, completed the same maneuvers as older prototypes, and landed safely. Even though SN15, like SN10, had a small fire in the engine area after landing, it was extinguished, completing the first successful high-altitude test. According to a later report by SpaceX, SN15 experienced several issues while landing, including the loss of tank pressure and an engine. Development towards first orbital launch In July 2021, Super Heavy BN3 conducted its first full-duration static firing and lit three engines. Around this time, SpaceX changed their naming scheme from "SN" to "Ship" for Starship crafts, and from "BN" to "Booster" for Super Heavy boosters. A month later, using cranes, Ship 20 was stacked atop Booster 4 to form the full launch vehicle for the first time; Ship 20 was also the first craft to have a body-tall heat shield. In October 2021, the catching mechanical arms, also known as "chopsticks", were installed onto the integration tower and the first tank farm's construction was completed. Two weeks later, NASA and SpaceX announced plans to construct Kennedy Space Center's Launch Complex 49. The public spotted the Raptor 2 engine at the start of 2022. Raptor 2 has a simpler design, less mass, wider throat, and an increase in central combustion chamber pressure from to . These changes yielded an increase in thrust from to , but a decrease of 3 seconds (~0.9%) of specific impulse. In February 2022, after stacking Ship 20 on top of Booster 4 using mechanical arms, Elon Musk gave a presentation on Starship, Raptor engine and Florida spaceport development at Starbase. In June 2022, the Federal Aviation Administration determined that Starbase did not need a full environmental impact assessment but that SpaceX must address issues identified in the preliminary environmental assessment. In July, Booster 7 tested spinning the liquid oxygen turbopumps on all thirty-three Raptor engines, resulting in an explosion at the vehicle's base, which destroyed a pressure pipe and causing minor damage to the launchpad. By the end of November, Ship 24 had performed 2- and full 6-engine static test fires, while Booster 7 had performed static fires with 1, 3, 7, 14, 11 engines and finally on February 9, 2023, a static fire with 31 engines at 50% throttle (33 was attempted but one engine was disabled pre-firing, and another engine aborted). In January 2023, Starship underwent a full wet dress rehearsal at Starbase, where it was filled with more than of propellant. First attempted orbital test flight After a canceled launch attempt on 17 April 2023, due to a frozen valve, Booster 7 and Ship 24 lifted off on 20 April at 13:33 UTC in the first orbital flight test. Three engines were disabled during the launch sequence and several more failed during the flight. The spacecraft also lost thrust vectoring control of the Raptor engines later in the flight, which led to the rocket starting an out of control tumbling motion. The vehicle reached a maximum altitude of . At around 3 minutes following liftoff, the rocket received a command to activate the automated flight termination system. However, the flight termination system failed to destroy the vehicle, the vehicle tumbled for another 40 seconds, and finally exploded. Had the launch proceeded as planned, the spacecraft would have continued to fly with its ground track passing through the Straits of Florida and eastward around the globe, with a hard splashdown in the Pacific Ocean around northwest of Kauai in the Hawaiian Islands, having made nearly one full revolution around the Earth. Preparations for the second orbital test flight After the first test flight significant work was done on the launch mount to repair the damage it sustained during the test and to prevent future issues. The foundation of the launch tower was reinforced and a steel water deluge flame deflector was built under the launch mount. Ship 25 was rolled to the suborbital launch site in May and underwent spin prime and static fire testing ahead of flight. Once that was completed, Booster 9 was rolled to the launch site to undergo cryogenic proof testing, spin primes and static fires of its set of engines. As of September 7th, Ship 25 is stacked onboard Booster 9 on the launch mount. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) oversaw the investigation of Starship's first flight failure, at the end of which SpaceX reported it had identified 63 needed corrective actions before another Starship launch license could take place. On September 8, 2023, the FAA concurred with SpaceX's report and closed the investigation. The FAA also announced that the full investigatory report would not be released due to confidential contents including export control information. FAA officials stated, "The closure of the mishap investigation does not signal an immediate resumption of Starship launches at Boca Chica." A launch license approval from the FAA could come as early as October. The United States Fish and Wildlife Service has yet to start a formal review of SpaceX's modifications, and depending on the situation, the next launch may not occur until 2024. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service received the final biological assessment from the Federal Aviation Administration. William Gerstenmaier, SpaceXโ€™s Vice President of Build and Flight Reliability, called for the FAA to increase licensing staff. On October 19, the FWS surveyed the area around Starbase and the consultation with the FAA has been extended into November. The FWS is reviewing the changes to the launch pad, especially the water deluge system. On October 31, 2023, the FAA concluded the safety review portion of the launch license, however, the FWS environmental review has not yet concluded. Funding As part of the development of the Human Landing System for the Artemis program, SpaceX was awarded in April 2021 a $2.89 billion contract from NASA to develop the Starship lunar lander for Artemis III. Blue Origin, a bidding competitor to SpaceX, disputed the decision and began a legal case against NASA and SpaceX in August 2021, stalling the work of SpaceX and NASA on the program with SpaceX for the duration of these legal disputes. It was dismissed by the Court of Federal Claims after three months, and Blue Origin was awarded $3.4 billion for their lunar lander two years later. In 2022, NASA awarded SpaceX $1.15 billion for a second lunar lander for Artemis 4. The same year, SpaceX was awarded a $102 million five-year contract to develop the Rocket Cargo program for the United States Space Force. SpaceX develops the Starship with private funding. SpaceX Chief Financial Officer Bret Johnsen disclosed in court that SpaceX has invested more than $3 billion into the Starbase facility and Starship systems from July 2014 to May 2023. Elon Musk stated in April 2023 that SpaceX expects to spend about $2 billion on Starship development in 2023. Design When stacked and fully fueled, Starship has a mass of approximately , a diameter of , and a height of . The rocket has been designed with the goal of being fully reusable to reduce launch costs and maintenance between flights. In its fully reusable configuration Starship is designed to carry to low Earth orbit, while the expended configuration is projected to have a payload capacity of . The rocket consists of the Super Heavy first-stage or booster, and the Starship second-stage or spacecraft, powered by the Raptor and Raptor Vacuum engines. The bodies of both rocket stages are made from stainless steel, giving Starship its strength for atmospheric entry and distinctive look. According to Eric Berger of Ars Technica, the manufacturing process starts with rolls of steel, which are unrolled, cut, and welded along the cut edge to create a cylinder of in diameter, in height, and 4ย mm (0.16ย in) thick, and around in mass. These cylinders, along with the nose cones, are stacked and welded along their edges to form the outer layer of the rocket. Inside, the methane and oxygen tanks are separated by the robot-made domes. Also according to Berger, Starship's reusability and stainless-steel construction has influenced the Terran R rocket and Project Jarvis, the second stage of Blue Origin's New Glenn super heavy-lift launch vehicle. Raptor engine Raptor is a family of rocket engines developed by SpaceX exclusively for use in Starship and Super Heavy vehicles. It burns liquid oxygen and methane in a highly efficient but complex full-flow staged combustion power cycle. The Raptor engine uses methane as the fuel of choice over other rocket propellants because it produces less soot and can be directly synthesized from carbon dioxide and water, using the Sabatier reaction. Unlike previous reusable rocket engines such as the RS-25, the engines are designed to be reused many times with little maintenance. The engine structure itself is mostly aluminum, copper, and steel; oxidizer-side turbopumps and manifolds subject to corrosive oxygen-rich flames are made of an Inconel-like SX500 superalloy. Raptor's main combustion chamber can contain of pressure, the highest of all rocket engines. Certain components are 3D printed. The Raptor's gimbaling range is 15ยฐ, higher than the RS-25's 12.5ยฐ and the Merlin's 5ยฐ. In mass production, SpaceX aims to produce each engine at a unit cost of US$250,000. Raptor operates with an oxygen-to-methane mixture ratio of about , lower than the stoichiometric mixture ratio of necessary to burn all propellants completely. Operation at the stoichiometric ratio provides better performance in theory but usually results in overheating and destruction of the engine. The propellants leave the pre-burners. They are injected into the main combustion chamber as hot gases instead of liquid droplets, enabling much higher power density as propellants mix rapidly via diffusion. The methane and oxygen are at such high temperatures and pressures that they ignite on contact, eliminating the need for igniters in the main combustion chamber. At sea level, the standard Raptor engine produces at a specific impulse of 327 seconds, increasing to 350 seconds in a vacuum. Raptor Vacuum, used on the Starship upper stage, is modified with a regeneratively cooled nozzle extension made of brazed steel tubes, increasing its expansion ratio to about 90 and its specific impulse in vacuum to 380 seconds. Super Heavy booster The first-stage booster, named Super Heavy is tall and wide, and contains thirty-three Raptor engines arranged in concentric rings. The outermost ring of 20 engines are of the "Raptor Boost" configuration with gimbal actuators removed to save weight and a modified injector with reduced throttle performance in exchange for greater thrust. At full power, all engines produce a collective of thrust. The booster's tanks can hold of propellant, consisting of of liquid oxygen and of liquid methane. However, current designs can only hold of propellant. The final design will have a dry mass between and , with the tanks weighing and the interstage . The booster is equipped with four electrically actuated grid fins, each with a mass of . Adjacent pairs of grid fins are only spaced sixty degrees apart instead of being orthogonal (as is the case on Falcon 9) to provide more authority in the pitch axis. Also, unlike Falcon 9, the grid fins do not retract and remain extended during ascent. The booster can be lifted through protruding hardpoints located between gridfins. Above the grid fins is the vented interstage, which enables starship to use hot staging, which is when the second stage separates when some of the first stages engine are still firing. According to Elon Musk, this process may provide up to 10% increase in payload to orbit. During unpowered flight in the vacuum of space, control authority is provided by cold gas thrusters fed with residual ullage gas. Starship spacecraft The Starship spacecraft is tall, in diameter, and has 6 Raptor engines, 3 of which are optimized for use in outer space. Future vehicles may have an additional 3 Raptor Vacuum engines for increased payload capacity. The vehicle's payload bay, measuring tall by in diameter, is the largest of any active or planned launch vehicle; its internal volume of is slightly larger than the ISS's pressurized volume. SpaceX may also provide a tall payload bay configuration for even larger payloads.Starship has a total propellant capacity of across its main tanks and header tanks. The header tanks are better insulated due to their position and are reserved for use to flip and land the spacecraft following reentry. A set of reaction control thrusters, which use the pressure in the fuel tank, control attitude while in space. The spacecraft has four body flaps to control the spacecraft's orientation and help dissipate energy during atmospheric entry, composed of two forward flaps and two aft flaps. According to SpaceX, the flaps replace the need for wings or tailplane, reduce the fuel needed for landing, and allow landing at destinations in the Solar System where runways don't exist (for example, Mars). Under the forward flaps, hardpoints are used for lifting and catching the spacecraft via mechanical arms. The flap's hinges are sealed in aero-covers because they would be easily damaged during reentry. Starship's heat shield, composed of thousands of hexagonal black tiles that can withstand temperatures of , is designed to be used many times without maintenance between flights. The tiles are made of silica and are attached with pins rather than glued, with small gaps in between to allow for heat expansion. Their hexagonal shape facilitate mass production and prevent hot plasma from causing severe damage to the vehicle. Variants For satellite launch, Starship will have a large cargo door that will open to release payloads and close upon reentry instead of a more conventional jettisonable nose-cone fairing. Instead of a cleanroom, payloads are integrated directly into Starship's payload bay, which requires purging the payload bay with temperature-controlled ISO class 8 clean air. To deploy Starlink satellites, the cargo door is be replaced with a slot and dispenser rack, whose mechanism has been compared to a Pez candy dispenser. Crewed Starship vehicles would replace the cargo bay with a pressurized crew section and have a life support system. For long-duration missions, such as crewed flights to Mars, SpaceX describes the interior as potentially including "private cabins, large communal areas, centralized storage, solar storm shelters, and a viewing gallery." Starship's life support system is expected to recycle resources such as air and water from waste. Starship Human Landing System (HLS) is a crewed lunar lander variant of the Starship vehicle that is extensively modified for landing, operation, and takeoff from the lunar surface. It features modified landing legs, a body-mounted solar array, a set of thrusters mounted mid-body to assist with final landing and takeoff, two airlocks, and an elevator to lower crew and cargo onto the lunar surface. Starship HLS will be able to land more than of payload on the Moon per flight. Starship will be able to be refueled by docking with separately launched Starship propellant tanker spacecraft in orbit. Doing so would increase the spacecraft's mass capacity and allow it to reach higher-energy targets, such as geosynchronous orbit, the Moon, and Mars. A Starship propellant depot could store methane and oxygen on-orbit, and will be used by Starship HLS to replenish its fuel tanks. Planned mission profile The payload is to be integrated into Starship at a separate facility and then rolled out to the spaceport. After Super Heavy and Starship are stacked onto their launch mount by lifting from hardpoints, they are loaded with fuel via the quick disconnect arm and support. Roughly four hundred truck deliveries are needed for one launch, although some commodities are provided on-site via an air separation unit. Then, the arm and mount detach, all thirty-three engines of Super Heavy ignite, and the rocket lifts off. After two minutes, at an altitude of , Super Heavy cuts off 30 of its engines, leaving only three center ones running at 50% thrust. Then, the ship ignites its engines while still attached to the booster and separates. The booster then returns to the launch site in a controlled descent, being caught by a pair of mechanical arms. After six minutes of flight, about of propellant remains inside the booster. Meanwhile, the Starship spacecraft accelerates to orbital velocity. Once in orbit, the spacecraft is planned to be refueled by one or more tanker variant Starships, increasing the spacecraft's capacity. Musk estimated in a tweet that 8 launches would be needed to completely refuel a Starship in low Earth orbit, having extrapolated this by using Starship's payload to orbit and combining it with how much fuel a fully fueled Starship contains. To land on bodies without an atmosphere, such as the Moon, Starship will fire its engines and thrusters to slow down. To land on bodies with an atmosphere such as the Earth and Mars, Starship first slows by entering the atmosphere via a heat shield. The spacecraft would then perform a "belly-flop" maneuver by diving back through the atmosphere body at a 60ยฐ angle to the ground, controlling its fall using four flaps at the front and aft sides of the spacecraft. Shortly before landing, the Raptor engines fire, using fuel from the header tanks, causing the spacecraft to resume vertical orientation. At this stage, Raptor engines' gimbaling, throttle, and reaction control system's firing help to maneuver the craft. A pseudospectral optimal control algorithm by the German Aerospace Center predicted that the landing flip would tilt up to 20ยฐ from the ground's perpendicular line, and the angle would be reduced to zero on touchdown. Future Starships are envisioned to be caught by mechanical arms, like the booster. If Starship's rocket stages land on a pad, a mobile hydraulic lift moves them to a transporter vehicle. If the rocket stages land on a floating platform, they will be transported by a barge to a port and finally transported by road. The recovered Super Heavy and Starship will either be positioned on the launch mount for another launch or refurbished at a SpaceX facility. Potential uses Starship's reusability is expected to reduce launch costs, expanding space access to more payloads and entities. Musk has predicted that a Starship orbital launch will eventually cost $1 million. Eurospace's director of research, Pierre Lionnet, however, stated that Starship's launch price would likely be higher because of the rocket's development cost (estimated by Musk in 2023 to be roughly 10 billion USD, with 3-5 billion having been spent as of 2023). Crewed and cargo launches Starship also plans to launch the second generation of SpaceX's Starlink satellites, which deliver global high-speed internet. A space analyst at financial services company Morgan Stanley stated development of Starship and Starlink are intertwined, with Starship launch capacity enabling cheaper Starlink launches, and Starlink's profits financing Starship's development costs. In deficit from its inception to 2022, Starlink was first reported slightly profitable in 2023. As of 19 August 2022, the Superbird-9 communication satellite is Starship's first and only known contract for externally made commercial satellites. The satellite weighs dry mass, planned for 2024 launch to a geostationary orbit. In the future, the spacecraft's crewed version could be used for space tourismโ€”for example, the DearMoon project funded by Yusaku Maezawa. Another example is the third flight of the Polaris program announced by Jared Isaacman. Farther in the future, Starship may host point-to-point flights (called "Earth to Earth" flights by SpaceX), traveling anywhere on Earth in under an hour. SpaceX president and chief operating officer Gwynne Shotwell said point-to-point travel could become cost competitive with conventional business class flights. John Logsdon, an academic on space policy and history, said point-to-point travel is unrealistic, as the craft would switch between weightlessness to 5ย g of acceleration. In January 2022, SpaceX was awarded a $102 million five-year contract to develop the Rocket Cargo program for the United States Space Force. Space exploration Starship's lunar lander Starship HLS was initially chosen by NASA as the sole lunar lander for the Artemis 3 and Artemis 4 crewed missions, as part of the Artemis program. In 2023 NASA awarded a contract to Blue Origin to develop a second lunar lander amidst concerns by NASA over delays in the Starship HLS development timeline. The lander is to be launched into a low earth orbit, and refueled by multiple Starship tanker spacecraft. Once it has enough fuel, it will perform a trans lunar injection burn and enter a near-rectilinear halo orbit around the moon. Then, the crews on board the Orion spacecraft are launched with the Space Launch System. Orion then docks with Starship HLS, and the crew transfers into the lander. The lander then performs a powered descent, landing near the lunar south pole. The crew will then perform the surface portion of their mission. The HLS will then ascend with the crew and rendezvous with the Orion spacecraft. The crew then transfers into the Orion spacecraft and Orion performs a burn to return to earth. Opinions differ on how Starship's planned low launch cost will affect the cost of space science. According to Waleed Abdalati, former NASA Chief Scientist, the planned low launch cost would cheapen satellite replacement and enable more ambitious missions for budget-limited programs. According to Lionnet, low launch cost might not reduce the overall cost of a science mission significantly: of the Rosetta space probe and Philae lander's mission cost of $1.7ย billion, the cost of launch (by the expendable Ariane 5) only made up ten percent. Astronomers have called to consider Starship's larger mass to orbit and wider cargo bay for proposed space telescopes such as LUVOIR, and to develop larger telescopes to take advantage of these capabilities. Starship's 9 meters fairing width could hold an 8 meters-wide large space telescope mirror in a single piece, alleviating the need for complex origami deployments such as that of the JWST's 6.5m mirror which added cost and delays. The low launch cost could also allow probes to use heavier, more common, cheaper materials, such as glass instead of beryllium for large telescope mirrors. At 5 tons, the JWST represents only 10% of the mass deliverable by a Starship to the Sun-Earth L2 point, and therefore minimizing the weight of the telescope would not have been a dominant design consideration. A refueled Starship could launch 100 ton observatories to the Moon, L2 Lagrange point and anywhere else in the solar system. Starship might also launch probes orbiting Neptune or Io, or large sample-return missions. Astrophysicists have noted Starship could deploy multiple antennae up to 30 meters in length, opening up radio astronomy to frequencies below 30MHz and wavelengths greater than 10m. This would give the ability to study the Universe's dark ages, unfeasible on Earth due to the atmosphere and human radio background. Space colonization Starship is intended to be able to land crews on Mars. The spacecraft is launched to low Earth orbit, and is then refueled by around five tanker spacecraft before heading to Mars. After landing on Mars, the Sabatier reaction is used to synthesize liquid methane and liquid oxygen, Starship's fuel, in a power-to-gas plant. The plant's raw resources are Martian water and Martian carbon dioxide. On Earth, similar technologies could be used to make carbon-neutral propellant for the rocket. SpaceX and Musk have stated their goal of colonizing Mars to ensure the long-term survival of humanity, with an ambition of sending a thousand Starship spacecraft to Mars during a Mars launch window in a very far future. Musk had maintained an interest in Mars colonization since 2001, when he joined the Mars Society and researched Mars-related space experiments before founding SpaceX in 2002. Musk has made tentative estimates of Starship's Mars landing; in March 2022, he gave a date of 2029 for the first crewed Mars landing. SpaceX has not published technical plans about Starship's life support systems, radiation protection, or in-orbit refueling. Facilities Testing and manufacturing Starbase consists of a manufacturing facility and launch site, and is located at Boca Chica, Texas. Both facilities operate twenty-four hours a day. A maximum of 450 full-time employees may be onsite. The site is planned to consist of two launch sites, one payload processing facility, one seven-acre solar farm, and other facilities. , the expansion plan's permit has been withdrawn by the United States Army Corps of Engineers, citing lack of information provided. The company leases Starbase's land for the STARGATE research facility, owned by the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley. It uses part of it for Starship development. At McGregor, Texas, the Rocket Development facility tests all Raptor engines. The facility has two main test stands: one horizontal stand for both engine types and one vertical stand for sea-level-optimized rocket engines. Other test stands are used for checking Starship's reaction control thrusters and Falcon's Merlin engines. The McGregor facility previously hosted test flights of landable first stagesโ€”Grasshopper and F9R Dev1. In the future, a nearby factory, which was under construction, will make the new generation of sea-level Raptors while SpaceX's headquarters in California will continue building the Raptor Vacuum and test new designs. At Florida, a facility at Cocoa purifies silica for Starship heat-shield tiles, producing a slurry that is then shipped to a facility at Cape Canaveral. In the past, workers constructed the Starship Mk2 prototype in competition with Starbase's crews. The Kennedy Space Center, also in Florida, is planned to host other Starship facilities, such as Starship launch sites at Launch Complex 39A, the planned Launch Complex 49, and a production facility at Roberts Road. This production facility is being expanded from "Hangar X", the Falcon rocket boosters' storage and maintenance facility. It will include a building, loading dock, and a place for constructing integration tower sections. Launch sites Starbase is planned to host two launch sites, named Pad A and Pad B. A launch site at Starbase has large facilities, such as a tank farm, an orbital launch mount, and an integration tower. Smaller facilities are present at the launch site: tanks surrounding the area containing methane, oxygen, nitrogen, helium, hydraulic fluid, etc.; subcoolers near the tank farm cool propellant using liquid nitrogen; and various pipes are installed at large facilities. Each tank farm consists of eight tanks, enough to support one orbital launch. The current launch mount on Pad A has a water sound suppression system, twenty clamps holding the booster, and a quick disconnect mount providing liquid fuel and electricity to the Super Heavy booster before it lifts off. The integration tower or launch tower consists of steel truss sections, a lightning rod on top, and a pair of mechanical arms that can lift, catch and recover the booster. The decision was made to enable flights and reduce the rocket's mass and part count. The mechanical arms are attached to a carriage and controlled by a pulley at the top of the tower. The pulley is linked to a winch and spool at the base of the tower using a cable. Using the winch, the carriage, and mechanical arms can move vertically, with support from bearings attached at the sides of the carriage. A linear hydraulic actuator moves the arms horizontally. Tracks are mounted on top of arms, which are used to position the booster or spacecraft. The tower is mounted with a quick disconnect arm extending to and contracting from the Starship spacecraft; its functions are similar to the quick disconnect mount that powers the booster. Since 2021, the company is constructing a second Starship launch pad in Cape Canaveral, Florida, in Kennedy Space Center's Launch Complex 39A, which is currently used to launch Crew Dragon capsules to the International Space Station. SpaceX plans to make a separate pad at 39A's north, named Launch Complex 49. Because of Launch Complex 39A's Crew Dragon launches, the company is studying how to strengthen the pad against the possibility of a Starship explosion and proposed to retrofit Cape Canaveral Space Launch Complex 40 instead. The towers and mechanical arms at the Florida launch sites should be similar to the one at Starbase, with improvements gained from the experience at Boca Chica. Phobos and Deimos were the names of two Starship offshore launch platforms, both in renovation as of March 2022. Before being purchased from Valaris Limited in June 2020, they were nearly identical oil platforms named Valaris 8501 and Valaris 8500. However, following further analysis from SpaceX, it has been announced that the offshore platforms were not suitable for Starship launches. The platforms were sold in early 2023. Community reception Outside the space community, reception to Starship's development among nearby locales has been mixed, especially from cities close to the Starbase spaceport. Proponents of SpaceX's arrival said the company would provide money, education, and job opportunities to the country's poorest areas. Fewer than one-fifth of those 25 or older in the Rio Grande Valley have a bachelor's degree, in comparison to the national average of one-third. The local government has stated that the company boosted the local economy by hiring residents and investing, aiding the three-tenths of the population who live in poverty. Activist Elias Cantu of the League of United Latin American Citizens said the company encourages Brownsville's gentrification, with an ever-increasing property valuation. Even though Starbase had originally planned to launch Falcon rockets when the original environmental assessment was completed in 2014, the site in 2019 was subsequently used to develop Starship, ultimately requiring a revised environmental assessment. Some of the tests have ended in large explosions, causing major disruption to residents and wildlife reserves. The Carrizo/Comecrudo Tribe and environmental activists also allege that SpaceX have overpoliced the area, disrupting indigenous ceremonies and local fishing. Starship's first integrated spaceflight attempt blasted large amounts of sand in the air, reaching communities within a 10-km (6-mile) radius. A small brushfire on nearby state parkland also occurred. There were concerns about the launch's impact on the health of both human residents and endangered species because of the sand blast, which was rumored to be concrete and silt particulate matter before analyses ruled against it. The impact of the first launch led to a lawsuit against the FAA, later joined by SpaceX, from four environmental groups and the Carrizo/Comecrudo Tribe. The disruption to residents is compounded by SpaceX's frequent closures of the road to the beach for vehicle testing. Some residents have moved away or requested financial reparations from the company. Notes See also Comparison of orbital launch systems Comparison of orbital launcher families Long March 9, a super-heavy-lift launch vehicle developed by China, designed to be reusable and close to Starship in tons to orbit SpaceX reusable launch system development program References External links Programmatic Environmental Assessment by the Federal Aviation Administration Starship of SpaceX on eoPortal directory, administered by the European Space Agency Tim Dodd's Starship interviews with Elon Musk on YouTube: A conversation with Elon Musk about Starship, 2019 Starbase and Starship tour, 2021: part 1, part 2, and part 3 Launch tower and Raptor engine tour, 2022: overview, launch infrastructure, Raptor engine Articles containing video clips Cargo spacecraft Crewed spacecraft SpaceX launch vehicles VTVL rockets Proposed reusable launch systems Reusable spaceflight technology Reusable spacecraft Reusable launch systems
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%9D%B4%EB%A0%88%EB%84%A4%20%ED%8C%8C%EB%A0%88%EB%8D%B0%EC%8A%A4
์ด๋ ˆ๋„ค ํŒŒ๋ ˆ๋ฐ์Šค
์ด๋ ˆ๋„ค ํŒŒ๋ ˆ๋ฐ์Šค ์—๋ฅด๋‚œ๋ฐ์Šค(, 1991๋…„ 7์›” 4์ผ ~ )๋Š” ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ์˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ ํ˜„์žฌ FC ๋ฐ”๋ฅด์…€๋กœ๋‚˜ ํŽ˜๋ฉ”๋‹ˆ์—์„œ ์ˆ˜๋น„์ˆ˜๋กœ ํ™œ์•ฝํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ ์—ฌ์ž ๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ์ฃผ์žฅ์„ ๋งก๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํด๋Ÿฝ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ๋ ˆ์•Œ ์†Œ์‹œ์—๋‹ค๋“œ ํŽ˜๋ฉ”๋‹ˆ๋…ธ 2008๋…„ ๋ ˆ์•Œ ์†Œ์‹œ์—๋‹ค๋“œ ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹ˆ๋…ธ์— ์ž…๋‹จํ•˜๋ฉฐ ํ”„๋กœ์— ์ •์‹ ์ž…๋ฌธํ•œ ํ›„ 2010-11 ์‹œ์ฆŒ๊นŒ์ง€ ๊ณต์‹์ „ 89๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ 7๊ณจ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๊ณ  ํŠนํžˆ 2010-11 ์ฝ”ํŒŒ ๋ธ ๋ ˆ์ด๋‚˜์—์„œ ํŒ€์˜ ์ฐฝ๋‹จ ์ฒซ ์ปต๋Œ€ํšŒ 4๊ฐ• ์ง„์ถœ์˜ ๋Œํ’์„ ์ด๋Œ์–ด๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. ์•„ํ‹€๋ ˆํ‹ฑ ๋นŒ๋ฐ”์˜ค ํŽ˜๋ฉ”๋‹ˆ๋…ธ 2010-11 ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ๋งˆ์นœ ํ›„ ์•„ํ‹€๋ ˆํ‹ฑ ๋นŒ๋ฐ”์˜ค ํŽ˜๋ฉ”๋‹ˆ๋…ธ๋กœ ํŠธ๋ ˆ์ด๋“œ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ  ์ดํ›„ 2015-16 ์‹œ์ฆŒ๊นŒ์ง€ ๊ณต์‹์ „ 139๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ 20๊ณจ๋กœ 2015-16 ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋ฉ”๋ผ ๋””๋น„์‹œ์˜จ ํŽ˜๋ฉ”๋‹ˆ๋‚˜ ์šฐ์Šน, 3์—ฐ์† ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ค€์šฐ์Šน(2011-12, 2012-13, 2013-14), 2014-15 ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 3์œ„, ์ฝ”ํŒŒ ๋ธ ๋ ˆ์ด๋‚˜ 2ํšŒ ์ค€์šฐ์Šน(2011-12, 2013-14) ๋“ฑ์˜ ์„ฑ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๊ฑฐ๋‘๋Š” ๋“ฑ 5์‹œ์ฆŒ๋™์•ˆ ๋นŒ๋ฐ”์˜ค์˜ ์ฃผ์ถ• ์ˆ˜๋น„์ˆ˜๋กœ ํ™œ์•ฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํŒŒ๋ฆฌ ์ƒ์ œ๋ฅด๋งน ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ 2015-16 ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ๋์œผ๋กœ ๋นŒ๋ฐ”์˜ค์™€ ๊ฒฐ๋ณ„ํ•œ ํ›„ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ๋””๋น„์ง€์˜น 1 ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ์˜ ๋ช…๋ฌธํŒ€์ธ ํŒŒ๋ฆฌ ์ƒ์ œ๋ฅด๋งน ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ์œผ๋กœ ๋‘ฅ์ง€๋ฅผ ์˜ฎ๊ฒจ 2020-21 ์‹œ์ฆŒ๊นŒ์ง€ 5์‹œ์ฆŒ๋™์•ˆ ๊ณต์‹์ „ 125๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ 22๊ณจ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ 2020-21 ์‹œ์ฆŒ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์šฐ์Šน, 3์—ฐ์† ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ค€์šฐ์Šน(2017-18, 2018-19, 2019-20), 2016-17 ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 3์œ„, 2016-17๋…„ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ค€์šฐ์Šน, 2ํšŒ ์—ฐ์† ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 4๊ฐ• ์ง„์ถœ(2019-20, 2020-21), 2017-18 ์ฟ ํ”„ ๋“œ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ ์šฐ์Šน, 2๋ฒˆ์˜ ์ฟ ํ”„ ๋“œ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ ์ค€์šฐ์Šน(2016-17, 2019-20) ๋“ฑ์˜ ๊ตต์งํ•œ ์„ฑ์ ์„ ๋‚จ๊ฒผ๋‹ค. FC ๋ฐ”๋ฅด์…€๋กœ๋‚˜ ํŽ˜๋ฉ”๋‹ˆ 2020-21 ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ๋งˆ์นœ ๋’ค FC ๋ฐ”๋ฅด์…€๋กœ๋‚˜ ํŽ˜๋ฉ”๋‹ˆ ์ด์ ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด 5๋…„๋งŒ์— ๊ณ ๊ตญ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณต๊ท€ํ•œ ํ›„ ํ˜„์žฌ๊นŒ์ง€ 2022๋…„ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ ์—ฌ์ž ์Šˆํผ์ปต ์šฐ์Šน, 2021-22 ์‹œ์ฆŒ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์šฐ์Šน, 2021-22๋…„ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ค€์šฐ์Šน ๋“ฑ์˜ ์„ฑ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๋‚จ๊ฒผ๋‹ค. ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ 2011๋…„ 11์›” 20์ผ ๋ฃจ๋งˆ๋‹ˆ์•„์™€์˜ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2013 ์˜ˆ์„  2์กฐ 4์ฐจ์ „(4-0 ์Šน)์—์„œ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ ์—ฌ์ž ๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ์†Œ์†์œผ๋กœ ๊ตญ์ œ A๋งค์น˜ ๋ฐ๋ท”์ „์„ ์น˜๋ €๊ณ  2013๋…„ 10์›” 27์ผ ์ตœ์•ฝ์ฒดํŒ€์ธ ์—์Šคํ† ๋‹ˆ์•„์™€์˜ 2015๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์ง€์—ญ ์˜ˆ์„  2์กฐ 1์ฐจ์ „์—์„œ A๋งค์น˜ ๋ฐ๋ท”๊ณจ์„ ํ„ฐ๋œจ๋ฆฌ๋ฉฐ ํŒ€์˜ 6-0 ๋Œ€์Šน์— ์ผ์กฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๋’ค 2015๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ์›”๋“œ์ปต ๋ณธ์„  ๋ฌด๋Œ€๋ฅผ ๋ฐŸ์•˜์œผ๋‚˜ ํŒ€์€ ์ด ๋Œ€ํšŒ ๋ณธ์„ ์—์„œ 1๋ฌด 2ํŒจยทE์กฐ ์ตœํ•˜์œ„์˜ ์„ฑ์ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๋‘๋ฉฐ ์กฐ๋ณ„๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ํƒˆ๋ฝ์˜ ๊ณ ๋ฐฐ๋ฅผ ๋งˆ์…จ๊ณ  ์ดํ›„ 2019๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์ง€์—ญ ์˜ˆ์„ ์—์„œ 4๊ณจ์„ ํ„ฐ๋œจ๋ ค 2ํšŒ ์—ฐ์† ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ๋ณธ์„ ํ–‰์„ ์ด๋ˆ ๋’ค 2019๋…„ ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ๋ณธ์„ ์—์„œ๋„ ๋งนํ™œ์•ฝํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์—ญ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ฒซ ์›”๋“œ์ปต 16๊ฐ• ์ง„์ถœ์˜ ํฐ ๊ณต์„ ์„ธ์› ๋‹ค. ์ด์— ์•ž์„œ 2017๋…„ ์•Œ๊ฐ€๋ฅด๋ธŒ์ปต๊ณผ 2018๋…„ ํ‚คํ”„๋กœ์Šค์ปต์—๋„ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์—ญ์‚ฌ์ƒ 2ํšŒ ์—ฐ์† ๊ตญ์ œ ๋Œ€ํšŒ ์šฐ์Šน์ปต์„ ๋“ค์–ด์˜ฌ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๊ธฐ์จ์„ ๋ง›๋ณด์•˜๊ณ  ํŠนํžˆ 2017๋…„ ์•Œ๊ฐ€๋ฅด๋ธŒ์ปต์—์„œ๋Š” ์ƒ์•  ์ฒซ ์ตœ์šฐ์ˆ˜์„ ์ˆ˜์— ์„ ์ •๋˜๋Š” ์˜์˜ˆ๊นŒ์ง€ ์•ˆ์•˜๋‹ค. ์ˆ˜์ƒ ํด๋Ÿฝ ๋ ˆ์•Œ ์†Œ์‹œ์—๋‹ค๋“œ ํŽ˜๋ฉ”๋‹ˆ๋…ธ ์ฝ”ํŒŒ ๋ธ ๋ ˆ์ด๋‚˜ : 4๊ฐ• (2010-11) ์•„ํ‹€๋ ˆํ‹ฑ ๋นŒ๋ฐ”์˜ค ํŽ˜๋ฉ”๋‹ˆ๋…ธ ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋ฉ”๋ผ ๋””๋น„์‹œ์˜จ ํŽ˜๋ฉ”๋‹ˆ๋‚˜ : ์šฐ์Šน (2015-16), ์ค€์šฐ์Šน (2011-12, 2012-13, 2013-14), 3์œ„ (2014-15) ์ฝ”ํŒŒ ๋ธ ๋ ˆ์ด๋‚˜ : ์ค€์šฐ์Šน (2011-12, 2013-14) ํŒŒ๋ฆฌ ์ƒ์ œ๋ฅด๋งน ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ ๋””๋น„์ง€์˜น 1 ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ : ์šฐ์Šน (2020-21), ์ค€์šฐ์Šน (2017-18, 2018-19, 2019-20), 3์œ„ (2016-17) ์ฟ ํ”„ ๋“œ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ : ์šฐ์Šน (2017-18), ์ค€์šฐ์Šน (2016-17, 2019-20) UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ : ์ค€์šฐ์Šน (2016-17), 4๊ฐ• (2019-20, 2020-21) FC ๋ฐ”๋ฅด์…€๋กœ๋‚˜ ํŽ˜๋ฉ”๋‹ˆ ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋ฉ”๋ผ ๋””๋น„์‹œ์˜จ ํŽ˜๋ฉ”๋‹ˆ๋‚˜ : ์šฐ์Šน (2021-22) UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ : ์ค€์šฐ์Šน (2021-22) ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ ์—ฌ์ž ์Šˆํผ์ปต : ์šฐ์Šน (2022) ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ (์—ฌ์ž) ์•Œ๊ฐ€๋ฅด๋ธŒ์ปต : ์šฐ์Šน (2017) ํ‚คํ”„๋กœ์Šค์ปต : ์šฐ์Šน (2018) ๊ฐœ์ธ ์•Œ๊ฐ€๋ฅด๋ธŒ์ปต ์ตœ์šฐ์ˆ˜์„ ์ˆ˜ : 2017 ๊ตญ์ œ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ํ˜‘ํšŒ ์„ ์ • ์›”๋“œ 11 : 2017 UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๋“œ๋ฆผํŒ€ : 2020-21 UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์˜ฌํ•ด์˜ ์ˆ˜๋น„์ˆ˜์ƒ : 2020-21 1991๋…„ ์ถœ์ƒ ์‚ด์•„์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ์˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์ˆ˜๋น„์ˆ˜ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2013 ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 2015๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2017 ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 2019๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ F์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ์˜ ์„ฑ์†Œ์ˆ˜์ž ์Šคํฌ์ธ  ์„ ์ˆ˜ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2022 ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ํŒŒ๋ฆฌ ์ƒ์ œ๋ฅด๋งน FC ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ FC ๋ฐ”๋ฅด์…€๋กœ๋‚˜ ํŽ˜๋ฉ”๋‹ˆ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 2023๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์˜ ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋””๋น„์ง€์˜น 1 ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irene%20Paredes
Irene Paredes
Irene Paredes Hernรกndez (born 4 July 1991) is a Spanish professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for Liga F club Barcelona and the Spain national team. Club career Real Sociedad Born in Legazpi, Gipuzkoa in the Basque Country, Paredes joined local side Zarautz in 2007. She then moved to Real Sociedad a year later. On 5 October 2008, she made her senior debut against Mรกlaga in a league game. Athletic Bilbao After spending three seasons at Real Sociedad, Paredes signed for Basque rivals Athletic Bilbao in 2011. She spent five seasons there, winning the Primera Divisiรณn in her final season with the club in 2015โ€“16. She also won three Copa Euskal Herria against her former club Real Sociedad in 2011, 2013 and 2015. On 10 June 2012, she was sent off for the first time in her career in their 1โ€“2 loss against Espanyol in the 2012 Copa de la Reina final. Paris Saint-Germain In 2016, Paredes signed for Paris Saint-Germain. She played her first UEFA Women's Champions League season after joining PSG and reached the final, where her team lost 6โ€“7 on penalties to Lyon. On 31 May 2018, she won her first trophy with the club as PSG defeated Lyon 1โ€“0 in the final of the 2018 Coupe de France Fรฉminine. She was named as captain of PSG before the start of the 2018โ€“19 season. In May 2019, Paredes extended her contract with PSG for two more years, keeping her at the club till 30 June 2021. On 21 September, Paredes played in her first final as captain as PSG were defeated 3โ€“4 on penalties by Lyon in the inaugural Trophรฉe des Championnes. On 4 June 2021, Paredes led PSG to their first ever league title, ending Lyon's run of 14 consecutive titles. She also led PSG to the semifinals of the Women's Champions League where her team lost to eventual champions Barcelona. Barcelona On 8 July 2021, Paredes signed a two-year deal with Barcelona after her contract with PSG expired. On 4 September, Paredes made her official Barcelona debut in a 5โ€“0 routing of Granadilla Tenerife. On 17 October, Paredes scored her first goal for Barcelona in a 5โ€“0 victory against Sporting Huelva. On 17 November, she scored her first Women's Champions League goal for Barcelona as she headed in the second goal in a 5โ€“0 defeat of 1899 Hoffenheim in the group stage. On 23 January 2022, Paredes won her first title with Barcelona after her side thrashed Atlรฉtico Madrid 7โ€“0 in the final to win their second Supercopa de Espaรฑa Femenina title. On 9 February, Paredes returned after recovering from Covid-19 and scored the fourth goal in the 9โ€“1 thrashing of Real Sociedad. On 13 February, Paredes suffered a muscle tear in her left thigh during their 3โ€“0 win against Athletic Bilbao and was ruled out for over four weeks. On 13 March, Paredes won her second Spanish league title, and her first with Barรงa, after Barcelona won 5โ€“0 against Real Madrid. On 22 March, Paredes returned from her injury when she came on at the 65th minute in a 3โ€“1 victory against Real Madrid in the first leg of the Champions League quarter final. On 30 March, she made her Camp Nou debut in the return leg of Barรงa's 5โ€“2 quarter final victory against Real Madrid. On 21 May, Paredes started against Lyon as Barcelona were defeated 1โ€“3 in the Champions League final at the Allianz Stadium in Turรญn. On 29 May, she won her third trophy with Barcelona as her team thrashed Sporting Huelva 6โ€“1 in the Copa de la Reina final. On 18 August, Paredes was announced as the fifth captain of Barcelona before the start of the new season. On 19 January 2023, Paredes was sent-off during Barcelona's 3โ€“1 victory over Real Madrid in the semi-final of the 2022-23 Supercopa de Espaรฑa Femenina and was subsequently suspended for the final. Three days later, her side defeated Real Sociedad 3โ€“0 to win the trophy. On 27 January, Paredes extended her contract with Barcelona until June 2025. On 30 April, she won her second league title with Barcelona when her side beat Sporting Huelva 3โ€“0. On 3 June, Paredes played the entire match as Barcelona won 3โ€“2 against VfL Wolfsburg in the final to win her first Women's Champions League title. International career She played her first minutes for the Spain national team in November 2011 against Romania. In June 2013, national team coach Ignacio Quereda confirmed Paredes as a member of his 23-player squad for the UEFA Women's Euro 2013 finals in Sweden. At the tournament, she scored an unfortunate own goal in Spain's 3โ€“1 quarter-final defeat to Norway. On 27 October 2013, she scored her first goal for Spain, in a 6โ€“0 home win against Estonia at a 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification match. She was also called up to be part of Spain's squad at the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup in Canada and at the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup in France. On 5 March 2018, she marked her 50th appearance for Spain by opening the scoring with a header in a 2โ€“0 victory against Czech Republic in the last group match of the Cyprus Cup. On 14 February 2022, Paredes was ruled out of the inaugural edition of the Arnold Clark Cup after suffering a muscle tear in her left thigh and was replaced by Sheila Garcรญa. On 6 April 2023, Paredes made her return to the national team in a 4โ€“2 international friendly win against Norway after she had resigned from the national team, along with her captaincy role in October 2022, following disagreements between a few players and the RFEF over unfavourable conditions in the dressing room. On 20 August, she won the FIFA Women's World Cup after Spain defeated England 1โ€“0 in the final. Personal life Paredes is in a relationship with former Spain hockey player Lucรญa Ybarra. During her stint at PSG, the couple lived together in Saint-Germain-en-Laye. In April 2021, Paredes and Ybarra announced that they were expecting their first child together. On 13 September, Paredes announced the arrival of their son Mateo, who was born the day before, in an Instagram post. Paredes had already asked coach Jorge Vilda not to summon her to the national squad for 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification due to the forthcoming birth. Style of play Paredes has been described to be a multifaceted defender, who is a commanding presence in the air. She is also a very skillful and technically gifted ball-playing defender as she contributes to her team's build-up while dribbling the ball up the field and connecting with the attackers. She is an attacking threat inside the opponent's penalty area from free-kicks and corners as she has demonstrated with her prowess in goalscoring through headers. Career statistics Club International Scores and results list Spain's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Paredes goal. Honours Athletic Bilbao Primera Divisiรณn: 2015โ€“16 Paris Saint-Germain Division 1 Fรฉminine: 2020โ€“21 Coupe de France Fรฉminine: 2017โ€“18 Barcelona Primera Divisiรณn: 2021โ€“22, 2022โ€“23 UEFA Women's Champions League: 2022โ€“23 Copa de la Reina: 2021โ€“22 Supercopa de Espaรฑa Femenina: 2021โ€“22, 2022โ€“23 Spain FIFA Women's World Cup: 2023 Algarve Cup: 2017 Cyprus Cup: 2018 Individual Algarve Cup Best player: 2017 FIFA FIFPro World XI: 2017 UEFA Women's Champions League Squad of the Season: 2020โ€“21, 2022โ€“23 UEFA Women's Champions League Defender of the Season: 2020โ€“21 References External links Irene Paredes at FC Barcelona (archive) Irene Paredes at BDFutbol 1991 births Living people People from Goierri Spanish women's footballers Spain women's international footballers Liga F players Real Sociedad Femenino players Athletic Club (women) players Paris Saint-Germain Fรฉminine players FC Barcelona Femenรญ players Women's association football defenders 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup players Expatriate women's footballers in France Spanish expatriate sportspeople in France Division 1 Fรฉminine players 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup players LGBT association football players Spanish LGBT sportspeople Footballers from Gipuzkoa UEFA Women's Euro 2022 players UEFA Women's Euro 2017 players 21st-century Spanish women 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup players FIFA Women's World Cup-winning players
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%ED%8A%B9%EB%B3%84%EA%B7%BC%EB%A1%9C%EA%B0%90%EB%8F%85%EA%B4%80%20%EC%A1%B0%EC%9E%A5%ED%92%8D
ํŠน๋ณ„๊ทผ๋กœ๊ฐ๋…๊ด€ ์กฐ์žฅํ’
ใ€ŠํŠน๋ณ„๊ทผ๋กœ๊ฐ๋…๊ด€ ์กฐ์žฅํ’ใ€‹()์€ 2019๋…„ 4์›” 8์ผ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2019๋…„ 5์›” 28์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋œ MBC ์›”ํ™” ๋ฏธ๋‹ˆ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ์ด๋‹ค. ์ค„๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ ๊ณผ๊ฑฐ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œ๊ธ‰ ์œ ๋„ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ถœ์‹ ์ด์ž ์ฒด์œก ๊ต์‚ฌ๋กœ์„œ ๊ฑด์‹คํ•œ ์‚ถ์„ ๊ฟˆ๊ฟจ์œผ๋‚˜ '์šฑ'ํ•˜๋Š” ์„ฑ๊ฒฉ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ํ‡ด์ถœ ๋œ ํ›„ ๋ฌด์‚ฌ์•ˆ์ผ์„ ์ตœ์šฐ์„ ์œผ๋กœ ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ณต๋ฌด์›์ด ๋œ '์กฐ์ง„๊ฐ‘'์ด ๊ณ ์šฉ๋…ธ๋™๋ถ€ ๊ทผ๋กœ๊ฐ๋…๊ด€์œผ๋กœ ์ผํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์‚ฌํšŒ์˜ ์•…๋• '๊ฐ‘'๋“ค์„ ์‘์ง•ํ•˜๋Š” ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋‹ค๋ฃฌ ์‚ฌํšŒํ’์ž ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ. ๋“ฑ์žฅ ์ธ๋ฌผ ์ฃผ์š” ์ธ๋ฌผ ๊น€๋™์šฑ : ์กฐ์ง„๊ฐ‘ ์—ญ (์•„์—ญ ๊น€๋™ํ•˜, ๊น€์˜์ค€) - ๋ณ„๋ช… ์กฐ์žฅํ’. ์™•๋…„ ์ฒด์œก๊ต์‚ฌ. ํ˜„์žฌ 7๊ธ‰ ๊ณต๋ฌด์› ๊ทผ๋กœ๊ฐ๋…๊ด€ ๋ฐ•์„ธ์˜ : ์ฃผ๋ฏธ๋ž€ ์—ญ - ์กฐ์ง„๊ฐ‘ ์ „์ฒ˜. ํ˜•์‚ฌ ๊น€๊ฒฝ๋‚จ : ์ฒœ๋•๊ตฌ ์—ญ - ์กฐ์žฅํ’์˜ ์˜› ์ œ์ž. ์™•๋…„ ๋‚ ๋ฆฌ๋˜ ์ผ์ง„. ํ˜„์žฌ ํฅ์‹ ์†Œ ๊ฐ‘์„๊ธฐํš ์‚ฌ์žฅ ๋ฅ˜๋•ํ™˜ : ์šฐ๋„ํ•˜ ์—ญ - ์กฐ์žฅํ’์˜ ์˜› ์ œ์ž. ๋ช…์„ฑ๊ทธ๋ฃน ๋ฒ•๋ฌดํŒ€ ๋ณ€ํ˜ธ์‚ฌ. ๋ฏธ๋ฆฌ๋‚ด์žฌ๋‹จ ์‹ ์ž„ ์ด์‚ฌ์žฅ ๊ตฌ์›์‹œ ๋…ธ๋™์ง€์ฒญ ๊ฐ•์„œ์ค€ : ์ด๋™์˜ ์—ญ - ์กฐ์ง„๊ฐ‘์˜ ๋™๋„ค ํ›„๋ฐฐ. ๊ทผ๋กœ๊ฐ๋…๊ด€ ์ด์›์ข… : ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์—ญ - ๊ตฌ์›์‹œ ๋…ธ๋™์ง€์ฒญ์žฅ. โ€˜์น ์น˜๋น ๋น โ€™(์น  ๋•Œ ์น˜๊ณ  ๋น ์งˆ ๋•Œ ๋น ์ง„๋‹ค)๋ฅผ ์•„๋Š” ํƒ€์ด๋ฐ์˜ ๊ท€์žฌ ์•ˆ์ƒ์šฐ : ํ™ฉ๋‘์‹ ์—ญ - ์•…๋• ๊ทผ๋กœ๊ฐ๋…๊ด€ ๊ฐ‘์„๊ธฐํš ์œ ์ˆ˜๋นˆ : ๋ฐฑ๋ถ€์žฅ ์—ญ - ๋ณธ๋ช… ๋ฐฑ์›๋งŒ. ๋•๊ตฌ ๊ผฌ๋ถ• 1. ์ถ”์‹ฌ์ „๋ฌธ๊ฐ€ ๊น€์‹œ์€ : ์˜ค๋Œ€๋ฆฌ ์—ญ - ๋ณธ๋ช… ์˜ค์•„๋ฆ„. ๋•๊ตฌ ๊ผฌ๋ถ• 2. ๊ธฐ๊ณ„์žฅ๋น„ ์ „๋ฌธ ๋ช…์„ฑ๊ทธ๋ฃน ์„ค์ธ์•„ : ๊ณ ๋ง์ˆ™ ์—ญ - ์ตœ์„œ๋ผ์˜ ๊ฐœ์ธ ๋น„์„œ. ์ฒœ๋•๊ตฌ์˜ ์—ฐ์ธ ์˜ค๋Œ€ํ™˜ : ๊ตฌ๋Œ€๊ธธ ์—ญ - ๋ฏธ๋ฆฌ๋‚ด์žฅํ•™์žฌ๋‹จ ์ด์‚ฌ์žฅ. ์ƒ๋„์—ฌ๊ฐ ์‹ค์งˆ์  ์‚ฌ์žฅ ์ด์ƒ์ด : ์–‘ํƒœ์ˆ˜ ์—ญ - ์กฐ์žฅํ’์˜ ์˜› ์ œ์ž. ์ตœ์„œ๋ผ์˜ ์™ธ๋™์•„๋“ค. ํ‹ฐ์—์Šค ์‚ฌ์žฅ ์†ก์˜ฅ์ˆ™ : ์ตœ์„œ๋ผ ์—ญ - ์–‘ํƒœ์ˆ˜์˜ ์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ. ๋ช…์„ฑ๊ทธ๋ฃน ํšŒ์žฅ ์ „๊ตญํ™˜ : ์–‘์ธํƒœ ์—ญ - ์–‘ํƒœ์ˆ˜์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€. ์ตœ์„œ๋ผ์˜ ๋‚จํŽธ. ๊ตญํšŒ์˜์› ์กฐ์ง„๊ฐ‘์˜ ๊ฐ€์กฑ ๊น€ํ™ํŒŒ : ์กฐ์ง„์ฒ  ์—ญ - ์กฐ์ง„๊ฐ‘์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€ ์ด๋‚˜์œค : ์กฐ์ง„์•„ ์—ญ (์•„์—ญ ์‹ฌํ˜œ์—ฐ) - ์ฃผ๋ฏธ๋ž€๊ณผ ์กฐ์ง„๊ฐ‘์˜ ๋”ธ ์ฃผ๋ณ€ ์ธ๋ฌผ ์ฐจ์ •์› : ๊น€์ง€๋ž€ ์—ญ - ๊ณต์•ˆ๋ถ€ ๋…ธ๋™์‚ฌ๊ฑด ๋‹ด๋‹น ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ. ์–‘ํƒœ์ˆ˜์™€ ์ •๋žต๊ฒฐํ˜ผ ์˜ˆ์ • ๊ณ ๊ฑดํ•œ : ๊น€์„ ์šฐ ์—ญ - ์กฐ์žฅํ’์˜ ์˜› ์ œ์ž. ์ƒ๋„์—ฌ๊ฐ ๋ฒ„์Šค ๊ธฐ์‚ฌ ๊ทธ ์™ธ ์ธ๋ฌผ ๊น€์ง„์„ฑ : ๊ตฌ๋ฏผ์žฌ ์—ญ - ๋Œ€๊ธธ์˜ ์•„๋“ค ์ถ”์—ฐ๊ทœ ๋ฐ•์šฐ์˜ ํ•œ์—ฌ์šธ ํ•œ์ง€์› ๊น€๊ด‘ํƒœ ์œค์—ฌํ•™ ์ด๋™์šฉ ํ™ฉ์žฌ์—ด : ์ƒ๋„์—ฌ๊ฐ ๋…ธ์กฐ์œ„์›์žฅ ์—ญ ์–‘์Šน๊ฑธ ์ด์„ฑ์ง„ ๊น€์šฉ์ง„ ๋ฐฑ์˜ฅ๊ท  ์„ฑํ˜„๋ฏธ ์œค์ข…๊ตฌ ๊น€ํƒœ๋ž‘ ๋ฐ•์ƒ์šฉ ์ง€์„ฑ๊ทผ ์ด์ฐฝ ์˜ค๊ทœํƒ ์•ˆ์ฐฌ์›… ์ด์›์ฐฌ ์„œ๋ฒ”์‹ ์„œ๋ณ‘๋• ์žฅ๋ฌธ๊ทœ ๋ฌธํ•™์ง„ ์ž„์žฌ๊ทผ ์„ค์ฐฝํฌ ์ด์šฉ๊ทœ ์ดํ•˜์˜ : ๊ณต์‹œ์„ ์ƒ๋‹˜ ์—ญ ์žฅ์šฑํ˜„ : ๊ฒฝ๋น„ ์—ญ ์ด์‘๋ฏผ : ๊ฒฝ๋น„ ์—ญ ํ™๋ฆฌ๊ฑธ : ๋•๊ตฌ ์นœ๊ตฌ ์—ญ ๋ฐ•์„ฑํ›ˆ : ๋•๊ตฌ ์นœ๊ตฌ ์—ญ ์ „ํ•ด์„ฑ : ๊ตฐ์ˆ˜ ์•„๋“ค ์—ญ ๋ฐ•์šฉ ์„œ๊ด‘์žฌ ์œ ์ˆœ์›… ์‹ ์ฒ ์ง„ ๋ฌธ์˜๋™ ๊ธˆ๋™ํ˜„ ์‹ ์žฌ์› ํ™์ œ์ด : ์ง€ํ˜ธ ์—ญ ์ด์ค€์„œ : ์ค‘๊ตญ์ง‘ ๋ฐฐ๋‹ฌ ์•Œ๋ฐ”์ƒ ์—ญ ๊น€์Šน์ฐฌ : ํ”ผ์ž ๋ฐฐ๋‹ฌ ์•Œ๋ฐ”์ƒ ์—ญ ์žฅํ˜ธ์ค€ : ์น˜ํ‚จ ๋ฐฐ๋‹ฌ ์•Œ๋ฐ”์ƒ ์—ญ ์ด๋™ํ˜„ : ๋ณด์Œˆ ๋ฐฐ๋‹ฌ ์•Œ๋ฐ”์ƒ ์—ญ ๋ฐ•๊ณ„์œค : ๋ถ„์‹ ๋ฐฐ๋‹ฌ ์•Œ๋ฐ”์ƒ ์—ญ ์•ˆํ˜œ์› : ์ž„์‚ฐ๋ถ€ ์—ญ ์กฐ๋ฏผ๊ทœ : ํšŒ์‚ฌ์› ์—ญ ์ •์„ธํ˜„ : ์•Œ๋ฐ”์ƒ ์—ญ ํ•œ์†กํ˜ธ : ๋ฒ„์Šค ์ •๋น„ ๊ธฐ์‚ฌ ์—ญ ๋ฐฉ์ธ์ค€ : ๋ฒ„์Šค ๊ธฐ์‚ฌ ์—ญ ๋‚จ์ฒœ์šฐ : ๋ฒ„์ŠคํšŒ์‚ฌ ์ง์› ์—ญ ์ง„์ฃผ์› : ๋ฌธ ๋น„์„œ ์—ญ ๊น€์ƒˆ๋กฌ : ๋น„์„œ ์—ญ ์‹ฌ๋‚˜์€ : ๋น„์„œ ์—ญ ํ—ˆ์ˆ˜๋นˆ : ๋น„์„œ ์—ญ ์ •์ง€์€ : ๋น„์„œ ์—ญ ๊น€ํ˜œ์ง„ : ๋น„์„œ ์—ญ ์ฐจ์†Œ์œค : ๋น„์„œ ์—ญ ๊น€์ฃผ์˜ : ์›จ์ดํŠธ๋ฆฌ์Šค ์—ญ ์œค๋ฏธ๊ฒฝ : ์žฅ์€์ง€ ์—ญ - ์€๋ฏธ์˜ ์–ธ๋‹ˆ ๋ฐ•์ง€์•ˆ : ์žฅ์€๋ฏธ ์—ญ - ํœด๋จผํ…Œํฌ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌ ์ง์› ์ด๊ทœํ˜„ : ์ด์ฐฝ๊ทœ ์—ญ - ๋ช…์„ฑ ๋ณ‘์› ์ธํ„ด ๋ฐ•์ง€์—ฐ : ์ฐฝ๊ทœ์˜ ์•„๋‚ด ์—ญ - ๋ช…์„ฑ๊ทธ๋ฃน์— ์˜ํ•œ ์ตœ๋Œ€ ํ”ผํ•ด์ž ์ž„ํ•˜๋น„ : ์ฐฝ๊ทœ์˜ ๋”ธ ์ง„ํฌ์—ญ ๊น€์—ฌ๋ฆ„ : ์ทจ์ค€์ƒ ์—ญ ์žฅ์˜ˆ๋ฆผ : ์ทจ์ค€์ƒ ์—ญ ๊น€๊ทœํฌ : ์ทจ์ค€์ƒ ์—ญ ๊น€๋ช…ํ›ˆ : ๋…ธ๋ž˜๋ฐฉ ์ง์› ์—ญ ์ด์ง€ํ›ˆ : ๋งน๊ณผ์žฅ ์—ญ - ์‚ฐ์žฌ์žฌ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ์œ„์›ํšŒ ์ง์› ๊น€์™•๊ทผ ์ตœ์‹œํ›ˆ ์†์ง„ํ™˜ ์‹ ์šฐ์ฒ  ์ตœ๋‚˜๋ฌด ์ดํ˜„๊ฑธ : ๋‚จ ๋น„์„œ ์—ญ - ์–‘์ธํƒœ์˜ ๋น„์„œ ์ •ํ˜„์„ ๋ฅ˜์ง€ํ›ˆ ์•ˆ์ˆ˜๋นˆ - ์‹ฌํ˜„์ˆ™ ์—ญ - ๋„์ง€์‚ฌ ํ›„๋ณด ์ด์„œํ™˜ ์žฅ์šฑํ˜„ ๋ฌธ์ •๊ธฐ ํ•œ์ˆ˜ํ˜ ๊ถŒํ˜๋ฒ” ๊น€์›์‹ ์ง„ํ˜„๊ด‘ ๋ฏผ์ •์„ญ ์žฅ์ค€ํ˜ธ ์ด์œค์ƒ ๊น€์ฃผ์ฐฌ ํ™ฉ๋ณด๊ถŒ : ํ‹ฐ์—์Šค ์ง์› ์—ญ ์žฅ์˜ˆ์ง„ : ๊ณ ์œ„์ธต ํ•˜๊ฐ ์—ญ ๋ฐ•์„ธํ›ˆ : ๋ฐฉ์†ก์‹ค ์ง์› ์—ญ ๋ฐ•์†Œ์˜ : ๊ฐ„ํ˜ธ์‚ฌ ์—ญ ์„œํฌ : ๊ฐ„ํ˜ธ์‚ฌ ์—ญ ์ตœ๋‚˜๋ฌด : ๊ฐ„ํ˜ธ์‚ฌ ์—ญ ํ™ฉ๋‹ค๊ฒฝ : ๊ฐ„ํ˜ธ์‚ฌ ์—ญ ์ด์›์ฐฌ ๊น€์ฃผ์ฐฌ ์ •ํ˜ธ : ๋ณด์•ˆ์ง์› ์—ญ ๋ฐ•๋Œ€์˜ ์ตœ์ค€ํ™˜ ๊น€ํ™˜ : ๊ด€์ œ์‹ค ์ง์› ์—ญ ๊ถŒ๊ตฌ๋‚จ : ์—”์ง€๋‹ˆ์–ด ์—ญ ์ •์ง€ํ˜ธ : ์ƒ๋„์—ฌ๊ฐ ๋ฐ”์ง€์‚ฌ์žฅ ์—ญ ์ „์ •์ผ : ์ •์ด์‚ฌ ์—ญ ์ •์˜ˆ๋…น : ์œ ์ • ์—ญ ๊น€๋ฏผ์ƒ ํ™ฉ์„ ์˜ : ์–‘ํ•™์ˆ˜์˜ ๋ถ€์ธ ์—ญ ์•ˆ์„ธ๋ฏผ ๊น€์ธ์‹ : PD ์—ญ ํ™์„๋นˆ : ๊ตฌ๋Œ€๊ธธ์˜ ์šด์ „๊ธฐ์‚ฌ ์—ญ ์žฅ๋ช…์šด ๋ฌธ์ง„์Šน ํŠน๋ณ„์ถœ์—ฐ ์„œ๊ฒฝ์„ : ํ† ๋ก  ์ง„ํ–‰์ž - ๋„์ง€์‚ฌ ํ›„๋ณด TVํ† ๋ก ํšŒ ์‚ฌํšŒ์ž ์—๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ ์‹ฑ๊ธ€ ๋ฐ์ด : ๊ฒฐํ˜ผ์‹ ์ถ•ํ•˜๊ณต์—ฐ ์ œ์ž‘์ง„ ๊ธฐํš : ๊ฐ•๋Œ€์„  ์ œ์ž‘ : ๊น€์Šน์กฐ, ์ตœ์ง„ํ˜ธ ํ”„๋กœ๋“€์„œ : ํ™์„์šฐ ๊ทน๋ณธ : ๊น€๋ฐ˜๋”” ์—ฐ์ถœ : ๋ฐ•์›๊ตญ, ์„ฑ์น˜์šฑ ์ดฌ์˜๊ฐ๋… : ๊น€์„ ์ฒ , ์ตœ์ •๊ธธ ์ดฌ์˜ : ์ด์ •์•„, ์ด๋ช…์ค€ ์กฐ๋ช… : ๊น€๊ด‘๋ฏผ, ์œค๊ฒฝํ˜„ ๋™์‹œ : ๋ฐ•์šฉ์ค€, ์ดํ˜„๋„ ์žฅ๋น„ : ์ตœ์ฐฝ์ง„, ์ด๊ธฐ๋ฆฌ ๋ฏธ์ˆ  : ํ•œ์ง€์„  ๋ฌด์ˆ  : ์ •๋‘ํ™ ํŽธ์ง‘ : ์˜ค์„ธ๋ ˆ๋‚˜ ์Œ์•… : ๋ฌธ์„ฑ๋‚จ ์Œ์•…ํšจ๊ณผ : ํ™๊ฐ€ํฌ ์กฐ์—ฐ์ถœ : ๋ฐ•์„ ์˜, ์กฐ๋ฌด๊ฒฝ, ๋ฐฑ์ˆ˜์˜ ์ž‘๊ณก : ์ •์ฐจ์‹, ์ตœ์„ฑํ›ˆ, ๊น€์˜์ง„, ๊น€๋ฏผํฌ, ๋ฐ•ํ˜„, ์žฅํšจ์ฃผ, ๊น€ํ™๊ฐ‘, ์ฒœ์„ธํ›ˆ OST : ๋ฎค์ง์Šคํ† ๋ฆฌ ์ด์œ ์ง„, ์†ก์Šน์ค€ ์‚ฌ์šด๋“œํŠธ๋ž™ Part. 1 Part. 2 Part. 3 Part. 4 Part. 5 ์‹œ์ฒญ๋ฅ  ์ˆ˜์ƒ ๋ฐ ํ›„๋ณด ๊ด€๋ จ ์ƒํ’ˆ DVD ํŠน๋ณ„๊ทผ๋กœ๊ฐ๋…๊ด€ ์กฐ์žฅํ’ DVD (6Disc) ๋ฐœ๋งค์ผ : 2019๋…„ 7์›” 12์ผ ๋™์‹œ๊ฐ„๋Œ€ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ KBS ์›”ํ™” ๋ฏธ๋‹ˆ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ ใ€Š๊ตญ๋ฏผ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ๋ถ„!ใ€‹ (2019๋…„ 4์›” 1์ผ ~ 2019๋…„ 5์›” 28์ผ) SBS ์›”ํ™” ๋ฏธ๋‹ˆ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ ใ€Šํ•ด์น˜ใ€‹ (2019๋…„ 2์›” 11์ผ ~ 2019๋…„ 4์›” 30์ผ) ใ€Š์ดˆ๋ฉด์— ์‚ฌ๋ž‘ํ•ฉ๋‹ˆ๋‹คใ€‹ (2019๋…„ 5์›” 6์ผ ~ 2019๋…„ 6์›” 25์ผ) ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋ชฉ๋ก (ใ…Œ) 2019๋…„ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋ชฉ๋ก ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ํŠน๋ณ„๊ทผ๋กœ๊ฐ๋…๊ด€ ์กฐ์žฅํ’ ๊ณต์‹์‚ฌ์ดํŠธ ๋ฌธํ™”๋ฐฉ์†ก ์›”ํ™”๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ 2019๋…„ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๋…ธ๋™ ์ •์น˜์ธ์„ ์†Œ์žฌ๋กœ ํ•œ ์ž‘ํ’ˆ ๊น€๋ฐ˜๋”” ์‹œ๋‚˜๋ฆฌ์˜ค ์ž‘ํ’ˆ 2010๋…„๋Œ€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ 2019๋…„์— ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ TV ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ 2019๋…„์— ์ข…๋ฃŒํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ TV ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special%20Labor%20Inspector
Special Labor Inspector
Special Labor Inspector () is a 2019 South Korean television series starring Kim Dong-wook, Park Se-young, Ryu Deok-hwan and Kim Kyung-nam. It aired from April 8 to May 28, 2019 on MBC TV. Synopsis The series follows the story of a civil servant who is appointed as a labor inspector in the Ministry of Employment and Labor. Cast Main Kim Dong-wook as Jo Jin-gap, a pure-hearted, hardworking, and honest person with strong sense of justice. He was once a promising judo athlete but was forced to quit after trying to protest an unfair result. He then attempted to become a fitness teacher, but it did not last long as he was unable to control his quick temper in front of the chairman's son. He eventually studied and passed the level nine civil servant exam and becomes a civil servant for a secured government position. However, everything changes when he is assigned as a labor inspector for the Ministry of Employment and Labor. Park Se-young as Joo Mi-ran, Jin-gap's ex-wife who is a former judo athlete turned detective. Ryu Deok-hwan as Woo Do-ha, an ace lawyer of the legal department at Myeongseong Group. Kim Kyung-nam as Cheon Deok-gu, Jin-gap's former pupil who becomes his loyal secret investigator. Supporting Seol In-ah as Go Mal-sook, the personal secretary of Myeongseong Group's chairperson. Oh Dae-hwan as Goo Dae-gil Lee Won-jong as Ha Ji-man Kang Seo-joon as Lee Dong-young Song Ok-sook as Choi Seo-ra Go Geon-han as Kim Sun-woo Shin Cheol-jin Yoo Su-bin Lee Sang-yi as Yang Tae-soo Special appearance Lee Gyu-hyun as Lee Chang Gyu, as an intern doctor. Production The first script reading of the cast was held in early January 2019. Ryu Deok-hwan and Park Se-young have previously worked together in the 2012 series Faith. Ratings Awards and nominations Notes References External links MBC TV television dramas Korean-language television shows 2019 South Korean television series debuts 2019 South Korean television series endings South Korean action television series South Korean comedy television series
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%84%A4%ED%83%95%EC%9D%98%20%EC%97%AD%EC%82%AC
์„คํƒ•์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌ
์„คํƒ•์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌ()๋Š” ๊ณผ๊ฑฐ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ํ˜„๋Œ€์— ์ด๋ฅด๊ธฐ๊นŒ์ง€ ์„คํƒ•์˜ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ, ์žฌ๋ฐฐ, ์ œ์กฐ, ํ™•์‚ฐ, ๋Œ€์ค‘ํ™” ๊ณผ์ •๊ณผ ๊ทธ ์˜ํ–ฅ๋“ค์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ๊ธฐ์ˆ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์„คํƒ•์€ 1์„ธ๊ธฐ ์ดํ›„ ์ธ๋„ ๋ถ๋ถ€์˜ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์‹๋ฌผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ฒ˜์Œ ์ƒ์‚ฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. "์„คํƒ•(sugar)"์ด๋ž€ ๋‹จ์–ด๋Š” ์‚ฐ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฌํŠธ์–ด "sharkara"๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์œ ๋ž˜๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ถ”์ •๋˜๋ฉฐ, ๊ธฐ์›์ „ 1500๋…„์—์„œ ๊ธฐ์›์ „ 500๋…„ ์‚ฌ์ด์— ์“ฐ์—ฌ์ง„ ์ธ๋„์˜ ์‚ฐ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฌํŠธ ๋ฌธํ•™์—๋Š” ์ธ๋„ ๋ฒต๊ณจ ์ง€์—ญ์—์„œ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ์žฌ๋ฐฐํ•˜๊ณ , ์„คํƒ•์„ ์ œ์กฐํ•œ ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ ๊ธฐ๋ก์ด ๋“ฑ์žฅํ•œ๋‹ค. ํˆฌ๋ฐ•ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด์ง„ ์„คํƒ•์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์‚ฐ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฌํŠธ ์ด๋ฆ„์€ "๊ณต์ด๋‚˜ ๋ฉ์–ด๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋“ค๋‹ค"๋ผ๋Š” ๋œป์˜ "๊ตฌ๋‹ค(guda)"์˜€๋‹ค. ์„คํƒ•์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌ๋Š” 5๊ฐ€์ง€ ์ฃผ์š” ๋‹จ๊ณ„๋กœ ๋‚˜๋‰œ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐ์›์ „ ์•ฝ 8000๋…„๊ฒฝ์— ๋™๋‚จ์•„์‹œ์•„ ์ง€์—ญ์—์„œ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ์žฌ๋ฐฐํ•˜๊ณ , ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์‹๋ฌผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜์•ก์„ ์ถ”์ถœ. ์•ฝ 2000๋…„์ „ ์ธ๋„์—์„œ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์ถ”์ถœ์•ก์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์„คํƒ• ์•Œ๊ฐฑ์ด๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋“œ๋Š” ์ œ์กฐ๋ฒ•์„ ๋ฐœ๋ช…ํ•˜๊ณ , 1์„ธ๊ธฐ ์ดˆ๋ฐ˜์— ์ธ๋„์—์„œ ์„คํƒ• ๊ฒฐ์ • ์•Œ๊ฐฑ์ด๋ฅผ ์ •์ œํ•˜๋Š” ๊ณผ์ •์˜ ๊ฐœ์„ . ์„คํƒ•์˜ ์ƒ์‚ฐ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์˜ ๊ฐœ์„ ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์ค‘์„ธ ์ด์Šฌ๋žŒ ์„ธ๊ณ„์— ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜์˜ ์žฌ๋ฐฐ ๋ฐ ์„คํƒ• ์ œ์กฐ์˜ ํ™•์‚ฐ. 16์„ธ๊ธฐ ์ดˆ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์„œ์ธ๋„ ์ œ๋„์™€ ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นด ๋Œ€๋ฅ™์˜ ์—ด๋Œ€ ์ง€์—ญ์— ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜์˜ ์žฌ๋ฐฐ์™€ ์„คํƒ• ์ œ์กฐ์˜ ํ™•์‚ฐ. 17์„ธ๊ธฐ์—์„œ 19์„ธ๊ธฐ๊นŒ์ง€ ์„คํƒ• ์ƒ์‚ฐ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์—์„œ ์ง‘์ค‘์ ์ธ ๊ฐœ์„ ์ด ๋’ค๋”ฐ๋ฆ„. 19์„ธ๊ธฐ์™€ 20์„ธ๊ธฐ์— ์‚ฌํƒ•๋ฌด ์„คํƒ•, ๊ณ ๊ณผ๋‹น ์˜ฅ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์‹œ๋Ÿฝ, ๊ธฐํƒ€ ๊ฐ๋ฏธ๋ฃŒ์˜ ๋ณด๊ธ‰ ๋ฐ ๋ฐœ์ „. ์ค‘์„ธ๊ฐ€ ๋๋‚˜๊ฐˆ ๋ฌด๋ ต ์„ธ๊ณ„์ ์œผ๋กœ ์•Œ๋ ค์ง„ ์„คํƒ•์€ ๋งค์šฐ ๋น„์‹ธ๊ณ  "ํ›Œ๋ฅญํ•œ ํ–ฅ์‹ ๋ฃŒ"๋กœ ๊ฐ„์ฃผ๋˜์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ, 1500๋…„๊ฒฝ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์˜ ํ–ฅ์ƒ๊ณผ ์‹ ๋Œ€๋ฅ™์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ์˜ ์„คํƒ• ๊ณต๊ธ‰์ด ์„คํƒ•์„ ํ›จ์”ฌ ๋” ๊ฐ’์‹ผ ๋Œ€๋Ÿ‰ ์ƒํ’ˆ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐ”๊พธ๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์žฌ๋ฐฐ์˜ ํ™•์‚ฐ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜์˜ ์ž‘๋ฌผํ™”๊ฐ€ ์‹œ์ž‘๋œ ๊ณณ์€ ๋‘ ๊ณณ์œผ๋กœ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋Š” ๋‰ด๊ธฐ๋‹ˆ์„ฌ์˜ ํŒŒํ‘ธ์•„์ธ์ด ์ž‘๋ฌผํ™”ํ•œ Saccharum officinarum(์‚ฌ์นด๋ฃธ ์˜คํ”ผํ‚ค๋‚˜๋ฃธ) ์ด๊ณ , ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋Š” ํƒ€์ด์™„๊ณผ ์ค‘๊ตญ ๋‚จ๋ถ€์˜ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ์•„์ธ๋“ค์ด ์ž‘๋ฌผํ™”ํ•œ Saccharum sinense์ด๋‹ค. ํŒŒํ‘ธ์•„์ธ๋“ค๊ณผ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ์•„์ธ๋“ค์€ ์›๋ž˜ ๊ฐ€์ถ•ํ™”๋œ ๋ผ์ง€ ์‚ฌ๋ฃŒ๋กœ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ์ฃผ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. Saccharum officinarum ๊ณผ Saccharum sinense ์˜ ํ™•์‚ฐ์€ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ์•„์ธ๋“ค์˜ ์ด์ฃผ์™€ ๋ฐ€์ ‘ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๊ด€๋ จ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. Saccharum barberi๋Š” Saccharum officinarum ์˜ ๋„์ž… ์ดํ›„ ์ธ๋„์—์„œ๋งŒ ์žฌ๋ฐฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. Saccharum officinarum ์€ ํŒŒํ‘ธ์•„์ธ๋“ค์— ์˜ํ•ด ๋‰ด๊ธฐ๋‹ˆ์„ฌ๊ณผ ์›”๋ฆฌ์Šค ์„ ์˜ ๋™์ชฝ์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์„ฌ๋“ค์—์„œ ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ์ž‘๋ฌผํ™”๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ด๊ณณ์€ ํ˜„๋Œ€ ์ƒ๋ฌผ๋‹ค์–‘์„ฑ์˜ ์ค‘์‹ฌ์ง€์ด๋‹ค. ์•ฝ 6000๋…„์ „๋ถ€ํ„ฐ Saccharum robustum ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ธ์œ„์„ ํƒ ๊ณผ์ •์„ ๊ฑฐ์ณ Saccharum officinarum๋ฅผ ์žฌ๋ฐฐํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. Saccharum officinarum ์€ ๋‰ด๊ธฐ๋‹ˆ์„ฌ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์„œ์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ ํผ์ ธ๋‚˜๊ฐ€ ๋™๋‚จ์•„์‹œ์•„์˜ ์„ฌ๋“ค์—์„œ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ์•„์ธ๋“ค๊ณผ ์ ‘์ด‰ํ•œ ํ›„ Saccharum spontaneum ๊ณผ ๊ต๋ฐฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ์ž‘๋ฌผํ™”์˜ ์ค‘์‹ฌ์ง€๋Š” ์ค‘๊ตญ ๋‚จ๋ถ€์™€ ํƒ€์ด์™„์œผ๋กœ Saccharum sinense๋Š” ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ์•„์ธ๋“ค์˜ ์ฃผ์š” ์žฌ๋ฐฐ์ข…์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. Saccharum sinense๋Š” ์ ์–ด๋„ 5500๋…„์ „์— ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ์•„์ธ๋“ค์˜ ์ฃผ์š” ์ž‘๋ฌผ๋“ค ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋‹จ๋ง›์ด ๋” ๋‚˜๋Š” Saccharum officinarum ์˜ ๋„์ž…์€ ๋™๋‚จ์•„์‹œ์•„ ์„ฌ ์ „์ฒด์— ๊ฑธ์ณ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์žฌ๋ฐฐ์ข…์„ ์ ์ฐจ์ ์œผ๋กœ Saccharum officinarum ๋กœ ๋Œ€์ฒดํ–ˆ์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๋™๋‚จ์•„์‹œ์•„ ์„ฌ๋“ค๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋™์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ ํผ์ ธ๋‚˜๊ฐ„ Saccharum officinarum ์€ ์•ฝ 3500๋…„์ „์— ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ์•„ ํ•ญํ•ด์ž๋“ค์— ์˜ํ•ด ํด๋ฆฌ๋„ค์‹œ์•„์™€ ๋ฏธํฌ๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ์•„๋กœ ํผ์ ธ๋‚˜๊ฐ”๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ Saccharum officinarum ์€ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ์•„ ์ƒ์ธ๋“ค์— ์˜ํ•ด ์•ฝ 3000๋…„์ „์— ์„œ์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ์ธ๋„๋กœ, ๋ถ์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ์ค‘๊ตญ์œผ๋กœ ํผ์ ธ๋‚˜๊ฐ”์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ ๊ณณ์—์„œ Saccharum officinarum ์€ Saccharum sinense ์™€ Saccharum barberi ์™€ ์žก์ข…๊ต๋ฐฐ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. Saccharum officinarum ์€ ์œ ๋ผ์‹œ์•„ ๋Œ€๋ฅ™ ์„œ๋ถ€์™€ ์ง€์ค‘ํ•ด๊นŒ์ง€ ํผ์ ธ๋‚˜๊ฐ”๋‹ค. ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์ถ”์ถœ์•ก์„ ์„คํƒ• ๊ฒฐ์ •์œผ๋กœ ์ •์ œํ•˜๋Š” ๊ณผ์ •์ด ์ง„ํ–‰๋œ ์ธ๋„์—์„œ๋Š” ์ข…์ข… ์ค‘๊ตญ ์‚ฌ์‹ ๋“ค์ด ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜์˜ ์žฌ๋ฐฐ ๋ฐ ์„คํƒ• ์ •์ œ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์•Œ์•„๋ณด๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ฐฉ๋ฌธํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 6์„ธ๊ธฐ์—๋Š” ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ๊ฒฝ์ž‘๊ณผ ์„คํƒ• ๊ฐ€๊ณต์ด ํŽ˜๋ฅด์‹œ์•„์—๊นŒ์ง€ ์ด๋ฅด๋ €๊ณ , ์•„๋ž ์„ธ๊ณ„์˜ ํ™•์žฅ์— ์˜ํ•ด ์ง€์ค‘ํ•ด ์„ธ๊ณ„๊นŒ์ง€ ์ง€์‹์ด ์ „ํŒŒ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ค‘์„ธ์˜ ์•„๋ž์ธ๋“ค์€ ๊ทธ๋“ค์ด ์–ด๋””๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€๋“ ์ง€ ๊ทธ๋“ค๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์„คํƒ• ๋ฐ ์„คํƒ• ์ƒ์‚ฐ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์„ ๊ฐ€์ ธ๋‹ค ์ฃผ์—ˆ๋‹ค. 15์„ธ๊ธฐ์— ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ๊ณผ ํฌ๋ฅดํˆฌ๊ฐˆ์˜ ํƒํ—˜๊ณผ ์ •๋ณต์€ ์ด๋ฒ ๋ฆฌ์•„๋ฐ˜๋„์˜ ๋‚จ์„œ๋ถ€๋กœ ์„คํƒ•์„ ๊ฐ€์ ธ์˜ค๊ฒŒ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์—”ํžˆํฌ ํ•ญํ•ด์™•์ž๋Š” 1425๋…„์— ๋งˆ๋ฐ์ด๋ผ ์ œ๋„์— ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ์ „ํŒŒํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์€ ์นด๋‚˜๋ฆฌ์•„ ์ œ๋„๋ฅผ ์ •๋ณตํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ทธ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ์ „ํŒŒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1493๋…„์— ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ† ํผ ์ฝœ๋Ÿผ๋ฒ„์Šค๋Š” ๊ทธ์˜ ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ํ•ญํ•ด์—์„œ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ๋ฌ˜๋ชฉ์„ ์‹ ๋Œ€๋ฅ™์— ํŠนํžˆ, ํžˆ์ŠคํŒŒ๋‹ˆ์˜ฌ๋ผ์„ฌ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ€์ ธ๊ฐ”๋‹ค. ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ์ธ๋„์—์„œ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜์˜ ์ด์šฉ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜๋Š” ์—ด๋Œ€ ๋‚จ์•„์‹œ์•„์™€ ๋™๋‚จ์•„์‹œ์•„์—์„œ ์œ ๋ž˜๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. Saccharum barberi๋Š” ์ธ๋„์—์„œ ์œ ๋ž˜๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , Saccharum edule ์™€ Saccharum officinarum๋Š” ๋‰ด๊ธฐ๋‹ˆ์„ฌ์—์„œ ์œ ๋ž˜๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์€ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ์”น์–ด์„œ ๋‹จ๋ง›์„ ๋ฝ‘์•„๋จน์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๋„์ธ๋“ค์€ ๊ตฝํƒ€ ์ œ๊ตญ(350๋…„๊ฒฝ) ์‹œ๊ธฐ์— ์„คํƒ•์„ ๊ฒฐ์ •ํ™”ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์„ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ‘ธ๋ผ๋‚˜๋ˆ„๋ฃจ(Purananuru), ์•„์ธ์ฟ ๋ฃจ๋ˆ„๋ฃจ(Ainkurunuru), ํŽ˜๋ฃธํŒŒ๋‚˜ํŠธ๋ฃจํŒŒ๋‹ค์ด(Perumpaanaatruppadai), ํŒŒํ‹ฐ๋‚˜ํŒŒ์•Œ๋ผ์ด(Paแนญแนญiแน‰appฤlai), ์•„์นด๋‚˜๋ˆ„๋ฃจ(Akananuru)์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ํƒ€๋ฐ€ ์ƒ๊ฐ๋ฌธํ•™์—์„œ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜์˜ ์žฌ๋ฐฐ, ๊ธฐ๊ณ„๋ฅผ ์ด์šฉํ•œ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜์•ก์˜ ์ถ”์ถœ, ์ธ๋„ ๋‚จ๋ถ€ ํƒ€๋ฐ€ ์ง€๋ฐฉ์—์„œ ์„คํƒ• ์ถ”์ถœ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋งŽ์€ ์–ธ๊ธ‰์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ‘ธ๋ผ๋‚˜๋ˆ„๋ฃจ(392๋…„)์—์„œ "์—ฌ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜๋Š” ์ƒ๊ฐ์‹œ๋Œ€๋™์•ˆ ์•Œ๋ ค์ง€์ง€ ์•Š์€ ์žฅ์†Œ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ํƒ€๋ฐ€ ์ง€์—ญ์œผ๋กœ ์˜ฎ๊ฒจ์ง„๋‹ค."๋ผ๊ณ  ์–ธ๊ธ‰๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ‘ธ๋ผ๋‚˜๋ˆ„๋ฃจ์™€ ์•„์ธ์ฟ ๋ฃจ๋ˆ„๋ฃจ์—์„œ๋Š” ๊ฑฐ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ธฐ๊ณ„๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜์•ก์„ ์ถ”์ถœํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ์ฝ”๋ผ๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ๋งŒ๋“  ์†Œ๋ฆฌ์™€ ๋น„๊ต๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ์„คํƒ•์„ ๋งŒ๋“œ๋Š” ๊ณผ์ •๋™์•ˆ ์ƒ๊ธฐ๋Š” ์—ฐ๊ธฐ๋Š” ์‚ฐ ์œ„์˜ ๊ตฌ๋ฆ„์— ๋น„์œ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๋„ ๋ฌด์—ญ์ƒ๋“ค์€ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ๋ฌด์—ญ๋กœ๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ์„คํƒ•์„ ์šด๋ฐ˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ถˆ๊ต ์Šน๋ ค๋“ค์— ์˜ํ•ด ์„คํƒ•์œผ๋กœ ๊ฒฐ์ •ํ™”ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์ด ์ค‘๊ตญ์œผ๋กœ ์ „ํŒŒ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๋„ ๋ถ๋ถ€์˜ ํ•˜๋ฅด์ƒค์˜ ํ†ต์น˜ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„(์žฌ์œ„: 606๋…„~647๋…„)๋™์•ˆ ๋‹น๋‚˜๋ผ์—์„œ ์ธ๋„ ์‚ฌ์ ˆ๋“ค์€ ๋‹น ํƒœ์ข…(์žฌ์œ„: 626๋…„~649๋…„)์ด ์„คํƒ•์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ๊ด€์‹ฌ์„ ๋ณด์ด์ž, ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜์˜ ์žฌ๋ฐฐ๋ฒ•์„ ์ค‘๊ตญ์ธ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ๊ฐ€๋ฅด์ณค๊ณ , ์ด์–ด์„œ ์ค‘๊ตญ์€ 7์„ธ๊ธฐ์— ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์žฌ๋ฐฐ๋ฅผ ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ค‘๊ตญ์ธก ๋ฌธ์„œ๋Š” ์„คํƒ• ์ •์ œ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์„ ์–ป๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด์„œ 647๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์‹œ์ž‘๋œ ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์— ๊ฑธ์นœ ์ธ๋„๋กœ์˜ ์‚ฌ์ ˆ๋‹จ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋‚จ์•„์‹œ์•„, ์ค‘๋™, ์ค‘๊ตญ์—์„œ๋Š” ์„คํƒ•์ด ์š”๋ฆฌ ๋ฐ ๋””์ €ํŠธ์˜ ํ•„์ˆ˜ํ’ˆ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ์ •์ œ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์€ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์ถ”์ถœ์•ก์„ ์–ป๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ๊ฐˆ๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ๋‘๋“œ๋ฆฐ ๋‹ค์Œ, ์ถ”์ถœ์•ก์„ ๋“์ด๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ํ–‡๋ณ•์— ๋ง๋ ค์„œ ์ž๊ฐˆ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ๋ณด์ด๋Š” ์„คํƒ• ๊ณ ํ˜•๋ฌผ์„ ์–ป์—ˆ๋‹ค. "์„คํƒ•(sugar)"์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์‚ฐ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฌํŠธ์–ด์ธ "sharkara"๋Š” "์ž๊ฐˆ(gravel)" ๋˜๋Š” "๋ชจ๋ž˜(sand)"๋ฅผ ์˜๋ฏธํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋งˆ์ฐฌ๊ฐ€์ง€๋กœ ์ค‘๊ตญ์–ด์—์„œ๋Š” "์ž๊ฐˆ ์„คํƒ•(gravel sugar)"์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๋œป์˜ ์šฉ์–ด "็ ‚็ณ–(์‚ฌํƒ•)"์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. 1792๋…„์— ์˜๊ตญ์—์„œ ์„คํƒ• ๊ฐ€๊ฒฉ์ด ์—„์ฒญ๋‚œ ๊ฐ€๊ฒฉ์œผ๋กœ ์˜ฌ๋ž๋‹ค. ์˜๊ตญ ๋™์ธ๋„ ํšŒ์‚ฌ๋Š” ๋ณธ๊ตญ์˜ ์„คํƒ• ๊ฐ€๊ฒฉ์„ ๋‚ฎ์ถ”๋Š”๋ฐ ๋„์›€์„ ๋‹ฌ๋ผ๋Š” ์š”์ฒญ์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. 1792๋…„ 3์›” 15์ผ ์˜๊ตญ ์ •๋ถ€์˜ ์žฅ๊ด€๋“ค์€ ์˜๊ตญ๋ น ์ธ๋„์—์„œ ์ •์ œ๋œ ์„คํƒ• ์ƒ์‚ฐ๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จ๋œ ๋ณด๊ณ ์„œ๋ฅผ ์ œ์ถœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฒต๊ณจ์˜ ์„ค๋ฆฝ์ž์ธ J. ํŒจํ„ฐ์Šจ(J. Paterson) ๋ถ€๊ด€์€ ์ธ๋„์—์„œ ์ƒ์‚ฐ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์ •์ œ๋‹น์ด ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ๋ฉด์—์„œ ์šฐ์œ„์— ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์„œ์ธ๋„ ์ œ๋„์—์„œ ๋ณด๋‹ค ๋” ์‹ธ๊ฒŒ ์„คํƒ•์„ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ณด๊ณ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ค‘์„ธ ์ด์Šฌ๋žŒ ์„ธ๊ณ„์™€ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์—์„œ์˜ ์„คํƒ• ๊ณ ๋Œ€ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค์ธ๋“ค๊ณผ ๋กœ๋งˆ์ธ๋“ค์€ ์‹ํ’ˆ์œผ๋กœ์จ๊ฐ€ ์•„๋‹Œ ์ˆ˜์ž… ์˜์•ฝํ’ˆ์œผ๋กœ์จ ์„คํƒ•์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด 1์„ธ๊ธฐ์— ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค์˜ ์˜์‚ฌ ๋””์˜ค์Šค์ฝ”๋ฆฌ๋ฐ์Šค๋Š” ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์ด ๊ธฐ์ˆ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1์„ธ๊ธฐ์— ๋กœ๋งˆ์˜ ๋Œ€ํ”Œ๋ฆฌ๋‹ˆ์šฐ์Šค๋Š” ์„คํƒ•์„ ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์ด ์•ฝ์šฉ์œผ๋กœ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ค‘์„ธ์— ์•„๋ž ์‚ฌ์—…๊ฐ€๋“ค์€ ์ธ๋„๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์„คํƒ• ์ƒ์‚ฐ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์„ ๋ฐ›์•„๋“ค์ด๊ณ , ์„คํƒ• ์‚ฐ์—…์„ ํ™•๋Œ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ค‘์„ธ ์•„๋ž์ธ๋“ค์€ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ํ˜„์ง€์— ์ œ๋‹น์†Œ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ–์ถ˜ ๋Œ€๊ทœ๋ชจ ํ”Œ๋žœํ…Œ์ด์…˜์„ ์„ธ์› ๋‹ค. ์—ด๋Œ€์„ฑ ๊ธฐํ›„๋Œ€์— ์„ธ์›Œ์ง€๋Š” ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์„คํƒ• ๊ณต์žฅ์€ ๋งŽ์€ ์–‘์˜ ๋ฌผ๊ณผ ์—ด์„ ํ•„์š”๋กœ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ณต์ ์ธ ๊ด€๊ฐœ์‹œ์„ค์˜ ์‚ฌ์šฉ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ์ค‘์„ธ ์•„๋ž ์„ธ๊ณ„ ์ „์—ญ์— ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์žฌ๋ฐฐ๊ฐ€ ํผ์ ธ๋‚˜๊ฐ”๋‹ค. ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜๋Š” 9์„ธ๊ธฐ๊ฒฝ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์‹œ์น ๋ฆฌ์•„ ํ† ํ›„๊ตญ ์‹œ๊ธฐ๋™์•ˆ ์ค‘์„ธ ๋‚จ๋ถ€ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์—์„œ ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ๊ด‘๋ฒ”์œ„ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์žฌ๋ฐฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์‹œ์น ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์™ธ์—๋„ ์•Œ์•ˆ๋‹ฌ๋ฃจ์Šค(ํ˜„์žฌ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ ๋‚จ๋ถ€์— ์œ„์น˜ํ•œ)๋Š” 10์„ธ๊ธฐ ์ดˆ์— ์„คํƒ• ์ƒ์‚ฐ์˜ ์ฃผ์š” ์ค‘์‹ฌ์ง€์˜€๋‹ค. ์„คํƒ•์€ ์•„๋ž ์„ธ๊ณ„๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์ „์—ญ์œผ๋กœ ์ˆ˜์ถœ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ค‘์„ธ ํ›„๊ธฐ ์„œ๊ตฌ์˜ ์ €์ž‘๋ฌผ์—์„œ ์„คํƒ• ์†Œ๋น„์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์–ธ๊ธ‰์ด ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด๋Š” ์ค‘์„ธ ํ›„๊ธฐ์— ์„คํƒ•์˜ ์ˆ˜์ž…๋Ÿ‰์ด ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ณด์—ฌ์ค€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์„คํƒ•์€ ์—ฌ์ „ํžˆ ๊ฐ’๋น„์‹ผ ์ˆ˜์ž…ํ’ˆ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. 14์„ธ๊ธฐ์™€ 15์„ธ๊ธฐ์— ์˜๊ตญ์—์„œ ๋ฌด๊ฒŒ๋‹น ์„คํƒ•์˜ ๊ฐ€๊ฒฉ์€ ์ธ๋„์–‘์„ ๊ฐ€๋กœ์งˆ๋Ÿฌ ์šด์†ก๋˜์–ด์•ผ ํ–ˆ๋˜ ์œก๋‘๊ตฌ, ์ƒ๊ฐ•, ์ •ํ–ฅ, ํ›„์ถ”์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ์—ด๋Œ€ ์•„์‹œ์•„์—์„œ ์ˆ˜์ž…๋œ ํ–ฅ์‹ ๋ฃŒ์™€ ๊ฑฐ์˜ ๊ฐ™์„ ๋งŒํผ ๋น„์ŒŒ๋‹ค. ํด๋ผ์ด๋ธŒ ํฐํŒ…(Clive Ponting)์€ ๋ฉ”์†Œํฌํƒ€๋ฏธ์•„์— ์†Œ๊ฐœ๋œ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์žฌ๋ฐฐ๊ฐ€ 10์„ธ๊ธฐ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ ˆ๋ฐ˜ํŠธ, ๋™๋ถ€ ์ง€์ค‘ํ•ด์˜ ์„ฌ๋“ค, ํŠนํžˆ ํ‚คํ”„๋กœ์Šค๊นŒ์ง€ ํ™•์‚ฐ๋˜์—ˆ์Œ์„ ์ถ”์ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ํฐํŒ…์€ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜์˜ ์žฌ๋ฐฐ๊ฐ€ ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด ๋™๋ถ€ ํ•ด์•ˆ์„ ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์ž”์ง€๋ฐ”๋ฅด๊นŒ์ง€ ํผ์ ธ๋‚˜๊ฐ”๋‹ค๊ณ  ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์‹ญ์ž๊ตฐ์€ ์„ฑ์ง€์—์„œ "๋‹ฌ์ฝคํ•œ ์†Œ๊ธˆ"์„ ์šด๋ฐ˜ํ•˜๋˜ ๋Œ€์ƒ๊ณผ ๋งˆ์ฃผ์ณค๋Š”๋ฐ, ๊ตฐ์‚ฌํ–‰๋™์ด ๋๋‚œ ํ›„ ์„คํƒ•์„ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์™”๋‹ค. 12์„ธ๊ธฐ ์ดˆ์— ๋ฒ ๋„ค์น˜์•„๋Š” ํ‹ฐ๋ ˆ ๋ถ€๊ทผ์˜ ์ผ๋ถ€ ๋งˆ์„์„ ํš๋“ํ•˜๊ณ , ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์œผ๋กœ ์ˆ˜์ถœํ•  ์„คํƒ•์„ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ํ† ์ง€๋ฅผ ๊ฐœ๊ฐ„ํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์ด ๊ณณ์—์„œ ๋˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๊ฐ๋ฏธ๋ฃŒ์ธ ๊ฟ€์„ ๋ณด์ถฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 12์„ธ๊ธฐ ํ›„๋ฐ˜์— ์“ฐ์—ฌ์ง„ ใ€Š์‹ญ์ž๊ตฐ ์—ฐ๋Œ€๊ธฐใ€‹์˜ ์ €์ž์ธ ํ‹ฐ๋ ˆ์˜ ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„์€ ์„คํƒ•์„ "์ธ๋ฅ˜์˜ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๊ณผ ๊ฑด๊ฐ•์— ๋งค์šฐ ํ•„์ˆ˜์ ์ธ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๊ท€์ค‘ํ•œ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ’ˆ"์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ํ‰ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์„คํƒ•์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ ์˜์–ด ๊ธฐ๋ก์€ 13์„ธ๊ธฐ ํ›„๋ฐ˜์— ๋“ฑ์žฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํฐํŒ…์€ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์˜ ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ์„คํƒ• ์‚ฌ์—…๊ฐ€์˜ ๋…ธ์˜ˆ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์˜์กด๋„๋ฅผ ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์ด ์„ค๋ช…ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. 1390๋…„๋Œ€์— ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์–ป์€ ์ถ”์ถœ์•ก์˜ ์–‘์„ ๋‘ ๋ฐฐ๋กœ ๋Š˜๋ฆด ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋” ๋‚˜์€ ์••์ฐฉ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์ด ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์••์ฐฉ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์˜ ๋ฐœ์ „์€ ์•ˆ๋‹ฌ๋ฃจ์‹œ์•„ ์ง€๋ฐฉ๊ณผ ์•Œ๊ฐ€๋ฅด๋ธŒ ์ง€๋ฐฉ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์„คํƒ• ํ”Œ๋žœํ…Œ์ด์…˜์˜ ๊ฒฝ์ œ์  ํŒฝ์ฐฝ์„ ์•ผ๊ธฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ํŒฝ์ฐฝ์€ 1455๋…„ ๋งˆ๋ฐ์ด๋ผ ์ œ๋„์—์„œ ์‹œ์น ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์ถœ์‹ ์˜ ์กฐ์–ธ์ž๋“ค๊ณผ ์ œ๋‹น์†Œ๋ฅผ ๊ฑด์„คํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ์ œ๋…ธ๋ฐ”์˜ ์ž๋ณธ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋งˆ๋ฐ์ด๋ผ ์ œ๋„์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ ‘๊ทผ์„ฑ์€ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์น˜์•„ ์ƒ์ธ๋“ค์˜ ์„คํƒ•์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋…์ ๊ถŒ์„ ์›ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ์ œ๋…ธ๋ฐ” ์ƒ์ธ๋“ค๊ณผ ํ”Œ๋ž‘๋“œ๋ฅด ์ƒ์ธ๋“ค์„ ๋Œ์–ด๋“ค์˜€๋‹ค. 1480๋…„์— ์•คํŠธ์›Œํ”„๋Š” ๋งˆ๋ฐ์ด๋ผ ์ œ๋„์—์„œ ์„คํƒ• ๋ฌด์—ญ์— ์ข…์‚ฌํ•˜๋Š” 70์—ฌ์ฒ™์˜ ์„ ๋ฐ•๋“ค์„ ๋ณด์œ ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ •์ œ ๋ฐ ์œ ํ†ต ๊ณผ์ •์€ ์•คํŠธ์›Œํ”„์— ์ง‘์ค‘๋˜์–ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1480๋…„๋Œ€์—๋Š” ์„คํƒ• ์ƒ์‚ฐ์ด ์นด๋‚˜๋ฆฌ์•„ ์ œ๋„๊นŒ์ง€ ํ™•๋Œ€๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1490๋…„๋Œ€๊นŒ์ง€ ์„คํƒ• ์ƒ์‚ฐ์— ์žˆ์–ด์„œ ๋งˆ๋ฐ์ด๋ผ ์ œ๋„๋Š” ํ‚คํ”„๋กœ์Šค๋ฅผ ๋”ฐ๋ผ์žก์•˜๋‹ค. ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด ๋…ธ์˜ˆ๋“ค์€ ์นด์Šคํ‹ฐ์•ผ ์™•๊ตญ์˜ ๋ฐœ๋ Œ์‹œ์•„ ์ฃผ๋ณ€์˜ ์„คํƒ• ํ”Œ๋ Œํ…Œ์ด์…˜์—์„œ ์ผํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 16์„ธ๊ธฐ์— ์œ ๋Œ€๊ต ์œจ๋ฒ•์„œ์ธ ใ€Š์Š์นธ ์•„๋ฃจํฌใ€‹(Shulchan Aruch)์˜ ์ €์ž์ธ ์œ ๋Œ€๊ต ์ง€๋„์ž์ธ ์š”์„ธํ”„ ์นด๋กœ(Joseph Karo)๋Š” ์ด์ง‘ํŠธ ์นด์ด๋กœ์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์œ ๋Œ€์ธ๋“ค์ด ์•ˆ์‹์ผ์— ๋ ˆ๋ชจ๋„ค์ด๋“œ๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋“ค๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ ˆ๋ชฌ ์ฃผ์Šค์™€ ๋ฌผ์„ ํ˜ผํ•ฉํ•œ ๋‹ค์Œ ์„คํƒ•์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์–ธ๊ธ‰ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์‹ ๋Œ€๋ฅ™์—์„œ์˜ ์„คํƒ• ์ƒ์‚ฐ ํฌ๋ฅดํˆฌ๊ฐˆ์ธ๋“ค์€ ์„คํƒ•์„ ๋ธŒ๋ผ์งˆ๋กœ ๊ฐ€์ ธ๊ฐ”๋‹ค. 1540๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ์‚ฐํƒ€์นดํƒ€๋ฆฌ๋‚˜์„ฌ์—๋Š” 800๊ฐœ์˜ ์ œ๋‹น์†Œ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์—ˆ๊ณ , ๋ธŒ๋ผ์งˆ, ๋ฐ๋ฉ”๋ผ๋ผ(Demarara), ์ˆ˜๋ฆฌ๋‚จ์˜ ๋ถ์ชฝ ํ•ด์•ˆ์—๋Š” 2,000๊ฐœ์˜ ์ œ๋‹น์†Œ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1501๋…„์— ํžˆ์ŠคํŒŒ๋‹ˆ์˜ฌ๋ผ์„ฌ์—์„œ ์ฒซ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ์„คํƒ• ์ˆ˜ํ™•์ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1520๋…„๋Œ€์— ๋งŽ์€ ์ œ๋‹น์†Œ๊ฐ€ ์ฟ ๋ฐ”์™€ ์ž๋ฉ”์ด์นด์— ๊ฑด์„ค๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1550๋…„ ์ด์ „์— ์‹ ๋Œ€๋ฅ™์— ์„ธ์›Œ์ง„ ์•ฝ 3,000๊ฐœ์˜ ์ž‘์€ ์ œ๋‹น์†Œ๋“ค์€ ์ฃผ์ฒ  ๊ธฐ์–ด, ๋ ˆ๋ฒ„, ์•ก์Šฌ(axle) ๋ฐ ๊ธฐํƒ€ ์žฅ๋น„์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ „๋ก€์—†๋Š” ์ˆ˜์š”๋ฅผ ์ฐฝ์ถœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์„คํƒ• ์ƒ์‚ฐ์˜ ํ™•์žฅ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์—์„œ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ๋œ ์ฃผํ˜•๊ณผ ์ฒ ์ฃผ๋ฌผ๋“ค์ด ์ „๋ฌธ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฑฐ๋ž˜๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ œ๋‹น์†Œ์˜ ๊ฑด์„ค์€ 18์„ธ๊ธฐ์— ์‚ฐ์—…ํ˜๋ช…์ด ์ผ์–ด๋‚˜๋Š”๋ฐ ํ•„์š”ํ•œ ๊ธฐ์ˆ  ๋ฐœ์ „์„ ์ด‰๋ฐœ์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. 1625๋…„ ์ดํ›„์— ๋„ค๋œ๋ž€๋“œ์ธ๋“ค์€ ๋‚จ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นด์—์„œ ์นด๋ฆฌ๋ธŒํ•ด ์„ฌ๊นŒ์ง€ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ ธ๊ฐ”๊ณ , ๋ฐ”๋ฒ ์ด๋„์Šค์—์„œ ๋ฒ„์ง„ ์ œ๋„๊นŒ์ง€ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ์žฌ๋ฐฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹น๋Œ€์˜ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์€ ์„คํƒ•์˜ ๊ฐ€์น˜๋ฅผ ์ข…์ข… ์‚ฌํ–ฅ, ์ง„์ฃผ, ํ–ฅ์‹ ๋ฃŒ์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ๊ท€์ค‘ํ•œ ๋ฌผํ’ˆ๊ณผ ๋น„๊ตํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํŠนํžˆ ์˜๊ตญ์˜ ์‹๋ฏผ์ง€ ์ •์ฑ…์— ์˜ํ•ด ์„คํƒ•์˜ ์ƒ์‚ฐ์ด ๋‹ค์›ํ™”๋จ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์„คํƒ•์˜ ๊ฐ€๊ฒฉ์€ ์„œ์„œํžˆ ํ•˜๋ฝํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด์ „์—๋Š” ์„คํƒ•์ด ๋ถ€์ž๋“ค๋งŒ์˜ ์‚ฌ์น˜ํ’ˆ์ด์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ์„คํƒ•์˜ ์†Œ๋น„๋Š” ๊ฐ€๋‚œํ•œ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค ์‚ฌ์ด์—์„œ๋„ ์ ์ฐจ ํ”ํ•ด์ง€๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์„คํƒ•์˜ ์ƒ์‚ฐ์€ ๋ถ๋ฏธ ๋Œ€๋ฅ™์˜ ์‹๋ฏผ์ง€, ์ฟ ๋ฐ”, ๋ธŒ๋ผ์งˆ์—์„œ ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฒ˜์Œ์—๋Š” ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์˜ ๊ณ„์•ฝ ๋…ธ๋™์ž๋“ค๊ณผ ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นด์˜ ์›์ฃผ๋ฏผ ๋…ธ์˜ˆ๋“ค์ด ๋…ธ๋™๋ ฅ์— ํฌํ•จ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์ฒœ์—ฐ๋‘ ๊ฐ™์€ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์˜ ์งˆ๋ณ‘๊ณผ ๋ง๋ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์™€ ํ™ฉ์—ด ๊ฐ™์€ ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด์˜ ์งˆ๋ณ‘๋“ค์€ ๊ณง ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นด ์›์ฃผ๋ฏผ์˜ ์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ์ค„์—ฌ๋‚˜๊ฐ”๋‹ค. ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์ธ๋“ค์€ ๋ง๋ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์™€ ํ™ฉ์—ด์— ๋งค์šฐ ์ทจ์•ฝํ–ˆ๊ณ , ๊ณ„์•ฝ ๋…ธ๋™์ž๋“ค์˜ ๊ณต๊ธ‰์€ ์ œํ•œ์ ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด ๋…ธ์˜ˆ๋“ค์€ ๋ง๋ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์™€ ํ™ฉ์—ด์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋‚ด์„ฑ์ด ๊ฐ•ํ•˜๊ณ , ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด ํ•ด์•ˆ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋…ธ์˜ˆ์˜ ๊ณต๊ธ‰์ด ํ’๋ถ€ํ–ˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์„คํƒ• ํ”Œ๋žœํ…Œ์ด์…˜ ๋…ธ๋™์ž ๊ณต๊ธ‰์˜ ์ฃผ๋œ ์›์ฒœ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 18์„ธ๊ธฐ ๋™์•ˆ ์„คํƒ•์€ ์—„์ฒญ๋‚˜๊ฒŒ ์ธ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋Œ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด ์˜๊ตญ์˜ ์„คํƒ• ์†Œ๋น„๋Ÿ‰์€ 1710๋…„๋ณด๋‹ค 1770๋…„์— 5๋ฐฐ ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1750๋…„์— ์ด๋ฅด๋Ÿฌ์„œ ์„คํƒ•์€ ๊ณก๋ฌผ์„ ์ œ์น˜๊ณ  ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๋ฌด์—ญ์—์„œ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๊ฐ€์น˜์žˆ๋Š” ์ƒํ’ˆ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์„คํƒ•์€ ๋ชจ๋“  ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์ˆ˜์ž…ํ’ˆ์˜ 5๋ถ„์˜ 1์„ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ–ˆ๊ณ , 18์„ธ๊ธฐ ํ›„๋ฐ˜์— ์„คํƒ•์˜ 5๋ถ„์˜ 4๋Š” ์„œ์ธ๋„ ์ œ๋„์˜ ์˜๊ตญ๊ณผ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์˜ ์‹๋ฏผ์ง€๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋‚˜์™”๋‹ค. ์„คํƒ• ์‹œ์žฅ์€ ์ผ๋ จ์˜ ํ˜ธํ™ฉ์„ ๊ฒช์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋งŽ์€ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์ธ๋“ค์˜ ์‹์Šต๊ด€์ด ํฌ๊ฒŒ ๋ฐ”๋€Œ์–ด ์ˆ˜์š”๊ฐ€ ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ•˜๊ณ , ์„คํƒ• ์ƒ์‚ฐ๋Ÿ‰์ด ํฌ๊ฒŒ ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์ธ๋“ค์€ ์žผ, ์‚ฌํƒ•, ์ฐจ, ์ปคํ”ผ, ์ฝ”์ฝ”์•„, ๊ฐ€๊ณต ์‹ํ’ˆ, ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋‹ฌ์ฝคํ•œ ์‹ํ’ˆ๋“ค์„ ํ›จ์”ฌ ๋” ๋งŽ์ด ์„ญ์ทจํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ•˜๋Š” ์ˆ˜์š” ์—ดํ’์— ๋ฐœ๋งž์ถ”์–ด ์„œ์ธ๋„ ์ œ๋„์˜ ์„คํƒ• ์ƒ์‚ฐ์ง€์—์„œ๋Š” ๋” ๋งŽ์€ ์„คํƒ•์„ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์— ์ฐฉ์ˆ˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์‹ค์ œ๋กœ ์„œ์ธ๋„ ์ œ๋„๋Š” ์„œ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์ธ๋“ค์ด ์†Œ๋น„ํ•œ ์„คํƒ•์˜ 90%๊นŒ์ง€ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ถ€ ์„ฌ๋“ค์€ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ž‘๋ฌผ์„ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ๋ณด๋‹ค ์„คํƒ•์„ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ๋ณด๋‹ค ์„ฑ๊ณต์ ์ž„์„ ์ž…์ฆํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ”๋ฒ ์ด๋„์Šค์™€ ์˜๊ตญ์˜ ๋ฆฌ์›Œ๋“œ ์ œ๋„์—์„œ ์„คํƒ•์€ ๊ฐ๊ฐ ์ˆ˜์ถœ์˜ 93%์™€ 97%๋ฅผ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋†์žฅ์ฃผ๋“ค์€ ๋‚˜์ค‘์— ์„คํƒ• ์ƒ์‚ฐ์„ ๋”์šฑ ๋Š˜๋ฆด ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์„ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด ์ž‘๋ฌผ ์žฌ๋ฐฐ์‹œ ๋ณด๋‹ค ์ƒ์‚ฐ์ ์ธ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ๊ทธ๋“ค์€ ๋ณด๋‹ค ๋ฐœ์ „๋œ ์ œ๋‹น์†Œ๋ฅผ ๊ฑด์„คํ•˜๊ณ , ๋” ๋‚˜์€ ํ’ˆ์ข…์˜ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ์žฌ๋ฐฐํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 18์„ธ๊ธฐ์— ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ์‹๋ฏผ์ง€ ํŠนํžˆ, ์ƒ๋„๋งน๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์„ฑ๊ณต์ ์ธ ์„คํƒ• ์ƒ์‚ฐ์ง€์˜€๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ํ’ˆ์ข…์˜ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์žฌ๋ฐฐ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋” ๋ฐœ์ „๋œ ๊ด€๊ฐœ์‹œ์„ค, ์ˆ˜๋ ฅ ๋ฐ ๊ธฐ๊ณ„ ์žฅ์น˜๋ฅผ ์ด์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ์ด์ต์ด ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๊ฐœ์„ ์—๋„ ๋ถˆ๊ตฌํ•˜๊ณ  ์„คํƒ•์˜ ๊ฐ€๊ฒฉ์€ ํŠนํžˆ, ๋„ค๋œ๋ž€๋“œ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ญํ•œ ๋ฐ˜๋ž€๊ณผ ๋‚˜ํด๋ ˆ์˜น ์ „์Ÿ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด ๋ฐœ์ƒ๋™์•ˆ ๊ธ‰๋“ฑํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์„คํƒ•์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ˆ˜์š”๋Š” ๋งŽ์•˜๊ณ , ์„คํƒ• ํ”Œ๋žœํ…Œ์ด์…˜ ๋†์žฅ์ฃผ๋“ค์€ ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์ƒํ™ฉ์„ ์–ด๋–ป๊ฒŒ ์ด์ต์œผ๋กœ ํ™œ์šฉํ•  ๊ฒƒ์ธ์ง€๋ฅผ ์ •ํ™•ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์•Œ๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์ธ๋“ค์ด ์นด๋ฆฌ๋ธŒํ•ด์˜ ๋” ํฐ ์„ฌ๋“ค์— ์„คํƒ• ํ”Œ๋žœํ…Œ์ด์…˜์„ ์„ค๋ฆฝํ•จ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ํŠนํžˆ, ์˜๊ตญ์—์„œ ์„คํƒ• ๊ฐ€๊ฒฉ์ด ํ•˜๋ฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 18์„ธ๊ธฐ์— ์ด๋ฅด๋Ÿฌ์„œ ๊ณผ๊ฑฐ์˜ ์‚ฌ์น˜ํ’ˆ์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ์ƒํ’ˆ์„ ์ผ๋ฐ˜ ์†Œ๋น„์ž๋“ค๋„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜๊ตญ์—์„œ๋Š” ์ฒ˜์Œ์— ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์˜ ์„คํƒ•์„ ์ฐจ์— ํƒ€๋Š”๋ฐ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ํ›„์— ์‚ฌํƒ•๊ณผ ์ดˆ์ฝœ๋ฆฟ์— ์„คํƒ•์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋งŽ์€ ์˜๊ตญ์ธ๋“ค(ํŠนํžˆ ์–ด๋ฆฐ์ด๋“ค)์ด ์žผ์„ ๋จน์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์„คํƒ• ๊ณต๊ธ‰์—…์ฒด๋“ค์€ ๋ณดํ†ต ์„คํƒ•๋ด‰์˜ ํ˜•ํƒœ๋กœ ์„คํƒ•์„ ํŒ๋งคํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์†Œ๋น„์ž๋“ค์€ ํ”Œ๋ผ์ด์–ด์™€ ๋น„์Šทํ•œ ๊ณต๊ตฌ์ธ ์Šˆ๊ฑฐ ๋‹™์Šค(sugar nips)๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ์„คํƒ• ์กฐ๊ฐ์„ ๋œฏ์–ด๋‚ด์•ผ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜๋Š” ํ† ์–‘์„ ๋น ๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ๊ณ ๊ฐˆ์‹œ์ผฐ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์—, ๋†์žฅ์ฃผ๋“ค์€ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์—์„œ ์„คํƒ• ์ˆ˜์š”๊ฐ€ ๊ณ„์† ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ•จ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ 19์„ธ๊ธฐ์—๋Š” ๋” ์‹ ์„ ํ•œ ํ† ์–‘์„ ๊ฐ€์ง„ ๋” ํฐ ์„ฌ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒ์‚ฐ ์‹œ์„ค์„ ์˜ฎ๊ฒจ๊ฐ€์•ผ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜๊ตญ์—์„œ 1์ธ๋‹น ์„คํƒ•์˜ ํ‰๊ท  ์†Œ๋น„๋Ÿ‰์€ 1700๋…„์— 4ํŒŒ์šด๋“œ์—์„œ 1800๋…„์— 18ํŒŒ์šด๋“œ, 1850๋…„์— 36ํŒŒ์šด๋“œ, 20์„ธ๊ธฐ๊นŒ์ง€ 100ํŒŒ์šด๋“œ ์ด์ƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฟ ๋ฐ”๋Š” ์‚ฐ์•… ์ง€๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ์—†๋Š” ํŽธํ‰ํ•œ ์ง€๋Œ€๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์นด๋ฆฌ๋ธŒํ•ด์—์„œ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ํ’๋ถ€ํ•œ ๋•…(์„คํƒ•์„ ์ฃผ์š” ์ž‘๋ฌผ๋กœ ์žฌ๋ฐฐ)์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฑฐ์˜ 4๋ถ„์˜ 3์˜ ํ† ์ง€๊ฐ€ ์ž‘๋ฌผ ์žฌ๋ฐฐ์— ์ด์ƒ์ ์ธ ๊ธฐ๋ณต์ด ์ง„ ํ‰์•ผ์˜€๋‹ค. ์ฟ ๋ฐ” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์€ ์„คํƒ• ์ž‘๋ฌผ์„ ์ˆ˜ํ™•ํ•  ๋•Œ ๋” ๋‚˜์€ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ–ˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ฟ ๋ฐ”๋Š” ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์„ฌ๋“ค๋ณด๋‹ค ๋ฒˆ์„ฑํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฟ ๋ฐ” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์€ ๋ฌผ๋ ˆ๋ฐฉ์•„, ์—์›Œ์‹ธ์ธ ๊ฐ€๋งˆ, ์ฆ๊ธฐ๊ธฐ๊ด€, ์ง„๊ณต์†ฅ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ํ˜„๋Œ€์ ์ธ ์ œ๋‹น ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๋ชจ๋“  ๊ธฐ์ˆ ๋“ค์€ ์ƒ์‚ฐ์„ฑ์„ ํ–ฅ์ƒ์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์ฟ ๋ฐ”๋Š” ์นด๋ฆฌ๋ธŒํ•ด ์ œ๋„์˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ง€์—ญ๋“ค๋ณด๋‹ค ๋” ์˜ค๋žซ๋™์•ˆ ๋…ธ์˜ˆ์ œ๋„๋ฅผ ์œ ์ง€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์•„์ดํ‹ฐ ํ˜๋ช…์œผ๋กœ ์•„์ดํ‹ฐ ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ์ด ์„ธ์›Œ์ง„ ํ›„์— ์•„์ดํ‹ฐ์˜ ์„คํƒ• ์ƒ์‚ฐ๋Ÿ‰์€ ๊ฐ์†Œํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์ฟ ๋ฐ”๋Š” ์„ธ๊ณ„ ์ตœ๋Œ€์˜ ์„คํƒ• ์ƒ์‚ฐ์ง€์ธ ์ƒ๋„๋งน๊ทธ๋ฅผ ๋Œ€์ฒดํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋ผ์งˆ์—์„œ ์˜ค๋žซ๋™์•ˆ ์„คํƒ•์„ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ•ด์™”๋Š”๋ฐ, ๋‚จ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นด์˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ง€์—ญ ๋ฟ๋งŒ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ผ ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด์™€ ํƒœํ‰์–‘์˜ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์‹๋ฏผ์ง€์—๋„ ์„คํƒ• ์ƒ์‚ฐ์ด ํผ์กŒ๊ณ , ํŠนํžˆ ํ”ผ์ง€์—์„œ ์ค‘์š”ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ชจ๋ฆฌ์…”์Šค, ๋‚˜ํƒˆ(Natal), ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ํ€ธ์ฆ๋žœ๋“œ์ฃผ์—์„œ ์„คํƒ• ์žฌ๋ฐฐ๊ฐ€ ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์„คํƒ• ์ƒ์‚ฐ์ง€๋“ค์€ ์ด์ œ ์ „์„ธ๊ณ„์—์„œ ํ˜๋Ÿฌ ๋“ค์–ด์˜จ ๋…ธ๋™์ž๋“ค๊ณผ ๋…ธ์˜ˆ๊ฐ€ ์•„๋‹Œ ๊ณ„์•ฝ ๋…ธ๋™์œผ๋กœ ๋…ธ๋™๋ ฅ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒฝํ–ฅ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. 19์„ธ๊ธฐ ํ›„๋ฐ˜์— 45๋งŒ๋ช… ์ด์ƒ์˜ ๊ณ„์•ฝ ๋…ธ๋™์ž๋“ค์ด ์ธ๋„์—์„œ ์˜๊ตญ๋ น ์„œ์ธ๋„ ์ œ๋„๋กœ ๊ฐ”๊ณ , ๋‚˜๋จธ์ง€ ์ธ๋„ ๋…ธ๋™์ž๋“ค์€ ๋‚˜ํƒˆ, ๋ชจ๋ฆฌ์…”์Šค, ํ”ผ์ง€๋กœ ๊ฐ”๊ณ , ์ด๋“ค์€ ๋‚˜์ค‘์— ์ด๋“ค ์ง€์—ญ ์ธ๊ตฌ์˜ ๋Œ€๋‹ค์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ํ€ธ์ฆ๋žœ๋“œ์ฃผ์—์„œ๋Š” ํƒœํ‰์–‘ ์„ฌ๋“ค๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋…ธ๋™์ž๋“ค์ด ์ด์ฃผํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์™€์ด์—๋Š” ์ค‘๊ตญ๊ณผ ์ผ๋ณธ ์ถœ์‹  ๋…ธ๋™์ž๋“ค์ด ์ด์ฃผํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋„ค๋œ๋ž€๋“œ์ธ๋“ค์€ ๋งŽ์€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์„ ์ž์™€์„ฌ์—์„œ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฌ๋‚จ์œผ๋กœ ์ด์ฃผ์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. ์„คํƒ• ํ”Œ๋žœํ…Œ์ด์…˜๋“ค์€ ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด ๋…ธ์˜ˆ๋“ค์ด ์—†์—ˆ๋‹ค๋ฉด ๋ฒˆ์ฐฝํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†์—ˆ์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์–ธ๊ธ‰๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ฝœ๋กฌ๋น„์•„์—์„œ๋Š” ์„คํƒ• ์žฌ๋ฐฐ๊ฐ€ ๋งค์šฐ ์ผ์ฐ ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ์‚ฌ์—…๊ฐ€๋“ค์€ ๋งŽ์€ ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด ๋…ธ์˜ˆ๋“ค์„ ์ˆ˜์ž…ํ•ด์„œ ์ž‘๋ฌผ์„ ๊ฒฝ์ž‘์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. ์ฝœ๋กฌ๋น„์•„์˜ ์‚ฐ์—…ํ™”๋Š” ๋ผํŠธ๋น„์•„ ์ถœ์‹ ์˜ ์œ ๋Œ€์ธ ์ด๋ฏผ์ž์ธ ์ œ์ž„์Šค ๋งˆํ‹ด ์—๋”(James Martin Eder)๊ฐ€ ๋‚จ๋ฏธ ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ ์ฆ๊ธฐ ๋™๋ ฅ์‹ ์ œ๋‹น์†Œ์ธ ๋งˆ๋ˆ„์—˜๋ฆฌํƒ€(Manuelita)๋ฅผ ์„ค๋ฆฝํ•จ์œผ๋กœ์จ 1901๋…„์— ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌํƒ•๋ฌด์˜ ๋ถ€์ƒ 1747๋…„์— ๋…์ผ์˜ ํ™”ํ•™์ž์ธ ์•ˆ๋“œ๋ ˆ์•„์Šค ๋งˆ๋ฅดํฌ๊ทธ๋ผํ”„(Andreas Marggraf)๋Š” ์‚ฌํƒ•๋ฌด ๋ฟŒ๋ฆฌ์— ์ˆ˜ํฌ๋กœ์Šค๊ฐ€ ์กด์žฌํ•จ์„ ํ™•์ธํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ์€ ์–ผ๋งˆ๋™์•ˆ์€ ๊ทธ์ € ํ˜ธ๊ธฐ์‹ฌ์ด ์žˆ๋Š” ์ •๋„๋กœ ๋‚จ์•„์žˆ์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ ๋งˆ๋ฅดํฌ๊ทธ๋ผํ”„์˜ ์ œ์ž์ธ ํ”„๋ž€์ธ  ์•„์ƒค๋ฅด(Franz Achard)๋Š” ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ์˜ ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ๋ฆฌํžˆ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 3์„ธ(์žฌ์œ„: 1797๋…„~1840๋…„)์˜ ํ›„์›ํ•˜์— ์Š๋ ˆ์ง€์—”์˜ ์ฟ ๋„ค๋ฅธ(์˜ค๋Š˜๋‚  ํด๋ž€๋“œ์˜ ์ฝ”๋‚˜๋ฆฌ)์— ์‚ฌํƒ•๋ฌด ๊ฐ€๊ณต ๊ณต์žฅ์„ ๊ฑด์„คํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ˆ˜์ต์ด ๊ฑฐ์˜ ๋‚˜์ง€ ์•Š์•˜์ง€๋งŒ, ์ด ๊ณต์žฅ์€ 1801๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋‚˜ํด๋ ˆ์˜น ์ „์Ÿ(๊ธฐ๊ฐ„: 1803๋…„~1815๋…„)๋™์•ˆ ํŒŒ๊ดด๋  ๋•Œ๊นŒ์ง€ ์šด์˜๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜๊ตญ์˜ ๋ด‰์‡„์— ์˜ํ•ด ์นด๋ฆฌ๋ธŒํ•ด์˜ ์ƒํ’ˆ์„ ์ˆ˜์ž…ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†์—ˆ๋˜ ๋‚˜ํด๋ ˆ์˜น์€ ์˜๊ตญ ์ƒ์ธ๋“ค๊ณผ ๊ฑฐ๋ž˜ํ•˜๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์›์น˜ ์•Š์•˜๊ณ , 1813๋…„์— ์„คํƒ•์˜ ์ˆ˜์ž…์„ ๊ธˆ์ง€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌํƒ•๋ฌด ์„คํƒ• ์‚ฐ์—…์€ ํŠนํžˆ ์žฅ๋ฐ”ํ‹ฐ์ŠคํŠธ ์ผ€๋ฃจ์—˜(Jean-Baptiste Quรฉruel)์ด ๋ฒค์ž๋ฏผ ๋ธ๋ ˆ์„ธ๋ฅด(Benjamin Delessert)์˜ ์‚ฌ์—…์ฒด๋ฅผ ์‚ฐ์—…ํ™”์‹œํ‚จ ํ›„์— ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ์„ ์ง„๊ตญ์—์„œ์˜ ์„คํƒ• ์‚ฐ์—…์€ ์ธ๋ ฅ ์ˆ˜์š”๊ฐ€ ๋‚ฎ์€ ๊ธฐ๊ณ„ ์žฅ์น˜์— ์˜์กดํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ•˜๋ฃจ์— ์•ฝ 1,500ํ†ค์˜ ์„คํƒ•์„ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ•˜๋Š” ๋Œ€ํ˜• ์‚ฌํƒ•๋ฌด ์ •์ œ ๊ณต์žฅ์€ 24์‹œ๊ฐ„ ์ƒ์‚ฐ ๊ฐ€๋™์„ ์œ„ํ•ด ์•ฝ 150๋ช…์˜ ์ƒ์ฃผ ์ธ๋ ฅ์„ ํ•„์š”๋กœ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌํƒ•๋ฌด๋Š” ์ „์„ธ๊ณ„ ์„คํƒ• ์ƒ์‚ฐ๋Ÿ‰์˜ ์•ฝ 30%๋ฅผ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐ๊ณ„ํ™” 18์„ธ๊ธฐ ํ›„๋ฐ˜๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์„คํƒ•์˜ ์ƒ์‚ฐ์€ ์ ์  ๋” ๊ธฐ๊ณ„ํ™”๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฆ๊ธฐ๊ธฐ๊ด€์€ 1768๋…„ ์ž๋ฉ”์ด์นด์—์„œ ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ์ œ๋‹น์†Œ์— ๋™๋ ฅ์„ ๊ณต๊ธ‰ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋ฐœ์ƒํ•œ ์ฆ๊ธฐ๋Š” ์—ด์ฒ˜๋ฆฌ ๊ณต์ • ๊ณผ์ •์—์„œ ์ง์ ‘ ๋ถˆ์„ ๋–ผ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋Œ€์ฒดํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 1813๋…„ ์˜๊ตญ์˜ ํ™”ํ•™์ž ์—๋“œ์›Œ๋“œ ์ฐฐ์Šค ํ•˜์›Œ๋“œ(Edward Charles Howard)๋Š” ๊ฐœ๋ฐฉ๋œ ์šฉ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ์•„๋‹Œ ๋ฐ€ํ๋œ ์šฉ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ์ฆ๊ธฐ๋กœ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์ถ”์ถœ์•ก์„ ๊ฐ€์—ดํ•˜๊ณ  ๋ถ€๋ถ„์ ์ธ ์ง„๊ณต ์ƒํƒœ๋กœ ์œ ์ง€๋˜๋Š” ์„คํƒ• ์ •์ œ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์„ ๋ฐœ๋ช…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์••๋ ฅ์„ ๊ฐ์†Œ์‹œํ‚ค๋ฉด ๋ฌผ์€ ๋” ๋‚ฎ์€ ์˜จ๋„์—์„œ ๋“๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์—, ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๋ฐฉ์‹์€ ์—ฐ๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ์ ˆ๊ฐ์‹œ์ผฐ๊ณ , ์บ๋Ÿฌ๋ฉœํ™”๋กœ ์†Œ์‹ค๋˜๋Š” ์„คํƒ•์˜ ์–‘์„ ๊ฐ์†Œ์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์ž ๋…ธ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ๋ฆด๋ฆฌ์™ธ(Norbert Rillieux)์— ์˜ํ•ด ์„ค๊ณ„๋œ ๋‹ค์ค‘ํšจ์šฉ ์ฆ๋ฐœ๊ธฐ(multiple-effect evaporator)๋Š” ์—ฐ๋ฃŒ ํšจ์œจ์„ฑ์„ ๋”์šฑ ํ–ฅ์ƒ์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค์ค‘ํšจ์šฉ ์ฆ๋ฐœ๊ธฐ๋Š” ์ผ๋ จ์˜ ์ง„๊ณต์†ฅ์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ด์ „์˜ ์ง„๊ณต์†ฅ๋ณด๋‹ค ๋‚ฎ์€ ์••๋ ฅ์œผ๋กœ ์œ ์ง€๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ ์†ฅ์˜ ์ฆ๊ธฐ๋Š” ์ตœ์†Œํ•œ์˜ ์—ด์„ ์†Œ๋ชจํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋‹ค์Œ์œผ๋กœ ์—ด์„ ๊ณต๊ธ‰ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ˜„๋Œ€ ์‚ฐ์—…์€ ๋ฌผ์„ ์ฆ๋ฐœ์‹œํ‚ค๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋‹ค์ค‘ํšจ์šฉ ์ฆ๋ฐœ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์ด์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋‹น๋ฐ€๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์„คํƒ•์„ ๋ถ„๋ฆฌํ•˜๋Š” ๊ณผ์ • ๋˜ํ•œ ๊ธฐ๊ณ„์ ์ธ ๊ณต์ •์˜ ๋Œ€์ƒ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ์ด๋น„๋“œ ์›จ์Šคํ„ด(David Weston)์€ 1852๋…„ ํ•˜์™€์ด์—์„œ ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์ž‘์—…์— ์›์‹ฌ๋ถ„๋ฆฌ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ์ ์šฉ์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐํƒ€ ๊ฐ๋ฏธ๋ฃŒ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ๊ณผ ์ผ๋ณธ์—์„œ๋Š” ๊ณ ๊ณผ๋‹น ์˜ฅ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์‹œ๋Ÿฝ์ด ํŠนํžˆ ์ฒญ๋Ÿ‰์Œ๋ฃŒ์™€ ๊ฐ€๊ณต์‹ํ’ˆ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์ผ๋ถ€ ์šฉ๋„์—์„œ ์„คํƒ•์„ ๋Œ€์ฒดํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ณ ๊ณผ๋‹น ์˜ฅ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์‹œ๋Ÿฝ์„ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ•˜๋Š” ๊ณผ์ •์€ 1957๋…„ ๋ฆฌ์ฒ˜๋“œ O. ๋งˆ์…œ(Richard O. Marshall)๊ณผ ์–ผ R. ์ฟ ์ด(Earl R. Kooi)์— ์˜ํ•ด ์ฒ˜์Œ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ฐ์—…์ ์ธ ์ƒ์‚ฐ ๊ณต์ •์€ 1965๋…„~1970๋…„์— ์ผ๋ณธ์˜ ๊ฒฝ์ œ์‚ฐ์—…์„ฑ ์‚ฐํ•˜ ์‚ฐ์—…๊ณผํ•™๊ธฐ์ˆ ์›์˜ ํƒ€์นด์‚ฌํ‚ค(Y. Takasaki) ๋ฐ•์‚ฌ์— ์˜ํ•ด ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ณ ๊ณผ๋‹น ์˜ฅ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์‹œ๋Ÿฝ์€ 1975๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 1985๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๊ฐ€๊ณต์‹ํ’ˆ ๋ฐ ์ฒญ๋Ÿ‰์Œ๋ฃŒ์— ๊ธ‰์†ํžˆ ๋„์ž…๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์—์„œ 1977๋…„์— ๋ถ€๊ณผ๋œ ์„คํƒ• ๊ด€์„ธ์™€ ์„คํƒ• ์ฟผํ„ฐ๋Š” ์„คํƒ•์˜ ์ˆ˜์ž… ๋น„์šฉ์„ ํฌ๊ฒŒ ์ฆ๊ฐ€์‹œ์ผฐ๊ณ , ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ์ œ์กฐ์—…์ž๋“ค์€ ๋” ๊ฐ’์‹ผ ๊ฐ๋ฏธ๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ์ฐพ์•˜๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ์„คํƒ• ๊ฐ€๊ฒฉ์ด ์ „์„ธ๊ณ„ ๊ฐ€๊ฒฉ์˜ ๋‘ ๋ฐฐ์ด๊ณ , ์˜ฅ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์žฌ๋ฐฐ์ž๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ์ง€๊ธ‰๋˜๋Š” ์ •๋ถ€์˜ ๋ณด์กฐ๊ธˆ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ์˜ฅ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜์˜ ๊ฐ€๊ฒฉ์ด ๋‚ฎ๊ฒŒ ์œ ์ง€๋˜๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์˜ฅ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ถ”์ถœํ•œ ๊ณ ๊ณผ๋‹น ์˜ฅ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์‹œ๋Ÿฝ์ด ๋ณด๋‹ค ๊ฒฝ์ œ์ ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ณ ๊ณผ๋‹น ์˜ฅ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์‹œ๋Ÿฝ์€ ๋งค๋ ฅ์ ์ธ ๋Œ€์šฉํ’ˆ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋Œ€๋‹ค์ˆ˜์˜ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ์‹ํ’ˆ ๋ฐ ์Œ๋ฃŒ ์ œ์กฐ์—…์ฒด๋“ค์€ ์„คํƒ•๋ณด๋‹ค ๊ณ ๊ณผ๋‹น ์˜ฅ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์‹œ๋Ÿฝ์„ ๋” ์„ ํ˜ธํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ฝ”์นด์ฝœ๋ผ์™€ ํŽฉ์‹œ ๊ฐ™์€ ์ฒญ๋Ÿ‰์Œ๋ฃŒ ์ œ์กฐ์‚ฌ๋“ค์€ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋‚˜๋ผ์—์„œ๋Š” ์„คํƒ•์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ, ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์—์„œ๋Š” 1984๋…„์— ๊ณ ๊ณผ๋‹น ์˜ฅ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์‹œ๋Ÿฝ์œผ๋กœ ์„คํƒ•์„ ๋Œ€์ฒดํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์ธ๋“ค์€ ํ‰๊ท ์ ์œผ๋กœ 2008๋…„์— ๊ณ ๊ณผ๋‹น ์˜ฅ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์‹œ๋Ÿฝ์„ ์•ฝ 17.1 kg ์„ ์„ญ์ทจํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ˆ˜ํฌ๋กœ์Šค๋ฅผ 21.2 kg์„ ์„ญ์ทจํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ตœ๊ทผ์—๋Š” ๊ฐ€๊ณต์‹ํ’ˆ์—์„œ ๊ณ ๊ณผ๋‹น ์˜ฅ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์‹œ๋Ÿฝ์˜ ์‚ฌ์šฉ ์ฆ๊ฐ€๊ฐ€ ๋Œ€์‚ฌ ์ฆํ›„๊ตฐ, ๊ณ ํ˜ˆ์••, ์ด์ƒ์ง€์งˆํ˜ˆ์ฆ, ์ง€๋ฐฉ๊ฐ„, ์ธ์Š๋ฆฐ ์ €ํ•ญ์„ฑ ๋ฐ ๋น„๋งŒ์„ ๋น„๋กฏํ•œ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ๊ฑด๊ฐ• ์ƒํƒœ๋“ค๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จ์ด ์žˆ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฐ€์„ค์ด ์ œ๊ธฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ๊ณ ๊ณผ๋‹น ์˜ฅ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์‹œ๋Ÿฝ์ด ์ˆ˜ํฌ๋กœ์Šค๋‚˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋‹จ๋‹น๋ฅ˜๋“ค๋ณด๋‹ค ๊ฑด๊ฐ•์— ์ข‹์ง€ ์•Š๋‹ค๋Š” ์ฆ๊ฑฐ๋Š” ํ˜„์žฌ๊นŒ์ง€๋Š” ๊ฑฐ์˜ ์—†๋‹ค. ๊ณ ๊ณผ๋‹น ์˜ฅ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์‹œ๋Ÿฝ์˜ ๊ณผ๋‹น ํ•จ๋Ÿ‰๊ณผ ๊ณผ๋‹น ๋Œ€ ํฌ๋„๋‹น์˜ ๋น„์œจ์€ ์‚ฌ๊ณผ ์ฃผ์Šค์™€ ํฌ๊ฒŒ ๋‹ค๋ฅด์ง€ ์•Š๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ถ€ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋“ค์€ ๊ณผ๋‹น์ด ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋‹จ๋‹น๋ฅ˜๋“ค๋ณด๋‹ค ์ง€๋ฐฉ์„ ํ•ฉ์„ฑํ•˜๋Š” ๊ณผ์ •์„ ๋” ์ด‰์ง„์‹œํ‚ฌ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๊ฐ€์ •ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๋Š” ๊ณ ๊ณผ๋‹น ์˜ฅ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์‹œ๋Ÿฝ์˜ ์กฐํ•ฉ์€ ์ˆ˜ํฌ๋กœ์Šค์™€ ๋งˆ์ฐฌ๊ฐ€์ง€๋กœ ๊ณผ๋‹น๊ณผ ํฌ๋„๋‹น์˜ ๋น„์œจ์ด ๊ฑฐ์˜ 1 : 1์ด๋ฉฐ, ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ๊ณ ๊ณผ๋‹น ์˜ฅ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์‹œ๋Ÿฝ์€ ๊ณผ๋‹น๊ณผ ํฌ๋„๋‹น์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ„ํ•ด๋˜๋Š” ์ˆ˜ํฌ๋กœ์Šค ๋Œ€์‚ฌ์˜ ์ฒซ ๋‹จ๊ณ„ ์ดํ›„์˜ ๋Œ€์‚ฌ๊ณผ์ •์ด ๋™์ผํ•˜๋‹ค. ๊ณ ๊ณผ๋‹น ์˜ฅ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์‹œ๋Ÿฝ์˜ ๋ณด๊ธ‰์ด ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ•จ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์‹ํ’ˆ ์ค‘์— ๋‹น๋ฅ˜์˜ ์นผ๋กœ๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์–ด, ๊ด€๋ จ ์งˆ๋ณ‘์˜ ๋ฐœ์ƒ์„ ์ฆ๊ฐ€์‹œํ‚ฌ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ์„คํƒ• ์ˆ˜ํฌ๋กœ์Šค ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ์‚ฌํƒ•์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ (์ข…) ์‚ฌํƒ•๋ฌด ์Œ์‹์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌ ์„คํƒ• ์‚ฐ์—… ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์ฐธ๊ณ  ๋ฌธํ—Œ ์Œ์‹์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌ ์„คํƒ•
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History%20of%20sugar
History of sugar
The history of sugar has five main phases: The extraction of sugar cane juice from the sugarcane plant, and the subsequent domestication of the plant in tropical India and Southeast Asia sometime around 4,000 BC. The invention of manufacture of cane sugar granules from sugarcane juice in India a little over two thousand years ago, followed by improvements in refining the crystal granules in India in the early centuries AD. The spread of cultivation and manufacture of cane sugar to the medieval Islamic world together with some improvements in production methods. The spread of cultivation and manufacture of cane sugar to the West Indies and tropical parts of the Americas beginning in the 16th century, followed by more intensive improvements in production in the 17th through 19th centuries in that part of the world. The development of beet sugar, high-fructose corn syrup and other sweeteners in the 19th and 20th centuries. Sugar was first produced from sugarcane plants in India sometime after the first century AD. The derivation of the word "sugar" is thought to be from Sanskrit (ล›arkarฤ), meaning "ground or candied sugar," originally "grit, gravel". Sanskrit literature from ancient India, written between 1500 and 500 BC provides the first documentation of the cultivation of sugar cane and of the manufacture of sugar in the Bengal region of the Indian subcontinent. Known worldwide by the end of the medieval period, sugar was very expensive and was considered a "fine spice", but from about the year 1500, technological improvements and New World sources began turning it into a much cheaper bulk commodity. The spread of sugarcane cultivation There are two centers of domestication for sugarcane: one for Saccharum officinarum by Papuans in New Guinea and another for Saccharum sinense by Austronesians in Taiwan and southern China. Papuans and Austronesians originally primarily used sugarcane as food for domesticated pigs. The spread of both S. officinarum and S. sinense is closely linked to the migrations of the Austronesian peoples. Saccharum barberi was only cultivated in India after the introduction of S. officinarum. Saccharum officinarum was first domesticated in New Guinea and the islands east of the Wallace Line by Papuans, where it is the modern center of diversity. Beginning at around 6,000 BP they were selectively bred from the native Saccharum robustum. From New Guinea it spread westwards to Island Southeast Asia after contact with Austronesians, where it hybridized with Saccharum spontaneum.The second domestication center is mainland southern China and Taiwan where S. sinense was a primary cultigen of the Austronesian peoples. Words for sugarcane exist in the Proto-Austronesian languages in Taiwan, reconstructed as *tษ™buS or **CebuS, which became *tebuh in Proto-Malayo-Polynesian. It was one of the original major crops of the Austronesian peoples from at least 5,500 BP. Introduction of the sweeter S. officinarum may have gradually replaced it throughout its cultivated range in Island Southeast Asia. From Island Southeast Asia, S. officinarum was spread eastward into Polynesia and Micronesia by Austronesian voyagers as a canoe plant by around 3,500 BP. It was also spread westward and northward by around 3,000 BP to China and India by Austronesian traders, where it further hybridized with Saccharum sinense and Saccharum barberi. From there it spread further into western Eurasia and the Mediterranean. India, where the process of refining cane juice into granulated crystals was developed, was often visited by imperial convoys (such as those from China) to learn about cultivation and sugar refining. By the sixth century AD, sugar cultivation and processing had reached Persia, and from there that knowledge was brought into the Mediterranean by the Arab expansion. "Wherever they went, the [medieval] Arabs brought with them sugar, the product and the technology of its production." Spanish and Portuguese exploration and conquest in the fifteenth century carried sugar south-west of Iberia. Henry the Navigator introduced cane to Madeira in 1425, while the Spanish, having eventually subdued the Canary Islands, introduced sugar cane to them. In 1493, on his second voyage, Christopher Columbus carried sugarcane seedlings to the New World, in particular Hispaniola. Early use of sugarcane in India Sugarcane originated in tropical Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia. Different species likely originated in different locations with S. barberi originating in India and S. edule and S. officinarum coming from New Guinea. Originally, people chewed sugarcane raw to extract its sweetness. Indians discovered how to crystallize sugar during the Gupta dynasty, although literary evidence from Indian treatises such as Arthashastra in the 2nd century AD indicates that refined sugar was already being produced in India. Indian sailors, consumers of clarified butter and sugar, carried sugar by various trade routes. Travelling Buddhist monks brought sugar crystallization methods to China. During the reign of Harsha (r. 606โ€“647) in North India, Indian envoys in Tang China taught sugarcane cultivation methods after Emperor Taizong of Tang (r. 626โ€“649) made his interest in sugar known, and China soon established its first sugarcane cultivation in the seventh century. Chinese documents confirm at least two missions to India, initiated in 647 AD, for obtaining technology for sugar-refining. In India, the Middle East and China, sugar became a staple of cooking and desserts. Early refining methods involved grinding or pounding the cane in order to extract the juice, and then boiling down the juice or drying it in the sun to yield sugary solids that looked like gravel. The Sanskrit word for "sugar" (sharkara) also means "gravel" or "sand". Similarly, the Chinese use the term "gravel sugar" (Traditional Chinese: ็ ‚็ณ–) for what is known in the west knows as "table sugar". In 1792, sugar prices soared in Great Britain. On 15 March 1792, his Majesty's Ministers to the British parliament presented a report related to the production of refined sugar in British India. Lieutenant J. Paterson, of the Bengal Presidency, reported that refined sugar could be produced in India with many superior advantages, and a lot more cheaply than in the West Indies. Cane sugar in the medieval era in the Muslim World and Europe There are records of knowledge of sugar among the ancient Greeks and Romans, but only as an imported medicine, and not as a food. For example, the Greek physician Dioscorides in the 1st century (AD) wrote: "There is a kind of coalesced honey called sakcharon [i.e. sugar] found in reeds in India and Eudaimon Arabia [i.e. Yemen] similar in consistency to salt and brittle enough to be broken between the teeth like salt. It is good dissolved in water for the intestines and stomach, and [can be] taken as a drink to help [relieve] a painful bladder and kidneys." Pliny the Elder, a 1st-century (AD) Roman, also described sugar as medicinal: "Sugar is made in Arabia as well, but Indian sugar is better. It is a kind of honey found in cane, white as gum, and it crunches between the teeth. It comes in lumps the size of a hazelnut. Sugar is used only for medical purposes." During the medieval era, Arab entrepreneurs adopted sugar production techniques from India and expanded the industry. Medieval Arabs in some cases set up large plantations equipped with on-site sugar mills or refineries. The cane sugar plant, which is native to a tropical climate, requires both a lot of water and a lot of heat to thrive. The cultivation of the plant spread throughout the medieval Arab world using artificial irrigation. Sugar cane was first grown extensively in medieval Southern Europe during the period of Arab rule in Sicily beginning around the 9th century. In addition to Sicily, Al-Andalus (in what is currently southern Spain) was an important center of sugar production, beginning by the tenth century. From the Arab world, sugar was exported throughout Europe. The volume of imports increased in the later medieval centuries as indicated by the increasing references to sugar consumption in late medieval Western writings. But cane sugar remained an expensive import. Its price per pound in 14th and 15th century England was about equally as high as imported spices from tropical Asia such as mace (nutmeg), ginger, cloves, and pepper, which had to be transported across the Indian Ocean in that era. Ponting traces the spread of the cultivation of sugarcane from its introduction into Mesopotamia, then the Levant and the islands of the eastern Mediterranean, especially Cyprus, by the 10th century. He also notes that it spread along the coast of East Africa to reach Zanzibar. Crusaders brought sugar home with them to Europe after their campaigns in the Holy Land, where they encountered caravans carrying what they called "sweet salt". Early in the 12th century, Venice acquired some villages near Tyre and set up estates to produce sugar for export to Europe, where it supplemented honey as the only other available sweetener. Crusade chronicler William of Tyre, writing in the late 12th century, described sugar as "a most precious product, very necessary for the use and health of mankind". The first record of sugar in English is in the late 13th century. Ponting recounts the reliance on slavery of the early European sugar entrepreneurs: The crucial problem with sugar production was that it was highly labour-intensive in both growing and processing. Because of the huge weight and bulk of the raw cane it was very costly to transport, especially by land, and therefore each estate had to have its own factory. There the cane had to be crushed to extract the juices, which were boiled to concentrate them, in a series of backbreaking and intensive operations lasting many hours. However, once it had been processed and concentrated, the sugar had a very high value for its bulk and could be traded over long distances by ship at a considerable profit. The [European sugar] industry only began on a major scale after the loss of the Levant to a resurgent Islam and the shift of production to Cyprus under a mixture of Crusader aristocrats and Venetian merchants. The local population on Cyprus spent most of their time growing their own food and few would work on the sugar estates. The owners therefore brought in slaves from the Black Sea area (and a few from Africa) to do most of the work. The level of demand and production was low and therefore so was the trade in slaves โ€” no more than about a thousand people a year. It was not much larger when sugar production began in Sicily. In the Atlantic ocean [the Canaries, Madeira, and the Cape Verde Islands], once the initial exploitation of the timber and raw materials was over, it rapidly became clear that sugar production would be the most profitable way of getting money from the new territories. The problem was the heavy labour involved because the Europeans refused to work except as supervisors. The solution was to bring in slaves from Africa. The crucial developments in this trade began in the 1440's... During the 1390s, a better press was developed, which doubled the amount of juice that was obtained from the sugarcane and helped to cause the economic expansion of sugar plantations to Andalusia and to the Algarve. It started in Madeira in 1455, using advisers from Sicily and (largely) Genoese capital for the mills. The accessibility of Madeira attracted Genoese and Flemish traders keen to bypass Venetian monopolies. "By 1480 Antwerp had some seventy ships engaged in the Madeira sugar trade, with the refining and distribution concentrated in Antwerp. The 1480's saw sugar production extended to the Canary Islands. By the 1490's Madeira had overtaken Cyprus as a producer of sugar." African slaves also worked in the sugar plantations of the Kingdom of Castile around Valencia. Sugar cultivation in the New World The Portuguese took sugar to Brazil. By 1540, there were 800 cane sugar mills in Santa Catarina Island and there were another 2,000 on the north coast of Brazil, Demarara, and Surinam. The first sugar harvest happened in Hispaniola in 1501; and many sugar mills had been constructed in Cuba and Jamaica by the 1520s. The approximately 3,000 small sugar mills that were built before 1550 in the New World created an unprecedented demand for cast iron gears, levers, axles and other implements. Specialist trades in mold-making and iron casting developed in Europe due to the expansion of sugar production. Sugar mill construction sparked development of the technological skills needed for a nascent industrial revolution in the early 17th century. After 1625, the Dutch transported sugarcane from South America to the Caribbean islands, where it was grown from Barbados to the Virgin Islands. Contemporaries often compared the worth of sugar with valuable commodities including musk, pearls, and spices. Sugar prices declined slowly as its production became multi-sourced throughout the European colonies. Once an indulgence only of the rich, the consumption of sugar also became increasingly common among the poor as well. Sugar production increased in the mainland North American colonies, in Cuba, and in Brazil. The labour force at first included European indentured servants and local Native American enslaved people. However, European diseases such as smallpox and African ones such as malaria and yellow fever soon reduced the numbers of local Native Americans. Europeans were also very susceptible to malaria and yellow fever, and the supply of indentured servants was limited. African slaves became the dominant source of plantation workers, because they were more resistant to malaria and yellow fever, and because the supply of enslaved people was abundant on the African coast. In the process of whitening sugar, the charred bones of dead enslaved people often supplemented the traditionally used animal bones. During the 18th century, sugar became enormously popular. Great Britain, for example, consumed five times as much sugar in 1770 as in 1710. By 1750, sugar surpassed grain as "the most valuable commodity in European tradeย โ€” it made up a fifth of all European imports and in the last decades of the century four-fifths of the sugar came from the British and French colonies in the West Indies." From the 1740s until the 1820s, sugar was Britain's most valuable import. The sugar market went through a series of booms. The heightened demand and production of sugar came about to a large extent due to a great change in the eating habits of many Europeans. For example, they began consuming jams, candy, tea, coffee, cocoa, processed foods, and other sweet victuals in much greater amounts. Reacting to this increasing trend, the Caribbean islands took advantage of the situation and set about producing still more sugar. In fact, they produced up to ninety percent of the sugar that the western Europeans consumed. Some islands proved more successful than others when it came to producing the product. In Barbados and the British Leeward Islands, sugar provided 93% and 97% respectively of exports. Planters later began developing ways to boost production even more. For example, they began using more farming methods when growing their crops. They also developed more advanced mills and began using better types of sugarcane. In the eighteenth century "the French colonies were the most successful, especially Saint-Domingue, where better irrigation, water-power and machinery, together with concentration on newer types of sugar, increased profits." Despite these and other improvements, the price of sugar reached soaring heights, especially during events such as the revolt against the Dutch and the Napoleonic Wars. Sugar remained in high demand, and the islands' planters knew exactly how to take advantage of the situation. As Europeans established sugar plantations on the larger Caribbean islands, prices fell in Europe. By the 18th century all levels of society had become common consumers of the former luxury product. At first most sugar in Britain went into tea, but later confectionery and chocolates became extremely popular. Many Britons (especially children) also ate jams. Suppliers commonly sold sugar in the form of a sugarloaf and consumers required sugar nips, a pliers-like tool, to break off pieces. Sugarcane quickly exhausts the soil in which it grows, and planters pressed larger islands with fresher soil into production in the nineteenth century as demand for sugar in Europe continued to increase: "average consumption in Britain rose from four pounds per head in 1700 to eighteen pounds in 1800, thirty-six pounds by 1850 and over one hundred pounds by the twentieth century." In the 19th century Cuba rose to become the richest land in the Caribbean (with sugar as its dominant crop) because it formed the only major island landmass free of mountainous terrain. Instead, nearly three-quarters of its land formed a rolling plain โ€” ideal for planting crops. Cuba also prospered above other islands because Cubans used better methods when harvesting the sugar crops: they adopted modern milling methods such as watermills, enclosed furnaces, steam engines, and vacuum pans. All these technologies increased productivity. Cuba also retained slavery longer than the most of the rest of the Caribbean islands. After the Haitian Revolution established the independent state of Haiti, sugar production in that country declined and Cuba replaced Saint-Domingue as the world's largest producer. Long established in Brazil, sugar production spread to other parts of South America, as well as to newer European colonies in Africa and in the Pacific, where it became especially important in Fiji. Mauritius, Natal and Queensland in Australia started growing sugar. The older and newer sugar production areas now tended to use indentured labour rather than enslaved people, with workers "shipped across the world ... [and] ... held in conditions of near slavery for up to ten years... In the second half of the nineteenth century over 450,000 indentured labourers went from India to the British West Indies, others went to Natal, Mauritius and Fiji (where they became a majority of the population). In Queensland workers from the Pacific islands were moved in. On Hawaii, they came from China and Japan. The Dutch transferred large numbers of people from Java to Surinam." It is said that the sugar plantations would not have thrived without the aid of the African enslaved people. In Colombia, the planting of sugar started very early on, and entrepreneurs imported many African enslaved people to cultivate the fields. The industrialization of the Colombian industry started in 1901 with the establishment of Manuelita, the first steam-powered sugar mill in South America, by Latvian Jewish immigrant James Martin Eder. The rise of beet sugar Sugar was a luxury in Europe until the early 19th century, when it became more widely available, due to the rise of beet sugar in Prussia, and later in France under Napoleon. Beet sugar was a German invention, since, in 1747, Andreas Sigismund Marggraf announced the discovery of sugar in beets and devised a method using alcohol to extract it. Marggraf's student, Franz Karl Achard, devised an economical industrial method to extract the sugar in its pure form in the late 18th century. Achard first produced beet sugar in 1783 in Kaulsdorf. In 1801, under the patronage of King Frederick William III of Prussia (reigned 1797โ€“1840), the world's first beet sugar production facility was established in Cunern, Silesia (then part of Prussia). While never profitable, this plant operated from 1801 until its destruction during the Napoleonic Wars (ca. 1802โ€“1815). The works of Marggraf and Achard were the starting point for the sugar industry in Europe, and for the modern sugar industry in general, since sugar was no longer a luxury product and a product almost only produced in warmer climates. In France, Napoleon cut off from Caribbean imports by a British blockade, and at any rate not wanting to fund British merchants, banned imports of sugar in 1813 and ordered the planting of 32,000 hectares with beetroot. A beet sugar industry emerged, especially after Jean-Baptiste Quรฉruel industrialized the operation of Benjamin Delessert. The United Kingdom Beetroot Sugar Association was established in 1832 but efforts to establish sugar beet in the UK were not very successful. Sugar beets provided approximately 2/3 of world sugar production in 1899. 46% of British sugar came from Germany and Austria. Sugar prices in Britain collapsed towards the end of the 19th century. The British Sugar Beet Society was set up in 1915 and by 1930 there were 17 factories in England and one in Scotland, supported under the provisions of the British Sugar (Subsidy) Act 1925. By 1935 homegrown sugar was 27.6% of British consumption. By 1929 109,201 people were employed in the British sugar beet industry, with about 25,000 more casual labourers. Mechanization Beginning in the late 18th century, the production of sugar became increasingly mechanized. The steam engine first powered a sugar mill in Jamaica in 1768, and soon after, steam replaced direct firing as the source of process heat. In 1813 the British chemist Edward Charles Howard invented a method of refining sugar that involved boiling the cane juice not in an open kettle, but in a closed vessel heated by steam and held under partial vacuum. At reduced pressure, water boils at a lower temperature, and this development both saved fuel and reduced the amount of sugar lost through caramelization. Further gains in fuel-efficiency came from the multiple-effect evaporator, designed by the United States engineer Norbert Rillieux (perhaps as early as the 1820s, although the first working model dates from 1845). This system consisted of a series of vacuum pans, each held at a lower pressure than the previous one. The vapors from each pan served to heat the next, with minimal heat wasted. Modern industries use multiple-effect evaporators for evaporating water. The process of separating sugar from molasses also received mechanical attention: David Weston first applied the centrifuge to this task in Hawaii in 1852. Other sweeteners In the United States and Japan, high-fructose corn syrup has replaced sugar in some uses, particularly in soft drinks and processed foods. The process by which high-fructose corn syrup is produced was first developed by Richard O. Marshall and Earl R. Kooi in 1957. The industrial production process was refined by Dr. Y. Takasaki at Agency of Industrial Science and Technology of Ministry of International Trade and Industry of Japan in 1965โ€“1970. High-fructose corn syrup was rapidly introduced to many processed foods and soft drinks in the United States from around 1975 to 1985. A system of sugar tariffs and sugar quotas imposed in 1977 in the United States significantly increased the cost of imported sugar and U.S. producers sought cheaper sources. High-fructose corn syrup, derived from corn, is more economical because the domestic U.S. price of sugar is twice the global price and the price of corn is kept low through government subsidies paid to growers. High-fructose corn syrup became an attractive substitute, and is preferred over cane sugar among the vast majority of American food and beverage manufacturers. Soft drink makers such as Coca-Cola and Pepsi use sugar in other nations, but switched to high-fructose corn syrup in the United States in 1984. The average American consumed approximately of high-fructose corn syrup in 2008, versus of sucrose. In recent years it has been hypothesized that the increase of high-fructose corn syrup usage in processed foods may be linked to various health conditions, including metabolic syndrome, hypertension, dyslipidemia, hepatic steatosis, insulin resistance, and obesity. However, there is to date little evidence that high-fructose corn syrup is any unhealthier, calorie for calorie, than sucrose or other simple sugars. The fructose content and fructose:glucose ratio of high-fructose corn syrup do not differ markedly from clarified apple juice. Some researchers hypothesize that fructose may trigger the process by which fats are formed, to a greater extent than other simple sugars. However, most commonly used blends of high-fructose corn syrup contain a nearly one-to-one ratio of fructose and glucose, just like common sucrose, and should therefore be metabolically identical after the first steps of sucrose metabolism, in which the sucrose is split into fructose and glucose components. At the very least, the increasing prevalence of high-fructose corn syrup has certainly led to an increase in added sugar calories in food, which may reasonably increase the incidence of these and other diseases. See also Sugar Cane and Rum Museum Castillo Serrallรฉs Hacienda Mercedita Food history Sugar industry Sugar Museum (Berlin) Notes Bibliography Sugar: The Most Evil Molecule from Science History Institute History of food and drink
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๋ชจ๋ฆฌ์Šค ํ”ผํ„ฐ์Šจ
๋ชจ๋ฆฌ์Šค ๋Ÿฌ์…€ ํ”ผํ„ฐ์Šจ ์ฃผ๋‹ˆ์–ด(Morris Russell Peterson Jr., 1977๋…„ 8์›” 26์ผ ~ )๋Š” ์€ํ‡ดํ•œ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ํ”„๋กœ ๋†๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜์ด๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋˜ํ•œ ์ธ๋””์• ๋‚˜ ํŽ˜์ด์„œ์Šค์™€ ๋‰ด์š• ๋‹‰์Šค์˜ ์ „ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์กฐ๋„ˆ์„  ๋ฒค๋”์˜ ์‚ฌ์ดŒ์ด๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜๋‹ค. ๋Œ€ํ•™ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ๋ฏธ์‹œ๊ฐ„์ฃผ ํ”Œ๋ฆฐํŠธ์—์„œ ํƒœ์–ด๋‚œ ํ”ผํ„ฐ์Šจ์€ ๋ฏธ์‹œ๊ฐ„ ์ฃผ๋ฆฝ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต์—์„œ ๋Œ€ํ•™ ๋†๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ํ™œ์•ฝํ•˜๊ณ  2000๋…„ NCAA ํƒ€์ดํ‹€๋กœ ๊ทธ๋“ค์„ ์ด๋ˆ ๋„์›€์„ ์ฃผ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€ํ•™์—์„œ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์‹œ๋‹ˆ์–ด ํ•ด์— ํ”ผํ„ฐ์Šจ์€ ๋“์ , ํ•„๋“œ๊ณจ ํผ์„ผํ‹ฐ์ง€์™€ ํ”„๋ฆฌ์Šค๋กœ ํผ์„ผํ‹ฐ์ง€์—์„œ ํŒ€์„ ์ด๋Œ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ํŒ€์˜ ์‚ฌ์ƒ 30์˜ ๋‘ ์ž๋ฆฌ์˜ ์ˆ˜ ๋“์  ์„ฑ๊ณผ๋“ค์„ ๊ฐ€์กŒ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” "์˜ฌํ•ด์˜ ๋น…ํ… ์„ ์ˆ˜"์™€ "ํผ์ŠคํŠธ ํŒ€ ์˜ฌ๋น…ํ…"์œผ๋กœ ํˆฌํ‘œ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , 5๊ฐœ์˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํˆฌํ‘œ๋“ค์—์„œ ํผ์ŠคํŠธ ํ˜น์€ ์„ธ์ปจ๋“œ ํŒ€์˜ ์˜ฌ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นธ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ ๋†“์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” 2000๋…„ NBA ๋“œ๋ž˜ํ”„ํŠธ์—์„œ ํ† ๋ก ํ†  ๋žฉํ„ฐ์Šค์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ „์ฒด 21์œ„๋กœ ์„ ๋ฐœ๋˜์–ด ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์ฒซ 3๊ฐœ์˜ ์‹œ์ฆŒ ๋™์•ˆ ๊ทธ๋“ค์˜ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์˜ ๋‹ค์ˆ˜์—์„œ ์ถœ๋ฐœ ์„ ์ˆ˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2009๋…„ 1์›” 17์ผ ๋ฏธ์‹œ๊ฐ„ ์ฃผ๋ฆฝ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต๋Š” ์ผ๋ฆฌ๋…ธ์ด ํŒŒ์ดํŒ… ์ผ๋ฆฌ๋‹ˆ๋ฅผ ์ƒ๋Œ€๋กœ ์ž์‹ ๋“ค์˜ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๊ธฐ ์ „์— ๋Œ€ํ•™์˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์‚ฌ์ƒ ๊ฑฐ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋“ค๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๊ทธ์˜ ๋“ฑ๋ฒˆํ˜ธ 42๋ฅผ ์˜๊ตฌ ๊ฒฐ๋ฒˆ ์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. NBA ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ํ† ๋ก ํ†  ๋žฉํ„ฐ์Šค 2000๋…„ ๋žฉํ„ฐ์Šค์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ฒซ ๋ผ์šด๋“œ์—์„œ ๋“œ๋ž˜ํ”„ํŠธ๋œ ํ”ผํ„ฐ์Šจ์€ ์ž์‹ ์ด ๋‹นํŒ์— ๊ฑธ์€ ์ˆœ๊ฐ„์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ํŒฌ๋“ค์˜ ์ด์•„๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ž์‹ ์˜ ํ”„๋กœ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ์—์„œ ์–ด๋–ค ์ดˆ๊ธฐ์˜ ์„ฑ๊ณต์„ ์ฆ๊ธฐ๋Š” ๋™์•ˆ ํ”ผํ„ฐ์Šจ์˜ ์ƒ์—ฐ์€ ์•ˆ๋‚ด๋œ ๋žฉํ„ฐ์Šค์˜ ์†Œ๋…„๋“ค์˜ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์‹œ๊ธฐ์˜ ์ž๊ตญ์„ ์ข‡์•„์„œ ์˜ฌ๋ผ๊ฐ€๊ธฐ ์ „์— ํ™•๊ณ ํ•œ ์‡ ํ‡ด๋ฅผ ํ–ฅํ•˜์—ฌ ๋”์šฑ ํŒฝ์ฐฝ๋ ฅ ์žˆ๋Š” ์ง€๋„ ์—ญํ• ์„ ๊ณ ์šฉํ•˜๊ณ  ์ž์‹ ์„ ์—˜๋ฆฌํŠธ์ธต ์ฃผ๋ณ€์˜ ๋ฐฉ์–ด์ž, ์œ„ํ—˜ํ•œ ์ƒ์—ฐ์ž์™€ ๊ฒฌ์‹คํ•œ ๋“์ ์ž๋กœ ๋ณ€ํ˜•์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. 2005๋…„ 12์›” 28์ผ ํ”ผํ„ฐ์Šจ์€ ๋žฉํ„ฐ์Šค์˜ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ ํ™œ์•ฝํ•œ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋“ค์˜ ๊ธฐ๋ก์„ ์„ธ์›Œ 418๊ฐœ์˜ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋“ค๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์•จ๋นˆ ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„์Šค๋ฅผ ์•ž์„ฐ๋‹ค. ํ”ผํ„ฐ์Šจ์€ ๋˜ํ•œ 2006๋…„ 4๋…„ ๋™์•ˆ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์ฒซ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋†“์น  ๋•Œ๊นŒ์ง€ 371๊ฐœ์˜ ์—ฐ์†์  ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ์ถœ์—ฐ์˜ ์ตœ์žฅ๊ธฐ์  ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋“ค์„ ํ™œ์•ฝํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ NBA๋ฅผ ์ด๋Œ๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํ”ผํ„ฐ์Šจ์€ 2005๋…„ ~06๋…„ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์— ํ™œ์•ฝํ•œ 82๊ฐœ์˜ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋“ค์„ ํ†ตํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ์‚ฌ์ƒ์˜ ํฌ์ธํŠธ์™€ ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ”์šด๋“œ๋ฅผ ๊ฒŒ์‹œํ•˜๊ณ , ํ•œ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— 16.8 ํฌ์ธํŠธ์™€ 4.6 ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ”์šด๋“œ๋ฅผ ํ‰๊ท ํ•˜๊ณ  2.3 ์–ด์‹œ์ŠคํŠธ์—์„œ ๋˜์กŒ๋‹ค. ์•„๋งˆ ๊ทธ์˜ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ์˜ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ํฐ ํ•˜์ด๋ผ์ดํŠธ๋Š” 2007๋…„ 3์›” 30์ผ ์›Œ์‹ฑํ„ด ์œ„์ €์ฆˆ๋ฅผ ์ƒ๋Œ€๋กœ 2๊ฐœ์˜ ํŒ€๋“ค์˜ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์˜คํ”„ ์‹œ๋“œ๋ฅผ ๊ฒฐ์‹ฌ์‹œํ‚จ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ์ผ์–ด๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ๋žฉํ„ฐ์Šค๋Š” 3.8์ดˆ ๋งŒ์ด ๋‚จ์œผ๋ฉด์„œ 190 ๋Œ€ 106์œผ๋กœ ์ถ”์ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์›Œ์ €์ฆˆ์˜ ๋งˆ์ดํด ๋Ÿฌํ•€์€ ํ’€์ฝ”ํŠธ ํŒจ์Šค๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€๋กœ ๋ง‰๊ณ , ์‹œ๊ฐ„์ด ๋‹ค ๋˜๊ฒŒ ๊ณต์„ ๊ณต์ค‘ ๋†’์ด๋กœ ๋˜์ ธ ์˜ฌ๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ๊ณต์€ ๊ทธ์˜ ์†๋“ค๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋ฏธ๋„๋Ÿฌ์ง€๊ณ , ๋†’์ด ์ถฉ๋ถ„์น˜ ์•Š๊ฒŒ ๋˜์ ธ์กŒ๋‹ค. ํ”ผํ„ฐ์Šจ์ด ๊ณต์„ ์žก๊ณ  "์•„๋ฒ  ๋งˆ๋ฆฌ์•„"์˜ 3 ํฌ์ธํŠธ ์Š›์„ ์˜์•„ ์—ฐ์žฅ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ์‹œ๊ฐ„์„ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋ณด๋‚ด๋Š” ๋ฐ ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์„ ๊ฐ€๋ผ์•‰ํžˆ๋ฉด์„œ ์•„์ง๋„ ์‹œ๊ณ„์— ์ถฉ๋ถ„ํ•œ ์‹œ๊ฐ„์ด ๋‚จ์•˜๋‹ค. ํ”ผํ„ฐ์Šจ์€ 4๋ฒˆ์งธ ์ฟผํ„ฐ์—์„œ 9.3์ดˆ ๋งŒ์ด ๋‚จ์œผ๋ฉด์„œ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์ฒซ ๊ต๋Œ€์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ 55์ดˆ ๋งŒ์„ ํ™œ์•ฝํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋žฉํ„ฐ์Šค๋Š” ์œ„์ €์ฆˆ๋ฅผ 123 ๋Œ€ 118๋กœ ๊บพ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋ผ์ด์–ธ ์ฝœ๋ž€์ ค๋กœ๋ฅผ ๊ณ„์•ฝํ•œ ํ›„, ๋žฉํ„ฐ์Šค์˜ ๊ฐœ์กฐํ•˜๋Š” ์ง„ํ–‰์ด ํ”ผํ„ฐ์Šจ์„ ํฌํ•จํ•˜๋ ค๊ณ  ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์€ ๊ฒƒ ๊ฐ™์•„ ๋ณด์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ์ผ์€ ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ์‚ฌ๋ผ์งˆ 2007๋…„ ์—ฌ๋ฆ„์— ๊ทธ์˜ ๊ณ„์•ฝ์ด ๋งŒ๊ธฐ ๋˜๊ธฐ ์ „์— ์‹œ๊ฐ„์˜ ๋ฌธ์ œ์ผ ๋ฟ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‰ด์˜ฌ๋ฆฌ์–ธ์Šค ํ˜ธ๋‹ˆ์ธ  2007๋…„ 7์›” 13์ผ ๋‰ด์˜ฌ๋ฆฌ์–ธ์Šค ํ˜ธ๋‹ˆ์ธ ๋Š” 2์ฒœ 3๋ฐฑ๋งŒ ๋‹ฌ๋Ÿฌ์˜ ๊ฐ€์น˜์— ํ”ผํ„ฐ์Šจ์„ 4๋…„ ๊ณ„์•ฝ์œผ๋กœ ๋งบ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜คํด๋ผํ˜ธ๋งˆ์‹œํ‹ฐ ์„ ๋” 2010๋…„ 7์›” 8์ผ ํ˜ธ๋‹ˆ์ธ ๋Š” ๊ทธํ•ด์˜ ๋“œ๋ž˜ํ”„ํŠธ์—์„œ ์ „์ฒด 11์œ„ ์„ ๋ฐœ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ฝœ ์˜ฌ๋“œ๋ฆฌ์น˜์™€ ๋”๋ถˆ์–ด ํ”ผํ„ฐ์Šจ์„ 2๋ช…์˜ ์ฒซ ๋ผ์šด๋“œ ๋“œ๋ž˜ํ”„ํŠธ์˜ ์„ ๋ฐœ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋“ค(21์œ„์˜ ํฌ๋ ˆ์ดํฌ ๋ธŒ๋ž˜ํ‚จ์Šค์™€ 26์œ„์˜ ํ€ธ์‹œ ํฐ๋ฑ์Šคํ„ฐ)์„ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ์˜คํด๋ผํ˜ธ๋งˆ์‹œํ‹ฐ ์„ ๋”๋กœ ์ด์ ์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. ์ƒฌ๋Ÿฟ ๋ฐฅ์บ์ธ  2011๋…„ 2์›” 24์ผ ํ”ผํ„ฐ์Šจ์€ ๋‚˜์ง€ ๋ชจํ•˜๋ฉ”๋“œ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ๊ตํ™˜์—์„œ D. J. ํ™”์ดํŠธ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์ƒฌ๋Ÿฟ ๋ฐฅ์บ์ธ ๋กœ ์ด์ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ž์‹ ์˜ ๊ณ„์•ฝ์ด ๋ฐฅ์บ์ธ ์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ์†๋–ผ๊ฒŒ ๋˜๋ฉด์„œ ๊ทธ๋Š” 4์ผ ํ›„์— ํฌ๊ธฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐฉ์†ก ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ 2015๋…„ 1์›” 14์ผ TSN์€ ๋ถ„์„์ž๋กœ์„œ ํ”ผํ„ฐ์Šจ์ด ์ž์‹ ๋“ค์˜ ๋ฐฉ์†ก ํŒ€์— ๊ฐ€์ž…ํ•  ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๊ณต๊ณ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋žฉํ„ฐ์Šค์˜ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋“ค์˜ ๋„คํŠธ์›Œํฌ์˜ ์ผ๊ด€ ํ”„๋กœ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ํ”ผํ„ฐ์Šจ์€ TSN ์ŠคํŠœ๋””์˜ค์™€ ์บ๋‚˜๋‹ค ํ† ๋ก ํ† ์˜ ์—์–ด ์บ๋‚˜๋‹ค ์„ผํ„ฐ์— ์žˆ๋Š” ํ˜„์žฅ ๋‘˜๋‹ค์—์„œ ์žญ ์•”์ŠคํŠธ๋กฑ, ๋ฆฌ์˜ค ๋กœํ‹ด์Šค, ๋งท ๋ฐ๋ธ”๋ฆฐ๊ณผ ๋กœ๋“œ ๋ธ”๋ž™์˜ TSN ๋ฐฉ์†ก ํŒ€์— ๊ฐ€์ž…ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํ”ผํ„ฐ์Šจ์€ ์Šคํฌ์ธ ์„ผํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ถ„์„์„ ์—ฐ์„คํ•˜๊ณ  ๋„คํŠธ์›Œํฌ์˜ ํ™•์žฅ๋œ NCAA ๋ณด๋„๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•˜์—ฌ ๋‚˜์˜ฌ ๊ฒƒ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2017๋…„์œผ๋กœ ๋ด์„œ ํ”ผํ„ฐ์Šจ์€ ๋” ์ด์ƒ TSN์— ๋ถ„์„์ž๊ฐ€ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜์˜ˆ 2006๋…„ 3์›” 31์ผ ํ”ผ๋‹‰์Šค ์„ ์Šค์™€ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ์‚ฌ์ƒ 38 ํฌ์ธํŠธ๋ฅผ ๋“์  2000๋…„ ํ† ๋ก ํ†  ๋žฉํ„ฐ์Šค์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ฒซ ๋ผ์šด๋“œ์˜ ๋“œ๋ž˜ํ”„ํŠธ ์„ ํƒ (์ „์ฒด 21์œ„) 2005๋…„ 4์›” 3์ผ ๋””ํŠธ๋กœ์ดํŠธ ํ”ผ์Šคํ„ด์Šค์™€ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ์ž์‹ ์˜ 800๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ 3 ํฌ์ธํŠธ ํ•„๋“œ๊ณจ์„ ๊ธฐ๋ก ๊ทธํ•ด 4์›” 8์ผ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ์‚ฌ์ƒ 14 ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ”์šด๋“œ 2006๋…„์— ๋๋‚œ 371๊ฐœ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ํ™œ์•ฝํ•œ ์ตœ์žฅ๊ธฐ ํ™œ๋™ ์—ฐ์† ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ๋ณด์œ  ํ™œ์•ฝํ•œ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ(542)์™€ 3 ํฌ์ธํŠธ ํ•„๋“œ๊ณจ(801)์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋žฉํ„ฐ์Šค ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ๊ธฐ๋ก ๋ณด์œ  ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ NBA profile Michigan State profile 1977๋…„ ์ถœ์ƒ ์‚ด์•„์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด๊ณ„ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์ธ ๋†๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ํ† ๋ก ํ†  ๋žฉํ„ฐ์Šค ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์˜คํด๋ผํ˜ธ๋งˆ์‹œํ‹ฐ ์„ ๋” ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ŠˆํŒ… ๊ฐ€๋“œ ์Šค๋ชฐ ํฌ์›Œ๋“œ ๋ฏธ์‹œ๊ฐ„ ์ฃผ๋ฆฝ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๋™๋ฌธ ๋ฏธ์‹œ๊ฐ„์ฃผ ์ถœ์‹ 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morris%20Peterson
Morris Peterson
Morris Russell Peterson Jr. (born August 26, 1977) is an American retired professional basketball player who played eleven seasons in the National Basketball Association (NBA). He played college basketball for Michigan State University, where in the 1999โ€“2000 season he led the Spartans to the national title as Big Ten Player of the Year. He is also a cousin of former NBA player Jonathan Bender. College career Born in Flint, Michigan, Peterson played collegiate basketball at Michigan State University, and helped lead them to the 2000 NCAA title. In his senior year at MSU, Peterson led the team in scoring, field goal percentage, and free throw percentage. He had a team-high 30 double-digit scoring efforts. He was voted Big Ten Player of the Year and First Team All-Big Ten, and he placed as first or second team All-American on five different polls. He was selected 21st overall by the Raptors in the 2000 NBA draft, and was a starter in the majority of their games during his first three seasons. On January 17, 2009, MSU retired his number 42 with MSU's other all-time greats before their game against the Illinois Fighting Illini. NBA career Toronto Raptors Drafted in the first round by the Raptors in 2000, Peterson was a fan favorite from the moment he stepped on the floor. While enjoying some early success in his professional career, Peterson's production faced a steady decline, before stepping up in the wake of the new era of Raptor youngsters being ushered in, taking on a more expansive leadership role and transforming himself into an elite perimeter defender, a clutch performer and consistent scorer. He is known for his three-point shooting, acrobatic shots, defense, and fearless driving to the basket. On December 28, 2005, Peterson set a record for career games played as a Raptor, surpassing Alvin Williams with 418 games played. Peterson also leads the NBA in longest consecutive games played, appearing in 371 straight until November 22, 2006, when he missed his first game in over four years. Peterson posted career highs in points and rebounds averaging 16.8 points and 4.6 rebounds and threw in 2.3 assists per game through 82 games played in the 2005โ€“06 season. Perhaps the biggest highlight of his career occurred against the Washington Wizards on March 30, 2007 in a game that helped determine the two teams' playoff seeding. The Raptors trailed 109โ€“106 with only 3.8 seconds left and no timeouts remaining. The Wizards' Michael Ruffin intercepted the full-court pass and tried to toss the ball high into the air so that the clock would run out. But the ball slipped from his hands and was not thrown high enough. There was still enough time on the clock as Peterson caught the ball and launched a "Hail Mary" three-pointer and sank it to send the game into overtime. Peterson only played 55 seconds in the game, with his first shift beginning with only 9.3 seconds left in the fourth quarter. The Raptors went on to defeat the Wizards, 123โ€“118. After signing Bryan Colangelo, it became apparent that the re-building process of the Raptors would not include Peterson. It was only a matter of time before his contract expired in the summer of 2007 that he would be gone. New Orleans Hornets On July 13, 2007, the New Orleans Hornets signed Peterson to a four-year contract, worth $23 million. Oklahoma City Thunder On July 8, 2010, the Hornets traded Peterson along with #11 overall pick in the 2010 draft, Cole Aldrich, to the Oklahoma City Thunder for two 2010 first-round draft picks (#21, Craig Brackins and #26, Quincy Pondexter). Charlotte Bobcats On February 24, 2011, Peterson was traded to the Charlotte Bobcats along with D.J. White in exchange for Nazr Mohammed. He was waived four days later when his contract was bought out by the Bobcats. Peterson's final NBA game was played on December 12, 2010 in a 106 - 77 win over the Cleveland Cavaliers where he recorded 2 points. Broadcasting career On January 14, 2015, TSN announced that Peterson would join their broadcast team as an analyst. For the network's package of Toronto Raptors games, Peterson joined TSN's broadcast team of Jack Armstrong, Leo Rautins, Matt Devlin, and Rod Black both in the TSN Studio and on-site at the Air Canada Centre in Toronto, Ontario. Peterson will also deliver analysis for SportsCentre and appear throughout the network's expanded NCAA coverage, including TSN's wall-to-wall coverage of NCAA March Madness. As of 2017, Peterson is no longer an analyst on TSN. Restaurant On January 23, 2018 Peterson, in a partnership with Viktor Palushaj, opened "MoPetes Sports Retreat" just outside of his hometown of Flint in neighboring Flint Township, Michigan. The menu features Michigan inspired dishes such as The Flintstones Combos, Flint-Town Reuben sandwich, the Izzo sub, and The National Champ Philly cheese steak sandwich. Accolades Career-high: March 31, 2006 Peterson scored a career-best 38 points vs. the Phoenix Suns. First-round draft choice (21st overall) by Toronto in 2000. Recorded his 800th career three-point field goal April 3, 2005 vs. the Detroit Pistons. Had a career-high 14 rebounds April 8, 2005. Held the longest active streak of games played, with 371, ending in 2006. Held Raptors career records for games played (542) and 3-point field goals (801). NBA career statistics Regular season |- | style="text-align:left;"| | style="text-align:left;"| Toronto | 80 || 49 || 22.6 || .431 || .382 || .717 || 3.2 || 1.3 || .8 || .2 || 9.3 |- | style="text-align:left;"| | style="text-align:left;"| Toronto | 63 || 56 || 31.6 || .438 || .364 || .751 || 3.5 || 2.4 || 1.2 || .2 || 14.0 |- | style="text-align:left;"| | style="text-align:left;"| Toronto | 82 || 80 || 36.0 || .392 || .337 || .789 || 4.4 || 2.3 || 1.1 || .4 || 14.1 |- | style="text-align:left;"| | style="text-align:left;"| Toronto | 82 || 29 || 26.2 || .405 || .371 || .809 || 3.2 || 1.4 || 1.1 || .2 || 8.3 |- | style="text-align:left;"| | style="text-align:left;"| Toronto | 82 || 61 || 30.6 || .420 || .385 || .832 || 4.1 || 2.1 || 1.1 || .2 || 12.5 |- | style="text-align:left;"| | style="text-align:left;"| Toronto | style="background:#cfecec;"| 82* || 77 || 38.3 || .436 || .395 || .820 || 4.6 || 2.3 || 1.3 || .2 || 16.8 |- | style="text-align:left;"| | style="text-align:left;"| Toronto | 71 || 12 || 21.3 || .429 || .359 || .683 || 3.3 || .7 || .6 || .2 || 8.9 |- | style="text-align:left;"| | style="text-align:left;"| New Orleans | 76 || 76 || 23.6 || .417 || .394 || .765 || 2.7 || .9 || .6 || .1 || 8.0 |- | style="text-align:left;"| | style="text-align:left;"| New Orleans | 43 || 9 || 12.0 || .399 || .388 || .632 || 2.0 || .4 || .3 || .1 || 4.4 |- | style="text-align:left;"| | style="text-align:left;"| New Orleans | 46 || 39 || 21.2 || .385 || .363 || .611 || 2.7 || .9 || .5 || .1 || 7.1 |- | style="text-align:left;"| | style="text-align:left;"| Oklahoma City | 4 || 0 || 5.8 || .400 || .000 || .000 || .8 || .3 || .0 || .0 || 1.0 |- class="sortbottom" | style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Career | 711 || 488 || 27.2 || .418 || .373 || .773 || 3.5 || 1.5 || .9 || .2 || 10.7 Playoffs |- | style="text-align:left;"| 2001 | style="text-align:left;"| Toronto | 8 || 3 || 13.8 || .514 || .444 || .750 || 1.5 || 1.9 || .8 || .0 || 5.4 |- | style="text-align:left;"| 2002 | style="text-align:left;"| Toronto | 5 || 5 || 30.8 || .367 || .118 || .800 || 2.8 || 2.2 || 1.0 || .6 || 9.2 |- | style="text-align:left;"| 2007 | style="text-align:left;"| Toronto | 6 || 2 || 30.5 || .517 || .500 || .833 || 4.5 || .3 || .3 || .3 || 6.8 |- | style="text-align:left;"| 2008 | style="text-align:left;"| New Orleans | 12 || 12 || 23.1 || .485 || .471 || .667 || 2.6 || .6 || .5 || .2 || 7.2 |- | style="text-align:left;"| 2009 | style="text-align:left;"| New Orleans | 2 || 0 || 10.5 || .200 || .333 || .750 || 1.5 || .5 || .5 || .0 || 3.0 |- class="sortbottom" | style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Career | 33 || 22 || 22.6 || .457 || .387 || .767 || 2.6 || 1.1 || .6 || .2 || 6.7 References External links NBA Profile Michigan State profile 1977 births Living people African-American basketball players All-American college men's basketball players American expatriate basketball people in Canada American men's basketball players Basketball players from Flint, Michigan Michigan State Spartans men's basketball players New Orleans Hornets players Oklahoma City Thunder players Shooting guards Small forwards Toronto Raptors draft picks Toronto Raptors players 21st-century African-American sportspeople 20th-century African-American sportspeople
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EB%85%B9%EB%91%90%EA%BD%83%20%28%EB%93%9C%EB%9D%BC%EB%A7%88%29
๋…น๋‘๊ฝƒ (๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ)
ใ€Š๋…น๋‘๊ฝƒใ€‹์€ 2019๋…„ 4์›” 26์ผ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 7์›” 13์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋˜์—ˆ๋˜ SBS ๊ธˆํ†  ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ๋‹ค. ์ค„๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ 1894๋…„ ๋™ํ•™ ๋†๋ฏผ ์šด๋™์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌ ์†์—์„œ ๋†๋ฏผ๊ตฐ๊ณผ ํ† ๋ฒŒ๋Œ€๋กœ ๊ฐˆ๋ผ์ ธ ์‹ธ์›Œ์•ผ ํ–ˆ๋˜ ์ด๋ณตํ˜•์ œ์˜ ํŒŒ๋ž€๋งŒ์žฅํ•œ ํœด๋จผ์Šคํ† ๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๊ทธ๋ฆฐ ์‚ฌ๊ทน ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ. ๋“ฑ์žฅ์ธ๋ฌผ ์ฃผ์š” ์ธ๋ฌผ ์กฐ์ •์„ : ๋ฐฑ์ด๊ฐ•(็™ฝๅˆฉๅบท) ์—ญ (์•„์—ญ ๊น€์Šนํ•œ, ๋ฐ•์ƒํ›ˆ) - ๋ฐฑ๊ฐ€๋„ค ์–ผ์ž ์ถœ์‹ . ์ดํ˜„์˜ ์ด๋ณตํ˜•. ๋งŒ๋“๊ณผ ์œ ์›”์ด์˜ ์•„๋“ค. ๋™ํ•™๋†๋ฏผ ์šด๋™๊พผ ๋ณ„๋™๋Œ€ ๋Œ€์žฅ ์œค์‹œ์œค : ๋ฐฑ์ดํ˜„(็™ฝๅˆฉ่ณข) ์—ญ (์•„์—ญ ์ •ํ˜„์ค€) - ๋ฐฑ๊ฐ€๋„ค ์ ์ž. ์ด๊ฐ•์˜ ์ด๋ณต๋™์ƒ. ๋งŒ๋“๊ณผ ์ฑ„์”จ๋ถ€์ธ์˜ ์•„๋“ค. ๊ณ ๋ถ€๋ฐฉ ์ด๋ฐฉ. ์ง‘๊ฐ•์†Œ ์ง‘๊ฐ• โ†’ ์ผ๋ณธ ๋‚ญ์ธ ์šฐ๋‘๋จธ๋ฆฌ ๋„๊นจ๋น„ (์˜ค๋‹ˆ) โ†’ ์‹ ๊ด€ ์‚ฌ๋˜, ๋ช…์‹ฌ์˜ ์˜› ์ •์ธ. ํ•œ์˜ˆ๋ฆฌ : ์†ก์ž์ธ(ๅฎ‹ๆ…ˆ็’˜) ์—ญ - ์†ก๋ด‰๊ธธ์˜ ์™ธ๋™๋”ธ. ์ „์ฃผ์—ฌ๊ฐ ์ฃผ์ธ. ์ด๊ฐ•์˜ ์ •์ธ ์ตœ๋ฌด์„ฑ : ์ „๋ด‰์ค€ ์—ญ - ๋™ํ•™ ๋†๋ฏผ ์šด๋™์„ ์ด๋ˆ ๋ฏผ์ดˆ๋“ค์˜ ์˜์›… ๋…น๋‘์žฅ๊ตฐ ๋ฐฑ๊ฐ€๋„ค ๋ฐ•ํ˜๊ถŒ : ๋ฐฑ๋งŒ๋“(็™ฝๆ™ฉๅพ—) ์—ญ - ์ „๋ผ๋„ ๊ณ ๋ถ€ ๊ด€์•„ ์ด๋ฐฉ. ๋งŒ์„๊พผ. ์ด๊ฐ•๊ณผ ์ดํ˜„์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€ ํ™ฉ์˜ํฌ : ์ฑ„์”จ ๋ถ€์ธ(่”กๆฐ) ์—ญ - ๋ฐฑ๋งŒ๋“์˜ ์ •์‹ค๋ถ€์ธ. ์ดํ˜„์˜ ์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ ๋ฐฑ์€ํ˜œ : ๋ฐฑ์ดํ™”(็™ฝๅˆฉ่ฏ) ์—ญ - ๋ฐฑ๊ฐ€๋„ค ์žฅ๋…€. ์ดํ˜„์˜ ๋ˆ„๋‚˜. ๊น€๋‹น์†์˜ ๋ถ€์ธ ์„œ์˜ํฌ : ์œ ์›”์ด ์—ญ - ๋ฐฑ๊ฐ€๋„ค ์—ฌ์ข…. ์ด๊ฐ•์˜ ์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ. ์ง‘๊ฐ•์†Œ ์ง‘์‚ฌ ์ •์„ ์ฒ  : ๋‚จ ์„œ๋ฐฉ ์—ญ - ๋ฐฑ๊ฐ€๋„ค ์ง‘์‚ฌ. ํ–‰๋ž‘์•„๋ฒ” ๋™ํ•™ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค ๋ฏผ์„ฑ์šฑ : ์ตœ๊ฒฝ์„  ์—ญ - ํƒœ์ธ ์ฃผ์‚ฐ๋ฆฌ์˜ ์ ‘์ฃผ. ๋†๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ์„ ๋ด‰๋ถ€๋Œ€ ์ง€ํœ˜๊ด€ ์•ˆ๊ธธ๊ฐ• : ํ•ด์Šน ์—ญ - ์Šน๋ ค. ์ตœ๊ฒฝ์„  ๋ถ€๋Œ€์˜ ์ผ์› ๋…ธํ–‰ํ•˜ : ๋ฒ„๋“ค์ด ์—ญ - ์ตœ๊ฒฝ์„  ๋ถ€๋Œ€์˜ ์ €๊ฒฉ์ˆ˜. ์šด๋ด‰ ์ผ๋Œ€๋ฅผ ์ฃผ๋ฆ„์žก๋˜ ๋ช…ํฌ์ˆ˜์˜ ๋”ธ ๋ณ‘ํ—Œ : ๋ฒˆ๊ฐœ ์—ญ - ๋ณธ๋ช… ํ•™๋™. ์ตœ๊ฒฝ์„  ๋ถ€๋Œ€์˜ ์ „๋ น. ๋ณ„๋™๋Œ€ ์ฒ™ํ›„ ์ •๊ทœ์ˆ˜ : ๋™๋ก๊ฐœ ์—ญ - ๋ฐฑ์ •, ์ตœ๊ฒฝ์„  ๋ถ€๋Œ€์˜ ์ผ์› ๋ฐ•์ง€ํ™˜ : ๊น€๊ฒฝ์ฒœ ์—ญ - ์ˆœ์ฐฝ ์ถœ์‹ ์˜ ๋นˆ๋†. ์ตœ๊ฒฝ์„  ๋ถ€๋Œ€์˜ ์ผ์› ๊น€์ •ํ˜ธ : ๊น€๊ฐœ๋‚จ ์—ญ - ํƒœ์ธ ๋Œ€์ ‘์ฃผ. ๋†๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ์ด๊ด€๋ น ํ™์šฐ์ง„ : ์†ํ™”์ค‘(ๅญซๅ’Œ้‡) ์—ญ - ์ •์ ์ถœ์‹ ์˜ ๋ฌด์žฅ ์ ‘์ฃผ. ๋†๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ์ด๊ด€๋ น ์ดํƒœ๊ฒ€ : ์†กํฌ์˜ฅ(ๅฎ‹ๅ–œ็Ž‰) ์—ญ - ์ „๋ด‰์ค€์˜ ์ฒ˜์กฑ 7์ดŒ. ๋Œ€์™ธ ์—ฐ๋ฝ๋ง ์ฃผ๋„ ๊ณ ๋ถ€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค ์ตœ์›์˜ : ํ™ฉ์„์ฃผ ์—ญ - ์ „๋ผ๋„ ๊ณ ๋ถ€ ๋„๊ณ„ ์„œ์›์˜ ๊ฐ•์žฅ. ์ดํ˜„์˜ ์Šค์Šน. ์ „๋ด‰์ค€์˜ ๋ง‰์—ญ์ง€์šฐ. ๋ช…์‹ฌ์˜ ์˜ค๋ผ๋ฒ„๋‹ˆ ๋ฐ•๊ทœ์˜ : ํ™ฉ๋ช…์‹ฌ(้ปƒๆ˜Žๅฟƒ) ์—ญ - ํ™ฉ์„์ฃผ์˜ ๋ˆ„์ด๋™์ƒ. ์ดํ˜„์˜ ์˜› ์ •์ธ ์กฐํฌ๋ด‰ : ํ™๊ฐ€ ์—ญ - ์ „๋ผ๋„ ๊ณ ๋ถ€ ๊ด€์•„ ํ˜•๋ฐฉ. ๋งŒ๋“์˜ ์ตœ์ธก๊ทผ โ†’ ์„์ฃผ์˜ ์ตœ์ธก๊ทผ โ†’ ์ดํ˜„์˜ ์ตœ์ธก๊ทผ ์กฐํ˜„์‹ : ์–ต์‡  ์—ญ - ์ „๋ผ๋„ ๊ณ ๋ถ€ ๊ด€์•„ ํ†ต์ธ. ์ด๊ฐ•์˜ ์˜ค๋ฅธํŒ”. ๊ณ ๋ถ€๋ฐฉ ์•„์ „ ํ–‰์ˆ˜ ๊น€๋„์—ฐ : ์ฒ ๋‘ ์—ญ - ์ „๋ผ๋„ ๊ณ ๋ถ€ ๊ด€์•„ ํ†ต์ธ. ์ด๊ฐ•์˜ ์˜ค๋ฅธํŒ” ๊น€ํ•˜๊ท  : ๋ฐ•์›๋ช…(ๆœดๅ…ƒๆ˜Ž) ์—ญ - ๊ณ ๋ถ€ ๊ตฐ์ˆ˜. ์กฐ๋ณ‘๊ฐ‘์˜ ํ›„์ž„ ์ „์ฃผ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค ๋ฐ•์ง€์ผ : ์†ก๋ด‰๊ธธ ์—ญ - ์ „๋ผ๋„ ๋ณด๋ถ€์ƒ์˜ ๋Œ€๋ถ€. ์ „๋ผ๋„ ์ž„๋ฐฉ์˜ ๋„์ ‘์žฅ. ์ž์ธ์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€ ๊น€์ƒํ˜ธ : ์ตœ๋•๊ธฐ(ๅด”ๅพทๆฐฃ) ์—ญ - ์ „์ฃผ์—ฌ๊ฐ ํ–‰์ˆ˜. ๊ตฐ์ธ ์ถœ์‹ . ๋ด‰๊ธธ์˜ ์˜ํ˜•์ œ ๋ฌธ์›์ฃผ : ๊น€๋‹น์† ์—ญ - ๋งŒ๋“๊ณผ ์ฑ„์”จ๋ถ€์ธ์˜ ์‚ฌ์œ„. ์ „๋ผ๊ฐ์˜์˜ ๊ตฐ๊ต. ์ดํ™”์˜ ๋‚จํŽธ. ์ดํ˜„์˜ ์žํ˜• ์ด์ˆœ์› : ๊น€๋ฌธํ˜„(้‡‘ๆ–‡้กฏ) ์—ญ - ์ „๋ผ๊ฐ์‚ฌ ๊ทธ ์™ธ ์ธ๋ฌผ ์„œ์žฌ๊ทœ : ์ด๋‘ํ™ฉ ์—ญ - ๊ด€๊ตฐ ์žฅ์ˆ˜ ๋‚จ๋ฌธ์ฒ  : ๊น€ํ•™์ง„ ์—ญ - ์ „๋ผ๋„ ๊ด€์ฐฐ์‚ฌ ์œค์„œํ˜„ : ํ™๊ณ„ํ›ˆ ์—ญ - ์–‘ํ˜ธ์ดˆํ† ์‚ฌ ์†์šฐํ˜„ : ์ด๊ทœํƒœ ์—ญ - ๊ด€๊ตฐ ์„ ๋ด‰์žฅ ๊ณฝ๋ฏผํ˜ธ : ๊น€๋•๋ช… ์—ญ - ํ˜ธ๋‚จ์ฐฝ์˜๋Œ€์žฅ์†Œ ์ง€๋„๋ถ€์˜ ์ผ์› ์ตœํฌ๋„ : ์˜ค์‹œ์˜ ์—ญ - ํ˜ธ๋‚จ์ฐฝ์˜๋Œ€์žฅ์†Œ ์ง€๋„๋ถ€์˜ ์ผ์› ์ „๊ตญํ™˜ : ๋Œ€์›๊ตฐ ์—ญ - ๊ณ ์ข…์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€ ๊น€์ง€ํ˜„ : ๋ฏผ๋น„ ์—ญ - ๊ณ ์ข…์˜ ์ •๋น„. ํฅ์„ ๋Œ€์›๊ตฐ ์ดํ•˜์‘์˜ ๋ฉฐ๋Š๋ฆฌ ์ด๊ธฐ์ฐฌ : ๋‹ค์ผ€๋‹ค ์š”์Šค์ผ€ ์—ญ - ์ผ๋ณธ ์™ธ๊ต๊ด€. ๋‚ญ์ธ ์ง‘๋‹จ์˜ ๊ฐ„์ž. ์ดํ˜„์˜ ์„ ๋ฐฐ ์ด์ฐฌ์˜ : ๊ณ ์ข… ์—ญ - ์กฐ์„  ์ œ26๋Œ€ ์ž„๊ธˆ. ๋Œ€ํ•œ์ œ๊ตญ 1๋Œ€ ํ™ฉ์ œ ํ™ฉ๋งŒ์ต : ๊น€ํ™์ง‘ ์—ญ - ๊ฐ‘์˜ค๊ฐœํ˜์˜ ์ฃผ์—ญ. ์กฐ์„  ์™•์กฐ ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰ ์˜์˜์ • ์ตœ๋Œ€ํ›ˆ : ๋ฏผ์˜ํœ˜ ์—ญ - ๋ณ‘์กฐํŒ์„œ (ํŠน๋ณ„์ถœ์—ฐ) ๊น€์ธ์šฐ : ์˜คํ† ๋ฆฌ ๊ฒŒ์ด์Šค์ผ€ ์—ญ - ์ผ๋ณธ ๊ณต์‚ฌ ์˜ค์šฉ : ์ด๋…ธ์šฐ์— ๊ฐ€์˜ค๋ฃจ ์—ญ ๊น€์„ฑ๊ฐ• : ์ •์—ฌ์ฐฝ ์—ญ - ์ฒญ๋‚˜๋ผ ์ œ๋… ๋ฌธ์ข…์› : ์›์„ธ๊ฐœ ์—ญ - ์กฐ์„ ์ฃผ์žฌ ์ฒญ๊ตญ ํ†ต์ƒ์‚ฌ์˜ ๊น€์ค‘ํฌ : ์†๋ณ‘ํฌ ์—ญ ์ตœ์‹œํ›ˆ : ๋‘๋ น ์—ญ ๊น€์€์ˆ˜ : ๋‚˜์žฅ ์—ญ ํŠน๋ณ„์ถœ์—ฐ ์žฅ๊ด‘ : ์กฐ๋ณ‘๊ฐ‘ ์—ญ - ๊ณ ๋ถ€ ๊ตฐ์ˆ˜ ์ด์ •ํ—Œ : ์ด์šฉํƒœ ์—ญ - ์•ˆํ•ต์‚ฌ ์ „๋ฌด์†ก : ์ตœ์‹œํ˜• ์—ญ - ๋™ํ•™ ์ œ2๋Œ€ ๊ต์ฃผ ๋ฏผ์ •๊ธฐ : ๋ฌด๋ช…์˜ ๋ฏผ๋ž€ ๊ฐ€๋‹ด์ž 1 ์—ญ ํ•œ์ƒ์ง„ : ๋ฌด๋ช…์˜ ๋ฏผ๋ž€ ๊ฐ€๋‹ด์ž 2 ์—ญ ๊น€์œ ๋ฆฌ : ๋ฌด๋ช…์˜ ๋ฏผ๋ž€ ๊ฐ€๋‹ด์ž 3 ์—ญ ์œค๊ท ์ƒ : ๋ฌดํœผ ์—ญ - ์ง„์‚ฐ์˜ ํ˜๋ช…๊ตฐ ์ด์ค€ํ˜ : ํ™๋Œ€ํ™ ์—ญ - ์ง„์‚ฐ์˜ ํ˜๋ช…๊ตฐ ๊น€๊ฒฝ์ง„ : ์ž์ธ์„ ๊ฒํƒˆ ํ•˜๋ ค ํ–ˆ๋˜ ๋‚จ์ž ์—ญ ๋ฐ•์„ฑ๊ทผ : ๋ฐ•๋™์ง„ ์—ญ ํ•˜์„ฑ๊ด‘ : ์ด๊ฑดํ˜• ์—ญ - ๊ณ ์ข…์˜ ์‹ฌ๋ณต ์ฑ„์ƒ์šฐ : ์ด์„ฑ๊ณ„ ์—ญ - ๋™๋ก๊ฐœ์˜ ์ฒซ์งธ ์•„๋“ค ๊น€ํ˜„๋นˆ : ์ด๋ฐฉ์› ์—ญ - ๋™๋ก๊ฐœ์˜ ๋‘˜์งธ ์•„๋“ค ๋ฐ•ํ›ˆ : ๊น€์ฐฝ์ˆ˜ ์—ญ - ํ™ฉํ•ด๋„ ํ•ด์ฃผ ์ ‘์ฃผ ์‹œ์ฒญ๋ฅ  ํŽธ์„ฑ ๋ณ€๊ฒฝ 2019๋…„ 6์›” 15์ผ : ์Šคํฌ์ธ  ์ค‘๊ณ„๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ์˜คํ›„10์‹œ 25๋ถ„์œผ๋กœ ํŽธ์„ฑ ๋ณ€๊ฒฝ. (31ํšŒ, 32ํšŒ) ์ˆ˜์ƒ ๋ฐ ํ›„๋ณด ์ฐธ๊ณ  ์‚ฌํ•ญ ์ด ํ™”๋ฉด์€ ๋ ˆํ„ฐ๋ฐ•์Šค๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋™ํ•™ ๋†๋ฏผ ์šด๋™์„ ์ „๋ด‰์ค€์˜ ์˜์›…์  ์ผ๋Œ€๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ์•„๋‹Œ ๋ฏผ์ดˆ๋“ค์˜ ์‚ถ๊ณผ ํ•ญ์Ÿ์— ์ดˆ์ ์„ ๋งž์ถฐ ๊ทธ๋ ค๋ƒˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ํ˜ธํ‰์„ ๋ฐ›์•„ ์ œ 32ํšŒ ํ•œ๊ตญ๋ฐฉ์†ก์ž‘๊ฐ€์ƒ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋ถ€๋ฌธ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์˜ ์˜์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ์•ˆ๊ฒŒ ๋˜์–ด KBS 1TV ํƒœ์กฐ ์™•๊ฑด (14ํšŒ) ์ดํ›„ ํ•œ๊ตญ๋ฐฉ์†ก์ž‘๊ฐ€์ƒ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž‘ ์ค‘ ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ์‚ฌ๊ทน ๋ถ€๋ฌธ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์˜ ์˜์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ์•ˆ์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋ชฉ๋ก (ใ„ด) 2019๋…„ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋ชฉ๋ก ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ๋…น๋‘๊ฝƒ ๊ณต์‹ํ™ˆํŽ˜์ด์ง€ ๋…น๋‘๊ฝƒ ์ „ํšŒ์ฐจ ๋ฌด๋ฃŒ๋ณด๊ธฐ 2019๋…„ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ SBS ๊ธˆํ† ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ์ •ํ˜„๋ฏผ ์‹œ๋‚˜๋ฆฌ์˜ค ์ž‘ํ’ˆ 2010๋…„๋Œ€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ 2019๋…„์— ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ TV ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ 2019๋…„์— ์ข…๋ฃŒํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ TV ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nokdu%20Flower
Nokdu Flower
Nokdu Flower () is a 2019 South Korean television series starring Jo Jung-suk, Yoon Shi-yoon and Han Ye-ri. It aired from April 26 to July 13, 2019 on SBS TV. Synopsis The series tells the story of two half-brothers from separate mothers but share the same father who experienced different upbringings due to their respective mothers' different social statuses. The brothers find themselves fighting on the opposite sides of the Battle of Ugeumchi, which took place in 1894 during the Donghak Peasant Revolution. Their relationship is tested as both find themselves questioning their loyalties and values. Cast Main Jo Jung-suk as Baek Yi-kang, the illegitimate older son who was born out of wedlock as the son of his father's wife's handmaid and is discriminated against by his family due to his mother's low status. Park Sang-hoon as young Baek Yi-kang Yoon Shi-yoon as Baek Yi-hyun, the legitimate younger son who received an elite education in Japan and is preparing for the national civil service exam. Han Ye-ri as Song Ja-in, a daughter of an elite family who is charismatic and strong-minded. She also runs a shop where she trades goods for money. Supporting Park Hyuk-kwon as Baek Ga, Yi-kang and Yi-hyun's father who is a notorious and wealthy government official in the town of Gobu. He is greedy for reputation due to his inferiority complex about his low birth. Min Sung-wook as Choi Kyung-seon, Yi-kang's ally who is the commander of the vanguard unit of a rebel army. Choi Moo-sung as Jeon Bongjun, the owner of a local apothecary who becomes the revolutionary leader. Kim Sang-ho as Choi Deok-gi Choi Won-young as Hwang Seok-ju Jo Hyun-sik as Eok-soe Park Gyu-young as Hwang Myung-shim Byung Hun as Beon Gae Shim Wan-joon as Jae-yun Noh Haeng-ha as Beo-deul, sniper and Kyung Seon's unit. Ahn Gil-kang as Hae Seung, monk and Kyung Seon's unit. Seo Young-hee as Yoo Wol, Yi-kang's mother. Hwang Young-hee as Chae Jung-shil, Yi-hyun's mother. Baek Eun-hye as Baek Yi-hwa, Yi-hyun's sister. Moon Won-joo as Kim Dang-son, Yi-hwa's husband. Park Ji-il as Song Bong-gil Park Ji-hwan as Kim Ga Son Woo-hyeon as Lee Kyu-tae Special appearance Park Hoon as Kim Chang-soo, Donghak leader. (Ep. 48) Production Early working title of the series is Ugeumchi (). Ratings Awards and nominations Notes References External links Seoul Broadcasting System television dramas Korean-language television shows 2019 South Korean television series debuts 2019 South Korean television series endings South Korean historical television series Television series by C-JeS Entertainment
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%9E%90%EC%97%B0%20%EC%97%B0%EC%97%AD
์ž์—ฐ ์—ฐ์—ญ
๋…ผ๋ฆฌํ•™ ๋ฐ ์ฆ๋ช…์ด๋ก ์—์„œ ์ž์—ฐ ์—ฐ์—ญ(่‡ช็„ถๆผ”็นน, natural deduction)์ด๋ž€ ์ž์—ฐ์Šค๋Ÿฌ์šด ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์  ์ถ”๋ก ์„ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ด๋Š” ์ฆ๋ช… ์—ฐ์‚ฐ์˜ ์ผ์ข…์œผ๋กœ, ์ตœ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ณต๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๋ฐฐ์ œํ•˜๊ณ  ์˜ค์ง ๊ตฌ๋ฌธ์ ์ธ ์ถ”๋ก  ๊ทœ์น™๋งŒ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ ์ฆ๋ช…์ด ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์ง€๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ํŠน์ง•์ด๋‹ค. ์ด๋Š”, ์ถ”๋ก ๊ทœ์น™์˜ ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์  ๋ฒ•์น™์„ ํ‘œํ˜„ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋งŽ์€ ๊ณต๋ฆฌ๋“ค์„ ์ด์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ํž๋ฒ ๋ฅดํŠธ ์ฒด๊ณ„์™€๋Š” ๋Œ€์กฐ๋œ๋‹ค. ์—ญ์‚ฌ ์ž์—ฐ ์—ฐ์—ญ์€ 20์„ธ๊ธฐ ์ดˆ ๋…ผ๋ฆฌํ•™์ž๋“ค์ด ๋ช…์ œ ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์˜ ๊ณต๋ฆฌํ™”์— ๋ฌธ์ œ์ ์„ ๋Š๋‚€ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๊ณต๋ฆฌํ™”๋œ ๋ช…์ œ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์˜ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์œ ๋ช…ํ•œ ์˜ˆ๋กœ๋Š” ๋Ÿฌ์…€๊ณผ ํ™”์ดํŠธํ—ค๋“œ๊ฐ€ ๊ณ ์•ˆํ•œ ์ˆ˜ํ•™ ์›๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํด๋ž€๋“œ ํ•™ํŒŒ์˜ ์–€ ์šฐ์นด์‹œ์—๋น„์น˜(Jan ลukasiewicz)๋Š” ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๋” ์ž์—ฐ์Šค๋Ÿฌ์šด ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋‹ค๋ฃฐ ํ•„์š”๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์Œ์„ ์ฃผ์žฅํ•˜์˜€๊ณ , ์ด์— ์ž๊ทน๋ฐ›์€ ์Šคํƒ€๋‹ˆ์Šค์™€ํ”„ ์•ผ์‹œ์ฝ”ํ”„์Šคํ‚ค(Stanisล‚aw Jaล›kowski)๊ฐ€ 1929๋…„ ๋‹ค์ด์–ด๊ทธ๋žจ ๊ธฐ๋ฒ•์„ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์„ ์‹œ์ž‘์œผ๋กœ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ์ง„ํ–‰ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ž์—ฐ์—ฐ์—ญ ์ฒด๊ณ„๋ฅผ ๋…ผ๋ฌธ์— ์ œ์‹œํ•˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ๋‹น์‹œ์—๋Š” ์ž˜ ์•Œ๋ ค์ง€์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. ํ•œํŽธ ๋…์ผ์˜ ๊ฒŒ๋ฅดํ•˜๋ฅดํŠธ ๊ฒ์ฒธ์€ ๋…๋ฆฝ์ ์œผ๋กœ 1935๋…„ ์ž์—ฐ ์—ฐ์—ญ ์ฒด๊ณ„๋ฅผ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœํ•˜์—ฌ ํ•™์œ„๋…ผ๋ฌธ์— ๋ฐœํ‘œํ•˜์˜€๊ณ  ์ด๊ฒƒ์ด ํ˜„๋Œ€ ์ž์—ฐ ์—ฐ์—ญ์˜ ๊ธฐ๋ฐ˜์ด ๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ฒ์ฒธ์€ ํŽ˜์•„๋…ธ ๊ณต๋ฆฌ๊ณ„์˜ ์ผ๊ด€์„ฑ์„ ์ฆ๋ช…ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ฐ”๋กœ ์ž์—ฐ์—ฐ์—ญ์„ ์ด์šฉํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜, ๊ทธ ๋ณต์žก์„ฑ์— ๋ถˆ๋งŒ์„ ๋Š๊ปด 1938๋…„์—๋Š” ์‹œํ€€ํŠธ ๊ณ„์‚ฐ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์ฆ๋ช…๊ตฌ์กฐ๋ฅผ ๊ณ ์•ˆํ•œ๋‹ค. 1960๋…„๋Œ€์˜ Dag Prawitz๋Š” ์ผ๋ จ์˜ ๊ฐ•์˜๋ฅผ ์ง„ํ–‰ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์ž์—ฐ์—ฐ์—ญ์„ ํฌ๊ด„์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ •๋ฆฌํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์˜€๊ณ , ๊ทธ์˜ 1965๋…„ ๋…ผ๋ฌธ Natural deduction: a proof-theoretical study์—์„œ ์ œ์‹œ๋œ ํ˜•ํƒœ๋Š” ํ˜„์žฌ ์ž์—ฐ์—ฐ์—ญ์˜ ์ตœ์ข…ํŒ์œผ๋กœ์„œ ์–‘์ƒ ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ๋‚˜ 2์ฐจ ์ˆ ์–ด ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์‘์šฉ๋„ ์ œ์‹œ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ž์—ฐ ์—ฐ์—ญ ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ ์ž์—ฐ ์—ฐ์—ญ์˜ ์ฒด๊ณ„๋Š” ๋ณดํ†ต ๊ณต๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ์ฃผ์–ด์ง„ ์‹์— ์ •ํ•ด์ง„ ๋ณ€ํ™”๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€ํ•˜๋Š” ์ถ”๋ก ๊ทœ์น™๋งŒ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ž˜ ์•Œ๋ ค์ง„ ์ฒด๊ณ„ System L์—์„œ๋Š” ์ฆ๋ช…์˜ ๊ตฌ๋ฌธ๊ทœ์น™์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ๋‹ค์Œ์˜ 9๊ฐ€์ง€ ์ถ”๋ก ๊ทœ์น™์ด ์กด์žฌํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ€์ • ๊ทœ์น™ "The Rule of Assumption" (A) ์ „๊ฑด ๊ธ์ • "Modus Ponendo Ponens" (MPP) ์ด์ค‘ ๋ถ€์ • ๊ทœ์น™ "The Rule of Double Negation" ์กฐ๊ฑด ์ฆ๋ช… ๊ทœ์น™ "The Rule of Conditional Proof" (CP) โˆง-๋„์ž… ๊ทœ์น™ "The Rule of โˆง-introduction" (โˆงI) โˆง-์ œ๊ฑฐ ๊ทœ์น™ "The Rule of โˆง-elimination" (โˆงE) โˆจ-๋„์ž… ๊ทœ์น™ "The Rule of โˆจ-introduction" (โˆจI) โˆจ-์ œ๊ฑฐ ๊ทœ์น™ "The Rule of โˆจ-elimination" (โˆจE) ๊ท€๋ฅ˜๋ฒ• "Reductio Ad Absurdum" (RAA) System L์—์„œ ์ฆ๋ช…์€ ๋‹ค์Œ์˜ ์กฐ๊ฑด์œผ๋กœ ์ •์˜๋œ๋‹ค: ์ •ํ˜•๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์‹(wff)์˜ ์œ ํ•œ์—ด๋กœ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์ง„๋‹ค. ๊ฐ ํ–‰์€ L์˜ ๊ทœ์น™์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ •๋‹นํ™”(ํ˜•์„ฑ)๋œ๋‹ค. ์ฆ๋ช…์˜ ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰ ํ–‰์ด '๊ฒฐ๋ก '์ด ๋˜๋ฉฐ, ์ด๋Š” ์ฆ๋ช…์˜ '์ „์ œ'(๋“ค)๋งŒ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๋„์ถœ๋œ ๊ฒƒ์ด์–ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ „์ œ๋Š” ์กด์žฌํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์„ ์ˆ˜๋„ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ „์ œ๊ฐ€ ์—†๋Š” ์ฆ๋ช…์—ด์„ ์ •๋ฆฌ(theorem)๋ผ ๋งํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ณง L์—์„œ ์ •๋ฆฌ๋ž€ "L ์†์—์„œ ๊ณต์ง‘ํ•ฉ์ธ ์ „์ œ๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ์ฆ๋ช…๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ์—ด"๋กœ ์ •์˜๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ”ํžˆ ๊ฐ ํ–‰ ์˜†์—๋Š” ํ•ด๋‹น ํ–‰์˜ ์‹์˜ ์„ฑ๋ฆฝ์˜ ๊ทผ๊ฑฐ๊ฐ€ ๋˜๋Š” ๊ทœ์น™๊ณผ ํ–‰์ด ํ•จ๊ป˜ ํ‘œ์‹œ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค์Œ์€ System L (tabular)์—์„œ ์ฆ๋ช…์˜ ์˜ˆ (ํ›„๊ฑด ๋ถ€์ •): ์ฆ๋ช…์˜ ์˜ˆ (๋ฐฐ์ค‘๋ฅ ) System L์˜ ๊ฐ ๊ทœ์น™๋“ค์€ ์ œ๊ฐ๊ฐ input์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐ›์•„๋“ค์ผ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์‹์˜ ํƒ€์ž…์„ ๊ทœ์ •ํ•ด๋†“๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๊ทธ input์— ์“ฐ์ด๋Š” ๊ฐ€์ •์„ ๋‹ค๋ฃจ๋Š” ๋ฒ• ์—ญ์‹œ ์ œ๊ฐ๊ฐ ๋‹ค๋ฅด๋‹ค. ์œ„์˜ tabular ํ‘œ๊ธฐ๋ฒ•๊ณผ ์œ ์‚ฌํ•œ Fitch diagram ํ‘œ๊ธฐ๋ฒ•์ด ์žˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ๊ทผ๋ณธ์ ์œผ๋กœ ํ‘œ๊ธฐ๋ฐฉ์‹ ์ด์™ธ์— ํฐ ์ฐจ์ด๋Š” ์—†๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ํ‘œ๊ธฐ๋ฒ•๊ณผ ๋ณ„๊ฐœ๋กœ ๊ณต๋ฆฌ์  ๋ช…์ œ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ์–ด๋–ค ๊ณต๋ฆฌ ๋˜๋Š” ์ถ”๋ก ๊ทœ์น™์„ ์ฑ„ํƒํ•˜๋Š”๊ฐ€๋Š” ์ œ๊ฐ๊ฐ ๋‹ฌ๋ผ์ง„๋‹ค. ํ˜•์‹์  ์ •์˜ ๋ช…์ œ์˜ ์œ ํ•œ์—ด ์ด ์ „์ œ์‹์˜ ์ง‘ํ•ฉ ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ฒฐ๋ก ์‹ ๋กœ์˜ ์—ฐ์—ญ(deduction)์ด๋ผ ํ•จ์€, ๋‹ค์Œ์ด ๋ชจ๋‘ ์„ฑ๋ฆฝํ•จ์„ ๊ฐ€๋ฆฌํ‚จ๋‹ค: ๋ชจ๋“  ์— ๋Œ€ํ•˜์—ฌ, ๊ฐ€ ์ „์ œ์‹์ด๊ฑฐ๋‚˜(๊ณง ์ด๊ฑฐ๋‚˜) ๊ฐ€ ์ด์ „์— ์ถœํ˜„ํ•œ ๋ช…์ œ์— ์–ด๋– ํ•œ ์ถ”๋ก ๊ทœ์น™์„ ์ ์šฉํ•œ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ์‹์ด๋‹ค. ๊ณต๋ฆฌ์  ๋ช…์ œ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์˜ ์ข…๋ฅ˜์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์ฑ„ํƒ๋˜๋Š” ๊ณต๋ฆฌ๋‚˜ ์ถ”๋ก ๊ทœ์น™์ด ๋‹ค๋ฅด๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด ํ”„๋ ˆ๊ฒŒ๋Š” ์—ฐ์—ญ์ฒด๊ณ„๋ฅผ ๊ตฌ์„ฑํ•  ๋•Œ 6๊ฐœ์˜ ๊ณต๋ฆฌ์™€ 2๊ฐœ์˜ ๊ทœ์น™์„ ์ •ํ•ด๋†“์•˜๊ณ , ํ”„๋ฆฐํ‚คํ”ผ์•„ ๋งˆํ…Œ๋งˆํ‹ฐ์นด๋Š” 5๊ฐœ์˜ ๊ณต๋ฆฌ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋˜๋Š” ์ฒด๊ณ„๋ฅผ ๋ณด์ด๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์–€ ์šฐ์นด์‹œ์—๋น„์น˜์˜ ๋ช…์ œ ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์—์„œ๋Š” ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๊ณต๋ฆฌ๊ณ„ A๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค: [PL1] p โ†’ (q โ†’ p) [PL2] (p โ†’ (q โ†’ r)) โ†’ ((p โ†’ q) โ†’ (p โ†’ r)) [PL3] (ยฌp โ†’ ยฌq) โ†’ (q โ†’ p) ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์ถ”๋ก ๊ทœ์น™๊ณ„ R์—๋Š” ์ „๊ฑด๊ธ์ •(MP)์„ ํฌํ•จํ–ˆ๋‹ค. [MP] ฮฑ, ฮฑ โ†’ ฮฒ โŠข ฮฒ ์ถ”๋ก ๊ทœ์น™์— ์˜ํ•ด ฮฃ์— ํฌํ•จ๋˜๋Š” ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์‹๊ณผ ๊ณต๋ฆฌ๋“ค๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์‹์„ ๋„์ถœํ•ด๋‚ผ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํŒ๋‹จ๊ณผ ๋ช…์ œ ์ž์—ฐ ์—ฐ์—ญ์˜ ์ผ๋ จ์˜ ๊ณผ์ •์€ ์ด๋ฏธ ์˜ฌ๋ฐ”๋ฅธ ๋ช…์ œ๋“ค์— ์ถ”๋ก ๊ทœ์น™(inference rule)์„ ์ ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๋˜๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์˜ฌ๋ฐ”๋ฅธ ๋ช…์ œ๋ฅผ ์ด๋Œ์–ด๋‚ด๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ์ฆ‰ ์—ฐ์—ญ์˜ ์ผ๋ จ์˜ ๊ณผ์ •์€ ๊ฒฐ๋ก ์ด ๋˜๋Š” ๋ช…์ œ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ฆ๋ช…์„ ๊ตฌ์„ฑํ•˜๋Š” ๊ณผ์ •์ด๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜๋‹ค. ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์—์„œ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์ค‘์š”ํ•œ ํŒ๋‹จ์ธ "A๋Š” ์ฐธ์ด๋‹ค"๋ผ๋Š” ํ˜•ํƒœ๋ฅผ ๋ณด๋ฉด, ๋ฌธ์ž A๋Š” ๋ช…์ œ๋ฅผ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ด๋Š” ์–ด๋– ํ•œ ํ‘œํ˜„์œผ๋กœ๋„ ์น˜ํ™˜๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์ง„์œ„ ํŒ๋‹จ์€ ๋” ๊ธฐ๋ณธ์ ์ธ ํŒ๋‹จ, "A๋Š” ๋ช…์ œ์ด๋‹ค"๋ผ๋Š” ํŒ๋‹จ์„ ํ•„์š”๋กœ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๊ธฐ๋ณธ์ ์ธ ๋‘ ํŒ๋‹จ "A๋Š” ๋ช…์ œ์ด๋‹ค"์™€ "A๋Š” ์ฐธ์ด๋‹ค"๋Š” ์ž์—ฐ์—ฐ์—ญ์—์„œ ๊ฐ๊ฐ "A prop" ์™€ "A true"๋ผ๋Š” ์•ฝ์ž๋กœ ํ‘œ๊ธฐ๋œ๋‹ค. ํ˜•์„ฑ ๊ทœ์น™(formation rule)์˜ ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์ธ ํ˜•ํƒœ๋Š” ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค: ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์„œ ๊ฐ ๋Š” ๋ช…์ œ์ด๊ณ  ์ถ”๋ก  ๊ทœ์น™์˜ ์ด๋ฆ„์ด "name" ์นธ์— ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ„๋‹ค. ์ง์„  ์œ„์˜ ๋ช…์ œ๋ฅผ ์ „์ œ(premise)๋ผ ํ•˜๊ณ , ์ง์„  ์•„๋ž˜์˜ ๋ช…์ œ๋ฅผ ๊ฒฐ๋ก (conclusion)์ด๋ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋‘ ๋ช…์ œ A์™€ B๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค ํ•˜๊ณ  ์ด๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋ณตํ•ฉ ๋ช…์ œ์ธ ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ๊ณฑ ๋ฅผ ๊ตฌ์„ฑํ•ด๋‚ธ๋‹ค ํ•˜์ž. ์ด ๋„์‹(๊ผด)์„ ์ถ”๋ก ๊ทœ์น™์˜ ํ˜•์‹์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์ด๋ ‡๊ฒŒ ์“ธ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค: ํ˜•์„ฑ ๊ทœ์น™์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ๋ช…์ œ๋ฅผ ํ˜•์„ฑํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ๊ทธ์ € ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์ด ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์Œ์„ ๋ช…์‹œํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด์ง€ ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์ด ์ฐธ์ž„์„ ์˜๋ฏธํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ์—ฐ์–ธ(), ์„ ์–ธ(), ๋ถ€์ •(), ํ•จ์˜(), ํ•ญ์ง„(), ๋ชจ์ˆœ()์„ ๋„์ž…ํ•˜๋Š” ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ formation ๊ณผ์ •์„ ์ƒ๊ฐํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ณ  ์ด๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ํ•ญ์ƒ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ๋ช…์ œ๋ฅผ ๊ตฌ์„ฑํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋„์ž…๊ณผ ์†Œ๊ฑฐ ์ฐธ์ธ ๋ช…์ œ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ฐธ์ธ ๋ช…์ œ๋ฅผ ์ด๋Œ์–ด๋‚ด๋Š” ์ƒ์„ฑ๊ทœ์น™์„ ์ถ”๋ก ๊ทœ์น™(inference rules)์ด๋ผ ๋ถ€๋ฅธ๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ๊ฐ ๋ช…์ œ๊ฐ€ true์ž„์ด ๋“œ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค๋งŒ ํ”ํžˆ ์ถ”๋ก ๊ทœ์น™์— ์˜ํ•œ ์—ฐ์—ญ์ž„์ด ์ž๋ช…ํ•  ๋•Œ ์ƒ๋žต๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ฐธ์ธ ๋ช…์ œ์—์„œ ๋” ๋ณตํ•ฉ์ ์ธ ์ฐธ์ธ ๋ช…์ œ๋ฅผ ๊ตฌ์„ฑํ•˜๋Š” ์ถ”๋ก ๊ทœ์น™์„ ๋„์ž… ๊ทœ์น™(introduction rules)์ด๋ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ์ปจ๋Œ€ ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ๊ณฑ์„ ๋„์ž…ํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ๋ช…์ œ "A true"์™€ "B true"์—์„œ "A and B true"๋ผ๋Š” ๊ฒฐ๋ก ์„ ์ด๋Œ์–ด๋‚ธ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ฉฐ, ์ด๋ฅผ ์ถ”๋ก ๊ทœ์น™์œผ๋กœ ํ‘œ๊ธฐํ•˜๋ฉด ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค: ์ด๋•Œ ๊ฐ ๋Œ€์ƒ์ด ๋ช…์ œ๋ผ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ์ž๋ช…ํ•˜๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ณด์•„์กŒ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์›๋ž˜๋Œ€๋กœ ์ •ํ™•ํžˆ ํ‘œํ˜„ํ•˜๋ฉด ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์ด ๋œ๋‹ค: ์•„๋ž˜๋Š” ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๋„์ž… ๊ทœ์น™๋“ค์ด๋‹ค: ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ๊ณฑ์„ ๋„์ž…ํ•˜๋Š” ์—ฐ์–ธ ๋„์ž…: ๋…ผ๋ฆฌํ•ฉ์„ ๋„์ž…ํ•˜๋Š” ์„ ์–ธ ๋„์ž…. ๋ช…์ œ์˜ ์ง„๋ฆฌ์น˜๊ฐ€ ์„ธ์›Œ์ง€๋Š” ๊ณผ์ •์ด 1๊ฐ€์ง€๊ฐ€ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ฏ€๋กœ ์„ ์–ธ ๋„์ž…์€ ์‚ฌ์‹ค 2๊ฐ€์ง€ ๊ทœ์น™์˜ ์ด์นญ์ด๋‹ค: ํ•ญ์ง„ ๋„์ž…. ํ•ญ์ง„(์ฐธ)์€ ์ „์ œ๊ฐ€ ์ „ํ˜€ ์—†๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์šฐ์—๋„ ๋„์ถœ๋œ๋‹ค: ํ•œํŽธ, ์•„๋ฌด ์ „์ œ๋„ ์—†์ด ๋ชจ์ˆœ(๊ฑฐ์ง“)์„ ๋„์ž…ํ•˜๋Š” ๋„์ž…๊ทœ์น™์€ ์กด์žฌํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ๋” ๋‹จ์ˆœํ•œ ํŒ๋‹จ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ฑฐ์ง“์„ ์ถ”๋ก ํ•ด๋‚ด๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ๋ถˆ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋‹ค. ๋„์ž…๊ทœ์น™์˜ ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ ๊ผด์ด ๋˜๋Š” ์†Œ๊ฑฐ ๊ทœ์น™(elimination rules)์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ์กด์žฌํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด๋Š” ๊ฑฐ๊พธ๋กœ ๋ณตํ•ฉ์ ์ธ ๋ช…์ œ๋ฅผ ํ•ด์ฒดํ•ด๋‚ด๋Š” ์ถ”๋ก ๊ทœ์น™์ด๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ๊ณฑ์„ ์ œ๊ฑฐํ•˜๋Š” ์—ฐ์–ธ ์†Œ๊ฑฐ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค: ์ถ”๋ก ๊ทœ์น™๋“ค์„ ์ ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์ด ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ๊ณฑ์˜ ๊ตํ™˜๋ฒ•์น™์„ ์ฆ๋ช…ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ€์„ค์  ๋„์ถœ ๋…ผ๋ฆฌํ•™์—๋Š” ๊ฐ€์ •์— ์˜ํ•œ ์ถ”๋ก (inferece by assumptions)์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋ฅผ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ด๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ฐ€์„ค์  ๋„์ถœ์˜ ๊ธฐ๋ฒ•์ด ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. A๊ฐ€ ์ฐธ์ž„์„ ๊ฐ€์ •ํ•˜์—ฌ B๊ฐ€ ์ฐธ์ž„์„ ๋„์ถœํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„, ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์ด ์“ธ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ์ถ”๋ก ๊ทœ์น™์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ํ•จ์˜ ๋„์ž…์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. A true๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ •ํ–ˆ์„ ๋•Œ B true๊ฐ€ ๋„์ถœ๋˜๋ฉด (A โŠƒ B) ture๋ฅผ ์ธ์ •ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด์™€ ์—ฐ๊ด€๋œ ๊ทœ์น™์œผ๋กœ์จ ํ›„๊ฑด ๋ถ€์ •, ์ฆ‰ not B์ธ ์ƒํ™ฉ์—์„œ A๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ •ํ–ˆ์„ ๋•Œ B๊ฐ€ ๋„์ถœ๋œ๋‹ค๋ฉด not A๋ฅผ ์ถ”๋ก ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ ๋“ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ผ๊ด€์„ฑ, ์™„์ „์„ฑ, ์ •๊ทœํ˜• ์ˆ˜๋ฆฌ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์—์„œ๋Š” ํ˜•์‹์  ์ด๋ก ์—์„œ ๋ชจ์ˆœ์ด ์ถ”๋ก ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์—†์œผ๋ฉด ๊ทธ ์ด๋ก ์€ ์ผ๊ด€์  ๋˜๋Š” ๋ฌด๋ชจ์ˆœ์ (consistent)์ด๋ผ ํ•˜๊ณ , ์ฐธ์ธ ๋ฌธ์žฅ์„ ์ถ”๋ก  ๊ทœ์น™์— ์˜ํ•ด ๋„์ถœํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉด ์™„์ „(complete)ํ•˜๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ”ํžˆ ์ด๋“ค์€ ๋ชจ๋ธ๋ก ์  ๋ฐฉ์‹์œผ๋กœ ์ดํ•ด๋˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ฆ๋ช…๋ก ์—์„œ ์ œํ•œ์  ์˜๋ฏธ์˜(local) ๋ฌด๋ชจ์ˆœ์„ฑ๊ณผ ์™„์ „์„ฑ์€ ์ˆœ์ˆ˜ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๊ตฌ๋ฌธ๋ก ์ ์ธ ๋ฐฉ์‹๋งŒ์œผ๋กœ ํ™•์ธ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. local consistency๋Š” ๋„์ž…๊ทœ์น™์ด ์ด์–ด์ง€๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ๋ฐ”๋กœ ๋’ค์— ์†Œ๊ฑฐ๊ทœ์น™์ด ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ ๋„์ถœ์€ ๋ฐ˜๋“œ์‹œ ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ '์šฐํšŒ'๊ฐ€ ์—†๋Š”(์ฆ‰, ์ด ์†Œ๊ฑฐ๊ทœ์น™์ด ์—†๋Š”) ๋„์ถœ๋กœ๋„ ๋Œ€์ฒด๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์Œ์„ ๋งํ•œ๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด A์™€ B์—์„œ ์—ฐ์–ธ ๋„์ž…์œผ๋กœ AโˆงB๋ฅผ ๋„์ถœํ•˜๊ณ  ๋‹ค์‹œ ์—ฐ์–ธ ์†Œ๊ฑฐ๋กœ A๋ฅผ ๋„์ถœํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•˜์ž. ์ด๋Š” A์—์„œ A๋ฅผ ๋„์ถœํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ถ•์•ฝ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์„ฑ์งˆ์€ ์†Œ๊ฑฐ๊ทœ์น™์˜ '๊ฐ•๋„'๋ฅผ ํ™•์ธํ•ด์ฃผ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ง์ธ์ฆ‰์Šจ ์†Œ๊ฑฐ๊ทœ์น™์ด '๋„ˆ๋ฌด ๊ฐ•ํ•˜๋ฉด' ์ด๋ฏธ ์–ธ๊ธ‰๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์€ ์ •๋ณด๋ฅผ ๋„์ถœํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์–ด๋ฒ„๋ ค local consistency๊ฐ€ ์„ฑ๋ฆฝํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋‹ค. ํ•œํŽธ local completeness๋Š” ๊ทธ ์Œ๋Œ€(dual)๊ฐ€ ๋˜๋Š” ๊ฐœ๋…์œผ๋กœ ์†Œ๊ฑฐ๊ทœ์น™์ด '์ถฉ๋ถ„ํžˆ ๊ฐ•ํ•ด์„œ' ๋ณธ๋ž˜์˜ ์‹์„ ๋‹ค์‹œ ๋„์ž…ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์ •๋„๊ฐ€ ๋จ์„ ํ™•์ธํ•ด์ค€๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด AโˆงB๋ฅผ ๋„์ถœํ•˜๋Š” ๊ณผ์ •์€, AโˆงB์— ์—ฐ์–ธ ์†Œ๊ฑฐ๋ฅผ ์ ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ A์™€ B๋ฅผ ๊ฐ๊ฐ ๋„์ถœํ•˜๊ณ  ์ด ๋‘˜๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์—ฐ์–ธ ๋„์ž…์œผ๋กœ ๋‹ค์‹œ AโˆงB๋ฅผ ๋„์ถœํ•˜๋Š” ๋” ๋ณต์žกํ•œ ๊ณผ์ •์œผ๋กœ ๋Œ€์ฒด๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ปค๋ฆฌ-ํ•˜์›Œ๋“œ ๋Œ€์‘(Curry-Howard correspondence)์— ์˜ํ•˜๋ฉด local consistency์™€ local completeness๋Š” ๊ฐ๊ฐ ๋žŒ๋‹ค ๊ณ„์‚ฐ์˜ ๋ฒ ํƒ€ ์ถ•์•ฝ(ฮฒ-reduction)๊ณผ ์—ํƒ€ ๋ณ€ํ™˜(ฮท-conversion)๊ณผ ์ผ์น˜ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฐœ๋…์ด๋‹ค. completeness์— ๋‚˜์˜จ ๊ฒƒ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ์†Œ๊ฑฐ์™€ ๋„์ž…์„ ์ฐจ๋ก€๋กœ ์ ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๊ณผ์ •์œผ๋กœ๋งŒ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์ง„ ๋„์ถœ์„ ํ‘œ์ค€ํ˜•(normal form)์ด๋ผ ํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ๋ชจ๋“  ๋„์ถœ์€ ๋Œ€์‘ํ•˜๋Š” ํ‘œ์ค€ํ˜•์„ ๊ฐ€์ง์ด ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์œผ๋กœ ์ฆ๋ช…๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Š” ์ถ”์ƒ ์žฌ์ž‘์„ฑ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์™€ ์—ฐ๊ด€๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ณ ์ฐจ ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ๋กœ์˜ ํ™•์žฅ ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ์‹œํ€€ํŠธ ๊ณ„์‚ฐ 1์ฐจ ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ ์–‘์ƒ ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ ์—ฐ์—ญ ์—ฐ์—ญ ๋…ผ๋ฆฌํ•™
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural%20deduction
Natural deduction
In logic and proof theory, natural deduction is a kind of proof calculus in which logical reasoning is expressed by inference rules closely related to the "natural" way of reasoning. This contrasts with Hilbert-style systems, which instead use axioms as much as possible to express the logical laws of deductive reasoning. Motivation Natural deduction grew out of a context of dissatisfaction with the axiomatizations of deductive reasoning common to the systems of Hilbert, Frege, and Russell (see, e.g., Hilbert system). Such axiomatizations were most famously used by Russell and Whitehead in their mathematical treatise Principia Mathematica. Spurred on by a series of seminars in Poland in 1926 by ลukasiewicz that advocated a more natural treatment of logic, Jaล›kowski made the earliest attempts at defining a more natural deduction, first in 1929 using a diagrammatic notation, and later updating his proposal in a sequence of papers in 1934 and 1935. His proposals led to different notations such as Fitch-style calculus (or Fitch's diagrams) or Suppes' method for which Lemmon gave a variant called system L. Natural deduction in its modern form was independently proposed by the German mathematician Gerhard Gentzen in 1933, in a dissertation delivered to the faculty of mathematical sciences of the University of Gรถttingen. The term natural deduction (or rather, its German equivalent natรผrliches SchlieรŸen) was coined in that paper: Gentzen was motivated by a desire to establish the consistency of number theory. He was unable to prove the main result required for the consistency result, the cut elimination theoremโ€”the Hauptsatzโ€”directly for natural deduction. For this reason he introduced his alternative system, the sequent calculus, for which he proved the Hauptsatz both for classical and intuitionistic logic. In a series of seminars in 1961 and 1962 Prawitz gave a comprehensive summary of natural deduction calculi, and transported much of Gentzen's work with sequent calculi into the natural deduction framework. His 1965 monograph Natural deduction: a proof-theoretical study was to become a reference work on natural deduction, and included applications for modal and second-order logic. In natural deduction, a proposition is deduced from a collection of premises by applying inference rules repeatedly. The system presented in this article is a minor variation of Gentzen's or Prawitz's formulation, but with a closer adherence to Martin-Lรถf's description of logical judgments and connectives. Judgments and propositions A judgment is something that is knowable, that is, an object of knowledge. It is evident if one in fact knows it. Thus "it is raining" is a judgment, which is evident for the one who knows that it is actually raining; in this case one may readily find evidence for the judgment by looking outside the window or stepping out of the house. In mathematical logic however, evidence is often not as directly observable, but rather deduced from more basic evident judgments. The process of deduction is what constitutes a proof; in other words, a judgment is evident if one has a proof for it. The most important judgments in logic are of the form "A is true". The letter A stands for any expression representing a proposition; the truth judgments thus require a more primitive judgment: "A is a proposition". Many other judgments have been studied; for example, "A is false" (see classical logic), "A is true at time t" (see temporal logic), "A is necessarily true" or "A is possibly true" (see modal logic), "the program M has type ฯ„" (see programming languages and type theory), "A is achievable from the available resources" (see linear logic), and many others. To start with, we shall concern ourselves with the simplest two judgments "A is a proposition" and "A is true", abbreviated as "A prop" and "A true" respectively. The judgment "A prop" defines the structure of valid proofs of A, which in turn defines the structure of propositions. For this reason, the inference rules for this judgment are sometimes known as formation rules. To illustrate, if we have two propositions A and B (that is, the judgments "A prop" and "B prop" are evident), then we form the compound proposition A and B, written symbolically as "". We can write this in the form of an inference rule: where the parentheses are omitted to make the inference rule more succinct: This inference rule is schematic: A and B can be instantiated with any expression. The general form of an inference rule is: where each is a judgment and the inference rule is named "name". The judgments above the line are known as premises, and those below the line are conclusions. Other common logical propositions are disjunction (), negation (), implication (), and the logical constants truth () and falsehood (). Their formation rules are below. Introduction and elimination Now we discuss the "A true" judgment. Inference rules that introduce a logical connective in the conclusion are known as introduction rules. To introduce conjunctions, i.e., to conclude "A and B true" for propositions A and B, one requires evidence for "A true" and "B true". As an inference rule: It must be understood that in such rules the objects are propositions. That is, the above rule is really an abbreviation for: This can also be written: In this form, the first premise can be satisfied by the formation rule, giving the first two premises of the previous form. In this article we shall elide the "prop" judgments where they are understood. In the nullary case, one can derive truth from no premises. If the truth of a proposition can be established in more than one way, the corresponding connective has multiple introduction rules. Note that in the nullary case, i.e., for falsehood, there are no introduction rules. Thus one can never infer falsehood from simpler judgments. Dual to introduction rules are elimination rules to describe how to deconstruct information about a compound proposition into information about its constituents. Thus, from "A โˆง B true", we can conclude "A true" and "B true": As an example of the use of inference rules, consider commutativity of conjunction. If A โˆง B is true, then B โˆง A is true; this derivation can be drawn by composing inference rules in such a fashion that premises of a lower inference match the conclusion of the next higher inference. The inference figures we have seen so far are not sufficient to state the rules of implication introduction or disjunction elimination; for these, we need a more general notion of hypothetical derivation. Hypothetical derivations A pervasive operation in mathematical logic is reasoning from assumptions. For example, consider the following derivation: This derivation does not establish the truth of B as such; rather, it establishes the following fact: If A โˆง (B โˆง C) is true then B is true. In logic, one says "assuming A โˆง (B โˆง C) is true, we show that B is true"; in other words, the judgment "B true" depends on the assumed judgment "A โˆง (B โˆง C) true". This is a hypothetical derivation, which we write as follows: The interpretation is: "B true is derivable from A โˆง (B โˆง C) true". Of course, in this specific example we actually know the derivation of "B true" from "A โˆง (B โˆง C) true", but in general we may not a priori know the derivation. The general form of a hypothetical derivation is: Each hypothetical derivation has a collection of antecedent derivations (the Di) written on the top line, and a succedent judgment (J) written on the bottom line. Each of the premises may itself be a hypothetical derivation. (For simplicity, we treat a judgment as a premise-less derivation.) The notion of hypothetical judgment is internalised as the connective of implication. The introduction and elimination rules are as follows. In the introduction rule, the antecedent named u is discharged in the conclusion. This is a mechanism for delimiting the scope of the hypothesis: its sole reason for existence is to establish "B true"; it cannot be used for any other purpose, and in particular, it cannot be used below the introduction. As an example, consider the derivation of "A โŠƒ (B โŠƒ (A โˆง B)) true": This full derivation has no unsatisfied premises; however, sub-derivations are hypothetical. For instance, the derivation of "B โŠƒ (A โˆง B) true" is hypothetical with antecedent "A true" (named u). With hypothetical derivations, we can now write the elimination rule for disjunction: In words, if A โˆจ B is true, and we can derive "C true" both from "A true" and from "B true", then C is indeed true. Note that this rule does not commit to either "A true" or "B true". In the zero-ary case, i.e. for falsehood, we obtain the following elimination rule: This is read as: if falsehood is true, then any proposition C is true. Negation is similar to implication. The introduction rule discharges both the name of the hypothesis u, and the succedent p, i.e., the proposition p must not occur in the conclusion A. Since these rules are schematic, the interpretation of the introduction rule is: if from "A true" we can derive for every proposition p that "p true", then A must be false, i.e., "not A true". For the elimination, if both A and not A are shown to be true, then there is a contradiction, in which case every proposition C is true. Because the rules for implication and negation are so similar, it should be fairly easy to see that not A and A โŠƒ โŠฅ are equivalent, i.e., each is derivable from the other. Consistency, completeness, and normal forms A theory is said to be consistent if falsehood is not provable (from no assumptions) and is complete if every theorem or its negation is provable using the inference rules of the logic. These are statements about the entire logic, and are usually tied to some notion of a model. However, there are local notions of consistency and completeness that are purely syntactic checks on the inference rules, and require no appeals to models. The first of these is local consistency, also known as local reducibility, which says that any derivation containing an introduction of a connective followed immediately by its elimination can be turned into an equivalent derivation without this detour. It is a check on the strength of elimination rules: they must not be so strong that they include knowledge not already contained in their premises. As an example, consider conjunctions. Dually, local completeness says that the elimination rules are strong enough to decompose a connective into the forms suitable for its introduction rule. Again for conjunctions: These notions correspond exactly to ฮฒ-reduction (beta reduction) and ฮท-conversion (eta conversion) in the lambda calculus, using the Curryโ€“Howard isomorphism. By local completeness, we see that every derivation can be converted to an equivalent derivation where the principal connective is introduced. In fact, if the entire derivation obeys this ordering of eliminations followed by introductions, then it is said to be normal. In a normal derivation all eliminations happen above introductions. In most logics, every derivation has an equivalent normal derivation, called a normal form. The existence of normal forms is generally hard to prove using natural deduction alone, though such accounts do exist in the literature, most notably by Dag Prawitz in 1961. It is much easier to show this indirectly by means of a cut-free sequent calculus presentation. First and higher-order extensions The logic of the earlier section is an example of a single-sorted logic, i.e., a logic with a single kind of object: propositions. Many extensions of this simple framework have been proposed; in this section we will extend it with a second sort of individuals or terms. More precisely, we will add a new kind of judgment, "t is a term" (or "t term") where t is schematic. We shall fix a countable set V of variables, another countable set F of function symbols, and construct terms with the following formation rules: and For propositions, we consider a third countable set P of predicates, and define atomic predicates over terms with the following formation rule: The first two rules of formation provide a definition of a term that is effectively the same as that defined in term algebra and model theory, although the focus of those fields of study is quite different from natural deduction. The third rule of formation effectively defines an atomic formula, as in first-order logic, and again in model theory. To these are added a pair of formation rules, defining the notation for quantified propositions; one for universal (โˆ€) and existential (โˆƒ) quantification: The universal quantifier has the introduction and elimination rules: The existential quantifier has the introduction and elimination rules: In these rules, the notation [t/x] A stands for the substitution of t for every (visible) instance of x in A, avoiding capture. As before the superscripts on the name stand for the components that are discharged: the term a cannot occur in the conclusion of โˆ€I (such terms are known as eigenvariables or parameters), and the hypotheses named u and v in โˆƒE are localised to the second premise in a hypothetical derivation. Although the propositional logic of earlier sections was decidable, adding the quantifiers makes the logic undecidable. So far, the quantified extensions are first-order: they distinguish propositions from the kinds of objects quantified over. Higher-order logic takes a different approach and has only a single sort of propositions. The quantifiers have as the domain of quantification the very same sort of propositions, as reflected in the formation rules: A discussion of the introduction and elimination forms for higher-order logic is beyond the scope of this article. It is possible to be in-between first-order and higher-order logics. For example, second-order logic has two kinds of propositions, one kind quantifying over terms, and the second kind quantifying over propositions of the first kind. Different presentations of natural deduction Tree-like presentations Gentzen's discharging annotations used to internalise hypothetical judgments can be avoided by representing proofs as a tree of sequents ฮ“ โŠขA instead of a tree of A true judgments. Sequential presentations Jaล›kowski's representations of natural deduction led to different notations such as Fitch-style calculus (or Fitch's diagrams) or Suppes' method, of which Lemmon gave a variant called system L. Such presentation systems, which are more accurately described as tabular, include the following. 1940: In a textbook, Quine indicated antecedent dependencies by line numbers in square brackets, anticipating Suppes' 1957 line-number notation. 1950: In a textbook, demonstrated a method of using one or more asterisks to the left of each line of proof to indicate dependencies. This is equivalent to Kleene's vertical bars. (It is not totally clear if Quine's asterisk notation appeared in the original 1950 edition or was added in a later edition.) 1957: An introduction to practical logic theorem proving in a textbook by . This indicated dependencies (i.e. antecedent propositions) by line numbers at the left of each line. 1963: uses sets of line numbers to indicate antecedent dependencies of the lines of sequential logical arguments based on natural deduction inference rules. 1965: The entire textbook by is an introduction to logic proofs using a method based on that of Suppes. 1967: In a textbook, briefly demonstrated two kinds of practical logic proofs, one system using explicit quotations of antecedent propositions on the left of each line, the other system using vertical bar-lines on the left to indicate dependencies. Proofs and type theory The presentation of natural deduction so far has concentrated on the nature of propositions without giving a formal definition of a proof. To formalise the notion of proof, we alter the presentation of hypothetical derivations slightly. We label the antecedents with proof variables (from some countable set V of variables), and decorate the succedent with the actual proof. The antecedents or hypotheses are separated from the succedent by means of a turnstile (โŠข). This modification sometimes goes under the name of localised hypotheses. The following diagram summarises the change. The collection of hypotheses will be written as ฮ“ when their exact composition is not relevant. To make proofs explicit, we move from the proof-less judgment "A true" to a judgment: "ฯ€ is a proof of (A true)", which is written symbolically as "ฯ€ : A true". Following the standard approach, proofs are specified with their own formation rules for the judgment "ฯ€ proof". The simplest possible proof is the use of a labelled hypothesis; in this case the evidence is the label itself. For brevity, we shall leave off the judgmental label true in the rest of this article, i.e., write "ฮ“ โŠข ฯ€ : A". Let us re-examine some of the connectives with explicit proofs. For conjunction, we look at the introduction rule โˆงI to discover the form of proofs of conjunction: they must be a pair of proofs of the two conjuncts. Thus: The elimination rules โˆงE1 and โˆงE2 select either the left or the right conjunct; thus the proofs are a pair of projectionsโ€”first (fst) and second (snd). For implication, the introduction form localises or binds the hypothesis, written using a ฮป; this corresponds to the discharged label. In the rule, "ฮ“, u:A" stands for the collection of hypotheses ฮ“, together with the additional hypothesis u. With proofs available explicitly, one can manipulate and reason about proofs. The key operation on proofs is the substitution of one proof for an assumption used in another proof. This is commonly known as a substitution theorem, and can be proved by induction on the depth (or structure) of the second judgment. Substitution theorem If ฮ“ โŠข ฯ€1 : A and ฮ“, u:A โŠข ฯ€2 : B, then ฮ“ โŠข [ฯ€1/u] ฯ€2 : B. So far the judgment "ฮ“ โŠข ฯ€ : A" has had a purely logical interpretation. In type theory, the logical view is exchanged for a more computational view of objects. Propositions in the logical interpretation are now viewed as types, and proofs as programs in the lambda calculus. Thus the interpretation of "ฯ€ : A" is "the program ฯ€ has type A". The logical connectives are also given a different reading: conjunction is viewed as product (ร—), implication as the function arrow (โ†’), etc. The differences are only cosmetic, however. Type theory has a natural deduction presentation in terms of formation, introduction and elimination rules; in fact, the reader can easily reconstruct what is known as simple type theory from the previous sections. The difference between logic and type theory is primarily a shift of focus from the types (propositions) to the programs (proofs). Type theory is chiefly interested in the convertibility or reducibility of programs. For every type, there are canonical programs of that type which are irreducible; these are known as canonical forms or values. If every program can be reduced to a canonical form, then the type theory is said to be normalising (or weakly normalising). If the canonical form is unique, then the theory is said to be strongly normalising. Normalisability is a rare feature of most non-trivial type theories, which is a big departure from the logical world. (Recall that almost every logical derivation has an equivalent normal derivation.) To sketch the reason: in type theories that admit recursive definitions, it is possible to write programs that never reduce to a value; such looping programs can generally be given any type. In particular, the looping program has type โŠฅ, although there is no logical proof of "โŠฅ true". For this reason, the propositions as types; proofs as programs paradigm only works in one direction, if at all: interpreting a type theory as a logic generally gives an inconsistent logic. Example: Dependent Type Theory Like logic, type theory has many extensions and variants, including first-order and higher-order versions. One branch, known as dependent type theory, is used in a number of computer-assisted proof systems. Dependent type theory allows quantifiers to range over programs themselves. These quantified types are written as ฮ  and ฮฃ instead of โˆ€ and โˆƒ, and have the following formation rules: These types are generalisations of the arrow and product types, respectively, as witnessed by their introduction and elimination rules. Dependent type theory in full generality is very powerful: it is able to express almost any conceivable property of programs directly in the types of the program. This generality comes at a steep price โ€” either typechecking is undecidable (extensional type theory), or extensional reasoning is more difficult (intensional type theory). For this reason, some dependent type theories do not allow quantification over arbitrary programs, but rather restrict to programs of a given decidable index domain, for example integers, strings, or linear programs. Since dependent type theories allow types to depend on programs, a natural question to ask is whether it is possible for programs to depend on types, or any other combination. There are many kinds of answers to such questions. A popular approach in type theory is to allow programs to be quantified over types, also known as parametric polymorphism; of this there are two main kinds: if types and programs are kept separate, then one obtains a somewhat more well-behaved system called predicative polymorphism; if the distinction between program and type is blurred, one obtains the type-theoretic analogue of higher-order logic, also known as impredicative polymorphism. Various combinations of dependency and polymorphism have been considered in the literature, the most famous being the lambda cube of Henk Barendregt. The intersection of logic and type theory is a vast and active research area. New logics are usually formalised in a general type theoretic setting, known as a logical framework. Popular modern logical frameworks such as the calculus of constructions and LF are based on higher-order dependent type theory, with various trade-offs in terms of decidability and expressive power. These logical frameworks are themselves always specified as natural deduction systems, which is a testament to the versatility of the natural deduction approach. Classical and modal logics For simplicity, the logics presented so far have been intuitionistic. Classical logic extends intuitionistic logic with an additional axiom or principle of excluded middle: For any proposition p, the proposition p โˆจ ยฌp is true. This statement is not obviously either an introduction or an elimination; indeed, it involves two distinct connectives. Gentzen's original treatment of excluded middle prescribed one of the following three (equivalent) formulations, which were already present in analogous forms in the systems of Hilbert and Heyting: (XM3 is merely XM2 expressed in terms of E.) This treatment of excluded middle, in addition to being objectionable from a purist's standpoint, introduces additional complications in the definition of normal forms. A comparatively more satisfactory treatment of classical natural deduction in terms of introduction and elimination rules alone was first proposed by Parigot in 1992 in the form of a classical lambda calculus called ฮปฮผ. The key insight of his approach was to replace a truth-centric judgment A true with a more classical notion, reminiscent of the sequent calculus: in localised form, instead of ฮ“ โŠข A, he used ฮ“ โŠข ฮ”, with ฮ” a collection of propositions similar to ฮ“. ฮ“ was treated as a conjunction, and ฮ” as a disjunction. This structure is essentially lifted directly from classical sequent calculi, but the innovation in ฮปฮผ was to give a computational meaning to classical natural deduction proofs in terms of a callcc or a throw/catch mechanism seen in LISP and its descendants. (See also: first class control.) Another important extension was for modal and other logics that need more than just the basic judgment of truth. These were first described, for the alethic modal logics S4 and S5, in a natural deduction style by Prawitz in 1965, and have since accumulated a large body of related work. To give a simple example, the modal logic S4 requires one new judgment, "A valid", that is categorical with respect to truth: If "A true" under no assumptions of the form "B true", then "A valid". This categorical judgment is internalised as a unary connective โ—ปA (read "necessarily A") with the following introduction and elimination rules: Note that the premise "A valid" has no defining rules; instead, the categorical definition of validity is used in its place. This mode becomes clearer in the localised form when the hypotheses are explicit. We write "ฮฉ;ฮ“ โŠข A true" where ฮ“ contains the true hypotheses as before, and ฮฉ contains valid hypotheses. On the right there is just a single judgment "A true"; validity is not needed here since "ฮฉ โŠข A valid" is by definition the same as "ฮฉ;โ‹… โŠข A true". The introduction and elimination forms are then: The modal hypotheses have their own version of the hypothesis rule and substitution theorem. Modal substitution theorem If ฮฉ;โ‹… โŠข ฯ€1 : A true and ฮฉ, u: (A valid) ; ฮ“ โŠข ฯ€2 : C true, then ฮฉ;ฮ“ โŠข [ฯ€1/u] ฯ€2 : C true. This framework of separating judgments into distinct collections of hypotheses, also known as multi-zoned or polyadic contexts, is very powerful and extensible; it has been applied for many different modal logics, and also for linear and other substructural logics, to give a few examples. However, relatively few systems of modal logic can be formalised directly in natural deduction. To give proof-theoretic characterisations of these systems, extensions such as labelling or systems of deep inference. The addition of labels to formulae permits much finer control of the conditions under which rules apply, allowing the more flexible techniques of analytic tableaux to be applied, as has been done in the case of labelled deduction. Labels also allow the naming of worlds in Kripke semantics; presents an influential technique for converting frame conditions of modal logics in Kripke semantics into inference rules in a natural deduction formalisation of hybrid logic. surveys the application of many proof theories, such as Avron and Pottinger's hypersequents and Belnap's display logic to such modal logics as S5 and B. Comparison with other foundational approaches Sequent calculus The sequent calculus is the chief alternative to natural deduction as a foundation of mathematical logic. In natural deduction the flow of information is bi-directional: elimination rules flow information downwards by deconstruction, and introduction rules flow information upwards by assembly. Thus, a natural deduction proof does not have a purely bottom-up or top-down reading, making it unsuitable for automation in proof search. To address this fact, Gentzen in 1935 proposed his sequent calculus, though he initially intended it as a technical device for clarifying the consistency of predicate logic. Kleene, in his seminal 1952 book Introduction to Metamathematics, gave the first formulation of the sequent calculus in the modern style. In the sequent calculus all inference rules have a purely bottom-up reading. Inference rules can apply to elements on both sides of the turnstile. (To differentiate from natural deduction, this article uses a double arrow โ‡’ instead of the right tack โŠข for sequents.) The introduction rules of natural deduction are viewed as right rules in the sequent calculus, and are structurally very similar. The elimination rules on the other hand turn into left rules in the sequent calculus. To give an example, consider disjunction; the right rules are familiar: On the left: Recall the โˆจE rule of natural deduction in localised form: The proposition A โˆจ B, which is the succedent of a premise in โˆจE, turns into a hypothesis of the conclusion in the left rule โˆจL. Thus, left rules can be seen as a sort of inverted elimination rule. This observation can be illustrated as follows: In the sequent calculus, the left and right rules are performed in lock-step until one reaches the initial sequent, which corresponds to the meeting point of elimination and introduction rules in natural deduction. These initial rules are superficially similar to the hypothesis rule of natural deduction, but in the sequent calculus they describe a transposition or a handshake of a left and a right proposition: The correspondence between the sequent calculus and natural deduction is a pair of soundness and completeness theorems, which are both provable by means of an inductive argument. Soundness of โ‡’ wrt. โŠข If ฮ“ โ‡’ A, then ฮ“ โŠข A. Completeness of โ‡’ wrt. โŠข If ฮ“ โŠข A, then ฮ“ โ‡’ A. It is clear by these theorems that the sequent calculus does not change the notion of truth, because the same collection of propositions remain true. Thus, one can use the same proof objects as before in sequent calculus derivations. As an example, consider the conjunctions. The right rule is virtually identical to the introduction rule The left rule, however, performs some additional substitutions that are not performed in the corresponding elimination rules. The kinds of proofs generated in the sequent calculus are therefore rather different from those of natural deduction. The sequent calculus produces proofs in what is known as the ฮฒ-normal ฮท-long form, which corresponds to a canonical representation of the normal form of the natural deduction proof. If one attempts to describe these proofs using natural deduction itself, one obtains what is called the intercalation calculus (first described by John Byrnes), which can be used to formally define the notion of a normal form for natural deduction. The substitution theorem of natural deduction takes the form of a structural rule or structural theorem known as cut in the sequent calculus. Cut (substitution) If ฮ“ โ‡’ ฯ€1 : A and ฮ“, u:A โ‡’ ฯ€2 : C, then ฮ“ โ‡’ [ฯ€1/u] ฯ€2 : C. In most well behaved logics, cut is unnecessary as an inference rule, though it remains provable as a meta-theorem; the superfluousness of the cut rule is usually presented as a computational process, known as cut elimination. This has an interesting application for natural deduction; usually it is extremely tedious to prove certain properties directly in natural deduction because of an unbounded number of cases. For example, consider showing that a given proposition is not provable in natural deduction. A simple inductive argument fails because of rules like โˆจE or E which can introduce arbitrary propositions. However, we know that the sequent calculus is complete with respect to natural deduction, so it is enough to show this unprovability in the sequent calculus. Now, if cut is not available as an inference rule, then all sequent rules either introduce a connective on the right or the left, so the depth of a sequent derivation is fully bounded by the connectives in the final conclusion. Thus, showing unprovability is much easier, because there are only a finite number of cases to consider, and each case is composed entirely of sub-propositions of the conclusion. A simple instance of this is the global consistency theorem: "โ‹… โŠข โŠฅ true" is not provable. In the sequent calculus version, this is manifestly true because there is no rule that can have "โ‹… โ‡’ โŠฅ" as a conclusion! Proof theorists often prefer to work on cut-free sequent calculus formulations because of such properties. See also Notes References (English translation Investigations into Logical Deduction in M. E. Szabo. The Collected Works of Gerhard Gentzen. North-Holland Publishing Company, 1969.) Translated and with appendices by Paul Taylor and Yves Lafont. Reprinted in Polish logic 1920โ€“39, ed. Storrs McCall. Lecture notes to a short course at Universitร  degli Studi di Siena, April 1983. PhD thesis. MSc thesis. External links Laboreo, Daniel Clemente, "Introduction to natural deduction." Domino On Acid. Natural deduction visualized as a game of dominoes. Pelletier, Jeff, "A History of Natural Deduction and Elementary Logic Textbooks." Levy, Michel, A Propositional Prover. Logical calculi Deductive reasoning Proof theory Methods of proof
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๋‹ฅํ„ฐ ํƒ์ •
ใ€Š๋‹ฅํ„ฐ ํƒ์ •ใ€‹์€ SBS์—์„œ 2019๋…„ 7์›” 17์ผ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2019๋…„ 9์›” 5์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋œ SBS ์ˆ˜๋ชฉ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ์ด๋‹ค. ์ค„๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ ์‚ฐ์—…ํ˜„์žฅ์˜ ์‚ฌํšŒ ๋ถ€์กฐ๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ํ†ต์พŒํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•ด๊ฒฐํ•˜๋Š” ๋‹ฅํ„ฐํƒ์ •๋“ค์˜ ํ™œ์•ฝ์„ ๊ทธ๋ฆฐ ์ƒ‰๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํ˜•ํƒœ์˜ ๋ฉ”๋””์ปฌ ์ˆ˜์‚ฌ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋“ฑ์žฅ ์ธ๋ฌผ ์ฃผ์š” ์ธ๋ฌผ ๋ฐ•์ง„ํฌ : ๋„์ค‘์€ ์—ญ - ์ตœํƒœ์˜์˜ ๅ‰ ์•„๋‚ด. ์ง์—…ํ™˜๊ฒฝ์˜ํ•™ ์ „๋ฌธ์˜. ์ž๋ณธ์— ์˜ํ•ด ์€ํ๋œ ์‚ฐ์—…์žฌํ•ด(๊ตฌ์˜์—ญ ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฐ๋„์–ด ์‚ฌ๋ง ์‚ฌ๊ณ )์—์„œ ๋ชจํ‹ฐ๋ธŒ๋ฅผ ์–ป์€ ๋น„์ •๊ทœ์ง ๋…ธ๋™์ž์˜ ์‚ฐ์—…์žฌํ•ด. ๊ณตํ•ญ์ฒ ๋„ ๊ณตํ•ญํ™”๋ฌผ์ฒญ์‚ฌ์—ญ์—์„œ ์ดฌ์˜.)์™€ ๊ฐ์ถฐ์ง„ ์งˆํ™˜๋“ค์„(์˜ฅ์‹œ์˜ ๊ฐ€์Šต๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ์–ด๋ฆฐ์ด๋“ค๋กœ ํ•˜์—ฌ๊ธˆ ํ˜ธํก๊ธฐ ์งˆํ™˜์œผ๋กœ ์‚ฌ๋งํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•œ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด) ๋ฐœ๊ตดํ•˜๊ณ  ์›์ธ์„ ๊ทœ๋ช…ํ•˜๋Š” โ€˜๋‹ฅํ„ฐ ํƒ์ •โ€™์œผ๋กœ ํ™œ์•ฝ ๋ด‰ํƒœ๊ทœ : ํ—ˆ๋ฏผ๊ธฐ ์—ญ (์•„์—ญ : ์กฐํ˜„๋„) - UDC ์ˆ˜์„์—ฐ๊ตฌ์›. ์ง์—…ํ™˜๊ฒฝ์˜ํ•™๊ณ„์˜ ์ด๋‹จ์•„. ๋‚˜์˜๊ฒŒ ๋งํ•˜๋ฉด ์ง€๋‚˜์น˜๊ฒŒ ์ž์œ ๋ถ„๋ฐฉํ•˜๊ณ , ์ข‹๊ฒŒ ๋งํ•˜๋ฉด ๊ธฐ๋ฐœํ•œ ์ž„๊ธฐ์‘๋ณ€์ด ๋„˜์น˜๋Š” ์ฒ˜์„ธ์ˆ ์˜ ๋‹ฌ์ธ ์ด๊ธฐ์šฐ : ์ตœํƒœ์˜ ์—ญ - ๋„์ค‘์€์˜ ๅ‰ ๋‚จํŽธ. TL๊ทธ๋ฃน์˜ ํ›„๊ณ„์ž. ๋จธ๋ฆฌ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋ฐœ๋๊นŒ์ง€ ์žฌ๋ฒŒ 3์„ธ. ์‚ฐ์—…์•ˆ์ „๋ณด๊ฑด์˜์ธ ๋„์ค‘์€์ด ์–ด๋ฆฐ์ด๋“ค์ด ํ˜ธํก๊ธฐ ์งˆํ™˜์œผ๋กœ ์‚ฌ๋งํ•˜๋Š” ์ด์œ ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€์Šต๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์ž„์„ ๋ฐํ˜€๋‚ด๋„๋ก ๋„์™”๊ณ , ๋ชจ์„ฑ๊ตญ์ด ํ‚ฌ๋Ÿฌ๋ฅผ ๋ณด๋‚ด์–ด ์ค‘์€์„ ํ•ด์น˜๋ ค ํ•˜์ž ์ง€์ผœ์ฃผ๊ณ , ๋ชจ์„ฑ๊ตญ์—๊ฒŒ "์ด์ œ๋Š” ์‚ด์ธ๊นŒ์ง€ ํ•˜๋ ค๊ณ  ํ•ฉ๋‹ˆ๊นŒ?"๋ผ๊ณ  ๋น„๋‚œํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ Š์€ ์ž๋ณธ๊ฐ€์ธ ์ž์‹ ์„ ์–•๋ณด๋Š” ๊ผฐ๋Œ€์ž„์›๋“ค์„ ์ฐจ๋ถ„ํ•œ ๋…์„ค๊ณผ ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์ •์—ฐํ•œ ๋ฐ˜๋ฐ•์œผ๋กœ์จ ๋”์ด์ƒ ๋ฐ˜ํ•ญํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•œ๋‹ค. UDC (๋ฏธํ™•์ง„์งˆํ™˜์„ผํ„ฐ / UNDIAGNOSED DISEASE CENTER) ๋ฐ•์ง€์˜ : ๊ณต์ผ์ˆœ ์—ญ - ๋ฏธํ™•์ง„์งˆํ™˜์„ผํ„ฐ์žฅ. ๋ฏธํ™•์ง„์งˆํ™˜์„ผํ„ฐ(UDC) ์ฐฝ์‹œ์ž๋กœ ๋ฏธํ˜ผ์˜ ์›Œ์ปค ํ™€๋ฆญ ์ด์˜์ง„ : ๋ณ€์ •ํ˜ธ ์—ญ - UDC ๊ฐ„ํ˜ธ์‹ค์žฅ. UDC ๊ฐ„ํ˜ธ๋ถ€๋ฌธ์„ ์ด๊ด„. ๊ทธ ์–ด๋–ค ์˜์‚ฌ๋ณด๋‹ค ๋” ์—ด์ •์ ์œผ๋กœ ํ™˜์ž๋ฅผ ๋ณด์‚ดํ”ผ๋Š” ํ„ฐํ”„ํ•œ ๋‚˜์ดํŒ…๊ฒŒ์ผ ํ›„์ง€์ด ๋ฏธ๋‚˜ : ์„์ง„์ด ์—ญ - UDC ๋ถ„์„ํŒ€์žฅ. ์žฌ์ผ๊ตํฌ3์„ธ. ์ผ๋ณธ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฑด๋„ˆ๊ฐ„ ํ• ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ ํ•œ๊ตญ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์• ์ •์ด ๋‚จ๋‹ค๋ฆ„. ํ•œ๊ตญ์–ด๋Š” ์„œํˆด์ง€๋งŒ ์ผ์„ ํ–ฅํ•œ ์—ด์ •์€ ๋„˜์น˜๋Š” ์›Œ์ปคํ™€๋ฆญ ์ •๊ฐ•ํฌ : ํ•˜์ง„ํ•™ ์—ญ - UDC ํ™”ํ•™๋ฌผ์งˆํŒ€์žฅ. ๋ฒ ํ…Œ๋ž‘ ์‚ฐ์—…์œ„์ƒ ๊ธฐ์‚ฌ. ๋ฌผ์งˆ ์ธก์ •์— ์žˆ์–ด์„œ ๋ฐ•ํ•™๋‹ค์‹. ๋ผ์ธ ํƒ€๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ํŠน๊ธฐ ์ด์˜์„ : ๊ณ ์„ ์ƒ ์—ญ - UDC ์ž์›๋ด‰์‚ฌ์ž. ์‹œ๋‹ˆ์–ด ํ™œ๋™๊ฐ€๋กœ UDC์—์„œ ์„œ๋ฅ˜ ์ •๋ฆฌ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋ณต์‚ฌ, ํƒ๋ฐฐ ์‹ ์ฒญ, ๋ถ„์„ ๋ฌผ์งˆ ์šด๋ฐ˜ ๋“ฑ ํ•„์š”ํ•œ ์žก์ผ๋“ค์„ ๋„๋งก์•„ ํ•จ TL ๊ทธ๋ฃน ๋ฅ˜ํ˜„๊ฒฝ : ์ตœ๋ฏผ ์—ญ - TL์˜๋ฃŒ์› ๋ณ‘๋ฆฌ๊ณผ ๋ ˆ์ง€๋˜ํŠธ. ์ตœํƒœ์˜์˜ ์—ฌ๋™์ƒ. TLํ˜ธํ…”์—์„œ ๊ทผ๋ฌดํ–ˆ๊ณ , ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์„ ์ธ์ •๋ฐ›์•„ ํ›„๊ณ„์ž๋กœ์„œ ์†์‹ค์ด ์—†๋Š” ์ธ๋ฌผ ์ด์ฒ ๋ฏผ : ๊ถŒ ์‹ค์žฅ ์—ญ - TL๊ทธ๋ฃน ํšŒ์žฅ ์ตœ๊ณค์˜ ์‹ฌ๋ณต์ด์ž ๋ถ€ํ•˜ ์ตœ๊ด‘์ผ : ๋ชจ์„ฑ๊ตญ ์—ญ - TL์˜ค์‰  ๋ณธ๋ถ€์žฅ. ์ง์—…ํ™˜๊ฒฝ์˜ํ•™ ์ „๋ฌธ์˜ ์ถœ์‹ . TL์—์„œ ์ผ์–ด๋‚˜๋Š” ๋ชจ๋“  ํ™”ํ•™๋ฌผ์งˆ ๊ด€๋ จ ์งˆํ™˜, ์ง์—…ํ™˜๊ฒฝ์  ๋ฌธ์ œ๋“ค, ์žฌํ•ด๋“ค์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด TG ์ฑ…์ž„์ด ์—†์Œ์„ ์ฆ๋ช…ํ•ด๋‚ด๋Š” ์‚ฌ์ธก ๋ณ€ํ˜ธ์‚ฌ. ์ž„์›๋“ค์กฐ์ฐจ ๋ชจ์„ฑ๊ตญ ๋ณธ๋ถ€์žฅ์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ๋ ฅ ์•„๋ž˜์— ์žˆ์—ˆ์„ ์ •๋„๋กœ TL์—์„œ์˜ ํž˜์ด ๋Œ€๋‹จํ•˜๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ์™ธ ์ธ๋ฌผ ๋ฐ•์ฃผํ˜• : ์ž„๊ตญ์‹  ์—ญ - ์ตœ๋ฏผ์˜ ๋‚จํŽธ ์ •์ˆœ์› : ์ • ํŒ€์žฅ ์—ญ - TL์˜ค์‰  ์ง์› ๊ถŒํ˜๋ฒ” : ๊น€๋„ํ˜• ์—ญ - TL๋ฉ”ํŠธ๋กœ ํ•˜์ฒญ์—…์ฒด ์ง์›. ๋ถˆ์˜์˜ ์‚ฌ๊ณ  ์ดํ›„ ์‚ด์ธ ์šฉ์˜์ž ๋ˆ„๋ช…์„ ์“ฐ๊ณ  ๋ชธ๋งˆ์ € ๋ง๊ฐ€์ ธ๋ฒ„๋ ธ๋‹ค๋Š” ์‚ฌ์‹ค์„ ์•Œ๊ฒŒ ๋จ ๋ฐฐ๋ˆ„๋ฆฌ : ๋ฐ•ํ˜œ๋ฏธ ์—ญ - ํ•˜๋ž‘์˜ ์„ ๋ฐฐ. ์–ด๋ ค์šด ์ƒ๊ณ„ ๋ฌธ์ œ๋กœ ๊ฟˆ์ด ์•„๋‹Œ ์‚ด๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ผ์„ ํ•ด์•ผ๋งŒ ํ•˜๋Š” ์ฒญ๋…„ ๋ฌธํƒœ์œ  : ๊ถŒ์ค€์ผ ์—ญ - TL๊ทธ๋ฃน ๋…ธ์กฐ์ค€๋น„์œ„์›์žฅ. ์‚ผ์„ฑ๊ทธ๋ฃน์„ ๋ชจํ‹ฐ๋ธŒ๋กœ ์‚ผ์€ ์„ค์ •์œผ๋กœ ๋ณด์ด๋Š”๋ฐ, ๋ฌด ๋…ธ์กฐ ๊ฒฝ์˜์„ ๊ฐ•ํ–‰ํ•˜๋Š” ์ฆ‰, ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋…ธ๋™์กฐํ•ฉ ์šด๋™์„ ํ•ด๊ณ , ํ•œ์ง์œผ๋กœ ์ด๋™ ๋“ฑ์˜ ๋ถˆ์ด์ต์œผ๋กœ์จ ์–ต์••ํ•˜๋Š” TL๊ทธ๋ฃน์˜ ๋…ธ๋™์ธ๊ถŒ ํƒ„์••์— ๋งž์„œ ์ˆ˜ ๋…„์งธ ํž˜๊ฒจ์šด ์‹ธ์›€์„ ์ด์–ด์˜ค๊ณ  ์žˆ์Œ. ๊น€๋ฏผํ˜ธ : ๊ถŒ๋„์œค ์—ญ - ์ค€์ผ์˜ ์•„๋“ค. ์—ฌ๋Š ์–ด๋ฆฐ์ด๋“ค์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ๋ฐ๊ณ  ๋ช…๋ž‘ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ, ์•„๋น ์˜ ์•„ํ””์„ ์ดํ•ดํ•˜๊ณ  ๋‹ฌ๋ž  ์ค„๋„ ์•„๋Š” ์† ๊นŠ์€ ์•„์ด. ์š”์ฆˆ์Œ ์›์ธ์„ ์•Œ ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋Š” ๊ธฐ์นจ ์ฆ์„ธ๋ฅผ ์•“๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ฑ„์œ ๋ฆฌ : ์ตœ์„œ๋ฆฐ ์—ญ - ์ดํ˜ผํ•œ ๋„์ค‘์€๊ณผ ์ตœํƒœ์˜์˜ ๋”ธ์ด์ž ์ตœ๊ณค์˜ ์†๋…€. ์–ด๋ฅธ๋“ค์˜ ํƒ์š•์— ํฌ์ƒ์–‘์ด ๋˜์–ด๋ฒ„๋ฆฐ ๋ถˆ์Œํ•œ ์•„์ด ๋ฐ•๊ทผํ˜• : ์ตœ๊ณค ์—ญ - TL๊ทธ๋ฃน ํšŒ์žฅ. ์ตœํƒœ์˜๊ณผ ์ตœ๋ฏผ์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€. ์ธ๊ฐ„๊ณผ ์ƒํ’ˆ์„, ๋…ธ๋™๊ณผ ๊ฐ€์น˜๋ฅผ ์ฒ ์ €ํžˆ ๋ถ„๋ฆฌํ•ด๋‚ด๋Š” ์‰ฝ๊ฒŒ ๋งํ•˜๋ฉด ๋…ธ๋™์ž๋ฅผ ์ธ๊ถŒ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง„ ์ธ๊ฐ„์ด ์•„๋‹Œ, ๋…ธ๋™๋ ฅ์˜ ๊ฐ€์น˜์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ํŒ๋‹จํ•˜๋Š” ๋ชฐ์ธ์ •ํ•œ ์กด์žฌ. ์ž๋ณธ์ฃผ์˜๋ผ๋Š” ๋ถˆํ‰๋“ฑํ•œ ์‚ฌํšŒ๊ตฌ์กฐ์˜ ์ˆ˜ํ˜œ์ž๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ณผ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์‹ ๋‹ด์ˆ˜ : ๊ณ  ๋ถ€์žฅ ์—ญ - TL๋ฉ”ํŠธ๋กœ ํ•˜์ฒญ์—…์ฒด ๋ถ€์žฅ ์ด์œค์ƒ : ์‚ฌ์žฅ ์—ญ - TL๋ฉ”ํŠธ๋กœ ํ•˜์ฒญ์—…์ฒด ์ฐจ์ˆœ๋ฐฐ : ๊ตญ์žฅ ์—ญ - ์‚ฐ์—…์•ˆ์ „๋ณด๊ฑด๊ตญ ๋…ธํ–‰ํ•˜ : ๊น€์–‘ํฌ ์—ญ - TL์ผ€๋ฏธ์ปฌ์˜ ์‹คํ—˜์„ ๋‹ด๋‹นํ•˜๋˜ ๋Œ€ํ•™์˜ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์› ์ด์ •์€ : ๋…ธ์ˆ™์ž ์—ญ ์ด๋‹คํ•ด : ์—ฌ์ž์นœ๊ตฌ ์—ญ ํŠน๋ณ„์ถœ์—ฐ ํ™ฉ์ •๋ฏผ : ์ •ํ•˜๋ž‘ ์—„๋งˆ ์—ญ ๊ณฝ๋™์—ฐ : ์ •ํ•˜๋ž‘ ์—ญ - ๋„์ค‘์€ ์•ž์ง‘์— ์‚ฌ๋Š” ์ด์›ƒ. ์ง์—…๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต ์ถœ์‹ . TL๋ฉ”ํŠธ๋กœ ์ •์ง์›์„ ๊ฟˆ๊พธ๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ์ธ๋ฌผ๋กœ ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฐ ๋„์–ด ์ˆ˜๋ฆฌ ๋‹ด๋‹น. ์ฐจ๋Ÿ‰์— ์น˜์–ด ์‚ฌ๋ง. ๊ตฌ์˜์—ญ์—์„œ ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฐ๋„์–ด๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฌ์ค‘ ์—ด์ฐจ์— ์น˜์—ฌ ์‚ฌ๋งํ•œ ๊น€ ์•„๋ฌด๊ฐœ ์”จ ์‚ฐ์—…์žฌํ•ด(๊ตฌ์˜์—ญ ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฐ๋„์–ด ์‚ฌ๋ง ์‚ฌ๊ณ )๋ฅผ ๋ชจํ‹ฐ๋ธŒ๋กœ ํ•œ ์ธ๋ฌผ. ์˜ค๋™๋ฏผ : ๋ฒ ์ด์ปค์‚ฌ์žฅ ์—ญ ์œค์†Œ์ด : ์œค์‹œ์›” ์—ญ - UDC ์‹ ์ž„ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํŒ€์žฅ ์ดฌ์˜์ง€ ์‹ ๊ธธ์—ญ ์ธ์ฒœ๊ตญ์ œ๊ณตํ•ญ ์„œํ•ด์ˆ˜์‚ฐ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์†Œ(๋ฏธํ™•์ธ์งˆํ™˜์„ผํ„ฐ) ๋™์ž‘๋Œ€๊ต ์ธ์ฒœ๋ฐฑ๋ณ‘์› - ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ๋ณ‘์› ์•„ํŠธ์„ผํ„ฐ ํ™”์ดํŠธ๋ธ”๋Ÿญ ์‹œ์ฒญ๋ฅ  ๋™์‹œ๊ฐ„๋Œ€ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ KBS ์ˆ˜๋ชฉ ๋ฏธ๋‹ˆ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ ใ€Š์ €์Šคํ‹ฐ์Šคใ€‹ (2019๋…„ 7์›” 17์ผ ~ 2019๋…„ 9์›” 5์ผ) ์ฐธ๊ณ  ์‚ฌํ•ญ ์ด ํ™”๋ฉด์€ ๋ ˆํ„ฐ๋ฐ•์Šค๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์›๋ž˜ ๋„์ค‘์€ ์—ญ์—๋Š” ๊น€ํ˜„์ฃผ๊ฐ€ ๋‚™์ ๋์œผ๋‚˜ ๊ณ ์‚ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹น์ดˆ ์ดˆ๋ฉด์— ์‚ฌ๋ž‘ํ•ฉ๋‹ˆ๋‹ค ํ›„์† ์›”ํ™” ๋ฏธ๋‹ˆ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ๋กœ ํŽธ์„ฑ๋  ์˜ˆ์ •์ด์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ SBS ์ธก์˜ ์›”ํ™”๊ทน ์ž ์ • ํ์ง€ ๊ฒฐ์ •์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์ˆ˜๋ชฉ ๋ฏธ๋‹ˆ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ๋กœ ํŽธ์„ฑ์ด ๋ณ€๊ฒฝ๋๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋ชฉ๋ก (ใ„ท) 2019๋…„ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋ชฉ๋ก ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ๋‹ฅํ„ฐ ํƒ์ • ๊ณต์‹ํ™ˆํŽ˜์ด์ง€ ๋‹ฅํ„ฐ ํƒ์ • ์ „ํšŒ์ฐจ ๋ฌด๋ฃŒ๋ณด๊ธฐ SBS ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ์ŠคํŽ˜์…œ 2010๋…„๋Œ€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ 2019๋…„ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ์†ก์œคํฌ ์‹œ๋‚˜๋ฆฌ์˜ค ์ž‘ํ’ˆ 2019๋…„์— ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ TV ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ 2019๋…„์— ์ข…๋ฃŒํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ TV ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doctor%20Detective
Doctor Detective
Doctor Detective () is a 2019 South Korean television series starring Park Jin-hee, Bong Tae-gyu and Lee Ki-woo. It aired from July 17 to September 5, 2019 on SBS. Synopsis The story of doctors who try to uncover the truth behind industrial accidents. It also factors in real life occupational hazard events that happened to real South Korean citizens by tailoring the drama to the real life event. Cast Main Park Jin-hee as Do Joong-eun Bong Tae-gyu as Heo Min-ki Lee Ki-woo as Choi Tae-yeong Supporting Undiagnosed Disease Center Park Ji-young as Gong Il-soon Lee Young-jin as Byeon Jeong-ho Mina Fujii as Seok Jin-i Jung Kang-hee as Ha Jin-hak Lee Yeong-seok as Mr. Go TL Medical Center Ryu Hyun-kyung as Choi Min Lee Chul-min as Mr. Kwon Choi Kwang-il as Mo Seong-gook Others Park Joo-hyung as Im Gook-sin Jung Soon-won as Team leader Jeong Kwon Hyuk-bum as Kim Do-hyeong Bae Noo-ri as Park Hye-mi Moon Tae-yu as Kwon Jun-il Kim Min-ho as Kwon Do-yoon Chae Yoo-ri as Choi Seo-rin Park Geun-hyung as Choi Gon Shin Dam-soo as Mr. Go Lee Yoon-sang as President Cha Soon-bae as General manager Roh Haeng-ha as Kim Yang-hee Park Sung-joon Special appearances Kwak Dong-yeon as Jeong Ha-rang Hwang Jung-min as Ha-rang's mother Oh Dong-min as Bakery president Jang Won-hyung Yoon So-yi as Yoon Si-wol Original soundtrack Part 1 Part 2 Part 3 Ratings In this table, represent the lowest ratings and represent the highest ratings. Each night's broadcast is divided into two 30-minute parts with a commercial break in between. References External links Seoul Broadcasting System television dramas Korean-language television shows 2019 South Korean television series debuts 2019 South Korean television series endings Television series by Studio S
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highway%20to%20Hell
Highway to Hell
ใ€ŠHighway to Hellใ€‹์€ 1979๋…„ 7์›” 27์ผ์— ๋ฐœ๋งค๋œ ํ˜ธ์ฃผ์˜ ํ•˜๋“œ ๋ก ๋ฐด๋“œ AC/DC์˜ ์—ฌ์„ฏ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ์ŠคํŠœ๋””์˜ค ์Œ๋ฐ˜์ด๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์€ ๊ตญ์ œ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐœ๋งค๋œ ์ด ๋ฐด๋“œ์˜ ๋‹ค์„ฏ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ์ŠคํŠœ๋””์˜ค ์Œ๋ฐ˜์ด์—ˆ๊ณ  ํ˜ธ์ฃผ์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๋งค๋œ ์—ฌ์„ฏ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ์Œ๋ฐ˜์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์Œ๋ฐ˜์€ 1980๋…„ 2์›” 19์ผ ์ด๋“ฌํ•ด ์ดˆ์— ์„ธ์ƒ์„ ๋– ๋‚œ ๋ฆฌ๋“œ ์‹ฑ์–ด ๋ณธ ์Šค์ฝง์˜ ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰ ์Œ๋ฐ˜์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ณธ ์Šค์ฝง์˜ ์ฃฝ์Œ 1980๋…„ 2์›” 19์ผ ํ™”์š”์ผ 33์„ธ์˜ ๋ณธ ์Šค์ฝง์€ ์ฃฝ์€ ์ฑ„ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ์ „๋‚  ์ €๋… ์บ ๋˜ํƒ€์šด์— ์žˆ๋Š” ํด๋Ÿฝ์ธ ๋ฎค์ง ๋จธ์‹ ์—์„œ ์ˆ ์„ ๋งŽ์ด ๋งˆ์‹œ๋ฉด์„œ ๋ณด๋ƒˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐ์ ˆํ–ˆ๋˜ ์Šค์ฝง์€ ์•Œ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ…Œ์–ด ํ‚ค๋‹ˆ์–ด๋ผ๋Š” ๋‚จ์ž์—๊ฒŒ ์ซ“๊ฒจ ์ง‘์œผ๋กœ ๋Œ์•„์™”๋‹ค. ํ‚ค๋‹ˆ์–ด๋Š” 2005๋…„ ใ€Š๋ฉ”ํƒˆ ํ•ด๋จธใ€‹์™€ ใ€Šํด๋ž˜์‹ ๋กใ€‹ ์‹œ์‚ฌ์ฃผ๊ฐ„์ง€ AC/DC์—์„œ ๋งค๊ธฐ ๋ชฌํƒˆ๋ฐ”๋…ธ์—๊ฒŒ "๊ทธ๋ฅผ ์ฐจ์— ๋‘๊ณ  ์™€์„œ ์ดˆ์ธ์ข…์„ ๋ˆŒ๋ €๋‹ค"๋ฉฐ "๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ํ˜„์žฌ ๋™๊ฑฐ ์ค‘์ธ ์—ฌ์ž์นœ๊ตฌ๋Š” ๋Œ€๋‹ตํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค"๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ์–ด์š”. ๋ณธ์˜ ์—ด์‡ ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ ธ๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ํ”Œ๋žซ์œผ๋กœ ๋ชธ์„ ๋“ค์—ฌ๋ณด๋ƒˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ์ง‘์— ์•„๋ฌด๋„ ์—†์—ˆ์–ด์š”. ๋ณธ์„ ๊นจ์šธ ์ˆ˜ ์—†์–ด์„œ ์‹ค๋ฒ„[์Šค๋ฏธ์Šค, ์Šค์ฝง์˜ ์ „ ์—ฌ์ž์นœ๊ตฌ]๋ฅผ ๋ถˆ๋Ÿฌ ์กฐ์–ธ์„ ๊ตฌํ–ˆ์–ด์š”. ๊ทธ๋…€๋Š” ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ์ž์ฃผ ๊ธฐ์ ˆํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๊ณ , ๋‹จ์ง€ ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ๊ทธ ์ผ์„ ๊ทธ๋งŒ๋‘๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ์ตœ์„ ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ์–ด์š”." ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ์ž ํ‚ค๋‹ˆ์–ด๋Š” ์Šค์ฝง์„ ์ž๊ธฐ ์ง‘์œผ๋กœ ํƒœ์›Œ๋‹ค ์ฃผ์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ๊ทธ ๊ฐ€์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ๋„ˆ๋ฌด ๋ฌด๊ฑฐ์›Œ์„œ ๋“ค์–ด์˜ฌ๋ฆด ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ์•Œ๊ณ  ๋‹ด์š”๋ฅผ ๋ฎ์–ด์ฃผ๊ณ  ๋น„ํ‹€๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ๋ฉฐ ์ž ์ž๋ฆฌ์— ๋“ค์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์„ค๋ช…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์Šค์ฝง์˜ ์‹œ์‹ ์€ ๋‹ค์Œ๋‚  ์•„์นจ 11์‹œ์— ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐค์ƒˆ ์Šค์ฝง์€ ์ž ๊ฒฐ์— ํ† ํ•˜๊ณ  ๋ชฉ์ด ๋ฉ”์–ด ์ฃฝ์€ ๋ชจ์–‘์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐํƒ€๋ฆฌ์ŠคํŠธ ์•ต๊ฑฐ์Šค ์˜์€ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋จผ์ € ์•Œ๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ  ๊ทธ์˜ ํ˜•์ œ/๋ฐด๋“œ ๋™๋ฃŒ ๋งฌ์ปด ์˜์—๊ฒŒ ์ „ํ™”๋ฅผ ๊ฑธ์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ๊ทธ๋Š” ์–ธ๋ก ์—์„œ ์•Œ๋ ค์ง€๊ธฐ ์ „์— ์Šค์Šค๋กœ ์Šค์ฝง์˜ ์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ์—๊ฒŒ ์ „ํ™”๋ฅผ ๊ฑธ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋งฌ์ปด์€ 2000๋…„ AC/DC์˜ ๋น„ํ•˜์ธ๋“œ ๋” ๋ฎค์ง์—์„œ ์Šค์ฝง์˜ ์‚ฌ๋ง ์†Œ์‹์€ "์‹ ๋ฌธ๋ณด๋‹ค ๋ฐด๋“œ ์ค‘ ํ•œ ๊ณณ์—์„œ ์˜ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ๋” ๋‚ซ๋‹ค"๊ณ  ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. AC/DC ์บ ํ”„๋Š” ์Šค์ฝง์ด ์—„์ฒญ๋‚œ ์–‘์˜ ์ˆ ์„ ๋งˆ์‹œ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ณด๋ฉด์„œ๋„ ์‡ผ๋ฅผ ๋†“์น˜๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ํ˜•ํŽธ์—†๋Š” ๊ณต์—ฐ์„ ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๊ฒฐ์ฝ” ๋ณธ ์ ์ด ์—†๋Š” ์Šค์ฝง์˜ ์ฃฝ์Œ์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ๋ง์—ฐ์ž์‹คํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์Šค์บ‡์˜ ์žฅ๋ก€์‹์—์„œ AC/DC๋Š” ์ž ์‹œ ํ•ด์ฒด๋ฅผ ๊ณ ๋ คํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ์Šค์ฝง์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€๋Š” ๊ทธ๋ฃน์„ ๊ณ„์† ์ด์–ด๊ฐ€์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ–ˆ๊ณ , ๋ถˆ๊ณผ 4๊ฐœ์›” ํ›„์— ์ด ๋ฐด๋“œ๋Š” ์‹ ์ธ ๊ฐ€์ˆ˜ ๋ธŒ๋ผ์ด์–ธ ์กด์Šจ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์ฒซ ์ฝ˜์„œํŠธ๋ฅผ ์—ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์•ต๊ฑฐ์Šค๋Š” "์–ด๋ฆด ๋•Œ, ์ฃฝ์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๊ฒƒ์ด ๊ฒฐ์ฝ” ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ๋ถ„์„ ๊ฑด๋“œ๋ฆฌ์ง€ ์•Š์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์ƒ๊ฐํ•ฉ๋‹ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ ‡๊ฒŒ ๊ฐ€๊นŒ์šด ๋น„๊ทน์€ ์ฒ˜์Œ์ด์—ˆ์–ด์š”." 2008๋…„ ๋ฒ ์ด์‹œ์ŠคํŠธ ํด๋ฆฌํ”„ ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„์Šค๋Š” ใ€Š๋กค๋ง ์Šคํ†คใ€‹์˜ ๋ฐ์ด๋น„๋“œ ํ”„๋ฆฌ์ผ€์—๊ฒŒ "์˜๋ถ€์ธ๋“ค์€ ์Šค์ฝง์˜ ์ฃฝ์Œ์œผ๋กœ ์‹ฌํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ”๋“ค๋ ธ์„ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์˜์‹ฌํ•œ๋‹ค"๋ฉฐ "๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ๋ณด์—ฌ์ฃผ์ง€๋Š” ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค"๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ์–ด์š”. ๊ทธ๋“ค์˜ ์บ๋ฆญํ„ฐ์— ์—†์–ด์š”. ๊ทธ๋“ค์€ ์Šฌํ””์„ ์•ˆ๊ณ  ๊ทธ๋ƒฅ ์žฅ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ์ฃ ." ๋งฌ์ปด์€ ๊ฐ™์€ ์ธํ„ฐ๋ทฐ์—์„œ ์Šค์ฝง์ด "์•„๋น ์™€ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค"๊ณ  ์„ค๋ช…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ์šฐ๋ฆฌ๋ณด๋‹ค ๊ฒจ์šฐ ๋ช‡ ์‚ด ์œ„์˜€์ง€๋งŒ, ๊ทธ๋Ÿฐ ๊ฒƒ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ์–ด์š”. ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋‘ ๋งˆ๋””๋กœ ๋ญ”๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ํ•ด๊ฒฐํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์—ˆ์–ด์š”." ๋ฐ˜์‘ ใ€ŠHighway to Hellใ€‹์€ AC/DC๊ฐ€ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ํ†ฑ 100์„ ๋ŒํŒŒํ•œ ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ LP๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ 17์œ„์— ๋„๋‹ฌํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์ด ์Œ๋ฐ˜์€ ๋ฐด๋“œ๋ฅผ ํ•˜๋“œ ๋ก ๊ณต์—ฐ์˜ ์ตœ๊ณ  ๋“ฑ๊ธ‰์œผ๋กœ ์˜ฌ๋ ค๋†“์•˜๋‹ค. AC/DC ์Œ๋ฐ˜(ใ€ŠBack in Blackใ€‹ ๋’ค๋ฅผ ์ด์–ด) ์ค‘ ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ๋กœ ๋งŽ์ด ํŒ”๋ฆฐ ์Œ๋ฐ˜์ด๋ฉฐ, ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ง€๊ธˆ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด์ง„ ํ•˜๋“œ ๋ก ์Œ๋ฐ˜ ์ค‘ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์œ„๋Œ€ํ•œ ์Œ๋ฐ˜์œผ๋กœ ๊ผฝํžŒ๋‹ค. ใ€Š๋กค๋ง ์Šคํ†คใ€‹์˜ ๊ทธ๋ ˆํŠธ ์ฝ”ํŠธ๋Š” "๋…ธ๋ž˜๋Š” ๋” ์ž‘๊ณ , ํ•ฉ์ฐฝ์€ ๋Ÿญ๋น„ํŒ€ ํ•˜๋ชจ๋‹ˆ๊ฐ€ ์‚ด์ฐŒ๊ฒŒ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ˆ˜์ƒ ์ˆœ๊ฐ„: ์Šค์ฝง์€ ๊ณ ๊ด€์ ˆ์˜ '๋ถˆ๊ฝƒ ์† ์ƒท ๋‹ค์šด'์„ ์„œ์ชฝ์˜ ๋งˆ๋…€์—๊ฒŒ ๊ฑธ๋งž๋Š” ๊ผฌ์ฑ™์ด๋กœ ๋‹ซ๋Š”๋‹ค." 2008๋…„ ใ€Š๋กค๋ง ์Šคํ†คใ€‹ ์ปค๋ฒ„ ์Šคํ† ๋ฆฌ์—์„œ ๋ฐ์ด๋น„๋“œ ํ”„๋ฆฌ์ผ€๋Š” "์Šˆํผํ”„๋กœ๋“€์„œ '๋จธํŠธ' ๋žญ์ด AC/DC์˜ ๊ฑฐ์นœ ๊ทธ๋ผ๋‚˜์ดํŠธ ๋ก์„ ์ด๋ฒˆ ์Œ๋ฐ˜์—์„œ ์ฐจํŠธ์Šค๋งˆํŠธ ๋ถ€๊ธฐ๋กœ ์กฐ๊ฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค"๊ณ  ์ง€์ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ฌ๋ฎค์ง์€ ์ด ๋…ธ๋ž˜๋ฅผ ใ€ˆHighway to Hellใ€‰์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถ€๋ฅธ๋‹ค. 2003๋…„ ์ด ์Œ๋ฐ˜์€ ใ€Š๋กค๋ง ์Šคํ†คใ€‹์ด ์„ ์ •ํ•œ ์—ญ์‚ฌ์ƒ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์œ„๋Œ€ํ•œ ์Œ๋ฐ˜ 500์žฅ ์ค‘ 200์œ„์— ์˜ฌ๋ž์œผ๋ฉฐ, 2012๋…„ ๊ฐœ์ • ์Œ๋ฐ˜์—๋„ ๋‹ค์‹œ ์ด๋ฆ„์„ ์˜ฌ๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๊ณก ๋ชฉ๋ก ๋ชจ๋“  ๊ณก๋“ค์€ ์•ต๊ฑฐ์Šค ์˜๊ณผ ๋งฌ์ปด ์˜ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๋ณธ ์Šค์ฝง์— ์˜ํ•ด ์ž‘์‚ฌ/์ž‘๊ณกํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ฐธ์—ฌ ์ธ์› AC/DC ๋ณธ ์Šค์ฝง โ€“ ๋ฆฌ๋“œ ๋ณด์ปฌ ์•ต๊ฑฐ์Šค ์˜ โ€“ ๋ฆฌ๋“œ ๊ธฐํƒ€ ๋งฌ์ปด ์˜ โ€“ ๋ฆฌ๋“ฌ ๊ธฐํƒ€, ๋ฐฑ ๋ณด์ปฌ ํด๋ฆฌํ”„ ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„์Šค โ€“ ๋ฒ ์ด์Šค ๊ธฐํƒ€, ๋ฐฑ ๋ณด์ปฌ ํ•„ ๋Ÿฌ๋“œ โ€“ ๋“œ๋Ÿผ ์ธ์ฆ ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ Lyrics Highway to Hell 1979๋…„ ์Œ๋ฐ˜ AC/DC์˜ ์Œ๋ฐ˜ ์• ํ‹€๋žœํ‹ฑ ๋ ˆ์ฝ”๋“œ ์Œ๋ฐ˜
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highway%20to%20Hell
Highway to Hell
Highway to Hell is the sixth studio album by Australian hard rock band AC/DC, released on 27 July 1979. It is the first of three albums produced by Mutt Lange, and is the last album featuring lead singer Bon Scott, who died on 19 February 1980. Background By 1978, AC/DC had released five albums internationally and had toured Australia and Europe extensively. In 1977, they landed in America and, with virtually no radio support, began to amass a live following. The band's most recent album, the live If You Want Blood, had reached number 13 in the United Kingdom, and the two albums previous to that, 1977's Let There Be Rock and 1978's Powerage, had seen the band find their raging, blues-based hard rock sound. Although the American branch of Atlantic Records had rejected the group's 1976 LP Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap, it now believed the band was poised to strike it big in the States if only they would work with a producer who could give them a radio-friendly sound. Since their 1975 Australian debut High Voltage, all of AC/DC's albums had been produced by George Young and Harry Vanda. According to the book AC/DC: Maximum Rock & Roll, the band was not enthusiastic about the idea, especially guitarists Angus Young and Malcolm Young, who felt a strong sense of loyalty to their older brother George: The producer Atlantic paired the band with was South African-born Eddie Kramer, best known for his pioneering work as engineer for Jimi Hendrix but also for mega-bands Led Zeppelin and Kiss. Kramer met the band at Criteria Studios in Miami, Florida but, by all accounts, they did not get on. Geoff Barton quotes Malcolm Young in Guitar Legends magazine: "Kramer was a bit of a prat. He looked at Bon and said to us, 'Can your guy sing?' He might've sat behind the knobs for Hendrix, but he's certainly not Hendrix, I can tell you that much." Former AC/DC manager Michael Browning recalls in the 1994 book Highway to Hell: The Life and Times of AC/DC Legend Bon Scott, "I got a phone call from Malcolm in Florida, to say, 'This guy's hopeless, do something, he's trying to talk us into recording that Spencer Davis song,' 'Gimme Some Lovin',' 'I'm a Man,' whatever it was." Browning turned to Zambian-born producer Robert John "Mutt" Lange to step in. Lange was best known for producing the Boomtown Rats number-one hit "Rat Trap" and post-pub rock bands like Clover, City Boy, and Graham Parker. In 1979, singer Bon Scott told RAM magazine, "Three weeks in Miami and we hadn't written a thing with Kramer. So one day we told him we were going to have a day off and not to bother coming in. This was Saturday, and we snuck into the studio and on that one day we put down six songs, sent the tape to Lange and said, 'Will you work with us?'" The band had also signed up with new management, firing Michael Browning and hiring Peter Mensch, an aggressive American who had helped develop the careers of Aerosmith and Ted Nugent. Recording With "Mutt" Lange in place as producer, recording commenced at the Roundhouse Recording Studios in Chalk Farm, north London in March 1979. In his book Highway to Hell, Clinton Walker writes, "The band virtually moved into the Roundhouse Studios in Chalk Farm, spending the best part of three months there. That, to start with, was a shock to AC/DC, who had never previously spent more than three weeks on any one album... Sessions for the albumโ€”15 hours a day, day-in day-out, for over two monthsโ€”were gruelling. Songs were worked and reworked." Lange's no-nonsense approach was appreciated by the band, whose own work ethic had always been solid. In an article by Mojos Sylvie Simmons, Malcolm Young stated that Lange "liked the simplicity of a band. We were all minimalist. We felt it was the best way to be... He knew we were all dedicated so he sort of got it. But he made sure the tracks were solid, and he could hear if a snare just went off." In the same article Angus Young added, "He was meticulous about sound, getting right guitars and drums. He would zero inโ€”and he was good too on the vocal side. Even Bon was impressed with how he could get his voice to sound." Tour manager, Ian Jeffery, who was present during recordings recalled: In AC/DC: Maximum Rock & Roll, Arnaud Durieux writes that Lange, a trained singer, showed Scott how to breathe so he could be a technically better singer on songs like "Touch Too Much" and would join in on background vocals himself, having to stand on the other side of the studio because his own voice was so distinctive. The melodic backing vocals were a new element to the band's sound, but the polish Lange added did not detract from the band's characteristic crunch, thereby satisfying both the band and Atlantic Records at the same time. Lange also taught Angus some useful lessons, instructing him to play his solos while sitting next to the producer. Jeffrey recalled: "Mutt said: 'Sit here and I'll tell you what I want you to play.' Angus was like, 'You fucking will, will ya?' But he sat next to Mutt and Mutt didn't force it on him, just kind of pointed at the fretboard and, 'Here, this...' and 'Hold that...' and 'Now go into that...' It was the solo from "Highway To Hell". It was fantastic! And that really stood them all to attention on Mutt too. He wasnโ€™t asking them to do anything he couldnโ€™t do himself, or getting on their case saying itโ€™s been wrong in the past; nothing like that. He really massaged them into what became that album." Tracks The album's most famous song is the title track. From the outset, Atlantic Records hated the idea of using the song as the album title, with Angus later telling Guitar Worlds Alan Di Perna: In a 2003 interview with Bill Crandall of Rolling Stone, Angus recalled the genesis of the song: The words to "Highway to Hell" took on a new resonance when Scott drank himself to death in 1980. AllMusic's Steve Huey observed: Scott's lyrics on Highway to Hell deal almost exclusively with lust ("Love Hungry Man", "Girls Got Rhythm"), sex ("Beating Around the Bush", "Touch Too Much", "Walk All Over You"), and partying on the town ("Get It Hot", "Shot Down in Flames"). In his 2006 band memoir, Murray Engelheart reveals that Scott felt the lyrics of songs like "Gone Shootin'" from the preceding Powerage were "simply too serious." "Touch Too Much" had been first recorded in July 1977, with a radically different arrangement and lyrics from its Highway to Hell incarnation. The final version was performed by Scott and AC/DC on the BBC music show Top of the Pops a few days before the singer's death in 1980. The song "If You Want Blood (You've Got It)" borrowed the title of the band's live album from the previous year and stemmed from Scott's response to a journalist at the Day on the Green festival in July 1978: when asked what they could expect from the band, Scott replied, "Blood". The opening guitar riff of "Beating Around the Bush" has been referred to by journalist Phil Sutcliffe as "almost a tribute... a reflection, I hesitate to say a copy" of "Oh Well" by Fleetwood Mac.Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Asked in 1998, "What's the worst record you've ever made?", Angus replied: "There's a song on Highway to Hell called 'Love Hungry Man' which I must have written after a night of bad pizza โ€“ you can blame me for that." Perhaps the album's most infamous song is "Night Prowler", mainly due to its association with serial killer Richard Ramรญrez. In June 1985, a highly publicised murder case began revolving around Ramirez, who was responsible for more than 15 brutal murders, as well as numerous rapes and attempted murders, in Los Angeles. Nicknamed the "Night Stalker", Ramรญrez was a fan of AC/DC, particularly "Night Prowler", and police claimed he left an AC/DC hat at one of the crime scenes. During the trial, Ramรญrez shouted "Hail Satan" and showed off a pentagram carved into his palm with the numbers 666 below it. This brought extremely bad publicity to AC/DC, whose concerts and albums faced protests by parents in Los Angeles. On the episode of VH1's Behind the Music about AC/DC, the band maintained that the song had been given a murderous connotation by Ramรญrez, but is actually about a boy sneaking into his girlfriend's bedroom at night while her parents are asleep, in spite of lyrics such as, "And you don't feel the steel, till it's hanging out your back". Release Highway to Hell was originally released on 27 July 1979 by Albert Productions, who licensed the album to Atlantic Records for release outside of Australia, and it was re-released by Epic Records in 2003 as part of the AC/DC Remasters series. In Australia, the album was originally released with a slightly different album cover, featuring flames and a drawing of a bass guitar neck superimposed over the same photo of the band used on the international cover; also, the AC/DC logo is a darker shade of maroon, but the accents are a bit lighter. The East German release had different and much plainer designs for the front and back of the album, apparently because the authorities were not happy with the sleeve as released elsewhere. "Highway to Hell" is featured in the 2003 film Final Destination 2 and the 2010 film Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief. "If You Want Blood (You've Got It)" is featured in the films Empire Records (1995), The Longest Yard (2005), The Dukes of Hazzard (2005), Shoot 'Em Up (2007), and Final Destination 5 (2011). "Walk All Over You" is featured in the 2010 film Grown Ups. "Touch Too Much" is featured on the soundtrack for the video game Grand Theft Auto IV: The Lost and Damned, and it was also the theme song for the World Wrestling Federation's SummerSlam event in 1998. Reception The album became AC/DC's first LP to break the top 100 of the US Billboard 200 chart, eventually reaching number 17, and it propelled the band into the top ranks of hard rock acts. It is the second-highest selling AC/DC album (behind Back in Black) and is generally considered one of the greatest hard rock albums ever made. On 25 May 2006, the album was certified 7ร— Platinum by the RIAA. Of the album, Greg Kot of Rolling Stone wrote: "The songs are more compact, the choruses fattened by rugby-team harmonies. The prize moment: Scott closes the hip-grinding 'Shot Down in Flames' with a cackle worthy of the Wicked Witch of the West." In a 2008 Rolling Stone cover story, David Fricke noted: "Superproducer 'Mutt' Lange sculpted AC/DC's rough-granite rock into chart-smart boogie on this album." AllMusic called the song "Highway to Hell" "one of hard rock's all-time anthems." The album was ranked number 199 on Rolling Stone magazine's 2003 list of the 500 greatest albums of all time; it was number 200 on the 2012 revised list. The 2010 book The 100 Best Australian Albums included Highway to Hell in the topย 50 (Back in Black was No.ย 2). In 2013, AC/DC fans Steevi Diamond and Jon Morter (who was behind a Rage Against the Machine Facebook campaign in 2009) spearheaded a Facebook campaign to make "Highway to Hell" a Christmas number one single on the UK Singles Chart, to celebrate the 40th anniversary of AC/DC, and to prevent The X Factor from achieving another number one hit single. The campaign raised funds for Feel Yourself, a testicular cancer-awareness charity. The song peaked at number four on the Official Singles Chart for Christmas that year, making it AC/DC's first-ever UK Top 10 single. Track listing PersonnelAC/DCBon Scott โ€“ lead vocals Angus Young โ€“ lead guitar Malcolm Young โ€“ rhythm guitar, backing vocals Cliff Williams โ€“ bass, backing vocals Phil Rudd โ€“ drumsTechnical personnel' Producer: Robert John "Mutt" Lange Recording Studio: Roundhouse Recording Studios, London, England Recording Engineer: Mark Dearnley Mixing Studio: Basing Street Studios, London, England Mixing Engineer: Tony Platt Assistant Engineer: Kevin Dallimore Art Direction: Bob Defrin Photography: Jim Houghton Charts Weekly charts Year-end charts Certifications References External links Lyrics on AC/DC's official website Highway to Hell by Joe Bonomo in the 33 1/3 Series of books AC/DC albums Albert Productions albums 1979 albums Atlantic Records albums Albums produced by Robert John "Mutt" Lange
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EA%B5%AC%ED%95%B4%EC%A4%98%202
๊ตฌํ•ด์ค˜ 2
ใ€Š๊ตฌํ•ด์ค˜ 2ใ€‹๋Š” 2019๋…„ 5์›” 8์ผ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2019๋…„ 6์›” 27์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ OCN์—์„œ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋œ ์ˆ˜๋ชฉ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ์ด๋‹ค. ์ค„๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ ์‚ฌ์ด๋น„ ์ข…๊ต๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ํ˜ผ๋ˆ์— ๋น ์ง„ ๋งˆ์„ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์˜ ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋‹ด์•„๋‚ด๋Š” ์‚ฌ์ด๋น„ ์Šค๋ฆด๋Ÿฌ ์ž‘ํ’ˆ์ด๋‹ค. ๋“ฑ์žฅ ์ธ๋ฌผ ์ฃผ์š” ์ธ๋ฌผ ์—„ํƒœ๊ตฌ : ๊น€๋ฏผ์ฒ  ์—ญ (์•„์—ญ : ๊น€์Šน์ฐฌ) - ํ—›๋œ ๋ฏฟ์Œ์— ๋„์ „ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฏธ์นœ ๊ผดํ†ต ์ฒœํ˜ธ์ง„ : ์ตœ๊ฒฝ์„ ์—ญ - ํ•œ๊ตญ๋Œ€ ๋ฒ•๋Œ€ ๊ต์ˆ˜์ž„๊ณผ ๋™์‹œ์— ๊ตํšŒ์˜ ์žฅ๋กœ. ์ง„์งœ? ์‚ฌ์ด๋น„? ์˜๋ฌธ์˜ ๋‚จ์ž. ๊น€๋ฏผ์ฒ ์— ์˜ํ•ด์„œ ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ์ง€๋ช… ์ˆ˜๋ฐฐ ์ค‘์ธ ์ „๊ณผ 10๋ฒ” ์‚ฌ๊ธฐ๊พผ์ธ ๊ฒƒ์ด ๋“œ๋Ÿฌ๋‚จ. ์ด์†œ : ๊น€์˜์„  ์—ญ (์•„์—ญ : ๊น€๋ฏผ์„œ) - ๋ฏผ์ฒ ์˜ 8์‚ด ์–ด๋ฆฐ ๋™์ƒ. ๊ฐ€์งœ๋ผ๋„ ๋ฏฟ๊ณ  ์‹ถ์€ ์ฒญ์ถ˜ ๊น€์˜๋ฏผ : ์„ฑ์ฒ ์šฐ ์—ญ - ๋งˆ์„์„ ๋ณ€ํ™”์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” ๋ชฉ์‚ฌ ์›”์ถ”๋ฆฌ ๋งˆ์„์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค ์ž„ํ•˜๋ฃก : ๋ฐ•๋•ํ˜ธ ์ด์žฅ ์—ญ - ๋งˆ์„ ์ผ์ด๋ผ๋ฉด ๋ˆ„๊ตฌ๋ณด๋‹ค ์—ด์‹ฌ์ธ ์—ดํ˜ˆ์ด์žฅ. ์ตœ์žฅ๋กœ์˜ ๋•์„ ๋ณธ ํ›„๋กœ๋Š” ๊ตํšŒ ์ผ์— ๋ˆ„๊ตฌ๋ณด๋‹ค ์•ž์žฅ์„ ๋‹ค. ๊น€์˜์„  : ์ด์žฅ ์ฒ˜ ์—ญ - ์›”์ถ”๋ฆฌ์˜ ์˜ค์ง€๋ผํผ. ๊ฐ€๋ถ€์žฅ์ ์ธ ๋‚จํŽธ ๋“ฑ์Œ€์— ๋‚ ๋กœ ์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์Šค๊ฐ€ ์Œ“์—ฌ๊ฐ€๋Š” ์›”์ถ”๋ฆฌ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ ์ „์—…์ฃผ๋ถ€. ์„ฑํ˜ : ์ •๋ณ‘๋ฅ  ์—ญ - ๋ฏผ์ฒ ์˜ ๋™๋„ค ์„ ๋ฐฐ. ์„œ์šธ ์‚ด์ด์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋กœ๋ง์„ ๋ฒ„๋ฆฌ์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜๋˜ ์ค‘, ์šฐ์—ฐํžˆ ๋งŒ๋‚œ ์ง„์ˆ™๊ณผ ์ฒซ๋ˆˆ์— ๋ฐ˜ํ•ด ๊ฒฐํ˜ผํ•˜๊ณ  ์›”์ถ”๋ฆฌ์— ์ •์ฐฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ค์—ฐ์•„ : ์ง„์ˆ™ ์—ญ - ๋ณ‘๋ฅ ์˜ ์•„๋‚ด. ์ Š์€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์ด ๋‹ค ๋– ๋‚˜๊ณ  ๋‚œ ์›”์ถ”๋ฆฌ์—์„œ 18๋…„๋งŒ์— ์•„๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์ถœ์‚ฐํ•  ์˜ˆ์ •์ด๋‹ค. ์ด์ฃผ์‹ค : ์ด๊ธˆ๋ฆผ ์—ญ - ์„ฑํ˜ธ ํ• ๋จธ๋‹ˆ์ด์ž ๋ณ‘๋ฅ ์˜ ์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ ์†๋ณด์Šน : ์ •์„ฑํ˜ธ ์—ญ - ๊ฑฐ๊ตฌ์ด์ง€๋งŒ ๋งˆ์Œ์€ ์•„์ง 6์‚ด ์–ด๋ฆฐ ์•„์ด. ๋งˆ์„ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ ๋ชจ๋‘๊ฐ€ ํ•จ๋ถ€๋กœ ๋Œ€ํ•˜๋Š” ์„ฑํ˜ธ์—๊ฒŒ ์„ฑ๋ชฉ์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ์œ ์ผํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์ธ๊ฐ„์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋Œ€ํ•ด์ฃผ์—ˆ๊ณ , ๊ทธ๋Ÿฐ ๋ชฉ์‚ฌ๋‹˜์„ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ฌด์—‡์ด๋“  ํ•˜๊ฒ ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋‹ค์งํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด์œคํฌ : ์–‘๊ณ„์žฅ ์—ญ - ์–‘๊ณ„์žฅ์„ ์šด์˜ํ•˜๋Š” ๋…ธ์ด๊ฐ. ์ฒœ๊ตญ์˜ ์ž๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ˆ„๊ตฌ๋ณด๋‹ค ๋ฐœ ๋น ๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ์›€์ง์ธ๋‹ค. ์šฐํ˜„ : ๋ถ•์–ด ์—ญ - ์•„๋‚ด๊ฐ€ ์ฃฝ๊ณ  ๊ณ ํ–ฅ ์›”์ถ”๋ฆฌ๋กœ ๋‹ค์‹œ ๋Œ์•„์™€ ๋‚š์‹œํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ์šด์˜. ์•„๋ฌด์—๊ฒŒ๋„ ๋‚ด๋น„์น˜์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋˜ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์†์„ ์„œ์šธ์—์„œ ์˜จ ์žฅ๋กœ๋ผ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์ด ํ›คํžˆ ๋“ค์—ฌ๋‹ค๋ณด๋Š” ๋“ฏํ•˜๋‹ค. ์žฅ์›์˜ : ๋ฐ•์น ์„ฑ ์—ญ - ๋ฏผ์ฒ ์˜ ๋™๋„ค ์„ ๋ฐฐ. ์›”์ถ”๋ฆฌ์—์„œ ์Šˆํผ๋ฅผ ์šด์˜ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ธ๊ฐ„์ ์ด๊ณ  ๋”ฐ๋œปํ•œ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ. ๊ตํšŒ์— ๋‚˜๊ฐ„ ์ดํ›„๋กœ ์•„๋‚ด์—๊ฒŒ ์ƒ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๋˜์‚ด์•„๋‚œ ๊ฒƒ๋งŒ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค. ๊น€์ˆ˜์ง„ : ๊น€๋ฏธ์„  ์—ญ - ์น ์„ฑ ์ฒ˜. ํ‰์ƒ ์—ด์‹ฌํžˆ ์‚ด์•„์™”๋Š”๋ฐ, ๋œ์ปฅ ํ์•”์— ๊ฑธ๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๊ตํšŒ๋ฅผ ๋‹ค๋‹ˆ๋ฉด์„œ ์ฃฝ์Œ์ด ๋‘๋ ต์ง€ ์•Š์•„์กŒ๋‹ค. ์„œ์˜ํ™” : ์˜์„  ๋ชจ ์—ญ - ๊ฐ•์ •ํฌ. ๋ฏผ์ฒ ๊ณผ ์˜์„ ์˜ ์—„๋งˆ. ๋น„๋ฃจํ•˜๊ธฐ๋งŒ ํ–ˆ๋˜ ์ธ์ƒ์ด ๊ตฌ์›์ž์™€๋„ ๊ฐ™์€ ์„ฑ๋ชฉ์‚ฌ๋‹˜์„ ๋งŒ๋‚œ ์ดํ›„ ๋ณ€ํ™”ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊น€๋ฏธํ™” : ๋Œ€๊ตฌ๋Œ ์—ญ ์๋‚ด ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค ์กฐ์žฌ์œค : ์‹ ํ•„๊ตฌ (์•„์—ญ: ์„œ์ƒ์›) ์—ญ - ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐํ•˜์ฃผ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ ์›”์ถ”๋ฆฌํŒŒ์ถœ์†Œ์žฅ. ๊ณ„๊ธ‰์€ ๊ฒฝ๊ฐ. ๊ณผ๊ฑฐ ๋ฏผ์ฒ ๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จ๋œ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ธ์ƒ์ด ํŒŒํƒ„ ๋‚ฌ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ƒ๊ฐํ•œ๋‹ค. ์–ด๋–ป๊ฒŒ ๋“  ์ฃฝ์ด๊ณ  ์‹ถ์„ ๋งŒํผ ๋ฏผ์ฒ ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ถ„๋…ธ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€๋“ํ•˜๋‹ค. ํ•œ์„ ํ™” : ๊ณ ์€์•„ ์—ญ - ์๋‚ด์— ์žˆ๋Š” cafe ์•„์ด๋ฆฌ์Šค ๋งˆ๋‹ด. ๋ฏผ์ฒ ๊ณผ ์–ด๋ฆฐ ์‹œ์ ˆ ์ž ๊น ๋งŒ๋‚˜๋‹ค ํ—ค์–ด์กŒ์ง€๋งŒ, ์—ฌ์ „ํžˆ ๊ทธ์—๊ฒŒ ์ž๊พธ ๋งˆ์Œ์ด ๊ฐ„๋‹ค. ๋ฐฑ์ˆ˜์žฅ : ์ˆ˜๋‹ฌ ์—ญ - ๋ฏผ์ฒ ์˜ ๋™๋„ค ํ›„๋ฐฐ. ๋ฏผ์ฒ ์˜ ์•ž์—์„  ์ฃฝ๋Š” ์‹œ๋Š‰๋„ ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ, ๋’ค์—์„  ๋ฌด์Šจ ์ƒ๊ฐ์„ ํ•  ์ง€ ๋ชจ๋ฅธ๋‹ค. ๋ฏผ์ฒ ์„ ์œ„๊ธฐ๋กœ ๋ชฐ์•„๋„ฃ์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ฐ€๋„ ์ค‘์š”ํ•œ ์ˆœ๊ฐ„์— ๊ทธ๋ฅผ ๋•๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ์™ธ ์ธ๋ฌผ ์ง„ํ˜„๋นˆ : ์ตœ์ง€์›… ์—ญ - ์ตœ๊ฒฝ์„์˜ ์ˆ˜ํ•˜. 3์ธ์กฐ ์ค‘ ๋ฆฌ๋”. ์ตœ๊ฒฝ์„์˜ ์กฐ์นด ์ฐจ์—ฝ : ์ด์ˆ˜ํ˜ธ ์—ญ - ์ตœ๊ฒฝ์„์˜ ์ˆ˜ํ•˜. ์ฒด๊ฒฉ์ด ๊ฑฐ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋‚จ์ž ๋ฉค๋ฒ„ ์ด์ƒ๋ฏธ : ์€์ง€ ์—ญ - ์ตœ๊ฒฝ์„์˜ ์ˆ˜ํ•˜. ์ตœ๊ฒฝ์„์˜ ์กฐ์ง ์ค‘ ์—ฌ์„ฑ ๋ฉค๋ฒ„ ์‹ฌ๋‹ฌ๊ธฐ : ๊ด‘๋ฏธ ์—ญ - ์ด์žฅ์˜ ๋”ธ ์œค์ข…๋นˆ : ์œ ํ™˜ํฌ ์—ญ - ๋Œ€๊ตฌ๋Œ์˜ ์•„๋“ค ๊น€๋™๋ฒ” : ์ •๋ฏผ ์—ญ - ์นดํŽ˜ '์•„์ด๋ฆฌ์Šค'์—์„œ ์ผํ•˜๋Š” ์•Œ๋ฐ”์ƒ ์ตœ์› : ๋ฐ•์„ฑ์‹  ์—ญ - ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐํ•˜์ฃผ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ ์›”์ถ”๋ฆฌํŒŒ์ถœ์†Œ ๊ฒฝ์‚ฌ ์ตœ๊ธฐ์„ญ : ๊น€์ค€ํƒœ ์—ญ - ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐํ•˜์ฃผ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ ์›”์ถ”๋ฆฌํŒŒ์ถœ์†Œ ๊ฒฝ์žฅ ์ด์„ค๊ตฌ : ์†ก ์˜์› ์—ญ - ๋ฏผ์ฒ ์˜ ๊ฐ๋ฐฉ ๋™๊ธฐ. ์ „์ง ์™ธ๊ณผ ์˜์‚ฌ์ด๋ฉฐ, ์ •ํ˜•, ์„ฑํ˜•, ํ‰๋ถ€ ์„ธ๊ฐ€์ง€ ๋‹ค ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ ์–‘ํฌ๋ช… : ์ • ๋„๋ น ์—ญ - ๋ฏผ์ฒ ์˜ ๊ฐ๋ฐฉ ๋™๊ธฐ ์œค์ข…๊ตฌ : ์˜์„  ๋ถ€ ์—ญ ๋ฐ•๊ธฐ์› : ์›๋กœ๋ชฉ์‚ฌ ์—ญ ์ตœ๋ฌธ์ˆ˜ : ์ตœ์žฅ๋กœ ์ฒ˜ ์—ญ ๋ฏผ๊ฒฝ์˜ฅ : ํ• ๋งค 1 ์—ญ ์†ก๊ด‘์ž : ํ• ๋งค 2 ์—ญ ๊น€์˜ํฌ : ํ• ๋งค 3 ์—ญ ์†์ƒ๊ฒฝ : ๋ฉ์น˜์žฌ์†Œ์ž ์—ญ ๊น€๋ฌธํ˜ธ : ๊ต๋„๊ด€ 1 ์—ญ ๊น€์˜์กฐ : ๊ต๋„๊ด€ 2 ์—ญ ์ด๋™๋ฏผ : ๊ณ ๋”ฉ 1 ์—ญ ์ด์กด์Šน : ๊ณ ๋”ฉ 2 ์—ญ ๋ฐฐ์žฌ์„ฑ : ๊ณ ๋”ฉ 3 ์—ญ ์—„์˜ฅ๋ž€ : ๊ณ ๊นƒ์ง‘ ์‚ฌ์žฅ ์—ญ ๊น€์Šนํ•œ ๊น€์ค€ : 6์„ธ ์•„์ด ์—ญ ์ด๊ด‘๋ชจ ๋ฐ•์ค€์ˆ˜ ํ•œ์—ฌ์šธ : ๊น€์–‘ ์—ญ ์˜ค๋‚œ์ฃผ : ์—ฌ๊ด€ ์ฃผ์ธ ์—ญ ๋ฐฐํ•œ์šฉ : ๋Œ€๋จธ๋ฆฌ ์—ญ ์„œ์ •ํ•˜ : ๋ฐ•์†Œ์žฅ ์—ญ ์ด์›์ง„ : ๊ตฌ๊ธ‰๋Œ€์› ์˜ค์ˆ˜ : ๊ตฌํšŒ์žฅ ์—ญ ๊น€์ฃผ์•„ : ๊ตฌํšŒ์žฅ๋ถ€์ธ ์—ญ ์„œํ˜œ๋นˆ : ๊ตฌํšŒ์žฅ ๋”ธ ์—ญ ์ตœํ™”์˜ : 60๋Œ€ ์•„์ €์”จ ์—ญ ์ตœ๊ต์‹ : ์นด์„ผํ„ฐ ์ง์› ์—ญ ์ฃผ๋ณ‘ํ•˜ : ๋Œ€ํ•™์ƒ ์—ญ ์„œ๊ด‘์žฌ : ๋Œ€ํ•™์ƒ ๋ถ€ ์—ญ ์„ฑ๋‚™๊ฒฝ : ์˜ค ์‚ฌ์žฅ ์—ญ - ๊ฐ•๋‚จ ๋ฃธ์‹ธ๋กฑ '์•„๋“œ๋ง' ์‚ฌ์žฅ. ์ตœ๊ฒฝ์„์˜ ๋™์—…์ž. ๋ณ‘๋ฅ ์„ ๊ฐ๊ธˆํ•˜๊ณ  ๋งˆ์•ฝ์„ ์ œ์กฐ ์ด๊ทœ์„ญ : ๊ณฝ ์ƒ๋ฌด ์—ญ - ๊ฐ•๋‚จ ๋ฃธ์‹ธ๋กฑ '์•„๋“œ๋ง' ์ƒ๋ฌด ์‹ ์žฌ๋„ : ๊ณต์ธ์ค‘๊ฐœ์‚ฌ ์—ญ ์•ˆ๋ ค์ง„ : ์ง์› ์—ญ ์†ก์ง„์šฐ ๋‚จ๋™ํ•˜ : ๋ถ€๋™์‚ฐ์—…์ž ์—ญ ์ตœ๋‚จ์šฑ : ์†๋‹˜ 1 ์—ญ ๊น€๊ฒฝํ›ˆ : ์†๋‹˜ 2 ์—ญ ๋ฐ•์šฉ์‹ : ์•ต์ปค ์—ญ ์—„์ง€๋งŒ : ๊น€์‹ ์žฌ ํ˜•์‚ฌ ์—ญ - ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์ง€๋ฐฉ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ฒญ ํ˜•์‚ฌ. ๊ณ„๊ธ‰์€ ๊ฒฝ์œ„. ํ™ฉ์น˜์ˆ˜ ์‚ด์ธ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด ๋‹ด๋‹น ํ•œ์žฌ์˜ : ํ™ฉ์น˜์ˆ˜ ์—ญ - ์„ฑ์ฒ ์šฐ ๋ชฉ์‚ฌ์™€ ์„ฑ๊ด€๊ณ„๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์กŒ๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ์ž์‚ดํ•œ ์ง€์„ ์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€ ๊ณ ๋งŒ๊ทœ : ๊ตฌ๊ธ‰ 2 ์—ญ ์‹ฌํ˜œ๋ฆผ : ์—ฌ์‹ ๋„ 1 ์—ญ ํ•จ์ง„์„ฑ : ํ˜•์‚ฌ ์—ญ ์ •์˜๋„ : ์•ต์ปค ์—ญ ์ฑ„์œคํฌ : ์‹๋‹น ์ฃผ์ธ ์—ญ ์ด์žฌ์€ : ์ฃผ์ธ ์•„์คŒ๋งˆ ์—ญ ๊น€์žฌ์ฒ  : ์น˜ํ‚จ์ง‘ ์‚ฌ์žฅ ์—ญ ์‹ ์•ˆ์‹ : ์ง์› 1 ์—ญ ์˜ค๋‹ค๊ฒฝ : ์ง์› 2 ์—ญ ์‹œ์ฒญ๋ฅ  ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋ชฉ๋ก (ใ„ฑ) 2019๋…„ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋ชฉ๋ก ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ๊ตฌํ•ด์ค˜ 2 ๊ณต์‹์‚ฌ์ดํŠธ 2019๋…„ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๋ฒ”์ฃ„ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ 2010๋…„๋Œ€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ ์• ๋‹ˆ๋ฉ”์ด์…˜์„ ๋ฐ”ํƒ•์œผ๋กœ ํ•œ ์ž‘ํ’ˆ ์ŠคํŠœ๋””์˜ค ๋“œ๋ž˜๊ณค ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ ํžˆ๋“ ์‹œํ€€์Šค ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ 2019๋…„์— ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ TV ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ 2019๋…„์— ์ข…๋ฃŒํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ TV ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ OCN ์ˆ˜๋ชฉ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Save%20Me%202
Save Me 2
Save Me 2 () is a 2019 South Korean television series starring Uhm Tae-goo, Chun Ho-jin, Esom and Kim Young-min. It is the sequel to the 2017 series Save Me and is based on the 2013 animation movie The Fake. The series aired on OCN's Wednesdays and Thursdays at 23:00 KST time slot from May 8 to June 27, 2019. Synopsis A pseudo-religious group sows discord in the village of Wolchoori. Cast Main Uhm Tae-goo as Kim Min-chul Chun Ho-jin as Choi Kyung-suk Esom as Kim Young-sun Kim Young-min as Sung Chul-woo Supporting Im Ha-ryong as Park Duk-ho Sung Hyuk as Jung Byung-ryul Han Sun-hwa as Go Eun-ah Jo Jae-yoon as Shin Pil-goo Woo Hyun as Boongeo Oh Yeon-ah as Jin-sook Jang Won-young as Chil-sung Kim Soo-jin as Chil-sung's wife Jeon Ji-hoo as Choi Ji Woong Seo Woo-jin as Seo-joon Production The first script reading took place in February 2019 in Sangam, Seoul, South Korea. Ratings References External links OCN television dramas Korean-language television shows 2019 South Korean television series debuts 2019 South Korean television series endings South Korean thriller television series South Korean mystery television series Television series by Studio Dragon Sequel television series Television series by Hidden Sequence
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%8B%A0%EC%9E%85%EC%82%AC%EA%B4%80%20%EA%B5%AC%ED%95%B4%EB%A0%B9
์‹ ์ž…์‚ฌ๊ด€ ๊ตฌํ•ด๋ น
ใ€Š์‹ ์ž…์‚ฌ๊ด€ ๊ตฌํ•ด๋ นใ€‹์€ 2019๋…„ 7์›” 17์ผ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2019๋…„ 9์›” 26์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋œ ๋ฌธํ™”๋ฐฉ์†ก ์ˆ˜๋ชฉ ๋ฏธ๋‹ˆ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ์ด๋‹ค. ์ค„๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ ๊ฒฉ๋™์˜ 19์„ธ๊ธฐ ์ดˆ '์‚ฌํ•„์„ ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ณ„์ง‘'์ด๋ผ๋ฉฐ ์†๊ฐ€๋ฝ์งˆ๋ฐ›์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋ณ„์ข… ์ทจ๊ธ‰๋ฐ›๋˜ ์—ฌ์‚ฌ๋“ค์ด ์ฃผ์ธ๊ณต. ๋‚จ๋…€๊ฐ€ ์œ ๋ณ„ํ•˜๊ณ  ์‹ ๋ถ„์—๋Š” ๊ท€์ฒœ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ํ•ด๋ฌต์€ ์ง„๋ฆฌ์™€ ๋งž์„œ๋ฉฐ ๋ณ€ํ™”๋ผ๋Š” ์†Œ์ค‘ํ•œ ์”จ์•—์„ ์‹ฌ๋Š” ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๊ทธ๋ฆฐ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ. ๋“ฑ์žฅ์ธ๋ฌผ ์ฃผ์š” ์ธ๋ฌผ ์‹ ์„ธ๊ฒฝ : ๊ตฌํ•ด๋ น / ์„œํฌ์—ฐ ์—ญ (์•„์—ญ ์ •์œคํ•˜) - 26์„ธ. ์˜ˆ๋ฌธ๊ด€ ๊ถŒ์ง€(ๆฌŠ็Ÿฅ) ์—ฌ์‚ฌ(ๅฅณๅฒ), ๋ฌธ์ง์˜ ๋”ธ. ์žฌ๊ฒฝ์˜ ์˜๋ถ“ ์—ฌ๋™์ƒ ์ฐจ์€์šฐ : ์ด๋ฆผ ์—ญ - 20์„ธ. ์™•์œ„ ๊ณ„์Šน ์„œ์—ด 2์ˆœ์œ„ ๋„์›๋Œ€๊ตฐ, ์—ฐ์• ์†Œ์„ค๊ฐ€ (ํ•„๋ช… ๋งคํ™”์„ ์ƒ). ํœ˜์˜๊ตฐ ์ด๊ฒธ์˜ ์ ์žฅ์ž. ํ•ด๋ น์˜ ์ง‘ ๊ณต์ •ํ™˜ : ๊ตฌ์žฌ๊ฒฝ ์—ญ (์•„์—ญ ์—„์ง€์„ฑ) - 37์„ธ. ํ•ด๋ น์˜ ์˜ค๋น . ๋„ˆ๊ทธ๋Ÿฝ๊ณ  ์ž์• ๋กœ์šด๋ฐ๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ๋ชธ๊ฐ€์ง ๋˜ํ•œ ๊ณ ์šด ์†Œ๋ฌธ๋‚œ ๋™์ƒ๋ฐ”๋ณด . ํ•ด๋ น์˜ ๋ˆˆ์ด ์ •์ˆ˜๋ฆฌ ๊ผญ๋Œ€๊ธฐ์— ๋‹ฌ๋ฆฌ๊ฒŒ ๋งŒ๋“  ์žฅ๋ณธ์ธ์ด๋ผ ๋ณด์—ฌ์ง ์–‘์กฐ์•„ : ์„ค๊ธˆ ์—ญ - ๋…ธ์ฒ˜๋…€ ํ•ด๋ น ์•„์”จ ๊ฑฑ์ •์— ๋ณ•๋“ค ๋‚  ์—†๋Š” ์—„๋งˆ ๊ฐ™๊ณ  ์–ธ๋‹ˆ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋ชธ์ข… ์ด๊ด€ํ›ˆ : ๊ฐ์‡  ์—ญ - 32์„ธ. ํ•ด๋ น๋„ค ๋…ธ๋น„, ์žฌ๊ฒฝ์˜ ์„œ๋ž˜์› ์‹œ์ ˆ ์นœ๊ตฌ ๋™์ƒ. ๋ง๋„ ์—†๊ณ  ํ‘œ์ •๋„ ์—†์ง€๋งŒ, ์žฌ๊ฒฝ์˜ ๋ณธ์‹ฌ์„ ์•Œ๊ณ  ์ดํ•ดํ•˜๋Š” ์œ ์ผํ•œ ์ธ๋ฌผ ์™•์‹ค๊ณผ ์กฐ์ • ๋ฐ•๊ธฐ์›… : ์ด์ง„ ์—ญ - 28์„ธ. ์™•์„ธ์ž. ๋„์›๋Œ€๊ตฐ ์ด๋ฆผ์˜ ํ˜• ๊น€๋ฏผ์ƒ : ์ดํƒœ ์—ญ - 54์„ธ. ํ˜„์™•. ํ•จ์˜๊ตฐ ์ตœ๋•๋ฌธ : ๋ฏผ์ตํ‰ ์—ญ - 59์„ธ. ์ขŒ์˜์ •. ๋ฏผ์šฐ์›์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€ ๊น€์—ฌ์ง„ : ๋Œ€๋น„ ์ž„์”จ ์—ญ - 65์„ธ. ์„ธ์ž์—๊ฒŒ ํž˜์ด ๋˜์–ด์ฃผ๋Š” ์ธ์žํ•œ ๋Œ€๋น„๋งˆ๋งˆ. ์™•์„ธ์ž์™€ ๋„์›๋Œ€๊ตฐ์˜ ํ• ๋จธ๋‹ˆ ์˜ˆ๋ฌธ๊ด€ ํ•œ๋ฆผ ์ด์ง€ํ›ˆ : ๋ฏผ์šฐ์› ์—ญ - 28์„ธ. ์ •7ํ’ˆ ๋ด‰๊ต. ์กฐ์ •์‹ค์„ธ ์ขŒ์˜์ • ๋ฏผ์ตํ‰์˜ ์•„๋“ค ํ—ˆ์ •๋„ : ์–‘์‹œํ–‰ ์—ญ - 37์„ธ. ์ •7ํ’ˆ ๋ด‰๊ต. ํ‘œ์ •์€ ๋Š˜ ์ฉ์–ด์žˆ๊ณ , ์ž์„ธ๋Š” ์‚๋”ฑํ•˜๊ณ , ๊ทผ๋ฌดํƒœ๋„๋Š” ๋”๋”์šฑ ์‚๋”ฑํ•œ ๋ถˆ๋Ÿ‰์‚ฌ๊ด€. ๊ถŒ์ง€ ์‹ ๋ถ„์ธ ์—ฌ์‚ฌ๋“ค์„ ์กธ์ง€์— ์„œ๋ฆฌ๋กœ ๋งŒ๋“  ์žฅ๋ณธ์ธ. ๊ฒ‰๋ณด๊ธฐ์—” ๊ผฐ๋Œ€, ์‹ค์€ ํ›„๋ฐฐ๋“ค์„ ๋ฌด์ง„์žฅ ์•„๋‚Œ ๊ฐ•ํ›ˆ : ํ˜„๊ฒฝ๋ฌต ์—ญ - 31์„ธ. ์ •8ํ’ˆ ๋Œ€๊ต. ํ•ด๋ น์˜ ์˜ˆ๋ฌธ๊ด€ ์ƒํ™œ์„ ๊ดด๋กญํžˆ๋Š” ์‹ฌ์ˆ ๊ถ‚์€ ์„ ๋ฐฐ ๋‚จํƒœ์šฐ : ์†๊ธธ์Šน ์—ญ - 35์„ธ. ์ •8ํ’ˆ ๋Œ€๊ต. ํ‘ธ๊ทผํ•œ ์ธ์ƒ๋งŒํผ ํ‘ธ๊ทผํ•œ ๋งˆ์Œ์”จ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง„ ๋ถ์ดŒ ํ• ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€ ์œค์ •์„ญ : ํ™ฉ์žฅ๊ตฐ ์—ญ - 28์„ธ. ์ •9ํ’ˆ ๊ฒ€์—ด. ๊ทธ์ € ์—ญ์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ์ œ์ผ ์žฌ๋ฐŒ๊ณ  ์—ญ์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ํ‰ ์ œ์ผ ์ข‹์€, ๋ผ›์†๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ฌธ๊ณผ์ธ ์—ดํ˜ˆ์‚ฌ๊ด€ ์ง€๊ฑด์šฐ : ์„ฑ์„œ๊ถŒ ์—ญ - 29์„ธ. ์ •9ํ’ˆ ๊ฒ€์—ด. ์šฐ์›๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์‚ฌ๊ด€์˜ ํ’ˆ์œ„๋ฅผ ๋‹ด๋‹นํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ฐ˜๋“ฏํ•œ ์„ ๋น„. ์˜คํฌ์ค€ : ์•ˆํ™์ต ์—ญ - 22์„ธ. ์ •9ํ’ˆ ๊ฒ€์—ด. ๋ฐฐ์•Œ๋„ ์—†๊ณ  ์ค๋Œ€๋„ ์—†๋Š” ์˜ˆ๋ฌธ๊ด€์˜ ๊ณต์‹ ๋”ธ๋ž‘์ด ์ด์ •ํ•˜ : ๊น€์น˜๊ตญ ์—ญ - 19์„ธ. ์ •9ํ’ˆ ๊ฒ€์—ด. ์–ด๋ฆฐ ๋‚˜์ด์— ์‚ฌ๊ด€์ด ๋œ ์ˆ˜์žฌ. ํ•œํ‰์ƒ ์ฑ…๋งŒ ์ฝ๊ณ  ์‚ฐ์ง€๋ผ ์•ž๋’ค ๊ฝ‰๊ฝ‰ ๋ง‰ํ˜€ ์œตํ†ต์„ฑ์ด๋ผ๊ณ ๋Š” ์—†๊ณ , ์›ฌ๋งŒํ•œ ์˜๊ฐ๋ณด๋‹ค ๊ณ ์ง€์‹ํ•จ ์˜ˆ๋ฌธ๊ด€ ๊ถŒ์ง€ ๋ฐ•์ง€ํ˜„ : ์†ก์‚ฌํฌ ์—ญ - 18์„ธ. ์ด์กฐ์ •๋ž‘ ์†ก์žฌ์ฒœ์˜ ๋”ธ ์ด์˜ˆ๋ฆผ : ์˜ค์€์ž„ ์—ญ - 21์„ธ. ๋…น๋ด‰๋‚ ๋งŒ ๊ธฐ๋‹ค๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์กฐ์„ ์˜ ์„œ๊ธ€ํ”ˆ ์ง์žฅ์ธ ์žฅ์œ ๋นˆ : ํ—ˆ์•„๋ž€ ์—ญ - 19์„ธ. ํ‰๋…„์ด ๋“ค์–ด ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์ด ๊ตถ๋Š”๋‹จ ์†Œ์‹์— โ€˜๊ทธ๋Ÿผ ๊ณ ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋จน์œผ๋ฉด ๋˜์ž–์•„์š”?โ€™ ๋˜๋ฌป๋Š” ์ดˆํŠน๊ธ‰ ๊ธˆ์ˆ˜์ € ์ฃผ๋ณ€ ์ธ๋ฌผ ์ „์ต๋ น : ๋ชจํ™” ์—ญ (์•„์—ญ ์กฐ๋ฏผ์•„)- 41์„ธ. ์ง™์€ ๋…น์ƒ‰ ๋ณต๋ฉด์„ ์“ฐ๊ณ  ์‹ ์ถœ๊ท€๋ชฐํ•˜๋Š” ์˜๋ฌธ์˜ ์—ฌ์ธ ์„ฑ์ง€๋ฃจ : ํ—ˆ์‚ผ๋ณด ์—ญ - 45์„ธ. ๋…น์„œ๋‹น ๋‚ด๊ด€ (์ •5ํ’ˆ) ๋ฅ˜ํƒœํ˜ธ : ์†ก์žฌ์ฒœ ์—ญ - 55์„ธ. ์ด์กฐ์ •๋ž‘ ๊น€์šฉ์šด : ๊ท€์žฌ ์—ญ - 35์„ธ. ์ตํ‰์˜ ์ˆ˜ํ•˜. ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์„ ๋ฒ ๋Š” ๋ฐ ๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ๋‚Œ์ด ์—†๊ณ , ๋ช…์„ ์œ„ํ•ด์„œ๋ผ๋ฉด ๋ฌด์—‡์ด๋“  ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์Œ ๊ทธ ์™ธ ์ธ๋ฌผ ์œ ์„ธ๋ก€ : ๋Œ€๋น„์ „ ์ƒ๊ถ ์—ญ ์„œ๊ด‘์žฌ ๋ฐ•์˜์ˆ˜ : ๊น€์„œ๋ฐฉ ์—ญ - ์„œ์ฑ…์  ์ฃผ์ธ ์šฐ๋ฏธํ™” ์†Œํฌ์ • ๊ธธ์ •์šฐ ๊น€์ง€์•ˆ ๊ฐ•๋‹คํ˜„ ํ™ฉํ˜„์ • ์ •์ˆ˜๋ฒ” ์ฐจ๊ด‘์ˆ˜ ์ •์ฐฌ : ๋Œ€์ œํ•™ ์—ญ - ๋ฌธ์˜๋Œ€๊ฐ. ํ์ฃผ์‚ฌ๊ฑด ๋‹น์‹œ ์ผ๊ธฐ์ฒญ ๋‹ด๋‹น ๋‚จ์ •์šฐ ๊น€๊ท€์„  ๊ถŒํ™์„ ์กฐ์žฌ์™„ ์œค์—ฌํ•™ ์ตœ์ •์€ ์ •์œ ๋‚˜ ๊น€๋‹จ์šฐ ํ•˜๋ฃจ๋น„ ์กฐ์„ ๊ธฐ ๊ฐ•๋ฏผ์„œ : ์ƒ๊ฐ์‹œ ์—ญ ์ด์—ฐ์„œ : ์œ ์ƒ ์—ญ ๊น€์œคํ˜ธ : ์œ ์ƒ ์—ญ ์žฅํ˜ธ์ค€ : ์žฌ๊ฒฝ์˜ ์นœ๊ตฌ ์—ญ ๊น€์˜ˆ๋ฆฐ : ์„ธ์ž๋นˆ ์—ญ - ์™•์„ธ์ž ์ด์ง„์˜ ์ •๋น„. ๋นˆ๊ถ ์ •์˜ˆ๋นˆ : ์„ ์ • ์—ญ ํŠน๋ณ„์ถœ์—ฐ ์„œ์˜์ฃผ : ์ด์Šนํ›ˆ ์—ญ - ํ•ด๋ น์˜ ์ •ํ˜ผ์ž ์ด์ข…ํ˜ : ์™ˆ์งœํŒจ ๋‘๋ชฉ ์—ญ ์กฐ์žฌ์œค : ๊น€์ฒ™์  ์—ญ - ์˜๊ธˆ๋ถ€ ๋„์‚ฌ ํŒŒ๋น„์•™ ์ฝ”๋ฅด๋น„๋…ธ : ์Ÿ ๋ฐ”ํ‹ฐ์ŠคํŠธ ๋ฐ”ํํ…”๋ ˆ๋ฏธ ์—ญ - ๋ฒ•๋ž€์„œ์ธ (ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ์ด์–‘์ธ) ์œค์ข…ํ›ˆ : ์ด๊ฒธ ์—ญ - ๋„์›๋Œ€๊ตฐ ์ด๋ฆผ์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€. ํ์ฃผ ์ด์Šนํšจ : ์„œ๋ฌธ์ง ์—ญ - ๊ตฌํ•ด๋ น์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€ (์„œ๋ž˜์›์˜ ์ค‘์‹ฌ์ธ๋ฌผ) ๊น€ํ˜„์ˆ˜ : ์˜ํ™” ์—ญ ์ดฌ์˜์ง€ ๊ด‘ํ•œ๋ฃจ์› ์—ฐํ™”์ • ์ฐฝ๋•๊ถ ๋Œ€์žฅ๊ธˆํŒŒํฌ ์†Œ์ˆ˜์„œ์› ๋ฌธ๊ฒฝ์ƒˆ์žฌ๋„๋ฆฝ๊ณต์› ์‹œ์ฒญ๋ฅ  ์ˆ˜์ƒ ๋ชฉ๋ก 2019๋…„ MBC ์—ฐ๊ธฐ๋Œ€์ƒ ์ตœ๊ณ ์˜ 1๋ถ„ ์ปคํ”Œ์ƒ (์‹ ์„ธ๊ฒฝ, ์ฐจ์€์šฐ) 2019๋…„ MBC ์—ฐ๊ธฐ๋Œ€์ƒ ์ˆ˜๋ชฉ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋ถ€๋ฌธ ๋‚จ์ž ์กฐ์—ฐ์ƒ (์ด์ง€ํ›ˆ) 2019๋…„ MBC ์—ฐ๊ธฐ๋Œ€์ƒ ์ˆ˜๋ชฉ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋ถ€๋ฌธ ์—ฌ์ž ์ตœ์šฐ์ˆ˜ ์—ฐ๊ธฐ์ƒ (์‹ ์„ธ๊ฒฝ) 2019๋…„ MBC ์—ฐ๊ธฐ๋Œ€์ƒ ์ˆ˜๋ชฉ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋ถ€๋ฌธ ๋‚จ์ž ์šฐ์ˆ˜์ƒ (์ฐจ์€์šฐ) ๊ฒฐ๋ฐฉ ์‚ฌ์œ  2019๋…„ 9์›” 11์ผ : ใ€Š์ถ”์„์—๋„ ๋‚˜ ํ˜ผ์ž ์‚ฐ๋‹คใ€‹ ๋ฐฉ์†ก ํŽธ์„ฑ์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ๊ฒฐ๋ฐฉ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ 9์›” 12์ผ : ใ€Š์ถ”์„ํŠน์ง‘ ๋‚˜ ํ˜ผ์ž ์‚ฐ๋‹ค ๋„ค ์–ผ๊ฐ„์ด ์ŠคํŽ˜์…œใ€‹ ๋ฐฉ์†ก ํŽธ์„ฑ์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ๊ฒฐ๋ฐฉ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฐธ๊ณ  ์‚ฌํ•ญ ์ด ํ™”๋ฉด์€ ๋ ˆํ„ฐ๋ฐ•์Šค๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ์‹ ์ž…์‚ฌ๊ด€ ๊ตฌํ•ด๋ น ๊ณต์‹ ํ™ˆํŽ˜์ด์ง€ 2019๋…„ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋ฌธํ™”๋ฐฉ์†ก ์ˆ˜๋ชฉ ๋ฏธ๋‹ˆ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ ๋ฌธํ™”๋ฐฉ์†ก์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๊น€ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜ ์‹œ๋‚˜๋ฆฌ์˜ค ์ž‘ํ’ˆ ์ดˆ๋ก๋ฑ€๋ฏธ๋””์–ด์˜ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๋กœ๋งจ์Šค ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ 2019๋…„์— ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ TV ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ 2019๋…„์— ์ข…๋ฃŒํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ TV ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ 2010๋…„๋Œ€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rookie%20Historian%20Goo%20Hae-ryung
Rookie Historian Goo Hae-ryung
Rookie Historian Goo Hae-ryung () is a 2019 South Korean television series starring Shin Se-kyung, in the title role as a free-spirited female historian, and Cha Eun-woo, as a prince working underground as a romance novelist. It is also a fictionalisation of part of the story of the Veritable Records of the Joseon Dynasty and their right to be considered a true history. The series aired on MBC's Wednesdays and Thursdays at 21:00 KST time slot from July 17 to September 26, 2019, with Netflix carrying the series internationally. Synopsis The scenario intertwines two storylines. One of them occurs in a "nowadays" placed in the early 19th century of Joseon. The other occurred twenty years earlier (white horse year, 1810). The first one is treated lightly, in the Sungkyunkwan Scandal vein, with caricatures , jokes, gimmicks, students fights, etc. The second one, only depicted by short flash-backs, is about the unjust situation of the rank and file people, and the brutal suppression of anyone who dares to object. Nowadays, Nokseodang In the Joseon Dynasty, women were objectified and undervalued. But free-spirited lady Goo Hae-ryung is brave enough to follow her own view of life. Still single at 26 years old, she focuses on studying and gaining knowledge, and in defending those who are wronged and abused. Meanwhile, the young and handsome 20-year-old Prince Dowon has been living his life alone at the Nokseodang ็ถ ๅถผๅ ‚ (green island pavilion). Isolated inside the Huwon Garden, he has to stay away from the royal Court and finds comfort by writing hangul romance novels. Published under the pen name Maehwa ๆข…่Šฑ (plum blossom), these novels become famous all over Hanyang, especially to women readers. The two main characters meet, and this first meeting sparks a war of preferences. But politics disturb the romance. Suddenly, Korean books and European translations are banned, confiscated and burned. All the beard bearing red robes at court are infuriated that "so many noble ladies ran away to find the love of their life after reading Maehwa's books" . But this is only a "just cause". The real target is "The Story of Hodam", a book about events that occurred twenty years earlier. In their frenzy to search and destroy every single copy of this book, the king and councilor Min Ik-pyeong go so far as ask for the recruitment of female historians, with the intent of planting spies in each chamber of the Royal Palace. As a result, four female apprentices (Goo Hae-ryung among them) are selected and added to the existing eight recorders. They write the conversations between the royals and their subjects in the everyday collection of sachaek ์‚ฌ์ฑ… which will be compiled into the Veritable Records of the Joseon Dynasty. Many gender stereotypes surface, only to be derided... and overcome. The twelve historians become embroiled in disputes with the Court, asserting their right under law to record all conversations between the royal family and courtiers, and even go on strike against the king. A smallpox epidemic will be the event that reconnects the two storylines. On the one hand, members of the court speculate on traditional remedies, and even attempt to kill the Prince by sending him to the infested provinces. On the other hand, Dowon organizes the state answer, seizing and distributing food while applying the ็‰›็—˜็จฎๆ›ธ, ็‘›็œผ (vaccination treaty, by Yeongan) that was provided by the mysterious Moh-wa. Hae-ryung remembers being vaccinated by her father in the past and convinces the Prince to prove the method by being the first patient to be inocculated. Twenty years ago, Seoraewon A set of flash-backs disseminated all across the episodes describes the events of "twenty years ago". The former King, Yi Gyeom, Prince Huiyeong, styled Hodam, founded Seoraewon, together with Seo Mun-jik, styled Yeongan. The later was the dean, while Hodam was one of the teachers. The leading team was completed by Barthelemy Dominique, a medicine teacher, who was sent by the Paris Foreign Missions Society. As a result, Seoraewon was a school of Western studies aimed at educating people regardless of social class or gender. The Seoraewon name ๆ›™ไพ†้™ข itself has the meaning of "Where Dawn Arrives". This is where Moh-wa learned vaccination and surgery. A conservative reaction ensued, led by Min Ik-pyeong. A forged letter of the King, allegedly saying "send more priests, and turn Joseon into a Catholic country" served as "just cause" for a massacre. Among the rare escapees were Dowon, the newborn son of Hodam and the 6 year-old Hae-ryung, the daughter of Yeongan. The series ends three years after "nowadays". Min Ik-pyeong and his proxy king are gone and Seoraewon is reinstated. Prince Yi Jin is in charge of the throne. Dowon can live in leisure outside of the Palace, wandering across the world, while Hae-ryung becomes a full-ranked member of the Yemungwan. Prince Yi Rim (Dowon) and Hae-ryung are still in a relationship but not married. They find time to travel together. Quotation (Goo Hae-ryung). "Even if you slash my throat, our brushes will not stop writing. If I die, another historian will take my place; if you kill that historian, another will take their place. Even if you kill every historian in this land, and take away all the paper and brushes, you won't be able to stop us. From mouth to mouth, teacher to student, elder to child, history will be told. That is the power of truth." Cast Main In the Netflix release, the following three characters are put forward in the opening sequence of each episode: Shin Se-kyung as Goo Hae-ryung (born Seo Hee-yeon) A noble lady who becomes one of the four female historians of the royal court. She is the daughter of Seo Moon-jik, the deceased dean of Seoraewon, and has been living with her guardian Jae-kyeong whom she regards as her older brother. She is among those Joseon women wanting to enforce their independence, moral and material as well, and to voice their ideas and opinions. As an historian, she is recognized as someone brave who does not fear anyone, even the King himself. She often cracks jokes even in the most dire circumstances, for example when she is locked in jail. Cha Eun-woo as Yi Rim (Prince Dowon) The first son of the dethroned King Huiyeong Yi Gyeom and the real heir to the throne. Not knowing his true lineage, he secretly works as a romance novelist under his nom de plume "Maehwa,". He does not involve himself in political matters, and regards his uncle King Yi Tae as his father and his cousin Crown Prince Yi Jin as his older brother. Spelled ๅณถ้ , Dowon means "Remote Island". Until he meets Hae-ryung, Yi Rim leads a pathologically lonely existence. She is his first and only friend. Park Ki-woong as Crown Prince Yi Jin People around Hae-ryung Gong Jung-hwan as Goo Jae-kyeong Hae-ryung's guardian; former student of medicine and Mo-hwa's classmate in the Seoraewon. He forged the letter used as a "just cause" for the Seorawon massacre. Later, his remorse made him write the banned book The Story of Hodam. Yang Jo-a as Seol-geum Hae-ryung's caretaker and confidant. She is a servant girl who lives vicariously through Hae-ryung's romantic adventures. Lee Kwan-hoon as Gak-soi Royal household and court Kim Min-sang as King Hamyeong Yi Tae He reluctantly let Yi Rim live but is threatened by Yi Rim's superior claim to the throne. From the beginning the King tries to neutralize Yi Rim as a rival, through sheer neglect. Choi Deok-moon as Left State Councillor Min Ik-pyeong Kim Ye-rin as Crown Princess Min Woo-hee Kim Yeo-jin as Queen Dowager Yim People from the Office of Royal Decrees (Yemun-gwan) The elders Lee Ji-hoon as Min Woo-won Heo Jeong-do as Yang Si-haeng Kang Hoon as Hyeon Kyeong-mook Nam Tae-woo as Son Gil-seung Yoon Jung-sub as Hwang Jang-goon Ji Gun-woo as Seong Seo-kwon Oh Hee-joon as Ahn Hong-ik Lee Jung-ha as Kimchi Guuk The other three female apprentices Park Ji-hyun as Song Sa-hee Lee Ye-rim as Oh Eun-im Jang Yoo-bin as Heo Ah-ran Others Jeon Ye-seo as Mo-hwa, a confidant of the Queen Dowager, skilled in archery, former student of medicine in the Seoraewon Sung Ji-ru as Heo Sam-bo, Prince Yi Rim's eunuch. He gives some atrocious courtship tips to Yi Rim. Ryu Tae-ho as Song Jae-cheon, "M. Yes", father of Song Sa-hee Kim Yong-un as Gwi Jae, Min Ik-pyeong's handy man Special appearances Seo Young-joo as Lee Seung-hoon : Hae-ryung husband-to-be, then magistrate of Songhwahyeon, E07 Fabien Yoon as: Jean Baptiste Barthรฉlemy - a beomnanseoin (French national) who came to Joseon to look for his older brother Dominique - Jean's deceased older brother; teacher of medicine in the Seoraewon Yoon Jong-hoon as Prince Huiyeong Yi Gyeom (a.k.a. Hodam) The dethroned King and Prince Yi Rim's biological father Lee Seung-hyo as Seo Moon-jik (a.k.a. Yeongan) Hae-ryung's biological father who was executed for treason charges 20 years ago. He was the dean of Seoraewon Lee Do-yeop as Shim Geum-yeol. Woo Mi-hwa as Go Hae-ryungโ€™s teacher. Production The drama's entire 13 billion won budget was financed by Netflix. Yeolhwajeong Pavilionโ€”located in Ganggol Village, Deungnyang-myeon, Boseong Countyโ€”is one of the filming locations of the series. Original soundtrack Part 1 Part 2 Part 3 Part 4 Part 5 Part 6 Viewership Awards and nominations Notes References External links MBC TV television dramas 2019 South Korean television series debuts 2019 South Korean television series endings South Korean historical television series South Korean romance television series Television series by Chorokbaem Media Korean-language Netflix exclusive international distribution programming Television series set in the Joseon dynasty
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%9D%B4%EB%AA%BD%20%28%EB%93%9C%EB%9D%BC%EB%A7%88%29
์ด๋ชฝ (๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ)
ใ€Š์ด๋ชฝใ€‹(็•ฐๅคข)์€ 2019๋…„ 5์›” 4์ผ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2019๋…„ 7์›” 13์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ฐฉ์˜๋œ ๋ฌธํ™”๋ฐฉ์†ก ์ฃผ๋ง ํŠน๋ณ„๊ธฐํš ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ๋กœ, ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ์ž„์‹œ์ •๋ถ€ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฝ 100์ฃผ๋…„์„ ๊ธฐ๋…ํ•˜๋Š” ํŠน์ง‘ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ์ด๋‹ค. ์ค„๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ ์ผ์ œ ๊ฐ•์ ๊ธฐ ์กฐ์„ ์„ ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฝ์œผ๋กœ ์ผ๋ณธ์ธ ์†์— ์ž๋ž€ ์กฐ์„ ์ธ ์˜์‚ฌ ์ด์˜์ง„๊ณผ ๋ฌด์žฅํ•œ ๋น„๋ฐ€๊ฒฐ์‚ฌ ์˜์—ด๋‹จ์žฅ ๊น€์›๋ด‰์ด ํŽผ์น˜๋Š” ์ฒฉ๋ณด ์•ก์…˜ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ. ๋“ฑ์žฅ์ธ๋ฌผ ์ฃผ์š” ์ธ๋ฌผ ์ด์š”์›: ์ด์˜์ง„ ์—ญ - 36์„ธ. ์™ธ๊ณผ์˜์‚ฌ ์œ ์ง€ํƒœ: ๊น€์›๋ด‰ ์—ญ - 39์„ธ. ์˜์—ด๋‹จ์žฅ ์ž„์ฃผํ™˜: ํ›„์ฟ ๋‹ค ์‚ฌ๋ถ€๋กœ ์—ญ - 32์„ธ. ์กฐ์„ ์ด๋…๋ถ€ ๋ฒ•๋ฌด๊ตญ ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ ๋‚จ๊ทœ๋ฆฌ: ๋ฏธํ‚ค ์—ญ - 29์„ธ. ์†ก๋ณ‘์ˆ˜์˜ ์ˆ˜์–‘ ๋”ธ. ๊ฒฝ์„ฑ๊ตฌ๋ฝ๋ถ€ ๊ฐ€์ˆ˜ ์˜์ง„์˜ ์ฃผ๋ณ€ ์ธ๋ฌผ ์ดํ•ด์˜: ํžˆ๋กœ์‹œ ์—ญ - 54์„ธ. ์˜์ง„์˜ ์–‘์•„๋ฒ„์ง€. ์ด๋…๋ถ€๋ณ‘์› ๋ถ€์›์žฅ. ํ—Œ๋ณ‘๋Œ€ ์†Œ์žฅ ์ด์˜์ˆ™: ๊น€ํ˜„์˜ฅ ์—ญ - 51์„ธ. ์˜์ง„๋„ค ์ง‘์‚ฌ. ์–ด๋ฆฐ ์˜์ง„์„ ์‹ค์ œ๋กœ ํ‚ค์šฐ๋‹ค์‹œํ”ผ ํ•จ ๊น€ํƒœ์šฐ: ์œ ํƒœ์ค€ ์—ญ - 42์„ธ. ํ•œ์ธ ์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ด์ฒ˜. ์˜์ง„์˜ ์„ ๋ฐฐ (ํŠน๋ณ„์ถœ์—ฐ) ์œค์ง€ํ˜œ: ์—์Šค๋” ์—ญ - 40์„ธ. ์กฐ์„ ์ธ ๋‚ด๊ณผ์˜์‚ฌ (ํŠน๋ณ„์ถœ์—ฐ) ์˜์—ด๋‹จ ์กฐ๋ณต๋ž˜: ๊น€๋‚จ์˜ฅ ์—ญ - 35์„ธ. ์˜์—ด๋‹จ์›. ์–ผ๊ตด์„ ๋“œ๋Ÿฌ๋‚ด๊ธฐ ์‰ฝ์ง€ ์•Š์€ ์›๋ด‰์„ ์œ„ํ•ด ๊ถ‚์€์ผ๋„ ๋งˆ๋‹ค ์•Š์Œ ๋ฐฑ์Šนํ™˜: ๋งˆ์ž๋ฅด ์—ญ - 26์„ธ. ์ดํ™”์–‘์žฅ์  ์žฌ๋‹จ์‚ฌ๋กœ ์œ„์žฅํ•œ ์นด๋ ˆ์ด์Šคํ‚ค ์ถœ์‹  ํญํƒ„๊ธฐ์ˆ ์ž ๋ฐ•ํ•˜๋‚˜: ์ฐจ์ •์ž„ ์—ญ - 34์„ธ. ๆขจ่Šฑ์–‘์žฅ์  ๋””์ž์ด๋„ˆ ์ด๊ทœํ˜ธ: ์œค์„ธ์ฃผ ์—ญ - 39์„ธ. ํ‘ธ์ค๊ฐ„ ์ฃผ์ธ. ์›๋ด‰์˜ ๊ณ ํ–ฅ ์นœ๊ตฌ. ๋„์‹ฌ ๋’ท๊ณจ๋ชฉ ์งฑ ํ—ˆ์ง€์›: ๋ฐ•ํ˜ ์—ญ - 33์„ธ. ์˜์—ด๋‹จ์›. ๋ชป ๋จน๊ณ  ๋ชป์‚ฌ๋Š” ๊ฒŒ ํž˜๋“ค์–ด์„œ ์˜์—ด๋‹จ์›์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ์ž˜ ๋จน๊ณ  ์ž˜์‚ด ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค ๊ธฐ์— ๋ณ€์ ˆ ๊น€์ฃผ์˜: ๊น€์Šน์ง„ ์—ญ - 32์„ธ. ๋ฐฑ๋‘์‚ฐ์„ ๋„˜๋‚˜๋“ค๋˜ ์—ญ์› ์กฐ์„  ์ด๋…๋ถ€ ์ „์ง„๊ธฐ: ์˜ค๋‹ค ์—ญ - 53์„ธ. ์˜ค๋‹ค ๋ฅ˜์ง€. ๋ฒ•๋ฌด๊ตญ์žฅ. ํ›„์ฟ ๋‹ค์˜ ์ƒ๊ด€. ํžˆ๋กœ์‹œ์™€๋Š” ์œก๊ตฐ์‚ฌ๊ด€ํ•™๊ต ๋™๊ธฐ๋กœ ๊ฒฝ์Ÿ๊ณผ ๊ฒฌ์ œ์˜ ๋Œ€์ƒ ์„ค์ •ํ™˜: ๋งˆ๋ฃจ ์—ญ - 29์„ธ. ํžˆ๋กœ์‹œ์˜ ๋ถ€๊ด€. ํ—Œ๋ณ‘๋Œ€ ์กฐ์žฅ(์ƒ์‚ฌ) ์•ˆ์‹ ์šฐ: ์ผ„ํƒ€ ์—ญ - 52์„ธ. ์ด๋…๋ถ€ ๊ฒฝ๋ฌด๊ตญ์žฅ. ์ผ„ํƒ€ ์˜ค๋…ธ. ๋งˆ์“ฐ์šฐ๋ผ์˜ ์ƒ๊ด€ ์œ ์ƒ์žฌ: ๋กœ์ฟ  ์—ญ - ์ƒํ•ด ์ผ๋ณธ ์˜์‚ฌ๊ด€ ํŠน์ˆ˜ ์š”์›. ์ „๋ฐฉ์—์„œ ํ™œ์•ฝํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์ฃผํŠน๊ธฐ๋Š” ์•”์‚ด ์ข…๋กœ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ ํ—ˆ์„ฑํƒœ: ๋งˆ์“ฐ์šฐ๋ผ ํžˆ๋กœ ์—ญ - ์กฐ์„ ์ธ ํƒœ์ƒ ์ผ๋ณธ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ ๊ฒฝ๋ถ€. ๊ณ ๋ฌธ์ „๋ฌธ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ•ํ•„์„ : ๋‹ค์ดํ‚ค ์—ญ - 32์„ธ. ์ข…๋กœ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ ์ˆœ์‚ฌ ์ด๊ต์—ฝ: ๋งˆ์ธ ๋‹ค ์—ญ - 32์„ธ. ํŠน๋ฌด1๊ณผ ํ˜•์‚ฌ ์œค์ค€์„ฑ: ๊ธฐ๋ฌด๋ผ ์—ญ - 32์„ธ. ํŠน๋ฌด1๊ณผ ํ˜•์‚ฌ ๋ฐ•์„ ์›…: ํƒ€๋กœ ์—ญ - 32์„ธ. ํŠน๋ฌด1๊ณผ ํ˜•์‚ฌ ์กฐ์„  ์ด๋…๋ถ€ ๋ณ‘์› ์œค์ข…ํ™”: ์ด์‹œ๋‹ค ์—ญ - 45์„ธ. ์ด์‹œ๋‹ค ์‹œ๋ฏธ์ฆˆ. ์กฐ์„ ์ด๋…๋ถ€๋ณ‘์› ์™ธ๊ณผ ๊ณผ์žฅ ๊น€๊ทœ์ข…: ์„ฑ์ค€์ˆ˜ ์—ญ - 29์„ธ. ๊ตฌ ์žํ˜œ๋ณ‘์› ํ˜„ ์กฐ์„ ์ด๋…๋ถ€๋ณ‘์› ์™ธ๊ณผ์˜์‚ฌ ์•ˆ์ˆ˜๋นˆ: ํ•˜๋‚˜์ฝ” ์—ญ - ๊ฐ„ํ˜ธ์‚ฌ ์ฒญ๋ฐฉ ๊น€๋ฒ•๋ž˜: ๋‘์›”์„ฑ ์—ญ - 52์„ธ. ์ค‘๊ตญ ๋น„๋ฐ€๊ฒฐ์‚ฌ์ธ ์ฒญ๋ฐฉ(้‘ๅน‡)์˜ ๋ณด์Šค ์ •์„ฑ์ผ: ์ง„์ˆ˜ ์—ญ - 38์„ธ. ๋‘์›”์„ฑ ๋ณด์ขŒ๊ด€. ์–ผ๊ตด์„ ๋ฐ”๊ฟ”์น˜๋Š” ์ค‘๊ตญ ์ „ํ†ต ๊ธฐ์˜ˆ โ€˜๋ณ€๊ฒ€โ€™ ์ „์ˆ˜์ž ์ด์„ ์ง„: ์ด์†Œ๋ฏผ ์—ญ - 35์„ธ. 16์„ธ์— ์ค‘๊ตญ์— ๊ฑด๋„ˆ์˜จ ์กฐ์„ ๊ณ„ ์—ฌ์„ฑ ๊ทธ ์™ธ ์ฃผ๋ณ€ ์ธ๋ฌผ ๊น€์„œ๋ผ: ์œ  ๋งˆ๋‹ด ์—ญ - ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ์ด๋ฆ„ ๋ฆด๋ฆฌ. ๊ฒฝ์„ฑ๊ตฌ๋ฝ๋ถ€ ๋งˆ๋‹ด, ์„œ์–‘์ธ ์ƒ๋ฅ˜์ธต๊ณผ ๊ต๋ฅ˜ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๋งŽ์€ ์ •๋ณด๋ฅผ ์–ป์—ˆ๊ณ  ๊ฒฝ์„ฑ์—์„œ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋งŽ์€ ํ˜„๊ธˆ์„ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋น ๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ์šด์šฉํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜ ์œ ํ•˜๋ณต: ๊น€๊ตฌ ์—ญ - 57์„ธ. ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์ž„์‹œ์ •๋ถ€์˜ ์ˆ˜์žฅ. ํ•ญ์ผ์šด๋™ ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ๊น€์›๋ด‰์˜ ๋ฌด๋ ฅํˆฌ์Ÿ์— ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ ๊น€๋„ํ˜„: ๋ฌด๋ผ์ด ์—ญ - 36์„ธ. ๋งŒ์ฃผ ์ฃผ๋‘” ์ผ๋ณธ๊ตฐ ๋Œ€์œ„ ๊น€์ˆ™์ธ: ๋งˆ์”จ ์—ญ - 50์„ธ. ๋งˆ์˜์„ฑ. ์ƒํ•ด ๊ฑฐ์ฃผ ์กฐ์„ ์ธ. ์ „์Ÿํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ์ฃผ๋ฆ„์žก๋˜ ์ด์ค‘์ŠคํŒŒ์ด โ€˜๊ฒ€์€ ๋ถ“๊ฝƒโ€™ ์ตœ์ข…๋‚จ: ๋ฏผ์˜์ค€ ์—ญ - ์ž์ž‘. ์œ ์ผํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์‚ด์•„์žˆ๋Š” ์ค‘์ถ”์› ๊ณ ๋ฌธ. ํ•ฉ๋ฐฉ ์„ฑ๋ช…์„œ์— ์ฐฌ์„ฑ์„ ํ‘œ๋ช… ์ดํ•œ์œ„: ์†ก๋ณ‘์ˆ˜ ์—ญ (ํŠน๋ณ„์ถœ์—ฐ) - 67์„ธ. ๋…ธ๋‹ค ํ—ค์ด์ง€๋กœ ๋ฐฑ์ž‘. ์นœ์ผ๋ฐ˜๋ฏผ์กฑํ–‰์œ„์ž. ์ด๋…๊ณผ ๋…๋Œ€ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ช‡ ์•ˆ๋˜๋Š” ์กฐ์„ ์ธ ๊ทธ ์™ธ ์ธ๋ฌผ ๋ฐ•์†Œ์ด: ์œ ํƒœ์ค€์˜ ๋”ธ ์—ญ ํ•œ๋ฏผ์ฑ„ ์•ˆ์ˆ˜๋นˆ ์ด์‚ฌ๋ผ ์žฅ์„œ๊ฒฝ ํ™์„ฑ๋• ์ตœ๊ด‘์ œ ์˜ฅ์ž์—ฐ: ์˜ค๊ด‘์‹ฌ ์—ญ - ๋งŒ์ฃผ ๋ฏผ๋ณ‘๋Œ€ ๋Œ€์žฅ ์ด๊ฐ•๋ฏผ: ์œค๋ด‰๊ธธ ์—ญ ์ž„์ฒ ํ˜• ์ •๊ทœ์ˆ˜: ๊น€์Šน์ง„์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€ ์—ญ ๊น€์ •๋ฏธ ์ตœ์ˆ˜์ž„ ์ด์ฃผ์„ : ์‹ ์–ธ์ค€ ์—ญ ์ด์„ธํฌ : ๊ฐ„ํ˜ธ์‚ฌ ์—ญ ํŠน๋ณ„์ถœ์—ฐ ์†๋ณ‘ํ˜ธ: ์ด์ค€ํ˜• ์—ญ ์ดฌ์˜์ง€ ํ•ฉ์ฒœ์˜์ƒํ…Œ๋งˆํŒŒํฌ ๊ณต์„ธ๋ฆฌ์„ฑ๋‹น ์šด๋…ธ์˜ ์ง‘ ์ˆœ์ฒœ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ์ดฌ์˜์žฅ ์˜› ์ถฉ๋‚จ๋„์ฒญ ์‹œ์ฒญ๋ฅ  ํŽธ์„ฑ ๋ณ€๊ฒฝ 2019๋…„ 5์›” 25์ผ: MBC ์Šคํฌ์ธ  2019 FIFA U-20 ์›”๋“œ์ปต ใ€Š๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ VS ํฌ๋ฅดํˆฌ๊ฐˆใ€‹ ์ค‘๊ณ„๋ฐฉ์†ก ๊ด€๊ณ„๋กœ 2ํšŒ ์—ฐ์†๋ฐฉ์†ก์œผ๋กœ ํŽธ์„ฑ ๋ณ€๊ฒฝ. (13ํšŒ, 14ํšŒ) ์ฐธ๊ณ  ์‚ฌํ•ญ ์ด์š”์›์ด ๋ถ„ํ•œ ์ด์˜์ง„ ์—ญ์€ ๋‹น์ดˆ ์ด์˜์• ๊ฐ€ ๋‚™์ ๋์œผ๋‚˜ ์Šค์ผ€์ค„ ๋ฌธ์ œ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๊ณ ์‚ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ‰์ดํ•œ ๋‚ด๋Ÿฌํ‹ฐ๋ธŒ์— ์˜ˆ์ƒ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ์Šคํ† ๋ฆฌ ๋ฟ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ผ ์บ๋ฆญํ„ฐ๋“ค์˜ ํŠน์„ฑ์ด ์ฒœํŽธ์ผ๋ฅ ์ ์ด๋ž€ ์ง€์ ์„ ์‚ฌ ํ•œ์ž๋ฆฟ์ˆ˜ ์‹œ์ฒญ๋ฅ ๋กœ ๊ธฐ๋Œ€ ์ดํ•˜์˜ ์„ฑ์ ์— ๊ทธ์ณค๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋ชฉ๋ก (ใ…‡) 2019๋…„ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋ชฉ๋ก ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ์ด๋ชฝ ๊ณต์‹์‚ฌ์ดํŠธ 2019๋…„ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋ฌธํ™”๋ฐฉ์†ก ์ฃผ๋ง ํŠน๋ณ„๊ธฐํš ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ์กฐ๊ทœ์› ์‹œ๋‚˜๋ฆฌ์˜ค ์ž‘ํ’ˆ 2010๋…„๋Œ€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ 2019๋…„์— ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ TV ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ 2019๋…„์— ์ข…๋ฃŒํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ TV ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Different%20Dreams
Different Dreams
Different Dreams () is a 2019 South Korean television series starring Lee Yo-won, Yoo Ji-tae, Lim Ju-hwan and Nam Gyu-ri. It aired four episodes every Saturday on MBC TV from 20:45 to 23:10 (KST), from May 4 to July 13, 2019. The series celebrates the 100th anniversary of the March 1st Movement which led to the formation of the Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea in 1919. Synopsis The story takes place in Gyeongseong (South Korea) and Shanghai (China) during the Japanese colonial rule of Korea. Lee Young-jin is a Korean surgeon who was raised by a Japanese family. She becomes a spy for the Korean government. Cast Main Lee Yo-won as Lee Young-jin (36 years old) Yoo Ji-tae as Kim Won-bong (39 years old) Lim Ju-hwan as Fukuda (32 years old) Nam Gyu-ri as Miki (29 years old) Supporting People around Lee Young-jin Lee Hae-young as Hiroshi Lee Young-sook as Kim Hyun-ok Kim Tae-woo as Yoo Tae-joon Yoon Ji-hye as Esther Heroic Corps Jo Bok-rae as Kim Nam-ok Baek Su-ho as Majar Park Ha-na as Cha Jeong-im Lee Kyu-ho as Yoon Se-ju Heo Ji-won as Park Hyeok Kim Joo-young as Kim Seung-jin Joseon Governor Office Jeon Jin-ki as Oda Seol Jung-hwan as Ma Roo (Maru) Ahn Shin-woo as Kenta Yu Sang-jae as Roku Jongno Police Station Heo Sung-tae as Matsuura Kang Pil-sun as Daiki Lee Kyo-yeob as Matsuda Yoon Joon-sung as Kimura Park Seon-woong as Taro Joseon Governor Office Hospital Yoon Jong-hwa as Ishida Kim Kyu-jong as Seong Joon-soo Cheongbang Kim Beob-rae as Do Wol-seong Jung Sung-il as Jin-soo Lee Sun-jin as Lee So-min Others Sora Jung as Yu Madam Yoo Ha-bok as Kim Gu Kim Do-hyun as Murai Kim Sook-in as Macey Lee Han-wi as Song Byung-soo Production Lee Young-ae was supposed to portray Lee Young-jin but she withdrew from the television series due to schedule conflicts. The series is entirely pre-produced. Filming began in October 2018 and wrapped up on April 28, 2019. The drama also serves as a reunion project for both Lee Yo-won and Nam Gyu-ri who both starred in the 2011 hit drama 49 Days. Original soundtrack Part 1 Part 2 Part 3 Part 4 Part 5 Part 6 Part 7 Part 8 Part 9 Part 11 Ratings In this table, represent the lowest ratings and represent the highest ratings. NR denotes that the drama did not rank in the top 20 daily programs on that date. N/A denotes that the rating is not known. Notes References External links Korean-language television shows MBC TV television dramas Television series set in Korea under Japanese rule South Korean historical television series Television series set in the 1930s South Korean melodrama television series South Korean pre-produced television series 2019 South Korean television series debuts 2019 South Korean television series endings
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%93%B0%EC%8B%9C%EB%A7%88%20%EC%A0%90%EB%A0%B9%20%EC%82%AC%EA%B1%B4
์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ ์ ๋ น ์‚ฌ๊ฑด
์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ ์ ๋ น ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์€ ์ œ์ • ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„์˜ ๊ตฐํ•จ์ด ๋ง‰๋ง(ๅน•ๆœซ) ์ผ๋ณธ์˜ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ(ๅฏพ้ฆฌ) ์•„์†Œ ๋งŒ(ๆต…่Œ…ๆนพ) ๋‚จ๋ถ€์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์ด๋ชจ์žํ‚ค(่Š‹ๅดŽ)๋ฅผ ์ ๋ นํ•ด ๋ง‰์‚ฌ์™€ ๊ณต์žฅ, ์—ฐ๋ณ‘์žฅ ๋“ฑ์„ ๊ฑด์„คํ•˜๊ณ  ๋ฐ˜๋…„ ๋™์•ˆ ์ฒด๋ฅ˜ํ–ˆ๋˜ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์ด๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ณธ์—์„œ๋Š” ๋‹น์‹œ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ๋ฅผ ์ ๋ นํ–ˆ๋˜ ๊ตฐํ•จ์˜ ์ด๋ฆ„์„ ๋”ฐ์„œ ํฌ์ƒคํŠธ๋‹ˆํฌ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด ํ˜น์€ ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„ ๊ตฐํ•จ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ ์ ๋ น ์‚ฌ๊ฑด(ใƒญใ‚ทใ‚ข่ป่‰ฆๅฏพ้ฆฌๅ ้ ˜ไบ‹ไปถ)์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถ€๋ฅธ๋‹ค. ๊ฒฝ๊ณผ ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„ ๊ตฐํ•จ์˜ ์ง„์ถœ ๋ถ„ํ(ๆ–‡ไน…) ์›๋…„(1861๋…„) 2์›” 3์ผ(์–‘๋ ฅ 3์›” 14์ผ) ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„ ์ œ๊ตญ ํ•ด๊ตฐ ์ค‘์œ„ ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์ด ๋ธŒ๋ฆด๋ฃŒํ”„๋Š” ๊ตฐํ•จ ํฌ์ƒคํŠธ๋‹ˆํฌ ํ˜ธ๋กœ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ์— ๋‚ดํ•ญํ•ด, ์˜ค์žํ‚ค์šฐ๋ผ(ๅฐพๅดŽๆตฆ)์— ๋‹ป์„ ๋‚ด๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์ธก๋Ÿ‰์„ ์‹ค์‹œ, ๊ทธ ๋’ค ๊ณง์žฅ ์•„์†Œ ๋งŒ์œผ๋กœ ์ง„์ž…ํ•ด ๋“ค์–ด ์™”๋‹ค. ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„ ํ•จ๋Œ€์˜ ์ค‘๊ตญ ํ•ด์—ญ ํ•จ๋Œ€ ์‚ฌ๋ น๊ด€์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ์ด์™„ ๋ฆฌํ•˜์ตธํ”„ ๋Œ€์ขŒ๋Š” ๋ถ€๋™ํ•ญ์„ ํ™•๋ณดํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ ํ•ดํ˜‘์— ๊ทผ๊ฑฐ์ง€๋ฅผ ๊ตฌ์ถ•ํ•  ๊ฒƒ์„ ์ œ์•ˆํ•˜์˜€๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ผ๋ณธ๊ณผ์˜ ๊ด€๊ณ„๊ฐ€ ์•…ํ™”๋  ๊ฒƒ์„ ์—ผ๋ คํ•œ ์ œ์ • ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” ๋ฆฌํ•˜์ตธํ”„์˜ ์ œ์•ˆ์„ ๊ฑฐ์ ˆํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์ œ์ • ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„์˜ ํ•ด์‚ฌ๋Œ€์‹ (ๆตทไบ‹ๅคง่‡ฃ)์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ๋Œ€๊ณต(ๅคงๅ…ฌ) ์ฝ˜์Šคํƒ„ํ‹ด ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์˜ˆ๋น„์น˜๊ฐ€ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ๋กœ์˜ ํ•จ๋Œ€ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌ์„ ํ—ˆ๊ฐ€ํ•˜์˜€๊ณ , ๋ฆฌํ•˜์ตธํ”„ ์‚ฌ๋ น๊ด€์˜ ๋ช…๋ น์œผ๋กœ ํฌ์ƒคํŠธ๋‹ˆํฌ ํ˜ธ๊ฐ€ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋˜ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ํฌ์ƒคํŠธ๋‹ˆํฌ ํ˜ธ๊ฐ€ ์˜ค์žํ‚ค์šฐ๋ผ์— ๋‹ป์„ ๋‚ด๋ฆฌ์ž ๋‹น์‹œ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ๋ฅผ ๋‹ค์Šค๋ฆฌ๋˜ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ ํ›„์ถ”๋ฒˆ์˜ ๋ฒˆ์ฃผ ์†Œ ์š”์‹œ์š”๋ฆฌ(ๅฎ—็พฉๅ’Œ)๋Š” ์ค‘์‹ ์„ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌํ•ด ๊ฐœํ•ญ์ง€๋„ ์•„๋‹Œ ๊ณณ์— ๋‹ป์„ ๋‚ด๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ๋ถˆ๋ฒ•์ด๋ผ๋ฉฐ ๋ฌผ๋Ÿฌ๊ฐˆ ๊ฒƒ์„ ํ•ญ์˜ํ–ˆ๊ณ , ํ•จ์žฅ ๋ธŒ๋ฆด๋ฃŒํ”„๋Š” ๋‚œํŒŒ๋œ ๋ฐฐ๋ผ์„œ ํ•ญํ•ด๊ฐ€ ์–ด๋ ต๋‹ค๋ฉฐ ๋ฐฐ๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฌํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด์„œ ์™”์„ ๋ฟ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ํšŒ๋‹ตํ–ˆ๊ณ , ๋‚˜์•„๊ฐ€ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฌ ๊ณต์žฅ์˜ ์„ค์น˜ ์ž์žฌ๋‚˜ ์‹๋ฃŒํ’ˆ, ์œ ๋…€(้Šๅฅณ)๋„ ์š”๊ตฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 3์›” 4์ผ์—๋Š” ์ด๋ชจ์žํ‚ค์— ๋ฌด๋‹จ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒ๋ฅ™ํ•ด ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ์šฉ ๋ง‰์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์ง“๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๋’ค ์„ ์ฒด ์ˆ˜๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๋ช…๋ชฉ์œผ๋กœ ๊ณต์žฅ๊ณผ ์—ฐ๋ณ‘์žฅ๊นŒ์ง€ ๊ฑด์„คํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ ํ›„์ถ”๋ฒˆ์˜ ๊ต์„ญ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ ํ›„์ถ”๋ฒˆ๋‚ด์—์„œ๋Š” ๋Œ€์‘์„ ๋†“๊ณ  ๋ฌด๋ ฅ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฉํ•ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ์–‘์ดํŒŒ์™€ ๋ถ„์Ÿ์„ ํ”ผํ•ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ์˜จ๊ฑดํŒŒ ์‚ฌ์ด์— ๋…ผ์Ÿ์ด ๋ฒŒ์–ด์ ธ ๋ฒˆ๋‚ด๊ฐ€ ๋– ๋“ค์ฉํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ฒˆ์ฃผ ์†Œ ์š”์‹œ์š”๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์‚ฌํƒœ๋ฅผ ์•…ํ™”์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” ์ผ ์—†์ด ์›๋งŒํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•ด๊ฒฐํ•˜๊ณ ์ž ์‹œ๋„ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋ฌธ์žฅ์‚ฌ(ๅ•็Šถไฝฟ)๋ฅผ ํฌ์ƒคํŠธ๋‹ˆํฌ ํ˜ธ์— ํŒŒ๊ฒฌํ•ด ๊ทธ ๋น„์œ„๋ฅผ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์ฐจ๋ก€ ์ถ”๊ถํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„ ํ•จ๋Œ€์ธก์€ ๋ฌด์‘๋‹ต์œผ๋กœ ์ผ๊ด€ํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์šฐ์„ธํ•œ ๋ฌด๋ ฅ์œผ๋กœ ์œ„ํ˜‘ํ•˜๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ ํ˜„์ง€ ์ฃผ๋ฏผ์„ ํšŒ์œ ํ•ด ๋ชฉ์žฌ ใƒป ์šฐ๋งˆ ใƒป ์‹๋Ÿ‰ ใƒป ๋ชฉํƒ„์„ ๊ฐ•ํƒˆํ•˜๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ๋งค์ˆ˜ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์žฅ๊ธฐ ์ฒด๋ฅ˜ํ•  ์ค€๋น„๋ฅผ ๊ฐ–์ถ”์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ˆ˜๋ณ‘๋“ค์ด ์ž‘์€ ๋ฐฐ๋ฅผ ๋™์›ํ•ด ์—ฐ์•ˆ์„ ์ธก์ •ํ•˜๊ณ  ์‚ฐ์•ผ๋ฅผ ๋Œ์•„๋‹ค๋‹ˆ๋ฉฐ ์•ผ์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ํฌํšํ•˜๋Š” ์™€์ค‘์— ๋ถ€๋…€์ž๋ฅผ ์ซ“์•„๋‹ค๋‹ˆ๋ฉฐ ์œ„ํ˜‘ํ•˜๋Š” ์ˆ˜๋ณ‘๋„ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด์— ๊ฒฉ์•™๋œ ์ฃผ๋ฏผ๋“ค๊ณผ์˜ ์‚ฌ์ด์— ๋ถ„์Ÿ์ด ๋ฒŒ์–ด์ง€๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋ฆด๋ฃŒํ”„ ํ•จ์žฅ์€ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ ํ›„์ถ”๋ฒˆ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ๋ฒˆ์ฃผ์™€์˜ ๋ฉดํšŒ๋ฅผ ์žฌ์‚ผ ์š”๊ตฌํ–ˆ๊ณ , 3์›” 23์ผ์—๋Š” ์ด๋ชจ์žํ‚ค์˜ ์กฐ์ฐจ๋ฅผ ์š”๊ตฌํ•ด ์™”๋‹ค. ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„์ธก๋กœ์จ๋Š” ๋ฌด๋ ฅ์œผ๋กœ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ ํ›„์ถ”๋ฒˆ์˜ ์Šน๋‚™์„ ์–ป์–ด๋‚ด๊ณ  ์ด๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ์ •์‚ฌ์‹คํ™”ํ•ด์„œ ๋ง‰๋ถ€์˜ ์ธ์ •์„ ๋ฐ›์œผ๋ ค๋Š” ์˜๋„์˜€๋‹ค. ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ ํ›„์ถ”๋ฒˆ์€ ๋Œ€์‘์— ๊ณ ์‹ฌํ–ˆ๊ณ , ๋ฉดํšŒ ์š”๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ๊ฑฐ์ ˆํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋‚˜๊ฐ€์‚ฌํ‚ค(้•ทๅดŽ)์™€ ์—๋„(ๆฑŸๆˆธ)๋กœ ๊ธ‰ํžˆ ์‚ฌ์ž๋ฅผ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌํ•ด ๋ง‰๋ถ€์˜ ์ง€์‹œ๋ฅผ ๊ตฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 4์›” 12์ผ, ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ์†Œํ•จ์ •์œผ๋กœ ์˜คํ›„๋‚˜๊ณ ์‹œ(ๅคง่ˆน่ถŠ)์˜ ์ˆ˜๋ฌธ(ๆฐด้–€)์„ ํ†ต๊ณผํ•˜๋ ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ ํ›„์ถ”๋ฒˆ์˜ ๊ฒฝ๋น„๋ณ‘์ด ์ œ์ง€ํ•˜์ž, ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋Š” ๊ฒฝ๋น„๋ณ‘ ยท ๋งˆ์“ฐ๋ฌด๋ผ ์‹ ๊ณ ๋กœ(ๆพๆ‘ๅฎ‰ไบ”้ƒŽ)๋ฅผ ์˜์•„ ์ฃฝ์ด๊ณ  ํ–ฅ์‚ฌ 2๋ช…์„ ํฌ๋กœ๋กœ ๋‚ฉ์น˜ํ•ด, ๊ตฐํ•จ์— ์—ฐํ–‰ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ ํ•œ ๋ช…์ธ ์š”์‹œ๋…ธ ์Šˆ๋…ธ์Šค์ผ€(ๅ‰้‡Žๆ•ฐไน‹ๅŠฉ)๋Š” ๊ทธ ์ž๋ฆฌ์—์„œ ํ˜€๋ฅผ ๊นจ๋ฌผ๊ณ  ์ž์‚ดํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„๊ตฐ์€ ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์„œ ๊ทธ์น˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ์ด๊ณณ์„ ์Šต๊ฒฉํ•ด ๋ฌด๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ•ํƒˆํ•˜๊ณ , ๋ช‡๋ช‡ ์ฃผ๋ฏผ์„ ๋‚ฉ์น˜ํ•ด ์†Œ ์ผ๊ณฑ ๋งˆ๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๋นผ์•—๊ณ  ๊ท€์„ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด์–ด ๋‹ค์Œ๋‚ ์—๋Š” ์ˆ˜๋ณ‘ 100์—ฌ๋ช…์„ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌํ•ด ์˜คํ›„๋‚˜์ฝ”์‹œ ๋งˆ์„์„ ์•ฝํƒˆํ•˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฒˆ์ฃผ ์†Œ ์š”์‹œ์นด์ฆˆ๋Š” ํฌ์ƒคํŠธ๋‹ˆํฌ ํ˜ธ์— ๋‹น์žฅ ํ‡ด๊ฑฐํ•  ๊ฒƒ์„ ์š”๊ตฌํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ๋„ ์Œ€๊ณผ ์†Œ๊ธˆ, ๋ชฉํƒ„์„ ์ฃผ๋ฉฐ ํšŒ์œ ํ•˜๊ณ ์ž ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ถ„์Ÿ์„ ํ”ผํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ฒˆ๋‚ด ์‚ฌ๋ฏผ์—๊ฒŒ๋Š” ๊ฒฝ๊ฑฐ๋ง๋™์„ ๊ฒฝ๊ณ„ํ•˜๋Š” ํ•œํŽธ, ๋ชฐ๋ž˜ ์—ฐ์•ˆ์— ํฌ๋Œ€๋ฅผ ์ถ•์กฐํ•ด ์‚ฌํƒœ์— ๋Œ€๋น„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜, ์†Œ ์”จ์˜ ์†Œ๋ น์ธ ํžˆ์  (่‚ฅๅ‰) ๋‹ค์‹œ๋กœ(็”ฐไปฃ)์—์„œ๋Š” ๋Œ€๊ด€ ํžˆ๋ผํƒ€ ํ—ค์ดํ•˜์น˜(ๅนณ็”ฐๅนณๅ…ซ)๊ฐ€ ์ˆ˜๋ณ‘์„ ์ด๋Œ๊ณ  ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ๋กœ ๊ฑด๋„ˆ๊ฐ€, ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„๋ณ‘์„ ๋ฌผ๋ฆฌ์น  ๊ธฐ์„ธ๋ฅผ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. ๋ง‰๋ถ€์˜ ๋Œ€์‘ ๋‚˜๊ฐ€์‚ฌํ‚ค ๋ถ€๊ต(้•ทๅดŽๅฅ‰่กŒ) ใƒป ์˜ค์นด๋ฒ  ๋‚˜๊ฐ€์“ฐ๋„ค(ๅฒก้ƒจ้•ทๅธธ)๋Š” ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ ํ›„์ถ”๋ฒˆ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„์™€์˜ ๋ถ„์Ÿ์„ ํ”ผํ•˜๋„๋ก ์‹ ์ค‘ํ•œ ๋Œ€์‘์„ ์ง€์‹œํ•˜๋Š” ํ•œํŽธ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถˆ๋ฒ•ํ–‰์œ„๋ฅผ ํž๋ฌธํ•˜๋Š” ๊ธ€์„ ๋ธŒ๋ฆด๋ฃŒํ”„ ํ•จ์žฅ์—๊ฒŒ ๋ณด๋‚ด๊ณ  ์‚ฌ๊ฐ€(ไฝ่ณ€), ์ง€์ฟ ์  (็ญ‘ๅ‰), ์กฐ์Šˆ(้•ทๅทž)๋ฅผ ๋น„๋กฏํ•œ ์ด์›ƒ ๋ฒˆ์˜ ์ œํ›„๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ์‹ค์ •์„ ์กฐ์‚ฌํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋Œ€์ฑ…์„ ์˜๋…ผํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ์ด๋ ‡๋‹ค ํ•  ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์ด ๋‚˜์˜ค์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. ๋ง‰๋ถ€๋Š” ๋ณด๊ณ ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›๊ณ  ๋†€๋ผ์„œ ํ•˜์ฝ”๋‹คํ…Œ ๋ถ€๊ต(็ฎฑ้คจๅฅ‰่กŒ) ใƒป ๋ฌด๋ผ๊ฐ€ํ‚ค ๋…ธ๋ฆฌ๋งˆ์‚ฌ(ๆ‘ๅžฃ็ฏ„ๆญฃ)์—๊ฒŒ ๋ช…ํ•ด ํ˜„์ง€ ์ฃผ์žฌ ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„ ์ด์˜์‚ฌ ์ด์˜ค์‹œํ”„ ๊ณ ์Šค์ผ€๋น„์น˜์—๊ฒŒ ํฌ์ƒคํŠธ๋‹ˆํฌ ํ˜ธ ํ‡ด๊ฑฐ๋ฅผ ์š”๊ตฌํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ๊ฐ€์ด์ฝ”์ฟ  ๋ถ€๊ต(ๅค–ๅ›ฝๅฅ‰่กŒ) ใƒป ์˜ค๊ตฌ๋ฆฌ ๋‹ค๋‹ค๋งˆ์‚ฌ(ๅฐๆ —ๅฟ ้ †)๋ฅผ ๊ฐ„๋ฆฐ๋งˆ๋ฃจ(ๅ’ธ่‡จไธธ)๋กœ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ๋กœ ๊ธ‰ํŒŒํ•ด ์‚ฌํƒœ ์ˆ˜์Šต์„ ๊พ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ถ„ํ ์›๋…„ 5์›” 7์ผ ๋ชฉ๋ถ€(็›ฎ้™„) ๋ฏธ์กฐ๊ตฌ์น˜ ํ•˜์น˜์ฃผ๊ณ ๋กœ(ๆบๅฃๅ…ซๅไบ”้ƒŽ) ๋“ฑ์„ ๊ฑฐ๋Š๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ์— ๋„์ฐฉํ•œ ๋‹ค๋‹ค๋งˆ์‚ฌ๋Š” 5์›” 10์ผ ํ•จ์žฅ ๋ธŒ๋ฆด๋ฃŒํ”„์™€ ํšŒ๊ฒฌํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ์ฒซ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ํšŒ๋‹ด์—์„œ ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„์ธก์€ ์ฆ์ •ํ’ˆ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋‹ต๋ก€๋ฅผ ๊ตฌ์‹ค๋กœ ๋ฒˆ์ฃผ ๋ฉด๋‹ด์„ ๊ฐ•๋ ฅํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์š”๊ตฌํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์˜ค๊ตฌ๋ฆฌ ๋‹ค๋‹ค๋งˆ์‚ฌ๋Š” ์ด๋ฅผ ํ—ˆ๊ฐ€ํ•˜๊ฒ ๋‹ค๋Š” ์ทจ์ง€๋กœ ํšŒ๋‹ตํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 5์›” 14์ผ, ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ํšŒ๋‹ด์—์„œ ์˜ค๊ตฌ๋ฆฌ ๋‹ค๋‹ค๋งˆ์‚ฌ๋Š” ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ์˜ ๋ฌด๋‹จ์ƒ๋ฅ™์„ ์กฐ์•ฝ ์œ„๋ฐ˜์ด๋ผ๋ฉฐ ํ•ญ์˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 5์›” 18์ผ์— ์„ธ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ํšŒ๋‹ด์—์„œ ๋ฒˆ์ฃผ ๋ฉด๋‹ด ์‹คํ˜„์„ ์š”๊ตฌํ•œ ๋ธŒ๋ฆด๋ฃŒํ”„์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์˜ค๊ตฌ๋ฆฌ ๋‹ค๋‹ค๋งˆ์‚ฌ๋Š”(๋กœ์ฃผ ์•ˆ๋„ ๋…ธ๋ถ€๋งˆ์‚ฌ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋ฒˆ์ฃผ ๋ฉด๋‹ด์€ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ ๊ฑฐ๋ฅ˜๋ฅผ ์ธ์ •ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ๋˜๋ฏ€๋กœ ํ—ˆ๋ฝํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋‹น๋ถ€๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์•„๋‘์—ˆ๋‹ค) ์ „์–ธ์„ ๋ฒˆ๋ณตํ•ด ๋ฒˆ์ฃผ๋ฅผ ํšŒ๊ฒฌํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋‹ค๊ณ  ํšŒ๋‹ตํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ง์ด ๋‹ค๋ฅด๋‹ค๋ฉฐ ๋ธŒ๋ฆด๋ฃŒํ”„๋Š” ๋งน๋ ฌํžˆ ํ•ญ์˜๋ฅผ ํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ๋‹ค๋‹ค๋งˆ์‚ฌ๋Š” ใ€Œ๋‚˜๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์‚ดํ•ด๋„ ์ƒ๊ด€์—†๋‹คใ€๋ฉฐ ๊ต์„ญ์€ ๊ฒฐ๋ ฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 5์›” 20์ผ์— ์˜ค๊ตฌ๋ฆฌ ๋‹ค๋‹ค๋งˆ์‚ฌ๋Š” ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ๋ฅผ ๋– ๋‚˜ ์—๋„๋กœ ํ–ฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์—๋„๋กœ ๋Œ์•„์˜จ ์˜ค๊ตฌ๋ฆฌ ๋‹ค๋‹ค๋งˆ์‚ฌ๋Š” ๋กœ์ฃผ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ๋ฅผ ์งํ• ๋ น์œผ๋กœ ์‚ผ์„ ๊ฒƒ๊ณผ ์ด๋ฒˆ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์˜ ์ ˆ์ถฉ์€ ์ •์‹ ์š”๊ตฌํ˜•์‹์œผ๋กœ ํ•  ๊ฒƒ, ๊ตญ์ œ์„ธ๋ก ์— ํ˜ธ์†Œํ•ด์•ผ ํ•  ๊ฒƒ ๋“ฑ์„ ์ œ์–ธํ•˜์˜€๊ณ , ๋กœ์ฃผ๋Š” ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์˜๊ฒฌ์„ ๋ฐ›์•„๋“ค์ด์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ์˜ค๊ตฌ๋ฆฌ ๋‹ค๋‹ค๋งˆ์‚ฌ๋Š” 7์›”์— ๊ฐ€์ด์ฝ”์ฟ  ๋ถ€์ฃ ์ง์—์„œ ์‚ฌ์ž„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ต์„ญ์ด ๋ง‰ํžŒ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ ํ›„์ถ”๋ฒˆ์—์„œ๋Š” ๋ฒˆ์ฃผ ๋ฉด๋‹ด์„ ์‹คํ˜„ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์„ ์ˆ˜ ์—†๊ฒŒ ๋˜์–ด, ๋ธŒ๋ฆด๋ฃŒํ”„๋Š” ๊ตฐํ•จ์„ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ ํ›„์ถ”๋ฒˆ์œผ๋กœ ํšŒํ•ญํ•ด, ๋ถ€ํ•˜๋ฅผ ๊ฑฐ๋Š๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๋ฒˆ์ฃผ ์†Œ ์š”์‹œ์š”๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๋ฉด๋‹ดํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ฒˆ์ฃผ ์†Œ ์š”์‹œ์š”๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๊ถŒ์ด์ด๋‚˜ ๋ง์›๊ฒฝ, ํ™”์•ฝ ๋ฐ ์ง‘์—์„œ ๊ธฐ๋ฅด๋Š” ๊ฐ€๊ธˆ๋ฅ˜ ๋ช‡ ์ข…์„ ์„ ๋ฌผ๋กœ ๋ฐ”์น˜๋ฉฐ ์žฅ๊ธฐ ์ฒด๋ฅ˜๋ฅผ ํ˜ธ์†Œํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„์ธก์€ ์ด๋ชจ์žํ‚ค์˜ ์˜๊ตฌ ์กฐ์ฐจ๋ฅผ ์š”๊ตฌํ–ˆ๊ณ , ๋Œ€๊ฐ€๋กœ ๋Œ€ํฌ 50๋ฌธ์˜ ์ง„ํ—Œ, ๊ฒฝ๋น„ํ˜‘๋ ฅ ๋“ฑ์„ ์ œ์˜ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ ํ›„์ถ”๋ฒˆ์ธก์€ ๋ง‰๋ถ€์— ์ง์ ‘ ๊ต์„ญํ•ด ๋‹ฌ๋ผ๊ณ  ์‘๋‹ตํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ์š”๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์•„๋“ค์ด์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. ์—ฐ๋„ ๊ฒฝ๋น„๋ฅผ ์„œ๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ ๋ฒˆ๋‚ด ์‚ฌ๋ฏผ์€ ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„๊ตฐ์˜ ์˜ค๋งŒ๋ฐฉ์žํ•œ ํƒœ๋„์— ๊ฒฉ๋…ธํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ๋ถˆ์ƒ์‚ฌ๋Š” ์ผ์–ด๋‚˜์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. ์˜๊ตญ์˜ ๊ฐœ์ž… 7์›” 9์ผ์— ์˜๊ตญ ๊ณต์‚ฌ ๋Ÿฌ๋“œํผ๋“œ ์˜ฌ์ฝ•๊ณผ ์˜๊ตญ ํ•ด๊ตฐ ์ค‘์žฅ ์ œ์ž„์Šค ํ˜ธํ”„๊ฐ€ ์ผ๋ณธ์˜ ๋ง‰๋ถ€์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์˜๊ตญ ํ•จ๋Œ€์˜ ์••๋ ฅ์œผ๋กœ ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„ ๊ตฐํ•จ์„ ํ‡ด๊ฑฐ์‹œํ‚ฌ ๊ฒƒ์„ ์ œ์•ˆํ–ˆ๊ณ , ๋กœ์ฃผ(่€ไธญ) ์•ˆ๋„ ๋…ธ๋ถ€๋งˆ์‚ฌ(ๅฎ‰่—คไฟกๆญฃ) ๋“ฑ๊ณผ ํ˜‘์˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 7์›” 23์ผ ์˜๊ตญ ๋™์–‘ํ•จ๋Œ€ ๊ตฐํ•จ ๋‘ ์ฒ™(์—”์นด์šดํ„ฐ, ๋ฆฐ๋„ํ”„)๊ฐ€ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ๋กœ ํšŒํ•ญํ•ด ์‹œ์œ„ํ–‰๋™์„ ํ–‰ํ–ˆ๊ณ , ํ˜ธํ”„ ์ค‘์žฅ์€ ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„์ธก์— ์—„์ค‘ํ•ญ์˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์‹ค์ œ๋กœ๋Š” ์ด ์‹œ์ ์—์„œ ์˜ฌ์ฝ•๋„ ์˜๊ตญ์— ์˜ํ•œ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ ์ ๋ น์„ ๋ณธ๊ตญ ์ •๋ถ€์— ์ œ์•ˆํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค(8์›” 2์ผ์ž ์‚ฌ์นด๋ชจํ†  ํ›„์ง€์š”์‹œๅ‚ๆœฌ่—ค่‰ฏ ใ€Ž์˜ค๊ตฌ๋‹ˆ ๊ฐ€์ฆˆ์‚ฌ๋…ธ์Šค์ผ€์˜ ์ƒ์• ใ€ๅฐๆ —ไธŠ้‡Žไป‹ใฎ็”Ÿๆถฏ ๊ณ ๋‹จ์ƒค่ฌ›่ซ‡็คพ). ๋˜ํ•œ ๋กœ์ฃผ ์•ˆ๋„ ๋…ธ๋ถ€๋งˆ์‚ฌ๋Š” ๋‹ค์‹œ๊ธˆ ํ•˜์ฝ”๋‹คํ…Œ ๋ถ€๊ต ๋ฌด๋ผ๊ฐ€ํ‚ค ๋…ธ๋ฆฌ๋งˆ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์‹œ์ผœ ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„ ์˜์‚ฌ์—๊ฒŒ ํ•ญ์˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด์ œ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ธŒ๋ฆด๋ฃŒํ”„์˜ ํ–‰๋™์„ ๊ทธ๋Œ€๋กœ ๋ณด๊ณ ๋งŒ ์žˆ๋˜ ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„ ์˜์‚ฌ ์ด์˜ค์‹œํ”„ ๊ณ ์Šค์ผ€๋น„์น˜๋Š” ์˜๊ตญ์˜ ๊ฐ„์„ญ์„ ๋ณด๊ณ  ํ˜•์„ธ๊ฐ€ ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌํ•ด์งˆ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ํŒ๋‹จํ•˜๊ณ  ๊ตฐํ•จ ์šฐํ‘ธ๋ฅด์น˜๋‹ˆํฌ ํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ๋กœ ๊ธ‰ํŒŒํ•ด ๋ธŒ๋ฆด๋ฃŒํ”„๋ฅผ ์„ค๋“ํ•ด, ๋ถ„ํ ์›๋…„(1861๋…„) 8์›” 15์ผ(9์›” 19์ผ) ํฌ์ƒคํŠธ๋‹ˆํฌ ํ˜ธ๋Š” ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ์—์„œ ๋ฌผ๋Ÿฌ๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. 9์›”, ๊ฐ€์ด์ฝ”์ฟ  ๋ถ€๊ต ๋…ธ๋…ธ์•ผ๋งˆ ๊ฐ€๋„ค์š”์‹œ(้‡Žใ€…ๅฑฑๅ…ผๅฏ›) ๋“ฑ์€ ๋ง‰๋ถ€์˜ ๋ช…์„ ๋ฐ›๊ณ  ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ๋กœ ์™€์„œ ํ•˜์ฝ”๋‹คํ…Œ ๋‹ดํŒ(็ฎฑ้คจ่ซ‡ๅˆค)์˜ ๊ฒฐ์˜์— ์˜๊ฑฐํ•ด ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„ ํ•จ๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ์— ๋จธ๋ฌด๋ฅด๋˜ ๋‹น์‹œ์— ์„ค์น˜๋˜์—ˆ๋˜ ์‹œ์„ค๋“ค์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ฒ˜๋ฆฌ์— ๋‚˜์„œ์„œ, ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„์ธ์˜ ์กฐ์˜๋ฌผ์€ ํŒŒ๊ดดํ•˜๊ณ  ๊ทธ ์žฌ๋ฃŒ๋Š” ๋‚˜๊ฐ€์‚ฌํ‚ค์— ๋ณด๊ด€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„์ธก์˜ ์˜๋„๋Š” ๊ทน๋™์—์„œ์˜ ๊ทผ๊ฑฐ์ง€๋ฅผ ์–ป๊ณ  ๋‚จํ•ด ํ•ญ๋กœ๋ฅผ ํ™•๋ณดํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ์— ์žˆ์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ๋‹น์‹œ ์•„์‹œ์•„ ์ผ๋Œ€์— ๊ด‘๋Œ€ํ•œ ์‹๋ฏผ์ง€๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ ์˜๊ตญ์— ์ถ”์›”๋‹นํ•ด ์ž์นซ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ๊ฐ€ ์˜๊ตญ์— ์กฐ์ฐจ๋  ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋‘๋ ค์›Œํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ๊ฑฐ๋ฌธ๋„ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด ๋ง‰๋ง์˜ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด ๋ง‰๋ง์˜ ๋Œ€์™ธ ๊ด€๊ณ„ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ์‹œ (๋‚˜๊ฐ€์‚ฌํ‚คํ˜„)์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌ ์“ฐ์‹œ๋งˆ ํ›„์ถ”๋ฒˆ ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„-์ผ๋ณธ ๊ด€๊ณ„์‚ฌ 1861๋…„ ์ผ๋ณธ 1861๋…„ ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„ 1861๋…„ ๋ถ„์Ÿ ๋Œ€ํ•œํ•ดํ˜‘
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsushima%20incident
Tsushima incident
The Tsushima incident occurred in 1861 when the Russians attempted to establish a year-round anchorage on the coast of the island of Tsushima, a Japanese territory located between Kyushu and Korea. British version of events Arrival of the Posadnik On 13 March 1861, the Russian corvette Posadnik (ะŸะพัะฐะดะฝะธะบ, 1856), captained by Nicolai Birilev, arrived in Tsushima island in the inlet of Ozaki, the captain demanding landing rights. This event triggered fear in the Japanese Shogunate, as the Russians had already attempted to breach Japan's isolation policy in the northern island of Hokkaido with the events involving Adam Laxman in 1792, the burning of villages there in 1806, and the events leading to the arrest of Vasilii Golovnin in 1811. At that time, only a few Japanese ports were open to foreign ships (Hakodate, Nagasaki, Yokohama), and Tsushima was clearly not one of them, thus suggesting unfriendly intentions on the part of the Russians. If taken over by the Russians, Tsushima could have become an effective base for further aggression. Japan received British help to support its policy. As tension rose, a second Russian ship arrived, and requests were made by the Russians to build a landing base and to receive supplies. Clash On 13 May 1861, the Russians sent a launch to explore the eastern coast of the island, despite the presence of two Saga Domain warships, Kankล Maru and Denryลซ Maru, as well as one British warship. On May 21, 1861, a clash took place between the Russian sailors of a launch and a group of samurai and farmers, in which one farmer was killed and one samurai, who soon committed suicide, was captured by the Russians. In mid-July, Hakodate bugyล Muragaki Norimasa went directly to the Russian Consulate in Hakodate, demanding the departure of the ship to the Russian Consul Goshkevitch. Russian retreat As this strategy did not work, the Japanese asked the British to intervene, as they also had an interest in preventing the Russians from extending their influence in Asia. Admiral Hope arrived in Tsushima with two warships on 28 August, and on 19 September 1861 Posadnik finally had to leave Tsushima. Russian version of events Background The late 1850s saw a period of Russian expansion into the Sea of Japan, with the setting up a post in the estuary of the Amur in 1850, the acquisition of the present Primorsky Krai by the Treaty of Aigun (1858) and the Convention of Peking (1860), and the establishment of Vladivostok in 1860. In 1858 the Imperial Russian Navy leased a strip of Nagasaki Bay coastline across the village of Inasa as a winter anchorage for the Chinese Flotilla's emerging Pacific Fleet (all domestic anchorages froze up in winter). Flotilla commander Admiral Ivan Likhachev realized the dangers of basing the fleet in a foreign port, and settled on establishing a permanent base in Tsushima. He was aware that the British had attempted to set their flag there in 1859 and had conducted hydrographic surveys around the island in 1855. In 1860 he requested a go-ahead from the government in Saint Petersburg; the cautious foreign minister, Alexander Gorchakov, ruled out any incursions against British interests, while General Admiral Konstantin Nikolayevich suggested making a private deal with the head of Tsushima-Fuchลซ Domain, as long as it did not disturb "the West". In case of failure the Russian authorities would deny all knowledge of the expedition. Landing In line with Likhachev's will and Konstantin's advice Posadnik left Hakodate February 20, 1861 and on March 1 reached the village of Osaki on the western coast of Asล Bay (Tatamura Bay in historical reports). Sล Yoshiyori, head of Sล clan, immediately informed the Bakufu government, however, the cautious cabinet of Andล Nobumasa delayed their response and Yoshiyori had to act on his own. Birilev, captain of Posadnik, made personal contact with Sล, exchanged courtesy gifts, and secured Yoshiyori's consent to survey the Imosaki Bay; Posadnik arrived there on April 2. The crew disembarked, raised the Russian flag, and began building temporary housing, a landing jetty and prepared to refit the ship which needed repairs to propeller and stern tube. Japanese officials tacitly agreed with de facto establishing a naval base and even assigned a team of fifteen local carpenters to help the Russians; the latter rewarded Sล with a gift of small naval cannons. Likhachev inspected the bay twice, March 27 on board Oprichnik and April 16 on board Svetlana and recorded friendly behaviour of the Japanese, however, in April the situation irreversibly changed. Clash On April 12, 1861 when the Russians disembarked from their launches, a group of local peasants led by one Matsumura Yasugorล attempted to bar entrance and drive the Russians back. In the ensuing clash Yasugorล was killed, two Japanese peasants taken hostage, the rest fled; no Russian fatalities were recorded. Sล appeased the population, ordering them to wait for a Bakufu pronouncement, and did not take any action. Russian sources say nothing about presence of Japanese or British warship in the area. Aftermath Oguri Tadamasa, the messenger of Bakufu, arrived in Tsushima in May and politely told Birilev to leave; Birilev explained that he would not move unless his own Admiral ordered him to retreat. After 13 days of waiting in vain, Oguri left; he left a letter allowing contacts between Birilev and local administration without prejudices against further radical action by the Japanese. Birilev used the permit to the full, and persuaded the council of Japanese officials to issue a charter agreeing with Russian naval presence in Tsushima. Tsushima elders granted the coastline between Hiroura and Imosaki exclusively to the Russians and agreed to bar entrance to any other foreign nation. The charter, however, clearly said that all these concessions depended on good will of the central government. The latter vehemently opposed the deal and called the British envoy Rutherford Alcock for help. Alcock immediately dispatched two ships under command of Vice Admiral James Hope. Retreat Likhachev, as instructed by Konstantin, ordered a general retreat and sent the message to Tsushima with the Oprichnik. Birilev and Posadnik left Tsushima on September 7, 1861, while Oprichnik and Abrek stayed in the harbor; both left at the end of September 1861. Likhachev later said that the failure had its upside: "We did not allow the British conquest of the islands", an opinion indirectly supported by contemporary personal meetings between Gorchakov and ambassador Francis Napier; the latter, however, never gave a definite answer about British plans in Tsushima. Likhachev was demoted from his command and tendered a voluntary resignation, which was rejected; the admiral was given command of a Baltic Fleet squadron. The Russian Navy stayed at Nagasaki until the completion of the Port Arthur base in China. See also Sakoku Empire of Japanโ€“Russian Empire relations Notes Sources Alexandr Shirokorad (2005). Rossiya vyhodit v mirovoy okean (ะ ะพััะธั ะฒั‹ั…ะพะดะธั‚ ะฒ ะผะธั€ะพะฒะพะน ะพะบะตะฐะฝ). Veche. Moeshart, Herman J. (1996). The Russian Occupation of Tsushima - A Stepping-stone to British leadership in Japan in: Ian Neary (Ed.), Leaders and Leadership in Japan (Japan Library, ) Japanโ€“Russia relations 1861 in Japan Diplomatic incidents
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%ED%8C%8C%ED%81%AC%EB%9D%BC%EC%B8%A0%20%EC%B6%A9%EB%8F%8C
ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ  ์ถฉ๋Œ
ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ  ์ถฉ๋Œ, ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์—์„œ ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ  ์ „ํˆฌ()๋Š” 1991๋…„ 3์›” ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์˜ ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ  ๋งˆ์„์—์„œ ์ผ์–ด๋‚œ ์œ ํ˜ˆ ์ถฉ๋Œ์ด๋‹ค. ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„์˜ ํ•ด์ฒด ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„ ๋™์•ˆ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋‚ด ๋ฏผ์กฑ ๊ฐˆ๋“ฑ์œผ๋กœ ์ผ์–ด๋‚œ ์ถฉ๋Œ์ด๋‹ค. ์ด ์ถฉ๋Œ์€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ „์Ÿ์œผ๋กœ ์ด์–ด์ง€๋Š” ๋ถ„์Ÿ์—์„œ ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ ์œ ํ˜ˆ ์ถฉ๋Œ์ด๋‹ค. ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ  ์ถฉ๋Œ์€ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ๋ฐ˜๊ตฐ์ด ๋งˆ์„ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ์™€ ์‹œ์ฒญ์„ ์žฅ์•…ํ•˜๊ณ  ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ ์ •๋ถ€ ๊ด€๋ฆฌ๋“ค์„ ์–ต๋ฅ˜ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” ๋งˆ์„ ๋‚ด ๋ฐ˜๊ตฐ ์ง„์••์„ ๋ช…๋ นํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๋‚ด๋ฌด๋ถ€ ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์–‘ ์ธก ์‚ฌ์ด ์ „ํˆฌ๊ฐ€ ์ด๋ค„์กŒ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ถฉ๋Œ์— ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ(JNA)๊ฐ€ ๊ฐœ์ž…์„ ์‹œ๋„ํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰์—” ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ •๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ๋งˆ์„์„ ๋‹ค์‹œ ์žฅ์•…ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ๊ณผ์˜ ๋Œ€๋ฆฝ ์ดํ›„ ํ˜‘์ •์„ ๋งบ์–ด ๋งˆ์„์—์„œ ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ๊ณผ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์ด ๋™์‹œ์— ํ›„ํ‡ดํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ๋ฐ˜๊ตฐ์ด ๋งˆ์„ ์žฅ์•…์„ ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์ด์ „ ์ƒํƒœ๋กœ ๋˜๋Œ๋ฆฐ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์— ํ•ฉ์˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฝ 1990๋…„, ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์˜ ์ด์„ ์—์„œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์‚ฌํšŒ์ฃผ์˜ ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ ๋‚ด ๋‹ค์ˆ˜๋‹น์œผ๋กœ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ์—ฐํ•ฉ(HDZ)๊ฐ€ ์ง‘๊ถŒํ•˜๋ฉฐ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ๊ณผ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์ธ ๋‚ด ๋ฏผ์กฑ ๋ถ„์Ÿ์ด ์‹ฌํ•ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์˜ ์ €ํ•ญ์„ ์•ฝํ™”์‹œํ‚ค๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์˜ํ† ๋ฐฉ์œ„๊ตฐ์˜ ๋ฌด๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์••์ˆ˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 8์›” 17์ผ, ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ์ด ๋ฌด์žฅ ๋ด‰๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ฏผ์กฑ ๊ฐˆ๋“ฑ์ด ๋ฐ˜๋ž€์œผ๋กœ ํ™•์‚ฐ๋˜๋ฉฐ ํฌ๋‹Œ ์ธ๊ทผ์˜ ๋‹ฌ๋งˆํ‹ฐ์•„ ์—ฐ์•ˆ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ์ธ๊ตฌ ๋ฐ€์ง‘ ์ง€์—ญ์„ ์ค‘์‹ฌ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฆฌ์นด, ์ฝ”๋ฅด๋‘”, ๋ฐ”๋…ธ๋น„๋‚˜, ์Šฌ๋ผ๋ณด๋‹ˆ์•„ ๋“ฑ ์ง€์—ญ์—์„œ ๋ฐ˜๋ž€ ์‚ฌํƒœ๊ฐ€ ํ™•๋Œ€๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ์€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์˜ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ํ”„๋ผ๋‡จ ํˆฌ์ง€๋งŒ์˜ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ •์ฑ…์— ๋ฐ˜๋ฐœํ•˜๋ฉฐ 1990๋…„ 7์›” ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์œ„์›ํšŒ๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฝํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด ์œ„์›ํšŒ์—์„œ ํฌ๋‹Œ ์„œ๋‚จ์ชฝ ์ž‘์€ ๋งˆ์„์˜ ์น˜๊ณผ์˜์‚ฌ์˜€๋˜ ๋ฐ€๋ž€ ๋ฐ”๋น„์น˜๊ฐ€ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์œผ๋กœ ์„ ์ถœ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ํฌ๋‹Œ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ์žฅ ๋ฐ€๋ž€ ๋งˆ๋ฅดํ‹ฐ์น˜๋Š” ์ค€๊ตฐ์‚ฌ ๋ฏผ๋ณ‘๋Œ€๋ฅผ ์„ค๋ฆฝํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด ๋‘ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์€ ๋‚˜์ค‘์— ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋‚ด ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์ธ ๋ฐ€์ง‘ ์ง€์—ญ์„ ํ†ตํ•ฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๋…๋ฆฝ์„ ์„ ํฌํ•œ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜ ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ(RSK)์˜ ์ •์น˜์ , ๊ตฐ์‚ฌ์  ์ง€๋„์ž๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1991๋…„ ์ดˆ๊นŒ์ง€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๋Š” ์ •๊ทœ๊ตฐ์ด ์—†์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๋Š” ๊ตญ๋ฐฉ๋ ฅ์„ ๊ฐ•ํ™”ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์š”์›์„ 2๋งŒ๋ช…์œผ๋กœ ์•ฝ ๋‘๋ฐฐ ๊ฐ€๊นŒ์ด ๋Š˜๋ ธ๋‹ค. ์ด์ค‘ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ํšจ๊ณผ๊ฐ€ ์ข‹์•˜๋˜ ๊ฒƒ์€ ๊ตฐ๋Œ€ ์กฐ์ง์„ ๋”ฐ๋ฅธ 12๊ฐœ ๋Œ€๋Œ€ 3์ฒœ๋ช…์˜ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ง€์—ญ๋ณ„๋กœ ์˜ˆ๋น„๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ 16๊ฐœ ๋Œ€๋Œ€, 10๊ฐœ ์ค‘๋Œ€ 9์ฒœ-1๋งŒ๋ช…์„ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฝํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ๋ฌด๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๋ถ€์กฑํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1991๋…„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ธ๊ตฌ์ด์กฐ์‚ฌ์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋ฉด ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ ์—์„œ ์ œ์ผ ๋งŽ์ด ์‚ด๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ฏผ์กฑ์€ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์ธ์œผ๋กœ 46.4%์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ ๊ทธ ๋‹ค์Œ์œผ๋กœ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ์ด 35.8% ์‚ด๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์˜ ์ •์น˜์ธ ๋ฒจ์ฝ” ์ž˜์ฟจ๋ผ๋Š” ์„œ์Šฌ๋ผ๋ณด๋‹ˆ์•„์˜ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ์˜ ์ด์ง€๋„์ž๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ž˜์ฟจ๋ผ๋Š” ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์ธ์ด ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ์—๊ฒŒ์„œ ๋…๋ฆฝํ•ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2์›” 22์ผ, ์ž˜์ฟจ๋ผ๊ฐ€ ํ†ต์ œํ•˜๋Š” ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ  ์‹œ์˜ํšŒ๋Š” ํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์ธ ์ž์น˜์ฃผ๋กœ ๊ฐ€์ž…ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ  ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ๋ฅผ ํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜ ๋‚ด๋ฌด๋ถ€ ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ™์—ฌ๋ฒ„๋ฆฌ์ž๋Š” ํˆฌํ‘œ๋ฅผ ๊ฒฐ์˜ํ•ด ํ†ต๊ณผ์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. 2์›” 28์ผ์—” ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ํ—Œ๋ฒ•์žฌํŒ์†Œ๊ฐ€ ํˆฌํ‘œ๊ฐ€ ๋ฌดํšจ๋ผ๊ณ  ๊ฒฐ๋ก ๋‚ด๋ ธ๋‹ค. ์ „๊ฐœ 1991๋…„ 2์›”, ๋ฐ”๋น„์น˜์™€ ๋งˆ๋ฅดํ‹ฐ์น˜๋Š” ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ์ค€๊ตฐ์‚ฌ์—๊ฒŒ ๋งˆ์„ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ ๋ฐ ์‹œ์ฒญ ๊ฑด๋ฌผ์„ ์žฅ์•…ํ•˜๋ผ๋Š” ๋ช…๋ น์„ ๋‚ด๋ ธ๋‹ค. 3์›” 1์ผ, ๋ฏผ๋ณ‘๋Œ€๋Š” ๋งˆ์„ ๋‚ด ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ๊ด€ 16๋ช…์„ ๋ฌด์žฅํ•ด์ œํ•˜๊ณ  ํ˜„์ง€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ •๋ถ€๋ฅผ ๋น„๋ฐฉํ•˜๊ณ  ํ˜‘๋ฐ•ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ  ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„ ์ง€ํœ˜ํ•˜๋Š” ์š”๋ณด ๋ฒ ์ฆˆ๋งˆ๋ฅด๋Š” ๋ฐ”๋น„์น˜์™€ ๋งˆ๋ฅดํ‹ฐ์น˜์˜ ํŽธ์„ ๋“ค์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด์— ํˆฌ์ง€๋งŒ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์€ ๋‚ด๋ฌด๋ถ€ ์žฅ๊ด€์—๊ฒŒ ์ฆ‰์‹œ ๋งˆ์„์„ ๋‹ค์‹œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๊ฐ€ ์žฅ์•…ํ•˜๋„๋ก ๋ช…๋ นํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1991๋…„ 3์›” 2์ผ ์˜ค์ „ 4์‹œ 30๋ถ„, ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋ฌด์žฅ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ 200๋ช…์ด ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ  ๋งˆ์„์— ๋„์ฐฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฒจ๋กœ๋ฐ”๋ฅด์—์„œ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌ๋œ "์˜ค๋ฉ”๊ฐ€" ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ ์ค‘๋Œ€๋Š” ๋ฐ”๋“œ๋ก€๋น„๋‚˜ ๋งˆ์„์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ์ ‘๊ทผํ•˜์˜€๋Š”๋ฐ ๋งŽ์€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋ฏผ๊ฐ„์ธ์ด ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ  ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์— ๋”ฐ๋ž๋‹ค. ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ  ์™ธ๊ณฝ์˜ ๋ฐ”๋ฆฌ์ผ€์ด๋“œ๋Š” ์ €ํ•ญ ์—†์ด ํ•จ๋ฝ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์€ ๋Œ€๋ฆฝ ์—†์ด ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ ๊ฑด๋ฌผ์„ ํ™•๋ณดํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ช‡ ์‹œ๊ฐ„ ํ›„, ๋ฒ ์ฆˆ๋งˆ๋ฅด์˜ ๋ช…๋ น์„ ๋ฐ›์€ ๊ตฐ์ด ๊ทผ์ฒ˜ ์–ธ๋•์—์„œ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ๋ฅผ ํ–ฅํ•ด ๋ฐœํฌํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ ์ž๊ทธ๋ ˆ๋ธŒ์—์„œ ์ถœ๋ฐœํ•œ ๋ฃจ์น˜์ฝ” ๋Œ€ํ…Œ๋Ÿฌ๋ถ€๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ ์— ๋„์ฐฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฒ ์ฆˆ๋งˆ๋ฅด๋Š” ๋™์ชฝ ํ”„์ˆœ์‚ฐ์˜ ์…ฐ์˜ค๋น„์ฐจ ๋ฐ ๋ถ€์ฒด ๋งˆ์„๋กœ ํ›„ํ‡ดํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋งˆํฌ๋กœ ๋ฃจํ‚ค์น˜์™€ ๋ฏˆ๋ผ๋ด ๋งˆ๋ฅด์นด์น˜๊ฐ€ ์ง€ํœ˜ํ•˜๋Š” ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์€ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์ธ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ 32๋ช…์„ ํฌํ•จํ•œ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ๋ฐ˜๊ตฐ 180๋ช…์„ ์ฒดํฌํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ด ๊ณผ์ •์—์„œ ์‚ฌ์ƒ์ž๊ฐ€ ๋‚˜์˜ค์ง„ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ  ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ฒญ์žฅ์— ๋ฒ ์ฆˆ๋งˆ๋ฅด๊ฐ€ ํ•ด์ž„๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ  ์ด ์ž๋ฆฌ์—” ์Šคํ…ŒํŒ ์ฟ ํ”„์ƒคํฌ๊ฐ€ ์ทจ์ž„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์˜ ํ–‰๋™์œผ๋กœ ์œ ๊ณ  ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ ์ •๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ๊ฐœ์ž…์— ๋‚˜์„ฐ๋‹ค. ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„์˜ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ด์ž ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์˜ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์ธ ๋ณด๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ๋ธŒ ์š”๋น„์น˜๋Š” ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„์˜ ๊ตญ๋ฐฉ๋ถ€ ์žฅ๊ด€์ธ ๋ฒจ์ฝ” ์นด๋””์˜ˆ๋น„์น˜์—๊ฒŒ ํ˜„์žฅ์— ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์„ ํˆฌ์ž…ํ•˜๋ผ๋Š” ๋ช…๋ น์„ ๋‚ด๋ ธ๋‹ค. ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ์ „์ฐจ 10๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ 3์›” 1์ผ ์ €๋…์— ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ ์— ๋„์ฐฉํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋งˆ์„ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๊ณณ์— ์ฃผ๋‘”ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ „์ฐจ ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์€ ๋งˆ์„ ๋ณ‘์› ๊ทผ์ฒ˜์— ์ฃผ๋‘”ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค์Œ ๋‚  ์˜คํ›„์—๋Š” ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ ์— ๋ฐ€๋ž€ ์ฒผ๋ ˆ์ผ€ํ‹ฐ์น˜ ๋Œ€๋ น์ด ์ด๋„๋Š” ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ์ถ”๊ฐ€ ๋ถ€๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ๋„์ฐฉํ•˜์˜€๊ณ  ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ๊ณผ ๋งค์šฐ ๊ฐ€๊น๊ฒŒ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฒผ๋ ˆ์ผ€ํ‹ฐ์น˜ ๋Œ€๋ น์€ ์ œ32 (๋ฐ”๋ผ์ฃผ๋”˜) ๊ตฐ๋‹จ ์ง€ํœ˜๊ด€์ธ ์˜ˆ๋ธŒ๋ ˜ ์ดˆํ‚ค์น˜์—๊ฒŒ ๋ช…๋ น์„ ๋‚ด๋ ธ๋‹ค. ์ดˆํ‚ค์น˜๋Š” ๋ฒจ๋กœ๋ฐ”๋ฅด์— ์ฃผ๋‘”ํ•œ ์ œ256๊ธฐ๊ณ„ํ™”์—ฌ๋‹จ์˜ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ‘๋Œ€๋Œ€์— ์†ํ•œ 3๊ฐœ ์ค‘๋Œ€ ๋ฐฐ์น˜๋ฅผ ์Šน์ธํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ ์— ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์ด ๋„์ฐฉํ–ˆ์„ ๋•Œ์—๋Š” ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ด ๋งˆ์„์„ ์žฅ์•…ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ง‰๊ธฐ์—๋Š” ๋„ˆ๋ฌด ๋Šฆ์€ ์ƒํƒœ์˜€๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ๋‚จ์€ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ๋ฐ˜๊ตฐ์ด ์ฃผ๋ณ€ ์–ธ๋•์—์„œ ๋งˆ์„์„ ํ–ฅํ•ด ์ด๊ฒฉํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ˆœ์ฐฐํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ ์ฐจ๋Ÿ‰์ด ์ด๊ฒฉ์„ ๋งž์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์€ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์ด ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ณณ์œผ๋กœ ํ›„ํ‡ดํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ˜๊ตฐ์—๊ฒŒ ์ด์„ ์ด ๋ฐ˜๊ฒฉํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์€ ์ด์— ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ ์ฐจ๋Ÿ‰์—๊ฒŒ ๋ฐœํฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ด๊ฒฉ์€ ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์˜ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์ธ ์Šค์ฒดํŒ ๋ฉ”์‹œ์น˜์™€ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ์ค‘๋ น ์•Œ๋ ˆํฌ์‚ฐ๋‹ค๋ฅด ๋ฐ”์‹ค๋ ˆ๋น„์น˜ ์‚ฌ์ด ํšŒ๋‹ด์„ ๊ฐ€์ ธ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ด ๋งˆ์„์„ ์žฅ์•…ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋„๋ก ํ•จ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์ข…๋ฃŒ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์€ ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ฐ•์ œ๋กœ ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ  ๋งˆ์„์˜ ํ†ต์ œ๋ฅผ ๋บ์„ ๊ณ„ํš์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ -91 ์ž‘์ „๋ช…์„ ๊ฐ€์ง„ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์˜ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์€ 3์›” 3์ผ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ •๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„ ์ฒ ์ˆ˜์‹œํ‚ค๊ธฐ๋กœ ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์ค‘์ง€๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ๋„ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์˜ ๊ฒฐ์ •์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ ์—์„œ ์ฒ ์ˆ˜ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 3์›” 12์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋งˆ์„์˜ ๋ถ๋ถ€ ์ ‘๊ทผ๋กœ์— ์ฒ ์ˆ˜ํ•˜์˜€๊ณ  7์ผ ํ›„์—๋Š” ์™„์ „ ์ฒ ์ˆ˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์—ฌํŒŒ ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ ๋ฐ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์„ ์ฒ ์ˆ˜์‹œํ‚ค๋กœ ํ•œ ํ˜‘์ •์œผ๋กœ ๋งˆ์„์€ ์› ์ƒํ™ฉ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณต๊ท€ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ฒดํฌ๋œ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ๊ด€ 32๋ช… ์ค‘ 17๋ช…์€ 3์›” 5์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ณต์งํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋ฒ ์ฆˆ๋ฉ”๋ฅด๋ฅผ ํฌํ•จํ•œ 5๋ช…์€ ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ ๊ธฐ์†Œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์™€ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๋ฐ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์˜ ์ง€์›์„ ๋ฐ›๋Š” ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ๋ฐ˜๊ตฐ ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ์ฒซ ์ „๋ฉด์ „์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์ ์—์„œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ „์Ÿ์˜ ์ฒซ ์ „์ดˆ์ „ ๊ฒฉ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ด๊ฒŒ ํฐ ์˜๋ฏธ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ  ์ถฉ๋Œ์—์„œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ์ด ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์ธ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋Œ€๋Ÿ‰ํ•™์‚ด์„ ์ €์งˆ๋ €๋‹ค๋Š” ๋ฏผ์กฑ์ฃผ์˜์  ์„ ์ „์„ ์•…์šฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๋ฐ ๋ชฌํ…Œ๋„ค๊ทธ๋กœ ์–ธ๋ก ์—์„œ๋Š” ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ  ์ถฉ๋Œ๋กœ ์•ฝ 40๋ช… ์ด์ƒ์ด ์‚ฌ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ณด๋„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ˜ผ๋ž€์Šค๋Ÿฝ๊ณ  ๋ถ€์ •ํ™•ํ•œ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๋ณด๋„์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์ ์ธ ์˜ˆ๋กœ, ๋ฒ ์˜ค๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ์˜ ์ผ๊ฐ„์ง€ ๋ฒ ์ฒด๋ฅด๋…œ ๋…ธ๋ณด์Šคํ‹ฐ๋Š” ๊ฐ™์€ ๋‚  1๋ฉด์— ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ ์˜ ์ •ํ†ต๊ตํšŒ ์‹ ๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ์‚ดํ•ด๋‹นํ–ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ธฐ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์‹ฃ๊ณ , 2๋ฉด์—๋Š” ๊ทธ ์‹ ๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ๋ถ€์ƒ์„ ์ž…์—ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ธฐ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์‹ฃ์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, 3๋ฉด์—” ๊ทธ ์‹ ๋ถ€์˜ ์ธํ„ฐ๋ทฐ ์งˆ๋‹ต์„ ์‹ฃ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์€ ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ ์—์„œ ์‚ฌ๋งํ•œ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์€ ์•„๋ฌด๋„ ์—†๋‹ค๋Š” ๋ฐœํ‘œ๋ฅผ ํ•ด์•ผ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ณด๋‹จ ๋ฐ€๋กœ์…ฐ๋น„์น˜๊ฐ€ ๋‹น์ˆ˜์ธ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ์‚ฌํšŒ๋‹น(SPS)์ด ์ง‘๊ถŒํ•œ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๋Š” ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์˜ ์ž‘์ „์„ "ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ •๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ํญ๋ ฅ์ ์ด๊ณ  ํŒŒ์‹œ์ฆ˜์ ์ธ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์œผ๋กœ ์ž”์ธํ•œ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ"์„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋น„๋‚œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Š” ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์˜ ์ˆ˜๋„์ธ ๋ฒ ์˜ค๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ์—์„œ ๋ถ„์œ„๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๋”์šฑ ์‹ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ์‚ฌํšŒ๋‹น์€ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์ธ์—๊ฒŒ "ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ HDZ์˜ ํญ๋ ฅ์ ์ธ ํ–‰๋™์— ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ํ•˜๋Š” ์‹œ์œ„"์— ๋ชจ์ผ ๊ฒƒ์„ ์ด‰๊ตฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ€๋กœ์…ฐ๋น„์น˜๋Š” ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ  ์ถฉ๋Œ์„ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์ด ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๋ฅผ ๊ฐ•์ œ ๋ฌด์žฅํ•ด์ œํ•˜๋Š” ๋ช…๋ถ„์œผ๋กœ ์ด์šฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์—๊ฒŒ ์ „์‹œ ์ž‘์ „๊ถŒ์„ ๋ถ€์—ฌํ•˜๊ณ  ๋น„์ƒ์‚ฌํƒœ๋ฅผ ๋‚ด๋ฆด ๊ฒƒ์„ ์š”๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ์š”์ฒญ์€ 5์›” 15์ผ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ง ํšŒ์˜์—์„œ ์นด๋””์˜ˆ๋น„์น˜๊ฐ€ ์•ˆ๊ฑด์„ ์ œ์‹œํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ด ์š”๊ตฌ๊ฐ€ ์Šน์ธ ๊ฑฐ๋ถ€๋˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋ฐ€๋กœ์…ฐ๋น„์น˜๋Š” ๋” ์ด์ƒ ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์˜ ๊ถŒํ•œ์„ ์ธ์ •ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ฒ ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์„ ์–ธํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์˜ ๊ฐœ์ž…์œผ๋กœ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ด ์ฟ ํ‹ฐ๋‚˜์™€ ๋…ธ๋ธŒ์Šค์นด๋กœ ์ด๋™ํ•˜๋Š” ์ค‘ ์˜ค์ฟ ์ฐจ๋‹ˆ์˜ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ์ง€๋„์ž๋“ค์€ ๋งˆ์„ ์ฃผ๋ฏผ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๊ฐœ์ž…์ด ์˜ค๊ธฐ ์ „์— ๋ฏธ๋ฆฌ ๋ฐ”๋ฆฌ์ผ€์ด๋“œ๋ฅผ ์„ธ์šฐ๋ผ๊ณ  ์ง€์‹œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ”๋ฆฌ์ผ€์ด๋“œ๋Š” ๋ฌด์žฅ ์‹œ๋ฏผ๋“ค์ด ์ง€์ผฐ๋‹ค. ํŒŒํฌ๋ผ์ธ ์—์„œ๋Š” ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์ธ ์‹œ์œ„๋Œ€ 500๋ช…์ด ์‹œ์˜ํšŒ ๊ฑด๋ฌผ ์•ž์— ๋ชจ์—ฌ ์‹œ์˜ํšŒ ๊ฑด๋ฌผ์— ๊ณ„์–‘๋œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์˜ ๊ตญ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋‚ด๋ฆฌ๋ผ๊ณ  ์š”๊ตฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์ฐธ๊ณ  ๋ฌธํ—Œ ์„œ์  ์ €๋„ ๋ฌธํ—Œ ๋‰ด์Šค ๋ฅดํฌ ๊ธฐํƒ€ ๋ฌธ์„œ 1991๋…„ ๋ถ„์Ÿ 1991๋…„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ „์Ÿ์˜ ์ „ํˆฌ 1991๋…„ 3์›”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pakrac%20clash
Pakrac clash
The Pakrac clash, known in Croatia as the Battle of Pakrac (), was a bloodless skirmish that took place in the Croatian town of Pakrac in March 1991. The clash was a result of increasing ethnic tensions in Croatia during the breakup of Yugoslavia. It was one of the first serious outbreaks of violence in what became the Croatian War of Independence. The clash began after rebel Serbs seized the town's police station and municipal building and harassed Croatian government officials. The Croatian government carried out a counterstrike against the rebels, sending Interior Ministry special police to re-establish control. Fighting broke out between the two sides. Despite an attempted intervention by the Yugoslav People's Army (Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija โ€“ JNA), the Croatian government reasserted its control over the town. After a standoff with the JNA, an agreement to pull out the special police and the JNA was reached, restoring the town to conditions before the Serb attempt to seize control of the police there. Background In 1990, following the electoral defeat of the government of the Socialist Republic of Croatia by the Croatian Democratic Union (, HDZ), ethnic tensions between Croats and Serbs worsened. The Yugoslav People's Army (Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija โ€“ JNA) confiscated Croatia's Territorial Defence (Teritorijalna obrana - TO) weapons to minimize resistance. On 17 August, the tensions escalated into an open revolt of the Croatian Serbs, centred on the predominantly Serb-populated areas of the Dalmatian hinterland around Knin, parts of the Lika, Kordun, Banovina, and eastern Croatia. The Croatian Serbs established the Serbian National Council in July 1990 to coordinate opposition to Croatian President Franjo Tuฤ‘man's policy of pursuing independence. Milan Babiฤ‡, a dentist from the southern town of Knin, was elected president and Knin's police chief Milan Martiฤ‡ established paramilitary militias. The two men eventually became the political and military leaders of the Republic of Serb Krajina (RSK), a self-declared state incorporating the Serb-inhabited areas of Croatia. In the beginning of 1991, Croatia had no regular army. To bolster its defence, Croatia doubled police personnel to about 20,000. The most effective part of the force was 3,000-strong special police deployed in twelve battalions adopting military organisation. There were also 9,000โ€“10,000 regionally organised reserve police, which was organized in 16 battalions and 10 companies but lacked weapons. According to the Croatian 1991 census, Serbs were the largest ethnic group in the municipality of Pakrac (46.4%), followed by Croats (35.8%). Serb Democratic Party politician Veljko Dลพakula became the political leader of Croatian Serbs in western Slavonia. He held a view that Serbs should secede from Croatia. On 22 February, the municipal council controlled by Dลพakula voted to join the Serbian Autonomous Oblast of Krajina (later renamed the RSK) and subordinate the Pakrac police station to the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Krajina. The vote was annulled by the Constitutional Court of Croatia on 28 February. Timeline In February 1991, Babiฤ‡ and Martiฤ‡ directed Serb paramilitaries to take over the town's police station and municipal buildings. On 1 March, the paramilitaries disarmed the town's 16 Croatian policemen and subjected local Croatian officials to a campaign of vilification and intimidation. The police in Pakrac were commanded by Jovo Vezmar, who sided with Babiฤ‡ and Martiฤ‡. In response, President Franjo Tuฤ‘man ordered the Croatian Interior Ministry to restore the government's authority over the town. At 04:30 on 2 March 1991, the first part of a 200-strong Croatian police force entered Pakrac. A company of the "Omega" special police unit, dispatched from Bjelovar, approached via the village of Badljevina, where a number of Croatian civilians followed the force towards Pakrac. A barricade outside Pakrac was cleared with no resistance, and the Croatian police secured the town's police station unopposed. Several hours later, shots were fired at the police station from a nearby hill by a force commanded by Vezmar. Soon afterwards, a second Croatian special police unit, the Luฤko Anti-Terrorist Unit, arrived from Zagreb. Vezmar retreated east towards the villages of ล eovica and Buฤje on the Psunj Mountain. The special police, commanded by Marko Lukiฤ‡ and Mladen Markaฤ, arrested 180 ethnic-Serb rebels, including 32 ethnic-Serb policemen, without either side sustaining deaths or injuries. Vezmar was replaced by Stjepan Kupsjak as the Pakrac police chief. The Croatian action prompted an intervention from the federal Yugoslav government. Borisav Joviฤ‡, the Serbian representative on the collective Presidency of Yugoslavia, supported a request by Yugoslav Defence Minister Veljko Kadijeviฤ‡ to send the JNA to the scene. The first ten JNA tanks arrived in Pakrac late in the evening of 1 March and took positions in various parts of the town; most of them were stationed near the town hospital. The next afternoon, an additional JNA unit led by Colonel Milan ฤŒeleketiฤ‡ arrived in Pakrac, taking positions close to the Croatian special police. ฤŒeleketiฤ‡ was acting on the orders of Major General Jevrem Cokiฤ‡, commander of the 32nd (Varaลพdin) Corps. Cokiฤ‡ authorised deployment of three companies of the armoured battalion of the 265th Mechanised Brigade based in Bjelovar. The arrival of JNA tanks in Pakrac came too late to stop the Croatian special police from retaking the town. However, it prompted the remaining Serb rebels to begin shooting at the town from the surrounding hills. Shots were fired at a police vehicle on patrol. The policemen shot back at men retreating towards a JNA position, and the JNA shot at the police vehicle in return. The shooting ended when talks between Croatian member of the federal presidency Stjepan Mesiฤ‡ and JNA Colonel Aleksandar Vasiljeviฤ‡ produced an agreement that the Croatian police would be allowed to retain control of the town. The JNA planned to retake control of Pakrac from the special police by force. The attack, codenamed Pakrac-91, was cancelled when the Croatian authorities agreed to withdraw the special police by the evening of 3 March. The JNA withdrew from Pakrac following a decision of the Yugoslav Presidency, abandoning the northern approaches to the town on 12 March, and pulling out completely seven days later. Aftermath The agreement to withdraw the special police and the JNA largely restored status quo ante bellum. 17 of the 32 arrested policemen returned to service by 5 March; charges were eventually filed against five, including Vezmar. The incident had a lasting significance because it was the first serious skirmish in what would become the Croatian War of Independencea full-scale war between Croatia and its rebel Serb population supported by Serbia and the JNA. The Serbian government used the Pakrac clash to strengthen nationalist propaganda claims that Croatia was committing genocide against its Serb population. Up to 40 deaths from the clash were reported by Serbian and Montenegrin media outlets. In an indication of the confused and highly inaccurate nature of the reporting, the Belgrade daily newspaper Veฤernje novosti reported on its front page that the town's Orthodox priest had been killed, on its second page that he had been wounded, and on its third page it printed a statement from him. The Yugoslav presidency finally issued a statement that nobody had been killed in Pakrac. In Serbia, the ruling Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS), led by Slobodan Miloลกeviฤ‡, condemned the Croatian police action as a "brutal attack by the Croatian government on the population of Pakrac [using] violent and fascist methods"a statement that was carried prominently by the state-controlled Radio Television Belgrade. The SPS urged Serbs to attend "protest meetings against the violent behaviour of the Croatian HDZ government". Miloลกeviฤ‡ used the Pakrac clash to demand that the JNA be authorised to forcibly disarm Croatia. The request, specifically demanding the granting of wartime powers to the JNA and the introduction of a state of emergency, was made through Kadijeviฤ‡ at a Presidency session of 11โ€“15 May. The request was refused, and Miloลกeviฤ‡ declared that he no longer recognised the authority of the federal presidency. The police intervention prompted Serb political leaders in Okuฤani to urge the local population to erect barricades around the town in to pre-empt another interventionโ€”stating that police forces were moving in from Kutina and Novska. The barricades were guarded by armed civilians. In Pakrac, approximately 500 Serb protesters gathered in front of the municipal council building to the demand the removal of the flag of Croatia. Footnotes References Books Scientific journal articles News reports Other sources Conflicts in 1991 1991 in Croatia Battles of the Croatian War of Independence Battles and conflicts without fatalities March 1991 events in Europe
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EB%A1%9D%EB%A7%A8%20X5
๋ก๋งจ X5
ใ€Š๋ก๋งจ X5ใ€‹(Mega Man X5)๋Š” ์บก์ฝค์ด ๋งŒ๋“  ์•ก์…˜๊ฒŒ์ž„ ๋ก๋งจ X์˜ 5๋ฒˆ์งธ ์ž‘ํ’ˆ์ด๋‹ค. ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ ์ „์ž‘๊ณผ ๋งˆ์ฐฌ๊ฐ€์ง€๋กœ ์—‘์Šค, ์ œ๋กœ ๋ชจ๋‘ ์ •์‹ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ์„œ๋ธŒํƒฑํฌ ๋˜ํ•œ Eํƒฑํฌ 2๊ฐœ Wํƒฑํฌ 1๊ฐœ. ๋ก๋งจ X5์˜ 8 ๋ณด์Šค ์ผ๋žŒ ํฌ๋ฆฌ์„ผํŠธ ๊ทธ๋ ˆ์ฆ๋ฆฌ(Crescent Grizzly)/๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์ฆ๋ฆฌ ์Šฌ๋ž˜์‰ฌ(Grizzly Slash) ์ด๋ช…์€ 'ํญ์ฃผ ์•„์ด์–ธํด๋กœ(ๆšด่ตฐใ‚ขใ‚คใ‚ขใƒณใ‚ฏใƒญใƒผ)' ๊ณฐ ํ˜•ํƒœ์˜ ๋ ˆํ”„๋ฆฌ๋กœ์ด๋“œ. ์•ฝ์ ์€ ์ŠคํŒŒ์ดํฌ ๋กœ์ฆˆ๋ ˆ๋“œ์˜ ๋ฌด๊ธฐ X:ํฌ๋ ˆ์„ผํŠธ ์ƒท(Crescent Shot) - 3๋ฐฉํ–ฅ ๋žœ๋ค์œผ๋กœ ์ดˆ์Šน๋‹ฌ ๋ชจ์–‘์˜ ์ƒท์„ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ. ์ฐจ์ง€ ์‹œ ์—‘์Šค๋ฅผ ๋‘˜๋Ÿฌ์‹ธ๋Š” ๋‚ ์นด๋กœ์šด ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์ƒ์„ฑํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ๋ฐฉ์–ด๋Šฅ๋ ฅ๋„ ์žˆ๋‹ค. Z:์ดˆ์Šน๋‹ฌ๋ฒ ๊ธฐ(ไธ‰ๆ—ฅๆœˆๆ–ฌ) - ์ ํ”„ํ•œ ์ƒํƒœ์—์„œ ํšŒ์ „๋ชจ์…˜์œผ๋กœ ์„ธ์ด๋ฒ„๋กœ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ. ๋”๋ธ”์ ํ”„๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋‹ค. ๋‹คํฌ ๋„คํฌ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ(Dark Necrobat)/๋‹คํฌ ๋””์ง€(Dark Dizzy) ๋ฐ•์ฅ ํ˜•ํƒœ์˜ ๋ ˆํ”„๋ฆฌ๋กœ์ด๋“œ ๋ฌด๊ธฐ X:๋‹คํฌ ํ™€๋“œ(Dark Hold) - ์ ์˜ ์›€์ง์ž„์„ ๋ฉˆ์ถ”๊ฒŒ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ฐจ์ง€๊ธฐ์ˆ ์€ ์—†์ง€๋งŒ, ๊ณต์ค‘์—์„œ๋Š” ์–ด๋””์„œ๋Š” ์‚ฌ์šฉ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ. Z:๋‹คํฌ ํ™€๋“œ(Dark Hold) - ์ ์˜ ์›€์ง์ž„์„ ๋ฉˆ์ถ”๊ฒŒ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ œ๋กœ ํ•œ์ •์œผ๋กœ๋งŒ ๊ณต์ค‘์—์„œ ์‚ฌ์šฉ ๋ถˆ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ, ์˜ค์ง ์ง€๋ฉด์— ๋‹ฟ์•„ ์žˆ์„ ๋•Œ๋งŒ ์‚ฌ์šฉ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ. ๋ณผํŠธ ํฌ๋ผ์ผ„(Volt Kraken)/์Šคํ€ด๋“œ ์• ๋“ค๋Ÿฌ(Squid Adler) ์ด๋ช…์€ '์ดˆ์ „์ž์˜ ํ•จ์ •(่ถ…้›ป็ฃใฎ็ฝ )' ์˜ค์ง•์–ด/ํฌ๋ผ์ผ„ ํ˜•ํƒœ์˜ ๋ ˆํ”„๋ฆฌ๋กœ์ด๋“œ. ์•ฝ์ ์€ ํƒ€์ด๋‹ฌ ๋ฉ•์ฝ”์ธ์˜ ์ ค ์„ธ์ด๋ฒ„(X), ๋น„์ˆ˜์ƒ(Z)์œผ๋กœ ๋งž์œผ๋ฉด ๋ชธ์ด ๋งˆ๋น„๊ฐ€ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋ฌด๊ธฐ X:ํŠธ๋ผ์ด ์ฌ๋”(Tri-Thunder) - ์ƒ, ํ•˜, ์ „ 3๋ฐฉํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ ๋™์‹œ์— ์ „๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ. ๋ฒฝ์— ๋‹ฟ์œผ๋ฉด ๊ตฌ(็ƒ)ํ˜•์œผ๋กœ ๋ณ€ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ฐจ์ง€ ์‹œ ์ž„์˜์˜ ์ง€์ ์—์„œ ์ˆ˜์ง๋ฐฉํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ ์ „๊ธฐ๋กœ ๊ณต๊ฒฉํ•œ๋‹ค. Z:์ „์ธ(้›ปๅˆƒ) - ์ „๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ํ๋ฅด๋Š” ์„ธ์ด๋ฒ„๋กœ ์œ„์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ ๊ณต๊ฒฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ƒค์ด๋‹ ํ˜ธํƒ€๋ฃจ๋‹‰์Šค(Shining Hotarunicus)/์ด์ง€ ๊ธ€๋กœ(Izzy Glow) ์•ฝ์ ์€ ๋ณผํŠธ ํฌ๋ผ์ผ„์˜ ํŠธ๋ผ์ด ์ฌ๋”์™€ ์ „์ธ์œผ๋กœ ๋งž์œผ๋ฉด ๋ชธ์ด ๊ฐ์ „๋˜์–ด ์•„๋ž˜๋กœ ๋–จ์–ด์ง„๋‹ค. ๋ฌด๊ธฐ X:์œŒ ๋ ˆ์ด์ €(Will Laser) - ๋ฐ˜๋”ง๋ถˆ์ด ๋ชจ์–‘์˜ ๋ฉ”์นด๋ฅผ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ. ๋ฉ”์นด๋Š” ์ƒํ•˜์ „ํ›„ ์กฐ์ข…์ด ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋‹ค. ์ฐจ์ง€ ์‹œ ์•ž์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ ๋ ˆ์ด์ €๋ฅผ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌํ•œ๋‹ค. Z:๋ฉธ์„ฌ๊ด‘(ๆป…้–ƒๅ…‰) - ์ œ๋กœ ์ฃผ๋ณ€์œผ๋กœ ์—๋„ˆ์ง€ ํƒ„์„ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ. ํฌ์œ„๋˜์—ˆ์„ ๋•Œ ์“ฐ๊ธฐ ์ข‹๋‹ค. ํƒ€์ด๋“ค ๋ฉ•์ฝ”์ธ(Tidal Makkoeen)/๋”ํ”„ ๋ฉ•์›”๋ Œ(Duff McWhalen) ์ด๋ช…์€ '๋Œ€ํ•ด์˜ ์ˆ˜ํ˜ธ์‹ (ๅคงๆตทใฎๅฎˆ่ญท็ฅž)' ํ–ฅ์œ ๊ณ ๋ž˜ ํ˜•ํƒœ์˜ ๋ ˆํ”„๋ฆฌ๋กœ์ด๋“œ๋กœ ์ด๋ฆ„์˜ ์œ ๋ž˜๋Š” ํ–ฅ์œ ๊ณ ๋ž˜๋ฅผ ๋œปํ•˜๋Š” ์ผ๋ณธ์–ด ่Œ‰้ฆ™้ฏจ(ใพใฃใ“ใ†ใใ˜ใ‚‰)์—์„œ ๋‚˜์™”๋‹ค. ์Šคํ…Œ์ด์ง€๋งˆ๋‹ค ๊ฑฐ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ž ์ˆ˜ํ•จ๊ณผ ์‹ธ์šฐ๋Š” ๋ฐ ๋จธ๋ฆฌ, ๊ผฌ๋ฆฌ, ๋ชธํ†ต ์ˆœ์ด๋‹ค. ์•ฝ์ ์€ ํฌ๋ฆฌ์„ผํŠธ ์ƒท(X), ์ดˆ์Šน๋‹ฌ๋ฒ ๊ธฐ(Z)์— ๋งž์œผ๋ฉด ์˜จ ๋ชธ์— ๊ธˆ์ด ๊ฐ€๊ณ  ์–ผ์–ด๋ถ™๋Š”๋‹ค. ๋ฌด๊ธฐ X:์ ค ์„ธ์ด๋ฒ„(Gel Shaver) - ๋•… ์œ„๋ฅผ ์ด๋™ํ•˜๋Š” ํ‘ธ๋ฅธ์ƒ‰ ์ƒท์„ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ. ์ฐจ์ง€ ์‹œ ์–‘์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ ์ด 8๊ฐœ์˜ ์–ผ์Œ๋ฉ์–ด๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ์ƒ์„ฑํ•œ๋‹ค. Z:๋น„์ˆ˜์ƒ(้ฃ›ๆฐด็ฟ”) - ์—์–ด๋Œ€์‰ฌ๋กœ ๋ชธํ†ต๊ณต๊ฒฉ. ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์ค‘์—๋Š” ๋ฌด์ ์ด๋ฉฐ, 3๋ฐฉํ–ฅ ๋น„ํ–‰์ด ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋‹ค. ์ŠคํŒŒ์ด๋Ÿด ํŽ˜๊ฐ€์‹œ์˜จ(Spiral Pegasion)/๋” ์Šค์นด์ด๋ฒ„(The Skiver) ๋ฌด๊ธฐ X:์œ™ ์ŠคํŒŒ์ด๋Ÿด(Wing Spiral) - ์œ„์ชฝ ๋ฐฉํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ ํšŒ์˜ค๋ฆฌ๋กœ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ. ์ฐจ์ง€ ์‹œ ์•ž์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ ํšŒ์˜ค๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๋‚ ๋ฆฌ๋ฉฐ, ํšŒ์˜ค๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์ด๋™ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ํฌ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ์ปค์ง„๋‹ค. Z:์งˆํ’(็–พ้ขจ) - ๋Œ€์‰ฌํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์ˆœ๊ฐ„์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ทธ๋ฆผ์ž๋ฅผ ์ƒ์„ฑํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ณต๊ฒฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ŠคํŒŒ์ดํฌ ๋กœ์ฆˆ๋ ˆ๋“œ(Spike Rosered)/์•ก์Šฌ ๋” ๋ ˆ๋“œ(Axle the Red) ์ด๋ช…์€ '์ง„ํ™์˜ ํ™˜์ˆ (็œŸ็ด…ใฎๅนป่ก“)' ์žฅ๋ฏธ ํ˜•ํƒœ์˜ ๋ ˆํ”„๋ฆฌ๋กœ์ด๋“œ. ์Šคํ…Œ์ด์ง€ ๊ฑฐ์˜ ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰์—์„œ ๊ฐ€์ด์•„ ์•„๋จธ ํ’‹ ํŒŒ์ธ  ํš๋“ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ. ๋ณด์Šค์˜ ์•ฝ์ ์€ ๊ทธ๋žœ๋“œ ํŒŒ์ด์–ด(X), ๋‹จ์ง€์—ผ(Z)์œผ๋กœ ๋งž์ถ”๋ฉด ๋ถˆ๊ฝƒ์„ ๋ฌด์„œ์›Œํ•˜๋Š” ์‹๋ฌผ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ๋ชธ์ด ๋ถ‰๊ฒŒ ๋‹ฌ์•„์˜ค๋ฅธ๋‹ค. ๋ฌด๊ธฐ X:์ŠคํŒŒ์ดํฌ ๋กœํ”„(Spike Rope) - ์ŠคํŒŒ์ดํฌ๊ฐ€ ๋ฐ•ํžŒ ๋…น์ƒ‰ ๊ตฌ์ฒด๋กœ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ. ๊ณต๊ฒฉ๋ฒ”์œ„๋Š” ์ข์ง€๋งŒ ๋ฒฝ์„ ๊ด€ํ†ตํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ฐจ์ง€ ์‹œ ๋ฒฝ์— ๋ฐ”์šด๋“œ๋˜๋Š” ๋ณด๋ผ์ƒ‰์„ ๋„๋Š” ๊ตฌ์ฒด๋ฅผ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌํ•œ๋‹ค. Z:์Œํ™˜๋ชฝ(ๅŒๅนปๅคข) - ์ œ๋กœ์˜ ์•ž์ชฝ์— ๋ถ„์‹ ์„ ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด ๋”๋ธ”๊ณต๊ฒฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฒˆ ๋””๋…ธ๋ ‰์Šค(Burn Dinorex)/๋งคํŠธ๋ ‰์Šค(Mattrex) ์ด๋ช…์€ '์ฅฌ๋ผ๊ธฐ ์ง€์˜ฅ(ใ‚ธใƒฅใƒฉใ‚ทใƒƒใ‚ฏใ‚คใƒณใƒ•ใ‚งใƒซใƒŽ)' ํ‹ฐ๋ผ๋…ธ์‚ฌ์šฐ๋ฃจ์Šค ํ˜•ํƒœ์˜ ๋ ˆํ”„๋ฆฌ๋กœ์ด๋“œ. ์ŠคํŒŒ์ด๋Ÿด ํŽ˜๊ฐ€์‹œ์˜จ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋ ˆํ”Œ๋ฆฌํฌ์Šค ์ถœ์‹ ์œผ๋กœ, ๋ฐฉ์ œ ์ž„๋ฌด๋ฅผ ์ฃผ๋กœ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ถ€๋Œ€ ์†Œ์†์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์Šคํ…Œ์ด์ง€ 2๊ตฌ์—ญ์—์„œ๋Š” ๋‘ ๊ฐˆ๋ž˜ ๊ธธ์ด ์žˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ์œ—๊ธธ๋กœ ๊ฐ€๋ฉด ์ค‘๊ฐ„๋ณด์Šค์ธ ํ”„ํ…Œ๋ผ๋…ธ๋ˆ ํ˜•ํƒœ์˜ ๋ฉ”์นด ํ”„ํ…Œ๋ผ๋…ธ์ด๋“œ๊ฐ€ ์ถœํ˜„ ์•ฝ์ ์€ ์ ค ์„ธ์ด๋ฒ„๋กœ ์•ฝ์  ๋ฐ˜์‘์€ ์—†์ง€๋งŒ ๋ฐ๋ฏธ์ง€๋ฅผ ๋งŽ์ด ์ค„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์–ด ์‰ฝ๊ฒŒ ํด๋ฆฌ์–ด. ์•„๋žซ๊ธธ์€ ๋ผ์ด๋“œ์•„๋จธ๋ฅผ ํƒ€๊ณ  ์šฉ์•”๋ฐ”๋‹ค ์†์œผ๋กœ ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ„๋‹ค. ๋ณด์Šค๋ฃธ ์ง์ „์˜ ๋ฐ‘์— ์บก์Š์—์„œ ๊ฐ€์ด์•„ ์•„๋จธ ์•” ํŒŒ์ธ  ํš๋“ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ. ๋ณด์Šค์˜ ์•ฝ์ ์€ ์œ™ ์ŠคํŒŒ์ด๋Ÿด(X), ์งˆํ’(Z)์œผ๋กœ ๋งž์œผ๋ฉด ๋ฐ”๋žŒ์— ํœฉ์‹ธ์—ฌ ๋ชธ์ด ๋– ์˜ค๋ฅธ๋‹ค. ๋ฌด๊ธฐ X:๊ทธ๋ผ์šด๋“œ ํŒŒ์ด์–ด(Ground Fire) - ๋ฐ”๋‹ฅ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถˆ๋ฉ์–ด๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ. ๋ฐ”๋‹ฅ์ด๋‚˜ ๋ฒฝ์— ๋‹ฟ์œผ๋ฉด ์‚ฌ๋ฐฉ์— ๋ถˆ๋˜ฅ์ด ํŠ„๋‹ค. ์ฐจ์ง€ ์‹œ ์–‘์†์—์„œ ๊ธธ๊ฒŒ ๋ฟœ์–ด๋‚˜์˜ค๋Š” ๋ถˆ๋ฉ์–ด๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌํ•œ๋‹ค. Z:๋‹จ์ง€์—ผ(ๆ–ญๅœฐ็‚Ž) - ์ ํ”„ํ•œ ์ƒํƒœ์—์„œ ์•„๋ž˜์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถˆ๊ฝƒ ์„ธ์ด๋ฒ„๋กœ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ. ๋ฐ”๋‹ฅ์— ๋‹ฟ์œผ๋ฉด ์‚ฌ๋ฐฉ์— ๋ถˆ๋˜ฅ์ด ํŠ„๋‹ค. ํ‰๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ๊ณต์‹ ์›น์‚ฌ์ดํŠธ Mega Man X5 - ๋ชจ๋น„๊ฒŒ์ž„์Šค 2000๋…„ ๋น„๋””์˜ค ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ๋ก๋งจ X ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์Šคํ…Œ์ด์…˜ (์ฝ˜์†”) ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์Šคํ…Œ์ด์…˜ ๋„คํŠธ์›Œํฌ ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ์œˆ๋„์šฐ ๊ฒŒ์ž„ 22์„ธ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฝ์œผ๋กœ ํ•œ ๋น„๋””์˜ค ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ์ผ๋ณธ์˜ ๋น„๋””์˜ค ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ์Šˆํผํžˆ์–ด๋กœ ๊ฒŒ์ž„
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mega%20Man%20X5
Mega Man X5
Mega Man X5, known as in Japan, is an action-platform video game and the fifth main installment in the Mega Man X series. Developed by Capcom, it was first released for the PlayStation in Japan on November 30, 2000, and in North America and PAL territories the following year. In 2002, the game was ported to Microsoft Windows as retail packages in both Japan and North America. Players control X and Zero, heroes who traverse eight selectable stages and acquire the special weapon of each stage's boss. Mega Man X5 was intended to be the final game in its series, according to Capcom producer Keiji Inafune. Its story is set in the 22nd century, in a world where humans coexist with androids called "Reploids". X and Zero once again face their nemesis Sigma who aims to destroy the planet and infect all Reploids with a virus. The design of X's upgrades, new villains, and new tactics for the platform franchise were the biggest focus from Capcom when developing the game. It was a commercial success and garnered a generally positive reception among critics, many of whom agreed that it would satisfy diehard fans of the series despite the stale gameplay formula and presentation of the story. It was re-released in 2006 as part of the Mega Man X Collection for the PlayStation 2 and in the Mega Man X Legacy Collection 2 in 2018 for additional consoles. Gameplay The gameplay in Mega Man X5 is similar to the previous installments of the Mega Man X series. The player is presented with a series of action-platforming stages that can be cleared in any order desired. The core aspects of gameplay are largely unchanged from previous installments, though X5 differs from its predecessor in a few notable ways. Before each level, players can choose whether to play as the shooter X or the swordsman Zero. X focuses on distanced combat using his X-Buster while the latter instead uses his Z-Saber in close combat. Defeating bosses results in the two characters gaining new weapons and techniques, respectively. and for the first time in the franchise, players are able to change the game's difficulty. The characters gain the new movement mechanics of crouching and hanging from ropes. Between the two characters, the one not chosen at the start of the game is disadvantaged โ€“ X loses his "Fourth Armor" (a less-powerful recreation of his armor from Mega Man X4), and Zero loses his Z-Buster weapon. X has four enhancing armor sets available: the Fourth Armor, the secret Ultimate Armor, and two others that must be assembled from parts found in capsules. X cannot wear any individual armor part without the rest of the matching set. Zero can find and enter Dr. Light's armor capsules, but in most cases he cannot use the armor parts inside โ€“ he can only retrieve them to deliver to X. If Zero reaches the capsule containing X's Ultimate Armor, Dr. Light offers him the "Black Zero" armor instead, which enhances his abilities. After the introduction stage, the player has 16 attempts to challenge four Maverick bosses in stages to complete the Enigma weapon needed to protect the planet from a space colony. A mid-boss named Dynamo also appears at predetermined intervals, stalling the player for time. If X is infected by a sufficient number of Sigma's viruses, his health begins to rapidly decline. Zero is affected differently by this level of infection โ€“ he becomes briefly invincible, with increased attack power. At any point between levels, the player can choose to fire the Enigma at the Eurasia, though the chance of success increases as the game progresses. Plot Like other entries in the series, Mega Man X5 takes place in "21XX", an unspecified year in the 22nd century, where humans have adapted to life with intelligent androids dubbed "Reploids". However, a series Reploids become Mavericks, causing crimes and chaos. The series' primary antagonist is Sigma, a Maverick who spreads a computer virus across the Earth, causing a series of new infected Mavserick. He also hires a Reploid mercenary named Dynamo to hijack the space colony Eurasia to make it collide with Earth. To prevent Eurasia from striking the planet, the Maverick Hunters pursue two options: firing a powerful cannon called "Enigma" at Eurasia to vaporize it, or failing that, launching a space shuttle and piloting it into the colony to destroy it. To maximize their chances of success, Hunters X and Zero are dispatched to collect parts for the two devices with the aid of their new teammates Alia, Douglas, and Signas. The necessary parts to upgrade the Enigma and shuttle are held by eight Mavericks, and X and Zero must defeat them to claim the parts. Whether the Enigma succeeds or fails, a new virus appears on the Earth, identified by Alia as the Sigma virus. If either one of the two methods succeeds, X and Zero proceed to hunt for the source of the virus. If the shuttle fails or if time expires, the colony crashes into the planet, nearly destroying it, and Zero is then infected by the virus. In either case, once the virus' origin is discovered, the Hunters investigate, penetrating a bizarre underground fortress. In the fortress, X and the infected Zero cross paths, where mutual suspicion and mistrust leads them to duel. After the duel, the story diverges into a few possible paths, each with its own ending. If Zero's mind is unaffected by the virus, he saves himself and X from Sigma, and they confront Sigma together. Upon defeating him, Sigma attempts to make the Hunters' victory for naught by taking them down with him. X tries to save Zero but is ambushed by Sigma and both Hunters are critically damaged. At this point, the endings diverge again depending on the player's chosen character. If Zero defeats Sigma, he reflects on his origin and life before dying. If X defeats Sigma, he inherits Zero's beam saber weapon and lives on as a Hunter. If Zero becomes a Maverick as a result of the virus, he sacrifices himself to save X from Sigma, and X continues on alone. Upon defeating Sigma, X is badly damaged. A mysterious figure recovers him but deletes all his memories of Zero. Development Mega Man X5 was originally intended to be the final game in the Mega Man X series. According to producer Keiji Inafune, he had little to do with the title and told the staff his idea. Much to the dismay of Inafune, Capcom decided to publish Mega Man X6 the following year, in which Zero survived his fight from X5. Haruki Suetsugu, an artist for Mega Man X4, designed almost all of the characters and promotional artwork for X5, adding various details to differentiate the characters from each other. Advancements in technology allowed the team to improve the visuals of the game over the previous installment. X5 uses still images without voiceovers instead of the animated cutscenes displayed in X4, which bothered Suetsugu as the price players paid was the same as before. Artist Hitoshi Ariga agreed with this sentiment as the boss characters were unvoiced. Suetsugu believed that the navigator Alia might be the most fitting heroine in the series in contrast to the tragic Iris from Mega Man X4. Alia stood out as the only female character, which Suetsugu did not mind since the game is aimed towards a young demographic. As the idea of having a calm woman as navigator proved difficult to execute, the other navigator Roll Caskett from Mega Man Legends was used as a reference. The villain Dynamo was based on Western movies, with a design that combined features from X and Zero. X's new Falcon Armor was designed by Ryuji Higurashi to resemble a bird with a beak-shaped chest piece, wings coming out of the back, and a talon-like arm cannon. Suetsugu designed the Gaea Armor to resemble Sanagiman from the Inazuman manga series. Other new characters were introduced to expand the roster of the Maverick Hunters beyond just the fighters, with Signus being the most mature among them and possibly having connections to the Repliforce from X4. Douglas and Lifesaver were created as minor characters for the roles of mechanic and doctor, respectively. The game does not employ voice acting, except that yells in the Japanese version were performed by Showtaro Morikubo, who replaced Kentarล Itล as X's voice actor, and by Ryลtarล Okiayu for Zero. Morikubo found the task challenging as he was debuting as a musician during the release of X5. The Maverick bosses in the English localization of the game are named after members of the American hard rock band Guns N' Roses. Capcom voice actress Alyson Court, who was involved in the game's English localization, chose the new names as a tribute to her then-husband's love of the band. For the Mega Man X Legacy Collection 2 release, the names of the Maverick bosses were changed to translations of their original Japanese names. The musical score for Mega Man X5 was composed by Naoto Tanaka, Naoya Kamisaka, and Takuya Miyawaki. The Japanese version of the game features "Monkey" as the opening theme and as the closing theme, both composed and performed by Morikubo and his band Mosquito Milk. The theme songs were included in the Rockman Theme Song Collection, published by Suleputer in 2002, and all of the game's instrumental and vocal music was included on the Capcom Music Generation: Rockman X1 ~ X6 soundtrack, released by Suleputer in 2003. The game was first released in Japan for the PlayStation on November 30, 2000. The North American release followed the next month on January 31, 2001. It was later released in Europe on August 3, 2001. A Microsoft Windows port was first released to retail in Asia on July 30, 2001, in Japan on May 24, 2002, and in North America on August 20, 2002. The game was included in the North American Mega Man X Collection for GameCube and PlayStation 2 in 2006. In 2014, the PlayStation Network released Mega Man X5 alongside X4. It became available for Windows via Steam, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and Nintendo Switch as a part of Mega Man X Legacy Collection 2 on July 24, 2018, worldwide and July 26, 2018, in Japan. Reception Mega Man X5 was generally well-received as an appealing sidescroller, although several sites commented that it did not contribute new major ideas to the franchise. GameRevolution enjoyed the contrasting gameplay system between X and Zero as well as the improved graphics. Official U.S. PlayStation Magazine stated that the game's difficulty felt harsher than previous installments as a result of enemy placement but still appreciated the focus on more checkpoints and continues, which balance it out. While they also appreciated the storytelling and multiple endings, they panned the idea of being forced into several cutscenes in the middle of the game without offering new ideas. Eurogamer agreed that players would need to properly collect most power-ups, like heart-shaped items, to make X and Zero able to fight the bosses. He found the system so repetitive that he instead recommended playing the related series, Legends, which he finds more innovative. Electronic Gaming Monthly found several parts of the game to be similar to Mega Man X4 and that the characters' interactions were cheesy. GameSpot said the gameplay would appeal to non-Mega Man fans and gamers in general due to the attention given to detail and the design of the new bosses. GamePro was more positive on the new content and improvements made over X4 and found it important for most fans. Regarding the game's presentation, responses were mixed. GameRevolution enjoyed the narrative associated with Armageddon but still felt it was poorly executed due to having to retread previous stages at the cost of losing hours to attack the colony. Both IGN and GameSpot enjoyed the presentation for relying on nostalgic tracks fitting for popular Super Nintendo games. The PC port was also the focus of some reviews, with Absolute Games criticizing the lack of noticeable improvements to the visuals or gameplay compared to Mega Man X4. On the other hand, Wolf praised the handling of stages and skills needed to defeat the bosses. According to the Japanese publication Famitsu, Mega Man X5 was the third best-selling video game in Japan during its release week, with 46,033 copies sold. It placed at number eight the following week with an additional 22,963 copies sold. Media Create sales information showed that the game was the 96th best-selling video game in Japan in 2000. Dengeki Online reported that Mega Man X5 sold a total of 215,687 copies in Japan by the end of 2001, listing it as the 132nd best-selling game of the year in the region. Toy Retail Sales Tracking (TRST) data showed that X5 was the fifth best-selling PlayStation game in North America for the month of February 2001. The game was eventually re-released as part of Sony's PlayStation The Best for Family collection of budget titles in Japan. References External links Official website Official PC website Mega Man X5 at MobyGames 2000 video games Malware in fiction Mega Man X games PlayStation (console) games PlayStation Network games Superhero video games Video games about impact events Video games about terrorism Video games about viral outbreaks Video games developed in Japan Video games set in the 22nd century Video games set in China Video games set in Egypt Video games set in Norway Video games set in Russia Video games set in Somalia Video games set in South Korea Video games set in Ukraine Windows games
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ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด
ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด() ๋˜๋Š” ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ”ผ์˜ ๋ถ€ํ™œ์ ˆ()์€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ „์Ÿ์—์„œ ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์ƒ์ž๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœ์ƒํ•œ ์ถฉ๋Œ์ด๋‹ค. 1991๋…„ 3์›” 31์ผ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์˜ ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜์—์„œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ๊ณผ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ์ด ์„ธ์šด SAO ํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜์˜ ๋ฌด์žฅ ๋ฐ˜๊ตฐ์ด ์„œ๋กœ ์ถฉ๋Œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ „ํˆฌ๋กœ SAO ํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜์˜ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ๊ตญ๋ฆฝ๊ณต์› ์ง€์—ญ์„ ์žฅ์•…ํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ์ดํ›„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๊ฐ€ ํƒˆํ™˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ถฉ๋Œ๋กœ ์–‘์ธก์—์„œ 1๋ช…์ด ์‚ฌ๋งํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๋ฏผ์กฑ ๊ฐˆ๋“ฑ์ด ๋งค์šฐ ์‹ฌ๊ฐํ•ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ „ํˆฌ์—์„œ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„์˜ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ด ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์—๊ฒŒ ์ง„๊ตฐํ•˜์—ฌ ์–‘ ์ธก ์‚ฌ์ด์— ์™„์ถฉ ์ง€๋Œ€๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฝํ•˜๋ผ๋Š” ๋ช…๋ น์„ ๋‚ด๋ ธ๋‹ค. ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์ด ๋‹ค์Œ ๋‚  ๋„์ฐฉํ•˜์—ฌ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์—๊ฒŒ ์ฒ ์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ์š”๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ์ตœํ›„ํ†ต์ฒฉ์„ ๋ณด๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜ ์ง€์—ญ์„ ์ ๋ นํ•œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์€ 4์›” 2์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ ์ฒ ์ˆ˜ํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ์ƒˆ๋กœ ์„ค์น˜๋œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ์— 90๋ช…์ด ์—ฌ์ „ํžˆ ์ฃผ๋‘”ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ๋Š” 3๋‹ฌ ํ›„ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์ด ํฌ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ 1991๋…„ 8์›”์— ํ•จ๋ฝ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฝ 1990๋…„, ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์˜ ์ด์„ ์—์„œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์‚ฌํšŒ์ฃผ์˜ ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ ๋‚ด ๋‹ค์ˆ˜๋‹น์œผ๋กœ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ์—ฐํ•ฉ(HDZ)๊ฐ€ ์ง‘๊ถŒํ•˜๋ฉฐ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ๊ณผ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์ธ ๋‚ด ๋ฏผ์กฑ ๋ถ„์Ÿ์ด ์‹ฌํ•ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์˜ ์ €ํ•ญ์„ ์•ฝํ™”์‹œํ‚ค๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์˜ํ† ๋ฐฉ์œ„๊ตฐ์˜ ๋ฌด๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์••์ˆ˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 8์›” 17์ผ, ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ์ด ๋ฌด์žฅ ๋ด‰๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ฏผ์กฑ ๊ฐˆ๋“ฑ์ด ๋ฐ˜๋ž€์œผ๋กœ ํ™•์‚ฐ๋˜๋ฉฐ ํฌ๋‹Œ ์ธ๊ทผ์˜ ๋‹ฌ๋งˆํ‹ฐ์•„ ์—ฐ์•ˆ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ์ธ๊ตฌ ๋ฐ€์ง‘ ์ง€์—ญ์„ ์ค‘์‹ฌ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฆฌ์นด, ์ฝ”๋ฅด๋‘”, ๋ฐ”๋…ธ๋น„๋‚˜, ์Šฌ๋ผ๋ณด๋‹ˆ์•„ ๋“ฑ ์ง€์—ญ์—์„œ ๋ฐ˜๋ž€ ์‚ฌํƒœ๊ฐ€ ํ™•๋Œ€๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ์€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์˜ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ํ”„๋ผ๋‡จ ํˆฌ์ง€๋งŒ์˜ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ •์ฑ…์— ๋ฐ˜๋ฐœํ•˜๋ฉฐ 1990๋…„ 7์›” ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์œ„์›ํšŒ๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฝํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด ์œ„์›ํšŒ์—์„œ ํฌ๋‹Œ ์„œ๋‚จ์ชฝ ์ž‘์€ ๋งˆ์„์˜ ์น˜๊ณผ์˜์‚ฌ์˜€๋˜ ๋ฐ€๋ž€ ๋ฐ”๋น„์น˜๊ฐ€ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์œผ๋กœ ์„ ์ถœ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ํฌ๋‹Œ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ์žฅ ๋ฐ€๋ž€ ๋งˆ๋ฅดํ‹ฐ์น˜๋Š” ์ค€๊ตฐ์‚ฌ ๋ฏผ๋ณ‘๋Œ€๋ฅผ ์„ค๋ฆฝํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด ๋‘ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์€ ๋‚˜์ค‘์— ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋‚ด ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์ธ ๋ฐ€์ง‘ ์ง€์—ญ์„ ํ†ตํ•ฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๋…๋ฆฝ์„ ์„ ํฌํ•œ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜ ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ(RSK)์˜ ์ •์น˜์ , ๊ตฐ์‚ฌ์  ์ง€๋„์ž๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1991๋…„ ์ดˆ๊นŒ์ง€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๋Š” ์ •๊ทœ๊ตฐ์ด ์—†์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๋Š” ๊ตญ๋ฐฉ๋ ฅ์„ ๊ฐ•ํ™”ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์š”์›์„ 2๋งŒ๋ช…์œผ๋กœ ์•ฝ ๋‘๋ฐฐ ๊ฐ€๊นŒ์ด ๋Š˜๋ ธ๋‹ค. ์ด์ค‘ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ํšจ๊ณผ๊ฐ€ ์ข‹์•˜๋˜ ๊ฒƒ์€ ๊ตฐ๋Œ€ ์กฐ์ง์„ ๋”ฐ๋ฅธ 12๊ฐœ ๋Œ€๋Œ€ 3์ฒœ๋ช…์˜ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ง€์—ญ๋ณ„๋กœ ์˜ˆ๋น„๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ 16๊ฐœ ๋Œ€๋Œ€, 10๊ฐœ ์ค‘๋Œ€ 9์ฒœ-1๋งŒ๋ช…์„ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฝํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ๋ฌด๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๋ถ€์กฑํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„์˜ ํ†ต์ œ ํ•˜์— ์˜ํ† ๋ฅผ ํ†ต์ผํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋…ธ๋ ฅ์œผ๋กœ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋‚ด์˜ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ์ง€๋„์ž๋“ค์€ 1991๋…„ 3์›” 25์ผ ํ”Œ๋ผํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜์—์„œ ์ •์น˜ ์ง‘ํšŒ๋ฅผ ์—ด์–ด SAO ํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜์— ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜ ์ง€์—ญ์„ ํŽธ์ž…ํ•  ๊ฒƒ์„ ์š”๊ตฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 3์ผ ํ›„์ธ 3์›” 28์ผ์—” SAO ํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜ ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ด ์ง€์—ญ์„ ์žฅ์•…ํ•˜๊ณ  ๋ฌด์žฅํ•œ ๋ฏผ๊ฐ„์ธ์˜ ๋„์›€์œผ๋กœ ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ๊ตญ๋ฆฝ๊ณต์›์— ์žˆ๋Š” ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๊ณต๋ฌด์›๋“ค์„ ๋‚ด์ซ“์•˜๋‹ค. SAO ํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜๊ฐ€ ํ”Œ๋ผํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜์— ์ฃผ๋‘”์‹œํ‚จ ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์€ ๋Œ€๋žต ๋ฐฑ์—ฌ๋ช…์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ง€์—ญ์€ ์ƒ๋Œ€์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ธ๊ตฌ ๋ฐ€๋„๊ฐ€ ๋‚ฎ์•˜์œผ๋ฉฐ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์ธ๋“ค์—๊ฒ ๋ช…๋ฐฑํ•œ ์œ„ํ˜‘์ด ์—†์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐ์ž ํŒ€ ์ฃผ๋‹คํ๋Š” ์ด ์›€์ง์ž„์€ ๋ฆฌ์นด ๋ฐ ๋ฐ”๋…ธ๋น„์•„ ์ง€์—ญ์˜ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๋งˆ์„์„ ์—ฐ๊ฒฐํ•˜๋Š” ๊ณต์› ๋‚จ๋ถ์„ ์ž‡๋Š” ๋„๋กœ๋ฅผ ์žฅ์•…ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ „๋žต์  ๋ชฉํ‘œ๋ฅผ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑํ•˜๋Ÿฌ๋Š” ์‹œ๋„์˜€์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์ถ”์ธกํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ „๊ฐœ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๋Š” ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜ ์ง€์—ญ์„ ํƒˆํ™˜ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์นด๋ฅผ๋กœ๋ฐ”์ธ ์™€ ๊ณ ์Šคํ”ผ์น˜ ์ง€์—ญ์˜ ์ถ”๊ฐ€ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ๋ ฅ ์ง€์›์„ ๋ฐ”ํƒ•์œผ๋กœ ์ž๊ทธ๋ ˆ๋ธŒ ์•ˆํŒŽ์˜ ๋ฃจ์น˜์ฝ” ๋Œ€ํ…Œ๋Ÿฌ๋ถ€๋Œ€, ๋ผํ‚คํ…Œ, ์‹ค๋ ˆ๋ฉ” ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ ๋“ฑ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์„ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์š”์‹œํ”„ ๋ฃจ์น˜์น˜๊ฐ€ ์ง€ํœ˜ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์€ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๋ฒ„์Šค, ์Šนํ•ฉ์ฐจ, ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์ˆ˜์†ก์žฅ๊ฐ‘์ฐจ ๋“ฑ์„ ๋™์›ํ•˜์—ฌ ํ”Œ๋ผํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜ ์ง€์—ญ์œผ๋กœ ์ง„๊ฒฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฃจ์น˜์น˜๊ฐ€ ์ง์ ‘ ์ง€ํœ˜ํ•˜๋Š” 180๋ช… ๊ฐ€๋Ÿ‰์˜ ๋ผํ‚คํ…Œ ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ๋ถ€๋Œ€(SPU)๋Š” ์ฝ”๋ผ๋‚˜๊ฐ• ๋‹ค๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ์ง™์€ ์•ˆ๊ฐœ ์†์—์„œ ์ž๊ทธ๋ ˆ๋ธŒ์—์„œ ๋‚˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์ฃผ๋„๋กœ๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋„์ฐฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฝ”๋ผ๋‚˜๊ฐ• ๋‹ค๋ฆฌ๋Š” 1991๋…„ 3์›” 30์ผ์—์„œ 31์ผ๋กœ ๋„˜์–ด๊ฐ€๋Š” ์ž์ •์— ๋ฃจ์ธ ์ฝ” ๋ถ€๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ์žฅ์•…ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ณด์กฐ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์€ ๋ฆฌ์น˜์ฝ” ํŽ˜ํŠธ๋กœ๋ณด ์…€๋กœ๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜ ์ง€์—ญ์œผ๋กœ ์ ‘๊ทผํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ฟ ๋ฏ€๋กœ๋ฒ ์ธ  ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ๋ถ€๋Œ€๋Š” ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜์™€ ๊ณ ์Šคํ”ผ์น˜ ์‚ฌ์ด ๋ฅ˜๋ณด๋…ธ ๊ณ ๊ฐœ๋ฅผ ์žฅ์•…ํ•ด ์ฃผ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์˜ ์šฐ์ต์„ ์•ˆ์ „ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋งŒ๋“ค์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๊ฐ€ ๋ณด๋‚ธ ์ด ๊ณต๊ฒฉ๊ตฐ์€ ๋Œ€๋žต 3๋ฐฑ๋ช… ๊ฐ€๊นŒ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ ๋ถ€๋Œ€๋Š” 3์›” 31์ผ ๋ถ€ํ™œ์ ˆ ์˜ค์ „ 7์‹œ ์ง์ „ ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜ ์ธ๊ทผ์˜ SAO ํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜๊ฐ€ ์„ค์น˜ํ•œ ๋ฐ”๋ฆฌ์ผ€์ด๋“œ ๋ถ€๊ทผ์—์„œ ๊ธฐ์Šต๋‹นํ–ˆ๋‹ค. SAO ํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜ ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ด ํƒ„ ์ฐจ๋Ÿ‰์„ ๊ณต๊ฒฉํ•˜๋‹ค 2์‹œ๊ฐ„ 30๋ถ„ ํ›„์— ๊ตญ๋ฆฝ๊ณต์› ์šฐ์ฒด๊ตญ์œผ๋กœ ํ›„ํ‡ดํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๋Š” ์ง„๊ฒฉํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ๊นŠ์€ ๋ˆˆ์— ๋ฐฉํ•ด๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋ถ€์ƒ์ž 6๋ช…์ด ๋ฐœ์ƒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ณต๊ฒฉ๊ตฐ์€ ์˜ค์ „ 11์‹œ์— ๋ชฉํ‘œ๋ฅผ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ณต๊ฒฉ ์ž‘์ „์ด ์™„๋ฃŒ๋  ์ฆˆ์Œ, ์š”์‹œํ”„ ์š”๋น„์น˜๊ฐ€ ํ›„ํ‡ดํ•˜๋Š” SAO ํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ์˜ ๊ธฐ๊ด€์ด์˜ ์ดํƒ„์— ๋งž์•„ ์‚ฌ๋งํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ „์Ÿ ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๊ตฐ์˜ ์‚ฌ๋ง์ž๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœ์ƒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ์งํ›„ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ๊ณต๊ตฐ์ด ์–‘ ์ธก์˜ ๋ถ€์ƒ์ž๋ฅผ ์‹ฃ๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ฐ€ Mi-8 ํ—ฌ๋ฆฌ์ฝฅํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ๋ณด๋ƒˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 1์‹œ๊ฐ„ ๋ฐ˜ ํ›„ ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜ ์ง€์—ญ์„ ๋– ๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ํ—ฌ๋ฆฌ์ฝฅํ„ฐ๋Š” ์ด ๋‹น์‹œ ์œ ๊ณ  ๊ณต๊ตฐ์˜ ์ตœ๊ณ ์ง€ํœ˜๊ด€์ธ 3์„ฑ์žฅ๊ตฐ ์•ˆํ†ค ํˆฌ์Šค๊ฐ€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋‚ด๋ฌด๋ถ€ ์žฅ๊ด€ ์š”์‹œํ”„ ๋ณผ์ฝ”๋ฐ”์ธ ์˜ ์š”์ฒญ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜ ์ฃผ๋ณ€์˜ ์ „ํˆฌ๊ฐ€ ๋๋‚˜๋ฉฐ ๋‚จ์ชฝ์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์ฝ”๋ ˆ๋‹ˆ์ฐจ์—์„œ ์‚ฐ๋ฐœ์ ์ธ ์ด๊ฒฉ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์ด ๋“ค๋ ค์™”๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์€ ๋‚  ์˜คํ›„, ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜์— ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ๊ฐ€ ์„ธ์›Œ์กŒ์œผ๋ฉฐ ํ† ๋ฏธ์Šฌ๋ผ๋ธŒ ์ผ๋ฆฌ์น˜๊ฐ€ ์ง€์—ญ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ ์ง€ํœ˜๊ด€์œผ๋กœ ์ž„๋ช…๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ์—” ๊ณ ์Šคํ”ผ์น˜์—์„œ ์žฌ๋ฐฐ์น˜๋œ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ๊ด€ 90๋ช… ๊ฐ€๋Ÿ‰์ด ๋ฐฐ์น˜๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์€ ๋‚  ์ €๋… ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„์˜ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ง์€ ์ถฉ๋Œ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ๋…ผ์˜ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋น„์ƒํšŒ์˜๋ฅผ ์—ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ง์˜ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์ธ ๋ณด๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ๋ธŒ ์š”๋น„์น˜์˜ ์ฃผ์žฅ์œผ๋กœ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์ด ๊ฐœ์ž…ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ง€์—ญ์„ ์žฅ์•…ํ•ด ์ถ”๊ฐ€ ์ „ํˆฌ๋ฅผ ๋ง‰๊ธฐ๋กœ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ์˜ํšŒ๋„ ๊ธด๊ธ‰์˜ํšŒ๋ฅผ ์†Œ์ง‘ํ•˜์—ฌ ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜์˜ ์ถฉ๋Œ์„ ์‹ค์งˆ์ ์ธ ์ „์Ÿ ๋ช…๋ถ„์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ„์ฃผํ•˜๊ณ  ์ž๊ทธ๋ ˆ๋ธŒ์™€ ์ถฉ๋Œํ•˜๋Š” ํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜์˜ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„์—๊ฒŒ "๋ชจ๋“  ํ•„์š”ํ•œ ์ง€์›"์„ ํ•ด ์ค„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๊ฒฐ๋ก ๋‚ด๋ ธ๋‹ค.๋‹ค์Œ ๋‚  SAO ํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜๋Š” ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜ ์ง€์—ญ์„ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ์˜ํ† ๋กœ ํŽธ์ž…ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋‚ด์˜ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ์˜ ํ—Œ๋ฒ•๊ณผ ๋ฒ•๋ฅ ์„ ์ค€์ˆ˜ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ณณ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๊ฒฐ์˜์•ˆ์„ ํ†ต๊ณผ์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์˜ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ธ ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ณด๋‹จ ๋ฐ€๋กœ์…ฐ๋น„์น˜๊ฐ€ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„๊ฐ€ ๋Š์Šจํ•œ ์—ฐํ•ฉ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐ”๋€Œ์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ํ•œ ๋…๋ฆฝ์„ ๋ฐ€๊ณ  ๋‚˜๊ฐˆ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๋ฅผ ๋ง‰๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ผ์„ ๋ฒŒ์ธ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋น„๋‚œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์ด ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ •๋ถ€๋ฅผ ์ „๋ณต์‹œํ‚ค๋Ÿฌ ์‹œ๋„ํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋น„๋‚œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์˜ ๊ฐœ์ž… 4์›” 1์ผ, ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์€ ์ œ1๊ตฐ๊ตฌ์™€ ์ œ5๊ตฐ๊ตฌ์˜ ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์„ ์ถœ๋™์‹œ์ผœ ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜ ์ง€์—ญ์— ์–‘ ์ง‘๋‹จ์„ ๋ถ„๋ฆฌ์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” ์™„์ถฉ์ง€์—ญ์„ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ถœ๋™ ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์—” ๋ฐ”๋ƒ๋ฃจ์นด์— ์ฃผ๋‘”ํ•˜๋˜ ์ œ329๊ธฐ๊ฐ‘์—ฌ๋‹จ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ‘๋Œ€๋Œ€, ๋ธ๋‹ˆ์ฒด์— ์ฃผ๋‘”ํ•˜๋˜ ์ œ6์‚ฐ์•…์—ฌ๋‹จ ๋Œ€๋Œ€, ์•ผ์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ๋ฐ”๋ฅด์Šค์ฝ”์™€ ์นด๋ฅผ๋กœ๋ฐ”์ธ ์— ์ฃผ๋‘”ํ•˜๋˜ ์ œ4๊ธฐ๊ฐ‘์—ฌ๋‹จ ์ •์ฐฐ๋Œ€๋Œ€ ๋ฐ ๊ธฐ๊ณ„ํ™”๋Œ€๋Œ€, ์ž๊ทธ๋ ˆ๋ธŒ์— ์ฃผ๋‘”ํ•˜๋˜ ์ œ306๋Œ€๊ณต๊ฒฝํฌ๋ณ‘์—ฐ๋Œ€ ๋Œ€๋Œ€, ์‚ฌ๋ชจ๋ณด๋ฅด์— ์ฃผ๋‘”ํ•˜๋˜ ์ œ367ํ†ต์‹ ์—ฐ๋Œ€ ํ†ต์‹ ์ค‘๋Œ€, ๋ฆฌ์˜ˆ์นด์— ์ฃผ๋‘”ํ•˜๋˜ ์ œ13ํ—Œ๋ณ‘๋Œ€๋Œ€ ์ค‘๋Œ€, ๋ฆฌ์˜ˆ์นด์— ์ฃผ๋‘”ํ•˜๋˜ ์ œ13ํ”„๋กค๋ ˆํƒ€๋ฆฌ์•„์ฐจ๋Ÿ‰ํ™”์—ฌ๋‹จ ๋ฐฉ๊ณตํฌ ๋ถ€๋Œ€๋“ค์ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ตœ์ข…์ ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ์ œ5๊ตฐ๊ตฌ๊ฐ€ ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜ ์ง€์—ญ์— ์ „์ง„์ง€ํœ˜๋ถ€๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜ ์ง€์—ญ์˜ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์€ ์ค‘๋ น ์ด๋ฐ˜ ์Šˆํ‹ฐ๋งˆ์ธ ์˜ ์ง€ํœ˜๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ์ œ5๊ตฐ๊ตฌ ์ง€ํœ˜๊ด€์ธ ์†Œ์žฅ ์•ˆ๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•ผ ๋ผ์…ฐํƒ€์˜ ๋ช…๋ น์œผ๋กœ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์˜ ๊ฐœ์ž…์€ ์–‘ ์ธก ์ค‘ ์–ด๋””๋„ ๋ณดํ˜ธํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ฉฐ ํŠน์ • ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„ ๋™์•ˆ ๋ฏผ์กฑ ๋ถ„์Ÿ์„ ๋ง‰๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ํŒŒ๊ฒฌ๋œ ๊ฒƒ ๋ฟ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๊ธฐ์žํšŒ๊ฒฌ์„ ์—ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์˜ ์›€์ง์ž„์— ๊ฒฉ๋ ฌํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋ฐ˜๋ฐœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ํˆฌ์ง€๋งŒ์˜ ์ธก๊ทผ์ธ ๋งˆ๋ฆฌ์˜ค ๋…ธ๋นŒ๋กœ๋Š” ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ์ธก์ด ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๊ด€๋ฃŒ์—๊ฒŒ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ด ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด์—์„œ ์ฒ ์ˆ˜ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์œผ๋ฉด ๊ต์ „ํ•  ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ผ๋””์˜ค ๋ฐฉ์†ก์—์„œ ํˆฌ์ง€๋งŒ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์€ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์€ ํ–‰๋™ ์ง€์นจ์ด ๋‹ฌ๋ผ์ง€์ง€ ์•Š์„ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ์ ๋Œ€๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ„์ฃผํ•  ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 4์›” 2์ผ, ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์€ ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด์˜ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์—๊ฒŒ ์ฒ ์ˆ˜ํ•˜๋ผ๊ณ  ์ตœํ›„ํ†ต์ฒฉ์„ ๋‚ด๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์€ ๋‚  ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์€ ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด์—์„œ ์ฒ ์ˆ˜ํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜, ์‹ ์„ค๋œ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ์˜ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ๊ด€ 90๋ช…์€ ๊ทธ๋Œ€๋กœ ๋‚จ์•„์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์—ฌํŒŒ ์ถฉ๋Œ์—์„œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ธก ์‚ฌ๋ง์ž๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ๊ด€ ์š”์‹œํ”„ ์š”๋น„์น˜ 1๋ช…์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. SAO ํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜ ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ๋„ ๋ผ์ด์ฝ” ๋ถ€์นด๋””๋…ธ๋น„์น˜๊ฐ€ ์ „ํˆฌ ์ค‘ ์‚ฌ๋งํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์ „์Ÿ ์ค‘ ์ฒซ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ์˜ ๊ต์ „ ์ค‘ ์‚ฌ๋ง์ž๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœ์ƒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด 20๋ช…์ด ๋ถ€์ƒ์„ ์ž…์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ด ์ค‘ 7๋ช…์ด ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ด๋‹ค. ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์€ SAO ํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ 29๋ช…์„ ํฌ๋กœ๋กœ ์žก์•˜์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ด ์ค‘ 18๋ช…์„ ๋ฐ˜๋ž€ ํ˜์˜๋กœ ๊ธฐ์†Œํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ˆ˜๊ฐ์ž ์ค‘์—๋Š” ๋‚˜์ค‘์— ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜ ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ์˜ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ด ๋˜๋Š” ๊ณ ๋ž€ ํ•˜์ง€์น˜๋„ ์žˆ์—ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ๊ทธ๋Š” ์–ผ๋งˆ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ์•Š์•„ ํ’€๋Ÿฌ๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” ํ•˜์ง€์น˜์˜ ์„๋ฐฉ์€ ์„ ์˜์˜ ํ‘œ์‹œ๋ผ๊ณ  ์„ค๋ช…ํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ๋ณผ์ฝ”๋ฐ”์ธ ๋Š” 1991๋…„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ •๋ถ€์™€ ํ˜‘๋ ฅํ•œ ์ด๋ ฅ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ํ’€๋Ÿฌ๋‚œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ „ํˆฌ ์ดํ›„ ์ดํƒˆ๋ฆฌ์•„์ธ์ด ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์ธ ๊ด€๊ด‘๊ฐ 400๋ช…์€ ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜์—์„œ ํ”ผ๋‚œํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜์˜ ์ถฉ๋Œ์€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์˜ ์ „๋ฐ˜์  ์ƒํ™ฉ์„ ์•…ํ™”์‹œ์ผฐ๊ณ  ๋ฏผ์กฑ ๋ถ„์Ÿ์ด ์‹ฌํ™”๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์˜ ๊ฐœ์ž…์œผ๋กœ ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜์—์„œ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„์™€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๊ณ„๊ฐ€ ๋ถ„๋ฆฌ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋‚˜, ์ด ์ง€์—ญ์˜ ์ƒํ™ฉ์€ ์ถฉ๋Œ ์ดํ›„ ์•…ํ™”๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ทผ์˜ ํ”Œ๋ผ์Šˆํ‚ค์—์„œ๋Š” ์ง€์—ญ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ์— ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ์ด ์ซ“๊ฒจ๋‚˜๊ณ  ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์ธ ๊ด€๋ฃŒ๋กœ ๋ฐ”๋€Œ์—ˆ๋‹ค. SAO ํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜์™€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์–‘์ธก ๋ชจ๋‘ ์‚ฌ๋ณด๋ฅด์Šค์ฝ”-๋ฆฌ์น˜์นด ์•ผ์„ธ๋‹ˆ์ฐจ-์˜ค๊ตฌ๋ฆฐ ๋„๋กœ์— ๋ฐ”๋ฆฌ์ผ€์ด๋“œ๋ฅผ ์„ธ์šฐ๋ฉฐ ๋ด‰์‡„ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์—ฌ๋ฆ„์ด ๋˜๋ฉด ๋„๋กœ ๋ด‰์‡„ ์ง€์—ญ์€ ํ”Œ๋ผ์Šˆํ‚ค ๋ถ์ชฝ์—์„œ ์‚ฌ๋ณด๋ฅด์Šค์ฝ” ๋‚จ์ชฝ๊นŒ์ง€๋กœ ํ™•๋Œ€๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” 4์›” 2์ผ์— 30๊ฐœ๋‚˜ ๋˜๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ๋ฅผ ์ƒˆ๋กœ ์‹ ์„คํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋„๋กœ๊ฐ€ ๋ด‰์‡„๋œ ๊ณณ์—์„œ๋Š” ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ์ฐจ๋Ÿ‰๋งŒ ํ†ตํ–‰์ด ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ง€์—ญ์˜ ์‹๋Ÿ‰, ์˜์•ฝํ’ˆ, ์ „๋ ฅ ๋ถ€์กฑ์ด ๊ฐ€์†ํ™”๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 5์›” 2์ผ์—๋Š” SAO ํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜์˜ ์ง‘๊ถŒ๋‹น์ธ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์ด ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜ ์ง€์—ญ์—์„œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„ ์ฒ ์ˆ˜ํ•˜๋ผ๋Š” ์กฐ์ง์ ์ธ ํ–‰์ง„๊ณผ ์ •์น˜์  ์ง‘ํšŒ๋ฅผ ์—ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ”๋น„์น˜์™€ ๋ณด์ด์Šฌ๋ผ๋ธŒ ์…ฐ์…ธ๊ฐ€ ์ด๋„๋Š” ํ–‰์ง„์€ ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜ ์ธ๊ทผ์—์„œ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์˜ ์ €์ง€๋กœ ์ „์ง„ํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ํ‹ฐํ† ๋‚˜ ์ฝ”๋ ˆ๋‹ˆ์ฐจ๋กœ ๋Œ์•„๊ฐ”๋‹ค. ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์€ 7์›” 1์ผ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ด ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ์žฅ๊ต 2๋ช…์„ ๋‚ฉ์น˜ํ•˜๊ณ  ํˆฌ์˜ฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ตฌ์‹ค๋กœ ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ๋ฅผ ๋ด‰์‡„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 7์›” 6์ผ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ๋Š” SAO ํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜ ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ๊ณผ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์ด ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜ ๋™๋‚จ์ชฝ์˜ ํ‹ฐํ† ๋ฐ” ์ฝ”๋ ˆ๋‹ˆ์ฐจ-๊ณ ์Šคํ”ผ์น˜ ๋„๋กœ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ฅ˜๋ณด๋กœ ๊ณ ๊ฐœ๋ฅผ ๊ณต๊ฒฉํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ด๋‹ฌ ๋ง๊นŒ์ง€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋ฐฉ์œ„๊ตฐ์„ ๋ชฐ์•„๋‚ด๊ณ  ๊ณ ๊ฐœ๋ฅผ ์žฅ์•…ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์—ฌ๋ฆ„ ๋‚ด๋‚ด ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์€ 4์›”์— ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜์— ๋ฐฐ์น˜ํ•œ ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์„ ์ด์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ฆฌ์นด ์ง€์—ญ์˜ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๊ตฐ๊ณผ ์ง€์†์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ „ํˆฌ๋ฅผ ๋ฒŒ์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด ์ „ํˆฌ๋Š” 8์›” 30์ผ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์ด ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ๋ฅผ ์ ๊ฑฐํ•˜๊ณ  ๋‹ค์Œ ๋‚  ๊ณ ์Šคํ”ผ์น˜ ์ „ํˆฌ๊ฐ€ ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜๋ฉด์„œ ๊ฒฉ๋ ฌํ•ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๋ฌธํ—Œ์—์„œ ์š”์‹œํ”„ ์š”๋น„์น˜๋Š” ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ „์Ÿ ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ ์‚ฌ๋ง์ž๋ผ๊ณ  ๊ธฐ๋กํ•œ๋‹ค. 1994๋…„์—” ๊ทธ์˜ ์ถœ์ƒ์ง€์˜€๋˜ ์•„๋ฅด์ž๋…ธ์— ์ถ”๋ชจ๋น„๊ฐ€ ์„ธ์›Œ์กŒ๋‹ค. ์ „ํ›„์—” ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ์‚ฌ๋งํ•œ ์žฅ์†Œ์— ์ถ”๋ชจ๋น„๊ฐ€ ์„ธ์›Œ์กŒ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋งค๋…„ ์ถฉ๋Œ ๊ธฐ๋…์‹์ด ์—ด๋ฆฐ๋‹ค. ํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ๋น„์ฒด ํ˜ธ์ˆ˜์—์„  ๋งค๋…„ ์ถฉ๋Œ๊ณผ ์š”๋น„์น˜ ์ถ”๋ชจ์‹์ด ์—ด๋ฆฐ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์ฐธ๊ณ  ๋ฌธํ—Œ ์„œ์  ์ €๋„ ๋ฌธํ—Œ ๋‰ด์Šค ๋ฅดํฌ ๊ธฐํƒ€ ๋ฌธํ—Œ 1991๋…„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ 1991๋…„ ๋ถ„์Ÿ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ „์Ÿ์˜ ์ „ํˆฌ 1991๋…„ 3์›” 1991๋…„ 4์›”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plitvice%20Lakes%20incident
Plitvice Lakes incident
The Plitvice Lakes incident ( or Plitviฤki krvavi Uskrs, both translating as "Plitvice Bloody Easter") was an armed clash at the beginning of the Croatian War of Independence. It was fought between Croatian police and armed forces from the Croatian Serb-established SAO Krajina at the Plitvice Lakes in Croatia, on 31 March 1991. The fighting followed the SAO Krajina's takeover of the Plitvice Lakes National Park and resulted in Croatia recapturing the area. The clash resulted in one killed on each side and contributed to the worsening ethnic tensions. The fighting prompted the Presidency of Yugoslavia to order the Yugoslav People's Army (Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija โ€“ JNA) to step in and create a buffer zone between the opposing forces. The JNA arrived at the scene the following day and presented Croatia with an ultimatum requesting the police to withdraw. Even though the special police units which captured the Plitvice Lakes area did pull out on 2 April, a newly established Croatian police station, staffed by 90 officers, remained in place. The police station was blockaded by the JNA three months later, and captured in late August 1991. Background In 1990, following the electoral defeat of the government of the Socialist Republic of Croatia, ethnic tensions worsened. The Yugoslav People's Army (Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija โ€“ JNA) confiscated Croatia's Territorial Defence (Teritorijalna obrana โ€“ TO) weapons to minimize resistance. On 17 August, the tensions escalated into an open revolt of the Croatian Serbs, centred on the predominantly Serb-populated areas of the Dalmatian hinterland around Knin, parts of the Lika, Kordun, Banovina regions and eastern Croatia. They established a Serbian National Council in July 1990, to coordinate opposition to Croatian President Franjo Tuฤ‘man's policy of pursuing independence for Croatia. Milan Babiฤ‡, a dentist from the southern town of Knin, was elected president. Knin's police chief, Milan Martiฤ‡, established paramilitary militias. The two men eventually became the political and military leaders of the SAO Krajina, a self-declared state incorporating the Serb-inhabited areas of Croatia. In the beginning of 1991, Croatia had no regular army. In an effort to bolster its defence, Croatia doubled the size of its police force to about 20,000. The most effective part of the force was the 3,000-strong special police that were deployed in 12 battalions adopting military organisation. In addition there were 9,000โ€“10,000 regionally organised reserve police. The reserve police were set up in 16 battalions and 10 companies, but they lacked weapons. In an effort to consolidate territory under their control, Croatian Serb leaders organised a political rally at the Plitvice Lakes on 25 March 1991, demanding the area be annexed to the SAO Krajina. Three days later, on 28 March, SAO Krajina special police seized the area, and with the help of armed civilians, removed the Croatian management of the Plitvice Lakes National Park. The force deployed by the SAO Krajina to the Plitvice Lakes was estimated to be approximately 100-strong. The region was relatively sparsely populated and there was no obvious threat to Serbs there. Journalist Tim Judah suggests that the move may have been motivated by a desire to control a strategic road that ran northโ€“south through the park, linking the Serb communities in the Lika and Banovina regions. Timeline Croatia deployed special police forces, specifically the Luฤko, Rakitje and Sljeme special police units based in and around Zagreb, supported by additional police forces drawn from Karlovac and Gospiฤ‡ to retake the Plitvice Lakes area. The Croatian police force, commanded by Josip Luciฤ‡, used several buses and passenger cars, as well as an armoured personnel carrier, to approach the Plitvice Lakes area. The main 180-strong group of the Rakitje Special Police Unit (SPU), directly commanded by Luciฤ‡, arrived in dense fog, along the main road from Zagreb via the Korana River bridge. The bridge was secured by the Luฤko unit shortly before midnight on 30/31 March 1991. An auxiliary force approached the Plitvice Lakes via Liฤko Petrovo Selo, while the Kumrovec SPU was deployed in the area between the lakes and Gospiฤ‡, where it captured the Ljubovo Pass to secure the right flank of the main effort. The total attacking force comprised approximately 300 troops. The approaching convoy was ambushed at a barricade set up by the SAO Krajina force near Plitvice Lakes before 7:00 in the morning of Easter Sunday, 31 March 1991. The SAO Krajina force attacked the vehicles carrying the Croatian police and held their position until they fell back to the national park post office two and a half hours later. The Croatian advance, additionally hindered by deep snow, was achieved at a cost of six wounded. The attacking force secured its objectives by 11:00ย am. As the attacking operation reached its completion, the Croatian military sustained its first combat fatality of the Croatian War of Independence, when Josip Joviฤ‡ was killed by a machine gun covering retreating SAO Krajina troops. Shortly afterwards, the Yugoslav Air Force dispatched a Mil Mi-8 helicopter to attend to wounded on both sides, and it left the area after an hour and a half. The helicopter was dispatched by Colonel General Anton Tus, head of the Yugoslav Air Force at the time, following a request by Josip Boljkovac, Interior Minister of Croatia. As the fighting around Plitvice ended, sporadic gunfire was reported near Titova Korenica, to the south. The same afternoon, a Croatian police station was established at the Plitvice Lakes and Tomislav Iljiฤ‡ was appointed its commanding officer. The station was staffed by approximately 90 police officers who were redeployed from Gospiฤ‡. The Presidency of Yugoslavia met in an emergency session the same evening to discuss the clash. At the insistence of Serbia's representative on the Presidency, Borisav Joviฤ‡, the JNA was ordered to intervene, gain control in the area and prevent further combat. The Serbian parliament also met in an emergency session, treating the clashes as a virtual casus belli and voting to offer the Krajina Serbs "all necessary help" in their conflict with Zagreb. The following day, the SAO Krajina adopted a resolution to the effect that the territory was incorporated into Serbia, whose constitution and laws were adopted for use in the Serb-held areas of Croatia. Croatian authorities accused Serbia's president, Slobodan Miloลกeviฤ‡, of stage-managing the unrest in order to break Croatia's resolve to declare independence unless Yugoslavia was transformed into a loose confederation. They also accused him of attempting to coax the JNA to overthrow Croatian government. JNA intervention On 1 April, the JNA established a buffer zone to separate the belligerents at Plitvice Lakes, deploying elements of the 1st and the 5th Military Districts. Those were an armoured battalion of the 329th Armoured Brigade based in Banja Luka, a battalion of the 6th Mountain Brigade based in Delnice, a reconnaissance company and a mechanised battalion of the 4th Armoured Brigade based in Jastrebarsko and Karlovac, a battalion of the 306th Light Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment based in Zagreb, a signals company of the 367th Signals Regiment based in Samobor, a company of the 13th Military Police Battalion based in Rijeka and an anti-aircraft artillery battery drawn from the 13th Proletarian Motorised Brigade based in Rijeka. Finally, the 5th Military District set up a forward command post at the Plitvice Lakes. The JNA force at the Plitvice Lakes was commanded by Colonel Ivan ล timac. The commanding officer of the 5th Military District, Major General Andrija Raลกeta, in overall command of the JNA intervention, told the media that his men were not protecting either side and were there only to prevent ethnic confrontations for an indeterminate period. However, the Croatian government reacted furiously to the JNA move. Tuฤ‘man's aide, Mario Nobilo, claimed that the JNA had told Croatian officials that it would engage the police if they did not leave Plitvice. In a radio address, Tuฤ‘man said that the JNA would be regarded as a hostile army of occupation if its course of action remained unchanged. On 2 April, the JNA handed the Croatian authorities an ultimatum, requesting the police leave Plitvice. The special police left Plitvice the same day, but the 90 officers staffing the newly established police station remained in place. Aftermath Police officer Josip Joviฤ‡ was the only Croatian fatality in the incident. The SAO Krajina force also suffered one killed in the fightingโ€”Rajko Vukadinoviฤ‡, who was the first Croatian Serb combat fatality in the war. A total of 20 people were wounded, seven of whom were the Croatian police. The Croatian forces captured 29 SAO Krajina troops, 18 of whom were formally charged with insurgency. Among the prisoners was Goran Hadลพiฤ‡, later to become the President of the Republic of Serbian Krajina, although he was quickly released. Hadลพiฤ‡'s release was explained as a goodwill gesture by the authorities, but Boljkovac claims he was released because he was collaborating with the Croatian authorities in 1991. Approximately 400 tourists, most of them Italian, were evacuated from the Plitvice Lakes after the fighting. The clash at the Plitvice Lakes worsened the overall situation in Croatia and led to an escalation of the conflict. Even though the Croatian and Serb forces were separated by the JNA at the Plitvice Lakes, the situation in the area continued to deteriorate following the clash. In nearby Plaลกki, Croatian police personnel left the local police station and were replaced by Serb officers. Both SAO Krajina and Croatian forces set up several roadblocks on the Saborskoโ€“Liฤka Jasenicaโ€“Ogulin road. By summer, the blockades were extended to the north of Plaลกki and south of Saborsko, where Croatian authorities established another 30-strong police station on 2 April. Only JNA vehicles were permitted to pass the roadblocks, and that brought about a shortage of food, medicine and electricity in the area. On 2 May, the Serb Democratic Party, the ruling party in the SAO Krajina, organised a protest march to the Plitvice Lakes and a political rally demanding the Croatian police withdraw from Plitvice. The march, led by Babiฤ‡ and Vojislav ล eลกelj, was prevented from reaching the Plitvice Lakes by the JNA and forced to return to Titova Korenica. The JNA imposed a blockade of the Plitvice Lakes police station on 1 July, on the pretext that the Croatian police had abducted and imprisoned two JNA officers. By 6 July, the SAO Krajina forces and the JNA commenced attacks on the Ljubovo Pass southeast of the Plitvice Lakes, on the Titova Korenicaโ€“Gospiฤ‡ road, driving the Croatian National Guard back and capturing the pass by the end of the month. Throughout the summer, the JNA continued to engage Croatian forces in Lika using the units deployed to the Plitvice Lakes in April. The fighting escalated further on 30 August, when the JNA captured the Plitvice Lakes police station and the following day when the Battle of Gospiฤ‡ began. Joviฤ‡ is largely viewed in Croatia as the first casualty of the Croatian War of Independence. A monument dedicated to him was erected in his birthplace of Arลพano in 1994. After the war, a monument was erected at the site of his death, where annual commemorations of the clash are held. The clash and Joviฤ‡'s death are commemorated annually at the Plitvice Lakes. References Sources Books Scientific journal articles News reports Other sources 1991 in Croatia Battles of the Croatian War of Independence Conflicts in 1991 March 1991 events in Europe
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%83%9D%EB%AC%BC%ED%95%99%EC%9E%90%20%EB%AA%A9%EB%A1%9D
์ƒ๋ฌผํ•™์ž ๋ชฉ๋ก
๋‹ค์Œ์€ ์ƒ๋ฌผํ•™์ž๋“ค์˜ ๋ชฉ๋ก์ด๋‹ค. A-Z ์—๋“œ์›Œ๋“œ O. ์œŒ์Šจ (1929) J. B. S. ํ™€๋ฐ์ธ (1892โ€“1964) J.L.B. ์Šค๋ฏธ์Šค (1897โ€“1968) ใ„ฑ ๊ฐ€์ด์šฐ์Šค ํ”Œ๋ฆฌ๋‹ˆ์šฐ์Šค ์„ธ์ฟค๋‘์Šค (23โ€“79) ๊ฑฐํ‹ฐ ์ฝ”๋ฆฌ (1886โ€“1957) ๊ฒŒ์˜ค๋ฅดํฌ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ ์Šˆํ…”๋Ÿฌ (1709โ€“1746) ๊ฒŒ์˜ค๋ฅดํฌ ํฌ๋ฅด์Šคํ„ฐ (1754โ€“1794) ๊ถŒํ„ฐ ๋ธ”๋กœ๋ฒจ (1936) ๊ทธ๋ ˆ๊ณ ์–ด ๋ฉ˜๋ธ (1822โ€“1884) ๊ธฐ๋ฌด๋ผ ๋ชจํ†  (1924โ€“1994) ใ„ด ๋…ธ๋จผ ๋ณผ๋กœ๊ทธ (1914) ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ํ‹ด๋ฒ ๋ฅดํ—Œ (1907โ€“1988) ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์ด ๋ฐ”๋นŒ๋กœํ”„ (1887โ€“1943) ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์ด ํ”„๋ฅด์ œ๋ฐœ์Šคํ‚ค (1839โ€“1888) ใ„ท ๋‹ค์ด์•ค ํฌ์‹œ (1932โ€“1985) ๋ฐ์ด๋น„๋“œ H. ํ—ˆ๋ธ” (1926) ๋ฐ์ด๋น„๋“œ ๋”๊ธ€๋ผ์Šค (1799โ€“1834) ๋ฐ์ด๋น„๋“œ ๋ณผํ‹ฐ๋ชจ์–ด (1938) ๋„๋„ค๊ฐ€์™€ ์Šค์Šค๋ฌด (1939) ใ„น ๋ผ์ฐจ๋กœ ์ŠคํŒ”๋ž€์ฐจ๋‹ˆ (1729โ€“1799) ๋ ˆ๋‚˜ํ†  ๋‘˜๋ฒ ์ฝ” (1914โ€“2012) ๋ ˆ์˜ค๋‚˜๋ฅด๋„ ๋‹ค ๋นˆ์น˜ (1452โ€“1519) ๋ ˆ์ด์ฒ  ์นด์Šจ (1907โ€“1964) ๋ ˆ์ง€๋„๋“œ ์ด๋„ค์Šค ํฌ์ฝ• (1863โ€“1947) ๋กœ๋„๋“œ ํ”ผ์…” (1890โ€“1962) ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด (1773โ€“1858) ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ๋ธŒ๋ฃธ (1866โ€“1951) ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ํฌ์ถ˜ (1813โ€“1880) ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ํ›… (1635โ€“1703) ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋ฅดํŠธ ๋ฐ”๋ผ๋‹ˆ (1876โ€“1936) ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋ฅดํŠธ ์ฝ”ํ (1843โ€“1910) J. ๋กœ๋นˆ ์›Œ๋Ÿฐ (1937) ๋กœ์ € ์šธ์ปท ์ŠคํŽ˜๋ฆฌ (1913โ€“1994) ๋กœ์ ˆ๋ฆฐ๋“œ ํ”„๋žญํด๋ฆฐ (1920โ€“1958) ๋ฃจ๋Œํ”„ ์•ผ์ฝ”ํ”„ ์นด๋ฉ”๋ผ๋ฆฌ์šฐ์Šค (1665โ€“1721) ๋ฃจ๋Œํ”„ ํ”ผ๋ฅดํ˜ธ (1821โ€“1902) ๋ฃจ์„œ ๋ฒ„๋ฑ…ํฌ (1849โ€“1926) ๋ฃจ์ด ์•„๊ฐ€์‹œ (1807โ€“1873) ๋ฃจ์ด ํŒŒ์Šคํ‡ด๋ฅด (1822โ€“1895) ๋คผํฌ ๋ชฝํƒ€๋‹ˆ์— (1932) ๋ฆฌ์ฒ˜๋“œ ๋„ํ‚จ์Šค (1941) ๋ฆฌ์ฒ˜๋“œ ์•ก์„ค (1946) ๋ฆฌ์ฒ˜๋“œ ์˜ค์–ธ (1804โ€“1892) ๋ฆฌํƒ€ ๋ ˆ๋น„๋ชฌํƒˆ์น˜๋‹ˆ (1909) ๋ฆฐ ๋งˆ๊ตด๋ฆฌ์Šค (1938) ๋ฆฐ๋‹ค B. ๋ฒ… (1947) ใ… ๋งˆ๋ฅด์ฒผ๋กœ ๋งํ”ผ๊ธฐ (1628โ€“1694) ๋งˆ์‚ฌ ์ฒด์ด์Šค (1927โ€“2003) ๋งˆ์ €๋ฆฌ ๋ž˜ํ‹ฐ๋จธ (1907โ€“2004) ๋งˆํ‹ฐ์•„์Šค ์•ผ์ฝ”ํ”„ ์Š๋ผ์ด๋ด (1804โ€“1881) ๋งˆํ‹ด ๋กœ๋“œ๋ฒจ (1925โ€“1998) ๋ง‰์Šค ๋ธ๋ธŒ๋คฝ (1906โ€“1981) ใ…‚ ๋ฐ”๋ฒ„๋ผ ๋งคํด๋ฆฐํ†ก (1902โ€“1992) ๋ฐœํ„ฐ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ๋ฐ (1843โ€“1905) ๋ฐฐ๋ฆฌ ๋งˆ์…œ (1951) ๋ฐฐ๋ฆฌ ๋ณผํ„ด (1802โ€“1879) ๋ฒ ๋ฅด๋‚˜๋ฅด๋„ ์šฐ์‚ฌ์ด (1887โ€“1971) ๋ฒค ๋ฐ”๋ ˆ์Šค (1955) ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ ์š”ํ•œ์„ผ (1857โ€“1927) ใ…… ์‚ฐํ‹ฐ์•„๊ณ  ๋ผ๋ชฌ ์ด ์นดํ•  (1852โ€“1934) ์‚ด๋ฐ”๋„๋ฅด ์—๋“œ์›Œ๋“œ ๋ฃจ๋ฆฌ์•„ (1912โ€“1991) ์ƒค๋ฅผ ๋ฃจ์ด ์•Œํ์Šค ๋ผ๋ธŒ๋ž‘ (1845โ€“1922) ์ƒค๋ฅผ ๋ฆฌ์…ฐ (1850โ€“1935) ์…€๋จผ ์—์ด๋ธŒ๋Ÿฌํ–„ ์™์Šค๋จผ (1888โ€“1973) ์Šคํƒ ๋ฆฌ ์ฝ”ํ—จ (1922) ์Šคํ‹ฐ๋ธ ์ œ์ด ๊ตด๋“œ (1941โ€“2002) ์‹œ๋“œ๋‹ˆ ๋ธŒ๋ ˆ๋„ˆ (1927) ์‹œ๋“œ๋‹ˆ ์˜ฌํŠธ๋จผ (1939) ใ…‡ ์•„๋ฅด๋ง ๋‹ค๋น„๋“œ (1826โ€“1900) ์•„๋ฆฌ์Šคํ† ํ…”๋ ˆ์Šค (384ย BCโ€“322ย BC) ์•„์„œ ์ฝ˜๋ฒ„๊ทธ (1918โ€“2007) ์•„์šฐ๊ตฌ์ŠคํŠธ ๋ฐ”์ด์Šค๋งŒ (1834โ€“1914) ์•„์šฐ๊ตฌ์ŠคํŠธ ํฌ๋กœ๊ทธ (1874โ€“1949) ์•„์น˜๋ณผ๋“œ ๋น„๋น„์–ธ ํž (1886โ€“1977) ์•ˆํ†ค ํŒ ๋ ˆ์ด์šฐ์—”ํ›… (1632โ€“1723) ์•Œ๋ ‰์‚ฐ๋” ํฐ ๋ฏธ๋ด๋„๋ฅดํ”„ (1815โ€“1894) ์•Œ๋ ‰์‚ฐ๋” ํฐ ํ›”๋ณผํŠธ (1769โ€“1859) ์•Œ๋ ‰์‚ฐ๋” ํ”Œ๋ ˆ๋ฐ (1881โ€“1955) ์•Œ๋ ‰์‚ฐ๋“œ๋ฅด ์˜คํŒŒ๋ฆฐ (1894โ€“1980) ์•Œ๋ ‰์‹œ ์นด๋  (1873โ€“1944) ์•Œ๋ฐ”๋ฅด ๊ตด์ŠคํŠธ๋ž€๋“œ (1862โ€“1930) ์•Œ๋ธŒ๋ ˆํžˆํŠธ ์ฝ”์…€ (1853โ€“1927) ์•Œ์‹œ๋“œ ๋„๋ฅด๋น„๋‹ˆ (1802โ€“1857) ์•™๋“œ๋ ˆ ๋ฅด๋ณดํ”„ (1902โ€“1994) ์•จํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ ๋‰ดํ„ด (1829โ€“1907) ์•จํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ ๋Ÿฌ์…€ ์›”๋ฆฌ์Šค (1823โ€“1913) ์•จํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ ์…”์šฐ๋“œ ๋กœ๋จธ (1894โ€“1973) ์•จํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ ํ—ˆ์‹œ (1908โ€“1997) ์–€ ์ž‰์—”ํ•˜์šฐ์Šค (1730โ€“1799) ์—๋‘์•„๋ฅดํŠธ ์ŠˆํŠธ๋ผ์Šค๋ถ€๋ฅด๊ฑฐ (1844โ€“1912) ์—๋“œ๊ฑฐ ์—์ด๋“œ๋ฆฌ์–ธ (1889โ€“1977) ์—๋“œ์›Œ๋“œ B. ๋ฃจ์ด์Šค (1918โ€“2004) ์—๋“œ์›Œ๋“œ ๋“œ๋ง์ปค ์ฝ”ํ”„ (1840โ€“1897) ์—๋ฅธ์ŠคํŠธ ๋งˆ์ด์–ด (1904โ€“2005) ์—๋ฅธ์ŠคํŠธ ํ•˜๋ฅดํ…Œ๋ฅดํŠธ (1859โ€“1933) ์—๋ฅธ์ŠคํŠธ ํ—ค์ผˆ (1834โ€“1919) ์—๋ฆญ F. ์œ„์ƒค์šฐ์Šค (1947) ์—๋ฆญ ์บ”๋“ค (1929) ์—๋ฐ€ ํ…Œ์˜ค๋„์–ด ์ฝ”ํ—ˆ (1841โ€“1917) ์—ํ‹ฐ์—” ์กฐํ”„๋ฃจ์•„ ์ƒํ‹ธ๋ ˆ๋ฅด (1772โ€“1844) ์—”๋ธ ํˆด๋น™ (1927) ์—˜๋ฆฌ ๋ฉ”์น˜๋‹ˆ์ฝ”ํ”„ (1845โ€“1916) ์—˜๋ฆฌ์ž๋ฒ ์Šค ๋ธ”๋ž™๋ฒˆ (1948) ์˜ค์Šค๋‹ˆ์–ผ ์ฐฐ์Šค ๋งˆ์‹œ (1831โ€“1899) ์˜คํƒ€ ๋„๋ชจ์ฝ” (1933) ์˜คํ†  ํ”„๋ฆฌ์ธ  ๋งˆ์ด์–ดํ˜ธํ”„ (1884โ€“1951) ์š”์ œํ”„ ๊ฒŒ๋ฅดํ•˜๋ฅดํŠธ ์ถ”์นด๋ฆฌ๋‹ˆ (1797โ€“1848) ์š”ํ•œ ๋ณผํ”„๊ฐ• ํฐ ๊ดดํ…Œ (1749โ€“1832) ์›”ํ„ฐ ๋กœ์Šค์ฐจ์ผ๋“œ (1868โ€“1937) ์œˆ์Šคํ„ด ์ฒ˜์น  (1831โ€“1881) ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„ ๋„๋„๋“œ ํ•ด๋ฐ€ํ„ด (1936โ€“2000) ์œจ๋ฆฌ์šฐ์Šค ํฐ ์ž‘์Šค (1832โ€“1897) ์ด๋ž˜์ฆˆ๋จธ์Šค ๋‹ค์œˆ (1731โ€“1802) ์ด๋ฐ˜ ํŒŒ๋ธ”๋กœํ”„ (1849โ€“1936) ใ…ˆ ์žํฌ ๋ชจ๋…ธ (1910โ€“1976) ์žํฌ ์ฟ ์Šคํ†  (1910โ€“1997) ์žฅ๋ฐ”ํ‹ฐ์ŠคํŠธ ๋ผ๋งˆ๋ฅดํฌ (1744โ€“1829) ์žฅ์•™๋ฆฌ ํŒŒ๋ธŒ๋ฅด (1823โ€“1915) ์กด "์žญ" ํ˜ธ๋„ˆ (1946) ์ œ1๋Œ€ ๋ฑ…ํฌ์Šค ์ค€๋‚จ์ž‘ ์กฐ์ง€ํ”„ ๋ฑ…ํฌ์Šค (1743โ€“1820) ์ œ๋Ÿด๋“œ ์—๋œ๋จผ (1929) ์ œ์ธ ๊ตฌ๋‹ฌ (1934) ์ œ์ž„์Šค D. ์™“์Šจ (1928) ์ œ์ž„์Šค ๋Ÿฌ๋ธŒ๋ก (1919) ์กฐ๋„ˆ์Šค ์†Œํฌ (1914โ€“1995) ์กฐ๋ฅด์ฃผ ํ€ด๋น„์— (1769โ€“1832) ๋ท”ํ’ (1707โ€“1788) ์กฐ์•ˆ ๋Ÿฌํ”„๊ฐ€๋“  (1946) ์กฐ์ง€ ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ๊ทธ๋ ˆ์ด (1808โ€“1872) ์กฐ์ง€ ์‡ผ (์ƒ๋ฌผํ•™์ž) (1751โ€“1813) ์กฐ์ง€ ์—๋ฐ€ ํŽ„๋ ˆ์ด๋“œ (1912) ์กฐ์ง€ ์›Œ์‹ฑํ„ด ์นด๋ฒ„ (1860โ€“1943) ์กฐ์ง€ ์›”๋“œ (1906โ€“1997) ์กฐ์ง€ C. ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„์Šค (1926) ์กฐ์ง€ํ”„ ๋Œํ„ด ํ›„์ปค (1817โ€“1911) ์กฐ์ง€ํ”„ ๋ ˆ์ด๋”” (1823โ€“1891) ์กด ๊ตด๋“œ (1804โ€“1881) ์กด ๋ฉ”์ด๋„ˆ๋“œ ์Šค๋ฏธ์Šค (1920โ€“2004) ์กด ๋ฎค์–ด (1838โ€“1914) ์กด ์Šคํ‹ฐ๋ธ์Šค ํ—จ์Šฌ๋กœ (1796โ€“1861) J.E. ๊ทธ๋ ˆ์ด (1800โ€“1875) ์กด ์—ํด์Šค (1903โ€“1997) ์กด ์ œ์ž„์Šค ์˜ค๋“€๋ณธ (1786โ€“1851) ์กด ํ™”์ดํŠธ (c. 1756โ€“1832) ์ค„๋ฆฌ์–ด์Šค ์•ก์„ค๋กœ๋“œ (1912โ€“2004) ์ค„๋ฆฌ์–ธ ํ—‰์Šฌ๋ฆฌ (1887โ€“1975) ์ฅ˜ ๋ณด๋ฅด๋ฐ (1870โ€“1961) ใ…Š ์ฐฐ์Šค ๋‹ค์œˆ (1809โ€“1882) ์ฐฐ์Šค ๋Œ€๋ธํฌํŠธ (1866โ€“1944) ์ฐฐ์Šค ์Šค์ฝง ์…ฐ๋งํ„ด (1857โ€“1922) ์ฐฐ์Šค ์›Œํ„ฐํ„ด (1782โ€“1865) ์ตœ์žฌ์ฒœ (1954๋…„) ใ…‹ ์นด๋ฅผ ์—๋ฅธ์ŠคํŠธ ํฐ ๋ฒ ์–ด (1792โ€“1876) ์นด๋ฅผ ํฐ ํ”„๋ฆฌ์Šˆ (1886โ€“1982) ์นด๋ฅผ๋ฃจ์Šค ์ƒค๊ฐ€์Šค (1879โ€“1934) ์นด๋ฐ€๋กœ ๊ณจ์ง€ (1843โ€“1926) ์นผ ์›Œ์ฆˆ (1928โ€“2012) ์นผ ํผ๋””๋‚ธ๋“œ ์ฝ”๋ฆฌ (1896โ€“1984) ์นผ ํŽ˜ํ…Œ๋ฅด ํˆฐ๋ฒ ๋ฆฌ (1743โ€“1828) ์นผ ํฐ ๋ฆฐ๋„ค (1707โ€“1778) ์บ๋ฆฌ ๋ฉ€๋ฆฌ์Šค (1944) ์ฝ˜๋ผํŠธ ๊ฒŒ์Šค๋„ˆ (1516โ€“1565) ์ฝ˜๋ผํŠธ ๋กœ๋ Œ์ธ  (1903โ€“1989) ํฌ๋ ˆ์ด๊ทธ ๋ฒคํ„ฐ (1946) ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ‹ฐ์•„๋„ค ๋‰˜์Šฌ๋ผ์ธํดํ•˜๋ฅดํŠธ (1942) ํด๋กœ๋“œ ๋ฒ ๋ฅด๋‚˜๋ฅด (1813โ€“1878) ใ…Œ ํ…Œ์˜ค๋„์‹œ์šฐ์Šค ๋„๋ธŒ์ž”์Šคํ‚ค (1900โ€“1975) ํ…Œ์˜ค๋„์–ด ์Šˆ๋ฐ˜ (1810โ€“1882) ํ…Œ์˜คํ”„๋ผ์Šคํ† ์Šค (372ย BC โ€“ 287ย BC) ํ…œํ”Œ ๊ทธ๋žœ๋”˜ (1947) ํ† ๋ฅด์Šคํ… ๋น„์…€ (1924) ํ† ๋จธ์Šค ์Šคํƒฌํผ๋“œ ๋ž˜ํ”Œ์Šค (1781โ€“1826) ํ† ๋จธ์Šค ํ—ŒํŠธ ๋ชจ๊ฑด (1868โ€“1945) ํ† ๋จธ์Šค ํ—จ๋ฆฌ ํ—‰์Šฌ๋ฆฌ (1825โ€“1895) ํŠธ๋กœํ•Œ ๋ฆฌ์„ผ์ฝ” (1898โ€“1976) ใ… ํŒŒ๋ผ์ผˆ์ˆ˜์Šค (1493โ€“1541) ํŒŒ์šธ ์—๋ฅผ๋ฆฌํžˆ (1854โ€“1915) ํ”„๋ž€์ฒด์Šค์ฝ” ๋ ˆ๋”” (1626โ€“1697) ํ”„๋ž‘์ˆ˜์•„ ์ž์ฝ”๋ธŒ (1920) ํ”„๋žœ์‹œ์Šค ํฌ๋ฆญ (1916โ€“2004) ํ”„๋ ˆ๋”๋ฆญ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌํ”ผ์Šค (1879โ€“1941) ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ๋ฆฌํžˆ ๋ขฐํ”Œ๋Ÿฌ (1852โ€“1915) ํ•„๋ฆฌํ”„ ํ”„๋ž€์ธ  ํฐ ์ง€๋ณผํŠธ (1796โ€“1866) ใ…Ž ํ•˜์›Œ๋“œ ํ”Œ๋กœ๋ฆฌ (1898โ€“1968) ํ•ธ์Šค ์• ๋Œํ”„ ํฌ๋ ˆ๋ธŒ์Šค (1900โ€“1981) ํ—จ๋ฆฌ ์›”ํ„ฐ ๋ฒ ์ด์ธ  (1825โ€“1892) ํ›„๊ณ  ํฐ ๋ชฐ (1805โ€“1872) ํœ˜ํ˜ธ ๋”ํ”„๋ฆฌ์Šค (1848โ€“1935) ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ๋…ธ๋ฒจ ์ƒ๋ฆฌํ•™ยท์˜ํ•™์ƒ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž ๋ชฉ๋ก ์ƒ๋ฌผํ•™์ž ๋ชฉ๋ก ์ƒ๋ฌผํ•™์ž ๋ชฉ๋ก ๋ชฉ๋ก
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20biologists
List of biologists
This is a list of notable biologists with a biography in Wikipedia. It includes zoologists, botanists, biochemists, ornithologists, entomologists, malacologists, naturalists and other specialities. A Abโ€“Ag John Jacob Abel (1857โ€“1938), American biochemist and pharmacologist, founder of the first department of pharmacology in the United States. John Abelson (born 1938), American biologist with expertise in biophysics, biochemistry, and genetics Richard J. Ablin (born 1940), American immunologist. Research on prostate cancer. Discovered prostate-specific antigen (PSA) which led to the development of the PSA test Erik Acharius (1757โ€“1819), Swedish botanist who studied lichens Gary Ackers (1939โ€“2011), American biophysicist who worked on thermodynamics of macromolecules. Gilbert Smithson Adair (1896โ€“1979), British protein chemist who identified cooperative binding of oxygen binding haemoglobin. Arthur Adams (1820โ€“1878), English physician and naturalist who classified crustaceans and molluscs Michel Adanson (1727โ€“1806), French naturalist who studied the plants and animals of Senegal Julius Adler (born 1930), American biochemist and geneticist known for work on chemotaxis. Monique Adolphe (born 1932), French cell biologist, pioneer of cell culture Edgar Douglas Adrian (1st Baron Adrian) (1889โ€“1977), British electrophysiologist, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1932) for research on neurons Adam Afzelius (1750โ€“1837), Swedish botanist who collected botanical specimens later acquired by Uppsala University Carl Adolph Agardh (1785โ€“1859), Swedish botanist who classified plant orders and classes Jacob Georg Agardh (1813โ€“1901), Swedish botanist known for classification of algae Louis Agassiz (1807โ€“1873), Swiss zoologist who studied the classification of fish; opponent of natural selection Alexander Agassiz (1835โ€“1910), American zoologist, son of Louis Agassiz, expert of marine biology and on mining Nikolaus Ager (also Nicolas Ager, Agerius) (1568โ€“1634), French botanist, author of De Anima Vegetativa Alโ€“An Nagima Aitkhozhina (1946โ€“2020), Kazakh molecular biologist, structural and functional organisation of the genome of higher organisms and the molecular mechanisms of regulation of its expression. William Aiton (1731โ€“1793), Scottish botanist, director of the botanical garden at Kew Bruce Alberts (born 1938), American biochemist, former President of the United States National Academy of Sciences, known for studying the protein complexes involved in chromosome replication, and for the book Molecular Biology of the Cell Robert Alberty (1921โ€“2014), American physical biochemist, with many contributions to enzyme kinetics. Alfred William Alcock (1859โ€“1933), British systematist of numerous species, aspects of biology and physiology of fishes Nora Lilian Alcock (1874โ€“1972), British pioneer in plant pathology who did research on fungal diseases Boyd Alexander (1873โ€“1910), English ornithologist who made surveys of birds in the Gold Coast (now Ghana), and the Bonin Islands Richard D. Alexander (1929โ€“2018), American evolutionary biologist whose scientific pursuits integrated systematics, ecology, evolution, natural history and behaviour Salim Ali (1896โ€“1987), Indian ornithologist who conducted systematic bird surveys across India Frรฉdรฉric-Louis Allamand (1736โ€“1809), Swiss botanist who described several plant genera Warder Clyde Allee (1885โ€“1955), American zoologist and ecologist, identified the Allee effect (correlation between population density and individual fitness) Joel Asaph Allen (1838โ€“1921), American zoologist who studied birds and mammals, known for Allen's rule Jorge Allende (born 1934), Chilean biochemist known for contributions to the understanding of protein biosynthesis George James Allman (1812โ€“1898), British naturalist who did important work on the gymnoblasts June Dalziel Almeida (1930โ€“2007), Scottish virologist who pioneered techniques for characterizing viruses, and discovered Coronavirus Tikvah Alper (1909โ€“1995), South African radiobiologist who showed that the infectious agent of scrapie contains no nucleic acid Prospero Alpini (1553โ€“1617), Italian botanist, the first in Europe to describe coffee and banana plants Sidney Altman (1939โ€“2022), Canadian-born molecular biologist, winner of the 1989 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work on RNA Amโ€“As Bruce Ames (born 1928), American biochemist, inventor of the Ames test for mutagenicity (sometimes regarded as a test for carcinogenicity) John E. Amoore (1939โ€“1998), British biochemist and zoologist, originator of the stereochemical theory of olfaction. Josรฉ Alberto de Oliveira Anchieta (1832โ€“1897), Portuguese naturalist who identified many new species of mammals, birds, amphibians and reptiles Mortimer Louis Anson (1901โ€“1968), American biochemist and protein chemist who proposed that protein folding was reversible Jakob Johan Adolf Appellรถf (1857โ€“1921), Swedish marine zoologist who made important contributions to knowledge of cephalopods Agnes Robertson Arber (1879โ€“1960), British plant morphologist and anatomist, historian of botany and philosopher of biology Aristotle (384ย BCโ€“322ย BC), Greek philosopher, sometimes regarded as the first biologist, he described hundreds of kinds of animals Emily Arnesen (1867โ€“1928), Norwegian zoologist who worked on sponges Frances Arnold (born 1956), American biochemist and biochemical engineer, pioneer of the use of directed evolution to engineer enzymes. Ruth Arnon (born 1933), Israeli biochemist, who works on anti-cancer and influenza vaccinations. She participated in developing the multiple sclerosis drug Copaxone. Peter Artedi (1705โ€“1735), Swedish naturalist who developed the science of ichthyology Gilbert Ashwell (1916โ€“2014), American biochemist, pioneer in the study of cell receptor Ana Aslan (1897โ€“1988), Romanian biologist who studied arthritis and other aspects of aging William Astbury (1898โ€“1961), British physicist, molecular biologist and X-ray crystallographer Atโ€“Az David Attenborough (born 1926), British natural history broadcaster Jean Baptiste Audebert (1759โ€“1800), French naturalist. Primarily an artist, he illustrated books of natural history, including Histoire naturelle des singes, des makis [lemurs] et des galรฉopithรจques Jean Victoire Audouin (1797โ€“1841), French zoologist: entomologist, herpetologist, ornithologist and malacologist John James Audubon (1786โ€“1851), French and American ornithologist and illustrator, who identified 25 new species Charlotte Auerbach (1899โ€“1994), German and British geneticist, founded the discipline of mutagenesis after discovering the effect of mustard gas on fruit flies Caroline Austin, British molecular biologist known for her work on human DNA topoisomerase enzymes Richard Axel (born 1946), American Nobel Prizeโ€“winning physiologist who discovered how to insert foreign DNA into a host cell Julius Axelrod (1912โ€“2004), American biochemist, winner of the 1970 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his research on catecholamine neurotransmitters Francisco Ayala (born 1934), Spanish-American evolutionary biologist and philosopher William Orville Ayres (1817โ€“1887), American physician and ichthyologist with publications in popular sources Fรฉlix de Azara (1746โ€“1811), Spanish naturalist who described more than 350 South American birds B Ba Charles Cardale Babington (1808โ€“1895), British botanist and archaeologist Churchill Babington (1821โ€“1889), British classical scholar, archaeologist and botanist John Bachman (1790โ€“1874), American ornithologist; also one of the first scientists to argue that blacks and whites are the same species Curt Backeberg (1894โ€“1966), German horticulturist, known for classification of cacti Karl Ernst von Baer (1792โ€“1876), German naturalist (in Estonia), biologist, geologist, meteorologist, geographer, and a founding father of embryology Liberty Hyde Bailey (1858โ€“1954), American botanist, one of the first to recognize the importance of Gregor Mendel's work Donna Baird (thesis 1980), American epidemiologist and evolutionary-population biologist, concerned with women's health Spencer Fullerton Baird (1823โ€“1887), American naturalist, ornithologist, ichthyologist and herpetologist who collected and classified many species Scott Baker (born 1954), American marine biologist, cetacean expert John Hutton Balfour (1808โ€“1884), Scottish botanist, author of numerous books, including Manual of Botany Clinton Ballou (1923โ€“2021), American biochemist who worked on the metabolism of carbohydrates and the structures of microbial cell walls Henri Heim de Balsac (1899โ€“1979), zoologist. David Baltimore (born 1938), American biologist, known for work on viruses. Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1975 Outram Bangs (1863โ€“1932), American zoologist who collected many bird species; author of more than 70 books and articles, 55 of them on mammals Joseph Banks (1743โ€“1820), English naturalist, botanist who collected 30,000 plant specimens and discovered 1,400. Robert Bรกrรกny (1876โ€“1936), Austro-Hungarian (later Swedish) physician. Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1914) for studies of the vestibular system Horace Barker (1907โ€“2000), American biochemist and microbiologist Ben Barres (1954โ€“2017), American neurobiologist who studied mammalian glial cells of the central nervous system Benjamin Smith Barton (1766โ€“1815), American botanist, author of Elements of botany, or Outlines of the natural history of vegetables, the first American textbook of botany John Bartram (1699โ€“1777), American botanist, described by Carl Linnaeus as the "greatest natural botanist in the world" William Bartram (1739โ€“1823), American botanist, ornithologist, natural historian, and explorer, author of Bartram's Travels (as now known) Anton de Bary (1831โ€“1888), German surgeon, botanist, microbiologist, and mycologist, considered a founding father of plant pathology (phytopathology) as well as the founder of modern mycology Dorothea Bate (1878โ€“1951), Welsh palaeontologist and pioneer of archaeozoology who studied fossils Henry Walter Bates (1825โ€“1892), English naturalist who gave the first scientific account of mimicry Patrick Bateson (1938โ€“2017), English biologist and science writer, president of the Zoological Society of London August Johann Georg Karl Batsch (1762โ€“1802), German botanist, mycologist who discovered almost 200 species of mushrooms Gaspard Bauhin (1560โ€“1624), Swiss botanist who introduced binomial nomenclature into taxonomy, foreshadowing Linnaeus Beโ€“Bi George Beadle (1903โ€“1989), American geneticist. Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1958 for discovery of the role of genes in regulating biochemical reactions within cells. 7th president of the University of Chicago. Johann Matthรคus Bechstein (1757โ€“1822), German naturalist, ornithologist, entomologist and herpetologist known for his treatise on singing birds Naturgeschichte der Stubenvรถgel Rollo Beck (1870โ€“1950), American ornithologist known for collecting birds and reptiles, including three of the last four individuals of the Pinta Island tortoise Jon Beckwith (born 1935), American microbiologist and geneticist who worked on bacterial genetics. Charles William Beebe (1877โ€“1962), American biologist, known for work on pheasants, and numerous books on natural history Martinus Beijerinck (1851โ€“1931), Dutch microbiologist and botanist who discovered viruses and investigated nitrogen fixation by bacteria Helmut Beinert (1913โ€“2007), German-American biochemist, a pioneer of the use of electron paramagnetic resonance in biological systems Thomas Bell (1792โ€“1880), English zoologist, surgeon and writer who described and classified Darwin's reptile specimens and crustaceans David Bellamy (1933โ€“2019), English broadcaster, activist and ecologist Boris Pavlovich Belousov (1893โ€“1970), Soviet chemist and biophysicist who discovered the Belousovโ€“Zhabotinsky reaction Stephen J. Benkovic (born 1938), American bioorganic chemist specializing in mechanistic enzymology Edward Turner Bennett (1797โ€“1836), English zoologist who described a new species of African crocodile George Bentham (1800โ€“1884), English botanist, known for his taxonomy of plants, written with Joseph Dalton Hooker, Genera Plantarum Jacques Benoit (1896โ€“1982), French biologist, physician. One of the pioneers of neuroendocrinology and photobiology. Robert Bentley (1821โ€“1893), English botanist, known for Medicinal Plants (four volumes) Wilson Teixeira Beraldo (1917โ€“1998), Brazilian physician and physiologist, co-discoverer of bradykinin Paul Berg (1926โ€“2023), American biochemist known for work on gene splicing of recombinant DNA. Hans Berger (1873โ€“1941), German neuroscientist, one of the founders of electroencephalography Carl Bergmann (1814โ€“1865), German anatomist, physiologist and biologist who developed Bergmann's rule relating population and body sizes with ambient temperature Rudolph Bergh (1824โ€“1909), Danish physician and zoologist who studied sexually transmitted diseases, and also molluscs Claude Bernard (1813โ€“1878), French physiologist, father of the concepts of the milieu intรฉrieur and homeostasis Samuel Stillman Berry (1887โ€“1984), American zoologist who established 401 mollusc taxa, and worked on chitons, cephalopods, and also land snails Thomas Bewick (1753โ€“1828), English ornithologist and illustrator, author of A General History of Quadrupeds Gabriel Bibron (1806โ€“1848), French zoologist, expert on reptiles and author (with Andrรฉ Marie Constant Dumรฉril) of Erpรฉtologie Gรฉnรฉrale Klaus Biemann (1926โ€“2016), Austrian chemist, the "father of organic mass spectrometry" Ann Bishop (1899โ€“1990), English biologist who specialized in protozoology and parasitology Biswamoy Biswas (1923โ€“1994), Indian ornithologist who studied, in particular, the birds of Nepal and Bhutan Blโ€“Bo Elizabeth Blackburn (born 1948), Australian/US Nobel Prizeโ€“winning researcher in the field of telomeres and the "telomerase" enzyme John Blackwall (1790โ€“1881), British entomologist, author of A History of the Spiders of Great Britain and Ireland Henri Marie Ducrotay de Blainville (1777โ€“1850), French zoologist, taxonomic authority on numerous zoological species, including Blainville's beaked whale Albert Francis Blakeslee (1874โ€“1954), American botanist, best known for research on Jimsonweed and the sexuality of fungi Thomas Blakiston (1832โ€“1891), English naturalist. "Blakiston's Line" separates animal species of Hokkaidล and northern Asia, from those of Honshลซ and southern Asia. Frank Nelson Blanchard (1888โ€“1937), American herpetologist who described new subspecies of snakes. Frjeda Blanchard (1889โ€“1977), American plant and animal geneticist who demonstrated Mendelian inheritance in reptiles. William Thomas Blanford (1832โ€“1905), English geologist and naturalist, editor of The Fauna of British India, Including Ceylon and Burma. Pieter Bleeker (1819โ€“1878), Dutch ichthyologist whose papers described 511 new genera and 1,925 new species Gรผnter Blobel (1936โ€“2018), German Nobel Prize-winning biologist who discovered that newly synthesized proteins contain "address tags" which direct them to the proper location within the cell Konrad Emil Bloch (1912โ€“2000), German-American biochemist who worked on cholesterol and fatty acid metabolism Steven Block (born 1952), American biophysicist who measured the mechanical properties of single bio-molecules David Mervyn Blow (1931โ€“2004), British X-ray crystallographer noted for work on protein structure Carl Ludwig Blume (Karel Lodewijk Blume, 1789โ€“1862), German-Dutch botanist who studied the flora of southern Asia, particularly Java Johann Friedrich Blumenbach (1752โ€“1840), German physiologist and anthropologist who classified human races on the basis of skull structure Edward Blyth (1810โ€“1873), English zoologist who classified many birds of India Josรฉ Vicente Barbosa du Bocage (1823โ€“1907), Portuguese zoologist with many papers on mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fishes, and others Pieter Boddaert (1730โ€“1795/1796), Dutch physician and naturalist who named many mammals, birds and other animals Brendan J. M. Bohannan (no date information), American microbial and evolutionary biologist, expert on the microbes of Amazonia Charles Lucien Bonaparte (1803โ€“1857), French naturalist who coined Latin names for many bird species James Bond (1900โ€“1989), American ornithologist, author of Birds of the West Indies Franco Andrea Bonelli (1784โ€“1830), Italian ornithologist, author of a Catalogue of the Birds of Piedmont, which described 262 species August Gustav Heinrich von Bongard (1786โ€“1839), German botanist in St Petersburg, one the first botanists to describe the plants of Alaska John Tyler Bonner (1920โ€“2019), American developmental biologist, expert on slime moulds Charles Bonnet (1720โ€“1793), Genevan naturalist who published work on many subjects, including insects and plants Aimรฉ Bonpland (1773โ€“1858), French explorer and botanist who collected and classified about 6,000 plants unknown in Europe Jules Bordet (1870โ€“1961), Belgian immunologist and microbiologist, winner of the 1919 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his discovery of the complement system in the immune system Antonina Georgievna Borissova (1903โ€“1970), Russian botanist who specialized on the flora of the deserts and semi-desert of central Asia Norman Borlaug (1914โ€“2009), American agricultural scientist, humanitarian, Nobel Peace Prize, and the father of the Green Revolution Louis Augustin Guillaume Bosc (1759โ€“1828), French botanist, invertebrate zoologist, and entomologist, who made a systematic examination of the mushrooms of the southern United States George Albert Boulenger (1858โ€“1937), Belgian and British zoologist, author of 19 monographs on fishes, amphibians, and reptiles Jules Bourcier (1797โ€“1873), French ornithologist, expert on hummingbirds Paul D. Boyer (1918โ€“2018), American biochemist who was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1997 for studies of ATP synthase Brโ€“Bu Margaret Bradshaw (born 1941), New Zealand Antarctic researcher who has worked on Devonian invertebrate palaeontology Johann Friedrich von Brandt (1802โ€“1879), German-Russian naturalist who described various birds; also an entomologist, specialising in beetles and millipedes Sara Branham Matthews (1888โ€“1962), American microbiologist and physician best known for her research into the isolation and treatment of Neisseria meningitidis Christian Ludwig Brehm (1787โ€“1864), German ornithologist who described many German species of birds Alfred Brehm (1829โ€“1884), German zoologist, author of many works on animals and especially birds Sydney Brenner (1927โ€“2019), British molecular biologist who worked on the genetic code, and later established the roundworm Caenorhabditis elegans as a model organism for developmental biology. Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (2002) Thomas Mayo Brewer (1814โ€“1880), American naturalist, specializing in ornithology and oology (the study of birds' eggs) William Brewster (1851โ€“1919), American ornithologist, curator of mammals and birds at Harvard. Mathurin Jacques Brisson (1723โ€“1806), French zoologist, author of Le Rรจgne animal and Ornithologie Nathaniel Lord Britton (1859โ€“1934), American botanist, coauthor of Illustrated Flora of the Northern United States, Canada, and the British Possessions Thomas D. Brock (1926โ€“2021), American microbiologist who discovered of hyperthermophiles such as Thermus aquaticus Adolphe Theodore Brongniart (1801โ€“1876), French botanist, author of many works, including Histoire des vรฉgรฉtaux fossiles Robert Broom (1866โ€“1951), South African paleontologist, author many many papers and books, including The mammal-like reptiles of South Africa and the origin of mammals Adrian John Brown (1852โ€“1920), British expert on brewing and malting, pioneer of enzyme kinetics James H. Brown (born 1942), American ecologist known for his metabolic theory of ecology Patrick O. Brown (born 1954), American biochemist who has developed experimental methods with DNA microarrays to investigate genome organization Robert Brown (1773โ€“1858), Scottish botanist known for pioneering use of the microscope in botany David Bruce (1855โ€“1931), Scottish pathologist and microbiologist who investigated Malta fever (now called brucellosis) and discovered trypanosomes Jean Guillaume Bruguiรจre (1750โ€“1798), French naturalist, mainly interested in molluscs and other invertebrates Thomas Bruice (1925โ€“2019), American bioorganic chemist, pioneer of chemical biology Morten Thrane Brรผnnich (1737โ€“1827), Danish zoologist, author of Ornithologia Borealis and Ichthyologia Massiliensis Francis Buchanan-Hamilton (1762โ€“1829), Scottish zoologist and botanist who studied plants and fishes in India Eduard Buchner (1860โ€“1917), German chemist and physiologist who overthrew the doctrine of vitalism by showing that fermentation occurred in cell-free extracts of yeast Linda B. Buck (born 1947), American physiologist noted for work on the olfactory system. Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (2004). Buffon (Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon, 1707โ€“1788), French naturalist. Author of many works in evolution, including Histoire naturelle, gรฉnรฉrale et particuliรจre. Walter Buller (1838โ€“1906), New Zealand naturalist, a dominant figure in New Zealand ornithology. Author of A History of the Birds of New Zealand. Alexander G. von Bunge (1803โ€“1890), German-Russian botanist who studied Mongolian flora. Luther Burbank (1849โ€“1926), American horticulturalist who developed more than 800 strains and varieties of plants, many of commercial importance Hermann Burmeister (1807โ€“1892), German Argentinian zoologist, entomologist, herpetologist, and botanist, who described many new species of amphibians and reptiles Frank Macfarlane Burnet (1899โ€“1985), Australian virologist. Nobel Prize in 1960 for predicting acquired immune tolerance and for developing the theory of clonal selection. Carolyn Burns (born 1942), New Zealand ecologist who studies the physiology and population dynamics of southern hemisphere zooplankton and food-web interactions Robert H. Burris (1914โ€“2010), American biochemist, expert on nitrogen fixation Carlos Bustamante (born 1951), Peruvian-American biophysicist who uses "molecular tweezers" to manipulate DNA for biochemical experiments Ernesto Bustamante (born 1950), Peruvian biochemist, specialist in mitochondria demonstrated the importance of mitochondrial hexokinase in glycolysis in rapidly growing malignant tumour cells. He currently works on DNA paternity testing. C Ca Jean Cabanis (1816โ€“1906), German ornithologist, founder of the Journal fรผr Ornithologie รngel Cabrera (1879โ€“1960), Spanish zoologist, author of South American Mammals George Caley (1770โ€“1829), English explorer and botanist, discoverer of Mount Banks, Australia Rudolf Jakob Camerarius (1665โ€“1721), German botanist, chiefly known for studies of the reproductive organs of plants Augustin Pyramus de Candolle (1778โ€“1841), Swiss botanist who documented many plant families and created a new plant classification system Charles Cantor (born 1942), American biophysicist, known for pulse field gel electrophoresis, and as Director of the Human Genome Project Elizabeth P. Carpenter (no date information), British structural biologist, professor Philip Pearsall Carpenter (1819โ€“1877), British conchologist, author of Catalogue of the collection of Mazatlan shells, in the British Museum: collected by Frederick Reigen Alexis Carrel (1873โ€“1944), French biologist and surgeon, winner of the 1912 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his work on sutures and organ transplants, advocate of eugenics Elie-Abel Carriรจre (1818โ€“1896), French botanist, an authority on conifers who described many new species Clodoveo Carriรณn Mora (1883โ€“1957), Ecuadorian paleontologist and naturalist who discovered many species and one genus Sean B. Carroll (born 1960), American evolutionary development biologist, author of The Making of the Fittest: DNA and the Ultimate Forensic Record of Evolution and other books Rachel Carson (1907โ€“1964), American marine biologist, author of Silent Spring George Washington Carver (1860โ€“1943), American agriculturist, author of bulletins on crop production, including How to Grow the Peanut and 105 Ways of Preparing it for Human Consumption John Cassin (1813โ€“1869), American ornithologist, who named many birds not described in the works of his predecessors Alexandre de Cassini (1781โ€“1832), French botanist who named many flowering plants and new genera in the sunflower family, many of them from North America Amy Castle (1880โ€“1971), New Zealand entomologist, who worked primarily on the Lepidoptera William E. Castle (1867โ€“1962), American geneticist who contributed to the mathematical foundations of Mendelian genetics, and anticipated what is now known as the Hardyโ€“Weinberg law. Mark Catesby (1683โ€“1749), English naturalist who studied flora and fauna in the New World. Author of Natural History of Carolina, Florida and the Bahama Islands Ceโ€“Ch Thomas Cech (born 1947), American biochemist who discovered catalytic RNA, Nobel Prize in 1989 Andrea Cesalpino (1519โ€“1603), Italian botanist who classified plants according to their fruits and seeds, rather than alphabetically or by medicinal properties Francesco Cetti (1726โ€“1778), Italian zoologist, author of Storia Naturale di Sardegna (Natural History of Sardinia) Carlos Chagas (1879โ€“1934), Brazilian physician who identified Trypanosoma cruzi as cause of Chagas disease Adelbert von Chamisso (Louis Charles Adรฉlaรฏde de Chamissot, 1781โ€“1838), German botanist, whose most important contribution was the description of many Mexican trees Britton Chance (1913โ€“2010), American biochemist, inventor of the stopped-flow method Min Chueh Chang (1908โ€“1991), Chinese-American reproductive biologist who studied the fertilisation process in mammalian reproduction, with work that led to the first test tube baby Jean-Pierre Changeux (born 1936), French biochemist and neuroscientist, originator of the allosteric model of cooperativity Frank Michler Chapman (1864โ€“1945), American ornithologist, who promoted the use of photography in ornithology, especially in his book Bird Studies With a Camera. Erwin Chargaff (1905โ€“2002), Austrian-American biochemist known for Chargaff's rules Emmanuelle Charpentier (born 1968), French microbiologist, geneticist and biochemist who discovered genome editing with CRISPR. Martha Chase (1927โ€“2003), American biologist who carried out the Hersheyโ€“Chase experiment, which showed that genetic information is held and transmitted by DNA, not by protein Thomas Frederic Cheeseman (1846โ€“1923), New Zealand botanist and naturalist with wide-ranging interests, including sea slugs Sergei Chetverikov (1880โ€“1959), Russian population geneticist who showed how early genetic theories applied to natural populations, and thus contributed towards the modern synthesis of evolutionary theory Charles Chilton (1860โ€“1929), New Zealand zoologist with 130 papers on crustaceans, mostly amphipods, isopods and decapods, from all around the world, but especially from New Zealand Carl Chun (1852โ€“1914), German marine biologist specializing in cephalopods and plankton. He discovered and named the vampire squid Aaron Ciechanover (born 1947). Israeli biochemist known for work on protein turnover, for which he was awarded the Nobel Prize in 2004 Clโ€“Co Albert Claude (1899โ€“1983), Belgian-American cell biologist who developed cell fractionation; Nobel Prize 1974 W. Wallace Cleland (1930โ€“2013). American biochemist known for work on enzyme kinetics and mechanism Nathan Cobb (1859โ€“1932), American biologist who described over 1000 different nematode species and laid the foundations of nematode taxonomy Leonard Cockayne (1855โ€“1934), New Zealand botanist especially active in plant ecology and theories of hybridisation Alfred Cogniaux (1841โ€“1916), Belgian botanist who worked especially with orchids Stanley Cohen (1922โ€“2020), American biochemist, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1986) for his discovery of growth factors Edwin Joseph Cohn (1892โ€“1953), American protein chemist known for studies on blood and the physical chemistry of protein Mildred Cohn (1913โ€“2009), American pioneer in the use of nuclear magnetic resonance to study enzymes James J. Collins (born 1965), American biologist, synthetic biology and systems biology pioneer Timothy Abbott Conrad (1803โ€“1877), American paleontologist and naturalist who studied the shells of the Tertiary and Cretaceous formations, as well as existing species of molluscs James Graham Cooper (1830โ€“1902), American surgeon and naturalist who contributed to both zoology and botany Edward Drinker Cope (1840โ€“1897), American paleontologist and comparative anatomist, also a herpetologist and ichthyologist, and founder of the Neo-Lamarckism school of thought Carl Ferdinand Cori (1896โ€“1984), Czech-American biochemist and pharmacologist, 1947 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for work on the Cori cycle Gerty Cori (1886โ€“1957), Czech-American biochemist, first American woman to win a Nobel Prize in science (Physiology or Medicine, 1947), for unraveling the mechanism of glycogen metabolism Charles B. Cory (1857โ€“1921), American ornithologist who collected many birds. Author of The Birds of Haiti and San Domingo and other books. Emanuel Mendes da Costa (1717โ€“1791), English botanist, naturalist, philosopher, author of A Natural History of Fossils, British Conchology, and other books Elliott Coues (1842โ€“1899), American army surgeon, historian, ornithologist, and author of Key to North American Birds, did much to promote the systematic study of ornithology Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer (1907โ€“2004), South African zoologist who discovered the Coelacanth Jacques-Yves Cousteau (1910โ€“1997), French naval officer, explorer, conservationist, filmmaker, innovator, scientist, photographer, author and researcher who studied the sea and all forms of life in water Miguel Rolando Covian (1913โ€“1992), Argentine-Brazilian neurophysiologist known for research on the neurophysiology of the limbic system, regarded as the father of Brazilian neurophysiology Frederick Vernon Coville (1867โ€“1937), American botanist, author of Botany of the Death Valley Expedition Crโ€“Cu Robert K. Crane, (1919โ€“2010), American biochemist who discovered sodiumโ€“glucose cotransport Lucy Cranwell (1907โ€“2000), New Zealand botanist who organized the Cheeseman herbarium of about 10,000 specimens in Auckland Philipp Jakob Cretzschmar (1786โ€“1845), German physician and zoologist (especially birds and mammals) Francis Crick (1916โ€“2004), British molecular biologist, biophysicist and neuroscientist, best known for discovering the structure of DNA (with James Watson); Nobel Prize 1962 Joseph Charles Hippolyte Crosse (1826โ€“1898), French conchologist, expert on molluscs, co-editor of the Journal de Conchyliologie Nicholas Culpeper (1616โ€“1654), English botanist, author of The English Physitian Allan Cunningham (1791โ€“1839), English botanist, "King's Collector for the Royal Garden at Kew" (in Australia) Gordon Herriot Cunningham (1892โ€“1962), New Zealand mycologist who published extensively on the taxonomy of fungi Kathleen Curtis (1892โ€“1993), New Zealand mycologist and plant pathologist, a founder of plant pathology in New Zealand William Curtis (1746โ€“1799), English botanist, author of Flora Londinensis Georges Cuvier (1769โ€“1832), French naturalist, author of Le Rรจgne Animal (the Animal Kingdom), the "founding father of paleontology" D Da Valerie Daggett (thesis 1990), American bioengineer who simulates proteins and other biomolecules by molecular dynamics Anders Dahl (1751โ€“1789), Swedish botanist whose name is recalled in the Dahlia, author of Observationes botanicae circa systema vegetabilium William Healey Dall (1845โ€“1927), American malacologist, one of the earliest scientific explorers of interior Alaska. He described many mollusks of the Pacific Northwest of America Keith Dalziel (1921โ€“1994), British biochemist, pioneer in systematizing the kinetics of two-substrate enzyme-catalysed reactions Carl Peter Henrik Dam (1895โ€“1976), Danish physiologist who discovered vitamin K Marguerite Davis (1887โ€“1967), American biochemist, co-discoverer of vitamins A and B Jivanayakam Cyril Daniel (1927โ€“2011), Indian naturalist, director of the Bombay Natural History Society, author of The Book of Indian Reptiles Charles Darwin (1809โ€“1882), British naturalist, author of The Origin of Species, in which he expounded the theory of natural selection, the starting point of modern evolutionary biology Erasmus Darwin (1731โ€“1802), English physician and naturalist, founding member of the Lunar Society, grandfather of Charles Darwin Jean Dausset (1916โ€“2009), French immunologist who worked on the major histocompatibility complex Charles Davenport (1866โ€“1944), American biologist and eugenicist, founded the Eugenics Record Office at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Gertrude Crotty Davenport (1866โ€“1946), American zoologist prominent in the eugenics movement Armand David (Pรจre David) (1826โ€“1900), French zoologist and botanist, commissioned by the Jardin des Plantes to undertake scientific journeys through China Bernard Davis (1916โ€“1994), American biologist who worked on microbial physiology and metabolism Richard Dawkins (born 1941), British evolutionary biologist and writer of popular science, author of The Selfish Gene, The Blind Watchmaker, The God Delusion and other influential books Margaret Oakley Dayhoff (1925โ€“1983), American biochemist, pioneer in bioinformatics. Deโ€“Di Pierre Antoine Delalande (1787โ€“1823), French naturalist employed by the National Museum of Natural History to collect natural history specimens Max Delbrรผck (1906โ€“1981), German-American physicist and biologist who demonstrated that natural selection acting on random mutations applied to bacteria, one of the creators of molecular biology; Nobel Prize 1969. Richard Dell (1920โ€“2002), New Zealand malacologist, author of The Archibenthal Mollusca of New Zealand Stefano Delle Chiaje (1794โ€“1860), Italian zoologist, botanist, anatomist and physician who worked on medicinal plants and on the taxonomy of invertebrates Paul ร‰mile de Puydt (1810โ€“1888), Belgian botanist, author of Les Orchidรฉes, histoire iconographique ..., active in political philosophy as well as botany Renรฉ Louiche Desfontaines (1750โ€“1833), French botanist and ornithologist who collected many plants in Tunisia and Algeria Gรฉrard Paul Deshayes (1795โ€“1875), French geologist and conchologist, distinguished for research on mollusc fossils Anselme Gaรซtan Desmarest (1784โ€“1838), French zoologist, author of Histoire Naturelle des Tangaras, des Manakins et des Todiers (natural history of various birds) Margaret Dick (1918โ€“2008), pioneering Australian microbiologist Ernst Dieffenbach (1811โ€“1855), German naturalist, one of the first scientists to work in New Zealand Johann Jacob Dillenius (1684โ€“1747), German botanist who worked in England on rare plants and mosses Lewis Weston Dillwyn (1778โ€“1855), British botanist and conchologist, also active in porcelain manufacture and politics, author of The British Confervae, an illustrated study of British freshwater algae John T. Dingle (active from 1959) British biologist and rheumatologist. Joan Marjorie Dingley (1916โ€“2008), New Zealand mycologist, world authority on fungi and New Zealand plant diseases Zacharias Dische (1895โ€“1988), Ukrainian-Jewish-American biochemist who discovered metabolic regulation by feedback inhibition Malcolm Dixon (1899โ€“1985), British biochemist, authority on enzyme structure, kinetics, and properties; author (with Edwin Webb) of Enzymes. Doโ€“Du Walter Dobrogosz (born 1933), American microbiologist, discoverer of Lactobacillus reuteri Theodosius Dobzhansky (1900โ€“1975), American geneticist of Ukrainian origin, one of the leading evolutionary biologists of his time Rembert Dodoens (1517โ€“1585), Flemish botanist who classified plants according to their properties and affinities (rather than listing them alphabetically) Anton Dohrn (1840โ€“1909), German marine biologist, Darwinist, founder of the world's first zoological research station, in Naples David Don (1799โ€“1841), British botanist who described major conifers discovered in his time, including the Coast Redwood. George Don (1798โ€“1856), British botanist known for his four-volume A General System of Gardening and Botany. James Donn (1758โ€“1813), English botanist, curator of the Cambridge University Botanic Gardens, and author of Hortus Cantabrigiensis Jean Dorst (1924โ€“2001), French ornithologist, authority on bird migration and one of the writers of Le Peuple Migrateur (Winged Migration) Edward Doubleday (1810โ€“1849), British entomologist known for The Genera of Diurnal Lepidoptera Henry Doubleday (1808โ€“1875), British entomologist, author of the first catalogue of British butterflies and moths, Synonymic List of the British Lepidoptera Jennifer Doudna (born 1964), American biochemist known for CRISPR-mediated genome editing; Nobel Prize 2020 David Douglas (1799โ€“1834), Scottish botanist who studied conifers. The Douglas-fir is named after him. Patricia Louise Dudley (1929โ€“2004), American zoologist who studied copepods (small crustaceans) Peter Duesberg (born 1936), German-American virologist who discovered the first retrovirus, and expert on genetic aspects of cancer, but his research contributions are overshadowed by his unpopular views on AIDS Fรฉlix Dujardin (1802โ€“1860), French zoologist who studied protozoans, and also the structure of the insect brain Renato Dulbecco (1914โ€“2012), Italian-American virologist awarded the Nobel Prize for work on oncoviruses Ronald Duman (1954โ€“2020), American neuroscientist whose work in biological psychiatry concerned the biological mechanisms behind antidepressants Andrรฉ Marie Constant Dumรฉril (1774โ€“1860), French zoologist at the Musรฉum national d'histoire naturelle, who worked on herpetology and ichthyology Auguste Dumรฉril (1812โ€“1870), French zoologist, professor of herpetology and ichthyology, noted for Catalogue mรฉthodique de la collection des Reptiles Charles Dumont de Sainte-Croix (1758โ€“1830), French lawyer, but also an amateur ornithologist who described a number of Javanese bird species Michel Felix Dunal (1789โ€“1856), French botanist known for work on the genus Solanum Robin Dunbar (born 1947), British anthropologist and evolutionary psychologist, a specialist in primate behaviour. Gerald Durrell (1925โ€“1995), British naturalist, writer, zookeeper, conservationist, and television presenter, writer of popular books, such as My Family and Other Animals Christian de Duve (1917โ€“2013), Belgian cytologist and biochemist, discoverer of peroxisomes and lysosomes E Sylvia Earle (born 1935), American oceanographer, author of Blue Hope: Exploring and Caring for Earth's Magnificent Ocean Lindon Eaves (1944โ€“2022), British geneticist (and priest) known for statistical modelling and the genetics of personality and social attitudes John Carew Eccles (1903โ€“1997), Australian neurophysiologist and winner of the 1963 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his work on the synapse Christian Friedrich Ecklon (1795โ€“1868), Danish botanical collector, particularly of South African plants and apothecary Gerald Edelman (1929โ€“2014), American immunologist who discovered the structure of antibodies Robert Stuart Edgar (1930โ€“ 2016), American geneticist who studied mechanisms of formation of virus particles John Tileston Edsall (1902โ€“2002), American protein chemist at Harvard, author of Proteins, Amino Acids and Peptides George Edwards (1693โ€“1773), British naturalist, ornithologist and illustrator, author of A Natural History of Uncommon Birds Christian Gottfried Ehrenberg (1795โ€“1876), German zoologist, comparative anatomist, geologist, and microscopist Paul Ehrlich (1854โ€“1915), German immunologist who discovered the first effective treatment for syphilis Karl Eichwald (1795โ€“1876), Baltic German geologist, physician, and naturalist, who described new species of reptiles Theodor Eimer (1843โ€“1898), German professor of zoology and comparative anatomy who studied speciation and kinship in butterflies George Eliava (1892โ€“1937), Georgian-Soviet microbiologist who worked with bacteriophages (viruses that infect bacteria) Gertrude B. Elion (1918โ€“1999), American pharmacologist known for using rational drug design for the discovery of new drugs Daniel Giraud Elliot (1835โ€“1915), American zoologist, founder of the American Ornithologist Union Gladys Anderson Emerson (1903โ€“1984), American historian and nutritionist, the first to isolate pure Vitamin E Gรผnther Enderlein (1872โ€“1968), German zoologist, entomologist, microbiologist, physician and manufacturer of pharmaceutical products Stephan Ladislaus Endlicher (1804โ€“1849), Austrian botanist, numismatist and Sinologist, director of the Botanical Garden of Vienna Michael S. Engel (born 1971), American paleontologist and entomologist who works on insect evolutionary biology and classification George Engelmann (1809โ€“1884), German-American botanist who described the flora of the west of North America Adolf Engler (1844โ€“1930), German botanist who worked on plant taxonomy and phytogeography, author of Die natรผrlichen Pflanzenfamilien Johann Christian Polycarp Erxleben (1744โ€“1777), German naturalist, author of Anfangsgrรผnde der Naturlehre and Systema regni animalis, founder of the first academic veterinary school in Germany Johann Friedrich von Eschscholtz (1793โ€“1831), Baltic German biologist and explorer. The Latin name (Eschscholtzia californica) of the California poppy commemorates him Constantin von Ettingshausen (1826โ€“1897), Austrian botanist known for his palaeobotanical studies of flora from the Tertiary era Alice Catherine Evans (1881โ€“1975), American microbiologist who demonstrated that Bacillus abortus caused the disease brucellosis (undulant fever or Malta fever) in both cattle and humans Warren Ewens (born 1937), Australian-American mathematical population geneticist working on the mathematical, statistical and theoretical aspects of population genetics Thomas Campbell Eyton (1809โ€“1880), English naturalist who studied cattle, fishes and birds, author of History of the Rarer British Birds F Faโ€“Fl Jean Henri Fabre (1823โ€“1915), French teacher, physicist, chemist and botanist, best known for the study of insects Johan Christian Fabricius (1745โ€“1808), Danish entomologist who named nearly 10,000 species of animals, and established the basis of insect classification. David Fairchild (1869โ€“1954), American botanist who introduced many exotic plants into the USA Hugh Falconer (1808โ€“1865), Scottish geologist, botanist, palaeontologist, and paleoanthropologist who studied the flora, fauna, and geology of India, Assam, and Burma John Farrah (1849โ€“1907), English businessman and amateur biologist Leonardo Fea (1852โ€“1903), Italian zoologist who made large collections of insects and birds Christoph Feldegg (1780โ€“1845), Austrian naturalist who made a large collection of birds David Fell (born 1947), British biochemist and pioneer of systems biology, author of Understanding the Control of Metabolism Honor Fell (1900โ€“1986), British zoologist who developed tissue and organ culture methods Sรฉrgio Ferreira (1934โ€“2016), Brazilian pharmacologist who discovered bradykinin potentiating factor, important for anti-hypertension drugs Alan Fersht (born 1943), British chemist and biochemist, expert on enzymes and protein folding Harold John Finlay (1901โ€“1951), New Zealand paleontologist and conchologist known for work on marine malacofauna of New Zealand Otto Finsch (1839โ€“1917), German ethnographer, naturalist and colonial explorer, known for a monograph on parrots Edmond H. Fischer (1920โ€“2021), Swiss-American biochemist known for protein kinases and phosphatases; Nobel Prize 1992 Johann Fischer von Waldheim (1771โ€“1853), German entomologist known for the classification of invertebrates Paul Henri Fischer (1835โ€“1893), French physician, zoologist, malacologist and paleontologist James Fisher (1922โ€“1970), English author, editor, broadcaster, naturalist and ornithologist Ronald Fisher (1890โ€“1962), British biologist and statistician, one of the founders of population genetics Leopold Fitzinger (1802โ€“1884), Austrian zoologist known for classification of reptiles Tim Flannery (born 1956), Australian biologist who has discovered numerous species of mammals Alexander Fleming (1881โ€“1955), British physician and microbiologist who discovered penicillin; Nobel Prize 1945 Charles Fleming (1916โ€“1987), New Zealand ornithologist, palaeontologist Walther Flemming (1843โ€“1905), German physician and anatomist, discoverer of mitosis and chromosomes Thomas Bainbrigge Fletcher (1878โ€“1950), English officer in the Royal Navy, and an amateur lepidopterist who became an expert on microlepidoptera Louis B. Flexner (1902โ€“1996), American biochemist who worked on memory and brain function Howard Walter Florey (1898โ€“1968), Australian pharmacologist who was the co-inventor of penicillin; Nobel Prize 1945 Foโ€“Fu Otto Folin (1867โ€“1934), Swedish-American chemist who developed methods for analysing protein-free blood filtrates E. B. Ford (1901โ€“1988), British ecological geneticist who studied the genetics of natural populations, and invented the field of ecological genetics Margot Forde (1935โ€“1992), New Zealand botanist who studied plant taxonomies of Inner Mongolia, Xinjiang and the Caucasus Peter Forsskรฅl (1732โ€“1763), Finnish explorer, orientalist, naturalist, and an apostle of Carl Linnaeus Georg Forster (1754โ€“1794), German naturalist, ethnologist, travel writer, journalist and revolutionary Peter Forster (born 1967), German geneticist researching human origins and ancestry, and prehistoric languages Johann Reinhold Forster (1729โ€“1798), German naturalist and ornithologist, the naturalist on James Cook's second Pacific voyage, Robert Fortune (1813โ€“1880), Scottish botanist and plant hunter who introduced many ornamental plants to Britain, Australia and the USA Dian Fossey (1932โ€“1985), American zoologist, one of the world's foremost primatologists Ruth Fowler Edwards (1930โ€“2013), British geneticist who studied effects of sex hormones on pregnancy and embryonic mortality in mice Heinz Fraenkel-Conrat (1910โ€“1999), German-American biochemist and virologist who studied tobacco mosaic virus Rosalind Franklin (1920โ€“1958), British x-ray crystallographer whose contributed to the discovery of the structure of DNA Francisco Freire Allemรฃo e Cysneiro (1797โ€“1874), Brazilian botanist who collected many Brazilian plants Perry A. Frey (born 1935), American biochemist known for work on enzyme mechanisms Irwin Fridovich (1929โ€“2019), American biochemist who discovered and studied superoxide dismutase Elias Magnus Fries (1794โ€“1878), Swedish mycologist and botanist, one of the founders of modern mushroom taxonomy Karl von Frisch (1886โ€“1982), Austrian ethologist and Nobel laureate, best known for pioneering studies of bees Imre Frivaldszky (1799โ€“1870), Hungarian botanist who wrote on plants, snakes, snails and insects Joseph S. Fruton (1912โ€“2007), Polish-American biochemist who worked on proteases, best known for his book General Biochemistry Leonhart Fuchs (1501โ€“1566), German physician and botanist, author of a book on medicinal plants Josรฉ Marรญa de la Fuente Morales (1855โ€“1932), Spanish priest and poet who studied insects and collected reptiles and amphibians Louis Agassiz Fuertes (1874โ€“1927), American ornithologist, illustrator and major American bird artist Kazimierz Funk (1884โ€“1967), Polish-American biochemist, discoverer of vitamin B3 (niacin). Robert F. Furchgott (1916โ€“2009), American biochemist known for discovering the biological roles of nitric oxide; Nobel Prize 1998 G Gaโ€“Gh Elmer L. Gaden (1923โ€“2012), American biochemical engineer, the "father of biochemical engineering" Joseph Gaertner (1732โ€“1791), German botanist, author of De Fructibus et Seminibus Plantarum Franรงois Gagnepain (1866โ€“1952), French botanist who studied the Annonaceae Joseph Paul Gaimard (1796โ€“1858), French naval surgeon and naturalist Birutรฉ Galdikas (born 1946), Lithuanian-Canadian primatologist, expert on orangutans Robert Gallo (born 1937), American virologist and co-discoverer of HIV Francis Galton (1822โ€“1911), British polymath, proponent of social Darwinism, eugenics and scientific racism William Gambel (1823โ€“1849), American naturalist, ornithologist, and botanist, the first to collect specimens in Santa Fe Prosper Garnot (1794โ€“1838), French surgeon and naturalist who collected specimens in South America Charles Gaudichaud-Beauprรฉ (1789โ€“1854), French botanist on a circumglobal expedition in 1817โ€“1820 Michael Gazzaniga (born 1939), American cognitive neuroscientist, best known for his research on split-brain patients Patrick Geddes (1854โ€“1932), Scottish biologist, sociologist, geographer and pioneering town planner Howard Scott Gentry (1903โ€“1993), American botanist, authority on agaves John Gerard (1545โ€“1611/12), English botanist, author of Herball, or Generall Historie of Plantes Conrad von Gesner (1516โ€“1565), Swiss physician, naturalist, bibliographer, and philologist, the father of modern scientific bibliography Luca Ghini (1490โ€“1566), Italian physician and botanist, creator of the first recorded herbarium and the first botanical garden in Europe Giโ€“Gm Clelia Giacobini (1931โ€“2010), Italian microbiologist, a pioneer of microbiology applied to conservation-restoration Quentin Gibson (1918โ€“2011), British-American biochemist known for work on haem proteins Walter Gilbert (born 1932). American biochemist awarded the Nobel Prize (1980) for work on DNA sequencing. John H. Gillespie (first publication 1973), American molecular evolutionist and population geneticist Ernest Thomas Gilliard (1912โ€“1965), American ornithologist on expeditions to South America and New Guinea. Charles Henry Gimingham (1923โ€“2018), British botanist who studied heathlands and heathers. Charles Frรฉdรฉric Girard (1822โ€“1895), French biologist, ichthyologist, herpetologist Johann Friedrich Gmelin (1748โ€“1804), German naturalist who named many species of gastropods Johann Georg Gmelin (1709โ€“1755), German naturalist who travelled Siberia Samuel Gottlieb Gmelin (1744โ€“1774), German botanist who explored the rivers Don and Volga Goโ€“Gra Frederick DuCane Godman (1834โ€“1919), English naturalist and ornithologist ร‰mil Goeldi (1859โ€“1917), Swiss-Brazilian naturalist and zoologist Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749โ€“1832), German poet, novelist and biologist who developed a theory of plant metamorphosis Joseph L. Goldstein (born 1940), American biochemist awarded the Nobel Prize for studies of cholesterol Eugene Goldwasser (1922โ€“2010), American biochemist who identified erythropoietin Camillo Golgi (1843โ€“1926), Italian physician and Nobel prize winner, pioneer in neurobiology Jane Goodall (born 1934), British primatologist, ethologist and anthropologist who studied chimpanzee society George Gordon (1806โ€“1879), British botanist, expert on conifers Philip Henry Gosse (1810โ€“1888), English naturalist, originator of the Omphalos hypothesis, or "Last Thursdayism" Michael M. Gottesman (born 1946), American biochemist who discovered of P-glycoprotein. Augustus Addison Gould (1805โ€“1866), American physician, conchologist and malacologist John Gould (1804โ€“1881), English ornithologist whose work on finches contributed to the theory of natural selection Stephen Jay Gould (1941โ€“2002), American paleontologist and popular science writer Alfred Grandidier (1836โ€“1921), French naturalist and explorer, author of L'Histoire physique, naturelle et politique de Madagascar Guillaume Grandidier (1873โ€“1957), French geographer, ethnologist, zoologist who studied Madagascar Temple Grandin (born 1947), American animal scientist, a designer of humane livestock facilities and writer on her experience with autism Sam Granick (1909โ€“1977), American biochemist known for studies of iron metabolism. Chapman Grant (1887โ€“1983), American herpetologist, historian, and publisher Pierre-Paul Grassรฉ (1895โ€“1985), French zoologist, expert on termites and proponent of neo-Lamarckian evolution Asa Gray (1810โ€“1888), American botanist who argued that religion and science are not necessarily mutually exclusive George Robert Gray (1808โ€“1872), English zoologist, author of Genera of Birds John Edward Gray (1800โ€“1875), English zoologist who described many species new to science Andrew Jackson Grayson (1819โ€“1869), American ornithologist and artist, author of Birds of the Pacific Slope Greโ€“Gu David E. Green (1910โ€“1983), American biochemist, pioneer in the study of enzymes involved in oxidative phosphorylation William King Gregory (1876โ€“1970), American zoologist, expert on mammalian dentition, contributor to evolutionary theory Janet Grieve (born 1940), New Zealand biological oceanographer known for work on marine taxonomy and biological productivity Frederick Griffith (1879โ€“1941), British bacteriologist who studied the epidemiology and pathology of bacterial pneumonia Jan Frederik Gronovius (1690โ€“1762), Dutch botanist, patron of Linnaeus, author of Flora Virginica Pavel Groลกelj (1883โ€“1940), Slovene biologist who studied the nervous system of jellyfish Colin Groves (1942โ€“2017), British-Australian biologist and anthropologist, author of Primate Taxonomy Fรฉlix ร‰douard Guรฉrin-Mรฉneville (1799โ€“1874), French entomologist commemorated in the scientific names of dozens of genera and species Johann Anton Gรผldenstรคdt (1745โ€“1781), German naturalist and explorer who worked on the biology, geology, geography, and linguistics of the Caucasus Allvar Gullstrand (1862โ€“1930), Swedish ophthalmologist, awarded the Nobel Prize for work on the lens of the eye Johann Ernst Gunnerus (1718โ€“1773), Norwegian bishop and botanist, author of Flora Norvegica Irwin Gunsalus (1912โ€“2008), American biochemist who discovered lipoic acid, and coauthor of The Bacteria: A Treatise on Structure and Function Albert Gรผnther (1830โ€“1914), British zoologist, ichthyologist and herpetologist who classified many reptile species Herbert ("Freddie") Gutfreund (1921โ€“2021), Austrian-British biochemist known for methods for studying fast enzyme-catalysed reactions H Ha Ernst Haeckel (1834โ€“1919), German physician, zoologist, and evolutionist who argued that "ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny" Hermann August Hagen (1817โ€“1893), German entomologist specialised in Neuroptera and Odonata J. B. S. Haldane (1892โ€“1964), British (later Indian) biologist known for work in physiology, genetics, evolutionary biology and mathematics; co-founder of population genetics John Scott Haldane (1860โ€“1936), Scottish physician and physiologist who made many important discoveries about the human body and the nature of gases William Donald Hamilton (1936โ€“2000), British evolutionary biologist who provided a rigorous genetic basis to explain altruism Philip Handler (1917โ€“1981), American nutritionist and biochemist who discovered the tryptophan-nicotinic acid relationship. Sylvanus Charles Thorp Hanley (1819โ€“1899), British conchologist and malacologist Arthur Harden (1865โ€“1940), British biochemist who studied the fermentation of sugar and fermentative enzymes Thomas Hardwicke (1755โ€“1835), English soldier and naturalist who collected numerous specimens Alister Clavering Hardy (1896โ€“1985), English marine biologist and pioneer student of the biological basis of religion Richard Harlan (1796โ€“1843), American naturalist, zoologist, physicist and paleontologist, author of Fauna Americana and American Herpetology Denham Harman (1916โ€“2014), American biogerontologist, father of the free radical theory of aging Ernst Hartert (1859โ€“1933), German ornithologist who studied hummingbirds Gustav Hartlaub (1814โ€“1900), German physician and zoologist who studied exotic birds Hamilton Hartridge (1886โ€“1976), British eye physiologist who invented the continuous-flow method for fast reactions Karl Theodor Hartweg (1812โ€“1871), German botanist who collected plants from the Pacific region from Ecuador to California Leland H. Hartwell (born 1939), American geneticist known for discoveries of proteins that control cell division William Harvey (1578โ€“1657), British physician who demonstrated the circulation of blood William Henry Harvey (1811โ€“1866), Irish botanist and phycologist who specialised in algae Hans Hass (1919โ€“2013), Austrian biologist and underwater diving pioneer who studied coral reefs, stingrays and sharks Frederik Hasselquist (1722โ€“1752), Swedish naturalist who collected specimens for Linnaeus in the Eastern Mediterranean Arthur Hay (1824โ€“1878), Scottish soldier and ornithologist who collected birds, insects, reptiles and mammals He James Hector (1834โ€“1907), Scottish geologist, naturalist, and surgeon Charles Hedley (1862โ€“1926), British-Australian naturalist, expert on molluscs Reinhart Heinrich (1946โ€“2006), German biophysicist who introduced and developed metabolic control analysis Oskar Heinroth (1871โ€“1945), German biologist who studied behaviour of ducks and geese, a founder of ethology Edmund Heller (1875โ€“1939), American zoologist and explorer who worked on mammals Wilhelm Hemprich (1796โ€“1825), German naturalist who studied the marine life of the Red Sea Willi Hennig (1913โ€“1976), German biologist who studied dipterans and created the theory of cladistics Victor Henri (1872โ€“1940), Russian-French physical chemist who applied ideas of physical chemistry to enzyme properties John Stevens Henslow (1796โ€“1861), English mineralogist, botanist and clergyman Johann Hermann (1738โ€“1800), French physician and naturalist who collected many mammals, birds, reptiles and fish Albert William Herre (1868โ€“1962), American ichthyologist and lichenologist known for taxonomic work in the Philippines Alfred Hershey (1908โ€“1997), American bacteriologist, Nobel Prizewinner for his work on virus genetics Avram Hershko (born 1937), Hungarian-Israeli biochemist awarded the Nobel Prize for discovering ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation Philip Hershkovitz (1909โ€“1997), American mammalogist noted especially as a primatologist Leo George Hertlein (1898โ€“1972), American paleontologist who studied mollusks, echinoderms, and brachiopods Hiโ€“Ho Archibald Vivian Hill (1886โ€“1977), British physiologist, winner of the 1922 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for elucidation of mechanical work in muscles Robin Hill (1899โ€“1991), British plant biochemist known for the Hill reaction of photosynthesis Dorothy Hodgkin (1910โ€“1994) British X-ray crystallographer, Nobel Prize in 1964 for work in protein crystallography. Brian Houghton Hodgson (1800โ€“1894), English naturalist who described many Himalayan birds and mammals Jan van der Hoeven (1802โ€“1868), Dutch zoologist who wrote about crocodiles butterflies, lancelets, lemurs and molluscs Bruno Hofer (1861โ€“1916), German fisheries scientist which studied fish parasitology and pathology Johann Centurius Hoffmannsegg (1766โ€“1849), German botanist, entomologist and ornithologist Jacques Bernard Hombron (1798โ€“1852), French naturalist and explorer who described Antarctic plants and animals Leroy Hood (born 1938), American biochemist who developed high speed automated DNA sequencer Robert Hooke (1635โ€“1703), British natural philosopher and secretary to the Royal Society Joseph Dalton Hooker (1817โ€“1911), British botanist, explorer and director of Kew Botanic Gardens William Jackson Hooker (1785โ€“1865), British botanist, director of Kew Botanic Gardens Frederick Gowland Hopkins (1861โ€“1947), British biochemist awarded the Nobel Prize in 1929 for work on vitamins Bernard Horecker (1914โ€“2010]. American biochemist at Cornell University known for elucidation of the pentose phosphate pathway. John "Jack" Horner (born 1946), American paleontologist, specialized in dinosaurs Norman Horowitz (1915โ€“2005), American geneticist who devised experiments to test whether life might exist on Mars Thomas Horsfield (1773โ€“1859), American naturalist who described Indonesian plants and animals Bernardo Houssay (1887โ€“1971), Argentine physiologist awarded the Nobel Prize in 1947 for work on sugar metabolism Martinus Houttuyn (1720โ€“1798), Dutch naturalist who studied Pteridophytes, Bryophytes and Spermatophytes Albert Howard (1873โ€“1947), British botanist, expert on compost Henry Eliot Howard (1873โ€“1940), English ornithologist, who studied territorial behaviour in birds Hrโ€“Hy Sarah Blaffer Hrdy (born 1946), American anthropologist who works on evolutionary psychology and sociobiology David H. Hubel (1926โ€“2013), Canadian-American neurobiologist, awarded the Nobel Prize in 1981 for studies of the structure and function of the visual cortex. Franรงois Huber (1750โ€“1831), Swiss entomologist who specialized in honey bees Ambrosius Hubrecht (1853โ€“1915), Dutch zoologist whose major work was in embryology and placentation of mammals William Henry Hudson (1841โ€“1922), Argentinian-British ornithologist, advocate of Lamarckian evolution, critic of Darwinism and vitalist Alexander von Humboldt (1769โ€“1859), German naturalist and explorer whose work on botanical geography laid the foundation for the field of biogeography Allan Octavian Hume (1829โ€“1912), British ornithologist who made a large collection of Indian birds George Evelyn Hutchinson (1903โ€“1991), British-American ecologist and limnologist who applied mathematics to ecology Frederick Hutton (1835โ€“1905), English biologist and geologist who used natural selection to explain the natural history of New Zealand Hugh Huxley (1924โ€“2013), British molecular biologist who worked on muscle physiology Julian Sorell Huxley (1887โ€“1975), English zoologist and contributor to the modern evolutionary synthesis; first Director-General of UNESCO Thomas Henry Huxley (1825โ€“1895), English zoologist who clarified relationships between invertebrates Alpheus Hyatt (1838โ€“1902), American zoologist and palaeontologist, proponent of neo-Lamarckism Libbie Hyman (1888โ€“1969), American invertebrate zoologist, author of A Laboratory Manual for Elementary Zoology Josef Hyrtl (1810โ€“1894), Austrian anatomist, author of a well-known textbook of human anatomy I Hermann von Ihering (1850โ€“1930), German-Brazilian zoologist who collected specimens in Brazil to send to Germany Johann Karl Wilhelm Illiger (1775โ€“1813), German zoologist and entomologist who overhauled the Linnaean system. Jan Ingenhousz (1730โ€“1799), Dutch physiologist, biologist and chemist known for discovering photosynthesis Tom Iredale (1880โ€“1972), English conchologist and ornithologist who published many systematic names Paul Erdmann Isert (1756โ€“1789), German botanist who collected plant specimens from West Africa Harvey Itano (1920โ€“2010), American biochemist who studied the molecular basis of sickle cell anaemia J Franรงois Jacob (1920โ€“2013), French biologist awarded the Nobel prize for studies of the regulation of transcription Nikolaus Joseph von Jacquin (1727โ€“1817), Dutch-Austrian botanist, chemist and mineralogist who collected plants in the Caribbean region Honorรฉ Jacquinot (1815โ€“1887), French surgeon and zoologist who described and illustrated mollusc species Daniel H. Janzen (born 1939), American entomologist and ecologist who has catalogued the biodiversity of Costa Rica William Jardine (1800โ€“1874), Scottish naturalist known for his book series The Naturalist's Library Feliks Pawel Jarocki (1790โ€“1865), Polish zoologist, curator of a large zoological collection Alec Jeffreys (born 1950), British biochemist and geneticist who invented genetic fingerprinting William Jencks (1927โ€“2007), American biochemist who applied chemical mechanisms to enzyme-catalysed reactions, author of Catalysis in Chemistry and Enzymology Thomas C. Jerdon (1811โ€“1872), British physician, zoologist and botanist who described bird species of India. John L. Jinks (1929โ€“1987), British geneticist known for cytoplasmic inheritance Wilhelm Johannsen (1857โ€“1927), Danish pharmacist, botanist, plant physiologist and geneticist who introduced the terms gene, phenotype and genotype Pauline Johnson, English immunologist and microbiologist concerned with innate and adaptive immune mechanisms David Starr Jordan (1851โ€“1931), ichthyologist and eugenicist, founding president of Stanford University Fรฉlix Pierre Jousseaume (1835โ€“1921), French zoologist and malacologist who collected specimens from the Red Sea Mike Joy (born 1959), New Zealand freshwater ecologist and science communicator Thomas H. Jukes (1906โ€“1999), British-American biologist known for work in nutrition and molecular evolution Adrien-Henri de Jussieu (1797โ€“1853), French botanist, author of Cours รฉlรฉmentaire de botanique and Gรฉographie botanique Antoine Laurent de Jussieu (1748โ€“1836), botanist who classified flowering plants Bernard de Jussieu (1699โ€“1777), French naturalist who classified the plants in the royal garden at Versailles Ernest Everett Just (1883โ€“1941), American biologist, author of Basic Methods for Experiments on Eggs of Marine Animals K Kaโ€“Ke Zbigniew Kabata (1924โ€“2014), Polish specialist in fish parasitology, author of The Parasitic Copepoda of British Fishes Henrik Kacser (1918โ€“1995), British geneticist and biochemist, founder of metabolic control analysis Emil T. Kaiser (1938โ€“1988), Hungarian-American protein chemist known work on enzyme modification Pehr Kalm (1716โ€“1779), Swedish-Finnish botanist who studied the life cycle of the 17-year periodical cicada Eric R. Kandel (born 1929), Austrian-American neuroscientist awarded the Nobel Prize for work on memory Ferdinand Karsch (1853โ€“1936), German arachnologist, entomologist, and anthropologist Gustav Karl Wilhelm Hermann Karsten (1817โ€“1908), German botanist and traveller who named many plants Bernard Katz (1911โ€“2003), German-British neuroscientist and biophysicist awarded the Nobel Prize for work on nerve biochemistry Rudolf Kaufmann (1909โ€“c. 1941), German trilobitologist known for his contributions to allopatric speciation and punctuated equilibrium Stuart Kauffman (born 1939), American biologist widely known for his promotion of self-organization as a factor in producing the complexity of biological systems and organisms Johann Jakob Kaup (1803โ€“1873), German naturalist who believed in an innate mathematical order in nature Janet Kear (1933โ€“2004), English ornithologist who studied waterfowl Douglas Kell (born 1953), British biochemist known for research on functional genomics John Kendrew (1917โ€“1997), British x-ray crystallographer awarded the Nobel Prize for determining the crystal structure of myoglobin Gerald A. Kerkut (1927โ€“2004), British zoologist and physiologist whose book The Implications of Evolution has been claimed to support creationism Anton Kerner von Marilaun (1831โ€“1898), Austrian botanist who studied phytogeography and phytosociology Robert Kerr (1755โ€“1813), Scottish surgeon who translated part of Linnaeus's Systema Naturae as The Animal Kingdom Warwick Estevam Kerr (1922โ€“2018), Brazilian geneticist who studied bee genetics and introduced African bees to Brazil Khโ€“Ku Har Gobind Khorana (1922โ€“2011), Indian-American biochemist awarded the Nobel Prize for work on the genetic code. Zofia Kielan-Jaworowska (1925โ€“2015), Polish paleontologist who led several paleontological expeditions to the Gobi desert Motoo Kimura (1924โ€“1994), Japanese mathematical biologist, working in the field of theoretical population genetics Carolyn King (thesis 1971), New Zealand zoologist specialising in mammals, particularly small rodents and mustelids Norman Boyd Kinnear (1882โ€“1957), Scottish zoologist involved in the drafting of the Protection of Birds Act of 1954 William Kirby (1759โ€“1850), English entomologist considered the "founder of entomology" Heinrich von Kittlitz (1799โ€“1874), Prussian artist, naval officer, explorer and naturalist, collector of many specimens Aaron Klug (1926โ€“2018), Lithuanian/South African/British crystallographer awarded the Nobel Prize for work on the structures of nucleic acid-protein complexes Jeremy Randall Knowles (1935โ€“2008), British and American biochemist known for research on enzyme mechanisms Wilhelm Kobelt (1840โ€“1916), German zoologist and malacologist, curator of the Senckenberg Museum Fritz Kรถberle (1910โ€“1983), Austrian-Brazilian physician and pathologist, student of Chagas disease Karl Koch (1809โ€“1879), German botanist who made botanical explorations in the Caucasus region Robert Koch (1843โ€“1910), German Nobel Prize-winning physician and bacteriologist, who introduced Koch's postulates Emil Theodor Kocher (1841โ€“1917), German physician awarded the Nobel Prize for his work on the thyroid gland Alexander Koenig (1858โ€“1940), German naturalist who founded the Museum Koenig in Bonn Albert von Kรถlliker (1817โ€“1905), Swiss physiologist who studied invertebrates, and later amphibians and mammalian embryos Charles Konig (1774โ€“1851), German naturalist who described fossils in the British Museum Arthur Kornberg (1918โ€“2007), American biochemist awarded the Nobel Prize for the discovery of DNA polymerase Roger D. Kornberg (born 1947), American biochemist at Stanford awarded the Nobel Prize for studies on RNA polymerase Adriaan Kortlandt (1918โ€“2009), Dutch ethologist associated with the "Rift valley theory" Daniel E. Koshland Jr. (1920โ€“2007), American biochemist known for protein flexibility (induced fit) Albrecht Kossel (1853โ€“1927), German physician awarded the Nobel Prize for determining the chemical composition of nucleic acids Hans Adolf Krebs (1900โ€“1981), German-British biochemist awarded the Nobel Prize for the discovery of the citric acid cycle Gerard Krefft (1830โ€“1881), German-Australian zoologist and palaeontologist, authot of The Snakes of Australia Eduardo Krieger (born 1930), Brazilian physician and physiologist known for research on hypertension Kewal Krishan (born 1973), Indian biological anthropologist working in forensic anthropology Schack August Steenberg Krogh (1874โ€“1949), Danish physiologist, awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for studies of the mechanism of regulation of skeletal muscle capillaries Winston Patrick Kuo, Chinese-American computational biologist Heinrich Kuhl (1797โ€“1821), German zoologist who studied the fauna of Java L La Henri Laborit (1914โ€“1995), French surgeon and physiologist who introduced the psychiatric use of chlorpromazine Bernard Germain de Lacรฉpรจde (1756โ€“1825), French naturalist who studied reptiles and fish David Lack (1910โ€“1973), British ornithologist who introduced Lack's Principle to explain the evolution of avian clutch sizes Frรฉdรฉric de Lafresnaye (1783โ€“1861), French ornithologist who described new bird species Keith Laidler (1916โ€“2003), British-Canadian expert on chemical and enzyme kinetics Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (1744โ€“1829), French evolutionist, coined many terms like biology and fossils Aylmer Bourke Lambert (1761โ€“1842), British botanist, author of A description of the genus Pinus Charles Lamberton (1876โ€“1960), French paleontologist who specialized in the recently extinct subfossil lemurs Hildegard Lamfrom (1922โ€“1984), German-American molecular biologist who developed a system for studying cell-free protein synthesis Hugh Lamprey (1928โ€“1996), British ecologist and bush pilot who developed methods for estimating game densities in Africa Charles Francis Laseron (1887โ€“1959), American-born Australian naturalist and malacologist John Latham (1740โ€“1837), English naturalist who named many Australian birds, author of A General Synopsis of Birds Pierre Andrรฉ Latreille (1762โ€“1833), French entomologist who studied arthropod systematics and taxonomy Charles Louis Alphonse Laveran (1845โ€“1922), French physician awarded the Nobel Prize for discovering malaria is caused by a protozoon Barbara Lawrence (1909โ€“1997), sometimes known as Barbara Lawrence Schevill, was an American paleozoologist and mammalogist George Newbold Lawrence (1806โ€“1855), American ornithologist who conducted Pacific bird surveys Michel Lazdunski (born 1938), French neuroscientist known for work on ion channels Le William Elford Leach (1790โ€“1836), English zoologist and marine biologist, an expert on crustaceans Colin Leakey (1933โ€“2018), British tropical botanist and specialist in bean science Louis Leakey (1903โ€“1972), Kenyan archaeologist and naturalist known for excavations in Olduvai Gorge Mary Leakey (1913โ€“1996), British paleoanthropologist who discovered the robust Zinjanthropus skull at Olduvai Gorge Meave Leakey (born 1942), British paleontologist who discovered Kenyanthropus platyops Richard Leakey (1944โ€“2022), Kenyan paleontologist, archaeologist and conservationist who led an expedition to the Omo River, Ethiopia Joseph LeConte (1823โ€“1901), American physiologist who worked on monocular and binocular vision Antoni van Leeuwenhoek (1632โ€“1723), Dutch biologist, developer of the microscope Franรงois Leguat (c. 1637โ€“1735), French naturalist who described species of birds and tortoises endemic to Rodrigues Albert L. Lehninger (1917โ€“1986), American biochemist who discovered that oxidative phosphorylation in eukaryotes occurs in mitochondria Joseph Leidy (1823โ€“1891), American paleontologist, parasitologist and anatomist who worked on dinosaur fossils Johann Philipp Achilles Leisler (1771โ€“1813), German physician and naturalist who named many bird species Luis Federico Leloir (1906โ€“1987), Argentinian biochemist awarded the Nobel Prize for work on sugar nucleotides, carbohydrate metabolism, and renal hypertension Juan Lembeye (1816โ€“1889), Spanish ornithologist, author of Aves de la Isla de Cuba Leonardo da Vinci (1452โ€“1519), Italian (Florentine) artist, who, as an anatomist, dissected and illustrated many specimens Jean Baptiste Leschenault de la Tour (1773โ€“1826), French botanist and ornithologist who collected plant and bird specimens in Australia and Java Renรฉ-Primevรจre Lesson (1794โ€“1849), French naturalist who described amphibian and reptile species Charles Alexandre Lesueur (1778โ€“1846), French naturalist, artist and explorer who described numerous turtle species Franรงois Le Vaillant (1753โ€“1824), French ornithologist who described species of birds collected in Africa Phoebus Levene (1869โ€“1940), Russian-American biochemist who discovered that DNA was composed of nucleobases and phosphate Michael Levitt (1947), South African-Israeli-British-American biophysicist awarded the Nobel Prize for developing multiscale models of complex chemical systems Edward B. Lewis (1918โ€“2004), American geneticist awarded the Nobel Prize for discovering the Drosophila Bithorax complex Richard Lewontin (1929โ€“2021), American evolutionary biologist, mathematician, geneticist, and social commentator Liโ€“Ly Choh Hao Li (1913โ€“1987), Chinese-American biochemist who discovered and synthesized human pituitary growth hormone Wen-Hsiung Li (born 1942), Taiwanese molecular evolutionary biologist known fr studies of the molecular clock Emmanuel Liais (1826โ€“1900), French botanist who studied the plants of remote regions of Brazil Martin Lichtenstein (1780โ€“1867), German zoologist who described new species of amphibians and reptiles Justus von Liebig (1803โ€“1873), German chemist who contributed to agricultural and biological chemistry, one of the founders of organic chemistry. John Lightfoot (1735โ€“1788), English conchologist and botanist, author of Flora Scotica which deals with Scottish plants and fungi David R. Lindberg (born 1948), American malacologist and biologist whose work has focused on sea snails Aristid Lindenmayer (1925โ€“1989), Hungarian biologist who developed a system to model the behaviour of plant cells John Lindley (1799โ€“1865), English botanist whose works included botanical textbooks for his students Heinrich Friedrich Link (1767โ€“1850), German botanist who studied many different subjects, including physics chemistry, geology, mineralogy, botany and zoology Carl Linnaeus (1707โ€“1778), Swedish botanist, father of the binomial nomenclature system Fritz Lipmann (1899โ€“1986), German-American biochemist awarded the Nobel Prize for work in intermediary metabolism Jacques Loeb (1859โ€“1924), German-American biologist who studied marine invertebrates and carried out an experiment on artificial parthenogenesis in sea urchins Friedrich Loeffler (1852โ€“1915), German bacteriologist who discovered the organisms causing diphtheria and foot-and-mouth disease Konrad Lorenz (1903โ€“1989), Austrian awarded the Nobel Prize for work in ethology John Claudius Loudon (1783โ€“1843), English botanist, author of An Encyclopรฆdia of Gardening James Lovelock (1919โ€“2022), English chemist and father of the Gaia hypothesis Hedvig Lovรฉn (1867 - 1943), Swedish botanists who studied plant respiration Percy Lowe (1870โ€“1948), English ornithologist who worked on fossil ostriches in China Peter Wilhelm Lund (1801โ€“1880), Danish zoologist and paleontologist who described pre-historic Pleistocene megafauna Salvador Luria (1912โ€“1991), Italian-American microbiologist awarded the Nobel prize winner for work on viruses Adolfo Lutz (1855โ€“1940), Brazilian epidemiologist, pathologist who studied tropical medicine and medical zoology Andrรฉ Lwoff (1902โ€“1994), French microbiologist awarded the Nobel for work on viral infection of bacteria Marguerite Lwoff (1905โ€“1979), French microbiologist and virologist who worked on the taxonomy of ciliate protozoa Richard Lydekker (1849โ€“1915), English naturalist influential in the science of biogeography Feodor Felix Konrad Lynen (1911โ€“1979), German biochemist awarded the Nobel Prize for work on cholesterol and fatty acid metabolism Trofim Lysenko (1898โ€“1976), Soviet biologist and agronomist whose denunciation of genetics was very damaging M Maโ€“Mc Jules Franรงois Mabille (1831โ€“1904), French malacologist who discovered and studied many mollusc species William MacGillivray (1796โ€“1852), Scottish botanist and ornithologist, author A Manual of British Ornithology John Macleod (1876โ€“1935), British biochemist awarded the Nobel Prize for the discovery of insulin Marcello Malpighi (1628โ€“1694), Italian anatomist and biologist who described physiological features related to the excretory system Ramon Margalef (1919โ€“2004), Spanish ecologist who applied information theory and mathematical models Emanuel Margoliash (1920โ€“2008), Israeli-American biochemist whose work on cytochrome c sequences formed the starting point for studies of protein evolution Leo Margolis (1927โ€“1997), Canadian parasitologist which showed that parasites could be used to identify fish stocks Lynn Margulis (1938โ€“2011), American evolutionary theorist who proposed that organelles were "captured" bacteria Othniel Charles Marsh (1831โ€“1899), American paleontologist who collected Mesozoic reptiles, Cretaceous birds, and Mesozoic and Tertiary mammals Barry Marshall (born 1951), Australian physician and microbiologist, awarded the 2005 Nobel Prize for elucidating the relationship between stomach ulcers and bacteria Bruce Marshall (born 1948), New Zealand malacologist who has named many species and genera Fermรญn Martรญn Piera (1954โ€“2001), Spanish specialist in the systematics of Scarabaeoidea (beetles) Carl Friedrich Philipp von Martius (1794โ€“1868), German botanist and explorer who collected many specimens John Martyn (1699โ€“1768), English botanist, author of Historia Plantarum Rariorum Thomas Martyn (1735โ€“1825), English priest and botanist, author of Plantรฆ Cantabrigiensis and Flora Rustica John Marwick (1891โ€“1978), New Zealand palaeontologist and geologist who studied and classified mollusc fossils Teresa Maryaล„ska (1937โ€“2019), Poland, paleontologist specializing in dinosaurs Ruth Mason (1913โ€“1990), New Zealand botanist specialising in the taxonomy and ecology of freshwater plants Francis Masson (1741โ€“1805), Scottish botanist and explorer, author of Stapeliae Novae, about South African succulents Gregory Mathews (1876โ€“1949), Australian ornithologist whose papers dealt especially with taxonomy and nomenclature Sara Branham Matthews (1888โ€“1962), American microbiologist, listed under B (Branham). Paul Matschie (1861โ€“1926), German zoologist who described 11 new species of reptiles William Diller Matthew (1871โ€“1930), Canadian-American paleontologist who worked primarily on mammal fossils Humberto Maturana (1928โ€“2021), Chilean philosopher and biologist known in particular for autopoiesis Polly Matzinger (born 1947), American immunologist known for the idea that antigen-presenting cells respond to "danger signals" Carl Maximowicz (1827โ€“1891), Russian botanist who studied flora of the Far East Harold Maxwell-Lefroy (1877โ€“1925), English entomologist who investigated the use of chemicals to control insects Robert May (1936โ€“2020), Australian mathematician who advanced the field of population biology by application of mathematical techniques Ernst Mayr (1904โ€“2005), ornithologist, systematist, philosopher of biology; originator of modern definition of "species" Barbara McClintock (1902โ€“1992), American biologist, winner of a Nobel Prize for her work on the transposon, or "jumping gene" James V. McConnell (1925โ€“1990), American biological psychologist who studied learning and memory transfer in planarians Eileen McLaughlin (thesis 1993), New Zealand biologist who studies assisted reproduction Mark McMenamin (born 1958), American paleontologist who has studied the Cambrian explosion and the Ediacaran biota Bruce McEwen (1938โ€“2020), American neuroendocrinologist and stress hormone expert Meโ€“Mi Edmund Meade-Waldo (1855โ€“1934), English ornithologist who discovered chick rearing behaviour of sandgrouse Ilya Ilyich Mechnikov (1845โ€“1916), Russian microbiologist awarded the Nobel Prize for work on the immune system and phagocytosis Johann Wilhelm Meigen (1764โ€“1845), German entomologist known for pioneering work on Diptera. Gregor Mendel (1822โ€“1884), Austrian monk who is often called the "father of genetics" for his study of the inheritance of traits in pea plants ร‰douard Mรฉnรฉtries (1802โ€“1861), French entomologist, an authority on Lepidoptera and Coleoptera Maud Leonora Menten (1879โ€“1960), Canadian biochemist and histologist known for work on the kinetics of enzyme action Archibald Menzies (1754โ€“1852), Scottish naturalist who introduced Araucaria araucana ("monkey-puzzle tree") to England Clinton Hart Merriam (1855โ€“1942), American zoologist and ornithologist, author of Mammals of the Adirondacks John C. Merriam (1869โ€“1945), American paleontologist known for his taxonomy of vertebrate fossils at the La Brea Tar Pits Don Merton (1939โ€“2011), New Zealand conservationist who saved the black robin from extinction, and also discovered the lek breeding system of the kakapo Franz Meyen (1804โ€“1840), Prussian physician and botanist, author of Phytotomie, the first major study of plant anatomy Rodolphe Meyer de Schauensee (1901โ€“1984), Swiss-American ornithologist noted for his study of South American birds Otto Fritz Meyerhof (1884โ€“1951), German-American physician and biochemist awarded the Nobel Prize for research on muscles Leonor Michaelis (1875โ€“1949), German biochemist known for work on enzyme kinetics, and on quinones Andrรฉ Michaux (1746โ€“1802), French botanist and explorer noted for his study of North American flora Aleksandr Fyodorovich Middendorf (1815โ€“1894), Russian zoologist who described the effects of permafrost on the spread of animals and plants Nicholai Miklukho-Maklai (1846โ€“1888), Russian marine biologist and anthropologist who studied indigenous people of New Guinea Gerrit Smith Miller Jr. (1869โ€“1956), American zoologist who concluded that the jaw of "Piltdown man" came from a fossil ape and the skullcap from a modern human Jacques Miller (born 1931), French-Australian immunologist who discovered the function of the thymus John Frederick Miller (1759โ€“1796), English illustrator (primarily of botany) Kenneth R. Miller (born 1948), American evolutionary biologist and author of Finding Darwin's God Philip Miller (1691โ€“1771), Scottish botanist, author of The Gardener's and Florists Dictionary or a Complete System of Horticulture Alphonse Milne-Edwards (1835โ€“1900), French zoologist who studied fossil birds and deep-sea exploration Henri Milne-Edwards (1800โ€“1885), French zoologist known for work on crustaceans Cรฉsar Milstein (1927โ€“2002), Argentinian-British biochemist awarded the Nobel Prize for developing the use of monoclonal antibodies Maria Rosa Miracle Solรฉ (1945โ€“2017), Spanish Professor Emeritus of Ecology at the University of Valencia Peter D. Mitchell (1920โ€“1992), British biochemist awarded the Nobel Prize for the theory of chemiosmosis George Jackson Mivart (1827โ€“1900), English biologist, author of On the Genesis of Species Mo-Mu Hugo von Mohl (1805โ€“1872), German botanist who first observed cell division under a microscope Paul Mรถhring (1710โ€“1792), German naturalist who pioneered the classification of bird species Juan Ignacio Molina (1740โ€“1829), Chilean naturalist, an early proponent of gradual evolution Brian Molloy (1930โ€“2022), New Zealand botanist, a leading authority on New Zealand orchids Pรฉrrine Moncrieff (1893โ€“1979), New Zealand ornithologist, author of New Zealand birds and how to identify them Jacques Monod (1910โ€“1976), French geneticist and biochemist, awarded the Nobel Prize for discoveries concerning genetic control of enzyme and virus synthesis George Montagu (1753โ€“1815), English naturalist, author of Ornithological Dictionary Luc Montagnier (1932โ€“2022), French virologist, awarded the Nobel Prize for the discovery of HIV Rita Levi-Montalcini (1909โ€“2012), Italian-American neurologist awarded Nobel Prize for her co-discovery of growth factors Tommaso di Maria Allery Monterosato (1841โ€“1927), Italian malacologist who studied the fossil deposits of Mount Pellegrino Pierre Dรฉnys de Montfort (1766โ€“1820), French naturalist who investigated the existence of gigantic octopuses George Thomas Moore (1871โ€“1956), American botanist who worked on plant pathology Marianne V. Moore (active 1978โ€“2017), American marine biologist Alfred Moquin-Tandon (1804โ€“1863), French naturalist, author of L'Histoire Naturelle des Iles Canaries Otto Andreas Lowson Mรถrch (1828โ€“1878), Swedish malacologist who described various taxa of molluscs Thomas Hunt Morgan (1868โ€“1945), American geneticist who worked on mutations in the fruit fly Drosophila Mary Morgan-Richards (thesis 1985), New Zealand evolutionary biologist whose research focusses on topics such as speciation and hybridisation Harold J. Morowitz (1927โ€“2016), American biophysicist who studied the application of thermodynamics to living systems, including the origin of life Desmond Morris (born 1928), British zoologist and biologist, author of The Naked Ape Roger Morse (1927โ€“2000), American entomologist, expert on bees and beekeeping Guy Mountfort (1905โ€“2003), English ornithologist and conservationist, author of A Field Guide to the Birds of Britain and Europe Ladislav Mucina (born 1956), Slovak botanist who works on plant ecology and biogeography Ferdinand von Mueller (1825โ€“1896), German-Australian physician, geographer, and botanist who collected and studied many Australian plants John Muir (1838โ€“1914), Scottish-American naturalist and conservationist who co-founded the Sierra Club Otto Friedrich Mรผller (1730โ€“1784), Danish naturalist who studied worms and other invertebrates Fritz Mรผller (1821โ€“1897), German-Brazilian naturalist who studied the natural history of the Atlantic forest south of Sรฃo Paulo Hermann Mรผller (Thurgau) (1850โ€“1927), Swiss botanist and oenologist who published on topics in viticulture and winemaking Philipp Ludwig Statius Mรผller (1725โ€“1776), German zoologist who classified the dugong, guanaco, potto and other species Salomon Muller (1804โ€“1864), Dutch naturalist and explorer who collected specimens in the Dutch East Indies Kary Mullis (1944โ€“2019), American biochemist, awarded Nobel Prize after inventing the polymerase chain reaction Otto von Mรผnchhausen (1716โ€“1774), German botanist who studied oaks in particular John Murray (1841โ€“1914), Scottish-Canadian marine biologist and oceanographer who collected marine species N Gary Paul Nabhan (born 1952), Lebanese-American conservationist, co-author of Forgotten Pollinators David Nachmansohn (1899โ€“1983), German biochemist who elucidated the role of phosphocreatine in muscular energy production Carl Nรคgeli (1817โ€“1891), Swiss botanist who studied cell division and pollination Johann Friedrich Naumann (1780โ€“1857), German founder of scientific ornithology, author of The Natural History of German Birds John Needham (1713โ€“1781), English priest and naturalist who claimed to have observed spontaneous generation Joseph Needham (1900โ€“1995), British biochemist, historian (of Chinese science) who studied embryology and morphogenesis Christian Gottfried Daniel Nees von Esenbeck (1776โ€“1858), German botanist and zoologist who described many plant species Masatoshi Nei (born 1931), Japanese-American evolutionary biologist and molecular population geneticist Wendy Nelson (thesis 1980), New Zealand marine phycologist who studies seaweeds Randolph M. Nesse (born 1948), American evolutionary biologist and psychiatrist who has studied aging Charles F. Newcombe (1851โ€“1924), British botanist who studied the botany of North America Frank Newhook (1918โ€“1999), New Zealand plant pathologist who studied fungal pathogens Alfred Newton (1829โ€“1907), English ornithologist, author of a four-volume Dictionary of Birds Margaret Morse Nice (1883โ€“1974), American ornithologist, author of Studies in the Life History of the Song Sparrow Henry Alleyne Nicholson (1844โ€“1899), British zoologist who studied fossil invertebrates Hermann Niemeyer (1918โ€“1991), Chilean biochemist and paediatrician known for work on mammalian metabolism Marshall Warren Nirenberg (1927โ€“2010), American biochemist and geneticist who took the first step in deciphering the genetic code Elmer Noble (1909โ€“2001), American parasitologist who described a pathogenic myxosporean Alfred Merle Norman (1831โ€“1918), English clergyman and naturalist who studied invertebrates Alfred John North (1855โ€“1917), Australian ornithologist who described many birds for the first time Paul Nurse (born 1949), British geneticist awarded the Nobel Prize for work control of the cell cycle Christiane Nรผsslein-Volhard (born 1942), German biologist awarded the Nobel Prize for studies of genes involved in the development of fruit fly embryos Thomas Nuttall (1786โ€“1858), English botanist and zoologist, author of the Manual of the Ornithology of the United States and of Canada O Ocโ€“Ok Severo Ochoa (1905โ€“1993), Spanish and American biochemist, Nobel Prize awarded the Nobel Prize for work on elucidating the genetic code Eugene P. Odum (1913โ€“2002), American ecologist, coauthor of Fundamentals of Ecology Howard T. Odum (1924โ€“2002), American ecologist who pioneered the field of systems ecology William Ogilby (1808โ€“1873), British zoologist concerned with classification and naming of animal species William Robert Ogilvie-Grant (1863โ€“1924), Scottish ornithologist who made many collecting trips, including Socotra and Madeira and the Canaries Sergey Ognev (1886โ€“1951), Russian zoologist who studied Russian mammals Alexander George Ogston (1911โ€“1996), British biochemist who explained how an achiral substance can have a chiral product in the tricarboxylate cycle Tomoko Ohta (born 1933), Japanese molecular biologist who developed the nearly neutral theory of evolution Reiji Okazaki (1930โ€“1975), Japanese molecular biologist who discovered Okazaki fragments, important in DNA replication Tsuneko Okazaki (born 1933), Japanese molecular biologist who discovered Okazaki fragments, important in DNA replication Lorenz Oken (1779โ€“1851), German naturalist who developed a classification of animals Olโ€“Ow Giuseppe Olivi (1769โ€“1795), Italian naturalist who studied the fauna of the seabed Mark A. O'Neill (born 1959), British biologist and computer scientist who has worked on artificial life and biologically inspired computing Aleksandr Oparin (1894โ€“1980), Russian biologist and biochemist, best known for his work on the origin of life Alcide d'Orbigny (1802โ€“1857), French naturalist who collected many specimens in South America George Ord (1781โ€“1866), American ornithologist, author of American Ornithology Eleanor Anne Ormerod (1828โ€“1901), English entomologist who developed agricultural entomology Edward Latham Ormerod (1819โ€“1873), English physician and entomologist, author of British Social Wasps Joan Orรณ (1923โ€“2004), Spanish biochemist known for studies of the origin of life Anders Sandรธe ร˜rsted (1816โ€“1872), Danish botanist who travelled in Central America and the Caribbean and published papers on the flora Henry Fairfield Osborn (1857โ€“1935), American eugenicist who led many fossil-hunting expeditions to the American Southwest William Charles Osman Hill (1901โ€“1975), British anatomist, primatologist and expert on primate anatomy Halszka Osmรณlska (1930โ€“2008), Polish paleontologist specializing in dinosaurs Emile Oustalet (1844โ€“1905), French zoologist who studied birds in particular Ray D. Owen (1915โ€“2014), American immunologist whose work led to modern immunology and organ transplantation Richard Owen (1804โ€“1892), British biologist, paleontologist, and taxonomist of fossil and extant organisms P Paโ€“Pe George Emil Palade (1912โ€“2008), Romanian-American biologist who discovered ribosomes, awarded the Nobel Prize for innovations in electron microscopy and cell fractionation Paul Maurice Pallary (1869โ€“1942), French-Algerian malacologist who named many mollusc species Peter Simon Pallas (1741โ€“1811), Prussian zoologist who described numerous animal species Edward Palmer (1829โ€“1911), British botanist who collected American plants for the Smithsonian Institution Josif Panฤiฤ‡ (1814โ€“1888), Serbian botanist who documented the flora of Serbia Paracelsus (Theophrastus von Hohenheim) (1493โ€“1541), Swiss physician and alchemist who pioneered toxicology Pia Parolin (born 1964), Italian biologist and tropical ecologist, photographer, author Carl Parrot (1867โ€“1911), German gynaecologist and ornithologist interested in the distribution and migration of birds Louis Pasteur (1822โ€“1895), French biologist, microbiologist, and chemist who established principles of vaccination William Paterson (1755โ€“1810), British soldier, botanist and explorer who collected botanical, geological and insect specimens in Australia David J. Patterson (born 1950) (Belfast) British then Irish biologist, studied protist taxonomy and evolution, later biodiversity informatics, Zoological Society of London, Silver medal Robert Patterson (1802โ€“1872), Irish naturalist, author of The natural history of the insects mentioned in Shakespeare's plays Daniel Pauly (born 1946), French marine biologist who has developed techniques to estimate the growth and mortality of fishes Ivan Pavlov (1849โ€“1936), Russian physiologist, psychologist and physician who discovered conditioning, and awarded the Nobel Prize for work on the digestive system Titian Peale (1799โ€“1885), American ornithologist, entomologist, photographer, and explorer Louise Pearce (1885โ€“1959), American pathologist who helped develop a treatment for African sleeping sickness Donald C. Peattie (1898โ€“1964), American botanist, author of A Natural History of Western Trees Eva J. Pell (born 1948), American plant pathologist who studies the physiological and biochemical impact of air pollutants Paul Pelseneer (1863โ€“1945), Belgian zoologist, primarily a malacologist, but interested in all aspects of zoology Jean-Marie Pelt (1933โ€“2015), French botanist who studied medicinal plants, of Afghanistan, Chile, Europe, and Yemen Thomas Pennant (1726โ€“1798), Welsh naturalist and antiquary, author of History of Quadrupeds David Penny (born 1939), New Zealand biologist known for theoretical biology, molecular evolution, human evolution, and the history of science Henri Perrier de la Bรขthie (1873โ€“1958), French botanist who studied the plants of Madagascar. George Perry (born 1771), English naturalist, author of Conchology, or the natural history of shells Samuel Victor Perry (1918โ€“2009) British biochemist, pioneer in muscle biochemistry Christian Hendrik Persoon (1761โ€“1836), German mycologist who wrote extensively on fungi Wilhelm Peters (1815โ€“1883), German naturalist who described the mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, river fish, insects and botany of Mozambique Pfโ€“Pu Ludwig Karl Georg Pfeiffer (1805โ€“1877), German physician, botanist and conchologist who named more than 20 new genera and species Rodolfo Amando Philippi (1808โ€“1904), German-Chilean zoologist who described three new species of South American lizards Constantine John Phipps (1744โ€“1792), English explorer, the first modern European to describe the polar bear and the ivory gull David Andrew Phoenix (born 1966), British biochemist who studies properties of biologically active amphiphilic peptides. Frederick Octavius Pickard-Cambridge (1860โ€“1905), English entomologist, expert on spiders Octavius Pickard-Cambridge (1828โ€“1917), English entomologist, mainly interested in spiders, but also on birds, butterflies and moths Charles Pickering (1805โ€“1878), American naturalist, author of Races of Man and Their Geographical Distribution Henry Augustus Pilsbry (1862โ€“1957), American zoologist, malacologist, leader in invertebrate taxonomy Gregory Goodwin Pincus (1903โ€“1967), American biologist and co-inventor of the combined oral contraceptive pill Ronald Plasterk (born 1957), Dutch politician and molecular biologist who has worked on zebrafish development Pliny the Elder (23โ€“79), Roman natural philosopher, author of Naturalis Historia an encyclopedia, a model of later ones Reginald Innes Pocock (1863โ€“1947), British taxonomist, expert on spiders and millipedes Felipe Poey (1799โ€“1891), Cuban zoologist who worked on butterflies and fish Giuseppe Saverio Poli (1746โ€“1825), Italian physicist and zoologist, whose collection included, especially, Lepidoptera, Cnidaria and Mollusca Winston Ponder (born 1941), New Zealand malacologist who has described many marine and freshwater animals, especially micromolluscs Arthur William Baden Powell (1901โ€“1987), New Zealand malacologist and paleontologist who studied and classified New Zealand molluscs Thomas Littleton Powys (1833โ€“1896), English ornithologist, author of Notes on the Birds of Northamptonshire and Neighbourhood Karel Presl (1794โ€“1852), Bohemian botanist, authority on Czech flora Alice Pruvot-Fol (1873โ€“1972), French malacologist who described many new species, mostly on the basis of preserved animals Nikolai Przhevalsky (1839โ€“1888), Russian explorer who described some previously unknown animal species, including Przewalski's horse Jan Evangelista Purkynฤ› (1787โ€“1869), Czech anatomist and physiologist who discovered the discovered the Purkinje effect and introduced the term protoplasm Frederick Traugott Pursh (1774โ€“1820), German-American botanist who studied the plants collected on the Lewis and Clark Expedition Frank W. Putnam (1917โ€“2006), American biochemist who worked on the structure and function of blood proteins Paul ร‰mile de Puydt (1810โ€“1888), Belgian botanist, interested in particular in orchids Q Juda Hirsch Quastel(1899โ€“1987), British-Canadian biochemist known for research in neurochemistry, metabolism and cancer Jean Louis Armand de Quatrefages de Brรฉau (1810โ€“1892), French naturalist whose work ranged from the annelids to man. Jean Renรฉ Constant Quoy (1790โ€“1869), French zoologist who studied the origins of coral reefs R Ra George Radda (born 1936), Hungarian chemist, known for molecular imaging of heart metabolism Gustav Radde (1831โ€“1903), German naturalist and explorer whose work encompassed birds, amphibians, reptiles, lizards, snakes and insects Thomas Stamford Raffles (1781โ€“1826), British biologist who studied mammals, fish, birds and insects Constantine Samuel Rafinesque (1783โ€“1840), French zoologist and botanist who described many North American species ร‰mile Louis Ragonot (1843โ€“1895), French entomologist who named many genera of butterflies and moths Rama Das V.S. (1933โ€“2010), Indian botanist who studied photosynthesis. Santiago Ramรณn y Cajal (1852โ€“1934), Spanish histologist awarded the Nobel prize for work on neuroanatomy and the central nervous system Edward Pierson Ramsay (1842โ€“1916), Australian ornithologist, author of Catalogue of the Australian Birds in the Australian Museum at Sydney Austin L. Rand (1905โ€“1982), Canadian zoologist who studied birds of Madagascar and New Guinea Suresh Rattan (born 1955), Indian biogerontologist who has formulated the concepts of essential lifespan and virtual gerontogenes John Ray (1627โ€“1705), English naturalist whose classification of plants Historia Plantarum was a step towards modern taxonomy Re Francesco Redi (1626โ€“1697), Italian physician known for his experiment in 1668 which is regarded as one of the first steps in refuting abiogenesis Lovell Augustus Reeve (1814โ€“1865), English conchologist, author of many publications on mollusc shells Heinrich Gustav Reichenbach (1823โ€“1889), German orchidologist, the world's leading authority on orchids Ludwig Reichenbach (1793โ€“1879), German botanist and ornithologist who introduced the idea of displaying invertebrate creatures as glass models Anton Reichenow (1847โ€“1941), German ornithologist known for classifying birds in six groups Caspar Georg Carl Reinwardt (1773โ€“1854), Dutch botanist who studied amphibians and reptiles as well as plants Bernhard Rensch (1900โ€“1990), German evolutionary biologist who searched for universal rules, such as Allen's Rule, Gloger's Rule and Rensch's rule Ralf Reski (born 1958), German botanist and biotechnologist who developed Physcomitrella as model organism Ri Achille Richard (1794โ€“1852), French botanist who studied and described several genera of orchids Jean Michel Claude Richard (1787โ€“1868), French botanist and plant collector Louis Claude Richard (1754โ€“1821), French botanist who collected botanical specimens in the Caribbean region Olivier Jules Richard (1836โ€“1896), French lichenologist who worked on the anatomy and symbiosis of lichens. John Richardson (1787โ€“1865), Scottish naturalist who explored the Arctic region Charles Richet (1850โ€“1935), French physiologist awarded the Nobel Prize for his discovery of anaphylaxis Charles Wallace Richmond (1868โ€“1932), American ornithologist, compiler of the Richmond Index of Latin names of birds Robert Ridgway (1850โ€“1929), American ornithologist, author of The Birds of North and Middle America Henry Nicholas Ridley (1855โ€“1956), British botanist who promoted rubber as a commercial product Christina Riesselman (thesis 2011), American paleoceanographer whose research focus is on Southern Ocean response to changing climate Roโ€“Ru Austin Roberts (1883โ€“1948), South African zoologist, posthumous author of The mammals of South Africa Harold E. Robinson (1932โ€“2020), American botanist and entomologist who worked on sunflowers and the bryophytes Maurรญcio Rocha e Silva (1910โ€“1983), Brazilian physician and pharmacologist, codiscoverer of bradykinin Martin Rodbell (1925โ€“1998), American biochemist and molecular endocrinologist awarded the Nobel Prize for work on signal transduction in cells George Romanes (1848โ€“1894), Scottish-Canadian evolutionary biologist and physiologist who laid the foundation of comparative psychology Alfred Romer (1894โ€“1973), American paleontologist whose textbook Vertebrate Paleontology laid the foundation for classifying vertebrates Robert Rosen (1934โ€“1998), American theoretical biologist who studied the defining principles of life Joel Rosenbaum (born 1933), American cell biologist who studies cilia and flagella in the model species Chlamydomonas Harald Rosenthal (born 1937), German hydrobiologist known for his work in fish farming and ecology Miriam Louisa Rothschild (1908โ€“2005), British entomologist, an authority on fleas, and the first person to work out the flea's jumping mechanism Walter Rothschild (1868โ€“1937), British zoologist interested in the taxonomy of birds and butterflies Joan Roughgarden (born 1946), American ecologist, evolutionary biologist and philosopher of science William Roxburgh (1759โ€“1815), Scottish botanist who studied sugarcane, indigo and sago Adriaan van Royen (1704โ€“1779), Dutch botanist known for work on the flora of Southeast Asia Karl Rudolphi (1771โ€“1832), Swedish-German physiologist regarded as the father of helminthology Eduard Rรผppell (1794โ€“1884), German naturalist and explorer, the first naturalist to traverse Ethiopia S Sa Joseph Sabine (1770โ€“1837), English naturalist, authority on the moulting, migration, and habit of British birds Julius von Sachs (1832โ€“1897), German botanist who first demonstrated hydroponics Frederick Sanger (1918โ€“2013), British biochemist twice awarded the Nobel Prize, for protein sequencing and for nucleic acid sequencing ร‰tienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire (1772โ€“1844), French naturalist who established the principle of unity of composition Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire (1805โ€“1861), French zoologist who coined the term รฉthologie (ethology), authority on deviation from normal structure Carl Ulisses von Salis-Marschlins (1762โ€“1818), Swiss naturalist interested in botany, entomology, and conchology Edward James Salisbury (1886โ€“1978), British botanist with "notable contributions to plant ecology and to the study of the British flora generally" Richard Anthony Salisbury (1761โ€“1829), British botanist, shunned by many botanists of his day Jonas Salk (1914โ€“1995), American biologist developed one of the first successful polio vaccines Robert Sapolsky (born 1957), American neuroscientist who studies sources of stress in wild baboons Georg Ossian Sars (1837โ€“1927), Norwegian marine biologist who studied the eggs and larvae of fish Michael Sars (1809โ€“1869), Norwegian taxonomist who described life-histories and reproductive cycles, behaviour and geographical dispersal of fish Konstantin Satunin (1863โ€“1915), Russian zoologist who described mammals of Russia and Central Asia William Saunders (1822โ€“1900), American botanist responsible for introducing many fruits and vegetables to American agriculture Marie Jules Cรฉsar Savigny (1777โ€“1851), French zoologist who wrote about the fauna in the Mediterranean Sea and the Red Sea Thomas Say (1787โ€“1843), American naturalist, the father of American descriptive entomology and American conchology Sc George Schaller (born 1933), American zoologist, one of the preeminent field biologists of the 20th century Albert Schatz (1920โ€“2005), American microbiologist who discovered streptomycin Paul Schimmel (born 1940) American biochemist who developed nucleic acid sequencing and coauthored Biophysical Chemistry Friedrich Schlechter (1872โ€“1925), German taxonomist and botanist, author of several works on orchids Hermann Schlegel (1804โ€“1884), German ornithologist, herpetologist and ichthyologist who believed that species are fixed Matthias Jakob Schleiden (1804โ€“1881), German botanist and co-founder of the cell theory George Schoener (1864โ€“1941), German-American botanist who experimented on rose breeding, especially in the use of wild species Rudolph Schoenheimer (1898โ€“1941), German-American biochemist, pioneer of radioactive tagging of molecules Johann David Schoepf (1752โ€“1800), German botanist and zoologist who studied turtles Heinrich Wilhelm Schott (1794โ€“1865), German botanist who studied plants of the arum family Johann Christian Daniel von Schreber (1739โ€“1810), German naturalist who wrote a series of books that focused on the mammals of the world Leopold von Schrenck (1826โ€“1894), Russian zoologist, geographer and ethnographer who studied the native peoples of Russia Charles Schuchert (1858โ€“1942), American invertebrate paleontologist, a leader in the development of paleogeography Stefan Schuster (born 1961) German biophysicist, pioneer in metabolic control analysis and metabolic pathway analysis Theodor Schwann (1810โ€“1882), German physician and physiologist whose major contribution to biology was the extension of cell theory to animals Neena Schwartz (1926โ€“2018), American endocrinologist known for her work on female reproductive biology Georg August Schweinfurth (1836โ€“1925), Baltic German botanist and ethnologist who explored East Central Africa Philip Sclater (1829โ€“1913), English zoologist and ornithologist who identified the main zoogeographic regions of the world. Giovanni Antonio Scopoli (1723โ€“1788), Italian-Austrian naturalist who collected plants and insects in the Alps Seโ€“Sl Henry Seebohm (1832โ€“1895), English ornithologist and traveller, author of A History of British Birds Michael Sela (1924โ€“2022) Israeli immunologist who works on synthetic antigens, molecules that trigger the immune system Prideaux John Selby (1788โ€“1867), English botanist and ornithologist, best known for his Illustrations of British Ornithology Nikolai Alekseevich Severtzov (1827โ€“1885), Russian explorer and naturalist, author of Vertical and Horizontal Distribution of Turkestan Wildlife Richard Bowdler Sharpe (1847โ€“1909), English zoologist and ornithologist who described many new species of bird George Shaw (1751โ€“1813), English botanist and zoologist who published English descriptions with scientific names of several Australian animals in Zoology of New Holland George Ernest Shelley (1840โ€“1910), English ornithologist, author of The Birds of Africa Charles Scott Sherrington (1857โ€“1922), British physiologist and neuroscientist, awarded the Nobel Prize for work on the functions of neurons Philipp Franz von Siebold (1796โ€“1866), German botanist who studied Japanese flora and fauna, and introduced Western medicine to Japan George Gaylord Simpson (1902โ€“1984), American paleontologist participated in the modern synthesis, and wrote Tempo and Mode in Evolution Rolf Singer (1906โ€“1994), German-born mycologist, taxonomist of gilled mushrooms (agarics) Smโ€“So John Kunkel Small (1869โ€“1938), American botanist who documented the flora of Florida Andrew Smith (1797โ€“1872), Scottish surgeon, explorer, ethnologist and zoologist, author of Illustrations of the Zoology of South Africa Edgar Albert Smith (1847โ€“1916), British zoologist and malacologist who published many separate memoirs on the Mollusca Emil L. Smith (1911โ€“2009) American protein chemist known for studies of protein evolution Frederick Smith (1805โ€“1879), British entomologist who specialized on Hymenoptera James Edward Smith (1759โ€“1828), English botanist, founder and first President of the Linnean Society of London Johannes Jacobus Smith (1867โ€“1947), Dutch botanist who collected specimens of plants of the Dutch East Indies as well as describing and cataloguing their flora James Leonard Brierley Smith (1897โ€“1968), South African ichthyologist who identified a taxidermied fish as a coelacanth John Maynard Smith (1920โ€“2004), British theoretical and mathematical evolutionary biologist and geneticist who discussed the evolution of sex and signalling theory, as well as other fundamental problems Oliver Smithies (1925โ€“2017) British-American geneticist and physical biochemist awarded the Nobel Prize for gel electrophoresis John Otterbein Snyder (1867โ€“1943), American ichthyologist who documented the native fishes of San Francisco Bay Solomon H. Snyder (born 1938), American neuroscientist who co-discovered endorphins Daniel Solander (1733โ€“1782), Swedish botanist who described and catalogued many plants of Australia and New Zealand Alberto Sols (1917โ€“1989), Spanish biochemist known for studies of metabolic regulation and for rejuvenating biochemistry in Spain Louis Franรงois Auguste Souleyet (1811โ€“1852), French zoologist and malacologist who studied marine molluscs of the Pacific Sp Douglas Spalding (1841โ€“1877), English biologist who researched on animal behavior and discovered imprinting Lazzaro Spallanzani (1729โ€“1799), Italian biologist whose research on biogenesis paved the way for the downfall of the theory of spontaneous generation Anders Sparrman (1748โ€“1820), Swedish naturalist, author of A voyage to the Cape of Good Hope, towards... Walter Baldwin Spencer (1860โ€“1929), British-Australian evolutionary biologist and anthropologist, known for fieldwork with Aboriginal peoples in Central Australia Roger W. Sperry (1913โ€“1994), American neuropsychologist awarded the Nobel Prize for his split-brain research Maximilian Spinola (1780โ€“1857), Italian entomologist who described many taxa Johann Baptist von Spix (1781โ€“1826), German naturalist who made a comparative morphology of the skulls of primates, reptiles, birds and others Herman Spรถring (1733โ€“1771), Finnish explorer, draughtsman, botanist and naturalist, who collected specimens from the south Pacific Kurt Sprengel (1766โ€“1833), German physician and botanist who studied the history of medicine Stewart Springer (1906โ€“1991), American ichthyologist noted for shark classification, behavior and distribution of species Richard Spruce (1817โ€“1893), English botanist and explorer who collected plants in South America Staโ€“Ste Agustรญn Stahl (1842โ€“1917), Puerto Rican zoologist and botanist who studied the plants of Puerto Rico Franklin Stahl (born 1929), American molecular biologist and geneticist who participated in the experiment to show semiconservative DNA replication Edward Stanley (1775โ€“1851), English naturalist with a large collection of living animals Philipp Ludwig Statius Mรผller (1725โ€“1776), German zoologist who classified the dugong, guanaco, potto and other species G. Ledyard Stebbins (1906โ€“2000), American botanist and geneticist, one of the leading evolutionary biologists of the 20th century. Japetus Steenstrup (1813โ€“1897), Danish zoologist who discovered the possibility of using fossils to interpreting climate and vegetation changes Charles M. Steinberg (1932โ€“1999), American immunobiologist and geneticist, co-discoverer of the amber-mutants that led to the recognition of stop codons Franz Steindachner (1834โ€“1919), Austrian ichthyologist and herpetologist who published work on fishes, reptiles and amphibians Joan Steitz (born 1941), American biochemist known for work on RNA Thomas A. Steitz (1940โ€“2018), American biochemist awarded the Nobel Prize for pioneering work on the ribosome Leonhard Hess Stejneger (1851โ€“1943), Norwegian-American ornithologist, herpetologist and zoologist known for work on reptiles and amphibians Georg Wilhelm Steller (1709โ€“1746), German ornithologist who worked in Russia, a pioneer of Alaskan natural history James Francis Stephens (1792โ€“1853), English entomologist and naturalist, author of Manual of British Beetles Kaspar Maria von Sternberg (1761โ€“1838), Bohemian botanist, the "Father of Paleobotany" Karl Stetter (born 1941), German microbiologist, expert on microbial life at high temperatures Nettie Maria Stevens (1861โ€“1912), American who discovered sex chromosomes, after observing sperm from male mealworms Frederick Campion Steward (1904โ€“1993), British botanist, pioneer of plant tissue culture, genetic engineering and plant biotechnology Stiโ€“Stu Edward Charles Stirling (1848โ€“1919), Australian anthropologist who reconstructed the skeleton of an enormous marsupial Gerald Stokell (1890โ€“1972), New Zealand horticulturist and ichthyologist who described native fish Witmer Stone (1866โ€“1939), American ornithologist, botanist, and mammalogist, author of The Plants of Southern New Jersey Gottlieb Conrad Christian Storr (1749โ€“1821), German physician, chemist and naturalist, the taxonomic authority of the genus Mellivora Vida Stout (1930โ€“2012), New Zealand limnologist whose research focused on the biology and chemistry of South Island lakes Eduard Strasburger (1844โ€“1912), German botanist who proposed that new cell nuclei only arise from the division of other nuclei Erwin Stresemann (1889โ€“1972), German ornithologist who compiled a comprehensive account of avian biology John Struthers (1823โ€“1899), Scottish anatomist known for the ligament of Struthers, a rare character in humans Alfred Henry Sturtevant (1891โ€“1970), American geneticist who constructed the first genetic map of a chromosome Samuel Stutchbury (1798โ€“1859), English naturalist and geologist co-discoverer of Thecodontosaurus, the fourth dinosaur genus to be named Lubert Stryer (born 1938), American biophysicist who developed the use of fluorescence spectroscopy, best known for his textbook Biochemistry Suโ€“Sz Richard Summerbell (born 1956), Canadian mycologist whose research explores opportunistic fungal pathogens Carl Jakob Sundevall (1801โ€“1875), Swedish zoologist who developed a phylogeny for birds based on the muscles of the hip and leg Mriganka Sur (born 1953), Indian cognitive neuroscientist specializing in neuroplasticity Henry Suter (1841โ€“1918), Swiss-New Zealand zoologist, naturalist and palaeontologist who studied the terrestrial and freshwater molluscs of New Zealand Mary Sutherland (1893โ€“1955), New Zealand botanist who pioneered work in agricultural forestry William John Swainson (1789โ€“1855), English ornithologist, malacologist, conchologist, entomologist and artist Jan Swammerdam (1637โ€“1680), Dutch biologist and microscopist who showed that the egg, larva, pupa, and adult of an insect are different forms of the same animal Olof Swartz (1760โ€“1816), Swedish botanist known for his taxonomic work and studies of pteridophytes Robert Swinhoe (1836โ€“1877), English naturalist who catalogued many Southeast Asian birds William Henry Sykes (1790โ€“1872), British ornithologist who catalogued birds and mammals from the Deccan Albert Szent-Gyรถrgyi (1893โ€“1986), Hungarian biochemist, the first to isolate vitamin C, awarded the Nobel Prize for analysis of the tricarboxylate cycle T Taโ€“Ti Wล‚adysล‚aw Taczanowski (1819โ€“1890), Polish zoologist who mainly worked on ornithology but also described reptiles, arachnids and other taxa Armen Takhtajan (1910โ€“2009), Armenian botanist who worked on plant evolution, systematics and biogeography Charles Tanford (1921โ€“2009), American protein chemist known for analysis of the hydrophobic effect Diana Temple (1925โ€“2006), Australian pharmacologist known for work on respiratory pharmacology Peter Gustaf Tengmalm (1754โ€“1803), Swedish physician and naturalist who worked on both medicine and ornithology Coenraad Jacob Temminck (1778โ€“1858), Dutch zoologist whose Manuel d'ornithologie was the standard work on European birds for many years Theophrastus (372ย BC โ€“ 287ย BC), biologist and the successor of Aristotle in the Peripatetic school, popularizer of science Johannes Thiele (1860โ€“1935), German zoologist and malacologist whose classification of Gastropoda remained in use for many years Mason Blanchard Thomas (1866โ€“1912), American phytopathologist and botanist, coauthor of A laboratory manual of plant histology Michael Rogers Oldfield Thomas (1858โ€“1929), British zoologist whose work on mammals, led to the description of many new species D'Arcy Wentworth Thompson (1860โ€“1942), Scottish biologist, author of On Growth and Form William Thompson (1805โ€“1852), Irish ornithologist and naturalist who published numerous notes on many aspects of birds Charles Wyville Thomson (1832โ€“1882), Scottish marine biologist who studied the biological conditions of the deep seas Louis-Marie Aubert du Petit-Thouars (1758โ€“1831), French botanist known for his work on orchids from Madagascar, Mauritius and Rรฉunion Carl Peter Thunberg (1743โ€“1828), Swedish naturalist who collected and described plants and animals from southern Africa and Asia Samuel Tickell (1811โ€“1875), British ornithologist who contributed to the ornithology and mammalology of India Niko Tinbergen (1907โ€“1988), Dutch ethologist awarded the Nobel Prize for work on organization and social behavior patterns of animals Ignacio Tinoco Jr. (1930โ€“2016), American chemist known for pioneering work on RNA folding Arne Tiselius (1902โ€“1971), Swedish biochemist awarded the Nobel Prize for development of protein electrophoresis. Toโ€“Tu Agostino Todaro (1818โ€“1892), Italian botanist who described Sicilian plants Susumu Tonegawa (born 1939), Japanese biologist, awarded the Nobel Prize discovery of the genetic principle for generation of antibody diversity, later primarily interested in neuroscience John Torrey (1796โ€“1873), American botanist who described plants of the USA Joseph Pitton de Tournefort (1656โ€“1708), French botanist, the first to make a clear definition of the concept of genus for plants John Kirk Townsend (1809โ€“1851), American ornithologist who collected animal specimens for John James Audubon Thomas Stewart Traill (1781โ€“1862), Scottish doctor and naturalist, specialist in medical jurisprudence Abraham Trembley (1710โ€“1784), Swiss naturalist, known for being the first to study freshwater polyps Melchior Treub (1851โ€“1910), Dutch botanist who worked on plants of south-east Asia Henry Baker Tristram (1822โ€“1906), English clergyman and ornithologist who tried to reconcile evolution and creation Robert Trivers (born 1943), American evolutionary biologist and sociobiologist known for the theories of reciprocal altruism and parental investment ร‰douard Louis Trouessart (1842โ€“1927), French naturalist who wrote Microbes, ferments and moulds Frederick W. True (1858โ€“1914), American naturalist who initially studied invertebrates, and later cetaceans George Washington Tryon Jr. (1838โ€“1888), American malacologist, who named more than 5,600 new molluscs species Chen-Lu Tsou (1923โ€“2006), Chinese biochemist known for work on enzyme inactivation kinetics, and as the "face of Chinese biochemistry" in the west Bernard Tucker (1901โ€“1950), English ornithologist, a leader of the collaborative Oxford Bird Census in 1927 Edward Tuckerman (1817โ€“1886), American botanist who studied lichens and other alpine plants Endel Tulving (born 1927), Estonian-Canadian neuroscientist, known for his pioneering research on human memory Marmaduke Tunstall (1743โ€“1790), English ornithologist, author of Ornithologica Britannica Ruth Turner (1915โ€“2000), American marine biologist, expert on shipworms, wood-boring bivalve mollusks William Turton (1762โ€“1835), British naturalist, author of A manual of the land and freshwater shells of the British Islands U Jakob von Uexkรผll (1864โ€“1944), Estonian biologist who discussed the relationship of animals with their environment, and founded biosemiotics Merton F. Utter (1917โ€“1980), American microbiologist and biochemist known for work on intermediary metabolism V Va Sebastien Vaillant (1669โ€“1722), French botanist who studied plants in the Royal Garden Achille Valenciennes (1794โ€“1865), French zoologist who studied parasitic worms in humans James W. Valentine (1926โ€“2023), American evolutionary biologist Pablo Valenzuela (born 1941), Chilean biochemist known for genetic studies of hepatitis viruses Ruth van Heyningen (1917โ€“2019), British biochemist known for her research on the lens and cataracts Donald Van Slyke (1883โ€“1971), Dutch-American biochemist known for the measurement of gas and electrolyte levels in tissues Francisco Varela (1946โ€“2001), Chilean biologist known for introducing the concept of autopoiesis Nikolai Vavilov (1887โ€“1943), Soviet botanist and geneticist, who defended "bourgeois pseudoscience" (genetics) against Lysenkoism Damodaran M. Vasudevan (born 1942), Indian physician, immunologist and educationist, authority on allergy and immunology, also on cancer Veโ€“Vr Craig Venter (born 1946), American biotechnologist known for sequencing the human genome and transfecting a cell with a synthetic chromosome Jules Verreaux (1807โ€“1873), French botanist and ornithologist who collected plants and animals (including human remains) in Africa and Australia Addison Emery Verrill (1839โ€“1926), American zoologist who studied marine organisms Louis Jean Pierre Vieillot (1748โ€“1831), French ornithologist who studied changes in plumage, and studied live birds Nicholas Aylward Vigors (1785โ€“1840), Irish zoologist who popularized the classification of birds on the basis of the quinarian system Rudolf Virchow (1821โ€“1902), German biologist and pathologist, founder of cell theory, known as "the father of modern pathology" Oswaldo Vital Brazil (1865โ€“1950), Brazilian physician and immunobiologist, discoverer of several antivenoms against snake, scorpion and spider bites Bert Vogelstein (born 1949), American geneticist, pioneer in cancer genomics Karel Voous (1920โ€“2002), Dutch ornithologist, author of Owls of the Northern Hemisphere Mary Voytek (thesis 1995), American biogeochemist and microbial ecologist who has studied environmental controls on microbial transformations of nutrients Hugo de Vries (1848โ€“1935), Dutch botanist known for suggesting the concept of genes W Wa Frans de Waal (born 1948), Dutch ethologist, primatologist and psychologist whose research centers on primate social behavior Coslett Herbert Waddell (1858โ€“1919), Irish priest and botanist known for work on difficult genera of flowering plants Jeremy Wade (born 1960), British writer and TV presenter with a special interest in rivers and freshwater fish Amy Wagers (thesis 1999), American biologist, stem cell and regenerative biology Johann Georg Wagler (1800โ€“1832), German herpetologist and ornithologist, author of Monographia Psittacorum Warren H. Wagner (1920โ€“2000), American botanist who developed an algorithm for analysing phylogenetic relationships between species Gรถran Wahlenberg (1780โ€“1851), Swedish naturalist who worked on plant geography, author of Flora lapponica Selman Waksman (1888โ€“1973), American biochemist, awarded the Nobel Prize for work on antibiotics Charles Athanase Walckenaer (1771โ€“1852), French entomologist who placed the black widow in its current genus George Wald (1906โ€“1997), American biologist, winner of the 1967 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his work on visual perception John E. Walker (born 1941), British biochemist awarded the Nobel Prize for work on ATPases and ATP synthase Alfred Russel Wallace (1823โ€“1913), British naturalist and explorer, known for independently conceiving the theory of natural selection Nathaniel Wallich (1786โ€“1854), Danish botanist who described many Indian plant species Benjamin Dann Walsh (1808โ€“1869), British-American entomologist who studied agricultural insect pests William Grey Walter (1910โ€“1977), American-British neurophysiologist and roboticist who improved techniques of electroencephalography James C. Wang (born 1938), Chinese-American biochemist who discovered topoisomerases Deepal Warakagoda (born 1965), Sri Lankan ornithologist who identified new bird species of Sri Lanka Otto Heinrich Warburg (1883โ€“1970), German biochemist awarded the Nobel Prize for pioneering studies of respiration J. Robin Warren (born 1937), Australian pathologist awarded the 2005 Nobel Prize for discovering that most stomach ulcers are caused by bacteria Arieh Warshel (born 1940). Israeli-American biochemist awarded the Nobel Prize for computational studies of functional properties of biological molecules. Charles Waterton (1782โ€“1865), English naturalist who introduced curare to Europe James D. Watson (born 1928), American molecular biologist, awarded the Nobel Prize-winning for discovering the structure of DNA Weโ€“Wh Edwin C. Webb (1921โ€“2006), British (later Australian) biochemist known for systematic classification of enzymes Philip Barker Webb (1793โ€“1854), English botanist, author of Histoire Naturelle des Iles Canaries Hugh Algernon Weddell (1819โ€“1877), English physician and botanist specializing in South American flora Jean Weigle (1901โ€“1968), Swiss physicist and molecular biologist who worked on the interactions between bacteriophage ฮป and E. coli Robert Weinberg (born 1942), American cancerologist who studies oncogenes and the genetic basis of cancer August Weismann (1834โ€“1914), German biologist who argued that inheritance only takes place by means of the germ cells Friedrich Welwitsch (1806โ€“1872), Austrian explorer and botanist who discovered the plant Welwitschia mirabilis in Angola Karl Wernicke (1848โ€“1905), German physician and neuroanatomist who discovered Wernicke's area Hans Westerhoff (born 1953), Dutch biochemist known for work in systems biology and metabolic regulation Victor Westhoff (1916โ€“2001), Dutch botanist who published work on phytosociology and conservation Alexander Wetmore (1886โ€“1978), American ornithologist, author of A Systematic Classification for the Birds of the World William Morton Wheeler (1865โ€“1937), American entomologist and myrmecologist who studied the behavior and classification of ants William Joseph Whelan (1924โ€“2021) British-American biochemist noted for research on glycogen and as a founder of international unions such as the IUBMB Gilbert White (1720โ€“1795), English naturalist known for Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne John White (c. 1756โ€“1832), English botanist who studied the native flora and fauna of Australia Wiโ€“William Robert Wiedersheim (1848โ€“1923), German anatomist known for his list of 86 "vestigial organs" in The Structure of Man: An Index to His Past History Maximilian zu Wied-Neuwied (1782โ€“1867), German explorer and ethnologist, the first in Europe to show real images of Brazilian Indians Hans Wiehler (1930โ€“2003), German-American botanist who studied Gesneriaceae Eric F. Wieschaus (born 1947), American developmental biologist awarded the Nobel Prize for work on the genetic control of embryonic development Torsten Wiesel (born 1924), Swedish-American neurobiologist awarded the Nobel Prize for work on information processing in the visual system Joan Wiffen (1922โ€“2009), New Zealand paleontologist who discovered numerous dinosaur fossils in New Zealand Siouxsie Wiles (thesis about 2005), British microbiologist who studies how glowing bacteria help to understand microbial infections Maurice Wilkins (1916โ€“2004). New Zealand and British x-ray crystallographer awarded the Nobel Prize for work on the structure of DNA Carl Ludwig Willdenow (1765โ€“1812), German botanist, pharmacist, and plant taxonomist, one of the founders of phytogeography George C. Williams (1926โ€“2010), American evolutionary biologist known for his criticism of group selection, and for introducing the gene-centric view of evolution Mark Williamson (thesis 1958), British zoologist, expert on biological invasions Willuโ€“Wyn Francis Willughby (1635โ€“1672), English ornithologist and ichthyologist who introduced innovative and effective ways of classifying animals Alexander Wilson (1766โ€“1813), Scottish-American ornithologist, author of American Ornithology (nine volumes) Allan Charles Wilson (1934โ€“1991), New Zealand biochemist and evolutionary biologist who pioneered molecular approaches to evolutionary changes and reconstructing phylogenies David Sloan Wilson (born 1949), American evolutionary biologist who supports the concept of group selection E. A. Wilson (1872โ€“1912), English naturalist and artist who painted British birds and objects seen in Antarctica Edward O. Wilson (1929โ€“2021), American entomologist and father of sociobiology, expert on ants, two-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize Sergei Winogradsky (1856โ€“1953), Russian microbiologist, ecologist and soil scientist who pioneered the cycle-of-life concept and studied nitrifying bacteria Caspar Wistar (1761โ€“1818), American anatomist and physician who developed anatomical models to assist in teaching anatomy Henry Witherby (1873โ€“1943), British ornithologist who introduced a bird-ringing scheme William Withering (1741โ€“1799), English botanist who introduced the use of digitalis, the active principle in foxgloves, as a remedy Carl Woese (1928โ€“2012), American microbiologist who used phylogenetic taxonomy of 16S ribosomal RNA to defined the Archaea as a new domain of life Friedrich Wรถhler (1800โ€“1882), German chemist known for his synthesis of urea from ammonium cyanate (a nail in the coffin of vitalism) Lewis Wolpert (1929โ€“2021), South-African-British developmental biologist known for the French flag model of embryonic development Wong Siew Te (born 1969), Malaysian zoologist known for studies of the Malayan sun bear and efforts for its conservation Flossie Wong-Staal (1947โ€“2020), American virologist known for complete genetic mapping of HIV Sewall Wright (1889โ€“1988), American geneticist, known for work on evolutionary theory and on path analysis, co-founder of population genetics Dorothy Wrinch (1894โ€“1976), British mathematical biologist who promoted the cyclol structure for proteins V. C. Wynne-Edwards (1906โ€“1997), Scottish zoologist known for advocacy of group selection, the theory that natural selection acts on groups X John Xantus de Vesey (1825โ€“1894), Hungarian-American zoologist who collected natural history specimens for the United States National Museum Y William Yarrell (1784โ€“1856), English zoologist, author of The History of British Fishes and A History of British Birds Ada Yonath (born 1939), Israeli crystallographer awarded the Nobel Prize for pioneering work on the structure of the ribosome J. Z. Young (1907โ€“1997), British neurophysiologist who discovered the squid giant axon in the course of work on signal transmission in nerves Z Floyd Zaiger (1926โ€“2020), American fruit geneticist who developed varieties of peaches, plums and other fruits Eberhard August Wilhelm von Zimmermann (1743โ€“1815), German zoologist who wrote one of the first works on the geographical distribution of mammals Karl Alfred von Zittel (1839โ€“1904), German palaeontologist, author of Handbuch der Palaeontologie Joseph Gerhard Zuccarini (1797โ€“1848), German botanist who described plants from Japan, Mexico and other places Margarete Zuelzer (1877โ€“1943), German zoologist who specialized in the study of protozoa References See also List of biochemists List of biogerontologists List of botanists by author abbreviation List of carcinologists List of coleopterists List of ecologists List of herpetologists List of malacologists List of mammalogists List of microbiologists List of mycologists List of ornithologists List of pathologists List of Russian biologists List of zoologists by author abbreviation List of Nobel Prize winners in physiology or medicine List List of biologists List
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%ED%8A%B8%EB%A0%88%ED%95%A0%EB%A1%9C%EC%8A%A4
ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค
ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค()๋Š” ํฌ๋„๋‹น 2๋ถ„์ž๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋œ ์ด๋‹น๋ฅ˜์ด๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ถ€ ์„ธ๊ท , ๊ท ๋ฅ˜, ์‹๋ฌผ ๋ฐ ๋ฌด์ฒ™์ถ”๋™๋ฌผ์€ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋ฅผ ์—๋„ˆ์ง€์›์œผ๋กœ ํ•ฉ์„ฑํ•˜๊ณ , ๊ฒฐ๋น™ ๋ฐ ๋ฌผ ๋ถ€์กฑ์—์„œ ์‚ด์•„๋‚จ๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋ฅผ ์ด์šฉํ•˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋ฅผ ์ถ”์ถœํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ํ•œ ๋•Œ ์–ด๋ ต๊ณ  ๋น„์šฉ์ด ๋งŽ์ด ๋“œ๋Š” ๊ณผ์ •์ด์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ, 2000๋…„๊ฒฝ์— ํ•˜์•ผ์‹œ๋ฐ”๋ผ์‚ฌ(็คพ) (์ผ๋ณธ, ์˜ค์นด์•ผ๋งˆ)๋Š” ๋…น๋ง๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋ฅผ ์ €๋ ดํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์ถ”์ถœํ•˜๋Š” ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์„ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋Š” ๋†’์€ ๋ณด์Šต ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์‹ํ’ˆ, ํ™”์žฅํ’ˆ, ์˜์•ฝํ’ˆ์— ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ตฌ์กฐ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋Š” ๋‘ ๋ถ„์ž์˜ ฮฑ-ํฌ๋„๋‹น ์‚ฌ์ด์— ฮฑ(1โ†’1)ฮฑ ๊ธ€๋ฆฌ์ฝ”์‚ฌ์ด๋“œ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ์— ์˜ํ•ด ํ˜•์„ฑ๋œ ์ด๋‹น๋ฅ˜์ด๋‹ค. ๋‹ค๋ฅธ 2๊ฐ€์ง€ ์ด์„ฑ์งˆ์ฒด๋Š” ์ž์—ฐ์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค. ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋Š” ์ž์—ฐ์—์„œ ์ด๋‹น๋ฅ˜ ๋ฐ ์ผ๋ถ€ ์ค‘ํ•ฉ์ฒด์—์„œ ๋‹จ์œ„์ฒด๋กœ๋„ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋œ๋‹ค. ํ•ฉ์„ฑ ์ ์–ด๋„ 3๊ฐ€์ง€์˜ ์ƒ๋ฌผํ•™์  ๋Œ€์‚ฌ๊ฒฝ๋กœ๊ฐ€ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค์˜ ์ƒํ•ฉ์„ฑ์„ ์ง€์›ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์‚ฐ์—…์ ์ธ ๊ณต์ •์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ์˜ฅ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜ ๋…น๋ง๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋ฅผ ์–ป์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํŠน์„ฑ ํ™”ํ•™์  ํŠน์„ฑ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋Š” 2๋ถ„์ž์˜ ํฌ๋„๋‹น์ด ฮฑ(1โ†’1)ฮฑ ๊ธ€๋ฆฌ์ฝ”์‚ฌ์ด๋“œ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ์œผ๋กœ ์—ฐ๊ฒฐ๋˜์–ด ํ˜•์„ฑ๋œ ๋น„ํ™˜์›๋‹น์œผ๋กœ, ์ •์‹ ๊ณ„ํ†ต๋ช…์€ ฮฑ-D-๊ธ€๋ฃจ์ฝ”ํ”ผ๋ผ๋…ธ์‹ค-(1โ†”1)-ฮฑ-D-๊ธ€๋ฃจ์ฝ”ํ”ผ๋ผ๋…ธ์‚ฌ์ด๋“œ์ด๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋Š” ์‚ฐ๊ฐ€์ˆ˜๋ถ„ํ•ด์— ๋งค์šฐ ๊ฐ•ํ•œ ์ €ํ•ญ์„ฑ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ฒŒ ๋˜๊ณ , ๋†’์€ ์˜จ๋„์™€ ์‚ฐ์„ฑ ์กฐ๊ฑด์—์„œ๋„ ์•ˆ์ •์„ฑ์„ ๊ฐ–๋Š”๋‹ค. ๊ธ€๋ฆฌ์ฝ”์‚ฌ์ด๋“œ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ์€ ์•Œ๋ฐํ•˜์ด๋“œ ๋˜๋Š” ์ผ€ํ†ค ์ž‘์šฉ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์˜ ๋ฆฌ์‹  ๋˜๋Š” ์•„๋ฅด์ง€๋‹Œ ์ž”๊ธฐ์— ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ(๋‹นํ™”, glycation ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๊ณผ์ •)ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋„๋ก ๋น„ํ™˜์›๋‹น์„ ํ์‡„๋œ ๊ณ ๋ฆฌ ํ˜•ํƒœ๋กœ ์œ ์ง€์‹œํ‚จ๋‹ค. ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋Š” ๋†’์€ ์˜จ๋„(>80ย ยฐC)๋ฅผ ์ œ์™ธํ•˜๊ณ ๋Š” ์ˆ˜ํฌ๋กœ์Šค๋ณด๋‹ค ์šฉํ•ด๋„๊ฐ€ ๋‚ฎ๋‹ค. ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋Š” ์ด์ˆ˜ํ™”๋ฌผ(dihydrate)๋กœ์จ ์žฅ์‚ฌ๋ฐฉํ˜•์˜ ๊ฒฐ์ •์„ ํ˜•์„ฑํ•˜๊ณ , ๊ฒฐ์ •ํ˜•์—์„œ ์ˆ˜ํฌ๋กœ์Šค ์—ด๋Ÿ‰ ํ•จ๋Ÿ‰์˜ 90%๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฌด์ˆ˜ ํ˜•ํƒœ์˜ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋Š” ์ฆ‰์‹œ ์ˆ˜๋ถ„์„ ๋˜์ฐพ์•„ ์ด์ˆ˜ํ™”๋ฌผ์„ ํ˜•์„ฑํ•˜๊ณ , ์—ด์ฒ˜๋ฆฌ์‹œ ํฅ๋ฏธ๋กœ์šด ๋ฌผ๋ฆฌ์  ํŠน์„ฑ์„ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ผ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค ์ˆ˜์šฉ์•ก์€ ๋†๋„ ์˜์กด์„ฑ ํด๋Ÿฌ์Šคํ„ฐ๋ง ๊ฒฝํ–ฅ์„ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ธ๋‹ค. ์ˆ˜์†Œ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ์„ ํ˜•์„ฑํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด, ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋Š” ๋ฌผ์—์„œ ์ž๊ฐ€ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ํฌ๊ธฐ์˜ ํด๋Ÿฌ์Šคํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ํ˜•์„ฑํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ „์ฒด ์›์ž ๋ถ„์ž ๋™์—ญํ•™ ์‹œ๋ฎฌ๋ ˆ์ด์…˜์€ 1.5~2.2๋ชฐ์˜ ๋†๋„๋ฅผ ๋ณด์—ฌ์ฃผ์—ˆ๊ณ , ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค ๋ถ„์ž ํด๋Ÿฌ์Šคํ„ฐ๊ฐ€ ์—ฌ๊ณผ๋˜์–ด ์ปค๋‹ค๋ž€ ์—ฐ์† ์‘์ง‘์ฒด๋ฅผ ํ˜•์„ฑํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์Œ์„ ๋ณด์—ฌ์ฃผ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋Š” ํ•ต์‚ฐ๊ณผ ์ง์ ‘์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒํ˜ธ์ž‘์šฉํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ์ด์ค‘ ๊ฐ€๋‹ฅ DNA์˜ ์šฉํ•ด๋ฅผ ์ด‰์ง„ํ•˜๊ณ , ๋‹จ์ผ ๊ฐ€๋‹ฅ ํ•ต์‚ฐ์„ ์•ˆ์ •์‹œํ‚จ๋‹ค. ์ƒ๋ฌผํ•™์  ํŠน์„ฑ ์„ธ๊ท , ํšจ๋ชจ, ๊ท ๋ฅ˜, ๊ณค์ถฉ, ๋ฌด์ฒ™์ถ”๋™๋ฌผ, ์‹๋ฌผ์— ์ด๋ฅด๋Š” ์ƒ๋ฌผ์ฒด๋“ค์€ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋“ค ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ํšจ์†Œ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ž์—ฐ์—์„œ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋Š” ์‹๋ฌผ๊ณผ ๋ฏธ์ƒ๋ฌผ์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋™๋ฌผ์—์„œ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋Š” ๋ฉ”๋šœ๊ธฐ, ๋‚˜๋น„, ๋ฒŒ ๊ฐ™์€ ๊ณค์ถฉ๊ณผ ์ƒˆ์šฐ ๋“ฑ์— ์กด์žฌํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋Š” ํ˜ˆ๋‹น์œผ๋กœ ์—ญํ• ์„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋Š” ์ดํ™” ํšจ์†Œ์ธ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋ ˆ์ด์Šค์— ์˜ํ•ด ํฌ๋„๋‹น์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ„ํ•ด๋˜์–ด ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋Š” ๋ง๋ฒŒ๊ณผ ๋ง๋ฒŒ ์• ๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ์˜ ์˜์–‘ ๊ตํ™˜์•ก์—๋„ ์กด์žฌํ•œ๋‹ค. ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋Š” ๊ณค์ถฉ์ด ๋น„ํ–‰์— ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ์ฃผ๋œ ์—๋„ˆ์ง€ ์ €์žฅ ํƒ„์ˆ˜ํ™”๋ฌผ์ด๋‹ค. ์ด์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ํ•œ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ์ด์œ ๋Š” ๊ณค์ถฉ์˜ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋ ˆ์ด์Šค์— ์˜ํ•ด ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค์˜ ๊ธ€๋ฆฌ์ฝ”์‚ฌ์ด๋“œ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ์ด ๋ถ„ํ•ด๋  ๋•Œ ๋‘ ๋ถ„์ž์˜ ํฌ๋„๋‹น์„ ๋ฐฉ์ถœํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜๊ณ , ์ด๋Š” ๋น„ํ–‰์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅธ ๋น ๋ฅธ ์—๋„ˆ์ง€ ๊ณต๊ธ‰์ด ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋„๋ก ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ ํ•˜๋‚˜์˜ ๊ธ€๋ฆฌ์ฝ”์‚ฌ์ด๋“œ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ์˜ ๋ถ„ํ•ด๋กœ ํ•œ ๋ถ„์ž์˜ ํฌ๋„๋‹น ๋ถ„์ž๋ฅผ ๋ฐฉ์ถœํ•˜๋Š” ์ €์žฅ ๋‹ค๋‹น๋ฅ˜์ธ ๋…น๋ง๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ํฌ๋„๋‹น์ด ๋ฐฉ์ถœ๋˜๋Š” ํšจ์œจ์˜ 2๋ฐฐ์ด๋‹ค. ์‹๋ฌผ์—์„œ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋Š” ํ•ด๋ฐ”๋ผ๊ธฐ์”จ, ๊ณ ์‚ฌ๋ฆฌ์‚ผ์†, ๋ถ€์ฒ˜์†์†์˜ ์‹๋ฌผ๋“ค, ํ•ด์กฐ๋ฅ˜์—์„œ ๋ณผ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ท ๋ฅ˜์—์„œ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋Š” ํ‘œ๊ณ ๋ฒ„์„ฏ, ๋Šํƒ€๋ฆฌ๋ฒ„์„ฏ, ์ƒˆ์†ก์ด๋ฒ„์„ฏ, ํŒฝ๋‚˜๋ฌด๋ฒ„์„ฏ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์ผ๋ถ€ ๋ฒ„์„ฏ๋ฅ˜์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋œ๋‹ค. ์‹๋ฌผ๊ณ„ ๋‚ด์—์„œ ์‚ฌ๋ง‰๊ณผ ์‚ฐ์•…์ง€๋Œ€์—์„œ ์ž๋ผ๋Š” ๋ถ€์ฒ˜์†์†(๋•Œ๋กœ๋Š” ๋ถ€ํ™œ์ดˆ๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถ€๋ฆ„) ์‹๋ฌผ์€ ๊ฐˆ๋ผ์ง€๊ณ  ๋ง๋ผ๋ฒ„๋ฆด ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค์˜ ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ๋น„๊ฐ€ ์˜จ ํ›„์— ๋‹ค์‹œ ์ดˆ๋ก์ƒ‰์œผ๋กœ ๋ณ€ํ•˜๊ณ  ๋‹ค์‹œ ์ƒ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์ฐพ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํฌ๋ฆฝํ† ๋ฐ”์ด์˜ค์‹œ์Šค(cryptobiosis) ์ƒํƒœ์—์„œ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๊ฐ€ ์ƒ๋ช…์ฒด ๋‚ด์—์„œ ์–ด๋–ป๊ฒŒ ์ž‘์šฉํ•˜๋Š”์ง€์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ๋‘ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ์œ ๋ ฅํ•œ ์ด๋ก ์€ ์–ผ์Œ ํ˜•์„ฑ์„ ๋ฐฉ์ง€ํ•˜๋Š” ์ƒํƒœ๋ผ๊ณ  ์„ค๋ช…ํ•˜๋Š” ์œ ๋ฆฌํ™”(็‰็’ƒๅŒ–, vitrification) ์ด๋ก ๊ณผ ๋ฌผ์„ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋กœ ๋Œ€์ฒดํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฌผ ์น˜ํ™˜(water displacement) ์ด๋ก ์ด๋‹ค. ์˜์–‘ ๋ฐ ์‹์ด ํŠน์„ฑ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋Š” ์žก์‹๋™๋ฌผ(์‚ฌ๋žŒ์„ ํฌํ•จ)๊ณผ ์ดˆ์‹๋™๋ฌผ์˜ ์žฅ ์ ๋ง‰์˜ ์†”๊ฐ€์žฅ์ž๋ฆฌ(brush border)์— ์กด์žฌํ•˜๋Š” ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋ ˆ์ด์Šค์— ์˜ํ•ด ํฌ๋„๋‹น์œผ๋กœ ๋น ๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ๋ถ„ํ•ด๋œ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Š” ํฌ๋„๋‹น์— ๋น„ํ•ด ํ˜ˆ๋‹น์˜ ๊ธ‰๊ฒฉํ•œ ์ฆ๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ๋œ ์ผ์œผํ‚จ๋‹ค. ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋Š” 22% ์ด์ƒ์˜ ๋†๋„์—์„œ ์ˆ˜ํฌ๋กœ์Šค์˜ ์•ฝ 45%์— ํ•ด๋‹นํ•˜๋Š” ๋‹จ๋ง›์„ ๋‚ธ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ๋†๋„๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ์†Œํ•˜๋ฉด ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค์˜ ๋‹จ๋ง›์€ ์ˆ˜ํฌ๋กœ์Šค์˜ ๋‹จ๋ง›๋ณด๋‹ค ๋น ๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ๊ฐ์†Œํ•ด์„œ 2.3% ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค ์šฉ์•ก์˜ ๋‹จ๋ง›์€ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋‹น๋Ÿ‰์˜ ์ˆ˜ํฌ๋กœ์Šค ์šฉ์•ก์˜ ๋‹จ๋ง›๋ณด๋‹ค 6.5๋ฐฐ ๋œ ๋‹ฌ๋‹ค. ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋Š” ์‹ํ’ˆ์˜ ์–ด๋Š”์ ์„ ๋‚ฎ์ถ”๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์•„์ด์Šคํฌ๋ฆผ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋ƒ‰๋™์‹ํ’ˆ์— ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. ์นด๊ธธ์‚ฌ(็คพ)๋Š” "๋‹น์‹ ์˜ ์ œํ’ˆ์— ์ตœ๊ณ ์˜ ๋ง›์„ ๋‚ด๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ง›์„ ํ–ฅ์ƒ์‹œํ‚ค๊ณ  ๊ฐ•ํ™”์‹œํ‚ค๋Š”" ๋ฌผ์งˆ๋กœ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค์˜ ์ž์‚ฌ ๋ธŒ๋žœ๋“œ์ธ "Treha"์˜ ์‚ฌ์šฉ์„ ๊ถŒ์žฅํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋ ˆ์ด์Šค ํšจ์†Œ์˜ ๊ฒฐํ•์€ ์ธ๊ตฌ์˜ 10~15%๊ฐ€ ๊ฒฐํ•์ธ ๊ทธ๋ฆฐ๋ž€๋“œ์˜ ์ด๋ˆ„์ดํŠธ๋ฅผ ์ œ์™ธํ•˜๊ณ ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์—๊ฒŒ์„œ ํ”ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋‹ค. ์˜ํ•™์  ์‚ฌ์šฉ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋Š” ํžˆ์•Œ๋ฃจ๋ก ์‚ฐ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๊ฑด์„ฑ๊ฐ๊ฒฐ๋ง‰์—ผ์„ ์น˜๋ฃŒํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๋Š” ์ธ๊ณต ๋ˆˆ๋ฌผ ์ œํ’ˆ์˜ ์„ฑ๋ถ„์ด๋‹ค. ์—ฐ๊ตฌ 1832๋…„์— H. A. L. ์œ„๊ฑฐ์Šค(H. A. L. Wiggers)๋Š” ํ˜ธ๋ฐ€์˜ ๋งฅ๊ฐ์—์„œ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋ฅผ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌํ–ˆ๊ณ , 1859๋…„์— ํ”ผ์—๋ฅด ๋ฒ ๋ฅดํ…”๋กœ(Pierre Berthelot)๋Š” ๋ฐ”๊ตฌ๋ฏธ๊ฐ€ ๋งŒ๋“œ๋Š” ๋ฌผ์งˆ์ธ "Trehala manna"์—์„œ ๋ฌผ์งˆ์„ ๋ถ„๋ฆฌํ•˜์—ฌ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค(trehalose)๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ช…๋ช…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2018๋…„ 1์›”์— ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์˜ ์žฅ์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜๋Š” ์„ธ๊ท ์ธ Clostridium difficile์˜ ์ผ๋ถ€ ๊ท ์ฃผ๊ฐ€ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค์— ๋ฐ˜์‘ํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ณด์—ฌ์ฃผ๋Š” ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœํ‘œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋Š” ์‹คํ—˜์‹ค์—์„œ ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋ฅผ ๊ณต๊ธ‰ํ–ˆ์„ ๋•Œ ์ด๋“ค ๊ท ์ฃผ๋“ค์ด ๋” ์ž˜ ์ž๋ผ๊ณ , ๋” ๋งŽ์€ ๋…์†Œ๋ฅผ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋“ค์€ 2000๋…„๊ฒฝ์— ์ƒ์‚ฐ ๋น„์šฉ์ด ๋‚ฎ์•„์กŒ์„ ๋•Œ ์‹๋ฃŒํ’ˆ์— ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๋ฅผ ๋„์ž…ํ•˜๋Š” ์‹œ๊ธฐ์™€ ๋ณ‘์›์—์„œ Clostridium difficile์˜ ๊ฐ์—ผ์ด ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ•œ ์‹œ๊ธฐ ์‚ฌ์ด์— ์ƒ๊ด€๊ด€๊ณ„๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์Œ์„ ์ง€์ ํ•˜๊ณ , ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ์—ผ์˜ ์ฆ๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ์ผ์œผํ‚ฌ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์‹œ์‚ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๋‹น์‹œ์— ํŠธ๋ ˆํ• ๋กœ์Šค๊ฐ€ ์‹ค์ œ๋กœ Clostridium difficile ๊ฐ์—ผ์˜ ์ฆ๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ์œ ๋ฐœํ–ˆ๋Š”์ง€ ๋˜๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์˜ ์žฅ์— ์žˆ๋Š” Clostridium difficile์— ์˜ํ–ฅ์„ ๋ฏธ์ณค๋Š”์ง€๋Š” ์•Œ์ ธ์ง€์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ์ƒ๋ฌผ๋‚ด์„ฑ ๋™๊ฒฐ๋ณดํ˜ธ์ œ ํฌ๋ฆฝํ† ๋ฐ”์ด์˜ค์‹œ์Šค ๋™๊ฒฐ ๊ฑด์กฐ ๊ฐ์ฃผ ๋” ์ฝ์„๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ , discussing 2010 paper: . ํƒ„์ˆ˜ํ™”๋ฌผ ์ด๋‹น๋ฅ˜ ๊ฐ๋ฏธ๋ฃŒ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trehalose
Trehalose
Trehalose (from Turkish tฤฑgala โ€“ a sugar derived from insect cocoons + -ose) is a sugar consisting of two molecules of glucose. It is also known as mycose or tremalose. Some bacteria, fungi, plants and invertebrate animals synthesize it as a source of energy, and to survive freezing and lack of water. Extracting trehalose was once a difficult and costly process, but around 2000, the Hayashibara company (Okayama, Japan) discovered an inexpensive extraction technology from starch. Trehalose has high water retention capabilities, and is used in food, cosmetics and as a drug. A procedure developed in 2017 using trehalose allows sperm storage at room temperatures. Structure Trehalose is a disaccharide formed by a bond between two ฮฑ-glucose units. It is found in nature as a disaccharide and also as a monomer in some polymers. Two other isomers exist, ฮฑ,ฮฒ-trehalose, otherwise known as neotrehalose, and ฮฒ,ฮฒ-trehalose (also referred to as isotrehalose). Neotrehalose has not been isolated from a living organism. Isotrehalose is also yet to be isolated from a living organism, but was found in starch hydroisolates. Synthesis At least three biological pathways support trehalose biosynthesis. An industrial process can derive trehalose from corn starch. Properties Chemical Trehalose is a nonreducing sugar formed from two glucose units joined by a 1โ€“1 alpha bond, giving it the name The bonding makes trehalose very resistant to acid hydrolysis, and therefore is stable in solution at high temperatures, even under acidic conditions. The bonding keeps nonreducing sugars in closed-ring form, such that the aldehyde or ketone end groups do not bind to the lysine or arginine residues of proteins (a process called glycation). Trehalose is less soluble than sucrose, except at high temperatures (>80ย ยฐC). Trehalose forms a rhomboid crystal as the dihydrate, and has 90% of the calorific content of sucrose in that form. Anhydrous forms of trehalose readily regain moisture to form the dihydrate. Anhydrous forms of trehalose can show interesting physical properties when heat-treated. Trehalose aqueous solutions show a concentration-dependent clustering tendency. Owing to their ability to form hydrogen bonds, they self-associate in water to form clusters of various sizes. All-atom molecular dynamics simulations showed that concentrations of 1.5โ€“2.2 molar allow trehalose molecular clusters to percolate and form large and continuous aggregates. Trehalose directly interacts with nucleic acids, facilitates melting of double stranded DNA and stabilizes single-stranded nucleic acids. Biological Organisms ranging from bacteria, yeast, fungi, insects, invertebrates, and lower and higher plants have enzymes that can make trehalose. In nature, trehalose can be found in plants, and microorganisms. In animals, trehalose is prevalent in shrimp, and also in insects, including grasshoppers, locusts, butterflies, and bees, in which trehalose serves as blood-sugar. Trehalase genes are found in tardigrades, the microscopic ecdysozoans found worldwide in diverse extreme environments. Trehalose is the major carbohydrate energy storage molecule used by insects for flight. One possible reason for this is that the glycosidic linkage of trehalose, when acted upon by an insect trehalase, releases two molecules of glucose, which is required for the rapid energy requirements of flight. This is double the efficiency of glucose release from the storage polymer starch, for which cleavage of one glycosidic linkage releases only one glucose molecule. In plants, trehalose is seen in sunflower seeds, moonwort, Selaginella plants, and sea algae. Within the fungi, it is prevalent in some mushrooms, such as shiitake (Lentinula edodes), oyster, king oyster, and golden needle. Even within the plant kingdom, Selaginella (sometimes called the resurrection plant), which grows in desert and mountainous areas, may be cracked and dried out, but will turn green again and revive after rain because of the function of trehalose. The two prevalent theories as to how trehalose works within the organism in the state of cryptobiosis are the vitrification theory, a state that prevents ice formation, or the water displacement theory, whereby water is replaced by trehalose. In bacterial cell wall, trehalose has a structural role in adaptive responses to stress such as osmotic differences and extreme temperature. Yeast uses trehalose as a carbon source in response to abiotic stresses. In humans, the only known function of trehalose is its ability to activate autophagy inducer. Trehalose has also been reported for anti-bacterial, anti-biofilm, and anti-inflammatory (in vitro and in vivo) activities, upon its esterification with fatty acids of varying chain lengths. Nutritional and dietary properties Trehalose is rapidly broken down into glucose by the enzyme trehalase, which is present in the brush border of the intestinal mucosa of omnivores (including humans) and herbivores. It causes less of a spike in blood sugar than glucose. Trehalose has about 45% the sweetness of sucrose at concentrations above 22%, but when the concentration is reduced, its sweetness decreases more quickly than that of sucrose, so that a 2.3% solution tastes 6.5 times less sweet as the equivalent sugar solution. It is commonly used in prepared frozen foods, like ice cream, because it lowers the freezing point of foods. Deficiency of trehalase enzyme is unusual in humans, except in the Greenlandic Inuit, where it occurs in 10โ€“15% of the population. Metabolism Five biosynthesis pathways have been reported for trehalose. The most common pathway is TPS/TPP pathway which is used by organisms that synthesize trehalose using the enzyme trehalose-6-phosphate (T6P) synthase (TPS). Second, trehalose synthase (TS) in certain types of bacteria could produce trehalose by using maltose and another disaccharide with two glucose units as substrates. Third, the TreY-TreZ pathway in some bacteria converts starch that contain maltooligosaccharide or glycogen directly into trehalose. Fourth, in primitive bacteria, trehalose glycisyltransferring synthase (TreT) produces trehalose from ADP-glucose and glucose. Fifth, trehalose phosphorylase (TreP) either hydrolyses trehalose into glucose-1-phosphate and glucose or may act reversibly in certain species. Vertebrates do not have the ability to synthesize or store trehalose. Trehalase in humans is found only in specific location such as the intestinal mucosa, renal brush-border, liver and blood. Expression of this enzyme in vertebrates is initially found during the gestation period that is the highest after weaning. Then, the level of trehalase remained constant in the intestine throughout life. Meanwhile, diets consisting of plants and fungi contain trehalose. Moderate amount of trehalose in diet is essential and having low amount of trehalose could result in diarrhea, or other intestinal symptoms. Medical use Trehalose is an ingredient, along with hyaluronic acid, in an artificial tears product used to treat dry eye. Outbreaks of Clostridium difficile were initially associated with trehalose,. This finding was disputed in 2019. History In 1832, H.A.L. Wiggers discovered trehalose in an ergot of rye, and in 1859 Marcellin Berthelot isolated it from Trehala manna, a substance made by weevils and named it trehalose. Trehalose has long been known as an autophagy inducer that acts independently of mTOR. In 2017 research was published showing that trehalose induces autophagy by activating TFEB, a protein that acts as a master regulator of the autophagy-lysosome pathway. See also Biostasis Cryoprotectant Cryptobiosis Freeze drying Lentztrehalose Trehalosamine References External links Trehalose in sperm preservation Carbohydrates Disaccharides Sugars Orphan drugs
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/2019%EB%85%84%20%EB%B2%A0%EB%84%A4%EC%88%98%EC%97%98%EB%9D%BC%20%EB%8C%80%ED%86%B5%EB%A0%B9%20%EC%9C%84%EA%B8%B0
2019๋…„ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ์œ„๊ธฐ
2019๋…„ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ์œ„๊ธฐ๋Š” 2018๋…„ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ฐ€ ๋ถ€์ • ์„ ๊ฑฐ์˜€๋‹ค๋ฉฐ ๋ฌดํšจ๋ฅผ ์„ ์–ธํ•œ ์•ผ๊ถŒ ์ง€๋„์ž ํ›„์•ˆ ๊ณผ์ด๋„ ๊ตญํšŒ์˜์žฅ๊ณผ ์ด์— ์ €ํ•ญํ•˜๋Š” ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น๊ณผ์˜ ์ •์น˜์  ๋ถ„์Ÿ์ด๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์€ ๊ณผ์ด๋„๋ฅผ, ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„๋Š” ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ๋ฅผ ์ง€์ง€ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์—ญ์‚ฌ 2018๋…„ 5์›”, 2018๋…„ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ฐ€ ์กฐ๊ธฐ์— ์‹ค์‹œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ ํ˜„์ง ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ด 68% ๋“ํ‘œ์œจ๋กœ ์žฌ์„ ๋˜๋ฉด์„œ 2๋ฒˆ์งธ ์ž„๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹น์‹œ ์ฃผ์š” ์•ผ๋‹น ์ธ์‚ฌ ๋Œ€๋‹ค์ˆ˜๋Š” ์ˆ˜๊ฐ๋˜๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ์„ ๊ฑฐ์— ์ถœ๋งˆํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋„๋ก ๊ฐ€ํƒ์—ฐ๊ธˆ ์กฐ์น˜ ๋“ฑ์ด ์ทจํ•ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ฐ€ ์ข…๋ฃŒ๋˜๊ณ  ๋‚˜์„œ, ์•ผ๊ถŒ์˜ ์œ ๋ ฅ ํ›„๋ณด๋“ค์€ ๊ฐ€ํƒ ์—ฐ๊ธˆ๊ณผ ์ˆ˜๊ฐ ๋“ฑ์œผ๋กœ ๋‚˜์„ค ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋Š” ์ƒํ™ฉ์—์„œ ์น˜๋Ÿฌ์กŒ๋‹ค๋ฉฐ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ฐ€ ๋ฌดํšจ์ž„์„ ์„ ์–ธํ•˜๊ณ  ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ ํ‡ด์ง„ ์šด๋™์„ ๋ฒŒ์—ฌ์™”๋‹ค. ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ํ—Œ๋ฒ•์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋ฉด ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ด ๊ณต์„์ผ ๋•Œ 30์ผ ์ด๋‚ด์— ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ์„ ๊ฑฐ๋ฅผ ์น˜๋Ÿฌ์•ผ ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๊ทธ ์‚ฌ์ด์— ๊ตญํšŒ์˜์žฅ์ด ์ž„์‹œ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ง์„ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰ํ•œ๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ 1์›”๊นŒ์ง€๋งŒ ํ•ด๋„ ํ›„์•ˆ ๊ณผ์ด๋„ ๊ตญํšŒ์˜์žฅ์ด ๋ˆ„๊ตฐ์ง€ ์•„๋Š” ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์ด 20%๋„ ์ฑ„ ์•ˆ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ 1์›” 23์ผ, ํ›„์•ˆ ๊ณผ์ด๋„ ๊ตญํšŒ์˜์žฅ์€ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ์ˆ˜๋„ ์นด๋ผ์นด์Šค์—์„œ ์—ด๋ฆฐ ๋Œ€๊ทœ๋ชจ ๋ฐ˜์ •๋ถ€ ์‹œ์œ„์—์„œ, ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ด ํ–‰์‚ฌํ•˜๋˜ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์›์ˆ˜ ๊ถŒํ•œ์„ ์ธ์ˆ˜ํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์„ ์–ธํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋ฉด์„œ, ๊ณผ๋„์ •๋ถ€ ์ˆ˜๋ฐ˜์œผ๋กœ์„œ ์ž์œ ํˆฌํ‘œ๋ฅผ ์‹ค์‹œํ•ด ํ—Œ์ • ์งˆ์„œ๋ฅผ ํšŒ๋ณตํ•˜๊ฒ ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์„ ์ด ๋‚˜์˜จ ์ฆ‰์‹œ, ๋ฏธ๊ตญ, ์บ๋‚˜๋‹ค, ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์—ฐํ•ฉ(EU), ์•„๋ฅดํ—จํ‹ฐ๋‚˜, ์ฝœ๋กฌ๋น„์•„ ๋“ฑ์€ ๊ณผ์ด๋„ ์ •๋ถ€๋ฅผ ์ธ์ •ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋„๋„๋“œ ํŠธ๋Ÿผํ”„ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์€ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋‚ , ํ˜„์žฌ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ๊ตญํšŒ๊ฐ€ ์œ ์ผํ•œ ํ•ฉ๋ฒ• ๊ธฐ๊ด€์ด๋ผ๋ฉด์„œ, ๊ณผ์ด๋„ ์˜์žฅ์˜ ์ž„์‹œ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ์„ ์–ธ์„ ์ธ์ •ํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ฐœํ‘œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ์ž ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์€ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์ด ์ด๋ฒˆ ์‚ฌํƒœ์˜ ๋ฐฐํ›„์— ์žˆ๋‹ค๋ฉฐ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ๊ณผ์˜ ๋‹จ๊ต๋ฅผ ์„ ์–ธํ•˜๊ณ  72์‹œ๊ฐ„ ๋‚ด ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ์™ธ๊ต๊ด€๋“ค์˜ ์ถœ๊ตญ์„ ๋ช…๋ นํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์€ ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ ์ •๊ถŒ์ด ๊ทธ๋Ÿด ์ž๊ฒฉ์ด ์—†๋‹ค๋ฉฐ, ์ด๋ฅผ ๋ฌด์‹œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ 1์›” 24์ผ, ํ›„์•ˆ ๊ณผ์ด๋„ ๊ตญํšŒ์˜์žฅ์€ "๋ˆ„๊ตฌ๋“ ์ง€ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ์˜ ํ—Œ์ • ์งˆ์„œ๋ฅผ ๋˜๋Œ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๋ฐ ๋„์›€์„ ์ค„ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ์‚ฌ๋ฉด์„ ๊ณ ๋ คํ•˜๊ฒ ๋‹ค"๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์˜ ํ•˜์•ผ๋ฅผ ์ „์ œ๋กœ ๋” ์ด์ƒ ์ฑ…์ž„์„ ๋ฌป์ง€ ์•Š๊ฒ ๋‹ค๋Š” ์˜์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๊ณตํ‘œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋…์ผ, ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค, ์˜๊ตญ, ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ, ํฌ๋ฅดํˆฌ๊ฐˆ, ๋„ค๋œ๋ž€๋“œ, ๋ฒจ๊ธฐ์— ๋“ฑ EU ์ฃผ์š” 7๊ฐœ๊ตญ์€ ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ด 2019๋…„ 2์›” 3์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์žฌ์‹ค์‹œ๋ฅผ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์œผ๋ฉด ๊ณผ์ด๋„ ์˜์žฅ์„ ์ž„์‹œ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์œผ๋กœ ์ธ์ •ํ•˜๊ฒ ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๊ฒฝ๊ณ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ 2์›” 2์ผ, ์ตœ์ดˆ๋กœ ํ˜„์—ญ ์žฅ๊ตฐ์ด ๊ณผ์ด๋„ ๊ตญํšŒ์˜์žฅ์„ ๊ณต๊ฐœ ์ง€์ง€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ๊ณต๊ตฐ์˜ ํ”„๋ž€์‹œ์Šค์ฝ” ์•ผ๋„ค์Šค ์žฅ๊ตฐ์€ ์œ ํŠœ๋ธŒ์— ๊ณต๊ฐœ๋œ ๋™์˜์ƒ์—์„œ ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์„ '๋…์žฌ์ž'๋กœ, ๊ณผ์ด๋„ ์˜์žฅ์„ '๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น'์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ€๋ฅด๋ฉฐ ๊ณผ์ด๋„ ์˜์žฅ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ง€์ง€ ์˜์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋˜ "๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ๊ตฐ๋ถ€์˜ 90%๊ฐ€ ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ์— ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ํ•œ๋‹ค"๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ๊ณต๊ตฐ ์ฐธ๋ชจ์ด์žฅ์€ ์•ผ๋„ค์Šค์˜ ๋ฐฐ๋ฐ˜์„ ๋น„ํŒํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ๊ณต๊ตฐ ์‚ฌ๋ น๋ถ€ ์ „๋žต ๊ธฐํš ์ฑ…์ž„์ž๋ผ์„œ ์‹ค์ œ๋กœ ๊ทธ์˜ ์ง€ํœ˜๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›๋Š” ๊ตฐ์ธ์€ ์—†๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์€ ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๋ถˆ๋ณต์ด ์•ผ๋‹น์˜ ์ฟ ๋ฐํƒ€ ์‹œ๋„๋ผ๋ฉด์„œ, 2020๋…„์— ์‹ค์‹œ๋  ์˜ˆ์ •์ธ ์ด์„ ๊ฑฐ๋ฅผ 2019๋…„์— ์กฐ๊ธฐ์— ์‹ค์‹œํ•˜์—ฌ ํ›„์•ˆ ๊ณผ์ด๋„ ๊ตญํšŒ์˜์žฅ์„ ๊ต์ฒดํ•˜๊ฒ ๋‹ค๋Š” ์ž…์žฅ์ด๋‹ค. ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์˜ ์‹ค์ • ์„์œ ๋Š” ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ์ˆ˜์ถœ ์†Œ๋“์˜ 96%๋ฅผ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ•˜๊ณ  ์˜ˆ์‚ฐ์˜ ์ ˆ๋ฐ˜์„ ์ถฉ๋‹นํ•  ๋งŒํผ ์ ˆ๋Œ€์ ์ธ ๋น„์ค‘์„ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ๋Š” ํŠนํžˆ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์— ์ค‘์š”ํ•œ ์›์œ  ๊ณต๊ธ‰์ฒ˜๋กœ, ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ๊ฐ€ ์ˆ˜์ถœํ•˜๋Š” ์›์œ ์˜ ์•ฝ 41%๊ฐ€ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์— ์ˆ˜์ถœ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ๋Š” ํ™•์ธ ๋งค์žฅ๋Ÿ‰์œผ๋กœ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ์ตœ๋Œ€์˜ ์„์œ ๋ฅผ ๋ณด์œ ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๊ณ , ๊ธˆ ๋งค์žฅ๋Ÿ‰๋„ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ์ตœ๋Œ€์ž„์„ ์ž…์ฆํ•˜๋Š” ์ ˆ์ฐจ๋ฅผ ๋ฐŸ๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ€์Šค ๋งค์žฅ๋Ÿ‰์€ ์„ธ๊ณ„ 4์œ„, ๋‹ค์ด์•„๋ชฌ๋“œ์™€ ์•Œ๋ฃจ๋ฏธ๋Š„ ๋“ฑ ๋งค์žฅ๋Ÿ‰๋„ ์—„์ฒญ๋‚˜๋‹ค. 1922๋…„ ๋กœ์—ด ๋”์น˜ ์‰˜์˜ ์ง€์งˆ์กฐ์‚ฌํŒ€์ด ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ์— ์—„์ฒญ๋‚œ ์„์œ ์ž์›์ด ๋งค์žฅ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ์‚ฌ์‹ค์„ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ๋•Œ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ๋Š” ์„ธ๊ณ„ 1์œ„ ์„์œ  ๋ณด์œ ๋Ÿ‰์˜ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๊ฐ€ ๋˜์–ด, ์„์œ ๋กœ ์—„์ฒญ๋‚œ ๋ˆ์„ ๋ฒŒ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ์˜ ๊ฒฝ์ œ๋Š” ์„์œ ์—๋งŒ ์˜์กดํ•˜๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์œ ๊ฐ€๊ฐ€ ํญ๋ฝํ•˜๋ฉด ์ˆœ์‹๊ฐ„์— ๊ฒฝ์ œ๊ฐ€ ๋งํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ์•ฝ์ ์„ ๊ฐ–๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ๋Š” 1980๋…„๋Œ€์— ์œ ๊ฐ€ ํ•˜๋ฝ์œผ๋กœ, 1989๋…„์—๋Š” ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋ถ€๋„๋กœ IMF ๊ตฌ์ œ ๊ธˆ์œต์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ์ด๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ์—์„œ๋Š” ์„œ๋ฐฉ ๊ฐ•๋Œ€๊ตญ๋“ค์˜ ๊ฒฝ์ œ ์•ฝํƒˆ์ด ๋ฐœ์ƒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1992๋…„ ์œก๊ตฐ ๊ณต์ˆ˜๋ถ€๋Œ€ ์ค‘๋ น์ด๋˜ ์šฐ๊ณ  ์ฐจ๋ฒ ์Šค์™€ ์ Š์€ ์žฅ๊ต๋“ค์ด ์ฟ ๋ฐํƒ€๋ฅผ ์‹œ๋„ํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ์‹คํŒจํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ๋Œ€์ค‘์˜ ์ธ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๋†’์•„์„œ 1998๋…„ ์šฐ๊ณ  ์ฐจ๋ฒ ์Šค ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ด ์ฒ˜์Œ ๋‹น์„ ๋˜๊ณ  ๋‚˜์„œ, ์‚ฌํšŒ์ฃผ์˜๋ฅผ ์„ ์–ธํ•˜๊ณ , ๊ทน๋‹จ์ ์ธ ๋ฐ˜๋ฏธ์ฃผ์˜ ์ •์ฑ…์„ ์‹ค์‹œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ๋Š” 2012๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์‹œ์ž‘๋œ ์œ ๊ฐ€ ํ•˜๋ฝ์˜ ์ง๊ฒฉํƒ„์„ ๋งž์•˜๋‹ค. 2012๋…„ 10์›” ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ์„ ๊ฑฐ์—์„œ ์šฐ๊ณ  ์ฐจ๋ฒ ์Šค ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ด 4์„ ์— ์„ฑ๊ณตํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์•” ํˆฌ๋ณ‘ ์ค‘์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ์ฐจ๋ฒ ์Šค๊ฐ€ ์œ„๋…ํ•ด์ง€๋ฉด์„œ 2013๋…„ 1์›” 10์ผ์— ์—ด๋ฆด ์˜ˆ์ •์ด๋˜ ์ทจ์ž„์‹์„ ๋ฌด๊ธฐํ•œ ์—ฐ๊ธฐํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์šฐ๊ณ  ์ฐจ๋ฒ ์Šค ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์€ ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ ๋ถ€ํ†ต๋ น์„ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ํ›„๊ณ„์ž๋กœ ์ง€๋ชฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ๋งˆ๋‘๋กœ๋Š” 2013๋…„ 3์›” 5์ผ์— ํ–ฅ๋…„ 59์„ธ๋ฅผ ์ผ๊ธฐ๋กœ ์‚ฌ๋งํ•œ ์šฐ๊ณ  ์ฐจ๋ฒ ์Šค์˜ ๋’ค๋ฅผ ์ด์–ด ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ์˜ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์œผ๋กœ ์ทจ์ž„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2018๋…„ 5์›” 7์ผ, ์šฐํŒŒ ์•ผ๊ถŒ์ด ์žฅ์•…ํ•œ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ๊ตญํšŒ๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ•œ ์ž๋ฃŒ์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋ฉด 2017๋…„ 5์›” 1์ผ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2018๋…„ 4์›” 30์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ 1๋…„๊ฐ„ ์†Œ๋น„์ž ๋ฌผ๊ฐ€๋Š” 13,779% ์ƒ์Šนํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ 137๋ฐฐ ์ •๋„ ํญ๋“ฑํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ 2014โ€“2017๋…„ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ์‹œ์œ„ 2019๋…„ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ๋ด‰๊ธฐ ๊ฐ์ฃผ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ์œ„๊ธฐ 2019๋…„ ์ •์น˜ 2019๋…„ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ ํ—Œ์ •์œ„๊ธฐ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ์˜ ์ •์น˜์‚ฌ 2020๋…„ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ 2022๋…„ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ 2021๋…„ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ 2023๋…„ ๋ฒ ๋„ค์ˆ˜์—˜๋ผ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venezuelan%20presidential%20crisis
Venezuelan presidential crisis
The Venezuelan presidential crisis was a political crisis concerning the leadership and the legitimate president of Venezuela between 2019 and 2023, with the nation and the world divided in support for Nicolรกs Maduro or Juan Guaidรณ. Venezuela is engulfed in a political and economic crisis which has led to more than seven million people leaving the country since 2015. The process and results of the 2018 presidential elections were widely disputed. The opposition-majority National Assembly declared Maduro a usurper of the presidency on the day of his second inauguration and disclosed a plan to set forth its president Guaidรณ as the succeeding acting president of the country under article 233 of the Venezuelan Constitution. A week later, the Supreme Tribunal of Justice declared that the presidency of the National Assembly was the "usurper" of authority and declared the body to be unconstitutional. Minutes after Maduro took the oath as president, the Organization of American States (OAS) approved a resolution in a special session of its Permanent Council declaring Maduro's presidency illegitimate and urging new elections. Special meetings of the OAS on 24 January and in the United Nations Security Council on 26 January were held but no consensus was reached. Secretary-General of the United Nations Antรณnio Guterres called for dialogue. During the 49th General Assembly of the Organization of American States on 27 June, Guaidรณ's presidency was recognized by the organization. Guaidรณ and the National Assembly declared he was acting president and swore himself in on 23 January. At his peak, Guaidรณ was recognized as legitimate by about 60 countries; despite never running as president, Maduro by about 20 countries. However, Guaidรณ's international support waned over time. Internationally, support followed geopolitical lines, with Russia, China, Cuba, Iran, Syria, and Turkey supporting Maduro, while the majority of Western and Latin American countries supported Guaidรณ as acting president. Support for Guaidรณ began to decline when a military uprising attempt in April 2019 failed to materialize. Following the failed uprising, representatives of Guaidรณ and Maduro began mediation, with the assistance of the Norwegian Centre for Conflict Resolution. After the second meeting in Norway, no deal was reached. In July 2019 negotiations started again in Barbados with representatives from both sides. In September, Guaidรณ announced the end of dialogue following a forty-day absence by the Maduro government as a protest against the recent sanctions by the United States. In March 2020, the United States proposed a transitional government that would exclude both Maduro and Guaidรณ from the presidency. U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said that sanctions did not apply to humanitarian aid during the coronavirus pandemic health emergency and that the United States would lift all sanctions if Maduro agreed to organize elections that did not include himself. Guaidรณ accepted the proposal, while Venezuela's foreign minister, Jorge Arreaza, rejected it. By January 2020, efforts led by Guaidรณ to create a transitional government had been unsuccessful and Maduro continued to control Venezuela's state institutions. In January 2021, the European Union stopped recognizing Guaidรณ as president, but still did not recognize Maduro as the legitimate president; the European Parliament reaffirmed its recognition of Guaidรณ as president, and the EU threatened with further sanctions. After the announcement of regional elections in 2021, Guaidรณ announced a "national salvation agreement" and proposed the negotiation with Maduro with a schedule for free and fair elections, with international support and observers, in exchange for lifting international sanctions. In December 2022, three of the four main opposition political parties (Justice First, Democratic Action and A New Era) backed and approved a reform to dissolve the interim government and create a commission of five members to manage foreign assets, as deputies sought a united strategy ahead of the next Venezuelan presidential election scheduled for 2024, stating that the interim government had failed to achieve the goals it had set. Background Since 2010, Venezuela has been suffering a socioeconomic crisis under Nicolรกs Maduro and briefly under his predecessor Hugo Chรกvez, as rampant crime, hyperinflation and shortages as a result of sanctions, diminish the quality of life. Javier Corrales stated in a 2020 Journal of Democracy that Maduro "presided over one of the most devastating national economic crises seen anywhere in modern times." As a result of discontent with the government, the opposition was elected to hold the majority in the National Assembly for the first time since 1999 following the 2015 parliamentary election. After the election, the lame duck National Assembly consisting of Bolivarian officials filled the Supreme Tribunal of Justice, the highest court in Venezuela, with Maduro allies. The tribunal stripped three opposition lawmakers of their National Assembly seats in early 2016, citing alleged "irregularities" in their elections, thereby preventing an opposition supermajority which would have been able to challenge President Maduro. In January 2016, the National Assembly declared a "health humanitarian crisis" given the "serious shortage of medicines, medical supplies and deterioration of humanitarian infrastructure", asking Maduro's government to "guarantee immediate access to the list of essential medicines that are basic and indispensable and that must be accessible at all times." The tribunal approved several actions by Maduro and granted him more powers in 2017. As protests mounted against Maduro, he called for a constituent assembly that would draft a new constitution to replace the 1999 Venezuela Constitution created under Chรกvez. According to Rafael Villa โ€“ writing in Defence Studies in 2022 โ€“ "Maduro's leadership [was] not consensual" and among the changes he had made to overcome his "political fragility" was promoting an excessive number of officers within the military, and the election of a 2017 Constituent National Assembly to replace the opposition-led National Assembly, which was elected in 2015. Many countries considered these actions a bid by Maduro to stay in power indefinitely, and over 40ย countries stated that they would not recognize the 2017 Constituent National Assembly (ANC). The Democratic Unity Roundtable, the main opposition to the incumbent ruling party, boycotted the election, saying that the ANC was "a trick to keep [the incumbent ruling party] in power." Since the opposition did not participate in the election, the Great Patriotic Pole coalition and its supporters, including the incumbent United Socialist Party of Venezuela, won all seats in the assembly by default. On 8 August 2017, the ANC declared itself to be the government branch with supreme power in Venezuela, banning the opposition-led National Assembly from performing actions that would interfere with the assembly while continuing to pass measures in "support and solidarity" with President Maduro, effectively stripping the National Assembly of all its powers. Maduro disavowed the National Assembly in 2017. As of 2018, some considered the National Assembly the only "legitimate" institution left in the country and human rights organizations said there were no independent institutional checks on presidential power. 2018 election and calls for transitional government In February 2018, Maduro called for presidential elections four months before the prescribed date. He was declared the winner in May 2018 after multiple major opposition parties were banned from participating, among other irregularities; many said the elections were invalid. Some politicians both internally and internationally said Maduro was not legitimately elected and considered him an ineffective dictator. In the months leading up to his 10 January 2019 inauguration, Maduro was pressured to step down by nations and bodies including the Lima Group (excluding Mexico), the United States and the OAS; this pressure was increased after the new National Assembly of Venezuela was sworn in on 5 January 2019. Between the May 2018 presidential election and Maduro's inauguration, there were calls to establish a transitional government. Signs of impending crisis showed when a Supreme Tribunal Justice and Electoral Justice seen as close to Maduro defected to the United States just a few days before the 10 January 2019 second inauguration of Nicolรกs Maduro. The justice, , said that Maduro was "incompetent" and "illegitimate". Minutes after Maduro took the oath as president of Venezuela, the OAS approved a resolution in a special session of its Permanent Council declaring Maduro's presidency illegitimate and urging new elections. Maduro's election was supported by Turkey, Russia, China, and the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America (ALBA). In December 2018, Guaidรณ had traveled to Washington, D.C., met with OAS Secretary General Luis Almagro. On 14 January 2019, he traveled to Colombia for a Lima Group meeting, in which Maduro's mandate was rejected. According to an article in El Paรญs, the January Lima Group meeting and the stance taken by Canadian Minister of Foreign Affairs Chrystia Freeland were key. El Paรญs describes Donald Trump's electionโ€”coinciding with the election of conservative presidents in Colombia and Brazil, along with deteriorating conditions in Venezuelaโ€”as "a perfect storm", with decisions influenced by U.S. officials including Vice President Mike Pence, Secretary of State Pompeo, National Security Advisor John Bolton and legislators Mario Dรญaz-Balart and Marco Rubio. Venezuelans Carlos Vecchio, Julio Borges and Gustavo Tarre were consulted and the Trump administration decision to back Guaidรณ formed on 22 January, according to El Paรญs. Dรญaz-Balart said that the decision was the result of two years of planning. Justification for the challenge The Venezuelan opposition says its actions are based on the 1999 Constitution of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, specifically Articles 233, 333 and 350. The first paragraph of Article 233 states that "when the president-elect is absolutely absent before taking office, a new election shall take place [...] And while the president is elected and takes office, the interim president shall be the president of the National Assembly." Article 333 calls for citizens to restore and enforce the Constitution if it is not followed. Article 350 calls for citizens to "disown any regime, legislation or authority that violates democratic values, principles and guarantees or encroaches upon human rights." Article 233 was invoked after the death of Hugo Chรกvez in 2013, which took place soon after his inauguration, and extraordinary elections were called within thirty days. Invoked by the National Assembly, Guaidรณ was declared acting president until elections could be held; Diego A. Zambrano, an assistant professor of law at Stanford Law School, says that "Venezuelan lawyers disagree on the best reading of this provision. Some argue Guaidรณ can serve longer if the electoral process is scheduled within a reasonable time." The National Assembly announced that it will designate a committee to appoint a new National Electoral Council, in anticipation of free elections. 2019 events Inauguration of Maduro In January 2019, Leopoldo Lรณpez's Popular Will party attained the leadership of the National Assembly of Venezuela according to a rotation agreement made by opposition parties, naming Juan Guaidรณ as president of the legislative body. Guaidรณ began motions to form a provisional government shortly after assuming his new role on 5 January 2019, stating that whether or not Maduro began his new term on the 10th, the country would not have a legitimately elected president in either case, calling for soldiers to "enforce the Constitution" Signs of impending crisis showed when a Supreme Court Justice and Electoral Justice seen as close to Maduro defected to the United States just a few days before the 10 January 2019 second inauguration of Nicolรกs Maduro. The justice, , said that Maduro was "incompetent" and "illegitimate". Minutes after Maduro took the oath as president of Venezuela, the OAS approved a resolution in a special session of its Permanent Council declaring Maduro's presidency illegitimate and urging new elections. Maduro's election was supported by Turkey, Russia, China, and the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America (ALBA). Guaidรณ announced a public assembly, referred to as an open cabildo, on 11 January, a rally in the streets of Caracas, where Guaidรณ spoke on behalf of the National Assembly saying that the country had fallen into a de facto dictatorship and had no leader. Guaidรณ said that the National Assembly would "take the responsibility that touches us". Leaders of other political parties, trade unions, women, and students also spoke at the rally. The opposition considered assuming the powers of the executive branch legitimate based on constitutional processes; The National Assembly specifically invoked Articles 233, 333, and 350 of the Constitution. Guaidรณ announced nationwide protests to be held on 23 Januaryโ€”the same day as the removal of Marcos Pรฉrez Jimรฉnez in 1958โ€”using a slogan chant of ยกSรญ se puede!. The National Assembly worked with the coalition Frente Amplio Venezuela Libre to create a plan for the demonstrations, organizing a unified national force. On 11 January, plans to offer incentives for the armed forces to disavow Maduro were announced. Guaidรณ declared acting president During Guaidรณ's speech, he said he was "willing to assume command ...ย only possible with the help of Venezuelans". Following Guaidรณ's speech, the National Assembly released a press statement saying that Guaidรณ had assumed the role of acting president. The Assembly retracted the statement later published another clarifying Guaidรณ's position as "willing to assume command ...ย only possible with the help of Venezuelans". Maduro's response was to call the opposition a group of "little boys", describing Guaidรณ as "immature". The Minister for Prison Services, Iris Varela, threatened that she had picked out a prison cell for Guaidรณ and asked him to be quick in naming his cabinet so she could prepare prison cells for them as well. The president of the Supreme Tribunal of Justice of Venezuela in exile, based in Panama, wrote to Guaidรณ, requesting him to become acting president of Venezuela. OAS Secretary-General Luis Almagro was the first to give international official support to Guaidรณ's claim, tweeting "We welcome the assumption of Juan Guaidรณ as interim president of Venezuela in accordance with Article 233 of the Political Constitution. You have our support, that of the international community and of the people of Venezuela." Later that day, Brazil and Colombia gave their support to Guaidรณ as acting president of Venezuela. Guaidรณ briefly detained, plans continue Guaidรณ was detained on 13 January by the Bolivarian Intelligence Service (SEBIN) and released 45ย minutes later. The SEBIN agents who intercepted his car and took him into custody were fired. The Information Minister, Jorge Rodrรญguez, said the agents did not have instructions and the arrest was orchestrated by Guaidรณ as a "media stunt" to gain popularity; BBC News correspondents said that it appeared to be a genuine ambush to send a message to the opposition. Almagro condemned the arrest, which he called a "kidnapping", while Pompeo referred to it as an "arbitrary detention". After his detention, Guaidรณ said that Rodrรญguez's admission that the SEBIN agents acted independently showed that the government had lost control of its security forces; he called Miraflores (the presidential palace) "desperate", and stated: "There is one legitimate president of the National Assembly and of all Venezuela." On 15 January 2019, the National Assembly approved legislation to work with dozens of foreign countries to request that these nations freeze Maduro administration bank accounts. Guaidรณ wrote a 15 January 2019 opinion piece in The Washington Post entitled "Maduro is a usurper. It's time to restore democracy in Venezuela"; he outlined Venezuela's erosion of democracy and his reasoning for the need to replace Maduro on an interim basis according to Venezuela's constitution. On 21 January, over two dozen National Guardsmen participated in a mutiny against Maduro with the assistance of residents in the area during the early morning hours. Government forces repressed the protestors tear gas and the officers were later captured. During the night, over thirty communities in Caracas and surrounding areas participated in strong protests against the Maduro government. The strongest protests occurred in San Josรฉ de Cotiza, where the rebel National Guardsmen were arrested, with demonstrations spreading throughout nearby communities, with cacerolazos heard throughout Caracas. One woman who was confused for a protester was killed in San Josรฉ de Cotiza by members of a colectivo, who stole her phone. On 22 January, Vice President Mike Pence called Guaidรณ personally and assured him that the United States would support his declaration. Guaidรณ declares himself acting president On 23 January, Guaidรณ swore to serve as acting president. On that morning, Guaidรณ tweeted, "The world's eyes are on our homeland today." On that day, millions of Venezuelans demonstrated across the country and world in support of Guaidรณ, with a few hundred supporting Maduro outside Miraflores. At one end of the blocked street was a stage where Guaidรณ spoke and took an oath to serve as interim president. Minutes after his speech, the United States announced that it recognized Guaidรณ as interim president while presidents Ivรกn Duque of Colombia and Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil, beside Canadian prime minister Chrystia Freeland, announced at the World Economic Forum that they too recognized him. The Venezuelan National Guard used tear gas on gathering crowds at other locations, and blocked protesters from arriving. Some protests grew violent, and at least 13ย people were killed. Michelle Bachelet of the United Nations requested a UN investigation into the security forces' use of violence. Guaidรณ began to appoint individuals in late January to serve as aides or diplomats, including Carlos Vecchio as the Guaidรณ administration's diplomatic envoy to the US, Gustavo Tarre to the OAS, and Julio Borges to represent Venezuela in the Lima Group. He announced that the National Assembly had approved a commission to implement a plan for the reconstruction of Venezuela, called Plan Paรญs (Plan for the Country), and he offered an Amnesty law, approved by the National Assembly, for military personnel and authorities who help to "restore constitutional order". The Statute Governing the Transition to Democracy was approved by the National Assembly on 5 February. As of July 2019, the National Assembly had approved Juan Guaidรณ's appointment has named 37 ambassadors and foreign representatives to international organizations and nations abroad. Maduro response Maduro accused the United States of backing a coup and said he would cut ties with them. He said Guaidรณ's actions were part of a "well-written script from Washington" to create a puppet state of the United States, and appealed to the American people in a 31 January video, asking them not to "convert Venezuela into another Vietnam". Maduro asked for dialogue with Guaidรณ, saying "if I have to go meet this boy in the Pico Humboldt at three in the morning I am going, [...] if I have to go naked, I am going, [I believe] that today, sooner rather than later, the way is open for a reasonable, sincere dialogue". He stated he would not leave the presidential office, saying that he was elected in compliance with the Venezuelan constitution. With the two giving speeches to supporters at the same time, Guaidรณ replied to Maduro's call for dialogue, saying he would not initiate diplomatic talks with Maduro because he believed it would be a farce and fake diplomacy that could not achieve anything. On 18 February, Maduro's government expelled a group of Members of the European Parliament that planned to meet Guaidรณ. The expulsion was condemned by Guaidรณ as well as Pablo Casado, president of the Spanish People's Party, and the Colombian government. Maduro's Foreign Minister Jorge Arreaza defended the expulsions, saying that the constitutional government of Venezuela "will not allow the European extreme right to disturb the peace and stability of the country with another of its gross interventionist actions." Humanitarian aid crisis Shortages in Venezuela have been present since 2007 during the presidency of Hugo Chรกvez. In 2016, the National Assembly of Venezuela declared a humanitarian crisis, asking Maduro's government to provide access to essential medicines and medical supplies. Before the presidential crisis, the Maduro government denied several offers of aid, stating that there was not a humanitarian crisis and that such claims were used to justify foreign intervention. Maduro's refusal of aid worsened the effects of Venezuela's crisis. During the presidential crisis, Maduro initially refused aid, stating that Venezuela is not a country of "beggars". Guaidรณ made bringing humanitarian aid to the country a priority. In early February, Maduro prevented the American-sponsored aid from entering Venezuela via Colombia, and Venezuela's communications minister, Jorge Rodriguez, said there was a plot between Colombia, the CIA and exiled Venezuelan politician Julio Borges to oust Maduro. Humanitarian aid intended for Venezuela was also stockpiled on the Brazilian border, and two indigenous Pemon people were killed as they attempted to block military vehicles from entering the area, when members of armed forces loyal to Maduro fired upon them with live ammunition. Guaidรณ issued an ultimatum to the Venezuelan Armed Forces, stating that humanitarian aid would enter Venezuela on 23 February and that the armed forces "will have to decide if it will be on the side of the Venezuelans and the Constitution or the usurper". Guaidรณ defied the restriction imposed by the Maduro administration on him leaving Venezuela, secretly crossed the border, saying that with the help of the Venezuelan military, and appeared at the Venezuela Aid Live concert in Cรบcuta, Colombia on 22 February, also to be present for the planned delivery of humanitarian aid. Testing Maduro's authority, he was met by presidents Ivรกn Duque of Colombia, Sebastiรกn Piรฑera from Chile, and Mario Abdo Benรญtez from Paraguay, as well as the OAS Secretary-General Luis Almagro. On 23 February, trucks with humanitarian aid attempted to enter Venezuela from Brazil and Colombia; the attempts failed, with only one truck able to deliver aid. At the Colombiaโ€“Venezuela border, the caravans were tear-gassed or shot at with rubber bullets by Venezuelan personnel. The National Guard repressed demonstrations on the Brazilian border and colectivos attacked protesters near the Colombian border, leaving at least four dead, and more than 285 injured. Lima Group meeting and Latin American tour Guaidรณ traveled from Cรบcuta to Bogotรก for a 24 February meeting with US Vice President Mike Pence, and a 25 February meeting of the Lima Group. The group urged the International Criminal Court to pursue charges of crimes against humanity for the Maduro administration's use of violence against civilians and blockade of humanitarian aid. Pence did not rule out the use of US military force. The Venezuelan government responded saying that Pence was trying to order others to take the country's assets, and saying that its basic rights were being disregarded in a campaign to unseat Maduro. Brazil's vice president said it would not permit its territory to be used to invade Venezuela, and the European Union cautioned against the use of military force. The Lima Group rejected the use of force as well. The US FAA warned pilots not to fly below 26,000ย feet over Venezuela, and US military officials said they had flown reconnaissance flights off the coast of Venezuela to gather classified intelligence about Maduro. From Bogotรก, Guaidรณ embarked on a regional tour to meet with the presidents of Brazil, Paraguay, Argentina, and Ecuador, to discuss ways to rebuild Venezuela and defeat Maduro. Guaidรณ's trip was approved by Venezuela's National Assembly, as required by the Constitution of Venezuela, but he faced the possibility of being imprisoned when returning to Venezuela because of the travel restriction placed upon him by the Maduro administration. He re-entered Venezuela on 4 March, via Simรณn Bolรญvar International Airport in Maiquetรญa, and was received at the airport by diplomats and in Caracas by a crowd of supporters. German ambassador Daniel Kriener was accused of interference in internal affairs and expelled from Venezuela because of his role in helping Guaidรณ re-enter. Blackouts In March 2019, Venezuela experienced a near total electrical blackout, and lost 150,000ย barrels per day in crude oil production during the blackout. Full recovery of oil production was expected to take months, but by April, Venezuela's exports were steady at a million barrels daily, "partially due to inventory drains". Experts and state-run Corpoelec (Corporaciรณn Elรฉctrica Nacional) sources attributed the electricity shortages to lack of maintenance, underinvestment, corruption and to a lack of technical expertise in the country resulting from a brain drain; Nicolรกs Maduro's administration attributes them to sabotage. Guaidรณ said that Venezuela's largest-ever power outage was "the product of the inefficiency, the incapability, the corruption of a regime that doesn't care about the lives of Venezuelans", Maduro's Attorney General, Tarek William Saab, called for an investigation of Guaidรณ, alleging that he had "sabotaged" the electric sector. While Maduro visited hydroelectric facilities in Ciudad Guayana on 16 March, promising to restructure the state-run power company Corpoelec, his Vice President Delcy Rodrรญguez announced that Maduro would restructure his administration, asking the "entire executive Cabinet to put their roles up for review". Guaidรณ announced he would embark on a tour of the country beginning 16 March, to organize committees for Operation Freedom with the goal to claim the presidential residence, Miraflores Palace. From the first rally in Carabobo state, he said, "We will be in each state of Venezuela and for each state we have visited the responsibility will be yours, the leaders, the united, [to] organize ourselves in freedom commands." United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) commissioner Michelle Bachelet's office sent a five-person delegation to Venezuela in March. On 20 March, Bachelet delivered a preliminary oral report before the UN Human Rights Council, in which she outlined a "devastating and deteriorating" human rights situation in Venezuela, expressed concern that sanctions would worsen the situation, and called on authorities to show a true commitment to recognizing and resolving the situation. Elvis Amoroso, Maduro's comptroller, alleged in March that Guaidรณ had not explained how he paid for his February 2019 Latin American trip, and said Guaidรณ would be barred from running for public office for fifteen years. The comptroller general is not a judicial body; according to constitutional lawyer Josรฉ Vicente Haro, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights ruled in 2011 that an administrative body cannot disallow a public servant from running. Constitutional law expert Juan Manuel Raffalli stated that Article 65 of Venezuela's Constitution provides that such determinations may only be made by criminal courts, after judgment of criminal activity. Red Cross aid effort In March, Francesco Rocca, president of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, announced that the Red Cross was preparing to bring humanitarian aid to the country in April to help ease both the chronic hunger and the medical crisis. The Wall Street Journal said that the acceptance of humanitarian shipments by Maduro was his first acknowledgement that Venezuela is "suffering from an economic collapse." After a 9 April meeting with the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), Maduro indicated for the first time that he was prepared to accept international aid. Guaidรณ called on Venezuelans to "stay vigilant to make sure incoming aid is not diverted for 'corrupt' purposes". Following the joint report from Human Rights Watch and Johns Hopkins in April 2019, increasing announcements from the United Nations about the scale of the humanitarian crisis, and the softening of Maduro's position on receiving aid, the ICRC tripled its budget for aid to Venezuela. The first Red Cross delivery of supplies for hospitals arrived on 16 April, offering an encouraging sign that the Maduro administration would allow more aid to enter. According to The New York Times, "armed pro-government paramilitaries" fired weapons to disrupt the first Red Cross delivery, and officials associated with Maduro's party told the Red Cross to leave. According to the Associated Press, having long denied that there was a humanitarian crisis in Venezuela, Maduro positioned the delivery "as a necessary measure to confront punishing U.S. economic sanctions." Having "rallied the international community", Guaidรณ "quickly claimed credit for the effort." Revocation of Guaidรณ's parliamentary immunity Chief justice Maikel Moreno asked that the Constituent Assembly (ANC), controlled by Maduro loyalists, remove Guaidรณ's parliamentary immunity as president of the National Assembly, moving the Maduro administration a step closer towards prosecuting Guaidรณ. Guaidรณ supporters disagree that the Maduro-backed institutions have the authority to ban Guaidรณ from leaving the country and consider acts of the ANC "null and void". The Venezuelan Constitution provides that only the National Assembly can bring the president to trial by approving the legal proceeding in a "merit hearing". On 2 April, after the ANC voted to remove his parliamentary immunity, Guaidรณ promised to continue fighting "Maduro's 'cowardly, miserable and murderous' regime." Military uprising attempt On 19 April, Guaidรณ called for a "definite end of the usurpation" and the "largest march in history" on 1 May. Coinciding with his speech, NetBlocks stated that state-run CANTV again blocked access to social media in Venezuela. On 30 April 2019, Leopoldo Lรณpez, who was held under house arrest by the Maduro administration, was freed on orders from Guaidรณ. The two men, flanked by members of the Venezuelan armed forces near La Carlota Air Force Base in Caracas, announced an uprising, stating that this was the final phase of "Operation Freedom". Though Guaidรณ said his forces held La Carlota, when supporters approached the base, Guaidรณ and a few dozen supporters stayed in a nearby overpass outside. Maduro was not seen during the day, but he appeared with his Defense Minister Padrino on that evening's televised broadcast, and announced he would replace Manuel Cristopher Figuera, Director General of the Bolivarian Intelligence Service (SEBIN), who had broken with Maduro during the uprising, saying it was time to "rebuild the country" and that "scoundrels were plundering the country." The United States said Maduro had prepared to leave Venezuela that morning, but Russia and Cuba helped convince him to stay. Both Russia and Maduro denied that he had plans to leave Venezuela. Guaidรณ's supporters were forced to retreat by security forces using tear gas. Colectivos fired on protesters with live ammunition, and one protester was shot in the head and killed. Human Rights Watch said it believed that "security forces fired shotgun pellets at demonstrators and journalists." By the end of the day, one protester had died, and Lรณpez was at the Spanish embassy, while about 25 military personnel received asylum in the Panamanian embassy in Caracas. Guaidรณ acknowledged he had received insufficient military backing, but added that "Maduro did not have the support nor the respect of the Armed Forces" and called for strikes beginning on 2 May, with the aim of a general strike later in the month. Russia and the US each charged the other with interference in another country's affairs. Negotiations Following the failed military uprising, momentum surrounding Guaidรณ had subsided and fewer supporters gathered at demonstrations, with Guaidรณ resorting to negotiations with Maduro. Guaidรณ's deputy chief Rafael Del Rosario acknowledged that the debacle on 30 April made the prospect of removing Maduro more difficult. Beginning negotiations was a setback for Guaidรณ's movement, with the Associated Press stating, "Participation in the mediation effort is a reversal for the opposition, which has accused Maduro of using negotiations between 2016 and 2018 to play for time". According to the New York Times, years of difficulties has made Maduro "adept at managing, if not solving, cascading crises", while Phil Gunson of the International Crisis Group stated that despite facing issues, Maduro "must be very pleased that he is now in the driving seat", with the ability to use the actions of Guaidรณ and international actors for propaganda purposes. By May 2019, Trump had decided that Guaidรณ was weak; Bolton attributed a change of Trump's position to a comment made by President of Russia Vladimir Putin to Trump in a phone call that Guaidรณ's claim to the presidency would be the equivalent of Hillary Clinton declaring herself president following the 2016 United States presidential election. Representatives of Guaidรณ and Maduro began mediation with the assistance of the Norwegian Centre for Conflict Resolution (NOREF), with Jorge Rodrรญguez and Hรฉctor Rodrรญguez serving as representatives for Maduro while and Stalin Gonzรกlez were representatives for Guaidรณ. Guaidรณ confirmed that there was an envoy in Norway, but assured that the opposition would not take part in "any kind of false negotiation" and that talks must lead to Maduro's resignation, a transitional administration and free and fair elections. In July 2019, Norway's commission carried out a third round of discussions between Guaidรณ's and Maduro's representatives in Barbados. By August 2019, the Maduro administration decided to halt talks with Guaidรณ's commission after Trump administration imposed new additional sanctions on Venezuela, ordering a freeze on all Venezuelan government assets in the United States and barred transactions with US citizens and companies. Second visit of the OHCHR Ahead of a three-week session of the UN Human Rights Council, the OHCHR chief, Michelle Bachelet, visited Venezuela from 19 to 21 June. The Human Rights Commissioner met separately with both Maduro and Guaidรณ during her visit, as well as with Maduro's Attorney General Tarek William Saab, several human right activists, and families of victims who experienced torture and state repression. Protests occurred in front of the UN office in Caracas during the last day of the visit, denouncing rights abuses carried out by Maduro's administration. Gilber Caro, who was released two days before the visit, joined the protest. Bachelet announced the creation of a delegation maintained by two UN officials that will remain in Venezuela to monitor the humanitarian situation. Bachelet expressed concern that the recent sanctions on oil exports and gold trade could worsen the crisis that has increased since 2013, calling the measures "extremely broad" and that they are capable of exacerbating the suffering of the Venezuelan people. She also called for the release of political prisoners in Venezuela. This was the first time a United Nations High Commissioner of Human Rights visited Venezuela. The final published report addressed the extrajudicial executions, torture, forced disappearances and other human rights violations reportedly committed by Venezuelan security forces in the recent years. Bachelet expressed her concerns for the "shockingly high" number of extrajudicial killings and urged for the dissolution of the Special Action Forces (FAES). According to the report, 1,569 cases of executions as consequence as a result of "resistance to authority" were registered by the Venezuelan authorities from 1 January to 19 March. Other 52 deaths that occurred during 2019 protests were attributed to colectivos. The report also details how the Venezuelan government "aimed at neutralising, repressing and criminalising political opponents and people critical of the government" since 2016. Guaidรณ supported the investigation, stating "the systematic violation of human rights, the repression, the torture... is clearly identified in the (UN) report". Maduro administration described the report as a "biased vision" and demanded it be "corrected". In the words of his foreign minister, "It's a text lacking in scientific rigor, with serious errors in methodology and which seems like a carbon copy of previous reports". Maduro would later state that the OHCHR "has declared itself an enemy" to Maduro and the Bolivarian Revolution. Speaking to reporters after the UN Human Rights Council, Bachelet announced the release of 22 Venezuelan prisoners, including 20 students, judge Maria Lourdes Afiuni, in her second house arrest since March, and journalist Braulio Jatar, arrested in 2016. Bachelet welcomed the conditional releases and the acceptance of the two officers delegation as "the beginning of positive engagement on the country's many human rights issues". In October 2019, Venezuela competed for one of the two seats to the United Nations Human Rights Council, along with Brazil and Costa Rica, and was elected with 105 votes in a secret ballot by the 193-member United Nations General Assembly. Brazil was re-elected with 153 votes, while Costa Rica was not having garnered 96 votes and entering the month of the election as competition to Venezuela. The United States, Lima Group and human rights groups lobbied against Venezuela's election. On 16 September 2020, the United Nations accused the Maduro government of crimes against humanity. Torture and death of Acosta Arรฉvalo On 26 June, Maduro said that his government had arrested several defecting military, thus foiling a plot to remove him from power and to assassinate him, his wife and Diosdado Cabello. The alleged plan also included the rescue of Raรบl Baduel, a retired general imprisoned for a second time in 2017, to install him as president. Maduro accused Israel, Colombia, Chile and the United States of involvement in the plot. Jorge Rodrรญguez said that the foiled plan involved the bombing of a government building, the seizing of La Carlota air base, and a bank robbery. Guaidรณ dismissed the allegations as lies; opposition members have frequently accused Maduro of coercion of arrested suspects and fabrication of plots for political gain. In the wake of the coup allegations, an alleged kidnapping attempt directed at members of Guaidรณ's entourage occurred on a Caracas highway. Eight armed men on motorcycles dressed as civilians allegedly surrounded a vehicle containing two of Guaidรณ's aides. Guaidรณ, who was in a car further ahead, spoke with the armed civilians, according to photos and a video released by his press team and published by Infobae. According to Guaidรณ, the group received orders from the Venezuelan Military Counter-intelligence agency DGCIM, but were not "hostile". Navy captain Rafael Acosta Arรฉvalo, who had been arrested on charges related to the alleged foiled coup attempt and transferred to a military hospital, died during detention on 28 June. Maduro administration did not provide a cause of death but announced an investigation on the matter. Acosta Arevalo's wife, human rights advocates, Juan Guaidรณ and the US Department of State accused Maduro's administration of torturing the captain to death. The Lima Group and the European Union called for an independent investigation. The preliminary autopsy determined that Acosta Arรฉvalo's cause of death was "severe cerebral edema [brain swelling] caused by acute respiratory failure caused by a pulmonary embolism caused by rhabdomyolysis [a potentially life-threatening breakdown of muscle fibers] by multiple trauma". Operaciรณn Alacrรกn An investigation led by Armando.info reported that nine members of the National Assembly defended individuals sanctioned by the United States for their involvement in the controversial Local Committees for Supply and Production (CLAP) program. The investigation reported that the implicated lawmakers had written letters of support to the United States Treasury and others to a Colombian man named Carlos Lizcano, who authorities were investigating over his possible links to Alex Saab, a Colombian businessman associated with the food distribution program and under United States sanctions. According to Armando.info, the lawmakers wrote the letters despite being aware of evidence that tied Lizcano to Saab. Guaidรณ condemned the actions of the nine legislators, suspending them from their positions and stating that it was "unacceptable to use a state institution to attempt to whitewash the reputation of thieves". The scandal damaged Guaidรณ's reputation among his supporters in Venezuela, with some members of the opposition beginning to call for new leadership, according to analysts and those involved. The Maduro government increased its pressure by "deploying bribes, intimidation and repression" attempting to divide the opposition to maintain power. Dollarization Following increased sanctions throughout 2019, the Maduro government abandoned policies established by Chรกvez such as price and currency controls. In a November 2019 interview with Josรฉ Vicente Rangel, President Maduro described dollarization as an "escape valve" that helps the recovery of the country, the spread of productive forces in the country and the economy. However, Maduro said that the Venezuelan bolรญvar would still remain as the national currency. The Economist wrote that Venezuela had also obtained "extra money from selling gold, both from illegal mines and from its reserves, and narcotics". Its article continued to explain that the improving economy led to more difficulties for Guaidรณ as Venezuelans who had a better situation were less likely to protest against Maduro. 2020 events Internal parliamentary election disrupted The 2020 Venezuelan National Assembly Delegated Committee election of 5 January, to elect the Board of Directors of the National Assembly was disrupted. The events resulted in two competing claims for the Presidency of the National Assembly: one by Luis Parra and one by Juan Guaidรณ. Parra was formerly a member of Justice First, but was expelled from the party on 20 December 2019 based on the Operaciรณn Alacrรกn corruption allegations, which he denied. From inside the legislature, Parra declared himself president of the National Assembly, a move that was welcomed by the Maduro administration. The opposition disputed this outcome, saying that quorum had not been achieved and that no votes were counted. Police forces had blocked access to parliament to some opposition members, including Guaidรณ and journalists. Later in the day, a separate session was carried out at the headquarters of El Nacional newspaper, where 100 of the 167 deputies voted to re-elect Guaidรณ as president of the parliament. Guaidรณ was sworn in a session on 7 January after forcing his way in through police barricades. On the same day, Parra reiterated his claim to the parliament's presidency. Russia is the only foreign government to have officially recognized Luis Parra's investiture, while the European Union, the United States, Canada, and most Latin American countries recognized Guaidรณ's re-election. Guaidรณ second international tour On 19 January, Guaidรณ once again exited Venezuela and arrived in Colombia, planning to meet with Mike Pompeo, as well as traveling to Europe and the United States later, defying his exit prohibition for a second time. Guaidรณ travelled to Brussels, Belgium, and on 22 January met with Margaritis Schinas, Vice-President of the European Commission, and Josep Borrell, High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs. On 23 January, Guaidรณ participated in the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. During his trip in Europe, Guaidรณ also met with Boris Johnson, Emmanuel Macron, and Angela Merkel. Afterwards, Guaidรณ travelled to Canada and met with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. On February 4, he was invited to President Donald Trump's 2020 State of the Union address to Congress, and was applauded by the crowd, which was composed of members of both Democratic and Republican parties. Diosdado Cabello declared that "nothing" would happen to Guaidรณ when he returned to Venezuela. After meeting with Donald Trump in the White House, Constituent Assembly member Pedro Carreรฑo said that if Guaidรณ wanted to come back as "commander-in-chief", "we will receive him with this peinilla", hitting his podium with a machete. Guaidรณ was allowed back into Venezuela by officials through Simรณn Bolรญvar International Airport on 12 February, despite the travel ban imposed by Maduro's government. Security forces installed an anti-aircraft gun in the Caracas-La Guaira highway and blocked the highway; opposition deputies had to reach the airport on foot to receive Guaidรณ. Due to the block, several ambassadors were also unable to go to the airport. Upon Guaidรณ's arrival at the Simรณn Bolรญvar International Airport, around two hundred Maduro supporters surrounded and jostled Guaidรณ, his wife Fabiana Rosales and several opposition deputies that waited for him at the airport. Some journalists were also attacked and had their equipment stolen by the group. Tens of military and police officials were present and did not intervene to prevent the attack. Several passengers declared to local outlets that Maduro's administration sent a group of pro-government activists to insult and harass the opposition members with impunity, including employees of the recently sanctioned Conviasa airline. The Inter American Press Association condemned the attacks on the journalists. The following day, the opposition and relatives denounced that Guaidรณ's uncle, Juan Josรฉ Mรกrquez, had been missing for 24 hours after receiving his nephew in the airport, blaming Maduro's government. His wife declared that Mรกrquez was detained in the migration area and that his whereabouts were unknown. Afterwards, in his television talk show Con El Mazo Dando, Diosdado Cabello accused Mรกrquez of carrying explosives when he landed in Venezuela. Hours later, a court formalized Mรกrquez's detention, copying Cabello's accusations. Mรกrquez was detained in the Caracas headquarters of the Directorate General of Military Counterintelligence, despite him being a civilian. Barquisimeto shooting On 29 February Juan Guaidรณ mobilized a march against the government of Nicolรกs Maduro in the Juan de Villegas parish, Barquisimeto, Lara state. The day of the march, pro-government colectivos shot at Guaidรณ, who was in a van at the time of the shooting. Bolivarian National Intelligence Service agents were also reported of having participated in the attack. Guaidรณ's vehicle received nine gunshots and the shooting left a total of ten wounded. COVID-19 pandemic The COVID-19 pandemic was confirmed to have spread to Venezuela on 13 March, when the Maduro administration announced the first two cases. On 16 March, Maduro reversed the country's official position against the International Monetary Fund (IMF), asking the institution for US$5ย billion to combat the pandemic, a first during Maduro's presidency, being a critic of the institution. The IMF rejected the deal as it was not clear, among its member states, on who it recognizes as Venezuela's president. According to a report by Bloomberg, the Maduro administration also tried to request aid of $1 billion from the IMF after the first request was denied. Guaidรณ called for the creation of a "national emergency government", not led by Maduro, on 28 March. According to Guaidรณ, a loan of US$1.2 billion was ready to be given in support of a power-sharing coalition between pro-Maduro officials, the military and the opposition in order to fight the pandemic in Venezuela. If accepted, the money would go to assist families affected by the disease and its economic consequences. US Department of Justice indictment On 26 March, the US Department of State offered $15 million on Nicolรกs Maduro, and $10 million each on Diosdado Cabello, Hugo Carvajal, Clรญver Alcalรก Cordones and Tareck El Aissami, for information leading to their arrest in relation to charges of drug trafficking and narco-terrorism. Maduro had been offering to hold talks with the opposition about handling the outbreak in the country shortly before the indictment and then called them off. After being indicted, retired general Clรญver Alcalรก in Colombia published a video claiming responsibility for a stockpile of weapons and military equipment seized in Colombia. According to Alcalรก, he had made a contract with Guaidรณ and "American advisers" in order to buy weapons to remove Maduro. Alcalรก did not present any evidence and Guaidรณ rejected the allegations. After wishing farewell to his family, Alcalรก surrendered to US authorities on 27 March. Transitional government proposals On 31 March, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said that sanctions did not apply to humanitarian aid during the COVID-19 pandemic in Venezuela and that the US would lift all sanctions if Maduro agreed to organize elections that did not include himself in a period of six to twelve months. Pompeo reiterated US support for Juan Guaidรณ. The US proposed a transitional government that would exclude both Maduro and Guaidรณ from the presidency. The deal would enforce a power-sharing scenario between the different government factions. Elections would have to be held within the year, and all foreign militaries, particularly Cuba and Russia, would have to leave the country. The US were still seeking Maduro's arrest at the time of the announcement. Other aspects of the US deal would include releasing all political prisoners and setting up a five-person council to lead the country; two members each chosen by Maduro and Guaidรณ would sit on the council, with the last member selected by the four. The European Union also agreed to remove sanctions if the deal went ahead. Experts have noted that the deal is similar to earlier proposals but explicitly mentions who would lead a transitional government, something which stalled previous discussions, and comes shortly after the US indicted Maduro, which might pressure him to peacefully leave power. Guaidรณ accepted the proposal while Venezuela's foreign minister Jorge Arreaza rejected it and declared that only parliamentary elections would take place in 2020. Arreaza said that "decisions about Venezuela would be made in Caracas and not in Washington or other capitals" and that "the most important transition for Venezuela was the one started many years ago from capitalism to socialism." After various members of Guaidรณ's team were arrested on 30 March, Guaidรณ denounced a new wave of attacks against him. Following that, Attorney General Tarek William Saab called Juan Guaidรณ to appear before the Public Ministry on 2 April based on Alcalรก's accusations. Guaidรณ did not accept to appear before the public prosecutor. The day of the citation, two more members of Guaidรณ's office were arrested, charged for alleged "attempted coup d'etat" and "magnicide". Guaidรณ's team reported that "With this new assault by the dictatorship, there are now 10 [of its] members that have been detained by security forces. Five of them in the last 72 hours." Reuters reported that during the pandemic allies of both Nicolรกs Maduro and Juan Guaidรณ had secretly begun exploratory talks, according to sources on both sides. Guaidรณ and US Special Representative for Venezuela Elliott Abrams have denied that negotiations have taken place. The Associated Press reported that the National Assembly agreed to establish a monthly $5,000 salary for the lawmakers funded from an $80 million "Liberation Fund" made up of Venezuelan assets seized by the Trump administration. Guaidรณ's communications team issued a statement denying that such salary had been approved, saying that lawmakers have gone unpaid since Maduro cut off funding after the opposition won the legislature in 2015 and that the deputies would determine an appropriate, as well as communicating it transparently. It also said that the $14 million in funding destined for the National Assembly would cover not only the deputies' personal income, but also office expenses, staff costs, travel and other related legislative expenses. Operation Gideon Eight former Venezuelan soldiers were killed and seventeen rebels were captured on 3 May, including two American security contractors, after approximately 60 men landed in Macuto and tried to invade Venezuela. The members of the naval attack force were employed as private military contractors by Silvercorp USA and the operation aimed to depose Maduro from power. Parliamentary election The opposition parties that make up the Democratic Unity Roundtable coalition agreed unanimously not to participate in the election, stating the reason as irregularities and their complaints during the planning of the process and arguing that it was likely the election would be fraudulent. Twenty-seven political parties signed the agreement, including the four largest opposition parties Popular Will, Justice First, Democratic Action and A New Era. The opposition criticized the appointment of the members of the National Electoral Council by the Supreme Tribunal, stating that it is under the purview of the National Assembly, and at least seven political parties had their board of directors suspended or replaced by the pro-government Supreme Tribunal of Justice, including Popular Will, Justice First, Democratic Action, and Copei, as well as left-wing political parties, including Tupamaro, Fatherland for All, and Red Flag. Opposition politicians Henrique Capriles and Stalin Gonzรกlez initially encouraged participation in the elections. They later withdrew and demanded better electoral conditions. The Lima Group, the International Contact Group, the European Union and the United States rejected holding parliamentary elections in 2020, insisting in the necessity of holding elections "with free and fair conditions". The International Contact Group, headed by Uruguay, stated the formation of the Electoral Council "undermines the credibility of the next electoral process." The Organization of American States (OAS) stated the appointment of the Electoral Council was "illegal", rejecting it, and further stated that independent bodies are needed for "transparent, free and fair" elections to take place in the country. In July, the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, headed by Michelle Bachelet, said that "the recent decisions of the Supreme Tribunal of Justice diminish the possibility to build conditions for democratic and credible electoral processes" and "appoint new National Electoral Council rectors without the consensus of all the political forces." 2021 events As a response to the position of the Popular Will party of focusing on a timetable for presidential, parliamentary and regional elections, Leopoldo Lรณpez said that "telling us from Europe that we are maximalist because we want freedom is a colonialist commentโ€‰[...]โ€‰that we should renounce our dream of freedom when you already have it." On 5 August 2021, Mexican President Andrรฉs Manuel Lรณpez Obrador announced that Mexico would host talks between the Maduro government and the political opposition. 2022 events San Carlos attack On 11 June 2022, pro-government followers attacked Guaidรณ after an opposition march in San Carlos, Cojedes state, throwing objects at him and violently removing him from the restaurant he was holding a meeting in. Nosliw Rodrรญguez, former PSUV deputy and candidate for the Cojedes governorship, was identified as one of the people that led the attack against Guaidรณ. Interim government dissolution On 30 December 2022, three of the four main political parties (Justice First, Democratic Action and A New Era) backed a reform of the Statute for the Transition to Democracy to dissolve the interim government and create a commission of five members to manage foreign assets, stating that the interim government had failed to achieve the goals it had set. The amendment was voted by the opposition National Assembly as deputies sought a united strategy ahead of the presidential elections scheduled for 2024. The reform was approved with 72 votes in favor, 29 against and 8 abstentions. Recognition, reactions, and public opinion At his peak, Guaidรณ's claim as the interim president of Venezuela was recognized 57 countries, "including the US, Canada and most Latin American and European countries". Other countries were divided between a neutral position, support for the National Assembly in general without endorsing Guaidรณ, and support for Maduro's presidency; internationally, support followed traditional geopolitical lines, with Russia, China, Iran, Syria, Cuba, and Turkey supporting Maduro, and the US, Canada, and most of Western Europe supporting Guaidรณ. The European Parliament recognized Guaidรณ as interim president. In 2019, the European Union unanimously recognized the National Assembly, but Italy dissented on recognizing Guaidรณ. In January 2021, the European Union stopped recognizing Guaidรณ's claim, but still did not recognize Maduro as the legitimate president; the European Parliament reaffirmed its recognition of Guaidรณ as president, and the EU threatened with further sanctions. The OAS approved a resolution on 10 January 2019 "to not recognize the legitimacy of Nicolรกs Maduro's new term". In a 24 January special OAS session, sixteen countries including the US recognized Guaidรณ as interim president, but they did not achieve the majority needed for a resolution. The United Nations called for dialogue and deescalation of tension, but could not agree on any other path for resolving the crisis. Twelve of the fourteen members of the Lima Group recognize Guaidรณ; Beatriz Becerraโ€”on the day after she retired as head of the human rights subcommittee for the European Parliamentโ€”said that the International Contact Group, jointly sponsored by Uruguay and Mexico, had been of no use and "has been an artifact that has served no purpose since it was created". She said there had been no progress on the 90-day deadline for elections that the group established when it was formed, and she considered that the Contact Group should be terminated and efforts coordinated through the Lima Group. During the 49th General Assembly of the Organization of American States, on 27 June, Guaidรณ's presidency was recognized by the organization. The Venezuelan Observatory of Social Conflictivity stated that there were on average 69 protests daily in Venezuela during the first three months of 2019, for a total of 6,211 protests, representing a significant increase over previous years (157% of protests for the same period in 2018, and 395% relative to the number in 2017). Following the failed uprising on 30 April, support for Guaidรณ declined, attendance to his demonstrations subsided and participants in committees organized by Guaidรณ stated that there has been little progress. Reuters reported in June that analysts have predicted that Maduro would maintain his position as he gains confidence that his actions against the opposition go "relatively unpunished". By the end of 2019, support for Guaidรณ dropped, with protests organized by his movement resulting with low participation. Pollster Datanรกlisis published figures showing that support for Guaidรณ decreased from 61% in February to 42% in November 2019. According to Jesรบs Seguรญas, the head of the Venezuelan analysis firm Datincorp, "For years Washington and the Venezuelan opposition have said that Nicolรกs Maduro, and before him Hugo Chรกvez, were weak and about to fall [...] but it's clear that's not the case". Analyst Carlos Pina stated that as "[t]he military support to President Maduro remains intact", the opposition will need to "rethink its strategy" and that "Guaidรณ has also been very limited in suggesting or proposing a strategy that could change the current [status quo]." Into December 2019, Venezuelan pollster Meganรกlisis surveys showed that 10% of respondents approved of Guaidรณ, compared to 9% who supported Maduro. As of January 2023, following the opposition vote to dissolve Guaidรณ's interim government, the United States stopped recognizing Guaidรณ's presidential claim. A spokesperson for the White House and State Department said that the US "recognized the National Assembly elected in 2015, which Guaidรณ had led, as Venezuela's 'only remaining democratically elected institution'." Defections The Miami Herald reported that dozens of arrests were made in anticipation of a military uprising, and Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino Lรณpez ordered a counterintelligence effort to locate conspirators or possible defectors. According to France 24, Maduro declared "military deserters who fled to Colombia have become mercenaries" as part of a "US-backed coup". Guaidรณ declared that the opposition had held secret meetings with military officials to discuss the Amnesty Law. Hugo Carvajal, the head of Venezuela's military intelligence for ten years during Hugo Chรกvez's presidency and "one of the government's most prominent figures", publicly broke with Maduro and endorsed Guaidรณ as acting president. During the 30 April 2019 uprising attempt, Manuel Cristopher Figuera, the Director General of Venezuela's National Intelligence Service, SEBIN, broke with Maduro. Certain top military figures recognized Guaidรณ, and around 1,400 military personnel have defected to Colombia, but the top military command stays loyal to the government. Following the 23 January events, some Venezuelan diplomats in the United States supported Guaidรณ; the majority returned to Venezuela on Maduro's orders. Foreign military involvement In early 2019, with Cuban and Russian-backed security forces in the country, United States military involvement became the subject of speculation. Senior U.S. officials have declared that "all options are on the table", but they have also said that "our objective is a peaceful transfer of power". Colombian guerrillas from National Liberation Army (ELN) have vowed to defend Maduro, with ELN leaders in Cuba stating that they have been drafting plans to provide military assistance to Maduro. Article 187 of the Venezuelan Constitution provides that "[i]t shall be the function of the National Assembly: (11) To authorize the operation of Venezuelan military missions abroad or foreign military missions within the country." In every demonstration summoned by Guaidรณ, there have been numerous signs demanding the application of Article 187, and a March poll showed 87.5% support for foreign intervention. Venezuelan politicians such Marรญa Corina Machado and Antonio Ledezma, former mayor of Caracas, have also demanded the application of the article. According to Giancarlo Fiorella, writing in Foreign Affairs, the "loudest calls for intervention are coming not from the White House and its media mouthpieces but from some members of the Venezuelan opposition and from residents of the country desperate for a solutionโ€”any solutionโ€”to their years-long plight." Fiorella states that "talk of invoking article 187(11) has become commonplace" in Venezuela, adding that "the push for a military intervention in Venezuela is most intense not among hawks in Washington but inside the country itself." Guaidรณ has said he would call for intervention "when the time comes", but in media interviews, he has not stated he supports removing Maduro by force. The National Assembly approved in July 2019 the reincorporation of Venezuela to the Inter-American Treaty of Reciprocal Assistance, a mutual defense pact signed in 1947 that has never been enacted and from which Venezuela retired in 2013. Venezuela's reincorporation to the pact "can be used to request military assistance against foreign troops inside the country." In a 4 December 2019 interview with Vox, Guaidรณ stated: "We sense a firm commitment from the United States. [...] I think they're doing everything they could be doing under these circumstances, as are Colombia and Brazil." When asked if he was nearer from removing Maduro from power than in January 2019, Guaidรณ replied: "Absolutely. Back then we didn't have multiple countries recognizing and supporting us. [...] Today, we have way more tools at our disposal than we did one year ago." Bloomberg News reported two days later that the Trump administration began to doubt that an opposition led by Guaidรณ would remove Maduro from office. The United States reportedly had no military option regarding Venezuela, although it began to debate on whether to partner with Russia to encourage Maduro to leave office or to increase pressure on Cuba, which is the Maduro government's main supporter. Cuban presence According to professor Erick Langer of Georgetown University, "Cuba and Russia have already intervened." A Cuban military presence of at least 15,000 personnel was in Venezuela in early 2018, while estimates ranging from hundreds to thousands of Cuban security forces were reported in 2019. In April 2019, Trump threatened a "full and complete embargo, together with highest-level sanctions" on Cuba if its troops do not cease operations in Venezuela. Russian presence Two nuclear weapon-capable Russian planes landed in Venezuela in December 2018 in what Reuters called a "show of support for Maduro's socialist government." According to the Kremlin, there are about 100 Russian military personnel in Venezuela "to repair equipment and provide technical co-operation". On 23 March 2019, two Russian planes landed in Venezuela carrying 99 troops and 35ย tonnes of matรฉriel. Alexey Seredin from the Russian Embassy in Caracas said the two planes were "part of an effort to maintain Maduro's defense apparatus, which includes Sukhoi fighter jets and anti-aircraft systems purchased from Russia." National Assembly deputy Williams Dรกvila said the National Assembly would investigate the "penetration of foreign forces in Venezuela." Assets and reserves Venezuela's third-largest export (after crude oil and refined petroleum products) is gold. The World Gold Council reported in January 2019 that Venezuela's foreign-held gold reserves had fallen by 69% to US$8.4ย billion during Maduro's presidency. In 2018, Maduro's government exported $900 million worth of gold out of Venezuela into ErdoฤŸan's Turkey. In April 2019, Rubio warned the United Arab Emirates and Turkey not be "accomplices" in the "outrageous crime" of exporting Venezuela's gold. In mid-December 2018, a Venezuelan delegation went to London to arrange for the Bank of England to return the $1.2ย billion in gold bullion that Venezuela stores at the bank. Unnamed sources told Bloomberg that the Bank of England declined the transfer due to a request from US Secretary of State Pompeo and National Security Adviser Bolton, who wanted to "cut off the regime from its overseas assets". In his memoir The Room Where It Happened, Bolton said UK Foreign Minister Jeremy Hunt was "delighted to cooperate on steps they could take, for example freezing Venezuela's gold deposits in the Bank of England, so the regime could not sell the gold to keep itself going". In an interview with the BBC, Maduro asked Britain to return the gold instead of sending humanitarian aid, saying that the gold was "legally Venezuela's, it belongs to the Central Bank of Venezuela" and could be used to solve the country's problems. Guaidรณ asked the British government to ensure that the Bank of England does not provide the gold to the Maduro government. Maduro also said that the US has frozen $10 billion in Venezuelan accounts through its sanctions. In mid-February 2019, a National Assembly legislator รngel Alvarado said that eightย tonnes of gold worth over US$340ย million had been taken from the vault while the head of the Central Bank was abroad. In March, Ugandan investigators reported that the gold could have been smuggled into that country. Government sources said another eight tonnes of gold was taken out of the Central Bank in the first week of April 2019; the government source said that there were 100 tonnes left. The gold was removed while minimal staff was present and the bank was not fully operational because of the ongoing, widespread power outages; the destination of the gold was not known. In 2009, Venezuela's foreign reserves peaked at US$43 billion; by July 2017, they had fallen below $10 billion "for the first time in 15 years", and as of March 2019, they had dropped to US$8 billion. About two-thirds of Venezuela's reserves are in gold. Part of Venezuela's remaining reserves are held by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in financial instruments called SDRs. In 2018, Venezuela had almost $1ย billion in IMF SDRs, but it had drawn US$600 million in one year. To access SDR reserves, IMF rules require than a government be recognized by a majority of IMF members, and there is no majority recognition for either man claiming the Venezuelan presidency; the IMF denied Maduro access to the remaining US$400ย millionโ€”"one of the regime's last remaining sources of cash" according to Bloomberg. The IMF has not recognized Guaidรณ; Ricardo Hausmannโ€”Guaidรณ's representative recognized by the Inter-American Development Bankโ€”said the "IMF is safeguarding the assets until a new government takes over. 'Those funds will be available when this usurpation ends.'" The US has given Guaidรณ control of "key Venezuelan bank accounts", and has said it will give Guaidรณ control of US assets once his administration is in power. The Portuguese bank Novo Banco stopped Maduro's attempt to transfer over US$1ย billion through BANDES subsidiary, Banco Bandes Uruguay, in early 2019. Over two months later, Maduro responded that Portugal had illegally blocked the money, and asked that it be returned to buy food and medicine. In 2020, the English High Court ruled in favor of Juan Guaidรณ in a hearing over whether Guaidรณ or Nicolรกs Maduro should control $1 billion of its gold stored in the Bank of London. In 2022, the United Kingdom Supreme Court ruled in favor of Juan Guaidรณ again regarding the control of the gold stored in the Bank of London. Sanctions During the crisis in Venezuela, the United States, Canada, Mexico, Panama, Switzerland individually, and the countries of the European Union collectively, have applied sanctions against people associated with Maduro's administration, including government officials, members of the military and security forces, and private individuals. As of 27 March 2018, the Washington Office on Latin America said 78ย Venezuelans associated with Maduro had been sanctioned by several countries. On 15 January 2019, the National Assembly approved legislation to work with dozens of foreign countries to request that these nations freeze Maduro administration bank accounts. Through April 2019, the U.S. sanctioned more than 150 companies, vessels and individuals, in addition to revoking visas of 718 individuals associated with Maduro. Christian Krรผger Sarmiento, director of Colombia Migration, announced on 30 January 2019 that the Colombian government maintained a list of people banned from entering Colombia or subject to expulsion. As of January 2019, the list had 200 people with a "close relationship and support for the Nicolรกs Maduro regime", but Krรผger said the initial list could increase or decrease. As the humanitarian crisis deepened and expanded, the Trump administration levied more serious economic sanctions against Venezuela. In January 2019, during the presidential crisis, the United States imposed sanctions on the Venezuelan state-owned oil and natural gas company PDVSA to pressure Maduro to resign. On 15 April 2019, Canada announced that another round of sanctions on 43ย individuals were applied on 12 April based on the Special Economic Measures Act. The government statement said those sanctioned are "high ranking officials of the Maduro regime, regional governors and/or directly implicated in activities undermining democratic institutions". The United States Department of the Treasury has also placed restrictions on transactions with digital currency emitted by or in the name of the government of Venezuela, referencing "Petro", a DIGITAL token. and on Venezuela's gold industry. After the detention of Guaidรณ's chief of staff, Roberto Marrero, in March 2019, the US also sanctioned the Venezuelan bank BANDES and its subsidiaries. The Treasury Department sanctioned seven additional individuals for their involvement in the disputed internal parliamentary elections of the National Assembly in January 2020. An October 2020 report published by the Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA) by Venezuelan economist Luis Oliveros found that "while Venezuela's economic crisis began before the first U.S. sectoral sanctions were imposed in 2017, these measures 'directly contributed to its deep decline, and to the further deterioration of the quality of life of Venezuelans' ". The report concluded that economic sanctions "have cost Venezuela's government as much as $31 billion since 2017" Censorship and media control The Venezuelan press workers union denounced that in 2019, 40ย journalists had been illegally detained as of 12 March; the National Assembly Parliamentary Commission for Media declared that there had been 173ย aggressions against press workers as of 13 March. As of June 2019, journalists have been denied access to seven sessions of the National Assembly by the National Guard. Between 12 January and 18 January, Internet access to Wikipedia (in all languages) was blocked in Venezuela after Guaidรณ's page on the Spanish Wikipedia was edited to show him as president. Later on 21 January, the day of the National Guard mutiny in Cotiza, Internet access to some social media was reported blocked for CANTV users. The Venezuelan government denied it had engaged in blocking. During the 23 January protests, widespread Internet outages for CANTV users were reported. Live streams of the National Assembly sessions and Guaidรณ's speeches have been regularly disrupted for CANTV users. Since 22 January, some radio programs have been ordered off air; other programs have been temporarily canceled or received censorship warnings, including a threat to close private television and radio stations if they recognized Guaidรณ as acting president or interim president of Venezuela. The website "Voluntarios X Venezuela" was promoted by Guaidรณ and the National Assembly to gather volunteers for humanitarian aid. Between 12 and 13 February, CANTV users that tried to access were redirected to a mirror site with a different URL address. The mirror site asked for personal information, including names, ID, address and telephone numbers. The phishing website used the .ve domain controlled by Conatel. This manipulation was denounced as a technique to identify dissidents to the government. Following the phishing incident, the official site was completely blocked for CANTV users on 16 February. During the 2020 election to choose the president of the National Assembly, independent journalists were also impeded from covering the event. Maduro's Ministry of Information, which has no relationship to the National Assembly, allowed reporters from state-run media to enter the legislative palace. Other reporters were not allowed in and told to watch it on a live feed from outside. State communications service CANTV reportedly blocked access to social media sites Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube on the day of the election. Block tracking website NetBlocks reported that the block began as the National Assembly session did. During the COVID-19 pandemic in Venezuela, the National Assembly created a webpage to provide information on the coronavirus disease 2019 to the public. The access to the site was restricted for CANTV users. During Juan Guaidรณ's return to Venezuela in February 2020, after his second international tour, various media workers were insulted, harassed, robbed and physically aggressed by a group of supporters and pro-Maduro agitators that received him in the airport. According to the Venezuelan Press Working Union (SNTP), Venezuelan security forces were present and witnessed the attacks, but did not intervene. When journalists were going to file the complaint to the authorities, security forces impeded their access to the prosecutor office. Closure of social media accounts In September 2020, Facebook closed 55 accounts, 42 pages and 36 Instagram accounts linked to CLS Strategies, a Washington-based public relations firm. Facebook said these were fake accounts used to secretly manipulate politics in Bolivia, Venezuela and Mexico in violation of Facebook's prohibition on foreign interference. The Stanford Internet Observatory, a disinformation research group, reported that CLS Strategies employees had previous professional ties to opposition political leaders in Venezuela. Arrests and detentions Multiple individuals associated with Guaidรณ were arrested or detained by the Maduro government. Roberto Marreroโ€”Guaidรณ's chief of staff and Leopoldo Lรณpez's attorneyโ€”was arrested by SEBIN during a raid on his home on 21 March. Gilber Caro, an alternate deputy and member of Guaidรณ's party, Popular Will, was re-arrested by the Bolivarian Intelligence Service on 26 April 2019. Eleven other members of Guaidรณ's team have been summoned to appear before SEBIN.Most of the individuals who were seen with Guaidรณ during the attempted uprising and many legislators were either arrested or in hiding. In May 2019, the TSJ ordered the prosecution of seven National Assembly members for their actions on 30 April. The rival Constituent Assembly stripped the members of their parliamentary immunity. The National Assembly dismissed the sentence, holding that the members of the Tribunal are illegitimate and that their ruling violates the parliamentary immunity of the deputies. As of 2 May 2019, there were 205 arrests related to protests. National Assembly Vice President Edgar Zambrano was arrested on 8 May 2019. With the seven deputies charged several crimes, an El Paรญs article stated that the Venezuelan parliament, elected to a majority in the 2015 elections, has been "systematically blocked" and dismembered by "political persecution" of 60% of its elected members. There was no preliminary merit hearing as required by law; an additional three deputies were indicted without a preliminary merit hearing. Three of the recently sanctioned members sought temporary refuge in foreign embassies. On 13 July 2019, two of Guaidรณ's security guards were arrested in Caracas. According to Information Minister Jorge Rodrรญguez, the two guards had attempted to sell rifles that had been taken from a National Guard armory ahead of the failed uprising on 30 April 2019. Guaidรณ said that the guards were arrested while protecting his family during his tour around the country. He dismissed the weapon sale allegations and speculated that the authorities would torture and frame the two men by planting weapons on them. Rodrรญguez announced that evidence would be presented during the next round of talks. See also 2019 Venezuelan protests 2019 shipping of humanitarian aid to Venezuela International Conference on the Situation in Venezuela 2019 Bolivian political crisis Notes References Bibliography External links 2019 in Venezuela 2020 in Venezuela 2021 in Venezuela 2022 in Venezuela 2023 in Venezuela Conflicts in 2019 Conflicts in 2020 Conflicts in 2021 Conflicts in 2022 Conflicts in 2023 2019 in politics 2020 in politics 2021 in politics 2022 in politics 2023 in politics Constitutional crises Crisis in Venezuela Foreign relations of Venezuela Political history of Venezuela Articles containing video clips
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%ED%95%9C%EA%B5%AD%EC%96%B4%20%EC%8B%9C%EC%9D%B8%20%EB%AA%A9%EB%A1%9D
ํ•œ๊ตญ์–ด ์‹œ์ธ ๋ชฉ๋ก
์•„๋ž˜๋Š” ํ•œ๊ตญ์–ด ์‹œ์ธ ๋ชฉ๋ก์ด๋‹ค. 21์„ธ๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ธ ๊ฐ€๋‚˜๋‹ค์ˆœ ใ„ฑ ๊ฐ•์€๊ต (1945) ๊ณ ์€ (1933) ๊ณ ์ฐฝ์ˆ˜ (1934) ๊ณ ํ˜•๋ ฌ (1954) ๊ณฝ์žฌ๊ตฌ (1954) ๊ตฌ์ƒ (์‹œ์ธ) (1919โ€“2004) ๊ธฐํ˜•๋„ (1960-1989) ๊น€๊ฒฝ (์‹œ์ธ) (1955-2018) ๊น€๊ฒฝ์ฃผ (์‹œ์ธ) (1976) ๊น€๊ด‘๊ทœ (์‹œ์ธ) (1941) ๊น€๊ด‘๋ฆผ (์‹œ์ธ) (1929) ๊น€๊ตฌ์šฉ (1922๋…„) (1922โ€“2001) ๊น€๊ธฐ๋ฆผ (1908-?) ๊น€๊ธฐํƒ (์‹œ์ธ) (1957) ๊น€๋‚จ์กฐ (1927) ๊น€๋ช…์ˆœ (1896๋…„) (1896โ€“1951) ๊น€๋ช…์ธ (์‹œ์ธ) (1946) ๊น€๋ด‰๊ธธ (์‹œ์ธ) (1956) ๊น€์‚ฌ์ธ (1956) ๊น€์ƒ์˜ฅ (1920๋…„) (1920โ€“2004) ๊น€์„ ์šฐ (์‹œ์ธ) (1970) ๊น€์†Œ์›” (1902โ€“1934) ๊น€์ˆ˜์˜ (1921โ€“1968) ๊น€์ˆ˜์˜ (1921โ€“1968) ๊น€์Šนํฌ (1952) ๊น€์‹ ์šฉ (1945) ๊น€์–ธ (1973) ๊น€์˜๋ž‘ (1903โ€“1950) ๊น€์˜๋ฌด (1944โ€“2001) ๊น€์˜ํ˜„ (์†Œ์„ค๊ฐ€) (1955) ๊น€์ •ํ™˜ (์‹œ์ธ) (1954) ๊น€์ข…๊ธธ (1926) ๊น€์ข…์ฒ  (์‹œ์ธ) (1947) ๊น€์ข…ํ•ด (์‹œ์ธ) (1941) ๊น€์ถ˜์ˆ˜ (1922โ€“2004) ๊น€ํ–‰์ˆ™ (1970) ๊น€ํ˜œ์ˆœ (1955) ๊น€ํ›„๋ž€ (1934) ใ„ด ๋‚˜ํฌ๋• (1966) ๋…ธ์ฒœ๋ช… (1912-1957) ๋‚˜ํƒœ์ฃผ (1945) ใ„ท ๋„์ข…ํ™˜ (1954) ใ… ๋งˆ์ข…๊ธฐ (1939) ๋ชจ์œค์ˆ™ (1910โ€“1990) ๋ฌธ๋•์ˆ˜ (1928) ๋ฌธ์ •ํฌ (์‹œ์ธ) (1947) ๋ฌธํƒœ์ค€ (์‹œ์ธ) (1970) ใ…‚ ๋ฐ•๋‚จ์ˆ˜ (1918โ€“1994) ๋ฐ•๋‘์ง„ (1916โ€“1998) ๋ฐ•๋ชฉ์›” (1916โ€“1978) ๋ฐ•์˜๊ทผ (1958-2006) ๋ฐ•์šฉ๋ž˜ (1925โ€“1980) ๋ฐ•์ด๋ฌธ (1930) ๋ฐ•์ธํ™˜ (์‹œ์ธ) (1926โ€“1956) ๋ฐ•์žฌ์‚ผ (1933โ€“1997) ๋ฐ•์ •๋Œ€ (1965) ๋ฐ•ํฌ์ง„ (1931โ€“2015) ๋ฐฑ์„ (1912~1996) ๋ณต๊ฑฐ์ผ (1946) ใ…… ์„œ์ •์ฃผ (1915โ€“2000) ์„ฑ๋ด‰์ˆ˜ (1964) ์„ฑ์ฐฌ๊ฒฝ (1930โ€“2013) ์‹ ๊ฒฝ๋ฆผ (1936) ์‹ ์šฉ๋ชฉ (1974) ใ…‡ ์˜ค๊ทœ์› (1941โ€“2007) ์˜ค์„ธ์˜ (์‹œ์ธ) (1942) ์˜คํƒ๋ฒˆ (1943) ์›ํšจ (617โ€“686) ์œ ์•ˆ์ง„ (1941) ์œ ์น˜ํ™˜ (1908โ€“1967) ์œค๋™์ฃผ (1917โ€“1945) ์œค์ง„ํ™” (1974) ์ด๊ทผํ™” (1976) ์ด๋ช…๋ž‘(์ž‘๊ฐ€) (1973) ์ด์ƒ (์ž‘๊ฐ€) (1910โ€“1937) ์ด์ƒํ™” (์‹œ์ธ) (1901โ€“1943) ์ด์„ฑ๋ณต (1952) ์ด์„ฑ๋ถ€ (1942โ€“2012) ์ด์œก์‚ฌ (1904โ€“1944) ์ด์œคํƒ (1952) ์ด์žฅ์šฑ (1968) ์ด์ œํ•˜ (1937) ์ดํ˜•๊ธฐ (1933โ€“2005) ์ดํ˜œ๊ฒฝ (์†Œ์„ค๊ฐ€) (1960) ์ดํ›„ (์†Œ์„ค๊ฐ€) (1982) ใ…ˆ ์žฅ์„๋‚จ (1965) ์žฅ์ •์ผ ( 1962) ์žฅ์ฒ ๋ฌธ (1966) ์ „๊ฒฝ๋ฆฐ (1962) ์ •์ง€์šฉ (1902-?) ์ •์ง€์šฉ (1902โ€“??) ์ •ํ˜ธ์Šน (1950) ์กฐ๊ธฐ์ฒœ (1913โ€“1951) ์กฐ๋ณ‘ํ™” (1921-2003) ์กฐ์ •๊ถŒ (1949) ์กฐ์ง€ํ›ˆ (1920-1968) ์ฃผ์š”ํ•œ (1900-1979) ใ…Š ์ฑ„ํ˜ธ๊ธฐ (1957) ์ฒœ์ƒ๋ณ‘ (1930-1993) ์ตœ๋‚จ์„  (1890 -1957) ์ตœ์Šนํ˜ธ (์‹œ์ธ) (1954) ์ตœ์˜๋ฏธ (์‹œ์ธ) (1961) ์ตœ์ •๋ก€ (1955) ์ตœ์Šน์ž (1952) ใ…Ž ํ•˜์Šน๋ฌด (1963) ํ•œํƒœํ˜ธ (1952) ํ—ˆ์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ (์‹œ์ธ) (1964) ํ™์œค์„ (1925) ํ™ฉ๋™๊ทœ (1938) ํ™ฉ์ธ์ˆ™ (1958) ํ™ฉ์ง€์šฐ (1952) ๋งŒํ•ด ํ•œ์šฉ์šด (1879โ€“1944) ์‹œ๊ฐ„ ์ˆœ์„œ์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅธ ๋ชฉ๋ก 1970๋…„๋Œ€ ์ด๊ทผํ™” (1976) ๊น€๊ฒฝ์ฃผ (์‹œ์ธ) (1976) ์‹ ์šฉ๋ชฉ (1974) ๊น€์–ธ (1973) ๊น€์„ ์šฐ (์‹œ์ธ) (1970) ๋ฌธํƒœ์ค€ (์‹œ์ธ) (1970) ํ•œ๊ฐ• (์†Œ์„ค๊ฐ€) (1970) 1960๋…„๋Œ€ ์ด์žฅ์šฑ (1968) ๋‚˜ํฌ๋• (1966) ์žฅ์ฒ ๋ฌธ (1966) ๋ฐ•์ •๋Œ€ (1965) ์žฅ์„๋‚จ (1965) ํ•˜์Šน๋ฌด (1964) ์„ฑ๋ด‰์ˆ˜ (1964) ํ—ˆ์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ (์‹œ์ธ) (1964) ์žฅ์ •์ผ (1962) ์ „๊ฒฝ๋ฆฐ (1962) ์ตœ์˜๋ฏธ (์‹œ์ธ) (1961) ๊ธฐํ˜•๋„ (1960-1989) ์ดํ˜œ๊ฒฝ (์†Œ์„ค๊ฐ€) (1960) 1950๋…„๋Œ€ ํ™ฉ์ธ์ˆ™ (1958) ๊น€๊ธฐํƒ (์‹œ์ธ) (1957) ์ฑ„ํ˜ธ๊ธฐ (1957) ๊น€๋ด‰๊ธธ (1956) ๊น€์‚ฌ์ธ (1956) ๊น€์˜ํ˜„ (์†Œ์„ค๊ฐ€) (1955) ์ตœ์ •๋ก€ (1955) ๋„์ข…ํ™˜ (1954) ๊น€์ •ํ™˜ (์‹œ์ธ) (1954) ๊ณฝ์žฌ๊ตฌ (1954) ๊ณ ํ˜•๋ ฌ (1954) ์ด์„ฑ๋ณต (1952) ํ™ฉ์ง€์šฐ (1952) ๊น€์Šนํฌ (1952) ์ด์œคํƒ (1952) ์ตœ์Šน์ž (1952) ์ •ํ˜ธ์Šน (1950) 1940๋…„๋Œ€ ์กฐ์ •๊ถŒ (1949) ๋ฐ•ํฌ์ง„ (1947) ๊น€์ข…์ฒ  (์‹œ์ธ) (1947) ๋ฌธ์ •ํฌ (์‹œ์ธ) (1947) ์˜ค๊ทœ์› (1947) ๋ณต๊ฑฐ์ผ (1946) ๊น€๋ช…์ธ (์‹œ์ธ) (1946) ๊น€์‹ ์šฉ (1945) ๊ฐ•์€๊ต (1945) ์ฒœ์ƒ๋ณ‘ (1945) ๊น€์˜๋ฌด (1944-2001) ์˜คํƒ๋ฒˆ (1943) ์ด๊ฐ€๋ฆผ (1943) ์ด์„ฑ๋ถ€ (1942-2012) ์ตœ์Šนํ˜ธ (์‹œ์ธ) (1942) ์œ ์•ˆ์ง„ (1941) ๊น€์ข…ํ•ด (์‹œ์ธ) (1941) ๊น€๊ด‘๊ทœ (์‹œ์ธ) (1941) 1930๋…„๋Œ€ ํ™ฉ๋™๊ทœ (1938) ์ด์ œํ•˜ (1937) ์‹ ๊ฒฝ๋ฆผ (1936) ๊น€ํ›„๋ž€ (1934) ๊ณ ์ฐฝ์ˆ˜ (1934) ๋ฐ•์žฌ์‚ผ (1933) ๊ณ ์€ (1933) ์ดํ˜•๊ธฐ (1933) ์ฒœ์ƒ๋ณ‘ (1930-1993) ์„ฑ์ฐฌ๊ฒฝ (1930-2013) ๋ฐ•์ด๋ฌธ (1930) 1920๋…„๋Œ€ ๊น€๊ด‘๋ฆผ (์‹œ์ธ) (1929) ๋ฌธ๋•์ˆ˜ (1928) ๊น€๋‚จ์กฐ (1927) ๋ฐ•์ธํ™˜ (์‹œ์ธ) (1926) ๊น€์ข…๊ธธ (1926) ํ™์œค์„ (1925) ๋ฐ•์šฉ๋ž˜ (1925-1980) ๊น€์ถ˜์ˆ˜ (1922-2004) ๊น€๊ตฌ์šฉ (1922๋…„) (Kim Kku) (1922-2001) ๊น€์ˆ˜์˜ (1921-1968) ๊น€์ƒ์˜ฅ (1920๋…„) (1920-2004) ์กฐ์ง€ํ›ˆ (1920-1968) 1910๋…„๋Œ€ ๊ตฌ์ƒ (์‹œ์ธ) (1919-2004) ์œค๋™์ฃผ (1918-1945) ๋ฐ•๋‚จ์ˆ˜ (1919-1994) ๋ฐ•๋ชฉ์›” (1916-1978) ์„œ์ •์ฃผ (1915-2000) ๋ฐฑ์„(1912~1996) ๋…ธ์ฒœ๋ช… (1912-1957) ์ด์ƒ (์ž‘๊ฐ€) (1910-1937) 1900๋…„๋Œ€ ์ •์ง€์šฉ (1903-?) ๊น€๊ธฐ๋ฆผ (1908-?) ์œ ์น˜ํ™˜ (1908-1967) ๊น€์˜๋ž‘ (1903-1950) ์ด์œก์‚ฌ (1904-1944) ์ •์ง€์šฉ (1903-?) ์ •์ง€์šฉ (1902โ€“??) ๊น€์†Œ์›” (1902-1934) ์ด์ƒํ™” (์‹œ์ธ) (1901~1943) ์ฃผ์š”ํ•œ (1900-1979) 1890๋…„๋Œ€ ๊น€๋ช…์ˆœ (1896๋…„) (1896-1951) ์ตœ๋‚จ์„  (1890-1957) 19์„ธ๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ธ ๋งŒํ•ด ํ•œ์šฉ์šด (1879-1944) 18์„ธ๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ธ ์œค์„ ๋„ (1587โ€“1671) ํ—ˆ๋‚œ์„คํ—Œ (1563โ€“1589) ์ดˆ๊ธฐ์˜ ์‹œ์ธ ์„์ฒœ ๊น€๊ฐ (1536-1610) ํ™ฉ์ง„์ด (1522-1565) ์ด์ƒ‰ (1328-1395 [1396?]) ์ตœ์ถฉ (984-1068) ๊ท ์—ฌ (917โ€”973) ์ตœ์น˜์› (857-915) ์›ํšจ (617โ€“686)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20Korean-language%20poets
List of Korean-language poets
This is a list of Korean-language poets. Twentieth-century poets Alphabetical list B Baek Seok (1912โ€“1996) Bok Koh-il (born 1946) C Chae Ho-ki (born 1957) Cheon Sang-byeong (1930โ€“1993) Cheon Yang-hee (born 1942) Cheong Chi-yong (1902โ€“1950) Cho Byung-hwa (1921โ€“2003) Cho Chi-hun (1920โ€“1968) Cho Chung-kwon (born 1949) Ch'oe Hae (1901โ€“1932) Choi Jeong-rye (born 1955) Choi Nam-son (1890โ€“1957) Choi Seung-ho (born 1954) Choi Young-mi (born 1961) Chu Yo-han (1900โ€“1979) D Do Jong-hwan (born 1954) G Gi Hyeong-do (1960โ€“1989) Go Hyeong-ryeol (born 1954) H Ha Seung-moo (born 1963) Heo Su-gyeong (born 1964) Hong Yun-suk (born 1925) Hwang In-suk (born 1958) Hwang Tong gyu (born 1938) Hwang Ji-U (born 1952) J Jang Cheol-mun (born 1966) Jang Jeong-il (born 1962) Jang Seok Nam (1965) Jeong Ho-seung (born 1950) Jeong Ji-yong often romanized in literature as Cheong Chi-yong (์ •์ง€์šฉ) (1902โ€“1950) Jo Ki-chon (1913โ€“1951) Jon Kyongnin (born 1962) K Kang Eun-gyo (born 1945) Kim Chunsu (1922โ€“2004) Kim Eon (born 1973) Kim Gi-taek (born 1957) Kim Gu-yong (Kim Kku; 1922โ€“2001) Kim Haengsook (born 1970) Kim Hu-ran (born 1934) Kim Hyesoon (born 1955) Kim Jeong-hwan (born 1954) Kim Jong-chul (born 1947) Kim Jonghae (born 1941) Kim Jong-gil (born 1926) Kim Kyungrin (1918โ€“2006) Kim Kwang-kyu (born 1941) Kim Kwang-lim (born 1929) Kim Kirim (1908-?) Kim Kyung-ju (born 1976) Kim Myeong-in (born 1946) Kim Myeong-sun (1896โ€“1951) Kim Nam-jo (born 1927) Kim Nyeon-gyun (born 1942) Kim Sa-in (born 1956) Kim Sang-ok (1920โ€“2004) Kim Sinyong (born 1945) Kim Seon-wu (born 1970) Kim Seung-hee (born 1952) Kim Soo-young (1921โ€“1968) Kim Sowol (1902โ€“1934) Kim Su-yeong (1921โ€“1968) Kim Yeong-hyeon (born 1955) Kim Young-moo (1944โ€“2001) Kim Youngtae (1936โ€“2007) Kim Yeong-nang (1903โ€“1950) Kwak Jae-gu (born 1954) Ko Chang-soo (born 1934) Ko Un (born 1933) Ko Hyeong-ryeol (born 1954) Ku Sang (1919โ€“2004) L Lee Hae-in (born 1945) Lee Hyeonggi (1933โ€“2005) Lee Hye-gyeong (1960) Lee Jangwook (1968) Lee Seong-bok (1952) Lee SungBoo (1942โ€“2012) Lee Yuksa (1904โ€“1944) Lee Yuntaek (born 1952) Lee Ze-ha (born 1937) M Ma Jonggi (born 1939) Manhae [pen name of Han Yong-un] (1879โ€“1944) Moon Chung-hee (born 1947) Moh Yoon-sook (1910โ€“1990) Moon Deoksu (born 1928) Moon Taejun (born 1970) N Noh Cheonmyeong (1912โ€“1957) O Oh Kyu Won (1947โ€“2007) Oh Sae-Young (born 1942) Oh Takbeon (born 1943) P Pak Tu-jin (1916โ€“1998) Park Hee-Jin (1931โ€“2015) Park In-hwan (1926โ€“1956) Park Jaesam (1933โ€“1997) Park Jeong-dae (born 1965) Park Nam-su (1918โ€“1994) Park Mok-wol (1916โ€“1978) Ynhui Park (born 1930) Park Yong-rae (1925โ€“1980) Park Young-geun (1958โ€“2006) R Ra Hee-Duk (born 1966) S Seo Jeong-ju ("Midang") (1915โ€“2000) Seung-Moo Ha (born 1964) Shin Kyeong-nim (born 1936) Shin Yong-Mok (born 1974) Sung Chan-gyeong (1930โ€“2013) W Wonhyo (617โ€“686) Y Yi Geun-hwa (born 1976) Yi Ho-woo (1912โ€“1970) Yi Sang (1910โ€“1937) Yi Sang-hwa (1901โ€“1943) Yu Anjin (born 1941) Yu Chi-hwan (1908โ€“1967) Yoo Yeong (1917โ€“2002) Yun Dong-ju (1917โ€“1945) Chronological list 1970s Yi Geun-hwa (born 1976) Kim Kyung-ju (born 1976) Shin Yong-Mok (born 1974) Kim Eon (born 1973) Kim Seon-wu (born 1970) Moon Taejun (born 1970) Han Kang (born 1970) 1960s Lee Jangwook (born 1968) Ra Hee-Duk (born 1966) Jang Cheol-mun (born 1966) Park Jeong-dae (born 1965) Jang Seok Nam (born 1965) Seung-Moo Ha (born 1964) Heo Su-gyeong (born 1964) Ha Seung-moo (born 1963) Jang Jeong-il (born 1962) Jon Kyongnin (born 1962) Choi Young-mi (born 1961) Gi Hyeong-do (1960โ€“1989) Lee Hye-gyeong (born 1960) 1950s Hwang In-suk (1958) Park Young-geun (1958โ€“2006) Kim Gi-taek (born 1957) Chae Ho-ki (born 1957) Kim Sa-in (born 1956) Kim Yeong-hyeon (born 1955) Choi Jeong-rye (born 1955) Do Jong-hwan (born 1954) Kim Jeong-hwan (born 1954) Kwak Jae-gu (born 1954) Go Hyeong-ryeol (born 1954) Lee Seong-bok (born 1952) Hwang Ji-U (born 1952) Kim Seung-hee (born 1952) Lee Yuntaek (born 1952) Jeong Ho-seung (born 1950) 1940s Cho Chung-kwon (born 1949) Park Hee-Jin (born 1947) Kim Jong-chul (born 1947) Moon Chung-hee (born 1947) Oh Kyu Won (born 1947) Bok Koh-il (born 1946) Kim Myeong-in (born 1946) Kim Sinyong (born 1945) Kang Eun-gyo (born 1945) Cheon Sang-byeong (born 1945) Kim Young-moo (1944โ€“2001) Oh Takbeon (born 1943) Lee Garim (born 1943) Lee SungBoo (1942โ€“2012) Choi Seung-ho (born 1942) Cheon Yang-hee (born 1942) Yu Anjin (born 1941) Kim Jonghae (born 1941) Kim Kwang-kyu (born 1941) 1930s Hwang Tong gyu (born 1938) Lee Ze-ha (born 1937) Shin Kyeong-nim (born 1936) Kim Hu-ran (born 1934) Ko Chang Soo (born 1934) Park Jaesam (born 1933) Ko Un (born 1933) Lee Hyeonggi (born 1933) Cheon Sang-byeong (1930โ€“1993) Sung Chan-gyeong (1930โ€“2013) Ynhui Park (born 1930) 1920s Kim Gwangrim (born 1929) Moon Deoksu (1928โ€“2020) Kim Nam-Jo (born 1927) Park In-hwan (1926โ€“1956) Kim Jong-Gil (1926โ€“1956) Hong Yun-suk (1925โ€“2015) Park Yong-rae (1925โ€“1980) Kim Ch'un-su (1922โ€“2004) Kim Kyu-yong (Kim Kku) (1922โ€“2001) Kim Su-yลng (1921โ€“1968) Kim Sang-ok (1920โ€“2004) Cho Chi-hun (1920โ€“1968) 1910s Ku Sang (1919โ€“2004) Park Nam-su (1919โ€“1994) Kim Kyungrin (1918โ€“2006) Yoo Yeong (1917โ€“2002) Yun Dong-ju (1917โ€“1945) Park Mok-wol (1916โ€“1978) Sล Chลng-ju (1915โ€“2000) Baek Seok(1912โ€“1996) Yi Ho-woo (1912โ€“1970) Noh Cheonmyeong (1912โ€“1957) Yi Sang (1910โ€“1937) 1900s Kim Kirim (1908-?) Yu Chi-hwan (1908โ€“1967) Lee Yuksa (1904โ€“1944) Kim Yลng-nang (1903โ€“1950) Jeong Ji-yong, often romanized in literature as Cheong Chi-yong (์ •์ง€์šฉ) (1902โ€“1950) Kim Sowol (1902โ€“1934) Yi Sang-hwa (1901โ€“1943) Chu Yo-han (1900โ€“1979) 1890s Kim Myeong-sun (1896โ€“1951) Kim Ok (1896-unknown) Choi Nam-son (1890โ€“1957) Nineteenth-century poets Han Yong-un [Manhae] (1879โ€“1944) Seventeenth-century poets Yun Seondo (1587โ€“1671) Heo Nanseolheon (1563โ€“1589) Earlier poets Note: Some or all of these poets, though Korean, wrote in Chinese. Heo Nanseolheon (1563-1589) Seokcheon, pen name of Kim Gak (1536-1610) Hwang Jin-i (1522-1565) Song Deokbong (1521-1578) Yi Saek (1328-1395 [1396?]) Ch'oe Ch'ung (984-1068) Kyun Yeo (917โ€”973) Choe Chiwon (857-915) Wonhyo (617โ€“686) See also Korean poetry References Korean Poets
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%ED%95%9C%EA%B5%AD%EA%B3%84%20%EB%AF%B8%EA%B5%AD%EC%9D%B8%20%EB%AA%A9%EB%A1%9D
ํ•œ๊ตญ๊ณ„ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์ธ ๋ชฉ๋ก
์•„๋ž˜๋Š” ์ €๋ช…ํ•œ ํ•œ๊ตญ๊ณ„ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์ธ ๋ชฉ๋ก์ด๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ์ˆ  ์•ˆํ•„๋ฆฝ ํ”„๋žญํฌ ์กฐ ๋ฐ์ด๋น„๋“œ ์ตœ (ํ™”๊ฐ€) ์ •๋‘๋ฆฌ ํ”ผํ„ฐ ์ • CYJO ํ™ฉ์ •๋ชฉ ์žฌ ๋ฆฌ ์ง ๋ฆฌ ๋ฐฑ๋‚จ์ค€ ๊ทธ๋ ˆ๊ทธ ๋ฐ• ํ”ผํ„ฐ ์† ๋น„์ฆˆ๋‹ˆ์Šค ์žฅ๋„์› ๊น€์šฉ (1959๋…„) ๋ฌธ๊ตญ์ง„ ํ•‘ํฌ๋ฒ ๋ฆฌ ์œ ์ผํ•œ ์œ ๊ธฐ๋ˆ ์กฐ๋ฆฌ ๋ฐ์ด๋น„๋“œ ์žฅ ์ฃผ๋”” ์ฃผ ์—”ํ„ฐํ…Œ์ธ๋จผํŠธ ํ‹ฐํŒŒ๋‹ˆ ์˜ ์ œ์‹œ์นด (๊ฐ€์ˆ˜) ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ (1991๋…„) ์จ๋‹ˆ (๊ฐ€์ˆ˜) ๋ธŒ๋ผ์ด์–ธ ํ‹ฐ ์ œ๋‚˜ ์šฐ์Šˆ์ฝ”๋น„์ธ  ์ˆ˜์žฐ ํ™ฉ ์ผ€๋นˆ (1991๋…„) ํ•œ์˜ˆ์Šฌ ์Šคํ‹ฐ๋ธ ์—ฐ ์—๋Ÿฐ ์œ  ์ž๋‹ˆ ์œค ์นผ ์œค ๋ฆญ ์œค ๊น€๊ฒฝํƒœ, PD ์•ˆํ•„๋ฆฝ ์—์ผ๋ฆฌ ํ”„๋ ˆ๋“œ ์•„๋ฏธ์Šจ ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ ๋นŒ๋”๋ฐฑ ๋ฌธ ๋ธ”๋Ÿฌ๋“œ๊ตฟ ์กฐ๋‹ˆ ์šฉ ๋ณด์‹œ ์ฐจํ•™๊ฒฝ ์•„๋“  ์กฐ ์กด ์กฐ ๋งˆ๊ฑฐ๋ฆฟ ์กฐ ์Šค๋ฏธ์Šค ์กฐ ์ผ€๋„ค์Šค ์ตœ ์ €์Šคํ‹ด ์ „ ์ œ์ด๋ฏธ ์ • ์ œ์‹œ (๊ฐ€์ˆ˜) ์กฐ ํ•œ ๋งˆํ‚คํ”Œ๋ผ์ด์–ด ํ•œํฌ์ค€ ๋‹ค๋‹ˆ์—˜ ํ—ค๋‹ˆ ์กฐ์Šˆ์•„ ์ƒค๋„ฌ ์ด๋งŒ ์ผ„ ์ • ์นด๋“œ (์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน) ์กฐ์…‰ ์นธ ์„ฑ ๊ฐ• ํŒ€ ๊ฐ• ๋Œ€๋‹ˆ์–ผ ๋Œ€ ๊น€ ๋žœ๋“ค ๋• ๊น€ ์• ํ”„ํ„ฐ์Šค์ฟจ ์Šคํ…ŒํŒŒ๋‹ˆ (๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ฐ€์ˆ˜) ๊น€์œค์ง„ ์—์Šค๋” ์ฟ  ์œจ ๊ถŒ ๋ฐ๋‹ˆ์Šค ๋กœํ„ด ์•ค๋”” (๊ฐ€์ˆ˜) ๋ณด๋น„ ๋ฆฌ C. S. ๋ฆฌ ์ด๊ธฐํ™ (๋ฐฐ์šฐ) ์ œ์ž„์Šค ๊ธฐ์„  ๋ฆฌ ์ด์ง€์•„ ์ €์Šคํ‹ด ๋ฆฌ (๋ฐฐ์šฐ) ๋ฉ”๊ฑด ๋ฆฌ (๊ฐ€์ˆ˜) ํผํŠธ๋ฆฌ์ƒค ์ž ๋ฆฌ ์ด์Šนํฌ (1970๋…„) ์œŒ ์œค ๋ฆฌ ๋‚ธ์‹œ (๊ฐ€์ˆ˜) ๋งˆ์ดํฌ ๋ชจ ์—๋ฆญ ๋‚จ ๋ ˆ์˜ค๋‚˜๋ฅด๋„ ๋‚จ ๋ฆฌํ‚ค ๊น€ ๋ฐ๋‹ˆ์Šค ์˜ค ๋ฐ๋‹ˆ์Šค ์˜ค ์˜ค์ˆœํƒ ํ—คํ‹ฐ์—” ๋ฐ• ๋ฐ•์žฌ๋ฒ” ์กด ๋ฐ• ๋ฐ•์ค€ํ˜• (๊ฐ€์ˆ˜) ๋ฆฐ๋‹ค ๋ฐ• ๋žœ๋“ค ๋ฐ• ์ˆ˜์ฃผ (๋ชจ๋ธ) ์ˆœ์ด ํ”„๋ ˆ๋นˆ ๋ฆฐ์ง€ ํ”„๋ผ์ด์Šค ํ”„๋‹ˆ์—˜ ์†์ž ์† ์Šคํ…ŒํŒ ์† ๋ฏธ์ผ€์ผ๋ผ ๋””์ธ  ์–ธ๋ก  ์ฃผ์ฃผ ์žฅ ๋ฒ•, ์ •๋ถ€ ๊ฐ•์˜์šฐ ๊ณ ํ™์ฃผ ๋ฃจ์‹œ ๊ณ  ์กด ์œ  ์„ฑ ๊น€ ๊ฐ•์„ํฌ (์ •์น˜์ธ) ์•ค๋”” ๊น€ ๊น€์ฐฝ์ค€ (1939๋…„) ์˜ ๊น€ ์‹ ํ˜ธ๋ฒ” ๋ฌธํ•™ ๊ฐ•์šฉํ˜ ๊น€์€๊ตญ (์†Œ์„ค๊ฐ€) ๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ ๋ฐฑ ๋ฆฌ ๋ฆฐ๋‹ค ์ˆ˜ ๋ฐ• ์ข…๊ต ๊น€์€์ผ - Joel Kim, ์บ˜๋ฆฌํฌ๋‹ˆ์•„ ์›จ์ŠคํŠธ๋ฏผ์Šคํ„ฐ์‹ ํ•™๊ต ํ•™์žฅ Julius Kim - The Gospel Coalition ๋Œ€ํ‘œ Walter Kim - National Association of Evangelicals ๋Œ€ํ‘œ Michael Oh - Lausanne Movement ๊ตญ์ œ์‚ฌ๋ฌด์ด์žฅ ์ด๊ด‘์ง„ - James A. Lee, Southern Reformed College and Seminary ์ด์žฅ Eugene Cho - Bread for the World ๋Œ€ํ‘œ ๊ตฐ์‚ฌ ๋Œ„ ์ตœ ์•ˆ์ˆ˜์‚ฐ ํ”ผํ„ฐ M. ๋ฆฌ ์Œ์•… ํ‹ฐํŒŒ๋‹ˆ ์˜ ์•ˆ ํŠธ๋ฆฌ์˜ค ํ”„๋ฆฌ์‹ค๋ผ ์•ˆ ์—์ผ๋ฆฌ ์—์ด๋จธ๋ฆฌ ๋‰ด์ด์ŠคํŠธ ์žฅ์˜์ฃผ ์•„๋“  ์กฐ ๋ฐ์ด๋น„๋“œ ์ตœ (์Œ์•…๊ฐ€) ๋คํŒŒ์šด๋ฐ๋“œ ๋””์•„ ํ”„๋žจํ”„ํ„ด ๋ฉ”๊ทธ & ๋””์•„ ์กฐ ํ•œ ํ™ํ˜œ๊ฒฝ ์‚ฌ๋ฌด์—˜ (๊ฐ€์ˆ˜) ํƒœ๋นˆ ๋ธŒ๋ผ์ด์–ธ (๊ฐ€์ˆ˜) ์ œ์‹œ์นด (๊ฐ€์ˆ˜) ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํƒˆ (๊ฐ€์ˆ˜) ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ (1991๋…„) ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ„ธ ์ผ€์ด ์ผ๋ผ์ด (๊ฐ€์ˆ˜) ๊น€์กฐํ•œ ์ด์ง„์ฃผ (์Œ์•…๊ฐ€) ์—๋ฆญ (๊ฐ€์ˆ˜) ์กด ๋ช… ์—๋ฆญ ๋‚จ ์บ๋Ÿฐ ์˜ค ์œ ์ง„ ๋ฐ• ๋ฐ•์žฌ๋ฒ” ๋ฐ•์ค€ํ˜• (๊ฐ€์ˆ˜) ๋ฐ•์ •ํ˜„ ํ…Œ๋”” (์Œ์•…๊ฐ€) ์†ํ˜ธ์˜ ์œค๋ฏธ๋ž˜ ํƒ€์ด๊ฑฐ JK ํŒ€ (๊ฐ€์ˆ˜) ์œ ์Šน์ค€ ๊ณผํ•™, ๊ธฐ์ˆ , ๊ต์œก ๋ฐฑํƒœ์›… ๋น…ํ„ฐ ์ฐจ ์ œํ”„ ํ•œ ํ•œ๋ฌด์˜ ๋ฐ๋‹ˆ์Šค ํ™ ๊ฐ•์„ฑ๋ชจ (๊ณตํ•™์ž) ๊น€์žฌ๊ถŒ (์ฒ ํ•™์ž) ๊น€์ข…ํ›ˆ (๊ณผํ•™์ž) ๊น€์šฉ (1959๋…„) ํ”ผํ„ฐ ๊น€ ํ•˜์›Œ๋“œ ๊ณ  ์ดํœ˜์†Œ ์ด์ฐฝ๋ž˜ ๋งˆํฌ ํด๋ž€์Šคํ‚ค ๋ฏธ์…ธ ๋ฆฌ ์„œ๋‚จํ‘œ ์šฐ์ •์€ ์Šคํฌ์ธ  ๋กญ ๋ ˆํ”„์Šค๋‚˜์ด๋” ๋‹ค์œˆ ๋ฐ”๋‹ˆ ์‚ฌ์ด๋จผ ์กฐ ํ–‰ํฌ ์ฝฉ๊ฑฐ ํ† ๋น„ ๋„์Šจ ๋นŒ ๋ฐ๋ชฝ ์ œ์ดํฌ ๋”๋‹ ๋ฒค ํ—จ๋”์Šจ ์•ค์„œ๋‹ˆ ๊น€ ํด๋กœ์ด ๊น€ ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ‹ฐ๋‚˜ ๊น€ ์ผ€๋นˆ ํ‚ด (1978๋…„) ์ž๋„ท ๋ฆฌ ์ƒˆ๋ฏธ ๋ฆฌ (๋‹ค์ด๋น™ ์„ ์ˆ˜) ๋ฌธํƒœ์ข… ๋‚˜์˜ค๋ฏธ ๋‚˜๋ฆฌ ๋‚จ ์ง ํŒฉ ์•ˆ์ ค๋ผ ๋ฐ• ๋ฆฌ์ฒ˜๋“œ ๋ฐ• BJ ํŽœ ์ด์„ ๊ฒฝ (1967๋…„) ํ•˜์ธ์Šค ์›Œ๋“œ ๋ฏธ์…ธ ์œ„ ์นด๋ฉ”๋ก  ๋ฆฐ ์ œ์ด๋“œ (ํ”„๋กœ๋ ˆ์Šฌ๋Ÿฌ) ์ง€๋ฏธ ์™• ์–‘ ๊ธฐํƒ€ ์„œ์žฌํ•„: ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ์‹œ๋ฏผ์ด ๋œ ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ ํ•œ๊ตญ์ธ ์†ก์˜ค๊ท : ํ•œ๊ตญ์˜ ๋…๋ฆฝ ํ™œ๋™๊ฐ€ ์†ก์ด๊ท : ํ•œ๊ตญ์˜ ๋…๋ฆฝ ํ™œ๋™๊ฐ€ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ Council of Korean Americans โ€“ a national KAPS โ€“ Korean American Professionals Society KorAmeLit.htm โ€“ selection of Korean-American literature KoreAm Journal โ€“ news Korean American Literature โ€“ comprehensive bibliography of Korean American authors and their books Arirang โ€“ interactive history of Korean Americans
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20Korean%20Americans
List of Korean Americans
The following is a list of notable Korean Americans, including original immigrants who obtained American citizenship and their American descendants. To be included in this list, the person must have a Wikipedia article showing they are Korean American or must have references showing they are Korean American and are notable. Art and design Dana Tai Soon Burgess, choreographer, cultural figure Richard Chai, fashion designer Frank Cho, comic book artist (Spider-Man, The New Avengers), writer, and creator (Liberty Meadows) David Choe, abstract artist Michael Choi, comic book artist (Witchblade, X-23 and X-Force) Doo-Ri Chung, fashion designer Peter Chung, animator, creator of cult animated TV series ร†on Flux CYJO (Cindy Hwang), photographer, "KYOPO project" Dennis Hwang, artist, Google doodler, game designer and artist of Pokรฉmon Go Derek Kirk Kim, cartoonist and author of critically acclaimed graphic novel Same Difference and Other Stories Nic Cha Kim, founder of Gallery Row in Downtown Los Angeles Scott Kim, puzzlemaster, artist, computer game designer Yu Yeon Kim, curator of art Grace La, designer, principal of La Dallman, professor of architecture, Harvard University Graduate School of Design Il Lee, artist Jae Lee, comic book artist (Namor the Sub-Mariner, Inhumans) Jim Lee, best-selling comic book artist (X-Men, Batman, Superman) and co-creator (Genยนยณ, WildC.A.T.s); co-founder of Image Comics; publisher and chief creative officer of DC Comics Lela Lee (1974โ€“ ), actress and cartoonist, creator of the comic strip and animated cartoons Kim, the Angry Little Asian Girl and Angry Little Girls Jiha Moon, artist Nam June Paik, Korean-born artist; father of video art Greg Pak, writer, director, actor (Robot Stories) Andy Park, comic book artist (Tomb Raider, X-Men) Peter Shin, a director of Family Guy Peter Sohn, animator at Pixar Animation Studios (The Good Dinosaur, Elemental) Amy Sol, contemporary artist based in Las Vegas, Nevada Tommy Yune, comic book writer and artist (Speed Racer, Robotech) and animation director (Robotech: The Shadow Chronicles) Jo Choi, photographer, Film director, and YouTuber Business Albert An, CEO of Tower Research Capital Nelson Chai, investment banker and former CFO of the New York Stock Exchange Do Won Chang, founder of Forever 21 Charlotte Cho, esthetician, author and co-founder of Soko Glam Timothy Hwang, founder and CEO of FiscalNote and president of the National Youth Association (NYA) Sabrina Kay, founder and chancellor of Fremont College David Kim, former CEO of Baja Fresh Daniel J. Kim, founder of Red Mango James Kim, founder of Amkor, billionaire Jim Kim, founder of venture capital firm Formation 8 Moon Kook-jin, founder of Kahr Arms, manufacturer of the Desert Eagle Brian Lee, co-founder of Legalzoom.com, ShoeDazzle.com, and The Honest Company Chong Moon Lee, founder of Diamond Multimedia Curtis Lee, founder and CEO of Luxe David Lee, real estate developer Michael Choe, CEO of Charlesbank Capital Partners Kewsong Lee, CEO of The Carlyle Group Young Lee, co-founder of Pinkberry Thai Lee, CEO and president of SHI International, billionaire Ilhan New, founder of La Choy Jane Park, founder of Julep, cosmetics company James Park, founder and CEO of Fitbit Sung Won Sohn, professor of economics at California State University, former president of LA Hanmi Bank Daewon Song, co-founder of Almost Skateboards James Sun, CEO and founder of GeoPage.com; The Apprentice finalist Lisa Song Sutton, businesswoman, attorney, former Miss Nevada United States and former congressional candidate Michael Yang, founder and CEO of mySimon, founder & CEO of Become.com and Michael Yang Capital Partners I LP Gideon Yu, co-owner of the San Francisco 49ers and Executive Chairman and CEO of Bowers & Wilkins Richard Yoo, founder and former CEO of Rackspace Community Leaders and Activists Ahn Changho, early 20th century immigrant community activist and leader, member of Korean independence movement Kenneth Bae, imprisoned by North Korea for human rights activity Emil J. Kang, non-profit arts administrator, curator, professor. Youngest president and first Asian-American to head a major symphony orchestra. First Korean-American to be nominated by the president of the United States for membership in the National Council on the Arts National Endowment for the Arts Angela E. Oh, attorney and social/political activist best known for her role as spokesperson for the Korean American community after the 1992 Los Angeles Riots and her position on President Bill Clinton's One America Initiative Park Yong-man, early 20th century immigrant community activist, member of Korean independence movement Song Oh-kyun, Korean independence activist (Originally from Pyongyang, North Korea) Song Yi-kyun, Korean independence activist and aviator (Originally from Pyongyang, North Korea) Criminals and murderers Seung-Hui Cho, murdered 32 people at Virginia Tech before committing suicide with a gun Fullerton Boys, Korean gangsters Culinary arts Danny Bowien, chef and owner of Mission Chinese Food in San Francisco and New York David Chang, chef, owner of Momofuku Noodle Bar, Momofuku Ko and Momofuku Ssรคm Bar in New York City Roy Choi, co-founder and head chef of Kogi Korean BBQ food trucks and restaurants in Los Angeles Judy Joo, chef, owner of Jinjuu Restaurant (London and Hong Kong) Iron Chef on Iron Chef UK; judge on Iron Chef America and The Next Iron Chef; host of Korean Food Made Simple Cooking Channel; judge on Kitchen Inferno Ann Kim, chef and co-owner of Young Joni and popular pizzerias in Minneapolis, Minnesota Beverly Kim, finalist on Top Chef (Season 9); first winner of Top Chef Last Chance Kitchen; chef-owner of Parachute, Chicago, Illinois Kristen Kish, winner of Top Chef (Season 10); chef at Stir, Boston, Massachusetts Corey Lee, chef-owner of Michelin-starred Benu in San Francisco; former head chef at The French Laundry Edward Lee, contestant on Top Chef (season 9); host of television show Culinary Genius Maangchi (Emily Kim, ๊น€๊ด‘์ˆ™), author, popularizer of Korean cuisine and its preparation Entertainment Philip Ahn, actor Ralph Ahn, actor Amy Anderson, stand up comedian and actress Aubrey Anderson-Emmons, actress (Modern Family) Fred Armisen, actor, comedian Awkwafina, also known as Nora Lum, rapper, actress and comedian of Chinese and Korean descent Nicole Bilderback, actress Moon Bloodgood, actress Johnny Yong Bosch, actor, best known as Adam Park in Power Rangers Steve Byrne, comedian, actor Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, author, video and filmmaker Katie Chang, actress Timothy Chang, comedian and actor Karen Chee, comedian and comedy writer, Late Night with Seth Meyers Arden Cho, actress, Teen Wolf Henry Cho, comedian and actor John Cho, actor born in Seoul, South Korea and raised in Los Angeles, California he appeared in the American Pie franchise and Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle as well as the Star Trek reboot series as Hikaru Sulu; singer for the group Left of zed Margaret Cho, comedian, former star of the television sitcom All American Girl Smith Cho, actress SungWon Cho, actor, voice actor and YouTuber Kelly Choi, model, television presenter Kenneth Choi, actor Justin Chon, actor Daniel Chun, writer, co-producer (The Simpsons) Charlet Chung, actress and voice actress Jamie Chung, actress Philip W. Chung, playwright, founder and Artistic Director of Lodestone Theatre Ensemble Morena Corwin, model and Playboy playmate Piper Curda, actress and singer Joy Dietrich, film director Michaela Dietz, voice actress (Steven Universe) Joanna Gaines, star of Fixer Upper Jon Gosselin, father of sextuplets; a subject of the reality show Jon & Kate Plus 8 Mark Fischbach (Markiplier), YouTuber and actor Bong Soo Han, "father of American Hapkido"; choreographed and performed in the fight scenes of Billy Jack Daniel Henney, model, actor in South Korea Gene Hong, producer, writer, and actor on Wild 'N Out Chanel Iman, model Ken Jeong, comedian, actor Grace Jung, comedian, writer and director Joseph Kahn, music video and movie director Angela Kang, television showrunner, producer, and writer Michael Kang, writer/director (The Motel, West 32nd) Sung Kang, actor (The Motel, Better Luck Tomorrow, The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift) Tim Kang, actor (The Mentalist) Alan Kim, actor, youngest nominee for BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role Catherine Haena Kim, actress and model Daniel Dae Kim, actor Evan C. Kim, actor, best known for his role in the 1977 John Landis comedy The Kentucky Fried Movie Grace Kim, Playboy playmate Irene Kim, model and fashion designer Jacqueline Kim, actress Randall Duk Kim, actor Yunjin Kim, actress Esther Ku, comedian Yul Kwon, contestant on Survivor: Cook Islands Alexander Sebastien Lee, actor, filmmaker Alice Lee, actress Becky Lee, contestant on Survivor: Cook Islands Bobby Lee, comedian, actor, podcaster C.S. Lee, actor Chris Chan Lee, filmmaker Christopher HK Lee, film director (Fading Away, The Last Tear, Forgotten Victory, Ayla) Ki Hong Lee, actor (The Maze Runner) James Kyson Lee, actor Lee Ji-ah, actress Justin Lee, actor Lela Lee, actress and cartoonist Liz Lee, actress, My Life as Liz Patricia Ja Lee, actress, best known as Cassie Chan in Power Rangers Raymond Lee, actor (Quantum Leap (2022 TV series)) Rex Lee, actor (Entourage) Sung-Hi Lee, model who appears mostly in soft-core nude photoshoots Will Yun Lee, actor (Die Another Day) Ma Dong-seok, actor Charles Melton, actor (Riverdale, The Sun Is Also a Star) Mike Moh, actor, martial artist, stuntman (Kamen Rider: Dragon Knight) Leonardo Nam, actor Ricky Lee Neely, actor Soon Hee Newbold, filmmaker, actress, martial artist Dennis Oh, actor Sandra Oh, actress Soon-Tek Oh, actor Dennis Joseph O'Neil, model and actor Joy Osmanski, actress Hettienne Park, actress (Hannibal) Ho Sung Pak, actor, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Liu Kang and Shang Tsung in Mortal Kombat Grace Park, actress, Battlestar Galactica Joon Park, actor Linda Park, Korean-born actress (Enterprise) Randall Park, actor (Fresh Off the Boat) Soo Joo Park, model Steve Park, actor (In Living Color) Sydney Park, actress (Spork, Instant Mom, The Walking Dead, Spirit Riding Free, Wish Upon, Lifeline, Pretty Little Liars: The Perfectionists) Soon-Yi Previn, actress; wife of Woody Allen; adoptive daughter of Mia Farrow Lindsay Price, television actress Phillip Rhee, actor (Best of the Best movies), Tae Kwon Do and Hapkido master Eddie Shin, actor Keong Sim, actor Sonja Sohn, actress Stephen Sohn, model James Sun, first runner-up, The Apprentice 6 Brian Tee, actor (The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift) Jenna Ushkowitz, actress and singer (Glee) Suzanne Whang, host of HGTV's House Hunters, Polly on NBC's Las Vegas, award-winning stand-up comedian Joe Wong, comedian Eugene Lee Yang, filmmaker, actor, and co-creator of the online comedy series The Try Guys Han Ye-seul, actress Steven Yeun, actor (The Walking Dead) Aaron Yoo, actor (Disturbia) Christine Yoo, scriptwriter and director of Wedding Palace Johnny Yune, comedian and actor (They Call Me Bruce?) Karl Yune, model and actor (Memoirs of a Geisha, Anacondas: The Hunt for the Blood Orchid, brother of Rick Yune) Rick Yune, model and actor (Die Another Day, The Fast and the Furious) Journalism Virginia Cha, CNN News anchor Juju Chang, ABC News anchor and reporter Alina Cho, CNN News correspondent Liz Cho, ABC News anchor and reporter Sophia Choi, former CNN Headline News anchor, now at KVBC-DT Sarah Jeong, journalist specializing in information technology law and other technology-related topics; former member of the editorial board of The New York Times Jay Caspian Kang, Vice News Tonight correspondent Arnold Kim, founder of MacRumors James Kim, former senior editor at CNET Lee Ann Kim, anchor and reporter for KGTV; executive director of the San Diego Asian Film Festival Lisa Kim, NBC News news anchor for NBC11 Michael Kim, ESPN anchor Seung Min Kim, White House correspondent for The Washington Post Mina Kimes, ESPN Journalist Kyung Lah, CNN News correspondent Jean H. Lee, former Associated Press bureau chief in Seoul and Pyongyang Michelle Ye Hee Lee, The Washington Post reporter and current president of the Asian American Journalists Association MJ Lee, CNN News political correspondent Corina Knoll, Los Angeles Times reporter Suchin Pak, MTV News anchor and reporter Amara Sohn-Walker, CNN News correspondent Eun Yang, NBC4/WRC-TV News anchor and reporter, Washington, DC Phil Yu, founder and owner of the Angry Asian Man blog Eunice Yoon, China Bureau Chief and Senior Correspondent for CNBC Young Jean Lee, New York Times writer Law and government Judge Herbert Choy, appointed to the U.S Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit; first Asian American appointed to the federal bench Julie J. Chung, diplomat, Acting Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs Judge Donna Ryu, magistrate judge in the U.S. District Court of Northern California Judge Michael Hun Park, United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit Judge Kenneth K. Lee, United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit Wendy Lee Gramm, former head of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA); wife of former United States Senator Phil Gramm Yumi Hogan, First Lady of the State of Maryland; first Korean American first lady of a U.S. state and the first Asian American first lady in the history of Maryland BJ Kang, FBI agent, lead investigator of insider trading case against Raj Rajaratnam Young Woo Kang, policy advisor of the National Council on Disability of the US White House in 2001 Michael Kim, trial lawyer Harold Hongju Koh, dean of Yale Law School and former Assistant Secretary of State during the Clinton administration Lucy H. Koh, judge, US District Court for the Northern District of California, appointed 2010 Ronald Moon, Chief Justice of the Hawai'i Supreme Court Annabel Park, founder of Coffee Party USA Meroe Park, associate deputy director of the Central Intelligence Agency from 2013 to 2017 John Yoo, Berkeley law professor and former Deputy Attorney General in the United States Department of Justice Sung Kim, US Ambassador to the Philippines Elected officials Martha Choe, city councilmember in Seattle John Choi, county attorney of Ramsey County, Minnesota and former Saint Paul City Attorney Jun Choi, former mayor of Edison, New Jersey Dr. Steven Choi Ph.D, California State Assemblyman, 68th District Christopher Chung, the first elected mayor of Palisades Park, New Jersey, where Koreans constitute the majority of the population Hoon-Yung Hopgood, member of Michigan State House of Representatives, first Korean American elected to public office in Michigan Sam Park, member of Georgia's State House of Representatives, first Korean American and the first openly gay person of color elected to Georgia's General Assembly, representing the 101st District. Sukhee Kang, former Mayor of Irvine, California Mark L. Keam, member of the Virginia House of Delegates Andy Kim, US Congressperson from New Jersey (Democrat), former US diplomat and national security official Harry Kim, former Mayor of Hawaii County Jane Kim, Supervisor in San Francisco Jay Kim, former Republican Congressman from California Patty Kim, State Representative of Pennsylvania Ron Kim, first Korean American elected in New York State Young O. Kim, Republican Congresswoman from California's 39th congressional district (2021โ€“present) Maria Robinson, member of Massachusetts House of Representatives, representing the 6th Middlesex District (2019-present), first Korean-American to be elected to the General Court of Massachusetts Cindy Ryu, Washington Washington House of Representatives, first female Korean American Mayor in the U.S.A. David Ryu, first Korean American elected to the Los Angeles City Council Paull Shin, Washington state senator; Korean adoptee Anna Song, trustee on the Santa Clara County Office of Education Michelle Steel, Republican Congresswoman from California's 48th congressional district (2021โ€“present) Sam Yoon, Boston City Councillor (2005โ€“2009), first Asian American to be elected to the position in the city Marilyn Strickland, Democrat Congresswoman from Washington's 10th congressional district Sylvia Luke, lieutenant governor of Hawaii, first Korean American elected to a statewide office in the U.S.A. David Oh, member of the Philadelphia City Council (2012-2023), first Asian American to be elected to the position in the city Helen Gym, member of the Philadelphia City Council (2016-2022), first Asian American woman to be elected to the position in the city Literature See Korean American writers for a more extensive list. Matthew J. Baek, illustrator, children's book author, and graphic designer Steph Cha, novelist Leonard Chang, novelist, short story and TV writer Alexander Chee, fiction writer, poet, journalist, and reviewer Kah Kyung Cho, philosopher and writer Franny Choi, poet Mary H.K. Choi, author Sook Nyul Choi, children's storybook writer Susan Choi, novelist Jenny Han, author of children's and young adult novels, including the 'To All the Boys I've Loved Before Series' Euny Hong, journalist and author of The Birth of Korean Cool: How One Nation is Conquering the World through Pop Culture Hyun Yi Kang, scholar and writer Minsoo Kang, historian and writer Younghill Kang, early Asian American writer; has been called "the father of Korean American literature" Crystal Hana Kim, author Elaine H. Kim, writer, editor and professor in Asian American Studies Elizabeth Kim, journalist and novelist Eugenia Kim, author Mike Kim, author Myung Mi Kim, poet Nancy Kim, author, lawyer Richard E. Kim, author, professor of literature Suki Kim, author, investigative journalist, novelist Suji Kwock Kim, poet, playwright, author of Notes From The Divided Country Corina Knoll, editor, journalist Cecilia Hae-Jin Lee, writer and artist R. O. Kwon, author Don Lee, author, editor Ed Bok Lee, poet, writer Min Jin Lee, novelist Mary Paik Lee, author of Quiet Odyssey(1990) Walter K. Lew, poet and scholar Nami Mun, novelist Gary Pak, writer, editor and professor of English, noted as one of the most important Asian Hawaiian writers Ty Pak, writer; speaker on Korean affairs and literature Linda Sue Park, American-born writer Ronyoung Kim, novelist T. K. Seung, philosopher and literary critic Cathy Song, poet Jane Jeong Trenka, author of The Language of Blood Monica Youn, poet, National Book Award finalist Young Jean Lee, playwright and director Ji-Yeon Yuh, reporter, writer, editor and professor in Asian American history Military JoAnne S. Bass, 19th Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force, first female senior enlisted service member of any United States military branch, first Asian American to hold the senior enlisted position in the Air Force Daniel Choi, U.S. Army officer and gay rights activist Susan Ahn Cuddy, first female gunnery officer in the United States Navy Major Gen. Sharon K.G. Dunbar, Commander of the Air Force District of Washington (AFDW); Commander of the 320th Air Expeditionary Wing, headquartered at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland Jeff Hwang, U.S. Air Force fighter pilot and 1999 winner of Mackay Trophy Andrew Kim, former head of CIA's Korea Mission Center Richard C. Kim, U.S. Army brigadier general, Deputy Commander of United States Army North Colonel Young-Oak Kim, highly decorated U.S. Army combat veteran of World War II and the Korean War; first non-white to command an Army combat battalion in US history Fred Ohr, World War II ace fighter pilot Peter M. Rhee, trauma surgeon and military veteran Sue Mi Terry, CIA intelligence analyst specializing in East Asia Music Ahn Trio, Juilliard-educated classical music trio, featured in print and television ads for Gap Priscilla Ahn, alternative/folk singer Ailee, singer based in South Korea AleXa, singer based in South Korea Amerie, R&B singer-songwriter, actress Anderson Paak, singer, rapper and multi-instrumentalist Aaron Kwak, also known as Aron, member of South Korean boy band NU'EST Sarah Chang, classical violinist and recipient of the Avery Fisher Prize Arden Cho, model, actress who also displays her singing and songwriting talents on YouTube David Choi, singer-songwriter and YouTube sensation Jae Chong, music producer, formerly of R&B group Solid Clara Chung, singer Dumbfoundead, rapper Dia Frampton, musician, younger sister of Meg Frampton Meg Frampton, musician, older sister of Dia Frampton Shinik Hahm, conductor, professor Joe Hahn, founding member of alternative rock band Linkin Park, multi-platinum and Grammy Award winner Heejun Han, singer and American Idol finalist (season 11) Huh Yun-jin, singer and member of South Korean girl group Le Sserafim Huening Kai,singer and member of South Korean boy band Tomorrow X Together Huening Bahiyyih,singer and member of South Korean girl group Kep1er Laine Hardy, singer and American Idol winner (season 17) Hei-Kyung Hong, soprano with The Metropolitan Opera Company Kim Samuel, former Produce 101 Contestant & Soloist Danny Im, member of South Korean hip hop group 1TYM, R&B singer based in South Korea Yuna Ito, Korean-Japanese, America-born J-pop singer and actress Jessi, singer and rapper Brian Joo, member of South Korean duo Fly to the Sky, R&B singer based in South Korea Jessica Jung, singer, musical actress of the South Korean version of Legally Blonde: The Musical; former member of group Girls' Generation; sister of Krystal Jung Krystal Jung, singer, dancer, actress, model; member of South Korean group f(x); sister of Jessica Jung Nicole Jung, singer, dancer, rapper and former member of KARA Crystal Kay, J-pop (Zainichi Korean) singer Bobby Kim (Ji-Won), SMTM Season 3 winner, rapper, singer, composer with IKON, MOBB David Kim, concertmaster of the Philadelphia Orchestra Dennis Kim, concertmaster of the Pacific Symphony Orchestra Eun Sun Kim, conductor of the San Francisco Opera Earl Kim, pianist and composer; Harvard University professor Eli Kim, member of South Korean boy band U-KISS George Han Kim (also known as Johan Kim), singer and member of former R&B group Solid Paul Kim, classical pianist Rebecca Kim, rapper, ex-member of band After School Stephanie Kim, singer, dancer and member of South Korean girl group The Grace Soovin Kim, violinist from New York City Andy Lee, singer, actor, and member of South Korean boy band Shinhwa JinJoo Lee, guitarist and member of DNCE. Kodi Lee, pianist and singer-songwriter Megan Lee, singer, actress Sean Lee, violinist, four-season concertmaster and teaching assistant at Juilliard Sunny Lee, singer, radio host, member of South Korean group Girls' Generation Kevin Kwan Loucks, pianist and arts entrepreneur Nancy McDonie, singer and member of South Korean group Momoland Lucia Micarelli, violinist Eric Mun, rapper, actor and leader/member of South Korean boy band Shinhwa John Myung, bass guitar player of progressive metal band Dream Theater Eric Nam, singer and TV host based in South Korea Soon Hee Newbold, composer, conductor and violinist Karen O, lead singer of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs Eugene Park, electric violinist in South Korea Jae Park, singer-songwriter, composer, and former guitarist for South Korean band Day6 Jay Park, hip hop singer, rapper, b-boy, dancer, and former ex leader of 2PM John Park, singer and first runner up of Superstar K2, Korean version of American Idol, semi-finalist on American Idol. Park Joon-hyung, rapper and leader/member of South Korean pop group g.o.d Lena Park, K-pop, R&B singer, songwriter, composer Mike Park, ska and punk musician, founder of Asian Man Records Teddy Park, member of 1TYM, singer/rapper/producer based in South Korea. Todd Park Mohr, lead vocals/guitars/keyboards/saxophone of Big Head Todd and the Monsters Peniel Shin, rapper, and member of South Korean boy group BTOB Son Hoyoung, singer and member of South Korean pop group g.o.d Susie Suh, singer-songwriter, signed with Epic Records T, R&B singer based in South Korea Nosaj Thing (Jason Chung), electronic musician Tiger JK, musician Tim, R&B singer based in South Korea Kevin Woo, singer, dancer and member of South Korean Boy Band U-KISS Steve Seung-Jun Yoo, singer and dancer formerly based in South Korea Scott Yoo, conductor, host of Now hear this on the PBS network. Tiffany Young, singer, musical actress Fame as Carmen Diaz; member of South Korean group Girls' Generation Michelle Zauner, singer and songwriter who performs under the name Japanese Breakfast Tokimonsta (Jennifer Lee), electronic music artist, producer, and DJ Religion Su Bong, Soen Sa Nim in the Kwan Um School of Zen and the designated heir of Seung Sahn's lineage Peter Ahn, translator of the New American Standard Bible Eugene Cho, President of Bread for the World Hae Jong Kim, Bishop of the United Methodist Church Julius Kim, President of The Gospel Coalition Walter Kim, President of National Association of Evangelicals James A. Lee, President of Southern Reformed College and Seminary Michael Oh, CEO of Lausanne Committee on World Evangelization Andrew S. Park, theologian Angela Warnick Buchdahl, rabbi Science, technology and education Tae-Ung Baik, professor of law at the University of Hawaii Manoa William S. Richardson School of Law; legal scholar of international human rights law and Korean law Victor Cha, professor in Asian studies, former Director for Asian Affairs in the White House's National Security Council Dennis Choi, neuroscientist at Emory University, member of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies, former executive vice president for neuroscience at Merck, former chairman of the department of neurology at Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine Howard Choi, spinal cord injury specialist Esther Choo, emergency physician and professor at the Oregon Health & Science University John Chun, designer of AC Cobra and Shelby Mustang GT350 and GT500 models; Tonka Toys designer Jefferson Han, one of the main developers of "multi-touch sensing" technology, owner of Perceptive Pixel company Moo-Young Han, physicist Dennis Hong, professor and the founding director of RoMeLa (Robotics & Mechanisms Laboratory) of the Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering Department at UCLA Waun Ki Hong, Division Head and Professor at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center and pioneer in field of cancer chemoprevention and cancer medicine. Hyun Yi Kang, scholar and writer; chair of Women's Studies and Associate Professor in Comparative Literature and English at University of California, Irvine Minsoo Kang, historian and writer at University of Missouri Sung-Mo "Steve" Kang, chancellor of University of California, Merced; former professor of electrical and computer engineering at various institutions Larry Kwak, world-renowned physician and scientist who has pioneered breakthrough innovations in immunology and cancer vaccines; and named one of Time Magazine's 100 Most Influential People in 2010. Jaegwon Kim, William Herbert Perry Faunce Professor of Philosophy at Brown University Jeong H. Kim, president of Bell Labs Jim Yong Kim, Francois Xavier Bagnoud Professor Health and Human Rights at Harvard University; former director of HIV/AIDS at the World Health Organization; 17th president of Dartmouth College; president of the World Bank June Huh, 2022 Fields medalist mathematician, professor at Princeton University Peter S. Kim, president of Merck, former MIT-Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research biochemist, member of National Academy of Sciences Howard Koh, professor of the Practice of Public Health; associate dean for Public Health Practice at the Harvard School of Public Health; former Massachusetts Commissioner of Public Health Bandy X. Lee, psychiatrist with Yale University and the co-author of the book, The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump Benjamin W. Lee, theoretical physicist (influenced development of the Standard Model) Chang-Rae Lee, professor of creative writing at Princeton University; novelist Jung-Min Lee, oncologist at the National Cancer Institute David Oh, NASA engineer and lead flight director of the Mars Curiosity rover Andrew S. Park, Methodist theologian Gary Pak, professor of English at University of Hawaii at Mฤnoa; one of the most important Asian Hawaiian writers No-Hee Park, Dean of the School of Dentistry at the University of California, Los Angeles. Mark L. Polansky, NASA astronaut Michelle Rhee, former chancellor of District of Columbia Public Schools; education reform advocate Sebastian Seung, computational neuroscientist, brain and cognitive sciences professor at MIT, and author of Connectomes Nam-Pyo Suh, doctor of engineering of Carnegie Mellon University, 14th president of KAIST in South Korea Jeannie Suk, assistant professor of law at Harvard Law School; award-winning writer Meredith Jung-En Woo, dean of the college and graduate school of arts and sciences at the University of Virginia, professor of political science and Korean studies Ji-Yeon Yuh, professor in Asian American history and Asian diasporas at the Northwestern University Joon Yun, radiologist; founder of Palo Alto Institute Sports Kenny Allen Former NFL player; Father is from Korea Darwin Barney, MLB player; grandfather is from Korea and grandmother is from Japan Marissa Brandt, Olympic ice hockey player Eugene Chung, former NFL player, first Korean American to be drafted in the 1st round, played offensive line Rich Cho, NBA executive, Vice President of Basketball Strategy of Memphis Grizzlies Simon Cho, Olympic speed skater; won the bronze medal in men's 5000 meter relay at the 2010 Vancouver Games John Choi, e-sports player Hank Conger, MLB player Emily Cross, Olympic fencer; won the silver medal in foil team at the 2008 Beijing Games Toby Dawson, Olympic skier, won the bronze medal in men's freestyle skiing at the 2006 Torino Games Bill Demong, Olympic skier; mother is half Korean Marcus Demps, American football player Will Demps, American football player Dane Dunning, MLB Player Jake Dunning, MLB player Tommy Edman, MLB player, mother is from Korea. Tom Farden, head coach of the Utah Red Rocks Marcus Freeman, head coach of Notre Dame Football, former NFL player James Hahn, professional golfer Kyle Hamilton, First-team All-American Notre Dame football player Benson Henderson, mixed martial artist, former UFC lightweight champion Sam Howell, American football quarterback John Huh, professional golfer Vicky Hurst, professional golfer Anthony Kim, professional golfer Chloe Kim, elite snowboarder, Winter X Games gold medalist (superpipe, 2015) Olympic gold medalist (halfpipe, 2018) Christina Kim, professional golfer Kevin Kim, tennis player Jessica Pegula, tennis player; daughter of Terry and Kim Pegula Kim Pegula, businesswoman and co-owner of Pegula Sports and Entertainment (Buffalo Bills, Buffalo Sabres, and other teams) alongside her husband Terry; born in Seoul and adopted by an American family at age 5 Younghoe Koo, American football player Tae Man Kwon, Hapkido Grand Master; 9th degree Black Belt Brandun Lee, professional boxer Jeanette Lee, pool player, nicknamed "The Black Widow" for her tendency to wear black John Lee, former football player Sammy Lee, diver, first American-born male Asian Olympic gold medalist David Lipsky, professional golfer; mother is from Korea Moon Tae-jong, professional basketball player Kyler Murray, NFL quarterback Kevin Na, professional golfer Naomi Nari Nam, figure skater Jim Paek, NHL hockey player Angela Park, professional golfer Jane Park, professional golfer Richard Park, NHL player B.J. Penn, mixed martial artist and former UFC lightweight and welterweight champion Rob Refsnyder, MLB player; born in Seoul, South Korea, and adopted by a couple from Southern California when he was five months old. Jhoon Rhee, taekwondo master and entrepreneur Terrmel Sledge, MLB player Daewon Song, professional skateboarder Sonya Thomas, aka "Black Widow," competitive eater, holder of 29 world titles Hines Ward, football player, MVP of Super Bowl XL Michelle Wie West, professional golfer Alex Yi, soccer player Ariane Andrew also known as Cameron, professional wrestler Mia Yim also known as Jade, professional wrestler James Yun, professional wrestler Ben Leber, NFL Linebacker Other Emma Broyles, Miss America 2022, as Miss Alaska. Philip Jaisohn, first Korean to become an American citizen; first Korean American to receive an American medical degree (Originally from Boseong County, Jeollanam-do, South Korea) References External links Council of Korean Americans โ€“ a national, nonpartisan, nonprofit organization of Korean American leaders KAPS โ€“ Korean American Professionals Society KorAmeLit.htm โ€“ selection of Korean-American literature KoreAm Journal โ€“ news, stories, and issues of Korean Americans nationwide Korean American Literature โ€“ comprehensive bibliography of Korean American authors and their books Arirang โ€“ interactive history of Korean Americans Americans Korean Americans Korean Korean
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%8B%9C%EC%9D%B8%20%EB%AA%A9%EB%A1%9D
์‹œ์ธ ๋ชฉ๋ก
์•„๋ž˜๋Š” ๊ตญ์ œ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ €๋ช…ํ•œ ์‹œ์ธ ๋ชฉ๋ก์ด๋‹ค. A-Z C. S. ๋ฃจ์ด์Šค D. H. ๋กœ๋Ÿฐ์Šค G. K. ์ฒด์Šคํ„ฐํ„ด T. E. ํ„ T. S. ์—˜๋ฆฌ์—‡ W. E. B. ๋‘ ๋ณด์ด์Šค W. H. ์˜ค๋“  W. S. ๊ธธ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ใ„ฑ ๊ฐ€๋„ (๋‹น๋‚˜๋ผ) ๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์—˜๋ผ ๋ฏธ์ŠคํŠธ๋ž„ ๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์—˜๋ ˆ ๋‹จ๋ˆˆ์น˜์˜ค ๊ฐ€์ด์šฐ์Šค ๋ฃจํ‚ฌ๋ฆฌ์šฐ์Šค ๊ฑฐํŠธ๋ฃจ๋“œ ์Šคํƒ€์ธ ๊ฒŒ๋ฅดํ•˜๋ฅดํŠธ ํ•˜์›ํŠธ๋งŒ ๊ฒŒ์˜ค๋ฅดํฌ ๋ท”ํžˆ๋„ˆ ๊ฒŒ์˜ค๋ฅดํฌ ํŠธ๋ผํด ๊ณ ๋ฐ”์•ผ์‹œ ์ž‡์‚ฌ ๊ณ ํŠธํ™€ํŠธ ์—ํ”„๋ผ์ž„ ๋ ˆ์‹ฑ ๊ตฌ์–‘์ˆ˜ ๊ตด์› ๊ท„ํ„ฐ ๊ทธ๋ผ์Šค ๊ธฐ์šค 9์„ธ ๋‹คํ‚คํ… ๊ณต์ž‘ ๊ธฐ์šค ์•„ํด๋ฆฌ๋„ค๋ฅด ใ„ด ๋‚˜๋‚˜ํฌ ๋‚˜์“ฐ๋ฉ” ์†Œ์„ธํ‚ค ๋‚™๋นˆ์™• ๋„ฌ๋ฆฌ ์ž‘์Šค ๋…ธ๋ฐœ๋ฆฌ์Šค ๋…ธ์ž ๋‹ˆ์ž๋ฏธ ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ๊ทธ๋ฃฌํŠธ๋น„ ๋‹‰ ์ผ€์ด๋ธŒ ใ„ท ๋‹ค์ด์•ค ์• ์ปค๋จผ ๋‹ฅํ„ฐ ์ˆ˜์Šค ๋‹จํ…Œ ๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์—˜ ๋กœ์„ธํ‹ฐ ๋‹จํ…Œ ์•Œ๋ฆฌ๊ธฐ์—๋ฆฌ ๋ฐ๋ฆญ ์›”์ปท ๋ฐํ‚ค๋ฌด์Šค ์œ ๋‹ˆ์šฐ์Šค ์œ ๋ฒ ๋‚ ๋ฆฌ์Šค ๋„๋กœ์‹œ ํŒŒ์ปค ๋„์‹œํ…Œ์ด ์˜ค๋ธŒ๋ผ๋„๋น„์น˜ ๋„์—ฐ๋ช… ๋‘๋ชฉ ๋‘๋ณด ๋””ํŠธ๋ฆฌํžˆ ๋ณธํšŒํผ ๋”œ๋Ÿฐ ํ† ๋จธ์Šค ใ„น ๋ผ๋นˆ๋“œ๋ผ๋‚˜ํŠธ ํƒ€๊ณ ๋ฅด ๋ผ์ด๋„ˆ ๋งˆ๋ฆฌ์•„ ๋ฆด์ผ€ ๋ผ์ด์–ธ ์• ๋ค์Šค ๋ž ํ”„ ์›”๋„ ์—๋จธ์Šจ ๋žญ์Šคํ„ด ํœด์Šค ๋Ÿฌ๋””์–ด๋“œ ํ‚คํ”Œ๋ง ๋ ˆ๋„ˆ๋“œ ์ฝ”ํ—จ ๋ ˆ๋ฏธ ๋“œ ๊ตฌ๋ฅด๋ชฝ ๋ ˆ์˜คํด ์„ธ๋‹ค๋ฅด ์ƒ๊ณ ๋ฅด ๋ ˆ์ง€๋‚˜ ๋ฐ๋ฆฌ์˜ˆํ”„ ๋กœ๋„์Šค์˜ ์•„ํด๋กœ๋‹ˆ์˜ค์Šค ๋กœ๋Ÿฐ์Šค ๋”๋Ÿด ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ๋ฃจ์ด์Šค ์Šคํ‹ฐ๋ธ์Šจ ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ๋ฒˆ์Šค ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šฐ๋‹ ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ์‚ฌ์šฐ๋”” ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ์ฝ˜ํ€˜์ŠคํŠธ ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ํŽœ ์›Œ๋Ÿฐ ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ํ”„๋กœ์ŠคํŠธ ๋กœํŠธ๋ ˆ์•„๋ชฝ ๋ฐฑ์ž‘ ๋กœํŽ˜ ๋ฐ ๋ฒ ๊ฐ€ ๋ฃจ๋„๋น„์ฝ” ์•„๋ฆฌ์˜ค์Šคํ†  ๋ฃจ๋ฏธ ๋ฃจ๋ฒค ๋‹ค๋ฆฌ์˜ค ๋ฃจ์ด ์•„๋ผ๊ณต ๋ฃจ์ด์Šค ๋ฐ ๊ณต๊ณ ๋ผ ๋ฃจ์ด์Šค ๋“œ ์นด๋ชฝ์ด์Šค ๋ฃจ์ด์Šค ์บ๋Ÿด ๋ฃจ์นด๋ˆ„์Šค ๋ฃจํฌ๋ ˆํ‹ฐ์šฐ์Šค ๋ฃจํŠธ๋น„ํžˆ ์•„ํž˜ ํฐ ์•„๋ฅด๋‹˜ ๋ฃจํŠธ๋น„ํžˆ ํ‹ฐํฌ ใ… ๋งˆ๊ฑฐ๋ฆฟ ์• ํŠธ์šฐ๋“œ ๋งˆ๋ฅด์ฟ ์Šค ๋งˆ๋‹๋ฆฌ์šฐ์Šค ๋งˆ๋ฅดํ‹ฐ์•Œ๋ฆฌ์Šค ๋งˆ๋ฅดํ‹ด ๋ฐœ์ € ๋งˆ๋ฆฌ๋‚˜ ์ธ ๋ฒ ํƒ€์˜ˆ๋ฐ” ๋งˆ๋ฆฌ์šฐ ์ง€ ์•ˆ๋“œ๋ผ์ง€ ๋งˆ์‚ฌ์˜ค์นด ์‹œํ‚ค ๋งˆ์“ฐ์˜ค ๋ฐ”์‡ผ ๋งˆ์•ผ ์•ค์ ˆ๋กœ ๋งˆํ…Œ์˜ค ๋งˆ๋ฆฌ์•„ ๋ณด์ด์•„๋ฅด๋„ ๋งˆํ‹ฐ์•„์Šค ํด๋ผ์šฐ๋””์šฐ์Šค ๋ง‰์Šค ์—๋ฅธ์ŠคํŠธ ๋งค์Šˆ ์•„๋„๋“œ ๋งค์š”์‹  ๋งนํ˜ธ์—ฐ ๋ชฐ๋ฆฌ์—๋ฅด ๋ฌดํ•˜๋งˆ๋“œ ์ดํฌ๋ฐœ ๋ฏธ๊ฒ” ๋ฐ ์šฐ๋‚˜๋ฌด๋…ธ ๋ฏธ๋ผ ๋ฐ”์ด ๋ฏธ์ผˆ๋ž€์ ค๋กœ ๋ถ€์˜ค๋‚˜๋กœํ‹ฐ ๋ฏธํ•˜์—˜ ์—”๋ฐ ๋ฏธํ•˜์ด ์—๋ฏธ๋„ค์Šค์ฟ  ๋ฏธํ•˜์ผ ๋ ˆ๋ฅด๋ชฌํ† ํ”„ ใ…‚ ๋ฐ”์ฒผ ๋ฆฐ์ง€ ๋ฐ”ํ‚ฌ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ์Šค ๋ฐ•์šฉ๋ž˜ ๋ฐฅ ๋”œ๋Ÿฐ ๋ฐฑ๊ฑฐ์ด ๋ฒ„๊ธฐ ์ค„๋Ÿฌ ๋ฒ ๋ฅด๊ธธ๋ฆฌ์šฐ์Šค ๋ฒ ๋ฅดํ†จํŠธ ๋ธŒ๋ ˆํžˆํŠธ ๋ฒ ํ‹ฐ๋‚˜ ํฐ ์•„๋ฅด๋‹˜ ๋ฒค ์กด์Šจ (๋ฌธํ•™๊ฐ€) ๋ณด๋ฆฌ์Šค ํŒŒ์Šคํ…Œ๋ฅด๋‚˜ํฌ ๋ณผํ…Œ๋ฅด ๋ณผํ”„๋žŒ ํฐ ์—์…ด๋ฐ”ํ ๋ธŒ์•ผ์‚ฌ ๋ธ”๋ผ๋””๋ฏธ๋ฅด ๋‚˜๋ณด์ฝ”ํ”„ ๋ธ”๋ผ๋””๋ฏธ๋ฅด ๋งˆ์•ผ์ฝฅ์Šคํ‚ค ๋ธ”๋ ˆ์ฆˆ ์ƒ๋“œ๋ผ๋ฅด ๋น„๊ณ  ๋ชจํ…์Šจ ๋น„์„ผํ…Œ ์•Œ๋ ˆ์ต์‚ฐ๋“œ๋ ˆ ๋น„์Šค์™€๋ฐ” ์‹ฌ๋ณด๋ฅด์Šค์นด ๋น…ํ† ๋ฅด ์œ„๊ณ  ใ…… ์‚ฌ๋”” ์‚ฌ๋ฎˆ์—˜ ๋ฒ ์ผ€ํŠธ ์‚ฌํฌ (์‹œ์ธ) ์‚ด๋ฐ”ํ† ๋ ˆ ์ฝฐ์‹œ๋ชจ๋„ ์ƒˆ๋ฎค์–ผ ์กด์Šจ ์ƒˆ๋ฎค์–ผ ํ…Œ์ผ๋Ÿฌ ์ฝœ๋ฆฌ์ง€ ์ƒค๋ฅผ 1์„ธ ๋„๋ฅผ๋ ˆ์•™ ๊ณต์ž‘ ์ƒค๋ฅผ ๋ณด๋“ค๋ ˆ๋ฅด ์ƒฌ๋Ÿฟ ๋ธŒ๋ก ํ…Œ ์„ธ๋ฅด๊ฒŒ์ด ์˜ˆ์„ธ๋‹Œ ์…ฐ์ด๋จธ์Šค ํžˆ๋‹ˆ ์…ธ ์‹ค๋ฒ„์Šคํƒ€์ธ ์†Œ์‹ (๋ถ์†ก) ์†Œํฌํด๋ ˆ์Šค ์‡ ๋ Œ ํ‚ค๋ฅด์ผ€๊ณ ๋ฅด ์‰ฌ์ฆˆ๋ชจ ์‰ด๋ผ ๋จธํ”ผ ์‰ด๋ ˆ์ด๋งŒ 1์„ธ ์Šˆํ…ŒํŒ ๊ฒŒ์˜ค๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ์Šคํƒ€ํ‹ฐ์šฐ์Šค ์Šคํ…ŒํŒ ๋ง๋ผ๋ฅด๋ฉ” ์Šคํ‹ฐ๋ธ ์ŠคํŽœ๋” ์Šคํ‹ฐ๋ธ ํฌ๋ ˆ์ธ ์‹œ๊ทธํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ ์„œ์ˆœ ์‹ ๊ธฐ์งˆ ์‹ค๋น„์•„ ํ”Œ๋ž˜์Šค ์‹ญ์ž๊ฐ€์˜ ์š”ํ•œ ใ…‡ ์•„๋‚˜ํ†จ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ์•„๋„คํ…Œ ํฐ ๋“œ๋กœ์Šคํ…Œํœ ์Šคํ˜ธํ”„ ์•„๋‹ด ๋ฏธ์ธ ํ‚ค์—๋น„์น˜ ์•„๋‹ด ์ž๊ฐ€์˜ˆํ”„์Šคํ‚ค ์•„๋ฅดํ‚ฌ๋กœ์ฝ”์Šค ์•„๋ฅดํˆฌ์–ด ์Šˆ๋‹ˆ์ธจ๋Ÿฌ ์•„๋ฅดํŠ€๋ฅด ๋žญ๋ณด ์•„๋ฆฌ์Šคํ† ํŒŒ๋„ค์Šค ์•„๋ฏธ๋ฅด ํ˜ธ์Šค๋กœ์šฐ ์•„๋ฏธ๋ฆฌ ๋ฐ”๋ผ์นด ์•„์„œ ๋งค์ปจ ์•„์„œ ์‹œ๋จผ์ฆˆ ์•„์šฐ์†Œ๋‹ˆ์šฐ์Šค ์•„์ด์Šคํ‚ฌ๋กœ์Šค ์•„์นด์กฐ๋ฉ” ์—๋ชฌ ์•ˆ๋‚˜ ์•„ํ๋งˆํ† ๋ฐ” ์•ˆ๋“œ๋ ˆ์ด ๋ฒจ๋ฆฌ ์•ˆ๋“œ๋ ˆ์ด ๋ณด์ฆˆ๋„ค์„ผ์Šคํ‚ค ์•Œ๋ ˆ์‚ฐ๋“œ๋กœ ๋งŒ์ดˆ๋‹ˆ ์•Œ๋ ˆ์ด์Šคํ„ฐ ํฌ๋กค๋ฆฌ ์•Œ๋ ‰์‚ฐ๋” ํฌํ”„ ์•Œ๋ ‰์‚ฐ๋“œ๋ฅด ๋ธ”๋กœํฌ ์•Œ๋ ‰์‚ฐ๋“œ๋ฅด ํ‘ธ์‹œํ‚จ ์•Œํ์Šค ๋“œ ๋ผ๋งˆ๋ฅดํ‹ด ์•Œํ”„๋ ˆ๋“œ ๋“œ ๋ฎˆ์„ธ ์•Œํ”„๋ ˆ๋“œ ๋“œ ๋น„๋‹ˆ ์•™๋“œ๋ ˆ ๋ธŒ๋ฅดํ†ต ์•™ํ† ๋ƒ‰ ์•„๋ฅดํ†  ์•ค ๋ธŒ๋ก ํ…Œ ์•ค๋“œ๋ฃจ ๋งˆ๋ฒŒ ์•จ๋Ÿฐ ๊ธด์ฆˆ๋ฒ„๊ทธ ์•จ๋ฆฌ์Šค ์›Œ์ปค ์•จ์ €๋„Œ ์ฐฐ์Šค ์Šค์œˆ๋ฒˆ ์•จํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ ํ…Œ๋‹ˆ์Šจ ์•ผ๋กœ์Šฌ๋ผํ”„ ์‚ฌ์ดํŽ˜๋ฅดํŠธ ์–€ ๋„ค๋ฃจ๋‹ค ์–€ ์ฝ”ํ•˜๋…ธํ”„์Šคํ‚ค ์–‘์นด ์ฟ ํŒ”๋ผ ์–ด๋”” ์—”๋“œ๋ ˆ ์—๊ธธ ์Šค์นผ๋ผ๊ทธ๋ฆผ์† ์—๋‘์•„๋ฅดํŠธ ๋ซผ๋ฆฌ์ผ€ ์—๋“œ๊ฑฐ ์•จ๋Ÿฐ ํฌ ์—๋“œ๋‚˜ ์„ธ์ธํŠธ ๋นˆ์„ผํŠธ ๋ฐ€๋ ˆ์ด ์—๋“œ๋จผ๋“œ ์ŠคํŽœ์„œ ์—๋””์Šค ์‹œํŠธ์›ฐ ์—๋ฅธ์ŠคํŠธ ๋ชจ๋ฆฌ์ธ  ์•„๋ฅธํŠธ ์—๋ฆฌํžˆ ์ผ€์ŠคํŠธ๋„ˆ ์—๋ฐ€๋ฆฌ ๋””ํ‚จ์Šจ ์—๋ฐ€๋ฆฌ ๋ธŒ๋ก ํ…Œ ์—์šฐ๋ฆฌํ”ผ๋ฐ์Šค ์—์šฐ์ œ๋‹ˆ์˜ค ๋ชฌํƒˆ๋ ˆ ์—์ฆˆ๋ผ ํŒŒ์šด๋“œ ์—”๋‹ˆ์šฐ์Šค ์—˜๋ฆฌ์ž๋ฒ ์Šค ๋น„์ˆ ์—˜์œˆ ๋ธŒ๋ฃฉ์Šค ํ™”์ดํŠธ ์˜ˆ๋ธŒ๊ฒŒ๋‹ˆ ์˜™ํˆฌ์…ด์ฝ” ์˜ค๊ทธ๋ด ๋‚˜์‹œ ์˜ค๋””์„ธ์•„์Šค ์—˜๋ฆฌํ‹ฐ์Šค ์˜ค๋งˆ๋ฅด ํ•˜์ด์–Œ ์˜ค๋น„๋””์šฐ์Šค ์˜ค์Šค์นด ์™€์ผ๋“œ ์˜ฅํƒ€๋น„์˜ค ํŒŒ์Šค ์˜ฌ๋”์Šค ํ—‰์Šฌ๋ฆฌ ์˜ฌ๋ฆฌ๋ฒ„ ์›ฌ๋“ค ํ™ˆ์Šค ์™€์Šค ์™•์œ  ์š”๋ฅด๊ธฐ์˜ค์Šค ์„ธํŽ˜๋ฆฌ์Šค ์š”์‚ฌ ๋ถ€์† ์š”์‚ฌ๋…ธ ์•„ํ‚ค์ฝ” ์š”์ œํ”„ ์Šˆํ…ŒํŒ ์š”์ œํ”„ ํฐ ์•„์ดํ—จ๋„๋ฅดํ”„ ๋‚จ์ž‘ ์š”ํ•œ ๊ณ ํŠธํ”„๋ฆฌํŠธ ํ—ค๋ฅด๋” ์š”ํ•œ ๋ฃจ๋“œ๋น„๊ทธ ๋ฃจ๋„ค๋ฒ ๋ฆฌ ์š”ํ•œ ๋ณผํ”„๊ฐ• ํฐ ๊ดดํ…Œ ์šฐ๊ณ  ํฌ์Šค์ฝœ๋กœ ์šธ๋ฆฌํžˆ ์ธ ๋น™๊ธ€๋ฆฌ ์›๋งค (์ฒญ๋‚˜๋ผ) ์›์ด๋‘ฌ ์›”๋ ˆ ์†Œ์ž‰์นด ์›”๋ฆฌ์Šค ์Šคํ‹ฐ๋ธ์Šค ์›”ํ„ฐ ๋กค๋ฆฌ ์›”ํ„ฐ ์Šค์ฝง ์›”ํŠธ ํœ˜ํŠธ๋จผ ์›ฌ๋“ค ๋ฒ ๋ฆฌ ์œ„์‘๋ฌผ ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„ S. ๋ฒ„๋กœ์Šค ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„ ๋ชจ๋ฆฌ์Šค ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„ ๋ฒ„ํ‹€๋Ÿฌ ์˜ˆ์ด์ธ  ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„ ๋ธ”๋ ˆ์ดํฌ ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„ ์„œ๋กœ์ด์–ธ ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„ ์…ฐ์ต์Šคํ”ผ์–ด ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„ ์›Œ์ฆˆ์›Œ์Šค ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„ ์นด๋ฅผ๋กœ์Šค ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„์Šค ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„ ํ—จ๋ฆฌ ๋ฐ์ด๋น„์Šค ์œŒํ”„๋ ˆ๋“œ ์˜ค์–ธ ์œก์œ  ์œจ๋ฆฌ์šฐ์‹œ ์Šค์›Œ๋ฐ”์ธ ํ‚ค ์‘์šฐ์˜Œ์ฃผ ์ด๋ž˜์ฆˆ๋จธ์Šค ๋‹ค์œˆ ์ด๋ฐ˜ ๋ฐ”์กฐํ”„ ์ด๋ฐ˜ ๋ถ€๋‹Œ ์ด๋ฐฑ ์ด์ƒ์€ (๋‹น๋‚˜๋ผ) ์ด์šฑ ์ด์ฒญ์กฐ ใ…ˆ ์ž์ฝ”๋ชจ ๋ ˆ์˜คํŒŒ๋ฅด๋”” ์žํฌ ํ”„๋ ˆ๋ฒ ๋ฅด ์ž ๋ฐ”ํ‹ฐ์Šคํƒ€ ๋งˆ๋ฆฌ๋…ธ ์žฅ ๋“œ ๋ผ ํํ… ์žฅ ๋ผ์‹  ์žฅ ์•„๋ฅดํ”„ ์žฅ ์ฝ•ํ†  ์žฅ ํ”„๋ฃจ์•„์‚ฌ๋ฅด ์žญ ์ผ€๋ฃจ์•… ์ œ๋ผ๋ฅด ๋“œ ๋„ค๋ฅด๋ฐœ ์ œ์ž„์Šค 1์„ธ (์Šค์ฝ”ํ‹€๋žœ๋“œ) ์ œ์ž„์Šค 1์„ธ (์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ) ์ œ์ž„์Šค ๋Ÿฌ์…€ ๋กœ์›ฐ ์ œ์ž„์Šค ์—์ด๋ฒ„๋ฆฌ (๋ฐฐ์šฐ) ์ œ์ž„์Šค ์—์ด์ง€ ์ œ์ž„์Šค ์กฐ์ด์Šค ์ œํ”„๋ฆฌ ์ดˆ์„œ ์กฐ๋„ˆ์„  ์Šค์œ„ํ”„ํŠธ ์กฐ๋ฅด์ฃผ ์…ฐ์•„๋ฐ ์กฐ๋ฐ˜๋‹ˆ ๋ณด์นด์น˜์˜ค ์กฐ๋ฐ˜๋‹ˆ ํŒŒ์Šค์ฝœ๋ฆฌ ์กฐ๋น„ ์กฐ์ˆ˜์— ์นด๋ฅด๋‘์น˜ ์กฐ์‹ (์กฐ์œ„) ์กฐ์กฐ ์กฐ์ง€ ๊ณ ๋“  ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฐ ์กฐ์ง€ ๋ฉ”๋Ÿฌ๋””์Šค ์กฐ์ง€ ์—˜๋ฆฌ์—‡ ์กฐ์ง€ํ”„ ๋ธŒ๋กœ๋“œ์Šคํ‚ค ์กฐ์ง€ํ”„ ์• ๋””์Šจ ์กด ๊ฒŒ์ด ์กด ๋˜ ์กด ๋“œ๋ผ์ด๋“  ์กด ๋ฆด๋ฆฌ (์ž‘๊ฐ€) ์กด ๋งฅํฌ๋ž˜ ์กด ๋ฉ”์ด์Šคํ•„๋“œ ์กด ๋ฐ€๋งํ„ด ์‹ฑ ์กด ๋ฐ€ํ„ด ์กด ๋ฒ ์ฒ˜๋จผ ์กด ์—…๋‹ค์ดํฌ ์กด ์›จ์ธ (๋ฌธํ•™๊ฐ€) ์กด ์›น์Šคํ„ฐ ์กด ํ‚ค์ธ  ์กด ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ฒ˜ ์กด ํ—จ๋ฆฌ ๋‰ด๋จผ ์ฃผ๋‚˜ ๋ฐ˜์Šค ์ฃผ์„ธํŽ˜ ์šด๊ฐ€๋ ˆํ‹ฐ ์งˆ ์•Œ๋ ‰์‚ฐ๋” ์—์Šค๋ฐ”์›€ ์ง ๋ชจ๋ฆฌ์Šจ ์ง ์บ๋Ÿด ใ…Š ์ฐฐ์Šค ๋žจ ์ฐฐ์Šค ๋ถ€์ฝ”์Šคํ‚ค ์ฐฐ์Šค ์›จ์Šฌ๋ฆฌ ์ฒด์‚ฌ๋ ˆ ํŒŒ๋ฒ ์„ธ ์ฒด์Šค์™€ํ”„ ๋ฏธ์›Œ์‹œ ์ตœ์น˜์› ใ…‹ ์นด๋น„๋ฅด ์นดํˆด๋ฃจ์Šค ์นผ ์ƒŒ๋“œ๋ฒ„๊ทธ ์นผ๋ฆฌ๋‹ค์‚ฌ ์นผ๋ฆฌ๋งˆ์ฝ”์Šค ์นผ๋ฆด ์ง€๋ธŒ๋ž€ ์ปฌ๋กœ์ฒ˜์ด ์นผ๋งŒ ์ผ€์˜ค์Šค์˜ ์‹œ๋ชจ๋‹ˆ๋ฐ์Šค ์ผ„๋“œ๋ฆญ ๋ผ๋งˆ ํฌ๋ ˆํ‹ฐ์•ต ๋“œ ํŠธ๋ฃจ์•„ ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํƒ€ ๋ณผํ”„ ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ† ํผ ๋ง๋กœ ํด๋ ˆ๋ง ๋งˆ๋กœ ํด๋ ˆ๋ฉ˜์Šค ๋ธŒ๋ Œํƒ€๋…ธ ํ‚น์ฆ๋ฆฌ ์—์ด๋ฏธ์Šค ใ…Œ ํƒ€๋ฐ์šฐ์Šค ๋กœ์ œ๋น„์น˜ ํƒ€๋ผ์Šค ์…ฐ์šฐ์ฒธ์ฝ” ํƒˆ๋ฆฌ์—์‹  ํ„ฐ๋ˆ„ ํŠธ๋ฃจ๋ฒ ์ธ ํ‚ค ํ…Œ๋“œ ํœด์Šค ํ…Œ์˜ค๋„์–ด ์Šˆํ† ๋ฆ„ ํ…Œ์˜ค๋„์–ด ํฐํƒ€๋„ค ํ…Œ์˜คํฌ๋ฆฌํ† ์Šค ํ…Œ์˜คํ•„ ๊ณ ํ‹ฐ์— ํ† ๋ฅด์ฝฐํ†  ํƒ€์†Œ ํ† ๋งˆ์Šค ํ‚น๊ณ  ํ† ๋จธ์Šค ๋งฌ๋Ÿฌ๋ฆฌ ํ† ๋จธ์Šค ๋จธํ„ด ํ† ๋จธ์Šค ์ฑ„ํ„ฐํ„ด ํ† ๋จธ์Šค ํ•˜๋”” ํˆฌํŒ ์ƒค์ปค ํˆด์‹œ๋‹ค์Šค ํŠธ๋ฆฌ์Šคํƒ• ์ฐจ๋ผ ํ‹ฐ๋ถˆ๋ฃจ์Šค ใ… ํŒŒ๋ธ”๋กœ ๋„ค๋ฃจ๋‹ค ํŒŒ์šธ ์ฒผ๋ž€ ํŒจํŠธ๋ฆญ ํ”ผ์–ด์Šค ํŒจํ‹ฐ ์Šค๋ฏธ์Šค ํŒฌ ๋†€๋ฆฌ ํผ์‹œ ๋น„์‹œ ์…ธ๋ฆฌ ํŽ˜๋ฐ๋ฆฌ์ฝ” ๊ฐ€๋ฅด์‹œ์•„ ๋กœ๋ฅด์นด ํŽ˜๋“œ๋กœ ์นผ๋ฐ๋ก  ๋ฐ ๋ผ ๋ฐ”๋ฅด์นด ํŽ˜๋ฅด๋‚œ๋‘ ํŽ˜์†Œ์•„ ํŽœ์ดˆ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋ฒ ์ด์ฝ”ํ”„ ํŽซ์ฝ” ์Šฌ๋ผ๋ฒ ์ด์ฝ”ํ”„ ํด ๋กœ๋Ÿฐ์Šค ๋˜๋ฐ” ํด ๋ฐœ๋ ˆ๋ฆฌ ํด ๋ฒ ๋ฅผ๋ Œ ํด ์—˜๋คผ์•„๋ฅด ํด ์˜ค์Šคํ„ฐ ํด ํด๋กœ๋ธ ํ‘œ๋„๋ฅด ํŠœ์ฒดํ”„ ํ“Œ์ค„๋ฆฌ ํ”„๋ž€์ฒด ํ”„๋ ˆ์…ฐ๋ Œ ํ”„๋ž€์ฒด์Šค์ฝ” ํŽ˜ํŠธ๋ผ๋ฅด์นด ํ”„๋ž€์ธ  ๊ทธ๋ฆดํŒŒ๋ฅด์ฒ˜ ํ”„๋ž€์ธ  ๋ฒ ๋ฅดํŽ  ํ”„๋ž‘์ˆ˜์•„ ๋น„์šฉ ํ”„๋žœ์‹œ์Šค ๋ณด๋ชฌํŠธ ํ”„๋žœ์‹œ์Šค ์ฝ˜ํผ๋“œ ํ”„๋กœํŽ˜๋ฅดํ‹ฐ์šฐ์Šค ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ๋ฆฌํžˆ ๊ณ ํ‹€๋ฆฌํ”„ ํด๋กœํ”„์Šˆํ† ํฌ ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ๋ฆฌํžˆ ๋‹ˆ์ฒด ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ๋ฆฌํžˆ ์‹ค๋Ÿฌ ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ๋ฆฌํžˆ ํš”๋œ๋ฆฐ ํ”ผ๋ฅด๋‹ค์šฐ์‹œ ํ”ผ์—๋ฅด ๋“œ ๋กฑ์‚ฌ๋ฅด ํ”ผํŠธ ๋„ํ—ˆํ‹ฐ ํ•€๋‹ค๋กœ์Šค ใ…Ž ํ•˜๋คผ ๋งˆ๋ฅดํ‹ด์† ํ•˜์ธ๋ฆฌํžˆ ๋ต ํ•˜์ธ๋ฆฌํžˆ ํ•˜์ด๋„ค ํ•˜ํ”ผ์ฆˆ ํ•œ์Šค ๋งˆ๊ทธ๋ˆ„์Šค ์—”์ฒธ์Šค๋ฒ ๋ฅด๊ฑฐ ํ•œ์Šค ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ‹ฐ์•ˆ ์•ˆ๋ฐ๋ฅด์„ผ ํ•œ์œ  ํ—ˆ๋จผ ๋ฉœ๋นŒ ํ—ค๋กœ๋‹ค์Šค ํ—ค๋ฅด๋งŒ ํ—ค์„ธ ํ—ค์‹œ์˜ค๋„์Šค ํ—จ๋ฆฌ ๋ฐ์ด๋น„๋“œ ์†Œ๋กœ ํ—จ๋ฆฌ ์›Œ์ฆˆ์›Œ์Šค ๋กฑํŽ ๋กœ ํ—จ๋ฆฌ ํ•„๋”ฉ ํ—จ๋ฆฌํฌ ์ž…์„ผ ํ˜ธ๋ผํ‹ฐ์šฐ์Šค ํ˜ธ๋ฅดํ—ค ๊ธฐ์˜Œ ํ˜ธ๋ฅดํ—ค ๋ฃจ์ด์Šค ๋ณด๋ฅดํ—ค์Šค ํ˜ธ๋ฉ”๋กœ์Šค ํ˜ธ์„ธ ๋งˆ๋ฅดํ‹ฐ ํ˜ธ์‘ค์–ธํ์—‰ ํ›„๊ณ  ํฐ ํ˜ธํ”„๋งŒ์Šคํƒˆ ํ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ†  ๋ณดํ…Œํ”„ ํž๋‹ค ๋‘˜๋ฆฌํ‹€ ํž๋ ˆ์–ด ๋ฒจ๋Ÿญ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20poets
List of poets
This is an alphabetical list of internationally notable poets. A Abโ€“Ak Aarudhra (1925โ€“1968), Indian Telugu poet, born Bhagavatula Sadasiva Sankara Sastry Jonathan Aaron (born 1941), US poet Chris Abani (born 1966), Nigerian poet Henry Abbey (1842โ€“1911), US poet Eleanor Hallowell Abbott (1872โ€“1958), US poet and fiction writer Siรดn Abel (fl. 18th c.), Welsh balladeer Aria Aber (born 1991), Afghan poet and novelist, resides in the US, writes & publishes primarily in English Lascelles Abercrombie (1881โ€“1938), English poet and literary critic Arthur Talmage Abernethy (1872โ€“1956), US journalist, minister, scholar; first North Carolina Poet Laureate Sam Abrams (born 1935), US poet, editor and critic Seth Abramson (born 1976), US poet Kosta Abraลกeviฤ‡ (1879โ€“1898), Serbian poet Dannie Abse (1923โ€“2014), Welsh poet in English Kathy Acker (1947โ€“1997), US experimental novelist, punk poet and playwright Diane Ackerman (born 1948), US author, poet and naturalist Duane Ackerson (1942โ€“2020), US writer of speculative poetry and fiction Milton Acorn (1923โ€“1986), Canadian poet, writer and playwright Harold Acton (1904โ€“1994), English writer, scholar and dilettante Jรกnos Aczรฉl (died 1523), Hungarian poet and provost Tamรกs Aczรฉl (1921โ€“1994), Hungarian poet Gilbert Adair (1944โ€“2011), Scottish novelist, poet and critic Virginia Hamilton Adair (1919โ€“2004), US poet Helen Adam (1909โ€“1993), Scottish-US poet, collagist and photographer Draginja Adamoviฤ‡ (1925โ€“2000), Serbian poet John Adams (1704โ€“1740), US poet Lรฉonie Adams (1899โ€“1988), US poet Ryan Adams (born 1974), US singer-songwriter and writer Hendrik Adamson (1891โ€“1946), Estonian poet Fleur Adcock (born 1934), New Zealand poet mainly in England Joseph Addison (1672โ€“1719), English essayist, poet, writer and politician Kim Addonizio (born 1954) US poet and novelist Artur Adson (1889โ€“1977), Estonian poet Endre Ady (1877โ€“1919), Hungarian poet Mariska Ady (1888โ€“1977), Hungarian poet Aeschylus (525โ€“456 BCE), Athenian tragedian Lucius Afranius (fl. c. 94 BCE), Roman comic poet Anastasia Afanasieva (born 1982), Ukrainian physician, poet, writer, translator John Agard (born 1949), Afro-Guyanese poet and children's writer Patience Agbabi (born 1965), British poet and performer James Agee (1909โ€“1955), US novelist, screenwriter, and poet Deborah Ager (born 1977), US poet and editor Istvรกn รgh (born 1938), Hungarian poet Kelli Russell Agodon (born 1969), US poet Dritรซro Agolli (1931โ€“2017), Albanian poet Carlos Martรญnez Aguirre (born 1974), Spanish poet Delmira Agustini (1886โ€“1914), Uruguayan poet Ishaaq bin Ahmed (1095 โ€“ 12th century), Arab scholar, poet and ancestor of the Somali Isaaq clan-family Ai (Florence Anthony, 1947โ€“2010), US poet Ama Ata Aidoo (1940โ€“2023), Ghanaian novelist, poet, playwright and academic Conrad Aiken (1889โ€“1973), US poet and author Aganice Ainianos (1838โ€“1892), Greek poet Akazome Emon (956โ€“1041), Japanese poet and historian Mark Akenside (1721โ€“1770), English poet and physician Rachel Akerman (1522โ€“1544), Austrian Jewish poet writing in German Mehdi Akhavan-Sales (1929โ€“1990), Iranian poet Bella Akhmadulina (1937โ€“2010), Russian poet Anna Akhmatova (1889โ€“1966), Russian poet Jan Nisar Akhtar (1914โ€“1976), Indian Urdu poet Javed Akhtar (born 1945), Indian poet, lyricist and scriptwriter Salman Akhtar (born 1946), Indian US professor and poet writing in English and Urdu Alโ€“Am Amina Al Adwan (born 1935), Jordanian writer, poet and critic Muhammad Taha Al-Qaddal (1951โ€“2021), Sudanese poet Luigi Alamanni (1495โ€“1556), Italian poet and statesman Alasdair mac Mhaighstir Alasdair (c. 1698โ€“1770), Scottish Gaelic poet Ave Alavainu (born 1942), Estonian poet Gillebrรญghde Albanach (fl. 1200โ€“1230), Scottish Gaelic poet and crusader Alcaeus (4th c. BCE), Athenian comic poet in Greek Alcaeus of Messene (fl. late 3rd/early 2nd c. BCE), Greek writer of verse epigrams Alcaeus of Mytilene (7thโ€“6th c. BCE), Greek lyric poet from Lesbos Allamraju Subrahmanyakavi (1831โ€“1892), Indian Telugu poet Guru Amar Das (1479โ€“1574), Punjabi poet and Sikh guru Ammiel Alcalay (born 1956), US poet, scholar and critic Alcman (fl. 7th c. BCE), Ancient Greek lyric poet Amos Bronson Alcott (1799โ€“1888), US poet and teacher Richard Aldington (1892โ€“1962), English poet and writer Vasile Alecsandri (1821โ€“1890), Romanian poet Tudur Aled (c. 1465โ€“1525), Welsh poet writing in Welsh Claribel Alegrรญa (1924โ€“2018), Central US poet writing in Spanish Vicente Aleixandre (1898โ€“1984), Spanish poet, Nobel Laureate 1977 Josip Murn Aleksandrov (1879โ€“1901), Slovene symbolist poet Sherman Alexie (born 1966), US poet and writer Felipe Alfau (1902โ€“1999), Catalan US novelist and poet Agha Shahid Ali (1949โ€“2001) Indian, Kashmiri and US poet Taha Muhammad Ali (1931โ€“2011), Palestinian poet Dante Alighieri (1265โ€“1321), Italian poet James Alexander Allan (1889โ€“1956), Australian poet August Alle (1899โ€“1952), Estonian poet William Allegrezza (born 1974), US poet, professor and editor Dick Allen (1939โ€“2017), US poet, critic and academic Donald Allen (1912โ€“2004), US poet, editor and translator Elizabeth Akers Allen (1832โ€“1911), US author and poet Ron Allen (1947โ€“2010), US poet and playwright Artur Alliksaar (1923โ€“1966), Estonian poet William Allingham (1824 or 1828โ€“1889), Irish poet and man of letters Washington Allston (1779โ€“1843), US painter and poet Damaso Alonso (1898โ€“1990), Spanish poet, philologist and critic Alta (Alta Gerrey; born 1942), US poet and writer Natan Alterman (1910โ€“1970), Israeli poet, journalist and translator Alurista (born 1947), Chicano poet and activist Al Alvarez (fl. 1929โ€“2019), English poet Julia Alvarez (born 1950), Dominican-US poet, novelist and essayist Betti Alver (1906โ€“1989), Estonian poet Moniza Alvi (born 1954), Pakistani-British poet and writer Ambroise (fl. c. 1190), Norman-French poet of Third Crusade Yehuda Amichai (1924โ€“2000), Israeli poet Indran Amirthanayagam (born 1960), Sri Lankan US poet, essayist and translator Kingsley Amis (1922โ€“1995), English author and poet A. R. Ammons (1926โ€“2001), US author and poet Anโ€“Aq Anacreon (570โ€“488 BCE), Greek lyric poet Alfred Andersch (1914โ€“1980), German writer and publisher Mir Anees or Anis) (1803โ€“1874), Indian poet in Urdu Guda Anjaiah (1955โ€“2016), Telugu Indian poet, singer, lyricist and writer from Telangana Ardan Angarkhaev (born 1946), Russian poet and writer Temsรผla Ao (born 1945), Indian Naga poet, short story writer, and ethnographer Ana Paula Arendt (born 1980), Brazilian classical poet Hans Christian Andersen (1805โ€“1875), Danish poet and children's writer Victor Henry Anderson (1917โ€“2001), US poet, kahuna and teacher of the Feri Tradition Carlos Drummond de Andrade (1902โ€“1987), Brazilian poet Mรกrio de Andrade (1893โ€“1945), Brazilian poet, novelist and critic Bernard Andrรฉ (1450โ€“1522), French Augustinian poet: poet laureate to Henry VII of England Peter Andrej (born 1959), Slovenian poet and musician Sophia de Mello Breyner Andresen (1919โ€“2004), Portuguese poet and writer Bruce Andrews (born 1948), US poet of language Kevin Andrews (1924โ€“1989), Anglo-Greek philhellene writer and archeologist Ron Androla (born 1954), US poet Guru Angad (1504โ€“1552), Sikh Guru and Punjabi poet Aneirin (fl. 6th c.), Brythonic epic poet Ralph Angel (1951โ€“2020), US poet and translator Maya Angelou (1928โ€“2014), US poet James Stout Angus (1830โ€“1923), Shetland poet mainly in Shetland dialect Marion Angus (1865โ€“1946), Scottish poet in Scots J. K. Annand (1908โ€“1993), Scottish children's poet Mika Antiฤ‡ (1932โ€“1986), Serbian poet David Antin (1932โ€“2016), US poet and critic Antler (born 1946), US poet Susanne Antonetta (born 1956), US poet and author Brother Antoninus (1912โ€“1994), US poet Raymond Antrobus (living), British Chairil Anwar (1922โ€“1949), Indonesian poet Johannes Anyuru (born 1979), Swedish poet Guillaume Apollinaire (1880โ€“1918), French poet Apollonius of Rhodes (270 โ€“ postโ€“245 BCE), Greek poet and librarian in Alexandria Maja Apostoloska (born 1976), Macedonian poet Philip Appleman (1926โ€“2020), US poet and professor Lajos รprily (1887โ€“1967), Hungarian poet and translator Pawlu Aquilina (1929โ€“2009), Maltese poet Ar Louis Aragon (1897โ€“1982), French poet, novelist and editor Jรกnos Arany (1817โ€“1882), Hungarian poet Archilochus (c. 680 โ€“ c. 645 BCE), Greek lyric poet Walter Conrad Arensberg (1878โ€“1954), US dadaist, critic and poet Tudor Arghezi (1880โ€“1967), Romanian poet Ludovico Ariosto (1474โ€“1533), Italian poet Aristophanes (c. 446 โ€“ c. 386 BCE), Greek dramatic poet Guru Arjan (1563โ€“1606), Sikh guru and Punjabi poet Rae Armantrout (born 1947), US language poet Simon Armitage (born 1963), English poet, playwright and novelist Richard Armour (1906โ€“1989), US poet and author Ernst Moritz Arndt (1769โ€“1860), German author and poet Bettina von Arnim (1785โ€“1859), German writer, composer and visual artist Ludwig Achim von Arnim (1781โ€“1831), German poet and novelist Craig Arnold (1967โ€“2009), US poet and professor Matthew Arnold (1822โ€“1888), English poet and cultural critic Arnรณrr รžรณrรฐarson jarlaskรกld (Poet of Earls, c. 1012 โ€“ 1070s), Icelandic skald Jean Arp (1886โ€“1966), German-French sculptor, painter and poet Franciszka Arnsztajnowa (1865โ€“1942), Polish poet Antonin Artaud (1896โ€“1948), French playwright, poet and essayist Asโ€“Az M. K. Asante (born 1982), US author, poet and professor John Ashbery (1927โ€“2017), US poet, 1976 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry Cliff Ashby (1919โ€“2012), English poet and novelist Renรฉe Ashley, US poet and novelist Anton Aลกkerc (1856โ€“1912), Slovenian poet and Roman Catholic priest Adam Asnyk (1838โ€“1897), Polish poet and dramatist Herbert Asquith (1881โ€“1947), English poet Mina Assadi (born 1942), Iranian poet, author and songwriter Vishnu Raj Atreya (1944โ€“2020), Nepali poet, author, songwriter and novelist Margaret Atwood (born 1939), Canadian poet, novelist and essayist W. H. Auden (1907โ€“1973), Anglo-US poet, essayist Imre Augustich (Imre Augustiฤ, 1837โ€“1879), Slovenian/Hungarian poet Joseph Auslander (1897โ€“1965), US poet, anthologist and novelist; US Poet Laureate, 1937โ€“1941 Ausonius (c. 310โ€“395), Latin poet and rhetorician at Burdigala (Bordeaux) Paul Auster (born 1947), US poet, novelist, playwright, essayist, and translator James Avery (1948โ€“2013), US actor, poet and screenwriter Margaret Avison (1918โ€“2007), Canadian poet Krayem Awad (born 1948), Viennese painter, sculptor and poet of Syrian origin Gennady Aygi (1934โ€“2006), Russian poet Ayo Ayoola-Amale (born 1970), Nigerian poet Pam Ayres (born 1947), English humorous poet Robert Aytoun (1570โ€“1638), Scottish poet Maryam Jafari Azarmani (born 1977), Iranian poet, essayist, critic and translator Jody Azzouni (born 1954), US philosopher and poet B Ba Mihรกly Babits (1883โ€“1941), Hungarian poet and translator Ken Babstock (born 1970), Canadian poet Jimmy Santiago Baca (born 1952), US poet and writer of Apache/Chicano descent Bacchylides (fl. 5th c. BCE), Greek lyric poet Bellamy Bach (fl. 1980s), joint pseudonym of fiction writers and poets Harivansh Rai Bachchan (fl. 20th c.), Hindi poet Joseph M. Bachelor (also Joseph Morris, 1889โ€“1947), US author, poet and educator Simon Bacher (1823โ€“1991), Hebrew poet in Hungary Ingeborg Bachmann (1926โ€“1973), Austrian poet and author Sutardji Calzoum Bachri (born 1941), Indonesian poet George Bacovia (1881โ€“1957), Romanian poet Krzysztof Kamil Baczyล„ski (1921โ€“1944), Polish poet and soldier Julio Baghy (1891โ€“1967), Hungarian Esperanto author and poet Bai Juyi (772โ€“846), Chinese poet of Tang dynasty Joanna Baillie (1762โ€“1851), Scottish poet and dramatist Jรณzsef Bajza (1804โ€“1858), Hungarian poet and critic Jรณzef Baka (1706/1707โ€“1788), Polish/Lithuanian poet and Jesuit priest Vyt Bakaitis (born 1940), Lithuania-US translator, editor and poet David Baker (born 1954), US poet Hinemoana Baker (born 1968) New Zealand poet and musician Bรขkรฎ (1526โ€“1600), Ottoman-Turkish language poet (pseudonym of Mahmud Abdรผlbรขkรฎ) John Balaban (born 1943), US poet and translator Bรกlint Balassi (1554โ€“1594), Hungarian poet Bรฉla Balรกzs (1884โ€“1949), Hungarian poet and critic Edward Balcerzan (born 1937), Polish poet, critic and translator Stanisล‚aw Baliล„ski (1898โ€“1984), Polish poet and diplomat Jesse Ball (born 1978), US poet and novelist Zsรณfia Balla (born 1949), Hungarian poet from Romania Addie L. Ballou (1837โ€“1916), US poet and suffragist Konstantin Balmont (1867โ€“1942), Russian symbolist poet and translator Russell Banks (born 1940), US fiction writer and poet Anne Bannerman (1765โ€“1829), Scottish poet Amiri Baraka (aka Leroi Jones) (1934โ€“2014), US writer, poet and dramatist Marcin Baran (born 1963), Polish poet and journalist Stanisล‚aw Baraล„czak (1946โ€“2014), Polish poet, critic and translator Anna Laetitia Barbauld (1743โ€“1825), English poet, essayist and children's author Porfirio Barba-Jacob (1883โ€“1942), Colombian poet and writer John Barbour (c. 1320โ€“1395), Scottish poet, first major writer in Scots Alexander Barclay (c. 1476โ€“1552), English/Scottish poet George Barker (1913โ€“1991), English poet and author Les Barker (born 1947), English poet Coleman Barks (born 1937), US poet Christine Barkhuizen le Roux (1959โ€“2020), South African poet Mihรกly Barla (Mihรกo Barla, c. 1778โ€“1824), Slovenian poet and pastor in Hungary Mary Barnard (1909โ€“2001), US poet, biographer and translator Djuna Barnes (1892โ€“1982), US writer William Barnes (1801โ€“1886), English writer, poet and philologist Catherine Barnett (born 1960), US poet and educator Richard Barnfield (1574โ€“1620), English poet Willis Barnstone (born 1927), US poet and literary translator Maria Barrell (died 1803), poet, playwright and writer of periodicals Laird Barron (born 1970), US poet, author Sรกndor Barta (1897โ€“1938), Hungarian poet executed in USSR Bernard Barton (1784โ€“1849), English poet and Quaker Bertha Hirsch Baruch (fl. late 18th โ€“ early 19th c.), US writer, poet and suffragist Todd Bash (born 1965), US avant-garde playwright, poet and writer Matsuo Bashล (1644โ€“1694), Japanese renku and haiku poet Michael Basinski (born 1950), US text, visual and sound poet Ellen Bass (born 1947), US poet Arlo Bates (1850โ€“1918), US author, poet and educator David Bates (1809โ€“1870), US poet Joseph Bathanti (born 1953), US poet, writer and professor; North Carolina Poet Laureate Jรกnos Batsรกnyi (1763โ€“1845), Hungarian poet Dawn-Michelle Baude (born 1959), US poet, journalist and educator Charles Baudelaire (1821โ€“1867), French poet, essayist and translator Cirilo Bautista (1941โ€“2018), Philippines poet, writer and critic Charles Baxter (born 1947), US writer and poet James K. Baxter (1926โ€“1972), New Zealand poet Be Jan Beatty (born 1952), US poet Francis Beaumont (1584โ€“1616), English poet and dramatist Samuel Beckett (1906โ€“1989), Irish avant-garde playwright, novelist and poet Joshua Beckman (living), US poet Matija Beฤ‡koviฤ‡ (born 1939), Serbian writer and poet Gustavo Adolfo Bรฉcquer (1836โ€“1870), Spanish poet and fiction writer Thomas Lovell Beddoes (1803โ€“1849), English poet, dramatist and physician Patricia Beer (1919โ€“1999), English poet and critic Sapargali Begalin (1895โ€“1983), Kazakh poet Aphra Behn (1640โ€“1689), English Restoration dramatist; early professional female writer Ferenc Bรฉkรกssy (1893โ€“1915), Hungarian poet Erin Belieu (born 1967), US poet Marvin Bell (1937โ€“2020), US poet and teacher; first Poet Laureate of State of Iowa Gioconda Belli (born 1948), Nicaraguan poet and novelist Giuseppe Gioachino Belli (1791โ€“1863), Italian sonneteer in Romanesco Xuan Bello (born 1965), Asturian poet Hilaire Belloc (1870โ€“1953), Anglo-French writer and historian Andrei Bely (1880โ€“1934), Russian novelist, poet and critic Stephen Vincent Benรฉt (1898โ€“1943), US author, poet and fiction writer William Rose Benรฉt (1886โ€“1950), US poet, writer and editor Elizabeth Benger (1775โ€“1827), English poet, biographer and novelist Gottfried Benn (1886โ€“1956), German essayist, novelist and expressionist poet Gwendolyn B. Bennett (1902โ€“1981), African-US writer and poet Jim Bennett (born 1951), English poet in Liverpool punk era Richard Berengarten (born 1943) English poet, writer and translator Bo Bergman (1869โ€“1967), Swedish writer and critic ฤฐlhan Berk (1918โ€“2008), Turkish poet Charles Bernstein (born 1950), US poet and scholar Bรฉroul (12th c.), Norman poet of episodic Tristan Daniel Berrigan (1921โ€“2016), US poet, priest and peace activist Ted Berrigan (1934โ€“1983), US poet James Berry (1924โ€“2017), Jamaican poet based in England Wendell Berry (born 1934), US man of letters, critic and farmer John Berryman (1914โ€“1972), US poet and scholar Dรกniel Berzsenyi (1776โ€“1836), Hungarian poet Mary Ursula Bethell (1874โ€“1945), New Zealand poet and social worker John Betjeman (1906โ€“1984), English poet, writer and broadcaster Elizabeth Beverley (fl. 1815โ€“1830), English poet, writer and entertainer Helen Bevington (1906โ€“2001), US poet, prose writer and educator L. S. Bevington (1845โ€“1895), English anarchist poet and essayist Bhโ€“Bl Subramanya Bharathi (1882โ€“1921), Tamil writer, poet and Indian independence activist Sujata Bhatt (born 1956), Indian poet in Gujarati ลนmitrok Biadula (1886โ€“1941), Jewish Belarusian poet, prose writer and independence activist Miron Biaล‚oszewski (1922โ€“1983), Polish poet, novelist and playwright Zbigniew Bieล„kowski (1913โ€“1994), Polish poet, critic and translator Biernat of Lublin (c. 1465 โ€“ post-1529), Polish poet and fabulist Laurence Binyon (1879โ€“1943), English poet, dramatist and art scholar Earle Birney (1904โ€“1995), Canadian poet, fiction writer and dramatist Nevin Birsa (1947โ€“2003), Slovene poet Balรกzs Birtalan (1969โ€“2016), Hungarian poet and publicist Elizabeth Bishop (1911โ€“1979), US poet and short-story writer; US Poet Laureate Ram Prasad Bismil (1897โ€“1927), poet and revolutionary writing in Urdu and Hindi Bill Bissett (born 1939), Canadian anti-conventional poet Sherwin Bitsui (born 1975), US Navajo poet Paul Blackburn (1926โ€“1971) US poet Richard Palmer Blackmur (1904โ€“1965), US literary critic and poet Lucian Blaga (1895โ€“1961), Romanian philosopher, poet and playwright Lewis Blake (born 1946), English poet William Blake (1757โ€“1827), English painter, poet and printmaker Don Blanding (1894โ€“1957), US poet, journalist, writer and speaker Adrian Blevins (born 1964), US poet Mathilde Blind (1841โ€“1896), German-born English poet and writer Alexander Blok (1880โ€“1921), Russian lyrical poet Benjamin Paul Blood (1832โ€“1919), US philosopher and poet Robert Bloomfield (1766โ€“1823), English laboring-class poet Roy Blumenthal (born 1968), South African poet Edmund Blunden (1896โ€“1974), English poet, author and literary critic Wilfrid Scawen Blunt (1840โ€“1922), English poet and writer Robert Bly (1926โ€“2021), US poet, author and leader of mythopoetic men's movement Boโ€“Bri Johannes Bobrowski (1917โ€“1965), East German author and poet Giovanni Boccaccio (1313โ€“1375), Italian author and poet Jean Bodel (1165โ€“1210), Old French poet รdรกm Bodor (born 1936), Hungarian poet from Romania Louise Bogan (1897โ€“1970), US poet; fourth US Poet Laureate Matteo Maria Boiardo (1440/1441โ€“1494), Italian Renaissance poet Nicolas Boileau-Desprรฉaux (1636โ€“1711), French poet and critic Michelle Boisseau (1955โ€“2017), US poet Christian Bรถk (born 1966), experimental Canadian poet Osbern Bokenam (c. 1393 โ€“ c. 1464), English poet and friar Eavan Boland (1944โ€“2020), Irish poet Alan Bold (1943โ€“1998), Scottish poet, biographer and journalist Heinrich Bรถll (1917โ€“1985), German novelist Edmund Bolton (c. 1575 โ€“ c. 1633), English historian and poet Nozawa Bonchล (c. 1640โ€“1714), Japanese haikai poet Dietrich Bonhoeffer (1906โ€“1945), German poet and Lutheran theologian Arna Wendell Bontemps (1902โ€“1973), US poet and member of the Harlem Renaissance Luke Booker (1762โ€“1835), English poet, cleric and antiquary Kurt Boone (born 1959), US poet Jorge Luis Borges (1899โ€“1986), Argentine fiction writer, essayist and poet Tadeusz Borowski (1922โ€“1951), Polish writer and journalist Hristo Botev (1848โ€“1876), Bulgarian poet and revolutionary Gordon Bottomley (1874โ€“1948), English poet and verse dramatist David Bottoms (born 1949), US poet; Georgia Poet Laureate Cathy Smith Bowers (born 1949), US poet; North Carolina Poet Laureate 2010โ€“2012 Edgar Bowers (1924โ€“2000), US poet and Bollingen Prize in Poetry winner Tadeusz Boy-ลปeleล„ski (1874โ€“1941), Polish poet, critic and translator Mark Alexander Boyd (1562โ€“1601), Scottish poet and mercenary Kay Boyle (1902โ€“1992), US writer, educator and political activist Alison Brackenbury (born 1953), English poet Anne (Dudley) Bradstreet (c. 1612 โ€“ 1672) America's first published poet Di Brandt (born 1952), Canadian poet and literary critic Giannina Braschi (born 1953), US poet born in Puerto Rico Kamau Brathwaite (1930โ€“2020), Barbadian writer Richard Brautigan (1935โ€“1984), US fiction writer and poet Bertolt Brecht (1898โ€“1956), German playwright, poet and lyricist Gerbrand Adriaensz Bredero (1585โ€“1618), Dutch poet and playwright Radovan Brenkus (born 1974), Slovak writer and poet Christopher Brennan (1870โ€“1932), Australian poet and scholar Joseph Payne Brennan (1918โ€“1990), US poet and writer of fantasy and horror fiction Clemens Brentano (1778โ€“1842), German poet and novelist Andrรฉ Breton (1896โ€“1966), French writer, poet and founder of Surrealism Nicholas Breton (1545โ€“1626), English poet and novelist Ken Brewer (1941โ€“2006), US poet and scholar; Utah Poet Laureate Breyten Breytenbach (born 1939), South-African/French writer, poet and painter Robert Bridges (1844โ€“1930), English poet; Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom Robert Bringhurst (born 1946), Canadian poet, typographer and author Broโ€“By Geoffrey Brock (born 1964), US poet and translator Eve Brodlique (1867โ€“1949), British-born Canadian/American poet, author and journalist Joseph Brodsky (1940โ€“1996), Russian poet and essayist Wladyslaw Broniewski (1897โ€“1962), Polish poet and soldier William Bronk (1918โ€“1999), US poet Anne Brontรซ (1820โ€“1849), English novelist and poet, youngest of three Brontรซ sisters Charlotte Brontรซ (1816โ€“1855), English novelist and poet, eldest of three Brontรซ sisters Emily Brontรซ (1818โ€“1848), English novelist and poet Rupert Brooke (1887โ€“1915), English poet Gwendolyn Brooks (1917โ€“2000), African-US poet; US Poet Laureate Hans Adolph Brorson (1694โ€“1764), Danish poet and Pietist bishop Joan Brossa (1919โ€“1998), Catalan poet, playwright and artist Nicole Brossard (born 1943), French Canadian formalist poet and novelist Olga Broumas (born 1949), Greek poet in United States Flora Brovina (born 1949), Kosovar Albanian poet, pediatrician and women's rights activist Petrus Brovka (aka Pyotr Ustinovich Brovka) (1905โ€“1980), Soviet Belarusian poet George Mackay Brown (1921โ€“1996), Scottish poet, author and dramatist James Brown known as J. B. Selkirk (1832โ€“1904), Scottish poet and essayist Sterling Brown (1901โ€“1989), African-US academic writer and poet Thomas Edward Brown (1830โ€“1897), Manx poet, scholar and theologian Frances Browne (1816โ€“1887), Irish poet and novelist William Browne (1590โ€“1643), English poet Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806โ€“1861), English poet Robert Browning (1812โ€“1889), English poet and playwright William Cullen Bryant (1794โ€“1878), US romantic poet and journalist Colette Bryce (born 1970), Northern Irish poet Bryher (aka Annie Winifred Ellerman) (1894โ€“1983), English novelist, poet and memoirist Valeri Bryusov (1873โ€“1924), Russian poet, novelist and critic Jan Brzechwa (1898โ€“1966), Polish poet and children's writer Dugald Buchanan (Dรนghall Bochanan) (1716โ€“1768), Scottish poet in Scots and Scottish Gaelic Robert Williams Buchanan (1841โ€“1901), Scottish poet, novelist and dramatist Georg Bรผchner (1813โ€“1837), German writer, poet and dramatist August Buchner (1591โ€“1661), German Baroque poet and professor Vincent Buckley (1927โ€“1988), Australian poet, essayist and critic David Budbill (1940โ€“2016), US poet and playwright Andrea Hollander Budy (born 1947), US poet Teodor Bujnicki (1907โ€“1944), Polish poet Charles Bukowski (1920โ€“1994), US poet, novelist and short story writer Ivan Bunin (1870โ€“1953) Russian poet and novelist Basil Bunting (1900โ€“1985), English modernist poet Anthony Burgess (1917โ€“1993), English writer, poet and playwright Robert Burns (1759โ€“1796), Scottish poet and a lyricist Stanley Burnshaw (1906โ€“2005), US poet John Burnside (born 1955), Scottish poet and writer, winner of T. S. Eliot and Forward poetry prizes William S. Burroughs (1914โ€“1997), US novelist, poet and essayist Andrzej Bursa (1932โ€“1957), Polish poet and writer Yosa Buson (1716โ€“1783), Japanese haikai poet and painter Raegan Butcher (born 1969), US poet and singer Ray Buttigieg (born 1955), poet, composer and musician Ignazio Buttitta (1899โ€“1997), Sicilian language poet Anthony Butts (born 1969), US poet Kathryn Stripling Byer (1944โ€“2017), US poet and teacher; North Carolina Poet Laureate 2005โ€“09 Witter Bynner (also Emanuel Morgan, 1881โ€“1968), US poet, writer and scholar George Gordon Byron, Lord Byron (1788โ€“1824), English poet and literary figure C Cabโ€“Cav Lydia Cabrera (1899โ€“1991), Cuban anthropologist and poet Dilys Cadwaladr (1902โ€“1979), Welsh poet and fiction writer in Welsh Cรฆdmon (fl. 7th c.), earliest Northumbrian poet known by name Maoilios Caimbeul (born 1944), Scots poet and children's writer in Gaelic Scott Cairns (born 1954), US poet, memoirist and essayist Alison Calder, Canadian poet and educator Angus Calder (1942โ€“2008), Scots poet, academic and educator Pedro Calderรณn de la Barca y Barreda Gonzรกlez de Henao Ruiz de Blasco y Riaรฑo (1600โ€“1681), Spanish dramatist, poet and writer of Spanish Golden Age Musa Cรคlil (1906โ€“1944), Soviet Tatar poet Barry Callaghan (born 1937), Canadian author, poet and anthologist Michael Feeney Callan (born 1955), Irish poet, novelist and biographer Callimachus (c. 305 โ€“ c. 240 BCE), Hellenistic poet, critic and scholar at Library of Alexandria Robert Calvert (1944โ€“1988), South African writer, poet and musician Norman Cameron (1905โ€“1953), Scottish poet Luรญs de Camรตes (c. 1524โ€“1580), early Portuguese poet Angus Peter Campbell (aka Aonghas P(h)ร draig Caimbeul, born 1952), Scottish poet, novelist, broadcaster and actor David Campbell (1915โ€“1979), Australian poet and wartime pilot Roy Campbell (1901โ€“1957), South African poet and satirist Thomas Campbell (1777โ€“1844), Scottish poet Jan Campert (1902โ€“1943), Dutch poet and journalist Remco Campert (1929โ€“2022), Dutch poet and novelist Thomas Campion (1567โ€“1619), English composer, poet and physician Matilde Camus (1919โ€“2012), Spanish poet and researcher Melville Henry Cane (1879โ€“1980), US poet and lawyer Ivan Cankar (1876โ€“1918), Slovene playwright, essayist and poet May Wedderburn Cannan (1893โ€“1973), English poet Edip Cansever (1928โ€“1986), Turkish poet Cao Cao (155โ€“220), Chinese poet and warlord Cao Pi (formally Emperor Wen of Wei) (187โ€“226), Chinese poet and first emperor of state of Cao Wei; second son of Cao Cao Cao Zhi (192โ€“232), Chinese poet; third son of Cao Cao Vahni Capildeo (born 1973), Trinidadian poet Ernesto Cardenal (1925โ€“2020), Nicaraguan Roman Catholic poet and priest Giosuรจ Carducci (1835โ€“1907), Italian poet and teacher Thomas Carew (1595โ€“1639), English Cavalier poet Henry Carey (1687โ€“1743), English poet, dramatist and songwriter Robert Carliell (died c. 1622), English didactic poet Bliss Carman (1861โ€“1929), Canadian-US poet associated with Confederation Poets Fern G. Z. Carr (born 1956), Canadian poet, translator, teacher and lawyer Jim Carroll (1949โ€“2009), US author, poet and punk musician Lewis Carroll (born Charles Lutwidge Dodgson) (1832โ€“1898), English writer, mathematician and photographer Hayden Carruth (1921โ€“2008), US poet and literary critic Ann Elizabeth Carson (born 1929), Canadian poet, artist and feminist Anne Carson (born 1950), Canadian poet, essayist and translator Elizabeth Carter (1717โ€“1806), English poet and bluestocking Jared Carter (born 1939), US poet and editor William Cartwright (1611โ€“1643), English dramatist and churchman Neal Cassady (1926โ€“1968), figure in 1950s Beat Generation and 1960s psychedelic movement Cyrus Cassells (born 1957), US poet and professor Rosalรญa de Castro (1837โ€“1885), Galician poet Catullus (c. 84โ€“54 BCE), Latin poet under the Roman Republic Charles Causley (1917โ€“2003), Cornish poet, schoolmaster and writer C. P. Cavafy (1863โ€“1933), Greek poet, journalist and civil servant Guido Cavalcanti (1250s โ€“ 1300), Florentine poet and friend of Dante Alighieri Nick Cave (born 1957), Australian writer, musician and actor Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle-upon-Tyne (1623โ€“1673), English writer, aristocrat and scientist Ceโ€“Cl Paul Celan (1920โ€“1970), Romanian-born Jewish poet and translator Thomas Centolella (living), US poet Blaise Cendrars (1887โ€“1961), French poet and author Anica ฤŒernej (1900โ€“1944), Slovene author and poet Luis Cernuda (1903โ€“1963), Spanish poet and literary critic Aimรฉ Cรฉsaire (1913โ€“2008), French poet, author and politician from Martinique Mรกrio Cesariny de Vasconcelos (1923โ€“2006), Portuguese surrealist poet รšrsula Cรฉspedes (1832โ€“1874), Cuban poet Ashok Chakradhar (born 1951), Hindi author and poet John Chalkhill (fl. 1600), English poet Jean Chapelain (1595โ€“1674), French poet and critic Arthur Chapman (1873โ€“1935), US cowboy poet and columnist George Chapman (1559โ€“1634), English dramatist, translator and poet Fred Chappell (born 1936), US author and poet; North Carolina Poet Laureate 1997โ€“2002 Renรฉ Char (1907โ€“1998), French poet Charles, Duke of Orlรฉans (1394โ€“1465), poet Craig Charles (born 1964), English writer, poet and comedian Thomas Chatterton (1752โ€“1770), English poet and forger of medieval poetry Geoffrey Chaucer (c. 1343โ€“1400), poet, philosopher and alchemist Subhadra Kumari Chauhan (1904โ€“1948), Indian poet writing in Hindi Reverend Fr. Fray Angelico Chavez (1910โ€“1996), US writer, poet and Franciscan priest Susana Chรกvez (1974โ€“2011), Mexican poet and human rights activist Syl Cheney-Coker (born 1945), Sierra Leone poet and novelist Andrea Cheng (1957โ€“2015), Hungarian-US poet and children's author Kelly Cherry (born 1940), US author and poet; Poet Laureate of Virginia 2010โ€“2012 G. K. Chesterton (1874โ€“1936), English writer and poet Choe Chiwon (born 857), Korean (Silla) poet Fukuda Chiyo-ni (1703โ€“1775), female Japanese haiku poet of Edo period Henri Chopin (1922โ€“2008), avant-garde poet and musician Jean Chopinel (or Jean de Meun) (c. 1240 โ€“ c. 1305), French writer Chrรฉtien de Troyes (fl. 12th c.), French poet Ralph Chubb (1892โ€“1960), poet, painter and printer Charles Churchill (1732โ€“1764), English poet and satirist John Ciardi (1916โ€“1986) Italian-US poet, translator and etymologist Colley Cibber (1671โ€“1757), English playwright and Poet Laureate Jovan ฤ†irilov (1931โ€“2014), Serbian drama expert, writer and poet Carson Cistulli (born 1979), US poet, essayist and English professor Hรฉlรจne Cixous (born 1937), French feminist writer, poet and playwright Amy Clampitt (1920โ€“1994), US poet and author Kate Clanchy (born 1965), Scottish poet and writer John Clanvowe (c. 1341โ€“1391), Anglo-Welsh poet and diplomat John Clare (1793โ€“1864), English poet Elizabeth Clark (1918โ€“1978), Scottish poet and playwright Austin Clarke (1896โ€“1974), Irish poet George Elliott Clarke (born 1960), Canadian poet and academic Gillian Clarke (born 1937), Welsh poet and playwright in English Paul Claudel (1868โ€“1955), French poet, dramatist and diplomat Claudian (c. 370โ€“404), Latin poet at court of Emperor Honorius Matthias Claudius (Asmus, 1740โ€“1815), German poet Hugo Claus (1929โ€“2008), Belgian author, poet and film director Brian P. Cleary (born 1959), US humorist, poet and author Jack Clemo (1916โ€“1994), English Christian poet Michelle Cliff (1946โ€“2016), Jamaican-US author of fiction, prose poems and literary criticism Lucille Clifton (1936โ€“2010), educator and Poet Laureate of Maryland Arthur Hugh Clough (1819โ€“1861), English poet, educationalist and assistant to Florence Nightingale Coaโ€“Con Grace Stone Coates (1881โ€“1976), US poet and story writer Robbie Coburn (born 1994), Australian poet Alison Cockburn (1712โ€“1794), Scottish poet, wit and socialite Jean Cocteau (1889โ€“1963), French writer Judith Ortiz Cofer (1952โ€“2016), Puerto Rican poet and author Leonard Cohen (1934โ€“2016), Canadian singer-songwriter, poet and novelist Wanda Coleman (1946โ€“2013), African-US poet Hartley Coleridge (1796โ€“1849), English poet, biographer and essayist Mary Elizabeth Coleridge (1861โ€“1907), English novelist, essayist and poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772โ€“1834), English poet Edward Coletti (born 1944), Italian-US poet Billy Collins (born 1941), US poet; US Poet Laureate 2001โ€“2003 William Collins (1721โ€“1759), English poet William Congreve (1670โ€“1729), English playwright and poet Stewart Conn (born 1936), Scottish poet and playwright Paul Conneally (born 1959), English poet, artist and musician Robert Conquest (1917โ€“2015), Anglo-US historian and poet Henry Constable (1562โ€“1613), English poet David Constantine (born 1944), English poet and translator Cooโ€“Cz Clark Coolidge (born 1939), US poet Wendy Cope (born 1945), English poet Robert Copland (fl. 1508โ€“1547), English printer, author and translator Julia Copus (born 1969), English poet and biographer Denys Corbet (1826โ€“1909), Guernsey poet in Guernรฉsiais Tristan Corbiรจre (1845โ€“1875), French poet Cid Corman (1924โ€“2004), US poet, translator and editor Alfred Corn (born 1943), US poet and essayist Frances Cornford (1886โ€“1960), English poet F. M. Cornford (1874โ€“1943), English classical scholar and poet; husband of Frances Cornford Joe Corrie (1894โ€“1968), Scottish miner, poet and playwright Gregory Corso (1930โ€“2001), US Beat poet Jayne Cortez (1936โ€“2012), US poet and performance artist George Coศ™buc (1866โ€“1918), Romanian poet, translator and teacher Charles Cotton (1630โ€“1687), English poet, author and translator Abraham Cowley (1618โ€“1667), English poet Malcolm Cowley (1898โ€“1989), US novelist, poet and critic William Cowper (1731โ€“1800), English poet and hymnist George Crabbe (1754โ€“1832), English poet, naturalist and clergyman Hart Crane (1899โ€“1932), US modernist poet Stephen Crane (1871โ€“1900), US novelist, short story writer and poet Richard Crashaw (1613โ€“1649), English Metaphysical poet Robert Creeley (1926โ€“2005), US poet Octave Crรฉmazie (1827โ€“1879), French Canadian poet Ann Batten Cristall (1769โ€“1848), English poet Charles Cros (1842โ€“1888), French poet and inventor Aleister Crowley (1875โ€“1947), English occultist and poet Andrew Crozier (1943โ€“2008), English poet Gyรถrgy Csanรกdy (1895โ€“1952), Hungarian poet and journalist Sรกndor Csoรณri (1930โ€“2016), Hungarian poet, essayist and politician Cui Hao (c. 704โ€“754), Tang Dynasty Chinese poet Countee Cullen (1903โ€“1946), US poet Necati Cumalฤฑ (1921โ€“2001), Turkish writer of fiction writer, essayist and poet E. E. Cummings (1894โ€“1962), US poet, essayist and playwright Allan Cunningham (1784โ€“1842), Scottish poet and author James Vincent Cunningham (1911โ€“1985), US poet, literary critic and teacher Allen Curnow (1911โ€“2001), New Zealand poet and journalist Ivor Cutler (1923โ€“2006), Scottish poet, songwriter and humorist Jรณzef Czechowicz (1903โ€“1939), Polish poet Gergely Czuczor (1800โ€“1866), Hungarian poet, monk and academic Tytus Czyลผewski (1880โ€“1945), Polish poet, playwright and painter D Daโ€“Dh Dalpatram (Dalpatram Dahyabhai Travadi) (1820โ€“1898), Indian Gujarati language poet Roque Dalton (1935โ€“1975), Salvador poet Ruby Dhal (born 1994), British-Afghan poet Sapardi Djoko Damono (1940โ€“2020), Indonesian poet Samuel Daniel (1562โ€“1619), English poet and historian David Daniels (1933โ€“2008), US visual poet Jeffrey Daniels (living), African-US poet Thomas d'Angleterre, 12th-century poet in Old French Gabriele D'Annunzio (1863โ€“1938), Italian poet, journalist, novelist and dramatist Hugh Antoine d'Arcy (1843โ€“1925), French-born poet and writer Rubรฉn Darรญo (1867โ€“1916), Nicaraguan poet initiating modernismo Keki Daruwalla (born 1937), Indian poet and fiction writer in English Erasmus Darwin (1731โ€“1802), English poet and herbalist Mahmoud Darwish (1941โ€“2008), Palestinian poet and author Elizabeth Daryush (1887โ€“1977), English poet; daughter of Robert Bridges Jibanananda Das (1899โ€“1954), Bengali poet and author Petter Dass (died 1707), Norwegian poet Mina Dastgheib (born 1943), Iranian poet Renรฉ Daumal (1908โ€“1944), French para-surrealist writer and poet Jean Daurat (1508โ€“1588), French poet, scholar and La Plรฉiade member William Davenant (1606โ€“1668), English poet and playwright Guy Davenport (1927โ€“2005), US writer, translator and illustrator Donald Davidson (1893โ€“1968) US poet, essayist and critic John Davidson (1857โ€“1909), Scottish balladeer, playwright and novelist Lucretia Maria Davidson (1808โ€“1825), US poet Donald Davie (1922โ€“1995), English poet and critic Alan Davies (born 1951), US poet, critic and editor Hugh Sykes Davies (1909โ€“1984), English poet, novelist and communist Sir John Davies (1569โ€“1626), English poet, lawyer and politician W. H. Davies (1871โ€“1940), Welsh poet and writer Jon Davis, US poet Edward Davison (1898โ€“1970), Scottish-US poet and critic; father of poet Peter Davison Peter Davison (1928โ€“2004), US poet, essayist and editor; son of poet Edward Davison Denis Davydov (1784โ€“1839), Russian soldier-poet of Napoleonic Wars Dayaram (1777โ€“1853), Gujarati language poet Gรกbor Dayka (1769โ€“1796), Hungarian poet Cecil Day-Lewis (1904โ€“1972), Anglo-Irish poet; UK Poet Laureate 1968โ€“1972 James Deahl (born 1945), Canadian poet and publisher Dulcie Deamer (1890โ€“1972), Australian poet and novelist John F. Deane (born 1943), Irish poet and novelist Aleลก Debeljak (1961โ€“2016), Slovenian critic, poet and essayist Jean Louis De Esque (1879โ€“1956), US poet and author Madeline DeFrees (1919โ€“2015), US poet Jacek Dehnel (born 1980), Polish poet, translator and painter Thomas Dekker (1572โ€“1641), English Elizabethan dramatist and pamphleteer Sor Juana Inรฉs de la Cruz (1651โ€“1695), Mexican poet Baltasar del Alcรกzar (1530โ€“1606), Spanish poet Walter de la Mare (1873โ€“1956), English poet, short story writer and novelist Leconte de Lisle (1818โ€“1894), French poet of Parnassian movement Christine De Luca (born 1947), Scottish poet in English and Shetland dialect Franรงois de Malherbe (1555โ€“1628), French poet, critic and translator Alfred de Musset (1810โ€“1857), French poet Gรฉrard de Nerval (1808โ€“1855), French poet, essayist and translator Sir John Denham (c. 1614โ€“1669), English poet and courtier Tory Dent (1958โ€“2005), US poet, critic and commentator ร‰variste de Parny (1753โ€“1814), French poet Regina Derieva (1949โ€“2013), Russian poet and writer Johan Andreas Dรจr Mouw (1863โ€“1919), Dutch poet and philosopher Toi Derricotte (born 1941), African-US poet Eustache Deschamps (1346โ€“1406), medieval French poet Lord de Tabley (1835โ€“1895), poet and botanist Babette Deutsch (1895โ€“1982), US poet, critic and novelist Fรฉlix Lope de Vega y Carpio (1562โ€“1635), Spanish playwright and poet Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, courtier and poet praised also for lost plays Alfred de Vigny (1797โ€“1863), French poet, playwright and novelist Lakshmi Prasad Devkota (1909โ€“1959), Nepali poet and essayist Phillippa Yaa de Villiers (born 1966), South African poet and performance artist Imtiaz Dharker (born 1954), Pakistan-born British poet, artist and filmmaker Dhurjati (c. 15th โ€“ 16th cc.), Telugu language poet Diโ€“Dr Souรฉloum Diagho (living), Tuareg poet Pier Giorgio Di Cicco (1949โ€“2019), Italian-Canadian poet; Poet Laureate of Toronto Jennifer K Dick (born 1970), US poet James Dickey (1923โ€“1997), US poet and novelist; US Poet Laureate Emily Dickinson (1830โ€“1886), US poet Matthew Dickman (born 1975), US poet, twin of Michael Dickman Michael Dickman (born 1975), US poet Blaga Dimitrova (1922โ€“2003), Bulgarian poet and politician Ramdhari Singh Dinkar (1908โ€“1974), Indian Hindi poet, essayist and academic Diane di Prima (1934โ€“2020), US poet Paul Dirmeikis (born 1954), French poet Vladislav Petkoviฤ‡ Dis (1880โ€“1917), Serbian poet Thomas M. Disch (1940โ€“2008), US poet, novelist Tim Dlugos (1950โ€“1990), US poet Henry Austin Dobson (1840โ€“1921), English poet and essayist Stephen Dobyns (born 1941), US author, novelist and poet Lajos Dรณczi (1845โ€“1918), Hungarian playwright, poet and politician Hendrik Doeff (1777โ€“1835), Dutch lexicographer and poet (in Japanese) and Commissioner in the Dejima trading post Gojko ฤogo (born 1940), Serbian poet Pete Doherty (born 1979), English musician, songwriter and poet Digby Mackworth Dolben (1848โ€“1867), English poet Joe Dolce (born 1947), Australian songwriter, poet and essayist Marรญa Magdalena Domรญnguez (1922โ€“2021), Spanish poet John Donne (1572โ€“1631), English poet, satirist and Anglican cleric H.D., Hilda Doolittle (1886โ€“1961), US Imagist poet Ap Chuni Dorji, Bhutanese poet Edward Dorn (1929โ€“1999), US poet and teacher Tishani Doshi (born 1975), Indian English poet and journalist Mark Doty (born 1953), US poet and memoirist Sarah Doudney (1841โ€“1926), English poet and children's writer Charles Montagu Doughty (1843โ€“1926), English poet, writer and traveler Alice May Douglas (1865โ€“1943), US poet and author Gavin Douglas (1474โ€“1522), Scottish bishop, makar and translator Keith Douglas (1920โ€“1944), English war poet Rita Dove (born 1952), US poet and author; US Poet Laureate Ernest Dowson (1867โ€“1900), English poet, novelist and short-story writer Jane Draycott (living), English poet Michael Drayton (1563โ€“1631), English poet of Elizabethan era Aleksander Stavre Drenova (1872โ€“1947), Albanian poet John Drinkwater (1882โ€“1937), English poet and dramatist Annette von Droste-Hรผlshoff (1797โ€“1848), German poet William Drummond (1585โ€“1649), Scottish poet William Henry Drummond (1854โ€“1907), Irish-born Canadian poet Elลผbieta Druลผbacka (1695 or 1698โ€“1765), Polish poet John Dryden (1631โ€“1700), English poet, critic and playwright Toru Dutt (1856โ€“1877), Indian poet and translator writing in French and English Duโ€“Dy Guillaume de Salluste Du Bartas (1544โ€“1590), French Huguenot poet Joachim du Bellay (c. 1522โ€“1560), French poet, critic and La Plรฉiade member W. E. B. Du Bois (1868โ€“1963), US writer and activist Norman Dubie (born 1945), US poet Jovan Duฤiฤ‡ (1871โ€“1943), Bosnian Serb poet, writer and diplomat Du Fu (712โ€“770), Chinese poet of Tang Dynasty Du Mu (803โ€“852), Chinese poet of late Tang Dynasty Carol Ann Duffy (born 1955), Scottish poet and playwright; Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom Alan Dugan (1923โ€“2003), US poet Sasha Dugdale (born 1974), English poet, playwright and translator Richard Duke (1658โ€“1711), English clergyman and poet Paul Laurence Dunbar (1872โ€“1906), African-US poet, novelist and playwright William Dunbar (c. 1460 โ€“ c. 1520), Scots makar Robert Duncan (1919โ€“1988), US poet Camille Dungy (born 1972), US poet, academic and essayist Douglas Dunn (born 1942), Scottish poet, academic and critic Stephen Dunn (1939โ€“2021), US poet Helen Dunmore (1952โ€“2017), English poet, novelist and children's writer Edward Plunkett, Baron Dunsany (1878โ€“1957), Irish poet Lawrence Durrell (1912โ€“1990), English novelist, poet and dramatist Michael Madhusudan Dutt (1824โ€“1873), Bengali poet and dramatist Stuart Dybek (born 1942), US poet, writer Sir Edward Dyer (1543โ€“1607), English courtier and poet. Bob Dylan (born 1941), US singer-songwriter and writer E Joan Adeney Easdale (1913โ€“1998), English poet Richard Eberhart (1904โ€“2005), US poet Houshang Ebtehaj (1928โ€“2022), Iranian poet Russell Edson (1935โ€“2014), US poet, novelist and illustrator Terry Ehret (born 1955), US poet Max Ehrmann (1872โ€“1945), US writer, poet, and attorney Joseph Freiherr von Eichendorff (1788โ€“1857), German poet and novelist Kristรญn Eirรญksdรณttir (born 1981), Icelandic poet George Eliot (Mary Ann Evans) (1819โ€“1880), English novelist, journalist and translator T. S. Eliot (1888โ€“1965), US/English publisher, playwright and critic Ebenezer Elliott ("Corn Law rhymer", 1781โ€“1849), English poet Royston Ellis (born 1941), English poet Paul ร‰luard (1895โ€“1952), French poet Odysseus Elytis (1911โ€“1996) Greek poet Claudia Emerson (1957โ€“2014), US poet; Poet Laureate of Virginia Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803โ€“1882), US essayist, lecturer and poet Gevorg Emin (1918โ€“1998), Armenian poet, essayist and translator Mihai Eminescu (1850โ€“1889), Romanian poet, novelist and journalist William Empson (1906โ€“1984), English literary critic and poet Yunus Emre (c. 1240 โ€“ c. 1321), Turkish poet and Sufi mystic Michael Ende (1929โ€“1995), German fantasy and children's writer and poet Leszek Engelking (born 1955), Polish, poet, fiction writer and translator Paul Engle (1908โ€“1991), US poet, novelist and playwright Ennius (c. 239 โ€“ c. 169 BCE), father of Latin poetry in Rome D. J. Enright (1920โ€“2002), English poet, novelist and critic Hans Magnus Enzensberger (born 1929), German writer, poet and translator Jรกnos Erdรฉlyi (1814โ€“1868), Hungarian poet and philosopher Louise Erdrich (born 1954), US novelist, poet and children's writer featuring Native US heritage Haydar Ergรผlen (born 1956), Turkish poet Max Ernst (1891โ€“1976), German poet and artist Errapragada Erranna, 14th-century Telugu poet Wolfram von Eschenbach (c. 1170 โ€“ c. 1220), German Minnesinger poet and knight Clayton Eshleman (1935โ€“2022), US poet, translator and editor Martรญn Espada (born 1957), US poet and teacher Florbela Espanca (1894โ€“1930), Portuguese poet Salvador Espriu (1913โ€“1985), Catalan poet in Spain Jill Alexander Essbaum (born 1971), US poet Alter Esselin (1889โ€“1974), Yiddish US poet Claude Esteban (1935โ€“2006), French poet Maggie Estep (born 1963), US slam poet and musician Jerry Estrin (1947โ€“1993), US poet and editor Euripides (480โ€“406 BCE), Athenian tragedian Margiad Evans (1909โ€“1958), English poet and novelist Mari Evans (1923โ€“2017), African-US poet William Everson (Brother Antoninus) (1912โ€“1994), US poet and critic Gavin Ewart (1916โ€“1995), English poet Elisabeth Eybers (1915โ€“2007), South African/Dutch poet; poetry in Afrikaans F Faโ€“Fn Frederick William Faber (1814โ€“1863), English poet, hymnist and theologian Kinga Fabรณ (1953โ€“2021), Hungarian poet and essayist Faiz Ahmed Faiz (1911โ€“1984), Indian/Pakistani poet Padraic Fallon (1905โ€“1974), Irish poet Christian Falster (1690โ€“1752), Danish poet and philologist Ferenc Faludi (1704โ€“1779), Hungarian poet Gyรถrgy Faludy (1910โ€“2006), Hungarian poet and translator U. A. Fanthorpe (1929โ€“2009), English poet Ahmad Faraz (1931โ€“2008), Pakistani Urdu poet and scriptwriter Eleanor Farjeon (1881โ€“1965), English children's writer, playwright and poet J. P. Farrell (born 1968), US poet and musician Forough Farrokhzad (1934โ€“1967), Iranian poet Joseph Fasano (born 1982), American poet and novelist Elaine Feinstein (1930โ€“2019), English poet, novelist and playwright Kรกroly Fellinger (born 1963) Hungarian poet in Slovakia Fenggan (fl. 9th c.), Chinese Zen monk poet under Tang Dynasty Elijah Fenton (1683โ€“1730), English poet, biographer and translator James Fenton (1931โ€“2021), Northern Irish linguist and poet in Ulster Scots James Martin Fenton (born 1949), English poet, journalist and literary critic Ferdowsi (935โ€“1020), Persian poet Terรฉz Ferenczy (1823โ€“1853), Hungarian poet Robert Fergusson (1750โ€“1774), Scottish poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti (1919โ€“2021), US poet, painter and activist Leandro Fernรกndez de Moratรญn (1760โ€“1828), Spanish dramatist, translator and poet Jerzy Ficowski (1924โ€“2006), Polish poet, writer and translator Henry Fielding (1707โ€“1754), English novelist, dramatist and poet Juan de Dios Filiberto (1885โ€“1964), Argentine poet and musician Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea (1661โ€“1720), English nature poet Annie Finch (born 1956), US poet, librettist and translator Ian Hamilton Finlay (1925โ€“2006), Scottish poet, writer and gardener Roy Fisher (1930โ€“2017), English poet and jazz pianist Edward Fitzgerald (1809โ€“1883), English poet and translator of Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam Robert Fitzgerald (1910โ€“1985), US poet, critic and translator Marjorie Fleming (1803โ€“1811), Scottish child poet and diarist Giles Fletcher the Elder (c. 1548โ€“1611), English poet, diplomat and MP Giles Fletcher the Younger (c. 1586โ€“1623), English poet John Fletcher (1579โ€“1625), English playwright and poet John Gould Fletcher (1886โ€“1950), US Imagist poet Phineas Fletcher (1582โ€“1650), English poet; elder son of Giles Fletcher the elder, brother of Giles the younger F. S. Flint (1885โ€“1960), English poet and translator Foโ€“Fu Jean Follain (1903โ€“1971), French author and poet Theodor Fontane (1819โ€“1898), German novelist, poet and realist writer John Forbes (1950โ€“1998), Australian poet Carolyn Forchรฉ (born 1950), US poet, editor and translator Ford Madox Ford (1873โ€“1939), English novelist, poet and critic John Ford (1586โ€“1639), English playwright and poet John M. Ford (1957โ€“2006), US SF and fantasy writer, game designer and poet Veronica Forrest-Thomson (1947โ€“1975), Scots poet and critical theorist Ugo Foscolo (1778โ€“1827), Italian writer, revolutionary and poet William Fowler (c. 1560โ€“1612), Scottish poet, writer and translator Janet Frame (1924โ€“2004), New Zealand author Anatole France (1844โ€“1924), French poet, journalist and novelist Robert Francis (1901โ€“1987), US poet Veronica Franco (1546โ€“1591), Italian poet and courtesan G S Fraser (1915โ€“1980), Scots poet, critic and academic Gregory Fraser (born 1963), US poet, editor and professor Naim Frashรซri (1846โ€“1900), Albanian poet and writer Louis-Honorรฉ Frรฉchette (1839โ€“1908), Canadian poet, politician and playwright Aleksander Fredro (1793โ€“1876), Polish poet and playwright Grace Beacham Freeman (1916โ€“2002), US poet and fiction writer; South Carolina Poet Laureate 1985โ€“1986 Nicholas Freeston (1907โ€“1978), English poet Erich Fried (1921โ€“1988), Austrian-born British poet, writer and translator Jean Froissart (c. 1337 โ€“ c. 1405), French chronicler and court poet Robert Frost (1874โ€“1963), US poet Gene Frumkin (1928โ€“2007), US poet and teacher John Fuller (born 1937), English poet and author, son of Roy Fuller Roy Fuller (1912โ€“1991), English poet Alice Fulton (born 1952), US poet and novelist; Bobbitt National Prize for Poetry winner John Furnival (1933โ€“2020), British visual and concrete poet Milรกn Fรผst (1888โ€“1967), Hungarian poet, novelist and playwright Fuzรปlรฎ (c. 1483โ€“1556), Azerbaijani and Ottoman poet G Gaโ€“Go Tadeusz Gajcy (1922โ€“1944), Polish poet Konstanty Ildefons Gaล‚czyล„ski (1905โ€“1953), Polish poet and stage writer Karina Galvez (born 1964), Ecuadorian poet James Galvin (born 1951), US poet Etienne-Paulin Gagne (1808โ€“1876), French poet, essayist and inventor Jรกnos Garay (1812โ€“1853), Hungarian poet and journalist Robert Garioch (wrote as Robert Garioch Sutherland, 1909โ€“1981), Scottish poet and translator Hamlin Garland (1860โ€“1940), US novelist, poet and essayist Raymond Garlick (1926โ€“2011), Anglo-Welsh poet and editor Richard Garnett (1835โ€“1906), English scholar, biographer and poet Jean Garrigue (1914โ€“1972), US poet Samuel Garth (1661โ€“1719), English physician and poet George Gascoigne (1535โ€“1577), English poet, soldier and would-be courtier David Gascoyne (1916โ€“2001), English poet of the Surrealist movement Thรฉophile Gautier (1811โ€“1872), French poet, dramatist and novelist John Gay (1685โ€“1732), English poet and dramatist Yehonatan Geffen (born 1947), Israeli author, poet and playwright Theodor Seuss Geisel (Dr. Seuss) (1904โ€“1991), US writer, poet and cartoonist Juan Gelman (1930โ€“2014), Argentinian poet, writer and translator Stefan George (1868โ€“1933), German poet, editor and translator Dan Gerber (born 1940), US poet รgnes Gergely (born 1933), Hungarian poet, novelist and translator Paul Gerhardt (1607โ€“1676), German hymnist Cezary Geroล„ (1960โ€“1998), Polish poet, journalist and translator Mirza Asadulla Khan Ghalib (1797โ€“1869) Indian poet in Urdu and Persian Charles Ghigna (Father Goose) (born 1946), US children's author, poet and feature writer Reginald Gibbons (born 1947), US poet, fiction writer and critic Khalil Gibran (1883โ€“1931), Lebanese-US artist, poet and writer Wilfrid Wilson Gibson (1878โ€“1962), English poet Ryan Giggs (born 1973), Welsh poet, footballer and homewrecker Jack Gilbert (1925โ€“2012), US poet W. S. Gilbert (1836โ€“1911), English poet Zuzanna Ginczanka (Sara Ginzburg, 1917โ€“1945), Polish poet Allen Ginsberg (1926โ€“1997), US Beat Generation poet Dana Gioia (born 1950), US writer, critic and poet Nikki Giovanni (born 1943), US poet, writer and educator Zinaida Gippius (1869โ€“1945), Russian poet, playwright and religious thinker Giglio Gregorio Giraldi (1479โ€“1552), Italian scholar and poet Giuseppe Giusti (1809โ€“1850), Italian poet Denis Glover (1912โ€“1980), New Zealand poet and publisher Louise Glรผck (born 1943), US poet; US Poet Laureate Guru Gobind Singh (1666โ€“1708), Indian poet in Punjabi, Urdu, etc. Cyprian Godebski (1765โ€“1809), Polish poet and novelist Gรฉrald Godin (1938โ€“1994), Canadian poet in French Patricia Goedicke (1931โ€“2006), US poet Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749โ€“1832), German writer, artist and politician Octavian Goga (1881โ€“1938), Romanian poet, playwright and translator Leah Goldberg (1911โ€“1970), Hebrew-language poet, playwright and writer Rumer Godden (1907โ€“1998), English children's writer and poet Ziya Gรถkalp (1876โ€“1924), Turkish sociologist, writer and poet Oliver Goldsmith (1730โ€“1774), Anglo-Irish writer and poet Pavel Golia (1887โ€“1959), Slovenian poet and playwright George Gomri (born 1934), Hungarian poet and journalist (also in English) Luis de Gรณngora (1561โ€“1627), Spanish lyric poet Lorna Goodison (born 1947), Jamaican poet Paul Goodman (1911โ€“1972), US novelist, playwright and poet Barnabe Googe or Gooche (1540โ€“1594), English pastoral poet and translator Adam Lindsay Gordon (1833โ€“1870), Australian poet and politician Gรกbor Gรถrgey (born 1929), Hungarian poet and politician Sergei Gorodetsky (1884โ€“1967), Russian poet Hedwig Gorski (born 1949), US performance poet and artist Herman Gorter (1864โ€“1927), Dutch poet and socialist Sir Edmund William Gosse (1849โ€“1928), English poet, author and critic Remy de Gourmont (1858โ€“1915), French poet, novelist and critic John Gower (c. 1330โ€“1408), English poet and friend of Chaucer Grโ€“Gy Anders Abraham Grafstrรถm (1790โ€“1870), Swedish historian, priest and poet James Graham, 1st Marquess of Montrose (1612โ€“1650), Scottish nobleman, soldier and poet Jorie Graham (born 1950), US poet and first female Boylston Professor at Harvard W S Graham (1918โ€“1986), Scottish poet Mark Granier (born 1957), Irish poet and photographer Alex Grant (living), Scottish US poet and teacher Gรผnter Grass (1927โ€“2015), German novelist, poet and playwright; 1999 Nobel Prize in Literature Richard Graves (1715โ€“1804), English poet and essayist Robert Graves (1895โ€“1985), English author and scholar Sir Alexander Gray (1882โ€“1968), Scottish translator, writer and poet Thomas Gray (1716โ€“1771), English poet Robert Greene (1558โ€“1592), English author and poet Dora Greenwell (1821โ€“1882), English poet Linda Gregg (1942โ€“2019) US poet Horace Gregory (1898โ€“1982), US poet, translator and critic Eamon Grennan (born 1941), Irish poet Fulke Greville, 1st Baron Brooke (1554โ€“1628), English poet, dramatist and statesman Susan Griffin (born 1943), US poet and writer Ann Griffiths (1776โ€“1805), Welsh poet and hymnist Bill Griffiths (1948โ€“2007), English poet and Anglo-Saxon scholar Jane Griffiths (born 1970), English poet and literary historian Rachel Eliza Griffiths (born 1978), US poet, photographer and visual artist Mariela Griffor (born 1961), Chilean poet, short-story writer and scholar Geoffrey Grigson (1905โ€“1985), English poet and critic Franz Grillparzer (1791โ€“1872), Austrian writer, poet and dramatist Nicholas Grimald (1519โ€“1562), English poet and dramatist Angelina Weld Grimkรฉ (1880โ€“1958), African-US playwright and poet Charlotte Forten Grimkรฉ (1835โ€“1914), African-US poet Rufus W. Griswold (1815โ€“1857), US anthologist, poet and critic Stanisล‚aw Grochowiak (1934โ€“1976), Polish poet and dramatist Nikanor Grujiฤ‡ (1810โ€“1887), Serbian writer, poet and bishop Stanisล‚aw Grochowiak (1934โ€“1976), Polish poet and dramatist Philip Gross (born 1952), English poet, novelist and playwright Igo Gruden (1893โ€“1948), Slovene poet and translator N. F. S. Grundtvig (1783โ€“1872), Danish poet, pastor and historian Wioletta Grzegorzewska (born 1974), Polish poet and writer Barbara Guest (1920โ€“2006), US poet and prose stylist Edgar Guest (1881โ€“1959), English-born US poet Paul Guest (living), US poet and memoirist Bimal Guha (born 1952), Bangladesh poet writing in Bengali Guillaume de Lorris (c. 1200 โ€“ c. 1240), French scholar and poet Jorge Guillรฉn (1893โ€“1984), Spanish poet Nicolรกs Guillรฉn (1902โ€“1989), Cuban poet, activist and writer Guido Guinizelli (c. 1230โ€“1276), Italian poet Guiot de Provins (died after 1208), French poet and trouvรจre Malcolm Guite (born 1957) Gรผl Baba (died 1541), Ottoman Bektashi dervish poet Nikolay Gumilyov (1886โ€“1921), Russian poet who founded acmeism Ivan Gunduliฤ‡ (Gianfrancesco Gondola) (1589โ€“1638), Croatian Baroque poet Thom Gunn (1929โ€“2004), Anglo-US poet Lee Gurga (born 1949), US haiku poet Ivor Gurney (1890โ€“1937), English composer and poet Lars Gustafsson (1936โ€“2016), Swedish poet, novelist and scholar Pedro Juan Gutiรฉrrez (born 1950), Cuban novelist and poet Beth Gylys (born 1964), US poet and professor Istvรกn Gyรถngyรถsi (1620โ€“1704), Hungarian poet Gรฉza Gyรณni (1884โ€“1917), Hungarian poet Brion Gysin (1916โ€“1986), English writer and sound poet Gabor G. Gyukics (born 1958), Hungarian-US poet and translator (also in English) H Ha Rafey Habib (living), Indian-born Muslim poet and scholar Marilyn Hacker (born 1942), US poet, translator and critic Hadraawi (born 1943), Somaliland poet and songwriter Hafez (1315โ€“1390), Persian poet Hai Zi (1964โ€“1989), Chinese poet John Haines (1924โ€“2011), US poet and educator Donald Hall (1928โ€“2018), US poet, writer and critic; US Poet Laureate Arthur Hallam (1811โ€“1833), English poet, subject of In Memoriam A.H.H. by Alfred Tennyson Michael Hamburger (1924โ€“2007), English translator, poet and academic Han Yu (768โ€“824), Chinese essayist and poet of Tang dynasty Hanshan (fl. 9th c.), Chinese poet of Tang dynasty Thomas Hardy (1840โ€“1928), English novelist and poet Charles Harpur (1813โ€“1868), Australian poet Sir Theodore Wilson Harris (1921โ€“2018), Guyanese poet, novelist and essayist Jim Harrison (1937โ€“2016), US poet, novelist and essayist Tony Harrison (born 1937), English poet and playwright Carla Harryman (born 1952), US poet, essayist and playwright David Harsent (born 1942), English poet and TV scriptwriter Paul Hartal (born 1936), Hungarian-born Canadian poet, painter and critic Peter Hรคrtling (1933โ€“2017), German writer and poet Michael Hartnett (1941โ€“1999), Irish poet writing in English and Irish Julia Hartwig (1921โ€“2017), Polish poet, writer and translator Gwen Harwood (1920โ€“1995), Australian poet and librettist Alamgir Hashmi (born 1951), English poet of Pakistani origin Ahmet HaลŸim (c. 1884โ€“1933), Turkish poet Robert Hass (born 1941), US poet; former Poet Laureate Mohammed Abdullah Hassan (1856โ€“1920), emir of the Dervish movement, of which Diiriye Guure was sultan Olav H. Hauge (1908โ€“1994), Norwegian poet Gerhart Hauptmann (1862โ€“1946), German dramatist, poet and novelist; Nobel Prize in Literature, 1912 Stephen Hawes (died 1523), English poet Robert Stephen Hawker (1803โ€“1875), English poet, antiquarian and Anglican priest George Campbell Hay (1915โ€“1984), Scottish poet and translator in Scottish Gaelic, Lowland Scots and English Gilbert Hay (fl. 15th c.), Scottish poet and translator in Middle Scots Robert Hayden (1913โ€“1980), US poet, essayist and educator; 1976 US Poet Laureate William Hayley (1745โ€“1820), English writer Tony Haynes (born 1960), US poet, songwriter and lyricist Ha Seung-moo((born October 13, 1963), Korean poet, professor and theologian He Seamus Heaney (1939โ€“2013), Irish poet, playwright and translator; 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature Josephine D. Heard (1861 โ€“ c. 1921), US teacher and poet John Heath-Stubbs (1918โ€“2006), English poet and translator Anne Hรฉbert (1916โ€“2000), Canadian poet and novelist Anthony Hecht (1923โ€“2004), US poet Jennifer Michael Hecht (born 1965), US poet, historian and philosopher Allison Hedge Coke (born 1958), US poet, writer and performer Markus Hediger (born 1959), Swiss writer and translator Ilona Hegedลฑs (living), poet John Hegley (born 1953), English performance poet, comedian and songwriter Heinrich Heine (1797โ€“1856), German poet, essayist and literary critic Lyn Hejinian (born 1941), US poet, essayist and translator Acharya Hemachandra (1089โ€“1172), Jain scholar, poet and polymath Felicia Hemans (1793โ€“1835), English poet Marian Hemar (1901โ€“1972), Polish poet, songwriter and playwright Essex Hemphill (1957โ€“1995), US poet and activist Hamish Henderson (1919โ€“2002), Scottish poet, songwriter and catalyst for folk revival in Scotland William Ernest Henley (1849โ€“1903), English poet, critic and editor Adrian Henri (1932โ€“2000), English poet and painter Robert Henryson (died c. 1500), Scottish poet Edward Herbert, 1st Baron Herbert of Cherbury (1583โ€“1648), Anglo-Welsh soldier, historian, poet and philosopher; brother of George Herbert George Herbert (1593โ€“1633), public orator and poet Mary Herbert, Countess of Pembroke (1561โ€“1621) (nรฉe Sidney), early English woman in literature Zbigniew Herbert (1924โ€“1998), Polish poet, essayist and dramatist Johann Gottfried Herder (1744โ€“1803), German philosopher, theologian and literary critic Miguel Hernรกndez (1910โ€“1942), Spanish poet and playwright of Generation of '27 and Generation of '36 movements Herodas or Herondas (3rd c. BCE), Greek poet and author of humorous dramatic scenes in verse Antoine Hรฉroet (died 1568), French poet Robert Herrick (1591โ€“1674), English poet Thomas Kibble Hervey (1799โ€“1859), Scottish-born English poet and critic Hesiod (fl. 750โ€“650 BCE), Ancient Greek poet Phoebe Hesketh (1909โ€“2005), English poet Hermann Hesse (1877โ€“1962), German-Swiss poet, novelist and painter Dorothy Hewett (1923โ€“2002), Australian feminist poet, novelist and playwright John Harold Hewitt (1907โ€“1987), Northern Irish poet William Heyen (born 1940), US poet, literary critic, novelist Thomas Heywood (c. 1570s โ€“ 1641), English playwright, actor and author Hiโ€“Hy Dick Higgins (1938โ€“1998), English poet and publisher Scott Hightower (born 1952), US poet and teacher Nรขzฤฑm Hikmet (1902โ€“1963), Turkish poet, playwright and novelist Geoffrey Hill (1932โ€“2016), English poet and professor Selima Hill (born 1945), English poet Hilda Hilst (1930โ€“2004), Brazilian poet, playwright and novelist Ellen Hinsey (born 1960), US poet Hipponax (6th c. BCE) of Ephesus, Ancient Greek iambic poet Hirato Renkichi (1893โ€“1922), Japanese avant-garde poet Rozalie Hirs (born 1965), Dutch poet Jane Hirshfield (born 1953), US poet George Parks Hitchcock (1914โ€“2010), US poet, playwright and painter H. L. Hix (born 1960), US poet and academic Marian Hluszkewycz (1877โ€“1935), Russian poet Thomas Hoccleve or Occleve (c. 1368 โ€“ 1426), English poet and clerk Michael Hofmann (born 1957), German-born poet and translator in English Hugo von Hofmannsthal (1874โ€“1929), Austrian novelist, poet and dramatist James Hogg (1770โ€“1835), Scottish poet and novelist David Holbrook (1923โ€“2011), English writer, poet and academic Friedrich Hรถlderlin (1770โ€“1843), German lyric poet Margaret Holford (1778โ€“1852), English poet and novelist Barbara Holland (1933โ€“2010), US author John Hollander (1929โ€“2013), Jewish-US poet and literary critic Matthew Hollis (born 1971), English poet Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809โ€“1894), US poet, professor and author Homer (fl. 8th c. BCE), Greek epic poet Thomas Hood (1799โ€“1845), English humorist and poet; father of playwright and editor Tom Hood A. D. Hope (1907โ€“2000), Australian satirical poet and essayist Gerard Manley Hopkins (1844โ€“1889), English poet and Jesuit priest Horace (Quintus Horatius Flaccus) (65โ€“08 BCE), Roman lyric poet George Moses Horton (1797โ€“1884), African-US poet Joan Houlihan, US poet A. E. Housman (1859โ€“1936), English poet and classicist Libby Houston (living), English poet, botanist and rock climber Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey (1517โ€“1547), English Renaissance poet Richard Howard (1929โ€“2022), US poet, critic and essayist Fanny Howe (born 1940), US poet and fiction writer Susan Howe (born 1937), US poet, scholar and essayist Hrotsvitha (died c. 1002), poet and first known female dramatist, from Lower Saxony Mohammad Nurul Huda (born 1949), Bangladeshi poet in Bengali John Ceiriog Hughes (1832โ€“1887), Welsh poet in Welsh Langston Hughes (1902โ€“1967), US poet, novelist and playwright Ted Hughes (1930โ€“1998), English poet and children's writer; Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom Richard Hugo (1923โ€“1982), US poet Victor Hugo (1802โ€“1885), French poet, novelist and dramatist Vicente Huidobro (1893โ€“1948), Chilean poet Lynda Hull (1954โ€“1994), US poet Keri Hulme (1947โ€“2021), New Zealand poet and fiction writer Thomas Ernest Hulme (1883โ€“1917), English critic and poet Alexander Hume (1560โ€“1609), Scottish poet Leigh Hunt (1784โ€“1859), English critic, essayist and poet Sam Hunt (born 1946), New Zealand poet Hแป“ Xuรขn Hฦฐฦกng (1772โ€“1822), Vietnamese poet Aldous Huxley (1894โ€“1963), English novelist, poet and travel writer Helen von Kolnitz Hyer (1896โ€“1983), US poet and writer; South Carolina Poet Laureate 1974โ€“1983 I Khadijah Ibrahiim (fl. 2022), British poet Henrik Johan Ibsen (1828โ€“1906), Norwegian playwright, director and poet Ibycus (fl. late 6th c. BCE), Ancient Greek lyric poet Ikkyu (1394โ€“1481), Japanese Zen Buddhist monk and poet Vojislav Iliฤ‡ (1860โ€“1894), Serbian poet Gyula Illyรฉs (1902โ€“1983), Hungarian poet and novelist Maria Ilnicka (1825 or 1827โ€“1897), Polish poet, novelist and translator Tonya Ingram (1991โ€“2022), US poet Sir Dr. Muhammad Iqbal (1877โ€“1938), Indian poet in Urdu and Persian Avetik Isahakyan (1875โ€“1957), Armenian lyric poet Sabit Ince (born 1954), Turkish lyric poet Inge Israel (1927โ€“2019), Canadian poet and playwright Wacล‚aw Iwaniuk (1912โ€“2001), Polish poet and journalist Jarosล‚aw Iwaszkiewicz (Eleuter, 1894โ€“1980), Polish poet, dramatist and translator Sergey Izgiyaev (1922โ€“1972), Russian poet, playwright and translator of Mountain Jewish descent J FP Jac (1955โ€“2008), Danish poet Violet Jacob (1863โ€“1946), Scottish poet in Scots Rolf Jacobsen (1907โ€“1994), Norwegian poet and writer Ada Jafarey (1924โ€“2015) Pakistani poet in Urdu Richard Jago (1715โ€“1781), English poet ฤura Jakลกiฤ‡ (1832โ€“1878), Serbian poet, painter and dramatist James I, King of Scots (1394โ€“1437), author of The Kingis Quair James VI and I (1566โ€“1625), King of Scots and of England and Ireland Christine James (born 1954), Welsh poet and academic Clive James (1939โ€“2019), Australian author, poet and memoirist Ernst Jandl (1925โ€“2000), Austrian writer, poet and translator Klemens Janicki (1516โ€“1543), Polish poet in Latin Janus Pannonius (1434โ€“1472), Hungarian/Slavonian poet in Latin Patricia Janus (1932โ€“2006), US poet and artist Mark F. Jarman (born 1952), US poet and critic Randall Jarrell (1914โ€“1965), US poet, children's author and novelist; US Poet Laureate Bruno Jasieล„ski (1901โ€“1938), Polish poet, novelist and playwright Mieczysล‚aw Jastrun (1903โ€“1983), Polish poet and essayist Lรกszlรณ Jรกvor (1903โ€“1992), Hungarian poet Robinson Jeffers (1887โ€“1962), US poet Vojin Jeliฤ‡ (1921โ€“2004), Croatian Serb poet and writer Rod Jellema (1927โ€“2018), US poet, teacher and translator Simon Jenko (1835โ€“1869), Slovene poet, lyricist and writer Elizabeth Jennings (1926โ€“2001), English poet Jia Dao (779โ€“843), Chinese poet active under Tang Dynasty John of the Cross (1542โ€“1591), Spanish mystic and poet Edmund John (1883โ€“1917), English poet Georgia Douglas Johnson (1880โ€“1966), US poet Helene Johnson (1906โ€“1995), African-US poet James Weldon Johnson (1871โ€“1938), US author, poet and folklorist Lionel Johnson (1867โ€“1902), English poet, essayist and critic Emily Pauline Johnson (in Mohawk: Tekahionwake) (1861โ€“1913), Canadian writer, performer and poet marking First Nations heritage Samuel Johnson (1709โ€“1784), English poet, essayist and lexicographer George Benson Johnston (1913โ€“2004), Canadian poet, translator and academic Anna Jรณkai (1932โ€“2017), Hungarian poet and prose writer David Jones (1895โ€“1974), English artist and poet Edward Smyth Jones (1881โ€“1968), African-American poet Richard Jones (living), English US poet Ben Jonson (1573โ€“1637), English poet and dramatist June Jordan (1936โ€“2002), US poet and educator Anthony Joseph (born 1966), British/Trinidadian poet, novelist and musician Jenny Joseph (1932โ€“2018), English poet Jovan Jovanoviฤ‡ Zmaj (1833โ€“1904), Serbian poet, physician James Joyce (1882โ€“1941), Irish novelist and poet Attila Jรณzsef (1905โ€“1937), Hungarian poet Frank Judge (1946โ€“2021), US editor, poet and film critic Ferenc Juhรกsz (1928โ€“2015), Hungarian poet Gyula Juhรกsz (1883โ€“1937), Hungarian poet Jamal Jumรก, Iraqi poet and researcher Donald Justice (1925โ€“2004), US poet Juvenal (fl. 1st c. โ€“ 2nd c. CE), Roman poet and satirist Jumoke Verissimo (born 1979), Nigerian poet Jaydeep Sarangi (born 1973), Indian poet in English K Kaโ€“Kh Abhay K (born 1980), Indian poet and diplomat Kabir (1440โ€“1518), mystic poet and sant of India Margit Kaffka (1880โ€“1918), Hungarian poet and novelist Kฤlidฤsa (fl. c. 4th c.), Sanskrit poet Kambar (c. 1180โ€“1250), Tamil poet Anna Kamieล„ska (1920โ€“1986), Polish poet, translator and critic Kannadasan (1927โ€“1981), Tamil poet, author and lyricist Jim Kacian (born 1953), US haiku poet and editor Uuno Kailas (1901โ€“1933), Finnish poet, author and translator Chester Kallman (1921โ€“1975), US poet, librettist and translator Lรกszlรณ Kรกlnoky (1912โ€“1985), Hungarian poet and translator Kรกlmรกn Kalocsay (1891โ€“1976), Hungarian and Esperanto poet Anna Kamieล„ska (1920โ€“1986), Polish poet, writer and critic Ilya Kaminsky (born 1977), Russian-US poet, critic and translator Orhan Veli Kanik (1914โ€“1950), Turkish poet Sรกndor Kรกnyรกdi (1929โ€“2018), Hungarian poet and translator from Romania Jaan Kaplinski (1941โ€“2021), Estonian poet, philosopher and critic Adeena Karasick (born 1965), Canadian/US poet, media artist and essayist Vim Karenine (born 1933), US poet, essayist and novelist Gyรถrgy Kรกroly (1953โ€“2018), Hungarian poet and critic Franciszek Karpiล„ski (1741โ€“1825), Polish poet Mary Karr (born 1955), US poet, essayist and memoirist Siavash Kasrai (1927โ€“1996), Iranian poet Julia Kasdorf (born 1962), US poet Laura Kasischke (born 1961), US poet and fiction writer Jan Kasprowicz (1860โ€“1926), Polish poet, playwright and critic Lajos Kassรกk (1887โ€“1967), Hungarian poet, novelist and painter Erich Kรคstner (1899โ€“1974), German author, poet and satirist Jรณzsef Katona (1791โ€“1830), Hungarian playwright and poet Bob Kaufman (1925โ€“1986), US beat poet and surrealist Shirley Kaufman (1923โ€“2016), US poet and translator Rupi Kaur (born 1992), Indo-Canadian poet and photographer Patrick Kavanagh (1904โ€“1967), Irish poet and novelist Nikos Kavvadias (1910โ€“1975), Greek poet Kazi Nazrul Islam (1899โ€“1976), Bengali poet, musician and revolutionary John Keats (1795โ€“1821), English Romantic poet Weldon Kees (1914โ€“1955), US poet, novelist and critic Isabella Kelly (1759โ€“1857), Scottish poet and novelist Arthur Kelton (died 1549/1550), rhymer on Welsh history Miranda Kennedy (born 1975), US poet Rann Kennedy (1772โ€“1851), English poet Walter Kennedy (c. 1455โ€“1518), Scottish makar X. J. Kennedy (born 1929), US poet, anthologist and children's writer Jane Kenyon (1947โ€“1995), US poet and translator Gรฉza Kรฉpes (1909โ€“1989), Hungarian poet and translator Jack Kerouac (1922โ€“1969), US novelist and poet Sidney Keyes (1922โ€“1943), English poet killed in action in World War II Keorapetse Kgositsile (1938โ€“2018), South African poet Mimi Khalvati (born 1944), Iranian-born British poet Dilwar Khan (1937โ€“2013), Bangladeshi poet Khushal Khan Khattak (1613โ€“1689), Pashtun Afghan poet, warrior and tribal chief Omar Khayyรกm (1048โ€“1122), Persian mathematician, astronomer and poet Kherdian, David (born 1931), Armenian-American writer, poet, and editor Vladislav Khodasevich (1886โ€“1939), Russian poet and literary critic Talib Khundmiri (1938โ€“2011), Indian poet and humorist in Urdu Ab'ul Hasan Yamฤซn ud-Dฤซn Khusrow (1253โ€“1325), Sufi poet, scholar and musician Kiโ€“Ky Saba Kidane (born 1978), Eritrean poet Sรธren Kierkegaard (1813โ€“1855), Danish philosopher and poet Emelihter Kihleng Pohnpeian poet and academic Andrzej Tadeusz Kijowski (born 1954), Polish poet and politician Takarai Kikaku (1661โ€“1707), Japanese haikai poet and disciple of Matsuo Bashล Joyce Kilmer (1886โ€“1918), US writer and poet Edward King (1612โ€“1637), Irish-born subject of Milton's Lycidas Henry King (1592โ€“1669), English poet and bishop William King (1663โ€“1712), English poet Thomas Hansen Kingo (1634โ€“1703), Danish bishop, poet and hymnist Gottfried Kinkel (1815โ€“1882), German poet and revolutionary Galway Kinnell (1927โ€“2014), US poet; Pulitzer Prize for Poetry 1982 John Kinsella (born 1963), Australian poet, novelist and essayist Thomas Kinsella (1928โ€“2021), Irish poet, translator and editor Rudyard Kipling (1865โ€“1936), English fiction writer and poet Easterine Kire (born 1959), Naga poet and novelist Danilo Kiลก (1935โ€“1989), Serbian fiction writer and poet Necip Fazฤฑl Kฤฑsakรผrek (1904โ€“1983), Turkish poet, novelist and playwright Atala Kisfaludy (1836โ€“1911), Hungarian poet Iya Kiva (born 1984), Ukrainian poet Eila Kivikk'aho (1921โ€“2004), Finnish poet Carolyn Kizer (1925โ€“2014), US poet; Pulitzer Prize for Poetry 1985 Sarah Klassen (born 1932), Canadian poet and fiction writer August Kleinzahler (born 1949), US poet Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock (1724โ€“1803), German poet Franciszek Dionizy Kniaลบnin (1750โ€“1807), Polish poet and Jesuit Etheridge Knight (1931โ€“1991), African-US poet Kobayashi Issa (1763โ€“1828), Japanese haikai poet Jan Kochanowski (1530โ€“1584), Polish Renaissance poet Kenneth Koch (1925โ€“2002), US poet, playwright and professor Jan Kochanowski (1530โ€“1584), Polish poet Petar Koฤiฤ‡ (1877โ€“1916), Bosnian Serb writer Istvรกn Kohรกry (1649โ€“1731), Hungarian poet Ferenc Kรถlcsey (1790โ€“1838), Hungarian poet Aladรกr Komjรกt (1891โ€“1937), Hungarian poet Yusef Komunyakaa (born 1947), US poet and teacher; Pulitzer Prize for Poetry 1994 Bรฉla Kondor (1931โ€“1972), Hungarian poet, prose writer and painter Faik Konitza (1875โ€“1942), Albanian poet Halina Konopacka (1900โ€“1989), Polish poet and athlete Maria Konopnicka (1842โ€“1910), Polish poet, novelist and children's writer Ted Kooser (born 1939), US poet; US Poet Laureate 2004โ€“2006 Stanisล‚aw Korab-Brzozowski (1876โ€“1901), Polish poet and translator Julian Kornhauser (born 1946), Polish poet, novelist and critic Apollo Korzeniowski (1820โ€“1869), Polish expressionist poet Jรณzsef Kossics (Joลพef Koลกiฤ, 1788โ€“1867), Hungarian/Slovenian poet and priest Laza Kostiฤ‡ (1841โ€“1910), Serbian poet, writer and polyglot Dezsล‘ Kosztolรกnyi (1885โ€“1936), Hungarian poet and prose writer Gopi Kottoor (born 1956), Indian poet, playwright and editor Urszula Kozioล‚ (born 1931), Polish poet Taja Kramberger (born 1970), Slovenian poet, translator and anthropologist Ignacy Krasicki (1735โ€“1801), Polish poet and novelist Zygmunt Krasiล„ski (1812โ€“1859), Polish poet Zlatko Krasni (1951โ€“2008), Serbian poet Ruth Krauss (1901โ€“1993), US poet and children's book author Krayem Awad (born 1948), Syrian-Austrian painter, sculptor and poet Carolyn Kreiter-Foronda (born 1946), US writer; Poet Laureate of Virginia Katarzyna Krenz (born 1953), poet, novelist and painter Miroslav Krleลพa (1893โ€“1981), Croatian/Yugoslav poet and novelist Antjie Krog (born 1952), South African poet, academic and writer Jรณzef Krupiล„ski (1930โ€“1998), Polish poet Ryszard Krynicki (born 1943), Polish poet and translator Marilyn Krysl (born 1942), US poet and fiction writer Andrzej Krzycki (1482โ€“1537), Polish poet and archbishop ลฝofia Kubini (fl. 17th c.), Hungarian poet in early Czech Paweล‚ Kubisz (1907โ€“1968), Polish poet and journalist Pรฉter Kuczka (1923โ€“1999), Hungarian poet and critic Anatoly Kudryavitsky (born 1954), Russian/Irish novelist, poet and translator Endre Kukorelly (born 1951), Hungarian poet and journalist Maxine Kumin (1925โ€“2014), US poet; US Poet Laureate 1981โ€“82 Stanley Kunitz (1905โ€“2006), US poet; US Poet Laureate 1974 and 2000 Yanka Kupala (1882โ€“1942), Belarus poet Tuli Kupferberg (1923โ€“2010), US counterculture poet and author Jalu Kurek (1904โ€“1983), Polish poet and prose writer Momoko Kuroda (้ป’็”ฐๆๅญ, born 1938), Japanese haiku poet Mira Kuล› (born 1958), Polish poet Kusumagraj (1912โ€“1999), Indian Marathi poet, writer and humanist Onat Kutlar (1936โ€“1995), Turkish writer and poet Stephen Kuusisto (born 1955), US poet Sir Francis Kynaston or Kinaston (1587โ€“1642), English poet L La Jean de La Fontaine (1621โ€“1695), French fabulist Ilmar Laaban (1921โ€“2000), Estonian poet Pierre Labrie (born 1972), Canadian poet in French Lรกszlรณ Ladรกnyi (1907โ€“1992), Hungarian-Israeli poet and writer Jules Laforgue (1860โ€“1887), Franco-Uruguayan poet Jarkko Laine (1947โ€“2006), Finnish poet, writer and playwright Ivan V. Laliฤ‡ (1931โ€“1996), Serbian poet Philip Lamantia (1927โ€“2005), US poet and lecturer Kendrick Lamar (born 1987), US poet and hip-hop artist Alphonse de Lamartine (1790โ€“1869), French writer, poet and politician Charles Lamb (1775โ€“1834), English essayist and poet Peter Lampe (born 1954), German scholar, writer and poet Letitia Elizabeth Landon (L. E. L.) (1802โ€“1838), English poet and novelist. Walter Savage Landor (1775โ€“1864), English writer and poet Antoni Lange (1863โ€“1929), Polish poet, philosopher and translator William Langland (c. 1332 โ€“ c. 1386) probable English author of dream-vision Piers Plowman Emilia Lanier (1569โ€“1645), English poet Sebestyรฉn Tinรณdi Lantos (c. 1510โ€“1556), Hungarian poet and historian Laozi (Lau-tzu) (fl. 6th c. BCE), Chinese philosopher and poet Alda Lara (1930โ€“1962), Angolan poet Rebecca Hammond Lard (1772โ€“1855), US poet Bruce Larkin (born 1957), US children's author and poet Philip Larkin (1922โ€“1985), English poet and novelist Claudia Lars (1899โ€“1974), Salvadoran poet Else Lasker-Schรผler (1869โ€“1945), German poet and playwright Lasus of Hermione (6th c. BCE), Greek lyric poet from Hermione in Argolid Evelyn Lau (born 1971), Canadian poet and novelist James Laughlin (1914โ€“1997), US poet and publisher Ann Lauterbach (born 1942), US poet, essayist and professor Comte de Lautrรฉamont (1846โ€“1870), Uruguayan/French poet Dorianne Laux (born 1952), US poet Christine Lavant (1915โ€“1973), Austrian poet and novelist D. H. Lawrence (1885โ€“1930), English novelist, poet and critic Henry Lawson (1867โ€“1922), Australian writer and poet; son of Louisa Lawson Louisa Lawson (1848โ€“1920), Australian poet and feminist Robert Lax (1915โ€“2000), US poet Laxmi Prasad Devkota (1909โ€“1959), Nepalese poet and scholar Henryka ลazowertรณwna (1909โ€“1942), Polish poet Le Edward Lear (1812โ€“1888), English poet, artist and illustrator Stanisล‚aw Jerzy Lec (1909โ€“1966), Polish poet and aphorist Joanna Lech (born 1984), Polish poet and novelist Jan Lechoล„ (1899โ€“1956), Polish poet, critic and diplomat Francis Ledwidge (1887โ€“1917), Irish war poet David Lee (born 1966), US poet Dennis Lee (born 1939), Canadian poet, editor and critic David Lehman (born 1948), US poet and editor รgnes Lehรณczky (born 1976), Hungarian poet, academic and translator Eino Leino (1878โ€“1926), Finnish poet and journalist Brad Leithauser (born 1953), US poet, novelist and essayist Alexander Lenard (1910โ€“1972) Hungarian writer and poet Sue Lenier (born 1957), English poet and playwright Lalitha Lenin (born 1946), Indian poet Krystyna Lenkowska (born 1957), Polish poet and translator Charlotte Lennox (c. 1730โ€“1804), Scottish poet and novelist John Leonard (born 1965), Australian poet Giacomo Leopardi (1798โ€“1837), Italian poet, essayist and philologist Mikhail Lermontov (1814โ€“1841), Russian writer, poet and painter Ben Lerner (born 1979), US poet, novelist and critic Bolesล‚aw Leล›mian (1877โ€“1937), Polish poet and artist Rika Lesser (born 1953), US poet and translator Gotthold Ephraim Lessing (1729โ€“1781), German writer, philosopher and dramatist Denise Levertov (1927โ€“1997), British-born US poet Dana Levin (born 1965), US poet and teacher Philip Levine (1928โ€“2015), US poet; 2011โ€“2012 US Poet Laureate Larry Levis (1946โ€“1996), US poet D. A. Levy (1942โ€“1968), US poet, artist and publisher William Levy (1939โ€“2019), US poet, fiction writer and editor Oswald LeWinter (1931โ€“2013), poet Alun Lewis (1915โ€“1944), Welsh poet in English C. S. Lewis (1898โ€“1963), Northern Irish novelist, poet and essayist Gwyneth Lewis (born 1959), Welsh poet; inaugural National Poet of Wales J. Patrick Lewis (born 1942), US children's poet Saunders Lewis (1893โ€“1985), Welsh poet, dramatist and critic Wyndham Lewis (1884โ€“1957), English painter and author Liโ€“Ly Li Houzhu (937โ€“978), Chinese poet and ruler of Southern Tang Kingdom (961โ€“975 CE) Josรฉ Lezama Lima (1910โ€“1976), Cuban writer and poet Tim Liardet (born 1959), English poet, critic and professor Li Bai (701โ€“762), Chinese Tang dynasty poet Jerzy Liebert (1904โ€“1931), Polish poet Li Jiao, poet under Tang and Zhou dynasties Li Qingzhao (1084โ€“1151), Chinese Song dynasty writer and poet Li Shangyin (813โ€“858), Chinese late Tang-dynasty poet Tim Lilburn (born 1950), Canadian poet and essayist Anne Morrow Lindbergh (1906โ€“2001), US author and aviator; wife of Charles Lindbergh Jack Lindeman (fl. late 20th c.), US poet and critic Sarah Lindsay (born 1958), US poet Rossy Evelin Lima (born 1986), Mexican poet Vachel Lindsay (1879โ€“1931), US poet Ewa Lipska (born 1945), Polish poet Lรกszlรณ Listi (1628โ€“1662), Hungarian poet Jรณzef ลobodowski (1909โ€“1988), Polish poet and political thinker Terry Locke (born 1946), New Zealand poet, anthologist and academic Thomas Lodge (1558โ€“1625), English dramatist and writer Iain Lom (c. 1624 โ€“ c. 1710), Scottish Gaelic poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807โ€“1882), US poet and educator Michael Longley (born 1939), Northern Irish poet Federico Garcรญa Lorca (1898โ€“1936), Spanish poet, dramatist and stage director Audre Lorde (1934โ€“1992), Caribbean-US writer, poet and librarian Richard Lovelace (1618โ€“1658), English Cavalier poet Amy Lowell (1874โ€“1925), US poet James Russell Lowell (1819โ€“1891), US poet, critic and diplomat Robert Lowell (1917โ€“1977), US poet; 1947 US Poet Laureate Maria White Lowell (1821โ€“1853), US poet and abolitionist Solomon Lรถwisohn (1788โ€“1821), Hungarian Jewish poet and historian in Hebrew and German Mina Loy (1882โ€“1966), English poet, playwright and novelist Lu You (1125โ€“1209), Chinese Song dynasty poet Stanisล‚aw Herakliusz Lubomirski (1642โ€“1702), Polish poet, writer and politician Gherasim Luca (1913โ€“1994), Romanian poet and surrealist Lucan (39โ€“65 CE), Roman poet Edward Lucie-Smith (born 1933), English writer, poet and broadcaster Gaius Lucilius (fl. 2nd c. BCE), Roman satirist Lucilius Junior (fl. 1st c. CE), poet and Procurator of Sicily Lucretius (c. 99 BCE โ€“ c. 55 BCE), Roman poet and philosopher Fitz Hugh Ludlow (1836โ€“1870), US author, journalist and explorer Edith Gyรถmrล‘i Ludowyk (1896โ€“1987), Hungarian poet and politician Luo Binwang (640โ€“684), Chinese Tang-dynasty writer and poet Thomas Lux (1946โ€“2017), US poet Mario Luzi (1914โ€“2005), Italian poet John Lydgate (1370โ€“1450), English monk and poet John Lyly (1553โ€“1606), English writer, poet and dramatist Sir David Lyndsay of the Mount (c. 1490 โ€“ c. 1555), Scottish Lord Lyon and poet Sandford Lyne (1945โ€“2007), US poet, educator and editor George Lyttelton (1709โ€“1773), English poet, statesman and arts patron M Ma Thomas Babington Macaulay, 1st Baron Macaulay (1800โ€“1859), Anglo-Scottish poet and historian George MacBeth (1932โ€“1992), Scottish poet and novelist Norman MacCaig (1910โ€“1996), Scottish poet Elizabeth Roberts MacDonald (1864โ€“1922), Canadian poet and writer Hugh MacDiarmid (1892โ€“1978), Scottish poet George MacDonald (1824โ€“1905), Scottish poet and novelist Sorley MacLean (1911โ€“1996), Scottish Gaelic poet Gwendolyn MacEwen (1941โ€“1987), Canadian writer and poet Antonio Machado (1875โ€“1939), Spanish poet Arthur Machen (1863โ€“1947), Welsh author and mystic Compton Mackenzie (1883โ€“1972), Scottish writer, memoirist and poet Archibald MacLeish (1892โ€“1987), US modernist poet and writer Aonghas MacNeacail (born 1942), writer in Scottish Gaelic Louis MacNeice (1907โ€“1963), Irish poet and playwright Hector Macneill (1746โ€“1818), Scottish poet and songwriter James Macpherson (1736โ€“1796), Scottish writer and poet Haki R. Madhubuti (born 1942), African-US writer, poet and educator Jayanta Mahapatra (born 1928), Indian English poet John Gillespie Magee Jr. (1922โ€“1941), US poet and aviator Eric Magrane (born 1975), US poet and geographer Derek Mahon (1941โ€“2020), Northern Irish poet Rudolf Maister (1874โ€“1934), Slovene poet and activist Gajanan Digambar Madgulkar (1919โ€“1977), Marathi and Hindi poet and playwright Jรกnos Majlรกth (1786โ€“1855), Hungarian historian and poet Clarence Major (born 1936), US poet, painter and novelist Desanka Maksimoviฤ‡ (1898โ€“1993), Serbian poet and professor Majeed Amjad (1914โ€“1974), Indian/Pakistani poet in Urdu Antoni Malczewski (1793โ€“1826), Polish poet Marcin Malek (born 1975), Polish poet, writer and playwright Josh Malihabadi (born Shabbir Hasan Khan) (1898โ€“1982), Indian Urdu poet Madayyagari Mallana (fl. 15th c.), Telugu poet Stephane Mallarme (1842โ€“1898), French poet and critic David Mallet (c. 1705โ€“1765), Scottish dramatist and poet Thomas Malory (1405โ€“1471), English author of Le Morte d'Arthur Goffredo Mameli (1827โ€“1849), Italian patriot, poet and writer Osip Mandelstam (also Mandelshtam, 1891โ€“1938), Russian poet James Clarence Mangan (1803โ€“1849), Irish poet Bill Manhire (born 1946), New Zealand poet and fiction writer; New Zealand Poet Laureate Marcus Manilius (fl. 1st c. CE), Roman poet and astrologer Maurice Manning (born 1966), US poet Ruth Manning-Sanders (1895โ€“1988), Welsh-born English poet and author Robert Mannyng (1275โ€“1340), English chronicler and monk in Middle English, French and Latin Chris Mansell (born 1953), Australian poet and publisher Jakobe Mansztajn (born 1982), Polish poet and blogger Manuchehri (Abu Najm Ahmad ibn Ahmad ibn Qaus Manuchehri; 11th c.), royal poet in Persia Alessandro Manzoni (1785โ€“1873), Italian poet and novelist Sรกndor Mรกrai (1900โ€“1989), Hungarian/US poet and novelist Ausiร s March (1397โ€“1459), Valencian poet and knight Morton Marcus (1936โ€“2009), US poet and author Mareez (1917โ€“1983), Indian poet in Gujarati Paul Mariani (born 1940), US poet and academic Marie de France (fl. 12th c.), poet probably French-born and resident in England Filippo Tommaso Marinetti (1876โ€“1944), Italian poet and editor Giambattista Marino (1569โ€“1625), Italian poet E. A. Markham (1939โ€“2008), Montserrat poet, playwright and novelist Edwin Markham (1852โ€“1940), US poet ฤorฤ‘e Markoviฤ‡ Koder (1806โ€“1891), Serbian poet Christopher Marlowe (1564โ€“1593), English dramatist, poet and translator Clรฉment Marot (1496โ€“1544), French Renaissance poet Don Marquis (1878โ€“1937), US novelist, poet and playwright Edward Garrard Marsh (1783โ€“1862), English poet and cleric John Marston (1576โ€“1634), English playwright, poet and satirist Josรฉ Martรญ (1853โ€“1895), Cuban poet and writer Martial (40 โ€“ c. 102 CE), Roman epigrammatist Camille Martin (born 1956), Canadian poet and collage artist Harry Martinson (1904โ€“1978), Swedish sailor, author and poet Andrew Marvell (1621โ€“1678), English metaphysical poet and politician John Masefield (1878โ€“1967), English poet and writer; UK Poet Laureate (1930โ€“1967) Edgar Lee Masters (1868โ€“1950), US poet, biographer and dramatist Dafydd Llwyd Mathau (fl. earlier 17th c.), Welsh poet in Welsh Jรกnos Mattis-Teutsch (1884โ€“1960), Hungarian-Romanian poet and artist Glyn Maxwell (born 1962), British poet, playwright and librettist Vladimir Mayakovsky (1893โ€“1930), Russian/Soviet poet and playwright Karl May (1842โ€“1912), German writer, poet and musician Bernadette Mayer (born 1945), US poet and prose writer Ben Mazer (born 1964), US poet and editor Mcโ€“Me James McAuley (1917โ€“1976), Australian poet and critic Susan McCaslin (born 1947), Canadian/US poet and critic J. D. McClatchy (1945โ€“2018), US poet and critic Michael McClure (1932โ€“2020), US poet, playwright and novelist John McCrae (1872โ€“1918), Canadian poet, physician and artist Walt McDonald (1934โ€“2022), US poet; Poet Laureate of Texas Dermit McEncroe (fl. early 18th century), Irish doctor and poet Elvis McGonagall, Scottish poet and comedian William Topaz McGonagall (1825โ€“1902), Scottish writer of doggerel Roger McGough (born 1937), English comedian and poet Campbell McGrath (born 1962), US poet Wendy McGrath, Canadian poet and novelist Thomas McGrath (1916โ€“1990), US poet Heather McHugh (born 1948), US poet, translator and educator Duncan Ban McIntyre (1724โ€“1812), Scottish poet in Scottish Gaelic James McIntyre (1827โ€“1906), Canadian writer of doggerel Claude McKay (1889โ€“1948), Jamaican-US writer and poet Don McKay (born 1942), Canadian poet, editor and educator Rod McKuen (1933โ€“2015), US poet, composer and singer James McMichael (born 1939), US poet Ian McMillan (born 1956), English poet, playwright and broadcaster Meera (1498โ€“1546), Indian Hindu mystic poet and Krishna devotee Narsinh Mehta (c. 1414 โ€“ c. 1481), Indian poet-saint of Gujarat Mei Yaochen (1002โ€“1060), Chinese Song dynasty poet Peter Meinke (born 1932), US poet and fiction writer Cecรญlia Meireles (1901โ€“1964), Brazilian poet Herman Melville (1819โ€“1891), US fiction writer and poet Meng Haoran (689 or 691โ€“740), Chinese Tang dynasty poet George Meredith (1828โ€“1909), English poet and novelist Kersti Merilaas (1913โ€“1986), Estonian poet Alda Merini (1931โ€“2009) Italian writer and poet Stuart Merrill (1863โ€“1915), US poet writing mainly in French James Merrill (1926โ€“1995), US poet; 1977 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry Thomas Merton (1915โ€“1968), US writer and Trappist monk W. S. Merwin (1927โ€“2019), US poet and author; 1971 and 2009 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry; 2010 US Poet Laureate Sarah Messer (born 1966), US poet and writer Charlotte Mew (1869โ€“1928), English poet Henry Meyer (1840โ€“1925), US poet writing in Pennsylvania Dutch Ferenc Mezล‘ (1885โ€“1961), Hungarian poet Miโ€“Mo Henri Michaux (1899โ€“1984), Belgian/French poet, writer and painter Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni (1475โ€“1564), Italian poet and sculptor Tadeusz Miciล„ski (1873โ€“1918), Polish poet and playwright Adam Mickiewicz (1798โ€“1855), Polish poet, essayist and publicist Veronica Micle (1850โ€“1889), Austrian/Romanian poet Christopher Middleton (c. 1560โ€“1628), English poet and translator Christopher Middleton (c.โ€‰1690โ€“1770), Royal Navy officer and navigator Christopher Middleton (1926โ€“2015), English poet Thomas Middleton (1580โ€“1627), English poet and playwright Agnes Miegel (1879โ€“1964), German writer and poet Josephine Miles (1911โ€“1985), US poet and critic Jennifer Militello, US poet and professor Branko Miljkoviฤ‡ (1934โ€“1961), Serbian poet Edna St. Vincent Millay (1892โ€“1950), US lyric poet, playwright and feminist Alice Duer Miller (1874โ€“1942), US writer and poet Grazyna Miller (1957โ€“2009), Italian/Polish poet and translator Jace Miller, US poet Jane Miller (born 1949), US poet Joaquin Miller (1837โ€“1913), US poet Leslie Adrienne Miller (born 1956), US poet Thomas Miller (1807โ€“1874), English poet Vassar Miller (1924โ€“1998), US writer and poet Spike Milligan (1918โ€“2002), Irish comedian, poet and musician Czesล‚aw Miล‚osz (1911โ€“2004), Polish poet; 1980 Nobel Prize in Literature John Milton (1608โ€“1674), English poet and polemicist Sima Milutinoviฤ‡ Sarajlija (1791โ€“1847), Serbian adventurer, writer and poet Marijane Minaberri (1926โ€“2017), French/Basque poet and radio broadcaster Robert Minhinnick (born 1952), Welsh poet, essayist and novelist Matthew Minicucci (born 1981), US poet and teacher Mir Taqi Mir (1725โ€“1810), Indian poet in Urdu Gabriela Mistral (1889โ€“1957), Chilean poet and feminist; 1945 Nobel Prize in Literature Adrian Mitchell (1932โ€“2008), English poet, novelist and playwright. Silas Weir Mitchell (1829โ€“1914), US physician and writer Stephen Mitchell (born 1943) US poet, translator and anthologist Waddie Mitchell (born 1950), US poet Ndre Mjeda (1866โ€“1937), Albanian Gheg poet Stanisล‚aw Mล‚odoลผeniec (1895โ€“1959), poet Anis Mojgani (born 1977), US spoken-word poet and visual artist Moliรจre (Jean-Baptiste Poquelin) (1622โ€“1673), French playwright Atukuri Molla (1440โ€“1530), Indian Telugu poet Aja Monet, Black American poet Harold Monro (1879โ€“1932), English poet Harriet Monroe (1860โ€“1936), US scholar, critic and poet John Montague (1929โ€“2016), Irish poet Charles Montagu, 1st Earl of Halifax (1661โ€“1715), English poet and statesman Eugenio Montale (1896โ€“1981), Italian poet, writer and translator; 1975 Nobel Prize in Literature Alexander Montgomerie (c. 1550โ€“1598), Scottish Jacobean courtier and makar Alan Moore (born 1960), Irish writer and poet Marianne Moore (1887โ€“1972), US poet and writer Merrill Moore (1903โ€“1957), US psychiatrist and poet Thomas Moore (1779โ€“1852), Irish poet, singer and songwriter Dom Moraes (1938โ€“2004), Goan writer, poet and columnist Kelly Ana Morey (born 1968), New Zealand novelist and poet Edwin Morgan (1920โ€“2010), Scottish poet and translator J. O. Morgan (born 1978), Scottish poet John Morgan (1688โ€“1733), Welsh clergyman, scholar and poet Lorin Morgan-Richards (born 1975), US poet and author Christian Morgenstern (1871โ€“1914), German author and poet Eduard Mรถrike (1804โ€“1875), German poet William Morris (1834โ€“1896), English writer, poet and designer Jim Morrison (1943โ€“1971), US songwriter and poet Jan Andrzej Morsztyn (1621โ€“1693), Polish poet Zbigniew Morsztyn (c. 1628โ€“1689), Polish poet Valzhyna Mort (born 1981), Belarus poet Viggo Mortensen (born 1958), US poet, actor and musician Moschus (fl. 2nd c. BCE), Greek bucolic poet Howard Moss (1922โ€“1987), US poet, dramatist and critic Andrew Motion (born 1952), English poet, novelist and biographer; Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom 1999โ€“2009 Enrique Moya (born 1958), Venezuelan poet, fiction writer and critic Muโ€“My Micere Githae Mugo (1942โ€“2023), Kenyan playwright, author and poet Erich Mรผhsam (1878โ€“1934), German-Jewish essayist, poet and, playwright Edwin Muir (1887โ€“1959), Scottish Orcadian poet, novelist and translator Paul Muldoon (born 1951), Irish poet Lale Mรผldรผr (born 1956), Turkish poet and writer Laura Mullen (born 1958), US poet Anthony Munday (1553โ€“1633), English playwright and writer George Murnu (1868โ€“1957), Romanian archeologist, historian and poet Sheila Murphy (born 1951), US text and visual poet George Murray (born 1971), Canadian poet Joan Murray (born 1945), US poet, writer and playwright Les Murray (1938โ€“2019), Australian poet, anthologist and critic Richard Murphy (1927โ€“2018), Irish poet Susan Musgrave (born 1951), Canadian poet and children's writer Lukijan Muลกicki (1777โ€“1837), Serbian poet, prose writer and polyglot Nikola Musulin (fl. 19th c.), Serbian poet Togara Muzanenhamo (born 1975), Zimbabwean poet Christopher Mwashinga (born 1965), Tanzanian poet, author and Christian minister Lam Quang My (born 1944), Vietnamese poet in Polish and Vietnamese N Vladimir Nabokov (1899โ€“1977), Russian novelist and poet in Russian and English Daniel Naborowski (1573โ€“1640), Polish poet Cecilia del Nacimiento (1570โ€“1646), Spanish nun, mystic, writer, and poet รgnes Nemes Nagy (1922โ€“1991), Hungarian poet and translator Gรกspรกr Nagy (1949โ€“2007), Hungarian poet Lajos Parti Nagy (born 1953), Hungarian poet, playwright and critic Lรกszlรณ Nagy (1925โ€“1978), Hungarian poet and translator Guru Nanak Dev (1469โ€“1539), first Sikh Guru and Punjabi poet Nannaya (c. 11th c.), earliest known Telugu author Philip Nanton (living), Vincentian poet Adam Naruszewicz (1733โ€“1796), Polish-Lithuanian poet, historian and dramatist Ogden Nash (1902โ€“1971), US poet known for light verse Thomas Nashe (1567โ€“1601), English playwright, poet and satirist Imadaddin Nasimi (died c. 1417), Azerbaijani poet Momฤilo Nastasijeviฤ‡ (1894โ€“1938), Serbian poet, novelist and dramatist Natsume Sลseki (1867โ€“1916), Japanese novelist and poet Gellu Naum (1915โ€“2001), Romanian poet, dramatist and children's writer Nedรฎm (c. 1681โ€“1730), Ottoman poet John Neal (1793โ€“1876), US writer, critic, activist and poet Henry Neele (1798โ€“1828), English poet and scholar Walela Nehanda, Black American poet John Neihardt (1881โ€“1973), US poet, historian and ethnographer ร‰mile Nelligan (1879โ€“1941), Quebec poet Marilyn Nelson (born 1946), US poet, translator and children's writer Howard Nemerov (1920โ€“1991), US poet; US Poet Laureate 1963โ€“1964 Istvรกn Pรฉter Nรฉmeth (born 1960), Hungarian poet and literary historian Condetto Nรฉnรฉkhaly-Camara (1930โ€“1972), Guinean poet and playwright Jan Neruda (1834โ€“1891), Czech journalist, writer and poet Pablo Neruda (1904โ€“1973), Chilean poet and politician; Nobel Prize for Literature 1971 NeลŸรขtรฎ (died 1674), Ottoman Sufi poet Henry John Newbolt (1862โ€“1938), English historian and poet John Henry Newman (1801โ€“1890), writer, poet and hymnist Aimee Nezhukumatathil (born 1974), Asian US poet Nguyแป…n Du (1766โ€“1820), Vietnamese poet in ancient Chแปฏ Nรดm script B. P. Nichol (bpNichol, 1944โ€“1988), Canadian poet Nicholas I of Montenegro (1841โ€“1921), poet and king of Montenegro Grace Nichols (born 1950), Guyanese poet Norman Nicholson (1914โ€“1987), English poet Lorine Niedecker (1903โ€“1970), US poet Julian Ursyn Niemcewicz (1758โ€“1841), Polish poet, playwright and statesman Friedrich Nietzsche (1844โ€“1900), German philosopher, poet and philologist Millosh Gjergj Nikolla (Migjeni) (1911โ€“1938), Albanian poet and writer Nisami (1141โ€“1209), Persian poet Nishiyama Sลin (1605โ€“1682), Japanese haikai poet Moeen Nizami (born 1965), Pakistani poet, scholar and writer Petar II Petroviฤ‡-Njegoลก (1813โ€“1851), Serbian poet, playwright and prince-bishop Yamilka Noa (born 1980), Cubanโ€“Costa Rican poet Gรกbor Nรณgrรกdi (born 1947), Hungarian poet, essayist and children's novelist Christopher Nolan (1965โ€“2009), Irish poet and author Fan S. Noli (1882โ€“1965), Albanian/US writer, diplomat and historian Olga Nolla (1938โ€“2001), Puerto Rican poet, writer and professor Harry Northup (born 1940), US actor and poet Caroline Norton (1808โ€“1877), English writer, feminist and reformer Cyprian Norwid (1821โ€“1883), Polish poet, dramatist and artist Alice Notley (born 1945), US poet Novalis (Friedrich von Hardenberg) (1772โ€“1801), German poet and novelist Franciszek Nowicki (1864โ€“1935), Polish poet and conservationist Alfred Noyes (1880โ€“1958), English poet Oodgeroo Noonuccal (1920โ€“1993), first Aboriginal Australian published poet Julia Nyberg (1784โ€“1854), Swedish poet and songwriter Naomi Shihab Nye (born 1952), Palestinian-US poet, songwriter and novelist Robert Nye (1939โ€“2016), English poet, novelist and children's writer Niyi Osundare (born 1947), Nigerian poet, dramatist and literary critic O Dositej Obradoviฤ‡ (1742โ€“1811), Serbian philosopher, writer and poet Sean O'Brien (born 1952), British poet, critic and playwright D. Michael O'Connor aka Damond Jiniya(Born 1974), North American singer, writer and poet Philip O'Connor (1916โ€“1998), Anglo-French writer and poet Antoni Edward Odyniec (1804โ€“1885), Polish poet Ron Offen (1930โ€“2010), US poet, playwright and producer Dennis O'Driscoll (1954โ€“2012), Irish poet Frank O'Hara (1926โ€“1966), US writer, poet and art critic Hisashi Okuyama (born 1941), Japanese poet Porsha Olayiwola (born 1988), US poet Sharon Olds (born 1942), US poet Mary Oliver (1935โ€“2015), US poet Charles Olson (1910โ€“1970), US modernist poet Saishu Onoe (1876โ€“1957), Japanese poet Onomacritus (c. 530โ€“480 BCE), Attic poet, priest and seer George Oppen (1908โ€“1984), US poet Artur Oppman (Or-Ot, 1867โ€“1931), Polish poet Edward Otho Cresap Ord, II (1858โ€“1923), US poet and painter Zaharije Orfelin (1726โ€“1785), Serbian polymath and poet Wล‚adysล‚aw Orkan (1875โ€“1930), Polish poet Peter Orlovsky (1933โ€“2010), US poet and actor; partner of Allen Ginsberg Gregory Orr (born 1947), US poet Agnieszka Osiecka (1936โ€“1997), Polish poet, writer and screenplay author Alice Oswald (born 1966), English poet Ouyang Xiu (1007โ€“1072), Chinese Song Dynasty historian, essayist and poet Ovid (43 BCE โ€“ 17 CE), Roman poet Wilfred Owen (1893โ€“1918), English poet and soldier ฤฐsmet ร–zel (born 1944), Turkish poet and scholar P Pa Ruth Padel (born 1946), English poet, author and critic Ron Padgett (born 1942), US poet, writer and translator Padmanฤbha (15th century) Dingal (Old Gujarati) poet and historian Dan Pagis (1930โ€“1986), Israeli poet and Holocaust survivor Grace Paley (1922โ€“2007), US short story writer and poet Francis Turner Palgrave (1824โ€“1897), English critic and poet Palladas (), Greek poet Michael Palmer (born 1943), US poet and translator Sima Panduroviฤ‡ (1883โ€“1960), Serbian poet Sumitranandan Pant (1900โ€“1977), Indian poet in Hindi Daniele Pantano (born 1976), Swiss poet, translator, editor and scholar William Williams Pantycelyn (1717โ€“1791), Welsh poet and hymnist in Welsh Park Yong-rae (1925โ€“1980), Korean poet Andrew Park (1807โ€“1863), Scottish poet Dorothy Parker (1893โ€“1967), US poet, fiction writer and satirist Amy Parkinson (1855โ€“1938), British-born Canadian poet Thomas Parnell (1679โ€“1718), Irish poet and clergyman Nicanor Parra (1914โ€“2018), Chilean mathematician and poet Henry Parrot (), English epigrammatist Giovanni Pascoli (1855โ€“1912), Italian poet รmbar Past (born 1949), Mexican poet, visual artist Boris Pasternak (1890โ€“1960), Russian poet, novelist and translator Leon Pasternak (1910โ€“1969), Polish poet and satirist Benito Pastoriza Iyodo (born 1954), Puerto Rican poet and fiction and literature writer Kenneth Patchen (1911โ€“1972), US poet and novelist Ravji Patel (1939โ€“1968), Indian poet Banjo Paterson (Andrew Barton Paterson) (1864โ€“1941), Australian bush poet, journalist and author Don Paterson (born 1963), Scottish poet, writer and musician Coventry Patmore (1823โ€“1896), English poet and critic Brian Patten (born 1946), English poet Lekhnath Paudyal (1885โ€“1966), Nepalese poet Paul I, Prince Esterhรกzy (1635โ€“1713) Austro-Hungarian poet Cesare Pavese (1908โ€“1950), Italian poet, novelist and critic Maria Pawlikowska-Jasnorzewska (1891โ€“1945), Polish poet and dramatist Octavio Paz (1914โ€“1998), Mexican writer, poet and diplomat Peโ€“Pl Thomas Love Peacock (1785โ€“1866), English poet and novelist Patrick Pearse (1879โ€“1916), Irish poet and writer James Larkin Pearson (1879โ€“1981), US poet and publisher Allasani Peddana (fl. 15th/16th cc.), Telugu poet Charles Pรฉguy (1873โ€“1914), French poet, essayist and editor Kathleen Peirce (born 1956), US poet Gabino Coria Peรฑaloza (1881โ€“1975), Argentine poet and lyricist Sam Pereira (living), US poet Lucia Perillo (1958โ€“2016), US poet Persius (34โ€“62 CE), Roman poet and satirist of Etruscan origin Fernando Pessoa (1888โ€“1935), Portuguese poet, philosopher and critic Lenrie Peters (1932โ€“2009), Gambian surgeon, novelist, poet and educationist Robert Peters (1924โ€“2014), US poet, scholar and playwright Pascale Petit (born 1953), French-Welsh poet and artist Petrarch (Francesco Petrarca) (1304โ€“1374), Italian scholar and poet Kata Szidรณnia Petrล‘czy (1659โ€“1708), Hungarian poet and prose writer Marine Petrossian (born 1960), Armenian poet, essayist and columnist Veljko Petroviฤ‡ (1884โ€“1967), Serbian poet, prose writer and theorist Mirko Petroviฤ‡-Njegoลก (1820โ€“1867), Serbian and Montenegrin poet, soldier and diplomat Mario Petrucci (born 1958), English poet, author and translator of Italian origin Ambrose Philips (1674โ€“1749), English poet and politician Katherine Philips (1632โ€“1664), Anglo-Welsh poet Savitribai Phule (1831โ€“1897), Indian social reformer, educationalist, and poet from Maharashtra Pi Rixiu (c. 834โ€“883), Tang Dynasty poet Tom Pickard (born 1946), English poet and film maker Pindar (522โ€“443 BCE), Theban lyric poet in Greek Robert Pinsky (born 1940), US poet, critic and translator; 1997โ€“2000 US Poet Laureate Ruth Pitter (1897โ€“1992), English poet Christine de Pizan (c. 1365 โ€“ c. 1430), Venetian historian, poet and philosopher Sylvia Plath (1932โ€“1963), US poet and novelist William Plomer (1903โ€“1973), South African novelist, poet and editor in English Poโ€“Pu Jacek Podsiadล‚o (born 1964), Polish poet, translator and essayist Edgar Allan Poe (1809โ€“1849), US author, poet and critic Suman Pokhrel (born 1967), Nepalese poet, playwright and artist Wincenty Pol (1807โ€“1872), Polish poet and geographer Margaret Steuart Pollard (1904โ€“1996), English poet Edward Pollock (1823โ€“1858), US poet John Pomfret (1667โ€“1702), English poet and clergyman. Marie Ponsot (1921โ€“2019), US poet, critic and essayist Vasko Popa (1922โ€“1991), Serbian poet of Romanian descent Alexander Pope (1688โ€“1744), English poet Antonio Porchia (1885โ€“1968), Italian Argentinian poet Judith Pordon (born 1954), US poet, writer and editor Peter Porter (1929โ€“2010), Australian poet based in England Halina Poล›wiatowska (1935โ€“1967), Polish poet and writer Roma Potiki (born 1958), New Zealand poet and playwright Wacล‚aw Potocki (1621โ€“1696), Polish poet and moralist Ezra Pound (1885โ€“1972), US expatriate poet and critic Alishetty Prabhakar (1952โ€“1993), Telugu poet Tapan Kumar Pradhan (born 1972), Indian poet, translator and activist Adรฉlia Prado (born 1935), Brazilian writer and poet Winthrop Mackworth Praed (1802โ€“1839), English politician and poet Jaishankar Prasad (1889โ€“1937), Indian poet in Hindi E. J. Pratt (1882โ€“1964), Canadian poet Petar Preradoviฤ‡ (1818โ€“1872), Croatian poet, writer and general France Preลกeren (1800โ€“1849), Carniolan Romantic poet Jacques Prรฉvert (1900โ€“1977), French poet and screenwriter Richard Price (born 1966), Scottish poet, novelist and translator Robert Priest (born 1951), English-born Canadian poet, children's author and singer/songwriter F. T. Prince (1912โ€“2003), English poet and academic Matthew Prior (1664โ€“1721), English poet and diplomat Bryan Procter (1787โ€“1874), English poet Sextus Propertius (50 or 45โ€“15 BCE), Latin elegiac poet Kevin Prufer (born 1969), US poet, academic and essayist J. H. Prynne (born 1936), English poet Kazimierz Przerwa-Tetmajer (1865โ€“1940), Polish poet, novelist and playwright Zenon Przesmycki (Miriam, 1861โ€“1944), Polish poet, translator and critic Jeremi Przybora (1915โ€“2004), Polish poet, writer and singer Luigi Pulci (1432โ€“1484), Italian poet known for Morgante Alexander Pushkin (1799โ€“1837), Russian poet, novelist and playwright Q Nizar Qabbani (1923โ€“1998), Syrian diplomat, poet and publisher Muhammad Tahir ul-Qadri (born 1951), Pakistani Sufi poet and scholar Sayyid Ahmedullah Qadri (1909โ€“1985), Indian poet, writer and politician Aref Qazvini (1882โ€“1934), Iranian poet, lyricist and musician Qu Yuan (343โ€“278 BCE), Chinese poet Francis Quarles (1592โ€“1644), English Christian poet Salvatore Quasimodo (1901โ€“1968), Italian author and poet; 1959 Nobel Prize in Literature R Raโ€“Re Jean Racine (1639โ€“1699), French dramatist Branko Radiฤeviฤ‡ (1824โ€“1853), Serbian lyric poet Leetile Disang Raditladi (1910โ€“1971) poet from Botswana Sam Ragan (1915โ€“1996), US poet, journalist and writer Shamsur Rahman (1929โ€“2006), Bangladeshi poet and columnist Craig Raine (born 1944), English poet Kathleen Raine (1908โ€“2003), English poet, critic and scholar Samina Raja (born 1961), Pakistani poet, writer and broadcaster Milan Rakiฤ‡ (1876โ€“1938), Serbian poet Carl Rakosi (1903โ€“2004), US Objectivist poet Martin Rakovskรฝ (c. 1535โ€“1579), Hungarian poet and scholar Zsuzsa Rakovszky (born 1950), Hungarian poet and translator Maraea Rakuraku (living), New Zealand Mฤori poet, playwright and short story writer Sir Walter Raleigh (c. 1554โ€“1618), English writer, poet and explorer Tenali Rama (16th c., CE), Telugu poet Ayyalaraju Ramabhadrudu (16th c., CE), Telugu poet Ramarajabhushanudu (mid 16th c. CE), Telugu poet and musician Guru Ram Das (1534โ€“1581), Sikh guru and Punjabi poet Simรณn Darรญo Ramรญrez (1930โ€“1992), Venezuelan poet Allan Ramsay (1686โ€“1758), Scottish poet, playwright and publisher Dudley Randall (1914โ€“2000), African-US poet and publisher Thomas Randolph (1605โ€“1635), English poet and dramatist John Crowe Ransom (1888โ€“1974), US poet, essayist and editor Addepalli Ramamohana Rao (1936โ€“2016), Telugu poet and literary critic รgnes Rapai (born 1952), Hungarian poet, writer and translator Noon Meem Rashid (1910โ€“1975), Pakistani poet writing in Urdu Stephen Ratcliffe (born 1948), US poet and critic Dahlia Ravikovitch (1936โ€“2005), Israeli poet and translator Tom Raworth (1938โ€“2017), British poet and visual artist Herbert Read (1893โ€“1968), English anarchist, poet and arts critic Peter Reading (1946โ€“2011), English poet Angela Readman (born 1973), English poet James Reaney (1926โ€“2008), Canadian poet, playwright and professor Malliya Rechana (mid-10th c. CE), Telugu poet Peter Redgrove (1932โ€“2003), English poet Beatrice Redpath (1886โ€“1937), Canadian poet and short story writer Henry Reed (1914โ€“1986), English poet, translator and radio dramatist Ishmael Reed (born 1938), US poet, playwright and novelist Ennis Rees (1925โ€“2009), US poet, professor and translator James Reeves (1909โ€“1978), English poet, children's writer and writer on song Abraham Regelson (1896โ€“1981), Israeli Hebrew poet, author and children's author Christopher Reid (born 1949), Hong Kong-born English poet, essayist and cartoonist James Reiss (1941โ€“2016), US poet Mikoล‚aj Rej (1505โ€“1569), Polish poet and prose writer Robert Rendall (1898โ€“1967), Orkney Scottish poet and amateur naturalist Pierre Reverdy (1889โ€“1960), French poet of Surrealism, Dadaism and Cubism Jacobus Revius (born Jakob Reefsen) (1586โ€“1658), Dutch poet, theologian and church historian Kenneth Rexroth (1905โ€“1982), US poet, translator and critical essayist Sydor Rey (1908โ€“1979), Polish poet and novelist Charles Reznikoff (1894โ€“1976), US Objectivist poet Raees Warsi (born 1963), Pakistani poet, writer and lyricist writing in Urdu Riโ€“Ry Francisco Granizo Ribadeneira (1925โ€“2009), Ecuadorian poet Anne Rice (1941โ€“2021), US fiction writer Stan Rice (1943โ€“2002), US poet and artist; husband of Anne Rice Adrienne Rich (1929โ€“2012), US poet, essayist and feminist John Richardson (1817โ€“1886), English Lake District poet Edgell Rickword (1898โ€“1982), English poet, critic and journalist Lola Ridge (1873โ€“1941), Irish-born US anarchist poet and editor Laura Riding (1901โ€“1981), US poet, critic and novelist Anne Ridler (1912โ€“2001), English poet and editor James Whitcomb Riley (1849โ€“1916), US writer and poet John Riley (1937โ€“1978), English poet of British Poetry Revival Rainer Maria Rilke (1875โ€“1926), Bohemian-Austrian poet Gopal Prasad Rimal (1918โ€“1973), Nepali poet and playwright Arthur Rimbaud (1854โ€“1891), French symbolist poet of Decadent movement Alberto Rรญos (born 1952), US poet and professor Khawar Rizvi (1938โ€“1981), Pakistani poet and scholar in Urdu and Persian Emma Roberts (1794โ€“1840), English travel writer and poet Michael Roberts (1902โ€“1948), English poet, writer and editor Edwin Arlington Robinson (1869โ€“1935), US poet Mary Robinson (1757โ€“1800), English poet and novelist Peter Robinson (born 1953), English poet Roland Robinson (1912โ€“1992), Australian poet and writer Georges Rodenbach (1855โ€“1898), Belgian Symbolist poet and novelist W R Rodgers (1909โ€“1969), Northern Irish poet, essayist and Presbyterian minister Josรฉ Luis Rodrรญguez Pittรญ (born 1971), Panamanian poet and artist Theodore Roethke (1908โ€“1963), US poet Samuel Rogers (1763โ€“1855), English poet Rognvald Kali Kolsson (c. 1103โ€“1158), Earl of Orkney and saint Matthew Rohrer (born 1970), US poet Gรฉza Rรถhrig (born 1967), Hungarian poet and actor Radoslav Rochallyi (born 1980), Slovak writer David Romtvedt (living), US poet Pierre de Ronsard (1524โ€“1585), French poet Peter Rosegger (1843โ€“1918), Austrian poet Franklin Rosemont (1943โ€“2009), US poet, artist and co-founder of Chicago Surrealist Group Penelope Rosemont (born 1942), US poet, writer and co-founder of Chicago Surrealist Group Michael Rosen (born 1946) UK children's poet and former children's poet laureate Isaac Rosenberg (1890โ€“1918), English poet Barbara Rosiek (1959โ€“2020), Polish poet, writer and psychologist Alan Ross (1922โ€“2001), English poet, cricket writer and editor Christina Rossetti (1830โ€“1894), English poet Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828โ€“1882), English poet, illustrator and painter Andrus Rรตuk (born 1957), Estonian artist and poet Raymond Roussel (1877โ€“1933), French poet, novelist and playwright Nicholas Rowe (1674โ€“1718), English dramatist, poet and miscellanist; UK Poet Laureate 1715 Samuel Rowlands (c. 1573โ€“1630), English poet and pamphleteer Susanna Roxman (1946โ€“2015), English poet born in Sweden Istvan Rozanich (1912โ€“1984), Hungarian poet exiled in Venezuela Tadeusz Rรณลผewicz (1921โ€“2014), Polish poet and writer Ljubivoje Rลกumoviฤ‡ (born 1939), Serbian poet Friedrich Rรผckert (1788โ€“1866), German poet, translator and academic Muriel Rukeyser (1913โ€“1980), US poet and political activist Zygmunt Rumel (1915โ€“1943), Polish poet and partisan Jalฤl ad-Dฤซn Muhammad Balkhi Rumi (1207โ€“1273), Persian Muslim poet, jurist and Sufi mystic Paul-Eerik Rummo (born 1942), Estonian poet Johan Ludvig Runeberg (1804โ€“1877), Finnish poet in Swedish Nipsey Russell (1918โ€“2005), US poet and comedian Lucjan Rydel (1870โ€“1918), Polish poet and playwright Jarosล‚aw Marek Rymkiewicz (1935โ€“2022), Polish poet, essayist and dramatist Ryลkan (1758โ€“1831), Japanese calligrapher and poet S Saโ€“Se Umberto Saba (1883โ€“1957), Italian poet and novelist Jaime Sabines (1926โ€“1999), Mexican poet Nelly Sachs (1891โ€“1970), Jewish German poet and playwright; 1966 Nobel Prize in Literature Charles Sackville, 6th Earl of Dorset and 1st Earl of Middlesex (1638โ€“1706), English poet and courtier Thomas Sackville, 1st Earl of Dorset (1536โ€“1608), English statesman, poet and dramatist Vita Sackville-West (1892โ€“1962), English author, poet and gardener Saสฟdฤซ Shฤซrฤzฤซ (1184โ€“1283/1291), Persian poet Benjamin Alire Sรกenz (born 1954), US poet, novelist and children's writer Ali Ahmad Said (Adunis) (born 1930), Syrian poet, essayist and translator Mellin de Saint-Gelais (c. 1491โ€“1558), French Renaissance poet Akim Samar (1916โ€“1943), Soviet poet and novelist seen as first Nanai language writer Sonia Sanchez (born 1934), African-US poet associated with Black Arts Movement Michal ล anda (born 1965), Czech writer and poet Carl Sandburg (1878โ€“1967), US poet, writer and editor; three Pulitzer Prizes Jacopo Sannazaro (1458โ€“1530), Italian poet, humanist and epigrammist from Naples Ann Sansom, English poet and writing tutor Aleksa ล antiฤ‡ (1868โ€“1924), Bosnian Serb poet Taneda Santลka (1882โ€“1940), Japanese free verse haiku poet Genrikh Sapgir (1928โ€“1999), Russian poet and fiction writer Sappho (c. 630โ€“612 โ€“ c. 570 BCE), ancient Greek lyric poet from Lesbos Jaydeep Sarangi (born 1973), Indian poet in English Maciej Kazimierz Sarbiewski (1595โ€“1640), Polish poet in Latin William Saroyan (1908โ€“1981), US author of Armenian descent Siegfried Sassoon (1886โ€“1967), English war poet Subagio Sastrowardoyo (1924โ€“1995), Indonesian poet, fiction writer and literary critic Satsvarupa Das Goswami (born 1939), US poet and artist William Saunders (1806โ€“1851), Welsh poet in Welsh Richard Savage (c. 1697โ€“1743), English poet Leslie Scalapino (1944โ€“2010), US poet, writer and playwright Maurice Scรจve (c. 1500โ€“1564), French poet Hermann Georg Scheffauer (1876โ€“1927), US poet, architect and fiction writer Georges Schehadรฉ (1905โ€“1989), Lebanese playwright and poet in French Friedrich Schiller (1759โ€“1805), German poet, philosopher and playwright Arno Schmidt (1914โ€“1979), German author and translator Dennis Schmitz (1937โ€“2019), US poet Johanna Schouten-Elsenhout (1910โ€“1992), Surinamese poet and community leader, wrote in Sranan Tongo and English Arthur Schnitzler (1862โ€“1931), Austrian author and dramatist Anton Schosser (1801โ€“1849), Austrian dialect poet Philip Schultz (born 1945), US poet James Schuyler (1923โ€“1991), US poet Delmore Schwartz (1913โ€“1966), US poet and fiction writer Alexander Scott (c. 1520โ€“1582/1583), Scottish poet Alexander Scott (1920โ€“1989), Scottish poet and playwright Frederick George Scott (1861โ€“1944), Canadian poet and author, father of F. R. Scott F. R. Scott (1899โ€“1985), Canadian poet, academic and constitutional expert Tom Scott (1918โ€“1995), Scottish poet Sir Walter Scott (1771โ€“1832), Scottish historical novelist, playwright and poet Gil Scott-Heron (1949โ€“2011), US soul musician and jazz poet George Bazeley Scurfield (1920โ€“1991), English poet, novelist, author and politician Peter Seaton (1942โ€“2010), US Language poet Wล‚adysล‚aw Sebyล‚a (1902โ€“1940), Polish poet Johannes Secundus (1511โ€“1536), Dutch Neo-Latin poet Sir Charles Sedley, 5th Baronet (1639โ€“1701), English poet, wit and dramatist George Seferis (pen name of Geลrgios Seferiรกdฤ“s) (1900โ€“1971), Greek poet and Nobel laureate Hugh Seidman (born 1940), US poet Rebecca Seiferle (living), US poet Jaroslav Seifert (1901โ€“1986), Czech writer, poet and journalist; 1984 Nobel Prize in Literature Lasana M. Sekou (born 1959), Sint Maarten poet, essayist and journalist Semonides of Amorgos (c. 7th c. BCE), Greek iambic and elegiac poet Lรฉopold Sรฉdar Senghor (1906โ€“2001), Senegalese poet, politician and cultural theorist Robert W. Service (1874โ€“1958), Scottish-Canadian poet Vikram Seth (born 1952), Indian author and poet Anne Sexton (1928โ€“1974), US poet; Confessional poetry, 1967 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry John W. Sexton (born 1958), Irish poet, fiction and children's writer Shโ€“Sj Thomas Shadwell (c. 1642โ€“1692), English poet and playwright; Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom, 1689โ€“1692 Muhammad Quli Qutb Shah (1565โ€“1612), sultan of Golkonda and poet in Persian, Telugu and Urdu Riaz Ahmed Gohar Shahi (1941โ€“2001), Pakistani Sufi spiritual leader, poet and author Parveen Shakir (1952โ€“1994) Pakistani poet, teacher and a civil servant of the government of Pakistan William Shakespeare (c. 1564โ€“1616), English poet and playwright Tupac Shakur (1971โ€“1996), US rapper, actor and black activist Otep Shamaya (born 1979), US singer-songwriter, actress and poet Ahmad Shamlou (1925โ€“2000), Iranian poet Paata Shamugia (born 1983), Georgian poet Ntozake Shange (1948โ€“2018), US playwright and poet Jo Shapcott (born 1953), English poet, editor and lecturer Karl Shapiro (1913โ€“2000), US poet; US Poet Laureate, 1946โ€“1947 Brenda Shaughnessy (born 1970), US poet Luci Shaw (born 1928), English-born Christian poet Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792โ€“1822), English Romantic poet William Shenstone (1714โ€“1763), English poet Bhupi Sherchan (1935โ€“1989), Nepalese poet Taras Shevchenko (1814โ€“1861), Ukrainian poet and artist Mustafa Sheykhoghlu (1340/1341 โ€“ 1410), Turkish poet and translator Masaoka Shiki (1867โ€“1902), Japanese author, poet and literary critic Hovhannes Shiraz (1915โ€“1984), Armenian poet James Shirley (1596โ€“1666), English dramatist Avraham Shlonsky (1900โ€“1973), Israeli poet and editor Sir Philip Sidney (1554โ€“1586), English poet, courtier and soldier Eli Siegel (1902โ€“1978), Latvian-US poet, critic and philosopher Robert Siegel (1939โ€“2012), US poet and novelist August Silberstein (1827โ€“1900), Austro-Hungarian poet and writer in German Jon Silkin (1930โ€“1997), English poet Hilda Siller (1861-1945), American poet and short story writer Ron Silliman (born 1946), US poet of Language poetry Shel Silverstein (1930โ€“1999), US poet, musician and children's writer Simeon Simev (born 1949), Macedonian poet, essayist and journalist Charles Simic (born 1938), Serbian-US poet; US Poet Laureate, 2007โ€“2008 Simonides of Ceos (c. 556โ€“468 BCE), Greek lyric poet, born at Ioulis on Kea Louis Simpson (1923โ€“2012), Jamaican poet Bennie Lee Sinclair (1939โ€“2000), US poet, novelist and story writer; South Carolina Poet Laureate, 1986โ€“2000 Burns Singer (1928โ€“1964), US poet raised in Scotland Marilyn Singer (born 1948), US children's writer and poet Ervin ล inko (1898โ€“1967), Croatian-Hungarian poet and prose writer Lemn Sissay (born 1967), English author and broadcaster Charles Hubert Sisson (1914โ€“2003), English poet and translator Edith Sitwell (1887โ€“1964), English poet and critic; eldest of three literary Sitwells Sjรณn (born 1962), Icelandic author and poet Skโ€“Sp Egill Skallagrรญmsson (c. 910 โ€“ c. 990), Viking Age poet, warrior and farmer, protagonist of Egil's Saga John Skelton (1460โ€“1529), English poet Sasha Skenderija (born 1968), Bosnian-US poet Ed Skoog (born 1971), US poet Jan Stanisล‚aw Skorupski (born 1938), Polish poet, essayist and esperantist Pencho Slaveykov (1866โ€“1912), Bulgarian poet Petko Slaveykov (1827โ€“1895), Bulgarian poet, publicist and folklorist Kenneth Slessor (1901โ€“1971), Australian poet and journalist Anton Martin Slomลกek (1800โ€“1862), Slovene bishop, author and culture advocate Antoni Sล‚onimski (1895โ€“1976), Polish poet, playwright and artist Michaรซl Slory (1935โ€“2018), Surinamese poet in Sranan Tongo, also in English, Dutch and Spanish Juliusz Sล‚owacki (1809โ€“1849), Polish Romantic poet Boris Slutsky (1919โ€“1986), Russian poet Christopher Smart (1722โ€“1771), English poet and playwright Hristo Smirnenski (1898โ€“1923), Bulgarian poet and writer Bruce Smith (born 1946), US poet Charlotte Smith (1749โ€“1806), English Romantic poet and novelist Clark Ashton Smith (1893โ€“1961), US poet, sculptor and author Margaret Smith (born 1958), US poet, musician and artist Patti Smith (born 1946), US singer-songwriter, poet and visual artist Stevie Smith (1902โ€“1971), English poet and novelist Sydney Goodsir Smith (1915โ€“1975), Scottish poet in Braid Scots Tracy K. Smith (born 1972), US poet William Jay Smith (1918โ€“2015), US poet; US Poet Laureate 1968โ€“1970 Tobias Smollett (1721โ€“1771), Scottish poet and author William De Witt Snodgrass (1926โ€“2009), US poet Gary Snyder (born 1930), US poet, essayist and environmentalist Edith Sรถdergran (1892โ€“1923), Finnish poet in Swedish Sลgi (1421โ€“1502), Japanese waka and renga poet David Solway (born 1941), Canadian poet, educational theorist and travel writer Marie-Ange Somdah (born 1959), Burkinabe poet and writer William Somervile (1675โ€“1742), English poet Sophocles (c. 496โ€“406 BCE), Athenian tragedian Charles Sorley (1895โ€“1915), English war poet Gary Soto (born 1952), Mexican-US author and poet William Soutar (1898โ€“1943), Scottish poet in English and Braid Scots Caroline Anne Southey (1786โ€“1854), English poet Robert Southey (1774โ€“1843), English Romantic poet and UK Poet Laureate, 1813โ€“1843 Robert Southwell (1561โ€“1595), English Catholic Jesuit priest, poet and clandestine missionary Wole Soyinka (born 1934), Nigerian poet and playwright and poet; 1986 Nobel Prize in Literature Bernard Spencer (1909โ€“1963), English poet, translator and editor Stephen Spender (1909โ€“1995), English poet, novelist. and essayist; US Poet Laureate 1965โ€“66 Edmund Spenser (1552โ€“1599), English poet Stโ€“Sz Edward Stachura (1937โ€“1979), poet, prose writer and translator Leopold Staff (1878โ€“1957), Polish poet William Stafford (1914โ€“1993), US poet and pacifist; US Poet Laureate 1970โ€“1971 A. E. Stallings (born 1968), US poet and translator Jon Stallworthy (1935โ€“2014), English academic, poet and literary critic Harold Standish (1919โ€“1972), Canadian poet and novelist Nichita Stฤƒnescu (1933โ€“1983), Romanian poet Ann Stanford (1916โ€“1987), US poet Anna Stanisล‚awska (1651โ€“1701), Polish poet George Starbuck (1931โ€“1996), US neo-Formalist poet Andrzej Stasiuk (born 1960), Polish poet and novelist Statius (c. 45โ€“96, CE), Roman poet Christian Karlson Stead, ONZ, CBE (born 1932), New Zealand novelist, poet and critic Stesichorus (c. 640โ€“555 BCE), Greek lyric poet Joseph Stefan (1835โ€“1893), Carinthian Slovenes physicist, mathematician and poet in Austria Stefan Stefanoviฤ‡ (1807โ€“1828), Serbian poet Gertrude Stein (1874โ€“1946), US modernist in prose and poetry Eric Stenbock (1860โ€“1895), Baltic German poet and writer of fantastic fiction Mattie Stepanek (1990โ€“2004), US poet and advocate George Stepney (1663โ€“1707), English poet and diplomat Anatol Stern (1899โ€“1968), Polish poet and art critic Gerald Stern (1925โ€“2022), US poet Marinko Stevanoviฤ‡ (born 1961), Bosnian poet C. J. Stevens (1927โ€“2021), US writer of poetry, fiction and biography Wallace Stevens (1880โ€“1955), US modernist poet Robert Louis Stevenson (1850โ€“1894), Scottish novelist, poet and travel writer Margo Taft Stever, US poet Trumbull Stickney (1874โ€“1904), US classical scholar and poet James Still (1906โ€“2001), US poet, novelist and folklorist Milica Stojadinoviฤ‡-Srpkinja (1828โ€“1878), Serbian poet Dejan Stojanoviฤ‡ (born 1959), Serbian-US poet, writer and philosopher Donna J. Stone (1933โ€“1994), US poet and philanthropist Ruth Stone (1915โ€“2011), US poet, author and teacher Lisa Gluskin Stonestreet (born 1968), US poet and editor Edward Storer (1880โ€“1944), English writer, translator and poet linked with Imagism Theodor Storm (1817โ€“1888), German writer and poet Alfonsina Storni (1892โ€“1938), Latin US Modernist poet Mark Strand (1934โ€“2014), Canadian-born US poet, essayist and translator; US Poet Laureate, 1990โ€“1991 Botho StrauรŸ (born 1944), German playwright, poet and novelist Joseph Stroud (born 1943), US poet Jesse Stuart (1907โ€“1984), US writer of fiction and poetry Jacquie Sturm (born Te Kare Papuni) (1927โ€“2009), New Zealand poet, fiction writer and librarian Su Shi (1037โ€“1101), Song dynasty writer, poet and artist Su Xiaoxiao (died c. 501 CE), courtesan and poet under Southern Qi Dynasty Sir John Suckling (1609โ€“1642), English poet and inventor of card game cribbage Suleiman the Magnificent (1494โ€“1566), Islamic poet and Ottoman ruler Robert Sullivan (born 1967) New Zealand Mฤori poet, academic and editor Jovan Sundeฤiฤ‡ (1825โ€“1900), Serbian poet Cemal Sรผreya (1931โ€“1990), Turkish poet and writer Abhi Subedi (born 1945), Nepalese poet, playwright and critic Pingali Surana (16th c.), Telugu poet Robert Sward (1933โ€“2022), US and Canadian poet and novelist Cole Swensen (born 1955), US poet, translator and copywriter Karen Swenson (born 1936), US poet May Swenson (1913โ€“1989), US poet and playwright Marcin ลšwietlicki (born 1961), Polish poet, prose writer and musician Jonathan Swift (1667โ€“1745), Anglo-Irish satirist, essayist and pamphleteer Algernon Charles Swinburne (1837โ€“1909), English poet, playwright and novelist Anna ลšwirszczyล„ska (also Anna Swir) (1909โ€“1984), Polish poet Joshua Sylvester (1563โ€“1618), English poet Arthur William Symons (1865โ€“1945), English poet, critic and editor John Millington Synge (1871โ€“1909), Irish dramatist, poet and folklore collector Wล‚adysล‚aw Syrokomla (1823โ€“1862), Polish poet and translator in Russian Empire Lล‘rinc Szabรณ (1900โ€“1957), Hungarian poet and literary translator Fruzina Szalay (1864โ€“1926), Hungarian poet and translator Mikoล‚aj Sฤ™p Szarzyล„ski (c. 1550 โ€“ c. 1581), poet in Polish and Latin Arthur Sze (born 1950), Chinese US poet Bertalan Szemere (1812โ€“1869), Hungarian poet and politician Gyula Szentessy (1870โ€“1905), Hungarian poet George Szirtes (born 1948), Hungary-born British poet and translator Janusz Szpotaล„ski (1929โ€“2001), Polish poet, satirist and translator Wล‚odzimierz Szymanowicz (1946โ€“1967), Polish poet and painter Wisล‚awa Szymborska (1923โ€“2012), Polish poet, essayist and translator; 1996 Nobel Prize in Literature Szymon Szymonowic (1558โ€“1629), Polish poet T Taโ€“Te Rabindranath Tagore (1861โ€“1941), Bengali polymath; 1913 Nobel Prize in Literature Judit Dukai Takรกch (Malvina, 1795โ€“1836), Hungarian poet Bogi Takรกcs (born 1983), Hungarian poet and fiction writer in US Kyoshi Takahama (1874โ€“1959), Japanese poet Taliesin (fl. 6th c.), British poet of post-Roman period Meary James Thurairajah Tambimuttu (1915โ€“1983), Tamil poet, editor and critic Maxim Tank (1912โ€“1996), Belarus poet Tao Qian (365โ€“427), Chinese poet Jovica Tasevski-Eternijan (born 1976), Macedonian poet, essayist and literary critic Alain Tasso (born 1962), Franco-Lebanese poet, painter and critic Torquato Tasso (1544โ€“1595), Italian poet Allen Tate (1899โ€“1979), US poet, essayist and commentator; US Poet Laureate 1943โ€“1944 James Tate (1943โ€“2015), US poet Emma Tatham (1829โ€“1855), English poet Tracey Tawhiao (born 1967), New Zealand Maori poet and artist Apirana Taylor (born 1955), New Zealand poet, novelist and story-teller Edward Taylor (c. 1642โ€“1729), colonial American poet, physician and pastor Emily Taylor (1795โ€“1872), English poet and children's writer Henry Taylor (1800โ€“1886), English poet and dramatist Henry S. Taylor (born 1942), US poet Jane Taylor (1783โ€“1824), English poet and novelist Sara Teasdale (1884โ€“1933), US lyric poet Guru Tegh Bahadur (1621โ€“1675), Sikh Guru and Punjabi poet Telesilla (fl. 510 BCE), Greek poet Raipiyel Tennakoon (1899โ€“1965), Sri Lankan poet William Tennant (1784โ€“1848), Scottish scholar and poet. Alfred, Lord Tennyson (1809โ€“1892), English poet; Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom 1850โ€“1892 Vahan Terian (1885โ€“1920), Armenian poet, lyricist and public activist Elaine Terranova (born 1939), US poet Lucy Terry (c. 1730โ€“1821), African-US poet; author of oldest known work by African American A. S. J. Tessimond (1902โ€“1962), English poet Neyzen Tevfik (1879โ€“1953), Turkish poet, satirist and performer Thโ€“To Kรกlmรกn Thaly (1839โ€“1909), Hungarian poet and politician Ernest Thayer (1863โ€“1940), US writer and poet John Thelwall (1764โ€“1834), English poet and essayist Theocritus (fl. 3rd c. BCE), Greek bucolic poet Antony Theodore (born 1954), German pastor poet and educator Jan Theuninck (born 1954), Belgian painter and poet Nandi Thimmana (15th โ€“ 16th cc.), Telugu poet Thiruvalluvar (around 31 BCE), Tamil poet and philosopher Dylan Thomas (1914โ€“1953), Welsh poet and writer in English Edward Thomas (1878โ€“1917), Welsh poet and essayist in English Lorenzo Thomas (1944โ€“2005), US poet and critic R. S. Thomas (1913โ€“2000), Welsh poet in English and Anglican priest John Thompson (1938โ€“1976), English-born Canadian poet John Reuben Thompson (1823โ€“1873), US poet, journalist, editor and publisher Francis Thompson (1859โ€“1907), English poet and ascetic James Thomson (1700โ€“1748), Scottish poet and playwright James Thomson (Bysshe Vanolis, 1834โ€“1882), Scottish Victorian poet Henry David Thoreau (1817โ€“1862), US author, poet and philosopher Georg Thurmair (1909โ€“1984), German poet and hymn writer Maria Luise Thurmair (1918โ€“2005), German poet and hymn writer Joseph Thurston (1704โ€“1732), English poet Anthony Thwaite (1930โ€“2021), English poet and writer Tibullus (c. 54โ€“19 BCE), Latin poet and elegy writer Chidiock Tichborne (1558โ€“1586), English conspirator and poet Thomas Tickell (1685โ€“1740), English poet and man of letters Ludwig Tieck (1773โ€“1853), German poet, translator, editor and critic Tikkana (1205โ€“1288), Telugu poet, translator of Mahabharata Gary Tillery (born 1947), US writer, poet and artist Abdillahi Suldaan Mohammed Timacade (1920โ€“1973), Somali poet Eugeniusz Tkaczyszyn-Dycki (born 1962), Polish poet Nick Toczek (born 1950), English writer, poet and broadcaster Melvin B. Tolson (1898โ€“1966), US Modernist poet, educator and columnist Charles Tomlinson (1927โ€“2015), English poet and translator Jean Toomer (1894โ€“1967), US poet and novelist Mihรกly Tompa (1819โ€“1868), Hungarian poet and pastor รlvaro Torres-Calderรณn (born 1975), Peruvian poet Kรกlmรกn Tรณth (1831โ€“1881), Hungarian poet Krisztina Tรณth (born 1967), Hungarian poet and translator Sรกndor Tรณth (1939โ€“2019), Hungarian poet and journalist Cyril Tourneur (1575โ€“1626), English poetic dramatist Ann Townsend (born 1962) US poet and essayist Trโ€“Tz Thomas Traherne (1636/1637โ€“1674), English poet, clergyman and religious writer Georg Trakl (1887โ€“1914), Austrian Expressionist poet Chrysanthemum Tran, Vietnamese-American poet Elizabeth Treadwell (born 1967), US poet Roland Michel Tremblay (born 1972), French Canadian writer and poet William S. Tribell (born 1977), US poet Duลกko Trifunoviฤ‡ (1933โ€“2006), Serbian poet and writer Calvin Trillin (born 1935), US humorist, poet and novelist Geeta Tripathee (born 1972), Nepali poet, lyricist, essayist and scholar Suryakant Tripathi (1896โ€“1961), Indian poet in Hindi and Bengali Quincy Troupe (born 1939), US poet, editor and professor Tรตnu Trubetsky (Tony Blackplait) (born 1963), Estonian glam punk musician and poet Marina Tsvetaeva (1892โ€“1941), Russian/Soviet poet Kurt Tucholsky (1890โ€“1935), German-Jewish journalist, satirist and writer Charlotte Maria Tucker (1821โ€“1893), English poet and religious writer Tulsidas (1497/1532โ€“1623), Hindu poet-saint, reformer and philosopher Hovhannes Tumanyan (1869โ€“1923), Armenian writer and public activist ฤžabdulla Tuqay (1886โ€“1913), Tatar poet, critic and publisher George Turberville (c. 1540 โ€“ c. 1597), English poet Charles Tennyson Turner (1808โ€“1879), English poet, elder brother of Alfred Tennyson Julian Turner (born 1955), English poet and mental health worker Thomas Tusser (1524โ€“1580), English poet and farmer Hone Tuwhare (1922โ€“2008), New Zealand Mฤori poet Julian Tuwim (1894โ€“1953), Polish poet of Jewish descent Jan Twardowski (1915โ€“2006), Polish poet and priest Chase Twichell (born 1950), US poet, professor and publisher Pontus de Tyard (c. 1521โ€“1605), French poet and priest Fyodor Tyutchev (1803โ€“1873), Russian Romantic poet Tristan Tzara (1896โ€“1963), Romanian and French avant-garde poet and performance artist U Kornel Ujejski (1823โ€“1897) Polish poet and political writer Erzsi รšjvรกri (1899โ€“1940), Hungarian poet Laura Ulewicz (1930โ€“2007), US beat poet Kavisekhara Dr Umar Alisha (1885โ€“1945), Telugu poet Jeff Unaegbu (born 1979), Nigerian writer, actor and documentary film maker Miguel de Unamuno (1864โ€“1936), Spanish essayist, novelist and poet Giuseppe Ungaretti (1888โ€“1970), Italian poet, critic and academic Unorthodox Australian Poet (born 1965), Australian poet Louis Untermeyer (1885โ€“1977), US poet, anthologist and critic; US Poet Laureate 1961โ€“1962 John Updike (1932โ€“2009), US novelist, poet and critic Allen Upward (1863โ€“1926), Irish-English Imagist poet and teacher Amy Uyematsu (1947โ€“2023), Japanese-US poet V Jรกnos Vajda (1827โ€“1897), Hungarian poet and journalist Paul Valรฉry (1871โ€“1945), French Symbolist author and poet Alfonso Vallejo (1943โ€“2021), Spanish artist, playwright and poet Cรฉsar Vallejo (1892โ€“1938), Peruvian poet, writer and playwright Jean-Pierre Vallotton (born 1955), French-Swiss poet and writer Valmiki poet harbinger in Sanskrit literature Cor Van den Heuvel (born 1931), US haiku poet, editor and archivist Mona Van Duyn (1921โ€“2004), US poet; US Poet Laureate 1992โ€“1993 Lin Van Hek (born 1944), Australian poet, writer and fashion designer Nikola Vaptsarov (1909โ€“1942), Bulgarian poet Varand (born 1954), Armenian poet, writer and professor of literature Mahadevi Varma (1907โ€“1987), Indian poet writing in Hindi Dimitris Varos (1949โ€“2017), modern Greek poet, journalist and photographer Henry Vaughan (1621โ€“1695), Welsh author, physician and metaphysical poet Thomas Vaux, 2nd Baron Vaux of Harrowden (1509โ€“1556), English poet Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller (1877โ€“1968), African-American poet, painter and sculptor Joana Vaz (c.โ€‰1500 โ€“ after 1570), Portuguese poet and courtier Vazha-Pshavela (aka Luka Razikashvili) (1861โ€“1915), Georgian poet and writer Reetika Vazirani (1962โ€“2003), US poet and educator Ivan Vazov (1850โ€“1921), Bulgarian poet, novelist and playwright Attila Vรฉgh (born 1962), Hungarian poet and philosopher Maffeo Vegio (Latin: Maphaeus Vegius) (1407โ€“1458), Italian poet in Latin Vemana (aka Kumaragiri Vema Reddy), Indian Telugu poet Gavril Stefanoviฤ‡ Vencloviฤ‡ (fl. 1680โ€“1749), Serbian priest, writer, poet and illuminator Helen Vendler (born 1933), US poetry critic and professor Jacint Verdaguer (1845โ€“1902), Catalan poet in Spain Paul Verlaine (1844โ€“1896), French poet associated with Symbolist movement Paul Vermeersch (born 1973), Canadian poet Veturi (1936โ€“2010), Telugu poet and songwriter Francis Vielรฉ-Griffin (1864โ€“1937), French symbolist poet Peter Viereck (1916โ€“2006), US poet, professor and political thinker Gilles Vigneault (born 1928), Canadian Quebecois poet, publisher and singer-songwriter Judit Vihar (born 1944), Hungarian poet and literary historian Jose Garcia Villa (1908โ€“1997), Philippines poet, literary critic and painter Xavier Villaurrutia (1903โ€“1950), Mexican poet and playwright Franรงois Villon (c. 1431โ€“1464), French poet, thief and barroom brawler Virgil (Publius Vergilius Maro; 70โ€“19 BCE), ancient Roman poet Roemer Visscher (1547โ€“1620), Dutch writer and poet Mihรกly Csokonai Vitรฉz (1773โ€“1805), Hungarian poet Mihailo Vitkoviฤ‡ (1778โ€“1829), Hungarian poet in Serbian and lawyer Walther von der Vogelweide (c. 1170 โ€“ c. 1230), celebrated Middle High German lyric poet Vincent Voiture (1597โ€“1648), French poet Voltaire (Franรงois-Marie Arouet) (1694โ€“1778), French Enlightenment writer Joost van den Vondel (1587โ€“1679), Dutch playwright and poet Andrei Voznesensky (1933โ€“2010), Soviet Russian poet Stanko Vraz (1810โ€“1851), Croatian-Slovenian language poet Vyasa, considered author of Mahabharata and some Vedas W Waโ€“Wh Wace (c. 1110 โ€“ post-1174), Norman poet Sidney Wade (born 1951), US poet and professor John Wain (1925โ€“1994), English poet, novelist and critic Diane Wakoski (born 1937), US poet linked with deep image, confessional and Beat generation poets Derek Walcott (1930โ€“2017), Saint Lucia poet and playwright; 1992 Nobel Prize in Literature Anne Waldman (born 1945), US poet Rosmarie Waldrop (born 1935), German-US poet, translator and publisher Arthur Waley (1889โ€“1966), English orientalist and Sinologist, poet and translator Alice Walker (born 1944), US author, poet and activist Margaret Walker (1915โ€“1998), African-US writer Edmund Waller (1606โ€“1687), English poet and politician Martin Walser (born 1927), German writer Robert Walser (1878โ€“1956), German-speaking Swiss writer Wan Shenzi (1856โ€“1923), Chinese couplet writer Connie Wanek (born 1952), US poet Wang Wei (็Ž‹็ถญ, 701โ€“761), Tang Dynasty Chinese poet, musician and painter Wang Wei (็Ž‹ๅพฎ, 1597โ€“1647), Chinese priestess and poet Emily Warn, US poet Sylvia Townsend Warner (1893โ€“1978), English novelist and poet Robert Penn Warren (1905โ€“1989), US poet, novelist and critic Lewis Warsh (1944โ€“1920), US poet, writer and visual artist Thomas Warton (1728โ€“1790), English literary historian, critic and poet Albert Wass (1908โ€“1998), Hungarian poet and novelist exiled in US Aleksander Wat (1900โ€“1967), Polish poet and memoirist Vernon Watkins (1906โ€“1967), Welsh poet, translator and painter Thomas Watson (1555โ€“1592), English lyric poet in English and Latin Samuel Wagan Watson (born 1972), Australian poet George Watsky (born 1986), US poet and rapper Barrett Watten (born 1948), US poet, editor and educator linked with Language poets Isaac Watts (1674โ€“1748), English hymnist and logician Theodore Watts-Dunton (1832โ€“1914), English critic and poet Tom Wayman (born 1945), Canadian poet, author and educator Adam Waลผyk (1905โ€“1982), Polish poet and essayist Francis Webb (1925โ€“1973), Australian poet John Webster (c. 1580 โ€“ c. 1634), English dramatist Rebecca Wee, US poet and professor Hannah Weiner (1928โ€“1997), US Language poet Sรกndor Weรถres (1913โ€“1989), Hungarian poet and translator Wei Yingwu (737โ€“792), Chinese poet Wen Yiduo (1899โ€“1946), Chinese poet Marjory Heath Wentworth (born 1958), US poet; South Carolina Poet Laureate Charles Wesley (1707โ€“1788), English Methodist leader and hymnist Gilbert West (1703โ€“1756), English poet, translator and Christian apologist Philip Whalen (1923โ€“2002), US poet, Zen Buddhist and figure in San Francisco Renaissance Franz Werfel (1890โ€“1945), Austrian-Bohemian novelist, playwright and poet Johan Herman Wessel (1742โ€“1785), Norwegian-Danish poet Mary Whateley (1738โ€“1825), English poet and playwright Phillis Wheatley (1753โ€“1784), first African-US poet Billy Edd Wheeler (born 1932), US songwriter, performer and poet E.B. White (1899โ€“1985), US essayist, author and humorist Henry Kirke White (1785โ€“1806), English poet James L. White (1936โ€“1981), US poet, editor and teacher Walt Whitman (1819โ€“1892), US poet, essayist and humanist Isabella Whitney (fl. 1567โ€“1573), English poet Reed Whittemore (1919โ€“2012), US poet, biographer and critic John Greenleaf Whittier (1807โ€“1892), US poet Wiโ€“Wy Anna Wickham (Edith Alice Mary Harper) (1884โ€“1947), English poet raised in Australia Les Wicks (born 1955), Australian poet, publisher and editor Ulrika Widstrรถm (1764โ€“1841), Swedish poet and translator John Wieners (1934โ€“2002), US lyric poet Kazimierz Wierzyล„ski (1894โ€“1969), Polish poet and journalist Richard Wilbur (1921โ€“2017), US poet; US Poet Laureate 1987โ€“1988 Peter Wild ((1940โ€“2009) US poet and historian Jane Wilde (1826โ€“1896), Irish poet and nationalist Oscar Wilde (1854โ€“1900), Irish writer, playwright and poet John Wilkinson (born 1953), English poet William IX, Duke of Aquitaine (1071โ€“1126), earliest troubadour poet whose work survives Aeneas Francon Williams (1886โ€“1971), Anglo-Scottish poet, writer and missionary Emmett Williams (1925โ€“2007), US poet and visual artist Jonathan Williams (1929โ€“2008), US poet, publisher and essayist Heathcote Williams (1941โ€“2017), English poet, political activist and dramatist Miller Williams (1930โ€“2015), US poet, translator and editor Oscar Williams (1900โ€“1964), Jewish Ukrainian-US anthologist and poet Saul Williams (born 1972), African-US singer, poet, writer and actor Sherley Anne Williams (1944โ€“1999), African-US poet, novelist and social critic Waldo Williams (1904โ€“1971), Welsh poet in Welsh William Carlos Williams (1883โ€“1963), poet and physician linked with modernism and imagism William Williams Pantycelyn (1717โ€“1791), Welsh poet and hymnist Clive Wilmer (born 1945), English poet John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester (1647โ€“1680), English poet, courtier and satirist Eleanor Wilner (born 1937), US poet and editor Anne Elizabeth Wilson (1901โ€“1946) US-born Canadian poet, writer, editor Peter Lamborn Wilson (Hakim Bey, 1945โ€“2022), US political and cultural writer, essayist and poet Christian Wiman (born 1966), US poet and editor David Wingate (1828โ€“1892), Scottish poet Yvor Winters (1900โ€“1968), US poet and literary critic George Wither (1588โ€“1667), English poet, pamphleteer and satirist Stanisล‚aw Ignacy Witkiewicz (Witkacy, 1885โ€“1939), Polish poet, writer and philosopher Stefan Witwicki (1801โ€“1847), Polish poet Woeser (born 1966), Tibetan activist, poet and essayist Rafaล‚ Wojaczek (1945โ€“1971), Polish poet Graลผyna Wojcieszko (born 1957), Polish poet and essayist Christa Wolf (1929โ€“2011), German literary critic, novelist and poet Charles Wolfe (1791โ€“1823), Irish poet Hans Wollschlรคger (1935โ€“2007), German writer, translator and historian Sholeh Wolpe (born 1962), Iranian-US poet, literary translator and playwright Maryla Wolska (Iwo Pล‚omieล„czyk, 1873โ€“1930), Polish poet George Woodcock (1912โ€“1995), Canadian poet and writer of biography and history Gregory Woods (born 1953), English poet who grew up in Ghana Dorothy Wordsworth (1771โ€“1855), English author, poet and diarist; sister of William Wordsworth William Wordsworth (1770โ€“1850), English Romantic poet Philip Stanhope Worsley (1835โ€“1866), English poet Carolyn D. Wright (1949โ€“2016), US poet Charles Wright (born 1935), US poet; 1998 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry David Wright (1920โ€“1994), South African-born poet and author Franz Wright (1953โ€“2015), US poet, son of James Wright; 2004 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry James Wright (1927โ€“1980), US poet, father of Franz Wright Jay Wright (born 1935), African-US poet, playwright and essayist Judith Wright (1915โ€“2000), Australian poet and environmentalist Lady Mary Wroth (1587 โ€“ c. 1651), English poet Thomas Wyatt (1503โ€“1542), English ambassador and lyric poet Jรณzef Wybicki (1747โ€“1822), Polish poet and national-anthem writer Elinor Wylie (1885โ€“1928), US poet and novelist Hedd Wyn (1887โ€“1917), Welsh poet in Welsh Edward Alexander Wyon (1842โˆ’1872), English architect and poet Stanisล‚aw Wyspiaล„ski (1869โ€“1907), Polish poet, playwright and painter X Xenokleides (4th c. BCE), Athenian poet Xin Qiji (1140โ€“1207), Chinese poet Cali Xuseen Xirsi (also Yam Yam) (1946โ€“2005), Somali poet active in 1960s Xu Pei (born 1966), Chinese-born German poet Xu Zhimo (1897โ€“1931), Chinese poet Halima Xudoyberdiyeva (1947โ€“2018), Uzbek poet Y Jลซkichi Yagi (1898โ€“1927), Japanese religious poet Leo Yankevich (born 1961), US poet and editor Peyo Yavorov (1878โ€“1914), Bulgarian Symbolist poet Raushan Yazdani (1918โ€“1967), Bengali poet and researcher W. B. Yeats (1865โ€“1939), Irish poet; 1923 Nobel Prize in Literature Sergei Yesenin (1895โ€“1925), Russian lyrical poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko (1933โ€“2017), Soviet Russian poet, dramatist and film director Yi Suhyeong (1435โ€“1528), politician and Confucian scholar, writer, and poet Lin Yining (1655 โ€“ c. 1730), Chinese poet, painter and composer Akiko Yosano (1878โ€“1942), Japanese poet, feminist and pacifist Nima Yooshij (1895โ€“1960), Iranian poet Andrew Young (1885โ€“1971), Scottish poet and clergyman Edward Young (1681โ€“1765), English poet Ian Young (born 1945), English/Canadian poet Kevin Young (born 1970), US poet and teacher Marguerite Young (1908โ€“1995), US author of poetry, fiction and non-fiction Simpson Charles Younger (1850โ€“1943), baseball player, soldier during the American Civil War, Civil Rights campaigner, and poet A. W. Yrjรคnรค (Aki Ville Yrjรคnรค; born 1967), Finnish poet, musician and songwriter Yuan Mei (1716โ€“1797), Chinese poet, scholar and gastronome Z Tymon Zaborowski (1799โ€“1828), Polish poet Adam Zagajewski (1945โ€“2021), Polish poet, novelist and essayist Jรณzef Bohdan Zaleski (1802โ€“1886), Polish poet Wacล‚aw Michaล‚ Zaleski (1799โ€“1849), Polish poet, critic and politician Esperanza Zambrano (1901โ€“1992), Mexican poet Andrea Zanzotto (1921โ€“2011), Italian poet Matthew Zapruder (born 1967), US poet, translator and professor Marya Zaturenska (1902โ€“1982), US lyric poet Kazimiera Zawistowska (1870โ€“1902), Polish poet and translator Abd al-Wahhab Abu Zayd (living), Saudi poet and translator Piotr Zbylitowski (1569โ€“1649), Polish poet and courtier Katarzyna Ewa Zdanowicz-Cyganiak (born 1979), Polish poet and journalist Emil Zegadล‚owicz (1888โ€“1941), Polish poet, playwright and translator Ludwig Zeller (1927โ€“2019) Chilean poet Robert Zend (1929โ€“1985), Hungarian-Canadian poet, fiction writer and artist Benjamin Zephaniah (born 1958), English writer, dub poet and Rastafarian Hristofor Zhefarovich (c. 1690โ€“1753), Serbian painter, writer and poet Calvin Ziegler (1854โ€“1930), German-US poet in Pennsylvania Dutch Narcyza ลปmichowska (Gabryella, 1819โ€“1876), Polish poet and novelist Radovan Zogoviฤ‡ (1907โ€“1986), Serbian/Montenegrin poet Miklรณs Zrรญnyi (1620โ€“1664), Hungarian poet and statesman Zuhayr ibn Abฤซ Sลซlmฤ (520โ€“609), pre-Islamic Arabian poet Louis Zukofsky (1904โ€“1978), US objectivist poets Jerzy ลปuล‚awski (1874โ€“1915), Polish poet, novelist and philosopher Juliusz ลปuล‚awski (1910โ€“1999), Polish poet, critic and translator Huldrych Zwingli (1484โ€“1531), Swish poet, hymnist and Reformation leader Eugeniusz ลปytomirski (1911โ€“1975), Polish poet, playwright and novelist in Russia and Canada References de:Liste von Dichtern
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%95%94%ED%92%80%EB%A0%89%EC%8A%A4%20%EC%BD%A4%ED%94%84%EB%A0%88%EC%82%AC
์•”ํ’€๋ ‰์Šค ์ฝคํ”„๋ ˆ์‚ฌ
์•”ํ’€๋ ‰์Šค ์ฝคํ”„๋ ˆ์‚ฌ(Ampulex compressa), ์—๋ฉ”๋ž„๋“œ๋Š”์Ÿ์ด๋ฒŒ(emerald cockroach wasp) ๋˜๋Š” ๋ณด์„๋Š”์Ÿ์ด๋ฒŒ(jewel wasp)์€ ๋ฒŒ๋ชฉ ๋Š”์Ÿ์ด๋ฒŒ๊ณผ์˜ ์‚ฌํšŒ ์ƒํ™œ์„ ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ๋‹จ๋…์„ฑ ๋ฒŒ(solitary wasp)์ด๋‹ค. ์ƒ๊น€์ƒˆ ์•”์ปท์˜ ๋ชธ ๊ธธ์ด๋Š” ์•ฝ 22mm์ด๋‹ค. ๋ชธ์€ ๊ธˆ์†์„ฑ ์ฒญ๋…น์ƒ‰์ด๋‹ค. ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ๋ฐ ์„ธ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ๋‹ค๋ฆฌ ์Œ์˜ ํ—ˆ๋ฒ…์ง€๊ฐ€ ๋นจ๊ฐ„์ƒ‰์ด๋‹ค. ์ˆ˜์ปท์€ ๋” ์ž‘๊ณ  ์นจ์ด ์—†๋‹ค. ๋ถ„ํฌ ์ด ๋ฒŒ์€ ์—ด๋Œ€ ์ง€๋ฐฉ, ํŠนํžˆ ๋‚จ์•„์‹œ์•„, ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ํƒœํ‰์–‘์˜ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์„ฌ๋“ค์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋œ๋‹ค. ์•”ํ’€๋ ‰์Šค ์ฝคํ”„๋ ˆ์‚ฌ๋Š” 1941๋…„ ์ƒ๋ฌผ์  ๋ฐฉ์ œ์˜ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์œผ๋กœ FX Williams์— ์˜ํ•ด ํ•˜์™€์ด์— ๋„์ž…๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ด ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์€ ๋ฒŒ์˜ ์˜ํ†  ๊ฒฝํ–ฅ๊ณผ ์ ์€ ์‚ฌ๋ƒฅ ํ™œ๋™์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ์„ฑ๊ณต์ ์ด์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ข…์€ ๋ธŒ๋ผ์งˆ ์ƒํŒŒ์šธ๋ฃจ์™€ ๋ฆฌ์šฐ๋ฐ์ž๋„ค์ด๋ฃจ ์ฃผ ์—์„œ๋„ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋œ๋‹ค. ์‚ฐํ† ์Šค ํ•ญ๊ตฌ์™€ ๋ฆฌ์šฐ๋ฐ์ž๋„ค์ด๋ฃจ ํ•ญ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ์ด ๋‚˜๋ผ์— ์ •์ฐฉํ–ˆ์„ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ์„ฑ์ด ๋†’๋‹ค. ์ƒํƒœ ๋Š”์Ÿ์ด๋ฒŒ๊ณผ ๋ฒŒ๋“ค์€ ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ๋ƒฅํ•œ๋‹ค. ์•”ํ’€๋ ‰์Šค ์ฝคํ”„๋ ˆ์‚ฌ๋Š” ์ด์งˆ๋ฐ”ํ€ด, ์ž”์ด์งˆ๋ฐ”ํ€ด ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  Nauphoeta rhombifolia ๊ฐ™์€ ๋Œ€ํ˜• ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๋ฅ˜๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ๋ƒฅํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ์˜ ๋‘๋ถ€ ์‹ ๊ฒฝ์ ˆ(๋‡Œ)๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ํŠน์ •ํ•œ ์‹ ๊ฒฝ์ ˆ๋“ค์„ ์นจ์œผ๋กœ ๊ณต๊ฒฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ณผ์ •์˜ ์ƒํ™”ํ•™์ ์ธ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์ด ์„ค๋ช…๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฒŒ์€ ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ์˜ ์‹ ๊ฒฝ ์ „๋‹ฌ ๋ฌผ์งˆ์„ ์ฐจ๋‹จํ•˜๋Š” ๋…์„ ์ฃผ์ž…ํ•˜๊ณ , ๊ฒฉ๋ ฌํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์ €ํ•ญํ•˜๋˜ ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ๋Š” ๋…์ด ์ฃผ์ž…๋œ ํ›„ ๋„๋ง๊ฐ€์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜๊ณ  ๋‘”ํ•ด์ง€๋ฉฐ ์ œ ๋ฐœ๋กœ ๋Œ๋ ค๊ฐ„๋‹ค. ๋จน์ด๋ฅผ ์žก์€ ๋Š”์Ÿ์ด๋ฒŒ์€ ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ ๋”๋“ฌ์ด์˜ ์ ˆ๋ฐ˜์„ ์ž๋ฅด๊ณ  ์šด๋ฐ˜ํ•˜์—ฌ, ๊ตด์„ ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด ๊ทธ ์†์— ๋จน์ด๋ฅผ ๋ณด๊ด€ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ถ€ํ™”ํ•œ ์• ๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ๋Š” ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ ์œ„์—์„œ ์‚ด๋ฉฐ 4-5์ผ ๋™์•ˆ ๋จน๊ณ  ๊ทธ ๋‹ค์Œ ๋ณต๋ถ€๋กœ ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ€๋ฉฐ ๋‚ด๋ถ€๊ธฐ์ƒ์„ฑ(endoparasitoid)๋กœ ์‚ด ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. 8์ผ ๋™์•ˆ, ๋ฒŒ ์œ ์ถฉ์€ ์ ์–ด๋„ ์œ ์ถฉ์ด ๋ฒˆ๋ฐ๊ธฐ ๋‹จ๊ณ„์— ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ€ ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ ๋ชธ ์†์—์„œ ๋ฒˆ๋ฐ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ํ˜•์„ฑํ•  ๋•Œ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ๊ฐ€ ์‚ด์•„์žˆ์„ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ์„ฑ์„ ์ตœ๋Œ€ํ™”ํ•˜๋Š” ์ˆœ์„œ๋Œ€๋กœ ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ์˜ ๋‚ด์žฅ ๊ธฐ๊ด€์„ ์†Œ๋ชจํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ, ์™„์ „ํžˆ ์ž๋ž€ ๋ฒŒ์€ ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ์˜ ๋ชธ์—์„œ ๋น ์ ธ๋‚˜์™€ ์„ฑ์ถฉ์œผ๋กœ ํ™œ๋™ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋…์ด ์žˆ๋Š” (ํŠนํžˆ, ๋‹จ๋…์„ฑ ๋ฒŒ๋“ค์—์„œ) ์ˆ˜๋งŽ์€ ๋™๋ฌผ๋“ค์ด ๋จน์ด๋ฅผ ์ƒˆ๋ผ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ์‚ด์•„์žˆ๋Š” ์Œ์‹์œผ๋กœ ๋งˆ๋น„์‹œํ‚ค์ง€๋งŒ ์•”ํ’€๋ ‰์Šค ์ฝคํ”„๋ ˆ์‚ฌ๋Š” ์ฒ˜์Œ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋…ํŠนํ•œ ํ–‰๋™ ๋ฐฉ์‹์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ์˜ ํ–‰๋™์„ ๋‚จ๊ฒจ๋†“๊ณ  ๊ฐœ์ •ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ๋ฅผ ์žก์•„๋จน๋Š” ๋Š”์Ÿ์ด๋ฒŒ์†(Ampulex)์˜ ๋ช‡๋ช‡ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ข…๋“ค๋„ ๋น„์Šทํ•œ ํ–‰๋™์„ ๋ณด์ธ๋‹ค. ๋Š”์Ÿ์ด๋ฒŒ์˜ ์ด๋Ÿฐ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์€ ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ์˜ ํƒˆ์ถœ ๋Œ€์‘์—๋งŒ ์˜ํ–ฅ์„ ๋ฏธ์นœ๋‹ค. ๋Š”์Ÿ์ด๋ฒŒ์˜ ์นจ์— ์ฐ”๋ฆฐ ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ๋Š” ์•ฝ 72 ์‹œ๊ฐ„ ๋™์•ˆ ์ƒ์กด ๋ณธ๋Šฅ(ํ—ค์—„์ด๋‚˜ ํ†ต์ฆ์„ ํ”ผํ•˜๋Š” ๋“ฑ)์ด ๋Œ€ํญ ๊ฐ์†Œ๋˜์ง€๋งŒ, ๋น„ํ–‰์ด๋‚˜ ๋’ค์ง‘๊ธฐ์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ์šด๋™ ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์€ ์†์ƒ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค. ์ƒํ™”ํ•™์  ํŠน์„ฑ ๋Š”์Ÿ์ด๋ฒŒ์˜ ์ฒซ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ์นจ ์ฐŒ๋ฅด๊ธฐ๋Š” ์•ž๋‹ค๋ฆฌ์— 2~3๋ถ„ ์ •๋„์˜ ๋งˆ๋น„๋ฅผ ์ผ์œผํ‚ค๋Š” ์•ž๊ฐ€์Šด ์‹ ๊ฒฝ์ ˆ(์‹ ๊ฒฝ ์กฐ์ง์˜ ๋ฉ์–ด๋ฆฌ)๋กœ ์ „๋‹ฌ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ฐŒ๋ฅด๊ธฐ๋Š” ์ƒ๋‹นํ•œ ์–‘์˜ ฮณ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ - ๋ถ€ํ‹ฐ๋ฅด์‚ฐ (GABA) ๋ฐ ์ƒ๋ณด ์ž‘์šฉ์ œ์ธ ํƒ€์šฐ๋ฆฐ ๋ฐ ฮฒ ์•Œ๋ผ๋‹Œ์„ ์ฃผ์ž…ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ•ฉ์„ฑ์€ ์ผ์‹œ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์‹ ๊ฒฝ ์‹œ๋ƒ…์Šค์—์„œ ์ฆ๊ฐ€ ๋œ ์—ผ์†Œ ์ด์˜จ ์ „๋„๋„๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ์ฝœ๋ฆฐ์„ฑ ์ „๋‹ฌ์„ ์–ต์ œํ•จ์œผ๋กœ์จ ์•ž๊ฐ€์Šด ์‹ ๊ฒฝ์ ˆ์—์„œ ์šด๋™ ํ™œ๋™ ์ „์œ„๋ฅผ ์ฐจ๋‹จํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐœ๋ณ„์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ด ๋ฌผ์งˆ๋“ค์€ ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ์˜ ๋‹จ๊ธฐ์ ์ธ ๋งˆ๋น„๋ฅผ ์œ ๋ฐœํ•œ๋‹ค. 10 : 7 : 4 ์˜ ๋น„์œจ๋กœ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์ฃผ์ž… ํ•˜๋ฉด ํšจ๊ณผ๊ฐ€ ์˜ค๋ž˜ ์ง€์†๋œ๋‹ค. GABA๋Š” ligand-gated ์—ผํ™”๋ฌผ ํ†ต๋กœ๋ฅผ ํ™œ์„ฑํ™”ํ•œ๋‹ค. GABA ์ˆ˜์šฉ์ฒด์— ๊ฒฐํ•ฉํ•จ์œผ๋กœ์จ ํƒ€์šฐ๋ฆฐ๊ณผ ๋ฒ ํƒ€ ์•Œ๋ผ๋‹Œ์€ ์‹œ๋ƒ…์Šค ํ‹ˆ์ƒˆ์— ์˜ํ•œ GABA์˜ ์„ญ์ทจ๋ฅผ ๋Šฆ์ถค์œผ๋กœ์จ ๋งˆ๋น„ ํšจ๊ณผ์˜ ์ง€์† ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„์„ ์—ฐ์žฅ์‹œํ‚จ๋‹ค. ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ๋œ ์ด ํ™”ํ•ฉ๋ฌผ ์นตํ…Œ์ผ์€ ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ๊ฐ€ ์›€์ง์ด๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ๋ฐฉ์–ดํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ฐฉ์ง€ํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ๋ฒŒ์€ ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ์นจ์„ ์ฐŒ๋ฅธ๋‹ค. ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ์นจ ์ฐŒ๋ฅด๊ธฐ๋Š” ์‹๋„ ์‹ ๊ฒฝ์ ˆ(subseophageal ganglion, SEG)์— ํˆฌ์—ฌ๋˜๋ฉฐ ํ›จ์”ฌ ์ •ํ™•ํ•˜๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๋งˆ๋น„๊ฐ€ ํ•„์š”ํ•˜๊ณ  ์ƒ๋‹นํžˆ ๊ธธ๋‹ค. ๋Š”์Ÿ์ด๋ฒŒ์€ ์ฐŒ๋ฅด๋Š” ๋™์•ˆ ์ ๊ทน์ ์œผ๋กœ SEG๋ฅผ ํƒ์ƒ‰ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ์นจ์€ ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ๊ฐ€ ์ž๋ฐœ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฑธ์„ ์ˆ˜์žˆ๋Š” ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์ด๋‚˜ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์˜์ง€๋ฅผ ์ €ํ•ดํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ, ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ๋Š” ์ž๊ทน์— ๋ฐ˜์‘ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์€ ๋˜ํ•œ ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ์˜ ๊ณผํ•œ ๋ชธ ์†์งˆ(grooming)๊ณผ ์‹ ์ง„ ๋Œ€์‚ฌ ๊ณผ์ •์˜ ๋ณ€ํ™”๋ฅผ ์ผ์œผํ‚ค๋Š” ์›์ธ์ด ๋œ๋‹ค. ์‹ ์ง„ ๋Œ€์‚ฌ ๋ณ€ํ™”๋Š” ๋Š”์Ÿ์ด๋ฒŒ ์œ ์ถฉ์˜ ์˜์–‘๋ถ„์„ ๋ณด์กดํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒ๊ฐ๋œ๋‹ค. ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋“ค์€ ํ”„๋กœ์นด์ธ ์ฃผ์ž…์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ์ด '์ข€๋น„ ์ƒํƒœ'๋ฅผ ์‹œ๋ฎฌ๋ ˆ์ด์…˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋“ค์€ ๋˜ํ•œ ์„ธํฌ ์™ธ ์–‘๊ทน์„ฑ ์ „๊ทน์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ์˜ ์‹ ๊ฒฝ ํ™œ๋™์ด ์ ์Œ์„ ํ™•์ธํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋…์€ ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ์˜ ์‹ ๊ฒฝ์ ˆ ๋‚ด์˜ ๊ตฌ์กฐ์—์„œ octopaminergic ์กฐ์ ˆ์„ ๋ฐฉํ•ดํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐ๋ณธ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ‘์ž‘์Šค๋Ÿฐ ์›€์ง์ž„์—์„œ ๊ทผ์œก ์ˆ˜์ถ•์„ ์กฐ์ ˆํ•˜๋Š” ์‹ ๊ฒฝ ์ „๋‹ฌ ๋ฌผ์งˆ์ธ octopamine์˜ ํšจ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ์ œํ•œํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ์•”ํ’€๋ ‰์Šค ๋””๋ฉ˜ํ† ๋ฅด : ํƒœ๊ตญ์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋œ ๋Š”์Ÿ์ด๋ฒŒ์†์˜ ์ผ์ข…. Glyptapanteles: ๊ณ ์น˜๋ฒŒ๊ณผ์˜ ์†์˜ ํ•˜๋‚˜. ํƒ€๋ž€ํŠค๋ผ ํ˜ธํฌ : ๋Œ€๋ชจ๋ฒŒ๊ณผ์˜ ์ผ์ข…. ๊ฐ์ฃผ ๋Š”์Ÿ์ด๋ฒŒ๊ณผ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emerald%20cockroach%20wasp
Emerald cockroach wasp
The emerald cockroach wasp or jewel wasp (Ampulex compressa) is a solitary wasp of the family Ampulicidae. It is known for its unusual reproductive behavior, which involves stinging a cockroach and using it as a host for its larvae. It thus belongs to the entomophagous parasites. Distribution The wasp is mostly found in the tropical regions of Africa, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and the Pacific islands. The flying wasps are more abundant in the warm seasons of the year. A. compressa was introduced to Hawaii by F.X. Williams in 1941 as a method of biocontrol. This has been unsuccessful because of the territorial tendencies of the wasp and the small scale on which they hunt. The species is also found in the Brazilian states of Sรฃo Paulo and Rio de Janeiro. A. compressa likely arrived in the country through the ports of Santos and Rio de Janeiro. Description The wasp has a metallic blue-green body, with the thighs of the second and third pair of legs red. The female is about 22ย mm long; the male is smaller and lacks a stinger. Males can be less than half of a female in size if emerging from a smaller or a superparasitized host. The species undergoes four larval stages, where the initial younger larvae can be seen as external hemolymph-feeders on the paralysed roach's leg, and the last instar feeds internally. Upon pupation it produces a chocolate-coloured, thick, spindle-shaped cocoon which can be found inside the dead cockroach within the burrow. Reproductive behavior and lifecycle Female wasps of this species were reported to sting a cockroach (specifically a Periplaneta americana, Periplaneta australasiae, or Nauphoeta rhombifolia) twice, delivering venom. Researchers using radioactive labeling demonstrated that the wasp stings precisely into specific ganglia of the roach. It delivers an initial sting to a thoracic ganglion and injects venom to mildly and reversibly paralyze the front legs of its victim. A biochemically-induced transient paralysis takes over the cockroach, where the temporary loss of mobility facilitates the second venomous sting at a precise spot in the victim's head ganglia (brain), in the section that controls the escape reflex. As a result of this sting, the roach will first groom extensively, and then become sluggish and fail to show normal escape responses. The venom is reported to block receptors for the neurotransmitter octopamine. Once the host is incapacitated, the wasp proceeds to chew off half of each of the roach's antennae, after which it carefully feeds from exuding hemolymph. The wasp, which is too small to carry the roach, then leads the victim to the wasp's burrow, by pulling one of the roach's antennae in a manner similar to a leash. In the burrow, the wasp will lay one or two white eggs, about 2ย mm long, between the roach's legs. It then exits and proceeds to fill in the burrow entrance with any surrounding debris, more to keep other predators and competitors out than to keep the roach in. With its escape reflex disabled, the stung roach simply rests in the burrow as the wasp's egg hatches after about 3 days. The hatched larva lives and feeds for 4โ€“5 days on the roach, then chews its way into its abdomen and proceeds to live as an endoparasitoid. Over a period of 8 days, the final-instar larva will consume the roach's internal organs, finally killing its host, and enters the pupal stage inside a cocoon in the roach's body. Eventually, the fully grown wasp emerges from the roach's body to begin its adult life. Development is faster in the warm season. Adults live for several months. Mating takes about a minute, and only one mating is necessary for a female wasp to successfully parasitize several dozen roaches. While a number of venomous animals paralyze prey as live food for their young, A. compressa is different in that it initially leaves the roach mobile and modifies its behavior in a unique way. Several other species of the genus Ampulex show a similar behavior of preying on cockroaches. The wasp's predation appears only to affect the cockroach's escape responses. While a stung roach exhibits drastically reduced survival instincts (such as swimming, or avoiding pain) for about 72 hours, motor abilities such as flight or flipping over are unimpaired. Biomechanics The first sting is delivered to the prothoracic ganglion (mass of nerve tissue) which causes a 2- to 3-minute paralysis of the front legs. This sting injects significant quantities of ฮณ amino-butyric acid (GABA) and complementary agonists taurine and ฮฒ alanine. The concoction temporarily blocks the motor action potentials in the prothoracic ganglion by depressing cholinergic transmission through the increased chloride conductance across nerve synapses. Individually, all of these substances induce short-term paralysis of the cockroach. When they are injected together in a ratio of , the effect is longer lasting. GABA activates ligand-gated chloride channels by binding to GABA receptors. Taurine and beta-alanine likely extend the duration of the paralytic effect by slowing the uptake of GABA by the synaptic cleft. Combined, this cocktail of compounds prevents the cockroach from moving and defending itself while the wasp administers the second sting/series of stings. The second sting is administered to the subesophageal ganglion (SEG) and is much more precise, hence the need for paralysis and is significantly longer. The wasp actively searches for the SEG during this sting. The second sting inhibits the cockroach's ability to walk spontaneously, or of its own will, but cockroaches can right themselves and swim while under the influence, and when startled, will jump but not run. It also causes excessive grooming and alterations in the metabolism of the cockroach. The metabolic change is thought to preserve nutrients for the wasp larva. Researchers have simulated this zombie state by injecting procaine into the SEG. They also determined using extracellular bipolar electrodes that neuronal activity was less in stung cockroaches. The venom may disturb the octopaminergic modulation in structures within the roach's ganglion. Basically, it limits the effectiveness of octopamine, the neurotransmitter that controls muscle contraction in sudden movements. See also Ampulex dementor, a species of cockroach wasp from Thailand with very similar behavior but different appearance Glyptapanteles, a genus of wasps capable of inducing caterpillars to guard its pupae Hymenoepimecis argyraphaga, a species of wasp that affect the web-building behavior of spiders to its own ends Tarantula hawk Behavior-altering parasite or parasitoid References External links Images of Emerald Cockroach Wasps, from MorphBank biological image database A 5 minute video of the wasps interaction with the cockroach. Ampulicidae Parasitic wasps Biological pest control wasps Suicide-inducing parasitism Insects described in 1781 Mind-altering parasites
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%95%84%EC%8A%A4%EB%8B%AC%20%EC%97%B0%EB%8C%80%EA%B8%B0
์•„์Šค๋‹ฌ ์—ฐ๋Œ€๊ธฐ
ใ€Š์•„์Šค๋‹ฌ ์—ฐ๋Œ€๊ธฐใ€‹๋Š” 2019๋…„ 6์›” 1์ผ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2019๋…„ 9์›” 22์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ฐฉ์˜๋œ tvN ํ† ์ผ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ์ด๋‹ค. ์„ค๋ช… ํƒœ๊ณ ์˜ ๋•… ์•„์Šค์—์„œ ์„œ๋กœ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ „์„ค์„ ์จ๊ฐ€๋Š” ์˜์›…๋“ค์˜ ์šด๋ช…์  ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ. ๋“ฑ์žฅ ์ธ๋ฌผ ์ฃผ์š” ์ธ๋ฌผ ์žฅ๋™๊ฑด : ํƒ€๊ณค ์—ญ (์•„์—ญ : ๋ฌธ์šฐ์ง„, ์ •์ œ์›) - ์ƒˆ๋…˜์กฑ ์กฑ์žฅ์ธ ์‚ฐ์›…์˜ ์•„๋“ค. ์•„์Šค๋‹ฌ์˜ ์ „์Ÿ ์˜์›…์œผ๋กœ, ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๊ณผ ๋‡Œ์•ˆํƒˆ์˜ 20๋…„ ๋Œ€ ์ „์Ÿ์„ ์Šน๋ฆฌ๋กœ ์ด๋ˆ โ€˜์•„์Šค๋‹ฌ์˜ ์ง€๋ฐฐ์ž', ์ด๊ทธํŠธ์ด๋‹ค. ์†ก์ค‘๊ธฐ : ์€์„ฌ / ์‚ฌ์•ผ ์—ญ (์•„์—ญ : ๊น€์˜ˆ์ค€) - ์™€ํ•œ์กฑ. ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์ธ ์•„์‚ฌํ˜ผ๊ณผ ๋‡Œ์•ˆํƒˆ์ธ ๋ผ๊ฐ€์ฆˆ์˜ ํ˜ผํ˜ˆ(์ด๊ทธํŠธ). ์žฌ์•™์˜ ๋ณ„์ด๋ผ ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ํ‘ธ๋ฅธ ๊ฐ์„ฑ์˜ ๊ธฐ์šด์„ ํƒ€๊ณ  ๋‚œ โ€˜์•„์Šค๋‹ฌ์˜ ์ด๋ฐฉ์ธโ€™. ๊น€์ง€์› : ํƒ„์•ผ ์—ญ (์•„์—ญ : ํ—ˆ์ •์€) - ์™€ํ•œ์กฑ์˜ ์”จ์กฑ ์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ ํ›„๊ณ„์ž์ด์ž ์—ด์†์˜ ๋”ธ. ์žฌ์•™์˜ ๋ณ„์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ํ‘ธ๋ฅธ ํ˜œ์„ฑ์˜ ๊ธฐ์šด์„ ์•ˆ๊ณ  ํƒœ์–ด๋‚œ โ€˜์˜ˆ์–ธ์˜ ์†Œ๋…€โ€™. ์™€ํ•œ์˜ ์ˆ˜ํ˜ธ์ž์ด์ž ๋‹น๊ทธ๋ฆฌ(๋‹น๊ณจ, ์ƒค๋จผ) ๊น€์˜ฅ๋นˆ : ํƒœ์•Œํ•˜ ์—ญ - ํ•ด์”จ ๊ฐ€๋ฌธ์˜ ์žฅ๋…€์ด์ž ๋ฏธํ™€์˜ ๋”ธ. ์•„์Šค๋‹ฌ ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ ํƒœํ›„ Part.1 ์˜ˆ์–ธ์˜ ์•„์ด๋“ค ์ƒˆ๋…˜์กฑ & ๋Œ€์นธ ๊น€์˜์„ฑ : ์‚ฐ์›… ์—ญ - ์ Š์€ ๋‚˜์ด์— ๋ถ€์กฑ ์—ฐ๋งน์žฅ ์ง€์œ„์— ์˜ค๋ฅธ ์ƒˆ๋…˜์กฑ์˜ ์กฑ์žฅ์ด์ž ํƒ€๊ณค์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€ ๋ฐ•ํ•ด์ค€ : ๋ฌด๋ฐฑ ์—ญ - ์†Œ์ˆ˜ ๋ถ€์กฑ์ธ ๋ฌผ๊ธธ์กฑ ์ถœ์‹ ์˜ ๋Œ€์นธ ๋ถ€๋Œ€์˜ 2์ธ์ž๋กœ, ํƒ€๊ณค์ด ์—ฐ๋งน์žฅ์ด ๋œ ํ›„์—๋Š” ๊ตฐ๊ฒ€๋ถ€์˜ ์ˆ˜์žฅ์ด ๋˜๋Š” ์ธ๋ฌผ ๋ฐ•๋ณ‘์€ : ๋‹จ๋ฒฝ ์—ญ - ์‚ฐ์›…์˜ ์•„๋“ค์ด์ž ํƒ€๊ณค์˜ ์ด๋ณต๋™์ƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒˆ๋…˜์กฑ์˜ ์–ด๋ผํ•˜(์กฑ์žฅ)ํ›„๊ณ„์ž. ์•„์Šค๋‹ฌ ์—ฐ๋งน์˜ ์น˜์•ˆ๊ณผ ์•ˆ์ „์„ ์ฑ…์ž„์ง€๋Š” ์œ„๋ณ‘๋‹จ ์ด๊ด€ ๋ฐ•ํ˜•์ˆ˜ : ๊ธธ์„  ์—ญ - ํฐ์‚ฐ์กฑ ์ถœ์‹ ์˜ ๋Œ€์นธ ๋ถ€๋Œ€ ์ „์‚ฌ, ํ˜„์žฌ ์œ„๋ณ‘๋‹จ์˜ ๋‹จ์žฅ ์ตœ์˜์ค€ : ์—ฐ๋ฐœ ์—ญ - ๋Œ€์นธ๋ถ€๋Œ€์˜ ์ „์‚ฌ ์ดํ˜ธ์ฒ  : ๊ธฐํ† ํ•˜ ์—ญ - ๋Œ€์นธ๋ถ€๋Œ€์˜ ์ „์‚ฌ. ํฐ์‚ฐ์กฑ ์ถœ์‹ ์œผ๋กœ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์œผ๋กœ์„  ๋ฏฟ์–ด์ง€์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ํž˜์„ ์ง€๋…”๊ณ  ๋ฌด์ˆ ๋„ ๋›ฐ์–ด๋‚œ ํŽธ ํ™ฉํฌ : ๋ฌด๊ด‘ ์—ญ - ๋Œ€์นธ๋ถ€๋Œ€์˜ ์ „์‚ฌ, ๋ฌด๋ฐฑ์˜ ๋™์ƒ ๊ธฐ๋„ํ›ˆ : ์–‘์ฐจ ์—ญ - ๋Œ€์นธ๋ถ€๋Œ€์˜ ์ „์‚ฌ. ์นจ๋ฌต์˜ ๋ฒŒ์„ ๋ฐ›๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ์ค‘ ์†ก์œ ํƒ : ๋ฐ•๋Ÿ‰ํ’ ์—ญ - ๋Œ€์นธ๋ถ€๋Œ€์˜ ์ „์‚ฌ. ์†Œ์ˆ˜ ๋ถ€์กฑ ์ถœ์‹ ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ๋“œ๋ฌผ๊ฒŒ ์ œ๊ด€ ์ˆ˜๋ จ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ฐ›์Œ ์ดํ™ฉ์˜ : ๋Œ€๋Œ€ ์—ญ - ์—ฐ๋งน๊ถ์˜ ํ•„๊ฒฝ์žฅ. ์—ฐ๋งน๊ตญ์—์„œ ์ผ์–ด๋‚˜๋Š” ์ผ๋“ค์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜๋Š” ํ•„๊ฒฝ์‚ฌ๋“ค์˜ ์šฐ๋‘๋จธ๋ฆฌ์ด๋ฉฐ ํ–‰์ • ๊ด€๋ฃŒ ํ™ฉ๋ฏผํ˜ธ : ์†Œ๋‹น ์—ญ - ์œ„๋ณ‘๋‹จ์˜ 1๋‹จ์žฅ์œผ๋กœ, ๊ธธ์„ ๊ณผ๋Š” ์–ด๋ฆฐ ์‹œ์ ˆ ์นœ๊ตฌ ๊น€์ •์šฐ : ํŽธ๋ฏธ ์—ญ - ์œ„๋ณ‘๋‹จ์˜ 2๋‹จ์žฅ์œผ๋กœ, ์—ญ์‹œ ๊ธธ์„ , ์†Œ๋‹น๊ณผ๋Š” ์–ด๋ฆฐ ์‹œ์ ˆ ์นœ๊ตฌ ํฐ์‚ฐ์กฑ ์ด๋„๊ฒฝ : ์•„์‚ฌ๋ก  ์—ญ - ํฐ์‚ฐ์กฑ์˜ ์กฑ์žฅ์ด์ž ์•„์Šค๋‹ฌ์˜ ์ œ์˜์™€ ์ œ๋ก€๋ฅผ ์ฃผ๊ด€ํ•˜๋Š” ๋Œ€์ œ๊ด€ ์†์ˆ™ : ์•„์‚ฌ์‚ฌ์นธ ์—ญ - ์•„์‚ฌ ๊ฐ€๋ฌธ์˜ ์ผ์›์ด์ž ํฐ์‚ฐ์˜ ์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ. ์•„์‚ฌ๋ก ๋ณด๋‹ค ๋†’์€ ์ง€์œ„์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์กด์žฌ ์„œ์€์•„ : ์•„์‚ฌ๋ชป ์—ญ - ์•„์‚ฌ ๊ฐ€๋ฌธ์˜ ์ผ์›์ด์ž ์‹ ๋…€์žฅ. ์•„์‚ฌ๋ก ์˜ ์˜ค๋ฅธํŒ” ์žฅ๋ฅ  : ์•„์‚ฌ์š˜ ์—ญ - ์•„์‚ฌ ๊ฐ€๋ฌธ์˜ ์ผ์›์ด์ž ์ œ๊ด€ ๋ฐ•์ง€์› : ์•„์‚ฌ๋ฌด ์—ญ - ์•„์‚ฌ ๊ฐ€๋ฌธ์˜ ์ผ์›์ด์ž ๋ฌด๋…€ ์ถ”์žํ˜„ : ์•„์‚ฌํ˜ผ ์—ญ (ํŠน๋ณ„์ถœ์—ฐ) - ์€์„ฌยท์‚ฌ์•ผ์˜ ์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ ํ•ด์กฑ ์กฐ์„ฑํ•˜ : ํ•ด๋ฏธํ™€ ์—ญ - ํ•ด์กฑ ์กฑ์žฅ์ด์ž ํƒœ์•Œํ•˜์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€ ์œค์‚ฌ๋ด‰ : ํ•ดํˆฌ์•… ์—ญ - ํƒœ์•Œํ•˜์˜ ์ตœ์ธก๊ทผ ํ•˜ํ˜ธ, ์ „์‚ฌ ๋ฐ•์„ฑ์—ฐ : ํ•ด์—ฌ๋น„ ์—ญ - ํƒœ์•Œํ•˜์˜ ์ตœ์ธก๊ทผ ํ•˜ํ˜ธ ๋ฐฐ๊ธฐ๋ฒ” : ํ•ดํ˜๋ฆฝ ์—ญ - ํ•ด์กฑ์˜ ํ•„๊ฒฝ์‚ฌ์ด์ž ๋ฏธํ™€์˜ ์ •๋ณด์ˆ˜์ง‘์ฑ… ๋ฏธ์ƒ : ํ•ด์•Œ์˜ ์—ญ - ํ•ด์กฑ์˜ ํ•„๊ฒฝ๊ด€์žฅ. ๋ถˆ์˜ ์„ฑ์ฑ„์˜ ํ•„๊ฒฝ๊ด€์€ 5000๊ฐœ ์ด์ƒ์˜ ์ฃฝ๊ฐ„๊ณผ ๊ฐ€์ฃฝ ์ฑ…์„ ๋ณด์œ  ํ™์ง€ํฌ : ํ•ด๊ฐ€์˜จ ์—ญ - ํ•ด์กฑ์˜ ๋†๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์ž. ๋ชจ๋“  ์ž‘๋ฌผ์˜ ์ข…์ž ๊ณ„๋ณด๋ฅผ ๊ฟฐ๊ณ  ์žˆ์„ ๋งŒํผ ๋›ฐ์–ด๋‚œ ๋‘๋‡Œ์™€ ํ•ด๋ฐ•ํ•œ ์ง€์‹์„ ๊ฐ€์ง ์ž„์ง„์›… : ํ•ด๊นŒ๋‹ฅ ์—ญ - ํ•ด์กฑ์˜ ์ฒญ๋™๊ธฐ์ˆ ์ž ์ฐจ์„ฑ์ œ : ํ•ด๋•Œ๋ฌธ ์—ญ - ํ•ด๊นŒ๋‹ฅ์˜ ์–ด๋ฆฐ ์•„๋“ค ์ „์ˆ˜์—ฐ : ํ•ด์–‘์šฐ ์—ญ - ๋งคํ˜ผ์ œ๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋“ค ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์œ ์ผํ•œ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์ž ๋ฐ”์น˜๋‘๋ ˆ ์กฐ์Šน์—ฐ : ํ•˜๋ฆผ ์—ญ - ํฐ์‚ฐ์กฑ ์ถœ์‹  ์•„์Šค๋‹ฌ ์ตœ๊ณ ์˜ ์•ฝ๋ฐ”์น˜(์˜์‚ฌ) ๊ณ ๋ณด๊ฒฐ : ์ฑ„์€ ์—ญ (์•„์—ญ : ์ง„์„œ์œจ) - ํ•˜๋ฆผ์˜ ๋”ธ. ์•„์Šค๋‹ฌ์˜ ์•ฝ๋ฐ”์น˜. ์ œ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๋‹ด๋‹นํ•˜๋Š” ํฐ์‚ฐ์กฑ์˜ ์ผ์› ์•ˆํ˜œ์› : ๋ˆˆ๋ณ„ ์—ญ - ์ฑ„์€์˜ ๋™์ƒ ์œค์—ฌ์ง„ : ์Šค์ฒœ ์—ญ - ์†Œ์ˆ˜๋ถ€์กฑ ์ถœ์‹ ์˜ ์•ฝ์ „ ํ•˜ํ˜ธ ๋ฅ˜์‹œํ˜„ : ๋ชจ๋ช…์ง„ ์—ญ - ์•ฝ์ „ ํ•˜ํ˜ธ. ํฐ์‚ฐ์กฑ ์ถœ์‹ ์˜ ์—ผ์ƒ‰๊ณต๋ฐฉ์„ ์šด์˜ํ•˜๋Š” ์žฅํ„ฐ์˜ ๋ฐ”์น˜ ๋ฏธ์ƒ : ์šธ๋ฐฑ ์—ญ - ์ƒˆ๋…˜์กฑ ์ถœ์‹ ์˜ ์•„์Šค๋‹ฌ ์žฅํ„ฐ์—์„œ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์˜ํ–ฅ๋ ฅ์ด ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ฐ”์น˜๋‘๋ ˆ ์žฅ ์ •์žฌ์› : ํŠธ๋ฆฌํ•œ ์—ญ - ์ž์‹ ์ด ํฐ์‚ฐ์กฑ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ž๋ถ€์‹ฌ์ด ๊ฐ•ํ•œ ๋ฐ”์น˜๋‘๋ ˆ์˜ ์ผ์› ๋ฏธ์ƒ : ๋ผ์ž„ ์—ญ - ์•„์Šค๋Œ€๋ฅ™ ์ถœ์‹ ์€ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋‚˜, ์•„์Šค๋‹ฌ ์—ฐ๋งน์ธ์œผ๋กœ์„œ ์ž๋ถ€์‹ฌ์„ ๊ฐ–๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ฐ”์น˜๋‘๋ ˆ์˜ ์ผ์› ์ด์•„๋ฅดํฌ ์ •์„์šฉ : ์—ด์† ์—ญ - ์™€ํ•œ์กฑ ์”จ์กฑ์žฅ์ด์ž ํƒ„์•ผ์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€ ๊น€ํ˜ธ์ • : ์ดˆ์„ค ์—ญ - ์™€ํ•œ์กฑ์˜ ์”จ์กฑ์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ. ํƒ„์•ผ์˜ ์ด๋ชจ ์‹ ์ฃผํ™˜ : ๋‹ฌ์ƒˆ ์—ญ - ์™€ํ•œ์กฑ ์ตœ๊ณ ์˜ ์ „์‚ฌ์ด์ž ์™€ํ•œ์กฑ ์”จ์กฑ์žฅ์˜ ํ›„๊ณ„์ž ๋ฐ•์ง„ : ๋ญ‰ํƒœ ์—ญ - ์™€ํ•œ์กฑ ์ถœ์‹ ์˜ ์ „์‚ฌ ์–‘๊ฒฝ์› : ํ„ฐ๋Œ€ ์—ญ - ์™€ํ•œ์กฑ ์ถœ์‹ ์˜ ์ „์‚ฌ ๊น€์ถฉ๊ธธ : ๋ถ์‡  ์—ญ - ์™€ํ•œ์กฑ ์ถœ์‹ ์˜ ์ „์‚ฌ. ๋ถˆ์˜ ์„ฑ์ฑ„์—์„œ ์•„์Šค๋‹ฌ์˜ ๋ถ€์กฑ๋“ค ๊ฐ„ ๋Œ€๋ฆฝ์ด ์žˆ์—ˆ์„ ๋‹น์‹œ ๋‹ฌ์ƒˆ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋„๋ง์นœ ์ธ๋ฌผ ๊ณ ๋‚˜ํฌ : ๋„ํ‹ฐ ์—ญ - ์™€ํ•œ์กฑ ์ถœ์‹ ์˜ ์–ด๋ฆฐ ์•„์ด ์‹ ๋ฌธ์„ฑ : ๋‘”์ง€ ์—ญ - ์™€ํ•œ์กฑ ์ถœ์‹  ์–ด๋ฅธ ์†ก์žฌ๋ฃก : ๊ฒ€๋ถˆ ์—ญ - ์™€ํ•œ์กฑ ์ถœ์‹  ์–ด๋ฅธ ๋ฐ•์˜ฅ์ถœ : ์•„๊ฐ€์ง€ ์—ญ - ์™€ํ•œ์กฑ ์ถœ์‹  ์–ด๋ฅธ ๊น€๋น„๋น„ : ์šฐ๋ฃจ๋ฏธ ์—ญ - ์™€ํ•œ์กฑ ์ถœ์‹  ์–ด๋ฅธ. ํƒ„์•ผ์—๊ฒŒ ๋Œ๋งค์งˆ์„ ๊ฐ€๋ฅด์นจ ๋‡Œ์•ˆํƒˆ ์œ ํƒœ์˜ค : ๋ผ๊ฐ€์ฆˆ ์—ญ - ์œ„๋Œ€ํ•œ ์‚ฌ๋ƒฅ๊พผ์ด์ž ์€์„ฌยท์‚ฌ์•ผ์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€. ์ด๋ฆ„์€ ๋‡Œ์•ˆํƒˆ์‹ ์•„๋‚˜๊ทธ๋žจ์œผ๋กœ '์ž๊ฐˆ' ๋ฌธ์ข…์› : ๋ผํฌ๋Š๋ฃจํ”„ ์—ญ - ๋‡Œ์•ˆํƒˆ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์ถ”์•™๋ฐ›๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋ƒฅ๊พผ์ด์ž ์ถ”์žฅ. ์ด๋ฆ„์€ ๋‡Œ์•ˆํƒˆ์‹ ์•„๋‚˜๊ทธ๋žจ์œผ๋กœ 'ํ‘ธ๋ฅธ ์นผ' ์˜ฅ๊ณ ์šด : ๋ฌดํŠธ๋ฃจ๋ธŒ ์—ญ - ๋‡Œ์•ˆํƒˆ ๋‹น๊ณจ ์†ก์ข…ํ˜ธ : ์ด์“ฐ๋ฃจ๋ธŒ ์—ญ - ๋ผํฌ๋Š๋ฃจํ”„๋ฅผ ์ž‡๋Š” ์œ„๋Œ€ํ•œ ์‚ฌ๋ƒฅ๊พผ์ด์ž ์ฐจ์„ธ๋Œ€ ์ถ”์žฅ. ์ด๋ฆ„์€ ๋‡Œ์•ˆํƒˆ์‹ ์•„๋‚˜๊ทธ๋žจ์œผ๋กœ '๋ถˆ์”จ' ๋‹‰์ฟค : ๋กœ๋ฑ ์—ญ (ํŠน๋ณ„์ถœ์—ฐ) (์•„์—ญ : ์ตœ๋กœ์šด) - ๋Œ€์ „์Ÿ๊ณผ ๋Œ€์‚ฌ๋ƒฅ์˜ ์ƒ์กด์ž. ์ด๋ฆ„์€ ๋‡Œ์•ˆํƒˆ์‹ ์•„๋‚˜๊ทธ๋žจ์œผ๋กœ '๋น›๋Œ' ์žฅ์žฌ์šฐ : ๋…ธ์Šค๋‚˜ํ˜ธ ์—ญ Part.2 ๋’ค์ง‘ํžˆ๋Š” ํ•˜๋Š˜ ์ผ์–ด๋‚˜๋Š” ๋•… ์ƒˆ๋…˜์กฑ & ๋Œ€์นธ ์ง€๋ฏผ : ๊ฑฐ๋งค ์—ญ - ๋Œ€์นธ๋ถ€๋Œ€์˜ ์ „์‚ฌ. ํƒ€๊ณค์˜ ๋ช…์„ ๋ฐ›์•„ ๊ฐ€๋ฅด๊ฐ„์„ ์ฃฝ์—ฌ ์ž์‚ด๋กœ ์œ„์žฅ ์‹œํ‚ค๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ชฉ์„ ๋งค๋‹ฌ๋˜ ์ค‘ ๋‡Œ์•ˆํƒˆ์ธ ์ด์“ฐ๋ฃจ๋ธŒ์—๊ฒŒ ์‹ฌ์žฅ์ด ๊บผ๋‚ด์ ธ ์ฃฝ๊ณ  ์ˆฒ์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ ๊ณ ์žฌ์ฒœ : ํ™์ˆ  ์—ญ - ๋Œ€์นธ๋ถ€๋Œ€์˜ ์ „์‚ฌ ๊น€์ •ํ™˜ : ์ดˆ๋ฆฌ๊ณค ์—ญ - ๋Œ€์นธ๋ถ€๋Œ€์˜ ์ „์‚ฌ ์ตœ์ง€์› : ๋‚˜๋ฆฐ ์—ญ - ๋‹จ๋ฒฝ์˜ ์–ด๋ฆฐ ๋”ธ. ์‚ฐ์›…๊ณผ ๋‹จ๋ฒฝ์„ ๋Œ€์‹ ํ•ด ์ƒˆ๋…˜์กฑ์˜ ์–ด๋ผํ•˜ ์ž๋ฆฌ์— ์˜ค๋ฆ„ ์–ด๋ผํ•˜ ๋ฏธ์ƒ : ์ดˆ๋ฐœ ์—ญ - ํ˜ธํ”ผ์กฑ์˜ ์–ด๋ผํ•˜. ์ž‡์†๋งŒ ์ฑ™๊ธฐ๋Š” ์•„์‚ฌ์”จ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ถˆ๋งŒ์ด ๊ฐ€๋“ ๋ฏธ์ƒ : ๋‹ค์™€ ์—ญ - ๊นŒ์น˜๋†€์กฑ์˜ ์–ด๋ผํ•˜ ๋ฏธ์ƒ : ์ฟตํ‰ ์—ญ - ๋ฐ”ํ† ์กฑ์˜ ์–ด๋ผํ•˜ ๋ฏธ์ƒ : ํ‘๊ฐˆ ์—ญ - ๊ฐ€๋ผ๋ง์กฑ์˜ ์–ด๋ผํ•˜ ๋ฏธ์ƒ : ๋ณด๋‹จ ์—ญ - ์—ฐ๋‹ฌ์กฑ์˜ ์–ด๋ผํ•˜ ๋Œ๋‹ด๋ถˆ ๊น€์„ฑ์ฒ  : ์žŽ์ƒ ์—ญ - ์•„๊ณ ์กฑ ์ถœ์‹ ์˜ ๋Œ๋‹ด๋ถˆ ๊นƒ๋ฐ”๋‹ฅ ๋…ธ์˜ˆ, ์‚ด์•„๋‚จ๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด์„œ๋ผ๋ฉด ์˜๋ฆฌ๋„ ์ •๋„ ์—†๋Š” ์ค€๋น„๋œ ๋ฐฐ์‹ ์ž ํƒœ์›์„ : ๋ฐ”๋„๋ฃจ ์—ญ - ์บ๋ž€์กฑ ์ถœ์‹ ์˜ ๋Œ๋‹ด๋ถˆ ๊นƒ๋ฐ”๋‹ฅ ๋…ธ์˜ˆ. ์บ๋ž€์กฑ ์ตœ๊ณ ์˜ ์ „์‚ฌ ๊ถŒ๋ฒ”ํƒ : ์˜ฌ๋งˆ๋Œ€ ์—ญ - ์•„์Šค๋‹ฌ ์ถœ์‹ ์˜ ๋Œ๋‹ด๋ถˆ ๊นƒ๋ฐ”๋‹ฅ ๋…ธ์˜ˆ. ์•„์Šค๋‹ฌ์—์„œ ๊ธˆ๊ธฐ์‹œ๋˜๋Š” โ€˜ํฐ์‚ฐ์˜ ์‹ฌ์žฅโ€™ ์žฅ๋กœ๋กœ ํ™œ๋™ํ•œ ์ „๋ ฅ ํƒ“์— ์ถ”ํฌ๋˜์–ด ๋Œ๋‹ด๋ถˆ๋กœ ์œ ๋ฐฐ๋˜๊ณ  ๋…ธ์˜ˆ ์‹ ์„ธ๊ฐ€ ๋จ ์กฐ๋ณ‘๊ทœ : ์‚ฌํŠธ๋‹‰ ์—ญ - ๋ชจ๋ชจ์กฑ ์ถœ์‹ ์˜ ๋Œ๋‹ด๋ถˆ ๊นƒ๋ฐ”๋‹ฅ ๋…ธ์˜ˆ ๋ฐฑ์Šน์ต : ์ฐจ๋‚˜๋ผ๊ธฐ ์—ญ - ๋ฌผ๊ธธ์กฑ ์ถœ์‹ ์˜ ๋Œ๋‹ด๋ถˆ ๊นƒ๋ฐ”๋‹ฅ ๋…ธ์˜ˆ ๊น€๋„ํ˜„ : ์‡ผ๋ฅด์ž๊ธด ์—ญ - ์•„์Šค๋‹ฌ ํ•˜ํ˜ธ ์ถœ์‹ ์œผ๋กœ ๋Œ๋‹ด๋ถˆ ๊ด€๋ฆฌ์ธ ๊ณจ๋‘์˜ ์ˆ˜ํ•˜ ๋ฅ˜์„ฑํ˜„ : ๊ณจ๋‘ ์—ญ - ์•„์Šค๋‹ฌ์—์„œ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌ๋œ ๋Œ๋‹ด๋ถˆ ๊ด€๋ฆฌ์ธ. ๋Œ๋‹ด๋ถˆ์˜ ์šฐ๋‘๋จธ๋ฆฌ. ์ž”์ธํ•œ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์œผ๋กœ ๋…ธ์˜ˆ๋“ค์„ ๊ด€๋ฆฌ ์†์ƒ๊ฒฝ : ๊ฑฐํ•œ ์—ญ - ๋Œ๋‹ด๋ถˆ ์†Œ์† ๊ณจ๋‘์˜ ์ˆ˜ํ•˜ Part.3 ์•„์Šค, ๊ทธ ๋ชจ๋“  ์ „์„ค์˜ ์„œ๊ณก ํฐ์‚ฐ์กฑ ๊น€์„ค์ง„ : ํ‘ธ๋ฅธ๊ฑฐ๋ฏธ ์—ญ ์†ก๊ฑดํฌ : ๊ฒ€์€ ํ˜€ ์—ญ ๋ฐ”์น˜๋‘๋ ˆ ๋ฏธ์ƒ : ๊ฐ์‹ค ์—ญ ์–ด๋ผํ•˜ ์—„์ง€๋งŒ : ๋ณด์šฐ ์—ญ ๋ชจ๋ชจ์กฑ ์นด๋ผํƒ€ ์—๋ฆฌ์นด : ์นด๋ฆฌ์นด ์—ญ - ๋ชจ๋ชจ์กฑ์˜ ์ƒค๋ฐ”๋ผ(์šฐ๋‘๋จธ๋ฆฌ) ์‹ฌ์€์šฐ : ํƒ€ํ”ผ์—” ์—ญ - ์‚ฌํŠธ๋‹‰์˜ ๋ถ€์ธ ๋ฌ˜์”จ ๋ฏธ์ƒ : ํŒŒ์‚ฌ ์—ญ - ๋ฌ˜์”จ์กฑ์˜ ์”จ์กฑ์žฅ ํ•˜์ค€ : ํƒ€์ถ”๊ฐ„ ์—ญ - ๊ฑฐ์น ๊ณ  ๊ฐ•์ธํ•œ ๋ฌ˜์”จ์กฑ ์ตœ๊ณ ์˜ ์ „์‚ฌ๋กœ ๋ง๋ณด๋‹ค ํ–‰๋™์ด ๋จผ์ € ๋‚˜๊ฐ€๋Š” ๋‹คํ˜ˆ์งˆ. ๋ถ€์กฑ์˜ ๋ชฐ๋ฝ์„ ํƒ€๊ฐœํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ์ˆ˜๋‹จ์œผ๋กœ ์€์„ฌ์„ ์ง€๋„์ž๋กœ ์ธ์ •ํ•œ ํ›„ ์€์„ฌ์„ ๋„์™€ ์ฒซ ์ „ํˆฌ์ธ ๋Œ๋‹ด๋ถˆ ํƒˆํ™˜ ์ž‘์ „์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ๋ฐฐ๋‹ค๋นˆ : ๋ฏธ๋ฃจ์†” ์—ญ - ์œ ๋Šฅํ•œ ๋ฌ˜์”จ์กฑ์˜ ์ „์‚ฌ. ์€์„ฌ์ด ํญํฌ์˜ ์‹ฌํŒ์—์„œ ์‚ด์•„๋‚จ์•„ ์ด๋‚˜์ด์‹ ๊ธฐ๋กœ ์ถ”์•™๋ฐ›๊ณ  ๋ถ€์กฑ์„ ์ด๋Œ๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•œ ํ›„ ์€์„ฌ์„ ๋„์™€ ์ฒซ ์ „ํˆฌ์ธ ๋Œ๋‹ด๋ถˆ ํƒˆํ™˜ ์ž‘์ „์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ๋ฏธ์ƒ : ๋ฌ˜์”จ ํ• ๋จธ๋‹ˆ ์—ญ - ๋ฌ˜์”จ์กฑ์˜ ํฐ ์–ด๋ฅธ ๋ฏธ์ƒ : ๋ฌ˜์”จ ์žฅ๋กœ ์—ญ - ๋ฌ˜์”จ์กฑ์˜ ์žฅ๋กœ ์ค‘ ํ•œ๋ช…. ์”จ์กฑ ๋‚ด ์ค‘๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ฌธ์ œ์— ๊ฒฐ์ •์ ์ธ ํŒ๋‹จ์„ ๋‚ด๋ฆผ ๊น€์˜ˆ์Šฌ : ์˜ˆ์Šค๋ž€ ์—ญ - ์”จ์กฑ์žฅ ํŒŒ์‚ฌ์˜ ๋”ธ. ํƒ€์ถ”๊ฐ„์˜ ์•ฝํ˜ผ๋…€ ํƒœ์”จ ๊ณ ์ฐฝ์„ : ํ…Œ์••๋… ์—ญ (ํŠน๋ณ„์ถœ์—ฐ) - ์ฐŒ์งˆํ•˜๊ณ  ๋ฌด๋Šฅํ•˜๊ธฐ ๊ทธ์ง€์—†๋Š” ํƒœ์”จ์กฑ์˜ ์”จ์กฑ์žฅ ๊น€์ •์˜ : ์ˆ˜ํ•˜๋‚˜ ์—ญ - ์žฅ๋กœ. ํƒœ์••๋…์˜ ๊ณ์—์„œ ์กฑ์žฅ์˜ ๊ถŒ์œ„๋ฅผ ์ง€์ผœ์ฃผ๊ณ , ์”จ์กฑ์˜ ์•ž๊ธธ์„ ํ—ค์•„๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๋ฏฟ์Œ์ง์Šค๋Ÿฝ๊ณ  ์ถฉ์งํ•œ ์กฐ์–ธ์ž. ๋’ค๋กœ๋Š” ์•„๊ณ ์กฑ์˜ ๋™ํƒœ๋ฅผ ์•„์Šค๋‹ฌ์— ๋ชฐ๋ž˜ ๋ณด๊ณ ํ•˜๋Š” ์—ฌ๋งˆ๋ฆฌ(๋ฐ€์ •)๋กœ "๋ถ‰์€ ๋ฐœํ†ฑ"์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์•”ํ˜ธ๋ช…์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ์Œ ํ•œ๋ฏผ : ํƒœ๋งˆ์ž ์—ญ - ํƒœ์”จ์กฑ์˜ ๋›ฐ์–ด๋‚œ ์‹ค๋ ฅ์˜ ์ „์‚ฌ. ์€์„ฌ์„ ์ด๋‚˜์ด์‹ ๊ธฐ๋กœ ์ธ์ •ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์•„๊ณ ์กฑ ์—ฐํ•ฉ์— ํ•ฉ๋ฅ˜ ๊ณ ์ƒํ˜ธ : ํƒœ๋‹ค์น˜ ์—ญ - ๋Œ๋‹ด๋ถˆ์— ๋…ธ์˜ˆ๋กœ ํŒ”๋ ค๊ฐ”๋˜ ํƒœ์”จ์กฑ์˜ ์ „์‚ฌ ์ •๋™ํ›ˆ : ํƒœ๋‹ˆ๋งˆ ์—ญ - ๋Œ๋‹ด๋ถˆ์— ๋…ธ์˜ˆ๋กœ ํŒ”๋ ค๊ฐ”๋˜ ํƒœ์”จ์กฑ์˜ ์ „์‚ฌ ์ˆ ์”จ ๋ฏธ์ƒ : ์ˆ ์”จ์กฑ์žฅ ์—ญ - ํƒœ์”จ์กฑ๊ณผ ์‚ฌ์ด๊ฐ€ ์ข‹์ง€ ์•Š์€ ์ˆ ์”จ์กฑ์˜ ์”จ์กฑ์žฅ ๊ทธ ์™ธ ์ธ๋ฌผ ์ตœ์„์ค€ ์ด๋„๊ตญ ์•„๋ˆ„ํŒœ ์œคํ˜ธ๋ฆผ ์ตœ๋™๊ตฌ : ์‡ผ๋ฅด์ž๊ธด ์ˆ˜ํ•˜ ์—ญ ๋งˆ์„ฑ๋ฏผ : ์‡ผ๋ฅด์ž๊ธด ์ˆ˜ํ•˜ ์—ญ ์—ฐ์ œํ˜ ๊น€์ƒ๋‘ ์ตœ์„œ์ค€ ์›์›…์žฌ ์ด์ฃผ์˜ ์ดํ™”๋ฃก ์ด๊ด‘์„ธ ์ด๊ทœ์„ญ ์•ˆ์ •ํ˜ธ ์ตœ์‹œํ›ˆ ์ดํšจ๋น„ ์žฅํ˜„์šฐ : ์ƒคํ•˜ํ‹ฐ์†Œ๋…„ ์—ญ ์ž„์ง€์œค : ์ƒคํ•˜ํ‹ฐ์†Œ๋…€ ์—ญ ์šฐ์šฉํฌ : ์‚ฐ์›… ํ˜ธ์œ„๋ฌด์‚ฌ ์—ญ ์ด๋ฒ”ํ›ˆ ๋ฐฑ์Šน์ต : ๋ฌผ๊ธธ์กฑ์˜ ์ฐจ๋‚˜๋ผ๊ธฐ ์—ญ ํŠน๋ณ„์ถœ์—ฐ ์ง€์ˆ˜ : ์ƒˆ๋‚˜๋ž˜ ์—ญ - ์‚ฌ์•ผ์˜ ์˜› ์ฒซ์‚ฌ๋ž‘ ์ดฌ์˜์ง€ ์•„์Šค๋‹ฌ ์—ฐ๋Œ€๊ธฐ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ์„ธํŠธ์žฅ ๋ƒ‡๊ธธ์ด์†Œ ์ƒ์กฑ์•”๊ตฐ๋ฆฝ๊ณต์› ํ™ฉ๋งค์‚ฐ ๋ฐ˜๊ณก์ง€ ํŒก์ž ์ข‹์•„ ๊ธธ ์ˆฒํ„ฐ๋„ ํฌ์ฒœ ํ•œํƒ„๊ฐ• ํ˜„๋ฌด์•” ํ˜‘๊ณก๊ณผ ๋น„๋‘˜๊ธฐ๋‚ญ ํญํฌ ์‹œ์ฒญ๋ฅ  ์ˆ˜์ƒ ๋ฐ ํ›„๋ณด ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋ชฉ๋ก (ใ…‡) 2019๋…„ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋ชฉ๋ก ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ์•„์Šค๋‹ฌ ์—ฐ๋Œ€๊ธฐ ๊ณต์‹์‚ฌ์ดํŠธ 2019๋…„ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๊น€์˜ํ˜„ ์‹œ๋‚˜๋ฆฌ์˜ค ์ž‘ํ’ˆ ๋ฐ•์ƒ์—ฐ ์‹œ๋‚˜๋ฆฌ์˜ค ์ž‘ํ’ˆ 2019๋…„์— ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ TV ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ 2019๋…„์— ์ข…๋ฃŒํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ TV ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ tvN ํ† ์ผ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthdal%20Chronicles
Arthdal Chronicles
Arthdal Chronicles () is a 2019 South Korean television series written by Kim Young-hyun and Park Sang-yeon and directed by Kim Won-seok, under the production banner of Studio Dragon and KPJ, starring Jang Dong-gun, Kim Ok-vin, alongside Song Joong-ki, Kim Ji-won in first season, Lee Joon-gi, Shin Se-kyung in second season. Regarded as the first Korean ancient fantasy drama, the story takes place during the Bronze Age and is loosely based on the story of Dangun, the founder of the first Korean Kingdom of Gojoseon and Asadal, the capital (which the series is loosely named after).<ref>{{Cite web |title='์•„์Šค๋‹ฌ ์—ฐ๋Œ€๊ธฐ' ์ œ๋ชฉ์— ๋‹ด๊ธด ๋œป์€?โ€ฆ '์ฒ˜์Œ์—๋Š” '์•„์‚ฌ๋‹ฌ ์—ฐ๋Œ€๊ธฐ |url=https://www.busan.com/view/busan/view.php?code=2019060122075737650 |access-date=October 6, 2023 |website=Busan Daily |language=ko}}</ref> The first season aired on tvN from June 1 to September 22, 2019, every Saturday and Sunday at 21:00 (KST) time slot. The second season aired on tvN from September 9 to October 22, 2023, every Saturday and Sunday at 21:20 (KST) time slot. It is available for streaming on Netflix for the first season and on Disney+ for the second season in selected regions. In spite of the generally mixed to negative reception from critics, the series was the sixth most preferred Korean drama among viewers in the United States market in 2019 per Consumer Research Report by the Korea Creative Content Agency. Synopsis In a mythical land called Arth, the inhabitants of the ancient city of Arthdal contend with power struggles, while some encounter love along the way. Eun-seom goes through hardships to bring his tribe back to life and learns of his true origins in the process. Cast and characters Jang Dong-gun as Ta-gon Song Joong-ki (season 1) and Lee Joon-gi (season 2) as Eun-seom and Saya Kim Ji-won (season 1) and Shin Se-kyung (season 2) as Tan-ya Kim Ok-vin as Tae Al-ha Production Season 1 The cast and crew attended a workshop in Yangju, Gyeonggi-do, on August 21, 2018. The first script reading was held on August 26, 2018. Filming officially started on December 5, 2018 with the opening ceremony of the set in Osan, whose construction took place for eight months. The drama was also filmed overseas in Brunei, with Song Joong-ki departing first on February 24, 2019. The drama serves as a reunion project for Song Joong-ki and Kim Ji-won who both starred in the 2016 hit drama Descendants of the Sun. Season 2 On February 12, 2020, it was announced that the drama was renewed for a second season. On June 11, 2020, it was announced that the production schedule was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic and has been excluded from the 2021 lineup. In February 2022, it was announced that the second season was expected to be released in early 2023 along with a webtoon and an MMORPG. Writers Kim Young-hyun and Park Sang-yeon would be in charge of the script again, with Kim Kwang-sik as director. Titled Arthdal Chronicles: The Sword of Aramun (), the season is set about eight years later; thus, Lee Joon-gi and Shin Se-kyung replaced Song Joong-ki and Kim Ji-won as the adult versions of Eun-seom and Tan-ya, while Jang Dong-gun and Kim Ok-vin reprised their roles. Filming began on August 23, 2022 and took place in Jeju Island. Shin finished filming her part on April 4, 2023. Filming was completed on May 2, 2023. Reception Critical reception The drama received mixed reviews. It was criticized by Game of Thrones fans for sharing similarities with that series, while critics felt that it employs poor use of CGI, has a formulaic plot, is similar to other foreign fantasy dramas and films centered on ancient times, and has a slow-paced storyline, which can make viewers lose interest. Viewers were also bewildered by the historical setting, as the drama is set in the Bronze Age but cast members are seen wearing armors and weapons that do not belong to that era. Conversely, the drama was praised for its intriguing storyline and unique setting, touching on subjects like the meaning of a tribe, an alliance and a nation, as well as religion. Writer Park Sang-yeon said, "I wouldn't even think of comparing our series to [Game of Thrones] and I don't think our goal is to create something similar... I wouldn't try to claim to do anything similar to the show and I don't think it's an appropriate comparison." He added, "We tried to create a great series by building a fictitious world of our own with our imagination and I hope you see our series as it is." Although John Serba of Decider.com gave the series a "Skip It" rating, he said, "Arthdal occurs in a more primitive time than [Game of Thrones], and appears to be set up to explore different ideas about the human creature and its thirst for power and possessions." He said that the show further differentiates itself from Game of Thrones by its absence of nudity and sex scenes. Forbes contributor Joan MacDonald said, "Stunning camera work makes The Arthdal Chronicles'' a visual pleasure to watch, capturing sweeping panoramas that place fledgeling humans in the context of a wide world waiting to be exploredโ€”and possibly conquered." The series received lower-than-expected viewership ratings, in comparison to its massive budget, but the first episode received ratings of 6.7 percent and peaked at 8 percent, placing it first for all dramas in its time slot, including non-cable broadcasting stations. It achieved a ratings high on June 9, with its fourth episode, scoring an average rating of 7.7 percent nationwide, which was an increase of 1.3 percent from the night before. The episode peaked at 8.9 percent nationwide. Staff mistreatment The production team was criticized for mistreatment of its production staff. The production team was accused of violating labor laws from local civic groups, including the Seoul-based Hanbit Media Labor Rights Center and Hope Solidarity Labor Union, as the drama crew had been subject to a "murderous" working environment that made them work up to 150 hours a week. The organizations reported Studio Dragon to the Seoul Employment and Labor Administration. The standards were agreed upon and announced by the studio last September to enhance the labor environment of its staff. Studio Dragon responded to the allegations, saying they abided by its own labor rules, but admitted that they had filmed for 113 hours during the week they went to Brunei in order to make the most out of their time shooting overseas. The studio denied reports that an injured staff member was ignored and told to continue working. Original soundtrack Part 1 Part 2 Special OST Viewership The first episode recorded average ratings of 6.7% and peaked at 8%, taking first place for all dramas in its time slot, including non-cable broadcasting stations. The drama's personal record of 7.7% was on its fourth episode. Its finale scored an average rating of 7.4% nationwide. The series entered the list of highest-rated Korean dramas in cable television. Season 1 Season 2 Awards and nominations Notes References External links (season 1) (season 2) TVN (South Korean TV channel) television dramas 2019 South Korean television series debuts South Korean historical television series South Korean fantasy television series Alternate history television series South Korean pre-produced television series Television series by Studio Dragon Korean-language Netflix exclusive international distribution programming
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EB%B8%8C%EB%A6%AC%EC%9C%A0%EB%8B%88%20%ED%98%91%EC%A0%95
๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์œ ๋‹ˆ ํ˜‘์ •
๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์œ ๋‹ˆ ํ˜‘์ •(, , )์€ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด(EC)์˜ ์ •์น˜์  ์ค‘์žฌ ํ•˜์— ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„, ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„, ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์‚ฌํšŒ์ฃผ์˜ ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ ์„ธ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ๊ฐ€ 1991๋…„ 7์›” 7์ผ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์˜ ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์œ ๋‹ˆ์„ฌ์—์„œ ํšŒ๋‹ด์„ ๊ฐ€์ง„ ํ›„ ์„œ๋ช…ํ•œ ๋ฌธ์„œ์ด๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์˜ค๋‹ˆ ํ˜‘์ •, ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์œ ๋‹ˆ ์„ ์–ธ, ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์˜ค๋‹ˆ ์„ ์–ธ์ด๋ผ๊ณ ๋„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด ํ˜‘์ •์—์„  ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„์˜ ๋ฏธ๋ž˜์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ํ–ฅํ›„ ํ˜‘์ƒ์„ ์ง„ํ–‰ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ํ™˜๊ฒฝ์„ ๋งŒ๋“ค๊ณ ์ž ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„์˜ ์ด๋ฆฌ ์•ˆํ…Œ ๋งˆ๋ฅด์ฝ”๋น„์น˜๋Š” ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ์„ ์กด์†์‹œํ‚ค๋Ÿฌ ํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ๊ณ ๋ฆฝ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ  ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„๋Š” ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ๋ ฅ์—์„œ ์™„์ „ํžˆ ๋ฒ—์–ด๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ์ด ํ˜‘์ •์œผ๋กœ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ(JNA)์€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ „์Ÿ์— ์ง‘์ค‘ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๊ตญ์ œ ๊ตญ๊ฒฝ์„ ๋‹ค์‹œ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์„ ๋ก€๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋“ค์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด๊ฐ€ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์œ„๊ธฐ ์‚ฌํƒœ์— ๊ด€์‹ฌ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์œ ๋‹ˆ ํ˜‘์ •์œผ๋กœ ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„์™€ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ๊ฐ„์— ์ผ์–ด๋‚˜๋˜ ์—ดํ˜ ์ „์Ÿ์ด ์ข…์‹๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„์™€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๋Š” 6์›” 25์ผ์— ํ•œ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์„ ์–ธ์„ 3๊ฐœ์›”๊ฐ„ ๋ณด๋ฅ˜ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ธฐ๋กœ ํ•ฉ์˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด ์™ธ์—๋„, ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์œ ๋‹ˆ ํ˜‘์ •์—์„œ๋Š” ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„ ๊ตญ๊ฒฝ์˜ ๊ตญ๊ฒฝ ํ†ต์ œ ๋ฐ ์„ธ๊ด€ ํ†ต๊ณผ ๋ฌธ์ œ, ํ•ญ๊ณต ๊ตํ†ต ๊ด€์ œ ๋ฌธ์ œ, ์ „์Ÿ ํฌ๋กœ ๊ตํ™˜ ๋ฌธ์ œ๋ฅผ ํ•ฉ์˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„์—์„œ ํ˜‘์ • ์ดํ–‰์„ ๊ฐ์‹œํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด ๊ฐ์‹œ ์ž„๋ฌด๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰, ํŒŒ๊ฒฌํ•˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํ˜‘์ • ์ฒด๊ฒฐ 11์ผ ํ›„, ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„์—์„œ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์„ ์ฒ ์ˆ˜์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ด์™€ ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€๋กœ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์˜ ์ „์Ÿ์—” ์˜ํ–ฅ์„ ์ฃผ์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜๊ณ  ๊ณ„์† ๋ถ„์Ÿ์ด ์ด์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฝ 1991๋…„ 6์›” 23์ผ, ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„์™€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๊ฐ€ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„์˜ ํ•ด์ฒด ๊ณผ์ • ์ค‘ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์„ ์–ธ์„ ํ•  ์ค€๋น„๋ฅผ ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ, ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด ์™ธ๋ฌด์žฅ๊ด€์€ EC ํšŒ์›๊ตญ์€ ์–‘ ๊ตญ์„ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์Šน์ธํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด๋Š” ๋…๋ฆฝ์„ ์–ธ์„ ์ผ๋ฐฉ์ ์ธ ์›€์ง์ž„์œผ๋กœ ๋ณด๊ณ  ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ์ด ์กด์†ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋„๋ก ํ˜‘์ƒ์„ ์ค‘์žฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด์™€ ๋™์‹œ์— EC๋Š” ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„, ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์™€์˜ ์ง์ ‘์ ์ธ ์™ธ๊ต ๊ต๋ฅ˜๋ฅผ ์ค‘์ง€ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ •๋ถ€์—์„  ํ™˜์˜ํ•˜๋Š” ์˜์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„์™€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๋Š” 6์›” 25์ผ ๋…๋ฆฝ์„ ์„ ์–ธํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ด ๋‹ค์Œ๋‚ ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์ด ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„ ๋‚ด๋กœ ๋ฐฐ์น˜๋˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 6์›” 27์ผ์—๋Š” ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ๊ณผ ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„ ๊ตญํ† ๋ฐฉ์œ„๊ตฐ(TDS)์ด ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„ ๊ตญ๊ฒฝ ์ง€์—ญ ํ†ต์ œ๊ถŒ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์ถฉ๋Œํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์—ดํ˜ ์ „์Ÿ์ด ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 6์›” ๋ง์—์„œ 7์›” ์ดˆ ์‚ฌ์ด EC ํ˜‘์ƒ๋‹จ 3๋ช…์ด ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ง€์—ญ์„ ์„ธ ์ฐจ๋ก€ ๋ฐฉ๋ฌธํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์ •์น˜ ํ˜‘์ƒ์„ ์ค‘์žฌํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์ถ”๊ฐ€ ํ˜‘์ƒ์ด ์ด์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€ํ‘œ๋‹จ์—” ๋ฃฉ์…ˆ๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ ์™ธ๋ฌด๋ถ€ ์žฅ๊ด€์ด์ž ๋ถ€์ด๋ฆฌ์ธ ์žํฌํ€ด์Šค ํ‘ธ์Šค, ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์—ฐํ•ฉ ์ด์‚ฌํšŒ ์˜์žฅ๊ตญ ์ดํƒˆ๋ฆฌ์•„ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์ธ ์ง€์•„๋‹ˆ ๋ฐ ๋ฏธ์ฒผ๋ฆฌ์Šค, ๋„ค๋œ๋ž€๋“œ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ ํ•œ์Šค ํŒ ๋ด ๋ธŒ๋กœํฌ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€ํ‘œ๋‹จ์ด ๋ฒ ์˜ค๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ๋กœ ๊ฐ€๊ธฐ ์ง์ „ ๊ณตํ•ญ์—์„œ ์—ด๋ฆฐ ๊ธฐ์žํšŒ๊ฒฌ์—์„œ ํ‘ธ์Šค๋Š” ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด๊ฐ€ ์ด ์œ„๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์ฑ…์ž„์งˆ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€ํ‘œ๋‹จ๊ณผ ๋งŒ๋‚œ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ณด๋‹จ ๋ฐ€๋กœ์…ฐ๋น„์น˜๋Š” ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋‚ด์—” ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์ธ 60๋งŒ๋ช…์ด ์‚ด๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ด ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„์—์„œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๊ฐ€ ๋…๋ฆฝํ•  ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ์„ฑ์„ ์ผ์ถ•ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 6์›” 29์ผ, ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์™€ ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„๋Š” ํ˜‘์ƒ ํ•ฉ์˜๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋…๋ฆฝ์„ ์–ธ์„ ์ผ์‹œ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณด๋ฅ˜ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ์— ํ•ฉ์˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด ๋Œ€ํ‘œ๋‹จ์€ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ฐ€ 6์›” 30์ผ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์˜ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๊ณ„ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์ธ ์Šค์ฒดํŒ ๋ฉ”์‹œ์น˜๋ฅผ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์œ„์›ํšŒ ์˜์žฅ์— ์ž„๋ช…ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์— ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ธฐ๋กœ ์ค‘์žฌํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ํ˜‘์ƒ์— ์ง„์ „์„ ๋ณด์˜€๋‹ค. ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์ด ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„๋กœ ์ฒ ์ˆ˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ง‰์‚ฌ๋กœ ๋Œ์•„๊ฐ€๋ฉด์„œ ํ•ฉ์˜๊ฐ€ ์ง„์ „์„ ์ด๋ฃฌ ๊ฒƒ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ๋ณด์˜€๋‹ค. 7์›” 1์ผ, ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด ์˜์žฅ์ง์— ๋„ค๋œ๋ž€๋“œ์— ์ด์–ด ํฌ๋ฅดํˆฌ๊ฐˆ์ด ๋งก์œผ๋ฉด์„œ ๋ฏธ์ฒผ๋ฆฌ์Šค ๋Œ€์‹  ํฌ๋ฅดํˆฌ๊ฐˆ ์™ธ๋ฌด๋ถ€ ์žฅ๊ด€์ธ ์กฐ์•„์˜ค ๋ฐ ๋ฐ์šฐ์Šค ํ•€ํ—ค์ด๋กœ๋กœ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ๋‹จ์ด ๊ต์ฒด๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์œ ๋‹ˆ ํšŒ๋‹ด ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด์˜ ์ค‘์žฌ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ, ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์˜ ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์œ ๋‹ˆ์„ฌ์—์„œ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด, ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„, ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„, ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„, ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ •๋ถ€ ์‚ฌ์ด ์ค‘์žฌ ํ˜‘์ƒ์ด ์—ด๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์œ ๋‹ˆ ํšŒ๋‹ด์€ 7์›” 7์ผ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ฐ˜ ๋ด ๋ธŒ๋กœํฌ๊ฐ€ ์ด๋„๋Š” ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด ๋Œ€ํ‘œ๋‹จ ์™ธ์—๋„ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„์˜ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น 8๋ช… ์ค‘ 5๋ช…์ธ ์Šค์ฒดํŒ ๋ฉ”์‹œ์น˜(ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„), ๋ณด๊ธฐ์น˜ ๋ณด๊ธฐ์ฒด๋น„์น˜(๋ณด์Šค๋‹ˆ์•„), ์•ผ๋„ค์ฆˆ ๋“œ๋ฅด๋…ธ๋ธŒ์…ฐํฌ(์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„), ๋ธŒ๋ž€์ฝ” ์ฝ”์Šคํ‹ฐ์น˜(๋ชฌํ…Œ๋„ค๊ทธ๋กœ), ๋ฐ”์‹ค ํˆฌํ‘ธ๋ฅด์ฝ”๋ธŒ์Šคํ‚ค(๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„)๊ฐ€ ์ฐธ์—ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด์™ธ์—๋„ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„์˜ ์ด๋ฆฌ์ธ ์•ˆํ…Œ ๋งˆ๋ฅด์ฝ”๋น„์น˜, ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ ์™ธ๋ฌด๋ถ€ ์žฅ๊ด€ ๋ถ€๋””๋ฏธ๋ฅด ๋ก ์ฐจ๋ฅด, ๋‚ด๋ฌด๋ถ€ ์žฅ๊ด€ ํŽ˜ํƒ€๋ฅด ๊ทธ๋ผ์ฐจ๋‹Œ, ๊ตญ๋ฐฉ์ฐจ๊ด€์ด์ž ๋ถ€์ œ๋…์ธ ์Šคํƒ€๋„ค ๋ธŒ๋กœ๋ฒ ํŠธ๋„ ์ฐธ์—ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์—” ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์˜ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ํ”„๋ผ๋‡จ ํˆฌ์ง€๋งŒ์ด, ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์—” ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„์˜ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ๋ฐ€๋ž€ ์ฟ ์ฐฌ์ด ์ฐธ์—ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ์ธก์—์„  ์ฐธ์„์„ ๊ฑฐ๋ถ€ํ•œ ๋ฐ€๋กœ์…ฐ๋น„์น˜ ๋Œ€์‹  6์›” 15์ผ ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ง ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์— ์‚ฌ์ž„ํ•œ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์ธ ๋ณด๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ๋ธŒ ์š”๋น„์น˜๊ฐ€ ์ฐธ์„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ค์ „ 8์‹œ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด ๋Œ€ํ‘œ๋‹จ์€ ์ฟ ์ฑค ๋ฐ ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ๋‹จ๊ณผ ๋ณ„๋„ ํ˜‘์˜๋ฅผ, ๊ทธ ๋‹ค์Œ์—” ํˆฌ์ง€๋งŒ ๋ฐ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ๋‹จ๊ณผ ํ˜‘์˜๋ฅผ, ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰์œผ๋กœ ์š”๋น„์น˜์™€ ๊ฐ๊ฐ ํšŒ๋‹ด์„ ๊ฐ€์กŒ๋‹ค. ์˜คํ›„์—๋Š” ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„, ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„, ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ๋‹จ์ด ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•œ ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ ๋ณธํšŒ์˜๊ฐ€ ์—ด๋ ธ์œผ๋‚˜ ์š”๋น„์น˜๋Š” ํšŒ๋‹ด์— ๋ถˆ๋งŒ์กฑ์Šค๋Ÿฌ์›Œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ˜‘์ •์€ 7์›” 5์ผ ํ—ค์ด๊ทธ์˜ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด ์ด์‚ฌํšŒ์—์„œ ์ค€๋น„ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด ํ˜‘์ • ๋ฌธ์„œ์—” ๊ณต๋™์„ ์–ธ ๋ฐ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ๊ฐ์‹œ ์ž„๋ฌด๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ์ •์น˜์  ํ˜‘์ƒ ๋ฐ ์ง€์นจ ํ˜‘์˜๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ํ™˜๊ฒฝ ์กฐ์„ฑ์„ ์„œ์ˆ ํ•œ ๋ถ€์†๋ฌธ์„œ 2๊ฐœ๋กœ ์ด๋ค„์ ธ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์˜ค๋‹ˆ ํ˜‘์ • ๋˜๋Š” ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์˜ค๋‹ˆ ์„ ์–ธ์œผ๋กœ ์ž˜ ์•Œ๋ ค์ง„ ์ด ํ˜‘์ •๋ฌธ์„œ์—์„  ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ๊ณผ ๊ตญํ† ๋ฐฉ์œ„๊ตฐ์€ ์ „๋ถ€ ๊ธฐ์ง€ ๋‚ด๋กœ ๋Œ์•„๊ฐ€๋ฉฐ, ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„ ๊ตญ๊ฒฝ๋งŒ ํ†ต์ œํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„ ๋ฐ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์–‘๊ตญ์€ ๋…๋ฆฝ์„ ์–ธ ์ดํ›„ 3๊ฐœ์›”๊ฐ„ ๋ชจ๋“  ๋…๋ฆฝ๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จ๋œ ํ™œ๋™์„ ์ค‘์ง€ํ•ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ช…์‹œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์œ ๋‹ˆ ํ˜‘์ •์œผ๋กœ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฝ๋œ ๊ฐ์‹œ ์ž„๋ฌด์—์„  ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„์˜ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ๊ณผ ๊ตญํ† ๋ฐฉ์œ„๊ตฐ์˜ ์ฒ ์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ๋ชจ๋‹ˆํ„ฐ๋งํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋‚˜์ค‘์—” ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„ ๋‚ด์—์„œ ๋ชจ๋“  ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์ด ์ฒ ์ˆ˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์—ฌํŒŒ ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์œ ๋‹ˆ ํ˜‘์ •์€ ํ•ฉ์˜๊ฐ€ ๊ฑฐ์˜ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์ง€์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๊ณ  ์„œ๋ช…๊ตญ๋“ค๋งˆ๋‹ค ํ•ฉ์˜๋ฅผ ์„œ๋กœ ๋‹ค๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ํ•ด์„ํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ๊ทธ๋ž˜๋„ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ง€์—ญ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด์˜ ๊ด€์‹ฌ์„ ํ™˜๊ธฐ์‹œ์ผฐ๊ณ  7์›” 10์ผ ํ—ค์ด๊ทธ์—์„œ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ๋ฌธ์ œ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ฒซ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด ํšŒ๋‹ด์ด ์—ด๋ ธ๋‹ค. ์ด ํšŒ๋‹ด์—์„  ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„ ๋‚ด ๋ง‰์‚ฌ์—์„œ์˜ ๊ตฐ์‚ฌ์  ๋Œ€๋ฆฝ์„ ์•ฝํ™”์‹œ์ผฐ๊ณ  ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„์˜ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ์ฒ ์ˆ˜ ํ˜‘์ƒ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด์„œ ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„์™€ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ์‚ฌ์ด ํ˜‘์ƒ์„ ์ค‘์žฌํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ ํฐ ์ง„์ „์„ ๋ณด์˜€๋‹ค. ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์—์„œ๋Š” ํ˜‘์ •์ด ์ฒด๊ฒฐ๋œ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋‚  ์ €๋…์— ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์ด ์˜ค์‹œ์˜ˆํฌ๋ฅผ ํฌ๊ฒฉํ•˜๋Š” ๋“ฑ ๋ฌด์žฅ ์ถฉ๋Œ์ด ๊ณ„์†๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์€ ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„์˜ ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์œ ๋‹ˆ ํ˜‘์ • ์ˆ˜ํ–‰์— ๋ฐ˜์‘ํ•˜์—ฌ 7์›” 18์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์„ ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„์—์„œ ์ฒ ์ˆ˜์‹œํ‚ค๋„๋ก ๋ช…๋ นํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด์˜ ๊ฐ์‹œ ์ž„๋ฌด๋Š” 9์›” 1์ผ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๋กœ ํ™•๋Œ€๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 9์›” ์ค‘์ˆœ๋ถ€ํ„ด ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋ฐฉ์œ„๊ตฐ๊ณผ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ด ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ๋ง‰์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๋ด‰์‡„ํ•˜๊ณ  ์ด์— ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์ด ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋‚ด๋กœ ๊ณต์„ธ๋ฅผ ํŽผ์น˜๋ฉด์„œ ์ „์Ÿ์ด ๊ฒฉํ™”๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์œ ๋‹ˆ ํ˜‘์ •์œผ๋กœ ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ์„ ์กด์†์‹œํ‚ค๋Ÿฌ๋Š” ๋งˆ๋ฅด์ฝ”๋น„์น˜๋Š” ๊ณ ๋ฆฝ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ๋ฐ˜ ๋ด ๋ธŒ๋กœํฌ๋ฅผ ์œ„์‹œํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ๋‹จ์ด ์ด๋ฅผ ๋ฌด์‹œํ•˜๊ณ  ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด ์ด์žฌ๋Š” ์•”๋ฌต์ ์œผ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์‹ค์ƒ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ํ•ด์ฒด๋ฅผ ๋งํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ ์กด์†์€ ๋ถˆ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ์ด ํ˜‘์ •์œผ๋กœ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ ์กด์†์„ ์œ„ํ•ด ์‹ธ์šด ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์˜ ์ง€๋„๋ถ€์˜ ์ผ๋ถ€ ๊ถŒํ•œ์ด ์ค„์–ด๋“ค์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์—์„œ๋Š” ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ๊ณผ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ๊ตฐ์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ๊ณ„์† ๋‚จ์•„์žˆ์–ด์„œ ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„์—์„œ๋Š” ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ ์ •๋ถ€, ํŠนํžˆ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ์ด ์™„์ „ํžˆ ์—†์–ด์กŒ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๋ฏผ์กฑ์ฃผ์˜์ž์—๊ฒ ํ•˜๋‚˜์˜ ๋ชฉํ‘œ๋ฅผ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑํ•˜์˜€๊ณ  ๊ตญ์ œ ๊ตญ๊ฒฝ์„ ๋‹ค์‹œ ๊ทธ๋ฆด ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ์ €๋„๋ฆฌ์ŠคํŠธ ์‚ฌ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ๋‚˜ P. ๋ผ๋ฉ”ํŠธ๋Š” 1991๋…„ 1์›” ์ฟ ์ฑค๊ณผ ๋ฐ€๋กœ์…ฐ๋น„์น˜ ์‚ฌ์ด ํ•ฉ์˜๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋ฐ€๋กœ์…ฐ๋น„์น˜๋Š” ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„์˜ ๋…๋ฆฝ์— ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ฐ€ ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ ํ•ฉ์˜๋ฅผ ๋ณด์•˜๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด์— ์ฟ ์ฑค์€ ๋Œ€์‹  ๋ฐ€๋กœ์…ฐ๋น„์น˜์˜ ๋Œ€์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฝ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ดํ•ด์— ๊ณต๊ฐ์„ ํ‘œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์‹œ๊ธฐ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด๋Š” ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์œ ๋‹ˆ ํ˜‘์ •์ด ์œ„๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์™„ํ™”์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ณด์•˜์œผ๋‚˜ ํ˜‘์ •์ด ๋งํ•˜๋Š” ์™„์ „ํ•œ ๋ถ„์Ÿ ์ข…์‹์— ํ•ด๋‹นํ•˜๋Š” ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์˜ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€ ๋Œ€์ „๋žต์ด ์ˆ˜์ •๋˜์ง€๋Š” ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์ฐธ๊ณ  ๋ฌธํ—Œ ์„œ์  ๊ธฐํƒ€ ๋ฌธํ—Œ 1991๋…„ ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„ 1991๋…„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ 1991๋…„ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ „์Ÿ ํ‰ํ™” ์กฐ์•ฝ ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„์˜ ์ •์น˜์‚ฌ 10์ผ ์ „์Ÿ 1991๋…„ ์ฒด๊ฒฐ๋œ ์กฐ์•ฝ 1991๋…„ ๋ฐœํšจ๋œ ์กฐ์•ฝ ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„์˜ ์กฐ์•ฝ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์˜ ์กฐ์•ฝ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„์˜ ์กฐ์•ฝ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ „์Ÿ 1991๋…„ 7์›”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brioni%20Agreement
Brioni Agreement
The Brioni Agreement, also known as the Brioni Declaration (, , , ), is a document signed by representatives of Slovenia, Croatia, and Yugoslavia under the political sponsorship of the European Community (EC) on the Brijuni Islands on 7 July 1991. The agreement sought to create an environment in which further negotiations on the future of Yugoslavia could take place. However, ultimately it isolated the federal prime minister Ante Markoviฤ‡ in his efforts to preserve Yugoslavia, and effectively stopped any form of federal influence over Slovenia. This meant the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) would focus on combat in Croatia, creating a precedent of redrawing international borders and staking the EC's interest in resolving the Yugoslav crisis. The agreement put an end to hostilities between the Yugoslav and Slovene forces in the Ten-Day War. Slovenia and Croatia agreed to suspend activities stemming from their 25 June declarations of independence for a period of three months. The document also resolved border control and customs inspection issues regarding Slovenia's borders, resolved air-traffic control responsibility and mandated an exchange of prisoners of war. The Brioni Agreement also formed the basis for an observer mission to monitor implementation of the agreement in Slovenia. Eleven days after the agreement was made, the federal government pulled the JNA out of Slovenia. Conversely, the agreement made no mitigating impact on fighting in Croatia. Background On 23 June 1991, as Slovenia and Croatia prepared to declare their independence during the breakup of Yugoslavia, the European Community (EC) foreign ministers decided the EC member states would not extend diplomatic recognition to the two states. The EC viewed the declarations as unilateral moves and offered assistance in negotiations regarding the future of the SFR Yugoslavia instead. At the same time, the EC decided to suspend direct talks with Slovenia and Croatia. The move was welcomed by the Yugoslav federal government. Slovenia and Croatia declared independence on 25 June, and the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) units began to deploy from its bases in Slovenia the next day. On 27 June, armed conflict broke out as the JNA and the Territorial Defence Force of Slovenia (TDS) began fighting over control of Slovenia's border posts, in what became the Ten-Day War. A three-strong EC delegation made three visits to the region in late June and early July to negotiate a political agreement which would facilitate further negotiations. The delegation consisted of the foreign ministers of Luxembourg, as the incumbent holder of the EC presidency, and Italy and the Netherlands, as the previous and future holders of that office. The delegation members were Jacques Poos (Luxembourg), Gianni de Michelis (Italy), and Hans van den Broek (Netherlands). Prior to the delegation's arrival in Belgrade, Poos told reporters that the EC would take charge of the crisis. There, the delegation was met by Serbian president Slobodan Miloลกeviฤ‡ who dismissed the prospect of Croatia leaving the Yugoslav federation because its population contained 600,000 Serbs. On 29 June, Croatia and Slovenia agreed to suspend their declarations of independence to allow time for a negotiated settlement. The EC delegation appeared to make progress when Serbia responded to the move by ceasing their opposition to the appointment of a Croatian member of the federal presidency, Stjepan Mesiฤ‡, as President of the Presidency of Yugoslavia on 30 June. The appearance of a success was reinforced when the JNA ordered its troops posted in Slovenia to return to their barracks. On 1 July, de Michelis was replaced by Joรฃo de Deus Pinheiro, the Portuguese foreign minister, to maintain the formula of current, former and future EC presidencies comprising the EC delegation as the Netherlands took over the presidency from Luxembourg, while Portugal was scheduled to assume the presidency after the Dutch. Conference at Brijuni A further result of the EC delegation's mission were talks attended by representatives of the EC, Croatia, Slovenia, Serbia and the Yugoslav government. The talks were held at Brijuni Islands on 7 July. Besides the EC delegation, headed by van den Broek, five out of eight members of the federal presidency attended the talksโ€”Mesiฤ‡, Bogiฤ‡ Bogiฤ‡eviฤ‡, Janez Drnovลกek, Branko Kostiฤ‡ and Vasil Tupurkovski. The Yugoslav federal prime minister Ante Markoviฤ‡ was also present, as were the Yugoslav federal foreign minister Budimir Lonฤar, interior minister Petar Graฤanin and the deputy defence minister Vice Admiral . Croatia was represented by President Franjo Tuฤ‘man while President Milan Kuฤan attended on behalf of Slovenia. Serbia was represented by Borisav Joviฤ‡, a former Serbian member of the federal presidency who had resigned from the position on 15 June, instead of Miloลกeviฤ‡ who refused to attend. Starting at 8:00ย a.m., the EC delegation held separate talks with Kuฤan and his assistants, then with Tuฤ‘man and his assistants, and finally with Joviฤ‡. In the afternoon, a plenary meeting was held with the federal, Slovene and Croatian delegations in attendance, while Joviฤ‡ reportedly left dissatisfied with the talks. The agreement was prepared at the EC council of ministers in The Hague on 5 July. It consisted of a Joint Declaration, and two annexes detailing the creation of an environment suitable to further political negotiations and guidelines for an observer mission to Yugoslavia. The agreement, which became known as the Brioni Declaration or the Brioni Agreement, required the JNA and the TDS to return to their bases, and stipulated that Slovene officials were to control Slovenia's borders alone and that both Slovenia and Croatia were to suspend all activities stemming from their declarations of independence for three months. The observer mission set out by the Brioni Agreement materialised as the European Community Monitor Mission (ECMM) tasked with monitoring the disengagement of the JNA and the TDS in Slovenia, and ultimately the withdrawal of the JNA from Slovenia. Aftermath Even though little was agreed upon and the agreement was later interpreted differently by its signatories, the Brioni Agreement established the EC's interest in the region and the first EC Ministerial Conference on Yugoslavia was held in The Hague on 10 July. The ECMM helped calm several standoffs around military barracks in Slovenia and facilitated negotiations between Slovene authorities and the JNA regarding the withdrawal of the JNA from Slovenia. In Croatia, armed combat continued and the JNA shelled the city of Osijek the same evening the agreement was signed. The federal presidency ordered the complete withdrawal of the JNA from Slovenia on 18 July in response to Slovene actions in breach of the Brioni Agreement. The ECMM's scope of work was expanded to include Croatia on 1 September. By mid-September, the war had escalated as the Croatian National Guard and police blockaded the JNA barracks and the JNA embarked on a campaign against Croatian forces. The Brioni Agreement isolated Markoviฤ‡ who tried to preserve the federation, but was ignored by van den Broek who appeared not to comprehend issues presented before him, and the EC delegation tacitly encouraged the dissolution of Yugoslavia. The agreement diminished the authority of part of the JNA's leadership who fought for the preservation of the Yugoslav federation. The agreement was also unfavourable for Croatia because it was left to defend against the JNA and Serb forces. By effectively removing Slovenia from influence of the federal authorities, especially the JNA, the agreement fulfilled one of the Serbian nationalists' goals, allowing the redrawing of international borders. Sabrina Ramet noted that Kuฤan and Miloลกeviฤ‡ reached an agreement in January 1991 in which Miloลกeviฤ‡ gave his assurances that Slovenia's independence bid would not be opposed by Serbia. In return, Kuฤan expressed his understanding for Miloลกeviฤ‡'s interest to create a Greater Serbia. At the time, the EC viewed the agreement as a method of defusing the crisis and failed to attribute the lull which coincided with the Brioni Agreement to a shift in Serbian strategy instead. The EC delegation's failure to respond to Joviฤ‡'s departure before the plenary meeting and the EC foreign ministers' declaration of 10 July indicating the EC would withdraw from mediation if the Brioni Agreement was not implemented only encouraged Serbia which, unlike Slovenia, Croatia, or the Yugoslav federation, had nothing to lose if the EC pulled out. In the end, the EC took credit for a rapid resolution of the armed conflict in Slovenia without realising that its diplomatic efforts had little to do with the situation on the ground. Footnotes References Books Other sources 1991 in Croatia 1991 in Slovenia 1991 in Yugoslavia Croatian War of Independence Peace treaties Political history of Slovenia Ten-Day War Treaties concluded in 1991 Treaties entered into force in 1991 Treaties of Slovenia Treaties of Croatia Treaties of Yugoslavia Yugoslav Wars July 1991 events in Europe
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%BF%A0%EC%96%BC%EB%A6%89%EA%B1%B0%EC%9D%98%20%EC%86%8C%EB%8F%84%EB%91%91
์ฟ ์–ผ๋ฆ‰๊ฑฐ์˜ ์†Œ๋„๋‘‘
ใ€Œ์ฟ ์–ผ๋ฆ‰๊ฑฐ์˜ ์†Œ๋„๋‘‘ใ€()๋Š” ์•„์ผ๋žœ๋“œ ์‹ ํ™”์˜ ์–ผ์Šคํ„ฐ ๋Œ€๊ณ„์— ์†ํ•˜๋Š” ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ๋กœ, ์–ผ์Šคํ„ฐ ๋Œ€๊ณ„์—์„œ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์žฅ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ๋‹ค. ํƒ„ ๋ณด ์ž‘ํ’ˆ์œผ๋กœ์„œ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์ ์ด๊ณ  ์œ ๋ช…ํ•œ ํƒ„ ๋ณด๋‹ค. ์ฝ”๋‚˜ํฌํƒ€์˜ ์—ฌ์™• ๋ฉ”๋ธŒ์™€ ๊ทธ ๋‚จํŽธ ์•Œ๋ฆด์ด ๋ˆ ์ฟ ์–ผ๋ฆ‰๊ฑฐ๋ผ๋Š” ๋งˆ๋ฒ•์†Œ๋ฅผ ์šธ๋ผ ์™•๊ตญ์—์„œ ๋นผ์•—์œผ๋ ค๊ณ  ์ „์Ÿ์„ ์ผ์œผํ‚ค๊ณ  ์ด๊ฒƒ์„ ์˜์›… ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์ด ๋ง‰์•„๋‚ด๋Š” ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ๋‹ค. ์ค„๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ ๋‚ด์šฉ์ƒ ใ€Œ์ฟ ์–ผ๋ฆ‰๊ฑฐ์˜ ์†Œ๋„๋‘‘ใ€์˜ ์ „ํŽธ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ๋“ค์ด ์žˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ๋“ค์„ ๋ ˜์Šค์ผˆ๋Ÿฌ(remscรฉla)๋ผ๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ณธํŽธ์˜ ๋‚ด์šฉ์„ ์ œ๋Œ€๋กœ ์ดํ•ดํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฝ๋“ค์ด ์ด ๋ ˜์Šค์ผˆ๋Ÿฌ๋“ค์—์„œ ์„ค๋ช…๋œ๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ์ปจ๋Œ€ ์šธ๋ผ ์˜์›… ๋ช‡ ๋ช…์ด ์™œ ์ฝ”๋‚˜ํฌํƒ€ ํŽธ์—์„œ ์‹ธ์šฐ๋Š”์ง€(๋ฐ๋ฅด๋“œ๋Ÿฌ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด), ์™œ ์ „์Ÿ ์ดˆ๊ธฐ์— ์šธ๋ผ์ธ๋“ค์ด ์‹ธ์›€์„ ํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜๊ณ  ๋ฌด๋ ฅํ™”๋˜์—ˆ๋Š”์ง€(๋งˆํ•˜ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด), ๋ˆ ์ฟ ์–ผ๋ฆ‰๊ฑฐ์™€ ํ•€๋ฒ ๋‚˜ํฌ๊ฐ€ ์–ด๋–ป๊ฒŒ ํƒœ์–ด๋‚ฌ๋Š”์ง€ ๋“ฑ์˜ ์‚ฌ์ •๋“ค์€ ๋ณธํŽธ์— ๋‚˜์˜ค์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋ ˜์Šค์ผˆ๋Ÿฌ๋“ค์˜ ๋‚ด์šฉ์ด๋‹ค. ๋ณธํŽธ ์ œ1ํŒ๋ณธ์€ ์ฝ”๋‚˜ํฌํƒ€์˜ ์ˆ˜๋„ ํฌ๋ฃจ์–ดํ•œ์—์„œ ๋ฉ”๋ธŒ์™€ ์•Œ๋ฆด์ด ๊ตฐ๋Œ€๋ฅผ ๋ชจ์œผ๋Š” ์žฅ๋ฉด์—์„œ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ œ2ํŒ๋ณธ์€ ์•Œ๋ฆด๊ณผ ๋ฉ”๋ธŒ๊ฐ€ ์„œ๋กœ์˜ ์žฌ์‚ฐ์„ ๋น„๊ตํ•ด ๋ณด๋Š” ์žฅ๋ฉด์—์„œ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ถ€๋ถ€์˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์žฌ์‚ฐ์€ ๋ชจ๋‘ ๊ฐ™์•˜์œผ๋‚˜ ๋งˆ๋ฒ•์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ •๋ ฅ์ด ๊ฐ•ํ•œ ์ข…์šฐ ํ•€๋ฒ ๋‚˜ํฌ๊ฐ€ ์•Œ๋ฆด์˜ ์†Œ์œ ๋ผ ์•Œ๋ฆด์ด ๊ทผ์†Œํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋” ๋ถ€์ž์˜€๋‹ค. ํ•€๋ฒ ๋‚˜ํฌ๋Š” ์›๋ž˜ ๋ฉ”๋ธŒ์˜ ์†Œ๋–ผ์—์„œ ํƒœ์–ด๋‚ฌ์œผ๋‚˜ ์ž๊ธฐ ์ฃผ์ธ์ด ์—ฌ์ž๋ผ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ์•„๋‹ˆ๊ผฌ์›Œ ๋ฉ”๋ธŒ์˜ ์†Œ๋–ผ๋ฅผ ๋– ๋‚˜ ์•Œ๋ฆด์˜ ์†Œ๋–ผ๋กœ ๊ฐ€ ๋ฒ„๋ฆฐ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๋ฉ”๋ธŒ๋Š” ๋‚จํŽธ๊ณผ ๋Œ€๋“ฑํ•ด์ง€๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ํ•€๋ฒ ๋‚˜ํฌ์— ๋Œ€์ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์ข…์šฐ์ธ ์ฟ ์–ผ๋ฆ‰๊ฑฐ์˜ ๋ˆ ์ฟ ์–ผ๋ฆ‰๊ฑฐ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ–๊ณ ์ž ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฉ”๋ธŒ๋Š” ๋ˆ ์ฟ ์–ผ๋ฆ‰๊ฑฐ์˜ ์ฃผ์ธ ๋‹ค๋Ÿฌ ๋ง‰ ํ”ผ์–ดํฌ๋„ˆ์—๊ฒŒ 1๋…„๊ฐ„ ์†Œ๋ฅผ ๋นŒ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์‹ถ๋‹ค๋Š” ์ „๊ฐˆ์„ ๋ณด๋‚ธ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค๋Ÿฌ๋Š” ์ฒ˜์Œ์— ๋™์˜ํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ์ „๋ น์ด ์ˆ ์ด ์ทจํ•ด์„œ ๋‹ค๋Ÿฌ๊ฐ€ ๋™์˜ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋”๋ผ๋„ ์ž๊ธฐ ์—ฌ์™•์€ ํž˜์œผ๋กœ ์†Œ๋ฅผ ๋นผ์•—์•„ ๊ฐ”์œผ๋ฆฌ๋ผ ๋– ๋ฒŒ๋ฆฌ๋ฉด์„œ ๊ณ„์•ฝ์ด ํŒŒํ† ๋‚œ๋‹ค. ๊ณผ์—ฐ ๊ทธ ๋ง๋Œ€๋กœ ๋ฉ”๋ธŒ๋Š” ํž˜์œผ๋กœ ์†Œ๋ฅผ ๋นผ์•—์•„ ์˜ค๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๊ตฐ๋Œ€๋ฅผ ์ผ์œผํ‚จ๋‹ค. ์ด ๋•Œ ์šธ๋ผ๋ฅผ ๋– ๋‚˜ ์ฝ”๋‚˜ํฌํƒ€์— ๋ง๋ช…ํ•ด ์žˆ๋˜ ํŽ˜๋ฅด๊ตฌ์Šค ๋ง‰ ๋กœํฌ ๋“ฑ๋„ ๋”ฐ๋ผ๊ฐ„๋‹ค. ์šธ๋ผ ๋‚จ์ž๋“ค์€ ๋งˆํ•˜์˜ ์ €์ฃผ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด "์ผ€์Šค ๋‹Œ๋˜()"์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์ƒํƒœ๊ฐ€ ๋˜์–ด ์ „์Ÿ์„ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ผ€์Šค ๋‹Œ๋˜์ด๋ž€ "9์ผ๊ฐ„์˜ ์žฅ์• "๋ผ๋Š” ๋œป์ด์ง€๋งŒ ์‹ค์ œ๋กœ๋Š” ๋ช‡ ๋‹ฌ๊ฐ„ ๊ณ„์†๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ž˜์„œ ์šธ๋ผ์—์„œ ์‹ธ์šธ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์€ ์—ด์ผ๊ณฑ ์‚ด์˜ ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ ๋ฟ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์€ ๋งˆ์ฐจ๋ถ€ ๋ผ๊ทธ ๋ง‰ ๋ฆฌ์—‰๊ฐ€๋ฐ”๋ฅด์˜ ๋„์›€์„ ๋ฐ›์•„ ํ˜ผ์ž ์ฝ”๋‚˜ํฌํƒ€๊ตฐ์—๊ฒŒ ์œ ๊ฒฉ์ „์„ ๋ฒŒ์ธ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๋ฉ”๋ธŒ์—๊ฒŒ ์ผ๊ธฐํ† ๋ฅผ ์‹ ์ฒญํ•ด ์ฝ”๋‚˜ํฌํƒ€์˜ ์ „์‚ฌ๋“ค์„ ํ•œ ๋ฒˆ์— ํ•œ ๋ช…์”ฉ ์“ฐ๋Ÿฌ๋œจ๋ฆฌ๋ฉด์„œ ๋ช‡ ๋‹ฌ ๋™์•ˆ ์‹œ๊ฐ„์„ ๋ฒˆ๋‹ค. ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์ด ๋กœํฌ ๋ง‰ ๋ชจํŽ˜๋ฏธ์Šค(Lรณch mac Mofemis)์™€ ์ผ๊ธฐํ† ๋ฅผ ํ•˜๋Š” ๋‚ , ์•„๋ฆ„๋‹ค์šด ์ Š์€ ์—ฌ์ž๊ฐ€ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚˜ ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์—๊ฒŒ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์‚ฌ๋ž‘์„ ์ฃผ๊ฒ ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์€ ํ‡ด์งœ๋ฅผ ๋†“๋Š”๋‹ค. ๋ถ„๋…ธํ•œ ์—ฌ์ž๋Š” ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์ •์ฒด(๋ชจ๋ฆฌ์•ˆ)๋ฅผ ๋“œ๋Ÿฌ๋‚ด๊ณ  ๊ทธ์˜ ์‹ธ์›€์„ ๋ฐฉํ•ดํ•˜๊ฒ ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์˜ˆ๊ณ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด๋ฒˆ ์‹ธ์›€ํ„ฐ๋Š” ์‹œ๋ƒ‡๋ฌผ์ด์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์šฐ์„  ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์ด ๋ฌผ์— ๋“ค์–ด์˜ค์ž ์žฅ์–ด๋กœ ๋‘”๊ฐ‘ํ•ด ๊ทธ์˜ ๋ฐœ์„ ํœ˜๊ฐ์•˜๊ณ , ๊ทธ ๋‹ค์Œ์—๋Š” ๋Š‘๋Œ€๋กœ ๋‘”๊ฐ‘ํ•ด ์‹œ๋ƒ‡๋ฌผ๋กœ ์†Œ๋–ผ๋ฅผ ๋ชฐ์•˜์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ์•”์†Œ๋กœ ๋‘”๊ฐ‘ํ•ด ์†Œ๋–ผ๋ฅผ ๋Œ๊ณ  ๋Œ์ง„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์€ ์žฅ์–ด, ๋Š‘๋Œ€, ์•”์†Œ๋ฅผ ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋•Œ๋ ค๋ˆ•ํžˆ๊ณ  ๋กœํฌ๋ฅผ ์ณ์ฃฝ์ธ๋‹ค. ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์ด ์Šน๋ฆฌํ•˜๊ณ  ๋‚˜์ž ๋ชจ๋ฆฌ์•ˆ์€ ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์ด ์žฅ์–ด, ๋Š‘๋Œ€, ์•”์†Œ์—๊ฒŒ ์ž…ํ˜”๋˜ ๋ถ€์ƒ์„ ํ•œ ๋ชธ์— ์ž…์€ ๋…ธํŒŒ์˜ ๋ชจ์Šต์œผ๋กœ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚˜ ์†Œ ์ –์„ ์ง ๋‹ค. ๋ชจ๋ฆฌ์•ˆ์€ ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์—๊ฒŒ ์šฐ์œ ๋ฅผ ์„ธ ๋ฒˆ ์ฃผ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์ด ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋ฐ›์•„๋จน์œผ๋ฉฐ ๊ทธ๋•Œ๋งˆ๋‹ค ๊ฐ์‚ฌ์˜ ์ธ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ํ•˜์ž ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์ด ์ถ•๋ณต์œผ๋กœ ์ทจ๊ธ‰๋˜์–ด ์„ธ ๊ฐœ์˜ ์ƒ์ฒ˜๊ฐ€ ํ•˜๋‚˜์”ฉ ๋‚˜์•˜๋‹ค. ๋ชจ๋ฆฌ์•ˆ์ด ์ •์ฒด๋ฅผ ๋“œ๋Ÿฌ๋‚ด์ž ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์€ ๋…ธํŒŒ๊ฐ€ ๋ชจ๋ฆฌ์•ˆ์ธ ์ค„ ์•Œ์•˜์œผ๋ฉด ๊ทธ์—๊ฒŒ ๊ฐ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์•˜์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ํˆฌ๋œ๋Œ„๋‹ค. ํ•œ๋ฒˆ์€ ๋งค์šฐ ํž˜๋“  ์‹ธ์›€์„ ์ด๊ธด ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์ด ์ง€์ณ ์“ฐ๋Ÿฌ์ ธ ์žˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ๋˜๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์‹ ์  ์กด์žฌ, ๋ฃจ ๋ผ์™€๋”๊ฐ€ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚œ๋‹ค. ๋ฃจ๋Š” ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์—๊ฒŒ ์ž์‹ ์ด ๊ทธ์˜ ์ƒ๋ถ€๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ฐํžˆ๊ณ  ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์„ 3์ผ๊ฐ„ ์žฌ์›Œ ๋ชธ์˜ ์ƒ์ฒ˜๋ฅผ ๋ชจ๋‘ ์น˜๋ฃŒํ•ด ์ค€๋‹ค. ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์ด ์ž ๋“ค์–ด ์žˆ๋˜ 3์ผ ์‚ฌ์ด ์šธ๋ผ์˜ ์†Œ๋…„๋ณ‘๋‹จ์ด ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์„ ๋Œ€์‹ ํ•ด ์‹ธ์šฐ๋ ค๋‹ค ๋ชจ์กฐ๋ฆฌ ๋–ผ์ฃฝ์Œ์„ ๋‹นํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ˆˆ์„ ๋œฌ ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์€ ๊ทธ ๊ด‘๊ฒฝ์„ ๋ชฉ๊ฒฉํ•˜๊ณ  ๋ฆฌ์ŠคํŠธ๋ผ๋“œ(rรญastrad)๋ผ๋Š” ๊ด‘๋ž€ ์ƒํƒœ์— ๋น ์ง„๋‹ค. ์ ๋„ ์•„๊ตฐ๋„ ๋ชป ์•Œ์•„๋ณด๋Š” ๊ดด๋ฌผ์ด ๋œ ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์€ ์ฝ”๋‚˜ํฌํƒ€๊ตฐ์˜ ์ฃผ๋‘”์ง€๋กœ ๋Œ๊ฒฉํ•ด ์ฃฝ์€ ์†Œ๋…„๋ณ‘๋“ค์˜ ์—ฌ์„ฏ ๋ฐฐ๊ฐ€ ๋˜๋Š” ์ฝ”๋‚˜ํฌํƒ€๊ตฐ์„ ์ฃฝ์—ฌ ๋ณต์ˆ˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ด‘๋ž€์ด ๊ฐ€๋ผ์•‰์€ ๋’ค ๋‹ค์‹œ ์ „์Ÿ์€ ํ‰์†Œ๋Œ€๋กœ ๋Œ์•„๊ฐ€ ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์ด ํ•œ ๋ช…์”ฉ ์ฝ”๋‚˜ํฌํƒ€ ์ „์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์ณ์ฃฝ์ด๋Š” ์ผ์ƒ์ด ๋ฐ˜๋ณต๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฉ”๋ธŒ๋Š” ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๋ฒˆ ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ๊ณผ์˜ ์•ฝ์†์„ ๊นจ๊ณ  ๋Œ€๊ฒฐ ์ค‘์— ์‘์›๊ตฐ์„ ๋ณด๋‚ด ๋‹ค๊ตฌ๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๋†“์œผ๋ ค ํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์€ ๋ชจ๋‘ ์ด๊ฒจ๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. ๋งˆ์นจ๋‚ด ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์˜ ์–‘์•„๋ฒ„์ง€์ด๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•œ ํŽ˜๋ฅด๊ตฌ์Šค๊ฐ€ ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ๊ณผ ๋งž์„ค ์ฐจ๋ก€๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ๊ณผ ํŽ˜๋ฅด๊ตฌ์Šค๋Š” ๋‹ค์Œ์— ํŽ˜๋ฅด๊ตฌ์Šค๊ฐ€ ํ•œ ๋ฒˆ ๋ฌผ๋Ÿฌ๋‚  ํ…Œ๋‹ˆ ์ด๋ฒˆ์—๋Š” ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์ด ํ•œ ๋ฒˆ ๋ฌผ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ํ•ฉ์˜ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๋‹ค์Œ ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์€ ์˜ํ˜•์ œ ํŽ˜๋ฅด๋””์–ด๋“œ ๋ง‰ ๋‹ค๋งŒ๊ณผ ์‹ธ์šฐ๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 3์ผ ๋ฐค๋‚ฎ์˜ ํ˜ˆํˆฌ ๋์— ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์ด ์ „์„ค์˜ ๋ฌด๊ธฐ ๊ฒŒ ๋ณผ๊ทธ๋กœ ํŽ˜๋ฅด๋””์–ด๋“œ๋ฅผ ์ฃฝ์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๋“œ๋””์–ด ์ €์ฃผ๊ฐ€ ํ’€๋ฆฐ ์šธ๋ผ ๋‚จ์ž๋“ค์ด ํ•˜๋‚˜๋‘˜ ์ผ์–ด๋‚ฌ๊ณ , ์šธ๋ผ ๊ตฐ๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ์†Œ์ง‘๋˜์–ด ์ตœํ›„์˜ ๋Œ€ํšŒ์ „์ด ๋ฒŒ์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์€ ๊ทธ๋™์•ˆ ๊ณ ์ƒํ•˜์—ฌ ์•‰์•„ ์‰ฌ๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ํŽ˜๋ฅด๊ตฌ์Šค๊ฐ€ ์šธ๋ผ ์™• ์ฝ˜์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ๋ง‰ ๋„ค์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์œ„๊ธฐ์— ๋ชฐ์•„๋„ฃ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํŽ˜๋ฅด๊ตฌ์Šค๊ฐ€ ์ฝ˜์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด๋ฅผ ์ณ์ฃฝ์—ฌ ์›์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ๊ฐš์œผ๋ ค ํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ฝ˜์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด์˜ ์นœ์•„๋“ค์ด์ž ํŽ˜๋ฅด๊ตฌ์Šค์˜ ์–‘์•„๋“ค๋กœ ํŽ˜๋ฅด๊ตฌ์Šค๊ฐ€ ๋ง๋ช…ํ•  ๋•Œ ๋”ฐ๋ผ๊ฐ”๋˜ ์ฝ”๋ฅด๋ง‰ ์ฝ˜๋“œ ๋กฑ๊ฐ€์Šค๊ฐ€ ๋‚˜์„œ ๋‘ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€์˜ ์‹ธ์›€์„ ๋ง๋ ธ๋‹ค. ํŽ˜๋ฅด๊ตฌ์Šค๋Š” ๊ฒ€์„ ํœ˜๋‘˜๋Ÿฌ ์‚ฐ ๊ผญ๋Œ€๊ธฐ ์„ธ ๊ฐœ๋ฅผ ๋‚ ๋ ค ๋ฒ„๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ„๋…ธ๋ฅผ ๋‹ฌ๋žฌ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐ๋ ฅ์„ ํšŒ๋ณตํ•œ ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ๋„ ์‹ธ์›€์— ๋›ฐ์–ด๋“ค๊ณ , ํŽ˜๋ฅด๊ตฌ์Šค์™€ ๋งˆ์ฃผํ•œ ์ฟ  ํ›Œ๋ฆฐ์€ ์ €๋ฒˆ์˜ ํ•ฉ์˜๋ฅผ ์ƒ๊ธฐ์‹œํ‚ค๋ฉฐ ํŽ˜๋ฅด๊ตฌ์Šค์—๊ฒŒ ๋ฌผ๋Ÿฌ๋‚  ๊ฒƒ์„ ์š”๊ตฌํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ž˜์„œ ํŽ˜๋ฅด๊ตฌ์Šค๊ฐ€ ๋ฌผ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜์ž ์ฝ”๋‚˜ํฌํƒ€์˜ ๋™๋งน๋“ค์€ ๊ณตํ™ฉ์— ๋น ์ ธ ํฉ์–ด์ง€๊ณ  ๋ฉ”๋ธŒ๋Š” ํ›„ํ‡ดํ•  ์ˆ˜๋ฐ–์— ์—†์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ „์Ÿ์˜ ๋ชฉ์ ์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ๋ˆ ์ฟ ์–ผ๋ฆ‰๊ฑฐ๋Š” ๊ทธ ๋‚œ์žฅํŒ ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ ์–ด๋–ป๊ฒŒ ํ™•๋ณดํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ์„ฑ๊ณตํ•ด ํฌ๋ฃจ์–ดํ•œ์œผ๋กœ ๋Œ๊ณ  ๊ฐ„๋‹ค. ํฌ๋ฃจ์–ดํ•œ์— ๋Œ์•„์˜จ ๋ฉ”๋ธŒ๋Š” ๋ˆ ์ฟ ์–ผ๋ฆ‰๊ฑฐ์™€ ํ•€๋ฒ ๋‚˜ํฌ๋ฅผ ์‹ธ์›€ ๋ถ™์ด๊ณ , ๊ฒฉ๋ ฌํ•œ ์†Œ์‹ธ์›€ ๋์— ๋ˆ ์ฟ ์–ผ๋ฆ‰๊ฑฐ๊ฐ€ ํ•€๋ฒ ๋‚˜ํฌ๋ฅผ ์ฃฝ์ธ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ๋ˆ ์ฟ ์–ผ๋ฆ‰๊ฑฐ๋„ ์น˜๋ช…์ƒ์„ ์ž…๊ณ  ์—๋ฆฐ ์„ฌ ๊ณณ๊ณณ์„ ๋– ๋Œ์•„๋‹ค๋‹ˆ๋‹ค ์ž๊ธฐ ๊ณ ํ–ฅ ์ฟ ์–ผ๋ฆ‰๊ฑฐ์— ๋‹ค๋‹ค๋ผ ์“ฐ๋Ÿฌ์ ธ ์ฃฝ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ถœ์ „ ใ€Œ์ฟ ์–ผ๋ฆ‰๊ฑฐ์˜ ์†Œ๋„๋‘‘ใ€์€ ์„ธ ๊ฐœ ํŒ๋ณธ์ด ๋ณด์กด๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ œ1ํŒ๋ณธ์€ 11์„ธ๊ธฐ ๋ง-12์„ธ๊ธฐ ์ดˆ์— ์“ฐ์—ฌ์ง„ ใ€ŽํšŒ๊ฐˆ์ƒ‰ ์•”์†Œ์˜ ์„œใ€, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  14์„ธ๊ธฐ์— ์“ฐ์ธ ใ€Ž๋ผ์นธ์˜ ํ™ฉ์ƒ‰์„œใ€์— ๋ณด์กด๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋‘ ์ฑ…์— ๋ณด์กด๋œ ๋‚ด์šฉ์€ ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋ถˆ์™„์ „ํ•œ๋ฐ, ๋‘˜์„ ์กฐํ•ฉํ•˜๋ฉด ์ „์ฒด ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ์™„์„ฑ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ œ2ํŒ๋ณธ์€ 12์„ธ๊ธฐ์— ์“ฐ์ธ ใ€Ž๋ผ๊ธด์˜ ์„œใ€์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ œ3ํŒ๋ณธ์€ ๋ถˆ์™„์ „๋ณธ์ด๋ฉฐ, 12์„ธ๊ธฐ์˜ ํ•„์‚ฌ๋ณธ ํŒŒํŽธ๋“ค์— ์‹ค๋ ค ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ณด์กด๋œ ๋ฌธํ—Œ๋“ค์˜ ์‹œ๊ธฐ๋Š” ์ด๋ ‡์ง€๋งŒ, ใ€Œ์ฟ ์–ผ๋ฆ‰๊ฑฐ์˜ ์†Œ๋„๋‘‘ใ€ ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ๋Š” 8์„ธ๊ธฐ๊ฒฝ์— ์ด๋ฏธ ์™„์„ฑ๋˜์–ด ์ดํ›„ 12์„ธ๊ธฐ์— ์ฑ„๋ก๋  ๋•Œ๊นŒ์ง€ ๊ตฌ์ „๋œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์—ฌ๊ฒจ์ง„๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์•„์ผ๋žœ๋“œ ์‹ ํ™” (์–ผ์Šคํ„ฐ ๋Œ€๊ณ„) ์ค‘์„ธ ๋ฌธํ•™ ์•„์ผ๋žœ๋“œ๋ฅผ ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฝ์œผ๋กœ ํ•œ ์ž‘ํ’ˆ ์ž‘์ž ๋ฏธ์ƒ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T%C3%A1in%20B%C3%B3%20C%C3%BAailnge
Tรกin Bรณ Cรบailnge
(Modern ; "the driving-off of the cows of Cooley"), commonly known as The Tรกin or less commonly as The Cattle Raid of Cooley, is an epic from Irish mythology. It is often called "The Irish Iliad", although like most other early Irish literature, the Tรกin is written in prosimetrum, i.e. prose with periodic additions of verse composed by the characters. The Tรกin tells of a war against Ulster by Queen Medb of Connacht and her husband King Ailill, who intend to steal the stud bull Donn Cuailnge. Due to a curse upon the king and warriors of Ulster, the invaders are opposed only by the young demigod, Cรบ Chulainn. The Tรกin is traditionally set in the 1st century in a pagan heroic age, and is the central text of a group of tales known as the Ulster Cycle. It survives in three written versions or "recensions" in manuscripts of the 12th century and later, the first a compilation largely written in Old Irish, the second a more consistent work in Middle Irish, and the third an Early Modern Irish version. The Tรกin has been influential on Irish literature and culture. It is often considered Ireland's national epic. Synopsis The Tรกin is preceded by a number of remscรฉla, or pre-tales, which provide background on the main characters and explain the presence of certain characters from Ulster in the Connacht camp, the curse that causes the temporary inability of the remaining Ulstermen to fight and the magic origins of the bulls Donn Cuailnge and Finnbhennach. The eight remscรฉla chosen by Thomas Kinsella for his 1969 translation are sometimes taken to be part of the Tรกin itself, but come from a variety of manuscripts of different dates. Several other tales exist which are described as remscรฉla to the Tรกin, some of which have only a tangential relation to it. The first recension begins with Ailill and Medb assembling their army in Cruachan; the purpose of this military build-up is taken for granted. The second recension adds a prologue in which Ailill and Medb compare their respective wealths and find that the only thing that distinguishes them is Ailill's possession of the phenomenally fertile bull Finnbhennach, who had been born into Medb's herd but scorned being owned by a woman so decided to transfer himself to Ailill's. Medb determines to get the equally potent Donn Cuailnge from Cooley to equal her wealth with her husband. She successfully negotiates with the bull's owner, Dรกire mac Fiachna, to rent the animal for a year. However, her messengers, while drunk, reveal that Medb intends to take the bull by force if she is not allowed to borrow him. The deal breaks down, and Medb raises an army, including Ulster exiles led by Fergus mac Rรณich and other allies, and sets out to capture Donn Cuailnge. The men of Ulster are disabled by an apparent illness, the ces noรญnden (literally "debility of nine (days)", although it lasts several months). A separate tale explains this as the curse of the goddess Macha, who imposed it after being forced by the king of Ulster to race against a chariot while heavily pregnant. The only person fit to defend Ulster is seventeen-year-old Cรบ Chulainn, and he lets the army take Ulster by surprise because he is off on a tryst when he should be watching the border. Cรบ Chulainn, assisted by his charioteer Lรกeg, wages a guerrilla campaign against the advancing army, then halts it by invoking the right of single combat at fords, defeating champion after champion in a stand-off lasting months. However, he is unable to prevent Medb from capturing the bull. Cรบ Chulainn is both helped and hindered by supernatural figures from the Tuatha Dรฉ Danann. Before one combat the Morrรญgan, the goddess of war, visits him in the form of a beautiful young woman and offers him her love, but Cรบ Chulainn spurns her. She then reveals herself and threatens to interfere in his next fight. She does so, first in the form of an eel who trips him in the ford, then as a wolf who stampedes cattle across the ford, and finally as a heifer at the head of the stampede, but in each form, Cรบ Chulainn wounds her. After he defeats his opponent, the Morrรญgan appears to him in the form of an old woman milking a cow, with wounds corresponding to the ones Cรบ Chulainn gave her in her animal forms. She offers him three drinks of milk. With each drink he blesses her, and the blessings heal her wounds. Cรบ Chulainn tells the Morrรญgan that had he known her real identity, he would not have spurned her. After a particularly arduous combat Cรบ Chulain is visited by another supernatural figure, Lug, who reveals himself to be Cรบ Chulainn's father. Lug puts Cรบ Chulainn to sleep for three days while he works his healing arts on him. While Cรบ Chulainn sleeps the youth corps of Ulster come to his aid but are all slaughtered. When Cรบ Chulainn awakes he undergoes a spectacular rรญastrad or "distortion", in which his body twists in its skin and he becomes an unrecognisable monster who knows neither friend nor foe. Cรบ Chulainn launches a savage assault on the Connacht camp and avenges the youth corps sixfold. After this extraordinary incident, the sequence of single combats resumes, although on several occasions Medb breaks the agreement by sending several men against Cรบ Chulainn at once. When Fergus, his foster-father, is sent to fight him, Cรบ Chulainn agrees to yield to him on the condition that Fergus yields the next time they meet. Finally, Medb incites Cรบ Chulainn's foster-brother Ferdiad to enter the fray, with poets ready to mock him as a coward, and offering him the hand of her daughter Finnabair, and her own "friendly thighs" as well. Cรบ Chulainn does not wish to kill his foster-brother and pleads with Ferdiad to withdraw from the fight. There follows a physically and emotionally gruelling three-day duel between the hero and his foster-brother. Cรบ Chulainn wins, killing Ferdiad with the legendary spear, the Gรกe Bolga. Wounded too sorely to continue fighting, Cรบ Chulainn is carried away by the healers of his clan. The debilitated Ulstermen start to rouse, one by one at first, then en masse. King Conchobar mac Nessa vows, that as the sky is above and the Earth is beneath, he will return every cow back to its stall and every abducted woman back to her home. The climactic battle begins. At first, Cรบ Chulainn sits it out, recovering from his wounds. Fergus has Conchobar at his mercy, but is prevented from killing him by Cormac Cond Longas, Conchobar's son and Fergus' foster-son, and in his rage cuts the tops off three hills with his sword. Cรบ Chulainn shrugs off his wounds, enters the fray and confronts Fergus, whom he forces to make good on his promise and yield before him. Fergus withdraws, pulling all his forces off the battlefield. Connacht's other allies panic and Medb is forced to retreat. Cรบ Chulainn comes upon Medb having her period ( "Then it was that the issue of blood came upon Medb" ). She pleads for her life and he not only spares her, but guards her retreat. Medb brings Donn Cuailnge back to Connacht, where the bull fights Finnbhennach, kills him, but is mortally wounded, and wanders around Ireland dropping pieces of Finnbhennach off his horns and thus creating placenames before finally returning home to die of exhaustion. Text Oral tradition The Tรกin is believed to have its origin in oral storytelling and to have only been written down during the Middle Ages. Although Romanas Bulatovas believes that the Tรกin was originally composed at Bangor Abbey between 630 and 670 AD, there is evidence that it had a far older oral history long before anything was written down. For example, the poem Conailla Medb michuru ("Medb enjoined illegal contracts") by Luccreth moccu Chiara, dated to , tells the story of Fergus mac Rรณich's exile with Ailill and Medb, which the poet describes as having come from sen-eolas ("old knowledge"). Two further 7th-century poems also allude to elements of the story: in Verba Scรกthaige ("Words of Scรกthach"), the warrior-woman Scรกthach prophesies Cรบ Chulainn's combats at the ford; and Ro-mbรกe laithi rordu rind ("We had a great day of plying spear-points"), attributed to Cรบ Chulainn himself, refers to an incident in the Boyhood Deeds section of the Tรกin. The high regard in which the written account was held is suggested by a ninth-century triad, that associated the Tรกin with the following wonders: "that the cuilmen [apparently a name for Isidore of Seville's Etymologiae] came to Ireland in its stead; the dead relating it to the living, viz. Fergus mac Rรณich reciting it to Ninnรญne the poet at the time of Cormac mac Faelรกin; one year's protection to him to whom it is related." Various versions of the epic have been collected from the oral tradition over the centuries since the earliest accounts were written down. Most recently, a version of the Tรกin was taken down in Scottish Gaelic by folklore collector Calum Maclean from the dictation of Angus Beag MacLellan, a tenant farmer and seanchaidh from South Uist, in the Outer Hebrides. A transcription was published in 1959. Manuscripts Despite the date of the surviving manuscripts, a version of the Tรกin may have been put to writing already in the eighth century. Tรกin Bรณ Cรบailnge has survived in three recensions. The first consists of a partial text in Lebor na hUidre (the "Book of the Dun Cow"), a late 11th-/early 12th-century manuscript compiled in the monastery at Clonmacnoise, and another partial text of the same version in the 14th-century manuscript called the Yellow Book of Lecan. These two sources overlap, and a complete text can be reconstructed by combining them. This recension is a compilation of two or more earlier versions, indicated by the number of duplicated episodes and references to "other versions" in the text. Many of the episodes are superb, written in the characteristic terse prose of the best Old Irish literature, but others are cryptic summaries, and the whole is rather disjointed. Parts of this recension can be dated from linguistic evidence to the 8th century, and some of the verse passages may be even older. The second recension is found in the 12th-century manuscript known as the Book of Leinster. This appears to have been a syncretic exercise by a scribe who brought together the Lebor na hUidre materials and unknown sources for the Yellow Book of Lecan materials to create a coherent version of the epic. While the result is a satisfactory narrative whole, the language has been modernised into a much more florid style, with all of the spareness of expression of the earlier recension lost in the process. The Book of Leinster version ends with a colophon in Latin which says: An incomplete third recension is known from twelfth-century fragments. In translation and adaptation 19th century translations of the work include Bryan O'Looney's translation made in the 1870s, as Tain Bo Cualnge, based on the Book of Leinster in Trinity College Library, Dublin. John O'Daly's also translated the work in 1857, but it is considered a poor translation. No published translation of the work was made until the early 20th century โ€“ the first English translation was provided L. Winifred Faraday in 1904, based on the Lebor na hUidre and the Yellow Book of Lecan; a German translation by Ernst Windisch was published at around the same time based on the Book of Leinster. Translated sections of the text had been published in the late 19th century, including one from on the Book of Leinster by Standish Hayes O'Grady in The Cuchullin Saga (ed. Eleanor Hull, 1898), as well as extracts, and introductory text. Lady Gregory's Cuchulain of Muirthemne (1903) also contains a paraphrased version of the tale. There were also several works based on the tale published in the very late 19th and early 20th century often with a focus on the hero Cรบ Chulainn, such as Cuchulain, the Hound of Ulster (E.Hull, 1911); Dun Dealgan, Cuchulain's Home Fort (H.G. Tempest, 1910); Cuchulain of Muirtheimhne (A.M. Skelly, 1908); The Coming of Cuculain (S. O'Grady, 1894); and several others; additionally a number of prose works from the same period took the tale as basis or inspiration, including works by W.B. Yeats, Aubrey Thomas de Vere, Alice Milligan, George Sigerson, Samuel Ferguson, Charles Leonard Moore, Fiona Macleod, as well as ballad versions from Scotland. Peadar Ua Laoghaire adapted the work as a closet drama, serialized in the Cork Weekly Examiner (1900โ€“1). In 1914 Joseph Dunn authored an English translation The Ancient Irish Epic Tale Tรกin Bรณ Cรบalnge based primarily on the Book of Leinster. Cecile O'Rahilly published academic editions/translations of both recensions, Tรกin Bรณ Cรบalnge from the Book of Leinster (1967), and Tรกin Bรณ Cรบailnge Recension 1 (1976), as well as an edition of the later Stowe Version, The Stowe version of Tรกin Bรณ Cuailnge (1961). two translations by Irish poets are available in mass-market editions: Thomas Kinsella's The Tรกin (1969) and Ciarรกn Carson's The Tรกin (2007). Both are based primarily on the first recension with passages added from the second, although they differ slightly in their selection and arrangement of material. Kinsella's translation is illustrated by Louis le Brocquy (see Louis le Brocquy Tรกin illustrations) and also contains translations of a selection of remscรฉla. Victorian era adapters omitted some aspects of the tale, either for political reasons relating to Irish Nationalism, or to avoid offending the sensibilities of their readers with bodily functions or sex. , focusing on translations and adaptation of "The Tรกin", analysed how 19th- and 20th-century writers used the original texts in creating Irish myths as part of the process of decolonization (from the United Kingdom), and so redacted elements that did not show Cuchulain in a suitably heroic light. Not only was sex, and bodily functions removed, but also humor. The version by took on a more 'folkish' aspect, whereas in O'Grady's version (see ) the protagonists more resembled chivalrous medieval knights. Several writers bowdlerized the source: for example the naked women sent to attempt to placate Cรบ Chulainn were omitted by most adapters of the Victorian period, or their nakedness reduced. Others interpreted the tale to their own ends - One of Peadar Ua Laoghaire's adaptations of the work, the play "Mรฉibh", included a temperance message, blaming the conflict over the bull on the drunkenness of the Connacht messengers. In Ua Laoghaire's serialization Medb retains her role as a powerful woman, but her sexuality, exploitation of her daughter Fionnabhair, and references to menstruation are heavily euphemized. Slightly later works such as Stories from the Tรกin and the derived Giolla na Tรกna were more accurate. The version by is considered to be the first (English) translation that accurately included both grotesque and sexual aspects of the tale; however the German translation by is considered to be complete, and lacks alterations and omissions due to conflicts of interests in the mind of contemporary Irish scholars. Remscรฉla The story of the Tรกin relies on a range of independently transmitted back-stories, known as remscรฉla ('fore-tales'). Some may in fact have been composed independently of the Tรกin and subsequently linked with it later in their transmission. As listed by Ruairรญ ร“ hUiginn, they are: De Faillsigud Tรกna Bรณ Cuailnge (How the Tรกin Bรณ Cuailnge was found), recounting how the story of the Tรกin was lost and recovered. Tรกin Bรณ Regamna (The cattle raid of Regamain) Tรกin Bรณ Regamon (The cattle raid of Regamon) Tรกin Bรณ Fraรญch ('The cattle Raid of Froech'): Froech mac Idaith is a Connacht warrior, killed by Cรบ Chulainn in the Tรกin; this tale gives him some back-story. Tรกin Bรณ Dartada (The cattle raid of Dartaid) Tรกin Bรณ Flidhais ('The cattle raid of Flidais'), a relatively late story drawing on older material Echtrae Nerai ('The Adventure of Nera') Aislinge Oengusa ('The Dream of Oengus'). Oengus Mac ind ร“c, son of the Dagda has no part in the Tรกin Bรณ Cรบailnge as we have it, but this tale relates how the otherworld woman Caer Ibormeith came to him in a vision how Oengus found her through the aid of Medb and Ailill. According to the story, this is why he helped them in their cattle-raid. Compert Con Culainn ('The Conception of Cรบ Chulainn') De Chophur in Dรก Mucado (Of the cophur of the two swineherds) Fochann Loingsi Fergusa meic Rรณig (The cause of Fergus mac Rรณich's exile), only the beginning of which survives, apparently explaining how Fergus came to be part of the army of Connacht Longas mac nUislenn ('The Exile of the Sons of Uisliu'), explaining how Fergus and various other Ulster exiles came to be in the army of Connacht Tochmarc Ferbe (The wooing of Ferb). Ces Ulad (The debility of the Ulstermen), not actually considered one of the remscรฉla, but providing an important account of why Macha curses the Ulaid: they made her race against the king's horses while she was pregnant. The tale's primary purpose, however, is to provide an etiology for the place-name Emain Machae. Cultural influence See Irish mythology in popular culture In 2004, indie rock band The Decemberists released a five-part single named The Tain, which recounts loosely the story of Tรกin Bรณ Cรบailnge. See also Tรกin Bรณ Tรกin Bรณ Flidhais References Bibliography , a paraphrase of the tale and others based on an oral translation , in Roman type with English introduction and glossary , in Gaelic type, same text as Texts and Translations , with illustrations by John Patrick Campbell Translation Translation : Further reading Gene C. Haley, Places in the Tรกin: The Topography of the 'Tรกin Bรณ Cรบailnge' Mapped and Globally Positioned (2012-). External links Timeless Myths: Ulaid Cycle Tรกin Bรณ Cรบailnge (Ernst Windisch's Irish transcription & Joseph Dunn's translation) Narratives of the Ulster Cycle Medieval literature Early Irish literature Irish-language literature Texts in Irish Ireland in fiction
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2007๋…„ ๋„์ฟ„๋„์ง€์‚ฌ ์„ ๊ฑฐ()๋Š” ์ œ16ํšŒ ํ†ต์ผ์ง€๋ฐฉ์„ ๊ฑฐ์˜ ์ผํ™˜์œผ๋กœ 2007๋…„ 4์›” 8์ผ์— ์‹ค์‹œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ํ˜„์ง ๋„์ง€์‚ฌ์ธ ์ด์‹œํ•˜๋ผ ์‹ ํƒ€๋กœ๊ฐ€ 3์„ ์— ์„ฑ๊ณตํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์ •๋ณด ๊ณ ์‹œ์ผ 2007๋…„ 3์›” 22์ผ ํˆฌํ‘œ์ผ 2007๋…„ 4์›” 8์ผ ์ž„๊ธฐ ๊ฐœ์‹œ์ผ 2007๋…„ 4์›” 23์ผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์‹ค์‹œ๋œ ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๋„์ฟ„๋„์˜ํšŒ ์˜์› ์žฌ๋ณด๊ถ์„ ๊ฑฐ (3์›” 30์ผ ๊ณ ์‹œ) ์•„๋‹ค์น˜๊ตฌ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ตฌ (๊ณค๋„ ์•ผ์š”์ด์˜ ์•„๋‹ค์น˜ ๊ตฌ์ฒญ์žฅ ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์ถœ๋งˆ์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅธ ์‚ฌ์ง) ๊ณ ํ† ๊ตฌ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ตฌ (์•ผ๋งˆ์žํ‚ค ๋‹ค์นด์•„ํ‚ค์˜ ๊ณ ํ†  ๊ตฌ์ฒญ์žฅ ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์ถœ๋งˆ์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅธ ์‚ฌ์ง) ์—๋„๊ฐ€์™€๊ตฌ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ตฌ (์˜ค๋‹ˆ์‹œ ํžˆ๋ฐ์˜ค์˜ ์ œ21ํšŒ ์ฐธ์˜์› ์˜์› ํ†ต์ƒ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์ถœ๋งˆ์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅธ ์‚ฌ์ง) ์˜คํƒ€๊ตฌ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ตฌ (๋งˆ์“ฐ๋ฐ”๋ผ ๋‹ค๋‹ค์š”์‹œ์˜ ์˜คํƒ€ ๊ตฌ์ฒญ์žฅ ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์ถœ๋งˆ์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅธ ์‚ฌ์ง) ์ดํƒ€๋ฐ”์‹œ๊ตฌ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ตฌ (์‚ฌ์นด๋ชจํ†  ๊ฒ์˜ ์ดํƒ€๋ฐ”์‹œ ๊ตฌ์ฒญ์žฅ ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์ถœ๋งˆ์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅธ ์‚ฌ์ง) ์„ธํƒ€๊ฐ€์•ผ๊ตฌ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ตฌ (์‚ฌ์ฟ ๋ผ์ด ๋ฃŒ๋…ธ์Šค์ผ€์˜ ์‚ฌ๋ง) ๋งˆ์น˜๋‹ค์‹œ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ตฌ (๋งˆํ‚ค ์‹œ๊ฒŒ๋ฃจ์˜ ๋งˆ์น˜๋‹ค ์‹œ์žฅ ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์ถœ๋งˆ์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅธ ์‚ฌ์ง) ์บ์น˜ํ”„๋ ˆ์ด์ฆˆ ๋„์ฟ„์˜ ๋ฏธ๋ž˜๋Š” ๋‚ด๊ฐ€ ์ •ํ•œ๋‹ค() ์„ ๊ฑฐ ํ™๋ณด ๋Œ€์‚ฌ ์ด์ฃผ์ธ ํžˆ์นด๋ฃจ (ํƒค๋ŸฐํŠธ) ์นด์‹œ์ด ์œ ์šฐ (์—ฌ๋ฐฐ์šฐ) ์ฃผ์š” ์Ÿ์  2016๋…„ ํ•˜๊ณ„ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ์˜ ๋„์ฟ„ ์œ ์น˜ ๋ฌธ์ œ ํ˜„์ง ์ด์‹œํ•˜๋ผ ๋„์ง€์‚ฌ๋Š” 2006๋…„, ํ•˜๊ณ„ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ์œ ์น˜ ๊ณ„ํš์„ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ•˜๊ณ  ๋„์ฟ„๋„์˜ํšŒ์˜ ๊ฒฐ์˜๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์•„ ๋„์ฟ„๋„์ฒญ ๋‚ด์— ์œ ์น˜ ๋ณธ๋ถ€๋ฅผ ์„ค์น˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ ์ผ๋ณธ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ์œ„์›ํšŒ์˜ ๊ตญ๋‚ด ํ›„๋ณด์ง€ ์„ ์ • ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๊ฑฐ์ณ ํ›„์ฟ ์˜ค์นด์‹œ๊ฐ€ ํƒˆ๋ฝํ•˜๊ณ  ๋„์ฟ„๊ฐ€ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ๊ฐœ์ตœ์ง€ ํ›„๋ณด๋กœ ์„ ์ •๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ๋“ฑ ์•ผ๊ถŒ์—์„œ ์œ ์น˜ ๋น„์šฉ์ด ๋„ˆ๋ฌด ๋ง‰๋Œ€ํ•˜๊ณ  ๋„์‹œ ๊ธฐ๋ฐ˜ ์ •๋น„์— ์‹œ๊ฐ„์ด ๋ถ€์กฑํ•˜๋‹ค๋Š” ์ด์œ ๋กœ ์œ ์น˜๋ฅผ ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์Ÿ์  ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด์‹œํ•˜๋ผ ์‹ ํƒ€๋กœ ๋„์ฟ„๋„์ง€์‚ฌ์˜ ๋„์ • ์šด์˜์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ํ‰๊ฐ€ ๋„์ง€์‚ฌ ์žฅ๊ธฐ ์žฌ์ž„์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•œ ํํ˜œ : ์ด์‹œํ•˜๋ผ๋Š” ๊ฐ€์กฑ ์ฑ„์šฉ ๋น„๋ฆฌ์™€ ๊ณ ์•ก์˜ ์ถœ์žฅ๋น„๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ด์šฉํ•œ ํ˜์˜๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ˜(ๅ) ์ด์‹œํ•˜๋ผํŒŒ์—์„œ๋Š” ์ด๋ฅผ ๋„์ง€์‚ฌ ์žฅ๊ธฐ ์žฌ์ž„์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•œ ํํ•ด์ธ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณด์•˜๋‹ค. ์ •๋ณด ๊ณต๊ฐœ ๋ฌธ์ œ : ๋„์ฟ„๋„๋Š” "์ „๊ตญ ์‹œ๋ฏผ ์˜ด๋ถ€์ฆˆ๋งŒ ์—ฐ๋ฝ ํšŒ์˜"์—์„œ ์ž‘์„ฑํ•œ "์ „๊ตญ ์ •๋ณด ๊ณต๊ฐœ๋„ ๋žญํ‚น"์—์„œ ํ•˜์œ„๊ถŒ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๊ณ  ์ด๋Š” ์ด์‹œํ•˜๋ผ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋„์ • ํ‰๊ฐ€์˜ ์Ÿ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ด์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํ›„๋ณด๋“ค์€ ๋‹น์„ ์‹œ ์ ๊ทน์ ์ธ ์ •๋ณด ๊ณต๊ฐœ๋ฅผ ์•ฝ์†ํ–ˆ๊ณ  ์ด์‹œํ•˜๋ผ๋„ ๊ณต์•ฝ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ์ •๋ณด ๊ณต๊ฐœ ๊ณ„ํš์„ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ •์น˜์  ๋ฐœ์–ธ : ์ด์‹œํ•˜๋ผ์˜ ์ •์น˜์  ๋ฐœ์–ธ, ํŠนํžˆ ๋ณด์ˆ˜์ ์ด๊ณ  ์šฐ์ต์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐ›์•„๋“ค์—ฌ์งˆ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ฐœ์–ธ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด์„œ ์ขŒ์ต ์„ฑํ–ฅ ์‹œ๋ฏผ ๋‹จ์ฒด ๋ฐ "ํŠน์ • ์•„์‹œ์•„(๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ, ์กฐ์„ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ์ฃผ์˜์ธ๋ฏผ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ, ์ค‘ํ™”์ธ๋ฏผ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ)" ๋‚˜๋ผ๋“ค์˜ ๋ฐ˜๋ฐœ์ด ์ปค์ง„ ์ƒํ™ฉ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹น์‹œ ์ง„ํ–‰ ์ค‘์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ๊ตญ๊ธฐยท๊ตญ๊ฐ€(ๅœ‹ๆญŒ) ์†Œ์†ก ๋“ฑ์„ ๋‘˜๋Ÿฌ์‹ธ๊ณ  ์•„์‚ฌ๋…ธ ์‹œ๋กœ๋Š” "์ผ๋ณธ์ธ์ด ๊ตญ๊ธฐ์™€ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€(ๅœ‹ๆญŒ)์— ๊ฒฝ์˜๋ฅผ ํ‘œํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ๋‹น์—ฐํ•˜๋‹ค"๋ฉด์„œ๋„ ์ด์‹œํ•˜๋ผ์˜ "๊ทผ๋ฆฐ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€" ๋ฐœ์–ธ ๋“ฑ ๊ณผ๊ฒฉํ•œ ๋ฐœ์–ธ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด์„œ๋Š” "์ด์›ƒ ๋‚˜๋ผ์˜ ์š•์„ ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ์ข‹์ง€ ์•Š๋‹ค"๋ฉฐ ๋น„ํŒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์š”์‹œ๋‹ค ๋งŒ์กฐ๋Š” "ํ˜„์žฌ์˜ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€(ๅœ‹ๆญŒ)๋Š” ์นจ๋žต์ „์Ÿ๊ณผ ์ฒœํ™ฉ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ฐœ์ธ ์ˆญ๋ฐฐ์˜ ์ƒ์ง•"์ด๋ผ๋ฉฐ ๊ธฐ๋ฏธ๊ฐ€์š” ์ž์ฒด์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ๋ถ€์ •์ ์ธ ์ž…์žฅ์„ ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. ์“ฐํ‚ค์ง€ ์‹œ์žฅ์„ ๊ณ ํ† ๊ตฌ ๋„์š”์Šค ์ง€์—ญ์œผ๋กœ ์ด์ „ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฌธ์ œ ์“ฐํ‚ค์ง€ ์‹œ์žฅ์„ ์ฃผ์˜ค๊ตฌ ์“ฐํ‚ค์ง€์—์„œ ๊ณ ํ† ๊ตฌ ๋„์š”์Šค๋กœ ์ด์ „ํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” "๋„์š”์Šค ์‹ ์‹œ์žฅ ๊ธฐ๋ณธ ๊ณ„ํš"์ด 2004๋…„์— ๋ฐœํ‘œ๋˜์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด์ „์ด ์˜ˆ์ •๋œ ๋ถ€์ง€์—์„œ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€ ํ™˜๊ฒฝ ๊ธฐ์ค€์„ ํฌ๊ฒŒ ์›ƒ๋„๋Š” ์œ ํ•ด ๋ฌผ์งˆ์ด ๊ฒ€์ถœ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ์กฐ์‚ฌ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๊ฐ€ ๋‚˜์˜ค์ž, ์‹œ์žฅ ์ด์ „ ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ํŒŒ๋“ค์˜ ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ ๋ช…๋ถ„์ด ์ƒ๊ฒจ๋‚˜๋ฉด์„œ ์ฐฌ์„ฑํŒŒ์™€ ํฌ๊ฒŒ ๋Œ€๋ฆฝํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์Ÿ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋– ์˜ฌ๋ž๋‹ค. ์ด์‹œํ•˜๋ผ๋Š” ๋‹น์ดˆ ์ด์ „ ์˜ˆ์ • ๋ถ€์ง€์˜ ํ† ์–‘์„ ๋ชจ๋‘ ๊ต์ฒดํ•  ๊ฒƒ์ด๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ํฐ ๋ฌธ์ œ๊ฐ€ ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ฐํ˜”์ง€๋งŒ, ์ดํ›„ ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ํŒŒ๋“ค์˜ ๋ฐ˜๋ฐœ์ด ๊ฑฐ์„ธ์ง€์ž "์ „๋ฌธ๊ฐ€์˜ ์˜๊ฒฌ์„ ์ฐธ๊ณ ํ•ด ๊ฒฐ์ •ํ•˜๊ฒ ๋‹ค"๋Š” ์‹ ์ค‘ํ•œ ์ž…์žฅ์œผ๋กœ ์„ ํšŒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ๊ธฐํƒ€ 1991๋…„ ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์ดํ›„๋กœ ๋„์ฟ„๋„์ง€์‚ฌ ์„ ๊ฑฐ์—์„œ ์ •๋‹น์˜ ์ถ”์ฒœ ๋ฐ ์ง€์ง€๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์€ ํ›„๋ณด๋Š” ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋‚™์„ ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ด์‹œํ•˜๋ผ ํ˜„ ๋„์ง€์‚ฌ ์—ญ์‹œ ๋ณด์ˆ˜์  ์„ฑํ–ฅ์˜ ์ •์น˜์ธ์ž„์—๋„ 1999๋…„ ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๋ฐ 2003๋…„ ์„ ๊ฑฐ์—์„œ๋„ ์ž๋ฏผ๋‹น์˜ ์ง€์›์„ ๋ฐ›์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜(๊ณต์‹ ์ง€์›์€ ์—†์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ๋‹น ์ง€๋„๋ถ€ ์ฐจ์›์˜ ์ง€์ง€ ์„ฑ๋ช…์€ ์žˆ์—ˆ์Œ), ์ด๋ฒˆ ์„ ๊ฑฐ์—์„œ๋Š” ์žฅ๋‚จ ์ด์‹œํ•˜๋ผ ๋…ธ๋ถ€ํ…Œ๋ฃจ๊ฐ€ ์ž๋ฏผ๋‹น์˜ ๋„์ฟ„๋„ ์ง€์—ญํšŒ์žฅ์„ ๋งก๊ณ  ์žˆ์Œ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ๋น„๋กœ์†Œ ์ž๋ฏผ๋‹น์˜ ์ง€์›์„ ๋ฐ›์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์€ ํ•ด 7์›”๋กœ ์˜ˆ์ •๋œ ์ œ21ํšŒ ์ฐธ์˜์› ์˜์› ํ†ต์ƒ์„ ๊ฑฐ๋ฅผ ์•ž๋‘๊ณ  ์ž๋ฏผ๋‹น๊ณผ ๋Œ€๋ฆฝ๊ฐ์„ ์„ธ์šฐ๋˜ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์ด ์ด๋ฒˆ ๋„์ง€์‚ฌ ์„ ๊ฑฐ์—์„œ ๋…์ž ํ›„๋ณด ์˜น๋ฆฝ์„ ๋ชจ์ƒ‰ํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ๊ฐ„ ๋‚˜์˜คํ† ๋ฅผ ํ›„๋ณด๋กœ ์˜น๋ฆฝํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋‘๊ณ  ๋‹น๋‚ด ํ˜ผ๋ž€์„ ์ดˆ๋ž˜ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋…์ž ํ›„๋ณด ์˜น๋ฆฝ์€ ์‹คํŒจ๋กœ ๋๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ์ตœ์ข…์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์€ ์‚ฌํšŒ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น๊ณผ ์—ฐํ•ฉํ•ด ์•„์‚ฌ๋…ธ ์‹œ๋กœ๋ฅผ ํ›„๋ณด๋กœ ์˜น๋ฆฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์ผ๋ณธ๊ณต์‚ฐ๋‹น์˜ ์ง€์›์„ ๋ฐ›์•„ ์ถœ๋งˆํ•œ ์š”์‹œ๋‹ค ๋งŒ์กฐ์—๊ฒŒ ์•ผ๊ถŒ ํ›„๋ณด ๋‹จ์ผํ™”๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด ์‚ฌํ‡ด๋ฅผ ์ด‰๊ตฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ๋„์ฟ„๋„ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ด€๋ฆฌ์œ„์›ํšŒ ๋„์ฟ„๋„ ๊ณต์‹ ํ™ˆํŽ˜์ด์ง€ 2007๋…„ ์„ ๊ฑฐ 2007๋…„ 4์›” 2007๋…„ ์ผ๋ณธ ๋„์ฟ„๋„์ง€์‚ฌ ์„ ๊ฑฐ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2007%20Tokyo%20gubernatorial%20election
2007 Tokyo gubernatorial election
The 2007 Tokyo Gubernatorial elections were held on April 8, 2007 as part of the 16th unified local elections. There were fourteen candidates, among them the incumbent governor Shintaro Ishihara. Most candidates, with the exception of Kurokawa and Yamaguchi, ran as independents, but some were supported by various parties. Results See also References Asahi News Editorial Trans-Pacific Radio coverage External links CityMayors coverage Video of candidate Koichi Toyama Discussion of 2007 Gubernatorial campaign Regular updates on 2007 Gubernatorial campaign and Japanese politics 2007 elections in Japan Shintaro Ishihara 2007 April 2007 events in Japan 2007 in Tokyo
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EB%AC%B4%EB%9D%BC%EC%B9%B4%EB%AF%B8%20%EB%AC%B4%EB%84%A4%ED%83%80%EC%B9%B4
๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ ๋ฌด๋„คํƒ€์นด
๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ ๋ฌด๋„คํƒ€์นด(, 2000๋…„ 2์›” 2์ผ ~ )๋Š” ์ผ๋ณธ์˜ ํ”„๋กœ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜์ด๋ฉฐ, ํ˜„์žฌ ์„ผํŠธ๋Ÿด ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์ธ ๋„์ฟ„ ์•ผ์ฟ ๋ฅดํŠธ ์Šค์™ˆ๋กœ์Šค์˜ ์†Œ์† ์„ ์ˆ˜(๋‚ด์•ผ์ˆ˜)์ด๋‹ค. ๊ตฌ๋งˆ๋ชจํ† ํ˜„ ๊ตฌ๋งˆ๋ชจํ† ์‹œ ํžˆ๊ฐ€์‹œ๊ตฌ ์ถœ์‹ ์ด๋‹ค. NPB์—์„œ์˜ ์•„์‹œ์•„์ธ ํƒ€์ž, ์ขŒํƒ€์ž๋กœ์„œ์˜ ์‹œ์ฆŒ ์ตœ๋‹ค ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ ๊ธฐ๋ก ๋ณด์œ ์ž(2022๋…„, 56ํ˜ธ, NPB ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์—ญ๋Œ€ 2์œ„), ๋ ˆ์ด์™€ ์‹œ๋Œ€ ์ตœ์ดˆ์ด์ž ์—ญ๋Œ€ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ ํƒ€๊ฒฉ ๋ถ€๋ฌธ 3๊ด€์™•(NPB ์‚ฌ์ƒ 8๋ฒˆ์งธ) ๋‹ฌ์„ฑ์ž๋‹ค. ํ†ต์‚ฐ 100ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ ๋ฐ ์‹œ์ฆŒ 100ํƒ€์  NPB ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ ๊ธฐ๋ก(21์„ธ 7๊ฐœ์›”), ์„ธ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ MVP ์ˆ˜์ƒ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ ๊ธฐ๋ก(21์„ธ), ์‹œ์ฆŒ 40ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ ๊ธฐ๋ก(22์„ธ 6๊ฐœ์›”), ์‹œ์ฆŒ 50 ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ ๊ธฐ๋ก(22์„ธ 7๊ฐœ์›”), ์„ธ๊ณ„ ์ตœ์ดˆ๊ฐ€ ๋˜๋Š” 5์—ฐํƒ€์„ ์—ฐ์† ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ ๊ธฐ๋ก๊ณผ ์—ญ๋Œ€ ์ผ๋ณธ์ธ ๋‹จ์ผ ์‹œ์ฆŒ ์ตœ๋‹ค ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์˜ ์†Œ์œ ์ž์ด๋‹ค. ์š”์‹œ๋ชจํ†  ํฅ์—…๊ณผ ๋งค๋‹ˆ์ง€๋จผํŠธ ๊ณ„์•ฝ์„ ๋งบ๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๋ฌผ ํ”„๋กœ์— ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ€๊ธฐ ์ „ย  ํด๋ŸฝํŒ€์—์„œ ์•ผ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ํ•˜๋˜ ํ˜•์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ 4์‚ด ๋ฌด๋ ต๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์บ์น˜๋ณผ์„ ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋๋‹ค. ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋ฉด ๋ฌด๋„คํƒ€์นด๋Š” ์œ ์น˜์›์— ๋‹ค๋‹ ๋•Œ ํ˜•๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์•ผ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ๋ฐฐ์šฐ๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ๊ณง๋ฐ”๋กœ โ€˜ํ”„๋กœ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ๋˜๊ณ  ์‹ถ๋‹คโ€™๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค.ย ๊ตฌ๋งˆ๋ชจํ†  ์‹œ๋ฆฝ ๋‹ค์ฟ ๋งˆ๋ฏธ๋‚˜๋ฏธ ์ดˆ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต(๊ตฌ๋งˆ๋ชจํ† ์‹œ ํžˆ๊ฐ€์‹œ๊ตฌ)์— ์ž…ํ•™ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ž์‹ ๋„ ํ˜•๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ํด๋ŸฝํŒ€์— ์ž…๋‹จํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋ณธ๊ฒฉ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์•ผ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋๋‹ค. ์ดˆ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต 3ํ•™๋…„ ๋•Œ ์ด๋ฐ ๋ž์ฟ„๊ฐ€ ๊ต์žฅ์„ ๋งก๊ณ , ์ „์ง ํ”„๋กœ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜์˜€๋˜ ์ด๋งˆ์ด ์กฐ์ง€, ๋ฏธํ›„๋„ค ํžˆ๋ฐ์œ ํ‚ค๊ฐ€ ์ง€๋„ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ โ€˜PBA ์•ผํ์ฃผ์ฟ โ€™์— ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ”๋Š”๋ฐ ์•ผํ์ฃผ์ฟ ์˜ ์ฝ”์น˜๋กœ์„œ ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ ์ „ ํ”„๋กœ ์„ ์ˆ˜์ธ ๋งˆ์“ฐ๋‚˜๊ฐ€ ํžˆ๋กœ๋ฏธ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ธ์ฝ”์Šค ์น˜๋Š” ๋ฒ• ๋“ฑ์„ ๋ฐฐ์› ๋‹ค. 4ํ•™๋…„ ๋•Œ์— ์—ฐ์‹ ์•ผ๊ตฌํŒ€ ใ€Š๋‹ค์ฟ ๋งˆ๋ฏธ๋‚˜๋ฏธ ์†Œ์•ผ๊ตฌ ํด๋Ÿฝใ€‹์— ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ€ 6ํ•™๋…„ ๋•Œ ์ „์ง ํ”„๋กœ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜์ธ ์š”์‹œ๋ชจํ†  ๋ฃŒ์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€๊ฐ€ ์ง€๋„ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์‹ ์•ผ๊ตฌํŒ€ ใ€Š๊ตฌ๋งˆ๋ชจํ†  ํžˆ๊ฐ€์‹œ ๋ฆฌํ‹€ ์‹œ๋‹ˆ์–ดใ€‹์— ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ”๋‹ค.ย ๊ตฌ๋งˆ๋ชจํ†  ์‹œ๋ฆฝ ๋‚˜๊ฐ€๋ฏธ๋„ค ์ค‘ํ•™๊ต์— ์ž…ํ•™ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œย 2ํ•™๋…„ ๊ฒจ์šธ์— ๊ทœ์Šˆ ์„ ๋ฐœํŒ€์œผ๋กœ ์ค‘ํ™”๋ฏผ๊ตญ์— ์›์ •๊ฐ”๊ณ ย ๋งˆ์Šค๋‹คย ์Šˆ,ย ๋‹ˆ์‹œ์šฐ๋ผ ํ•˜์•ผํ† ย ๋“ฑ๊ณผ ํŒ€ ๋™๋ฃŒ๊ฐ€ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ทœ์Šˆ๊ฐ€ํ์ธ ๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต์—์„œ๋Š” 1ํ•™๋…„ ๋•Œ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ฃผ์ „ 1๋ฃจ์ˆ˜๋กœ ๊ณ ์ •๋๊ณ  ๊ฐ™์€ ํ•ด(2015๋…„) ํ•˜๊ณ„ ๊ตฌ๋งˆ๋ชจํ†  ๋Œ€ํšŒ์—์„œ ์šฐ์Šน์„ ์ด๋Œ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ๋Œ€ํšŒ์—์„œ๋Š” 4๋ฒˆ ํƒ€์ž๋กœ ๊ธ‰๊ฑฐ ๊ธฐ์šฉ๋ผ ์ฒซ ํƒ€์„์—์„œ ๋งŒ๋ฃจ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ํ„ฐ๋œจ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๋“ฑ์˜ ๋ฐ๋ท”๋ฅผ ์ด๋ค„๋ƒˆ๋‹ค.ย ๊ทธํ•ด ํ•˜๊ณ„ ๊ณ ์‹œ์—” ๋Œ€ํšŒ์— 4๋ฒˆ ํƒ€์ž๋กœ์„œ ์ถœ์ „ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ๋„ ์ด์‹œ์นด์™€ํ˜„์˜ย ์œ ๊ฐ์นธ ๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต๋ฅผย ์ƒ๋Œ€๋กœ ๋ฌด์•ˆํƒ€์— ๊ทธ์ณ ์ฒซ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ํŒจํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1ํ•™๋…„ ๊ฐ€์„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ํฌ์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ๋งก์•„ 2ํ•™๋…„ ์—ฌ๋ฆ„๊ณผ 3ํ•™๋…„ ์—ฌ๋ฆ„ ๋ชจ๋‘ ๊ตฌ๋งˆ๋ชจํ†  ๋Œ€ํšŒ ๊ฒฐ์Šน๊นŒ์ง€ ์ง„์ถœํ•˜์˜€์ง€๋งŒ ๋ชจ๋‘ย ์Šˆ๊ฐ€์ฟ ์นธ ๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต์— ํŒจํ•ด ๊ณ ์‹œ์—”์— ์ถœ์ „ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์€ 1ํ•™๋…„ ์—ฌ๋ฆ„์˜ ํ•œ ์ฐจ๋ก€๋ฟ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค.ย ํ†ต์‚ฐ 52ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๋›ฐ์–ด๋‚œ ์žฅํƒ€๋ ฅ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ผ๋ถ€์—์„  ใ€Šํžˆ๊ณ ์˜ ๋ฒ ์ด๋ธŒ ๋ฃจ์Šคใ€‹๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2ํ•™๋…„ ์„ ๋ฐฐ๋กœ๋Š” ์ด์„ธ ํžˆ๋กœ๋ฌด, 1ํ•™๋…„ ์„ ๋ฐฐ๋กœ๋Š” ์š”์‹œ๋…ธ ๋ฐ๋ฃจํ‚ค๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ํŠนํžˆ ์š”์‹œ๋…ธ์™€๋Š” ๋ฐฐํ„ฐ๋ฆฌ๋„ ๊ตฌ์„ฑํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต 2ํ•™๋…„ ๋•Œ์ธ 2016๋…„์—๋Š” ๊ตฌ๋งˆ๋ชจํ†  ์ง€์ง„์„ ๊ฒฝํ—˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋“œ๋ž˜ํ”„ํŠธ ํšŒ์˜ 2017๋…„ 10์›” 26์ผ์— ์—ด๋ฆด ๋“œ๋ž˜ํ”„ํŠธ ํšŒ์˜๋ฅผ ์•ž๋‘๊ณ  ๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ์— ์ž…์ฐฐํ•œ ๋„์ฟ„ ์•ผ์ฟ ๋ฅดํŠธ ์Šค์™ˆ๋กœ์Šค, ์š”๋ฏธ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ์ž์ด์–ธ์ธ , ๋„ํ˜ธ์ฟ  ๋ผ์ฟ ํ… ๊ณจ๋“ ์ด๊ธ€์Šค ๋“ฑ 3๊ฐœ ๊ตฌ๋‹จ์„ ํฌํ•จํ•œ 7๊ฐœ ๊ตฌ๋‹จ์ด 1์ˆœ์œ„ ์ง€๋ช…์œผ๋กœ ๊ฒฝํ•ฉ์„ ๋ฒŒ์ธ ์™€์„ธ๋‹ค ์‹ค์—…๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต์˜ ๊ธฐ์š”๋ฏธ์•ผ ๊ณ ํƒ€๋กœ(์ถ”์ฒจ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ํ™‹์นด์ด๋„ ๋‹›ํฐํ–„ ํŒŒ์ดํ„ฐ์Šค๊ฐ€ ํ˜‘์ƒ๊ถŒ์„ ํš๋“)์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์ผ๊ฐ์—์„œ๋Š” โ€˜๋™์ชฝ์˜ ๊ธฐ์š”๋ฏธ์•ผ, ์„œ์ชฝ์˜ ๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธโ€™๋ผ๊ณ  ํ‘œํ˜„ํ•  ์ •๋„๋กœ ์ฃผ๋ชฉ์„ ๋ฐ›๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๋“œ๋ž˜ํ”„ํŠธ ํšŒ์˜ ๋‹น์ผ ์ถ”์ฒจ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ๊ธฐ์š”๋ฏธ์•ผ๋ฅผ ์ง€๋ช…ํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•œ ์•ผ์ฟ ๋ฅดํŠธยท์š”๋ฏธ์šฐ๋ฆฌยท๋ผ์ฟ ํ… ๋“ฑ 3๊ฐœ ๊ตฌ๋‹จ์ด ๊ฒฝํ•ฉ์„ ๋ฒŒ์ด๋ฉด์„œ ์ถ”์ฒจ ๋์— ์•ผ์ฟ ๋ฅดํŠธ๊ฐ€ ๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ์˜ ํ˜‘์ƒ๊ถŒ์„ ํš๋“ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ตฌ๋งˆ๋ชจํ† ํ˜„ ์ถœ์‹  ์„ ์ˆ˜์˜ ๋“œ๋ž˜ํ”„ํŠธ 1์ˆœ์œ„ ์ง€๋ช…์€ 2013๋…„ ๋“œ๋ž˜ํ”„ํŠธ ํšŒ์˜์—์„œ ํ•œ์‹  ํƒ€์ด๊ฑฐ์Šค๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 1์ˆœ์œ„์— ์ง€๋ช…๋œ ์ด์™€์‚ฌ๋‹ค ์œ ํƒ€(์š”์ฝ”ํ•˜๋งˆ ์ƒ๊ณผ๋Œ€ํ•™) ์ด๋ž˜์ด๋ฉฐ ๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™์ƒ์œผ๋กœ์„œ๋Š” 2007๋…„์— ์š”๋ฏธ์šฐ๋ฆฌ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ง€๋ช…๋œ ํ›„์ง€๋ฌด๋ผ ๋‹ค์ด์Šค์ผ€(ํ˜„๋ฆฝ ๊ตฌ๋งˆ๋ชจํ†  ๊ณต์—…๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต) ์ด๋ž˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์•ผ์ฟ ๋ฅดํŠธ์˜ ์ง€๋ช…์„ ๋ฐ›์€ ๋’ค ์žฅ๋ž˜์˜ ๋ชฉํ‘œ๋ฅผ ๋ฌป๋Š” ์งˆ๋ฌธ์— โ€œํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ๋ฟ๋งŒ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ผ ํฌ์ƒ ํ”Œ๋ผ์ด์™€ ์ง„๋ฃจํƒ€ ๋“ฑ ์ƒํ™ฉ์— ๋งž๋Š” ํƒ€๊ฒฉ์œผ๋กœ ํŒ€์— ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์„ ์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ๋˜๊ณ  ์‹ถ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์–ธ์  ๊ฐ€๋Š” ์ผ์žฅ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์งŠ์–ด์ง€๊ณ  ์‹ถ๋‹คโ€๋ผ๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 11์›” 12์ผ์— ๊ณ„์•ฝ๊ธˆ 8,000๋งŒ ์—”,ย ์—ฐ๋ด‰ย 720๋งŒ ์—”์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ€๊ณ„์•ฝ์„ ๋งบ์—ˆ๊ณ (๊ธˆ์•ก์€ ์ถ”์ •์น˜) ๋“ฑ๋ฒˆํ˜ธ๋Š”ย 55๋ฒˆ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฒฐ์ •๋๋‹ค. ๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต ์‹œ์ ˆ์˜ ์ˆ˜๋น„ ์œ„์น˜๋Š” ํฌ์ˆ˜์™€ย 1๋ฃจ์ˆ˜์˜€์ง€๋งŒ, ํ”„๋กœ์— ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ„ ํ›„์—๋Š” 3๋ฃจ์ˆ˜๋กœ ์ด๋™๋˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋“ฑ๋ก๋„ ๋‚ด์•ผ์ˆ˜๋กœ์˜ ์ž…๋‹จํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋๋‹ค. 12์›” 22์ผ์—๋Š”ย ์•ผ๋งˆ๋‹ค ๋ฐ์“ฐํ† ์™€ ๋ธ”๋ผ๋””๋ฏธ๋ฅด ๋ฐœ๋ Œํ‹ด์—๊ฒŒ ์ œ์ž๊ฐ€ ๋˜๊ฒ ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. ์•ผ์ฟ ๋ฅดํŠธ ์‹œ๋Œ€ 2018๋…„ 4์›”๋ง ๊ธฐ์ค€์œผ๋กœย 28๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ์ถœ์ „, 4๋ฒˆ ํƒ€์ž ๊ฒธ 3๋ฃจ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œย 2๊ตฐ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์—ย ์„ ๋ฐœ ์ถœ์ „ํ•ด ํƒ€์œจ 0.311, 3ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ, 20ํƒ€์ ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 6์›”์—๋Š” ํƒ€์œจ 0.315, 6ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ, 14ํƒ€์ , 7๊ฐœ์˜ ๋„๋ฃจ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜์—ฌ ์›”๊ฐ„ MVP๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜์ƒํ–ˆ๋‹ค.ย ์•ผ์ฟ ๋ฅดํŠธ์˜ ๊ณ ์กธ ์‹ ์ธ์ด ์›”๊ฐ„ MVP๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜์ƒํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ย 2011๋…„์˜ ์•ผ๋งˆ๋‹ค ๋ฐ์“ฐํ†  ์ด๋ž˜ ์ฒ˜์Œ์ด๋‹ค. 7์›” 12์ผ์— ํ”„๋ ˆ์‰ฌ ์˜ฌ์Šคํƒ€์ „(ํ•˜๋ฃจ์นด ์œ ๋ฉ” ๊ตฌ์žฅ)์—ย 4๋ฒˆ ํƒ€์ž ๊ฒธ 1๋ฃจ์ˆ˜๋กœ ์„ ๋ฐœ ์ถœ์ „ํ•ดย 1์•ˆํƒ€ 1๋„๋ฃจ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 9์›” 16์ผ์— 1๊ตฐ ์Šน๊ฒฉ, ๊ฐ™์€ ๋‚ ย ํžˆ๋กœ์‹œ๋งˆ ๋„์š” ์นดํ”„์ „์—์„œ 6๋ฒˆ ํƒ€์ž ๊ฒธ 3๋ฃจ์ˆ˜๋กœ ์„ ๋ฐœ ์ถœ์ „ํ•ด, 2ํšŒ์—ย ์ฒซ ํƒ€์„์—์„œ ์ฒซ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ 2000๋…„๋Œ€ ์ถœ์ƒ์˜ ์„ ์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ 1๊ตฐ ๊ณต์‹์ „์—์„œ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•œ ์ผ๋ณธ ํ”„๋กœ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ๋Š” ์ด๋‚  ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ๊ด€ํ•ด์„œ โ€œ์ฒซํšŒ์˜ ์—๋Ÿฌ๋ฅผ ๋˜์ฐพ์œผ๋ ค๊ณ  ํƒ€์„์— ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ”๋‹ค. ํ”„๋กœ ์ฒซ ํƒ€์„์ด ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์ด ๋˜์–ด ์ข‹์•˜๋‹คโ€๋ผ๊ณ  ์†Œ๊ฐ์„ ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. ์ฒซ ํƒ€์„ ์ดํ›„์—๋Š” 13ํƒ€์„์—์„œ ๋ฌด์•ˆํƒ€ 2๋ณผ๋„ท์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ทธํ•ด 1๊ตฐ์—์„œ์˜ ์•ˆํƒ€๋Š” ์ด ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์—๋งŒ ๋จธ๋ฌผ๋ €์ง€๋งŒ 2๊ตฐ์—์„œ์˜ ์„ฑ์ ์€ ํƒ€์œจ 0.288, 17ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ, 70ํƒ€์ , 16๋„๋ฃจ์™€ ๊ณ ์กธ ์‹ ์ธ์œผ๋กœ์„œ ๋‚จ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ข‹์€ ์„ฑ์ ์„ ๋ƒˆ๋‹ค.ย 11์›” 27์ผ, 2๊ตฐ์˜ ์ด์Šคํ„ด ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์—์„œ ์šฐ์ˆ˜ ์„ ์ˆ˜์ƒ, ์‹ ์ธ์ƒ, ๋…ธ๋ ฅ์ƒ์— ์„ ์ •๋๋‹ค. ๋‹ค์Œ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ์•ž๋‘๊ณ ๋Š” ์ „๋…„ ๋Œ€๋น„ 5%, 80๋งŒ ์—”์ด ์ƒ์Šนํ•œ ์ถ”์ • ์—ฐ๋ด‰ 800๋งŒ ์—”์œผ๋กœ ๊ณ„์•ฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ ์‹œ๋ฒ” ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋šœ๋ ทํ•œ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๋‚จ๊ฒจ 6๋ฒˆ ํƒ€์ž ๊ฒธ 3๋ฃจ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์ฒซ ๊ฐœ๋ง‰์ „์— ์„ ๋ฐœ ์ถœ์ „ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 19์„ธ 1๊ฐœ์›”์—์„œ์˜ ๊ฐœ๋ง‰์ „ ์„ ๋ฐœ ์ถœ์žฅ์€ 1959๋…„์˜ย ๋‹ˆ์‹œ์˜ค์นด ์„ธ์ดํ‚ค์น˜(๋‹น์‹œ 21์„ธ 10๊ฐœ์›”)์˜ ๊ตฌ๋‹จ ๊ธฐ๋ก์„ ๊ฒฝ์‹ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 5์›” 11์ผ ์š”๋ฏธ์šฐ๋ฆฌ์ „์—์„œ ์–‘๋Œ€ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์ œ ๋„์ž… ์ดํ›„ ์—ญ๋Œ€ 18๋ฒˆ์งธ๊ฐ€ ๋˜๋Š” ๊ณ ์กธ 2๋…„์ฐจ ์ด๋‚ด์—์„œ์˜ ๋‘ ์ž๋ฆฟ์ˆ˜ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์ด ๋˜๋Š” 10ํ˜ธ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ์น˜๊ณ , ํŒ€ 38๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์งธ์—์„œ์˜ ๋„๋‹ฌ์€ ๊ณ ์กธ 2๋…„์ฐจ ์ด๋‚ด์—์„œ๋Š” ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋นจ๋ž๋‹ค. 5์›” 12์ผ ์š”๋ฏธ์šฐ๋ฆฌ์ „์—์„œ ํ”„๋กœ ๋ฐ๋ท” ํ›„ ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ 4๋ฒˆ ํƒ€์ž๋กœ ์ถœ์ „ํ–ˆ๋‹ค.ย 6์›” ์ดํ›„์—๋Š” ์ˆ˜๋น„์˜ ์–ด๋ ค์›€๊ณผย ์‚ฌ์นด๊ตฌ์น˜ ๋„๋ชจํƒ€์นด์˜ ์ดํƒˆ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ๊ฑฐ์˜ 1๋ฃจ์ˆ˜๋กœ ์ถœ์ „ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ฌ์Šคํƒ€์ „์—์„œ๋Š” 3๋ฃจ์ˆ˜ ๋ถ€๋ฌธ์—์„œ ํŒฌ ํˆฌํ‘œ 1์œ„๋กœ ์„ ์ถœ๋ผ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ ๋”๋น„์—๋„ ์ถœ์ „ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 8์›” 12์ผ์˜ DeNA์ „์—์„œ๋Š”ย ์•ผ๋งˆ์‚ฌํ‚ค ์•ผ์Šค์•„ํ‚ค๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 25ํ˜ธ ์—ญ์ „ ๋๋‚ด๊ธฐ 2์  ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ๋•Œ๋ ค๋‚ด๋ฉด์„œ ๋๋‚ด๊ธฐ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์˜ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ ๊ธฐ๋ก์„ ๊ฒฝ์‹ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 8์›” 22์ผ, ๊ณ ์กธ 2๋…„์ฐจ์˜ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ๋Š” ์„ผํŠธ๋Ÿด ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ตœ์ดˆ๊ฐ€ ๋˜๋Š” ์‹œ์ฆŒ 30ํ˜ธ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ์ณค๋‹ค. 9์›” 4์ผ์˜ ํžˆ๋กœ์‹œ๋งˆ์ „์—์„œ์˜ ์ ์‹œํƒ€๋กœ 87ํƒ€์ ์— ๋„๋‹ฌํ•ด ๋‚˜์นด๋‹ˆ์‹œ ํ›„ํ† ์‹œ๊ฐ€ย ๊ธฐ๋กํ•œ ๊ณ ์กธ 2๋…„์ฐจ ์ด๋‚ด ์‹œ์ฆŒ ์ตœ๋‹ค ํƒ€์  ์ผ๋ณธ ๊ธฐ๋ก์„ ๋„˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ 9์›” 21์ผ์— ์‹œ์ฆŒ 36ํ˜ธ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ์น˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋‚˜์นด๋‹ˆ์‹œ ์ดํ›„๊ฐ€ ๋˜๋Š” ๊ณ ์กธ 2๋…„์ฐจ ์ด๋‚ด์— ์žˆ์–ด์„œ์˜ ์‹œ์ฆŒ ์ตœ๋‹ค ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ ์ผ๋ณธ ๊ธฐ๋ก์— ๋„˜์–ด์„ฐ๋‹ค. ์œ„์—์„œ ๋งํ•œ ๋ฐ”์™€ ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ๋Š” ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์ด๋‚˜ ํƒ€์ ๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จํ•œ ์ˆ˜๋งŽ์€ ๊ณ ์กธ 2๋…„์ฐจ ์ด๋‚ด, ๋ฏธ์„ฑ๋…„์—์„œ์˜ ๊ธฐ๋ก์„ ๋ฐ”๊พธ์–ด ์ตœ์ข…์ ์œผ๋กœ ํŒ€๋‚ด ์œ ์ผํ•œ ๊ธฐ๋ก์ด ๋˜๋Š” ์‹œ์ฆŒ ์ „์ฒด 143๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ์ถœ์ „ํ•˜์—ฌ 36ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ, 96ํƒ€์ (์–‘๋Œ€ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 3์œ„)์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•œ ๋ฐ˜๋ฉด, ํƒ€์œจ์€ 0.231๋กœ ๊ทœ์ •๋œ ํƒ€์„์— ๋„๋‹ฌํ•œ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ๋Š” ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ตœ์ € ๊ธฐ๋ก์ด๋‹ค. ์‚ผ์ง„์ˆ˜์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋ฉด 2004๋…„์— ์ด์™€๋ฌด๋ผ ์•„ํ‚ค๋…ธ๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•œ 173๊ฐœ์˜ ์‚ผ์ง„์„ ๋›ฐ์–ด๋„˜๋Š” 184๊ฐœ์˜ ์‚ผ์ง„์„ ๊ธฐ๋ก, ์„ผํŠธ๋Ÿด ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๊ธฐ๋ก ๋ฐ ์ผ๋ณธ์ธ ์„ ์ˆ˜์˜ ์ตœ๋‹ค ๊ธฐ๋ก์„ ๊ฒฝ์‹ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์—ฐ๋ด‰ ํ˜‘์ƒ์—์„œ๋Š” 4,500๋งŒ ์—”(์ „๋…„ ๋Œ€๋น„๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 3700๋งŒ ์—” ์ฆ๊ฐ€)์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์กฐ๊ฑด์œผ๋กœ ๊ณ„์•ฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ๋„ ์œ„์—์„œ ์–ธ๊ธ‰ํ•œ ํ™œ์•ฝ์ƒ์„ ์ธ์ •๋ฐ›์•„ ๊ทธํ•ดย ๋„๋ฃจ์™•์„ ํš๋“ํ•œย ํ•œ์‹ ์˜ย ์ง€์นด๋ชจํ†  ๊ณ ์ง€์—๊ฒŒ 39ํ‘œ ์ฐจ์ด๋ฅผ ์•ž์„œ ๋ฌด๋‚œํ•˜๊ฒŒย ์„ผํŠธ๋Ÿด ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ตœ์šฐ์ˆ˜ ์‹ ์ธ(์‹ ์ธ์™•)์„ ์ˆ˜์ƒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2020๋…„ ํ”„๋กœ 3๋…„์ฐจ๋กœ ๊ฐœ๋ง‰์ „๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 4๋ฒˆ ํƒ€์ž ๊ฒธ 3๋ฃจ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ ๊ธฐ์šฉ๋๋‹ค.ย 6ยท7์›”์€ ํƒ€์œจ 0.339, 6ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ, 37ํƒ€์ ๊ณผ ๊ฐœ๋ง‰ ์ดํ›„์— ์ข‹์€ ์„ฑ์ ์„ ๋‚จ๊ฒจ ๊ตฌ๋‹จ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ์ธ 20์„ธ ๋‚˜์ด์— ์›”๊ฐ„ MVP๋กœ ์„ ์ •๋๋‹ค. ๋˜ 7์›”์— 31ํƒ€์ ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜์—ฌ 1991๋…„ 6์›”ย ํžˆ๋กœ์‚ฌ์™€ ๊ฐ€์“ฐ๋ฏธ๊ฐ€ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•œ ๊ตฌ๋‹จ์˜ ์ผ๋ณธ์ธ ์›”๊ฐ„ ํƒ€์  ๊ธฐ๋ก(29ํƒ€์ )์„ ๊ฒฝ์‹ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 11์›” 5์ผ ํ•œ์‹ ์ „์—์„œ๋Š” 2์ฐจ๋ก€ ์ถœ๋ฃจํ•˜์—ฌ 2๋„๋ฃจ, 3๋„๋ฃจ, ํ™ˆ์Šคํ‹ธ๋กœ ํ•œ ์ด๋‹ ์„ธ ์ฐจ๋ก€ ๋„๋ฃจ์— ์„ฑ๊ณตํ–ˆ๋‹ค.ย ์ตœ์ข…์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ „์ฒด 120๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ์ถœ์ „ํ•ด, ํƒ€์œจ 0.307(๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 5์œ„), 28ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ(๋™ 2์œ„ ํƒ€์ด), 86ํƒ€์ (๋™ 2์œ„), 130์•ˆํƒ€(๋™ 5์œ„), 30๊ฐœ์˜ 2๋ฃจํƒ€(๋™ 2์œ„ ํƒ€์ด)๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์ถœ๋ฃจ์œจ 0.427, ์žฅํƒ€์œจ 0.585, ๋“์ ๊ถŒ ํƒ€์œจ 0.352,ย OPSย 1.012, 87์‚ฌ๊ตฌ๋Š” ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 1์œ„๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜์—ฌ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์ฒซ ํƒ€๊ฒฉ ํƒ€์ดํ‹€์ด ๋˜๋Š”ย ์ตœ๊ณ  ์ถœ๋ฃจ์œจ์„ ํš๋“ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 20์„ธ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์— ์ตœ๊ณ  ์ถœ๋ฃจ์œจ ํš๋“๊ณผ ์ „ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ 4๋ฒˆ ์ถœ์ „์€ ๋ชจ๋‘ ์—ญ๋Œ€ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ ๊ธฐ๋ก์ด ๋˜๋ฉด์„œ 2๋…„ ์—ฐ์† ์ „ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ์ถœ์ „๋„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•œํŽธ, ์‚ผ์ง„ ์ˆ˜๋Š” ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ํ†ฑ์˜ 115๊ฐœ, ์‹ค์ฑ… ์ˆ˜๋Š” ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 2์œ„์˜ 14๊ฐœ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค.ย ์—ฐ๋ด‰ ํ˜‘์ƒ์—์„œ 1์–ต ์—”(์ „๋…„ ๋Œ€๋น„ 5,500๋งŒ ์—” ์ธ์ƒ)์˜ ์กฐ๊ฑด์œผ๋กœ ๊ณ„์•ฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•œํŽธ 4๋…„์ฐจ ๋งŒ์— 1์–ต ์—”์— ๋„๋‹ฌํ•˜์—ฌ ํ›„๋ฃจํƒ€ ์•„์“ฐ์•ผ,ย ์•„์˜คํ‚ค ๋…ธ๋ฆฌ์น˜์นด,ย ์˜ค๊ฐ€์™€ ์•ผ์Šคํžˆ๋กœ๋ฅผ ๋„˜์–ด์„  ๊ตฌ๋‹จ ๋‚ด ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋น ๋ฅธ ํƒ€์ด ๊ธฐ๋ก์ด๋ฉฐ, ๊ตฌ๋‹จ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ ๊ธฐ๋ก์ด๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜๋‹ค. ๋”์šฑ์ด ๊ณ ์กธ 4๋…„์ฐจ์—์„œ์˜ 1์–ต ์—” ๋„๋‹ฌ์€ย ๋‹ค๋‚˜์นด ๋งˆ์‚ฌํžˆ๋กœ,ย ๋‹ค๋ฅด๋น—์Šˆ ์œ ๋ฅผ ๋„˜์–ด์„  ์ผ๋ณธ ํ”„๋กœ ์•ผ๊ตฌ์—์„œ์˜ ์—ญ๋Œ€ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋น ๋ฅธ ํƒ€์ด ๊ธฐ๋ก์ด ๋๋‹ค. 2021๋…„ ์ „๋…„๋„์— ์ด์–ด ์ „ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ 4๋ฒˆ ํƒ€์ž๋ฅผ ๋งก์•„ ์ „๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ์—๋Š” 26ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ(๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 2์œ„), 61ํƒ€์ (๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 3์œ„)์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ›„๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ์—์„œ๋Š” 2ํ•  5ํ‘ผ๋Œ€์˜€๋˜ ํƒ€์œจ์„ ํฌ๊ฒŒ ์˜ฌ๋ฆฌ๋ฉด์„œ ๋‚˜๋ฆ„๋Œ€๋กœ ํž˜์„ ์“ฐ๋Š” ๋“ฑ ํƒ€์ ์„ ์ง€์†์ ์œผ๋กœ ์Œ“์•„๊ฐ€๋ฉฐ ํŒ€์„ ์„ ๋‘ ์ž๋ฆฌ๋กœ ์˜ฌ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์—ญํ• ์„ ๋งก์•˜๋‹ค. 9์›” 19์ผ์—๋Š” ์—ญ๋Œ€ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ๊ฐ€ ๋˜๋Š” 21์„ธ 7๊ฐœ์›”๋กœ ํ†ต์‚ฐ 100ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์— ๋„๋‹ฌํ•ด 1989๋…„์— ๊ธฐ์š”ํ•˜๋ผ ๊ฐ€์ฆˆํžˆ๋กœ๊ฐ€ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•œ 21์„ธ 9๊ฐœ์›”์—์„œ์˜ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑ ๊ธฐ๋ก์„ 32๋…„ ๋งŒ์— ๊ฐˆ์•„์น˜์› ๋‹ค. 10์›”์—๋Š” ๋ถ€์ง„์— ํ—ˆ๋•์ธ ์˜ํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์€ 40ํ˜ธ์— ๋„๋‹ฌํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๊ณ ย ์˜ค์นด๋ชจํ†  ๊ฐ€์ฆˆ๋งˆ(์š”๋ฏธ์šฐ๋ฆฌ)์—๊ฒŒ 1ํƒ€์  ์ฐจ์ด๋กœ ํƒ€์ ์™• ํƒ€์ดํ‹€์„ ๋†“์ณค๋‹ค.ย ๊ทธ๋ž˜๋„ ๋ณธ์ธ์œผ๋กœ์„œ๋Š” ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœย ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์™• ํƒ€์ดํ‹€์„ ์˜ค์นด๋ชจํ† ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ํš๋“ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ณผ๋„ท ์ˆ˜๋Š” 106๊ฐœ๋กœ 2๋…„ ์—ฐ์† ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 1์œ„๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๊ณ  ์ถœ๋ฃจ์œจ๋„ ์ „๋…„๋„์™€ ๋งˆ์ฐฌ๊ฐ€์ง€๋กœ 40%๋ฅผ ๋ŒํŒŒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. OPS๋Š” ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 2์œ„์ธ 0.974๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๊ณ ,ย ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์ฒซ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์šฐ์Šน์— ํฌ๊ฒŒ ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค.ย ์˜ค๋ฆญ์Šค ๋ฒ„ํŽ„๋กœ์Šค์™€ ๋งž๋ถ™์€ย ์ผ๋ณธ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ์—์„œ๋„ ์ „์ฒด 6๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ 4๋ฒˆ ํƒ€์ž์œผ๋กœ ํ’€์ด๋‹ ์ถœ์ „ํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ํŠนํžˆ 1์ฐจ์ „๊ณผ 5์ฐจ์ „์—์„œ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ์ณค๋‹ค. ํŒ€์€ 4์Šน 2ํŒจ์˜ ์„ฑ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ผ๋ณธ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ ์ •์ƒ์— ์˜ค๋ฅด๋ฉด์„œ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์šฐ์Šน์— ๋”ํ•ด ์ผ๋ณธ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ ์šฐ์Šน๋„ ๋™์‹œ์— ๊ฒฝํ—˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์‹œ์ฆŒ ์ข…๋ฃŒ ํ›„์˜ NPB ์‹œ์ƒ์‹์—์„œ๋Š” ์„ผํŠธ๋Ÿด ๋ฆฌ๊ทธย MVP๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜์ƒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 21์„ธ ๋‚˜์ด์˜ ์„ผํŠธ๋Ÿด ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ MVP ์ˆ˜์ƒ์€ 1996๋…„ย ๋งˆ์“ฐ์ด ํžˆ๋ฐํ‚ค(์š”๋ฏธ์šฐ๋ฆฌ)๋ฅผ ์ œ์น˜๊ณ  ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ MVP๋ฅผ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ•˜๋Š” ์˜์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ์•ˆ๊ฒŒ ๋๋‹ค. ์ขŒํƒ€์ž์˜ MVP ์ˆ˜์ƒ์€ ์•ผ์ฟ ๋ฅดํŠธ ๊ตฌ๋‹จ ์—ญ์‚ฌ์ƒย ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋ฅดํ†  ํŽ˜ํƒ€์ง€๋‹ˆย ์ด๋ž˜ 20๋…„ ๋งŒ์˜ ์ผ์ด๋ฉฐ ์ผ๋ณธ์ธ ์ขŒํƒ€์ž๋กœ๋Š”ย ์™€์นด๋งˆ์“ฐ ์“ฐํ† ๋ฌด ์ด๋ž˜ 43๋…„ ๋งŒ์— ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œย ํƒ€์œจ 2ํ• ๋Œ€์—์„œ์˜ MVP ์ˆ˜์ƒ์€ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜ยทํฌ์ˆ˜ ์ด์™ธ์—์„œ๋Š” ์„ผํŠธ๋Ÿด ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ตœ์ดˆ๊ฐ€ ๋๋‹ค. 12์›” 20์ผ, ์—ฐ๋ด‰ ํ˜‘์ƒ์—์„œ 1์–ต 2,000๋งŒ ์—”์ด ์ƒ์Šนํ•œ ์—ฐ๋ด‰ 2์–ต 2,000๋งŒ ์—”์œผ๋กœ ์žฌ๊ณ„์•ฝ์„ ๋งบ์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2022๋…„ 4์›” 2์ผ์˜ DeNA์ „์—์„œ ๋๋‚ด๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์ณค๋‹ค. 5์›” 6, 7์ผ์˜ ์š”๋ฏธ์šฐ๋ฆฌ์ „(๋ชจ๋‘ ๋„์ฟ„๋”)์—์„œ 2๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ์—ฐ์† ๋งŒ๋ฃจ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ์ณค์œผ๋ฉฐ, NPB์—์„œ๋Š” 2018๋…„ ์Šค๊ธฐ๋ชจํ†  ์œ ํƒ€๋กœ ์ดํ›„ ์‚ฌ์ƒ 9๋ฒˆ์งธ, ์„ธ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์—์„œ๋Š” 2006๋…„ ํƒ€์ด๋ก  ์šฐ์ฆˆ ์ดํ›„ ์‚ฌ์ƒ 3๋ฒˆ์งธ๋กœ ์พŒ๊ฑฐ๋ฅผ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ต๋ฅ˜์ „์— ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ„, 5์›” 24์ผ์˜ ํ™‹์นด์ด๋„ ๋‹›ํฐํ–„ ํŒŒ์ดํ„ฐ์Šค์ „(์ง„๊ตฌ ์•ผ๊ตฌ์žฅ)์—์„œ๋Š” ํ‚คํƒ€์•ผ๋งˆ ์ฝ”ํ‚ค๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋๋‚ด๊ธฐ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ, 6์›” 12์ผ ํ›„์ฟ ์˜ค์นด ์†Œํ”„ํŠธ๋ฑ…ํฌ ํ˜ธํฌ์Šค์ „์—์„œ๋Š” ์นด์•ผ๋งˆ ์‹ ์•ผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ, ๊ฒฐ์Šนํƒ€๊ฐ€ ๋˜๋Š” ์—ญ์ „ ๋งŒ๋ฃจ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ์น˜๋Š” ๋“ฑ, ์ „ 18๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ํƒ€์œจ 0.351, 6ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ, 13ํƒ€์ ์˜ ํ™œ์•ฝ์— ์˜ํ•ด, ๊ต๋ฅ˜์ „ MVP์— ๋น›๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ๋˜ 6์›”์€ ํƒ€์œจ 0.410, 14ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ, 35ํƒ€์ ์˜ ์„ฑ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์›”๊ฐ„ MVP๋กœ ์„ ์ •๋๋‹ค. 7์›” 13์ผ ์ฃผ๋‹ˆ์น˜์ „(๋‚˜๊ณ ์•ผ ๋”)์—์„œ ๋‘ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋น ๋ฅธ 30ํ˜ธ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ „๋ฐ˜์ „์„ ํƒ€์œจ 0.312(๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 5์œ„), 33ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ, 89ํƒ€์  (ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ, ํƒ€์ ์€ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ํ†ฑ)์˜ ์„ฑ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ํ›„๋ฐ˜์ „์€ 7์›” 31์ผ ํ•œ์‹  ํƒ€์ด๊ฑฐ์Šค 16์ฐจ์ „(๊ณ ์‹œ์—”)์—์„œ 8์›” 2์ผ ์ฃผ๋‹ˆ์น˜ 14์ฐจ์ „(์ง„๊ตฌ ์•ผ๊ตฌ์žฅ)์— ๊ฑธ์ณ NPB ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ตœ์ดˆ๋กœ 5์—ฐํƒ€์„ ์—ฐ์† ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค(์ƒ์„ธํ›„์ˆ ). 7์›”์€ 8ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ, 17ํƒ€์ , ์žฅํƒ€์œจ 0.742, ์ถœ๋ฃจ์œจ 0.471์˜ ์„ฑ์ ์œผ๋กœ 2๊ฐœ์›” ์—ฐ์† ์›”๊ฐ„ MVP๋กœ ์„ ์ •๋๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ํ›„๋„ ํ˜ธ์กฐ๋Š” ๊ณ„์†๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , 8์›” 5์ผ ๋Œ€ ์š”๋ฏธ์šฐ๋ฆฌ 19์ฐจ์ „(์ง„๊ตฌ ์•ผ๊ตฌ์žฅ)์„ ๋งˆ์นœ ์‹œ์ ์—์„œ 39ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ, 98ํƒ€์ ์€ ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์„ ๋‘, ํƒ€์œจ 0.320์€ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 3์œ„์˜€์ง€๋งŒ, ๊ฐ™์€ 6์ผ์— ํ”ผ๋กœ๊ฐ์„ ํ˜ธ์†Œํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ใ€ŒํŠน๋ก€ 2022ใ€์— ์˜ํ•ด ๋“ฑ๋ก ๋ง์†Œ๋๋‹ค. PCR ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ๋กœ ์Œ์„ฑ ํŒ์ •์„ ๋ฐ›์•„ ๋‹ค์Œ 7์ผ์—๋Š” ์žฌ๋“ฑ๋กํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ์ด์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ 2020๋…„ 6์›” 19์ผ ๋™๋…„ ๊ฐœ๋ง‰์ „๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ณ„์†ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ ๊ตฌ๋‹จ ์ตœ๋‹ค ๊ธฐ๋ก์˜ ์—ฐ์† 4๋ฒˆ ์ถœ์ „์ด 360๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ, ์•„์šธ๋Ÿฌ 2019๋…„ 5์›” 26์ผ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ณ„์†ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ ์—ฐ์† ์„ ๋ฐœ ์ถœ์ „์ด 454๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋กœ, ๊ฐ™์€ ํ•ด ๊ฐœ๋ง‰์ „๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ณ„์†๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ ์—ฐ์† ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ์ถœ์ „์ด 503๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋ฉˆ์ท„๋‹ค. 8์›” 11์ผ ๋Œ€ ํžˆ๋กœ์‹œ๋งˆ์ „(MAZDA Zoom-Zoom ์Šคํƒ€๋””์›€ ํžˆ๋กœ์‹œ๋งˆ)์—์„œ ๊ฐœ์ธ์— ์žˆ์–ด์„œ๋„ ์ฒ˜์Œ์ด์ž ์–‘๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋น ๋ฅธ 40ํ˜ธ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๊ณ , 22์„ธ ์‹œ์ฆŒ 40ํ˜ธ ๋„๋‹ฌ์€ NPB ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ ๊ธฐ๋ก์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 9์›” 2์ผ์˜ ์ฃผ๋‹ˆ์น˜์ „(์ง„๊ตฌ ์•ผ๊ตฌ์žฅ)์—์„œ 3ํšŒ๋ง์— ์˜ค๋…ธ ์œ ๋‹ค์ด์—์„œ ๋ฐ›์•„์นœ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์ด, 2013๋…„์˜ ๋ฐœ๋ Œํ‹ด ์ด๋ž˜ 9๋…„ ๋งŒ 10๋ฒˆ์งธ(15๋ฒˆ์งธ), ์ผ๋ณธ ๊ตญ์ ์˜ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ๋Š” 2002๋…„์˜ ๋งˆ์“ฐ์ด ํžˆ๋ฐํ‚ค(์š”๋ฏธ์šฐ๋ฆฌ) ์ดํ›„ 20๋…„ ๋งŒ์— 6๋ฒˆ์งธ๊ฐ€ ๋˜๋Š” ์‹œ์ฆŒ 50ํ˜ธ๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ 22์„ธ์—์„œ์˜ 50ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑ์€ 1964๋…„ 55ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ๋‚ ๋ฆฐ ์˜ค ์‚ฌ๋‹คํ•˜๋ฃจ์˜ 24์„ธ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ‘๋„๋Š” ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ ๊ธฐ๋ก ๋‹ฌ์„ฑ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ—ค์ด์„ธ์ด ํƒœ์ƒ์œผ๋กœ์„œ๋Š” ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ 50ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 9์›” 9์ผ์˜ ํžˆ๋กœ์‹œ๋งˆ์ „(์ง„๊ตฌ ์•ผ๊ตฌ์žฅ)์—์„œ ์˜ค์„ธ๋ผ ๋‹ค์ด์น˜์— 53ํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ์น˜๊ณ , 1963๋…„์˜ ๋…ธ๋ฌด๋ผ ์นด์ธ ์•ผ์™€ 1985๋…„์˜ ์˜ค์น˜์•„์ด ํžˆ๋กœ๋ฏธ์“ฐ(52๊ฐœ)๋ฅผ ๋„˜์–ด์„  ์ผ๋ณธ ๊ตญ์  ์„ ์ˆ˜์˜ ์ตœ๋‹ค ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ ๊ธฐ๋ก์„ ๊ฐฑ์‹ . 9์›” 13์ผ์˜ ์š”๋ฏธ์šฐ๋ฆฌ์ „(์ง„๊ตฌ ์•ผ๊ตฌ์žฅ)์—์„œ 3ํšŒ๋ง์— ์Šค๊ฐ€๋…ธ ํ† ๋ชจ์œ ํ‚ค๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 1985๋…„์˜ ๋žœ๋”” ๋ฐ”์Šค์„ ๋„˜์–ด์„  54ํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  9ํšŒ๋ง์— ์˜คํƒ€ ๋‹ค์ด์„ธ์ด๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ด๋‚  2๊ฐœ์งธ๊ฐ€ ๋˜๋Š” 3์  ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ์ขŒ์ต์„์— ๋‚ ๋ ค, ์˜ค ์‚ฌ๋‹คํ•˜๋ฃจ๊ฐ€ ๋ณด์œ ํ•œ ์ผ๋ณธ์ธ ๋“ฑ๋ก ์„ ์ˆ˜์˜ ํ”„๋กœ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์‹œ์ฆŒ ์ตœ๋‹ค ํƒ€์ด ๊ธฐ๋ก(55ํ˜ธ)์— 58๋…„๋งŒ์— ๋Š˜์–ด์„ฐ๋‹ค. ์‹œ์ฆŒ 55ํ˜ธ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์€ 2013๋…„ ๋ฐœ๋ Œํ‹ด ์ดํ›„ 9๋…„ ๋งŒ์— ๋‹ค์„ฏ ๋ฒˆ์งธ์ด๋‹ค. 9์›” 24์ผ DeNA์ „์—์„œ ์‹œ์ฆŒ 24๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ณ ์˜ 4๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›๋Š”๋‹ค. ์˜ฌ ์‹œ์ฆŒ 24๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ณ ์˜ 4๊ตฌ๋กœ 1995๋…„ ํ† ๋งˆ์Šค ์˜ค๋งˆ๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๋„˜์–ด์„œ๋Š” ๊ตฌ๋‹จ ์‹ ๊ธฐ๋ก์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 55ํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•œ ๋’ค 13๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ 5์•ˆํƒ€ยท20์‚ผ์ง„์˜ ๋ถ€์ง„์— ๋น ์ ธ, ์ˆ˜์œ„ ํƒ€์ž ๋‹คํˆผ์„ ๋ฒŒ์ด๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ ์˜ค์˜ค์‹œ๋งˆ ์š”ํ—ค์ด(์ฃผ๋‹ˆ์น˜)์— ์ผ์‹œ์  ๋ชจ๋‹จ์œ„์˜ ๊ทผ์†Œํ•œ ์ฐจ์ด๊นŒ์ง€ ์ค„์—ฌ์กŒ์ง€๋งŒ, ๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ๊ฐ€ ํƒ€์œจ์„ 0.317๋กœ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋˜ ๊ฐ™์€ ํ•ด 10์›” 2์ผ, ์˜ค์˜ค์‹œ๋งˆ๋Š” ์‹œ์ฆŒ ์ตœ์ข…์ „์ด ๋œ ํžˆ๋กœ์‹œ๋งˆ 25ํšŒ์ „(๋งˆ์“ฐ๋‹ค ์Šคํƒ€๋””์›€)์—์„œ ๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ์˜ ํƒ€์œจ์„ ๋›ฐ์–ด๋„˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ(0.3142), ๋งŒ์ผ ๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ๊ฐ€ ๋‹ค์Œ๋‚ ์ธ 3์ผ์˜ ์‹œ์ฆŒ ์ตœ์ข…์ „์„ 3ํƒ€์ˆ˜ ๋ฌด์•ˆํƒ€๋กœ ๋๋‚ธ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ์—๋„ ํƒ€์œจ์€ 0.3148์ด ๋˜๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์—, ์ด ์‹œ์ ์—์„œ ๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ์˜ ์ˆ˜์œ„ ํƒ€์ž๋Š” ๊ฒฐ์ •์ ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ๋Š” ๋‹ค์Œ๋‚  3์ผ์— ์ง„๊ตฌ ์•ผ๊ตฌ์žฅ์—์„œ ์—ด๋ฆฐ ์‹œ์ฆŒ ์ตœ์ข…์ „์ด ๋˜๋Š” DeNA 25ํšŒ์ „์—์„œ, ์ œ1ํƒ€์„์—์„œ๋Š” ๋ฒ”ํƒ€๋กœ ๋ฌผ๋Ÿฌ๋‚ฌ์ง€๋งŒ, ์ œ2ํƒ€์„์œผ๋กœ ์ ์‹œํƒ€๋ฅผ ์ณค๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์—, ๋‚˜๋จธ์ง€ 5ํƒ€์„ ๋ฒ”ํ‡ดํ•ด๋„(7ํƒ€์ˆ˜ 1์•ˆํƒ€์—์„œ๋„) ์˜ค์˜ค์‹œ๋งˆ์˜ ํƒ€์œจ์„ ์•ž์„œ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ํ™•์ •๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์‹œ์ฆŒ ๊ณต์‹์ „ ์ตœ์ข… ํƒ€์„์ด ๋œ ์ด ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์˜ ์ œ4ํƒ€์„(7ํšŒ๋ง:์‹œ์ฆŒ 612ํƒ€์„์งธ)์—์„œ, ์ด๋ฆฌ์— ํƒ€์ด์„ธ์ด์˜ ์ฒซ๊ตฌ(๊ตฌ์† 151ย km/h)๋ฅผ ์šฐ์ค‘๊ฐ„ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ๋‚ ๋ ค, ์ผ๋ณธ์ธ ๋“ฑ๋ก ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋ฐ ์ขŒํƒ€์ž์— ์˜ํ•œ ์‹œ์ฆŒ ์ตœ๋‹ค์‹ ๊ธฐ๋ก 56ํ˜ธ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์€ ์•ž์„œ ์–ธ๊ธ‰ํ•œ 55ํ˜ธ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์—์„œ 14๊ฒฝ๊ธฐยท61ํƒ€์„๋งŒ์˜ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํƒ€๊ฒฉ 3๊ฐœ ๋ถ€๋ฌธ์˜ ์ตœ์ข… ์„ฑ์ ์€ ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ํ†ฑ์˜ ํƒ€์œจ 0.318 (์ˆ˜์œ„ ํƒ€์ž), 56ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ(ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์™•), 134ํƒ€์ (ํƒ€์ ์™•)์œผ๋กœ, 1938๋…„์˜ ๋‚˜์นด์ง€๋งˆ ํ•˜๋ฃจ์•ผ์Šค์™€ 1982๋…„์˜ ์˜ค์น˜์•„์ด ํžˆ๋กœ๋ฏธ์“ฐ(๋ชจ๋‘ ๋‹น์‹œ 28์„ธ)๋ฅผ ์ œ์น˜๊ณ , NPB ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ๊ฐ€ ๋˜๋Š” 22์„ธ๋กœ, ๋ ˆ์ด์™€ ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ 3๊ด€์™•์„ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑํ–ˆ๋‹ค. NPB์— ์žˆ์–ด์„œ์˜ 3๊ด€์™•์€, 2004๋…„์˜ ๋งˆ์ธ ๋‚˜์นด ๋…ธ๋ถ€ํžˆ์ฝ”(๋‹น์‹œ: ํ›„์ฟ ์˜ค์นด ๋‹ค์ด์— ํ˜ธํฌ์Šค) ์ด๋ž˜ 18๋…„ ๋งŒ์— 8๋ฒˆ์งธ(ํ†ต์‚ฐ 12๋ฒˆ์งธ)๋กœ, ์„ธ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์—์„œ๋Š” 1986๋…„์˜ ๋žœ๋”” ๋ฐ”์Šค(๋‹น์‹œ: ํ•œ์‹  ํƒ€์ด๊ฑฐ์Šค) ์ดํ›„ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑ์ด๋‹ค. ์ข…๋ฐ˜์€ ์•ž์„œ ์–ธ๊ธ‰ํ•œ ๋Œ€๋กœ ๋ถ€์ง„์„ ๊ฒช์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด์„œ๋Š” 3๋ฒˆ์˜ ์›”๊ฐ„ MVP๋ฅผ ํš๋“ํ•ด ๊ตฌ๋‹จ ์‚ฌ์ƒ 29๋…„ ๋งŒ์— ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ์„ธ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์—ฐํŒจ์— ํฌ๊ฒŒ ๊ณตํ—Œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜คํ”ˆ ํ•˜์šฐ์Šค ๊ทธ๋ฃน์€ 56ํ˜ธ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ๊ณผ 3๊ด€์™•์„ ๊ธฐ๋…ํ•ด ๋‹น์ดˆ ์˜ˆ์ •ํ–ˆ๋˜ 1์–ต ์—”์—์„œ 3์–ต ์—”์œผ๋กœ ๋Œ€์ฆ์•กํ•˜๋Š” ํ˜•ํƒœ๋กœ ์ง‘์„ ์„ ๋ฌผํ•˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ๊ฒฐ์ •ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ 2021๋…„ 6์›” 16์ผ, ๋„์ฟ„ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ์˜ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์ผ๋ณธ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ๋กœ ๋ฐœํƒ๋๋‹ค.ย ์ด ๋Œ€ํšŒ์—์„œ๋Š” ์ด 5๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— 8๋ฒˆ ํƒ€์ž ๊ฒธ 3๋ฃจ์ˆ˜๋กœ ์„ ๋ฐœ ์ถœ์ „ํ•ด ํŒ€์€ ๊ธˆ๋ฉ”๋‹ฌ์„ ํš๋“ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐœ์ธ์œผ๋กœ์„œ๋Š” ๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „ ์ƒ๋Œ€์ธย ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์ „์—์„œ ์„ ์ œ ์†”๋กœ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ์น˜๋Š” ๋“ฑ ํƒ€์œจ 0.333(15ํƒ€์ˆ˜ 5์•ˆํƒ€), 1ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ, 3ํƒ€์ ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ์˜ ํŠน์ง• ํƒ€๊ฒฉ ์Šค์œ™ ์Šคํ”ผ๋“œ์˜ ์†๋„์™€ ์›”๋“ฑํ•จ์˜ ๋น„๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ํŠน์ง•. ์—ญ๋ฐฉํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ์˜ ์žฅํƒ€๋ ฅ์„ ๊ฐ–์ถ”๊ณ , ์ฃผ๋‹ˆ์น˜์˜ย ์•ผ๋‚˜๊ธฐ ์œ ์•ผ๋Š”, ๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ์˜ 2019๋…„์˜ ์„ฑ์žฅ๋งŒ์„ โ€œ์ธ์ฝ”์Šค์— ๋–จ์–ด๋œจ๋ ค ๋‘๋ฉด ์ข‹์•˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ์‹œ์ฆŒ ๋„์ค‘๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ํŒ”๊ฟˆ์น˜๋ฅผ ์ ‘์–ด ๋‚ด๊ฐ์„ ์น˜๋„๋ก ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹คโ€๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ๋ฅผ ํ‰๊ฐ€ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ˆ˜๋น„ยท์ฃผ๋ฃจ 50๋ฏธํ„ฐ ์ฃผํ–‰ 6์ดˆ 1,ย ํฌ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ์˜ 2๋ฃจ ์†ก๊ตฌ ํƒ€์ž„์€ ์ตœ๊ณ  1๋„ 1์ดˆ 84.ย ๋‚ด์•ผ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ ์ˆ˜๋น„๋ ฅ์ด ๊ณผ์ œ๊ฐ€ ๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์‹ ์ฒด๋Šฅ๋ ฅ ๋ฐ๋“œ ๋ฆฌํ”„ํŠธ 200kg, ๋ฒค์น˜ ํ”„๋ ˆ์Šค 110kg, ์˜ค๋ฅธ์† ์•…๋ ฅ 72kg, ์™ผ์† ์•…๋ ฅ 71kg์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์‹ ์ฒด ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์˜ ์†Œ์œ ์ž๋‹ค.(2017๋…„ 11์›” ์‹œ์ ) 5์—ฐํƒ€์„ ์—ฐ์† ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ 2022๋…„ 7์›” 31์ผ ํ•œ์‹  ํƒ€์ด๊ฑฐ์Šค์ „(๊ณ ์‹œ์—” ๊ตฌ์žฅ)์—์„œ๋Š” 7ํšŒ์ดˆ, 9ํšŒ์ดˆ, ์—ฐ์žฅ 11ํšŒ์ดˆ์™€ 3ํƒ€์„ ์—ฐ์† ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ์น˜๊ณ , 0-2์˜ ์—ด์„ธ์—์„œ 4-2์˜ ์—ญ์ „ ์Šน๋ฆฌ๋กœ ์ด์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๋‹ค์Œ๋‚ (8์›” 2์ผ) ์ฃผ๋‹ˆ์น˜ ๋“œ๋ž˜๊ฑด์Šค์ „(์ง„๊ตฌ ์•ผ๊ตฌ์žฅ)์—์„œ๋Š” 1ํšŒ๋ง์˜ ์ œ1ํƒ€์„์—์„œ ์šฐ์›”์— 38ํ˜ธ ์†”๋กœ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ์น˜๊ณ , NPB ์‚ฌ์ƒ ํƒ€์ด ๊ธฐ๋ก์ด ๋˜๋Š” 4ํƒ€์„ ์—ฐ์† ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ 3ํšŒ๋ง์˜ ์ œ2ํƒ€์„์—์„œ๋Š” ์ขŒ์ค‘๊ฐ„์— 2์—ฐํƒ€์„ ์—ฐ์†์ด ๋˜๋Š” 39ํ˜ธ 2์  ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜๊ณ , NPB ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ตœ์ดˆ, MLB์—์„œ๋„ ๊ณต์‹ ๊ธฐ๋ก์ด ์—†๋Š” 5์—ฐํƒ€์„ ์—ฐ์† ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 6ํšŒ๋ง์˜ ์ œ3์—ฐํƒ€์„์˜ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋Š” ์ขŒ์ต์ˆ˜ ์•ž 2๋ฃจํƒ€์˜€๋‹ค. ์ธ๋ฌผยท์—ํ”ผ์†Œ๋“œ ์• ์นญ์€ ใ€Œ๋ฌด๋„ค()ใ€(๊ฐ€์กฑ, ๋™๋ฃŒ ๋“ฑ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ), ใ€Œ๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ๋‹˜()ใ€(์•ผ์ฟ ๋ฅดํŠธ ์ž…๋‹จ ํ›„์— ์‹ ์ ์ธ ํ™œ์•ฝ์„ ๋ณด์ด๋Š” ๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด, ์ธํ„ฐ๋„ท์ƒ์—์„œ ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌ๊ฒŒ ๋œ ๋ง. ์˜ค๋ฆฌ์ง€๋„ ์ƒํ’ˆ์œผ๋กœ ํŒ๋งค๋˜๋Š” ๋“ฑ, ๊ตฌ๋‹จ ๊ณต์ธ์˜ ์• ์นญ์ด ๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค)๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ๋Š” ์„œ์˜ˆ ์„ ์ƒ๋‹˜์œผ๋กœ, ๋ฌด๋„คํƒ€์นด ์ž์‹ ๋„ ์†Œ๋…„ ์‹œ์ ˆ์€ ์„œ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋ฐฐ์› ๋‹ค. ์•ผ์ฟ ๋ฅดํŠธ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋“œ๋ž˜ํ”„ํŠธ ์ง€๋ช…์„ ๋ฐ›์€ ํ›„ 2017๋…„ 12์›” 8์ผ์—๋Š” ์ œ39ํšŒ ์š”๋ฏธ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ํ•™์ƒ ์„œ์ „์—์„œ ์ž…์ƒ(ํŠน์„ )ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด ๋ฐœํ‘œ๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. 2021๋…„์—๋Š”ย ๋ฌธ์˜ˆ์ถ˜์ถ”ย ๊ธฐํš์—์„œย ์ˆ˜์˜ย ์„ ์ˆ˜ย ์ด์ผ€์— ๋ฆฌ๋‚˜์ฝ”์™€ ๋Œ€๋‹ดํ–ˆ๋‹ค.ย ๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ๋„, ์ด์ผ€์—์˜ย ๋ฐฑํ˜ˆ๋ณ‘์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์™„์ „ ๋ถ€ํ™œ์„ ๋ชฉํ‘œ๋กœ ์‹ธ์šฐ๋Š” ๋ชจ์Šต์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด, ใ€Œ์ž์‹ ๋„ ์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋„ค์š”. ์–ด๋Š ์„ธ๊ณ„์—์„œ๋„ ๊ธฐ๋ถ„์ด ๊ฐ•ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์œผ๋ฉด ์•ˆ ๋œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋Š๊ผˆ์Šต๋‹ˆ๋‹ค.ใ€๋ผ๊ณ  ๊ฐ๋ช…์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์€ ํŒ€์˜ ์„ ๋ฐฐ์ธย ์•ผ๋งˆ๋‹ค ํ…Œ์ธ ํ† ์™€ ๋งค์šฐ ์‚ฌ์ด๊ฐ€ ์ข‹๊ณ , 2021๋…„ ๋„์ฟ„ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ์—์„œ๋Š” ๊ฒฐ์Šน์—์„œย ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€๋ฅผ ๊ฒฉํŒŒํ•˜๊ณ ย ๊ธˆ๋ฉ”๋‹ฌ์— ๋น›๋‚˜์ž ๋งˆ์šด๋“œ ๋ถ€๊ทผ์—์„œ ์•ผ๋งˆ๋‹ค๋ฅผย ๊ณต์ฃผ๋‹˜์•ˆ๊ธฐ ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๊ธฐ๋ปํ•˜๋Š” ๋ชจ์Šต์ด ํ™”์ œ๊ฐ€ ๋๋‹ค.ย ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ ์‚ฌ์ „์— ์•ผ๋งˆ๋‹ค์™€ ใ€Œ์šฐ์Šนํ•˜๋ฉด ์ถ”์–ต์œผ๋กœ ๋ญ”๊ฐ€ ํ•˜์žใ€๋ผ๊ณ  ์•ฝ์†ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์–ด, ๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ๋„ ใ€Œ์•ผ๋งˆ๋‹ค ์”จ์—๊ฒŒ ใ€Ž๊ณต์ฃผ๋‹˜ ์•ˆ์•„์ค˜ใ€๋ผ๊ณ  ๋งํ•ด์กŒ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ํ–ˆ์Šต๋‹ˆ๋‹คใ€๋ผ๊ณ  ๋งํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ค๋ฆญ์Šคย ๋ฒ„ํŒ”๋กœ์Šค์˜ ๋‹ˆ์‹œ์šฐ๋ผ ํ•˜์•ผํ† ์™€๋Š” ์ดˆ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต ์‹œ์ ˆ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์นœํ•œ ์นœ๊ตฌ๋กœ ๋ผ์ด๋ฒŒ ๊ด€๊ณ„์— ์žˆ์—ˆ๊ณ , ์ดˆยท์ค‘ํ•™๊ต์—์„œ๋Š” ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๋ฒˆ ๋Œ€์ „ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋•Œ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ทธ๋Š” โ€œ๊ฐ™์ด ํ”„๋กœ๋กœ ๊ฐ€์žโ€๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค.ย ํ”„๋กœ ์ง„์ž… ํ›„์ธ 2021๋…„ ์‹œ์ฆŒ ๋™์•ˆ ์–‘์ธกย ํŠน๋ฐœ์„ฑ ๋Œ€ํ‡ด๊ณจ๋‘๊ดด์‚ฌ์ฆ์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ ํ˜„์—ญ ์€ํ‡ด๋ฅผ ๊ฒฐ์˜ํ•œ ๋‹ˆ์‹œ์šฐ๋ผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ โ€œ์ ˆ๋Œ€ ์šฐ์Šนํ•˜๋ผโ€๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ฉ”์‹œ์ง€๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ํ›„, ๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ๊ฐ€ ์†Œ์†ํ•œ ์•ผ์ฟ ๋ฅดํŠธ๋Š” ํ›Œ๋ฅญํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์šฐ์Šน์„ ๊ฑฐ๋‘์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ๋Š” โ€œ๋ˆˆ์ด ๋œจ๊ฑฐ์›Œ์กŒ์Šต๋‹ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์•ผํ† ๊ฐ€ ํ•œ ์ฐจ๋ก€ ํž˜๋“ค์–ด ํ–ˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์‘์›ํ•ด ์ค€๋‹ค. ์•ผ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ๊ณ„์†ํ•˜๊ณ  ์‹ถ์–ด๋„ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์•ผํ† ๋Š” ํ•œ๊ณ„๊นŒ์ง€ ๋„์ „ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ž์‹ ๋„ ํ›„ํšŒ๊ฐ€ ์—†๋„๋ก ํ•ด๊ฐ€๊ณ  ์‹ถ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๊ฐ€์Šด์— ์ƒˆ๊ฒผ์Šต๋‹ˆ๋‹ค.โ€๋ผ๊ณ  ์‚ฐ์ผ€์ด ์‹ ๋ฌธ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ˆ˜๊ธฐ์— ์“ฐ๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ˜•๊ณผ ๋™์ƒ์ด ์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ผํ˜•์ œ๋กœ, ๋ชจ๋‘๊ฐ€ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ๊ฒฝํ—˜์ž์ด๋‹ค.ย ํ˜•ยทํ† ๋ชจ์œ ํ‚ค๋Š”ย TSยทTECH์—์„œ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ ์†Œ์†ํ•˜๋Š”ย ์‚ฌํšŒ์ธ ์•ผ๊ตฌย ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ, ๋„์นด์ด ๋Œ€ํ•™ย ์‹œ์ ˆ์—๋Š”ย ๋ฉ”์ด์ง€์ง„๊ตฌ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ๋Œ€ํšŒ์—์„œ์˜ ๋“ฑํŒ ๊ฒฝํ—˜๋„ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋‚จ๋™์ƒยท์ผ€์ดํƒ€๋Š” ๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ์™€ ๋งˆ์ฐฌ๊ฐ€์ง€๋กœ ๊ทœ์Šˆ๊ฐ€ํ์ธ ๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต์—์„œ ๋‚ด์•ผ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ ํ™œ์•ฝ ์ค‘์— ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, 3ํ•™๋…„์ด์—ˆ๋˜ 2022๋…„ ์—ฌ๋ฆ„ ๊ณ ์‹œ์—”์— ์ถœ์ „ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ผํ˜•์ œ ์ค‘ ์‹ ์žฅ์€ ๋ฌด๋„คํƒ€์นด๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์ž‘๋‹ค. 2021๋…„ ์‹œ์ฆŒ ํ›„๋ฐ˜, ์ž…๋‹จ 1๋…„ ์ฐจ์— ๋‹น์‹œ 2๊ตฐ ํƒ€๊ฒฉ ์ฝ”์น˜์˜€๋˜ ๋งˆ์ธ ๋ชจํ†  ์œ ์ด์น˜๋Š” ์•ž์œผ๋กœ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ํ•ด์•ผํ•˜๋Š” ์‹œ๊ฐ„์— ์Œ€์ด๋‚˜ ๋ฉด๋ฅ˜ ๋“ฑ์˜ ํƒ„์ˆ˜ํ™”๋ฌผ์„ ๋Œ€๋Ÿ‰์œผ๋กœ ์„ญ์ทจํ•˜๋Š” ์ ์„ ์šฐ๋ คํ•ด ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์•„์นจ์ž ์— ์•ฝํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ์ž์‹ ์˜ Twitter์—์„œ๋„ ์ผ์ฐ ์ผ์–ด๋‚˜๋Š” ์š”๋ น์„ ๋ฌผ์–ด๋ณด๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹น์‹œ ์š”๋ฏธ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ๋‹ˆ์˜ค์นด ๋„๋ชจํžˆ๋กœ๊ฐ€ ์ผ๋ณธ ํ”„๋กœ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ 2์—ฐํƒ€์„ ์—ฐ์† ๋งŒ๋ฃจ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•œ 2006๋…„ 4์›” 30์ผ์˜ ์š”๋ฏธ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ๋Œ€ ์ฃผ๋‹ˆ์น˜์ „(๋„์ฟ„๋”)์„ ํ˜„์ง€์—์„œ ๊ด€์ „ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด ํ”„๋กœ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ๋ชฉํ‘œ๋กœ ์‚ผ์•˜๋˜ ๊ณ„๊ธฐ์˜€๋‹ค. ์ œ32ํšŒ ๋„์ฟ„ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์ผ๋ณธ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ(์‚ฌ๋ฌด๋ผ์ด ์žฌํŒฌ)๋กœ์„œ ๊ธˆ๋ฉ”๋‹ฌ์„ ํš๋“ํ•œ ์˜์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ์ธ์ •๋ฐ›์•„, 2022๋…„ 1์›” 7์ผ, ๊ตฌ๋งˆ๋ชจํ† ์‹œ ์ฃผ์˜ค๊ตฌ์— ์œ„์น˜ํ•œ ๋ชจ๊ต์ธ ๊ทœ์Šˆ๊ฐ€์ฟ ์ธ ๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต ๊ทผ์ฒ˜์—๋Š”, ๊ธฐ๋…์˜ ๊ณจ๋“œ ํฌ์ŠคํŠธ(์ œ45ํ˜ธ)๊ฐ€ ์„ค์น˜๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ƒ์„ธ ์ •๋ณด ์ถœ์‹  ํ•™๊ต ๊ทœ์Šˆ๊ฐ€์ฟ ์ธ ๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ๋„์ฟ„ ์•ผ์ฟ ๋ฅดํŠธ ์Šค์™ˆ๋กœ์Šค(2018๋…„ ~ ) ๊ตญ๊ฐ€ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ 2020๋…„ ํ•˜๊ณ„ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ์ผ๋ณธ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œ 2023๋…„ ์›”๋“œ ๋ฒ ์ด์Šค๋ณผ ํด๋ž˜์‹ ์ผ๋ณธ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œ ์ˆ˜์ƒยทํƒ€์ดํ‹€ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ํƒ€์ดํ‹€ ์ˆ˜์œ„ ํƒ€์ž : 1ํšŒ(2022๋…„) ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์™• : 2ํšŒ(2021๋…„, 2022๋…„) ํƒ€์ ์™• : 1ํšŒ(2022๋…„) ์ตœ๊ณ  ์ถœ๋ฃจ์œจ : 2ํšŒ(2020๋…„, 2022๋…„) 21์„ธ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์— ํš๋“ํ•œ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์™•(2021๋…„), 22์„ธ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์— ํš๋“ํ•œ ์ˆ˜์œ„ ํƒ€์žยทํƒ€์ ์™•(2022๋…„)์€ ๋ชจ๋‘ ์„ผํŠธ๋Ÿด ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์—ญ๋Œ€ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ ์ˆ˜์ƒ MVP : 2ํšŒ(2021๋…„, 2022๋…„) โ€ป2022๋…„์—๋Š” ๋งŒ์žฅ์ผ์น˜๋กœ ์„ ์ •(์„ผํŠธ๋Ÿด ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์—ญ๋Œ€ 4๋ฒˆ์งธ) ์‹ ์ธ์™•(2019๋…„) ๋ฒ ์ŠคํŠธ ๋‚˜์ธ : 3ํšŒ(2020๋…„ ~ 2022๋…„) ์‡ผ๋ฆฌํ‚ค ๋งˆ์“ฐํƒ€๋กœ์ƒ : 1ํšŒ(2022๋…„) โ€ปํŠน๋ณ„์ƒ ์›”๊ฐ„ MVP : 4ํšŒ(์•ผ์ˆ˜ ๋ถ€๋ฌธ : 2020๋…„ 6ยท7์›”, 2022๋…„ 6์›”, 2022๋…„ 7์›”, 2022๋…„ 8์›”) ์ปค๋ฏธ์…”๋„ˆ ํŠน๋ณ„ ์ˆ˜์ƒ : 1ํšŒ(2022๋…„) โ€ปํŠน๋ณ„์ƒ ์„ผํŠธ๋Ÿดยทํผ์‹œํ”ฝ ๊ต๋ฅ˜์ „ ์ตœ์šฐ์ˆ˜ ์„ ์ˆ˜์ƒ(MVP) : 1ํšŒ(2022๋…„) ์˜ฌ์Šคํƒ€์ „ ๊ฐํˆฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜์ƒ : 1ํšŒ(2022๋…„ 2์ฐจ์ „) ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ ๋”๋น„ ๋‹›์‚ฐ ๋ฆฌํ”„์ƒ : 1ํšŒ(2021๋…„) ํ˜ธ์น˜ ํ”„๋กœ ์Šคํฌ์ธ  ๋Œ€์ƒ ํ”„๋ ˆ์‹œ์ƒ(2019๋…„) ํžˆ๊ฐ€์‹œํ…Œ์“ฐ ๊ณต์—… presents ์‚ผ๊ธฐ ์•„๋ž˜์˜ ๊ถŒ๋ ฅ์ƒ(2021๋…„ 3 - 5์›”๋„) ์˜คํ”ˆ ํ•˜์šฐ์Šค ํŠน๋ณ„ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์ƒ(2022๋…„) ๊ฐœ์ธ ๊ธฐ๋ก ์ฒซ ๊ธฐ๋ก ์ฒซ ์ถœ์žฅยท์ฒซ ์„ ๋ฐœ ์ถœ์žฅ : 2018๋…„ 9์›” 16์ผ, ๋Œ€ ํžˆ๋กœ์‹œ๋งˆ ๋„์š” ์นดํ”„ 22์ฐจ์ „(๋ฉ”์ด์ง€ ์ง„๊ตฌ ์•ผ๊ตฌ์žฅ), 6๋ฒˆยท3๋ฃจ์ˆ˜๋กœ ์„ ๋ฐœ ์ถœ์žฅ ์ฒซ ํƒ€์„ยท์ฒซ ์•ˆํƒ€ยท์ฒซ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐยท์ฒซ ํƒ€์  : ์ƒ๋™, 2ํšŒ๋ง์— ์˜ค์นด๋‹ค ์•„ํ‚คํƒ€์ผ€๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์šฐ์›” 2์  ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ ์ฒซ ๋„๋ฃจ : 2019๋…„ 5์›” 8์ผ, ๋Œ€ ํ•œ์‹  ํƒ€์ด๊ฑฐ์Šค 9์ฐจ์ „(๋ฉ”์ด์ง€ ์ง„๊ตฌ ์•ผ๊ตฌ์žฅ), 12ํšŒ๋ง์— 2๋ฃจ ์•ˆ์ฐฉ(ํˆฌ์ˆ˜: ์‹œ๋งˆ๋ชจํ†  ํžˆ๋กœ์•ผ, ํฌ์ˆ˜: ์šฐ๋ฉ”๋…ธ ๋ฅ˜ํƒ€๋กœ) ๊ธฐ๋ก ๋‹ฌ์„ฑ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ํ†ต์‚ฐ 100ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ : 2021๋…„ 9์›” 19์ผ, ๋Œ€ ํžˆ๋กœ์‹œ๋งˆ ๋„์š” ์นดํ”„ 18์ฐจ์ „(๋ฉ”์ด์ง€ ์ง„๊ตฌ ์•ผ๊ตฌ์žฅ), 1ํšŒ ๋ง์— ๋‹ค์นดํ•˜์‹œ ๊ณ ์•ผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์šฐ์›” ์†”๋กœ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ โ€ป์—ญ๋Œ€ 303๋ฒˆ์งธ, 21์„ธ 7๊ฐœ์›”์—์„œ์˜ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑ์€ NPB ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ ๊ธฐ๋ก ํ†ต์‚ฐ 150ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ : 2022๋…„ 8์›” 26์ผ, ๋Œ€ ์š”์ฝ”ํ•˜๋งˆ DeNA ๋ฒ ์ด์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ 17์ฐจ์ „(์š”์ฝ”ํ•˜๋งˆ ์Šคํƒ€๋””์›€), 6ํšŒ์ดˆ์— ์˜ค์“ฐํ‚ค ์‹ ์ด์น˜๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์šฐ์›” ์†”๋กœ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ โ€ป์—ญ๋Œ€ 179๋ฒˆ์งธ, 22์„ธ 6๊ฐœ์›”์—์„œ์˜ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑ์€ ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ, ํ”„๋กœ 5๋…„์ฐจ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑ์€ ๊ธฐ์š”ํ•˜๋ผ ๊ฐ€์ฆˆํžˆ๋กœ ์ดํ›„ ์‚ฌ์ƒ 2๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ธฐํƒ€ ํƒ€๊ฒฉ ๋ถ€๋ฌธ 3๊ด€์™• : 1ํšŒ(2022๋…„) โ€ป์—ญ๋Œ€ 8๋ฒˆ์งธ, ๋ ˆ์ด์™€ ์‹œ๋Œ€์—์„œ๋Š” ์ตœ์ดˆ, ํ—ค์ด์„ธ์ด ์‹œ๋Œ€์— ํƒœ์–ด๋‚œ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ๋Š” ์ตœ์ดˆ. 22์„ธ ์‹œ์ฆŒ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑ์€ ์—ญ๋Œ€ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ. ํƒ€์œจ 0.318์€ 3๊ด€์™• ์ตœ์ € ๊ธฐ๋ก, 56ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์€ 3๊ด€์™• ์ตœ๋‹ค ๊ธฐ๋ก ์ฒซ ํƒ€์„ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ : ์—ญ๋Œ€ 64๋ฒˆ์งธ(2018๋…„) 19์„ธ 6๊ฐœ์›”์—์„œ์˜ ๋๋‚ด๊ธฐ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ : 2019๋…„ 8์›” 12์ผ, ๋Œ€ ์š”์ฝ”ํ•˜๋งˆ DeNA ๋ฒ ์ด์Šคํƒ€์Šค 19์ฐจ์ „(๋ฉ”์ด์ง€ ์ง„๊ตฌ ์•ผ๊ตฌ์žฅ), 9ํšŒ๋ง์— ์•ผ๋งˆ์‚ฌํ‚ค ์•ผ์Šค์•„ํ‚ค๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ค‘์›” ์—ญ์ „ ๋๋‚ด๊ธฐ 2์  ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ โ€ป์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ ๊ณ ์กธ 2๋…„์งธ ์ด๋‚ด ์‹œ์ฆŒ 36ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ(2019๋…„) โ€ปNPB ํƒ€์ด ๊ธฐ๋ก(๋‚˜์นด๋‹ˆ์‹œ ํ›„ํ† ์‹œ์™€ ํƒ€์ด ๊ธฐ๋ก) ๊ณ ์กธ 2๋…„์งธ ์ด๋‚ด ์‹œ์ฆŒ 96ํƒ€์ (2019๋…„) โ€ปNPB ๊ธฐ๋ก ์‹œ์ฆŒ 184์‚ผ์ง„(2019๋…„) โ€ป์„ผํŠธ๋Ÿด ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๊ธฐ๋ก ๋ฐ ์ผ๋ณธ์ธ ๊ธฐ๋ก ํ•œ ์ด๋‹ 3๋„๋ฃจ : 2020๋…„ 11์›” 5์ผ, ๋Œ€ ํ•œ์‹  ํƒ€์ด๊ฑฐ์Šค 24์ฐจ์ „(ํ•œ์‹  ๊ณ ์‹œ์—” ๊ตฌ์žฅ), 2ํšŒ์ดˆ์— ๊ธฐ๋ก(ํˆฌ์ˆ˜: ๋‹ˆ์‹œ ์œ ํ‚ค, ํฌ์ˆ˜: ์šฐ๋ฉ”๋…ธ ๋ฅ˜ํƒ€๋กœ) โ€ป์—ญ๋Œ€ 17๋ฒˆ์งธ ์ฒซํšŒ 4๋ฒˆ ํƒ€์ž๋กœ์„œ์˜ ๋งŒ๋ฃจ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ : 2021๋…„ 9์›” 21์ผ, ๋Œ€ ์š”์ฝ”ํ•˜๋งˆ DeNA ๋ฒ ์ด์Šคํƒ€์Šค 18์ฐจ์ „(์š”์ฝ”ํ•˜๋งˆ ์Šคํƒ€๋””์›€), 1ํšŒ์ดˆ์— ์‚ฌ์นด๋ชจํ†  ์œ ์•ผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ โ€ป์„ผํŠธ๋Ÿด ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์—์„œ๋Š” ์—ญ๋Œ€ 10๋ฒˆ์งธ, 11๋ฒˆ์งธ 21์„ธ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์—์„œ์˜ MVP : 2021๋…„ โ€ป์„ผํŠธ๋Ÿด ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ 21์„ธ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์—์„œ์˜ ์‹œ์ฆŒ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์™• ํš๋“ โ€ป21์„ธ ์ดํ•˜์—์„œ์˜ ํš๋“์€ ์—ญ๋Œ€ 7๋ช…์งธ์ด์ž 9๋ฒˆ์งธ, ๋งˆ์น˜๋‹ค ์œ ํ‚คํžˆ์ฝ”์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์„ผํŠธ๋Ÿด ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ ํƒ€์ด ๊ธฐ๋ก 21์„ธ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์—์„œ์˜ 100ํƒ€์ ๏ผš2021๋…„ โ€ป์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ 21์„ธ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์—์„œ์˜ 100์‚ฌ๊ตฌ๏ผš2021๋…„ โ€ป์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ 3๋…„ ์—ฐ์† ์ขŒ์ธก ๋ฐฉํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ 2์ž๋ฆฌ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ: 2019๋…„ - 2021๋…„ โ€ป์ขŒํƒ€์ž ์‚ฌ์ƒ 4๋ฒˆ์งธ 2๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ์—ฐ์† ๋งŒ๋ฃจ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ : 2022๋…„ 5์›” 6์ผ - 7์ผ, ๋Œ€ ์š”๋ฏธ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ์ž์ด์–ธ์ธ  7์ฐจ์ „, 3ํšŒ์ดˆ์— ํ˜ธ๋ฆฌํƒ€ ๊ฒ์‹ ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ, ๋Œ€ ์š”๋ฏธ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ์ž์ด์–ธ์ธ  8์ฐจ์ „, 3ํšŒ์ดˆ์— ๋งท ์Šˆ๋ฉ”์ด์ปค๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ(๋„์ฟ„ ๋”) โ€ป์—ญ๋Œ€ 9๋ฒˆ์งธ ์›”๊ฐ„ 9์ฐจ๋ก€์˜ ์Šน๋ฆฌ ํƒ€์ ๏ผš2022๋…„ 6์›” โ€ป์–‘๋Œ€ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์ œ ์ดํ›„ ์ตœ๋‹ค ๊ธฐ๋ก ์›”๊ฐ„ 5์ฐจ๋ก€์˜ ํ•œ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ์—ฐํƒ€์„ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ : ์ƒ๋™ โ€ป์—ญ๋Œ€ 3๋ฒˆ์งธ 5์—ฐํƒ€์„ ์—ฐ์† ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ : 2022๋…„ 7์›” 31์ผ - 8์›” 2์ผ, ๋Œ€ ํ•œ์‹  ํƒ€์ด๊ฑฐ์Šค 16์ฐจ์ „(ํ•œ์‹  ๊ณ ์‹œ์—” ๊ตฌ์žฅ), 7ํšŒ์ดˆ์— ์™€ํƒ€๋‚˜๋ฒ  ์œ ๋‹ค์ด, 9ํšŒ์ดˆ์— ์ด์™€์žํ‚ค ์Šค๊ตฌ๋ฃจ, 11ํšŒ์ดˆ์— ์ด์‹œ์ด ๋‹ค์ด์น˜๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ, ๋Œ€ ์ฃผ๋‹ˆ์น˜ ๋“œ๋ž˜๊ฑด์Šค 14์ฐจ์ „(๋ฉ”์ด์ง€ ์ง„๊ตฌ ์•ผ๊ตฌ์žฅ), 1ํšŒ๋ง๊ณผ 3ํšŒ๋ง์— ์•ผ๋‚˜๊ธฐ ์œ ์•ผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ โ€ปNPB ๊ธฐ๋ก 14ํƒ€์„ ์—ฐ์† ์ถœ๋ฃจ(2022๋…„ 8์›” 26์ผ ~ 28์ผ) โ€ป์—ญ๋Œ€ 2์œ„ ํƒ€์ด ์‹œ์ฆŒ 50ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ : 2022๋…„ โ€ป์—ญ๋Œ€ 10๋ช…์งธ์ด์ž 15๋ฒˆ์งธ, ์ผ๋ณธ์ธ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ๋Š” 2002๋…„ ๋งˆ์“ฐ์ด ํžˆ๋ฐํ‚ค ์ดํ›„ ์—ญ๋Œ€ 6๋ฒˆ์งธ, 22์„ธ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์—์„œ์˜ ๋„๋‹ฌ์€ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ์ตœ์—ฐ์†Œ, 119๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๊นŒ์ง€์˜ ๋„๋‹ฌ์€ NPB ์—ญ๋Œ€ 3๋ฒˆ์งธ๋กœ ๋น ๋ฅธ ๊ธฐ๋ก ์‹œ์ฆŒ 56ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ : 2022๋…„ ์—ญ๋Œ€ 2์œ„ โ€ป์ผ๋ณธ์ธ ์ตœ๋‹ค ๊ธฐ๋ก ์‹œ์ฆŒ 4๊ฐœ์˜ ๋งŒ๋ฃจ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ : 2022๋…„ โ€ป์—ญ๋Œ€ ๊ณต๋™ 2์œ„ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์™•์œผ๋กœ์„œ 2์œ„์™€์˜ ๊ฐœ์ˆ˜์ฐจ 26๊ฐœ : 2022๋…„ โ€ปNPB ๊ธฐ๋ก ์‹œ์ฆŒ 134ํƒ€์  : 2022๋…„ โ€ป๋žœ๋”” ๋ฐ”์Šค์™€ ๋‚˜๋ž€ํžˆ NPB ์ขŒํƒ€์ž ํƒ€์ด ๊ธฐ๋ก ํƒ€์ ์™•์œผ๋กœ์„œ 2์œ„์™€์˜ ์ ์ˆ˜์ฐจ 47์  : 2022๋…„ โ€ปNPB ๊ธฐ๋ก 3๋…„ ์—ฐ์† ์ตœ๋‹ค ๋ณผ๋„ท : 2020๋…„ ~ 2022๋…„ โ€ป์˜ค ์‚ฌ๋‹คํ•˜๋ฃจ, ์˜ค์น˜์•„์ด ํžˆ๋กœ๋ฏธ์“ฐ์— ์ด์€ ์„ผํŠธ๋Ÿด ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์—ญ๋Œ€ ๊ณต๋™ 3์œ„ ์˜ฌ์Šคํƒ€์ „ ์ถœ์žฅ : 3ํšŒ(2019๋…„, 2021๋…„, 2022๋…„) ๋“ฑ๋ฒˆํ˜ธ 55(2018๋…„ ~ ) ์—ฐ๋„๋ณ„ ํƒ€๊ฒฉ ์„ฑ์  2022๋…„ ์‹œ์ฆŒ ์ข…๋ฃŒ ๊ธฐ์ค€ ๊ตต์€ ๊ธ€์”จ๋Š” ์‹œ์ฆŒ ์ตœ๊ณ  ์„ฑ์ . ์—ฐ๋„๋ณ„ ํƒ€๊ฒฉ ์„ฑ์  ์†Œ์† ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ๋‚ด์—์„œ์˜ ์ˆœ์œ„ โ€˜-โ€™๋Š” 10์œ„ ๋ฏธ๋งŒ(ํƒ€์œจ, OPS๋Š” ๊ทœ์ • ํƒ€์„์— ๋„๋‹ฌํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์€ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ์—๋„ โ€˜-โ€™๋กœ ํ‘œ๊ธฐ) NPB์—์„œ์˜ ํƒ€๊ฒฉ ํƒ€์ดํ‹€์€ ์ˆ˜์œ„ ํƒ€์ž, ์ตœ๋‹ค ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ, ์ตœ๋‹ค ํƒ€์ , ์ตœ๋‹ค ๋„๋ฃจ, ์ตœ๋‹ค ์•ˆํƒ€, ์ตœ๊ณ  ์ถœ๋ฃจ์œจ ์—ฐ๋„์—์„œ ๊ตต์€ ๊ธ€์”จ๋Š” ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ตœ์šฐ์ˆ˜ ์„ ์ˆ˜(MVP) ์ˆ˜์ƒ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ์—์„œ์˜ ํƒ€๊ฒฉ ์„ฑ์  ์—ฐ๋„๋ณ„ ์ˆ˜๋น„ ์„ฑ์  2022๋…„ ์‹œ์ฆŒ ์ข…๋ฃŒ ๊ธฐ์ค€ ๊ตต์€ ๊ธ€์”จ๋Š” ์‹œ์ฆŒ ์ตœ๊ณ  ์„ฑ์  ๋“ฑ์žฅ๊ณก ใ€ˆใ€‰ WANIMA (2018 ~ 2019๋…„) ใ€ˆI CANใ€‰ EXPRESS (2019ๅนด) โ€ป์ง์ˆ˜ ํƒ€์„ ใ€ˆใ€‰ GReeeeN (2019๋…„) โ€ปํ™€์ˆ˜ ํƒ€์„โ†’์ œ2ํƒ€์„ (2019๋…„ ๋„์ค‘๋ถ€ํ„ฐ) ใ€ˆHappinessใ€‰ ์•„๋ผ์‹œ (2019๋…„) โ€ป์ œ1ํƒ€์„ ใ€ˆใ€‰ AK-69 (2019๋…„) โ€ป์ œ3ํƒ€์„ ใ€ˆใ€‰ ํ›„์ฟ ์•ผ๋งˆ ๋งˆ์‚ฌํ•˜๋ฃจ (2020๋…„) โ€ป์ง์ˆ˜ ํƒ€์„ ใ€ˆMy Timeใ€‰ Fabolous ft.Jeremih (2020๋…„ ~ ) โ€ปํ™€์ˆ˜ ํƒ€์„โ†’์ œ1ํƒ€์„ (2021๋…„ ๋„์ค‘๋ถ€ํ„ฐ) ใ€ˆU R not aloneใ€‰ GReeeeN (2021๋…„) โ€ป์ง์ˆ˜ ํƒ€์„ ใ€ˆ - Movie editใ€‰ RADWIMPS (2021๋…„ ~ ) โ€ป์ œ3ํƒ€์„ ใ€ˆใ€‰ YOASOBI (2021๋…„ ~ ) โ€ป์ œ2ํƒ€์„ ใ€ˆใ€‰ ํ•˜๋ฃจ๋ฏธ (2021๋…„ ๋„์ค‘๋ถ€ํ„ฐ) โ€ป์ œ3ํƒ€์„ ใ€ˆใ€‰ WANIMA (2021๋…„ ~ ) โ€ป์ œ4 ํƒ€์„ ใ€ˆBattle Scarsใ€‰ Lupe Fiasco & Guy Sebastian (2021๋…„ 11์›” 24์ผ) ๊ฐ์ฃผ ๋‚ด์šฉ์ฃผ ์ฐธ์กฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ๊ด€๋ จ ๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ ๋ฌด๋„คํƒ€์นด | ๋„์ฟ„ ์•ผ์ฟ ๋ฅดํŠธ ์Šค์™ˆ๋กœ์Šค - ๊ณต์‹ ํ™ˆํŽ˜์ด์ง€ 2017๋…„ ์ผ๋ณธ ํ”„๋กœ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์‹ ์ธ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์„ ํƒ ํšŒ์˜ - ๋„์ฟ„ ์•ผ์ฟ ๋ฅดํŠธ ์Šค์™ˆ๋กœ์Šค ๋“œ๋ž˜ํ”„ํŠธ ์ง€๋ช… ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋ชฉ๋ก - ์ผ๋ณธ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ๊ณต์‹ ํ™ˆํŽ˜์ด์ง€ SNS ๋ฌด๋ผ์นด๋ฏธ ๋ฌด๋„คํƒ€์นด ๊ณต์‹ ๋ธ”๋กœ๊ทธ 2000๋…„ ์ถœ์ƒ ์‚ด์•„์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ ๊ตฌ๋งˆ๋ชจํ† ์‹œ ์ถœ์‹  ๊ตฌ๋งˆ๋ชจํ† ์‹œ์˜ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ผ๋ณธ์˜ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ผ๋ณธ ํ”„๋กœ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ๋‚ด์•ผ์ˆ˜ ๋„์ฟ„ ์•ผ์ฟ ๋ฅดํŠธ ์Šค์™ˆ๋กœ์Šค ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ผ๋ณธ ํ”„๋กœ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์ตœ์šฐ์ˆ˜ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ผ๋ณธ ํ”„๋กœ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์‹ ์ธ์™• ์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž ์ผ๋ณธ์˜ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 2020๋…„ ํ•˜๊ณ„ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ผ๋ณธ์˜ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ๊ธˆ๋ฉ”๋‹ฌ๋ฆฌ์ŠคํŠธ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ๋ฉ”๋‹ฌ๋ฆฌ์ŠคํŠธ 2020๋…„ ํ•˜๊ณ„ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ๋ฉ”๋‹ฌ๋ฆฌ์ŠคํŠธ 2023๋…„ ์›”๋“œ ๋ฒ ์ด์Šค๋ณผ ํด๋ž˜์‹ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Munetaka%20Murakami
Munetaka Murakami
is a Japanese professional baseball infielder for the Tokyo Yakult Swallows of Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB). Amateur career Munetaka started playing baseball at five years of age. He entered Kyushลซ Gakuin Integrated High School where he became their team's regular first baseman and cleanup hitter. They made it to the 2015 Koshien national tournaments in his first year, but got defeated in the first round. He then played catcher in his second and third years, but they did not make it to any national tournaments. He hit a total of 52 home runs in high school, and his slugging prowess earned him the nickname "Babe Ruth of Higo", Higo being the former name of Kumamoto Prefecture. Professional career Tokyo Yakult Swallows Despite not getting a lot of media exposure from appearances in national games, he was drafted in the first round of the 2017 NPB Draft by the Tokyo Yakult Swallows, Yomiuri Giants and the Rakuten Golden Eagles, as an alternative pick after they lost Kลtarล Kiyomiya to the Nippon Ham Fighters. The Swallows won the lottery, and signed him for a contract of 80 million yen and a 7.2 million yen annual salary. He was assigned jersey number 55. 2018 He spent most of the season playing in Eastern League (minors) games. He batted at .311 in 28 games until the end of April, with 3 home runs and 20 RBI. In June, he got awarded League MVP of the month for batting .315 and driving in 14 runs, last accomplished by a Swallows rookie in 2011 by Tetsuto Yamada. He also got voted into the Fresh All Star games in July. He continued to play well in the following months, and finally got the chance to play in the main squad on the September 16 game against the Hiroshima Carp. He debuted as the starting third baseman, and hit a home run in his first at-bat. But after failing to record a hit in his next 5 appearances, he was sent back to the farm and ended the season there. He finished with a batting average of .288, 17 home runs, 70 RBIs and 16 stolen bases in the minors. Post-season, he was awarded both the Eastern League MVP and Rookie of the Year awards, and was given a 800,000 yen pay rise, bringing his annual salary to 8 million yen. 2019 2019 was Murakami's break out season. On February 27, he was selected to play for the Japan national baseball team at the 2019 exhibition games against Mexico. His great performance during the preseason exhibition games earned him the third base spot in the season-opener. This made him the youngest Swallows player to start in the season opening game at 19 years old, beating the previous record of 21 year-old Seikichi Nishioka in 1958. He hit his 10th home run by May 10, and managed to secure the cleanup position by May 12. He got voted into his first All-Star Game in July where he got top votes for third base, and was also selected for the Home Run Derby showdown. On August 12, he hit his first walk-off home run against the Baystars and became the youngest NPB player to achieve this feat. He hit his 30th home run by August 22, and became the first Central League player drafted out of high school to notch at least 30 home runs within 2 years from his debut. On September 4, he broke the NPB RBI record of high school-drafted players in their second season by notching his 87th RBI. He was the only Swallows player to appear in all of the team's 143 games, and despite batting only .231, he topped the team in home runs with 36 which tied the NPB home-run record for 2nd-year rookies, and finished second in RBI with 96. He also set a record for most strikeouts for a Japanese player with 184. His performance earned him the 2019 CL Rookie of the Year Award, and a 37 million pay rise which more than quadrupled his previous salary to 45 million yen. 2021 Murakami won the Central League MVP award following the 2021 season by hitting the league-leading 39 home runs, driving in 112 RBIs and drawing 106 walks while slashed .278/.408/.566. In the Japan Series, Murakami hit two home runs to help the Tokyo Yakult Swallows capture their first title after 20 years. 2022 In 2022, Murakami became the first NPB player to hit a home run in five consecutive plate appearances, over the course of two games. On September 13, 2022, Murakami hit his 55th home run of the season, tying Sadaharu Oh for the most home runs by a Japanese player in a season, and for second in NPB overall, alongside Alex Cabrera, Tuffy Rhodes, and Oh. Unfortunately for Murakami, he would go on a slump, going 48 straight at-bats without a home run, but on the final day of the regular season, on October 3, 2022, Murakami would hit his 56th home run of the season, breaking Oh's record for the most home runs by a Japanese-born player. He also became the first person who plays offense to win the NPB Triple Crown since Nobuhiko Matsunaka of the Fukuoka Daiei Hawks in 2004, and the first by a Central League player since Randy Bass of the Hanshin Tigers in 1986, and the youngest player to win the Triple Crown, at 22 years, eight months, and one day old at the conclusion of the 2022 regular season. He then proceeded to win the Central League MVP in a unanimous vote, becoming the first player since Masahiro Tanaka in and the first position player since Sadaharu Oh in to win the MVP ballot unanimously. After the 2022 season, Murakami signed a three-year contract extension worth 600ย million yen per year, which stipulates that the Swallows must post Murakami to Major League Baseball after the 2025 season. International career Murakami represented Japan in the 2023 World Baseball Classic. After struggling during most of the tournament and going 0-for-4 with 3 strikeouts in the semifinal against Mexico, Murakami hit a walk-off two-run double to help Japan prevail 6โ€“5. In the final against the defending champion USA, Murakami led off the bottom of the second inning with a first-pitch home run off Merrill Kelly to tie the game. Japan went on to win the championship game 3โ€“2, seizing its third title. References External links Career statistics โ€“ NPB.jp 2000 births Living people Nippon Professional Baseball third basemen Baseball people from Kumamoto Prefecture Tokyo Yakult Swallows players Nippon Professional Baseball MVP Award winners Nippon Professional Baseball Rookie of the Year Award winners Baseball players at the 2020 Summer Olympics Olympic baseball players for Japan Olympic medalists in baseball Olympic gold medalists for Japan Medalists at the 2020 Summer Olympics 21st-century Japanese people 2023 World Baseball Classic players
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EA%B8%B8%EB%9D%BC%EB%93%9C%20%EC%B6%94%EC%BB%A4%EB%A7%8C
๊ธธ๋ผ๋“œ ์ถ”์ปค๋งŒ
๊ธธ๋ผ๋“œ ์ถ”์ปค๋งŒ(, , 1971๋…„ 6์›” 1์ผ ~ )์€ ์ด์Šค๋ผ์—˜์—์„œ ํƒœ์–ด๋‚œ ์–ธ์–ดํ•™์ž์ด์ž ์–ธ์–ด ๋ถ€ํฅ์ž์ด๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ํ˜ธ์ฃผ ์• ๋“ค๋ ˆ์ด๋“œ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต์—์„œ ๊ต์ˆ˜์ด์ž ์œ„๊ธฐ์— ์ฒ˜ํ•œ ์–ธ์–ด๋“ค ๋ฐ ์–ธ์–ดํ•™์˜ ํ•™์žฅ์„ ๋งž๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ์˜ฅ์Šคํฌ๋“œ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋ฐ•์‚ฌํ•™์œ„, ์ผ€์ž„๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์ง€ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋ฐ•์‚ฌํ•™์œ„ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ํ…” ์•„๋น„๋ธŒ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต์—์„œ ์ธ๋ฌธํ•™ ์„์‚ฌํ•™์œ„๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ์œ ๋Œ€์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ํ˜ธ์ฃผ ํ˜‘ํšŒ(AAJS)์˜ ํšŒ์žฅ์ด์ž ํ˜ธ์ฃผ์˜ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€ ๊ฑด๊ฐ• ๋ฐ ์˜ํ•™ ์กฐ์‚ฌ ์œ„์›ํšŒ(NHMRC)์—์„œ ์ž๊ธˆ์„ ์ œ๊ณต๋ฐ›๋Š” ์–ธ์–ด ํšŒ๋ณต ๋ฐ ์ •์‹ ๊ฑด๊ฐ•์„ ํ‰๊ฐ€ํ•˜๋Š” ํฐ ์กฐ์‚ฌ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์˜ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์žฅ์ด๋‹ค. ์ƒ์•  ์ถ”์ปค๋งŒ ๊ต์ˆ˜๋Š” ์• ๋ณด๋ฆฌ์ง€๋„ ์›์ฃผ๋ฏผ ๋ฐ ํ† ๋ ˆ์Šค ์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ดํŠธ ์„ฌ ์›์ฃผ๋ฏผ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ์˜ ํ˜ธ์ฃผ ํ˜‘ํšŒ(AIATSIS) ๋ฐ ์œ„ํ—˜์— ์ฒ˜ํ•œ ์–ธ์–ด๋“ค์˜ ์žฌ๋‹จ(FEL)์˜ ์„ ์ถœ๋œ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ์›์ด๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” AustraLex์—์„œ 2013๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2015๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ํšŒ์žฅ์ด์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ํ˜ธ์ฃผ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ์œ„์›ํšŒ(ARC)์—์„œ 2007๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2011๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ ํŠน๋ณ„ํšŒ์›(Discovery Fellow)์ด์—ˆ๊ณ , 2000๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2004๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ Churchill College Cambridge์—์„œ Gulbenkian ์กฐ์‚ฌ ํšŒ์›์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ์ „ ์„ธ๊ณ„์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฒ•์› ์†Œ์†ก์—์„œ ์‚ฌ์ „ํŽธ์ง‘ (์ „์ง‘) ๋ฐ ์–ธ์–ดํ•™ (๋ฒ•์˜ํ•™์ ) ๋ถ€๋ถ„์˜ ๊ณ ๋ฌธ ๋ฐ ์ž๋ฌธ์œ„์›์„ ๋งก๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ์ƒํ•˜์ด ๊ตญ์ œ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต์—์„œ ํŠน์ถœ๋‚œ ๋ฐฉ๋ฌธ ๊ต์ˆ˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ ์บ ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์ง€ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต, ํ€ธ์ฆ๋žœ๋“œ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต, ์‹ฑ๊ฐ€ํด ๊ตญ๋ฆฝ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต, ์ƒํ•˜์ด ์ง€์•„์˜ค ํ†ต ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต, ๋™์ค‘๊ตญ ๋ณดํ†ต ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต, ์ƒํ•˜์ด ๊ตญ์ œ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต, ํžˆ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ ์˜ˆ๋ฃจ์‚ด๋ ˜ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต, ๋„ค๊ฒŒ๋ธŒ์˜ ๋ฒค ์ฟ ๋ฆฌ์˜จ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๋ฐ ๋งˆ์ด์• ๋ฏธ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต์—์„œ ๊ฐ€๋ฅด์ณค๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ์›จ์ด์ฆˆ๋งŒ ๊ณผํ•™ ํ˜‘ํšŒ, ํ…” ์•„๋น„๋ธŒ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต, ๋กํŽ ๋Ÿฌ ์žฌ๋‹จ์˜ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ๋ฐ ํšŒ์˜ ์„ผํ„ฐ, ๋นŒ๋ผ ์„ค๋ฒจ๋กœ๋‹ˆ, ๋ฒจ๋ผ์ง€์˜ค (์ดํƒˆ๋ฆฌ์•„), ํ•ด๋ฆฌ ๋žœ์„ฌ ์ธ๋ฌธํ•™ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ์„ผํ„ฐ, ์˜ค์Šคํ‹ด์— ์œ„์น˜ํ•œ ํ…์‚ฌ์Šค ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต, ํžˆ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ ์˜ˆ๋ฃจ์‚ด๋ ˜ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต์— ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ณ ๊ธ‰์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ์ด์Šค๋ผ์—˜ ํ˜‘ํšŒ, ๋ผ ํŠธ๋กœ๋ธŒ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต์— ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ณ ๊ธ‰ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ํ˜‘ํšŒ, ์ƒํ•˜์ด ๊ตญ์ œ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์–ธํ•˜ํ•™ ํ˜‘ํšŒ, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๋„์ฟ„์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์ผ๋ณธ์–ด ๋ฐ ์ผ๋ณธ์–ดํ•™์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€ ํ˜‘ํšŒ์˜ ์ฝ”์ฟ ๋ฆฌ์ธ  ์ฝ”์ฟ ๊ณ  ์ผ„ํ์ฃ ์—์„œ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ํŠน๋ณ„ ํšŒ์›์ด๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ์„ธ์ธํŠธ ํœด์˜ ์˜ฅ์ŠคํฌํŠธ ๋Œ€ํ•™์˜ ๋Œ€๋‹ˆ์Šค ์Šคํ‚ค๋„ˆ ์žฅํ•™์ƒ, ์˜ฅ์ŠคํฌํŠธ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต์˜ ์Šค์บ์ณ๋“œ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์žฅํ•™์ƒ, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์ดํƒˆ๋ฆฌ์•„์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์•„๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„ ํ•ด์˜ ์—ฐํ•ฉ๋œ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€ํ•™์—์„œ ์žฅํ•™์ƒ์ด๋‹ค. ์–ธ์–ดํ•™์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ธฐ์—ฌ ์ถ”์ปค๋งŒ ๊ต์ˆ˜๋Š” ์ „ ์„ธ๊ณ„๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•˜์—ฌ ์–ธ์–ด ํšŒ์ƒ์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ด์ž ์ดˆ ํ•™๋ฌธ๋ถ„์•ผ์ธ ์–ธ์–ด๋ณต๊ณ ํ•™์˜ ์„ค๋ฆฝ์ž์ด๋‹ค. ์–ธ์–ด๋ณต๊ณ ํ•™์€ ํ•œํŽธ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ๋น„๊ต์ ์ด๋ฉฐ ์ฒด๊ณ„์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณดํŽธ์ ์ธ ํ•œ๊ณ„๋“ค๊ณผ ์„ธ๊ณ„์ ์ธ ์งœ์ž„์ƒˆ๋ฅผ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํ•˜๊ณ  (Zuckermann 2009 ์ฐธ์กฐ) ๋˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํ•œํŽธ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ๋ฐฐํƒ€์ฃผ์˜์ ์ธ ๋…ํŠน์„ฑ๋“ค ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์ „์„ธ๊ณ„์ ์œผ๋กœ ์–ธ์–ด์˜ ์žฌ์ƒ ๋ฐ ์žฌํ™œ์„ฑํ™”์—์„œ ๋‘๋“œ๋Ÿฌ์ง€๋Š” ๋ฌธํ™”์ ์ด๊ณ  ์ƒ๋Œ€์ ์ธ ํŠน์งˆ์„ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๊ทธ ์žฌํ™œ์„ฑํ™”๋Š” ์ „์„ธ๊ณ„๋ฅผ ๊ฑธ์ณ์„œ ์‚ฌํšŒํ•™์ƒ์˜ ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฝ์—์„œ ์‹œ๋„๋œ๋‹ค (Zuckermann and Walsh 2011 ์ฐธ์กฐ). 2011๋…„ ์ถ”์ปค๋งŒ ๊ต์ˆ˜๋Š” ๋‚จํ˜ธ์ฃผ์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์—์–ด ๋ฐ˜๋„(Eyre Peninsula)์˜ ๋ฐฉ๊ฐˆ๋ผ ์• ๋ณด๋ฆฌ์ง€๋„ ์ง€์—ญ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋ฐฉ๊ฐˆ๋ผ ์–ธ์–ด์˜ ์žฌ์ƒ์‚ฌ์—…์„ ์ฐฉ์ˆ˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2018๋…„ ๊ธฐ์ค€์œผ๋กœ, ๊ทธ์˜ MOOC (๋Œ€๋Ÿ‰ ๊ณต๊ฐœ ์˜จ๋ผ์ธ ๊ณผ์ •), ์–ธ์–ด ์žฌ์ƒ: ์œ„ํ—˜์— ์ฒ˜ํ•œ ์–ธ์–ด๋“ค์˜ ๋ฏธ๋ž˜๋ฅผ ์ง€ํ‚ค๋ฉด์„œ, ๋Š” 190๊ฐœ๊ตญ์˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์ˆ˜๋ฐฑ๊ฐœ์˜ ๋…ํŠนํ•œ ์–ธ์–ด ์‚ฌ์šฉ์ž๋“ค๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋œ ๋งŒ 2์ฒœ๋ช…์˜ ์ˆ˜๊ฐ•์ž๋ฅผ ๋Œ์–ด๋“œ๋ ธ๋‹ค. ์ €์„œ ์ถ”์ปค๋งŒ ๊ต์ˆ˜๋Š” ํš๊ธฐ์ ์ธ ๋ฒ ์ŠคํŠธ์…€๋Ÿฌ Israelit Safa Yafa (์ด์Šค๋ผ์—˜์–ด โ€“ ์•„๋ฆ„๋‹ค์šด ์–ธ์–ด; Am Oved, 2008), ์ด์Šค๋ผ์—˜ ํžˆ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์–ด์˜ ์–ธ์–ด์ ‘์ด‰๊ณผ ์–ดํœ˜์ ์ธ ํ’์š”(Palgrave Macmillan, 2003), ์ด์Šค๋ผ์—˜์–ด ๋ฒ„์ ผ Tingo (Keren, 2011)์˜ ์„ธ๊ฐœ์˜ ์ฑ•ํ„ฐ, ๋งค๋ ฅ -์• ๋ณด๋ฆฌ์ง€๋„ ์›์ฃผ๋ฏผ ๋ฐ ํ† ๋ ˆ์Šค ์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ดํŠธ ์„ฌ ์›์ฃผ๋ฏผ๊ณผ์˜ ์ƒํ˜ธ ์กด์ค‘ ๋ฐ ๋ณด์•ˆ ์ ์ธ ๊ต๋ฅ˜ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๊ทธ๋“ค์˜ ์˜ˆ์ˆ  ์ž‘ํ’ˆ๋“ค ๋ฐ ์ง€์  ์žฌ์‚ฐ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์•ˆ๋‚ด์„œ (2015), ์ฒซ๋ฒˆ์งธ ๋ฐฉ๊ฐˆ๋ผ ์• ๋ณด๋ฆฌ์ง€๋„ ์˜จ๋ผ์ธ ์–ธ์–ด ์‚ฌ์ „ (2017)์˜ ์ €์ž์ด๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด-์•„์‹œ์•„ ์–ธ์–ดํ•™ ์˜ ์ค‘๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ฌธ์ œ๋“ค (2012), ์œ ๋Œ€ ์–ธ์–ด ์ ‘์ด‰ (2014), ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  โ€˜์–ธ์–ด ์‚ฌํšŒํ•™์˜ ๊ตญ์ œ ์ €๋„์˜ ํŠน๋ณ„ํ•œ ๋ฌธ์ œโ€™ ์˜ ํŽธ์ง‘์ž์ด๋ฉฐ ์œ„ํ—˜์— ์ฒ˜ํ•œ ์–ดํœ˜, ํ‘œ์‹œ์˜ ํšŒ๋ณต (2014)์˜ ๊ณต๋™ ํŽธ์ง‘์ž์ด๋‹ค. ์„œ์  Revivalistics: From the Genesis of Israeli to Language Reclamation in Australia and Beyond, 2020, Oxford University Press (ISBN 9780199812790 / ISBN 9780199812776) Language Contact and Lexical Enrichment in Israeli Hebrew, 2003, Palgrave Macmillan (ISBN 9781403917232 / ISBN 978140338695) Israelit Safa Yafa, 2008, Am Oved (ISBN 978-965-13-1963-1) Mangiri Yarda (Healthy Country: Barngarla Wellbeing and Nature), Revivalistics Press, 2021. Engaging โ€“ A Guide to Interacting Respectfully and Reciprocally with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People, and their Arts Practices and Intellectual Property, 2015 Dictionary of the Barngarla Aboriginal Language of Eyre Peninsula, South Australia, 2018 Barngarlidhi Manoo (Speaking Barngarla Together), Barngarla Language Advisory Committee, 2019. (Barngarlidhi Manoo โ€“ Part II) Jewish Language Contact (=International Journal of the Sociology of Language 226), 2014 Burning Issues in Afro-Asiatic Linguistics , 2012 ์ €๋„ ๋ฌธํ—Œ ๋ฐ ์„œ์ ์˜ ์žฅ โ€˜์–ธ์–ด๋ณต๊ณ ํ•™, ๋ณต์ง€ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ํ† ํฌ๋†€๋กœ์ง€(Talknology)-์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ์˜ ํ†ต์ฐฐโ€™ (Revivalistics, Wellbeing and Talknology โ€“ Insights from Australia), ๋ฌดํ˜•์œ ์‚ฐํ•™ (Intangible Heritage Studies) 6.1: 7-75. Zuckermann, Ghil'ad; Quer, Giovanni; Shakuto, Shiori (2014). Native Tongue Title: Proposed Compensation for the Loss of Aboriginal Languages, Australian Aboriginal Studies 2014/1: 55-71. Zuckermann, Ghil'ad; Walsh, Michael (2014). โ€œOur Ancestors Are Happy!โ€: Revivalistics in the Service of Indigenous Wellbeing, Foundation for Endangered Languages XVIII: 113-119. Zuckermann, Ghil'ad; Walsh, Michael (2011). Stop, Revive, Survive: Lessons from the Hebrew Revival Applicable to the Reclamation, Maintenance and Empowerment of Aboriginal Languages and Cultures, Australian Journal of Linguistics 31: 111โ€“127. Zuckermann, Ghil'ad (2009). Hybridity versus Revivability: Multiple Causation, Forms and Patterns, Journal of Language Contact 2: 40โ€“67. Zuckermann, Ghil'ad (2006). A New Vision for "Israeli Hebrew": Theoretical and Practical Implications of Analyzing Israel's Main Language as a Semi-Engineered Semito-European Hybrid Language, Journal of Modern Jewish Studies 5: 57โ€“71. Zuckermann, Ghil'ad (2004). Cultural Hybridity: Multisourced Neologization in "Reinvented" Languages and in Languages with "Phono-Logographic" Script, Languages in Contrast 4: 281โ€“318. Zuckermann, Ghil'ad (2003). Language Contact and Globalization: The Camouflaged Influence of English on the Worldโ€™s Languages โ€“ with special attention to Israeli (sic) and Mandarin, Cambridge Review of International Affairs 16: 287โ€“307. Zuckermann, Ghil'ad (2008). 'Realistic Prescriptivism': The Academy of the Hebrew Language, its Campaign of 'Good Grammar' and Lexpionage, and the Native Israeli Speakers, Israel Studies in Language and Society 1: 135โ€“154. Zuckermann, Ghil'ad (2006). "Complement Clause Types in Israeli", Complementation: A Cross-Linguistic Typology, Oxford University Press, pp. 72โ€“92. Zuckermann, Ghil'ad (2006). " 'Etymythological Othering' and the Power of 'Lexical Engineering' in Judaism, Islam and Christianity. A Socio-Philo(sopho)logical Perspective", Explorations in the Sociology of Language and Religion, John Benjamins, pp. 237โ€“258. Yadin, Azzan; Zuckermann, Ghil'ad (2010). "Blorรญt: Pagans' Mohawk or Sabras' Forelock?: Ideological Secularization of Hebrew Terms in Socialist Zionist Israeli", The Sociology of Language and Religion: Change, Conflict and Accommodation, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 84โ€“125. Sapir, Yair; Zuckermann, Ghil'ad (2008). "Icelandic: Phonosemantic Matching", Globally Speaking: Motives for Adopting English Vocabulary in Other Languages, Multilingual Matters, pp. 19โ€“43. ์ถœ์—ฐ ์ž‘ํ’ˆ Fry's Planet Word, ์Šคํ‹ฐ๋ธ ํ”„๋ผ์ด SBS: Living Black: S18 Ep9 - Linguicide Babbel: Why Revive A Dead Language? - Interview with Prof. Ghil'ad Zuckermann Language Revival: Securing the Future of Endangered Languages, edX MOOC ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ Ghil'ad Zuckermann, D.Phil. (Oxon.) University Staff Directory: Professor Ghil'ad Zuckermann Ghil'ad Zuckermann, Academia Jewish Language Research Website: Ghil'ad Zuckermann Professor Ghil'ad Zuckermann's website Australian of the Day: Ghil'ad Zuckermann Voices of the land, Anna Goldsworthy, The Monthly, September 2014. BBC World Service: Reawakening Language ๊ฐ์ฃผ 1971๋…„ ์ถœ์ƒ ์‚ด์•„์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ ์ด์Šค๋ผ์—˜์˜ ํžˆ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์–ดํ•™์ž ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ๋ฌธํ—Œํ•™์ž ์ด์Šค๋ผ์—˜์˜ ์‚ฌ์ „ ํŽธ์ฐฌ์ž ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ์‚ฌ์ „ ํŽธ์ฐฌ์ž ์—ญ์‚ฌ์–ธ์–ดํ•™์ž ์‚ฌํšŒ์–ธ์–ดํ•™์ž ์–ด์›ํ•™์ž ์ด๋””์‹œ์–ดํ•™์ž ์œ ๋Œ€์ธ ์ž‘๊ฐ€ ํ…”์•„๋น„๋ธŒ ์ถœ์‹  ํ…”์•„๋น„๋ธŒ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๋™๋ฌธ ์˜ฅ์Šคํผ๋“œ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ์„ธ์ธํŠธํœด์Šค ์นผ๋ฆฌ์ง€ ๋™๋ฌธ ์ผ€์ž„๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์ง€ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ์ฒ˜์น  ์นผ๋ฆฌ์ง€ ๊ต์ˆ˜ ํ…์‚ฌ์Šค ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ์˜ค์Šคํ‹ด ๊ต์ˆ˜ ์œ ๋Œ€๊ณ„ ์ด์Šค๋ผ์—˜์ธ ์ด์Šค๋ผ์—˜๊ณ„ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์ธ ์ด์Šค๋ผ์—˜์˜ ์–ธ์–ดํ•™์ž ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ์–ธ์–ดํ•™์ž
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghil%27ad%20Zuckermann
Ghil'ad Zuckermann
Ghil'ad Zuckermann (, ; ) is an Israeli-born language revivalist and linguist who works in contact linguistics, lexicology and the study of language, culture and identity. Zuckermann is Professor of Linguistics and Chair of Endangered Languages at the University of Adelaide, Australia. He is the president of the Australian Association for Jewish Studies. Overview Zuckermann was born in Tel Aviv in 1971 and raised in Eilat. He attended the United World College (UWC) of the Adriatic in 1987โ€“1989. In 1997 he received an M.A. in Linguistics from the Adi Lautman Program at Tel Aviv University. In 1997โ€“2000 he was Scatcherd European Scholar of the University of Oxford and Denise Skinner Graduate Scholar at St Hugh's College, receiving a DPhil (Oxon.) in 2000. While at Oxford, he served as president of the Jewish student group L'Chaim Society. As Gulbenkian research fellow at Churchill College (2000โ€“2004), he was affiliated with the Department of Linguistics, Faculty of Modern and Medieval Studies, University of Cambridge. He received a titular Ph.D. (Cantab.) in 2003. Zuckermann is a polyglot, with his past teaching positions ranging across universities in England, China, Australia, Singapore, Slovakia, Israel, and the United States. In 2010-2015 he was China's Ivy League Project 211 "Distinguished Visiting Professor", and "Shanghai Oriental Scholar" professorial fellow, at Shanghai International Studies University. He was Australian Research Council (ARC) Discovery Fellow in 2007-2011 and was awarded research fellowships at various universities in various countries. He was awarded a British Academy Research Grant, Memorial Foundation of Jewish Culture Postdoctoral Fellowship, Harold Hyam Wingate Scholarship and Chevening Scholarship. Currently, Zuckermann is Professor of Linguistics and Chair of Endangered Languages at the University of Adelaide. He is elected member of the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies and the Foundation for Endangered Languages. He serves as Editorial Board member of the Journal of Language Contact (Brill), consultant for the Oxford English Dictionary (OED), and expert witness in (corpus) lexicography, (forensic) linguistics and trademarks (intellectual property). In 2013-2015 he was President of the Australasian Association of Lexicography (AustraLex). Since February 2017 he has been the president of the Australian Association for Jewish Studies (AAJS). In 2017 Zuckermann secured extensive research funding from Australia's National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) to study effects of Indigenous language reclamation on wellbeing. Research Zuckermann applies insights from the Hebrew revival to the revitalization of Aboriginal languages in Australia. According to Yuval Rotem, the Israeli Ambassador to Australia, Zuckermann's "passion for the reclamation, maintenance and empowerment of Aboriginal languages and culture inspired [him] and was indeed the driving motivator of" the establishment of the Allira Aboriginal Knowledge IT Centre in Dubbo, New South Wales, Australia, on 2 September 2010. He proposes Native Tongue Title, compensation for language loss, because "linguicide" results in "loss of cultural autonomy, loss of spiritual and intellectual sovereignty, loss of soul". He uses the term sleeping beauty to refer to a no-longer spoken language and urges Australia "to define the 330 Aboriginal languages, most of them sleeping beauties, as the official languages of their region", and to introduce bilingual signs and thus change the linguistic landscape of the country. "So, for example, Port Lincoln should also be referred to as Galinyala, which is its original Barngarla name." His edX MOOC Language Revival: Securing the Future of Endangered Languages has had 20,000 learners from 190 countries. Zuckermann proposes a controversial hybrid theory of the emergence of Israeli Hebrew according to which Hebrew and Yiddish "acted equally" as the "primary contributors" to Modern Hebrew. Scholars including Yiddish linguist Dovid Katz (who refers to Zuckermann as a "fresh-thinking Israeli scholar"), adopt Zuckermann's term "Israeli" and accept his notion of hybridity. Others, for example author and translator Hillel Halkin, oppose Zuckermann's model. In an article published on 24 December 2004 in The Jewish Daily Forward, pseudonymous column "Philologos", Halkin accused Zuckermann of a political agenda. Zuckermann's response was published on 28 December 2004 in The Mendele Review: Yiddish Literature and Language. As described by Reuters in a 2006 article, "Zuckermann's lectures are packed, with the cream of Israeli academia invariably looking uncertain on whether to endorse his innovative streak or rise to the defense of the mother tongue." According to Omri Herzog (Haaretz), Zuckermann "is considered by his Israeli colleagues either a genius or a provocateur". Reclamation of the Barngarla language In 2012 Zuckermann started working with the Barngarla community to revive and reclaim the Barngarla language, based on the work of a German Lutheran pastor Clamor Wilhelm Schรผrmann, who worked at a mission in 1844 and created a Barngarla dictionary. This led to ongoing language revival workshops being held in Port Augusta, Whyalla, and Port Lincoln several times each year, with funding from the federal government's Indigenous Languages Support program. Wardlada Mardinidhi / Barngarla Bush Medicines, a 24-page book, was published in July 2023. It is the third book co-written by Zuckermann and members of the Richards family of Port Lincoln, this time represented by Evelyn Walker. It records the names a number of native plants from around Port Lincoln in Barngarla, Latin, and English, and describes their use as bush medicine. Adelaide Language Festival Zuckermann is the founder and convener of the Adelaide Language Festival. Contributions to linguistics Zuckermann's research focuses on contact linguistics, lexicology, revivalistics, Jewish languages, and the study of language, culture and identity. Zuckermann argues that Israeli Hebrew, which he calls "Israeli", is a hybrid language that is genetically both Indo-European (Germanic, Slavic and Romance) and Afro-Asiatic (Semitic). He suggests that "Israeli" is the continuation not only of literary Hebrew(s) but also of Yiddish, as well as Polish, Russian, German, English, Ladino, Arabic and other languages spoken by Hebrew revivalists. Zuckermann's hybridic synthesis is in contrast to both the traditional revival thesis (i.e. that "Israeli" is Hebrew revived) and the relexification antithesis (i.e. that "Israeli" is Yiddish with Hebrew words). While his synthesis is multi-parental, both the thesis and the antithesis are mono-parental. Zuckermann introduces revivalistics as a new transdisciplinary field of enquiry surrounding language reclamation (e.g. Barngarla), revitalization (e.g. Adnyamathanha) and reinvigoration (e.g. Irish). Complementing documentary linguistics, revivalistics aims to provide a systematic analysis especially of attempts to resurrect no-longer spoken languages (reclamation) but also of initiatives to reverse language shift (revitalization and reinvigoration). His analysis of multisourced neologization (the coinage of words deriving from two or more sources at the same time) challenges Einar Haugen's classic typology of lexical borrowing. Whereas Haugen categorizes borrowing into either substitution or importation, Zuckermann explores cases of "simultaneous substitution and importation" in the form of camouflaged borrowing. He proposes a new classification of multisourced neologisms such as phono-semantic matching. Zuckermann's exploration of phono-semantic matching in Standard Mandarin and Meiji period Japanese concludes that the Chinese writing system is multifunctional: pleremic ("full" of meaning, e.g. logographic), cenemic ("empty" of meaning, e.g. phonographic โ€“ like a syllabary) and simultaneously cenemic and pleremic (phono-logographic). He argues that Leonard Bloomfield's assertion that "a language is the same no matter what system of writing may be used" is inaccurate. "If Chinese had been written using roman letters, thousands of Chinese words would not have been coined, or would have been coined with completely different forms". Selected publications Zuckermann has published in English, Hebrew, Italian, Yiddish, Spanish, German, Russian, Arabic, Korean and Chinese. Books authored Revivalistics: From the Genesis of Israeli to Language Reclamation in Australia and Beyond. New York: Oxford University Press, 2020. / . (Israelit Safa Yafa) Language Contact and Lexical Enrichment in Israeli Hebrew. Palgrave Macmillan, 2003. / . Mangiri Yarda (Healthy Country: Barngarla Wellbeing and Nature), Revivalistics Press, 2021. Barngarlidhi Manoo - Part 2 Dictionary of the Barngarla Aboriginal Language, 2018. Engaging โ€“ A Guide to Interacting Respectfully and Reciprocally with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People, and their Arts Practices and Intellectual Property, 2015. Books edited Jewish Language Contact (Special Issue of the International Journal of the Sociology of Language, Vol. 226), 2014. Burning Issues in Afro-Asiatic Linguistics, 2012. / . Journal articles and book chapters Filmography Fry's Planet Word, Stephen Fry interviews Zuckermann about the revival of Hebrew The Politics of Language, Stephen Fry interviews Zuckermann about language SBS: Living Black: S18 Ep9 - Linguicide Babbel: Why Revive A Dead Language? - Interview with Ghil'ad Zuckermann edX MOOC: Language Revival: Securing the Future of Endangered Languages References External links University of Adelaide: Researcher Profile: Ghil'ad Zuckermann University Staff Directory: Ghil'ad Zuckermann Ghil'ad Zuckermann, Academia Ghil'ad Zuckermann's website 1971 births Living people Academics from Tel Aviv Linguists from Australia Australian lexicographers Linguists from Israel Israeli philologists Israeli Jews Australian Jews Historical linguists Etymologists Linguists of Yiddish Linguists of Hebrew Linguists of Pamaโ€“Nyungan languages Sociolinguists Israeli Hebraists Scholars of nationalism Israeli emigrants to Australia Semiticists Linguists at the University of Cambridge Academic staff of the University of Adelaide Academic staff of the University of Queensland Academic staff of the National University of Singapore University of Texas at Austin faculty Academic staff of Shanghai Jiao Tong University Academic staff of the East China Normal University Academic staff of Shanghai International Studies University Academic staff of La Trobe University Tel Aviv University alumni Alumni of St Hugh's College, Oxford Fellows of Churchill College, Cambridge Israeli translation scholars People educated at a United World College 20th-century linguists 21st-century linguists Adi Lautman Interdisciplinary Program for Outstanding Students alumni Presidents of the Australian Association for Jewish Studies Language revival
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EB%B6%80%EC%BD%94%EB%B0%94%EB%A5%B4%20%ED%95%99%EC%82%B4
๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ํ•™์‚ด
๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ํ•™์‚ด(), ๋˜๋Š” ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ๋ณ‘์› ํ•™์‚ด, ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ ํ•™์‚ด()์€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ „์Ÿ ๋„์ค‘์ธ 1991๋…„ 11์›” 20์ผ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ๋™๋‚จ์ชฝ์˜ ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ์—์„œ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ(JNA)๊ฐ€ ์ธ๊ณ„ํ•œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ ํฌ๋กœ์™€ ๋ฏผ๊ฐ„์ธ์„ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ์ค€๊ตฐ์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ์ง‘๋‹จ์œผ๋กœ ํ•™์‚ดํ•œ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์ด๋‹ค. ์ด ํ•™์‚ด์€ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ์ „ํˆฌ๊ฐ€ ๋๋‚˜ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ, ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ ์˜ํ† ๋ฐฉ์œ„๊ตฐ, ์ธ๊ทผ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ์ง€์—ญ์—์„œ ๋ชจ์ง‘ํ•œ ๋ฏผ๋ณ‘๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด๋ฅผ ์žฅ์•…ํ•œ ์งํ›„ ์ผ์–ด๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ํ•™์‚ด์€ ์ผ์–ด๋‚œ ์‹œ์ ์—์„œ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ์ดํ›„ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์—์„œ ์ผ์–ด๋‚œ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๊ฑฐ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ทœ๋ชจ์˜ ํ•™์‚ด์ด์ž ์ „์Ÿ๋ฒ”์ฃ„์ด๋‹ค. ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ์ „ํˆฌ ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰ ๋‚ , ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ง€์—ญ ์ •๋ถ€, ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ, ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด ๊ฐ์‹œ ์ž„๋ฌด ์„ธ ์„ธ๋ ฅ์€ ๊ตญ์ œ ์ ์‹ญ์ž ์œ„์›ํšŒ(ICRC)์˜ ํ˜‘๋ ฅ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ๋ณ‘์›์—์„œ ๋Œ€ํ”ผ๋ฅผ ๋„์™€์ฃผ๊ธฐ๋กœ ํ•ฉ์˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์€ ์ ์‹ญ์ž๋ฅผ ๋ณ‘์›์œผ๋กœ ๋“ค์—ฌ๋ณด๋‚ด๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ง‰๊ณ  ๋ณ‘์› ์•ˆ์— ์žˆ๋˜ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค ์•ฝ 300๋ช…์„ ๋Œ์–ด๋‚ด๋ฒ„๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๋ณ‘์›์—์„œ ๋Œ์–ด๋‚ด์ง„ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ์„ ์ค‘์‹ฌ์œผ๋กœ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์ธ, ํ—๊ฐ€๋ฆฌ์ธ, ๋ณด์Šค๋‹ˆ์•„์ธ, ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋ฐฉ์œ„๊ตฐ์— ์ž์›ํ•œ ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ 2๋ช…์ด ํฌํ•จ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ฒ˜์Œ์—๋Š” ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ๋ง‰์‚ฌ๋กœ ์ด์†ก๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ช‡๋ช‡ ํฌ๋กœ๋Š” ๋ณ‘์› ์ง์›์œผ๋กœ ํ™•์ธ๋˜์–ด ๋ฌด๋ฆฌ์—์„œ ๋น ์ ธ ๋ณ‘์›์œผ๋กœ ๋Œ๋ ค๋ณด๋ƒˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋‚˜๋จธ์ง€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์€ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ๋™๋‚จ์ชฝ์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ ๋†์žฅ์œผ๋กœ ๋Œ๋ ค๊ฐ”๋‹ค. ๋†์žฅ์— ๋„์ฐฉํ•˜์ž ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์ด ๋†์žฅ์—์„œ ์ฒ ์ˆ˜ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์ „ ์ˆ˜ ์‹œ๊ฐ„ ๋™์•ˆ ํฌ๋กœ๋“ค์€ ์ง€์†์ ์ธ ํญํ–‰์„ ๋‹นํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ดํ›„ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์€ ํฌ๋กœ๋ฅผ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ๋ฏผ๋ณ‘๋Œ€์™€ ์˜ํ† ๋ฐฉ์œ„๊ตฐ ์„ธ๋ ฅ์—๊ฒŒ ์ธ๊ณ„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํฌ๋กœ๋“ค์€ ์ค€๋น„๋œ ์žฅ์†Œ๋กœ ์˜ฎ๊ฒจ์ ธ 10~20๋ช…์˜ ๋ฌด๋ฆฌ๋กœ ๋ฌถ์—ฌ ์ด์‚ด๋‹นํ•œ ํ›„ ์ง‘๋‹จ๋ฌด๋ค์— ๋ฌปํ˜”๋‹ค. ์ง‘๋‹จ๋ฌ˜์ง€๋Š” 1992๋…„ 10์›” ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์—ฐ์ดˆ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ์ง€์—ญ์— ๋ฐฐ์น˜๋œ ์œ ์—”๋ณดํ˜ธ๊ตฐ(UNPROFOR)์—๊ฒŒ ์ธ๊ณ„๋˜์–ด ๋ณดํ˜ธ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. 1996๋…„ ๊ตฌ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ๊ตญ์ œํ˜•์‚ฌ์žฌํŒ์†Œ(ICTY)์˜ ์กฐ์‚ฌ๋‹จ์ด ๋ฐœ๊ตด์„ ํ•œ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ๋ฌด๋ค์—์„œ ์œ ๊ณจ 200๋ช…๋ถ„์ด ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ธก์€ 61๋ช…์ด ๋” ์‚ดํ•ด๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋ฌด๋ค์— ๋ฌปํ˜”๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ICTY ๊ฒ€์ฐฐ ์ธก์—์„œ๋Š” 60๋ช…์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์ถ”์ •ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ICTY๋Š” ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ํ•™์‚ด์„ ๋ฒŒ์ธ ํ˜์˜๋กœ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ์žฅ๊ต 2๋ช…์„ ๊ธฐ์†Œํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ „ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์˜ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ธ ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ณด๋‹จ ๋ฐ€๋กœ์…ฐ๋น„์น˜๋ฅผ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด์—์„œ ์ผ์–ด๋‚œ ํ•™์‚ด์„ ํฌํ•จํ•œ ์ˆ˜๋งŽ์€ ์ „์Ÿ ๋ฒ”์ฃ„๋ฅผ ์ผ์œผํ‚จ ํ˜์˜๋กœ ๊ธฐ์†Œํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ฐ€๋กœ์…ฐ๋น„์น˜๋Š” ์žฌํŒ์ด ๋๋‚˜๊ธฐ ์ „ ๊ต๋„์†Œ์—์„œ ์˜ฅ์ค‘ ์‚ฌ๋งํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ ์˜ํ† ๋ฐฉ์œ„๊ตฐ ์†Œ์† ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋“ค ๋ฐ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ๋ฏผ๋ณ‘๋Œ€ ๋Œ€์› ์ˆ˜ ๋ช…๋„ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ํ•™์‚ด์— ๊ฐ€๋‹ดํ•œ ํ˜์˜๋กœ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ์‚ฌ๋ฒ•๋ถ€์— ์žฌํŒ์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๊ณ  ์œ ์ฃ„ ํŒ๊ฒฐ์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. 2015๋…„ 2์›”, ๊ตญ์ œ์‚ฌ๋ฒ•์žฌํŒ์†Œ๋Š” ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ „์—ญ์—์„œ ์ผ์–ด๋‚œ ํฌ์œ„์ „, ํ•™์‚ด, ๊ธฐํƒ€ ๋™์‹œ๋‹ค๋ฐœ์  ๋ฐ˜์ธ๋ฅœ์  ์‚ฌ๊ฑด๋“ค์ด ์ œ๋…ธ์‚ฌ์ด๋“œ ํ˜์˜๋ฅผ ๊ตฌ์„ฑํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค๊ณ  ํŒ๊ฒฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ง‘๋‹จ๋ฌด๋ค ํ˜„์žฅ์—๋Š” ๊ธฐ๋…๋น„ ๋ฐ ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ ๋†์žฅ์—์„œ ๋Œ€๋Ÿ‰ ํ•™์‚ด์ด ์ผ์–ด๋‚˜๊ธฐ ์ง์ „ ํฌ๋กœ๋“ค์„ ์ˆ˜์šฉํ•œ ๊ฑด๋ฌผ์ด ํ‘œ์‹œ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 2006๋…„ ์ด ๊ฑด๋ฌผ์€ ๊ธฐ๋…์„ผํ„ฐ๋กœ ๊ฐœ์ถ•๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2014๋…„ 7์›”๊นŒ์ง€ ๊ธฐ๋…์„ผํ„ฐ์—” ๊ด€๊ด‘๊ฐ 50๋งŒ๋ช…์ด ๋‹ค๋…€๊ฐ”๋‹ค. ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฝ 1990๋…„, ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์‚ฌํšŒ์ฃผ์˜ ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ์—์„œ ์—ด๋ฆฐ ์ด์„ ์—์„œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ์—ฐํ•ฉ(HDZ)๊ฐ€ ์••์Šนํ•˜๋ฉฐ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋‚ด ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์ธ๊ณผ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ ์‚ฌ์ด ๋ฏผ์กฑ๋ถ„๊ทœ๊ฐ€ ๊ฑฐ์„ธ์ง€๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ(JNA)๋Š” ์ €ํ•ญ์„ ์ตœ์†Œํ™”ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์˜ํ† ๋ฐฉ์œ„๊ตฐ์˜ ๋ชจ๋“  ๋ฌด๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์••์ˆ˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 8์›” 17์ผ์—๋Š” ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ์ด ๋ด‰๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์ผ์œผํ‚ค๋ฉฐ ๋ฏผ์กฑ ๊ธด์žฅ์ด ๊ฒฉํ™”๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ˜๋ž€์€ ์Šคํ”Œ๋ฆฌํŠธ์—์„œ ๋™๋ถ์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ 60km ๋–จ์–ด์ง„ ํฌ๋‹Œ ์ธ๊ทผ์˜ ๋‹ฌ๋งˆํ‹ฐ์•„ ์—ฐ์•ˆ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ์ธ๊ตฌ ๋ฐ€์ง‘ ์ง€์—ญ์„ ์ค‘์‹ฌ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฆฌ์นด, ์ฝ”๋ฅด๋‘”, ๋ฐ”๋…ธ๋น„๋‚˜, ์Šฌ๋ผ๋ณด๋‹ˆ์•„ ๋“ฑ ์ง€์—ญ์—์„œ ๋ฐ˜๋ž€ ์‚ฌํƒœ๊ฐ€ ํ™•๋Œ€๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1991๋…„ 1์›”, ๋ชฌํ…Œ๋„ค๊ทธ๋กœ ์‚ฌํšŒ์ฃผ์˜ ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ ๋ฐ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๋‚ด์˜ ๋ณด์ด๋ณด๋””๋‚˜, ์ฝ”์†Œ๋ณด ๋ฉ”ํ† ํžˆ์•ผ ์ž์น˜์ฃผ์˜ ์ง€์›์„ ๋ฐ›์€ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๋Š” ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์˜ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋ณด์•ˆ๊ตฐ ๋ฌด์žฅ ํ•ด์ œ ์ž‘์ „ ์Šน์ธ์„ ์š”๊ตฌํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ง์˜ ์Šน์ธ ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€๋กœ ์‹คํŒจํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด ์‹œ๋„๊ฐ€ ์‹คํŒจํ•œ ํ›„, 3์›” ์ดˆ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ๋ฐ˜๊ตฐ๊ณผ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ ์‚ฌ์ด ๋ฌดํ˜ˆ ์ถฉ๋Œ์ด ์ผ์–ด๋‚ฌ๋‹ค.์ด ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์œผ๋กœ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์€ ์œ ๊ณ  ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ง์˜ ์ „์‹œ ํ†ต์ˆ˜๊ถŒ ๋ถ€ํ™œ๊ณผ ์ „๊ตญ์˜ ๋น„์ƒ์‚ฌํƒœ ์„ ํฌ๋ฅผ ํ•  ๊ฒƒ์„ ์š”์ฒญํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๋ฐ ๊ทธ ๋™๋งน๊ตญ์€ ์ด ์š”๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ์ง€์ง€ํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ง์€ ์ด๋ฅผ ๊ฑฐ๋ถ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์˜ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ์Šฌ๋กœ๋ณด๋‹จ ๋ฐ€๋กœ์…ฐ๋น„์น˜๋Š” ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๋ฅผ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ๋‚ด๋กœ ์œ ์ง€ํ•˜๊ธฐ๋ณด๋‹ค๋Š” ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ํ™•์žฅํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ์ง€์ง€ํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๊ณต๊ฐœ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์„ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ตฐ์œผ๋กœ ๋Œ€์ฒดํ•˜๊ฒ ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์œ„ํ˜‘ํ•˜๊ณ  ๋” ์ด์ƒ ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์˜ ๊ถŒํ•œ์„ ์ธ์ •ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ฒ ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์„ ํฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์ด ๋ฐ€๋กœ์…ฐ๋น„์น˜์˜ ํ†ต์ œ ํ•˜์— ๋“ค๋ฉด์„œ, ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์€ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์˜ ํ™•์žฅ ๊ณ„ํš์— ์ฐฌ์„ฑํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์œ ๊ณ  ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ์„ ์กด์†ํ•˜๊ฒ ๋‹ค๋Š” ์ž…์žฅ์„ ํ๊ธฐํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 3์›” ๋ง์—๋Š” ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์ƒ์ž๊ฐ€ ๋‚˜์˜จ ์œ ํ˜ˆ ์ถฉ๋Œ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์ด ์ผ์–ด๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. 4์›” ์ดˆ์—” ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋‚ด์˜ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ๋ฐ˜๊ตฐ์ด ๋ชจ์—ฌ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ํ†ต์ œ ํ•˜์˜ ์˜ํ† ๋ฅผ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋กœ ํ†ต์ผํ•˜๊ฒ ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. ์ด ์ง€์—ญ์€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ •๋ถ€๊ฐ€ '์ดํƒˆ์ง€์—ญ'์œผ๋กœ ์„ ์–ธํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 1991๋…„ ์ดˆ๊นŒ์ง€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๋Š” ์ •๊ทœ๊ตฐ์ด ์—†์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๋Š” ๊ตญ๋ฐฉ๋ ฅ์„ ๊ฐ•ํ™”ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์š”์›์„ 2๋งŒ๋ช…์œผ๋กœ ์•ฝ ๋‘๋ฐฐ ๊ฐ€๊นŒ์ด ๋Š˜๋ ธ๋‹ค. ์ด์ค‘ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ํšจ๊ณผ๊ฐ€ ์ข‹์•˜๋˜ ๊ฒƒ์€ ๊ตฐ๋Œ€ ์กฐ์ง์„ ๋”ฐ๋ฅธ 12๊ฐœ ๋Œ€๋Œ€ 3์ฒœ๋ช…์˜ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ง€์—ญ๋ณ„๋กœ ์˜ˆ๋น„๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ 16๊ฐœ ๋Œ€๋Œ€, 10๊ฐœ ์ค‘๋Œ€ 9์ฒœ-1๋งŒ๋ช…์„ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฝํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ๋ฌด๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๋ถ€์กฑํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์•…ํ™”๋˜๋Š” ์ƒํ™ฉ์— ๋Œ€์‘ํ•˜์—ฌ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” 5์›” ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ ๋Œ€๋Œ€๋ฅผ ์ „๋ฌธ์ ์ธ 4๊ฐœ ๋ฐฉ์œ„์—ฐ๋Œ€๋กœ ๋ฐ”๊พธ๋ฉฐ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋ฐฉ์œ„๊ตฐ(ZNG)๋ฅผ ์„ค๋ฆฝํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๊ตญ๋ฐฉ๋ถ€ ํ†ต์ œ ํ•˜์— ์žˆ๋˜ ์ด ๋ถ€๋Œ€๋Š” ์€ํ‡ดํ•œ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ์žฅ๊ตฐ์ธ ๋งˆ๋ฅดํ‹ด ์ŠˆํŽ˜๊ฒ”์ด ์ง€ํœ˜ํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ 4๊ฐœ ์—ฐ๋Œ€ 8์ฒœ๋ช…์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์™ธ์—๋„ ์˜ˆ๋น„๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ด 4๋งŒ๋ช…์œผ๋กœ ํ™•๋Œ€๋˜์–ด ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋ฐฉ์œ„๊ตฐ ์†Œ์†์œผ๋กœ ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ€ 19๊ฐœ ์—ฌ๋‹จ 14๊ฐœ ๋…๋ฆฝ๋Œ€๋Œ€๋กœ ์žฌํŽธ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐฉ์œ„์—ฌ๋‹จ์€ ์†Œํ™”๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ์™„๋น„๋œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋‚ด ์œ ์ผํ•œ ๋ถ€๋Œ€์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋ฐฉ์œ„๊ตฐ ์ „๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ค‘ํ™”๊ธฐ๋Š” ์—†์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์—ฌ๋‹จ ์ด์ƒ์˜ ์ง€ํœ˜๋ถ€ ๋ฐ ํ†ต์ œ ๊ตฌ์กฐ๋Š” ์ œ๋Œ€๋กœ ์žˆ์ง€๋„ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. ์ค‘๋ฌด๊ธฐ ๋ถ€์กฑ์ด ๋„ˆ๋ฌด ์‹ฌํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋ฐฉ์œ„๊ตฐ์€ ๋ฐ•๋ฌผ๊ด€ ๋ฐ ์˜ํ™” ์ŠคํŠœ๋””์˜ค์˜ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ์‹œ๊ธฐ ๋ฌด๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์ด์šฉํ•ด ๋ณด์ถฉํ•  ์ •๋„์˜€๋‹ค. ๋‹น์‹œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์˜ ๋ฌด๊ธฐ ๋น„์ถ•๋Ÿ‰์€ ํ•ด์™ธ์—์„œ ์ˆ˜์ž…ํ•œ ์†Œํ™”๊ธฐ 3๋งŒ์ •๊ณผ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ด ์ด์ „์— ์†Œ์œ ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ ์†Œํ™”๊ธฐ 15,000์ • ๋ฟ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐฉ์œ„์—ฌ๋‹จ์œผ๋กœ ์žฌํŽธ๋œ ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„ ๋Œ€์‹ ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ƒˆ๋กญ๊ฒŒ 10,000๋ช…์˜ ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ด ๋‹ค์‹œ ์†Œ์ง‘๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ „์กฐ 9์›” 14-15์ผ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๊ฐ€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋‚ด ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ์‹œ์„ค์„ ์ ๋ นํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ง‰์‚ฌ ์ „ํˆฌ๋ฅผ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์ž ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์€ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ํฌ์œ„๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ์ž‘์€ ๊ณต์„ธ๋ฅผ ํŽผ์น˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์€ ์‹œ๊ธฐ์—” ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๋ฅผ ํ–ฅํ•œ ๋Œ€๊ทœ๋ชจ ๊ณต์„ธ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋™์›๋ น์„ ์„ ํฌํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์„ ๋ชจ์œผ๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ๋™์›๋œ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋“ค์ด ๊ด‘๋ฒ”์œ„ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์ง•๋ณ‘์„ ๊ฑฐ๋ถ€ํ•˜๊ณ  ์ง€์ • ๋ถ€๋Œ€ ์ดํƒˆ์ด๋‚˜ ํƒˆ์˜, ์ „ํˆฌ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์‚ฌ๊ธฐ ์ €ํ•˜ ๋“ฑ์ด ๊ณณ๊ณณ์—์„œ ๋ณด๊ณ ๋˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ค‘์•™์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์—์„œ ์ด์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ฐ˜์‘์ด ์ข‹์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ๋Œ€๋žต 26%๋งŒ ์ง•๋ณ‘์— ๋ณ‘์—ญ์„ ์น˜๋ฅด๋Ÿฌ ๊ฐ”๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ณด๊ณ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฐ ์ƒํ™ฉ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ€๋Œ€ ๋‚ด ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์ด ๋ถ€์กฑํ•ด์ง€๊ณ  ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์€ ๋ถ€๋Œ€์—์„œ ๋ณด๋ณ‘๋ถ€๋Œ€ ๋ฐฐ์น˜๋ฅผ ์ค„์ด๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋™๋ถ€์˜ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋ณด๋‹ˆ์•„ ์ง€์—ญ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ๊ณต์„ธ๋Š” 9์›” 20์ผ ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์ด ๋ฐ˜๋ณต์ ์œผ๋กœ ์‹œ๋„ํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ์ ๋ น์— ์‹คํŒจํ–ˆ๋˜ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ์‹œ๊ฐ€์ง€ ์žฅ์•…์ด ์ „์—ญ์˜ ์ตœ์ข… ๋ชฉํ‘œ์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ๋ฐ ์ฃผ๋ณ€ ์ง€์—ญ์˜ ์ „ํˆฌ๋Š” ์ˆ˜๊ฐœ์›”๊ฐ„ ๊ณ„์†๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ  ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ ์„œ์Šฌ๋ผ๋ณด๋‹ˆ์•„์˜ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ์žฅ์•… ์ง€์—ญ์—์„œ ์„œ์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ ์ง„๊ตฐํ•  ์˜ˆ์ •์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์˜ ์ฃผ๋ ฅ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ‘๋ถ€๋Œ€๋ฅผ ๋ฐฐ์น˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด์˜ ํ•จ๋ฝ ์™ธ์—๋„ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์€ ๋นˆ์ฝ”๋ธŒ์น˜ ์„œ์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ ์ง„๊ฒฉํ•˜๊ธฐ ์ „์— ํ›„๋ฐฉ ์œ„ํ˜‘์„ ์ผ์†Œํ•˜๋„๋ก ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๊ตฐ์„ ์™„์ „ํžˆ ์†Œ๋ฉธ์‹œํ‚ค๋Ÿฌ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์€ ๋ณ‘์—ญ์— ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„ ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์€ ์˜ˆ๋น„๊ตฐ ๋Œ€์‹  ํ˜„์ง€ ์ง€์—ญ์˜ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ์˜ํ† ๋ฐฉ์œ„๊ตฐ ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์ด๋‚˜ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ์ค€๊ตฐ์‚ฌ ์กฐ์ง์„ ์ด์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์„ ๊ฐ•ํ™”ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ž์›๊ตฐ์€ ๋ฏผ์กฑ ์ฆ์˜ค๋กœ ๊ฐ€๋“ ์ฐจ ๊ฐ€์ •์„ ์•ฝํƒˆํ•˜๋Š” ๋“ฑ ๋ฏผ๊ฐ„์ธ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์ž”ํ•™ํ–‰์œ„๋ฅผ ์ €์งˆ๋ €๋‹ค. 2๊ฐœ์›”์ด ๋„˜๋Š” ์ „ํˆฌ ํ›„ 11์›” 18์ผ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด์˜ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๊ตฐ์ด ํ•ญ๋ณตํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ์‹œ๊ฐ€์ง€๋Š” ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์˜ ํฌ๋ณ‘ ๋ฐ ๋ฐ•๊ฒฉํฌ, ๋กœ์ผ“ ํฌ๊ฒฉ์œผ๋กœ ์‹ฌ๊ฐํ•œ ํ”ผํ•ด๋ฅผ ์ž…์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ „ํˆฌ๊ฐ€ ๋๋‚  ๋•Œ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋„์‹œ ๋‚ด๋กœ ํฌ์™€ ๋ฏธ์‚ฌ์ผ์ด ์ตœ์†Œ 70๋งŒ๊ฐœ๊ฐ€ ๋–จ์–ด์กŒ์œผ๋ฉฐ ํ•˜๋ฃจ 12,000๊ฐœ๊ฐ€ ๋„˜๋Š” ๊ผด๋กœ ๋–จ์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ์ „๊ฐœ ์ด์†ก ์ค€๋น„ 11์›” 17์ผ, ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ์ œ5(์ž๊ทธ๋ ˆ๋ธŒ) ์ „๋ฉด๊ตฐ ์ง€ํœ˜๊ด€์ธ ์†Œ์žฅ ์•ˆ๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•ผ ๋ผ์…ฐํƒ€๋Š” ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด ๊ฐ์‹œ ์ž„๋ฌด๋‹จ์—๊ฒŒ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์€ ์›์น™์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด์—์„œ ์ทจ์•ฝํ•œ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์„ ์‹ ์†ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋Œ€ํ”ผ์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” ๋ฐ ํ•ฉ์˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์•Œ๋ ธ๋‹ค. ์ด ๋‹น์‹œ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ๋ณ‘์›์—๋Š” 400๋ช… ๊ฐ€๋Ÿ‰์ด ๊ฐ‡ํžŒ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์•Œ๋ ค์ ธ ์žˆ์—ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ์‹ค์ œ ๊ทธ ์ˆซ์ž๋Š” 450๋ช…์ด ๋„˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ํ™•์ธ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ณ‘์›์—๋Š” ์‹ฌ๊ฐํ•œ ๋ถ€์ƒ์œผ๋กœ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜์ผ ๊ฐ„ ๋ฐ›๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ์ค‘ํ™˜์ž 40๋ช…๊ณผ ๊ฒฝ๋ถ€์ƒ์œผ๋กœ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ํ™˜์ž 360๋ช…์„ ํฌํ•จํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ํ™˜์ž๋“ค ์™ธ์—๋„ ์ผ๋ถ€ ๋ฏผ๊ฐ„์ธ๋“ค์€ ์ „ํˆฌ ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰ ๋‚  ๋ณ‘์›์œผ๋กœ ํ”ผ๋‚œ์„ ๊ฐ€๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋“ค์€ ๋ณ‘์›์ด ๋‹น์‹œ ๋งค์ผ ํฌ๊ฒฉ์„ ๋ฐ›๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ๋„์‹œ์—์„œ ๋ณ‘์›์œผ๋กœ ๋Œ€ํ”ผํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด ์™ธ์—๋„ ๋งŽ์€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๊ตฐ์ด ๋ณ‘์›์˜ ํ™˜์ž๋‚˜ ์ง์›์œผ๋กœ ๋ณ‘์› ์•ˆ์œผ๋กœ ํ”ผ๋‚œ์˜ค๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 11์›” 18์ผ, ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„, ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ, ์œ ๋Ÿฝ๊ณต๋™์ฒด ๊ฐ์‹œ๋‹จ ์…‹์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋œ ์‚ผ๋‘์œ„์›ํšŒ๋Š” ๊ตญ์ œ ์ ์‹ญ์ž ์œ„์›ํšŒ, ๊ตญ๊ฒฝ ์—†๋Š” ์˜์‚ฌํšŒ, ๋ชฐํƒ€์„ธ๋ฅด ์ธํ„ฐ๋„ค์…”๋„ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ๋“ค๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด์˜ ํ”ผ๋‚œ ํ•ด๋ฒ•์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ๋…ผ์˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 11์›” 18์ผ์—์„œ 19์ผ๋กœ ๋„˜์–ด๊ฐ€๋Š” ๋ฐค, ๋ผ์…ฐํƒ€ ์ง€ํœ˜๊ด€๊ณผ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋ณด๊ฑด๋ถ€ ์žฅ๊ด€ ์•ˆ๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•ผ ํ—ค๋ธŒ๋ž€๊ทธ๋Š” ํ”ผ๋‚œ์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ํ•ฉ์˜์— ์„œ๋ช…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ํ•ฉ์˜๋ฌธ์—์„œ๋Š” ํ”ผ๋‚œ๋ฏผ๋“ค์ด ๋ฃจ์ž์ธ  ๊ต์™ธ-๋ณด๊ทธ๋‹ค๋…ธ๋ธŒ์น˜-๋งˆ๋ฆฐ์น˜-์ง€๋””๋„ค ๊ต์ฐจ๋กœ-๋ˆ„์Šˆํƒ€๋ฅด-๋นˆ์ฝ”๋ธŒ์น˜ ๋„๋กœ๋ฅผ ๋”ฐ๋ผ ํ”ผ๋‚œํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ณด์žฅํ•ด์ค€๋‹ค๋Š” ๋‚ด์šฉ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ”ผ๋‚œ๋ฏผ๋“ค์€ ์ง€๋””๋„ค ๊ต์ฐจ๋กœ์—์„œ ๊ตญ์ œ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ์— ์ธ๊ณ„๋˜๊ณ  ๋ณ‘์›์€ ๊ตญ์ œ ์ ์‹ญ์ž ์œ„์›ํšŒ๊ฐ€ ๋‹ด๋‹นํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜๋ฉฐ, ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์— ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด ๊ฐ์‹œ ์ž„๋ฌด๋‹จ์ด ์ „์ฒด ์ž‘์ „์„ ๊ฐ๋…ํ•˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํ—ค๋ธŒ๋ž€๊ทธ ์žฅ๊ด€์€ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ๋ณ‘์›์˜ ๋ณ‘์›์žฅ์ธ ๋ฒ ์Šค๋‚˜ ๋ณด์‚ฌ๋‚˜์ธ ์—๊ฒŒ ์ด ํ•ฉ์˜๋ฅผ ํ†ต๋ณดํ•˜๊ณ  ์ ์‹ญ์ž ํŒ€์ด ๊ณง ๋„์ฐฉํ•  ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋‚  ์ €๋… ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ํฌ์œ„์ „์˜ ์ „ ๊ณผ์ •์„ ์ฒดํ—˜ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๋ฐฉ์†กํ•˜๋˜ ์ €๋„๋ฆฌ์ŠคํŠธ ์‹œ๋‹ˆ์ƒค ๊ธ€๋ผ๋ฐ”์…ฐ๋น„์น˜๋Š” ๋ณ‘์›์—์„œ ์ตœ์ข… ๋ฐฉ์†ก์„ ์ง„ํ–‰ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ธ€๋ผ๋ฐ”์…ฐ๋น„์น˜๋Š” ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๋ฏผ๋ณ‘๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ์ž์‹ ์„ ์žก์„ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ๋ฌด์Šจ ์ง“์„ ํ•  ์ง€ ๋ชฐ๋ผ, ์ ์‹ญ์ž์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋นจ๋ฆฌ ๋„์‹œ๋ฅผ ๋– ๋‚˜๊ณ  ์‹ถ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ณ‘์› ์žฅ์•… 11์›” 19์ผ ์•„์นจ, ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด ์ž„๋ฌด ๊ฐ์‹œ๋‹จ(ECMM)์€ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ๋‚ด ์กฐ์ง์ ์ธ ์ €ํ•ญ์ด ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋๋‚ฌ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ์•Œ์•˜์œผ๋‚˜ ๋ณ‘์› ๋‚ด์˜ ํ™˜์ž๋“ค์ด ์–ด๋–ป๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋Š”์ง€์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด์„œ๋Š” ์–ด๋– ํ•œ ์ •๋ณด๋„ ๋ฐ›์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ณต๋™์ฒด ๊ฐ์‹œ๋‹จ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ ๋””๋ฆญ ์ž” ๋ฐ˜ ํœดํ„ด ๋Œ€์‚ฌ๋Š” ECMM์„ ๋Œ€์‹ ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ผ์Šˆํƒ€์—๊ฒŒ ๋Œ€์‹  ๊ฐœ์ž…ํ•ด๋‹ฌ๋ผ๊ณ  ์š”๊ตฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋‚  ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ๋ถ€๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ๋ณ‘์›์— ๋„์ฐฉํ–ˆ๊ณ  ๋ณด์‚ฌ๋‚˜์ธ ๋Š” ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ์žฅ๊ต ๋ฐ€๋ ˆ ๋ฏ€๋ฅดํฌ์‹œ์น˜๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋‚œ ์ƒํƒœ์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ณด์‚ฌ๋‚˜์ธ ๋Š” ๋ฏ€๋ฅดํฌ์‹œ์น˜๊ฐ€ ํ”ผ๋‚œ ํ˜‘์ •์„ ์ง€ํ‚ฌ ์˜๋ฌด๋Š” ์—†๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์–ธ๊ธ‰ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ ์‹ญ์ž ๋Œ€์›๋“ค์€ ํ˜„์žฅ์˜ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ์žฅ๊ต์˜ ๋ฐฉํ•ด๋กœ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ๋‚ด๋กœ ์ง„์ž…ํ•  ์ˆœ ์—†์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ 11์›” 19์ผ ์ดˆ์ €๋…์—๋Š” ์ ์ง‘์ž์‚ฌ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์Šค ๋ณด๋ฆฌ์‹ฑ์–ด๊ฐ€ "์žฅ๊ตฐ"๊ณผ์˜ ์•ฝ์†์„ ์ฃผ์žฅํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ๋ณ‘์›์— ๋„์ฐฉํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์„œ ๋ณด๋ฆฌ์‹ฑ์–ด๋Š” ๊ฑด๋ฌผ์„ ์žฅ์•…ํ•œ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ๋Œ€์œ„๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋‚˜ ์ ์ง‘์ž์‚ฌ์˜ ์‹œ์„ค ๋ฐฉ๋ฌธ์„ ํ—ˆ๊ฐ€ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ ๋ณด๋ฆฌ์‹ฑ์–ด๋Š” ์ ์ง‘์ž์‚ฌ ํ˜ธ์†ก ํ–‰๋ ฌ๋กœ ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ€ ๋ณ‘์›์„ ํƒˆ์ถœํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด๋‚  ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ๊ธฐ์ž ์•™๋„ค ๋ฐ”๋ผ๋ฏธ๋„ ๋ณ‘์›์„ ๋ฐฉ๋ฌธํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด์—์„œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๊ตฐ์— ์ž์›ํ•ด ์ „ํˆฌ์— ์ฐธ์—ฌํ–ˆ๋˜ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์ธ ์ง„๋ฏธ์…ฐ ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ฆฌ์—๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋‚˜ ์ธํ„ฐ๋ทฐ๋ฅผ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ฐ”๋ผ๋ฏธ๋Š” ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ฆฌ์—์—๊ฒŒ ๊ธฐ์ž ์‹ ๋ถ„์ฆ์„ ์ด์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๋„์‹œ๋ฅผ ํƒˆ์ถœํ•˜์ž๊ณ  ์ œ์•ˆํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ฆฌ์—๋Š” ์ด๋ฅผ ๊ฑฐ์ ˆํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 11์›” 20์ผ ์•„์นจ, ์ ์‹ญ์ž์‚ฌ ํ–‰๋ ฌ์ด ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด์— ๋„์ฐฉํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ๋ณ‘์›์„ ๋ฐ”๋กœ ์•ž์— ๋‘๊ณ  ๋‹ค๋ฆฌ์—์„œ ์ €์ง€๋‹นํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์žฅ๊ฐ‘์ฐจ๊ฐ€ ๋ณ‘์›์œผ๋กœ ํ–ฅํ•˜๋Š” ๋‹ค๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๋ง‰๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๊ทธ๊ณณ์— ์žˆ๋˜ ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ์žฅ๊ต์ธ ์†Œ๋ น ๋ฒ ์…€๋ฆฐ ์Šˆ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ˜์ฐจ๋‹Œ๋Š” ์ ์‹ญ์ž์‚ฌ ํ–‰๋ ฌ์„ ๋ง‰์•„๋ฒ„๋ ธ๋‹ค. ํ˜„์žฅ์—์„œ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ๊ณผ ์ ์‹ญ์ž์‚ฌ ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ํ˜‘์ƒ์„ ์›๋งŒํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด BBC ๊ธฐ์ž ๋งˆํ‹ด ๋ฒจ์ด ํ†ต์—ญ์„ ์ž์›ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ฒ ์…€๋ฆฐ ์Šˆ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ˜์ฐจ๋‹Œ์€ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ์นด๋ฉ”๋ผ ์•ž์—์„œ ์ ์‹ญ์ž์‚ฌ ์š”์›์—๊ฒŒ "์—ฌ๊ธด ๋‚ด ๋‚˜๋ผ์ด๊ณ , ์šฐ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์ด๊ณณ์„ ์ ๋ นํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์—ฌ๊ธด ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„๊ณ , ๋‚œ ์ด๊ณณ์„ ์ง€ํœ˜ํ•œ๋‹ค!"๋ผ๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜๋Œ์•„์˜ฌ ํ˜ธ์†ก๋Œ€๋ฅผ ๋งž์ดํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ง€๋””๋„ค ๊ต์ฐจ๋กœ์— ์žˆ๋˜ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ๊ณต๋™์ฒด ๊ฐ์‹œ๋‹จ์€ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์—๊ฒŒ 11์›” 22์ผ ํ”ผ๋‚œ๋ฏผ ํ˜ธ์†ก๋Œ€๋Š” ๋ณด์Šค๋‹ˆ์•„ ๋ถ๋ถ€์˜ ๋ณด์‚ฐ์Šคํ‚ค์ƒค๋งˆ์ธ ๋กœ ํ–ฅํ•  ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ํ†ต๋ณดํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์Šˆ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ˜์ฐจ๋‹Œ์ด ํ˜ธ์†ก๋Œ€ ํ–‰๋ ฌ์„ ๋ง‰๋Š” ๋™์•ˆ ํฌ๋กœ๋“ค์€ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋ฐฉํ–ฅ์—์„œ ์˜จ ๋ฒ„์Šค๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋ฐ–์œผ๋กœ ๋Œ๋ ค๋‚˜๊ฐ”๋‹ค. ๋Œ€๋žต 300์—ฌ๋ช…์ด ๋ณ‘์›์—์„œ ๋น ์ ธ๋‚˜๊ฐ„ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ํ™•์ธ๋œ๋‹ค. ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ ๋†์žฅ 11์›” 20์ผ์—๋Š” ์Šˆ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ˜์ฐจ๋‹Œ๊ณผ ๋Œ€๋ น ๋„ค๋ณด์ด์ƒค ํŒŒ๋ธŒ์ฝ”๋น„์น˜๋Š” ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด์—์„œ ๋ถ€์ƒ์ž๋ฅผ ์ด์†กํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์ด ๋ฒ„์Šค๋ฅผ ์ œ๊ณตํ•ด์ค„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ฐœํ‘œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ 10์‹œ 30๋ถ„ ๊ฒฝ ๋ฒ„์Šค๋Š” ํฌ๋กœ๋ฅผ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ๋‚จ์ชฝ ๋์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ๋ณ‘์˜์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ€๋ฒ„๋ ธ๊ณ  ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์„œ ๋ณ‘์› ์ง์›์œผ๋กœ ํ™•์ธ๋œ 15๋ช…์€ ๋‹ค์‹œ ๋ณ‘์›์œผ๋กœ ๋˜๋Œ๋ ค๋ณด๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. ๋ณ‘์˜์— ๋‚จ์•„์žˆ๋˜ ๋‚จ์€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์€ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ๊ณผ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ์ค€๊ตฐ์‚ฌ์กฐ์ง ๋Œ€์›์ด ์œ„ํ˜‘ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ์ง€๋„์ž๋“ค์€ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ „์Ÿ ๋ฒ”์ฃ„ ํ˜์˜๋กœ ๊ธฐ์†Œํ•˜๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ”๋ผ๋ฉฐ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๋‚ด์˜ ๊ตฌ๊ธˆ์‹œ์„ค๋กœ ์˜ฎ๊ธฐ๋Š” ๋ฐ ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2์‹œ๊ฐ„ ๋™์•ˆ ๋ณ‘์˜์— ์žˆ์€ ํ›„ ๋ฒ„์Šค๋Š” ๊ทธ๋ผ๋ณด๋ณด ๊ทผ์ฒ˜์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ ๋†์žฅ์œผ๋กœ ์ด๋™ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋Œ๋ ค์˜จ ๋ฌด๋ฆฌ ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ์ด์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ์ด๋“ค ์ค‘์—์„  ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๋ฏผ์กฑ์ธ, ๋ฌด์Šฌ๋ฆฌ๋งˆ๋‹ˆ, ํ—๊ฐ€๋ฆฌ์ธ ์™ธ์—๋„ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด์—์„œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๊ตฐ์— ์ž์›ํ•œ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์ธ์ธ ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ฆฌ์—์™€ ๋…์ผ์ธ 1๋ช…๋„ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ๋ฌด๋ฆฌ์—๋Š” ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ๋ณ‘์› ์•ฝ๊ตญ์— ๊ทผ๋ฌดํ–ˆ๋˜ ๋ผ์…ฐํƒ€ ์กฐ์นด๋„ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ๋กœ ๋Œ๋ ค์˜จ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์€ 261๋ช…์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ถ€ ๋ฌธํ—Œ์—์„œ๋Š” ์ด ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค ์ค‘ ์—ฌ์„ฑ์ด 1-2๋ช… ์žˆ์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 5๋‹ฌ ๋œ ์ž„์‚ฐ๋ถ€๋„ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ถ”์ •ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํฌ๋กœ๋กœ ๋Œ๋ ค์˜จ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์˜ ๋‚˜์ด๋Š” ์ตœ์†Œ 16์„ธ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ตœ๋Œ€ 72์„ธ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด์ค‘ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์–ด๋ฆฐ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์€ ๋งŒ 16์„ธ์ธ ์ด๊ณ ๋ฅด ์นด์น˜์น˜์ด๋‹ค. ํฌ๋กœ๋“ค์ด ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด์—์„œ 10km ์ •๋„ ๋–จ์–ด์ง„ ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ์— ๋„์ฐฉํ•˜์ž ๋ฒ„์Šค์— ์žˆ๋˜ ํฌ๋กœ๋“ค์€ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋‚˜ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ์ค€๊ตฐ์‚ฌ ์กฐ์ง์—๊ฒŒ ํ•œ๋ช…์”ฉ ๋Œ๋ ค๊ฐ€ ๋†์žฅ ์•ˆ์˜ ๋†์ž‘๋ฌผ ์ €์žฅ์†Œ ์ฐฝ๊ณ ๋กœ ๋Œ๋ ค๊ฐ”๋‹ค. ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ์ „ ์‹œ์žฅ์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋ธŒ์ฝ” ๋„ํฌ๋งˆ๋…ธ๋น„์น˜๋Š” ํฌ๋กœ๋ฅผ ๊ตฌํƒ€ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฌด์žฅ ์„ธ๋ ฅ ์ค‘ ํ•œ๋ช…์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ตฐ์ธ๋“ค์€ ๋Œ๋ ค์˜จ ๋ฏผ๊ฐ„์ธ์„ ๊ตฌํƒ€ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๊ทธ๋“ค์ด ๊ฐ€์ง„ ๊ฐœ์ธ ์†Œ์ง€ํ’ˆ์ด๋‚˜ ๋ˆ, ๋ณด์„๋„ ๊ฐ•ํƒˆํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํ•˜๋ฃจ ๋„˜๊ฒŒ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ํ—Œ๋ณ‘์€ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ์˜ํ† ๋ฐฉ์œ„๊ตฐ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋‚˜ ์ค€๊ตฐ์‚ฌ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋“ค์„ ํฌ๋กœ๋ฅผ ๊ตฌํƒ€ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ง‰์ง€๋„ ๋ชปํ•˜๊ณ  ๋†์žฅ ์ฐฝ๊ณ  ๋‚ด๋กœ ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ€์ง€๋„ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋“ค์€ ํฌ๋กœ๋ฅผ ๋ง‰๋Œ€๊ธฐ, ๊ฐœ๋จธ๋ฆฌํŒ, ์‡ ์‚ฌ์Šฌ, ์•ผ๊ตฌ๋ฐฉ๋ง์ด ๋“ฑ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ํญํ–‰ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋ถ€์ƒ์„ ์ž…์—ˆ๋˜ ๋ฏผ๊ฐ„์ธ์€ ์ž์‹ ์ด ์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ ๋ชฉ๋ฐœ๋กœ๋„ ๋งž์•˜๋‹ค. ํ•ด์งˆ๋…˜์ด ๋  ๋•Œ๊นŒ์ง€ ์ตœ์†Œํ•œ 2๋ช…์ด ๊ตฌํƒ€๋‹นํ•ด ์ฃฝ์€ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ถ”์ •๋œ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ํญํ–‰ํ•œ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ ํ•œ๋ช…์ด ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์ธ 1๋ช…์„ ํฌํ•จํ•œ ์ตœ์†Œํ•œ ํฌ๋กœ 5๋ช…์„ ์ด์ฃฝ์˜€๋Š”๋ฐ ์ด ์ค‘ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์ธ์€ ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์—์ธ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ถ”์ •๋œ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ๋ฌด๋ฆฌ์— ์žˆ๋˜ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ ์ค‘ 7-8๋ช…์€ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์˜ ๋ช…๋ น์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด๋กœ ๋Œ์•„์™€ ํ’€๋Ÿฌ๋‚ฌ๋Š”๋ฐ ์•„๋งˆ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ์ด์›ƒ์ด ์†์„ ์จ ํƒˆ์ถœํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ถ”์ •๋œ๋‹ค. ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰์œผ๋กœ ๋ฏ€๋ฅดํฌ์‹œ์น˜๋Š” ๋†์žฅ์—์„œ ํฌ๋กœ๋ฅผ ์˜ํ† ๋ฐฉ์œ„๊ตฐ ์ง€ํœ˜๊ด€์ด์ž ๋ฏผ๋ณ‘๋Œ€ "๋ ˆ๋ฐ” ์ˆ˜ํผ๋ฐ๋ฆฌ์นด"์˜ ์ง€ํœ˜๊ด€์ธ ๋ฏธ๋กœ๋ฅ˜๋ธŒ ๋ถ€์š”๋น„์น˜๊ฐ€ ์ง€ํœ˜ํ•˜๋Š” ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์ธ ์˜ํ† ๋ฐฉ์œ„๊ตฐ์—๊ฒŒ ํฌ๋กœ ๊ด€๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๊ทธ๋ƒฅ ๋„˜๊ฒจ๋ฒ„๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์„ ์ฒ ์ˆ˜ํ•˜๋ผ๋Š” ๋ช…๋ น์„ ๋‚ด๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๋ฏผ๋ณ‘๋Œ€ "๋ ˆ๋ฐ” ์ˆ˜ํผ๋ฐ๋ฆฌ์นด"๋Š” ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ์‹œ๋“œ์—์„œ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฝ๋œ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๊ธ‰์ง„๋‹น์˜ ๋ฏผ๋ณ‘๋Œ€๋กœ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ์˜ ์ œ1 ๊ธฐ๊ณ„ํ™”๊ฒฝ๋น„์—ฌ๋‹จ ์†Œ์†์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜คํ›„ 6์‹œ๊ฒฝ ํฌ๋กœ๋“ค์€ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๋ฌด๋ฆฌ๋กœ ๋‚˜๋ˆ ์กŒ๋‹ค. 10-20๋ช… ๊ฐ€๋Ÿ‰์˜ ๋ฌด๋ฆฌ๋กœ ์ชผ๊ฐœ์ง„ ํฌ๋กœ๋“ค์€ ๊ฑด๋ฌผ์— ๋‚˜์™€ ํŠธ๋Ÿญ์— ์‹ฃ์–ด์ ธ ์ˆ˜๋ฐฑ ๋ฏธํ„ฐ ์ •๋„ ๋–จ์–ด์ง„ ๋‚˜๋ฌด๊ฐ€ ์šฐ๊ฑฐ์ง„ ๊ณ„๊ณก์œผ๋กœ ์˜ฎ๊ฒจ์กŒ๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๋ฆฌ ์ค€๋น„๋œ ์ฒ˜ํ˜•์žฅ์œผ๋กœ ์˜ฎ๊ฒจ์ง„ ํฌ๋กœ๋“ค์€ ์ด์‚ด๋‹นํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋ถˆ๋„์ €๋ฅผ ์ด์šฉํ•ด ์ง‘๋‹จ๋ฌด๋ค ์‹์œผ๋กœ ํŒŒ๋ฌปํ˜”๋‹ค. 15-20๋ถ„ ํ›„ ๋‹ค์Œ ๋ฌด๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ๋ ค์˜ค๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋นˆ ํŠธ๋Ÿญ์ด ๊ฑด๋ฌผ๋กœ ๋‹ค์‹œ ์ด๋™ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰ ํฌ๋กœ ๋ฌด๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๋†์žฅ ๊ฑด๋ฌผ ๋ฐ”๋กœ ๋ฐ–์—์„œ ํ•œ๊บผ๋ฒˆ์— ํ•™์‚ด๋‹นํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐค 10์‹œ ๊ฒฝ์ด ๋˜์–ด์„œ ๋ชจ๋“  ํฌ๋กœ๊ฐ€ ์ „๋ถ€ ํ•™์‚ด๋‹นํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฑฐ์˜ ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์˜ ๋ฌธํ—Œ์—์„œ๋Š” ์•ฝ 260๋ช…์ด ํ•™์‚ด๋‹นํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ถ”์ •ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์‚ฌ๋ง์ž์ˆ˜๋Š” ICTY ๊ฒ€์ฐฐ์ธก์—์„œ ์ธ์šฉํ•œ ์ˆซ์ž๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ถ€ ๋ฌธํ—Œ์—์„œ๋Š” ์ตœ๋Œ€ 264๋ช…์ด ํ•™์‚ด๋‹นํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ถ”์ •ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” 261๋ช…์ด ํ•™์‚ด๋‹นํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ถ”์ •ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ํ•™์‚ด์€ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „ ์ดํ›„ ์ด๋•Œ๊นŒ์ง€ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์—์„œ ์ผ์–ด๋‚œ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๊ฑฐ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ „์Ÿ๋ฒ”์ฃ„ ํ–‰์œ„์˜€๋‹ค. ์—ฌํŒŒ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ๊ตฐ์‚ฌ๋Š” 1991๋…„ 10์›” ์ดˆ ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜์šฉ์†Œ๋กœ ๋ฐ”๊พธ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ง‘๋‹จ์‚ดํ•ด ์ด์™ธ์—๋„ 1991๋…„ ๊ฐ€์„ ๋™์•ˆ ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ ์ˆ˜์šฉ์†Œ์— ๋Œ€๋žต 3-4์ฒœ๋ช…์ด ๋˜๋Š” ๋‚จ์„ฑ ํฌ๋กœ๊ฐ€ ์ˆ˜์šฉ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ด๋“ค์€ ์ผ์‹œ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ์— ์ˆ˜์šฉ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ์Šค๋ ˜์Šค์นด๋ฏธํŠธ๋กœ๋น„์ฐจ ๊ฐ์˜ฅ์ด๋‚˜ ์ง€์—ญ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ๊ตฐ๋ถ€๋Œ€๋กœ ์ด์†ก๋˜์–ด ๋‹ค์‹œ ์Šคํƒ€์˜ˆ์ฒด๋ณด, ๋ฒ ๊ฒŒ์ด์น˜ ๋“ฑ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๋‚ด์˜ ๊ฐ•์ œ์ˆ˜์šฉ์†Œ๋กœ ์˜ฎ๊ธฐ๋Š” ์ž„์‹œ์ˆ˜์šฉ์†Œ ์—ญํ• ์„ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 1991๋…„ ์ฒด๊ฒฐ๋œ ์ผ๋ จ์˜ ์ •์น˜์  ํ˜‘์ •๊ณผ 1992๋…„ ์ดˆ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์™€ ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ์‚ฌ์ด ์ฒด๊ฒฐ๋œ ํœด์ „ ํ˜‘์ •์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด์™€ ์ธ๊ทผ ์ง€์—ญ์„ ํฌํ•จํ•œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๊ณณ๊ณณ์— ์œ ์—”๋ณดํ˜ธ๊ตฐ(UNPROFOR)์ด ํ‰ํ™”์œ ์ง€ ์ž„๋ฌด๋กœ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ์—”๋ณดํ˜ธ๊ตฐ์€ 1992๋…„ 3์›” ๊ฒฝ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋ฐฐ์น˜๊ฐ€ ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ง‘๋‹จ๋ฌด๋ค ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ ๋ฒ•์˜์ธ๋ฅ˜ํ•™์ž ํด๋ผ์ด๋“œ ์Šค๋…ธ์šฐ๋Š” 1992๋…„ 10์›” ์ž๊ทธ๋ ˆ๋ธŒ๋ฅผ ๋ฐฉ๋ฌธํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ํ•™์‚ด์˜ ์กด์žฌ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์•Œ๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์Šค๋…ธ์šฐ ๊ต์ˆ˜๋Š” ์ „์Ÿ๋ฒ”์ฃ„ ํ˜์˜ ์กฐ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด ์œ ์—”ํŒ€ ๋Œ€์› ์ค‘ ํ•œ๋ช…์œผ๋กœ ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ€ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด๋ฅผ ์—ฌํ–‰ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ฑฐ๊ธฐ์„œ ์Šค๋…ธ์šฐ ๊ต์ˆ˜๋Š” ์ž๊ทธ๋ ˆ๋ธŒ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ์˜๋Œ€์˜ ํ•™๊ณผ์žฅ์„ ๋งŒ๋‚˜ ํ•™์‚ด์„ ํ”ผํ•ด ์‚ด์•„๋‚จ์€ ์ „ ๊ตฐ์ธ์„ ์†Œ๊ฐœ๋ฐ›์•˜๊ณ  ๊ทธ์—๊ฒŒ์„œ ํ•™์‚ด์— ๊ด€ํ•ด์„œ ๋“ฃ๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 3์ผ ํ›„, ์Šค๋…ธ์šฐ ๊ต์ˆ˜๋Š” ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด์— ๋„์ฐฉํ•ด ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ์ง€์—ญ์˜ ์œ ์—”๋ณดํ˜ธ๊ตฐ์œผ๋กœ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌ๋œ ์™•๋ฆฝ ์บ๋‚˜๋‹ค ๊ธฐ๋งˆ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์˜ ์ค‘์‚ฌ ๋ ˆ๋ฆฌ ๋ฌด์–ด์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ ์ง€์—ญ์œผ๋กœ ํ–ฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๊ณณ์—์„œ ๋ฌด์–ด๋Š” ์ง„ํ™ ์†์— ํŒŒ๋ฌปํžŒ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ๋‘๊ฐœ๊ณจ์„ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ฉฐ์น  ํ›„ ์œ ์—”์€ ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ ์ง€์—ญ์„ ๋ฒ”์ฃ„ ํ˜„์žฅ์œผ๋กœ ์„ ํฌํ•˜๊ณ  ํ˜„์žฅ ๋ณดํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„ ์œ ์—”๋ณดํ˜ธ๊ตฐ์„ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์Šค๋…ธ์šฐ ๊ต์ˆ˜๋Š” ์ž์‹ ์„ ํฌํ•จํ•ด 4๋ช…์œผ๋กœ ์ด๋ค„์ง„ ํŒ€์„ ๊พธ๋ ค ๊ฒจ์šธ ์ „์— ์˜ˆ๋น„ ์กฐ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์‹ค์‹œํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 1992๋…„ 12์›” ํ•™์‚ด ํ˜„์žฅ์— ๋„์ฐฉํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด ํŒ€์€ ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„๊ตฐ์ด ๋ณดํ˜ธํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ํ•™์‚ด ํ˜„์žฅ์— ๋„์ฐฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ฌด์–ด๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌํ•œ ๋ผˆ์กฐ๊ฐ ์™ธ์—๋„ ๋‚˜๋จธ์ง€ ๋ชจ๋“  ๋ผˆ๋„ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋ถ€๋ถ„์ ์œผ๋กœ ํŒŒ๋ฌปํ˜€ ๋‚จ์•„์žˆ๋Š” ๋ผˆ์กฐ๊ฐ๋“ค๋„ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํŒ€์€ ํ˜„์žฅ์—์„œ ๋Œ€๋žต 1m ์ •๋„์˜ ๊นŠ์ด๋กœ ์ฐธํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ํŒ ๋‹ค. ๋•…์„ ํŒŒ๋ฉด์„œ ๋” ๋งŽ์€ ๋ผˆ๋ฅผ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋ฌด๋ค์˜ ํฌ๊ธฐ๋„ ๋Œ€๋žต์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ถ”์ธกํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ง€ํ•˜๋ฅผ ํŒŒ๋‚ด๋ ค๊ฐ€ ์กฐ์‚ฌํ•œ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ๋Œ€๋žต 200์—ฌ๋ช… ์ด์ƒ์ด ์ง‘๋‹จ๋ฌด๋ค์— ํŒŒ๋ฌปํžŒ ๊ฒƒ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒฐ๋ก ์„ ๋‚ด๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์กฐ์‚ฌ๋‹จ์€ ๋ฌด๋ค ํ•œ์ผ ์—์„œ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„๊ตฐ์ด ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ํ‘œ์ค€ ์ƒ์‚ฐ๋œ AK-47์˜ ํƒ„์•ฝํ†ต ๋”๋ฏธ๋ฅผ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌํ•˜๊ณ  ๊ทธ์™€ ์ • ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ํŽธ ๋‚˜๋ฌด์—” ์ด์•Œ ๊ตฌ๋ฉ์ด ๋šซ๋ฆฐ ๊ฒƒ๋„ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌํ•˜์—ฌ ์‚ฌ๊ฒฉ์ˆ˜๋“ค์ด ๋ฌด๋ค ํ•œ์ชฝ์— ์„œ์„œ ํ•œ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ๋ฅผ ํ–ฅํ•ด ๋ฐœ์‚ฌํ•ด ์ด์‚ดํ•œ ๊ฒƒ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค๋Š” ์ถ”์ธก์„ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” 1993๋…„์—์„œ 1994๋…„ ์‚ฌ์ด ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ์— ๋ฌปํžŒ ์‹œ์‹ ์„ ๋ฐœ๊ตดํ•˜์ž๋Š” ์‹œ๋„๋ฅผ ํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ์‹คํŒจํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์œ ์—” ์‚ฌ๋ฌด์ด์žฅ์ด ์ž„๋ช…ํ•œ 5๋ช…์˜ ์ „๋ฌธ๊ฐ€์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์›์ด 1993๋…„ 10์›” ์‹œ์‹  ๋ฐœ๊ตด์„ ์œ„ํ•ด ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ๋กœ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ด๋“ค๋„ ์ง€์—ญ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ํ–‰์ •๋ถ€์˜ ๋ฐฉํ•ด๋กœ ์‹คํŒจํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ์ •๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„ ํ‰ํ™”์œ ์ง€๊ตฐ์˜ ๊ฐ์‹œ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›๋Š” ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ ์ง‘๋‹จ๋ฌ˜์ง€์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ถ”๊ฐ€ ์กฐ์‚ฌ ์‹œ๋„๋ฅผ ๋ช‡ ์ฐจ๋ก€ ๋ง‰์€ ๋์— 1994๋…„ 1์›” ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ์œ ์—” ๋Œ€์‚ฌ์ธ ๋งค๋“ค๋ฆฐ ์˜ฌ๋ธŒ๋ผ์ดํŠธ๊ฐ€ ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ๋กœ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ฌ๋ธŒ๋ผ์ดํŠธ๋Š” 1993๋…„ ์„ธ์›Œ์ง„ ๊ตฌ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ๊ตญ์ œํ˜•์‚ฌ์žฌํŒ์†Œ(ICTY)์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ์ง€์ง€๋ฅผ ๋ณด์—ฌ์ฃผ๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ํŒŒ๊ฒฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฌด๋ค ๋ฐœ๊ตด 1995๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ์ง€์—ญ์˜ ์ •์น˜์  ์ƒํ™ฉ์€ ๋ณ€ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ด ํ•ด 5์›”๊ณผ 8์›” ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„๊ตฐ์€ ์•”ํ˜ธ๋ช… ํ”Œ๋ž˜์‹œ ์ž‘์ „๊ณผ ํญํ’ ์ž‘์ „์„ ์‹ค์‹œํ•˜์—ฌ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ๊ตฐ์‚ฌ๋“ค์„ ์ฐจ๋ก€์ฐจ๋ก€ ๊ฒฉํŒŒํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋™๋ถ€ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋ณด๋‹ˆ์•„๊ฐ€ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„๊ฐ€ ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰๊นŒ์ง€ ์ ๋ นํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ ์ง€์—ญ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. 11์›”์—๋Š” ์—๋ฅด๋‘ํŠธ ํ˜‘์ •์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋™๋ถ€ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋ณด๋‹ˆ์•„ ์ง€์—ญ๋„ ์ ์ง„์ ์œผ๋กœ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์˜ ํ†ต์น˜๋กœ ๋Œ์•„๊ฐ€๊ธฐ๋กœ ํ•ฉ์˜ํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ด์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ํ˜‘์ • ์ดํ–‰์„ ์œ„ํ•ด ์œ ์—”์—์„œ ์ž„์‹œ๋กœ ํ†ต์น˜ํ•˜๋Š” ์œ ์—” ๋™์Šฌ๋ผ๋ณด๋‹ˆ์•„, ๋ฐ”๋ผ๋ƒ ๋ฐ ์„œ์‹œ๋ฅด๋ฏธ์›€ ์ž ์ •ํ†ต์น˜๊ธฐ๊ตฌ(UNTAES)๊ฐ€ ์„ธ์›Œ์กŒ๋‹ค. 1996๋…„ 9์›” 1์ผ์—๋Š” ํ‰ํ™”์œ ์ง€๊ตฐ ๊ฐ์‹œ ํ•˜์— ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋‚˜๋จธ์ง€ ์ง€์—ญ์˜ ๋ฐœ๊ตด์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ฐœ๊ตด ์ž‘์—…์—๋Š” ICTY ์š”์›๊ณผ ์ธ๊ถŒ์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ์˜์‚ฌํšŒ, ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๊ฐ๋…๊ด€์ด ์™€์„œ ํ˜„์žฅ์— ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋Œ€๋žต 30 mยฒ ์˜์—ญ์„ ๊ตด์ฐฉํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์‹œ์ฒด๋“ค์ด ์„œ๋กœ ์—‰ํ‚จ ์ง‘๋‹จ๋ฌด๋ค์ด ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฑฐ์˜ ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์˜ ์‹œ์‹ ์€ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๋ฐœ์˜ ์ด์ƒ์„ ๋งž์€ ์ƒํƒœ์˜€๋‹ค. 10์›” 24์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ฌด๋ค์—์„œ ์‹œ์‹  ์œ ๊ณจ 200๊ตฌ๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœ๊ตด๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์œ ๊ณจ์€ ์ž๊ทธ๋ ˆ๋ธŒ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ์˜๊ณผ๋Œ€ํ•™์˜ ๋ฒ•์˜ํ•™๋ถ€๋กœ ๋„˜๊ฒจ์กŒ๋‹ค. ๋ฐœ๊ตด 4๋…„ ์ „๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” ์ถ”์ • ํฌ์ƒ์ž์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์‚ฌ์ „ ์ •๋ณด๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜์ง‘ํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ ์˜ํ•™๋ถ€ ๊ฑด๋ฌผ์— ํ˜„๋Œ€์ ์ธ ์‹œ์‹ ์•ˆ์น˜์†Œ๋ฅผ ๊ฑด์„คํ•˜๊ณ  ์ „ํ†ต์  ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ICTY ์กฐ์‚ฌ๊ด€๋“ค์ด ์‹ ์›์„ ํ™•์ธํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋Š” ์‹œ์‹ ์— ๋Œ€ํ•˜์—ฌ ์œ ์ „์ž ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์œ ์ „ํ•™์ž๋“ค์„ ํ›ˆ๋ จ์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. 2002๋…„ 10์›”๊นŒ์ง€ 184๋ช…์˜ ์‹ ์›์ด ํ™•์ธ๋˜์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์€ ์œ ์ „์ž ์กฐ์‚ฌ๋กœ ํ™•์ธํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 2010๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ 194๋ช…์˜ ์‹ ์›์„ ํ™•์ธํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ธ€๋ผ๋ฐ”์…ฐ๋น„์น˜์˜ ์‹œ์‹  ์ผ๋ถ€๋„ ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ์—์„œ ํ•™์‚ด๋‹นํ•œ 61๋ช…์ด ๊ทธ ์ž๋ฆฌ์— ๋ฌปํ˜”์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์˜์‹ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋œ ์ง‘๋‹จ๋ฌด๋ค ๊ทผ์ฒ˜์— ์ถ”๊ฐ€๋กœ ํ•˜๋‚˜ ์ด์ƒ์˜ ๋ฌด๋ค์ด ๋” ์žˆ๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ์›๋ž˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๊ณณ์— ๋ฌปํ˜€ ์žˆ๋˜ ์‹œ์‹ ๋“ค์ด 2์ฐจ๋กœ ์˜ฎ๊ฒจ์ ธ ๋ฌปํ˜”์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์ถ”์ •ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์—์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ฑ…์„ ์ง€์€ ์ž‘๊ฐ€ ๋„ค๋ฒค์นด ๋„ค๋น„์น˜๋Š” 1991๋…„ 11์›” ์ถ”๊ฐ€๋กœ ์ง‘๋‹จ ํ•™์‚ด์ด ์ผ์–ด๋‚˜ ๋‹ˆ์ฝœ๋ผ์—๋ฅผ ๋น„๋กฏํ•œ 61๋ช…์ด ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์–‰์€ ๋ฌด๋ค์— ๋ฌปํ˜”๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ž‘๊ฐ€๋Š” 1992๋…„ ์ดˆ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ์ •๋ถ€์—์„œ ๋ฌด๋ค์ด ๋„ˆ๋ฌด ์–‰์•„ ์‹œ์‹ ๋“ค์ด ๋•… ์œ„๋กœ ๋‹ค ๋“œ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ๋ณด์ธ๋‹ค๋Š” ์ด์œ ๋กœ 2์ฐจ๋กœ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๊ณณ์œผ๋กœ ์˜ฎ๊ฒจ์ ธ ๋งค์žฅ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ „๋ฒ” ์žฌํŒ 1995๋…„, ICTY๋Š” ์Šˆ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ˜์ฐจ๋‹Œ, ๋ฏ€๋ฅดํฌ์‹œ์น˜, ์œ ๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฏผ๊ตฐ ๋Œ€์œ„์ธ ๋ฏธ๋กœ์Šฌ๋ผ๋ธŒ ๋ผ๋””์น˜๋ฅผ ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ ํ•™์‚ด๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จ๋œ ํ˜์˜๋กœ ๊ธฐ์†Œํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด๋“ค์€ ์ดํ›„ ์–ธ๋ก  ๋“ฑ์ง€์—์„œ "๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด 3์ธ๋ฐฉ"(Vukovar three) ๋“ฑ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌ๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ICTY๋Š” ๋‹น์‹œ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ์‹œ์žฅ์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ๋„ํฌ๋งˆ๋…ธ๋น„์น˜๋„ 1996๋…„ 3์›” ๊ธฐ์†Œ๋œ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จํ•˜์—ฌ ํ•™์‚ด๊ณผ ์—ฐ๊ด€์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ณด๊ณ  ์ถ”๊ฐ€๋กœ ๊ธฐ์†Œํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋„ํฌ๋งˆ๋…ธ๋น„์น˜๋Š” ๋ฆฌํ‹€ ํ”Œ๋ผ์›Œ ์ž‘์ „์— ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•œ ์œ ์—”๋ณดํ˜ธ๊ตฐ์—๊ฒŒ ์ฒดํฌ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ  1997๋…„ 6์›” 27์ผ ์ฒดํ•€ ๋น„ํ–‰์žฅ์—์„œ ICTY์—๊ฒŒ ๋„˜๊ฒจ์กŒ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ž‘์ „์€ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ๋‚ด์˜ ์œ ์—”๊ตฐ์ด ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ICTY๊ฐ€ ๊ธฐ์†Œํ•œ ์ „๋ฒ”์„ ์ฒดํฌํ•œ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์ด๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ๋„ํฌ๋งˆ๋…ธ๋น„์น˜์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์žฌํŒ ํ‰๊ฒฐ์€ ๋๋‚ด ์ด๋ค„์ง€์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ํ‰๊ฒฐ์ด ๋ฐœํ‘œ๋˜๊ธฐ ๋ฉฐ์น  ์ „์ธ 1998๋…„ 6์›” 28์ผ ICTY ๊ฐ์˜ฅ ์•ˆ์—์„œ ๋ชฉ์„ ๋งค ์ž์‚ดํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ICTY๋Š” ํ•™์‚ด๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จํ•˜์—ฌ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ๋ฏผ๋ณ‘๋Œ€ ์ง€๋„์ž์ธ ์ ค์ฝ” ๋ผ์ฃผ๋‚˜ํ† ๋น„์น˜(์ผ๋ช… ์•„๋ฅด์นธ)๋„ ๊ธฐ์†Œํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ์žฌํŒ์— ํšŒ๋ถ€๋˜๊ธฐ ์ „ ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋ฒ ์˜ค๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ์—์„œ ์•”์‚ด๋‹นํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2002๋…„ 5์›” ๋ฏ€๋ฅดํฌ์‹œ์น˜๋Š” ๋„ค๋œ๋ž€๋“œ์˜ ICTY์— ์ž์ˆ˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ผ๋””์น˜์™€ ์Šˆ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ˜์ฐจ๋‹Œ์€ ๊ฐ๊ฐ 2003๋…„ 5์›”๊ณผ 6์›”์— ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์—์„œ ์ฒดํฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ฒดํฌ๋Š” ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ์˜ํšŒ์—์„œ ICTY์™€์˜ ํ˜‘๋ ฅ๊ณผ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์—๊ฒŒ์˜ ์žฌ์ • ์ง€์›์„ ์ •ํ•œ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„์ด ๋๋‚˜๊ธฐ ์ง์ „์— ๊ทน์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ผ์–ด๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. 2007๋…„ ICTY๋Š” ๋ฏ€๋ฅดํฌ์‹œ์น˜, ์Šˆ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ˜์ฐจ๋‹Œ์„ ์œ ์ฃ„ ํŒ๊ฒฐํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ๋ผ๋””์น˜๋Š” ๋ฌด์ฃ„ ์„๋ฐฉํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ฏ€๋ฅดํฌ์‹œ์น˜๋Š” 20๋…„ํ˜•์„ ์„ ๊ณ ๋ฐ›์•˜๊ณ  ์Šˆ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ˜์ฐจ๋‹Œ์€ 5๋…„ํ˜•์„ ์„ ๊ณ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. 2009๋…„ ์ด๋ค„์ง„ ํ•ญ์†Œ์‹ฌ์—์„œ ์Šˆ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ˜์ฐจ๋‹Œ์€ 17๋…„ํ˜•์œผ๋กœ ๋Š˜์–ด๋‚ฌ์œผ๋ฉฐ 2010๋…„ ํŒ๊ฒฐ๊ฒ€ํ† ์—์„œ 10๋…„ํ˜•์œผ๋กœ ์ค„์–ด๋“ค์—ˆ๋‹ค. ICTY๋Š” ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด์—์„œ์˜ ์ „์Ÿ ๋ฒ”์ฃ„ ํ˜์˜๋กœ ๋ฐ€๋กœ์…ฐ๋น„์น˜ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น, ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋ณด์•ˆ์ฒญ ์†Œ์†์˜ ์กฐ๋น„์ฐจ ์Šคํƒ€๋‹ˆ์‹œ์น˜, ํ”„๋ž€์ฝ” ์‹œ๋งˆํ† ๋น„์น˜์™€ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์˜ ์ •์น˜์ง€๋„์ž์ธ ๊ณ ๋ž€ ํ•˜์ง€์น˜, ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๊ธ‰์ง„๋‹น ๋‹น์ˆ˜ ๋ณด์ด์Šฌ๋ผ๋ธŒ ์…ฐ์…ธ ๋“ฑ์„ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์„ ๊ธฐ์†Œํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ฐ€๋กœ์…ฐ๋น„์น˜ ์žฌํŒ์€ 2006๋…„ 3์›” ๋ฐ€๋กœ์…ฐ๋น„์น˜์˜ ์‚ฌ๋ง์œผ๋กœ ํ‰๊ฒฐ ์—†์ด ๊ณตํŒ์ด ๋๋‚ฌ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์Šคํƒ€๋‹ˆ์‹œ์น˜์™€ ์‹œ๋งˆํ† ๋น„์น˜์˜ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ์ „๋ฒ”์žฌํŒ์€ 2013๋…„ ๋ชจ๋“  ์žฌํŒ์ด ๋๋‚˜๊ธฐ ์ „์— ํ˜์˜ ๊ธฐ์†Œ๊ฐ€ ๋ˆ„๋ฝ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2016๋…„ 3์›”์—” ์…ฐ์…ธ์ด ํ•ญ์†Œ์‹ฌ์„ ์•ž์— ๋‘๊ณ  ํ˜•๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๋๋‚˜ ์„๋ฐฉ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€์น˜๋Š” 2016๋…„ 7์›” ๋ชจ๋“  ์žฌํŒ์ด ๋๋‚˜๊ธฐ๋„ ์ „์— ์•”์œผ๋กœ ์‚ฌ๋งํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2015๋…„ ๊ธฐ์ค€ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ ํ•™์‚ด๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จํ•˜์—ฌ ์ด 15๋ช…์—๊ฒŒ ์œ ์ฃ„ ํŒ๊ฒฐ์„ ๋‚ด๋ ธ๋‹ค. 2010๋…„ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด์˜ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์˜ํ† ๋ฐฉ์œ„๊ตฐ ์ง€ํœ˜๊ด€์ธ ๋ฏธ๋กœ๋ฅ˜๋ธŒ ๋ถ€์š”๋น„์น˜์™€ ๋ถ€์ง€ํœ˜๊ด€์ธ ์Šคํƒ„์ฝ” ๋ถ€์•ผ๋…ธ๋น„์น˜๋Š” ๋‹ค๋ฅธ 11๋ช…์˜ ๋Œ€์›๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์œ ์ฃ„ ํŒ๊ฒฐ์„ ๋ฐ›๊ณ  20๋…„ํ˜•์„ ์„ ๊ณ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋Š”๋ฐ ์ด ๋•Œ ํŒ๊ฒฐ๋ฐ›์€ ์ „๋ฒ” ๋ชจ๋‘ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„๊ณ„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์˜ํ† ๋ฐฉ์œ„๊ตฐ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ์˜€๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ๋ฏผ๋ณ‘๋Œ€ "๋ ˆ๋ฐ” ์ˆ˜ํผ๋ฐ๋ฆฌ์นด" ์†Œ์† ๋Œ€์›์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ”„๋ ˆ๋“œ๋ผ๊ทธ ๋ฐ€๋กœ์˜ˆ๋น„์น˜, ์กฐ๋ฅด์ œ ์‡ผ์‹œ์น˜, ๋ฐ€๋กœ์Šฌ๋ผ๋ธŒ ์ž์ฝ”๋น„์น˜, ์‚ฌ์ƒค ๋ผ๋‹คํฌ๋Š” 20๋…„ํ˜•์„ ์„ ๊ณ ๋ฐ›์•˜์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋ฐ€๋ž€ ๋ณด์ด๋…ธ๋น„์น˜, ์ด๋ฐ˜ ์•ˆํ† ๋‹ˆ์˜ˆ๋น„์น˜๋Š” 15๋…„ํ˜•, ์š”๋น„์ฐจ ํŽ˜๋ฆฌ์น˜๋Š” 13๋…„ํ˜•, ๋‚˜๋‹ค ์นผ๋ผ๋ฐ”๋Š” 11๋…„ํ˜•์„ ์„ ๊ณ ๋ฐ›์•˜์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋ฐ€๋ž€ ๋ž€์ถ”์ž๋‹Œ์€ 7๋…„ํ˜•, ํ”„๋ ˆ๋“œ๋ผ๊ทธ ๋“œ๋ผ๊ณ ๋น„์น˜, ๊ณ ๋ž€ ๋ฌด๊ณ ์ƒค๋Š” 5๋…„ํ˜•์„ ์„ ๊ณ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. 2013๋…„ 12์›”์—๋Š” ์ด ํŒ๊ฒฐ์ด ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ํ—Œ๋ฒ•์žฌํŒ์†Œ์—์„œ ๋ฌดํšจ ํŒ๊ฒฐ์„ ๋ฐ›์Œ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์ƒˆ ์žฌํŒ์„ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋‹ค์‹œ ํ•ญ์†Œ์‹ฌ์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2015๋…„ 2์›”์—๋Š” ๋ถ€์š”๋น„์น˜, ๋ถ€์•ผ๋…ธ๋น„์น˜, ๋ฐ€๋กœ์˜ˆ๋น„์น˜, ๋ผ๋‹คํฌ, ์‡ผ์‹œ์น˜, ์ž์ฝ”๋น„์น˜๋Š” ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ์ตœ๊ณ ๋Œ€๋ฒ•์›์—์„œ ํ•ญ์†Œ ๋ฒ•์›์˜ ์žฌํŒ์ด ์žˆ์„ ๋•Œ๊นŒ์ง€ ์„๋ฐฉํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํŒ๊ฒฐํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2014๋…„ ์ผ์–ด๋‚œ ๋ณ„๊ฐœ์˜ ์žฌํŒ์—์„œ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๋ฒ•์›์€ ๋ ˆ๋ฐ” ์ˆ˜ํผ๋ฐ๋ฆฌ์นด ์†Œ์† ๋Œ€์›์œผ๋กœ ํ•™์‚ด์— ๋™์ฐธํ–ˆ๋˜ ํŽ˜ํƒ€๋ฅด ์น˜๋ฆฌ์น˜์—๊ฒŒ 15๋…„ํ˜•์„ ์„ ๊ณ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2015๋…„ 2์›”์—๋Š” ๊ตญ์ œ์‚ฌ๋ฒ•์žฌํŒ์†Œ(ICJ)๊ฐ€ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด์—์„œ ์ผ์–ด๋‚œ ํฌ์œ„๊ณต๊ฒฉ๊ณผ ๋Œ€ํ•™์‚ด์€ ์‹ฌ๊ฐํ•œ ์ „์Ÿ๋ฒ”์ฃ„๋ผ๋Š” ์ ์€ ์ธ์ •ํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ์ด๊ฒƒ์ด ์ œ๋…ธ์‚ฌ์ด๋“œ์— ํ•ด๋‹นํ•˜์ง„ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค๊ณ  ํŒ๊ฒฐํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ถ”๋ชจ 1998๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด์—์„œ๋Š” ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ์ „ํˆฌ์˜ ํ”ผํ•ด์ž์™€ ์งํ›„ ์ผ์–ด๋‚œ ์ฐธ์ƒ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ถ”๋ชจ๋กœ ๋งค๋…„ 11์›” 18์ผ ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ์‹œ๋ฆฝ๋ณ‘์›์—์„œ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋„์‹œ ๋‚ด ๊ธฐ๋…๋ฌ˜์ง€๊นŒ์ง€ ํ–‰์ง„ํ•˜๋Š” "๊ธฐ์–ต์˜ ํ–‰์ง„"์„ ์—ฐ๋‹ค. 2014๋…„์—๋Š” 8๋งŒ๋ช…์ด ์ด ํ–‰์ง„์— ์ฐธ์—ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1998๋…„ 12์›” 30์ผ์—๋Š” ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ์˜ ์ง‘๋‹จ๋ฌด๋ค ์œ„์— ์กฐ๊ฐ๊ฐ€ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋ณด๋ฏธ๋ฅด ๋“œ๋ฆฐ์ฝ”๋น„์น˜๊ฐ€ ์กฐ๊ฐํ•œ ์ถ”๋ชจ๋น„๊ฐ€ ๊ณต๊ฐœ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ „์Ÿ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„ ๋ฒŒ์–ด์ง„ ํ•™์‚ด ๋“ฑ์˜ ์ง‘๋‹จ๋ฌด๋ค์—๋Š” ์ด์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋ชจ์–‘์˜ ์ถ”๋ชจ๋น„๊ฐ€ ๊ฑด์„ค๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ๋Œ€ํ•™์‚ด ์ž์ฒด๋Š” ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ํ•™์‚ด์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๋ง ์™ธ์—๋„ ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ ํ•™์‚ด, ๋ถ€์ฝ”๋ฐ”๋ฅด ๋ณ‘์› ํ•™์‚ด๋กœ๋„ ๋ถ€๋ฅธ๋‹ค. ์ด ํ•™์‚ด์€ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ „์Ÿ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋‚ด์—์„œ ์ผ์–ด๋‚œ ๋‹จ์ผ ํ•™์‚ด ์ค‘ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๊ทœ๋ชจ๊ฐ€ ํฌ๋‹ค. 2006๋…„์—๋Š” ์ „ ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ ๋†์žฅ ๋ถ€์ง€ ์œ„์— ๋ฐ€๋ฆฌ์˜Œ์ฝ” ๋กœ๋ฏธ์น˜๊ฐ€ ๋””์ž์ธํ•œ ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ ์ถ”๋ชจ ์„ผํ„ฐ๊ฐ€ ๊ฑด๋ฆฝ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ถ”๋ชจ์„ผํ„ฐ๋Š” 1991๋…„ 11์›” 20์ผ ํฌ๋กœ๋“ค์ด ์ฒ˜ํ˜•๋˜๊ธฐ ์ง์ „ ์ˆ˜์šฉ๋˜์—ˆ๋˜ ์ฐฝ๊ณ  ๊ฑด๋ฌผ์„ ๊ฐœ์กฐํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ฑด๋ฆฝํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์œ ๋ฆฌ๋กœ ๋‘˜๋Ÿฌ์‹ธ์ธ ๋กœ๋น„์—์„œ ๋“ค์–ด์˜ฌ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์ด ๊ฑด๋ฌผ์€ ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ์—์„œ ์ฒ˜ํ˜•๋‹นํ•ด ์ง‘๋‹จ๋ฌด๋ค์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋œ 200๋ช…์˜ ์‚ฌ๋ง์ž์™€ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•œ 61๋ช…์˜ ์‹ค์ข…์ž์˜ ์‚ฌ์ง„์„ ์กฐ๋ช…์œผ๋กœ ๋น„์ถ˜๋‹ค. ์ฝ˜ํฌ๋ฆฌํŠธ ๋ฐ”๋‹ฅ์—๋Š” ์ฝ”๋”ฉ๋œ ํ ํƒ„์•ฝํ†ต๊ณผ ํฌ์ƒ์ž 261๋ช…์˜ ์ด๋ฆ„์ด ๊ธฐ๋ก๋œ "์•…๋งˆ์˜ ๋‚˜์„ "(ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์–ด๋กœ Spirala zla) ์กฐ๊ฐํ’ˆ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ฒœ์žฅ์—๋Š” ํฌ์ƒ์ž 261๋ช…์„ ์ƒ์ง•ํ•˜๋Š” ์ž‘์€ ์กฐ๋ช… 261๊ฐœ๊ฐ€ ๋‹ฌ๋ ค ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์„ผํ„ฐ ์•ˆ์—๋Š” ์ง‘๋‹จ๋ฌด๋ค ๋ฐœ๊ตด๋•Œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌํ•œ ๊ฐœ์ธ ์†Œ์ง€ํ’ˆ๊ณผ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์‹ ๋ถ„์ฆ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋ฌธ์„œ๋„ ์ „์‹œ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค.์ด ์ถ”๋ชจ์„ผํ„ฐ๋Š” ์ž๊ทธ๋ ˆ๋ธŒ์‹œ์—์„œ 200๋งŒ ์ฟ ๋‚˜(์•ฝ 27๋งŒ ์œ ๋กœ)๋ฅผ ์ง€์›ํ•˜์—ฌ ์„ธ์›Œ์กŒ๋‹ค. ์™„๊ณต ํ›„ 2014๋…„ 7์›”๊นŒ์ง€ 50๋งŒ๋ช…์ด ์ถ”๋ชจ์„ผํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ๋ฐฉ๋ฌธํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์€ ํ•ด ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” 8ํ•™๋…„ ํ•™์ƒ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ์„ผํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ๋ฐฉ๋ฌธํ•˜๋Š” ๊ต์œก ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋งค๋…„ ์•ฝ 5๋งŒ๋ช…์˜ ํ•™์ƒ์ด ์ด ์„ผํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ๋ฐฉ๋ฌธํ•œ๋‹ค. 2010๋…„์—๋Š” ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์˜ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ๋ณด๋ฆฌ์Šค ํƒ€๋””์น˜๊ฐ€ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์ˆ˜๋ฐ˜์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ์ตœ์ดˆ๋กœ ๊ธฐ๋…์„ผํ„ฐ์™€ ์˜ค๋ธŒ์ฐจ๋ผ ์ง‘๋‹จ๋ฌด๋ค์„ ๋ฐฉ๋ฌธํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํƒ€๋””์น˜ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์€ ๋ฌด๋ค์— ํ™”ํ™˜์„ ์–น์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ๋Œ€ํ‘œํ•˜์—ฌ ์‚ฌ์ฃ„ ๋ฐœ์–ธ์„ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋” ๋ณด๊ธฐ ๋ฒ ๋ ˆํ”„๋กœ๋ฉ”ํŠธ ์ˆ˜์šฉ์†Œ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ „์Ÿ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„ ๋ฐœ์ƒํ•œ ํ•™์‚ด ๋ชฉ๋ก ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์ „์Ÿ์˜ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์ฐธ๊ณ  ๋ฌธํ—Œ ์„œ์  ์ €๋„ ๋ฌธํ—Œ ๋‰ด์Šค ๋ฅดํฌ ๊ธฐํƒ€ ๋ฌธํ—Œ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ 1991๋…„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ „์Ÿ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„์˜ ์ „์Ÿ ๋ฒ”์ฃ„ ํฌ๋กœ์•„ํ‹ฐ์•„์˜ ํ•™์‚ด ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜ ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ 1991๋…„ ์‚ด์ธ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด 1991๋…„ 11์›” 1991๋…„ ํ•™์‚ด
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vukovar%20massacre
Vukovar massacre
The Vukovar massacre, also known as the Vukovar hospital massacre or the Ovฤara massacre, was the killing of Croatian prisoners of war and civilians by Serb paramilitaries, to whom they had been turned over by the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA), at the Ovฤara farm southeast of Vukovar on 20 November 1991, during the Croatian War of Independence. The massacre occurred shortly after Vukovar's capture by the JNA, Territorial Defence (TO), and paramilitaries from neighbouring Serbia. It was the largest massacre of the Croatian War of Independence. In the final days of the battle, the evacuation of the Vukovar hospital was negotiated between Croatian authorities, the JNA and the European Community Monitor Mission in cooperation with the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). The JNA subsequently refused the ICRC access to the hospital despite the agreement and removed approximately 300 people from its premises. The group, largely consisting of Croats but also including Serbs, Hungarians, Muslims and two foreign nationals who fought on the side of the Croatian National Guard, was initially transported to the JNA barracks in Vukovar. Several prisoners were identified as hospital staff and removed from the group to be returned to the hospital while the rest of them were transported to the Ovฤara farm south of Vukovar. Once at the farm, the prisoners were beaten for several hours before the JNA pulled its troops from the site, leaving the prisoners in the custody of the Croatian Serb TO and Serbian paramilitaries. The prisoners were then taken to a prepared site, shot in groups of ten to twenty and buried in a mass grave. The mass grave was discovered in October 1992 and guarded by the United Nations Protection Force which had deployed to the area earlier that year. In 1996, 200 sets of remains were exhumed from the grave by International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) investigators. Croatia believes 61 others were buried in a different grave on the site, while ICTY prosecutors believe that figure stands at 60. The ICTY convicted two JNA officers in connection with the massacre, and also tried former Serbian President Slobodan Miloลกeviฤ‡ for a number of war crimes, including those committed at Vukovar. Miloลกeviฤ‡ died in prison before his trial could be completed. Several former members of the Croatian Serb TO and Serbian paramilitary units have been tried by the Serbian judiciary and convicted for their involvement in the massacre. In February 2015, the International Court of Justice ruled that the siege, massacre and simultaneous atrocities committed elsewhere in Croatia did not constitute genocide. The site of the mass grave is marked by a monument and the storage building used at Ovฤara farm to hold the prisoners in captivity before their execution was rebuilt as a memorial centre in 2006. By July 2014, the centre had been visited by about 500,000 tourists. Background In 1990, ethnic tensions between Serbs and Croats worsened after the electoral defeat of the government of the Socialist Republic of Croatia by the Croatian Democratic Union ( โ€“ HDZ). The Yugoslav People's Army ( โ€“ JNA) confiscated Croatia's Territorial Defence ( โ€“ TO) weapons to minimize resistance. On 17 August, the tensions escalated into an open revolt of the Croatian Serbs. The rebellion was centred on the predominantly Serb-populated areas of the Dalmatian hinterland around Knin, approximately north-east of Split, as well as parts of Lika, Kordun, Banovina and eastern Slavonia. In January 1991, Serbia, supported by Montenegro and Serbia's provinces of Vojvodina and Kosovo, unsuccessfully tried to obtain the Yugoslav Presidency's approval for a JNA operation to disarm Croatia's security forces. The request was denied, and a bloodless skirmish between Serb insurgents and the Croatian special police occurred that March. This prompted the JNA itself to ask the Federal Presidency to grant it wartime authority and declare a state of emergency. Even though the request was backed by Serbia and its allies, on 15 March, the Federal Presidency declined. Serbian President Slobodan Miloลกeviฤ‡, preferring a campaign to expand Serbia rather than to preserve Yugoslavia with Croatia as a federal unit, publicly threatened to replace the JNA with a Serbian army and declared that he no longer recognized the authority of the Federal Presidency. As the JNA came under Miloลกeviฤ‡'s control, the JNA abandoned its plans to preserve Yugoslavia in favour of expanding Serbia. The first casualties of the conflict occurred by the end of March. In early April, the leaders of the Serb revolt in Croatia declared their intention to unite the areas under their control with Serbia. These areas came to be viewed as breakaway regions by the Government of Croatia. At the beginning of 1991, Croatia had no regular army. To bolster its defence, Croatia doubled its police numbers to about 20,000. The most effective part of the Croatian police force was a 3,000-strong special police comprising twelve battalions organised along military lines. There were also 9,000โ€“10,000 regionally organised reserve police in 16 battalions and 10 companies, but they lacked weapons. In response to the deteriorating situation, the Croatian government established the Croatian National Guard ( โ€“ ZNG) in May by expanding the special police battalions into four all-professional guards brigades. Under the control of the Croatian Ministry of Defence and commanded by retired JNA General Martin ล pegelj, the four guards brigades comprised approximately 8,000 troops. The reserve police, also expanded to 40,000, was attached to the ZNG and reorganised into 19 brigades and 14 independent battalions. The guards brigades were the only units of the ZNG that were fully equipped with small arms; throughout the ZNG there was a lack of heavier weapons and there was poor command and control structure above the brigade level. The shortage of heavy weapons was so severe that the ZNG resorted to using World War II-era arms taken from museums and film studios. At the time, the Croatian weapon stockpile consisted of 30,000 small arms purchased abroad and 15,000 previously owned by the police. To replace the personnel lost to the guards brigades, a new 10,000-strong special police was established. Prelude After Croatia launched the Battle of the Barracks on 14โ€“15 September to capture the JNA's facilities in Croatia, the JNA launched a small-scale operation against Vukovar to relieve the city garrison. At the same time, it began large-scale mobilisation in preparation for its campaign in Croatia. It was met with widespread refusal of mobilised personnel to report to their designated units, desertions and an overall lack of enthusiasm for the campaign. The response rate was particularly poor in Central Serbia, where only 26 percent of those called up reported for service. This resulted in low troop availability, forcing the JNA to deploy fewer infantry units. The JNA's offensive operations, directly associated with the campaign in the east Croatian region of Slavonia, were launched on 20 September. The assault on Vukovar gradually became the main effort of the campaign as the JNA was repeatedly unable to capture the city. The fighting in and around Vukovar lasted months and eventually drew in the JNA's main armoured force, which had previously been slated to advance west towards Serb-held areas in western Slavonia. In addition to relieving its Vukovar garrison, the JNA wished to dissipate the Croatian forces in the city so that they would not pose any threat to its rear in the event that the campaign progressed west of Vinkovci. The JNA was reinforced by local Serb-manned TO units and Serbian paramilitary volunteers who were meant to replace those reservists that had failed to respond to their call-up. The volunteers were often motivated by ethnic hatred, looted countless homes and committed numerous atrocities against civilians. After more than two months of fighting, the Croatian forces surrendered on 18 November. Vukovar sustained significant damage due to the JNA's artillery and rocket barrages. By the end of the battle, over 700,000 shells and other missiles had been fired at the city, at a rate of up to 12,000 per day. Timeline Evacuation arrangements On 17 November, Major General Andrija Raลกeta, the commander of the JNA 5th (Zagreb) Military District, notified the European Community Monitor Mission (ECMM) that the JNA accepted in principle the quick evacuation of vulnerable persons from Vukovar. At the time, it was estimated that there were about 400 people trapped in the city's hospital, but the actual number was later discovered to be about 450. This included about 40 patients receiving treatment for severe injuries sustained over the preceding few days and about 360 patients recovering from wounds suffered earlier on. In addition to these individuals, some civilians had taken shelter in the hospital in the final days of the battle. They moved there expecting to be evacuated from the city, even though the hospital itself was subjected to daily artillery attack. Furthermore, a number of Croatian troops took refuge in the hospital posing as patients or staff. On 18 November, the Tripartite Commission, consisting of representatives of Croatia, the JNA and the ECMM, discussed methods of evacuation with representatives of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), the Mรฉdecins Sans Frontiรจres and the Malteser International. On the night of 18/19 November, Raลกeta and Croatian Health Minister Andrija Hebrang signed an agreement on the evacuation. The agreement guaranteed that the evacuees would travel via the route Luลพac suburbโ€“Bogdanovciโ€“Marinciโ€“Zidine junctionโ€“Nuลกtarโ€“Vinkovci. They were to be handed over to international authorities at the Zidine junction, the hospital was to be placed under the control of the ICRC and the ECMM was to oversee the entire operation. Hebrang notified the hospital director Vesna Bosanac of the agreement and told her that ICRC teams would arrive. That evening Siniลกa Glavaลกeviฤ‡, a radio reporter who had covered the entire course of the siege from within the city, broadcast his final report from the hospital. Glavaลกeviฤ‡ himself hoped to leave the city with the ICRC, fearing for his life should the Serb paramilitaries capture him. Takeover of the hospital On the morning of 19 November, the ECMM became aware that organised resistance had ceased in Vukovar, but it did not receive any information on the fate of the hospital patients. Consequently, the head of the ECMM, ambassador Dirk Jan van Houten, contacted Raลกeta asking him to intervene on the ECMM's behalf. That day, a JNA unit arrived at the hospital and Bosanac was taken to meet JNA Colonel Mile Mrkลกiฤ‡. According to Bosanac, Mrkลกiฤ‡ told her that he was not obligated by the evacuation agreement. Even though the ICRC was not granted access to Vukovar by JNA officers at the scene, in the early evening of 19 November, ICRC representative Nicolas Borsinger managed to reach the hospital claiming he had an appointment with "a general". Once there, Borsinger found a JNA captain in charge of the facility who agreed to grant the ICRC access. Borsinger then rejoined the ICRC convoy that was moving towards the hospital to evacuate it. The hospital was also toured by French reporter Agnรจs Vahramian that day, and there she recorded an interview with Jean-Michel Nicolier, a wounded Frenchman who fought alongside Croatian forces in Vukovar. Vahramian offered Nicolier a press pass to try to get him out of the city, but he refused. On the morning of 20 November, the ICRC convoy reached Vukovar, only to be stopped at a bridge near the hospital. An armoured vehicle blocked access to the bridge leading to the hospital, and a JNA officer at the scene, Major Veselin ล ljivanฤanin, refused to let the ICRC pass. In order to facilitate negotiations with the ICRC at the scene, BBC reporter Martin Bell volunteered his interpreter. In a confrontation recorded by television cameras, ล ljivanฤanin told the ICRC personnel: "This is my country, we have conquered this. This is Yugoslavia, and I am in command here!" The ECMM personnel that had arrived at the Zidine junction to meet the returning convoy were informed by the JNA that the evacuees would instead be turned over to them in Bosanski ล amac, in northern Bosnia, on 22 November. While ล ljivanฤanin held back the convoy, the prisoners were smuggled out of the hospital in buses in another direction. In total, approximately 300 people were taken away from the hospital. Ovฤara farm Later on 20 November, ล ljivanฤanin and Colonel Nebojลกa Pavkoviฤ‡ informed the press that the JNA would provide buses to transport the wounded out of Vukovar. Instead, at about 10:30, the buses took the prisoners to the JNA barracks on the southern edge of Vukovar, where 15 men were separated from the group and returned to the hospital after being identified as hospital staff. During their stay in the barracks, the Croatian Serb TO and Serbian paramilitaries threatened the prisoners. Croatian Serb leaders opposed moving the prisoners to detention facilities in Serbia, claiming they wished to prosecute them for alleged crimes committed against Serbs. After spending two hours at the barracks, the buses took the prisoners to the Ovฤara farm near the village of Grabovo. The group largely consisted of Croats, but also included several ethnic Serbs, Muslims, ethnic Hungarians, the French national Nicolier, and one German national who fought in defence of Vukovar. It also included Raลกeta's nephew, who worked at the Vukovar hospital pharmacy at the time. The group taken to Ovฤara consisted of 261 people. Sources disagree as to whether the group included one, or two women, one of whom was five months pregnant. The age of the prisoners ranged from 16 to 72. The youngest among them was 16-year-old Igor Kaฤiฤ‡. Igor Kaฤiฤ‡ On November 20, 1991, two days after the fall of Vukovar, Kaฤiฤ‡, his mother, and sisters came out of the make-shift shelter of the Vukovar hospital basement with other refugees under orders of the Yugoslav People's Army and local Serb forces. Outside, Veselin ล ljivanฤanin, officer of the Yugoslav People's Army, was standing at the door separating the men from women and children. He pointed to Kaฤiฤ‡, who was a tall and strong young man, and he put him among the men, saying: "You over there!". Igor Kaฤiฤ‡'s mother asked ล ljivanฤanin "Why him, he's just a kid?" as she showed him Igor's health card with the date of his birth. ล ljivanฤanin replied: "We'll check everything." That was the last time his mother and sisters saw Kaฤiฤ‡. He was killed at Ovฤara the same day. Massacre The prisoners were forced onto busses. Once they reached Ovฤara, away from Vukovar, the captives were ordered from the buses one-by-one and forced to run the gauntlet past dozens of JNA troops and Serb paramilitaries towards a farm storage building. Slavko Dokmanoviฤ‡, a former mayor of Vukovar, was one of the armed men involved in beating prisoners. As the captives were beaten, they were also stripped of their personal belongings, money and jewelry. Over the course of the day, the JNA military police failed to prevent soldiers of the Croatian Serb TO and Serbian paramilitaries from beating the prisoners in the storage building. They were beaten using sticks, rifle butts, chains, baseball bats, and in one instance a wounded prisoner was beaten with his own crutches. By sundown, at least two men were beaten to death. In addition, one of the captors shot five prisoners, including one Frenchman, who is presumed to be Nicolier. Seven or eight men were returned to Vukovar on orders of the JNA, presumably released at the intervention of their Serb neighbours. Ultimately, Mrkลกiฤ‡ ordered the JNA military police to withdraw from the farm, leaving the prisoners in the custody of a Croatian Serb TO unit led by Miroljub Vujoviฤ‡, commander of the Croatian Serb TO in Vukovar, and the Leva Supoderica paramilitary unit. Leva Supoderica was a volunteer unit set up by the Serbian Radical Party (; SRS) in ล id, Serbia, and subordinated to the JNA's 1st Guards Mechanised Brigade. At about 18:00, the prisoners were divided into groups. Each group of 10 to 20 was loaded onto a truck and transported several hundred metres (yards) from the building towards a wooded ravine. When the prisoners reached the previously prepared execution site, they were shot and buried in a mass grave using a bulldozer. After 15โ€“20 minutes, the truck would return empty to pick up the next group. The final group of prisoners was executed just outside the farm building itself. By 22:00 that evening, all of the prisoners had been killed. Most sources place the number of victims at around 260. This figure has been used by ICTY prosecutors. Some estimates of the death toll go as high as 264. The Croatian authorities believe that the total figure stands at 261. Aftermath Croatian Serb forces turned Ovฤara into a prison camp in early October 1991. Aside from the massacre, 3,000โ€“4,000 male prisoners were temporarily held in the Ovฤara camp at some point during autumn of 1991 before being transported to the prison in Sremska Mitrovica or to the local JNA barracks, which was the transit point for Serbian detention camps such as Stajiฤ‡evo and Begejci. Following a series of political agreements concluded in 1991 and a ceasefire between the JNA and Croatia in early 1992, the United Nations Protection Force (UNPROFOR) was deployed for peacekeeping in certain parts of Croatia, including Vukovar and its surroundings. It began its deployment in March 1992. Discovery of the mass grave Forensic anthropologist Clyde Snow learned of the massacre during his visit to Zagreb in October 1992. Snow travelled there as a United Nations (UN) team member sent to investigate reports of war crimes. In a meeting Snow had with the dean of the Zagreb University School of Medicine, he was introduced to a former soldier who claimed to have survived the massacre and told Snow where it took place. Three days later, Snow went to Vukovar and drove to Ovฤara accompanied by Royal Canadian Mounted Police Sergeant Larry Moore who was deployed to the region with the UNPROFOR. At the site, Moore spotted a human skull in the mud. A few days later, the UN declared the site a crime scene and deployed Russian UNPROFOR troops to guard it. Snow put together a four-man team including himself to conduct a preliminary investigation of the site before the winter, and the team arrived at the site in December 1992. They examined the site still under guard by the Russian troops, excavated the skull spotted by Moore and the rest of the body, as well as another set of partially covered remains. The team excavated a trench across the site. That allowed them to detect a few more bodies and infer the size of the grave. The information they obtained led Snow to conclude that the grave may contain more than two hundred bodies. The investigators also found spent cartridges consistent with standard Yugoslav-built AK-47s on one side of the grave and bullet holes in trees on the opposite side, leading them to conclude that a firing squad had stood on one side of the pit and fired across or into it. Croatian authorities launched initiatives to exhume the bodies buried at Ovฤara in 1993 and 1994, but those were unsuccessful. A five-member Commission of Experts appointed by the UN Secretary General came to Ovฤara to exhume the victims in October 1993. However, they were prevented from carrying out their work by the local Croatian Serb administration. After the Croatian Serb authorities blocked several attempts to further investigate the mass grave at Ovฤara, still under constant guard by the Russian peacekeepers, the site was visited by then-U.S. Ambassador to the UN Madeleine Albright in January 1994. She used the occasion to stress U.S. support for the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), which had been set up in 1993. Exhumation The political situation in the area did not change until 1995. That year, Croatia militarily defeated the Croatian Serbs in offensives codenamed Flash and Storm, in May and August respectively. That left eastern Slavonia as the last remaining Croatian Serb-held area. Gradual restoration of the area to Croatian rule was agreed upon in November through the Erdut Agreement, and the United Nations Transitional Administration for Eastern Slavonia, Baranja and Western Sirmium (UNTAES) peacekeeping mission was deployed to implement the agreement. The exhumation of the remains at Ovฤara began on 1 September 1996 while the site was still under the constant guard of peacekeepers. The exhumation was conducted by ICTY personnel and the Physicians for Human Rights, with Croatian observers at the site. The excavation works uncovered a mass grave encompassing approximately and containing a heap of intertwined bodies. Most of the bodies exhibited evidence of multiple gunshot wounds. By 24 October, 200 sets of remains were recovered from the grave. The remains were transported for forensic examination to the Zagreb University School of Medicine. In the four years preceding the exhumation, Croatian authorities collected ante-mortem information on presumed victims, built a modern morgue at the School of Medicine and trained geneticists in DNA analysis to allow for the identification of those who could not be identified by ICTY investigators using traditional methods. By October 2002, 184 victims were identified, largely using DNA analyses, and the figure was increased to 194 by 2010. Glavaลกeviฤ‡'s remains were among those exhumed at Ovฤara. Croatian authorities suspect that a further 61 individuals killed at Ovฤara were buried there as well. They suspect one or more additional mass graves exist in the general area, or that the bodies originally buried at the site were moved to a secondary grave. Nevenka Nekiฤ‡, the Croatian author of a book on Nicolier, claims that an additional shallow grave was excavated at Ovฤara in November 1991 and that Nicolier and 60 others were buried there. According to her, they were exhumed by Croatian Serb authorities and moved to a secondary location in early 1992 because the grave was so shallow that body parts protruded through the ground surface. War crime trials In November 1995, the ICTY indicted Mrkลกiฤ‡, ล ljivanฤanin and JNA captain Miroslav Radiฤ‡ for war crimes related to the Ovฤara massacre. The group was subsequently termed the "Vukovar three" by the media. The ICTY also charged Dokmanoviฤ‡, mayor of Vukovar at the time, with war crimes in connection with the massacre in a sealed indictment in March 1996. He was arrested by UNTAES troops in Operation Little Flower and transferred to the ICTY via ฤŒepin Airfield on 27 June 1997. The operation was the first arrest of a person indicted by the ICTY by any UN force in the former Yugoslavia. Dokmanoviฤ‡'s trial never produced a verdict, however. He hanged himself in his ICTY prison cell on 28 June 1998, several days before a verdict was to be announced. The ICTY also linked Serb warlord ลฝeljko Raลพnatoviฤ‡ and his paramilitary formations to the massacre, but he was assassinated in Belgrade before he could be brought to trial. Mrkลกiฤ‡ surrendered to the ICTY in the Netherlands in May 2002. Radiฤ‡ and ล ljivanฤanin were arrested in Serbia in May and June 2003 respectively. The arrests were made shortly before the expiration of a deadline set by the U.S. Congress linking financial assistance to Serbia to its cooperation with the ICTY. In 2007, the ICTY convicted Mrkลกiฤ‡ and ล ljivanฤanin, but acquitted Radiฤ‡. Mrkลกiฤ‡ received a 20-year prison sentence, while ล ljivanฤanin was sentenced to five years in prison. In 2009, ล ljivanฤanin's sentence was increased to 17 years in prison on appeal and finally reduced to ten years following a review of the judgment in 2010. The ICTY also indicted Miloลกeviฤ‡, as well as Jovica Staniลกiฤ‡ and Franko Simatoviฤ‡ of the Serbian State Security Service, Croatian Serb political leader Goran Hadลพiฤ‡ and the leader of the Serbian Radical Party Vojislav ล eลกelj for various war crimes, including those committed in Vukovar. Miloลกeviฤ‡'s trial ended without any verdict upon his death in March 2006, while the Vukovar-related charges against Staniลกiฤ‡ and Simatoviฤ‡ were dropped from their indictments even before the pair were acquitted on all counts in 2013. In March 2016, ล eลกelj was acquitted on all counts, pending appeal. In 2018, he was convicted of hate speech for inciting the deportation of Croats from Hrtkovci in 1992, and sentenced to ten years imprisonment, but acquitted on all other counts, including those pertaining to Vukovar. Hadลพiฤ‡ died of cancer in July 2016, before his trial could be completed. , Serbian authorities have convicted 15 people in connection with the Ovฤara massacre. In 2010, Vujoviฤ‡ and Stanko Vujanoviฤ‡ (deputy commander of Croatian Serb TO in Vukovar) were convicted and sentenced to 20 years in prison along with eleven others, all of them former members of the Croatian Serb TO or Leva Supoderica. Predrag Milojeviฤ‡, ฤorฤ‘e ล oลกiฤ‡, Miroslav ฤankoviฤ‡ and Saลกa Radak were sentenced to 20 years in prison, Milan Vojnoviฤ‡ and Ivan Antonijeviฤ‡ were sentenced to 15 years in prison, Jovica Periฤ‡ was sentenced to 13 years, Nada Kalaba was sentenced to 11 years, Milan Lanฤuลพanin was sentenced to seven, and Predrag Dragoviฤ‡ and Goran Mugoลกa were given five-year prison sentences. In December 2013, these convictions were set aside by the Constitutional Court of Serbia and the case was returned to the Court of Appeals for a new trial. In February 2015, Vujoviฤ‡, Vujanoviฤ‡, Milojeviฤ‡, Radak, ล oลกiฤ‡ and ฤankoviฤ‡ were released from custody based on a decision of the Supreme Court of Cassation pending a retrial by the Court of Appeals. In a separate trial completed in 2014, Serbian authorities convicted and sentenced Petar ฤ†iriฤ‡ to 15 years in prison for participating in the massacre as a member of Leva Supoderica. In February 2015, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruled that the siege and ensuing massacre did not constitute genocide, though it confirmed that serious crimes had taken place. Commemoration Since 1998, the victims of the Battle of Vukovar and the events that occurred in its immediate aftermath are commemorated annually on 18 November by a procession starting at the Vukovar hospital and reaching the city's memorial cemetery. In 2014, the event drew 80,000 participants. A monument sculpted by Slavomir Drinkoviฤ‡ that marks the site of the mass grave at Ovฤara was unveiled on 30 December 1998. Monuments of the same design have subsequently been used to mark all the other mass graves from the Croatian War of Independence. The massacre itself has come to be referred to as the Vukovar massacre, the Ovฤara massacre, or the Vukovar hospital massacre. It was by far the largest massacre committed during the Croatian War of Independence. In 2006, the Ovฤara Memorial Centre, designed by Miljenko Romiฤ‡, opened at the site of the former Ovฤara farm. The centre opened in a remodeled storage building where prisoners were held on 20 November 1991 before they were executed. The dim interior of the building, accessed through a glass-encased foyer, features illuminated photographs of 200 victims exhumed from the mass grave and the 61 missing who were executed at Ovฤara. The concrete floor contains encased spent cartridges and the Spiral of Evil () sculpture displaying the names of 261 victims. The ceiling contains 261 lighting fixtures symbolising the number of victims. The centre also contains an exhibition of personal belongings and documents found in the mass grave. The completion of the centre was funded by the City of Zagreb at the cost of 2ย million kuna ( 270,000ย euro). By July 2014, the centre was visited by about 500,000 people. In the same year, Croatia launched an education programme which entails visits to the centre by eighth-grade pupils, and 50,000 pupils are scheduled to visit the centre annually. In 2010, Serbian President Boris Tadiฤ‡ visited the memorial centre and the mass grave site, as the first Serbian head of state to do so. He laid wreaths at the site and apologized on behalf of the Serbian state. Several victims of the massacre are honoured individually in Vukovar. There is a monument honouring Kaฤiฤ‡ together with his father who was killed on 2 October 1991 during the Battle of Vukovar, a bridge in the city is named after Nicolier, and one of the city's schools is named after Glavaลกeviฤ‡. See also List of massacres in Croatia Velepromet camp References Sources Books Scientific journal articles News reports Other sources External links 1990s murders in Croatia 1991 in Croatia 1991 crimes in Croatia 1991 murders in Europe Anti-Croat sentiment Attacks on hospitals Ethnic cleansing in the Yugoslav Wars Massacre Massacres in 1991 Massacres in Croatia November 1991 events in Europe Prisoner of war massacres Republic of Serbian Krajina Serbian war crimes in the Croatian War of Independence Massacres of Croats Massacres in the Croatian War of Independence
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%ED%98%B8%ED%85%94%20%EB%8D%B8%EB%A3%A8%EB%82%98
ํ˜ธํ…” ๋ธ๋ฃจ๋‚˜
ใ€Šํ˜ธํ…” ๋ธ๋ฃจ๋‚˜ใ€‹๋Š” 2019๋…„ 7์›” 13์ผ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2019๋…„ 9์›” 1์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ฐฉ์†ก๋œ tvN ํ† ์ผ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ์ด๋‹ค. ์ค„๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ ์—˜๋ฆฌํŠธ ํ˜ธํ…”๋ฆฌ์–ด๊ฐ€ ์šด๋ช…์ ์ธ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์œผ๋กœ ํ˜ธํ…” ๋ธ๋ฃจ๋‚˜์˜ ์ง€๋ฐฐ์ธ์„ ๋งก๊ฒŒ ๋˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋‹ฌ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ๊ณ ๊ณ ํ•˜๊ณ  ์•„๋ฆ„๋‹ต์ง€๋งŒ ๊ดดํŒํ•œ ์‚ฌ์žฅ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋ธ๋ฃจ๋‚˜๋ฅผ ์šด์˜ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์ƒ๊ธฐ๋Š” ํŠน๋ณ„ํ•œ ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ. ๋“ฑ์žฅ ์ธ๋ฌผ ์ฃผ์š” ์ธ๋ฌผ ์ด์ง€์€ : ์žฅ๋งŒ์›”(1300์‚ด ์ด์ƒ) ์—ญ (์•„์—ญ ๊น€๊ทœ๋ฆฌ) ๋ธ๋ฃจ๋‚˜ ํ˜ธํ…” ์‚ฌ์žฅ. ๊ป๋ฐ๊ธฐ๋Š” ๋‹ฌ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ๊ณ ๊ณ ํ•˜๊ณ  ์•„๋ฆ„๋‹ต์ง€๋งŒ, ์ฒœ๋…„๋„ ๋„˜๊ฒŒ ๋ฌต์€ ๋…ธํŒŒ๊ฐ€ ์†์— ๋“ค์–ด์•‰์€ ๋“ฏ ์ญˆ๊ธ€์ญˆ๊ธ€ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋ชป๋‚œ ์„ฑ๊ฒฉ. ๊ดดํŒํ•˜๊ณ , ์‹ฌ์ˆ  ๋งž๊ณ , ๋ณ€๋•์ด ์‹ฌํ•˜๊ณ , ์˜์‹ฌ๊ณผ ์š•์‹ฌ๋„ ๋งŽ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์‹ฌ์ง€์–ด ์‚ฌ์น˜์Šค๋Ÿฝ๊ธฐ๊นŒ์ง€ ํ•˜๋‹ค. ์—ฌ์ง„๊ตฌ : ๊ตฌ์ฐฌ์„ฑ(20๋Œ€ ํ›„๋ฐ˜) ์—ญ (์•„์—ญ ๊น€๊ฐ•ํ›ˆ) ์ดˆ์—˜๋ฆฌํŠธ ํ˜ธํ…”๋ฆฌ์–ด. ํ˜ธํ…” ๋ธ๋ฃจ๋‚˜์˜ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์ง€๋ฐฐ์ธ. ๊ฐ•๋ฐ•, ๊ฒฐ๋ฒฝ, ์ง‘์ฐฉ ๋“ฑ์„ ๋ชจ๋‘ ๊ฐ–์ถ˜ ์ž๊ธฐ๊ด€๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ์ฒ ์ €ํ•œ ์™„๋ฒฝ์ฃผ์˜์ž๋กœ, ๋ˆ„๊ฐ€ ๋ด๋„ ๋งค์šฐ ์ž˜๋‚ฌ๊ณ  ๋‚ด๊ฐ€ ๋ด๋„ ์ •๋ง ์ž˜๋‚œ, ์Šค์Šค๋กœ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ž๋ž‘์Šค๋Ÿฐ ๋งˆ์Œ์„ ์ˆจ๊ธฐ์ง€ ๋ชปํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ•œ๋งˆ๋””๋กœ ์žฌ์ˆ˜ ์—†์„ ๋งŒํผ ์ž˜๋‚œ ์ฒ™์„ ํ•˜๋Š” ํƒ€์ž…์ด์ง€๋งŒ ๊ฝค๋‚˜ ์˜ˆ์˜๋ฐ”๋ฅธ ์ฒญ๋…„์ด์ž ์‚ฌ์‹ค์€ ๋งˆ์Œ์ด ์—ฐ์•ฝํ•œ ์‰ฌ์šด ๋‚จ์ž์ด๋‹ค. ๊ท€์‹ ์„ ๋ฌด์„œ์›Œํ•˜๋‚˜, ๊ท€์‹ ์ „์šฉ ํ˜ธํ…” ๋ธ๋ฃจ๋‚˜์˜ ์ง€๋ฐฐ์ธ์œผ๋กœ ์ผํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ํ˜ธํ…” ๋ธ๋ฃจ๋‚˜ ์‹ ์ •๊ทผ : ๊น€์„ ๋น„(๊น€์‹œ์ต, 30๋Œ€ ํ›„๋ฐ˜) ์—ญ ์Šค์นด์ด๋ฐ” ๋ฐ”ํ…๋”. 500๋…„ ๊ทผ๋ฌด๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ์˜ ํ˜ธํ…” ๋ธ๋ฃจ๋‚˜ ์Šค์นด์ด๋ฐ”์˜ ๋ฐ”ํ…๋”์ด๋ฉฐ ์ตœ์žฅ๊ธฐ ๊ทผ๋ฌด์ž๋กœ, ๊ณผ๊ฑฐ ์žฅ์›๊ธ‰์ œ๊นŒ์ง€ ํ•œ ์„ ๋น„์˜€๋‹ค๋Š” ์ž๊ธ์‹ฌ์ด ๊ฐ•ํ•˜๋‹ค. ๋ฐฐํ•ด์„  : ์ตœ์„œํฌ(40๋Œ€) ์—ญ ๊ฐ์‹ค์žฅ. 200๋…„ ๊ทผ๋ฌด๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ์˜ ํ˜ธํ…” ๋ธ๋ฃจ๋‚˜์˜ ๊ฐ์‹ค์žฅ์ด๋ฉฐ ๋”ฑ ๋ถ€๋Ÿฌ์ง„ ์„ฑ๊ฒฉ๊ณผ ๋˜‘ ๋–จ์–ด์ง€๋Š” ์™ธํ–ฅ์„ ๊ฐ–์ถ˜ ์—ฌ์‚ฌ๋‹˜์ด๋‹ค. ๋ผˆ๋Œ€ ์žˆ๋Š” ์กฐ์„  ๋ช…๋ฌธ๊ฐ€์˜ ์ข…์† ๋ง๋ฉฐ๋Š๋ฆฌ์˜€๋‹ค. ํ‘œ์ง€ํ›ˆ : ์ง€ํ˜„์ค‘(19์„ธ) ์—ญ ํ”„๋ก ํŠธ๋งจ. ํ•œ๊ตญ ์ „์Ÿํ†ต์— ์‚ฌ๋งํ•˜์—ฌ 70์—ฌ ๋…„์งธ ๊ทผ๋ฌด ์ค‘์ด๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ์˜ ๋ฐ”๋ฅด๊ณ  ์ฐฉํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ผํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹ซ์–ดํ•˜๋Š” ์˜๋ฝ์—†๋Š” ์‹ญ๋Œ€ ์†Œ๋…„์ด๋‹ค. ๊ฐ•๋ฏธ๋‚˜ : ๊น€์œ ๋‚˜(์ •์ˆ˜์ • ์˜ํ˜ผ, 18์„ธ) ์—ญ ์ธํ„ด. ๋‚ด๋ฉด์— ๊ธฐ๊ตฌํ•œ ์‚ฌ์—ฐ์ด ์ˆจ์–ด์žˆ๋Š” ๋˜‘๋˜‘ํ•˜๊ณ  ๋‹น์ฐฌ ๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™์ƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ตฌ์ฐฌ์„ฑ์˜ ์ง€๋ฐฐ์ธ ์ž๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ํ˜ธ์‹œํƒํƒ ๋…ธ๋ฆฌ๋ฉฐ ์–ผ๋ฅธ ๊ทธ๋งŒ๋‘๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋‹ค๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ํ˜ธํ…” ๋ธ๋ฃจ๋‚˜์˜ ์ธํ„ด์‚ฌ์›์ด๋‹ค. ์ •๋™ํ™˜ : ๋…ธ์ค€์„(70๋Œ€ ํ›„๋ฐ˜) ์—ญ ์ด์ง€๋ฐฐ์ธ. 1980๋…„๋Œ€๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•ด 30๋…„์งธ ๊ทผ๋ฌด์ค‘์ด๋‹ค. ๋ชจ๋“  ๊ฒƒ์„ ์žƒ๊ณ  ์ธ์ƒ์„ ํฌ๊ธฐํ•˜๋ ค๋˜ ์‚ฌ์—…๊ฐ€๋Š” ์ƒ์„ ๋งˆ๊ฐํ•˜๋ ค ๋“ค๋ฆฐ ํ˜ธํ…”์—์„œ, ์—ฌ์‚ฌ์žฅ์ธ ๋งŒ์›”์„ ๋งŒ๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๋’ค๋กœ ์ญ‰ ๋งŒ์›”์˜ ํ˜ธํ…”์—์„œ ์ผํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ฃฝ์Œ์„ ์•ž๋‘๊ณ  ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰ ์—…๋ฌด๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์‹ ๊ณผ ์‚ฌ์‹ ๋“ค ์„œ์ด์ˆ™ : ๋งˆ๊ณ ์‹  ์—ญ ์ด์Šน๊ณผ ์ €์Šน์„ ์˜ค๊ฐ€๋ฉฐ, ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์ƒ์‚ฌ๊ณ ๋ฝ์„ ๊ด€์žฅํ•˜๋Š” ์‹ ์ด๋‹ค. ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ์„ฑ๊ฒฉ์˜ ์—ด๋‘ ์ž๋งค์ด๋‹ค(1์ธ 12์—ญ) ๊ฐ•ํ™์„ : ์‚ฌ์‹  ์—ญ ๋ธ๋ฃจ๋‚˜์— ๋จธ๋ฌผ๋‹ค ๋‚˜๊ฐ€๋Š” ์†๋‹˜๋“ค์„ ํƒ์‹œ์— ํƒœ์›Œ ์ €์Šน์œผ๋กœ ์ธ๋„ํ•˜๋Š” ์ธ์†”์ž๋‹ค. ๋ณธ์—…์€ ์ €์Šน์œผ๋กœ ์˜ํ˜ผ์„ ๋ฐ๋ ค๊ฐ€๋Š” ์‚ฌ์‹ ์ด๋ฉฐ, ์†๋‹˜์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์ €์Šน๋ฒ„์Šค, ์ €์Šน์ฒญ์†Œ์ฐจ, ์ €์Šน๋ฆฌ๋ฌด์ง„ ๋“ฑ์„ ์šด์ „ํ•˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฌด์ฃผ๊ตญ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค ์ด๋„ํ˜„ : ๊ณ ์ฒญ๋ช…/๋ฐ˜๋”ง๋ถˆ์ด ์—ญ ์˜์ฃผ์„ฑ ํ˜ธ์œ„ ๋Œ€์žฅ, ์†กํ™”๊ณต์ฃผ์˜ ์ •ํ˜ผ์ž. ๋ฉธ๋งํ•œ ๊ณ ๊ตฌ๋ ค ๊ท€์กฑ์˜ ํ›„์†์ด์ง€๋งŒ ์ผ์ฐŒ๊ฐ์น˜ ๋ฌด์ฃผ๊ตญ์— ํˆฌํ•ญํ•œ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ํ˜„์žฌ๋Š” ๋ฌด์ฃผ๊ตญ ๋ณ€๋ฐฉ ์˜์ฃผ์„ฑ์˜ ๋ฌด์žฅ์œผ๋กœ, ๋งน์ˆ˜์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ์šฉ๋งนํ•˜๊ณ  ๋ผ›์†๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ฌด์ธ์ธ ์‚ฌ๋‚ด์ด๋‹ค. ์ž์‹ ์ด ํ˜ธ์œ„ํ•˜๋˜ ํ–‰๋ ฌ์„ ์Šต๊ฒฉํ•œ ๋„์ ๋‹จ์˜ ์ผ์›์ธ ๋งŒ์›”์„ ๋งŒ๋‚˜๋ฉด์„œ ์˜คํžˆ๋ ค ๊ทธ๋…€์—๊ฒŒ ๋งคํ˜น๋‹นํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ดํƒœ์„  : ์—ฐ์šฐ/๋ฐ•์˜์ˆ˜ ์—ญ ๋งŒ์›”์˜ ์˜ค๋ฅธํŒ”, ๋ฒ”์ฒœ ์ค‘๋ถ€ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ ๊ฐ•๋ ฅ๊ณ„ ํ˜•์‚ฌ. ๋งŒ์›”๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๊ณ ๊ตฌ๋ ค ์œ ๋ฏผ๋“ค์ด ๋ชจ์—ฌ ์‚ฌ๋Š” ๊ฐ€์˜ค๋ฆฌ์ดŒ์˜ ๋„์ ํŒจ ์ผ๋‹น. ์†์žฌ์ฃผ๊ฐ€ ์ข‹์•„ ๋ฌด๊ธฐ๋„, ์•…๊ธฐ๋„ ์ž˜ ๋‹ค๋ฃจ๋ฉฐ, ๋ถˆ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ์šฑํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ฐ€๋„ ๋ฐ”๋กœ ์‹์–ด์„œ ํ•˜ํ•˜ ์›ƒ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ ์ข‹์€ ์„ฑ๊ฒฉ์„ ๊ฐ€์กŒ๋‹ค. ๋งŒ์›”๊ณผ๋Š” ์นœ๊ตฌ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ, ๋‚จ๋งค์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ, ๋ถ€ํ•˜์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ์ž๋ผ์™”๊ณ , ๊ทธ์—๊ฒŒ ์ด์ œ ๋งŒ์›”์€ ๋ˆ„๋‚˜ ๊ฐ™๊ณ  ๋‘๋ชฉ ๊ฐ™์€ ๊ด€๊ณ„์ด๋‹ค. ๊ตฌ์ฐฌ์„ฑ ์นœ๊ตฌ๋“ค ์กฐํ˜„์ฒ  : ์‚ฐ์ฒด์Šค(20๋Œ€ ํ›„๋ฐ˜) ์—ญ ๊ตฌ์ฐฌ์„ฑ์˜ ์นœ๊ตฌ. ์ „ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ์ฒด์ธ์„ ๊ฑฐ๋Š๋ฆฐ ์–ด๋งˆ์–ด๋งˆํ•œ ๊ทœ๋ชจ์˜ ํ”ผ์ž์™•๊ตญ ํ”„๋ฆฐ์Šค, ์ฐฌ์„ฑ์˜ ๋ฃธ๋ฉ”์ดํŠธ. ์˜์  ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์ด ์ „ํ˜€ ์—†์–ด์„œ ๋ธ๋ฃจ๋‚˜ ํ˜ธํ…”์ด๋‚˜ ์žฅ๋งŒ์›”์˜ ์‹ค์ฒด๋ฅผ ์•Œ์•„์ฑ„์ง€ ๋ชปํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋•๋ถ„์— ์œ ์ผํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋งŒ์›”๊ณผ ํ•ด๋ง‘๊ฒŒ ๋ง ๋†“๊ณ  ์ง€๋‚ด๋Š” ์ธ๋ฌผ. ๋ฐ•์œ ๋‚˜ : ์ด๋ฏธ๋ผ(20๋Œ€ ํ›„๋ฐ˜)/์†กํ™”๊ณต์ฃผ ์—ญ (์•„์—ญ ๊ถŒ์˜ˆ์€) ์ข…ํ•ฉ๋ณ‘์› ์†Œ์•„๊ณผ ์˜์‚ฌ. ๋ถ€์žฃ์ง‘์— ๋˜‘๋˜‘ํ•˜๊ณ  ์˜ˆ์œ ์ „ํ˜•์ ์ธ ์—„์นœ๋”ธ๋กœ, ์ฐฌ์„ฑ์ด ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์— ์žˆ๋˜ ์‹œ์ ˆ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ์นœ๊ตฌ๋‹ค. ์ „์ƒ ์ฒญ๋ช…์˜ ํ˜ผ์ธ ์ƒ๋Œ€์ด๋ฉฐ ๋งŒ์›”์˜ ์›์ˆ˜์ด๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ์™ธ ์ธ๋ฌผ ์ฐจ์ฒญํ™” : ํƒ€์‚ด ๋‹นํ•œ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ ์—ญ (โ€ ) ์ด์šฐ์ง„ ์‹ ๋‚˜๋ผ ๊น€์˜ค๋ณต ๊น€๊ฐ•ํ›ˆ : ๊ตฌ์ฐฌ์„ฑ ์•„์—ญ ์‹ ํ˜„์•„ ์ด์Šน์ค€ ์กฐํŒ์ˆ˜ ์ฒœํ™ฉ์„ฑ ๊น€์ƒ์šฑ ์Šน๋ณด์œค ๊น€์›ํ•ด : ๋ฒ”์ฒœ์‹œ์žฅ ์—ญ ๊น€์‹œํ—Œ ์ด์ฑ„๊ฒฝ : ์œ ๋ช… ํ˜ธํ…” ์‚ฌ์žฅ ์—ญ ํ•œ์žฌ์ด : ์„œ์ฃผํฌ ์—ญ ๋ฐ•์œค์‹ ์ด๋ณ‘์ฒ  ๊ณ ์Šน๋ณด ๋…ธ๋™๊ทœ ์˜คํ˜„์„ ๊น€์ƒ์ˆ˜ ์ตœ๊ธธ ๊น€ํ˜„์ง„ ์—„๋ณด์˜ ์‹ฌ๊ณ ์€ ์ด์œค์„œ ํ•œ๋‹ค์€ ๊น€์˜์žฌ ์ด์€์ฃผ ์—„ํ˜œ์ˆ˜ ๊น€์†Œ์—ฐ ์ •์ฃผํฌ ์ด์Šนํ›ˆ ์ฒœ์˜ˆ์› ๋‚จ๊ฒฝ์ : ์™• ํšŒ์žฅ ์—ญ ๊น€๋‚จ์ง„ ๊น€๋ฏธํ˜œ ํ—ˆ์ˆ˜๋นˆ ์ •๋‹ค์šด ๊น€์Šน์ผ ์ด๊ทœํ˜ ์ด์Šน์—ฐ ์กฐ์„ฑํ™˜ ๊น€๊ฒฝ์› ์„œ์€์ฃผ ๋ฐ•์ˆ™๋ช… ๋ฐ•์‹œํ™˜ ํ™๋Œ€์˜ ํ•œํ˜ธ์„  ์ด๊ฒฝ์˜ค ๋ฐ•์†Œ์˜ ๊น€๋™๊ทœ ๊น€๊ถŒ ๊น€ํ•™๊ทœ ๊น€์ƒ๋ฏธ ๋ฐ•๊ฐ€๋žŒ : ์ •์ˆ˜์ • ์—ญ (โ€ ) - ๊น€์œ ๋‚˜์— ์˜ํ•ด ์ฃฝ์€ ํ•™์ƒ ์กฐ๋ถ€ํ˜„ ํ™์„œ์ค€ : ๊น€์œ ๋‚˜์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€ ์—ญ ๊น€์˜์„  : ๊น€์œ ๋‚˜์˜ ์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ ์—ญ ๋ฐ•๋ณด์€ ๊ตฌ๋‹ค์†ก ์ด์ง€์™„ : ๊น€์œ ๋‚˜ ๋ฐ˜ ํ•™์ƒ ์—ญ ์ •์˜ˆ๋นˆ ๊น€์—์Šค๋” ์ด๋ฏผ๋ น : 13ํ˜ธ์‹ค ๊ท€์‹  ์œค๊ฐ€์˜ ์—ญ (โ€ ) ๊น€ํ˜•๋ช… : ๋™์˜์ƒ ๊ท€์‹  ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ํ”ผํ•ด์ž ์—ญ (โ€ ) ๊น€๋ฏธ์€ : ์‚ฌํ˜ผ์‹ ์‹ ๋ถ€ ์—ญ (โ€ ) ์–‘ํฌ์› : ํŠธ๋Ÿญ ์‚ฌ๊ณ  ์•„๋“ค ๊ท€์‹  ์—ญ (โ€ ) ์—ฌ๊ฐ€ํ›ค : ์—˜๋ฆฌ๋ฒ ์ดํ„ฐ ๊ท€์‹  ์—ญ (โ€ ) ์ด์ˆ˜์•„ : ์บฃ๋ง˜ ์•„์ด ์—ญ ๊น€์ง€์„ฑ ์ด์„ฑ๊ทœ ์ด๋‚จ๊ทœ [[์ด๋™ํ˜„] ์ •์ˆ˜๋ฒ” ์žฅํƒœ๋ฏผ : ๋ฐฉํƒœ์šฐ ์—ญ - '์ค‘์ „์ด ๋œ ์—ฌ์ž'์˜ ์ž„๊ธˆ ์ดํ˜„ ์—ญ ๋ฐฐ์šฐ ์žฅ์˜ˆ๋ฆผ : ํŽธ์˜์  ์ง์› ์—ญ ๊น€์ง€ํ›ˆ : ๋งž์„  ๋‚จ ์—ญ ์ด์„ธ์•„ : ํ•ด๊ณจ ๊ท€์‹  ์—ญ (โ€ ) ๊น€์ค‘๋ˆ : ํ˜•์‚ฌ ์žฅ์šด๋ช… ์—ญ ์žฅ๋‚จ์—ด : ์ค‘๋…„ ๋ถ€๋ถ€ ๊ท€์‹  ๋‚จํŽธ ์—ญ (โ€ ) ์ตœ์œ ์†ก ํ•œ์šฐ์—ด ์ตœ๋ฌธ์ˆ˜ ํ•œ์‚ฌ๋ช… ์•ˆ์ˆ˜ํ˜ธ ์ด์›์ง„ ์œค์ข…์› ์ด์„ ์˜ ์ดํ•˜์˜ ๊น€์˜ํ˜ธ : ๋ฐœ๋ › ์š”์› ์—ญ ์˜ค์„ธ์€ : ํŒฌ ์—ฌ๊ณ ์ƒ ์—ญ ์„œ์ด์ˆ˜ : ์ง€ํ˜„๋ฏธ ์—ญ ์ด์•จ๋ฆฌ : ๋ฏธ๋ผ์˜ ๋™์ƒ ์—ญ ํ•œ์˜ˆํ•˜ ๊น€์„œ์•„ ๊น€์Šนํ•œ : ํ•œ์˜์› ์•„๋“ค ๊ฐ•ํ˜„์ง„ ์—ญ ๊น€์ด์‚ฐ : ๋ฒ„์Šค ๊ธฐ์‚ฌ ์—ญ ์„œํฌ ์„ฑ๋ฏผ์ค€ : ํ˜•๋ฏผ ์—ญ ์ด์žฌ์—ฐ ์„œ์ •ํ›„ ์„œํ˜„๊ทœ ์ž„์‹œํ›„ ์ตœ์„ฑํฌ ํŠน๋ณ„์ถœ์—ฐ ์˜ค์ง€ํ˜ธ : ์ฐฌ์„ฑ์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€ ์—ญ - ๊ตฌ์ฐฌ์„ฑ์ด ์–ด๋ฆด ๋•Œ ์ฐฌ์„ฑ์„ ๋งŒ์›”์—๊ฒŒ ํŒ”์•˜๋‹ค. ์ด์ค€๊ธฐ : ๊ตฌ๋งˆ ์‹ ๋ถ€ ์—ญ - ์ œ1์ˆœ์œ„ ์ง€๋ฐฐ์ธ ํ›„๋ณด ์ด์‹œ์–ธ : ์šฐ์ฃผ ๋น„ํ–‰์‚ฌ ์—ญ - ์ œ 2์ˆœ์œ„ ์ง€๋ฐฐ์ธ ํ›„๋ณด ์ด๋‹ค์œ— : ์„ค์ง€์› ์—ญ - ๊ณผ๊ฑฐ ์œ ํ•™ ์‹œ์ ˆ ์‚ฐ์ฒด์Šค๋ฅผ ์ž์‚ด ์ง์ „๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ชฐ๊ณ  ๊ฐ„ ์žฅ๋ณธ์ธ. ์—ฐ์‡„์‚ด์ธ๋งˆ. ์กฐํ˜„์‹ : 404ํ˜ธ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ๊ณ ๊ฐ ์—ญ ๋ฏผ๊ฒฝ์ง„ : ๊ฐ•์•„์ง€ ํ• ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€ ์—ญ ํ™๊ฒฝ : ๋นต์ง‘ ๋‚จ์ž ์—ญ - ๋บ‘์†Œ๋‹ˆ ๋ฒ” ์ด์ด๊ฒฝ : ๋ฐฐ์šฐ ์œ ์˜ค ์—ญ - ๋ฐฉํƒœ์šฐ์˜ ํ›„์ž„ ๋ฐฐ์šฐ ๊น€์ค€ํ˜„ : ๋ณธ์ธ ์—ญ ํ‘œ์˜ˆ์ง„ : ์ค‘์ „ ์—ญ ์€๊ฐ€์€ : ํ”ผ์ž์ง‘ ์•Œ๋ฐ”์ƒ ์—ญ ์˜คํƒœ๊ฒฝ : ์ •์€์„ ์—ญ - ์›”๋“œ ๋””์Šคํฌ์˜ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ. ๋ชฐ์นด ์œ ํฌ์ž ์„ค๋ฆฌ : ์ •์ง€์€ ์—ญ - ์™• ํšŒ์žฅ์˜ ์†๋…€ ๋‚จ๋‹ค๋ฆ„ : ๋Œ€๋™์ • ์‹  ์—ญ - ๋งˆ์„์˜ ํฐ ์šฐ๋ฌผ์„ ์ง€ํ‚ค๋Š” ์‹ ๋ น ํ™ฉ์˜ํฌ : ํ™ฉ๋ฌธ์ˆ™ ์—ญ - ์ „ ์ง€๋ฐฐ์ธ ์„œ์€์ˆ˜ : ๋ฒ ๋กœ๋‹ˆ์นด ์—ญ - ์‚ฐ์ฒด์Šค์˜ ์—ฐ์ธ ๋ฐ•์ง„์ฃผ : ๊ฒฝ์•„ ์—ญ (โ€ ) - ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์ƒ์ƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด์ง„ ์ƒ๋…๊ท€์‹  ์ด์Šน์ค€ : ๊ฐ•๋งŒ์˜ ์—ญ - ํ•œ์˜์‚ฌ ์†Œํฌ์ • : ์ด์„ธ์˜ ์—ญ - ๊ฐ•๋งŒ์˜ ๋ถ€์ธ ๊น€์ˆ˜ํ˜„ : ํ˜ธํ…” ๋ธ”๋ฃจ๋ฌธ ์‚ฌ์žฅ ์—ญ ์ดฌ์˜์ง€ ๋ฐ˜ํฌ๋Œ€๊ต ๋ชฉํฌ๊ทผ๋Œ€์—ญ์‚ฌ๊ด€1๊ด€ ํŒŒ๋ผ๋‹ค์ด์Šค์‹œํ‹ฐ ๋ง์ƒํ•ด์ˆ˜์š•์žฅ ์„œ์šธ๋Œ€๊ณต์› ํ•œ๊ตญ๋ณด๊ฑด๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ์ปคํ”ผ์ธ๋œจ๋ฝ ๋ฒ„ํ‹€๋Ÿฌ์Šคํ…Œ์ด๋ธ” ๋กฏ๋ฐ์›”๋“œํƒ€์›Œ ์ด์Œ ๋” ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์Šค ํ˜œ๋ฏผ๋‹น ์„œ์šธ์ฑ…๋ณด๊ณ  ์ฐฝํ™”๋‹น ๋Œ€ํ•™๋กœ์  ์„œ๊ฐ•๋Œ€๊ต ๋ณดํƒ€๋ณดํƒ€ ๋งˆ๋ฆฌ๋‚˜๋ฒ ์ด์Šคํƒ€์  ์–ด๊ธฐ์–ด์ฐจ ํ•œ์–‘๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ์—๋ฆฌ์นด์บ ํผ์Šค ์„ฑํฅ์‚ฐ์„ฑ ์‚ฌ๋ž‘๋‚˜๋ฌด ํ•˜๋‚จ์ข…ํ•ฉ์šด๋™์žฅ์•ž ๋ณด๋„์œก๊ต ๋งˆํฌ๋Œ€๊ต ์–ด ๋กœํ”„ ์Šฌ๋ผ์ด์Šค ํ”ผ์Šค ๋บ‘์˜ค๋ฅด๋ฐฉ ๊ด‘๊ต์  ํ”ผ์ž์•Œ๋ธ”๋กœ ๋ฌธ๋ž˜์ง์˜์  ์ผ์‚ฐํ˜ธ์ˆ˜๊ณต์› ์•„์‹œ์•„๋“œ์›จ๋”ฉ์ปจ๋ฒค์…˜ ์„œ์šธ ์•ฝ๋ น์‹œ์žฅ ๋ฌธ๊ฒฝ์ƒˆ์žฌ ์˜คํ”ˆ์„ธํŠธ์žฅ ์ „๊ณกํ•ญ ๋ง์ƒํ•ด๋ณ€ ํŒŒ๋ผ๋‹ค์ด์Šค์‹œํ‹ฐ ์›๋”๋ฐ•์Šค ์šฐ๋ฆฌ๊ฝƒ์‹๋ฌผ์› ํ˜ธํ…” ์„ธํŠธ์žฅ ์ƒ›๊ฐ• ๋ฌธํ™”๋‹ค๋ฆฌ ์—์ด์น˜์—๋น„๋‰ด ๊ฑด๋Œ€์  ๊ตญ๋ฆฝ๋ฐฑ๋‘๋Œ€๊ฐ„์ˆ˜๋ชฉ์› ํ•ฉ์ฒœ์˜์ƒํ…Œ๋งˆํŒŒํฌ ์„ฑํฅ์‚ฐ์„ฑ ์‹œ์ฒญ๋ฅ  OST ์•„๋ž˜๋Š” ์‹ฑ๊ธ€์•จ๋ฒ”์— ํฌํ•จ๋œ ๊ณก๋“ค์ด๋ฉฐ, ์ •๋ ฌ๊ธฐ์ค€์€ ์ถœ์‹œ ์ˆœ์ด๋‹ค. Part.1 Part.2 Part.3 Part.4 Part.5 Part.6 Part.7 Part.8 Part.9 Part.10 Part.11 Part.12 Part.13 ์ฐธ๊ณ  ์‚ฌํ•ญ ์ด ํ™”๋ฉด์€ ๋ ˆํ„ฐ๋ฐ•์Šค๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ˜ธํ…” ํ˜„์žฅ์ง ํ•™๋ ฅ ์กฐ๊ฑด : 2๋…„์ œ ์ดˆ๋Œ€์กธ ๊ฐ์ฃผ ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋ชฉ๋ก 2019๋…„ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋ชฉ๋ก ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ํ˜ธํ…” ๋ธ๋ฃจ๋‚˜ ํ™ˆํŽ˜์ด์ง€ 2019๋…„ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ 2010๋…„๋Œ€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ ํ™์ •์€ยทํ™๋ฏธ๋ž€ ์‹œ๋‚˜๋ฆฌ์˜ค ์ž‘ํ’ˆ ํ˜ธํ…”์„ ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฝ์œผ๋กœ ํ•œ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ์„œ์šธํŠน๋ณ„์‹œ๋ฅผ ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฝ์œผ๋กœ ํ•œ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ ๋‚˜๋ฌด๋ฅผ ์†Œ์žฌ๋กœ ํ•œ ์ž‘ํ’ˆ ์œ ๋ น์„ ์†Œ์žฌ๋กœ ํ•œ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํŒํƒ€์ง€ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ์ŠคํŠœ๋””์˜ค ๋“œ๋ž˜๊ณค ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ 2019๋…„์— ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ TV ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ 2019๋…„์— ์ข…๋ฃŒํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ TV ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ tvN ํ† ์ผ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hotel%20del%20Luna
Hotel del Luna
Hotel del Luna () is a 2019 South Korean television series, starring Lee Ji-eun and Yeo Jin-goo as the owner and manager, respectively, of the eponymous hotel that caters only to ghosts. Produced by GTist, written by the Hong sisters and directed by Oh Chung-hwan, it aired on tvN from July 13 to September 1, 2019. It was the most-viewed tvN drama of 2019 and is one of the highest-rated Korean dramas in cable television history. Synopsis "Hotel del Luna" (previously known as "Guest House of the Moon") is not like any other hotel. A supernatural place, the hotel is not visible in its true form during the daytime and humans can only come across the hotel under special circumstances. Its staff and clients are all ghosts coming to terms with unfinished business in their former lives before they pass on to the afterlife and cycle of reincarnation; the staff, in particular, have been there for decades or centuries as they have not settled their grudges. The exception to this is the hotel's general manager, which has been filled by a succession of human "passersby" since they need to interact normally with the real world in certain instances, like paying bills or fulfilling ghosts' requests with still-living relatives/friends. Jang Man-wol (Lee Ji-eun) is the owner of this hotel, which is located in Myeong-dong, Seoul. Due to a huge sin committed more than a millennium ago, the hotel catering to the dead has been bound to her soul. As a result of manipulation by the deity Mago (Seo Yi-sook), Jang Man-wol meets Koo Chan-sung's father (Oh Ji-ho) and makes a deal: in exchange for his life, his son will work for her 20 years later. Desperate to save his son, the father takes Koo Chan-sung (Yeo Jin-goo) abroad. The young man grows up to be a sincere, level-headed perfectionist with a soft heart. He comes back to South Korea after his father's death, 21 years later to be an assistant manager at a multi-national hotel corporation, only to face Jang Man-wol, after which he ends up fulfilling the agreement and becomes the manager of Hotel del Luna. Through Koo Chan-sung, the mysteries and the secrets behind the hotel and its owner are revealed. Cast and characters Main Lee Ji-eun as Jang Man-wol Kim Gyu-ri as young Man-wol The moody owner of Hotel del Luna (Guest House of the Moon). She was condemned to this fate in order to atone for the sins she committed 1,300 years ago. Alternating between being aloof and bad-tempered, she is known for her love of extravagant things, particularly luxurious outfits, fast cars, and expensive champagne. Yeo Jin-goo as Koo Chan-sung Kim Kang-hoon as young Chan-sung The new general manager of Hotel del Luna. He is a Harvard MBA graduate hired as an assistant manager at one of Korea's top hotels. However, due to a deal his father made with Jang Man-wol twenty-one years earlier, Chan-sung is forced to become the general manager of Hotel del Luna. Being stoic and rational puts him at odds with Man-wol, particularly curbing her spendthrift and extortionist tendencies. Supporting At the Hotel del Luna Jung Dong-hwan as Noh Joon-suk The hotel's general manager for 30 years and Chan-sung's predecessor. He considers Man-wol as a sister, daughter and friend. Shin Jung-geun as Kim Seon-bi (formerly Kim Shi-ik) The longest employee of the hotel and the Sky Bar's bartender. Before his death, he was a Joseon Dynasty scholar. Bae Hae-sun as Choi Seo-hee The housekeeper and room service provider with an extrovert personality. She lived during the Joseon era as a nobleman's wife. Pyo Ji-hoon as Ji Hyun-joong The hotel receptionist. He is nice and polite but does not like his job. He was a student who died at the height of the Korean War. Kang Mi-na as spirit of Jung Soo-jung / Kim Yoo-na A rich and arrogant student, whose body ends up being inhabited by the spirit of Jung Soo-jung, a schoolmate whom Yoo-na bullied and accidentally killed. When Yoo-na's spirit is destroyed, Soo-jung decides to remain inside Yoo-na's body and assume her identity. People around Jang Man-wol Lee Do-hyun as Go Chung-myung A Later Silla royal guard captain who becomes a friend of Man-wol and Yeon-woo. Lee Tae-sun as Yeon-woo / Officer Park Young-soo The co-leader of the bandits and Man-wol's foster brother. He is reincarnated as police detective Park Young-soo. People around Gu Chan-sung Cho Hyun-chul as Sanchez Chan-sung's best friend since they were studying at Harvard. He is the son of a wealthy pizza franchise operator, running the restaurant in Seoul. He opens up his house to Chan-sung and Lee Mi-ra. Park Yoo-na as Princess Song-hwa / Lee Mi-ra A Later Silla princess who was evil. After spending several centuries atoning for her sins, she is reincarnated as Lee Mi-ra, a doctor with a good personality and Chan-sung's ex-girlfriend from his university days. Lee David as Seol Ji-won A rich young man and Chan-sung's schoolmate at Harvard. He holds a grudge against both Chan-sung and Sanchez. He is later revealed to be a psychopathic serial killer who murdered at least seven people, in which all of their souls became guests of Hotel Del Luna. Other characters Seo Yi-sook as Mago A goddess who controls the life and death of people passing through the hotel and appears in many forms. Kang Hong-seok as Grim Reaper A spirit who guides the souls staying at the hotel to the afterlife and captures wandering evil spirits. Song Duk-ho as Oh Tae-seok He is a soldier who runs away from war when the war breaks out. Special appearances Oh Ji-ho as Chan-sung's father (Ep. 1 & 16) Kim Won-hae as the mayor (Ep. 1) Lee Chae-kyung as hotel CEO (Ep. 1โ€“2 & 10) Nam Kyoung-eub as Chairman Wang (Ep. 2, 9 & 10) Lee Joon-gi as priest (Ep. 3) Lee Si-eon as astronaut (Ep. 3) Jo Hyun-sik as hotel guest (Ep. 3) Hong Kyung as baker (Ep. 4) Kim Mi-eun as bride Lee Soo-min (Ep. 5) Lee Yi-kyung as actor Yu Oh (Ep. 6) Pyo Ye-jin as actress (Ep. 6) Kim Jun-hyun as himself (Ep. 6) Park Jin-joo as Gyeong-ah (Ep. 8) Nam Da-reum as Spirit of the Well (Ep. 9โ€“10) Sulli as Jung Ji-eun (Ep. 10) Choi Yoo-song as spirit of Chan-sung's mother (Ep. 10) Seo Eun-soo as Veronica (Ep. 11) Hwang Young-hee as Hwang Moon-sook (Ep. 11) Lee Seung-joon as doctor (Ep. 12) So Hee-jung as doctor's wife (Ep. 12) Kim Seung-han as doctor's son (Ep. 12) Lee Min-young as ghost (Ep. 13) Kim Soo-hyun as new owner of the Guest House of the Moon, renaming it Hotel Blue Moon (Ep. 16) Original soundtrack Part 1 Part 2 Part 3 Part 4 Part 5 Part 6 Part 7 Part 8 Part 9 Part 10 Part 11 Part 12 Part 13 Special soundtrack Chart performance Viewership This series aired on tvN, a cable channel/pay TV which normally has a relatively smaller audience compared to free-to-air TV/public broadcasters (KBS, SBS, MBC and EBS). It was the most viewed tvN drama of 2019, and is currently the sixteenth highest-rated Korean drama in cable television history. Awards and nominations Adaptations US remake On June 24, 2020, Studio Dragon announced that it would co-produce an American remake of Hotel del Luna with Skydance. Alison Schapker will be in charge of developing and producing the series. She will be working with Miky Lee, Jinnie Choi and Hyun Park of Studio Dragon, and David Ellison, Dana Goldberg and Bill Bost of Skydance Television. So far, no channel has picked up the idea of a US remake. Korean musical On January 27, 2021, the theater company Showplay announced that Hotel del Luna was adapted into a stage musical that premiered in 2022. References External links Hotel del Luna at Studio Dragon Hotel del Luna at GTist Korean-language television shows 2019 South Korean television series debuts 2019 South Korean television series endings TVN (South Korean TV channel) television dramas South Korean fantasy television series Television shows written by the Hong sisters Television series by Studio Dragon Television series about ghosts Television series set in 2019 Television series set in hotels Television shows set in Seoul
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EB%82%98%EB%94%94%EC%95%84%20%EB%82%98%EB%94%A4
๋‚˜๋””์•„ ๋‚˜๋”ค
๋‚˜๋””์•„ ๋‚˜๋”ค(, 1988๋…„ 1์›” 2์ผ ~ )์€ ์•„ํ”„๊ฐ€๋‹ˆ์Šคํƒ„ ์ถœ์‹  ๋ด๋งˆํฌ์˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ ํ˜„์žฌ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ NWSL ๋ผ์‹ฑ ๋ฃจ์ด๋นŒ์—์„œ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์ˆ˜๋กœ ๋›ฐ๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์™ธ๊ณผ ์˜์‚ฌ๋กœ๋„ ํ™œ๋™ ์ค‘์ด๋‹ค. ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ์•„ํ”„๊ฐ€๋‹ˆ์Šคํƒ„ ํ—ค๋ผํŠธ ์ถœ์‹ ์œผ๋กœ๊ทธ์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€๋Š” ์•„ํ”„๊ฐ€๋‹ˆ์Šคํƒ„ ์œก๊ตฐ ์žฅ๊ต๋กœ ๋ณต๋ฌดํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ 2000๋…„์— ํƒˆ๋ ˆ๋ฐ˜์— ์˜ํ•ด ์ฒ˜ํ˜•๋‹นํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ์‹ ๋ณ€์— ์œ„ํ˜‘์„ ๋Š๊ผˆ๊ณ  ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ์™€ 4๋ช…์˜ ์ž๋งค๋“ค๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์œ„์กฐ๋œ ์—ฌ๊ถŒ์„ ์ด์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ํŒŒํ‚ค์Šคํƒ„, ์ดํƒˆ๋ฆฌ์•„, ์˜๊ตญ์„ ๊ฑฐ์ณ ๋ด๋งˆํฌ ๋‚œ๋ฏผ ์บ ํ”„๋กœ ํ”ผ์‹ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ ‡๊ฒŒ ๋ด๋งˆํฌ์— ์ •์ฐฉํ•˜์ž๋งˆ์ž ์˜ฌ๋ณด๋ฅด์—์„œ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ƒํ™œ์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๊ณ  2005๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2012๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ B52 ์˜ฌ๋ณด๋ฅด, ํŒ€ ๋น„๋ณด๋ฅด, VSK ์˜ค๋ฅดํ›„์Šค ๋“ฑ์—์„œ ๋งนํ™œ์•ฝํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ํŠนํžˆ VSK ์˜ค๋ฅดํ›„์Šค ์†Œ์†์œผ๋กœ 5์—ฐ์† ๋ด๋งˆํฌ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 3์œ„(2007-08 ~ 2011-12), 2008-09 ๋ด๋งˆํฌ ์—ฌ์ž์ปต ์šฐ์Šน, 2009-10 ๋ด๋งˆํฌ ์—ฌ์ž์ปต ์ค€์šฐ์Šน, 2010-11 ๋ด๋งˆํฌ ์—ฌ์ž์ปต 4๊ฐ• ์ง„์ถœ ๋“ฑ์˜ ์„ฑ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๊ฑฐ๋‘์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํด๋Ÿฝ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ 2012๋…„ ํฌ๋ฅดํˆฌ๋‚˜ ์˜ˆ๋ง์œผ๋กœ ์ด์ ํ•œ ํ›„ ๊ฐ™์€ ํ•ด 9์›” ์Šค์ฝ”ํ‹€๋žœ๋“œ ์—ฌ์ž ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋ฏธ์–ด๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์˜ ๊ธ€๋ž˜์Šค๊ณ  ์‹œํ‹ฐ์™€์˜ 2012-13๋…„ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 32๊ฐ• 1์ฐจ์ „์—์„œ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ํด๋Ÿฝ ๋Œ€ํ•ญ์ „ ๋ฐ๋ท” ๋ฌด๋Œ€๋ฅผ ์น˜๋ฅด์ž๋งˆ์ž ๋ฉ€ํ‹ฐ๊ณจ์„ ํ„ฐ๋œจ๋ฆฌ๋ฉฐ ํŒ€์˜ 2-1 ์Šน๋ฆฌ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ 16๊ฐ• ์ง„์ถœ์˜ ๊ต๋‘๋ณด๋ฅผ ๋งˆ๋ จํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ํ›„ 2014๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ํฌ๋ฅดํˆฌ๋‚˜ ์˜ˆ๋ง ์†Œ์†์œผ๋กœ ํ™œ๋™ํ•˜๋ฉฐ 2012-13 ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ค€์šฐ์Šน, 2013-14 ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์šฐ์Šน, 2012-13 ๋ด๋งˆํฌ ์—ฌ์ž์ปต ์ค€์šฐ์Šน, 2013-14 ๋ด๋งˆํฌ ์—ฌ์ž์ปต 4๊ฐ• ์ง„์ถœ ๋“ฑ์— ์ด๋ฐ”์ง€ํ–ˆ๊ณ  2014๋…„ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ NWSL์˜ NJ/NY ๊ณ ์„ฌ์œผ๋กœ ์ด์ ํ•˜์—ฌ 2015 ์‹œ์ฆŒ๊นŒ์ง€ ํ™œ๋™ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ํŠนํžˆ 2014๋…„ 8์›”์—๋Š” ๋ฏธ๊ตญ NWSL ์ด๋‹ฌ์˜ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ ์„ ์ •๋˜๋Š” ์˜์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ์•ˆ์•˜๋‹ค. 2015 ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ๋งˆ์น˜๊ณ  2016 ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ์•ž๋‘” 2016๋…„ 1์›” ๊ฐ™์€ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์˜ ํฌํ‹€๋žœ๋“œ ์†์Šค๋กœ ํŠธ๋ ˆ์ด๋“œ๋œ ํ›„ 2016 NWSL ์‹ค๋“œ ์šฐ์Šน, 2016 NWSL 4๊ฐ• ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์˜คํ”„, 2017 ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์˜คํ”„ ์šฐ์Šน ๋“ฑ์— ๊ณตํ—Œํ•œ ๋’ค2017๋…„ 9์›” 28์ผ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ FA ์—ฌ์ž ์Šˆํผ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์˜ ๋งจ์ฒด์Šคํ„ฐ ์‹œํ‹ฐ์™€ ์ •์‹ ๊ณ„์•ฝ์„ ์ฒด๊ฒฐํ•œ ํ›„ ์ด๋“ฌํ•ด์ธ 2018๋…„ 1์›” ํŒ€์— ์ „๊ฒฉ ํ•ฉ๋ฅ˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋งจ์‹œํ‹ฐ ํ•ฉ๋ฅ˜ ์ดํ›„ ๊ฐ™์€ ํ•ด 1์›” 7์ผ ์—ด๋ฆฐ ๋ ˆ๋”ฉ FC์™€์˜ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ ๋ฌด๋Œ€ ๋ฐ๋ท”์ „์„ ์น˜๋ €๊ณ  ์ด ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ 2๊ณจ์„ ํ„ฐ๋œจ๋ฆฌ๋ฉฐ 5-2 ์™„์Šน์— ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ–ˆ๊ณ  ์ดํ›„ ํŒ€์€ 2017-18 ์‹œ์ฆŒ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ค€์šฐ์Šน, ์—ฌ์ž FA์ปต 4๊ฐ• ๋“ฑ์˜ ์„ฑ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๋‚จ๊ฒผ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  2019๋…„ 1์›” 3์ผ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ๋””๋น„์ง€์˜น 1 ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ ๋ช…๋ฌธํŒ€์ธ ํŒŒ๋ฆฌ ์ƒ์ œ๋ฅด๋งน ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ๊ณผ ์ž…๋‹จ ๊ณ„์•ฝ์„ ์ฒด๊ฒฐํ–ˆ๊ณ  ํŒŒ๋ฆฌ ์ƒ์ œ๋ฅด๋งน ํ•ฉ๋ฅ˜ ํ›„ 2020-21 ์‹œ์ฆŒ๊นŒ์ง€ ํ™œ๋™ํ•˜๋ฉฐ 2019๋…„ ํŠธ๋กœํŽ˜ ๋ฐ ์ƒนํ”ผ์˜ค๋„ค ์ค€์šฐ์Šน, 2019-20 ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ค€์šฐ์Šน, 2020-21 ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์šฐ์Šน, 2019-20 ์ฟ ํ”„ ๋“œ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ ์ค€์šฐ์Šน, 2ํšŒ ์—ฐ์† UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 4๊ฐ• ์ง„์ถœ(2019-20, 2020-21) ๋“ฑ์— ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2020-21 ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ๋์œผ๋กœ ํŒŒ๋ฆฌ ์ƒ์ œ๋ฅด๋งน๊ณผ ๊ฒฐ๋ณ„ํ•œ ๋’ค ๋ผ์‹ฑ ๋ฃจ์ด๋นŒ๊ณผ ์ž…๋‹จ ๊ณ„์•ฝ์„ ์ฒด๊ฒฐํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ 4๋…„๋งŒ์— ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋ฌด๋Œ€๋กœ ๋ณต๊ท€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ๋ด๋งˆํฌ ๊ตญ์ ๋ฒ•์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ 2006๋…„๊นŒ์ง€๋Š” ๋ด๋งˆํฌ ์‹œ๋ฏผ๊ถŒ์„ ์–ป์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๊ณ  2008๋…„์—์„œ์•ผ ๋ด๋งˆํฌ ์‹œ๋ฏผ๊ถŒ์„ ์–ป์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ 2006๋…„ ์ดํ›„ 5๋…„๊ฐ„ ๋ด๋งˆํฌ์— ๊ฑฐ์ฃผํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜์˜ ๊ตญ์ ๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จ๋œ ๊ตญ์ œ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์—ฐ๋งน์˜ ๊ทœ์ •์— ์˜๊ฑฐํ•ด ๋ด๋งˆํฌ ์—ฌ์ž ๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€์—์„œ ํ™œ๋™ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†์—ˆ์Œ์—๋„๋ด๋งˆํฌ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ํ˜‘ํšŒ์˜ ์š”์ฒญ์— FIFA๋Š” ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ ๋‚˜๋”ค์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์˜ˆ์™ธ ๊ทœ์ •์„ ์ ์šฉํ•จ์œผ๋กœ์„œ ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ ์ฒœ์‹ ๋งŒ๊ณ  ๋์— ๋ด๋งˆํฌ ์—ฌ์ž ๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€์— ํ•ฉ๋ฅ˜ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์—ˆ๊ณ  ์ด๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋ด๋งˆํฌ ์—ฌ์ž ๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ์—ญ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์™ธ๊ตญ์—์„œ ๊ท€ํ™”ํ•œ ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ ์„ ์ˆ˜์— ์ด๋ฆ„์„ ์˜ฌ๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๋ด๋งˆํฌ ์—ฌ์ž ๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ํ•ฉ๋ฅ˜ ํ›„ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ๊ณผ์˜ 2009๋…„ ์•Œ๊ฐ€๋ฅด๋ธŒ์ปต B์กฐ ์กฐ๋ณ„๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 1์ฐจ์ „(0-2 ํŒจ)์—์„œ ๊ตญ์ œ A๋งค์น˜ ๋ฐ๋ท”์ „์„ ์น˜๋ €๊ณ  ์•„์ด์Šฌ๋ž€๋“œ์™€์˜ ์กฐ๋ณ„๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ตœ์ข…์ „์—์„œ A๋งค์น˜ ๋ฐ๋ท”๊ณจ์„ ์‹ ๊ณ ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ํŒ€์˜ 3ยท4์œ„์ „ ์ง„์ถœ์— ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ํŒ€์€ 3ยท4์œ„ ๊ฒฐ์ •์ „์—์„œ๋„ ๋…์ผ์„ ๊บพ์œผ๋ฉฐ 3์œ„๋กœ ๋Œ€ํšŒ๋ฅผ ๋งˆ๋ฌด๋ฆฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2013๊ณผ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2017 ๋ณธ์„ ์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ด ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ ์ „ ๋Œ€ํšŒ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ ๋…์ผ๊ณผ์˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2017 8๊ฐ•์ „์—์„œ 0-1๋กœ ๋’ค์ ธ ์žˆ๋˜ ํ›„๋ฐ˜ 4๋ถ„ ๋™์ ๊ณจ์„ ํ„ฐ๋œจ๋ ธ๊ณ  ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ฆฌ์•„์™€์˜ 4๊ฐ•์ „ ์Šน๋ถ€์ฐจ๊ธฐ์—์„œ๋Š” ์ฒซ๋ฒˆ์งธ ํ‚ค์ปค๋กœ ๋‚˜์„œ์„œ ์นจ์ฐฉํ•˜๊ฒŒ PK๋ฅผ ์„ฑ๊ณต์‹œํ‚ค๋ฉฐ ๋ด๋งˆํฌ์˜ ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ฒซ ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ ๋Œ€ํšŒ ๊ฒฐ์Šน ์ง„์ถœ์— ์ด๋ฐ”์ง€ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๊ฐœ์ตœ๊ตญ ๋„ค๋œ๋ž€๋“œ์™€์˜ ๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „์—์„œ๋„ ๋“์ ์„ ์„ฑ๊ณต์‹œํ‚ค๋ฉด์„œ ์ค€์šฐ์Šน์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๋ด๋งˆํฌ ์—ฌ์ž ๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ์—ญ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ ๋Œ€ํšŒ ์ตœ๊ณ  ์„ฑ์ ์— ๊ณตํ—Œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2022 ์˜ˆ์„  8๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ 9๊ณจ์„ ๋งนํญํ•˜๋Š” ํ™œ์•ฝ์„ ํŽผ์น˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋ด๋งˆํฌ์˜ 7ํšŒ ์—ฐ์†์ด์ž ํ†ต์‚ฐ 9๋ฒˆ์งธ ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ ๋Œ€ํšŒ ๋ณธ์„  ์ง„์ถœ์— ํฐ ์—ญํ• ์„ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌ์ƒํ™œ 2017 ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ๋งˆ์นœ ํ›„ ์™ธ๊ณผ ์˜์‚ฌ์˜ ๊ฟˆ์„ ์ด๋ฃจ๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์˜ค๋ฅดํ›„์Šค ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ์˜๊ณผ๋Œ€ํ•™์— ์ž…ํ•™ํ–ˆ๊ณ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ ํ™œ๋™ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ 5๋…„๊ฐ„ ์˜์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ๋˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ฐค๋‚ฎ์„ ์•ˆ ๊ฐ€๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์—ด์‹ฌํžˆ ๊ณต๋ถ€ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋ด๋งˆํฌ์–ด, ์˜์–ด, ๋…์ผ์–ด, ํŽ˜๋ฅด์‹œ์•„์–ด, ๋‹ค๋ฆฌ์–ด, ์šฐ๋ฅด๋‘์–ด, ํžŒ๋””์–ด, ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์–ด, ์•„๋ž์–ด ๋“ฑ ๋ฌด๋ ค 11๊ฐœ์˜ ์–ธ์–ด๋ฅผ ์œ ์ฐฝํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๊ตฌ์‚ฌํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๊ตญ์ œ ์—ฐํ•ฉ ํ™๋ณด๋Œ€์‚ฌ๋กœ์„œ ๋Œ€์™ธ ํ™œ๋™๋„ ํŽผ์นœ ๋’ค ๋งˆ์นจ๋‚ด 2022๋…„ 1์›” ๊ทธํ† ๋ก ๊ฐˆ๋งํ•˜๋˜ ์™ธ๊ณผ ์˜์‚ฌ์˜ ๊ฟˆ์„ ์ด๋ค˜๋‹ค. ์—ฌ๋‹ด์œผ๋กœ ๋‚˜๋”ค์€ ์•„ํ”„๊ฐ€๋‹ˆ์Šคํƒ„์—์„œ ๊ฐ€์ˆ˜๋กœ ํ™œ๋™ํ•˜๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ํƒˆ๋ ˆ๋ฐ˜ ๊ณต์Šต์„ ํ”ผํ•ด ํ˜„์žฌ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋กœ์Šค์•ค์ ค๋ ˆ์Šค์— ๊ฑฐ์ฃผ ์ค‘์ธ ์•„๋ฆฌ์•„๋‚˜ ์‚ฌ์˜ˆ๋“œ์˜ ์กฐ์นด์ด๋ฉฐ ๋ฌด์Šฌ๋ฆผ ์‹ ์ž๋กœ๋„ ์ž˜ ์•Œ๋ ค์ ธ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ˆ˜์ƒ VSK ์˜ค๋ฅดํ›„์Šค ๋ด๋งˆํฌ ์—ฌ์ž 1๋ถ€ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ : 3์œ„ (2007-08, 2008-09, 2009-10, 2010-11, 2011-12) ๋ด๋งˆํฌ ์—ฌ์ž์ปต : ์šฐ์Šน (2008-09), ์ค€์šฐ์Šน (2009-10), 4๊ฐ• (2010-11) ํฌ๋ฅดํˆฌ๋‚˜ ์˜ˆ๋ง ๋ด๋งˆํฌ ์—ฌ์ž 1๋ถ€ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ : ์šฐ์Šน (2013-14), ์ค€์šฐ์Šน (2012-13) ๋ด๋งˆํฌ ์—ฌ์ž์ปต : ์ค€์šฐ์Šน (2012-13), 4๊ฐ• (2013-14) ํฌํ‹€๋žœ๋“œ ์†์Šค ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ์œ„๋ฏผ์Šค ์‚ฌ์ปค ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ : ์šฐ์Šน (2017), 4๊ฐ• (2016) NWSL ์‹ค๋“œ : ์šฐ์Šน (2016) ๋งจ์ฒด์Šคํ„ฐ ์‹œํ‹ฐ FA ์—ฌ์ž ์Šˆํผ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ : ์ค€์šฐ์Šน (2017-18) ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ ์—ฌ์ž FA์ปต : 4๊ฐ• (2017-18) ํŒŒ๋ฆฌ ์ƒ์ œ๋ฅด๋งน ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ ๋””๋น„์ง€์˜น 1 ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ : ์šฐ์Šน (2020-21), ์ค€์šฐ์Šน (2019-20) ์ฟ ํ”„ ๋“œ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ : ์ค€์šฐ์Šน (2019-20) UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ : 4๊ฐ• (2019-20, 2020-21) ํŠธ๋กœํŽ˜ ๋ฐ ์ƒนํ”ผ์˜ค๋„ค : ์ค€์šฐ์Šน (2019) ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ (์—ฌ์ž) UEFA ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜๊ถŒ ๋Œ€ํšŒ : ์ค€์šฐ์Šน (2017) ์•Œ๊ฐ€๋ฅด๋ธŒ์ปต : 3์œ„ (2009) ๊ฐœ์ธ NWSL ์ด๋‹ฌ์˜ ์„ ์ˆ˜์ƒ : 2014๋…„ 8์›” ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ๋‚˜๋””์•„ ๋‚˜๋”ค ํ”„๋กœํ•„ - ๋ด๋งˆํฌ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ํ˜‘ํšŒ 1988๋…„ ์ถœ์ƒ ์‚ด์•„์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ ๋ด๋งˆํฌ์˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋ด๋งˆํฌ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์ˆ˜ ์•„ํ”„๊ฐ€๋‹ˆ์Šคํƒ„๊ณ„ ๋ด๋งˆํฌ์ธ ๋ด๋งˆํฌ์˜ ๋ฌด์Šฌ๋ฆผ ํ—ค๋ผํŠธ ์ถœ์‹  ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์— ๊ฑฐ์ฃผํ•œ ๋ด๋งˆํฌ์ธ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ์— ๊ฑฐ์ฃผํ•œ ๋ด๋งˆํฌ์ธ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์— ๊ฑฐ์ฃผํ•œ ๋ด๋งˆํฌ์ธ ๋งจ์ฒด์Šคํ„ฐ ์‹œํ‹ฐ WFC์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2009 ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2013 ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2017 ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ FA ์—ฌ์ž ์Šˆํผ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ์œ„๋ฏผ์Šค ์‚ฌ์ปค ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2022 ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ FIFA ์„ผ์ถ”๋ฆฌ ํด๋Ÿฝ ์—ฌ์ž ์„ ์ˆ˜ NJ/NY ๊ณ ์„ฌ FC์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ํŒŒ๋ฆฌ ์ƒ์ œ๋ฅด๋งน FC ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์˜ ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ์˜ ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋””๋น„์ง€์˜น 1 ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nadia%20Nadim
Nadia Nadim
Nadia Nadim (; born 2 January 1988) is a professional footballer and physician who plays as a striker for NWSL club Racing Louisville FC. Born in Afghanistan, she represents the Denmark national team at international level. Nadim is considered the most influential and greatest Afghan female footballer of all time, particularly because she won leagues in two countries, the USA league title (NWSL Championship) in 2017 with the Portland Thorns and the French league title in the 2020โ€“21 season with Paris Saint-Germain. Early life and career Nadia was born in Herat and raised for the first part of her childhood in Afghanistan in a wealthy family. When Nadim was 9 years old, her father, an Afghan National Army (ANA) general, was executed by the Taliban. A couple of years later, her family โ€“consisting of Nadim, her mother and her four sistersโ€“ fled to Denmark. Shortly after arriving in Denmark, when 12 years old, she tried playing football for the first time and began playing at the small local club GUG in Aalborg. Her senior career began at B52 Aalborg and Team Viborg. Club career Early career Nadim played for B52 Aalborg, Team Viborg from 2005 to 2006 and IK Skovbakken from 2006 to 2012, before moving to Fortuna Hjรธrring in 2012. She made her Champions League debut in September the same year, scoring both goals in a 2โ€“1 win over Scottish Champions Glasgow City. Sky Blue FC Nadim joined NWSL club Sky Blue FC near the end of the 2014 NWSL season. Playing in six games, she scored seven goals and registered three assists. She was named player of the week on 19 August and player of the month for the NWSL on 14 August. On 16 February 2015, Sky Blue announced that Nadim had been signed to play for Sky Blue in the 2015 season as well. Portland Thorns FC On 14 January 2016, Nadim was traded to Portland Thorns FC. Playing as a striker, she finished the 2016 season as the team's top scorer with nine goals in 20 games as the team won the 2016 NWSL Shield. In the 2017 season, she helped the team to a second-place finish in the league and victory in the NWSL Championship game. Manchester City On 28 September 2017, Nadim signed for FA Women's Super League side Manchester City for the 2018 season. She joined the club in January 2018, and made her debut with Manchester City on 7 January 2018 in a 5โ€“2 win over Reading. After six minutes on the ground she scored her first goal for the team, and 26 minutes later she made an assist when Manchester City scored their second goal in the match. In her second match for the team she scored the winning goal in a 1โ€“0 victory over Chelsea in the semi-final of the Continental Tyres Cup. On 26 July 2018, while on the US tour with Manchester City, the BBC reported that Nadim had requested a transfer out of the club, stating that she had never felt at home there and wanted to leave. On 19 December 2018, Manchester City announced that Nadim would be departing the club and her contract would be terminated on 1 January 2019, allowing her to sign with another club. Paris Saint-Germain On 3 January 2019, Nadim signed for Paris Saint-Germain. On 9 July 2019, Nadim extended her contract for Paris Saint-Germain after a successful first season. She was later rewarded with the captain's armband and named the team's vice captain for the 2019โ€“20 season. She scored 13 goals and made 13 assists in 16 league and cup games. Racing Louisville FC On 9 June 2021, Nadim signed with Racing Louisville FC, returning to the NWSL four years after leaving Portland Thorns FC for Manchester City. In September 2021, with the NWSL reeling from abuse scandals, she accused NJ/NY Gotham FC management of forging her signature on a contract extension so they could trade her rights to Portland in January 2016. She also accused league staffers of pressuring her to have a surgery for her season-ending ACL injury in the United States rather than abroad, threatening that "if something went wrong with the surgery outside of US they could consider taking actions against me." International career Under Danish nationality law Nadim could not apply for citizenship until turning 18 years old in 2006. When citizenship was eventually granted in 2008, FIFA eligibility rules blocked Nadim from playing for Denmark, because she had not yet been resident for the requisite five years after turning 18. A subsequent challenge from the Danish Football Association (DBU) led to FIFA's legal department making an exception to the rules in Nadim's case. Nadim immediately became a member of the Denmark national team, making her debut in the 2009 Algarve Cup in a 2โ€“0 defeat by the United States. In doing so, she became the first naturalised Dane to represent a Denmark senior national football team. She participated in all three of Denmark's games at UEFA European Championship 2009 in Finland. She was named in national coach Kenneth Heiner-Mรธller's Denmark squad for UEFA European Championship 2013. In Denmark's opening group match against hosts Sweden Nadim featured as a substitute in an eventful 1โ€“1 draw. In the UEFA Women's Euro 2017 tournament, she was instrumental in Denmark's advancement, scoring the tying goal in Denmark's eventual 2โ€“1 win over favorites Germany in the knockout stages, and scoring a go-ahead goal in the final, which Denmark ultimately lost to host Netherlands 4โ€“2. On 27 October 2020, Denmark had to win away against Italy to qualify for the UEFA European Championship 2022, and Nadim was crowned player of the match after scoring two crucial goals in Denmark's 3โ€“1 win over Italy in Florence. The two goals secured Denmark's spot in the upcoming Euros. On 24 June 2022, she played her 100th match for Denmark in a friendly match against Brazil. Style of play Nadim is recognized for her energetic and determined style of play. She is successful from the penalty spot, having converted all but one of her penalties in the NWSL (and with the one miss being a save by the goalkeeper and immediately scored by Nadim on the rebound) and both of her attempts at Euro 2017. Outside football Criticism of sportswashing of Qatar In December 2021, Nadim received criticism in the media for describing Qatar as a nation that helps people in need. Her positive description of the desert state is conflicting with the general consensus in the Danish population and the opinion formulated by the Danish FA on the oppression of human rights and poor conditions for migrant workers in Qatar. Subsequently, Nadim denied having received money for her performance in Qatar, which turned out not to be true when Danish newspaper B.T. found out that she had received payment for attending the education summit in the country. As a consequence of her role as an ambassador for World Cup in Qatar, Danish Refugee Council removed Nadim from her role as a goodwill ambassador. Nadim stated on her Twitter that her collaboration with the Danish Refugee Council had been inactive since the beginning of 2019. However, B.T. proved this statement inaccurate. Personal life and medical career Nadim attended medical school at Aarhus University (remotely during the football season) with the aim of becoming a surgeon when her playing days are over. In 2020, she was assisting in surgery. She qualified as a doctor in January 2022. Nadim is Muslim, and speaks nine languages. Afghan singer Aryana Sayeed is her aunt. In 2018, Forbes ranked her Number 20 in their "Most Powerful Women in International Sports" list. Her mother, Hamida Nadim, was killed in a motor vehicle accident on 23 November 2022, aged 57. When Nadia learned that her mother had died, she departed during her work as a pundit for British broadcaster ITV at the Denmarkโ€“Tunisia match in the Men's World Cup. Endorsements Nadia signed a representation contract with Nike in 2017, making her the first ever Danish female football player to be represented by Nike. Nike has used Nadia in many of their branches on top of doing work for the football department. She has also done commercials for Air Jordan as well as Nike's collaborations with Martine Rose. Besides her work with Nike, Nadia is also known for her work with Visa and Hugo Boss. In 2016, Danish TV station DR released a four-episode long documentary about Nadia that followed her from Denmark to the United States, documenting her player development with the Portland Thorns. In 2018, Danish publisher JP/Politiken published Nadia Nadim's autobiography called "Min Historie" which translates to "My Story". The book got nominated for Sports book of the year. The book was released in French on 26 May 2021, through the French publisher Hachette Book Group. Career statistics Honours Portland Thorns FC NWSL Shield: 2016 NWSL Championship: 2017 Manchester City FA WSL runners-up: 2017โ€“18 Paris Saint-Germain Division 1 Fรฉminine: 2020โ€“21 Racing Louisville FC NWSL Challenge Cup runners-up: 2023 Denmark UEFA Women's Euro runners-up: 2017 Individual Portland Thorns 2016 top goalscorer Awards and recognition In July 2019, Nadia Nadim was named UNESCO Champion for Girls and Women's Education. She received this recognition for her role in promoting sport and gender equality, her contribution to the Organization's educational action prioritizing young people and advocacy for girls and women's education at an international scale, among others. References Match reports External links 1988 births Living people Sportspeople from Herat Sportspeople of Afghan descent Afghan Muslims Danish Muslims Afghan emigrants to Denmark Naturalised citizens of Denmark Afghan women's footballers Danish women's footballers Women's association football forwards VSK Aarhus (women) players Fortuna Hjรธrring players NJ/NY Gotham FC players Portland Thorns FC players Manchester City W.F.C. players Paris Saint-Germain Fรฉminine players Racing Louisville FC players Elitedivisionen players National Women's Soccer League players Women's Super League players Division 1 Fรฉminine players Denmark women's international footballers Danish expatriate women's footballers Danish expatriate sportspeople in England Danish expatriate sportspeople in the United States Danish expatriate sportspeople in France Expatriate women's soccer players in the United States Expatriate women's footballers in England Expatriate women's footballers in France FIFA Women's Century Club UEFA Women's Euro 2022 players UEFA Women's Euro 2017 players Danish association football commentators
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EB%B8%8C%EB%A1%A4%EC%8A%A4%ED%83%80%EC%A6%88
๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ
๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ๋Š” ํ•€๋ž€๋“œ ๋น„๋””์˜ค ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ํšŒ์‚ฌ์ธ ์Šˆํผ์…€์—์„œ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœํ•˜๊ณ  ๋ฐœํ‘œํ•œ AOS, 3์ธ์นญ ์ŠˆํŒ… ๋น„๋””์˜ค ๊ฒŒ์ž„์ด๋‹ค. 2017๋…„ 6์›” 15์ผ ๋ฒ ํƒ€ ์ถœ์‹œ ํ›„, 2018๋…„ 12์›” 12์ผ iOS ๋ฐ ์•ˆ๋“œ๋กœ์ด๋“œ์šฉ์œผ๋กœ ์ „ ์„ธ๊ณ„์— ์ถœ์‹œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด ๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ์—์„œ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด๋“ค์€ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ๋ชจ๋“œ์—์„œ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด๋“ค์ด๋‚˜ AI์™€ ์ „ํˆฌ๋ฅผ ๋ฒŒ์ธ๋‹ค. ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด๋Š” ๋ธŒ๋กค๋Ÿฌ๋ผ๋Š” ์ด๋ฆ„์„ ๊ฐ€์ง„ ์บ๋ฆญํ„ฐ๋“ค ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋ฅผ ์„ ํƒํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋ธŒ๋กค๋Ÿฌ๋“ค์€ ์Šคํƒ€ ๋“œ๋กญ, ๋ธŒ๋กค ํŒจ์Šค, ์ฑŒ๋ฆฐ์ง€, ํฌ๋ž˜๋”ง, ๋ณด์„์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ์–ป์–ด์„œ ์ „ํˆฌ์— ์‚ฌ์šฉํ• ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋กค๋Ÿฌ๋“ค์€ ์ผ๋ฐ˜, ํฌ๊ท€, ์ดˆํฌ๊ท€, ์˜์›…, ์‹ ํ™”, ์ „์„ค, ํฌ๋กœ๋งˆํ‹ฑ ๋“ฑ๊ธ‰์œผ๋กœ ๋‚˜๋‰œ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ์—์„œ๋Š” ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ๋ชจ๋“œ๋ฅผ ์„ ํƒํ•˜์—ฌ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ดํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋ชจ๋“œ๋งˆ๋‹ค ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๊ทœ์น™๊ณผ ๋ชฉํ‘œ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ๋ชจ๋“œ์—์„œ์˜ ์ตœ๋Œ€ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด ์ˆ˜๊นŒ์ง€ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด๋“ค์„ ์ดˆ๋Œ€ํ•˜์—ฌ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ดํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฒŒ์ž„์„ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ดํ•˜์—ฌ ์Šน๋ฆฌํ•˜๋ฉด ํŠธ๋กœํ”ผ๋ฅผ ์–ป๋Š”๋ฐ, ๋ฐ›๋Š” ํŠธ๋กœํ”ผ์˜ ๊ฐœ์ˆ˜๋Š” ๋ชจ๋“œ์™€ ๋ธŒ๋กค๋Ÿฌ์˜ ํŠธ๋กœํ”ผ๋งˆ๋‹ค ๋‹ค๋ฅด๊ณ  ์†”๋กœ ์‡ผ๋‹ค์šด, ๋“€์˜ค ์‡ผ๋‹ค์šด์€ ์ˆœ์œ„๋งˆ๋‹ค ๋ฐ›๋Š” ํŠธ๋กœํ”ผ์˜ ๊ฐœ์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ๋‹ค๋ฅด๋‹ค. ๋˜, ํ•œ ํŒ€์˜ ํŠธ๋กœํ”ผ๊ฐ€ ์›”๋“ฑํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋‚ฎ์œผ๋ฉด ์–ธ๋”๋…์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ฌด์กฐ๊ฑด ์ผ์ •์–‘์˜ ํŠธ๋กœํ”ผ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›๋Š”๋‹ค. (3vs3 ๋ชจ๋“œ์—๋งŒ ์ ์šฉ) ์ผ์ • ํŠธ๋กœํ”ผ์— ๋„๋‹ฌํ•˜๋ฉด ๋ณด์ƒ์„ ๋ฐ›์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์Šคํ‚จ์€ ๋ณด์„ ๋˜๋Š” ๋ธ”๋ง์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์ž…ํ•˜๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ๋ธŒ๋กค ํŒจ์Šค๋‚˜ ํด๋Ÿฝ ์ฝ”์ธ, ๋ฌด๋ฃŒ ๋ณด์ƒ, ์ฑŒ๋ฆฐ์ง€, ์Šคํƒ€๋“œ๋กญ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ํ•ด์ œํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋กค ํŒจ์Šค 2020๋…„ 5์›” ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ์—…๋ฐ์ดํŠธ์— "๋ธŒ๋กค ํŒจ์Šค"๋ผ๋Š” ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ๋ณด์ƒ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์ด ์ถ”๊ฐ€๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด๊ฐ€ ์ „ํˆฌ์—์„œ ๊ฒฝ์Ÿํ•  ๋•Œ ๋ธŒ๋กค ํŒจ์Šค๋ฅผ ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์ง„ํ–‰ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ํ† ํฐ์„ ์–ป๋Š”๋‹ค. ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด๋Š” ๋ธŒ๋กค ํŒจ์Šค์—์„œ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ์•„์ดํ…œ์„ ์–ป์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋กค ํŒจ์Šค์—๋Š” ๋‘ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ชจ๋“  ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด๋Š” ๊ธฐ๋ณธ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฌด๋ฃŒ ํŒจ์Šค๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๊ณ , ๋ณด์„, ํ˜„๊ธˆ(ํ˜„์งˆ)์œผ๋กœ ๋ธŒ๋กค ํŒจ์Šค๋ฅผ ๊ตฌ์ž…ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํŒŒ์›Œ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ํŒŒ์›Œ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋ธŒ๋กค ํŒจ์Šค ์‹œ์ฆŒ 5์—์„œ ๊ฒŒ์ž„์— ์ถ”๊ฐ€๋œ ๊ฒฝ์Ÿ ์ˆœ์œ„ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์ด๋‹ค. ์ด๊ฒƒ์ด ํŒŒ์›Œ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์„ ๋Œ€์ฒดํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด๋Š” 4500๊ฐœ์˜ ํŠธ๋กœํ”ผ์—์„œ ํŒŒ์›Œ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ๋ฅผ ์ž ๊ธˆ ํ•ด์ œํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋ก ์ฆˆ 1๋“ฑ๊ธ‰๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋งˆ์Šคํ„ฐ ๋“ฑ๊ธ‰๊นŒ์ง€ ์ด 19๋“ฑ๊ธ‰์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ฒซ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ์ œ์™ธํ•˜๊ณ  ๊ฐ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์€ ๋‘ ๋‹ฌ ๋™์•ˆ ์ง€์†๋œ๋‹ค. ํŒŒ์›Œ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์ด ๋๋‚˜๋ฉด ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด๋Š” ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์ˆœ์œ„์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ๋ธ”๋ง์„ ์–ป๋Š”๋‹ค. ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด๋Š” ํ˜ผ์žํ•˜๋Š” ์†”๋กœ๋ชจ๋“œ์™€ 3๋ช…์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋œ ํŒ€์œผ๋กœ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ดํ•˜๋Š” ํŒ€๋ชจ๋“œ๋กœ ํŒŒ์›Œ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ๋ฅผ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์Šน์ž๋Š” 3์ „ 2์„ ์Šน์ œ ํ˜•์‹์œผ๋กœ ๊ฒฐ์ •๋˜๋ฉฐ ๋ฌด์Šน๋ถ€๋Š” ๊ณ„์‚ฐ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค. ๊ฐ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋Š” ๋ฌด์ž‘์œ„๋กœ ์„ ํƒ๋œ ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ๋ชจ๋“œ์™€ ๋งต์œผ๋กœ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์–‘ ํŒ€์˜ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด๋“ค์ด ๊ฐ๊ฐ ๊ธˆ์ง€ํ•  ๋ธŒ๋กค๋Ÿฌ๋ฅผ ์„ ํƒํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ•˜๋Š” 6๋ช…์˜ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด๋Š” ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋ธŒ๋กค๋Ÿฌ๋กœ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ดํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ฒŒ์ž„์˜ ์ง„ํ–‰ ์ƒํ™ฉ์€ ์ƒ๋Œ€ ์ˆœ์œ„๋ฅผ ๋น„๋กฏํ•œ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ์š”์ธ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ๋‹ฌ๋ผ์ง„๋‹ค. ํด๋Ÿฝ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ํด๋Ÿฝ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋ธŒ๋กค ํŒจ์Šค ์‹œ์ฆŒ 9์—์„œ ํด๋Ÿฝ ๊ฐ„์˜ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์ฃผ๊ฐ„ ๊ฒฝ์Ÿ ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ๋ชจ๋“œ๋กœ ๋„์ž…๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ˆ˜์š”์ผ, ๊ธˆ์š”์ผ, ์ผ์š”์ผ์— 8๊ฐœ์˜ ํด๋Ÿฝ์ด ๊ฒฝ์Ÿํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด ๋ชจ๋“œ๋ฅผ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด ํ•˜๋ ค๋ฉด ํ‹ฐ์ผ“์ด ํ•„์š”ํ•˜๋‹ค. ํด๋Ÿฝ ํšŒ์›๋“ค์ด ์ตœ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋งŽ์€ ํด๋Ÿฝ ํŠธ๋กœํ”ผ๋ฅผ ํš๋“ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ดํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์€ ํด๋Ÿฝ์˜ ํšŒ์›๊ณผ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ดํ•˜๋ฉด ๋” ๋งŽ์€ ํด๋Ÿฝ ํŠธ๋กœํ”ผ๋ฅผ ํš๋“ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ์ผ์ •์ด ๋๋‚œ ํ›„ ํด๋Ÿฝ์€ ํด๋Ÿฝ ํŠธ๋กœํ”ผ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋ฐ˜์œผ๋กœ ์ˆœ์œ„๊ฐ€ ๋งค๊ฒจ์ง„๋‹ค. ๋งค์ฃผ ์›”์š”์ผ์— ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ์ข…๋ฃŒ๋˜๋ฉด ํด๋Ÿฝ์˜ ์Šน๊ฒฉ ๋˜๋Š” ๊ฐ•๋“ฑ ์—ฌ๋ถ€์™€ ๋ณด์ƒ ์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ๊ฒฐ์ •ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ํด๋Ÿฝ ํŠธ๋กœํ”ผ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ์ค€์œผ๋กœ ํด๋Ÿฝ ์ˆœ์œ„๊ฐ€ ๊ฒฐ์ •๋œ๋‹ค. ํด๋Ÿฝ ๋“ฑ๊ธ‰์€ ๋ธŒ๋ก ์ฆˆ 1๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜๋Š” ํŒŒ์›Œ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๋“ฑ๊ธ‰ ์ฒด์ œ์™€ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค. ๊ฐ ํด๋Ÿฝ ํšŒ์›์€ ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰์— ํด๋Ÿฝ ๋ฐ ํšŒ์›์˜ ์„ฑ๊ณผ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ํด๋Ÿฝ ์ฝ”์ธ์„ ๋ฐ›๊ฒŒ ๋˜๋ฉฐ, ์ด๋Š” ํด๋Ÿฝ ์ƒ์ ์—์„œ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์‹œ์ฆŒ 3๋‹ฌ(3์›”, 6์›”, 9์›”, 12์›”)๋งˆ๋‹ค ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ๋ธŒ๋กค ํŒจ์Šค์™€ ํŒŒ์›Œ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ์ œ๊ณต๋œ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ๊ฐ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์—๋Š” ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ํ…Œ๋งˆ๋กœ ํ•˜๋Š” ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์Šคํ‚จ๊ณผ ๋ธŒ๋กค๋Ÿฌ๋“ค์ด๋ณ‘์‹ ์ œ๊ณต๋œ๋‹ค.<ref name="M์šฉ|last1=Swan |first1=Eva |title=Everything you need to know about Brawl Stars' Summer of Monsters pass |url=https://dotesports.com/mobile/news/everything-you-need-to-know-about-brawl-stars-summer-of-monsters-pass |website=Dot Esports |access-date=1 February 2021 |date=7 July 2020}}</ref> ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ ๋ฐ ์ถœ์‹œ ์Šˆํผ์…€์€ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์˜ค๋ธŒ ๋ ˆ์ „๋“œ ๋ฐ ์˜ค๋ฒ„์›Œ์น˜์™€ ๋น„์Šทํ•œ ์žฅ๋ฅด์˜ ๊ฒŒ์ž„์„ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํŒ€์€ ๋จผ์ € ๋ชจ๋ฐ”์ผ ๊ธฐ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์—ผ๋‘์— ๋‘๊ณ  ์„ค๊ณ„๋œ ๊ทธ๋Ÿฐ ๊ฒŒ์ž„์„ ๋งŒ๋“ค๊ณ  ์‹ถ์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์Šˆํผ์…€์˜ ํ”„๋žญํฌ ์บ์ธ๋ฒ„๊ทธ๋Š” "์šฐ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๋งŽ์€ ๋‹จ์ ์„ ์ œ๊ฑฐํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋งŽ์€ ์žฌ๋ฏธ๋ฅผ ์œ ์ง€ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ์ค‘์ ์„ ๋‘์—ˆ์Šต๋‹ˆ๋‹ค."๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ์—๋Š” ๋ฐฐํ‹€ ๋กœ์–„ ์žฅ๋ฅด์˜ ์ผ๋ถ€ ์š”์†Œ๊ฐ€ ํฌํ•จ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ์ง€๋งŒ ์ด ์žฅ๋ฅด์˜ ๋ชจ๋“  ๊ฒƒ์ด ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜๊ธฐ ์ „์— ๊ตฌํ˜„๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ฒŒ์ž„์€ ๊ฒŒ์ž„์˜ ๊ฑฐ์˜ ๋ชจ๋“  ์ธก๋ฉด์ด ๋ณ€๊ฒฝ๋œ ๊ธด ์†Œํ”„ํŠธ ๋Ÿฐ์นญ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„์œผ๋กœ ์œ ๋ช…ํ•˜๋‹ค. ์Šˆํผ์…€์€ 2017๋…„ 6์›” 14์ผ ๋ผ์ด๋ธŒ ์ŠคํŠธ๋ฆผ ๋น„๋””์˜ค๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ๋ฅผ ๊ณต์‹์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค์Œ ๋‚  ์บ๋‚˜๋‹ค์—์„œ iOS ๋Œ€์ƒ ์ œํ•œ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ถœ์‹œํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ œํ•œ์  ์ถœ์‹œ๋Š” 522์ผ ๋™์•ˆ ์ง€์†๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ด ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„ ๋™์•ˆ ๊ฒŒ์ž„์ด ์‹ค์ œ๋กœ ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ถœ์‹œ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์„์ง€ ๋‚ด๋ถ€์ ์œผ๋กœ ์˜๊ตฌ์‹ฌ์ด ์˜ค๊ฐ”๋‹ค. ์ฒ˜์Œ์—๋Š” ๊ฒŒ์ž„์ด ํƒญ ํˆฌ ๋ฌด๋ธŒ ๋ชจ๋“œ๋กœ ์ง„ํ–‰๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ  ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด๊ฐ€ ํ™”๋ฉด์„ ํƒญํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜, ์ด๋Š” ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ ์•„๋‚ ๋กœ๊ทธ ์ปจํŠธ๋กค์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๊ณ  ๊ฐ€๋กœ ๋ชจ๋“œ์—์„œ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ดํ•˜๋Š” ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด๋กœ ๋ณ€๊ฒฝ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐํƒ€ ๋ณ€๊ฒฝ ์‚ฌํ•ญ์—๋Š” UI ๋ณ€๊ฒฝ, ๋ฉ”ํƒ€ ๊ฒŒ์ž„์„ ๋ณ€๊ฒฝํ•˜๊ณ  ๊ฒŒ์ž„์„ 2D์—์„œ 3D๋กœ ์ „ํ™˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํ”„๋žญํฌ ์บ์ธ๋ฒ„๊ทธ๋Š” ํž˜๋“ค์—ˆ๋˜ ๋ฒ ํƒ€ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„์„ "์„ฑ๊ณต์„ ์–ด๋–ป๊ฒŒ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์„์ง€ ํ™•์‹ ์ด ์„œ์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”" ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์žฅ๋ฅด์—์„œ ์ž‘์—…ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ์ž์—๊ฒŒ ๋Œ๋ ธ๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ฒŒ์ž„์€ 2018๋…„ 1์›” 19์ผ ํ•€๋ž€๋“œ, ์Šค์›จ๋ด, ๋ด๋งˆํฌ, ๋…ธ๋ฅด์›จ์ด, ์•„์ผ๋žœ๋“œ, ์‹ฑ๊ฐ€ํฌ๋ฅด, ํ™์ฝฉ, ๋งˆ์นด์˜ค ๋ฐ ๋ง๋ ˆ์ด์‹œ์•„์—์„œ iOS์šฉ์œผ๋กœ ์ œํ•œ์  ์ถœ์‹œ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, 2018๋…„ 6์›” 26์ผ์— ์•ˆ๋“œ๋กœ์ด๋“œ๋กœ ์ œํ•œ์  ์ถœ์‹œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ๋Š” 2018๋…„ 12์›” 12์ผ์— ์ „ ์„ธ๊ณ„์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ •์‹ ์ถœ์‹œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ถœ์‹œ ์ฒซ ๋‹ฌ ๋งŒ์— 6300๋งŒ ๋‹ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์ด์ƒ์„ ๋ฒŒ์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2020๋…„ 6์›” 9์ผ์— ๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ๊ฐ€ ์ค‘๊ตญ์—์„œ ์ถœ์‹œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํŒŒํŠธ๋„ˆ์‹ญ ๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ๋Š” ๋ผ์ธํ”„๋ Œ์ฆˆ์™€ ํŒŒํŠธ๋„ˆ์‹ญ์„ ๋งบ๊ณ  ๊ณต์‹ ๊ตฟ์ฆˆ, ๋ผ์ธํ”„๋ Œ์ฆˆ ์บ๋ฆญํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋ฐ˜์œผ๋กœ ํ•œ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ๋ธŒ๋กค๋Ÿฌ ์Šคํ‚จ, ๋ผ์ธ ๋ฉ”์‹ ์ €์˜ ํ•€ ํŒฉ ๋ฐ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์ฝ˜ํ…์ธ ๋ฅผ ์ œ์ž‘ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2020๋…„ 1์›” ํ•œ๊ตญ์— ํŒ์—…์Šคํ† ์–ด๋ฅผ ์—ด์–ด ํŒŒํŠธ๋„ˆ์‹ญ ์ƒํ’ˆ์„ ํŒ๋งคํ–ˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ƒํ’ˆ์€ ์ฃผ์š” ๋ผ์ธํ”„๋ Œ์ฆˆ ์†Œ๋งค์ ๊ณผ ์˜จ๋ผ์ธ์—์„œ๋„ ๊ตฌ์ž…ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ๋Š” ํŒŒ๋ฆฌ ์ƒ์ œ๋ฅด๋งน FC์™€ ์ œํœดํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. (PSG)๋Š” 2019๋…„ PSG์˜ e์Šคํฌ์ธ  ์‚ฌ์—…๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ์ฃผ๊ด€ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ ๋ณผ ์ปต์„ ๊ฐœ์ตœํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 3๊ฐœ์˜ ์˜จ๋ผ์ธ ์˜ˆ์„  ์ด๋ฒคํŠธ์™€ ์˜จ๋ผ์ธ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์˜คํ”„ ์ด๋ฒคํŠธ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ƒ์œ„ 2๊ฐœ ํŒ€์€ ๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „์„ ์œ„ํ•ด ํŒŒ๋ฆฌ๋กœ ํ–ฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „์€ PSG์˜ ํ™ˆ๊ตฌ์žฅ์ธ Parc des Princes์—์„œ ์ƒ์ค‘๊ณ„๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ชจ๋“  ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋Š” ์ถ•๊ตฌ์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ์œ ์‚ฌํ•œ ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ๋ชจ๋“œ์ธ ๋ธŒ๋กค ๋ณผ๋กœ ์ง„ํ–‰๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ๋Š” 2020๋…„๊ณผ 2021๋…„์— PSG์™€ ๋‹ค์‹œ ํŒŒํŠธ๋„ˆ์‹ญ์„ ๋งบ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํŒŒํŠธ๋„ˆ์‹ญ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„ ๋™์•ˆ ๊ฒŒ์ž„์€ ํŒŒ๋ฆฌ ์ƒ์ œ๋ฅด๋งน ์ฑŒ๋ฆฐ์ง€๋ฅผ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฑŒ๋ฆฐ์ง€๋Š” ๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ ์ฑŒ๋ฆฐ์ง€์™€ ์œ ์‚ฌํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ๋ชจ๋“  ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋Š” ๋ธŒ๋กค ๋ณผ ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ๋ชจ๋“œ๋ฅผ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ดํ•˜์—ฌ์•ผ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2020๋…„์— 9์Šน 4ํŒจ ์ดํ•˜์˜ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ์‰˜๋ฆฌ์˜ PSG ์Šคํ‚จ์„ ๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. PSG์˜ e์Šคํฌ์ธ  ๋ถ€์„œ์—๋Š” 2020๋…„ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ ์ฑŒ๋ฆฐ์ง€์—์„œ ๊ฒฝ์Ÿํ•œ ํŒ€๋„ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2021๋…„์—๋Š” ๋‹ค์ด๋„ˆ๋งˆ์ดํฌ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ PSG๋งˆ์ดํฌ ์Šคํ‚จ์„ ๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ˜์‘ ์ˆ˜์ƒ ๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ๋Š” ์ œ15ํšŒ ์˜๊ตญ ์•„์นด๋ฐ๋ฏธ ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ์–ด์›Œ๋“œ์—์„œ "๋ชจ๋ฐ”์ผ ๊ฒŒ์ž„" ๋ฐ "์˜ฌํ•ด์˜ EE ๋ชจ๋ฐ”์ผ ๊ฒŒ์ž„" ๋ถ€๋ฌธ์„ ์ˆ˜์ƒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋น„ํ‰ ๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ๋Š” ๋ฆฌ๋ทฐ ์ˆ˜์ง‘๊ธฐ ๋ฉ”ํƒ€ํฌ๋ฆฌํ‹ฑ์—์„œ "๋ณดํ†ต ๋˜๋Š” ํ‰๊ท " ๋ฆฌ๋ทฐ ๋˜๋Š” 100๊ฐœ ์ค‘ 72๊ฐœ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ํฌ์ผ“ ๊ฒŒ์ด๋จธ์˜ ํ•ด๋ฆฌ ์Šฌ๋ ˆํ„ฐ๋Š” ๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ์— 5์  ๋งŒ์ ์— 3์ ์„ ์ฃผ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ธ€๋กœ๋ฒŒ ์ถœ์‹œ ์งํ›„ ๊ฒŒ์ž„์„ ๋ฆฌ๋ทฐํ•œ ๊ทธ๋Š” ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ์ง„ํ–‰ ์ƒํ™ฉ์„ ์นญ์ฐฌํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ๊ฒŒ์ž„์˜ ๋ฐฐํ‹€๋กœ์–„ ๋ชจ๋“œ์ธ ์‡ผ๋‹ค์šด์ด ๊ฒŒ์ž„์— ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ชจ๋“  ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ๋ชจ๋“œ ์ค‘ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์žฌ๋ฏธ์—†๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋น„ํŒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ์‡ผ๋‹ค์šด์ด "์žฅ๋ฅด์˜ ์ง„์ •ํ•œ ๊ด‘๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ํฌ์ฐฉํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋งต์— ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ชจ๋“  ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด์™€ ๊ทธ๋“ค์ด ๋ฌด์—‡์„ ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š”์ง€ ๊ฑฐ์˜ ๋ณผ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๋šœ๋ ทํ•œ ๊ธด์žฅ๊ฐ์ด ๋ถ€์กฑํ•ฉ๋‹ˆ๋‹ค."๋ผ๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” "๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ์—์„œ ๋ญ”๊ฐ€ ๋น ์กŒ๋‹ค. ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ดํ•˜๊ณ , ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์บ๋ฆญํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ์–ป๊ณ , ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ๋ชจ๋“œ๋ฅผ ์ž ๊ธˆ ํ•ด์ œํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ๋งˆ๋•…ํžˆ ํ•ด์•ผ ํ•  ๊ฒƒ๋งŒํผ ์ฆ๊ฑฐ์šด ์‹œ๊ฐ„์„ ๋ณด๋‚ผ ์ˆ˜๋Š” ์—†๋‹ค"๊ณ  ๋งํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ๊ณ„์†ํ•ด์„œ "์•ก์…˜์€ ๋น„๊ต์  ๋‹จ์ˆœํ•ฉ๋‹ˆ๋‹ค. ํŒ€ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ์ฒ˜์Œ ๋ช‡ ์ดˆ ์•ˆ์— ๊ฒŒ์ž„์ด ์–ด๋–ค ๋ฐฉํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ ํ˜๋Ÿฌ๊ฐˆ์ง€ ์•Œ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์Šต๋‹ˆ๋‹ค."๋ผ๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ๊ฒŒ์ž„์ด "๋งŽ์€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์ด ๊ธฐ๋Œ€ํ–ˆ๋˜ ๋ฉ€ํ‹ฐํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด ๋ชจ๋ฐ”์ผ ์•ก์…˜์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ํฐ ์ง„์ „"์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ๋ณด์ด์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์‹ค๋ง์Šค๋Ÿฝ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒฐ๋ก ์„ ๋‚ด๋ ธ๋‹ค. 148 ์•ฑ์Šค์˜ ์บ ํ”„๋ฐธ ๋ฒ„๋“œ๋Š” 5์  ๋งŒ์ ์— 3.5์ ์„ ์ฃผ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋…€๋Š” ๊ฒŒ์ž„์ด "์•„๋ž˜๋‚˜ ์˜ค๋ธŒ ๋ฐ”์˜ฌ๊ณผ ์˜ค๋ฒ„์›Œ์น˜๋ฅผ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉํ•œ ๊ฒƒ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค"๋ผ๊ณ  ์–ธ๊ธ‰ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋…€๋Š” ๊ฒŒ์ž„์˜ ๊ทธ๋ž˜ํ”ฝ๊ณผ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ์ž๊ฐ€ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด๊ฐ€ ๋‹ค์‹œ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ดํ•˜๋„๋ก ๊ถŒ์žฅํ•˜๋Š” ์ง„ํ–‰ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์˜ ๊ตฌํ˜„๊ณผ ๋น ๋ฅธ ๋งค์น˜๋ฉ”์ดํ‚น์„ ์นญ์ฐฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ๊ทธ๋…€๋Š” ๊ฒŒ์ž„์˜ ์ปจํŠธ๋กค์ด "์ด์ƒํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋Š์Šจํ•˜๊ณ  ํ๋ฆฟํ•œ" ๋Š๋‚Œ, ์บ๋ฆญํ„ฐ๊ฐ€ "์˜ˆ์ธก ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ์˜์›… ์ŠˆํŒ… ์ „ํ˜•"์— ๋น ์ง€๋Š” ๋Š๋‚Œ, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  "๊ฒŒ์ž„์˜ ๋ชจ๋“  ๋ชจ๋“œ๊ฐ€ ์ด์ „์— ๋ณธ ๊ฒƒ์˜ ์ผ๋ถ€ ๋ณ€ํ˜•"์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋” ๋‚˜์€ ๋ฉ€ํ‹ฐํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด ์ŠˆํŒ… ๊ฒŒ์ž„์ด ํ•„์š”ํ•˜๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋…€๋Š” ๋˜ํ•œ ๋นˆ๋ฒˆํ•œ ์—ฐ๊ฒฐ ๋ฌธ์ œ์™€ ๋ถˆ๊ท ํ˜•ํ•œ ํŒ€์ด ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด ๊ฒฝํ—˜์„ ๋œ ์ฆ๊ฒ๊ฒŒ ๋งŒ๋“ ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๊ฐ•์กฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ƒ์—…์  ์„ฑ๊ณต ๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ๋Š” 2์–ต ํšŒ ์ด์ƒ ๋‹ค์šด๋กœ๋“œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2020๋…„์— ๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ๋Š” ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์—์„œ ๋ชจ๋ฐ”์ผ ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ์ค‘ ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ๋กœ ๋†’์€ ๋งค์ถœ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2020๋…„์—๋Š” ์ด 5์–ต 2,600๋งŒ ๋‹ฌ๋Ÿฌ์˜ ์ˆ˜์ต์„ ์˜ฌ๋ ธ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ด๋Š” ์ „์ฒด ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„ ์ˆ˜์ต์˜ ์ ˆ๋ฐ˜ ์ด์ƒ์„ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์Šˆํผ์…€์˜ ๋„ค ๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ฒŒ์ž„์œผ๋กœ ๋งค์ถœ์ด 10์–ต ๋‹ฌ๋Ÿฌ๋ฅผ ๋„˜์–ด์„ฐ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ ๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ์€ ์ „ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ๊ณต๊ฐœ ํ† ๋„ˆ๋จผํŠธ์ด๋‹ค. ์ด ํ† ๋„ˆ๋จผํŠธ๋Š” ์›”๊ฐ„ ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ๋‚ด ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ ์ฑŒ๋ฆฐ์ง€๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋˜์–ด ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด๊ฐ€ 5๊ฐ€์ง€ ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ๋ชจ๋“œ์™€ ๋งต์—์„œ 4๋ฒˆ ๋ฏธ๋งŒ์˜ ํŒจ๋ฐฐ๋ฅผ ํ•˜๊ณ  15์Šน์„ ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ „ํˆฌ์—์„œ ๊ฒฝ์Ÿํ•œ๋‹ค. 15์Šน ํ›„, ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด๋Š” ๋‹ค์Œ ๋‹จ๊ณ„์ธ ์ง€์—ญ ์›”๊ฐ„ ์˜ˆ์„ ์ „์„ ์ง„ํ–‰ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์„œ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด๋Š” 16์„ธ ์ด์ƒ์ด์–ด์•ผ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ์„ ์ „ ์Šน๋ฆฌํ•˜๋ฉด ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด๋Š” ์ง€์—ญ ์›”๊ฐ„ ๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „์— ์ง„์ถœํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ง€์—ญ ๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „์„ ์Šน๋ฆฌํ•˜๋ฉด ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „๊นŒ์ง€ ๊ฐˆ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2019๋…„์— ์ด ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ์€ ๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ ์›”๋“œ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ์ด๋ž€ ์ด๋ฆ„์œผ๋กœ ์•Œ๋ ค์กŒ๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ 11์›” 15์ผ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 11์›” 16์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ฒก์Šค์ฝ”์—์„œ ๊ฐœ์ตœ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1๋“ฑ ์šฐ์Šน์ž๋Š” 3-0์œผ๋กœ ์Šน๋ฆฌํ•œ ๋…ธ๋ฐ” E์Šคํฌ์ธ ์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ฒฝ์Ÿํ•˜๋Š” ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€์ž๋กœ๋Š” ์• ๋‹ˆ๋ฉ€ ์ฐฌํ‘ธ๋ฃจ, ํŠธ๋ฆฌ๋ธ” ๊ฒŒ์ด๋ฐ, 3๋ฒ ์–ด์Šค, ์ŠคํŽ˜์ด์Šค์Šคํ…Œ์ด์…˜ ๊ฒŒ์ด๋ฐ, PSG E์Šคํฌ์ธ ๊ฐ€ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. $250,000 ์ƒ๊ธˆ์ด ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ์˜ ์ฒซ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ตญ์ œ ์ด๋ฒคํŠธ์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋ถ๋ฏธ, ์œ ๋Ÿฝ, ๋ผํ‹ด ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นด, ๋™๋‚จ์•„์‹œ์•„, ์ผ๋ณธ, ํ•œ๊ตญ์˜ ํŒ€์ด ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2020๋…„ ์›”๋“œ ํŒŒ์ด๋„์€ 11์›” 21์ผ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 22์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ ๊ธฐ๋ณธ ์ƒ๊ธˆ $1,000,000๋กœ ์—ด๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๊ธˆ์•ก์˜ ์ ˆ๋ฐ˜์€ ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ๋‚ด ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ ํŒจํ‚ค์ง€ ์ˆ˜์ต๊ธˆ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋ชจ๊ธˆ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์›๋ž˜ ํด๋ž€๋“œ ์นดํ† ๋น„์ฒด์—์„œ ์—ด๋ฆด ์˜ˆ์ •์ด์—ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ์ฝ”๋กœ๋‚˜19 ํŒฌ๋ฐ๋ฏน์œผ๋กœ ์˜จ๋ผ์ธ์œผ๋กœ ์—ฐ๊ธฐ๋œ ์›”๋“œ ํŒŒ์ด๋„์—๋Š” 8๊ฐœ ํŒ€์ด ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ์Šต๋‹ˆ๋‹ค. PSG E์Šคํฌ์ธ ๋Š” $200,000์˜ ์ƒ๊ธˆ์œผ๋กœ ์˜ฌํ•ด ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ์˜ ์šฐ์Šน์ž์˜€๋‹ค. ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ƒ๊ธˆ์€ 2~8์œ„๋ฅผ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ•œ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํŒ€์œผ๋กœ ๋‚˜๋ˆ„์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. 2021๋…„์—๋Š” ๋ธŒ๋กค์Šคํƒ€์ฆˆ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ์ด 2์›” 20์ผ์— ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ์—๋Š” 2์›”๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 9์›”๊นŒ์ง€ ํ•œ ๋‹ฌ์— ํ•œ ๋ฒˆ ์—ด๋ฆฌ๋Š” 8๊ฐœ์˜ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ ์ฑŒ๋ฆฐ์ง€์™€ ์›”๊ฐ„ ์˜ˆ์„ ์€ ๊ฐ๊ฐ ์‹œ์ฆŒ๋‹น ์ดํ‹€ ๋™์•ˆ ์ƒ์ค‘๊ณ„๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ง€์—ญ ์›”๊ฐ„ ์˜ˆ์„ ์—์„œ ์ƒ์œ„ 8๊ฐœ ํŒ€์ด ์ง€์—ญ ์›”๊ฐ„ ๊ฒฐ์„ ์— ์ง„์ถœํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 11์›” 26์ผ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 28์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ฃจ๋งˆ๋‹ˆ์•„ ๋ถ€์ฟ ๋ ˆ์Šˆํ‹ฐ์—์„œ ์ง์ ‘ ๊ฐœ์ตœ๋  ์˜ˆ์ •์ธ ์›”๋“œ ํŒŒ์ด๋„์— 7๊ฐœ ์ง€์—ญ์˜ ์›”๊ฐ„ ํŒŒ์ด๋„ 16๊ฐœ ํŒ€์ด ํ•œ์ž๋ฆฌ์— ๋ชจ์˜€๋‹ค. 2021๋…„์˜ ์ƒ๊ธˆ์€ ์›”๊ฐ„ ๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „์—์„œ $600,000์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ๋‚ด ์ œ์•ˆ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ์ด ๊ธˆ์•ก์„ ๋Š˜๋ฆด ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „์—์„œ๋Š” ์ตœ์†Œ $500,000์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ์Šˆํผ์…€ (๊ธฐ์—…) ํด๋ž˜์‹œ ๋กœ์–„ ํด๋ž˜์‹œ ์˜ค๋ธŒ ํด๋žœ ํ—ค์ด๋ฐ์ด ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ ์›Œ์ฆˆ ๋ถ๋น„์น˜ ๊ฐ์ฃผ ํ•€๋ž€๋“œ์˜ ๋น„๋””์˜ค ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ์ „๋žต ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ์•ˆ๋“œ๋กœ์ด๋“œ ๊ฒŒ์ž„ IOS ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ๋ชจ๋ฐ”์ผ ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ์ŠˆํŒ… ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ์•ก์…˜ ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ๋ถ€๋ถ„ ์œ ๋ฃŒํ™” ๋น„๋””์˜ค ๊ฒŒ์ž„ 2010๋…„๋Œ€ ์œ ํ–‰ 2020๋…„๋Œ€ ์œ ํ–‰ 2018๋…„ ๋น„๋””์˜ค ๊ฒŒ์ž„
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brawl%20Stars
Brawl Stars
Brawl Stars is a multiplayer online battle arena and third-person hero shooter video game developed and published by the Finnish video game company Supercell. It was released worldwide on December 12, 2018, on iOS and Android. The game features various game modes, each with a different objective. Players can choose from a selection of Brawlers, which are characters that can be controlled with on-screen joysticks in a game match. Gameplay In Brawl Stars, players battle against other players or AI opponents in multiple game modes. Players can choose between characters called Brawlers that they have unlocked through Boxes, the Brawl Pass, the Trophy Road, or purchased through the Shop to use in battles. In December 2022, Boxes were removed, and all previous methods to get them were replaced with credits and chroma credits, which are used to unlock Brawlers, who are now mostly placed on the "Starr Road". Brawl Stars has a variety of different game modes that players can choose from, each one having a different objective. Players can invite friends to play with them up to the maximum team size of the game mode. In addition, it is possible to purchase skins with Gems, Star Points, and Coins, or unlock them through the Brawl Pass, which will alter the appearance, animations, effects, and/or sounds of Brawlers. Brawlers Brawlers are the characters that you can control in the game of Brawl Stars. You can control their normal attack, their super (special type of attack that charges up when you hit an opponent), their gadgets (special abilities that can be used up to 3 times) and their hypercharge (special attack that temporarily increases damage, speed and improves the brawlerโ€™s super attack). Every brawlerโ€™s attack can be influenced by Star Powers, with each brawler having their own 2 unique ones can affect their attacks, movement speed, recharge time, etc. Some of the brawlers have traits which might affect the way the brawler interacts with it's environment and opponents. Brawlers come in variety of rarities: Common, Rare, Super Rare, Epic, Mythic, Legendary and Chromatic. Brawl Pass In May 2020, a game update added a new reward system called โ€œBrawl Passโ€. The Brawl Pass is the game's version of a battle pass. When players compete in battles, they earn Tokens to progress along the Brawl Pass, which the tokens required would exponentially increase per Brawl Pass level. Players can earn credits, chroma credits, Gems, skins, Pins (emojis that can be used during battles or in a team game room), Coins, Power Points, and Brawlers from the pass. There are two types of Brawl Pass. All players have the free Brawl Pass by default. Players can purchase the premium Brawl Pass with Gems. Power League Power League is a competitive ranking system added to the game in season 5. This replaced the Power Play system. Players unlock this system at 4500 trophies. There are a total of 19 ranks between bronze one and master. Each season lasts two months. At the end of a Power League season, players gain Star Points based on their rank. Players can enter Power League solo or with teams of three. The winner is decided on a best-of-three format and ties do not count. Each match starts the game randomly choosing a game mode and map. All players from both teams choose a Brawler to ban. All six players in the match must play with a different Brawler. Players in the team can switch Brawlers with each other if they have the specific Brawler unlocked. Progression is varied based on various factors including the opponents ranks. Club League Club League was introduced in season 9 as a new weekly competition between Clubs, where eight Clubs compete during the days Wednesday, Friday and Sunday of the week. Tickets are required to play matches. 4 tickets are given on Wednesday and Friday, with 6 tickets given on Sunday. Clubs compete to gain the most Club Trophies possible by players playing in selected matches. Players who play with other Club members are rewarded by earning more Club Trophies for the club. After each competing day, the Clubs are ranked based on the club's Trophies to earn Club Points. When the league ends on Monday, the Clubs are ranked based on the club's Points to determine if the club is promoted or demoted and the number of rewards. Club Ranks are the same as Power League ranks, where progression starts at Bronze I. Each Club member receives Club Coins at the end based on the performance of the club and the member, which can be used in the Club Shop. Seasons Each season brings a new Brawl Pass, which includes a new Chromatic Brawler and their tier 70 skin for the Brawl Pass. The season also brings a Power League Season. Resources The main resources in Brawl Stars are as following: Gems: The premium currency in Brawl Stars. Can buy cosmetics, Brawlers from the Starr Road and the Brawl Pass. Is available for money or tiers in the free portion of the Brawl Pass. Will very rarely be available in certain events, such as the Brawlidays in December. Coins: are used to upgrade Brawlers and buy Gadgets, Starpowers and Gears for Brawlers. They are available for money, the Brawl Pass, the Trophy Road and the Club Shop. Also occasionally available through Challenges and events. Power Points: are used to upgrade brawlers from power 1 through power 11. They are available through all the methods coins are available through with the exception of real life money. Tokens: are used to progress through the Brawl pass. They are available through Quests, Challenges and events. Bling: Bling was introduced in season 18. They are used alongside with gems to get cosmetics. They replaced Star Points which were used to buy the Power League skins and are available with the same methods Star Points were available from. Bling is available by progressing through Power League, Challenges, events and getting a Brawler to rank 10, 15, 20, 25, 30 and 35. Club Coins: Club Coins are used to buy things in the Club shop and are available through Club League and Club Quests. Starr Road The Starr Road, prominently featured on the main game screen just beneath 'Brawlers', serves as the gateway to unlocking Brawlers of varying rarities. Players can select a Brawler from a pool of others of the same rarity to initiate the unlocking process. As credits accrue through the Trophy Road, Daily Freebie or Brawl Pass, they are dedicated to unlocking the chosen Brawler. The flexibility exists for players to switch to a different Brawler they wish to unlock at any time, with the accumulated credits seamlessly transitioning to the new selection. Once a Brawler is successfully unlocked, it becomes a permanent addition to the player's collection. The Starr Road then presents a fresh array of Brawlers from the next rarity tier for unlocking, encompassing Rares, Super Rares, Epics, Mythics, and Legendaries. Alternatively, players have the option to acquire Brawlers from the Starr Road using Gems. The Chromatic Shop, found on the Starr Road screen under 'Chromatics', introduces Chromatic Brawlers to the in-game battlefield. These Brawlers can be unlocked with Chroma Credits, which are obtainable through the Brawl Pass and used exclusively in the Chromatic Shop for purchases. If a specific Chromatic Brawler remains unattainable with Chroma Credits, it indicates the need to unlock more Chromatic Brawlers. The Chromatic Shop provides an alternative option for players to use Gems to obtain Chromatic Brawlers when desired. Player retention In Brawl Stars, both new and returning players are offered incentives to enhance their gaming experience. Newcomers can participate in the "Newcomers Daily Gift Streak" program, which encourages them to log in daily for a continuous 15-day period to earn gifts to support their initial gameplay. For returning players who have been away from the game for some time, the "Welcome Back Rewards" system provides incentives. Players who log in every day for 14 days upon their return receive a range of rewards, the specifics of which are contingent on the length of their absence and their total Trophy count at the time of their return. This approach aims to re-engage and reward players who revisit the game after an extended break. Development and release Supercell set out to develop a team based game similar to League of Legends and Overwatch. The team wanted to create such a game that was designed with mobile devices in mind first. According to Supercell's Frank Keienburg, "Our focus was on retaining a lot of depth while stripping away all the fluff." Although the game contains some elements of the battle royale genre, these were implemented before the genre as a whole took off and the team did not set out to make a game with those elements. The game is notable for its long soft launch period during which virtually every aspect of the game changed. Supercell officially announced the game via a livestream video on June 14, 2017. It received an iOS soft launch in Canada the following day. The soft launch would last a total of 522 days, during which internally it was doubted whether or not the game would ever actually see a general release. Initially the game was played in portrait mode and had players tapping on the screen, this was changed eventually to players using analog controls and playing in landscape mode. Other changes include changing the UI, changing the metagame and transitioning the game from 2D to 3D. Frank Keienburg attributes the difficult beta period to the developers working in a new genre where they "weren't sure how to interpret its success". The game soft-launched in Finland, Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Ireland, Singapore, Hong Kong, Macao and Malaysia for iOS on January 19, 2018, and on June 26, 2018, Android received early access to the game as a continuation of the soft launch. Brawl Stars was made globally and officially available on December 12, 2018. It made more than US$63 million in its first month. On June 9, 2020, Brawl Stars was released in Mainland China. Partnerships The game has a partnership with Line Friends to create official merchandise, new skins for Brawlers that are based on Line Friends characters, sticker packs on Line messenger, and new content. A pop-up store was opened in January 2020 in South Korea to sell the merchandise from the partnership. Merchandise is also available at major Line Friends retail stores and online. In September 2022, Brawl Stars also partnered with BT21, featuring new skins and Pins in-game. The game partnered up with Paris Saint-Germain F.C. (PSG), a French professional soccer club, in 2019 to host Brawl Stars Ball Cup organized by PSG's esports division. There were three online qualifier events and an online playoff event. The top two teams travelled to Paris for the finals. The finals were played live at PSG's home stadium, Parc des Princes. All matches took place in Brawl Ball, a football-like game mode. The game partnered up with PSG again in 2020 and 2021. During the partnerships, the game launched the Paris Saint-Germain Challenge. The challenges are similar to the championship challenges, but all matches are based in the Brawl Ball game mode. In 2020, the game offered a PSG skin for Shelly for players who won nine matches and lost four or fewer times. PSG's esports division also has a team that competed in the 2020 championship challenge. In 2021, the game offered a PSG Mike skin for Dynamike. Reception Awards The game was nominated for "Mobile Game" and "EE Mobile Game of the Year" at the 15th British Academy Games Awards. Critical reception Brawl Stars received "mixed or average" reviews or 72 out of 100 on review aggregator Metacritic. Pocket Gamer'''s Harry Slater scored the game 3 out of 5. Reviewing the game immediately after global release, he praised that game's progression. He criticized Showdown, the game's battle royale mode, for being the weakest of all the game modes that were in the game. He said that Showdown "doesn't capture the real madness of the genre, and there's a distinct lack of tension since you can pretty much see everyone on the map and what they're up to." He mentioned that something felt "missing in Brawl Stars. You'll play, you'll get new characters, you'll unlock new modes, but you're never having quite as much fun as you feel you should be doing." He continued on to say that "the action is relatively flat - in the team matches you know within the first few seconds which way the game is going." He concluded in disappointment because the game did not seem like "the huge step forward for multiplayer mobile action that a lot of us were hoping for."148 Apps' Campbell Bird scored the game 3.5 out of 5. She started with mentioning that the game felt "like a combination of Arena of Valor and Overwatch." She praised the game's graphics and the developer's implementation of the progression system to encourage players to play again, as well as the quick matchmaking. However, she criticized the game's controls for feeling "oddly loose and muddy," the characters falling "into pretty predictable hero shooter archetypes," as well as claiming that "every mode in the game is some variation on something youโ€™ve seen before in other, better multiplayer shooters." She also highlighted that the frequent connection issues and unbalanced teams made the experience of playing the game less enjoyable. Commercial receptionBrawl Stars has been downloaded over 200 million times. In 2020, Brawl Stars had the second highest gross of any mobile game in Europe. It grossed US$526 million in total in 2020, which accounted for more than half its life time revenue. It was also the fourth game by Supercell to surpass US$1 billion in lifetime revenue. Brawl Stars Championship The Brawl Stars Championship is an open tournament for players across the globe. This tournament consists of the monthly in-game Championship Challenges where players compete in game to win 15 matches in five different game modes and maps without losing 3 matches. After 15 wins, players proceed to the next stage, the regional Monthly Qualifier events, where players must be 16 years or older to participate. Through the qualifier events, players can secure a spot in the regional Monthly Finals. These events would lead to the World Finals. In 2019, this championship was known as the Brawl Stars World'' Championship. It was held on November 15 to November 16, 2019, at the Busan Exhibition and Convention Center in South Korea. The first-place winner was Nova Esports after a 30 victory. Other participants competing included Animal Chanpuru, Tribe Gaming, 3Bears, Spacestation Gaming, and PSG Esports. With a $250,000 prize pool, it was the first international event for the game and had teams from North America, Europe, Latin America, Southeast Asia, Japan, and South Korea. In 2020, the World Finals were held between November 21 and 22 with a base $1,000,000 prize pool. Half of the amount was raised through proceeds from an in-game championship package. Eight teams participated in the World Finals, which were originally planned to take place in Katowice, Poland, but was moved online due to the COVID-19 pandemic. PSG Esports was the winner of this year's championship with a prize of $200,000. The other monetary prizes were split between the other teams which won second to eighth place. In 2021, the Brawl Stars Championship started on February 20. There are eight seasons for the championship that occur once per month starting from February until September. The Championship Challenges and Monthly Qualifiers are each live for two days per season. The top eight teams from the regional Monthly Qualifiers go to the regional Monthly Finals. 16 teams from the Monthly Finals from all seven regions come together to participate in the World Finals, which took place from November 26 to 28 in-person in Bucharest, Romania. The prizes for 2021 are $600,000 in the Monthly Finals, and a minimum of $500,000 in the World Finals with opportunities to increase this amount through in-game offers. References External links 2017 video games Android (operating system) games Esports games Free-to-play video games IOS games Multiplayer online games Strategy video games Supercell (video game company) games Video games developed in Finland
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%95%84%EB%8B%A8%20%EB%A7%89%20%EA%B0%80%EB%B8%8C%EB%9E%80
์•„๋‹จ ๋ง‰ ๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ž€
์•„๋‹จ ๋ง‰ ๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ž€()์€ 574๋…„๊ฒฝ-609๋…„๊ฒฝ์˜ ๋‹ฌ ๋ฆฌ์–ดํƒ€ ๊ตญ์™•์ด๋‹ค. ๋‹ฌ ๋ฆฌ์–ดํƒ€๋Š” ์˜ค๋Š˜๋‚ ์˜ ์Šค์ฝ”ํ‹€๋žœ๋“œ ์•„๊ฐ€์ผ ๋ทฐํŠธ์™€ ์•„์ผ๋žœ๋“œ ์•คํŠธ๋ฆผ์ฃผ, ์ฆ‰ ๋…ธ์Šค ํ•ดํ˜‘ ์–‘์•ˆ์„ ์˜ํ† ๋กœ ์ ์œ ํ•œ ๊ณ ๋Œ€ ์—ฐ๋งน์™•๊ตญ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์กฑ๋ณด๋“ค์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋ฉด ์•„๋‹จ ๋ง‰ ๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ž€์€ ๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ž€ ๋ง‰ ๋„๋ง๊ฐ€๋ฅดํŠธ์˜ ์•„๋“ค์ด๋‹ค. ์ฝœ๋ฃธ๋ฐ” ํžˆ์—”์‹œ์Šค์™€ ๋™์‹œ๋Œ€์ธ์ด์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์•„๋‹จ ์™•์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ๊ธฐ๋ก์€ ์ฝœ๋ฃธ๋ฐ”์˜ ์„ฑ์ธ์ „๋“ค(์•„๋”๋‚˜๋ˆ„์Šค ํžˆ์—”์‹œ์Šค์˜ ใ€Œ์„ฑ์ž ์ฝœ๋ฃธ๋ฐ”์˜ ์‚ถใ€ ๋“ฑ)์„ ์ฃผ์š” ์‚ฌ๋ฃŒ๋กœ ์‚ผ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์•„์ผ๋žœ๋“œ ํŽธ๋…„์‚ฌ์„œ๋“ค์—๋Š” ์•„๋‹จ์ด ์—๋ฆฐ์„ฌ, ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌํŠผ์„ฌ ๋ถ๋ถ€, ์˜คํฌ๋‹ˆ ์ œ๋„, ๋งจ์„ฌ, ์Šค์ฝ”ํ‹€๋žœ๋“œ ๋™ํ•ด์•ˆ ๋“ฑ์— ๊ตฐ์‚ฌ์›์ •์„ ๋ฒŒ์ธ ๊ธฐ๋ก๋“ค์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฒ ๋‹ค ๋ฒ ๋„ค๋ผ๋นŒ๋ฆฌ์Šค์˜ ๊ธฐ๋ก์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋ฉด, ์•„๋‹จ์€ ๋ฒ ์˜ค๋ฅด๋‹ˆ์ฒด ์™• ์• ์„คํ”„๋ฆฌ์Šค์™€ ๋ฐ๊ทธ์‚ฌ์Šคํƒ„ ์ „ํˆฌ(603๋…„)์—์„œ ํฌ๊ฒŒ ์‹ธ์›Œ ๋Œ€ํŒจํ•จ์œผ๋กœ์จ ๋ชฐ๋ฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์•„๋‹จ์€ ํŒจ์ „ ์ดํ›„ ํ์œ„๋˜๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ์Šค์Šค๋กœ ํ‡ด์œ„ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค. ์–ผ๋งˆ ์ง€๋‚˜์ง€ ์•Š์•„ 609๋…„ 4์›” 17์ผ ์‚ฌ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌ๋ฃŒ ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ํ–‰์ ์ด ๊ธฐ๋ก๋œ ์‚ฌ๋ฃŒ๋กœ๋Š” ๋ฒ ๋‹ค ๋ฒ ๋„ค๋ผ๋นŒ๋ฆฌ์Šค์˜ ใ€Ž์•ต๊ธ€์ธ์˜ ๊ตํšŒ์‚ฌใ€, ์•„์ผ๋žœ๋“œ ํŽธ๋…„์‚ฌ์„œ๋“ค ์ค‘ ใ€Ž์šธ๋ผ ํŽธ๋…„์‚ฌใ€์™€ ใ€Žํ‹ฐ๊ฒŒ๋ฅด๋‚˜ํฌ์˜ ํŽธ๋…„์‚ฌใ€, ์•„๋”๋‚˜๋ˆ„์Šค ํžˆ์—”์‹œ์Šค์˜ ใ€Œ์„ฑ์ž ์ฝœ๋ฃธ๋ฐ”์˜ ์‚ถใ€ ๋“ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹ฌ ๋ฆฌ์–ดํƒ€์˜ ์กฑ๋ณด์„œ ๊ฒธ ํ˜ธ๊ตฌ์กฐ์‚ฌ์„œ์ธ ใ€Ž์•Œ๋ฐ”์ธ์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌใ€์—๋Š” ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ์กฐ์ƒ๋“ค๊ณผ ์ง๊ณ„ํ›„์†๋“ค์ด ๊ธฐ๋ก๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ด ์‚ฌ๋ฃŒ๋“ค ์ค‘ ์–ด๋Š ๊ฒƒ๋„ ์•„๋‹จ์ด ์‚ด๋˜ 6์„ธ๊ธฐ ๋‹น๋Œ€์˜ ๊ฒƒ์€ ์—†๋‹ค. ์•„๋”๋‚˜๋ˆ„์Šค์˜ ์ฝœ๋ฃธ๋ฐ” ์„ฑ์ธ์ „์€ 7์„ธ๊ธฐ ๋ง์— ์“ฐ์˜€๋Š”๋ฐ, ์•„์ด์˜ค๋‚˜ ์ˆ˜๋„์›์žฅ ์ฟฐ๋ฉ”๋„ค์šฐ์Šค ์•Œ๋ถ€์Šค๊ฐ€ ๋จผ์ € ์“ด ์„ฑ์ธ์ „์˜ ๋‚ด์šฉ์„ ์ธ์šฉํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ฟฐ๋ฉ”๋„ค์šฐ์Šค์˜ ์„ฑ์ธ์ „์ด ์“ฐ์—ฌ์ง„ ์‹œ๊ธฐ๋Š” ์ด๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ์žก์œผ๋ฉด 640๋…„๊ฒฝ์œผ๋กœ ๋น„์ •ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฒ ๋‹ค ๋ฒ ๋„ค๋ผ๋นŒ๋ฆฌ์Šค์˜ ๊ตํšŒ์‚ฌ์„œ๋Š” ์•„๋”๋‚˜๋ˆ„์Šค๋ณด๋‹ค 30์—ฌ๋…„ ๋’ค์— ์“ฐ์—ฌ์ง„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ฉฐ, ์•„์ผ๋žœ๋“œ ํŽธ๋…„์‚ฌ์„œ๋“ค์—์„œ ์ด ์‹œ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋‹ค๋ฃจ๋Š” ๋‚ด์šฉ ์—ญ์‹œ 7์„ธ๊ธฐ ์ค‘๋ฐ˜ ์ดํ›„์— ์“ฐ์—ฌ์กŒ๋‹ค. 1130๋…„๊ฒฝ์— ์ž‘์„ฑ๋œ ๋กค๋ฆฐ์Šจ B 502๋ฒˆ ํ•„์‚ฌ๋ณธ์—๋Š” ใ€Œ์˜คํ›„์˜ ์•„๋“ค ๋ธŒ๋ž€๋‘๋ธŒ์™€ ๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ž€์˜ ์•„๋“ค ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ํƒ„์ƒใ€()์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๋ณด์กด๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋ฉด, ์•„๋‹จ ๋ง‰ ๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ž€์€ ๋ผ๊ธด ๊ตญ์™• ๋ธŒ๋ž€๋‘ก ๋ง‰ ์—ํ•˜ํฌ์™€ ์Œ๋‘ฅ์ด ํ˜•์ œ๋กœ, ์ด ์ผ„์…€๋ฝ ์”จ์กฑ์— ์†ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋‹ฌ ๋ฆฌ์–ดํƒ€์˜ ๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ž€ ์™•๋„ ๋ผ๊ธด์˜ ์Œ๋‘ฅ์ด ์™•์ž์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋‚  ์Œ๋‘ฅ์ด ์™•๋…€๋ฅผ ๋ณด์•˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด ๋‘ ์™•์‹ค์€ ์•„๋“ค๊ณผ ๋”ธ์„ ํ•œ ๋ช…์”ฉ ๋ฐ”๊พธ๊ธฐ๋กœ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ž˜์„œ ์•„๋‹จ์€ ๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ž€์˜ ์•„๋“ค("๋ง‰ ๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ž€")์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ใ€Œ๋ฒ ๋ฅด์นธ์˜ ์˜ˆ์–ธ์‹œใ€์—์„œ๋„ ์•„๋‹จ์„ ๋ผ๊ธด ์ถœ์‹ ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์„ค๋ช…ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์Šค์ฝ”ํ‹€๋žœ๋“œ์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌํ•™์ž ์กด ์›”ํ„ฐ ๋งฅ๋„๋„๋“œ ๋ฐฐ๋„ˆ๋จผ์€ ์ด๋Ÿฐ ์ „ํ†ต์  ์•ผ์‚ฌ๋“ค์ด ์•„๋ฌด ์‚ฌ์‹ค์  ๊ทผ๊ฑฐ๊ฐ€ ์—†๋‹ค๊ณ  ๊ฒฐ๋ก ๋‚ด๋ฆฐ๋‹ค. ์ง€๊ธˆ์€ ์‹ค์ „๋˜์–ด ์ „ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ์•„์ผ๋žœ๋“œ์–ด ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ ใ€Œ๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ž€์˜ ์•„๋“ค ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ๋ชจํ—˜ใ€()์ด ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์‚ฌ๋ฃŒ๋“ค์—์„œ ์–ธ๊ธ‰๋˜์ง€๋งŒ, ๊ทธ ๋‚ด์šฉ์€ ์•Œ ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋‹ค. ํ”„๋žœ์‹œ์Šค ์กด ๋ฒˆ์€ ใ€Œ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ๋ชจํ—˜ใ€์ด 11์„ธ๊ธฐ ์—๋ฆฐ์˜ ์ง€๊ณ ์™• ๋””์–ด๋ฅด๋งˆํŠธ ๋ง‰ ๋ฐ€ ๋„ˆ ๋ฏ€๋ณด๊ฐ€ ์Šค์ฝ”ํŠธ์ธ์˜ ์™• ๋ง ์ฝœ๋ฃธ 3์„ธ ๋ง‰ ๋ˆ์นด๋‹ค์™€์˜ ์™ธ๊ต๋ฅผ ๋ˆ๋…ํžˆ ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์“ฐ๊ฒŒ ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์ถ”์ธกํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋””์–ด๋ฅด๋งˆํŠธ ์ง€๊ณ ์™•์€ ๋ธŒ๋ž€๋‘๋ธŒ์˜ ํ›„์†์ด๊ณ , ๋ง ์ฝœ๋ฃธ 3์„ธ๋Š” ์•„๋‹จ ๋ง‰ ๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ž€์˜ ํ›„์†์„ ์ž์ฒ˜ํ–ˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์ด๋‹ค. ์•„๋‹จ์€ ใ€Œ์นด๋…ธ ๋ง‰ ๊ฐ€๋ฅดํŠธ๋‚œ์˜ ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐใ€์—๋„ ๋“ฑ์žฅํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ, ์ด ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ๋ฌ˜์‚ฌ๋˜๋Š” ์‚ฌ๊ฑด๋“ค์€ 7์„ธ๊ธฐ ์ค‘์—ฝ์— ์ผ์–ด๋‚œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณด์ธ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ใ€Œ๋ชฝ๊ฐ„์˜ ์ˆ˜ํƒœใ€์—๋„ ์•„๋‹จ์ด ๋“ฑ์žฅํ•œ๋‹ค. ์›จ์ผ์Šค ์ชฝ ์‚ฌ๋ฃŒ์—๋„ ์•„๋‹จ์ด ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๋ฒˆ ๋“ฑ์žฅํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌํŠผ์ธ์ด ์•„๋‹Œ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์œผ๋กœ์„œ ์›จ์ผ์Šค ์ „ํ†ต์‚ฌ์„œ์— ์ด๋ ‡๊ฒŒ ์ž์ฃผ ๋“ฑ์žฅํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ๋งค์šฐ ๋“œ๋ฌธ ์ผ์ด๋‹ค. ์›จ์ผ์Šค์–ด ์‚ฌ๋ฃŒ๋“ค์—์„œ๋Š” ๊ทธ๋ฅผ ์•„์—๋‹จ ๋ธŒ๋ผ๋‹ค์šฑ()์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถ€๋ฅธ๋‹ค. "๋ธŒ๋ผ๋‹ค์šฑ"์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๋ณ„๋ช…์€ "๊ธฐ๋งŒ์ž(The Treacherous)" ๋˜๋Š” "๊ฐ„๊ตํ•œ ์ž(The Wily)"๋ผ๋Š” ๋œป์ด๋‹ค. ๋‹ฌ ๋ฆฌ์–ดํƒ€์™€ ์ธ์ ‘ํ•œ ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌํŠผ๊ณ„ ์™•๊ตญ ์•ŒํŠธํด๋ฆฌํŠธ ๊ตญ์™• ๋Ÿฌ๋ฐ๋ฅดํ 1์„ธ ํ•˜์—˜๊ณผ์˜ ๋™๋งน์„ ํŒŒ๊ธฐํ•œ ์ผ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ด๋Ÿฐ ๋ณ„๋ช…์„ ์–ป์€ ๊ฒƒ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค. ๋Ÿฌ๋ฐ๋ฅดํ 1์„ธ์™€ ์•„๋‹จ ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ์›ํ•œ์€ ํ”„๋Ÿฌ๋ฐ์ธ์„ฌ์˜ ์‚ผ์ œ์‹œ๋ฅผ ๋น„๋กฏํ•ด ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๊ณณ์—์„œ ํ™•์ธ๋œ๋‹ค. ํ•œํŽธ ์‚ผ์ œ์‹œ์—์„œ๋Š” ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ๊ตฐ๋Œ€๊ฐ€ "ํ”„๋Ÿฌ๋ฐ์ธ ์„ฌ์˜ 3๋Œ€ ๊ตฐ์„ธ" ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋กœ์„œ "์ฃผ๊ตฐ์˜ ๋ช…๋ น์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ๋ฐ”๋‹ค๋กœ ๋‚˜๊ฐ”๋‹ค"๊ณ  ํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ ์‚ฌ๋ฃŒ๊ฐ€ ์‹ค์ „๋˜์–ด ์ „ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ํ•ด์™ธ ์›์ •์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ์ผ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋งŒ์•ฝ ๊ทธ๋ ‡๋‹ค๋ฉด ๊ทธ ์›์ • ๋Œ€์ƒ์€ ์˜คํฌ๋‹ˆ ์ œ๋„ ๋˜๋Š” ๋งจ์„ฌ์ด์—ˆ์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์›จ์ผ์Šค์–ด ์‚ฌ๋ฃŒ๋“ค์—์„œ๋Š” ์•„๋‹จ์ด ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌํŠผ๊ณ„ ํ˜ˆํ†ต์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ•œ๋‹ค. ใ€Œ๋ถ๋ฐฉ์ธ์˜ ๊ฐ€๊ณ„ใ€์—์„œ๋Š” ์•„๋‹จ์ด 6์„ธ๊ธฐ ์ดˆ ์•ŒํŠธํด๋ฆฌํŠธ ๊ตญ์™•์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ๋”ํ”ˆ์™ˆ 1์„ธ ํ—จ์˜ ํ›„์†์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค๋งŒ ์ด ์กฑ๋ณด๋Š” "๊ฐ€์šฐ๋ž€()"์ด ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€๊ฐ€ ์•„๋‹Œ ์•„๋“ค๋กœ ๊ธฐ๋ก๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋Š” ๋“ฑ ๋‹ค์†Œ ํ˜ผ๋ž€์Šค๋Ÿฝ๋‹ค. ์ปด๋ธŒ๋กœ๋ผํ‹ด์–ด ์‚ฌ๋ฃŒ De Situ Brecheniauc์™€ Cognacio Brychan์—์„œ๋Š” ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ๊ฐ€ ์›จ์ผ์Šค ์†Œ์™•๊ตญ ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜์ธ ๋ธŒ๋Ÿฌํ—ค์ด๋‹ˆ์˜ฅ ์™• ๋ธŒ๋Ÿฌํ•œ์˜ ๋”ธ ๋ฃจ์•ˆ(Luan)์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฐ ์กฑ๋ณด์„œ๋“ค์€ ์„œ๋กœ ๋‚ด์šฉ๋„ ๋งž์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ์‹ ๋ขฐ์„ฑ๋„ ์˜์‹ฌ์Šค๋Ÿฝ์ง€๋งŒ, ํ•˜๋‚˜๊ฐ™์ด ์•„๋‹จ์ด ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌํŠผ๊ณ„์™€ ๋ฐ€์ ‘ํ•œ ๊ด€๋ จ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ•˜๋Š” ์ ์—์„œ ํŠน๊ธฐํ•  ๋งŒ ํ•˜๋‹ค. ๋‹น๋Œ€ ์ƒํ™ฉ ๋‹ฌ ๋ฆฌ์–ดํƒ€๋Š” ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์†Œ์™•๊ตญ๋“ค๋กœ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์ง„ ์—ฐ๋งน์™•๊ตญ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์•„๋‹จ์€ ๋‹ฌ ๋ฆฌ์–ดํƒ€์˜ ์ง€๊ณ ์™•์œผ๋กœ์„œ ์ด๋Ÿฐ ์†Œ์™•๋“ค์„ ๊ฑฐ๋Š๋ ธ๋‹ค. ์•„๋‹จ์ด ์™• ๋…ธ๋ฆ‡์„ ํ•˜๋˜ 6์„ธ๊ธฐ์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ๊ธฐ๋ก์€ ๋‚จ์€ ๊ฒƒ์ด ์—†์œผ๋‚˜, ใ€Ž์•Œ๋ฐ”์ธ์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌใ€์—๋Š” 7์„ธ๊ธฐ์—์„œ 8์„ธ๊ธฐ ์‚ฌ์ด ๋‹ฌ ๋ฆฌ์–ดํƒ€์˜ ํ–‰์ •๊ตฌ์—ญ์ด ์ „ํ•ด์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋ฉด 7์„ธ๊ธฐ์— ๋‹ฌ ๋ฆฌ์–ดํƒ€๋Š” 3๊ฐœ์˜ ์†Œ์™•๊ตญ์œผ๋กœ ๋‚˜๋‰˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ๊ฐ ์†Œ์™•๊ตญ์€ ๊ฑด๊ตญ์ž์˜ ์ด๋ฆ„์œผ๋กœ ๋ถˆ๋ ธ๋‹ค. ์šฐ์„  ์ผ€๋„ฌ ๋Š๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ž€(Cenรฉl nGabrรกin)์€ ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€ ๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ž€ ๋ง‰ ๋„๋ง๊ฐ€๋ฅดํŠธ์˜ ์ด๋ฆ„์ด ๋ถ™์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ํ‚จํƒ€์ด์–ด๋ฐ˜๋„, ์ฝ”์›”๋ฐ˜๋„, ๋ทฐํŠธ์„ฌ์„ ๋‹ค์Šค๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ๋กœ ์ผ€๋„ฌ ๋กœ์•„๋ฅธ(Cenรฉl Loairn)์€ ๋กœ์•„๋ฅธ ๋ง‰ ์—๋ฅดํฌ์˜ ์ด๋ฆ„์ด ๋ถ™์—ˆ๊ณ  ์•„๊ฐ€์ผ ๋ถ๋ถ€๋ฅผ ๋‹ค์Šค๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰์œผ๋กœ ์ผ€๋„ฌ ๋†๊ตฌ์‚ฌ(Cenรฉl nร“engusa)๋Š” ํŽ˜๋ฅด๊ตฌ์Šค ๋ชจ๋ฅด์˜ ๋™์ƒ ์˜น๊ตฌ์Šค ๋ชจ๋ฅด ๋ง‰ ์—๋ฅดํฌ(ร“engus Mรณr mac Eirc)์˜ ์ด๋ฆ„์ด ๋ถ™์—ˆ๊ณ  ์•„์ผ๋ ˆ์ด์„ฌ์„ ๋‹ค์Šค๋ ธ๋‹ค. ์ด ์„ธ ์†Œ์™•๊ตญ ๋ฐ‘์— ๋˜ ๋ถ€์กฑ ๋‹จ์œ„์˜ ๊ตฌ์—ญ๋“ค์ด ์žˆ์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ๋“ค์ด ใ€Ž์•Œ๋ฐ”์ธ์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌใ€์— ๊ธฐ๋ก๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ•œํŽธ ํ•ดํ˜‘ ๊ฑด๋„ˆ ์•„์ผ๋žœ๋“œ์„ฌ ์ชฝ์˜ ์‚ฌ์ •์€ ์ด์— ๋น„ํ•ด ๊ธฐ๋ก์ด ๋ถ€์‹คํ•˜๋‹ค. ๋ฐ”๊นฅ์„ ๋ณด์ž๋ฉด ๊ฒŒ์ผ์ธ์ด ์‚ฌ๋Š” ๋‹ฌ ๋ฆฌ์–ดํƒ€์˜ ์ด์›ƒ๋‚˜๋ผ๋Š” ํ”ฝํŠธ์ธ์ด ์‚ฌ๋Š” ํ”ฝํŠธ๋žœ๋“œ, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌํŠผ์ธ์ด ์‚ฌ๋Š” ํ—จ ์˜ค๊ธ€๋ ˆ๋“œ์˜€๋‹ค. ํ—จ ์˜ค๊ธ€๋ ˆ๋“œ๋Š” ์˜ค๋Š˜๋‚ ์˜ ๋ถ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ์™€ ์ €์ง€ ์Šค์ฝ”ํ‹€๋žœ๋“œ์˜ ์ „์‹ ์ด ๋˜๋Š” ์ง€์—ญ์ด๋‹ค. ํ—จ ์˜ค๊ธ€๋ ˆ๋“œ์—์„œ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๊ฐ•๋ ฅํ•œ ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌํŠผ๊ณ„ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Š” ์•ŒํŠธํด๋ฆฌํŠธ์˜€๋‹ค. ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ์ƒ์•  ๋ง์—ฝ์—๋Š” ์•ต๊ธ€๋กœ์ƒ‰์Šจ์ธ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์ธ ๋ฒ ์˜ค๋ฅด๋‹ˆ์ฒด๊ฐ€ ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌํŠผ์„ฌ ๋ถ๋ถ€์—์„œ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๊ฐ•๋Œ€ํ•œ ์„ธ๋ ฅ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์•„์ผ๋žœ๋“œ์„ฌ์—์„œ๋Š” ๋‹ฌ ๋ฆฌ์–ดํƒ€๊ฐ€ ์šธ๋ผ์˜ ์ผ๋ถ€ ์ง€์—ญ์„ ๋‹ค์Šค๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๋‹ฌ ๋ฆฌ์–ดํƒ€์˜ ์šธ๋ผ ์ง€์—ญ์„ ๋‹ค์Šค๋ฆฐ ๊ฒƒ์€ ๋‹ฌ ํ”ผ์–ดํƒ€ํฌ ์”จ์กฑ์˜ ๋ฐ”ํƒ„ ๋ง‰ ์นด๋ฆด์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์šธ๋ผ ์ง€์—ญ์—๋Š” ๋‹ฌ ๋ฆฌ์–ดํƒ€์— ๋ณต์†๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์€ ํฌ๋ฃจํžŒ ๋ถ€์กฑ์ด ํ†ต์ผ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์€ ์ฑ„ ์‚ด์•˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด๋“ค ๋ถ€์กฑ์ด ๋‹ฌ ๋‚˜๋ผ๋”” ์”จ์กฑ์˜ ์ „์‹ ์ด ๋œ๋‹ค. ์•„๋‹จ ๋ง‰ ๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ž€์˜ ์‹œ๋Œ€์˜ ํฌ๋ฃจํžŒ ์™•๋“ค ์ค‘ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์ค‘์š”ํ•œ ์ธ๋ฌผ๋กœ๋Š” ํ”ผ์–ดํฌ๋„ค ๋ง‰ ๋ฐ”ํƒ„์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์šธ๋ผ ์ง€์—ญ์„ ๋ฒ—์–ด๋‚˜๋ฉด ์ด ๋„ฌ ์”จ์กฑ์˜ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์™•๊ตญ๋“ค๊ณผ ๊ทธ ๋ด‰์‹ ๊ตญ๋“ค, ๋™๋งน๊ตญ๋“ค์ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๊ณ , ์ด๋“ค ๋‚จ์ชฝ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋“ค์€ ๋Œ€๊ฐœ ๋‹ฌ ๋ฆฌ์–ดํƒ€์˜ ์šธ๋ผ์— ์ ๋Œ€์ ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ๋„ฌ ์™•๋“ค ์ค‘ ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ์‹œ๋Œ€์— ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์ค‘์š”ํ–ˆ๋˜ ์™•์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ๋ถ ์ด ๋„ฌ์˜ ์ผ€๋„ฌ ์ฝ”๋‚  ์”จ์กฑ์— ์†ํ•˜๋Š” ์•„๋“œ ๋ง‰ ์•ˆ๋ฏธ๋ ˆํฌ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์•„๋“œ ๋ง‰ ์•ˆ๋ฏธ๋ ˆํฌ๋Š” ์„ฑ์ž ์ฝœ๋ฃธ๋ฐ”์™€ ์ข…ํ˜•์ œ์ง€๊ฐ„์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์น˜์„ธ ์ƒ์ˆ ํ•œ ๋ชจ๋“  ์‚ฌ๋ฃŒ๋“ค์—์„œ ์•„๋‹จ ๋ง‰ ๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ž€์€ ๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ž€ ๋ง‰ ๋„๋ง๊ฐ€๋ฅดํŠธ์˜ ์•„๋“ค๋กœ ๊ธฐ๋ก๋œ๋‹ค. ์•„๋”๋‚˜๋ˆ„์Šค์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋ฉด ์•„๋‹จ์—๊ฒŒ๋Š” ์˜ค๊ฐ€๋‚œ(Eoganรกn)์ด๋ผ๋Š” ํ˜•์ œ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์—ˆ๊ณ  ์˜ค๊ฐ€๋‚œ์€ 597๋…„๊ฒฝ์— ์ฃฝ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ใ€Ž์•Œ๋ฐ”์ธ์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌใ€์—๋Š” ๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ž€์˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์•„๋“ค ์„ธ ๋ช…์˜ ์ด๋ฆ„์ด ๋” ๊ฑฐ๋ก ๋˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ํ‚ฌ๋‹คํฌ(Cuildach), ๋”๋‚ (Domnall), ๋„๋ง๊ฐ€๋ฅดํŠธ(Domangart)๋ผ๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ‚ฌ๋‹คํฌ์™€ ๋„๋ง๊ฐ€๋ฅดํŠธ์— ๊ด€ํ•ด์„œ๋Š” ์•„๋ฌด๊ฒƒ๋„ ์•Œ๋ ค์ง„ ๋ฐ” ์—†๋‹ค. ์•„๋”๋‚˜๋ˆ„์Šค๊ฐ€ "๋”๋‚ ์˜ ์•„๋“ค ์ฝ”๋‚ ์˜ ์•„๋“ค ์ด์˜ค์•ˆ(Ioan)"์ด "์ผ€๋„ฌ ๋Š๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ž€์˜ ์™•ํ†ต์— ์†ํ•œ๋‹ค"๊ณ  ๊ธฐ๋กํ•œ ๋ฐ” ์žˆ์œผ๋‚˜, ํ˜„์žฌ ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ ๊ทธ์ € ์ด์˜ค์•ˆ์ด ์ผ€๋„ฌ ๋Š๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ž€ ์”จ์กฑ์— ์†ํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ๋œป์œผ๋กœ๋งŒ ํ•ด์„๋  ๋ฟ, ์ด์˜ค์•ˆ์˜ ํ• ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€ ๋”๋‚ ์ด ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ๋‚จ๋™์ƒ ๋”๋‚ ๊ณผ ๋™์ผ์ธ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์ƒ๊ฐ๋˜์ง€๋Š” ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค. 574๋…„ ์ˆ™๋ถ€ ์ฝ”๋‚  ๋ง‰ ์ฝค๊ฐˆ์ด ์ฃฝ๊ณ  ์•„๋‹จ์ด ์™•์œ„๋ฅผ ๊ณ„์Šนํ–ˆ์„ ๋•Œ ๊ทธ์˜ ๋‚˜์ด๋Š” 40์—ฌ ์„ธ์˜€๋‹ค. ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ์™•์œ„๊ณ„์Šน์€ ์ˆœํƒ„์น˜ ์•Š์•˜๊ณ  ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๋„์ „์ž๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋˜ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณด์ธ๋‹ค. ์•„๋”๋‚˜๋ˆ„์Šค๋Š” ์„ฑ์ž ์ฝœ๋ฃธ๋ฐ”๋Š” ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ๋™์ƒ ์˜ค๊ฐ€๋‚œ(Eoganรกn)์„ ์ง€์ง€ํ–ˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์•„๋”๋‚˜๋ˆ„์Šค๋Š” ์•„๋‹จ์ด ์ฝœ๋ฃธ๋ฐ”์—๊ฒŒ ์™•์œผ๋กœ ์„œํ’ˆ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด๊ฒƒ์ด ์‚ฌ์‹ค์ด๋ผ๋ฉด ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌํŠผ์„ฌ๊ณผ ์•„์ผ๋žœ๋“œ์„ฌ์„ ํ†ตํ‹€์–ด ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ ๋Œ€๊ด€์‹ ์‚ฌ๋ก€๋กœ ๊ผฝํž ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ใ€Ž์šธ๋ผ ํŽธ๋…„์‚ฌใ€์™€ ใ€Žํ‹ฐ๊ฒŒ๋ฅด๋‚˜ํฌ์˜ ํŽธ๋…„์‚ฌใ€๋Š” ์ „ ์™• ์ฝ”๋‚ ์ด ์ฃฝ์€ 574๋…„ ์ดํ›„ ํ‚จํƒ€์ด์–ด๋ฐ˜๋„์—์„œ ์ „ํˆฌ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๊ธฐ๋กํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ „ํˆฌ๋ฅผ ํ…”๋กœํฌ(Teloch) ์ „ํˆฌ ๋˜๋Š” ๋ธ๊ตฌ(Delgu) ์ „ํˆฌ๋ผ๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ „ํˆฌ๊ฐ€ ๋ฒŒ์–ด์ง„ ์ •ํ™•ํ•œ ์žฅ์†Œ๋Š” ์•Œ๋ ค์ ธ ์žˆ์ง€ ์•Š๋‹ค. ์•„์ผ๋žœ๋“œ ํŽธ๋…„์‚ฌ์„œ๋“ค์€ โ€œ์ฝค๊ฐˆ์˜ ์•„๋“ค ์ฝ”๋‚ ์˜ ์•„๋“ค ๋‘”์นด๋“œ๋ฅผ ๋น„๋กฏํ•œ ๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ž€์˜ ์•„๋“ค๋“ค์˜ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๋™๋งน์ž๋“ค์ด ์“ฐ๋Ÿฌ์กŒ๋‹คโ€๊ณ  ๊ฐ™์€ ๋‚ด์šฉ์„ ์ „ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ใ€Ž์šธ๋ผ ํŽธ๋…„์‚ฌใ€ 575๋…„ ๊ธฐ์‚ฌ์—๋Š” ๋ฆฌ๋จธ๋ฐฐ๋”” ๊ทผ๊ต์˜ ๋ฌผ๋ผ(Mullagh)๊ณ ์ง€์—์„œ "๋“œ๋ฆผ์ผ€ํŠธ(Druim Cett) ๋Œ€ํšŒ์˜"๊ฐ€ ์—ด๋ ธ๊ณ , ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์— ์•„๋“œ ๋ง‰ ์•ˆ๋ฏธ๋ ˆํฌ์™€ ์ฝœ๋ฃธ๋ฐ”๊ฐ€ ์ฐธ์„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์•„๋”๋‚˜๋ˆ„์Šค๋Š” ์ด ํšŒ์˜์— ์•„๋‹จ๋„ ์ฐธ์„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๊ธฐ๋กํ•œ๋‹ค. ํšŒ์˜์˜ ์ฃผ์ œ๋Š” ๋‹ค ์•Œ๋ ค์ ธ ์žˆ์ง€ ์•Š์ง€๋งŒ, ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ๋‹ฌ ๋ฆฌ์–ดํƒ€ ์™•๊ตญ์˜ ์ฒ˜์šฐ์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ๋ฌธ์ œ๊ฐ€ ๊ฑฐ๋ก ๋˜์–ด ํ•ฉ์˜๊ฐ€ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ์•„๋‹จ๊ณผ ์•„๋“œ๋Š” ์ด ๋„ฌ ์™•์กฐ๊ฐ€ ๋‹ฌ ๋ฆฌ์–ดํƒ€์˜ ํ•จ๋Œ€๋ฅผ ๋™์›ํ•˜๋Š” ๋Œ€๊ฐ€๋กœ ๋‹ฌ ๋ฆฌ์–ดํƒ€๋Š” ์ด ๋„ฌ์— ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๊ณต๋ฌผ์„ ๋ฐ”์น˜์ง€ ์•Š์•„๋„ ๋˜๋ฉฐ, ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋“ค์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ์šธ๋ผ ์ง€์—ญ์—์„œ๋งŒ ์ง•๋ณ‘ํ•ด ์ œ๊ณตํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์— ๋™์˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ํ•ฉ์˜๊ฐ€ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์ง„ ๊ฒƒ์€ ๋‹น์‹œ ๋ฐ”ํƒ„ ๋ง‰ ์นด๋ฆด์ด ์•„๋‹จ๊ณผ ์•„๋“œ์—๊ฒŒ ๋ชจ๋‘ ์œ„ํ˜‘์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒ๊ฐ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ”ํƒ„์€ ์˜ค๋Š˜๋‚ ์˜ ์•คํŠธ๋ฆผ์ฃผ ์•„์ผ๋žœ๋“œ๋งค๊ธฐ๋ฐ˜๋„๋กœ ๋‹ฌ ๋ฆฌ์–ดํƒ€ ๊ตญ์™•์„ ๋ถˆ๋Ÿฌ๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ์ž์‹ ์—๊ฒŒ ๊ฒฝ์˜๋ฅผ ํ‘œํ•˜๋ผ๊ณ  ์น˜์š•์„ ์ฃผ์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์•„๋‹จ์ด ๋ฐ”๋กœ ๊ทธ ๋ฌธ์ œ์˜ ๋‹ฌ ๋ฆฌ์–ดํƒ€ ๊ตญ์™•์œผ๋กœ ์ƒ๊ฐ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์šธ๋ผ ์ชฝ ์‚ฌ๋ฃŒ์—๋Š” ๋ฐ”ํƒ„์ด ์Šค์ฝ”ํ‹€๋žœ๋“œ์—์„œ ๊ณต๋ฌผ์„ ๋œฏ์—ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ์–ธ๊ธ‰๋„ ์žˆ๋‹ค. 581๋…„ ๋ฐ”ํƒ„์ด ์ฃฝ์œผ๋ฉด์„œ ์šธ๋ผ์ธ๋“ค์€ ๋ฐ”ํƒ„์˜ ์‹œ๋Œ€์— ์ ๋ นํ–ˆ๋˜ ๋งจ์„ฌ์„ ๋ฒ„๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๋– ๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ์–ด์ฉŒ๋ฉด ์•„๋‹จ์ด ์ซ“์•„๋‚ธ ๊ฒƒ์ผ ์ˆ˜๋„ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์•„๋‹จ์ด 583๋…„๊ฒฝ ๋งจ์„ฌ์—์„œ ์‹ธ์› ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ธฐ๋ก์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ณด๋‹ค ์กฐ๊ธˆ ์ „์ธ 580๋…„๊ฒฝ, ์•„๋‹จ์€ ์˜คํฌ๋‹ˆ ์ œ๋„๋ฅผ ๊ณต๊ฒฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹น์‹œ ์˜คํฌ๋‹ˆ๋Š” ํ”ฝํŠธ์ธ์˜ ์™• ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ 1์„ธ์˜ ์‹ ํ•˜๊ตญ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ๋งจ์„ฌ ์›์ •์€ ์•„๋”๋‚˜๋ˆ„์Šค๊ฐ€ ์–ธ๊ธ‰ํ•œ "๋ฏธ์–ดํžˆ(Miathi)"์™€์˜ ์ „ํˆฌ์™€ ํ˜ผ๋™๋˜๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ์–ดํžˆ๋Š” ํฌ์Šค๊ฐ• ์œ ์—ญ์˜ ๋ถ€์กฑ์—ฐ๋งน์ฒด์ธ ๋งˆ์ด์•„ํƒ€์ด๋ฅผ ๋งํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณด์ธ๋‹ค. ์ด ์›์ •์€ ์„ฑ๊ณตํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ์•„๋“ค ์•„๋ฅดํˆฌ๋ฅด(Artรบr)์™€ ์˜คํ•˜๋“œ ํ•€๋“œ(Eochaid Find)๊ฐ€ ์ž‘์ „ ์ค‘ ์‚ฌ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์•„๋”๋‚˜๋ˆ„์Šค๋Š” ์ „ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ „ํˆฌ๋Š” 590๋…„๊ฒฝ์— ์žˆ์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋ ˆํ๋ ˆ๋“œ(Leithreid) ๋˜๋Š” ๋ ˆํ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ(Leithrig) ์ „ํˆฌ๋ผ๊ณ  ๊ธฐ๋ก๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ใ€Œ๋ฒ ๋ฅด์นธ์˜ ์˜ˆ์–ธ์‹œใ€์—์„œ๋Š” ์•„๋‹จ์ด ํ”ฝํŠธ์ธ๊ณผ ์‹ธ์šฐ๋ฆฌ๋ผ๋Š” ๋‚ด์šฉ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์•„๋‹จ๊ณผ ํ”ฝํŠธ์ธ ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ์œ ์ผํ•œ ๊ธฐ๋ก๋œ ์ „ํˆฌ๋Š” 599๋…„ ๋˜๋Š” ๊ทธ ์ดํ›„์— ํ‚ค๋ฅดํ‚จ(Circinn)์—์„œ ๋ฒŒ์–ด์กŒ๋˜ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณด์ด๋ฉฐ, ์ด ์ „ํˆฌ์—์„œ ์•„๋‹จ์ด ํŒจ๋ฐฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํŽธ๋…„์‚ฌ์„œ๋“ค์€ ์ด ์ „ํˆฌ์—์„œ ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ์•„๋“ค๋“ค๋„ ์ฃฝ์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์–ธ๊ธ‰ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ธฐ๋ก์ด 584๋…„๊ฒฝ ํ‚ค๋ฅดํ‚จ์—์„œ ๋ฒŒ์–ด์ง„ ์•„์Šค๋ ˆํ(Asreth) ์ „ํˆฌ์™€ ํ˜ผ๋™๋œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์„ค์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์•„์Šค๋ ˆํ ์ „ํˆฌ์—์„œ๋Š” ํ”ฝํŠธ์ธ์˜ ์™• ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ 1์„ธ๊ฐ€ ์ฃฝ์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ํ”ฝํŠธ์ธ๋“ค ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ๋‚ด์ „์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์›จ์ผ์Šค ์ชฝ ์ „ํ†ต์‚ฌ์„œ๋“ค์—์„œ๋Š” ์•„๋‹จ๊ณผ ์•ŒํŠธํด๋ฆฌํŠธ ๊ตญ์™• ๋Ÿฌ๋ฐ๋ฅดํ 1์„ธ ํ•˜์—˜ ์‚ฌ์ด์— ์ „์Ÿ์ด ๋ฒŒ์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ ๋ฌธํ—Œํ•™์ž ํ—ฅํ„ฐ ๋ฌธ๋กœ ์ฑ„๋“œ์œ…์€ ์•„๋‹จ์ด ์›๋ž˜ ๋Ÿฌ๋ฐ๋ฅดํ 1์„ธ ๋ฐ ๊ทธ ์ „์˜ ์•ŒํŠธํด๋ฆฌํŠธ ๊ตญ์™•๋“ค๊ณผ ์˜ค๋žซ๋™์•ˆ ๋™๋งน์„ ๋งบ๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ฐ€, ๋Ÿฌ๋ฐ๋ฅดํ 1์„ธ์˜ ๋Œ€์— ์™€์„œ ๋™๋งน์ด ๊นจ์ง€๊ณ  ์ „์Ÿ์œผ๋กœ ๋น„ํ™”๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ์„ค์„ ์ œ์•ˆํ–ˆ๊ณ  ํ›„๋Œ€ ์—ญ์‚ฌํ•™์ž๋“ค๋„ ์ด ํ•ด์„์„ ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์•„๋”๋‚˜๋ˆ„์Šค๋Š” ๋Ÿฌ๋ฐ๋ฅดํ๊ฐ€ ๋ฃจ์ด๊ทธ๋ฒ (Luigbe)๋ผ๋Š” ์ˆ˜๋„์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์•„์ด์˜ค๋‚˜์„ฌ์— ๋ณด๋‚ด ์ฝœ๋ฃธ๋ฐ”์—๊ฒŒ โ€œ๊ทธ์˜ ์ ๋“ค๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋„๋ฅ™๋  ๊ฒƒ์ธ์ง€ ๋ง ๊ฒƒ์ธ์ง€ ์•Œ๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œโ€ ๋Œ€ํ™”๋ฅผ ๋‚˜๋ˆ„์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ”„๋Ÿฌ๋ฐ์ธ์„ฌ์˜ ์‚ผ์ œ์‹œ์—์„œ๋Š” ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ์•ŒํŠธํด๋ฆฌํŠธ ์•ฝํƒˆ์ด ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌํŠผ์„ฌ์˜ โ€œ3๋Œ€ ๋ฌด๋ถ„๋ณ„ํ•œ ์•ฝํƒˆโ€์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ใ€Œ์ Š์€์ด๋“ค์„ ์ง€ํœ˜ํ•จใ€(Peiryan Vaban)์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์‹œ์—์„œ๋„ ์•„๋‹จ๊ณผ ๋Ÿฌ๋ฐ๋ฅดํ ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ์ „ํˆฌ๋ฅผ ๋…ธ๋ž˜ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ง€๊ธˆ์€ ์‹ค์ „๋œ ์•„์ผ๋žœ๋“œ์–ด ์„œ์‚ฌ์‹œ Orgain Sratha Cluada๋Š” ๋ณดํ†ต 870๋…„ ๋ฐ”์ดํ‚น์ด ์•ŒํŠธํด๋ฆฌํŠธ๋ฅผ ๊ณต๊ฒฉํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋…ธ๋ž˜ํ•œ ์ž‘ํ’ˆ์ด์—ˆ์„ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒ๊ฐ๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ์•จ๋Ÿฐ ๋งฅ์ฟผ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์ด๊ฒƒ์ด ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ๋Ÿฌ๋ฐ๋ฅดํ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์„ ๋…ธ๋ž˜ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์„ค์„ ์ œ๊ธฐํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ชฐ๋ฝ ์•„๋‹จ์€ 603๋…„ ๋ฐ๊ทธ์‚ฌ์Šคํƒ„ ์ „ํˆฌ์—์„œ ๋ฒ ์˜ค๋ฅด๋‹ˆ์ฒด ์™•๊ตญ์—๊ฒŒ ํŒจ๋ฐฐํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ชฐ๋ฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ๋ฐ๊ทธ์‚ฌ์Šคํƒ„์ด ๋ฒ ์˜ค๋ฅด๋‹ˆ์ฒด์™€ ๋‹ฌ ๋ฆฌ์–ดํƒ€ ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ์ฒซ ๋ถ„์Ÿ์€ ์•„๋‹ˆ์—ˆ๋˜ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณด์ธ๋‹ค. ์•„๋”๋‚˜๋ˆ„์Šค์˜ ๊ธฐ๋ก์— ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ์•„๋“ค ๋„๋ง๊ฐ€๋ฅดํŠธ๊ฐ€ ์ƒ‰์Šจ์ธ์˜ ๋•…์—์„œ ์ฃฝ์—ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ์–ธ๊ธ‰์ด ์žˆ๊ณ , ๋ธŒ๋ž€ ์—ญ์‹œ ๊ธฐ๋ก๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์€ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ „ํˆฌ์—์„œ ์ฃฝ์€ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ถ”์ธก๋œ๋‹ค. ๋ฒ ๋‹ค ๋ฒ ๋„ค๋ผ๋นŒ๋ฆฌ์Šค๋Š” ์•„๋‹จ์ด ์• ์„คํ”„๋ฆฌ์Šค์˜ ์„ฑ์žฅ์„ ์œ„ํ—˜์‹œํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด ๋ถ„์Ÿ์˜ ๊ทผ์›์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์–ธ๊ธ‰ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ๊ทธ์‚ฌ์Šคํƒ„ ์ „ํˆฌ๊ฐ€ ๋ฒŒ์–ด์ง„ ๊ณณ์ด ์ •ํ™•ํžˆ ์–ด๋””์ธ์ง€๋Š” ์•Œ ์ˆ˜ ์—†์ง€๋งŒ ๋ฒ ๋‹ค๋Š” ๋…ธ์„ฌ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์•„ ๋•…์— ์ „์žฅ์ด ์žˆ์—ˆ์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ ๋ณด์•˜๋‹ค. ์ „ํˆฌ๋Š” ์• ์„คํ”„๋ฆฌ์Šค์˜ ๊ฒฐ์ •์  ์Šน๋ฆฌ๋กœ ๋๋‚ฌ๊ณ , ๋ฒ ๋‹ค๋Š” โ€œ๊ทธ ๋•Œ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์˜ค๋Š˜๋‚ ์— ์ด๋ฅด๊ธฐ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌํŠผ์„ฌ์˜ ์–ด๋–ค ์•„์ผ๋žœ๋“œ๊ณ„ ์™•๋„ ์•ต๊ธ€์ธ์—๊ฒŒ ๊ฐํžˆ ์‹ธ์›€์„ ๊ฑธ์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๋‹คโ€๊ณ  ์กฐ์‹ฌ์Šค๋Ÿฝ๊ฒŒ ๋ง๋ถ™์˜€๋‹ค. ์ „ํˆฌ์—๋Š” ์Šน๋ฆฌํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ์• ์„คํ”„๋ ˆ๋“œ ์—ญ์‹œ ์ƒ๋‹นํ•œ ์†์‹ค์„ ์ž…์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ๋ฒ ๋‹ค์˜ ๊ธฐ๋ก์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋ฉด ์• ์„คํ”„๋ ˆ๋“œ์˜ ๋™์ƒ ํ…Œ์˜ค๋ฐœ๋“œ(Theodbald)์™€ ๊ทธ ๋ฌด๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ์ „๋ฉธํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ…Œ์˜ค๋ฐœ๋“œ๋Š” ์•„์ผ๋žœ๋“œ ์ชฝ ๋ฌธํ—Œ๋“ค์—์„œ๋Š” ์•ˆํ”„๋ฆฌํ(Eanfrith)๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌ๋ฉฐ, ์ผ€๋„ฌ ๋…ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ๋ง ์šฐ๋งˆ ๋ง‰ ๋ฐ”ํƒ„์ด ๊ทธ๋ฅผ ์ฃฝ์˜€๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ง ์šฐ๋งˆ ๋ง‰ ๋ฐ”ํƒ„์€ ๋ฐ”ํƒ„ ๋ง‰ ๋‹ˆ๋„ค๋„์˜ ์•„๋“ค์ด๋‹ค. ใ€Œ๋ชฝ๊ฐ„์˜ ์ˆ˜ํƒœใ€์—์„œ๋Š” ์šธ๋ผ ๊ตญ์™• ํ”ผ์–ดํฌ๋„ˆ ๋ง‰ ๋ฐ”ํƒ„์ด ๊ตฐ๋Œ€๋ฅผ ์ด๋Œ๊ณ  ์•„๋‹จ์„ ๋„์™€ ์ƒ‰์Šจ์ธ๊ณผ ์‹ธ์› ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ์–ด์ฉŒ๋ฉด ๊ทธ๋„ ๋ฐ๊ทธ์‚ฌ์Šคํƒ„์— ์ฐธ์ „ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ผ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ์„ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ใ€Ž์•ต๊ธ€๋กœ์ƒ‰์Šจ ์—ฐ๋Œ€๊ธฐใ€์—์„œ๋Š” ๋ฒ ์˜ค๋ฅด๋‹ˆ์ฒด์˜ ์ „ ๊ตญ์™• ํ›„์‚ฌ์˜ ์•„๋“ค ํ—ค๋ง ์™•์ž๊ฐ€ ์ด ์‹ธ์›€ํ„ฐ์—์„œ ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ํŽธ์— ์„œ ์‹ธ์› ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ—ค๋ง์€ ์™•์œ„๊ณ„์Šน์—์„œ ์• ์„คํ”„๋ฆฌ์Šค์—๊ฒŒ ํŒจ๋ฐฐํ•˜๊ณ  ๋‹ฌ ๋ฆฌ์–ดํƒ€์— ๋ง๋ช…ํ•œ ์ƒํƒœ์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ฐ๊ทธ์‚ฌ์Šคํƒ„์—์„œ ๋Œ€ํŒจํ•˜๊ณ  609๋…„ 4์›” 17์ผ ์ฃฝ์„ ๋•Œ๊นŒ์ง€ ๊ทธ ์‚ฌ์ด 6๋…„๊ฐ„ ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ํ–‰์ ์€ ์ „ํ˜€ ๊ธฐ๋ก๋œ ๋ฐ”๊ฐ€ ์—†๋‹ค. ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ์‚ฌ๋ง์ผ์ž๋Š” 800๋…„๊ฒฝ ๊ธฐ๋ก์ธ ใ€Žํƒˆ๋ผ๊ทธํŠธ์˜ ์ˆœ๊ต๋กใ€์— ๋‚˜์˜จ๋‹ค. ใ€Žํ‹ฐ๊ฒŒ๋ฅด๋‚˜ํฌ์˜ ํŽธ๋…„์‚ฌใ€์—์„œ๋Š” ์•„๋‹จ์ด ํ–ฅ๋…„ 74์„ธ๋กœ ์ฃฝ์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ใ€Œ๋ฒ ๋ฅด์นธ์˜ ์˜ˆ์–ธ์‹œใ€์—์„œ๋Š” ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ํ‚จํƒ€์ด์–ด๋ฐ˜๋„์—์„œ ์ฃฝ์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ฉฐ โ€œ์ฃฝ์„ ๋•Œ๋Š” ์™•์ด ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ฆฌ๋ผโ€๊ณ  ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 12์„ธ๊ธฐ์— ์“ฐ์ธ ใ€Ž์„ฑ ๋ผ์Šค๋ Œ์˜ ํ–‰์ ใ€์—์„œ๋Š” ์•„๋‹จ์ด ์™•์œ„์—์„œ ์ซ“๊ฒจ๋‚ฌ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•˜๋ฉฐ, 14์„ธ๊ธฐ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์ธ ์กด ํฌ๋ฅด๋‘”์€ ์•„๋‹จ์ด ํ‚จํƒ€์ด์–ด๋ฐ˜๋„ ํ‚ฌ์ผ€๋ž€์— ๋ฌปํ˜”๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ผ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ€๊ณ„ ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ์™•์œ„๋Š” ๊ทธ ์•„๋“ค ์˜คํ•˜๋“œ ๋น„๋” ๋ง‰ ์•„๋‹จ์ด ๊ณ„์Šนํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์•„๋”๋‚˜๋ˆ„์Šค๋Š” ์ฝœ๋ฃธ๋ฐ”๊ฐ€ ์˜คํ•˜๋“œ์˜ ํ˜•๋“ค์ด ๋ถ€์™•์„ ๊ณ„์Šนํ•  ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ ์˜ˆ์ธกํ–ˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ใ€Ž์•Œ๋ฐ”์ธ์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌใ€์— ๊ธฐ๋ก๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋Š” ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์•„๋“ค๋“ค์˜ ์ด๋ฆ„์€ ์˜คํ•˜๋“œ ํ•€๋“œ(Eochaid Find), ํˆฌ์–ดํ—(Tuathal), ๋ธŒ๋ž€(Bran), ๋ฐ”ํ—ค๋„ˆ(Baithรฉne), ์ฝ”๋‚ญ(Conaing), ๊ฐ€๋ฅดํŠธ๋‚˜ํŠธ(Gartnait)๋‹ค. ๋˜ ์•„๋”๋‚˜๋ˆ„์Šค๋Š” ์•„๋ฅดํˆฌ๋ฅด(Artรบr)์™€ ๋„๋ง๊ฐ€๋ฅดํŠธ(Domangart)๋ผ๋Š” ์•„๋“ค๋“ค๋„ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ใ€Ž์•Œ๋ฐ”์ธ์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌใ€์—๋Š” ์•„๋ฅดํˆฌ๋ฅด๋Š” ์ฝ”๋‚ญ์˜ ์•„๋“ค๋กœ ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ์†์ž๋กœ ์˜ฌ๋ผ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๊ณ  ๋„๋ง๊ฐ€๋ฅดํŠธ๋Š” ์•„์˜ˆ ๋ณด์ด์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค. ๋„๋ง๊ฐ€๋ฅดํŠธ ์—ญ์‹œ ์•„๋ฅดํˆฌ๋ฅด์™€ ๋งˆ์ฐฌ๊ฐ€์ง€๋กœ ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ์•„๋“ค์ด ์•„๋‹Œ ์†์ž์˜€์„ ์ˆ˜๋„ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ๋ ‡๋‹ค๋ฉด ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€๋Š” ์ฝ”๋‚ญ์ผ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ์„ฑ์ด ํฌ๋‹ค. ์ผ€๋„ฌ ๋Š๊ฐ€๋ธŒ๋ž€์˜ ์™•ํ†ต์€ ์˜คํ•˜๋“œ ๋น„๋”๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ๊ทธ ์•„๋“ค ๋”๋‚  ๋ธŒ๋ ˆํฌ ๋ง‰ ์—ํฌ๋‹คํฌ๋กœ ๊ณ„์Šน๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋‚˜, ์ฝ”๋‚ญ์˜ ํ›„์†๋“ค์ด 7์„ธ๊ธฐ์—์„œ 8์„ธ๊ธฐ์— ์ด๋ฅด๊ธฐ๊นŒ์ง€ ๊ณ„์† ์™•์œ„์— ๋„์ „ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ์•„๋“ค ๊ฐ€๋ฅดํŠธ๋‚˜ํŠธ๊ฐ€ ํ”ฝํŠธ์ธ์˜ ์™• ๊ฐ€๋ฅดํŠธ๋‚˜ํŠธ 2์„ธ(601๋…„๊ฒฝ ์‚ฌ๋ง)์™€ ๋™์ผ์ธ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์„ค์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ ํ”ฝํŠธ์ธ์ด ๋ชจ๊ณ„์ œ์˜€์œผ๋ฆฌ๋ผ๋Š” ์ถ”์ธก์— ์˜์กดํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๋น„ํŒ๋ฐ›๋Š”๋‹ค. ๊ฐ€๋ฅดํŠธ๋‚˜ํŠธ 2์„ธ์˜ ๋‹ค์Œ ์™• ๋„คํฌํƒ„ 2์„ธ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€๋ฅดํŠธ๋‚˜ํŠธ์˜ ์†์ž์ด๋ฉฐ ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ์ฆ์†์ž๋ผ๋Š” ์„ค๋„ ์žˆ์ง€๋งŒ ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ ๋”์šฑ ์„ค๋“๋ ฅ์ด ๋–จ์–ด์ง„๋‹ค. ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ๋”ธ๋“ค์— ๊ด€ํ•ด์„œ๋Š” ์•„๋“ค๋“ค์— ๋น„ํ•ด ์•Œ๋ ค์ง„ ๊ฒƒ์ด ์ ๋‹ค. ๊ฒŒ๋จธ(Gemma)๋ผ๊ณ ๋„ ํ•˜๋Š” ๋งˆํ๊ฒœ(Maithgemm)์ด ๋‹ฌ ํ”ผ์–ดํƒ€ํฌ์˜ ์นด๋ (Cairell)๊ณผ ๊ฒฐํ˜ผํ–ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ธฐ๋ก์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์•„๋‹จ์€ ์•„๋‚ด๋ฅผ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฟ ๋‘์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ๊ทธ ์ค‘ ์ด๋ฆ„์ด ๊ธฐ๋ก๋œ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์€ ์—†๋‹ค. ๋‹ค๋งŒ ํ•œ ๋ช…์€ ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌํŠผ์ธ์ด์—ˆ๊ณ  ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํ•œ ๋ช…์€ ํ”ฝํŠธ์ธ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ์œ„ ์„ค์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ๊ฐ€๋ฅดํŠธ๋‚˜ํŠธ 2์„ธ๊ฐ€ ์•„๋‹จ์˜ ์•„๋“ค์ด ๋งž๋‹ค๋ฉด ํ”ฝํŠธ์ธ ์™•๋น„์˜ ์ด๋ฆ„์€ ๋„๋ฉœํฌ(Domelch)๊ฐ€ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์ฐธ๊ณ  ์ž๋ฃŒ ๋‹ฌ ๋ฆฌ์–ดํƒ€ ๊ตญ์™• 609๋…„ ์‚ฌ๋ง ์•„์ผ๋žœ๋“œ ์‹ ํ™” (์—ด์™• ๋Œ€๊ณ„) ํ์œ„๋œ ๊ตฐ์ฃผ 6์„ธ๊ธฐ ์Šค์ฝ”ํ‹€๋žœ๋“œ์˜ ๊ตฐ์ฃผ 7์„ธ๊ธฐ ์Šค์ฝ”ํ‹€๋žœ๋“œ์˜ ๊ตฐ์ฃผ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%81ed%C3%A1n%20mac%20Gabr%C3%A1in
รedรกn mac Gabrรกin
รedรกn mac Gabrรกin (pronounced in Old Irish; ), also written as Aedan, was a king of Dรกl Riata from 574 until c. 609 AD. The kingdom of Dรกl Riata was situated in modern Argyll and Bute, Scotland, and parts of County Antrim, Ireland. Genealogies record that รedรกn was a son of Gabrรกn mac Domangairt. He was a contemporary of Saint Columba, and much that is recorded of his life and career comes from hagiography such as Adomnรกn of Iona's Life of Saint Columba. รedรกn appears as a character in Old Irish and Middle Irish language works of prose and verse, some now lost. The Irish annals record รedรกn's campaigns against his neighbours, in Ireland, and in northern Britain, including expeditions to the Orkney Islands, the Isle of Man, and the east coast of Scotland. As recorded by Bede, รedรกn was decisively defeated by ร†thelfrith of Bernicia at the Battle of Degsastan. รedรกn may have been deposed, or have abdicated, following this defeat. His date of death is recorded by one source as 17 April 609, in Kilkerran. Sources The sources for รedรกn's life include Bede's Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum; Irish annals, principally the Annals of Ulster and the Annals of Tigernach; and Adomnรกn's Life of Saint Columba. The Senchus fer n-Alban, a census and genealogy of Dรกl Riata, purports to record his ancestry and that of his immediate descendants. None of these sources are contemporary. Adomnรกn's work was written in the very late 7th century, probably to mark the centenary of Columba's death. It incorporates elements from a lost earlier life of Columba, De virtutibus sancti Columbae, by Cummรฉne Find. This may have been written as early as 640; neither the elements incorporated from Cummรฉne's work nor Adomnรกn's own writings can be treated as simple history. Bede's history was written 30 years after Adomnรกn's. The surviving Irish annals contain elements of a chronicle kept at Iona from the middle of the 7th century onwards, so that these too are retrospective when dealing with รedรกn's time. The Rawlinson B 502 manuscript, dated to c. 1130, contains the tale Gein Branduib maic Echach ocus Aedรกin maic Gabrรกin (The Birth of Brandub son of Eochu and of Aedรกn son of Gabrรกn). In this story, รedรกn is the twin brother of Brandub mac Echach, a King of Leinster who belonged to the Uรญ Cheinnselaig kindred. รedรกn is exchanged at birth for one of the twin daughters of Gabrรกn, born the same night, so that each family might have a son. The Prophecy of Berchรกn also associates รedรกn with Leinster. John Bannerman concluded that "[t]here seems to be no basis of fact behind these traditions." Francis John Byrne suggested that the Echtra was written by a poet at the court of Diarmait mac Maรญl na mBรณ, an 11th-century descendant of Brandub, and was written to cement an alliance between Diarmait and the Scots king Mรกel Coluim mac Donnchada ("Malcolm III"), who claimed to be a descendant of รedรกn. A lost Irish tale, Echtra รedรกin mac Gabrรกin (The Adventures of รedรกn son of Gabrรกn), appears in a list of works, but its contents are unknown. รedรกn is a character in the epic Scรฉla Cano meic Gartnรกin, but the events which inspired the tale appear to have taken place in the middle of the 7th century. He also appears in the tale Compert Mongรกin. รedรกn additionally appears in a variety of Welsh sources, making him one of the few non-Britons to figure in Welsh tradition. Welsh sources call him Aedan Bradawc, meaning "The Treacherous" or "The Wily". He may have earned this epithet after the collapse of an alliance with Rhydderch Hael, king of the nearby Brittonic kingdom of Alt Clut; enmity between them is remembered in the Welsh Triads and elsewhere. Another Triad records รedรกn's host as one of the "Three Faithful War-Bands of the Island of Britain", as they "went to the sea for their lord". This may point to an otherwise lost tradition concerning one of รedรกn's sea expeditions, such as to Orkney or the Isle of Man. Additionally, several Welsh works claim a Brittonic pedigree for รedรกn. The Bonedd Gwลทr y Gogledd records him as a descendant of Dyfnwal Hen of Alt Clut, though the genealogy is much confused (Gauran is given as his son, rather than father). The Cambro-Latin De Situ Brecheniauc and Cognacio Brychan claim his mother was Luan, daughter of Brychan of Brycheiniog in Wales. Though these pedigrees are inconsistent and likely dubious, they are notable in highlighting รedรกn's close association with the Britons. Neighbours รedรกn was the chief king in Dรกl Riata, ruling over lesser tribal kings. The Senchus fer n-Alban records the sub-divisions of Dรกl Riata in the 7th and 8th centuries, but no record from รedรกn's time survives. According to the Senchus, Dรกl Riata was divided into three sub-kingdoms in the 7th century, each ruled by a kin group named for their eponymous founder. These were the Cenรฉl nGabrรกin, named for รedรกn's father, who ruled over Kintyre, Cowal and Bute; the Cenรฉl Loairn of northern Argyll; and the Cenรฉl nร“engusa of Islay. Within these there were smaller divisions or tribes which are named by the Senchus. Details of the Irish part of the kingdom are less clear. Looking outward, Dรกl Riata's neighbours in north Britain were the Picts and the Britons of the Hen Ogledd, the Brittonic-speaking parts of what is now Northern England and southern Lowland Scotland. The most powerful Brittonic kingdom in the area was Alt Clut, later known as Strathclyde and Cumbria. Late in รedรกn's life, the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Bernicia became the greatest power in north Britain. In Ireland, Dรกl Riata formed part of Ulster, ruled by Bรกetรกn mac Cairill of the Dรกl Fiatach. The other major grouping in Ulster consisted of the disunited tribes of the Cruithne, later known as the Dรกl nAraidi. The most important Cruithne king in รedรกn's time was Fiachnae mac Bรกetรกin. Beyond the kingdom of Ulster, and generally hostile to it, were the various kingdoms and tribes of the Uรญ Nรฉill and their subjects and allies. Of the Uรญ Nรฉill kings, รed mac Ainmuirech of the Cenรฉl Conaill, Columba's first cousin once removed, was the most important during รedรกn's reign. Reign Adomnรกn, the Senchus fer n-Alban and the Irish annals record รedรกn as a son of Gabrรกn mac Domangairt (died c. 555โ€“560). รedรกn's brother Eoganรกn is known from Adomnรกn and his death is recorded c. 597. The Senchus names three other sons of Gabrรกn, namely Cuildach, Domnall, and Domangart. Although nothing is known of Cuildach and Domangart or their descendants, Adomnรกn mentions a certain Ioan, son of Conall, son of Domnall, "who belonged to the royal lineage of the Cenรฉl nGabrรกin", but this is generally read as meaning that Ioan was a kinsman of the Cenรฉl nGabrรกin, and his grandfather named Domnall is not thought to be the same person as รedรกn's brother Domnall. รedรกn was about forty years old when he became king, following the death of his uncle Conall mac Comgaill in 574. His succession as king may have been contested; Adomnรกn states that Columba had favoured the candidacy of รedรกn's brother Eoganรกn. Adomnรกn claims that รedรกn was ordained as king by Columba, the first example of an ordination known in Britain and Ireland. In 574, following the account of Conall's death, the Annals of Ulster and the Annals of Tigernach record a battle in Kintyre, called the Battle of Teloch, or Delgu. The precise location of the battle is unidentified. The annals agree that "Dรบnchad, son of Conall, son of Comgall, and many others of the allies of the sons of Gabrรกn, fell." In 575, the Annals of Ulster report "the great convention of Druim Cett", at Mullagh or Daisy Hill near Limavady, with รed mac Ainmuirech and Columba in attendance. Adomnรกn reports that รedรกn was present at the meeting. The purpose of the meeting is not entirely certain, but one agreement made there concerned the status of รedรกn's kingdom. รedรกn and รed agreed that while the fleet of Dรกl Riata would serve the Uรญ Nรฉill, no tribute would be paid to them, and warriors would only be provided from the Dรกl Riata lands in Ireland. The reason for this agreement is thought to have been the threat posed to รedรกn, and also to รed, by Bรกetรกn mac Cairill. Bรกetรกn is said to have forced the king of Dรกl Riata to pay homage to him at Rosnaree on Islandmagee. รedรกn is thought to be the king in question, and Ulster sources say that Bรกetรกn collected tribute from Scotland. Following Bรกetรกn's death in 581, the Ulstermen abandoned the Isle of Man, which they had captured in Bรกetรกn's time, perhaps driven out by รedรกn who is recorded as fighting there c. 583. Earlier, c. 580, รedรกn is said to have raided Orkney, which had been subject to Bridei son of Maelchon, King of the Picts, at an earlier date. รedรกn's campaigns on the Isle of Man have sometimes been confused with the battle against the Miathi mentioned by Adomnรกn. The Miathi appear to have been the Maeatae, a tribe in the area of the upper river Forth. This campaign was successful, but รedรกn's sons Artรบr and Eochaid Find were killed in battle according to Adomnรกn. This battle may have taken place c. 590 and been recorded as the Battle of Leithreid or Leithrig. The Prophecy of Berchรกn says of รedรกn: "Thirteen years (one after another) [he will fight against] the Pictish host (fair the diadem)." The only recorded battle between รedรกn and the Picts appears to have been fought in Circinn, in 599 or after, where รedรกn was defeated. The annals mention the deaths of his sons here. It has been suggested that this battle was confused with the "Battle of Asreth" in Circinn, fought c. 584, in which Bridei son of Maelchon was killed. This battle is described as being "fought between the Picts themselves". A number of Welsh traditions point to warfare between รedรกn and King Rhydderch Hael of Alt Clut, the northern Brittonic kingdom later known as Strathclyde. Hector Munro Chadwick and subsequent historians suggest รedรกn was initially in a long-term alliance with Rhydderch and his predecessors, but that it eventually collapsed into conflict. Adomnรกn reports that Rhydderch sent a monk named Luigbe to Iona to speak with Columba "for he wanted to learn whether he would be slaughtered by his enemies or not". A Welsh Triad names รedรกn's plundering of Alt Clut as one of the "three unrestrained plunderings of Britain", and the poem Peiryan Vaban tells of a battle between รedรกn and Rhydderch. The lost Irish epic Orgain Sratha Cluada is usually thought to refer to the attack on Alt Clut in 870 by Vikings, but MacQuarrie suggests that it may refer to an attack by รedรกn on Rhydderch. Degsastan and after Degsastan appears not to have been the first battle between รedรกn and the Bernicians. The death of his son Domangart in the land of the Saxons is mentioned by Adomnรกn, and it is presumed that Bran died in the same otherwise unrecorded battle. Of the roots of this conflict, Bede mentions only that รedรกn was alarmed by ร†thelfrith's advance. Wherever the Battle of Degsastan was fought, Bede saw it as lying within Northumbria. The battle was a decisive victory for ร†thelfrith, and Bede says, carefully, that "[f]rom that day until the present, no king of the Irish in Britain has dared to do battle with the English." Although victorious, ร†thelfrith suffered losses; Bede tells us his brother Theodbald was killed with all his following. Theodbald appears to be called Eanfrith in Irish sources, which name his killer as Mรกel Umai mac Bรกetรกin of the Cenรฉl nEรณgain, son of High-King Bรกetรกn mac Ninnedo. The Irish poem Compert Mongรกin says that the king of Ulster, Fiachnae mac Bรกetรกin of the Dรกl nAraidi, aided รedรกn against the Saxons, perhaps at Degsastan. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle mentions that Hering, son of King Hussa of Bernicia, was present, apparently fighting with รedรกn. After the defeat of Degsastan, the annals report nothing of รedรกn until his death around six years later, perhaps on 17 April 609, the date supplied by the Martyrology of Tallaght, composed c. 800. The Annals of Tigernach give his age as 74. The Prophecy of Berchรกn places his death in Kintyre and says "[h]e will not be king at the time of his death", while the 12th century Acta Sancti Lasriani claims that he was expelled from the kingship. John of Fordun, writing in the 14th century, believed that รedรกn had been buried at Kilkerran in Kintyre. รedรกn's descendants รedรกn was succeeded by his son, Eochaid Buide. Adomnรกn gives an account of Columba's prophecy that Eochaid's older brothers (listed as Artรบr, Eochaid Find and Domangart) would predecease their father. รedรกn's other sons are named by the Senchus fer n-Alban as Eochaid Find, Tuathal, Bran, Baithรฉne, Conaing, and Gartnait. Adomnรกn also names Artรบr, called a son of Conaing in the Senchus, and Domangart, who is not included in the Senchus. Domangart too may have been a grandson rather than a son of รedรกn, most likely another son of Conaing. The main line of Cenรฉl nGabrรกin kings were the descendants of Eochaid Buide through his son Domnall Brecc, but the descendants of Conaing successfully contested for the throne throughout the 7th century and into the 8th. It has been suggested that Gartnait son of รedรกn could be the same person as Gartnait son of Domelch, king of the Picts, whose death is reported around 601, but this rests on the idea of Pictish matriliny, which has been criticised. Even less certainly, it has been argued that Gartnait's successor in the Pictish king-lists, Nechtan, was his grandson, and thus รedรกn's great-grandson. Less is known of รedรกn's daughters. Maithgemm, also recorded as Gemma, married a prince named Cairell of the Dรกl Fiatach. The names of รedรกn's wives are not recorded, but one was said to be Brittonic, and another may have been a Pictish woman named Domelch, if indeed the Gartnait son of Domelch and Gartnait son of รedรกn are one and the same. Notes References External links CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts at University College Cork includes: the Gein Branduib maic Echach ocus Aedรกin maic Gabrรกin, the Scรฉla Cano meic Gartnรกin, and Irish annals, some with translations Compert Mongรกn translated by Mary Jones. Artรบr mac Aedan of Dalriada by Michelle Ziegler, The Heroic Age Issue 1, Spring/Summer 1999 Scรฉlaย โ€“ a catalogue of medieval Irish narratives 6th-century births 600s deaths Year of birth unknown Year of death uncertain Kings of Dรกl Riata Cycles of the Kings 7th-century Scottish monarchs 7th-century Irish monarchs 6th-century Irish monarchs 6th-century Scottish monarchs
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2018๋…„ ๋ ˆ์Šคํ„ฐ ํ—ฌ๋ฆฌ์ฝฅํ„ฐ ์ถ”๋ฝ ์‚ฌ๊ณ 
2018๋…„ ๋ ˆ์Šคํ„ฐ ํ—ฌ๋ฆฌ์ฝฅํ„ฐ ์ถ”๋ฝ ์‚ฌ๊ณ ๋Š” 2018๋…„ 10์›” 27์ผ ์•„๊ตฌ์Šคํƒ€์›จ์Šคํ‹€๋žœ๋“œ AW169 ๊ธฐ์ข…์˜ ๋น„์ฐจ์ด ์†Œ์œ  ํ—ฌ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ํ‚น ํŒŒ์›Œ ์Šคํƒ€๋””์›€ ์ธ๊ทผ์— ์ถ”๋ฝํ•ด ๋ ˆ์Šคํ„ฐ ์‹œํ‹ฐ์˜ ๊ตฌ๋‹จ์ฃผ ์œ„์ฐจ์ด ์‹œ์™€ํƒ€๋‚˜์˜๋ผํŒŒ๋ฅผ ํฌํ•จํ•ด ํƒ‘์Šน์ž 5๋ช…์ด ์ „์› ์‚ฌ๋งํ•œ ์‚ฌ๊ณ ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌ๊ณ  ๊ฐœ์š” 2018๋…„ 10์›” 27์ผ G-VSKP๊ธฐ์— ๊ธฐ์žฅ๊ณผ ์Šน๊ฐ 1๋ช…์ด ํƒ‘์Šนํ•˜๊ณ  ์„œ๋ฆฌ ์ฃผ์— ์œ„์น˜ํ•œ ํŽ˜์–ด์˜ฅ์Šค ๊ณตํ•ญ์—์„œ ์ด๋ฅ™ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋Ÿฐ๋˜ ํ—ฌ๋ฆฌํฌํŠธ์— ์Šน๊ฐ 3๋ช…(์œ„์ฐจ์ด, ์ง์› 2๋ช…)์„ ๋” ํƒœ์šด์ฑ„ 14:43 BST(13:43 UTC)์— ์ด๋ฅ™ํ•ด ๋ฒจ๋ณด์–ด ๋“œ๋ผ์ด๋ธŒ์— ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ ˆ์Šคํ„ฐ ์‹œํ‹ฐ ํ›ˆ๋ จ์žฅ์œผ๋กœ ์ด๋™ํ•ด 15:58 BST(14:58 UTC)์— ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํƒ‘์Šน๊ฐ๋“ค์€ ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋‚ด๋ ค ์ฐจ๋Ÿ‰์œผ๋กœ ํ‚น ํŒŒ์›Œ ์Šคํƒ€๋””์›€๊นŒ์ง€ ์ด๋™ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 10๋ผ์šด๋“œ ๋ ˆ์Šคํ„ฐ ์‹œํ‹ฐ์™€ ์›จ์ŠคํŠธํ–„ ์œ ๋‚˜์ดํ‹ฐ๋“œ์™€์˜ ํ™ˆ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๋๋‚œ ๋’ค ๊ธฐ์žฅ๊ณผ ์Šน๊ฐ 1๋ช…์€ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์žฅ์„ ๋– ๋‚˜ ํ—ฌ๊ธฐ๋กœ ๋Œ์•„์™€ ํ‰์†Œ๋Œ€๋กœ ์‹œ์™€ํƒ€๋‚˜์˜๋ผํŒŒ์™€ ๊ทธ์˜ ์ง์› 2๋ช…์„ ํƒœ์šฐ๋Ÿฌ ํ—ฌ๊ธฐ๋กœ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์žฅ๊นŒ์ง€ ์ด๋™ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ—ฌ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ์ด๋ฅ™ ์ค€๋น„๋ฅผ ํ•˜๋Š” ์žฅ๋ฉด์ด BT ์Šคํฌ์ธ  ๋ฐฉ์†ก์— ์ดฌ์˜๋˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํ—ฌ๊ธฐ๋Š” ๋ฃจํ„ด ๊ณตํ•ญ์œผ๋กœ ์ด๋™ํ•  ์˜ˆ์ •์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌ๊ณ  ๋ฐœ์ƒ ์œ„์ฐจ์ด์™€ ๊ธฐ์žฅ, ๋‚˜๋จธ์ง€ 3๋ช…์€ ํ—ฌ๊ธฐ์— ํƒ‘์Šนํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์žฅ ์•ˆ์—์„œ ๋Œ€๋žต 20:37 BST (19:37 UTC)์— ์ด๋ฅ™ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํ—ฌ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ์ƒ์Šนํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ํ•ญ๋กœ์ƒ ๋ฐฉํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ ๋Œ๋ฆฌ์ž ๊ธฐ์ฒด๊ฐ€ ์˜ค๋ฅธ์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ ๊ธฐ์šธ์–ด์ง€๋ฉด์„œ ๊ฑท์žก์„ ์ˆ˜ ์—†์ด ํšŒ์ „ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ, ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์žฅ์—์„œ ์•ฝ 200m ๋–จ์–ด์ง„ E์ฃผ์ฐจ์žฅ์— ์ถ”๋ฝํ•˜๊ณ , ํ—ฌ๊ธฐ๋Š” ํ™”์—ผ์— ๋’ค์‹ธ์˜€๋‹ค. ํ˜„์žฅ์— ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ๊ด€ ๋‘ ๋ช…์ด ๋‹ค๊ฐ€๊ฐ€ ๊ทธ ์ค‘ ํ•œ ๋ช…์ด ํ—ฌ๊ธฐ์— ๋‹ฌ๋ ค๊ฐ€ ๊ตฌ์กฐํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ฐฝ๋ฌธ์„ ๊นจ๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋…ธ๋ ฅํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ํ™”์—ผ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๋ฌผ๋Ÿฌ๋‚  ์ˆ˜ ๋ฐ–์— ์—†์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค์Œ ๋‚ , ๋ ˆ์Šคํ„ฐ์…” ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์€ ๊ณต์‹์ ์œผ๋กœ ํ—ฌ๊ธฐ์— ํƒ€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ 5๋ช… ์ „์›์ด ์ถ”๋ฝ๊ณผ ๊ทธ ์ดํ›„์— ๋ฐœ์ƒํ•œ ํ™”์žฌ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์‚ฌ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ฐํž˜๊ณผ ๋”๋ถˆ์–ด ์‚ฌ๋ง์ž์— ์ด๋ฆ„์„ ๊ณต๊ฐœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํƒ‘์Šน๊ฐ 5๋ช… ์ค‘ 3๋ช…์€ ํƒœ๊ตญ์ธ์œผ๋กœ ๋ ˆ์Šคํ„ฐ ์‹œํ‹ฐ์˜ ๊ตฌ๋‹จ์ฃผ์ธ ์œ„์ฐจ์ด ์‹œ์™€ํƒ€๋‚˜์˜๋ผํŒŒ, ๊ทธ์˜ ์ง์› 2๋ช… ๋„์œ„ํฐ ํŒํ”„๋ž˜(Kaveporn Punpare), ๋ˆ„์‚ฌ๋ผ ์ˆ™๋‚˜๋งˆ์ด(Nusara Suknamai)์™€ ์˜๊ตญ ๊ตญ์ ์˜ ๊ธฐ์žฅ์ธ ์—๋ฆญ ์Šค์™€ํผ(Eric Swaffer)์™€ ํด๋ž€๋“œ ๊ตญ์ ์˜ ๋ถ€๊ธฐ์žฅ์ด์ž ์Šค์™€ํผ์˜ ์—ฌ์ž์นœ๊ตฌ์ธ ์ด์ž๋ฒจ๋ผ ๋กœ์ž ๋ ˆํ˜ธ๋น„์น˜(Izabela Roza Lechowicz)๊ฐ€ ์‚ฌ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. "ํƒ‘์Šน์ž ์™ธ์— ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์‚ฌ์ƒ์ž๋Š” ์—†์—ˆ๋‹ค"๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ง๋ถ™์˜€๋‹ค. ํ—ฌ๊ธฐ ์ •๋ณด ํ•ด๋‹น ํ—ฌ๊ธฐ์˜ ๊ธฐ์ข…์€ ์•„๊ตฌ์Šคํƒ€์›จ์Šคํ‹€๋žœ๋“œ AW169๊ณ  ๋“ฑ๋ก๊ธฐํ˜ธ๋Š” G-VSKP, c/n 69018๋กœ 2016๋…„์— ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. 10์ธ์Šน์ด๋ฉฐ ์ค‘๋Ÿ‰์€ ์•ฝ 4,500kg (9,900 lb)๋‹ค. ํ”„๋žซํŠธ ์•ค ํœ˜ํŠธ๋‹ˆ ์บ๋‚˜๋‹ค PW210A(Pratt & Whitney Canada PW210A) ์—”์ง„ 2๊ฐœ๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ์†Œ์œ ์ž๋Š” ํญ์Šค๋ฒ„๋Ÿฌ(Foxborough)๊ณ , ์•„๋งˆ๋ฐ์šฐ์Šค ํ•ญ๊ณต(Amadeus Aviation)์ด ์šดํ•ญํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์กฐ์‚ฌ ์˜๊ตญํ•ญ๊ณต์‚ฌ๊ณ ์กฐ์‚ฌ์œ„์›ํšŒ(AAIB)๋Š” ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์กฐ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์ฐฉ์ˆ˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌ๊ณ ๊ธฐ ์ œ์กฐ์‚ฌ์˜ ๋‚˜๋ผ์ธ ์ดํƒˆ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ํ•ญ๊ณต์•ˆ์ „์œ„์›ํšŒ(ANSV)์™€ ์‚ฌ๊ณ ๊ธฐ์˜ ์—”์ง„ ์ œ์กฐ์‚ฌ์˜ ๋‚˜๋ผ์ธ ์บ๋‚˜๋‹ค์˜ ๊ตํ†ต์•ˆ์ „์œ„์›ํšŒ(TSB)๊ฐ€ ์ˆ˜์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์ง€์›ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํด๋ž€๋“œํ•ญ๊ณต์‚ฌ๊ณ ์กฐ์‚ฌ์œ„์›ํšŒ(SCAAI)์™€ ํƒœ๊ตญํ•ญ๊ณต์‚ฌ๊ณ ์กฐ์‚ฌ์œ„์›ํšŒ(AAIC)์˜ ๊ด€๊ณ„์ž๋“ค๋„ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌ๋๋‹ค. 10์›” 28์ผ, ํ™”์žฌ๋กœ ์‹ฌ๊ฐํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์†์ƒ๋œ ๋””์ง€ํ„ธ ๋น„ํ–‰๊ธฐ๋ก์žฅ์น˜๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋๊ณ , ๊ธฐ๋ก์žฅ์น˜์— ๋‹ด๊ฒจ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ฐ์ดํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ์ถ”์ถœํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ํ–„ํ”„์…”์ฃผ ํŒ๋ฒ„๋Ÿฌ์— ์œ„์น˜ํ•œ AAIB ๋ณธ๋ถ€๋กœ ์šด์†ก๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 11์›” 2์ผ, ํ—ฌ๊ธฐ์˜ ์ž”ํ•ด๋„ ํŒ๋ฒ„๋Ÿฌ๋กœ ์šด์†ก๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌ๊ณ  ํ—ฌ๊ธฐ์˜ ์Šน๊ฐ๊ณผ ์Šน๋ฌด์›์˜ ์‚ฌ๋ง ์›์ธ์„ ์กฐ์‚ฌํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๊ฒ€์‹œ ๋ฒ•์ •์ด ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. 11์›” 7์ผ, ์œ ๋Ÿฝํ•ญ๊ณต์•ˆ์ „์ฒญ(EASA)๋Š” ๊ฐํ•ญ์„ฑ ๊ฐœ์„ ์ง€์‹œ(Airworthiness Directive) 2018-0241-E๋ฅผ ๊ณตํ‘œํ–ˆ๊ณ , ๋ชจ๋“  ์•„๊ตฌ์Šคํƒ€์›จ์Šคํ‹€๋žœ๋“œ AW169์™€ ์•„๊ตฌ์Šคํƒ€์›จ์Šคํ‹€๋žœ๋“œ AW189 ๊ธฐ์ข…์ธ ํ—ฌ๊ธฐ์˜ ๊ผฌ๋ฆฌ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ํ†ต์ง€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 11์›” 14์ผ, ์กฐ์‚ฌ ์ง„ํ–‰ ๊ณผ์ •์„ ์š”์•ฝํ•œ ๋ณด๊ณ ์„œ๋ฅผ ๊ณต๊ฐœํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์š”์ž‰(Yawing) ์ œ์–ด๋ ฅ ์ƒ์‹ค์ด ์ถ”๋ฝ์˜ ์›์ธ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐํ˜€์กŒ๊ณ , ์š”์ž‰ ์ œ์–ด๋ ฅ ์ƒ์‹ค์˜ ์›์ธ์€ ์•„์ง ๋ฐํ˜€์ง€์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๊ณ , ๊ผฌ๋ฆฌํšŒ์ „๋‚ ๊ฐœ(tail rotor)์— ์ค‘์ ์„ ๋งž์ถ”๊ณ  ์ˆ˜์‚ฌํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. 11์›” 30์ผ, EASA๋Š” ๊ผฌ๋ฆฌํšŒ์ „๋‚ ๊ฐœ ์ผ๋ถ€์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์ฃผ๊ธฐ ์ ๊ฒ€์„ ํ†ต์ง€ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋น„์ƒ๊ฒฝ๋ณด์ •๋น„๋ฅผ ํšŒ๋ณดํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2018๋…„ 12์›” 6์ผ, AAIB๋Š” 2์ฐจ ์‚ฌ๊ณ ์ง„ํ–‰ ๋ณด๊ณ ์„œ(Special Bulletin)๋ฅผ ๊ณต๊ฐœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์กฐ์‚ฌ๊ด€์€ ๊ผฌ๋ฆฌํšŒ์ „๋‚ ๊ฐœ์˜ ์ œ์–ด์ถ•์ด ์ž‘๋™๋ ˆ๋ฒ„์žฅ์น˜(actuator lever mechanism)์™€ ๋ถ„๋ฆฌ๋˜์–ด ์กฐ์ข…์‹ค์˜ ํŽ˜๋‹ฌ์ด ์ž‘๋™ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์€ ๊ฒƒ์ด ์š”์ž‰ ์ œ์–ด๋ ฅ ์ƒ์‹ค์˜ ์›์ธ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. ๊ผฌ๋ฆฌํšŒ์ „๋‚ ๊ฐœ์˜ ์ž ๊ธˆ๋„ˆํŠธ์™€ ํ•€ ์บ๋ฆฌ์–ด๋„ ๋Š์Šจํ•ด์ง„ ์ƒํƒœ๋กœ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋๋‹ค. ๋ฐ˜์‘ ๋ฐ ์—ฌํŒŒ ์„œํฌํ„ฐ๋“ค์€ ๋‹ค์Œ๋‚  ์•„์นจ์— ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์žฅ ๋ฐ–์— ๊ฝƒ๊ณผ ์œ ๋‹ˆํผ์„ ๋†“์œผ๋ฉด์„œ ์ถ”๋ชจํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌ๊ณ  ์ „ ๋ ˆ์Šคํ„ฐ ์‹œํ‹ฐ์˜ ์ƒ๋Œ€ํŒ€์ธ ์›จ์ŠคํŠธํ–„ ์œ ๋‹ˆํผ๋„ ๋ˆˆ์— ๋„์˜€๋‹ค. 10์›” 30์ผ, ๋ ˆ์Šคํ„ฐ ์‹œํ‹ฐ๋Š” ์กฐ๋ฌธ๋ก์„ ๋น„์น˜ํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์˜จ๋ผ์ธ์œผ๋กœ๋„ ์ž‘์„ฑํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ฒŒ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 11์›” 10์ผ ํ† ์š”์ผ, ๋ ˆ์Šคํ„ฐ ์‹œํ‹ฐ ํŒฌ๋“ค์€ '5000-1' ์ถ”๋ชจ๊ฑท๊ธฐ์ถ•์ œ ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•ด ํ—ฌ๊ธฐ ์ถ”๋ฝ ์‚ฌ๊ณ ์˜ ํฌ์ƒ์ž๋“ค์„ ๊ธฐ๋ ธ๋‹ค. ์ถ•๊ตฌ๊ณ„ 2018-19 FA ์—ฌ์ž ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ ๋ ˆ์Šคํ„ฐ ์‹œํ‹ฐ์™€ ๋งจ์ฒด์Šคํ„ฐ ์‹œํ‹ฐ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋Š” ํฌ์ƒ์ž์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ถ”๋ชจ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด ์—ฐ๊ธฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌ๊ณ  ์ดํ›„, ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ ์ „ ํฌ์ƒ์ž๋“ค์„ ๊ธฐ๋ฆฌ๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ฌต๋…์˜ ์‹œ๊ฐ„์„ ๊ฐ€์กŒ๊ณ , ์„ ์ˆ˜๋“ค ๋ชจ๋‘ ๊ฒ€์€ ์™„์žฅ์„ ์ฐผ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ 2018๋…„ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ 2018๋…„ ํ•ญ๊ณต ์‚ฌ๊ณ  ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ์—์„œ ์ผ์–ด๋‚œ ํ•ญ๊ณต ์‚ฌ๊ณ  ์Šคํฌ์ธ  ๊ด€๋ จ ํ•ญ๊ณต ์‚ฌ๊ณ  ๋ ˆ์Šคํ„ฐ์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌ ๋ ˆ์Šคํ„ฐ์˜ ๊ตํ†ต ๋ ˆ์Šคํ„ฐ ์‹œํ‹ฐ FC OH ๋ขฐ๋ฒˆ 2018๋…„ 10์›”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2018%20Leicester%20helicopter%20crash
2018 Leicester helicopter crash
On 27 October 2018, a Leonardo AW169 helicopter crashed shortly after take-off from Leicester City's King Power Stadium in Leicester, England, while on route to Luton Airport. All people on boardโ€”the pilot and four passengers, including club owner Vichai Srivaddhanaprabhaโ€”were killed in the crash. The Air Accidents Investigation Branch attributed the crash to a loss of yaw control owing to a failure of the tail rotor control linkage. History of the flight Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha frequently travelled to and from the stadium in the helicopter for Leicester City's matches, with the Leicester Mercury describing it as "a familiar sight for Foxes fans." On 27 October, the helicopter departed Fairoaks Airport in Surrey with the pilot and his girlfriend on board. It stopped at London Heliport to collect three additional passengersโ€”Srivaddhanaprabha and two members of his staffโ€”before departing at 14:43 BST (13:43 UTC). It arrived at the Leicester City Football Club Training Ground on Belvoir Drive, south of the King Power Stadium at 15:58 BST (14:58 UTC). All on board disembarked and travelled by car to the stadium for Leicester's game against West Ham United. The pilot and his girlfriend returned after the football match concluded and then, as was usual, flew the helicopter to the stadium to collect Srivaddhanaprabha and his two staff members. The helicopter was seen preparing to lift off from the pitch live on BT Sport, during a post-match broadcast. By this point, the coach carrying the West Ham team had departed, but some Leicester City staff members and players were still in the stadium, while there remained fans of both clubs in areas outside. The aircraft was due to fly to Luton Airport. Accident With Vichai, the pilot and three other people on board, the helicopter took off from within the stadium at approximately 20:37 BST (19:37 UTC). As the pilot turned the helicopter towards its en-route heading, the tail rotor control linkage broke, sending the helicopter into an uncontrollable spin. One witness described the aircraft falling "like a stone to the floor". It struck the ground in stadium Car Park E, about from the stadium, and burst into flames. Two police officers and two club staff leaving the stadium attempted to rescue those in the helicopter but had to retreat due to the heat and flames. They sustained heat injuries. Investigators ruled out a suggestion of a collision with a police drone as a possible cause. The following day, Leicestershire Police confirmed that everybody on board had been killed in the crash and subsequent fire, and named the five fatalities. They were three Thais: club owner Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha and two members of his staffโ€”Kaveporn Punpare and Nusara Suknamai, British pilot Eric Swaffer, and his Polish girlfriend, Izabela Roza Lechowicz. A small memorial has been erected at East Sheen Cemetery for these two pilots. It was determined that four of the five occupants survived the crash, but with disabling injuries that prevented their escape from the helicopter. They died in the consequent fire. Two police officers, Michael Hooper and Stephen Quartermain, suffered burns and smoke inhalation attempting to rescue the occupants, and subsequently were nominated for a national police bravery award as well as receiving Queen's Gallantry Medals. Aircraft The aircraft involved in the accident was a Leonardo AW169 helicopter, registration G-VSKP, c/n 69018, manufactured in 2016. It seated 10 people and weighed roughly . It was powered by two Pratt & Whitney Canada PW210A engines. The aircraft was owned by Foxborough and operated by Amadeus Aviation. This was the first crash and hull loss involving the AW169. Investigation The Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB) opened an investigation into the accident. Italy's Agenzia Nazionale per la Sicurezza del Volo, representing the state of the manufacturer of the helicopter, and Canada's Transportation Safety Board, representing the state of the manufacturer of the helicopter's engines, provided assistance. Accredited representatives from Poland's State Commission on Aircraft Accidents Investigation and Thailand's Aircraft Accident Investigation Committee also provided assistance. America's National Transportation Safety Board, representing the state of the manufacturer of the tail rotor actuator, and the French Bureau d'Enquรชtes et d'Analyses pour la Sรฉcuritรฉ de l'Aviation Civile, representing the state of the manufacturer of the tail rotor bearing, also assisted. The aircraft's Digital Flight Data Recorder was recovered on 28 October, having been severely damaged in the fire. It was transported to the AAIB's base at Farnborough, Hampshire, for downloading of its data. The wreckage of the helicopter was transported to Farnborough on 2 November. A coroner's inquest was convened to investigate the official cause of death for the passengers and crew of the helicopter. The investigation reported in the court revealed that there was minimal opportunity for any individuals who survived the initial crash to escape, or for anyone to help those trapped. On 7 November, the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) issued an Airworthiness Directive, demanding checks of the tails of all AgustaWestland AW169 and AgustaWestland AW189 helicopters, as a precautionary measure. On 14 November, the AAIB released a Special Bulletin, outlining the progress of the investigation. A loss of yaw control was revealed as the cause of the aircraft crashing, with the reasons for the loss of yaw control not yet determined. On 30 November, the EASA issued an Emergency Alert Service Bulletin requiring periodic inspection of part of the tail rotor system. This was made mandatory by an Airworthiness Directive issued the same day. On 6 December 2018, the AAIB published a second Special Bulletin. Investigators revealed that loss of control of the helicopter resulted from the tail rotor actuator control shaft (which controls the pitch of the tail rotor blades) becoming disconnected from the actuator lever mechanism that transmits the pilots' pedal inputs to control the helicopter's yaw. They have also revealed evidence of the normally stationary control shaft being spun by the tail rotor which caused the castellated nut holding the actuator lever in place to friction weld to its carrier, shear off its split pin and rotate off the threaded shaft. The locking nut and pin carrier were found loose in the tail rotor fairing and were bonded together. A duplex bearing that was designed to allow the control shaft to remain stationary (with the rest of the tail rotor assembly rotating around it) was found to only allow a few degrees of rotation, with the races blocked up by a mix of burnt grease and metallic particles. The AAIB published their two volume final report on 6 September 2023. Eight safety recommendations were made. Responses Fans began to lay flowers and football shirts outside the stadium the morning after the crash. Shirts and scarves from other teams including West Ham United, Leicester City's opponent in the match prior to the crash, were also seen. On 30 October, Leicester City opened a book of condolence, with an online version also available. Some buildings were floodlit in blue as a tribute to the victims, including England's national stadium, Wembley. The club's official charity The Foxes Foundation was renamed The Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha Foundation. On 10 November thousands of Leicester City fans took part in a '5,000-1' walk in remembrance of the victims, before Leicester City played Burnley at home. The initial appeal was for 5,000 fans to take part, though reports suggested the number was about 10,000. Leicester City established a memorial garden on the site of the crash. Football The 2018โ€“19 FA Women's Championship match between Leicester City and Manchester United, scheduled for the day after the crash, was postponed. The women's reserve league match against Derby County, Leicester City's EFL Cup fixture against Southampton, which had been scheduled to take place at the King Power Stadium on 30 October, the Premier League International Cup fixture between Leicester City U-23s and Feyenoord Academy and the Belgian First Division B fixture between Oud-Heverlee Leuven, the second club owned by Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, and Lommel, originally scheduled for 31 October, were all also postponed. At the other Premier League football fixtures on Sunday, players wore black armbands, both for the crash victims and for Remembrance Day, though a few days earlier than Remembrance armbands are usually worn. The NFL London series match between the Philadelphia Eagles and Jacksonville Jaguars taking place at Wembley stadium the day after the crash included a pre-game tribute in memory of victims of both the Leicester crash and the Pittsburgh synagogue shooting which occurred on the same day. Litigation On 26 October 2021, the families of the pilots launched a legal case at the District Court of Massachusetts in the United States, suing Raytheon for damages. The plaintiffs alleged that Raytheon "negligently designed, manufactured, assembled and sold the Tail Rotor Actuator such that the Accident Aircraft's Tail Rotor Actuator control shaft was subject to disconnection from the actuator lever mechanism". See also Matthew Harding โ€“ Chelsea F.C. investor killed in a helicopter crash returning from a football match in October 1996. References 2018 disasters in the United Kingdom 2018 in England October 2018 events in the United Kingdom 2010s in Leicester Accidents and incidents involving the AgustaWestland AW169 Aviation accidents and incidents in 2018 Aviation accidents and incidents in England Sports-related aviation accidents and incidents Leicester City F.C. Oud-Heverlee Leuven Transport in Leicester
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EA%B0%9C%EC%9B%90%ED%86%B5%EB%B3%B4
๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณด
๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณด(้–‹ๅ…ƒ้€šๅฏถ)๋Š” ์ค‘๊ตญ ๋‹น๋‚˜๋ผ(ๅ”) ์™•์กฐ ๋ฌด๋•(ๆญฆๅพณ) 4๋…„(621๋…„)์— ์ฒ˜์Œ ์ฃผ์กฐ๋˜์–ด ๋‹น๋Œ€๋Š” ๋ฌผ๋ก  ์˜ค๋Œ€์‹ญ๊ตญ ์‹œ๋Œ€(ไบ”ไปฃๅๅ›ฝๆ™‚ไปฃ)๊นŒ์ง€ ์•ฝ 3๋ฐฑ์—ฌ ๋…„์— ๊ฑธ์ณ ์œ ํ†ต๋˜์—ˆ๋˜ ๊ธˆ์† ํ™”ํ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณด๋Š” ์ง„๋‚˜๋ผ(็งฆ)์˜ ๋ฐ˜๋ƒฅ์ „(ๅŠๅ…ฉ้Œข), ํ•œ๋‚˜๋ผ(ๆผข)์˜ ์˜ค์ˆ˜์ „(ไบ”้Š–้Œข)์˜ ํ˜•ํƒœ๋ฅผ ์ด์–ด๋ฐ›์•„ ์ง€๋ฆ„ 8ํ‘ผ(์•ฝ 24mm)์ด๋‹ค. ์ด ํ™”ํ ํ•œ ์žฅ์˜ ์งˆ๋Ÿ‰์€ 2์ฃผ(้Š–) 4๋ฅ˜(็ตซ) ์ฆ‰ ํ•œ ๋ƒฅ(๋Œ€๋ƒฅ)์˜ 1/10(์•ฝ 3.73g)๋กœ, ์งˆ๋Ÿ‰์˜ ๋‹จ์œ„๋ฅผ ๋œปํ•˜๋Š” ใ€Œ์ „ใ€(้Œข)์ด ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์„œ ์œ ๋ž˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ใ€Œ1๊ทผ = 16๋ƒฅใ€1๋ƒฅ = 24์ฃผ้Š–ใ€1์ฃผ = 10๋ฅ˜ใ€๋ผ๋Š” ๋ณต์žกํ•œ ์ฒด๊ณ„๋ฅผ ๋Œ€์‹ ํ•ด ใ€Œ1๊ทผ = 16๋Ÿ‰ใ€์€ ๊ทธ๋Œ€๋กœ ์œ ์ง€๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ๊ทธ ์ดํ•˜๋Š” ใ€Œ1๋ƒฅ = 10์ „ใ€1์ „ = 10ํ‘ผใ€1ํ‘ผ = 10๋ฆฌๅŽ˜ใ€1๋ฆฌ = 10ํ˜ธๆฏซใ€๋ผ๋Š” ์‹ญ์ง„๋ฒ• ์ฒด๊ณ„๊ฐ€ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋ฌด๊ฒŒ ๋‹จ์œ„๋กœ์จ์˜ ์ „์€ ์ผ๋ณธ์œผ๋กœ ์ „ํ•ด์ ธ์„œ 1๋ฌธ(ๅŒ)์ด๋ผ ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌ๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋ฆ„ ์ด ํ™”ํ์˜ ์ฝ๋Š” ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์€ ใ€Œ์œ„ใƒป์•„๋ž˜ใƒป์˜ค๋ฅธ์ชฝใƒป์™ผ์ชฝใ€ ์ˆœ์œผ๋กœ ใ€Œ๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณดใ€(้–‹ๅ…ƒ้€šๅฏณ)๊ฐ€ ๋˜์ง€๋งŒ ใ€Œ์œ„ใƒป์˜ค๋ฅธ์ชฝใƒป์•„๋ž˜ใƒป์™ผ์ชฝใ€์œผ๋กœ ์ด์–ด ์ฝ์–ด์„œ ใ€Œ๊ฐœํ†ต์›๋ณดใ€(้–‹้€šๅ…ƒๅฏณ)๋ผ๊ณ  ์ฝ๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ์–ด๋Š ์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ ์ฝ๋“  ์˜๋ฏธ๋Š” ํ†ตํ•˜๊ธฐ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์˜ˆ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋‘ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ์„ค์ด ๋ณ‘์กดํ•ด ์˜ค๋ฉด์„œ ๊ฒฐ๋ก ์ด ๋‚˜์˜ค์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹น ํ˜„์ข… ๊ฐœ์›(้–‹ๅ…ƒ) 26๋…„(738๋…„)์— ์ถœํŒ๋œ ใ€Š๋‹น์œก์ „ใ€‹(ๅ”ๅ…ญๅ…ธ)์—๋Š” ใ€Œ๋ฌด๋• ์ค‘์— ๋ชจ๋“  ์˜ค์ˆ˜์ „์„ ์ •์ง€ํ•˜๊ณ  ๊ฑฐ๋“ญ ๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณด๋ฅผ ์ฃผ์กฐํ•˜์˜€๋‹คใ€๋ผ๊ณ  ๊ธฐ์ˆ ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ํ•œํŽธ์œผ๋กœ ใ€Š๊ตฌ๋‹น์„œใ€‹(่ˆŠๅ”ๆ›ธ)์— ใ€Œ๊ฑฐ๋“ญ ์ฒœํ•˜์— ์ฃผ์กฐํ•˜๋Š” ๊ณณ์„ ๋‘๊ณ  ์•„์šธ๋Ÿฌ ๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณด์ „์„ ์ฃผ์กฐํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹คใ€(ไปไปคๅคฉไธ‹็ฝฎ้‘ชไน‹่™•ไธฆ้‘„้–‹ๅ…ƒ้€šๅฏณ้Œข)๋ผ๊ณ  ๊ธฐ์ˆ ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹น๋Œ€์—๋Š” ใ€Œ๊ฐœ์›ใ€(้–‹ๅ…ƒ)์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๋‹จ์–ด๋Š” ๋‹น๋Œ€์— ์—ฐํ˜ธ๋กœ์จ ์กด์žฌํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์€ ๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณด๊ฐ€ ์ฃผ์กฐ๋œ ๊ฒƒ๋ณด๋‹ค ๋ฐฑ ๋…„์ด๋‚˜ ๋Šฆ์€ ๋’ค์˜ ์ผ๋กœ ๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณด๋ผ ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌ๊ฒŒ ๋œ ๊ฒƒ์€ ๊ฐœ์› ์ดํ›„์˜ ์ผ์ด ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ƒ๋Š” ์„ค๋„ ์กด์žฌํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹น ๊ณ ์กฐ๊ฐ€ ๋ฌด๋• ์—ฐํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ–ˆ์Œ์—๋„ ๋ฌด๋•ํ†ต๋ณด(ๆญฆๅพท้€šๅฏถ)๊ฐ€ ์•„๋‹Œ ๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณด๋ผ๋Š” ์ด๋ฆ„์„ ๋ถ™์ธ ๊ฒƒ์€ ์—ฐํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ๋”ฐ์„œ ๋ช…๋ช…ํ•œ ํ™”ํ๋ฅผ ์ฃผ์กฐํ•  ๋‹น์‹œ์—๋Š” ์•„์ง ์‹œ์žฅ์ด ํ™œ์„ฑํ™”๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์•„์„œ ๋‹น ๊ณ ์ข…(้ซ˜ๅฎ—)์ด ์ฃผ์กฐํ•œ ๊ฑด๋ด‰์ฒœ๋ณด(ไนพๅฐๆณ‰ๅฎ)๋Š” ๊ฒจ์šฐ 8๊ฐœ์›”๋ฐ–์— ์“ฐ์ด์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๊ณ , ๋‹น ์™•์กฐ ์ดํ›„์— ์™€์„œ์•ผ ๋ช…๋Œ€์˜ ์˜๋ฝํ†ต๋ณด(ๆฐธๆจ‚้€šๅฏถ)์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ์—ฐํ˜ธ๊ฐ€ ์ด๋ฆ„์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ™์€ ํ™”ํ๊ฐ€ ๋น„๋กœ์†Œ ๋„๋ฆฌ ์“ฐ์ด๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐœ์› ์—ฐํ˜ธ ๋“ฑ์žฅ ์ด์ „ ํ›„๋ฒ ์ด์„ฑ(ๆน–ๅŒ—็œ) ์•ˆ๋ฃจ(ๅฎ‰้™†)์˜ ์˜ค์™• ๊ฐ(ๅด็Ž‹ๆช)์˜ ๋น„(ๅฆƒ) ์–‘์”จ(ๆฅŠๆฐ)์˜ ๋ฌด๋ค(637๋…„ ์กฐ์„ฑ)์ด๋‚˜ ํ•จ์–‘(ๅ’ธ้™ฝ)์˜ ์žฅ๋ฝ๊ณต์ฃผ๋ฌ˜(้•ทๆจ‚ๅ…ฌไธปๅข“, 643๋…„ ์กฐ์„ฑ), ์‹œ์•ˆ(่ฅฟๅฎ‰)์˜ ์œ„์˜ฌ๋ฌ˜(ไผŸๅ„ฟๅข“, 647๋…„ ์กฐ์„ฑ), ์‚ฐ์‹œ ์„ฑ ํ™๊ฑด(ๅผ˜ไนพ)์˜ ์ •์ธํƒœ๋ฌ˜(้„ญไปๆณฐๅข“, 664๋…„ ์กฐ์„ฑ) ํ›„๋ฒ ์ด ์„ฑ ์œˆํ˜„(้ƒงๅŽฟ)์˜ ์ดํœ˜๋ฌ˜(ๆŽๅพฝๅข“, 684๋…„ ์กฐ์„ฑ), ํ—ˆ๋‚œ์„ฑ(ๆฒณๅ—็œ) ์˜Œ์Šค(ๅƒๅธˆ)์˜ ์ด์ˆ˜์ผ๋ฌ˜(ๆŽๅฎˆไธ€ๅข“, 693๋…„ ์กฐ์„ฑ), ์‹œ์•ˆ ๊ณฝ๊ณ ๋ฌ˜(้ƒญๆš ๅข“, 695๋…„ ์กฐ์„ฑ), ์‚ฐ์‹œ ์„ฑ ์ฒธํ˜„(ไนพๅŽฟ)์˜ ์˜ํƒœ๊ณต์ฃผ๋ฌ˜(ๆฐธๆณฐๅ…ฌไธปๅข“, 706๋…„ ์กฐ์„ฑ), ์‹œ์•ˆ์˜ ๊ณฝํ™˜๋ฌ˜(้ƒญๆก“ๅข“, 708๋…„ ์กฐ์„ฑ)์—์„œ ๋ชจ๋‘ ๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณด๊ฐ€ ์ถœํ† ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹น๋Œ€์˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋™์ „์„ ๋ณด๋ฉด ์‚ฌ์‚ฌ๋ช…(ๅฒๆ€ๆ˜Ž)์ด ์ฃผ์กฐํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ์ˆœ์ฒœ์›๋ณด(้ †ๅคฉๅ…ƒๅฏถ) ใƒป ๋“์ผ์›๋ณด(ๅพ—ไธ€ๅ…ƒๅฏถ)๋‚˜ 8์„ธ๊ธฐ ํ›„๋ฐ˜์˜ ๋Œ€๋ ฅ์›๋ณด(ๅคงๆšฆๅ…ƒๅฏถ)์—๋Š” ใ€Œ์›๋ณดใ€๊ฐ€, 8์„ธ๊ธฐ ํ›„๋ฐ˜์˜ ๊ฑด์ค‘ํ†ต๋ณด(ๅปบไธญ้€šๅฏถ)์—๋Š” ใ€Œํ†ต๋ณดใ€๊ฐ€ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋‘ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ใ€Œ์›๋ณดใ€ ใƒป ใ€Œํ†ต๋ณดใ€ ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋‹น๋Œ€ ์ดํ›„์—๋„ ๊ณ„์† ํ™”ํ์˜ ์ด๋ฆ„์œผ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ข…๋ฅ˜ ๊ฐœ์›(้–‹ๅ…ƒ) : ๊ณ ์กฐ ๋ฌด๋• 4๋…„(621๋…„) ์ฒ˜์Œ ์ฃผ์กฐํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ธ€์”จ๋Š” ๊ตฌ์–‘์ˆ˜(ๆญ้™ฝ่ฉข)์˜ ๊ฒƒ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ค‘๋‹น ์‹œ๋Œ€์—๋Š” '๊ฐœ์›'์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๋‹จ์–ด๊ฐ€ ๋น ์กŒ๋‹ค. ํšŒ์ฐฝ๊ฐœ์›(ไผšๆ˜Œ้–‹ๅ…ƒ) : ๋‹น ๋ฌด์ข…(ๆญฆๅฎ—) ํšŒ์ฐฝ(ๆœƒๆ˜Œ) 5๋…„(845๋…„) ์ฃผ์กฐ๋œ ๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณด์˜ ์ผ์ข…. ํšŒ์ฐฝ ํ๋ถˆ ๋‹น์‹œ ์ง•๋ฐœ๋œ ๋ถˆ์ƒ์ด๋‚˜ ๋ถˆ๊ตฌ(ไฝ›ๅ…ท)๋ฅผ ๋…น์—ฌ์„œ ์ฃผ์กฐํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋’ท๋ฉด์— ์ฃผ์กฐ์ง€๋ฅผ ํ‘œ์‹œํ•œ ๋ฌธ์ž๊ฐ€ ์ƒˆ๊ฒจ์ ธ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด ์ฐฝ(ๆ˜Œ)์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์“ด ๊ฒƒ์€ ์–‘์ฃผ(ๆšๅทž)์—์„œ ์ œ์ž‘๋œ ๊ฒƒ, ๊ฒฝ(ไบฌ)์€ ๊ฒฝ์กฐ๋ถ€ ์ฆ‰ ์žฅ์•ˆ์—์„œ ์ œ์ž‘๋œ ๊ฒƒ, ๋‚™(ๆด›)์€ ํ•˜๋‚จ๋ถ€(ๆฒณๅ—ๅบœ) ์ฆ‰ ๋‚™์–‘์—์„œ ์ œ์ž‘๋œ ๊ฒƒ, ์ต(็›Š)์€ ์ต์ฃผ(็›Šๅทž) ์ฆ‰ ์„ฑ๋„(ๆˆ้ƒฝ)์—์„œ ์ œ์ž‘๋œ ๊ฒƒ, ๋‚จ(่—)์€ ๋‚จ์ „ํ˜„(่—็”ฐ็œŒ), ์–‘(่ฅ„)์€ ์–‘์ฃผ(่ฅ„ๅทž, ์–‘์–‘่ฅ„้™ฝ), ํ˜•(่Š)์€ ํ˜•์ฃผ(่Šๅทž), ์›”(่ถŠ)์€ ์›”์ฃผ(่ถŠๅทž), ์„ (ๅฎฃ)์€ ์„ ์ฃผ(ๅฎฃๅทž, ์„ ์„ฑๅฎฃๅŸŽ), ํ™(ๆดช, ํ™์ฃผๆดชๅทž), ๋‹ด(ๆฝญ)์€ ๋‹ด์ฃผ(ๆฝญๅทž), ์—ฐ(ๅ…—)์€ ์—ฐ์ฃผ(ๅ…—ๅทž), ์–‘(ๆข)์€ ์–‘์ฃผ(ๆขๅทž), ์œค(ๆฝค)์€ ์œค์ฃผ(ๆฝคๅทž), ์•…(้„‚)์€ ์•…์ฃผ(้„‚ๅทž), ํ‰(ๅนณ)์€ ํ‰์ฃผ(ๅนณๅทž), ํฅ(่ˆˆ)์€ ํฅ์›๋ถ€(่ˆˆๅ…ƒๅบœ, ํ•œ์ค‘ๆผขไธญ), ๊ด‘(ๅปฃ)์€ ๊ด‘์ฃผ(ๅปฃๅทž), ์žฌ(ๆข“)๋Š” ์žฌ์ฃผ(ๆข“ๅทž), ๋ณต(็ฆ)์€ ๋ณต์ฃผ(็ฆๅทž), ๋‹จ(ไธน)์€ ๋‹จ์ฃผ(ไธนๅทž), ๊ณ„(ๆก‚)๋Š” ๊ณ„์–‘๊ฐ(ๆก‚้™ฝ็›ฃ)์—์„œ ์ œ์ž‘๋œ ๊ฒƒ ๋“ฑ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹น ์ด์™ธ์—๋„ ๋‚จ๋‹น(ๅ—ๅ”)ใ€๋ฏผ(้–ฉ)ใ€๋‚จํ•œ(ๅ—ๆผข)ใ€์˜ค์›”(ๅ‘‰่ถŠ)ใ€์ดˆ(ๆฅš) ๋“ฑ์ง€์—์„œ๋„ ์ฃผ์กฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‚จ๋‹น์—์„œ ๋ฐœํ–‰ํ•œ ๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณด์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๋Š” ํ‘œ๋ฉด์˜ ๊ธ€์”จ๊ฐ€ ์ „์„œ์ฒด๋กœ ์ƒˆ๊ฒจ์ ธ ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ํŠน์ง•์ด๋‹ค. ์ง๊ฒฝ์ด ์ž‘์€ ๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณด์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์€ ๋ฏผ๊ฐ„์—์„œ ์ฃผ์กฐ๋œ ์‚ฌ์ฃผ์ „(็ง้‘„้Œข)์ด๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ๊ธˆ์ด๋‚˜ ์€์œผ๋กœ ์ฃผ์กฐํ•œ ๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณด๋„ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ๋‹น์˜ ์‹œ์ธ ์žฅํ˜ธ(ๅผต็ฅœ)์˜ ใ€Šํ‡ด๊ถ์ธใ€‹(้€€ๅฎฎไบบ)์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์‹œ ๊ตฌ์ ˆ ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ ใ€Œ้–‹ๅ…ƒ็š‡ๅธๆŽŒไธญๆ†, ๆต่ฝไบบ้–“ไบŒๅๅนด, ้•ท่ชชๆ‰ฟๅคฉ้–€ไธŠๅฎด, ็™พๅƒšๆจ“ไธ‹ๆ‹พ้‡‘้Œขใ€์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์‹œ๊ตฌ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹น ํ˜„์ข…์ด ๋Š˜ ์Šน์ฒœ๋ฌธ(ๆ‰ฟๅคฉ้–€)์˜ ๋ฌธ๋ฃจ์—์„œ ์—ฐํšŒ๋ฅผ ์—ด๊ณ  ์˜ค๋ฝ์„ ๋ฒ ํ’€๋ฉด์„œ ์ž๋ฆฌ์˜ ๋ถ„์œ„๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ํ•œ์ฐฝ ๋ฌด๋ฅด์ต์—ˆ์„ ๋•Œ ๋ฌธ๋ฃจ ์•„๋ž˜๋ฅผ ํ–ฅํ•ด์„œ ๊ธˆ์ „์„ ๋ฟŒ๋ ค ์ฃผ์—ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ์‹œ์—์„œ ์–ธ๊ธ‰๋˜๋Š” ใ€Œ๊ธˆ์ „ใ€์ด๋ž€ ใ€Œ๊ธˆ๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณดใ€(้‡‘้–‹ๅ…ƒ้€šๅฏถ)๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€๋ฆฌํ‚ค๋Š”๋ฐ, ์œ ํ†ต์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ํ™”ํ๋กœ์จ๋ผ๊ธฐ๋ณด๋‹ค๋Š” ์†Œ์žฅ ๋ฐ ์™„์ƒ์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ๊ธฐ๋…์ฃผํ™” ๊ฐ™์€ ์„ฑ๊ฒฉ์ด ๋” ๊ฐ•ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์‹ค์ œ๋กœ ํ•˜๊ฐ€์ดŒ(ไฝ•ๅฎถๆ‘)์˜ ๋‹น๋Œ€ ์ฐฝ๊ณ  ์œ ์ ์—์„œ ๊ธˆ๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณด 30๋งค์™€ ์€๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณด(้Š€้–‹ๅ…ƒ้€šๅฏถ) 421๋งค๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœ๊ตด๋˜์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด๋Š” ํ™”ํ๊ฐ€ ์ฐฝ๊ณ  ์•ˆ์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ตด๋œ ์—ญ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ ๋ฐœ๊ตด์ด์—ˆ๊ณ , ๋™์‹œ์— ใ€Œ๊ธˆ๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณดใ€์˜ ์กด์žฌ๊ฐ€ ์‹ค์ œ๋กœ ํ™•์ธ๋œ ์‚ฌ๋ก€์ด๋‹ค. ์˜ํ–ฅ ์ผ๋ณธ์˜ ํ™”ํ์ธ ํ™”๋™๊ฐœ์ง„์€ ๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณด์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ์„ ๋ฐ›์•„ ์ฃผ์กฐ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ํ•œ๊ตญ์˜ ์ „๋ผ๋‚จ๋„ ํ™”์ˆœ์˜ ๋ฐฑ์ œ ์‚ฌ์ฐฐ ๊ณต๋ฆผ์‚ฌํ„ฐ๋‚˜ ๊ฒฝ์ฃผ ๋ง๋•์‚ฌ์ง€, ๊ฒฝ์ƒ๋ถ๋„ ์›”์„ฑ๊ตฐ ๊ฒฌ๊ณก๋ฉด ํ•˜๊ตฌ๋ฆฌ ์˜› ์ ˆํ„ฐ์—์„œ ํ•ญ์•„๋ฆฌ์— ๋‹ด๊ธด ๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณด๊ฐ€ ์ˆ˜์Šต๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋ฐœํ•ด์˜ ์—ผ์ฃผ์„ฑ์ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋˜ ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„ ์—ฐํ•ด์ฃผ ํฌ๋ผ์Šคํ‚ค๋…ธ ์œ ์ ์ด๋‚˜ ์ถฉ์ฒญ๋ถ๋„ ์ถฉ์ฃผ์‹œ ๋‹จ์›”๋™ ์œ ์ , ๊ฒฝ์ƒ๋ถ๋„ ์•ˆ๋™์‹œ ์„œ์‚ผ๋ฆฌ ๊ณ ๋ ค๋ฒฝํ™”๊ณ ๋ถ„(11์„ธ๊ธฐ ๋ง 12์„ธ๊ธฐ ์ดˆ)์—์„œ ๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณด๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœ๊ตด๋˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์กฐ์„  ํƒœ์ข…(ๅคชๅฎ—) 15๋…„(1415๋…„) ์‚ฌ์„ฌ์„œ(ๅธ่ด็ฝฒ)์—์„œ๋Š” ๋‹น์˜ ๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณด ์ œ๋„๋ฅผ ๋ชจ๋ฐฉํ•ด ์กฐ์„ ํ†ต๋ณด(ๆœ้ฎฎ้€šๅฏถ)๋ผ๋Š” ๊ธˆ์† ํ™”ํ๋ฅผ ์ฃผ์กฐํ•˜๋„๋ก ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ฐธ๊ณ  ์ž๋ฃŒ ์›์œ ํ•œ ใ€Šํ•œ๊ตญ์˜ ์ „ํ†ต์‚ฌํšŒ ํ™”ํใ€‹ ์ดํ™”์—ฌ์ž๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต์ถœํŒ๋ถ€, 2005๋…„ ํ•œ๊ตญ์กฐํ๊ณต์‚ฌ ใ€Š์šฐ๋ฆฌ๋‚˜๋ผ ํ™”ํ์˜ ๋ณ€์ฒœ๊ณผ ์“ฐ์ž„์ƒˆใ€‹ 2017๋…„ ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ๊ตญ๋ฆฝ์ค‘์•™๋ฐ•๋ฌผ๊ด€ ์†Œ์žฅ ๊ฐœ์›ํ†ต๋ณด(๋ชจ์กฐํ’ˆ) ์ค‘๊ตญ์˜ ์ฃผํ™” ๋‹น๋‚˜๋ผ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaiyuan%20Tongbao
Kaiyuan Tongbao
The Kaiyuan Tongbao (), sometimes romanised as Kai Yuan Tong Bao or using the archaic Wade-Giles spelling K'ai Yuan T'ung Pao, was a Tang dynasty cash coin that was produced from 621 under the reign of Emperor Gaozu and remained in production for most of the Tang dynasty until 907. The Kaiyuan Tongbao was notably the first cash coin to use the inscription tลng bวŽo (้€šๅฏถ) and an era title as opposed to have an inscription based on the weight of the coin as was the case with Ban Liang, Wu Zhu and many other earlier types of Chinese cash coins. The Kaiyuan Tongbao's calligraphy and inscription inspired subsequent Central Asian, Japanese, Korean, Ryลซkyลซan, and Vietnamese cash coins and became the standard until the last cash coin to use the inscription "้€šๅฏถ" was cast until the early 1940s in French Indochina. The Kaiyuan Tongbao also signified a major change in how money circulated in the Chinese Empire, while previously cash coins were valued based on their weights, they would now be valued based on government regulations. After the fall of the Tang dynasty Kaiyuan Tongbao coins would continue to be produced by various states of the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period. During the Ming dynasty, and later dynasties, the Kaiyuan Tongbao would become the most important cash coin to be used in traditional Chinese medicine. Manufacture Wax mother coins Under the Sui and Tang dynasties mother coins reached their definite form and were produced in moulds engraved by ancestor coins, however during this same period a casting technique called "the lost wax method" was used to cast the Kaiyuan Tongbao cash coins, in this method mother coins made from wax rather than metal were used, these mother coins were produced in large quantities because they were very cheap to make, unlike metal mother coins these wax mother coins stayed in the clay moulds and when the mould heated up they would melt away leaving a cavity for the molten metal to pour into forming the coins. This technique was also used for casting other bronze items however it was only used for casting coinage during the Sui and Tang dynasties and its sudden discontinuation pointed out to the fact that it was probably inefficient for mass producing small items such as coins. Clay moulds The world's only known authentic specimen of a Tang dynasty period clay mould () that was used to cast Kaiyuan Tongbao cash coins was unearthed in Shutang, Wangcheng District, Changsha, Hunan on August 17, 1992 by Mr. Ceng Jingyi (), a retired teacher and coin collector. The Kaiyuan Tongbao clay mould is classified as a Chinese "national treasure" (). Up until the unearthing of this clay mould in the year 1992, no moulds were known to exist for the casting of Tang dynasty coinage. The discovery of this clay mould has made it unclear as to what process was actually used to cast the Kaiyuan Tongbao cash coins. While the Kaiyuan Tongbao cash coins could have been cast in the traditional manner from moulds made of clay, stone, or bronze as was the case since the Warring States period, it was believed that cash coins during this period were being cast in sand using "mother coins" (ๆฏ้Œข) to make the impressions where the circulation cash coins would later be produced from. With the discovery of this unique clay mould, however, it has now been confirmed that clay moulds were still being used by mints to cast cash coins during the Tang dynasty period. The unique Kaiyuan Tongbao clay mould was placed on display at the "Exhibition of Chinese Ancient Coins" () which was held at the Ouyang Xun Cultural Park () located in Shutang (). History Under the Tang dynasty the earlier Wu Zhu coins of the Sui dynasty would remain the standard currency, but during the fourth year of the Wu De (ๆญฆๅพท) period (or 621 of the Gregorian calendar) Emperor Gaozu decreed that the Kaiyuan Tongbao coin be cast with a strictly enforced standard weight of LiวŽng (ๅ…ฉ). The introduction of this new series of cash coins proved to be of epochal significance in the monetary history of China as the new coin started the "Baowen coinage" system (together with the Ban Liang cash coins introduced during the Qin period and Wu Zhu cash coins introduced during the Han period, making them the three major coinage systems in monetary history of China), which influenced the Chinese coinage system for over a millennium. The Kaiyuan Tongbao also changed the way that cash coins were valued, as before they were dependent on their weight but starting from the Kaiyuan Tongbao the value of a cash coin would be determined by government regulation. The government of the Tang dynasty initially set up the Money Casting Bureau, which operated mints in a total of 14 locations. Unlike earlier Chinese cash coins which had their legends based on their weight, the Kaiyuan Tongbao was notably the first Chinese cash coin to use the tลng bวŽo (้€šๅฏถ) inscription and simultaneously inspired the yuรกn bวŽo (ๅ…ƒๅฏถ) inscription. The reason that the Kaiyuan Tongbao also inspired the yuรกn bวŽo legend is because the Chinese people themselves had trouble figuring out the correct character order, as the inscription is read in what was referred to as the "standard order" (top-bottom-right-left) some people accidentally read it in the wrong order as they had assumed that the inscription was read clockwise as Kaitong Yuanbao (้–‹้€šๅ…ƒๅฏถ), this was also because rather than having the first two characters spell out the period title (which was Wu De when the Kaiyuan Tongbao was introduced), they had a different inscription. However this mistake in how the legend was read inspired the Northwest Chinese rebel Shi Siming to cast his own cash coins with the inscription Shuntian Yuanbao (้ †ๅคฉๅ…ƒๅฏถ, shรนn tiฤn yuรกn bวŽo) cash coins first issued in Luoyang in 759, this coin however does have a clockwise inscription. Another term that was used to denote "the currency type" in Chinese coin inscriptions was zhรฒng bวŽo (้‡ๅฏถ) which could be translated as "heavy currency". The first cash coin to have this inscription was the Qianyuan Zhongbao (ไนพๅ…ƒ้‡ๅฏถ) which was first produced in the year 759. The terms yuรกn bวŽo (ๅ…ƒๅฏถ) and zhรฒng bวŽo (้‡ๅฏถ) which were both established during a 138 year period of the Tang dynasty would continue to be used on Chinese coins to the very end of the Qing dynasty in 1911. While the term tลng bวŽo (้€šๅฏถ) was even used longer with the last Chinese cash coin, the Minguo Tongbao (ๆฐ‘ๅœ‹้€šๅฏถ) being produced in Dongchuan, Yunnan during the early Republic of China period. Another important difference with the inscription of the Kaiyuan Tongbao compared to earlier Chinese cash coins was that it was not written in seal script but rather in the more plain calligraphic clerical script. The Emperor asked one of China's most well-known calligraphers, Ouyang Xun to write down the legend of the cash coin. This was also the first time in Chinese history that a famous calligrapher wrote the characters for a Chinese cash coin. Minting and copper extraction were centrally controlled, and private casting was punishable by death. For the first time we find regulations giving the prescribed coinage alloy: 83% copper, 15% lead, and 2% tin. Previously the percentages used seem to have been on an ad hoc basis. Actual analyses show rather less copper than this. The standard weight of the Kaiyuan Tongbao was 1 mace, but a notable thing about the cash coins of the Tang dynasty is, that for the first and only time in the monetary history of China, the coins grew bigger and heavier during the reign of the dynasty. The New Book of Tang states that the imperial government specified the alloy ratio for Kaiyuan Tongbao cash coins upon their introduction at 21,200 jin of copper, 3700 jin of pewter, and 500 jin of black tin (equivalent to 83% Cu and 17% Pb + Sn) per mint. At first, mints were set up in Luoyang in Henan, and also in Peking, Chengdu, Bingzhou (Taiyuan in Shanxi), and then Guilin in Guangxi. Minting rights were also granted to some princes and officials. By 660, deterioration of the coinage due to forgery had become a problem. The regulations were reaffirmed in 718, and forgeries suppressed. In 737, the first commissioner with overall responsibility for casting was appointed. 1 furnace that produced 3.3 million Kaiyuan Tongbao coins a year during the Tian Bao period between 713 and 756 would need 21220 jin of copper, 3709 jin of tin, and 540 jin per regulation of lead and had an average waste of 23,5 %. The Kaiyuan Tongbao cash coins produced during the Tian Bao period had an officially set copper alloy however some Kaiyuan coins from this period were blue or white it's likely that other alloys were also used. In 739, ten mints were recorded, with a total of 89 furnaces casting some 327,000 strings of cash a year. 123 liang of metal were needed to produce a string of coins weighing 100 liang. In the late 740s, skilled artisans were employed for casting, rather than conscripted peasants. Despite these measures, the coinage continued to deteriorate. In 808, a ban on hoarding coins was proclaimed. This was repeated in 817. Regardless of the rank of a person, they could not hold more than 5,000 strings of cash. Cash balances exceeding this amount had to be expended within two months to purchase goods. This was an attempt to compensate for the lack of cash in circulation. By 834, mint output had fallen to 100,000 strings a year, mainly due to the shortage of copper. Forgeries using lead and tin alloys were produced. Due to the fact that this continued to be produced for two centuries by various mints all over China there are several hundred varieties of the Kaiyuan Tongbao that can be distinguished from each other due to slight differences. The Kaiyuan Tongbao cash coins that were first cast until the height of the Tang period, early issues can be very accurately assigned to their time of casting and archeological evidence from Tang era tombs indeed prove that the first stroke of the character "ๅ…ƒ" are shorter than later versions, for this reason these coins are referred to as "short one yuan" (็Ÿญไธ€ๅ…ƒ, duวŽn yฤซ yuรกn) versions. A lesser quantity of these early Kaiyuan Tongbao cash coins are made from what the Chinese call "white copper" (็™ฝ้Š…, bรกi tรณng) and are subsequently referred to as "White Copper/Baitong Kaiyuan Tongbao coins" (็™ฝ้Š…้–‹ๅ…ƒ้€šๅฏถ, bรกitรณng kฤiyuรกn tลng bวŽo) today, however during the Tang dynasty itself they were given the nickname "pure coins" (้’้Œข, qฤซng qiรกn) which also became the basis for the nickname (ๅค–่™Ÿ) of "pure coin scholar" (้’้Œขๅญธๅฃซ, qฤซng qiรกn xuรฉ shรฌ) which was given to Emperor Gaozong as his writings were said to resemble the coins. There also exist Kaiyuan Tongbao cash coins which are differentiated by their second horizontal stroke, other than the first variant these others quite rare. The following versions of the Kaiyuan Tongbao coin can be distinguished by the "ๅ…ƒ" character's second horizontal stroke (or "shoulder"): Kaiyuan Tongbao cash coins also commonly have differentiating features on their reverse, these can include crescents which according to legend happened when either Empress Zhangsun or Empress Taimu or in some versions of the story Yang Guifei pressed her fingernail into a specimen Kaiyuan Tongbao coin made from wax. Other sources claim that the crescents were added due to foreign influence. Today it is widely believed that these crescents were marks of quality used by various mints. Other than crescents, there were several Kaiyuan Tongbao coins with other reverse decorations, these include: Early Kaiyuan Tongbao coins are easily identified due to their deeply cut characters that never touch the rim of the coin, these are called "separate from the rim" Kaiyuan Tongbao coins (), while the reverse of these coins tend to have uniform and clear rims. Later variants of the Kaiyuan Tongbao often have excess metal between the strokes of the Hanzi characters and even later variants have characters with strokes so long that they touch the rim, meanwhile the rims on the reverse side of these Kaiyuan Tongbao coins tend to be irregular and relatively flat. Huichang era Kaiyuan Tongbao cash coins Huichang Kaiyuan Tongbao () cash coins are a series of Kaiyuan Tongbao coins produced under Emperor Wuzong who was a devout Taoist and used the reign era name of huรฌchฤng (ๆœƒๆ˜Œ), during the 5th year of this epoch (845) Emperor Wuzong ordered the casting of new coins with the inscription Kaiyuan Tongbao to be manufactured of bronze acquired by melting confiscated statues, copper bells, gongs, incense burners, and other copper items from Buddhist temples. These local mints were under the control of the provincial governors. The New Tang History states that Li Shen, governor of Huainan province, requested that the empire might cast coins bearing the name of the prefecture in which they were cast, and this was agreed. These Kaiyuan Tongbao cash coins differed from earlier variants due to the fact that they had the character chฤng (ๆ˜Œ) on their reverse side, other mints in China then adopted this and soon 23 mints produced Kaiyuan Tongbao coins with their own mint marks. Huichang Kaiyuan Tongbao coins are also of inferior workmanship compared to earlier coins and are diminutive in size. When Emperor Emperor Xuanzong ascended to the throne in the year 846, the aforementioned policy was reversed, and the new coins were recast to make Buddhist statues. The following mint marks could be found on Huichang Kaiyuan Tongbao cash coins: Turtle shell coins 13 Kaiyuan Tongbao turtle shell coins (), made from Hawksbill sea turtle shell, were discovered at the Famen Temple in 1987. In 1987 a large number of treasures dating to the Tang dynasty period were uncovered at the site. Among the over 27,000 cash coins found at the temple there were 13 turtle shell cash coins with the inscription Kaiyuan Tongbao, they have a diameter of 2.75 centimeters, a thickness of 0.06 centimeters, and a weight of 24.8 grams. In Buddhism turtle shells are among the 7 treasures and these cash coins may have been made to commemorate a very special occasion. Likely by the order of a Tang dynasty emperor to honour a sacred relic of Gautama Buddha that was located at the Famen Temple. As no mention of these turtle shell Kaiyuan Tongbao cash coins exist in any historical records or text both Chinese archaeologists and numismatists were surprised with the find. Experts do note that the number of the coins (13) is considered auspicious in Buddhism, which may be related to the fact that there are 13 turtle shell coins. This is further reflected in there being 13 sects in Chinese Mahayana Buddhism, 13, floors at the Tibetan Potala Palace and that the Famen Pagoda (where the coins were found) also had 13 floors. As of 2021 these were the oldest known turtle shell coins found anywhere in the world. Other variants Mintage figures The maximum annual output of mints during the Tang dynasty was 327.000 strings (327.000.000 cash coins). Counterfeit coins Counterfeit cash coins () were rampant during the Tang dynasty period, counterfeit Kaiyuan Tongbao cash coins were of inferior quality, they were typically lighter or were made with alloys containing larger percentages of cheaper metals, such as iron and lead, reducing the Intrinsic value of the cash coins in circulation. The Old Book of Tang claims that the Jianghuai region, the two capital (Chang'an and Luoyang) regions, the Hebei region, and the Nanling region were most seriously affected by counterfeit cash coins. The introduction and circulation of counterfeit cash coins negatively affected the economy by causing inflation and reducing social stability. The emergence of coin counterfeiting in China is rooted in the development of the commodity economy and the scarcity of money. The counterfeiting of cash coins prevailed due to a number of factors, primarily based on the market demand for money, while the production of official cash coins was being constrained by the prohibitively high costs associated with their manufacture. The cost of casting wasn't just affected by production costs such as the volume of fuel and manpower, but also by acquisition costs relating to the scarcity of copper, as well as the cost of transportation. These factors all created a market incentive to produce counterfeit cash coins to fill the demand for currency. The government of the Tang dynasty explicitly forbade coin counterfeiting and actively took measures to eliminate the bad Kaiyuan Tongbao cash coins that were illegally produced. Despite their efforts, the crackdown on counterfeit cash coins proved largely to be unsuccessful. Despite the official regulations requiring government mints to cast cash coins with high copper content, examinations of the chemical composition of official Kaiyuan Tongbao cash coins reveal higher tin and lead contents that don't match the official alloy compositions mentioned in the historical records. A 2004 analysis revealed that officially produced Kaiyuan Tongbao cash coins were on average 70.21% copper, 17.85% lead, and 8.64% tin, the researchers hypothesised that counterfeit cash coins were probably those with exceptionally high lead content (>36 wt%). Researcher Liu of the Chinese numismatic society believed that the government regulations requiring high copper content in the official alloys were only introduced to curb the cash coin counterfeiting. Influence outside of China Japan Japanese "Fuhonsen" and later the Wadลkaichin were modelled after the Tang dynasty's Kaiyuan Tongbao coin using similar calligraphy. Sogdia During excavations in the historically Sogdian cities of Afrasiab (old Samarkand) and Pendjikent a large number of Sogdian coins were uncovered, the Soviet numismatist Smirnova listed in her catalogue on Sogdian coins from 1573 published in 1981 a large number of coins of which several were based on Kaiyuan Tongbao's. Sogdian coins tend to be produced independently by each city and contain tribal mint marks known as tamgha's, some cities used coins based on Persian coinages (which made up 13.2% of the known variants), while others preferred Chinese cash coins which were influenced by the Tang dynasty's western expanse during the seventh century (cash style coins also made up the majority of Sogdian coins and accounted for 86.7% of all known variants), as well as hybrid coins which feature an image based on a square hole on one side of the coin and a portrait of the King in the other side (these made up 0.7% of the known variants). A number of Sogdian coins even imitate the Kaiyuan Tongbao inscription directly, but on their reverses have added Sogdian tamgha's on the right or left side of the hole as well as the Sogdian word for "lord". The modern era these Sogdian Kaiyuan Tongbao coins are reproduced in large numbers by forgers in Hong Kong, these forgeries have proven to be very difficult to differentiate from the original coins and are abundant in quantity. Vietnam Vietnamese cash coins produced from the ฤinh until the late Trแบงn dynasty tend to be heavily based on the Chinese Kaiyuan Tongbao cash coins, an example would be the Lรฝ dynasty era Thiรชn Tฦฐ Nguyรชn Bแบฃo (ๅคฉ่ณ‡ๅ…ƒๅฏถ) cash coins cast under Emperor Lรฝ Cao Tรดng which uses two distinct styles of Chinese calligraphy, one of them is a native Lรฝ dynasty style and the other is based on the Kaiyuan Tongbao, often the Chinese character "Nguyรชn" (ๅ…ƒ) on older Vietnamese coins is copied directly from Chinese Kaiyuan Tongbao coins, particularly how the left hook of the character moves upwards, although variants of the characters in "pure Vietnamese styles" were cast simultaneously. Like many Kaiyuan Tongbao coins many of these early Vietnamese cash coins would add reverse crescents or mint marks which were often wholly borrowed from the calligraphic style of the Kaiyuan Tongbao. Every early Vietnamese cash coin that has a reverse inscription is based on the Kaiyuan Tongbao. Modern influence A Kaiyuan Tongbao cash coin appears on the reverse side of a 2010 Hong Kong banknote issued by the Standard Chartered Bank with a face value of $1,000. In 2013 a sculpture of a Kaiyuan Tongbao with a diameter of 24 meters (or 78.7 feet) and a thickness of 3.8 meters (or 12.5 feet) was constructed to be displayed at the Baoshan National Mining Park (ๅฎๅฑฑๅ›ฝๅฎถ็Ÿฟๅฑฑๅทฅๅ›ญ) theme park in the Guiyang Prefecture of Chenzhou, Hunan. The sculpture is notably of a Huichang Kaiyuan Tongbao with the Gui (ๆก‚) mint mark. There is a 10 meter tall Kaiyuan Tongbao-shaped door which stands on a bridge in the Jiangxia District of Wuhan, Hubei. Hoards of Kaiyuan Tongbao cash coins See also Flying cash Notes References Sources Coins of China Economy of the Tang dynasty Chinese numismatics Cash coins by inscription
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%ED%9E%88%EB%82%98%ED%83%80%EC%9E%90%EC%B9%B446
ํžˆ๋‚˜ํƒ€์ž์นด46
ํžˆ๋‚˜ํƒ€์ž์นด46()๋Š” ์ผ๋ณธ์˜ ์—ฌ์„ฑ ์•„์ด๋Œ ๊ทธ๋ฃน์œผ๋กœ, 2015๋…„ 11์›” 30์ผ์— ๊ฒฐ์„ฑ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ 3์›” 27์ผ์— ์‹ฑ๊ธ€ ๋ฐ๋ท”. ๊ฒฐ์„ฑ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2019๋…„ 2์›” 11์ผ์˜ ๊ฐœ๋ช…๊นŒ์ง€ ํžˆ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋‚˜ ์ผ€์•ผํ‚ค์ž์นด46()์˜ ๋ช…์˜๋กœ์„œ ํ™œ๋™ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐœ์š” ํžˆ๋‚˜ํƒ€์ž์นด46๋Š” ใ€ˆํžˆ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋‚˜ ์ผ€์•ผํ‚ค์ž์นด46ใ€‰๊ฐ€ 2019๋…„ 2์›” 11์ผ์— ๊ฐœ๋ช…ํ•œ ๊ทธ๋ฃน์œผ๋กœ, ๊ฐ™์€ ๋‚ , ๋™์˜์ƒ ์•ฑ ใ€ŠSHOWROOMใ€‹์—์„œ ํ–‰ํ•ด์ง„ ์ „๋‹ฌ์—์„œ ๊ฐœ๋ช…์ด ๋ฐœํ‘œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ™œ๋™ ์ค‘์˜ ๊ทธ๋ฃน์ด ๊ฐœ๋ช…ํ•ด ใ€ˆ์‚ฌ์นด๋ฏธ์น˜ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆใ€‰ ์ค‘ ์—ญ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ฒ˜์Œ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ฐœ๋ช… ์ „์˜ ใ€ˆํžˆ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋‚˜ ์ผ€์•ผํ‚ค์ž์นด46ใ€‰๋Š” ์ผ€์•ผํ‚ค์ž์นด46(ํ˜„ ์‚ฌ์ฟ ๋ผ์ž์นด46)์˜ 2๊ตฐ์  ์กด์žฌ๋กœ์„œ ๊ฒฐ์„ฑ๋˜์–ด ๋ณด๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์„ ํ–‰๋ณตํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•˜๋Š” ใ€ˆํ•ดํ”ผ ์•„์šฐ๋ผใ€‰๋ฅผ ๋‚ด๊ฑธ๊ณ  ํ™œ๋™ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ง๋ถ™์—ฌ ์‹ ๊ทธ๋ฃน๋ช…์œผ๋กœ์„œ ใ€ˆํžˆ๋‚˜ํƒ€์ž์นดใ€‰๋ฅผ ์ฑ„์šฉํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์— ๋Œ€ํ•˜์—ฌ๋Š” ์•„ํ‚ค๋ชจํ†  ์•ผ์Šค์‹œ์˜ ์ œ์•ˆ์œผ๋กœ ๋„์ฟ„๋„ ๋ฏธ๋‚˜ํ† ๊ตฌ ๋ฏธํƒ€์— ์‹ค์žฌํ•˜๋Š” ใ€ˆํœด์šฐ๊ฐ€(ๆ—ฅๅ‘ : ์ง€๊ธˆ์˜ ๋ฏธ์•ผ์žํ‚คํ˜„์— ์žˆ๋˜ ์˜› ์ฟ ๋‹ˆ)์ž์นดใ€‰๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ํžŒํŠธ๋ฅผ ๋”ฐ์™€ ใ€ˆํžˆ๋‚˜ํƒ€(ๆ—ฅๅ‘ : ์ผ๋ณธ์–ด๋กœ ์–‘์ง€, ์–‘๋‹ฌ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๋œป)์ž์นด๋กœ ์ฝ๊ฒŒํ•˜์žใ€‰๋ผ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฒฐ์ •๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฃน ์ปฌ๋Ÿฌ๋Š” ใ€ˆํ•˜๋Š˜์ƒ‰ใ€‰์œผ๋กœ ใ€ˆํ•˜๋Š˜์„ ๋†’๊ฒŒ ๋‚  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋„๋กใ€‰์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์˜๋ฏธ๋„ ๋„ฃ์–ด ๋ถ™์—ฌ์กŒ๋‹ค. ์•ฝ๋ ฅ ํžˆ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋‚˜ ์ผ€์•ผํ‚ค์ž์นด46 ์‹œ๋Œ€ 2015๋…„ 11์›” 30์ผ(29์ผ ์‹ฌ์•ผ), ใ€Š์ผ€์•ผํ‚ค๋ผ๊ณ  ์“ธ ์ˆ˜ ์—†์–ด?ใ€‹์˜ ๋ฐฉ์†ก ์ค‘ ์‹ ๋ฉค๋ฒ„ ๋‚˜๊ฐ€ํ•˜๋งˆ ๋„ค๋ฃจ์˜ ์ถ”๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ๋ฐœํ‘œ. ๋‹จ, ๋‚˜๊ฐ€ํ•˜๋งˆ ๋„ค๋ฃจ๋Š” ์ผ€์•ผํ‚ค์ž์นด46์˜ ์–ธ๋” ๊ทธ๋ฃน์— ํ•ด๋‹นํ•˜๋Š” ใ€ˆํžˆ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋‚˜ ์ผ€์•ผํ‚ค์ž์นด46(ใ‘ใ‚„ใๅ‚46)ใ€‰๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ํ™œ๋™ ๊ฐœ์‹œ. ๋™์‹œ์— ใ€ˆํžˆ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋‚˜ ์ผ€์•ผํ‚ค์ž์นด46ใ€‰์˜ ๋ฉค๋ฒ„ ์ถ”๊ฐ€ ๋ชจ์ง‘๋„ ๋ฐœํ‘œ. 2016๋…„ 5์›” 8์ผ, ใ€ˆํžˆ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋‚˜ ์ผ€์•ผํ‚ค์ž์นด46ใ€‰ ํ•ฉ๊ฒฉ์ž 11๋ช…์ด ๊ฒฐ์ •. 10์›” 28์ผ, ์ฒซ ๋‹จ๋… ์ด๋ฒคํŠธ ใ€Šํžˆ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋‚˜ ์˜ค๋ชจํ…Œ๋‚˜์‹œํšŒใ€‹(์•„์นด์‚ฌ์นด BLITZ)๋ฅผ ์š”๊ธˆ 500์—”์— ๊ฐœ์ตœ. 2017๋…„ 6์›” 2์ผ, ํžˆ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋‚˜ ์ผ€์•ผํ‚ค์ž์นด46 ์ถ”๊ฐ€ ๋ฉค๋ฒ„ ์˜ค๋””์…˜์ด ๊ฐœ์ตœ๊ฐ€ ๋๋‹ค. 8์›” 15์ผ, ํžˆ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋‚˜ ์ผ€์•ผํ‚ค์ž์นด46 ์ถ”๊ฐ€ ๋ฉค๋ฒ„ ํ•ฉ๊ฒฉ์ž 9๋ช…์ด ๊ฒฐ์ •๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 9์›” 24์ผ, ๋‚˜๊ฐ€ํ•˜๋งˆ ๋„ค๋ฃจ ํžˆ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋‚˜ ์ผ€์•ผํ‚ค์ž์นด46 ๊ฒธ์ž„ํ•ด์ œ, ์ผ€์•ผํ‚ค์ž์นด46 ๋ถ€์ž„. 2018๋…„ 4์›” 9์ผ(8์ผ ์‹ฌ์•ผ), ํžˆ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋‚˜ ์ผ€์•ผํ‚ค์ž์นด46 ์ฒซ ๊ณ ์ • TV ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ ใ€Šํžˆ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋‚˜ ์˜ค์‹œใ€‹์˜ ๋ฐฉ์†ก์„ ์‹œ์ž‘. 6์›” 20์ผ, ํžˆ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋‚˜ ์ผ€์•ผํ‚ค์ž์นด46์˜ ๋ฐ๋ท” ์•จ๋ฒ” ใ€ˆ๋‹ฌ๋ ค๊ฐ€๋Š” ์ˆœ๊ฐ„ใ€‰์„ ๋ฐœ๋งค. ์—ฌ๋ฆ„, ๋…ธ๊ธฐ์ž์นด46, ์ผ€์•ผํ‚ค์ž์นด46, ํžˆ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋‚˜ ์ผ€์•ผํ‚ค์ž์นด46์˜ ์‚ฌ์นด๋ฏธ์น˜ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ 3 ๊ทธ๋ฃน ํ•ฉ๋™ ์˜ค๋””์…˜์„ ๊ฐœ์ตœ. 11์›” 29์ผ, ์‚ฌ์นด๋ฏธ์น˜ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ 3 ๊ทธ๋ฃน ํ•ฉ๋™ ์˜ค๋””์…˜์˜ ํ•ฉ๊ฒฉ์ž 39๋ช…์˜ ๋ฐฐ์†์ฒ˜๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœํ‘œ๋˜์–ด, 3๊ธฐ์ƒ๋กœ์„œ 1๋ช…์ด ๊ฐ€์ž…ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 12์›” 10์ผ, ์ผ๋ณธ ๊ฐ€์ˆ˜ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ๋กœ์„œ Mnet์˜ ใ€Š2018 MAMA PREMIERE IN KOREAใ€‹์— ์ฐธ์—ฌ. ๋ฒ ์ŠคํŠธ ๋‰ด ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ ์•„ํ‹ฐ์ŠคํŠธ ์ผ๋ณธ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์— ์ˆ˜์ƒ. ๊ฐ™์€ ๋‚ , ์ผ๋ณธ ๋ฌด๋„๊ด€์—์„œ ใ€Š์˜ค๋ชจํ…Œ๋‚˜์‹œํšŒใ€‹๋ฅผ ๊ฐœ์ตœํ•ด, 3๊ธฐ์ƒ 1๋ช…์ด ํ”ผ๋กœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํžˆ๋‚˜ํƒ€์ž์นด46 ์‹œ๋Œ€ 2019๋…„ 2์›” 11์ผ, ใ€Šํžˆ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋‚˜๋ถ€ํ„ฐ์˜ ์†Œ์‹ใ€‹์„ SHOWROOM์—์„œ ์ฐฉ์‹ ํ•ด, ใ€ˆํžˆ๋‚˜ํƒ€์ž์นด46(ๆ—ฅๅ‘ๅ‚46)ใ€‰์— ๊ทธ๋ฃน๋ช… ๊ฐœ๋ช…์„ ๋ฐœํ‘œ. ์‚ฌ์นด๋ฏธ์น˜ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ฒ˜์Œ. 3์›” 5์ผ ยท 6์ผ์— ์š”์ฝ”ํ•˜๋งˆ ์•„๋ ˆ๋‚˜์—์„œ ใ€Šํžˆ๋‚˜ํƒ€์ž์นด46 ๋ฐ๋ท” ์นด์šดํŠธ ๋ผ์ด๋ธŒ!!ใ€‹๋ฅผ ๊ฐœ์ตœ. 3์›” 27์ผ, ํžˆ๋‚˜ํƒ€์ž์นด46์˜ ๋ฐ๋ท” ์‹ฑ๊ธ€ ใ€ˆํฅใ€‰์„ ๋ฐœ๋งค. 4์›” 1์ผ, ใ€Šํžˆ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋‚˜ ์˜ค์‹œใ€‹์˜ ๋ฐฉ์†ก์„ ์ข…๋ฃŒ. 4์›” 8์ผ(7์ผ ์‹ฌ์•ผ), ํžˆ๋‚˜ํƒ€์ž์นด46์˜ ๊ทธ๋ฃน๋ช… ๊ฐœ๋ช… ์ฒซ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ ใ€Šํžˆ๋‚˜ํƒ€์ž์นด์—์„œ ๋งŒ๋‚ฉ์‹œ๋‹คใ€‹์˜ ๋ฐฉ์†ก์„ ์‹œ์ž‘. 11์›” 14์ผ, ใ€Š์ œ70ํšŒ NHK ํ™๋ฐฑ๊ฐ€ํ•ฉ์ „ใ€‹ ์ถœ์žฅ(์ถœ์—ฐ)์ด ๊ฒฐ์ •๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 12์›” 31์ผ, ใ€Š์ œ70ํšŒ NHK ํ™๋ฐฑ๊ฐ€ํ•ฉ์ „ใ€‹ ์ฒซ ์ถœ์žฅ. 2020๋…„ 2์›” 15์ผ, ์‚ฌ์นด๋ฏธ์น˜ ์—ฐ์ˆ˜์ƒ ๋ฉค๋ฒ„ ์ค‘ ์ •์‹์œผ๋กœ ๊ทธ๋ฃน ๋ฐฐ์†๋˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ฐœํ‘œ. ๋™๋…„ 2์›” 16์ผ์—๋Š” ใ€Š์‚ฌ์นด๋ฏธ์น˜ ์—ฐ์ˆ˜์ƒ ๋ฐฐ์†๋ฐœํ‘œ SHOWROOMใ€‹์—์„œ 3๊ธฐ์ƒ์— 3๋ช…์ด ๋ฐฐ์†๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 12์›” 31์ผ, ใ€Š์ œ71ํšŒ NHK ํ™๋ฐฑ๊ฐ€ํ•ฉ์ „ใ€‹ ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ์ถœ์žฅ. 2021๋…„ 12์›” 31์ผ, ใ€Š์ œ72ํšŒ NHK ํ™๋ฐฑ๊ฐ€ํ•ฉ์ „ใ€‹ ์„ธ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ์ถœ์žฅ. 2022๋…„ 3์›” 7์ผ, ์‹ ๋ฉค๋ฒ„ ์˜ค๋””์…˜ ๊ฐœ์‹œ. 9์›” 21์ผ, 4๊ธฐ์ƒ ๋ฉค๋ฒ„ ์˜ค๋””์…˜ ํ•ฉ๊ฒฉ์ž 12๋ช…์˜ ๊ฐ€์ž…์„ ๋ฐœํ‘œ. 12์›” 31์ผ, ใ€Š์ œ73ํšŒ NHK ํ™๋ฐฑ๊ฐ€ํ•ฉ์ „ใ€‹ ๋„ค ๋ฒˆ์งธ ์ถœ์žฅ. 2023๋…„ 2์›” 11์ผ ยท 12์ผ, ๋งˆ์ฟ ํ•˜๋ฆฌ ๋ฉง์„ธ ์ด๋ฒคํŠธ ํ™€์—์„œ ใ€Šํžˆ๋‚˜ํƒ€์ž์นด46 4๊ธฐ์ƒ ์˜ค๋ชจํ…Œ๋‚˜์‹œํšŒใ€‹๋ฅผ ๊ฐœ์ตœ. ๋ฉค๋ฒ„ ํ˜„ ๋ฉค๋ฒ„ ์ „ ๋ฉค๋ฒ„ ์„ ๋ฐœ โ—Ž - ์„ผํ„ฐ โ—‹ - ํ”„๋ก ํŠธ โ–ฒ - 2์—ด โ—ผ๏ธŽ - 3์—ด ์Œ๋ฐ˜ ๋ชฉ๋ก ์‹ฑ๊ธ€ ํžˆ๋‚˜ํƒ€์ž์นด46 ์•จ๋ฒ” ํžˆ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋‚˜ ์ผ€์•ผํ‚ค์ž์นด46 ํžˆ๋‚˜ํƒ€์ž์นด46 ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์ž‘ํ’ˆ ์‹ฑ๊ธ€ ํžˆ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋‚˜ ์ผ€์•ผํ‚ค์ž์นด46 ์•จ๋ฒ” ํžˆ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋‚˜ ์ผ€์•ผํ‚ค์ž์นด46 ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ๋…ธ๊ธฐ์ž์นด46 ์‚ฌ์ฟ ๋ผ์ž์นด46 AKB48 ๊ฐ์ฃผ ๋‚ด์šฉ์ฃผ ์ถœ์ฒ˜์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ํžˆ๋‚˜ํƒ€์ž์นด46 ๊ณต์‹ ์‚ฌ์ดํŠธ ํžˆ๋‚˜ํƒ€์ž์นด46 - ์†Œ๋‹ˆ ๋ฎค์ง ์—”ํ„ฐํ…Œ์ธ๋จผํŠธ ์žฌํŒฌ ๋‚ด ์‚ฌ์ดํŠธ ํžˆ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋‚˜ ์ผ€์•ผํ‚ค์ž์นด46 - ์†Œ๋‹ˆ ๋ฎค์ง ์—”ํ„ฐํ…Œ์ธ๋จผํŠธ ์žฌํŒฌ ๋‚ด ์‚ฌ์ดํŠธ ํžˆ๋‚˜ํƒ€์ž์นด46 ๊ณต์‹ ๋ธ”๋กœ๊ทธ (2019๋…„ 3์›” 28์ผ ~ ) ย (์ผ๋ณธ๋งŒ ํ•ด๋‹น) (2023๋…„ 4์›” 19์ผ ~ ) ํžˆ๋‚˜ํƒ€์ž์นด46 ร— SHOWROOM ๋ฉค๋ฒ„ ๊ฐœ์ธ ์ฐฉ์‹  - SHOWROOM ์ผ๋ณธ์˜ ํŒ ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน ์ผ๋ณธ์˜ ๊ฑธ ๊ทธ๋ฃน 2015๋…„ ๊ฒฐ์„ฑ๋œ ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน ์ผ๋ณธ์˜ ์•„์ด๋Œ ๊ทธ๋ฃน 10์ธ์กฐ ์ด์ƒ ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน 2010๋…„๋Œ€ ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน 2020๋…„๋Œ€ ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน ์†Œ๋‹ˆ ๋ฎค์ง ์—”ํ„ฐํ…Œ์ธ๋จผํŠธ (์ผ๋ณธ)์˜ ์Œ์•…๊ฐ€ Mnet ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ ๋ฎค์ง ์–ด์›Œ๋“œ ์ˆ˜์ƒ ์Œ์•…๊ฐ€ NHK ํ™๋ฐฑ๊ฐ€ํ•ฉ์ „ ์ถœ์—ฐ์ž
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hinatazaka46
Hinatazaka46
is a Japanese idol group produced by Yasushi Akimoto. The group was established as a subgroup of Keyakizaka46 named Hiragana Keyakizaka46 on November 30, 2015, and was renamed and spun off into its own group on February 11, 2019. The group's name is adopted from the alternate reading of Hyลซgazaka Street in Mita, Minato-ku, Tokyo, following the custom of naming groups after sloping streets in the Sakamichi Series. The captain of the group is Kumi Sasaki and fans of the group have been named , or the sun. As a subgroup of Keyakizaka46, Hiragana Keyakizaka46's works were released as part of the main group's releases, except for the album Hashiridasu Shunkan (2018). As of June 2022, Hinatazaka46 has released seven singles and one album, and their first single, "Kyun", is the best-selling debut single by a female artist in Japan. Members of the group have also appeared in television dramas such as Re:Mind (2017), Dasada (2020), and Koeharu! (2021), the weekly variety show Hinatazaka de Aimashล, as well as two theatrically released documentaries. History 2015โ€“2018: Hiragana Keyakizaka46 The group was established as on November 30, 2015, as a subgroup of Keyakizaka46, with their name written in hiragana as opposed to kanji. Colloquially, Hiragana Keyakizaka46 was also known as Hiragana Keyaki, while the main Keyakizaka46 group was known as Kanji Keyaki. At its founding, Hiragana Keyakizaka46 consisted of only one member, Neru Nagahama, who did not participate in the Keyakizaka46 final audition due to her parents' earlier disapproval and was assigned to the subgroup as a "special case"; she would later be appointed a member of both groups and join the main Keyakizaka46 lineup starting from their second single, "Sekai ni wa Ai Shika Nai" (2016). Auditions were held soon after for Hiragana Keyakizaka46, and the first generation of eleven members joined the group in May 2016. The group was initially announced as the "under" group to Keyakizaka46 with the possibility of its members also being selected for the main group's song lineup, a system already practiced by Nogizaka46. Due to the two groups' increasing activities, Nagahama left Hiragana Keyakizaka46 in September 2017, becoming only a member of the main group. A second generation of nine people was added in August 2017, and a third, again consisting of only Hinano Kamimura, was added in November 2018 through a Sakamichi Series joint audition. As a subgroup, Hiragana Keyakizaka46 released their music as part of the main group's singles and albums. Their first release as a group is the B-side "Hiragana Keyaki" () from "Sekai ni wa Ai Shika Nai", although Nagahama did perform from Keyakizaka46's debut single "Silent Majority" (2016) with several Keyakizaka46 members. In concerts, the two groups often performed together, but Hiragana Keyakizaka46 also held independent concerts, including a nationwide Zepp tour in 2017 and a three-day Nippon Budokan performance in January 2018, after Keyakizaka46 pulled out due to lead singer Yurina Hirate's injury. Hiragana Keyakizaka46 also released an independent album in 2018 titled Hashiridasu Shunkan. In terms of variety shows, Hiragana Keyakizaka46 initially appeared in Keyakizaka46's shows Keyakitte, Kakenai? and KeyaBingo!, and started their own show Hiragana Oshi in 2018. The first generation also appeared in the drama series Re:Mind in 2017. From April to May 2018, Hiragana Keyakizaka46 members performed in the stage play Ayumi written by , where the characters (which consist of people of various ages and genders, as well as animals) was portrayed by different members on every scene change. The play was released on Hulu Japan in February 2021. 2019โ€“present: Reborn as Hinatazaka46 Hiragana Keyakizaka46 became an independent group on February 11, 2019, and was renamed Hinatazaka46. The new name is an alternate reading of street in Minato-ku, Tokyo, following the custom of Sakamichi Series of having its groups named after sloping streets. The group's official Twitter and TikTok accounts were launched shortly, and their variety TV program was renamed to Hinatazaka de Aimashล. They also announced in a Showroom live broadcast that their fandom name would be Ohisama (ใŠใฒใ•ใพ), which is a slang for the Sun as "just like a cannot exist without the Sun, [Hinatazaka46] cannot exist without the fans". Their first single, "Kyun", was released on March 27, 2019, and surpassed 476,000 copies sold within the first week. The single became the best-selling debut single by a female artist in Japan, a record previously held by Keyakizaka46's "Silent Majority". "Kyun" also won the Best Choreography award at the 2019 MTV Video Music Awards. On September 24, a rhythm game titled Uni's On Air was released that featured Keyakizaka46 and Hinatazaka46. Hinatazaka46 attended the 70th NHK Kลhaku Uta Gassen for the first time in the group's history, where they performed "Kyun". After that, "Azato Kawaii" was shown at the 71st NHK Kลhaku Uta Gassen, and "Kimi Shika Katan" was performed at the 72nd NHK Kลhaku Uta Gassen, and "Kitsune" was performed at the 73rd NHK Kลhaku Uta Gassen. On January 16, 2020, the members of Hinatazaka46 were featured in a television series titled Dasada, with Nao Kosaka as the main protagonist. On February 16, 2020, three members were added to the third generation from the remaining unassigned members of the 2018 Sakamichi Series joint audition, bringing that generation up to four people. On July 31, 2020, Hinatazaka46 live streamed a concert titled Hinatazaka46 Live Online, Yes! With You!, where they announced that their first studio album will be released on September 23. Their mascot character, a sky blue bird named Poka, was introduced at the live streamed Hinakuri (Hina Christmas) 2020 concert on December 24. On March 7, 2022, the group announced the audition for their fourth generation members with applications starting that day and screening taking place on April 4. Twelve members passed the audition out of 51,038 participants, and they were gradually introduced to the public from September 22 to October 3. They would make their musical debut with the song "Blueberry & Raspberry", included on the group's 8th single, "Tsuki to Hoshi ga Odoru Midnight". It was first shown at the Happy Smile Tour 2022 in Tokyo held on November 12โ€“13, 2022. On March 30โ€“31, 2022, the group held their long-sought first Tokyo Dome concert, , attended by about 100,000 people in two days. The concert was originally scheduled for 2020, but postponed twice due to the COVID-19 pandemic. From March 30, 2023, the Hinatazaka46 official website will start supporting in Japanese, English, Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, and Korean. On April 19, 2023, the group announced the launching of the Hinatazaka Channel on YouTube for content other than music. Members Since its founding, Hinatazaka46 has had a total of 37 members from four generations. 31 of those members are still in the group, though one has announced graduation. If third generation members are marked with an asterisk (*), it means that they joined after the initial third generation members on February 15, 2020. Past members Notable subgroups These are the subgroups of Hinatazaka46 that have appeared in events independent of the group. Hana-chans Members: Suzuka Tomita, Konoka Matsuda is an acoustic guitar duo unit, named after the kanji in both members' names. Their first song as a duo, , was released as part of Hinatazaka46's third single. On June 27, 2021, Hana-chans held their first independent live show on MTV Japan, titled MTV Acoustic Flowers - Until Full Bloom "Bell & Like"-, in which they covered Hinatazaka46 songs and Taylor Swift's "We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together". The performance was originally planned as a concert scheduled for March 3, 2020, but was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic; "Until Full Bloom" was a reference to the postponed event, while and were references to the duo's given names. On October 5, the duo served as the opening act for MTV Live Match 2021, and also performed as part of Hinatazaka46 for the main event. Saitama Trio/Color Chart Members: Miku Kanemura, Akari Nibu, Miho Watanabe (before graduation) The , or , was the unofficial name for the three Hinatazaka46 members, all from the second generation, who are natives of Saitama Prefecture. In September 2018, they served as one-day traffic chiefs of the Saitama Prefectural Police to promote traffic safety. In November 2020, they joined the , a public relations group consisting of popular artists from the prefecture. In October 2020, the trio started the radio program on Tokyo FM; the supermarket chain Belc, which sponsors the program, subsequently released limited edition food products in collaboration with them. They also became voice actresses for the first animated miniseries based on the character Pickles the Frog, which first became associated with Hiragana Keyakizaka46 in 2017 after Kanemura gave a Pickles doll to each second generation member as Christmas presents. In February 2021, the Saitama Trio were voted the most wanted unit (subgroup with their own songs) by fans on a Twitter campaign to commemorate Hinatazaka46's second debut anniversary. Hinatazaka46's sixth single, released in October 2021, would include their first song as a trio, , performed under the unit name ; the name is a reference to a nickname for Saitama Prefecture, . Discography Studio albums Singles Promotional singles Songs from Keyakizaka46's releases Guest appearances Other charted songs Videography Video albums Tours and concerts Hinatazaka46 holds several regular annual concerts. The concerts, held in March or April, are to celebrate their debut anniversary on March 27, 2019. The W-Keyaki Festival (pronounced "Double Keyaki Festival") concerts in the summer were held jointly with Sakurazaka46 in 2021 and 2022 as the two groups formerly known as Keyakizaka46, and were the continuation of the concerts held annually by that group at the Fuji-Q Highland Conifer Forest until 2019. are held on or around Christmas, and was first held as the concert in 2018. Aside from these, there have also been various non-regular concerts, tours, and other live events. Concerts Hiragana Keyakizaka46 (March 21โ€“22, 2017: Zepp Tokyo) (January 30โ€“February 1, 2018: Nippon Budokan) (December 11โ€“13, 2018: Nippon Budokan) Hinatazaka46 (March 5โ€“6, 2019: Yokohama Arena) (September 26, 2019: Saitama Super Arena) (Christmas Live) (December 17โ€“18, 2019: Makuhari Messe International Exhibition Hall Hall 4โ€“6, second day also livestreamed) (December 24, 2020, only livestreamed) (December 24โ€“25, 2021: Makuhari Messe International Exhibition Hall 9โ€“11 Hall, both days also livestreamed) (December 17โ€“18, 2022: Ariake Arena, second day also livestreamed) (Anniversary Live) (March 31, 2020: livestreaming only on YouTube) (March 27, 2021: livestreamed concert with limited audience seats, 746 seats were available) (March 30โ€“31, 2022: Tokyo Dome, both days also livestreamed) Hinatazaka46 4th Anniversary Memorial Live ใ€œ 4 Kaime no Hinatansaiใ€œ (ๆ—ฅๅ‘ๅ‚46 4ๅ‘จๅนด่จ˜ๅฟตMEMORIAL LIVE ๏ฝž4ๅ›ž็›ฎใฎใฒใช่ช•็ฅญ๏ฝž) (April 1โ€“2, 2023: Yokohama Stadium, second day also livestreamed) ๏ผˆonly livestreamed๏ผ‰ (March 6, 2021: Hikari TV Channel) ๏ผˆDecember 22, 2022: Makuhari Messe International Exhibition Hall 9 Hall๏ผ‰ (Joint event with Sakurazaka46: Fuji-Q Conifer Forest) 2021 (July 10โ€“11, 2021, both days also livestreamed) 2022 (July 21ใƒป23, 2022: Live streaming only on the second day) (July 31, 2020, only livestreamed) (June 28, 2022: Tokyo International Forum, Hall A, also livestreamed) (July 19, 2023: Tokyo International Forum, Hall A) Collaboration Hinatazaka46ร—Dasada Hinatazaka46ร—Dasada Live & Fashion Show (February 4โ€“5, 2020, Yokohama Arena) Hinatazaka46ร—Dasada Fall & Winter Collection (October 15, 2020, only livestreamed) Hinatazaka46ร—Koeharu! Hinatazaka46ร—Koeharu Liveshow! (November 5, 2021, only livestreamed) Tours Hiragana Keyakizaka46 Hiragana Zenkoku Tour 2017 The took place from May 31 to December 12. Hashiridasu Shunkan Tour 2018 The took place from June 4 to July 10. Hinatazaka46 Zenkoku Ohisama ka Keikaku 2021 The took place from September 15 to October 20. (October 20, 2021: Nippon Gaishi Hall, also livestreamed) Happy Smile Tour 2022 The Happy Smile Tour 2022 took place from September 1. (November 13, 2022: Yoyogi National Gymnasium 1st Gymnasium, also livestreamed) Filmography Television Dramas Variety shows Talk shows Animation Film Documentary Theatre Radio Games Attraction Fashion shows Tokyo Girls Collection GirlsAward Events Bibliography Books Photo book Biography Manga Newspaper Awards Notes References External links Japanese idol groups Japanese girl groups Sakamichi Series Musical groups established in 2015 2015 establishments in Japan
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EB%A6%AC%EC%82%AC%20%EB%94%94%20%EB%B0%B0%EB%82%98
๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜
๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋งˆ๋ฆฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜(, 1984๋…„ 11์›” 14์ผ ~ )๋Š” ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ ํฌ์ง€์…˜์€ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์ˆ˜์ด๋‹ค. ํ˜„์žฌ๋Š” ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„ W๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์˜ ์‹œ๋“œ๋‹ˆ FC์—์„œ ํ™œ๋™ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํด๋Ÿฝ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜๋Š” ์›จ์Šคํ„ด์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์ฃผ ํผ์Šค์—์„œ ํƒœ์–ด๋‚˜์„œ ํผ์Šค์—์„œ ๋‚จ์„œ์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ ์•ฝ 30๋ถ„ ์ •๋„ ๋–จ์–ด์ง„ ๊ณณ์— ์œ„์น˜ํ•œ ์ž‘์€ ํ•ญ๊ตฌ ๋„์‹œ์ธ ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋งจํ‹€์—์„œ ์„ฑ์žฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜๋Š” ์–ด๋ฆฐ ์‹œ์ ˆ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ถ•๊ตฌ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์‚ฌ๋ž‘์„ ํ‚ค์›Œ๊ฐ€๋ฉด์„œ ์ถ•๊ตฌ๊ณต๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์ž๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๊ฐ€ ๋งŽ์•˜๊ณ  ์ Š์€ ์‹œ์ ˆ์—๋Š” ๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ์—์„œ ๋™์ƒ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ์ฆ๊ธฐ๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๊ฐ€ ๋งŽ์•˜๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜๋Š” 2006๋…„ 10์›”๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2007๋…„ 3์›”๊นŒ์ง€ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ FA ์—ฌ์ž ๋‚ด์…”๋„๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ ๋™์ปค์Šคํ„ฐ ๋กœ๋ฒ„์Šค ๋ฒจ์Šค ์†Œ์†์œผ๋กœ ํ™œ์•ฝํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 2008๋…„์—๋Š” ์Šค์›จ๋ด ๋‹ค๋ง์Šค๋ฒค์Šค์นธ์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ AIK๋กœ ์ด์ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2008๋…„ 11์›”์—๋Š” ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ํผ์Šค ๊ธ€๋กœ๋ฆฌ๋กœ ์ด์ ํ–ˆ๊ณ  2008๋…„ 11์›” 8์ผ์— ์—ด๋ฆฐ ๋ฉœ๋ฒ„๋ฅธ ๋น…ํ† ๋ฆฌ์™€์˜ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ์ฒ˜์Œ ์ถœ์ „ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„ W๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๋ฌด๋Œ€์— ๋ฐ๋ท”ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜๋Š” 2008๋…„ 9์›”์— ์—ด๋ฆฐ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ์—ฌ์ž ํ”„๋กœ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์ธํ„ฐ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ๋“œ๋ž˜ํ”„ํŠธ๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด 18์œ„์— ์ง€๋ช…๋˜๋ฉด์„œ ์›Œ์‹ฑํ„ด ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋ค์— ์ง€๋ช…๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ  2009๋…„ 3์›”์— ์›Œ์‹ฑํ„ด ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋ค๊ณผ ์ •์‹ ๊ณ„์•ฝ์„ ์ฒด๊ฒฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2011๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ์›Œ์‹ฑํ„ด ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋ค์˜ ํ›„๊ณ„ ๊ตฌ๋‹จ์ธ ๋งค์ง์žญ ์†Œ์†์œผ๋กœ ํ™œ์•ฝํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ์—ฌ์ž ํ”„๋กœ ์ถ•๊ตฌ๋Š” 2011 ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ๋์œผ๋กœ ํ์ง€๋˜๊ณ  ๋งŒ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜๋Š” 2012๋…„์— ์Šค์›จ๋ด์˜ ๋ฆฐ์…ฐํ•‘ FC์™€์˜ ๊ณ„์•ฝ์„ ์ฒด๊ฒฐํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋‹ค๋ง์Šค๋ฒค์Šค์นธ ๋ฌด๋Œ€์— ๋ณต๊ท€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฐ์…ฐํ•‘ FC๋Š” 2012 ๋‹ค๋ง์Šค๋ฒค์Šค์นธ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์—์„œ 11์Šน 6๋ฌด 5ํŒจ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ 3์œ„๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๊ณ  ๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜๋Š” ์ „์ฒด 22๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ 18๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ์ถœ์ „ํ•˜์—ฌ 7๊ณจ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜๋Š” 2013๋…„ 2์›”์— ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ์Šค์นด์ด ๋ธ”๋ฃจ๋กœ ์ด์ ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ์œ„๋ฏผ์Šค ์‚ฌ์ปค ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๋ฌด๋Œ€์— ๋ฐ๋ท”ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์Šค์นด์ด ๋ธ”๋ฃจ๋Š” 2013 ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ์œ„๋ฏผ์Šค ์‚ฌ์ปค ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ •๊ทœ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์—์„œ 10์Šน 6๋ฌด 6ํŒจ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ 4์œ„๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๊ณ  ๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜๋Š” 17๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ 16๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ์„ ๋ฐœ ์ถœ์ „ํ•˜์—ฌ 5๊ณจ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜๋Š” 2013๋…„ 10์›”๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2017๋…„ 4์›”๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ํด๋Ÿฝ์ธ ๋ณด์Šคํ„ด ๋ธŒ๋ ˆ์ด์ปค์Šค, ์›Œ์‹ฑํ„ด ์Šคํ”ผ๋ฆฟ, ์˜ฌ๋žœ๋„ ํ”„๋ผ์ด๋“œ, ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ํด๋Ÿฝ์ธ ๋ฉœ๋ฒ„๋ฅธ ๋น…ํ† ๋ฆฌ, ๋ฉœ๋ฒ„๋ฅธ ์‹œํ‹ฐ, ์บ”๋ฒ„๋ผ ์œ ๋‚˜์ดํ‹ฐ๋“œ๋ฅผ ์˜ค๊ฐ€๋ฉด์„œ ํ™œ์•ฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2017๋…„ 4์›”์—๋Š” ์‚ฌ์šฐ์Šค ๋ฉœ๋ฒ„๋ฅธ์œผ๋กœ ์ด์ ํ–ˆ๊ณ  2017๋…„ 10์›”์—๋Š” ์‹œ๋“œ๋‹ˆ FC๋กœ ์ด์ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜๋Š” 2004๋…„์— ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ ๋ฐœํƒ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 2004๋…„ ์•„ํ…Œ๋„ค ํ•˜๊ณ„ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ๋ณธ์„ ์—์„œ๋Š” 4๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ์ถœ์ „ํ•˜์—ฌ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ 8๊ฐ• ์ง„์ถœ์— ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜๋Š” ์ค‘๊ตญ์—์„œ ๊ฐœ์ตœ๋œ 2007๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต์—์„œ ๋…ธ๋ฅด์›จ์ด์™€์˜ ์กฐ๋ณ„ ์˜ˆ์„  ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ(์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„๋Š” ๋…ธ๋ฅด์›จ์ด์™€ 1-1 ๋ฌด์Šน๋ถ€๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•จ)์—์„œ 1๊ณจ, ๊ฐ€๋‚˜์™€์˜ ์กฐ๋ณ„ ์˜ˆ์„  ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ(์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„๋Š” ๊ฐ€๋‚˜์— 4-1 ์Šน๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•จ)์—์„œ 2๊ณจ, ๋ธŒ๋ผ์งˆ๊ณผ์˜ 8๊ฐ•์ „ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ(์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„๋Š” ๋ธŒ๋ผ์งˆ์— 2-3์œผ๋กœ ํŒจ๋ฐฐํ•จ)์—์„œ 1๊ณจ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜์—ฌ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ 8๊ฐ• ์ง„์ถœ์— ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜๋Š” ํ•ด๋‹น ๋Œ€ํšŒ์—์„œ ์ž์‹ ์ด ๊ธฐ๋กํ•œ 4๊ณจ์ด ๋Œ€ํšŒ๊ฐ€ ์—ด๋ฆฌ๊ธฐ 3๊ฐœ์›” ์ „์— ์‚ฌ๋งํ•œ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€์—๊ฒŒ ๋ฐ”์น˜๋Š” ๊ณจ์ด์—ˆ์Œ์„ ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜๋Š” ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„๋กœ ๊ท€๊ตญํ•œ ์ดํ›„์— ์ฃผ์œ ์†Œ์—์„œ ๊ทผ๋ฌดํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜๋Š” ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์—์„œ ๊ฐœ์ตœ๋œ 2010๋…„ AFC ์—ฌ์ž ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต์—์„œ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ฒซ AFC ์—ฌ์ž ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต ์šฐ์Šน์— ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜๋Š” 2010๋…„ 9์›”์— ์ž์‹ ์˜ ํŽ˜์ด์Šค๋ถ ๊ณ„์ •์— ๋ฐœ๊ธฐํ•œ ์Œ๊ฒฝ ์‚ฌ์ง„์ด ๊ฒŒ์žฌ๋œ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์„ ๊ฒฝํ—˜ํ–ˆ๊ณ  ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์—ฐ๋งน์— ์ž์‹ ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ชจ์š•์ ์ธ ์‚ฌ์ง„์„ ์‚ญ์ œํ•ด ์ค„ ๊ฒƒ์„ ์š”์ฒญํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜๋Š” 2011๋…„ 5์›”์— 2011๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต์„ ์ค€๋น„ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ํ›ˆ๋ จ ์บ ํ”„์—์„œ ์ผ์–ด๋‚œ ๋ถ€์ ์ ˆํ•œ ํ–‰๋™์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ํ†ฐ ์„œ๋จธ๋‹ˆ ๊ฐ๋…์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ถ•์ถœ๋‹นํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์–ผ๋งˆ ์ง€๋‚˜์ง€ ์•Š์•„์„œ ๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€์— ๋ณต๊ท€ํ–ˆ๊ณ  ๋…์ผ์—์„œ ๊ฐœ์ตœ๋œ 2011๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜๋Š” ์ ๋„ ๊ธฐ๋‹ˆ์™€์˜ ์กฐ๋ณ„ ์˜ˆ์„  ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ 1๊ณจ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ 3-1 ์Šน๋ฆฌ์— ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ–ˆ๊ณ  ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„๋Š” ํ•ด๋‹น ๋Œ€ํšŒ์—์„œ 8๊ฐ•์ „์— ์ง„์ถœํ•˜๋Š” ์„ฑ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜๋Š” 2012-13 ์‹œ์ฆŒ์—์„œ ์Šค์›จ๋ด ๋‹ค๋ง์Šค๋ฒค์Šค์นธ ๋ฌด๋Œ€๋กœ ์ด์ ํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์˜์ง€๋Š” ๊ฐ•ํ•ด์กŒ๋‹ค๋Š” ์ž…์žฅ์„ ํ‘œ๋ช…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜๋Š” 2015๋…„ 6์›” 8์ผ์— ์—ด๋ฆฐ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ๊ณผ์˜ 2015๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ์กฐ๋ณ„ ์˜ˆ์„  ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ A๋งค์น˜ 100๋ฒˆ์งธ ์ถœ์ „ ๊ธฐ๋ก์„ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฝํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„๋Š” ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์— 1-3์œผ๋กœ ํŒจ๋ฐฐํ•˜๊ณ  ๋งŒ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜๋Š” ์บ๋‚˜๋‹ค์—์„œ ๊ฐœ์ตœ๋œ 2015๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต์—์„œ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€์˜ ์ฃผ์žฅ์„ ๋งก์•˜๊ณ  ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„๋Š” ํ•ด๋‹น ๋Œ€ํšŒ์—์„œ 8๊ฐ•์ „์— ์ง„์ถœํ•˜๋Š” ์„ฑ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ์‚ฌ ๋”” ๋ฐฐ๋‚˜๋Š” 2016๋…„ ๋ฆฌ์šฐ๋ฐ์ž๋„ค์ด๋ฃจ ํ•˜๊ณ„ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ•œ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€์˜ ์ฃผ์žฅ์„ ๋งก์œผ๋ฉด์„œ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ 8๊ฐ• ์ง„์ถœ์— ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํŠนํžˆ ์งง์€ ํœด์‹ ์‹œ๊ฐ„ ๋™์•ˆ์— ์ž์‹ ์˜ ๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ๋™๋ฃŒ์˜€๋˜ ์—˜๋ฆฌ์Šค ์ผˆ๋Ÿฐ๋“œ๋‚˜์ดํŠธ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋ฌผ๋ณ‘์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žฅ๋‚œ์„ ์น˜๋Š” ์žฅ๋ฉด์„ ์—ฐ์ถœํ•˜์—ฌ ํ™”์ œ๊ฐ€ ๋˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต์—์„œ๋Š” ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ 16๊ฐ• ์ง„์ถœ์— ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ˆ˜์ƒ ํด๋Ÿฝ ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ๋ฒˆ ๋กœ์–ด W๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ ์šฐ์Šน 1ํšŒ (2010-11) ๋ฉœ๋ฒ„๋ฅธ ๋น…ํ† ๋ฆฌ W๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ ์šฐ์Šน 1ํšŒ (2013-14) ๋ฉœ๋ฒ„๋ฅธ ์‹œํ‹ฐ W๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ ์šฐ์Šน 1ํšŒ (2015-16) W๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋ฏธ์–ด์‹ญ ์šฐ์Šน 1ํšŒ (2015-16) ์‹œ๋“œ๋‹ˆ FC W๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ ์šฐ์Šน 1ํšŒ (2018-19) ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ 2010๋…„ AFC ์—ฌ์ž ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต ์šฐ์Šน 2017๋…„ ํ† ๋„ˆ๋จผํŠธ ์˜ค๋ธŒ ๋„ค์ด์…˜์Šค ์šฐ์Šน 2019๋…„ ์ปต ์˜ค์Šค ๋„ค์ด์…˜์Šค ์šฐ์Šน ๊ฐœ์ธ 2002-03 ์ค„๋ฆฌ ๋Œ๋Ÿฐ ๋ฉ”๋‹ฌ ์ˆ˜์ƒ 2002-03 ์œ„๋ฏผ์Šค ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ์‚ฌ์ปค ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๊ณจ๋“ ๋ถ€ํŠธ ์ˆ˜์ƒ 2013๋…„ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์—ฐ๋งน ์˜ฌํ•ด์˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ˆ˜์ƒ ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ 1984๋…„ ์ถœ์ƒ ์‚ด์•„์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ FIFA ์„ผ์ถ”๋ฆฌ ํด๋Ÿฝ ์—ฌ์ž ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์ˆ˜ 2004๋…„ ํ•˜๊ณ„ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 2007๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 2011๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 2015๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 2016๋…„ ํ•˜๊ณ„ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 2019๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋ฆฐ์…ฐํ•‘ FC์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์บ”๋ฒ„๋ผ ์œ ๋‚˜์ดํ‹ฐ๋“œ FC์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ A๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์œ„๋ฏผ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ์œ„๋ฏผ์Šค ์‚ฌ์ปค ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์— ๊ฑฐ์ฃผํ•œ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์ธ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ์— ๊ฑฐ์ฃผํ•œ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์ธ ์›Œ์‹ฑํ„ด ์Šคํ”ผ๋ฆฟ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋ณด์Šคํ„ด ๋ธŒ๋ ˆ์ด์ปค์Šค์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ NJ/NY ๊ณ ์„ฌ FC์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์˜ฌ๋žœ๋„ ํ”„๋ผ์ด๋“œ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ํ•ด์™ธ ์ง„์ถœ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์Šค์›จ๋ด์˜ ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ดํƒˆ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ์˜ ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์„ธ๋ฆฌ์— A (์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ)์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋‹ค๋ง์Šค๋ฒค์Šค์นธ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lisa%20De%20Vanna
Lisa De Vanna
Lisa Marie De Vanna (born 14 November 1984) is an Australian professional soccer player who plays as a forward for Perth Glory. She has previously played for Adelaide Sensation, Western Waves, Doncaster Rovers Belles, AIK, Perth Glory, Washington Freedom, Brisbane Roar, magicJack, Newcastle Jets, Linkรถping, Sky Blue FC, Melbourne Victory, Boston Breakers, Washington Spirit, Melbourne City, North Shore Mariners, Orlando Pride, Canberra United, South Melbourne, Sydney FC, and Fiorentina as well as representing the Australian national team 150 times. She is noted for her pace and dribbling skills. She has been regularly considered one of the greatest female footballers in the world; football analyst and former Socceroo Craig Foster stated that she "ran on jet-fuel; burning up twice as fast, but with incredible impact." Early life De Vanna was born in Perth, Western Australia to a Portuguese mother and an Italian father. She was born and raised in the small port city of Fremantle, located about 30 minutes southwest of Perth. De Vanna developed her love for the game of football at a young age and has said that she slept with her soccer ball and spent much of her time as a youth playing soccer in the street with her brother. De Vanna is a Portuguese speaker. Club career Doncaster Rovers Belles L.F.C., 2006โ€“07 In October 2006 De Vanna signed for Doncaster Rovers Belles, departing the English Premier League club in March 2007. AIK Fotboll Dam, 2008 De Vanna played for Swedish club AIK for the 2008 Damallsvenskan season. De Vanna had a very successful season, being the 5th highest goalscorer with 15 goals, helping AIK to their most successful season. Perth Glory, 2008โ€“09 In November 2008, De Vanna was signed to Perth Glory in the Australian W-League and made her first appearance for the club on 8 November 2008 against the Melbourne Victory. Washington Freedom / magicJack, 2009โ€“11 In September 2008, De Vanna was selected by Washington Freedom in Women's Professional Soccer. She was the 18th overall selection in the 2008 WPS International Draft. She officially signed for the Freedom in late March 2009. Through the next three years, she played for Washington Freedom and its successor magicJack in the WPS as well as Perth Glory, Brisbane Roar and Newcastle Jets in the W-League in Australia. Linkรถping FC, 2012 After the WPS suspended operations, De Vanna signed for Damallsvenskan club Linkรถpings FC. She scored five goals in her first eight games including a hat trick against Piteรฅ IF on 3 June 2012. During a match against Kopparberg/Gรถteborg FC on 14 October 2012, she scored the game-winning goal in the 82nd minute helping her team win 3โ€“2. Linkรถping finished third during the regular season with an 11โ€“6โ€“5 record. De Vanna finished the 2012 season having started in 18 of the 22 matches in which she played and scored seven goals. Sky Blue FC, 2013 On 1 February 2013, it was announced that De Vanna signed with Sky Blue FC for the inaugural season of the National Women's Soccer League, the top division in the United States. In June 2013, De Vanna scored a bicycle kick goal and was named the league's Player of the Week. Her goal garnered international attention and went viral on websites like YouTube and soccer-related websites. She was also voted NWSL Fans' Choice MVP for Week 8. During a game against the Western New York Flash on 21 July 2013, De Vanna was sidelined with a hamstring injury. De Vanna started in 16 of the 17 games in which she played and scored five goals. Sky Blue finished in fourth during the regular season with a 10โ€“6โ€“6 record. Melbourne Victory, 2013โ€“14 In October 2013, it was confirmed that De Vanna had signed for Melbourne Victory for the 2013โ€“14 W League season. Boston Breakers, 2014 On 3 March 2014, Sky Blue FC traded De Vanna to the Boston Breakers in exchange for a 2014 international roster spot and the Breakers' first-round 2015 college draft pick, which became Sarah Killion. Washington Spirit, 2014 On 18 June 2014, the Boston Breakers traded De Vanna to Washington Spirit in exchange for defender and Mexican international Bianca Sierra and the Spirit's fourth and fifth round 2015 college draft picks. Melbourne Victory, 2014โ€“15 In September 2014 it was confirmed that De Vanna signed to play with Melbourne Victory again. Melbourne City, 2015โ€“16 Having played a season with the Victory, De Vanna was lured across the city to Victory's A-League rivals, Melbourne City, becoming the brand new W-League side's very first signing. Orlando Pride, 2016 On 29 August 2016, De Vanna joined Orlando Pride. After playing three matches in the 2016 National Women's Soccer League season, she was waived by Orlando Pride before the 2017 National Women's Soccer League season. Canberra United, 2016โ€“17 In December 2016, De Vanna joined Canberra United as a guest player for the remainder of the 2016โ€“17 W-League season. South Melbourne, 2017 On 7 April 2017, De Vanna joined South Melbourne to play in the Women's National Premier League. She finished the season with 18 goals in 16 matches, including a 4-goal haul on 28 August 2017 in a 7โ€“0 rout of Bulleen Lions. Sydney FC, 2017โ€“2019 On 2 October 2017, De Vanna joined Sydney FC. Fiorentina, 2019โ€“2020 In August 2019, De Vanna joined Italian club Fiorentina. Melbourne Victory, 2020โ€“2021 In December 2020, De Vanna returned to the W-League, signing with Melbourne Victory once more. At the end of the season, she was named in the PFA's W-League Team of the Season together with five team-mates. Perth Glory, 2021โ€“present A couple of months after announcing her international retirement, De Vanna decided to return to the game, re-joining her former club Perth Glory. The decision was in part related to the efforts of coach Alex Epakis and chairman Tony Sage to foster a safe, supportive, and respectful environment at the club. International career De Vanna played four games at the 2004 Olympic Football Tournament. She scored four goals for Australia in the 2007 World Cup โ€” one in a 1โ€“1 draw against Norway, two in a 4โ€“1 victory against Ghana, and one against Brazil in her team's 2โ€“3 loss in the quarterfinals. Each goal she scored at the World Cup was dedicated to her father, who died three months before the tournament began. On 1 October 2007 Lisa was named in the FIFA's Women's World Cup All Star Team and she was also nominated for the 2007 FIFA World Player of the Year award. She was named Western Australian Sportswoman of the Year in 2007. After returning home after the World Cup De Vanna returned to a job at a petrol station. In May 2011 De Vanna was sent home from a training camp held to prepare the national team for the World Cup. Australian coach Tom Sermanni stated that the expulsion was for an unacceptable standard of behaviour. The previous September, De Vanna had been subject to a complaint after photographs involving a large inflatable penis were posted to her Facebook page. She was censured by Football Federation Australia and instructed to remove the offending pictures. De Vanna moved to Sweden for the 2012โ€“13 season, but discussed that her desire to play for The Matildas was then stronger than ever. On 8 June 2015 De Vanna captained the Matilda's in her 100th game, scoring their only goal in a 3โ€“1 defeat to the United States in the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup. During a match against Brazil in the 2016 Olympics, a moment of De Vanna and teammate Elise Kellond-Knight went viral when during a short break, De Vanna absentmindedly tried to drink from the wrong end of a water bottle, prompting Kellond-Knight to quickly flip it in her hand. Presently, De Vanna is the second highest goal scorer in Matildas history after Sam Kerr, with 47. Matches and goals scored at World Cup and Olympic tournaments Lisa De Vanna has competed in four FIFA Women's World Cup tournaments: China 2007, Germany 2011,Canada 2015, and France 2019 and two Olympics: Athens 2004 and Rio 2016; altogether played 23 matches and scored 8 goals at those six global tournaments. Managerial De Vanna was appointed as a Technical Assistant for the FFV National Training Centre in September 2018. Career statistics International goals Honours Club Brisbane Roar W-League Championship: 2010โ€“11 Melbourne Victory W-League Championship: 2013โ€“14, 2020โ€“21 Melbourne City W-League Championship: 2015โ€“16 W-League Premiership: 2015โ€“16 Sydney FC W-League Championship: 2018โ€“19 Country Australia OFC U-20 Women's Championship: 2002 AFC Women's Asian Cup: 2010 AFC Olympic Qualifying Tournament: 2016 Individual Julie Dolan Medal: 2002โ€“03 Women's National Soccer League Golden Boot: 2002โ€“03 FIFA Women's World Cup All-Star Team: 2007, 2015 FIFA Puskรกs Award nominee: 2013 FFA Female Footballer of the Year: 2013 In popular culture Television and film Leading up to the 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup, De Vanna was the focus of an ESPN documentary, Unstoppable, directed by award-winning filmmaker, Safina Uberoi. In 2013, she was featured in an hour-long episode of ESPN's Aussies Abroad entitled, The Matildas, which profiled four Australian national team players (De Vanna, Samantha Kerr, Kyah Simon, and Caitlin Foord) and their experience playing internationally. See also List of women's footballers with 100 or more caps List of foreign Damallsvenskan players List of foreign NWSL players References Match reports Further reading External links 1984 births Living people Australian women's soccer players Olympic soccer players for Australia Perth Glory FC (A-League Women) players Brisbane Roar FC (A-League Women) players Newcastle Jets FC (A-League Women) players Melbourne Victory FC (A-League Women) players Melbourne City FC (A-League Women) players Canberra United FC players Sydney FC (A-League Women) players Sportswomen from Western Australia Washington Freedom players MagicJack (WPS) players Doncaster Rovers Belles L.F.C. players Expatriate women's soccer players in the United States FA Women's National League players Expatriate women's footballers in Sweden Australian people of Italian descent Australian people of Portuguese descent Australian expatriate sportspeople in England Expatriate women's footballers in England Footballers at the 2004 Summer Olympics Footballers at the 2016 Summer Olympics 2007 FIFA Women's World Cup players 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup players 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup players Australian Institute of Sport soccer players NJ/NY Gotham FC players A-League Women players National Women's Soccer League players Women's Professional Soccer players Damallsvenskan players Linkรถpings FC players Soccer players from Perth, Western Australia Australia women's international soccer players Women's association football forwards Washington Spirit players Boston Breakers players Australian expatriate sportspeople in the United States FIFA Women's Century Club Orlando Pride players Australian expatriate sportspeople in Sweden 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup players ACF Fiorentina (women) players Serie A (women's football) players South Australian Sports Institute soccer players Australian expatriate women's soccer players Expatriate women's footballers in Italy Australian expatriate sportspeople in Italy
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%84%9C%EB%A7%A8%EC%82%AC%20%EC%BB%A4
์„œ๋งจ์‚ฌ ์ปค
์„œ๋งจ์‚ฌ ๋ฉ”์ด ์ปค(, 1993๋…„ 9์›” 10์ผ~)๋Š” ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ, ํฌ์ง€์…˜์€ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์ˆ˜์ด๋‹ค. ์ƒ˜ ์ปค()๋ผ๋Š” ์• ์นญ์œผ๋กœ๋„ ์•Œ๋ ค์ ธ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ํ˜„์žฌ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ FA ์—ฌ์ž ์Šˆํผ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์˜ ์ฒผ์‹œ FC ์œ„๋ฏผ์—์„œ ํ™œ๋™ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์–ด๋ฆฐ ์‹œ์ ˆ ์„œ๋งจ์‚ฌ ์ปค๋Š” ์›จ์Šคํ„ด์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์ฃผ ํผ์Šค ๊ต์™ธ์— ์œ„์น˜ํ•œ ์ด์ŠคํŠธํ”„๋ฆฌ๋งจํ‹€์—์„œ ์˜๊ตญ๊ณ„ ์ธ๋„์ธ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€์™€ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์ธ ์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ ์‚ฌ์ด์—์„œ ํƒœ์–ด๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ์„œ๋งจ์‚ฌ ์ปค์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€์ธ ๋กœ์ € ์ปค๋Š” ์ธ๋„ ์ฝœ์นดํƒ€์—์„œ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ์ธ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€์™€ ์ธ๋„์ธ ์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ ์‚ฌ์ด์—์„œ ํƒœ์–ด๋‚ฌ๊ณ  7์„ธ ์‹œ์ ˆ์— ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„ ํผ์Šค๋กœ ์ด์ฃผํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋กœ์ € ์ปค๋Š” ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์—์„œ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•ˆ ํ’‹๋ณผ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๊ฒธ ์ฝ”์น˜๋กœ ํ™œ๋™ํ–ˆ๊ณ  ์„œ๋งจ์‚ฌ ์ปค์˜ ์˜ค๋น ์ธ ๋Œ€๋‹ˆ์–ผ ์ปค ๋˜ํ•œ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•ˆ ํ’‹๋ณผ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ ํ™œ๋™ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์„œ๋งจ์‚ฌ ์ปค๋„ ์–ด๋ฆฐ ์‹œ์ ˆ์— ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•ˆ ํ’‹๋ณผ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ ํ™œ๋™ํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ 12์„ธ ์‹œ์ ˆ์— ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ ์ „ํ–ฅํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ํด๋Ÿฝ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ 2006๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2008๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ์›จ์Šคํ„ด ๋‚˜์ด์ธ  SC์—์„œ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ƒํ™œ์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๊ณ  15์„ธ ์‹œ์ ˆ์ด๋˜ 2009๋…„์— ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„ W๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๋ฌด๋Œ€์— ๋ฐ๋ท”ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. 2008๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2011๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ํผ์Šค ๊ธ€๋กœ๋ฆฌ ์†Œ์†์œผ๋กœ ๋›ฐ์—ˆ๊ณ  2012๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2014๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ์‹œ๋“œ๋‹ˆ FC ์†Œ์†์œผ๋กœ ํ™œ์•ฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํŠนํžˆ 2012-13 W๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์—์„œ๋Š” ์‹œ๋“œ๋‹ˆ FC์˜ W๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ ์šฐ์Šน์— ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2013๋…„์— ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ์œ„๋ฏผ์Šค ์‚ฌ์ปค ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์˜ ์‹œ์นด๊ณ  ๋ ˆ๋“œ ์Šคํƒ€์Šค๋กœ ์ด์ ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 2013 ์‹œ์ฆŒ์—์„œ๋Š” ์‹œ์นด๊ณ  ๋ ˆ๋“œ ์Šคํƒ€์Šค์˜ ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ์œ„๋ฏผ์Šค ์‚ฌ์ปค ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์‹ค๋“œ ์šฐ์Šน์— ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2014๋…„ 8์›”์—๋Š” ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ํผ์Šค ๊ธ€๋กœ๋ฆฌ๋กœ ๋ณต๊ท€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2015๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2017๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ์œ„๋ฏผ์Šค ์‚ฌ์ปค ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์˜ ์Šค์นด์ด ๋ธ”๋ฃจ์—์„œ ํ™œ์•ฝํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 2017 ์‹œ์ฆŒ์—์„œ๋Š” 17๊ณจ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ณจ๋“ ๋ถ€ํŠธ๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜์ƒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2018๋…„ 1์›” 18์ผ์—๋Š” ์‹œ์นด๊ณ  ๋ ˆ๋“œ ์Šคํƒ€์Šค๋กœ ๋ณต๊ท€ํ–ˆ๊ณ  2018 ์‹œ์ฆŒ์—์„œ 16๊ณจ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ 2ํšŒ ์—ฐ์†์œผ๋กœ ๊ณจ๋“ ๋ถ€ํŠธ๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜์ƒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2019๋…„์—๋Š” ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ FA ์—ฌ์ž ์Šˆํผ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์˜ ์ฒผ์‹œ FC ์œ„๋ฏผ์œผ๋กœ ์ด์ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฒผ์‹œ์—์„œ๋„ ํ•ด๋งˆ๋‹ค ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์™€ FA์ปต ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์ปต ์šฐ์Šน์— ๊ณตํ—Œํ•˜์˜€๊ณ , 2020-21 ์ฑ”์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ค€์šฐ์Šน์— ๊ณตํ—Œํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ 15์„ธ ์‹œ์ ˆ์ด๋˜ 2009๋…„ 2์›”์— ์—ด๋ฆฐ ์ดํƒˆ๋ฆฌ์•„์™€์˜ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ์ฒ˜์Œ ์ถœ์ „ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ ๋ฐ๋ท”ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2011๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต, 2015๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต, 2016๋…„ ๋ฆฌ์šฐ๋ฐ์ž๋„ค์ด๋ฃจ ํ•˜๊ณ„ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ, 2019๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต, 2020๋…„ ๋„์ฟ„, 2023๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 2017๋…„์—๋Š” ์•„์‹œ์•„ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์—ฐ๋งน(AFC) ์˜ฌํ•ด์˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์„ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์„ ์ˆ˜์ƒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ˆ˜์ƒ ํด๋Ÿฝ ์‹œ๋“œ๋‹ˆ FC ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„ W๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 1ํšŒ ์šฐ์Šน (2012-13) ์›จ์Šคํ„ด ๋‰ด์š• ํ”Œ๋ž˜์‹œ ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ์œ„๋ฏผ์Šค ์‚ฌ์ปค ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์‹ค๋“œ 1ํšŒ ์ˆ˜์ƒ (2013) ํผ์Šค ๊ธ€๋กœ๋ฆฌ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„ W๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋ฏธ์–ด์‹ญ 1ํšŒ ์šฐ์Šน (2014) ์ฒผ์‹œ FC ์œ„๋ฏผ FA ์—ฌ์ž ์Šˆํผ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 4ํšŒ ์šฐ์Šน (2019-2020, 2020-2021, 2021-2022, 2022-2023) FA์ปต 3ํšŒ ์šฐ์Šน (2020-2021, 2021-2022, 2022-2023) ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์ปต 2ํšŒ ์šฐ์Šน (2019-2020, 2020-2021) ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œ 2010๋…„ AFC ์—ฌ์ž ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต ์šฐ์Šน 2014๋…„ AFC ์—ฌ์ž ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต ์ค€์šฐ์Šน 2018๋…„ AFC ์—ฌ์ž ์•„์‹œ์•ˆ์ปต ์ค€์šฐ์Šน ๊ฐœ์ธ ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ์œ„๋ฏผ์Šค ์‚ฌ์ปค ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ด ์ฃผ์˜ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 7ํšŒ ์„ ์ • (2013๋…„ 9์ฃผ, 2016๋…„ 18์ฃผ, 2017๋…„ 9์ฃผ, 2017๋…„ 12์ฃผ, 2017๋…„ 17์ฃผ, 2018๋…„ 15์ฃผ, 2018๋…„ 22์ฃผ) ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ์œ„๋ฏผ์Šค ์‚ฌ์ปค ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ด ๋‹ฌ์˜ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 2ํšŒ ์„ ์ • (2017๋…„ 5์›”, 2017๋…„ 6์›”) ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ์œ„๋ฏผ์Šค ์‚ฌ์ปค ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๊ณจ๋“ ๋ถ€ํŠธ 2ํšŒ ์ˆ˜์ƒ (2017 ์‹œ์ฆŒ, 2018 ์‹œ์ฆŒ) ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ์œ„๋ฏผ์Šค ์‚ฌ์ปค ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ MVP ์ˆ˜์ƒ (2017 ์‹œ์ฆŒ) ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ์œ„๋ฏผ์Šค ์‚ฌ์ปค ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๋ฒ ์ŠคํŠธ ์ผ๋ ˆ๋ธ ์„ ์ „ (2017 ์‹œ์ฆŒ, 2018 ์‹œ์ฆŒ) 2017๋…„ AFC ์˜ฌํ•ด์˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์„ ์ˆ˜์ƒ ์ˆ˜์ƒ FA ์—ฌ์ž ์Šˆํผ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์˜ฌํ•ด์˜ ์„ ์ˆ˜ (2021-2022 ์‹œ์ฆŒ) FA ์—ฌ์ž ์Šˆํผ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ด๋‹ฌ์˜ ์„ ์ˆ˜ (2021๋…„ 4์›”, 2022๋…„ 4์›”) FA ์—ฌ์ž ์Šˆํผ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๋“์ ์™• (2020-2021 ์‹œ์ฆŒ, 2021-2022 ์‹œ์ฆŒ) ์ฒผ์‹œ FC ์˜ฌํ•ด์˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์„ ์ˆ˜ (2021-2022 ์‹œ์ฆŒ, 2022-2023 ์‹œ์ฆŒ) ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ 1993๋…„ ์ถœ์ƒ ์‚ด์•„์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ 20์„ธ๊ธฐ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ 21์„ธ๊ธฐ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ 20์„ธ๊ธฐ ์„ฑ์†Œ์ˆ˜์ž ์‚ฌ๋žŒ 21์„ธ๊ธฐ ์„ฑ์†Œ์ˆ˜์ž ์‚ฌ๋žŒ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์ˆ˜ ์›จ์Šคํ„ด ๋‰ด์š• ํ”Œ๋ž˜์‹œ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ NJ/NY ๊ณ ์„ฌ FC์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์‹œ์นด๊ณ  ๋ ˆ๋“œ ์Šคํƒ€์Šค์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ฒผ์‹œ FC ์œ„๋ฏผ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ A๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์œ„๋ฏผ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ์œ„๋ฏผ์Šค ์‚ฌ์ปค ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ FA ์—ฌ์ž ์Šˆํผ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ํ•ด์™ธ ์ง„์ถœ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ์˜ ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 2016๋…„ ํ•˜๊ณ„ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 2020๋…„ ํ•˜๊ณ„ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 2011๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 2015๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 2019๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 2023๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ FIFA ์„ผ์ถ”๋ฆฌ ํด๋Ÿฝ ์—ฌ์ž ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ์„ฑ์†Œ์ˆ˜์ž ์Šคํฌ์ธ  ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์›จ์Šคํ„ด์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์ฃผ ์ถœ์‹  ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ๊ณ„ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์ธ ์ธ๋„๊ณ„ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์ธ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์— ๊ฑฐ์ฃผํ•œ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์ธ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ์— ๊ฑฐ์ฃผํ•œ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„์ธ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sam%20Kerr
Sam Kerr
Samantha May Kerr (born 10 September 1993) is an Australian professional soccer player who plays as a striker for FA Women's Super League club Chelsea, and the Australia women's national team, which she has captained since 2019. Known for her speed, skill, and tenacity, Kerr is widely considered one of the best strikers in the world, and one of Australia's greatest athletes. Kerr is the all-time leading Australian international scorer, and is the all-time leading scorer in the National Women's Soccer League (NWSL) in the United States. She is the only female soccer player to have won the Golden Boot in three different leagues and on three different continentsโ€”the W-League (Australia/New Zealand) in 2017โ€“18 and 2018โ€“19, the NWSL (North America) in 2017, 2018, and 2019, and the Women's Super League (Europe) in 2020โ€“21 and 2021โ€“22. Kerr started her career at the age of 15 with Perth Glory where she played from 2008 to 2012, before moving to Sydney FC. In 2013, she joined the Western New York Flash for the inaugural season of the NWSL and helped lead the team to win the NWSL Shield. She later played for Sky Blue FC and the Chicago Red Stars in the same league. In 2019, Kerr indicated her interest to play in Europe, and having fielded multiple offers from clubs such as Olympique Lyonnais, Kerr ultimately signed with Chelsea, so far winning 8 trophies with the club, including back-to-back-to-back Women's Super League titles, as well as helping the team reach the UEFA Women's Champions League final for the first time in 2021. Kerr earned her first senior international cap in 2009 at the age of 15 and has since represented Australia at the 2010, 2014, 2018, and 2022 AFC Women's Asian Cup tournaments, the 2011, 2015, 2019, and 2023 FIFA Women's World Cups, and the 2016 and 2020 Summer Olympics. During the 2019 World Cup, she became the first Australian player to score a hat trick at a World Cup tournament. In 2021, she captained the team to their historic first ever semi-final of a major tournament during the delayed 2020 Summer Olympics, resulting in their best ever 4th-place finish. Kerr was named the 2018 Young Australian of the Year as part of the 2018 Australia Day Honours, and as part of the 2022 Australia Day Honours, was awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) for her "services to football", becoming only the second Australian female footballer to receive such an honour after the inaugural Matildas' captain, Julie Dolan. She was awarded the 2017 and 2018 Julie Dolan Medal as the best player in Australia, is a record five-time recipient of the PFA Australian Women's Footballer of the Year, awarded it in 2013, 2017, 2018, 2019, and 2022, and was named International Player of the Year by the Football Media Association in 2013 and 2014. She received the ESPY Award for Best International Women's Soccer Player in 2018, 2019, and 2022, and was nominated for the award in 2021. She also won the ESPY Award for Best NWSL Soccer Player in 2019, and was nominated for the award in 2018. In 2022 and in 2023, Kerr was awarded the FWA Women's Footballer of the Year. She was the first and only Australian women's footballer to be named to the shortlist for the Ballon d'Or Fรฉminin in 2022, and one of only two players (alongside France international Wendie Renard) to have been nominated in all editions of the award since its inception in 2018, ranking 5th, 7th, 3rd, 3rd, and 2nd respectively. Kerr and fellow Australian Hayley Raso have both been nominated on the shortlist for the Ballon d'Or Fรฉminin in 2023. She has also been shortlisted for The Best FIFA Women's Player consistently since 2017, ranking 10th, 9th, 11th, 7th, and 2nd, respectively. Kerr has also been nominated for the BBC Women's Footballer of the Year award from 2018 to 2022 and has been named to the Top 10 of The Guardian's The 100 Best Female Footballers In The World from 2017 to 2022, ranking 3rd, 2nd, 1st, 6th, 3rd, and 3rd, respectively. Early life Kerr was born in East Fremantle, a suburb of Perth, Western Australia. She is the daughter of Roxanne ( Regan) and Roger Kerr. Her father, a professional Australian rules football player, was born in Calcutta to an English father (a featherweight boxer) and an Indian mother who played basketball. Her mother also comes from a sporting family: her father Harry and uncle Con Regan were professional footballers in the West Australian Football League and another uncle J. J. Miller was a champion jockey who won the Melbourne Cup in 1966 with Galilee. Kerr played Australian rules football when she was young. Both her father and older brother, Daniel Kerr, were professional Australian rules footballers. She played the sport until switching to association football at the age of 12, mostly due to gender restrictions. Despite facing some struggles transitioning from Australian rules football to association football, at age 13, she was spotted by Perth Glory striker Bobby Despotovski who described her athleticism and raw talent as "exceptional". At age 15, she made her W-League and international debuts. Club career Western Knights, 2006โ€“2008 Kerr first started playing football as a junior at Western Knights in Mosman Park. After three years at the Western Knights, she trialled for the Western Australian State Team before moving to Perth Glory. Perth Glory, 2008โ€“2011 Kerr made her debut for Perth Glory at the age of 15 during the 2009 W-League season. She was voted Players' Player at the 2009 W-League Awards and awarded Goal of the Year for her longโ€“range goal against Sydney FC in round 8. During the 2010โ€“11 season, Kerr started in all 10 matches and scored three goals. She scored a brace in the first half of a match against Adelaide United on 14 January 2011 lifting Perth to a 2โ€“1 victory. Western New York Flash, 2013โ€“2014 In 2013, Kerr signed with the Western New York Flash. She made 19 starts in her 21 appearances for the club and scored six goals. After defeating Sky Blue FC 2โ€“0 in the semi-finals, the Flash lost 2โ€“0 to Portland in the final. Kerr returned to the Flash for the 2014 season. Head coach Aaran Lines said of Kerr, "With her attributes โ€“ her speed, athleticism and instincts โ€“ if she continues to develop at the rate she is, Sam can become one of the best strikers in the world." Kerr started in all 20 matches and was the team's leading scorer with 9 goals. She was named NWSL Player of the Week for week 9 after recording a brace and assist against Portland. Following the 2014 season, Kerr was traded to Sky Blue FC in exchange for Elizabeth Eddy and a first-round pickโ€”fourth overallโ€”in the 2015 NWSL College Draft. The Flash used that pick to draft Sam Mewis. Return to Perth Glory, 2014โ€“2015 In August 2014, Kerr returned to Perth Glory on a one-year deal as one of six Matildas to sign for Perth. She would open her account in Perth's second match against Adelaide United to give Perth the lead in the second half which they would win. The following match she scored a double in her team's 10โ€“1 rout of Western Sydney Wanderers. After missing out in the next four games, Kerr would go and score eight goals in the final four games of the regular season which included a hat-trick against her former team in Sydney FC. She continued her regular season form in the following season when she scored the winning goal in a 2โ€“1 victory over Melbourne Victory in the opening round of the competition. That would be the only goal that she would score in the season with her leg giving way in a non-contact ankle injury which forced her out for the rest of the season. This wouldn't stop Perth from giving her a one-year contract extension before the start of that season. In the 2016โ€“17 W-League season she scored ten goals, led the team to the Grand Final, and earned the Julie Dolan Medal and the Penny Tanner Media MVP Award. In October 2018, she became the first marquee player of the W-League when she was reportedly offered $400,000 contract to stay in Perth instead of going overseas where she was offered $100,000 less. The marquee signing delivered in the 2018โ€“19 W-League season, when she finished top of the goal scoring charts with 17 goals at above a goal a game. This included a hat-trick in the semi-final against Melbourne Victory which booked Perth's spot into the grand final. Sky Blue FC, 2015โ€“2017 In 2015, Kerr joined Matildas teammate Caitlin Foord at Sky Blue FC following their participation at the FIFA Women's World Cup in Canada. Kerr's six goals in her nine appearances ranked first on the team. During the 2016 season, Kerr made nine appearances for Sky Blue after being away with the national team in preparation for the 2016 Rio Olympics. She scored five goals during the regular season. Kerr was named NWSL Player of the week for Week 18 after scoring two goals: an 80th-minute equaliser against the Orlando Pride and a game-winning goal against the Pride a few days later. In the 2017 season, Kerr set a new NWSL record when she scored 4 goals in a single game after being down 3โ€“0 to Seattle Reign at halftime. Sky Blue eventually won the match 5โ€“4. At the age of 23, Kerr sat atop the all-time NWSL goalscoring table. Kerr won the NWSL Golden Boot and MVP award after finishing the 2017 season with a record-breaking 17 goals. Chicago Red Stars, 2018โ€“2019 On 18 January 2018, Kerr was traded to the Chicago Red Stars along with Nikki Stanton by the Sky Blue FC in a three-team trade with the Chicago Red Stars and Houston Dash. She got off to a slow start in the 2018 season, not scoring until the eighth match of the season when she contributed to a 1โ€“1 draw against North Carolina Courage. In August, she was named as NWSL Player of the Month for the third time in her career as she scored five goals throughout the month of August which included two goals against Portland Thorns FC and Orlando Pride. At the end of the 2018 season, Kerr scored 16 goals and won the Golden Boot for the second consecutive season, leading to her becoming the first player to win the NWSL Golden Boot more than once, and was elected into the NWSL Best XI as a forward. At the end of the 2019 season, Kerr and the Chicago Red Stars made their first appearance in the NWSL Championship, losing 4โ€“0 to North Carolina Courage. Several days prior to the championship game, Kerr was named the 2019 NWSL MVP, the first, and currently only, NWSL player to ever receive the award twice. Kerr also received, for the third year in a row, the NWSL Golden Boot, leading the league with 18 goals and five assists, despite missing some games over the summer to play with Australia in the World Cup. Kerr was also named Player of the Year by the National Women's Soccer League Players Association, who presented their own awards for the first time. At the end of the 2019 season Kerr announced that she was considering moving to a European team and had multiple offers. Chelsea, 2020โ€“present On 13 November 2019, WSL club Chelsea announced Kerr would be joining the club for the second half of the 2019โ€“20 FA WSL season on a two-and-a-half year contract. Kerr made her Chelsea debut against Reading on 5 January 2020 and scored her first goal two weeks later against Arsenal. She won her first trophy with Chelsea in their 2โ€“1 win over Arsenal in the League Cup Final. Chelsea went on to win the 2019โ€“20 league title despite a curtailed season due to the COVID-19 pandemic, based on points per match. At the 2020 Women's FA Community Shield on 29 August 2020, Kerr created a series of goal scoring opportunities before being substituted in Chelsea's 2โ€“0 win over Manchester City. She scored a hat-trick in the 6โ€“0 win over Bristol City in Chelsea's defence of the League Cup title, and led goalscoring for Chelsea during the season, ultimately helping her win her second Women's Super League title during the 2020โ€“21 FA WSL season. She scored 21 goals in 22 games, winning the Golden Boot, making her the first player to win it in three different leagues. That same season, Kerr helped Chelsea reach the final of the UEFA Women's Champions League for the first time, before being defeated by Barcelona. During the 2021โ€“22 WSL season, Kerr continued exhibiting fine form and was nominated for the Barclays Player of the Month for September. On 16 November 2021, Kerr signed a two-year contract extension, keeping her at the club until the end of the 2023โ€“24 season, saying: "I can't see myself going anywhere else in the world or leaving Europe, having what I have at Chelsea." The following week, Kerr scored the winning goal in Chelsea's Champions League group stage match against Servette, and scored her third league hat-trick, against Birmingham City, within 26 minutes, as well as providing the assist for team-mate Fran Kirby's 100th Chelsea goal, with Kerr celebrating her achievement with her signature back-flip, the first time she performed it at Chelsea's homeground of Kingsmeadow. On 5 December, Kerr scored a brace in the delayed FA Cup final against Arsenal, winning Player of the Match, and helping her team lift the trophy and secure the domestic quadruple of the 2020โ€“21 season, the first English women's club to achieve the feat. Kerr ended the 2021 calendar year as the leading goalscorer in the WSL, with 23 goals, and was second in total assists with 10, behind Kirby. Upon returning to Chelsea after being eliminated in the Asian Cup at the beginning of 2022, Kerr continued with a fine run of goal-scoring, scoring 10 goals in 7 consecutive matches, the first Chelsea player to do so. She scored the lone Chelsea goal in a 3โ€“1 defeat at the hands of Manchester City in the League Cup final and in Chelsea's 0โ€“9 record-breaking win against Leicester City in the WSL on 27 March, Kerr scored a brace, repeating the feat the following week in a match against Reading, the 5th consecutive WSL match she had scored in. On 24 April, in a league game against Tottenham Hotspur, Kerr scored in her 6th consecutive WSL match, and in doing so, broke her own record set the previous season of scoring against the most opposing teams, by scoring against all opponents bar Arsenal. In April 2022, Kerr was awarded the FWA Women's Footballer of the Year, receiving 40% of the vote ahead of Vivianne Miedema and Lauren Hemp, and won the FA WSL April Player of the Month. Kerr ended the season with 32 goals (including 3 goals of the 2020โ€“21 FA Cup held over the course of the 2021โ€“22 season) and 9 assists across all competitions, winning the Women's Super League for the third consecutive time, and the FA Women's Cup for the second consecutive time. After a formidable season in front of goal for the Blues, she was voted Chelsea Women's Player of the Year by Chelsea supporters with over 70 per cent of the vote and was also voted Women's Super League Player of the Season. She also received the PFA Players' Player of the Year, in addition to being named in the PFA WSL Team of the Year for second consecutive year. Kerr finished as top goal scorer, netting 32 times in all competitions. She retained the Golden Boot award for the second consecutive year, having scored 20 times in the 2021โ€“22 season. The striker scored a number of important goals during the season, including a crucial 92nd-minute winner against Aston Villa at Kingsmeadow in March 2022 to keep the Blues' title hopes alive. Kerr also scored twice as Chelsea beat Manchester United on the final day of the season, with her well-taken volley against the Red Devils being voted the Goal of the Season. She also scored the winning goal at Wembley as the Blues secured their second consecutive FA Cup. International career In February 2009, at the age of 15, Kerr made her international debut for Australia's senior national team in Canberra as a 76th minute substitute in a friendly against Italy, which Australia lost 5โ€“1. She scored her first international goal at the age of 16 during the 2010 AFC Women's Asian Cup final against North Korea, helping Australia draw 1โ€“1 in full-time, which led to Kerr's first international trophy. 2010 AFC Women's Asian Cup, China In May 2010, Kerr was named to the Matildas squad to compete at the 2010 AFC Women's Asian Cup, the qualifying tournament for the 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup in Germany. After scoring in the second match of the group against South Korea, she scored the opening goal of the final against North Korea before seeing Australia taking out the title via a penalty shoot-out. The same year, she represented Australia at the 2010 Peace Queen Cup. 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup, Germany In 2011 at age 17, Kerr was named to Australia's 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup squad by head coach Tom Sermanni as one of seven players who were under twenty years of age. She made her World Cup debut coming on as a substitute in the 79th minute of Australia's first group stage match against Brazil. She was a starter for the team's second group stage match against Equatorial Guinea helping Australia win 3โ€“2 and the team's final group stage match and 2โ€“1 win against Norway. Australia finished second place in their group and advanced to the knockout stage where they were defeated 3โ€“1 by Sweden. 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup, Canada After injuring her knee in December 2014 and undergoing surgery, Kerr worked hard with fitness coach Aaron Holt to recover ahead of the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup in Canada. Kerr was the team's starting striker during Australia's first group stage match against the United States, which Australia lost 3โ€“1. During the team's second group stage match, she helped Australia defeat Nigeria 2โ€“0. During the match, Kerr was elbowed in the face by Ugo Njoku, which ultimately resulted in a three-game suspension for Njoku. Kerr recovered and started during Australia's final group stage match against Sweden, a 1โ€“1 draw. Australia's finished second in their group and advanced to the round of 16 where Kerr played in the team that defeated Brazil 1โ€“0. She also started the quarterfinal match in the first time Australia reached this stage, but they were defeated by 2011 champions Japan 1โ€“0. 2016โ€“2018 In July 2017, Kerr was the top goalscorer at the inaugural Tournament of Nations in the United States. She scored a hat-trick in Australia's 4โ€“2 victory over Japan, and also scored a goal against Brazil, leading Australia to win the tournament. Prior to this tournament, Kerr had scored eight goals in her first 49 games for the national team. Her hat-trick against Japan was the beginning of a run of 11 goals in six games. Kerr was named 2017 AFC Women's Footballer of the Year. 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, France In February 2019, Kerr was named captain of the Matildas by newly appointed head coach Ante Milicic. Two months later, she was one of five nominees for the BBC Women's Footballer of the Year award. During the team's first group stage match at the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup in France, she opened up an early lead against Italy after scoring a goal off a penalty kick rebound, though Australia ultimately lost 2โ€“1 in stoppage time. Kerr's goal was her first at a World Cup tournament and she celebrated by punching the corner flag to honor Tim Cahill, the all-time leading goalscorer for the Socceroos. During the team's second group stage match against Brazil, though Kerr was in an offside position when Monica Hickmann Alves headed the ball into her own goal, the video assistant referee (VAR) deemed that Kerr wasn't interfering and the goal was counted for Australia. Australia won 3โ€“2. Kerr scored four goals in the team's 4โ€“1 win against Jamaica and was named Player of the Match. She is the first Australian footballer to score a hat-trick at a World Cup tournament and the tenth footballer to score four goals. Australia finished second in their group and advanced to the knockout stage where they were defeated by Norway in a penalty shoot-out. Kerr's five goals at the tournament ranked fourth highest behind Ellen White of England and Americans Alex Morgan and Megan Rapinoe, who all scored six. 2020 Olympic Games, Tokyo At 2020 Tokyo Olympics held in 2021, Australia was grouped with United States, Sweden and New Zealand. Kerr scored in the opening game, in which they beat New Zealand 2โ€“1. In the second game against Sweden, Kerr scored a brace but missed a penalty and ended up losing 4โ€“2. Progressing to the quarter-finals against Great Britain, Kerr scored an 89th-minute equaliser to see the game into extra time, before getting a brace to help Australia secure a 4โ€“3 victory and progress to the semi-finals against Sweden. During this match, Kerr scored a goal that was controversially disallowed, and Australia ultimately lost 1โ€“0. In the bronze medal match against the United States, she scored a goal in a 4โ€“3 defeat, to become the all-time top scorer for the Matildas, surpassing Lisa De Vanna, with 48 goals. Post Olympics On 21 September, in their first match after their Olympics defeat, and in Australia's first ever match against the Republic of Ireland, Kerr won her 100th cap, the 10th Matilda in history to do so. She returned with Australia to play two friendly matches against Brazil on home soil in October, the first time doing so since before the COVID-19 pandemic, and scored her 49th international goal in the second match. 2022 AFC Women's Asian Cup, India At the 2022 AFC Women's Asian Cup, Kerr scored 5 goals in Australia's opening match of the group stage against Indonesia, and in the process, equalled and surpassed the Australian international goal-scoring record, among both male and female Australian internationals, previously set by Tim Cahill (50 international goals). She was also able to achieve the feat within fewer matches, needing 105 matches to equal the 50 goals set by Cahill, who set the record within 108 international appearances. Despite being eliminated in the quarter-finals by South Korea, she won the Golden Boot, scoring 7 goals in only 4 matches. 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup, Australia and New Zealand On 3 July, it was announced that Kerr would captain the Matildas' 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup squad in her fourth World Cup appearance, this time on home soil. Kerr missed the opening match against Ireland as a result of a calf injury. The team announced that she would miss the first two pool matches, but subsequently there was speculation that she would miss all of them and possibly the whole tournament. Rumours emerged that the team deliberately understated the severity of the injury. She ultimately missed all three group games but could have taken the pitch against Canada if they needed her. With a comfortable 4โ€“0 win, there was no need for her to play. Kerr made her first appearance in the 2023 World Cup in the 80th minute of the Matildas' win in the round of 16 clash with Denmark. She was again used as a substitute in the Australia's historic quarter-final victory over France, scoring a goal in the concluding penalty shootout. The team reached the World Cup semi-finals for the first time, facing England. Down a goal after the first half, Kerr equalized for Australia with her first goal of the tournament, but two subsequent English goals resulted in a 3โ€“1 loss, thwarting the Matildas' hopes of reaching the final. Kerr's goal was widely praised as one of the best of the tournament thus far. In popular media In 2013, Kerr was featured in an hour-long episode of ESPN's Aussies Abroad entitled, The Matildas, which profiled four Australian national team players (Kerr, Lisa De Vanna, Kyah Simon, and Caitlin Foord) and their experience playing internationally. She was featured along with her national teammates in the EA Sports' FIFA video game series starting in FIFA 16, the first time women players were included in the game. Kerr was featured on the cover of the July 2011 issue of Australian FourFourTwo along with four of her national team teammates: Melissa Barbieri, Kyah Simon, Thea Slatyer, and Sarah Walsh. In March 2018, she was featured in Vogue Australia as a 2018 Game Changer. In 2018, she was featured on the cover of the Australian version of the FIFA 19 video game. In September 2020, she was announced as the second-highest rated female player in FIFA 21 with a 92-rated card, which was only beat by Megan Rapinoe's 93 rating. Kerr has an endorsement deal with Nike. In 2019, she starred in a commercial, Dream Further, that aired during the Champions League Final and 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup and also featured Gerard Piquรฉ, Alex Scott, Neymar Jr., Crystal Dunn, Lieke Martens and Philippe Coutinho. The same year, her trademark backflip was featured in the Nike ad, Dream Crazier along with other women athletes like Serena Williams, Megan Rapinoe, and Diana Taurasi and aired during the 91st Academy Awards. She is a brand ambassador for Powerade. In 2021, she published her first book (The Flip Out) in her autobiographical football themed children's book series, "Kicking Goals". In July 2022, it was announced that Kerr would feature on the cover of the Ultimate edition of FIFA 23 alongside Kylian Mbappรฉ, this is the first time a female player would appear on the global cover of the game franchise. (Alex Morgan and Christine Sinclair had previously appeared on the cover of the US and Canada versions of FIFA 16, respectively.) New artwork featuring Kerr on the cover of FIFA 23 is also scheduled for the 2023 Women's World Cup. Kerr was crowned world's best women's footballer in the FIFA 23 Women's World Cup - alongside Spain's Alexia Putellas. In July 2023, she co-starred in a commercial for Degree deodorant, along with Trinity Rodman and Estefania Banini. Personal life Kerr is currently in a relationship with American soccer player Kristie Mewis. She was previously in a relationship with former Perth Glory and Chicago Red Stars teammate Nikki Stanton. Kerr is a supporter of the West Coast Eagles and was the club's number-one ticket holder in 2019 and 2020. Her brother, Daniel Kerr, is a former player for the West Coast Eagles. On 27 October 2023, the newly finished West Australian State Football Centre was officially named the Sam Kerr Football Centre at its official opening. Career statistics Club International Scores and results list Australia's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Kerr goal. Honours Sydney FC W-League Championship: 2012โ€“13 Western New York Flash NWSL Shield: 2013 NWSL Championship runner-up: 2013 Perth Glory W-League Premiership: 2014 W-League Championship runner-up: 2014, 2016โ€“17, 2018โ€“19 Chicago Red Stars NWSL Championship runner-up: 2019 Chelsea FA Women's Super League: 2019โ€“20, 2020โ€“21, 2021โ€“22, 2022โ€“23 Women's FA Cup: 2020โ€“21, 2021โ€“22, 2022โ€“23 FA Women's League Cup: 2019โ€“20, 2020โ€“21; runner-up: 2021โ€“22 FA Women's Community Shield: 2020 UEFA Women's Champions League runner-up: 2020โ€“21 Australia AFF U-16 Women's Championship: 2009 AFC Women's Asian Cup: 2010; runner-up: 2014, 2018 Centenary Cup: 2013 Individual W-League Player's Player of the Year: 2009, 2014 W-League Goal of the Year: 2009, 2016โ€“17 FFA Female U20 Footballer of the Year: 2010, 2014 PFA Australian Women's Footballer of the Year: 2013, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2022 Julie Dolan Medal: 2016โ€“17, 2017โ€“18 PFA W-League Team of the Season: 2016โ€“17, 2017โ€“18, 2018โ€“19 W-League Golden Boot: 2017โ€“18, 2018โ€“19 Football Media Association International Player of the Year: 2013, 2014 NWSL Player of the Week: 2013: Week 9; 2016: Week 18; 2017: Week 9 12, 17; 2018: Week 15, 22 NWSL Player of the Month: 2017: May, June, 2018: August 2019: May NWSL Team of the Month: 2017: May, June, July, August; 2018: July, August; 2019: April, May, September NWSL Golden Boot: 2017, 2018, 2019 NWSL Most Valuable Player Award: 2017, 2019 NWSL Best XI: 2017, 2018, 2019 Asian Women's Footballer of the Year: 2017, 2022 ABC Sport Personality of the Year: 2017 IFFHS Women's World Team of the Year: 2017, 2021 Young Australian of the Year: 2018 ESPY Awards Best International Women's Soccer Player: 2018, 2019, 2022 ESPY Awards Best NWSL Player ESPY Award: 2019 The 100 Best Female Footballers In The World Winner: 2019 IFFHS AFC Women's Team of the Decade: 2011โ€“2020 UK Young Achiever Award: 2021 FA Women's Super League Player of the Month: April 2021, April 2022 FA Women's Super League Golden Boot: 2020โ€“21, 2021โ€“22 PFA WSL Fans' Player of the Month: March 2021, April 2022 PFA WSL Team of the Year: 2020โ€“21, 2021โ€“22, 2022โ€“23 UEFA Women's Champions League Squad of the Season: 2020โ€“21 IFFHS AFC Women's Player of the Year: 2021 IFFHS AFC Women's All-time Women's Dream Team: 2021 IFFHS World's Best International Goal Scorer: 2022 Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM): 2022 AFC Women's Asian Cup Golden Boot: 2022 London Football Awards FA Women's Super League Player of the Year: 2022 Football Writer's Association Women's Footballer of the Year: 2021โ€“22, 2022โ€“23 Women's Super League Player of the Season: 2021โ€“22 Women's Super League Goal of the Season: 2021โ€“22 PFA Players' Player of the Year: 2022 PFA WSL Fansโ€™ Player of the Year: 2020โ€“21, 2021โ€“22 Chelsea Women's Player of the Year: 2021โ€“22, 2022โ€“23 The Athletic WSL Player of the Year: 2021โ€“22 The Athletic WSL Team of the Year: 2020โ€“21, 2021โ€“22 GiveMeSportW (GMS) Fans' WSL Player of the Season: 2021โ€“22 Key to the City of Perth: 2022 FIFA FIFPRO Women's World 11: 2022 Australian flag-bearer for the coronation of Charles III and Camilla: 2023 Ballon d'Or Fรฉminin 3rd place: 2021, 2022; runner-up: 2023 Records Australia (2009 to present) All-time leading Australian international female scorer: 63 (from 5 August 2021 to present) All-time leading Australian international scorer: 63 (from 12 Apr 2023 to present) All-time leading Australian international female scorer at the Olympics: 7 (from 2020 Tokyo Olympics to present) Most goals scored in a calendar year: 12 (2022) First Australian football player to score a hat-trick at a World Cup: 2019 Most consecutive games scored in: 7 (from 30 July 2017 to 28 February 2018) W-League (2008โ€“09 to 2018โ€“19) Former all-time leading scorer: 70 (from 24 January 2019 to 20 March 2021: overtaken by Michelle Heyman) Most goals in a season: 17 (2018โ€“19) Most hat-tricks: 4 (tied with Michelle Heyman) Fastest hat-trick: 7 minutes (16 December 2017 vs Newcastle Jets) Most 'Golden Boot' awards: 2 (2017โ€“18, 2018โ€“19) (tied with Michelle Heyman and Kate Gill) National Women's Soccer League (2013 to 2019) All-time leading scorer: 77 (from 8 July 2017 to present) Former all-time assists leader: 24 (overtaken by Lynn Williams, Tobin Heath and Jessica McDonald) First player to score 50 goals (9 June 2018) First teenager to score a goal: (April 2013) Most goals in a season: 18 (2019) Most goals in a match: 4 (tied with Kristen Hamilton and Alex Morgan) Most shots on target in a season: 54 (2017) Most hat-tricks in a season: 2 (2017) Most consecutive seasons to score at least 10 goals: 3 (2017 to 2019) Most consecutive seasons to score at least 15 goals: 3 (2017 to 2019) First Australian international to play 100 regular season games Most 'Most Valuable Player' awards: 2 (2017, 2019) Most 'Golden Boot' awards: 3 (2017, 2018, 2019) FA Women's Super League (2019โ€“20 to present) Most goals in a full-season debut: 21 (2020โ€“21) Most goals in a calendar year: 23 (2021) Most number of teams scored against in a season: 10 (2021 โ€“22) Most hat-tricks against a single club: 2 (vs Birmingham City) (tied with Bethany England, Rachel Williams and Vivianne Miedema) Most first half hat-tricks: 2 (tied with Vivianne Miedema) First player to score against every team played against (2 September 2020 vs Everton) Most goals scored as a headers in one season: 9 (2020โ€“21) First player to score at least 20 goals in consecutive seasons: 2020โ€“21 to 2021โ€“22 Most consecutive seasons to score at least 20 goals: 2 (2020โ€“21 to 2021โ€“22) Most 'Golden Boot' awards: 2 (2020โ€“21 to 2021โ€“22) (tied with Vivianne Miedema) Most goals across all competitions in a season: 32 (2021โ€“22) UEFA Women's Champion League (2020โ€“21 to present) Most goals in a group stage game: 4 Perth Glory (2008 to 2011, 2014 to 2019) All-time leading scorer: 57 (2014 to present) Sky Blue FC (2015โ€“2017) All-time leading scorer: 28 (28 June 2017 to present) Chicago Red Stars (2018 to 2019) All-time leading scorer: 35 (tied with Christen Press) (20 October 2019 to present) Chelsea (2020 to present) Most consecutive games scored in: 7 (26 February 2022 to 3 April 2022) Other Most goals in a FIFA Women's World Cup game: 4, 2019 Only football player to win the Golden Boot in 3 different leagues/continents: W-League (Australia): 2017โ€“18, 2018โ€“19; NWSL (North America): 2017, 2018, 2019; FA WSL (Europe) 2020โ€“21,2021โ€“22 First Australian female football player to be nominated for the Ballon d'Or First Australian football player to place in the top 3 of the Ballon d'Or: 2021 First Australian football player to place in the top 3 of The Best FIFA Player: 2021 First Australian to win PFA Playersโ€™ Player of the Year: 2022 First West Australian-born female recipient of the Key to the City of Perth: 2022 First female footballer to be chosen to be on the cover of a FIFA video game: FIFA 23 See also List of A-League Women records and statistics List of NWSL records and statistics List of FA WSL records and statistics List of FIFA Women's World Cup hat-tricks List of women's footballers with 100 or more international caps List of top international women's football goal scorers by country References Further reading External links Australia player profile Chelsea player profile Sky Blue FC player profile (archived) 1993 births Living people Australian women's soccer players Soccer players from Perth, Western Australia Perth Glory FC (A-League Women) players Sydney FC (A-League Women) players Australian people of English descent Australian people of Anglo-Indian descent Australian sportspeople of Indian descent Anglo-Indian people 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup players 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup players 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup players Footballers at the 2016 Summer Olympics Australia women's international soccer players National Women's Soccer League players Expatriate women's soccer players in the United States A-League Women players Women's Super League players Women's association football forwards Western New York Flash players NJ/NY Gotham FC players Chicago Red Stars players Chelsea F.C. Women players Australian expatriate sportspeople in England Australian expatriate sportspeople in the United States Olympic soccer players for Australia Lesbian sportswomen Australian lesbians Australian LGBT soccer players Recipients of the Medal of the Order of Australia Expatriate women's footballers in England Footballers at the 2020 Summer Olympics FIFA Women's Century Club Australian expatriate women's soccer players Sportspeople from Fremantle Sportswomen from Western Australia 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup players
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EB%93%80%EB%9E%80%20%EB%93%80%EB%9E%80%EC%9D%98%20%EC%88%98%EC%83%81%20%EB%B0%8F%20%ED%9B%84%EB%B3%B4%20%EB%AA%A9%EB%A1%9D
๋“€๋ž€ ๋“€๋ž€์˜ ์ˆ˜์ƒ ๋ฐ ํ›„๋ณด ๋ชฉ๋ก
๋“€๋ž€ ๋“€๋ž€์€ ๊ทธ๋ž˜๋ฏธ์ƒ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž์ธ ๋ฒ„๋ฐ์—„ ์ถœ์‹  ์˜๊ตญ์˜ ๋ก ๋ฐด๋“œ์ด๋‹ค. 1980๋…„๋Œ€ ์ƒ์—…์ ์œผ๋กœ ํฐ ์„ฑ๊ณต์„ ๊ฑฐ๋‘” ๋ฐด๋“œ ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ MTV๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€์ ธ์˜จ "2์ฐจ ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌํ‹ฐ์‹œ ์ธ๋ฒ ์ด์ „"์˜ ์ฃผ์—ญ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1980๋…„๋Œ€ ์ด๋ž˜๋กœ ์˜๊ตญ ์‹ฑ๊ธ€ ์ฐจํŠธ์—์„œ ํƒ‘ 10์œ„๋ฅผ 14๋ฒˆ, ๋นŒ๋ณด๋“œ ํ•ซ 100 ์ฐจํŠธ ์ž…์„ฑ์„ 21๋ฒˆ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ. 1์–ต ์žฅ ์ด์ƒ์˜ ๋ ˆ์ฝ”๋“œ๋ฅผ ํŒ๋งคํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นธ ๋ฎค์ง ์–ด์›Œ๋“œ ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นธ ๋ฎค์ง ์–ด์›Œ๋“œ๋Š” Dick Clark์— ์˜ํ•ด 1973๋…„ ์‹œ์ž‘๋œ ์—ฐ๋ก€ ํ–‰์‚ฌ์ด๋‹ค. ๋“€๋ž€ ๋“€๋ž€์€ ํ›„๋ณด์— ๊ทธ์ณค๋‹ค. |- | align="center" rowspan="2"| 1985 ||๋“€๋ž€ ๋“€๋ž€|| ์ตœ๊ณ ์˜ ๊ทธ๋ฃน ๋น„๋””์˜ค ์•„ํ‹ฐ์ŠคํŠธ(ํŒ, ๋ฝ, ๋ฐด๋“œ ํ˜น์€ ๋“€์˜ค) || |- ๋ธŒ๋ผ๋ณด ์˜คํ†  ์–ด์›Œ๋“œ ๋ธŒ๋ผ๋ณด ์˜คํ†  ์–ด์›Œ๋“œ๋Š” ๋…์ผ์˜ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์œ ๋ช…ํ•œ 10๋Œ€ ์žก์ง€์ธ ๋ธŒ๋ผ๋ณด ๋งค๊ฑฐ์ง„์—์„œ ๊ฐœ์ตœํ•œ๋‹ค. ์Œ์•…, ์˜ํ™”, ์Šคํฌ์ธ ๊ณ„์—์„œ ํŠน์ถœ๋‚œ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ์ฃผ์–ด์ง„๋‹ค. |- | 1985 | ๋“€๋ž€ ๋“€๋ž€ | ์ตœ๊ณ ์˜ ๊ทธ๋ฃน(์€์ƒ) | ๋ธŒ๋ฆฟ ์–ด์›Œ๋“œ ๋ธŒ๋ฆฟ ์–ด์›Œ๋“œ๋Š” ์˜๊ตญ ์ถ•์Œ๊ธฐ ํ˜‘ํšŒ์—์„œ ์ง„ํ–‰ํ•˜๋Š” ์—ฐ๋ก€ ํ–‰์‚ฌ์ด๋‹ค. ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์˜ ๋…ธ๋ฏธ๋„ค์ดํŠธ ๋ชจ๋‘ ์ˆ˜์ƒํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. |- |align="center" | 1985 ||"Wild Boys" || ์ตœ๊ณ ์˜ ๋น„๋””์˜ค์ƒ(์˜๊ตญ) || |- |align="center" | 2004 || ๋“€๋ž€ ๋“€๋ž€ || ์Œ์•…๊ณตํ—Œ์ƒ || |- ๊ทธ๋ž˜๋ฏธ์ƒ ๊ทธ๋ž˜๋ฏธ์ƒ์€ ๊ตญ๋ฆฝ ๋ ˆ์ฝ”๋”ฉ ์•„์นด๋ฐ๋ฏธ์—์„œ ์ˆ˜์—ฌํ•˜๋Š” ์—ฐ๋ก€ ํ–‰์‚ฌ์ด๋‹ค. ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์˜ ๋…ธ๋ฏธ๋„ค์ดํŠธ ๋ชจ๋‘ ์ˆ˜์ƒํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. |- | align="center"| 1984 || "Girls on Film" / "Hungry Like the Wolf" || ์ตœ๊ณ ์˜ ๋ฎค์ง๋น„๋””์˜ค์ƒ(๋‹จํŽธ ๋ถ€๋ฌธ) || |- | align="center"| 1984 ||Duran Duran(1983 Video) || ์ตœ๊ณ ์˜ ๋ฎค์ง๋น„๋””์˜ค์ƒ(์žฅํŽธ ๋ถ€๋ฌธ) || |- Q ์–ด์›Œ๋“œ ์›”๊ฐ„ ์žก์ง€ Q ๋งค๊ฑฐ์ง„์—์„œ ์ง„ํ–‰ํ•˜๋Š” ํ–‰์‚ฌ์ด๋‹ค. |- |align="center" | 2003 || ๋“€๋ž€ ๋“€๋ž€ || Q ํ‰์ƒ๊ณต๋กœ์ƒ || |- |align="center" | 2015 || ๋“€๋ž€ ๋“€๋ž€ || Q ์•„์ด์ฝ˜์ƒ || |- ๊ณจ๋“  ๊ธ€๋กœ๋ธŒ์ƒ ๊ณจ๋“  ๊ธ€๋กœ๋ธŒ ์–ด์›Œ๋“œ๋Š” ํ• ๋ฆฌ์šฐ๋“œ ์™ธ์‹  ๊ธฐ์ž ํ˜‘ํšŒ์—์„œ ์ฃผ์ตœํ•˜๋Š” ์‹œ์ƒ์‹์ด๋‹ค. ๋ทฐ ํˆฌ ์–ด ํ‚ฌ๋กœ ํ•œ ๋ฒˆ ๋…ธ๋ฏธ๋„ค์ดํŠธ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ์˜ํ™” <๋ฐฑ์•ผ>์˜ ์ฃผ์ œ๊ฐ€์™€ ๊ฒฝํ•ฉ์„ ๋ฒŒ์ด๋‹ค ์ˆ˜์ƒํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๋‹ค. |- |align="center"| 1986 || "A View to a Kill" from A View to a Kill || ์ตœ๊ณ ์˜ ์ฃผ์ œ๊ฐ€์ƒ || MTV ๋น„๋””์˜ค ๋ฎค์ง ์–ด์›Œ๋“œ 1984๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์‹œ์ž‘๋œ MTV์˜ ์—ฐ๋ก€ ์‹œ์ƒ์‹์ด๋‹ค. |- | align="center"| 1984 ||"The Reflex"|| Best Editing in a Video || |- | align="center"| 1984 ||"The Reflex"|| Best Stage Performance in a Video || |- | align="center"| 1985 ||"Wild Boys"|| Best Direction in a Video || |- | align="center"| 1993 ||"Ordinary World"|| Best Cinematography || |- | align="center"| 2003 ||๋“€๋ž€ ๋“€๋ž€|| Lifetime Achievement Award|| |- | align="center"| 2015 ||๋“€๋ž€ ๋“€๋ž€|| Video Visionary Award|| |- ๋ฎค์ง ๋น„๋””์˜ค ํ”„๋กœ๋•์…˜ ์–ด์›Œ๋“œ MVPA ์–ด์›Œ๋“œ๋Š” ๋กœ์Šค์•ค์ ค๋ ˆ์Šค ์ค‘์‹ฌ์˜ ์Œ์•… ๊ต๋ฅ˜ ๋‹จ์ฒด๋“ค์ด ์ตœ๊ณ ์˜ ๋ฎค์ง ๋น„๋””์˜ค๋ฅผ ์„ ์ •ํ•˜๋Š” ์ƒ์ด๋‹ค. |- | rowspan="2" | 2008 | rowspan="2" | "Falling Down" | Best Adult Contemporary Video | |- | Best Colorist/Telecine | ํ• ๋ฆฌ์šฐ๋“œ ๋ช…์˜ˆ์˜ ๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ ํ• ๋ฆฌ์šฐ๋“œ ๋ช…์˜ˆ์˜ ๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ. |- | align="center"| 1993 ||๋“€๋ž€ ๋“€๋ž€ ||ํ• ๋ฆฌ์šฐ๋“œ ๋ช…์˜ˆ์˜ ๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ|| |- ์•„์ด๋ฒ„ ๋…ธ๋ฒจ๋กœ ์–ด์›Œ๋“œ ์ž‘๊ณก, ์ž‘์‚ฌ์— ํ—Œ์ •๋˜๋Š” ์—ฐ๋ก€ ์‹œ์ƒ์‹์ด๋‹ค. ๋งค๋…„ ๋Ÿฐ๋˜์—์„œ ์ฃผ์ตœ๋œ๋‹ค. |- | 1985 ||"The Reflex" || rowspan=2 | International Hit of the Year || |- | rowspan =2 | 1986 || rowspan ="2" | "A View to a Kill" || |- | The Best Film Theme or Song || |- | rowspan =3 | 1994 || rowspan=3 | "Ordinary World" || International Hit of the Year || |- | Best Song Musically and Lyrically || |- | Most Performed Work || |- | 2005 ||๋“€๋ž€ ๋“€๋ž€ || Outstanding Contribution To Music || |- ๋ฃจ๋‚˜์Šค ๋ธ ์–ด๋””ํ† ๋ฆฌ์˜ค ๋ฉ•์‹œ์ฝ”์˜ National Auditorium์ด ์ง€์›ํ•˜๋Š” ์‹œ์ƒ์‹์œผ๋กœ, ์ตœ๊ณ ์˜ ๋ฒ ์ŠคํŠธ ๋ผ์ด๋ธŒ ์‡ผ๋ฅผ ์„ ์ •ํ•œ๋‹ค. |- | 2005 | rowspan=3|๋“€๋ž€ ๋“€๋ž€ | rowspan=3|์ตœ๊ณ ์˜ ํ•ด์™ธ ๋ก ์•„ํ‹ฐ์ŠคํŠธ | |- | 2011 | |- | 2017 | ํด์Šคํƒ€ ์ฝ˜์„œํŠธ ์ธ๋”์ŠคํŠธ๋ฆฌ ์–ด์›Œ๋“œ |- | 1988 | The Strange Behavior Tour | Most Creative Stage Production | |- | 1989 | The Secret Caravan Club Tour | Club Tour of the Year | ์‹ค๋ฒ„ ํด๋ ˆํ”„ ์–ด์›Œ๋“œ 1976๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ง„ํ–‰๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ์˜๊ตญ์˜ ์—ฐ๋…„ ํ–‰์‚ฌ์ด๋‹ค. |- | 2015 | ๋“€๋ž€ ๋“€๋ž€ | Silver Clef Award | ์Šค๋งค์‹œ ํžˆํŠธ ํด ์œ„๋„ˆ์Šค ํŒŒํ‹ฐ ๋งค๋…„ ์Œ์•…์žก์ง€ ์Šค๋งค์‹œ ํžˆํŠธ๊ฐ€ ์ฃผ์ตœํ•˜๊ณ , BBC์—์„œ ๋ฐฉ์†กํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. (1988~2005) |- | rowspan=3|1981 | ๋“€๋ž€๋“€๋ž€ | Best Group | |- | "Girls on Film" | Best Single | |- | rowspan=3|Simon Le Bon | rowspan=2|Most Fanciable Male | |- | rowspan=5|1982 | |- | Best Male Singer | |- | Rio | Best Album | |- | "Save a Prayer" | rowspan=2|Best Single | |- | "Hungry Like the Wolf" | |- | 1983 | rowspan=5|๋“€๋ž€ ๋“€๋ž€ | Best Group | |- | rowspan=2|1984 | Worst Group | |- | rowspan=3|Best Group | |- | 1986 | |- | 1987 | UK ๋ฎค์ง ๋น„๋””์˜ค ์–ด์›Œ๋“œ ๋ฎค์ง ๋น„๋””์˜ค์˜ ์ฐฝ์ž‘์„ฑ๊ณผ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์  ๋ฉด๋ชจ, ํ˜์‹ ์„ ์•Œ๋ฆฌ๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด 2008๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ง„ํ–‰๋˜๋Š” ์—ฐ๋ก€ ์‹œ์ƒ์‹์ด๋‹ค. |- | 2011 ||"Before the Rain" || Best Pop Video - Budget || |- ๋“€๋ž€ ๋“€๋ž€ ์ˆ˜์ƒ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20awards%20and%20nominations%20received%20by%20Duran%20Duran
List of awards and nominations received by Duran Duran
Duran Duran are a Grammy Award-winning English rock band from Birmingham, United Kingdom. They were one of the most successful of the 1980s bands and a leading band in the MTV-driven "Second British Invasion" of the United States. Since the 1980s they have placed 14 in the Top 10 of the UK Singles Chart and 21 in the US Billboard Hot 100 and have sold more than 100 million records. ASCAP Pop Music Awards The ASCAP Pop Music Awards honors the songwriters and publishers of the most performed pop songs. !Ref. |- | rowspan=2|1994 | "Ordinary World" | rowspan=2|Most Performed Songs | | |- | "Come Undone" | | American Music Awards The American Music Awards is an annual awards ceremony created by Dick Clark in 1973. Duran Duran has been nominated once overall at the American Music Awards. |- | align="center" rowspan="2"| ||Duran Duran|| Favorite Group Video Artist Pop, Rock, Band, or Duo || |- BT Digital Music Awards Launched in 2002, the BT Digital Music Awards were held annually in the United Kingdom. |- | 2004 | Duran Duran's official site | Best Music Website | Billboard Music Awards The Billboard Music Awards are held to honor artists for commercial performance in the U.S., based on record charts published by Billboard. |- | rowspan=6|1983 | rowspan=6|Duran Duran | Top Pop Artist | |- | Top Duo/Group | |- | Top Pop Albums Artist | |- | Top Pop Albums Artist โ€“ Duo/Group | |- | Top Pop Singles Artist | |- | Top Pop Singles Artist โ€“ Duo/Group | Bravo Otto Awards The Bravo Otto Awards are held by Bravo magazine, the largest teen magazine within the German-language sphere, to honor top performers in film, music, television and sport. |- | 1985 | Duran Duran | Best Group (Silver) | Brit Awards The Brit Awards are the British Phonographic Industry's annual pop music awards. Duran Duran has won two award from two nominations. |- |align="center" | 1985 ||"Wild Boys" || Best British Video || |- |align="center" | 2004 || Duran Duran || Outstanding Contribution To Music || |- Classic Pop Readers' Awards Classic Pop is a monthly British music magazine, which launched in October 2012. It was devised and founded by Ian Peel, who was also editor for the first 19 issues. Rik Flynn stepped in as editor until Issue 23 followed by current editor Steve Harnell. Ian Peel remains involved as Founder & Editor-at-Large. |- |align="center" |2020 | Themselves | Group of the Year | GAFFA Awards (Denmark) !Ref. |- | align="center" rowspan=2|2022 | Duran Duran |International Band | | rowspan=2| |- | Future Past | International Album | Grammy Awards The Grammy Awards are awarded annually by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. Duran Duran has received two awards from two nominations. |- | align="center"| || "Girls on Film" / "Hungry Like the Wolf" || Best Music Video, Short Form || |- | align="center"| ||Duran Duran || Best Music Video, Long Form || |- Rock and Roll Hall of Fame The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is a museum located on the shores of Lake Erie in downtown Cleveland, Ohio, United States, dedicated to the recording history of some of the best-known and most influential artists, producers, and other people who have influenced the music industry. |- | 2022 | Performer | Hall of Fame | |- Q Awards Q Magazine was a monthly music magazine from the UK, where Duran Duran won a Lifetime Achievement Award. |- |align="center" | 2003 || Duran Duran || Q Lifetime Achievement Award || |- |align="center" | 2015 || Duran Duran || Q Icon Award || |- Golden Globe Awards The Golden Globe Awards are awarded annually by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association. Duran Duran has received one nomination. |- |align="center"| 1986 || "A View to a Kill" from A View to a Kill || Best Original Song || MTV Video Music Awards The MTV Video Music Awards is an annual awards ceremony established in 1984 by MTV. |- | align="center"| || "The Reflex" || Best Editing in a Video || |- | align="center"| || "The Reflex" || Best Stage Performance in a Video || |- | align="center"| || "Wild Boys" || Best Direction in a Video || |- | align="center"| || "Ordinary World" || Best Cinematography in a Video || |- | align="center"| || Duran Duran || Lifetime Achievement Award || |- MTV Europe Music Awards The MTV Europe Music Awards is an annual awards ceremony established in 1994 by MTV Europe. |- | align="center"| 2015 || Duran Duran || Video Visionary Award || |- Music Video Production Awards The MVPA Awards are annually presented by a Los Angeles-based music trade organization to honor the year's best music videos. |- | rowspan="2" | 2008 | rowspan="2" | "Falling Down" | Best Adult Contemporary Video | |- | Best Colorist/Telecine | Hollywood Walk of Fame Hollywood Walk of Fame |- | align="center"| 1993 ||Duran Duran ||Hollywood Walk of Fame|| |- IM&MC Music Video Awards The IM&MC Music Video Awards is Clip Competition Awards will be presented to winners during the telecast. The Marked the closing of the first International Music&Media Conference (IM&MC). The show was carried live by the BBC and The U.K.-based Music Box network, and was tapped for later presentation on MTV in the U.S. and MuchMusic in Canada. !Ref. |- | 1986 | Arena | Best Story Line โ€“ Long-form Video | | Ivor Novello Awards The Ivor Novello Awards is an award ceremony for songwriting and composing, held annually in London, United Kingdom. |- | 1985 ||"The Reflex" || rowspan=2 | International Hit of the Year || |- | rowspan =2 | 1986 || rowspan ="2" | "A View to a Kill" || |- | The Best Film Theme or Song || |- | rowspan =3 | 1994 || rowspan=3 | "Ordinary World" || International Hit of the Year || |- | Best Song Musically and Lyrically || |- | Most Performed Work || |- | 2005 ||Duran Duran || Outstanding Contribution To Music || |- Lunas del Auditorio Lunas del Auditorio are sponsored by The National Auditorium in Mexico to honor the best live shows in the country. |- | 2005 | rowspan=3|Duran Duran | rowspan=3|Best Foreign Rock Artist | |- | 2011 | |- | 2017 | Pollstar Concert Industry Awards The Pollstar Concert Industry Awards is an annual award ceremony to honor artists and professionals in the concert industry. |- | 1988 | The Strange Behavior Tour | Most Creative Stage Production | |- | 1989 | The Secret Caravan Club Tour | Club Tour of the Year | Premios Ondas The Premios Ondas have been given since 1954 by Radio Barcelona, a subsidiary of Cadena SER, in recognition of professionals in the fields of radio and television broadcasting, the cinema, and the music industry. |- | 2004 | Duran Duran | Special Jury Award | Silver Clef Awards The Silver Clef Awards are an annual UK music awards lunch which has been running since 1976. Duran Duran has received one award. |- | 2015 | Themselves | Silver Clef Award | Smash Hits Poll Winners Party The Smash Hits Poll Winners Party (1988โ€“2005) was an awards ceremony held annually by British magazine Smash Hits, and broadcast on BBC One. |- | rowspan=3|1981 | Themselves | Best Group | |- | "Girls on Film" | Best Single | |- | rowspan=3|Simon Le Bon | rowspan=2|Most Fanciable Male | |- | rowspan=5|1982 | |- | Best Male Singer | |- | Rio | Best Album | |- | "Save a Prayer" | rowspan=2|Best Single | |- | "Hungry Like the Wolf" | |- | rowspan=5|1983 | Themselves | Best Group | |- |"Union of the Snake" | Best Video | |- | Simon Le Bon | Best Male Singer | |- | John Taylor | Most Fanciable Male | |- | Villa Park show 1983 | Event of The Year | |- | rowspan=8|1984 | Themselves | Worst Group | |- | Themselves | Best Group | |- | Seven and the Ragged Tiger | Best Album | |- | "The Wild Boys" | Best Single | |- | "The Wild Boys" | Best Video | |- | Simon Le Bon | Best Male Singer | |- | John Taylor | Most Fanciable Male | |- | Roger Taylor Wedding | Event of The Year | |- | rowspan=5|1985 | Themselves | Best Group | |- | "A View to a Kill" | Best Single | |- | Simon Le Bon | Best Male Singer | |- | John Taylor | Most Fanciable Male | |- | John Taylor | Best Dressed Person | |- | rowspan=3| 1986 | Themselves | Worst Group | |- | "Notorious" | Best Single | |- | John Taylor | Most Fanciable Male | |- | 1987 | Themselves | Worst Group | UK Music Video Awards The UK Music Video Awards is an annual award ceremony founded in 2008 to recognise creativity, technical excellence and innovation in music videos and moving images for music. |- | 2011 ||"Before the Rain" || Best Pop Video โ€“ Budget || |- | 2012 || "Girl Panic" || Best Styling in a Video || References Awards Lists of awards received by British musician Lists of awards received by musical group
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%99%B8%ED%8A%B8%EB%B5%88%EC%8B%9C%20%EC%8B%A4%ED%97%98
์™ธํŠธ๋ตˆ์‹œ ์‹คํ—˜
์™ธํŠธ๋ตˆ์‹œ ์‹คํ—˜์€ ๊ด€์„ฑ ์งˆ๋Ÿ‰๊ณผ ์ค‘๋ ฅ ์งˆ๋Ÿ‰ ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ์ƒ๊ด€ ๊ด€๊ณ„๋ฅผ ์ธก์ • ํ•œ ์œ ๋ช…ํ•œ ๋ฌผ๋ฆฌํ•™ ์‹คํ—˜์œผ๋กœ ํ—๊ฐ€๋ฆฌ์˜ ๋ฌผ๋ฆฌํ•™์ž์ธ ์™ธํŠธ๋ตˆ์‹œ ๋กœ๋ž€๋“œ๊ฐ€ ๊ด€์„ฑ ์งˆ๋Ÿ‰๊ณผ ์ค‘๋ ฅ ์งˆ๋Ÿ‰์ด ๋™์ผํ•˜๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ์ž…์ฆํ•œ ์‹คํ—˜์ด๋‹ค. ๊ด€์„ฑ ์งˆ๋Ÿ‰๊ณผ ์ค‘๋ ฅ ์งˆ๋Ÿ‰์ด ๋™์ผํ•œ์ง€ ์—ฌ๋ถ€๋Š” ์˜ค๋žซ๋™์•ˆ ์˜์‹ฌ ๋ฐ›์•„ ์™”์œผ๋‚˜ ์ •ํ™•ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์ž…์ฆ ๋œ ์ ์ด ์—†์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์ดˆ๊ธฐ์˜ ์‹คํ—˜์€ ์•„์ด์ž‘ ๋‰ดํ„ด ( Isaac Newton, 1642-1727)์— ์˜ํ•ด ์ˆ˜ํ–‰๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ๋ฆฌํžˆ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ ๋ฒ ์…€ ( Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel, 1784-1846)์— ์˜ํ•ด ํ–ฅ์ƒ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1882๋…„๊ฒฝ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์™ธํŠธ๋ตˆ์‹œ ๋กœ๋ž€๋“œ๊ฐ€ 1906๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 1909๋…„๊นŒ์ง€์˜ ์žฅ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„์— ๊ฑธ์นœ ๊ฐœ์„ ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋น„ํ‹€๋ฆผ ์ €์šธ์„ ์ด์šฉํ•œ ํ›จ์”ฌ ๋” ์ •ํ™•ํ•œ ์‹คํ—˜์„ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์™ธํŠธ๋ตˆ์‹œ์˜ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํŒ€์€ ๋น„์Šทํ•œ ์ข…๋ฅ˜์˜ ๋ณด๋‹ค ์ •ํ™•ํ•œ ์‹คํ—˜๊ณผ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ์œ ํ˜•์˜ ๋ฌผ์งˆ ๋ฐ ์ง€๊ตฌ์˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์œ„์น˜์—์„œ์˜ ์‹คํ—˜์„ ํ†ตํ•˜์—ฌ, ๋ชจ๋‘ ๊ด€์„ฑ ์งˆ๋Ÿ‰๊ณผ ์ค‘๋ ฅ ์งˆ๋Ÿ‰์˜ ๋™์ผ์„ฑ์„ ์ž…์ฆํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธํ›„์— ์ด ์‹คํ—˜์€ ์ค‘๋ ฅ๊ณผ ๊ฐ€์†๋„๊ฐ€ ๋™๋“ฑํ•˜๋‹ค๋Š” ์ผ๋ฐ˜ ์ƒ๋Œ€์„ฑ ์ด๋ก ์œผ๋กœ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ๋œ ๋“ฑ๊ฐ€ ์›๋ฆฌ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ํ˜„๋Œ€์  ์ดํ•ด์— ์˜ํ–ฅ์„ ๋ฏธ์ณค๋‹ค. ํž˜์˜ ๋‹จ์œ„์˜ ์ •์˜์— ๋น„๋ก€์ƒ์ˆ˜๋Š” ํฌํ•จ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฏ€๋กœ, ์™ธํŠธ๋ตˆ์‹œ ์‹คํ—˜์€ ๊ด€์„ฑ ์งˆ๋Ÿ‰์ด ์ค‘๋ ฅ ์งˆ๋Ÿ‰์— ์ •ํ™•ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋น„๋ก€ํ•จ์„ ์‹คํ—˜์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐํžŒ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ์™ธํŠธ๋ตˆ์‹œ์˜ ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ์‹คํ—˜ ์™ธํŠธ๋ตˆ์‹œ์— ์˜ํ•œ ์›๋ž˜์˜ ์‹คํ—˜ ์žฅ์น˜๋Š” ๊ฐ€๋Š” ์‹ค์— ๋งค๋‹ฌ๋ฆฐ ๋ง‰๋Œ€์˜ ์–‘์ชฝ ๋์— ๋ถ€์ฐฉ๋œ 2 ๊ฐœ์˜ ์งˆ๋Ÿ‰์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ง‰๋Œ€ ๋˜๋Š” ์„ฌ์œ ์— ๋ถ€์ฐฉ ๋œ ๊ฑฐ์šธ์€ ์ž‘์€ ๋ง์›๊ฒฝ์œผ๋กœ ๋น›์„ ๋ฐ˜์‚ฌํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ง‰๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ์กฐ๊ธˆ์ด๋ผ๋„ ํšŒ์ „ํ•˜๋ฉด ๊ด‘์„ ์ด ๋ฐ˜์‚ฌ๋˜์–ด ๋ง์›๊ฒฝ์œผ๋กœ ํ™•๋Œ€ ํ•  ๋•Œ ๋ˆˆ์— ๋„๋Š” ๋ณ€ํ™”๋ฅผ ์ผ์œผํ‚จ๋‹ค. ์ง€๊ตฌ ๊ธฐ์ค€ ํ”„๋ ˆ์ž„ (์ฆ‰, ๊ด€์„ฑ ํ”„๋ ˆ์ž„์ด ์•„๋‹Œ "์‹คํ—˜์‹ค ํ”„๋ ˆ์ž„")์—์„œ๋Š”, ์ˆ˜ํ‰ ์ €์šธ์˜ ์งˆ๋Ÿ‰์— ์ž‘์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ํž˜์€ ์ค„์˜ ์žฅ๋ ฅ, ์ค‘๋ ฅ ๋ฐ ์ง€๊ตฌ ํšŒ์ „์— ์˜ํ•œ ์›์‹ฌ๋ ฅ์ด๋‹ค. ์ง€๊ตฌ์˜ ์ค‘๋ ฅ์€ ์ค‘๋ ฅ ์งˆ๋Ÿ‰์— ์˜์กดํ•˜๋Š” ๋‰ดํ„ด์˜ ๋งŒ์œ ์ธ๋ ฅ ๋ฒ•์น™์— ์˜ํ•ด ๊ณ„์‚ฐ๋œ๋‹ค. ์›์‹ฌ๋ ฅ์€ ๋‰ดํ„ด์˜ ์šด๋™ ๋ฒ•์น™์— ์˜ํ•ด ๊ณ„์‚ฐ๋˜๋ฉฐ ๊ด€์„ฑ ์งˆ๋Ÿ‰์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ๋‹ฌ๋ผ์ง„๋‹ค. ์™ธํŠธ๋ตˆ์‹œ์˜ ์‹คํ—˜์—์„œ๋Š” ๋‘ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ์œ ํ˜•์˜ ์งˆ๋Ÿ‰์ด ์„œ๋กœ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ๋‘ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ํž˜์ด ๋‘ ๋ฌผ์ฒด์—์„œ ๋˜‘๊ฐ™์€ ๋ฐฉ์‹์œผ๋กœ ์ž‘์šฉํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์•„์„œ ์‹œ๊ฐ„์ด ์ง€๋‚จ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ๋ง‰๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ํšŒ์ „ํ•˜๋„๋ก ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํšŒ์ „ํ•˜๋Š” "์‹คํ—˜์‹ค ํ”„๋ ˆ์ž„(์ฆ‰, ์ง€๊ตฌ ํ‘œ๋ฉด)"์—์„œ๋Š” ์ค„์˜ ์žฅ๋ ฅ๊ณผ ์ด๋ณด๋‹ค ํ›จ์”ฌ ์›์‹ฌ๋ ฅ์€ ๋ฒกํ„ฐ ํ•ฉ์œผ๋กœ ์„œ๋กœ ์ƒ์‡„๋œ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ˜๋ฉด์— "๊ด€์„ฑ ํ”„๋ ˆ์ž„(์šฐ์ฃผ์—์„œ ์ •์ง€ํ•œ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ)"์—์„œ ๋ณผ ๋•Œ๋Š” ์ค‘๋ ฅ๊ณผ ์žฅ๋ ฅ์˜ (๋ฒกํ„ฐ) ํ•ฉ์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ €์šธ์ด ์ง€๊ตฌ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ํšŒ์ „ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์‹คํ—˜์‹ค ํ”„๋ ˆ์ž„์—์„œ ๋ง‰๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ์ •์ง€ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด์„œ๋Š” ๊ฐ ๋ฌผ์ฒด์— ์ž‘์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ํž˜์˜ ๋ง‰๋Œ€์ƒ์˜ ์„ฑ๋ถ„์—์„œ ์˜์˜ ์•Œ์งœ ํ† ํฌ๊ฐ€ ์ƒ์„ฑ๋˜์–ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค(์œ ์ผํ•œ ์ž์œ ๋„๋Š” ์ˆ˜ํ‰๋ฉด์—์„œ์˜ ํšŒ์ „์ž„). ๊ณ„๊ฐ€ ์˜์›ํžˆ ์ •์ง€ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค๋ฉด, ๊ธฐ๊ณ„์  ํ‰ํ˜•์„ ์˜๋ฏธํ•˜๋‚˜(์ฆ‰, ์•Œ์งœ ํž˜๊ณผ ํ† ํฌ๊ฐ€ ๋ชจ๋‘ ์˜), ๋‘ ๊ฐœ์˜ ๋ฌผ์ฒด๊ฐ€ ์ •์ง€ ์ƒํƒœ์— ๋งค๋‹ฌ๋ ค ์žˆ์ง€๋งŒ ์„œ๋กœ ์ƒ์ดํ•œ ์›์‹ฌ๋ ฅ์ด ์ž‘์šฉํ•˜๋ฉด ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ง‰๋Œ€์— ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํ† ํฌ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€ํ•ด์ง€๊ฒŒ ๋˜๋ฏ€๋กœ ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ ๊ณ„๋Š” ์ €์ ˆ๋กœ ํšŒ์ „ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋  ๊ฒƒ์ด์–ด์„œ, ๊ณ„๋Š” ์ด ์ƒํƒœ์— ๊ทธ๋Œ€๋กœ ๋จธ๋ฌด๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜ ์—†๊ณ  ๋‘ ๋ชธ์ฒด์— ์ž‘์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ์›์‹ฌ๋ ฅ์˜ ์ฐจ์ด๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ๋ง‰๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ํšŒ์ „ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ถ”๊ฐ€ ๊ฐœ์„  1885๋…„๊ฒฝ์˜ ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ์‹คํ—˜์€ ํฐ ์ฐจ์ด๋Š” ์—†์—ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ์™ธํŠธ๋ตˆ์‹œ๋Š” ์‹คํ—˜์„ ๋ณด๋‹ค ์ •ํ™•ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ–ฅ์ƒ์‹œํ‚ค๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์‹คํ—˜์„ ๊ฐœ์„ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 1889๋…„์— ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋ฌผ์งˆ์— ์˜ํ•œ ์ค‘๋ ฅ์˜ ๋ณ€ํ™”๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋Š”์ง€๋ฅผ ๋ณด๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ์ข…๋ฅ˜์˜ ์ƒ˜ํ”Œ ์žฌ๋ฃŒ๋กœ ์ด ์žฅ์น˜๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด ์‹คํ—˜์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๋ณ€ํ™”๋Š” ์ธก์ • ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋‹ค๋Š” ์ ์„ ์ฆ๋ช…ํ•˜๊ณ  2,000 ๋งŒ๋ถ„์˜ 1์— ์ด๋ฅด๋Š” ์ •ํ™•์„ฑ์„ ์ฃผ์žฅํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 1890๋…„์— ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋ถ€๋‹คํŽ˜์ŠคํŠธ์—์„œ Gellรฉrt Hill ์˜ ์งˆ๋Ÿ‰์„ ์ธก์ • ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ๋ฟ๋งŒ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ผ ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๋‹ค์Œ ํ•ด์— ๊ทธ๋Š” ์žฅ์น˜์˜ ์ˆ˜์ • ๋œ ๋ฒ„์ „์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ž‘์—…์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ด๋ฅผ "์ˆ˜ํ‰ ๋ณ€์œ„๊ณ„ (horizontal variometer)"๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถˆ๋ €๋‹ค. ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์„œ๋Š” ๊ธฐ๋ณธ ์„ค๊ณ„๋ฅผ ์•ฝ๊ฐ„ ์ˆ˜์ •ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋‘๊ฐœ์˜ ๋ฌผ์ฒด ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋ฅผ ๋ง‰๋Œ€ ๋์— ์ง์ ‘ ๋ถ€์ฐฉ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ๋ง‰๋Œ€ ๋์— ๋ถ€ํƒ๋œ ์‹ค์— ๋งค๋‹ฌ์•˜๋‹ค. ์ด๋กœ์จ 2 ์ฐจ์›์—์„œ์˜ ๋น„ํ‹€๋ฆผ์„ ์ธก์ • ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ด๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•˜์—ฌ ์ค‘๋ ฅ๊ฐ€์†๋„ g ์˜ ๊ตญ์†Œ ์ˆ˜ํ‰ ์„ฑ๋ถ„์„ ์ธก์ • ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์€ ํ›จ์”ฌ ๋” ์ •ํ™•ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ง€๊ธˆ์€ ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ์™ธํŠธ๋ตˆ์‹œ ๋ฐธ๋Ÿฐ์Šค์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์ด ์žฅ์น˜๋Š” ์˜ค๋Š˜๋‚  ๊ตญ๋ถ€์ ์ธ ์งˆ๋Ÿ‰ ๋ฐ€๋„๋ฅผ ๊ฒ€์ƒ‰ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ง€๊ตฌ ํƒ์‚ฌ์— ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์žฅ์น˜๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ Dezsรถ Pekรกr (1873-1953)์™€ Jenล‘ Fekete (1880-1943)๋Š” 1906๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 4000 ์‹œ๊ฐ„์˜ ์‹คํ—˜์„ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰ํ•˜์—ฌ, 1909๋…„ ๋Ÿฐ๋˜์—์„œ ๊ฐœ์ตœ ๋œ ์ œ16ํšŒ ๊ตญ์ œ ์ธก์ง€ ํšŒ์˜์—์„œ ์ฒ˜์Œ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ•˜์˜€๋Š”๋ฐ ์ •ํ™•๋„๊ฐ€ 1 ์–ต๋ถ„์˜ 1๋กœ ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์™ธํŠธ๋ตˆ์‹œ๋Š” 1919๋…„์— ์‚ฌ๋งํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์™„์ „ํ•œ ์ธก์ •์€ Pekรกr์™€ Fekete์— ์˜ํ•ด์„œ 1922๋…„์—์•ผ ์ถœํŒ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ด€๋ จ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ์™ธํŠธ๋ตˆ์‹œ๋Š” ์›€์ง์ด๋Š” ์„ ๋ฐ•์—์„œ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํŒ€์ด ์ˆ˜ํ–‰ํ•œ ๋น„์Šทํ•œ ์‹คํ—˜์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด์„œ๋„ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํ•˜์—ฌ ์ธก์ •๋œ ๋ฏธ์„ธํ•œ ์ฐจ์ด๋ฅผ ์„ค๋ช…ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ์™ธํŠธ๋ตˆ์‹œ ํšจ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ 1908๋…„ ํ‘ํ•ด์—์„œ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰๋œ ์ถ”๊ฐ€ ์ž‘์—…์—์„œ ์ž…์ฆ ๋œ ํšจ๊ณผ์™€ ๊ฐ™์ด ์ง€๊ตฌ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์„ ๋ฐ•์˜ ์›€์ง์ž„์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ฐœ์ƒํ•˜๋Š” ์ถ”๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€์†๋ ฅ์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. 1930๋…„๋Œ€์—๋Š” ์™ธํŠธ๋ตˆ์‹œ์˜ ํ•™์ƒ์ด์—ˆ๋˜ Jรกnos Renner (1889-1976)๊ฐ€ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋ฅผ 1 ~ 2 ์–ต์—์„œ 50 ์–ต ๋ถ„์˜ 1๋กœ ํ–ฅ์ƒ ์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. P. G. ๋กค๊ณผ R. ํฌ๋กœํŠธ์ฝ”ํ”„์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ Robert H. Dicke๋Š” ์žฅ๋น„๋ฅผ ๊ฐœ์„ ํ•˜์—ฌ ์‹คํ—˜์„ ์žฌ์‹คํ–‰ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ •ํ™•๋„๋ฅผ 1 ์ฒœ์–ต ๋ถ„์˜ 1๋กœ ํ–ฅ์ƒ ์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋“ค์€ ๋˜ํ•œ ์ฃผ์žฅ๋œ ์ •ํ™•์„ฑ์ด ๋‹ค์†Œ ์˜์‹ฌ์Šค๋Ÿฌ์› ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ œ์•ˆ๋œ ์›๋ž˜์˜ ์‹คํ—˜์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์ฐจ๋ก€ ๊ด€์ฐฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์šฐ๋ ค์— ๋น„์ถ”์–ด ๋ฐ์ดํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ์žฌ๊ฒ€ํ† ํ•˜๋ฉด ๋™๋“ฑ์„ฑ ์›๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ์ •ํ™•ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์œ ํ˜•์˜ ์žฌ๋ฃŒ์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ณ€๊ฒฝ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ด๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณด์ด๋Š” ๋ช…๋ฐฑํ•œ ์•„์ฃผ ์•ฝ๊ฐ„์˜ ํšจ๊ณผ๊ฐ€ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. 1980๋…„๋Œ€์— ์ค‘๋ ฅ๊ณผ ์–‘์ž ์—ญํ•™์„ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉํ•˜๋ ค๋Š” ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ๋ฌผ๋ฆฌ ์ด๋ก ์—์„œ๋Š” ๋ฌผ์งˆ๊ณผ ๋ฐ˜๋ฌผ์งˆ์ด ์ค‘๋ ฅ์— ์˜ํ•ด "์•ฝ๊ฐ„" ๋‹ค๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ์˜ํ–ฅ์„ ๋ฐ›์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์ œ์•ˆ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. Dicke์˜ ์ฃผ์žฅ๊ณผ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉํ•˜๋ฉด ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์ฐจ์ด๋ฅผ ์ธก์ • ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ์„ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ๋ณด์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์ผ๋ จ์˜ ์™ธํŠธ๋ตˆ์‹œ ์œ ํ˜•์˜ ์‹คํ—˜(์ง„๊ณต ๊ธฐ๋‘ฅ์—์„œ์˜ ์‹œ๊ฐ„์ฐจ ๋‚™ํ•˜ ๋“ฑ)์ด ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์กŒ์œผ๋‚˜ ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌํ•œ ํšจ๊ณผ๋Š” ์กด์žฌํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค๋Š” ์ ์ด ๋ฐํ˜€์กŒ๋‹ค. ์ด ์‹คํ—˜์˜ ๋ถ€๋Œ€ํšจ๊ณผ๋กœ๋Š” ๊ตญ์†Œ ์ธต์„œํ•™, ๋ฌผ๋ฆฌํ•™ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์†Œ(์™ธํŠธ๋ตˆ์‹œ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐœ์ธ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์„ค๊ณ„ ํ•œ)์˜ ๋ฌผ๋ฆฌ์  ๋ฐฐ์น˜, ๋‚ ์”จ ๋ฐ ๊ธฐํƒ€ ํšจ๊ณผ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์„ธ๋ถ€ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ํฌํ•จํ•˜์—ฌ ์›๋ณธ ์™ธํŠธ๋ตˆ์‹œ ๋ฐ์ดํ„ฐ์˜ ์žฌ๊ฒ€ํ† ์˜€๋‹ค. ์‹คํ—˜์€ ์ž˜ ๊ธฐ๋ก๋˜์–ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฐธ์กฐ ๋‹ค์„ฏ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ํž˜ ๊ด€์„ฑ ํ”„๋ ˆ์ž„ ํ‘ธ์ฝ” ์ง„์ž ์ผ๋ฐ˜ ์ƒ๋Œ€์„ฑ ์ด๋ก  ์ผ๋ฐ˜ ์ƒ๋Œ€์„ฑ ์ด๋ก ์˜ ํ…Œ์ŠคํŠธ ์ฐธ๊ณ  ๋ฌธํ—Œ ๋ฌผ๋ฆฌํ•™ ์‹คํ—˜
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E%C3%B6tv%C3%B6s%20experiment
Eรถtvรถs experiment
The Eรถtvรถs experiment was a famous physics experiment that measured the correlation between inertial mass and gravitational mass, demonstrating that the two were one and the same, something that had long been suspected but never demonstrated with the same accuracy. The earliest experiments were done by Isaac Newton (1642โ€“1727) and improved upon by Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel (1784โ€“1846). A much more accurate experiment using a torsion balance was carried out by Lorรกnd Eรถtvรถs starting around 1885, with further improvements in a lengthy run between 1906 and 1909. Eรถtvรถs's team followed this with a series of similar but more accurate experiments, as well as experiments with different types of materials and in different locations around the Earth, all of which demonstrated the same equivalence in mass. In turn, these experiments led to the modern understanding of the equivalence principle encoded in general relativity, which states that the gravitational and inertial masses are the same. It is sufficient for the inertial mass to be proportional to the gravitational mass. Any multiplicative constant will be absorbed in the definition of the unit of force. Eรถtvรถs's original experiment Eรถtvรถs's original experimental device consisted of two masses on opposite ends of a rod, hung from a thin fiber. A mirror attached to the rod, or fiber, reflected light into a small telescope. Even tiny changes in the rotation of the rod would cause the light beam to be deflected, which would in turn cause a noticeable change when magnified by the telescope. As seen from the Earth's frame of reference (or "lab frame", which is not an inertial frame of reference), the primary forces acting on the balanced masses are the string tension, gravity, and the centrifugal force due to the rotation of the Earth. Gravity is calculated by Newton's law of universal gravitation, which depends on gravitational mass. The centrifugal force is calculated by Newton's laws of motion and depends on inertial mass. The experiment was arranged so that if the two types of masses were different, the two forces will not act in exactly the same way on the two bodies, and over time the rod will rotate. As seen from the rotating "lab frame", the string tension plus the (much smaller) centrifugal force cancels the weight (as vectors), while as seen from any inertial frame the (vector) sum of the weight and the tension makes the object rotate along with the earth. For the rod to be at rest in the lab frame, the reactions, on the rod, of the tensions acting on each body, must create a zero net torque (the only degree of freedom is rotation on the horizontal plane). Supposing that the system was constantly at rest โ€“ this meaning mechanical equilibrium (i.e. net forces and torques zero) โ€“ with the two bodies thus hanging also at rest, but having different centrifugal forces upon them and consequently exerting different torques on the rod through the reactions of the tensions, the rod then would spontaneously rotate, in contradiction with our assumption that the system is at rest. So the system cannot exist in this state; any difference between the centrifugal forces on the two bodies will set the rod in rotation. Further improvements Initial experiments around 1885 demonstrated that there was no apparent difference, and Eรถtvรถs improved the experiment to demonstrate this with more accuracy. In 1889 he used the device with different types of sample materials to see if there was any change in gravitational force due to materials. This experiment proved that no such change could be measured, to a claimed accuracy of 1 in 20 million. In 1890 he published these results, as well as a measurement of the mass of Gellรฉrt Hill in Budapest. The next year he started work on a modified version of the device, which he called the "horizontal variometer". This modified the basic layout slightly to place one of the two rest masses hanging from the end of the rod on a fiber of its own, as opposed to being attached directly to the end. This allowed it to measure torsion in two dimensions, and in turn, the local horizontal component of g. It was also much more accurate. Now generally referred to as the Eรถtvรถs balance, this device is commonly used today in prospecting by searching for local mass concentrations. Using the new device a series of experiments taking 4000 hours was carried out with Dezsรถ Pekรกr (1873โ€“1953) and Jenล‘ Fekete (1880โ€“1943) starting in 1906. These were first presented at the 16th International Geodesic Conference in London in 1909, raising the accuracy to 1 in 100 million. Eรถtvรถs died in 1919, and the complete measurements were only published in 1922 by Pekรกr and Fekete. Related studies Eรถtvรถs also studied similar experiments being carried out by other teams on moving ships, which led to his development of the Eรถtvรถs effect to explain the small differences they measured. These were due to the additional accelerative forces due to the motion of the ships in relation to the Earth, an effect that was demonstrated on an additional run carried out on the Black Sea in 1908. In the 1930s a former student of Eรถtvรถs, Jรกnos Renner (1889โ€“1976), further improved the results to between 1 in 2 to 5 billion. Robert H. Dicke with P. G. Roll and R. Krotkov re-ran the experiment much later using improved apparatus and further improved the accuracy to 1 in 100 billion. They also made several observations about the original experiment which suggested that the claimed accuracy was somewhat suspect. Re-examining the data in light of these concerns led to an apparent very slight effect that appeared to suggest that the equivalence principle was not exact, and changed with different types of material. In the 1980s several new physics theories attempting to combine gravitation and quantum mechanics suggested that matter and anti-matter would be affected slightly differently by gravity. Combined with Dicke's claims there appeared to be a possibility that such a difference could be measured, this led to a new series of Eรถtvรถs-type experiments (as well as timed falls in evacuated columns) that eventually demonstrated no such effect. A side-effect of these experiments was a re-examination of the original Eรถtvรถs data, including detailed studies of the local stratigraphy, the physical layout of the Physics Institute (which Eรถtvรถs had personally designed), and even the weather and other effects. The experiment is therefore well recorded. Table of measurements over time Tests on the Equivalence principle See also Fifth force Inertial frame General relativity Foucault pendulum Eddington experiment Tests of general relativity References Physics experiments Gravimetry
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%ED%97%A4%EC%84%BC%EC%B9%B4%EC%85%80%20%EB%B0%A9%EB%B0%B1%EA%B5%AD
ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ
ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ(), ๋˜๋Š” ๊ฐ„๋‹จํžˆ ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€์€ ์‹ ์„ฑ ๋กœ๋งˆ ์ œ๊ตญ ์•„๋ž˜์— ์žˆ๋˜ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ์ด๋‹ค. 1567๋…„ ํ—ค์„ผ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ์ด ํ•„๋ฆฝ 1์„ธ ํ—ค์„ผ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ์˜ ์‚ฌ๋ง์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ„ํ• ๋˜๋ฉด์„œ, ๊ทธ์˜ ์žฅ์ž์˜€๋˜ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 4์„ธ๊ฐ€ ํ—ค์„ผ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ์˜ ๋ถ์ชฝ ์˜ํ† ์™€ ์ˆ˜๋„ ์นด์…€์„ ๋ฌผ๋ ค๋ฐ›๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์•„๋“ค๋“ค์ด ๋ฌผ๋ ค๋ฐ›์€ ์˜ํ† ๋Š” ํ—ค์„ผ๋ผ์ธํŽ ์Šค ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ, ํ—ค์„ผ๋‹ค๋ฆ„์Šˆํƒ€ํŠธ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ, ํ—ค์„ผ๋งˆ๋ฅด๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ„ํ• ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1803๋…„ ๋‚˜ํด๋ ˆ์˜น ์ „์Ÿ ๋‹น์‹œ, ์‹ ์„ฑ ๋กœ๋งˆ ์ œ๊ตญ์€ ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ์„ ํ—ค์„ผ ์„ ์ œํ›„๊ตญ์œผ๋กœ ์Šน๊ฒฉ์‹œ์ผฐ๊ณ , ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 9์„ธ๋Š” ํ—ค์„ผ ์„ ์ œํ›„๊ฐ€ ๋œ๋‹ค. ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค๊ตฐ์ด ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€์„ ์ ๋ นํ•˜๊ณ  ์ดํ›„ ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€์€ ๋ฒ ์ŠคํŠธํŒ”๋ Œ ์™•๊ตญ์˜ ์ผ๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ๋˜๋ฉด์„œ, ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ๋„ ๋ฉธ๋งํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์—ญ์‚ฌ ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ์€ 1567๋…„ ํ—ค์„ผ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ์ด ํ•„๋ฆฝ 1์„ธ ํ—ค์„ผ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ์˜ ์‚ฌ๋ง์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ„ํ• ๋˜๋ฉด์„œ, ๊ทธ์˜ ์žฅ์ž์˜€๋˜ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 4์„ธ๊ฐ€ ํ—ค์„ผ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ์˜ ๋ถ์ชฝ ์˜ํ† ์™€ ์ˆ˜๋„ ์นด์…€์„ ๋ฌผ๋ ค๋ฐ›์œผ๋ฉด์„œ ํ˜•์„ฑ๋œ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋‹ค. 1604๋…„ ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€์€ ๋งˆ์šฐ๋ฆฌ์ธ  ํฐ ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€์ด ์•„๋“ค์ด ์—†๋˜ ๋ฃจ์ด์Šค 4์„ธ ํฐ ํ—ค์„ผ๋งˆ๋ฅด๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ํ—ค์„ผ๋งˆ๋ฅด๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ์„ ์ƒ์†๋ฐ›์œผ๋ฉด์„œ ์˜ํ† ๊ฐ€ ํ™•์žฅ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 30๋…„ ์ „์Ÿ 1605๋…„ ๋งˆ์šฐ๋ฆฌ์ธ ๋Š” ์นผ๋ฑ…ํŒŒ ์‹ ๋„๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , 30๋…„ ์ „์Ÿ์ด ๋ฐœ๋ฐœํ•˜์ž ๊ฐœ์‹ ๊ต ์ธก์—์„œ ์‹ธ์› ๋‹ค. ํ—ค์„ผ๋‹ค๋ฆ„์Šˆํƒ€ํŠธ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ์—๊ฒŒ ๊ทธ์˜ ์˜ํ† ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ•์ œ๋กœ ํ• ์–‘ํ•œ ์ดํ›„, 1627๋…„ ๋งˆ์šฐ๋ฆฌ์ธ ๋Š” ์•„๋“ค ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 5์„ธ์—๊ฒŒ ์™•์œ„๋ฅผ ๋„˜๊ฒผ๋‹ค. ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 5์„ธ๋Š” ์‹ ์„ฑ ๋กœ๋งˆ ์ œ๊ตญ๊ตฐ์ด ์นจ๊ณตํ–ˆ์„ ๋•Œ ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€ ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์„ ์žƒ์ž ๊ตฌ์Šคํƒ€๋ธŒ 2์„ธ ์•„๋Œํ”„, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์ดํ›„์—๋Š” ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ์™•๊ตญ๊ณผ ๋™๋งน์„ ๋งบ์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1637๋…„ ๋ง๋ช… ์ค‘ ์‚ฌ๋งํ•œ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 5์„ธ์˜ ๋’ค๋ฅผ ์ด์–ด ๊ทธ์˜ ๋ถ€์ธ์ธ ์•„๋ง๋ฆฌ์— ์—˜๋ฆฌ์ž๋ฒ ์Šค ํฐ ํ•˜๋‚˜์šฐ๋ฎŒ์  ๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ๊ฐ€ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 6์„ธ์˜ ์„ญ์ •์„ ๋งก์•˜๋‹ค. ์•„๋ง๋ฆฌ์— ์—˜๋ฆฌ์ž๋ฒ ์Šค๋Š” ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€์˜ ์ด์ต์„ ์ฆ์ง„์‹œํ‚ค๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋…ธ๋ ฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€์—์„œ ํ™ฉ์ œ๊ตฐ์„ ์ถ•์ถœํ•œ ์ดํ›„, ๊ทธ๋…€๋Š” ์‹œ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€๊ฐ€ ํ—ค์„ผ๋‹ค๋ฆ„์Šˆํƒ€ํŠธ ์นœ์ฒ™์—๊ฒŒ ์žƒ์—ˆ๋˜ ๋งˆ๋ฅด๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ๋ฅผ ๋˜์ฐพ๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๊ตฐ๋Œ€๋ฅผ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค 1648๋…„ ๋ฒ ์ŠคํŠธํŒ”๋ Œ ์กฐ์•ฝ์ด ์ฒด๊ฒฐ๋œ ์ดํ›„, ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€์€ ์ƒค์›€๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ๊ณผ ํ—ค์ŠคํŽ ํŠธ ์ฃผ๊ต๋ น๊นŒ์ง€ ํš๋“ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ ๊ทธ๋…€๋Š” ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€์˜ ๋ถ„ํ• ์„ ๋ง‰๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์žฅ์ž์ƒ์†์ œ๋ฅผ ๋„์ž…ํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ, 1651๋…„ ๊ฑด๊ฐ• ์•…ํ™”๋กœ ์‚ฌ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 17์„ธ๊ธฐ์™€ 18์„ธ๊ธฐ 1651๋…„ ์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ์˜ ์ฃฝ์Œ ์ดํ›„ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ ์ง์œ„์— ์˜ค๋ฅธ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 6์„ธ๋Š” 1663๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ํ†ต์น˜ํ–ˆ๊ณ , ๊ทธ์˜ ์•„๋“ค ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 7์„ธ๋Š” ๋‹น์‹œ 1670๋…„์˜ ์ด๋ฅธ ๋‚˜์ด์— ์‚ฌ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ์˜ ๋’ค๋ฅผ ์ด์–ด ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 6์„ธ์˜ ์ฐจ๋‚จ์ธ ์นด๋ฅผ์ด ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์นด๋ฅผ์˜ ๋’ค๋ฅผ ์ด์–ด ์™•์ด ๋œ ํ”„๋ ˆ๋“œ๋ฆฌํฌ 1์„ธ๋Š” ์Šค์›จ๋ด์˜ ์™•์ด๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๊ธฐ์—, 1730๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 1751๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ์Šค์›จ๋ด๊ณผ ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€์€ ๋™๊ตฐ์—ฐํ•ฉ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1751๋…„ ํ”„๋ ˆ๋“œ๋ฆฌํฌ 1์„ธ์˜ ์‚ฌ๋ง ํ›„, ์นด๋ฅผ์˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์•„๋“ค์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 8์„ธ๊ฐ€ ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ๊ทธ๋Š” 1760๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€์„ ๋‹ค์Šค๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 8์„ธ์˜ ์‚ฌ๋ง ์ดํ›„ ํ”„๋ ˆ๋“œ๋ฆฌํฌ 2์„ธ๊ฐ€ ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€์˜ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” 1745๋…„ ์žฌ์ปค๋ฐ”์ดํŠธ ๋ฐ˜๋ž€ ๋‹น์‹œ ์˜๊ตญ์„ ์ง€์›ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ํ—ค์„ผ๊ตฐ์„ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ 1775๋…„ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ „์Ÿ์ด ๋ฐœ๋ฐœํ–ˆ์„ ๋•Œ, ๊ทธ๋Š” ๊ตฐ์ž๊ธˆ์„ ๋ชจ์•„ ํ—ค์„ผ๊ตฐ์„ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋ณธํ† ์— ํŒŒ๊ฒฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฉธ๋ง 1803๋…„ ๋…์ผ ์ค‘์žฌํ™”๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด, ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ์€ ํ—ค์„ผ ์„ ์ œํ›„๊ตญ์œผ๋กœ ์Šน๊ฒฉ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 9์„ธ๋„ ์„ ์ œํ›„๊ฐ€ ๋˜์–ด ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 1์„ธ ํฐ ํ—ค์„ผ ์„ ์ œํ›„๋ผ๋Š” ์นญํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿผ์—๋„ ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๋ช…์นญ์€ ์—ฌ์ „ํžˆ ์ž”์กดํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1806๋…„, ๋‚˜ํด๋ ˆ์˜น ๋ณด๋‚˜ํŒŒ๋ฅดํŠธ๊ฐ€ ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ ์™•๊ตญ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ง€์ง€๋ฅผ ๋ช…๋ถ„์œผ๋กœ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 1์„ธ๋ฅผ ํ‡ด์œ„์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ ์นด์…€์€ ๋ฒ ์ŠคํŠธํŒ”๋ Œ ์™•๊ตญ์˜ ์ˆ˜๋„๋กœ ์ง€์ •๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ๋‚˜ํด๋ ˆ์˜น์˜ ํ˜•์ธ ์ œ๋กฌ ๋ณด๋‚˜ํŒŒ๋ฅดํŠธ๊ฐ€ ๋ฒ ์ŠคํŠธํŒ”๋ Œ์˜ ์ดˆ๋Œ€ ๊ตญ์™•์œผ๋กœ ์ฆ‰์œ„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1813๋…„ ๋‚˜ํด๋ ˆ์˜น์˜ ํŒจ๋ฐฐ ์ดํ›„ ํ—ค์„ผ ์„ ์ œํ›„์˜ ์ง์œ„๋Š” ๋ณต์›๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ๋น„์—”๋‚˜ ํšŒ์˜ ์ดํ›„ ์ˆ˜๋งŽ์€ ์„ ์ œํ›„๊ตญ์ด ์™•๊ตญ์œผ๋กœ ์Šน๊ฒฉ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 1์„ธ ์—ญ์‹œ ํ—ค์„ผ ์„ ์ œํ›„๊ตญ์„ ์™•๊ตญ์œผ๋กœ ์˜ฌ๋ฆฌ๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋…ธ๋ ฅํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ์ด๋Š” ์‹คํŒจ๋กœ ๋๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ์˜› ํ—ค์„ผ๋‹ค๋ฆ„์Šˆํƒ€ํŠธ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ํ—ค์„ผ ๋Œ€๊ณต๊ตญ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์˜ํ† ๋ฅผ ์ง€ํ‚ค๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„์€ ์„ ์ œํ›„๋ผ๋Š” ๋ช…์นญ์„ ์œ ์ง€ํ•˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ๊ฒฐ์ •ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ—ค์„ผ๊ตฐ ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ์€ 17์„ธ๊ธฐ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 18์„ธ๊ธฐ ์‚ฌ์ด์— ๊ทธ๋“ค์˜ ๊ตฐ๋Œ€๋ฅผ ์ž„๋Œ€ํ•ด์ฃผ๋Š” ๊ฑธ๋กœ ์œ ๋ช…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ๋•Œ ๋‹น์‹œ ์†Œ๊ตญ๋“ค์ด ๊ตฐ๋Œ€๋ฅผ ๋นŒ๋ ค์ฃผ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์ธ ๊ด€ํ–‰์œผ๋กœ, ์ด๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋” ํฐ ์ด์ต์„ ์–ป๊ณ ์ž ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ๋ชฉํ‘œ์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ตญ์ œ์ ์ธ ์‚ฌ๋ฒ•๊ฐ€๋“ค์€ ์ด๋“ค์„ ์šฉ๋ณ‘๊ณผ ๋ณด์กฐ๋ถ€๋Œ€ ์‚ฌ์ด๋กœ ๊ทœ์ •ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์šฉ๋ณ‘๋“ค์€ ๊ฐœ๊ฐœ์ธ์ด ์™ธ๊ตญ๊ตฐ์—์„œ ๋ณต๋ฌดํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๊ณ , ๋ณด์กฐ๋ถ€๋Œ€๋Š” ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋Œ€๊ณต์„ ์ง€์›ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ณด๋‚ด๋Š” ๋ถ€๋Œ€์ด๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์ด๋‹ค. 1730๋…„ ๊ฒฝ, ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€์€ ์ธ๊ตฌ์˜ 5.3%๊ฐ€ ๊ตฐ์—์„œ ๋ณต๋ฌดํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์„ ์ •๋„๋กœ ๊ฐ•๋ ฅํ•œ ๊ตฐ์„ ์œก์„ฑ ์ค‘์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Š” ๋‹น์‹œ ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ ์™•๊ตญ๋ณด๋‹ค๋„ ๋†’์€ ๋ณต๋ฌด์œจ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ—ค์„ผ๊ตฐ์€ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๊ฐ•๋Œ€๊ตญ๋“ค์˜ ์ค€๋น„๋œ ์˜ˆ๋น„๊ตฐ์œผ๋กœ์จ ๋ณต๋ฌดํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๊ฐ€ ๋งŽ์•˜๋‹ค. ํ—ค์„ผ๊ตฐ์ด ํ™œ์•ฝํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์ ์ธ ์ „์Ÿ์ด ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ „์Ÿ์œผ๋กœ ์˜๊ตญ๊ตฐ ์œก๊ตฐ ์ „์ฒด ์ค‘ 25%๊ฐ€ ๋…์ผ ์ œํ›„๋“ค๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ž„์ฐจํ•œ ๊ตฐ๋Œ€์˜€๊ณ , ์ด ์ค‘ ์ ˆ๋ฐ˜์€ ํ—ค์„ผํ•˜๋‚˜์šฐ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ๊ณผ ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ์—์„œ ์™”๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์ด์œ ๋กœ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์ธ๋“ค์€ ์˜๊ตญ ์œก๊ตฐ์—์„œ ๋ณต๋ฌดํ•˜๋Š” ๋ชจ๋“  ๋…์ผ์ธ ๋ถ€๋Œ€๋ฅผ ํ—ค์„ผ๊ตฐ"์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถˆ๋ €๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€ ๋ณ€๊ฒฝ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ ๋…์ผ์˜ ๊ทผ์„ธ์‚ฌ ์‹ ์„ฑ ๋กœ๋งˆ ์ œ๊ตญ์˜ ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ ์Šค์›จ๋ด์˜ ์™•๊ฐ€
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landgraviate%20of%20Hesse-Kassel
Landgraviate of Hesse-Kassel
The Landgraviate of Hesse-Kassel (), spelled Hesse-Cassel during its entire existence, was a state of the Holy Roman Empire. The state was created in 1567 when the Landgraviate of Hesse was divided upon the death of Philip I, Landgrave of Hesse. His eldest son William IV inherited the northern half of the Landgraviate and the capital of Kassel. The other sons received the Landgraviates of Hesse-Marburg, Hesse-Rheinfels and Hesse-Darmstadt. During the Napoleonic reorganisation of the Empire in 1803, the Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel was elevated to an Electorate and Landgrave William IX became an Imperial Elector. Many members of the House of Hesse-Kassel served in the Danish military gaining high ranks and power in the realm due to the fact that many Landgraves were married to Danish princesses. Members of the family who are known to have served Denmark-Norway include Prince Frederik of Hesse-Kassel, Prince Frederick of Hesse-Kassel, and Prince Charles of Hesse-Kassel. It had two votes to the Reichstag: one for itself and one for Hersfeld Abbey. It was later occupied by French troops and became part of the Kingdom of Westphalia, a French satellite state. The Electorate of Hesse was restored at the end of the Napoleonic Wars, though by that time there was no longer an emperor to elect. History The Landgraviate of Hesse-Kassel was founded by William IV the Wise, the eldest son of Philip I. On his father's death in 1567, the Landgraviate of Hesse was divided into four parts. William IV received about half of the territory, with Kassel as his capital. Hesse-Kassel expanded in 1604 when Maurice, Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel inherited the Landgraviate of Hesse-Marburg from his childless uncle, Louis IV, Landgrave of Hesse-Marburg (1537โ€“1604). Thirty Years' War In 1605, Maurice became Calvinist and entered the Thirty Years' War on the Protestant side. After being forced to cede some of his territories to Hesse-Darmstadt, Maurice abdicated in 1627 in favour of his son William V. His younger sons received appanages, which created several cadet lines in yet another partition of Hesse. William V allied himself with Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden and then France, losing most of Hesse-Kassel when Imperial troops invaded. He died in exile in 1637, leaving his widow Amalie Elisabeth of Hanau-Mรผnzenberg to act as regent for their eight-year-old son William VI. Amalie Elisabeth vigorously advanced the interests of Hesse-Kassel. After expelling Imperial troops from Hesse-Kassel, she sent troops to take the city of Marburg, which her father-in-law had lost to their Hesse-Darmstadt relatives. At the Peace of Westphalia in 1648, Hesse-Kassel was further rewarded with most of the County of Schaumburg and the newly secularized Hersfeld Abbey. Amalie Elisabeth also introduced the rule of primogeniture to prevent Hesse-Kasse from being divided again in the future. However, her health was ruined by the stresses of the war, and she died in 1651. 17th and 18th centuries William VI, who came of age in 1650, was an enlightened patron of learning and the arts. He was succeeded by his son William VII, Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel, then an infant, who died in 1670. He was succeeded by his brother Charles I. Charles' chief claim to fame is that he hired out his soldiers to foreign powers as auxiliaries, as a means of improving the finances of his principality. William V was succeeded by Landgraves William VI and William VII. Frederick I of Sweden, the next landgrave, became by marriage King of Sweden. Although the Landgraviate was in personal union with Sweden from 1730 to 1751, the King's younger brother, Prince William, ruled in Kassel as regent until he succeeded his brother as William VIII. On Frederick I's death in 1751, he was succeeded by his brother William VIII, who fought as an ally of Kingdom of Great Britain during the Seven Years' War. His successor, Frederick II, converted to Catholicism after a long line of Protestant Landgraviates. When the American Revolutionary War broke out, Frederick II leased Hessian troops to Great Britain for service in America. End of the landgraviate Following the reorganization of the German states during the German mediatisation of 1803, the Landgraviate of Hesse-Kassel was raised to the Electorate of Hesse and Landgrave William IX was elevated to Imperial Elector, taking the title William I, Elector of Hesse. The principality thus became known as , although still usually referred to as Hesse-Kassel. In 1806, William I was dispossessed by Napoleon Bonaparte for his support of the Kingdom of Prussia in the War of the Fourth Coalition. Kassel was designated as the capital of a new Kingdom of Westphalia, where Napoleon appointed his brother Jรฉrรดme Bonaparte as king. Following Napoleon's defeat in 1813, the elector was restored. At the Congress of Vienna, a number of Napoleonic electorates were elevated to kingdoms, and William tried to secure recognition as King of the Chatti. However, he was rebuffed by the Great Powers, who listed him as a "Royal Highness" along with the other grand dukes. To secure his pre-eminence over his cousin, the Grand Duke of Hesse in the former Hesse-Darmstadt, William chose to keep his title of Prince-Elector. The rulers of the Electorate of Hesse became the only Prince-Electors in the German Confederation, even though there was no longer a Holy Roman Emperor for them to elect. Hessian troops in foreign service The Landgraves of Hesse-Kassel were famous for renting out their army to European Great Powers during the 17th and 18th centuries. It was a widespread practice at the time for small countries to rent out troops to larger countries in exchange for subsidies. International jurists drew a distinction between mercenaries and auxiliaries (Hilfstruppen). Mercenaries served in foreign armies as individuals, while auxiliaries were sent by their prince to the aid of another prince. Hesse-Kassel took the practice to an extreme, maintaining 5.3% of its population under arms in 1730. This was a higher proportion than even Prussia, a country that was so heavily militarized that it was described as "not a country with an army, but an army with a country". The Hessian army served as a readily available reserve for the Great Powers. During the American War of Independence, 25% of the British army consisted of troops rented from German princes, half of whom came from Hesse-Kassel and nearby Hesse-Hanau. For this reason, Americans refer to all German troops serving with the British army as "Hessians", a form of synecdoche. Namesakes The village of Hessen Cassel, Indiana, near Fort Wayne, founded by German immigrants, is named for the Landgraviate of Hesse-Kassel. See also New Netherland New Sweden Pennsylvania Dutch Rulers of Hesse Notes References External links Hoeckmann.de: Map of Hesse (Northern part) โ€” in 1789 Hoeckmann.de: Map of Hesse (Southern part) โ€” in 1789 Landgraviate of Hesse-Kassel Early Modern history of Germany Counties of the Holy Roman Empire States and territories established in 1567 States and territories disestablished in 1803 1567 establishments in the Holy Roman Empire 1803 disestablishments in the Holy Roman Empire Hesse-Kassel, Landgraviate of North Hesse Former monarchies of Europe
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%95%84%EB%A5%B4%EC%9B%AC
์•„๋ฅด์›ฌ
์•„๋ฅด์›ฌ(Arwen)์€ ใ€Š๋ฐ˜์ง€์˜ ์ œ์™•ใ€‹์˜ ๋“ฑ์žฅ์ธ๋ฌผ์ด๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ๋ธ๋ธ์˜ ๊ตฐ์ฃผ ์—˜๋ก ๋“œ์˜ ์™ธ๋™๋”ธ์ด์ž ๊ณค๋„๋ฅด ์—ฐํ•ฉ ์™•๊ตญ์˜ ์ดˆ๋Œ€ ์™•๋น„์ด๋‹ค. ๊ฐœ์š” ์•„๋ฅด์›ฌ์€ ํƒœ์–‘์˜ ์ œ3์‹œ๋Œ€ 241๋…„ ์—˜๋ก ๋“œ์™€ ์ผˆ๋ ˆ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์•ˆ ์‚ฌ์ด์—์„œ ํƒœ์–ด๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ๋•…์˜ ์š”์ •๋“ค ์‚ฌ์ด์—์„œ๋Š” ์ฐฌ๋ž€ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋น›๋‚˜๋Š” ์ €๋…๋ณ„๊ณผ๋„ ๊ฐ™์€ ์กด์žฌ์˜€๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ €๋…๋ณ„์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์˜๋ฏธ์˜ ์šด๋„๋ฏธ์—˜(undomรญel)์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๋ณ„์นญ์„ ๊ฐ€์กŒ๋‹ค. 3์‹œ๋Œ€์˜ ์š”์ •๊ณผ ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ํ†ตํ‹€์–ด ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์•„๋ฆ„๋‹ค์šด ์กด์žฌ๋ผ๋Š” ํ‰๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ํ”ผ๋ถ€๋Š” ๋ง‘๊ณ  ํ  ํ•˜๋‚˜ ์—†์ด ๊นจ๋—ํ•˜๊ณ  ๋งค๋„๋Ÿฌ์› ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ๋ฆผ์ž ๊ฐ™์ด ๊ฒ€๊ณ  ๊ธด ๋จธ๋ฆฌ์นผ๊ณผ ๋ง‘์€ ์ €๋…ํ•˜๋Š˜๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ํšŒ์ƒ‰๋น› ๋ˆˆ๋™์ž๋ฅผ ์ง€๋‹Œ ๋งค์šฐ ์•„๋ฆ„๋‹ค์šด ์—ฌ์„ฑ์œผ๋กœ ์—˜๋ก ๋“œ๊ฐ€ ์—ฌ์„ฑ์œผ๋กœ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚˜๊ธฐ๋ผ๋„ ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋ชจ์Šต์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ฌ˜์‚ฌ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ๋ชจ๋“  ์ผ๋ฃจ๋ฐ”ํƒ€๋ฅด์˜ ์ž์† ์ค‘ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์•„๋ฆ„๋‹ค์› ๋‹ค๋Š” ๋ฃจ์‹œ์—” ํ‹ฐ๋ˆ„๋น„์—˜์˜ ํ›„์†์œผ๋กœ ๋ฃจ์‹œ์—”์˜ ํ›„์† ์ค‘ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๊ทธ๋…€๋ฅผ ๋งŽ์ด ๋‹ฎ์•˜์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋งˆ์น˜ ๊ทธ๋…€๊ฐ€ ์‚ด์•„ ๋Œ์•„์˜ค๊ธฐ๋ผ๋„ ํ•œ ๋“ฏ ์•„๋ฆ„๋‹ค์› ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ž‘์ค‘ํ–‰์  ์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ ์ผˆ๋ ˆ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์•ˆ์ด ์˜คํฌ๋“ค์˜ ๊ณ ๋ฌธ์„ ๋ฐ›์€ ๋’ค ๋ฐœ๋ฆฌ๋…ธ๋ฅด๋กœ ๋– ๋‚˜์ž, ์•„๋ฅด์›ฌ์€ ๋กœ์Šค๋กœ๋ฆฌ์—”์—์„œ ์™ธํ• ๋จธ๋‹ˆ ๊ฐˆ๋ผ๋“œ๋ฆฌ์—˜์˜ ๋ณด์‚ดํ•Œ ์•„๋ž˜์„œ ์ง€๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. ์ œ3์‹œ๋Œ€ ๋ง ์•„๋ผ๊ณ ๋ฅธ์ด ์ž์‹ ์˜ ํ˜ˆํ†ต์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์•Œ๊ฒŒ ๋œ ํ›„์— ๋ฒ ๋ Œ๊ณผ ๋ฃจ์‹œ์—”์˜ ๋…ธ๋ž˜๋ฅผ ๋ถ€๋ฅด๋˜ ์ค‘ ์ˆฒ์†์—์„œ ์ถค์„ ์ถ”๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ทธ๋…€๋ฅผ ๋ณด๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์•„๋ฅด์›ฌ์„ ์ž์‹ ์ด ๋ถ€๋ฅด๋˜ ๋…ธ๋ž˜ ์†์˜ ๋ฃจ์‹œ์—”์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์ฐฉ๊ฐํ•œ ์•„๋ผ๊ณ ๋ฅธ์€ ๊ทธ๋…€๋ฅผ ํ‹ฐ๋ˆ„๋น„์—˜์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถ€๋ฅธ๋‹ค. ์ด์— ์•„๋ฅด์›ฌ์€ ๊ทธ์™€ ๋Œ€ํ™”๋ฅผ ๋‚˜๋ˆ„์—ˆ๊ณ , ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์ด๋ฆ„๊ณผ ์•„๋ผ๊ณ ๋ฅธ์˜ ํ˜ˆํ†ต๊ณผ์˜ ๊ด€๋ จ์„ฑ์„ ๋งํ•ด์ค€๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ ์•„๋ผ๊ณ ๋ฅธ์€ ๋‘๋„ค๋‹ค์ธ์˜ ์กฑ์žฅ์œผ๋กœ์„œ 30๋…„๊ฐ„ ๋ฐฉ๋ž‘์ž๋กœ ํ™œ๋™ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„์— ์ž ์‹œ ๋กœ์Šค๋กœ๋ฆฌ์—”์„ ๋ฐฉ๋ฌธํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด๋•Œ ์šฐ์—ฐํžˆ ๋กœ์Šค๋กœ๋ฆฌ์—”์— ๋จธ๋ฌด๋ฅด๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ ์•„๋ฅด์›ฌ๊ณผ ๋งŒ๋‚˜์„œ ์•ฝํ˜ผํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ˜์ง€์ „์Ÿ ๋™์•ˆ์—๋Š” ๋ฆฌ๋ธ๋ธ์— ์€๊ฑฐํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์•„๋ผ๊ณ ๋ฅธ์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ๊นƒ๋ฐœ์„ ์งฐ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ˜์ง€์ „์Ÿ์ด ๋๋‚œ ํ›„ ์•„๋ฅด๋…ธ๋ฅด-๊ณค๋„๋ฅด ์žฌํ†ตํ•ฉ ์™•๊ตญ์˜ ํ†ต์น˜์ž๊ฐ€ ๋œ ์•„๋ผ๊ณ ๋ฅธ์™€ ํ˜ผ์ธํ•˜์—ฌ ์™•๊ตญ์˜ ํ›„๊ณ„์ž์ด์ž ์นœ์•„๋“ค ์—˜๋‹ค๋ฆฌ์˜จ์„ ๋‚ณ์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋…€๋Š” ๋ฐ˜์š”์ • ์—์•„๋ Œ๋”œ์˜ ํ›„์†์œผ๋กœ ์š”์ •์˜ ์‚ถ ํ˜น์€ ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์‚ถ ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋ฅผ ๊ณจ๋ผ ๊ทธ ์—ฌ์ƒ์„ ์‚ด์•„์•ผ ํ–ˆ๊ณ  ๋ถ€์นœ๊ณผ ์Œ๋‘ฅ์ด ์˜ค๋น ์™€ ๋‹ฌ๋ฆฌ ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์‚ถ์„ ์„ ํƒํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํ–‰๋ณตํ–ˆ๋˜ ์•„๋ฅด์›ฌ์˜ ์šด๋ช…์€ ๋ถˆํ–‰์œผ๋กœ ๋๋‚  ์ˆ˜ ๋ฐ–์— ์—†์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์•„๋ผ๊ณ ๋ฅธ์˜ ์ˆ˜๋ช…์ด ๋ˆ„๋ฉ”๋…ธ๋ฅด์ธ์˜ ํ›„์†์ด๋ผ์„œ ๊ธด ํŽธ์ด์—ˆ์œผ๋‚˜, ๋ถˆ๋ฉธ์˜ ์š”์ •์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ๊ทธ๋…€์—๊ฒŒ๋Š” ํ•œ๋‚ฑ ์ฐฐ๋‚˜์— ๋ถˆ๊ณผํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด์—ˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์ด๋‹ค. ์ œ4์‹œ๋Œ€ 120๋…„์— ์•„๋ผ๊ณ ๋ฅธ์˜ ์ˆ˜๋ช…์ด ๋‹คํ•˜์ž ๊ทธ๋…€๋Š” ํฐ ์Šฌํ””์— ๋น ์กŒ๊ณ , ๋ฌด๋ค ๋ฐ–์œผ๋กœ ๋‚˜์˜จ ๊ทธ๋…€์˜ ๋ชจ์Šต์€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ์— ๋ชน์‹œ๋„ ์ง€์น˜๊ณ , ๋ณ„ ํ•˜๋‚˜ ๋œจ์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ๊ฒจ์šธ์˜ ์ €๋… ํ•˜๋Š˜์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ์‚ญ๋ง‰ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๋Š™๊ฒŒ ๋Š๊ปด์กŒ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„์—๋Š” ์—˜๋‹ค๋ฆฌ์˜จ๊ณผ ๊ฐ€์กฑ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ์ž‘๋ณ„์ธ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ํ•œ ๋’ค, ๋ชจ๋‘๊ฐ€ ๋– ๋‚˜ ํ™ฉํํ•ด์ง„ ๋กœ์Šค๋กœ๋ฆฌ์—”์˜ ์ผ€๋ฆฐ ์•”๋กœ์Šค์—์„œ 1๋…„ ๋’ค ์‚ฌ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์‹ค์‚ฌ์˜ํ™” ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ์—์„œ ํ”ผํ„ฐ ์žญ์Šจ ๊ฐ๋…์˜ ๋ฐ˜์ง€์˜ ์ œ์™• ์‹ค์‚ฌ์˜ํ™” ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ์—์„œ๋Š” ์›์ž‘์— ๋น„ํ•ด ์•„๋ฅด์›ฌ์˜ ๋น„์ค‘์ด ์ƒ๋‹นํžˆ ์ƒํ–ฅ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐฐ์šฐ๋Š” ๋ฆฌ๋ธŒ ํƒ€์ผ๋Ÿฌ ํ”„๋กœ๋„๊ฐ€ ๋‚˜์ฆˆ๊ตด์˜ ๋…์— ๋‹นํ•œ ๋’ค ์ซ“๊ธฐ๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ์„ ๋•Œ ๊ทธ๋ฅผ ๋„์™€ ๋‚˜์ฆˆ๊ตด์˜ ์ถ”๊ฒฉ์„ ๋ฐ›๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ์›๋ž˜ ๊ธ€๋กœ๋ฅดํ•€๋ธ์˜ ์—ญํ• ์ด์—ˆ์œผ๋‚˜, ์‹ค์‚ฌ์˜ํ™”์—์„œ๋Š” ๊ธ€๋กœ๋ฅดํ•€๋ธ์ด ์‚ญ์ œ๋˜๊ณ  ์•„๋ฅด์›ฌ์ด ๊ทธ ์—ญํ• ์„ ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์˜ํ™”๊ฐ€ ์ง„ํ–‰๋˜๋ฉด์„œ ์•„๋ฅด์›ฌ์€ ์„œ์ชฝ์˜ ๋ฐœ๋ฆฌ๋…ธ๋ฅด๋กœ ๋– ๋‚˜๋Š” ์—ฌ์ •์— ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ์•„๋ผ๊ณ ๋ฅธ์€ ์–ธ์  ๊ฐ€ ์ฃฝ์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ฉฐ ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ์ฃฝ์œผ๋ฉด ๊ทธ๋…€์—๊ฒŒ๋Š” ๋” ์ด์ƒ ํฌ๋ง๋„ ์‚ถ๋„ ์กด์žฌํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ํ™˜์˜์„ ์—˜๋ก ๋“œ๊ฐ€ ๋ณด์—ฌ์คฌ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์ˆฒ์†์„ ์ง€๋‚˜๋˜ ์ค‘ ์•„๋ฅด์›ฌ์€ ์•„์ด๊ฐ€ ๋›ฐ๋…ธ๋Š” ํ™˜์˜์„ ๋ณด๊ฒŒ ๋˜๊ณ , ํฌ๋ง์ด ์—†์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์—˜๋ก ๋“œ์˜ ๋ง๊ณผ๋Š” ๋‹ฌ๋ฆฌ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ํฌ๋ง์ด ์กด์žฌํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฏธ๋ž˜๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์Œ์„ ์•Œ๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์•„๋ฅด์›ฌ์€ ๋‹ค์‹œ ๊นŠ์€๊ณจ๋กœ ๋Œ์•„๊ฐ€ ์—˜๋ก ๋“œ์—๊ฒŒ ๋ถ€๋Ÿฌ์ง„ ๋‚˜๋ฅด์‹ค์„ ์•ˆ๋‘๋ฆด๋กœ ๋ฒผ๋ฆฌ๊ฒŒ ๋” ์„ค๋“ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌ์šฐ๋ก ์„ ๋น„๋กฏํ•œ ์–ด๋‘ ์˜ ์„ธ๋ ฅ๋“ค์ด ๊ฐ•ํ•ด์งˆ์ˆ˜๋ก ์ €๋…๋ณ„์˜ ๋น›์€ ์‚ฌ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“ค๊ณ , ์•„๋ฅด์›ฌ์€ ์•ฝํ•ด์ง€๋ฉฐ ์ฃฝ์–ด๊ฐ„๋‹ค๋Š” ์„ค์ •์ด ์ถ”๊ฐ€๋œ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Š” ์—˜๋ก ๋“œ๊ฐ€ ํ•˜๋Š” ์—˜๋‹ค๋ฅด์˜ ์ƒ๋ช…์ด ์•„๋ฅด์›ฌ์„ ๋– ๋‚˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๋Œ€์‚ฌ๋กœ๋„ ํ‘œํ˜„๋œ๋‹ค. ๋ณต์žกํ•œ ๋‚ด๋ ฅ ํ˜ˆํ†ต์˜ ์ค‘์š”์„ฑ์ด ๋ถ€๊ฐ๋˜๋Š” ์„ธ๊ณ„๊ด€ ์•ˆ์—์„œ๋„ ๊ต‰์žฅํžˆ ๋ณต์žกํ•œ ๊ณ„๋ณด๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์กŒ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ํ˜ˆํ†ต ์ค‘์—์„œ๋Š”ใ€Š๋ฐ˜์ง€์˜ ์ œ์™•ใ€‹ ์ด์ „์˜ ์‹œ๋Œ€์  ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฝ์—์„œ ํ™œ๋™ํ•œ ๊ฑธ์ถœํ•œ ์กด์žฌ๊ฐ€ ๋งŽ์ด ์–ธ๊ธ‰๋˜์–ด ์†Œ์„ค๋งŒ ์ฝ์€ ๋…์ž์—๊ฒŒ๋Š” ํฌ๊ฒŒ ์™€๋‹ฟ์ง€ ์•Š์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์œผ๋‚˜, ๋ฌด๋ ค ์„ธ์ƒ์˜ ์ฐฝ์กฐ๋ฅผ ๋„์šด ๋งˆ์ด์•„, ์„ธ ์š”์ • ๋Œ€์™• ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์„ธ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์˜์›… ๊ฐ€๋ฌธ์˜ ํ”ผ๋ฅผ ๋ชจ๋‘ ๊ฐ€์ง„ ์—ฌ์„ฑ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ณ„๋ณด๋ฅผ ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์˜ฌ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋ฉดใ€Š์‹ค๋งˆ๋ฆด๋ฆฌ์˜จใ€‹์˜ ์ดˆ๋ฐ˜๋ถ€์— ๋“ฑ์žฅํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ”๋ƒ๋ฅด ๋Œ€์™• ์ž‰๊ถค, ๋†€๋„๋ฅด ๋Œ€์™• ํ•€์›จ, ์‹ ๋‹ค๋ฅด ๋Œ€์™• ์—˜์›จ์˜ ํ”ผ๋ฅผ ๋ชจ๋‘ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์„ธ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์˜์›… ๊ฐ€๋ฌธ์ธ ํ• ๋ ˆ์Šค, ํ•˜๋„๋ฅด, ๋ฒ ์˜ค๋ฅด ๊ฐ€๋ฌธ์˜ ํ”ผ์™€ ์˜์ ์กด์žฌ์ธ ๋งˆ์ด์•„ ๋ฉœ๋ฆฌ์•ˆ์˜ ํ˜ˆํ†ต๋„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ํ˜ˆํ†ต์€ ๋ˆ„๋ฉ”๋…ธ๋ฅด ์™•์กฑ๋“ค์˜ ํ˜ˆํ†ต๊ณผ๋„ ๋น„์Šทํ•œ๋ฐ, ์ด๋Š” ๋ˆ„๋ฉ”๋…ธ๋ฅด ์™•์กฐ์˜ ์‹œ์กฐ์ธ ์—˜๋กœ์Šค๊ฐ€ ์•„๋ฅด์›ฌ์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€์ธ ์—˜๋ก ๋“œ์™€ ํ˜•์ œ์ด๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์ด๋‹ค. ์‚ฌ์‹ค์ƒ ์ž‘์ค‘ ๋“ฑ์žฅํ•˜๋Š” ์š”์ • ๊ตฐ์ฃผ์™€ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์™•์กฑ์€ ์„œ๋กœ ํ˜ˆ์—ฐ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ต‰์žฅํžˆ ๋จผ ์นœ์ฒ™ ๊ด€๊ณ„์ธ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๊ณ ๊ท€ํ•œ ๊ณ„๋ณด๋Š” ๋‹จ์ ์œผ๋กœ ํ—˜ํ•œ ์‹œ๋ จ์„ ๊ฒช์€ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ๋‚จํŽธ ์•„๋ผ๊ณ ๋ฅธ 2์„ธ๊ฐ€ ๊ทธ๋…€์˜ ์ง์œผ๋กœ ์•Œ๋งž์€ ์กด์žฌ์ž„์„ ์•Œ๋ ค์ฃผ๋Š” ์—ญํ• ์„ ํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ์ž‘ํ’ˆ ๋‚ด์ ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ์˜ค๋žซ๋™์•ˆ ๋‚˜๋‰˜์–ด ์žˆ๋˜ ์—์•„๋ Œ๋”œ์˜ ๊ฐ€๊ณ„๋ฅผ ๋‹ค์‹œ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋กœ ํ•ฉ์ณค๋‹ค๋Š” ์˜์˜๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐํƒ€ ์•„๋ผ๊ณ ๋ฅธ์€ 210์„ธ์˜ ๋‚˜์ด๋กœ ์ฃฝ์Œ์„ ๋งž์ดํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋™์‹œ๋Œ€ ์ธ๊ฐ„๋ณด๋‹ค ๋น„๊ต์  ์žฅ์ˆ˜ํ•œ ์™•์ด์ง€๋งŒ, ์ด์ „ ์‹œ๋Œ€์˜ ๋ˆ„๋ฉ”๋…ธ๋ฅด ์™•๊ตญ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  2์‹œ๋Œ€ ๋ง๋ช… ์™•๊ตญ์˜ ๊ตญ์™•๋“ค๋ณด๋‹ค ์งง์€ ์ˆ˜๋ช…์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜์ƒ์˜ ์‚ถ์ด ์ฃผ์–ด์ง„ ์š”์ •์—๊ฒŒ๋Š” ์งง์€ ์ˆœ๊ฐ„์— ์ง€๋‚˜์ง€ ์•Š์•˜์œผ๋‚˜, ๊ฒฐ๋‹จ์„ ๋‚ด๋ฆฐ ์•„๋ฅด์›ฌ์€ ๋กœ์Šค๋กœ๋ฆฌ์—”์˜ ์ผ€๋ฆฐ ์•”๋กœ์Šค์—์„œ ์‚ถ์„ ๋งˆ์ณค๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋…€๊ฐ€ ์ฃฝ์€ ํ›„์— ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์€ ์ €๋…๋ณ„ ์™•๋น„๋ฅผ ๋ง๊ฐํ•˜์˜€๊ณ , ๋ฐ”๋‹ค ๋™์ชฝ์—์„œ๋Š” ๋”์ด์ƒ ๋‹ˆํ”„๋ ˆ๋”œ๊ณผ ์—˜๋ผ๋…ธ๋ฅด๊ฐ€ ํ”ผ์ง€ ์•Š์•˜์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์˜›๋‚ ์˜ ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ๋Š” ๋” ์ด์ƒ ์ „ํ•ด์ง€์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ ๋ฐ˜์ง€์˜ ์ œ์™•์˜ ๋“ฑ์žฅ์ธ๋ฌผ 1954๋…„ ์ฐฝ์กฐ๋œ ๊ฐ€๊ณต์ธ๋ฌผ ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ๋•…์˜ ๋ฐ˜์š”์ •
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arwen
Arwen
Arwen Undรณmiel is a fictional character in J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth legendarium. She appears in the novel The Lord of the Rings. Arwen is one of the half-elven who lived during the Third Age; her father was Elrond half-elven, lord of the Elvish sanctuary of Rivendell, while her mother was the Elf Celebrian, daughter of the Elf-queen Galadriel, ruler of Lothlรณrien. She marries the Man Aragorn, who becomes King of Arnor and Gondor. In Peter Jackson's film adaptation, Arwen is played by Liv Tyler. She plays a more active role in the film than in the book, personally rescuing the Hobbit Frodo from the Black Riders at the Fords of Bruinen (a role played by Glorfindel in the book). Fictional biography Narrative Arwen was the youngest child of Elrond, lord of the Elvish sanctuary of Rivendell and leader of the High Elves remaining in Middle-earth at the end of the Third Age, and Celebrรญan, daughter of Galadriel, ruler of the Elvish forest realm of Lothlรณrien. Her elder brothers were the twins Elladan and Elrohir. Her name "Ar-wen" means 'noble maiden' in Sindarin. She was given the name "Evenstar" as the most beautiful of the last generation of High Elves in Middle-earth. As told in "The Tale of Aragorn and Arwen", in his twentieth year Aragorn met Arwen for the first time in Rivendell, where he lived under Elrond's protection. Arwen, then over 2,700 years old, had recently returned to her father's home after living with her grandmother, Galadriel, in Lothlรณrien. Aragorn fell in love with Arwen at first sight. Thirty years later, the two were reunited in Lothlรณrien. Arwen reciprocated Aragorn's love, and on the mound of Cerin Amroth they committed themselves to marrying each other. In making that choice, Arwen gave up the Elvish immortality available to her as a daughter of Elrond, and agreed to remain in Middle-earth instead of travelling to the Undying Lands. Arwen first appears in the text of The Lord of the Rings in Rivendell, shortly after Frodo Baggins wakes in the House of Elrond: she sits beside her father at the celebratory feast. When the Fellowship of the Ring comes to Lothlรณrien, Aragorn remembers his earlier meeting with Arwen and pauses in reverence. Shortly before Aragorn takes the Paths of the Dead, he is joined by a contingent of his people accompanied by Arwen's brothers, Elladan and Elrohir, who bring him a gift from Arwen: a banner of black cloth. The banner is unfurled at the Battle of the Pelennor Fields to reveal the emblem of Elendil figured in mithril, gems, and gold; this becomes the first triumphant public announcement of the king's return. After the ring is destroyed, Aragorn becomes king of Arnor and Gondor. Arwen arrives at Minas Tirith, and they are married. She gives Frodo the Evenstar: her necklace with a white stone, to aid him when his injuries trouble him. Arwen serves as inspiration and motivation for Aragorn, who must become King of both Arnor and Gondor before Elrond will allow her to marry him. The Tale of Aragorn and Arwen, an appendix to the main story, relates that Aragorn and Arwen had a son, Eldarion, and at least two unnamed daughters. One year after Aragorn's death, Arwen dies at the age of 2,901. Relationships Through her father, Elrond, Arwen was the granddaughter of Eรคrendil the Mariner (the second of the Half-elven), great-granddaughter of Tuor of Gondolin, and therefore a direct descendant of the ancient House of Hador. Through her great-grandmother, Idril, Arwen was a descendant of King Turgon of the Noldor. Through her mother, she was the granddaughter of the Elf-queen Galadriel of Lothlรณrien. Through both of her parents, Arwen was a direct descendant of the ancient Elven House of Finwรซ. Furthermore, Arwen was a descendant of Beren and Lรบthien, whose story resembled hers. Indeed, Arwen was held to be the reappearance in likeness of Lรบthien, fairest of all the Elves, who was called Nightingale (Tinรบviel). Arwen was a distant relative of her husband Aragorn. Aragorn's ancestor, Elros Tar-Minyatur, the first King of Nรบmenor, was her father Elrond's brother, who chose to live as a Man rather than as one of the Eldar. Arwen became Queen of the Reunited Kingdom of Arnor and Gondor when she married Aragorn, who was of the line of the Kings of Arnor. By their marriage, the lines of the Half-elven were reunited. Their union served, too, to unite and preserve the bloodlines of the three kings of the high Elves (Ingwรซ, Finwรซ, and the brothers Olwรซ and Elwรซ) as well as the only line with Maiarin blood through Arwen's great-great-great grandmother, Melian, Queen of Doriath. Analysis As related in The History of Middle-earth, Tolkien conceived the character of "Elrond's daughter" late in the writing. Prior to this, he had considered having Aragorn marry ร‰owyn of the royal family of Rohan. Arwen is depicted as extremely beautiful; she is in Melissa Hatcher's view in Mythlore "a symbol of the unattainable, a perfect match for the unattainable Aragorn in ร‰owyn's eyes." Carol Leibiger wrote in the J.R.R. Tolkien Encyclopedia that Arwen's lack of involvement follows the general Elvish pattern, already established in The Silmarillion and continued in The Lord of the Rings, of retreating to safe havens. The scholar of English literature Nancy Enright wrote that Arwen, like Christ, is an immortal who voluntarily chooses mortality out of love, in her case for Aragorn. She granted that Arwen is not a conspicuous character, and unlike ร‰owyn does not ride into battle, but stated that her inner power is "subtly conveyed" and present throughout the novel. Adaptations Peter Jackson's film series In Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings film trilogy, Arwen is played by Liv Tyler. The films give her a more prominent role than her literary counterpart. In the first film, Arwen searches for Aragorn and single-handedly rescues Frodo Baggins from the Black Riders at Bruinen, thwarting them with a sudden flood, summoned by an incantation. During this flight, Arwen wields the sword Hadhafang, which according to film merchandise was once wielded by her father and had belonged to his grandmother Idril Celebrindal. In the film adaptation of The Two Towers, the injured Aragorn is revived by a dream or vision of Arwen, who kisses him and asks the Valar to protect him. In the film, Arwen does not send Aragorn the banner she has made; instead, Elrond takes the sword Narsil, reforged as Andรบril, to Aragorn at Dunharrow, and tells him that Arwen's fate has become bound to the One Ring, and that she is dying. The Tolkien scholar Janet Brennan Croft comments that Jackson makes Arwen passive, denying her independence of mind; from being a constant support, she is a distraction, even a temptation, to the American Superhero, and their marriage, in the book a sign of his rightful kingship, is in the film something he accepts as if he was condemned to it. In the extended version, Elrond asks Arwen, in Elvish with English subtitles, to accompany him to safety in Valinor, away from Middle-earth. The Tolkien scholar Dimitra Fimi comments that the procession of Elves in the scene "Arwen's vision" in the extended version borrows visually from the "Celtic" imagery of John Duncan's 1911 Pre-Raphaelite painting Riders of the Sidhe. Sauron uses the Palantรญr to show Aragorn a dying Arwen (a scene from the future) in the hope of weakening his resolve. The films portray Arwen as becoming human through her love for Aragorn; as in the novel, she follows the choice of her ancestor Lรบthien to become a mortal woman for the love of a mortal man. The films introduce a jewelled pendant called the Evenstar which Arwen gives to Aragorn as a token of their love. A similar pendant appears in Marion Zimmer Bradley's short story The Jewel of Arwen, although in that story Arwen gives it to "the Ring-Bearer" rather than to Aragorn. In Tolkien's novel, Arwen gives Frodo "a white gem like a star...hanging upon a silver chain" before he leaves Minas Tirith, saying, "When the memory of the fear and the darkness troubles you...this will bring you aid". In earlier versions of the script, Arwen fought in the Battle of Helm's Deep and brought the sword Andรบril to Aragorn. Some scenes of Arwen fighting in Helm's Deep were filmed before both the film's writers (with Liv Tyler's approval) reconsidered the change and deleted her from the sequence. The critic John D. Rateliff wrote approvingly of the deletion of what he calls "Arwen, Warrior Princess", even though it came "at the cost of reducing her to a sort of Lady of Shallott languishing for most of the final two films". In the Mythopoeic Society's Tolkien on Film: Essays on Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings, Cathy Akers-Jordan, Victoria Gaydosik, Jane Chance, and Maureen Thum all contend that the portrayal of Arwen and other women in the Jackson films is thematically faithful to or compatible with Tolkien's writings, despite the differences. Other In the 1981 BBC radio serialisation of The Lord of the Rings, Arwen is voiced by Sonia Fraser. In the musical theatre adaptation of Lord of the Rings, Arwen, played in London in 2007 by Rosalie Craig, sings the Prologue, and three musical numbers: "The Song of Hope", "Star of Eรคrendil" (with the Elven chorus) and "The Song of Hope Duet" (with Aragorn). In the 2009 fan film The Hunt for Gollum, Arwen is played by Rita Ramnani. The Lord of the Rings board game made use of a rendition of Arwen by Jackson's conceptual designer, the illustrator John Howe; the work was inspired by the French actress Isabelle Adjani. Notes References Primary Secondary Sources English given names invented by fiction writers Female characters in film Female characters in literature Fictional female soldiers and warriors Fictional queens Given names inspired by popular culture Literary characters introduced in 1954 The Lord of the Rings characters Middle-earth Half-elven
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๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋…๋ฆฝ ํ˜๋ช…์˜ ๋…์ผ์ธ
๋…์ผ์ธ๋“ค์€ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ „์Ÿ์˜ ์–‘์ธก์—์„œ ๋ณต๋ฌดํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋งŽ์€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์€ ์™•๋‹นํŒŒ์˜ ๋Œ€์˜๋ฅผ ์ง€์ง€ํ–ˆ๊ณ , ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ๋คผ๋„ค๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ ์„ ์ œํ›„๊ตญ์˜ ์„ ์ œํ›„์ด์ž ์˜๊ตญ์˜ ์™•์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ์กฐ์ง€ 3์„ธ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ณต๋ฌดํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํŠนํžˆ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ์™•๊ตญ๊ณผ ์ธ์ ‘ํ•œ ๋ผ์ธ๋ž€ํŠธ์—์„œ ์˜จ ๋…์ผ์ธ๋“ค์€ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ์™•๊ตญ ์œก๊ตฐ์—์„œ ๋ณต๋ฌดํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋…์ผ์ธ๋“ค์€ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ๋…๋ฆฝ๊ตฐ์„ ์ง€์›ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์™”์ง€๋งŒ, ๋…๋ฆฝ๊ตฐ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณต๋ฌดํ•œ ๋…์ผ์ธ ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์€ ์‹๋ฏผ์ฃผ์˜์ž์˜€๋‹ค. ์˜๊ตญ์˜ ๋™๋งน๊ตญ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋…๋ฆฝ ํ˜๋ช… ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„ ๋™์•ˆ ์‹ ์„ฑ ๋กœ๋งˆ ์ œ๊ตญ ํ•˜์—์„œ ๋Š์Šจํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ†ต์ผ๋œ ์ˆ˜๋งŽ์€ ๋…์ผ์–ด๊ถŒ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋“ค์ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋“ค ์ค‘ ๋‹ค์ˆ˜๋Š” ๊ณต์‹์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฃจํ„ฐ๊ต ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ด๋“ค์€ ์ „ํ†ต์ ์œผ๋กœ ์˜๊ตญ์„ ๋น„๋กฏํ•œ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๊ฐœ์‹ ๊ต ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋“ค๊ณผ ๋™๋งน์„ ๋งบ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋…๋ฆฝ ํ˜๋ช… ๋‹น์‹œ ์˜๊ตญ์˜ ์™• ์กฐ์ง€ 3์„ธ๋Š” ํ•˜๋…ธ๋ฒ„ ์„ ์ œํ›„๋ฅผ ๊ฒธํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์กฐ์ง€ 3์„ธ๋Š” ๋ฏผ์กฑ์ ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ๋…์ผ๊ณ„ ์ถœ์‹ ์œผ๋กœ, ์˜์–ด๋ฅผ ๋ชจ๊ตญ์–ด๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ํ•˜๋…ธ๋ฒ„๊ฐ€์˜ ์ˆ˜์žฅ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜๊ตญ์€ 1756๋…„ ์™ธ๊ต ํ˜๋ช… ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„ ๋™์•ˆ ๋…์ผ์˜ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋“ค๊ณผ ๋™๋งน์„ ๋งบ์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, 7๋…„ ์ „์Ÿ์—์„œ๋Š” ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ์˜ ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ๋ฆฌํžˆ 2์„ธ์™€ ๋™๋งน์„ ๋งบ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์˜๊ตญ ์‹๋ฏผ์ง€๋“ค์ด ๋ช‡์‹ญ ๋…„ ํ›„์— ๋ฐ˜๋ž€์„ ์ผ์œผ์ผฐ์„ ๋•Œ, ๋ช‡๋ช‡ ๋…์ผ์–ด๊ถŒ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋“ค์€ ์˜๊ตญ ์œก๊ตฐ๊ณผ ๊ณ„์•ฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ตฐ๋Œ€๋ฅผ ์™ธ๊ตญ์— ์ž„๋Œ€ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ๋ช‡๋ช‡ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์ธ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ๋…ผ๋ž€์ด ๋˜์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ๋…์ผ์–ด๊ถŒ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์˜ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์€ ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ „์Ÿ์—์„œ ๋ณต๋ฌดํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ํฐ ์ž๋ถ€์‹ฌ์„ ๋“œ๋Ÿฌ๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. ์–ด๋–ค ๊ฒฝ์šฐ์—๋Š”, ๋…์ผ์ธ์€ ์‹ฌ์ง€์–ด ์ œ60์—ฐ๋Œ€์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ์˜๊ตญ ๋ถ€๋Œ€์— ์ง์ ‘ ์ž…๋Œ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์ธ๋“ค์€ ๋…์ผ์–ด๊ถŒ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์˜ ๋ถ€๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋•…์— ๋„์ฐฉํ•˜์ž ์ด๊ฒƒ์„ ์กฐ์ง€ 3์„ธ์˜ ๋ฐฐ์‹ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณด์•˜๋‹ค. ๋ช‡๋ช‡ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ์˜์›๋“ค์€ ์กฐ์ง€ 3์„ธ๊ฐ€ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋“ค์„ ์ž์‹ ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค๋ฉด ๋…๋ฆฝ์„ ์„ ์–ธํ•  ๊ฒƒ์„ ์„ ํฌํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์ด๋ฅผ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ์• ๊ตญ์ž๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ์„ ์ „ ๋„๊ตฌ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋…์ผ์ธ ๊ตฐ๋Œ€๋Š” "์™ธ๊ตญ ์šฉ๋ณ‘"์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถˆ๋ ธ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋…๋ฆฝ์„ ์–ธ์—์„œ๋„ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋‹จ์–ด๋กœ์จ ์–ธ๊ธ‰๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค : ๋ช‡๋ช‡ ์ž‘์€ ๋…์ผ์–ด๊ถŒ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์˜ ์žฌ์ •์ ์ธ ๊ธฐ์ดˆ๋Š” 18์„ธ๊ธฐ ๋™์•ˆ์— ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ๋ฐฉ๋ฉด์—์„œ ๋” ํฐ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ์„ธ์šฐ๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ „ํˆฌ์— ๊ทธ๋“ค์˜ ์—ฐ๋Œ€๋ฅผ ์ •๊ทœ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋นŒ๋ ค์ฃผ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์—ญ์‚ฌ ํ•™์ž ์ฐฐ์Šค W. ์ž‰๊ทธ๋ผ์˜ค๋Š” (Charles W. Ingrao) ๋Š” ํ—ค์„ผ ์šฉ๋ณ‘ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€: ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ๋ฆฌํžˆ 2์„ธ ์น˜ํ•˜์˜ ์ƒ๊ฐ, ๊ธฐ๊ด€ ๋ฐ ๊ฐœํ˜, 1760-1785 (2003)์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์ด๋ฅผ ์„ค๋ช…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ—ค์„ผ์˜ ์šฉ๋ณ‘๋“ค์€ ์ž˜ ํ›ˆ๋ จ๋˜๊ณ  ์žฅ๋น„๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ—ค์„ผ ์šฉ๋ณ‘๋“ค์€ ํ—ค์„ผ ๋Œ€๊ณต์—๊ฒŒ ๋ˆ์„ ์ฃผ๋Š” ์–ด๋Š ๋ˆ„๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด์„œ๋ผ๋„ ์ž˜ ์‹ธ์› ๋‹ค. ์ „์Ÿ์ด ๋๋‚˜์ž ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ์˜ํšŒ๋Š” ๋…์ผ์ธ๋“ค์ด ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์— ๋‚จ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋„๋ก ํ˜œํƒ, ํŠนํžˆ ๋ฌด๋ฃŒ ๋†์ง€๋ฅผ ์ œ๊ณตํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜๊ตญ ์—ญ์‹œ ๋…ธ๋ฐ”์Šค์ฝ”์ƒค์— ์ •์ฐฉํ•˜๊ณ ์ž ํ•˜๋Š” ๋…์ผ์ธ ๊ตฐ๋Œ€์— ํ† ์ง€ ๋ฐ ์„ธ๊ธˆ ํ˜œํƒ์„ ์ œ๊ณตํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€ ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ์˜ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ์ด์ž ์กฐ์ง€ 3์„ธ์˜ ์‚ผ์ดŒ์ธ ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ๋ฆฌํžˆ 2์„ธ ํฐ ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€์€ ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นด ๋Œ€๋ฅ™์—์„œ ์‹ธ์šธ 12,000๋ช… ์ด์ƒ์˜ ๊ตฐ์ธ์„ ์ œ๊ณตํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋“ค์˜ ์˜๊ตญ ๋™๋งน๊ตฐ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ํ—ค์„ผ๊ตฐ์€ ๋ถ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นด์— ์ ์‘ํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ ์•ฝ๊ฐ„ ์–ด๋ ค์›€์„ ๊ฒช์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋„์ฐฉํ•  ์ฒซ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ตฐ๋Œ€๋Š” ์ „์—ผ๋ณ‘์œผ๋กœ ๊ณ ํ†ต๋ฐ›์•˜๊ณ , ์ด๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ๋กฑ์•„์ผ๋žœ๋“œ ์ „ํˆฌ์˜ ๊ฐœ์‹œ๊ฐ€ ์ง€์—ฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1776๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ํ—ค์„ผ๊ตฐ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋“ค์€ ๋ถ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นด์—์„œ ๋ณต๋ฌดํ•˜๋Š” ์˜๊ตญ ์œก๊ตฐ์— ํ†ตํ•ฉ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ๊ทธ๋“ค์ด ์ฐธ์ „ํ•œ ์ „ํˆฌ์—๋Š”๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ „์Ÿ์˜ ๋‰ด์š• ๋‰ด์ €์ง€ ์ „์—ญ, ์ €๋จผํƒ€์šด ์ „ํˆฌ, ์ฐฐ์Šคํ„ด ๊ณต๋ฐฉ์ „, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์•ฝ 1300๋ช…์˜ ๋…์ผ์ธ์ด ํฌ๋กœ๋กœ ๋Œ๋ ค๊ฐ„ ์š”ํฌํƒ€์šด ์ „ํˆฌ ๋“ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๋ณด๊ณ ์„œ์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋ฉด ๋…์ผ์ธ์ด ์˜๊ตญ์ธ๋ณด๋‹ค ๋” ๋‚˜์€ ์ „ํˆฌ๋ ฅ๊ณผ ์‚ฌ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋ณด์œ ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€์€ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ „์Ÿ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„ ์ค‘ 16,000๋ช…์˜ ๊ตฐ๋Œ€๋ฅผ ํŒŒ๋ณ‘ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ด ์ค‘ 6,500๋ช…์€ ๋Œ์•„๊ฐ€์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. ํ—ค์„ผ ์žฅ๊ตฐ ์•„๋‹ด ๋ฃจํŠธ๋น„ํžˆ ์˜คํฌ์Šค๋Š” 1,800๋ช…์˜ ํ—ค์„ผ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋“ค์ด ์‚ฌ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ถ”์ •ํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ํ—ค์„ผ ๊ตฐ๋Œ€์˜ ๋งŽ์€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์€ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์— ๋จธ๋ฌผ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์›ํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์ „์Ÿ ํ›„์—๋„ ๊ณ„์† ๋จธ๋ฌผ๋ €๋‹ค. ๋…์ผ์–ด๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๋Œ€๋‹ค์ˆ˜์˜ ๊ตฐ๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ํ—ค์„ผ์—์„œ ์™”๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ํ˜„๋Œ€ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์ธ๋“ค์€ ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๋…์ผ์ธ ๊ตฐ๋Œ€๋ฅผ ์ด์นญํ•˜์—ฌ ํ—ค์„ผ๊ตฐ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถˆ๋ €๋‹ค. ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€์€ ์˜๊ตญ๊ณผ 15๊ฐœ ์—ฐ๋Œ€, 4๊ฐœ์˜ ์ฒ™ํƒ„๋ณ‘ ๋Œ€๋Œ€, 2๊ฐœ์˜ ์—ฝ๋ณ‘ ์—ฐ๋Œ€, 4๊ฐœ์˜ ํฌ๋ณ‘ ์—ฐ๋Œ€๋ฅผ ์ œ๊ณตํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋™๋งน ์กฐ์•ฝ์„ ์ฒด๊ฒฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํŠนํžˆ ์—ฝ๋ณ‘ ์—ฐ๋Œ€๋Š” ๊นŒ๋‹ค๋กญ๊ฒŒ ๋ชจ์ง‘๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ๊ธ‰๋ฃŒ๊ฐ€ ์ž˜ ์ง€๋ถˆ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ์˜๋ณต์ด ์ข‹์•˜์œผ๋ฉฐ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์œก์ฒด ๋…ธ๋™์—์„œ ์ž์œ ๋กœ์› ๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์—์„œ์˜ "์ธ๋„์‹" ์ „์Ÿ์—์„œ ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์—ฝ๋ณ‘์—ฐ๋Œ€๋Š” ํ•„์ˆ˜์ ์ด์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, 1777๋…„ 12์›”์— ์˜๊ตญ์€ ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€๊ณผ ์—ฝ๋ณ‘๋ถ€๋Œ€์˜ ์ˆ˜๋ฅผ 260๋ช…์—์„œ 1,066๋ช…์œผ๋กœ ๋Š˜๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์— ๋™์˜ํ•œ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์กฐ์•ฝ์— ์„œ๋ช…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€๊ตฐ์€ ๋Œ€์„œ์–‘ ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ํŽธ์— ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ตฐ์ธ๋“ค์˜ ์†์‹ค์„ ๋Œ€์ฒดํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†์—ˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด๊ณ„ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์ธ๋“ค์„ ํ•˜์ธ๊ณผ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋กœ ๋ชจ์ง‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 115๋ช…์˜ ํ‘์ธ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ํ—ค์„ผ ๋ถ€๋Œ€์—์„œ ๊ทผ๋ฌดํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์€ ๋ถ์„ ์—ฐ์ฃผํ•˜๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ํŒŒ์ดํ”„๋ฅผ ๋ถ€๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€์—์„œ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์ž˜ ์•Œ๋ ค์ง„ ์žฅ๊ต๋Š” ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ ํฐ ํ‚ค๋‹ˆํฌ์„ผ ์žฅ๊ตฐ์œผ๋กœ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์ „ํˆฌ์—์„œ ๊ตฐ๋Œ€๋ฅผ ์ง€ํœ˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ฃผ๋ชฉํ• ๋งŒํ•œ ์žฅ๊ต์—๋Š” 1777๋…„ ๋ ˆ๋“œ๋ฑ…ํฌ ์ „ํˆฌ์—์„œ ์น˜๋ช…์ ์ธ ๋ถ€์ƒ์„ ์ž…์€ ๋Œ€๋ น ์นด๋ฅผ ํฐ ๋„๋…ธํ”„์™€ 1776๋…„ ํŠธ๋ Œํ„ด ์ „ํˆฌ์—์„œ ๋ถ€์ƒ์„ ์ž…์€ ์š”ํ•œ ๋กค ๋Œ€๋ น์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋กค์˜ ์—ฌ๋‹จ์€ ํฌ๋กœ๋กœ ์žกํ˜€ ํฌ๋กœ ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์€ ํŽœ์‹ค๋ฒ ๋‹ˆ์•„๋กœ ๋ณด๋‚ด์ ธ ๋†์žฅ์—์„œ ์ผํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ—ค์„ผํ•˜๋‚˜์šฐ ํ—ค์„ผํ•˜๋‚˜์šฐ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ๊ตญ์€ ํ—ค์„ผ์นด์…€์˜ ์ค€๋…๋ฆฝ ์ง€์—ญ์œผ๋กœ, ๊ฐœ์‹ ๊ต๋„์ธ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 1์„ธ๊ฐ€ ๋‹ค์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1775๋…„ ๋ฒ™์ปคํž ์ „ํˆฌ ์†Œ์‹์„ ๋“ค์€ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„์€, ์กฐ์ง€3์„ธ์—๊ฒŒ ๋ฌด์กฐ๊ฑด์ ์œผ๋กœ ์—ฐ๋Œ€๋ฅผ ์ œ๊ณตํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ „์Ÿ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„ ๋™์•ˆ, ํ—ค์„ผํ•˜๋‚˜์šฐ๋Š” 2,422๋ช…์˜ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์ด ์ค‘ 1,441๋ช…๋งŒ์ด 1783๋…„ ๊ท€ํ™˜ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ—ค์„ผ๊ตฐ์˜ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋“ค ์ค‘ ์ƒ๋‹น์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ํ•˜๋‚˜์šฐ์—์„œ ์™”๊ณ , ์ด๋“ค ์ค‘ ๋ช‡๋ช‡์€ ์ „์Ÿ ์ดํ›„ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋Œ€๋ฅ™์— ๋‚จ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์›ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ—ค์„ผํ•˜๋‚˜์šฐ์˜ ์œ ๋ช…ํ•œ ์žฅ๊ต์—๋Š” ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ ํฐ ๊ฐˆ ์žฅ๊ตฐ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ์กด ๋ฒ„๊ณ ์ธ ์žฅ๊ตฐ ํœ˜ํ•˜์—์„œ ํ•˜๋‚˜์šฐ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์˜จ ์—ฌ๋‹จ์„ ์ง€ํœ˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ถ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นด์— ํŒŒ๊ฒฌ๋œ ๋ถ€๋Œ€ ์ค‘์—๋Š” ๋ณด๋ณ‘ 1๊ฐœ ๋Œ€๋Œ€์™€ ์—ฝ๋ณ‘ ๋Œ€๋Œ€, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์ž์œ ๊ตฐ๋‹จ์ด๋ผ ์•Œ๋ ค์ง„ ๋น„์ •๊ทœ์ง ๋ณด๋ณ‘๋Œ€๋Œ€์™€ ํฌ๋ณ‘ ์—ฐ๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ๋ณผํŽœ๋ท”ํ…” ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ๋คผ๋„ค๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ ๊ณต๊ตญ์€ 3๊ฐœ์˜ ๋‚˜๋ผ๋กœ ๋ถ„ํ• ๋˜์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด ์ค‘ ํ•œ ๊ณณ์ด ์กฐ์ง€ 3์„ธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ œํ›„๋กœ ๋‹ค์Šค๋ฆฌ๋Š” ํ•˜๋…ธ๋ฒ„ ์„ ์ œํ›„๊ตญ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜๋…ธ๋ฒ„์™€ ์ด์›ƒํ•œ ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ๋ณผํŽœ๋ท”ํ…” ๊ณต๊ตญ์€ ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ ๊ณต์ž‘ ์นด๋ฅผ 1์„ธ์™€ ๊ทธ ์•„๋“ค์ธ ์นด๋ฅผ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ ํŽ˜๋ฅด๋””๋‚œํŠธ๊ฐ€ ๋‹ค์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์นด๋ฅผ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ ํŽ˜๋ฅด๋””๋‚œํŠธ๋Š” ์กฐ์ง€ 3์„ธ์˜ ๋ˆ„๋‚˜์ธ ์˜๊ตญ ์™•๋…€ ์•„์šฐ๊ตฌ์Šคํƒ€์™€ ๊ฒฐํ˜ผํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1775๋…„ ์นด๋ฅผ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ ํŽ˜๋ฅด๋””๋‚œํŠธ๋Š” ์กฐ์ง€ 3์„ธ์—๊ฒŒ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์—์„œ ๋ฐœ์ƒํ•œ ๋ฐ˜๋ž€์„ ์ง„์••ํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ ๋„์›€์ด ๋˜๋Š” ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋“ค์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1775๋…„ 12์›”, ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ๋ฆฌํžˆ ์•„๋Œํ”„ ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ์ ค ์žฅ๊ตฐ์€ ์กฐ์•ฝ์ด ํ™•์ •๋˜๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋Œ€ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์ง•๋ณ‘์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ๋Š” 1776๋…„ 1์›” 9์ผ ์˜๊ตญ๊ณผ ์กฐ์•ฝ์„ ์ฒด๊ฒฐํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋…์ผ์–ด๊ถŒ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€ ์ค‘ ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ์˜๊ตญ์„ ์ง€์ง€ํ•˜๋Š” ์กฐ์•ฝ์„ ์ฒด๊ฒฐํ•œ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜๊ตญ๊ณผ ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ๋Š” 4,000๋ช…์˜ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌํ•˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ํ•ฉ์˜ํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, 4๊ฐœ์˜ ๋ณด๋ณ‘์—ฐ๋Œ€, 1๊ฐœ์˜ ์ฒ™ํƒ„๋ณ‘ ๋Œ€๋Œ€, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  1๊ฐœ์˜ ์šฉ๊ธฐ๋ณ‘์—ฐ๋Œ€์™€ 1๊ฐœ์˜ ๊ฒฝ๋ณด๋ณ‘๋Œ€๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌ๋  ์˜ˆ์ •์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ ์กฐ์•ฝ์—์„œ ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ๊ตฐ์˜ ๊ธ‰๋ฃŒ๋Š” 2๋‹ฌ์น˜ ๊ธ‰๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ์„ ๋ถˆํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ํฌํ•จํ•˜์—ฌ ์‹ ์„ฑ ๋กœ๋งˆ ์ œ๊ตญ์˜ ํƒˆ๋Ÿฌ๋กœ ์ง€๋ถˆ๋  ์˜ˆ์ •์ด์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์กฐ์ง€ 3์„ธ์—๊ฒŒ ์ถฉ์„ฑ์„ ๋งน์„ธํ•˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•ฉ์˜์—์„œ ๋…ผ๋ž€์ด ๋˜๋Š” ์กฐํ•ญ์€ ์นด๋ฅผ ๋Œ€๊ณต์ด ์ „์‚ฌํ•œ ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋“ค์„ ๋Œ€์ฒดํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ยฃ7 ๋ฐ 4s์„ ์ง€๋ถˆํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์•ฝ์ •๋˜์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, 3๋ช…์˜ ๋ถ€์ƒ์ž๋ฅผ 1๋ช…์˜ ์ „์‚ฌ์ž์™€ ๋™๋“ฑํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์ทจ๊ธ‰ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์นด๋ฅผ์€ ์ „์‚ฌ์ž๋‚˜ "ํ”์น˜ ์•Š์€ ์ „์—ผ์„ฑ ์งˆ๋ณ‘"์— ๊ฑธ๋ฆฐ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค ๋ชจ๋‘๋ฅผ ๋Œ€์ฒดํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ˆ์„ ๋‚ด๊ณ ์ž ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ ๊ณต์ž‘ ์นด๋ฅผ 1์„ธ๋Š” ์˜๊ตญ์— 4,000๋ช…์˜ ๋ณด๋ณ‘๊ณผ 350๋ช…์˜ ์ค‘์šฉ๊ธฐ๋ณ‘์„ ์ œ๊ณตํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ „ํˆฌ๋Š” ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ๋ฆฌํžˆ ์•„๋Œํ”„ ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ์ ค ์žฅ๊ตฐ์ด ์ด์‚ฌ๋ น๊ด€์„ ๋งก๊ณ , ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ๋ฆฌํžˆ ๋ฐ”์›€์ด ์ง€ํœ˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ์ ค ์žฅ๊ตฐ์€ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์กฐ์•ฝ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์ถ”๊ฐ€์ ์ธ ์ง•์ง‘์„ ์œ„ํ•ด ์—ฐ๋Œ€๋“ค์„ ์žฌ์กฐ์งํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ตฐ๋‹จ์œผ๋กœ ํŽธ์„ฑํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ˆ™๋ จ๋œ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋“ค์€ ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ์ ค ์—ฐ๋Œ€, ๋ ˆ์ธ  ์—ฐ๋Œ€, ํ”„๋ฆฐ์ธ  ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ๋ฆฌํžˆ ์—ฐ๋Œ€, ํฐ ์ŠˆํŽ˜ํžˆํŠธ ์—ฐ๋Œ€์˜ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์ค‘๋Œ€์™€ ํฐ ๋ฐ”๋ฅด๋„ˆ ๋Œ€๋Œ€ ๋ฐ ์šฉ๊ธฐ๋ณ‘ ๋ถ€๋Œ€ ๊ณณ๊ณณ์— ํฌ์ง„๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐœ๋ฐํฌ ํ›„๊ตญ ๋ฐ ์•ˆํ• ํŠธ์ฒด๋ฅดํ”„์ŠคํŠธ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ๋คผ๋„ค๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ๋Š” ๊ฐ•์ œ ์ง•์ง‘์„ ํ”ผํ•œ ์˜๊ตญ ์˜ˆ๋น„๋ถ€๋Œ€์˜€๊ณ , ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ ๊ณต์ž‘์€ ๋ถ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นด์— ๋ž€๋ฐ์Šคํ‚จ๋”๋ฅผ ํŒŒ๋ณ‘ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ธฐ๋กœ ์„ ์–ธํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์ด์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์ง€์ฃผ๋“ค์€ ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ์— ๋‚จ์•„์žˆ๋Š” ๋ถ€๋Œ€๋ฅผ ์ „ํ™˜์‹œํ‚ฌ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์žฅ๊ต๋“ค๊ณผ ํ•˜์‚ฌ๊ด€๋“ค์€ ๊ณ„๊ธ‰์„ ์ฑ„์šฐ๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์‹ ์„ฑ ๋กœ๋งˆ ์ œ๊ตญ ๊ณณ๊ณณ์„ ๋Œ์•„๋‹ค๋…”๊ณ , ์ธ์„ผํ‹ฐ๋ธŒ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ์ด๋“ค์€ ์‹ ์„ธ๊ณ„์—์„œ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ๊ฒฝ์ œ์  ๊ธฐํšŒ๋ฅผ ์–ป๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด, ์ž์‹ ๋“ค์˜ ํ˜•๋Ÿ‰์„ ์ค„์ด๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด, ๋˜๋Š” ๋ชจํ—˜์„ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ถ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นด๋กœ ํ–ฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋“ค์€ 1777๋…„ ์ƒˆ๋Ÿฌํ† ๊ฐ€ ์ „์—ญ ๋‹น์‹œ ์กด ๋ฒ„๊ณ ์ธ ํœ˜ํ•˜์˜ ๋…์ผ์–ด๊ถŒ ์ •๊ทœ๋ถ€๋Œ€์˜ ๋Œ€๋‹ค์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ–ˆ๊ณ , "๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ด์ปค"๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถˆ๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ์™€ ํ—ค์„ผํ•˜๋‚˜์šฐ์˜ ์—ฐํ•ฉ๊ตฐ์€ ๋ฒ„๊ณ ์ธ์˜ ๊ตฐ๋Œ€์— ์ ˆ๋ฐ˜ ์ •๋„๋ฅผ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ด์ปค๋Š” ํ›ˆ๋ จ์ด ์ž˜ ๋œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ๋„ ์œ ๋ช…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฑ”ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ธํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ๊ฑด๋„Œ ์„ ๋ฐ•๋“ค ์ค‘ ํ•œ ์ฒ™์€ ์œก๊ตฐ์—์„œ ์ž์‹ ๋“ค์˜ ์ค‘์š”๋„๋ฅผ ์ธ์ง€ํ•˜๊ณ  ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ ๊นƒ๋ฐœ์„ ๊ฑธ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ์ ค์˜ ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ ๊ตฐ๋Œ€๋Š” ํ—ˆ๋ฐ”ํŠผ ์ „ํˆฌ์— ์ฐธ์ „ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ฏธ๊ตฐ์˜ ์šฐ์ต์— ๋งž์„œ ์ด๊ฒ€๋Œ๊ฒฉ์„ ํ•˜์˜€๊ณ , ์ด ๊ณต๊ฒฉ ๋•๋ถ„์— ์˜๊ตญ๊ตฐ์˜ ๋ถ•๊ดด๋ฅผ ๋ง‰์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ์ ค์˜ ๋ถ€์ธ์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ํ”„๋ ˆ๋ฐ๋ฆฌ์นด ์ƒค๋ฅผ๋กœํ…Œ ๋ฆฌ๋ฐ์ ค์€ ๋‚จํŽธ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋‹ค๋‹ˆ๋ฉฐ ์ƒˆ๋Ÿฌํ† ๊ฐ€ ์ „์—ญ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ค‘์š”ํ•œ ๋ฃŒ๊ฐ€ ๋œ ๊ธฐ๋ก๋“ค์„ ๋‚จ๊ฒผ๋‹ค. ๋ฒ„๊ณ ์ธ์˜ ํ•ญ๋ณต ์ดํ›„, 2,431๋ช…์˜ ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ด์ปค๋“ค์€ ์ „์Ÿ์ด ๋๋‚  ๋•Œ๊นŒ์ง€ ํ˜‘์ •๊ตฐ์˜ ์ผ์›์œผ๋กœ ๋‚จ์•„์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ๋Š” ๋ถ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นด์— 5,723๋ช…์˜ ๊ตฐ๋Œ€๋ฅผ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 1783๋…„ ๊ฐ€์„๊นŒ์ง€ 3,105๋ช…์ด ๊ท€ํ–ฅํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์†์‹ค์—๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋ง์ด๋‚˜ ์œ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์˜ ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ ๊ตฐ์ธ๋“ค์€ ํ˜‘์ •๊ตฐ ์‹œ๊ธฐ์— ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์— ์ต์ˆ™ํ•ด์กŒ๊ณ , ์ „์Ÿ์ด ๋๋‚ฌ์„ ๋•Œ ์˜ํšŒ์—์„œ ์ƒ์ฃผ๋ฅผ ํ—ˆ๋ฝ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ ๊ณต์ž‘์ด ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์—์„œ ์‚ฌ๋งํ•œ ๋ชจ๋“  ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋“ค์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์˜๊ตญ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋ณด์ƒ์„ ๋ฐ›์€ ์ดํ›„, ์œ ๊ธฐ์ž๋“ค์„ ์‚ฌ๋ง์ž๋กœ ๋ณด๊ณ ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ๊ทธ์—๊ฒŒ ๋„์›€์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ ๊ณต์ž‘์€ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์— ๋‚จ์•„์žˆ๊ฑฐ๋‚˜, ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์—์„œ ๋Œ์•„์˜จ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ 6๋‹ฌ์น˜ ๊ธ‰๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ์ œ๊ณตํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์•ˆ์Šค๋ฐ”ํ ๋ฐ ๋ฐ”์ด๋กœ์ดํŠธ ๋ธŒ๋ž€๋ด๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ์•ˆ์Šค๋ฐ”ํ ํ›„๊ตญ๊ณผ ๋ธŒ๋ž€๋ด๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ๋ฐ”์ด๋กœ์ดํŠธ ํ›„๊ตญ์€ ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ‹ฐ์•ˆ ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ๋ฆฌํžˆ ์นด๋ฅผ ์•Œ๋ ‰์‚ฐ๋” ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฑ์˜ ์ง€ํœ˜ ํ•˜์— ์˜๊ตญ์— 2๊ฐœ ๋ณด๋ณ‘๋Œ€๋Œ€์™€ 1๊ฐœ ์˜ˆ๊ฑฐ ์ค‘๋Œ€, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ํฌ๋ณ‘๋Œ€ 1๊ฐœ๋ฅผ ํฌํ•จํ•ด ์ด 1,644๋ช…์˜ ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์„ ๋ณด๋ƒˆ๊ณ , ์ด ์ค‘ 461๋ช…์ด ์‚ด์•„๋Œ์•„์˜ค์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์•ˆ์Šค๋ฐ”ํ์™€ ๋ฐ”์ด๋กœ์ดํŠธ์—์„œ ์ด 2,353๋จ•์ด ํŒŒ๊ฒฌ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ์ด ์ค‘์—๋Š” ์˜ˆ๊ฑฐ ์—ฐ๋Œ€ ์ „์ฒด๊ฐ€ ํฌํ•จ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋“ค์€ "๊ฐ€์žฅ ํ‚ค๊ฐ€ ํฌ๊ณ  ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์— ์˜จ ์—ฐ๋Œ€ ์ค‘ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋ฉ‹์žˆ์–ด ๋ณด์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ", "ํ—ค์„ผ์ธ๋ณด๋‹ค ๋” ์ž˜ ์‹ธ์šด๋‹ค"๊ณ  ํ‰๊ฐ€๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ์•ˆ์Šค๋ฐ”ํ๊ตฐ๊ณผ ๋ฐ”์ด๋กœ์ดํŠธ๊ตฐ์€ ๋‰ด์š•์— ์žˆ๋˜ ํ•˜์šฐ์˜ ๊ตฐ๋Œ€์— ํŽธ์ž…๋˜์–ด ํ•„๋ผ๋ธํ”ผ์•„ ์ „์—ญ์—์„œ ์‹ธ์› ๋‹ค. ์•ˆ์Šค๋ฐ”ํ๊ตฐ๊ณผ ๋ฐ”์ด๋กœ์ดํŠธ๊ตฐ์€ ์š”ํฌํƒ€์šด ์ „ํˆฌ ๋‹น์‹œ ์ฐฐ์Šค ์ฝ˜์›”๋ฆฌ์Šค์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ๋™์›์ด ๋๋‚œ ํ›„, ์•ˆ์Šค๋ฐ”ํ๊ตฐ๊ณผ ๋ฐ”์ด๋กœ์ดํŠธ๊ตฐ์€ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์ง•์ง‘๋ น์„ ๋‚ด๋ ค ๋ถ€๋Œ€๋ฅผ ์ถ”๊ฐ€๋กœ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ „์Ÿ์ด ๋๋‚  ๋ฌด๋ ต, 2,361๋ช…์˜ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋“ค์ด ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นด ๋Œ€๋ฅ™์— ํŒŒ๊ฒฌ๋˜์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ์ ˆ๋ฐ˜๋„ ์•ˆ ๋˜๋Š” 1,041๋ช…์ด 1783๋…„ ๋ง ๊ท€๊ตญํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์•ˆ์Šค๋ฐ”ํ์™€ ๋ฐ”์ด๋กœ์ดํŠธ์˜ ํ›„์ž‘์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ์นด๋ฅผ์€ ์ „์Ÿ์ด ๋ฐœ๋ฐœํ•˜์ž ๋นš๋”๋ฏธ์— ์•‰์•˜์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋“ค์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ ยฃ100,000 ์ด์ƒ์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. 1791๋…„ ์นด๋ฅผ์€ ์•ˆ์Šค๋ฐ”ํ์™€ ๋ฐ”์ด๋กœ์ดํŠธ๋ฅผ ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ ์™•๊ตญ์— ๋งค๊ฐํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ ํŽœ์…˜์ด ์žˆ๋Š” ์˜๊ตญ์—์„œ ์—ฌ์ƒ์„ ๋ณด๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ๋คผ๋„ค๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ๋คผ๋„ค๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ ์„ ์ œํ›„๊ตญ์˜ 5๊ฐœ ๋Œ€๋Œ€ ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์ด ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ€๋ ค๋˜ ์˜๊ตญ๊ตฐ์„ ๊ตฌ์ถœํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ง€๋ธŒ๋กคํ„ฐ์™€ ๋ฏธ๋…ธ๋ฅด์นด์— 1775๋…„ ์ดˆ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค.. ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ๋คผ๋„ค๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ์™€ ์˜๊ตญ์€ ๋™๊ตฐ์—ฐํ•ฉ์ด์—ˆ๊ณ  ๊ฐ๊ฐ์˜ ์ •๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ๋”ฐ๋กœ ์žˆ์—ˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์—, ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ๋คผ๋„ค๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ์˜ ๊ตฐ๋Œ€๋Š” ์˜๊ตญ-ํ•˜๋…ธ๋ฒ„ ์กฐ์•ฝ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์˜๊ตญ์ด ๊ตฐ๋Œ€ ๋น„์šฉ์„ ๋Œ€์‹  ์ง€๋ถˆํ•˜๊ณ , ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ๋คผ๋„ค๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ ๊ตฐ๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ํ•ด์™ธ๋กœ ํŒŒ๋ณ‘๋˜๋Š” ๋™์•ˆ ๋ธŒ๋ž€๋ด๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ๋คผ๋„ค๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ ๋ณธํ† ๋ฅผ ๋ณดํ˜ธํ•˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด์Šˆ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ๋คผ๋„ค๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ ๊ตฐ๋Œ€๋Š” ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ „์Ÿ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„ ์ค‘ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๊ทœ๋ชจ๊ฐ€ ํฌ๊ณ  ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„์ด ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๊ธธ์—ˆ๋˜ ์ง€๋ธŒ๋กคํ„ฐ ๋Œ€๊ณต๋ฐฉ์ „์—์„œ ํ™œ์•ฝํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋ฏธ๋…ธ๋ฅด์นด ์นจ๊ณต ๋•Œ๋„ ์„ฌ์„ ๋ฐฉ์–ดํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ ์ด๋“ค์€ ์˜๊ตญ๋ น ์ธ๋„๋กœ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌ๋˜์–ด ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค-๋งˆ์ด์†Œ๋ฅด ์—ฐํ•ฉ๊ตฐ์„ ์ฟ ๋‹ฌ๋„๋ฅด ์ „ํˆฌ์—์„œ ๊ฒฉํ‡ดํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์•ˆํ• ํŠธ์ฒผํ”„์ŠคํŠธ ์•ˆํ• ํŠธ์ฒผํ”„์ŠคํŠธ ํ›„๊ตญ์˜ ํ›„์ž‘ ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ๋ฆฌํžˆ ์•„์šฐ๊ตฌ์Šคํˆฌ์Šค๋Š” 1777๋…„ 1,160๋ช…์˜ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌํ•˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ์˜๊ตญ๊ณผ ์กฐ์•ฝ์„ ์ฒด๊ฒฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์กฐ์•ฝ ์ฒด๊ฒฐ ํ›„ 5๊ฐœ์›” ๋งŒ์— ์—ฐ๋Œ€ ์ค‘ 2๊ฐœ ๋Œ€๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ์ง•์ง‘๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ƒˆ๋กœ ์ง•์ง‘๋œ ๋ณ‘์‚ฌ 900๋ช…์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฒซ๋ฒˆ์งธ ๋Œ€๋Œ€๊ฐ€ 1778๋…„ 5์›” ํ€˜๋ฒก์‹œ๋ฅผ ์ง€ํ‚ค๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์บ๋‚˜๋‹ค์— ํŒŒ๊ฒฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฐธ๊ณ  ๋ฌธํ—Œ ๊ฐ์ฃผ ๋‚ด์šฉ์ฃผ ์ถ”๊ฐ€ ์ž๋ฃŒ Hocker, Edward W. The Fighting Parson of the American Revolution: A Biography of General Peter Muhlenberg, Lutheran Clergyman, Military Chieftain, and Political Leader (1936). Huck, Stephan (2011). Soldaten gegen Nordamerika. Mรผnchen: Oldenbourg Verlag. Jarck, Horst-Rรผdiger (ed.)(2000). Brรผcken in eine neue Welt. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz. Scales, Jodie K. (2001). Of Kindred Germanic Origins. Writers Club Press. Tappert, Theodore G. "Henry Melchior Muhlenberg and the American Revolution." Church History 11.4 (1942): 284-301. online Tolzmann, Don Heinrich, ed.; German Americans in the Revolution: Henry Melchoir Muhlenberg Richards' History (2013, based on 1908 history), emphasis on Pennsylvania ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ „์Ÿ์˜ ์˜๊ตญ๊ตฐ ๋ถ€๋Œ€ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋…๋ฆฝ ์ „์Ÿ ๋…์ผ-๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๊ด€๊ณ„
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germans%20in%20the%20American%20Revolution
Germans in the American Revolution
Ethnic Germans served on both sides of the American Revolutionary War. Large numbers of Germans had emigrated to Pennsylvania, New York, and other American colonies, and they were generally neutral. Some belonged to pacifist sects such as the Amish, but many were drawn into the Revolution and the war. Allies of Great Britain Germans in Europe lived in numerous separate states. Some of these states had been in alliance with Britain during the Seven Years' War, and were eager to assist Great Britain. Britain had used auxiliary forces in every one of its 18th century wars, their use in suppressing rebellion seemed consistent with previous policy. Their use against British subjects was controversial, however. Despite British Whig opposition to using German soldiers to subjugate the "sons of Englishmen," Parliament overwhelmingly approved the measure in order to quickly raise the forces need to suppress the rebellion. The leasing of soldiers to a foreign power was also controversial to some Europeans, but the people of these continental states generally took great pride in their soldiers' service in the war. Prussia notably rejected the request to send soldiers. Germans living in America did not enlist in the auxiliary units but some enlisted in British units. The 60th (Royal American) Regiment recruited both from the Americas and from Germany. The sudden demand to rent thousands of auxiliaries placed a burden on recruiters. Base standards had to be met, including a minimum height and number of teeth required to operate flintlock muskets. Recruiters could be forced to pay losses due to desertion or loss of equipment. As many as 40,000 German auxiliaries were sent to North America, Gibraltar, Minorca and Mysore, and South Africa. In North America, German units accounted for more than a third of British forces. Americans were alarmed at the arrival of hired German fighters. Several American representatives to Continental bodies declared they would be willing to declare independence if King George used such soldiers against them. The hired German troops were referred to as mercenaries by the patriots. Patriot outrage was also reflected in the Declaration of Independence: Colonial-era jurists drawing a distinction between auxiliaries and mercenaries, with auxiliaries serving their prince when sent to the aid of another prince, and mercenaries serving a foreign prince as individuals. By this distinction, the troops which served in the American Revolution were not mercenaries, but auxiliaries. Early Republican historians, however, defended the term "mercenaries" to distinguish the foreign, professional armies from the idealized citizen soldier who altruistically fought for independence. Mercy Otis Warren promoted the idea of German auxiliaries as barbarians, but also as victims of tyranny. Throughout the war, the United States attempted to entice the hired men to stop fighting. In April 1778, Congress issued a letter, addressed "To the officers and soldiers in the service of the king of Great Britain, not subjects of the said king", which offered land and livestock to defecting German units, in addition to increased rank. At the conclusion of the war, Congress offered incentivesโ€”especially free farmlandโ€”for these ethnic Germans to remain in the United States. Great Britain also offered land and tax incentives to its Loyalist soldiers willing to settle in Nova Scotia in present-day Canada. Hesse-Kassel The financial basis of some smaller continental states was the regular rental of their regiments to fight for various larger nations during the 18th century. The Landgraviate of Hesse-Kassel, in particular, was economically depressed, and had "rented" out professional armies since the 17th century, with general support from both upper and lower classes. This allowed Hesse-Kassel to maintain a larger standing army, which in turn gave it the ability to play a larger role in European power politics. Hesse-Kassel pressed eligible men into service for up to 20 years, and by mid-18th century, about 7% of the population was in military service. The Hessian army was very well trained and equipped; its troops fought well for whoever was paying their prince. The Landgraviate of Hesse-Kassel was under Frederick II, a Roman Catholic and an uncle of King George III. He initially provided over 12,000 soldiers to fight in the Americas. Like their British allies, the Hessians had some difficulty acclimatizing to North America; the first troops to arrive suffered from widespread illness, which forced a delay in the attack on Long Island. From 1776 on, Hessian soldiers were incorporated into the British Army serving in North America, and they fought in most of the major battles, including those of New York and New Jersey campaign, the Battle of Germantown, the Siege of Charleston, and the final Siege of Yorktown, where about 1,300 Germans were taken prisoner, although various reports indicate that the Germans were in better spirits than their British counterparts. Because the majority of the German-speaking troops came from Hesse, modern Americans sometimes refer to all such troops of this war generically as "Hessians". It has been estimated that Hesse-Kassel contributed over 16,000 troops during the course of the Revolutionary War, of whom 6,500 did not return. Hessian officer (later General) Adam Ludwig Ochs estimated that 1,800 Hessian soldiers were killed, but many in the Hessian army intended on staying in America, and remained after the war. Captain Frederick Zeng, for example, served out his term with the armies of Hesse-Kassel and remained in the United States, even becoming an associate of Philip Schuyler. Hesse-Kassel signed a treaty of alliance with Great Britain to supply fifteen regiments, four grenadier battalions, two jรคger companies, and three companies of artillery. The jรคgers in particular were carefully recruited and well paid, well clothed, and free from manual labor. These jรคgers proved essential in the "Indian style" warfare in America, and Great Britain signed a new treaty in December 1777 in which Hesse-Kassel agreed to increase their number from 260 to 1,066. German-speaking armies could not quickly replace men lost on the other side of the Atlantic, so the Hessians recruited African-Americans as soldiers, known as Black Hessians. There were 115 black soldiers serving with Hessian units, most of them as drummers or fifers. It is estimated that 20% of the people serving in Hessian units were not Hessians. Perhaps the best-known officer from Hesse-Kassel is General Wilhelm von Knyphausen, who commanded his troops in several major battles. Other notable officers include Colonel Carl von Donop (mortally wounded at the Battle of Red Bank in 1777) and Colonel Johann Rall, who was fatally wounded at the Battle of Trenton in 1776. Rall's regiment was captured, and many of the soldiers were sent to Pennsylvania to work on farms. The war proved longer and more difficult than either Great Britain or Hesse-Kassel had anticipated, and the mounting casualties and extended supply lines took a political and economic toll. Following the American Revolution, Hesse-Kassel would end the practice of raising and leasing armies. Hesse-Hanau Hesse-Hanau was a semi-independent appendage of Hesse-Kassel, governed by the Protestant Hereditary Landgrave William, eldest son of the Roman Catholic Frederick II of Hesse-Kassel. When William received news of the Battle of Bunker Hill in 1775, he unconditionally offered a regiment to King George III. During the course of the war, Hanau provided 2,422 troops; only 1,441 returned in 1783. A significant number of Hessian soldiers were volunteers from Hanau, who had enlisted with the intention of staying in the Americas when the war was over. Colonel Wilhelm von Gall is one well-known officer from Hesse-Hanau; he commanded a regiment from Hanau under General John Burgoyne. Among the units sent to North America were one battalion of infantry, a battalion of jรคgers, a battalion of irregular infantry known as a Frei-Corps, and a company of artillery. Brunswick-Wolfenbรผttel Brunswick-Lรผneburg was a duchy that had been divided into several territories, one of which was ruled by George III as the Electorate of Brunswick-Lรผneburg (Hanover). The neighboring Duchy of Brunswick-Wolfenbรผttel (Brunswick) was ruled by Duke Charles I of Brunswick-Bevern; his son and heir, Charles William Ferdinand, was married to Princess Augusta of Great Britain, the sister of George III. In 1775, Charles William Ferdinand ("Prince Carl") told King George III that Brunswick had soldiers who could be used to help put down the rebellion in the Americas. In December 1775, General Friedrich Adolf Riedesel began recruiting in anticipation of the finalized treaty. Brunswick was the first German-speaking state to sign a treaty supporting Great Britain, on 9 January 1776. It agreed to send 4,000 soldiers: four infantry regiments, one grenadier battalion, one dragoon regiment and one light infantry battalion. The Brunswick treaty provided that all troops would be paid in Imperial Thalers โ€“ including two months' advance pay, but required that all troops take an oath of service to King George III. A controversial clause in the agreement stipulated that Duke Charles I would be paid ยฃ7 and 4s to replace each Brunswick soldier killed in battle- with three wounded men equal to one dead man; Charles, however, would pay to replace any deserters or any soldier who fell sick with anything other than an "uncommon contagious malady." Duke Charles I provided Great Britain with 4,000 foot soldiers and 350 heavy dragoons (dismounted) under Lt-Colonel Friedrich Baum, all commanded by General Friedrich Adolf Riedesel. General Riedesel reorganized the existing Braunschweig regiments into Corps to allow for the additional recruits required by the new treaty. Experienced soldiers were spread among the new companies in the Regiment von Riedesel, Regiment von Rhetz, Regiment Prinz Friedrich, and Regiment von Specht, as well as the Battalion von Barner and dragoons. Braunschweig-Luneburg, along with Waldeck and Anhalt-Zerbst, was one of the three British auxiliary that avoided impressment, and Karl I vowed not to send Landeskinder (sons of the land) to North America, so land owners were permitted to transfer to units that would remain in Braunschweig. Officers and non-commissioned officers went throughout the Holy Roman Empire recruiting to fill their ranks, offering financial incentives, travel to North America with the potential for economic opportunities in the New World, reduced sentences, and adventure. These soldiers were the majority of the German-speaking regulars under General John Burgoyne in the Saratoga campaign of 1777, and were generally referred to as "Brunswickers." The combined forces from Brunswick and Hesse-Hanau accounted for nearly half of Burgoyne's army, and the Brunswickers were known for being especially well-trained. One of the ships used to cross Lake Champlain flew a flag of Braunschweig to recognize their significance to the army. Riedesel's Brunswick troops made a notable entry into the Battle of Hubbardton, singing a Lutheran hymn while making a bayonet charge against the American right flank, which may have saved the collapsing British line. Riedesel's wife, Friederike, traveled with her husband and kept a journal which remains an important primary account of the Saratoga campaign. After Burgoyne's surrender, 2,431 Brunswickers were detained as part of the Convention Army until the end of the war. Brunswick sent 5,723 troops to North America, of whom 3,015 did not return home in the autumn of 1783. Some losses were to death or desertion, but many Brunswickers became familiar with America during their time with the Convention Army, and when the war ended, they were granted permission to stay by both Congress and their officers. Many had taken the opportunity to desert as the Convention Army was twice marched through Pennsylvania German settlements in eastern Pennsylvania. As the Duke of Brunswick received compensation from the British for every one of his soldiers killed in America, it was in his best interest to report the deserters as dead, whenever possible. The Duke even offered six months' pay to soldiers who remained or returned to America. Ultimately, Brunswick lost money from their treaty with Great Britain, and the new Prince Karl was nearly brought to financial ruin. Ansbach-Bayreuth The dual Margraviates of Brandenburg-Ansbach and Brandenburg-Bayreuth, under Margrave Charles Alexander, initially supplied 1,644 men to the British in two infantry battalions, one company of jรคgers and one of artillery, of whom 461 did not return home. A total of 2,353 soldiers were sent from Ansbach-Bayreuth, including an entire regiment of jรคgers. They were described as "the tallest and best-looking regiments of all those here," and "better even than the Hessians." These troops were incorporated into Howe's army in New York and were part of the Philadelphia campaign. Ansbach-Bayreuth troops were also with General Cornwallis at the Siege of Yorktown, with a force of nearly 1,100 troops. After the initial mobilization of troops, Ansbach-Beyreuth sent several other transports with new recruits. By the end of the war, 2,361 Soldiers had deployed to the Americas, but fewer than half, 1,041, returned had returned by the end of 1783. The Margrave of Ansbach-Bayreuth was deeply in debt when the war broke out, and received more than ยฃ100,000 for the use of his soldiers. In 1791 he sold Ansbach and Bayreuth to Prussia and lived the rest of his life in England on a Prussian pension. Waldeck Waldeck made a treaty to rent troops to Britain on 20 April 1776. Prince Friedrich Karl August of Waldeck kept three regiments ready for paid foreign service. The first of these regiments, with 684 officers and men, sailed from Portsmouth in July 1776 and participated in the New York campaign. During the campaign the Waldeck regiment captured wine and spirits belonging to American General Lee and were embittered towards the British General Howe when he made them empty the bottles by the roadside. The Waldeck troops were integrated into the German auxiliaries under Hessian General Wilhelm von Knyphausen. In 1778, the 3rd Waldeck Regiment was sent to defend Pensacola as part of the British force under General John Campbell. The Regiment was dispersed throughout West Florida, including Fort Bute, Mobile and Baton Rouge. The regimental commander, Colonel Johann Ludwig Wilhelm von Hanxleden, complained that his soldiers were sickened and even died due to the climate. The remote locations received few supply ships, and the soldiers' pay was insufficient to buy local goods. Prince August informed Lord Germain that Waldeck could not recruit new soldiers fast enough to replace those dying in West Florida. In addition to slow supplies, the British and Waldeck forces did not receive news in a timely manner. They were unaware that Spain had declared war on Great Britain until they were attacked by forces under Spanish Governor Bernardo de Gรกlvez. When this campaign was complete at the Siege of Pensacola, Spain recruited many of the poorly fed and supplied Waldeck soldiers. British prisoners of war were later exchanged, but Waldeck prisoners of war were kept by the Spanish in New Orleans, Veracruz, and more than a year in Havana before finally being exchanged in 1782. Waldeck contributed 1,225 men to the war, and lost 720 as casualties or deserters. In the course of the war, 358 Waldeck soldiers died from sickness, and 37 died from combat. Hanover Five battalions of troops of the Electorate of Brunswick-Lรผneburg (Hanover), whose Elector was none other than the British King George III, were sent to Gibraltar and Menorca as early as 1775 to relieve the British soldiers stationed there, who could then be sent to fight in America. Since Hanover was ruled in personal union and had its own government, Hanoverian troops were deployed under a British-Hanoverian Treaty in which Great Britain agreed to pay Hanoverian expenses and defend Hanover against invasion while the troops were away. These Hanoverian soldiers were defenders during the Great Siege of Gibraltar, the largest and longest battle of the war, and in the defense of Menorca. Late in the war, two regiments from Hanover were sent to British India, where they served under British command in the Siege of Cuddalore against a combined French and Mysorean defense. Anhalt-Zerbst The Prince of Anhalt-Zerbst, Frederick Augustus signed a treaty to provide Great Britain with 1,160 men in 1777. The Regiment of two battalions were raised in five months, and consisted of 900 new recruits. One battalion of 600โ€“700 men arrived in the Canadas in May 1778 to guard Quebec City. The other, consisting of some 500 "Pandours" (irregular soldiers recruited from Slavic lands within the Austrian Empire) was sent in 1780 to garrison British-occupied New York City. Whether these troops could function as irregular light infantry has been much debated, although they were described by contemporary accounts as Pandours. Congressional Support German Americans German immigration to the British colonies began in the late 17th century. By the mid-18th century, approximately 10% of the colonial American population spoke German. Germans were easily the largest non-British European minority in British North America, but their assimilation and Anglicisation varied greatly. During the French and Indian War in 1756, Great Britain utilized them by forming the Royal American Regiment, whose enlisted men were principally German colonists. Other Germans immigrated then, including Frederick, Baron de Weissenfels, who settled in New York as a British officer. When the Revolutionary War began, Weissenfels deserted the British forces and served with the Patriots from 1775 onward, rising to lieutenant colonel. German-speaking colonists were divided between neutrals and supporters of the Patriot and Loyalist causes. German loyalists fought in their local militias, and some returned to German states in exile following the war. In contrast, following the Battle of Long Island, a Hessian chaplain complained that the British had killed prisoners of war, "many among them were Germans, and that cut me doubly to the heart." Several new states formed German regiments, or filled the ranks of local militias with German Americans. German colonists in Charleston, South Carolina, formed a fusilier company in 1775, and some Germans in Georgia enlisted under General Anthony Wayne. German patriots were most numerous where they stood in contrast to the large, pacifist Quaker population. Brothers Peter and Frederick Muhlenberg, for example, were elected to Congress, and Peter served on Washington's general staff. The German Van Leer Family all enlisted as officers, some under General Anthony Wayne. Pennsylvania Dutch Provost Corps Pennsylvania Dutch were recruited for the American Provost corps under Captain Bartholomew von Heer, a Prussian who had served in a similar unit in Europe before immigrating to Reading, Pennsylvania, prior to the war. During the Revolutionary War, the Marechaussee Corps were utilized in a variety of ways, including intelligence gathering, route security, enemy prisoner of war operations, and even combat during the Battle of Springfield. The Marechausee also provided security for Washington's headquarters during the Battle of Yorktown, acted as his security detail, and was one of the last units deactivated after the Revolutionary War. The Marechaussee Corps was often not well received by the Continental Army, due in part to their defined duties but also due to the fact that some members of the corps spoke little or no English. Six of the provosts had even been Hessian prisoners of war prior to their recruitment. Because the provost corps completed many of the same functions as the modern U.S. Military Police Corps, it is considered a predecessor of the current United States Military Police Regiment. German Regiment On 25 May 1776, the Second Continental Congress authorized the 8th Maryland Regiment, also known as the German Battalion or German Regiment, to be formed of colonial ethnic Germans as part of the Continental Army. Unlike most continental line units, it drew from multiple states, initially comprising eight companies: four from Maryland and four (later five) from Pennsylvania. Nicholas Haussegger, a major under General Anthony Wayne, was commissioned as the colonel. The regiment saw service at the Battle of Trenton and the Battle of Princeton, and took part in campaigns against American Indians. The regiment was disbanded 1 January 1781. European supporters George Washington welcomed European officers in his army. Johann de Kalb was a Bavarian who served in the armies of France before receiving a commission as a general in the Continental Army. Other Germans came to the United States to utilize their military training. Frederick William, Baron de Woedtke, for example, was a Prussian officer who obtained a Congressional commission early in the war; he died in New York in 1776. Gustave Rosenthal was an ethnic German from Estonia who became an officer in the Continental Army. He returned to Estonia after the war, but other German soldiers, such as David Ziegler, chose to stay and become citizens in the nation they had helped found. In addition, France had eight German-speaking regiments with over 2,500 soldiers. The famous Lauzun's Legion included both French and German soldiers, and was commanded in German. There were also German soldiers and officers in the French Royal Deux-Ponts Regiment. The most famous German to support the Patriot cause was Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben from Prussia, who came to America independently, through France, and served as Washington's inspector general. General von Steuben is credited with training the Continental Army at Valley Forge, and he later wrote the first drill manual for the United States Army. In June 1780 he was given command of the advance guard in the defense of Morristown, New Jersey. Von Steuben was granted citizenship and remained in United States until his death in 1794. Von Steuben's native Prussia joined the League of Armed Neutrality, and Frederick II of Prussia was well appreciated in the United States for his support early in the war. Frederick II maintained a grudge against George III since the British monarch had withdrawn military subsidies during the Seven Years' War. He expressed interest in opening trade with the United States and bypassing English ports, and allowed an American agent to buy arms in Prussia. Frederick predicted American success, and promised to recognize the United States and American diplomats once France did the same. Prussia also interfered in the recruiting efforts of Russia and neighboring German states when they raised armies to send to the Americas, and Frederick II forbade enlistment for the American war within Prussia. All Prussian roads were denied to troops from Anhalt-Zerbst, which delayed reinforcements that Howe had hoped to receive during the winter of 1777โ€“1778. When the War of the Bavarian Succession erupted, however, Frederick II became much more cautious with Prussian relations with Britain. U.S. ships were denied access to Prussian ports, and Frederick refused to officially recognize the United States until they had signed the Treaty of Paris. After the war, Frederick II wrongly predicted that the United States was too large to operate as a republic, and that it would soon rejoin the British Empire with representatives in Parliament. Notes and references Notes See also List of British units in the American Revolutionary War References Bibliography Atwood, Rodney. The Hessians: Mercenaries from Hessen-Kassel in the American Revolution (Cambridge University Press, 1980). Baer, Friederike. Hessians: German Soldiers in the American Revolutionary War (Oxford University Press, 2022). Website Crytzer, Brady J. Hessians: Mercenaries, Rebels, and the War for British North America (Westholme Publishing, 2015). Fetter, Frank Whitson. โ€œWho Were the Foreign Mercenaries of the Declaration of Independence?โ€ Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, vol. 104, no. 4, 1980, pp.ย 508โ€“513. online Frantz, John B., and William Pencak, eds. Beyond Philadelphia: The American Revolution in the Pennsylvania Hinterland (Penn State Press, 2010). Hocker, Edward W. The Fighting Parson of the American Revolution: A Biography of General Peter Muhlenberg, Lutheran Clergyman, Military Chieftain, and Political Leader (1936). Huck, Stephan (2011). Soldaten gegen Nordamerika. Mรผnchen: Oldenbourg Verlag. Ingrao, Charles. "" Barbarous Strangers": Hessian State and Society during the American Revolution." American Historical Review 87.4 (1982): 954-976 online. Ingrao, Charles W. The Hessian mercenary state: ideas, institutions, and reform under Frederick II, 1760-1785 Cambridge University Press, 2003. Jarck, Horst-Rรผdiger (ed.)(2000). Brรผcken in eine neue Welt. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz. Neimeyer, Charles Patrick. America Goes to War: A Social History of the Continental Army (1995) complete text online Nolt, Steven, Foreigners in Their Own Land: Pennsylvania Germans in the Early American Republic, Penn State U. Press, 2002 Percy, Sarah. Mercenaries: The history of a norm in international relations (Oxford University Press, 2007). Roeber, A. G. Palatines, Liberty, and Property: German Lutherans in Colonial British America (1998) Scales, Jodie K. (2001). Of Kindred Germanic Origins. Writers Club Press. * Tappert, Theodore G. "Henry Melchior Muhlenberg and the American Revolution." Church History 11.4 (1942): 284-301. online Tolzmann, Don Heinrich, ed.; German Americans in the Revolution: Henry Melchoir Muhlenberg Richards' History (2013, based on 1908 history), emphasis on Pennsylvania Underwood, Matthew. "Jealousies of a standing army: the use of mercenaries in the American revolution and its implications for Congress's role in regulating private military firms." Northwestern University Law Review106 (2012): 317+. online External links The Ansbach-Bayreuth Army in America Bibliography of the German Participation in the American Revolution compiled by the United States Army Center of Military History German Auxiliaries Muster Rolls, 1776-1786 Seventy muster rolls and 15 additional letters and documents of the German regiments employed by the British to fight in the American Revolutionary War digitized by the William L. Clements Library German Auxiliary Units at Yorktown at the U.S. National Park Service Haldimand Collection โ€“ Numerous documents and letters concerning the participation of Hessians soldiers to the American Revolutionary War The Marechausee: von Heerโ€™s Provost Corps, corps history Recreated Regiment Von Riedesel with Regiment history "Hessians:" German Soldiers in the American Revolutionary War. Academic blog with original German sources, English translations, and commentary. Treaties American Revolutionary War German-American history
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์˜๊ตฌ์ฑ„
์˜๊ตฌ์ฑ„(ๆฐธไน…ๅ‚ต, )๋Š” ๋งŒ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ์—†๋Š” ์ฑ„๊ถŒ์ด๋‹ค. ์—ญ์‚ฌ 2011๋…„ 11์›” 28์ผ, 900์—ฌ๋…„ ์ „ํ†ต์˜, ์˜์–ด๊ถŒ ์ตœ๊ณ  ์˜ค๋žœ ๋Œ€ํ•™์ธ ์˜ฅ์Šคํผ๋“œ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต๊ฐ€ ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ตœ์ดˆ๋กœ ์˜๊ตฌ์ฑ„๋ฅผ ๋ฐœํ–‰ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2์–ต5์ฒœ๋งŒ ํŒŒ์šด๋“œ(3์–ต3์ฒœ200๋งŒ ๋‹ฌ๋Ÿฌยท์•ฝ 3์ฒœ598์–ต์›) ๊ทœ๋ชจ์ด๋ฉฐ, JP๋ชจ๊ฑด์„ ์ฑ„๊ถŒ๋ฐœํ–‰ ์ฃผ๊ด€์‚ฌ๋กœ ์ •ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋งŒ๊ธฐ๋Š” 100๋…„์ด๋‹ค. ๋ฌด๋””์Šค๋Š” ์˜ฅ์Šคํผ๋“œ๋Œ€์— ์ตœ๊ณ  ๋“ฑ๊ธ‰์ธ 'ํŠธ๋ฆฌํ”Œ A(Aaa)' ์‹ ์šฉ๋“ฑ๊ธ‰์„ ๋ถ€์—ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2012๋…„ 3์›”, ์กฐ์ง€ ์˜ค์ฆˆ๋ฒˆ ์˜๊ตญ ์žฌ๋ฌด์žฅ๊ด€์ด 100๋…„ ๋งŒ๊ธฐ ์˜๊ตฌ์ฑ„์ธ ์˜ค์ฆˆ๋ฒˆ ์ฑ„๊ถŒ์„ ๋ฐœํ–‰ํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ฐœํ‘œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ตญ๊ฐ€ ์‹ ์šฉ๋“ฑ๊ธ‰์ด AAA๋ฅผ ์œ ์ง€ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์–ด์„œ, ์˜๊ตญ์˜ 10๋…„ ๋งŒ๊ธฐ ๊ตญ์ฑ„ ์ด์ž์œจ์€ 2% ์ˆ˜์ค€์œผ๋กœ 19์„ธ๊ธฐ ์ดํ›„ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋‚ฎ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์—, ์ง€๊ธˆ์ด ์˜๊ตฌ์ฑ„ ๋ฐœํ–‰์˜ ์ ๊ธฐ๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ณด๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. 2014๋…„ 4์›” 28์ผ, 100๋…„ ๋งŒ๊ธฐ๋กœ, 2114๋…„ ๋งŒ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๋Œ์•„์˜ค๋Š” 10์–ต ํŒŒ์šด๋“œ(์•ฝ 1์กฐ7000์–ต์›) ๊ทœ๋ชจ์˜ ๋ฉ•์‹œ์ฝ” ์ •๋ถ€ ๊ตญ์ฑ„ ๋ฐœํ–‰์— ์„ฑ๊ณตํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ธˆ๋ฆฌ๋Š” 5.62%์ด๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ธฐ๊ด€ํˆฌ์ž์ž๋“ค์ด ๋Œ€๊ฑฐ ๋ชฐ๋ ค ์˜ˆ์ƒ์น˜์˜ 2๋ฐฐ์ธ 10์–ต ๋‹ฌ๋Ÿฌ๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœํ–‰๋๋‹ค. ์ œ1์ฐจ๋Œ€์ „ ๋‹น์‹œ ์˜๊ตญ์ด ์˜๊ตฌ์ฑ„์ธ ์ „์Ÿ ์ฑ„๊ถŒ(:en:War bond)๋ฅผ ๋ฐœํ–‰ํ•œ ์ ์€ ์žˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ๊ทผ๋ž˜ ๋“ค์–ด ์ด ๊ฐ™์€ ์ดˆ์žฅ๊ธฐ ๊ตญ์ฑ„ ๋ฐœํ–‰์€ ์œ ๋ก€๊ฐ€ ์—†๋‹ค. ์ง€๋‚œ 2010๋…„ ๋ฏธ ๋‹ฌ๋Ÿฌํ™”๋กœ ํ‘œ์‹œ๋œ 100๋…„ ๋งŒ๊ธฐ ์ดˆ์žฅ๊ธฐ์ฑ„๋ฅผ ์ฐ์€ ๋ฐ ์ด์–ด, ์ด๋ฒˆ์—” ์˜๊ตญ ํŒŒ์šด๋“œํ™”๋กœ 100๋…„ ๋งŒ๊ธฐ ๊ตญ์ฑ„๋ฅผ ์ฒ˜์Œ ๋ฐœํ–‰ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํˆฌ์ž์€ํ–‰ ๊ณจ๋“œ๋งŒ์‚ญ์Šค์™€ ๋ฐ”ํด๋ ˆ์ด์ฆˆ๊ฐ€ ์ฑ„๊ถŒ ๋ฐœํ–‰ ์ฃผ๊ด€์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๋งก์•˜๋‹ค. 2015๋…„ 3์›”, ์˜๊ตญ ์ •๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ์ œ1์ฐจ๋Œ€์ „ ์ „์‹œ๋น„์šฉ ๊ตญ์ฑ„๋ฅผ 100์—ฌ๋…„ ๋งŒ์— ๋ชจ๋‘ ์ƒํ™˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 19์–ต ํŒŒ์šด๋“œ(์•ฝ 3์กฐ3์ฒœ์–ต์›) ๊ทœ๋ชจ์ด๋ฉฐ, 1917๋…„ 1์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„๋Œ€์ „ ๋‹น์‹œ ์ „์‹œ๋น„์šฉ์„ ๋งˆ๋ จํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ฐœํ–‰ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜๊ตฌ์ฑ„๋กœ ์—ฐ ์ด์ž์œจ์€ 3.5%, ํˆฌ์ž์ž๊ฐ€ 12๋งŒ๋ช…์„ ๋„˜๋Š”๋‹ค. ์ตœ๊ทผ ๊ฒฝ์ œ์‚ฌ์ •์ด ๋‚˜๋น ์ง€์ž, ๊ณ ๊ธˆ๋ฆฌ์ธ ๋ถ€์ฑ„๋ฅผ ๋ชจ๋‘ ์ƒํ™˜ํ•˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. 2015๋…„ 6์›” 15์ผ, ์‹œ์žฅ์กฐ์‚ฌ์—…์ฒด์ธ ๋”œ๋กœ์ง(Dealogic)์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋ฉด ์˜ฌํ•ด ์˜๊ตญ์—์„œ ๋น„๊ธˆ์œต ๊ธฐ์—…๋“ค์ด ๋ฐœํ–‰ํ•œ ์˜๊ตฌ์ฑ„๋Š” 380์–ต ๋‹ฌ๋Ÿฌ(์•ฝ 42์กฐ5์ฒœ์–ต์›)๋กœ ์ง‘๊ณ„๋๋‹ค. ๋”œ๋กœ์ง์ด ์ž๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ์ง‘๊ณ„ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•œ 1995๋…„ ์ดํ›„ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋งŽ์€ ๊ทœ๋ชจ๋‹ค. ์ดˆ์ €๊ธˆ๋ฆฌ ๊ธฐ์กฐ ์†์—์„œ ์ด์ž์œจ์ด ์ƒ๋Œ€์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋†’์€ ์œ„ํ—˜ ์ƒํ’ˆ์ธ ์˜๊ตฌ์ฑ„์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ˆ˜์š”๊ฐ€ ๋ชฐ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์žˆ์Œ์„ ๋ณด์—ฌ์ค€๋‹ค. ์˜๊ตฌ์ฑ„๋Š” ํˆฌ์ž์ž์—๊ฒŒ ์ด์ž๋งŒ ์ง€๊ธ‰ํ•˜๋Š” ํ˜•ํƒœ์˜ ์ฑ„๊ถŒ์ด๋‹ค. ์›๊ธˆ์ƒํ™˜ ์˜๋ฌด๊ฐ€ ์—†๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ฃผ์‹๊ณผ ์ฑ„๊ถŒ์˜ ์ค‘๊ฐ„ ์„ฑ๊ฒฉ์˜ 'ํ•˜์ด๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ๋“œ์ฑ„๊ถŒ'์œผ๋กœ๋„ ๋ถˆ๋ฆฐ๋‹ค. ๋ฌผ๋ก  ํŠน์ • ์‹œ์  ์ดํ›„์— ์ฝœ์˜ต์…˜ ํ–‰์‚ฌ๋กœ ์›๊ธˆ์„ ์กฐ๊ธฐ ์ƒํ™˜ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. 2017๋…„ 2์›” 15์ผ, ์ „์„ธ๊ณ„ ์ดˆ์žฅ๊ธฐ ๊ตญ์ฑ„ ๋ฐœํ–‰ ๊ทœ๋ชจ๊ฐ€ 2006๋…„์—์„œ 2016๋…„ ์‚ฌ์ด์— ์„ธ ๋ฐฐ๋กœ ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๊ฒฝ์ œํ˜‘๋ ฅ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ(OECD)๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ดˆ์ €๊ธˆ๋ฆฌ ์‹œ๋Œ€์—์„œ ์ ์ฐจ ๊ณ ๊ธˆ๋ฆฌ ์‹œ๋Œ€๋กœ ์‹œ์žฅ์ƒํ™ฉ์ด ๋ณ€ํ•˜๋ ค๊ณ  ํ•  ๋•Œ์—๋Š”, ์ดˆ์žฅ๊ธฐ์˜ ์ดˆ์ €๊ธˆ๋ฆฌ ๊ตญ์ฑ„๋ฅผ ๋งŽ์ด ๋ฐœํ–‰ํ•ด ๋†“๋Š” ๊ฒŒ ๋‚˜์ค‘์— ๊ณ ๊ธˆ๋ฆฌ ์‹œ๋Œ€์— ์ž๊ธˆ์„ ๋นŒ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ๋ณด๋‹ค ํ›จ์”ฌ ์ด๋“์ด๋‹ค. 2017๋…„ 2์›” 23์ผ, ์Šคํ‹ฐ๋ธ ๋ฏ€๋ˆ„์‹  ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ์žฌ๋ฌด์žฅ๊ด€์€ 100๋…„ ๋งŒ๊ธฐ ๊ตญ์ฑ„ ๋ฐœํ–‰์„ ๊ฒ€ํ† ์ค‘์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ์ •๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœํ–‰ํ•œ ์ตœ์žฅ๊ธฐ ๊ตญ์ฑ„๋Š” 30๋…„ ๋งŒ๊ธฐ์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ์žฌ๋ฌด๋ถ€ ์ฐจ์ž… ์ž๋ฌธ ์œ„์›ํšŒ๊ฐ€ ์ง€๋‚œ๋‹ฌ 31์ผ ํšŒ์˜๋ฅผ ์—ด๊ณ  ๊ธˆ๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ์˜ค๋ฅด๋Š” ์ƒํ™ฉ์—์„œ ์žฅ๊ธฐ ๊ตญ์ฑ„ ๋ฐœํ–‰ ์ „๋žต์€ ์—ญ์‚ฌ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์„ฑ๊ณผ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ์˜๊ฒฌ์„ ๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. 2017๋…„ 7์›” 18์ผ, ๊ต๋ณด์ƒ๋ช…์ด 5์–ต ๋‹ฌ๋Ÿฌ(์•ฝ 5600์–ต์›) ๊ทœ๋ชจ์˜ ์˜๊ตฌ์ฑ„ ๋ฐœํ–‰์— ์„ฑ๊ณตํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์—ฐ 3.95% ๊ธˆ๋ฆฌ๋กœ ์•„์‹œ์•„ ๊ธˆ์œตํšŒ์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœํ–‰ํ•œ ์˜๊ตฌ์ฑ„ ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ ์—ญ๋Œ€ ์ตœ์ € ๊ธˆ๋ฆฌ๋กœ 3%๋Œ€ ๊ธˆ๋ฆฌ๋กœ ๋ฐœํ–‰ํ•œ ์ฒซ ์‚ฌ๋ก€์ด๋‹ค. ๋‹ค์ด์ด์น˜์ƒ๋ช…๊ณผ ๋‹›ํฐ์ƒ๋ช… ๋“ฑ ์ผ๋ณธ ์ƒ๋ช…๋ณดํ—˜์‚ฌ๋“ค์˜ ์˜๊ตฌ์ฑ„๋Š” 4.03~4.06% ๊ธˆ๋ฆฌ๋กœ ์œ ํ†ต๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฌด๋””์Šค๊ฐ€ ํ‰๊ฐ€ํ•œ ๊ต๋ณด์ƒ๋ช…์˜ ๊ธ€๋กœ๋ฒŒ ์‹ ์šฉ๋“ฑ๊ธ‰์€ 'A1'์ด๋‹ค. 2018๋…„ 6์›” 8์ผ, ์•„์‹œ์•„๋‚˜ํ•ญ๊ณต์ด ์˜๊ตฌ์ฑ„ ๋ฐœํ–‰์— ์‹คํŒจํ–ˆ๋‹ค. IPG๋Š” 9.5%, ๋ฐœํ–‰๊ทœ๋ชจ๋Š” ์ตœ๋Œ€ 3์–ต ๋‹ฌ๋Ÿฌ์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ฐœํ–‰์‚ฌ์—๊ฒ 3๋…„ ํ›„ ์กฐ๊ธฐ์ƒํ™˜์ฒญ๊ตฌ๊ถŒ(์ฝœ์˜ต์…˜)์„ ํ–‰์‚ฌํ•  ๊ถŒํ•œ์ด ๋ถ€์—ฌํ•  ๊ณ„ํš์ด์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ํˆฌ์ž์ž๊ฐ€ ๋ชจ์ด์ง€ ์•Š์•„ ๋ฐœํ–‰์„ ์—ฐ๊ธฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2018๋…„ 10์›” 18์ผ, ๋‘์‚ฐ์ค‘๊ณต์—…์˜ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์žํšŒ์‚ฌ ๋‘์‚ฐํŒŒ์›Œ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์ด 3์–ต๋‹ฌ๋Ÿฌ(์•ฝ 3400์–ต์›) ๊ทœ๋ชจ ์˜๊ตฌ์ฑ„ ๋ฐœํ–‰์— ์„ฑ๊ณตํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ตœ์ดˆ์ œ์•ˆ๊ฐ€๊ฒฉ(IPG)์€ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๊ตญ์ฑ„ 3๋…„๋ฌผ(3T)์— 110bp(area) ๊ฐ€์‚ฐํ•œ ์ˆ˜์ค€์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐœํ–‰์‚ฌ์—๊ฒ 3๋…„ ํ›„ ์กฐ๊ธฐ์ƒํ™˜์ฒญ๊ตฌ๊ถŒ(์ฝœ์˜ต์…˜)์„ ํ–‰์‚ฌํ•  ๊ถŒํ•œ์ด ๋ถ€์—ฌ๋๋‹ค. ๋‘์‚ฐํŒŒ์›Œ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์€ ์ž์ฒด ์‹ ์šฉ๋“ฑ๊ธ‰ ์—†์ด ํ•œ๊ตญ์ˆ˜์ถœ์ž…์€ํ–‰ ์ง€๊ธ‰๋ณด์ฆ์„ ๋ฐ›์•„ ๋ฐœํ–‰์— ๋‚˜์„ฐ๋‹ค. ํ˜„์žฌ ์ˆ˜์ถœ์ž…์€ํ–‰์˜ ๊ตญ์ œ ์‹ ์šฉ๋“ฑ๊ธ‰์€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ์ •๋ถ€์™€ ๋™์ผํ•˜๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ 1์›”, ์ค‘๊ตญ์€ํ–‰์ด ์ค‘๊ตญ ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ ์˜๊ตฌ์ฑ„๋ฅผ 400์–ต ์œ„์•ˆ(์•ฝ 6์กฐ5์ฒœ328์–ต์›) ๊ทœ๋ชจ๋กœ ๋ฐœํ–‰ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ตœ์ดˆ์ œ์•ˆ๊ฐ€๊ฒฉ(IPG)์œผ๋กœ 4.5~5.2%์˜ ํ‘œ๋ฉด๊ธˆ๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ์ œ์‹œํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 5๋…„ ํ›„ ์ด๋ฅผ ์žฌ๋งค์ž…ํ•˜๋Š” ์ฝœ์˜ต์…˜์ด ๋ถ€๊ฐ€๋๋‹ค. ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ํ•˜๋ฐฉ ์••๋ ฅ์— ์ง๋ฉดํ•œ ์ค‘๊ตญ ๊ธˆ์œต๋‹น๊ตญ์€ 2019๋…„ ์ดˆ ์€ํ–‰๊ถŒ์˜ ์˜๊ตฌ์ฑ„ ๋ฐœํ–‰์„ ํ—ˆ์šฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋Ÿ‰๋‘ฅ์ฐจ์ด(ๆขๆฃŸๆ) ๊ตํ†ต์€ํ–‰ ๊ธˆ์œต์—ฐ๊ตฌ์„ผํ„ฐ ์„ ์ž„ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์›์€ ๋ฐ”์ ค III ํ˜‘์•ฝ ํ‹€์— ๊ธฐ์ดˆํ•œ ๊ธฐํƒ€ ๊ธฐ๋ณธ์ž๋ณธ ํ™•์ถฉ ๋„๊ตฌ์ธ ์˜๊ตฌ์ฑ„๋Š” ์˜๊ตญ, ๋ฏธ๊ตญ, ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ๋“ฑ ์„ ์ง„๊ตญ์—์„œ ๋น ๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ๋ฐœ์ „ํ•ด ์„ฑ์ˆ™ํ•œ ํ•˜์ด๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ๋“œ ์ฑ„๊ถŒ ์ž๋ณธ์กฐ๋‹ฌ ๋„๊ตฌ๋กœ ์ž๋ฆฌ์žก์•˜๋‹ค๋ฉด์„œ ์˜๊ตฌ์ฑ„ ๋ฐœํ–‰์€ ์ค‘๊ตญ ์ƒ์—…์€ํ–‰์ด ๊ธฐํƒ€ ๊ธฐ๋ณธ์ž๋ณธ์„ ํ™•์ถฉํ•˜๋Š” ์ค‘์š”ํ•œ ๋„๊ตฌ ํ˜์‹ ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ ๋Œ€์šฐ์กฐ์„ ํ•ด์–‘์ด ํ˜„๋Œ€์ค‘๊ณต์—…์— ์ธ์ˆ˜ํ•ฉ๋ณ‘๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€์šฐ์กฐ์„ ์ด ๋ฐœํ–‰ํ•˜๊ณ  ํ•œ๊ตญ์ˆ˜์ถœ์ž…์€ํ–‰์ด ๋ณด์œ ํ•œ ์˜๊ตฌ์ฑ„ 2์กฐ 3์ฒœ์–ต์›์˜ ์ฒ˜๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ๋ฌธ์ œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ˜„๋Œ€์ค‘๊ณต์—…์ด ๊ทธ ์ค‘์—์„œ 1์กฐ์› ์ •๋„๋ฅผ ๋ฌผ์–ด์ค˜์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ์†Œ๋ฆฌ๋„ ๋‚˜์™”๋‹ค. ํ•œ๊ตญ์ˆ˜์ถœ์ž…์€ํ–‰์€ ์ด๋ฅผ ๋Œ€์šฐ์กฐ์„  ์ฃผ์‹์œผ๋กœ ์ „ํ™˜ํ•ด ์ฃผ์‹์‹œ์žฅ์—์„œ ๋งค๊ฐํ•  ๊ถŒ๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€์šฐ์กฐ์„ ํ•ด์–‘์˜ ์ง€๋ฐฐ์ฃผ์ฃผ ์ž๋ณธ์€ 4์กฐ์›์œผ๋กœ ์ด์ค‘ 60%์— ํ•ด๋‹นํ•˜๋Š” 2์กฐ3000์–ต์›์ด ํ•œ๊ตญ์ˆ˜์ถœ์ž…์€ํ–‰์ด ์ธ์ˆ˜ํ•œ ์˜๊ตฌ์ฑ„๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์ฑ„๊ถŒ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perpetual%20bond
Perpetual bond
A perpetual bond, also known colloquially as a perpetual or perp, is a bond with no maturity date, therefore allowing it to be treated as equity, not as debt. Issuers pay coupons on perpetual bonds forever, and they do not have to redeem the principal. Perpetual bond cash flows are, therefore, those of a perpetuity. Perpetual bonds vs. equity Although similar to equity, perpetual bonds do not have attached votes and, therefore, provide no means of control over the issuer. Perpetual bonds are still fixed-income securities; therefore, paying coupons is mandatory whereas paying dividends on equity is discretionary. Examples Consols that were issued by the United States and the UK governments. War bonds issued by a number of governments to finance war efforts in the first and second world wars. The oldest example of a perpetual bond was issued on 15 May 1624 by the Dutch water board of Lekdijk Bovendams. Only about five such bonds from the Dutch Golden Age are known to survive today. Another of these bonds, issued in 1648, is currently in the possession of Yale University. Yale bought the document for its history of finance archive at auction in 2003, at which time no interest had been paid on it since 1977. Yale Professor Geert Rouwenhorst travelled in person to the Netherlands to collect the interest due. Interest continues to accumulate on this bond, and was most recently paid in 2015 by the eventual successor of Lekdijk Bovendams (Hoogheemraadschap De Stichtse Rijnlanden). Originally issued with a principal of "1000 silver of 20 Stuivers a piece", as of 2004 the yearly interest payment to the bondholder is set at โ‚ฌ11.35. According to its original terms, the bond would pay 5% interest in perpetuity, although the interest rate was reduced to 3.5% and then 2.5% during the 18th century. Some undated gilt-edged securities issued by the Bank of England Most perpetual bonds issued in the present day are deeply subordinated bonds issued by banks. The bonds are counted as Tier 1 capital and help the banks fulfill their capital requirements. Most of these bonds are callable, but the first call date is never less than five years from the date of issueโ€”a call protection period. Pricing Perpetual bonds are valued using the formula: where: is an annual coupon interest on a bond. is an expected yield for maximum term available. See also Bond market Debt securities Fixed income Government bond Perpetual subordinated debt Subordinated debt War bond References External links "Perpetual debt in favour, but yields may fall", LiveMint.com, July 7, 2007 Bonds (finance)
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%9D%B8%EB%A5%98%EC%9C%A0%EC%A0%84%ED%95%99
์ธ๋ฅ˜์œ ์ „ํ•™
์ธ๋ฅ˜์œ ์ „ํ•™์€ ์ธ๋ฅ˜์˜ ์œ ์ „์„ ๋‹ค๋ฃจ๋Š” ํ•™๋ฌธ์œผ๋กœ ๊ทธ ์˜์—ญ์€ ๊ณ ์ „์œ ์ „ํ•™, ์„ธํฌ์œ ์ „ํ•™, ๋ถ„์ž์œ ์ „ํ•™, ์ƒํ™”ํ•™์œ ์ „ํ•™, ์œ ์ „์ฒดํ•™, ์ง‘๋‹จ์œ ์ „ํ•™, ๋ฐœ๋‹ฌ์œ ์ „ํ•™, ์˜ํ•™์œ ์ „ํ•™, ์œ ์ „์ƒ๋‹ด๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ํ•™๋ฌธ์— ๊ฑธ์ณ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ์ „์ž๋Š” ์ƒ๋ฌผ์˜ ์œ ์ „์  ํŠน์ง• ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์„ ๊ฒฐ์ •ํ•˜๋Š” ์ผ๋ฐ˜์  ์š”์ธ์ด๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์—ญ์‹œ ํ•˜๋‚˜์˜ ์ƒ๋ฌผ ์ข…์œผ๋กœ์„œ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ๊ฒŒ๋†ˆ์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์œ ์ „์ž ์ •๋ณด์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅธ ํŠน์ง•์„ ์ง€๋‹ˆ๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ณ ์ „์œ ์ „ํ•™์˜ ๊ด€์‹ฌ ๋ถ„์•ผ์ธ ๋ถ€๋ชจ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋ฌผ๋ ค๋ฐ›๋Š” ์œ ์ „ ํ˜•์งˆ์ด ์ž์‹์—๊ฒŒ ๋ฐœํ˜„๋˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‚˜, ์ง‘๋‹จ ๋‚ด์—์„œ ๋Œ€๋ฆฝํ˜•์งˆ์˜ ๋ฐœํ˜„๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์ง‘๋‹จ์œ ์ „ํ•™์  ์—ฐ๊ตฌ, ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์œ ์ „์ฒด์˜ ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ๊ณผ ์—ญํ• ์„ ํƒ๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ์œ ์ „์ฒดํ•™, ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์ถœ์ƒ๊ณผ ์„ฑ์žฅ์„ ์‚ดํ”ผ๋Š” ๋ฐœ๋‹ฌ์œ ์ „ํ•™์  ์—ฐ๊ตฌ, ๊ฐ ์ข… ์œ ์ „์  ์งˆ๋ณ‘์„ ์‚ดํ”ผ๊ณ  ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฒ•์„ ์ฐพ๋Š” ์˜ํ•™์œ ์ „ํ•™์  ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋“ค์€ ๊ฐ ํ•™๋ฌธ๋“ค์ด ์—ฐ๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ๊ณผ์ œ์˜ ํ•ด๊ฒฐ์ฑ…์„ ๋ฐํžˆ๊ณ ์ž ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์œ ์ „์„ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ์ „์ž ๋‹ค์–‘์„ฑ๊ณผ ์œ ์ „์˜ ์–‘์ƒ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ƒ๋ฌผ๋“ค๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์ด ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์—ญ์‹œ ์ง‘๋‹จ ๋‚ด์—์„œ ๋Œ์—ฐ๋ณ€์ด์— ์˜ํ•œ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ๋Œ€๋ฆฝํ˜•์งˆ์„ ๊ฐ–๋Š”๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด ์ธ๋ฅ˜๋Š” ๋ฉœ๋ผ๋‹Œ ํ˜•์„ฑ์— ๊ด€๊ณ„๋˜๋Š” ์œ ์ „์ž๋“ค์ด ๋‹ค์–‘์„ฑ์„ ๋„๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ง‘๋‹จ๋งˆ๋‹ค ํ”ผ๋ถ€, ๋จธ๋ฆฌ์นด๋ฝ, ํ™์ฑ„ ๋“ฑ์˜ ์ƒ‰์ƒ์ด ๋‹ค๋ฅด๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด๋Š” ์ƒ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด 22์Œ๊ณผ ์„ฑ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด 1์Œ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„ DNA๋กœ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์ ธ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋“ค ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด๋Š” ๊ฐ๊ฐ์˜ ์ข…๋ฅ˜์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์œ ์ „ ๋ฐฉ์‹์ด ๋‹ค๋ฅด๋‹ค. ์ƒ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด์˜ ์œ ์ „ ์ƒ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด์˜ ๋™์ผํ•œ ์œ„์น˜์— ๋†“์ธ ์œ ์ „ํ˜•์งˆ์ธ ๋Œ€๋ฆฝํ˜•์งˆ์— ์šฐ์—ด๊ด€๊ณ„๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค๋ฉด ์ž์‹ ์„ธ๋Œ€์˜ ์œ ์ „์ž ๋ฐœํ˜„์€ ๋ฉ˜๋ธ์˜ ์œ ์ „๋ฒ•์น™์„ ๋”ฐ๋ฅธ๋‹ค. ์„œ๋กœ ๋Œ€๋ฆฝํ•˜๋Š” ์œ ์ „ ํ˜•์งˆ์ด ์œ ์ „์ฒด์—์„œ ๋™์ผํ•œ ์œ„์น˜๋ฅผ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ•˜๋ฉด ์šฐ์„ฑ ํ˜•์งˆ๋งŒ์ด ๋ฐœํ˜„๋˜๋ฉฐ ๋ถ€๋ชจ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์—ด์„ฑ ํ˜•์งˆ๋งŒ์„ ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋ฌผ๋ ค๋ฐ›์„ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ์—๋งŒ ์—ด์„ฑ ํ˜•์งˆ์ด ๋ฐœํ˜„ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ํ…Œ์ด-์‚ญ์Šค๋ณ‘์€ ์—ด์„ฑ ์œ ์ „์— ์˜ํ•œ ์œ ์ „๋ณ‘์ด๊ณ , ํ—ŒํŒ…ํ„ด๋ณ‘์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ์—” ์šฐ์„ฑ ์œ ์ „ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ•œํŽธ, ํ”ผ๋ถ€์ƒ‰์˜ ๊ฒฐ์ •์— ๊ด€์—ฌํ•˜๋Š” ์œ ์ „์ž๋“ค์€ ๋šœ๋ ทํ•œ ์šฐ์—ด ๊ด€๊ณ„๊ฐ€ ์—†์–ด ๋ฉ˜๋ธ์˜ ์œ ์ „๋ฒ•์น™์„ ๋”ฐ๋ฅด์ง€๋Š” ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ํ•˜๋‚˜์˜ ์œ ์ „ ํ˜•์งˆ์˜ ๋ฐœํ˜„์—๋Š” ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ์œ ์ „์ž๊ฐ€ ๊ด€์—ฌํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์ด ๊ฒฝ์šฐ์—” ๋ณด๋‹ค ๋ณต์žกํ•œ ์œ ์ „์ž ๋ฐœํ˜„์„ ๋ณด์ธ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์œ ์ „ ํ˜•์งˆ์ด ํ‘œํ˜„ํ˜•์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐœํ˜„๋˜๋Š” ๋ฐ์—๋Š” ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ํ™˜๊ฒฝ ์š”์ธ์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ์„ ๋ฐ›๋Š”๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์œ ์ „์ž ๋ฐœํ˜„์—์„œ ๋ณด์ด๋Š” ๋ณต์žก์„ฑ์€ ๋ฐœ์ƒ๊ณ„ ์˜ํ•™์˜ ์ฃผ์š” ๊ด€์‹ฌ์‚ฌ์ด๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜๋‹ค. ์„ฑ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด์˜ ์œ ์ „ ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์„ฑ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด๋Š” X ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด์™€ Y ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด๋กœ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์ ธ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์„ฑ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด์˜ ์Œ์ด XX์ธ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๋Š” ์—ฌ์„ฑ์ด ๋˜๊ณ , XY์ธ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๋Š” ๋‚จ์„ฑ์ด ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ฆ‰ ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์„ฑ๋ณ„์€ Y ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด์— ์˜ํ•ด ๊ฒฐ์ •๋œ๋‹ค. Y ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด๋Š” ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์ง„ํ™” ๊ณผ์ •์—์„œ ์ƒ๋‹น ๋ถ€๋ถ„์ด ์†Œ์‹ค๋˜์–ด X ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด์— ๋น„ํ•ด ๊ทธ ํฌ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ํ˜„์ €ํžˆ ์ž‘๊ณ , ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ์‹ค์ œ ์ž‘๋™ํ•˜๋Š” ์œ ์ „์ž์˜ ์ˆ˜๋„ ์ ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฐ ์œ ์ „์ฒด ์ถ•์†Œ ์ง„ํ™”๋Š” ๋‘ ์„ฑ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ์ˆ˜๋ถ„์—ด ๊ณผ์ •์—์„œ ์„œ๋กœ ๋ถ„๋ช…ํžˆ ๊ตฌ๋ถ„๋˜๋„๋ก ํ•œ๋‹ค. Y ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด๋Š” ๋‚จ์„ฑ์˜ ์„ฑ์ง• ๋ฐœํ˜„๊ณผ ๊นŠ์€ ๊ด€๊ณ„๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๊ทผ์œก, ํ‚ค ๋“ฑ์˜ ์š”์ธ์—๋„ ์ž‘์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ˜๋ฉด X ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด์—๋Š” ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์„ ํ•˜๋Š” ์œ ์ „์ž๋“ค์ด ํ›จ์”ฌ ๋งŽ์ด ๋‹ด๊ฒจ์ ธ ์žˆ๋‹ค. X ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด๋Š” ๋‚จ๋…€ ๋ชจ๋‘ ์ง€๋‹ˆ๊ณ  ์žˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ž์‹ ์„ธ๋Œ€๋Š” ๋ถ€๋ชจ ๋ชจ๋‘๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ X ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ Y ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด๋Š” ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€์—์„œ ์•„๋“ค๋กœ ๋ฐ–์— ์ „๋‹ฌ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์œผ๋ฏ€๋กœ ๋ถ€๊ณ„์œ ์ „ ์–‘์ƒ์„ ๋„๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. Y ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด์˜ ๋ถ€๊ณ„ ์œ ์ „์„ ์ถ”์ ํ•˜๋ฉด ํ˜„์ƒ ์ธ๋ฅ˜์˜ ๋‚จ์„ฑ ๊ณตํ†ต ์กฐ์ƒ ์ง‘๋‹จ์„ ์ƒ์ •ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋ฅผ Y์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด ์•„๋‹ด์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„ DNA์˜ ์œ ์ „ ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„๋Š” ์ง„ํ•ต์ƒ๋ฌผ์ด ๊ฐ–๋Š” ์„ธํฌ์†Œ๊ธฐ๊ด€์œผ๋กœ ํ•ต๊ณผ ๋…๋ฆฝ๋œ ๋ณ„๋„์˜ ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„ DNA๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ์„ธํฌ ํ•˜๋‚˜์—๋Š” ์ˆ˜๋ฐฑ ๊ฐœ์˜ ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„ DNA์— ๋‹ด๊ธด ์œ ์ „์ž๋Š” 37๊ฐœ์ด๋‹ค. ๋ฆฐ ๋งˆ๊ตด๋ฆฌ์Šค๋Š” ์ง„ํ™” ๊ณผ์ •์˜ ์–ด๋Š ์‹œ์ ์—์„œ ๋ณ„๊ฐœ์˜ ์ƒ๋ฌผ์ธ ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„๊ฐ€ ์ง„ํ•ต ์ƒ๋ฌผ์˜ ์กฐ์ƒ๊ณผ ๊ณต์ƒ์„ ์ด๋ฃจ์—ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฐ€์„ค์„ ์ œ์‹œํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์ด ์ง„ํ•ต์ƒ๋ฌผ์ด์ž ํฌ์œ ๋ฅ˜์— ์†ํ•˜๋Š” ์ƒ๋ฌผ๋“ค์€ ๋ชจ๊ณ„์˜ ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„๋งŒ์ด ์œ ์ „๋˜๊ณ  ๋ถ€๊ณ„์˜ ๊ฒƒ์€ ์ „๋‹ฌ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค. ์ˆ˜์ • ๊ณผ์ •์—์„œ ๋ถ€๊ณ„์˜ ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋ฉธํ•˜๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์ด๋‹ค. ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„ DNA๋Š” ์œ ์ „ ๊ณผ์ •์—์„œ ์œ ์ „์ž ์žฌ์กฐํ•ฉ์„ ๊ฒช์ง€ ์•Š์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋ชจ๊ณ„ ๋‹จ์ผ ๊ณ„ํ†ต์œผ๋กœ ์ „๋‹ฌ๋˜๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๊ณ„๋ณด์˜ ์ถ”์ ๊ณผ ๋น„๊ต๊ฐ€ ์‰ฝ๊ณ  ํ•ต์•ˆ์˜ ์œ ์ „์ฒด์™€ ๋‹ฌ๋ฆฌ ํฌ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ์ž‘์•„ ๋ถ„์„๋„ ์‰ฝ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„ DNA์˜ ์กฐ์ ˆ ๋ถ€์œ„ ์œ ์ „์ž์—์„œ ์—ผ๊ธฐ ์น˜ํ™˜์ด ์ž์ฃผ ์ผ์–ด๋‚˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋ถ€์œ„์— ๋น„ํ•ด ๋Œ์—ฐ๋ณ€์ด ์†๋„๊ฐ€ ๋น ๋ฅด๋‹ค. ์นจํŒฌ์ง€์™€ ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ํ•ต ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด ์ฐจ์ด๋Š” ์•ฝ 1%์— ๋ถˆ๊ณผํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ, ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„ DNA ์ฐจ์ด๋Š” 9%์— ์ด๋ฅธ๋‹ค. ๋น„๊ต์  ๋น ๋ฅธ ์‹œ๊ฐ„ ๋‚ด์˜ ๋ณ€ํ™”๋ฅผ ๊ด€์ธกํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ธ๋ฅ˜์œ ์ „ํ•™์€ ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„ DNA์˜ ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ํŠน์„ฑ์„ ์‚ด๋ ค ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ๋ฐฉ๋ฉด์˜ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์— ํ™œ์šฉํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„ DNA์˜ ์กฐ์ ˆ ๋ถ€์œ„ ๋Œ์—ฐ๋ณ€์ด๋Š” ํ™˜๊ฒฝ์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅธ ์ง„ํ™” ์••๋ ฅ์„ ๋ฐ›์ง€ ์•Š๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ค‘๋ฆฝ์  ์ง„ํ™”๋ฅผ ๊ฑฐ์น˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. 1987๋…„ ์•จ๋Ÿฐ ์œŒ์Šจ๊ณผ ๋ ˆ๋ฒ ์นด ์นธ, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๋งˆํฌ ์Šคํ†คํ‚น์€ ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด, ์•„์‹œ์•„, ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋ฆฌ์•„, ์œ ๋Ÿฝ, ๋‰ด๊ธฐ๋‹ˆ์˜ ์—ฌ์„ฑ 147๋ช…์˜ ํƒœ๋ฐ˜์—์„œ ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„ DNA๋ฅผ ์ถ”์ถœํ•˜์—ฌ ๋น„๊ตํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„ DNA์˜ ๋‹ค์–‘์„ฑ, ์ฆ‰ ๋Œ์—ฐ๋ณ€์ด์— ์˜ํ•œ ์ฐจ์ด๋Š” ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด ๋‚ด์˜ ์ง‘๋‹จ์—์„œ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ํฌ๊ณ  ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ง‘๋‹จ์—์„œ๋Š” ์ ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ํ™•์ธ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋“ค์€ ์ด ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ”ํƒ•์œผ๋กœ ํ˜„์ƒ ์ธ๋ฅ˜์˜ ์—ฌ์„ฑ ๊ณตํ†ต ์กฐ์ƒ ์ง‘๋‹จ ์ฆ‰ ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์ด๋ธŒ๊ฐ€ ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด์—์„œ ์‚ด์•˜์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๊ฐ€์„ค์„ ์ œ์‹œํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด๋Š” ๊ณ ์ธ๋ฅ˜ํ•™์˜ ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด ๊ธฐ์›์„ค์„ ๊ฐ•๋ ฅํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋’ท๋ฐ›์นจํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•œํŽธ ์Šค๋ฐ˜ํ…Œ ํŽ˜๋ณด์˜ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํŒ€์ด ๋„ค์•ˆ๋ฐ๋ฅดํƒˆ์ธ์˜ ํ•ต ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด์—์„œ ํ˜„์ƒ ์ธ๋ฅ˜์™€ ๋„ค์•ˆ๋ฐ๋ฅดํƒˆ์ธ ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ์œ ์ „์ž ๊ตํ™˜์ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ์ฆ๊ฑฐ๋ฅผ ์ฐพ์•„๋‚ด์–ด ๊ตฌ์ธ๋ฅ˜์™€ ํ˜„์ƒ์ธ๋ฅ˜์˜ ํ˜ผํ˜ˆ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ์ด‰๋ฐœ์‹œํ‚ค๋ฉด์„œ ํ˜„์ƒ ์ธ๋ฅ˜์˜ ๋‹ค์ง€์—ญ ๊ธฐ์› ๊ฐ€์„ค ์—ญ์‹œ ๊ณ„์†ํ•˜์—ฌ ์œ ์ง€๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ• ์ธ๊ฐ„ ๊ฒŒ๋†ˆ ํ”„๋กœ์ ํŠธ์˜ ์™„์„ฑ์œผ๋กœ ์ธ๋ฅ˜ ์œ ์ „์ž์˜ ๋ชจ๋“  ๋ถ€๋ถ„์ด ๊ณต๊ฐœ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ๋ฐฉ๋ฉด์—์„œ ์ธ๋ฅ˜์œ ์ „ํ•™์„ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋“ค์€ ์ด ๊ฒŒ๋†ˆ ๋ฐ์ดํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ์ค€์œผ๋กœ ๋ชฉ์ ํ•˜๋Š” ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ๋Œ€์ƒ ์œ ์ „์ž๋ฅผ ๋น„๊ตํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด ์ƒ์˜ ์œ ์ „์ž ๊ฐ๊ฐ์˜ ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ ์—ญ์‹œ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ€๊ณ„๋„ ๋ถ„์„ ๊ฐ€๊ณ„๋„ ๋ถ„์„์€ ์œ ์ „ ํ˜•์งˆ์˜ ๋ถ„์„์„ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋„๋ฆฌ ์“ฐ์ด๋Š” ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์ด๋‹ค. ์นœ์กฑ ์ง‘๋‹จ์€ ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„ ๋™์ผํ•œ ์œ ์ „์ž๋ฅผ ๊ณต์œ ํ•˜๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์–ด๋–ค ํ˜•์งˆ์ด ์–ด๋–ค ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด์™€ ์—ฐ๊ด€๋˜์–ด ์œ ์ „๋˜๋Š” ์ง€ ์ถ”์ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด ํ˜ˆ์šฐ๋ณ‘์€ X ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด ์œ„์˜ ์œ ์ „์ž์™€ ์—ฐ๊ด€๋˜์–ด ์œ ์ „๋˜๋Š” ์„ฑ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด ์—ฐ๊ด€ ์œ ์ „ ์งˆํ™˜์ด๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์œ ์ „ ํ˜•์งˆ ์ถ”์ ์€ ๋ณด๋‹ค ํฐ ์ง‘๋‹จ์œผ๋กœ ํ™•๋Œ€๋˜์–ด ์ˆ˜ํ˜•๋„๋ฅผ ์ž‘์„ฑํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ฒŒ ํ•ด ์ค€๋‹ค. ๋‹จ์ˆœํžˆ ์ƒ๊ฐํ•˜๋ฉด ํ•œ ๋ช…์˜ ์ž์‹์—๊ฒŒ๋Š” ๋ถ€๋ชจ ๋‘˜์ด ์žˆ๊ณ , ๊ทธ ๋ถ€๋ชจ๋„ ๊ฐ๊ฐ ๋‘˜์˜ ๋ถ€๋ชจ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ–๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ž์‹์—๊ฒ 4๋ช…์˜ ์กฐ๋ถ€๋ชจ, 8๋ช…์˜ ์ฆ์กฐ๋ถ€๋ชจ, 16๋ช…์˜ ๊ณ ์กฐ๋ถ€๋ชจ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ–๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ฆ‰ ์œ—๋Œ€๋กœ ์˜ฌ๋ผ๊ฐˆ์ˆ˜๋ก 2์˜ ์ œ๊ณฑ์ˆ˜๋งŒํผ ์กฐ์ƒ์ด ๋ถˆ์–ด๋‚˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ด๋ ‡๊ฒŒ ๋˜๋ฉด ํ•œ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์˜ 10๋Œ€ ์œ„ ์กฐ์ƒ์€ ๋ชจ๋‘ 1,024 ๋ช…์ด ๋˜๊ณ  35๋Œ€ ์กฐ์ƒ์€ 34,359,738,368 ๋ช…์œผ๋กœ 343์–ต๋ช…์„ ๋„˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ํ•œ ์„ธ๋Œ€์˜ ์žฌ์ƒ์‚ฐ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„์„ 30๋…„์œผ๋กœ ์žก์„ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ๋ถˆ๊ณผ 1,050๋…„ ์‚ฌ์ด์— ์ด๋Ÿฐ ์ผ์ด ์ผ์–ด๋‚˜์•ผ ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ, ํ˜„์‹ค์—์„œ ์ „์„ธ๊ณ„์˜ ์ธ๊ตฌ๊ฐ€ 50์–ต์„ ๋„˜์–ด์„  ๊ฒƒ์€ 20์„ธ๊ธฐ์˜ ์ผ์ด๋‹ค. ์ฆ‰, ์‹ค์ œ๋กœ๋Š” ์–ด๋Š ์ •๋„ ๊ทœ๋ชจ์˜ ์ง‘๋‹จ ๋‚ด์—์„œ ์นœ์—ฐ ๊ด€๊ณ„์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค๋ผ๋ฆฌ ํ˜ˆ์—ฐ์„ ๋งบ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋ฐ–์— ์—†๋‹ค. ์ด ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ธ๋ฅ˜์˜ ๊ฐ ์ง‘๋‹จ์€ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ง‘๋‹จ๊ณผ ๊ตฌ๋ณ„๋˜๋Š” ์ง‘๋‹จ์  ์œ ์ „์  ํŠน์ง•, ์ฆ‰ ์œ ์ „์ž ํ’€์„ ์ง€๋‹ˆ๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์‹ค์ œ ํ˜ˆ์—ฐ ๊ด€๊ณ„๋ฅผ ๋น„๊ตํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†์„ ๋•Œ์—๋Š” ์œ ์ „์ฒด ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ์ฐจ์ด๋ฅผ ๋น„๊ตํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„ DNA์˜ ์—ผ๊ธฐ ์„œ์—ด์—์„œ 1 ๊ฐœ๊ฐ€ ์„œ๋กœ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ง‘๋‹จ์€ 2 ๊ฐœ๊ฐ€ ์„œ๋กœ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ง‘๋‹จ๋ณด๋‹ค ๋ถ„๋ช… ๋” ๋ฐ€์ ‘ํ•œ ๊ด€๊ณ„์— ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ถ„์„ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋ ‡๊ฒŒ ๋ถ„์„ํ•  ๋•Œ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์†์˜ ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ๊ณ ๋ฆด๋ผ์†์˜ ๊ณ ๋ฆด๋ผ๋ณด๋‹ค ์นจํŒฌ์ง€์†์˜ ๋ณด๋…ธ๋ณด์™€ ๋” ๋†’์€ ์นœ์—ฐ ๊ด€๊ณ„๋ฅผ ์ง€๋‹Œ๋‹ค. ์œ ์ „์ž ๋ถ„์„ ์ง‘๋‹จ ์•ˆ์—์„œ ์ธ๊ตฌ์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ํฌ๊ฒŒ ์ค„์–ด๋“ค๋ฉด ๋Œ€๋ฆฝํ˜•์งˆ ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ ์ผ๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ์†Œ์‹ค๋˜์–ด ํŠน์ • ์œ ์ „ ํ˜•์งˆ๋งŒ ๊ณ ์ฐฉ๋˜๋Š” ๊ฐœ์ฒด๊ตฐ ๋ณ‘๋ชฉํ˜„์ƒ์„ ๊ฒช๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ˜„์ƒ ์ธ๋ฅ˜๋Š” ๋ช‡ ์ฐจ๋ก€์˜ ๋ณ‘๋ชฉํ˜„์ƒ์„ ๊ฒช์€ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณด์ด๋ฉฐ ์•ฝ 10๋งŒ๋…„ ์ „์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ์—” ์ „์ฒด ์ธ๊ตฌ์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ 1๋งŒ๋ช… ์ดํ•˜์ผ ์ •๋„๋กœ ์‹ฌ๊ฐํ•œ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๋„ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•œํŽธ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ํ™˜๊ฒฝ์— ๋†“์ด๋ฉด ์ ์‘์˜ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ์ง‘๋‹จ ์•ˆ์—์„œ ํŠน์ • ์œ ์ „์ž์˜ ๋ฐœํ˜„ ๋น„์œจ์ด ๊ธ‰๊ฒฉํžˆ ์˜ฌ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋Š” ์ฐฝ์‹œ์ž ํšจ๊ณผ ์—ญ์‹œ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚œ๋‹ค. ํžˆ๋ง๋ผ์•ผ ์‚ฐ๋งฅ์— ์‚ด๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ณ ์‚ฐ์กฑ ์„ธ๋ฅดํŒŒ๋Š” ์ €์ง€๋Œ€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค๋ณด๋‹ค ํƒ์›”ํ•œ ํํ™œ๋Ÿ‰์„ ์ง€๋…”์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๊ณผํ•™์ž๋“ค์€ ์ด๋“ค๋งŒ์ด ๊ฐ–๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ณ€ํ˜•๋œ ์œ ์ „์ž๋ฅผ ์›์ธ์œผ๋กœ ์ง€๋ชฉํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ์ „์ž ๋ถ„์„์€ ํ˜„์žฌ ์ง„ํ–‰๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ์ธ๋ฅ˜์˜ ์ง„ํ™”๋ฅผ ํฌ์ฐฉํ•  ์ˆ˜๋„ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์„ธ๋ฅดํŒŒ์˜ ๋†’์€ ํํ™œ๋Ÿ‰๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จ๋œ EPAS1 ์œ ์ „์ž๋Š” 1์ฒœ๋…„ ์ „ ๋ฌด๋ ต ์ผ์–ด๋‚œ ๋Œ์—ฐ๋ณ€์ด์— ์˜ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ดํ›„ ๊ฐ์ง€๋กœ ๋น ๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ์ „ํŒŒ๋˜์–ด "์„ธ๊ณ„์—์„œ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋น ๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ์ง„ํ™”ํ•˜๋Š” ์œ ์ „์ž"๋ผ๋Š” ๋ณ„๋ช…์„ ์–ป์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ์ „์ฒด ๋ถ„์„ ์ง‘๋‹จ ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ์œ ์ „์  ์ฐจ์ด๋Š” ํ•˜๋‚˜ ํ•˜๋‚˜์˜ ์œ ์ „์ž๋‚˜ ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด๋ฟ๋งŒ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ผ ๊ฒŒ๋†ˆ ์ „์ฒด์˜ ๋น„๊ต๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ํ™•์ธํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„ ๊ฒŒ๋†ˆ ํ”„๋กœ์ ํŠธ ์ดํ›„ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๊ฐ์ง€์—์„œ๋Š” ์ถ”๊ฐ€์ ์ธ ์œ ์ „์ฒด ๋ถ„์„์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ์ธ๋ฅ˜ ์ง‘๋‹จ ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ์ฐจ์ด์™€ ์œ ์ธ์›๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๊ฐ€๊นŒ์šด ์ข… ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ์œ ์ „์  ๋น„๊ต๊ฐ€ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค๋ฉด ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๊ฐ€๊นŒ์šด ์ข…์ธ ์นจํŒฌ์ง€๋‚˜ ๋ณด๋…ธ๋ณด์™€ ๋‹ฌ๋ฆฌ ์ธ๊ฐ„๋งŒ์ด ๋‹ค์ฑ„๋กœ์šด ์–ธ์–ด๋ฅผ ๊ตฌ์‚ฌํ•˜๋Š” ์œ ์ „ํ•™์  ์›์ธ์œผ๋กœ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ๊ณ ์œ ์˜ FOXP2 ์œ ์ „์ž๊ฐ€ ์ง€๋ชฉ๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์™ธ์—๋„ ์˜ค๋ž‘์šฐํƒ„, ๊ณ ๋ฆด๋ผ ๋“ฑ์˜ ์ข…๋“ค๊ณผ ์ธ๋ฅ˜ ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ์œ ์ „์ฒด ๋น„๊ต๊ฐ€ ์ง„ํ–‰๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฒŒ๋†ˆ ๋ถ„์„์˜ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๊ณผ์— ์†ํ•˜๋Š” ์ข…๋“ค์€ ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰ ๊ณตํ†ต ์กฐ์ƒ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์˜ค๋ž‘์šฐํƒ„์ด ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋จผ์ € ๊ฐˆ๋ผ์ ธ ๋‚˜์™”๊ณ  ๊ทธ ๋’ค๋กœ ๊ณ ๋ฆด๋ผ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐˆ๋ผ์ ธ ๋‚˜์™”์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์นจํŒฌ์ง€์™€ ๋ณด๋…ธ๋ณด์˜ ๊ณตํ†ต์กฐ์ƒ๊ณผ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์†์ด ๋ถ„๋ฆฌ๋œ ๋‹ค์Œ ์นจํŒฌ์ง€์™€ ๋ณด๋…ธ๋ณด๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ๊ธฐ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ข…์œผ๋กœ ์ง„ํ™”ํ•˜๊ณ  ์‚ฌ๋žŒ ์†์˜ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๊ณ ์ธ๋ฅ˜๋“ค์ด ๋ถ„ํ™”๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ํ™•์ธํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ด€๋ จ ์ฃผ์ œ ํ•˜ํ”Œ๋กœ๊ทธ๋ฃน ์ƒ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด๋‚˜ ์„ฑ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด ๋˜๋Š” ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„ DNA ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋Œ์—ฐ๋ณ€์ด์˜ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๊ฐ€ ์œ ์ „๋˜๋ฉฐ ๋Œ์—ฐ๋ณ€์ด๊ฐ€ ๊ฑฐ๋“ญ๋  ์ˆ˜๋ก ๊ทธ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋„ ๋ˆ„์ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ์ธ๋ฅ˜๋Š” ์„œ๋กœ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋…ํŠนํ•œ ๋Œ€๋ฆฝํ˜•์งˆ์„ ๊ฐ–๋Š” ์œ ์ „์ž ํ’€์„ ๊ณต์œ ํ•˜๋Š” ์ง‘๋‹จ์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ๋ถ„๋œ๋‹ค. ์ด๋ฅผ ์ธ๋ฅ˜ ํ•˜ํ”Œ๋กœ๊ทธ๋ฃน์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ธ๋ฅ˜ ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„ DNA ํ•˜ํ”Œ๋กœ๊ทธ๋ฃน์€ ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์ด๋ธŒ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ„๊ธฐ๋œ ๋ชจ๊ณ„ ์œ ์ „ ๊ณ„ํ†ต์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ๊ตฌ์„ฑํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์ธ๋ฅ˜์˜ ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด ๊ธฐ์›์„ค์„ ์ง€์ง€ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ•œํŽธ ์ธ๋ฅ˜ Y-์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด DNA ํ•˜ํ”Œ๋กœ๊ทธ๋ฃน์€ ๋ถ€๊ณ„ ๊ณตํ†ต ์กฐ์ƒ์ธ Y์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด ์•„๋‹ด์„ ๊ธฐ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ„๊ธฐ๋œ ๋ถ€๊ณ„ ์œ ์ „ ๊ณ„ํ†ต์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ๊ตฌ์„ฑํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ ๊ทธ ๊ธฐ์›๊ณผ ๊ธฐ์ ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด์„œ๋Š” ์•„์ง ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๊ฐ€์„ค์ด ๊ฒฝ์Ÿํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๋ฅ˜ ํ•˜ํ”Œ๋กœ๊ทธ๋ฃน์„ ํŠน์ •ํ•˜๊ณ  ์ด๋“ค์„ ๋น„๊ตํ•˜๋Š” ์ž‘์—…์€ ์ธ๋ฅ˜์œ ์ „ํ•™์˜ ํ•ต์‹ฌ์  ๊ธฐ๋ฐ˜์„ ์ด๋ฃฌ๋‹ค. ํ•˜ํ”Œ๋กœ๊ทธ๋ฃน์˜ ์ •์˜์™€ ๋ถ„๋ฅ˜๋Š” ๊ด€๋ จ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ์„ฑ๊ณผ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ํ•ด๋งˆ๋‹ค ์—…๋ฐ์ดํŠธ๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ์ „์„ฑ ์งˆํ™˜ ์œ ์ „์„ฑ ์งˆํ™˜์€ ์œ ์ „์ž๋‚˜ ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด์— ์ƒ๊ธด ๋Œ์—ฐ๋ณ€์ด ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๋ฐœ์ƒํ•˜๋Š” ์งˆํ™˜์ด๋‹ค. ๋Œ์—ฐ๋ณ€์ด๋Š” ํ•œ ๋ฒˆ ์ผ์–ด๋‚˜๋ฉด ๊ณ„์†ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ž์‹ ์„ธ๋Œ€์— ์œ ์ „๋˜๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๊ฐ€๊ณ„๋„์— ๋™์ผํ•œ ์งˆ๋ณ‘์„ ๊ฐ–๋Š” ์นœ์กฑ๋“ค์ด ๋†“์ด๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์œ ์ „์ž ๋Œ์—ฐ๋ณ€์ด์— ์˜ํ•œ ์œ ์ „์„ฑ ์งˆํ™˜์€ ๋Œ€๊ฐœ ์œ ์ „์ž๊ฐ€ ์ •์ƒ์ ์ธ ํ˜•์งˆ ๋ฐœํ˜„์„ ์‹คํ˜„ํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๋ฐœ์ƒํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ ํ˜ˆ๊ตฌ์˜ ๋ชจ์–‘์ด ๋‚ซ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ๋ณ€ํ˜•๋˜๋Š” ๊ฒธํ˜• ์ ํ˜ˆ๊ตฌ ๋นˆํ˜ˆ์ฆ์ด๋‚˜, ํ”ผ๋ถ€๋ฅผ ๋น„๋กฏํ•œ ์‹ ์ฒด ๊ธฐ๊ด€์—์„œ ๋ฉœ๋ผ๋‹Œ์„ ์ƒ์„ฑํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐฑ์ƒ‰์ฆ, ํ˜ˆ์•ก ์‘๊ณ  ์ธ์ž์˜ ์ด์ƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ถœํ˜ˆ์ด ๋ฉˆ์ถ”์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ํ˜ˆ์šฐ๋ณ‘๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์งˆํ™˜๋“ค์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด ๋Œ์—ฐ๋ณ€์ด์— ์˜ํ•œ ์œ ์ „์„ฑ ์งˆํ™˜์€ ๊ฐ์ˆ˜๋ถ„์—ด ๊ณผ์ •์—์„œ ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด๊ฐ€ ์ œ๋Œ€๋กœ ๋ถ„ํ• ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์•„ ์ผ์–ด๋‚˜๋Š” ์งˆํ™˜์ด๋‹ค. ์‚ผ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด์„ฑ์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๊ฐ€ ๋„๋ฆฌ ์•Œ๋ ค์ ธ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด์˜ 21๋ฒˆ ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด๊ฐ€ ์‚ผ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด์„ฑ์ด ๋˜๋ฉด ๋‹ค์šด ์ฆํ›„๊ตฐ์„ ๋ณด์ด๊ฒŒ ๋˜๋ฉฐ, ์„ฑ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๋„ XXX ์ฆํ›„๊ตฐ, XXYํ˜•์ด๋‚˜ XXXYํ˜•์„ ๋„๊ฒŒ ๋˜๋Š” ํด๋ผ์ธํŽ ํ„ฐ ์ฆํ›„๊ตฐ, X ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด ํ•˜๋‚˜๋งŒ์ด ๋ฐœํ˜„๋œ ํ„ฐ๋„ˆ ์ฆํ›„๊ตฐ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์งˆํ™˜๋“ค์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๋ฅ˜์˜ ์ง„ํ™”์™€ ๊ธฐ์› DNA ๋ถ„์„ ๊ธฐ๋ฒ•์˜ ๋ฐœ๋‹ฌ๋กœ ์ธ๋ฅ˜์œ ์ „ํ•™์  ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋Š” ์ธ๋ฅ˜์˜ ์ง„ํ™”์™€ ๊ธฐ์›์„ ๋ฐํžˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ํฐ ๊ธฐ์—ฌ๋ฅผ ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๋ฅ˜์˜ ๊ธฐ์›์€ ํ•œ ๋•Œ ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์ด๋ธŒ์˜ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ ์ดํ›„ ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด ๊ธฐ์›์„ค์ด ๊ฑฐ์˜ ์ •์„ค์ด ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋‚˜, ์ดํ›„ ๋„ค์•ˆ๋ฐ๋ฅดํƒˆ์ธ ๊ฒŒ๋†ˆ์˜ ๋ถ„์„ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ํ˜„์ƒ ์ธ๋ฅ˜์™€ ๋„ค์•ˆ๋ฐ๋ฅดํƒˆ์ธ ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ํ˜ผํ˜ˆ์ด ํ™•์ธ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ  ์•Œํƒ€์ด์‚ฐ๋งฅ์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋œ ๋ฐ๋‹ˆ์†Œ๋ฐ”์ธ์˜ ์œ ์ „์ฒด ๋ถ„์„์œผ๋กœ ์ธ๋ฅ˜์˜ ์ง„ํ™”์™€ ๊ธฐ์›์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋Š” ์ด์ œ ๋”์šฑ ๋ณต์žกํ•œ ์–‘์ƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ „๊ฐœ๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋„ค์•ˆ๋ฐ๋ฅดํƒˆ์ธ ๊ฒŒ๋†ˆ์—์„œ ๊ธฐ์›ํ•œ ์œ ์ „์ž๋Š” ํ˜„์ƒ ์ธ๋ฅ˜์˜ ์ „์ฒด ํ•˜ํ”Œ๋กœ๊ทธ๋ฃน์—์„œ ์ตœ์†Œ 2% ์ด์ƒ ๊ด€์ฐฐ๋˜๊ณ  ๋ฐ๋‹ˆ์†Œ๋ฐ”์ธ์—์„œ ๊ธฐ์›ํ•œ ์œ ์ „์ž๋Š” ์•„์‹œ์•„์—์„œ๋Š” ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์ง€๋งŒ ๋ฉœ๋ผ๋„ค์‹œ์•„ ์ง‘๋‹จ์—์„œ๋Š” 4% ์ •๋„ ํ™•์ธ๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ ํ˜„์ƒ ์ธ๋ฅ˜๋Š” ๋‹จ์ผํ•œ ์ง‘๋‹จ์—์„œ ์—ฐ์†ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ถ„๊ธฐ๋œ ๊ฒƒ์ด ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ผ ์ตœ์†Œ ๋‘ ์ข… ์ด์ƒ์˜ ๊ณ ์ธ๋ฅ˜์™€ ํ˜ผํ˜ˆ์„ ๊ฑฐ์ณ ํ˜•์„ฑ๋œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ์œ ์ „์ž ๊ฐ์‹ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์œ ์ „์ž๋Š” ์ง‘๋‹จ ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ์ฐจ์ด์™€ ๋งˆ์ฐฌ๊ฐ€์ง€๋กœ ๊ฐœ์ธ ์‚ฌ์ด์—๋„ ์ฐจ์ด๊ฐ€ ์กด์žฌํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด๋ฅผ ๋น„๊ตํ•˜๋ฉด ๋งˆ์น˜ ์ง€๋ฌธ์„ ๋น„๊ตํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ํŠน์ • ๊ฐœ์ธ์˜ ์œ ์ „์ž๋ฅผ ๊ฐ์‹ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์œ ์ „์ฒด์˜ ํŠน์ • ๋ถ€์œ„์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์—ผ๊ธฐ์„œ์—ด์˜ ์งง์€ ๋ฐ˜๋ณต๊ตฌ๊ฐ„์€ ๊ฐœ์ธ๋งˆ๋‹ค ์กฐ๊ธˆ์”ฉ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํŠน์ง•์„ ๋ณด์ด๋ฉฐ ๋ถ€๋ชจ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ฐ๊ธฐ 50%์”ฉ ๋ฌผ๋ ค๋ฐ›๋Š”๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์งง์€ ๋ฐ˜๋ชฉ๊ตฌ๊ฐ„์€ ๋Œ์—ฐ๋ณ€์ด ์†๋„๋„ ๋นจ๋ผ ์„ธ๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ์ง€๋‚ ์ˆ˜๋ก ๋‹ฌ๋ผ์ง€๊ธฐ ์‰ฝ๋‹ค. ์ด๋ ‡๊ฒŒ ์ˆ˜์ง‘๋œ ํŠน์ • ์œ ์ „์ž ๋ถ€์œ„์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ํŠน์ง•์„ DNA ํ”„๋กœํŒŒ์ผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑํ•˜๊ณ  ์ด๋ฅผ ๋น„๊ตํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ฐœ์ธ์„ ํŠน์ •ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„ ๊ฒŒ๋†ˆ์€ ๋ชน์‹œ ํฌ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ „์ฒด๋ฅผ ๋ถ„์„ํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ ๋งŽ์€ ์‹œ๊ฐ„๊ณผ ๋น„์šฉ์ด ๋“ค์ง€๋งŒ, ์ถฉ๋ถ„ํ•œ ์ˆซ์ž์˜ ํŠน์ • ๊ตฌ๊ฐ„๋งŒ์„ ๋”ฐ๋กœ ๋•Œ๋‚ด์–ด ๋ถ„์„ํ•˜๋ฉด ์‹œ๊ฐ„๊ณผ ๋น„์šฉ์„ ์ ˆ์•ฝํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋ ‡๊ฒŒ ์งง์€ ๊ตฌ๊ฐ„ ๋ฐ˜๋ณต์ด ์ผ์–ด๋‚˜๋Š” ํŠน์ • ๋ถ€์œ„๋งŒ์„ ๋ถ„์„ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ STR ๋ถ„์„์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐœ์ธ์„ ํŠน์ •ํ•˜๋Š” ์œ ์ „์ž ๊ฐ์‹์€ ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„ STR ๋ถ„์„์œผ๋กœ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ์ „์ž ๊ฐ์‹์€ ๊ฐ์ข… ์‚ฌ๊ฑด ์‚ฌ๊ณ ์˜ ์‹ ์›ํ™•์ธ, ์‹ค์ข…์ž ํ™•์ธ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์ˆ˜์‚ฌ์— ์ด์šฉ๋˜๋ฉฐ ์ „์Ÿ์ด๋‚˜ ํ•™์‚ด๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์˜ค๋ž˜๋œ ์—ญ์‚ฌ์  ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์˜ ์œ ํ•ด ๊ฐ์‹์—๋„ ์“ฐ์ธ๋‹ค. ๊ด€๋ จ ํ•™๋ฌธ ์œ ์ „์ฒดํ•™ - ์ธ๊ฐ„ ๊ฒŒ๋†ˆ์„ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํ•œ๋‹ค. ์˜ํ•™์œ ์ „ํ•™ - ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์œ ์ „์„ฑ ์งˆํ™˜์„ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ง‘๋‹จ์œ ์ „ํ•™ - ์ง‘๋‹จ๊ฐ„์˜ ์œ ์ „์  ์นœ์—ฐ์„ฑ๊ณผ ์ฐจ์ด๋ฅผ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํ•œ๋‹ค. ์œ ์ „์ž์ธ๋ฅ˜ํ•™ - ์œ ์ „์ฒด ๋น„๊ต๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ์ธ๋ฅ˜ ์ง‘๋‹จ ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ์นœ์—ฐ ๊ด€๊ณ„๋ฅผ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํ•˜๊ณ  ์ธ๋ฅ˜์˜ ๊ธฐ์›๊ณผ ์ด์ฃผ ๊ฒฝ๋กœ๋ฅผ ์ถ”์ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ธ๋ฅ˜ ์ง„ํ™”์œ ์ „ํ•™ - ์œ ์ „์ฒด ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ์ธ๋ฅ˜์˜ ์ง„ํ™” ๊ฒฝ๋กœ๋ฅผ ์ถ”์ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฐœ๋‹ฌ์œ ์ „ํ•™ - ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ๋ฐœ์ƒ๊ณผ ์ƒ์žฅ์— ์ž‘์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ์œ ์ „์ฒด๋ฅผ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ์œ ์ „ํ•™ ์œ ์ „์ฒด ์ธ๊ฐ„ ๊ฒŒ๋†ˆ ๋„ค์•ˆ๋ฐ๋ฅดํƒˆ์ธ ๊ฒŒ๋†ˆ ๋ฉ˜๋ธ์˜ ๋ฒ•์น™์„ ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋Š” ์œ ์ „์„ฑ ์งˆํ™˜ ๋ชฉ๋ก ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์ฐธ์กฐ์ฃผ ๋‚ด์šฉ์ฃผ ์ฐธ๊ณ  ๋ฌธํ—Œ K. ๋ฉ”๋ฐํŽ˜์…€ํ—ค๋ฅด๋งŒ, ๊ถŒ์„ธํ›ˆ ์—ญ, ใ€Šํ™”ํ•™์œผ๋กœ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์ง„ ์„ธ์ƒใ€‹, ์—์ฝ”๋ฆฌ๋ธŒ๋ฅด, 2007๋…„, ์˜ˆ๋ณ‘์ผ, ใ€Š๋‚ด ๋ชธ์•ˆ์˜ ๊ณผํ•™ - ํƒ„์ƒ์—์„œ ์œ ์ „์ž ์กฐ์ž‘๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ชธ์ง€๋„๋ฅผ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๋‹คใ€‹, ํšจํ˜•์ถœํŒ, ํ•˜์ธ๋ฆฌํžˆ ์ฐฝํด, ๋ฐ•์Šน์žฌ ์—ญ, ใ€Š์ง€๋Šฅ์  ์œ ์ „์žใ€‹, ํ”„๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ์Šค, 2007๋…„, ๊น€์šฉํ™˜, ใ€Š์ธ๋ฅ˜ ์ง„ํ™”์˜ ์˜ค๋”ง์„ธ์ดใ€‹, ๊ฐ€๋žŒ๊ธฐํš, 2003๋…„, ์Šค๋ฐ˜ํ…Œ ํŽ˜๋ณด, ๊น€๋ช…์ฃผ ์—ญ, ใ€Š์žƒ์–ด๋ฒ„๋ฆฐ ๊ฒŒ๋†ˆ์„ ์ฐพ์•„์„œใ€‹, ๋ถ€ํ‚ค, 2015๋…„, ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ Human Genome Project How many Genes do humans have? MITOMAP A human mitochondrial genome database
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human%20genetics
Human genetics
Human genetics is the study of inheritance as it occurs in human beings. Human genetics encompasses a variety of overlapping fields including: classical genetics, cytogenetics, molecular genetics, biochemical genetics, genomics, population genetics, developmental genetics, clinical genetics, and genetic counseling. Genes are the common factor of the qualities of most human-inherited traits. Study of human genetics can answer questions about human nature, can help understand diseases and the development of effective treatment and help us to understand the genetics of human life. This article describes only basic features of human genetics; for the genetics of disorders please see: medical genetics. Genetic differences and inheritance patterns Inheritance of traits for humans are based upon Gregor Mendel's model of inheritance. Mendel deduced that inheritance depends upon discrete units of inheritance, called factors or genes. Autosomal dominant inheritance Autosomal traits are associated with a single gene on an autosome (non-sex chromosome)โ€”they are called "dominant" because a single copyโ€”inherited from either parentโ€”is enough to cause this trait to appear. This often means that one of the parents must also have the same trait, unless it has arisen due to an unlikely new mutation. Examples of autosomal dominant traits and disorders are Huntington's disease and achondroplasia. Autosomal recessive inheritance Autosomal recessive traits is one pattern of inheritance for a trait, disease, or disorder to be passed on through families. For a recessive trait or disease to be displayed two copies of the trait or disorder needs to be presented. The trait or gene will be located on a non-sex chromosome. Because it takes two copies of a trait to display a trait, many people can unknowingly be carriers of a disease. From an evolutionary perspective, a recessive disease or trait can remain hidden for several generations before displaying the phenotype. Examples of autosomal recessive disorders are albinism, cystic fibrosis. X-linked and Y-linked inheritance X-linked genes are found on the sex X chromosome. X-linked genes just like autosomal genes have both dominant and recessive types. Recessive X-linked disorders are rarely seen in females and usually only affect males. This is because males inherit their X chromosome and all X-linked genes will be inherited from the maternal side. Fathers only pass on their Y chromosome to their sons, so no X-linked traits will be inherited from father to son. Men cannot be carriers for recessive X linked traits, as they only have one X chromosome, so any X linked trait inherited from the mother will show up. Females express X-linked disorders when they are homozygous for the disorder and become carriers when they are heterozygous. X-linked dominant inheritance will show the same phenotype as a heterozygote and homozygote. Just like X-linked inheritance, there will be a lack of male-to-male inheritance, which makes it distinguishable from autosomal traits. One example of an X-linked trait is Coffinโ€“Lowry syndrome, which is caused by a mutation in ribosomal protein gene. This mutation results in skeletal, craniofacial abnormalities, mental retardation, and short stature. X chromosomes in females undergo a process known as X inactivation. X inactivation is when one of the two X chromosomes in females is almost completely inactivated. It is important that this process occurs otherwise a woman would produce twice the amount of normal X chromosome proteins. The mechanism for X inactivation will occur during the embryonic stage. For people with disorders like trisomy X, where the genotype has three X chromosomes, X-inactivation will inactivate all X chromosomes until there is only one X chromosome active. Males with Klinefelter syndrome, who have an extra X chromosome, will also undergo X inactivation to have only one completely active X chromosome. Y-linked inheritance occurs when a gene, trait, or disorder is transferred through the Y chromosome. Since Y chromosomes can only be found in males, Y linked traits are only passed on from father to son. The testis determining factor, which is located on the Y chromosome, determines the maleness of individuals. Besides the maleness inherited in the Y-chromosome there are no other found Y-linked characteristics. Pedigrees analysis A pedigree is a diagram showing the ancestral relationships and transmission of genetic traits over several generations in a family. Square symbols are almost always used to represent males, whilst circles are used for females. Pedigrees are used to help detect many different genetic diseases. A pedigree can also be used to help determine the chances for a parent to produce an offspring with a specific trait. Four different traits can be identified by pedigree chart analysis: autosomal dominant, autosomal recessive, x-linked, or y-linked. Partial penetrance can be shown and calculated from pedigrees. Penetrance is the percentage expressed frequency with which individuals of a given genotype manifest at least some degree of a specific mutant phenotype associated with a trait. Inbreeding, or mating between closely related organisms, can clearly be seen on pedigree charts. Pedigree charts of royal families often have a high degree of inbreeding, because it was customary and preferable for royalty to marry another member of royalty. Genetic counselors commonly use pedigrees to help couples determine if the parents will be able to produce healthy children. Karyotype A karyotype is a very useful tool in cytogenetics. A karyotype is picture of all the chromosomes in the metaphase stage arranged according to length and centromere position. A karyotype can also be useful in clinical genetics, due to its ability to diagnose genetic disorders. On a normal karyotype, aneuploidy can be detected by clearly being able to observe any missing or extra chromosomes. Giemsa banding, g-banding, of the karyotype can be used to detect deletions, insertions, duplications, inversions, and translocations. G-banding will stain the chromosomes with light and dark bands unique to each chromosome. A FISH, fluorescent in situ hybridization, can be used to observe deletions, insertions, and translocations. FISH uses fluorescent probes to bind to specific sequences of the chromosomes that will cause the chromosomes to fluoresce a unique color. Genomics Genomics is the field of genetics concerned with structural and functional studies of the genome. A genome is all the DNA contained within an organism or a cell including nuclear and mitochondrial DNA. The human genome is the total collection of genes in a human being contained in the human chromosome, composed of over three billion nucleotides. In April 2003, the Human Genome Project was able to sequence all the DNA in the human genome, and to discover that the human genome was composed of around 20,000 protein coding genes. Medical genetics Medical genetics is the branch of medicine that involves the diagnosis and management of hereditary disorders. Medical genetics is the application of genetics to medical care. It overlaps human genetics, for example, research on the causes and inheritance of genetic disorders would be considered within both human genetics and medical genetics, while the diagnosis, management, and counseling of individuals with genetic disorders would be considered part of medical genetics. Population genetics Population genetics is the branch of evolutionary biology responsible for investigating processes that cause changes in allele and genotype frequencies in populations based upon Mendelian inheritance. Four different forces can influence the frequencies: natural selection, mutation, gene flow (migration), and genetic drift. A population can be defined as a group of interbreeding individuals and their offspring. For human genetics the populations will consist only of the human species. The Hardyโ€“Weinberg principle is a widely used principle to determine allelic and genotype frequencies. Mitochondrial DNA In addition to nuclear DNA, humans (like almost all eukaryotes) have mitochondrial DNA. Mitochondria, the "power houses" of a cell, have their own DNA. Mitochondria are inherited from one's mother, and their DNA is frequently used to trace maternal lines of descent (see mitochondrial Eve). Mitochondrial DNA is only 16kb in length and encodes for 62 genes. Genes and sex The XY sex-determination system is the sex-determination system found in humans, most other mammals, some insects (Drosophila), and some plants (Ginkgo). In this system, the sex of an individual is determined by a pair of sex chromosomes (gonosomes). Females have two of the same kind of sex chromosome (XX), and are called the homogametic sex. Males have two distinct sex chromosomes (XY), and are called the heterogametic sex. X-linked traits Sex linkage is the phenotypic expression of an allele related to the chromosomal sex of the individual. This mode of inheritance is in contrast to the inheritance of traits on autosomal chromosomes, where both sexes have the same probability of inheritance. Since humans have many more genes on the X than the Y, there are many more X-linked traits than Y-linked traits. However, females carry two or more copies of the X chromosome, resulting in a potentially toxic dose of X-linked genes. To correct this imbalance, mammalian females have evolved a unique mechanism of dosage compensation. In particular, by way of the process called X-chromosome inactivation (XCI), female mammals transcriptionally silence one of their two Xs in a complex and highly coordinated manner. Human traits with possible monogenic or oligogenic inheritance patterns Disabling conditions Genetic Chromosomal See also Human evolutionary genetics Human genome List of Mendelian traits in humans Johns Hopkins Human Genetics Program References Further reading * External links Human Genome Project How many Genes do humans have? Human Genetics Video (website critique) MITOMAP A human mitochondrial genome database
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์ƒˆํ™œ์šฉ
์ƒˆํ™œ์šฉ(-ๆดป็”จ) ๋˜๋Š” ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด()์€ ๋ถ€์‚ฐ๋ฌผ, ํ์ž์žฌ์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ์“ธ๋ชจ ์—†๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ๋ฒ„๋ ค์ง€๋Š” ๋ฌผ๊ฑด์„ ์ƒˆ๋กญ๊ฒŒ ๋””์ž์ธํ•ด ์˜ˆ์ˆ ์ ยทํ™˜๊ฒฝ์  ๊ฐ€์น˜๊ฐ€ ๋†’์€ ๋ฌผ๊ฑด์œผ๋กœ ์žฌํƒ„์ƒ์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” ์žฌํ™œ์šฉ ๋ฐฉ์‹์ด๋‹ค. ์ƒˆํ™œ์šฉ(์˜: Upcyling)์ด๋ž€ ๋ฆฌ๋„ˆ ํ•„์ธ (Reiner Pilz)๊ฐ€ ์ฒ˜์Œ ์–ธ๊ธ‰ํ•˜์—ฌ ํƒ„์ƒํ•œ ๋‹จ์–ด๋กœ, ์˜๋‹จ์–ด 'Upgrade'์™€ โ€˜Recyclingโ€™์„ ํ•ฉ์นœ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ํ•œ๊ตญ์–ด "์ƒˆํ™œ์šฉ"์€ ์ด๋ฏธ ์žˆ๋˜ ๊ฒƒ์ด ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ผ, "์ฒ˜์Œ ๋งˆ๋ จํ•˜๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ๋‹ค์‹œ ์ƒ๊ฒจ๋‚œ"์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๋œป์˜ ๊ด€ํ˜•์‚ฌ "์ƒˆ"์™€ "์žฌํ™œ์šฉ"์˜ "ํ™œ์šฉ"์„ ํ•ฉ์นœ ๋ง๋กœ, 2012๋…„ 8์›” 22์ผ ๊ตญ๋ฆฝ๊ตญ์–ด์› ์ œ8์ฐจ ๋ง๋‹ค๋“ฌ๊ธฐ์œ„์›ํšŒ ํšŒ์˜์—์„œ "์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด"์˜ ์ˆœํ™”์–ด๋กœ ์ œ์‹œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํŠน์ • ์šฉ๋„๋กœ์„œ์˜ ์ˆ˜๋ช…์„ ๋‹คํ•ด ๋ฒ„๋ ค์ง€๋Š” ์ œํ’ˆ์„ ๋‹จ์ˆœํžˆ ์žฌํ™œ์šฉ(recyling)ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋„˜์–ด, ๊ธฐ์กด์˜ ํ˜•ํƒœ๋‚˜ ์—ญํ• ์„ ๊ฐ€์ ธ๊ฐ€๋˜, ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ๋””์ž์ธ์„ ๋”ํ•˜๋Š” ๋“ฑ์˜ ๊ณผ์ •์„ ๊ฑฐ์ณ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์šฉ๋„์˜ ์ œํ’ˆ์œผ๋กœ ๋งŒ๋“œ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ. ์ฆ‰, ์—ญํ• ์„ ๋‹คํ•œ ํํ’ˆ์„ ํ•ด์ฒดํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ์ž˜ ํ™œ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ธฐ์กด์˜ ์ œํ’ˆ๋ณด๋‹ค ๋” ๋ฐœ์ „ํ•œ ์ œํ’ˆ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒˆ๋กญ๊ฒŒ ํƒ„์ƒ์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” ๊ณผ์ •์ด๋‹ค. ์›์ œํ’ˆ์˜ ์žฌ๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ์™„์ „ํžˆ ๋ณ€ํ˜•์‹œ์ผœ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๋‹ค์šด์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง(downcycling)๊ณผ๋Š” ์ฐจ์ด๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํํ’ˆ์„ ๋‹ค์‹œ ํ™œ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์€ ํฌ๊ฒŒ ๋‘ ๊ฐ€์ง€๋กœ ๋‚˜๋‰˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ํ•˜๋‚˜๋Š” โ€˜์žฌ์‚ฌ์šฉ(re-use)โ€™์ด๋ฉฐ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋Š” โ€˜์žฌํ™œ์šฉ(re-cycling)โ€™์ด๋‹ค. ์žฌ์‚ฌ์šฉ๊ณผ ์žฌํ™œ์šฉ ๋„์ค‘ ์ œํ’ˆ์˜ ํ’ˆ์งˆ์ด ์ €ํ•˜๋  ๊ฒฝ์šฐ, ์ด๋Š” โ€˜๋‹ค์šด์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง(downcycling)โ€™์œผ๋กœ ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌ๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ์ค‘ ์žฌํ™œ์šฉ์€ ๊ทธ ๊ณผ์ • ์ค‘์— ์ด์‚ฐํ™”ํƒ„์†Œ ๋ฐœ์ƒ์„ ์œ ๋ฐœํ•˜๋Š” ์—๋„ˆ์ง€๋ฅผ ํ•„์š”๋กœ ํ•˜์—ฌ ํ™˜๊ฒฝ์˜ค์—ผ์„ ์œ ๋ฐœํ•ด์™”๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ž˜์„œ ํ•„์š”ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด ์žฌํ™œ์šฉ์—์„œ ํ•œ ๋‹จ๊ณ„ ๋ฐœ์ „๋œ ํ˜•ํƒœ์ธ ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง์ด๋‹ค. ์—ญ์‚ฌ ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง(upcycling)๊ณผ ๋‹ค์šด์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง(downcycling)์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์šฉ์–ด๋Š” ์†ํŠผ ์ผ€์ด(Thornton Kay)๊ฐ€ ๋ผ์ด๋„ˆ ํ•„์ฆˆ(Riner Pilz)๋ฅผ ์ธ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ, 1994๋…„ ์‚ด๋ณด๋‰ด์Šค์˜ ๊ธฐ์‚ฌ์—์„œ ์ฒ˜์Œ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2009๋…„, ๋กœ์ดํ„ฐ์˜ Belinda Smith๋Š” ๋ถ€์œ ํ•œ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์—์„œ ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง์ด ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ๊ฐ€๋‚œํ•œ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์—์„œ๋Š” ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง์ด ํ•„์ˆ˜์ ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค.ํ™˜๊ฒฝ ์นœํ™”์ ์ธ ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง ๊ด€ํ–‰์„ ์ง€์ง€ํ•˜๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์€ ์˜ค๋ž˜๋œ ํฌ์žฅ์žฌ์™€ ์˜๋ฅ˜๋ฅผ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์œผ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์ˆ˜๋…„๊ฐ„ ํšจ๊ณผ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง์„ ํ•ด์™”๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋งํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง์€ ํ˜„์žฌ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋‚˜๋ผ๋“ค, ํŠนํžˆ ์ €๋ ดํ•œ ๊ฐ€๊ฒฉ์— ์ƒ์‚ฐ์ž๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ์ด์ต์ด ๋˜๋Š” ์นœํ™˜๊ฒฝ ์ œํ’ˆ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ด€์‹ฌ์ด ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ฐ˜์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๋‚˜๋ผ์—์„œ ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ๊ธฐ๋œ ํฌ์žฅ์˜ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์šฉ๋„๋ฅผ ์ฐพ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์— ์ „๋ฌธํ™”๋œ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๊ธฐ์—…์ธ ํ…Œ๋ผ ์‚ฌ์ดํด์˜ ๋Œ€๋ณ€์ธ์ธ Albe Zakes์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋ฉด, ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง์ด ์ฃผ๋ฅ˜๊ฐ€ ๋œ๋‹ค๋ฉด ๊ธฐ์—… ์„ธ๊ณ„๋Š” ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์ด ์ด์ต์ด ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ณผ ํ•„์š”๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์•„์ง ์—…๊ณ„ ์ „๋ฐ˜์˜ ์ˆ˜์น˜๊ฐ€ ๋‚˜์˜ค์ง€ ์•Š์€ ์ƒํ™ฉ์—์„œ ์•„์ง ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ๋‹จ๊ณ„์ž„์—๋„ ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง์— ์ง‘์ค‘ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ธฐ์—…์ด ๋Š˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค.์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง์€ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ๊ณผ ์ „ ์„ธ๊ณ„์— ๊ฑธ์ณ ์ƒ๋‹นํ•œ ์„ฑ์žฅ์„ ๋ณด์—ฌ ์™”๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด, Etsy, Pinterest ๋˜๋Š” Upcycle Studio์—์„œ "์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง"์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๋‹จ์–ด๊ฐ€ ํ‘œ์‹œ๋œ ์ œํ’ˆ ์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ 2010๋…„ 1์›” ์•ฝ 7,900๊ฐœ์—์„œ 1๋…„ ํ›„ ๊ฑฐ์˜ 30,000๊ฐœ๋กœ ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ๊ธฐ๋ฌผ์„ ์ˆ˜๊ฑฐํ•ด ์žฌํ™œ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ๊ทธ์น˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ์ƒํ™œ์“ฐ๋ ˆ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ๋‹นํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ์ž๊ฐ์ด ์ผ์–ด๋‚˜๋ฉด์„œ ์ƒˆํ™œ์šฉ์ด ๋Œ€์•ˆ์œผ๋กœ ์ œ์‹œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์™ธ๊ตญ์—์„œ๋Š” ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์†Œ๋น„ ํŠธ๋ Œ๋“œ๋กœ ์ž๋ฆฌ ์žก์€ ์ง€ ์˜ค๋ž˜๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋Ÿฐ๋˜๋””์ž์ธํŽ˜์Šคํ‹ฐ๋ฒŒ์€ 2012๋…„ ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง์„ '์˜ฌํ•ด์˜ ํŠธ๋ Œ๋“œ'๋กœ ๊ผฝ์•˜๋‹ค. ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋ช…ํ’ˆ ๋ฐ˜์—ด์— ์˜ค๋ฅธ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๋„ ์žˆ๋‹ค. 1993๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ํŠธ๋Ÿญ์šฉ ๋ฐฉ์ˆ˜ ์ฒœ๋ง‰์ด๋‚˜ ์—์–ด๋ฐฑ, ์ž๋™์ฐจ ์•ˆ์ „๋ฒจํŠธ ๋“ฑ์„ ์žฌํ™œ์šฉํ•ด์„œ ๊ฐ€๋ฐฉ์„ ๋งŒ๋“ค๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ์Šค์œ„์Šค ๋ธŒ๋žœ๋“œ 'ํ”„๋ผ์ดํƒ', ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ๊ฐ€๊ตฌ ์—…๊ณ„์˜ ๋ช…ํ’ˆ์œผ๋กœ ๋– ์˜ค๋ฅธ '๋ฆฌ๋ฐ” 1920', '๋ฐ•์Šคํ„ฐ' ๋“ฑ์ด ๊ทธ๋Ÿฐ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๋‹ค. ํ™œ์šฉ ์‚ฌ๋ก€ ์˜ˆ์ˆ  ์ฃผ๋ฅ˜ ๋ฏธ์ˆ ์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋œ ๋ฌผ๊ฑด(objet trovรฉ)์„ ์žฌ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ์ „ํ†ต์€ ๋ฏผ์† ์˜ˆ์ˆ ์—์„œ ์˜ค๋žซ๋™์•ˆ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ ๋ฐฉ์‹์ด๊ธฐ๋Š” ํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ, 20์„ธ๊ธฐ ์„ฑ์ˆ™๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๊ฒช์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋”์šฑ ๋ฐœ์ „ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด ์•„๋ฏธ์‰ฌ ํ€ผํŠธ๋Š” ์ธ์–‘๋œ ์ฒœ์„ ์žฌ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๋กœ์Šค์•ค์ ค๋ ˆ์Šค์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ์ด๋จผ ๋กœ๋””์•„์˜ ์™€์ธ  ํƒ€์›Œ(1921โ€“1954)๋Š” ๊ณ ์ฒ , ๋„์ž๊ธฐ, ๊นจ์ง„ ์œ ๋ฆฌ์˜ ๊ฑฐ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์žฌํ™œ์šฉ์˜ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์  ์˜ˆ์ด๋ฉฐ, ์ด๋Š” ์™€์ธ  ์Šค์นด์ด๋ผ์ธ์—์„œ 30๋ฏธํ„ฐ๊ฐ€ ๋„˜๋Š” ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋†’์€ 17๊ฐœ์˜ ๊ตฌ์กฐ๋ฌผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์Œ์•… ํŒŒ๋ผ๊ณผ์ด์˜ ์นดํ…Œ์šฐ๋ผ ์žฌํ™œ์šฉ ์˜ค์ผ€์ŠคํŠธ๋ผ๊ฐ€ ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง์ด ์Œ์•…์— ์ ์šฉ๋œ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์  ์‚ฌ๋ก€์ด๋‹ค. ์˜ค์ผ€์ŠคํŠธ๋ผ์˜ ์•…๊ธฐ๋Š” ์•„์ˆœ์ฝ˜์˜ ๋งค๋ฆฝ์ง€์—์„œ ๊ฐ€์ ธ์˜จ ์žฌ๋ฃŒ๋กœ ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด์กŒ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์•„์ˆœ์ฝ˜์˜ ์ด๋ฆ„์€ ์ด ์ง€์—ญ์˜ ์นดํ…Œ์šฐ๋ผ ๋ผ๊ตฐ(Cateura lagoon)์—์„œ ์œ ๋ž˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๊ฒƒ์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ์‹ค์ œ ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ์˜ํ™” Landfill Harmonic์—์„œ ํ‘œํ˜„๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ฐ์—… ํ”Œ๋ผ์Šคํ‹ฑ ๋ฐ ์ „์ž ์ œ์กฐ์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋งŽ์€ ์‚ฐ์—… ๊ณต์ •์€ ์œ ํ•œํ•œ ์ž์›์˜ ์†Œ๋น„์— ์˜์กดํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ํ๊ธฐ๋ฌผ์€ ํ™˜๊ฒฝ์— ์•…์˜ํ–ฅ์„ ๋ฏธ์น  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ๊ฑด๊ฐ•์— ์˜ํ–ฅ์„ ๋ฏธ์น  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๋งฅ๋ฝ์—์„œ ์ƒˆํ™œ์šฉ์€ ํ๊ธฐ๋ฌผ ๋˜๋Š” ๋ถ€์‚ฐ๋ฌผ์—์„œ ๋” ๋†’์€ ๊ฐ€์น˜๋ฅผ ์ง€๋‹Œ ์ œํ’ˆ์„ ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด ํ๊ธฐ๋ฌผ๊ณผ ์ž์› ์†Œ๋น„๋ฅผ ์ค„์ด๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์‚ฌ์šฉ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ๋ฏธ๋ž˜ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์˜ ์‚ฌ์šฉ์„ ์„ค๋ช…ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์†Œ๋น„์ž ๊ฐ€์ „์—์„œ ์ค‘๊ณ  ์ œํ’ˆ์˜ ์žฌ ์ œ์กฐ ๋˜๋Š” ๋ฆฌํผ๋ธŒ ํ”„๋กœ์„ธ์Šค๋Š” ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์ œ์กฐ์— ๋น„ํ•ด ์—๋„ˆ์ง€ ๋ฐ ์žฌ๋ฃŒ ์†Œ๋น„๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ์†Œํ•˜๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์—… ์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง์œผ๋กœ ๋ณผ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์žฌ์ƒ์‚ฐ๋œ ์ œํ’ˆ์€ ํ๊ธฐํ•˜๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ์žฌํ™œ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ๋ณด๋‹ค ๊ฐ€์น˜๊ฐ€ ๋” ๋†’๋‹ค. ์–‘์กฐ ๊ณต์ •์—์„œ ๋‚˜์˜ค๋Š” ํ๊ธฐ๋ฌผ์„ ๋ฐ”์ด์˜ค๊ฐ€์Šค ๊ณต์ •์˜ ๊ธฐํŒ์œผ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•จ์œผ๋กœ์จ ํ๊ธฐํ•  ํ•„์š”๊ฐ€ ์—†์–ด์ง€๊ณ  ์ „์ฒด ์–‘์กฐ ๊ณต์ •์— ์ƒ๋‹นํ•œ ์ด์ต์„ ์ฐฝ์ถœํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐํŒ ๊ฐ€๊ฒฉ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์šด์˜๋น„์˜ ์•ฝ 20%์˜ ์ด์ต์ด ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ณผ์ •์—์„œ ๋ฐ”์ด์˜ค๊ฐ€์Šค ๊ณต์žฅ์€ "์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋Ÿฌ" ์—ญํ• ์„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์˜๋ฅ˜ ๋””์ž์ด๋„ˆ๋“ค์€ ์‚ฐ์—… ์„ฌ์œ  ํ๊ธฐ๋ฌผ๊ณผ ๊ธฐ์กด ์˜๋ฅ˜๋ฅผ ๋ชจ๋‘ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ํŒจ์…˜์„ ๋งŒ๋“œ๋Š” ๊ธฐ๋ณธ ์žฌ๋ฃŒ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง์€ ์†Œ๋น„ ์ด์ „ ๋˜๋Š” ์†Œ๋น„ ์ดํ›„ ํ๊ธฐ๋ฌผ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ๋‘˜์˜ ์กฐํ•ฉ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์•Œ๋ ค์ ธ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์†Œ๋น„ ์ด์ „ ํ๊ธฐ๋ฌผ์€ ๊ณต์žฅ์—์„œ ํŒจํ„ด์„ ๋„๋ ค๋‚ด๊ณ  ๋‚จ์€ ์›๋‹จ ์ž”ํ•ด์™€ ๊ฐ™์ด ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด์ง„๋‹ค. ์†Œ๋น„ ์ดํ›„ ํ๊ธฐ๋ฌผ์€ ๊ธฐ์ฆ๋ฐ›์€ ์˜ท๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์ด ์ฃผ์ธ์—๊ฒŒ ๋” ์ด์ƒ ์œ ์šฉํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์„ ๋•Œ ์™„์„ฑ๋œ ์ œํ’ˆ์„ ๋งํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ข…์ข…, ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์€ ์‚ฌ๊ณ , ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๊ณ , ๋ฒ„๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์— ๋งŒ์กฑํ•˜๋Š” ์„ ํ˜• ๊ฒฝ์ œ๋ฅผ ์‹คํ–‰ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์€ ์ˆ˜๋ฐฑ๋งŒ ํ‚ฌ๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ์˜ ์„ฌ์œ  ํ๊ธฐ๋ฌผ์ด ๋ฒ„๋ ค์ง€๋Š” ๋ฐ ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ƒ์‚ฐ๋˜๋Š” ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์˜ ์„ฌ์œ ๋Š” ์žฌํ™œ์šฉ์ด ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ, ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์—์„œ๋งŒ ์•ฝ 85%๊ฐ€ ํ† ์ง€ ๋งค๊ฐ์œผ๋กœ ๊ท€๊ฒฐ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ง€์† ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ์‚ถ์„ ์‚ด๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด์„œ๋Š” ํŒจ์ŠคํŠธํŒจ์…˜์— ์˜ํ•ด ์žฅ๋ ค๋˜๋Š” "๋ฒ„๋ฆฌ๋Š”" ํƒœ๋„์™€๋Š” ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€๋˜๋Š” ์˜๋ณต ์„ ํƒ์ด ํ•„์š”ํ•˜๋‹ค. ์ƒˆํ™œ์šฉ(upcycling)์€ ์ด๊ฒƒ์„ ๋„์™€ ์ค„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์€ ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์ด ๋” ์ˆœํ™˜์ ์ธ ๊ฒฝ์ œ ๋ชจ๋ธ์„ ์‹คํ–‰์— ์˜ฎ๊ธฐ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์ด๋‹ค. ์ˆœํ™˜ ๊ฒฝ์ œ(Circular Economy)๋Š” ๋ฆฌ์†Œ์Šค๋ฅผ ์ตœ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์˜ค๋ž˜ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ์‚ฌ์šฉ ์ค‘์— ์ตœ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋งŽ์€ ๊ฐ€์น˜๋ฅผ ์ฐฝ์ถœํ•œ ๋‹ค์Œ, ์‚ฌ์šฉ์ด ๋๋‚˜๋ฉด ๋ณต์›ํ•˜๊ณ  ์šฉ๋„ ๋ณ€๊ฒฝํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋งํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋งฅ๋„๋„ˆ์™€ ๋ธŒ๋ผ์›…๊ฐ€ํŠธ์— ์˜ํ•ด ๋Œ€์ค‘ํ™”๋œ ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ ์š”๋žŒ ๋Œ€ ์š”๋žŒ ์›๋ฆฌ๋กœ๋„ ์•Œ๋ ค์ ธ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์›๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์ œํ’ˆ์ด ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์ˆ˜๋ช… ์ฃผ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ์ƒ๋ถ„ํ•ด๋˜๋„๋ก ์„ค๊ณ„๋˜์–ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋งํ•œ๋‹ค. ์‹ํ’ˆ ์ „์„ธ๊ณ„์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋งค๋…„ ์ˆ˜์‹ญ์–ต ํŒŒ์šด๋“œ์˜ ์Œ์‹์ด ๋‚ญ๋น„๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์ด ์Œ์‹์„ ์žฌ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๊ณ  ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด์„ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ•œ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์ธ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์€ ๋™๋ฌผ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ๋จน์ด๋กœ ์ฃผ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ธ๋ฐ, ๋ผ์ง€์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋งŽ์€ ๋™๋ฌผ๋“ค์ด ์ฃผ์–ด์ง„ ์Œ์‹๋ฌผ์„ ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋จน์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์ด๋‹ค. ์Œ์‹๋ฌผ ์“ฐ๋ ˆ๊ธฐ๋Š” ๊ธฐ๋ถ€๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ณ  ์‹๋‹น๋“ค์€ ๊ณ ๊ฐ๋“ค์ด ๋จน์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ๋ชจ๋“  ์Œ์‹์„ ์ ˆ์•ฝํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ง€์—ญ ๋†์—…์ง„ํฅ์ฒญ์— ๋ฌธ์˜ํ•ด ์Œ์‹๋ฌผ์“ฐ๋ ˆ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์–ด๋””์„œ ๊ธฐ๋ถ€ํ•ด์•ผ ํ•˜๋Š”์ง€, ์–ผ๋งˆ๋‚˜ ์ž์ฃผ ์–ผ๋งˆ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋ถ€ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š”์ง€ ๋“ฑ์„ ์•Œ์•„๋ณด๋Š” ๊ฒƒ๋„ ๊ธฐ๋ถ€๋ฅผ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํ˜•ํƒœ์˜ ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง ์Œ์‹์€ ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ถ„ํ•ดํ•ด์„œ ์—๋„ˆ์ง€๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์ž๋“ค์€ ์Œ์‹์„ ์••๋ ฅ์œผ๋กœ ์กฐ๋ฆฌํ•˜์—ฌ ์žฌ์‚ฌ์šฉ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ๋ฐ”์ด์˜ค ์—ฐ๋ฃŒ๋กœ ๋ถ„ํ•ดํ•œ ๋‹ค์Œ ์ „๊ธฐ์™€ ์—ด์„ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์ž”ํ•ด๋กœ ๋ฉ”ํƒ„์„ ๋งŒ๋“ค ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์„ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์Œ์‹์„ ๊ทธ๋Ÿฐ ์‹์œผ๋กœ ํ™œ์šฉํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์„ ๋•Œ, ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์€ ๊ทธ๋ƒฅ ๋ถ„ํ•ดํ•ด์„œ ํ‡ด๋น„๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋ฉด ํ† ์–‘์ด ๊ฐœ์„ ๋  ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ณผ์ผ, ์•ผ์ฑ„, ๋‹ฌ๊ฑ€ ๊ป์งˆ, ๊ฒฌ๊ณผ๋ฅ˜, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๊ฒฌ๊ณผ๋ฅ˜ ๊ป์งˆ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋งŽ์€ ์ข…๋ฅ˜์˜ ์Œ์‹๋ฌผ ์“ฐ๋ ˆ๊ธฐ๋Š” ํ† ์–‘์„ ํ’๋ถ€ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ํ‡ด๋น„๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ณต๊ฐ„ ๊ณต๊ฐ„ ๋˜ํ•œ ์ƒˆํ™œ์šฉ์ด ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋‹ค. ๋ฒ„๋ ค์งˆ ์ปจํ…Œ์ด๋„ˆ๋ฅผ ํ™œ์šฉํ•ด ์นดํŽ˜๋‚˜ ํŽธ์ง‘์ˆ์„ ๋งŒ๋“ค๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜๊ณ , ๊ณต์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋ฒ„๋ ค์ง€๋Š” ๋ชฉ์žฌ๋‚˜ ํŒ”๋ ˆํŠธ๋ฅผ ํ™œ์šฉํ•ด ์ธํ…Œ๋ฆฌ์–ด ์†Œํ’ˆ์œผ๋กœ ํƒœ์–ด๋‚˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฌผ๋ฅ˜์ฐฝ๊ณ ๋ฅผ ์ƒˆํ™œ์šฉ ํ•˜์—ฌ ํ˜ธํ…”๋กœ ์žฌํƒ„์ƒ ์‹œํ‚ค๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ๋ฐ”๋กœ ์„œ์šธ์‹œ ์ค‘๊ตฌ์— ์žˆ๋Š” '์Šค๋ชฐํ•˜์šฐ์Šค ๋น…๋„์–ด'์ด๋‹ค. ์ด๊ณณ์€ 54๋…„๋œ ๋ฌผ๋ฅ˜์ฐฝ๊ณ ๋ฅผ ํ—ˆ๋ฌผ์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ๊ฐœ์„ฑ์„ ์‚ด๋ ค ์ธํ…Œ๋ฆฌ์–ด๋ฅผ ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ฒœ์žฅ์€ ์ฐฝ๊ณ  ๋ณธ์—ฐ์˜ ๋ชจ์Šต์ด ๋Š๊ปด์ง€๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ํŠน์ง•์ด๋‹ค. ๋””์ž์ธ ๊ณผ์ • ๋„์‹œ์—์„œ๋Š” ๋งค์ผ ์ˆ˜ ํ†ค์˜ ํ๊ธฐ๋ฌผ์ด ์ƒ์‚ฐ๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ผ๋ถ€ ๊ต์œก์ž๋“ค, ํŠนํžˆ ์ Š์€์ด๋“ค์ด ์‹œ๋ฏผ๋“ค์˜ ์ธ์‹์„ ๋†’์ด๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋…ธ๋ ฅํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด์ „์— ์“ฐ๋ ˆ๊ธฐ๋กœ ๊ตญํ•œ๋˜์—ˆ๋˜ ์žฌํ™œ์šฉ์˜ ๊ฐœ๋…์„ ์žฌ์ •์˜ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ Š์€ ๋””์ž์ด๋„ˆ๋“ค์€ ํ๋น„๋‹ ๋ด‰์ง€๋กœ ๋งŒ๋“  ๋ฐฐ๋‚ญ๊ณผ ๊ฐ€์ฃฝ์„ ์žฌ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๋งŒ๋“  ์ง€์—ญ ์–‘ํƒ„์ž์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ์ œํ’ˆ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ "์“ฐ๋ ˆ๊ธฐ"๋ฅผ ์ž ์žฌ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์‹œ์žฅ์„ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋Š” ์ƒํ’ˆ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐ”๊พธ๋ ค๊ณ  ์‹œ๋„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2010๋…„ ํ™์ฝฉ์˜ ์ปค๋ฎค๋‹ˆํ‹ฐ ๋ฎค์ง€์—„ ํ”„๋กœ์ ํŠธ๊ฐ€ ์ถœํŒํ•œ ๊ด€๋ จ ์„œ์  ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋Š” ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ ์„ค๊ณ„์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ ์‹คํ—˜์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ž์žฌ ์ˆ˜์ง‘, ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง ์„ค๊ณ„, ์ง€์—ญ ์ƒ์‚ฐ ๋ฐ ๊ณต๊ณต ๋ณด๊ธ‰์— ๊ฑธ์ณ, ํ๊ธฐ๋ฌผ ์ฒ˜๋ฆฌ ๋ฐ ์—๋„ˆ์ง€ ์ ˆ์•ฝ ์ „๋žต์— ์˜ํ–ฅ์„ ๋ฏธ์น  ์ง€์† ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ œ์•ˆ์„ ์ œ๊ณตํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ™์ฝฉ ํ˜„์ง€ ๋ฐœ๋ช…๊ฐ€ ๊ฒŒ๋ฆฌ ์ฐฌ์€ ํ์ž์žฌ๋ฅผ ์ž์ „๊ฑฐ ๋ถ€ํ’ˆ์œผ๋กœ ํ™œ์šฉํ•ด '์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง' ์ž์ „๊ฑฐ๋ฅผ ๋””์ž์ธํ•˜๊ณ  ๋งŒ๋“œ๋Š”๋ฐ ์ ๊ทน ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ํ๊ธฐ๋ฌผ์„ ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์˜ ์žฌ๋ฃŒ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ์ ์–ด๋„ 8๋Œ€์˜ ์ž์ „๊ฑฐ๋ฅผ ๋ฐœ๋ช…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. Wheel Thing Maker์˜ Gary์™€ ๊ทธ์˜ ํŒŒํŠธ๋„ˆ๋“ค์€ ์ •๊ธฐ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์†ŒํŒŒ์—์„œ ๊ฐ€์ฃฝ ํ”ผ๋ถ€, ์˜ท์žฅ์˜ ๋‹จ๋‹จํ•œ ๋‚˜๋ฌดํŒ ๋˜๋Š” ๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ์˜ ํ๊ธฐ๋ฌผ ์ˆ˜์ง‘์†Œ์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์ฐจ๋Ÿ‰ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฌ์ ์—์„œ ๋‚˜์˜ค๋Š” ๊ณ ๋ฌด ํƒ€์ด์–ด์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ์œ ์šฉํ•œ ํ๊ธฐ๋ฌผ์„ ์ˆ˜์ง‘ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฐฉ์ˆ˜ ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์ด ์žˆ๋Š” ํŠธ๋Ÿญ ๋ฎ๊ฐœ์ฒœ๊ณผ ์•ˆ์ „๋ฒจํŠธ์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ์‚ฐ์—… ํ๊ธฐ๋ฌผ์„ ์ด์šฉํ•ด ๊ฐ€๋ฐฉ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒˆํ™œ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ฐ€๋ฐฉ๋งˆ๋‹ค ๊ณ ์œ ํ•œ ๋””์ž์ธ์„ ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด๋‚ธ ๋ธŒ๋žœ๋“œ ํ”„๋ผ์ดํƒ ๋˜ํ•œ ์ƒˆํ™œ์šฉ์˜ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์  ์˜ˆ์‹œ๋กœ ๋ณผ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ตญ๋‚ด์—์„œ์˜ ์ƒˆํ™œ์šฉ ๊ตญ๋‚ด์—์„  ํ•ด์™ธ๋ณด๋‹จ ๋‹ค์†Œ ๋Šฆ๊ฒŒ ์ƒˆํ™œ์šฉ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ธ์‹์ด ์žกํžˆ๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2000๋…„๋Œ€ ํ›„๋ฐ˜ ๋ช‡๋ช‡ ๋””์ž์ด๋„ˆ ๊ทธ๋ฃน๊ณผ ํ™˜๊ฒฝ ์šด๋™๊ฐ€๋“ค์„ ์ค‘์‹ฌ์œผ๋กœ ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 2014๋…„ ๊ธฐ์ค€ ๊ตญ๋‚ด ์ƒˆํ™œ์šฉ ์‹œ์žฅ์€ ์•ฝ 25์–ต์› ์ˆ˜์ค€์œผ๋กœ, ๋‹ค์†Œ ๋‚ฎ์€ ์ˆ˜์น˜๋ฅผ ๋ณด์ธ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ํ•œ๊ตญ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋””์ž์ธํ˜‘ํšŒ์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋ฉด ๊ตญ๋‚ด ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด ๊ธฐ์—… ์ˆ˜๋Š” 2008๋…„ 3๊ฐœ์—์„œ 2017๋…„ 9์›” ์•ฝ 150๊ฐœ๋กœ ์ง‘๊ณ„๋ผ 10๋…„ ์ƒˆ 50๋ฐฐ ์ด์ƒ ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ•˜๋Š” ๋“ฑ ๊ฐ€ํŒŒ๋ฅธ ์„ฑ์žฅ์„ธ๋ฅผ ๋ณด์ด๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, 2016๋…„ '์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ง'์ด ํŠธ๋ Œ๋“œ ํ‚ค์›Œ๋“œ๋กœ ๋ฝ‘ํžˆ๋ฉฐ ์ƒˆํ™œ์šฉ ๋ฌธํ™”๊ฐ€ ๋น ๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ์ž๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ์žก๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. 2015๋…„ ๊ตญ๋‚ด ์ตœ์ดˆ ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด์„ผํ„ฐ์ธ ๊ด‘๋ช…์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด์•„ํŠธ์„ผํ„ฐ๊ฐ€ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ๊ด‘๋ช…์‹œ์— ๋ฌธ์„ ์—ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฌธํ™”์ฒด์œก๊ด€๊ด‘๋ถ€์˜ 'ํ์‚ฐ์—…์‹œ์„ค ๋ฌธํ™”์žฌ์ƒ์‚ฌ์—…' ๊ณต๋ชจ์— ๊ด‘๋ช…์‹œ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ •๋ผ ๊ด‘๋ช…์‹œ์ž์›ํšŒ์ˆ˜์‹œ์„ค ํ™๋ณด๋™์œผ๋กœ ์“ฐ์ด๋˜ ๊ฑด๋ฌผ์„ ๋ฆฌ๋ชจ๋ธ๋งํ•˜์—ฌ 2015๋…„ 6์›” 12์ผ ๊ฐœ๊ด€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2017๋…„ ์„œ์šธ์ƒˆํ™œ์šฉํ”Œ๋ผ์ž๊ฐ€ ๊ฑด๋ฆฝ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ด์™ธ์—๋„ ๋Œ€๊ตฌ ํ•œ๊ตญ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด์„ผํ„ฐ, ์ธ์ฒœ ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด์—์ฝ”์„ผํ„ฐ, ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋„์—…์‚ฌ์ดํดํ”Œ๋ผ์ž, ์ˆœ์ฒœ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด์„ผํ„ฐ ๋”์ƒˆ๋กฌ, ์ฒญ์ฃผ์ƒˆํ™œ์šฉ์‹œ๋ฏผ์„ผํ„ฐ ๋“ฑ ์ „๊ตญ์ ์œผ๋กœ 10์—ฌ๊ฐœ์˜ ์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด ๊ด€๋ จ ์„ผํ„ฐ๊ฐ€ ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด์กŒ๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด์งˆ ์˜ˆ์ •์ด๋‹ค. ๋ฒ•์ œ๋„์  ์ธก๋ฉด์—์„œ๋Š” 2021๋…„ 4์›” ๊ฐœ์ •๋œ 'ํ™˜๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์ˆ  ๋ฐ ํ™˜๊ฒฝ์‚ฐ์—… ์ง€์›๋ฒ•(์•ฝ์นญ: ํ™˜๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์‚ฐ์—…๋ฒ•)' ์ œ2์กฐ 3ํ•ญ์— ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒˆํ™œ์šฉ ์‚ฐ์—…์˜ ๋ฒ•์  ๊ฐœ๋…์ด ๋ช…์‹œ๋˜๋ฉฐ, ์ƒˆํ™œ์šฉ ๊ธฐ์—…์„ ์ง€์›ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ฒ•์  ๊ทผ๊ฑฐ๊ฐ€ ๋งˆ๋ จ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ๋‹ค์šด์‚ฌ์ดํด ์„œ์šธ์ƒˆํ™œ์šฉํ”Œ๋ผ์ž ๊ด‘๋ช…์—…์‚ฌ์ดํด์•„ํŠธ์„ผํ„ฐ ์‚ฌ์ „ ์žฌํ™œ์šฉ ๊ฐ์ฃผ ๊ณต์˜ˆ ์žฌ์‚ฌ์šฉ ์žฌํ™œ์šฉ ํ™˜๊ฒฝ๊ณผ ์‚ฌํšŒ ๋ฌธํ™”์™€ ํ™˜๊ฒฝ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upcycling
Upcycling
Upcycling, also known as creative reuse, is the process of transforming by-products, waste materials, useless, or unwanted products into new materials or products perceived to be of greater quality, such as artistic value or environmental value. Description Upcycling is the opposite of downcycling, which is the other part of the recycling process. Downcycling involves converting materials and products into new materials, sometimes of lesser quality. Most recycling involves converting or extracting useful materials from a product and creating a different product or material. The terms upcycling and downcycling were first used in print in an article in SalvoNEWS by Thornton Kay quoting Reiner Pilz and published in 1994. Upsizing was the title of the German edition of a book about upcycling first published in English in 1998 by Gunter Pauli and given the revised title of Upcycling in 1999. The German edition was adapted to the German language and culture by Johannes F. Hartkemeyer, then Director of the Volkshochschule in Osnabrรผck. The concept was later incorporated by William McDonough and Michael Braungart in their 2002 book Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things. They state that the goal of upcycling is to prevent wasting potentially useful materials by making use of existing ones. This reduces the consumption of new raw materials when creating new products. Reducing the use of new raw materials can result in a reduction of energy usage, air pollution, water pollution and even greenhouse gas emissions. This is a significant step towards regenerative design culture where the end products are cleaner, healthier, and usually have a better value than the material inputs. For example, during the recycling process of plastics other than those used to create bottles, many different types of plastics are mixed, resulting in a hybrid. This hybrid is used in the manufacturing of plastic lumber applications. However, unlike the engineered polymer ABS which hold properties of several plastics well, recycled plastics suffer phase-separation that causes structural weakness in the final product. In 2009, Belinda Smith from Reuters wrote that upcycling had increased in the rich countries but observed that upcycling was a necessity in poorer ones: Supporters of the environmentally friendly practice of upcycling say people in developing countries have effectively been upcycling for years, using old packaging and clothing in new ways, although more out of need than for the environment. But upcycling is now taking off in other countries, reflecting an increased interest in eco-friendly products, particularly ones that are priced at an affordable level and proving profitable for the manufacturers. "If upcycling is going to become mainstream, then the corporate world needs to see that it can be profitable," said Albe Zakes, spokesman of U.S. company TerraCycle which specializes in finding new uses for discarded packaging. A growing number of companies are focusing on upcycling although the trend is still in its infancy with industry-wide figures yet to be produced. Upcycling has shown significant growth across the United States and the World. For example, the number of products on Etsy, Pinterest or Upcycle Studio tagged with the word "upcycled" increased from about 7,900 in January 2010 to nearly 30,000 a year later . , that number stood at 263,685. Material downcycling occurs when it is either not possible or uneconomic to restore materials to their original quality, for example, when wrought aluminium alloys are melted to produce lower-grade casting alloys. Material upcycling, in the thermodynamic sense, is only possible if even more energy is added to upgrade the material quality. Two guiding questions to ask when assessing recovering for waste materials or products are: How much energy is required to restore the recovered material back to the desired material or product?, and, How does this quantity compare with obtaining the desired material or product from virgin or primary sources? In some cases, little energy is required to reuse a discarded product, for example, secondhand clothing. In other cases, the energy required to recover the materials is more than the energy required to process virgin material. Recyling and Upcycling While recycling usually means the materials are remade into their original form, e.g., recycling plastic bottles into plastic polymers, which then produce plastic bottles through the manufacturing process, upcycling adds more value to the materials, as the name suggested. According to Watson & Wolfe "Upcycling, also known as creative reuse, is the process of transforming by-products, waste materials, useless, or unwanted products into new materials or products perceived to be of greater quality, such as artistic value or environmental value." Similarly, recycle art may refer to art pieces using used materials in their original form while upcycle art may involve a transformation process such as breaking down, reforming, reassembling, and the like. A common concept in Recycling is the 3Rs, which represent Reduce, Reuse,ย and Recycle. According to "The Upcycle Artist's Handbook: A Comprehensive Guide to Creating Art from Waste" published by Upcycle Art And Craft Society (UAACS). They coined a 3Rs principle for upcycling: Rethink, Reform, and Reborn. "Rethink" involves reevaluating something and looking at an item from a new perspective. It means seeing the potential for repurposing, giving it a new function, or exploring other creative possibilities for that material. "Reform" involves physically altering the item, either by dismantling it, combining it with other materials, or using different techniques to change its form. This transformation of existing materials creates a new structure that better suits the artist's creative vision. "Reborn" is the final outcome when the upcycled item is given new life or purpose. It's like a resurrection of cast-offs that are given a second life" Applications Art Upcycle Art or sometimes known as Recycled Art or Recyclโ€™Art is the transformation of waste or used materials and objects into art pieces. The tradition of reusing found objects (objet trouvรฉ) in mainstream art came of age sporadically through the 20th century, although it has long been a means of production in folk art. The Amish quilt, for example, came about through reapplication of salvaged fabric. Simon Rodia's Watts Towers (1921โ€“1954) in Los Angeles exemplifies upcycling of scrap metal, pottery and broken glass on a grand scale; it consists of 17 structures, the tallest reaching over 30 meters into the Watts skyline. Intellectually, upcycling bears some resemblance to the ready-made art of Marcel Duchamp and the Dadaists. Duchamp's "Bicycle Wheel" (1913), a front wheel and fork attached to a common stool, is among the earliest of these works, while "Fountain" (1917), a common urinal purchased at a hardware store, is arguably his best-known work. Pablo Picasso's "Bull's Head" (1942), a sculpture made from a discarded bicycle saddle and handlebars, is the Spanish painter's sly nod to the Dadaists. Throughout the mid-century, the artist Joseph Cornell fabricated collages and boxed assemblage works from old books, found objects and ephemera. Robert Rauschenberg collected trash and disused objects, first in Morocco and later on the streets of New York, to incorporate into his art works. The idea of consciously raising the inherent value of recycled objects as a political statement, however, rather than presenting recycled objects as a reflection or outcome from the means of production, is largely a late 20th-century concept. Romuald Hazoumรฉ, an artist from the West African Bรฉnin, was heralded in 2007 for his use of discarded plastic gasoline and fuel canisters to resemble traditional African masks at Documenta 12 in Kassel, Germany. Hazoumรฉ has said of these works, "I send back to the West that which belongs to them, that is to say, the refuse of consumer society that invades us every day." Jeff Wassmann, an American artist who has lived in Australia for the past 25 years, uses items found on beaches and junk stores in his travels to create the early Modern works of a fictional German relative, Johann Dieter Wassmann (1841โ€“1898). In Vorwarts (Go Forward) (pictured), Wassmann uses four simple objects to depict a vision of modern man on the precarious eave of the 20th century: an early optometry chart as background, a clock spring as eye, a 19th-century Chinese bone opium spoon from the Australian gold fields as nose and an upper set of dentures found on an Australian beach as mouth. Wassmann is unusual among artists in that he does not sell his work, rather they are presented as gifts; by not allowing these works to re-enter the consumer cycle, he averts the commodification of his end product. Max Zorn is a Dutch tape artist who creates artwork from ordinary brown packaging tape and hangs pieces on street lamps as a new form of street art at night. By adding and subtracting layers of tape on acrylic glass with a surgical scalpel, the artwork can only be visible when light is placed behind it, mimicking the effects similar to stained glass window methods. His technique with pioneering upcycling with street art has been featured at Frei-Cycle 2013, the first design fair for recycling and upcycling in Freiburg, Germany. Music A prominent example is the Recycled Orchestra of Cateura in Paraguay. The instruments of the orchestra are made from materials taken from the landfill of Asunciรณn, whose name comes from the Cateura lagoon in the area. A limited part of its real history is narrated in the film Landfill Harmonic. Industry Many industrial processes, like plastic, paint, and electronic fabrication, rely on the consumption of finite resources. Furthermore, the waste may have an environmental impact and can affect human health. Within this context, upcycling describes the use of available and future technologies to reduce waste and resource consumption by creating a product with a higher value from waste or byproduct streams. In consumer electronics, the process of re-manufacturing or refurbishment of second-hand products can be seen as upcycling because of the reduced energy and material consumption in contrast to new manufacturing. The re-manufactured product has a higher value than disposing or downcycling it. The use of Brewer's spent grain, a waste product of brewing processes, as a substrate in biogas processes eliminates the need for disposal and can generate significant profit to the overall brewing process. Depending on the substrate's price, a profit of approximately 20% of the operational costs is possible. In this process, the biogas plant acts as an "upcycler". Clothes Designers have begun to use both industrial textile waste and existing clothing like as the base material for creating new fashions. Upcycling has been known to use either pre-consumer or post-consumer waste or possibly a combination of the two. Pre-consumer waste is made while in the factory, such as fabric remnants left over from cutting out patterns. Post-consumer waste refers to the finished product when itโ€™s no longer useful to the owner, such as donated clothes. Textile upcycling has an official certification process called UPMADEยฎ. Fashion designers such as Ksenia Schnaider and Reet Aus have applied upcycling philosophy by designing entire collections from scraps. With the rising popularity of upcycling, several lawsuits have been filed by luxury trademark owners against parties that sell upcycled versions of their products featuring logos or other protected trademarks. In February 2021, Chanel filed a lawsuit for trademark infringement and unfair competition against Shiver + Duke, a jewelry company that repurposed authentic Chanel buttons without Chanel's knowledge or consent. The lawsuit alleged that Shiver + Duke's use of the buttons created customer confusion and was a materially different use from the original intended use. Similarly, Louis Vuitton accused Sandra Ling Designs, Inc. (SLD) for creating and selling apparel, handbags, and accessories made from authentic pre-owned Louis Vuitton goods. Louis Vuitton argued that the modified products failed to meet their quality standards and consumers would likely mistakenly believe that the items originated from the luxury brand. SLD argued that disclaimers were present on each upcycled product to prevent confusion. Ultimately, the parties reached a settlement, with SLD agreeing to pay a fine and withdraw all counterclaims. Often, people practice linear economy where they are content to buy, use, then throw away. This system contributes to millions of kilos of textile waste being thrown away. While most textiles produced are recyclable, around 85% end-up in landfills in the USA alone. To live a sustainable life, clothing options opposite to the "throw away" attitude encouraged by fast fashion are needed. Upcycling can help with this, as it puts into practice a more circular economy model. A Circular Economy is where resources are used for as long as possible, getting the most value out of them while in use, then restored and repurposed when their use is over. Popularized by McDonough and Braungart, this has also been known as the cradle-to-cradle principle. This principle states a product should be designed either to have multiple life cycles or be biodegradable. Food Billions of pounds of food are wasted every year around the world, but there are ways that people reuse food and find a way to upcycle. One common method is to feed it to animals because many animals, such as pigs, will eat all the scraps given. Approximately, 30% of the food livestock consumes, in total, comes from food waste in the supply chain, or crops that are grown and processed. Food waste can be donated and restaurants can save all the food customers don't eat. Donations can also be made by contacting local agricultural extension offices to find out where to donate food waste and how often and how much one can donate. Another form of upcycling food is to break it down and use it as energy. Engineers have found a way to break the food down into a reusable bio-fuel by pressure cooking it and then they are able to make methane out of the remains which can be used to produce electricity and heat. When the food isn't used in those ways, another way is to just break it down and use it in compost, which will improve the soil. Many types of food waste, such as fruits, vegetables, egg shells, nuts, and nut shells, can be used in compost to enrich soil. A 2019-founded non-profit, The Upcycled Food Association, established certification standards and a logo that allows consumers to be confident of the upcycled food being consumed. Whole Foods named upcycling one of the ten food trends of 2021. Design processes Tonnes of wastes are produced every day in our cities, and some educators are attempting to raise citizens' awareness, especially the youth. To redefine the concept of recycling previously confined to trash categorization, groups of young designers have attempted to transform "trash" into potentially marketable products such as backpacks made of waste plastic bags and area rugs created by reusing hides. One relevant book published by Community Museum Project in Hong Kong in 2010, was the first experiment on upcycling systems design. Spanning across material collecting, upcycling design, local production and public dissemination, it provides proposals towards a sustainable system that will cast impact on our strategies of waste handling and energy saving. Hong Kong local inventor Gary Chan is actively involved in designing and making 'upcycling' bikes by making use of waste materials as parts for his bikes. He invented at least 8 bikes using wastes as a majority of the materials. Gary and his partners at Wheel Thing Makers regularly collect useful wastes such as leather skin from sofas, hardwood plates of wardrobes, or rubber tires from vehicle repair stores in the waste collection station on streets. Potential technologies The worldwide plastic production was 280 million tons in 2011 and production levels are growing every year. Its haphazard disposal causes severe environmental damage, such as the creation of the Great Pacific garbage patch. In 2018, global annual plastic consumption grew to over 320 million tons. In order to solve this problem, the employment of modern technologies and processes to reuse the waste plastic as a cheap substrate is under research. The goal is to bring this material from the waste stream back into the mainstream by developing processes, which will create an economic demand for them. One approach in the field involves the conversion of waste plastics (like LDPE, PET, and HDPE) into paramagnetic, conducting microspheres or into carbon nano-materials by applying high temperatures and chemical vapor deposition. On a molecular level, the treatment of polymers like polypropylene or thermoplastics with electron beams (doses around 150 kGy) can increase material properties like bending strength and elasticity and provides an eco-friendly and sustainable way to upcycle them. Active research is being carried out for the biotransformation upcycling of plastic waste (e.g., polyethylene terephthalate and polyurethane) into PHA bioplastic using bacteria. PET could be converted into the biodegradable PHA by using a combination of temperature and microbial treatment. First it gets pyrolized at 450ย ยฐC and the resulting terephthalic acid is used as a substrate for microorganisms, which convert it finally into PHA. Similar to the aforementioned approach is the combination of nano-materials like carbon nanotubes with powdered orange peel as a composite material. This might be used to remove synthetic dyes from wastewater. Biotechnology companies have recently shifted focus towards the conversion of agricultural waste, or biomass, to different chemicals or commodities. One company in particular, BioTork, has signed an agreement with the State of Hawaii and the USDA to convert the unmarketable papayas in Hawaii into fish feed. As part of this Zero Waste Initiative put forth by the State of Hawaii, BioTork will upcycle the otherwise wasted biomass into fish feed. See also Environmentalism Food rescue Reuse Scrapstore Trashion Waste hierarchy References External links Culture and the environment Handicrafts Recycling Reuse
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๋ ˆ๋‚  ํŽ˜๋“œ๋กœ์Šค(, 1971๋…„ 10์›” 10์ผ ~ )๋Š” ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์˜ ์ „์ง ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋ฐ ํ˜„ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์ง€๋„์ž๋กœ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์‹œ์ ˆ ํฌ์ง€์…˜์€ ๊ณต๊ฒฉํ˜• ๋ฏธ๋“œํ•„๋”์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ ํ˜„์žฌ ๋ชจ๋กœ์ฝ” ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€์˜ ๊ฐ๋…์ง์„ ๋งก๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์‹œ์ ˆ ํด๋Ÿฝ 1971๋…„ 10์›” 10์ผ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ์˜ค๋ฅผ๋ ˆ์•™์—์„œ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ๊ณ„ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์ธ ๋ถ€๋ชจ ์‚ฌ์ด์—์„œ ํƒœ์–ด๋‚˜ 1990๋…„ FC ๋‚ญํŠธ ์ž…๋‹จ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ํ”„๋กœ์— ์ „๊ฒฉ ์ž…๋ฌธํ•œ ๋’ค 2009๋…„ ์€ํ‡ดํ•  ๋•Œ๊นŒ์ง€ 19๋…„๋™์•ˆ ์˜ฌ๋žญํ”ผํฌ ๋“œ ๋งˆ๋ฅด์„ธ์œ , ํŒŒ๋ฅด๋งˆ ์นผ์ดˆ, SSC ๋‚˜ํด๋ฆฌ, ์˜ฌ๋žญํ”ผํฌ ๋ฆฌ์˜น, ๋ชฝํŽ ๋ฆฌ์— HSC, ํˆด๋ฃจ์ฆˆ FC, SC ๋ฐ”์Šคํ‹ฐ์•„, ์•Œ์ฝ”๋ฅด SC, ์‰ฌ๋“œ ๋‹ˆ๋ธŒ๋ฅด๋„ค ์ž„ํ”ผ ๋“œ์‹œ์ฆˆ, ๋ถ€์Šˆ๋ฉ˜ ๋ผ๋ณผ์—์Šค์ฟ ๋ธ”๋ผํฌ, FC ๋ณผ๋ฆ„ ๋“ฑ์—์„œ ํ™œ๋™ํ–ˆ๊ณ  ํŠนํžˆ 1990๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 1996๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ FC ๋‚ญํŠธ์˜ ์ฃผ์ „ ๋ฏธ๋“œํ•„๋”๋กœ ๋งนํ™œ์•ฝํ•˜๋ฉฐ 1992-93 ์ฟ ํ”„ ๋“œ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ์ค€์šฐ์Šน, 1993-94 ์ฟ ํ”„ ๋“œ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค 4๊ฐ•, 1994-95 ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์•™ ์šฐ์Šน, 1995-96๋…„ UEFA ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 4๊ฐ• ์ง„์ถœ ๋“ฑ์˜ ์—…์ ์„ ๋‚จ๊ฒผ๋‹ค. ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ 1993๋…„ 7์›” 28์ผ ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„์™€์˜ ์นœ์„  ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค A๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ์†Œ์†์œผ๋กœ ๊ตญ์ œ A๋งค์น˜ ๋ฐ๋ท”์ „์„ ์น˜๋ €๊ณ  1995๋…„ 9์›” 6์ผ ํ™ˆ์—์„œ ์—ด๋ฆฐ ์•„์ œ๋ฅด๋ฐ”์ด์ž”๊ณผ์˜ UEFA ์œ ๋กœ 1996 ์˜ˆ์„  1์กฐ 8์ฐจ์ „์—์„œ A๋งค์น˜ ๋ฐ๋ท”๊ณจ์„ ํ„ฐ๋œจ๋ฆฌ๋ฉฐ 10-0 ๋Œ€์Šน๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ 2ํšŒ ์—ฐ์† ์œ ๋กœ ๋Œ€ํšŒ ๋ณธ์„  ์ง„์ถœ์— ์ผ์กฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ํ›„ UEFA ์œ ๋กœ 1996 ๋ณธ์„  ์—”ํŠธ๋ฆฌ์— ํ•ฉ๋ฅ˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ํŒ€์˜ 4๊ฐ• ์ง„์ถœ์„ ์ด๋Œ์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ์ฒด์ฝ”์™€์˜ 4๊ฐ•์ „ ์Šน๋ถ€์ฐจ๊ธฐ์—์„œ 5๋ฒˆ์งธ ํ‚ค์ปค๋กœ ๋‚˜์„ฐ๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ์ƒ๋Œ€ ๊ณจํ‚คํผ ํŽ˜ํŠธ๋ฅด ์ฝ”์šฐ๋ฐ”์˜ ์„ ๋ฐฉ์— ๊ฐ€๋กœ๋ง‰ํ˜€ ๊ฒฐ์Šน ๋ฌธํ„ฑ์—์„œ ๋ˆˆ๋ฌผ์„ ํ˜๋ ธ๊ณ  ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ ์ด๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ์ž๊ตญ ์–ธ๋ก ๊ณผ ์ถ•๊ตฌํŒฌ๋“ค๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์Ÿ์•„์ง„ ์—„์ฒญ๋‚œ ๋น„๋‚œ์„ ๊ฐ์ˆ˜ํ•ด์•ผ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์œ ๋กœ 1996 4๊ฐ•์ „์—์„œ์˜ ์Šน๋ถ€์ฐจ๊ธฐ ์‹ค์ถ•์˜ ์—ฌํŒŒ๋กœ 1996๋…„ 11์›” 29์ผ ์—ด๋ฆฐ ๋ด๋งˆํฌ์™€์˜ ์นœ์„  ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋์œผ๋กœ ๋” ์ด์ƒ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€์— ๋ฐœํƒ๋˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๊ณ  ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ A๋งค์น˜ 25๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ 4๊ณจ์˜ ๊ธฐ๋ก์„ ๋‚จ๊ธด ์ฑ„ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ์œ ๋‹ˆํผ์„ ๋ฒ—์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ง€๋„์ž ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ํด๋Ÿฝ 2008๋…„ ์ƒ์žฅ๋คผ์—˜์˜ ๊ฐ๋…์œผ๋กœ ๋ณธ๊ฒฉ์ ์ธ ์ง€๋„์ž ์ปค๋ฆฌ์–ด๋ฅผ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•œ ๋’ค 2009๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2012๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ์ƒํ”„๋ฆฌ๋ฒ  ์ƒ์ผ๋ ˆ๋ฅด์˜ ๊ฐ๋…์„ ์—ญ์ž„ํ–ˆ๊ณ  2015๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2017๋…„๊นŒ์ง€๋Š” ๊ณ ํ–ฅํŒ€์ธ US ์˜ค๋ฅผ๋ ˆ์•™์˜ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ๊ณ ๋ฌธ์„ ๋งก์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  2017๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2019๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ๋””๋น„์ง€์˜น 1 ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ์˜ ๋ช…๋ฌธํŒ€์ธ ์˜ฌ๋žญํ”ผํฌ ๋ฆฌ์˜น ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ์˜ ๊ฐ๋…์„ ์—ญ์ž„ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 2ํšŒ ์—ฐ์† ์šฐ์Šน(2017-18, 2018-19), 2017-18 ์ฟ ํ”„ ๋“œ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ ์ค€์šฐ์Šน, 2018-19 ์ฟ ํ”„ ๋“œ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ ์šฐ์Šน, UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 2ํšŒ ์—ฐ์† ์šฐ์Šน(2017-18, 2018-19)์˜ ๊ธˆ์žํƒ‘์„ ์Œ“์•˜๊ณ  2018๋…„์—๋Š” FIFA ์˜ฌํ•ด์˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ฐ๋…์ƒ๊นŒ์ง€ ์ˆ˜์ƒํ•˜๋Š” ์˜์˜ˆ๊นŒ์ง€ ์•ˆ์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ 2018-19 ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ๋์œผ๋กœ ์˜ฌ๋žญํ”ผํฌ ๋ฆฌ์˜น ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ์˜ ๊ฐ๋…์ง์—์„œ ๋ฌผ๋Ÿฌ๋‚œ ๋’ค 2020๋…„ 11์›” ๋ชจ๋กœ์ฝ” ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€์˜ ๊ฐ๋…์œผ๋กœ ์ทจ์ž„ํ•˜์—ฌ 1๋…„ 8๊ฐœ์›” ํ›„ 2023๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด ์ง€์—ญ ์˜ˆ์„ ๊ฒฉ์œผ๋กœ ์—ด๋ฆฐ 2022๋…„ ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด ์—ฌ์ž ๋„ค์ด์…˜์Šค์ปต ๋ณธ์„ ์—์„œ ๊ฐœ์ตœ๊ตญ์ธ ๋ชจ๋กœ์ฝ”์˜ ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ฒซ ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด ์—ฌ์ž ๋„ค์ด์…˜์Šค์ปต ์ค€์šฐ์Šน ๋ฐ ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ฒซ ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ๋ณธ์„  ์ง„์ถœ์˜ ์พŒ๊ฑฐ๋ฅผ ์ด๋Œ์—ˆ๊ณ  ํŠนํžˆ ์ด ๋Œ€ํšŒ ์ตœ๋‹ค ์šฐ์Šน๊ตญ์ธ ๋‚˜์ด์ง€๋ฆฌ์•„์™€์˜ 4๊ฐ•์ „์—์„œ ์Šน๋ถ€์ฐจ๊ธฐ๊นŒ์ง€ ๊ฐ€๋Š” ์ ‘์ „ ๋์— ์Šน๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๊ฑฐ๋‘๋Š” ๊ธฐ์ ์„ ์ผ์œผํ‚ค๋ฉด์„œ ๋ชจ๋กœ์ฝ” ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ์˜ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์—ญ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋“ค์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ˆ˜์ƒ ํด๋Ÿฝ (์„ ์ˆ˜) FC ๋‚ญํŠธ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 1 : ์šฐ์Šน (1994-95) ์ฟ ํ”„ ๋“œ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค : ์ค€์šฐ์Šน (1992-93), 4๊ฐ• (1993-94) UEFA ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ : 4๊ฐ• (1995-96) ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ (์„ ์ˆ˜) UEFA ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜๊ถŒ ๋Œ€ํšŒ : 4๊ฐ• (1996) ํด๋Ÿฝ (์ง€๋„์ž) ์˜ฌ๋žญํ”ผํฌ ๋ฆฌ์˜น ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ ๋””๋น„์ง€์˜น 1 ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ : ์šฐ์Šน (2017-18, 2018-19) ์ฟ ํ”„ ๋“œ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ : ์šฐ์Šน (2018-19), ์ค€์šฐ์Šน (2017-18) UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ : ์šฐ์Šน (2017-18, 2018-19) ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ (์ง€๋„์ž) (์—ฌ์ž) ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด ์—ฌ์ž ๋„ค์ด์…˜์Šค์ปต : ์ค€์šฐ์Šน (2022) ๊ฐœ์ธ FIFA ์˜ฌํ•ด์˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ฐ๋…์ƒ : 2018 1971๋…„ ์ถœ์ƒ ์‚ด์•„์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์˜ ๋‚จ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ฐ๋… ๋‚จ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๋ฏธ๋“œํ•„๋” ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ๊ณ„ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์ธ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ๋‚จ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ UEFA ์œ ๋กœ 1996 ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์„ธ๋ฆฌ์— A์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ดํƒˆ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ ๋‚จ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ SSC ๋‚˜ํด๋ฆฌ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ํŒŒ๋ฅด๋งˆ ์นผ์ดˆ 1913์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ FC ๋‚ญํŠธ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ SC ๋ฐ”์Šคํ‹ฐ์•„์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋ชฝํŽ ๋ฆฌ์— HSC์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์˜ฌ๋žญํ”ผํฌ ๋“œ ๋งˆ๋ฅด์„ธ์œ ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์˜ฌ๋žญํ”ผํฌ ๋ฆฌ์˜น์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ํˆด๋ฃจ์ฆˆ FC์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 1์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์นดํƒ€๋ฅด ์Šคํƒ€์Šค ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์˜ ํ•ด์™ธ ์ง„์ถœ ๋‚จ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์นดํƒ€๋ฅด์— ๊ฑฐ์ฃผํ•œ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์ธ ์นดํƒ€๋ฅด์˜ ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ ๋‚จ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ๋‚จ์ž U-21 ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 1993๋…„ ์ง€์ค‘ํ•ด ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์˜ฌ๋žญํ”ผํฌ ๋ฆฌ์˜น ํŽ˜๋ฏธ๋‹Œ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ฐ๋… ๋ชจ๋กœ์ฝ” ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ๊ฐ๋… 2023๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ๋…
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reynald%20Pedros
Reynald Pedros
Reynald Michel Sebastian Pedros (born 10 October 1971) is a French professional football manager and former player who played as a midfielder. He recently managed the Morocco women's national team. Early life and club career Reynald Michel Sebastian Pedros was born on 10 October 1971 in Orlรฉans, Loiret, and is of Portuguese and Spanish descent. He played as a left-footed attacking midfielder, formed in Nantes. He was part of the magic trio of FC Nantes with Patrice Loko and Nicolas Ouรฉdec. He won the Ligue 1 title with Nantes in 1995. The following year he reached the semi-finals of the UEFA Champions League. International career Pedros played for the France national team. His career bears some similarity to David Ginola's โ€“ a mistake in the last 1994 FIFA World Cup qualifying match leading to French elimination, and subsequently being dropped from the national team. Before UEFA Euro 1996, he was considered one of the best French midfielders, on par with Zinedine Zidane, and was selected for the tournament. France reached the semi-final to face the Czech Republic, and the two teams could not be separated over ninety minutes. The match thus went into extra time and subsequently a penalty shoot-out. After five successful penalties for each team, Pedros was to take the first of the penalties in sudden death. His shot was weak and slow, and was easily saved by the Czech goalkeeper, Petr Kouba. Miroslav Kadlec came to take the next penalty, scored it, and knocked France out of the tournament. Following this elimination, Pedros was made a pariah by the media and was greatly disliked by French fans. He attempted to make a comeback, in Ligue 2, but he was never able to come back to the top of his game. Managerial career Pedros worked as president adviser at Orlรฉans for two years. On 2 June 2017, he took over as head coach of Olympique Lyonnais Fรฉminin. He led them to retain the Division 1 Fรฉminine championship for the 12th and 13th time. He also succeeded in guiding the team to retaining the UEFA Women's Champions League for the 3rd and 4th time. In November 2020, Pedros became the coach of the Moroccan women's national team. This recruitment took place in the context of the effort made by the FRMF and its President Fouzi Lekjaa to develop women's football in Morocco, particularly mass football, with the aim of becoming a stronghold of women's football at continental and world level. His first tournament was the 2022 Women's Africa Cup of Nations, at which he guided Morocco to reach the final of the WAFCON for the first time in its only third appearance. This included a win on penalties win over African powerhouse Nigeria in the semi-finals, which was seen as a redemption for his penalty defeat in Euro 1996. In August 2023, he took Morocco women's team to the knockout stages of the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup on their debut appearance at the tournament. Career statistics International goals Scores and results list France's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Pedros goal. Honours Manager Lyon Division 1 Fรฉminine: 2017โ€“18, 2018โ€“19 Coupe de France Fรฉminine: 2018โ€“19 UEFA Women's Champions League: 2018โ€“19, 2019โ€“20 Morocco Women's Africa Cup of Nations runner-up: 2022 References External links 1971 births Living people Footballers from Orlรฉans French men's footballers Men's association football midfielders FC Nantes players Olympique de Marseille players Parma Calcio 1913 players SSC Napoli players Olympique Lyonnais players Montpellier HSC players Toulouse FC players SC Bastia players Al-Khor SC players Ligue 1 players Serie A players Qatar Stars League players Competitors at the 1993 Mediterranean Games Mediterranean Games medalists in football Mediterranean Games bronze medalists for France France men's under-21 international footballers France men's international footballers UEFA Euro 1996 players French football managers Olympique Lyonnais Fรฉminin managers French expatriate men's footballers Expatriate men's footballers in Italy Expatriate men's footballers in Qatar Expatriate men's footballers in Switzerland French expatriate sportspeople in Italy French expatriate sportspeople in Qatar French expatriate sportspeople in Switzerland French people of Portuguese descent French people of Spanish descent Morocco women's national football team managers 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup managers
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%95%94%ED%94%BC%EC%8B%A4%EB%A6%B0
์•”ํ”ผ์‹ค๋ฆฐ
์•”ํ”ผ์‹ค๋ฆฐ()์€ ๊ธฐ๋„ ๊ฐ์—ผ, ์š”๋กœ๊ฐ์—ผ์ฆ, ์ˆ˜๋ง‰์—ผ, ์‚ด๋ชจ๋„ฌ๋ผ์ฆ, ์‹ฌ์žฅ๋‚ด๋ง‰์—ผ ๋“ฑ ์ˆ˜๋งŽ์€ ๋ณ‘๊ท  ๊ฐ์—ผ์„ ์˜ˆ๋ฐฉํ•˜๊ณ  ์น˜๋ฃŒํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๋Š” ํ•ญ์ƒ๋ฌผ์งˆ์ด๋‹ค. ์‹ ์ƒ์•„์˜ ๊ทธ๋ฃน B ์—ฐ์‡„๊ตฌ๊ท ๊ฐ์—ผ ์˜ˆ๋ฐฉ์„ ์œ„ํ•ด์„œ๋„ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ตฌ๊ฐ•์œผ๋กœ, ๊ทผ์œก ์ฃผ์‚ฌ๋กœ, ๋˜๋Š” ์ •๋งฅ ์ฃผ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋ณต์šฉํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ชจ๋“  ํ•ญ์ƒ๋ฌผ์งˆ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค ๊ฐ์—ผ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์—๋Š” ์œ ์šฉํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์ธ ๋ถ€์ž‘์šฉ์—๋Š” ๋ฐœ์ง„, ๊ตฌ์—ญ์งˆ, ์„ค์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ํฌํ•จ๋œ๋‹ค. ํŽ˜๋‹ˆ์‹ค๋ฆฐ์— ์•Œ๋ ˆ๋ฅด๊ธฐ ๋ฐ˜์‘์ด ์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์€ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ์ข‹๋‹ค. ์‹ฌ๊ฐํ•œ ๋ถ€์ž‘์šฉ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ํด๋กœ์ŠคํŠธ๋ฆฌ๋””์›€ ๋””ํ”ผ์‹ค ๋Œ€์žฅ์—ผ, ๊ณผ๋ฏผ์ฆ์ด ํฌํ•จ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์‹ ๋ถ€์ „ ํ™˜์ž์—๊ฒŒ๋Š” ์œ ์šฉํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ๋ณต์šฉ๋Ÿ‰์€ ๋‚ฎ์ถ”์–ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ž„์‹  ๋ฐ ๋ชจ์œ  ์ˆ˜์œ  ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„์— ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ์ผ์€ ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ์•ˆ์ „ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ„์ฃผ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ •์˜ ์•”ํ”ผ์‹ค๋ฆฐ์€ ๋ฒ ํƒ€๋ฝํƒ(ฮฒ-lactam) ํ•ญ์ƒ์ œ(antibiotics)์˜ ํŽ˜๋‹ˆ์‹ค๋ฆฐ(penicillin) ๊ทธ๋ฃน์— ์†ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธํŽ˜๋‹ˆ์‹ค๋ฆฐ(aminopenicillin) ๊ณ„ํ†ต์˜ ์ผ๋ถ€์ด๋‹ค. ๋ฐ•ํ…Œ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ์„ธํฌ๋ง‰ ํ•ฉ์„ฑ์„ ์ €ํ•ดํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฉ”์ปค๋‹ˆ์ฆ˜์œผ๋กœ ์‚ด๊ท  ํšจ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ด๋ฉฐ ๋„“์€ ํ•ญ๊ท  ์˜์—ญ์„ ๋ณด์œ ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. Streptococcu pneumoniae, enterococci, nonpenicillinase-producing staphylococci, Listeria ๋“ฑ์˜ ๊ทธ๋žŒ ์–‘์„ฑ๊ท (gram-positive bacteria), Haemophilus influenzae, E. coli, Proteus mirabilis, Salmonella ๋“ฑ์˜ ๊ทธ๋žŒ ์Œ์„ฑ๊ท (gram-negative bacteria), ๋ ™ํ† ์Šคํ”ผ๋ผ(Leptospira) ๋“ฑ์— ํšจ๊ณผ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ž‘์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ์›๋ฆฌ ์•”ํ”ผ์‹ค๋ฆฐ์€ ๋ฐ•ํ…Œ๋ฆฌ์•„๊ฐ€ ์„ธํฌ๋ฒฝ์„ ๋งŒ๋“ค๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ํ•„์š”๋กœ ํ•˜๋Š” ํšจ์†Œ์ธ ํŠธ๋žœ์ŠคํŽฉํ‹ฐ๋ฐ์ด์Šค(transpeptidase)์— ๋น„๊ฐ€์—ญ์  ์–ต์ œ์ œ๋กœ ์ž‘์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ํšจ์†Œ์˜ ํ™œ์„ฑ์„ ์–ต์ œํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด ํšจ์†Œ์— ์˜ํ•œ ํŽฉํƒ€์ด๋“œ์ „์ด(transpeptidation) ๋ฐ˜์‘ ์–ต์ œ๋Š” ์„ธ๊ท ์˜ ์„ธํฌ๋ฒฝ์„ ๊ตฌ์„ฑํ•˜๋Š” ํ•ต์‹ฌ ์„ฑ๋ถ„์ธ ํŽฉํ‹ฐ๋„๊ธ€๋ฆฌ์นธ(peptidoglycan) ํ˜•์„ฑ์„ ์–ต์ œํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์„ธํฌ ์šฉํ•ด๋ฅผ ์œ ๋„ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์˜ํ•™ ์งˆ๋ณ‘ ์„ธ๊ท ์„ฑ ๋‡Œ์ˆ˜๋ง‰์—ผ; ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ๊ธ€๋ฆฌ์ฝ”์‚ฌ์ด๋“œ๋Š” ๊ทธ๋žŒ ์Œ์„ฑ ๋‡Œ์ˆ˜๋ง‰์—ผ ๋ฐ•ํ…Œ๋ฆฌ์•„์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ํšจ๋Šฅ์„ ์ฆ๊ฐ€์‹œํ‚ค๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ถ”๊ฐ€๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์žฅ๊ตฌ๊ท  ๊ท ์ฃผ์— ์˜ํ•œ ์‹ฌ๋‚ด๋ง‰์—ผ(off-label ์‚ฌ์šฉ); ์ข…์ข… ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ๊ธ€๋ฆฌ์ฝ”์‚ฌ์ด๋“œ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ์˜ค์—ผ๋œ ๋ฌผ์ด๋‚˜ ์Œ์‹(์˜ˆ: ์‚ด๋ชจ๋„ฌ๋ผ๊ท )์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•œ ์œ„์žฅ ๊ฐ์—ผ์‹œ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋น„๋‡จ ์ƒ์‹๊ธฐ ๊ฐ์—ผ์‹œ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ์š”๋„ ์นดํ…Œํ„ฐ ์‚ฌ์šฉ์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•œ ๊ฐ์—ผ๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จ๋˜๊ณ  ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์•ฝ๋ฌผ์— ๋ฐ˜์‘ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ์˜๋ฃŒ ๊ด€๋ จ ๊ฐ์—ผ์‹œ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ค‘์ด์—ผ(์ค‘์ด ๊ฐ์—ผ)์—์„œ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด์ „์— ๋ฅ˜๋งˆํ‹ฐ์Šค์„ฑ ์‹ฌ์žฅ ์งˆํ™˜์ด ์žˆ๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ์น˜๊ณผ ์น˜๋ฃŒ, ์งˆ ์ž๊ถ ์ ˆ์ œ์ˆ  ๋˜๋Š” ์ œ์™• ์ ˆ๊ฐœ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์˜ ์˜ˆ๋ฐฉ(์ฆ‰, ๊ฐ์—ผ ์˜ˆ๋ฐฉ). ๋˜ํ•œ ์กฐ๊ธฐ ๋ฐœ๋ณ‘ ์‹ ์ƒ์•„ ๊ฐ์—ผ์„ ์˜ˆ๋ฐฉํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๊ทธ๋ฃน B ์—ฐ์‡„์ƒ๊ตฌ๊ท ์˜ ๋ณด๊ท ์ž์ธ ์ž„์‚ฐ๋ถ€์—๊ฒŒ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐ๊ด€์ง€์—ผ, ์ธ๋‘์—ผ์„ ํฌํ•จํ•œ ํ˜ธํก๊ธฐ ๊ฐ์—ผ์‹œ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ •๋งฅ ๋‘์—ผ์‹œ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ํŒจํ˜ˆ์ฆ์‹œ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฐฑ์ผํ•ด, 2์ฐจ ๊ฐ์—ผ ์˜ˆ๋ฐฉ ๋ฐ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์‹œ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ์•”ํ”ผ์‹ค๋ฆฐ์€ ์ž„์งˆ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์—๋„ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ์ง€๊ธˆ์€ ํŽ˜๋‹ˆ์‹ค๋ฆฐ์— ๋‚ด์„ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ณ€์ข…์ด ๋„ˆ๋ฌด ๋งŽ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ•ํ…Œ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์•”ํ”ผ์‹ค๋ฆฐ์€ ๋งŽ์€ ๊ทธ๋žŒ ์–‘์„ฑ ๋ฐ ๊ทธ๋žŒ ์Œ์„ฑ ๋ฐ•ํ…Œ๋ฆฌ์•„์— ์˜ํ•œ ๊ฐ์—ผ์„ ์น˜๋ฃŒํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ Streptococcus pneumoniae, Streptococcus pyogenes, Staphylococcus aureus์˜ ์ผ๋ถ€ ๋ถ„๋ฆฌ์ฃผ(ํŽ˜๋‹ˆ์‹ค๋ฆฐ ๋‚ด์„ฑ ๋˜๋Š” ๋ฉ”ํ‹ฐ์‹ค๋ฆฐ ๋‚ด์„ฑ ๊ท ์ฃผ๋Š” ์•„๋‹˜), Trueperella ๋ฐ ์ผ๋ถ€ Enterococcus๋ฅผ ํฌํ•จํ•œ ๊ทธ๋žŒ ์–‘์„ฑ ๋ฐ•ํ…Œ๋ฆฌ์•„์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ํ™œ์„ฑ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง„ ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ "๊ด‘๋ฒ”์œ„ํ•œ ์ŠคํŽ™ํŠธ๋Ÿผ" ํŽ˜๋‹ˆ์‹ค๋ฆฐ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ ๋‹ค์ œ๋‚ด์„ฑ Enterococcus faecalis ๋ฐ E. faecium์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์ž‘์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๋ช‡ ์•ˆ ๋˜๋Š” ํ•ญ์ƒ์ œ ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜์ด๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋žŒ ์Œ์„ฑ ๋ฐ•ํ…Œ๋ฆฌ์•„์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ํ™œ์„ฑ์€ Neisseria meningitidis, ์ผ๋ถ€ Haemophilus influenzae ๋ฐ ์ผ๋ถ€ Enterobacteriaceae(๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์˜ Enterobacteriaceae ๋ฐ Pseudomonas๋Š” ๋‚ด์„ฑ์ด ์žˆ์Œ)๋ฅผ ํฌํ•จํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ™œ์„ฑ ์ŠคํŽ™ํŠธ๋Ÿผ์€ ๋ฐ•ํ…Œ๋ฆฌ์•„๊ฐ€ ์•”ํ”ผ์‹ค๋ฆฐ ๋ฐ ๊ด€๋ จ ํ•ญ์ƒ์ œ๋ฅผ ๋น„ํ™œ์„ฑํ™”ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ƒ์„ฑํ•˜๋Š” ํšจ์†Œ์ธ ๋ฒ ํƒ€ ๋ฝํƒ€๋งˆ์ œ๋ฅผ ์–ต์ œํ•˜๋Š” ์•ฝ๋ฌผ์ธ ์„ค๋ฐ•ํƒ์˜ ๋ณ‘์šฉ ํˆฌ์—ฌ์— ์˜ํ•ด ํ–ฅ์ƒ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋•Œ๋กœ๋Š” ๋ฐ˜์ฝ”๋งˆ์ด์‹ , ๋ฆฌ๋„ค์กธ๋ฆฌ๋“œ, ๋‹ตํ† ๋งˆ์ด์‹  ๋ฐ ํ‹ฐ๊ฒŒ์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ฆฐ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์ด ์ž‘์šฉ ๊ธฐ์ „์ด ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํ•ญ์ƒ์ œ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌ์šฉ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ์–‘์‹ ์•”ํ”ผ์‹ค๋ฆฐ์€ ๊ฒฝ๊ตฌ, ๊ทผ์œก ์ฃผ์‚ฌ(์ฃผ์‚ฌ) ๋˜๋Š” ์ •๋งฅ ์ฃผ์ž…์œผ๋กœ ํˆฌ์—ฌํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์บก์Š ๋˜๋Š” ๊ฒฝ๊ตฌ ํ˜„ํƒ์•ก์œผ๋กœ ์ œ๊ณต๋˜๋Š” ๊ฒฝ๊ตฌ ํ˜•ํƒœ๋Š” ์‹ฌ๊ฐํ•œ ๊ฐ์—ผ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๊ฐ€ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ผ IM ๋˜๋Š” IV ์ฃผ์‚ฌ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ํ›„์† ์กฐ์น˜๋กœ ์ œ๊ณต๋œ๋‹ค. IV ๋ฐ IM ์ฃผ์‚ฌ์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ, ์•”ํ”ผ์‹ค๋ฆฐ์€ ์žฌ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋˜์–ด์•ผ ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ถ„๋ง๋กœ ๋ณด๊ด€๋œ๋‹ค. ๋น ๋ฅธ IV ์ฃผ์‚ฌ๋Š” ๊ฒฝ๋ จ ๋ฐœ์ž‘์„ ์œ ๋ฐœํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฏ€๋กœ IV ์ฃผ์‚ฌ๋Š” ์ฒœ์ฒœํžˆ ํ•ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ถ€์ž‘์šฉ ๋…์„ฑ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋นˆ๋ฒˆํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์ผ์–ด๋‚˜๋Š” ๋…์„ฑ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ์•ฝ๋ฌผ์˜ ์ถ•์ ์— ์˜ํ•œ ์‹ ๋ถ€์ „์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ตฌํ†  ์ฆ์„ธ๋ฅผ ๋™๋ฐ˜ํ•˜๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ๋™๋ฐ˜ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ์˜ค์‹ฌ, ์ƒ๋ณต๋ถ€ ๋ถˆ์พŒ๊ฐ, ๊ฒฝ์ฆ์—์„œ ์ค‘์ฆ ์„ค์‚ฌ, ๊ตฌ๋‚ด์—ผ ๋˜๋Š” ๊ตฌ๋‚ด ๊ฑด์กฐ, ์„คํ†ต ๋˜๋Š” ํ‘๋ชจ์„ค ๊ฐ™์€ ์ฆ์ƒ์„ ์ผ์œผํ‚ฌ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋‘๋“œ๋Ÿฌ๊ธฐ, ์ž์ƒ‰ํ”ผ๋ถ€๋ณ‘๋ณ€, ๊ตญ์†Œ ๋ถ€์ข…, ์‹ฌํ•œ ์‡ ์•ฝ, ์–ด์ง€๋Ÿผ์ฆ, ์˜ค์‹ฌ, ๊ตฌํ† , ์„ค์‚ฌ, ๋ณต๋ถ€ ํ†ต์ฆ, ์‹ฌํ•œ ์ฒœ์‹์„ ๋™๋ฐ˜ํ•œ ๊ธฐ๊ด€์ง€์ˆ˜์ถ•, ํ‰ํ†ต, ์ค‘์ฆ ๊ณ ํ˜ˆ์••, ์ฒญ์ƒ‰์ฆ, ์ˆœํ™˜ ํ—ˆํƒˆ, ํ๋ถ€์ข…, ๊ฒฝ๋ จ, ํ˜ธํก ๋ถ€์ „์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•œ ์‚ฌ๋ง ๋“ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ถ€์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ์ž…์ˆ , ํ˜€, ์–ผ๊ตด, ์•ˆ์™€๊ณจ ์กฐ์ง์˜ ํ˜„์ €ํ•œ ๋ถ€๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋™๋ฐ˜ํ•œ ํ˜ˆ๊ด€ ๋ถ€์ข…, ์ฒœ์‹์„ฑ ํ˜ธํก, ํฐ ๋‘๋“œ๋Ÿฌ๊ธฐ ๋“ฑ์ด ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋‚ด์„ฑ ์•”ํ”ผ์‹ค๋ฆฐ์„ ํฌํ•จํ•œ ๋ชจ๋“  ๋ฒ ํƒ€๋ฝํƒ(ฮฒ-lactam) ํ•ญ์ƒ์ œ๋Š” ๊ตฌ์กฐ์ƒ ๋ฒ ํƒ€๋ฝํƒ(ฮฒ-lactam) ๊ณ ๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฒ ํƒ€๋ฝํƒ ํ•ญ์ƒ์ œ์˜ ํšจ๊ณผ๋Š” ๋ถ„ํ•ด๋˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ํŽ˜๋‹ˆ์‹ค๋ฆฐ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ(penicillin binding protein, PBP)์— ๋„๋‹ฌํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ๊ณผ ๊ทธ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ๊ณผ ๊ฐ•ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉํ•˜๋Š” ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์— ๋‹ฌ๋ ค ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ, ๋ฒ ํƒ€๋ฝํƒ ํ•ญ์ƒ์ œ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋‚ด์„ฑ์€ ํฌ๊ฒŒ ๋‘ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ์ด์œ ๋กœ ๋ฐœ์ƒํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ•ํ…Œ๋ฆฌ์•„๊ฐ€ ๋ฒ ํƒ€๋ฝํƒ€๋ฉ”์ด์Šค(ฮฒ-lactamase) ํšจ์†Œ๋ฅผ ์ƒ์„ฑํ•˜๋ฉด ํ•ญ์ƒ์ œ์˜ ๋ฒ ํƒ€๋ฝํƒ ๊ณ ๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€์ˆ˜๋ถ„ํ•ด๋˜์–ด ํ•ญ์ƒ์ œ ํšจ๊ณผ๊ฐ€ ์‚ฌ๋ผ์ง„๋‹ค. ๋ฐ•ํ…Œ๋ฆฌ์•„๊ฐ€ ๋ฒ ํƒ€๋ฝํƒ€๋ฉ”์ด์Šค ํšจ์†Œ๋ฅผ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์œ ์ „์ž๋ฅผ ์ž์ฒด์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋˜๋Š” ๋ฒ ํƒ€๋ฝํƒ€๋ฉ”์ด์Šค(ฮฒ-lactamase) ํšจ์†Œ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ํ”Œ๋ผ์Šค๋ฏธ๋“œ(plasmid) DNA๋ฅผ ์™ธ๋ถ€๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ „๋‹ฌ๋ฐ›์•„ ๋‚ด์„ฑ์„ ํš๋“ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ถ€ ๋ฐ•ํ…Œ๋ฆฌ์•„๋Š” ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ๊ตฌ์กฐ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง„ ํŽ˜๋‹ˆ์‹ค๋ฆฐ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์„ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ฒ ํƒ€๋ฝํƒ ํ•ญ์ƒ์ œ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋‚ด์„ฑ์„ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ธ๋‹ค. ๋ฒ ํƒ€๋ฝํƒ ํ•ญ์ƒ์ œ๋Š” ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๋ณ€ํ™”๋œ ํŽ˜๋‹ˆ์‹ค๋ฆฐ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์— ํšจ๊ณผ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฒ ํƒ€๋ฝํƒ์€ ๋ฐ•ํ…Œ๋ฆฌ์•„์˜ ์„ธํฌ๋ฒฝ ํ•ฉ์„ฑ์„ ๋ฐฉํ•ดํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ ํšจ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๋ฐœํœ˜ํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๋ฐฉ์‹์˜ ํ•ญ์ƒ์ œ ๋‚ด์„ฑ์˜ ์ฃผ๋ชฉํ• ๋งŒํ•œ ์˜ˆ๋กœ ๋ฉ”ํ‹ฐ์‹ค๋ฆฐ ๋‚ด์„ฑ ํ™ฉ์ƒ‰ ํฌ๋„์ƒ๊ตฌ๊ท  (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, MRSA)๊ณผ ํŽ˜๋‹ˆ์‹ค๋ฆฐ ๋‚ด์„ฑ ํŽ˜๋ ด๊ตฌ๊ท  (penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae, PRSA)๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ƒํ˜ธ์ž‘์šฉ ์•”ํ”ผ์‹ค๋ฆฐ์€ ํ”„๋กœ๋ฒ ๋„ค์‹œ๋“œ ๋ฐ ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ์™€ ๋ฐ˜์‘ํ•˜์—ฌ ์‹ ์žฅ ๋ฐฐ์„ค์„ ๊ฐ์†Œ์‹œํ‚จ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค๋Ÿ‰์˜ ์•”ํ”ผ์‹ค๋ฆฐ์€ ํ˜ˆ์†ŒํŒ ์‘์ง‘์„ ์–ต์ œํ•จ์œผ๋กœ์จ ์™€ํŒŒ๋ฆฐ ๋ฐ ๊ธฐํƒ€ ๊ฒฝ๊ตฌ ํ•ญ์‘๊ณ ์ œ๋ฅผ ๋™์‹œ์— ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ์ถœํ˜ˆ ์œ„ํ—˜์„ ์ฆ๊ฐ€์‹œํ‚ฌ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์•”ํ”ผ์‹ค๋ฆฐ์€ ๊ฒฝ๊ตฌ ํ”ผ์ž„์•ฝ์˜ ํšจ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๋–จ์–ด๋œจ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์•Œ๋ ค์ ธ ์žˆ์ง€๋งŒ ์ด๋Š” ๋…ผ๋ž€์˜ ์—ฌ์ง€๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํด๋กœ๋žŒํŽ˜๋‹ˆ์ฝœ, ์—๋ฆฌํŠธ๋กœ๋งˆ์ด์‹ , ์„ธํŒ”๋กœ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฐ, ํ…ŒํŠธ๋ผ์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ฆฐ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํ•ญ์ƒ์ œ์— ์˜ํ•ด ํšจ๊ณผ๊ฐ€ ๋–จ์–ด์งˆ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด, ํ…ŒํŠธ๋ผ์‚ฌ์ดํด๋ฆฐ์€ ๋ฐ•ํ…Œ๋ฆฌ์•„์—์„œ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ ํ•ฉ์„ฑ์„ ์–ต์ œํ•˜์—ฌ ์•”ํ”ผ์‹ค๋ฆฐ์ด ์ž‘์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ํ‘œ์ ์„ ๊ฐ์†Œ์‹œํ‚จ๋‹ค. ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ๊ธ€๋ฆฌ์ฝ”์‚ฌ์ด๋“œ์™€ ๋™์‹œ์— ํˆฌ์—ฌํ•˜๋ฉด ๊ฒฐํ•ฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๋น„ํ™œ์„ฑํ™”ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ณ„๋„๋กœ ํˆฌ์—ฌํ•˜๋ฉด ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ๊ธ€๋ฆฌ์ฝ”์‚ฌ์ด๋“œ์™€ ์•”ํ”ผ์‹ค๋ฆฐ์ด ๋Œ€์‹  ์„œ๋กœ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ•ํ™”ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์•”ํ”ผ์‹ค๋ฆฐ์€ ์•Œ๋กœํ‘ธ๋ฆฌ๋†€๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์ œ๊ณต๋  ๋•Œ ๋” ์ž์ฃผ ํ”ผ๋ถ€ ๋ฐœ์ง„์„ ์œ ๋ฐœํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ฝœ๋ ˆ๋ผ ์ƒ๋ฐฑ์‹ ๊ณผ ์žฅํ‹ฐํ‘ธ์Šค ์ƒ๋ฐฑ์‹  ๋ชจ๋‘ ์•”ํ”ผ์‹ค๋ฆฐ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ํˆฌ์—ฌํ•˜๋ฉด ํšจ๊ณผ๊ฐ€ ์—†์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์•”ํ”ผ์‹ค๋ฆฐ์€ ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ฝœ๋ ˆ๋ผ์™€ ์žฅํ‹ฐํ‘ธ์Šค๋ฅผ ์น˜๋ฃŒํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜์–ด ์‹ ์ฒด๊ฐ€ ์ƒ์Šนํ•ด์•ผ ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฉด์—ญ ๋ฐ˜์‘์„ ๋‚ฎ์ถ˜๋‹ค. ์‚ฌํšŒ์  ํŠน์„ฑ ์—ญ์‚ฌ ์•”ํ”ผ์‹ค๋ฆฐ์€ 1958๋…„ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 1961๋…„ ์ƒ์šฉํ™”๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜๋ฃŒ์ œ๋„์— ํ•„์ˆ˜์ ์ธ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ํšจ๊ณผ์ ์ด๊ณ  ์•ˆ์ „ํ•œ ์˜์•ฝํ’ˆ ๋ชฉ๋ก์ธ WHO ํ•„์ˆ˜ ์˜์•ฝํ’ˆ ๋ชฉ๋ก์— ๋“ฑ์žฌ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ€๊ฒฉ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ๋„์ƒ๊ตญ์—์„œ์˜ ๋„๋งค๊ฐ€๋Š” 2014๋…„ ์ •๋งฅ์ฃผ์‚ฌ์šฉ์•ก ์œ ๋ฆฌ๋ณ‘ ๊ธฐ์ค€์œผ๋กœ US$0.13์—์„œ 1.20 ์‚ฌ์ด์ด๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์—์„œ๋Š” ์ œ๋„ค๋ฆญ ์˜์•ฝํ’ˆ์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ๋งคํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 10์ผ์น˜ ์น˜๋ฃŒ ๋น„์šฉ์€ ๋Œ€๋žต 13 ๋‹ฌ๋Ÿฌ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ์•„๋ชฉ์‹œ์‹ค๋ฆฐ ํŽ˜๋‹ˆ์‹ค๋ฆฐ ํ•ญ์ƒ์ œ ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ Ampicillin bound to proteins in the PDB ํŽ˜๋‹ˆ์‹ค๋ฆฐ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋ณด๊ฑด ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ํ•„์ˆ˜ ์˜์•ฝํ’ˆ RTT ํŽ˜๋‹ ํ™”ํ•ฉ๋ฌผ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ampicillin
Ampicillin
Ampicillin is an antibiotic belonging to the aminopenicillin class of the penicillin family. The drug is used to prevent and treat a number of bacterial infections, such as respiratory tract infections, urinary tract infections, meningitis, salmonellosis, and endocarditis. It may also be used to prevent group B streptococcal infection in newborns. It is used by mouth, by injection into a muscle, or intravenously. Common side effects include rash, nausea, and diarrhea. It should not be used in people who are allergic to penicillin. Serious side effects may include Clostridium difficile colitis or anaphylaxis. While usable in those with kidney problems, the dose may need to be decreased. Its use during pregnancy and breastfeeding appears to be generally safe. Ampicillin was discovered in 1958 and came into commercial use in 1961. It is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines. The World Health Organization classifies ampicillin as critically important for human medicine. It is available as a generic medication. Medical uses Diseases Bacterial meningitis; an aminoglycoside can be added to increase efficacy against gram-negative meningitis bacteria Endocarditis by enterococcal strains (off-label use); often given with an aminoglycoside Gastrointestinal infections caused by contaminated water or food (for example, by Salmonella) Genito-urinary tract infections Healthcare-associated infections that are related to infections from using urinary catheters and that are unresponsive to other medications Otitis media (middle ear infection) Prophylaxis (i.e. to prevent infection) in those who previously had rheumatic heart disease or are undergoing dental procedures, vaginal hysterectomies, or C-sections. It is also used in pregnant woman who are carriers of group B streptococci to prevent early-onset neonatal infections. Respiratory infections, including bronchitis, pharyngitis Sinusitis Sepsis Whooping cough, to prevent and treat secondary infections Ampicillin used to also be used to treat gonorrhea, but there are now too many strains resistant to penicillins. Bacteria Ampicillin is used to treat infections by many gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria. It was the first "broad spectrum" penicillin with activity against gram-positive bacteria, including Streptococcus pneumoniae, Streptococcus pyogenes, some isolates of Staphylococcus aureus (but not penicillin-resistant or methicillin-resistant strains), Trueperella, and some Enterococcus. It is one of the few antibiotics that works against multidrug resistant Enterococcus faecalis and E. faecium. Activity against gram-negative bacteria includes Neisseria meningitidis, some Haemophilus influenzae, and some of the Enterobacteriaceae (though most Enterobacteriaceae and Pseudomonas are resistant). Its spectrum of activity is enhanced by co-administration of sulbactam, a drug that inhibits beta lactamase, an enzyme produced by bacteria to inactivate ampicillin and related antibiotics. It is sometimes used in combination with other antibiotics that have different mechanisms of action, like vancomycin, linezolid, daptomycin, and tigecycline. Available forms Ampicillin can be administered by mouth, an intramuscular injection (shot) or by intravenous infusion. The oral form, available as capsules or oral suspensions, is not given as an initial treatment for severe infections, but rather as a follow-up to an IM or IV injection. For IV and IM injections, ampicillin is kept as a powder that must be reconstituted. IV injections must be given slowly, as rapid IV injections can lead to convulsive seizures. Specific populations Ampicillin is one of the most used drugs in pregnancy, and has been found to be generally harmless both by the Food and Drug Administration in the U.S. (which classified it as category B) and the Therapeutic Goods Administration in Australia (which classified it as category A). It is the drug of choice for treating Listeria monocytogenes in pregnant women, either alone or combined with an aminoglycoside. Pregnancy increases the clearance of ampicillin by up to 50%, and a higher dose is thus needed to reach therapeutic levels. Ampicillin crosses the placenta and remains in the amniotic fluid at 50โ€“100% of the concentration in maternal plasma; this can lead to high concentrations of ampicillin in the newborn. While lactating mothers secrete some ampicillin into their breast milk, the amount is minimal. In newborns, ampicillin has a longer half-life and lower plasma protein binding. The clearance by the kidneys is lower, as kidney function has not fully developed. Contraindications Ampicillin is contraindicated in those with a hypersensitivity to penicillins, as they can cause fatal anaphylactic reactions. Hypersensitivity reactions can include frequent skin rashes and hives, exfoliative dermatitis, erythema multiforme, and a temporary decrease in both red and white blood cells. Ampicillin is not recommended in people with concurrent mononucleosis, as over 40% of patients develop a skin rash. Side effects Ampicillin is comparatively less toxic than other antibiotics, and side effects are more likely in those who are sensitive to penicillins and those with a history of asthma or allergies. In very rare cases, it causes severe side effects such as angioedema, anaphylaxis, and C. difficile infection (that can range from mild diarrhea to serious pseudomembranous colitis). Some develop black "furry" tongue. Serious adverse effects also include seizures and serum sickness. The most common side effects, experienced by about 10% of users are diarrhea and rash. Less common side effects can be nausea, vomiting, itching, and blood dyscrasias. The gastrointestinal effects, such as hairy tongue, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and colitis, are more common with the oral form of penicillin. Other conditions may develop up several weeks after treatment. Overdose Ampicillin overdose can cause behavioral changes, confusion, blackouts, and convulsions, as well as neuromuscular hypersensitivity, electrolyte imbalance, and kidney failure. Interactions Ampicillin reacts with probenecid and methotrexate to decrease renal excretion. Large doses of ampicillin can increase the risk of bleeding with concurrent use of warfarin and other oral anticoagulants, possibly by inhibiting platelet aggregation. Ampicillin has been said to make oral contraceptives less effective, but this has been disputed. It can be made less effective by other antibiotic, such as chloramphenicol, erythromycin, cephalosporins, and tetracyclines. For example, tetracyclines inhibit protein synthesis in bacteria, reducing the target against which ampicillin acts. If given at the same time as aminoglycosides, it can bind to it and inactivate it. When administered separately, aminoglycosides and ampicillin can potentiate each other instead. Ampicillin causes skin rashes more often when given with allopurinol. Both the live cholera vaccine and live typhoid vaccine can be made ineffective if given with ampicillin. Ampicillin is normally used to treat cholera and typhoid fever, lowering the immunological response that the body has to mount. Pharmacology Mechanism of action Ampicillin is in the penicillin group of beta-lactam antibiotics and is part of the aminopenicillin family. It is roughly equivalent to amoxicillin in terms of activity. Ampicillin is able to penetrate gram-positive and some gram-negative bacteria. It differs from penicillin G, or benzylpenicillin, only by the presence of an amino group. This amino group, present on both ampicillin and amoxicillin, helps these antibiotics pass through the pores of the outer membrane of gram-negative bacteria, such as E. coli, Proteus mirabilis, Salmonella enterica, and Shigella. Ampicillin acts as an irreversible inhibitor of the enzyme transpeptidase, which is needed by bacteria to make the cell wall. It inhibits the third and final stage of bacterial cell wall synthesis in binary fission, which ultimately leads to cell lysis; therefore, ampicillin is usually bacteriolytic. Pharmacokinetics Ampicillin is well-absorbed from the GI tract (though food reduces its absorption), and reaches peak concentrations in one to two hours. The bioavailability is around 62% for parenteral routes. Unlike other penicillins, which usually bind 60โ€“90% to plasma proteins, ampicillin binds to only 15โ€“20%. Ampicillin is distributed through most tissues, though it is concentrated in the liver and kidneys. It can also be found in the cerebrospinal fluid when the meninges become inflamed (such as, for example, meningitis). Some ampicillin is metabolized by hydrolyzing the beta-lactam ring to penicilloic acid, though most of it is excreted unchanged. In the kidneys, it is filtered out mostly by tubular secretion; some also undergoes glomerular filtration, and the rest is excreted in the feces and bile. Hetacillin and pivampicillin are ampicillin esters that have been developed to increase bioavailability. History Ampicillin has been used extensively to treat bacterial infections since 1961. Until the introduction of ampicillin by the British company Beecham, penicillin therapies had only been effective against gram-positive organisms such as staphylococci and streptococci. Ampicillin (originally branded as "Penbritin") also demonstrated activity against gram-negative organisms such as H. influenzae, coliforms, and Proteus spp. Cost Ampicillin is relatively inexpensive. In the United States, it is available as a generic medication. Veterinary use In veterinary medicine, ampicillin is used in cats, dogs, and farm animals to treat: Anal gland infections Cutaneous infections, such as abscesses, cellulitis, and pustular dermatitis E. coli and Salmonella infections in cattle, sheep, and goats (oral form). Ampicillin use for this purpose had declined as bacterial resistance has increased. Mastitis in sows Mixed aerobicโ€“anaerobic infections, such as from cat bites Multidrug-resistant Enterococcus faecalis and E. faecium Prophylactic use in poultry against Salmonella and sepsis from E. coli or Staphylococcus aureus Respiratory tract infections, including tonsilitis, bovine respiratory disease, shipping fever, bronchopneumonia, and calf and bovine pneumonia Urinary tract infections in dogs Horses are generally not treated with oral ampicillin, as they have low bioavailability of beta-lactams. The half-life in animals is around that same of that in humans (just over an hour). Oral absorption is less than 50% in cats and dogs, and less than 4% in horses. See also Amoxycillin (p-hydroxy metabolite of ampicillin) Azlocillin and pirbenicillin (urea and amide made from ampicillin) Pivampicillin (special pro-drug of ampicillin) References External links Enantiopure drugs Penicillins Phenyl compounds World Health Organization essential medicines Wikipedia medicine articles ready to translate
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์ธ๋„์˜ ๊ฒฝ์ œ
์ธ๋„์˜ ๊ฒฝ์ œ๋Š” ์‚ฌํšŒ์ฃผ์˜ ๊ฒฝ์ œ์ฒด์ œ์—์„œ ๊ฐœํ˜๊ฐœ๋ฐฉ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณ€ํ™”ํ•œ ์‹œ์žฅ๊ฒฝ์ œ์ฒด์žฌ์ด๋‹ค. ์„œ๊ธฐ 1๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ฑฐ์˜ 1700๋…„ ๋™์•ˆ ์ธ๋„๋Š” ์˜๊ตญ์˜ ์ง€๋ฐฐ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›๊ธฐ ์ „๊นŒ์ง€ ์„ธ๊ณ„ GDP์˜ 35% ~ 40%๋ฅผ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ•˜๋˜ ๋ถ€๊ตญ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜๊ตญ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋…๋ฆฝํ•œ ์ดํ›„ ์ง‘๊ถŒํ•œ ์ž์™€ํ• ๋ž„ ๋„ค๋ฃจ๋Š” ์ƒ๊ณต์—… ์‚ฌํšŒ๋ฅผ ์ง€ํ–ฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ๊ทธ๋Š” ์ƒ๊ณต์—…์ž๋“ค์„ ๋ถˆ์‹ ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์‚ฌ์  ์ด์œค๋งŒ์„ ์ถ”๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ์ƒ๊ณต์—…์ž๋“ค์ด ์ •๋ถ€์˜ ์—„๊ฒฉํ•œ ํ†ต์ œ์™€ ๊ด€๋ฆฌ ์•„๋ž˜ ์žˆ์–ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ƒ๊ฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ž˜์„œ ์ค‘๊ณต์—…์„ ๋น„๋กฏํ•œ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„์‚ฐ์—…์„ ๋ชจ๋‘ ๊ตญ์˜ํ™”ํ–ˆ๊ณ  ๊ธฐ์—…์„ค๋ฆฝ๊ณผ ํ™•์žฅ ๋“ฑ์„ ์ •๋ถ€์˜ ์ฒ ์ €ํ•œ ๊ฒ€ํ† ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์•„์•ผ ํ•˜๋Š” ํ—ˆ๊ฐ€์ œ๋ฅผ ๋„์ž…ํ•˜๋Š” ๋“ฑ ์‚ฌํšŒ์ฃผ์˜ํ˜• ํ†ต์ œ๊ฒฝ์ œ ๋ชจํ˜•์„ ์ถ”๊ตฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์„ฑ์žฅ ์ž ์žฌ๋ ฅ์ด ์–ต์ œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ƒ๊ฐ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ธ๋„์˜ ๊ฒฝ์ œ๋Š” 1960๋…„๋Œ€ ์ค‘๋ฐ˜์— ์œ„๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋งž์•„ 15๋…„๊ฐ„ ๋ถ€์ง„ํ•œ ์„ฑ์žฅ์„ ๋ณด์—ฌ์™”๋‹ค. 1970๋…„๋Œ€ ํ›„๋ฐ˜์—๋Š” ์ œ2์ฐจ ์˜ค์ผ์‡ผํฌ๋กœ ์œ„๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๊ฒฝํ—˜ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 1990๋…„๋Œ€ ์ดˆ๋ฐ˜์— ์™ธํ™˜์œ„๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋งž์•˜๋‹ค. 1991๋…„ ์™ธํ™˜์œ„๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๊ทน๋ณตํ•œ ์ดํ›„ 1992๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2002๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ์—ฐํ‰๊ท  5.8%์˜ ๋†’์€ GDP์„ฑ์žฅ๋ฅ ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 2005๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2007๋…„๊นŒ์ง€๋Š” 9%์˜ ์„ฑ์žฅ๋ฅ ์„ ๋ณด์ด๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๋„๋Š” ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ๋„์ƒ๊ตญ๊ณผ๋Š” ๋‹ฌ๋ฆฌ ์ œ์กฐ์—…์ด ์•„๋‹Œ IT์™€ ์„œ๋น„์Šค์—… ์ค‘์‹ฌ์œผ๋กœ ์„ฑ์žฅํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ด๋Š” ๊ตญ์ œ ์‹œ์žฅ์—์„œ์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ๋ ฅ ์ฆ๊ฐ€์™€ ์ธ๋„ ์‹œ์žฅ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ด€์‹ฌ์„ ๋„๋ชจํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์—ญ์‚ฌ ํ˜„๋Œ€ 1951๋…„ ~ 1979๋…„, ๋„ค๋ฃจ์‹ ์‚ฌํšŒ์ฃผ์˜ ์ด ์‹œ๊ธฐ๋Š” ๋„ค๋ฃจ์˜ ์‚ฌํšŒ์ฃผ์˜๋ฅผ ์‹œํ—˜ํ•˜๋Š” 30๋…„ ๋™์•ˆ์˜ ์‹œ๊ธฐ์˜€๋‹ค. ์‹๋ฏผ์ง€ ์ง€๋ฐฐ๋กœ ์ธํ•˜์—ฌ ์™œ๊ณก๋œ ๊ฒฝ์ œ๊ตฌ์กฐ์™€ ์‹œ์žฅ์‹คํŒจ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ”๋กœ์žก๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์˜ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„์‚ฐ์—…์„ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๊ฐ€ ๊ด€์žฅํ•˜๊ณ  ์ˆ˜์ž…๋Œ€์ฒด์ •์ฑ…์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„์‚ฐ์—…์„ ์œก์„ฑํ•˜๊ณ  ๊ฒฝ์ œ์  ์ž๋ฆฝ์„ ์ด๋ฃจ๊ณ ์ž ํ–ˆ๋˜ ์‹œ๊ธฐ์ด๋‹ค. ์ด ์‹œ๊ธฐ๋Š” ๋‚ฎ์€ ์„ฑ์žฅ๋ฅ ์„ ๋ณด์ธ ์ €์„ฑ์žฅ ์‹œ๋Œ€์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด ์‹œ๊ธฐ๋Š” ์ œ 1์ฐจ ๊ฒฝ์ œ๊ณ„ํš์ด ์‹œ์ž‘๋œ 1951๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ œ 3์ฐจ ๊ฒฝ์ œ๊ณ„ํš์ด ์™„๋ฃŒ๋œ 1965๋…„๊นŒ์ง€์˜ 15๋…„๊ฐ„์œผ๋กœ ์ธ๋„์‚ฐ์—… ๋ฐœ์ „์˜ ๊ธฐ๋ฐ˜์„ ํ˜•์„ฑํ•œ ์‹œ๊ธฐ๋ผ๊ณ  ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์‹œ๊ธฐ๋Š” ๋‚ฎ์€ ์„ฑ์žฅ๋ฅ ์„ ๋ณด์ธ ์‹œ๋Œ€์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ๊ฒฝ์ œ๊ณ„ํš๊ณผ ์‚ฌํšŒ์•ˆ์ •์„ ์ด๋ฃจ๊ณ ์ž ๋…ธ๋ ฅํ•œ ์‹œ๊ธฐ์˜€๋‹ค. ๋†์—…๋ฐœ์ „์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ๊ด€๊ฐœ์ˆ˜๋กœ์˜ ํ™•์žฅ, ์ค‘ํ™”ํ•™๊ณต์—… ์œก์„ฑ ๋“ฑ ์ธํ”„๋ผ์™€ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„ ์‚ฐ์—… ์œก์„ฑ์€ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€ ์ฃผ๋„๋กœ ์ด๋ค„์กŒ๋‹ค. ์ •๋ถ€์˜ ํˆฌ์ž๋Š” ์ „๊ธฐ, ๊ฐ€์Šค, ์ˆ˜๋„ ๋ฐ ์šด์†ก์—… ๋“ฑ ์ธํ”„๋ผ์— ์ง‘์ค‘๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์ด ์‹œ๊ธฐ์— ๋„์ž…๋œ ์ˆ˜์ž…๋Œ€์ฒด์ •์ฑ…์€ ์ดํ›„ ์ธ๋„์˜ ์™ธํ™˜๋ถ€์กฑ๊ณผ ์ธ๋„ ๊ฒฝ์ œ์˜ ๋ฐœ์ „์„ ์ €ํ•ดํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ˆ˜์ž…๋Œ€์ฒด์ •์ฑ…์€ ์™ธํ™˜๋ถ€์กฑ์„ ๊ฐ€์ ธ์™”๊ณ  ์™ธํ™”์˜ ๋ถ€์กฑ์€ ์™ธํ™˜ ๊ด€๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ˆ˜์ถœ์ž…์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ทœ์ œ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ•ํ™”ํ–ˆ๊ณ  ์ด๋Š” ๋‹ค์‹œ ์™ธํ™”๋ถ€์กฑ์œผ๋กœ ์—ฐ๊ฒฐ๋˜๋Š” ์•…์ˆœํ™˜์„ ๊ฐ€์ ธ์™€ ์™ธํ™˜์œ„๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๊ฒช๊ฒŒ๋˜๋Š” ์•…์ˆœํ™˜์„ ๊ฐ€์ ธ์™”๋‹ค. 1966๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 1979๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ์ˆ˜์ž…๋Œ€์ฒด์ •์ฑ…๊ณผ ๊ตญ์œ ํ™” ์ •์ฑ…์ด ๋”์šฑ ๊ฐ•๋ ฅํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์‹œํ–‰๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ  ์ด์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ๊ฒฝ์ œ ํ™œ๋™๊ณผ ์„ฑ์žฅ๋ฅ ์ด ํฌ๊ฒŒ ์œ„์ถ•๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1965๋…„๊ณผ 1966๋…„์—๋Š” ๊ทน์‹ฌํ•œ ๊ฐ€๋ญ„์„ ๊ฒช์—ˆ๊ณ  ์ธ๋„์™€ ํŒŒํ‚ค์Šคํƒ„ ๊ฐ„์˜ ์ „์Ÿ์ด ๋ฐœ๋ฐœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1969๋…„์—๋Š” ๊ณผ์ ๋ฐฉ์ง€๋ฒ•, 1973๋…„์—๋Š” ์™ธ๊ตญํ™˜๊ด€๋ฆฌ๋ฒ•์ด ๋„์ž…๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋งŽ์€ ์€ํ–‰๊ณผ ๋ณดํ—˜์‚ฌ๋“ค์ด ๊ตญ์œ ํ™”๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ  ์‚ฐ์—…ํ—ˆ๊ฐ€์ œ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ•ํ™”๋˜์–ด ๋ฏผ๊ฐ„์˜ ํˆฌ์ž๊ฐ€ ์œ„์ถ•๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ˆ˜์ถœ์ž…์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ทœ์ œ์˜ ์ฆ๊ฐ€๋กœ ๋Œ€์™ธ ๊ฑฐ๋ž˜๋„ ๊ฐ์†Œํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ˆ˜์ž…์ œํ•œ ์ •์ฑ…์œผ๋กœ ์ œ์กฐ์—…์„ ๋น„๋กฏํ•œ 2์ฐจ ์‚ฐ์—…์ด ์œ„์ถ•๋˜์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ์ˆ˜์ž…์ œํ•œ์œผ๋กœ ์ž๋ณธ์žฌ ์ˆ˜์ž…์ด ๋ถ€์ง„ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์–ด์„œ์ด๋‹ค. 1980๋…„ ~ 1990๋…„, ๊ฐœํ˜๊ฐœ๋ฐฉ๊ณผ ๊ฒฝ์ œ์œ„๊ธฐ ์ œ์กฐ์—… ์ƒ์‚ฐ์„ฑ ์ €ํ•˜์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ด ์‹œ๊ธฐ์˜ ์ž๊ฐ์€ 1980๋…„๋Œ€ ์ดˆ ๊ทœ์ œ ์™„ํ™”์™€ ๋Œ€์™ธ๊ฐœ๋ฐฉ์—๋กœ์˜ ๊ฒฝ์ œ์ •์ฑ… ๋ฐฉํ–ฅ ์„ ํšŒ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ ธ์™”๋‹ค. ์ž์œ ์ฃผ์˜ ์‹œ์žฅ๊ฒฝ์ œ๋กœ ์ „ํ™˜ํ•œ ๊ฒฝ์ œ์ •์ฑ…์ด ๋ฏธ์น˜๋Š” ์ธ๋„ ๊ฒฝ์ œ์—์˜ ํŒŒ๊ธ‰๋ ฅ์€ ์ปธ๋‹ค. ์ด ์‹œ๊ธฐ์˜ ํŠน์ง•์€ ์ž๋ณธ์žฌ ์ˆ˜์ž…๊ด€๋ จ ๊ทœ์ œ๊ฐ€ ํฌ๊ฒŒ ์™„ํ™”๋˜๋ฉด์„œ ๊ธฐ๊ณ„์žฅ๋น„์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ํˆฌ์ž์™€ ๋ฏผ๊ฐ„ํˆฌ์ž๊ฐ€ ํฌ๊ฒŒ ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ƒ์‚ฐ์„ฑ์ด ํ–ฅ์ƒ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋Œ€์™ธ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ตญ์ œ ์œ ๊ฐ€๊ฐ€ ์•ˆ์ •๋จ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์ธ๋„ ๋‚ด ๋ฌผ๊ฐ€๊ฐ€ ์•ˆ์ •๋˜์–ด ๋ฏผ๊ฐ„ ์†Œ๋น„๊ฐ€ ์ฆ๋Œ€๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ํ’์ž‘์œผ๋กœ ๋†์ˆ˜์‚ฐ๋ฌผ ๋ถ€๋ฌธ์˜ ๋†’์€ ์„ฑ์žฅ๋ฅ ์ด ๊ฒฝ์ œ ์„ฑ์žฅ์— ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ•˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ด ์‹œ๊ธฐ์˜ ๊ณผ๋„ํ•œ ์žฌ์ • ์ง€์ถœ ๋ฐ ๋ถ€์ฑ„ ๋ˆ„์ ๊ณผ ๊ฒฝ์ƒ์ˆ˜์ง€ ์ ์ž์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅธ ์™ธํ™˜๋ณด์œ ๊ณ  ๊ฐ์†Œ ๋“ฑ ๋‚ด๋ถ€์ ์ธ ์œ„๊ธฐ ์š”์ธ๋“ค์€ 1991๋…„ ์ธ๋„ ์™ธํ™˜์œ„๊ธฐ๋ผ๋Š” ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ ธ์™”๋‹ค. 1991๋…„ ~ 2003๋…„, ์™ธํ™˜์œ„๊ธฐ์˜ ๊ทน๋ณต ์ธ๋„๋Š” ์™ธํ™˜์œ„๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๊ทน๋ณตํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๊ฒฝ์ œ ์ „๋ฐ˜์— ๊ฑธ์ณ ์ ๊ทน์ ์ธ ๊ฐœํ˜๊ณผ ๊ฐœ๋ฐฉ ์ •์ฑ…์„ ์ถ”์ง„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๋„ ๊ฒฝ์ œ์˜ ๊ตฌ์กฐ์  ๋ณ€ํ™”๋Š” ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์ธ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ๋„์ƒ๊ตญ๋“ค๊ณผ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์–‘์ƒ์„ ๋„์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋†์ˆ˜์‚ฐ์—…์—์„œ ๊ด‘์—…, ๊ณต์—…์œผ๋กœ ์ด์ „๋œ ๋’ค, ์„œ๋น„์Šค์—… ์ค‘์‹ฌ ์‚ฌํšŒ๋กœ ์ด๋™ํ•˜๋Š” ์ˆ˜์ˆœ์„ ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋Š” ๊ฒƒ๊ณผ ๋‹ฌ๋ฆฌ IT๊ด€๋ จ ๋ถ€๋ฌธ์ด 18.4%๋ผ๋Š” ๋†’์€ ์„ฑ์žฅ๋ฅ ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜์˜€๊ณ  ๊ธˆ์œต์‚ฐ์—…๋„ 10%์˜ ์„ฑ์žฅ์„ธ๋ฅผ ์ด์–ด๊ฐ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์„œ๋น„์Šค์—… ์„ฑ์žฅ๋ฅ ์ด 7.1%๋กœ ๋†’์•„์ ธ ๊ฒฝ์ œ์„ฑ์žฅ์„ ์ฃผ๋„ํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ œ์กฐ์—…๋„ 6%๋Œ€์˜ ์„ฑ์žฅ์„ธ๋ฅผ ๋ณด์˜€๋‹ค. ์ธ๋„์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ๋†์—…์ค‘์‹ฌ ์‚ฌํšŒ์—์„œ ๊ด‘์—…, ๊ณต์—…์œผ๋กœ ์ด์ „ํ•˜๋Š” ๋‹จ๊ณ„๋ฅผ ๊ฑฐ์น˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ๋ฐ”๋กœ ์„œ๋น„์Šค์—… ์ค‘์‹ฌ ์‚ฌํšŒ๋กœ ์ด์ „๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ž๋ฃŒ ๋ถ„์•ผ ๋†์—… ์„ฌ์œ ์ธ ํ™ฉ๋งˆ ์ƒ์‚ฐ๋Ÿ‰์—์„œ ์„ธ๊ณ„์—์„œ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋งŽ์€ ์–‘์„ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ฝฉ๊ณผ ์‹๋ฌผ์˜ ์ƒ์‚ฐ๋Ÿ‰ ๋˜ํ•œ 1์œ„์ด๋ฉฐ ์Œ€, ๋ฐ€, ๋•…์ฝฉ ๋“ฑ์€ ์ค‘๊ตญ์— ์ด์–ด 2์œ„์˜ ์ƒ์‚ฐ๋Ÿ‰์„ ๋ณด์ด๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์ธ๋„์˜ ๋†์—… ์ƒ์‚ฐ๋Ÿ‰์€ ๋†์—…๊ฐœํ˜ ์ดํ›„๋กœ ๊ฐ์†Œํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์‚ฐ์—…ํ™”์™€ ๋„์‹œํ™”๋กœ ๋†์ง€ ๋ฉด์ ์˜ ์ถ•์†Œ๊ฐ€ ์ด๋ค„์กŒ๋‹ค. ์ƒ์‚ฐ์š”์†Œ ์ˆ˜์ค€์˜ ๋”๋”˜ ์„ฑ์žฅ์€ ์ธ๋„๋†์—…์— ๊ฑธ๋ฆผ๋Œ์ด ๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด ์šด์†ก์—…๊ณผ ์ธํ”„๋ผ์˜ ๋”๋”˜ ๋ฐœ๋‹ฌ๋กœ ์ƒ๋‹น๋Ÿ‰์˜ ๋†์‚ฐ๋ฌผ์ด ๋ถ€ํŒจํ•˜๋Š” ๋“ฑ์˜ ๋ฌธ์ œ์ ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๋„ ๋†์—…์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ํˆฌ์ž๋Š” 1960๋…„๋Œ€ ์ดํ›„ ์ƒ์Šนํ•˜์˜€๊ณ  1970๋…„๋Œ€ ์ค‘๋ฐ˜์— ๋“ค์–ด์„œ ํ•œ์ธต ๋” ๊ฐ•ํ™”๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ค‘์—์„œ ๋†’์€ ๊ณต๊ณต๋ถ€๋ฌธ์˜ ํˆฌ์ž๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์—ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ 1991๋…„ ์ฑ„ํƒ๋œ ๊ฒฝ์ œ๊ฐœํ˜ ์ดํ›„ ์ง€์†์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ณต๊ณต๋ถ€๋ฌธ์˜ ํˆฌ์ž๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ์†Œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๋†์—… ํˆฌ์ž์˜ ๊ฐ์†Œ๋Š” ๋†์—… ์„ฑ์žฅ์˜ ๊ฐ์†Œ๋กœ ์ด์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ๊ฒŒ๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ๋†์—…์˜ ๋ฌด์—ญ์กฐ๊ฑด์€ ์•…ํ™”๋˜์–ด 1990๋…„๋Œ€ ๋ง ๋†๋ถ€๋“ค์˜ ์†Œ๋“์ด ๊ฐ์†Œํ•˜๊ณ  ๋†๊ฐ€ ๋ถ€์ฑ„๊ฐ€ ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๋‚ณ์•˜๋‹ค. ์ž๋ณธ์กฐ๋‹ฌ์€ ์–ด๋ ค์›Œ ์ž๋ณธ์กฐ๋‹ฌ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์ด ์ œํ•œ์ ์ธ ์†Œ์ž‘๋†๊ณผ ๋นˆ๋†์ด 75% ์ด์ƒ์„ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ•จ์—๋„ ์ œ๋„๊ถŒ ์•ˆ์—์„œ์˜ ๋Œ€์ถœ์ด ์–ด๋ ต๋‹ค. ๋†์ดŒ์ง€์—ญ์—์„œ๋Š” ์‹ ์šฉ๊ธˆ๊ณ ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ์†Œํ•˜์—ฌ ๋†์—…์‹ ์šฉ์˜ ๋ถ„๋ฐฐ๊ฐ€ ๋ถˆํ‰๋“ฑํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์ด๋ค„์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ œ์กฐ์—… ์ธ๋„ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” ์ œ์กฐ์—…์„ ์œก์„ฑํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ํˆฌ์ž๋ฅผ ๊ณ„์†ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์„œ๋น„์Šค์—…๋ณด๋‹ค ์ œ์กฐ์—…์ด ๋ฒŒ์–ด๋“ค์ธ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋งค์ถœ์ด ๋” ๋งŽ์€ ๋ถ€๊ฐ€๊ฐ€์น˜์™€ ๊ณ ์šฉ์„ ์ฐฝ์ถœํ•˜๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์ธ๋ฐ, ์ด๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด์„  ์ธํ”„๋ผ ํˆฌ์ž๊ฐ€ ์ค‘์š”ํ•˜๋‹ค. ์ „๋ ฅ๊ณต๊ธ‰์ด ๋ถ€์กฑํ•˜๊ณ  ์›์ž์žฌ์™€ ์ œํ’ˆ ์ด๋™์— ํ•„์š”ํ•œ ๋„๋กœ์™€ ํ•ญ๋งŒ์‹œ์„ค์ด ๋ถ€์กฑํ•˜๋‹ค๋ฉด ์ œ์กฐ์—…์˜ ๋ฐœ์ „์„ ๊ธฐ๋Œ€ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์–ด๋ ต๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์ด๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ธ๋„์˜ ์žฌ์ •์ ์ž๋Š” ์ œ์กฐ์—… ๊ธฐ๋ฐ˜ ํ˜•์„ฑ์— ํ•„์š”ํ•œ ์ธํ”„๋ผ ํˆฌ์ž๋ฅผ ์ œํ•œ์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. ์ œ์กฐ์—…์˜ ์ทจ์•ฝํ•จ์€ ์ธ๋„ ๊ฒฝ์ œ์˜ ๋ถˆ์•ˆ์ •์„ฑ์„ ํ‚ค์šด ์š”์ธ์œผ๋กœ ๊ผฝํžŒ๋‹ค. ์—ด์•…ํ•œ ์ธํ”„๋ผ ๋ฟ๋งŒ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ผ ์žฆ์€ ์ •๊ถŒ ๊ต์ฒด์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅธ ์ •์ฑ… ํ˜ผ์„ ๊ณผ ์ง€๋ฐฉ์ •๋ถ€์˜ ์ง€์—ญ์ด๊ธฐ์ฃผ์˜, ํ† ์ง€ ์†Œ์œ ๊ถŒ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ถ„์Ÿ, ์ •์น˜์  ๋ถ€ํŒจ๋Š” ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ํˆฌ์ž ๋งค๋ ฅ์„ ๋–จ์–ด๋œจ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์›์ธ์œผ๋กœ ์ž‘์šฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์„œ๋น„์Šค์—… ์ธ๋„๋Š” ๋‚จ์•„์‹œ์•„ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋“ค๊ณผ ๋งˆ์ฐฌ๊ฐ€์ง€๋กœ ์„œ๋น„์Šค์—… ๋น„์ค‘์ด ๋†’์€ ํŽธ์ด๋‹ค. ์ธ๋„๋Š” ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ๋„์ƒ๊ตญ๋“ค๊ณผ ๋‹ฌ๋ฆฌ ๋†์—… ์ค‘์‹ฌ ๊ฒฝ์ œ์—์„œ ๋ฐ”๋กœ ์„œ๋น„์Šค์—… ์ค‘์‹ฌ ์‚ฌํšŒ๋กœ ๋ณ€ํ™”ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Š” ์ƒ์‚ฐ์„ฑ ์ฆ๋Œ€์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋กœ ์ธ๋„ ๊ฒฝ์ œ์— ๊ธ์ •์ ์ธ ์˜ํ–ฅ์„ ์ฃผ์ง€๋Š” ๋ชปํ•˜๋‚˜ ์„œ๋น„์Šค์—… ์ฃผ๋„ ์„ฑ์žฅ์€ ๋ถˆ๊ฐ€ํ”ผํ•ด ๋ณด์ธ๋‹ค. ์ด์—๋Š” ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ๊ฐ€์„ค์ด ์žˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ์ด์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋กœ ์ค‘๊ฐ„์žฌ๋กœ์„œ์˜ ์ˆ˜์š”์ฆ๊ฐ€๊ฐ€์„ค์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ œ์กฐ์—…์ด ์ƒ์‚ฐ์˜ ์ „๋ฌธํ™”๋ฅผ ์ถ”๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ๊ณผ์ •์—์„œ ๊ฐ์ข… ์„œ๋น„์Šค๋ฅผ ์™ธ์ฃผํ™”ํ–ˆ๊ณ  ์ด ๊ณผ์ •์—์„œ ๋น„์ฆˆ๋‹ˆ์Šค ์„œ๋น„์Šค๊ฐ€ ๊ธ‰์†๋„๋กœ ๋ฐœ์ „ํ–ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฐ€์„ค์ด๋‹ค. ๋งˆ์ผ€ํŒ…, ๊ด‘๊ณ , ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ, ๋””์ž์ธ์ด ํ•˜๋‚˜์˜ ์ค‘๊ฐ„์žฌ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๋Š” ํ˜„์ƒ์€ ์„œ๋น„์Šค์˜ ์ƒ์‚ฐ์„ ๋”์šฑ ์ด‰์ง„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Š” ์ธ๋„์˜ ํŠน์ˆ˜์„ฑ๊ณผ ์ œ์กฐ์—… ์„ฑ์žฅ์˜ ์ •์ฒด, ๊ฒฝ์ œ ์ •์ฑ… ๋ฐ ๊ทœ์ œ, ์‹๋ฏผ์ง€ ๊ฒฝํ—˜์ด ๋ณตํ•ฉ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ž‘์šฉํ•œ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ณด๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ๋งž๋‹ค. ํ†ตํ™” ์ธ๋„์˜ ๋ฃจํ”ผํ™”๋Š” ๊ณต์‹ ๋ถ€๋ฌธ์—์„œ ๊ทธ๋‹ค์ง€ ๋ˆˆ์— ๋„๋Š” ์—ญํ• ์„ ํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณด์ธ๋‹ค. ์ค€๋น„ํ†ตํ™”๋กœ์„œ์˜ ์‚ฌ์šฉ์€ ์ด๋ค„์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ๊ฐœ์ž…ํ†ตํ™”๋กœ์„œ์˜ ์—ญํ• ์—์„œ๋„ ํ•ด๋‹น๋œ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฃจํ”ผํ™”์˜ ๊ฐ€์น˜๋Š” ์ƒ๋‹นํžˆ ๋ถˆ์•ˆ์ •ํ•œ๋ฐ ์ด ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๊ตญ์ œ ๋ฌด์—ญ๊ณผ ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ ํˆฌ์ž์˜ ์œ ์น˜์—์„œ ์–ด๋ ค์›€์„ ์ฃผ๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. 1947๋…„ ์ธ๋„ ๋…๋ฆฝ ํ›„ ์ธ๋„๋Š” 1๋‹ฌ๋Ÿฌ๋Š” 1๋ฃจํ”ผ๋กœ ๋ฃจํ”ผํ™”์˜ ํ™˜์œจ์„ ๋‹ฌ๋Ÿฌํ™”์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ณ ์ •ํ™˜์œจ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•ด์˜ค๋‹ค 1951๋…„ ์ธ๋„ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์ œ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ 5๊ฐœ๋…„ ๊ณ„ํš์„ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ–ˆ๊ณ , 1966๋…„ ์ธ๋„ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” ์ˆ˜์ถœ์„ ๋Š˜๋ฆฌ๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ฃจํ”ผํ™”์˜ ๊ฐ€์น˜๋ฅผ ํ‰๊ฐ€์ ˆํ•˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1973๋…„์—๋Š” ์ œ 1์ฐจ ์˜ค์ผ์‡ผํฌ๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœ์ƒํ–ˆ๊ณ  ์›์œ  ๊ฐ€๊ฒฉ์ด ํญ๋“ฑํ•˜์ž ๋ถˆ๋ฒ•์ ์ธ ํ™˜์œจ ๊ฑฐ๋ž˜๋ฅผ ๋ง‰๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์™ธ๊ตญํ™˜๊ด€๋ฆฌ๋ฒ•์„ ์ œ์ •ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 1985๋…„ ๊ตญ๋‚ด ์ƒ์‚ฐ์ด ๊ฐ์†Œํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋ฃจํ”ผํ™”์˜ ๊ฐ€์น˜๊ฐ€ ๊ธ‰๋ฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1991๋…„ ์ธ๋„ ๊ฒฝ์ œ ์œ„๊ธฐ๋กœ ์ •์น˜ ๊ฒฝ์ œ์ ์œผ๋กœ ํฐ ํ˜ผ๋ž€์ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๊ณ  ๋ฃจํ”ผํ™”์˜ ๊ฐ€์น˜๊ฐ€ ๋”์šฑ ํ‰๊ฐ€ ์ ˆํ•˜๋˜์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ์ด๋Š” ์ธ๋„์˜ ํ†ตํ™” ์ •์ฑ…์ด ๊ณ ์ •ํ™˜์œจ์ œ์—์„œ ๋ณ€๋™ํ™˜์œจ์ œ๋กœ ๋ฐ”๋€Œ๋Š” ๊ณ„๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ช‡ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ๊ฐœํ˜ ์กฐ์น˜๊ฐ€ ๋‹จํ–‰๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ  ์ธ๋„๋Š” ์ด ์ƒํ™ฉ์„ ํƒ€๊ณ„ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด IMF์˜ ๊ถŒ๊ณ ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์•„๋“ค์ด๊ฒŒ ๋œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๋ณ€๋™ํ™˜์œจ์ œ๋ฅผ ๋„์ž…ํ•œ ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฝ์—๋Š” ๋‘ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ์ด์œ ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ๊ตญ์ œ์‹œ์žฅ์—์„œ์˜ ๊ฒฝ์Ÿ๋ ฅ ๊ฐ•ํ™”, ๊ณ ์ •ํ™˜์œจ์ œ ์•„๋ž˜์—์„œ ๋‚ด์™ธ์ž๊ธˆ์˜ ๊ฒฉ์ฐจ๋ฅผ ์ด์šฉํ•œ ํˆฌ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋ง‰๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋ชฉ์ ์ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋จผ์ € ๊ฒฝ์Ÿ๋ ฅ ๊ฐ•ํ™” ์ธก๋ฉด์—์„œ์˜ ๋ณ€๋™ํ™˜์œจ์ œ ๋„์ž…์€ ๊ณ ์ •ํ™˜์œจ์ œ๋ฅผ ์ฑ„ํƒํ•œ ์ƒํ™ฉ์—์„œ ๋ฌผ๊ฐ€๊ฐ€ ์ƒ์Šนํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜๋ฉด ๋ฌผ๊ฐ€๊ฐ€ ์ƒ์Šนํ•œ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์˜ ๊ฒฝ์Ÿ๋ ฅ์€ ๊ฐ์†Œํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜๋ฉฐ ์™ธํ™” ๋ถ€์กฑ์œผ๋กœ ์–ด๋ ค์›€์„ ๊ฒช์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ์šฐ๋ ค์—์„œ์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ตญ์ œ ์ˆ˜์ง€์˜ ๊ท ํ˜•์„ ์œ ์ง€ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Š” ๋ฌผ๊ฐ€ ์ˆ˜์ค€์„ ๋‚ฎ์ถ”๋ ค๋Š” ๋ชฉ์ ์—์„œ ๊ฑฐ์‹œ์  ๋ฐฉ์‹์„ ํ™œ์šฉํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜๋Š”๋ฐ ์ด๋Š” ๋ณ€ํ™”๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ์ƒ๋‹นํ•œ ๋…ธ๋ ฅ๊ณผ ํฌ์ƒ์„ ์š”๊ตฌํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ๋ฌผ๊ฐ€ ์ƒ์Šน์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ณด์ƒ์œผ๋กœ ํ™˜์œจ์„ ๊ฐ์†Œ์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์—์„œ ๋ฒ—์–ด๋‚˜๊ณ  ๊ฒฝ์Ÿ๋ ฅ์„ ์œ ์ง€ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ๋” ๋‚ซ๋‹ค๋Š” ํŒ๋‹จ์ด ์ž‘์šฉํ–ˆ๋˜ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๋‚ด์™ธ์ž๊ธˆ์˜ ๊ฒฉ์ฐจ๋ฅผ ์ด์šฉํ•œ ํˆฌ๊ธฐ๋ž€ ๊ธฐ์กด์˜ ํ™”ํ ํ‰๊ฐ€๊ฐ€ ์ ˆํ•˜๋  ๋•Œ ํˆฌ๊ธฐ์ž๋ณธ์€ ์ด ์ด๋™์ด ์ˆœ๊ฐ„์ ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ์ธ์ง€ํ•˜๊ณ  ๋ฏธ๋ž˜์— ์‹œ์„ธ ์ฐจ์ต์„ ์–ป์œผ๋ ค๊ณ  ์ด๋™ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ์‹ค์ œ ํ™”ํ์˜ ํ‰๊ฐ€ ์ ˆํ•˜๋Š” ๊ทธ ํšจ๊ณผ๊ฐ€ ๋ฐ˜๊ฐ๋  ์ˆ˜๋ฐ–์— ์—†๋‹ค. ๋ณ€๋™ํ™˜์œจ์ œ๋Š” ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ์ถฉ๊ฒฉ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์žฌ์ •์„ ๋ณดํ˜ธํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋ ˆํŠผ ์šฐ์ฆˆ ์ฒด์ œ์—์„œ ๋ฌด์—ญ ์ ์ž๋Š” ๊ตญ๋‚ด ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ์œ„์ถ•์„ ๊ฐ€์ ธ์˜จ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ๋ณ€๋™ํ™˜์œจ์ฒด์ œ์—์„œ ํ™˜์œจ์€ ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์ถฉ๊ฒฉ์„ ๋ณดํ˜ธํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์กฐ์ •๋˜์–ด ์ˆ˜์š”, ๊ฒฝ์ƒ์ˆ˜์ง€, ๊ฒฝ์Ÿ๋ ฅ์„ ์œ ์ง€ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค๋Š” ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์ด๋‹ค. 1992๋…„ ํ•˜์ƒค๋“œ ๋ฉ”ํƒ€์˜ ๊ธˆ์œต ์‚ฌ๊ธฐ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์œผ๋กœ ์ธ๋„์˜ ๋‹จ์† ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ์ธ ์ธ๋„ ์ฃผ์‹๊ฑฐ๋ž˜๋ถ€(Securities and Exchange Board of India)๊ฐ€ ์„ค๋ฆฝ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ๋ฃจํ”ผํ™”๋Š” ์ˆ˜์ถœ์„ ์žฅ๋ คํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋‹ค์‹œ ํ•œ ๋ฒˆ ํ‰๊ฐ€์ ˆํ•˜๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ด์ค‘ํ™˜์œจ(dual exchange rate)์ด ๋„์ž…๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๋„๋Š” ์ธ๋„์ค€๋น„์€ํ–‰์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ์ด์ค‘ํ™˜์œจ์„ ์ž์œ ํ™˜์œจ์ œ๋„(liberalised exchange rate system)์— ์ ์šฉํ–ˆ์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, 1993๋…„ ์‹œ์žฅ๊ณ ์ •ํ™˜์œจ๋กœ ๊ฐœ์ •ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ์‹œ์žฅ์‹ฌ๋ฆฌ์— ์˜ํ•ด ๋ฃจํ”ผํ™”๋Š” ์ž์œ ๋กญ๊ฒŒ ๋ณ€๋™๋˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ค‘์•™์€ํ–‰์˜ ๊ฐœ์ž…์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋ณดํ˜ธ๋ฐ›์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1993๋…„ ์ˆ˜์ž… ํ—ˆ๊ฐ€์ œ๊ฐ€ ํ์ง€๋˜๊ณ  ๋ชจ๋“  ๋ถ€๋ฌธ์— ๊ฑธ์ณ ๊ด€์„ธ๊ฐ€ ํ• ์ธ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๋’ค๋กœ ์•„์‹œ์•„ ์™ธํ™˜์œ„๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœ์ƒํ•œ 1997๋…„์—๋Š” ์žฌ๋ฌด๋ถ€ ์žฅ๊ด€์ธ ํŒ”๋ผ๋‹ˆ์•„ํŒ ์น˜๋‹ด๋ฐ”๋žŒ์ด ์ž์‹ ์ด ์ฃผ์žฅํ•˜๋˜ ์„ธ๊ธˆ์„ ๋‚ฎ์ถ”๋Š” ์ •์ฑ…์„ ์‹คํ–‰ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1999๋…„์—” ๊ธฐ์กด์˜ ์™ธ๊ตญํ™˜๊ด€๋ฆฌ๋ฒ•์ด ๊ฐœ์ •๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฌธ์ œ์  ์ธ๋„๋Š” ๊ฐœํ˜๊ฐœ๋ฐฉ์„ ํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ์—ฌ์ „ํžˆ ๊ณ„ํš๊ฒฝ์ œ์˜ ์ž”์žฌ๊ฐ€ ์กด์žฌํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์—ฐ๋ฆฝ์ •๋ถ€๋ฅผ ๊ตฌ์„ฑํ•˜๋Š” ์ธ๋„ ๊ณต์‚ฐ๋‹น์„ ๋น„๋กฏํ•œ ์ขŒํŒŒ ์ •๋‹น, ์ •๋ถ€๊ธฐ๊ด€์˜ ๊ณผ๋„ํ•œ ๊ทœ์ œ, ๊ณต๋ฌด์›๋“ค์˜ ๋ถ€ํŒจ์™€ ๊ณ ์••์ ์ธ ํƒœ๋„๊ฐ€ ์žฅ์• ์š”์ธ์ด ๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๋„์˜ ์€ํ–‰์€ ์žฌ๋ฌด๊ตฌ์กฐ๊ฐ€ ๊ฑด์‹คํ•˜๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ‰๊ฐ€๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ์‹ค์ œ๋กœ๋Š” ์‚ฐ์—…์˜ ์„ฑ์žฅ์„ ๋’ท๋ฐ›์นจํ•˜๋Š” ์—ญํ• ์—๋Š” ์†Œ๊ทน์ ์ธ ์ฑ„ ๋ฐฉ์–ด์  ๊ฒฝ์˜์„ ์ด์–ด๊ฐ€๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์€ํ–‰์˜ 75%๊ฐ€ ์ •๋ถ€ ์†Œ์œ ๋กœ ๋˜์–ด์žˆ๋Š” ์€ํ–‰์ด๋‹ค. ๊ธˆ์œต๊ฐœํ˜์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์š”๊ตฌ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ๊ธฐ๋“๊ถŒ์ธต์˜ ๋ฐ˜๋ฐœ๋กœ ๊ธˆ์œต๊ฐœํ˜์ด ์ด๋ค„์ง€์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฌผ๋ถ€์กฑ๊ณผ ์ „๋ ฅ๋ถ€์กฑ ๋ฌธ์ œ๋ฅผ ์•ˆ๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ด๋กœ ์ธํ•œ ๋„์‹œ ์ƒํ™œ์˜ ์–ด๋ ค์›€์œผ๋กœ ๋†์ดŒ์—์„œ ๋„์‹œ๋กœ ์ธ๊ตฌ์˜ ์ด๋™์ด ์ด๋ค„์ง€์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์—ด์•…ํ•œ ์ธํ”„๋ผ๋„ ์„ฑ์žฅ์— ๊ฑธ๋ฆผ๋Œ์ด ๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ •๋ถ€์˜ ์˜ˆ์‚ฐ ์ ์ž๋Š” ์ธํ”„๋ผ ํˆฌ์ž๋ฅผ ๋”์šฑ ์–ด๋ ต๊ฒŒ ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. 40%๋ฅผ ์ƒํšŒํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฌธ๋งน๋ฅ ๊ณผ ์ทจํ•™ ์—ฐ๋ น ์•„๋™์˜ 20%๊ฐ€ ์ทจํ•™์„ ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ๊ต์œก ๋ฌธ์ œ ๋˜ํ•œ ๋ฌธ์ œ์ ์œผ๋กœ, ๋ถˆ๊ฐ€์ด‰์ฒœ๋ฏผ ์ดํ•˜์˜ ํ•˜์ธต ์นด์ŠคํŠธ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ต์œก ๊ธฐํšŒ๋ฅผ ์ฃผ์ž๋Š” ์ฃผ์žฅ๊ณผ ๋‹ฌ๋ฆฌ ๊ตญ๋ฏผ๊ต์œก์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์™ธ๋ฉด์€ ์ทจ์•ฝํ•œ ๊ต์œก์˜ ์›์ธ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐœํ˜์ด ์ œ๋Œ€๋กœ ์ด๋ค„์ง€์ง€ ๋ชปํ•œ ์ƒํ™ฉ์—์„œ์˜ ๋†’์€ ์„ฑ์žฅ๋ฅ ์€ ์ธํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์…˜์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๋ถ€๋‹ด์œผ๋กœ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ฌ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋…ธ๋™์‹œ์žฅ์—์„œ์˜ ๊ฒฝ์ง์„ฑ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๊ธฐ์—…๋“ค์€ ํˆฌ์žํ™•๋Œ€๋ฅผ ๊บผ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋…ธ๋™์‹œ์žฅ์—์„œ ๊ณ„์•ฝ์ง ๋…ธ๋™์€ ๊ฒฝ์ œํŠน๋ณ„์ง€๊ตฌ ์ด์™ธ์—๋Š” ๊ธˆ์ง€๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. 2์–ต 6์ฒœ๋งŒ ๋ช…์— ๋‹ฌํ•˜๋Š” ์ ˆ๋Œ€๋นˆ๊ณค์ธต ๋ฌธ์ œ์™€ ์ €์ถ•๋ฅ ์€ ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•œ ๋ฐ˜๋ฉด ์†Œ๋น„๋Š” ๋Š˜์–ด๋‚จ์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅธ ๋ฌธ์ œ๋กœ ๊ฒฝ์ƒ์ˆ˜์ง€๊ฐ€ ์••๋ฐ•์„ ๋ฐ›๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋Œ€์ถœ๋ฅ ์ด ์ง€๋‚˜์น˜๊ฒŒ ๋†’์•„์ง„ ์ธก๋ฉด๋„ ์—†์ง€ ์•Š์•„ ์žˆ๋‹ค. IT์‚ฐ์—…์€ ์„ฑ์žฅํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ์ „๋ฌธ ์ธ๋ ฅ์ด ์ด๋ฅผ ๋’ท๋ฐ›์นจํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•ด ํ˜•์„ฑ๋œ ๋†’์€ ์ž„๊ธˆ ๋ฌธ์ œ๋Š” ๊ตญ์ œ๊ฒฝ์Ÿ๋ ฅ ํ•˜๋ฝ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๋‚ณ๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ง€์ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์ฐธ๊ณ ์ž๋ฃŒ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy%20of%20India
Economy of India
The economy of India has transitioned from a mixed planned economy to a mixed middle-income developing social market economy with notable public sector in strategic sectors. It is the world's fifth-largest economy by nominal GDP and the third-largest by purchasing power parity (PPP). According to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), on a per capita income basis, India ranked 139th by GDP (nominal) and 127th by GDP (PPP). From independence in 1947 until 1991, successive governments followed Soviet model and promoted protectionist economic policies, with extensive Sovietization, state intervention, demand-side economics, natural resources, bureaucrat driven enterprises and economic regulation. This is characterised as dirigism, in the form of the Licence Raj. The end of the Cold War and an acute balance of payments crisis in 1991 led to the adoption of a broad economic liberalisation in India and indicative planning. Since the start of the 21st century, annual average GDP growth has been 6% to 7%. The economy of the Indian subcontinent was the largest in the world for most of recorded history up until the onset of colonialism in early 19th century. India accounts for 7.2% of the global economy in 2022 in PPP terms, and around 3.4% in nominal terms in 2022. India still has informal domestic economies; COVID-19 reversed both economic growth and poverty reduction; credit access weaknesses contributed to lower private consumption and inflation; and new social and infrastructure equity efforts. Economic growth slowed down in 2017 due to the shocks of "demonetisation" in 2016 and the introduction of the Goods and Services Tax in 2017. Nearly 70% of India's GDP is driven by domestic consumption. The country remains the world's sixth-largest consumer market. Apart from private consumption, India's GDP is also fueled by government spending, investments, and exports. In 2022, India was the world's 6th-largest importer and the 9th-largest exporter. India has been a member of the World Trade Organization since 1 January 1995. It ranks 63rd on the Ease of doing business index and 40th on the Global Competitiveness Index. Due to extreme rupee/dollar rate fluctuations India's nominal GDP fluctuates significantly. With 476 million workers, the Indian labour force is the world's second-largest. India has one of the world's highest number of billionaires and extreme income inequality. The number of income tax returns filed has been increasing year on year reaching a record 6,77,00,000 income tax returns for the 2023-24 financial year filed by 31st July 2023; this was a 16.1% increase on the previous year when 5,83,00,000 tax returns were filed by 31 July 2022. Income-Tax Department said that it was a "fair indication of widening of [the] tax base" that 53,67,000 of the tax returns were by people who had never filed a tax return before. During the 2008 global financial crisis, the economy faced a mild slowdown. India endorsed Keynesian policy and initiated stimulus measures (both fiscal and monetary) to boost growth and generate demand. In subsequent years, economic growth revived. According to the World Bank, to achieve sustainable economic development, India must focus on public sector reform, infrastructure, agricultural and rural development, removal of land and labour regulations, financial inclusion, spur private investment and exports, education, and public health. The period between 2004 and 2014 is referred to as Indiaโ€™s lost decade as India fell behind other BRIC economies. In 2022, India's ten largest trading partners were the United States, China, United Arab Emirates (UAE), Saudi Arabia, Russia, Germany, Hong Kong, Indonesia, South Korea, and Malaysia. In 2021โ€“22, the foreign direct investment (FDI) in India was $82ย billion. The leading sectors for FDI inflows were the service sector, the computer industry, and the telecom industry. India has free trade agreements with several nations and blocs, including ASEAN, SAFTA, Mercosur, South Korea, Japan, Australia, UAE, and several others which are in effect or under negotiating stage. The service sector makes up more than 50% of GDP and remains the fastest growing sector, while the industrial sector and the agricultural sector employs a majority of the labor force. The Bombay Stock Exchange and National Stock Exchange are some of the world's largest stock exchanges by market capitalisation. India is the world's sixth-largest manufacturer, representing 2.6% of global manufacturing output. Nearly 65% of India's population is rural, and contributes about 50% of India's GDP. It has the world's fifth-largest foreign-exchange reserves worth $561 billion. India has a high public debt with 83% of GDP, while its fiscal deficit stood at 6.4% of GDP. India faces high unemployment, rising income inequality, and a drop in aggregate demand. India's gross domestic savings rate stood at 29.3% of GDP in 2022. In recent years, independent economists and financial institutions have accused the government of manipulating various economic data, especially GDP growth. India's overall social spending as a share of GDP in 2021โ€“22 will be 8.6%, which is much lower than the average for OECD nations. History For a continuous duration of nearly 1700 years from the year 1 CE, India was the world's largest economy, constituting 35 to 40% of the world GDP. The combination of protectionist, import-substitution, Fabian socialism, and social democratic-inspired policies governed India for sometime after the end of British rule. The economy was then characterised as Dirigism, It had extensive regulation, protectionism, public ownership of large monopolies, pervasive corruption and slow growth. Since 1991, continuing economic liberalisation has moved the country towards a market-based economy. By 2008, India had established itself as one of the world's faster-growing economies. Ancient and medieval eras Indus Valley Civilisation The citizens of the Indus Valley civilisation, a permanent settlement that flourished between 2800ย BCE and 1800ย BCE, practised agriculture, domesticated animals, used uniform weights and measures, made tools and weapons, and traded with other cities. Evidence of well-planned streets, a drainage system, and water supply reveals their knowledge of urban planning, which included the first-known urban sanitation systems and the existence of a form of municipal government. West Coast Maritime trade was carried out extensively between South India and Southeast and West Asia from early times until around the fourteenth century CE. Both the Malabar and Coromandel Coasts were the sites of important trading centres from as early as the first century BCE, used for import and export as well as transit points between the Mediterranean region and southeast Asia. Over time, traders organised themselves into associations which received state patronage. Historians Tapan Raychaudhuri and Irfan Habib claim this state patronage for overseas trade came to an end by the thirteenth century CE, when it was largely taken over by the local Parsi, Jewish, Syrian Christian, and Muslim communities, initially on the Malabar and subsequently on the Coromandel coast. Silk Route Other scholars suggest trading from India to West Asia and Eastern Europe was active between the 14th and 18th centuries. During this period, Indian traders settled in Surakhani, a suburb of greater Baku, Azerbaijan. These traders built a Hindu temple, which suggests commerce was active and prosperous for Indians by the 17th century. Further north, the Saurashtra and Bengal coasts played an important role in maritime trade, and the Gangetic plains and the Indus valley housed several centres of river-borne commerce. Most overland trade was carried out via the Khyber Pass connecting the Punjab region with Afghanistan and onward to the Middle East and Central Asia. Although many kingdoms and rulers issued coins, barter was prevalent. Villages paid a portion of their agricultural produce as revenue to the rulers, while their craftsmen received a part of the crops at harvest time for their services. Mughal, Rajput, and Maratha eras (1526โ€“1820) The Indian economy was largest and most prosperous throughout the world history and will continue to be under the Mughal Empire, up until the 18th century. Sean Harkin estimates China and India may have accounted for 60 to 70 percent of world GDP in the 17th century. The Mughal economy functioned on an elaborate system of coined currency, land revenue and trade. Gold, silver and copper coins were issued by the royal mints which functioned on the basis of free coinage. The political stability and uniform revenue policy resulting from a centralized administration under the Mughals, coupled with a well-developed internal trade network, ensured that Indiaโ€“before the arrival of the Britishโ€“was to a large extent economically unified, despite having a traditional agrarian economy characterised by a predominance of subsistence agriculture. Agricultural production increased under Mughal agrarian reforms, with Indian agriculture being advanced compared to Europe at the time, such as the widespread use of the seed drill among Indian peasants before its adoption in European agriculture, and possibly higher per-capita agricultural output and standards of consumption then 17 century Europe. The Mughal Empire had a thriving industrial manufacturing economy, with India producing about 25% of the world's industrial output up until 1750, making it the most important manufacturing center in international trade. Manufactured goods and cash crops from the Mughal Empire were sold throughout the world. Key industries included textiles, shipbuilding, and steel, and processed exports included cotton textiles, yarns, thread, silk, jute products, metalware, and foods such as sugar, oils and butter. Cities and towns boomed under the Mughal Empire, which had a relatively high degree of urbanization for its time, with 15% of its population living in urban centres, higher than the percentage of the urban population in contemporary Europe at the time and higher than that of British India in the 19th century. In early modern Europe, there was significant demand for products from Mughal India, particularly cotton textiles, as well as goods such as spices, peppers, indigo, silks, and saltpeter (for use in munitions). European fashion, for example, became increasingly dependent on Mughal Indian textiles and silks. From the late 17th century to the early 18th century, Mughal India accounted for 95% of British imports from Asia, and the Bengal Subah province alone accounted for 40% of Dutch imports from Asia. In contrast, there was very little demand for European goods in Mughal India, which was largely self-sufficient. Indian goods, especially those from Bengal, were also exported in large quantities to other Asian markets, such as Indonesia and Japan. At the time, Mughal Bengal was the most important center of cotton textile production. In the early 18th century the Mughal Empire declined, as it lost western, central and parts of south and north India to the Maratha Empire, which integrated and continued to administer those regions. The decline of the Mughal Empire led to decreased agricultural productivity, which in turn negatively affected the textile industry. The subcontinent's dominant economic power in the post-Mughal era was the Bengal Subah in the east., which continued to maintain thriving textile industries and relatively high real wages. However, the former was devastated by the Maratha invasions of Bengal and then British colonization in the mid-18th century. After the loss at the Third Battle of Panipat, the Maratha Empire disintegrated into several confederate states, and the resulting political instability and armed conflict severely affected economic life in several parts of the country โ€“ although this was mitigated by localised prosperity in the new provincial kingdoms. By the late eighteenth century, the British East India Company had entered the Indian political theatre and established its dominance over other European powers. This marked a determinative shift in India's trade, and a less-powerful effect on the rest of the economy. British era (1793โ€“1947) From the beginning of the 19th century, the British East India Company's gradual expansion and consolidation of power brought a major change in taxation and agricultural policies, which tended to promote commercialisation of agriculture with a focus on trade, resulting in decreased production of food crops, mass impoverishment and destitution of farmers, and in the short term, led to numerous famines. The economic policies of the British Raj caused a severe decline in the handicrafts and handloom sectors, due to reduced demand and dipping employment. After the removal of international restrictions by the Charter of 1813, Indian trade expanded substantially with steady growth. The result was a significant transfer of capital from India to England, which, due to the colonial policies of the British, led to a massive drain of revenue rather than any systematic effort at modernisation of the domestic economy. Under British rule, India's share of the world economy declined from 24.4% in 1700 down to 4.2% in 1950. India's GDP (PPP) per capita was stagnant during the Mughal Empire and began to decline prior to the onset of British rule. India's share of global industrial output declined from 25% in 1750 down to 2% in 1900. At the same time, United Kingdom's share of the world economy rose from 2.9% in 1700 up to 9% in 1870. The British East India Company, following their conquest of Bengal in 1757, had forced open the large Indian market to British goods, which could be sold in India without tariffs or duties, compared to local Indian producers who were heavily taxed, while in Britain protectionist policies such as bans and high tariffs were implemented to restrict Indian textiles from being sold there, whereas raw cotton was imported from India without tariffs to British factories which manufactured textiles from Indian cotton and sold them back to the Indian market. British economic policies gave them a monopoly over India's large market and cotton resources. India served as both a significant supplier of raw goods to British manufacturers and a large captive market for British manufactured goods. British territorial expansion in India throughout the 19th century created an institutional environment that, on paper, guaranteed property rights among the colonisers, encouraged free trade, and created a single currency with fixed exchange rates, standardised weights and measures and capital markets within the company-held territories. It also established a system of railways and telegraphs, a civil service that aimed to be free from political interference, a common-law, and an adversarial legal system. This coincided with major changes in the world economyย โ€“ industrialisation, and significant growth in production and trade. However, at the end of colonial rule, India inherited an economy that was one of the poorest in the developing world, with industrial development stalled, agriculture unable to feed a rapidly growing population, a largely illiterate and unskilled labour force, and extremely inadequate infrastructure. The 1872 census revealed that 91.3% of the population of the region constituting present-day India resided in villages. This was a decline from the earlier Mughal era, when 85% of the population resided in villages and 15% in urban centers under Akbar's reign in 1600. Urbanisation generally remained sluggish in British India until the 1920s, due to the lack of industrialisation and absence of adequate transportation. Subsequently, the policy of discriminating protection (where certain important industries were given financial protection by the state), coupled with the Second World War, saw the development and dispersal of industries, encouraging rural-urban migration, and in particular, the large port cities of Bombay, Calcutta and Madras grew rapidly. Despite this, only one-sixth of India's population lived in cities by 1951. The effect of British rule on India's economy is a controversial topic. Leaders of the Indian independence movement and economic historians have blamed colonial rule for India's poor economic performance following independence and argued that the wealth required for Britain's industrial development was derived from wealth taken from India. At the same time, right-wing historians have countered that India's poor economic performance was due to various sectors being in a state of growth and decline due to changes brought in by colonialism and a world that was moving towards industrialisation and economic integration. Several economic historians have argued that real wage decline occurred in the early 19th century, or possibly beginning in the very late 18th century, largely as a result of British imperialism. According to Prasannan Parthasarathi and Sashi Sivramkrishna, the grain wages of Indian weavers were likely comparable to that of their British counterparts and their average income was around five times the subsistence level, which was comparable to advanced parts of Europe. However they concluded that due to the scarcity of data, it was hard to draw definitive conclusions and that more research was required. It has also been argued that India went through a period of deindustrialization in the latter half of the 18th century as an indirect outcome of the collapse of the Mughal Empire. Pre-liberalisation period (1947โ€“1991) Indian economic policy after independence was influenced by the colonial experience, which was seen as exploitative by Indian leaders exposed to the planned economy of the Soviet Union. Domestic policy tended towards protectionism, with a strong emphasis on import substitution industrialisation, economic interventionism, a large government-run public sector, business regulation, and central planning, while trade and foreign investment policies were relatively liberal. Five-Year Plans of India resembled central planning in the Soviet Union. Steel, mining, machine tools, telecommunications, insurance, and power plants, among other industries, were effectively nationalised in the mid-1950s. The Indian economy of this period is characterised as Dirigism. Jawaharlal Nehru, the first prime minister of India, along with the statistician Prasanta Chandra Mahalanobis, formulated and oversaw economic policy during the initial years of the country's independence. They expected favourable outcomes from their strategy, involving the rapid development of heavy industry by both public and private sectors, and based on direct and indirect state intervention, rather than the more extreme Soviet-style central command system. The policy of concentrating simultaneously on capital- and technology-intensive heavy industry and subsidising manual, low-skill cottage industries was criticised by economist Milton Friedman, who thought it would waste capital and labour, and retard the development of small manufacturers. Since 1965, the use of high-yielding varieties of seeds, increased fertilisers and improved irrigation facilities collectively contributed to the Green Revolution in India, which improved the condition of agriculture by increasing crop productivity, improving crop patterns and strengthening forward and backward linkages between agriculture and industry. However, it has also been criticised as an unsustainable effort, resulting in the growth of capitalistic farming, ignoring institutional reforms and widening income disparities. In 1984, Rajiv Gandhi promised economic liberalization, he made V. P. Singh the finance minister, who tried to reduce tax evasion and tax receipts rose due to this crackdown although taxes were lowered. This process lost its momentum during the later tenure of Mr. Gandhi as his government was marred by scandals. Post-liberalisation period (since 1991) The collapse of the Soviet Union, which was India's major trading partner, and the Gulf War, which caused a spike in oil prices, resulted in a major balance-of-payments crisis for India, which found itself facing the prospect of defaulting on its loans. India asked for a $1.8ย billion bailout loan from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which in return demanded de-regulation. In response, the Narasimha Rao government, including Finance Minister Manmohan Singh, initiated economic reforms in 1991. The reforms did away with the Licence Raj, reduced tariffs and interest rates and ended many public monopolies, allowing automatic approval of foreign direct investment in many sectors. Since then, the overall thrust of liberalisation has remained the same, although no government has tried to take on powerful lobbies such as trade unions and farmers, on contentious issues such as reforming labour laws and reducing agricultural subsidies. This has been accompanied by increases in life expectancy, literacy rates, and food security, although urban residents have benefited more than rural residents. From 2010, India has risen from ninth-largest to the fifth-largest economies in the world by nominal GDP in 2019 by surpassing UK, France, Italy and Brazil. India started recovery in 2013โ€“14 when the GDP growth rate accelerated to 6.4% from the previous year's 5.5%. The acceleration continued through 2014โ€“15 and 2015โ€“16 with growth rates of 7.5% and 8.0% respectively. For the first time since 1990, India grew faster than China which registered 6.9% growth in 2015. However the growth rate subsequently decelerated, to 7.1% and 6.6% in 2016โ€“17 and 2017โ€“18 respectively, partly because of the disruptive effects of 2016 Indian banknote demonetisation and the Goods and Services Tax (India). India is ranked 63rd out of 190 countries in the World Bank's 2020 ease of doing business index, up 14 points from the last year's 100 and up 37 points in just two years. In terms of dealing with construction permits and enforcing contracts, it is ranked among the 10 worst in the world, while it has a relatively favourable ranking when it comes to protecting minority investors or getting credit. The strong efforts taken by the Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) to boost ease of doing business rankings at the state level is said to affect the overall rankings of India. COVID-19 pandemic and aftermath (2020โ€“present) During the COVID-19 pandemic, numerous rating agencies downgraded India's GDP predictions for FY21 to negative figures, signalling a recession in India, the most severe since 1979. The Indian Economy contracted by 6.6 percent which was lower than the estimated 7.3 percent decline. In 2022, the ratings agency Fitch Ratings upgraded India's outlook to stable similar to S&P Global Ratings and Moody's Investors Service's outlooks. In the first quarter of financial year 2022โ€“2023, the Indian economy grew by 13.5%. Data The following table shows the main economic indicators in 1980โ€“2022 (with IMF staff estimates in 2023โ€“2028). Inflation below 5% is in green. The annual unemployment rate is extracted from the World Bank, although the International Monetary Fund finds them unreliable. Sectors Historically, India has classified and tracked its economy and GDP in three sectors: agriculture, industry, and services. Agriculture includes crops, horticulture, milk and animal husbandry, aquaculture, fishing, sericulture, aviculture, forestry, and related activities. Industry includes various manufacturing sub-sectors. India's definition of services sector includes its construction, retail, software, IT, communications, hospitality, infrastructure operations, education, healthcare, banking and insurance, and many other economic activities. Agriculture Agriculture and allied sectors like forestry, logging and fishing accounted for 17% of the GDP, the sector employed 49% of its total workforce in 2014. Agriculture accounted for 23% of GDP, and employed 59% of the country's total workforce in 2016. India ranks second globally in food and agricultural production, while agricultural exports were $35.09ย billion. As the Indian economy has diversified and grown, agriculture's contribution to GDP has steadily declined from 1951 to 2011, yet it is still the country's largest employment source and a significant piece of its overall socio-economic development. Crop-yield-per-unit-area of all crops has grown since 1950, due to the special emphasis placed on agriculture in the five-year plans and steady improvements in irrigation, technology, application of modern agricultural practices and provision of agricultural credit and subsidies since the Green Revolution in India. However, international comparisons reveal the average yield in India is generally 30% to 50% of the highest average yield in the world. The states of Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Haryana, Madhya Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Bihar, West Bengal, Gujarat and Maharashtra are key contributors to Indian agriculture. India receives an average annual rainfall of and a total annual precipitation of 4,000 billion cubic metres, with the total utilisable water resources, including surface and groundwater, amounting to 1,123 billion cubic metres. of the land area, or about 39% of the total cultivated area, is irrigated. India's inland water resources and marine resources provide employment to nearly 6 million people in the fisheries sector. In 2010, India had the world's sixth-largest fishing industry. India is the largest producer of milk, jute and pulses, and has the world's second-largest cattle population with 170 million animals in 2011. It is the second-largest producer of rice, wheat, sugarcane, cotton and groundnuts, as well as the second-largest fruit and vegetable producer, accounting for 10.9% and 8.6% of the world fruit and vegetable production, respectively. India is also the second-largest producer and the largest consumer of silk, producing in 2005. India is the largest exporter of cashew kernels and cashew nut shell liquid (CNSL). Foreign exchange earned by the country through the export of cashew kernels during 2011โ€“12 reached based on statistics from the Cashew Export Promotion Council of India (CEPCI). of kernels were exported during 2011โ€“12. There are about 600 cashew processing units in Kollam, Kerala. India's foodgrain production remained stagnant at approximately during both the 2015โ€“16 and 2014โ€“15 crop years (Julyโ€“June). India exports several agriculture products, such as Basmati rice, wheat, cereals, spices, fresh fruits, dry fruits, buffalo beef meat, cotton, tea, coffee and other cash crops particularly to the Middle East, Southeast and East Asian countries. About 10 percent of its export earnings come from this trade. At around , India has the second-largest amount of arable land, after US, with 52% of total land under cultivation. Although the total land area of the country is only slightly more than one-third of China or US, India's arable land is marginally smaller than that of US, and marginally larger than that of China. However, agricultural output lags far behind its potential. The low productivity in India is a result of several factors.Over-regulation of agriculture has increased costs, price risks and uncertainty, and governmental intervention in labour, land, and credit are hurting the market. Infrastructure such as rural roads, electricity, ports, food storage, retail markets and services remain inadequate. The average size of land holdings is very small, with 70% of holdings being less than in size. Irrigation facilities are inadequate, as revealed by the fact that only 46% of the total cultivable land was irrigated resulting in farmers still being dependent on rainfall, specifically the monsoon season, which is often inconsistent and unevenly distributed across the country. In an effort to bring an additional of land under irrigation, various schemes have been attempted, including the Accelerated Irrigation Benefit Programme (AIBP) which was provided in the Union Budget. Farming incomes are also hampered by lack of food storage and distribution infrastructure; a third of India's agricultural production is lost from spoilage. Manufacturing and industry Industry accounts for 26% of GDP and employs 22% of the total workforce, and Mumbai is generally considered the industrial capital. According to the World Bank, India's industrial manufacturing GDP output in 2015 was 6th largest in the world on current US dollar basis ($559ย billion), and 9th largest on inflation-adjusted constant 2005 US dollar basis ($197.1ย billion). The industrial sector underwent significant changes due to the 1991 economic reforms, which removed import restrictions, brought in foreign competition, led to the privatisation of certain government-owned public-sector industries, liberalised the foreign direct investment (FDI) regime, improved infrastructure and led to an expansion in the production of fast-moving consumer goods. Post-liberalisation, the Indian private sector was faced with increasing domestic and foreign competition, including the threat of cheaper Chinese imports. It has since handled the change by squeezing costs, revamping management, and relying on cheap labour and new technology. However, this has also reduced employment generation, even among smaller manufacturers who previously relied on labour-intensive processes. Manufacturing and tech industries are geographically located in industrial regions in India, It is also the world's second-largest coal producer, the second-largest agrochemical producer, the second-largest cement producer, the second-largest steel producer, and the third-largest electricity producer. Agrochemicals and Fertilizers At present, 57 large fertilizer units are manufacturing a wide number of nitrogen fertilizers. These include 29 urea-producing units and 9 ammonia sulfate-producing units as a by-product. Besides, there are 64 small-scale producing units of single super phosphate. According to the latest data released by the WTO, India has emerged as the second largest exporter of agrochemicals in the world. The rank was sixth, 10 years ago.The Indian agrochemical industry fetches valuable trade surplus every year. The trade surplus sharply increased from Rs. 8,030 crores in 2017โ€“18 to Rs. 28,908 crores in the last fiscal. India's agrochemicals export has doubled in the last 6 years from $2.6 bn in 2017โ€“18 to $5.4 bn in the last financial year according to the data recently released by Ministry of Commerce. It has grown at an impressive CAGR of 13% which is among the highest in the manufacturing sector. Millions of farmers in over 130 countries trust Indian agrochemicals for their high quality and affordable prices, said an industry observer. With the global agrochemicals market estimated at $78 billion, predominantly comprising post-patent products, India is rapidly becoming a preferred global hub for sourcing such agrochemicals. To bolster domestic production and reduce imports, the Crop Care Federation of India (CCFI) has recommended specific measures to the Government of India. Defence sector With strength of over 1.3 million active personnel, Indian Army is the third-largest military force and the largest volunteer army. Defence expenditure was pegged at US$70.12ย billion for fiscal year 2022โ€“23 and, increased 9.8% than previous fiscal year. India is the world's second largest arms importer; between 2016 and 2020, it accounted for 9.5% of the total global arms imports. India exported military hardware worth in the financial year 2022โ€“23, the highest ever and a notable tenfold increase since 2016โ€“17. Energy sector Primary energy consumption of India is the third-largest after China and US with 5.3% global share in the year 2015. Coal and crude oil together account for 85% of the primary energy consumption of India. India's oil reserves meet 25% of the country's domestic oil demand. India's total proven crude oil reserves are , while gas reserves stood at . Oil and natural gas fields are located offshore at Ashoknagar Oil Field, Bombay High, Krishna Godavari Basin, Mangala Area and the Cauvery Delta, and onshore mainly in the states of West Bengal, Assam, Gujarat and Rajasthan. India is the fourth-largest consumer of oil and net oil imports were nearly in 2014โ€“15, which had an adverse effect on the country's current account deficit. The petroleum industry in India mostly consists of public sector companies such as Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC), Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Limited (HPCL), Bharat Petroleum Corporation Limited (BPCL) and Indian Oil Corporation Limited (IOCL). There are some major private Indian companies in the oil sector such as Reliance Industries Limited (RIL) which operates the world's largest oil refining complex. India became the world's third-largest producer of electricity in 2013 with a 4.8% global share in electricity generation, surpassing Japan and Russia. By the end of calendar year 2015, India had an electricity surplus with many power stations idling for want of demand. The utility electricity sector had an installed capacity of 303 GW of which thermal power contributed 69.8%, hydroelectricity 15.2%, other sources of renewable energy 13.0%, and nuclear power 2.1%. India meets most of its domestic electricity demand through its of proven coal reserves. India is also rich in certain alternative sources of energy with significant future potential such as solar, wind and biofuels (jatropha, sugarcane). India's dwindling uranium reserves stagnated the growth of nuclear energy in the country for many years. Recent discoveries in the Tummalapalle belt may be among the top 20 natural uranium reserves worldwide, and an estimated reserve of of thoriumย โ€“ about 25% of world's reservesย โ€“ are expected to fuel the country's ambitious nuclear energy program in the long-run. The Indo-US nuclear deal has also paved the way for India to import uranium from other countries. Transport sector The Indian Railways contributes to ~3% of the country's gross domestic product (GDP) and has social obligations pegged at $5.3 Billion annually. Indian Railways revenue has grown at 5% CAGR in the past 5 years but profitability has reduced drastically in the past 4 years, due to growing infrastructure and modernization expenses. With a workforce of 1.31 million people, the IR is also one of the country's largest employers. The railways is a major contributor to jobs, GDP, and mobility. Indian Railways has decided to revise its 2022โ€“23 rolling stock production plan upwards. The Ministry's new plan targets the production of 8,429 units for the coming financial year. Production for 2022โ€“23 has been raised by 878 units from the earlier planned 7,551, according to the revised targets. Indian Railways has targeted to manufacture 475 new Vande Bharat trainsets for the next four years as a part of its modernization plan.It is about Rs 40,000 crore(5 billion $) business opportunity that would also create 15,000 jobs and several spin -off benefits. Indian Railway's CORE aims to electrify all of its broad gauge network by 31 March 2024. The entire electrified mainline rail network in India uses 25 kV AC; DC is used only for metros.As of July 2023, India currently has 90% of total train tracks fully electrified. Under the eleventh Five Year Plan of India (2007โ€“12), the Ministry of Railways started constructing a new Dedicated Freight Corridor (DFC) in two long routes, namely the Eastern and Western freight corridors. The two routes cover a total length of , with the Eastern Dedicated Freight Corridor stretching from Ludhiana in Punjab to Dankuni in West Bengal and the Western Dedicated Freight Corridor from Jawaharlal Nehru Port in Mumbai (Maharashtra) to Dadri in Uttar Pradesh. The DFC will generate around 42,000 jobs and provide long term employment to many people in public sector and private sector. India is developing modern mass rapid transit systems to meet present and future urban requirements. A modern metro rail system is already in place in the cities of Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore, Kolkata, Hyderabad, Kochi, Gurgaon, Jaipur, Noida, Pune, Nagpur, Kanpur, Ahmedabad and Lucknow. Similar mass transit systems are intended for Agra, Bhopal, Indore, Surat, Patna, Bhubaneswar Tri-city , Chandigarh Tri-city, Gwalior, Mysore, Nashik, Prayagraj, Varanasi, Ranchi, Thane, Trivandrum and Navi Mumbai. Former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee has been credited with success of the metro systems in India and every metro has followed Delhi Metro model generating lot of real estate wealth in India specially in smaller cities like Gurgaon and Noida. For Elevated corridor, there is no need for land acquisition as pillars are built above Median strip of a road. Land prices in tier-II cities such as Lucknow, Patna, Jaipur, Ahmedabad, Pune, Kochi, and Coimbatore have gone up by almost 8-10 percent following the introduction of a metro corridor in these cities, an assessment by JLL has said. India is also developing modern RRTS system to replace the old MRTS system which will provide connectivity in Delhi Metropolitan Area and Mumbai Metropolitan Region which will serve the suburbs of these big cities at 80โ€“100ย km of distance from city center. Engineering Engineering is the largest sub-sector of India's industrial sector, by GDP, and the third-largest by exports. It includes transport equipment, machine tools, capital goods, transformers, switchgear, furnaces, and cast and forged parts for turbines, automobiles, and railways. The industry employs about 4 million workers. On a value-added basis, India's engineering subsector exported $67ย billion worth of engineering goods in the 2013โ€“14 fiscal year, and served part of the domestic demand for engineering goods. As of 2023, India is the 3rd largest automotive market in the world in terms of sales. The Indian automobile industry is the world's fourth-largest by production. The engineering industry of India includes its growing car, trainsets, rail wagons, motorcycle and scooters industry, and productivity machinery such as steel equipment, nuclear equipment, shovel, dump trucks, tractors. India manufactured and assembled about 18 million passenger and utility vehicles in 2011, of which 2.3 million were exported. Indian Railways has made a new record of manufacturing 10,000 coaches for both domestic and export purposes. India is the largest producer and the largest market for tractors, accounting for 29% of global tractor production in 2013. India is the 12th-largest producer and 7th-largest consumer of machine tools. The rolling stock market in India will be worth 4 billion $ approx. in 2023 will reach 5 billion $ in 2025.The automotive manufacturing industry contributed $79ย billion (4% of GDP) and employed 6.76 million people (2% of the workforce) in 2016. Iron and steel India surpassed Japan as the second largest steel producer in January 2019. As per worldsteel, India's crude steel production in 2018 was at , 4.9% increase from in 2017, which means that India overtook Japan as the world's second largest steel production country. According to data presented by PIB(FY2021-22), there are more than 900 steel plants in India that produce crude steel. These are owned by PSUs, large-scale companies as well as small and medium enterprises (SMEs). In the year 2021-22, the total capacity of these plants stood at 154.06 million tonnes. India plans to build 12 new steel plants with a capacity of per year. Indian Ministry of Steel instructed public sector integrated steel plants to increase capacity by at least 80%, to per year by 2030. The current capacity is per year. Steel products produced by large and well established companies such as JSW Group, Jindal Steel and Power, Tata Steel, RINL and SAIL have extremely diversified steel product lines such as TMT Bars, steel pipes, railway tracks, rail wheels etc. The total market value of the Indian steel sector stood at US$57.8 billion in 2011 and is predicted to touch US$95.3 billion by 2016.Growth of crude steel production in India has not kept pace with the growth in capacity of production, according to the report. As per this report, steel sector contributes 2 per cent to India's GDP and employs half a million people directly and 2 million people indirectly. The Indian steel sector has been vibrant, growing at a compounded rate of 6% year-on-year. Business-to-Business commerce Business-to-Business (B2B) marketplaces are likely to hit gross merchandise value (GMV) of $125 billion in the next five years, growing at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 45%, according to a report by Avendus Capital. India's B2B e-commerce startups sees 3-6x growth, India's B2B (business-to-business) market is twice the size of B2C (business-to-consumer) and contributes roughly two-thirds to India $3 trillion economy.India has seen the rise of several B2B unicorns too and, they are going after what's potentially a $2 trillion opportunity.These companies are fuelling the engines of Indian economy โ€” the micro-, small- and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs). The addressable market is big with over 65 million MSMEs all ready to go digital, but only about six to 10 million of them actively buy and sell online. As per Airtel, 5G will make more B2B Revenues than B2C. Government e Marketplace is an online platform for public procurement within Government departments/organizations in India under Government of India also knows as G2G commerce, The initiative was launched on August 9, 2016, by the Ministry of Commerce and Industry. GeM's B2B procurement crosses Rs 2 lakh-crore mark($30.76 Billion).The business through GeM has grown from around Rs 35,000 crore two years ago and tripled last year to Rs 1 lakh 6 thousand crores. Gems and jewellery India is one of the largest centres for polishing diamonds and gems and manufacturing jewellery; it is also one of the two largest consumers of gold. After crude oil and petroleum products, the export and import of gold, precious metals, precious stones, gems and jewellery accounts for the largest portion of India's global trade. The industry contributes about 7% of India's GDP, employs hundreds of thousands, and is a major source of its foreign-exchange earnings. The gems and jewellery industry created $80.84ย billion in economic output on value-added basis in 2023. The gems and jewellery industry has been economically active in India for several thousand years. Until the 18th century, India was the only major reliable source of diamonds. Now, South Africa and Australia are the major sources of diamonds and precious metals, but along with Antwerp, New York City, and Ramat Gan, Indian cities such as Surat and Mumbai are the hubs of world's jewellery polishing, cutting, precision finishing, supply and trade. Unlike other centres, the gems and jewellery industry in India is primarily artisan-driven; the sector is manual, highly fragmented, and almost entirely served by family-owned operations. The particular strength of this sub-sector is in precision cutting, polishing and processing small diamonds (below one carat). India is also a hub for processing of larger diamonds, pearls, and other precious stones. Statistically, 11 out of 12 diamonds set in any jewellery in the world are cut and polished in India. Infrastructure India's infrastructure and transport sector contributes about 5% of its GDP. India has a road network of over the second-largest road network in the world only behind United States. At 1.66ย km of roads per square kilometre of land (2.68 miles per square mile), the quantitative density of India's road network is higher than that of Japan (0.91) and United States (0.67), and far higher than that of China (0.46), Brazil (0.18) or Russia (0.08). Qualitatively, India's roads are a mix of modern highways and narrow, unpaved roads, and are being improved. 87.05% of Indian roads were paved. It is upgrading its infrastructure. India had completed over of 4- or 6-lane highways, connecting most of its major manufacturing, commercial and cultural centres. India's road infrastructure carries 60% of freight and 87% of passenger traffic. India has a coastline of with 13 major ports, 15 big private ports and 60 operational non-major ports, which together handle 95% of the country's external trade by volume and 70% by value (most of the remainder handled by air). Kandla Port, New Kandla is the largest public port established in early 1960's, while Mundra is the largest private sea port. The airport infrastructure of India includes 125 airports, of which 66 airports are licensed to handle both passengers and cargo. Petroleum products and chemicals Petroleum products and chemicals are a major contributor to India's industrial GDP, and together they contribute over 34% of its export earnings. India hosts many oil refinery and petrochemical operations developed with help of Soviet technology such as Barauni Refinery and Gujarat Refinery , it also includes the world's largest refinery complex in Jamnagar that processes 1.24 million barrels of crude per day. By volume, the Indian chemical industry was the third-largest producer in Asia, and contributed 5% of the country's GDP. India is one of the five-largest producers of agrochemicals, polymers and plastics, dyes and various organic and inorganic chemicals. Despite being a large producer and exporter, India is a net importer of chemicals due to domestic demands. India's chemical industry is extremely diversified and estimated at $178 billion. The chemical industry contributed $163 billion to the economy in FY18 and is expected to reach $300โ€“400 billion by 2025. The industry employed 17.33 million people (4% of the workforce) in 2016. Engineers India, a consulting firm which designs refinery and other petrochemical complex is currently executing the construction of Barmer Refinery to be completed by 2024. Pharmaceuticals The Indian pharmaceutical industry has grown in recent years to become a major manufacturer of health care products for the world. India holds a 20% market share in the global supply of generics by volume. The Indian pharmaceutical sector also supplies over 62% of the global demand for various vaccines. India's pharmaceutical exports stood at $17.27ย billion in 2017โ€“18 and are expected to reach $20ย billion by 2020. The industry grew from $6ย billion in 2005 to $36.7ย billion in 2016, a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 17.46%. It is expected to grow at a CAGR of 15.92% to reach $55ย billion in 2020. India is expected to become the sixth-largest pharmaceutical market in the world by 2020. India is the world's largest manufacturer of generic drugs, and its pharmaceutical sector fulfills over 50% of the global demand for vaccines. It is one of the fastest-growing industrial sub-sectors and a significant contributor to India's export earnings. The state of Gujarat has become a hub for the manufacture and export of pharmaceuticals and active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs). Textile The textile and apparel market in India was estimated to be $108.5ย billion in 2015. It is expected to reach a size of $226ย billion by 2023. The industry employees over 35 million people. By value, the textile industry accounts for 7% of India's industrial, 2% of GDP and 15% of the country's export earnings. India exported $39.2ย billion worth of textiles in the 2017โ€“18 fiscal year. The Indian textiles industry is estimated at $100ย billion and contributes 13% of industrial output and 2.3% of India's GDP while employs over 45 million people directly. India's textile industry has transformed in recent years from a declining sector to a rapidly developing one. After freeing the industry in 2004โ€“2005 from a number of limitations, primarily financial, the government permitted massive investment inflows, both domestic and foreign. From 2004 to 2008, total investment into the textile sector increased by $27ย billion. Ludhiana produces 90% of woollens in India and is known as the Manchester of India. Tirupur has gained universal recognition as the leading source of hosiery, knitted garments, casual wear, and sportswear. Expanding textile centres such as Ichalkaranji enjoy one of the highest per-capita incomes in the country. India's cotton farms, fibre and textile industry provides employment to 45 million people in India, including some child labour (1%). The sector is estimated to employ around 400,000 children under the age of 18. Pulp and paper The pulp and paper industry in India is one of the major producers of paper in the world and has adopted new manufacturing technology. The paper market in India was estimated to be worth in 2017โ€“18 recording a CAGR of 6โ€“7%. Domestic demand for paper almost doubled from around in the 2007โ€“08 fiscal to over in 2017โ€“18. The per capita consumption of paper in India is around 13โ€“14ย kg annually, lower than the global average of 57ย kg. Mining Mining contributed $63ย billion (3% of GDP) and employed 20.14 million people (5% of the workforce) in 2016. India's mining industry was the fourth-largest producer of minerals in the world by volume, and eighth-largest producer by value in 2009. In 2013, it mined and processed 89 minerals, of which four were fuel, three were atomic energy minerals, and 80 non-fuel. The public sector accounted for 68% of mineral production by volume in 2011โ€“12. India has the world's fourth-largest natural resources, with the mining sector contributing 11% of the country's industrial GDP and 2.5% of total GDP. Nearly 50% of India's mining industry, by output value, is concentrated in eight states: Odisha, Rajasthan, Chhattisgarh, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh and Karnataka. Another 25% of the output by value comes from offshore oil and gas resources. India operated about 3,000 mines in 2010, half of which were coal, limestone and iron ore. On output-value basis, India was one of the five largest producers of mica, chromite, coal, lignite, iron ore, bauxite, barite, zinc and manganese; while being one of the ten largest global producers of many other minerals. India was the fourth-largest producer of steel in 2013, and the seventh-largest producer of aluminium. India's mineral resources are vast. However, its mining industry has declinedย โ€“ contributing 2.3% of its GDP in 2010 compared to 3% in 2000, and employed 2.9 million peopleย โ€“ a decreasing percentage of its total labour. India is a net importer of many minerals including coal. India's mining sector decline is because of complex permit, regulatory and administrative procedures, inadequate infrastructure, shortage of capital resources, and slow adoption of environmentally sustainable technologies. Construction The construction industry contributed $288ย billion (13% of GDP) and employed 60.42 million people (14% of the workforce) in 2016. The construction and real estate sector ranks third among the 14 major sectors in terms of direct, indirect, and induced effects in all sectors of the economy. The real estate sector will provide huge business opportunities, employment and big avenues for startup ecosystem. The 2023 Union budget of India also focused significantly on infrastructure with nearly โ‚น10 trillion direct investment of central government. Services and Consulting industry The services sector has the largest share of India's GDP, accounting for 57% in 2012, up from 15% in 1950. It is the seventh-largest services sector by nominal GDP, and third largest when purchasing power is taken into account. The services sector provides employment to 27% of the workforce. Information technology and business process outsourcing are among the fastest-growing sectors, having a cumulative growth rate of revenue 33.6% between fiscal years 1997โ€“98 and 2002โ€“03, and contributing to 25% of the country's total exports in . Aviation India is the fourth-largest civil aviation market in the world recording an air traffic of 158 million passengers in 2017. The market is estimated to have 800 aircraft by 2020, which would account for 4.3% of global volumes, and is expected to record annual passenger traffic of 520 million by 2037. IATA estimated that aviation contributed $30ย billion to India's GDP in 2017, and supported 7.5 million jobs โ€“ 390,000 directly, 570,000 in the value chain, and 6.2 million through tourism. Civil aviation in India traces its beginnings to 18 February 1911, when Henri Pequet, a French aviator, carried 6,500 pieces of mail on a Humber biplane from Allahabad (present-day Prayagraj) to Naini. Later on 15 October 1932, J.R.D. Tata flew a consignment of mail from Karachi to Juhu Airport. His airline later became Air India and was the first Asian airline to cross the Atlantic Ocean as well as first Asian airline to fly jets. Nationalisation In March 1953, the Indian Parliament passed the Air Corporations Act to streamline and nationalise the then existing privately owned eight domestic airlines into Indian Airlines for domestic services and the Tata group-owned Air India for international services. The International Airports Authority of India (IAAI) was constituted in 1972 while the National Airports Authority was constituted in 1986. The Bureau of Civil Aviation Security was established in 1987 following the crash of Air India Flight 182. De-regulation The government de-regularised the civil aviation sector in 1991 when the government allowed private airlines to operate charter and non-scheduled services under the 'Air Taxi' Scheme until 1994, when the Air Corporation Act was repealed and private airlines could now operate scheduled services. Private airlines including Jet Airways, Air Sahara, Modiluft, Damania Airways and NEPC Airlines commenced domestic operations during this period. The aviation industry experienced a rapid transformation following deregulation. Several low-cost carriers entered the Indian market in 2004โ€“05. Major new entrants included Air Deccan, Air Sahara, Kingfisher Airlines, SpiceJet, GoAir, Paramount Airways and IndiGo. Kingfisher Airlines became the first Indian air carrier on 15 June 2005 to order Airbus A380 aircraft worth 3ย billion. However, Indian aviation would struggle due to an economic slowdown and rising fuel and operation costs. This led to consolidation, buyouts and discontinuations. In 2007, Air Sahara and Air Deccan were acquired by Jet Airways and Kingfisher Airlines respectively. Paramount Airways ceased operations in 2010 and Kingfisher shut down in 2012. Etihad Airways agreed to acquire a 24% stake in Jet Airways in 2013. AirAsia India, a low-cost carrier operating as a joint venture between Air Asia and Tata Sons launched in 2014. โ€“14, only IndiGo and GoAir were generating profits. The average domestic passenger air fare dropped by 70% between 2005 and 2017, after adjusting for inflation. Banking and financial services The financial services industry contributed $809ย billion (37% of GDP) and employed 14.17 million people (3% of the workforce) in 2016, and the banking sector contributed $407ย billion (19% of GDP) and employed 5.5 million people (1% of the workforce) in 2016. The Indian money market is classified into the organised sector, comprising private, public and foreign-owned commercial banks and cooperative banks, together known as 'scheduled banks'; and the unorganised sector, which includes individual or family-owned indigenous bankers or money lenders and non-banking financial companies. The unorganised sector and microcredit are preferred over traditional banks in rural and sub-urban areas, especially for non-productive purposes such as short-term loans for ceremonies. Prime Minister Indira Gandhi nationalised 14 banks in 1969, followed by six others in 1980, and made it mandatory for banks to provide 40% of their net credit to priority sectors including agriculture, small-scale industry, retail trade and small business, to ensure that the banks fulfilled their social and developmental goals. Since then, the number of bank branches has increased from 8,260 in 1969 to 72,170 in 2007 and the population covered by a branch decreased from 63,800 to 15,000 during the same period. The total bank deposits increased from in 1970โ€“71 to in 2008โ€“09. Despite an increase of rural branches โ€“ from 1,860 or 22% of the total in 1969 to 30,590 or 42% in 2007 โ€“ only 32,270 of 500,000 villages are served by a scheduled bank. India's gross domestic savings in 2006โ€“07 as a percentage of GDP stood at a high 32.8%. More than half of personal savings are invested in physical assets such as land, houses, cattle, and gold. The government-owned public-sector banks hold over 75% of total assets of the banking industry, with the private and foreign banks holding 18.2% and 6.5% respectively. Since liberalisation, the government has approved significant banking reforms. While some of these relate to nationalised banks โ€“ such as reforms encouraging mergers, reducing government interference and increasing profitability and competitiveness โ€“ other reforms have opened the banking and insurance sectors to private and foreign companies. Financial technology According to the report of The National Association of Software and Services Companies (NASSCOM), India has a presence of around 400 companies in the fintech space, with an investment of about $420ย million in 2015. The Indian fintech landscape is segmented as follows โ€“ 34% in payment processing, followed by 32% in banking and 12% in the trading, public and private markets. The Fintech growing at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 22 percent during 2022 and 2030. The overall fintech market in estimated to grow to about 2.1 trillion dollars. Information technology The information technology (IT) industry in India consists of two major components: IT Services and business process outsourcing (BPO). The sector has increased its contribution to India's GDP from 1.2% in 1998 to 7.5% in 2012. According to NASSCOM, the sector aggregated revenues of 147 billion in 2015, where export revenue stood at 99 billion and domestic at 48ย billion, growing by over 13%. The Indian IT industry is a major exporter of IT services with $227ย billion in revenue and employs over 5 million people. The growth in the IT sector is attributed to increased specialisation, and an availability of a large pool of low-cost, highly skilled, fluent English-speaking workers โ€“ matched by increased demand from foreign consumers interested in India's service exports, or looking to outsource their operations. The share of the Indian IT industry in the country's GDP increased from 4.8% in 2005โ€“06 to 7% in 2008. In 2009, seven Indian firms were listed among the top 15 technology outsourcing companies in the world. The business process outsourcing services in the outsourcing industry in India caters mainly to Western operations of multinational corporations. around 2.8 million people work in the outsourcing sector. Annual revenues are around $11ย billion, around 1% of GDP. Around 2.5 million people graduate in India every year. Wages are rising by 10โ€“15 percent as a result of skill shortages. Insurance India became the tenth-largest insurance market in the world in 2013, rising from 15th in 2011. At a total market size of US$66.4ย billion in 2013, it remains small compared to world's major economies, and the Indian insurance market accounted for just 2% of the world's insurance business in 2017. India's life and non-life insurance industry collected in total gross insurance premiums in 2018. Life insurance accounts for 75.41% of the insurance market and the rest is general insurance. Of the 52 insurance companies in India, 24 are active in life-insurance business. Specialised insurers Export Credit Guarantee Corporation and Agriculture Insurance Company (AIC) offer credit guarantee and crop insurance. It has introduced several innovative products such as weather insurance and insurance related to specific crops. The premium underwritten by the non-life insurers during 2010โ€“11 was against in 2009โ€“10. The growth was satisfactory, particularly given across-the-broad cuts in the tariff rates. The private insurers underwrote premiums of against in 2009โ€“10. Life Insurance Corporation, a Government owned Public sector company has an asset of US$570 billion which greater than Apple Inc.'s US$332.16 billion. Retail The retail industry, excluding wholesale, contributed $793ย billion (10% of GDP) and employed 35 million people (8% of the workforce) in 2020. The industry is the second largest employer in India, after agriculture. The Indian retail market is estimated to be US$600ย billion and one of the top-five retail markets in the world by economic value. India has one of the fastest-growing retail markets in the world, and is projected to reach $1.3ย trillion by 2020. India has retail market worth $1.17ย trillion, which contributes over 10% of India's GDP. It also has one of the world's fastest growing e-commerce markets. The e-commerce retail market in India was valued at $32.7ย billion in 2018, and is expected to reach $71.9ย billion by 2022. India's retail industry mostly consists of local mom-and-pop stores, owner-staffed shops and street vendors. Retail supermarkets are expanding, with a market share of 4% in 2008. In 2012, the government permitted 51% FDI in multi-brand retail and 100% FDI in single-brand retail. However, a lack of back-end warehouse infrastructure and state-level permits and red tape continue to limit growth of organised retail. Compliance with over thirty regulations such as "signboard licences" and "anti-hoarding measures" must be made before a store can open for business. There are taxes for moving goods from state to state, and even within states. According to The Wall Street Journal, the lack of infrastructure and efficient retail networks cause a third of India's agriculture produce to be lost from spoilage. Tourism The World Travel & Tourism Council calculated that tourism generated or 9.4% of the nation's GDP in 2017 and supported 41.622 million jobs, 8% of its total employment. The sector is predicted to grow at an annual rate of 6.9% to by 2028 (9.9% of GDP). Over 10 million foreign tourists arrived in India in 2017 compared to 8.89 million in 2016, recording a growth of 15.6%. The tourism industry contributes about 9.2% of India's GDP and employs over 42 million people. India earned $21.07ย billion in foreign exchange from tourism receipts in 2015. International tourism to India has seen a steady growth from 2.37 million arrivals in 1997 to 8.03 million arrivals in 2015. Bangladesh is the largest source of international tourists to India, while European Union nations and Japan are other major sources of international tourists. Less than 10% of international tourists visit the Taj Mahal, with the majority visiting other cultural, thematic and holiday circuits. Over 12 million Indian citizens take international trips each year for tourism, while domestic tourism within India adds about 740 million Indian travellers. India has a fast-growing medical tourism sector of its health care economy, offering low-cost health services and long-term care. In October 2015, the medical tourism sector was estimated to be worth US$3ย billion. It is projected to grow to $7โ€“8ย billion by 2020. In 2014, 184,298 foreign patients traveled to India to seek medical treatment. Healthcare and Travel Healthcare India's healthcare sector is expected to grow at a CAGR of 29% between 2015 and 2020, to reach US$280ย billion, buoyed by rising incomes, greater health awareness, increased precedence of lifestyle diseases, and improved access to health insurance. The India hospital market size was valued at USD 93.6 billion in 2022, driven by the rise in the prevalence of chronic and infectious diseases across India. The market size is anticipated to grow at a CAGR of 5.75% during the forecast period of 2023-2031 to achieve a value of USD 154.8 billion by 2031. Travel Healthcare is a growing sector in India. In 2022,According to Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI) report, India's travel healthcare sector was estimated to be worth US$9 billion. Approximately 2 million patients visit India each year from 78 countries for medical, wellness and IVF treatments, generating $6 billion for the industry which is expected to reach $13 billion by 2026 backed by the governmentโ€™s Heal in India initiative. The ayurveda industry in India recorded a market size of $4.4ย billion in 2018. The Confederation of Indian Industry estimates that the industry will grow at a CAGR 16% until 2025. Nearly 75% of the market comprises over-the-counter personal care and beauty products, while ayurvedic well-being or ayurvedic tourism services accounted for 15% of the market. Logistics The logistics industry in India was worth over $160ย billion in 2016, and grew at a CAGR of 7.8% in the previous five-year period. The industry employs about 22 million people. It is expected to reach of a size of $215ย billion by 2020. India was ranked 35th out of 160 countries in the World Bank's 2016 Logistics Performance Index. Media and Press An ASSOCHAM-PwC joint study projected that the Indian media and entertainment industry would grow from a size of $30.364ย billion in 2017 to $52.683ย billion by 2022, recording a CAGR of 11.7%. The study also predicted that television, satellite dish, over-the-top services would account for nearly half of the overall industry growth during the period. India has very popular newspaper and media outlets such as The Times of India, Hindustan Times and Zee TV. Films, entertainment and music industry The Indian cinema industry is expected to garner a revenue of around Rs 16,198 crore by 2026, of which Rs 15,849 would be Box office revenue and the rest Rs 349 crore from advertising, the report added. India's Recorded Music industry (which is a key sub-segment) is making steady progress at a CAGR of 13.6 percent, thanks to streaming models. India has many popular music recording houses such as T-series. Telecommunications The telecommunication sector generated in revenue in 2014โ€“15, accounting for 1.94% of total GDP. India is the second-largest market in the world by number of telephone users (both fixed and mobile phones) with 1.053 billion subscribers It has one of the lowest call-tariffs in the world, due to fierce competition among telecom operators. India has the world's third-largest Internet user-base. there were 342.65 million Internet subscribers in the country. India's telecommunication industry is the world's second largest by the number of mobile phone, smartphone, and internet users. It is the world's 24th-largest oil producer and the third-largest oil consumer. Industry estimates indicate that there are over 554 million TV consumers in India India is the largest direct-to-home (DTH) television market in the world by number of subscribers. there were 84.80 million DTH subscribers in the country. Security markets The development of Indian security markets began with the launch of the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) in July 1875 and the Ahmedabad Stock Exchange in 1894. Since then, 22 other exchanges have traded in Indian cities. In 2014, India's stock exchange market became the 10th largest in the world by market capitalisation, just above those of South Korea and Australia. India's two major stock exchanges, BSE and the National Stock Exchange of India, had a market capitalisation of US$1.71ย trillion and US$1.68ย trillion according to the World Federation of Exchanges, which grew to $3.36 trillion and $3.31 trillion respectively by September 2021. The initial public offering (IPO) market in India has been small compared to NYSE and NASDAQ, raising US$300ย million in 2013 and US$1.4ย billion in 2012. Ernst & Young stated that the low IPO activity reflects market conditions, slow government approval processes, and complex regulations. Before 2013, Indian companies were not allowed to list their securities internationally without first completing an IPO in India. In 2013, these security laws were reformed and Indian companies can now choose where they want to list first: overseas, domestically, or both concurrently. Further, security laws have been revised to ease overseas listings of already-listed companies, to increase liquidity for private equity and international investors in Indian companies. Foreign trade and investment Foreign trade India's foreign trade by year Until the liberalisation of 1991, India was largely and intentionally isolated from world markets, to protect its economy and to achieve self-reliance. Foreign trade was subject to import tariffs, export taxes and quantitative restrictions, while foreign direct investment (FDI) was restricted by upper-limit equity participation, restrictions on technology transfer, export obligations and government approvals; these approvals were needed for nearly 60% of new FDI in the industrial sector. The restrictions ensured that FDI averaged only around $200ย million annually between 1985 and 1991; a large percentage of the capital flows consisted of foreign aid, commercial borrowing and deposits of non-resident Indians. India's exports were stagnant for the first 15ย years after independence, due to general neglect of trade policy by the government of that period; imports in the same period, with early industrialisation, consisted predominantly of machinery, raw materials and consumer goods. Since liberalisation, the value of India's international trade has increased sharply, with the contribution of total trade in goods and services to the GDP rising from 16% in 1990โ€“91 to 47% in 2009โ€“10. Foreign trade accounted for 48.8% of India's GDP in 2015. Globally, India accounts for 1.44% of exports and 2.12% of imports for merchandise trade and 3.34% of exports and 3.31% of imports for commercial services trade. India's major trading partners are the European Union, China, United States and United Arab Emirates. In 2006โ€“07, major export commodities included engineering goods, petroleum products, chemicals and pharmaceuticals, gems and jewellery, textiles and garments, agricultural products, iron ore and other minerals. Major import commodities included crude oil and related products, machinery, electronic goods, gold and silver. In November 2010, exports increased 22.3% year-on-year to , while imports were up 7.5% at . The trade deficit for the same month dropped from in 2009 to in 2010. India is a founding-member of General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) and its successor, the WTO. While participating actively in its general council meetings, India has been crucial in voicing the concerns of the developing world. For instance, India has continued its opposition to the inclusion of labour, environmental issues and other non-tariff barriers to trade in WTO policies. India secured 43rd place in competitiveness index. Balance of payments Since independence, India's balance of payments on its current account has been negative. Since economic liberalisation in the 1990s, precipitated by a balance-of-payment crisis, India's exports rose consistently, covering 80.3% of its imports in 2002โ€“03, up from 66.2% in 1990โ€“91. However, the global economic slump followed by a general deceleration in world trade saw the exports as a percentage of imports drop to 61.4% in 2008โ€“09. India's growing oil import bill is seen as the main driver behind the large current account deficit, which rose to $118.7ย billion, or 11.11% of GDP, in 2008โ€“09. Between January and October 2010, India imported $82.1ย billion worth of crude oil. The Indian economy has run a trade deficit every year from 2002 to 2012, with a merchandise trade deficit of US$189ย billion in 2011โ€“12. Its trade with China has the largest deficit, about $31ย billion in 2013. India's reliance on external assistance and concessional debt has decreased since liberalisation of the economy, and the debt service ratio decreased from 35.3% in 1990โ€“91 to 4.4% in 2008โ€“09. In India, external commercial borrowings (ECBs), or commercial loans from non-resident lenders, are being permitted by the government for providing an additional source of funds to Indian corporates. The Ministry of Finance monitors and regulates them through ECB policy guidelines issued by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) under the Foreign Exchange Management Act of 1999. India's foreign exchange reserves have steadily risen from $5.8ย billion in March 1991 to โ‚น38,832.21ย billion (US$540ย billion) in July 2020. In 2012, United Kingdom announced an end to all financial aid to India, citing the growth and robustness of Indian economy. India's current account deficit reached an all-time high in 2013. India has historically funded its current account deficit through borrowings by companies in the overseas markets or remittances by non-resident Indians and portfolio inflows. From April 2016 to January 2017, RBI data showed that, for the first time since 1991, India was funding its deficit through foreign direct investment inflows. The Economic Times noted that the development was "a sign of rising confidence among long-term investors in Prime Minister Narendra Modi's ability to strengthen the country's economic foundation for sustained growth". Foreign direct investment As the third-largest economy in the world in PPP terms, India has attracted foreign direct investment (FDI). During the year 2011, FDI inflow into India stood at $36.5ย billion, 51.1% higher than the 2010 figure of $24.15ย billion. India has strengths in telecommunication, information technology and other significant areas such as auto components, chemicals, apparels, pharmaceuticals, and jewellery. Despite a surge in foreign investments, rigid FDI policies were a significant hindrance. Over time, India has adopted a number of FDI reforms. India has a large pool of skilled managerial and technical expertise. The size of the middle-class population stands at 300 million and represents a growing consumer market. India liberalised its FDI policy in 2005, allowing up to a 100% FDI stake in ventures. Industrial policy reforms have substantially reduced industrial licensing requirements, removed restrictions on expansion and facilitated easy access to foreign technology and investment. The upward growth curve of the real-estate sector owes some credit to a booming economy and liberalised FDI regime. In March 2005, the government amended the rules to allow 100% FDI in the construction sector, including built-up infrastructure and construction development projects comprising housing, commercial premises, hospitals, educational institutions, recreational facilities, and city- and regional-level infrastructure. Between 2012 and 2014, India extended these reforms to defence, telecom, oil, retail, aviation, and other sectors. From 2000 to 2010, the country attracted $178ย billion as FDI. The inordinately high investment from Mauritius is due to routing of international funds through the country given significant tax advantages โ€“ double taxation is avoided due to a tax treaty between India and Mauritius, and Mauritius is a capital gains tax haven, effectively creating a zero-taxation FDI channel. FDI accounted for 2.1% of India's GDP in 2015. As the government has eased 87 foreign investment direct rules across 21 sectors in the last three years, FDI inflows hit $60.1ย billion between 2016 and 2017 in India. Outflows Since 2000, Indian companies have expanded overseas, investing FDI and creating jobs outside India. From 2006 to 2010, FDI by Indian companies outside India amounted to 1.34 per cent of its GDP. Indian companies have deployed FDI and started operations in United States, Europe and Africa. The Indian company Tata is United Kingdom's largest manufacturer and private-sector employer. Remittances In 2015, a total of US$68.91ย billion was made in remittances to India from other countries, and a total of US$8.476ย billion was made in remittances by foreign workers in India to their home countries. UAE, US, and Saudi Arabia were the top sources of remittances to India, while Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Nepal were the top recipients of remittances from India. Remittances to India accounted for 3.32% of the country's GDP in 2015. Mergers and acquisitions Between 1985 and 2018 20,846 deals have been announced in, into (inbound) and out of (outbound) India. This cumulates to a value of US$618ย billion. In terms of value, 2010 has been the most active year with deals worth almost 60 bil. USD. Most deals have been conducted in 2007 (1,510). Here is a list of the top 10 deals with Indian companies participating: Currency EXCHANGE RATES The Indian rupee () is the only legal tender in India, and is also accepted as legal tender in neighbouring Nepal and Bhutan, both of which peg their currency to that of the Indian rupee. The rupee previously was divided into 100 paise, which no longer exist. The highest-denomination banknote is the 2,000 note until 30 September 2023 after which it will be scrapped and โ‚น500 note will become the highest denomination; the lowest-denomination coin in circulation is the โ‚น1 coin. In 2017, demonetisation was announced in which โ‚น500 and โ‚น1000 notes were withdrawn and new โ‚น500 notes were issued. India's monetary system is managed by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), the country's central bank. Established on 1 April 1935 and nationalised in 1949, the RBI serves as the nation's monetary authority, regulator and supervisor of the monetary system, banker to the government, custodian of foreign exchange reserves, and as an issuer of currency. It is governed by a central board of directors, headed by a governor who is appointed by the Government of India. The benchmark interest rates are set by the Monetary Policy Committee. The rupee was linked to the British pound from 1927 to 1946, and then to US dollar until 1975 through a fixed exchange rate. It was devalued in September 1975 and the system of fixed par rate was replaced with a basket of four major international currencies: the British pound, US dollar, the Japanese yen and the Deutsche Mark. In 1991, after the collapse of its largest trading partner, the Soviet Union, India faced the major foreign exchange crisis and the rupee was devalued by around 19% in two stages on 1 and 2 July. In 1992, a Liberalized Exchange Rate Mechanism (LERMS) was introduced. Under LERMS, exporters had to surrender 40 percent of their foreign exchange earnings to the RBI at the RBI-determined exchange rate; the remaining 60% could be converted at the market-determined exchange rate. In 1994, the rupee was convertible on the current account, with some capital controls. After the sharp devaluation in 1991 and transition to current account convertibility in 1994, the value of the rupee has been largely determined by market forces. The rupee has been fairly stable during the decade 2000โ€“2010. In October 2022, rupee touched an all-time low 83.29 to US dollar. Income and consumption India's gross national income per capita had experienced high growth rates since 2002. It tripled from 19,040 in 2002โ€“03 to 53,331 in 2010โ€“11, averaging 13.7% growth each of these eight years, with peak growth of 15.6% in 2010โ€“11 and, growth in the inflation-adjusted per-capita income of the nation slowed to 5.6% in 2010โ€“11, down from 6.4% in the previous year. These consumption levels are on an individual basis. The average family income in India was $6,671 per household in 2011. According to 2011 census data, India has about 330 million houses and 247 million households. The household size in India has dropped in recent years, the 2011 census reporting 50% of households have four or fewer members, with an average of 4.8 members per household including surviving grandparents. These households produced a GDP of about $1.7ย trillion. Consumption patterns note: approximately 67% of households use firewood, crop residue, or cow-dung cakes for cooking purposes; 53% do not have sanitation or drainage facilities on premises; 83% have water supply within their premises or from their house in urban areas and from the house in rural areas; 67% of the households have access to electricity; 63% of households have landline or mobile telephone service; 43% have a television; 26% have either a two- or four-wheel motor vehicle. Compared to 2001, these income and consumption trends represent moderate to significant improvements. One report in 2010 claimed that high-income households outnumber low-income households. New World Wealth publishes reports tracking the total wealth of countries, which is measured as the private wealth held by all residents of a country. According to New World Wealth, India's total wealth increased from $3,165ย billion in 2007 to $8,230ย billion in 2017, a growth rate of 160%. India's total wealth decreased by 1% from $8.23ย trillion in 2017 to $8.148ย trillion in 2018, making it the sixth wealthiest nation in the world. There are 20,730 multimillionaires (7th largest in the world) and 118 billionaires in India (3rd largest in the world). With 327,100 high net-worth individuals (HNWI), India is home to the 9th highest number of HNWIs in the world. Mumbai is the wealthiest Indian city and the 12th wealthiest in the world, with a total net worth of $941ย billion in 2018. Twenty-eight billionaires reside in the city, ranked ninth worldwide. the next wealthiest cities in India were Delhi ($450ย billion), Bengaluru ($320ย billion), Hyderabad ($310ย billion), Kolkata ($290ย billion), Chennai ($200ย billion), and Gurugram ($110ย billion). The Global Wealth Migration Review 2019 report, published by New World Wealth, found that 5,000 HNWI's emigrated from India in 2018, or about 2% of all HNWIs in the country. Australia, Canada, and United States were among the top destination countries. The report also projected that private wealth in India would grow by around 180% to reach $22,814ย billion by 2028. Poverty In May 2014, the World Bank reviewed and proposed revisions to its poverty calculation methodology of 2005 and purchasing-power-parity basis for measuring poverty. According to the revised methodology, the world had 872.3 million people below the new poverty line, of which 179.6 million lived in India. With 17.5% of the total world's population, India had a 20.6% share of the world's poorest in 2013. According to a 2005โ€“2006 survey, India had about 61 million children under the age of 5 who were chronically malnourished. A 2011 UNICEF report stated that between 1990 and 2010, India achieved a 45 percent reduction in mortality rates under the age of 5, and now ranks 46th of 188 countries on this metric. Since the early 1960s, successive governments have implemented various schemes to alleviate poverty, under central planning, that have met with partial success. In 2005, the government enacted the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA), guaranteeing 100ย days of minimum wage employment to every rural household in all the districts of India. In 2011, it was widely criticised and beset with controversy for corrupt officials, deficit financing as the source of funds, poor quality of infrastructure built under the programme, and unintended destructive effects. Other studies suggest that the programme has helped reduce rural poverty in some cases. Yet other studies report that India's economic growth has been the driver of sustainable employment and poverty reduction, though a sizeable population remains in poverty. India lifted 271 million people out of poverty between 2006 and 2016, recording the fastest reductions in the multidimensional poverty index values during the period with strong improvements in areas such as assets, cooking fuel, sanitation, and nutrition. On the 2019 Global Hunger Index India ranked 102nd (out of 117 countries), being categorized as 'serious' in severity. Employment Agricultural and allied sectors accounted for about 52% of the total workforce in 2009โ€“10. While agriculture employment has fallen over time in percentage of labour employed, services which include construction and infrastructure have seen a steady growth accounting for 20.3% of employment in 2012โ€“13. Of the total workforce, 7% is in the organised sector, two-thirds of which are in the government-controlled public sector. About 51.2% of the workforce in India is self-employed. According to a 2005โ€“06 survey, there is a gender gap in employment and salaries. In rural areas, both men and women are primarily self-employed, mostly in agriculture. In urban areas, salaried work was the largest source of employment for both men and women in 2006. Unemployment Unemployment in India is characterised by chronic (disguised) unemployment. Government schemes that target eradication of both poverty and unemployment โ€“ which in recent decades has sent millions of poor and unskilled people into urban areas in search of livelihoods โ€“ attempt to solve the problem by providing financial assistance for starting businesses, honing skills, setting up public sector enterprises, reservations in governments, etc. The decline in organised employment, due to the decreased role of the public sector after liberalisation, has further underlined the need for focusing on better education and created political pressure for further reforms. India's labour regulations are heavy, even by developing country standards, and analysts have urged the government to abolish or modify them to make the environment more conducive for employment generation. The 11th five-year plan has also identified the need for a congenial environment to be created for employment generation, by reducing the number of permissions and other bureaucratic clearances required. Inequalities and inadequacies in the education system have been identified as an obstacle, which prevents the benefits of increased employment opportunities from reaching all sectors of society. Child labour Child labour is a complex problem that is rooted in poverty. Since the 1990s, the government has implemented a variety of programs to eliminate child labour. These have included setting up schools, launching free school lunch programs, creating special investigation cells, etc. Author Sonalde Desai stated that recent studies on child labour in India have found some pockets of industries in which children are employed, but overall, relatively few Indian children are employed. Child labour below the age of 10 is now rare. In the 10โ€“14 age group, the latest surveys find only 2% of children working for wage, while another 9% work within their home or rural farms assisting their parents in times of high work demand such as sowing and harvesting of crops. Diaspora employment India has the largest diaspora around the world, an estimated 32 million people according to the Ministry of External Affairs (India), many of whom work overseas and remit funds back to their families. The Middle East region is the largest source of employment for expat Indians. The crude oil production and infrastructure industry of Saudi Arabia employs over 2 million expat Indians. Cities such as Dubai and Abu Dhabi in United Arab Emirates have employed another 2 million Indians during the construction boom in recent decades. In 2009โ€“10, remittances from Indian migrants overseas stood at , the highest in the world, but their share in FDI remained low at around 1%. Trade unions In India, the Trade Union movement is generally divided on political lines. According to provisional statistics from the Ministry of Labour, trade unions had a combined membership of 24,601,589 in 2002. As of 2008, there are 12 Central Trade Union Organisations (CTUO) recognized by the Ministry of Labour. The forming of these unions was a big deal in India. It led to a big push for more regulatory laws which gave workers a lot more power. AITUC is the oldest trade union in India. It is a left supported organization. A trade union with nearly 2,000,000 members is the Self Employed Women's Association (SEWA) which protects the rights of Indian women working in the informal economy. In addition to the protection of rights, SEWA educates, mobilizes, finances, and exalts their members' trades. Multiple other organizations represent workers. These organizations are formed upon different political groups. These different groups allow different groups of people with different political views to join a Union. Economic issues Corruption Corruption has been a pervasive problem in India. A 2005 study by Transparency International (TI) found that more than half of those surveyed had first-hand experience of paying a bribe or peddling influence to get a job done in a public office in the previous year. A follow-up study in 2008 found this rate to be 40 percent. In 2011, TI ranked India at 95th place amongst 183 countries in perceived levels of public sector corruption. By 2016, India saw a reduction in corruption, and its ranking improved to 79th place. In 1996, red tape, bureaucracy, and the Licence Raj were suggested as a cause for the institutionalised corruption and inefficiency. More recent reports suggest the causes of corruption include excessive regulations and approval requirements, mandated spending programs, monopoly of certain goods and service providers by government-controlled institutions, bureaucracy with discretionary powers, and lack of transparent laws and processes. Computerisation of services, various central and state vigilance commissions, and the 2005 Right to Information Act โ€“ which requires government officials to furnish information requested by citizens or face punitive action โ€“ have considerably reduced corruption and opened avenues to redress grievances. In 2011, the Indian government concluded that most spending fails to reach its intended recipients, as the large and inefficient bureaucracy consumes budgets. India's absence rates are among the worst in the world; one study found that 25% of public sector teachers and 40% of government-owned public-sector medical workers could not be found at the workplace. Similarly, many issues are facing Indian scientists, with demands for transparency, a meritocratic system, and an overhaul of the bureaucratic agencies that oversee science and technology. India has an underground economy, with a 2006 report alleging that India topped the worldwide list for black money with almost $1,456ย billion stashed in Swiss banks. This would amount to 13 times the country's total external debt. These allegations have been denied by the Swiss Banking Association. James Nason, the Head of International Communications for the Swiss Banking Association, suggested "The (black money) figures were rapidly picked up in the Indian media and in Indian opposition circles, and circulated as gospel truth. However, this story was a complete fabrication. The Swiss Bankers Association never published such a report. Anyone claiming to have such figures (for India) should be forced to identify their source and explain the methodology used to produce them." A Step was taken by Prime Minister Modi, on 8 November 2016, involved the demonetization of all 500 and 1000 rupee bank notes (replaced by new 500 and 2000 rupee notes) to return black money into the economy followed by criticism that the measure was deemed ineffective by economists and negatively affected the poorest people of India. This demonetisation together with the introduction of The goods and services tax(GST) is believed to be responsible for the slowdown in growth. Education India has made progress in increasing the primary education attendance rate and expanding literacy to approximately three-fourths of the population. India's literacy rate had grown from 52.2% in 1991 to 74.04% in 2011. The right to education at the elementary level has been made one of the fundamental rights under the Eighty-Sixth Amendment of 2002, and legislation has been enacted to further the objective of providing free education to all children. However, the literacy rate of 74% is lower than the worldwide average, and the country suffers from a high drop-out rate. Literacy rates and educational opportunities vary by region, gender, urban and rural areas, and among different social groups. Economic disparities A critical problem facing India's economy is the sharp and growing regional variations among India's different states and territories in terms of poverty, availability of infrastructure, and socio-economic development. Six low-income statesย โ€“ Assam, Chhattisgarh, Nagaland, Madhya Pradesh, Odisha, and Uttar Pradeshย โ€“ are home to more than one-third of India's population. Severe disparities exist among states in terms of income, literacy rates, life expectancy, and living conditions. The four states of Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat and Karnataka alone are projected to account for almost 50% of India's GDP by 2030; the five South Indian states are projected to contribute 35% of India's GDP by 2030 despite currently having 20% of India's population. The five-year plans, especially in the pre-liberalisation era, attempted to reduce regional disparities by encouraging industrial development in the interior regions and distributing industries across states. The results have been discouraging as these measures increased inefficiency and hampered effective industrial growth. The more advanced states have been better placed to benefit from liberalisation, with well-developed infrastructure and an educated and skilled workforce, which attract the manufacturing and service sectors. Governments of less-advanced states have tried to reduce disparities by offering tax holidays and cheap land and focused on sectors like tourism, which can develop faster than other sectors. India's income Gini coefficient is 33.9, according to the United Nations Development Program (UNDP), indicating overall income distribution to be more uniform than East Asia, Latin America, and Africa. The Global Wealth Migration Review 2019 report, published by New World Wealth, estimated that 48% of India's total wealth was held by high-net-worth individuals. There is a continuing debate on whether India's economic expansion has been pro-poor or anti-poor. Studies suggest that economic growth has been pro-poor and has reduced poverty in India. Climate change Debt External Debt See also Economic Advisory Council Economic development in India List of megaprojects in India Make in India โ€“ a government program to encourage manufacturing in India NITI Aayog Startup India Taxation in medieval India Political funding in India Events: Great Recession World oil market chronology from 2003 Demonetization Economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic in India Lists: List of companies of India List of largest companies in India List of the largest trading partners of India List of megaprojects in India Trade unions in India Natural resources of India Notes References Further reading Books Malone, David M., C. Raja Mohan, and Srinath Raghavan, eds. The Oxford handbook of Indian foreign policy (2015) excerpt pp 609โ€“649. Papers and reports Bahl, R., Heredia-Ortiz, E., Martinez-Vazquez, J., & Rider, M. (2005). India: Fiscal Condition of the States, International Experience, and Options for Reform: Volume 1 (No. paper05141). International Center for Public Policy, Andrew Young School of Policy Studies, Georgia State University. Articles News a External links Ministry of Finance Ministry of Commerce and Industry Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation India profile at the CIA World Factbook India profile at The World Bank India โ€“ OECD India Economy of Asia-related lists
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EA%B3%84%EB%AA%BD%EC%A3%BC%EC%9D%98
๊ณ„๋ชฝ์ฃผ์˜
๊ณ„๋ชฝ์ฃผ์˜(ๅ•“่’™ไธป็พฉ, )๋ž€ 18์„ธ๊ธฐ ํ•˜๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ์— ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์ „์—ญ์— ์œ ํ–‰ํ–ˆ๋˜ ๋ฌธํ™”์ , ์ฒ ํ•™์ , ๋ฌธํ•™์ , ์ง€์  ์‚ฌ์กฐ๋‹ค. ์ด๊ฒƒ์ด ํฅํ–ˆ๋˜ ์‹œ๋Œ€๋ฅผ ๊ณ„๋ชฝ์‹œ๋Œ€๋ผ๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์ ์ธ ์ฒ ํ•™์ž๋กœ ๋ฐ”๋คผํ ์Šคํ”ผ๋…ธ์ž, ์กด ๋กœํฌ, ํ”ผ์—๋ฅด ๋ฒจ, ์•„์ด์ž‘ ๋‰ดํ„ด ๋“ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ณ„๋ชฝ์ฃผ์˜์ž๋“ค์€ ์Šค์Šค๋กœ๋ฅผ ์ง„๋ณด์  ์—˜๋ฆฌํŠธ๋ผ๊ณ  ์ƒ๊ฐํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์ข…๊ต์  ์ •์น˜์  ๋ฐ•ํ•ด์— ๋งž์„œ ํˆฌ์Ÿํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ณ„๋ชฝ์ฃผ์˜์ž๋“ค์˜ ์ €์ž‘์€ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋…๋ฆฝ์ „์Ÿ๊ณผ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ํ˜๋ช…์„ ๋น„๋กฏํ•œ 18์„ธ๊ธฐ ๋ง์˜ ์ •์น˜์  ๋Œ€๊ฒฉ๋ณ€์— ํฐ ์˜ํ–ฅ์„ ๋ฏธ์ณค๋‹ค. ๊ฐœ์„ค 17์„ธ๊ธฐ ํ›„๋ฐ˜์— ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์–ด 18์„ธ๊ธฐ์— ์žฅ๋ฏธ๋น›์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐœํ™”(้–‹่Šฑ)๋œ ๊ณ„๋ชฝ ์šด๋™์€ ์ •์น˜๋‚˜ ๊ฒฝ์ œ, ์‚ฌํšŒ, ์ข…๊ต, ์‚ฌ์ƒ ๋“ฑ์— ์žˆ์–ด์„œ์˜ ์ „๊ทผ๋Œ€์ ์ธ ์–ด๋‘ ์— ์ด์„ฑ์˜ ๋น›์„ ๋น„์ถ”์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ „๊ทผ๋Œ€์ ์ธ ์–ด๋‘ ์ด๋ž€ ์ „๊ทผ๋Œ€์ ์ด๋ฉฐ ๋ด‰๊ฑด์ , ์ข…๊ต์ ์ธ ๊ถŒ์œ„, ํŠน๊ถŒ, ๋ถ€์ •, ์••์ œ(ๅฃ“ๅˆถ), ์ธ์Šต(ๅ› ็ฟ’), ์ „ํ†ต, ํŽธ๊ฒฌ, ๋ฏธ์‹ (่ฟทไฟก) ๋“ฑ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ณ„๋ชฝ(์–ด๋‘ ์— ๋น›์„ ๋น„์ถ”์–ด ๋ฐ๊ณ  ํ˜„๋ช…ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•˜๋Š” ์ผ)์˜ ์‚ฌ์ƒ๊ฐ€๋Š”, ์ด์„ฑ์„ ์ฒ™๋„๋กœ ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ด ์–ด๋‘ ์„ ๋น„ํŒํ•˜๊ณ  ์‹ฌํŒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฑฐ๊ธฐ์„œ๋Š” ์ข…๊ต๋„ ์ž์—ฐ๊ด€(่‡ช็„ถ่ง€)๋„, ์‚ฌํšŒ๋„ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋„, ๋ชจ๋“  ๊ฒƒ์ด ์šฉ์„œ ์—†์ด ๋น„ํŒ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด์ œ๊นŒ์ง€์˜ ์‚ฌํšŒ ํ˜•ํƒœ๋ผ๋“ ์ง€ ์ „ํ†ต์ ์ธ ์‚ฌ๊ณ ๋ฐฉ์‹์ด ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ์„œ ์“ฐ๋ ˆ๊ธฐํ†ต์— ๋˜์ ธ์กŒ๋‹ค. ์ด์„ฑ์— ์˜ํ•ด์„œ ์ƒ๊ฐํ•ด ๋‚ธ ๊ฒƒ์ด ๋ชจ๋“  ์ธ๊ฐ„ ํ–‰์œ„๋‚˜ ์‚ฌํšŒ ํ˜•ํƒœ์˜ ๊ธฐ์ค€์œผ๋กœ์„œ ์š”๊ตฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด์„ฑ์— ์ž…๊ฐํ•œ ์˜์›ํ•œ ์ง„๋ฆฌ, ์˜์›ํ•œ ์ •์˜๊ฐ€ ์ข…๋ž˜์˜ ์•”์šฐ(ๆš—ๆ„š)์™€ ๋Œ€์น˜๋˜์–ด์•ผ ํ–ˆ๋˜ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์€ ๋ฐ”๋กœ ์ผ์ฒด๊ฐ€ ์‹ ์˜ ๊ถŒ์œ„์— ์ž…๊ฐํ•œ ์ค‘์„ธ(ไธญไธ–)์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด์„œ, ๋ชจ๋“  ๊ฒƒ์„ ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ๋‘๋‡Œ์˜ ์‚ฌ๊ณ (็†ๆ€ง)์— ์ž…๊ฐํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ์—ญ์ „์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด์„ฑ์  ์ •์‹ ์˜ ์—ด๊ด‘์ด ์„ธ๊ณ„๋ฅผ ๋’คํ”๋“ค์—ˆ๋˜ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๋จผ์ € ์ •์น˜์— ๊ด€ํ•ด์„œ๋Š” ๊ณ„์•ฝ๋ก (ๅฅ‘็ด„่ซ–)์ด ์ฃผ์žฅ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„์€ ์นจ๋ฒ”๋˜์–ด์„œ๋Š” ์•ˆ ๋˜๋Š” ์ž์—ฐ๊ถŒ(่‡ช็„ถๆฌŠ)์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ž์—ฐ์— ์ž…๊ฐํ•ด์„œ ์ž์œ ์ด๋ฉฐ, ํ‰๋“ฑ์ด๋‹ค. ์ƒ์กด๊ณผ ์žฌ์‚ฐ ์†Œ์œ ์˜ ๊ถŒ๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์„ ์ง€ํ‚ค๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด์„œ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์€ ๊ณ„์•ฝ์— ์˜ํ•ด ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋“ค์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ์šฐ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๊ธฐ๋ณธ์ ์ธ ๊ถŒ๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ์นจํ•ด๋‹นํ–ˆ์„ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ, ๋น„ํŒํ•˜๊ณ  ์ €ํ•ญํ•  ๊ถŒ๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ฒฌ์ง€์—์„œ ๊ณ„๋ชฝ์‚ฌ์ƒ๊ฐ€๋“ค์€ ์™•๊ถŒ์ด๋‚˜ ๋‚ก์€ ์ œ๋„๋‚˜ ์••์ œ๋‚˜ ๋ถˆํ‰๋“ฑ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด์„œ ๋‚ ์นด๋กœ์šด ๋น„ํŒ๊ณผ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์„ ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์— ์˜ํ•ด์„œ ๊ทผ๋Œ€์ ์ธ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ํ˜๋ช…์— ์ด๋ก ์  ์ง€์ฃผ(ๆ”ฏๆŸฑ)๋ฅผ ์ œ๊ณตํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋“ค ๊ณ„๋ชฝ์‚ฌ์ƒ๊ฐ€๋“ค์€, ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์€ ๋…ธ๋™์— ์˜ํ•ด์„œ ๋น„๋กœ์†Œ ์žฌ์‚ฐ์„ ์ž๊ธฐ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•˜๋Š” ์ฃผ์žฅ์„ ์ „๊ฐœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋กœ์จ ํ•œํŽธ์—์„œ๋Š” ์ „๊ทผ๋Œ€์  ์ฐฉ์ทจ๋ฅผ ๋น„๋‚œํ•˜๊ณ , ๋˜ ํ•œํŽธ์—์„œ๋Š” ํฅ๋ฅญ(่ˆˆ้š†)ํ•˜๋Š” ์ž๋ณธ์ฃผ์˜์  ์‚ฌ์œ (็งๆœ‰)๋ฅผ ์˜นํ˜ธํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ข…๊ต์— ์žˆ์–ด์„œ๋Š” ์ด์„ฑ์˜ ์ž…์žฅ์—์„œ ์ด์‹ ๋ก (็†็ฅž่ซ–), ์ž์—ฐ์ข…๊ต, ์ด์„ฑ์ข…๊ต, ๋‚˜์•„๊ฐ€ ๋ฌด์‹ ๋ก (็„ก็ฅž่ซ–) ๋“ฑ์ด ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚˜์„œ ์‹ ์•™์˜ ์ž์œ , ์ข…๊ต์  ๊ด€์šฉ(ๅฏฌๅฎน), ๊ต๊ถŒ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ์˜ ํ•ด๋ฐฉ ๋“ฑ์ด ์š”๊ตฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋„๋•์— ๊ด€ํ•ด์„œ๋Š” ํ•œํŽธ์œผ๋กœ ์ˆœ์ˆ˜ํ•œ ์ด์„ฑ์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ์„ (ๅ–„)์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ณด๋Š” ์ด์„ฑ์ฃผ์˜๊ฐ€, ๋˜ ํ•œํŽธ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ์ธ๊ฐ„์ ์ธ ํ–‰๋ณต์„ ์ œ1์˜๋กœ ํ•˜๋Š” ํ–‰๋ณต๋ก (ๅนธ็ฆ่ซ–)์ด ์ฃผ์žฅ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์ธ์‹๋ก ์—์„œ๋Š” ๊ฐ๊ฐ์  ์†Œ์—ฌ(ๆ‰€่ˆ‡)๋ฅผ ์˜ค์„ฑ(ๆ‚Ÿๆ€ง) ๋‚ด์ง€ ์ž์•„๊ฐ€ ์ข…ํ•ฉํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ์—์„œ ์ง„๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ์„ฑ๋ฆฝํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฐ์„ฑ(ๆ„Ÿๆ€ง), ์˜ค์„ฑ๋ก , ๊ฐ๊ฐ์  ๊ฒฝํ—˜์„ ์ค‘์‹œํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒฝํ—˜์ฃผ์˜ ๋‚ด์ง€ ๊ฐ๊ฐ๋ก , ๋‚˜์•„๊ฐ€์„œ ์œ ๋ฌผ๋ก  ๋“ฑ์ด ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ์ด์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ๊ณ„๋ชฝ์‚ฌ์ƒ์„ ๊ธ‰์†๋„๋กœ ๋ฐœ์ „ํ•ด ์˜จ ์ž๋ณธ์ฃผ์˜ ๋‚ด์ง€ ๋ถ€๋ฅด์ฃผ์•„ ์‹œ๋ฏผ์˜์‹๊ณผ ๊ณผํ•™ ๋‚ด์ง€ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์˜ ์ง„๋ณด๋ฅผ ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฝ์œผ๋กœ ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ๊ณ„๋ชฝ ์šด๋™์€ ์ž๋ณธ์ฃผ์˜๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋ฐœ์ „ํ•œ ์˜๊ตญ์—์„œ ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์–ด(๋กœํฌ, ํ„, ์Šค๋ฏธ์Šค ๋“ฑ), ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์— ๊ฐ€์„œ(๋ชฝํ…Œ์Šคํ‚ค์™ธ, ๋ณผํ…Œ๋ฅด, ๋ฃจ์†Œ, ๋ฐฑ๊ณผ์ „์„œํŒŒ ๋“ฑ), ๋…์ผ๋กœ ํŒŒ๊ธ‰๋˜์–ด ๊ฐ”๋‹ค(๋ผ์ดํ”„๋‹ˆ์ธ , ๋ณผํ”„, ์นธํŠธ ๋“ฑ). ์˜๊ตญ์ด๋‚˜ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์—์„œ์˜ ๊ณ„๋ชฝ์šด๋™์€ ํ•˜์ธต(ไธ‹ๅฑค)์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ƒ์ธต์œผ๋กœ์˜ ์ƒ์Šน(ไธŠๆ˜‡)์˜ ๋ฐ˜์˜์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ๊ทผ๋Œ€ํ˜๋ช…์˜ ์ด๋ก ์  ์ง€์ฃผ๊ฐ€ ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ๊ทผ๋Œ€ํ™”์—์„œ ๋’ค๋–จ์–ด์ง„ ๋…์ผ์—์„œ๋Š” ์ด์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ํ•˜์ธต์—์„œ์˜ ์ƒ์Šน์ด ๊ฒฐ์—ฌ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๊ณ„๋ชฝ์‚ฌ์ƒ์€ ๋จธ๋ฆฌ ์†์—์„œ๋งŒ์˜ ์ž์œ ๋‚˜ ํ‰๋“ฑ์ด๋‚˜ ์ธ๊ถŒ ์กด์ค‘์— ๊ทธ์ณ์•ผ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋…์ผ์˜ ๊ณ„๋ชฝ์‚ฌ์ƒ์„ ๊ณ„๋ชฝ๋œ ์ „์ œ๊ตฐ์ฃผ(ๅฐˆๅˆถๅ›ไธป)์— ์˜ํ•œ '์œ„์—์„œ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ์˜ ๊ฐœํ˜'์— ๋…์ผ์˜ ๊ทผ๋Œ€ํ™”๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋Œ€ํ–ˆ๋˜ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๋…์ผ 17์„ธ๊ธฐ ๋ง๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋…์ผ์˜ ์ฒ ํ•™์€ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์‹œ๋Œ€๋ฅผ ๋งž์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋•Œ๊นŒ์ง€ ์ง€๋ฐฐ์ ์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ์‹ ํ•™(็ฅžๅญธ)๊ณผ ๊ทธ์˜ ์ข…์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ์Šค์ฝœ๋ผ์˜ ํ˜•์ด์ƒํ•™์— ๋Œ€์‹ ํ•ด์„œ ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์ด์„ฑ์ด๋‚˜ ๊ฒฝํ—˜์„ ์ค‘์‹œํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒฝํ–ฅ์ด ์ฒ ํ•™์— ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ ์‹œ๋ฏผ๊ณ„๊ธ‰์˜ ์ž์œ ๋กญ๊ณ  ๋น„ํŒ์ ์ธ ์‚ฌ๊ณ  ํ™œ๋™์˜ ๊ณ ์กฐ(้ซ˜ๆฝฎ)๋ฅผ ์˜๋ฏธํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋…์ผ ์ฒ ํ•™์˜ ์ด์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ์‹œ๊ธฐ๋Š” ๋Œ€๋žต ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ‹ฐ์•ˆ ํ† ๋งˆ์ง€์šฐ์Šค(1655-1728)๊ฐ€ ํ• ๋ ˆ ๋Œ€ํ•™์—์„œ ํ™œ๋™ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•œ 1690๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์นธํŠธ์˜ <์ˆœ์ˆ˜์ด์„ฑ๋น„ํŒ(็ด”็ฒน็†ๆ€งๆ‰นๅˆค)>์ด ๊ฐ„ํ–‰๋œ 1781๋…„๊นŒ์ง€๋กœ ๋ณด๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์‹œ๋Œ€์˜ ์ฃผ์š” ์ฒ ํ•™์ž๋“ค๋กœ์„œ๋Š”, ์‹ ํ•™๊ณผ ์ฒ ํ•™์˜ ์œตํ™”๋ฅผ ๊พ€ํ•œ ์ฒ ํ•™์ž์ธ ๋ผ์ดํ”„๋‹ˆ์ธ ๋ฅผ ๊ณผ๋„๊ธฐ(้ŽๆธกๆœŸ)์˜ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์œผ๋กœ ํ•˜๊ณ  ๋ฐ์นด๋ฅดํŠธ, ์Šคํ”ผ๋…ธ์ž์˜ ์ˆ˜ํ•™์ ์ธ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์œผ๋กœ ์ธ์‹๋ก ์„ ์™„์„ฑ์‹œํ‚ค๋ ค๊ณ  ํ•œ ์น˜๋ฅธํ•˜์šฐ์Šค(์น˜๋ฅธํ•˜์šฐ์  ) (1651-1708), ์˜๊ตญ ๊ฒฝํ—˜๋ก ์„ ๋…์ผ์— ์†Œ๊ฐœํ•˜๊ณ  ๋ฒ•ํ•™(ๆณ•ๅญธ)์˜ ์˜์—ญ์—์„œ ์—…์ ์„ ๋‚จ๊ธด ํ† ๋งˆ์ง€์šฐ์Šค(1655-1728), ๊ณ„๋ชฝ์˜ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์  ์ฒ ํ•™์ž๋กœ์„œ ํ˜•์‹ ํ•ฉ๋ฆฌ์„ฑ์„ ๊ธฐ์ดˆ๋กœ ํ˜•์ด์ƒํ•™์˜ ๊ฐœ์กฐ(ๆ”น้€ )๋ฅผ ์‹œ๋„ํ•˜๊ณ , ์นธํŠธ ์ฒ ํ•™์„ ์ค€๋น„ํ•œ ๋ณผํ”„, ์Šคํ”ผ๋…ธ์ž์ฃผ์˜์˜ ์ž…์žฅ์—์„œ ์ •ํ†ต ๋ฃจํ„ฐ์ฃผ์˜ ์‹ ํ•™์„ ๋น„ํŒํ•˜๊ณ , ์œ ๋ฌผ๋ก ์  ๊ฒฝํ–ฅ์˜ ๋ฒ”์‹ ๋ก (ๆฑŽ็ฅž่ซ–)์„ ์ฃผ์žฅํ•˜์—ฌ ํ—ค๋ฅด๋”๋‚˜ ๊ดดํ…Œ์—๊ฒŒ ๊ฐ•๋ ฅํ•œ ์˜ํ–ฅ์„ ๋‚จ๊ธด ์—๋ฐ๋ฅด๋งŒ(1698-1767), ๋…์ผ ๊ณ„๋ชฝ์˜ ์ตœ๋Œ€ ์‚ฌ์ƒ๊ฐ€ ๋ ˆ์‹ฑ ๋“ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹น์‹œ์˜ ๋…์ผ์€ ๋ด‰๊ฑด ์ œํ›„(่ซธไพฏ) ์ง€๋ฐฐํ•˜์˜ ์†Œ๋ฐฉ ๋ถ„๋ฆฝ(ๅฐ้‚ฆๅˆ†็ซ‹) ์ƒํƒœ์— ์žˆ์—ˆ๊ณ , ๋ด‰๊ฑด๊ถŒ๋ ฅ๊ณผ ์†์„ ์žก์€ ๋ฃจํ„ฐ ์ฃผ์˜ ์‹ ํ•™์ด ์ž์œ ๋กœ์šด ์–ธ๋ก ์„ ํƒ„์••ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์—, ๋…์ผ ๊ณ„๋ชฝ์‚ฌ์ƒ์€ ์‹ ํ•™๊ณผ ์ข…๊ต ๋ฌธ์ œ๋กœ ์˜ค๋žซ๋™์•ˆ ๊ณ ๋ฏผํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์œผ๋ฉด ์•ˆ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜๊ตญ ๋„“์€ ์˜๋ฏธ๋กœ์„œ์˜ ์˜๊ตญ ๊ณ„๋ชฝ์ฒ ํ•™์€ 17์„ธ๊ธฐ ์ดˆ์˜ ํ”„๋žœ์‹œ์Šค ๋ฒ ์ด์ปจ์—์„œ 18์„ธ๊ธฐ ๋ง์˜ ์• ๋ค ์Šค๋ฏธ์Šค, ๋ฒค๋‹ด์— ์ด๋ฅด๋Š” ๊ฒฝํ—˜๋ก ์˜ ์ฒ ํ•™๊ณผ ๊ฑฐ์˜ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•ด์„๋˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ข์€ ๋œป์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ์กด ๋กœํฌ์—์„œ ์Šค๋ฏธ์Šค๊นŒ์ง€์˜ 18์„ธ๊ธฐ ์ฒ ํ•™์„ ์ด์นญํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ์„œ ์‹ ํ•™์ ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ์ด์„ฑ์˜ ์šฐ์œ„(ๅ„ชไฝ)๋ฅผ ์„ค๋ช…ํ•˜๊ณ  ํ›„์— ๋ฌด์‹ ๋ก ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฒฝ์‚ฌ(ๅ‚พๆ–œ)๋ฅผ ๋ณด์ธ ์ด์‹ ๋ก (็†็ฅž่ซ–)์˜ ํ๋ฆ„(์•ค์„œ๋‹ˆ ์ฝœ๋ฆฐ์ฆˆ, ์กด ํ†จ๋žœ๋“œ, ์ œ3๋Œ€ ์ƒคํ”„์ธ ๋ฒ„๋ฆฌ ๋ฐฑ์ž‘)์ด ์žˆ๊ณ  ๋„๋•์ฒ ํ•™์œผ๋กœ์„œ๋Š” ์ธ๊ฐ„์— ๋‚ด์žฌ(ๅ…งๅœจ)ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ชจ๋ž„์„ผ์Šค๋ฅผ ๊ฐ•์กฐํ•˜๋Š” ๋„๋•๊ฐํ•™ํŒŒ(้“ๅพทๆ„Ÿๅญธๆดพ)(์ƒคํ”„์ธ ๋ฒ„๋ฆฌ)์™€ ์œ ๋ฌผ๋ก ์—์˜ ๊ฒฝํ–ฅ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง„ ๊ณต๋ฆฌ์ฃผ์˜(๋ฐ์ด๋น„๋“œ ํ•˜ํ‹€๋ฆฌ, ์กฐ์…‰ ํ”„๋ฆฌ์Šคํ‹€๋ฆฌ, ๋ฒ„๋„ˆ๋“œ ๋งจ๋”๋นŒ)๊ฐ€ ๋Œ€๋ฆฝ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ธ์‹๋ก ์œผ๋กœ์„œ๋Š” ๊ฒฝํ—˜๊ณผ ๊ฐ๊ฐ์„ ์ค‘์‹œํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒฝํ–ฅ(ํ„)์ด ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ํ„์€ ํšŒ์˜๋ก (ๆ‡ท็–‘่ซ–)์— ๋น ์กŒ๋Š”๋ฐ ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ ์˜คํžˆ๋ ค ์˜ˆ์™ธ์ ์ด๋ฉฐ, ๋Œ€์„ธ(ๅคงๅ‹ข)๋Š” ๋„๋•๊ฐ์„ ๊ฐ•์กฐํ•˜๋“  ์ด๊ธฐ์‹ฌ(ๅˆฉๅทฑๅฟƒ)์„ ๊ฐ•์กฐํ•˜๋“ ๊ฐ„์— ๋ฐ์€ ๋‚™๊ด€๋ก (ๆจ‚่ง€่ซ–)๊ณผ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์ค‘์‹ฌ์ฃผ์˜๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ๊ณ„๋ชฝ์‚ฌ์ƒ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์‚ฌํšŒ ๋น„ํŒ์€ ์—†๊ณ , ์˜จ๊ฑดํ•˜๊ณ  ํ˜„์ƒ(็พ็‹€) ๊ธ์ •์ ์ด๋ฉฐ, ์ด ์ ์— ์˜๊ตญ ๊ณ„๋ชฝ์‚ฌ์˜ ํŠน์ง•์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•˜๊ฒ ๋‹ค. ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์—์„œ๋Š” ๋‹ค๋งŒ '์ฒ ํ•™'์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถˆ๋ฆฐ๋‹ค. 18์„ธ๊ธฐ 10๋…„๋Œ€, ๊ฐ€ํ†จ๋ฆญ ์‹ ์•™์˜ ๊ถŒ์œ„์ฃผ์˜, ๊ธˆ์š•์ด๋‚˜ ๋ณต์ข…์˜ ์œค๋ฆฌ์— ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ณธ๋Šฅ๊ณผ ์ง€์„ฑ์˜ ์ €ํ•ญ์ด ๋ฐ์นด๋ฅดํŠธ ์ฒ ํ•™์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ ์•„๋ž˜ ๋ฌธํ•™๊ฐ€ ์‚ฌ์ด์— ์ผ์–ด๋‚˜์„œ 1715๋…„ ์ดํ›„๊ฐ€ ๋˜์ž ์ด์„ฑ์ (็†ๆ€ง็š„) ๋น„ํŒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐœ์ „ํ•ด ๋‚˜๊ฐ”๋‹ค. ๋ณผํ…Œ๋ฅด๋‚˜ ๋ชฝํ…Œ์Šคํ‚ค์™ธ, ๋””๋“œ๋กœ๋Š” ์•™์‹œ์•ต ๋ ˆ์ง(่ˆŠๅˆถๅบฆ) ์‚ฌํšŒ์— ๊ณ ์ฐฉ(ๅ›บ็€)ํ•˜๋Š” ์ข…๊ต์  ํŽธ๊ฒฌ, ์‚ฌํšŒ์  ๊ธฐ์„ฑ๊ด€๋…์— ๋น„ํŒ์„ ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ํŠนํžˆ ๋ณผํ…Œ๋ฅด๋Š” ์ด์‹ ๋ก (็†็ฅž่ซ–), ์ข…๊ต์  ๊ด€์šฉ(ๅฏฌๅฎน)์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ๊ตํšŒ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์„ ์‹ค์‹œํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋ชฝํ…Œ์Šคํ‚ค์™ธ๋Š” ์‹ ๋ž„ํ•œ ์‚ฌํšŒ, ๋ฌธ๋ช… ๋น„ํŒ์„ ์ „๊ฐœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„, ๋ฐ์นด๋ฅดํŠธ์˜ ์ด์„ฑ(็†ๆ€ง)์€ ์ •์ (้œ็š„)์ธ ์ง„๋ฆฌ์˜ ์„ ํ—˜์ (ๅ…ˆ้ฉ—็š„)์ธ ๋ณด์œ ์ž๋ผ๋Š” ์„ฑ์งˆ์—์„œ ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์ (ๆฉŸ่ƒฝ็š„)์ธ ์ง„๋ฆฌ์˜ ์ถ”๊ตฌ์ž(่ฟฝๆฑ‚่€…)๋ผ๋Š” ์„ฑ์งˆ๋กœ ๋ณ€ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ํ•œํŽธ์—์„œ๋Š” ์˜๊ตญ์—์„œ ๋‰ดํ„ด ๋ฌผ๋ฆฌํ•™์˜ ๊ฒฝํ—˜์ฃผ์˜, ๋กœํฌ์˜ ๊ฐ๊ฐ๋ก (ๆ„Ÿ่ฆบ่ซ–) ๋“ฑ์ด ์ˆ˜์ž…๋˜์–ด ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์š”์†Œ๋Š” ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ๊ณ„๋ชฝ์ฃผ์˜ ์ฒ ํ•™ ํ˜•์„ฑ์— ์˜ํ–ฅ์„ ์ฃผ์—ˆ๋‹ค.๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์€ ์ฒด๊ณ„(้ซ”็ณป)๋ผ๊ธฐ๋ณด๋‹ค ๋ชจ๋“  ํ•™๋ฌธ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ๋งค๊ฐœ(ๅช’ไป‹)ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์— ๊ฐ€๊น๋‹ค. 1748๋…„ ๋ชฝํ…Œ์Šคํ‚ค์™ธ์˜ <๋ฒ•์˜ ์ •์‹ >์ด ๋ฐœํ‘œ๋˜๋Š” ํ•ด๋Š” ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ์‚ฌํšŒ์˜ ๊ฒฝ์ œ ๋ฒˆ์˜, ๊ฒฝ์ œ ์ž์œ ์ฃผ์˜์˜ ์„ฑ์žฅ์„ ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฝ์œผ๋กœ ๊ณ„๋ชฝ์ฃผ์˜์˜ ๊ฒฐ์ „(ๆฑบๆˆฐ) ๊ฐœ์‹œ๊ธฐ๋ผ ๋ถˆ๋ฆฐ๋‹ค. ์•™์‹œ์•ต ๋ ˆ์ง ์‚ฌํšŒ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ž์—ฐ๋ฒ•(่‡ช็„ถๆณ•)์ด๋‚˜ ์‚ฌ์ƒ์ , ์ •์น˜์  ์ž…์žฅ์—์„œ์˜ ๋น„ํŒ์€ ์ฐจ์ธฐ ์ฒด๊ณ„ํ™”๋˜์–ด, 1752๋…„์—๋Š” <๋ฐฑ๊ณผ์ „์„œ(็™พ็ง‘ๅ…จๆ›ธ)>๋กœ์„œ ๊ฒฐ์‹ค์„ ๋ณด์•˜๋‹ค. ์ด ์‹œ๊ธฐ์˜ ์ฒ ํ•™์ž ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ๋Š” ์ฝฉ๋””์•ฝ, ์—˜๋ฒ ์‹œ์šฐ์Šค, ๋ผ ๋ฉ”ํŠธ๋ฆฌ ๋“ฑ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์ด ๊ฐ๊ฐ๋ก , ์ด์‹ ๋ก ์˜ ์ž…์žฅ์—์„œ ์œ ๋ฌผ๋ก , ๋ฌด์‹ ๋ก (็„ก็ฅž่ซ–)์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐœ์ „ํ•ด ๋‚˜๊ฐ€๋Š” ๊ฒƒ๋„ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ฌ๊ณ , ํ•œํŽธ ์ •์น˜ ๋น„ํŒ์€ ๋ฃจ์†Œ์˜ <์‚ฌํšŒ๊ณ„์•ฝ๋ก >(1762)๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์ด ์ „์ฒด ์‚ฌํšŒ์งˆ์„œ์—์„œ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์˜ ๊ธฐ๋ณธ ์›๋ฆฌ๋กœ ๊ฑฐ์Šฌ๋Ÿฌ ์˜ฌ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋Š” ๊ฒƒ๋„ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1770๋…„๊ฒฝ ์ด๋ฏธ ๊ณ„๋ชฝ์ฃผ์˜๋Š” ์‹œ๋Œ€์˜ ์ง€๋ฐฐ์ ์ธ ์ด๋ฐ์˜ฌ๋กœ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๋˜์–ด, ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ํ˜๋ช…์ด๋‚˜ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค๋ฅผ ๋ฐฉ๋ฌธํ•œ ํ”„๋žญํด๋ฆฐ(1707-1790)์˜ ์ •์น˜์  ํ™œ๋™์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ ๋“ฑ์—์„œ ์ž๊ทน์„ ๋ฐ›์•„ ์‚ฌํšŒ, ์ •์น˜ ๋ณ€ํ˜์˜ ์ด๋ก ์  ๋ฐฉํ–ฅ์„ ์žก๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ชจ๋ฃจ๋ ˆ(1727-1819)๋‚˜ ๋งˆ๋ธ”๋ฆฌ(1709-1785) ๋“ฑ์ด ์ด ์„ธ๋Œ€์ด๋ฉฐ, ์ž์—ฐ๋ฒ•์„ ํ•˜๋‚˜์˜ ๊ตฌ์ฒด์  ๋ชฉํ‘œ๋กœ ํ•˜๊ณ  ๊ณต๋™ ์†Œ์œ ์˜ ์‚ฌํšŒ๋ฅผ ์ƒ์ •(ๆƒณๅฎš)ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ํ˜๋ช… ์ง์ „, ์ฒ ํ•™์€ ์ „๊ตญ์˜ ๊ฐœ๋ช…์ (้–‹ๆ˜Ž็š„) ๋ถ€๋ฅด์ฃผ์•„๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ๋กœ์žก์•„ '์ƒ๊ฐํ•˜๋Š” ๋Œ€์ค‘'์„ ์กฐ์„ฑ(้€ ๆˆ)ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ์จ ์‹ค์ฒœ์ ์ธ ๋ณ€ํ˜์˜ ์‚ฌ์ƒ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ˜๋ช…์˜ํšŒ์—์„œ ์ „๊ฐœ๋˜๋Š” ๋ชจ๋“  ์ •์น˜์‚ฌ์ƒ์€ ์ด๋ฏธ ๊ณ„๋ชฝ์ฃผ์˜์— ์›ํ˜•(ๅŽŸๅž‹)์œผ๋กœ์„œ ๋‚ดํฌ๋œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์ด ์ „์Ÿ์ด๋‚˜ ๊ฒฝ์ œ ์œ„๊ธฐ, ์ •์น˜์  ์—ญ๊ด€๊ณ„(ๅŠ›้—œไฟ‚)๋ฅผ ๊ณ„๊ธฐ๋กœ ์ „๊ฐœ๋œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. 19์„ธ๊ธฐ ์ „๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ ๊ณ„๋ชฝ์ฃผ์˜์˜ ์ธ์‹๋ก , ๊ณผํ•™๋ก , ์—ญ์‚ฌ๋ก ์€ ์ฝฉํŠธ์˜ ์‹ค์ฆ์ฃผ์˜์— ๊ณ„์Šน๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ํ•œํŽธ ๋ณดํŽธ์  ์ด์„ฑ(็†ๆ€ง)์—์˜ ์‹ ๋ขฐ๋Š” ๋ฃจ์•„์ด์— ์ฝ”๋ž„, ์ฃผํ”„๋กœ์™€(1796-1842) ๋“ฑ์— ๊ณ„์Šน๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lumi%C3%A8res
Lumiรจres
The Lumiรจres (literally in English: The Lights) was a cultural, philosophical, literary and intellectual movement beginning in the second half of the 17th century, originating in western Europe and spreading throughout the rest of Europe. It included philosophers such as Baruch Spinoza, David Hume, John Locke, Edward Gibbon, Voltaire, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Denis Diderot, Pierre Bayle and Isaac Newton. This movement is influenced by the scientific revolution in southern Europe arising directly from the Italian renaissance with people like Galileo Galilei. Over time it came to mean the , in English the Age of Enlightenment. Members of the movement saw themselves as a progressive รฉlite, and battled against religious and political persecution, fighting against what they saw as the irrationality, arbitrariness, obscurantism and superstition of the previous centuries. They redefined the study of knowledge to fit the ethics and aesthetics of their time. Their works had great influence at the end of the 18th century, in the American Declaration of Independence and the French Revolution. This intellectual and cultural renewal by the Lumiรจres movement was, in its strictest sense, limited to Europe. These ideas were well understood in Europe, but beyond France the idea of "enlightenment" had generally meant a light from outside, whereas in France it meant a light coming from within oneself. In the most general terms, in science and philosophy, the Enlightenment aimed for the triumph of reason over faith and belief; in politics and economics, the triumph of the bourgeois over nobility and clergy. Philosophical themes Scientific revolution Advances in scientific method The Lumiรจres movement was in large part an extension of the discoveries of Nicolas Copernicus in the 16th century, which were not well known during his lifetime, and more so of the theories of Galileo Galilei (1564ย โ€“ 1642). Inquiries to establish certain axioms and mathematical proofs continued as Cartesianism throughout the 17th century. Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz (1646ย โ€“ 1716) and Isaac Newton (1642ย โ€“ 1727) had independently and almost simultaneously developed the calculus, and Renรฉ Descartes (1596ย โ€“ 1650) the idea of monads. British philosophers such as Thomas Hobbes and David Hume adopted an approach, later called empiricism, which preferred the use of the senses and experience over that of pure reason. Baruch Spinoza took Descartes' side, most of all in his Ethics. But he demurred from Descartes in ("On the Improvement of the Understanding"), where he argued that the process of perception is not one of pure reason, but also the senses and intuition. Spinoza's thought was based on a model of the universe where God and Nature are one and the same. This became an anchor in the Age of Enlightenment, held across the ages from Newton's time to that of Thomas Jefferson's (1743โ€“1826). A notable change was the emergence of a naturalist philosophy, spreading across Europe, embodied by Newton. The scientific method โ€“ exploring experimental evidence and constructing consistent theories and axiom systems from observed phenomena โ€“ was undeniably useful. The predictive ability of its resulting theories set the tone for his masterwork Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica (1687). As an example of scientific progress in the Age of Reason and the Lumiรจres movement, Newton's example remains unsurpassed, in taking observed facts and constructing a theory which explains them a priori, for example taking the motions of the planets observed by Johannes Kepler to confirm his law of universal gravitation. Naturalism saw the unification of pure empiricism as practiced by the likes of Francis Bacon with the axiomatic, "pure reason" approach of Descartes. Belief in an intelligible world ordered by a Christian God became the crux of philosophical investigations of knowledge. On one side, religious philosophy concentrated on piety, and the omniscience and ultimately mysterious nature of God; on the other were ideas such as deism, underpinned by the impression that the world was comprehensible by human reason and that it was governed by universal physical laws. God was imagined as a "Great Watchmaker"; experimental natural philosophers found the world to be more and more ordered, even as machines and measuring instruments became ever more sophisticated and precise. The most famous French natural philosopher of the 18th century, Georges-Louis Leclerc de Buffon, was critical of this natural theology in his masterwork Histoire Naturelle. Buffon rejected the idea of ascribing to divine intervention and the "supernatural" that which science could now explain. This criticism brought him up against the Sorbonne which, dominated by the Roman Catholic Church, never stopped trying to censor him. In 1751, he was ordered to redact some propositions contrary to the teaching of the Church; having proposed 74,000 years for the age of the Earth, this was contrary to the Bible which, using the scientific method on data found in biblical concordances, dated it to around 6,000 years. The Church was also hostile to his no less illustrious contemporary Carl von Linnรฉ, and some have concluded that the Church simply refused to believe that order existed in nature. Individual liberty and the social contract This effort to research and elucidate universal laws, and to determine their component parts, also became an important element in the construction of a philosophy of individualism, where everyone had rights based only on fundamental human rights. There developed the philosophical notion of the thoughtful subject, an individual who could make decisions based on pure reason and no longer in the yoke of custom. In Two Treatises of Government, John Locke argued that property rights are not held in common but are totally personal, and made legitimate by the work required to obtain the property, as well as its protection (recognition) by others. Once the idea of natural law is accepted, it becomes possible to form the modern view of what we would now call political economy. In his famous essay Answering the Question: What is Enlightenment? (, ), Immanuel Kant defined the Lumiรจres thus: The Lumiรจres' philosophy was thus based on the realities of a systematic, ordered and understandable world, which required Man also to think in an ordered and systematic way. As well as physical laws, this included ideas on the laws governing human affairs and the divine right of kings, leading to the idea that the monarch acts with the consent of the people, and not the other way around. This legal concept informed Jean-Jacques Rousseau's theory of the social contract as a reciprocal relationship between men, and more so between families and other groups, which would become increasingly stronger, accompanied by a concept of individual inalienable rights. The powers of God were moot amongst atheist Lumiรจres. The Lumiรจres movement redefined the ideas of liberty, property and rationalism, which took on meanings that we still understand today, and introduced into political philosophy the idea of the free individual, liberty for all guaranteed by the State (and not the whim of the government) backed by a strong rule of law. To understand the interaction between the Age of Reason and the Lumiรจres, one approach is to compare Thomas Hobbes with John Locke. Hobbes, who lived for three quarters of the 17th century, had worked to create an ontology of human emotions, ultimately trying to make order out of an inherently chaotic universe. In the alternate, Locke saw in Nature a source of unity and universal rights, with the State's assurance of protection. This "culture revolution" over the 17th and 18th centuries was a battle between these two viewpoints of the relationship between Man and Nature. This resulted, in France, in the spread of the notion of human rights, finding expression in the 1789 Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen, which greatly influenced similar declarations of rights in the following centuries, and left in its wake global political upheaval. Especially in France and the United States, freedom of expression, freedom of religion and freedom of thought were held to be fundamental rights. Social values and manifests Representation of the people The core values supported by the Lumiรจres were religious tolerance, liberty and social equality. In England, America and France, the application of these values resulted in a new definition of natural law and a separation of political power. To these values may be added a love of nature and the cult of reason. Philosophical goals The ideal figure of the Lumiรจres was a philosopher, a man of letters with a social function of exercising his reason in all domains to guide his and others' conscience, to advocate a value system and use it in discussing the problems of the time. He is a committed individual, involved in society, an (Encyclopรฉdie; "Honest man who approaches everything with reason"), (Diderot, "Who concerns himself with revealing error"). The rationalism of the Lumiรจres was not to the exclusion of aesthetics. Reason and sentiment went hand-in-hand in their philosophy. The thoughts of the Lumiรจres were equally capable of intellectual rigour and sentimentality. Despite controversy about the limits of their philosophy,<ref>{{cite book|first=Louis|last=Sala-Molins|title=Les misรจres des Lumiรจres; sous la raison l'outrage|place=Paris|publisher=Flammarion|year=1992}}</ref> especially when they denounced black slavery, many Lumiรจres criticised slavery, or colonialism, or both, including Montesquieu in De l'Esprit des Lois (while keeping a "personal" slave), Denis Diderot in Supplรฉment au voyage de Bougainville, Voltaire in Candide and Guillaume-Thomas Raynal in his encyclopaedic Histoire des deux Indes, the very model of 18th-century anticolonialism to which, among others, Diderot and dโ€™Holbach contributed. It was stated without any proof that one of their number, Voltaire, had shares in the slave trade. Encyclopaedic goals At the time, there was a particular taste for compendia of "all knowledge". This ideal found an instance in Diderot and d'Alembert's ("Encyclopaedia, or Systematic Dictionary of the Sciences, Arts, and Crafts"), usually known simply as the Encyclopรฉdie. Published between 1750 and 1770 it aimed to lead people out of ignorance through the widest dissemination of knowledge. Criticism The Lumiรจres movement was, for all its existence, pulled in two directions by opposing social forces: on one side, a strong spiritualism accompanied by a traditional faith in the religion of the Church; on the other, the rise of an anticlerical movement, critical of the differences between religious theory and practice, which was most manifest in France. Anticlericism was not the only source of tension in France: some noblemen contested monarchical power and the upper classes wanted to see greater fruit from their labours. A relaxing of morals fomented opinion against absolutism and the Ancient Order. According to Dale K. Van Kley, Jansenism in France also became a source of division. The French judicial system showed itself to be outdated. Even though commercial law had become codified during the 17th century, there was no uniform, or codified, civil law. Voltaire This social and legal background was criticised in works by the likes of Voltaire. Exiled in England between 1726 and 1729, he studied the works of John Locke and Isaac Newton, and the English monarchy. He became well known for his denunciation of injustices such as those against Jean Calas, Pierre-Paul Sirven, Franรงois-Jean de la Barre and Thomas Arthur, comte de Lally. The Lumiรจres philosophy saw its climax in the middle of the 18th century. For Voltaire, it was obvious that if the monarch can get the people to believe unreasonable things, then he can get them to do unreasonable things. This axiom became the basis for his criticism of the Lumiรจres, and led to the basis of romanticism: that constructions from pure reason created as many problems as they solved. According to the Lumiรจres philosophers, the crucial point of intellectual progress consisted of the synthesis of knowledge, enlightened by human reason, with the creation of a sovereign moral authority. A contrary point of view that developed, arguing that such a process would be swayed by social conventions, leading to a "New Truth" based on reason that was but a poor imitation of the ideal and unassailable truth. The Lumiรจres movement thus tried to find a balance between the idea of a "natural" liberty (or autonomy) and the freedom from that liberty, that is to say, the recognition that the autonomy found in nature was at odds with the discipline required for pure reason. At the same time, with various monarchs' reforms, there was a piecemeal attempt to redefine the order of society, and the relationship between monarch and subjects. The idea of a natural order was equally prevalent in scientific thought, for example, in the works of the biologist Carl von Linnรฉ. Kant In Germany, Immanuel Kant (like Rousseau, defining himself among the Lumiรจres) heavily criticised the limitations of pure reason in his work Critique of Pure Reason (), but also that of English empiricism in Critique of Practical Reason (). Compared with the rather subjective metaphysics of Descartes, Kant developed a more objective viewpoint in this branch of philosophy. Adam Smith Great thinkers at the end of the Lumiรจres movement (Adam Smith, Thomas Jefferson and even the young Goethe) adopted into their philosophy the ideas of self-organising and evolutionary forces. The Lumiรจres' stance was then presented with reference to what was seen as a universal truth: that Good is fundamental in nature, but it is not self-evident. On the contrary, it is the advance of human reason that reveals this constant structure. Romanticism is the exact opposite of this stance. Aestheticism This resulted in reflections about urbanism. The Lumiรจres' model town would be a joint effort between public provision and sympathetic architects, to create administrative or utilitarian buildings (town halls, hospitals, theatres, commissariats) all provided with views, squares, fountains, promenades, and so on. The French Acadรฉmie royale d'architecture was of the opinion that ("The beautiful is the pleasant"). For Abbรฉ Laugier, on the contrary, the beautiful was that which was in line with rationality. The natural model for all architecture was the log cabin supported by four tree trunks, with four horizontal parts and a roof, respectively columns, entablature, and pediments. The model of a Greek temple was thus extended into the dรฉcor and the structure. This paradigm resulted in a change of style in the middle of the 18th century: Rococo was dismissed, Ancient Greece and Palladian architecture became the principal references for neoclassical architecture. The University of Virginia, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, was founded by Thomas Jefferson. He drew up plans for parts of the campus based on the values of the Lumiรจres. The Place Stanislas at Nancy, France is the focus of an array of neoclassical urban buildings, and has been on the UNESCO List of World Heritage Sites in France since 1983, as well as several other sites in the town, such as the Place de la Carriรจre and the Place dโ€™Alliance, the administrative centre of the time. Claude Nicolas Ledoux (1736ย โ€“ 1806) was a member of the Acadรฉmie d'Architecture was without doubt the architect whose projects best represented the utopian, purely rational environment. (That which is rational, and thus based in the understanding of nature, cannot be at the same time utopian.) Starting in 1775 he built the Royal Saltworks at Arc-et-Senans, a very industrial city in Doubs. The bourgeoise had learned nothing from the Lumiรจres, even though they saw Rousseau, Montesquieu and Kant as honest men who approved of the "รฉlite": a vague concept, and one of which the Lumiรจres amongst others disapproved. There was considerable coverage in the English and French Press, but less so in Germany and Italy; in Spain and Russia very few knew about it save a few intellectuals, senior officials and grand families participated in the movement. The mass of the people could not care less: the vast majority of the common people, even in France, had never heard of Voltaire or Rousseau. Nevertheless, the Lumiรจres had disrupted the old certainties. This did not stop at social and political upheaval: the Enlightenment inspired a revolutionary generation, which is not to say they explicitly encouraged the French Revolution of 1789. Key figures Philosophers Origins The philosophers of the Lumiรจres movement came with many different talents: Thomas Jefferson had had a legal education but was equally at home with archaeology and architecture; Benjamin Franklin had been a career diplomat and was a physicist. Condorcet wrote on subjects as wide-ranging as commerce, finance, education and science. The social origins of the philosophers were also diverse: many were from middle-class families (Voltaire, Jefferson), others from more modest beginnings (Emmanuel Kant, Franklin, Diderot) or from the nobility (Montesquieu, Condorcet). Some had had a religious education (Diderot, Louis de Jaucourt) or one in the law (Montesquieu, Jefferson). The philosophers formed networks and communicated in letters; the vitriolic correspondence between Rousseau and Voltaire is well known. The great figures of the 18th century met and debated in the salons, cafรฉs or academies. These thinkers and formed an international community. Franklin, Jefferson, Adam Smith, David Hume and Ferdinando Galiani all spent many years in France. Because they criticised the established order, the philosophers were chased by the authorities and had to resort to subterfuge to escape prison. Franรงois-Marie Arouet took on the pseudonym Voltaire. In 1774, Thomas Jefferson wrote a report on behalf of the Virginia delegates to the First Continental Congress, which was convened to discuss the grievances of Great Britain's American colonies. Because its content, he could only publish it anonymously. Diderot's ("Letter on the Blind for the Use of those who can See") landed him in prison at the Chรขteau de Vincennes. Voltaire was accused of writing pamphlets criticising Philippe II, Duke of Orlรฉans (1674โ€“1723), and imprisoned in the Bastille. in 1721, Montesquieu published ("Persian Letters") anonymously in Holland. From 1728 to 1734, he went to many European countries. Faced with censorship and in financial difficulty, the philosophers often resorted to the protection of aristocrats and patrons: Chrรฉtien Guillaume de Lamoignon de Malesherbes and Madame de Pompadour, chief mistress of Louis XV, supported Diderot. Marie-Thรฉrรจse Rodet Geoffrin (1699ย โ€“ 1777) paid part of the publishing costs of the Encyclopรฉdie. From 1749 to 1777 she held a fortnightly , inviting artists, intellectuals, men of letters and philosophers. The other great salon of the time was that of Claudine Guรฉrin de Tencin. In the 1720s, Voltaire exiled himself in England, where he absorbed Locke's ideas. The philosophers were, in general, less hostile to monarchical rule than they were to that of the clergy and the nobility. In his defence of Jean Calas, Voltaire defended Royal justice against the excesses of fantastical provincial courts. Many European monarchs โ€“ Charles III of Spain, Maria Theresa of the House of Habsburg, Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor, Catherine II of Russia, Gustave III of Sweden โ€“ met with philosophers such as Voltaire, who was presented to the Court of Frederick the Great, and Diderot, who was presented to the Court of Catherine the Great. Philosophers such as d'Holbach were advocates of "enlightened absolutism" in the hope that their ideas would spread more quickly if they had the approval of the Head of State. Subsequent events would show the philosophers the limits of such an approach with sovereigns who were , "more absolutist than enlightened". Only Rousseau stuck rigidly to the revolutionary ideal of political equality. Notable members France Pierre Bayle, ร‰milie du Chรขtelet, ร‰tienne Bonnot de Condillac, Nicolas de Condorcet, Denis Diderot, Jean le Rond D'Alembert, Olympe de Gouges, Vincent de Gournay, D'Holbach, Bernard Le Bouyer de Fontenelle, Claude-Adrien Helvรฉtius, Gilbert du Motier de La Fayette, Antoine Laurent de Lavoisier, La Mettrie, Louis de Jaucourt, Jean-Franรงois Marmontel, Pierre Louis Moreau de Maupertuis, Montesquieu, Franรงois Quesnay, Antoine Destutt de Tracy, Anne Robert Jacques Turgot, Voltaire, Georges-Louis Leclerc de Buffon World England: Anthony Collins, John Locke, Edward Gibbon, William Godwin, Henry St John, 1st Viscount Bolingbroke, Samuel Johnson, James Oglethorpe, William Paley, Joseph Priestley, William Wilberforce, Mary Wollstonecraft Ireland: George Berkeley, Richard Cantillon, John Toland Germany (Prussia): Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi, Johann Gottfried von Herder, Emmanuel Kant, Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, Moses Mendelssohn Italy: Cesare Beccaria, Ferdinando Galiani, Mario Pagano, Giambattista Vico, Pietro Verri, Alessandro Verri, Antonio Genovesi, Carlo Goldoni, Giuseppe Parini Poland: Hugo Koล‚ล‚ฤ…taj, Jean Potocki, Ignacy Krasicki Portugal: Sebastiรฃo Josรฉ de Carvalho e Melo, 1st Marquis of Pombal, Luรญs Antรณnio Verney, Antรณnio Nunes Ribeiro Sanches, Francisco de Oliveira, Duarte Ribeiro de Macedo, Matias Aires Ramos da Silva Eรงa Russia: Nikolay Ivanovich Novikov, Mikhail Lomonosov Romania: Ion Budai-Deleanu, Ienฤƒchiลฃฤƒ Vฤƒcฤƒrescu, Anton Pann, Samuil Micu, Gheorghe ศ˜incai Scotland: James Boswell, David Hume, Francis Hutcheson, James Burnett, Lord Monboddo, Adam Smith, James Watt Spain: Antonio Josรฉ Cavanilles, Pedro Rodrรญguez de Campomanes, Benito Jerรณnimo Feijoo, Lorenzo Hervรกs y Panduro, Gaspar Melchor de Jovellanos, Leandro Fernรกndez de Moratรญn, Josรฉ Celestino Mutis Switzerland (Geneva): Jean-Jacques Rousseau United States: John Adams, Samuel Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, Thomas Paine, George Washington Dissemination The spread of literacy and reading allowed the development of what may be called an , "public space"; intellectual and political debate was no longer confined to the inner circle of the administrative class and the รฉlite, encompassing larger parts of society. This process of dissemination of new ideas was increased by new methods of communication. Parts of the Encyclopรฉdie, were read by the nobility and the upper class in literary salons, with those present giving their opinions on the writings of philosophers. Newspapers and the postal service allowed a more rapid exchange of ideas throughout Europe, resulting in a new form of cultural unity. Encylopรฉdistes A second important change by the Lumiรจres movement, looking back to the previous century, had its origin in France with the Encyclopรฉdistes. This intellectual movement supported the idea that there was a structural model of both scientific and moral knowledge, that this model was innate and that its expression was a form of human liberation. Starting 1751, Denis Diderot and Jean le Rond d'Alembert published the ("Systematic Encyclopaedia or Dictionary of Science, Arts and Crafts"). This raised questions on who should have the liberty to get hold of such information; the Press played an important role in the dissemination of ideas during the French Revolution. Salons and cafรฉs At first, literary cafรฉs such as the Cafรฉ Procope in Paris, were the favoured night-time haunt of young poets and critics, who could read and debate, and bragg about their latest success in the theatre or bookshops. But these were eclipsed by (Literary cafรฉs), open to all who had some talent, at least for public speaking. Their defining characteristic was their intellectual mix; men would gather to express their views and satisfy their thirst for knowledge and to establish their world-view. But it was necessary to be "introduced" into these salons: received artists, thinkers and philosophers. Each hostess had her day, her speciality and her special guests. The model example is the hotel of Madame de Lambert (Anne-Thรฉrรจse de Marguenat de Courcelles) at the turn of the century. Talented men regularly decamped there to expound their ideas and test their latest work on a privileged public. Worldly and cultured, the grandes dames who set up these salons enlivened the soirรฉes, encouraging the timid and cutting short arguments. Having strong, relatively liberated personalities, they were often writers and diarists themselves. This social mixing was particularly prominent in 18th-century France, in the "" ("General States of Human Spirit") where the Lumiรจres philosophy flourished. Some cultured women were treated as equal to the men on questions of religion, politics and science, and could bring a certain stylishness to debate, for example the contributions of Anne Dacier to the Quarrel of the Ancients and the Moderns, and the works of ร‰milie du Chรขtelet. Academies, libraries and clubs The were learned societies which were formed to collate and disseminate works of literature and science. In France, several Royal institutions were set up in the 17th century (the Acadรฉmie franรงaise in 1634; the Acadรฉmie des inscriptions et belles-lettres in 1663; the Acadรฉmie royale des sciences in 1666; the Acadรฉmie royale d'architecture in 1671),; other societies were set up in Paris, such as the Acadรฉmie nationale de mรฉdecine in 1731 and the Acadรฉmie nationale de mรฉdecine in 1776. Clergy and, to a lesser extent, nobility formed the majority of the membership. Provincial societies acted to bond together the intellectual รฉlite of French towns. Their social composition shows that privileged men were less prominent than in Paris: 37% from the nobility, 20% from the Church. Commoners represented the other 43%. Merchants and manufacturers were a small minority (4%). Neighbouring academies, public libraries and lecture halls flourished, often involving the same enthusiastic men of learning. They were often supported by individual rich men, or funded by public subscription. They collected scientific works, the great dictionaries, had a lecture hall and, nearby, a discussion room. All learned societies functioned as open salons and formed provincial, national and Europe-wide networks, exchanging books and letters, welcoming visiting members, and launching research and teaching programmes in subjects such as physics, chemistry, mineralogy, agronomy, and demography. In the British Thirteen Colonies of North America, James Bowdoin (1726โ€“1790), John Adams (1735โ€“1826) and John Hancock (1737โ€“1793) founded the American Academy of Arts and Sciences at Boston during the American War of Independence. In 1743, Benjamin Franklin founded the American Philosophical Society. At the start of the 19th century, Thomas Jefferson had one of the largest private libraries in the country. Of all the learned societies, the most advanced was that of the Freemasons, although restricted to the upper classes. Having its origin in Great Britain, freemasonry embraced all the characteristics of the Lumiรจres: God-fearing, tolerant, liberal, humanist, aesthetic. It took Europe by storm, where it had thousands of lodged by 1789. In civil, military and even religious walks of life, it did particularly well in becoming part of the State apparatus. Neither anticlerical (which they became in the 19th century) nor revolutionary, masonic lodges helped to expand on philosophical ideas and the spirit of reform in their political strategies. Intellectual discussion took on an esoteric, or sectarian, nature. Masonic lodges, even more than the Academies, emphasised the importance of equality according to ability rather than privilege by birth. Hawkers and printers The spread of ideas of the Lumiรจres relied just as heavily on the actions of travelling traders. As they moved from town to town, they took their ideas and news with them, and could spread it by word of mouth to the illiterate. The Press had helped to spread philosophical tracts (notably Diderot and d'รlembert's Encyclopรฉdie), and encouraged the habit of reflective thought in the populace. In the end, the Press helped form public opinion, in spite of the ever-present censorship. Periodicals included the Journal des savants, also known as the Journal des Sรงavans, the Mercure de France, and economic periodicals such as the ร‰phรฉmรฉrides du citoyen under Nicolas Baudeau of the ร‰conomistes party and Franรงois Quesnay of the Physiocrates. By cataloguing books and with subscriptions to learned societies, a public far from the centre of political activity could keep up with new ideas, discoveries and debates every month, if not every day. Political influence By the end of the 17th century, John Locke had defined the separation of powers of government as between the executive branch and legislative branch. In De l'esprit des lois (1748) Montesquieu resurrected the idea of the separation of powers and extended it to include a third power, the judicial branch. In the 1750s attempts were made in England, Austria, Prussia and France to "rationalise" their monarchs and their laws. The "enlightened"' () idea of a "rational" (or "systematic"; ) government was cast into the American Declaration of Independence and, to a lesser extent, in the manifesto of Jacobinism during the French Revolution. It propagated to the United States Constitution of 1787. American Revolution Thomas Jefferson, a cultured and learned man and one of the original planters of the State of Virginia, was well known to the English philosopher John Locke, and the Genevan Jean-Jacques Rousseau. He presided over the drafting of the Constitution of Virginia in 1776, from which he took certain parts when drafting the American Declaration of Independence, proclaimed on 4 July 1776 at the Second Continental Congress in Philadelphia. In the summer of 1784, he travelled to Europe to take over the duties of Benjamin Franklin as Ambassador of the United States to France, and during this time he met many of the Lumiรจres, becoming a frequent visitor to literary salons and bookshops in Paris. The influence of the Lumiรจres'philosophy is apparent in the Declaration of Independence, with the proclamations that all men are created equal and its opposition to tyranny. The 1787 United States Constitution restates Montesquieu's principle of the separation of powers into legislative, executive and judicial branches, which together form the foundations of modern democracy. French Revolution As the philosophy took hold in the salons, the cafรฉs and the clubs, the absolute rule of the monarch disintegrated, in part because of opposition by the French nobility who saw no future for themselves in reform. During the French Revolution, philosophical ideas informed political debate. The majority of deputies to the National Assembly were from the cultured bourgeois class, who aspired to ideas of liberty and equality. For example, Maximilien de Robespierre was an enthusiastic follower of Rousseau. But most of the French philosophers died before seeing their seedlings planted during the Revolution bear fruit, with the exception of Nicolas de Condorcet, Louis Sรฉbastien Mercier and Abbรฉ Raynal. The first two of these three Girondists fell out of favour; only the third came out with honour, even, after his death in 1796, having a bust made in honour of his essays on the abolition of black slavery, on 4 February 1794 (in the Gregorian calendar; 16 pluviรดse of year II in the French Republican Calendar). He was also the uncle of a , Simon Camboulas. The French Revolution in particular represents a violent application of the Lumiรจres' philosophy, especially during the Reign of Terror, the interregnum of the Jacobins. Descartes characterised the desire for a "rational" and "spiritual" revolution as one that aimed to eradicate the Church, and Christianity, entirely. The National Convention revoked the French Republican Calendar, the system of measurement of time, and the system of currency, while making the goal of equality, both social and economic, the highest priority of the State. See also Gazette de Leyde Political Spectrum Lettres d'une Pรฉruvienne'' by Franรงoise de Graffigny Modernity Rationalism Universalism Notes References External links Virtual tour of the French National Library Age of Enlightenment American Revolution French Revolution Posthumanists
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2009๋…„ ๋„์ฟ„๋„์˜ํšŒ ์˜์› ์„ ๊ฑฐ
2009๋…„ ๋„์ฟ„๋„์˜ํšŒ ์˜์› ์„ ๊ฑฐ()๋Š” ๋„์ฟ„๋„์˜ํšŒ ์˜์› 127๋ช…์„ ์„ ์ถœํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด 2009๋…„ 7์›” 12์ผ์— ์‹ค์‹œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐœ์š” ๋„์ฟ„๋„์˜ํšŒ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๋Š” ๋ณธ๋ž˜ ํ†ต์ผ์ง€๋ฐฉ์„ ๊ฑฐ์˜ ์ผ๋ถ€๋กœ์„œ ์‹ค์‹œ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋‚˜, 1965๋…„์˜ ์˜ํšŒ ํ•ด์‚ฐ์œผ๋กœ ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์‹œ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๋‹ฌ๋ผ์กŒ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ผ๋ณธ์—์„œ ์ด๋ฐ”๋ผํ‚คํ˜„์˜ํšŒ, ์˜คํ‚ค๋‚˜์™€ํ˜„์˜ํšŒ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ํ†ต์ผ์ง€๋ฐฉ์„ ๊ฑฐ๋กœ ์‹ค์‹œ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ๋„๋„๋ถ€ํ˜„ ์˜ํšŒ ์„ ๊ฑฐ์ด๋‹ค. ์ด๋ฒˆ ์„ ๊ฑฐ์—์„œ ์œ ๊ถŒ์ž ์ˆ˜๋Š” ์ง€๋‚œ 2005๋…„ ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๋•Œ๋ณด๋‹ค 33๋งŒ ๋ช… ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ•œ ์•ฝ 1060๋งŒ ๋ช…์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ ๊ฑฐ์˜ ์ฃผ์š” ์Ÿ์ ์€, 2016๋…„ ํ•˜๊ณ„ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ์˜ ๋„์ฟ„ ์œ ์น˜์™€ ๋„์ฟ„๋„์ง€์‚ฌ ์ด์‹œํ•˜๋ผ ์‹ ํƒ€๋กœ์˜ ์“ฐํ‚ค์ง€ ์‹œ์žฅ ์ด์ „ ๊ณ„ํš, ์‹ ์€ํ–‰๋„์ฟ„๋ฅผ ๋‘˜๋Ÿฌ์‹ผ ๋ฌธ์ œ์˜€๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์„ธ์Šต ์ •์น˜์ธ ๊ทœ์ œ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์  ๋…ผ์˜๋„ ์Ÿ์ ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฌด์—‡๋ณด๋‹ค๋„ ์ค‘์˜์›์˜ 4๋…„ ์ž„๊ธฐ ๋งŒ๋ฃŒ์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅธ ์ด์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ฐ€ ๋Šฆ์–ด๋„ 2009๋…„ 10์›”๊นŒ์ง€๋Š” ์‹ค์‹œ๋˜์–ด์•ผ ํ–ˆ๊ธฐ์— "์ด์„ ๊ฑฐ์˜ ์ „์ดˆ์ „" ์„ฑ๊ฒฉ์„ ๋„์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์—ฐ๋ฆฝ ์—ฌ๋‹น์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ๊ณต๋ช…๋‹น์€ ๋„์ฟ„๋„๋ฅผ ์ค‘์š”ํ•œ ๊ฑฐ์ ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์ƒ๊ฐํ•˜์—ฌ ๋„์˜์› ์„ ๊ฑฐ์™€ ์ด์„ ๊ฑฐ ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ๊ฐ„๊ฒฉ์„ ์ตœ์†Œ 1๊ฐœ์›” ์ด์ƒ์œผ๋กœ ์กฐ์ •ํ•ด ๋‹ฌ๋ผ๊ณ  ์ค‘์˜์› ํ•ด์‚ฐ๊ถŒ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง„ ์•„์†Œ ๋‹ค๋กœ ์ด๋ฆฌ์—๊ฒŒ ์š”์ฒญํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์ •๋ณด ๊ณ ์‹œ์ผ 2009๋…„ 7์›” 3์ผ ํˆฌํ‘œ์ผ 2009๋…„ 7์›” 12์ผ ์˜์› ์ •์ˆ˜ ์ด 127๋ช… ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์ œ๋„ ์†Œ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ตฌ์ œ, 2~8๋ช…์„ ์„ ์ถœํ•˜๋Š” ๋Œ€์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ตฌ์ œ ์ž…ํ›„๋ณด์ž ์˜์› ์ •์ˆ˜ 127๋ช…์— ๋Œ€ํ•˜์—ฌ 221๋ช…์ด ์ž…ํ›„๋ณดํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ์ž์œ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์€ ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์ „ 48์„์œผ๋กœ ๋„์˜ํšŒ ์ œ1๋‹น์ด์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ์ด๋ฒˆ ์„ ๊ฑฐ์—์„œ๋Š” 38์„์— ๊ทธ์น˜๋ฉฐ ์ œ2๋‹น์œผ๋กœ ์ „๋ฝํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด๋Š” 1963๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 1965๋…„ ์‚ฌ์ด ์ค„์ค„์ด ๋ฐํ˜€์ง„ ๋„์˜ํšŒ ์˜์›๋“ค์˜ ๋ถ€ํŒจ ์Šค์บ”๋“ค์ธ "๋„์ฟ„๋„์˜ํšŒ ๊ฒ€์€ ์•ˆ๊ฐœ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด"์ด ๋ฐœ์ƒํ•œ ๋’ค ๋„์˜ํšŒ ์ž์ง„ ํ•ด์‚ฐ์œผ๋กœ ์น˜๋Ÿฌ์ง„ 1965๋…„ ์„ ๊ฑฐ์—์„œ ์ผ๋ณธ์‚ฌํšŒ๋‹น์— ์ œ1๋‹น์„ ๋นผ์•—๊ธด ์ดํ›„ ์ฒ˜์Œ ์žˆ๋Š” ์ผ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํŠนํžˆ 1๋ช…์˜ ์˜์›์„ ์„ ์ถœํ•˜๋Š” ์†Œ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ตฌ์ œ๋กœ ์น˜๋Ÿฌ์ง„ 7๊ฐœ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ตฌ์—์„œ 1์Šน 6ํŒจ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์‹ค์ƒ ์™„ํŒจํ•˜์˜€๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด 7๊ฐœ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ตฌ ์ค‘ 1959๋…„ ์ด๋ž˜ ํ•œ๋ฒˆ๋„ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋‹น์— ๋นผ์•—๊ธฐ์ง€ ์•Š์€ ์ง€์š”๋‹ค๊ตฌ, ์ฃผ์˜ค๊ตฌ, ์˜ค๋ฉ”์‹œ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ตฌ์—์„œ ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ํ›„๋ณด๊ฐ€ ๋‹น์„ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ตฌ์ฒด์ ์œผ๋กœ, ์ง€์š”๋‹ค๊ตฌ์—์„œ๋Š” ์ž๋ฏผ๋‹น ๋„์ฟ„๋„ ์ง€์—ญ ํšŒ์žฅ์„ ๋งก์œผ๋ฉฐ 6๊ธฐ ์—ฐ์† ๋‹น์„ ๋๋˜ ํ˜„์ง ์˜์›์ด ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๊ณ ์‹œ ์ผ์ฃผ์ผ ์ „ ์ถœ๋งˆ๋ฅผ ์„ ์–ธํ•œ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์˜ ์‹ ์ธ ํ›„๋ณด์—๊ฒŒ ํŒจํ•˜์˜€๊ณ , ์ฃผ์˜ค๊ตฌ์—์„œ๋Š” 7๊ธฐ ์—ฐ์† ๋‹น์„ ๋๋˜ ํ˜„์ง ์˜์›์ด ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์˜ ์‹ ์ธ ์—ฌ์„ฑ ํ›„๋ณด์—๊ฒŒ ํŒจํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ณต๋ช…๋‹น์€ ์ž…ํ›„๋ณดํ•œ 23๋ช… ์ „์›์ด ๋‹น์„ ๋์ง€๋งŒ ์ž๋ฏผ๋‹น๊ณผ ์˜์„์„ ํ•ฉ์ณ๋„ 61์„์œผ๋กœ ๊ณผ๋ฐ˜์ธ 64์„์— ๋ชป ๋ฏธ์น˜๊ฒŒ ๋๋‹ค. ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์€ ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๊ณ ์‹œ ์ „๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ด๋ฒˆ ๋„์˜์› ์„ ๊ฑฐ๋ฅผ "์ด์„ ๊ฑฐ์˜ ์ „์ดˆ์ „"์œผ๋กœ ๊ทœ์ •ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์€ ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์ „ 34์„์—์„œ 54์„์œผ๋กœ ํฌ๊ฒŒ ์•ฝ์ง„ํ•ด ๋„์˜ํšŒ ์ œ1๋‹น์„ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํŠนํžˆ ์ž๋ฏผ๋‹น์ด ์ˆ˜์‹ญ๋…„๊ฐ„ ์ง€์ผœ์˜จ 7๊ฐœ์˜ ์†Œ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ตฌ์—์„œ 6์Šน 1ํŒจ๋กœ ์••์Šน์„ ๊ฑฐ๋‘์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ณธ๊ณต์‚ฐ๋‹น, ๋„์ฟ„ ์ƒํ™œ์ž ๋„คํŠธ์›Œํฌ ๋“ฑ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ •๋‹น๋“ค์€ ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์ „๋ณด๋‹ค ์˜์„์ด ์ค„์–ด๋“ค์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํŠนํžˆ ์ผ๋ณธ๊ณต์‚ฐ๋‹น์€ ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์ „ 13์„์—์„œ 8์„์œผ๋กœ 5์„์ด ์ค„์–ด๋“œ๋Š” ์ฐธํŒจ๋ฅผ ๋‹นํ•ด 44๋…„๋งŒ์— ๋„์ฟ„๋„์˜ํšŒ์—์„œ ์˜์„์ด ํ•œ ์ž๋ฆฌ์ˆ˜๋Œ€๋กœ ๋–จ์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ๋„์˜ํšŒ์— ์˜์•ˆ์„ ์ œ์ถœํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ํ•„์š”ํ•œ ์ตœ์†Œ ์˜์„(11์„)์„ ํ™•๋ณดํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌํšŒ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์€ ์ง€๋‚œ๋ฒˆ ๋„์˜์› ์„ ๊ฑฐ์™€ ๋งˆ์ฐฌ๊ฐ€์ง€๋กœ ์˜์„์„ ์–ป์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ ๊ฑฐ ํ›„ ์ด ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๋‘๊ณ  ๋„์ฟ„๋„์ง€์‚ฌ์ธ ์ด์‹œํ•˜๋ผ ์‹ ํƒ€๋กœ๋Š” ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๋‹ค์Œ๋‚ ์˜ ํšŒ๊ฒฌ์—์„œ "์ค‘์˜์› ์„ ๊ฑฐ๋ฅผ ์•ž๋‘๊ณ  ์Šค๋ชจ(ํŒจ๋ฐฐ)๋ฅผ ๋‹นํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€๋‹จํžˆ ๊ท€์ฐฎ์€ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ" ๋ผ๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ ๊ฑฐ ํ›„ ์ž์œ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์—์„œ๋Š” ๋‹น ์ด์žฌ์ด์ž ๋‚ด๊ฐ์ด๋ฆฌ๋Œ€์‹ ์ธ ์•„์†Œ ๋‹ค๋กœ์˜ ํ‡ด์ง„์„ ์š”๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ๋ชฉ์†Œ๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ๋†’์•„์กŒ๊ณ , ์ด์— ์•„์†Œ ๋‹ค๋กœ๋Š” ์ž์‹ ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ํ‡ด์ง„ ์š”๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ์ž ์žฌ์šฐ๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๋‹ค์Œ๋‚ ์ธ 7์›” 13์ผ ์˜คํ›„์— ๊ธฐ์žํšŒ๊ฒฌ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด "7์›” 21์ผ์— ์ค‘์˜์›์„ ํ•ด์‚ฐํ•ด 8์›” 30์ผ์— ์ด์„ ๊ฑฐ๋ฅผ ์‹ค์‹œํ•œ๋‹ค"๋ผ๋ฉฐ ์ค‘์˜์› ํ•ด์‚ฐ์„ ์„ ์–ธํ•˜์˜€๊ณ , ๋‹น ์ด์žฌ์ง ์‚ฌํ‡ด ์š”๊ตฌ๋Š” ์ผ์ถ•ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์•„์šธ๋Ÿฌ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ๋“ฑ ์•ผ๋‹น๋“ค์€ ์ด๋ฒˆ ๋„์˜์› ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐํšŒ๋กœ ์‚ผ์•„ ์ค‘์˜์›์—๋Š” ๋‚ด๊ฐ ๋ถˆ์‹ ์ž„ ๊ฒฐ์˜์•ˆ์„, ์ฐธ์˜์›์—๋Š” ์ด๋ฆฌ ๋ฌธ์ฑ… ๊ฒฐ์˜์•ˆ์„ ์ œ์ถœํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ดํ›„ ๋ถˆ์‹ ์ž„ ๊ฒฐ์˜๋Š” ์ค‘์˜์›(์ž๋ฏผ๋‹น์ด ์ œ1๋‹น)์—์„œ ๋ถ€๊ฒฐ, ์ด๋ฆฌ ๋ฌธ์ฑ… ๊ฒฐ์˜์•ˆ์€ ์ฐธ์˜์›(๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์ด ์ œ1๋‹น)์—์„œ ๊ฐ€๊ฒฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•œํŽธ, ์ž๋ฏผ๋‹น ๋„์ฟ„๋„ ์ง€์—ญ ํšŒ์žฅ ์ด์‹œํ•˜๋ผ ๋…ธ๋ถ€ํ…Œ๋ฃจ๋Š” ๋„์˜์› ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์ž๋ฏผ๋‹น ์ฐธํŒจ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ํšŒ์žฅ์ง ์‚ฌํ‡ด ์˜์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ํ‘œ๋ช…ํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ํ›„์ž„์ด ๊ฒฐ์ •๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์•„ ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ ์ด์‹œํ•˜๋ผ๋ฅผ ๋น„๋กฏํ•ด ๋„์ฟ„๋„ ์ง€์—ญ๋‹น ์ง‘ํ–‰๋ถ€ ์ „์›์ด ์—ฐ์ž„๋๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์ฐธํŒจ๋ฅผ ๋‹นํ•œ ์ผ๋ณธ๊ณต์‚ฐ๋‹น์€ 7์›” 16์ผ์— ์‹œ์ด ๊ฐ€์ฆˆ์˜ค ์œ„์›์žฅ์ด ๊ธฐ์žํšŒ๊ฒฌ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ž…์žฅ์„ "๋น„ํŒ ์ผ๋ณ€๋„"์—์„œ "์„œ๋กœ ์ผ์น˜ํ•˜๋Š” ์ •์ฑ…์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด์„œ๋Š” ํ˜‘๋ ฅํ•˜๋Š” '๊ฑด์„ค์  ์•ผ๋‹น'์œผ๋กœ ์ „ํ™˜ํ•œ๋‹ค"๋ผ๋Š” ๊ธฐ๋ณธ ๋ฐฉ์นจ์„ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ๋„์ฟ„๋„ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ด€๋ฆฌ์œ„์›ํšŒ ๋„์ฟ„๋„์˜ํšŒ ์˜์› ์„ ๊ฑฐ 2009๋…„ 7์›” ๋„์ฟ„๋„์˜ํšŒ ์˜์› ์„ ๊ฑฐ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009%20Tokyo%20prefectural%20election
2009 Tokyo prefectural election
Prefectural elections for the Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly were held on 12 July 2009. In the runup to the Japanese general election due by October they were seen as an important test for Taro Aso's ruling coalition of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and the New Komeito. New Komeito considers Tokyo as an important stronghold and had repeatedly asked Prime Minister Aso to avoid holding the two elections within a month of each other. Campaigning officially started on July 3, 2009. The prefecture's 10.6 million registered voters (up 230,000 from 2005) were called upon to elect the 127 Assembly members in 42 electoral districts at 1,868 polling stations across Tokyo. 221 candidates had been formally registered with the Tokyo metropolitan electoral commission. The LDP and the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) each endorsed 58 candidates, the Japan Communist Party (JCP) supports 40 and New Komeito formally fields 23 candidates, though it has also decided to support LDP candidates in several districts. Local campaign issues included Tokyo's bid for the 2016 Olympic Games and governor Shintaro Ishihara's plan to relocate the Tsukiji fish market in 2012. The national debate over a possible ban of "hereditary" (, seshลซ) politicians has also affected several candidates. Tokyo's legislative election is one of only three elections for prefectural parliaments countrywide that are not held in the "unified regional election" (tลitsu chihล senkyo, last round: 2007), the other two being Ibaraki's and Okinawa's prefectural assembly elections. Results Polls closed at 8:00 pm Japan Standard Time. Turnout was significantly up from 2005 and stood at 54.5 percent. The DPJ picked up 20 seats and saw 54 of their 58 candidates elected. The LDP lost its status as strongest party in the Metropolitan Assembly for the first time since 1965. Despite strong results for coalition partner Kลmeitล, the ruling camp could not defend an absolute majority (64 seats). The only electoral district where an LDP candidate received the most votes (top tลsen) was the single-member [Izu and Ogasawara] islands electoral district of former assembly president Chลซichi Kawashima, a native of ลŒshima town who had represented the islands since 1985. |- ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;" |Parties ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;" |Candidates ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |% ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Seats |- | style="text-align:left;" |Democratic Party of Japan (ๆฐ‘ไธปๅ…š, Minshutล) | style="text-align:right;" | 58 | style="text-align:right;" | 2,298,494 | style="text-align:right;" | 40.79 | style="text-align:right;" | 54 |- | style="text-align:left;" |Liberal Democratic Party of Japan (่‡ช็”ฑๆฐ‘ไธปๅ…š, Jiyลซ Minshutล) | style="text-align:right;" | 58 | style="text-align:right;" | 1,458,108 | style="text-align:right;" | 25.88 | style="text-align:right;" | 38 |- | style="text-align:left;" |New Komeito Party (ๅ…ฌๆ˜Žๅ…š, Kลmeitล) | style="text-align:right;" | 23 | style="text-align:right;" | 743,427 | style="text-align:right;" | 13.19 | style="text-align:right;" | 23 |- | style="text-align:left;" |Japanese Communist Party (ๆ—ฅๆœฌๅ…ฑ็”ฃๅ…š, Nihon Kyลsan-tล) | style="text-align:right;" | 40 | style="text-align:right;" | 707,602 | style="text-align:right;" | 12.56 | style="text-align:right;" | 8 |- | style="text-align:left;" |Tokyo Seikatsusha Network (ๆฑไบฌใƒป็”Ÿๆดป่€…ใƒใƒƒใƒˆใƒฏใƒผใ‚ฏ) | style="text-align:right;" | 5 | style="text-align:right;" | 110,407 | style="text-align:right;" | 1.96 | style="text-align:right;" | 2 |- | style="text-align:left;" |Social Democratic Party (็คพๆฐ‘ๅ…š Shamin-tล) | style="text-align:right;" | 2 | style="text-align:right;" | 20,084 | style="text-align:right;" | 0.36 | style="text-align:right;" | 0 |- | style="text-align:left;" | Others | style="text-align:right;" | 13 | style="text-align:right;" | 45,329 | style="text-align:right;" | 0.80 | style="text-align:right;" | 0 |- | style="text-align:left;" | Independents | style="text-align:right;" | 22 | style="text-align:right;" | 250,869 | style="text-align:right;" | 4.45 | style="text-align:right;" | 2 |- |style="text-align:left;background-color:#E9E9E9"|Total (turnout 54.49%) |style="text-align:right;background-color:#E9E9E9" | 221 |style="text-align:right;background-color:#E9E9E9"| 5,705,441 |style="text-align:right;background-color:#E9E9E9"| 100.00 |style="text-align:right;background-color:#E9E9E9"| 127 |- | style="text-align:left;" colspan=5 |Source: Tokyo electoral commission |} Aftermath The president of the LDP's Tokyo prefectural federation, one of governor Ishihara's then two sons in the national House of Representatives, Nobuteru, initially hinted to step down as LDP Tokyo chief, but eventually stayed on. Nationally, Tarล Asล came under pressure within his party to resign immediately as party president-prime minister, but could avoid a leadership challenge by calling the general election of the House of Representatives early โ€“ the election on August 30 resulted in a landslide loss for the ruling coalition. Democrat Ryล Tanaka from Suginami was elected assembly president, Kantarล Suzuki (Kลmeitล, Arakawa) became vice president. The assembly majority in the new assembly is often involved in disputes with governor Ishihara over the budget, the Tsukiji relocation and other issues. Yet, in the gubernatorial election of 2011 (part of the unified regional election), Ishihara was safely reelected for a fourth term. References External links JANJAN: ๆฑไบฌ้ƒฝ่ญฐไผš่ญฐๅ“ก้ธๆŒ™ 2009 elections in Japan Tokyo prefectural elections July 2009 events in Japan 2009 in Tokyo
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%ED%8C%80%20%EC%9B%A8%EC%9D%B4%ED%81%AC%ED%95%84%EB%93%9C
ํŒ€ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ
ํ‹ฐ๋ชจ์‹œ ์Šคํ‹ฐ๋ธ ("ํŒ€") ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ(Timothy Stephen ("Tim") Wakefield, 1966๋…„ 8์›” 2์ผ~2023๋…„ 10์›” 1์ผ)๋Š” ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ํ”„๋กœ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜์ด๋‹ค. ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ํ”ผ์ธ ๋ฒ„๊ทธ ํŒŒ์ด๋ฆฌ์ธ ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ํŒ€์—์„œ ์žฅ๊ธฐ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณต๋ฌดํ•œ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ 1995๋…„์— ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์—ฌ 2012๋…„ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์€ํ‡ด์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋๋‚œ ๋ณด์Šคํ„ด ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค์™€ ์ž์‹ ์˜ 17๋…„๊ฐ„ ์žฌ์ง์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๊ธฐ์–ต๋˜๋Š” ํŽธ์ด๋‹ค. ์€ํ‡ด ๋‹น์‹œ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋ฉ”์ด์ € ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๋ฒ ์ด์Šค๋ณผ์—์„œ ์—ฐ์žฅ์ž ํ™œ๋™ ์„ ์ˆ˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ž์‹ ์˜ ๊ธฐํ˜ธ์  ๋„ˆํด๋ณผ๋กœ ์•Œ๋ ค์ง„ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” 2011๋…„ 9์›” 3์ผ ํ† ๋ก ํ†  ๋ธ”๋ฃจ์ œ์ด์Šค๋ฅผ ์ƒ๋Œ€๋กœ ์ž์‹ ์˜ 200๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์šฐ์Šนํ•˜๊ณ , ์‚ฌ์ด ์˜๊ณผ ๋กœ์ € ํด๋ ˆ๋ฉ˜์Šค ๋‘ ์„ ์ˆ˜์— ์ด์–ด 186๊ฐœ์˜ ํŒ€ ์Šน๋ฆฌ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค์—์„œ 3์œ„์ด๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” 97๊ฐœ์˜ ์ด๋‹๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ํŽœ์›จ์ด ํŒŒํฌ์—์„œ ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์šฐ์Šน์—์„œ 2์œ„(ํด๋ ˆ๋ฉ˜์Šค์˜ 100๊ฐœ์˜ ๋’ค๋กœ)์ด๊ณ , ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค์˜ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ํˆฌ๊ตฌ๋œ ์ด๋‹์—์„œ 3,006๊ฐœ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์‚ฌ์ƒ 1์œ„๋กœ 2010๋…„ 6์›” 8์ผ ํด๋ ˆ๋ฉ˜์Šค์˜ ์ด 2,777๊ฐœ๋ฅผ ์•ž์„ฐ๋‹ค. ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋ฅดํ†  ํด๋ ˆ๋ฉ˜ํ…Œ ์ƒ์„ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ 8๋ฒˆ์ด๋‚˜ ํ›„๋ณด์— ์˜ฌ๋ž์œผ๋ฉฐ 2010๋…„์— ์ˆ˜์ƒํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2023๋…„ 10์›” 1์ผ, ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ํ–ฅ๋…„ 57์„ธ์˜ ๋‚˜์ด์— ์•”์œผ๋กœ ์„ธ์ƒ์„ ๋– ๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ์ƒ์•  ํ”Œ๋กœ๋ฆฌ๋‹ค์ฃผ ๋ฉœ๋ฒˆ์—์„œ ํƒœ์–ด๋‚œ ๊ทธ๋Š” ์˜ค ๊ฒŒ์ผ๋ฆฌ ๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต์—์„œ, ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๊ณ ๋‚˜์„œ ํ”Œ๋กœ๋ฆฌ๋‹ค ๊ณต๊ณผ ๋Œ€ํ•™์—์„œ ์ˆ˜ํ•™ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํ”Œ๋กœ๋ฆฌ๋‹ค ๊ณต๊ณผ ๋Œ€ํ•™์—์„œ ๊ทธ๋Š” ์ž์‹ ์˜ 2ํ•™๋…„๊ณผ ์ฃผ๋‹ˆ์–ด ํ•ด์— 1๋ฃจ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ ํŒฌ์„œ์Šค ํŒ€์˜ MVP๋กœ ์ž„๋ช…๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” 40์—์„œ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ ๊ธฐ๋ก์€ ๋ฌผ๋ก , 22๊ฐœ์˜ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์‹ฑ๊ธ€ ์‹œ์ฆŒ ๊ธฐ๋ก๋“ค์„ ์„ธ์› ๋‹ค. 2006๋…„ ๊ทธ์˜ ๋“ฑ๋ฒˆํ˜ธ 3์€ ๋Œ€ํ•™์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ์˜๊ตฌ ๊ฒฐ๋ฒˆ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ”„๋กœ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ํ”ผ์ธ ๋ฒ„๊ทธ ํŒŒ์ด๋ฆฌ์ธ  ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” 1988๋…„ ํ”ผ์ธ ๋ฒ„๊ทธ ํŒŒ์ด๋ฆฌ์ธ ์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ 2๋ฃจ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ ๋“œ๋ž˜ํ”„ํŠธ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์Šค์นด์šฐํŠธ๊ฐ€ ๊ทธ์˜ ์‹ค๋ ฅ๋“ค๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ํฌ์ง€์…˜์˜ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ์ „ํ˜€ ๋”๋ธ” A์˜ ๊ณต ์œ„๋กœ ์–ป์ง€ ์•Š์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๊ทธ์—๊ฒŒ ๋ง์„ ํ•œ ํ›„, ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ์ž์‹ ์„ ์ž˜ ์•Œ๋ ค์ง€๊ฒŒ ๋งŒ๋“  ๋„ˆํด๋ณผ์„ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด์–ด์ง„ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์— ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ์‹ฑ๊ธ€ A ์„ธ์ผ๋Ÿผ ๋ทฐ์บ๋‹ˆ์–ด์Šค๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ํ™œ์•ฝํ•˜๋Š” ๋™์•ˆ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ํ”„๋กœ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜ ๋ฐ๋ท”๋ฅผ ์ด๋ฃจ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ์˜ ์ฆ‰์‹œ์˜ ์„ฑ๊ณต์€ 1990๋…„ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๋กœ ์™„์ „ํ•œ ํ’์Šต์œผ๋กœ ์ด๋Œ์—ˆ๊ณ , ๊ทธ๋Š” ํˆฌ๊ตฌํ•œ ์ถœ๋ฐœ๊ณผ ์ด๋‹๋“ค์—์„œ ์บ๋กค๋ผ์ด๋‚˜ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ๋ฅผ ์ด๋Œ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” 1991๋…„ ๋”๋ธ” A๋กœ ์ง„์ถœํ•˜์—ฌ ์ง€์†์ ์œผ๋กœ ํ–ฅ์ƒ์‹œ์ผœ ์šฐ์Šน๊ณผ ํˆฌ๊ตฌํ•œ ์ด๋‹๋“ค์—์„œ ํŒŒ์ด๋ฅด์ธ ์˜ ๋งˆ์ด๋„ˆ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋“ค์„ ์ด๋Œ๊ณ  ์ž์‹ ์ด 2.90์˜ ๋ฐฉ์–ด์œจ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ 15 ์Šน 8 ํŒจ๋กœ ๊ฐˆ ๋•Œ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋“ค์„ ์™„๋ฃŒํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 1992๋…„~94๋…„ 1992๋…„ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นธ ์–ด์†Œ์‹œ์—์ด์…˜์˜ ํŠธ๋ฆฌํ”Œ A ๋ฒ„ํŽ„๋กœ ๋ฐ”์ด์Šจ์Šค์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” 7์›” 31์ผ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์‚ฌ์ƒ 6๊ฐœ์˜ ์™„๋ฃŒ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋“ค์„ ๋“ฑ๋กํ•˜์—ฌ 3.06์˜ ๋ฐฉ์–ด์œจ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ 10๊ฐœ์˜ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์šฐ์Šนํ•˜๊ณ  ๋ฉ”์ด์ € ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๋ฒ ์ด์Šค๋ณผ๋กœ ์†Œ์ง‘๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ž์‹ ์˜ ๋ฉ”์ด์ € ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๋ฐ๋ท”์—์„œ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ์„ธ์ธํŠธ๋ฃจ์ด์Šค ์นด๋””๋„์Šค๋ฅผ ์ƒ๋Œ€๋กœ 146๊ฐœ์˜ ํˆฌ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ๋˜์ง€๋Š” ๋™์•ˆ 10๋ช…์˜ ํƒ€์ž๋“ค ์ŠคํŠธ๋ผ์ดํฌ์•„์›ƒ ์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. ๋ง‰๋ฐ”์ง€์˜ ๋ถ„์ „์œผ๋กœ ๋‚ด๋ ค๊ฐ€์„œ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์˜คํ”„๋ฅผ ๋›ฐ์–ด์˜ค๋ฅด๋Š” ํŒŒ์ด๋ฆฌ์ธ ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ํ›„์›์„ ๋งˆ๋ จํ•˜์—ฌ 13๊ฐœ์˜ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋“ค์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜๊ณ , ์ŠคํฌํŒ… ๋‰ด์Šค๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ "์˜ฌํ•ด์˜ ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์‹ ์ธ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜" ์ƒ์„ ๊ทธ์—๊ฒŒ ์ˆ˜์—ฌํ•œ ์ƒ์—ฐ์ธ 2.15์˜ ๋ฐฉ์–ด์œจ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ 8 ์Šน 1 ํŒจ์˜ ๊ธฐ๋ก์„ ์ˆ˜์ง‘ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๋™๋ถ€ ๋””๋น„์ „์„ ์šฐ์Šนํ•œ ํ›„, ํŒŒ์ด๋ฆฌ์ธ ๋Š” ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ์—์„œ ์• ํ‹€๋žœํƒ€ ๋ธŒ๋ ˆ์ด๋ธŒ์Šค๋ฅผ ํ–ฅํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋ธŒ๋ ˆ์ด๋ธŒ์Šค์˜ ์Šคํƒ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ํ†ฐ ๊ธ€๋ž˜๋นˆ์„ ์ƒ๋Œ€๋Ÿฌ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์ถœ๋ฐœ๋“ค์„ ๋‘˜๋‹ค ์ด๊ธฐ๊ณ  ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ์˜ 3๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์™€ 3์ผ๊ฐ„ ํœด์‹์— 6๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ์™„๋ฃŒ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋˜์กŒ๋‹ค. ํŒŒ์ด๋ฆฌ์ธ ๊ฐ€ 7๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ๋ธŒ๋ ˆ์ด๋ธŒ์Šค๋ฅผ ์ง€๋„ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋ธŒ๋ ˆ์ด๋ธŒ์Šค๊ฐ€ ์Šคํƒ  ๋ฒจ๋ฆฐ๋‹ค์— 9๋ฒˆ์งธ ๋ง๊ธฐ์—์„œ 3๊ฐœ์˜ ๋“์ ์„ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ทœํ•ฉํ•  ๋•Œ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ์˜ MVP๋กœ ์ž„๋ช…๋˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ๊ท ํ˜•์ด ์žกํ˜”๋‹ค. 1993๋…„ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์˜ ์ฒซ๋‹ฌ ๋™์•ˆ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” 2๋ฒˆ์ด๋‚˜ 9๋ช…์˜ ํƒ€์ž๋“ค์„, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ถœ๋ฐœ์—์„œ 10๋ช…์„ 1๋ฃจ๋กœ ๊ฑด๋„ˆ๊ฐ€๊ฒŒ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ถœ๋ฐœ ๊ต์ฒด์—์„œ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์ž๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ์žƒ์€ ํ›„, ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋”๋ธ” A๋กœ ๋ณด๋‚ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” 9์›”์— ๋‹ค์‹œ ๋ถˆ๋Ÿฌ์ง€๊ณ  ๋‹ค์‹œ ๋ถ„ํˆฌํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ 2๊ฐœ์˜ ์—ฐ์†์  ์™„๋ด‰๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ๋๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” 1994๋…„์˜ ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์„ ํŠธ๋ฆฌํ”Œ A ๋ฒ„ํŽ„๋กœ์™€ ๋ณด๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ํ—ˆ์šฉ๋œ ํŒจ๋ฐฐ์™€ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ๋“ค์—์„œ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ๋ฅผ ์ด๋Œ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” 9์›” ํŒŒ์ด๋ฆฌ์ธ ์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋‹ค์‹œ ๋ถˆ๋Ÿฌ์กŒ์œผ๋‚˜ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋“ค์˜ ํŒŒ์—…์˜ ์ด์œ ๋กœ ์•ผ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. 1995๋…„ 4์›” 20์ผ ํŒŒ์ด๋ฆฌ์ธ ๋Š” ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋ฅผ ๋‚ด๋ณด๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. ๋ณด์Šคํ„ด ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค ํŒŒ์ด๋ฆฌ์ธ ์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋‚˜์˜ค๊ฒŒ ๋œ์ง€ 6์ผ ํ›„, ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋ณด์Šคํ„ด ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค์™€ ๊ณ„์•ฝ์ด ๋งบ์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ์•„์›ƒ ํˆฌ๊ตฌ๋กœ์„œ ๊ทธ์—๊ฒŒ ๋„ˆํด๋ณผ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ์šฉ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์ค€ 2๋ช…์˜ ์ „ ๋„ˆํด๋ณผ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ํ•„๊ณผ ์กฐ ๋‹ˆํฌ๋กœ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์ผํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํŠธ๋ฆฌํ”Œ A ํฌํ„ฐํ‚ท์—์„œ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” 2.53์˜ ๋ฐฉ์–ด์œจ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ 2 ์Šน 1 ํŒจ๋กœ ๊ฐ”๋‹ค. 1995๋…„~98๋…„ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค์˜ ๊ต์ฒด๊ฐ€ 1995๋…„ ์‹œ์ฆŒ ์ดˆ๊ธฐ์— ๋ถ€์ƒ๋“ค๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ถœ๋ฐœ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋“ค ๋กœ์ € ํด๋ ˆ๋ฉ˜์Šค์™€ ์—๋Ÿฐ ์‹ค์˜ ์ •์ƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ„ํˆฌํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ํŠธ๋ฆฌํ”Œ A๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์†Œ์ง‘๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ๊ณง ๊ทธ๋“ค์˜ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์˜์ง€์ ์ธ ์ถœ๋ฐœ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ ์ฆ๋ช…ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” 17๊ฐœ์˜ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋“ค(๊ทธ์ค‘์— 6๊ฐœ๋Š” ์™„๋ฃŒ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ)์„ ํ†ตํ•˜์—ฌ 1.65์˜ ๋ฐฉ์–ด์œจ๊ณผ 14 ์Šน 1 ํŒจ์˜ ๊ธฐ๋ก๊ณผ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ํ•œํ•ด๋ฅผ 2.95์˜ ๋ฐฉ์–ด์œจ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ 16 ์Šน 8 ํŒจ๋กœ ๋๋‚ด ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค๊ฐ€ ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นธ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๋™๋ถ€ ๋””๋น„์ „ ํƒ€์ดํ‹€์„ ์šฐ์Šนํ•˜๋Š” ๋„์›€์„ ์ฃผ์—ˆ๊ณ , ์ŠคํฌํŒ… ๋‰ด์Šค "์˜ฌํ•ด์˜ ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นธ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๋ณต๊ท€ ์„ ์ˆ˜" ์ƒ์„ ์‚ฌ๋กœ์žก์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นธ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์‚ฌ์ด ์˜ ์ƒ ๋น„๋ฐ€ ํˆฌํ‘œ์—์„œ 3์œ„๋ฅผ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋‹ค์Œ 3๊ฐœ์˜ ์‹œ์ฆŒ(1996๋…„~98๋…„)์— ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” 45๊ฐœ์˜ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์šฐ์Šนํ•˜๊ณ , ์ถœ๋ฐœ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ 3๊ฐœ์˜ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์— ๊ฐ๊ฐ 5.14, 4.25์™€ 4.58์˜ ๋ฐฉ์–ด์œจ์„ ๊ฐ€์กŒ๋‹ค. 1997๋…„ ๊ทธ๋Š” ํˆฌ๊ตฌ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ 16๋ช…์˜ ํƒ€์ž๋“ค์„ ์•ˆํƒ€ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋ฉ”์ด์ € ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๋ฒ ์ด์Šค๋ณผ์„ ์ด๋Œ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” 2001๋…„ 18๋ช…์˜ ํƒ€์ž๋“ค์„ ๋„˜์–ด๋œจ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์ด ์—…์ ์„ ๋˜ํ’€์ดํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 1999๋…„~2002๋…„ 1999๋…„ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค์˜ ์ตœ์ข…ํšŒ ํ†ฐ ๊ณ ๋“ ์ด ๋ถ€์ƒ์„ ๋‹นํ•˜๊ณ  ๊ฐ๋… ์ง€๋ฏธ ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„์Šค๋Š” ์‹œ์ฆŒ์˜ ์ค‘๋ฐ˜ ๋™์•ˆ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋ฅผ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์ตœ์ข…ํšŒ๋กœ ์ž๋ฆฌ์— ์•‰ํ˜”๋‹ค. 8์›” 10์ผ ๊ทธ๋Š” ํ•˜๋‚˜์˜ ์ด๋‹์—์„œ 4๋ช…์˜ ํƒ€์ž๋“ค์„ ์ŠคํŠธ๋ผ์ดํฌ์•„์›ƒ ์‹œํ‚จ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๋“ค์˜ ์„ ๋ฐœ ๋‹จ์ฒด์— ๊ฐ€์ž…ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์•ˆ์ ˆ๋ถ€์ ˆํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•œ ๋„ˆํด๋ณผ์ด ๋งŽ์€ ํŒจ์Šค๋œ ๊ณต์„ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ•˜๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๋ช‡๋ช‡์˜ ๋„ˆํด๋ณผ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋“ค์€ ๊ทธ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์ด ๋ช…์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋‚˜๋ˆ„์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋ฐ๋ฆญ ๋กœ๊ฐ€ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์ตœ์ข…ํšŒ๋กœ์„œ ๋‚˜์˜ค๊ธฐ ์ „์— 15๊ฐœ์˜ ์„ธ์ด๋ธŒ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜์˜€๊ณ , ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ์ถœ๋ฐœ ๊ต์ฒด๋กœ ๋Œ์•„์™”๋‹ค. ์ž์‹ ์˜ ๋ถˆํŽœ์˜ ์™ธ๋ถ€๋กœ ์„ฑ๊ณต ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ์ •๊ทœ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์› ํˆฌ์ˆ˜์˜ ํฌ์ง€์…˜์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ถœ๋ฐœ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๋กœ ์˜ฎ๊ฒจ์ง€๊ณ  ๋‹ค์Œ 3๊ฐœ์˜ ์‹œ์ฆŒ(2000๋…„~02๋…„)์— ๋‹ค์‹œ ๋Œ์•„์™”๋‹ค. 2002๋…„ 7์›” ํ›„์ˆœ์— ๊ต์ฒด๋กœ ๋ณต๊ท€๋œ ํ›„, ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ์˜๊ตฌํ•œ ์ •๊ทœ์  ์ถœ๋ฐœ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2003๋…„~08๋…„ 2003๋…„ ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นธ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ์—์„œ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋‰ด์š• ์–‘ํ‚ค์Šค๋ฅผ ์ƒ๋Œ€๋กœ 14๊ฐœ์˜ ์ด๋‹์— 4๊ฐœ์˜ ๋“์ ์„ ํ—ˆ์šฉํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋งˆ์ดํฌ ๋ฌด์‹œ๋‚˜๋ฅผ ์ƒ๋Œ€๋กœ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ์˜ ์ฒซ๋ฒˆ์งธ์™€ 4๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋“ค์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜๊ณ , ์ด ์ถœ๋ฐœ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋“ค์„ ๋‘˜๋‹ค ์šฐ์Šนํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์–‘ํ‚ค์Šค๊ฐ€ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋™์  ๋งค๊ธด ํ›„, ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋˜ํ•œ 7๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์˜ ์—ฌ๋ถ„์˜ ์ด๋‹์—์„œ ํˆฌ๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ๋ถˆ๋Ÿฌ๋“ค์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค๋Š” 8๋ฒˆ์งธ ์ด๋‹์—์„œ 5 ๋Œ€ 2๋กœ ์ด๋Œ์–ด์ ธ ์™”๋‹ค. 10๋ฒˆ์งธ ์ด๋‹์—์„œ ์ˆœ์„œ์— ๋ฌผ๋Ÿฌ๊ฐ„ ํ›„, ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” 11๋ฒˆ์งธ ์ด๋‹์˜ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์ฒซ ํˆฌ๊ตฌ์— ์—๋Ÿฐ ๋ถ„์—๊ฒŒ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ๋‚ด์ฃผ์–ด ์–‘ํ‚ค์Šค๋ฅผ ์›”๋“œ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ๋กœ ๋ณด๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๋๋‚œ ํ›„, ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ํŒฌ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ์‚ฌ๊ณผํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2004๋…„ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ์–‘ํ‚ค์Šค๋ฅผ ์ƒ๋Œ€๋กœ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค๊ฐ€ ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นธ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ์„ ์šฐ์Šนํ•˜๋Š” ๋„์›€์„ ์ฃผ์–ด ์›”๋“œ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ๋กœ ์ง„์ถœํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ 7๊ฐœ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ ์ค‘์˜ ์ตœ๊ณ ์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค๋Š” ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ์˜ ์ฒซ 2๊ฐœ์˜ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ํŒจํ•˜์˜€๊ณ , ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๊ฐ€ ๋‹ค์Œ ๋‚ ์„ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๋“ค์„ ๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋กœ ๋“ค๊ฑฐ๊ฐ€๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์˜๋ฌธํ•  ๋•Œ 3๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ๋‚˜์˜๊ฒŒ ํŒจํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ์‹œ์ž‘๋œ 4๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ž์‹ ์„ ๋ฐฉ์ง€ํ•œ 3๊ณ  3๋ถ„์˜ 1 ์ด๋‹์„ ํˆฌ๊ตฌํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ฐ๋ฆญ ๋กœ๋Š” ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค๊ฐ€ ์ตœํ›„์ ์œผ๋กœ ์šฐ์Šนํ•œ 4๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์ž๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 5๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋‹ค์‹œ ๋ถˆํŽœ์˜ ์™ธ๋ถ€๋ฅผ ํˆฌ๊ตฌํ•˜๊ณ , 14 ์ด๋‹ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ์šฐ์Šน ํˆฌ์ˆ˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค๊ฐ€ 5 ๋Œ€ 4๋กœ ์šฐ์Šนํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ 3๊ฐœ์˜ ์™„๋ด‰ ์ด๋‹์„ ๋˜์กŒ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” 2004๋…„ ์›”๋“œ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ์˜ ์ฒซ๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ํˆฌ๊ตฌํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค๊ฐ€ ์นด๋””๋„์Šค๋ฅผ 11 ๋Œ€ 9๋กœ ๊บพ์œผ๋ฉด์„œ ์›”๋“œ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ ์—ญ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ตœ๊ณ ์˜ ๋“์  ์ฒซ๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์˜€๋˜ ๊ฒฐ์ •์„ ์–ป์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค๋Š” 86๋…„ ๋งŒ์— ์ž์‹ ๋“ค์˜ ์ฒซ ์›”๋“œ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ์นด๋””๋„์Šค๋ฅผ ํœฉ์“ธ์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2005๋…„ 4์›” 19์ผ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ์ž์‹  ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ์˜ ๋‚˜๋จธ์ง€๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ž์‹ ์„ ๊ฐ„์งํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค์— ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์„ ์ค€ 4๋ฐฑ๋งŒ ๋‹ฌ๋Ÿฌ์˜ ๊ณ„์•ฝ์œผ๋กœ ๋™์˜ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2005๋…„ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์— ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” 16๊ฐœ์˜ ์šฐ์Šน๊ณผ 4.15์˜ ๋ฐฉ์–ด์œจ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค์˜ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๋“ค์„ ์ด๋Œ์—ˆ๋‹ค. 9์›” 11์ผ ๊ทธ๋Š” ์–‘ํ‚ค์Šค์—๊ฒŒ 1 ๋Œ€ 0์œผ๋กœ ํŒจํ•œ ์™„๋ฃŒ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ŠคํŠธ๋ผ์ดํฌ์•„์›ƒ(12)์„ ์„ธ์› ๋‹ค. 2007๋…„ ๊ทธ๋Š” 17 ์Šน 12 ํŒจ์˜ ๊ธฐ๋ก๊ณผ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ๋๋ƒˆ์œผ๋‚˜ 9์›” ํ›„์ˆœ ์ด๋ž˜ ๊ทธ๋ฅผ ๊ดด๋กญํ˜€ ์˜จ ์–ด๊นจ ๋ถ€์ƒ์˜ ์ด์œ ๋กœ ์›”๋“œ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค์˜ ๋“ฑ๋ก๋ถ€์—์„œ ์ œ์™ธ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2008๋…„ ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ํˆฌ๊ตฌํ•œ ๋™์•ˆ 12๊ฐœ์˜ ํŒจ์Šค๋œ ๊ณต๋“ค์€ ๋ฉ”์ด์ € ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์—์„œ ์ •์ƒ์— ์˜ฌ๋ž๋‹ค. 2009๋…„ 2009๋…„ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์ž์‹ ์˜ 15๋ฒˆ์งธ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์— ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ”๋‹ค. 4์›” 15์ผ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ํ…Œ๋ฆฌ ํ”„๋žญ์ฝ”๋‚˜ ๊ฐ๋…์—๊ฒŒ "๋‚œ ์ƒํƒœ๋“ค์„ ์ดํ•ดํ•˜๊ณ , ๋‹น์‹ ์ด ์•Œ์•„์•ผ ํ•  ๊ฒƒ์ด ์žˆ์Šต๋‹ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฌด์Šจ ์ผ์ด ์ผ์–ด๋‚˜๋˜์ง€ ๋‚  ๊บผ๋‚ด์ง€ ๋ง๊ณ  ๋‚ด๊ฐ€ ๊ณ„์† ๊ฐˆ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ฒŒ ํ•˜์‹œ์˜ค."๋ผ๊ณ  ๋งํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” 8๋ฒˆ์งธ ์ด๋‹์œผ๋กœ ๋ฌด์•ˆํƒ€๋ฅผ ๋“ค๊ณ  ๊ฐ€ ์™„๋ฃŒ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์˜ ์šฐ์Šน์„ ์–ป์—ˆ๋‹ค. 42์„ธ์˜ ๋‚˜์ด๋กœ ์ด ์ผ์€ ๊ทธ๋ฅผ ์ตœ์—ฐ์žฅ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค์˜ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ์™„๋ฃŒ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ํˆฌ๊ตฌํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋งŒ๋“ค๊ณ , ์ด๋ฒˆ์—๋Š” 7 ์ด๋‹๊ณผ ๋น„๋กœ ์งง์•„์ง„ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์ธ 2์—ฐ์† ์™„๋ฃŒ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ํˆฌ๊ตฌํ•  ๋•Œ ๊ทธ์˜ ๋‹ค์Œ ์ถœ๋ฐœ์—์„œ ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ๊นฐ ๊ธฐ๋ก์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” 6์›” 27์ผ์„ ํ†ตํ•˜์—ฌ 10 ์Šน 3 ํŒจ์˜ ๊ธฐ๋ก๊ณผ ํŒ€์„ ์ด๋Œ์—ˆ๋‹ค. 7์›” 3์ผ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์ถœ๋ฐœ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ํ”„๋žœ์ฐจ์ด์ฆˆ ์—ญ์‚ฌ์ƒ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋งŽ์€ ์ถœ๋ฐœ๋กœ ๋กœ์ € ํด๋ ˆ๋ฉ˜์Šค๋ฅผ ์—Ž์„ฐ๋‹ค. ํˆฌ์ˆ˜ํŒ์— ๊ทธ์˜ ์„ฑ๊ณต์€ ๊ทธํ•ด์˜ ์˜ฌ์Šคํƒ€ ์„ ๋ฐœ ๋‹น์‹œ 10๊ฐœ์˜ ์šฐ์Šน๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋ฉ”์ด์ € ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์— ๊ทธ๋ฅผ ์ •์ƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋†“์•˜๋‹ค. 7์›” 5์ผ ๊ทธ๋Š” ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นธ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์˜ ์˜ฌ์Šคํƒ€๋กœ์„œ ๊ณต๊ณ ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , 42์„ธ์˜ ๋‚˜์ด์— 2๋ฒˆ์งธ ์—ฐ์žฅ์ž ์ฒซ ์˜ฌ์Šคํƒ€๋กœ ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ์˜ฌ์Šคํƒ€ ๋ธŒ๋ ˆ์ดํฌ์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋ฉ”์ด์ € ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ตœ๊ณ  ๊ธฐ๋ก 11 ์Šน 3 ํŒจ๋ฅผ ์†Œ์œ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์›จ์ดํฌ ํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ์ž์‹ ์ด ์กฐ ๋งค๋“ ์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ํ•„์š”ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์œผ๋ฉด์„œ ์„ธ์ธํŠธ๋ฃจ์ด์Šค์—์„œ ํ™œ๋™์„ ๋ณด์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ์•„๋ž˜ ๋“ฑ๊ณผ ์ข…์•„๋ฆฌ ๋ถ€์ƒ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋‹ค์Œ 6์ฃผ๋ฅผ ๋†“์ณค๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ์‹œ์นด๊ณ  ํ™”์ดํŠธ์‚ญ์Šค๋ฅผ ์ƒ๋Œ€๋กœ 8์›” 26์ผ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ๋‹ค์Œ ์ถœ๋ฐœ์„ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด ํ•˜๋‚˜์˜ ๋“์ ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ 7๊ฐœ์˜ ์ด๋‹์„ ํˆฌ๊ตฌํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2010๋…„ 2010๋…„ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์ž์‹ ์˜ 16๋ฒˆ์งธ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์— ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ”๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋งˆ์“ฐ์ž์นด ๋‹ค์ด์Šค์ผ€๊ฐ€ ์žฅ์• ์ž ๋ช…๋‹จ์—์„œ ๋‚˜์˜ฌ ๋•Œ๊นŒ์ง€ ์ถœ๋ฐœ ๊ต์ฒด์—์„œ ํ•œํ•ด๋ฅผ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ํ›„์— ์กฐ์‹œ ๋ฒ ์ผ“์—๊ฒŒ ์ƒ๊ธด ๋ถ€์ƒ์˜ ์ด์œ ๋กœ ๊ต์ฒด์— ์žฌ๊ฐ€์ž…ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 5์›” 12์ผ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” 3 ๋Œ€ 2์˜ ํŒจ๋ฐฐ์—์„œ ํ† ๋ก ํ†  ๋ธ”๋ฃจ์ œ์ด์Šค์˜ ๋ฒ„๋…ผ ์›ฐ์Šค๋ฅผ ์ƒ๋Œ€๋กœ ์ž์‹ ์˜ 2000๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ์ŠคํŠธ๋ผ์ดํฌ์•„์›ƒ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ์ตœ์†Œํ•œ 2000๊ฐœ์˜ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ์ŠคํŠธ๋ผ์ดํฌ์•„์›ƒ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ํ™œ๋™์ ์ธ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๋“ค ๋งŒ์œผ๋กœ์„œ ์ œ์ด๋ฏธ ๋ชจ์ด์–ด, ํ•˜๋น„์—๋ฅด ๋ฐ”์Šค์ผ€์Šค์™€ ์•ค๋”” ํŽ˜ํ‹ฐํŠธ์— ๊ฐ€์ž…ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 6์›” 8์ผ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค ํˆฌ์ˆ˜์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ํˆฌ๊ตฌ๋œ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋งŽ์€ ์ด๋‹์„ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ํด๋ ˆ๋ฉ˜์Šค๋ฅผ ํ†ต๊ณผํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ํด๋ฆฌ๋ธ”๋žœ๋“œ ์ธ๋””์–ธ์Šค์— 3 ๋Œ€ 2๋กœ ๊ทธ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์šฐ์Šนํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ๊ฐ”๋‹ค. 6์›” 13์ผ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ํˆฌ๊ตฌ๋œ 3000๊ฐœ์˜ ์ด๋‹๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ํ™œ๋™์ ์ธ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๋“ค ๋งŒ์œผ๋กœ์„œ ๋ชจ์ด์–ด์™€ ํŽ˜ํ‹ฐํŠธ์— ๊ฐ€์ž…ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋‚จ์•„์žˆ๋Š” ๋ฐ ํ”Œ๋ผ์ด๋ณผ์— ํ•„๋ผ๋ธํ”ผ์•„ ํ•„๋ฆฌ์Šค์˜ ์…ฐ์ธ ๋น…ํ† ๋ฆฌ๋…ธ๋ฅผ ์€ํ‡ด์‹œํ‚ค๋ฉด์„œ ์ด ์—…์ ์— ์„ฑ์ทจ๋ฅผ ์ด๋ฃจ์—ˆ๋‹ค. 7์›” 2์ผ ๊ทธ๋Š” ํŽœ์›จ์ด ํŒŒํฌ์—์„œ ์ถœ๋ฐœ๋“ค์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๊ธฐ๋ก์„ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ํด๋ ˆ๋ฉ˜์Šค๋ฅผ ํ†ต๊ณผํ•˜์˜€๊ณ , ๋ณผํ‹ฐ๋ชจ์–ด ์˜ค๋ฆฌ์˜ฌ์Šค์— 3 ๋Œ€ 2๋กœ ์šฐ์Šนํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ 8๊ฐœ์˜ ์ด๋‹์„ ๊ฐ”๋‹ค. 9์›” 8์ผ ํƒฌํŒŒ๋ฒ ์ด ๋ ˆ์ด์Šค๋ฅผ ์ƒ๋Œ€๋กœ ๊ทธ๋Š” ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์šฐ์Šนํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ์—ฌํƒœ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค์˜ ์ตœ์—ฐ์žฅ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋˜ํ•œ ํŽœ์›จ์ด ํŒŒํฌ์—์„œ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ๋‚˜์˜ค๋Š” ๋ฐ ์ตœ์—ฐ์žฅ ์„ ์ˆ˜์ด๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 10์›” 28์ผ 2010๋…„ ์›”๋“œ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ์˜ 2๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ์—ด๋ฆฌ๊ธฐ ์ „์— ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋ฅดํ†  ํด๋ ˆ๋ฉ˜ํ…Œ ์ƒ์„ ์ˆ˜์ƒํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2011๋…„ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ์˜ 2011๋…„ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์€ ๋‹คํ๋ฉ˜ํ„ฐ๋ฆฌ ์˜ํ™” ใ€Š๋„ˆํด๋ณผ!ใ€‹์—์„œ ์ด์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๊ตฌ์› ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค ์œ ๋‹ˆํผ์— ์ž์‹ ์˜ 17๋ฒˆ์งธ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์กด ๋ž˜ํ‚ค์™€ ๋งˆ์“ฐ์ž์นด์—๊ฒŒ ์ƒ๊ธด ๋ถ€์ƒ๋“ค์ด ๊ทธ๋ฅผ ์ถœ๋ฐœ ๊ต์ฒด๋กœ ์˜ฎ๊ฒผ๋‹ค. 5์›” 11์ผ ๋กœ์ €์Šค ์„ผํ„ฐ์—์„œ ๋ธ”๋ฃจ์ œ์ด์Šค๊ฐ€ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค๋ฅผ 9 ๋Œ€ 3์œผ๋กœ ๊บพ์œผ๋ฉด์„œ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๊ตฌ์›์—์„œ 1๊ณผ 3๋ถ„์˜ 1 ์ด๋‹์„ ํˆฌ๊ตฌํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 44์„ธ 282์ผ์˜ ๋‚˜์ด์— ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋‚˜์˜ค๋Š” ๋ฐ ์—ฌํƒœ๊นŒ์ง€ ์ตœ์—ฐ์žฅ ์„ ์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ฌ์Šคํƒ€ ๋ธŒ๋ ˆ์ดํฌ์—์„œ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” 4.74์˜ ๋ฐฉ์–ด์œจ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ 5 ์Šน 3 ํŒจ์˜ ๊ธฐ๋ก์„ ๊ฐ€์กŒ๋‹ค. 7์›” 24์ผ ์‹œ์• ํ‹€ ๋งค๋ฆฌ๋„ˆ์Šค๋ฅผ ์ƒ๋Œ€๋กœ ํˆฌ๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ๋™์•ˆ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋งˆ์ดํฌ ์นดํ”„๋ฅผ ์ƒ๋Œ€๋กœ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค ์œ ๋‹ˆํผ์— ์ž์‹ ์˜ 2,000๋ฒˆ์งธ ์ŠคํŠธ๋ผ์ดํฌ์•„์›ƒ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋˜ํ•œ ๊ทธ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ์ž์‹ ์˜ 199๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ์šฐ์Šน์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ์˜ 199๋ฒˆ์งธ ์šฐ์Šน ํ›„, ๊ทธ์˜ 200๋ฒˆ์งธ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ์šฐ์Šน์„ ์–ป๋Š” ๋ฐ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ์—๊ฒŒ 8๊ฐœ์˜ ์‹œ๋„๋“ค์„ ๋Œ์œผ๋ฉด์„œ ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ 9์›” 13์ผ ํŽœ์›จ์ด ํŒŒํฌ์—์„œ ๋ธ”๋ฃจ์ œ์ด์Šค์— 18 ๋Œ€ 6์˜ ์šฐ์Šน์—์„œ ํ•ด๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. ์Šน๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นธ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๋™๋ถ€ ๋””๋น„์ „ ์‹ ๋ถ„๋“ค์—์„œ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค๊ฐ€ ์–‘ํ‚ค์Šค์˜ ๋’ค๋กœ 4๊ฐœ์˜ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋–จ์–ด์ง€๋ฉด์„œ ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นธ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์˜ ์™€์ผ๋“œ ์นด๋“œ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ๊ฒฝ์ฃผ์—์„œ ๋ ˆ์ด์Šค๊ฐ€ ์‹ค์งˆ์  ๊ทผ๊ฑฐ๋ฅผ ์–ป์œผ๋ฉด์„œ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค๊ฐ€ ์šฐ์Šน๋“ค์˜ ๋ฌด์‹œ๋ฌด์‹œํ•œ ํ•„์š”์— ์žˆ์„ ๋‹น์‹œ์— ์™”๋‹ค. ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค๋Š” ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ์ ์œผ๋กœ ํ•˜๋‚˜์˜ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์˜คํ”„๋“ค์„ ๋†“์น˜๊ณ  ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” 5.12์˜ ๋ฐฉ์–ด์œจ๊ณผ 7 ์Šน 8 ํŒจ์—์„œ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ๋๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. 2012๋…„ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค์— ์˜ํ•œ ๋ด„ ํ›ˆ๋ จ์œผ๋กœ ์ดˆ๋Œ€์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋งˆ์ด๋„ˆ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๊ณ„์•ฝ์ด ์ œ๊ณต๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” 2์›” 17์ผ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์€ํ‡ด๋ฅผ ๊ณต๊ณ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ์šฐ์Šน์—์„œ ํด๋ ˆ๋ฉ˜์Šค์™€ ์‚ฌ์ด ์˜์— ๋ฐ€๋ ค 3์œ„, ์ŠคํŠธ๋ผ์ดํฌ์•„์›ƒ์—์„œ ํด๋ ˆ๋ฉ˜์Šค์— ๋ฐ€๋ ค 2์œ„, ํˆฌ์ˆ˜์— ์˜ํ•œ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ์ถœ์—ฐ์—์„œ ๊ตฌ์› ํˆฌ์ˆ˜ ๋ฐฅ ์Šคํƒ ๋ฆฌ์— ๋ฐ€๋ ค 2์œ„, ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ ์ถœ๋ฐœํ•œ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋“ค์—์„œ 1์œ„์™€ ํˆฌ๊ตฌํ•œ ์ด๋‹์—์„œ 1์œ„์™€ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ์„ ๋๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. ํฌ์ˆ˜ ๋„ˆํด๋ณผ์„ ํฌ๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ์–ด๋ ค์šด ์ด์œ ๋กœ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค๋Š” ์–ด์ฉŒ๋‹ค ๋ฐฉ์–ด์—์„œ ์ „๋ฌธ์ ์ด๊ณ , ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ์˜ ์ถœ๋ฐœ์˜ ์ „๋ถ€ ํ˜น์€ ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์„ ์žก์€ ๋ฐฑ์—… ํฌ์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ์†Œ์œ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ช‡๋…„์˜ ์„ธ์›” ๋™์•ˆ ๊ทธ์˜ ๊ฐœ์ธ์  ํฌ์ˆ˜๋Š” ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋ฅผ ์žก๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ์†Œํ”„ํŠธ๋ณผ ํฌ์ˆ˜์˜ ๋ฏธํŠธ๋กœ ๋น„์Šทํ•œ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ์ฐฌ์„ฑํ•œ ๋ฏธํŠธ๋ฅผ ์ด์šฉํ•œ ๋”๊ทธ ๋ฏธ๋ผ๋ฒจ๋ฆฌ์˜€๋‹ค. ์กฐ์‹œ ๋ฐ”๋“œ๋Š” ์ด์ „์˜ ์˜คํ”„์‹œ์ฆŒ์— ์ƒŒ๋””์—์ด๊ณ  ํŒŒ๋“œ๋ฆฌ์Šค๋กœ ์ž์‹ ์„ ์ด์ ์‹œํ‚จ ํ›„, 5์›” 1์ผ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค๊ฐ€ ๋ฏธ๋ผ๋ฒจ๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ์žฌํš๋“ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์ „์— 2006๋…„ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์˜ ์ฒซ ๋‹ฌ ๋™์•ˆ ์ž ์‹œ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋ฅผ ์žก์•˜๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๋ผ๋ฒจ๋ฆฌ๋Š” 2008๋…„ ๋ด„์— ๋‚ด๋ณด๋‚ด์กŒ๊ณ , ๊ทธํ•ด ๋™์•ˆ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ์˜ ํฌ์ˆ˜๋Š” ์ผ€๋นˆ ์บ์‹œ์˜€๋‹ค. ์กฐ์ง€ ์ฝ”ํƒ€๋ž˜์Šค๊ฐ€ 2009๋…„ ๊ทธ์˜ ๊ฐœ์ธ์  ํฌ์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2009๋…„ 7์›” 31์ผ ๋น…ํ† ๋ฅด ๋งˆ๋ฅดํ‹ฐ๋„ค์Šค๊ฐ€ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ทจ๋“๋˜๊ณ , 8์›” 26์ผ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ํฌ๊ตฌํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋งˆ๋ฅดํ‹ฐ๋„ค์Šค๋Š” 1๋ฃจ์ˆ˜์˜ ๋ฏธํŠธ์— ์ •์ฐฉํ•˜๊ธฐ ์ „์— ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ๊ธ€๋กœ๋ธŒ์™€ ๋ฏธํŠธ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ์˜ ํˆฌ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ํฌ๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ์‹คํ—˜์„ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋งˆ๋ฆฌํ‹ฐ๋„ค์Šค์™€ ์ œ์ด์Šจ ๋ฒ ๋ฆฌํ… ๋‘˜๋‹ค์—๊ฒŒ ์ƒ๊ธด ๋ถ€์ƒ๋“ค์˜ ์ด์œ ๋กœ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค๋Š” ์ฃผ์š” ํฌ์ˆ˜๋Š” ๋ฌผ๋ก  ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ์˜ ํฌ์ˆ˜๋กœ ์ง€๋‚ด๋Š” ๋ฐ 2010๋…„ 7์›” 1์ผ ํœด์Šคํ„ด ์• ์ŠคํŠธ๋กœ์Šค๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ผ€๋นˆ ์บ์‹œ๋ฅผ ์žฌ์ทจ๋“ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋งˆ๋ฅดํ‹ฐ๋„ค์Šค๋Š” ์ž์‹ ์ด ๋Œ์•„์˜ฌ ๋•Œ ํ•œ๋ฒˆ ๋” ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ์˜ ํฌ์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2011๋…„ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋ถˆํŽœ์—์„œ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜๊ณ , ์žฌ๋กœ๋“œ ์‚ดํ„ธ๋Ÿฌ๋งˆํ‚ค์•„์™€ ์ œ์ด์Šจ ๋ฒ ๋ฆฌํ…์ด ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋“ค์— ๋“ค์–ด์˜ฌ ๋•Œ ๊ทธ๋ฅผ ํฌ๊ตฌํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๊ฐ€ ๊ต์ฒด๋กœ ๋Œ์•„์˜ฌ ๋•Œ ์ƒํƒˆ๋ผ๋งค์น˜์•„๋Š” ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•œ ๊ฐ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ํฌ์ˆ˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํˆฌ๊ตฌ ์Šคํƒ€์ผ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋Š๋ฆฐ ์˜†์œผ๋กœ ๋˜์ง€๋Š” ๋™์ž‘์œผ๋กœ ๋งํ•ด์ง„ ๊ฒƒ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ํˆฌ๊ตฌํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ์‚ฌ์‹ค 4๋ถ„์˜ 3์˜ ๋‚ด๋ฆฌ์น˜๋Š” ๋™์ž‘์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ผ์€ ๋˜ํ•œ ํƒ€์ž๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ๊ทธ์˜ ์–ด๋–ค ํˆฌ๊ตฌ๋“ค์„ ๋“œ๋Ÿฌ๋ƒˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ๋“ค์ด ๊ทธ์˜ ์†์„ ๋ณผ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์ด๋‹ค. ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ์˜ ์ฃผ์š” ํˆฌ๊ตฌ ๋„ˆํด๋ณผ์€ ๋ณดํ†ต ๋Œ€๋žต ํ•œ ์‹œ๊ฐ„์— 64~68 ๋งˆ์ผ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ทธ์˜ ๋„ˆํด๋ณผ์˜ ์žฆ์€ ๊ณ ๋™์€ ์˜จ๋„, ์Šต๊ธฐ, ํˆฌํ•˜, ๊ณต๊ธฐ ์ €ํ•ญ, ๋ฐ”๋žŒ์˜ ์†๋„, ๊ณต์˜ ์ปจ๋””์…˜ ๋“ฑ์„ ํฌํ•จํ•œ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ์š”์ธ๋“ค์— ์˜์ง€ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ํ•œ ์‹œ๊ฐ„์— 71~75 ๋งˆ์ผ์˜ ํŒจ์ŠคํŠธ๋ณผ, ๋Š๋ฆฐ ์ปค๋ธŒ(ํ•œ ์‹œ๊ฐ„์— 57~61 ๋งˆ์ผ)๊ณผ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ๋„ˆํด๋ณผ์˜ ๋Š๋ฆฐ ์—ฐ์ถœ(ํ•œ ์‹œ๊ฐ„์— 59~62 ๋งˆ์ผ)์„ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ด๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋„ˆํด๋ณผ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๋“ค์€ ์ „ํ†ต์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋”์šฑ ์ž์ฃผ ํˆฌ๊ตฌํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ฐ, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์ง‘ํ•ฉ์ ์ธ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๋“ค๋ณด๋‹ค ํ•œ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ๋”์šฑ ๋งŽ์€ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๋“ค์„ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ฏฟ์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ์ž์‹  ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ์˜ ์ฒซ 10๋…„์„ ํ†ตํ•˜์—ฌ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋น„์Šทํ•œ ํ˜•์‹์„ ๋”ฐ๋ž๋Š” ๋ฐ 1993๋…„ 4์›” 27์ผ ๊ทธ๋Š” ํŒŒ์ด๋ฆฌ์ธ  ๋Œ€ ๋ธŒ๋ ˆ์ด๋ธŒ์Šค๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ 10๊ฐœ ์ด์ƒ์˜ ์ด๋‹์„ ํˆฌ๊ตฌํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ์ดํ‹€๋งŒ์˜ ํœด์‹์— 7๊ณผ 3๋ถ„์˜ 1 ์ด๋‹ ๊ธด๊ธ‰ ์ถœ๋ฐœ์˜ ์ถ”๊ฐ€์—์„œ 2๊ฐœ์˜ ์™„๋ฃŒ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ํฌํ•จํ•œ ์ด 33๊ณผ 3๋ถ„์˜ 1 ์ด๋‹์„ ํˆฌ๊ตฌํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2003๋…„๊ณผ 2004๋…„ ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นธ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ ๋งŒํผ ๋Šฆ๊ฒŒ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ์ถœ๋ฐœ ์‚ฌ์ด์— ๊ตฌ์› ์ถœ์—ฐ์„ ์ด๋ฃจ๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ž์‹  ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ์˜ ํ›„๊ธฐ์˜ ์„ธ์›”์— ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค๋Š” ์ •ํ†ต์ ์œผ๋กœ ํˆฌ๊ตฌ ์ด์ˆ˜์˜ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„๋“ค์—์„œ ์ง‘ํ•ฉ์ ์ธ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๋“ค์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ๋”์šฑ ๋Œ€์šฐํ•˜์—ฌ ๋“œ๋ฌผ๊ฒŒ ํ•œ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ๋Œ€๋žต 100๊ฐœ์˜ ํˆฌ๊ตฌ๋“ค๋ณด๋‹ค ๋”๋งŽ์ด ํˆฌ๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ๊ทธ๋ฅผ ํ—ˆ๋ฝํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ ๊ทธ์—๊ฒŒ 4์ผ์˜ ํœด์‹์„ ์ฃผ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ๊ทธ๋“ค์˜ ํˆฌ๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ํŒ”์— ๋น„๊ต์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋‚ฎ์€ ์ฐฉ์šฉ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๋„ˆํด๋ณผ์˜ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๋“ค์€ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๋“ค์˜ ๋Œ€๋‹ค์ˆ˜๋ณด๋‹ค ๋”์šฑ ์žฅ๊ธฐ์  ํ”„๋กœ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ์„ ๊ฐ€๋Š” ๊ฒฝํ–ฅ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํƒ€๊ตฌ ์ง€์ •๋œ ํƒ€์ž์˜ ๊ทœ์น™์˜ ์ด์œ ๋กœ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์˜ ํŒŒํฌ๋“ค์—์„œ ํ™œ์•ฝํ•  ๋•Œ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค ๋งŒ์„ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ํƒ€๊ตฌํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ํŒ€ ํŒŒ์ด๋ฆฌ์ธ ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ํ•œ ๋™์•ˆ ๊ทธ๋Š” ์ž์‹ ์˜ 2๋…„์— .072๊ณผ .163์˜ ํƒ€๊ตฌ ํ‰๊ท ์„ ๊ฐ€์กŒ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” 1993๋…„ ์ž์‹  ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ์˜ ๋‹จ ํ•˜๋‚˜์˜ ํ™ˆ๋Ÿฐ์„ ์ณค๋‹ค. ๊ทธ์˜ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ํƒ€๊ตฌ ํ‰๊ท ์€ .117์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์™ธ๋ถ€์˜ ์ถœ์—ฐ๋“ค ์ž์„  ์‚ฌ์—… ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋ฉ”์ด์ € ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๋ฒ ์ด์Šค๋ณผ์„ ํ†ตํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ทธ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์ž์„ ์ ์ธ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋“ค ์ค‘์˜ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋กœ์„œ ์ž˜ ์•Œ๋ ค์กŒ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ๊ณต๋™์ฒด์—๊ฒŒ ๋Œ๋ ค์ฃผ๋Š” ์˜ํ˜ผ์„ ์ตœ๊ณ ๋กœ ๋ฐ˜์‚ฌํ•˜๋Š” ์„ ์ˆ˜์—๊ฒŒ ์ˆ˜์—ฌ๋œ ๋กœ๋ฒ ๋ฅดํ†  ํด๋ ˆ๋ฉ˜ํ…Œ ์ƒ์„ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ 8๋ฒˆ์ด๋‚˜ ํ›„๋ณด์— ์˜ฌ๋ž์œผ๋ฉฐ 2010๋…„์— ์ˆ˜์ƒํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 1998๋…„ ์ด๋ž˜ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ์ž์‹ ๊ณผ ์‹œ๊ฐ„์„ ๋‚˜๋ˆ„๋Š” ๋ฐ ํ™˜์ž๋“ค์„ ํŽœ์›จ์ด ํŒŒํฌ๋กœ ๋ฐ๋ ค์˜ค๋Š” ๋ฐ ๋ณด์Šคํ„ด์—์„œ ํ”„๋ž€์‹œ์Šค์นธ ์–ด๋ฆฐ์ด ๋ณ‘์›๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ํŒŒํŠธ๋„ˆ์‹ญ์„ ๊ฐ€์กŒ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋˜ํ•œ 18๋…„ ๋™์•ˆ ํ•œํ•ด์˜ ๋ช…์‚ฌ ๊ณจํ”„ ํ† ๋„ˆ๋จผํŠธ๋ฅผ ๊ฐœ์ตœํ•˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋˜ํ•œ ์–ด๋ฆฐ์ด๋“ค์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋‰ด์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ์˜ ํ”ผ์นญ ์ธ ํฌ ํ‚ค์ฆˆ, ํ”Œ๋กœ๋ฆฌ๋‹ค์ฃผ ๋ฉœ๋ฒˆ์—์„œ ์šฐ์ฃผ ํ•ด์•ˆ ์ค‘์žฌ ์„ผํ„ฐ์™€ ๊ฐ€์Šค ๋ธŒ๋ฃฉ์Šค์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ฐฝ๋ฆฝ๋œ ํ„ฐ์น˜ ์—  ์˜ฌ ํŒŒ์šด๋ฐ์ด์…˜๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ํ™œ๋™์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ง€๋‚ด์˜ค๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2007๋…„ ํ”ผ์นญ ์ธ ํฌ ํ‚ค์ฆˆ๋ฅผ ์„ฑ์›ํ•œ ์ˆ˜์ž…์˜ 100%์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋กฑ๋ณผ ํฌ๋„์›๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๊ต์ œ์—์„œ "์ผ€์ด๋ฒ„๋„ˆํด"์ด๋ผ ๋ถˆ๋ฆฐ ํฌ๋„์ฃผ๋ฅผ ํŒ๋งคํ•˜์—ฌ 10๋งŒ ๋‹ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์ด์ƒ์„ ๋ชจ๊ธˆํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2013๋…„ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค๋Š” ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋ฅผ ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค ์žฌ๋‹จ์˜ ๋ช…์˜ˆ ์˜์žฅ์œผ๋กœ ์ž„๋ช…ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ์—ญํ• ์—์„œ ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋ชจ๊ธˆ ์ด๋ฒคํŠธ, ๊ณต๋™์ฒด ์„œ๋น„์Šค์˜ ๋‚ ๊ณผ ๊ฐœ์ธ์  ๋ฐฉ๋ฌธ๋“ค์„ ํ›„์›ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฐฉ์†ก 2012๋…„ 6์›” ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค์˜ ๋ฐฉ์†ก ๋ฒ”์œ„๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ŠคํŠœ๋””์˜ค ๋ถ„์„์ž๋กœ์„œ NESN์— ๊ฐ€์ž…ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ถ”์ฒœ 2015๋…„ 8์›” ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ์ง€์ ์˜ ๋Œ€๊ฐœ์žฅ๊ณผ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „, ๋ผ๋””์˜ค์™€ ํ”„๋ฆฐํŠธ ๊ด‘๊ณ ๋“ค์—์„œ ์ถœ์—ฐ์„ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด ํŒŒ๋ฐํ„ด ์€ํ–‰์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋Œ€๋ณ€์ธ์œผ๋กœ ์„œ๋ช…ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋น„์ง€๋‹ˆ์Šค ์ด์ต๋“ค ์›จ์ดํฌํ•„๋“œ๋Š” ๋งค์‚ฌ์ถ”์„ธ์ธ ์ฃผ ํŽจ๋ธŒ๋กœํฌ์—์„œ ํ„ฐ๋„ˆ์ฆˆ ์•ผ๋“œ๋กœ ๋ถˆ๋ฆฐ ๋ ˆ์Šคํ† ๋ž‘์˜ ์ผ๋ถ€ ์†Œ์œ ์ž์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๋ ˆ์Šคํ† ๋ž‘์—์„œ ๊ทธ์˜ ํŒŒํŠธ๋„ˆ๋“ค ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋Š” ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ํ•˜ํ‚ค ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ˆ€ ์†ํ„ด์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๋ ˆ์Šคํ† ๋ž‘์€ ํ˜„์žฌ ํ์—… ์ค‘์ด๋‹ค. ๊ฐœ์ธ ์ƒํ™œ ํŒ€์€ ๋งค์‚ฌ์ถ”์„ธ์ธ ์ฃผ์—์„œ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ๋ถ€์ธ ์Šคํ…Œ์ด์Šค ์Šคํ† ๋ฒ„๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋“ค์€ 2002๋…„ 11์›” 9์ผ์— ๊ฒฐํ˜ผํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋“ค์˜ 2๋ช…์˜ ์ž์‹์€ ํŠธ๋ ˆ๋ฒ„(2004๋…„์ƒ)์™€ ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์• ๋‚˜(2005๋…„์ƒ)์ด๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋“ค์€ ํ”Œ๋กœ๋ฆฌ๋‹ค์ฃผ ์„ธ์ดํ‹€๋ผ์ดํŠธ๋น„์น˜์—์„œ ์ง‘์„ ์†Œ์œ ํ•œ๋‹ค. 1966๋…„ ์ถœ์ƒ 2023๋…„ ์‚ฌ๋ง ํ”Œ๋กœ๋ฆฌ๋‹ค์ฃผ ์ถœ์‹  ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋ฉ”์ด์ € ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๋ฒ ์ด์Šค๋ณผ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜ ํ”ผ์ธ ๋ฒ„๊ทธ ํŒŒ์ด๋ฆฌ์ธ  ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋ณด์Šคํ„ด ๋ ˆ๋“œ์‚ญ์Šค ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์•„๋ฉ”๋ฆฌ์นธ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์˜ฌ์Šคํƒ€ ๋‡Œ์ข…์–‘์œผ๋กœ ์ฃฝ์€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tim%20Wakefield
Tim Wakefield
Timothy Stephen Wakefield (August 2, 1966 โ€“ October 1, 2023) was an American professional baseball knuckleball pitcher. Wakefield began his Major League Baseball (MLB) career with the Pittsburgh Pirates, but is most remembered for his 17-year tenure with the Boston Red Sox, from 1995 until his retirement in 2012 as the longest-serving player on the team, earning a total of $55 million. When he retired at age 45 after 19 seasons in MLB, Wakefield was the oldest active player in the major leagues. Wakefield won his 200th career game on September 13, 2011, and he ranks third in career wins in Red Sox franchise history (186), behind Cy Young and Roger Clemens. He is second in all-time wins at Fenway Park with 97, behind Clemens's 100, and is the all-time leader in innings pitched by a Red Sox pitcher, with 3,006, having surpassed Clemens's total of 2,777 on June 8, 2010. Wakefield was an All-Star in 2009 and he won the Roberto Clemente Award in 2010. Early life Wakefield was born in Melbourne, Florida, on August 2, 1966. He attended Eau Gallie High School and then attended Florida Institute of Technology, where he played college baseball for the Florida Tech Panthers. At Florida Tech, he was named the Panthers' team most valuable player as a first baseman in his sophomore and junior years. He set a single-season Panthers record with 22 home runs, as well as the career home run record at 40. In 2006, his uniform number, No.ย 3, was retired by the college. Professional career Pittsburgh Pirates Draft and minor leagues The Pittsburgh Pirates selected Wakefield as a first baseman in the eighth round of the 1988 MLB draft. He received a $15,000 signing bonus from the Pirates. After a scout told him that he would never get above Double-A ball as a position player with his skills, Wakefield began developing the knuckleball that made him so well-known. The following season, Wakefield made his professional pitching debut while playing for the Single-A Salem Buccaneers. His immediate success led to a full conversion to pitcher in 1990, and he led the Carolina League in starts and innings pitched. Wakefield advanced to Double-A in 1991, leading all Pirates minor leaguers in wins, innings pitched, and complete games when he went 15โ€“8 with a 2.90 earned run average (ERA). 1992โ€“1994 In 1992, Wakefield began the season with the Triple-A Buffalo Bisons of the American Association. He registered a league-high six complete games by July 31โ€”winning 10 games with a 3.06 ERAโ€”and was called up to the majors. In his major league debut, Wakefield threw a complete game against the St. Louis Cardinals, striking out 10 batters while throwing 146 pitches. Down the stretch, Wakefield provided a boost for the playoff-bound Pirates, starting 13 games and compiling an 8โ€“1 record with a 2.15 ERA, a performance that won him the National League Rookie Pitcher of the Year Award from The Sporting News. After winning the National League East division, the Pirates faced the Atlanta Braves in the National League Championship Series. Wakefield won both of his starts against Braves star Tom Glavine, throwing a complete game five-hitter in Game 3 of the NLCS and another complete game in Game 6 on three days' rest. The Braves rallied for three runs in the bottom of the ninth off Stan Belinda. The Pirates named Wakefield their Opening Day starter for the 1993 season. Wakefield walked nine batters on Opening Day. After losing his spot in the starting rotation, Wakefield was sent down to Double-A in July. He was recalled in September and struggled again, finishing the season with a 6โ€“11 record and a 5.61 ERA. Wakefield spent most of 1994 with Triple-A Buffalo. He led the league in losses, walks, and home runs allowed. Wakefield was recalled to the Pirates in September but he did not play due to the players strike. The Pirates released Wakefield on April 20, 1995. Boston Red Sox Six days after being released from the Pirates, Wakefield was signed by the Boston Red Sox. He worked with Phil and Joe Niekro, two former knuckleballers, who encouraged him to use the knuckleball as an out pitch. With the Triple-A Pawtucket Red Sox, Wakefield went 2โ€“1 with a 2.52 ERA. 1995โ€“1998 With the Boston Red Sox rotation struggling from injuries to top of the rotation starters Roger Clemens and Aaron Sele early in the 1995 season, Wakefield was called up from Triple-A, and soon proved to be their most dependable starter. He began the season with a 1.65 ERA and a 14โ€“1 record through 17 games, six of which were complete games. He ended the year 16โ€“8 with a 2.95 ERA, helping the Red Sox win the American League East division title, and capturing the Sporting News American League Comeback Player of the Year. He finished third in the AL Cy Young Award balloting. Over the next three seasons (1996โ€“1998), Wakefield won 43 games and had ERAs of 5.14, 4.25, and 4.58 over that time as a starter. In 1997, he led Major League Baseball by hitting 16 batters with a pitch. He would repeat this feat in 2001 plunking a career-high 18 batters. 1999โ€“2002 In 1999, Boston's closer Tom Gordon was injured and manager Jimy Williams installed Wakefield as the new closer during the middle part of the season. On August 10, 1999, he joined a select group of pitchers who have struck out four batters in one inning. Because the fluttering knuckleball produces many passed balls, several knuckleballers share this honor with him. He recorded 15 saves before Derek Lowe emerged as the new closer and Wakefield returned to the starting rotation. Because of his success out of the bullpen, Wakefield was regularly moved from the position of relief pitcher to starter and back again over the next three seasons (2000โ€“2002). He made 15 starts in 2002. 2003โ€“2008 Wakefield returned to Boston's starting rotation permanently in 2003. In that season's ALCS, Wakefield allowed four runs over 14 innings against the New York Yankees. He started Games 1 and 4 of the Series against Mike Mussina and won both starts. He was also called in to pitch in extra innings of Game 7, after the Yankees tied the game. The Red Sox had been leading 5โ€“2 in the eighth inning. After retiring the side in order in the 10th, Wakefield gave up a home run to Aaron Boone on his first pitch of the 11th, sending the Yankees to the World Series. Wakefield apologized to fans after the game. In 2004, Wakefield helped the Red Sox win the ALCS against the Yankees, a best-of-seven series to advance to the World Series. The Red Sox lost the first two games of the ALCS and were losing badly in Game 3 when Wakefield asked to be put into the game to save the other pitchers for the next day. He pitched innings which prevented him from starting Game 4. Derek Lowe started Game 4 in his place which the Red Sox ultimately won. In Game 5, Wakefield again pitched out of the bullpen and was the winning pitcher in a 14-inning game, throwing three shutout innings as the Red Sox won 5โ€“4. The Red Sox beat the Yankees and went on to the World Series. He pitched Game 1 of the 2004 World Series, but did not get a decision as Boston defeated the St. Louis Cardinals, 11โ€“9, which was the highest-scoring Game 1 in World Series history. The Red Sox swept the Cardinals for their first World Series title in 86 years. On April 19, 2005, Wakefield agreed to a $4 million, one-year "rolling" contract extension that gave the Red Sox the ability to keep Wakefield for the rest of his career. In the 2005 season, Wakefield led the Red Sox pitching staff with 16 wins and a 4.15 ERA. On September 11, 2005, he set a career high in strikeouts (12) in a 1โ€“0 complete game loss to the New York Yankees. In 2007, Wakefield finished the season with a 17โ€“12 record and started Game 4 of the ALCS, taking the loss, but was left off the Red Sox roster for the World Series due to an injured shoulder that had been bothering him since late September. The 12 passed balls while he was pitching topped the majors in 2008. 2009 Wakefield entered his 15th season with the Boston Red Sox in 2009. On April 15, 2009, a day after the Red Sox bullpen was tasked with pitching over 11 innings of relief, telling manager Terry Francona not to remove him from the game. He pitched a no-hitter into the eighth inning, and earned a complete game win. At 42, this made him the oldest Red Sox pitcher to pitch a complete game, a record he would break himself in his next start when he pitched a second consecutive complete game win, this time in a seven-inning, rain-shortened game. Wakefield led the team with a 10โ€“3 record through June 27. With his start on July 3, 2009, Wakefield surpassed Roger Clemens for the most starts in franchise history. His success on the mound had him atop the major leagues with 10 wins at the time of the 2009 All-Star selection. On July 5, 2009, he was announced as an AL All-Star, making him the second-oldest first-time All-Star at 42, behind only Satchel Paige who was 45. By the All-Star break, Wakefield possessed a major league-best 11โ€“3 record. Wakefield did not see action in St. Louis, as he was not needed by Joe Maddon. On July 21, Wakefield was placed on the disabled list due to a lower back strain. He returned from the disabled list on August 26 against the Chicago White Sox, pitching seven innings while allowing one earned run to earn a no decision. 2010 Wakefield entered his 16th season with the Boston Red Sox in 2010. He began the year in the starting rotation until Daisuke Matsuzaka came off the disabled list. He later rejoined the rotation due to an injury to Josh Beckett. On May 12, Wakefield recorded his 2,000th career strikeout against Vernon Wells of the Toronto Blue Jays in a 3โ€“2 loss. He joined Jamie Moyer, Javier Vรกzquez, and Andy Pettitte as the only active pitchers with at least 2,000 career strikeouts. On June 8, Wakefield passed Roger Clemens for the most innings pitched by a Red Sox pitcher. He went on to win that game 3โ€“2 over the Cleveland Indians. On June 13, Wakefield joined Moyer and Pettitte as the only active pitchers with 3,000 innings pitched. He accomplished this feat by retiring Shane Victorino of the Philadelphia Phillies on a fly ball to left. On July 2, he surpassed Clemens for another record, this for starts at Fenway Park; he went eight innings to win 3โ€“2 over the Baltimore Orioles. On September 8, against the Tampa Bay Rays, he became the oldest Red Sox pitcher ever to win a game; he is also the oldest player to appear in a game for the Red Sox at Fenway. On October 28, before Game 2 of the 2010 World Series, Wakefield received the Roberto Clemente Award. 2011 Wakefield's 2011 season was followed in the documentary film Knuckleball! Wakefield started his seventeenth season in a Red Sox uniform as a reliever, but injuries to John Lackey and Daisuke Matsuzaka moved him into the starting rotation. On May 11, 2011, Wakefield pitched innings in relief as the Toronto Blue Jays defeated the Red Sox 9โ€“3 at the Rogers Centre. He became, at 44 years, 282 days, the oldest player ever to appear for the Red Sox. At the All-Star break, Wakefield had a 5โ€“3 record with a 4.74 ERA. On July 24, 2011, while pitching against the Seattle Mariners, Wakefield recorded his 2,000th strikeout in a Red Sox uniform against Mike Carp; he also recorded his 199th career win in that game. It took Wakefield eight attempts to earn his 200th career win after his 199th, finally doing so in an 18โ€“6 rout over the Toronto Blue Jays at Fenway Park on September 13, 2011. The victory came at a time when the Red Sox were in dire need of wins, with the Tampa Bay Rays gaining substantial ground in the race for the American League wild card as Boston fell four games behind the New York Yankees in the AL East division standings. Boston eventually missed the playoffs by one game, and Wakefield ended the season at 7โ€“8 with a 5.12 ERA. For the 2012 season, Wakefield was offered a minor league contract, with an invitation to spring training, by the Red Sox. Wakefield announced his retirement on February 17, 2012. Wakefield finished his Red Sox career third in wins (behind Roger Clemens and Cy Young), second in strikeouts (behind Clemens), second in game appearances by a pitcher (behind reliever Bob Stanley), first in games started as a pitcher, and first in innings pitched. Playing style Pitching style Wakefield pitched with what was said to be a slow sidearm motion, but was actually a -overhand motion. This also revealed some of his pitches to hitters, because they could see his hand. Wakefield's primary pitch, the knuckleball, was thrown between and had a great deal of variance in how much it "fluttered". The flutter of his knuckleball depended on a variety of factors including temperature, humidity, precipitation (both type and intensity), air resistance, wind speed, wind direction, the condition of the ball, and very small changes in his grip or the orientation of the seams. Wakefield also featured a fastball and a curveball which averaged between . Knuckleball pitchers are traditionally believed to be able to pitch more frequently and for more pitches per game than conventional pitchers. Throughout the first decade of his career, Wakefield followed a similar pattern: on April 27, 1993, he threw 172 pitches over 10+ innings in a game for the Pittsburgh Pirates against the Atlanta Braves. In his first two weeks with the Red Sox, Wakefield pitched a total of innings, including two complete games in addition to a -inning emergency start on just two days' rest. As late as the 2003 and 2004 ALCS, Wakefield was making relief appearances between starts. In the later years of his career, the Red Sox generally treated Wakefield more like conventional pitchers in terms of pitch count, rarely allowing him to pitch more than about 110 pitches per game, and giving him four days of rest. Also, because of the relatively low wear on their pitching arms, knuckleball pitchers tend to have longer professional careers than most other pitchers. At the time of his retirement, Wakefield was seventh on the all-time hit batters list. Personal catcher Because of the difficulty of catching a knuckleball, the Red Sox sometimes carried a backup catcher who specialized in defense and who caught most or all of Wakefield's starts. For several years, his personal catcher was Doug Mirabelli, who used a league-approved mitt similar to a softball catcher's mitt for catching Wakefield. Josh Bard briefly caught Wakefield during the first month of the 2006 season, before Boston reacquired Mirabelli on May 1 after trading him to San Diego the previous offseason. Mirabelli was released in the spring of 2008 and Wakefield's catcher was Kevin Cash during 2008. George Kottaras became his personal catcher in 2009. Victor Martinez was acquired by the Red Sox on July 31, 2009, and began catching for Wakefield on August 26, 2009. Martinez experimented catching Wakefield's pitches with various gloves and mitts before settling on a first baseman's mitt. Due to injuries to both Martinez and Jason Varitek, Boston reacquired Cash from the Houston Astros on July 1, 2010, to serve as Wakefield's catcher as well as the primary catcher. Martinez became Wakefield's catcher once more when he returned. In 2011, Wakefield began the season in the bullpen and both Jarrod Saltalamacchia and Jason Varitek caught him when he entered games. When Wakefield returned to the rotation, Saltalamacchia was the catcher in each game he started. Post-MLB career In June 2012, Wakefield joined NESN as a studio analyst for Red Sox coverage. He continued to serve as a studio analyst through the 2023 season. In August 2015, Wakefield signed on as a spokesperson for Farmington Bank, making appearances at branch grand openings and in television, radio, and print advertisements. Personal life Wakefield became an evangelical Christian in 1990. Wakefield met his wife, Stacy Stover, in Massachusetts and they were married on November 9, 2002. They had two children, Trevor (born 2004) and Brianna (born 2005). In 2010, Wakefield bought a house in Indian Harbour Beach, Florida, for $1,825,000. Wakefield was part owner of a restaurant in Pembroke, Massachusetts, called Turner's Yard. One of his partners in the restaurant was National Hockey League player Shawn Thornton. Death On October 1, 2023, Wakefield died at his home in Massachusetts of a seizure resulting from brain cancer. He was 57. The cancer diagnosis had been revealed days earlier by Curt Schilling, Wakefield's former Red Sox teammate, stirring controversy because the release was not authorized by Wakefield or his family. Philanthropy Wakefield was nominated eight times by the Red Sox for the Roberto Clemente Award, presented to the player who best reflects the spirit of giving back to the community, winning the award in 2010. Wakefield partnered with the Franciscan Hospital for Children in Boston to bring patients to Fenway Park to share time with him on and off the field. Wakefield hosted an annual celebrity golf tournament, raising over $10 million for the Space Coast Early Intervention Center, a pre-school program for children with special needs. Wakefield was also active with New England's Pitching In for Kids organization, a program dedicated to improving the lives of children across the New England region) and the Touch 'Em All Foundation founded by Garth Brooks. In 2007, Wakefield released a charity wine called CaberKnuckle, in association with Longball Vineyards, with 100% of the proceeds supporting Pitching in for Kids; the wine raised more than $100,000. In 2013, the Red Sox named Wakefield Honorary Chairman of the Red Sox Foundation. In that role, Wakefield supported fundraising events, community service days, and personal visits. See also Boston Red Sox Hall of Fame List of Boston Red Sox team records List of knuckleball pitchers List of Major League Baseball career wins leaders List of Major League Baseball career strikeout leaders List of Major League Baseball career hit batsmen leaders List of oldest Major League Baseball players List of Major League Baseball single-inning strikeout leaders References External links 1966 births 2023 deaths American evangelicals American League All-Stars Augusta Pirates players Baseball players from Florida Boston Red Sox announcers Boston Red Sox players Buffalo Bisons (minor league) players Carolina Mudcats players Converts to evangelical Christianity Deaths from brain cancer in the United States Deaths from cancer in Massachusetts Florida Tech Panthers baseball players Knuckleball pitchers Major League Baseball broadcasters Major League Baseball pitchers Pawtucket Red Sox players People from Indian Harbour Beach, Florida Pittsburgh Pirates players Salem Buccaneers players Sportspeople from Brevard County, Florida Sportspeople from Melbourne, Florida Watertown Pirates players Welland Pirates players
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%ED%94%84%EB%A0%88%EC%8A%A4%ED%8C%8C%20%ED%98%91%EC%A0%95
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ํ”„๋ ˆ์ŠคํŒŒ ํ˜‘์ •(, , )์€ 2018๋…„ 6์›” 12์ผ์— ์ฒด๊ฒฐ๋œ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค์™€ ๋ถ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„ ๊ฐ„์˜ ํ˜‘์ •์ด๋‹ค. ์ด ํ˜‘์ •์€ ๋ถ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„๋Š” ๊ตญํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„์—์„œ ๋ถ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„๋กœ ๋ณ€๊ฒฝํ•˜๋Š” ๋Œ€์‹ ์— ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค๋Š” ๋ถ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„์˜ ๋ถ๋Œ€์„œ์–‘ ์กฐ์•ฝ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ(NATO) ๊ฐ€์ž…์— ๋™์˜ํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ๋‚ด์šฉ์„ ๋‹ด๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฝ ๋ถ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„๋Š” 1991๋…„ ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ์‚ฌํšŒ์ฃผ์˜ ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ์ด ํ•ด์ฒด๋˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„ ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์ด๋ฆ„์œผ๋กœ ๋…๋ฆฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค๋Š” ๋ถ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„๊ฐ€ ์•Œ๋ ‰์‚ฐ๋“œ๋กœ์Šค 3์„ธ์™€ ๊ทธ์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€ ํ•„๋ฆฌํฌ์Šค 2์„ธ์˜ ๊ณ ๋Œ€ ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„ ์™•๊ตญ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฑฐ์Šฌ๋Ÿฌ ์˜ฌ๋ผ๊ฐ€๋Š” ์—ญ์‚ฌ์ ์ธ ๊ทผ์›์„ ๋‚ด์„ธ์›Œ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค ๋ถ๋ถ€ ์ง€์—ญ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์˜์œ ๊ถŒ์„ ์ฃผ์žฅํ•  ๊ฒƒ์„ ์‹ฌํžˆ ์šฐ๋ คํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„๋ผ๋Š” ๊ตญํ˜ธ ์‚ฌ์šฉ์„ ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ์ž…์žฅ์„ ํ‘œ๋ช…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ถ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„๋Š” ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค์™€์˜ ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„ ๊ตญํ˜ธ ๋ถ„์Ÿ์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ํ•œ๋™์•ˆ ์œ ์—”์„ ๋น„๋กฏํ•œ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๊ตญ์ œ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ์—์„œ "๊ตฌ์œ ๊ณ ์Šฌ๋ผ๋น„์•„ ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„ ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ"(The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, FYROM)์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์ด๋ฆ„์œผ๋กœ ์•Œ๋ ค์ง€๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค์™€์˜ ๊ตญํ˜ธ ๋ถ„์Ÿ์€ ๋ถ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„๊ฐ€ ๋ถ๋Œ€์„œ์–‘ ์กฐ์•ฝ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ(NATO), ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์—ฐํ•ฉ(EU) ๊ฐ€์ž…์„ ์ถ”์ง„ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ณผ์ •์—์„œ ์ปค๋‹ค๋ž€ ์žฅ์• ๋ฌผ๋กœ ์—ฌ๊ฒจ์กŒ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค์˜ ์•Œ๋ ‰์‹œ์Šค ์น˜ํ”„๋ผ์Šค ์ด๋ฆฌ๋Š” 2018๋…„ 6์›” 12์ผ์— ์—ด๋ฆฐ ๋ถ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„์˜ ์กฐ๋ž€ ์ž์—ํ”„ ์ด๋ฆฌ์™€์˜ ํšŒ๋‹ด์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋ถ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„์˜ ๊ตญํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„์—์„œ ๋ถ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„๋กœ ๋ณ€๊ฒฝํ•˜๋Š” ๋Œ€์‹ ์— ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค๊ฐ€ ๋ถ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„์˜ ๋ถ๋Œ€์„œ์–‘ ์กฐ์•ฝ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ(NATO) ๊ฐ€์ž…์— ๋™์˜ํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ์•ˆ๊ฑด์— ํ•ฉ์˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2018๋…„ 6์›” 17์ผ์—๋Š” ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค์™€ ๋ถ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„ ์–‘๊ตญ์˜ ์ด๋ฆฌ์™€ ์™ธ๋ฌด์žฅ๊ด€์ด ํ”„๋ ˆ์ŠคํŒŒํ˜ธ ์ธ๊ทผ์— ์œ„์น˜ํ•œ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค์˜ ํ”„์‚ฌ๋ผ๋ฐ์Šค ๋งˆ์„์—์„œ ์ •์‹ ์„œ๋ช…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋น„์ค€ ๊ณผ์ • ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„ ์˜ํšŒ๋Š” 2018๋…„ 6์›” 20์ผ์— ํ”„๋ ˆ์ŠคํŒŒ ํ˜‘์ • ๋น„์ค€ ๋™์˜์•ˆ์„ ๊ฐ€๊ฒฐ์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ณผ์ •์—์„œ ์˜์› 69๋ช…์ด ์ฐฌ์„ฑํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ๋‚ด๋ถ€ ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„ ํ˜๋ช… ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ-๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„ ๊ตญ๋ฏผํ†ตํ•ฉ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์€ "๋ฒ•์  ์ƒํƒœ์˜ ํ•™์‚ด์ด์ž ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ํ•™์‚ด"์ด๋ผ๋ฉฐ ํˆฌํ‘œ๋ฅผ ๊ฑฐ๋ถ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค ์™ธ๋ฌด๋ถ€๋Š” 2018๋…„ 6์›” 25์ผ์— ๋ฐœํ‘œํ•œ ๊ณต์‹ ์„ฑ๋ช…์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„๊ฐ€ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ๊ตญํ˜ธ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์—ฐํ•ฉ(EU)ยท๋ถ๋Œ€์„œ์–‘ ์กฐ์•ฝ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ(NATO) ๊ฐ€์ž…ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์— ๋™์˜ํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์กฐ๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ์ด๋ฐ”๋…ธํ”„ ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์€ 2018๋…„ 6์›” 26์ผ์— ๊ณต๊ฐœ๋œ ๊ณต์‹ ์„ฑ๋ช…์—์„œ "๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„์˜ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€ ์ •์ฒด์„ฑ, ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์˜ ๊ฐœ์„ฑ, ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„์˜ ์–ธ์–ด(๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„์–ด) ๋ฐ ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„์˜ ๊ณต์กด ๋ชจ๋ธ"์„ ํŒŒ๊ดดํ•˜๋Š” ํ˜‘์ •์˜ ์„œ๋ช…์„ ๊ฑฐ๋ถ€ํ•˜๊ฒ ๋‹ค๋Š” ์˜์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” 2018๋…„ 6์›” 27์ผ์— ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„์˜ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์—ฐํ•ฉ(EU) ๊ฐ€์ž… ํ˜‘์ƒ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ฑฐ๋ถ€๊ถŒ ํ–‰์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์ฒ ํšŒํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๊ณต์‹ ํ†ต๋ณดํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2018๋…„ 7์›” 5์ผ์—๋Š” ๋ถ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„ ์˜ํšŒ ์†Œ์† ์˜์› 69๋ช…์ด ํ”„๋ ˆ์ŠคํŒŒ ํ˜‘์ • ๋น„์ค€ ๋™์˜์•ˆ์„ ๊ฐ€๊ฒฐ์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. 2018๋…„ 7์›” 11์ผ์—๋Š” ๋ถ๋Œ€์„œ์–‘ ์กฐ์•ฝ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ(NATO)๊ฐ€ ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„๋ฅผ ๋ถ๋Œ€์„œ์–‘ ์กฐ์•ฝ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ์˜ 30๋ฒˆ์งธ ํšŒ์›๊ตญ์œผ๋กœ ์ดˆ์ฒญํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2018๋…„ 7์›” 30์ผ์—๋Š” ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„ ์˜ํšŒ๊ฐ€ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค์™€์˜ ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„ ๊ตญํ˜ธ ๋ณ€๊ฒฝ ํ•ฉ์˜์•ˆ์— ๋™์˜ํ•  ๊ฒƒ์ธ๊ฐ€์˜ ์—ฌ๋ถ€๋ฅผ ๋ฌป๋Š” ๋ฒ•์  ๊ตฌ์†๋ ฅ์ด ์—†๋Š” ๊ตญ๋ฏผํˆฌํ‘œ๋ฅผ ์‹ค์‹œํ•˜๋Š” ์•ˆ๊ฑด์„ ๊ฐ€๊ฒฐ์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. 2018๋…„ 9์›” 30์ผ์—๋Š” ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„์—์„œ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค์™€์˜ ๊ตญํ˜ธ ๋ณ€๊ฒฝ ํ•ฉ์˜์•ˆ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋™์˜ ์—ฌ๋ถ€๋ฅผ ๋ฌป๋Š” ๊ตญ๋ฏผํˆฌํ‘œ๊ฐ€ ์‹ค์‹œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ตญ๋ฏผํˆฌํ‘œ๋Š” ์ „์ฒด ์œ ๊ถŒ์ž 666,344๋ช…์ด ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ฐฌ์„ฑ 609,427ํ‘œ(94.18%), ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ 37,687ํ‘œ(5.82%), ๋ฌดํšจ ๋ฐ ๊ธฐ๊ถŒ 19,230ํ‘œ(2.89%)๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ํˆฌํ‘œ์œจ์ด 36.89%๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ •์กฑ์ˆ˜ 50%์— ๋ฏธ๋‹ฌํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ถ€๊ฒฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2018๋…„ 10์›” 15์ผ์—๋Š” ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„ ์˜ํšŒ์—์„œ ๊ตญํ˜ธ ๋ณ€๊ฒฝ์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ํ† ๋ก ์ด ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ํ—Œ๋ฒ• ๊ฐœ์ •์„ ์œ„ํ•ด์„œ๋Š” ์ „์ฒด ์˜์„ 120์„ ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ 2/3์— ํ•ด๋‹นํ•˜๋Š” 80๋ช… ์ด์ƒ์˜ ์ฐฌ์„ฑ์ด ํ•„์š”ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2018๋…„ 10์›” 19์ผ์—๋Š” ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„ ์˜ํšŒ ์†Œ์† ์˜์› 80๋ช…์ด ๊ฐœํ—Œ์•ˆ์— ์ฐฌ์„ฑํ•จ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„์˜ ๊ตญํ˜ธ๋ฅผ "๋ถ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„"๋กœ ๋ณ€๊ฒฝํ•˜๋Š” ๊ณผ์ •์ด ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2018๋…„ 12์›” 3์ผ์—๋Š” ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„ ์˜ํšŒ์˜ ๊ฐœํ—Œ์•ˆ ์ดˆ์•ˆ์ด ์ฐฌ์„ฑ 67ํ‘œ, ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ 23ํ‘œ, ๊ธฐ๊ถŒ 4ํ‘œ๋กœ ๊ฐ€๊ฒฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ 1์›” 11์ผ์—๋Š” ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„ ์˜ํšŒ ์†Œ์† 81๋ช…์ด ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„์˜ ๊ตญํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ๋ถ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„๋กœ ๋ณ€๊ฒฝํ•˜๋Š” ๋‚ด์šฉ์ด ๋‹ด๊ธด ํ—Œ๋ฒ• ๊ฐœ์ •์•ˆ์„ ๊ฐ€๊ฒฐ์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ 1์›” 13์ผ์—๋Š” ํŒŒ๋…ธ์Šค ์นด๋ฉ”๋…ธ์Šค ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค ๊ตญ๋ฐฉ๋ถ€ ์žฅ๊ด€์ด ํ”„๋ ˆ์ŠคํŒŒ ํ˜‘์ •๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จํ•˜์—ฌ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์†Œ์† ์ •๋‹น์ธ ๋…๋ฆฝ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค์ธ์ด ์•Œ๋ ‰์‹œ์Šค ์น˜ํ”„๋ผ์Šค ์ด๋ฆฌ์˜ ์†Œ์† ์ •๋‹น์ธ ๊ธ‰์ง„์ขŒํŒŒ์—ฐํ•ฉ๊ณผ์˜ ์—ฐ์ •์—์„œ ํƒˆํ‡ดํ•˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ๊ฒฐ์ •ํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค ์˜ํšŒ๋Š” 2019๋…„ 1์›” 16์ผ์— ์•Œ๋ ‰์‹œ์Šค ์น˜ํ”„๋ผ์Šค ์ด๋ฆฌ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ถˆ์‹ ์ž„ ํˆฌํ‘œ๋ฅผ ์‹ค์‹œํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ์ฐฌ์„ฑ 151ํ‘œ, ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ 148ํ‘œ, ๊ธฐ๊ถŒ 1ํ‘œ๋กœ ๋ถ€๊ฒฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•œํŽธ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค ์•„ํ…Œ๋„ค์—์„œ๋Š” 60,000๋ช…์ด ๋„˜๋Š” ์‹œ์œ„๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค ์˜ํšŒ์˜ ํ”„๋ ˆ์ŠคํŒŒ ํ˜‘์ • ๋น„์ค€์— ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ํ•˜๋Š” ์ง‘ํšŒ๋ฅผ ์ฃผ์ตœํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ์ผ๋ถ€ ์‹œ์œ„๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ํญ๋ ฅ์„ ํ–‰์‚ฌํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ด ์ตœ๋ฃจํƒ„์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ์ง„์••ํ•˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค ์˜ํšŒ๋Š” 2019๋…„ 1์›” 25์ผ์— ํ”„๋ ˆ์ŠคํŒŒ ํ˜‘์ • ๋น„์ค€ ๋™์˜์•ˆ, ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„ ๊ตญํ˜ธ ๋ณ€๊ฒฝ ํ•ฉ์˜์•ˆ์„ ์ฐฌ์„ฑ 153ํ‘œ, ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ 146ํ‘œ๋กœ ๊ฐ€๊ฒฐ์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. ์ด์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„๋Š” 2019๋…„ 2์›” 12์ผ์„ ๊ธฐํ•ด ๊ณต์‹ ๊ตญ๋ช…์„ ๋ถ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„๋กœ ๋ณ€๊ฒฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„ ๊ตญํ˜ธ ๋ถ„์Ÿ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค์˜ ๋Œ€์™ธ ๊ด€๊ณ„ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ํ”„๋ ˆ์ŠคํŒŒ ํ˜‘์ •์˜ ์˜์–ด ์›๋ฌธ, ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„์–ด ์›๋ฌธ, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค์–ด ์›๋ฌธ Igor Janev, Legality of the Prespa Agreement Between Macedonia and Greece, Journal of Political Science and International Relations, Vol. 2, Issue 2, 2019. Igor Janev, Prespa Agreement And Its Effects On Macedonian Right To National Identity: An Act of Ethnoโ€“ Genocidal Termination of the National Identity, Lambert Academic Publishing 2021. ISBN 978-620-4-71741-8. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค-๋ถ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„ ๊ด€๊ณ„ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค์˜ ์กฐ์•ฝ ๋ถ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„์˜ ์กฐ์•ฝ 2018๋…„ ์ฒด๊ฒฐ๋œ ์กฐ์•ฝ 2019๋…„ ๋ฐœํšจ๋œ ์กฐ์•ฝ 2018๋…„ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค 2018๋…„ ๋ถ๋งˆ์ผ€๋„๋‹ˆ์•„ 2018๋…„ 6์›” 2019๋…„ 2์›”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prespa%20Agreement
Prespa Agreement
The Prespa Agreement, also known as the Treaty of Prespa, the Prespes deal or the Prespa accord, is an agreement reached in 2018 between Greece and the then-Republic of Macedonia, under the auspices of the United Nations, resolving a long-standing dispute between the two. Apart from resolving the terminological differences, the agreement also covers areas of cooperation between the two countries in order to establish a strategic partnership. Signed beside the shared Lake Prespa, from which it took its name, and ratified by the parliaments of both countries, the agreement went into force on 12 February 2019, when the two countries notified the UN of the deal's completion, following the ratification of the NATO accession protocol for North Macedonia on 8 February. It replaces the Interim Accord of 1995 and sees the Republic of Macedonia's constitutional name changed to the Republic of North Macedonia . Name of the agreement The Prespa Agreement is the short, informal name for the agreement, named after the place where it was signed, Lake Prespa. Its full name is Final Agreement for the settlement of the differences as described in the United Nations Security Council resolutions 817 (1993) and 845 (1993), the termination of the Interim Accord of 1995, and the establishment of a strategic partnership between the Parties. Background Following the breakup of Yugoslavia in 1991, use of the name "Macedonia" was disputed between the Southeastern European countries of Greece and the then-Republic of Macedonia. The dispute arose from the ambiguity in nomenclature between the former Yugoslav republic, the adjacent Greek region of Macedonia, and the ancient kingdom of Macedon. Citing historical and irredentist concerns, Greece opposed the use of the name "Macedonia" by the Republic of Macedonia without a geographical qualifier like "Northern" or "Upper" for use "by all... and for all purposes". As approximately two million ethnic Greeks identify themselves as Macedonians who typically view themselves as being unrelated to the ethnic Macedonians, Greece further objected to the use of the term "Macedonian" for the neighboring country's largest ethnic group and its language. The Republic of Macedonia was accused of appropriating symbols and figures that are historically considered part of Greek culture, such as the Vergina Sun and Alexander the Great, and of promoting the irredentist concept of a United Macedonia, which involves territorial claims on Greece, Bulgaria, Albania, and Serbia. Prior to the Prespa agreement, international organizations provisionally referenced the Republic of Macedonia as "the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia" (sometimes abbreviated as "fYROM"). Contents of the agreement The agreement provides that the Republic of Macedonia takes the name of Republic of North Macedonia (; ). This new name is to be used for all purposes (erga omnes), that is, domestically, in all bilateral relations and in all regional and international organizations and institutions. The deal includes recognition of the Macedonian language in the United Nations, noting that it is within the group of South Slavic languages, and that the nationality of the country will be called Macedonian/citizen of the Republic of North Macedonia. Also, there is an explicit clarification that the citizens of the country are not related to ancient Hellenic civilization that previously inhabited the northern regions of Greece. Specifically, Article 7 mentions that both countries acknowledge that their respective understanding of the terms "Macedonia" and "Macedonian" refers to a different historical context and cultural heritage. When reference is made to Greece, these terms denote the area and people of its northern region, as well as the Hellenic civilization, history and culture of that region. When reference is made to the Republic of North Macedonia, these terms denote its territory, language and people, with their own, distinctly different, history and culture. Additionally, the agreement stipulates the removal of the Vergina Sun from public use in the Republic of North Macedonia and the formation of a committee for the review of school textbooks and maps in both countries for the removal of irredentist content and to align them with UNESCO and Council of Europe standards. Reactions The Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras announced on 12 June 2018 that an agreement had been reached with his Macedonian counterpart Zoran Zaev on the dispute, "which covers all the preconditions set by the Greek side". The agreement was signed at Lake Prespa, a body of water which forms a partial common border between the Republic of North Macedonia, Greece and Albania. Political reactions The international community reacted positively to the Prespa agreement, with the media dubbing it as "historic". The European Union welcomed it, with the European Council President Donald Tusk tweeting his "sincere congratulations" to Tsipras and Zaev. "I am keeping my fingers crossed. Thanks to you, the impossible is becoming possible," he said. EU Foreign Affairs chief Federica Mogherini and commissioner Johannes Hahn also issued a joint statement congratulating the two prime ministers "in reaching this historic agreement between their countries, which contributes to the transformation of the entire region of Southeast Europe." NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg welcomed the agreement, stating that it will set the Republic of Macedonia on the path towards NATO membership. Additionally, the British Foreign Minister Boris Johnson welcomed the agreement as being "fantastic news". "The agreement once and for always confirms and strengthens the Macedonian ethnic and cultural identity, the Macedonian language, the Macedonian nationality. It guarantees the security of the country and provides a secure future for the citizens of the Republic of Macedonia", Zaev said. The domestic communities reacted more negatively to the agreement. In Macedonia, the President of the Republic, Gjorge Ivanov, declared that he wouldn't sign the agreement, calling it "disastrous". Additionally, VMRO-DPMNE, the main conservative party at the time, also opposed the agreement, and pledged to organize public protests against it. In Macedonia, protests went violent at Skopje, and Macedonian SDSM MP Hari Lokvenec, who attended the Prespa ceremony, had his parliamentary vehicle set on fire at Bitola by unidentified perpetrators. In Greece, Golden Dawn (GD), a far-right party, and the Communist Party of Greece (CPG), a far-left party, opposed the agreement, with a Golden Dawn MP, Konstantinos Barbarousis, calling for military rule and firing squads to execute politicians responsible for the deal. As a result, Barbarousis was expelled from his party, and a warrant was issued for his arrest for high treason. He fled using his parliamentary vehicle but eventually was found and arrested. Additionally, the conservative New Democracy party filed a motion of no-confidence against Tsipras in parliament because of the name deal, which was rejected two days later with a simple parliamentary majority; 153 against it, 127 for. Kyriakos Mitsotakis, leader of the New Democracy party, had argued in this connection that the Greek foreign minister (and hence the government of Syriza) had no authority to sign the agreement, based on international legal arguments that were responded to by legal scholars. Following his departure as Greek foreign minister, Kotzias stated in October 2018 that key reasons for the Prespa agreement were to bring stability to the Balkans and to stop Turkish influence within the region. Public reactions In Greece, the deeply unpopular agreement had an instant negative impact on Tsipras's chances of staying in power. According to separate polls conducted by Marc and Ekathimerini, between 65% and 68% of Greeks were against the Prespes deal and what was contained within it. There were large public demonstrations in 2018 and 2019 against the Prespes deal in Athens and Thessaloniki that lasted days. There were also vast student sit-ins which affected 210 schools in Greek Central Macedonia alone. Despite the uproar, the protesters were accused of having links with the far-right/fascists. In response, famous composer and leftist Mikis Theodorakis, who was also against the Prespes deal, called the Syriza government 'left-wing fascists'. During the ratification of the Prespes deal (2018-19), fake news promoted a possible territorial loss of Greek Macedonia and a sense of victimization and dehumanization that demanded emergency actions to protect Greece from North Macedonia and its Greek assistants. Furthermore, the Greek news coverage showed that several news stories tried to undermine the country's then-government. In North Macedonia, the majority of public perception was also against the deal but not to the same extent as the Greek public. According to polls conducted by Sitel TV, 45% of the public stated they felt negatively towards the deal while 44% said they felt positively towards it. Around half (50.5 percent) of those surveyed said they thought the government in Skopje did a good job during the negotiations with Greece against 40.7 percent who said it did not. A June 2020 poll in North Macedonia, conducted by the National Democratic Institute, showed that 58% of Macedonians support the Prespa agreement and that there is also strong public support for the country's Euro-Atlantic direction, with 74% positive opinions for NATO (of which North Macedonia has been a member since 27 March 2020) and 79% positive opinions for accession to the European Union. An October 2020 poll conducted in Greece by the Friedrich Naumann Foundation in cooperation with the KAPA Research, shows that the Prespa Agreement is becoming increasingly accepted in Greece, with the majority (58%) of the Greeks viewing it positively; 25% consider it to be a good agreement, while 33% view it as an agreement with several compromises but necessary (up from 18% and 24% respectively in 2018). Signature The Prespa agreement, which replaced the Interim Accord of 1995, was signed on 17 June 2018 in a high-level ceremony at the Greek border village of Psarades on Lake Prespa, by the two foreign ministers Nikola Dimitrov and Nikos Kotzias and in the presence of the respective prime Ministers, Zoran Zaev and Alexis Tsipras. The meeting was attended by the UN's Special Representative Matthew Nimetz, the Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs Rosemary DiCarlo, the EU's High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Federica Mogherini, and the European Commissioner for Enlargement and European Neighbourhood Policy Johannes Hahn, among others. After the ceremony, Tsipras, along with his Macedonian counterpart, crossed over the border to the Macedonian side of Lake Prespa for lunch at the village of Oteลกevo. The symbolic move marked the first visit of a Greek prime minister in the Republic of Macedonia since it declared independence in 1991. Ratification and implementation On 13 June 2018, Zaev said that North Macedonia is changing the license plates of its vehicles from MK to NMK to reflect the country's new name. The Macedonian government announced that the statues of Alexander the Great, Philip II of Macedon and Olympias of Epirus, which were raised as part of the Skopje 2014 program, will be given new inscriptions with clarifications that they symbolize the Ancient Greek period and are "honouring Greek-Macedonian friendship". Ratification by the Macedonian Parliament On 5 July 2018, the Prespa agreement was ratified by the Macedonian parliament with 69 MPs voting in favor of it. However, the Macedonian President Gjorge Ivanov vetoed the bill. Under the Macedonian Constitution, if the Parliament readopts the law with a majority of votes from the total number of MPs, the president is obliged to sign it into law. On 20 June, the Prespa agreement was once again ratified by the Parliament of the Republic of Macedonia with 69 of the total 120 MPs voting in favor of it. Opposition party VMRO-DPMNE boycotted the parliamentary session and declared the Prespa treaty as a "genocide of the legal state" and a "genocide of the entire nation". On 25 June, the Greek Foreign Ministry informed the EU and NATO that Greece is no longer objecting to Macedonia's Euro-Atlantic accession under the new name. The next day, however, President Ivanov refused to sign the agreement and threatened Macedonian Prime Minister Zaev and the ruling coalition's MPs with imprisonment of at least 5 years for voting in favor of an agreement which, according to Ivanov, puts the Republic of Macedonia in a subordinate position to a foreign state. "I do not accept the constitutional change aimed at changing the constitutional name [of the country]. I do not accept ideas or proposals which would endanger Macedonia's national identity, the individuality of the Macedonian nation, the Macedonian language and the Macedonian model of coexistence. In the presidential election, 534,910 citizens voted in favor of this electoral program. The agreement goes beyond the scope of United Nations Security Council Resolutions 817 (1993) and 845 (1993), since it refers to the "difference in the name of the State" and not to the "disputes" to which the agreement refers", Ivanov said, adding that "This agreement brings the Republic of Macedonia to subordination from another country, namely the Republic of Greece. According to Article 308 of the Penal Code, "a citizen who brings the Republic of Macedonia to a state of subservience or dependence on another state is punishable by imprisonment of at least five years". The legalization of this agreement creates legal consequences that are the basis for committing a crime." Because the constitution required the president to sign, the ratified agreement was allowed to be officially published in the country's official gazette with a footnote detailing the constitutional and legal situation in place of the president's signature. The withdrawal of the Greek veto resulted in the European Union approving on 27 June the start of accession talks with the Republic of Macedonia, to begin the next year conditional on the implementation of the Prespa agreement and the change of the nation's constitutional name to Republic of North Macedonia. On 11 July, NATO invited Macedonia to start accession talks in a bid to become the Euro-Atlantic alliance's 30th member. Macedonian referendum and ratification On 30 July, the parliament of Macedonia approved plans to hold a non-binding referendum on changing the country's name that took place on 30 September. 91% of voters voted in favour with a 37% turnout, but the referendum was not carried because of a constitutional requirement for a 50% turnout. Total turnout for the referendum was at 666,344 and of those some 260,000 were ethnic Albanian voters of Macedonia. The government intended to push forward with the name change. On 15 October 2018, the parliament of Macedonia began debating the name change. The proposal for the constitutional reform requires the vote of 80 MPs, i.e. two-thirds of the 120-seat parliament. On 16 October, US Assistant Secretary of State Wess Mitchell sent a letter to VMRO-DPMNE leader Hristijan Mickoski, in which he expresses the disappointment of the United States with the positions of the leadership, including him personally, and asks to "set aside partisan interests" and work to get the name change approved. Mickoski expressed his hope that the Republic of Macedonia will be very soon a part of the NATO and EU families, "but proud and dignified, not humiliated, disfigured and disgraced." On 19 October the parliament voted to start the process of renaming the country "North Macedonia", after a total of 80 MPs voted in favour of the constitutional changes. On 30 October, the Skopje Public Prosecutor's Office opened a case against Macedonian President Gjorge Ivanov for his refusal to fulfill his constitutional obligations in signing the Prespa agreement after it was ratified by the Macedonian Parliament. On 3 December 2018, Macedonia's Parliament approved a draft constitutional amendment, with 67 lawmakers voting in favour, 23 voting against and 4 abstaining. A simple majority was needed at this stage. After some political wrangling over constitutional issues related to the multi-ethnic makeup of the state, all Albanian political parties of Macedonia voted in favour of the name change along with the governing Social-Democrats and some members of the opposition. On 11 January 2019, the Macedonian Parliament completed the legal implementation of the Prespa Agreement by approving the constitutional changes for renaming the country to North Macedonia with a two-thirds parliamentary majority (81 MPs). International reactions to Macedonian ratification The international community, NATO and European Union leaders, including Greek PM Alexis Tsipras and Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz, as well as heads of neighboring states, congratulated the Macedonian Prime Minister Zoran Zaev. The British Prime Minister Theresa May described the vote as a "historic moment", while the Kosovar President Hashim Thaรงi expressed his hope that the Prespa Agreement, which resolved the Macedonia naming dispute, can be used as a "model" for resolving Kosovo's dispute with Serbia as well. Albanian President Ilir Meta congratulated the name change and Albanian Foreign Minister Ditmir Bushati hailed the vote by tweeting that Albanian political parties were the "decisive factor". In exile in Hungary, the fugitive former Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski has condemned the Prespa agreement, stating that Zaev "scammed" and "tricked" the Macedonian people over the country's name change, and that the Greek politicians imposed an unfavourable deal upon North Macedonia that outlines exclusive claims over "antique history" by Greece. Post-Macedonian ratification developments On 13 January 2019, Greece Defence Minister Panos Kammenos and his Independent Greeks party quit Greece's ruling coalition over the Prespa agreement, potentially leaving the governing coalition without a workable majority in parliament. Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras then held a confidence vote on 16 January and survived 151โ€“148, with one lawmaker absent. Tsipras survived the vote with 145 of his Radical Left Syriza party and with 6 MPs who were either Independents or Independent Greeks (ANEL). In the days prior to the ratification of the Prespa agreement by the Greek Parliament, over 60,000 protesters (according to police; 600,000, according to organizers) from all over the country arrived in Athens to demand the rejection of the agreement; some of these protests had become violent, with the police required to use tear gas to disperse the groups. During the last week, public opinion poll showed that over 65% of the people were against the ratification of the Prespa agreement, whereas many popular Greek artists (S. Xarhakos, V. Papakonstantinou J. Kotsiras etc.) agreed that a referendum should have been held. On 19 January, Mikis Theodorakis' editorial was published in which he characterized the ratification of the agreement from Greek MPs as a "crime", demanding a referendum in Greece on the agreement as well. On 23 January, just a day prior to the ratification in the Hellenic Parliament, hundreds of scholars, professors, writers and artists from all over Greece signed petitions in support of the Prespa agreement. In a February 2019 survey, a public opinion poll done for Sitel TV channel in North Macedonia showed 44.6 percent of respondents were positive about the Prespa agreement, while 45.6 percent were negative toward the accord. A majority, 59.5 percent expressed that the agreement would positively impact relations between both countries and 57.7 percent felt that the two states would implement the accord. Half of respondents, 50.5 percent stated that the Macedonian government did well in negotiations with Greece and 40.7 percent disagreed that it did. Survey participants (49.2 percent) felt that the agreement would make travel into Greece easier. Ratification by the Greek Parliament On 25 January 2019, Greece's Parliament approved the Prespa agreement with 153 votes in favor and 146 votes against, with 1 abstention. Shortly after the ratification of the deal, Greece's Alternate Foreign Minister Georgios Katrougalos signed, in the Greek Parliament, the enacted law of the Prespa Agreement. The international community, including the Prime Ministers Theresa May of United Kingdom, Justin Trudeau of Canada, Boyko Borisov of Bulgaria and Edi Rama of Albania, Presidents Emmanuel Macron of France, Hashim Thaรงi of Kosovo, Donald Tusk of the European Union, and Jean-Claude Juncker of the EU's Commission, USA's and Germany's foreign ministers, Michael Pompeo and Heiko Maas respectively, Romania's EU minister George Ciamba whose country held EU presidency, as well as NATO's chief Jens Stoltenberg, welcomed positively the ratification of the deal. Furthermore, the Republic of Macedonia's Prime Minister Zoran Zaev, in his congratulatory message to his Greek counterpart Alexis Tsipras, whom he called "a friend", described the ratification as a "historic victory" which "ends a long-standing diplomatic conflict between Athens and Skopje". Russia, on the other hand, opposed the Prespa Agreement citing the low turnout in the non-binding 2018 referendum on changing the country's name. Hungary, which gave asylum to fugitive former Macedonian Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski, a staunch critic of the agreement, also lobbied against it. Post-Greek ratification developments On 6 February 2019, NATO's 29 members signed the accession protocol with North Macedonia. On 8 June 2021, the President of the United States, Joseph Biden, signed the Executive Order 14033 for imposing economic sanctions and travel bans to any individuals who may try to undermine the Prespa Agreement. Alexis Tsipras and Zoran Zaev received jointly a number of awards for their roles as the prime ministers of their respective states in reaching the Prespa Agreement and settling the naming dispute between the two nations, including the Peace Prize of Westphalia, the Ewald von Kleist Award and the Hessian Peace Prize. See also Macedonia naming dispute References Notes Further reading Nimetz, M. (2020). The Macedonian "Name" Dispute: The Macedonian Questionโ€”Resolved? Nationalities Papers, 48(2), 205โ€“214. External links Agreement text in English, and translations in Macedonian and Greek. Treaties of Greece Treaties of North Macedonia Treaties concluded in 2018 Treaties entered into force in 2019 2018 in Greek politics 2018 in the Republic of Macedonia Greeceโ€“North Macedonia relations
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020%EB%85%84%20%EB%AF%B8%EA%B5%AD%20%EB%8C%80%ED%86%B5%EB%A0%B9%20%EC%84%A0%EA%B1%B0%20%EB%AF%BC%EC%A3%BC%EB%8B%B9%20%ED%9B%84%EB%B3%B4%20%EA%B2%BD%EC%84%A0
2020๋…„ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ํ›„๋ณด ๊ฒฝ์„ 
์ œ48์ฐจ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ์ „๋‹น๋Œ€ํšŒ ๋Œ€์˜์› ์„ ์ถœ ๊ฒฝ์„  ๋ฐ 2020๋…„ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ํ›„๋ณด ๊ฒฝ์„ ์€ 2020๋…„ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์ •ยท๋ถ€ํ†ต๋ น ํ›„๋ณด๋ฅผ ์„ ์ถœํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์—ด๋ฆด ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ํ›„๋ณด ๊ฒฝ์„ ์ด๋‹ค. 2020๋…„ ๊ฒฝ์„ ์€ ์ง€๋‚œ ๊ฒฝ์„  ๋‹น์‹œ ๋…ผ๋ž€์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋˜ ๋‹น์—ฐ์ง ๋Œ€์˜์› (superdelegate) ์ œ๋„๋ฅผ ๊ฐœํŽธํ•˜์—ฌ ๋‹น์—ฐ์ง ๋Œ€์˜์›๋“ค์€ ํŠน์ˆ˜ํ•œ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๊ฐ€ ์•„๋‹ˆ๊ณ ๋Š” ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ํ›„๋ณด ์„ ์ถœ ๋•Œ ํˆฌํ‘œํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๊ฒŒ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ฒฝ๊ณผ ๋‹น๋‚ด ์ง„์˜ ๊ฐˆ๋“ฑ 2016๋…„ ๋Œ€์„  ๋‹น์‹œ, ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์˜ ๋Œ€์„  ํ›„๋ณด ์ง€๋ช…์ „์€ ์ค‘๋„ ์„ฑํ–ฅ ๋‹น๊ถŒํŒŒ์˜ ์ง€์ง€๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์€ ํž๋Ÿฌ๋ฆฌ ํด๋ฆฐํ„ด๊ณผ ์ง„๋ณด ์„ฑํ–ฅ ๋น„๋‹น๊ถŒํŒŒ์˜ ์ง€์ง€๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์€ ๋ฒ„๋‹ˆ ์ƒŒ๋”์Šค์˜ ์–‘์ž ๊ตฌ๋„๋กœ ์น˜๋ค„์กŒ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ์ƒŒ๋”์Šค๋Š” ํด๋ฆฐํ„ด์—๊ฒŒ ์„ํŒจํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์ง„๋ณดํŒŒ๋Š” ๋‹น๊ถŒํŒŒ๊ฐ€ ์ง„๋ณด์ธต์„ ์™ธ๋ฉดํ•œ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋ผ๋ฉฐ ๋ถˆ๋งŒ์„ ํ‘œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์— ๋‹น ์ง€๋„๋ถ€ ์ธ์‚ฌ๋“ค์ด ์ค‘๋ฆฝ์„ ์ง€ํ‚ค์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ํด๋ฆฐํ„ด์„ ์ง€์ง€ํ•˜๊ณ , ์‹ฌ์ง€์–ด ๊ฒฝ์„  ๊ณผ์ •์—์„œ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ๋„์›€์„ ์ค€ ์‚ฌ์‹ค์ด ์œ„ํ‚ค๋ฆฌํฌ์Šค์— ์˜ํ•ด ํญ๋กœ๋˜๋ฉฐ ๋‹น๋‚ด ๋ถ„์œ„๊ธฐ๋Š” ์•…ํ™”๋๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ํ•ด ๋Œ€์„ ์—์„œ ํด๋ฆฐํ„ด์€ ๋„๋„๋“œ ํŠธ๋Ÿผํ”„ ๊ณตํ™”๋‹น ํ›„๋ณด์—๊ฒŒ ํŒจ๋ฐฐํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์ด๋Š” ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์ด ์ Š์€ ์ธต๊ณผ ๋…ธ๋™์ž๋“ค ๋“ฑ์˜ ํ‘œ์‹ฌ์„ ์žƒ์€ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋กœ ๋ถ„์„๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹น๊ถŒํŒŒ์™€ ์ง„๋ณดํŒŒ ๊ฐ„์˜ ๊ฐˆ๋“ฑ์€ 2017๋…„ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ์ง€๋„๋ถ€ ๊ฒฝ์„ ์—์„œ๋„ ์ด์–ด์กŒ๋Š”๋ฐ, ๋‹น๊ถŒํŒŒ์˜ ์ง€์›์„ ๋ฐ›์€ ํ†ฐ ํŽ˜๋ ˆ์ฆˆ ์ „ ๋…ธ๋™๋ถ€ ์žฅ๊ด€์ด ์ง„๋ณดํŒŒ์˜ ํ‚ค์Šค ์—˜๋ฆฌ์Šจ ํ•˜์›์˜์›์„ ๋ˆ„๋ฅด๊ณ  ์ „๊ตญ์œ„์›ํšŒ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ๋กœ ์„ ์ถœ๋˜๋ฉฐ ์ง„๋ณดํŒŒ๋Š” ๋˜ ํ•œ ๋ฒˆ ์ขŒ์ ˆ์„ ๊ฒช์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ง„๋ณด ๋Œํ’ ๊ฐ•๊ฒฝ ๋ณด์ˆ˜ ๋…ธ์„ ์˜ ํŠธ๋Ÿผํ”„๊ฐ€ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ด ๋˜์ž, ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ๋‚ด์—์„œ๋Š” ๋ฐ˜์‚ฌ ์ž‘์šฉ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ•๊ฒฝ ๋Œ€์—ฌ ํˆฌ์Ÿ ๋…ธ์„ ์ด ๋Œ€์„ธ๋ฅผ ํƒ”๋‹ค. ๋ฒ„๋‹ˆ ์ƒŒ๋”์Šค, ํ‚ค์–ด์Šคํ‹ด ์งˆ๋ฆฌ๋ธŒ๋žœ๋“œ, ์—˜๋ฆฌ์ž๋ฒ ์Šค ์›Œ๋Ÿฐ, ์ฝ”๋ฆฌ ๋ถ€์ปค, ์นด๋ฉ€๋ผ ํ•ด๋ฆฌ์Šค ๋“ฑ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์˜ ๋Œ€์„  ์ฃผ์ž๊ธ‰ ์ •์น˜์ธ๋“ค์€ ํ•˜๋‚˜ ๊ฐ™์ด ํŠธ๋Ÿผํ”„๊ฐ€ ์ž„๋ช…ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฑฐ์˜ ๋ชจ๋“  ์ธ์‚ฌ์— ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ํ•˜๊ณ , ํŠธ๋Ÿผํ”„๊ฐ€ ๋‚ด๋†“๋Š” ์ •์ฑ…๋งˆ๋‹ค ๋น„ํŒํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐฉ์‹์œผ๋กœ ์ธ๊ธฐ ๋ฐ ์ง€์ง€๋ฅผ ์–ป์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Š” ๋ฏธํˆฌ ์šด๋™, 2016๋…„ ๊ฒฝ์„  ๋‹น์‹œ ์ƒŒ๋”์Šค ์—ดํ’ ๋“ฑ์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ ์ง„๋ณด์ ์ธ ์ •์ฑ…๋“ค์ด ๊พธ์ค€ํžˆ ์ธ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์–ป๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ ํƒ“๋„ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ผ๊ฐ์—์„  ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์ด ๋„ˆ๋ฌด ์ขŒ๋กœ ์น˜์šฐ์น˜๋Š” ๊ฒŒ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ƒ๋Š” ์šฐ๋ ค๋„ ์ œ๊ธฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2018๋…„ ์ค‘๊ฐ„ ์„ ๊ฑฐ์—์„œ ์ง„๋ณด ๋Œํ’์€ ํ™•์—ฐํžˆ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚˜, ์ƒŒ๋”์Šค์™€ ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ฏผ์ฃผ์‚ฌํšŒ์ฃผ์˜๋ฅผ ํ‘œ๋ฐฉํ•˜๋Š” ์•Œ๋ ‰์‚ฐ๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์˜ค์นด์‹œ์˜ค์ฝ”๋ฅดํ…Œ์Šค ํ›„๋ณด๊ฐ€ ํ•˜์›์˜์› ๋‹น์„ ์— ์„ฑ๊ณตํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋น„๋กฏ, ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ตœ๋‹ค์˜ ์—ฌ์„ฑ, ์œ ์ƒ‰์ธ์ข…, ์„ฑ์†Œ์ˆ˜์ž ๋‹น์„ ์ž๋“ค์ด ํƒ„์ƒํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์Šคํ…Œ์ด์‹œ ์—์ด๋ธŒ๋Ÿผ์Šค ์กฐ์ง€์•„ ์ฃผ์ง€์‚ฌ ํ›„๋ณด, ๋ฒ ํ†  ์˜ค๋กœํฌ ํ…์‚ฌ์Šค ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ ์ƒ์›์˜์› ํ›„๋ณด ๋“ฑ ๊ณตํ™”๋‹น ํ…ƒ๋ฐญ ์ง€์—ญ์—์„œ ์ถœ๋งˆํ•œ ํ›„๋ณด๋“ค์ด ๋‹น์„ ์—๋Š” ์‹คํŒจํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ๊ธฐ๋Œ€ ์ด์ƒ์˜ ์„ ์ „์„ ๋ณด์—ฌ ๊ณตํ™”๋‹น์— ์ถฉ๊ฒฉ์„ ์ฃผ์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ 1์›” ๊ฐค๋Ÿฝ ์—ฌ๋ก ์กฐ์‚ฌ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ, ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ์ง€์ง€์ธต ์ค‘ ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ตœ๋‹ค์ธ 51%๊ฐ€ ์Šค์Šค๋กœ ์ง„๋ณด๋ผ๊ณ  ์ƒ๊ฐํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ฐํ˜€, ์ฒ˜์Œ ๊ฐค๋Ÿฝ์—์„œ ํ•ด๋‹น ์งˆ๋ฌธ์˜ ์—ฌ๋ก ์กฐ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์‹ค์‹œํ•œ ์ดํ›„ ์ตœ๊ณ ์น˜๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ 2016๋…„ ๋ฒ„๋‹ˆ ์ƒŒ๋”์Šค๊ฐ€ ๊ณต์•ฝํ•  ๋•Œ๋งŒ ํ•ด๋„ ๊ธ‰์ง„์ ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๋ง์„ ๋“ฃ๋˜ ์ „๊ตญ๋ฏผ ์˜๋ฃŒ๋ณดํ—˜ ์ œ๋„ ๋„์ž…, ๋Œ€ํ•™ ๋“ฑ๋ก๊ธˆ ๋ฌด๋ฃŒํ™”, ๋ถ€์ž ์ฆ์„ธ ๋“ฑ์˜ ์ •์ฑ…๋“ค์ด ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ์ง€์ง€์ธต ์‚ฌ์ด์—์„œ 7~80%๋ฅผ ์›ƒ๋„๋Š” ์••๋„์ ์ธ ์ง€์ง€๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋“œ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜, ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ์ง€์ง€์ž๋“ค์ด ์ง„๋ณด ์„ฑํ–ฅ์ด ๊ฐ•ํ•ด์ง„ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ„์„๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ๋‹น๊ถŒํŒŒ์˜ ์ค‘์ง„์ธ ๋‚ธ์‹œ ํŽ ๋กœ์‹œ ํ•˜์›์˜์žฅ์€ ๋‹น์ด ๋Œ€์„ธ๋ฅผ ๋”ฐ๋ผ ๋” ์ง„๋ณด์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐ”๋€Œ์–ด์•ผ ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒŒ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ƒ๋Š” ์งˆ์˜์— "(๋‚˜๋‚˜ ์˜ค์นด์‹œ์˜ค์ฝ”๋ฅดํ…Œ์Šค ์˜์›์˜) ์ง€์—ญ๊ตฌ๋Š” ๋ฌผ ์ปต์„ ๊ณต์ฒœํ•ด๋„ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์ด๊ธฐ๋งŒ ํ•˜๋ฉด ๋‹น์„ ๋˜๋Š” ๊ณณ๋“ค"์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์ง€์ ํ•˜๊ณ  "์šฐ๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ์ด๋ฒˆ ์ด์„ ์—์„œ ์Šน๋ฆฌํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์€ ์ค‘๋„, ์ฃผ๋ฅ˜ ํ›„๋ณด 43๋ช…์˜ ์„ ์ „ ๋•๋ถ„์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค"๊ณ  ๋งํ•ด ์˜จ๊ฑด ๋…ธ์„ ์„ ๊ณ ์ˆ˜ํ•  ๋œป์„ ๋ถ„๋ช…ํžˆ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฒฝ์„  ๊ตฌ๋„ 2019๋…„ ์ดˆ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์—˜๋ฆฌ์ž๋ฒ ์Šค ์›Œ๋Ÿฐ, ํ‚ค์–ด์Šคํ‹ด ์งˆ๋ฆฌ๋ธŒ๋žœ๋“œ, ์นด๋ฉ€๋ผ ํ•ด๋ฆฌ์Šค ๋“ฑ ์Šคํƒ€ ์ •์น˜์ธ๋“ค์˜ ์ถœ๋งˆ ์„ ์–ธ์ด ์ด์–ด์กŒ์œผ๋‚˜, ๊ฐ์ข… ์—ฌ๋ก ์กฐ์‚ฌ์—์„œ๋Š” ์ถœ๋งˆ ์„ ์–ธ์กฐ์ฐจ ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์€ ์กฐ ๋ฐ”์ด๋“  ์ „ ๋ถ€ํ†ต๋ น๊ณผ ๋ฒ„๋‹ˆ ์ƒŒ๋”์Šค ์ƒ์›์˜์›์ด ์–‘๊ฐ• ๊ตฌ๋„๋ฅผ ํ˜•์„ฑํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ”์ด๋“ ์€ ์˜ค๋ฐ”๋งˆ ์ •๋ถ€ 8๋…„ ๋™์•ˆ ๋ถ€ํ†ต๋ น์„ ์ง€๋‚ธ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ๊ณผ๊ฑฐ "ํ‘์ธ ํ•™์ƒ ๋ฐฑ์ธ ํ•™๊ต ์ž…ํ•™ ์ •์ฑ… ๊ฒฐ์‚ฌ ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ (์ดˆ์„  ์˜์›์ด๋˜ 1974๋…„ ๋‹น์‹œ)" ๋ฐœ์–ธ ๋“ฑ์˜ ๋…ผ๋ž€์—๋„ ๋ถˆ๊ตฌํ•˜๊ณ  ํ‘์ธ ์œ ๊ถŒ์ž๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ์••๋„์ ์ธ ์ง€์ง€๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์•˜์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์›๋กœ ์ค‘๋„ ์ •์น˜์ธ์œผ๋กœ์„œ ๋ฐฑ์ธ ๋ฐ ์ค‘๋„ ๊ณ„์—ด์—์„œ๋„ ์ƒ๋‹นํ•œ ์ง€์ง€๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ 3์›” CNN ์—ฌ๋ก ์กฐ์‚ฌ์—์„œ๋Š” ์นด๋ฉ€๋ผ ํ•ด๋ฆฌ์Šค ์ƒ์›์˜์›๊ณผ ๋ฒ ํ†  ์˜ค๋กœํฌ ์ „ ํ•˜์›์˜์›์ด ๋‘ ์ž๋ฆฟ์ˆ˜ ์ง€์ง€์œจ์„ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋‹น์ดˆ ๊ตฐ์†Œ ํ›„๋ณด๋กœ ๋ถ„๋ฅ˜๋˜๋˜ ํ”ผํŠธ ๋ถ€ํ‹ฐ์ง€์ง€ ์‚ฌ์šฐ์Šค๋ฒค๋“œ ์‹œ์žฅ๋„ 3์›” 11์ผ CNN์—์„œ ์ฃผ์ตœํ•œ ์œ ๊ถŒ์ž ๊ฐ„๋‹ดํšŒ ๋ฐฉ์†ก์— ์ถœ์—ฐํ•ด ์ง„์†”ํ•œ ์ด๋ฏธ์ง€๋กœ ํ™”์ œ๋ฅผ ๋Œ์—ˆ๊ณ , ๊ทธ ๋’ค ์ Š์€ ์ธต์„ ์ค‘์‹ฌ์œผ๋กœ ๊พธ์ค€ํžˆ ์ง€์ง€์„ธ๋ฅผ ๋ถˆ๋ ค๋‚˜๊ฐ€ ์‹œ๊ฐ„์ด ๊ฐˆ ์ˆ˜๋ก ์ฃผ์š” ํ›„๋ณด๋กœ ๋ถ„๋ฅ˜๋˜๊ธฐ์— ์ด๋ฅด๋ €๋‹ค. ์—˜๋ฆฌ์ž๋ฒ ์Šค ์›Œ๋Ÿฐ ์ƒ์›์˜์›์€ ๋ถ€์ž์„ธ ๋„์ž…, ํ•™์ž๊ธˆ ๋Œ€์ถœ ๊ฐ๋ฉด ๋“ฑ์„ ๊ณต์•ฝํ•˜๊ณ  ๊ณต์•ฝ์„ ๋’ท๋ฐ›์นจํ•  ์ž์„ธํ•œ ๊ณ„ํš์„ ๋‚ด๋†“์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ง€์ง€์œจ์„ ํšŒ๋ณตํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์นด๋ฉ€๋ผ ํ•ด๋ฆฌ์Šค ์ƒ์›์˜์›์€ ๋งˆ์ด์• ๋ฏธ์—์„œ ์—ด๋ฆฐ 1์ฐจ ํ† ๋ก ํšŒ์—์„œ ๋ฐ”์ด๋“  ์ „ ๋ถ€ํ†ต๋ น์˜ ํ‘์ธ ํ•™์ƒ ๋ฐฑ์ธ ํ•™๊ต ์ž…ํ•™ ์ง€์› ์ œ๋„ ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ ์ด๋ ฅ์„ ์ €๊ฒฉํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์ž ์‹œ ์ธ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๊ธ‰๋ถ€์ƒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ ์ค‘ํ›„๋ฐ˜์—๋Š” ๋ฐ”์ด๋“  ์ „ ๋ถ€ํ†ต๋ น๊ณผ ์›Œ๋Ÿฐ ์ƒ์›์˜์›, ์ƒŒ๋”์Šค ์ƒ์›์˜์› ๋“ฑ ์„ธ 70๋Œ€ ํ›„๋ณด๊ฐ€ 3๊ฐ• ๊ตฌ๋„๋ฅผ ํ˜•์„ฑํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ๋ถ€ํ‹ฐ์ง€์ง€ ์‹œ์žฅ๋„ ์ฒซ ๊ฒฝ์„ ์ง€์ธ ์•„์ด์˜ค์™€ ์ง€์—ญ ๋‹น์› ์—ฌ๋ก ์กฐ์‚ฌ์—์„œ 1์œ„๋ฅผ ๋‹ฌ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๋“ฑ ๋งŒ๋งŒ์น˜ ์•Š๊ฒŒ ๊ทธ ๋’ค๋ฅผ ๋”ฐ๋ž๋‹ค. ํ•œ๋•Œ ์ƒ์œ„๊ถŒ ํ›„๋ณด๋กœ ๋ถ„๋ฅ˜๋˜์—ˆ๋˜ ํ•ด๋ฆฌ์Šค๋‚˜ ์˜ค๋กœํฌ๋Š” ์ง€์ง€์œจ ํ•˜๋ฝ์„ ๋ฐ˜์ „์‹œํ‚ค์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜๊ณ  ๊ฒฝ์„  ์‹œ์ž‘๋„ ์ „์— ์‚ฌํ‡ดํ•˜๊ณ  ๋งˆ๋Š”๊ฐ€ ํ•˜๋ฉด, 2019๋…„ 11์›”์— ์ถœ๋งˆ๋ฅผ ์„ ์–ธํ•œ ๋งˆ์ดํด ๋ธ”๋ฃธ๋ฒ„๊ทธ ์ „ ๋‰ด์š• ์‹œ์žฅ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ๋’ค๋Šฆ๊ฒŒ ๊ฒฝ์„ ์— ๋›ฐ์–ด๋“œ๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๋„ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ›„๋ณด ์ตœ์ข… ํ›„๋ณด ๊ฒฝ์„  ์‹œ์ž‘ ์ดํ›„ ์‚ฌํ‡ด ํ›„๋ณด ๊ฒฝ์„  ์‹œ์ž‘ ์ด์ „ ์‚ฌํ‡ด ํ›„๋ณด ํ† ๋ก ํšŒ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์€ ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ตœ๋Œ€์˜ ํ›„๋ณด๊ตฐ์ด ๊ฒฝ์„ ์— ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๊ณ ๋ ค, ๊ธฐ์กด ๊ฒฝ์„  ํ›„๋ณด ํ† ๋ก ๋ณด๋‹ค ๊ทœ์ •์„ ์—„๊ฒฉํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ 2์›” 14์ผ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์€ ์ตœ๋Œ€ 20๋ช…๊นŒ์ง€๋งŒ ๊ฒฝ์„  ํ† ๋ก ํšŒ์— ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ตœ์†Œ 3๊ฐœ์˜ ์ „๊ตญ ๋‹จ์œ„ ์—ฌ๋ก ์กฐ์‚ฌ ํ˜น์€ ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ๊ฒฝ์„  ์ง€์—ญ 4๊ณณ ์—ฌ๋ก ์กฐ์‚ฌ์—์„œ 1% ์ด์ƒ์˜ ์ง€์ง€์œจ์„ ๋ฐ›๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ์ตœ์†Œ 20๊ฐœ ์ฃผ์—์„œ 6๋งŒ 5์ฒœ ๋ช…์˜ ํ›„์›์ž ๋ฐ 50๊ฐœ ์ฃผ์—์„œ 200๋ช…์˜ ํ›„์›์ž๋ฅผ ํ™•๋ณดํ•œ ํ›„๋ณด๋งŒ ์ดˆ์ฒญ๋  ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ฐœํ‘œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ 6์›” 1์ฐจ ํ† ๋ก ํšŒ์— ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•  ์ด 20๋ช…์˜ ํ›„๋ณด์ž๊ฐ€ ํ™•์ •๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ํ•˜๋ฃจ์— 10๋ช… ์”ฉ ์ดํ‹€์— ๊ฑธ์ณ 1์ฐจ ํ† ๋ก ํšŒ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐœ์ตœ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 7์›” 2์ฐจ ํ† ๋ก ํšŒ๋Š” 1์ฐจ ํ† ๋ก ํšŒ์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ๊ธฐ์ค€์œผ๋กœ ์ฐธ์—ฌ ํ›„๋ณด๋ฅผ ๊ฒฐ์ •ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ 2์ฐจ ํ† ๋ก ํšŒ์— ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•˜๋Š” ํ›„๋ณด๋“ค์˜ ๋ฉด๋ฉด์€ 1์ฐจ ํ† ๋ก ํšŒ์™€ ํฐ ์ฐจ์ด๊ฐ€ ์—†์—ˆ์œผ๋‚˜, 1์ฐจ ํ† ๋ก ํšŒ ๋•Œ ์ฐธ์—ฌํ–ˆ๋˜ ์—๋ฆญ ์Šค์›”์›ฐ ํ›„๋ณด๊ฐ€ ํ•˜์›์˜์› ์žฌ์„  ๋„์ „์œผ๋กœ ์„ ํšŒํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๋Œ€์„  ํ›„๋ณด๋ฅผ ์‚ฌํ‡ดํ•˜์—ฌ ์Šคํ‹ฐ๋ธŒ ๋ถˆ๋Ÿญ ํ›„๋ณด๊ฐ€ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์ด ํ† ๋ก ์— ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 9์›” 3์ฐจ ํ† ๋ก ํšŒ์—์„œ๋Š” ์—ฌ๋ก ์กฐ์‚ฌ ์ง€์ง€์œจ 2% ์ด์ƒ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜๊ณ , 130,000๋ช…์˜ ๊ฐœ์ธ ํ›„์›์ž๋“ค์„ ํ™•๋ณดํ•˜๋Š” ๋“ฑ ๋‘ ๊ฐ€์ง€์˜ ์กฐ๊ฑด์„ ๋ชจ๋‘ ์ถฉ์กฑํ•˜๋Š” ํ›„๋ณด๋“ค๋งŒ์ด ํ† ๋ก ํšŒ์— ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋„๋ก ๊ธฐ์ค€์ด ์ƒํ–ฅ ์กฐ์ •๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 10์›” 4์ฐจ ํ† ๋ก ํšŒ ์ฐธ์—ฌ ์ž๊ฒฉ์€ 3์ฐจ ํ† ๋ก ํšŒ์™€ ๋™์ผํ•œ ๊ธฐ์ค€์ด ์ ์šฉ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋‚˜, ์ ์šฉ ์—ฌ๋ก ์กฐ์‚ฌ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„์„ ๋Š˜๋ฆฐ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ 3์ฐจ ํ† ๋ก ํšŒ ๋•Œ๋ณด๋‹ค 2๋ช…์ด ๋งŽ์€ 12๋ช…์˜ ํ›„๋ณด๋“ค์ด ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ดํ‹€์— ๊ฑธ์ณ ์—ด๋ฆฐ 1์ฐจ ํ† ๋ก ํšŒ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ํžˆ์ŠคํŒจ๋‹‰ ์ด๋ฏผ์ž ๊ฐ€์ • ์ถœ์‹ ์˜ ํ›Œ๋ฆฌ์•ˆ ์นด์ŠคํŠธ๋กœ ํ›„๋ณด๋Š” ์ด๋ฏผ์ž ๋ฌธ์ œ ํ•ด๊ฒฐ์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ํ˜„์‹ค์ ์ด๊ณ  ๊ฑด์„ค์ ์ธ ๊ณต์•ฝ์„ ์ œ์‹œํ•ด ๋งค๋‹ˆํŽ˜์Šคํ†  ํ›„๋ณด์˜ ์ด๋ฏธ์ง€๋ฅผ ์–ป์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ฐธ์ „ ๊ตฐ์ธ ์ถœ์‹ ์˜ ํ„ธ์‹œ ๊ฐœ๋ฒ„๋“œ ํ›„๋ณด๋Š” ์•ˆ๋ณด ์ •์ฑ…์— ์ผ๊ฐ€๊ฒฌ์„ ๋ณด์—ฌ ์ผ์ „์˜ ์„ฑ์†Œ์ˆ˜์ž ํ˜์˜ค ๋ฐœ์–ธ ๋…ผ๋ž€์œผ๋กœ ๋‚˜๋น ์ง„ ์ด๋ฏธ์ง€๋ฅผ ํšŒ๋ณตํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ„์„๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ํ† ๋ก ํšŒ์˜ ํ•˜์ด๋ผ์ดํŠธ๋Š” ๋‘˜์งธ๋‚  ํ† ๋ก ์žฅ์—์„œ ์กฐ ๋ฐ”์ด๋“  ํ›„๋ณด์™€ ์นด๋ฉ€๋ผ ํ•ด๋ฆฌ์Šค ํ›„๋ณด ๊ฐ„์— ๋ฒŒ์–ด์ง„ ์„ค์ „์ด์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ํ•ด๋ฆฌ์Šค ํ›„๋ณด๋Š” "๋‚˜๋Š” ๋ฐฑ์ธ๊ณผ ํ‘์ธ์ด ๊ฐ™์€ ํ•™๊ต๋ฅผ ๋‹ค๋‹ˆ๊ฒŒ ๋œ 2๋…„์ฐจ์— ์ž…ํ•™ํ–ˆ๋‹ค"๋ฉฐ ๋ณธ์ธ์ด ํ•™๊ต์— ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐˆ ๋‹น์‹œ ๊ตญํšŒ์˜์›์œผ๋กœ์จ ํ‘์ธ ํ•™์ƒ๋“ค์„ ๋ฐฑ์ธ ํ•™๊ต์— ์ž…ํ•™์‹œ์ผœ์ฃผ๋Š” ์ •์ฑ…์— ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ฐ”์ด๋“  ํ›„๋ณด๋ฅผ ๋น„ํŒํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ฐ”์ด๋“  ํ›„๋ณด๋Š” ์ž์‹ ์€ ํ‘์ธ๋“ค์ด ๋ฐฑ์ธ ํ•™๊ต์— ์ž…ํ•™ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์— ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ฉฐ, ๋‹จ์ง€ ์ค‘์•™ ์ •๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ์•„๋‹Œ ์ง€๋ฐฉ ์ •๋ถ€์—์„œ ์ฒ˜๋ฆฌํ•  ์ผ์ด๋ผ ์ƒ๊ฐํ•˜์—ฌ ์ค‘์•™ ์ •๋ถ€ ์ฐจ์›์—์„œ ๊ฐœ์ž…ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์— ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ ๋ฟ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ฐ˜๋ก ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ณผ์ •์—์„œ ๋ฐ”์ด๋“ ย ํ›„๋ณด๊ฐ€ ์–ธ์„ฑ์„ ๋†’์—ฌ ๋ถ„์œ„๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ์ผ์ˆœ ํ—˜์•…ํ•ด์ง€๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํ•œ๋™์•ˆ ์—ฌ๋ก ์กฐ์‚ฌ์—์„œ ์„ ๋‘๊ถŒ์œผ๋กœ ํ™•์‹คํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์น˜๊ณ  ๋‚˜๊ฐ€์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜๋˜ ํ•ด๋ฆฌ์Šค ํ›„๋ณด๋Š” ์ด ํ† ๋ก ์„ ๊ณ„๊ธฐ๋กœ ๋ช…์‹ค์ƒ๋ถ€ํ•œ ๋ฉ”์ด์ € ํ›„๋ณด๋กœ ์ž๋ฆฌ์žก๊ฒŒ ๋œ ๋ฐ˜๋ฉด, ๋ฐ”์ด๋“  ํ›„๋ณด์˜ ์ง€์ง€์œจ์€ ์ฃผ์ถคํ•˜๋Š” ๋ชจ์Šต์„ ๋ณด์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด๊ฐ™์ด ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ํ† ๋ก ํšŒ์—์„œ๋Š” ๋ฐ”์ด๋“  ํ›„๋ณด์—๊ฒŒ ๋ชจ๋“  ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์ด ์ง‘์ค‘๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋‚˜, 4์ฐจ ํ† ๋ก ํšŒ์—์„œ๋Š” ๊ทธ ์‚ฌ์ด ์ง€์ง€์œจ์ด ๋ฌด์„ญ๊ฒŒ ๋ถˆ์–ด๋‚œ ์›Œ๋Ÿฐ ํ›„๋ณด๊ฐ€ ์ง‘์ค‘ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์„ ๋ฐ›๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์—ฌ๋ก  ์กฐ์‚ฌ ๋…ผ๋ž€ ์กฐ ๋ฐ”์ด๋“ ์˜ ๋ถ€์ ์ ˆ ์Šคํ‚จ์‹ญ ๋…ผ๋ž€ 2019๋…„ 3์›” ๋ง, ๋ฐ”์ด๋“ ์€ ์Šคํ…Œ์ด์‹œ ์—์ด๋ธŒ๋Ÿผ์Šค ์ „ ์กฐ์ง€์•„ ์ฃผ์˜ํšŒ ํ•˜์›์˜์›์„ ๋Ÿฌ๋‹๋ฉ”์ดํŠธ๋กœ ๊ณ ๋ ค, ์ ‘์ด‰ํ•˜๋Š” ๋“ฑ ํ™œ๋ฐœํ•œ ์ถœ๋งˆ ์ค€๋น„๋ฅผ ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋˜ 3์›” 29์ผ, ๋ฃจ์‹œ ํ”Œ๋กœ๋ ˆ์Šค ์ „ ๋„ค๋ฐ”๋‹ค ์ฃผ์˜ํšŒ ํ•˜์›์˜์›์ด ๋ฐ”์ด๋“ ์ด ์ž์‹ ์„ ๋ถ€์ ์ ˆํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋งŒ์ง„ ์ ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ•ด ํŒŒ๋ฌธ์ด ๋ถˆ๊ฑฐ์กŒ๋‹ค. ํ”Œ๋กœ๋ Œ์Šค๋Š” 2014๋…„ ๋ฐ”์ด๋“ ์ด ๋‹น์‹œ ๋„ค๋ฐ”๋‹ค ์ฃผ ๋ถ€์ง€์‚ฌ ํ›„๋ณด์˜€๋˜ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์œ ์„ธ๋ฅผ ์ง€์›ํ•˜๋Ÿฌ ์™”์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋‹จ์ƒ ์œ„์— ์˜ค๋ฅด๊ธฐ ์ „์— ์ž์‹ ์˜ ๋‘ ์–ด๊นจ๋ฅผ ์žก๋”๋‹ˆ ๋จธ๋ฆฌ์นด๋ฝ ๋ƒ„์ƒˆ๋ฅผ ๋งก๊ณ  ๋’คํ†ต์ˆ˜์— ์ž…์„ ๋งž์ท„๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด์–ด์„œ 4์›” 1์ผ์—๋Š” ๋˜ ํ•œ ๋ช…์˜ ์—ฌ์„ฑ์ด ๋น„์Šทํ•œ ๋‚ด์šฉ์„ ํญ๋กœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‘๋ฒˆ์งธ ์—ฌ์„ฑ์€ ์ง ํ•˜์ž„์Šค ์ฝ”๋„คํ‹ฐ์ปท ์ฃผ ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ ํ•˜์›์˜์› ์˜์›์‹ค์—์„œ ๋ณด์ขŒ๊ด€์„ ์ง€๋‚ธ ์—์ด๋ฏธ ๋ผํฌ์Šค๋ผ๋Š” ์—ฌ์„ฑ์œผ๋กœ, ๋ผํฌ์Šค๋Š” ๋ฐ”์ด๋“ ์ด 2009๋…„ ํ•˜์ž„์Šค ์˜์›์˜ ํ›„์› ํ–‰์‚ฌ์— ์ฐธ์„ํ–ˆ์„ ๋•Œ ์ž์‹ ์—๊ฒŒ ๋‹ค๊ฐ€์˜ค๋”๋‹ˆ ๋‘ ์†์œผ๋กœ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ๋ชฉ์„ ๋ถ™์žก๊ณ  ์ฝ”๋ฅผ ๋ถ€๋ฒผ๋Œ”๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ”์ด๋“ ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ๋น„์Šทํ•œ ์ฃผ์žฅ์„ ํ•˜๊ณ  ๋‚˜์˜จ ์—ฌ์„ฑ๋“ค์€ ์•ž์„  ๋‘ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์„ ํฌํ•จํ•ด 7๋ช…์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ”์ด๋“ ์€ ์ž์‹ ์€ ๊ฒฐ๋‹จ์ฝ” ์„ฑ์ ์ธ ์˜๋„๋ฅผ ํ’ˆ์€ ์ ์ด ์—†๋‹ค๊ณ  ๊ฐ•์กฐํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ๋„, ์ž์‹  ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๋ถˆ์พŒ๊ฐ์„ ๋Š๋‚€ ์—ฌ์„ฑ๋“ค์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค๋ฉด ์‚ฌ๊ณผํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์„ฑ๋ช…์„ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‚ธ์‹œ ํŽ ๋กœ์‹œ ํ•˜์›์˜์žฅ, ๋‹ค์ด์•ค ํŒŒ์ธ์Šคํƒ€์ธ ์ƒ์›์˜์› ๋“ฑ ๋ฐ”์ด๋“ ๊ณผ ๊ฐœ์ธ์ ์ธ ์นœ๋ถ„์ด ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ์ฃผ๋ฅ˜ ๊ณ„์—ด ์ธ์‚ฌ๋“ค์€ "๊ทธ๊ฑด (์„ฑ์ ์ธ ์˜๋ฏธ๊ฐ€ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ผ) ๊ทธ์ € ๋ฐ”์ด๋“ ์ด ์ •์ด ๋งŽ์€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์ด๋ผ ํ•˜๋Š” ํŠน์œ ์˜ ํ–‰๋™"์ด๋ฉฐ, ์ž์‹ ๋“ค์ด ์•„๋Š” ๋ฐ”์ด๋“ ์€ "์ง„์ • ๋”ฐ๋œปํ•˜๊ณ  ์ข‹์€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ"์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๋ฐ”์ด๋“ ์„ ๋ณ€ํ˜ธํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ๋‚ด ์—ฌ์„ฑ ๋‹จ์ฒด, ์‚ฌํšŒ ๋‹จ์ฒด ๋“ฑ์—์„œ๋Š” ์‹œ๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ๋ณ€ํ•œ ๋งŒํผ ์ œ๊ธฐ๋œ ์˜ํ˜น๋“ค์„ ๊ทธ๋ƒฅ ๋„˜๊ฒจ์„œ๋Š” ์•ˆ ๋œ๋‹ค๋ฉฐ ์ฒ ์ €ํ•œ ์ง„์ƒ ๊ทœ๋ช…์„ ์š”๊ตฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ๋ฐ–์—๋„ ๋ฐ”์ด๋“  ํ›„๋ณด๋Š” ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์œ ์„ธ ์ค‘ ๊ณผ๊ฑฐ ์ž์‹ ์ด ์ธ์ข… ์ฐจ๋ณ„ ์ฐฌ์„ฑ๋ก ์ž ๊ตญํšŒ์˜์›๋“ค๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์ผํ•œ ๊ฒฝํ—˜์„ ์ž๋ž‘์Šค๋Ÿฝ๊ฒŒ ์–˜๊ธฐํ•˜๋ฉฐ "๊ทธ๋•Œ๋Š” (์ •์น˜๊ฐ€) ์‹ ์‚ฌ์ ์ด์—ˆ๊ณ  ๋ญ”๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. ์ƒ๊ฐ์€ ๋‹ฌ๋ž์–ด๋„ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์ผ์„ ํ•ด์„œ ๋ญ”๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ํ•ด๋ƒˆ๋‹ค"๊ณ  ๋ฐœ์–ธํ•ด ์—ฌ๋ก ์˜ ๋ญ‡๋งค๋ฅผ ๋งž๋Š” ๋“ฑ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๋ฒˆ ๋…ผ๋ž€์˜ ์ค‘์‹ฌ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฒ„๋‹ˆ ์ƒŒ๋”์Šค์˜ ์žฌ์‚ฐ ๊ณต๊ฐœ ๋…ผ๋ž€ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋Œ€์„  ์ถœ๋งˆ์ž๋“ค์˜ ๊ด€๋ก€๋Œ€๋กœ ๋ฒ„๋‹ˆ ์ƒŒ๋”์Šค๋Š” ์ง€๋‚œ 10๋…„ ๊ฐ„์˜ ์„ธ๊ธˆ ๋ณด๊ณ ๋ฅผ ๊ณต๊ฐœํ•˜์˜€๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ƒŒ๋”์Šค์˜ ์žฌ์‚ฐ์ด 2016๋…„ ๋Œ€์„  ๋•Œ์™€ ๋น„๊ตํ•ด ํ™•์—ฐํžˆ ๋Š˜์–ด, ์ž์‚ฐ์ด 200๋งŒ ๋ถˆ์ด ๋„˜๋Š” ์ด๋ฅธ๋ฐ” ๋ฐฑ๋งŒ์žฅ์ž๊ฐ€ ๋œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ํ™•์ธ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2016๋…„ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ๊ฒฝ์„ ์— ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•œ ๋’ค๋กœ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ์‚ฌํšŒ์ฃผ์˜ ์ธ์‚ฌ๋กœ ๋– ์˜ค๋ฅธ ์ƒŒ๋”์Šค๋Š” ์ดํ›„ "์šฐ๋ฆฌ์˜ ํ˜๋ช… (Our Revolution)", "์•ž์œผ๋กœ ์šฐ๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ๋‚˜์•„๊ฐ€์•ผ ํ•  ๊ธธ (Where We Go From Here)" ๋“ฑ์˜ ์ €์„œ๋ฅผ ์ถœํŒํ•˜์˜€๊ณ , ์ด๋“ค์ด ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋ฒ ์ŠคํŠธ์…€๋Ÿฌ๊ฐ€ ๋˜์–ด ์–ด๋งˆ์–ด๋งˆํ•œ ์ธ์„ธ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์•„ ์ด๊ฐ™์ด ์žฌ์‚ฐ์ด ๋ถˆ์–ด๋‚œ ๊ฒƒ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. "์–ต๋งŒ์žฅ์ž๋“ค ๋ช‡ ๋ช…์ด ์ „์ฒด ์ค‘์‚ฐ์ธต, ๋…ธ๋™ ๊ณ„์ธต์„ ๋“ฑ์ณ๋จน๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ" (2015๋…„ ์• ๋ฆฌ์กฐ๋‚˜ ํ”ผ๋‹‰์Šค ์œ ์„ธ) ๋“ฑ ์ƒ๋ฅ˜์ธต์„ ๊ณต๊ฒฉํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐœ์–ธ ๋ฐ ์ •์ฑ… ๊ธฐ์กฐ๋กœ ์œ ๋ช…ํ•œ ์ƒŒ๋”์Šค์˜ ์ด๊ฐ™์€ ์žฌ์‚ฐ ์ƒํ™ฉ์— ์ผ๊ฐ์—์„œ๋Š” ์ƒŒ๋”์Šค๊ฐ€ ํƒ€์ธ์˜ ์žฌ์‚ฐ ์ฆ์‹์€ ๊ณต๊ฒฉํ•ด๋†“๊ณ  ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์žฌ์‚ฐ ์ฆ์‹์—๋Š” ๊ด€๋Œ€ํ•˜๋‹ค๋Š” ๋น„ํŒ์ด ์ œ๊ธฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ƒŒ๋”์Šค๋Š” "๋ˆ„๊ตฌ๋“ ์ง€ ๋ฒ ์ŠคํŠธ์…€๋Ÿฌ ์ž‘๊ฐ€๊ฐ€ ๋˜๋ฉด ๋ฐฑ๋งŒ๋ถˆ์„ ๋ฒŒ๊ฒŒ ๋˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ"์ด๋ผ๋ฉฐ, ์ž์‹ ์€ ๋‚ด์•ผ ํ•  ์„ธ๊ธˆ์„ ๋ชจ๋‘ ์„ฑ์‹คํžˆ ๋ƒˆ์Œ์œผ๋กœ ์ž์‹ ์ด ๋น„ํŒํ•ด์˜จ ๋…ธ๋™์ž ์ฐฉ์ทจ, ๊ต๋ฌ˜ํ•œ ์„ธ๊ธˆ ํšŒํ”ผ ๋“ฑ์œผ๋กœ ์žฌ์‚ฐ์„ ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๋ถ€์ž๋“ค๊ณผ๋Š” ๋‹ค๋ฅด๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ฐ˜๋ฐ•ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋˜ํ•œ ๋ฐฑ๋งŒ์žฅ์ž๊ฐ€ ์•„๋‹ˆ์—ˆ๋˜ 2016๋…„๊ณผ ๋‹ค๋ฆ„์—†์ด ๋ถ€์ž ๋ฐ ๋Œ€๊ธฐ์—… ๊ณผ์„ธ๋ฅผ ๊ณต์•ฝํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๋ณ€์ ˆ ๋…ผ๋ž€์„ ์ข…์‹์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. ํญ์Šค ๋‰ด์Šค ์ถœ์—ฐ ๋ฌธ์ œ 2019๋…„ 3์›”, ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ์ „๊ตญ์œ„๋Š” 2020๋…„ ๋Œ€์„  ๊ฒฝ์„  ํ›„๋ณด ํ† ๋ก ํšŒ ๋ฐฉ์†ก์‚ฌ๋กœ ํญ์Šค ๋‰ด์Šค๋Š” ๋ฌด์กฐ๊ฑด ๋ฐฐ์ œํ•  ๊ฒƒ์„ ์„ ์–ธํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์  ๋ณด์ˆ˜ ์ผ€์ด๋ธ” ์ฑ„๋„์ธ ํญ์Šค ๋‰ด์Šค๋Š” ๊ทธ ๋™์•ˆ ๊ณตํ™”๋‹น์— ์šฐํ˜ธ์ ์ด๊ณ  ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์— ๋น„ํŒ์ ์ธ ํŽธํ–ฅ์ ์ธ ๋ณด๋„์™€ ์ธ์ข…์ฐจ๋ณ„ ๋ฐ ์„ฑ์ฐจ๋ณ„, ์„ฑ์†Œ์ˆ˜์ž ์ฐจ๋ณ„ ๋“ฑ์„ ์˜นํ˜ธํ•˜๋Š” ๋‚ด์šฉ์˜ ๋ฐฉ์†ก์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ๊ทน์šฐ ์–ธ๋ก ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๋น„ํŒ์„ ๋ฐ›์•„์™”๋‹ค. ์ด๊ฐ™์€ ์ด์œ ๋กœ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ์ „๊ตญ์œ„๋Š” ํญ์Šค ๋‰ด์Šค๋ฅผ ์ „๋ฉด ๋ณด์ด์ฝงํ•˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ๊ฒฐ์ •ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ๋ฒ„๋‹ˆ ์ƒŒ๋”์Šค ํ›„๋ณด๊ฐ€ ํญ์Šค ๋‰ด์Šค์—์„œ ์ฃผ์ตœํ•œ ์œ ๊ถŒ์ž ๊ฐ„๋‹ดํšŒ ๋ฐฉ์†ก์— ์ถœ์—ฐํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์„ ํ•„๋‘๋กœ, ์—์ด๋ฏธ ํด๋กœ๋ฒ„์ƒค ํ›„๋ณด ํ›„๋ณด, ํ”ผํŠธ ๋ถ€ํ‹ฐ์ง€์ง€ ํ›„๋ณด, ํ‚ค์–ด์Šคํ‹ด ์งˆ๋ฆฌ๋ธŒ๋žœ๋“œ ํ›„๋ณด ๋“ฑ์ด ๊ฐ™์€ ํฌ๋งท์œผ๋กœ ํญ์Šค ๋‰ด์Šค์— ์ถœ์—ฐํ•ด ํ™”์ œ๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ถ€ํ‹ฐ์ง€์ง€ ํ›„๋ณด๋Š” "๋งŒ์•ฝ ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ๋‹น์ด ํŠน์ •ํ•œ ๊ตญ๋ฏผ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ๋‹ค๊ฐ€๊ฐ€์ง€ ์•Š์•„์„œ ๊ทธ๋“ค์ด ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ๋‹น์˜ ๋ฉ”์‹œ์ง€๋ฅผ ๋“ฃ์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค๋ฉด ๊ทธ๊ฑด ๊ทธ๋“ค์˜ ์ž˜๋ชป์ด ์•„๋‹ˆ์ง€ ์•Š๋Š๋ƒ"๋ฉฐ "ํญ์Šค ๋‰ด์Šค ์‹œ์ •์ฐจ๋“ค์€ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์ด ๊ทธ ๋™์•ˆ ๋งŒ๋‚˜์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋˜ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์ด๋‹ค, ๊ทธ๋“ค์„ ์žก๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๊ฐ€์น˜๋ฅผ ๋ฒ„๋ ค์„œ๋Š” ์•ˆ ๋˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ •๋ง ๋ชจ๋“  ๊ตญ๋ฏผ๋“ค์˜ ์ง€์ง€๋ฅผ ์–ป๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด์„  ๋…ธ๋ ฅ์„ ํ•ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค"๊ณ  ๋งํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์ถœ์—ฐ ์ด์œ ๋ฅผ ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. ์ƒŒ๋”์Šค-์›Œ๋Ÿฐ ๊ฐ„ "์—ฌ์„ฑ ํ„ํ›ผ ๋ฐœ์–ธ" ์ง„์‹ค ๊ณต๋ฐฉ 2020๋…„ 1์›”, ์—˜๋ฆฌ์ž๋ฒ ์Šค ์›Œ๋Ÿฐ ํ›„๋ณด ์ธก์€ ๋ฒ„๋‹ˆ ์ƒŒ๋”์Šค ํ›„๋ณด๊ฐ€ 2018๋…„ ์ž์‹ ๊ณผ ์‚ฌ์ ์ธ ์ž๋ฆฌ์—์„œ ๋Œ€ํ™”ํ•˜๋˜ ์ค‘ "์—ฌ์ž๋Š” ๋Œ€์„ ์—์„œ ์Šน๋ฆฌํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋‹ค"๊ณ  ๋ฐœ์–ธํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ƒŒ๋”์Šค ํ›„๋ณด๋Š” ์ž์‹ ์ด 80๋…„๋Œ€์— ํ•œ ๋ฐฉ์†ก์—์„œ "์—ฌ์ž๋„ ๋Œ€์„ ์—์„œ ์Šน๋ฆฌํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ณธ๋‹ค"๊ณ  ๋ฐœ์–ธํ•œ ์˜์ƒ์„ ์ฐพ์•„๋‚ด๋Š” ๋“ฑ ์ ๊ทน์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐ˜๋ฐ•ํ•˜๊ณ , ์ž์‹ ์€ ๊ฒฐ์ฝ” ์—ฌ์„ฑ์˜ ๋Œ€์„  ๋‹น์„  ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ์„ฑ์„ ์˜์‹ฌํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐœ์–ธ์„ ํ•œ ์ ์ด ์—†๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ฒฝ์„  ์•„์ด์˜ค์™€ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ์•„์ด์˜ค์™€ ๊ฒฝ์„ ์€ 2020๋…„ 2์›” 3์ผ ์ฝ”์ปค์Šค ๋ฐฉ์‹์œผ๋กœ ์‹ค์‹œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ์ฝ”์ปค์Šค ์ œ๋„๋Š” ๊ทธ ์ ˆ์ฐจ๊ฐ€ ๋ณต์žกํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์œ ๋ช…ํ•œ๋ฐ, ์šฐ์„  1์ฐจ ํˆฌํ‘œ๋ฅผ ํ•œ ๋‹ค์Œ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ตฌ๋ณ„๋กœ 15% ๋ฏธ๋งŒ ๋“ํ‘œ ํ›„๋ณด๋ฅผ ์ปท์˜คํ”„, ๊ทธ ๋’ค ๋‚จ์€ ํ›„๋ณด๋“ค ์ค‘์—์„œ 2์ฐจ ํˆฌํ‘œ๋ฅผ ์‹ค์‹œํ•˜๋Š” ํˆฌํ‘œ ๋ฐฉ์‹์ด ํŠน์ดํ•˜๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๋ฟ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ผ ์ด๊ฐ™์€ ํˆฌํ‘œ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ตฌ๋ณ„๋กœ ์ง‘๊ณ„ํ•œ ๋’ค ๊ฐ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ตฌ์— ํ• ๋‹น๋œ SDE(State Delegate Equivalence; ์ฃผ ๋Œ€์˜์› ํ™˜์‚ฐ์น˜)๋ฅผ ํ›„๋ณด๋ณ„๋กœ ๋ถ„๋ฐฐํ•˜๊ณ  ํ›„๋ณด๋ณ„ SDE ๋น„์œจ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•ด ํ›„๋ณด๋ณ„ ์ „๋‹น๋Œ€ํšŒ ๋Œ€์˜์› ์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ํ™•์ •ํ•˜๋Š” ๋Œ€์˜์› ๋ถ„๋ฐฐ ๋ฐฉ์‹๋„ ๋งค์šฐ ํŠน์ดํ•˜๋‹ค. ์ด์ „๊นŒ์ง€๋งŒ ํ•ด๋„ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ์•„์ด์˜ค์™€์ฃผ๋‹น์€ SDE ๋ฐฐ๋ถ„ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋งŒ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ•˜๊ณ  ์œ ๊ถŒ์ž๋“ค์˜ ํˆฌํ‘œ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋Š” ๊ณต๊ฐœํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์•„์™”๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด๋ฒˆ ๊ฒฝ์„ ์—์„œ๋Š” 1, 2์ฐจ ํˆฌํ‘œ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋„ ๊ณต๊ฐœํ•˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ฐœํ‘œ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ์ง‘๊ณ„ ์–ดํ”Œ๋ฆฌ์ผ€์ด์…˜์ด ๊ฒฝ์„  ๋‹น์ผ ์˜ค์ž‘๋™ํ•ด ๊ฐœํ‘œ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ์ง‘๊ณ„ ๋ฐ ๋ฐœํ‘œ๊ฐ€ ๋Šฆ์–ด์ง„ ๋์— ๋ฐœํ‘œ๋œ ๊ฒฝ์„  ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ๋ฒ„๋‹ˆ ์ƒŒ๋”์Šค ํ›„๋ณด๊ฐ€ ๋“ํ‘œ์œจ 1์œ„๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜, ๋Œ€์˜์›์€ ํ”ผํŠธ ๋ถ€ํ‹ฐ์ง€์ง€ ํ›„๋ณด๊ฐ€ ๋” ๋งŽ์ด ๊ฐ€์ ธ๊ฐ€๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‰ดํ–„ํ”„์…” ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ๋‰ดํ–„ํ”„์…” ๊ฒฝ์„ ์€ 2020๋…„ 2์›” 11์ผ ํ”„๋ผ์ด๋จธ๋ฆฌ ๋ฐฉ์‹์œผ๋กœ ์‹ค์‹œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ์„ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์˜ˆ์ƒ๋Œ€๋กœ ์ƒŒ๋”์Šค ํ›„๋ณด์™€ ๋ถ€ํ‹ฐ์ง€์ง€ ํ›„๋ณด๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ๊ฐ 1์œ„์™€ 2์œ„๋ฅผ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, 3์œ„๋Š” ๋œป๋ฐ–์—๋„ ํด๋กœ๋ฒ„์ƒค ํ›„๋ณด๊ฐ€ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์›Œ๋Ÿฐ ํ›„๋ณด์™€ ๋ฐ”์ด๋“  ํ›„๋ณด๋Š” ๊ฐ๊ฐ 4์œ„์™€ 5์œ„๋กœ ์ฐธํŒจํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋‘˜์€ 15% ๋ฏธ๋งŒ์„ ๋“ํ‘œํ•ด ๋Œ€์˜์› ํš๋“ ์กฐ๊ฑด๋„ ์ถฉ์กฑํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋„ค๋ฐ”๋‹ค ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ๋„ค๋ฐ”๋‹ค ๊ฒฝ์„ ์€ 2020๋…„ 2์›” 22์ผ ์ฝ”์ปค์Šค ๋ฐฉ์‹์œผ๋กœ ์‹ค์‹œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1์ฐจ ํˆฌํ‘œ์—์„œ 15% ์ด์ƒ์˜ ๋“ํ‘œ๋ฅผ ํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•œ ํ›„๋ณด๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์„ ์‹œ ๊ทธ ํ›„๋ณด์˜ ์ง€์ง€์ž๋“ค์€ 15% ์ด์ƒ ๋“ํ‘œ ํ›„๋ณด๋“ค ์ค‘์—์„œ 2์ฐจ ํˆฌํ‘œ๋ฅผ ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ด๊ฐ™์€ ์ตœ์ข… ํˆฌํ‘œ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ํ† ๋Œ€๋กœ ํˆฌํ‘œ๊ตฌ๋ณ„ ํ›„๋ณด๋ณ„ CCD (County Convention Delegates; ์นด์šดํ‹ฐ๋‹น๋Œ€ํšŒ ๋Œ€์˜์› ์ˆ˜)๋ฅผ ๊ณ„์‚ฐํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌ์šฐ์Šค์บ๋กค๋ผ์ด๋‚˜ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ์‚ฌ์šฐ์Šค์บ๋กค๋ผ์ด๋‚˜ ๊ฒฝ์„ ์€ 2020๋…„ 2์›” 29์ผ ํ”„๋ผ์ด๋จธ๋ฆฌ ๋ฐฉ์‹์œผ๋กœ ์‹ค์‹œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ๋ฐ”์ด๋“ ๊ณผ ์ƒŒ๋”์Šค๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ๊ฐ 1์œ„์™€ 2์œ„๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•ด ์ „๋Œ€ ๋Œ€์˜์›์„ ๋ฐฐ๋ถ„ ๋ฐ›๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ ์™ธ ํ›„๋ณด๋“ค์€ ๋ชจ๋‘ ์ฃผ ์ „์ฒด๋Š” ๋ฌผ๋ก  ๋ชจ๋“  ํ•˜์›์˜์› ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ตฌ์—์„œ 15% ๋ด‰์‡„ ์กฐํ•ญ์— ๋ฏธ๋‹ฌํ•˜์—ฌ ๋Œ€์˜์›์„ ์–ป์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€์˜์› ํ™•๋ณด ํ˜„ํ™ฉ ์ „๋‹น๋Œ€ํšŒ ์ œ48์ฐจ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ํ›„๋ณด ์„ ์ถœ ์ „๋‹น๋Œ€ํšŒ๋Š” ์œ„์Šค์ฝ˜์‹  ์ฃผ ๋ฐ€์›Œํ‚ค ์‹œ์—์„œ 2020๋…„ 7์›” 13์ผ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 16์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋‚˜ํ˜ ๊ฐ„ ์น˜๋Ÿฌ์งˆ ์˜ˆ์ •์ด๋‹ค. ์œ„์Šค์ฝ˜์‹ ์ฃผ๋Š” 1988๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2012๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ์ด 7๋ฒˆ์˜ ๋Œ€์„ ์—์„œ ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์ด ์Šน๋ฆฌํ–ˆ๋˜ ์ง€์—ญ์œผ๋กœ, ์ง€๋‚œ ๋Œ€์„  ๋•Œ ํž๋Ÿฌ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์ด ๊ณณ์—์„œ ๋‹น์—ฐํžˆ ์Šน๋ฆฌํ•  ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒ๊ฐํ•˜๊ณ  ๋‹จ ํ•œ ๋ฒˆ๋„ ์œ ์„ธ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ์•Š์•˜์„ ์ •๋„์˜€์œผ๋‚˜, 2016๋…„ ๋Œ€์„  ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ํŠธ๋Ÿผํ”„๊ฐ€ ๊ณตํ™”๋‹น ํ›„๋ณด๋กœ๋Š” 1984๋…„ ๋ ˆ์ด๊ฑด ์ดํ›„ ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ์œ„์Šค์ฝ˜์‹ ์—์„œ ์Šน๋ฆฌํ•ด ์ถฉ๊ฒฉ์„ ์ฃผ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ๋‚ด๋ถ€์—์„œ๋Š” ๋ฏธ๋Œ€๋ฅ™ ์ค‘์„œ๋ถ€ ์œ ๊ถŒ์ž๋“ค์˜ ์ง€์ง€๋ฅผ ๋ณต๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ์ฐจ๊ธฐ ์„ ๊ฑฐ์—์„œ์˜ ์Šน๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ ˆ์‹คํ•˜๋‹ค๋Š” ์—ฌ๋ก ์ด ํ˜•์„ฑ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ์ „๊ตญ์œ„๊ฐ€ ๊ทธ ๋ฐ”๋กœ ๋‹ค์Œ ๋Œ€์„  ํ›„๋ณด ์„ ์ถœ ๋Œ€ํšŒ๋ฅผ ์œ„์Šค์ฝ˜์‹ ์—์„œ ๊ฐœ์ตœํ•˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ์„ ์ •ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ๋„ ์ด๋Ÿฐ ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฝ์—์„œ ์ด๋ค„์ง„ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ„์„๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ 2020๋…„ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ์„ ๊ฑฐ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020%20Democratic%20Party%20presidential%20primaries
2020 Democratic Party presidential primaries
Presidential primaries and caucuses were organized by the Democratic Party to select the 3,979 pledged delegates to the 2020 Democratic National Convention held on August 17โ€“20 to determine the party's nominee for president in the 2020 United States presidential election. The elections took place in all 50 U.S. states, the District of Columbia, five U.S. territories, and through Democrats Abroad, and occurred between February 3 and August 11. A total of 29 major candidates declared their candidacies for the primaries, the largest field of presidential primary candidates for any American political party since the modern primaries began in 1972, exceeding the field of 17 major candidates in the 2016 Republican Party presidential primaries. Former Vice President Joe Biden led polls throughout 2019, with the exception of a brief period in October when Senator Elizabeth Warren experienced a surge in support. 18 of the 29 declared candidates withdrew before the formal beginning of the primary due to low polling, fundraising, and media coverage. The first primary was marred by controversy, as technical issues with vote reporting resulted in a three-day delay in vote counting in the Iowa caucus, as well as subsequent recounts. The certified results of the caucus eventually showed Mayor Pete Buttigieg winning the most delegates, while Senator Bernie Sanders won the popular vote in the state. Sanders then went on to win the New Hampshire primary in a narrow victory over Buttigieg before handily winning the Nevada caucus, cementing his status as the front-runner for the nomination. Biden, whose campaign fortunes had suffered from losses in Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada, made a comeback by overwhelmingly winning the South Carolina primary, motivated by strong support from African American voters, an endorsement from South Carolina U.S. Representative Jim Clyburn, as well as Democratic establishment concerns about nominating Sanders. After Biden won South Carolina, and one day before the Super Tuesday primaries, several moderate candidates dropped out of the race and endorsed Biden in what was viewed as a consolidation of the party's moderate wing. Prior to the announcement, polling saw Sanders leading with a plurality in most Super Tuesday states. Biden then went on to win 10 out of 15 contests on Super Tuesday, beating back challenges from Sanders, Warren, and former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, solidifying his lead. On April 8, Biden became the presumptive nominee after Sanders, the only other candidate remaining, withdrew from the race. In early June, Biden passed the threshold of 1,991 delegates to win the nomination. In total, seven candidates received pledged delegates: Biden, Sanders, Warren, Bloomberg, Buttigieg, Senator Amy Klobuchar and U.S. Representative Tulsi Gabbard. On August 11, Biden announced that former presidential candidate Senator Kamala Harris would be his running mate. Biden and Harris were officially nominated for president and vice president by delegates at the Democratic National Convention on August 18 and 19. Biden and Harris went on to win the presidency and vice presidency in the general election on November 3, defeating the incumbents President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence. Biden became the first Democratic candidate since Bill Clinton, and the third ever Democratic candidate, to win the nomination without carrying either Iowa or New Hampshire, the first two states on the primary/caucus calendar. The primaries were initially scheduled to go through June 6. However, the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States caused a number of states to shift their primaries to later in the year. Background After Hillary Clinton's loss in the previous election, many felt the Democratic Party lacked a clear leading figure. Divisions remained in the party following the 2016 primaries, which pitted Clinton against Bernie Sanders. Between the 2016 election and the 2018 midterm elections, Senate Democrats generally shifted to the political left in relation to college tuition, healthcare, and immigration. The 2018 elections saw the Democratic Party regain the House of Representatives for the first time in eight years, picking up seats in both urban and suburban districts. Reforms since 2016 On August 25, 2018, the Democratic National Committee (DNC) members passed reforms to the Democratic Party's primary process in order to increase participation and ensure transparency. State parties are encouraged to use a government-run primary whenever available and increase the accessibility of their primary through same-day or automatic registration and same-day party switching. Caucuses are required to have absentee voting, or to otherwise allow those who cannot participate in person to be included. Independent of the results of the primaries and caucuses, the Democratic Party, from its group of party leaders and elected officials, also appointed 771 unpledged delegates (superdelegates) to participate in its national convention. In contrast to all previous election cycles since superdelegates were introduced in 1984, superdelegates will no longer have the right to cast decisive votes on the convention's first ballot for the presidential nomination. They will be allowed to cast non-decisive votes if a candidate has clinched the nomination before the first ballot, or decisive votes on subsequent ballots in a contested convention. In that case, the number of votes required shall increase to a majority of pledged and superdelegates combined. Superdelegates are not precluded from publicly endorsing a candidate before the convention. There were also a number of changes to the process of nomination at the state level. A decline in the number of caucuses occurred after 2016, with Democrats in Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Kansas, Maine, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, and Washington all switching from various forms of caucuses to primaries (with Hawaii, Kansas, and North Dakota switching to party-run "firehouse primaries"). This has resulted in the lowest number of caucuses in the Democratic Party's recent history, with only three states (Iowa, Nevada, and Wyoming) and four territories (American Samoa, Guam, Northern Marianas, and U.S. Virgin Islands) using them. In addition, six states were approved in 2019 by the DNC to use ranked-choice voting in the primaries: Alaska, Hawaii, Kansas, and Wyoming for all voters; Iowa and Nevada for absentee voters. Rather than eliminating candidates until a single winner is chosen, voters' choices would be reallocated until all remaining candidates have at least 15%, the threshold to receive delegates to the convention. Several states which did not use paper ballots widely in 2016 and 2018, adopted them for the 2020 primary and general elections, to minimize potential interference in vote tallies, a concern raised by intelligence officials, election officials and the public. The move to paper ballots enabled audits to start where they had not been possible before, and in 2020 about half the states audit samples of primary ballots to measure accuracy of the reported results. Audits of caucus results depend on party rules, and the Iowa Democratic party investigated inaccuracies in precinct reports, resolved enough to be sure the delegate allocations were correct, and decided it did not have authority or time to correct all errors. Rules for number of delegates Number of pledged delegates per state The number of pledged delegates from each state is proportional to the state's share of the electoral college, and to the state's past Democratic votes for president. Thus less weight is given to swing states and Republican states, while more weight is given to strongly Democratic states, in choosing a nominee. Six pledged delegates are assigned to each territory, 44 to Puerto Rico, and 12 to Democrats Abroad. Each jurisdiction can also earn bonus delegates by holding primaries after March or in clusters of 3 or more neighboring states. Within states, a quarter of pledged delegates are allocated to candidates based on statewide vote totals, and the rest typically based on votes in each congressional district, although some states use divisions other than congressional districts. For example, Texas uses state Senate districts. Districts which have voted Democratic in the past get more delegates, and fewer delegates are allocated for swing districts and Republican districts. For example, House Speaker Pelosi's strongly Democratic district 12 has 7 delegates, or one per 109,000 people, and a swing district, CA-10, which became Democratic in 2018, has 4 delegates, or one per 190,000 people. Candidate threshold Candidates who received under 15% of the votes in a state or district didn't get any delegates from that area. Candidates who got 15% or more of the votes divided delegates in proportion to their votes. These rules apply at the state level to state delegates and within each district for those delegates. The 15% threshold was established in 1992 to limit "fringe" candidates. The threshold now means that any sector of the party (moderate, progressive, etc.) which produces many candidates, thus dividing supporters' votes, may win few delegates, even if it wins a majority of votes. Schedule and results Election day postponements and cancellations Due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, a number of presidential primaries were rescheduled. On April 27, New York canceled its primary altogether on the grounds that there was only one candidate left with an active campaign. Andrew Yang responded with a lawsuit, arguing that the decision infringes on voting rights, and in early May, the judge ruled in favor of Yang. In addition, the DNC elected to delay the 2020 Democratic National Convention from July 13โ€“16 to August 17โ€“20. Candidates Major candidates in the 2020 Democratic presidential primaries had held significant elective office or received substantial media coverage. Nearly 300 candidates who did not receive significant media coverage also filed with the Federal Election Commission to run for president in the primary. Nominee Withdrew during the primaries Other notable individuals who were not major candidates terminated their campaigns during the primaries: Henry Hewes, real estate developer; Right to Life nominee for Mayor of New York City in 1989 and U.S. Senate from New York in 1994 Sam Sloan, chess player and publisher (Ran for Congress in NY-14) Robby Wells, former college football coach; Independent candidate for president in 2016 Withdrew before the primaries Other notable individuals who were not major candidates terminated their campaigns before the primaries: Ben Gleib, actor, comedian, satirist, and writer Ami Horowitz, conservative activist and documentary filmmaker (endorsed Donald Trump) Brian Moore, activist; Green nominee for U.S. Senate from Florida in 2006; Socialist and Liberty Union nominee for president in 2008 Ken Nwadike Jr., documentary filmmaker, motivational speaker, and peace activist Political positions Debates and forums Primary election polling Timeline Ballot access Filing for the primaries began in October 2019. indicates that the candidate was on the ballot for the primary contest, indicates that the candidate was a recognized write-in candidate, and indicates that the candidate did not appear on the ballot in that state's contest. indicates that a candidate withdrew before the election but was still listed on the ballot. Candidates listed in italics have suspended their campaigns. National convention The 2020 Democratic National Convention was scheduled to take place in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on July 13โ€“16, 2020, but was postponed and rescheduled to take place on August 17โ€“20 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The event became a virtual "Convention Across America" with voting held online before the opening gavel, and the non-televised events held remotely over ZOOM. Endorsements Campaign finance This is an overview of the money being raised and spent by each campaign for the entire period running from January 1, 2017, to March 31, 2020, as it was reported to the Federal Election Commission (FEC). Total raised is the sum of all individual contributions (large and small), loans from the candidate, and transfers from other campaign committees. The last column, Cash On Hand (COH), has been calculated by subtracting the "spent" amount from the "raised" amount, thereby showing the remaining cash each campaign had available for its future spending As of February 29, 2020, the major candidates have raised $989,234,992.08. Maps See also 2020 United States presidential election National Conventions 2020 Democratic National Convention 2020 Republican National Convention 2020 Libertarian National Convention 2020 Green National Convention 2020 Constitution Party National Convention Presidential primaries 2020 Republican Party presidential primaries 2020 Libertarian Party presidential primaries 2020 Green Party presidential primaries 2020 Constitution Party presidential primaries Notes References 2019 in American politics 2020 elections in the United States Political timelines of the 2020s by year Democratic Party presidential primaries, 2020
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%9C%B5%ED%95%A9%20%EA%B7%9C%EC%B9%99
์œตํ•ฉ ๊ทœ์น™
์ด๋ก ๋ฌผ๋ฆฌํ•™๊ณผ ์ถ”์ƒ๋Œ€์ˆ˜ํ•™์—์„œ ์œตํ•ฉ ๊ทœ์น™(่žๅˆ่ฆๅ‰‡, )์€ 2์ฐจ์› ๋“ฑ๊ฐ ์žฅ๋ก ์— ๋Œ€์‘๋˜๋Š” ํŠน๋ณ„ํ•œ ๋Œ€์ˆ˜ ๊ตฌ์กฐ์ด๋‹ค. ์œตํ•ฉ ๊ทœ์น™์€ 1์ฐจ์žฅ ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ์—ฐ์‚ฐ์ž ๊ณฑ ์ „๊ฐœ์— ์–ด๋–ค 1์ฐจ์žฅ์ด ๋“ฑ์žฅํ•˜๋Š”์ง€๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ ๊ณ„์ˆ˜๋Š” ๋ชจ๋“ˆ๋Ÿฌ S๋ณ€ํ™˜๊ณผ ํŽ˜๋ฅผ๋ฆฐ๋” ๊ณต์‹()์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๊ณต์‹์œผ๋กœ ๊ณ„์‚ฐ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์œตํ•ฉ ๊ทœ์น™์—๋Š” ํ•ญ์ƒ ์ž์—ฐ์Šค๋Ÿฝ๊ฒŒ ์œตํ•ฉํ™˜(่žๅˆ็’ฐ, ) ๋˜๋Š” ํŽ˜๋ฅผ๋ฆฐ๋” ๋Œ€์ˆ˜(Verlindeไปฃๆ•ธ, )๋ผ๋Š” ๊ฐ€ํ™˜ํ™˜์ด ๋Œ€์‘๋œ๋‹ค. ์ •์˜ ์œ ํ•œ ์ง‘ํ•ฉ ๋ฐ ๋Œ€ํ•ฉ ์ด ์ฃผ์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•˜์ž. ๊ทธ๋ ‡๋‹ค๋ฉด, ์ด๋กœ ์ƒ์„ฑ๋˜๋Š” ์ž์œ  ๊ฐ€ํ™˜ ๋ชจ๋…ธ์ด๋“œ ๋ฅผ ์ƒ๊ฐํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ์›์†Œ๋Š” ์˜ ์›์†Œ๋“ค๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋œ ์ค‘๋ณต์ง‘ํ•ฉ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒ๊ฐํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์œ„์˜ ์œตํ•ฉ ๊ทœ์น™์€ ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์กฐ๊ฑด์„ ๋งŒ์กฑ์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” ํ•จ์ˆ˜ ์ด๋‹ค. (๊ทœ๊ฒฉํ™”) (๋Œ€ํ•ฉ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋Œ€์นญ) (์œตํ•ฉ) (๋ถ€ํ˜ธ) (๋น„ํ‡ดํ™”์„ฑ) ์„ฑ์งˆ ํ•ญ๋“ฑ์›๊ณผ 3์  ๊ณ„์ˆ˜ ์ž„์˜์˜ ์œตํ•ฉ ๊ทœ์น™ ๊ฐ€ ์ฃผ์–ด์กŒ์„ ๋•Œ, ์–ด๋–ค ์›์†Œ ์— ๋Œ€ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ด๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ด๋ฅผ ์œตํ•ฉ ๊ทœ์น™์˜ ํ•ญ๋“ฑ์›()์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ๋ณดํ†ต ๋‹จ์ˆœํžˆ ๋กœ ํ‘œ๊ธฐํ•œ๋‹ค. (์ด๋Š” 2์ฐจ์› ๋“ฑ๊ฐ ์žฅ๋ก ์—์„œ ํ•ญ๋“ฑ ์—ฐ์‚ฐ์ž์— ํ•ด๋‹นํ•œ๋‹ค.) ์ฆ๋ช…: ๊ณต๋ฆฌ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ, ์ด๋‹ค. ์ด๋ฏ€๋กœ, ์ด๋Š” ์–ด๋–ค ์ธ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ์ด๋ฉฐ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋‚˜๋จธ์ง€ ์— ๋Œ€ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ž„์„ ์˜๋ฏธํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฐ๋ฐ ๊ณต๋ฆฌ์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ธ ๊ฐ€ ์กด์žฌํ•˜์—ฌ์•ผ ํ•˜๋ฏ€๋กœ, ์ด๋Š” ์ผ ์ˆ˜ ๋ฐ–์— ์—†์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ด๋‹ค. ์ด๋ฏ€๋กœ ์ด๋‹ค. ์ด๋Š” ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์ด ํ•ญ๋“ฑ์›์„ ์ด๋ฃฌ๋‹ค. ์ฆ๋ช…: ๊ณต๋ฆฌ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ, ์ด๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ, ํ•ญ์ƒ ๋‹ค์Œ์ด ์„ฑ๋ฆฝํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ฆ๋ช…: ๊ณต๋ฆฌ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ, ์ด๋‹ค. ๋ฅผ ๋งŒ์กฑ์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” ์ •์ˆ˜ ๋Š” 0 ๋ฐ 1 ๋ฐ–์— ์—†๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ์ด๋ฏ€๋กœ ์ด๋ฉฐ, ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ์ด๋‹ค. ๋งŒ์•ฝ ์ด๋ผ๋ฉด, ์ž„์˜์˜ ์— ๋Œ€ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ธ๋ฐ, ์ด๋Š” ๊ณต๋ฆฌ์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ถˆ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ํ•ญ์ƒ ์ด๋‹ค. ์‚ฌ์‹ค, ์œตํ•ฉ ๊ทœ์น™์€ ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋ฐ์ดํ„ฐ๋กœ๋งŒ ์™„์ „ํžˆ ๊ฒฐ์ •๋œ๋‹ค. ํ•ญ๋“ฑ์› 3์  ๊ณ„์ˆ˜ ์ฆ๋ช…: 2์  ์ดํ•˜์˜ ๊ณ„์ˆ˜๋Š” ๋กœ ์™„์ „ํžˆ ๊ฒฐ์ •๋œ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ, ์ด๋ฏ€๋กœ, ์ ์˜ ๊ณ„์ˆ˜๋Š” 3์  ๊ณ„์ˆ˜์™€ ์  ๊ณ„์ˆ˜๋กœ ๊ฒฐ์ •๋œ๋‹ค. ๋ฌผ๋ก , 3์  ๊ณ„์ˆ˜ ์—์„œ ๋งŒ์•ฝ ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ ํ•˜๋‚˜๊ฐ€ ์— ์†ํ•œ๋‹ค๋ฉด ๊ทธ ๊ฐ’์€ ์ž๋ช…ํ•˜๋‹ค. ๋ณดํ†ต 3์  ๊ณ„์ˆ˜๋Š” ๋กœ ํ‘œ๊ธฐํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€์นญ์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ฐ€ ๋œ๋‹ค. (๋Š” ํฌ๋กœ๋„ค์ปค ๋ธํƒ€์ด๋‹ค.) ์ฆ‰, ์œตํ•ฉ ๊ทœ์น™์€ ๋‹ค์Œ ์กฐ๊ฑด์„ ๋งŒ์กฑ์‹œํ‚จ๋‹ค. s ๋งŒ์•ฝ ๋ฅผ ํ–‰๋ ฌ ๋กœ ํ‘œ๊ธฐํ•œ๋‹ค๋ฉด, ์ด๋Š” ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค. ์ฆ‰, ์ด ์กฐ๊ฑด์€ ์œตํ•ฉ ํ–‰๋ ฌ๋“ค์ด ์„œ๋กœ ๊ตํ™˜ ๋ฒ•์น™์„ ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ํ•ด์„ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ, ๋ณต์†Œ์ˆ˜ ๊ณ„์ˆ˜์—์„œ ์ด๋“ค์„ ๋™์‹œ์— ๋Œ€๊ฐํ™”ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ธฐ์ €๋ฅผ ์ฐพ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํŽ˜๋ฅผ๋ฆฐ๋” ๊ณต์‹์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ, ์ด ๊ธฐ์ €๋Š” ๋ชจ๋“ˆ๋Ÿฌ ๋ณ€ํ™˜์˜ Sํ–‰๋ ฌ์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ฃผ์–ด์ง„๋‹ค. ๊ณ ์ฐจ ์ข…์ˆ˜ ์œตํ•ฉ ๊ทœ์น™ ์œตํ•ฉ ๊ทœ์น™ ๋ฐ ์ž์—ฐ์ˆ˜ ์— ๋Œ€ํ•˜์—ฌ, ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ํ•จ์ˆ˜๋“ค์„ ์žฌ๊ท€์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ •์˜ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋“ค์€ 2์ฐจ์› ๋“ฑ๊ฐ ์žฅ๋ก ์—์„œ, ์ข…์ˆ˜ ์˜ ์ฝคํŒฉํŠธ ๋ฆฌ๋งŒ ๊ณก๋ฉด ์œ„์— ์ •์˜๋œ ์ƒ๊ด€ ํ•จ์ˆ˜์— ๋Œ€์‘๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ ‡๋‹ค๋ฉด, ์ด๋Š” ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์„ฑ์งˆ์„ ๋”ฐ๋ฅธ๋‹ค. ์œตํ•ฉํ™˜ ์œตํ•ฉ ๊ทœ์น™ ์ด ์ฃผ์–ด์กŒ์„ ๋•Œ, ๋กœ ์ƒ์„ฑ๋˜๋Š” ์ž์œ  ์•„๋ฒจ ๊ตฐ ์œ„์— ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ -์Œ์„ ํ˜• ๊ณฑ์…ˆ ์—ฐ์‚ฐ์„ ์ค„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Š” ํ•ญ๋“ฑ์› ์„ ๊ฐ–๋Š” ๊ฐ€ํ™˜ํ™˜์„ ์ด๋ฃจ๋ฉฐ, ์œตํ•ฉํ™˜์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํŠนํžˆ, ์œตํ•ฉํ™˜ ์˜ ๊ฐ€ํ™˜ํ™˜์œผ๋กœ์„œ์˜ ํ•ญ๋“ฑ์›์€ 0๊ฐœ์˜ ์›์†Œ์˜ ๊ณฑ์ด๋ฏ€๋กœ, ์ด๋‹ค. ์ฆ‰, ์œตํ•ฉํ™˜์˜ ํ•ญ๋“ฑ์›์€ ์œตํ•ฉ ๊ทœ์น™์˜ ํ•ญ๋“ฑ์›๊ณผ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค. ๋ฌผ๋ก  1๊ฐœ์˜ ์›์†Œ์˜ ๊ณฑ์€ ์ด๋ฏ€๋กœ ์ด ์ •์˜๋Š” ์ผ๊ด€์ ์ด๋‹ค. ์ด ์ •์˜๊ฐ€ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ ๋ฒ•์น™์„ ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋Š” ์ดํ•ญ ์—ฐ์‚ฐ์„ ์ •์˜ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ์œตํ•ฉ ๊ทœ์น™์˜ ์œตํ•ฉ ๊ณต๋ฆฌ์—์„œ ๋น„๋กฏ๋œ๋‹ค. ์œตํ•ฉํ™˜ ์œ„์—๋Š” ํ•ญ์ƒ ๋‹ค์Œ ์กฐ๊ฑด์„ ๋งŒ์กฑ์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” ๋ง์…ˆ ๊ตฐ ์ค€๋™ํ˜• ์ด ์กด์žฌํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ๋Š” -๊ฐ€๊ตฐ์˜ ๋™ํ˜• ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์„ ์ •์˜ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ, ๋ชจ๋“  ์œตํ•ฉํ™˜์€ ๊ณ ๋Ÿฐ์Šคํ‹ด ํ™˜์ด๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ฐ€๊ตฐ ๋™ํ˜•์—์„œ, ๋Œ€๊ฐํ•ฉ ์— ๋Œ€์‘๋˜๋Š” ์˜ ์›์†Œ๋Š” ์นด์‹œ๋ฏธ๋ฅด ์›์†Œ ์ด๋‹ค. ๋“ฑ๊ฐ ์žฅ๋ก ์˜ ์œตํ•ฉํ™˜ 2์ฐจ์› ๋“ฑ๊ฐ ์žฅ๋ก  ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ ์ตœ์†Œ ๋ชจํ˜•์ด ์ฃผ์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•˜์ž. ์ด ๊ฒฝ์šฐ, ๋ฅผ 1์ฐจ์žฅ์˜ ์ง‘ํ•ฉ์œผ๋กœ ๋†“๊ณ , ๋ฅผ ํ•ญ๋“ฑ ํ•จ์ˆ˜๋กœ ๋†“๊ณ , ๋กœ ๋†“์ž. (์—ฌ๊ธฐ์„œ ๋Š” ๋“ฑ๊ฐ ์žฅ๋ก ์˜ 3์  ์ƒ๊ด€ ํ•จ์ˆ˜์˜ ๊ณ„์ˆ˜์ด๋‹ค.) ๊ทธ๋ ‡๋‹ค๋ฉด, ์ด๋Š” ์œตํ•ฉ ๊ทœ์น™์„ ์ •์˜ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ณด๋‹ค ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ, ๋น„๋ผ์†Œ๋กœ ๋Œ€์ˆ˜ ๋Œ€์‹  ์ดˆ๋Œ€์นญ ๋น„๋ผ์†Œ๋กœ ๋Œ€์ˆ˜๋‚˜ ์•„ํ•€ ๋ฆฌ ๋Œ€์ˆ˜(๋ฒ ์Šค-์ถ”๋ฏธ๋…ธ-์œ„ํŠผ ๋ชจํ˜•)์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ, ์œ ํ•œ ๊ฐœ์˜ 1์ฐจ์žฅ์„ ๊ฐ–๋Š” 2์ฐจ์› ๋“ฑ๊ฐ ์žฅ๋ก ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด์„œ๋„ ์œ ์‚ฌํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์œตํ•ฉํ™˜์„ ์ •์˜ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ๋Œ€ํ•ฉ ์ด ์ž๋ช…ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํŽ˜๋ฅผ๋ฆฐ๋” ๊ณต์‹ ์œ ํ•œ ๊ฐœ์˜ 1์ฐจ์žฅ์„ ๊ฐ–๋Š” 2์ฐจ์› ๋“ฑ๊ฐ ์žฅ๋ก ์—์„œ, ์ตœ๊ณ  ๋ฌด๊ฒŒ ํ‘œํ˜„๋“ค์˜ ์ง€ํ‘œ๊ฐ€ ๋ผ๊ณ  ํ•˜์ž. ๊ทธ๋ ‡๋‹ค๋ฉด, ์›ํ™˜๋ฉด ์œ„์—์„œ์˜ ๋ชจ๋“ˆ๋Ÿฌ ๋ถˆ๋ณ€์„ฑ ์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ฐ€ ๋˜๋Š” ํ–‰๋ ฌ ์ด ์กด์žฌํ•œ๋‹ค. (๋ณด๋‹ค ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ, ์œ„์—๋Š” ์˜ ํ‘œํ˜„์ด ์กด์žฌํ•œ๋‹ค.) ๋Š” ํ•ญ์ƒ ์œ ๋‹ˆํ„ฐ๋ฆฌ ํ–‰๋ ฌ์ด๋ฉฐ, ๋Œ€์นญ ํ–‰๋ ฌ์ด๋ฉฐ (โ€ป์—๋ฅด๋ฏธํŠธ ํ–‰๋ ฌ์ด ์•„๋‹ˆ๋‹ค), ์ด๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ฒฝ์šฐ, ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ํŽ˜๋ฅผ๋ฆฐ๋” ๊ณต์‹()์ด ์„ฑ๋ฆฝํ•œ๋‹ค. ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์„œ ๋Š” ์„ฑ๋ถ„๋ณ„ ๋ณต์†Œ์ผค๋ ˆ์ด๋‹ค (์ฆ‰, ). ์˜ˆ ์ด์ง• ๋ชจํ˜• ์ž„๊ณ„ 2์ฐจ์› ์ด์ง• ๋ชจํ˜•์— ํ•ด๋‹นํ•˜๋Š” ์ตœ์†Œ ๋ชจํ˜• ์„ ์ƒ๊ฐํ•˜์ž. ์ด ๊ฒฝ์šฐ, ์„ธ ๊ฐœ์˜ ์ผ์ฐจ์žฅ์ด ์กด์žฌํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค. ์ด์— ๋Œ€์‘๋˜๋Š” ์œตํ•ฉ ๊ทœ์น™์€ ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ฒฝ์šฐ, ํŽ˜๋ฅผ๋ฆฐ๋” ๋Œ€์ˆ˜๋Š” 3์ฐจ์›์ด๋ฉฐ, ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค. ์ฆ‰, ๊ณฑ์…ˆ์ด ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค. ๋ฒ ์Šค-์ถ”๋ฏธ๋…ธ-์œ„ํŠผ ๋ชจํ˜• ๋‹ค์Œ์ด ์ฃผ์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•˜์ž. ๋ณต์†Œ์ˆ˜ ๋‹จ์ˆœ ๋ฆฌ ๋Œ€์ˆ˜ ์˜ ์นด๋ฅดํƒ• ๋ถ€๋ถ„ ๋Œ€์ˆ˜ ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ, ๊ทผ๊ณ„ ๋ฅผ ์ •์˜ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทผ๊ณ„ ์œ„์˜ ์ˆœ์„œ. ์ด์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ์ตœ๊ณ (ๆœ€้ซ˜) ๊ทผ ์„ ๊ณ ๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์–‘์˜ ์ •์ˆ˜ ์ด์ œ, ์˜ ์šฐ์„ธ ๋ฌด๊ฒŒ ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ ์ธ ๊ฒƒ๋“ค์˜ ์ง‘ํ•ฉ์„ ๋ผ๊ณ  ํ•˜์ž. ์ด๋“ค์€ ์•„ํ•€ ๋ฆฌ ๋Œ€์ˆ˜ ์˜ ์ค€์œ„ ์˜ ํ‘œํ˜„๋“ค๊ณผ ์ผ๋Œ€์ผ๋กœ ๋Œ€์‘ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์— ๋Œ€์‘ํ•˜๋Š” -ํ‘œํ˜„์„ ๋ผ๊ณ  ํ‘œ๊ธฐํ•˜์ž. ์ด์ œ, ๋‹ค์Œ ๋ฐ์ดํ„ฐ๊ฐ€ ์ฃผ์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•˜์ž. ์ฝคํŒฉํŠธ ์—ฐ๊ฒฐ ๋ฆฌ๋งŒ ๊ณก๋ฉด ์˜ ์œ ํ•œ ๋ถ€๋ถ„ ์ง‘ํ•ฉ ํ•จ์ˆ˜ ๊ทธ๋ ‡๋‹ค๋ฉด, ์˜ ํ‘œํ˜„ ์„ ์ƒ๊ฐํ•˜์ž. ๋˜ํ•œ, ๊ฐ’ ์ •์น™ ํ•จ์ˆ˜์˜ ๋ณต์†Œ์ˆ˜ ๋ฆฌ ๋Œ€์ˆ˜ ๋Š” ์ด ํ‘œํ˜„ ์œ„์— ํ‘œ์ค€์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ž‘์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ, ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋ณต์†Œ์ˆ˜ ๋ฒกํ„ฐ ๊ณต๊ฐ„์„ ์ •์˜ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์„œ ๋Š” ์˜, -์ž‘์šฉ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์Œ๋Œ€๋ถˆ๋ณ€๋Ÿ‰์˜ ๊ณต๊ฐ„, ์ฆ‰ ์— ๋ถˆ๋ณ€์ธ, ์˜ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ํฐ ๋ชซ ๋ฒกํ„ฐ ๊ณต๊ฐ„์ด๋‹ค. ์•„ํ•€ ๋ฆฌ ๋Œ€์ˆ˜ ์˜ ํ‘œํ˜„์„ ๊ฐ–๋Š” 2์ฐจ์› ๋“ฑ๊ฐ ์žฅ๋ก ์ธ ๋ฒ ์Šค-์ถ”๋ฏธ๋…ธ-์œ„ํŠผ ๋ชจํ˜•์„ ์ •์˜ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ฒฝ์šฐ, ๋ณต์†Œ์ˆ˜ ๋ฒกํ„ฐ ๊ณต๊ฐ„ ๋Š” ๊ฐ ์  ์— ์— ํ•ด๋‹นํ•˜๋Š” ์ผ์ฐจ์žฅ์„ ์‚ฝ์ž…ํ•œ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ์˜ ๋“ฑ๊ฐ ๋ธ”๋ก์ด๋‹ค. ๋‘ ์œ ํ•œ ์ง‘ํ•ฉ , ๋ฐ ์ „๋‹จ์‚ฌ ํ•จ์ˆ˜ ๊ฐ€ ์ฃผ์–ด์กŒ์„ ๋•Œ, ํ‘œ์ค€์ ์ธ ๋ฒกํ„ฐ ๊ณต๊ฐ„ ๋™ํ˜• ์‚ฌ์ƒ ์ด ์ฃผ์–ด์ง„๋‹ค. ์ฆ‰, ๋“ฑ๊ฐ ๋ธ”๋ก์˜ ์ฐจ์›์€ ์„ ํƒํ•œ ์ ๋“ค์˜ ์ˆ˜ ๋ฐ ๋Œ€์‘๋˜๋Š” ํ‘œํ˜„์—๋งŒ ์˜์กดํ•˜๊ณ , ์ ์˜ ์œ„์น˜์— ์˜์กดํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ฒฝ์šฐ, ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์œตํ•ฉ ๊ทœ์น™์„ ์ƒ๊ฐํ•˜์ž. ์ฆ‰, ์ด๋Š” ๋ฆฌ๋งŒ ๊ตฌ ์œ„์˜ ๋“ฑ๊ฐ ๋ธ”๋ก์˜ ์ฐจ์›์ด๋‹ค. ์ด๋Š” ๋ฒ ์Šค-์ถ”๋ฏธ๋…ธ-์œ„ํŠผ ๋ชจํ˜•์— ๋Œ€์‘๋˜๋Š” ์œตํ•ฉ ๊ทœ์น™์ด๋‹ค. ์—ญ์‚ฌ ์—๋ฆญ ํŽ˜๋ฅผ๋ฆฐ๋”(, 1962ใ€œ)๊ฐ€ 1988๋…„์— 2์ฐจ์› ๋“ฑ๊ฐ ์žฅ๋ก ์„ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋„์ž…ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ฐธ๊ณ  ๋ฌธํ—Œ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ๋“ฑ๊ฐ ์žฅ๋ก 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fusion%20rules
Fusion rules
In mathematics and theoretical physics, fusion rules are rules that determine the exact decomposition of the tensor product of two representations of a group into a direct sum of irreducible representations. The term is often used in the context of two-dimensional conformal field theory where the relevant group is generated by the Virasoro algebra, the relevant representations are the conformal families associated with a primary field and the tensor product is realized by operator product expansions. The fusion rules contain the information about the kind of families that appear on the right hand side of these OPEs, including the multiplicities. More generally, integrable models in 2 dimensions which aren't conformal field theories are also described by fusion rules for their charges. References Conformal field theory
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%ED%95%A0%EB%A6%B4%20%EC%9D%B4%EB%82%A0%EC%A6%89
ํ• ๋ฆด ์ด๋‚ ์ฆ‰
ํ• ๋ฆด ์ด๋‚ ์ฆ‰(, ~ )์€ ํ„ฐํ‚ค ํƒœ์ƒ์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌํ•™์ž์ด๋‹ค. ์ฃผ์š” ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ์˜์—ญ์€ ์˜ค์Šค๋งŒ ์ œ๊ตญ์˜ ์‚ฌํšŒ์‚ฌ์™€ ๊ฒฝ์ œ์‚ฌ์˜€๋‹ค. ์˜ค์Šค๋งŒ ์ œ๊ตญ์‚ฌ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์— ์žˆ์–ด ํ• ๋ฆด ์ด๋‚ ์ฆ‰์€ ๋ฉ”ํ๋ฉ”ํŠธ ํ‘ธ์•„ํŠธ ์พจํ”„๋ฅ„๋คผ์˜ ๋’ค๋ฅผ ์ด์–ด ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ์•„๋‚ ํ•™ํŒŒ์˜ ์‚ฌํšŒ, ๊ฒฝ์ œํ•™์  ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•๋ก ์„ ์ด์‹ํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์™ธ๋ฉ”๋ฅด ๋ฃจํŠธํ”ผ ๋ฐ”๋ฅด์นธ์˜ ๋’ค๋ฅผ ์ด์–ด ์˜ค์Šค๋งŒ ์ œ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ณ ๋ฌธ์„œ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ๋Œ€์ค‘ํ™”์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. ์ƒ์•  ํ• ๋ฆด ์ด๋‚ ์ฆ‰์€ ์˜ค์Šค๋งŒ ์ œ๊ตญ ์ฝ˜์Šคํƒ„ํ‹ฐ๋‹ˆ์˜ˆ์—์„œ ํƒœ์–ด๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. (ํ• ๋ฆด ์ด๋‚ ์ฆ‰ ์ž์‹ ๋„ ์ •ํ™•ํ•œ ์ƒ์ผ์„ ๋ชฐ๋ž์œผ๋‚˜, ํ„ฐํ‚ค์—์„œ๋Š” 5์›” 26์ผ์„, ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์—์„œ๋Š” 7์›” 4์ผ์„ ์ƒ์ผ์œผ๋กœ ์‚ผ์•˜๋‹ค). ํ• ๋ฆด ์ด๋‚ ์ฆ‰์˜ ๊ฐ€์กฑ์€ ์ „์Ÿ์„ ํ”ผํ•ด 1924๋…„, ์•™์นด๋ผ๋กœ ์ด์ฃผํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€์ธ ์„ธ์ดํŠธ ์˜ค์Šค๋งŒ ๋ˆ„๋ฆฌ()๋Š” ๊ฐ€์กฑ์„ ๋– ๋‚˜ ์ด์ง‘ํŠธ๋กœ ์ด์ฃผํ–ˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์—, ํ• ๋ฆด ์ด๋‚ ์ฆ‰์€ ํŽธ๋ชจ ๊ฐ€์ •์—์„œ ์„ฑ์žฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ดˆ๋“ฑ๊ต์œก์€ ์•™์นด๋ผ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ๋ฉ•ํ…Œ๋น„()์—์„œ, ์ค‘๋“ฑ๊ต์œก์€ ์•™์นด๋ผ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ๋ฌด์•Œ๋ฆผ ๋ฉ•ํ…Œ๋น„()์—์„œ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ณ ๋“ฑ๊ต์œก์€ ๋ฐœ๋ฅด์ผ€์‹œ๋ฅด ๋„ค์žํ‹ฐ ๋ฒ ์ด ๋ฌด์•Œ๋ฆผ ๋ฉ•ํ…Œ๋น„()์—์„œ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ์ค‘ํ•™๊ต์™€ ๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต์—์„œ๋Š” ์„ ์ƒ๋‹˜์ด ๋˜๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ํฌ๋งํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜, ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต์— ์ž…ํ•™ํ•  ๋ฌด๋ ต์—๋Š” ์—ญ์‚ฌํ•™์ž๋กœ ๊ฟˆ์„ ๋ฐ”๊พธ์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1936๋…„, ์•™์นด๋ผ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ์–ธ์–ด, ์—ญ์‚ฌ, ์ง€๋ฆฌํ•™๋ถ€์— ์ž…ํ•™, ๊ทผ๋Œ€์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์ „๊ณตํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1940๋…„์— ๊ต์œก๊ณผ์ •์„ ๋งˆ์น˜๊ณ ๋Š” ํ•ด๋‹น ํ•™๋ถ€์— ์กฐ๊ต๋กœ ์ทจ์—…ํ–ˆ๊ณ , 1942๋…„์—๋Š” ใ€Šํƒ„์ง€๋งˆํŠธ์™€ ๋ถˆ๊ฐ€๋ฅด ๋ฌธ์ œ()ใ€‹๋ž€ ๋…ผ๋ฌธ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐ•์‚ฌ ๊ณผ์ •์„ ๋งˆ์น˜๊ณ , 1952๋…„ ๊ต์ˆ˜๋กœ ์ž„์šฉ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1972๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ํ•ด๋‹น ํ•™๋ถ€์—์„œ ๊ต์ˆ˜๋กœ ์žฌ์งํ•œ ํ• ๋ฆด ์ด๋‚ ์ฆ‰์€ ์ดํ›„ ์‹œ์นด๊ณ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ์‚ฌํ•™๊ณผ๋กœ ์ด์งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ• ๋ฆด ์ด๋‚ ์ฆ‰์˜ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์ ์ธ ์ €์ž‘ ใ€Š์˜ค์Šค๋งŒ ์ œ๊ตญ: ๊ณ ์ „๊ธฐ 1300-1600()ใ€‹์ด ์ถœ๊ฐ„๋œ ๊ฒƒ(1973๋…„)๋„ ์ด ์‹œ๊ธฐ์˜€๋‹ค. 1993๋…„์—๋Š” ๋‹ค์‹œ ์‹œ์นด๊ณ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต์—์„œ ํ‡ด์งํ•˜์—ฌ ๋นŒ์ผ„ํŠธ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต๋กœ ์ ์„ ์˜ฎ๊ฒจ ์ฃฝ์„๋•Œ๊นŒ์ง€ ์ž๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ์ง€์ผฐ๋‹ค. 2003๋…„์—๋Š” ์ž์‹ ์ด ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ ์˜ค์Šค๋งŒ ๊ด€๋ จ ์‚ฌ๋ฃŒ์™€ ์„œ์ ๋“ค์„ ๋นŒ์ผ„ํŠธ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต์— ๊ธฐ๋ถ€ํ•˜์˜€๊ณ , ๋นŒ์ผ„ํŠธ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต๋Š” ํ• ๋ฆด ์ด๋‚ ์ฆ‰ ์˜ค์Šค๋งŒ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ์„ผํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด ์ด ์ž๋ฃŒ๋“ค์„ ๊ณต๊ฐœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•™๋ฌธ ํ• ๋ฆด ์ด๋‚ ์ฆ‰ ํ•™๋ฌธ ์„ธ๊ณ„์˜ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ํฐ ํŠน์ง•์€, ์˜ค์Šค๋งŒ ์ œ๊ตญ์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ์ด๋‚˜ ํƒ€์ž์˜ ๋ˆˆ์ด ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ผ ์˜ค์Šค๋งŒ์ธ์˜ ๋ˆˆ์œผ๋กœ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํ–ˆ๋˜ ์ ์ด๋ฉฐ, ์ด๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด ํ‰์ƒ ๋…ธ๋ ฅํ•ด์™”๋‹ค. ๊ทธ์˜ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋Š” ํ•ญ์ƒ ์›์‚ฌ๋ฃŒ์— ์ฒœ์ฐฉํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด ํ• ๋ฆด ์ด๋‚ ์ฆ‰์€ ์˜์–ด, ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์–ด, ๋…์ผ์–ด์™€ ์•„๋ž์–ด, ์ด๋ž€์–ด, ์ดํƒˆ๋ฆฌ์•„์–ด๋ฅผ ๊ณต๋ถ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์œผ๋กœ ๋ง๋ฏธ์•”์•„ ๊ทธ๋Š” ์˜ค์Šค๋งŒ ์‹œ๋Œ€์˜ ์ •์น˜, ์‚ฌํšŒ, ๊ฒฝ์ œ ์ „ ์˜์—ญ์„ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํ•˜์˜€๊ณ , ์˜ค์Šค๋งŒ ๋ฒ•์ฒด๊ณ„, ํ† ์ง€์ œ๋„, ํ‹ฐ๋งˆ๋ฅด ์ œ๋„, ๋„์‹œ์‚ฌ, ๊ฐœํ˜๊ธฐ ์‚ฌํšŒ๊ฒฝ์ œ ๋ณ€์ฒœ์‚ฌ ๋“ฑ์—์„œ ํŠนํžˆ ์„ฑ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๋ณด์˜€๋‹ค. ์•™์นด๋ผ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต์—์„œ ํ• ๋ฆด ์ด๋‚ ์ฆ‰์€ ํ‘ธ์•„ํŠธ ์พจํ”„๋ฅ„๋คผ์˜ ์ง€๋„๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ์ด ์‹œ๊ธฐ ํ• ๋ฆด ์ด๋‚ ์ฆ‰์˜ ์‚ฌ๊ด€์€ ํ„ฐํ‚ค ๋ฏผ์กฑ์ฃผ์˜์ ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์™ธ๋ฉ”๋ฅด ๋คผํŠธํ”ผ ๋ฐ”๋ฅด์นธ์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ ์ฐจ์ธฐ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ์•„๋‚ ํ•™ํŒŒ์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๊ณ , 1950๋…„, ํŒŒ๋ฆฌ์˜ ์ปจํผ๋Ÿฐ์Šค์—์„œ ํŽ˜๋ฅด๋‚ญ ๋ธŒ๋กœ๋ธ๊ณผ ใ€ŠํŽ ๋ฆฌํŽ˜ 2์„ธ ์‹œ๋Œ€์˜ ์ง€์ค‘ํ•ด์™€ ์ง€์ค‘ํ•ด ์„ธ๊ณ„ใ€‹๋ฅผ ์†Œ๊ฐœ ๋ฐ›์€ ๋’ค ์ด๋‚ ์ฆ‰์˜ ์‚ฌ๊ด€์€ ๊ทน์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณ€ํ™”ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋‚ ์ฆ‰์€ ์ดํ›„ ์˜ค์Šค๋งŒ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์ง€์ค‘ํ•ด, ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋ฌด์—ญ, ๊ฒฝ์ œ, ์‚ฌํšŒ, ์ œ๋„์  ๋ณ€ํ™”๋ผ๋Š” ๋” ๋„“์€ ํ‹€ ์•„๋ž˜์—์„œ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฟ๋งŒ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ผ, ์ด๋‚ ์ฆ‰์€ ๋งˆ๋ฅดํฌ์Šค์ฃผ์˜๋Š” ๊ฑฐ๋ถ€ํ•˜์˜€์ง€๋งŒ ๋งˆ๋ฅดํฌ์Šค ํ•™์ž๋“ค๊ณผ ๋งˆ์ฐฌ๊ฐ€์ง€๋กœ ๋†๋ฏผ, ๋„์‹œ ๋…ธ๋™์ž, ๋ฌผ์งˆ ๋ฌธํ™”, ์˜ค์Šค๋งŒ ์ œ๊ตญ ๊ฑด์„ค์˜ ๊ฒฝ์ œ์  ์š”์ธ ๋“ฑ์— ๊ด€์‹ฌ์„ ๊ฐ€์กŒ๋‹ค. ์˜๊ตญ์—์„œ ๊ตํ™˜๊ต์ˆ˜๋กœ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉด์„œ๋Š” ํด ์œ„ํŠธํ…๊ณผ ๊ต๋ฅ˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ์‚ฌ๋ฃŒ์˜ ๋น„ํŒ์ ์œผ๋กœ ํ•ด์„ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฌ˜๋ฅผ ๊นจ๋‹ฌ์•˜๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋‚จ๊ฒจ์ง„ ์˜ค์Šค๋งŒ ๊ณต๋ฌธ์„œ๋ฅผ ํ™œ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ํ† ์ง€์ œ๋„, ์ธ๊ตฌ, ๋†์—… ์ƒ์‚ฐ์„ฑ, ๊ณต์—…, ๊ต์—ญ, ์„ธ๊ธˆ ๋“ฑ์˜ ์ฃผ์ œ๋ฅผ ๋‹ค๋ฃจ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ• ๋ฆด ์ด๋‚ ์ฆ‰์€ ๋˜ํ•œ ๋ชจ๋“  ํ•™์ƒ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ์˜ค์Šค๋งŒ ๊ณ ๋ฌธ์„œ๋ฅผ ์ ๊ทน ํ™œ์šฉํ•˜๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๊ถŒํ–ˆ๊ณ , ๊ทธ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ์˜ค์Šค๋งŒ์‚ฌ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์˜ ์ง€ํ‰์€ ์ •์น˜์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๋›ฐ์–ด๋„˜์–ด ํ™•์žฅํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฃผ์š” ๋…ผ์ € 1943. (ํ„ฐ) Tanzimat ve Bulgar Meselesi. TTK. 1954. (ํ„ฐ) Hicri 835 Tarihli Suret-i Defter-i Sancak-ฤฑ Arvanid. TTK. 1954. (ํ„ฐ) Fatih Devri รœzerinde Tetkikler ve Vesikalar. TTK. 1956. (ํ„ฐ) Kanรปnnรขme-i Sultรขnรฎ ber Mรปceb-i ร–rf-i Osmanรฎ: II. Mehmed ve II. Bayezid Devirlerine Ait Yasaknรขme ve Kanรปnnรขmeler. TTK. (R. Anhegger์™€ ๊ณต์ €) 1960. (์˜) โ€œMehmed the Conqueror (1432-1481) and his Time.โ€ Speculum, Vol. 35, No. 3: 408-427. 1969. (์˜) โ€œCapital Formation in the Ottoman Empire.โ€ The Journal of Economic History, Vol. 29, No. 1: 97-140. 1969. (์˜) โ€œThe Policy of Mehmed II toward the Greek Population of Istanbul and the Byzantine Buildings of the City.โ€ Dumbarton Oaks Papers, Vol. 23/24: 229-249. 1973. (์˜) The Ottoman Empire: the Classical Age, 1300-1600. Weidenfeld and Nicholson. 2005. (ํ„ฐ) Osmanlฤฑ imparatorluฤŸu: klasik รงaฤŸ (1300-1600). RuลŸen Sezer ์˜ฎ๊น€. Yapฤฑ Kredi Kรผltรผr Sanat Yayฤฑncฤฑlฤฑk. 1978. (ํ„ฐ) Gazavรขt-ฤฑ Sultรขn Murรขd b. Mehemmed Hรขn ฤฐzladi ve Varna SavaลŸlarฤฑ (1443-1444) รœzerinde Anonim Gazavรขtnรขme. TTK. (M. OฤŸuz์™€ ๊ณต์ €) 1978. (์˜) The Ottoman Empire: Conquest, Organization and Economy. Variorum Reprints. 1985. (์˜) Studies in Ottoman Social and Economic History. Variorum Reprints. 1993. (ํ„ฐ) Osmanlฤฑ ฤฐmparatorluฤŸu Toplum ve Ekonomi รœzerinde ArลŸiv ร‡alฤฑลŸmalarฤฑ, ฤฐncelemeler. Eren. 1993. (์˜) The Middle East and the Balkans under the Ottoman Empire (Indiana University Turkish Studies and Turkish Ministry of Culture Joint Series Volume 9). Indiana University. 1993. (์˜) The History of the Black Sea Trade: the Register of Customs of Caffa. Cambridge University Press. 1995. (์˜) From Empire to Republic: Essays on Ottoman and Turkish Social History. Eren. 2000. (ํ„ฐ) Osmanlฤฑโ€™da Devlet, Hukuk, Adรขlet. Eren. 2003. (ํ„ฐ) ลžรขir ve Patron, Patrimonyal Devlet ve Sanat รœzerinde Bir ฤฐnceleme. DoฤŸu Batฤฑ Yayฤฑnlarฤฑ. 2005. (ํ„ฐ) DoฤŸu Batฤฑ Makaleler I. DoฤŸu Batฤฑ Yayฤฑnlarฤฑ.' 2006. (์˜) Turkey and Europe in History. Eren. 2007. (ํ„ฐ) Atatรผrk ve Demokratik Tรผrkiye. Kฤฑrmฤฑzฤฑ Yayฤฑnlarฤฑ. 2010. (ํ„ฐ) KuruluลŸ Dรถnemi Osmanlฤฑ Sultanlarฤฑ. ฤฐSAM Yayฤฑnlarฤฑ. 2016. (ํ„ฐ) Osmanlฤฑ Tarihinde ฤฐslamiyet ve Devlet. ฤฐลŸ Bankasฤฑ Yayฤฑnlarฤฑ. ํŽธ์ €์ž O. Okyar์™€ ๊ณต๋™ ํŽธ์ €. 1980. Tรผrkiyeโ€™nin Sosyal ve Ekonomik Tarihi / Social and Economic History of Turkey (1071-1920). Meteksan. C. Kafadar์™€ ๊ณต๋™ ํŽธ์ €. 1994. (์˜) Sรผleyman the Second and his Time. Isis Press. D. Quataert์™€ ๊ณต๋™ ํŽธ์ €. 1994. (์˜) An Economic and Social History of the Ottoman Empire, 1300โ€“1914. Cambridge University Press. N. Gรถyรผnรง, E. ฤฐhsanoฤŸlu, Y. HalaรงoฤŸlu์™€ ๊ณต๋™ ํŽธ์ €. 1999. (ํ„ฐ) Osmanlฤฑ, vol. 01-12. Yeni Tรผrkiye Yayฤฑnlarฤฑ. Gรผnsel Renda์™€ ๊ณต๋™ ํŽธ์ €. 2004. Osmanlฤฑ UygarlฤฑฤŸฤฑ/ Ottoman Civilization, vol. 01-02. Kรผltรผr BakanlฤฑฤŸฤฑ. M. SeyitdanlฤฑoฤŸlu์™€ ๊ณต๋™ ํŽธ์ €. 2006. (ํ„ฐ) Tanzimat / DeฤŸiลŸim Sรผrecinde Osmanlฤฑ ฤฐmparatorluฤŸu. Phoenix Yayฤฑnlarฤฑ. ์—ญ์ฃผ์„œ Tursun Beg. 1978. The History of Mehmed the Conqueror. American Research Institute. (R. Murphey์™€ ๊ณต์—ญ) ๊ฐ์ฃผ 1916๋…„ ์ถœ์ƒ 2016๋…„ ์‚ฌ๋ง ํŠ€๋ฅดํ‚ค์˜ˆ์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ํŠ€๋ฅดํ‚ค์˜ˆ์˜ ๊ณผํ•™์ž ํŠ€๋ฅดํ‚ค์˜ˆ์˜ ์ €์ˆ ๊ฐ€ ํŠ€๋ฅดํ‚ค์˜ˆ์˜ ๋ฐฑ์„ธ์ธ ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„ ๊ณผํ•™ ์˜ˆ์ˆ  ์•„์นด๋ฐ๋ฏธ ํšŒ์› ์ด์Šคํƒ„๋ถˆ ์ถœ์‹  ์•™์นด๋ผ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๋™๋ฌธ ๋Ÿฐ๋˜ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๊ต์ˆ˜ ์‹œ์นด๊ณ  ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๊ต์ˆ˜ ํฌ๋ฆผ ํƒ€ํƒ€๋ฅด์ธ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halil%20%C4%B0nalc%C4%B1k
Halil ฤฐnalcฤฑk
Halil ฤฐnalcฤฑk (7 September 1916 โ€“ 25 July 2016) was a Turkish historian. His highly influential research centered on social and economic approaches to the Ottoman Empire. His academic career started at Ankara University, where he completed his PhD and worked between 1940 and 1972. Between 1972 and 1986 he taught Ottoman history at the University of Chicago. From 1994 on he taught at Bilkent University, where he founded the history department. He was a founding member of Eurasian Academy. Biography He was born in Istanbul on 7 September 1916 to a Crimean Tatar family that left Crimea for the city in 1905. He attended Balฤฑkesir Teacher Training School, and then Ankara University, Faculty of Language, History and Geography, Department of History, from which he graduated in 1940. His work on Timur drew the attention of Mehmet Fuat Kรถprรผlรผ, who facilitated his entry as an assistant to the Modern Age Department of the university. He completed his PhD in 1942 in the same department. His PhD thesis was on the Bulgarian question in the late Ottoman Empire, specifically during tanzimat, and constituted one of the first socioeconomic approaches in Turkish historiography. In December 1943, he became assistant professor and his research interest became focused on the social and economic aspects of the Ottoman Empire. He worked on the Ottoman judicial records of Bursa and in the Ottoman archives in Istanbul. He became a member of the Turkish Historical Society in 1947. In 1949, he was sent by the university to London, where he worked on Ottoman and Turkic inscriptions in the British Museum and attended seminars by Paul Wittek at the School of Oriental and African Studies. Here, he met other influential historians such as Bernard Lewis. He attended a congress in Paris in 1950, where he met Fernand Braudel, whose work greatly influenced him. He returned to Turkey in 1951 and became a professor in the same department in 1952. He lectured as a visiting professor in Columbia University in 1953โ€“54 and worked and studied as a research fellow at Harvard University in 1956โ€“57. Upon his return to Turkey, he lectured on Ottoman, European and American history as well as administrative organization and Atatรผrk's reforms. In 1967, he lectured as a visiting professor in Princeton University and the University of Pennsylvania. He joined the International Association of Southeastern European Studies () in 1966 and held the presidency of this institution between 1971 and 1974. In 1971, Harvard University offered him a permanent teaching position and the University of Pennsylvania offered him a five-year contract. He refused these, wishing to stay in Turkey. However, in the meantime, the political turmoil in Turkey worsened and students became increasingly involved in conflict, hindering education. In 1972, he accepted an invitation to join the faculty of the University of Chicago, where he taught Ottoman history until 1986. Between 1990 and 1992, he lectured as a visiting professor at Harvard and Princeton. In 1992, he returned to Turkey after an invitation by Bilkent University, where he founded the history department, teaching at the postgraduate level, and taught until his death. In 1993, he donated his collection of books, journals and off-prints on the history of Ottoman Empire to the library of Bilkent University. He had been a member and president of many international organizations, he was a member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts in Department of Historical Sciences, also a member of the Institute of Turkish Studies. ฤฐnalcฤฑk died on 25 July 2016 and is buried in the Fatih Mosque in Istanbul. Work and impact ฤฐnalcฤฑk's work was centered upon a social and economic analysis of the Ottoman Empire. He aimed at both countering what he saw as the hostile, biased narrative presented by western sources at the onset of his work and what he saw as an exaggerated, romanticized and nationalistic historiography in Turkey itself. He exemplified the biased western narrative he tried to dispel as Franz Babinger's depiction of Mehmed the Conqueror as a bloodthirsty, sadistic personality. He criticized generalizing approaches to Ottoman history as such approaches, he argued, lacked social or economic insight due to a lack of research. He was the first historian to study Ottoman judicial records in depth to deduce elements of the socioeconomic factors in the Ottoman society. When he first started his research in the 1940s, such documents were believed to be useless due in part to the recent change of alphabet and were being stored in unfavorable conditions or altogether destroyed. ฤฐnalcฤฑk corrected a number of wrong convictions about Ottoman and Turkish history. One such instance was his discovery that the proposition that the Ottoman dynasty belonged to the Kayฤฑ tribe was fabricated in the 15th century. According to Immanuel Wallerstein, ฤฐnalcฤฑk shaped the discipline of historical research with his unique methodology and led to many students in his school of thought approaching issues from a number of socioeconomic and cultural perspectives. He was influenced by the works of Fuad Kรถprรผlรผ, Fernand Braudel and ร–mer Lรผtfi Barkan. List of publications His most important work was his first book, Hicrรฎ 835 tarihli Sรปret-i defter-i sancak-i Arvanid (Copied of register for A.H. 835 in Sanjak of Albania), which was published at Ankara in 1954 and presented one of the earliest available land register in Ottoman Empire's archives. in English: The Origin of the Ottoman-Russian Rivalry and the Don-Volga Canal (1569) (Ankara: Tรผrk Tarih Kurunui Basimevi, 1948). "The Policy of Mehmed II toward the Greek Population of Istanbul and the Byzantine Buildings of the City" (1968) "Capital Formation in the Ottoman Empire" (1969), The Journal of Economic History, Vol. 29, No. 1, The Tasks of Economic History, pp.ย 97โ€“140 "Ottoman Policy and Administration in Cyprus after the Conquest" (1969) History of the Ottoman Empire Classical Age / 1300โ€“1600 (1973) The Ottoman Empire: Conquest, Organization and Economy (1978) Studies in Ottoman Social and Economic History (1985) The Middle East and the Balkans under the Ottoman Empire: Essays on Economy and Society (1993) An Economic and Social History of the Ottoman Empire, 1300โ€“1914 (with Donald Quataert, 1994) From Empire to Republic: Essays on Ottoman and Turkish Social History (1995) Sources and Studies on the Ottoman Black Sea: The Customs Register of Caffa 1487โ€“1490 (1996) Essays in Ottoman History (1998) in Turkish: Makaleler 1: DoฤŸu Batฤฑ, DoฤŸu Batฤฑ Yayฤฑnlarฤฑ 2005 Fatih devri รผzerinde tetkikler ve vesikalar Ankara, 1954 Osmanlฤฑ'da Devlet, Hukuk, Adalet, Eren Yayฤฑncฤฑlฤฑk 2000 Osmanlฤฑ ฤฐmparatorluฤŸu'nun Ekonomik ve Sosyal Tarihi Cilt 1 /1300-1600, Eren Yayฤฑncฤฑlฤฑk, Prof. Dr. Donald Quataert ile 2001 Osmanlฤฑ ฤฐmparatorluฤŸu'nun Ekonomik ve Sosyal Tarihi Cilt 2 / 1600โ€“1914, Eren Yayฤฑncฤฑlฤฑk 2004 Osmanlฤฑ ฤฐmparatorluฤŸu โ€“ Toplum ve Ekonomi, Eren Yayฤฑncฤฑlฤฑk Osmanlฤฑ ฤฐmparatorluฤŸu Klasik ร‡aฤŸ (1300โ€“1600), Yapฤฑ Kredi Yayฤฑnlarฤฑ 2003 Tanzimat ve Bulgar Meselesi Eren Yayฤฑncฤฑlฤฑk ABD Tarihi, Allan Nevins/Henry Steele Commager (รงeviri) DoฤŸu Batฤฑ Yayฤฑnlarฤฑ 2005 ลžair ve Patron, DoฤŸu Batฤฑ Yayฤฑnlarฤฑ 2003 Balkanlar (Prof. Dr. Erol Manisalฤฑ ile) Atatรผrk ve Demokratik Tรผrkiye, Kฤฑrmฤฑzฤฑ Yayฤฑnฤฑnlarฤฑ (1.Baskฤฑ: Temmuz 2007 โ€“ 2.Baskฤฑ: Aralฤฑk 2007) Devlet-i Aliyye (1.Baskฤฑ: 2009) KuruluลŸ โ€“ Osmanlฤฑ Tarihini Yeniden Yazmak Tanzimat, DeฤŸiลŸim Sรผrecinde Osmanlฤฑ ฤฐmparatorluฤŸu (Mehmet SeyitdanlฤฑoฤŸlu ile birlikte) ฤฐลŸ Bankasฤฑ Kรผltรผr Yayฤฑnlarฤฑ 2011. OSMANLILAR, Fรผtรผhat ve Avrupa ฤฐle ฤฐliลŸkiler Has-BaฤŸรงede 'AyลŸ u Tarab โ€“ Nedimler ลžairler Mutripler, ฤฐลŸ Bankasฤฑ Kรผltรผr Yayฤฑnlarฤฑ (2011) KuruluลŸ ve ฤฐmparatorluk Sรผrecinde Osmanlฤฑ Osmanlฤฑlar (2010) KuruluลŸ ve ฤฐmparatorluk Sรผrecinde Osmanlฤฑ (2011) Rรถnesans Avrupasฤฑ Tรผrkiye'nin Batฤฑ Medeniyetiyle ร–zdeลŸleลŸme Sรผreci, ฤฐลŸ Bankasฤฑ Kรผltรผr Yayฤฑnlarฤฑ (2011) Osmanlฤฑ ve Modern Tรผrkiye, TimaลŸ Yayฤฑnlarฤฑ (2013) Devlet-i 'Aliyye: Tagayyรผr ve Fesad, Osmanlฤฑ ฤฐmparatorluฤŸu รœzerine AraลŸtฤฑrmalar II, ฤฐลŸ Bankasฤฑ Kรผltรผr Yayฤฑnlarฤฑ'' (2014) Awards TรœRKSOY Honor Medal. Footnotes References External links Official Web Page โ€“ Halil ฤฐnalcฤฑk Web Page Bilkent University โ€“ Halil ฤฐnalcฤฑk Collection 1916 births 2016 deaths 20th-century Turkish historians 21st-century Turkish historians Turkish people of Crimean Tatar descent Writers from Istanbul Academics of the University of London Ankara University alumni Academic staff of Ankara University Academic staff of Bilkent University Members of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts Foreign members of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts Scholars of Ottoman history University of Chicago faculty Historians of Turkey METU Mustafa Parlar Foundation Science Award winners
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EB%A7%88%ED%8B%B8%EB%8B%A4%20%28%EB%AE%A4%EC%A7%80%EC%BB%AC%29
๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค (๋ฎค์ง€์ปฌ)
ใ€Š๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹คใ€‹(Matilda the Musical)๋Š” 1988๋…„์— ์•„๋™๋ฌธํ•™๊ฐ€ ๋กœ์•Œ๋“œ ๋‹ฌ์ด ์ง‘ํ•„ํ•œ ์†Œ์„ค์„ ์›์ž‘์œผ๋กœ, 2010๋…„์— ์˜๊ตญ ์Šคํƒ ํฌ๋“œ์— ์ดˆ์—ฐํ•œ ์›จ์ŠคํŠธ์—”๋“œ ๋ฎค์ง€์ปฌ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ฐœ์š” 2009๋…„ ์˜๊ตญ์— ์œ ๋ช…ํ•œ "๋กœ์—ด ์…ฐ์ต์ŠคํŽ˜์–ด ์ปดํผ๋‹ˆ(์ดํ•˜ RSC)"๊ฐ€ ๋ฐ๋‹ˆ์Šค ์ผˆ๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๊ทน์ž‘๊ฐ€๋กœ ํ•˜์—ฌ ํŒ€ ๋ฏผ์นœ์ด ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฎค์ง€์ปฌ ๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค๋ฅผ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ•˜๊ณ , ์ž‘๊ณก๊ฐ€ ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ†  ๋‚˜์ดํŒ…๊ฒŒ์ผ, ์Œ์•… ๊ฐ๋… ๋กญ ํ•˜์›ฐ, ์„ธํŠธ ๋””์ž์ด๋„ˆ ํด ํ‚ค์—๋ธŒ์™€ ํŠน์ˆ˜ํšจ๊ณผ ์ œ์ž‘์‚ฌ์ธ ๋กœ์–„ ์…ฐ์ต์ŠคํŽ˜์–ด ์ปดํผ๋‹ˆ(์ดํ•˜ RSC)๋Š” 2010๋…„ ๊ฒจ์šธ์— ์„ธ๊ณ„ ์ดˆ์—ฐ์„ ์•ž๋‘๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธํ•ด 11์›” 9์ผ์— ์˜๊ตญ ์Šคํƒ ํฌ๋“œ์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์ŠคํŠธ๋žซํผ๋“œ ๊ทน์žฅ์—์„œ ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋ทฐ ๊ณต์—ฐ์„ ํ•œ๋’ค, 12์›” 9์ผ์— ์ •์‹์œผ๋กœ ์ดˆ์—ฐํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์›จ์ŠคํŠธ์—”๋“œ ์ดˆ์—ฐ 2011๋…„ 10์›” 18์ผ, ๋ฎค์ง€์ปฌ ๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค๋Š” ์˜๊ตญ ์›จ์ŠคํŠธ์—”๋“œ์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์บ ๋ธŒ๋ฆฟ์ง€ ๊ทน์žฅ์—์„œ ๊ณต์—ฐ์„ ์˜ค๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋ฎค์ง€์ปฌ ๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค๋Š”, 2012๋…„ ์˜ฌ๋ฆฌ๋ฒ„ ์–ด์›Œ์ฆˆ์—์„œ 10๊ฐœ ๋ถ€๋ฌธ ๋ชจ๋‘์— ํ›„๋ณด๋กœ ์˜ฌ๋ž๊ณ , ์›จ์ŠคํŠธ์—”๋“œ์— ์ดˆ์—ฐํ–ˆ๋˜ ๋„ค ๋ช…์˜ ๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ์‹œ์ƒ์‹์—์„œ "์žฅ๋‚œ ๊พธ๋Ÿฌ๊ธฐ"๊ณต์—ฐ์„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์™ธ์—๋„ 7๊ฐœ ๋ถ€๋ฌธ ์˜ฌ๋ฆฌ๋น„์— ์ƒ์„ ์ˆ˜์ƒํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ˆ˜์ƒํ•œ ๋ถ„์•ผ๋Š”, ์ตœ๊ณ ์˜ ์‹ ์ž‘ ๋ฎค์ง€์ปฌ, ์ตœ๊ณ  ๊ฐ๋…(Warchus), ๋ฎค์ง€์ปฌ(Carvel)์˜ ์ตœ์šฐ์ˆ˜ ๋ฐฐ์šฐ์ƒ, ๋ฎค์ง€์ปฌ(4๋ช…์˜ ๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค๋ฅผ ์—ฐ๊ธฐํ•œ ์•„์—ญ), ์ตœ์šฐ์ˆ˜ ์•ˆ๋ฌด๊ฐ€ (๋‹ฌ๋ง), ์ตœ์šฐ์ˆ˜ ์„ธํŠธ ๋””์ž์ธ (Howell)๊ณผ Best Sound Design (๋ฒ ์ด์ปค)๋“ฑ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ธฐํƒ€ ์ด์™ธ์—๋„ 2012๋…„ 11์›” 19์ผ์— ์˜๊ตญ์˜ ITV ๋ฐฉ์†ก๊ตญ์— "Royal Variety Performance"์— ์ดˆ์ฒญ๋œ ์ „๋ ฅ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ธŒ๋กœ๋“œ์›จ์ด ์ดˆ์—ฐ 2012๋…„ 2์›” 29์ผ, RSC๊ฐ€ ๋ฎค์ง€์ปฌ ๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค๋Š” ๋ธŒ๋กœ๋“œ์›จ์ด์— ์ •์‹์œผ๋กœ ์ดˆ์—ฐํ•˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ฐœํ‘œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2012๋…„ 7์›” 19์ผ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2013๋…„ 4์›” 11์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋‰ด์š• ๋ธŒ๋กœ๋“œ์›จ์ด์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์Šˆ๋ฒ ๋ฅดํŠธ ๊ทน์žฅ์—์„œ ๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค ๊ณต์—ฐ์„ ์˜ค๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ์•„์—ญ๋ฐฐ์šฐ 4๋ช…์ด ๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค๋กœ์จ ์—ญํ• ์„ ์†Œํ™”ํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ์ˆœํšŒ๊ณต์—ฐ 2013๋…„ 6์›” 1์ผ, ํŒ€ ๋ฏผ์นœ์€ ์ธํ„ฐ๋ทฐ์—์„œ "๋ฎค์ง€์ปฌ ๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค๊ฐ€" ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๊ตญ๋ฆฝ ํˆฌ์–ด๋ฅผ ์ค€๋น„ ์ค‘์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ฐœํ‘œํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ ๊ทธํ•ด 7์›” 7์ผ ์ธ๊ธฐ์— ํž˜์ž…์–ด ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ์ „๊ตญ์„ ๋Œ๋ฉฐ ์ˆœํšŒ๊ณต์—ฐ์„ ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ˜ธ์ฃผ ๋ฐ ๋‰ด์งˆ๋žœ๋“œ ์ดˆ์—ฐ 2013๋…„ 7์›” ํŒ€ ๋ฏผ์นœ์ด ํ˜ธ์ฃผ ๋ฐ ๋‰ด์งˆ๋žœ๋“œ ๊ณต์—ฐ ๊ณ„ํš์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ฐœํ‘œํ•œ๋’ค, ๊ทธํ•ด 9์›” ์‹œ๋“œ๋‹ˆ์—์„œ ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ "๋ฎค์ง€์ปฌ ๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค" ๊ณต์—ฐ์„ ์˜ฌ๋ฆฐ๋’ค, ๋ฉœ๋ฒ„๋ฅธ, ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ๋ฒˆ, ํผ์Šค, ์• ๋“ค๋ ˆ์ด๋“œ์™€ ๋‰ด์งˆ๋žœ๋“œ ์˜คํด๋žœ๋“œ์—์„œ ์ž‡๋”ฐ๋ผ ๊ณต์—ฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์บ๋‚˜๋‹ค ํ† ๋ก ํ†  ๊ณต์—ฐ ์บ๋‚˜๋‹ค ํ† ๋ก ํ† ์—์„œ 2016๋…„ 7์›”๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2017๋…„ 1์›” 7์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ ์บ๋‚˜๋‹ค ํ† ๋ก ํ†  ์—๋“œ๋ฏธ๋ฅด๋น„์‰ฌ ๊ทน์žฅ์—์„œ ๊ณต์—ฐ์„ ์˜ฌ๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ์™ธ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€ ํ•„๋ฆฌํ•€์—์„œ 2018๋…„ 1์›”์— ๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ์ดˆ์—ฐ๋˜์–ด ๊ณต์—ฐ์„ ์˜ฌ๋ ธ๊ณ , ์ด ์™ธ์—๋„ ์ „ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ์ˆœํšŒ ๊ณต์—ฐ์„ ํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ๋‚จ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ, ์‹ฑ๊ฐ€ํฌ๋ฅด, ์ค‘๊ตญ์—์„œ ์ž‡๋”ฐ๋ผ ๊ณต์—ฐ์„ ์˜ค๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ์„ ํ’์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ธ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋Œ๊ณ  ์žˆ๊ณ , ๋‚˜๋‚ ํžˆ ๊ด€๋žŒ์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ๊ธ‰์ฆํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ์ดˆ์—ฐ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์—์„œ ์‹ ์‹œ์ปดํผ๋‹ˆ๊ฐ€ 2018๋…„ 9์›” 6์ผ์— ๋ฎค์ง€์ปฌ ๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค๋ฅผ ์ดˆ์—ฐํ•˜์—ฌ 2019๋…„ 2์›” 10์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ 189ํšŒ์— ๊ฑธ์ณ ์—ญ์‚ผ๋™ LG ์•„ํŠธ์„ผํ„ฐ์— ๊ณต์—ฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ์ตœ์ดˆ ์ดˆ์—ฐ์ด๋ฉด์„œ, ์•„์‹œ์•„ ์ตœ์ดˆ ์ดˆ์—ฐ์— ๋น„์˜์–ด๊ถŒ ์ตœ์ดˆ๋กœ ์ดˆ์—ฐ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์ ์—์„œ ์„ ํ’์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ธ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋Œ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•œ๊ตญ ๊ณต์—ฐ ์ถœ์—ฐ์ง„ ๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค ์›œ์šฐ๋“œ ํ™ฉ์˜ˆ์˜, ์•ˆ์†Œ๋ช…,์ด์ง€๋‚˜, ์„ค๊ฐ€์€ ๋ฏธ์Šค ์•„๊ฐ€์‚ฌ ํŠธ๋Ÿฐ์น˜๋ถˆ : ๊น€์šฐํ˜•, ์ตœ์žฌ๋ฆผ ๋ฏธ์Šค ์ œ๋‹ˆํผ ํ—ˆ๋‹ˆ : ๋ฐฉ์ง„์˜, ๋ฐ•ํ˜œ๋ฏธ ๋ฏธ์„ธ์Šค ์ง€๋‹ˆ์•„ ์›œ์šฐ๋“œ : ์ตœ์ •์›, ๊ฐ•์›…๊ณค ๋ฏธ์Šคํ„ฐ ํ•ด๋ฆฌ ์›œ์šฐ๋“œ : ํ˜„์ˆœ์ฒ , ๋ฌธ์„ฑํ˜ ๋ฏธ์„ธ์Šค ํŽ ํ”„์Šค : ๊น€๊ธฐ์ • ์•จ๋ฆฌ์Šค : ์†ก๋‘๋‚˜, ๊น€๋‹จ๋น„ ๋ผ๋ฒค๋” : ๊น€์š”๋‚˜, ๊น€ํ•˜์œค ์•„๋งŒ๋‹ค : ๊น€์—ฐํ™”, ์˜ค๋ฏธ์„  ๋ธŒ๋ฃจ์Šค : ๋ฌธ์„œ์œค, ์ดํƒœ๊ฒฝ, ๊ณฝ์ด์•ˆ, ๊น€๊ทœ๋™ ํ† ๋ฏธ : ์œ ํ˜ธ์—ด, ์—๋ฆญ ํ…Œ์ผ๋Ÿฌ ๋‚˜์ด์ ค : ์„ฑ์ง€ํ™˜, ๊ฐ•ํฌ์ค€ ์—๋ฆญ : ์ด์šฐ์ง„, ์„ฑ์ฃผํ™˜ ํ˜ธ๋ฅดํ…์‹œ์•„ : ๋ฐ•์†Œํ˜„ ํ‚ค์ฆˆ ์Šค์œ™ : ๊น€๋‚˜์—ฐ, ์˜ค์œ ๋ฆผ ์•™์ƒ๋ธ” ๋ฐ ์Šค์œ™ : ์„œ๋งŒ์„, ๊ฐ•์ธ์˜, ์ตœ์€์ฃผ, ๊ฐ•๋™์ฃผ, ์œ ์ฒ ํ˜ธ, ์—ฐ๋ณด๋ผ, ์ด์Šน์ผ, ๊น€์‹œ์˜, ์ฃผ๋ฏผ์šฐ, ๋ฐ•์ฐฌ์–‘, ๊น€์•„๋ฆ„, ๊น€์•„๋žŒ, ๊น€์˜ˆ์ง€, ํ•œ์ค€ํ˜ 2๋ฒˆ์งธ ํ•œ๊ตญ๊ณต์—ฐ ๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค ์›œ์šฐ๋“œ ์—ญ : ์ž„ํ•˜์œค, ํ•˜์‹ ๋น„, ์ตœ์€์˜, ์ง„์—ฐ์šฐ ๋ฎค์ง€์ปฌ ๋„˜๋ฒ„ ์ œ1๋ง‰ "Overture" โ€“ Orchestra "Miracle" โ€“ Children, Party Entertainer, Doctor, Mrs. Wormwood, Mr. Wormwood, Matilda, Company "Naughty" โ€“ Matilda "Story 1: Once Upon A Time" โ€“ Matilda, Mrs. Phelps, Acrobat, Escapologist "School Song" โ€“ Ensemble "Pathetic" โ€“ Miss Honey "The Hammer" โ€“ Miss Trunchbull, Miss Honey, Children "The Chokey Chant" โ€“ Ensemble "Loud" โ€“ Mrs. Wormwood, Rudolpho, Ensemble "This Little Girl" โ€“ Miss Honey "Story 2: The Great Day Arrived..." โ€“ Matilda, Mrs. Phelps, Escapologist, Acrobat's Sister "Bruce" โ€“ Company ์ œ2๋ง‰ "Telly" โ€“ Mr. Wormwood, Michael "When I Grow Up" โ€“ Children, Miss Honey, Matilda, Company "Story 3: The Trick Started Well..." โ€“ Matilda, Mrs. Phelps, Acrobat, Escapologist "Story 4: I'm Here" โ€“ Matilda, Escapologist "The Smell of Rebellion" โ€“ Miss Trunchbull, Children "Quiet" โ€“ Matilda "My House" โ€“ Miss Honey, Escapologist "Revolting Children" โ€“ Children, Ensemble "This Little Girl" (reprise)# โ€“ Sergei "When I Grow Up" (reprise) โ€“ Company ์ค„๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ ํƒœ์–ด๋‚  ๋•Œ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋‚จ๋‹ฌ๋ฆฌ ๊นœ์ฐํ•˜๊ณ  ์ด๋ช…ํ•œ ์†Œ๋…€ ๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค์—๊ฒŒ๋Š” ๋„ˆ๋ฌด๋‚˜ ์•ˆ ์–ด์šธ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๊ฐ€์กฑ์ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋“ค์€ ๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค์˜ ์ฒœ์žฌ์„ฑ์„ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌํ•˜๊ธฐ๋Š”์ปค๋…• ๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค์—๊ฒŒ ๋ฐ”๋ณด๊ฐ™์€ TV๋ฅผ ์–ต์ง€๋กœ ๋ณด๊ฒŒ ํ•˜๊ณ  ์ฝ๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ์ฑ…๋งˆ์ € ๋นผ์•—์•„ ๋˜์ ธ๋ฒ„๋ฆฐ๋‹ค. 6์‚ด์ด ๋˜๋˜ ํ•ด ๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค๋ฅผ ์„ฑ๊ฐ€์‹œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋Š๋‚€ ๊ทธ๋…€์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€๋Š” ๋”ธ์„ ์ด์ƒํ•œ ํ•™๊ต์— ์ž…ํ•™์‹œํ‚จ๋‹ค. ์ด ํ•™๊ต๋Š” ํ•œ๋งˆ๋””๋กœ ๊ณตํฌ์ธ ์•„๊ฐ€ํƒ€ ํŠธ๋Ÿฐ์น˜๋ถˆ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ, ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ฐฉํ•˜๊ณ  ์•„์ด๋“ค์„ ์ง„์‹ฌ์œผ๋กœ ์‚ฌ๋ž‘ํ•˜๋Š” ๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค์˜ ๋‹ด์ž„ ์„ ์ƒ๋‹˜ ๋ฏธ์Šค ์ œ๋‹ˆํผ ํ—ˆ๋‹ˆ์™€ ์นœ๊ตฌ๋“ค ๋•๋ถ„์— ๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค๋Š” ํ•™๊ต ์ƒํ™œ์ด ์ฆ๊ฒ๊ธฐ๋งŒ ํ•˜๋‹ค. ํ•œํŽธ ํ—ˆ๋‹ˆ๋Š” ๋ถˆํ–‰ํ•œ ๊ณผ๊ฑฐ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์€ ๋ฐ”๋กœ ๊ต์žฅ์ธ ํŠธ๋Ÿฐ์น˜๋ถˆ์ด ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์ด๋ชจ์ด๊ณ  ๊ทธ๋…€๊ฐ€ ํ—ˆ๋‹ˆ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€์ด์ž ํƒˆ์ถœ ๋งˆ์ˆ ์‚ฌ ๋งค๊ทธ๋„ˆ์Šค์˜ ๋ชจ๋“  ์žฌ์‚ฐ๊ณผ ํ•™๊ต๋งˆ์ € ๋‹ค ๋นผ์•—์•„ ๋ฒ„๋ ธ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด๋ฅผ ๋ณธ ๋งˆํ‹ธ๋‹ค๋Š” ์นœ๊ตฌ๋“ค๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์•„์ด๋“ค์„ ๊ท€์ฐฎ๊ณ  ์“ธ๋ชจ์—†๋Š” ์กด์žฌ๋กœ ์ทจ๊ธ‰ํ•˜๋Š” ์•„๊ฐ€ํƒ€ ํŠธ๋Ÿฐ์น˜๋ถˆ ๊ต์žฅ์„ ์ƒ๋‹˜์„ ์ซ“์•„๋‚ด๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ž‘์ „์„ ํŽธ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ 2010๋…„ ๋ฎค์ง€์ปฌ ๋ธŒ๋กœ๋“œ์›จ์ด ๋ฎค์ง€์ปฌ ์›จ์ŠคํŠธ์—”๋“œ ๋ฎค์ง€์ปฌ 2018๋…„ ๋ฎค์ง€์ปฌ 2019๋…„ ๋ฎค์ง€์ปฌ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matilda%20the%20Musical
Matilda the Musical
Roald Dahl's Matilda, also known simply as Matilda and Matilda the Musical, is a musical with music and lyrics by Tim Minchin and a book by Dennis Kelly. It is based on the 1988 novel Matilda by Roald Dahl. The musical's narrative centres on Matilda Wormwood, a precocious five-year-old girl with the gift of telekinesis, who loves reading, overcomes obstacles caused by her family and school, and helps her teacher to reclaim her life. After a twelve-week trial run staged by the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) at Stratford-upon-Avon from November 2010 to January 2011, it received its West End premiere on 24ย November 2011 at the Cambridge Theatre and its Broadway premiere on 11ย April 2013 at the Shubert Theatre. Matilda the Musical has received widespread critical acclaim and box-office popularity, winning seven 2012 Olivier Awards, including Best New Musicalat the time, the highest number of such awards ever won by a single show. Cleo Demetriou, Kerry Ingram, Eleanor Worthington Cox and Sophia Kiely shared a Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role in a Musical. Ten-year-old Eleanor Worthington became the youngest winner of the award in any category. At the 2013 Tony Awards, the show won five awards, including the Tony Award for Best Book of a Musical for Dennis Kelly. A film adaptation was released on 25ย November 2022 in the United Kingdom, followed by the United States on 25ย December 2022. Background In 1988, British children's author Roald Dahl wrote the original novel Matilda, illustrated by Quentin Blake, about a young intelligent girl who develops a love of reading despite her abusive parents and headmistress of her school, incorporating rebellion and magical powers. The novel was adapted into a 1996 American film directed by Danny DeVito as well as an audio reading by Kate Winslet and a BBC Radio 4 programme narrated by Lenny Henry. In December 2009, the Royal Shakespeare Company announced its intention to stage a musical adaptation with direction by Matthew Warchus and adaptation by Dennis Kelly. Musician and comedian Tim Minchin was chosen to write music and lyrics after Warchus saw his 2009 tour Ready for This? and persuaded during the encore song "White Wine in the Sun". It was also revealed comedian and musician Bill Bailey had been asked to write the songs, however turned the project down due to other works. Coincidentally Minchin revealed that he had originally attempted to gain permission from the Dahl estate to stage a musical adaptation in the early 2000s when writing for a local youth theatre in Perth, Western Australia. Productions Stratford-upon-Avon (2010โ€“11) In 2009, the Royal Shakespeare Company announced its intent to stage a musical adaptation of the story Matilda, engaging Dennis Kelly as playwright, Tim Minchin as the composer and lyricist, Matthew Warchus as director, Chris Nightingale as orchestrator and music supervision, Rob Howell as set designer and Paul Kieve as illusionist and special effects creator. Originally titled Matilda, A Musical, the show opened at the Courtyard Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon, England on 9ย December 2010, following previews from 9ย November. The production was choreographed by Peter Darling. Bertie Carvel played the infamous Miss Trunchbull, with Paul Kaye and Josie Walker as Matilda's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wormwood, and Lauren Ward as Matilda's angelic teacher, Miss Honey. Three young actresses, Adrianna Bertola, Josie Griffiths and Kerry Ingram, alternated in the title role. The show ended its premiere engagement on 30ย January 2011. London (2011โ€“present) In 2011, the musical received its West End debut (under the new title of Matilda the Musical) at London's Cambridge Theatre. The show was originally scheduled to begin previews on 18 October 2011, but because of structural and installation work at the theatre, the start of the performances was delayed until 25 October. The opening night was postponed from 22 to 24 November. The musical opened in London to uniformly positive reviews; Kaye and Carvel received high praise for their performances. Many of the principal adult cast from the Stratford run reprised their roles in London. Eleanor Worthington Cox, Cleo Demetriou, Sophia Kiely and Kerry Ingramthe only one to reprise her role from Stratford at this timestarred in the title role. In October 2011, Matilda won Best Musical and Best Actor (Bertie Carvel) in the UK Theatre Awards, and in November 2011 it won the Ned Sherrin Award for Best Musical as part of The Evening Standard Theatre Awards. The production was nominated in all 10 categories for which it was eligible at the 2012 Olivier Awards. The four Matildas performed "Naughty" at the awards show. Matilda won 7 Oliviers: Best New Musical, Best Director (Warchus), Best Actor in a Musical (Carvel), Best Actress in a Musical (accepted by four Matildas), Best Theatre Choreographer (Darling), Best Set Design (Howell) and Best Sound Design (Baker). This was a record number for any show in the event's 36-year history. On March 16, 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the show suspended performances, returning to the Cambridge Theatre from 16 September 2021. On 12 November 2021, a 10th anniversary performance celebrated 10 years since the show opened in the West End which featured a pre-show speech by Kelly and Minchin with many of the creatives and previous cast in attendance, including 42 previous Matildas. Broadway (2013โ€“17) On 29 February 2012, the RSC announced the show would transfer to Broadway in spring 2013; it would still be set in England despite initial pressure for the show to be Americanised. On 19 July 2012, it was announced that the show would open on 11 April 2013 at the Shubert Theatre, with previews commencing on 4 March 2013. Bertie Carvel and Lauren Ward reprised their roles as Miss Trunchbull and Miss Honey. Ted Wilson also continued as Eric. A four-girl cast consisting of Sophia Gennusa, Oona Laurence, Bailey Ryon, and Milly Shapiro played the titular role of Matilda. The transfer cost to produce; it opened as planned on 11 April 2013, with Sophia Gennusa playing the leading role. Small changes were made from the London production; some lyrics were changed to suit American audiences, and more scenes used the orchestra pit/front stalls area of the theatre. The Broadway production also introduced an overture and pre-show curtain, as of June 2013. The Broadway production closed on 1 January 2017 after 1,555 performances. US national tour (2015โ€“17) On 1 June 2013, Tim Minchin announced during an interview that the show was preparing for a US national tour. Minchin said, "We just got it up in New York, there's a touring version that is meant to be going on in America...". Once again produced by the Royal Shakespeare Company and The Dodgers, the tour began technical rehearsals and performances in May 2015 at the Shubert Theatre in New Haven, Connecticut, before its official launch on 7 June at the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles, California. Announced stops included the SHN Orpheum Theare in San Francisco, California, the 5th Avenue Theatre in Seattle, Washington, the AT&T Performing Arts Center in Dallas, Texas, the Kennedy Center Opera House in Washington, D.C., and the Straz Center for the Performing Arts in Tampa, Florida. The cast was announced on 21 April 2015. Three girls would alternate in the lead role: Mia Sinclair Jenness, Gabby Gutierrez, and Mabel Tyler. Gutierrez and Tyler made their tour debuts; Jenness had appeared in the original Broadway cast and 25th anniversary tour of Les Misรฉrables. Other principal cast members included Jennifer Blood as Miss Honey, Bryce Ryness as Miss Trunchbull, and Quinn Mattfeld and Cassie Silva as Mr. and Mrs. Wormwood. The national tour of Matilda had its first official performance on 7 June 2015 at the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles, California. Mia Sinclair Jenness played the title role. The US national tour took its final bow on 25 June 2017 at the Chapman Music Hall in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Australian and New Zealand tour (2015โ€“17) Sydney: In July 2013, Minchin said that an Australian production was planned for 2015. The production, produced by Louise Withers, had preview performances from 28 July before opening at the Sydney Lyric theatre on 20 August 2015. The ticketing release date (October 2014) was announced at Pier 2/3 in Walsh Bay, with Minchin, International Executive Producer Andrรฉ Ptaszynski, NSW Deputy Premier Andrew Stoner and Sydney press in attendance. The cast included Marika Aubrey and Daniel Frederiksen as Mr. and Mrs. Wormwood, Elise McCann as Miss Honey and James Millar as Miss Trunchbull. Sasha Rose (12), Georgia Taplin (11), Molly Barwick (10) and Bella Thomas (13) shared the title role with Thomas playing Matilda on the opening night. The Sydney season ended on Sunday 29 February with Georgia Taplin playing the title role, before transferring to Melbourne. Melbourne: For the Melbourne season, Dusty Bursill, Alannah Parfett, Tiana Mirra and Ingrid Torelli were announced to rotate playing the title role. On 3 January, Sydney Matilda Bella Thomas was injured and Parfett began her run early in Sydney, covering Thomas until she was better and joining the girls in a rotation until the end of the Sydney run. Mirra and Torelli made their debuts in Sydney's final week on 24 and 27 February respectively. The show opened at Melbourne's Princess Theatre on 13 March and was extended to perform until 11 November 2016. Some of the Sydney child cast members reprised their roles for selected performances in Melbourne; for example, certain performances featured Molly Barwick as Matilda. Brisbane, Perth, Adelaide and Auckland: A new season was announced to start in Brisbane, Perth, Adelaide, and Auckland. Izellah Connelly, Annabella Cowley, Venice Harris, Eva Murawski rotated the leading role of Matilda. The Matilda tour continued on to Brisbane from 25 November 2016 to 12 February 2017 at the Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC) before moving on to perform at the Crown Theatre in Perth from 28 February until 7 May 2017 and from 21 May to 16 July 2017 at the Adelaide Festival Theatre in South Australia. The show ran in at the Civic Theatre in Auckland until 22 October 2017. Lucy Maunder was initially scheduled to take on the role of Miss Honey from McCann beginning the Brisbane leg. However, due to Maunder's pregnancy, the transition was postponed until 20 March 2017 midway through the Perth leg. Toronto (2016โ€“17) After the successful launches of Once and the Tony Award-winning Kinky Boots, Mirvish Productions chose to open a Canadian production of Matilda the Musical. The company opened at the Ed Mirvish Theatre beginning in July 2016, closing on 7 January 2017. Hannah Levinson, Jenna Weir, and Jaime MacLean rotated playing the title role. On 8 October 2016, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and family attended a performance. UK and Ireland tour (2018โ€“19) On 11 April 2017, a tour was announced to begin at Curve, Leicester from 5โ€“24 March 2018 before touring to Bord Gรกis Energy Theatre, Dublin (4โ€“28 April), Sunderland Empire (8 May - 2 June), Milton Keynes Theatre (5โ€“30 June), Birmingham Hippodrome (3 July โ€“ 8 September), Manchester Palace Theatre (18 September โ€“ 24 November) and Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff (4 December - 12 January 2019). Further venues were announced on 13 March 2018. The tour will go to Theatre Royal, Plymouth (15 January - 16 February 2019), the Alhambra Theatre, Bradford (19 February โ€“ 23 March), Edinburgh Playhouse (2โ€“27 April), the Bristol Hippodrome (7 May - 8 June), Southampton Mayflower (11 June โ€“ 6 July) and Norwich Theatre Royal (16 July โ€“ 17 August). On 17 October 2017, the adult cast was announced, to include Craige Els as Miss Trunchbull, Carly Thoms as Miss Honey, Sebastien Torkia as Mr Wormwood and Rebecca Thornhill as Mrs Wormwood. On 16 January 2018, the children's cast was announced, with the role of Matilda being shared between Annalise Bradbury, Lara Cohen, Poppy Jones and Nicola Turner. The tour officially opened as scheduled on 5 March 2018 at the Curve theatre in Leicester, with Poppy Jones in the title role on opening night. Philippines (2017) Matilda had its Asian premiere in the Philippines on 10 November 2017. The production closed on 10 December 2017. This production was the first licensed production; it was not produced by the Royal Shakespeare Company, and has no links to the original production except for the score and script. The show featured Esang de Torres, Uma Martin, and Felicity Kyle Napuli alternating the title role, with Esang playing the role on opening night. The Manila production also had a 16-child strong cast alternating 8 other student roles, namely Gabrielle Aerin Ong and Maria Ericka Peralejo as Lavander; Denise Fidel Arteta and Chi Chi Tan as Amanda; Nicole Chien and Ella Gonzalez as Alice; Alba Berenguer-Testa and Chantel Marie Guinid as Hortensia; Josh Nubla and Miguel Suarez as Bruce; Rhythm Alexander and Ian Albert Magallona as Eric; Gabo Tiongson and Pablo Miguel Palacpac as Nigel; and John Joseph Miraflores and Teddy Velasco as Tommy. Korea (2018โ€“19, 2022โ€“23) In July 2017, Seensee Company announced they would be producing a production of Matilda the Musical in September 2018. The production will be in arrangement with the RSC and be the first non-English version of Matilda produced. The company includes a cast consisting of four girls, named Li Ji Na, An So Myeong, Hwang Ye Yeong, and Seol Ga Eun that will rotate in the title role of Matilda, as well as a 16-member child cast that will play the roles of Matilda's classmates. The production opened their preview show on 8 September 2018, with An So Myeong in the title role. Li Ji Na and Seol Ga Eun played their first performances on 9 September, and Hwang Ye Yeong had first debut as Matilda on 14 September. A 12 September press call included a performance of Naughty by Hwang Ye Young, Quiet by Seol Ga Eun, a performance of Revolting Children, and more. The production officially closed on 10 February 2019, with Hwang Ye Yeong playing the title role. In April 2020, Seensee Company announced they will be running another production of Matilda the Musical from October 2022 to January 2023, in Daesung D Cube Art Center. The cast includes four girls playing Matilda (Lim Ha Yun, Jin Yeon Woo, Choi Eun Yeong, Ha Sin Bi), a 16-member child cast, and a 26-member adult cast. The production opened their preview show on 5 October 2022. International tour (2018โ€“20, 2023) South Africa: An international tour began at the Teatro At Montecasino in Johannesburg from 17 October to 2 December 2018, before running at the Artscape Opera House in Cape Town from 11 December 2018 to 13 January 2019. The tour cast was announced on 28 August 2018 Lilla Fleischmann, Kitty Harris, and Morgan Santo in the role of Matilda. Other cast members include Ryan de Villers as Miss Trunchbull, Bethany Dickson as Miss Honey, Stephen Jubber and Claire Taylor as Mr. and Mrs. Wormwood, and Nonpumelelo Mayiyane as Mrs. Phelps. Matilda's classmates will be played by Jack Fokkens, Keeran Isaacs, Robyn Ivey, Joshua LeClair, Levi Maron, Ipeleng Merafe, Megan Saayman, Taylor Salgado, Cameron Seear and Zac Gabriel Werb. The rest of the adult ensemble includes Jasmin Colangelo, Katrina Dix, Sinead Donnelly, Michael Gardiner, Kent Jeycocke, Weslee Lauder, Carlo McFarlane, Kenneth Meyer, Daniel Parrott, Adrianna Patlaszynska, Jonathan Raath, and Logan Timbr. Singapore: Following the South African runs, the international tour began a run at the Sands Theater at Marina Bay Sands. At this time, Sofia Poston joined the show as Matilda. She will rotate along with Fleischmann, Harris, and Santo. Poston had her debut on the tour's opening night in Singapore. The tour will perform there from 21 February to 17 March 2019. China: Following the Singaporean runs, the international tour ran across 13 cities in China from June 2019 to January 2020. Philippines: The Manila leg of the international tour at The Theater at Solaire at Solaire Resort & Casino, ran from 5 March and ended early on 13 March 2020 due to the fears of coronavirus in the country, it was supposed to end on 25 March 2020. Zara Yazbek Polito, Sofia Poston, and Zoe Modlinne will rotate in the title role. Haley Flaherty and Hayden Tee will reprise their West End roles as Miss Honey and Miss Trunchbull. The cast also includes Stephen Jubber as Mr. Wormwood, Matthew Leck as Bruce Bogtrotter, Claire Taylor as Mrs. Wormwood, and Nompumelelo Mayiyane as Mrs. Phelps. Israel: In August 2023, the tour reopened at the Tel Aviv Opera House. Originally scheduled to run from 7 August to 22 August, it was then extended to 26 August due to demand. The tour cast was announced on 27 July 2023 with Donna Craig, Myla Williams, and Yolani Balfour in the role of Matilda. Other cast members include Ryan de Villers & James Wolstenholme as Miss Trunchbull, Carly Thoms & Gemma Scholes as Miss Honey, Matthew Rowland and Emily Squibb as Mr. and Mrs. Wormwood, and Londiwe Dlamini as Mrs. Phelps. Japan (2023) In June 2022, HoriPro announced that a Japanese version of Matilda would be performed at Tokyu Theatre Orb in Tokyo, Japan starting from Spring 2023. The cast includes Sakura Kamura, Minori Kumano, Miran Terada and Nonoka Mikami sharing the role of Matilda as well as Yusuke Onuki, Ryunosuke Onoda and alternating as Miss Agatha Trunchbull, Miyu Sakihi and Natsumi Kon alternating as Miss Jennifer Honey, Mario Tashiro and Tsukasa Saito (from Trendy Angel) alternating as Mr. Wormwood, Hiromu Kiriya and Chihiro Otsuka alternating as Mrs. Wormwood and Mayumi Oka and Yukiko Ikeda alternating as Mrs. Phelps. US Regional Productions In 2018, a small number of major regional theaters produced Matilda. Walnut Street Theatre's production of Matilda was the first regional production after the show closed down on Broadway. Philadelphia's Walnut Street Theatre produced Matilda with performances beginning on 6 November 2018 for a total run of 4 months through 2019. Matilda was played by Jemma Bleu Greenbaum and Ellie Biron. Synopsis Act I Mrs. Wormwood gives birth to Matilda, but the new mother is only worried about a ballroom dancing contest she has missed. Similarly shallow, Mr. Wormwoodโ€”a used-car salesman and television addictโ€”dismisses the child when he realizes she is a girl ("Miracle"). Five years later, Matilda is an avid reader and lives unhappily with her parents. The Wormwoods are oblivious to her genius and frequently mock and verbally abuse her. Matilda adds some of her mother's peroxide to her father's hair oil, leaving Mr. Wormwood with bright green hair ("Naughty"). At the library, Matilda spends time with the kind librarian Mrs. Phelps and makes up a story about a world-famous acrobat couple who cannot have children ("Once Upon a Time"). Matilda has her first day at school ("School Song"). Her teacher Miss Honey instantly sees that Matilda is exceptionally intelligent and decides to request that Matilda be moved to the top class ("Pathetic"). However, the child-hating and tyrannical headmistress Miss Trunchbull dismisses Miss Honey's suggestion ("The Hammer"). Matilda's father takes out his career frustration on Matilda, so she puts superglue around the rim of his hat ("Naughty" reprise). At school, Matilda is told of Miss Trunchbull's cruel punishments, including the Chokey: a tiny cupboard lined with sharp objects in which she locks disobedient children for hours ("The Chokey Chant"). Miss Honey meets Mrs. Wormwood and her dance partner Rudolpho. Mrs. Wormwood mocks Matilda's interest in books and intellect ("Loud"). Miss Honey is desperate to help Matilda but feels powerless to do so ("This Little Girl"). Matilda tells Mrs. Phelps more about the acrobat couple. When the acrobat gets pregnant, her sister becomes furious about refunding the crowd's money and produces a contract binding them to perform the act or go to jail ("The Great Day Arrived"). At school, Bruce Bogtrotter is punished by Miss Trunchbull ("Bruce"). Act II Mr. Wormwood advises the audience against reading in favor of watching television ("Telly"). Matilda's classmates sing about their hopes ("When I Grow Up"). Matilda tells Mrs. Phelps more of the story of the acrobat. Bound by their contract, she performs her act but is fatally injured, living just long enough to give birth to a girl. Her husband invites the acrobat's sister to move in and look after his daughter. The girl's aunt is secretly cruel ("The Trick Started Well"). Mr. Wormwood is pleased because he tricked his Russian customers ("I'm So Clever"). Matilda scolds him, so he locks her in her bedroom. Matilda continues the story of the acrobat's daughter. The aunt locks her in the cellar, where the father finds her. Filled with rage, he chases the aunt but is never seen again ("I'm Here"). The next day, Miss Trunchbull forces Miss Honey's class to undergo a gruelling physical education lesson ("The Smell of Rebellion"). Miss Trunchbull bullies the children, then verbally abuses Matilda, but Matilda discovers she can move objects with her mind ("Quiet"). Matilda demonstrates her powers to Miss Honey who tells of her own cruel and abusive aunt, who looked after her as a child after her parents died. When Miss Honey first became a teacher, her aunt produced a bill detailing everything Miss Honey consumed as a child, along with other expenses, and forced her to sign a contract binding her to pay it all back. Desperate to escape, Miss Honey found refuge in an old farm shed ("My House"). Matilda recognizes Miss Honey's scarf from the story of the acrobatโ€”which she realizes is the true story of Miss Honey's childhood, and that her wicked aunt is Miss Trunchbull. Miss Trunchbull schemes to punish Lavender, but her classmates try to intervene. Matilda uses her powers to write on the blackboard, saying it is the ghost of Miss Honey's father ("Chalk Writing"). Miss Trunchbull runs away and the children celebrate ("Revolting Children"). Miss Honey receives her parents' house and money, and she becomes the new headmistress. Matilda cannot use her powers. The Wormwoods try to escape with Matilda to Spain but the Russian mafia arrive. Sergei is impressed by Matilda's intellect, and he lets them go ("This Little Girl" reprise). Matilda is allowed to live with Miss Honey as the Wormwoods leave for Spain ("When I Grow Up" reprise / "Naughty" reprise II). Musical numbers Act I "Overture" โ€“ Orchestra ยง "Miracle" โ€“ Children, Party Entertainer, Doctor, Mrs. Wormwood, Mr. Wormwood, Matilda, Ensemble "Naughty" โ€“ Matilda "Story 1: Once Upon a Time" โ€“ Matilda, Mrs. Phelps, Acrobat, Escapologist ยง "School Song" โ€“ Ensemble "Pathetic" โ€“ Miss Honey "The Hammer" โ€“ Miss Trunchbull, Miss Honey, Children, Ensemble "Naughty" (Reprise) โ€“ Matilda ยงโ€ก "The Chokey Chant" โ€“ Ensemble ยง "Loud" โ€“ Mrs. Wormwood, Rudolpho "This Little Girl" โ€“ Miss Honey "Story 2: The Great Day Arrived" โ€“ Matilda, Mrs. Phelps, Acrobat, Escapologist, Acrobat's Sister ยง "Bruce" โ€“ Company Act II "Telly" โ€“ Mr. Wormwood, Michael "Entr'acte" โ€“ Orchestra โ€ก "When I Grow Up" โ€“ Children, Miss Honey, Matilda, Company "Story 3: The Trick Started Well..." โ€“ Matilda, Mrs. Phelps, Acrobat, Escapologist ยง "I'm So Clever" โ€“ Mr. Wormwood ยงโ€ก "Story 4: I'm Here" โ€“ Matilda, Escapologist "The Smell of Rebellion" โ€“ Miss Trunchbull, Children "Quiet" โ€“ Matilda "My House" โ€“ Miss Honey, Escapologist "Chalk Writing" โ€“ Miss Trunchbull, Children ยง "Revolting Children" โ€“ Children, Ensemble "This Little Girl" (Reprise) โ€“ Sergei ยงโ€ก Finale: "When I Grow Up" (Reprise)/"Naughty" (Reprise) - Company ยง Not present on the original London cast recording โ€ก Not present on the original Broadway cast recording The instrumentation uses a ten-to-thirteen-piece orchestra, including keyboards, reeds, brass, strings and percussion. The performances run 2 hours and 40 minutes, including one interval. The "Overture" is included in the Broadway production only while the "Entr'acte" was only used in the London production where it has now been cut apart from the final bars which lead into "When I Grow Up". Recordings The cast album recorded by the original Stratford company was released on CD in September 2011 and a month later as a Digital Download. It features a hidden spoken track which follows "When I Grow Up" (Reprise). This is the full version of the speech that is heard in part, before, during and after "Quiet" in the show. A new Original Broadway cast album was released on 22ย September 2013 as a CD. This contains more tracks than the UK recording and includes "The Chokey Chant". The deluxe version features Matilda's stories of the Acrobat and the Escapologist, the song "Perhaps a Child" sung by Sergei, which was cut from the show early on in the Stratford previews due to time constraints, but the final lines were included in the Broadway show as "This Little Girl Reprise". The album also included "Naughty" with all four Broadway Matildas singing. Principal roles and original cast members Notable West End replacements Matildaย โ€“ Isobelle Molloy, Chloe Hawthorn, Lara Wollington Miss Trunchbull โ€“ Alex Gaumond, Hayden Tee Miss Honey โ€“ Gina Beck Mr. Wormwoodย โ€“ Steve Furst Mrs. Phelps - Sharlene Whyte, Lisa Davina Phillip Notable Broadway replacements Matilda - Gabriella Pizzolo, Brooklyn Shuck Miss Trunchbullย โ€“ Craig Bierko, Christopher Sieber Miss Honeyย โ€“ Jill Paice Mr. Wormwoodย โ€“ Matt Harrington Mrs. Wormwoodย โ€“ Amy Spanger Mrs. Phelpsย โ€“ Natalie Venetia Belcon Film adaptation In June 2013, Minchin said a future film adaptation was being planned. He said during an interview, "We just got [the show] up in New York, there's a touring version that is meant to be going on in America, concurrently the English version is up, there's a film that will probably be made in the next 4 or 5 years and all this sort of stuff." Mara Wilson, who played Matilda in the original 1996 film adaptation of Dahl's novel, said, "Maybe if they made it into a movie, I could have a cameo, but that's for them to decide." Kelly, who wrote the book of the musical, is set to write the film's screenplay, with Minchin writing additional songs and music, and Warchus directing the film. In April 2020, Ralph Fiennes was rumoured as cast in the role of Miss Trunchbull. The film was originally expected to shoot from August to December 2020 at Shepperton Studios, however, the shooting schedule for the film was interrupted due to lockdown procedures in place for the COVID-19 pandemic. In January 2021, Lashana Lynch, Emma Thompson and Alisha Weir were confirmed as cast in the roles of Miss Honey, Miss Trunchbull and the titular role respectively, with over 200 children cast as the rest of the student body of Crunchem Hall. Ellen Kane, who worked with choreographer Peter Darling on the stage production, is set to choreograph. The film was expected to begin principal photography on May 3, 2021 in Ireland. The film is intended to be produced by Tim Bevan and Eric Fellner through Working Title Films and distributed by Netflix worldwide and Sony Pictures Releasing through its TriStar Pictures banner in the United Kingdom. In April 2021, it was announced that Stephen Graham, Andrea Riseborough and Sindhu Vee would be joining the cast as Mr. Wormwood, Mrs. Wormwood and Mrs. Phelps respectively. Meesha Garbett as Hortensia, Charlie Hodson-Prior as Bruce, Andrei Shen as Eric, Ashton Robertson as Nigel, Winter Jarrett Glasspool as Amanda and Rei Yamachi Fulker as Lavender make up some of the 200 dancing, singing and acting kids. The film was theatrically released in the United Kingdom on 25 November 2022, while in other countries was available on Netflix on 25 December. Critical reception 2010 RSC Stratford production Michael Billington, writing for The Guardian, gave the musical four stars out of five. He praised the adaptation of the book, the "ebullient music and lyrics", the direction, the stage design and the performancesespecially Bertie Carvel as Miss Trunchbull. The Independent also gave the show four out of five stars and said, "The Royal Shakespeare Company has struck gold with this wildly entertaining musicalย โ€ฆย Kelly's clever adaptation and the witty, intricate songs byย ...ย Minchin create a new, improved version of Dahl's storyย ...ย Warchus's wondrously well-drilled production finds just the right balance between gleeful grotesque humour and heart-warming poignancy." Charles Spencer, writing for The Daily Telegraph awarded the show all five stars and praised the "splendidly witty, instantly hummable songs, dazzling choreography, a cast of impossibly cute and delightful children and a fantastic star turn from Bertie Carvelย ...ย [Kelly's] script has both deepened the emotion of Dahl's story while adding loads of splendid jokes of his own", and concluded, "It is funny, heart-warming, and bang-on target". Matt Wolf of The Arts Desk said: "I was struck by the sight of many a child grinning as openly as their adult companions were wiping away tears". Henry Hitchings of the London Evening Standard also praised the performances, direction and design and commented on Minchin's "witty songs [in which] he switches between styles with remarkable dexterity". He continued, "There's a playfulness throughout [the book] that proves intoxicatingย ...ย In this lovingly created show, Matilda'''s magic positively sparkles. There's a cleverness in the writing which ensures that, while it appeals to children, there is plenty for adults to savourย ...ย it's blissfully funny." In September 2019, The Guardian writers listed the RSC performance of Matilda as the seventh best theatre show since 2000. Original London production The reviews of the London performances were also extremely positive. Julie Carpenter of the Daily Express awarded the show all five stars and called the musical "[g]loriously over the top", and said, "it's an irresistible and ingenious mix of fun, fizz, cruelty, incredible choreography and above all warmth which means we root for the kids from the start. Fantastic." Henry Hitchings' review in the Evening Standard ranked the piece five stars, praising the music and lyrics, book, set design, choreography, direction and performances. The review in The Guardian said, "You'd be a nitwit to miss this hit show." The Stage also gave Matilda five stars, as did Spencer, writing again for The Telegraph. Confirming his impression of the 2010 production, he wrote about the West End transfer: The Financial Times, The Times and The Sunday Times each awarded the show four stars out of five, but found little to criticise. Ben Brantley, writing for The New York Times, called the adaptation "a sweet and sharp-witted work of translation, whichย ...ย turns dark and sodden anxieties into bright and buoyant fantasies [that address] a raging thirst these days for [such] tonics". A year after the show opened, Time Out gave the production four stars out of five, noting the departure of Carvel and calling the show "a little too long and, dramatically, a tad wayward", but nevertheless "wise, wicked, glorious fun." Original Broadway production Most of the New York critics gave the Broadway transfer their highest marks. Brantley wrote: "Matilda works with astonishing slyness and grace to inculcate us with its radical point of view. [It] is about words and language, books and stories, and their incalculable worth as weapons of defense, attack and survivalย ...ย Above all it's an exhilarating tale of empowerment". He also said the child actors "strengthen their diction" so that the "tasty lyrics" could be clearly heard. Richard Zoglin, in Time magazine said that the show is "a fresh start for the Broadway musical" with "a score that seems all but woven into the scenerysimple but distinctive tunesย ...ย intricate lyricsย ...ย Every element of the show seems hand-crafted and right". He said that director Warchus "lets the characters go gloriously over the top (the way children see them), but also brings a hushed intensity". He also said that the second act "runs a bit too long" and that "the combination of shrill child voices, British accents and heavy miking causes many of the lyrics to get muddled". Elisabeth Vincentelli's review in the New York Post said, "Once in a blue moon, a show comes out blazing and restores your faith in Broadway. Matilda The Musical is that show." David Rooney of The Hollywood Reporter said the stage show captured "the unique flavor of Roald Dahl's classic 1988 children's novel", and added, "this funhouse fairy tale is by turns riotous and poignant, grotesque and menacing, its campy comic exaggeration equaled only by its transporting emotional power". David Cote, in Time Out New York, wondered whether the show was too English for Broadway tastes; he wrote, "Matilda is a kids' musical, not a musical that happens to be about a kid. As such, its attractions may be limited to younger spectators and die-hard Dahl fans. That would be a pity, since Matilda is wickedly smart and wildly fun". A review in USA Today said the show tries too hard to be clever, but it is affecting and enchanting. Of the British papers reviewing the transfer, The Telegraph gave the show four stars out of five, and said, "There's a harder-edged quality to the New York staging: the general tenor is louder and more exaggerated, and the Gilbertian finesse of [the] astonishing lyrics didn't translate for my companionย ...ย But the tremendous heart and intelligence of the piece remains undimmed." A review by Brendan Lemon in the Financial Times also gave the piece four stars out of five. Awards and nominations London production Broadway production Australian production References Further reading "A Novel Approach," by Keith Loria, "Backstage" column, Make-Up Artist'' magazine, Number 102, June/July 2013, pp 74โ€“75, Key Publishing Group, Vancouver, Washington, US. A two-page article with three color photos discussing the musical's make-up and hair/wig requirements for the New York and London productions, with quotes by key personnel. External links Official website 2010 musicals Broadway musicals Musical Critics' Circle Theatre Award-winning musicals Laurence Olivier Award-winning musicals Musicals based on works by Roald Dahl Musicals set in schools West End musicals Musicals set in England British musicals Musicals based on novels Tony Award-winning musicals
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020%EB%85%84%20AFC%20%EC%B1%94%ED%94%BC%EC%96%B8%EC%8A%A4%EB%A6%AC%EA%B7%B8
2020๋…„ AFC ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ
2020๋…„ AFC ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ๋Š” 2020๋…„ 1์›” 14์ผ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 12์›” 19์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ ์—ด๋ฆฐ ์•„์‹œ์•„ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์˜ ์ตœ์ •์ƒ ํŒ€์ด ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ•˜๋Š” 39๋ฒˆ์งธ ๋Œ€ํšŒ(์•„์‹œ์•ˆ ํด๋Ÿฝ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์‹ญ ํฌํ•จ)์ด์ž ํ˜„์žฌ์˜ AFC ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” 18ํšŒ์งธ๋ฅผ ๋งž๋Š” ์•„์‹œ์•„ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋“ค์˜ ํด๋Ÿฝ๋Œ€ํ•ญ์ „์ด๋‹ค. ์ด ๋Œ€ํšŒ์˜ ์šฐ์ŠนํŒ€์€ 2021๋…„ AFC ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์— ์ž๋™ ์ง„์ถœ๊ถŒ์„ ์–ป๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ด ๋•Œ ์ด ๋Œ€ํšŒ ์šฐ์ŠนํŒ€ ์ž๊ตญ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์—์„œ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ˆœ์œ„์ƒ AFC ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ง„์ถœํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜๋ฉด 2021๋…„ AFC ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์˜ˆ์„  ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์˜คํ”„์— ์ง„์ถœํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. 2008๋…„ ์ดํ›„ ์ตœ์ดˆ๋กœ AFC ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์šฐ์ŠนํŒ€์ด ์ž๋™๋ณธ์„ ์ง„์ถœํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  2020๋…„ AFC ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์šฐ์ŠนํŒ€์€ ์นดํƒ€๋ฅด์—์„œ ๊ฐœ์ตœ๊ฐ€ ๋˜๋Š” 2020๋…„ FIFA ํด๋Ÿฝ ์›”๋“œ์ปต ์ง„์ถœ๊ถŒ์„ ์–ป๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋งŒ์•ฝ ์นดํƒ€๋ฅด ์Šคํƒ€์Šค ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์†Œ์† ํด๋ŸฝํŒ€์ด ์ด๋ฒˆ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ๋ฅผ ์šฐ์Šนํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋ ์‹œ ์ด ๋Œ€ํšŒ ์ค€์šฐ์ŠนํŒ€์ด FIFA ํด๋Ÿฝ ์›”๋“œ์ปต์— ์ง„์ถœํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์ด๋ฒˆ 2020๋…„ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰์œผ๋กœ 32๊ฐœํŒ€ ๋ณธ์„  ์ฒด์ œ๊ฐ€ ๋ง‰์„ ๋‚ด๋ฆฌ๊ฒŒ ๋˜๋ฉฐ 2021๋…„ ์‹œ์ฆŒ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ๋Š” 40๊ฐœํŒ€ ๋ณธ์„  ์ฒด์ œ๋กœ ํ™•๋Œ€๋œ๋‹ค. ์ด๋ฒˆ๋Œ€ํšŒ ๋””ํŽœ๋”ฉ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์€ ์‚ฌ์šฐ๋”” ํ”„๋กœ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์˜ ์•Œํž๋ž„ SFC์ด๋‹ค. 2020๋…„ 4์›”, ์ฝ”๋กœ๋‚˜19 ๋ฒ”์œ ํ–‰์„ ์ด์œ ๋กœ 2020๋…„ 9์›” ์ค‘์ˆœ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋Œ€ํšŒ๊ฐ€ ์ค‘๋‹จ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 2020๋…„ 9์›” 14์ผ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋Œ€ํšŒ๊ฐ€ ์žฌ๊ฐœ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฐธ๊ฐ€๊ถŒ ๋ฐฐ์ • AFC ๋Œ€ํšŒ ์œ„์›ํšŒ๋Š” 2014๋…„ 1์›” 25์ผ ๋ณธ ๋Œ€ํšŒ๋ฅผ ๊ฐœ์ •ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ถ๋งˆ๋ฆฌ์•„๋‚˜ ์ œ๋„๋ฅผ ์ œ์™ธํ•œ 46๊ฐœ AFC ํšŒ์›๊ตญ์ด ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋žญํ‚น ์„ ๋ณ„ ๊ธฐ์ค€์€ ์ตœ๊ทผ 4๋…„๊ฐ„ ๊ฐ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์˜ ๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€๊ณผ ๊ตฌ๋‹จ๋“ค์˜ ๋Œ€๋ฅ™ ๋Œ€ํšŒ ์„ฑ์ ์„ ํ† ๋Œ€๋กœ ์ •ํ•ด์ง„๋‹ค. 2019๋…„๊ณผ 2020๋…„์˜ AFC ๋Œ€ํšŒ๋Š” AFC ํด๋Ÿฝ ๋žญํ‚น์„ ๊ธฐ์กฐ๋กœ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํ˜‘ํšŒ๋“ค์€ ๋‘ ์ง€์—ญ์œผ๋กœ ๋‚˜๋‰˜์–ด ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์„œ์•„์‹œ์•„ ์ง€์—ญ์—์„œ๋Š” ์„œ์•„์‹œ์•„ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์—ฐ๋งน(WAFF)๊ณผ ์ค‘์•™์•„์‹œ์•„ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์—ฐ๋งน(CAFA), ๋‚จ์•„์‹œ์•„ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์—ฐ๋งน(SAFF) ์†Œ์† ํ˜‘ํšŒ๋“ค์ด ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋™์•„์‹œ์•„ ์ง€์—ญ์—์„œ๋Š” ๋™์•„์‹œ์•„ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์—ฐ๋งน(EAFF)๊ณผ ์•„์„ธ์•ˆ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์—ฐ๋งน(AFF) ์†Œ์† ํ˜‘ํšŒ๋“ค์ด ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์„œ์•„์‹œ์•„์™€ ๋™์•„์‹œ์•„ ๊ฐ ์ง€์—ญ์€ ์กฐ๋ณ„ ์˜ˆ์„ ์—์„œ 4๊ฐœ ์กฐ์”ฉ ๋‚˜๋‰˜์–ด ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์–‘ ์ง€์—ญ ๋ชจ๋‘ 12๊ฐœ์˜ ์งํ–‰ ํ‹ฐ์ผ“๊ณผ 4๊ฐœ์˜ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์˜คํ”„ ํ‹ฐ์ผ“์„ ๋ฐฐ๋ถ„๋ฐ›๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. AFC ๋žญํ‚น ์ตœ์ƒ์œ„ 12๊ฐœ ํ˜‘ํšŒ๋Š”, AFC ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ๊ธฐ์ค€์— ๋งž์ถ˜๋‹ค๋ฉด, AFC ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์— ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ ์ง€์—ญ์˜ AFC ๋žญํ‚น ์ตœ์ƒ์œ„ 6๊ฐœ ํ˜‘ํšŒ(์„œ์•„์‹œ์•„ ์ตœ์ƒ์œ„ 6๊ฐœ ํ˜‘ํšŒ+๋™์•„์‹œ์•„ ์ตœ์ƒ์œ„ 6๊ฐœ ํ˜‘ํšŒ)๋Š” ์ตœ์†Œํ•œ 1๊ฐœ์˜ ๋ณธ์„  ์งํ–‰ ํ‹ฐ์ผ“์„ ๋ณด์œ ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ ์ง€์—ญ ์ตœ์ƒ์œ„ 1์œ„์™€ 2์œ„ ํ˜‘ํšŒ๋Š” 3์žฅ์˜ ๋ณธ์„  ์งํ–‰ ํ‹ฐ์ผ“๊ณผ 1์žฅ์˜ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์˜คํ”„ ํ‹ฐ์ผ“์„ ๊ฐ–๋Š”๋‹ค. ๊ฐ ์ง€์—ญ ์ตœ์ƒ์œ„ 3์œ„์™€ 4์œ„ ํ˜‘ํšŒ๋Š” 2์žฅ์˜ ๋ณธ์„  ์งํ–‰ ํ‹ฐ์ผ“๊ณผ 2์žฅ์˜ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์˜คํ”„ ํ‹ฐ์ผ“์„ ๊ฐ–๋Š”๋‹ค. ๊ฐ ์ง€์—ญ ์ตœ์ƒ์œ„ 5์œ„ ํ˜‘ํšŒ๋Š” 1์žฅ์˜ ๋ณธ์„  ์งํ–‰ ํ‹ฐ์ผ“๊ณผ 2์žฅ์˜ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์˜คํ”„ ํ‹ฐ์ผ“์„ ๊ฐ–๋Š”๋‹ค. ๊ฐ ์ง€์—ญ ์ตœ์ƒ์œ„ 6์œ„ ํ˜‘ํšŒ๋Š” 1์žฅ์˜ ๋ณธ์„  ์งํ–‰ ํ‹ฐ์ผ“๊ณผ 1์žฅ์˜ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์˜คํ”„ ํ‹ฐ์ผ“์„ ๊ฐ–๋Š”๋‹ค. ๊ฐ ์ง€์—ญ ์ตœ์ƒ์œ„ 7์œ„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 12์œ„๊นŒ์ง€์˜ ํ˜‘ํšŒ๋Š” 1์žฅ์˜ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์˜คํ”„ ํ‹ฐ์ผ“์„ ๊ฐ–๋Š”๋‹ค. ํ•˜๋‚˜์˜ ํ˜‘ํšŒ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€์งˆ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ํ‹ฐ์ผ“์˜ ์ตœ๋Œ€ ๊ฐœ์ˆ˜๋Š”, ์ตœ์ƒ์œ„ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ํŒ€ ์ˆ˜์˜ 1/3 ์ˆ˜์™€ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค. ๋งŒ์•ฝ ์–ด๋Š ํ˜‘ํšŒ๊ฐ€ ์งํ–‰ ํ‹ฐ์ผ“์„ ํฌ๊ธฐํ•œ๋‹ค๋ฉด, ๊ทธ ํ‹ฐ์ผ“์€ ์ตœ์†Œํ•œ 3์žฅ ์ด์ƒ์˜ ์งํ–‰ ํ‹ฐ์ผ“์„ ๋ณด์œ ํ•œ ํ˜‘ํšŒ ์ค‘ ์ตœ์ƒ์œ„ ํ˜‘ํšŒ์—๊ฒŒ ๋Œ์•„๊ฐ€๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋งŒ์•ฝ ์–ด๋Š ํ˜‘ํšŒ๊ฐ€ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์˜คํ”„ ํ‹ฐ์ผ“์„ ํฌ๊ธฐํ•œ๋‹ค๋ฉด, ๊ทธ ํ‹ฐ์ผ“์€ ์†Œ๋ฉธ๋˜๋ฉฐ ๊ทธ ์–ด๋–ค ํ˜‘ํšŒ์—๊ฒŒ๋„ ๋Œ์•„๊ฐ€๊ฒŒ ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค. 2020๋…„ AFC ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ•˜๋Š” ํ˜‘ํšŒ๋“ค์€ 2017๋…„ 11์›” 29์ผ ๋ฐœํ–‰๋œ AFC ํด๋Ÿฝ ๋žญํ‚น๊ณผ 2014๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2017๋…„๊นŒ์ง€์˜ FIFA ๋žญํ‚น์— ์˜ํ•ด ๊ฒฐ์ •๋  ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ํด๋Ÿฝ ์ผ์ • AFC ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ผ์ •์€ ์•„๋ž˜์™€ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค. ๋ชจ๋“  ๋Œ€์ง„ ์ถ”์ฒจ์€ ๋ง๋ ˆ์ด์‹œ์•„ ์ฟ ์•Œ๋ผ๋ฃธํ‘ธ๋ฅด์—์„œ ์ง„ํ–‰๋œ๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ์„  ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์˜คํ”„ ๊ฐ๊ฐ์˜ ์˜ˆ์„  ๋ผ์šด๋“œ๋Š” ๋‹จํŒ์ „์œผ๋กœ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์ ธ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทœ์ • 9์กฐ 2ํ•ญ์— ์˜๊ฑฐํ•˜์—ฌ, ์—ฐ์žฅ์ „์ด๋‚˜ ์Šน๋ถ€์ฐจ๊ธฐ๋Š” ์ •๊ทœ ์‹œ๊ฐ„ ๋‚ด์— ์Šน์ž๊ฐ€ ๊ฒฐ์ •๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์•˜์„ ๋•Œ ์Šน์ž๋ฅผ ๊ฒฐ์ •ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ ์ง€์—ญ์—์„œ์˜ ์˜ˆ์„  ๋ผ์šด๋“œ ํŒ€ ๋ฐฐ์ •์€ AFC ํด๋Ÿฝ ๋žญํ‚น์— ๊ทผ๊ฑฐํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ฒฐ์ •๋˜๊ณ , ๋‘˜ ์ค‘ ์ˆœ์œ„๊ฐ€ ๋†’์€ ํ˜‘ํšŒ์— ์†Œ์†๋œ ํด๋Ÿฝ์˜ ๊ตฌ์žฅ์—์„œ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์ง„ํ–‰ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์€ ํ˜‘ํšŒ์˜ ์†Œ์†๋œ ํŒ€๋ผ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๊ฐ™์€ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ๋ฐฐ์ •๋  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋‹ค. 1์ฐจ ์˜ˆ์„  |+์„œ์•„์‹œ์•„ |+๋™์•„์‹œ์•„ 2์ฐจ ์˜ˆ์„  |+์„œ์•„์‹œ์•„ |+๋™์•„์‹œ์•„ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์˜คํ”„ |+์„œ์•„์‹œ์•„ |+๋™์•„์‹œ์•„ ์กฐ๋ณ„ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ A์กฐ B์กฐ C์กฐ D์กฐ E์กฐ F์กฐ G์กฐ H์กฐ ๊ฒฐ์„  ํ† ๋„ˆ๋จผํŠธ ๋Œ€์ง„ํ‘œ 16๊ฐ•์ „ 8๊ฐ•์ „ ์ค€๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „ ๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „ ์šฐ์Šน ์ตœ๋‹ค๋“์ ์ž ์ˆœ์œ„ ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ 2020๋…„ AFC์ปต ๊ฐ์ฃผ AFC ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์‹œ์ฆŒ AFC ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ฝ”๋กœ๋‚˜19 ๋ฒ”์œ ํ–‰์œผ๋กœ ์—ฐ๊ธฐ๋œ ์Šคํฌ์ธ  ํ–‰์‚ฌ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020%20AFC%20Champions%20League
2020 AFC Champions League
The 2020 AFC Champions League was the 39th edition of Asia's premier club football tournament organized by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC), and the 18th under the current AFC Champions League title. Ulsan Hyundai won their second Champions League title by defeating Persepolis 2โ€“1 in the final. Ulsan automatically qualify for the 2021 AFC Champions League (although they had already qualified through their domestic performance), the first time since 2008 that the AFC Champions League holders were guaranteed automatic qualification in the following year. They also earned the right to play in the 2020 FIFA Club World Cup in Qatar. The tournament was the last to involve 32 teams during the group stage, which increased to 40 teams in 2021. The competition was suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Asia after group stage matches on 4 March 2020, and restarted on 14 September 2020. All matches after the restart were played in Qatar, with the final played at the Al Janoub Stadium. Al-Hilal of Saudi Arabia were the defending champions, but the club effectively withdrew from the competition when they could not name the required 13 players for their final group stage match, as all but 11 players had tested positive for COVID-19. For the first time, the video assistant referee (VAR) system was in use from the quarter-finals onwards. Association team allocation The 46 AFC member associations (excluding the associate member Northern Mariana Islands) were ranked based on their national team's and clubs' performance over the last four years in AFC competitions, with the allocation of slots for the 2019 and 2020 editions of the AFC club competitions determined by the 2017 AFC rankings (Entry Manual Article 2.3): The associations were split into two regions: West Region consisted of the associations from the West Asian Football Federation (WAFF), the Central Asian Football Association (CAFA), and the South Asian Football Federation (SAFF). East Region consisted of the associations from the ASEAN Football Federation (AFF) and the East Asian Football Federation (EAFF). In each region, there were four groups in the group stage, including a total of 12 direct slots, with the 4 remaining slots filled through play-offs. The top 12 associations in each region as per the AFC rankings were eligible to enter the AFC Champions League, as long as they fulfilled the AFC Champions League criteria. The top six associations in each region got at least one direct slot in the group stage, while the remaining associations got only play-off slots (as well as AFC Cup group stage slots): The associations ranked 1st and 2nd each got three direct slots and one play-off slot. The associations ranked 3rd and 4th each got two direct slots and two play-off slots. The associations ranked 5th each got one direct slot and two play-off slots. The associations ranked 6th each got one direct slot and one play-off slot. The associations ranked 7th to 12th each got one play-off slot. The maximum number of slots for each association was one-third of the total number of eligible teams in the top division. If any association gave up its direct slots, they were redistributed to the highest eligible association, with each association limited to a maximum of three direct slots. If any association gave up its play-off slots, they were annulled and not redistributed to any other association. Association ranking For the 2020 AFC Champions League, the associations were allocated slots according to their association ranking which was published on 15 December 2017, which took into account their performance in the AFC Champions League and the AFC Cup, as well as their national team's FIFA World Rankings, during the period between 2014 and 2017. Notes Teams The following 52 teams from 23 associations entered the competition. In the following table, the number of appearances and last appearance count only those since the 2002โ€“03 season (including qualifying rounds), when the competition was rebranded as the AFC Champions League. Notes Schedule The schedule of the competition was as follows. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, only some of the group stage matches on matchdays 1โ€“3 in February and March were played as scheduled, and all matches on matchdays 4โ€“6 were postponed until further notice. The round of 16, quarter-finals and semi-finals were also initially moved to 10โ€“12 and 24โ€“26 August, 14โ€“16 and 28โ€“30 September, and 20โ€“21 and 27โ€“28 October. The AFC announced the calendar of the remaining matches on 9 July 2020, with all matches before the final played at centralised venues, and all knockout ties played as a single match. On 10 September 2020, the AFC announced the new dates for the East Region matches and the final. Notes: W: West Region E: East Region Italics: new dates after restart The original schedule of the competition, as planned before the pandemic, was as follows. Qualifying play-offs Preliminary round 1 Preliminary round 2 Play-off round Group stage Group A Group B Group C Group D Group E Group F Group G Group H Knockout stage Bracket Round of 16 Quarter-finals Semi-finals Final Awards Main awards Note: Abderrazak Hamdallah finished ahead of Jรบnior Negrรฃo to win the Top Scorer award despite scoring the same number of goals, and also having the same number of assists (first tiebreaker), since he played fewer minutes throughout the competition (second tiebreaker). All Star Squad Source: Opta Best XI Source: Fans' awards The AFC took polls of fans in its website after the tournament. Statistics Statistical leaders Top scorers Toyota Player of the Week awards See also 2020 AFC Cup References External links , the-AFC.com AFC Champions League 2020, stats.the-AFC.com 1 2020 Association football events postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EA%B3%A0%EC%A0%84%EC%A0%95%ED%86%B5%EC%A3%BC%EC%9D%98
๊ณ ์ „์ •ํ†ต์ฃผ์˜
๊ณ ์ „์ •ํ†ต์ฃผ์˜ (ๅคๅ…ธ ๆญฃ็ตฑไธป็พฉ, )๋˜๋Š” ๊ณ ์ •ํ†ต์ฃผ์˜(ๅคๆญฃ็ตฑไธป็พฉ)๋Š” ๊ฐœ์‹ ๊ตํšŒ ์‹ ํ•™ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ด์ž ์‹ ํ•™ ํ•™ํŒŒ์ด๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ณธ์–ด๊ถŒ์—์„œ๋Š” ๋ณต๊ณ ์ •ํ†ต์ฃผ์˜(ๅพฉๅคๆญฃ็ตฑไธป็พฉ)๋ผ๊ณ ๋„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ฃผ๋กœ ๋ฏธ์ฃผ์™€ ์˜๊ตญ ์ค‘์‹ฌ์˜ ์˜์–ด๊ถŒ ์ง€์—ญ์—์„œ 20์„ธ๊ธฐ ๋ง๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์–ด 21์„ธ๊ธฐ ํ˜„์žฌ์—๋Š” ์˜์–ด๊ถŒ์„ ๋„˜์–ด ๋…์ผ์–ด๊ถŒ์„ ํฌํ•จํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฐœ์‹ ๊ต ์ „์—ญ์—์„œ๋„ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋˜๋Š” ์‹ ํ•™ ํ•™ํŒŒ์ด๋ฉฐ ์‹ ํ•™ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋กœ, 11์„ธ๊ธฐ ์ด์ „ ๊ณต๊ตํšŒ์˜ ์‹ ํ•™๊ณผ ๊ต๋ถ€์˜ ์ดํ•ด์™€ ์‹ ์•™์„ ํ†ตํ•ฉ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํ•˜์—ฌ ํ˜„๋Œ€์  ์˜๋ฏธ๋ฅผ ์ œ์‹œํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ •ํ†ต์  ๊ต๋ถ€๋“ค์˜ ์‹ ํ•™๊ณผ ํ˜„๋Œ€์˜ ์กฐํ™”๋ฅผ ๊ฐ•์กฐํ•˜์—ฌ, ์‹ ์ •ํ†ต์ฃผ์˜์™€ ๊ตฌ๋ถ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ณ ์ „์ •ํ†ต์ฃผ์˜๋กœ ๋ถˆ๋ฆฐ๋‹ค. ์‹ ์ •ํ†ต์ฃผ์˜๊ฐ€ 20์„ธ๊ธฐ ์ค‘๋ฐ˜๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์‹ค์กด์ฃผ์˜์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ์ฒ ํ•™ ์‚ฌํšŒ์  ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•๋ก ์„ ์ค‘์ ์œผ๋กœ ํ™œ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ๊ณผ ๋‹ฌ๋ฆฌ, ๊ณ ์ „์ •ํ†ต์ฃผ์˜๋Š” ๊ตํšŒ์˜ 2000๋…„ ์—ญ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๋” ๊ฐ•์กฐํ•˜๊ณ , ์ ์šฉ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•๋ก ์ธ ์ฒ ํ•™์  ์‚ฌํšŒ์  ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•๋ก ๋ณด๋‹ค ๊ตํšŒ์ „ํ†ต ๋‚ด๋ถ€์˜ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•๋ก ์„ ๊ฐ•์กฐํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ณ ์ „์ •ํ†ต์ฃผ์˜ ๊ฐœ๋… ๊ณ ์ „์ •ํ†ต์ฃผ์˜๋Š” ํ˜„๋Œ€์˜ ๊ธฐ๋…๊ต ์‹ ํ•™์ด 11์„ธ๊ธฐ ๊ตํšŒ ๋Œ€๋ถ„์—ด ์ด์ „์ธ ๊ณต๊ตํšŒ ์‹œ์ ˆ์˜ ์‹ ํ•™๊ณผ 16์„ธ๊ธฐ ์„œ๋ฐฉ๊ตํšŒ์˜ ์ข…๊ต๊ฐœํ˜ ์ฐฌ์„ฑํŒŒ์™€ ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ํŒŒ, ์ฆ‰ ๊ฐœ์‹ ๊ตํšŒ์™€ ์ฒœ์ฃผ๊ตํšŒ์˜ ๋ถ„์—ด ์ด์ „์˜ ์ „ํ†ต๊ณผ ์กฐํ™”๋ฅผ ๊ฐ•์กฐํ•œ๋‹ค. 5์„ธ๊ธฐ ๊ต๋ถ€์ธ โ€˜๋ ˆ๋žญ์˜ ๋นˆ์„ผํŠธโ€™(Vincent of Lรฉrins)์˜ ์‹ ํ•™์  ๊ธฐ์ค€์ธ ์‹ ์•™์€ '๋ˆ„๊ตฌ๋‚˜ ์–ด๋””์—์„œ๋‚˜ ์–ธ์ œ๋‚˜ ๋ฏฟ๋Š” ๊ฒƒโ€™()์„ ์ง€์นจ์œผ๋กœ ์‚ผ๋Š”๋‹ค. ๊ณ ์ „์ •ํ†ต์ฃผ์˜ ์—ญ์‹œ ์ด์„ฑ์ฃผ์˜์— ๊ทผ๊ฑฐํ•œ ๊ทผ๋Œ€ ์‹ ํ•™์˜ ์„ฑํ–ฅ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ฐ˜์„ฑ์œผ๋กœ ์‹œ์ž‘๋œ ์‹ ํ•™ ์šด๋™์ด๋‹ค. ํŠนํžˆ 2์ฐจ ๋Œ€์ „ ์ดํ›„ 18์„ธ๊ธฐ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ํ˜•์„ฑ๋œ ์ž์œ ์ฃผ์˜ ์‹ ํ•™์˜ ํ•œ๊ณ„์— ์ง๋ฉดํ•˜์—ฌ, ๊ทผ๋Œ€์  ์‹ ํ•™ ์šด๋™์˜ ๋ฌธ์ œ๋ฅผ ๊ทน๋ณตํ•˜๊ณ ์ž ํ˜•์„ฑ๋œ ํฌ์ŠคํŠธ๋ชจ๋˜ ์‹ ํ•™์šด๋™์˜ ํŒŒํŽธ์„ฑ์„ ๋„˜์–ด์„œ๋Š” ๊ณ ์ „๊ณผ ํ˜„๋Œ€๋ฅผ ์•„์šฐ๋ฅด๋Š” ์‹ ํ•™์šด๋™์ด ๊ณ ์ „์ •ํ†ต์ฃผ์˜ ์‹ ํ•™์ด๋‹ค. ๊ณ ์ „์ •ํ†ต์ฃผ์˜ ์‹ ํ•™์ž ๊ณ ์ „์ •ํ†ต์ฃผ์˜๋Š” ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ์—ฐํ•ฉ๊ฐ๋ฆฌ๊ตํšŒ ์‹ ํ•™์ž์ด์ž ๋“œ๋ฅ˜๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ์‹ ํ•™๋Œ€ํ•™์› ๊ต์ˆ˜์˜€๋˜ ํ† ๋งˆ์Šค ์˜ค๋“ ์˜ ์กฐ์ง์‹ ํ•™ ์ €์„œ, โ€˜๊ณ ์ „ ๊ธฐ๋…๊ตโ€™(Classical Christianity)๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ์‹ ํ•™์  ๊ธฐ์ค€๊ณผ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•๋ก ์ด ํ™•๋ฆฝ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 21์„ธ๊ธฐ์— ๋“ค์–ด์™€ ๊ณ ์ „์ •ํ†ต์ฃผ์˜๋Š” ๊ณ ์ „๊ธฐ๋…๊ต์™€ ํฌ์ŠคํŠธ๋ชจ๋˜ ๊ธฐ๋…๊ต๋ฅผ ์กฐํ™”๋กญ๊ฒŒ ํ•˜๋Š” ์‹ ํ•™์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐœ์ „ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ดˆ๊ธฐ์—๋Š” ๊ฐœ์‹ ๊ต ๊ณต๊ตํšŒ์ฃผ์˜๋ฅผ ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋Š” ๊ฐ๋ฆฌ๊ตํšŒ๋ฅผ ์ค‘์‹ฌ์œผ๋กœ ์‹ ํ•™์  ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๊ฐ€ ์ง„ํ–‰๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ๊ณต๊ตํšŒ์ฃผ์˜ ๋ฒ”์ฃผ์˜ ๊ตํšŒ์— ์˜ํ–ฅ์„ ๋ผ์ณค๊ณ  ์ ์ฐจ ๊ฐ๋ฆฌ๊ตํšŒ์™€ ๋ฃจํ„ฐ๊ตํšŒ ๋“ฑ ๊ฐœ์‹ ๊ต ๊ณต๊ตํšŒ์ฃผ์˜ ๊ตํšŒ๋ฅผ ๋„˜์–ด ์žฅ๋กœ๊ตํšŒ์™€ ์นจ๋ก€๊ตํšŒ ๋“ฑ์œผ๋กœ ํ™•์žฅ๋˜์–ด ์‹ ํ•™์  ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ์ง„ํ–‰ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ์ฃผ ์ง€์—ญ์˜ ๊ณ ์ „์ •ํ†ต์ฃผ์˜ ์‹ ํ•™์ž๋กœ๋Š”, ๊ฐ๋ฆฌ๊ตํšŒ ์‹ ํ•™์ž๋“ค์„ ํฌํ•จํ•˜์—ฌ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ๊ต๋‹จ์˜ ์‹ ํ•™์ž๋“ค๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ์  ์Šจ(Robert Jenson), ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ† ํผ ํ™€(Christopher Hall), ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ์›จ๋ฒ„(Robert E. Webber), ์ œํ”„๋ฆฌ ์›จ์ธ๋ผ์ดํŠธ(Geoffrey Wainwright), ์นผ ๋ธŒ๋ผํŠผ(Carl Braaten), ์Šคํƒ ๋ฆฌ ๊ทธ๋ Œ์ฆˆ(Stanley Grenz), ๋ณผํ”„ํ•˜๋ฅดํŠธ ํŒ๋„จ๋ฒ ๋ฅดํฌ(Wolfhart Pannenberg), ๋ฆฌ์ฐจ๋“œ ๋‰ดํ•˜์šฐ์Šค(Richard John Neuhaus) ๋“ฑ์ด ๊ณ ์ „์ •ํ†ต์ฃผ์˜ ์ค‘์š”์„ฑ์„ ๊ฑฐ๋ก ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์œ ๋ ฅํ•œ ์‹ ํ•™์ž๋กœ๋Š” ๋ฃจํ„ฐ๊ตํšŒ์˜ ๋งˆ๋ฒ„ ๋˜(Marva Dawn)๊ณผ ์žฅ๋กœ๊ตํšŒ์˜ ์•ค๋“œ๋ฅ˜ ํผ๋ธŒ์Šค(Andrew Purves), ์นจ๋ก€๊ตํšŒ์˜ ํ‹ฐ๋ชจ์‹œ ์กฐ์ง€(Timothy George), ์„ฑ๊ณตํšŒ๊ตํšŒ์˜ ์•Œ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ„ฐ ๋งฅ๊ทธ๋ž˜์Šค(Alister McGrath), ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ† ํผ ํ™€(Christopher Hall) ๋“ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์  ์‹ ํ•™์ž ํ† ๋งˆ์Šค ์˜ค๋“  ๋งˆ๋ฒ„ ๋˜ ์•Œ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ„ฐ ๋งฅ๊ทธ๋ž˜์Šค ์•ค๋“œ๋ฅ˜ ํผ๋ธŒ์Šค ํ‹ฐ๋ชจ์‹œ ์กฐ์ง€ ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ† ํผ ํ™€ ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ์‹ ์ •ํ†ต์ฃผ์˜ ๊ต๋ถ€ ๊ณต๊ตํšŒ ํ˜„๋Œ€์‹ ํ•™ ์ฃผ์š” ๋ฌธํ—Œ ์ฃผ์š” ๋ฌธํ—Œ์œผ๋กœ ํ† ๋งˆ์Šค ์˜ค๋“ ์˜ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ์™€ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ํ•™์ž๋“ค์˜ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์•„์ง ํ•œ๊ตญ์–ด๋กœ ๋ฒˆ์—ญ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์•„ ์•„๋ž˜์„œ ์†Œ๊ฐœํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฌธํ—Œ์€ ์˜์–ด ์ €์„œ์˜ ์ œ๋ชฉ์„ ๊ทธ๋Œ€๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํ† ๋งˆ์Šค ์˜ค๋“ ์˜ ์ €์ž‘: Thomas Oden: Agenda for Theology, later re-published as After Modernity...What?, Thomas Oden, General editor: Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture that Oden describes as a multi-volume patristic commentary on Scripture by the โ€œfathers of the churchโ€ spanning โ€œthe era from Clement of Rome (fl. c. 95) to John of Damascus (c.645-c.749).โ€ Detailed information about the set can be found at the publisher Thomas Oden: John Wesley's Scriptural Christianity: A Plain Exposition of His Teaching on Christian Doctrine, Thomas Oden: Pastoral Theology: Essentials of Ministry, Thomas Oden: The Rebirth of Orthodoxy: Signs of New Life in Christianity, Thomas Oden: Requiem: A Lament in Three Movements, Thomas Oden: Systematic Theology (three volumes... The Living God, The Word of Life and Life in the Spirit, republished in one volume as Classic Christianity) ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์‹ ํ•™์ž์˜ ์ฃผ์š” ์ €์ž‘: Christopher Hall and Kenneth Tanner (eds.): Ancient & Postmodern Christianity: Paleo-Orthodoxy in the 21st Century (Essays In Honor of Thomas C. Oden), . Christopher A. Hall: Reading Scripture with the Church Fathers Colleen Carroll: The New Faithful: Why Young Adults Are Embracing Christian Orthodoxy () Richard Foster Streams of Living Water: Celebrating the Great Traditions of Christian Faith ) ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ๊ณ ์ „์ •ํ†ต์ฃผ์˜ ์˜์–ด ๋ˆ„๋ฆฌ์ง‘ Paleo Orthodoxy resources ํ† ๋งˆ์Šค ์˜ค๋“ ์˜ ๋ˆ„๋ฆฌ์ง‘ Thomas Oden's Paleo-Orthodoxy by Eric Landstrom ๊ธฐ๋…๊ต ์šฉ์–ด ๊ธฐ๋…๊ต ์‹ ํ•™ ์šด๋™
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleo-orthodoxy
Paleo-orthodoxy
Paleo-orthodoxy (from Ancient Greek ฯ€ฮฑฮปฮฑฮนฯŒฯ‚ "ancient" and Koine Greek แฝ€ฯฮธฮฟฮดฮฟฮพฮฏฮฑ "correct belief") is a Protestant Christian theological movement in the United States which emerged in the late 20th and early 21st centuries and which focuses on the consensual understanding of the faith among the ecumenical councils and Church Fathers. While it understands this consensus of the Church Fathers as orthodoxy proper, it calls itself paleo-orthodoxy to distinguish itself from neo-orthodoxy, a movement that was influential among Protestant churches in the mid-20th century. Background Paleo-orthodoxy attempts to see the essentials of Christian theology in the consensus of the Great Church before the schism between the Orthodox Church and the Catholic Church (the Eastโ€“West Schism of 1054) and before the separation of Protestantism from the Roman Catholic Church (the Protestant Reformation of 1517), described in the canon of Vincent of Lรฉrins as "" ("What [is believed] everywhere, always and by everyone"). Adherents of paleo-orthodoxy often form part of the Convergence Movement, though paleo-orthodoxy is not exclusive to the movement. Paleo-orthodox Protestants have different interpretations of the early Church's teachings. Paleo-orthodox theologians The dominant figure of the movement, United Methodist theologian Thomas C. Oden of Drew University, published a series of books not only calling for a return to "classical Christianity" but also providing the tools to do so. The 2002 collection of essays in honor of Oden, Ancient and Postmodern Christianity: Paleo-Orthodoxy in the 21st Century (Kenneth Tanner, Christopher Alan Hall, eds., ) offers a glimpse into the work of some of the theologians active in this area: Robert Jenson, Christopher Hall, Amy Oden, Bradley Nassif, David Mills, Robert Webber, Geoffrey Wainwright, Carl Braaten, Stanley Grenz, John Franke, Alan Padget, Wolfhart Pannenberg, Richard John Neuhaus, et al. Similar approaches emerge in the theology of Marva Dawn (a Lutheran); Alister McGrath (a Church of England Reformed evangelical); Andrew Purves (a Presbyterian); Timothy George (Baptist); and Christopher Hall (an Episcopalian); J. Davila-Ashcraft (Evangelical Episcopal Communion); and Emilio Alvarez (founding Archbishop of the Union of Charismatic Orthodox Churches). See also Restorationism Old Catholicism References Further reading Among Oden's works, either as writer or editor, in support of paleo-orthodoxy are: Thomas Oden: Agenda for Theology, later re-published as After Modernity...What?, Thomas Oden, General editor: Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture that Oden describes as a multi-volume patristic commentary on Scripture by the fathers of the church spanning the era from Clement of Rome (fl. c. 95) to John of Damascus (c.645-c.749). โ€“ Detailed information about the set can be found at the publisher. Thomas Oden: John Wesley's Scriptural Christianity: A Plain Exposition of His Teaching on Christian Doctrine, Thomas Oden: Pastoral Theology: Essentials of Ministry, Thomas Oden: The Rebirth of Orthodoxy: Signs of New Life in Christianity, Thomas Oden: Requiem: A Lament in Three Movements, Thomas Oden: Systematic Theology (three volumes... The Living God, The Word of Life and Life in the Spirit, republished in one volume as Classic Christianity) Works by other authors: Christopher Hall and Kenneth Tanner (eds.): Ancient & Postmodern Christianity: Paleo-Orthodoxy in the 21st Century (Essays In Honor of Thomas C. Oden), . Christopher A. Hall: Reading Scripture with the Church Fathers Colleen Carroll: The New Faithful: Why Young Adults Are Embracing Christian Orthodoxy () Richard Foster Streams of Living Water: Celebrating the Great Traditions of Christian Faith ) External links Thomas Oden's Paleo-Orthodoxy by Eric Landstrom Protestant ecumenism Christian terminology Christian theological movements
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EB%8B%A8%EB%B0%B1%EC%A7%88%EB%B9%84%EC%83%9D%EC%84%B1%EC%84%B1%20%EC%95%84%EB%AF%B8%EB%85%B8%EC%82%B0
๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ๋น„์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ
๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ๋น„์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ()์€ ์ƒํ™”ํ•™์—์„œ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์˜ ์ƒํ•ฉ์„ฑ์„ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ƒ๋ช…์ฒด์˜ ๊ฒŒ๋†ˆ(์œ ์ „์ฒด)์— ์ž์—ฐ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์•”ํ˜ธํ™”๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋Š” 22๊ฐ€์ง€์˜ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ(์ง„ํ•ต์ƒ๋ฌผ์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ 21๊ฐ€์ง€)์ด ์•„๋‹Œ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ๋“ค์„ ์ง€์นญํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ 140๊ฐ€์ง€ ์ด์ƒ์˜ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ๋น„์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์ด ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์—์„œ ์ž์—ฐ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒ์„ฑ๋˜๋ฉฐ, ์ˆ˜์ฒœ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ์ด์ƒ์˜ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ๋น„์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์ด ์ž์—ฐ์—์„œ ์ƒ์„ฑ๋˜๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ์‹คํ—˜์‹ค์—์„œ ํ•ฉ์„ฑ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์—ญํ• ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ๋งŽ์€ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ๋น„์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ๋“ค์€ ์ค‘์š”ํ•˜๋‹ค. ์ƒํ•ฉ์„ฑ์—์„œ์˜ ๋Œ€์‚ฌ ์ค‘๊ฐ„์ƒ์„ฑ๋ฌผ, ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์˜ ๋ฒˆ์—ญ ํ›„ ๋ณ€ํ˜•์—์„œ, ์ƒ๋ฆฌํ•™์  ์—ญํ• ์—์„œ (์˜ˆ: ์„ธ๊ท ์˜ ์„ธํฌ๋ฒฝ์˜ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ ์š”์†Œ, ์‹ ๊ฒฝ์ „๋‹ฌ๋ฌผ์งˆ ๋ฐ ๋…์†Œ), ์ฒœ์—ฐ ๋˜๋Š” ์ธ๊ณต ์•ฝ๋ฆฌํ•™์  ํ™”ํ•ฉ๋ฌผ, ์šด์„์— ์กด์žฌํ•˜๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ์ƒ๋ฌผ ๋ฐœ์ƒ ์ด์ „์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์‹คํ—˜ (์˜ˆ: ๋ฐ€๋Ÿฌ์™€ ์œ ๋ฆฌ์˜ ์‹คํ—˜)์— ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. ์กด์žฌ์˜ ๋ถ€์ •์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ •์˜ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ๊ธฐ(โ€“NH2)์™€ ์นด๋ณต์‹ค๊ธฐ(โ€“COOH)๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ชจ๋“  ์œ ๊ธฐ ํ™”ํ•ฉ๋ฌผ์€ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์ด๋‹ค. ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์€ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ๊ธฐ, ์นด๋ณต์‹ค๊ธฐ, ๊ณ์‚ฌ์Šฌ, ฮฑ-์ˆ˜์†Œ์˜ L-์ž…์ฒดํ˜•ํƒœ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ–๋Š” ์ค‘์‹ฌ ํƒ„์†Œ ์›์ž(ฮฑ-ํƒ„์†Œ ๋˜๋Š” 2-ํƒ„์†Œ)๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ถ€๋ฅ˜์˜ ์ž‘์€ ๋ถ€๋ถ„ ์ง‘ํ•ฉ์ด๋‹ค. ๋น„์นด์ด๋ž„์„ฑ์ธ ๊ธ€๋ฆฌ์‹ ๊ณผ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ 2์ฐจ ์•„๋ฏผ์ธ ํ”„๋กค๋ฆฐ์€ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ด๋ฏผ์€ ์•„๋‹ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ์ „ํ†ต์ ์ธ ์ด์œ ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ์ข…์ข… ์ด๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถˆ๋ฆฐ๋‹ค. ๋ฒˆ์—ญ ์ค‘์— ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์— ํ†ตํ•ฉ๋˜๋Š” 20๊ฐ€์ง€์˜ ํ‘œ์ค€ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ๋“ค์€ ์œ ์ „ ๋ถ€ํ˜ธ๋กœ ์•”ํ˜ธํ™”๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์…€๋ ˆ๋…ธ์‹œ์Šคํ…Œ์ธ๊ณผ ํ”ผ๋กค๋ฆฌ์‹ ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๋‘ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ์ถ”๊ฐ€์ ์ธ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๋น„ํ‘œ์ค€ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์€ ์ „์šฉ ์ฝ”๋ˆ์ด ์—†์ง€๋งŒ ํŠน์ • ์„œ์—ด์ด ์กด์žฌํ•  ๋•Œ ์ข…๊ฒฐ ์ฝ”๋ˆ ๋Œ€์‹ ์— ์ฒจ๊ฐ€๋˜๋ฉฐ, ์…€๋ ˆ๋…ธ์‹œ์Šคํ…Œ์ธ์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ UGA ์ฝ”๋ˆ๊ณผ SECIS ์š”์†Œ, ํ”ผ๋กค๋ฆฌ์‹ ์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ UAG ์ฝ”๋ˆ๊ณผ PYLIS ํ•˜๋ฅ˜ ์„œ์—ด์„ ํ•„์š”๋กœ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋ชจ๋“  ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ๋“ค์€ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ๋น„์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์ด๋‹ค. ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์ด ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์˜ ๋ถ€๋ฅ˜๋“ค์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. 20๊ฐ€์ง€์˜ ํ‘œ์ค€ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ 22๊ฐ€์ง€์˜ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ ๊ณ ๋†๋„์—์„œ ๋ฌด์ƒ๋ฌผ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒ์„ฑ๋˜๋Š” 80๊ฐ€์ง€ ์ด์ƒ์˜ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ ์•ฝ 900๊ฐ€์ง€๋Š” ์ž์—ฐ์ ์ธ ๊ฒฝ๋กœ์— ์˜ํ•ด ์ƒ์„ฑ๋œ๋‹ค. 118๊ฐ€์ง€ ์ด์ƒ์˜ ์ธ๊ณต์ ์ธ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์ด ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์— ์‚ฝ์ž…๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋“ค ๋ถ€๋ฅ˜๋“ค์€ ์„œ๋กœ ๊ฒน์น˜๋Š” ๋ถ€๋ถ„์ด ์žˆ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์ง€๋งŒ ๋™์ผํ•˜์ง€๋Š” ์•Š๋‹ค. 22๊ฐ€์ง€์˜ ๋ชจ๋“  ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์€ ์ƒ๋ฌผ์— ์˜ํ•ด ์ƒํ•ฉ์„ฑ๋˜๋ฉฐ ์ „๋ถ€๋Š” ์•„๋‹ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ์ผ๋ถ€๋Š” ๋น„์ƒ๋ฌผ์ (์ƒ๋ฌผ ๋ฐœ์ƒ ์ด์ „์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ์‹คํ—˜ ๋ฐ ์šด์„์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋จ)์ด๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜๋‹ค. ๋…ธ๋ฅด๋ฅ˜์‹ ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์ผ๋ถ€ ์ฒœ์—ฐ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์€ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ ํ•ฉ์„ฑ ๊ณผ์ •์˜ ์˜ค๋ฅ˜๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ๋ฒˆ์—ญ์‹œ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ๋กœ ์ž˜๋ชป ์‚ฝ์ž…๋˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์˜ค๋ฅด๋‹ˆํ‹ด๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋งŽ์€ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ๋“ค์€ ์ƒํ•ฉ์„ฑ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒ์„ฑ๋˜๋Š” ๋Œ€์‚ฌ ์ค‘๊ฐ„์ƒ์„ฑ๋ฌผ์ด์ง€๋งŒ ๋ฒˆ์—ญ์‹œ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์— ์‚ฝ์ž…๋˜์ง€๋Š” ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค. ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์—์„œ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ ์ž”๊ธฐ๋“ค์€ ๋ฒˆ์—ญ ํ›„ ๋ณ€ํ˜•์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์—์„œ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ๋น„์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณ€ํ˜•๋œ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ๋“ค์€ ๋น„์ƒ๋ฌผ์  ํ˜ผํ•ฉ๋ฌผ(์˜ˆ: ฮฑ-๋ฉ”ํ‹ธ๋…ธ๋ฅด๋ฐœ๋ฆฐ)์—์„œ๋งŒ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋œ๋‹ค. 30๊ฐ€์ง€ ์ด์ƒ์˜ ๋น„์ฒœ์—ฐ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ๋“ค์ด ์œ ์ „๊ณตํ•™์  ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์— ์˜ํ•ด ๋ฒˆ์—ญ์‹œ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ๋กœ ์‚ฝ์ž…๋˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ƒํ•ฉ์„ฑ๋˜์ง€๋Š” ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. ๋ช…๋ช…๋ฒ• ์œ ๊ธฐ ๋ถ„์ž์˜ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ํƒ„์†Œ๋ฅผ ๊ตฌ๋ณ„ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ IUPAC ๋ฒˆํ˜ธ ๋งค๊ธฐ๊ธฐ ์ฒด๊ณ„ ์™ธ์—๋„ ์นด๋ณต์‹ค๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๊ตฌ์„ฑํ•˜๋Š” ํƒ„์†Œ์˜ ๋‹ค์Œ ํƒ„์†Œ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ฐ ํƒ„์†Œ์— ์ˆœ์ฐจ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค ๋ฌธ์ž๋ฅผ ํ‘œ์‹œํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ตฌ๋ถ„ํ•  ์ˆ˜๋„ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์„œ ฮฑ-ํƒ„์†Œ๋Š” ฮฑ-์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์—์„œ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ๊ธฐ, ์นด๋ณต์‹ค๊ธฐ, ๊ณ์‚ฌ์Šฌ, ์ˆ˜์†Œ ์›์ž์™€ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ์ค‘์‹ฌ ์นด์ด๋ž„ ํƒ„์†Œ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ์Šค ๋ฌธ์ž๋กœ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ผ ์‹œ์— ์นด๋ณต์‹ค๊ธฐ์˜ ํƒ„์†Œ๋Š” ๊ณ ๋ คํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ๋งŽ์€ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ๋น„์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ๋“ค์˜ IUPAC ์ด๋ฆ„์€ "2-์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ-"๋กœ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์—ฌ "-์‚ฐ"์œผ๋กœ ๋๋‚œ๋‹ค. ์ฒœ์—ฐ ๋น„-L-ฮฑ-์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์˜ ์ฒœ์—ฐ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์€ L-์ž…์ฒดํ˜•ํƒœ์˜ ฮฑ-์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์ด์ง€๋งŒ ์ผ๋ถ€ ์˜ˆ์™ธ๊ฐ€ ์กด์žฌํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋น„-ฮฑ-์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ ์ผ๋ถ€ ๋น„-ฮฑ-์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์ด ์ƒ๋ฌผ์— ์กด์žฌํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๊ตฌ์กฐ์—์„œ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ๊ธฐ๋Š” ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ ๋ถ„์ž์˜ ์นด๋ณต์‹ค๊ธฐ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋” ๋จผ ๊ณณ์— ์œ„์น˜ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ฮฒ-์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์€ ์นด๋ณต์‹ค๊ธฐ์˜ ํƒ„์†Œ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ํƒ„์†Œ์— ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๊ณ , ฮณ-์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์€ ์„ธ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ํƒ„์†Œ์— ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋กœ๋Š” ฮฒ-์•Œ๋ผ๋‹Œ, ฮณ-์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ๋ทฐํ‹ฐ๋ฅด์‚ฐ(GABA), ฮด-์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ๋ ˆ๋ถˆ๋ฆฐ์‚ฐ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ฮฑ-์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์ด ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์— ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๋Š” ์ด์œ ๋Š” ์šด์„ ๋ฐ ์ƒ๋ฌผ ๋ฐœ์ƒ ์ด์ „๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จ๋œ ์‹คํ—˜์—์„œ์˜ ๋นˆ๋„์™€ ๊ด€๋ จ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. 2์ฐจ ๊ตฌ์กฐ์˜ ์ธก๋ฉด์—์„œ ฮฒ-์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์˜ ์œ ํ•ดํ•œ ํŠน์„ฑ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ์ถ”์ธก์€ ์ž˜๋ชป๋œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐํ˜€์กŒ๋‹ค. D-์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ ์ผ๋ถ€ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์—๋Š” ์ •์ƒ์ ์ธ ๋ฆฌ๋ณด์†œ์— ์˜ํ•œ ๋ฒˆ์—ญ ๋ฐ ์ „์‚ฌ์— ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋Š” ์นด์ด๋ž„์„ฑ์ด ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€์ธ ํ™”ํ•™ ๋ฌผ์งˆ์ด ํฌํ•จ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์˜ ์„ธ๊ท ์˜ ์„ธํฌ๋ฒฝ์€ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ๋‹น์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋œ ์ค‘ํ•ฉ์ฒด๊ฐ€ ์„œ๋กœ ์งง์€ ์˜ฌ๋ฆฌ๊ณ ํŽฉํƒ€์ด๋“œ๋กœ ๊ฐ€๊ต๋œ ํŽฉํ‹ฐ๋„๊ธ€๋ฆฌ์นธ์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ฌ๋ฆฌ๊ณ ํŽฉํƒ€์ด๋“œ๋Š” ๋น„๋ฆฌ๋ณด์†œ์œผ๋กœ ํ•ฉ์„ฑ๋˜๋ฉฐ D-์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ๋“ค, ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ D-์•Œ๋ผ๋‹Œ๊ณผ D-๊ธ€๋ฃจํƒ์‚ฐ์„ ํฌํ•จํ•˜๋Š” ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ํŠน์„ฑ๋“ค์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ถ”๊ฐ€์ ์ธ ํŠน์ง•์€ ์ „์ž๊ฐ€ ํ”ผ๋ฆฌ๋…์‚ด ์ธ์‚ฐ(PLP) ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ ํšจ์†Œ(alr ๋˜๋Š” ์ƒ๋™์œ ์ „์ž์ธ dadX์— ์˜ํ•ด ์•”ํ˜ธํ™” ๋จ)์— ์˜ํ•ด ๋ผ์„ธ๋ฏธํ™”๋˜๋Š” ๋ฐ˜๋ฉด ํ›„์ž๋Š” ๋ณด์กฐ ์ธ์ž์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ๋…๋ฆฝ์ ์ธ ํšจ์†Œ(murI์— ์˜ํ•ด ์•”ํ˜ธํ™” ๋จ)์— ์˜ํ•ด ๋ผ์„ธ๋ฏธํ™”๋œ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ถ€ ๋ณ€ํ˜•์ด ์กด์žฌํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ, ํ…Œ๋ฅด๋ชจํ† ๊ฐ€์†(Thermotoga)์˜ ์ข…์—๋Š” D-๋ฆฌ์‹ ์ด ์กด์žฌํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ํŠน์ • ๋ฐ˜์ฝ”๋งˆ์ด์‹  ๋‚ด์„ฑ ์„ธ๊ท ์—๋Š” D-์„ธ๋ฆฐ์ด ์กด์žฌ(vanT ์œ ์ „์ž)ํ•œ๋‹ค. ฮฑ-ํƒ„์†Œ์— ์ˆ˜์†Œ๊ฐ€ ์—†๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ๋ชจ๋“  ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์€ ฮฑ-ํƒ„์†Œ์— ์ ์–ด๋„ ํ•˜๋‚˜์˜ ์ˆ˜์†Œ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ธ€๋ฆฌ์‹ ์€ ๋‘ ๊ฐœ์˜ ์ˆ˜์†Œ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๊ณ , ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์€ ํ•œ ๊ฐœ์˜ ์ˆ˜์†Œ์™€ ํ•œ ๊ฐœ์˜ ๊ณ์‚ฌ์Šฌ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ˆ˜์†Œ๋ฅผ ๋ฉ”ํ‹ธ๊ธฐ์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋” ํฐ ์น˜ํ™˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ์น˜ํ™˜ํ•˜๋ฉด ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ ๊ณจ๊ฒฉ์ด ์™œ๊ณก๋œ๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ถ€ ๊ท ๋ฅ˜์—์„œ ฮฑ-์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์•„์ด์†Œ๋ทฐํ‹ฐ๋ฅด์‚ฐ์€ ํŽฉํƒ€์ด๋“œ์˜ ์ „๊ตฌ์ฒด๋กœ ์ƒ์„ฑ๋˜๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ ์ค‘ ์ผ๋ถ€๋Š” ํ•ญ์ƒ์ œ์˜ ํŠน์„ฑ์„ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ธ๋‹ค. ์ด ํ™”ํ•ฉ๋ฌผ์€ ์•Œ๋ผ๋‹Œ๊ณผ ์œ ์‚ฌํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ฮฑ-ํƒ„์†Œ์— ์ˆ˜์†Œ ๋Œ€์‹ ์— ๋ฉ”ํ‹ธ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ฮฑ-์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์•„์ด์†Œ๋ทฐํ‹ฐ๋ฅด์‚ฐ์€ ์นด์ด๋ž„์„ฑ์ด ์•„๋‹ˆ๋‹ค. ฮฑ-์ˆ˜์†Œ๊ฐ€ ์—†๋Š” ์•Œ๋ผ๋‹Œ๊ณผ ์œ ์‚ฌํ•œ ๋˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํ™”ํ•ฉ๋ฌผ๋กœ๋Š” ๋ฉ”ํ‹ธ๋ Œ ๊ณ์‚ฌ์Šฌ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ๋””ํ•˜์ด๋“œ๋กœ์•Œ๋ผ๋‹Œ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ ์ž์—ฐ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒ์„ฑ๋˜๋Š” ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๋””ํ•˜์ด๋“œ๋กœ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ๋“ค ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜์ด๋‹ค. ํŠธ์œˆ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ ์ž…์ฒด์ค‘์‹ฌ L-ฮฑ-์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์˜ ํ•˜์œ„ ์ง‘ํ•ฉ์€ ๋‘ ๋ง๋‹จ ์ค‘ ์–ด๋Š ์ชฝ์ด ฮฑ-ํƒ„์†Œ์ธ์ง€ ๋ชจํ˜ธํ•˜๋‹ค. ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์—์„œ ์‹œ์Šคํ…Œ์ธ ์ž”๊ธฐ๋Š” ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์‹œ์Šคํ…Œ์ธ ์ž”๊ธฐ์™€ ์ดํ™ฉํ™” ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ์„ ํ˜•์„ฑํ•˜์—ฌ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์„ ๊ฐ€๊ตํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋‘ ๊ฐœ์˜ ๊ฐ€๊ต๋œ ์‹œ์Šคํ…Œ์ธ์€ ์‹œ์Šคํ‹ด์„ ํ˜•์„ฑํ•œ๋‹ค. ์‹œ์Šคํ…Œ์ธ๊ณผ ๋ฉ”ํ‹ฐ์˜ค๋‹Œ์€ ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ง์ ‘์ ์ธ ํ™ฉ์‚ฐํ™”์— ์˜ํ•ด ์ƒ์„ฑ๋˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ผ๋ถ€ ์ข…์—์„œ๋Š” ํ™œ์„ฑํ™”๋œ ํ˜ธ๋ชจ์„ธ๋ฆฐ ๋˜๋Š” ์„ธ๋ฆฐ์ด ์‹œ์Šคํ…Œ์ธ ๋˜๋Š” ํ˜ธ๋ชจ์‹œ์Šคํ…Œ์ธ๊ณผ ์œตํ•ฉํ•˜์—ฌ ์‹œ์Šคํƒ€ํ‹ฐ์˜ค๋‹Œ์„ ํ˜•์„ฑํ•˜๋Š” ํ™ฉ์ „ํ™˜ ๊ฒฝ๋กœ์— ์˜ํ•ด ์ƒ์„ฑ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ์‚ฌํ•œ ํ™”ํ•ฉ๋ฌผ๋กœ๋Š” ์‹ธ์ด์˜ค์—์Šคํ„ฐ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ์—ฐ๊ฒฐ๋œ ๋‘ ๊ฐœ์˜ ์•Œ๋ผ๋‹Œ ๋ถ„์ž๋กœ ๋ณผ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ž€ํ‹ฐ์˜ค๋‹Œ์ด ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ์ƒ๋ฌผ๋“ค์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋œ๋‹ค. ์œ ์‚ฌํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์ ฑ์ฝœ์ฝฉ์˜ ์‹๋ฌผ ๋…์†Œ์ธ ์  ์ฝœ์‚ฐ์€ ๋ฉ”ํ‹ธ๋ Œ๊ธฐ์— ์˜ํ•ด ์—ฐ๊ฒฐ๋œ ๋‘ ๊ฐœ์˜ ์‹œ์Šคํ…Œ์ธ์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค์ด์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธํ”ผ๋ฉœ์‚ฐ์€ ํŽฉํ‹ฐ๋„๊ธ€๋ฆฌ์นธ์—์„œ ๊ฐ€๊ต๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๋ฉฐ, ๋ฆฌ์‹ ์˜ ์ „๊ตฌ์ฒด๋กœ (ํƒˆ์นด๋ณต์‹คํ™”๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด) ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ƒ๋ฌผ ๋ฐœ์ƒ ์ด์ „์˜ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ ๋ฐ ๋Œ€์ฒด์ƒํ™”ํ•™ ์šด์„๊ณผ ์ƒ๋ฌผ ๋ฐœ์ƒ ์ด์ „์˜ ์‹คํ—˜(์˜ˆ: ๋ฐ€๋Ÿฌ์™€ ์œ ๋ฆฌ์˜ ์‹คํ—˜)์—์„œ๋Š” 20๊ฐ€์ง€์˜ ํ‘œ์ค€ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ๋ณด๋‹ค ๋” ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ๋“ค์ด ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ ์ค‘ ์ผ๋ถ€๋Š” ํ‘œ์ค€ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ๋ณด๋‹ค ๋” ๋†’์€ ๋†๋„์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋œ๋‹ค. ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์— ๊ธฐ๋ฐ˜ํ•œ ์ƒ๋ช…์ฒด๊ฐ€ ์šฐ์ฃผ์˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๊ณณ์—์„œ ํ‰ํ–‰์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐœ์ƒํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค๋ฉด ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์˜ 75% ์ด์ƒ์€ ๊ณต์œ ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์ถ”์ธก๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์ฃผ๋ชฉํ• ๋งŒํ•œ ์ด์ƒ์€ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ๋ทฐํ‹ฐ๋ฅด์‚ฐ์˜ ๋ถ€์กฑ์ด๋‹ค. ์ง์„ ํ˜• ๊ณ์‚ฌ์Šฌ ์œ ์ „ ๋ถ€ํ˜ธ๋Š” ๋™๊ฒฐ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์œผ๋กœ ์„ค๋ช…๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ง์„ ํ˜• ์‚ฌ์Šฌ์ด ์žˆ๋Š” ํ‘œ์ค€ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ(์•Œ๋ผ๋‹Œ)์ด ํ•˜๋‚˜๋งŒ ์žˆ๋Š” ์ด์œ ๋Š” ๋‹จ์ˆœํžˆ ๋ฐœ๋ฆฐ, ๋ฅ˜์‹ , ์•„์ด์†Œ๋ฅ˜์‹ ์ด ์ค‘๋ณต๋˜๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์ผ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์ง์„ ํ˜• ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์€ ํ›จ์”ฌ ๋” ์•ˆ์ •์ ์ธ ฮฑ-๋‚˜์„ ์„ ํ˜•์„ฑํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณด๊ณ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 16์กฑ ์›์†Œ (์นผ์ฝ”์  ) ์„ธ๋ฆฐ, ํ˜ธ๋ชจ์„ธ๋ฆฐ, O-๋ฉ”ํ‹ธํ˜ธ๋ชจ์„ธ๋ฆฐ ๋ฐ O-์—ํ‹ธํ˜ธ๋ชจ์„ธ๋ฆฐ์€ ํ•˜์ด๋“œ๋ก์‹œ๋ฉ”ํ‹ธ๊ธฐ, ํ•˜์ด๋“œ๋ก์‹œ์—ํ‹ธ๊ธฐ, O-๋ฉ”ํ‹ธํ•˜์ด๋“œ๋ก์‹œ๋ฉ”ํ‹ธ๊ธฐ ๋ฐ O-๋ฉ”ํ‹ธํ•˜์ด๋“œ๋ก์‹œ์—ํ‹ธ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ณ์‚ฌ์Šฌ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์‹œ์Šคํ…Œ์ธ, ํ˜ธ๋ชจ์‹œ์Šคํ…Œ์ธ, ๋ฉ”ํ‹ฐ์˜ค๋‹Œ ๋ฐ ์—ํ‹ฐ์˜ค๋‹Œ์€ ์‹ธ์ด์˜ฌ ๋“ฑ๊ฐ€๋ฌผ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์…€๋ ˆ๋†€ ๋“ฑ๊ฐ€๋ฌผ์€ ์…€๋ ˆ๋…ธ์‹œ์Šคํ…Œ์ธ, ์…€๋ ˆ๋…ธํ˜ธ๋ชจ์‹œ์Šคํ…Œ์ธ, ์…€๋ ˆ๋…ธ๋ฉ”ํ‹ฐ์˜ค๋‹Œ, ์…€๋ ˆ๋…ธ์—ํ‹ฐ์˜ค๋‹Œ์ด๋‹ค. ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ 16์กฑ ์›์†Œ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ๋“ค๋„ ์ž์—ฐ์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋œ๋‹ค. ์•„์ŠคํŽ˜๋ฅด๊ธธ๋ฃจ์Šค ํ‘ธ๋ฏธ๊ฐ€ํˆฌ์Šค(Aspergillus fumigatus) ์•„์ŠคํŽ˜๋ฅด๊ธธ๋ฃจ์Šค ํ…Œ๋ ˆ์šฐ์Šค(Aspergillus terreus) ๋ฐ ํŽ˜๋‹ˆ์‹ค๋ฆฌ์›€ ํฌ๋ฆฌ์†Œ๊ฒŒ๋ˆ”(Penicillium chrysogenum)๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์ƒ๋ฌผ์ข…๋“ค์€ ํ™ฉ์ด ์—†๋Š” ์ƒํƒœ์—์„œ ํ…”๋ฃจ๋กœ์‹œ์Šคํ…Œ์ธ ๋ฐ ํ…”๋ฃจ๋กœ๋ฉ”ํ‹ฐ์˜ค๋‹Œ์„ ์ƒ์„ฑํ•˜๊ณ  ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ๋กœ ํ†ตํ•ฉ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ™•์žฅ๋œ ์œ ์ „ ๋ถ€ํ˜ธ ์—ญํ•  ์„ธํฌ ํŠนํžˆ ๋…๋ฆฝ์˜์–‘์ƒ๋ฌผ์—์„œ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ๋น„์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ๋“ค์ด ๋Œ€์‚ฌ ์ค‘๊ฐ„์ƒ์„ฑ๋ฌผ๋กœ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ํ”ผ๋ฆฌ๋…์‚ด ์ธ์‚ฐ(PLP) ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ ํšจ์†Œ์˜ ์ด‰๋งค์  ์œ ์—ฐ์„ฑ์—์„œ ๋ถˆ๊ตฌํ•˜๊ณ  ๋งŽ์€ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ๋“ค์ด ์ผ€ํ† ์‚ฐ(์˜ˆ: 4-๋ฉ”ํ‹ธ-2-์˜ฅ์†ŒํŽœํƒ„์‚ฐ์—์„œ ๋ฅ˜์‹ ์œผ๋กœ)์œผ๋กœ ํ•ฉ์„ฑ๋˜๊ณ  ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰ ๋‹จ๊ณ„์—์„œ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธํ™”๋˜์–ด ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ๋น„์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์˜ ๋Œ€์‚ฌ ์ค‘๊ฐ„์ƒ์„ฑ๋ฌผ์˜ ์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ์ƒ๋‹นํžˆ ๋‚ฎ๊ฒŒ ์œ ์ง€ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์˜ค๋ฅด๋‹ˆํ‹ด๊ณผ ์‹œํŠธ๋ฃฐ๋ฆฐ์€ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ ์ดํ™”์ž‘์šฉ์˜ ์ผ๋ถ€์ธ ์š”์†Œ ํšŒ๋กœ์—์„œ ์ƒ์„ฑ๋œ๋‹ค(์•„๋ž˜ ์ฐธ์กฐ). 1์ฐจ ๋Œ€์‚ฌ์— ๋”ํ•˜์—ฌ, ๋ช‡๋ช‡ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ๋น„์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์€ ์ž‘์€ ํ™”ํ•ฉ๋ฌผ ๋˜๋Š” ๋น„๋ฆฌ๋ณด์†œ ํŽฉํƒ€์ด๋“œ(์ผ๋ถ€ ๋…์†Œ์™€ ๊ฐ™์€)๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋“ค๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ 2์ฐจ ๋Œ€์‚ฌ์˜ ์ „๊ตฌ์ฒด ๋˜๋Š” ์ตœ์ข… ์ƒ์„ฑ๋ฌผ์ด๋‹ค. ๋ฒˆ์—ญ ํ›„ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ๋กœ ํ†ตํ•ฉ ์œ ์ „ ๋ถ€ํ˜ธ์— ์˜ํ•ด ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์œผ๋กœ ์•”ํ˜ธํ™”๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์Œ์—๋„ ๋ถˆ๊ตฌํ•˜๊ณ  ์ผ๋ถ€ ๋น„ํ‘œ์ค€ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ๋“ค์ด ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ด๋“ค์€ ํ‘œ์  ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์— ์กด์žฌํ•˜๋Š” ํ‘œ์ค€ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์˜ ๊ณ์‚ฌ์Šฌ์˜ ๋ฒˆ์—ญ ํ›„ ๋ณ€ํ˜•์— ์˜ํ•ด ํ˜•์„ฑ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๋ณ€ํ˜•์€ ๋ณดํ†ต ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์˜ ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์ด๋‚˜ ์กฐ์ ˆ์— ํ•„์ˆ˜์ ์ด๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด ฮณ-์นด๋ณต์‹œ๊ธ€๋ฃจํƒ์‚ฐ์—์„œ ๊ธ€๋ฃจํƒ์‚ฐ์˜ ์นด๋ณต์‹คํ™”๋Š” ์นผ์Š˜ ์–‘์ด์˜จ๊ณผ ๋” ์ž˜ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•˜๊ณ , ํ•˜์ด๋“œ๋ก์‹œํ”„๋กค๋ฆฐ์—์„œ ํ”„๋กค๋ฆฐ์˜ ํ•˜์ด๋“œ๋ก์‹คํ™”๋Š” ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ ์กฐ์ง์„ ์œ ์ง€ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ์ค‘์š”ํ•˜๋‹ค. ๋˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์˜ˆ๋Š” ๋ฆฌ์‹  ์ž”๊ธฐ์˜ ๋ณ€ํ˜•์„ ํ†ตํ•œ ๋ฒˆ์—ญ ๊ฐœ์‹œ์ธ์ž์ธ EIF5A์—์„œ ํ•˜์ดํ“จ์‹ ์˜ ํ˜•์„ฑ์ด๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๋ณ€ํ˜•์€ ๋˜ํ•œ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์˜ ๊ตญ์†Œํ™”๋ฅผ ๊ฒฐ์ •ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด ๊ธด ์†Œ์ˆ˜์„ฑ ์ž‘์šฉ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์ฒจ๊ฐ€ํ•˜๋ฉด ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์„ ์ธ์ง€์งˆ ๋ง‰์— ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ์‹œํ‚ฌ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ๋ง๋ก ์‚ฐ์ด ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์— ์ž˜๋ชป ํ†ตํ•ฉ๋˜์–ด ์กด์žฌํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ์˜ˆ๋น„์ ์ธ ์ฆ๊ฑฐ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋…์„ฑ ์œ ์‚ฌ์ฒด ์‹ธ์ด์•Œ๋ฆฌ์‹ ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋ช‡๋ช‡ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ๋น„์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์€ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์˜ ํŠน์ • ํŠน์„ฑ์„ ๋ชจ๋ฐฉํ•˜๋Š” ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ๋…์„ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ€ด์Šค์ฟ ์•Œ์‚ฐ, ์นด๋‚˜๋ฐ”๋‹Œ, ์•„์ œํ‹ฐ๋”˜-2-์นด๋ณต์‹ค์‚ฐ์„ ๋น„๋กฏํ•œ ์ผ๋ถ€ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ๋น„์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์€ ์‹ ๊ฒฝ์ „๋‹ฌ๋ฌผ์งˆ(์ฆ‰, ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ ์ƒํ•ฉ์„ฑ์— ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์Œ)๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๋Š” ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์„ ๋ชจ๋ฐฉํ•˜์—ฌ ์‹ ๊ฒฝ๋…์„ฑ์„ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ธ๋‹ค. ์„ธํŒ”๋กœ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฐ C๋Š” ์„ธํŒ”๋กœ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฐ ๋ถ€๋ถ„์œผ๋กœ ์•„๋งˆ์ด๋“œํ™”๋œ ฮฑ-์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์•„๋””ํ”„์‚ฐ(ํ˜ธ๋ชจ๊ธ€๋ฃจํƒ์‚ฐ) ๊ณจ๊ฒฉ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํŽ˜๋‹ˆ์‹ค๋ผ๋ฏผ์€ ์ž‘์šฉ ๋ฐฉ์‹์ด ์•Œ๋ ค์ง€์ง€ ์•Š์€ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์šฉ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์ด๋‹ค. ์ž์—ฐ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒ์„ฑ๋˜๋Š” ์‚ฌ์ด์•„๋…ธํ†ก์‹ ์—๋Š” ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ๋น„์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ๋“ค๋„ ํฌํ•จ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด ๋งˆ์ดํฌ๋กœ์‹œ์Šคํ‹ด๊ณผ ๋…ธ๋‘˜๋ผ๋ฆฐ์€ ๋‘˜ ๋‹ค ฮฒ-์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์ธ ADDA๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์œ ๋„๋œ๋‹ค. ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์ด ์•„๋‹Œ ๊ฒƒ๋“ค ํƒ€์šฐ๋ฆฐ์€ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์„คํฐ์‚ฐ์ด๋ฉฐ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์นด๋ณต์‹ค์‚ฐ์ด ์•„๋‹ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ๋•Œ๋•Œ๋กœ ํŠน์ • ์ƒ๋ฌผ์ฒด(๊ณ ์–‘์ด์™€ ๊ฐ™์€)์—์„œ ์˜์–‘์š”๊ตฌ์„ฑ์„ ์–ต์ œํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ํ•„์š”ํ•œ ์–‘์ด ๋น„ํƒ€๋ฏผ(๋ณด์กฐ ์ธ์ž ์˜์–‘์š”๊ตฌ์„ฑ)๋ณด๋‹ค "ํ•„์ˆ˜ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ"(์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ ์˜์–‘์š”๊ตฌ์„ฑ)์— ๋” ๊ฐ€๊นŒ์šด ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ„์ฃผ๋œ๋‹ค. ์‚ผํˆฌ๋ฌผ์งˆ์ธ ์‚ฌ๋ฅด์ฝ”์‹  ๋ฐ ํŠธ๋ผ์ด๋ฉ”ํ‹ธ๊ธ€๋ฆฌ์‹ ์€ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์œ ๋„๋˜์ง€๋งŒ ๊ฐ๊ฐ 2์ฐจ ์•„๋ฏผ ๋ฐ 4์ฐจ ์•„๋ฏผ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ ํฌ๋„๋‹น์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ ์ผ€ํ†ค์ฒด์ƒ์„ฑ์„ฑ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ ์ฃผํ•ด ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ์‚ฐ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-proteinogenic%20amino%20acids
Non-proteinogenic amino acids
In biochemistry, non-coded or non-proteinogenic amino acids are distinct from the 22 proteinogenic amino acids (21 in eukaryotes) which are naturally encoded in the genome of organisms for the assembly of proteins. However, over 140 non-proteinogenic amino acids occur naturally in proteins and thousands more may occur in nature or be synthesized in the laboratory. Chemically synthesized amino acids can be called unnatural amino acids. Unnatural amino acids can be synthetically prepared from their native analogs via modifications such as amine alkylation, side chain substitution, structural bond extension cyclization, and isosteric replacements within the amino acid backbone. Many non-proteinogenic amino acids are important: intermediates in biosynthesis, in post-translational formation of proteins, in a physiological role (e.g. components of bacterial cell walls, neurotransmitters and toxins), natural or man-made pharmacological compounds, present in meteorites or used in prebiotic experiments (such as the Millerโ€“Urey experiment). Definition by negation Technically, any organic compound with an amine (โ€“NH2) and a carboxylic acid (โ€“COOH) functional group is an amino acid. The proteinogenic amino acids are small subset of this group that possess central carbon atom (ฮฑ- or 2-) bearing an amino group, a carboxyl group, a side chain and an ฮฑ-hydrogen levo conformation, with the exception of glycine, which is achiral, and proline, whose amine group is a secondary amine and is consequently frequently referred to as an imino acid for traditional reasons, albeit not an imino. The genetic code encodes 20 standard amino acids for incorporation into proteins during translation. However, there are two extra proteinogenic amino acids: selenocysteine and pyrrolysine. These non-standard amino acids do not have a dedicated codon, but are added in place of a stop codon when a specific sequence is present, UGA codon and SECIS element for selenocysteine, UAG PYLIS downstream sequence for pyrrolysine. All other amino acids are termed "non-proteinogenic". There are various groups of amino acids: 20 standard amino acids 22 proteinogenic amino acids over 80 amino acids created abiotically in high concentrations about 900 are produced by natural pathways over 118 engineered amino acids have been placed into protein These groups overlap, but are not identical. All 22 proteinogenic amino acids are biosynthesised by organisms and some, but not all, of them also are abiotic (found in prebiotic experiments and meteorites). Some natural amino acids, such as norleucine, are misincorporated translationally into proteins due to infidelity of the protein-synthesis process. Many amino acids, such as ornithine, are metabolic intermediates produced biosynthetically, but not incorporated translationally into proteins. Post-translational modification of amino acid residues in proteins leads to the formation of many proteinaceous, but non-proteinogenic, amino acids. Other amino acids are solely found in abiotic mixes (e.g. ฮฑ-methylnorvaline). Over 30 unnatural amino acids have been inserted translationally into protein in engineered systems, yet are not biosynthetic. Nomenclature In addition to the IUPAC numbering system to differentiate the various carbons in an organic molecule, by sequentially assigning a number to each carbon, including those forming a carboxylic group, the carbons along the side-chain of amino acids can also be labelled with Greek letters, where the ฮฑ-carbon is the central chiral carbon possessing a carboxyl group, a side chain and, in ฮฑ-amino acids, an amino group โ€“ the carbon in carboxylic groups is not counted. (Consequently, the IUPAC names of many non-proteinogenic ฮฑ-amino acids start with 2-amino- and end in -ic acid.) Natural non-L-ฮฑ-amino acids Most natural amino acids are ฮฑ-amino acids in the L conformation, but some exceptions exist. Non-alpha Some non-ฮฑ-amino acids exist in organisms. In these structures, the amine group displaced further from the carboxylic acid end of the amino acid molecule. Thus a ฮฒ-amino acid has the amine group bonded to the second carbon away, and a ฮณ-amino acid has it on the third. Examples include ฮฒ-alanine, GABA, and ฮด-aminolevulinic acid. The reason why ฮฑ-amino acids are used in proteins has been linked to their frequency in meteorites and prebiotic experiments. An initial speculation on the deleterious properties of ฮฒ-amino acids in terms of secondary structure turned out to be incorrect. D-amino acids Some amino acids contain the opposite absolute chirality, chemicals that are not available from normal ribosomal translation and transcription machinery. Most bacterial cells walls are formed by peptidoglycan, a polymer composed of amino sugars crosslinked with short oligopeptides bridged between each other. The oligopeptide is non-ribosomally synthesised and contains several peculiarities including D-amino acids, generally D-alanine and D-glutamate. A further peculiarity is that the former is racemised by a PLP-binding enzymes (encoded by alr or the homologue dadX), whereas the latter is racemised by a cofactor independent enzyme (murI). Some variants are present, in Thermotoga spp. D-Lysine is present and in certain vancomycin-resistant bacteria D-serine is present (vanT gene). Without a hydrogen on the ฮฑ-carbon All proteinogenic amino acids have at least one hydrogen on the ฮฑ-carbon. Glycine has two hydrogens, and all others have one hydrogen and one side-chain. Replacement of the remaining hydrogen with a larger substituent, such as a methyl group, distorts the protein backbone. In some fungi ฮฑ-aminoisobutyric acid is produced as a precursor to peptides, some of which exhibit antibiotic properties. This compound is similar to alanine, but possesses an additional methyl group on the ฮฑ-carbon instead of a hydrogen. It is therefore achiral. Another compound similar to alanine without an ฮฑ-hydrogen is dehydroalanine, which possess a methylene sidechain. It is one of several naturally occurring dehydroamino acids. Twin amino acid stereocentres A subset of L-ฮฑ-amino acids are ambiguous as to which of two ends is the ฮฑ-carbon. In proteins a cysteine residue can form a disulfide bond with another cysteine residue, thus crosslinking the protein. Two crosslinked cysteines form a cystine molecule. Cysteine and methionine are generally produced by direct sulfurylation, but in some species they can be produced by transsulfuration, where the activated homoserine or serine is fused to a cysteine or homocysteine forming cystathionine. A similar compound is lanthionine, which can be seen as two alanine molecules joined via a thioether bond and is found in various organisms. Similarly, djenkolic acid, a plant toxin from jengkol beans, is composed of two cysteines connected by a methylene group. Diaminopimelic acid is both used as a bridge in peptidoglycan and is used a precursor to lysine (via its decarboxylation). Prebiotic amino acids and alternative biochemistries In meteorites and in prebiotic experiments (e.g. Millerโ€“Urey experiment) many more amino acids than the twenty standard amino acids are found, several of which at higher concentrations than the standard ones: it has been conjectured that if amino acid based life were to arise in parallel elsewhere in the universe, no more than 75% of the amino acids would be in common. The most notable anomaly is the lack of aminobutyric acid. Straight side chain The genetic code has been described as a frozen accident and the reasons why there is only one standard amino acid with a straight chain (alanine) could simply be redundancy with valine, leucine and isoleucine. However, straight chained amino acids are reported to form much more stable alpha helices. Chalcogen Serine, homoserine, O-methylhomoserine and O-ethylhomoserine possess a hydroxymethyl, hydroxyethyl, O-methylhydroxymethyl and O-methylhydroxyethyl side chain; whereas cysteine, homocysteine, methionine and ethionine possess the thiol equivalents. The selenol equivalents are selenocysteine, selenohomocysteine, selenomethionine and selenoethionine. Amino acids with the next chalcogen down are also found in nature: several species such as Aspergillus fumigatus, Aspergillus terreus, and Penicillium chrysogenum in the absence of sulfur are able to produce and incorporate into protein tellurocysteine and telluromethionine. Expanded genetic code Roles In cells, especially autotrophs, several non-proteinogenic amino acids are found as metabolic intermediates. However, despite the catalytic flexibility of PLP-binding enzymes, many amino acids are synthesised as keto acids (such as 4-methyl-2-oxopentanoate to leucine) and aminated in the last step, thus keeping the number of non-proteinogenic amino acid intermediates fairly low. Ornithine and citrulline occur in the urea cycle, part of amino acid catabolism (see below). In addition to primary metabolism, several non-proteinogenic amino acids are precursors or the final production in secondary metabolism to make small compounds or non-ribosomal peptides (such as some toxins). Post-translationally incorporated into protein Despite not being encoded by the genetic code as proteinogenic amino acids, some non-standard amino acids are nevertheless found in proteins. These are formed by post-translational modification of the side chains of standard amino acids present in the target protein. These modifications are often essential for the function or regulation of a protein; for example, in ฮณ-carboxyglutamate the carboxylation of glutamate allows for better binding of calcium cations, and in hydroxyproline the hydroxylation of proline is critical for maintaining connective tissues. Another example is the formation of hypusine in the translation initiation factor EIF5A, through modification of a lysine residue. Such modifications can also determine the localization of the protein, for example, the addition of long hydrophobic groups can cause a protein to bind to a phospholipid membrane. There is some preliminary evidence that aminomalonic acid may be present, possibly by misincorporation, in protein. Toxic analogues Several non-proteinogenic amino acids are toxic due to their ability to mimic certain properties of proteinogenic amino acids, such as thialysine. Some non-proteinogenic amino acids are neurotoxic by mimicking amino acids used as neurotransmitters (that is, not for protein biosynthesis), including quisqualic acid, canavanine and azetidine-2-carboxylic acid. Cephalosporin C has an ฮฑ-aminoadipic acid (homoglutamate) backbone that is amidated with a cephalosporin moiety. Penicillamine is a therapeutic amino acid, whose mode of action is unknown. Naturally-occurring cyanotoxins can also include non-proteinogenic amino acids. Microcystin and nodularin, for example, are both derived from ADDA, a ฮฒ-amino acid. Not amino acids Taurine is an amino sulfonic acid and not an amino carboxylic acid, however it is occasionally considered as such as the amounts required to suppress the auxotroph in certain organisms (such as cats) are closer to those of "essential amino acids" (amino acid auxotrophy) than of vitamins (cofactor auxotrophy). The osmolytes, sarcosine and glycine betaine are derived from amino acids, but have a secondary and quaternary amine respectively. See also Dicarboxylic acid Notes References Amino acids
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%B2%AD%EC%83%89%20%EC%9E%91%EC%A0%84
์ฒญ์ƒ‰ ์ž‘์ „
์ฒญ์ƒ‰ ์ž‘์ „() ๋˜๋Š” ๋ธ”๋ผ์šฐ ์ž‘์ „์€ 1942๋…„ ์—ฌ๋ฆ„์— ํžˆํ‹€๋Ÿฌ๊ฐ€ ์ฝ”์นด์„œ์Šค ์ง€์—ญ์˜ ์œ ์ „์„ ์†์— ๋„ฃ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ชฉํ‘œ๋กœ ํ•œ ์ž‘์ „์ด๋‹ค. ์ดˆ๋ฐ˜์—๋Š” ๋…์ผ๊ตฐ์ด ์Šน์Šน์žฅ๊ตฌํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ ์ „ํˆฌ ๋“ฑ์˜ ํŒจ๋ฐฐ๋กœ ์ตœ์ข…์ ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ์‹คํŒจํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฝ 1941๋…„ 6์›” 22์ผ ์‹œ์ž‘๋œ ๋ฐ”๋ฅด๋ฐ”๋กœ์‚ฌ ์ž‘์ „์ด ๋ชจ์Šคํฌ๋ฐ” ๊ณต๋ฐฉ์ „์˜ ํŒจ๋ฐฐ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์‹ค์ƒ ์‹คํŒจ๋กœ ๋๋‚˜์ž, ํžˆํ‹€๋Ÿฌ๋Š” 1942๋…„ 4์›” ์ฒญ์ƒ‰ ์ž‘์ „(Fall Blau)๋ผ๋Š” ์ด๋ฆ„์˜ ๊ณ„ํš์„ ์ œ์‹œํ•˜๊ณ  ์†Œ๋ จ ๋‚จ๋ถ€์˜ ์ฝ”์นด์„œ์Šค ์ง€์—ญ์„ ๊ณต๋žตํ•˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ๊ฒฐ์ •ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ”์ฟ , ๋งˆ์ด์ฝ”ํ”„, ๊ทธ๋กœ์ฆˆ๋‹ˆ ๋“ฑ์˜ ์œ ์ „์ด ์žˆ๋Š” ์ฝ”์นด์„œ์Šค ์ง€๋ฐฉ์€ ์†Œ๋ จ์˜ ์„์œ  ์ƒ๋ช…์ค„๊ณผ๋„ ๋‹ค๋ฆ„์—†์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํŠนํžˆ ์†Œ๋ จ ๊ตญ๋‚ด์™€ ์—ฐ๊ฒฐ๋œ ์ฒ ๋„๊ฐ€ ๋กœ์Šคํ† ํ”„์™€ ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ ๋ฐฉ๋ฉด ๋‘ ๊ณณ๋ฟ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ์•Œ์•„์ฑˆ ๋…์ผ๊ตฐ์€ ์ด๊ณณ์˜ ์ฒ ๋„๋ฅผ ๋Š์–ด ์†Œ๋ จ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ€๋Š” ์„์œ  ์ˆ˜์†ก์„ ์™„์ „ ์ฐจ๋‹จํ•  ์†์…ˆ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์„์œ ๋Š” ๋…์ผ๊ตฐ์—๊ฒŒ๋„ ํ•„์š”ํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ 1941๋…„ ์ฆˆ์Œ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋…์ผ๊ตฐ์˜ ์„์œ  ๊ณต๊ธ‰์ฒ˜๋Š” ์‚ฌ์‹ค์ƒ ๋ฃจ๋งˆ๋‹ˆ์•„๋กœ ์ œํ•œ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ  ๋…์ผ๊ตฐ์€ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์„์œ  ๊ณต๊ธ‰์ฒ˜๋ฅผ ํ™•๋ณดํ•  ํ•„์š”์„ฑ์„ ๋Š๋ผ๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ž‘์ „๊ณ„ํš ๋…์ผ๊ตฐ์€ ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์ž‘์ „์„ ๊ณ„ํšํ–ˆ๋‹ค. Blau I : ํ—ค๋ฅด๋งŒ ํ˜ธํŠธ ํœ˜ํ•˜์˜ ์ œ4๊ธฐ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ๊ณผ ์ œ2๊ตฐ์ด ํ—๊ฐ€๋ฆฌ ์ œ2๊ตฐ์˜ ์ง€์›์„ ๋ฐ›์•„ ์ฟ ๋ฅด์Šคํฌ์™€ ๋ณด๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ๋ฅผ ๊ณต๊ฒฉํ•˜๊ณ  ๋ณผ๊ฐ€๊ฐ• ๋ถ์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ„๋‹ค. Blau II : ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ๋ฆฌํžˆ ํŒŒ์šธ๋ฃจ์Šค ํœ˜ํ•˜์˜ ์ œ6๊ตฐ์ด ํ•˜๋ฅด์ฝ”ํ”„์„ ์ง€๋‚˜ ์ œ4๊ธฐ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ๊ณผ ํ‰ํ–‰ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์ง„๊ฒฉํ•ด ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ๋กœ ๊ฐ„๋‹ค. Blau III : ์ œ1๊ธฐ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ์„ ์ฃผ์ถ•์œผ๋กœ ์ œ17๊ตฐ๊ณผ ๋ฃจ๋งˆ๋‹ˆ์•„ ์ œ4๊ตฐ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋ˆ ๊ฐ• ํ•˜๋ฅ˜ ์ง€์—ญ์„ ๊ณต๊ฒฉํ•œ๋‹ค. B ์ง‘๋‹จ๊ตฐ (๋ง‰์‹œ๋ฐ€๋ฆฌ์•ˆ ํฐ ๋ฐ”์ดํ์Šค ์ง€ํœ˜) ์ œ2๊ตฐ ์ œ55๊ตฐ๋‹จ ์ œ4๊ธฐ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ ์ œ24๊ธฐ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ๋‹จ ์ œ48๊ธฐ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ๋‹จ ์žฌ13๊ตฐ๋‹จ ์ œ6๊ตฐ (ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ๋ฆฌํžˆ ํŒŒ์šธ๋ฃจ์Šค ์ง€ํœ˜) ์ œ40๊ธฐ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ๋‹จ (XXXX Panzer Corps, ๊ฒŒ์˜ค๋ฅดํฌ ์‹œํˆฌ๋ฉ” ์ง€ํœ˜) ์ œ51๊ตฐ๋‹จ (LI Army Corps) ์ œ8๊ตฐ๋‹จ (VIII Army Corps) ์ œ17๊ตฐ๋‹จ (XVII Army Corps) ์ œ29๊ตฐ๋‹จ (XXIX Army Corps) ํ—๊ฐ€๋ฆฌ ์ œ2๊ตฐ ์ œ3๊ตฐ๋‹จ ์ œ7๊ตฐ๋‹จ ๋ฃจ๋งˆ๋‹ˆ์•„ ์ œ4๊ตฐ ์ดํƒˆ๋ฆฌ์•„ ์ œ8๊ตฐ A ์ง‘๋‹จ๊ตฐ (๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ ๋ฆฌ์ŠคํŠธ ์ง€ํœ˜) ์ œ1๊ธฐ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ ์ œ17๊ตฐ ๋ฃจ๋งˆ๋‹ˆ์•„ ์ œ3๊ตฐ ์ œ11๊ตฐ ํฌ๋ ˜๋ฆฐ ์ž‘์ „ ํžˆํ‹€๋Ÿฌ๋Š” ๋ธ”๋ผ์šฐ ์ž‘์ „์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜๊ธฐ์— ์•ž์„œ ์ผ์ข…์˜ ์–‘๋™์ž‘์ „์ธ ํฌ๋ ˜๋ฆฐ ์ž‘์ „์„ ๊ฐœ์‹œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ž‘์ „์˜ ๋ชฉ์ ์€ ๋ชจ์Šคํฌ๋ฐ”์— ๋ชฐ๋ ค ์žˆ๋Š” ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ๋ธ”๋ผ์šฐ ์ž‘์ „์— ๊ฐœ์ž…ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ฐฉํ•ดํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๋…์ผ๊ตฐ์€ ๋ชจ์Šคํฌ๋ฐ” ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์„ ์žฌ๊ฐœํ•˜๋ผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๊ฐ€์งœ ์ง€๋ น์„ ๋‚ด๋ฆฌ๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ๋ชจ์Šคํฌ๋ฐ” ์ง€๊ตฌ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ •์ฐฐ๋น„ํ–‰์„ ๊ฐ•ํ™”ํ•˜๋Š” ๋“ฑ ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ์ด ์ด ์œ„์žฅ ๋ชจ์Šคํฌ๋ฐ” ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์˜ ์ „๋ชจ๋ฅผ ํŒŒ์•…ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†์„ ์ •๋„๋กœ, ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋ฉด์„œ๋„ ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์„ ํ˜„์‹ค์ ์ธ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ํ™•์‹ ํ•˜๋„๋ก ์œ ๋„ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐฉํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ ์œ„์žฅ์ „์ˆ ์„ ๊พธ๋ช„๋‹ค. ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ์€ ๊ทธ ๊ฐ€์งœ ์ •๋ณด๋ฅผ ๋ฏฟ๊ณ  ๋ชจ์Šคํฌ๋ฐ” ๋ฐฉ์–ด์„ ์„ ๊ฐ•ํ™”ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ์•ˆ๊ฐ„ํž˜์„ ์ผ๋‹ค. ํžˆํ‹€๋Ÿฌ์—๊ฒŒ ์žˆ์–ด์„œ๋Š” ์ˆœ์กฐ๋กญ๊ฒŒ ์ž˜ ์ง„ํ–‰๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฐ๋ฐ 1942๋…„ 6์›” 19์ผ์— ๊ตฐ์‚ฌ๊ธฐ๋ฐ€์ด ๋ˆ„์„ค๋˜์–ด ๋ธ”๋ผ์šฐ ์ž‘์ „์ด ์œ„๊ธฐ์— ์ง๋ฉดํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ผ์ดํ—ฌ ์†Œ๋ น์˜ ๋น„ํ–‰๊ธฐ ์‚ฌ๊ณ  ๋…์ผ ์ œ6๊ตฐ ์ œ40๊ธฐ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ๋‹จ์˜ ์‚ฌ๋ น๊ด€ ๊ฒŒ์˜ค๋ฅดํฌ ์‹œํˆฌ๋ฉ” ์ค‘์žฅ์€ 6์›” 17์ผ ํœ˜ํ•˜ 3๊ฐœ ์‚ฌ๋‹จ์˜ ์‚ฌ๋‹จ์žฅ๋“ค์„ ์†Œ์ง‘ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ๋ธ”๋ผ์šฐ ์ž‘์ „ ์ œ1๋‹จ๊ณ„์—์„œ ๊ตฐ๋‹จ์ด ๋งก์€ ์—ญํ• ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌํ•‘์„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์‹œํˆฌ๋ฉ”๋Š” ๊ตฌ๋‘์— ์˜ํ•œ ์ง€๋ น์„ ๋‚ด๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์‚ฌ๋‹จ์žฅ ํ•œ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์ด ์ •ํ™•ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๊ธฐ์–ตํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์•ฝ๊ฐ„์˜ ๋ฉ”๋ชจ๋ฅผ ์š”์ฒญํ–ˆ๊ณ  ์‹œํˆฌ๋ฉ”๋„ ์ด๊ฒƒ์„ ํ—ˆ๋ฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋ฐ˜ ํŽ˜์ด์ง€ ์ •๋„์˜ ๊ฐœ์š”๋ฅผ ๊ตฌ์ˆ ํ•˜๊ณ  ๊ฐ ์‚ฌ๋‹จ์žฅ์—๊ฒŒ ๋ณด๋‚ด๋Š” ๋ณต์‚ฌ๋ณธ์„ ๋งŒ๋“ค๊ฒŒ ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ฏฟ์„ ๋งŒํ•œ ์ „๋ น์—๊ฒŒ ์ฃผ์–ด์„œ ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์„ ํ•˜๋ฅด์ฝ”ํ”„ ๋ถ๋ฐฉ์˜ 3๊ฐœ ์‚ฌ๋‹จ ์‚ฌ๋ น๋ถ€์— ์ „ํ•˜๋„๋ก ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 6์›” 19์ผ, ์‹œํˆฌ๋ฉ”์˜ ์ด ๊ทœ์น™ ์œ„๋ฐ˜ ๋ฉ”๋ชจ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์€ ์ œ23๊ธฐ๊ฐ‘์‚ฌ๋‹จ์˜ ์ž‘์ „์ฃผ์ž„์ฐธ๋ชจ ์š”์•„ํž˜ ๋ผ์ดํ—ฌ ์†Œ๋ น์ด ๊ฒฐ์ •์ ์ธ ์‹ค์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋น„ํ–‰๊ธฐ๋กœ ์ œ17๊ตฐ๋‹จ ์‚ฌ๋ น๋ถ€๋กœ ๊ฐ€์„œ ์ž๊ธฐ ์‚ฌ๋‹จ ๋ฐฐ์น˜๋ฅผ ํ™•์ธํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ฌธ์ œ์˜ ๋ฉ”๋ชจ์™€ ์ œ40๊ธฐ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ๋‹จ ์†Œ์† ๊ฐ ์‚ฌ๋‹จ์˜ ๋ฐฐ์น˜๋„์™€ ์ œ1๋‹จ๊ณ„์˜ ๊ตฐ์‚ฌ ๋ชฉํ‘œ๋ฅผ ์ ์€ ์ „์šฉ์ง€๋„๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ๊ฐ”๋‹ค. ๋ผ์ดํ—ฌ์€ ์˜คํ›„ 2์‹œ์— ํ”ผ์ ค๋Ÿฌ ์‹œํ† ๋ฅดํžˆ ๊ด€์ธก๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ํƒ‘์Šนํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ๊ด€์ธก๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ํ–‰๋กœ๋ฅผ ์ž˜๋ชป ๋ฒ—์–ด๋‚˜๋ฉด์„œ ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ ๊ณ ์‚ฌํฌ์˜ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์„ ๋ฐ›์•„ ์—ฐ๋ฃŒ ํƒฑํฌ์— ๊ตฌ๋ฉ์ด ๋œท๋ ค ์  ์ „์„  ๊ทผ์ฒ˜์— ๋ถˆ์‹œ์ฐฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋‚  ๋ฐค 10์‹œ์— ์‹œํˆฌ๋ฉ”๋Š” ๋ผ์ดํ—ฌ ์†Œ๋ น ํƒ‘์Šน๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ์˜ˆ์ • ์‹œ๊ฐ„์ด ๋„˜์–ด๋„ ๋Œ์•„์˜ค์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค๋Š” ๋ณด๊ณ ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›๊ณ  ๋ชจ๋“  ๋ถ€๋Œ€์— ์—ฐ๋ฝ์„ ์ทจํ•ด ๋ผ์ดํ—ฌ ํƒ‘์Šน๊ธฐ์˜ ํ–‰๋ฐฉ์„ ์ฐพ๊ฒŒ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋งˆ์นจ๋‚ด ์ œ336์‚ฌ๋‹จ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์—ฐ๋ฝ์ด ๋“ค์–ด์™”๋Š”๋ฐ ๊ทธ ๊ด€์ธก๊ธฐ๋Š” ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ ์ „์„  ๋ฐ”๋กœ ๋’ค ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ฉด ๋ฐ”๋กœ ์•ž์— ๋–จ์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๊ด€์ธก๊ธฐ๋Š” ๊ธ‰ํŒŒ๋œ ์ˆ˜์ƒ‰๋Œ€์— ์˜ํ•ด ๋ฌด์ธ์ง€๋Œ€์˜ ํ•œ ๊ณจ์งœ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ๊ธฐ์ฒด๋Š” ๋ฌด์‚ฌํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ๊ธฐ๋‚ด์—๋Š” ์„œ๋ฅ˜๊ฐ€ ์—†์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ˆ˜์ƒ‰๋Œ€๋Š” 2๊ฐœ์˜ ์ƒˆ ๋ฌด๋ค์„ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌํ•˜๊ณ  ์†Œ๋ จ๋ณ‘์ด ๋ผ์ดํ—ฌ๊ณผ ์กฐ์ข…์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์‚ดํ•˜์—ฌ ๋งค์žฅํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ถ”์ธกํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฌด๋ค์„ ํŒŒ๋‚ด์–ด ๋‚˜์˜จ ์‹œ์ฒด๋Š” ์†์ƒ์ด ์‹ฌํ•ด ๋‹น๋ฒˆ๋ณ‘๋„ ๋ผ์ดํ—ฌ์˜ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋‹จ์ •์ ์œผ๋กœ ํ™•์ธํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์‹œํˆฌ๋ฉ” ์ค‘์žฅ์€ ๋ผ์ดํ—ฌ์ด ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ์— ๋ถ™์žกํ˜€ ์ฒญ์ƒ‰ ์ž‘์ „์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ธฐ๋ฐ€์„ ๋ˆ„์„คํ•˜๊ณ  ํฌ๋ ˜๋ฆฐ ์ž‘์ „์œผ๋กœ ๋ชจ์Šคํฌ๋ฐ” ๋ฐฉ๋ฉด์— ์žˆ๋˜ ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ๋ธ”๋ผ์šฐ ์ž‘์ „์„ ๋ถ„์‡„ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ๋ฅผ ํ–ฅํ•ด ๋‚จํ•˜ํ•ด ์˜ค๋ฆฌ๋ผ๊ณ  ์šฐ๋ คํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์ด ๋ฐœ์ƒํ•œ ์งํ›„ ์‹œํˆฌ๋ฉ”์™€ ๊ทธ ๋ถ€ํ•˜ ์žฅ๊ต๋“ค์€ ๋‹น์žฅ ๋…์ผ๊ตฐ๋ถ€์˜ ์‹ฌ๋ฌธ์„ ๋ฐ›์•„ ์ œ23 ๊ธฐ๊ฐ‘์‚ฌ๋‹จ์žฅ์€ ๋ธ”๋ผ์šฐ ์ž‘์ „์ด ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜๊ธฐ ์ „์— ์ขŒ์ฒœ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ  ์‹œํˆฌ๋ฉ”์™€ ๊ทธ ๋ง‰๋ฃŒ๋Š” ๊ตฐ๋ฒ•ํšŒ์˜์— ํšŒ๋ถ€๋˜์–ด ๊ฐ๊ธฐ 5๋…„ ๋ฐ 2๋…„์˜ ํ˜•์„ ์–ธ๋„๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ๊ตฐ๋ฒ•ํšŒ์˜ ์˜์žฅ์ธ ํ—ค๋ฅด๋งŒ ๊ดด๋ง ์›์ˆ˜๋Š” ํ›Œ๋ฅญํ•œ ๊ตฐ์ธ์ธ ์‹œํˆฌ๋ฉ”๋ฅผ ๋™์ •ํ•˜์—ฌ ํžˆํ‹€๋Ÿฌ์—๊ฒŒ ๊ด€๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ฒ˜๋ถ„์„ ์ง„์ •ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํžˆํ‹€๋Ÿฌ๋Š” ์‹œํˆฌ๋ฉ”์˜ ํ˜•์„ ๊ฐํ•˜๊ณ  ๊ทธ๋ฅผ ๋ถ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด๋กœ ๋ณด๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ ์‹œํˆฌ๋ฉ”๋Š” 1942๋…„ 10์›” ๋ฒŒ์–ด์ง„ ์—˜ ์•Œ๋ผ๋ฉ”์ธ ์ „ํˆฌ์—์„œ ์ „์‚ฌํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ฒญ์ƒ‰ ์ž‘์ „ ๊ฐœ์‹œ์ผ์ด ๋‹ค๊ฐ€์˜ด์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ํžˆํ‹€๋Ÿฌ๋Š” ๋”œ๋ ˆ๋งˆ์— ๋น ์กŒ์œผ๋‚˜ ๋ธ”๋ผ์šฐ ์ž‘์ „์„ ๊ฐํ–‰ํ•˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ๊ฒฐ์ •ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์†Œ๋ จ์˜ ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ์€ ๋ธ”๋ผ์šฐ ์ž‘์ „์„ ๋ฏฟ์œผ๋ ค ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ ๋ถ€๋Œ€๋Š” ๋ผ์ดํ—ฌ์ด ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ ์„œ๋ฅ˜๋ฅผ ์†์— ๋„ฃ์—ˆ๊ณ , ์ด ์„œ๋ฅ˜๋Š” ์„ธ๋ฌœ ํ‹ฐ๋ชจ์…ด์ฝ” ์›์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ์—๊ฒŒ ์ „๋‹ฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ์€ ์ด ์„œ๋ฅ˜๋ฅผ ์„ ์ž…๊ด€์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ํ•ด์„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค: ๋…์ผ๊ตฐ์˜ ์˜๋„๋Š” ๋ชจ์Šคํฌ๋ฐ” ๋‚จ๋ฐฉ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋ชจ์Šคํฌ๋ฐ”๋ฅผ ๊ณต๊ฒฉํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ๋“ค์€ ์—‰ํ„ฐ๋ฆฌ ์ž‘์ „๊ณ„ํš์„œ๋ฅผ ํƒ„๋กœ๋‚˜๊ฒŒ ํ•จ์œผ๋กœ์จ ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์žˆ์ง€๋„ ์•Š์€ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ญํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ชจ์Šคํฌ๋ฐ” ๋ฐฉ์–ด๊ตฐ์„ ๋Œ์–ด๋‚ด๋ ค ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ํ•ด์„์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ณต์ค‘ ์ •์ฐฐ์— ์˜ํ•ด ๋…์ผ๊ตฐ ๋ถ€๋Œ€ ๋ฐฐ์น˜๊ฐ€ ๊ณ„ํš์„œ์™€ ์ผ์น˜ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ํ™•์ธ๋˜์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ๋ฌธ์ œ ์‚ผ์œผ๋ ค ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ณต๊ฒฉ ์ œ1์ฐจ ๋ณด๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ ๊ณต๋ฐฉ์ „ 1942๋…„ 6์›” 28์ผ, ํŽ˜๋„๋ฅด ํฐ ๋ณดํฌ ์›์ˆ˜ ํœ˜ํ•˜์˜ 3๊ฐœ๊ตฐ ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ 2๊ฐœ ๊ตฐ์ด ํ•˜๋ฅด์ฝ”ํ”„ ๋ถ๋ฐฉ ์•ฝ 150km์˜ ์ฟ ๋ฅด์Šคํฌ ์ง€๊ตฌ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ง„๊ฒฉ์„ ๊ฐœ์‹œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฃผ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์„ ๋งก์€ ๋…์ผ ๋‚จ๋ถ€์ง‘๋‹จ๊ตฐ์€ ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์ด 130๋งŒ๋ช…์— ๋‹ฌํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์ „์ฐจ 2์ฒœ๋Œ€์™€ 1,600์—ฌ๊ธฐ์˜ ํ•ญ๊ณต๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๋™์›๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋จผ์ € ์ œ4์žฅ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ, ์ œ2๊ตฐ์ด ๋™์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ ์•ฝ 160 km์ง€์ ์— ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ณด๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ๋ฅผ ํ–ฅํ•ด ์ง„๊ฒฉ์„ ๊ฐœ์‹œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ณด๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ๋Š” ๋ˆ๊ฐ•๊ณผ ๋ณด๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ๊ฐ•์ด ํ•ฉ๋ฅ˜ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ณณ์— ์žˆ๋Š” ๋„์‹œ๋กœ์„œ ๋ชจ์Šคํฌ๋ฐ”, ํ‘ํ•ด, ์นด์Šคํ”ผํ•ด๋ฅผ ์ž‡๋Š” ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„์˜ ๋‚จ๋ถ์— ๊ฑธ์นœ ๋ชจ๋“  ์ฒ ๋„์™€ ๋„๋กœ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ํ•˜์ฒœ ๊ตํ†ต์˜ ์š”์ถฉ์ง€์˜€๋‹ค. 2์ผ ํ›„, ๋ณดํฌ ์žฅ๊ตฐ ํœ˜ํ•˜์˜ ์ œ3ํƒ€๊ฒฉ๊ตฐ๊ณผ ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋“œ๋ฆฌํžˆ ํŒŒ์šธ๋ฃจ์Šค ์ค‘์žฅ์ด ์ง€ํœ˜ํ•˜๋Š” ์ œ6๊ตฐ์ด ๋ถ๋™์ชฝ์˜ ๋ณด๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ๋ฅผ ํ–ฅํ•ด ํ•˜๋ฅด์ฝ”ํ”„๋ฅผ ์ถœ๋ฐœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ œ6๊ตฐ์€ ์ •์˜ˆ๊ตฐ์œผ๋กœ์„œ 11๊ฐœ ์‚ฌ๋‹จ๊ณผ ์‹œํˆฌ๋ฉ” ์ค‘์žฅ์ด ์‚ฌ๋ น๊ด€์„ ๋งก๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋˜ ์ œ40์žฅ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ๋‹จ์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ์žฅ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ๋‹จ์ด ์„ ๋ด‰์—์„œ ๊ธธ์„ ๋‚ด๊ณ  ์ œ6๊ตฐ์€ ๋ถ์ชฝ ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ๊ณผ ์—ฐ๊ณ„ํ•ด์„œ ์˜ค์Šค์ฝœ๊ฐ•๊ณผ ๋ˆ๊ฐ• ์‚ฌ์ด์—์„œ ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ์„ ํฌ์œ„ํ•  ์˜ˆ์ •์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ž‘์ „์ด ๋๋‚˜๋ฉด ๋…์ผ๊ตฐ์€ ๋ˆ๊ฐ•์„ ๋‚จํ•˜ํ•˜๊ณ  ๋‹ค์‹œ ํ•œ๋ฒˆ ํ˜‘๊ณต์ž‘์ „์„ ํŽด์„œ ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ๋ฅผ ๋ด‰์‡„ํ•œ ๋‹ค์Œ ์ฝ”์นด์„œ์Šค๋กœ ์ง„๊ฒฉํ•  ๊ณ„ํš์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ์ž‘์ „์€ ์ด๋ก ์ ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ์™„๋ฒฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์ฒ˜์Œ ์ˆ˜์ผ๊ฐ„์€ ์ „์žฅ์—์„œ๋„ ๋นˆํ‹ˆ ์—†์ด ํ›Œ๋ฅญํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰๋˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ๋ณด์˜€๋‹ค. 6์›” 30์ผ, ๋ถ์ชฝ์˜ ์žฅ๊ฐ‘๋ถ€๋Œ€๋Š” ๋ณด๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ๊นŒ์ง€ ๊ฐ€๋Š” ๋„๋กœ์˜ ๋ฐ˜์„ ์ฃผํŒŒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ ์ „์„  ์‚ฌ๋ น๊ด€ ํ‹ฐ๋ชจ์„ผ์ฝ”๋Š” ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ์˜ ๋ช…๋ น์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ ์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ ํ›„ํ‡ดํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ œ6๊ตฐ์€ ๊ฑฐ์˜ ์•„๋ฌด๋Ÿฐ ์ €ํ•ญ๋„ ๋ฐ›์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. ํ‹ฐ๋ชจ์„ผ์ฝ”๊ตฐ์˜ ํ™ฉ๊ธ‰ํ•œ ์ฒ ์ˆ˜๋Š” ์ฒญ์ƒ‰ ์ž‘์ „์˜ ์ œ1๋‹จ๊ณ„ ์ „์ฒด๋ฅผ ์œ„ํƒœ๋กญ๊ฒŒ ๋งŒ๋“ค์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ์˜ ์ฒ ์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ๊นจ๋‹ฌ์€ ๋ ˆ์˜ค ๊ฐ€์ด๋ฅด ํฐ ์Šˆ๋ฒ ํŽœ๋ถ€๋ฅดํฌ ์ค‘์žฅ(์ค„์—ฌ์„œ ๊ฐ€์ด๋ฅด ์žฅ๊ตฐ)์€ ๋‹น์‹œ ์‹œํˆฌ๋ฉ” ์ค‘์žฅ์˜ ํ›„์ž„์œผ๋กœ ์ œ40์žฅ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ๋‹จ์žฅ์ด ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์žฅ๊ตฐ์€ ์ฆ‰๊ฐ ์ œ 40์žฅ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ๋‹จ์„ ๋™์ชฝ์˜ ๋ˆ๊ฐ•์œผ๋กœ ์ง„ํ–‰์‹œํ‚ค๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ํ—ˆ๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ์š”์ฒญํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์„œ ํ‡ด๊ฐํ•˜๋Š” ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ ํ‡ด๋กœ๋ฅผ ๋Š์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์„ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณด์•˜๋˜ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ํŒŒ์šธ๋ฃจ์Šค ์žฅ๊ตฐ์€ ์ „์žฅ์—์„œ ์ฆ‰ํฅ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ž‘์ „์„ ๋ณ€๊ฒฝํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ์‹ซ์–ดํ–ˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๊ทธ ์š”์ฒญ์„ ๊ฑฐ์ ˆํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ€์ด๋ฅด ์žฅ๊ตฐ์ด ์ œ6๊ตฐ ์‚ฌ๋ น๋ถ€๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋ฐ›์€ ํšŒ๋‹ต์€ ๊ทธ์—๊ฒŒ ์ฃผ์–ด์ง„ ๋‹น์ดˆ ์ž„๋ฌด๋ฅผ ๋˜ํ’€์ดํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฆ‰, "์ œ40์žฅ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ๋‹จ์€ ์ œ4์žฅ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ๊ณผ ํ•ฉ๋ฅ˜ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ถ์œผ๋กœ ์ง„๊ฒฉํ•˜๋ผ"๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด์˜€๋‹ค. 7์›” 3์ผ๊ฒฝ์—๋Š” ํžˆํ‹€๋Ÿฌ๋„ ํŒŒ์šธ๋ฃจ์Šค๊ฐ€ ๋ณด๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ ๊ทผ๊ต์—์„œ ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ์„ ๊ณต๋žตํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์‹œ๊ฐ„์„ ๋‚ญ๋น„ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์„์ง€ ๋ชจ๋ฅธ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ์•Œ๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋‚  ํžˆํ‹€๋Ÿฌ๋Š” ํฐ ๋ณดํฌ ์›์ˆ˜์˜ ์ „ํˆฌ์‚ฌ๋ น๋ถ€๋กœ ๋‚ ์•„์™€ ๋ณด๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ์ƒˆ ๊ณ„ํš์„ ๋ช…๋ นํ–ˆ๋‹ค. "๋ณดํฌ, ๋‚˜๋Š” ๋ณด๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ ์ ๋ น์„ ์ด์ œ๋Š” ๊ณ ์ง‘ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์†Œ. ๋˜ ์‹ค์ œ๋กœ๋„ ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์ด ๊ผญ ํ•„์š”ํ•˜๋‹ค๊ณ ๋„ ์ƒ๊ฐํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์†Œ. ๋งŒ์•ฝ ๋‹น์‹ ์ด ํ•˜๊ณ  ์‹ถ๋‹ค๋ฉด ์ฆ‰๊ฐ ๋‚จํ•˜ํ•ด๋„ ์ข‹์†Œ." ์ด ๋ณ€์‹ฌ์œผ๋กœ ์ผ๋ จ์˜ ์–ด์ง€๋Ÿฌ์šด ๋ช…๋ น์ด ์ž‡๋‹ฌ์•„ ํ•˜๋‹ฌ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์ด ์ผ๋‹จ๋ฝ๋˜์—ˆ์„ ๋•Œ๋Š” ๋ธ”๋ผ์šฐ ์ž‘์ „์€ ์ˆ˜์Šตํ•˜๊ธฐ ์–ด๋ ค์šด ํ˜ผ๋ž€ ์ƒํƒœ๋กœ ๋น ์กŒ๋‹ค. ๋จผ์ € 7์›” 3์ผ ์˜คํ›„ ๋Šฆ๊ฒŒ ์ œ40์žฅ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ๋‹จ์žฅ ๊ฐ€์ด๋ฅด ์žฅ๊ตฐ์€ ์ œ6๊ตฐ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ดˆ๊ธฐ์˜ ์ง€๋ น์„ ๋’ค์—Ž๊ณ  ๋ˆ๊ฐ•์„ ํ–ฅํ•ด ์ง„๊ฒฉํ•˜๋ผ๋Š” ๋ช…๋ น์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ ์–ผ๋งˆ ์ „์— ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ์š”์ฒญํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ํ—ˆ๋ฝ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์€ ๋ช…๋ น์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฐ๋ฐ ์ดํŠฟ๋‚  ์ •์˜ค ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ์ง„๊ฒฉ์„ ๊ฐœ์‹œํ•˜์ž๋งˆ์ž ๊ทธ ๋ช…๋ น์€ ๋˜๋‹ค์‹œ ์ทจ์†Œ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ๊ทธ ๋Œ€์‹  ๋ณด๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ๋กœ ์ง„์ถœํ•ด ์ œ4์žฅ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ์ด ์ด ๋„์‹œ๋ฅผ ๊ณต๊ฒฉํ•˜๋Š” ๋™์•ˆ ๊ทธ ์ธก๋ฉด์„ ๋ณดํ˜ธํ•˜๋ผ๋Š” ๋ช…๋ น์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ์˜ค๋žซ๋™์•ˆ ํžˆํ‹€๋Ÿฌ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ž์œ  ์ง€ํœ˜๊ถŒ์„ ์–ป์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๋˜ ๋ณดํฌ ์žฅ๊ตฐ์ด ๋น„๋กœ์†Œ ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์„ ์–ป๊ฒŒ ๋˜์ž, ๊ทธ๋Š” ์šฐ์„  ๋ณด๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ๋ฅผ ์šฐํšŒํ•˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ๊ฒฐ์ •ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฐ๋ฐ ๊ทธ๋•Œ ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ์ง€ํœ˜ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ถ์ชฝ ๋ถ€๋Œ€์˜ ์ผ๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ๋ณด๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ๋กœ ์ˆ˜ km์ง€์ ๊นŒ์ง€ ์œก๋ฐ•ํ–ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ์•Œ๊ณ ๋Š” ์ƒ๊ฐ์„ ๊ณ ์ณ์„œ ๊ฐ€๋Š” ๊น€์— ๋ณด๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ๋ฅผ ์ ๋ นํ•˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ๋งˆ์Œ๋จน๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋˜ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. 7์›” 5์ผ์— ์ œ4๊ธฐ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ์˜ ์„ ๋ด‰์ด ๋ณด๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ ๊ทผ๋ฐฉ์˜ ๋ˆ ๊ฐ•์— ๋„๋‹ฌํ–ˆ๊ณ  ์ด๋ฅผ ๋ณธ ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ์€ ์—ฌ์ „ํžˆ ๋…์ผ๊ตฐ์ด ๋ณด๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ๋ฅผ ์ง€๋‚˜ ์ˆ˜๋„ ๋ชจ์Šคํฌ๋ฐ”๋ฅผ ๋…ธ๋ฆฌ๋ ค ํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์˜ˆ์ธกํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ณดํฌ๋Š” ๋ณด๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ์— ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ ๋ถ€๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ์ถฉ๋งŒํ•ด ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ์•Œ๊ณ  ๋‹นํ™ฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ ๋ฐฉ์–ด๊ตฐ์€ 9๊ฐœ ๋ณด๋ณ‘์‚ฌ๋‹จ๊ณผ 4๊ฐœ ๋ณด๋ณ‘์—ฌ๋‹จ, 7๊ฐœ ์ „์ฐจ ์—ฌ๋‹จ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  2๊ฐœ ๋Œ€์ „์ฐจํฌ ์—ฌ๋‹จ์œผ๋กœ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์ ธ ์žˆ์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ด๋“ค์€ ์„ ์ „๋ถ„ํˆฌํ•ด์„œ ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ ์ „ํˆฌ๋ฅผ ์Šน๋ฆฌ๋กœ ์ด๋Œ๊ธฐ๊นŒ์ง€ ์‹œ๊ฐ„์„ ๋ฒŒ์–ด์ฃผ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ณดํฌ๋Š” 7์›” 13์ผ์ด ๋˜์–ด์„œ์•ผ ๊ฒจ์šฐ ๋ณด๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ๋ฅผ ์ ๋ นํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ ‡๊ธฐ๋Š” ํ–ˆ์–ด๋„ ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ์–ป์€ ํฌ๋กœ์˜ ์ˆ˜๋Š” ์ ์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ์€ ๋ˆ๊ฐ• ๋™์ชฝ ๊ธฐ์Šญ์˜ ์ค‘์š”ํ•œ ๋ณด๊ธ‰๋กœ์™€ ์ฒ ๋„๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์ˆ˜ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฒซ ๊ด€๋ฌธ์ธ ๋ณด๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ ์ „ํˆฌ๋กœ ์ฒญ์ƒ‰ ์ž‘์ „์ด ํํŠธ๋Ÿฌ์ง€์ž ํžˆํ‹€๋Ÿฌ๋Š” ์‹œ๊ฐ„์˜ ์†์‹ค์„ ๋ฉ”์šฐ๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด, ์›๋ž˜์˜ ์ž‘์ „์„ ํฌ๊ธฐํ•˜๊ณ  ๋‚จ๋ถ€์ง‘๋‹จ๊ตฐ์„ A ์ง‘๋‹จ๊ตฐ๊ณผ B ์ง‘๋‹จ๊ตฐ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ„๋ฆฌํ•ด ๊ฐ๊ฐ ๋กœ์Šคํ† ํ”„์™€ ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ๋ฅผ ์ ๋ นํ•ด ์ฝ”์นด์„œ์Šค๋กœ์˜ ๋ฌธ์„ ์—ด๊ธฐ๋กœ ๊ฒฐ์ •ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฒ˜์Œ ๊ณ„ํš์— ์˜ํ•˜๋ฉด, ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ ์ง€๊ตฌ ํ˜‘๊ณต์ž‘์ „์—์„œ ๋‚จ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ์˜ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์„ ๋งก๊ฒŒ ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋˜ ์—๋ฐœํŠธ ํฐ ํด๋ผ์ด์ŠคํŠธ ์žฅ๊ตฐ ํœ˜ํ•˜์˜ ์ œ1์žฅ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ์€ ์ด ๋ชฉ์ ์„ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ƒˆ ๋ช…๋ น์„ ๋ฐ›์•„ ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ ๋Œ€์‹  ๋กœ์Šคํ† ํ”„๋กœ ๋‚จํ•˜ํ•˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๋‹น์ดˆ ํ—ค๋ฅด๋งŒ ํ˜ธํŠธ ์žฅ๊ตฐ์˜ ์ œ4๊ธฐ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ์€ ์ œ6๊ตฐ์˜ ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ ์ง„๊ฒฉ์„ ๊ฐ•ํ™”ํ•˜๋Š” ์—ญํ• ์„ ๋งก๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ง€๊ธˆ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ๋Š” ๋‚จํ•˜ํ•ด์„œ ํด๋ผ์ด์ŠคํŠธ๋ฅผ ๋•๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‚จ๋ถ€์ง‘๋‹จ๊ตฐ ์‚ฌ๋ น๊ด€ ๋ณดํฌ ์žฅ๊ตฐ์€ ์ž๊ธฐ ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์˜ ๋ถ„ํ• ์— ํ•ญ์˜ํ•˜๋‹ค ํ•ด์ž„๋˜๊ณ  ๋ง์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ํ›„์ž„์œผ๋กœ ๋ง‰์‹œ๋ฐ€๋ฆฌ์•ˆ ํฐ ๋ฐ”์ดํฌ์Šค ์žฅ๊ตฐ์ด ์ž„๋ช…๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์„œ ๋กœ์Šคํ† ํ”„๋ฅผ ๊ณต๊ฒฉํ•˜๊ณ  ์ฝ”์นด์„œ์Šค ์ง€๋ฐฉ๊นŒ์ง€ ๊ฐ€์•ผ ํ•  A์ง‘๋‹จ๊ตฐ์—๊ฒŒ๋Š” ์žฅ๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ ์ด๋™์„ ํ•ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ์ด์œ ๋กœ ํฌํƒ„๊ณผ ์—ฐ๋ฃŒ๊ฐ€ ๋” ๋งŽ์ด ํ• ๋‹น๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํด๋ผ์ด์ŠคํŠธ๋Š” ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ๋ฅผ 7์›” ๋ง์— ํ•œ๋ฒˆ๋„ ์‹ธ์šฐ์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ ๋„ ์ ๋ นํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ›„์— ํšŒ๊ณ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ B์ง‘๋‹จ๊ตฐ ์†Œ์† ํŒŒ์šธ๋ฃจ์Šค๋Š” ํžˆํ‹€๋Ÿฌ์˜ ๊ฒฐ์ •์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์—ฐ๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ๋นผ์•—๊น€์œผ๋กœ์„œ ์˜ˆ์ • ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„ ์•ˆ์— ๋„๋‹ฌํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์ด ๋Šฆ์–ด์ง„ ๋งŒํผ ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ ๋ฐฉ์–ด์„ ์€ ํ•œ์ธต ๋” ๊ฐ•ํ™”๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋กœ์Šคํ† ํ”„ ๊ณต๋ฐฉ์ „ ์นผ๋ผ์น˜ ์ „ํˆฌ ํŒŒ์šธ๋ฃจ์Šค๊ฐ€ ์ง€ํœ˜ํ•˜๋Š” ๋…์ผ ์ œ6๊ตฐ์€ ์ง„๊ฒฉ์„ ๊ณ„์†ํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ๋Œ€ํ•ญํ•˜๋Š” ์ ์„ ๊ฑฐ์˜ ๋งŒ๋‚  ์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ์—†์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋…์ผ ์œก๊ตฐ ์ด์‚ฌ๋ น๋ถ€์˜ ํ• ๋” ์ฐธ๋ชจ์ด์žฅ์€ ๋ˆ ๊ฐ•์„ ๋‚จํ•˜ํ•ด์„œ ์นผ๋ผ์น˜๋กœ ํ–ฅํ•˜๋Š” ์ œ6๊ตฐ์ด ์•„๋ฌด๋Ÿฐ ์ €ํ•ญ๋„ ๋ฐ›์ง€ ์•Š์€ ์ฑ„ ์ง„๊ฒฉ์„ ๊ณ„์†ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ์กฐ์‹ฌ์Šค๋ ˆ ๋ฐ”๋ผ๋ณด๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. "์ดํ†ต ๊ฐํ•˜, ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ์€ ์•„๊ตฐ๊ณผ์˜ ์ ‘์ด‰์„ ์กฐ์ง์ ์œผ๋กœ ํ”ผํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์Šต๋‹ˆ๋‹ค."๋ผ๊ณ  ํ• ๋”๋Š” ํžˆํ‹€๋Ÿฌ์—๊ฒŒ ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. "๋ง๋„ ์•ˆ ๋˜๋Š” ์†Œ๋ฆฌ๋‹ค."๋ผ๊ณ  ํžˆํ‹€๋Ÿฌ๋Š” ์˜์•„๋ถ™์˜€๋‹ค. "์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ์€ ํŒจ์ฃผํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋“ค์€ ๊ณผ๊ฑฐ ์ˆ˜๊ฐœ์›” ๋™์•ˆ ์ž…์€ ํƒ€๊ฒฉ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋˜์‚ด์•„๋‚˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค." ์†Œ๋ จ ์ œ62๊ตฐ ์‚ฌ๋ น๊ด€ V Ya. ์ฝœํŒŒํฌ์น˜ ์†Œ์žฅ์€ ๊ณตํ™ฉ์ƒํƒœ์— ๋น ์ง„ ๋ถ€๋Œ€๋ฅผ ๋ถ™๋“ค์–ด ์„ธ์šฐ๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ง‰๋ฃŒ๋“ค์„ ์ž๋™์†Œ์ด์œผ๋กœ ๋ฌด์žฅ์‹œ์ผœ ์นผ๋ผ์น˜(๋ณด๋กœ๋„ค์‹œ ๋‚จ๋™์ชฝ ์•ฝ 180km, ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ ๋ถ์„œ์ชฝ ์•ฝ 320km) ๊ต๋Ÿ‰ ๊ทผ์ฒ˜์— ๋ฐฐ์น˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์žฅ๊ต๋“ค์€ ๋„๋ง์น˜๋Š” ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ์„ ๋ถˆ๋Ÿฌ์„ธ์šฐ๋Š” ํ•œํŽธ์œผ๋กœ, ์ง€ํ‰์„ ์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ํŒŒ์šธ๋ฃจ์Šค ํœ˜ํ•˜์˜ ๋…์ผ ์ œ6๊ตฐ์ด ๊ธˆ๋ฐฉ์ด๋ผ๋„ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚  ๊ฒƒ ๊ฐ™์•„ ์กฐ๋งˆ์กฐ๋งˆํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์ œ6๊ตฐ์€ ๋๋‚ด ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚˜์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. ์ฝœํŒŒํฌ์น˜๋Š” ์–ผ๋งˆ ํ›„ ํ‹ฐ๋ชจ์„ผ์ฝ”์—๊ฒŒ "๋…์ผ๊ตฐ์˜ ์ถ”๊ฒฉ ์—†์Œ"์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์ „๋ณด๋ฅผ ์ณค๋‹ค. "์ด๊ฒƒ์€ ๋„๋Œ€์ฒด ์–ด๋–ป๊ฒŒ ๋œ ์˜๋ฌธ์ธ๊ฐ€."๋ผ๊ณ  ํ‹ฐ๋ชจ์„ผ์ฝ”๋Š” ์ฐธ๋ชจ์žฅ์—๊ฒŒ ๋ฌผ์—ˆ๋‹ค. "๋…์ผ๊ตฐ์ด ๊ณ„ํš์„ ๋ฐ”๊พธ์—ˆ๋Š”๊ฐ€?" ์ด๋•Œ๋Š” ๊ทธ๋ ‡์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. ํŒŒ์šธ๋ฃจ์Šค์˜ ์ œ6๊ตฐ์€ ์—ฐ๋ฃŒ๊ฐ€ ๋ฐ”๋‹ฅ๋‚˜ ์นผ๋ผ์น˜ ์ „๋ฐฉ ์•ฝ 250 km ์ง€์ ์—์„œ ์ •์ง€ํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ฑฐ๊ธฐ์— ๊ทธํ›„ 18์ผ๊ฐ„์ด๋‚˜ ์ฃผ์ €์•‰์•„ ์žˆ์–ด์•ผ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ์˜ ์„ธ๋ฌœ ํ‹ฐ๋ชจ์…ด์ฝ”๋Š” ์ด ๊ธฐํšŒ๋ฅผ ๋‹น์žฅ ์ด์šฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ์นผ๋ผ์น˜ ์ฃผ๋ณ€์˜ 4๊ฐœ๊ตฐ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋Œ์–ด๋ชจ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ชจ๋“  ๋ณ‘๋ ฅ๊ณผ ์•„์ง ํŽธ์„ฑ์ค‘์— ์žˆ๋˜ 2๊ฐœ ์ „์ฐจ๊ตฐ์„ ํˆฌ์ž…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํœ˜ํ•˜์˜ ๋Œ€๋ณ‘๋ ฅ์„ ์ข์€ ์ „์„ ์— ๊ฝ‰ ๋ชฐ์•„๋„ฃ์—ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ํ‹ฐ๋ชจ์„ผ์ฝ”์˜ ์‹ค์ˆ˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์—ฐ๋ฃŒ ๋ณด๊ธ‰์„ ๋ฐ›์€ ๋…์ผ ์ œ6๊ตฐ์˜ ํŒŒ์šธ๋ฃจ์Šค๋Š” ์ด์ค‘ ํฌ์œ„ ์ž‘์ „์„ ์ทจํ•ด์„œ ์ง„๊ฒฉํ•ด ๊ฐ”๋‹ค. 7์›” 17์ผ ์ดํ›„ ๋…์ผ ์ œ6๊ตฐ์€ ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ ์ œ62๊ตฐ ๋ฐ ์ œ64๊ตฐ๊ณผ ์กฐ์šฐํ•˜๊ณ  7์›” 25์ผ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 8์›” 11์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ ์ง„ํ–‰๋œ ์นผ๋ผ์น˜ ์ „ํˆฌ(Battle of Kalach)์—์„œ ์ œ6๊ตฐ์˜ ์ œ14์žฅ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ๋‹จ๊ณผ ์ œ8๊ตฐ๋‹จ์ด ์ขŒ์ต์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ง„์ถœํ•˜๊ณ , ํ˜ธํŠธ์˜ ์ œ4๊ธฐ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ œ24๊ธฐ๊ฐ‘๊ตฐ๋‹จ๊ณผ ์ œ51๊ตฐ๋‹จ์ด ์šฐ์ต์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ง„์ถœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 8์›” 8์ผ ํฌ์œ„๋ง์ด ์™„์„ฑ๋˜์—ˆ์„ ๋•Œ, 7๋งŒ์˜ ์†Œ๋ จ๋ณ‘๊ณผ ์•ฝ 1์ฒœ ๋Œ€์˜ ์ „์ฐจ ๋ฐ ์žฅ๊ฐ‘์ฐจ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  750๋ฌธ์˜ ๋Œ€ํฌ๊ฐ€ ํฌ์œ„๋ง ์†์— ๊ฐ‡ํ˜”๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฐ๋ฐ ์ด ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์ด ๋๋‚˜์ž ํŒŒ์šธ๋ฃจ์Šค๋Š” ์นผ๋ผ์น˜ ์ฃผ๋ณ€์„ ์†Œํƒ•ํ•˜๊ณ  ๋‚จ์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ง€์›๋ฐ›๊ธฐ๋กœ ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋˜ ํ˜ธํŠธ๊ตฐ์„ ๊ธฐ๋‹ค๋ฆฌ๋Š๋ผ 2์ฃผ์ผ์„ ๋‚ญ๋น„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์ด ๋ฌธ์ œ๊ฐ€ ๋˜์ž ํ˜ธํŠธ๋Š” ๋๋‚ด ํžˆํ‹€๋Ÿฌ์—๊ฒŒ ์†Œํ™˜๋œ๋‹ค. ๋“œ๋””์–ด 8์›” 21์ผ ์ œ6๊ตฐ์€ ๋ˆ๊ฐ•์„ ๊ฑด๋„ˆ ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ๋ฅผ ํ–ฅํ•œ ์ง„๊ฒฉ์„ ๊ฐœ์‹œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ ์ „ํˆฌ ๋…์ผ A์ง‘๋‹จ๊ตฐ์˜ ํ›„ํ‡ด ์ดํ›„ ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ ์ „ํˆฌ์—์„œ ์˜ˆ์ƒ์น˜ ๋ชปํ•œ ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ์˜ ๋ฐ˜๊ฒฉ์„ ๋ฐ›์€ ๋…์ผ B์ง‘๋‹จ๊ตฐ์€ ๊ฑฐ์˜ ์ „๋ฉธํ•˜๊ณ  ๋งŒ๋‹ค. ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ ์ „ํˆฌ ํ›„ ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ์€ 'ํ† ์„ฑ ์ž‘์ „'์„ ๊ฐœ์‹œํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ์ด ์ž‘์ „์˜ ๋ชฉ์ ์€ ๋กœ์Šคํ† ํ”„๋ฅผ ์ ๋ นํ•˜์—ฌ ์ฝ”์นด์„œ์Šค ์ง€๋ฐฉ์— ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋…์ผ A์ง‘๋‹จ๊ตฐ์„ ๊ฐ€๋‘ฌ๋ฒ„๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1942๋…„ 8์›”, ์—๋ฐœํŠธ ํฐ ํด๋ผ์ด์ŠคํŠธ๊ฐ€ ์ง€ํœ˜ํ•˜๋Š” ๋…์ผ A์ง‘๋‹จ๊ตฐ์€ ํ…Œ๋ ˆํฌ๊ฐ• ๋ถ€๊ทผ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋„๋‹ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์„œ ์ฝ”์นด์„œ์Šค ์‚ฐ๋งฅ์— ๊ฐ€๋กœ๋ง‰ํžˆ๊ณ , ๋˜ ํ…Œ๋ ˆํฌ๊ฐ• ๋„ํ•˜๋ฅผ ์•ž๋‘๊ณ  ๋œป๋ฐ–์—๋„ ์—ฐ๋ฃŒ ๋ถ€์กฑ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๋ฉˆ์ถ”์–ด์„œ๊ณ  ๋ง์•˜๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ๊ทธ๊ณณ ์ฃผ๋ฏผ๋“ค์ด ํ•„์‚ฌ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์ถ•ํ•œ ๋ฐฉ์–ด ์‹œ์„ค๋„ ๊ทธ๋“ค์˜ ์•ž๊ธธ์„ ๊ฐ€๋กœ๋ง‰์•˜๋‹ค. ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ ์ฝ”์นด์„œ์Šค ์ง‘๋‹จ๊ตฐ ์‚ฌ๋ น๊ด€ I. V. ํŠœ๋ ˆ๋„คํ”„ ์žฅ๊ตฐ์€ ์ด๋ ‡๊ฒŒ ์“ฐ๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. "์ฃผ๋ฏผ๋“ค์€ ํ”ผ๋ฌป์€ ํ—๊ฒŠ์„ ๋ฌผ์ง‘์ด ์ƒ๊ธด ์†์— ๊ฐ๊ณ  ์“ฐ๋Ÿฌ์งˆ ๋•Œ๊นŒ์ง€ ๊ตณ์„ธ๊ฒŒ ์ผํ•ด์ฃผ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ดˆ๊ฐ€์„ ๋ฌด๋ ต์—๋Š” 7๋งŒ ๊ฐœ์˜ ํ† ์น˜์นด์™€ ๊ธฐํƒ€ ์ดํฌ์ขŒ๋ฅผ ํฌํ•จํ•œ ์•ฝ 10๋งŒ์„ ํ—ค์•„๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๋ฐฉ์–ด์‹œ์„ค์ด ๊ตฌ์ถ•๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 800km๋ฅผ ๋„˜๋Š” ๋Œ€์ „์ฐจ ๊ตฌ๋ฉ์ด๋ฅผ ํŒŒ๊ณ  320km์— ๊ฑธ์นœ ์žฅ๋ฒฝ์„ ๊ตฌ์ถ•ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ 1,600km๋‚˜ ๋˜๋Š” ์ฐธํ˜ธ๋„ ํŒ ๋‹ค. ์ค„์žก์•„ ๋™์› ์ธ๋ ฅ์ด ์—ฐ 900๋งŒ์ผ๋ถ„์˜ ๋…ธ๋™ ์‹œ๊ฐ„์„ ์ด ์ž‘์—…์— ๋ฐ”์ณค๋‹ค." ํŒŒ์šธ๋ฃจ์Šค๊ฐ€ ์Šคํƒˆ๋ฆฐ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ์—์„œ ํฌ์œ„๋œ 1์›”๊ฒฝ, ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ์€ 'ํ† ์„ฑ ์ž‘์ „'์„ ๊ฐœ์‹œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํด๋ผ์ด์ŠคํŠธ๋Š” ์ž์‹ ์ด ๊ถ์ง€์— ๋ชฐ๋ฆฐ ๊ฒƒ์„ ๊นจ๋‹ฌ์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ํ›„์— ์ด๋ ‡๊ฒŒ ์“ฐ๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. "์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ์€ ๋กœ์Šคํ† ํ”„ ์ „๋ฐฉ ๋ถˆ๊ณผ 6.4km๋˜๋Š” ์ง€์ ๊นŒ์ง€ ์˜ค๊ณ , ์•„๊ตฐ์€ ๋กœ์Šคํ† ํ”„ ๋™์ชฝ 630km์ง€์ ์— ์žˆ์„ ๋•Œ, ํžˆํ‹€๋Ÿฌ๋Š” ์–ด๋– ํ•œ ์ƒํ™ฉ์—์„œ๋„ ์ ˆ๋Œ€๋กœ ์ฒ ์ˆ˜ํ•ด์„œ๋Š” ์•ˆ๋œ๋‹ค๋Š” ๋ช…๋ น์„ ๋‚˜์—๊ฒŒ ๋ณด๋‚ด์™”๋‹ค. ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ ๊ทธ์•ผ๋ง๋กœ ์ฃฝ์Œ์˜ ์„ ๊ณ  ๊ฐ™์€ ๊ฒƒ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฐ๋ฐ ๊ทธ ์ดํŠฟ๋‚ ์— ๋‚˜๋Š” ์ƒˆ ๋ช…๋ น์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ํ‡ด๊ฐํ•˜๋ผ, ๋ชจ๋“  ์žฅ๋น„๋ฅผ ๋‹ค ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์ฒ ์ˆ˜ํ•˜๋ผ." ํด๋ผ์ด์ŠคํŠธ๋Š” ์ง€์ฒดํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ์ค€๋น„๋ฅผ ํ•˜๊ณ  ๋‹น์žฅ ์ถœ๋ฐœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌํ•˜์—ฌ ํด๋ผ์ด์ŠคํŠธ๋Š” ๊ฐ„๋ฐœ์˜ ์ฐจ์ด๋กœ ๋กœ์Šคํ† ํ”„๋ฅผ ์ง€๋‚˜ ํƒˆ์ถœ์— ์„ฑ๊ณตํ•œ๋‹ค. 1943๋…„ 2์›” 14์ผ, ์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ์€ ๋กœ์Šคํ† ํ”„๋ฅผ ์ ๋ นํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ๋ฒŒ์จ ๋…์ผ A์ง‘๋‹จ๊ตฐ์˜ ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰ ๋ถ€๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ์ฒ ์ˆ˜ํ•œ ๋’ค์˜€๋‹ค. ํด๋ผ์ด์ŠคํŠธ๋Š” ์ด ๊ณต์ ์— ์˜ํ•ด ์›์ˆ˜๋กœ ์Šน์ง„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํžˆํ‹€๋Ÿฌ๊ฐ€ ํ‡ด๊ฐ์„ ์ง€ํœ˜ํ•œ ์ „๊ณต์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์žฅ์„ฑ์„ ์Šน์ง„์‹œํ‚จ ์ผ์€ ๊ทธ์ „๊นŒ์ง€๋Š” ํ•œ ๋ฒˆ๋„ ์—†์—ˆ๋˜ ์ผ์ด๋‹ค. ์ด๋ ‡๊ฒŒ ํ•ด์„œ ์ฝ”์นด์„œ์Šค ์ง€์—ญ์˜ ์œ ์ „์„ ๋ชฉํ‘œ๋กœ ํ•œ '๋ธ”๋ผ์šฐ ์ž‘์ „'์€ ์‹คํŒจ๋กœ ๋๋‚˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ฐธ๊ณ  ์„œ์  '๋ผ์ดํ”„ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„๋Œ€์ „', <์†Œ๋ จ๊ตฐ์˜ ๋ฐ˜๊ฒฉ> ๊ฐ์ฃผ 1942๋…„ ๋ถ„์Ÿ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „์˜ ์ „ํˆฌ์™€ ์ž‘์ „ ๋…์ผ-์†Œ๋ จ ์ „์Ÿ 1942๋…„ ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„ 1942๋…„ ์šฐํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜ ๋ฃจ๋งˆ๋‹ˆ์•„๊ฐ€ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ•œ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „์˜ ์ „ํˆฌ์™€ ์ž‘์ „ ํ—๊ฐ€๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ•œ ์ œ2์ฐจ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋Œ€์ „์˜ ์ „ํˆฌ์™€ ์ž‘์ „
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Case%20Blue
Case Blue
Case Blue (German: Fall Blau) was the Wehrmacht's plan for the 1942 strategic summer offensive in southern Russia between 28ย June and 24 November 1942, during World War II. The objective was to capture the oil fields of Baku (Azerbaijan SSR), Grozny and Maikop for two purposes: to enable the Germans to re-supply their low fuel stock and also to deny their use to the Soviet Union, thereby bringing about the complete collapse of the Soviet war effort. After Operation Barbarossa failed to destroy the Soviet Union as a political and military threat the previous year, Adolf Hitler, the Fรผhrer of Nazi Germany, recognised that Germany was now locked in a war of attrition, and he was also aware that Germany was running low on fuel supply and would not be able to continue attacking deeper into enemy territory without more stock. With this in mind, Hitler ordered for the preparation of offensive plans for summer 1942 to secure the Soviet oil fields in the Caucasus. The operation involved a two-pronged attack: one from the Axis right flank against the oil fields of Baku, known as Operation Edelweiss, and one from the left flank to protect the first attack, moving in the direction of Stalingrad along the Don River, known as Operation Fischreiher. Army Group South (Heeresgruppe Sรผd) of the German Army was divided into Army Groups A and B (Heeresgruppe A and B). Army Group A was tasked with fulfilling Operation Edelweiss by crossing the Caucasus mountains to reach the Baku oil fields, while Army Group B protected its flanks along the Volga by fulfilling Operation Fischreiher. Supported by 2,035 Luftwaffe aircraft and 1,934 tanks and assault guns, the 1,570,287-man Army Group South began the offensive on 28 June, advancing 48 kilometers on the first day and easily brushing aside the 1,715,000 Red Army troops opposite, who falsely expected a German offensive on Moscow even after Blau commenced. The Soviet collapse in the south allowed the Germans to capture the western part of Voronezh on 6 July and reach and cross the Don river near Stalingrad on 26 July. Army Group B's approach toward Stalingrad slowed in late July and early August owing to constant counterattacks by newly deployed Red Army reserves and overstretched German supply lines. The Germans defeated the Soviets in the Battle of Kalach and the combat shifted to the city itself in late August. Nonstop Luftwaffe airstrikes, artillery fire and street-to-street combat completely destroyed the city and inflicted heavy casualties on the opposing forces. After three months of battle, the Germans controlled 90% of Stalingrad on 19 November. In the south, Army Group A captured Rostov on 23 July and swept south from the Don to the Caucasus, capturing the demolished oilfields at Maikop on 9 August and Elista on 13 August near the Caspian Sea coast. Heavy Soviet resistance and the long distances from Axis sources of supply reduced the Axis offensive to local advances only and prevented the Germans from completing their strategic objective of capturing the main Caucasus oilfield at Baku. Luftwaffe bombers destroyed the oilfields at Grozny but attacks on Baku were prevented by the insufficient range of the German fighters. The Allies were concerned about the possibility of German forces continuing to the south and east and linking up with Japanese forces (then advancing in Burma) in India. However, the Red Army defeated the Germans at Stalingrad, following Operations Uranus and Little Saturn. This defeat forced the Axis to retreat from the Caucasus in order to avoid getting cut off by the Red Army, which was now advancing from Stalingrad towards Rostov in order to achieve the cut-off. Only the Kuban region remained tentatively occupied by Axis troops. Axis strategy Background On 22ย June 1941, Germany launched Operation Barbarossa with the intention of defeating the Soviet Union in a quick offensive which was expected to last only 3 months. The Axis offensive had met with initial success and the Red Army had suffered some major defeats before halting the Axis units just short of Moscow (November/December 1941). Although the Germans had captured vast areas of land and important industrial centers, the Soviet Union remained in the war. In the winter of 1941โ€“42, the Soviets struck back in a series of successful counteroffensives, pushing back the German threat to Moscow. Despite these setbacks, Hitler wanted complete destruction of Russia, for which he required the oil resources of the Caucasus. By February 1942 the German Army High Command (OKH) had begun to develop plans for a follow-up campaign to the aborted Barbarossa offensive โ€“ with the Caucasus as its principal objective. On 5ย April 1942, Hitler laid out the elements of the plan now known as "Case Blue" (Fall Blau) in Fรผhrer Directive No. 41. The directive outlined the main goals of the 1942 summer campaign on Germany's Eastern Front: holding attacks for Army Group (AG) Centre, the capture of Leningrad and the link-up with Finland for AG North, and the capture of the Caucasus region for Army Group South. The main focus was to be the capture of the Caucasus region. The oilfields The Caucasus, a large, culturally diverse region traversed by its eponymous mountains, is bounded by the Black Sea to the west and the Caspian Sea to the east. The region north of the mountains was a production center for grain, cotton and heavy farm machinery, while its two main oilfields, at Maykop, near the Black Sea, and Grozny, about halfway between the Black and the Caspian Seas, produced about 10 percent of all Soviet oil. South of the mountains lay Transcaucasia, comprising Georgia, Azerbaijan and Armenia. This heavily industrialized and densely populated area contained some of the largest oilfields in the world. Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan, was one of the richest, producing 80 percent of the Soviet Union's oilโ€”about 24 million tons in 1942 alone. The Caucasus also possessed plentiful coal and peat, as well as nonferrous and rare metals. Manganese deposits at Chiatura, in Transcaucasia, formed the richest single source in the world, yielding 1.5ย million tons of manganese ore annually, half of the Soviet Union's total production. The Kuban region of the Caucasus also produced large amounts of wheat, corn, sunflower seeds, and sugar beets, all essential in the production of food. These resources were of immense importance to Hitler and the German war effort. Of the three million tons of oil Germany consumed per year, 85 percent was imported, mainly from the United States, Venezuela, and Iran. When war broke out in September 1939, the British naval blockade cut Germany off from the Americas and the Middle East, leaving the country reliant on oil-rich European countries such as Romania to supply the resource. An indication of German reliance on Romania is evident from its oil consumption; in 1938, just one-third of the 7,500,000 tons consumed by Germany came from domestic stocks. Oil had always been Germany's Achilles heel, and by the end of 1941, Hitler had nearly exhausted Germany's reserves, which left him with only two significant sources of oil, the country's own synthetic production and the Romanian oilfields, with the latter supplying 75% of Germany's oil imports in 1941. Aware of his declining oil resources, and fearful of enemy air attacks on Romania (Germany's main source of crude oil), Hitler's strategy was increasingly driven by the need to protect Romania and acquire new resources, essential if he wanted to continue waging a prolonged war against a growing list of enemies. In late 1941, the Romanians warned Hitler that their stocks were exhausted and they were unable to meet German demands. For these reasons, the Soviet oilfields were extremely important to Germany's industry and armed forces as the war became global, the power of the Allies grew, and shortages started to occur in Axis resources. Planning Axis forces The German plan involved a three-staged attack: Blau I: Fourth Panzer Army, commanded by Hermann Hoth (transferred from Army Group Centre) and the Second Army, supported by the Second Hungarian Army, would attack from Kursk to Voronezh and continue the advance, anchoring the northern flank of the offensive towards the Volga. Blau II: Sixth Army, commanded by Friedrich Paulus, would attack from Kharkov and move in parallel with Fourth Panzer Army, to reach the Volga at Stalingrad (whose capture was not deemed necessary). Blau III: First Panzer Army would then strike south towards the lower Don River, with Seventeenth Army on the western flank and Fourth Romanian Army on the eastern flank. The strategic objectives of the operation were the oilfields at Maykop, Grozny and Baku. As in Barbarossa, these movements were expected to result in a series of grand encirclements of Soviet troops. The offensive was to be conducted across the southern Russian (Kuban) steppe utilizing the following Army Group units: Northern Sector (Volga campaign) Army Group B Generalfeldmarschall Maximilian von Weichs Second Army (General Hans von Salmuth) LV Army Corps (R. von Roman) Fourth Panzer Army (Generaloberst Hermann Hoth) XXIV Panzer Corps (W. Langermann und Erlenkamp) XXXXVIII Panzer Corps (W. Kempf) XIII Army Corps (E. Straube) Sixth Army (General der Panzertruppe Friedrich Paulus) XXXX Panzer Corps (G. Stumme) LI Army Corps (W. von Seydlitz-Kurzbach) VIII Army Corps (W. Heitz) XVII Army Corps (K. Hollidt) XXIX Army Corps (H. von Obstfelder) Hungarian Second Army (Colonel-General Vitรฉz Gusztรกv Jรกny) III Corps (G. Rakovsky) VII Army Corps (Wehrmacht) (E.-E. Hell) Arrived 21โ€“25 July: IV Corps (L. Csatay) VII Corps (E. Gyimesi) Romanian Fourth Army Italian Eighth Army (Arrived 11โ€“15 August) (General Italo Gariboldi) II Corps (G. Zanghieri) XXXV Corps (G. Messe) Alpini Corps (G. Nasci) Luftflotte 4 Generaloberst Alexander Lรถhr (thru 20 July) Generalfeldmarschall Wolfram Freiherr von Richthofen (from 20 July) 8th Air Corps 4th Air Corps German air strength in the east numbered 2,644 aircraft on 20ย June 1942, over 20% more than a month earlier. Whereas in 1941 most units fought on the central front supporting Army Group Centre, 1,610 aircraft (61%), supported Army Group South. Southern Sector (Caucasus campaign) Army Group A Generalfeldmarschall Wilhelm List First Panzer Army Seventeenth Army Third Romanian Army Eleventh Army Soviet forces The Soviet army command (Stavka) failed to discern the direction of the main German strategic offensive anticipated in 1942, even though they were in possession of the German plans. On 19ย June, the chief of operations of the 23rd Panzer Division, Major Joachim Reichel, was shot down over Soviet-held territory while flying an observation aircraft over the front near Kharkov. The Soviets recovered maps from his aircraft detailing the exact German plans for Case Blue. The plans were handed over to Stavka, in Moscow. Joseph Stalin, however, believed it to be a German ruse, remaining convinced that the primary German strategic goal in 1942 would be Moscow, in part due to Operation Kremlin (Fall Kreml), a German deception plan aimed at the city. As a result, the majority of Red Army troops were deployed there, although the direction from which the Case Blue offensive would come was still defended by the Bryansk, Southwestern, Southern and North Caucasian Fronts. With about 1 million soldiers at the front line and another 1.7ย million in reserve armies, their forces accounted for about one quarter of all Soviet troops. Following the disastrous start of Case Blue for the Soviets, they reorganised their frontlines several times. Over the course of the campaign, the Soviets also fielded the Voronezh Front, Don Front, Stalingrad Front, Transcaucasian Front, and the Caucasian Front, though not all existed at the same time. With the German thrust expected in the north, Stavka planned several local offensives in the south to weaken the Germans. The most important of these was aimed at the city of Kharkov and would be conducted mainly by the Southwestern Front under Semyon Timoshenko, supported by the Southern Front commanded by Rodion Malinovsky. The operation was scheduled for 12ย May, just prior to a planned German offensive in the area. The ensuing Second Battle of Kharkov ended in disaster for the Soviets, severely weakening their mobile forces. At the same time, the Axis clearing of the Kerch Peninsula together with the Battle of Sevastopol, which lasted until July, weakened the Soviets further and allowed the Germans to supply Army Group A across the Kerch Peninsula through the Kuban. The Red Army order of battle at the start of the campaign was as follows: Northern Sector (Volga campaign) Armies deployed north to south: Bryansk Front Generalleutnant Filipp I. Golikov 48th Army (G.A. Khaliuzin) 4 rifle divisions (1 Guards), 2 rifle brigades, 2 tank brigades, 1 cavalry division 13th Army (N.P. Pukhov) 5 rifle divisions, 1 rifle brigade, 1 tank brigade 5th Tank Army (A.I. Liziukov) (KIA 23 July) 7 tank brigades 3rd Army (P.P. Korzun) 6 rifle divisions, 2 rifle brigades, 2 tank brigades 40th Army (M.A. Parsegov) 6 rifle divisions, 3 rifle brigades, 2 tank brigades Front forces 2 rifle divisions (1 Guards), 1 rifle brigade, 20 tank brigades (2 Guards), 6 cavalry divisions Second Air Army Generalmajor Stepan Y. Krasovsky Aviation divisions: 3 fighter, 4 ground attack, 2 bomber, 1 night bomber Southwestern Front Marshal Semyon K. Timoshenko 28th Army (D.I. Riabyshev) 7 rifle divisions (1 Guards), 5 tank brigades (1 Guards) 38th Army (K.S. Moskalenko) 8 rifle divisions, 7 tank brigades, 1 independent tank battalion 9th Army (F.A. Parkhomenko) 8 rifle divisions, 1 tank brigade, 3 cavalry divisions 21st Army (A.I. Danilov) 5 rifle divisions, 1 NKVD motorized rifle division, 3 tank brigades Front forces 8 tank brigades, 2 independent tank battalions, 3 cavalry divisions Eighth Air Army Generalmajor Timofei T. Khriukin Aviation divisions: 5 fighter, 2 ground attack, 2 bomber, 2 night bomber The offensive Opening phase The German offensive commenced on 28ย June 1942, with Fourth Panzer Army starting its drive towards Voronezh. Due to a chaotic Soviet retreat, the Germans were able to advance rapidly, restoring Wehrmacht confidence for the upcoming major offensive. Close air support from the Luftwaffe also played an important role in this early success. It contained the Red Air Force, through air superiority operations, and provided interdiction through attacks on airfields and Soviet defence lines. At times, the German air arm acted as a spearhead rather than a support force, ranging on ahead of the tanks and infantry to disrupt and destroy defensive positions. As many as 100 German aircraft were concentrated on a single Soviet division in the path of the spearhead during this phase. General Kazakov, the Bryansk Front's chief of staff, noted the strength and effectiveness of the Axis aviation. Within 26 days, the Soviets lost 783 aircraft from the 2nd, 4th, 5th and 8th Air Armies, compared to a German total of 175. By 5ย July, forward elements of Fourth Panzer Army had reached the Don River near Voronezh and became embroiled in the battle to capture the city. Stalin and the Soviet command still expected the main German thrust in the north against Moscow, and believed the Germans would turn north after Voronezh to threaten the capital. As a result, the Soviets rushed reinforcements into the town to hold it at all costs and counterattacked the Germans' northern flank in an effort to cut off the German spearheads. 5th Tank Army, commanded by Major General A.I. Liziukov, managed to achieve some minor successes when it began its attack on 6ย July, but was forced back to its starting positions by 15ย July, losing about half of its tanks in the process. Although the battle was a success, Hitler and von Bock, commander of Army Group South, argued over the next steps in the operation. The heated debate, and continuing Soviet counterattacks, which tied down Fourth Panzer Army until 13ย July, caused Hitler to lose his temper and dismiss von Bock on 17ย July. As part of the second phase of the operation, on 9ย July, Army Group South was split into Army Group A and Army Group B, with Wilhelm List appointed as commander of Army Group A and Army Group B commanded by Maximillian von Weichs. Only two weeks into the operation, on 11ย July, the Germans began to suffer logistical difficulties, which slowed the advance. The German Sixth Army was continually delayed by fuel shortages. Eight days later, on 20ย July, shortages of fuel were still undermining operations, leaving many units unable to execute their orders. The 23rd Panzer Division and 24th Panzer Division both became stranded during the opening phase. Once again, as it had done during the Norwegian Campaign in April 1940, and Barbarossa in 1941, the Luftwaffe's Junkers Ju 52 transport fleet flew in supplies to keep the army going. The situation remained difficult with German troops forced to recover fuel from damaged or abandoned vehicles, and in some cases, leave behind tanks and vehicles with heavy fuel consumption to continue their advance. This undermined the strength of the units, which were forced to leave fighting vehicles behind. Nevertheless, the Luftwaffe flew in 200 tons of fuel per day to keep the army supplied. Despite this impressive performance in keeping the army mobile, Lรถhr was replaced by the more impetuous and offensive-minded von Richthofen. Splitting of Army Group South Believing that the main Soviet threat had been eliminated, desperately short of oil and needing to meet all the ambitious objectives of Case Blue, Hitler made a series of changes to the plan in Fรผhrer Directive No. 45 on July 23, 1942: reorganized Army Group South into two smaller Army Groups, A and B; directed Army Group A to advance to the Caucasus and capture the oil fields (Operation EdelweiรŸ); directed Army Group B to attack towards the Volga and Stalingrad (Operation Fischreiher). There is no evidence Hitler was opposed by, or received complaints from Franz Halder, Chief of the General Staff, or anyone else, about the directive until August 1942. The new directive created enormous logistical difficulties, with Hitler expecting both Army Groups to advance along different routes. Logistics lines were already at breaking point with ammunition and fuel shortages most apparent and it would be impossible to advance using the conservative supply rates he demanded. The divergence of the Army Groups would also open a dangerous gap between the Armies, which could be exploited by the Soviets. The Italian Alpine Corps, of the Italian Army in the Soviet Union, did not arrive in the Caucasus Mountains with Army Group A, instead remaining with Sixth Army. Army Group A was expected to operate in mountain terrain with only three mountain divisions and two infantry divisions unsuited to the task. The splitting of Army Group South enabled the launching of Operation Edelweiss and Operation Fischreiher, the two main thrusts of the Army Groups. Both groups had to achieve their objectives simultaneously, instead of consecutively. The success of the initial advance was such that Hitler ordered the Fourth Panzer Army south to assist the First Panzer Army to cross the lower Don river. This assistance was not needed and Kleist later complained that Fourth Panzer Army clogged the roads and that if they had carried on toward Stalingrad, they could have taken it in July. When it turned north again two weeks later, the Soviets had gathered enough forces together at Stalingrad to check its advance. Army Group A: Caucasus Breaking into the Caucasus With air support from the Ju 87s of Sturzkampfgeschwader 77, List's Army Group A recaptured Rostov, the "gate to the Caucasus", on 23 July 1942 relatively easily. The Luftwaffe had air superiority in the early phase of the operation, which was of great help to the ground forces. With the Don crossing secured and Sixth Army's advance flagging on the Volga front, Hitler transferred the Fourth Panzer Army to Army Group B and sent it back to the Volga. The redeployment used enormous amounts of fuel to transfer the army by air and road. After crossing the Don on 25 July, Army Group A fanned out on a front from the Sea of Azov to Zymlianskaya (today Zymlyansk). The German Seventeenth Army, along with elements of the Eleventh Army and the Romanian Third Army, manoeuvred west towards the east coast of the Black Sea, while the First Panzer Army attacked to the south-east. The Seventeenth Army made a slow advance but the First Panzer Army had freedom of action. On 29 July the Germans cut the last direct railway between central Russia and the Caucasus, causing considerable panic to Stalin and Stavka, which led to the passing of Order No. 227 "Not a step back!". Salsk was captured on 31 July and Stavropol on 5 August. Although the army group made a quick advance, by 3 August the vanguard comprised only light mobile forces and most of the tanks lagged behind, due to lack of fuel and supply breakdowns, despite the efforts of 4th Air Corps, which flew in supplies around the clock. On 9 August, the First Panzer Army reached Maikop in the foothills of the Caucasus mountains, having advanced more than in fewer than two weeks. The western oil fields near Maikop were seized in a commando operation from 8โ€“9 August, but the oil fields had been sufficiently destroyed by the Red Army to take about a year to be repaired. Shortly afterwards Pyatigorsk was taken. On 12ย August, Krasnodar was captured and German mountain troops hoisted the Nazi flag on the highest mountain of the Caucasus, Mount Elbrus. The length of the German advance created chronic supply difficulties, particularly of petrol; the Black Sea was judged too dangerous and fuel was brought by rail through Rostov or delivered by air, but panzer divisions were sometimes at a standstill for weeks. Even petrol trucks ran out of fuel and oil had to be brought up on camels. With the Soviets often retreating instead of fighting, the number of prisoners fell short of expectations and only 83,000 were taken. As Hitler and OKH began to concentrate on Stalingrad, some of Kleist's mobile forces were diverted. Kleist lost his flak corps and most of the Luftwaffe supporting the southern front, only reconnaissance aircraft being left behind. The Voyenno-Vozdushnye Sily (VVS) brought in about 800 bombers, a third of which were operational. With the transfer of air cover and flak units, Soviet bombers were free to harass the German advance. The quality of the Soviet resistance increased, with many of the forces used coming from local levies, who Kleist thought were willing to fight harder for their homeland. German units were especially bogged down by fighting Georgian alpine and mountain troops, who greatly contributed to stalling their advance. The quantity of replacements and supplies the Soviets committed increased, and faced with these difficulties, the Axis advance slowed after 28 August. Battle for the oilfields In the south-east, the Wehrmacht headed in the direction of Grozny and Baku, the other important petroleum centres. More installations and industrial centres fell into German hands, many intact or only slightly damaged during the Russian retreat. From Augustโ€“September, the Taman Peninsula and a part of the Novorossiysk naval base were captured. The Germans continued towards Tuapse on the Black Sea coast and in the east Elista was taken on 13 August. In the south, the German advance was stopped north of Grozny, after taking Mozdok on 25 August. German paratroopers assisted an insurgency in Chechnya, operating behind Soviet lines. German mountain troops failed to secure the Black Sea ports and the advance fell short of Grozny as supply difficulties arose once more. The Soviets dug in the 9th and 44th armies of the North Transcaucasian Front along the rocky Terek River bank in front (north) of the city. The Luftwaffe was unable to support the German army that far forward and Soviet aviation attacked bridges and supply routes virtually unopposed. The Germans crossed the river on 2 September but made only slow progress. At the beginning of September, Hitler had a major argument with the High Command and specifically List, as he perceived the advance of the German forces as too slow. As a result, Hitler dismissed List on 9 September and took direct command of Army Group A himself. Axis ships transported 30,605 men, 13,254 horses and 6,265 motor vehicles across the Black Sea from Romania, from 1โ€“2 September. With the reinforcements, the Germans captured most of the Black Sea naval bases but were held up at Novorossiysk, where the Soviet 47th Army had prepared for a long siege. The port fell on 10 September, after a four-day battle, the final German victory in the Caucasus. It left the heights south of the port and several coast roads in the hands of 47th Soviet Army. Attempts to push out of Novorossiysk were costly failures and the Axis also failed to break the defences on the coastal plain from Novorossiysk to Tuapse, having only the strength to stabilise the line. Romanian Army losses were particularly high and the Romanian 3rd Mountain Division was nearly wiped out by a Soviet counter-attack from 25โ€“26 September. Further east, the Axis enjoyed greater success and on 1 September, the Germans took (ะฅัƒะปั…ัƒั‚ะฐฬ), halfway between Elista and Astrakhan. During August and September, German patrols raided the railway around Kizlyar, north-east of Grozny, marking the farthest advance of the German forces towards the Caspian Sea. In the south, the First Panzer Army advance on Grozny was stopped by the Red Army and the 14th Air Army. By late September, supply failures and the resistance of the Red Army slowed the Axis advance. The Germans took Nakchik on 26 October. On 2 November 1942, Romanian mountain troops (Vรขnฤƒtori de munte) under the command of Brigadier General Ioan Dumitrache took Nalchik, the capital of Kabardino-Balkaria and also the farthest point of Axis advance into the Caucasus. This victory earned the Romanian General the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross. Up to 10,000 prisoners were captured in two days, before the advance toward Grozny was stopped again west of the city at Vladikavkaz. On 5 November, Alagir was seized and the Alagirโ€“Beslanโ€“Malgobek line reached became the farthest German advance in the south. By this time, the gap between Army Groups A and B had left them vulnerable to a counter-offensive. Only the German 16th Motorized Infantry Division remained inside the gap, guarding the left flank of the First Panzer Army by securing the road towards Astrakhan. On 22 November, after several Soviet counter-attacks, Hitler appointed Kleist as Group commander with orders to hold his position and prepare to resume the offensive if Stalingrad could be taken. Luftwaffe oil offensive In the first week of October 1942, Hitler came to recognise that the capture of the Caucasus oil fields was unlikely before winter, which forced the Germans to take up defensive positions. Unable to capture them, he was determined to deny them to the enemy and ordered the Oberkommando der Luftwaffe (OKL) to inflict as much damage as possible. On 8ย October, Hitler called for the air offensive to be carried out no later than 14ย October, as he required air assets for a major effort at Stalingrad. As a result, on 10ย October 1942, Fliegerkorps 4 of Luftflotte 4 (4th Air Corps of Fourth Air Fleet) was ordered to send every available bomber against the oilfields at Grozny. Fourth Air Fleet was in poor shape by this time โ€“ von Richthofen had begun Case Blue with 323 serviceable bombers out of a total of 480. He was now down to 232, of which only 129 were combat ready. Nevertheless, the force could still deliver damaging blows. Attacks on the refineries reminded von Richthofen of the attacks on Sevastopol several months earlier. Thick black smoke rose from the refineries to a height of . On 12ย October, further raids caused even more destruction. It had been a strategic mistake not to have made greater efforts to hit the oil refineries at Grozny and Baku sooner, as their destruction would have been a greater blow to the Soviets than the loss of Stalingrad, where most of the air fleet was deployed. Onย 19 November, the Soviet counter-offensive at Stalingrad compelled von Richthofen to once more withdraw his units north to the Volga and bring an end to the aerial offensive. Much damage was done at Grozny, but the remaining oilfields were beyond the logistical reach of the German Army as well as of the fighter aircraft of the Luftwaffe. Grozny was within range of German bombers from 4th Air Corps, based near the Terek River. But Grozny and the captured oilfields at Maykop produced only ten per cent of Soviet oil. The main fields at Baku were out of German fighter range. German bombers could have reached them, but it meant flying the most direct, thus most predictable route without protection. In August it may have been possible to carry out these operations owing to the weakness of Soviet air power in the region, but by October it had been considerably strengthened. Army Group B: Volga Don bend On 23 July, the main body of Army Group B started its advance toward the Don. The Germans met with increasing Soviet resistance from the new Stalingrad Front, with the 62nd and 64th Soviet Armies. On 26 July, XIV Panzer Corps broke through and reached the Don, where the new First and Fourth Tank Armies conducted several futile counter-attacks by inexperienced troops. In the south, Fourth Panzer Army made better progress against 51st Army. After crossing the Don, the Germans advanced on Kotelnikovo, reaching the town by 2 August. Soviet resistance convinced Paulus that Sixth Army was not strong enough to cross the Don by itself, so he waited for Fourth Panzer Army to fight its way north. On 4 August, the Germans were still from Stalingrad. By 10 August, the Red Army had been cleared from most of the west bank of the Don, but Soviet resistance continued in some areas, further delaying Army Group B. The Wehrmacht advance on Stalingrad was also impeded by supply shortages caused by the poor state of Soviet roads. The Luftwaffe sent an ad-hoc force of 300 Ju 52 transport aircraft, enabling the Germans to advance; some bombers were diverted from operations to supply flights under the Stalingrad Transport Region force. The Soviet defence at the Don forced the Germans to commit more and more troops to an increasingly vulnerable front, leaving few reserves to back up the Axis divisions on either flank. The Soviets made several counter-attacks on the northern flank of Army Group B, between Stalingrad and Voronezh. From 20โ€“28 August, the 63rd Army and the 21st Army counter-attacked near Serafimovich, forcing the Italian Eighth Army to fall back. The 1st Guards Army attacked near Novo-Grigoryevskaja, extending its bridgehead. These and several other bridgeheads across the Don, opposed by the Eighth Italian and Second Hungarian armies, were a constant danger. On 23 August, Sixth Army crossed the Don and Army Group B established a defensive line on one of its bends. Sixth Army reached the northern suburbs of Stalingrad later that day, beginning the Battle of Stalingrad. The Hungarian, Italian and Romanian armies were from Stalingrad, which was in range of forward air bases. Luftflotte 4 attacked the city, turning much of it to rubble. The Soviets reported that civilian casualties from 23โ€“26 August were 955 dead and 1,181 wounded (a preliminary total; later reports of casualties in the tens of thousands were probably exaggerations). Sixth Army advanced from the north via Kalach and Fourth Panzer Army came up from the south through Kotelnikovo. In the first few days, the XIV Panzer Corps opened a corridor between the main body of Sixth Army and the northern Stalingrad suburbs at the Volga. In the south, Soviet resistance repulsed the Fourth Panzer Army. On 29 August another attempt was made with Hoth turning his forces west directly through the center of 64th Army. The attack was unexpectedly successful and Fourth Panzer Army got behind 62nd and 64th Armies with the chance to encircle and cut off 62nd Army. Von Weichs ordered Sixth Army to complete the encirclement; a Soviet counter-attack held up the advance for three days and the Soviets escaped and retreated towards Stalingrad. The rapid German advance caused a slump in morale among the Soviet troops, who retreated in chaos, abandoning the outer defences of the city. After defeating the last Soviet counter-attacks, Sixth Army resumed its offensive on 2 September, linking up with Fourth Panzer Army the following day. On 12 September, the Germans entered Stalingrad. Battle of Stalingrad The advance into Stalingrad against the 62nd Army was carried out by Sixth Army, while Fourth Panzer Army secured the southern flank. The city was a ribbon along the west bank of the Volga, which forced the Germans to conduct a frontal assault, and the ruins of the city gave the defenders an advantage. To counter Luftwaffe air superiority, the commander of the 62nd Army, General Vasily Chuikov, ordered his troops to "hug" the Germans, negating German tactical mobility. The Luftwaffe suppressed Soviet artillery on the east bank of the Volga and caused many casualties during Soviet attempts to reinforce the defenders on the west bank. From mid-September until early November the Germans made three big attacks on the city and ground forward in mutually-costly fighting. By mid-November, the Soviets were penned into four shallow bridgeheads, with the front line only from the river. Anticipating victory, substantial numbers of Luftwaffe aircraft were withdrawn to the Mediterranean in early November to support the Axis operations in Tunisia. Sixth Army had captured about 90 percent of the city. On 19 November, the Soviets launched Operation Uranus, a two-pronged counter-offensive against the flanks of Sixth Army. With the battle for the city and the exhaustion of Fourth Panzer Army, the flanks were mainly guarded by Romanian, Hungarian and Italian soldiers. Third Romanian Army, on the Don River west of Stalingrad, and Fourth Romanian Army, south-east of Stalingrad, had been under constant Soviet attack since September. Third Romanian Army had been transferred from Caucasus on 10 September to take over Italian positions on the Don, opposite the Soviet bridgeheads. The Romanians were understrength and had only around six modern anti-tank guns per division. The bulk of the German tank reserve, the 48th Panzer Corps, consisted of about 180 tanks, half being obsolete Panzer 35(t)s. The two Romanian armies were routed and Sixth Army with parts of Fourth Panzer Army were encircled in Stalingrad. Hitler ordered Sixth Army to remain on the defensive, rather than try to break out. It was intended the army would be supplied by air, but the quantity of supplies necessary was far beyond the ability of the Luftwaffe to carry. Sixth Army's strength diminished and the Soviets gained the upper hand inside the city. To stabilise the situation on the Eastern Front, Army Group Don (Heeresgruppe Don) under Field Marshal Erich von Manstein was created to fill the gap between Army Groups A and B. On 12 December, a relief operation called Operation Winter Storm was launched from the South by fresh reinforcements of the 4th Panzer Army. The offensive surprised the Soviets and the Germans were able to penetrate the Soviet line for towards Stalingrad. Despite these gains, the Sixth Army was not allowed to attempt to break out and link up, so this led to nothing. The failure was followed by a siege that lasted for almost two months, during which the Sixth Army was destroyed. Aftermath Operation Saturn Following the success of Operation Uranus, the Red Army began Operation Saturn to cut off Army Group A and all troops east of Rostov. During the German relief operation at Stalingrad, Soviet forces had been redeployed, lesser objectives substituted, and the operation renamed "Little Saturn". The attack fell on Eighth Italian Army and the remnants of Third Romanian Army, and led to the destruction of most of Eighth Army. On the verge of collapse, Army Groups B and Don were able to prevent a Soviet breakthrough but Army Group A was ordered to withdraw from the Caucasus on 28 December. The Soviets launched several follow-up offensives, later called the Voronezh-Kharkov Strategic Offensive. The Ostrogozhskโ€“Rossosh Offensive began on 12 January and destroyed large parts of the Second Hungarian Army and the remnants of Eighth Italian Army at the Don south-east of Voronezh. With the southern flank in danger, Second German Army was forced to withdraw from Voronezh and the Don. The operations continued until January and led Stavka to believe that they could deal a fatal blow to the Germans and decide the war in southern Russia. Operation Star, conducted by the Voronezh Front, was aimed at Kharkov, Kursk and Belgorod. Operation Gallop was conducted by the South-western Front against Voroshilovgrad, Donetsk and then towards the Sea of Azov, to cut off the German forces east of Donetsk. The operations began simultaneously at the end of January. The Soviets broke through quickly and in the north, Kursk fell on 18 February and Kharkov on 16 February after a German withdrawal, while in the south the Germans were pushed back to a line west of Voroshilovgrad. Army Groups Don, B and parts of Army Group A were renamed Army Group South, commanded by Manstein, on 12 February. The Kharkov and Donbas operations were started on 25 February by the new Central Front led by Rokossovsky, with the forces freed after the surrender of the Germans in Stalingrad on 2 February. The operations were aimed at Army Group Centre in the north and timed to coincide with the expected successes of the Soviet operations in the south. Army Group South escaped encirclement and prepared a counter-offensive, which led to the Third Battle of Kharkov and the stabilisation of the front. The disaster at Stalingrad was the end of Case Blue and the territorial gains had been reversed by the end of 1943, except for the Kuban bridgehead on the Taman peninsula, retained for a possible second offensive to the Caucasus, which was held until 19 October 1943. Effect on the war The failure of the operation, mainly due to the disastrous defeat at Stalingrad, marked the turning point in the war on the Eastern Front. Germany was forced to withdraw some 800 kilometres back to a new battle about 100 kilometres west of the city of Kursk. This withdrawal set the pace for Operation Citadel in the summer of 1943, which was unsuccessful, and resulted in a permanent swing of fortunes in the Soviets' favour for the remainder of the war. The Soviets permanently secured the initiative with regard to offensives, while Germany was forced to switch to a defensive posture that persisted until its eventual defeat less than 2 years later. Analysis Due to the initial success of the German summer offensive in 1942, Hitler became more ambitious, putting great strain on the German army. Hitler did not expect the Soviets to be able to launch a counter-offensive as big as Operation Uranus and sent troops elsewhere, ordering the Wehrmacht to simultaneously achieve several goals. Opposition and minor setbacks led to Hitler sacking dissenters and interfering more in command, constantly changing plans and orders, which led to confusion, delays and wastage of precious resources like fuel as the German army struggled to keep up with Hitler's indecisiveness. Overextension reduced the capabilities of the German Army and its allies to defend this territory and the Soviets mounted a decisive offensive at Stalingrad, encircling a German army. Soon both sides concentrated on the battle for the city, making the Caucasus a secondary theatre. With Army Group B unable to hold the Volga line, Soviet offensives almost cut off Army Group A in the Caucasus and it was forced to withdraw. The surrender of Sixth Army was a huge blow to German morale and it came as a great shock to Hitler. Despite the destruction of Sixth Army, the Soviets were able to only force the German Army back from the Caucasus, delaying the final decision on the Eastern Front. The Soviet command overestimated its capabilities and pushed its forces forward to the limit of its supply lines, which led to defeat at the Third Battle of Kharkov and left the Germans able to fight the Battle of Kursk. See also Oil campaign of World War II Operation Braunschweig Reichskommissariat Kaukasien Notes Army Group A was under direct command of the OKH from 10 September 1942 until 22 November 1942, when von Kleist took over. Not all of those tanks were serviceable at the beginning of the offensive, as tanks were in repair, already engaged in combat, refitting, or not present at the frontline. Took command upon von Bock being relieved by Hitler 17 July. Took command upon von Weichs being raised to army group command 17 July. KIA 3 October at Storoshewoje on the Middle Don. Surrendered remains of Sixth Army at Stalingrad 31 January 1943. A set of plans for Fall Blau held by an officer of one of Stumme's panzer divisions fell into Soviet hands on 19 June. Furious at this breach, Hitler relieved Stumme 21 July and had him court-martialed. Stumme was reassigned to the Afrika Korps and was killed in action 12 October at El Alamein. Captured at Stalingrad 31 January 1943, died in captivity 9 February 1944. Executed by firing squad for war crimes November 1947. Committed suicide October 1944 following arrest by the Gestapo. Executed by firing squad in Yugoslavia for war crimes February 1947. Died of a brain tumor in American captivity 12 July 1945. The Third Romanian Army was later assigned to Army Group B and was one of the two Romanian armies heavily engaged in Operation Uranus. After the successful completion of the battle for the Kerch Peninsula, 11th Army was split and only parts of it were assigned to Army Group A. Relieved for military incompetence and reassigned March 1943. Relieved for military incompetence and reassigned 22 July. The Seventeenth Army of Army Group A stayed in the Kuban bridgehead. References Bibliography Javrishvili K., Battle of Caucasus: Case for Georgian Alpinists, Translated by Michael P. Willis, 2017. Conflicts in 1942 1942 in Russia 1942 in Ukraine Battles and operations of World War II involving Hungary Military campaigns involving Germany Battles and operations of the Sovietโ€“German War Battles and operations of World War II involving Romania Battles and operations of World War II involving Italy Battles involving the Independent State of Croatia
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%95%84%EC%8A%A4%EC%B9%B4%EB%A5%B4%20%EB%A7%88%EB%AF%BC
์•„์Šค์นด๋ฅด ๋งˆ๋ฏผ
์•„์Šค์นด๋ฅด ์šฐ์žํฌํŒŒ์˜ˆ๋น„์น˜ ๋งˆ๋ฏผ(, 1965๋…„ 10์›” 23์ผ ~ )์€ 2019๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2022๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„ ์ด๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ์ง€๋‚ธ ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„์˜ ์ •์น˜์ธ์ด๋‹ค. 2016๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2019๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„ ๋ถ€์ด๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ์ง€๋ƒˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ด์ „์—๋Š” ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„ ๊ตญ์˜ ์ฒ ๋„ ํšŒ์‚ฌ ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„ ํ…Œ๋ฏธ๋ฅด ์กธ๋ฆฌ์˜ ์‚ฌ์žฅ์„ ์ง€๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. 2008๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ํ˜„์žฌ๊นŒ์ง€ ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„ ์•„์ด์Šคํ•˜ํ‚ค ์—ฐ๋งน ํšŒ์žฅ์„ ๋งก๊ณ  ์žˆ๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜๋‹ค. ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์€ 2022๋…„ ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„ ์‹œ์œ„ ์—ฌํŒŒ๋กœ ์นด์‹ฌ์กฐ๋งˆ๋ฅดํŠธ ํ† ์นด์˜ˆํ”„ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ด ๋‚ด๊ฐ ์ด์‚ฌํ‡ด๋ฅผ ์ง€์‹œํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์ด๋ฆฌ์ง์—์„œ ๋ฌผ๋Ÿฌ๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„ ์—ฌ๋‹น ๋ˆ„๋ฅด ์˜คํƒ„(ํ˜„์žฌ์˜ ์•„๋งˆ๋‚˜ํŠธ)์˜ ๋‹น์›์ธ ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์€ 2005๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2006๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ๋‹ค๋‹ˆ์–„ ์•„ํ๋ฉ”๋„ํ”„ ์ •๋ถ€์—์„œ ๊ตํ†ตํ†ต์‹ ๋ถ€ ์žฅ๊ด€์œผ๋กœ ์žฌ์งํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, 2006๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2008๋…„๊นŒ์ง€๋Š” ์•„์Šคํƒ€๋‚˜ ์‹œ์žฅ์œผ๋กœ ์žฌ์งํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ์ƒ์• ์™€ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์€ ์ฒผ๋ฆฌ๋…ธ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ์—์„œ ํƒœ์–ด๋‚˜ ์ฒผ๋ฆฌ๋…ธ๊ทธ๋ผ๋“œ ํ† ๋ชฉ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต์™€ ํ”Œ๋ ˆํ•˜๋…ธํ”„ ๊ฒฝ์ œ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต๋ฅผ ํ† ๋ชฉ๊ณตํ•™๊ณผ ๊ฒฝ์ œํ•™ ์ „๊ณต์œผ๋กœ ์กธ์—…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์€ "์ฒผ๋ฆฐํƒธ์ง€์ŠคํŠธ๋กœ์ด" ํŠธ๋ ˆ์Šคํƒ€ ์ฐฝ์„ค์ž๋กœ์„œ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„ ํ˜์‹  ๊ธฐ์—… ์—ฐํ•ฉ ๋ถ€๊ตญ์žฅ์„ ์ง€๋‚ธ ๋ฐ” ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์€ 1996๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2008๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ์•„์Šคํƒ€๋‚˜ ์ œ1๋ถ€์•„ํ‚ด, ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„ ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ ๊ตํ†ตํ†ต์‹ ๋ถ€ ์ฐจ๊ด€, ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„ ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ ์‚ฐ์—…ํ†ต์ƒ๋ถ€ ์ œ1์ฐจ๊ด€์œผ๋กœ ์žฌ์งํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2006๋…„, ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์€ ์•„์Šคํƒ€๋‚˜ ์•„ํ‚ด (์ฃผ์ง€์‚ฌ์— ํ•ด๋‹น)์— ์ž„๋ช…๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2008๋…„, ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„ ํ…Œ๋ฏธ๋ฅด ์กธ๋ฆฌ ์‚ฌ์žฅ์ด ๋  ๋•Œ๊นŒ์ง€ ์•„์Šคํƒ€๋‚˜ ์•„ํ‚ด์œผ๋กœ ์žฌ์งํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2016๋…„, ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์€ ์‚ฌ๊ธดํƒ€์˜ˆํ”„ ์ •๋ถ€์˜ ์ œ1๋ถ€์ด๋ฆฌ์— ์ž„๋ช…๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2018๋…„, ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์€ ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ธฐ์—… ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„ ๊ด€๊ด‘์ฒญ์˜ ์ด์‚ฌํšŒ์— ํ•ฉ๋ฅ˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„ ์ด๋ฆฌ (2019๋…„ ~ 2022๋…„) ์ž„๋ช… 2019๋…„ 2์›”, ๋ฐ”ํ‚คํŠธ์ž” ์‚ฌ๊ธดํƒ€์˜ˆํ”„ ์ด๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๋ˆ„๋ฅด์ˆ ํƒ„ ๋‚˜์ž๋ฅด๋ฐ”์˜ˆํ”„ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์˜ ์ง€์‹œ๋กœ ํ•ด์ž„๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ, ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์ด ์ด๋ฆฌ ๊ถŒํ•œ๋Œ€ํ–‰์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , 2์›” 25์ผ์— ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„ ์˜ํšŒ์—์„œ ๋งŒ์žฅ์ผ์น˜๋กœ ์ฐจ๊ธฐ ์ด๋ฆฌ ์ž„๋ช…์ด ํ™•์ •๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค์Œ๋‚ ์ธ 2์›” 26์ผ, ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์€ ๋‚ด๊ฐ ํšŒ์˜์—์„œ ์ •๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์˜ ์‚ถ์˜ ์งˆ์„ ํ–ฅ์ƒ์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” "๊ตฌ์ฒด์ ์ธ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ"๋ฅผ ๋ชฉํ‘œ๋กœ ํ•ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2021๋…„ 1์›” 10์ผ, ์นด์‹ฌ์กฐ๋งˆ๋ฅดํŠธ ํ† ์นด์˜ˆํ”„ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์€ ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„์—์„œ ์—ด๋ฆฐ 2021๋…„ ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„ ์ด์„  ๋‹น์ผ ๋ฒ•๋ฅ ์— ๊ทผ๊ฑฐํ•ด ์ •๋ถ€์˜ ์‚ฌ์ž„์„ ์š”๊ตฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์„ ๋Œ€์‹ ํ•ด ์ด๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ๋  ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ์„ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์Ÿ์ž๋กœ ๋ฐ”์šฐ์ด๋ฅด์ž” ๋ฐ”์ด๋ฒ ํฌ, ๋ˆ„๋ฅผ๋ž€ ๋‹ˆ๊ทธ๋งˆํˆด๋ฆฐ, ์•„์„ธํŠธ ์ด์„ธ์ผ€์…ฐํ”„, ์นด๋‚˜ํŠธ ๋ณด์คŒ๋ฐ”์˜ˆํ”„, ์—๋ฅด๋ณผ๋ผํŠธ ๋„์‚ฌ์˜ˆํ”„, ๋ฐ”ํ‚คํŠธ ์ˆ ํƒ€๋…ธํ”„๊ฐ€ ๊ฑฐ๋ก ๋˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์˜ ๊ฑฐ์ทจ๋ฅผ ์ถ”์ธกํ•˜๊ณ  ์˜ˆ์ธกํ•˜๋Š” ๋‚ด์šฉ์ด ๋‚˜๋Œ์•˜๋‹ค. ์ „ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์ด์ž ๋ˆ„๋ฅด ์˜คํƒ„ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ ๋ˆ„๋ฅด์ˆ ํƒ„ ๋‚˜์ž๋ฅด๋ฐ”์˜ˆํ”„๋Š” ์ •๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋‚˜๋ผ๋“ค๊ณผ๋Š” ์ •๋ฐ˜๋Œ€๋กœ ์ผ์„ ํ•ด์™”๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋งํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์˜ ์žฌ์„ ์„ ์ง€์ง€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1์›” 15์ผ, ํ† ์นด์˜ˆํ”„๋Š” ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„ ์ œ7์ฐจ ์˜ํšŒ ๊ฐœํšŒ์‹์—์„œ ์˜ํšŒ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ์› 99๋ช… ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ 78๋ช…์˜ ์ง€์ง€๋กœ ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์„ ์ด๋ฆฌ์ง์— ๋‹ค์‹œ ์ง€๋ช…ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋‚˜๋จธ์ง€๋Š” ๊ธฐ๊ถŒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋ฆฌ ์ž„๋ช…์ด ๋งŒ์žฅ์ผ์น˜ ์ง€์ง€๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์ง€ ๋ชปํ•œ ๊ฑด์€ 2007๋…„ ์ดํ›„ ์ฒ˜์Œ์ด๋‹ค. ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์€ ์ด ์„ธ์…˜์—์„œ ์ฝ”๋กœ๋‚˜19 ๋ฒ”์œ ํ–‰๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จํ•ด ์˜ํšŒ ์•ผ๋‹น์˜ ๋น„ํŒ์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ์„ธ์…˜์—์„œ ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์€ ์‚ถ์˜ ์งˆ ํ–ฅ์ƒ, ์†Œ๋“ ๋ฐ ๋ณต์ง€ ํ–ฅ์ƒ, ํˆฌ์ž ์œ ์น˜, ์‹ ๊ธฐ์ˆ  ๋„์ž…, ๋…ธ๋™์ž์˜ ๋‹ฌ ์‹ ์„ค ๋“ฑ ํšจ๊ณผ์ ์ธ ์กฐ์น˜๊ฐ€ ์ทจํ•ด์งˆ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์„ค๋ช…ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์ž์‹ ์„ ์ง€์ง€ํ•ด ์ค€ ์˜์›๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ๊ฐ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ํ‘œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ž„๊ธฐ 2019๋…„ 6์›” 24์ผ, ํˆฌ๋ฅดํ‚ค์Šคํƒ„์ฃผ ์•„๋ฆฌ์Šค์˜ ๋งˆ์„ ๊ทผ์ฒ˜ ํƒ„์•ฝ๊ณ ์—์„œ ๊ฑฐ๋Œ€ํ•œ ํญ๋ฐœ์ด ๋ฐœ์ƒํ•˜์—ฌ 3๋ช…์ด ์‚ฌ๋งํ•˜๊ณ  89๋ช…์ด ๋ถ€์ƒ๋‹นํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์€ ํ† ์นด์˜ˆํ”„๋ฅผ ๋Œ€์‹ ํ•˜์—ฌ 6์›” 29์ผ์— ๋งˆ์„์„ ๋ฐฉ๋ฌธํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ๊ณณ์—์„œ 2019๋…„ 8์›” 1์ผ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ชจ๋“  ํ”ผํ•ด ๋ณต์›์„ ์™„๋ฃŒํ•˜๋„๋ก ๋ช…๋ นํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ”ผํ•ด ๋ณต์›์—๋Š” 561์–ต ํ…ก๊ฒŒ๊ฐ€ ๋ฐฐ์ •๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ์ด ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ 275์–ต ํ…ก๊ฒŒ๋Š” ์ •๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ์˜ˆ๋น„๋น„๋กœ ๋ฐฐ์ •ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 8์›” 2์ผ, ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์€ ๋งˆ์„์„ ๋‹ค์‹œ ๋ฐฉ๋ฌธํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ณต์›์— ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•œ ๋ชจ๋“  ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค๊ป˜ ๊ฐ์‚ฌ ์˜์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ํ‘œ๋ช…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2022๋…„ 1์›”, ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์€ 2022๋…„ ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„ ์‹œ์œ„์˜ ์—ฌํŒŒ๋กœ ์ด๋ฆฌ์ง์—์„œ ๋ฌผ๋Ÿฌ๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ์™ธ๊ต ์ •์ฑ… 2019๋…„ 7์›” 11-12์ผ, ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์€ ํ‚ค๋ฅด๊ธฐ์Šค์Šคํƒ„๊ณผ ํƒ€์ง€ํ‚ค์Šคํƒ„์„ ๊ณต์‹ ๋ฐฉ๋ฌธํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ, ํ‚ค๋ฅด๊ธฐ์Šค์Šคํƒ„์˜ ์†Œ๋ก ๋ฐ”์ด ์  ๋ฒ ์ฝ”ํ”„ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์„ ๋งŒ๋‚˜ ์–‘์ž ๋ฌด์—ญ, ๊ฒฝ์ œ ๋ฐ ํˆฌ์ž ํ˜‘๋ ฅ์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ๋ฌธ์ œ๋ฅผ ๋…ผ์˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฌดํ•จ๋ฉง์นผ๋ฆฌ ์•„๋ถˆ๊ฐ€์ง€์˜ˆํ”„ ํ‚ค๋ฅด๊ธฐ์Šค์Šคํƒ„ ์ด๋ฆฌ์™€ ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์€ ๋น„์Šˆ์ผ€ํฌ์—์„œ ์—ด๋ฆฐ ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„-ํ‚ค๋ฅด๊ธฐ์ฆˆ ์ •๋ถ€ ๊ฐ„ ํ˜‘์˜ํšŒ ์ œ8์ฐจ ํšŒ์˜์—์„œ ์–‘๊ตญ ๊ฐ„ ๋ฌด์—ญ๊ณผ ๊ฒฝ์ œ ํ˜‘๋ ฅ์„ ๊ฐ•ํ™”ํ•˜๋ ค๋Š” ๊ณต๋™ ๊ณ„ํš์˜ ๊ฐœ์š”๋ฅผ ๋…ผํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ์–‘๊ตญ ๊ฐ„ ๋งŽ์€ ๊ณ„์•ฝ์ด ์ฒด๊ฒฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์€ ๋‘์ƒจ๋ฒ ์—์„œ ํƒ€์ง€ํ‚ค์Šคํƒ„ ์ด๋ฆฌ ์ฝ”ํžˆ๋ฅด ๋ผ์ˆ ์กฐ๋‹ค์™€ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ํ˜‘๋ ฅ ํ˜‘์ • 7๊ฐœ์— ์„œ๋ช…ํ•˜๊ณ  ์–‘๊ตญ์— ์ด์ต์ด ๋  ์ „๋žต์  ํŒŒํŠธ๋„ˆ์‹ญ ๊ณผ์ •๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จํ•œ ์•ฝ์†์„ ๋…ผ์˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2020๋…„ 7์›” 17์ผ, ๋ฏผ์Šคํฌ์—์„œ ์—ด๋ฆฐ ์œ ๋ผ์‹œ์•„ ์ •๋ถ€ ๊ฐ„ ํ˜‘์˜ํšŒ์—์„œ ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์€ ๋ฏธํ•˜์ผ ๋ฏธ์Šˆ์Šคํ‹ด ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„ ์ด๋ฆฌ์™€ ๋งŒ๋‚˜ ์ฝ”๋กœ๋‚˜๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค๊ฐ์—ผ์ฆ-19 ๋Œ€์‘์— ๋„์›€์„ ์ค€ ๋Ÿฌ์‹œ์•„ ์ •๋ถ€์— ๊ฐ์‚ฌ ์ธ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์ „ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2020๋…„ 11์›” 6์ผ, ๋…๋ฆฝ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์—ฐํ•ฉ (CIS) ์ •๋ถ€ ์ •์ƒ๊ฐ„ ํ™”์ƒํšŒ์˜์—์„œ ๋งˆ๋ฏผ์€ ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„์˜ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€ ์ƒํ’ˆ ์ถœ๋‚ฉ ์ฒด๊ณ„์™€ ๋…๋ฆฝ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์—ฐํ•ฉ ๋‚ด ๋ฌด์—ญ ๊ณต๊ธ‰ ์ฒด๊ณ„์˜ ์›ํ™œํ•œ ๊ตฌ์ถ•์„ ์ œ์•ˆํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ตญ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ„ ๋†์‚ฐ๋ฌผ์˜ ํ๋ฆ„. ๋ฐฉ์‚ฌ์„ฑ ๋ฌผ์งˆ์˜ ๊ตญ๊ฒฝ์„ ๋„˜๋Š” ์šด์†ก, ์‚ฌํšŒ์˜ ๋””์ง€ํ„ธ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ ๋ถ„์•ผ์—์„œ ๋…๋ฆฝ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์—ฐํ•ฉ ํšŒ์›๊ตญ์˜ ์ •๋ณด ํ˜‘๋ ฅ, ์›์ž๋ ฅ, ๋†์—…, ์šด์†ก ๋ถ€๋ฌธ, ๊ณตํ•™ ๋ฐ ๊ธฐํƒ€ ๋ถ„์•ผ์—์„œ ํ˜‘๋ ฅ์„ ๊ฐ•ํ™”ํ•˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ๊ฒฐ์ •ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ 1965๋…„ ์ถœ์ƒ ์‚ด์•„์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„์˜ ์ด๋ฆฌ ์นด์žํ์Šคํƒ„์˜ ์ •์น˜์ธ ์•„์Šคํƒ€๋‚˜ ์ถœ์‹ 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asqar%20Mamin
Asqar Mamin
Asqar Uzaqbaiuly Mamin (, ; born 23 October 1965) is a Kazakh politician and economist who served as the Prime Minister of Kazakhstan from 2019 to 2022, resigning due to pressure from the 2022 Kazakh unrest. He served as First Deputy Prime Minister from 9 September 2016 to 21 February 2019. Previously, he was the president of the Kazakhstan Temir Zholy, the national railway company of Kazakhstan. He also serves as the president of the Kazakhstan Ice Hockey Federation, a position he assumed in 2008. A member of the ruling Kazakhstan's political party Nur Otan, Mamin previously served as รคkim of Astana from 2006 to 2008, and as Minister of Transport and Communication in Daniyal Akhmetov Cabinet from 2005 to 2006, and as First Deputy Prime Minister of the Republic of Kazakhstan from 2016 to 2019 and Prime Minister of the Republic of Kazakhstan from 2019 to 2022. Early life and career Mamin was born in Tselinograd (now Astana). He graduated from the Tselinograd Civil Engineering Institute and the Plekhanov Russian University of Economics with civil engineering and economics specialties. He began his career as an erector of Tselintyazhstroy trust. He served as deputy director general of Innovative Enterprises Union of Kazakhstan. From 1996 to 2008, he served as the first deputy รคkim of Astana, Vice Minister of Transport and Communications of the Republic of Kazakhstan, First Vice Minister of Industry and Trade of the Republic of Kazakhstan. On 21 September 2006, Mamin was appointed as the รคkim of Astana. He served that position until he became the president of Kazakhstan Temir Zholy on 17 April 2008. On 9 September 2016, he was appointed as the First Deputy Prime Minister in Sagintayev Cabinet. On 8 January 2018, Mamin joined the board of directors of the national company Kazakh Tourism. Prime Minister of Kazakhstan (2019โ€“2022) Appointment On 21 February 2019, Prime Minister Bakhytzhan Sagintayev was dismissed by President Nursultan Nazarbayev. As a result, Mamin became the Acting PM and was confirmed by the Parliament unanimously to be the new PM on 25 February. The following day on 26 February, Mamin at the meeting with the cabinet telling that the government should aim at "concrete results" that would improve of the quality of life of the population. On 10 January 2021, President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev called for the resignation of the government in accordance with the legislation on the day of the 2021 legislative elections which were held in Kazakhstan. Speculations arose regarding Mamin's fate, in which it was widely expected that he would retain it while among other likely contenders to possibly replace Mamin's prime ministerial post were seen as Bauyrjan Baibek, Nurlan Nigmatulin, Aset IsekeลŸev, Qanat Bozumbaev, Erbolat Dosaev or Baqyt Sultanov. Former president and Nur Otan chairman Nursultan Nazarbayev endorsed for Mamin's re-appointment, stating that the government has done its job contrary in other countries. On 15 January, Tokayev re-nominated Mamin to the post of the PM at the opening session of the 7th Parliament of Kazakhstan with 78 out of 99 deputies support while the rest abstained, marking it the first time since 2007, that the PM had not received unanimous support. From there, Mamin was criticised by the parliamentary opposition over his handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. At the session, Mamin thanked the deputies for support, outlining that effective measures would be taken in improving quality of life, increasing income and welfare, attracting investment, introducing new technologies, and creating workers' months. Term On 24 June 2019, a fire broke out in an ammo storage near the town of Arys in Turkistan Region, resulting in a huge explosion where three people died and 89 of them were injured. Mamin, on the behalf of Tokayev, visited the town on 29 June and from there, he ordered all repairs from the damage to be completed by 1 August 2019. For the restoration, 56.1 billion tenge was allocated, of which 27.5 billion were from the government's reserve. On 2 August, Mamin re-visited the town where he expressed gratitude to everyone who was involved in the repairs, calling it "a tremendous work" as 90% of restoration by then was completed. By 2019, the GDP growth rate in Kazakhstan accounted 4.5%, a higher than expected figure thanks to a driven growth generated by the construction, transport, trade and communications industry, contrary to as the Kazakh Government and World Bank expected the range to be 3.5 to 3.8% rate. On 24 January 2020, at the government meeting, Mamin outlined key goals in ensuring the economic growth of 4.7 to 5% for 2020 with a given task in creating 430,000 new jobs and increasing real incomes for the population. A strategic objective was unveiled which aimed at increasing the volume of fixed investments by an average of 15% annually and to bring its level to 30% of GDP by 2025. Amid the unrest in January 2022, he resigned his post. COVID-19 With the outbreak of COVID-19 in Wuhan, Mamin, at the meeting with officials on 26 January 2020 instructed several preventive measures to be implemented in order to prevent spread of the virus such as strengthening sanitary, epidemiological and migration control at the borders, travel restrictions to China, suspension of the 72 hour visa-free stay for persons arriving from China. In addition, he called for the creation of the Inter-Agency Commission on Coronavirus Non-Proliferation, chaired by Deputy PM Berdibek Saparbayev. After the reported first case of COVID-19 in the country in March 2020, a state of emergency was declared as well as the formation of the State Commission for the State Emergency Regime in which Mamin became the head of. At the first meeting of the commission, Mamin instructed the government to strengthen measures by carrying out sanitary and anti-epidemic measures in all organizations and facilities and to provide pharmacy networks with medicines and personal protective equipment, while noting that รคkims would take personal control of implementing measures. On 17 April 2020, Mamin issued a governmental decree "On certain issues of entry (exit) in the Republic of Kazakhstan and the stay of immigrants in the Republic of Kazakhstan", which suspended certain laws that granted a 30-day visa-free stay for citizens from 57 countries. On 21 April 2020, Mamin announced that the nationwide lockdowns would soften only with strict adherence to sanitary and epidemiological safety. As the coronavirus restrictions were lifted on 11 May 2020, an estimated of 4.2 million Kazakhstanis had lost their jobs. To combat the issue, Mamin instructed the Ministry of Labour, National Economy and Agriculture, as well as with the akimats, to take measures in increasing employment in all state programs and ensure the implementation of all planned indicators with the Labour Ministry monitoring the work with the รคkims. On 19 June 2020, after an increase of cases shortly after the COVID-19 restrictions were lifted, Mamin addressed the difficulties of the epidemiological situation with the enforcement of new lockdowns by Tokayev. From there, Mamin directed the cabinet ministers and regional administrations to prepare a set of new effective methods to counter the resurgence of coronavirus cases. He also ordered to boost the domestic production of personal protective equipment. At the government conference on 18 July 2020, it was declared that the situation in the country had been stabilized. Mamin ordered the cabinet officials to form in the Stabilization Fund the necessary stocks of medicines and medical products in each region to which he cited examples in Almaty, Nur-Sultan (now Astana) and Aqtรถbe Region. On 4 August 2020, with a decrease in COVID-19 cases, Mamin warned the government that the country must take steps to prevent the possible new wave of coronavirus infections that could occur in fall as he stated the increase of cases in 126 countries. He called for the continuation of intensive work in treating sick citizens and reduce the spread of the virus, as well as an awareness campaign on the need for citizens to comply with sanitary standards and quarantine requirements. At the State Commission meeting chaired by Mamin, it was decided on 13 August 2020 to phase out the lockdownsโ€“imposed from 5 July 2020โ€“starting from 17 August towards business but with limited capacity and 80% of employees were encouraged to maintain remote work format while the ban on mass events, entertainment facilities remained and the activities of cultural objects, museums, conferences, exhibitions and forums were prohibited. In September 2020, Mamin extended quarantine measures in fears of 2nd wave of infections by instructing the รคkims to keep the epidemiological situation on the ground under special control, strictly comply with all sanitary standards, and respond promptly and accurately to changes in the rate of reproduction of the virus and morbidity with measures to prepare the infrastructure and ensure safety for workers. The Healthcare and Digital Development, Innovation and Aerospace Industry ministries were ordered to step up public awareness. Foreign policy In an official visit to Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan on 11โ€“12 July 2019, Mamin met with Kyrgyz President Sooronbay Jeenbekov where they both discussed issues on bilateral trade, economic and investment cooperation. At the VIII Meeting of the Kazakh-Kyrgyz Intergovernmental Council held in Bishkek, Mamin along with Kyrgyz PM Mukhammedkalyi Abylgaziev outlined joint plans that were aimed at deepening trade and economic cooperation between the two countries. As a result, a number of agreements were signed. In Dushanbe, Mamin with Tajik PM Kokhir Rasulzoda signed seven new cooperation agreements and discussed the commitment to the course of strategic partnership which would benefit both countries. At the Eurasian Intergovernmental Council held on 17 July 2020 in Minsk, Mamin met with Russian PM Mikhail Mishustin where he thanked the Russian government for its assistance in a fight against COVID-19, telling that "we have received the competence of Russian doctors who have come, worked and work in different regions of Kazakhstan." He also expressed interest for Kazakhstan to be among the first countries in purchasing the Sputnik V vaccine. On 6 November 2020, at the video conference between the heads of governments of Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), Mamin proposed to create the National Commodity Conducting System in Kazakhstan as well as the formation trade-supply system within the CIS to ensure the smooth flow of agricultural products between the countries. A decision was adopted on the cross-border transportation of radioactive materials, information cooperation of CIS member states in the field of digital development of society, as well as decisions to strengthen cooperation in nuclear energy, agriculture, transport sector, engineering and other spheres. Personal life Askar Mamin is married to Altynai Mamina. The couple has a son and daughter: Daniyar (b. 1986) and Dinara (b. 1991). On 30 October 2020, the Internet Elite published a financial analysis on Mamin's brother, Marat, which showed him owning properties worth millions in Florida and Mamin's nephew, Ernar, operating businesses abroad in Western and Central Europe, as well as renting apartments in London. References 1965 births Living people Nur Otan politicians Prime Ministers of Kazakhstan Mayors of Astana Ministers of Transport and Communications (Kazakhstan) People from Astana Plekhanov Russian University of Economics alumni First Deputy Prime Ministers of Kazakhstan Recipients of Order of Friendship of Uzbekistan
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exile%20on%20Main%20St.
Exile on Main St.
ใ€ŠExile on Main St.ใ€‹์€ ์˜๊ตญ์˜ ๋ก ๋ฐด๋“œ ๋กค๋ง ์Šคํ†ค์Šค์˜ ์ŠคํŠœ๋””์˜ค ์Œ๋ฐ˜์ด๋‹ค. ์ด ์Œ๋ฐ˜์€ 1972๋…„ 5์›” 12์ผ ๋กค๋ง ์Šคํ†ค์Šค ๋ ˆ์ฝ”๋“œ์— ์˜ํ•ด ๋”๋ธ” ์Œ๋ฐ˜์œผ๋กœ ์ฒ˜์Œ ๋ฐœ๋งค๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ  ์˜๊ตญ์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๋งค๋œ ์ด ๋ฐด๋“œ์˜ ์—ด ๋ฒˆ์งธ ์ŠคํŠœ๋””์˜ค ์Œ๋ฐ˜์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์Œ๋ฐ˜์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์ž๋ฃŒ๋Š” ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ๋‚จ๋ถ€์— ์žˆ๋Š” ๋„ฌ์ฝ”ํŠธ๋ผ๋Š” ์ด๋ฆ„์˜ ๋นŒ๋ผ์—์„œ ์„ธ์…˜์—์„œ ์ฃผ๋กœ ๋…น์Œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐํƒ€๋ฆฌ์ŠคํŠธ ํ‚ค์Šค ๋ฆฌ์ฒ˜์ฆˆ๋Š” ๊ทธ ๋ฐด๋“œ๊ฐ€ ์„ธ๊ธˆ ํƒˆ๋ฃจ์ž๋กœ ํ•ด์™ธ์— ์‚ฌ๋Š” ๋™์•ˆ ์‚ด๋ ค๊ณ  ๋นŒ๋ผ๋ฅผ ๋นŒ๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๋กค๋ง ์Šคํ†ค์Šค๋Š” ์ด๋ฏธ ์ฃผ์š” ์ŠคํŠœ๋””์˜ค ๋ฐ–์—์„œ ๋…น์Œ ์—ฐ์Šต์„ ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ๊ทธ๋“ค์˜ ์ด์ „ ์Œ๋ฐ˜์ธ ใ€ŠSticky Fingersใ€‹์˜ ๋งŽ์€ ์›๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€, ๋ฆฌ๋“œ ์‹ฑ์–ด ๋ฏน ์žฌ๊ฑฐ์˜ ๊ณ ํ–ฅ์ธ ํ–„ํ”„์…”์ฃผ์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์Šคํƒ€๊ทธ๋กœ๋ธŒ์Šค์—์„œ, ์ด๋™์‹ ๋…น์Œ ์ŠคํŠœ๋””์˜ค๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์กŒ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์€ ๋ชจ๋ฐ”์ผ ์ŠคํŠœ๋””์˜ค๋ฅผ ๋„ฌ์ฝ”ํŠธ๋กœ ์˜ฎ๊ฒจ ๋ณ„์žฅ ์ง€ํ•˜์— ์„ค์น˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ‚ค์Šค ๋ฆฌ์ฒ˜์ฆˆ๋Š” ์œ„์ธต์— ๋ณธ๊ฐ€์—์„œ ์‚ด์•˜๊ณ , ์ข…์ข… ๋ฐด๋“œ์˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์Œ์•…๊ฐ€ ์นœ๊ตฌ๋“ค์€ ๋ฐด๋“œ์™€ ์žผ ์„ธ์…˜์„ ํ•˜๊ณ  ํŠธ๋ž™์„ ๊น”๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋…น์Œ ์ŠคํŠœ๋””์˜ค๋กœ ์ž์ฃผ ๋‚ด๋ ค์™”๋‹ค. ๋ฉค๋ฒ„๋“ค(๋‹น์‹œ ์–ด๋Š ์ •๋„์˜ ๋งŒ์ทจ ์ƒํƒœ)์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ๋‚ฎ๋งˆ๋‹ค ํฌ๊ฒŒ ๋‹ฌ๋ผ์ง€๋Š” ๋“ฑ ๋งค์ผ ๋ฐค๋งˆ๋‹ค ๋…น์Œ์ž‘์—…์ด ์ด์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ์ •๊ทœ ์ŠคํŠœ๋””์˜ค ๊ณต๊ฐ„์˜ ๊ฒฝ๊ณ„ ์—†์ด, ์„ธ์…˜์€ ์ƒ๋‹นํžˆ ๋Š์Šจํ•˜๊ณ  ์กฐ์ง์ ์ด์ง€ ์•Š์•˜์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ ๋…ธ๋ž˜ ์Šคํƒ€์ผ์˜ ํ™ฉํ™€ํ•œ ํ‘œ์™€ ์Œ๋ฐ˜์˜ ์—‰์„ฑํ•˜๊ณ  ๋Š์Šจํ•œ ๋Š๋‚Œ์„ ๋ณด์—ฌ์ค€๋‹ค. ์ด ๋…น์Œ์€ ๋กœ์Šค์•ค์ ค๋ ˆ์Šค์˜ ์„ ์…‹ ์‚ฌ์šด๋“œ ๋ ˆ์ฝ”๋“œ์˜ ์˜ค๋ฒ„๋ฅ ์„ธ์…˜์œผ๋กœ ๋งˆ๋ฌด๋ฆฌ๋์œผ๋ฉฐ ํ”ผ์•„๋‹ˆ์ŠคํŠธ ๋‹ˆํ‚ค ํ™‰ํ‚จ์Šค, ์ƒ‰์†Œํฌ๋‹ˆ์ŠคํŠธ ๋ฐ”๋น„ ํ‚ค์Šค, ๋“œ๋Ÿฌ๋จธ ์ง€๋ฏธ ๋ฐ€๋Ÿฌ, ํ˜ธ๋ฅธ ์—ฐ์ฃผ์ž ์ง ํ”„๋ผ์ด์Šค ๋“ฑ ๋ฎค์ง€์…˜๋“ค์ด ์ถ”๊ฐ€๋กœ ์ฐธ์—ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ๋‚˜์˜จ ์Œ์•…์€ ๋ธ”๋ฃจ์Šค, ๋กœํฐ๋กค, ์Šค์œ™, ์ปจํŠธ๋ฆฌ, ๊ฐ€์ŠคํŽ  ๋“ฑ์— ๋ฟŒ๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๋‘๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๊ณ , ๊ฐ€์‚ฌ๋Š” ์พŒ๋ฝ์ฃผ์˜, ์„น์Šค, ์‹œ๊ฐ„์˜ ์ฃผ์ œ๋ฅผ ํƒ๊ตฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ใ€ŠExile on Main St.ใ€‹์€ 1970๋…„๋Œ€ ๊ธ์ •์ ์ธ ๋น„ํŒ์  ์žฌ๊ฒ€ํ†  ์ด์ „์— ์—‡๊ฐˆ๋ฆฐ ํ‰๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ์ดํ›„ ๋น„ํ‰๊ฐ€๋“ค์€ ๋กค๋ง ์Šคํ†ค์Šค์˜ ์ตœ๊ณ  ์ž‘ํ’ˆ์œผ๋กœ ํ‰๊ฐ€ํ•ด ์™”์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์Œ๋ฐ˜ ๋ชฉ๋ก์—์„œ ๋†’์€ ์ˆœ์œ„๋ฅผ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด ์Œ๋ฐ˜์€ ์ž์ฃผ ์—ฐ์ฃผ๋˜๋Š” ์ฝ˜์„œํŠธ ์Šคํ…Œ์ดํ”Œ์„ ํฌํ•จํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์˜๊ตญ, ๋ฏธ๊ตญ, ์บ๋‚˜๋‹ค๋ฅผ ํฌํ•จํ•œ 6๊ฐœ๊ตญ ์ค‘ 1์œ„๋ฅผ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ•˜๋ฉฐ, 12๊ฐœ๊ตญ์—์„œ 10์œ„ ์•ˆ์— ๋“ค์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์Œ๋ฐ˜์€ ํ‚ค์Šค ๋ฆฌ์ฒ˜์ฆˆ, ์ปจํŠธ๋ฆฌ ์Œ์•… ๋ฐœ๋ผ๋“œ ใ€ˆSweet Virginiaใ€‰ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์ „์„ธ๊ณ„์ ์ธ ํ†ฑ 10 ํžˆํŠธ๊ณก์ธ ใ€ˆTumbling Diceใ€‰๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜๋กํ•œ ๋“œ๋ฌธ ๊ณก์ธ ใ€ˆHappyใ€‰๋ฅผ ํƒ„์ƒ์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. 2010๋…„ 5์›” 17์ผ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์—์„œ๋Š” ๋ฆฌ๋งˆ์Šคํ„ฐ๋“œ๋˜๊ณ  ํ™•์žฅ๋œ ๋ฒ„์ „์˜ ์Œ๋ฐ˜์ด ๋ฐœ๋งค๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ  ๋‹ค์Œ๋‚  ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์—์„œ๋Š” 10๊ฐœ์˜ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ๊ณก์ด ์ˆ˜๋ก๋œ ๋ณด๋„ˆ์Šค ๋””์Šคํฌ๊ฐ€ ๋‚˜์™”๋‹ค. ๋ฐœ๋งค ๋‹น์‹œ์—๋„ ์ด๋ก€์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋†’์€ ์ฐจํŠธ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์˜๊ตญ 1์œ„, ๋ฏธ๊ตญ 2์œ„์— ์˜ฌ๋ž๋‹ค. ๋…น์Œ ใ€ŠExile on Main St.ใ€‹์€ 1969๋…„์—์„œ 1972๋…„ ์‚ฌ์ด์— ์ž‘๊ณกํ•˜๊ณ  ๋…น์Œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฏน ์žฌ๊ฑฐ๋Š” "์•จ๋Ÿฐ ํด๋ผ์ธ๊ณผ ๊ณ„์•ฝ์„ ๋๋‚ธ ํ›„, ์šฐ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๊ทธ์—๊ฒŒ [๋” ์ด๋ฅธ ๊ณก๋“ค]์„ ์ฃผ๊ณ  ์‹ถ์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค"๋ผ๊ณ  ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋“ค์€ ใ€ŠSticky Fingersใ€‹์˜ ใ€ˆBrown Sugarใ€‰์™€ ใ€ˆWild Horsesใ€‰๋ฅผ ๊ฐ•์š”ํ–ˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์ด๋‹ค. 1969๋…„์—์„œ 1971๋…„ ์‚ฌ์ด์— ์˜๊ตญ์˜ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ์ŠคํŠœ๋””์˜ค์™€ ์žฌ๊ฑฐ์˜ ์Šคํƒ€๊ทธ๋กœ๋ธŒ์Šค ์ปจํŠธ๋ฆฌ ํ•˜์šฐ์Šค์—์„œ ใ€ŠSticky Fingersใ€‹์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ์„ธ์…˜ ๋™์•ˆ ๋งŽ์€ ํŠธ๋ž™์ด ๋…น์Œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1971๋…„ ๋ด„, ๋กค๋ง ์Šคํ†ค์Šค๋Š” ๊ทธ๋“ค์ด ๋นš์ง„ ๋ˆ์„ ์„ธ๊ธˆ์œผ๋กœ ์“ฐ๊ณ  ์ •๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ๊ทธ๋“ค์˜ ์ž์‚ฐ์„ ๋ชฐ์ˆ˜ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์ „์— ์˜๊ตญ์„ ๋– ๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ์žฌ๊ฑฐ๋Š” ์ƒˆ ์‹ ๋ถ€ ๋น„์•™์นด์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ํŒŒ๋ฆฌ์— ์ •์ฐฉํ–ˆ๊ณ  ๊ธฐํƒ€๋ฆฌ์ŠคํŠธ ํ‚ค์Šค ๋ฆฌ์ฒ˜์ฆˆ๋Š” ๋‹ˆ์Šค ๊ทผ์ฒ˜์˜ ๋นŒํ”„๋ž‘์Šˆ์‰ฌ๋ฅด๋ฉ”๋ฅด์— ์žˆ๋Š” ๋„ฌ์ฝ”ํŠธ๋ผ๋Š” ๋ณ„์žฅ์„ ๋นŒ๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋ฉค๋ฒ„๋“ค์€ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ๋‚จ๋ถ€์— ์ •์ฐฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋“ค์ด ์Œ๋ฐ˜ ์ž‘์—…์„ ๊ณ„์†ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์ ๋‹นํ•œ ๋…น์Œ์‹ค์„ ์ฐพ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์—†์—ˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๋„ฌ์ฝ”ํŠธ์˜ ๋ฆฌ์ฒ˜์ฆˆ์˜ ์ง€ํ•˜์‹ค์€ ๋ฐด๋“œ์˜ ์ด๋™์‹ ๋…น์Œ ํŠธ๋Ÿญ์„ ์ด์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ์ž„์‹œ ์ŠคํŠœ๋””์˜ค๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์Œ์•…๊ณผ ๊ฐ€์‚ฌ ์˜ฌ๋ฎค์ง์€ ใ€ŠExile on Main St.ใ€‹์„ "ํญ๋„“๊ณ  ์ง€์นœ ๋”๋ธ” ์Œ๋ฐ˜"์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถ€๋ฅด๋ฉฐ, ์ด ์Œ๋ฐ˜์€ ๋กœํฐ๋กค, ๋ธ”๋ฃจ์Šค, ์ปจํŠธ๋ฆฌ, ๊ฐ€์ŠคํŽ  ์Šคํƒ€์ผ์„ ์•„์šฐ๋ฅด๋Š” "์–ด๋‘์šด, ๋ฐ€๋„ ๋†’์€ ์žผ์˜ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ"๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ฌ˜์‚ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋น„๋ก ์ด ์Œ๋ฐ˜์ด ์ข…์ข… ๋ฆฌ์ฒ˜์ฆˆ์˜ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์ข‹์€ ์ˆœ๊ฐ„์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ฌ˜์‚ฌ๋˜์ง€๋งŒ, ใ€ŠExile on Main St.ใ€‹์€ ์ข…์ข… ์ƒ๋™๊ฐ ์žˆ๊ณ  ๋ฟŒ๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ก ์‚ฌ์šด๋“œ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋น„์ „์„ ๋ฐ˜์˜ํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ƒ๊ฐ๋˜๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์—, ์žฌ๊ฑฐ๋Š” ์ด๋ฏธ ์Œ๋ฐ˜ ๋ฐœ๋งค ๋‹น์‹œ ๋ช‡ ๋ฒˆ์˜ ์ธํ„ฐ๋ทฐ์—์„œ ๋กœํฐ๋กค๋กœ ์ง€๋ฃจํ•จ์„ ํ‘œํ˜„ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ณก ๋ชฉ๋ก ๋ชจ๋“  ๊ณก๋“ค์€ ํŠน๋ณ„ํ•œ ์–ธ๊ธ‰์ด ์—†๋Š” ํ•œ ๋ฏน ์žฌ๊ฑฐ์™€ ํ‚ค์Šค ๋ฆฌ์ฒ˜์ฆˆ์— ์˜ํ•ด ์ž‘์‚ฌ/์ž‘๊ณกํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ธ์ฆ ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ Exile on Main St on RollingStones.com 1972๋…„ ์Œ๋ฐ˜ ๋กค๋ง ์Šคํ†ค์Šค์˜ ์Œ๋ฐ˜ ์• ํ‹€๋žœํ‹ฑ ๋ ˆ์ฝ”๋“œ ์Œ๋ฐ˜ ๋ฒ„์ง„ ๋ ˆ์ฝ”๋“œ ์Œ๋ฐ˜ ์ง€๋ฏธ ๋ฐ€๋Ÿฌ๊ฐ€ ํ”„๋กœ๋“€์‹ฑํ•œ ์Œ๋ฐ˜ ํ™ˆ ์ŠคํŠœ๋””์˜ค์—์„œ ๋…น์Œํ•œ ์Œ๋ฐ˜
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exile%20on%20Main%20St.
Exile on Main St.
Exile on Main St. is the 10th British and 12th American studio album by the English rock band the Rolling Stones, released on 12 May 1972 by Rolling Stones Records. It is viewed as a culmination of a string of the band's most critically successful albums, following the releases of Beggars Banquet (1968), Let It Bleed (1969) and Sticky Fingers (1971). The album is known for its murky, inconsistent sound due to more disjointed musicianship and production, along with a party-like atmosphere heard in several tracks. Recording began in 1969 at Olympic Studios in London during sessions for Sticky Fingers, with the main sessions beginning in mid-1971 at a rented villa in the South of France named Nellcรดte after the band became tax exiles. Due to the lack of a professional studio nearby, they worked with a mobile recording studio and recorded in-house. The loose and unorganised Nellcรดte sessions went on for hours into the night, with personnel varying greatly from day to day. Recording was completed with overdub sessions at Sunset Sound in Los Angeles and included additional musicians such as pianist Nicky Hopkins, saxophonist Bobby Keys, drummer and producer Jimmy Miller, and horn player Jim Price. The results produced enough songs for the Stones' first double album. The band continued a back-to-basics direction heard in Sticky Fingers after the experimental instrumentation of previous albums, yet Exile exhibited a wider range of influences in blues, rock and roll, swing, country and gospel, while the lyrics explored themes related to hedonism, sex and time. The album contains frequently-performed concert staples and topped the charts in six countries, including the UK, US and Canada. It included the singles "Happy", which featured lead vocals from Keith Richards, country music ballad "Sweet Virginia", and worldwide top-ten hit "Tumbling Dice". The album's artwork, a collage of various images, reflects the Rolling Stones' prideful rebellion. After its release, the Stones embarked on an American tour, gaining infamy for the riotous audience and performances. Exile on Main St. was originally met with mixed reviews before receiving strong reassessments by the end of the 1970s. It has since been recognized as a pivotal hard rock album, viewed by many critics as the Rolling Stones' best work and as one of the greatest albums of all time. Rolling Stone magazine has ranked the album number 7 on its list of the "500 Greatest Albums of All Time" in 2003 and 2012, and dropping to number 14 in the 2020 edition, consistently as the highest-rated Rolling Stones album on the list. In 2012, the album was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame, the band's fourth album to be inducted. A remastered and expanded version of the album was released in 2010 featuring a bonus disc with 10 new tracks. Unusual for a re-release, it also charted highly at the time of its release, reaching number one in the UK and number two in the US. Recording Early sessions Exile on Main St. was written and recorded between 1969 and 1972. Mick Jagger said "After we got out of our contract with Allen Klein, we didn't want to give him [those earlier tracks]," as they were forced to do with "Brown Sugar" and "Wild Horses" from Sticky Fingers (1971). Many tracks were recorded between 1969 and 1971 at Olympic Studios and Jagger's Stargroves country house in East Woodhay during sessions for Sticky Fingers. By the spring of 1971 the Rolling Stones had spent the money they owed in taxes and left Britain before the government could seize their assets. Jagger settled in Paris with his new bride Bianca, and guitarist Keith Richards rented a villa, Nellcรดte, in Villefranche-sur-Mer, near Nice. The other members settled in the south of France. As a suitable recording studio could not be found where they could continue work on the album, Richards' basement at Nellcรดte became a makeshift studio using the band's mobile recording truck. Nellcรดte Recording began in earnest sometime near the middle of June. Bassist Bill Wyman recalls the band working all night, every night, from eight in the evening until three the following morning for the rest of the month. Wyman said of that period, "Not everyone turned up every night. This was, for me, one of the major frustrations of this whole period. For our previous two albums we had worked well and listened to producer Jimmy Miller. At Nellcรดte things were very different and it took me a while to understand why." By this time Richards had begun a daily habit of using heroin. Thousands of pounds' worth of heroin flowed through the mansion each week, along with visitors such as William S. Burroughs, Terry Southern, Gram Parsons, John Lennon, and Marshall Chess, the son of famous blues impresario Leonard Chess, who had been recently recruited to serve as president of the Rolling Stones' new eponymous record label. Parsons was asked to leave Nellcรดte in early July 1971, the result of his obnoxious behavior and an attempt by Richards to clean the house of drug users as the result of pressure from the French police. Richards' substance abuse frequently prevented him from attending the sessions that continued in his basement, while Jagger and Wyman were often unable to attend sessions for other reasons. This often left the band in the position of having to record in altered forms. A notable instance was the recording of one of Richards' most famous songs, "Happy". Recorded in the basement, Richards said in 1982, Happy' was something I did because I was for one time early for a session. There was Bobby Keys and Jimmy Miller. We had nothing to do and had suddenly picked up the guitar and played this riff. So we cut it and it's the record, it's the same. We cut the original track with a baritone sax, a guitar and Jimmy Miller on drums. And the rest of it is built up over that track. It was just an afternoon jam that everybody said, 'Wow, yeah, work on it. The basic band for the Nellcรดte sessions consisted of Richards, Keys, Mick Taylor, Charlie Watts, Nicky Hopkins, Miller (who covered for the absent Watts on the aforementioned "Happy" and "Shine a Light"), and Jagger when he was available. Wyman did not like the ambiance of Richards' villa and sat out many of the French sessions. Although Wyman is credited on only eight songs of the released album, he told Bass Player magazine that the credits are incorrect and that he actually played on more tracks than that. The other bass parts were credited to Taylor, Richards and session bassist Bill Plummer. Wyman noted in his memoir Stone Alone that there was a division between the band members and associates who freely indulged in drugs (Richards, Miller, Keys, Taylor and engineer Andy Johns) and those who abstained to varying degrees (Wyman, Watts and Jagger). Los Angeles Work on basic tracks (including "Rocks Off", "Rip This Joint", "Casino Boogie", "Tumbling Dice", "Torn and Frayed", "Happy", "Turd on the Run", "Ventilator Blues" and "Soul Survivor") began in the basement of Nellcรดte and was taken to Sunset Sound Recorders in Los Angeles, where overdubs (all lead and backing vocals, all guitar and bass overdubs) were added during sessions that meandered from December 1971 until March 1972. Although Jagger was frequently missing from Nellcรดte, he took charge during the second stage of recording in Los Angeles, arranging for the keyboardists Billy Preston and Dr. John and the cream of the city's session backup vocalists to record layers of overdubs. The final gospel-inflected arrangements of "Tumbling Dice", "Loving Cup", "Let It Loose" and "Shine a Light" were inspired by Jagger, Preston, and Watts' visit to a local evangelical church where Aretha Franklin was recording what would become the live album/movie Amazing Grace. The extended recording sessions and differing methods on the part of Jagger and Richards reflected the growing disparity in their personal lives. During the making of the album, Jagger had married Bianca, followed closely by the birth of their only child, Jade, in October 1971. Richards was firmly attached to his girlfriend Anita Pallenberg, yet both were in the throes of heroin addiction, which Richards would not overcome until the turn of the decade. Music and lyrics According to Bill Janovitz, in his account of the album for the 33โ…“ book series, Exile on Main St. features "a seemingly infinite amount of subtle (and not so subtle) variations on rock & roll โ€“ a form that had seemed to be severely limited to basic, guitar-driven music." Music biographer John Perry writes that the Rolling Stones had developed a style of hard rock for the album that is "entirely modern yet rooted in 1950s rock & roll and 1930sโ€“1940s swing". Stephen Thomas Erlewine, writing for AllMusic, described Exile on Main St. as "a sprawling, weary double album" featuring "a series of dark, dense jams" that encompass rock and roll, blues, country, and gospel styles. Rolling Stone writer Richard Gehr compares the album to outlaw music and observes a strong influence of music from the American South in its "loose-limbed" explorations of 1950s rock, African-American soul, and gospel country. Although Exile is often thought to reflect Richards' vision for a raw, rootsy rock sound, Jagger was already expressing his boredom with rock and roll in several interviews at the time of the album's release. Jagger's stance on Exiles rock and roll sound at the time is interpreted by the music academic Barry J. Faulk to seemingly "signal the end of the Stones' conscious attempt to revive American-style roots rock". With Richards' effectiveness seriously undermined by his dependence on heroin, the group's subsequent 1970s releases โ€“ directed largely by Jagger โ€“ would experiment to varying degrees with other musical genres, moving away from the rootsy influences of Exile on Main St. According to Robert Christgau, Exile on Main St. expands on the hedonistic themes the band had explored on previous albums such as Sticky Fingers. As he writes, "It piled all the old themes โ€“ sex as power, sex as love, sex as pleasure, distance, craziness, release โ€“ on top of an obsession with time that was more than appropriate in men pushing 30 who were still committed to what was once considered youth music." Packaging For Exile on Main St., Mick Jagger wanted an album cover that reflected the band as "runaway outlaws using the blues as its weapon against the world", showcasing "feeling of joyful isolation, grinning in the face of a scary and unknown future". As the band finished the album in Los Angeles, they approached designer John Van Hamersveld and his photographer partner Norman Seeff, and also invited documentary photographer Robert Frank. The same day Seeff photographed the Stones at their Bel Air mansion, Frank took Jagger for photographs at Los Angeles' Main Street. The location was the 500 block near the Leonide Hotel. At the time there was a pawnshop, a shoeshine business and a pornographic theatre (The Galway Theatre) at the location. Still, Van Hamersveld and Jagger chose the cover image from an already existing Frank photograph, an outtake from his seminal 1958 book The Americans. Named "Tattoo Parlor" but possibly taken from Hubert's Dime museum in New York City, the image is a collage of circus performers and freaks, such as "Three Ball Charlie", a 1930s sideshow performer from Humboldt, Nebraska, who holds three balls (a tennis ball, a golf ball, and a "5" billiard ball) in his mouth; Joe "The Human Corkscrew" Allen, pictured in a postcard-style advertisement, a contortionist with the ability to wiggle and twist through a hoop; and Hezekiah Trambles, "The Congo Jungle Freak", a man who dressed as an African savage, in a picture taken by the then recently deceased Diane Arbus. The Seeff pictures were repurposed as 12 perforated postcards inside the sleeve, while Frank's Main Street photographs were used in the gatefold and back cover collage made by Van Hamersveld, which features other pictures Frank took of the band and their crewโ€”including their assistant Chris O'Dell, a former acquaintance of Van Hamersveld who brought him to the Stonesโ€”and other The Americans outtakes. Release and reception Exile on Main St. was first released on 12 May 1972 as a double album by Rolling Stones Records. It was the band's tenth studio album released in the United Kingdom. Preceded by the UK (number 5) and US (number 7) Top 10 hit "Tumbling Dice", Exile on Main St was an immediate commercial success, reaching number 1 worldwide just as the band embarked on their celebrated 1972 American Tour. Their first American tour in three years, it featured many songs from the new album. The Richards-sung "Happy" was released as a second single to capitalize on the tour; it would peak at number 22 in the United States in August. After the release of Exile on Main St., Allen Klein sued the Rolling Stones for breach of settlement because five songs on the album were composed while Jagger and Richards were under contract with his company, ABKCO: "Sweet Virginia", "Loving Cup", "All Down the Line", "Shine a Light" and "Stop Breaking Down" (written by Robert Johnson but re-interpreted by Jagger and Richards). ABKCO acquired publishing rights to the songs, giving it a share of the royalties from Exile on Main St., and was able to release another album of Rolling Stones songs, More Hot Rocks (Big Hits & Fazed Cookies). Exile on Main St. was not well received by some contemporary critics, who found the quality of the songs inconsistent. Reviewing in July 1972 for Rolling Stone, Lenny Kaye said the record has "a tight focus on basic components of the Stones' sound as we've always known it," including blues-based rock music with a "pervading feeling of blackness". However, he added that the uneven quality of songs means "the great Stones album of their mature period is yet to come". Richard Williams of Melody Maker was more enthusiastic and deemed it the band's best album, writing that it will "take its place in history" as the music "utterly repulses the sneers and arrows of outraged put down artists. Once and for all, it answers any questions about their ability as rock 'n' rollers." Geoffrey Cannon of The Guardian agreed, stating: "Exile On Main Street will go down as [the Stones'] classic album, made at the height of their musical powers and self-confidence." The NMEs Roy Carr gave additional praise to the tracks, praising the styles present, the performances of the band and the lyrical content. In a year-end list for Newsday, Christgau named it the best album of 1972, stating the "fagged-out masterpiece" marks the peak of rock music for the year as it "explored new depths of record-studio murk, burying Mick's voice under layers of cynicism, angst and ennui". Legacy and reappraisal Critics later reassessed Exile on Main St. favourably, and by the late 1970s it had become viewed as the Rolling Stones' greatest album. In retrospect, Janovitz called it "the greatest, most soulful, rock & roll record ever made" because it seamlessly distills "perhaps all the essential elements of rock & roll up to 1971, if not beyond". He added that it is "the single greatest rock & roll record of all time", distinguished from other contending albums by the Beatles or Pet Sounds, which are more so "brilliant pop records". On the response to the album, Richards said, "When [Exile] came out it didn't sell particularly well at the beginning, and it was also pretty much universally panned. But within a few years the people who had written the reviews saying it was a piece of crap were extolling it as the best frigging album in the world." In 2003, Jagger said, "Exile is not one of my favourite albums, although I think the record does have a particular feeling. I'm not too sure how great the songs are, but put together it's a nice piece. However, when I listen to Exile it has some of the worst mixes I've ever heard. I'd love to remix the record, not just because of the vocals, but because generally I think it sounds lousy. At the time Jimmy Miller was not functioning properly. I had to finish the whole record myself, because otherwise there were just these drunks and junkies. Of course I'm ultimately responsible for it, but it's really not good and there's no concerted effort or intention." Jagger also stated he did not understand the praise among Rolling Stones fans because the album did not yield many hits. Richards also said, "Exile was a double album. And because it's a double album you're going to be hitting different areas, including 'D for Down', and the Stones really felt like exiles. We didn't start off intending to make a double album; we just went down to the south of France to make an album and by the time we'd finished we said, 'We want to put it all out.' The point is that the Stones had reached a point where we no longer had to do what we were told to do. Around the time Andrew Oldham left us, we'd done our time, things were changing and I was no longer interested in hitting Number One in the charts every time. What I want to do is good shitโ€”if it's good they'll get it some time down the road." Accolades Exile on Main St. has been ranked on various lists as one of the greatest albums of all time. In 1998, Q magazine readers voted Exile on Main St the 42nd-greatest album of all time, while in 2000 the same magazine placed it at number 3 in its list of the 100 Greatest British Albums Ever. In 1987 it was ranked third on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the best 100 albums of the period 1967โ€“1987. In 1993, Entertainment Weekly named it number 1 on their list of "100 Greatest CDs". In 2003, Pitchfork ranked it number 11 on their Top 100 Albums of the 1970s. In 2001, the TV network VH1 placed it at number 12 on their greatest albums list. In 2003, the album was ranked 7th on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time, maintaining the rating in a 2012 revised list, but dropping to number 14 on the 2020 revised edition of the list, the highest Rolling Stones album ranked on the list. In 2005, Exile on Main St. was ranked number 286 in Rock Hards book The 500 Greatest Rock & Metal Albums of All Time. The album was ranked number 19 on the October 2006 issue of Guitar World magazine's list of the greatest 100 guitar albums of all time. In 2007, the National Association of Recording Merchandisers (NARM) and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame placed the album number 6 on the "Definitive 200" list of albums that "every music lover should own." Its re-release has a highest normalised rating of 100 on Metacritic based on seven professional reviews, a distinction it shares with other re-releases such as London Calling by The Clash. The album was also included in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die. In 2012, the album was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame. It was voted number 35 in the 3rd edition of English writer Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums (2000). In popular culture The album and its title have been referenced several times in popular culture. The garage-trash noise-rock band Pussy Galore released a complete cover of the album, titled Exile on Main St., that reflected their own personal and musical interpretations of the songs, as opposed to paying tribute to the original sound. John Duffy of AllMusic rated the album three and a half out of five stars, and NME ranked it number 253 in "The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time". The British acid house group Alabama 3 titled its debut album Exile on Coldharbour Lane. Perhaps the most notable reference comes from indie singer/songwriter Liz Phair's debut album Exile in Guyville. Phair herself claimed the album to be a direct song-by-song "response" of sorts to Exile on Main St. Post-grunge band Matchbox Twenty paid homage to this album by titling their 2007 retrospective Exile on Mainstream. Industrial rock band Chemlab named the leading track from their album East Side Militia, "Exile on Mainline", in reference to the Rolling Stones album. The Departed, a 2006 film by Martin Scorsese, features a scene in which Bill Costigan mails Madolyn Madden an Exile on Main St jewel case containing an incriminating recording of Colin Sullivan conspiring with crime boss Frank Costello. The same film also uses the song "Let It Loose" from the album. On 31 October 2009, American rock band Phish covered Exile on Main St in its entirety as the "musical costume" for their Halloween show in Indio, California. The first episode of the fourth season of the Showtime program Californication is called "Exile on Main St". A later episode in the sixth season featured a guest character waking up next to her musician boyfriend who had died from an overdose in the night in room "1009," a reference to the lyrics of "Shine a Light". The same song was also played by Tim Minchin's character in the following episode. The first episode of the sixth season of the hit CW show Supernatural is titled "Exile on Main Street". Reissues In 1994, Exile on Main St was remastered and reissued by Virgin Records, along with the rest of the post-Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out catalogue, after the company acquired the masters to the band's output on its own label. This remaster was initially released in a Collector's Edition CD, which replicated in miniature many elements of the original vinyl album packaging, including the postcards insert. Universal Music, which remastered and re-released the rest of the post-1970 Rolling Stones catalogue in 2009, issued a new remastering of Exile on Main St. in Europe on 17 May 2010 and in the United States the next day, featuring a bonus disc with ten new tracks. Of the ten bonus tracks, only two are undoctored outtakes from the original sessions: an early version of "Tumbling Dice" entitled "Good Time Women", and "Soul Survivor", the latter featuring a Richards lead vocal (with dummy/placeholder lyrics). The other tracks received overdubs just prior to release on this package, with new lead vocals by Jagger on all except "I'm Not Signifying", backing vocals in places by past and current Stones tour singers Cindy Mizelle and Lisa Fischer, and several new guitar parts by Keith Richards, and Mick Taylor on "Plundered My Soul." On the selection of tracks, Richards said, "Well, basically it's the record and a few tracks we found when we were plundering the vaults. Listening back to everything we said, 'Well, this would be an interesting addition.. All harmonica heard was added during 2010 sessions by Jagger, and Richards added a new guitar lead on "So Divine". "Title 5" is not an actual outtake from the sessions for Exile, it is an outtake from early 1967 sessions. It features the MRB effect (mid-range boost) from a Vox Conqueror or Supreme amp, as used by Richards in 1967 and 1968. "Loving Cup" is an outtake from early June 1969, but is actually an edit from two outtakes. The first 2 minutes and 12 seconds is the well-known 'drunk' version, as has been available on bootlegs since the early 1990s, but the second part is spliced from a second, previously unknown take. "Following the River" features Jagger overdubs on a previously uncirculated track featuring Nicky Hopkins on piano. The re-released album entered at number one in the UK charts, almost 38 years to the week after it first occupied that position. The album also re-entered at number two in the US charts selling 76,000 during the first week. The bonus disc, available separately as Exile on Main St Rarities Edition exclusively in the US at Target also charted, debuting at number 27 with 15,000 copies sold. It was released once again in 2011 by Universal Music Enterprises in a Japanese-only SHM-SACD version. Track listing Personnel Sources: The Rolling Stones Mick Jagger โ€“ lead vocals, backing vocals; harmonica ; electric guitar ; tambourine Keith Richards โ€“ guitars, backing vocals; bass guitar ; electric piano ; lead vocals Mick Taylor โ€“ guitars ; bass guitar ; backing vocals Bill Wyman โ€“ bass guitar Charlie Watts โ€“ drums Additional personnel Nicky Hopkins โ€“ keyboards Bobby Keys โ€“ tenor saxophone; baritone saxophone Jim Price โ€“ trumpet, trombone; organ Ian Stewart โ€“ piano Jimmy Miller โ€“ percussion , drums Bill Plummer โ€“ double bass Billy Preston โ€“ piano, organ Al Perkins โ€“ pedal steel guitar Richard "Didymus" Washington โ€“ marimba Venetta Fields, Clydie King โ€“ backing vocals Joe Greene โ€“ backing vocals Jerry Kirkland โ€“ backing vocals Shirley Goodman, Tami Lynn, Mac Rebennack โ€” backing vocals Kathi McDonald โ€“ backing vocals Technical Glyn Johns โ€“ engineer Andy Johns โ€“ engineer Joe Zagarino โ€“ engineer Jeremy Gee โ€“ engineer Doug Sax โ€“ mastering Robert Frank โ€“ cover photography and concept John Van Hamersveld โ€“ layout design Norman Seeff โ€“ layout design 2010 bonus disc Keith Richards โ€“ lead vocals Lisa Fischer, Cindy Mizelle โ€“ backing vocals David Campbell โ€“ string arrangement Don Was and The Glimmer Twins โ€“ production Bob Clearmountain โ€“ mixing Charts Weekly charts Year-end charts Certifications See also Album era References Bibliography External links Exile on Main St on RollingStones.com 1972 albums The Rolling Stones albums Rolling Stones Records albums Albums produced by Jimmy Miller Albums recorded at Olympic Sound Studios Albums recorded at Sunset Sound Recorders Albums with cover art by John Van Hamersveld Atlantic Records albums Virgin Records albums Country rock albums by British artists Soul albums by British artists Gospel albums by British artists Rock-and-roll albums Albums recorded in a home studio Country blues albums
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%9C%A0%ED%83%9C%EA%B3%B5
์œ ํƒœ๊ณต
์œ ํƒœ๊ณต(ๅŠ‰ๅคชๅ…ฌ, ? ~ ๊ธฐ์›์ „ 197๋…„)์€ ์ „ํ•œ์„ ๊ฑด๊ตญํ•œ ๊ณ ์ œ(้ซ˜ๅธ) ์œ ๋ฐฉ(ๅŠ‰้‚ฆ)์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€์ด๋‹ค. ใ€Š์‚ฌ๊ธฐใ€‹์—์„œ๋Š” ๊ทธ์˜ ์ด๋ฆ„์„ ๋”ฐ๋กœ ์ „ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์œผ๋ฉฐ, ํ›„๋Œ€์˜ ์ฃผ์„์—๋Š” ์ง‘๊ฐ€(ๅŸทๅ˜‰) ํ˜น์€ ๋‹จ(็…“)์ด๋ผ๊ณ ๋„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํŒจํ˜„(ๆฒ›็ธฃ) ํ’์(่ฑ้‚‘) ์ถœ์‹ ์œผ๋กœ, ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€์˜ ์ด๋ฆ„์€ ์ธ(ไป), ์กฐ๋ถ€์˜ ์ด๋ฆ„์€ ์ฒญ(ๆทธ)์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์•„๋“ค์ธ ์œ ๋ฐฉ์ด ์„œ์ดˆ์˜ ํ•ญ์šฐ์™€ ์‹ธ์šฐ๋˜ ์ดˆํ•œ์ „์Ÿ ๋‹น์‹œ์— ํ•ญ์šฐ์˜ ํฌ๋กœ๊ฐ€ ๋˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ํ›„์— ํ’€๋ ค๋‚˜ ์œ ๋ฐฉ์˜ ๋ณด์‚ดํ•Œ์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ ์žฅ์•ˆ์œผ๋กœ ์˜ฎ๊ฒจ์™€ ์‚ด๋ฉด์„œ ํƒœ์ƒํ™ฉ(ๅคชไธŠ็š‡)์˜ ์นญํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์•˜์œผ๋ฉฐ ๊ธฐ์›์ „ 197๋…„์— ์‚ฌ๋งํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ƒ์•  ๊ฐ€์กฑ ์œ ํƒœ๊ณต์€ ์œ ์˜จ(ๅŠ‰ๅชผ)์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์—ฌ์ธ๊ณผ ๊ฒฐํ˜ผํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ ๋ง์•„๋“ค์ธ ์œ ๋ฐฑ, ๋‘˜์งธ ์•„๋“ค์ธ ์œ ์ค‘์„ ๋‚ณ์•˜๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ ์–ด๋Š๋‚ ์€ ์œ ์˜จ์ด ์—ฐ๋ชป๊ฐ€์—์„œ ์‰ฌ๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ๊ฟˆ์†์—์„œ ์‹ ์„ ๋งŒ๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ์ด๋•Œ ์ฒœ๋‘ฅ์ด ์šธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๋ฒผ๋ฝ์ด ์น˜๋”๋‹ˆ ํ•˜๋Š˜์ด ๊นœ๊นœํ•ด์กŒ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์œ ํƒœ๊ณต์ด ๊ฐ€์„œ ๋ณด๋‹ˆ ๊ต๋ฃก(่›Ÿ้พ)์ด ์œ ์˜จ์˜ ๋ชธ ์œ„์— ์˜ฌ๋ผํƒ€ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ ์œ ์˜จ์ด ์ž„์‹ ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์–ด์„œ ์•„๋“ค์„ ๋‚ณ์•˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ๊ทธ ์ด๋ฆ„์ด ์œ ๊ณ„(ๅŠ‰ๅญฃ)๋ผ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ์œ ๊ณ„๊ฐ€ ๋ฐ”๋กœ ํ›—๋‚ ์˜ ์œ ๋ฐฉ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํฌ๋กœ์ƒํ™œ ๊ธฐ์›์ „ 205๋…„ 4์›”, ์œ ๋ฐฉ์ด ํŒฝ์„ฑ(ๅฝญๅŸŽ)์—์„œ ํ•ญ์šฐ์—๊ฒŒ ํฌ๊ฒŒ ํŒจํ•˜์˜€์„ ๋•Œ์— ํ•ญ์šฐ๋Š” ์œ ๋ฐฉ์˜ ๊ณ ํ–ฅ์ธ ํŒจํ˜„์— ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์„ ๋ณด๋‚ด ๊ทธ๊ณณ์— ๋จธ๋ฌผ๋˜ ์œ ๋ฐฉ์˜ ๊ฐ€์กฑ๋“ค์„ ์žก์œผ๋ ค ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด๋•Œ ์œ ๋ฐฉ์˜ ์ˆ˜๋ ˆ๋ฅผ ๋ชฐ๋˜ ํ•˜ํ›„์˜์ด ์œ ํƒœ๊ณต๊ณผ ์—ฌํ›„๋ฅผ ์ฐพ์œผ๋ ค ํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ์ด๋ฏธ ์œ ๋ฐฉ์˜ ๊ฐ€์กฑ๋“ค์ด ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋‹ฌ์•„๋‚œ ํ›„์˜€๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์‹คํŒจํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํ•œํŽธ ์ด๋•Œ์— ์‹ฌ์ด๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ์œ ํƒœ๊ณต๊ณผ ์—ฌํ›„ ๋“ฑ์„ ๋ชจ์‹œ๊ณ  ์ƒ›๊ธธ์„ ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์œ ๋ฐฉ์„ ๋”ฐ๋ผ๋‚˜์…”๋ ค๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ํ•ญ์šฐ์˜ ๊ตฐ์‚ฌ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ๋ถ™์žกํ˜”๋‹ค. ํ•ญ์šฐ๋Š” ์ด๋“ค์„ ํฌ๋กœ๋กœ ์‚ผ์•„์„œ ๊ตฐ์˜์— ๋‘๊ณ  ๋‹ค๋…”๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ ์œ ๋ฐฉ์€ 8์›”์— ์„ค๊ตฌยท์™•ํก ๋“ฑ์„ ๋ณด๋‚ด ์œ ํƒœ๊ณต๊ณผ ์—ฌํ›„๋ฅผ ๊ตฌ์ถœํ•˜๋ ค ํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ์ดˆ๋‚˜๋ผ ์ธก์—์„œ ๊ตฐ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๋ณด๋‚ด์„œ ๋ง‰์•˜๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์‹คํŒจํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ธฐ์›์ „ 203๋…„, ์œ ๋ฐฉ๊ณผ ํ•ญ์šฐ๊ฐ€ ๊ด‘๋ฌด์‚ฐ(ๅปฃๆญฆๅฑฑ)์—์„œ ๋Œ€์น˜ํ•˜์˜€๋Š”๋ฐ, ํ•ญ์šฐ๊ฐ€ ์œ ๋ฐฉ์—๊ฒŒ ํ•ญ๋ณตํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์œผ๋ฉด ์œ ํƒœ๊ณต์„ ์‚ถ์•„์„œ ์ฃฝ์—ฌ๋ฒ„๋ฆฌ๊ฒ ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ˜‘๋ฐ•ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์œ ๋ฐฉ์ด ์ด์— ์‘ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ์˜คํžˆ๋ ค ํ•ญ์šฐ๋ฅผ ๋„๋ฐœํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ "๋‚ด๊ฐ€ ํ•ญ์šฐ ๋„ˆ์™€ ๋ถ๋ฉดํ•˜์—ฌ ํšŒ์™•์˜ ๋ช…์„ ๋ฐ›๋“ค ๋•Œ ํ˜•์ œ๊ฐ€ ๋˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ์•ฝ์†ํ–ˆ์œผ๋‹ˆ ๋‚ด ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€๊ฐ€ ๊ณง ๋„ค ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€๋‹ค. ๊ผญ ๋„ค ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€๋ฅผ ์‚ถ์•„ ์ฃฝ์—ฌ์•ผ๊ฒ ๋‹ค๋ฉด ๋‚˜ํ•œํ…Œ๋„ ๊ตญ๋ฌผ์ด๋ผ๋„ ํ•œ ๊ทธ๋ฆ‡ ๋‚˜๋ˆ ์ฃผ๊ธฐ ๋ฐ”๋ž€๋‹ค."๋ผ ๋งํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด์— ๋ถ„๋…ธํ•œ ํ•ญ์šฐ๊ฐ€ ์œ ํƒœ๊ณต์„ ์ฃฝ์ด๋ ค ํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ํ•ญ๋ฐฑ์ด ๋งŒ๋ฅ˜ํ•˜์ž ๊ทธ๋งŒ๋‘์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋•Œ์— ํ•ญ์šฐ๋Š” ์‹๋Ÿ‰์ด ๊ณ ๊ฐˆ๋˜์–ด ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌํ•ด์กŒ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์œ ๋ฐฉ์ด ์œก๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ๋ณด๋‚ด ํƒœ๊ณต์„ ํ’€์–ด์ค„ ๊ฒƒ์„ ์ฒญํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ๋“ฃ์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ์ž ์œ ๋ฐฉ์ด ๋‹ค์‹œ ํ›„๊ณต(ไพฏๅ…ฌ)์„ ๋ณด๋‚ด ํ•ญ์šฐ๋ฅผ ์„ค๋“ํ•˜์ž ํ•ญ์šฐ๋Š” ๊ทธ ์กฐ๊ฑด์œผ๋กœ ํ•œ๋‚˜๋ผ์™€ ์ดˆ๋‚˜๋ผ๊ฐ€ ํ™๊ตฌ(้ดปๆบ)๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ทธ ์„œ์ชฝ๊ณผ ๋™์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ ๋•…์„ ๋‚˜๋ˆ„์–ด ๊ฐ€์งˆ ๊ฒƒ์„ ์š”๊ตฌํ•˜์—ฌ ๋งน์•ฝ์ด ์„ฑ๋ฆฝ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธํ•ด 9์›”์— ์œ ํƒœ๊ณต๊ณผ ์—ฌํ›„๋Š” ํ•œ๋‚˜๋ผ๋กœ ๋Œ์•„์˜ฌ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํƒœ์ƒํ™ฉ ๊ธฐ์›์ „ 202๋…„ ์ •์›”, ์œ ๋ฐฉ์€ ๋งˆ์นจ๋‚ด ํ•ญ์šฐ๋ฅผ ์ œ๊ฑฐํ•˜๊ณ  ์ฒœํ•˜๋ฅผ ํ‰์ •ํ•˜์—ฌ ํ™ฉ์ œ์˜ ์ž๋ฆฌ์— ์˜ฌ๋ž๋‹ค. ์œ ๋ฐฉ์€ ํ™ฉ์ œ๊ฐ€ ๋œ ํ›„์— 5์ผ์— ํ•œ๋ฒˆ์”ฉ ์œ ํƒœ๊ณต์—๊ฒŒ ์ธ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๋“œ๋ฆฌ๋ ค ์™”๋Š”๋ฐ, ์œ ๋ฐฉ๊ณผ ์œ ํƒœ๊ณต์ด ์„œ๋กœ๋ฅผ ํ‰๋ฏผ ์‹œ์ ˆ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ๋Œ€ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ์ž ์œ ํƒœ๊ณต์˜ ์ง‘์•ˆ์ผ์„ ๋Œ๋ณด๋˜ ๊ฐ€๋ น(ๅฎถไปค)์ด ํƒœ๊ณต์—๊ฒŒ ๋น„๋ก ์œ ๋ฐฉ์ด ํƒœ๊ณต์˜ ์•„๋“ค์ด๋”๋ผ๋„ ์ด์ œ๋Š” ์ธ๋ฏผ์˜ ์ฃผ์ธ์ด๊ณ , ํƒœ๊ณต์€ ๊ทธ์˜ ์‹ ํ•˜์ด๋ฏ€๋กœ ์œ„๊ณ„๋ฅผ ํ™•์‹คํžˆ ๋‚˜๋ˆ„์–ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋งํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์œ ํƒœ๊ณต์ด ๊ทธ ๋ง์„ ๋ฐ›์•„๋“ค์—ฌ ์ดํ›„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์œ ๋ฐฉ์ด ์ธ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ํ•˜๋Ÿฌ ์˜ฌ๋•Œ๋งˆ๋‹ค ๋น—์ž๋ฃจ๋ฅผ ๋“ค๊ณ  ๋ฌธ ์•ž์— ์„œ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ๋’ท๊ฑธ์Œ์งˆ์„ ์น˜๋ฉฐ ์ฒœ์ž๋ฅผ ๋Œ€ํ•˜๋Š” ์˜ˆ๋กœ ๋งž์ดํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์œ ๋ฐฉ์ด ๋†€๋ผ์„œ ์–ด๊ฐ€์—์„œ ๋‚ด๋ ค ์œ ํƒœ๊ณต์„ ๋ถ€์ถ•ํ•˜์ž, ์œ ํƒœ๊ณต์ด "ํ™ฉ์ œ๋Š” ์ธ๋ฏผ์˜ ์ฃผ์ธ์ด๊ฑฐ๋Š˜ ๋‚ด๊ฐ€ ์–ด์ฐŒ ์ฒœํ•˜์˜ ๋ฒ•์„ ์–ด์ง€๋Ÿฝํž ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ฒ ์†Œ์ด๊นŒ."๋ผ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด์— ์œ ๋ฐฉ์ด ์œ ํƒœ๊ณต์„ ํƒœ์ƒํ™ฉ(ๅคชไธŠ็š‡)์œผ๋กœ ๋†’์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ, ํƒœ๊ณต์—๊ฒŒ ์ถฉ๊ณ ํ•œ ๊ฐ€๋ น์—๊ฒŒ๋Š” ๊ธˆ 500๊ทผ์„ ์ƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ฃผ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์‹ ํ’ ํƒœ์ƒํ™ฉ์€ ์žฅ์•ˆ์˜ ๊นŠ์€ ๊ถ๊ถ๋กœ ์˜ฎ๊ฒจ์™€ ์‚ด์•˜์œผ๋‚˜ ๋Š˜ ์šฐ์šธํ•ดํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์ฆ๊ฑฐ์šด ๊ธฐ์ƒ‰์ด ์—†์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ณ ์กฐ๊ฐ€ ๊ทธ ์ด์œ ๋ฅผ ์•Œ์•„๋ณด๋‹ˆ, ํƒœ์ƒํ™ฉ์€ ํ‰์ƒ ๋™์•ˆ ๋ฐฑ์ •์ด๋‚˜ ์†Œ๋…„๋“ค, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์ˆ ์žฅ์ˆ˜๋‚˜ ๋–ก์žฅ์ˆ˜์™€ ์–ด์šธ๋ฆฌ๋ฉฐ ๋‹ญ์‹ธ์›€์ด๋‚˜ ๊ณต๋†€์ด๋ฅผ ์ฆ๊ฒผ๋Š”๋ฐ ์ง€๊ธˆ์€ ๊ทธ๋Ÿฐ ๊ฒƒ์ด ์—†์—ˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ฆ๊ฑฐ์›€์„ ๋Š๋ผ์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜๋˜ ๊ฒƒ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์œ ๋ฐฉ์ด ์‹ ํ’(ๆ–ฐ่ฑ)์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๋งˆ์„์„ ๋งŒ๋“ค๊ณ ๋Š” ๊ณ ํ–ฅ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์„ ๊ทธ๊ณณ์œผ๋กœ ์ด์ฃผ์‹œ์ผœ์„œ ํƒœ์ƒํ™ฉ์„ ๊ธฐ์˜๊ฒŒ ํ•ด์ฃผ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ์•™๊ถ์˜ ์—ฐํšŒ ๊ธฐ์›์ „ 198๋…„, ๋ฏธ์•™๊ถ์ด ์™„๊ณต๋˜์ž ์œ ๋ฐฉ์ด ์ œํ›„์™€ ๊ตฐ์‹ ๋“ค์„ ๋ถˆ๋Ÿฌ ๋ชจ์•„ ์—ฐํšŒ๋ฅผ ๋ฒ ํ’€์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋•Œ ํƒœ์ƒํ™ฉ๋„ ์—ฐํšŒ์— ์ดˆ๋Œ€๋˜์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์œ ๋ฐฉ์ด ์˜ฅ์ž”์„ ๋“ค๊ณ  ์ผ์–ด๋‚˜ ํƒœ์ƒํ™ฉ์—๊ฒŒ ์ถ•์ˆ˜ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๋งํ•˜๊ธฐ๋ฅผ, "์˜›๋‚ ์— ๋Œ€์ธ(ๅคงไบบ)๊ป˜์„  ๋Š˜ ์‹ (่‡ฃ)์ด ๋ฌด๋ขฐํ•˜๊ณ  ์ƒ์—…๋„ ๊พธ๋ฆฌ์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๋‘˜์งธ ํ˜•๋งŒํผ ๋…ธ๋ ฅ๋„ ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•˜์…จ์Šต๋‹ˆ๋‹ค. ์ง€๊ธˆ ์ œ๊ฐ€ ์ด๋ฃฌ ๊ฒƒ๊ณผ ๋‘˜์งธ ํ˜•์ด ์ด๋ฃฌ ๊ฒƒ ์ค‘ ๋ฌด์—‡์ด ๋” ๋งŽ์Šต๋‹ˆ๊นŒ?"๋ผ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด์— ๋Œ€์ „์˜ ์‹ ํ•˜๋“ค์ด ๋ชจ๋‘ ๋งŒ์„ธ๋ฅผ ๋ถ€๋ฅด๊ณ  ์›ƒ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ฆ๊ฑฐ์›Œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฃฝ์Œ ๊ธฐ์›์ „ 197๋…„ 10์›”, ํƒœ์ƒํ™ฉ์ด ์•ฝ์–‘๊ถ(ๆซŸ้™ฝๅฎฎ)์—์„œ ์„ธ์ƒ์„ ๋– ๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ์ด์— ์œ ๋ฐฉ์˜ ์•„์šฐ์ธ ์ดˆ์™• ์œ ๊ต์™€ ๊ณต์‹ ์ธ ์–‘์™• ํŒฝ์›” ๋“ฑ์ด ์™€์„œ ์žฅ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์ง€๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ ๊ธฐ์›์ „ 3์„ธ๊ธฐ ์ถœ์ƒ ๊ธฐ์›์ „ 197๋…„ ์‚ฌ๋ง ์ „ํ•œ ๊ณ ์ œ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liu%20Taigong
Liu Taigong
Liu Taigong (), personal name Liu Tuan (), was the father of Liu Bang (Emperor Gaozu of Han). Biography Not much is recorded about Taigong historically. He was born and likely lived his early life in present-day Feng County, Jiangsu. His personal name is not known. Some historical sources says his name is Liu Zhijia (Chinese:ๅŠ‰ๅŸทๅ˜‰), although this name is likely chosen after Liu Bang became Emperor. He likely came from a humble, rural background. After Taigong's son Liu Bang became emperor, Liu Bang continued to visit his father once a week. However, upon hearing from an advisor that it was no longer appropriate for Taigong to "receive" his son, as Taigong was technically one of his subjects, Taigong began to greet his son in deprecatory fashion, honoring the latter's status as emperor. Upon learning the reason behind his father's actions, Liu Bang honored Taigong with the title Taishang Huang on 4 July 201 BCE, a year after Liu Bang declared himself emperor in February 202 BCE. The title nominally elevated Liu's status in court protocol as to remain consistent with Confucian norms of filial piety. Taigong died at a palace in the city of Yueyang in June 197 BC. On 9 August 197 BC, he was entombed in present-day Lintong District, Xi'an. Family Consorts and Issue: Wang Hanshi (), also known as Liu Ao (, "Old woman Liu"), posthumously honored as Empress Zhaoling () Liu Bo, Prince Wu'ai (; b. 262 BC), first son Liu Xi, Prince Qing of Wu (; 260โ€“193 BC), second son Empress Zhao'ai () Liu Bang, Emperor Gao (; 256โ€“195 BC), third son Retired Empress, of the Li clan (), formerly a concubine Liu Jiao, Prince Yuan of Chu (; d. 179 BC), fourth son Ancestry References Zizhi Tongjian, volumes 9 to 12 Records of the Grand Historian, volume 8 Book of Han, volume 36 3rd-century BC births 197 BC deaths Emperor Gaozu of Han
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EB%A9%94%ED%86%A0%ED%8A%B8%EB%A0%89%EC%84%B8%EC%9D%B4%ED%8A%B8
๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ
๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ(, MTX, ์ด์ „ ๋ช…์นญ: ์•„๋ฉ”ํ†ฑํ…Œ๋ฆฐ/amethopterin)๋Š” ํ™”ํ•™์ž‘์šฉ์ œ์ด์ž ๋ฉด์—ญ๊ณ„ ์–ต์ œ์ œ์ด๋‹ค. ์•”, ์ž๊ฐ€๋ฉด์—ญ์งˆํ™˜, ์ž๊ถ์™ธ์ž„์‹ ์˜ ์น˜๋ฃŒ, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์˜ํ•™์  ๋‚™ํƒœ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ์•”์˜ ์ข…๋ฅ˜๋กœ๋Š” ์œ ๋ฐฉ์•”, ๋ฐฑํ˜ˆ๋ณ‘, ํ์•”, ๋ฆผํ”„์ข…, ์ž„์‹ ์˜์•ฝ๋ง‰๋ณ‘, ๊ณจ์œก์ข…์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ ์‘์ฆ์ด ๋˜๋Š” ์ž๊ฐ€๋ฉด์—ญ ์งˆํ™˜์˜ ์œ ํ˜•์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ๊ฑด์„ , ๋ฅ˜๋จธํ‹ฐ์Šค ๊ด€์ ˆ์—ผ, ํฌ๋ก ๋ณ‘์ด ํฌํ•จ๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ฒฝ๊ตฌ๋‚˜ ์ฃผ์‚ฌ๋กœ ํˆฌ์—ฌํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ”ํ•œ ๋ถ€์ž‘์šฉ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ๊ตฌ์—ญ์งˆ, ํ”ผ๊ณค, ๋ฐœ์—ด, ๊ฐ์—ผ ์œ„ํ—˜์˜ ์ฆ๊ฐ€, ๋ฐฑํ˜ˆ๊ตฌ ๊ฐ์†Œ, ๊ตฌ๋‚ด์—ผ์ด ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋ถ€์ž‘์šฉ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ๊ฐ„์งˆํ™˜, ํ์งˆํ™˜, ๋ฆผํ”„์ข…, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์‹ฌ๊ฐํ•œ ํ”ผ๋ถ€ ๋ฐœ์ง„์ด ๋ฐœ์ƒํ•œ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์žฅ๊ธฐ์ ์ธ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์€ ๋ถ€์ž‘์šฉ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์ฃผ๊ธฐ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฒ€์‚ฌํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ์ข‹๋‹ค. ๋ชจ์œ  ์ˆ˜์œ  ์ค‘์— ๋ณต์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ์•ˆ์ „ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋‹ค. ์‹ ๋ถ€์ „ ํ™˜์ž์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ์ ์€ ์–‘์„ ๋ณต์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ํ•„์š”ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์‹ ์ฒด์˜ ์—ฝ์‚ฐ ์‚ฌ์šฉ์„ ์ฐจ๋‹จํ•จ์œผ๋กœ์จ ๋™์ž‘ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋Š” 1947๋…„ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ๋˜์–ด ์ฒ˜์Œ์—๋Š” ์•” ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด ์˜ํ•™์šฉ์œผ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ํ˜„์žฌ์˜ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฐฉ์‹๋ณด๋‹ค ๋…์„ฑ์ด ๋œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1956๋…„, ์ „์ด์•”์˜ ์ตœ์ดˆ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์— ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜๋ฃŒ์ œ๋„์— ํ•„์ˆ˜์ ์ธ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ํšจ๊ณผ์ ์ด๊ณ  ์•ˆ์ „ํ•œ ์˜์•ฝํ’ˆ ๋ชฉ๋ก์ธ WHO ํ•„์ˆ˜ ์˜์•ฝํ’ˆ ๋ชฉ๋ก์— ๋“ฑ์žฌ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋Š” ์ œ๋„ค๋ฆญ ์˜์•ฝํ’ˆ์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ๋งค๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋‹ค. ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ๋„์ƒ๊ตญ์˜ ๋„๋งค๊ฐ€๋Š” 2014๋…„ ๊ตฌ๊ฐ• ์„ญ์ทจ ๊ธฐ์ค€์œผ๋กœ ํ•˜๋ฃจ์— US$0.06 ~ US$0.36 ์‚ฌ์ด์ด๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ, ๊ฒฝ๊ตฌ ํˆฌ์—ฌ๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•œ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์—๋Š” ๋ณดํ†ต $25 ~ $50์˜ ๋น„์šฉ์ด ๋“ ๋‹ค. 2016๋…„ ๊ธฐ์ค€, ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์—์„œ๋Š” 400๋งŒ ๊ฑด ์ด์ƒ์˜ ์ฒ˜๋ฐฉ๊ณผ ๋”๋ถˆ์–ด 152๋ฒˆ์งธ๋กœ ์ฒ˜๋ฐฉ์„ ๋งŽ์ด ๋ฐ›์€ ์•ฝ๋ฌผ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ํ•™์  ์‚ฌ์šฉ ํ•ญ์•”ํ™”ํ•™์š”๋ฒ• ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋Š” ๋ณธ๋ž˜ ํ™”ํ•™์š”๋ฒ•์— ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ๋˜์–ด, ๋‹จ๋… ๋˜๋Š” ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์•ฝ์ œ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜์–ด ์™”๋‹ค. ์œ ๋ฐฉ์˜ ๊ณ ํ˜• ์ข…์–‘, ๋‘๊ฒฝ๋ถ€์•”, ํ์•”, ๋ฐฉ๊ด‘์•”, ๊ธ‰์„ฑ ๋ฆผํ”„๊ตฌ์„ฑ ๋ฐฑํ˜ˆ๋ณ‘, ๋น„ํ˜ธ์ง€ํ‚จ ๋ฆผํ”„์ข…, ๊ณจ์œก์ข…, ๋‹ด๊ด€์•”, ๊ทธ ์™ธ ์˜์–‘๋ง‰ ์‹ ์ƒ๋ฌผ ๋“ฑ ๊ฐ์ข… ์•” ์น˜๋ฃŒ์— ํšจ๊ณผ์ ์ด๋‹ค. ์ž๊ฐ€๋ฉด์—ญ์งˆํ™˜ ๋ณธ๋ž˜ ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋Š” ํ•ญ์•”์ œ ์šฉ๋„๋กœ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋‚˜, ์ €์šฉ๋Ÿ‰ ํˆฌ์—ฌํ•  ๋•Œ๋Š” ํŠน์ • ์ž๊ฐ€๋ฉด์—ญ์งˆํ™˜์˜ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์— ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„ ์•ˆ์ „ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ํšจ๊ณผ์ ์ธ ์•ฝ์ œ๋กœ ์“ฐ์ผ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋Š” ์„ฑ์ธ์˜ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ์ž๊ฐ€๋ฉด์—ญ์งˆํ™˜ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์— ํ•ญ๋ฅ˜๋งˆํ‹ฐ์Šค์ œ๋กœ ์“ฐ์ธ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ์˜ˆ๋กœ๋Š” ๋ฅ˜๋งˆํ‹ฐ์Šค ๊ด€์ ˆ์—ผ, ๊ฑด์„ , ๊ฑด์„ ์„ฑ ๊ด€์ ˆ์—ผ, ๋ฐ˜์‘์„ฑ ๊ด€์ ˆ์—ผ, ์žฅ๋ณ‘์„ฑ ๊ด€์ ˆ์—ผ, ๊ทผ์œก์—ผ, ์ „์‹ ๊ฒฝํ™”์ฆ, ๋ฃจํ‘ธ์Šค, ์œ ์œก์ข…์ฆ, ํฌ๋ก ๋ณ‘, ์Šต์ง„, ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์ข…๋ฅ˜์˜ ํ˜ˆ๊ด€์—ผ ๋“ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์–ด๋ฆฐ์ด์—์„œ๋Š” ์ฒญ์†Œ๋…„์„ฑ ํ”ผ๋ถ€๊ทผ์œก์—ผ, ์ฒญ์†Œ๋…„์„ฑ ํŠน๋ฐœ์„ฑ ๊ด€์ ˆ์—ผ, ํฌ๋„๋ง‰์—ผ, ๊ตญ์†Œํ”ผ๋ถ€๊ฒฝํ™”์ฆ ๋“ฑ์˜ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์— ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋Š” ๋ฅ˜๋งˆํ‹ฐ์Šค ๊ด€์ ˆ์—ผ์˜ ์ผ์ฐจ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์ œ ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜์ด๋‹ค. ์ฝ”ํฌ๋ž€ ๋ฆฌ๋ทฐ์—์„œ 1์ฃผ์ผ์— 5~25mg ์šฉ๋Ÿ‰ ํˆฌ์—ฌ ์‹œ 12~52์ฃผ ์น˜๋ฃŒ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„ ๋™์•ˆ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์— ์ด๋“์ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ณด๊ณ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์น˜๋ฃŒ ์ค‘๋‹จ์œจ์€ ๋ถ€์ž‘์šฉ์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด 16% ์ •๋„๋กœ ๋†’์•˜๋‹ค. ์ €์šฉ๋Ÿ‰์˜ ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋ฅผ ์•„์Šคํ”ผ๋ฆฐ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋น„์Šคํ…Œ๋กœ์ด๋“œ์„ฑ ํ•ญ์—ผ์ฆ์ œ(NSAIDs)๋‚˜, ํŒŒ๋ผ์„ธํƒ€๋ชฐ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์ง„ํ†ต์ œ์™€ ๋ณ‘์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ์ ์ ˆํ•œ ๋ชจ๋‹ˆํ„ฐ๋ง ํ•˜์—์„œ ์‹ค์‹œํ•  ์‹œ ๋ฅ˜๋งˆํ‹ฐ์Šค ๊ด€์ ˆ์—ผ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ํ™˜์ž์—์„œ๋„ ๋น„๊ต์  ์•ˆ์ „ํ•œ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฒ•์ด๋‹ค. ํ•œํŽธ ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋Š” ์„คํŒŒ์‚ด๋ผ์ง„์ด๋‚˜ ํ•˜์ด๋“œ๋ก์‹œํด๋กœ๋กœํ€ธ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๊ณ ์ „์ ์ธ ํ•ญ๋ฅ˜๋งˆํ‹ฐ์Šค์ œ์™€ ๋ณ‘์šฉํ•˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ๋ฅ˜๋งˆํ‹ฐ์Šค ๊ด€์ ˆ์—ผ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์˜ ํšจ๊ณผ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์—ฐ๊ตฌํ•œ ์ฒด๊ณ„์  ๋ฌธํ—Œ๊ณ ์ฐฐ์—์„œ๋Š”, ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ ๋‹จ๋… ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ณด๋‹ค TNF ์–ต์ œ์ œ๋‚˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ƒ๋ฌผํ•™์  ์ œ์ œ์™€ ๋ณ‘์šฉ ํˆฌ์—ฌํ–ˆ์„ ๋•Œ ์น˜๋ฃŒ ํšจ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๊ฐœ์„ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. ์œ ์‚ฌํ•˜๊ฒŒ, 2016๋…„์˜ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์—์„œ๋Š” ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋ฅผ TNF ์–ต์ œ์ œ์™€ ๋ณ‘์šฉ ํˆฌ์—ฌํ–ˆ์„ ๋•Œ ๊ถค์–‘์„ฑ ๋Œ€์žฅ์—ผ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์— ํšจ๊ณผ์ ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋Š” ๋‹ค๋ฐœ๊ฒฝํ™”์ฆ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์—๋„ ์“ฐ์ด๋ฉฐ, ๊ฐ„ํ˜น ์ „์‹  ํ™๋ฐ˜ ๋ฃจํ‘ธ์Šค ์น˜๋ฃŒ์— ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ด๋ฅผ ๋’ท๋ฐ›์นจํ•˜๋Š” ์ž ์ •์ ์ธ ๊ทผ๊ฑฐ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๊ฐ€ ์กด์žฌํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ž„์‹  ์ค‘ ์‚ฌ์šฉ ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋Š” ๋‚™ํƒœ์ œ๋กœ, ๋‚˜ํŒ”๊ด€์ด ํŒŒ์—ด๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์€ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ์ž๊ถ์™ธ์ž„์‹ ์˜ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์— ์“ฐ๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ ํˆฌ์—ฌ์™€ ํ™•์žฅ์†ŒํŒŒ์ˆ ์„ ๋™์‹œ์— ์‹ค์‹œํ•ด ํฌ์ƒ๊ธฐํƒœ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์— ์ด์šฉํ•˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋“œ๋ฌผ๊ฒŒ๋Š” ๋ฏธํŽ˜ํ”„๋ฆฌ์Šคํ†ค๊ณผ ๋ณ‘์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ์ •์ƒ ์ž„์‹ ์„ ๋‚™ํƒœํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ์— ์“ฐ์ด๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํˆฌ์—ฌ ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋Š” ๊ฒฝ๊ตฌ ํˆฌ์—ฌ, ๊ทผ์œก ์ฃผ์‚ฌ, ์ •๋งฅ ์ฃผ์‚ฌ, ํ”ผํ•˜ ์ฃผ์‚ฌ, ์ˆ˜๋ง‰๋‚ด๊ณต๊ฐ„ ํˆฌ์—ฌ ๋“ฑ์˜ ๋ฐฉ์‹์œผ๋กœ ํˆฌ์—ฌํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋…์„ฑ์„ ์ œํ•œํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋Œ€๊ฐœ ํ•˜๋ฃจ๊ฐ€ ์•„๋‹Œ 1์ฃผ์ผ์— ํ•œ ๋ฒˆ ํˆฌ์—ฌํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฃจํ‹ด์œผ๋กœ ์ผ๋ฐ˜ ํ˜ˆ์•ก ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ, ๊ฐ„ ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ, ํฌ๋ ˆ์•„ํ‹ฐ๋‹Œ์„ ๊ฐ์‹œํ•˜๋„๋ก ๊ถŒ๊ณ ๋œ๋‹ค. ํฌ๋ ˆ์•„ํ‹ฐ๋‹Œ ์ธก์ •์ธ ์ตœ์†Œ 2๋‹ฌ์— ํ•œ ๋ฒˆ ์‹ค์‹œํ•˜๋„๋ก ๊ถŒ๊ณ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋ถ€์ž‘์šฉ์„ ์ตœ์†Œํ™”ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด, ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋ฅผ ํˆฌ์—ฌํ•  ๋•Œ ์—ฝ์‚ฐ์„ ํ”ํžˆ ๊ฐ™์ด ์ฒ˜๋ฐฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ถ€์ž‘์šฉ ํ”ํ•œ ๋ถ€์ž‘์šฉ์—๋Š” ๊ฐ„๋…์„ฑ, ๊ตฌ๋‚ด์—ผ, ํ˜ˆ์•ก์˜ ์ด์ƒ(๋ฐฑํ˜ˆ๊ตฌ๊ฐ์†Œ์ฆ, ๋นˆํ˜ˆ, ํ˜ˆ์†ŒํŒ๊ฐ์†Œ์ฆ, ๊ฐ์—ผ ์œ„ํ—˜ ์ฆ๊ฐ€, ํƒˆ๋ชจ, ์‹์š•๋ถ€์ง„, ๊ตฌ์—ญ์งˆ, ๋ณตํ†ต, ์„ค์‚ฌ, ํ”ผ๋กœ๊ฐ, ๋ฐœ์—ด, ์–ด์ง€๋Ÿผ์ฆ, ์กธ๋ฆผ, ๋‘ํ†ต, ๊ธ‰์„ฑ ํ๋ ด, ์ฝฉํŒฅ ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ ์†์ƒ ๋“ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋Š” ์ ๋ง‰์—ผ์„ ์ผ์œผํ‚ค๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋กœ ์ธํ•œ ํ๋ ด์€ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์˜ ๋“œ๋ฌธ ํ•ฉ๋ณ‘์ฆ์œผ๋กœ, ๋ฅ˜๋งˆํ‹ฐ์Šค ๊ด€์ ˆ์—ผ ์น˜๋ฃŒ ์ž„์ƒ์‹œํ—˜์„ ๋ดค์„ ๋•Œ ์ ์ฐจ ๊ฐ์†Œํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณด์ธ๋‹ค. ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋Š” ๊ธฐํ˜•์„ ์œ ๋ฐœํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ์ž„์‹  ์ „ ์ตœ์†Œ 4์ฃผ ๋™์•ˆ์€ ๋ณต์šฉ์„ ์ค‘๋‹จํ•˜๊ณ  ์ž„์‹ ๊ณผ ์ˆ˜์œ  ์ค‘์—๋Š” ๋ณต์šฉํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์•„์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ•œํŽธ ์—ฌ์„ฑ ์ชฝ์ด ์ž„์‹ ์„ ์‹œ๋„ํ•˜๋Š” ์ค‘, ๋‚จ์„ฑ ํŒŒํŠธ๋„ˆ๊ฐ€ ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋ฅผ ๋ณต์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ์•ˆ์ „ํ•˜๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ง€์นจ์ด ๊ฐœ์ •๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ณจ์ˆ˜์—ผ, ๋ฐฑ์งˆ๋‡Œ๋ณ‘์ฆ ๋“ฑ์˜ ์ค‘์ถ”์‹ ๊ฒฝ๊ณ„ ๋ฐ˜์‘์ด ๋ณด๊ณ ๋˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜์˜€๋Š”๋ฐ, ํŠนํžˆ ์ง์ ‘ ๋‡Œ์ฒ™์ˆ˜์•ก์œผ๋กœ ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ€๋„๋ก ์ˆ˜๋ง‰๋‚ด๊ณต๊ฐ„์œผ๋กœ ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋ฅผ ํˆฌ์—ฌํ•œ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ์— ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํ•œํŽธ ํ”ผ๋ถ€ ๋ถ€์ž‘์šฉ๋„ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฟ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ฌ๋Š”๋ฐ, ํŠนํžˆ ๊ณ ์šฉ๋Ÿ‰์œผ๋กœ ํˆฌ์—ฌํ•˜์˜€์„ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ๋ถ€์ž‘์šฉ์ด ์ž˜ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ์ž˜ ์•Œ๋ ค์ง€์ง€๋Š” ์•Š์•˜์œผ๋‚˜ ๋˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋ฐœ์ƒ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ์‹ฌ๊ฐํ•œ ๋ถ€์ž‘์šฉ์€ ์‹ ๊ฒฝ ์†์ƒ๊ณผ ๊ธฐ์–ต ์ƒ์‹ค์ด๋‹ค. ์‹ ๊ฒฝ๋…์„ฑ์€ ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๊ฐ€ ๋‡Œํ˜ˆ๊ด€์žฅ๋ฒฝ์„ ๊ฐ€๋กœ์งˆ๋Ÿฌ ๋Œ€๋‡Œํ”ผ์งˆ์˜ ์‹ ๊ฒฝ์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ์†์ƒ์‹œ์ผœ ๋ฐœ์ƒํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ํ™˜์ž๋“ค์—์„œ ๋ฐœ์ƒํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์ด๋Ÿฐ ์‹ ๊ฒฝ ์†์ƒ์„ "chemo brain"์ด๋‚˜ "chemo fog"๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถ€๋ฅด๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์•ฝ๋ฌผ ์ƒํ˜ธ์ž‘์šฉ ํŽ˜๋‹ˆ์‹ค๋ฆฐ์€ ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ์˜ ๋ฐฐ์ถœ์„ ์ค„์—ฌ ๋…์„ฑ ์œ„ํ—˜์„ ๋†’์ผ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋‘ ์•ฝ๋ฌผ์„ ๊ฐ™์ด ํˆฌ์—ฌํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ, ๋ชจ๋‹ˆํ„ฐ๋ง์„ ๋”์šฑ ์ฒ ์ €ํžˆ ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ๊ถŒ๊ณ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์•„๋ฏธ๋…ธ๊ธ€๋ฆฌ์ฝ”์‚ฌ์ด๋“œ ๊ณ„์—ด ์•ฝ๋ฌผ์€ ๋„ค์˜ค๋งˆ์ด์‹ ๊ณผ ํŒŒ๋กœ๋ชจ๋งˆ์ด์‹ ์€ ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ์˜ ์œ„์žฅ๊ด€ ํก์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ๊ฐ์†Œ์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์•Œ๋ ค์ ธ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ”„๋กœ๋ฒ ๋„ค์‹œ๋“œ๋Š” ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ์˜ ๋ฐฐ์„ค์„ ์–ต์ œํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ์˜ ๋…์„ฑ ๋ฐœ์ƒ ์œ„ํ—˜์„ ์ฆ๊ฐ€์‹œํ‚จ๋‹ค. ์œ ์‚ฌํ•˜๊ฒŒ, ๋ ˆํ‹ฐ๋…ธ์ด๋“œ์™€ ํŠธ๋ฆฌ๋ฉ”ํ† ํ”„๋ฆผ์€ ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ์™€ ์ƒํ˜ธ์ž‘์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ฐ๊ฐ ์ถ”๊ฐ€์ ์ธ ๊ฐ„๋…์„ฑ๊ณผ ํ˜ˆ์•ก๋…์„ฑ์„ ์œ ๋ฐœํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ฐํ˜€์ ธ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์‹œํด๋กœ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฐ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋ฉด์—ญ์–ต์ œ์ œ๋Š” ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ์˜ ํ˜ˆ์•กํ•™์  ํšจ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ•ํ™”ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ž ์žฌ์ ์ธ ๋…์„ฑ์˜ ์›์ธ์ด ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋น„์Šคํ…Œ๋กœ์ด๋“œ ํ•ญ์—ผ์ฆ์ œ(NSAIDs) ์—ญ์‹œ ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ์™€ ์น˜๋ช…์ ์ธ ์ƒํ˜ธ์ž‘์šฉ์„ ์ผ์œผํ‚ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์ฆ๋ก€ ๋ณด๊ณ ๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ์•Œ๋ ค์ ธ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์•„์‚ฐํ™” ์งˆ์†Œ๊ฐ€ ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ์˜ ํ˜ˆ์•ก๋…์„ฑ์„ ๊ฐ•ํ™”ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ ์—ญ์‹œ ๋ฐํ˜€์ ธ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ค๋ฉ”ํ”„๋ผ์กธ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์–‘์„ฑ์ž ํŽŒํ”„ ์–ต์ œ์ œ(PPIs)๋‚˜ ๋ฐœํ”„๋กœ์‚ฐ ๊ฐ™์€ ํ•ญ๊ฒฝ๋ จ์ œ, ์‹œ์Šคํ”Œ๋ผํ‹ด๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์‹ ๋…์„ฑ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๋Š” ์•ฝ์ œ, ์œ„์žฅ๊ด€์•ฝ์ธ ์ฝœ๋ ˆ์ŠคํŠธ๋ผ๋ฏผ๊ณผ ๋‹จํŠธ๋กค๋ Œ ๋“ฑ์€ ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ์˜ ํ˜ˆ์žฅ ๋‚ด ๋†๋„๋ฅผ ๋†’์ธ๋‹ค. ์ž‘์šฉ ๊ธฐ์ „ ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋Š” ํ•ญ๋Œ€์‚ฌ๋ฌผ์งˆ, ๊ทธ์ค‘์—์„œ๋„ ํ•ญ์—ฝ์‚ฐ์ œ์— ์†ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๊ฐ€ ์•”๊ณผ ๋ฅ˜๋งˆํ‹ฐ์Šค ๊ด€์ ˆ์—ผ์„ ์น˜๋ฃŒํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์€ ๋‘ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ์„œ๋กœ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๊ฒฝ๋กœ๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด์„œ๋ผ๊ณ  ์ถ”์ •๋œ๋‹ค. ์•”์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ, ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋Š” ์‚ฌ์ˆ˜์†Œ์—ฝ์‚ฐ ํ•ฉ์„ฑ์— ๊ด€์—ฌํ•˜๋Š” ํšจ์†Œ์ธ ์ด์ˆ˜์†Œ์—ฝ์‚ฐ ํ™˜์›ํšจ์†Œ(DHFR)๋ฅผ ๊ฒฝ์Ÿ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ €ํ•ดํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๊ฐ€ DHFR์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ๋ณด์ด๋Š” ์นœํ™”์„ฑ์€ ์ด์ˆ˜์†Œ์—ฝ์‚ฐ์ด ๊ฐ€์ง€๋Š” ์นœํ™”๋ ฅ์˜ 1000๋ฐฐ ์ •๋„์— ์ด๋ฅธ๋‹ค. DHFR์€ ์ด์ˆ˜์†Œ์—ฝ์‚ฐ์ด ํ™œ์„ฑ์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๋Š” ๋ฌผ์งˆ์ธ ์‚ฌ์ˆ˜์†Œ์—ฝ์‚ฐ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณ€ํ™˜๋˜๋Š” ๊ณผ์ •์„ ์ด‰๋งคํ•œ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌ์ˆ˜์†Œ์—ฝ์‚ฐ์€ ๋‰ดํด๋ ˆ์˜ค์‚ฌ์ด๋“œ ํ‹ฐ๋ฏธ๋”˜์˜ ์‹ ์ƒํ•ฉ์„ฑ(๋ฐ๋…ธ๋ณดํ•ฉ์„ฑ)์— ํ•„์š”ํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ํ‹ฐ๋ฏธ๋”˜์€ DNA ๋ณต์ œ ๊ณผ์ •์—์„œ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด DNA๋ฅผ ํ•ฉ์„ฑํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ์— ํ•„์ˆ˜์ ์ด๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ, ์—ฝ์‚ฐ์€ ํ“จ๋ฆฐ๊ณผ ํ”ผ๋ฆฌ๋ฏธ๋”˜ ์—ผ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ํ•ฉ์„ฑํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ์—๋„ ๋ฐ˜๋“œ์‹œ ํ•„์š”ํ•˜๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋Š” DNA, RNA, ํ‹ฐ๋ฏธ๋”œ๋ ˆ์ดํŠธ, ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ ํ•ฉ์„ฑ์„ ์–ต์ œํ•˜๋Š” ํšจ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ธ๋‹ค. ๋ฅ˜๋งˆํ‹ฐ์Šค ๊ด€์ ˆ์—ผ์˜ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์— ์žˆ์–ด์„œ DHFR ์–ต์ œ๋Š” ์ฃผ๋œ ์ž‘์šฉ ๊ธฐ์ „์ด ์•„๋‹Œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒ๊ฐ๋˜๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ๋ณด๋‹ค๋Š” ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๊ธฐ์ „์ด ์ž‘๋™ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์—ฌ๊ฒจ์ง„๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ์˜ˆ๋กœ๋Š” 1. ํ“จ๋ฆฐ ๋Œ€์‚ฌ์— ๊ด€์—ฌํ•˜๋Š” ํšจ์†Œ๋ฅผ ์–ต์ œํ•˜์—ฌ ์•„๋ฐ๋…ธ์‹ ์„ ์ถ•์ ์‹œํ‚ค๊ฑฐ๋‚˜, 2. T์„ธํฌ์˜ ํ™œ์„ฑํ™”๋ฅผ ์–ต์ œํ•˜๋ฉฐ T์„ธํฌ๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœํ˜„ํ•˜๋Š” ์„ธํฌ๋‚ด ๋ถ€์ฐฉ ๋ถ„์ž๋ฅผ ์–ต์ œํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐฉ์‹, 3. B์„ธํฌ์˜ ์„ ํƒ์  ํ•˜ํ–ฅ์กฐ์ ˆ, 4. ํ™œ์„ฑํ™”๋œ T์„ธํฌ์˜ CD95์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ฐ์ˆ˜์„ฑ์„ ์ฆ๊ฐ€์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” ๊ธฐ์ „, 5. ๋ฉ”ํ‹ธ๊ธฐ์ „์ดํšจ์†Œ ํ™œ์„ฑ์„ ์–ต์ œํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ฉด์—ญ๊ณ„ ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์— ๊ด€์—ฌํ•˜๋Š” ํšจ์†Œ ํ™œ์„ฑ์„ ๋น„ํ™œ์„ฑํ™”์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” ๊ธฐ์ „ ๋“ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ์˜ ๋˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ž‘์šฉ ๊ธฐ์ „์€ ์ธํ„ฐ๋ฃจํ‚จ 1ฮฒ๊ฐ€ ์„ธํฌ ํ‘œ๋ฉด์˜ ์ˆ˜์šฉ์ฒด์— ๊ฒฐํ•ฉํ•˜๋Š” ๊ณผ์ •์„ ์–ต์ œํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋Š” ํ•ญ์‚ฌ์ดํ† ์นด์ธ์ œ๋กœ๋„ ์ž‘์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ์—ญ์‚ฌ 1947๋…„, ์‹œ๋“œ๋‹ˆ ํŒŒ๋ฒ„(Sidney Farber)๊ฐ€ ์ด๋„๋Š” ์—ฐ๊ตฌํŒ€์€ ์—ฝ์‚ฐ์˜ ์œ ์‚ฌ์ฒด์ด๋ฉฐ, ์–ด๋ฆฐ์ด ๊ธ‰์„ฑ ๋ฆผํ”„๋ชจ๊ตฌ์„ฑ ๋ฐฑํ˜ˆ๋ณ‘์˜ ๊ด€ํ•ด๋ฅผ ์œ ๋„ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์•„๋ฏธ๋†‰ํ…Œ๋ฆฐ์„ ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ์„ ๋ณด์˜€๋‹ค. ์—ฝ์‚ฐ์˜ ํˆฌ์—ฌ๊ฐ€ ๋ฐฑํ˜ˆ๋ณ‘์„ ์•…ํ™”์‹œํ‚ฌ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ณ , ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€๋กœ ์—ฝ์‚ฐ์ด ๋ถ€์กฑํ•œ ์‹๋‹จ์€ ๋ฐฑํ˜ˆ๋ณ‘์„ ํ˜ธ์ „์‹œํ‚ฌ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ์ด ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์ง€๋ฉด์„œ ์—ฝ์‚ฐ ์œ ์‚ฌ์ฒด์˜ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ์— ๋ฐ•์ฐจ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€ํ•ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์ด๋Ÿฐ ํšจ๊ณผ๊ฐ€ ์™œ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚˜๋Š”์ง€, ๊ทธ ๊ธฐ์ „์€ ์—ฌ์ „ํžˆ ์•Œ๋ ค์ ธ ์žˆ์ง€ ์•Š๋‹ค. ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์—ฝ์‚ฐ ์œ ์‚ฌ์ฒด๋„ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ๋˜๋Š” ์ค‘์ด์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, 1950๋…„์— ๋“ค์–ด์„œ๋Š” ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๊ฐ€ ๋ฐฑํ˜ˆ๋ณ‘ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์ œ๋กœ ์ œ์•ˆ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1956๋…„ ๋ฐœํ‘œ๋œ ๋™๋ฌผ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์—์„œ๋Š” ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ์˜ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์ง€์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ์•„๋ฏธ๋†‰ํ…Œ๋ฆฐ๋ณด๋‹ค ์šฐ์ˆ˜ํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๊ฐ€ ์น˜๋ฃŒ ์•ฝ์ œ๋กœ ๋ณด๋‹ค ์„ ํ˜ธ๋˜๋ฉฐ ์•„๋ฏธ๋†‰ํ…Œ๋ฆฐ์€ ์ž„์ƒ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1951๋…„, ์ œ์ธ C. ๋ผ์ดํŠธ(Jane C. Wright)๋Š” ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋ฅผ ๊ณ ํ˜• ์ข…์–‘ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์— ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ•˜์˜€๋Š”๋ฐ, ์œ ๋ฐฉ์•”์—์„œ ๊ด€ํ•ด๊ฐ€ ์ผ์–ด๋‚œ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. ๋ผ์ดํŠธ์˜ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํŒ€์€ ๋ฐฑํ˜ˆ๋ณ‘์ด ์•„๋‹Œ, ๊ณ ํ˜• ์ข…์–‘์—์„œ ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ์ฒ˜์Œ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ฏผ์ถ”๋ฆฌ(ๆŽๆ•ๆฑ‚)์™€ ๊ทธ ๋™๋ฃŒ๋“ค์€ 1956๋…„์— ๋ฉ”ํ† ํŠธ๋ ‰์„ธ์ดํŠธ๋กœ ์น˜๋ฃŒํ–ˆ์„ ๋•Œ ์—ฌ์„ฑ์˜ ๋‹ด๊ด€์•”๊ณผ ์œต๋ชจ๋ง‰์ƒ˜์ข…์—์„œ ์™„์ „ ๊ด€ํ•ด๊ฐ€ ์ผ์–ด๋‚œ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ณด๊ณ ํ•˜์˜€๊ณ , ๋ผ์ดํŠธ ๋“ฑ์€ 1960๋…„์— ๊ท ์ƒ์‹์œก์ข…์—์„œ ๊ด€ํ•ด๋ฅผ ์œ ๋„ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ์— ์„ฑ๊ณตํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ National Rheumatoid Arthritis Society (NRAS) article on Methotrexate Chembank entry on methotrexate Methotrexateโ€”general article from NIH Methotrexate Injection MedlinePlus article from NIH Patient Education โ€“ Methotrexate from American College of Rheumatology U.S. National Library of Medicine: Drug Information Portal โ€“ Methotrexate ํ•ญ๋ฅ˜๋จธํ‹ฐ์ฆ˜์ œ ๋ฒค์ฆˆ์•„๋งˆ์ด๋“œ ๊ฐ„๋…์†Œ ๋ฉด์—ญ ์–ต์ œ์ œ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋ณด๊ฑด ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ํ•„์ˆ˜ ์˜์•ฝํ’ˆ RTT ์•” ์น˜๋ฃŒ ์ฝฉํŒฅ ๋…์†Œ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methotrexate
Methotrexate
Methotrexate (MTX), formerly known as amethopterin, is a chemotherapy agent and immune-system suppressant. It is used to treat cancer, autoimmune diseases, and ectopic pregnancies. Types of cancers it is used for include breast cancer, leukemia, lung cancer, lymphoma, gestational trophoblastic disease, and osteosarcoma. Types of autoimmune diseases it is used for include psoriasis, rheumatoid arthritis, and Crohn's disease. It can be given by mouth or by injection. Common side effects include nausea, feeling tired, fever, increased risk of infection, low white blood cell counts, and breakdown of the skin inside the mouth. Other side effects may include liver disease, lung disease, lymphoma, and severe skin rashes. People on long-term treatment should be regularly checked for side effects. It is not safe during breastfeeding. In those with kidney problems, lower doses may be needed. It acts by blocking the body's use of folic acid. Methotrexate was first made in 1947 and initially was used to treat cancer, as it was less toxic than the then-current treatments. In 1956 it provided the first cures of a metastatic cancer. It is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines. Methotrexate is available as a generic medication. In 2020, it was the 113th most commonly prescribed medication in the United States, with more than 5million prescriptions. Medical uses Chemotherapy Methotrexate was originally developed and continues to be used for chemotherapy, either alone or in combination with other agents. It is effective for the treatment of a number of cancers, including solid tumours of breast, head and neck, lung, bladder, as well as acute lymphocytic leukemias, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, osteosarcoma, and choriocarcinoma and other trophoblastic neoplasms. Autoimmune disorders Although originally designed as a chemotherapy drug, in lower doses methotrexate is a generally safe and well-tolerated drug in the treatment of certain autoimmune diseases. Methotrexate is used as a disease-modifying treatment for a number of autoimmune diseases in adults, including rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis, reactive arthritis, enteropathic arthritis, myositis, systemic sclerosis, lupus, sarcoidosis, Crohn's disease, eczema and many forms of vasculitis. In children, it can be used for juvenile dermatomyositis, juvenile idiopathic arthritis, uveitis and localised scleroderma. Methotrexate is one of the first-line therapies for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis. Weekly doses of 5 to 25mg were found by a Cochrane review to be beneficial for 12-52 weeks duration of therapy, though it is used longer-term in clinical practice. Discontinuation rates are as high as 16% due to adverse effects. Use of low doses of methotrexate together with NSAIDs such as aspirin or analgesics such as paracetamol is relatively safe in people being treated for rheumatoid arthritis, with appropriate monitoring. Methotrexate is also sometimes used in combination with other conventional DMARDs, such as sulfasalazine and hydroxychloroquine. Studies and reviews have found that most rheumatoid arthritis patients treated with methotrexate for up to one year had less pain, functioned better, had fewer swollen and tender joints, and had less disease activity overall as reported by themselves and their doctors. X-rays also showed that the progress of the disease slowed or stopped in many people receiving methotrexate, with the progression being completely halted in about 30% of those receiving the drug. Those individuals with rheumatoid arthritis treated with methotrexate have been found to have a lower risk of cardiovascular events such as myocardial infarctions and strokes. Results of a systematic review exploring the comparative effectiveness of treatments of early rheumatoid arthritis show that treatment efficacy can be improved with combination therapy with anti-TNF or other biologic medications, compared with methotrexate monotherapy. Likewise, a 2016 study found the use of methotrexate, in combination with anti-TNF agents, has been shown to be effective for the treatment of ulcerative colitis. Methotrexate has also been used for multiple sclerosis and is used occasionally in systemic lupus erythematosus, with tentative evidence to support such use. During pregnancy Methotrexate is an abortifacient and is used to treat ectopic pregnancies, provided the fallopian tube has not ruptured. Methotrexate with dilation and curettage is used to treat molar pregnancy. Rarely, it is used in combination with mifepristone to abort uterine pregnancies. Administration Methotrexate can be given by mouth or by injection (intramuscular, intravenous, subcutaneous, or intrathecal). Doses are usually taken weekly, not daily, to limit toxicity. Routine monitoring of the complete blood count, liver function tests, and creatinine are recommended. Measurements of creatinine are recommended at least every two months. Folic acid is commonly co-prescribed with methotrexate to minimise the risk of adverse effects. Adverse effects The most common adverse effects include hepatotoxicity, stomatitis, blood abnormalities (leukopenia, anaemia and thromboycytopenia), increased risk of infection, hair loss, nausea, reduced appetite, abdominal pain, diarrhoea, fatigue, fever, dizziness, drowsiness, headache, acute pneumonitis and renal impairment. Methotrexate can also cause mucositis. Methotrexate pneumonitis is a rare complication of therapy, and appears to be reducing in frequency in most recent rheumatoid arthritis treatment trials. In the context of rheumatoid arthritis interstitial lung disease, methotrexate treatment may be associated with a lower incidence of ILD over time. Methotrexate is teratogenic and it is advised stop taking it at least 4 weeks before becoming pregnant and it should be avoided during pregnancy (pregnancy category X) and while breastfeeding. Guidelines have been updated to state that it is safe for a male partner to take at any point while trying to conceive. Central nervous system reactions to methotrexate have been reported, especially when given via the intrathecal route (directly into the cerebrospinal fluid), which include myelopathies and leukoencephalopathies. It has a variety of cutaneous side effects, particularly when administered in high doses. Another little understood but serious possible adverse effect of methotrexate is neurological damage and memory loss. Neurotoxicity may result from the drug crossing the bloodโ€“brain barrier and damaging neurons in the cerebral cortex. People with cancer who receive the medication often nickname these effects "chemo brain" or "chemo fog". Drug interactions Penicillins may decrease the elimination of methotrexate, so increase the risk of toxicity. While they may be used together, increased monitoring is recommended. The aminoglycosides neomycin and paromomycin have been found to reduce gastrointestinal (GI) absorption of methotrexate. Probenecid inhibits methotrexate excretion, which increases the risk of methotrexate toxicity. Likewise, retinoids and trimethoprim have been known to interact with methotrexate to produce additive hepatotoxicity and haematotoxicity, respectively. Other immunosuppressants like cyclosporins may potentiate methotrexate's haematologic effects, hence potentially leading to toxicity. NSAIDs have also been found to fatally interact with methotrexate in numerous case reports. Nitrous oxide potentiating the haematological toxicity of methotrexate has also been documented. Proton-pump inhibitors such as omeprazole and the anticonvulsant valproate have been found to increase the plasma concentrations of methotrexate, as have nephrotoxic agents such as cisplatin, the GI drug colestyramine, and dantrolene. Mechanism of action Methotrexate is an antimetabolite of the antifolate type. It is thought to affect cancer and rheumatoid arthritis by two different pathways. For cancer, methotrexate competitively inhibits dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR), an enzyme that participates in the tetrahydrofolate synthesis. The affinity of methotrexate for DHFR is about 1000-fold that of dihydrofolate. DHFR catalyses the conversion of dihydrofolate to the active tetrahydrofolate. Tetrahydrofolate is needed for the deย novo synthesis of the nucleoside thymidine, required for DNA synthesis. Also, folate is essential for purine and pyrimidine base biosynthesis, so synthesis will be inhibited. Methotrexate, therefore, inhibits the synthesis of DNA, RNA, thymidylates, and proteins. For the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, inhibition of DHFR is not thought to be the main mechanism, but rather multiple mechanisms appear to be involved, including the inhibition of enzymes involved in purine metabolism, leading to accumulation of adenosine; inhibition of T cell activation and suppression of intercellular adhesion molecule expression by T cells; selective down-regulation of B cells; increasing CD95 sensitivity of activated T cells; and inhibition of methyltransferase activity, leading to deactivation of enzyme activity relevant to immune system function. Another mechanism of MTX is the inhibition of the binding of interleukin 1-beta to its cell surface receptor. Thereby, it acts as anticytokine. History In 1947, a team of researchers led by Sidney Farber showed aminopterin, a chemical analogue of folic acid developed by Yellapragada Subbarao of Lederle, could induce remission in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. The development of folic acid analogues had been prompted by the discovery that the administration of folic acid worsened leukemia, and that a diet deficient in folic acid could, conversely, produce improvement; the mechanism of action behind these effects was still unknown at the time. Other analogues of folic acid were in development, and by 1950, methotrexate (then known as amethopterin) was being proposed as a treatment for leukemia. Animal studies published in 1956 showed the therapeutic index of methotrexate was better than that of aminopterin, and clinical use of aminopterin was thus abandoned in favor of methotrexate. In 1951, Jane C. Wright demonstrated the use of methotrexate in solid tumors, showing remission in breast cancer. Wright's group was the first to demonstrate use of the drug in solid tumors, as opposed to leukemias, which are a cancer of the marrow. Min Chiu Li and his collaborators then demonstrated complete remission in women with choriocarcinoma and chorioadenoma in 1956, and in 1960 Wright et al. produced remissions in mycosis fungoides. References External links National Rheumatoid Arthritis Society (NRAS) article on Methotrexate Methotrexate Injection MedlinePlus article from NIH Antifolates Antineoplastic and immunomodulating drugs Benzamides Chemotherapy Disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs Folates Hepatotoxins IARC Group 3 carcinogens Immunosuppressants Mammalian dihydrofolate reductase inhibitors Abortifacients Nephrotoxins Orphan drugs Wikipedia medicine articles ready to translate World Health Organization essential medicines
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%A7%80%EB%8F%84%EB%B6%80%EB%94%98
์ง€๋„๋ถ€๋”˜
์ง€๋„๋ถ€๋”˜(, ZDV), ์•„์ง€๋„ํ‹ฐ๋ฏธ๋”˜(azidothymidine, AZT)์€ HIV/AIDS ์˜ˆ๋ฐฉ ๋ฐ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์— ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๋Š” ํ•ญ๋ ˆํŠธ๋กœ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค ์•ฝ์ œ์ด๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํ•ญ๋ ˆํŠธ๋กœ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค ์•ฝ์ œ๋“ค๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ๊ถŒ๊ณ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ฃผ์‚ฌ์นจ ์ฐ”๋ฆผ ํ›„ ๋˜๋Š” ๋ถ„๋งŒ ์ค‘ ๋ชจ์ž๊ฐ์—ผ ๋˜๋Š” ๊ธฐํƒ€ ์ž ์žฌ์  ๋…ธ์ถœ์„ ์˜ˆ๋ฐฉํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ง€๋„๋ถ€๋”˜ ์ž์ฒด๋กœ ํŒ๋งค๋˜๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ๋ผ๋ฏธ๋ถ€๋”˜/์ง€๋„๋ถ€๋”˜ ๋ฐ ์•„๋ฐ”์นด๋น„๋ฅด/๋ผ๋ฏธ๋ถ€๋”˜/์ง€๋„๋ถ€๋”˜์œผ๋กœ์„œ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ํŒ๋งค๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ตฌ๊ฐ•์ด๋‚˜ ์ €์†์˜ ์ •๋งฅ ์ฃผ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์ธ ๋ถ€์ž‘์šฉ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ๋‘ํ†ต, ๋ฐœ์—ด, ๋ฉ”์Šค๊บผ์›€์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์‹ฌ๊ฐํ•œ ๋ถ€์ž‘์šฉ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ๊ฐ„ ์งˆํ™˜, ๊ทผ์œก๋ณ‘, ์œ ์‚ฐ์‚ฐ์ฆ์ด ํฌํ•จ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ž„์‹  ์ค‘์—๋„ ํ”ํžˆ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๋ฉฐ ํƒœ์•„์—๊ฒŒ ์•ˆ์ „ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ„์ฃผ๋œ๋‹ค. ZDV๋Š” ๋‰ดํด๋ ˆ์˜ค์‹œ๋“œ ์œ ์‚ฌ์ฒด ์—ญ์ „์‚ฌํšจ์†Œ(NRTI)๊ณ„์— ์†ํ•œ๋‹ค. DNA๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋“ค๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด HIV๊ฐ€ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ์—ญ์ „์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์–ต์ œํ•จ์œผ๋กœ์จ ๋™์ž‘ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋ฏ€๋กœ ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค์˜ ๋ณต์ œ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ์†Œ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ง€๋„๋ถ€๋”˜์€ 1964๋…„ ์ฒ˜์Œ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1987๋…„ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์—์„œ ์‚ฌ์šฉ์ด ์Šน์ธ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ HIV์˜ ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์ œ์˜€๋‹ค. ์˜๋ฃŒ์ œ๋„์— ํ•„์ˆ˜์ ์ธ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ํšจ๊ณผ์ ์ด๊ณ  ์•ˆ์ „ํ•œ ์˜์•ฝํ’ˆ ๋ชฉ๋ก์ธ WHO ํ•„์ˆ˜ ์˜์•ฝํ’ˆ ๋ชฉ๋ก์— ๋“ฑ์žฌ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ œ๋„ค๋ฆญ ์˜์•ฝํ’ˆ์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ๋งค๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋‹ค. ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ๋„์ƒ๊ตญ์˜ ๋„๋งค๊ฐ€๋Š” 1๊ฐœ์›”์— US$5.10 ~ $25.60 ์‚ฌ์ด์ด๋‹ค. 2015๋…„ ๊ธฐ์ค€์œผ๋กœ, ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ์›”๊ฐ„ ์ฒ˜๋ฐฉ ๋น„์šฉ์€ $200 ์ด์ƒ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ํ•™์  ์‚ฌ์šฉ HIV ์น˜๋ฃŒ AZT๋Š” ๋ณดํ†ต ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํ•ญ๋ ˆํŠธ๋กœ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค ์š”๋ฒ•๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ํ•˜๋ฃจ์— ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ ๋ณต์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ ‘๊ทผ๋ฒ•์€ ๊ณ ํ™œ์„ฑ ํ•ญ๋ ˆํŠธ๋กœ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค ์น˜๋ฃŒ(HAART) ๋ผ๊ณ  ํ•˜๋ฉฐ HIV ์ €ํ•ญ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ์„ฑ์„ ๋ฐฉ์ง€ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. HIV ์˜ˆ๋ฐฉ AZT๋Š” ๋ผ๋ฏธ๋ถ€๋”˜์ด๋ผ ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๋˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํ•ญ๋ ˆํŠธ๋กœ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค ์•ฝ๋ฌผ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋…ธ์ถœ ํ›„ ๋ฐฉ์ง€์ œ(post-exposure prophylaxis, PEP)์— ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜์–ด ์™”๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋“ค์€ ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค์— ์ฒ˜์Œ ํ•œ ๋ฒˆ ๋…ธ์ถœ๋œ ํ›„ HIV ๊ฐ์—ผ์˜ ์œ„ํ—˜์„ ์ƒ๋‹นํžˆ ์ค„์ด๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์ผํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ตœ๊ทผ์— AZT๋Š” PEP๋ฅผ ์ œ๊ณตํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ํ…Œ๋…ธํฌ๋น„๋ฅด์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํ•ญ๋ ˆํŠธ๋กœ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค๋กœ ๋Œ€์ฒด๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. AZT๋Š” ์ด์ œ ์ž„์‹ , ๋ถ„๋งŒ ๋ฐ ์ถœ์‚ฐ ์ค‘ HIV ๋ชจ์ž๊ฐ์—ผ์˜ ์‚ฌ์ „ ๋…ธ์ถœ ๋ฐฉ์ง€ ๋ฐ ์‚ฌํ›„ ๋…ธ์ถœ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ์ž„์ƒ ๊ฒฝ๋กœ์˜ ์ฃผ์š” ๋ถ€๋ถ„์ด๋ฉฐ, ๊ฐ์—ผ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์€ ํ˜•์ œ์ž๋งค์˜ ์ถœ์‚ฐ ๋ฐ ์‹ ์ƒ์•„ ๋ฐœ๋‹ฌ์— ํ•„์ˆ˜์ ์ธ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ž…์ฆ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. AZT๊ฐ€ ์—†๋‹ค๋ฉด, HIV์— ๊ฐ์—ผ๋œ ์‚ฐ๋ชจ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง„ ํƒœ์•„๋“ค ์ค‘ ๋งŽ๊ฒŒ๋Š” 10-15%๊ฐ€ ๊ทธ๋“ค ์Šค์Šค๋กœ ๊ฐ์—ผ๋  ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. AZT๋Š” ์ˆ˜์ • ํ›„, ๋ถ„๋งŒ, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์ถœ์‚ฐ 6์ฃผ ํ›„์—์„œ ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์œ„ํ—˜์„ ์ตœ์†Œ 8%๊นŒ์ง€ ๊ฐ์†Œ์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ํ•ญ๋ ˆํŠธ๋กœ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค์ œ, ์ œ์™•์ ˆ๊ฐœ, ์•ˆ๋ฉด ๋งˆ์Šคํฌ, ํŠผํŠผํ•œ ๊ณ ๋ฌด ์žฅ๊ฐ‘, ์ž„์ƒ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ผํšŒ์šฉ ๊ธฐ์ €๊ท€ ๋ถ„๋ฆฌ, ์ž… ์ ‘์ด‰ ๋ฐฉ์ง€์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ์ผ๊ด€๋˜๊ณ  ์‚ฌ์ „ ์˜ˆ๋ฐฉ์ ์ธ ์กฐ์น˜๋“ค์€ HIV์˜ ์•„๋™ ๋ณดํ˜ธ์ž ์ „์—ผ์„ 1-2% ์ •๋„ ๋” ์ค„์ผ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. 1994๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 1999๋…„๊นŒ์ง€, AZT๋Š” HIV ๋ชจ์ž๊ฐ์—ผ์˜ ์ฃผ์š” ์˜ˆ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. AZT๋Š” ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์—์„œ 1000๋ช… ์ด์ƒ์˜ ๋ถ€๋ชจ ๋ฐ ์œ ์•„ ์‚ฌ๋ง์„ ์˜ˆ๋ฐฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๋‹น์‹œ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์—์„œ HIV ์–‘์„ฑ ์‚ฐ๋ชจ์—๊ฒŒ ํ—ˆ์šฉ๋˜๋Š” ๊ด€๋ฆฌ ํ‘œ์ค€์€ 076 ์–‘์„ฑ์œผ๋กœ ์•Œ๋ ค์ ธ ์žˆ์—ˆ๊ณ , 2์ฐจ ์ ‘์ข… 3๊ฐœ์›” ์ดํ›„ ์ผ์ผ 5ํšŒ AZT๋ฅผ ํˆฌ์—ฌํ•˜๊ณ  ์ถœ์‚ฐ ์ค‘์—๋Š” ์ •๋งฅ ๋‚ด์— AZT๋ฅผ ํˆฌ์—ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฒ•์€ ์‹œ๊ฐ„์ด ์˜ค๋ž˜ ๊ฑธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๋น„์šฉ์ด ๋งŽ์ด ๋“ค์—ˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์—, ๋ชจ์ž๊ฐ์—ผ์ด ์‹ฌ๊ฐํ–ˆ๋˜ ๊ธ€๋กœ๋ฒŒ ๋‚จ๋ถ€์—์„œ๋Š” ๋ถˆ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋‹ค๊ณ  ์—ฌ๊ฒจ์กŒ๋‹ค. 1990๋…„๋Œ€ ๋ง์—๋Š” '์ž์› ๋นˆ๊ณค' ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์—์„œ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ์งง๊ณ  ๊ฐ„๋‹จํ•œ ์ฒด๊ณ„์˜ ์œ ํšจ์„ฑ์„ ํ…Œ์ŠคํŠธํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋งŽ์€ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๊ฐ€ ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด AZT ๋‹จ๊ธฐ ์ฝ”์Šค๋Š” ๊ด€๋ฆฌ ํ‘œ์ค€์ด ์—ด์•…ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์—์„œ ์‹œํ—˜ํ•ด ๋ณด์•˜๋‹ค๋ฉด ์˜๋ฃŒ์‚ฌ๊ณ ๋กœ ๊ฐ„์ฃผ๋˜์—ˆ์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ๊ทธ๋Ÿผ์—๋„ ๋ถˆ๊ตฌํ•˜๊ณ  ๋นˆ๊ณคํ•œ ํ”ผํ—˜์ž์˜ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์™€ ์ƒ์กด์„ ๊ฐœ์„ ํ•˜๋Š” ์น˜๋ฃŒ์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ถ€์ž‘์šฉ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ํ”ํ•œ ๋ถ€์ž‘์šฉ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ๋ฉ”์Šค๊บผ์›€, ๊ตฌํ† , ์œ„์‚ฐ ์—ญ๋ฅ˜, ๋‘ํ†ต, ๋ณต๋ถ€ ์ง€๋ฐฉ ๊ฐ์†Œ, ๊ฐ€๋ฒผ์šด ์ˆ˜๋ฉด, ์‹์š• ๊ฐํ‡ด ๋“ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋น„๊ต์  ํ”ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์€ ๋ถ€์ž‘์šฉ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ์†ํ†ฑ๊ณผ ๋ฐœํ†ฑ์˜ ํฌ๋ฏธํ•œ ๋ณ€์ƒ‰, ๊ธฐ๋ถ„ ์ƒ์Šน, ๊ฐ€๋” ๋”ฐ๋”๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ์ผ์‹œ์ ์ธ ์†์ด๋‚˜ ๋ฐœ์˜ ๋ฌด๊ฐ๊ฐ, ๊ฐ€๋ฒผ์šด ํ”ผ๋ถ€ ๋ณ€์ƒ‰ ๋“ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์•Œ๋Ÿฌ์ง€ ๋ฐ˜์‘์€ ๋“œ๋ฌผ๋‹ค. AZT๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ์žฅ๊ธฐ ๊ณ ์„ ๋Ÿ‰ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋Š” ๋นˆํ˜ˆ, ํ˜ธ์ค‘๊ตฌ๊ฐ์†Œ์ฆ, ๊ฐ„๋…์„ฑ, ์‹ฌ๊ทผ์ฆ, ๊ทผ๋ณ‘์ฆ ๋“ฑ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ์ œํ•œํ•˜๋Š” ๋ถ€์ž‘์šฉ๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จ์ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๋ชจ๋“  ์กฐ๊ฑด์€ ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ AZT ์„ ๋Ÿ‰ ๊ฐ์†Œ ์‹œ ๊ฐ€์—ญ์„ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ํ™•์ธ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋“ค์€ ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋ช‡ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ์›์ธ์— ๊ธฐ์ธํ•œ๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค๋ฉด ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„ DNA์˜ ์ผ์‹œ์ ์ธ ๊ณ ๊ฐˆ, ์ผ๋ถ€ ์„ธํฌ ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„์—์„œ ฮณ-DNA ์ค‘ํ•ฉํšจ์†Œ์˜ ๋ฏผ๊ฐ๋„, ํ‹ฐ๋ฏธ๋”˜ ์‚ผ์ธ์‚ฐ์—ผ์˜ ๊ณ ๊ฐˆ, ์‚ฐํ™” ์ŠคํŠธ๋ ˆ์Šค, ์„ธํฌ ๋‚ด L-์นด๋ฅด๋‹ˆํ‹ด์˜ ๊ฐ์†Œ, ๋˜๋Š” ๊ทผ์œก ์„ธํฌ์˜ ์„ธํฌ์ž๋ฉธ ๋“ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. AZT๋กœ ์ธํ•œ ๋นˆํ˜ˆ์€ ์ ํ˜ˆ๊ตฌ ์ƒ์„ฑ์„ ์ด‰์ง„ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์—๋ฆฌํŠธ๋กœํŽ˜ํ‹ด์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ์„ฑ๊ณต์ ์œผ๋กœ ์น˜๋ฃŒํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๋„๋ฉ”ํƒ€์‹ , ๋…ธ๋ฅด๋‹ค์ œํŒœ, ์•„์„ธํ‹ธ์‚ด๋ฆฌ์‹ค์‚ฐ (์•„์Šคํ”ผ๋ฆฐ), ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ํŠธ๋ฆฌ๋ฉ”ํ† ํ”„๋ฆผ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๊ฐ„ ๊ธ€๋ฃจํฌ๋ก ์‚ฐํ™”๋ฅผ ์–ต์ œํ•˜๋Š” ์•ฝ๋ฌผ์€ ์ œ๊ฑฐ์œจ์„ ๋–จ์–ด๋œจ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์•ฝ๋ฌผ ์น˜๋ฃŒ ๊ฐ•๋„๋ฅผ ๋†’์˜€๋‹ค. ์˜ค๋Š˜๋‚  ๋ถ€์ž‘์šฉ์€ AZT์˜ ์ €์šฉ๋Ÿ‰ ์‚ฌ์šฉ์— ์žˆ์–ด ํ›จ์”ฌ ๋œ ๋ณดํŽธ์ ์ด๋‹ค. IARC์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋ฉด ์‹คํ—˜๋™๋ฌผ์—๋Š” ์ง€๋„๋ถ€๋”˜์˜ ๋ฐœ์•”์„ฑ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ถฉ๋ถ„ํ•œ ์ฆ๊ฑฐ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์—๊ฒŒ ๋ฐœ์•”์„ฑ์ด ์žˆ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค ์ €ํ•ญ์„ฑ ํ™˜์ž์—๊ฒŒ ์šฉ์ธ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋†’์€ ์šฉ๋Ÿ‰์—์„œ๋„, AZT๋Š” ๋ชจ๋“  HIV ๋ณต์ œ๋ฅผ ์˜ˆ๋ฐฉํ•  ๋งŒํผ ์ถฉ๋ถ„ํžˆ ๊ฐ•๋ ฅํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค์˜ ๋ณต์ œ์™€ ์งˆ๋ณ‘์˜ ์ง„ํ–‰๋งŒ์„ ๋Šฆ์ถœ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. AZT ์น˜๋ฃŒ๊ฐ€ ๊ธธ์–ด์ง€๋ฉด HIV๋Š” AZT ์—ญ์ „์‚ฌํšจ์†Œ์˜ ๋Œ์—ฐ๋ณ€์ด์— ์˜ํ•ด AZT์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋‚ด์„ฑ์„ ๋ฐœ๋‹ฌ์‹œํ‚ฌ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ €ํ•ญ์„ฑ ๋ฐœ๋‹ฌ์„ ๋Šฆ์ถ”๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์˜์‚ฌ๋“ค์€ ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ AZT๋ฅผ ๋‹จ๋ฐฑ์งˆ ๋ถ„ํ•ดํšจ์†Œ ์–ต์ œ์ œ, ๋น„ํ•ต์‚ฐ ์—ญ์ „์‚ฌํšจ์†Œ ์–ต์ œ์ œ, ๋˜๋Š” ํ†ตํ•ฉํšจ์†Œ ์–ต์ œ์ œ์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ข…๋ฅ˜์˜ ์—ญ์ „์‚ฌํšจ์†Œ ์–ต์ œ์ œ ๋ฐ ํ•ญ ๋ ˆํŠธ๋กœ ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค ์–ต์ œ์ œ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ํˆฌ์—ฌํ•  ๊ฒƒ์„ ๊ถŒ๊ณ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์€ HAART (Highly Active Anti Retroviral Therapy)๋ผ๊ณ  ์•Œ๋ ค์ ธ ์žˆ๋‹ค ๊ธฐ์ „ AZT๋Š” ํ‹ฐ๋ฏธ๋”˜ ์œ ์‚ฌ์ฒด์ด๋‹ค. AZT๋Š” ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค๊ฐ€ RNA๋ฅผ ๋ฐ”ํƒ•์œผ๋กœ DNA ๋ณต์‚ฌ๋ณธ์„ ๋งŒ๋“ค๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ํšจ์†Œ์ธ HIV์˜ ์—ญ์ „์‚ฌํšจ์†Œ๋ฅผ ์„ ํƒ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์–ต์ œํ•จ์œผ๋กœ์จ ์ž‘์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ์—ญ์ „์‚ฌ๋Š” HIV์˜ ์ด์ค‘ ๊ฐ€๋‹ฅ DNA ์ƒ์‚ฐ์„ ์œ„ํ•ด ํ•„์š”ํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ ์ดํ›„ ํ”„๋กœ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถ€๋ฅด๋Š” ๊ฐ์—ผ๋œ ์„ธํฌ์˜ ์œ ์ „ ๋ฌผ์งˆ์— ํ†ตํ•ฉ๋œ๋‹ค. ์„ธํฌ ํšจ์†Œ๋Š” AZT๋ฅผ ํšจ๊ณผ์ ์ธ 5'-์‚ผ์ธ์‚ฐ ํ˜•ํƒœ๋กœ ๋ณ€ํ™˜ํ•œ๋‹ค. HIV์˜ ํ˜•์„ฑ DNA ์‚ฌ์Šฌ์˜ ์ข…์‹์ด ์–ต์ œ ํšจ๊ณผ์˜ ํŠน์ • ์š”์†Œ๋ผ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์—์„œ ์ฆ๋ช…๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋งค์šฐ ๋†’์€ ์šฉ๋Ÿ‰์—์„œ, AZT์˜ ์‚ผ์ธ์‚ฐ ํ˜•ํƒœ๋Š” ์„ธํฌ ๋ถ„์—ด์„ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์„ธํฌ์—์„œ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๋Š” DNA ์ค‘ํ•ฉํšจ์†Œ๋„ ์–ต์ œํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์ง€๋งŒ, AZT์˜ ์šฉ๋Ÿ‰๊ณผ๋Š” ์ƒ๊ด€์—†์ด HIV์˜ ์—ญ์ „์‚ฌํšจ์†Œ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์นœํ™”๋ ฅ์ด ์•ฝ 100๋ฐฐ ๋” ๋†’๋‹ค. AZT์— ์˜ํ•ด DNA ์ˆ˜์„ ์ด ๋ฐฉํ•ด๋  ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ์„ธํฌ๊ฐ€ ๋น ๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ์ˆ˜์„ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์„ ํƒ์„ฑ์ด ์ผ์–ด๋‚œ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ˜๋ฉด HIV ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค๋Š” ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์ด ๋ถ€์กฑํ•˜๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ AZT๋Š” ๊ฐ์—ผ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์€ ์„ธํฌ ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์— ์˜ํ–ฅ์„ ๋ฏธ์น˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  HIV ๋ณต์ œ๋ฅผ ๋ฐฉํ•ดํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ถฉ๋ถ„ํžˆ ๋†’์€ ์šฉ๋Ÿ‰์—์„œ, AZT๋Š” ๋ฏธํ† ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ฆฌ์•„๊ฐ€ ๋ณต์ œ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” DNA ์ค‘ํ•ฉํšจ์†Œ๋ฅผ ์–ต์ œํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ์ž ์žฌ์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋…์„ฑ์ด์ง€๋งŒ ์‹ฌ๊ทผ๊ณผ ๊ณจ๊ฒฉ๊ทผ์— ๋Œ€ํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ฐ€์—ญ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ž‘์šฉํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๊ทผ์—ผ์„ ์œ ๋ฐœํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ™”ํ•™ AZT๋Š” ๋น„๋Œ€์นญ ํ•ต์˜ ๋‹จ์‚ฌ์ •๊ณ„์˜ ์†Œ๊ธˆ ๊ตฌ์กฐ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€๋ฉฐ, ์—ผ๊ธฐ์Œ ์ดํ•ฉ์ฒด์˜ ๊ท ๋“ฑํ™”๋œ H-N-O ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ ๋„คํŠธ์›Œํฌ๋ฅผ ์ด๋ฃฌ๋‹ค. ์ด ๋‹ค์ค‘์Šค์ผ€์ผ ๊ฒฐ์ •์ฒด์˜ ๊ฒฉ์ž ์ƒ๋ถ€ ๊ตฌ์กฐ๋ฌผ๊ณผ ๊ณ„๋ฉด ํ™œ์„ฑ์ œ์˜ ๋จธ๋ฆฌ ๋ถ€๋ถ„ ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ์ •์ „๊ธฐ์  ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ ๊ทน์„ฑ์€ 1987๋…„๊ณผ 1988๋…„์— ๋ณด๋„๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์—ญ์‚ฌ ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ์•” ์—ฐ๊ตฌ 1960๋…„๋Œ€, ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์˜ ์•”์ด ํ™˜๊ฒฝ ๋‚ด ๋ ˆํŠธ๋กœ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค์— ์˜ํ•ด ์œ ๋ฐœ๋œ๋‹ค๋Š” ์ด๋ก ์€ ์ž„์ƒ์ ์ธ ์ง€์ง€์™€ ์ง€์›์„ ์–ป์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์ตœ๊ทผ ์ด ์ด๋ก ์€ ๋…ธ๋ฒจ์ƒ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž์ธ ํ•˜์›Œ๋“œ ํ…Œ๋ฏผ๊ณผ ๋ฐ์ด๋น„๋“œ ๋ณผํ‹ฐ๋ชจ์–ด์˜ ์—…์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด, ๊ฑฐ์˜ ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์˜ ์กฐ๋ฅ˜ ์•”์€ ์ƒˆ์˜ ๋ ˆํŠธ๋กœ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค์— ์˜ํ•ด ์œ ๋ฐœ๋œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์•Œ๋ ค์กŒ์ง€๋งŒ, ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ๋ ˆํŠธ๋กœ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค์—์„œ๋„ ํ•ด๋‹นํ•˜๋Š”์ง€๋Š” ์•„์ง ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์€ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐํ˜€์กŒ๋‹ค. ๋…ธ๋ฒจ์ƒ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž์ธ ์กฐ์ง€ ํžˆ์นญ์Šค์™€ ๊ฑฐํŠธ๋ฃจ๋“œ ์—˜๋ฆฌ์–ธ์˜ ์‹คํ—˜์‹ค์—์„œ ํ–‰ํ•ด์ง„ ์œ ์‚ฌํ•œ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์—์„œ ํ•ต์‚ฐ์˜ ํ•ฉ์„ฑ์„ ์„ฑ๊ณก์ ์œผ๋กœ ์–ต์ œํ•˜๋Š” ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ํ™”ํ•ฉ๋ฌผ์ด ํ•ญ๊ท , ํ•ญ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ํ•ญ์•” ๋ฌผ์งˆ๋กœ ์ฆ๋ช…๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ์ด๋Š” ํ•ญ์•”๋ฌผ์งˆ์ธ 6-mercaptopurine์˜ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ๋กœ ์ด์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ”๋ฐ”๋ผ ์•ค ์นด๋ฅด๋งˆ๋…ธ์Šค ์•” ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์†Œ์™€ ์›จ์ธ ์ฃผ๋ฆฝ ์˜๊ณผ๋Œ€ํ•™์˜ ์ œ๋กฌ ํ˜ธ๋น„์ธ ๋Š” ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๊ตญ๋ฆฝ ๋ณด๊ฑด์›(NIH)์˜ ์ง€์› ํ•˜์— 1964๋…„์— ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ AZT๋ฅผ ํ•ฉ์„ฑํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์ƒ์ฅ์—์„œ ์ƒ๋ฌผํ•™์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถˆํ™œ์„ฑ์ธ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ํŒ๋ช…๋œ ํ›„ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ์€ ๋ณด๋ฅ˜๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 1974๋…„ ๋…์ผ ๊ดดํŒ…๊ฒ์— ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ง‰์Šคํ”Œ๋ž‘ํฌ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์†Œ์˜ ์šธํ”„๋žŒ ์˜ค์Šคํ…Œ๋ฅดํƒ€๊ทธ๋Š” AZT๊ฐ€ ํŠธ๊ธฐ์ ์œผ๋กœ ํ”„๋ Œ๋“œ ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค(๋งˆ์šฐ์Šค ๋ฐฑํ˜ˆ๋ณ‘ ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค์˜ ์ผ์ข…)๋ฅผ ํ‘œ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์‚ผ์•˜๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ณด๊ณ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ํ”„๋ Œ๋“œ ๋ฐฑํ˜ˆ๋ณ‘ ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค๋Š” ๋ ˆํŠธ๋กœ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค์ด๊ณ , ๋ ˆํŠธ๋กœ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ์œ ๋ฐœ๋˜๋Š” ์•Œ๋ ค์ง„ ์ธ์ฒด ์งˆํ™˜์ด ์—†์–ด ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋“ค์˜ ๊ด€์‹ฌ์„ ๊ฑฐ์˜ ๋Œ์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๋‹ค. HIV/AIDS ์—ฐ๊ตฌ 1983๋…„ ํŒŒ๋ฆฌ ํŒŒ์Šคํ‡ด๋ฅด ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์†Œ์˜ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์›๋“ค์€ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ๋ฉด์—ญ ๊ฒฐํ• ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค๋กœ ์•Œ๋ ค์ง„ ๋ ˆํŠธ๋กœ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค๋ฅผ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ๋ฉด์—ญ ๊ฒฐํ• ์ฆํ›„๊ตฐ์˜ ์›์ธ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐํ˜€๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. ์–ผ๋งˆ ํ›„, ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๊ตญ๋ฆฝ ์•” ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์†Œ(NCI)์˜ ์‚ฌ๋ฌด์—˜ ๋ธŒ๋กœ๋”, ํžˆ๋กœ์•„ํ‚ค ๋ฏธ์“ฐ์•ผ, ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ์•ผ๋ฅด์ฝ”์•ˆ์€ ์—์ด์ฆˆ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฒ•์„ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋“ค์€ ์ง์ ‘ ๋งŒ๋“  CD4+ T ์„ธํฌ๋“ค์„ ์ด์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ, HIV์— ์˜ํ•ด CD4+ T ์„ธํฌ๋“ค์ด ์ฃฝ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ณดํ˜ธํ•˜๋Š” ์•ฝ๋ฌผ๋“ค์˜ ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์„ ๊ฒ€์‚ฌํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋ถ„์„๋ฒ•์„ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์•ฝ๋ฌผ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ ๊ณผ์ •์„ ์ด‰์ง„ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด NCI ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ง„์€ ํ•ญ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค ํ™œ๋™์ด ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ํ™”ํ•ฉ๋ฌผ ๋ผ์ด๋ธŒ๋Ÿฌ๋ฆฌ์— ์ ‘๊ทผํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์ œ์•ฝ์‚ฌ์™€์˜ ํ˜‘์—…์„ ์ ๊ทน ๋ชจ์ƒ‰ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ๋ถ„์„๋ฒ•์€ ํ™”ํ•ฉ๋ฌผ์˜ ํ•ญ HIV ํšจ๊ณผ์™€ ๊ฐ์—ผ๋œ T ์„ธํฌ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋…์„ฑ์„ ๋™์‹œ์— ํ…Œ์ŠคํŠธํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. 1984๋…„ 6์›”, Burroughs-Welcome์˜ ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šคํ•™์ž ๋งˆํ‹ฐ ์„ธ์ธํŠธ ํด๋ ˆ์–ด๋Š” HIV ๋ณต์ œ๋ฅผ ์–ต์ œํ•  ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ์„ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋Š” ์•ฝ๋ฌผ์„ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ์„ ์„ธ์› ๋‹ค. Burroughs-Welcome์€ ์กฐ์ง€ ํžˆ์นญ์Šค, ๊ฑฐํŠธ๋ฃจ๋“œ ์—˜๋ฆฌ์–ธ, ๋ฐ์ด๋น„๋“œ ๋ฐฐ๋ฆฌ, ํด ๋งฅ๊ฑฐํŠธ ์ฃผ๋‹ˆ์–ด, ํ•„๋ฆฝ ํผ๋จผ, ๋งˆ์‚ฌ ์„ธ์ธํŠธ, ์žฌ๋‹› ๋ผ์ด๋“œ์•„์›ƒ, ์‚ฐ๋“œ๋ผ ๋ ˆ๋ฅด๋งŒ ๋“ฑ ๋“ฑ ๋‰ดํด๋ ˆ์˜ค์‚ฌ์ด๋“œ ์•„๋‚ ๋กœ๊ทธ์™€ ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค ์งˆํ™˜์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ „๋ฌธ ์ง€์‹์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์›๋“ค์— ์˜ํ•ด ์ด๋Œ์–ด์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋“ค์˜ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋Š” ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค ํšจ์†Œ์ธ ์—ญ์ „์‚ฌํšจ์†Œ์— ์ดˆ์ ์„ ๋งž์ท„๋‹ค. ์—ญ์ „์‚ฌํšจ์†Œ๋Š” HIV๋ฅผ ํฌํ•จํ•œ ๋ ˆํŠธ๋กœ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค๊ฐ€ ๊ทธ๋“ค ์ž์‹ ์„ ๋ณต์ œํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ํšจ์†Œ์ด๋‹ค. ๋‹น์‹œ ์›ฐ์ปด ๊ทธ๋ฃน์€ ์‹คํ–‰ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ์‚ฌ๋‚ด HIV ํ•ญ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ์—†์—ˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— 2์ฐจ ํ…Œ์ŠคํŠธ๋Š” ๋ ˆํŠธ๋กœ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค์˜ ํ”„๋ Œ์ฆˆ ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค ๋˜๋Š” ํ•˜๋น„ ์œก์ข… ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค์— ๊ฐ์—ผ๋œ ์ฅ ์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ๋Œ€์ƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๋ ˆํŠธ๋กœ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค๋Š” ํ•ฉ๋‹นํ•œ ๋Œ€๋ฆฌํ‘œ์ง€์ž(surrogate marker)์— ํ•ด๋‹นํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฏฟ์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. AZT๋Š” ํ”„๋ Œ๋“œ ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค์™€ ํ•˜๋น„ ์œก์ข… ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค์˜ ์ฃผ๋ชฉํ•  ๋งŒํ•œ ์–ต์ œ์ œ์ž„์ด ์ž…์ฆ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, AZT์˜ ๊ธฐ๋ก์„ ์‚ดํŽด๋ณธ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ์ˆ˜๋…„ ์ „ ์ฅ์—์„œ ํ•ญ๊ท  ํ™œ์„ฑ์„ ๊ฒ€์‚ฌํ–ˆ์„ ๋•Œ ๋…์„ฑ์ด ๋‚ฎ์•˜๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ์— ๊ธฐ์ดˆํ•˜์—ฌ, ๋‰ดํด๋ ˆ์˜ค์‚ฌ์ด๋“œ ํ™”ํ•™์ž์ธ ์žฌ๋‹› ๋ผ์ด๋“œ์•„์›ƒ์ด AZT๋ฅผ ํ•ด๋‹น ์กฐ์ง์˜ HIV ํ•ญ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค ๋ถ„์„ ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด NCI๋กœ ๋ณด๋‚ผ 11๊ฐ€์ง€ ํ™”ํ•ฉ๋ฌผ ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋กœ ์„ ์ •ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1985๋…„ 2์›”, NCI ๊ณผํ•™์ž๋“ค์€ AZT๊ฐ€ in vitro ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์—์„œ ํšจ๋Šฅ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ช‡ ๋‹ฌ ํ›„, NCI์™€ ๋“€ํฌ ๋Œ€ํ•™์—์„œ AZT์˜ ์ž„์ƒ 1์ƒ ์‹œํ—˜์ด ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ž„์ƒ 1์ƒ ์‹œํ—˜์„ ์ง„ํ–‰ํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ๋“ค์€ ์‹คํ—˜์‹ค์—์„œ ํšจ๊ณผ์ ์ธ ํ•ญ HIV ํ™œ์„ฑ์„ ๋ณด์˜€๋˜ ๋˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์•ฝ๋ฌผ์ธ ์ˆ˜๋ผ๋ฏผ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ์‹คํ—˜ ๊ฒฝํ—˜์„ ๋ฐ”ํƒ•์œผ๋กœ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. AZT์˜ ์ด ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ์‹คํ—˜์€ ์ด ์•ฝ์ด HIV ํ™˜์ž์—๊ฒŒ ์•ˆ์ „ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํˆฌ์—ฌ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ณ , ํ™˜์ž๋“ค์˜ CD4 ์ˆ˜์น˜๋ฅผ ์ฆ๊ฐ€์‹œํ‚ค๊ณ , ํ”ผ๋ถ€ ํ…Œ์ŠคํŠธ๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ์ธก์ •๋œ T ์„ธํฌ ๋ฉด์—ญ๋ ฅ์ด ํšŒ๋ณต๋˜์—ˆ์Œ์„ ์ฆ๋ช…ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, AIDS ํ™˜์ž์˜ ์ฒด์ค‘ ์ฆ๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ์œ ๋„ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์ž„์ƒ ํšจ๊ณผ์˜ ๊ฐ•๋ ฅํ•œ ์ฆ๊ฑฐ๋ฅผ ๋ณด์—ฌ ์ฃผ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ in vitro์—์„œ ์ž‘์šฉํ•œ AZT ์ˆ˜์น˜๋ฅผ ํ˜ˆ์ฒญ ๋ฐ ์ง„์ •์ œ ํ˜•ํƒœ๋กœ ํ™˜์ž์—๊ฒŒ ์ฃผ์ž…ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ณ , ๊ฐ์—ผ๋œ ๋‡Œ์—๋งŒ ๊นŠ์ˆ™์ด ์นจํˆฌํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ํŠนํ—ˆ ์ถœ์› ๋ฐ FDA ์Šน์ธ ์ดํ›„ Burroughs-Welcome์— ์˜ํ•ด AZT์˜ ์—„๊ฒฉํ•œ ์ด์ค‘ ๋งน๊ฒ€ ์œ„์•ฝ ํ†ต์ œ ๋ฌด์ž‘์œ„ ์‹œํ—˜์ด ์ˆ˜ํ–‰๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , AZT๊ฐ€ HIV๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง„ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์˜ ์ˆ˜๋ช…์„ ์•ˆ์ „ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์—ฐ์žฅํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ์ฆ๋ช…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. Burroughs-Welcome์€ 1985๋…„์— AZT ํŠนํ—ˆ๋ฅผ ์ถœ์›ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ์‹ํ’ˆ์˜์•ฝ๊ตญ(FDA) ๊ฐ์—ผ๋ฐฉ์ง€ ์ž๋ฌธ ์œ„์›ํšŒ๋Š” AZT์˜ ์Šน์ธ์„ ๊ถŒ๊ณ ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด 10๋Œ€ 1๋กœ ํˆฌํ‘œ๋ฅผ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. FDA๋Š” 1987๋…„ 3์›” 20์ผ, HIV, ์—์ด์ฆˆ, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์—์ด์ฆˆ ๊ด€๋ จ ๋ณตํ•ฉ์ฒด์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์‚ฌ์šฉ์„ ์œ„ํ•ด ๊ทธ ์•ฝ์„ ์Šน์ธํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์‹คํ—˜์‹ค์—์„œ AZT๊ฐ€ HIV์— ๋Œ€ํ•ญํ–ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ์ตœ์ดˆ ์ž…์ฆ๊ณผ ์Šน์ธ ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„์€ 25๊ฐœ์›”๋กœ, ์ตœ๊ทผ ์—ญ์‚ฌ์ƒ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์งง์€ ์•ฝ๋ฌผ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ ๊ธฐ๊ฐ„์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ํ›„ AZT๋Š” 1990๋…„์— ๋งŒ์žฅ์ผ์น˜๋กœ ์œ ์•„์™€ ์•„๋™์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์‚ฌ์šฉ์ด ์Šน์ธ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. AZT๋Š” ์ฒ˜์Œ์— ํ˜„์žฌ๋ณด๋‹ค ๋‹ค์†Œ ๋†’์€ ์šฉ๋Ÿ‰(์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ 4์‹œ๊ฐ„๋งˆ๋‹ค 400mg)์œผ๋กœ ํˆฌ์—ฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๋‹น์‹œ HIV/AIDS ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋Œ€์•ˆ๋“ค์˜ ๋ถ€์กฑ์€ HIV๋กœ ์ธํ•œ ๋ถˆ๊ฐ€ํ”ผํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋Š๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ํ‰ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๊ณ ํ†ต์Šค๋Ÿฌ์šด ์‚ฌ๋ง์ด ์ผ์‹œ์ ์ธ ๋นˆํ˜ˆ๊ณผ ์•…์„ฑ ์งˆํ™˜๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์•ฝ๋ฌผ์˜ ๋ถ€์ž‘์šฉ์„ ๋Šฅ๊ฐ€ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๊ฑด๊ฐ• ์œ„ํ—˜/์œ ์ต ๋น„์œจ์„ ๋ช…ํ™•ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ™•์ธ์‹œ์ผœ ์ฃผ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌํšŒ์™€ ๋ฌธํ™” 1991๋…„, ์˜นํ˜ธ ๋‹จ์ฒด์ธ ํผ๋ธ”๋ฆญ ์‹œํ‹ฐ์ฆŒ์€ ํŠนํ—ˆ๊ฐ€ ๋ฌดํšจ๋ผ๋ฉฐ ์†Œ์†ก์„ ์ œ๊ธฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ํ›„, Bar Laboratories์™€ Novopharm Ltd. ๋˜ํ•œ NCI ๊ณผํ•™์ž ์‚ฌ๋ฌด์—˜ ๋ธŒ๋กœ๋”, ํžˆ๋กœ์•„ํ‚ค ๋ฏธ์“ฐ์•ผ, ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ์•ผ๋ฅด์ฝ”์•ˆ์ด ๋ฐœ๋ช…๊ฐ€๋กœ ์ง€๋ช…๋˜์—ˆ์–ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ์ฃผ์žฅ์— ๊ธฐ์ดˆํ•˜์—ฌ ํŠนํ—ˆ์— ์ด์˜๋ฅผ ์ œ๊ธฐํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์ด ๋‘ ํšŒ์‚ฌ๋Š” AZT๋ฅผ ์ผ๋ฐ˜ ์˜์•ฝํ’ˆ์œผ๋กœ ํŒ๋งคํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด FDA์— ์ถœ์›ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด Burroughs-Welcome์€ ๋‘ ํšŒ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์ƒ๋Œ€๋กœ ์†Œ์†ก์„ ์ œ๊ธฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ์—ฐ๋ฐฉ ์ˆœํšŒ ํ•ญ์†Œ๋ฒ•์›์€ 1992๋…„์— ๋ฒ„๋กœ์Šค ์›ฐ์ปด์˜ ์†์„ ๋“ค์–ด์ฃผ๋ฉด์„œ, ๋น„๋ก ๊ทธ๋“ค์ด HIV๋ฅผ ์ƒ๋Œ€๋กœ ์‹คํ—˜์„ ํ•œ ์ ์€ ์—†์ง€๋งŒ, NCI ๊ณผํ•™์ž๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ๋ณด๋‚ด๊ธฐ ์ „์— HIV์— ์ž‘๋™ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๊ตฌ์ƒํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํŒ๊ฒฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์†Œ์†ก์€ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋Œ€๋ฒ•์›์— ์ƒ๊ณ ๋˜์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ 1996๋…„์— ๊ทธ๋“ค์€ ๊ณต์‹์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฒ€ํ† ํ•˜๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๊ฑฐ๋ถ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. Burroughs Welcome Co. v. Bar Laboratories ์†Œ์†ก์€ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋ฐœ๋ช…๋ฒ•์—์„œ ํš๊ธฐ์ ์ธ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2002๋…„, ์—์ด์ฆˆ ๊ฑด๊ฐ•๊ด€๋ฆฌ ์žฌ๋‹จ(AHF)์— ์˜ํ•ด ๋˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์†Œ์†ก์ด ์ œ๊ธฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด ์†Œ์†ก ์—ญ์‹œ GSK๋ฅผ ์ƒ๋Œ€๋กœ ๋ฐ˜๋…์  ์†Œ์†ก์„ ์ œ๊ธฐํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด ํŠนํ—ˆ ์†Œ์†ก์€ 2003๋…„์— ๊ธฐ๊ฐ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ  AHF๋Š” ๊ทธ ํŠนํ—ˆ์— ์ด์˜๋ฅผ ์ œ๊ธฐํ•˜๋Š” ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์†Œ์†ก์„ ์ œ๊ธฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. GSK์˜ AZT ํŠนํ—ˆ๋Š” 2005๋…„์— ๋งŒ๋ฃŒ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, 2005๋…„ 9์›”์— FDA๋Š” ์„ธ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ์ œ๋„ค๋ฆญ ๋ฒ„์ „์„ ์Šน์ธํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ U.S. National Library of Medicine: Drug Information Portal โ€“ Zidovudine ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋ณด๊ฑด ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ํ•„์ˆ˜ ์˜์•ฝํ’ˆ IARC 2B๊ตฐ ๋ฐœ์•” ๋ฌผ์งˆ RTT ํ…ŒํŠธ๋ผํ•˜์ด๋“œ๋กœํ“จ๋ž€ ํ”ผ๋ฆฌ๋ฏธ๋”˜๋‹ค์ด์˜จ ๊ฐ„๋…์†Œ ์•„์ž์ด๋“œ ํ•˜์ด๋“œ๋ก์‹œ๋ฉ”ํ‹ธ ํ™”ํ•ฉ๋ฌผ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zidovudine
Zidovudine
Zidovudine (ZDV), also known as azidothymidine (AZT), is an antiretroviral medication used to prevent and treat HIV/AIDS. It is generally recommended for use in combination with other antiretrovirals. It may be used to prevent mother-to-child spread during birth or after a needlestick injury or other potential exposure. It is sold both by itself and together as lamivudine/zidovudine and abacavir/lamivudine/zidovudine. It can be used by mouth or by slow injection into a vein. Common side effects include headaches, fever, and nausea. Serious side effects include liver problems, muscle damage, and high blood lactate levels. It is commonly used in pregnancy and appears to be safe for the fetus. ZDV is of the nucleoside analog reverse-transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI) class. It works by inhibiting the enzyme reverse transcriptase that HIV uses to make DNA and therefore decreases replication of the virus. Zidovudine was first described in 1964. It was approved in the United States in 1987 and was the first treatment for HIV. It is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines. It is available as a generic medication. Medical uses HIV treatment AZT was usually dosed twice a day in combination with other antiretroviral therapies. This approach is referred to as Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy (HAART) and is used to prevent the likelihood of HIV resistance. As of 2019, the standard is a three-drug once-daily oral treatment that can include AZT. HIV prevention AZT has been used for post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) in combination with another antiretroviral drug called lamivudine. Together they work to substantially reduce the risk of HIV infection following the first single exposure to the virus. More recently, AZT has been replaced by other antiretrovirals such as tenofovir to provide PEP. Before tenofovir, a principal part of the clinical pathway for both pre-exposure prophylaxis and post-exposure treatment of mother-to-child transmission of HIV during pregnancy, labor, and delivery and has been proven to be integral to uninfected siblings' perinatal and neonatal development. Without AZT, 10โ€“15% of fetuses with HIV-infected mothers will themselves become infected. AZT has been shown to reduce this risk to 8% when given in a three-part regimen post-conception, delivery, and six weeks post-delivery. Consistent and proactive precautionary measures, such as the rigorous use of antiretroviral medications, cesarean section, face masks, heavy-duty rubber gloves, clinically segregated disposable diapers, and avoidance of mouth contact will further reduce child-attendant transmission of HIV to as little as 1โ€“2%. During 1994 to 1999, AZT was the primary form of prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission. AZT prophylaxis prevented more than 1000 parental and infant deaths from AIDS in the United States. In the U.S. at that time, the accepted standard of care for HIV-positive mothers was known as the 076 regimen and involved five daily doses of AZT from the second trimester onwards, as well as AZT intravenously administered during labour. As this treatment was lengthy and expensive, it was deemed unfeasible in the Global South, where mother-to-child transmission was a significant problem. A number of studies were initiated in the late 1990s that sought to test the efficacy of a shorter, simpler regimen for use in 'resource-poor' countries. This AZT short course was an inferior standard of care and would have been considered malpractice if trialed in the US; however, it was nonetheless a treatment that would improve the care and survival of impoverished subjects. Antibacterial properties Zidovudine also has antibacterial properties, though not routinely used in clinical settings. It acts on bacteria with a mechanism of action still not fully explained. Promising results from in vitro and in vivo studies showed the efficacy of AZT also against multidrug-resistant gram-negative bacteria (including mcr-1 carrying and metallo-ฮฒ-lactamase producing isolates), especially in combination with other active agents (e.g. fosfomycin, colistin, tigecycline). Side effects Most common side-effects include nausea, vomiting, acid reflux (heartburn), headache, cosmetic reduction in abdominal body fat, trouble sleeping, and loss of appetite. Less common side effects include faint discoloration of fingernails and toenails, mood elevation, occasional tingling or transient numbness of the hands or feet, and minor skin discoloration. Allergic reactions are rare. Early long-term higher-dose therapy with AZT was initially associated with side effects that sometimes limited therapy, including anemia, neutropenia, hepatotoxicity, cardiomyopathy, and myopathy. All of these conditions were generally found to be reversible upon reduction of AZT dosages. They have been attributed to several possible causes, including transient depletion of mitochondrial DNA, sensitivity of the ฮณ-DNA polymerase in some cell mitochondria, the depletion of thymidine triphosphate, oxidative stress, reduction of intracellular L-carnitine or apoptosis of the muscle cells. Anemia due to AZT was successfully treated using erythropoetin to stimulate red blood cell production. Drugs that inhibit hepatic glucuronidation, such as indomethacin, nordazepam, acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin) and trimethoprim decreased the elimination rate and increased the therapeutic strength of the medication. Today, side-effects are much less common with the use of lower doses of AZT. According to IARC, there is sufficient evidence in experimental animals for the carcinogenicity of zidovudine; it is possibly carcinogenic to humans (Group 2B). In 2009, the State of California added zidovudine to its list of chemicals "known to the state of California to cause cancer and other reproductive harm." Viral resistance Even at the highest doses that can be tolerated in patients, AZT is not potent enough to prevent all HIV replication and may only slow the replication of the virus and progression of the disease. Prolonged AZT treatment can lead to HIV developing resistance to AZT by mutation of its reverse transcriptase. To slow the development of resistance, physicians generally recommend that AZT be given in combination with another reverse-transcriptase inhibitor and an antiretroviral from another group, such as a protease inhibitor, non-nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitor, or integrase inhibitor; this type of therapy is known as HAART (Highly Active Anti Retroviral Therapy). Mechanism of action AZT is a thymidine analogue. AZT works by selectively inhibiting HIV's reverse transcriptase, the enzyme that the virus uses to make a DNA copy of its RNA. Reverse transcription is necessary for production of HIV's double-stranded DNA, which would be subsequently integrated into the genetic material of the infected cell (where it is called a provirus). Cellular enzymes convert AZT into the effective 5'-triphosphate form. Studies have shown that the termination of HIV's forming DNA chains is the specific factor in the inhibitory effect. At very high doses, AZT's triphosphate form may also inhibit DNA polymerase used by human cells to undergo cell division, but regardless of dosage AZT has an approximately 100-fold greater affinity for HIV's reverse transcriptase. The selectivity has been suggested to be due to the cell's ability to quickly repair its own DNA chain if it is disrupted by AZT during its formation, whereas the HIV virus lacks that ability. Thus AZT inhibits HIV replication without affecting the function of uninfected cells. At sufficiently high dosages, AZT begins to inhibit the cellular DNA polymerase used by mitochondria to replicate, accounting for its potentially toxic but reversible effects on cardiac and skeletal muscles, causing myositis. Chemistry Enantiopure AZT crystallizes in the monoclinic space group P21. The primary intermolecular bonding motif is a hydrogen bonded dimeric ring formed from two N-H...O interactions. History Initial cancer research In the 1960s, the theory that most cancers were caused by environmental retroviruses gained clinical support and funding. It had recently become known, due to the work of Nobel laureates Howard Temin and David Baltimore, that nearly all avian cancers were caused by bird retroviruses, but corresponding human retroviruses had not yet been found. In parallel work, other compounds that successfully blocked the synthesis of nucleic acids had been proven to be both antibacterial, antiviral, and anticancer agents, the leading work being done at the laboratory of Nobel laureates George H. Hitchings and Gertrude Elion, leading to the development of the antitumor agent 6-mercaptopurine. Richard E. Beltz first synthesized AZT in 1961, but did not publish his research.Jerome Horwitz of the Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institute and Wayne State University School of Medicine synthesized AZT in 1964 under a US National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant. Development was shelved after it proved biologically inert in mice. In 1974, Wolfram Ostertag of the Max Planck Institute for Experimental Medicine in Gรถttingen, Germany, reported that AZT specifically targeted Friend virus (strain of murine leukemia virus). This report attracted little interest from other researchers as the Friend leukemia virus is a retrovirus, and at the time, there were no known human diseases caused by retroviruses. HIV/AIDS research In 1983, researchers at the Institut Pasteur in Paris identified the retrovirus now known as the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) as the cause of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in humans. Shortly thereafter, Samuel Broder, Hiroaki Mitsuya, and Robert Yarchoan of the United States National Cancer Institute (NCI) initiated a program to develop therapies for HIV/AIDS. Using a line of CD4+ T cells that they had made, they developed an assay to screen drugs for their ability to protect CD4+ T cells from being killed by HIV. In order to expedite the process of discovering a drug, the NCI researchers actively sought collaborations with pharmaceutical companies having access to libraries of compounds with potential antiviral activity. This assay could simultaneously test both the anti-HIV effect of the compounds and their toxicity against infected T cells. In June 1984, Burroughs-Wellcome virologist Marty St. Clair set up a program to discover drugs with the potential to inhibit HIV replication. Burroughs-Wellcome had expertise in nucleoside analogs and viral diseases, led by researchers including George Hitchings, Gertrude Elion, David Barry, Paul (Chip) McGuirt Jr., Philip Furman, Martha St. Clair, Janet Rideout, Sandra Lehrman and others. Their research efforts were focused in part on the viral enzyme reverse transcriptase. Reverse transcriptase is an enzyme that retroviruses, including HIV, utilize to replicate themselves. Secondary testing was performed in mouse cells infected with the retroviruses Friend virus or Harvey sarcoma virus, as the Wellcome group did not have a viable in-house HIV antiviral assay in place at that time, and these other retroviruses were believed to represent reasonable surrogates. AZT proved to be a remarkably potent inhibitor of both Friend virus and Harvey sarcoma virus, and a search of the company's records showed that it had demonstrated low toxicity when tested for its antibacterial activity in rats many years earlier. Based in part on these results, AZT was selected by nucleoside chemist Janet Rideout as one of 11 compounds to send to the NCI for testing in that organization's HIV antiviral assay. In February 1985, the NCI scientists found that AZT had potent efficacy in vitro. Several months later, a phase 1 clinical trial of AZT at the NCI was initiated at the NCI and Duke University. In doing this Phase I trial, they built on their experience in doing an earlier trial, with suramin, another drug that had shown effective anti-HIV activity in the laboratory. This initial trial of AZT proved that the drug could be safely administered to patients with HIV, that it increased their CD4 counts, restored T cell immunity as measured by skin testing, and that it showed strong evidence of clinical effectiveness, such as inducing weight gain in AIDS patients. It also showed that levels of AZT that worked in vitro could be injected into patients in serum and suppository form, and that the drug penetrated deeply only into infected brains. Patent filed and FDA approval A rigorous double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized trial of AZT was subsequently conducted by Burroughs-Wellcome and proved that AZT safely prolongs the lives of people with HIV. Burroughs-Wellcome filed for a patent for AZT in 1985. The Anti-Infective Advisory Committee to United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) voted ten to one to recommend the approval of AZT. The FDA approved the drug (via the then-new FDA accelerated approval system) for use against HIV, AIDS, and AIDS Related Complex (ARC, a now-obsolete medical term for pre-AIDS illness) on March 20, 1987. The time between the first demonstration that AZT was active against HIV in the laboratory and its approval was 25 months. AZT was subsequently approved unanimously for infants and children in 1990. AZT was initially administered in significantly higher dosages than today, typically 400ย mg every four hours, day and night, compared to modern dosage of 300ย mg twice daily. The paucity of alternatives for treating HIV/AIDS at that time unambiguously affirmed the health risk/benefit ratio, with inevitable slow, disfiguring, and painful death from HIV outweighing the drug's side-effect of transient anemia and malaise. Society and culture In 1991, the advocacy group Public Citizen filed a lawsuit claiming that the patents were invalid. Subsequently, Barr Laboratories and Novopharm Ltd. also challenged the patent, in part based on the assertion that NCI scientists Samuel Broder, Hiroaki Mitsuya, and Robert Yarchoan should have been named as inventors, and those two companies applied to the FDA to sell AZT as a generic drug. In response, Burroughs Wellcome Co. filed a lawsuit against the two companies. The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ruled in 1992 in favor of Burroughs Wellcome, ruling that even though they had never tested it against HIV, they had conceived of it working before they sent it to the NCI scientists. This suit was appealed up to the Supreme Court of the US, but in 1996 they declined to formally review it. The case, Burroughs Wellcome Co. v. Barr Laboratories, was a landmark in US law of inventorship. In 2002, another lawsuit was filed challenging the patent by the AIDS Healthcare Foundation, which also filed an antitrust case against GSK as well. The patent case was dismissed in 2003 and AHF filed a new case challenging the patent. GSK's patents on AZT expired in 2005, and in September 2005, the FDA approved three generic versions. References External links Organoazides Hepatotoxins IARC Group 2B carcinogens Nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase inhibitors Pyrimidinediones Tetrahydrofurans GSK plc brands World Health Organization essential medicines Wikipedia medicine articles ready to translate Hydroxymethyl compounds
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%95%BC%EB%A7%88%EB%AA%A8%ED%86%A0%20%EB%8D%B0%EC%93%B0%EC%95%BC%20%281985%EB%85%84%29
์•ผ๋งˆ๋ชจํ†  ๋ฐ์“ฐ์•ผ (1985๋…„)
์•ผ๋งˆ๋ชจํ†  ๋ฐ์“ฐ์•ผ(, 1985๋…„ 9์›” 4์ผ ~ )๋Š” ์ผ๋ณธ์˜ ์ „ ํ”„๋กœ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜์ด๋ฉฐ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์ง€๋„์ž์ด๋‹ค. ํ˜„์žฌ ์ผ๋ณธํ”„๋กœ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์„ผํŠธ๋Ÿด๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์— ๋„์ฟ„ ์•ผ์ฟ ๋ฅดํŠธ ์Šค์™ˆ๋กœ์Šค์˜ 2๊ตฐ ์œก์„ฑ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜ ์ฝ”์น˜์ด๋‹ค.์™€์นด์•ผ๋งˆํ˜„ ํžˆ๋‹ค์นด๊ตฐ ์œ ๋ผ์ • ์ถœ์‹ ์ด๋ฉฐ ํ˜„์—ญ ์‹œ์ ˆ ํฌ์ง€์…˜์€ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ธ๋ฌผ ํ”„๋กœ ์ž…๋‹จ ์ „ ์ดˆ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต 1ํ•™๋…„ ๋•Œ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์•ผ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๊ณ  ์ค‘ํ•™๊ต ์‹œ์ ˆ์—๋Š” ์†Œ๋…„ ์•ผ๊ตฌํŒ€ โ€˜์™€์นด์•ผ๋งˆ ๋ผ์ด์˜จ์Šคโ€™์—์„œ ํ™œ์•ฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๋‚˜๋ฒ  ๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต์—์„œ๋Š” ์˜ค์นด๋ชจํ†  ์š”์Šค์ผ€์˜ ๋Œ€๊ธฐ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ธดํ‚ค ๋Œ€ํ•™์—์„œ๋Š” 3ํ•™๋…„ ๋ด„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋“ฑํŒํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ 3ํ•™๋…„ ๊ฐ€์„์— ์—ด๋ฆฐ ๊ตํ†  ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ณผ์˜ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ์ฒซ ์„ ๋ฐœ ๋“ฑํŒํ•˜์—ฌ 5ํ”ผ์•ˆํƒ€ ๋ฌด๋ณผ๋„ท์œผ๋กœ ์™„๋ด‰์Šน์„ ๊ฑฐ๋‘ฌ ์ฒซ ์Šน๋ฆฌ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ๋๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ ์˜คํ† ๋‚˜๋ฆฌ ๊ฒ์ง€์— ์ด์€ 2์„ ๋ฐœ๋กœ์„œ ํ™œ์•ฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 4ํ•™๋…„ ๊ฐ€์„์—๋Š” ๊ตฌ์›, ๋งˆ๋ฌด๋ฆฌ๋กœ ํ™œ์•ฝํ•˜์—ฌ ํŒ€ ์šฐ์Šน์— ํฐ ๊ธฐ์—ฌ๋ฅผ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ํ†ต์‚ฐ 20๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ๋“ฑํŒํ•˜์—ฌ 5์Šน 1ํŒจ, ํ‰๊ท  ์ž์ฑ…์  1.25๋ฅผ ๋‚จ๊ฒผ๊ณ  ํŒ€ ๋™๊ธฐ๋กœ๋Š” ์˜ค์ œ ํžˆ๋กœ์œ ํ‚ค๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ํ›„ ๋ฏธ์“ฐ๋น„์‹œ ์ค‘๊ณต์—… ๊ณ ๋ฒ ์— ์ž…์‚ฌํ•˜์—ฌ ์‚ฌํšŒ์ธ ์•ผ๊ตฌํŒ€์— ์†Œ์†๋๋Š”๋ฐ 1๋…„์งธ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ํŒ€์˜ ์—์ด์Šค๊ฐ€ ๋˜๋ฉด์„œ 2๋…„ ์—ฐ์†(์ œ79ํšŒ, ์ œ80ํšŒ) ํŒ€์„ ๋„์‹œ ๋Œ€ํ•ญ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ๋Œ€ํšŒ์˜ ์ถœ์ „์„ ์ด๋Œ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํŠนํžˆ ์ œ80ํšŒ ๋Œ€ํšŒ์—์„œ๋Š” ์ตœ๊ณ  ๊ตฌ์† 148km๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2009๋…„ 10์›” 29์ผ์— ์—ด๋ฆฐ ํ”„๋กœ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ๋“œ๋ž˜ํ”„ํŠธ ํšŒ์˜์—์„œ ๋„์ฟ„ ์•ผ์ฟ ๋ฅดํŠธ ์Šค์™ˆ๋กœ์Šค๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2์ˆœ์œ„ ์ง€๋ช…์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๊ณ  ๊ทธํ•ด 11์›” 27์ผ์— ๊ณ„์•ฝ๊ธˆ 7,500๋งŒ ์—”, ์—ฐ๋ด‰ 1,200๋งŒ ์—”์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ€๊ณ„์•ฝ์„ ๋งบ์—ˆ๋‹ค(๊ธˆ์•ก์€ ์ถ”์ •์น˜). ํ”„๋กœ ์ž…๋‹จ ํ›„ 2010๋…„์—๋Š” ์‹œ๋ฒ” ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ์ฒซ ๋“ฑํŒํ•˜์—ฌ ํ˜ธํˆฌํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ์ข…๋ฃŒ ํ›„ ํŒ”๊ฟˆ์น˜ ํ†ต์ฆ์„ ํ˜ธ์†Œํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์ •๋ฐ€๊ฒ€์‚ฌ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ์ธ๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ๋Š์–ด์ง„ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ํŒ๋ช…๋๋‹ค. ํ† ๋ฏธ ์กด ์ˆ˜์ˆ ์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— 1๊ตฐ๊ณผ 2๊ตฐ์—์„œ์˜ ๋‹จ ํ•œ ๋ฒˆ๋„ ์ถœ์ „ํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•œ ์ฑ„๋กœ ์‹œ์ฆŒ์„ ๋งˆ์ณค๋‹ค. 2011๋…„์—๋Š” ํŒ”๊ฟˆ์น˜ ๋ถ€์ƒ์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ ์ด๋ ‡๋‹ค ํ•  ๋งŒํ•œ ํ™œ์•ฝ์„ ๋ณด์—ฌ์ฃผ์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๊ณ  1๊ตฐ์—์„œ์˜ ์„ฑ์ ์€ 9๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ๋“ฑํŒํ•˜์—ฌ ์Šน๋ฆฌ์—†์ด 1ํŒจ๋งŒ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2012๋…„์—๋Š” ์‹œ์ฆŒ ์ค‘๋ฐ˜์— ํ† ๋‹ˆ ๋ฐ”๋„ท์ด ์ „๋ ฅ์—์„œ ์ดํƒˆํ•œ ์ดํ›„ ์…‹์—…๋งจ์œผ๋กœ ์ž๋ฆฌ์žก์•˜๊ณ  ๊ทธํ•ด 50๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ๋“ฑํŒํ•˜์—ฌ 2์Šน 2ํŒจ, 17ํ™€๋“œ, 1.21์˜ ํ‰๊ท  ์ž์ฑ…์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ข‹์€ ์„ฑ์ ์„ ๋‚จ๊ฒผ๋‹ค. 2013๋…„์—๋„ ์…‹์—…๋งจ์œผ๋กœ์„œ ์‹œ์ฆŒ ๊ฐœ๋ง‰์„ ๋งž์ดํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ๋ฐ”๋„ท์˜ ๋ถ€์ง„์œผ๋กœ ์‹œ์ฆŒ ์ดˆ๋ฐ˜๋ถ€ํ„ฐ๋Š” ๋งˆ๋ฌด๋ฆฌ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๋กœ ๋ณด์ง์ด ๋ณ€๊ฒฝ๋˜๋ฉด์„œ ์‹œ์ฆŒ 11์„ธ์ด๋ธŒ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์‹œ์ฆŒ ์ค‘๋ฐ˜๋ถ€ํ„ฐ๋Š” ์‹ ์ธ์ด๋˜ ์ด์‹œ์•ผ๋งˆ ๋‹ค์ด์น˜์™€์˜ ๋ฐฐ์น˜ ์ „ํ™˜์— ์˜ํ•ด ๋‹ค์‹œ ์…‹์—…๋งจ์ด ๋˜๋ฉด์„œ ๊ฐœ์ธ ์ตœ๋‹ค์ธ 64๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ๋“ฑํŒ, 25ํ™€๋“œ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2014๋…„์—๋Š” ํˆฌ์ˆ˜์ง„์ด ์ „์ฒด์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ €์กฐํ•œ ๋ชจ์Šต์„ ๋ณด์—ฌ ๊ฐœ๋ง‰ ํ›„ 7๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ์ค‘ 6๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ๋“ฑํŒํ•˜๋Š” ๋“ฑ ์‹œ์ฆŒ ์ดˆ๋ฐ˜๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋“ฑํŒ์„ ๊ฑฐ๋“ญํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 7์›”์—๋Š” 3๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ์—ฐ์†์œผ๋กœ ์‹ค์ ์„ ๋‚ด์ฃผ๋ฉด์„œ ํ•œ ๋ฒˆ์€ 1๊ตฐ ๋“ฑ๋ก์ด ๋ง์†Œ๋์ง€๋งŒ 3๋…„ ์—ฐ์† 50๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ๋“ฑํŒ์„ ๋„˜๊ฒผ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฐ ํ•œํŽธ์œผ๋กœ ํ™€๋“œ์ˆ˜, ํ‰๊ท  ์ž์ฑ…์ ์—์„œ๋Š” ์ „๋…„๋„์— ๋น„ํ•ด ์„ฑ์ ์ด ๋–จ์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. 2015๋…„์—๋Š” 1๊ตฐ์—์„œ์˜ 17๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ๋“ฑํŒ์—๋งŒ ๊ทธ์ณค๊ณ  ๊ฐ™์€ ํ•ด 9์›”์—๋Š” ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ์˜ ์˜ค๋ฅธ์ชฝ ํŒ”๊ฟˆ์น˜ ์ธ๋Œ€ ์žฌ๊ฑด ์ˆ˜์ˆ (ํ† ๋ฏธ ์กด ์ˆ˜์ˆ )์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ์ด๋“ฌํ•ด 2016๋…„์—๋Š” ์ „๋…„๋„ ํŒ”๊ฟˆ์น˜ ์ˆ˜์ˆ ์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ 1๊ตฐ ๋“ฑํŒ์€ ์—†์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2018๋…„ 9์›” 30์ผ์— ํ˜„์—ญ์—์„œ ์€ํ‡ดํ•˜๊ฒ ๋‹ค๋Š” ์ž…์žฅ์„ ๋ฐํ˜”๊ณ  ๊ฐ™์€ ํ•ด 10์›” 8์ผ ๋ฉ”์ด์ง€ ์ง„๊ตฌ ์•ผ๊ตฌ์žฅ์—์„œ ์—ด๋ฆฐ ํ•œ์‹  ํƒ€์ด๊ฑฐ์Šค์ „์˜ 7ํšŒ์ดˆ์— ์€ํ‡ด ๋“ฑํŒํ•˜์—ฌ ์ƒ๋Œ€ ํƒ€์ž ์š”์นด์™€ ๋‚˜์˜ค๋งˆ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์ค‘๊ฒฌ์ˆ˜ ๋œฌ๊ณต์œผ๋กœ ์ฒ˜๋ฆฌํ–ˆ๊ณ  ๋งˆ์ฐฌ๊ฐ€์ง€๋กœ ์ด ํ•ด๋ฅผ ๋์œผ๋กœ ์€ํ‡ดํ•˜๋Š” ๋งˆ์“ฐ์˜ค์นด ๊ฒ์ด์น˜์™€ ๊ต์ฒด๋๋‹ค. ์ƒ์„ธ ์ •๋ณด ์ถœ์‹  ํ•™๊ต ์™€์นด์•ผ๋งˆ ํ˜„๋ฆฝ ๋ฏธ๋‚˜๋ฒ  ๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต ๊ธดํ‚ค ๋Œ€ํ•™ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ์‚ฌํšŒ์ธ ์‹œ๋Œ€ ๋ฏธ์“ฐ๋น„์‹œ ์ค‘๊ณต์—… ๊ณ ๋ฒ  ํ”„๋กœํŒ€ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ๋„์ฟ„ ์•ผ์ฟ ๋ฅดํŠธ ์Šค์™ˆ๋กœ์Šค(2010๋…„ ~ 2018๋…„) ์ง€๋„์ž ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ๋„์ฟ„ ์•ผ์ฟ ๋ฅดํŠธ ์Šค์™ˆ๋กœ์Šค 2๊ตฐ ์œก์„ฑ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜ ์ฝ”์น˜(2022๋…„ ~ ) ๊ฐœ์ธ ๊ธฐ๋ก ์ฒซ ๊ธฐ๋ก ์ฒซ ๋“ฑํŒ : 2011๋…„ 8์›” 20์ผ, ๋Œ€ ์š”๋ฏธ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ์ž์ด์–ธ์ธ  19์ฐจ์ „(๋„์ฟ„ ๋”), 6ํšŒ๋ง์— 2๋ฒˆ์งธ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ ๊ตฌ์› ๋“ฑํŒ, 1์ด๋‹ ๋ฌด์‹ค์  ์ฒซ ํƒˆ์‚ผ์ง„ : ์ƒ๋™, 6ํšŒ๋ง์— ์‚ฌ์นด๋ชจํ†  ํ•˜์•ผํ† ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋ฃจํ‚น ์‚ผ์ง„ ์ฒซ ํ™€๋“œ : 2012๋…„ 6์›” 27์ผ, ๋Œ€ ์š”์ฝ”ํ•˜๋งˆ DeNA ๋ฒ ์ด์Šคํƒ€์Šค 7์ฐจ์ „(์…€๋ฃฐ๋Ÿฌ ์Šคํƒ€๋””์›€ ๋‚˜ํ•˜), 7ํšŒ๋ง 2์‚ฌ์— 2๋ฒˆ์งธ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ ๊ตฌ์› ๋“ฑํŒ, 1/3์ด๋‹ ๋ฌด์‹ค์  ์ฒซ ์Šน๋ฆฌ : 2012๋…„ 6์›” 29์ผ, ๋Œ€ ํ•œ์‹  ํƒ€์ด๊ฑฐ์Šค 6์ฐจ์ „(๋ฉ”์ด์ง€ ์ง„๊ตฌ ์•ผ๊ตฌ์žฅ), 8ํšŒ์ดˆ 1์‚ฌ์— 6๋ฒˆ์งธ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ ๊ตฌ์› ๋“ฑํŒ, 2/3์ด๋‹ ๋ฌด์‹ค์  ์ฒซ ์„ธ์ด๋ธŒ : 2013๋…„ 4์›” 23์ผ, ๋Œ€ ํžˆ๋กœ์‹œ๋งˆ ๋„์š” ์นดํ”„ 4์ฐจ์ „(๋ฉ”์ด์ง€ ์ง„๊ตฌ ์•ผ๊ตฌ์žฅ), 9ํšŒ์ดˆ์— 4๋ฒˆ์งธ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜๋กœ์„œ ๊ตฌ์› ๋“ฑํŒยท๋งˆ๋ฌด๋ฆฌ, 1์ด๋‹ ๋ฌด์‹ค์  ๊ธฐํƒ€ ์˜ฌ์Šคํƒ€์ „ ์ถœ์žฅ : 1ํšŒ(2013๋…„) ๋“ฑ๋ฒˆํ˜ธ 20(2010๋…„ ~ 2018๋…„) 92(2021๋…„ ~ ) ์—ฐ๋„๋ณ„ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜ ์„ฑ์  ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ 1985๋…„ ์ถœ์ƒ ์‚ด์•„์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ ์ผ๋ณธ์˜ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ผ๋ณธ ํ”„๋กœ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ํˆฌ์ˆ˜ ๋„์ฟ„ ์•ผ์ฟ ๋ฅดํŠธ ์Šค์™ˆ๋กœ์Šค ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๊ธดํ‚ค ๋Œ€ํ•™ ๋™๋ฌธ ์™€์นด์•ผ๋งˆํ˜„ ์ถœ์‹  ์™€์นด์•ผ๋งˆํ˜„์˜ ์•ผ๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 20์„ธ๊ธฐ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ 21์„ธ๊ธฐ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetsuya%20Yamamoto
Tetsuya Yamamoto
is a professional Japanese baseball player. He plays pitcher for the Tokyo Yakult Swallows. External links NPB.com 1985 births Living people Baseball people from Wakayama Prefecture Japanese baseball players Nippon Professional Baseball pitchers Tokyo Yakult Swallows players Japanese baseball coaches Nippon Professional Baseball coaches
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EB%8B%AC%EA%B6%A4%EB%8F%84%20%EB%9E%91%EB%8D%B0%EB%B6%80
๋‹ฌ๊ถค๋„ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€
๋‹ฌ๊ถค๋„ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€( LOR )๋Š” ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ๋‹ฌํ‘œ๋ฉด์— ํšจ์œจ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์‹œํ‚จ ํ›„ ์ง€๊ตฌ๋กœ ๊ท€ํ™˜์‹œํ‚ค๋Š”๋ฐ ํ•„์š”ํ•œ ํ•ต์‹ฌ ๊ฐœ๋…์ด๋‹ค. 1960๋…„๋Œ€์™€ 1970๋…„๋Œ€์— ์•„ํด๋กœ ๊ณ„ํš ์ž„๋ฌด์— ํ™œ์šฉ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. LOR ์ž„๋ฌด์—์„œ๋Š” ์ฃผ ์šฐ์ฃผ์„ ๊ณผ ์ด๋ณด๋‹ค ์ž‘์€ ๋‹ฌ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์„ ์ด ๋‹ฌ์˜ ๊ถค๋„๊นŒ์ง€ ์šดํ•ญํ•œ ํ›„, ์ฃผ ์šฐ์ฃผ์„ ์€ ๋‹ฌ ๊ถค๋„์— ๋จธ๋ฌผ๋Ÿฌ ์žˆ๋Š” ์ƒํƒœ์—์„œ ๋‹ฌ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์„ ๋งŒ ๋‹ฌ์˜ ํ‘œ๋ฉด๊นŒ์ง€ ๋…์ž์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋‚ด๋ ค ๊ฐ„๋‹ค. ์ž„๋ฌด๋ฅผ ๋งˆ์นœ ํ›„, ๋‹ฌ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์„ ์€ ๋‹ฌ ๊ถค๋„๋กœ ๋ณต๊ท€ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ฃผ ์šฐ์ฃผ์„ ๊ณผ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€ ๋ฐ ์žฌ ๋„ํ‚นํ•˜๊ณ  ์Šน๋ฌด์›๊ณผ ํ™”๋ฌผ์ด ์ฃผ ์šฐ์ฃผ์„ ์œผ๋กœ ์ด๋™๋˜๋ฉด ๋‹ฌ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์„ ์„ ๋ถ„๋ฆฌํ•˜์—ฌ ํ๊ธฐํ•˜๊ณ , ์ฃผ ์šฐ์ฃผ์„ ๋งŒ ์ง€๊ตฌ๋กœ ๊ท€ํ™˜ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋‹ฌ๊ถค๋„ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€๋Š” ๋‹ฌ ํ‘œ๋ฉด์— ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ๋ณด๋‚ด์–ด ์™•๋ณต ์—ฌํ–‰์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๊ฒฝ์ œ์ ์ธ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์œผ๋กœ 1919๋…„ ๊ตฌ ์†Œ๋ จ ์šฐํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜์˜ ๊ณตํ•™์ž์ธ ์œ ๋ฆฌ ์ฝ˜๋“œ๋ผํŠœํฌ(Yuri Kondratyuk)์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ œ์•ˆ๋œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ฒ˜์Œ ์•Œ๋ ค์กŒ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์œ ๋ช…ํ•œ ์‚ฌ๋ก€๋Š” ํ•˜๋‚˜์˜ ๋กœ์ผ“๋‹จ์œผ๋กœ ์ง€๊ตฌ๋‹ฌ ํšก๋‹จ ํ•ญ๋กœ์— ๋ณด๋‚ด์ง„ ์•„ํด๋กœ ์‚ฌ๋ น์„œ๋น„์Šค์„ (CSM)๊ณผ ์•„ํด๋กœ ๋‹ฌ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์„ (LM)์ด๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฐ๋ฐ ์…”ํ‹€์œ ๋„ ๊ณ ์ค‘๋Ÿ‰ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ์ฒด(Shuttle-Derived Heavy Lift Launch Vehicle)์™€ ๊ณจ๋“  ์ŠคํŒŒ์ดํฌ(Golden Spike)์™€ ๊ฐ™์ด ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์„ ๊ณผ ์ฃผ์šฐ์ฃผ์„ ์ด ๋”ฐ๋กœ ์šดํ•ญํ•˜๋Š” ๋ณ€์ข…๋„ ๋‹ฌ๊ถค๋„ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€๋กœ ๋ถ„๋ฅ˜๋œ๋‹ค. ์žฅ์ ๊ณผ ๋‹จ์  ์žฅ์  LOR์˜ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ํฐ ์žฅ์ ์€ ๋‹ฌ์˜ ๊ถค๋„์—์„œ ์ง€๊ตฌ๋กœ ๋˜๋Œ์•„ ์˜ฌ ๋•Œ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ์ถ”์ง„์ฒด๋ฅผ ๋ถˆํ•„์š”ํ•œ "์‚ฌ์ค‘ (dead weight)"์œผ๋กœ ๋‹ฌ๊ถค๋„์—์„œ ๋‹ฌ ํ‘œ๋ฉด๊นŒ์ง€ ์™•๋ณต์‹œํ‚ฌ ํ•„์š”๊ฐ€ ์—†๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์šฐ์ฃผ์„ ์˜ ํ™”๋ฌผ ์ค‘๋Ÿ‰์„ ๊ฐ์†Œ์‹œํ‚ฌ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ์ ์ด๋‹ค. ์‚ฌํ›„์— ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๋Š” ์‚ฌ์ค‘(dead weight) ์ถ”์ง„์ฒด๋Š” ๊ทธ ํ‚ฌ๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ๋‹น ๋” ๋งŽ์€ ํ‚ฌ๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ์˜ ์ถ”์ง„์ฒด์— ์˜ํ•ด ์‚ฌ์ „์— ์ถ”์ง„๋˜์–ด์•ผ ํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ถ”์ง„์ฒด์˜ ์ฆ๊ฐ€๋Š” ํƒฑํฌ ์ค‘๋Ÿ‰์˜ ์ฆ๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ํ•„์š”๋กœ ํ•˜๋ฏ€๋กœ ์Šน์ˆ˜ํšจ๊ณผ๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœ์ƒํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ์ค‘๋Ÿ‰์˜ ์ฆ๊ฐ€๋Š” ๋‹ฌ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์‹œ ๋” ๋งŽ์€ ์ถ”๋ ฅ์„ ํ•„์š”๋กœํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ์ด๋Š” ํฌ๊ณ  ๋ฌด๊ฑฐ์šด ์—”์ง„์„ ์˜๋ฏธํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์žฅ์ ์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ๋‹ฌ ์ฐฉ๋ฅœ์„  ์ด์™ธ์˜ ์ฃผ ์šฐ์ฃผ์„ ๋„ ๋‹ฌ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์— ์ ํ•ฉํ•˜๋„๋ก ์„ค๊ณ„ํ•  ํ•„์š”๊ฐ€ ์—†๊ณ  ๋‹ฌ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์„ ๋งŒ์„ ๊ทธ ๋ชฉ์ ์„ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ์„ค๊ณ„๋˜๋„๋ก ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ์ ์ด๋‹ค. ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰์œผ๋กœ, ๋‹ฌ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์„ ์— ํ•„์š”ํ•œ ์ƒ๋ช… ์œ ์ง€ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์˜ ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ์„ธํŠธ๋Š” ์ฃผ ์šฐ์ฃผ์„  ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋ฐฑ์—… ์—ญํ• ์„ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์–ด, ์ฃผ ์šฐ์ฃผ์„ ์˜ ์ƒ๋ช… ์œ ์ง€ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†์„ ๋•Œ์— ๋‹ฌ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์„ ์˜ ์ƒ๋ช… ์œ ์ง€ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์„ ํ™œ์šฉํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ์žฅ์ ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹จ์  1962๋…„ ๋‹น์‹œ์—๋Š” ์ง€๊ตฌ ๊ถค๋„์—์„œ๋„ ์šฐ์ฃผ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰๋œ ์ ์ด ์—†์—ˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๋‹ฌ๊ถค๋„ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€๋Š” ์œ„ํ—˜ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒ๊ฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋งŒ์ผ ๋‹ฌ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์„ (LM)์ด ์‚ฌ๋ น์„œ๋น„์Šค ๋ชจ๋“ˆ(CSM)์— ๋„๋‹ฌ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๊ฒŒ ๋˜๋ฉด, ๋‘ ๋ช…์˜ ์šฐ์ฃผ ๋น„ํ–‰์‚ฌ๋Š” ๋Œ€๊ธฐ๋กœ ์žฌ์ง„์ž…ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ง€๊ตฌ๋กœ ๊ท€ํ™˜ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ๋ถˆ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฐ๋ฐ 1965๋…„๊ณผ 1966๋…„์˜ 6ํšŒ์˜ ์ œ๋ฏธ๋‹ˆ ๊ณ„ํš ๋ฏธ์…˜์—์„œ ๋ ˆ์ด๋”์™€ ๊ธฐ๋‚ด ํƒ‘์žฌ ์ปดํ“จํ„ฐ์˜ ๋„์›€์œผ๋กœ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ์„ฑ๊ณต์ ์œผ๋กœ ์‹œ์—ฐ๋˜์–ด ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์šฐ๋ ค๋Š” ๊ทผ๊ฑฐ์—†๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ํŒ๋ช…๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์•„ํด๋กœ ๊ณ„ํš์—์„œ๋„ 8๋ฒˆ์˜ ๋‹ฌ๊ถค๋„ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€ ์‹œ๋„๊ฐ€ ์„ฑ๊ณต์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์•„ํด๋กœ ๋ฏธ์…˜ ๋ชจ๋“œ์˜ ์„ ํƒ 1961๋…„ ์•„ํด๋กœ ๋‹ฌ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ์ด ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์—ˆ์„ ๋•Œ, 3์ธ์˜ ์‚ฌ๋ น์„ /์„œ๋น„์Šค๋ชจ๋“ˆ(CSM)์˜ ์กฐํ•ฉ์ด ๋‹ฌ ํ‘œ๋ฉด์—์„œ ์ด๋ฅ™ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ง€๊ตฌ๋กœ ๋Œ์•„์˜ฌ ๋•Œ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์˜ˆ์ •ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™ ์žฅ์น˜์šฉ ๋‹ค๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ๋‹ฌ๋ฆฐ ๋Œ€ํ˜• ๋กœ์ผ“ ๋‹จ์œผ๋กœ ๋‹ฌ์— ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™ํ•˜์—ฌ์•ผ ํ•˜๋ฏ€๋กœ ๋ฌด๊ฒŒ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€ ๋˜๋Š” ๋งค์šฐ ํฐ ์šฐ์ฃผ์„ ์„ ๋‹ฌ์— ๋ณด๋‚ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด๊ฒƒ์ด (๋‹จ์ผ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌ์ฒด์—์„œ) ์ง์ ‘ ์ƒ์Šน์œผ๋กœ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค๋ฉด, ์š”๊ตฌ๋˜๋Š” ๋กœ์ผ“์€ ๋…ธ๋ฐ” ํด๋ž˜์Šค์™€ ๊ฐ™์ด ๋งค์šฐ ์ปค์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด๊ฒƒ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋Œ€์•ˆ์€ ์ง€๊ตฌ๊ถค๋„ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€์˜€์„ ๊ฒƒ์ธ๋ฐ, ์ƒˆํ„ด ๊ธ‰์˜ ๋กœ์ผ“์œผ๋กœ ์™„์ „ํ•œ ์šฐ์ฃผ์„ ์˜ ์ผ๋ถ€๋ฅผ ๋‚˜๋ˆ„์–ด ๋ฐœ์‚ฌํ•˜์—ฌ ์ง€๊ตฌ ๊ถค๋„์ƒ์—์„œ ๋‹ฌ์„ ํ–ฅํ•ด ์ถœ๋ฐœํ•˜๊ธฐ ์ „์— ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€ํ•  ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์—์„œ๋Š” ์ง€๊ตฌ ์ถœ๋ฐœ ๋‹จ๊ณ„๋ฅผ ๋ณ„๋„๋กœ ๋ฐœ์‚ฌํ•˜๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ์ถœ๋ฐœ ๋‹จ๊ณ„์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ถค๋„์ƒ์˜ ์—ฐ๋ฃŒ ์žฌ๊ณต๊ธ‰์ด ํ•„์š”ํ•  ์ˆ˜๋„ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ†ฐ ๋Œ๋ž€(Tom Dolan)์€ ๋‹ฌ ๊ถค๋„ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€์˜ ๋Œ€์•ˆ์„ ์ œ์‹œํ•˜์˜€๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด๋Š” 1960๋…„๋Œ€ ์ดˆ๊ธฐ์˜ ์•„ํด๋กœ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ์˜ ํƒ€๋‹น์ƒ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์—์„œ ์šฐ์ฃผ ํƒœ์Šคํฌ ๊ทธ๋ฃน(Space Task Group)์˜ ์ง ์ฑ”๋ฒŒ๋ฆฐ(Jim Chamberlin) ๊ณผ ์˜ค์›ฌ ๋ฉ”์ด๋‚˜๋“œ(Owen Maynard)์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ๋ฐ ์ถ”์ง„๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ๋ชจ๋“œ์—์„œ๋Š” ํ•˜๋‚˜์˜ ์ƒˆํ„ด V์„ ์ด์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๋” ์ž‘์€ LUM( Lunar Excursion Module )๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ CSM์„ ๋‹ฌ์— ๋ฐœ์‚ฌํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ ๋œ ์šฐ์ฃผ์„ ์ด ๋‹ฌ์˜ ๊ถค๋„์— ๋„๋‹ฌํ•˜๋ฉด ์„ธ ์šฐ์ฃผ ๋น„ํ–‰์‚ฌ ์ค‘ ํ•œ ์šฐ์ฃผ ๋น„ํ–‰์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ CSM์„ ์œ ์ง€ํ•˜๊ณ  ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋‘ ์šฐ์ฃผ์ธ์€ LEM์— ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ€์„œ ๋‹ฌ ํ‘œ๋ฉด์œผ๋กœ ๋‚ด๋ ค๊ฐ„๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฐ ๋‹ค์Œ LEM์˜ ์ƒ์Šน ๋‹จ๊ณ„๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๋‹ฌ ๊ถค๋„์˜ CSM์— ๋‹ค์‹œ ํ•ฉ๋ฅ˜ ํ•œ ๋‹ค์Œ LEM์„ ๋ฒ„๋ฆฌ๊ณ  CSM์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ์ง€๊ตฌ๋กœ ๋Œ์•„์˜จ๋‹ค. ์ด ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์€ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœํŒ€์„ ์ด๋ˆ ๋žญ๊ธ€๋ฆฌ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์„ผํ„ฐ(Langley Research Center)์˜ ์—”์ง€๋‹ˆ์–ด ์กด ํœด๋ณผํŠธ(John C. Houbolt)์— ์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ NASA์˜ ๋ถ€๊ตญ์žฅ(Associate Administrator)์ธ ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ์‹œ๋จผ์Šค(Robert Seamans)์˜ ๊ด€์‹ฌ์„ ๋Œ๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํƒ‘์žฌ๋Ÿ‰์ด ์ ๊ฒŒ ๋“ ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ ์™ธ์—๋„, LOR ๋ฐฉ์‹์˜ ๋˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ด์ ์€ ๋ฐ”๋กœ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™ ์ „์šฉ์œผ๋กœ ์„ค๊ณ„๋œ ๋‹ฌ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์„ ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. LEM์˜ ์„ค๊ณ„๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ์šฐ์ฃผ ๋น„ํ–‰์‚ฌ๋Š” ๊ด€์ธก์ฐฝ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋Œ€๋žต ์ƒ๊ณต์—์„œ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™ ์ง€์ ์„ ๋ช…ํ™•ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋ณผ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ฒŒ ๋˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋ น์„ (Command Module) ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์„  ๋ฐฉ์‹์—์„œ๋Š” ์ ์–ด๋„ ๋†’์ด์—์„œ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์ง€์ ์ด ๋“ฑ๋’ท์ชฝ์— ์žˆ๊ฒŒ ๋˜์–ด ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฐ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด์„œ๋งŒ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์ง€์ ์„ ๋ณด๊ฒŒ ๋˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ๊ณผ ๋Œ€๋น„๋œ๋‹ค. LEM์„ ์ œ2์˜ ์œ ์ธ ์ฐจ๋Ÿ‰์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœํ•˜๋ฉด ์—ฌ๋ถ„์˜ ์ค‘์š” ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ(์ „๋ ฅ, ์ƒ๋ช… ์œ ์ง€ ๋ฐ ์ถ”์ง„)์˜ ์ด์ ์ด ์ œ๊ณต๋˜์–ด CSM ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์˜ ์ค‘์š”ํ•œ ์˜ค๋ฅ˜๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœ์ƒํ•œ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ, ์šฐ์ฃผ ๋น„ํ–‰์‚ฌ์˜ ์ƒ์กด์„ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•˜๊ณ  ์šฐ์ฃผ ๋น„ํ–‰์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์•ˆ์ „ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๊ตฌํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” "๊ตฌ๋ช…์ •"์œผ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Š” ๋น„์ƒ ์‚ฌํƒœ๋กœ ๊ณ„ํš๋˜์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ LEM ์‚ฌ์–‘์— ํฌํ•จ๋˜์ง€๋Š” ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ์ ์œผ๋กœ, ์ด ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์€ ์‚ฐ์†Œ ํƒฑํฌ ์žฅ์• ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ์„œ๋น„์Šค ๋ชจ๋“ˆ์˜ ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์ด ์ •์ง€๋˜๋Š” ์‹ฌ๊ฐํ•œ ์žฅ์• ๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœ์ƒํ•œ 1970๋…„์˜ ์•„ํด๋กœ 13ํ˜ธ ์ž„๋ฌด์—์„œ ๋งค์šฐ ์ค‘์š”ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜นํ˜ธ๋ก  ์กด ํœด๋ณผํŠธ ๋ฐ•์‚ฌ(Dr. John Houbolt)๋Š” LOR์˜ ์žฅ์ ์ด ๊ทธ๋ƒฅ ์ง€๋‚˜์ณ ๋ฒ„๋ฆฌ๋„๋ก ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. ์›”๋ฉด์ž„๋ฌด ์šด์˜๊ทธ๋ฃน(Lunar Mission Steering Group)์˜ ์ผ์›์œผ๋กœ์„œ ํœด๋ณผํŠธ๋Š” 1959๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์šฐ์ฃผ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€์˜ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์  ์ธก๋ฉด์„ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ํ•ด ์™”๋Š”๋ฐ, ์šฐ์ฃผ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์ด์•ผ๋ง๋กœ 1960๋…„๋Œ€ ๋‚ด์— ๋‹ฌ๋‚˜๋ผ๋กœ ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ๋ณด๋‚ผ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ฐ€์žฅ ํƒ€๋‹น์„ฑ ์žˆ๊ณ  ์œ ์ผํ•œ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋žญ๊ธ€๋ฆฌ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ์„ผํ„ฐ(Langley Research Center)์˜ ์ผ๋ถ€ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์›๊ณผ ๋งˆ์ฐฌ๊ฐ€์ง€๋กœ ํ™•์‹ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ๋ฒˆ NASA์— ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๋ณด๊ณ ํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜, ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ์ œ์•ˆ์„ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ•œ ๋‚ด๋ถ€ ํƒœ์Šคํฌ ํฌ์Šค๊ฐ€ ์ž„์˜๋กœ ์„ค์ •๋œ "๊ธฐ๋ณธ ์›์น™"์„ ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ•ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋Š๊ผˆ๋‹ค. ํœด๋ณผํŠธ์— ๋”ฐ๋ฅด๋ฉด ์ด ๊ธฐ๋ณธ ๊ทœ์น™์€ NASA์˜ ๋‹ฌ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ฐฉ์•ˆ์„ ์ œํ•œํ•˜์—ฌ LOR์ด ๊ณต์ •ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๊ณ ๋ ค๋˜๊ธฐ๋„ ์ „์— ๋ฐฐ์ œ๋˜๋„๋ก ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 1961๋…„ 11์›”, ํœด๋ณผํŠธ๋Š” ์ •์‹ ํ†ต๋กœ๋ฅผ ๊ฑด๋„ˆ ๋›ฐ์–ด์„œ 9 ํŽ˜์ด์ง€ ๊ธธ์ด์˜ ๊ฐœ์ธ ์„œ์‹ ์„ ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ์‹œ๋จผ์Šค(๋ถ€๊ตญ์žฅ)์—๊ฒŒ ์ง์ ‘ ์ž‘์„ฑํ•˜๋Š” ๋Œ€๋‹ดํ•œ ์กฐ์น˜๋ฅผ ์ทจํ–ˆ์Šต๋‹ˆ๋‹ค. ํœด๋ณผํŠธ๋Š” ๋‹ฌ๊ถค๋„ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€์˜ ๋ฐฐ์ œ์— ํ•ญ์˜ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ "๋‹ฌ๋‚˜๋ผ์— ๊ฐ€๊ณ  ์‹ถ์€๊ฑด์ง€ ์•„๋‹Œ์ง€?"๋ผ๊ณ  "๊ด‘๊ธฐ์˜ ๋ชฉ์†Œ๋ฆฌ์™€๋„ ๊ฐ™์ด" ๋ฌผ์—ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋žญ๊ธ€๋ฆฌ ์—”์ง€๋‹ˆ์–ด์ธ ํœด๋ณผํŠธ๊ฐ€ ๋งํ–ˆ๋‹ค. "์™œ ๋…ธ๋ฐ”๋Š” ์—„์ฒญ๋‚œ ํฌ๊ธฐ์—๋„ ๋ถˆ๊ตฌํ•˜๊ณ  ๊ทธ๋ƒฅ ๋ฐ›์•„๋“ค์—ฌ์ง€๋Š”๋ฐ, ๋‹ฌ๊ถค๋„ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€๋ฅผ ํฌํ•จํ•˜๋Š” ํ›จ์”ฌ ์ž‘์€ ํฌ๊ธฐ์˜ ๊ณ„ํš์€ ์™œ ๊ณ ๋ ค ๋Œ€์ƒ์—์„œ ๋ฐฐ์ œ๋˜๋Š”๊ฐ€? ๋‚˜๋Š” ์ด๋Ÿฐ ๋ฐฉ์‹์œผ๋กœ ์—ฐ๋ฝํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ๋‹ค์†Œ ๋น„๊ณต์‹์ ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ์ถฉ๋ถ„ํžˆ ์•Œ๊ณ  ์žˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ์˜ˆ์™ธ์ ์ธ ์ ˆ์ฐจ๊ฐ€ ํ•„์š”ํ•  ์ •๋„๋กœ ์ค‘์š”ํ•œ ๋ฌธ์ œ์ด๋‹ค."๋ผ๊ณ  ํœด๋ณผํŠธ๋Š” ์ธ์ •ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์‹œ๋จผ์Šค๊ฐ€ ํœด๋ณผํŠธ์˜ ํŠน๋ณ„ํ•œ ํŽธ์ง€์— ๋‹ต์žฅํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ 2 ์ฃผ๊ฐ€ ๊ฑธ๋ ธ๋‹ค. ํ™๋ณด ๊ด€๋ฆฌ์ž๋Š” "์ž๊ฒฉ์„ ๊ฐ–์ถ˜ ์ง์›์ด ์ œํ•œ๋œ ์ง€์นจ์— ์˜ํ•ด ๋ถ€๋‹นํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์ œํ•œ๋˜๋ฉด ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ์กฐ์ง๊ณผ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์— ๊ทนํžˆ ํ•ด๋กœ์šธ ๊ฒƒ"์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋™์˜ํ–ˆ์Šต๋‹ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” NASA๊ฐ€ ์•ž์œผ๋กœ๋„ ๋‹ฌ๊ถค๋„ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€์— ๋”์šฑ ๋งŽ์€ ๊ด€์‹ฌ์„ ๊ธฐ์šธ์ผ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ํœด๋ณผํŠธ์—๊ฒŒ ํ™•์‹  ์‹œ์ผฐ์Šต๋‹ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๋‹ค์Œ ๋‹ฌ์— NASA๋Š” ๋ฐ”๋กœ ๊ทธ ์ผ์„ ํ•˜๊ณ , ๋ฏธ ์šฐ์ฃผํ•ญ๊ณต๊ตญ ๋‚ด์™ธ์˜ ๋งŽ์€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์ด ๊นœ์ง ๋†€๋ž๊ฒŒ๋„ ๋‹คํฌํ˜ธ์Šค์˜€๋˜ ๋‹ฌ๊ถค๋„ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ๊ณง๋ฐ”๋กœ ์„ ๋‘ ์ฃผ์ž๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ช‡ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ์š”์ธ๋“ค์ด ๋ฌธ์ œ๋ฅผ ํ˜ธ์˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฒฐ์ •๋˜๊ฒŒ ํ•˜์˜€๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ฒซ์งธ๋กœ, ์ง€๋ฆ„์˜ ์ƒˆํ„ด Vํ˜•์˜ ๋กœ์ผ“์— ๋น„ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ง€๋ฆ„์˜ ๋…ธ๋ฐ” ๋กœ์ผ“์˜ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ์— ํ•„์š”ํ•œ ์‹œ๊ฐ„๊ณผ ๋ˆ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ง์ ‘ ์ƒ์Šน(direct ascend) ์•„์ด๋””์–ด์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋น„ํ˜ธ๊ฐ์ด ์ฆ๊ฐ€ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋‘˜์งธ, ์ง€๊ตฌ ๊ถค๋„ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ทฐ์—์„œ ์š”๊ตฌ๋˜๋Š” ์ƒ๋Œ€์ ์œผ๋กœ ํฐ ์šฐ์ฃผ์„ ์„ ๋‹ฌ์—์„œ์˜ ์—ฐ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์œผ๋กœ ๊ธฐ๋™ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์ ์ธ ์šฐ๋ ค๊ฐ€ ์ปค์ง„ ์  ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์ด๋‹ค. ๋งˆ์Œ์„ ๋ฐ”๊พผ NASA ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์ž ํ•œ ๋ช…์ด ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์ด ์„ค๋ช…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค : ๋‹ฌ์— ์ด๋ฅด๊ธฐ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ˆˆ์„ ๋—„ ์ˆ˜์—†๋Š” ์‚ฌ์—…์€ ๋งŒ์กฑ์Šค๋Ÿฌ์šด ๋‹ต์„ ์–ป์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ์Šต๋‹ˆ๋‹ค. LOR์˜ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์ข‹์€ ์ ์€ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋ณ„๋„์˜ ์ฐจ๋Ÿ‰์„ ๋งŒ๋“ค ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ž…๋‹ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹ฌ๊ถค๋„ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€์— ์ฐฌ์„ฑํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ ๊ทธ๋ฃน์„ ํƒˆํ‡ดํ•œ ์ฒซ๋ฒˆ์งธ ์ฃผ์š” ๊ทธ๋ฃน์œผ๋กœ๋Š”, ๋‹น์‹œ ๋žญ๊ธ€๋ฆฌ์— ์žˆ์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ๊ณง ํœด์Šคํ„ด์œผ๋กœ ์ด์‚ฌ ํ•  ๋กœ๋ฒ„๋“œ ๊ธธ๋ฃจ์Šค(Robert Gilruth)์˜ ์šฐ์ฃผ ์ž‘์—… ๊ทธ๋ฃน(Space Task Group)์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ๋Š” ์•จ๋ผ๋ฐ”๋งˆ ์ฃผ ํ—Œ์ธ ๋นŒ(Huntsville)์— ์žˆ๋Š” ๋งˆ์ƒฌ ์šฐ์ฃผ ๋น„ํ–‰ ์„ผํ„ฐ (Marshall Space Flight Center)์˜ ํฐ ๋ธŒ๋ผ์šด (Von Braun) ํŒ€์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ํ›„์— ์ด ๋‘ ๊ฐ•๋ ฅํ•œ ๊ฐœ์ข…์ž ์ง‘๋‹จ๊ณผ ๋žญ๊ธ€๋ฆฌ์˜ ์ง„์ •ํ•œ ์‹ ์ž๋“ค๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ NASA ๋ณธ๋ถ€์˜ ์ฃผ์š” ๊ด€๋ฆฌ๋“ค, ํŠนํžˆ ์ง์ ‘ ์ƒ์Šน์„ ๊ธฐ๋‹ค๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๋˜ ๊ด€๋ฆฌ์ž ์ œ์ž„์Šค ์›น์„ ์„ค๋“ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋‹ฌ๊ถค๋„ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ๋‹ฌ์— ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์‹œํ‚ฌ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์œ ์ผํ•œ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์ด๋ผ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ์„ค๋“ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. NASA ๋‚ด๋ถ€์˜ ํ•ต์‹ฌ ์ธ์‚ฌ๋“ค์ด ์ด ๊ฐœ๋…์„ ์ง€์ง€ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ, ์ œ์ž„์Šค ์›น์€ 1962๋…„ 7์›” ๋‹ฌ๊ถค๋„ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€๋ฅผ ์Šน์ธํ•˜๊ณ , 1962๋…„ 7์›” 11์ผ ๊ธฐ์ž ํšŒ๊ฒฌ์—์„œ ๊ณต์‹ ๋ฐœํ‘œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์ผ€๋„ค๋”” ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์˜ ๊ณผํ•™ ๊ณ ๋ฌธ์ธ ์ œ๋กฌ ์œ„์ฆˆ๋„ˆ๋Š” ๋‹ฌ๊ถค๋„ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€์— ๋๊นŒ์ง€ ๊ฐ•ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. LOR์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๊ณ„ํš๋“ค ์†Œ๋ จ์—์„œ ์ œ์•ˆ๋œ N1 ๋กœ์ผ“, LK Lander ์™€ Soyuz 7K-LOK๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๋‹ฌ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™ ๊ณ„ํš์€ ์ด์™€ ์œ ์‚ฌํ•œ LOR ์ž„๋ฌด ํ”„๋กœํ•„์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•  ์˜ˆ์ •์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ทจ์†Œ ๋œ ์ปจ์Šคํ…”๋ ˆ์ด์…˜ ๊ณ„ํš์—์„œ ๋‹ฌ ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์€ ์ง€๊ตฌ ๊ถค๋„ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€ ์™€ ๋‹ฌ ๊ถค๋„ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€์˜ ์กฐํ•ฉ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ–ˆ์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. 2019๋…„์— ์˜ˆ์ •๋œ ์ค‘๊ตญ์˜ ์ฐฝ์–ด 5ํ˜ธ์˜ ์›”์„ ํ‘œ๋ณธ ๋ฐ˜ํ™˜ ๊ณ„ํš์—์„œ๋Š” ๋กœ๋ด‡์— ์˜ํ•œ ๋‹ฌ ๋ž‘๋ฐ๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋  ์˜ˆ์ •์ด๋‹ค. ๋Œ€์ค‘ ๋ฌธํ™”์—์„œ ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „ ๋ฏธ๋‹ˆ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ์ธ ์ง€๊ตฌ์—์„œ ๋‹ฌ๊นŒ์ง€ ์˜ ์ œ5ํŽธ์ธ "์ŠคํŒŒ์ด๋”"์—์„œ๋Š” 1961๋…„ ์•„ํด๋กœ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ์— ๋ฏธ ํ•ญ๊ณต ์šฐ์ฃผ๊ตญ (NASA)์ด LOR์„ ์ฑ„ํƒํ•˜๋„๋ก ์„ค๋“ํ•˜๋Š” ์กด ํœด๋ณผํŠธ์˜ ์ฒซ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ์‹œ๋„๋ฅผ ๊ทนํ™”ํ•˜๊ณ , ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ ์œ ์ธ ์‹œํ—˜ ๋น„ํ–‰์ธ 1969๋…„ ์•„ํด๋กœ 9 ํ˜ธ๊นŒ์ง€์˜ ๋‹ฌ์ฐฉ๋ฅ™์„ (LM)์˜ ๋ฐœ์ „ ๊ณผ์ •์„ ์ถ”์ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด ํŽธ์˜ ์ด๋ฆ„์ธ ์ŠคํŒŒ์ด๋”๋Š” Apollo 9ํ˜ธ์˜ LM์˜ ์ด๋ฆ„์„ ๋”ฐ์„œ ์ง€์€ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์ฃผํ•ด ์ถœ์ „ ์ฐธ๊ณ  ๋ฌธํ—Œ ์•„ํด๋กœ ๊ณ„ํš
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunar%20orbit%20rendezvous
Lunar orbit rendezvous
Lunar orbit rendezvous (LOR) is a process for landing humans on the Moon and returning them to Earth. It was utilized for the Apollo program missions in the 1960s and 1970s. In a LOR mission, a main spacecraft and a smaller lunar lander travel to lunar orbit. The lunar lander then independently descends to the surface of the Moon, while the main spacecraft remains in lunar orbit. After completion of the mission there, the lander returns to lunar orbit to rendezvous and re-dock with the main spacecraft, then is discarded after transfer of crew and payload. Only the main spacecraft returns to Earth. Lunar orbit rendezvous was first proposed in 1919 by Ukrainian engineer Yuri Kondratyuk, as the most economical way of sending a human on a round-trip journey to the Moon. The most famous example involved Project Apollo's command and service module (CSM) and lunar module (LM), where they were both sent to a translunar flight in a single rocket stack. However, variants where the landers and main spacecraft travel separately, such as the lunar landing plans proposed for Shuttle-Derived Heavy Lift Launch Vehicle, Golden Spike and the 2029/2030 Chinese crewed effort, are also considered to be lunar orbit rendezvous. Advantages and disadvantages Advantages The main advantage of LOR is the spacecraft payload saving, due to the fact that the propellant necessary to return from lunar orbit back to Earth need not be carried as dead weight down to the Moon and back into lunar orbit. This has a multiplicative effect, because each pound of "dead weight" propellant used later has to be propelled by more propellant sooner, and also because increased propellant requires increased tankage weight. The resultant weight increase would also require more thrust for lunar landing, which means larger and heavier engines. Another advantage is that the lunar lander can be designed for just that purpose, rather than requiring the main spacecraft to also be made suitable for a lunar landing. Finally, the second set of life support systems that the lunar lander requires can serve as a backup for the systems in the main spacecraft. Disadvantage Lunar-orbit rendezvous was considered risky as of 1962, because space rendezvous had not been achieved, even in Earth orbit. If the LM could not reach the CSM, two astronauts would be stranded with no way to get back to Earth or survive re-entry into the atmosphere. The fear proved to be unfounded, as rendezvous was successfully demonstrated in 1965 and 1966 on six Project Gemini missions with the aid of radar and on-board computers. It was also successfully done each of the eight times it was tried on Apollo missions. Apollo Mission mode selection When the Apollo Moon landing program was started in 1961, it was assumed that the three-man command and service module combination (CSM) would be used for takeoff from the lunar surface, and return to Earth. It would therefore have to be landed on the Moon by a larger rocket stage with landing gear legs, resulting in a very large spacecraft (in excess of ) to be sent to the Moon. If this were done by direct ascent (on a single launch vehicle), the rocket required would have to be extremely large, in the Nova class. The alternative to this would have been Earth orbit rendezvous, in which two or more rockets in the Saturn class would launch parts of the complete spacecraft, which would rendezvous in Earth orbit before departing for the Moon. This would possibly include a separately launched Earth departure stage, or require on-orbit refueling of the empty departure stage. Wernher von Braun and Heinz-Hermann Koelle of the Army Ballistic Missile Agency presented lunar orbit rendezvous, as an option for reaching the Moon efficiently, to the heads of NASA, including Abe Silverstein, in December 1958. During 1959 Conrad Lau of the Chance-Vought Astronautics Division supervised a complete mission plan using lunar orbit rendezvous which was then sent to Silverstein at NASA in January 1960. Tom Dolan, who worked for Lau, was sent to explain the company's proposal to NASA engineers and management in February 1960. This alternative was then studied and promoted by Jim Chamberlin and Owen Maynard at the Space Task Group in the 1960 early Apollo feasibility studies. This mode allowed a single Saturn V to launch the CSM to the Moon with a smaller Lunar Excursion Modul (LEM). When the combined spacecraft reaches lunar orbit, one of the three astronauts remains with the CSM, while the other two enter the LEM, undock and descend to the surface of the Moon. They then use the ascent stage of the LEM to rejoin the CSM in lunar orbit, then discard the LEM and use the CSM for the return to Earth. This method was brought to the attention of NASA Associate Administrator Robert Seamans by Langley Research Center engineer John C. Houbolt, who led a team to develop it. Besides requiring less payload, the ability to use a lunar lander designed just for that purpose was another advantage of the LOR approach. The LEM's design gave the astronauts a clear view of their landing site through observation windows approximately above the surface, as opposed to being on their backs in a Command Module lander, at least above the surface, able to see it only through a television screen. Developing the LEM as a second crewed vehicle provided the further advantage of redundant critical systems (electrical power, life support, and propulsion), which enabled it to be used as a "lifeboat" to keep the astronauts alive and get them home safely in the event of a critical CSM system failure. This was envisioned as a contingency, but not made a part of the LEM specifications. As it turned out, this capability proved invaluable in 1970, saving the lives of the Apollo 13 astronauts when an oxygen tank explosion disabled the Service Module. Advocacy Dr. John Houbolt would not let the advantages of LOR be ignored. As a member of Lunar Mission Steering Group, Houbolt had been studying various technical aspects of space rendezvous since 1959 and was convinced, like several others at Langley Research Center, that LOR was not only the most feasible way to make it to the Moon before the decade was out, it was the only way. He had reported his findings to NASA on various occasions but felt strongly that the internal task forces (to which he made presentations) were following arbitrarily established "ground rules." According to Houbolt, these ground rules were constraining NASA's thinking about the lunar missionโ€”and causing LOR to be ruled out before it was fairly considered. In November 1961, Houbolt took the bold step of skipping proper channels and writing a nine-page private letter directly to associate administrator Robert C. Seamans. "Somewhat as a voice in the wilderness," Houbolt protested LOR's exclusion. "Do we want to go to the Moon or not?" the Langley engineer asked. "Why is Nova, with its ponderous size simply just accepted, and why is a much less grandiose scheme involving rendezvous ostracized or put on the defensive? I fully realize that contacting you in this manner is somewhat unorthodox," Houbolt admitted, "but the issues at stake are crucial enough to us all that an unusual course is warranted." It took two weeks for Seamans to reply to Houbolt's letter. The associate administrator agreed that "it would be extremely harmful to our organization and to the country if our qualified staff were unduly limited by restrictive guidelines." He assured Houbolt that NASA would in the future be paying more attention to LOR than it had up to this time. In the following months, NASA did just that, and to the surprise of many both inside and outside the agency, LOR quickly became the front runner. Several factors decided the issue in its favor. First, there was growing disenchantment with the idea of direct ascent due to the time and money it was going to take to develop a diameter Nova rocket, compared to the diameter Saturn V. Second, there was increasing technical apprehension over how the relatively large spacecraft demanded by Earth-orbit rendezvous would be able to maneuver to a soft landing on the Moon. As one NASA engineer who changed his mind explained: The business of eyeballing that thing down to the Moon really didn't have a satisfactory answer. The best thing about LOR was that it allowed us to build a separate vehicle for landing. The first major group to change its opinion in favor of LOR was Robert Gilruth's Space Task Group, which was still located at Langley but was soon to move to Houston as the Manned Spacecraft Center. The second to come over was Wernher von Braun's team at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. These two powerful groups, along with the engineers who had originally developed the plan at Langley, persuaded key officials at NASA Headquarters, notably Administrator James Webb, who had been holding out for direct ascent, that LOR was the only way to land on the Moon by 1969. Webb approved LOR in July 1962. The decision was officially announced at a press conference on July 11, 1962. President Kennedy's science adviser, Jerome Wiesner, remained firmly opposed to LOR. Other plans using LOR The proposed Soviet lunar landing plan, using the N1 rocket, LK Lander and Soyuz 7K-LOK, would have used a similar LOR mission profile. The Constellation program would have used a combination of EOR and LOR for Moon landing. The Artemis program plans to use LOR to land humans on the lunar south pole region. In popular culture Episode 5 of the 1998 television miniseries From the Earth to the Moon, "Spider", dramatizes John Houbolt's first attempt to convince NASA to adopt LOR for the Apollo Program in 1961, and traces the development of the LM up to its first crewed test flight, Apollo 9, in 1969. The episode is named after the Apollo 9 Lunar Module. See also Lunar orbit insertion Trans-lunar injection Trans-Earth injection Notes References Citations Bibliography External links Spaceflight concepts Apollo program Space rendezvous
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์บ๋Ÿฐ ์นด๋‹ˆ
์บ๋Ÿฐ ์ค„๋ฆฌ์•„ ์นด๋‹ˆ(, 1987๋…„ 8์›” 1์ผ ~ )๋Š” ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ์˜ ์ „์ง ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์‹œ์ ˆ ํฌ์ง€์…˜์€ ์œ™์–ด์˜€๋‹ค. ํด๋Ÿฝ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ์บ๋Ÿฐ ์นด๋‹ˆ๋Š” 11์„ธ ์‹œ์ ˆ์ด๋˜ 1998๋…„์— ๋ฒ„๋ฐ์—„ ์‹œํ‹ฐ์— ์ž…๋‹จํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ƒํ™œ์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 14์„ธ ์‹œ์ ˆ์ด๋˜ 2001๋…„์— ์—ด๋ฆฐ ํ’€๋Ÿผ๊ณผ์˜ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ์ถœ์ „ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ FA ์—ฌ์ž ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋ฏธ์–ด๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ๋””๋น„์ „ ๋ฌด๋Œ€์— ๋ฐ๋ท”ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2006๋…„ 7์›” 13์ผ์— ์•„์Šค๋„๋กœ ์ด์ ํ–ˆ๊ณ  2006-07 ์‹œ์ฆŒ์—์„œ๋Š” ์•„์Šค๋„์˜ FA ์—ฌ์ž ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋ฏธ์–ด๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์šฐ์Šน, FA ์—ฌ์ž์ปต ์šฐ์Šน, FA ์œ„๋ฏผ์Šค ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋ฏธ์–ด๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์ปต, UEFA ์—ฌ์ž์ปต(ํ˜„์žฌ์˜ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ) ์šฐ์Šน์— ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2006๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2009๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ์•„์Šค๋„ ์†Œ์†์œผ๋กœ ํ™œ์•ฝํ•˜๋˜ ๋™์•ˆ์—๋Š” ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 54๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ(2006-07 ์‹œ์ฆŒ 21๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ, 2007-08 ์‹œ์ฆŒ 20๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ, 2008-09 ์‹œ์ฆŒ 13๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ)์— ์ถœ์ „ํ•˜์—ฌ 28๊ณจ(2006-07 ์‹œ์ฆŒ 10๊ณจ, 2007-08 ์‹œ์ฆŒ 10๊ณจ, 2008-09 ์‹œ์ฆŒ 8๊ณจ)์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๊ณ  ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ, ์ปต ๋Œ€ํšŒ, ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์ปต, UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์—์„œ๋Š” ์ „์ฒด 91๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ(2006-07 ์‹œ์ฆŒ 36๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ, 2007-08 ์‹œ์ฆŒ 34๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ, 2008-09 ์‹œ์ฆŒ 21๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ)์— ์ถœ์ „ํ•˜์—ฌ 42๊ณจ(2006-07 ์‹œ์ฆŒ 13๊ณจ, 2007-08 ์‹œ์ฆŒ 17๊ณจ, 2008-09 ์‹œ์ฆŒ 12๊ณจ)์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2008๋…„ 9์›” 24์ผ์—๋Š” ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ์—ฌ์ž ํ”„๋กœ ์ถ•๊ตฌ(WPS) ์ธํ„ฐ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ๋“œ๋ž˜ํ”„ํŠธ 3๋ผ์šด๋“œ์—์„œ 19๋ฒˆ์งธ๋กœ ์‹œ์นด๊ณ  ๋ ˆ๋“œ ์Šคํƒ€์Šค์— ์ง€๋ช…๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2009๋…„ 1์›” 27์ผ์„ ๊ธฐํ•ด ์‹œ์นด๊ณ  ๋ ˆ๋“œ ์Šคํƒ€์Šค๋กœ ์ด์ ํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ์•„์Šค๋„์—์„œ ์ฝ”์น˜๋ฅผ ์—ญ์ž„ํ–ˆ๋˜ ์—๋งˆ ํ—ค์ด์Šค๊ฐ€ ์‹œ์นด๊ณ  ๋ ˆ๋“œ ์Šคํƒ€์Šค์˜ ๊ฐ๋…์œผ๋กœ ์ž„๋ช…๋˜์–ด ์ฃผ๋ชฉ์„ ๋ฐ›๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2011๋…„์— ๋ฒ„๋ฐ์—„ ์‹œํ‹ฐ๋กœ ๋ณต๊ท€ํ–ˆ๊ณ  2012๋…„์—๋Š” ๋ฒ„๋ฐ์—„ ์‹œํ‹ฐ์˜ FA ์—ฌ์ž์ปต ์šฐ์Šน์— ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2014๋…„ 10์›”์—๋Š” 2014๋…„ 7์›”์— ์—ด๋ฆฐ ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ‹€ ์•„์นด๋ฐ๋ฏธ(ํ˜„์žฌ์˜ ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ‹€ ์‹œํ‹ฐ)์™€์˜ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ‹€ ์•„์นด๋ฐ๋ฏธ ์†Œ์†์œผ๋กœ ๋›ฐ๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ์˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜์ธ ๋‚˜ํƒˆ๋ฆฌ์•„ ํŒŒ๋ธ”๋กœ์Šค์—๊ฒŒ ์š•์„ค์„ ํ•œ ์‚ฌ์‹ค์ด ๋ฌธ์ œ๊ฐ€ ๋˜์–ด ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ํ˜‘ํšŒ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 1๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ์ถœ์ „ ์ •์ง€ ์ฒ˜๋ถ„์„ ๋ฐ›๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2015๋…„ 3์›”์—๋Š” ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ๋Š” ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฒ„๋ฐ์—„ ์‹œํ‹ฐ ๋ช…์˜ˆ์˜ ์ „๋‹น์— ์ด๋ฆ„์„ ์˜ฌ๋ ธ๋‹ค. 2015๋…„ 12์›”์—๋Š” ์ฒผ์‹œ์™€ 2๋…„ ๊ณ„์•ฝ์„ ์ฒด๊ฒฐํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ์ฒผ์‹œ์˜ ์—๋งˆ ํ—ค์ด์Šค ๊ฐ๋…์€ ์บ๋Ÿฐ ์นด๋‹ˆ๋ฅผ "์„ธ๊ณ„ ์ •์ƒ๊ธ‰ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜"๋ผ๊ณ  ํ‰๊ฐ€ํ•˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2017-18 ์‹œ์ฆŒ์—์„œ๋Š” ์ฒผ์‹œ์˜ FA ์—ฌ์ž ์Šˆํผ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์šฐ์Šน, FA ์—ฌ์ž์ปต ์šฐ์Šน์— ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2018๋…„ 10์›”์—๋Š” ํ”ผ์˜ค๋ Œํ‹ฐ๋‚˜์™€์˜ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ํŽ˜๋„ํ‹ฐํ‚ฅ์„ ์„ฑ๊ณต์‹œํ‚ค๋ฉด์„œ ์ฒผ์‹œ์˜ 1-0 ์Šน๋ฆฌ์— ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ์ธํ„ฐ๋„ท์—์„œ ์„ฑ ์ฐจ๋ณ„์ ์ธ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์„ ๋ฐ›๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ ์บ๋Ÿฐ ์นด๋‹ˆ๋Š” 2005๋…„ 2์›” 17์ผ์— ์—ด๋ฆฐ ์ดํƒˆ๋ฆฌ์•„์™€์˜ ์นœ์„  ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์— ๊ต์ฒด ์ถœ์ „ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ ๋ฐ๋ท”ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ๋Š” ํ•ด๋‹น ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ 4-1 ์Šน๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๊ณ  ์บ๋Ÿฐ ์นด๋‹ˆ๋Š” ํ•ด๋‹น ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ์ž์‹ ์˜ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ์ฒซ ๊ณจ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์บ๋Ÿฐ ์นด๋‹ˆ๋Š” ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ๊ฐ๋…์„ ์—ญ์ž„ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ ํ˜ธํ”„ ํŒŒ์›”๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ ๋ฐœํƒ๋œ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์ Š์€ ์„ ์ˆ˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ์—์„œ ๊ฐœ์ตœ๋œ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2005์—์„œ๋Š” ํ•€๋ž€๋“œ์™€์˜ ์กฐ๋ณ„ ์˜ˆ์„  ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ํ›„๋ฐ˜์ „ ์ถ”๊ฐ€ ์‹œ๊ฐ„์— ๊ฒฐ์Šน๊ณจ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•˜์—ฌ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ์˜ 3-2 ์Šน๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ์•ˆ๊ฒจ์ฃผ๋ฉด์„œ ์–ธ๋ก ์˜ ์ฃผ๋ชฉ์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. 2005๋…„๊ณผ 2006๋…„์—๋Š” ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ํ˜‘ํšŒ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์˜ฌํ•ด์˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์ฒญ์†Œ๋…„ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ ์„ ์ •๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ  ์ค‘๊ตญ์—์„œ ๊ฐœ์ตœ๋œ 2007๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต, ํ•€๋ž€๋“œ์—์„œ ๊ฐœ์ตœ๋œ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2009, ๋…์ผ์—์„œ ๊ฐœ์ตœ๋œ 2011๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต, ์Šค์›จ๋ด์—์„œ ๊ฐœ์ตœ๋œ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2013์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ˜ธํ”„ ํŒŒ์›” ๊ฐ๋…์€ ๋„ค๋œ๋ž€๋“œ์™€์˜ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2009 ์ค€๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ์ œ์‹œ์นด ํด๋ผํฌ์˜ ํŽ˜์ด์Šค์™€ ์—๋„ˆ์ง€๋ฅผ ํ™œ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๋„ค๋œ๋ž€๋“œ์˜ ํ’€๋ฐฑ์„ ์ง€์น˜๋„๋ก ๋งŒ๋“ค์—ˆ๊ณ  ๊ต์ฒด ์ถœ์ „ํ•œ ์บ๋Ÿฐ ์นด๋‹ˆ์—๊ฒŒ ๊ฒฐ์ •์ ์ธ ํšจ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ์•ˆ๊ฒจ์ฃผ๋ฉด์„œ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ์˜ 2-1 ์Šน๋ฆฌ์— ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ๋Š” UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2009 ๊ฒฐ์Šน์ „ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ๋…์ผ์— 2-6์œผ๋กœ ํŒจ๋ฐฐํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์ค€์šฐ์Šน์„ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์บ๋Ÿฐ ์นด๋‹ˆ๋Š” 2012๋…„ ๋Ÿฐ๋˜ ํ•˜๊ณ„ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ์—์„œ ์˜๊ตญ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ์˜๊ตญ์€ ์บ๋‚˜๋‹ค์™€์˜ 8๊ฐ•์ „ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ 0-2๋กœ ํŒจ๋ฐฐํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ํƒˆ๋ฝํ•˜๊ณ  ๋งŒ๋‹ค. ์บ๋Ÿฐ ์นด๋‹ˆ๋Š” 2014๋…„ 11์›” 23์ผ์— ์—ด๋ฆฐ ๋…์ผ๊ณผ์˜ ์นœ์„  ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ A๋งค์น˜ 100๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ์ถœ์ „ ๊ธฐ๋ก์„ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฝํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ๋Š” ํ•ด๋‹น ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ๋…์ผ์— 0-3์œผ๋กœ ํŒจ๋ฐฐํ•˜๊ณ  ๋งŒ๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ธฐ๋ก์€ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋กœ๋Š” ํ†ต์‚ฐ 4๋ฒˆ์งธ์— ํ•ด๋‹นํ•˜๋Š” A๋งค์น˜ 100๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ์ถœ์ „ ๊ธฐ๋ก์ด๋‹ค. 2015๋…„์—๋Š” ๋งˆํฌ ์ƒ˜ํ”„์Šจ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ๊ฐ๋…์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์บ๋‚˜๋‹ค์—์„œ ๊ฐœ์ตœ๋œ 2015๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ•œ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ๋ช…๋‹จ์— ํฌํ•จ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์บ๋Ÿฐ ์นด๋‹ˆ๋Š” ๋ฉ•์‹œ์ฝ”์™€์˜ ์กฐ๋ณ„ ์˜ˆ์„  ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ(์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ๋Š” ๋ฉ•์‹œ์ฝ”์— 2-1 ์Šน๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•จ)์—์„œ 1๊ณจ, ์ฝœ๋กฌ๋น„์•„์™€์˜ ์กฐ๋ณ„ ์˜ˆ์„  ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ(์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ๋Š” ์ฝœ๋กฌ๋น„์•„์— 2-1 ์Šน๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋กํ•จ)์—์„œ 1๊ณจ์„ ๊ธฐ๋กํ–ˆ๊ณ  ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ๋Š” ํ•ด๋‹น ๋Œ€ํšŒ์—์„œ 3์œ„๋ฅผ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ•˜์—ฌ ์—ญ๋Œ€ ์ตœ๊ณ  ์„ฑ์ ์„ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฝํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2017๋…„์—๋Š” ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ์˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ์— ํ—Œ์‹ ํ•œ ๊ณต๋กœ๋ฅผ ์ธ์ •๋ฐ›์•„ ์˜๊ตญ ์™•์‹ค๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ƒˆํ•ด๋ฅผ ๋งž์ดํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ์ฐจ์›์—์„œ ๋Œ€์˜ ์ œ๊ตญ ํ›ˆ์žฅ์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๊ณ  ๋„ค๋œ๋ž€๋“œ์—์„œ ๊ฐœ์ตœ๋œ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2017์— ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์บ๋Ÿฐ ์นด๋‹ˆ๋Š” ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์—์„œ ๊ฐœ์ตœ๋œ 2019๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต์„ ๋์œผ๋กœ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€์—์„œ ์€ํ‡ดํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ๋Š” ์Šค์›จ๋ด๊ณผ์˜ 2019๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต 3ยท4์œ„์ „ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์—์„œ 1-2๋กœ ํŒจ๋ฐฐํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ 4์œ„๋ฅผ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ˆ˜์ƒ ํด๋Ÿฝ ๋ฒ„๋ฐ์—„ ์‹œํ‹ฐ FA ์—ฌ์ž์ปต 1ํšŒ ์šฐ์Šน (2012) ์•„์Šค๋„ FA ์—ฌ์ž ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋ฏธ์–ด๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ๋””๋น„์ „ 3ํšŒ ์šฐ์Šน (2005-06, 2006-07, 2007-08) FA ์—ฌ์ž์ปต 3ํšŒ ์šฐ์Šน (2005-06, 2006-07, 2007-08) FA ์—ฌ์ž ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋ฏธ์–ด๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์ปต 1ํšŒ ์šฐ์Šน (2006-07) FA ์—ฌ์ž ์ปค๋ฎค๋‹ˆํ‹ฐ ์‹ค๋“œ 1ํšŒ ์šฐ์Šน (2005-06) UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์Šค๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 1ํšŒ ์šฐ์Šน (2006-07) ์ฒผ์‹œ FA ์—ฌ์ž ์Šˆํผ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ 1ํšŒ ์šฐ์Šน (2017-18) FA ์—ฌ์ž์ปต 1ํšŒ ์šฐ์Šน (2017-18) ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œ 2009๋…„ ํ‚คํ”„๋กœ์Šค์ปต ์šฐ์Šน UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2009 ์ค€์šฐ์Šน 2013๋…„ ํ‚คํ”„๋กœ์Šค์ปต ์šฐ์Šน 2015๋…„ ํ‚คํ”„๋กœ์Šค์ปต ์šฐ์Šน 2015๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต 3์œ„ 2019๋…„ ์‹œ๋นŒ๋ฆฌ๋ธŒ์Šค์ปต ์šฐ์Šน ๊ฐœ์ธ ๋ฒ„๋ฐ์—„ ์‹œํ‹ฐ ๋ช…์˜ˆ์˜ ์ „๋‹น ๋“ฑ๋ก ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ์บ๋Ÿฐ ์นด๋‹ˆ ํ”„๋กœํ•„ - ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ํ˜‘ํšŒ 1987๋…„ ์ถœ์ƒ ์‚ด์•„์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ์˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋Œ€ํ‘œํŒ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ๊ณต๊ฒฉ์ˆ˜ FIFA ์„ผ์ถ”๋ฆฌ ํด๋Ÿฝ ์—ฌ์ž ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ฒผ์‹œ FC ์œ„๋ฏผ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์•„์Šค๋„ WFC์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋ฒ„๋ฐ์—„ ์‹œํ‹ฐ WFC์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2005 ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 2007๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2009 ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 2011๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2013 ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 2015๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ UEFA ์—ฌ์ž ์œ ๋กœ 2017 ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 2019๋…„ FIFA ์—ฌ์ž ์›”๋“œ์ปต ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์˜๊ตญ์˜ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ 2012๋…„ ํ•˜๊ณ„ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋Ÿฌํ”„๋ฒ„๋Ÿฌ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๋™๋ฌธ FA ์—ฌ์ž ์Šˆํผ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์— ๊ฑฐ์ฃผํ•œ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ์ธ ์‹œ์นด๊ณ  ๋ ˆ๋“œ ์Šคํƒ€์Šค์˜ ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋žœ๋“œ์˜ ํ•ด์™ธ ์ง„์ถœ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ ์—ฌ์ž ์ถ•๊ตฌ ์„ ์ˆ˜
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karen%20Carney
Karen Carney
Karen Julia Carney (born 1 August 1987) is an English sports journalist and former professional footballer who played as a winger and midfielder. Carney has been a regular broadcaster for live football on Sky Sports, ITV and Amazon Prime, including Women's Super League and men's Premier League matches since 2019. She is also a sports columnist for BBC Sport, BBC Radio 5 Live, BBC Television, and The Guardian. Carney began her career at Birmingham City and was twice named FA Young Player of the Year in 2005 and 2006. After signing with Arsenal, she experienced great success in 2006โ€“07 winning the UEFA Women's Cup and all three domestic trophies: the FA Women's Premier League, FA Women's Cup, and the FA Women's Premier League Cup. Following two seasons with Chicago Red Stars in the American Women's Professional Soccer (WPS), Carney re-joined Birmingham City from 2011 to 2015. Carney finished her career with Chelsea where she was named Player of the Year in 2016 and captained the club to an FA Women's Cup title in 2017โ€“18. She retired in July 2019. Carney made her senior international debut for England in 2005. She represented England at four FIFA Women's World Cups (2007, 2011, 2015 and 2019) and at four UEFA Women's Championships (2005, 2009, 2013 and 2017). At the time of her retirement, she was the second most capped England player with 144 appearances, although this has since been surpassed by Jill Scott. She also represented Great Britain at the 2012 Summer Olympics. In 2015, Carney was inducted into Birmingham City's Hall of Fame, and 2021, she was inducted into the English Football Hall of Fame. In 2017, she was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) for services to football. Club career Birmingham City, 2005โ€“06 Carney joined Birmingham City Ladies at the age of 11 and played at various age levels for the club alongside the likes of Eniola Aluko and Laura Bassett. She made her first-team debut for Birmingham City in the FA Women's Premier League National Division against Fulham Ladies at the age of 14. She earned FA National Young Player of the Year honors in 2005 and 2006. Move to Arsenal, 2006โ€“09 Carney joined Arsenal Ladies on 13 July 2006, and played a major part in the team that won four major honours in the 2006/07 season: the FA Women's Premier League, FA Women's Cup, FA Women's Premier League Cup, and the UEFA Women's Cup. She made 21 appearances in the Premier League in her first season and scored 10 goals. In all competitions, she made 36 appearances and scored 13 goals. The following season saw Carney take on a greater role at Arsenal. She made 20 Premier League appearances and scored 10 goals. In all competitions, she made 34 appearances and scored 17 goals. 2008โ€“09 marked Carney's final season with Arsenal. She made 13 Premier League appearances and scored eight goals. In all competitions, she made 21 appearances and scored 12 goals. Chicago Red Stars, 2009โ€“10 After a new professional league was announced in the United States, Carney was selected by Chicago Red Stars in the third round (19th overall) of the 2008 WPS International Draft. The Red Stars made Carney their first signing on 27 January 2009. It was confirmed the following day by Arsenal. She joined Head Coach Emma Hayes, who had served as Arsenal's first team assistant coach. In the inaugural 2009 Women's Professional Soccer season, Carney appeared in and started 17 games (1471 minutes) and scored two goals while assisting on another. She scored her first goal for the club during a 4โ€“0 win against the Boston Breakers. The Red Stars finished in sixth place with a record. During the 2010 season, Carney competed in 21 matches. She scored the game-winning goal against Sky Blue FC on 2 August lifting Chicago to a 2โ€“1 win on her birthday. The Red Stars finished the regular season in sixth place with a record. Return to Birmingham City, 2011โ€“15 After Chicago Red Stars folded ahead of the 2011 season, Carney re-signed for Birmingham City. During the 2011 FA WSL, she started in all 13 matches and scored 3 goals helping lift the club to a second-place finish. During a 4โ€“0 win against Bristol City, Carney scored a brace. She scored the game-winning goal in a 2โ€“1 win against Arsenal on 28 April. During the 2012 season, Carney started in all 14 matches and scored 3 goals. Birmingham City finished in second place with a record. She scored the winning goal and was Player of the Match in the 2012 FA Women's Cup Final. Due to national team obligations, Carney competed in six matches for Birmingham City during the 2013 season. The club finished in fourth place with a record. Carney was a starting player during the 2014 season in all 14 matches. Her 6 goals ranked first on the team and tied for top in the league. During a match against Manchester City on October 5, her brace led Birmingham City to a 2โ€“1 win. In October 2014 Carney was fined and received a one-match suspension for an incident in July when she told opposition player Natalia Pablos to "fuck off back to Spain". In the last game of the 2014 FA WSL season, she missed a penalty in Birmingham City's 2โ€“2 draw with Notts County that might have led to a league title. Birmingham City finished in third place during the regular season with a record. Carney was the first woman inducted into Birmingham City's Hall of Fame in March 2015. She scored two penalties in Birmingham's 3โ€“0 win at relegation-bound Bristol Academy in September 2015, to help secure the club's WSL 1 status. Despite national team duty at the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup in Canada, Carney finished the 2015 season with three goals in 11 matches. Birmingham City finished in sixth place with a record. Chelsea, 2016โ€“19 In December 2015, Carney left Birmingham for the second time in her career, transferring to FA WSL champions Chelsea on a two-year contract. She was described as "world-class" by Chelsea manager Emma Hayes, who previously worked with Carney at Arsenal and Chicago Red Stars. During the 2016 FA WSL, Carney scored 3 goals in 16 matches. Chelsea finished in second place with a record. She scored the game-opening goal in the club's 4โ€“1 against Doncaster on 24 March off a penalty. After the match, Hayes noted, "Karen Carney was at the heart and the core of everything, especially in the first half, and she looks like she's been playing at Chelsea for years. I thought she was instrumental in everything we did, whether she was on the left side, down the middle, or on the right." She scored Chelsea's second goal in the 4th minute of a 4โ€“0 against her former club, Birmingham City on 28 August, in her hometown of Solihull. She was named the club's Player of the Year and was short-listed for England Women's Player of the Year. After extending her contract with Chelsea through 2020, Carney's four goals in the seven matches she competed in during the 2017 FA WSL ranked third in the league. Chelsea finished in first place during the regular season with a record. During the 2017โ€“18 FA WSL season, she scored three goals in eight matches, including a brace against Yeovil on 29 October. Chelsea won the league title as well as the 2017โ€“18 FA Women's Cup. In October 2018, Carney's ninth-minute penalty goal captained Chelsea's 1โ€“0 Women's Champions League win over Fiorentina. Carney was named to the 2018โ€“19 Women's Champions League Squad of the Season . Following the match, Carney experienced sexist, death and abuse threats by an Instagram user after the match. The user was banned from the social media platform for threatening and abusive behaviour. Although Carney declined to press charges, England's Football Association called for police involvement. During her final season with the club, Carney scored one goal in 14 matches in the 2018โ€“19 FA WSL. International career England Carney made her senior international debut in England's 4โ€“1 victory over Italy in 2005, coming off the bench to score England's fourth goal. She was the youngest player to earn a senior debut during Hope Powell's tenure as England coach. The same year, she was an integral part of the team at the UEFA Women's Euro 2005 and scored a last-minute, game-winning goal in the 3โ€“2 win over Finland, which earned her significant media attention. In her late teens, Carney won FA Young Player of the Year in 2005 and 2006. In August 2009, she was named to Powell's national team squad for Euro 2009. In the semi-final win over the Netherlands, Powell utilised 20-year-old Jessica Clarke's pace and energy to tire the Dutch full-backs, before introducing substitute Carney to decisive effect. On 23 November 2014, Carney competed in her 100th senior international match in a 3โ€“0 loss to Germany at Wembley Stadium in front of a record 45,619 fans. Carney was the youngest and the eighth player to earn 100 caps for England. The match marked the first time a women's national team game had been played at Wembley. Carney stated the game was her favourite moment in her career: "Getting my 100th cap for England was a real honour... It's every boy's dream to play at Wembley so for me being a girl and leading the national team out at one of the most iconic stadiums in the world is a moment I will never forget." In May 2015, England manager Mark Sampson named Carney in his final squad for the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup, hosted in Canada. Carney scored in England's 2โ€“1 group stage wins over Mexico and Colombia. England eventually finished third. Carney was named to the 2019 England World Cup squad, and earned her 141st cap in England's first match against Scotland. On 5 July 2019, Carney announced that she would retire after the World Cup third-place final match against Sweden. England lost the match 2โ€“1, and the match saw an Ellen White goal disallowed due to handball. Carney was allotted 160 when the FA announced their legacy numbers scheme to honour the 50th anniversary of Englandโ€™s inaugural international. Great Britain In June 2012, Carney was named in the 18-player Great Britain squad for the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. She played in all four games as Great Britain were beaten 2โ€“0 by Canada in the last eight. Post-playing career Carney and Liesel Jolly co-created "the Second Half"; a programme supporting women footballers in their careers post-football. In August 2022, Carney was appointed Chair of the Future of Women's Football Review for the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, looking into ways the Government can nurture and expand the game in the UK.The review was published in July 2023 and called for a massive changes across the women's game in England. Media career In 2020, Carney joined ITV's coverage of England's women's team, the FA Cup, the 2022 FIFA World Cup and the Euro 2024 finals. In September 2021, Carney joined Sky Sports as lead Women's Super League pundit. Carney has commentated on Champions League matches for CBS Sports. Personal life Carney is from Birmingham. She was born in Hall Green and attended St. Ambrose Barlow Catholic Primary School and St. Peter's RC Secondary School, Solihull. Asked about her origins and outlook in June 2019, she said, "I'm from Birmingham: my mum works at Sainsbury's, my dad is a fire-fighter. We keep it real. We know who we are. I don't need a Bentley; I don't need a Rolexโ€. Carney graduated with a Bachelor of Science Degree from Loughborough University in Sports and Exercise Science with a specialization in Physiology and Sports Psychology. Her dissertation was on "The impact of caffeine on repeated sprint performance in elite female football". In 2013, she graduated from the University of Gloucestershire with a Master of Science in Sports Psychology with a specialization in Performance Psychology. Her dissertation was on "video analysis and coach reflection of team talks within football". As of 2021 she was studying towards a Master of Business Administration at the James Lind Institute, and graduated in October 2022. Carney was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2017 New Year Honours for services to football. Carney is a vegan and credits the diet for improving both her physical and mental health. Carney was nicknamed the Wizard. Career statistics International goals Scores and results list England's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Carney goal. Honours Birmingham City Women's FA Cup: 2012 Arsenal FA Women's Premier League National Division: 2005โ€“06, 2006โ€“07, 2007โ€“08 FA Women's Cup: 2005โ€“06, 2006โ€“07, 2007โ€“08 FA Women's Premier League Cup: 2006โ€“07 FA Women's Community Shield: 2005โ€“06 UEFA Women's Cup: 2006โ€“07 Chelsea FA Women's Cup: 2017โ€“18 England Cyprus Cup: 2009, 2013, 2015 UEFA Women's Championship runner-up: 2009 FIFA Women's World Cup third place: 2015 SheBelieves Cup: 2019 Individual FA International Young Player of the Year: 2005, 2006 FA WSL Top Goalscorer: 2014 Birmingham City F.C. Hall of Fame: 2015 English Football Hall of Fame: 2021 Women's Super League Hall of Fame: 2022 See also List of women's footballers with 100 or more international caps List of UEFA Women's Championship goalscorers List of players who have appeared in multiple UEFA Women's Championships List of players who have appeared in multiple FIFA Women's World Cups List of England women's international footballers List of football personalities with British honours List of Chicago Red Stars players References Further reading Aluko, Eniola (2019), They Don't Teach This, Random House, Caudwell, Jayne (2013), Women's Football in the UK: Continuing with Gender Analyses, Taylor & Francis, Clarke, Gemma (2019), Soccerwomen: The Icons, Rebels, Stars, and Trailblazers Who Transformed the Beautiful Game, Dunn, Carrie (2019), Pride of the Lionesses: The Changing Face of Women's Football in England, Pitch Publishing (Brighton) Limited, Dunn, Carrie (2016), The Roar of the Lionesses: Women's Football in England, Pitch Publishing Limited, Grainey, Timothy (2012), Beyond Bend It Like Beckham: The Global Phenomenon of Women's Soccer, University of Nebraska Press, External links Karen Carney โ€“ The Football Association profile Karen Carney โ€“ Chicago Red Stars profile 1987 births Living people English women's footballers Alumni of Loughborough University Birmingham City W.F.C. players Arsenal W.F.C. players Chelsea F.C. Women players Chicago Red Stars players England women's international footballers FA Women's National League players Expatriate women's soccer players in the United States Women's Super League players 2007 FIFA Women's World Cup players 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup players 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup players Footballers at the 2012 Summer Olympics Olympic footballers for Great Britain Footballers from Solihull Women's association football forwards English people of Irish descent FIFA Women's Century Club Members of the Order of the British Empire English expatriate women's footballers English expatriate sportspeople in the United States 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup players BT Sport presenters and reporters Women sports commentators BBC sports presenters and reporters Women association football commentators Association football commentators English association football commentators Women's Professional Soccer players UEFA Women's Euro 2017 players WSL Hall of Fame inductees
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%ED%83%80%EC%9B%8C%EB%A7%81
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ํƒ€์›Œ๋ง()์€ 1974๋…„ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์—์„œ ๊ฐœ๋ด‰ํ•œ ์˜ํ™”๋‹ค. ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์—์„œ๋Š” 1977๋…„ 9์›” 27์ผ์— ๊ฐœ๋ด‰ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€ํ˜• ํ˜ธํ…”์—์„œ ์ผ์–ด๋‚œ ํ™”์žฌ ์‚ฌ๊ณ ์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ์˜ํ™”์ด๋‹ค. ์ค„๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ ์บ์ŠคํŒ… ํด ๋‰ด๋จผ - ๋”๊ทธ ๋กœ๋ฒ„์ธ  ์—ญ, ๊ธ€๋ผ์Šค ํƒ€์›Œ ๊ฑด์ถ•๊ฐ€ ์Šคํ‹ฐ๋ธŒ ๋งคํ€ธ - ๋งˆ์ดํด ์˜คํ•ผ๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์—ญ, SFFD ์ œ 5๋Œ€๋Œ€ ๋Œ€์žฅ ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„ ํ™€๋“  - ์ œ์ž„์Šค ๋˜์นธ ์—ญ, ๊ฑด์ถ•์—…์ž ํŽ˜์ด ๋”๋„ˆ์›จ์ด - ์ˆ˜์ž” ํ”„๋žญํด๋ฆฐ ์—ญ, ๋”๊ทธ ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ์˜ ์•ฝํ˜ผ๋…€ ํ”„๋ ˆ๋“œ ์•„์Šคํ…Œ์–ด - ํ•˜๋ฆฌ ํด๋ ˆ์ด๋ณธ ์—ญ, ๋ฎฌ๋Ÿฌ ๋ถ€์ธ๊ณผ ๋‹จ๋ จํ•˜๋Š” ์‚ฌ๊ธฐ๊พผ ์ˆ˜์ „ ๋ธŒ๋ ˆ์ดํด๋ฆฌ - ํŒจํ‹ฐ ๋˜์บ” ์‹œ๋ชฌ์Šค ์—ญ, ์ œ์ž„์Šค ๋˜์นธ์˜ ๋”ธ ๋ฆฌ์ฒ˜๋“œ ์ฒด์ž„๋ฒŒ๋ฆฐ - ๋กœ์ € ์‹œ๋ชฌ์Šค ์—ญ, ์ „๊ธฐ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์ž์™€ ๋˜์นธ์˜ ์‚ฌ์œ„ ์ œ๋‹ˆํผ ์กด์Šค - ๋ผ์ด์†”๋ › ๋ฎฌ๋Ÿฌ ์—ญ O. J. ์‹ฌ์Šจ - ํ•ด๋ฆฌ ์ €๋‹ˆ๊ฑด ์—ญ, ์ตœ๊ณ  ๋ณด์•ˆ ์ฑ…์ž„์ž ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ๋ณธ - ๊ฒŒ๋ฆฌ ํŒŒ์ปค ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ์ƒ์›์˜์› ์—ญ ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ์™€๊ทธ๋„ˆ - ๋Œ„ ๋น„๊ฒ”๋กœ ์—ญ, ํ™๋ณด ๋‹ด๋‹น๊ด€ ์ˆ˜์ „ ํ”Œ๋ž˜๋„ˆ๋ฆฌ - ๋กœ๋ฆฌ ์—ญ ์…€๋ผ ๋งคํŠœ์Šค ์•จ๋Ÿฐ - ํด๋ผ ๋žจ์ง€ ์—ญ ๋…ธ๋จผ ๋ฒ„ํ„ด - ์œŒ ๊ธฐ๋”ฉ ์—ญ, ์ „๊ธฐ ์—”์ง€๋‹ˆ์–ด ์žญ ์ฝœ๋ฆฐ์Šค - ์‹œ์žฅ ๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ "๋ฐฅ" ๋žจ์ง€ ์—ญ ๋ˆ ๊ณ ๋ˆ - ์บํ”ผ ์—ญ, SFFD ํŠธ๋Ÿญ Co. 12 ์†Œ๋ฐฉ ๋Œ€์œ„ ํŽ ํ†ค ํŽ˜๋ฆฌ - ์Šค์ฝง ์—ญ, SFFD ์—”์ง„ Co. 4 ์†Œ๋ฐฉ๊ด€ ๊ทธ๋ ˆ๊ณ ๋ฆฌ ์‹œ์—๋ผ - ์นด๋ฅผ๋กœ์Šค ์—ญ, ๋” ๋ฐ”ํ…๋” ์–ด๋‹ˆ ์˜ฌ์„œํ‹ฐ - ๋งˆํฌ ํŒŒ์›Œ์Šค ์—ญ, SFFD ์—”์ง„ Co. 4 ์†Œ๋ฐฉ๊ด€ ๋Œ€๋ธŒ๋‹ˆ ์ฝœ๋จผ - SFFD ๋ถ€๊ตญ์žฅ 1 ์—ญ ์—˜๋ฆฌ์ž๋ฒ ์Šค ๋กœ์ €์Šค - ๋ ˆ์ด๋”” ์ธ ๋ถ€์ด ์—ญ ์•ˆ ๋ ˆ์Šคํ„ฐ - ์†๋‹˜ ์—ญ ๋…ธ๋จผ ๊ทธ๋ผ๋ณด์Šคํ‚ค - ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์ปค(๋ฌด๋ฆฌ์•ผ) ์—ญ, ํ•ด๊ตฐ ํ•ญ๊ณต ๊ตฌ์กฐ ๋Œ€์žฅ ๋กœ์Šค ์—˜๋ฆฌ์—‡ - SFFD ๋ถ€๊ตญ์žฅ 2 ์—ญ ์˜ฌ๋ž€ ์†Œ์šธ - ์กด์Šจ ์—ญ ์นผ๋ ˆ๋‚˜ ๊ฐ€์›Œ - ์•ˆ์ ค๋ผ ์˜ฌ๋ธŒ๋ผ์ดํŠธ ์—ญ ๋งˆ์ดํฌ ๋ฃจํ‚จ๋žœ๋“œ - ํ•„๋ฆฝ ์˜ฌ๋ธŒ๋ผ์ดํŠธ ์—ญ ์บ๋กค ๋งฅ๋ณด์ด - ๋ฏธ์„ธ์Šค ์˜ฌ๋ธŒ๋ผ์ดํŠธ ์—ญ ์Šค์ฝง ๋‰ด๋งจ - ์˜ ์†Œ๋ฐฉ๊ด€ ์—ญ ํด ์ฝ”๋ฏธ - ํŒ€ ์—ญ ์กฐ์ง€ ์›”๋ฆฌ์Šค - ์ตœ๊ณ  ๊ด€๋ฆฌ์ž ์—ญ ํŒจํŠธ๋ฆญ ์ปฌ๋ฆฌํ„ด - ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์ž ์—ญ ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„ ๋ฐ”์…‹ - ์ž„๋Œ€ ์—์ด์ „ํŠธ ์—ญ ์กด ํฌ๋กœํฌ๋“œ - ์นผ๋ผํ•œ ์—ญ ์—๋ฆญ ๋„ฌ์Šจ - ์›จ์Šค ์—ญ ์•„ํŠธ ๋ฐœ๋ฆฐ์ € - ์•„๋‚˜์šด์„œ ์—ญ Lcdr. ๋…ธ๋จผ ํž‰์Šค - ์กฐ์ข…์‚ฌ ์—ญ Ltjg. ํ† ๋งˆ์Šค ์นด๋ฅด๋‚˜ํ•œ - ๋ถ€์กฐ์ข…์‚ฌ ์—ญ ๋ชจ๋ฆฐ ๋งฅ๊ฑฐ๋ฒˆ - ํŒŒํ‹ฐ ๊ฐ€์ˆ˜ ์—ญ (๊ณต์ธ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์Œ) ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„ ํŠธ๋ ˆ์ผ๋Ÿฌ - ๋นŒ ํ•˜ํŠผ ์—ญ, ๊ฒฝ๋น„์› (๊ณต์ธ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์Œ) ํ•œ๊ตญํŒ ์„ฑ์šฐ์ง„ KBS ์ฒซ ๋”๋น™ (1983๋…„ 1์›” 1์ผ) ์ตœ์‘์ฐฌ - ๋งˆ์ดํฌ (์Šคํ‹ฐ๋ธŒ ๋งฅํ€ธ) ์–‘์ง€์šด - ๋”๊ทธ (ํด ๋‰ด๋จผ) ์ตœํ˜ - ๋˜์ปจ (์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„ ํ™€๋“ ) ์ด์„ ์˜ - ์ˆ˜์ž” (ํŽ˜์ด ๋”๋„ˆ์›จ์ด) ๊น€์ข…์„ฑ - ๋น„๊ธ€๋กœ (๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ์™€๊ทธ๋„ˆ) ์ด๊ฒฝ์ž ์ž„์ˆ˜์•„ ๋‚˜์ˆ˜๋ž€ ๋ฌธ์˜๋ž˜ ๋…ธ๋ฏผ ์ด์œค์„  MBC (1991๋…„ 11์›” 23์ผ) ๊น€์šฉ์‹ - ๋”๊ทธ (ํด ๋‰ด๋จผ) ์ด์œค์—ฐ - ๋งˆ์ดํฌ (์Šคํ‹ฐ๋ธŒ ๋งฅํ€ธ) ์ž„์ข…๊ตญ - ๋˜์ปจ (์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„ ํ™€๋“ ) ๊ฐ•๋ฏธ - ์ˆ˜์ž” (ํŽ˜์ด ๋”๋„ˆ์›จ์ด) ๋ฐ•๊ธฐ๋Ÿ‰ - ๋กœ์ € (๋ฆฌ์ฒ˜๋“œ ์ฒด์ž„๋ฒŒ๋ฆฐ) ์ตœ๋ฐฉ๋ž€ - ๋ฆฌ์กธ๋ › (์ œ๋‹ˆํผ ์กด์Šค) ์ตœ๋ณ‘ํ•™ - ํ• ๋ฆฌ (ํ”„๋ ˆ๋“œ ์•„์Šคํ…Œ์–ด) ์„ฑ์œ ์ง„ - ํŒจํ‹ฐ (์ˆ˜์ „ ๋ธŒ๋ ˆ์ดํด๋ฆฌ) ์‹ ์„ฑํ˜ธ - ํŒŒ์ปค (๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ๋ณธ) ๊น€๊ด€์ฒ  - ๋น„๊ธ€๋กœ (๋กœ๋ฒ„ํŠธ ์™€๊ทธ๋„ˆ) ํ™์Šน์˜ฅ ๊น€์œค์ • ์ด์ธ์„ฑ ์ตœ์ƒ๊ธฐ ๋ฐ•์˜ํ™” ์ด์šฐ์‹  ์ด์ข…ํ˜ ํ™ฉ์œค๊ฑธ ๊น€๊ฐ•์‚ฐ ๊น€์˜ํ›ˆ KBS ์žฌ๋”๋น™ (1996๋…„ 4์›” 11์ผ) ๊น€์ข…์„ฑ - ๋”๊ทธ (ํด ๋‰ด๋จผ) ์–‘์ง€์šด - ๋งˆ์ดํฌ (์Šคํ‹ฐ๋ธŒ ๋งฅํ€ธ) ์ตœํ˜ - ๋˜์ปจ (์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„ ํ™€๋“ ) ์ด์„ ์˜ - ์ˆ˜์ž” (ํŽ˜์ด ๋”๋„ˆ์›จ์ด) ๊น€์ •ํฌ ์ด๊ฒฝ์ž ๋…ธ๋ฏผ ์—„์ฃผํ™˜ ์ด์œค์„  ์„ฑ์„ ๋…€ ํ™์˜๋ž€ ๊ธ€๋ž˜์Šค ํƒ€์›Œ ๊ธ€๋ž˜์Šค ํƒ€์›Œ()๋Š” ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ์ƒŒํ”„๋ž€์‹œ์Šค์ฝ”์— ์œ„์น˜ํ•œ ๋นŒ๋”ฉ์ด๋ฉฐ ์˜ํ™” ํƒ€์›Œ๋ง์— ๋‚˜์˜จ๋‹ค. ์ง€์ƒ 138์ธต์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ƒŒํ”„๋ž€์‹œ์Šค์ฝ”์—์„œ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๋†’์€ ๋งˆ์ฒœ๋ฃจ๋‹ค. ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ์˜์–ด ์˜ํ™” ์ž‘ํ’ˆ 1974๋…„ ์˜ํ™” ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ์žฌ๋‚œ ์˜ํ™” ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ์˜ํ™” ์ž‘ํ’ˆ ์กด ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„์Šค ์˜ํ™” ์Œ์•… ์†Œ๋ฐฉ ์˜ํ™” ์กด ๊ธธ๋Ÿฌ๋จผ ๊ฐ๋… ์˜ํ™” ์ƒŒํ”„๋ž€์‹œ์Šค์ฝ”๋ฅผ ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฝ์œผ๋กœ ํ•œ ์˜ํ™” ์ƒŒํ”„๋ž€์‹œ์Šค์ฝ”์—์„œ ์ดฌ์˜ํ•œ ์˜ํ™” ์•„์นด๋ฐ๋ฏธ ์ดฌ์˜์ƒ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž‘ ์•„์นด๋ฐ๋ฏธ ํŽธ์ง‘์ƒ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž‘
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Towering%20Inferno
The Towering Inferno
The Towering Inferno is a 1974 American disaster film directed by John Guillermin and produced by Irwin Allen, featuring an ensemble cast led by Paul Newman and Steve McQueen. It was adapted by Stirling Silliphant from the novels The Tower (1973) by Richard Martin Stern and The Glass Inferno (1974) by Thomas N. Scortia and Frank M. Robinson. In addition to McQueen and Newman, the cast includes William Holden, Faye Dunaway, Fred Astaire, Susan Blakely, Richard Chamberlain, O.J. Simpson, Robert Vaughn, Robert Wagner, Susan Flannery, Gregory Sierra, Dabney Coleman and Jennifer Jones in her final role. The Towering Inferno was released theatrically on December 16, 1974. The film received generally positive reviews from critics, and earned around $203.3 million, making it the highest-grossing film of 1974. It was nominated for eight Academy Awards, including Best Picture, winning three: Best Song, Best Cinematography and Best Editing. Plot Architect Doug Roberts returns to San Francisco for the dedication of the Glass Tower, a mixed-use skyscraper which he designed for developer James Duncan. The tower, tall and 138 stories, is the world's tallest building. During testing, an electrical short-circuit starts a fire on the 81st floor just after another short occurs in the main utility room. While examining the latter short, Roberts sees the wiring is inadequate and suspects that Roger Simmons, the electrical subcontractor and Duncan's son-in-law, cut corners. Simmons, however, feigns innocence. During the dedication ceremony, chief of public relations Dan Bigelow turns on all the tower's lights, but Roberts orders them shut off to reduce the load on the electrical system. Smoke is seen on the 81st floor, and the San Francisco Fire Department is summoned. Roberts and engineer Will Giddings go to that floor, where Giddings is fatally burned pushing a guard away from the fire. Roberts reports the fire to Duncan, who is courting Senator Gary Parker for an urban renewal contract and refuses to order an evacuation. SFFD Chief Michael O'Halloran arrives and forces Duncan to evacuate the guests from the Promenade Room on the 135th floor. Simmons admits to Duncan that he cut corners to bring the project back under budget and suggests other subcontractors did likewise. Fire overtakes the express elevators, killing a group whose elevator stops on the engulfed 81st floor. Bigelow and his girlfriend Lorrie are killed when a separate fire traps them in the Duncan Enterprises offices on the 65th floor. Lisolette Mueller, a guest and resident of the tower being wooed by con man Harlee Claiborne, rushes to the 87th floor to check on a deaf mother and her two children. Security Chief Jernigan rescues the mother, but a ruptured gas line explodes, destroying the stairwell and preventing Roberts and the rest from following. They traverse the wreckage of the stairwell to reach a service elevator which takes them to the 134th floor, but the door to the Promenade Room is blocked with hardened cement. Roberts uses a ventilation shaft to reach the Promenade Room, while Lisolette and the children stay behind. As firemen begin to bring the fire under control on floor 65, the electrical system fails, deactivating the passenger elevators; O'Halloran abseils down the elevator shaft to safety. As firemen ascend to free the blocked door at the Promenade Room, another explosion destroys part of the remaining stairwell, blocking the last means of escape from the upper floors. After the stuck door is freed, reuniting Lisolette and the children with Roberts and the others, Simmons makes a futile attempt to escape down the stairwell, but is blocked by flames and retreats. Meanwhile, Claiborne reveals his true identity and intentions to Lisolette, who says she doesn't care and still wants to be with him. An attempt at a helicopter rescue fails when two women run up to the aircraft: the pilot tries to evade them and crashes, setting the roof ablaze. A Navy rescue team attach a breeches buoy between the Promenade Room and the roof of the adjacent 102-story Peerless Building, and rescue many guests, including Patty Simmons, Duncan's daughter. Roberts rigs a gravity brake on the scenic elevator, allowing one trip down for 12 people, including Roberts' fiancรฉe Susan Franklin, Lisolette, and the children. An explosion near the 110th floor throws Lisolette from the elevator to her death and leaves the elevator hanging by a single cable. O'Halloran rescues the elevator with a Navy helicopter. As fire reaches the Promenade Room, a group of men led by Simmons attempts to commandeer the breeches buoy, which is destroyed in an explosion, killing Simmons, Senator Parker and several others. In a last-ditch strategy, O'Halloran and Roberts blow up water tanks atop the Tower with plastic explosives. Most of the remaining party-goers survive as water rushes through the building, extinguishing the flames. Claiborne, in shock upon hearing of Lisolette's death, is given her cat by Jernigan. Duncan consoles his grieving daughter and promises such a disaster will never happen again. Roberts accepts O'Halloran's offer of guidance on how to build a fire-safe skyscraper. O'Halloran drives away, exhausted. Cast Production Development In April 1973, it was announced that Warner Bros., whose then production chief was John Calley, paid $350,000 for the rights to Richard Martin Stern's The Tower, prior to that book's publication. This amount was larger than originally reported โ€“ the book had been the subject of a bidding war between Warner Bros., 20th Century Fox and Columbia Pictures: Columbia dropped out when the price reached $200,000 and Warner Bros. offered $390,000. Irwin Allen, who just had a big success with a disaster movie, The Poseidon Adventure (1972), was at Fox and persuaded that studio to make a higher offer when the book was sold to Warner Bros. Eight weeks later Fox was submitted a novel, Thomas N. Scortia and Frank M. Robinson's The Glass Inferno that was published the following year, which Allen says had "the same sort of characters, the same locale, the same story, the same conclusion." They bought the novel for a reported fee of $400,000. Allen was concerned that two films about a tall building on fire might cannibalize each other, remembering what happened in the 1960s when rival biopics about Oscar Wilde, with Oscar Wilde and The Trials of Oscar Wilde in 1960 and Jean Harlow, with Magna Media Distribution's Harlow and Paramount Pictures's Harlow in 1965, were released. He convinced executives at both studios to join forces to make a single film on the subject. The studios issued a joint press release announcing the single film collaboration in October 1973. Stirling Silliphant, who had written The Poseidon Adventure, would write the script and Allen would produce. It was decided to split costs equally between the studios, but the film would be made at Fox, where Allen was based. Fox would distribute in the United States and Canada, and Warner Bros. outside those territories. Warner Bros. also handled the worldwide television distribution rights. Incidents and character names were taken from both novels. The total cost for the film was US$14,300,000. Casting Several actors who appeared in small roles, including John Crawford, Erik Nelson, Elizabeth Rogers, Ernie Orsatti, and Sheila Matthews, had previously appeared in The Poseidon Adventure which Allen also produced (Allen and Matthews were husband and wife). Additionally, Paul Newman's son, Scott, played the acrophobic fireman afraid to rappel down the elevator shaft. Lead actors Steve McQueen and Paul Newman were each paid $1million. Although famed for his dancing and singing in musical movies, Fred Astaire received his only Oscar nomination for this film. He also won both a BAFTA Award and Golden Globe Award for his performance. Filming Principal photography took place over 14 weeks. Guillermin says that Newman and McQueen were very good to work with and added considerably to their roles. Music The score was composed and conducted by John Williams, orchestrated by Herbert W. Spencer and Al Woodbury, and recorded at the 20th Century Fox scoring stage on October 31 and November 4, 7 and 11, 1974. The original recording engineer was Ted Keep. Source music in portions of the film includes instrumental versions of "Again" by Lionel Newman and Dorcas Cochran, "You Make Me Feel So Young" by Josef Myrow and Mack Gordon, and "The More I See You" by Harry Warren and Mack Gordon. A snippet of a cue from Williamsโ€™ score to Cinderella Liberty (1973) titled 'Maggie Shoots Pool' is heard in a scene when William Holden's character converses on the phone with Paul Newman's character. It is not the recording on the soundtrack album but a newer arrangement recorded for The Towering Inferno. An extended version is heard, ostensibly as source music in a deleted theatrical scene sometimes shown as part of a longer scene from the TV broadcast version. One of the most sought-after unreleased music cues from the film is the one where Williams provides low-key lounge music during a party prior to the announcement of a fire. O'Hallorhan orders Duncan to evacuate the party; the music becomes louder as Lisolette and Harlee are seen dancing and Duncan lectures son-in-law Roger. Titled "The Promenade Room" on the conductor's cue sheet, the track features a ragged ending as Duncan asks the house band to stop playing. Because of this, Film Score Monthly did not add this cue to the expanded soundtrack album. The Academy Award-winning song "We May Never Love Like This Again" was composed by Al Kasha and Joel Hirschhorn and performed by Maureen McGovern, who appears in a cameo as a lounge singer and on the score's soundtrack album, which features the film recording plus the commercially released single version. Additionally, the theme tune is interpolated into the film's underscore by Williams. The song's writers collaborated on "The Morning After" from The Poseidon Adventure, an Oscar-winning song which was also recorded by McGovern, although hers was not the vocal used in that film. The first release of portions of the score from The Towering Inferno was on Warner Bros. Records early in 1975 (Catalog No. BS-2840) "Main Title" (5:00) "An Architect's Dream" (3:28) "Lisolette And Harlee" (2:34) "Something For Susan" (2:42) "Trapped Lovers" (4:28) "We May Never Love Like This Again" โ€“ Kasha/Hirschhorn, performed by Maureen McGovern (2:11) "Susan And Doug" (2:30) "The Helicopter Explosion" (2:50) "Planting The Charges โ€“ And Finale" (10:17) A near-complete release came on the Film Score Monthly label (FSM) on April 1, 2001 and was produced by Lukas Kendall and Nick Redman. FSM's was an almost completely expanded version remixed from album masters at Warner Bros. archives and the multi-track 35mm magnetic film stems at 20th Century Fox. Placed into chronological order and restoring action cues, it became one of the company's biggest sellers; only 4000 copies were pressed and it is now out of print. Reports that this soundtrack and that of the film Earthquake (1974), also composed by Williams, borrowed cues from each other are inaccurate. The version of "Main Title" on the FSM disc is the film version. It differs from the original soundtrack album version. There is a different balance of instruments in two spots, and in particular the snare drum is more prominent than the album version which also features additional cymbal work. Although the album was not a re-recording, the original LP tracks were recorded during the same sessions and several cues were combined. The film version sound was reportedly better than the quarter-inch WB two-track album master. Although some minor incidental cues were lost, some sonically 'damaged' cues โ€“ so called due to a deterioration of the surviving audio elements โ€“ are placed at the end of the disc's program time following the track "An Architect's Dream" which is used over the end credits sequence. "Main Title" (5:01) "Something For Susan" (2:42) "Lisolette and Harlee" (2:35) "The Flame Ignites" (1:01) "More For Susan" (1:55) "Harlee Dressing" (1:37) "Let There Be Light" (:37) "Alone At Last" (:51) "We May Never Love Like This Again (Film Version)" โ€“ Maureen McGovern (2:04) "The First Victims" (3:24) "Not A Cigarette" (1:18) "Trapped Lovers" (4:44) "Doug's Fall/Piggy Back Ride" (2:18) "Lisolette's Descent" (3:07) "Down The Pipes/The Door Opens" (2:59) "Couples" (3:38) "Short Goodbyes" (2:26) "Helicopter Rescue" (3:07) "Passing The Word" (1:12) "Planting The Charges" (9:04) "Finale" (3:57) "An Architect's Dream" (3:28) "We May Never Love Like This Again (Album Version)" โ€“ Maureen McGovern (2:13) "The Morning After (Instrumental)" (2:07) "Susan And Doug (Album Track)" (2:33) "Departmental Pride and The Cat (Damaged)" (2:34) "Helicopter Explosion (Damaged)" (2:34) "Waking Up (Damaged)" (2:39) Release The Towering Inferno was released in theatres on December 14, 1974, in United States and Canada by 20th Century Fox, and internationally by Warner Bros. Top billing McQueen, Paul Newman, and William Holden all wanted top billing. Holden was refused, his long-term standing as a box office draw having been eclipsed by both McQueen and Newman. To provide dual top billing, the credits were arranged diagonally, with McQueen lower left and Newman upper right. Thus, each appeared to have "first" billing depending on whether the credit was read left-to-right or top-to-bottom. This was the first time this "staggered but equal" billing was used in a movie, although it had been considered earlier for the same two actors regarding Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969) until McQueen turned down the Sundance Kid role. McQueen is mentioned first in the film's trailers. In the cast list rolling from top to bottom at the film's end, however, McQueen and Newman's names were arranged diagonally as at the beginning; as a consequence, Newman's name is fully visible first there. Reception Critical response The Towering Inferno received generally positive reviews from critics and audiences alike upon its release. The film has an approval rating of 68% based on 37 reviews with an average rating of 6.50/10 on Rotten Tomatoes. The site's consensus states: "Although it is not consistently engaging enough to fully justify its towering runtime, The Towering Inferno is a blustery spectacle that executes its disaster premise with flair." Metacritic gave the film a score of 69 based on 11 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews." Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film three out of four stars and praised it as "the best of the mid-1970s wave of disaster films." Variety praised the film as "one of the greatest disaster pictures made, a personal and professional triumph for producer Irwin Allen. The $14 million cost has yielded a truly magnificent production which complements but does not at all overwhelm a thoughtful personal drama." Vincent Canby of The New York Times wrote that the film is "overwrought and silly in its personal drama, but the visual spectacle is first rate. You may not come out of the theater with any important ideas about American architecture or enterprise, but you will have had a vivid, completely safe nightmare." Pauline Kael, writing for The New Yorker, panned the writing and characters as retreads from The Poseidon Adventure, and further wrote, "What was left out this time was the hokey fun. When a picture has any kind of entertainment in it, viewers don't much care about credibility, but when it isn't entertaining we do. And when a turkey bores us and insults our intelligence for close to three hours, it shouldn't preen itself on its own morality." Gene Siskel of The Chicago Tribune gave the film two-and-a-half stars out of four, calling it "a stunt and not a story. It's a technical achievement more concerned with special effects than with people. That's why our attitude toward the film's cardboard characters is: let 'em burn." Filmink called it "brilliant fun." Box office The film was one of the biggest grossing films of 1975 with theatrical rentals of $48,838,000 in the United States and Canada. In January 1976, it was claimed that the film had attained the highest foreign film rental for any film in its initial release with $43 million and went on to earn $56 million. When combined with the rentals from the United States and Canada, the worldwide rental is $104,838,000. The film grossed $116 million in the United States and Canada and $203 million worldwide. Awards and nominations See also List of American films of 1974 Skyscrapers in film List of firefighting films "Disco Inferno", a song inspired by a scene in the film in which a discothรจque catches fire 555 California Street References Sources Further reading </ref> External links 1974 films 1970s action drama films 1970s disaster films 1970s American films 20th Century Fox films Warner Bros. films American disaster films Films scored by John Williams Films about firefighting Films based on American thriller novels Films based on multiple works Films directed by John Guillermin Films produced by Irwin Allen Films set in San Francisco Films shot in San Francisco Films that won the Best Original Song Academy Award Films whose cinematographer won the Best Cinematography Academy Award Films whose editor won the Best Film Editing Academy Award Films featuring a Best Supporting Actor Golden Globe winning performance Films with screenplays by Stirling Silliphant 1974 drama films Films about high-rise fires 1970s English-language films
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์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์น˜๋ฃŒ
์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์น˜๋ฃŒ(Stem-cell therapy)๋Š” ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ์ด์šฉํ•ด ์งˆ๋ณ‘์„ ์น˜๋ฃŒํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋งํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ˜„์žฌ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋„๋ฆฌ ์•Œ๋ ค์ง„ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฒ•์€ ์กฐํ˜ˆ๋ชจ์„ธํฌ์ด์‹(HSCT)์ด๋‹ค. ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋Š” ๋ณดํ†ต ๊ณจ์ˆ˜์ด์‹์˜ ํ˜•ํƒœ๋กœ ์ดํ–‰๋œ๋‹ค. ์‹ ๊ฒฝํ‡ดํ–‰์„ฑ ์งˆํ™˜๊ณผ ๋‹น๋‡จ๋ณ‘, ์‹ฌ์žฅ๋ณ‘ ๋“ฑ ๊ฐ์ข… ์งˆํ™˜์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฒ•์„ ์ฐพ์•„๋‚ด๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๊ฐ€ ํ™œ๋ฐœํžˆ ์ง„ํ–‰ ์ค‘์ด๋ฉฐ, ๋ฐฐ์•„ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ๋ถ„๋ฆฌ ๋ฐ ๋ฐฐ์–‘ํ•˜๊ณ , ์ฒด์„ธํฌ ํ•ต์ด์ „์„ ์ด์šฉํ•ด ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋“ค๊ณ , ์œ ๋„ ๋งŒ๋Šฅ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋“œ๋Š” ๋“ฑ์˜ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์ด ๋ฐœ์ „ํ•จ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์œค๋ฆฌ์ ์ธ ๋…ผ๋ž€์ด ์ปค์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์„ค ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์น˜๋ฃŒ ๊ฐœ๋… 30๋…„ ๋™์•ˆ ์กฐํ˜ˆ๋ชจ์„ธํฌ์ด์‹์€ ๋ฐฑํ˜ˆ๋ณ‘์ด๋‚˜ ๋ฆผํ”„์ข…๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ์งˆํ™˜์„ ๊ฐ€์ง„ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์„ ์น˜๋ฃŒํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ์— ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜์–ด์™”๋‹ค. ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์ด์‹ ๊ด€์ ์—์„œ ๋ณด๋ฉด. ๊ธฐ์ฆ์ž์˜ ๊ฑด๊ฐ•ํ•œ ๊ณจ์ˆ˜๋Š” ์ˆ™์ฃผ์˜ ๋ชธ์— ๋ถ€์กฑํ•œ ์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด ๋‚ด๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๊ด€๋ จ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋“ค์„ ๋‹ค์‹œ ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด๋‚ธ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์ด์‹๋œ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋Š” ์•”์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ์ฃฝ์ด๋Š” ๋ฐ ๋„์›€์„ ์ฃผ๋Š” ๋ฉด์—ญ ๋ฐ˜์‘์„ ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด๋‚ธ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ด ๊ณผ์ •์ด ๊ณผํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์ง„ํ–‰๋  ์ˆ˜๋„ ์žˆ๊ณ , ์ด๊ฒƒ์ด ์ด ์น˜๋ฃŒ์˜ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์‹ฌ๊ฐํ•œ ๋ถ€์ž‘์šฉ์ธ ์ด์‹ vs ์ˆ™์ฃผ ์งˆ๋ณ‘์œผ๋กœ ์ด์–ด์งˆ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์น˜๋ฃŒ ๋ฐœ์ „๊ณผ ์˜ˆ์‹œ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์ ์ธ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฒ•์œผ๋กœ๋Š” 2012๋…„ ์บ๋‚˜๋‹ค์—์„œ ์กฐ๊ฑด๋ถ€๋กœ ์Šน์ธ๋œ ์Šคํ…Œ๋กœ์ด๋“œ์— ๋ฐ˜์‘ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ์–ด๋ฆฐ์ด์˜ ๊ธ‰์„ฑ ์ด์‹ vs ์ˆ™์ฃผ ์งˆํ™˜์„ ๊ด€๋ฆฌํ•˜๋Š” ํ”„๋กœ์น˜๋ง์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฒ•์ด ์กด์žฌํ•œ๋‹ค. FDA์—์„œ๋Š” ์ œ๋Œ€ํ˜ˆ์—์„œ ์ถ”์ถœํ•œ 5๊ฐœ์˜ ์กฐํ˜ˆ๋ชจ์„ธํฌ ์ œํ’ˆ์„ ํ˜ˆ์•ก ๋ฐ ๋ฉด์—ญํ•™์  ์งˆ๋ณ‘ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์— ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ์Šน์ธํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ์ดํ›„ ์•„์‹œ์•„์—์„œ์˜ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์น˜๋ฃŒ ๋ณ€์ฒœ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์‚ดํŽด๋ณด์ž๋ฉด, 2013๋…„ ์ผ๋ณธ์€ ๊ธฐ์กด ์•ฝ์‚ฌ๋ฒ•์„ ๊ฐœ์ •ํ•ด ํ—ˆ๊ฐ€๋ฐ›์ง€ ์•Š์€ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ์˜์‚ฌ ์ฑ…์ž„ํ•˜์— ์‹œ์ˆ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋„๋ก ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ณผ๊ฑฐ ์ผ๋ณธ์€ ๊ธฐ์กด ์•ฝ์‚ฌ๋ฒ•์ƒ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ์น˜๋ฃŒ์ œ๋ฅผ ์˜์•ฝํ’ˆ์œผ๋กœ ๋ถ„๋ฅ˜ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋‚˜, ์กฐ๊ฑด๋ถ€ ์Šน์ธ์ œ๋„๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋ณ‘์›์—์„œ ํ—ˆ๊ฐ€๋ฐ›์ง€ ์•Š์€ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ์น˜๋ฃŒ์ œ๋ผ๋„ ์˜์‚ฌ ์ฑ…์ž„ ํ•˜์— ์‹œ์ˆ ์„ ํ—ˆ์šฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2018๋…„ 9์›” 6์ผ, ๋Œ€๋งŒ ์ •๋ถ€๊ฐ€ 6๊ฐœ ํ•ญ๋ชฉ์˜ ์ธ์ฒด ์„ธํฌ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ํ—ˆ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 6๊ฐœ ํ•ญ๋ชฉ์˜ ์ธ์ฒด ์„ธํฌ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋Š” ์ž๊ฐ€๋ง์ดˆํ˜ˆ์•ก ์กฐํ˜ˆ๋ชจ์„ธํฌ ์ด์‹, ์ž๊ฐ€๋ฉด์—ญ์„ธํฌ ์น˜๋ฃŒ, ์ž๊ฐ€์ง€๋ฐฉ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์ด์‹, ์ž๊ฐ€์„ฌ์œ ์•„์„ธํฌ ์ด์‹, ์ž๊ฐ€๊ณจ์ˆ˜์ค‘๊ฐ„์—ฝ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์ด์‹, ์ž๊ฐ€์—ฐ๊ณจ์„ธํฌ ์ด์‹์„ ๋งํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ง๊ธฐ์•” ํ™˜์ž, 1~3๊ธฐ์˜ ์•” ํ™˜์ž, ์ค‘์ฆํ™”์ƒ ํ™˜์ž, ํ‡ดํ–‰์„ฑ ๊ด€์ ˆ์—ผ ํ™˜์ž ๋“ฑ ์ˆ˜๋งŒ๋ช…์ด ์‹ ์•ฝ ์ž„์ƒ์‹คํ—˜์ด๋‚˜ ํ•ด์™ธ ์›์ • ์น˜๋ฃŒ ์—†์ด ๋Œ€๋งŒ์—์„œ ์„ธํฌ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2018๋…„ 12์›”, ์ผ๋ณธ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” ์„ธ๊ณ„ ์ตœ์ดˆ๋กœ ์ฒ™์ˆ˜์†์ƒ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ์น˜๋ฃŒ์ œ์˜ ์ƒ์šฉํ™”๋ฅผ ํ—ˆ์šฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ 3์›” 5์ผ, ๋„ค์ด์ฒ˜์ง€์— ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋กœ ์—์ด์ฆˆ ํ™˜์ž๋ฅผ ์น˜๋ฃŒํ•œ 2๋ฒˆ์งธ ์‚ฌ๋ก€๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœํ‘œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2007๋…„ ์ฒซ ์‚ฌ๋ก€์ธ ๋ฒ ๋ฅผ๋ฆฐ ํ™˜์ž๊ฐ€ ๋‚˜์˜จ ์ดํ›„ 12๋…„ ๋งŒ์ด๋‹ค. CCR5 ์œ ์ „์ž๋ฅผ ์ƒ์„ฑํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ฒŒ ๋Œ์—ฐ๋ณ€์ด๊ฐ€ ๋œ ์กฐํ˜ˆ๋ชจ์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ์—์ด์ฆˆ ํ™˜์ž์— ์ด์‹ํ•˜์ž, HIV๊ฐ€ ์™„์ „ํžˆ ์‚ฌ๋ผ์กŒ๋‹ค. 18๊ฐœ์›” ํ›„์— ๋‹ค์‹œ ๊ฒ€์‚ฌํ•ด๋„ HIV๊ฐ€ ๊ฒ€์ถœ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์•˜๋‹ค. HIV์—๋Š” CCR5 ์™ธ์— ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์œ ์ „์ž๋ฅผ ์ด์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ์ข…๋ฅ˜๋„ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ˜„์žฌ์˜ ๋‘ ์ž„์ƒ ์‚ฌ๋ก€๋Š” ๋ชจ๋‘ CCR5๋ฅผ ๊ฐ์—ผ ์ˆ˜๋‹จ์œผ๋กœ ์“ฐ๋Š” HIV์—๋งŒ ์ž‘๋™ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์น˜๋ฃŒ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ์ƒํ™ฉ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋Š” ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๊ฐ€์ง€ ์ด์œ ๋กœ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ์—์„œ ๋ถ„๋น„๋˜๋Š” ๋ถ„์ž์™€ ์—‘์†Œ์ข€๋„ ์•ฝ๋ฌผ์„ ๋งŒ๋“ค๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์„ธํฌ ์ž์ฒด์˜ ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ ์™ธ์—, ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ์—์„œ ์ƒ์‚ฐ๋˜๋Š” ์ธก๋ถ„๋น„ ์ˆ˜์šฉ์„ฑ ์ธ์ž๊ฐ€ ํ‡ดํ–‰์„ฑ, ์ž๊ฐ€๋ฉด์—ญ, ์—ผ์ฆ์„ฑ ์งˆํ™˜์—์„œ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋ฐ˜์œผ๋กœ ํ•œ ๋ฉ”์ปค๋‹ˆ์ฆ˜์ด ๋ฐํ˜€์ ธ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฒ•์ด ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ๋ฐฐ์–‘ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๊ฐ€ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋‚˜ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์— ์ด์šฉ๋˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด์„œ๋Š” ์–‘์งˆ์˜ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๊ฐ€ ๋Œ€๋Ÿ‰์œผ๋กœ ํ•„์š”ํ•˜๋‹ค. ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ์˜ ์ž ์žฌ๋ ฅ์„ ์žƒ์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ์ฒด์™ธ์—์„œ ๊ฐ ์ˆœ์ˆ˜ ์กฐ์ง์˜ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋ฐฐ์–‘ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์„ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ํ•„์š”ํ•˜๋‹ค. ํ˜„์žฌ๋Š” 2์ฐจ์› ๋ฐ 3์ฐจ์› ์„ธํฌ ๋ฐฐ์–‘ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์ด ์กด์žฌํ•œ๋‹ค. 2์ฐจ์› ์„ธํฌ ๋ฐฐ์–‘ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์€ ์ง€๋‚œ 40๋…„๊ฐ„ ์ „ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ์ˆ˜์ฒœ ๊ฐœ์˜ ์‹คํ—˜์‹ค์—์„œ ์ผ์ƒ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2์ฐจ์› ์„ธํฌ ๋ฐฐ์–‘์—์„œ, ์„ธํฌ๋Š” ๋ฐ”๋‹ฅ ์ธก์˜ ๋‹จ๋‹จํ•˜๊ณ  ํ‰ํ‰ํ•œ ํ‘œ๋ฉด, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์ • ๋‹จ๋ฉด์˜ ์•ก์ฒด์— ๋…ธ์ถœ๋œ๋‹ค. 2์ฐจ ์„ธํฌ ๋ฐฐ์–‘์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ, ์„ธํฌ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ๊ฐ ์„ธํฌ ์œ ํ˜•์— ๊ณ ์œ ํ•œ ์„ธํฌ ์™ธ ๊ธฐ์งˆ์ด ๊ฒฐ์—ฌ๋˜์–ด ์„ธํฌ ๋Œ€์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๋ณ€ํ™”์‹œํ‚ค๊ณ  ๊ทธ ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์„ฑ์„ ๊ฐ์†Œ์‹œํ‚ฌ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ƒ์กด ์„ธํฌ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ทน์ ์ธ ์ ์‘์ด ํ•„์š”ํ•˜๋‹ค. 3์ฐจ์› ์„ธํฌ ๋ฐฐ์–‘ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์€ ์ค„๊ธฐ ์„ธํฌ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ƒ์ฒด ๋ชจ๋ฐฉ ๋ฏธ์„ธ ํ™˜๊ฒฝ์„ ์ƒ์„ฑ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ƒ์ฒด ๋‚ด์—์„œ์˜ ๊ณ ์œ ํ•œ ์„ธํฌ ์™ธ ๊ธฐ์งˆ(ECM)๊ณผ ์œ ์‚ฌํ•˜๋‹ค. ์ตœ๊ทผ ์ˆ˜์‹ญ ๋…„ ๋™์•ˆ ์ฒจ๋‹จ ์ƒ์ฒด ์žฌ๋ฃŒ๋Š” 3 ์ฐจ์› ์„ธํฌ ๋ฐฐ์–‘ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์— ํฌ๊ฒŒ ๊ธฐ์—ฌ ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์ฆ์‹๊ณผ ๋ถ„ํ™”๋ฅผ ๊ฐœ์„ ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋”์šฑ ๋…ํŠนํ•˜๊ณ  ๋ณต์žกํ•œ ์ƒ์ฒด ์žฌ๋ฃŒ๊ฐ€ ์ œ์•ˆ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ์ค‘์—์„œ๋„ ๋‚˜๋…ธ๊ตฌ์กฐํ™”๋œ ์ƒ์ฒด ์žฌ๋ฃŒ๋Š” ํ‘œ๋ฉด์  ๋Œ€ ๋ถ€ํ”ผ๋น„๊ฐ€ ์œ ๋ฆฌํ•œ ํŠน์ง•์„ ๊ฐ€์ง€๋ฉฐ ๋‚˜๋…ธ ๊ทœ๋ชจ์—์„œ ์ฒœ์—ฐ ECM์˜ ๋ฌผ๋ฆฌ์  ๋ฐ ์ƒ๋ฌผํ•™์  ํŠน์ง•์„ ๋ชจ๋ฐฉํ•˜๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ํŠนํžˆ ๊ด€์‹ฌ์˜ ๋Œ€์ƒ์ด ๋œ๋‹ค. ์žฌ์ƒ ์น˜๋ฃŒ ๋ชจ๋ธ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋Š” 1)ํ•ญ์—ผ์ฆ ํšจ๊ณผ ์ œ๊ณต 2)์†์ƒ๋œ ์กฐ์ง์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์›์  ๋ณต๊ท€ ๋ฐ ์กฐ์ง ์„ฑ์žฅ์— ํ•„์š”ํ•œ ๋‚ดํ”ผ ์ „๊ตฌ ์„ธํฌ์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ์„ธํฌ ๋ชจ์ง‘, 3)ํ‰ํ„ฐ ํ˜•์„ฑ์„ ํ†ตํ•œ ์กฐ์ง ์žฌํ˜•์„ฑ ๋„์›€ 4)์„ธํฌ์‚ฌ๋ฉธ ์–ต์ œ 5)๋ผˆ, ์—ฐ๊ณจ, ํž˜์ค„ ๋ฐ ์ธ๋Œ€ ์กฐ์ง์œผ๋กœ์˜ ๋ถ„ํ™”.์˜ 5๊ฐ€์ง€ ์ฃผ์š” ๋ฉ”์ปค๋‹ˆ์ฆ˜์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ํšŒ๋ณต์„ ์ค‘์žฌํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒ๊ฐ๋œ๋‹ค. ์†์ƒ๋œ ๋ถ€์œ„๋กœ์˜ ํ˜ˆ์•ก ๊ณต๊ธ‰์„ ๋”์šฑ ์ฆ๊ฐ€์‹œํ‚ค๊ณ , ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์กฐ์ง ์žฌ์ƒ์„ ์ด‰์ง„ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด, ํ˜ˆ์†ŒํŒ์ด ํ’๋ถ€ํ•œ ํ˜ˆ์žฅ์„ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์ด์‹์‹œ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์ด์‹๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋Š” ๋˜ํ•œ ํ‘œ๋ฉด์—์„œ ๋ฐœํ˜„๋˜๋Š” ๋น„๊ต์  ์ ์€ ์ˆ˜์˜ MHC ๋ถ„์ž๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ๋‚ฎ์€ ๋ฉด์—ญ ์›์„ฑ์„ ๊ฐ–๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์•Œ๋ ค์ ธ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ๋ฉด์—ญ ๋ฐ˜์‘์„ ํšŒํ”ผ์‹œํ‚ค๊ณ , ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์กฐ์ง์˜ ๋‚ด์„ฑ์„ ์ด‰์ง„ํ•˜๋Š” ์ผ€๋ชจ์นด์ธ์„ ๋ถ„๋น„ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐํ˜€์กŒ๋‹ค. ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ ํฐ ๋ฉด์—ญ ๊ฑฐ๋ถ€๋ฐ˜์‘์˜ ์œ„ํ—˜์—†์ด ๋™์ข… ์ด๊ณ„ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ฒŒํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ถ€ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ์˜ ํšจ๋Šฅ์ด ์ „๋‹ฌ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์— ์˜ํ•ด ์˜ํ–ฅ์„ ๋ฐ›์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด, ๋ผˆ๋ฅผ ์žฌ์ƒ์‹œํ‚ค๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋Š” ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์„ฑ ๋ผˆ์˜ ์ƒ์„ฑ์„ ์œ„ํ•ด ํ•„์š”ํ•œ ๋ฏธ๋„ค๋ž„์„ ์ƒ์‚ฐํ•˜๋Š” ์Šค์ผ€ํด๋“œ์— ์ข…์ข… ๋„์ž…๋œ๋‹ค. ์•ฝ๋ฌผ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ ๋ฐ ์ƒ์˜ํ•™ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ์˜ ์ง์ ‘ ๋ถ„ํ™”๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ์ƒ์ฒด ์™ธ์—์„œ ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์„ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ด๋Š” ์„ฑ์ธ ์กฐ์ง์„ ๊ณ„์†ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ฐฐ์–‘์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์€ ์•ฝ๋ฌผ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ๊ธฐํšŒ๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋“ ๋‹ค. ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋“ค์€ ๋ถ„ํ™”๋œ ์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ์„ฑ์žฅ์‹œํ‚จ ๋‹ค์Œ ๊ฐ ์„ธํฌ ์œ ํ˜•์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์•ฝ๋ฌผ์„ ์‹œํ—˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ƒ์ฒด ๋‚ด ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์ „์— ์ƒ์ฒด ์™œ์—์„œ์˜ ์ƒํ˜ธ ์ž‘์šฉ์„ ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์•ฝ๋ฌผ ์‹œํ—˜์€ ์ข…-ํŠน์ด์  ์ƒํ˜ธ ์ž‘์šฉ์˜ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ์„ฑ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ˆ˜์˜ํ•™ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์— ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ์•ฝ๋ฌผ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ์— ์ค‘์š”ํ•˜๋‹ค. ์ƒ์ฒด ์™ธ์—์„œ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์กฐ์ง์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์˜ํ–ฅ์ด ๋™๋ฌผ ์‹œํ—˜ ๋‹จ๊ณ„ ์ด์ „์— ๋Œ€๋žต์ ์ธ ๋ฉ”์ปค๋‹ˆ์ฆ˜ ๋ฐ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ์ œ๊ณต ํ•  ๊ฒƒ์ด๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์—, ๋™๋ฌผ ์‹คํ—˜์˜ ํ•„์š”์„ฑ์ด ๊ฐ์†Œ ๋  ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ํฌ๋ง์ด์žˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ๋„๋œ ๋‹ค๋Šฅ์„ฑ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ(iPSC)์˜ ์ถœํ˜„์œผ๋กœ, ๋ฉธ์ข… ์œ„๊ธฐ์ข…์˜ ๋™๋ฌผ์— ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฒ•์ด ํƒ๊ตฌ๋˜๊ณ  ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. ๋ฐฐ์•„๋‚˜ ๋‚œ์†Œ๋ฅผ ํ™•๋ณดํ•  ํ•„์š”์—†์ด, ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋“ค์€ ๋น„ ์นจ์Šต์  ๊ธฐ๋ฒ•์œผ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ์ค‘๊ฐ„์—ฝ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ๋” ์‰ฝ๊ฒŒ ์ œ๊ฑฐํ•˜๊ณ  ๋™๋ฌผ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์œ„ํ—˜์„ ํฌ๊ฒŒ ์ค„์ผ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ๊ณต๊ธ‰์› ์žฌ์ƒ ์š”๋ฒ•์„ ๋ชฉ์ ์œผ๋กœํ•˜๋Š” ๋Œ€๋ถ€๋ถ„์˜ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋Š” ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ํ™˜์ž์˜ ๊ณจ์ˆ˜ ๋˜๋Š” ์ง€๋ฐฉ ์กฐ์ง์—์„œ ๋ถ„๋ฆฌ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ค‘๊ฐ„์—ฝ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ(MSC)๋Š” ๋ผˆ, ์—ฐ๊ณจ, ํž˜์ค„ ๋ฐ ์ธ๋Œ€๋ฟ๋งŒ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ผ ๊ทผ์œก, ์‹ ๊ฒฝ ๋ฐ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์กฐ์ง์„ ๊ตฌ์„ฑํ•˜๋Š” ์„ธํฌ๋กœ ๋ถ„ํ™” ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์†์ƒ๋œ ์กฐ์ง์œผ๋กœ ์ด์‹ ๋œ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ์˜ ์ˆ˜๋Š” ์น˜๋ฃŒ ํšจ๋Šฅ์„ ๋ณ€ํ™”์‹œํ‚ฌ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด ํ•˜๋‚˜์˜ ์˜ˆ์‹œ๋กœ ๊ณจ์ˆ˜๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์œ ๋ž˜๋œ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋Š” ์ˆ˜๋ฐฑ๋งŒ๊ฐœ์˜ ์„ธํฌ๋กœ ์ฆ์‹ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์‹คํ—˜์‹ค์—์„œ ๋ฐฐ์–‘๋œ๋‹ค. ์ง€๋ฐฉ ์œ ๋ž˜ ์กฐ์ง์€ ๋˜ํ•œ ์‚ฌ์šฉ์ „์— ๊ฐ€๊ณต์„ ํ•„์š”๋กœ ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ, ์ง€๋ฐฉ ์œ ๋ž˜ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ฐฐ์–‘ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์€ ๊ณจ์ˆ˜ ์œ ๋ž˜ ์„ธํฌ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ๋งŒํผ ๊ด‘๋ฒ”์œ„ํ•˜์ง€๋Š” ์•Š๋‹ค. ๊ณจ์ˆ˜ ์œ ๋ž˜ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๊ฐ€ ๋ผˆ, ์—ฐ๊ณจ, ์ธ๋Œ€ ๋ฐ ํž˜์ค„ ๋ณต๊ตฌ์— ๋ฐ”๋žŒ์งํ•˜๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ƒ๊ฐ๋˜๋Š” ๋ฐ˜๋ฉด, ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋“ค์€ ์ง€๋ฐฉ ์œ ๋ž˜ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ๋ถ„ํš์— ์ด๋ฏธ ์กด์žฌํ•˜๋Š” ๋น„๊ต์  ์ˆ˜์›”ํ•œ ์ˆ˜์ง‘ ๊ธฐ์ˆ  ๋ฐ ๋‹ค์„ธํฌ ๋ฏธ์„ธ ํ™˜๊ฒฝ์ด ์ž๊ฐ€ ์ด์‹์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋ฐ”๋žŒ์งํ•œ ๊ณต๊ธ‰์›์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์ƒ๊ฐํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋™๋ฌผ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ตœ์†Œํ•œ์˜ ์œ„ํ—˜์œผ๋กœ ํ™•๋ณดํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์šฉ์ด์„ฑ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ง„ํ”ผ์™€ ํ”ผ๋ถ€ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ๊ณต๊ธ‰์ด ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋˜๊ณ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์กฐํ˜ˆ๋ชจ ์„ธํฌ๋Š” ๋˜ํ•œ ํ˜ˆ๋ฅ˜๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ์ด๋™ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐํ˜€์กŒ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ค‘๊ฐ„์—ฝ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ์™€ ๋™์ผํ•œ ๋ถ„ํ™” ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์„ ๊ฐ–๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๋น„ ์นจ์Šต์ ์ธ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ํ™•๋ณดํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์žฅ์ ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ตœ๊ทผ ์—ฌ๋ถ„์˜ ๋ฐฐ์•„ ์ค‘๊ฐ„์—ฝ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ์˜ ์‚ฌ์šฉ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ด€์‹ฌ์ด ๋งŽ์•„์กŒ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ๋™๋ฌผ๋“ค์˜ ์ œ๋Œ€, ๋…ธ๋ฅธ์ž ๋ฐ ํƒœ๋ฐ˜์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜๋Š” ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ์˜ ๋ถ„ํ™” ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์„ ์กฐ์‚ฌํ•˜๋Š” ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๊ฐ€ ์ง„ํ–‰ ์ค‘์ด๋‹ค. ์ด๋“ค ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋Š” ๋‚ด๋ฐฐ์—ฝ ๋ฐ ์™ธ๋ฐฐ์—ฝ ๊ธฐ์›์˜ ์กฐ์ง์„ ๋ณด๋‹ค ์‰ฝ๊ฒŒ ํ˜•์„ฑํ•˜๋Š” ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์„ ํฌํ•จํ•˜์—ฌ, ๊ทธ๋“ค์˜ ์„ฑ์ฒด๊ฐ€ ๋งŒ๋“ค ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ๋ณด๋‹ค ๋” ์ฐจ๋ณ„ํ™” ๋œ ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์„ ๊ฐ–๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒ๊ฐ๋œ๋‹ค ๋ฐฐ์•„ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ๋ฐฐ์•„ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ์˜ ์‚ฌ์šฉ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋…ผ๋ž€์ด ํ™•์‚ฐ๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ๋…ผ์Ÿ์€ ์ฃผ๋กœ ๋ฐฐ์•„ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ์˜ ํŒŒ๊ดด๋ฅผ ํ•„์š”๋กœ ํ•˜๋Š” ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ๋ฐฐ์•„ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜ํ™•ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๋Š” ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์„ ๋Œ€์ƒ์œผ๋กœ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„ ๋ฐฐ์•„ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์— ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€๋Š” ์ข…์ข… ์ฒ ํ•™์ , ๋„๋•์ , ์ข…๊ต์  ๋ฐ˜๋Œ€์— ๊ทผ๊ฑฐํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ธ๊ฐ„ ๋ฐฐ์•„์˜ ํŒŒ๊ดด๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜๋ฐ˜ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋„ ์žˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์—๋Š” ์„ฑ์ธ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ, ์–‘์ˆ˜ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ, ์œ ๋„ ๋งŒ๋Šฅ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๊ฐ€ ํฌํ•จ๋œ๋‹ค. 2009๋…„ 1์›” 23์ผ, ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ์‹ํ’ˆ์˜์•ฝ๊ตญ์€ ์ธ๊ฐ„์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ฐฐ์•„ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ๊ธฐ๋ฐ˜ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์˜ ์ฒซ ์ž„์ƒ์‹œํ—˜ ๊ฐœ์‹œ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด ๊ฒŒ๋ก ์‚ฌ(Geron)์— ํ—ˆ๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ๋‚ด์ฃผ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์‹œ๋„๋Š” ๊ธ‰์„ฑ ์ฒ™์ˆ˜์†์ƒ์ž์—๊ฒŒ ๋ฐฐ์•„ ์ค„๊ธฐ ์„ธํฌ์—์„œ ์œ ๋ž˜๋œ ํฌ์†Œ๋Œ๊ธฐ์‹ ๊ฒฝ๊ต ์ „๊ตฌ ์„ธํฌ์˜ ์•ฝ๋ฌผ(GRNOPC1)์„ ํ‰๊ฐ€ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ชฉํ‘œ๋กœ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2013๋…„ ์ƒ๋ช…๊ณตํ•™ ๋ฐ ์žฌ์ƒ์˜ํ•™ ๊ธฐ์—… ๋ฐ”์ด์˜คํƒ€์ž„(AMEX: BTX)์€ ์ž„์ƒ์‹œํ—˜ ์žฌ๊ฐœ๋ฅผ ๋ชฉ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ฃผ์‹๊ฑฐ๋ž˜๋กœ ๊ฒŒ๋ก ์˜ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์ž์‚ฐ์„ ์ทจ๋“ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ค‘๊ฐ„์—ฝ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ๊ณผํ•™์ž๋“ค์€ ํ•ด๋™ ํ›„ ๋ช‡ ์‹œ๊ฐ„ ์ด๋‚ด์— ์ˆ˜ํ˜ˆ๋œ ์ค‘๊ฐ„์—ฝ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ(MSC)๋Š” ์„ธํฌ ์„ฑ์žฅ ๋กœ๊ทธ ๋‹จ๊ณ„์— ์žˆ๋Š” ์ค‘๊ฐ„์—ฝ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ์— ๋น„ํ•ด ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์ด ๋–จ์–ด์ง€๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ์งˆ๋ณ‘ ์น˜๋ฃŒ์— ํšจ๊ณผ๊ฐ€ ๋–จ์–ด์งˆ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฏ€๋กœ ๋ƒ‰๋™ ๋ณด๊ด€๋œ ์ค‘๊ฐ„์—ฝ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ๊ด€๋ฆฌํ•˜๊ธฐ ์ „์— ์„ธํฌ ์„ฑ์žฅ ๋กœ๊ทธ ๋‹จ๊ณ„๋กœ ๋˜๋Œ๋ ค์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ณด๊ณ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ƒํƒœ์˜ ์ค‘๊ฐ„์—ฝ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜ํ™•ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ์„ธํฌ๊ฐ€ ์–ผ๊ณ  ํ•ด๋™ํ•˜๋Š” ๋™์•ˆ ๋ฐ›๋Š” ์ถฉ๊ฒฉ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ํšŒ๋ณตํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ๋„์›€์ด ๋  ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ํ•ด๋™ ์งํ›„์˜ ์ค‘๊ฐ„์—ฝ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ์ž„์ƒ์‹œํ—˜์€ ์‹ ์„ ํ•œ ์ค‘๊ฐ„์—ฝ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ ์ž„์ƒ์‹œํ—˜์— ๋น„ํ•ด ํšจ๊ณผ๊ฐ€ ์ข‹์ง€ ๋ชปํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ณด๊ณ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ํ™œ์šฉ ์‹ ๊ฒฝ ํ‡ดํ™” ํŒŒํ‚จ์Šจ๋ณ‘, ๊ทผ์œ„์ถ•์„ฑ ์ธก์‚ญ ๊ฒฝํ™”์ฆ ๋ฐ ์•Œ์ธ ํ•˜์ด๋จธ ๋ณ‘๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋‡Œ ํ‡ดํ–‰์„ฑ ๋™๋ฌผ ๋ชจ๋ธ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ์˜ ์˜ํ–ฅ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๊ฐ€ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค๋ฐœ์„ฑ ๊ฒฝํ™”์ฆ๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จ๋œ ์‚ฌ์ „ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋“ค์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฑด๊ฐ•ํ•œ ์„ฑ์ธ ๋‡Œ์—๋Š” ์‹ ๊ฒฝ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๊ฐ€ ์กด์žฌํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ์ด ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋Š” ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์ธ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์ˆ˜๋ฅผ ์œ ์ง€ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ถ„์—ดํ•˜๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ์ „๊ตฌ ์„ธํฌ๊ฐ€ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ „๊ตฌ ์„ธํฌ๋Š” ๋‡Œ ๋‚ด์—์„œ ์ด๋™ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ฃผ๋กœ ํ›„๊ฐ์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋‰ด๋Ÿฐ ์ง‘๋‹จ์„ ์œ ์ง€ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋‚ด์ธ์„ฑ ์‹ ๊ฒฝ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ์˜ ์•ฝ๋ฆฌํ•™์  ํ™œ์„ฑํ™”๋Š” ์‹ ๊ฒฝ๊ณ„ ์žฅ์• ์˜ ์ฅ ๋ชจ๋ธ์—์„œ ์‹ ๊ฒฝ ๋ณดํ˜ธ ๋ฐ ํ–‰๋™ ํšŒ๋ณต์„ ์œ ๋„ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณด๊ณ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์‹œ๊ฐ ์žฅ์•  2003๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์›๋“ค์€ ์‹œ๋ ฅ์„ ํšŒ๋ณต์‹œํ‚ค๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๊ฐ๋ง‰ ์ค„๊ธฐ ์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ์†์ƒ๋œ ๋ˆˆ์— ์„ฑ๊ณต์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ด์‹ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ํŒ€์ด ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๋ง๋ง‰ ์„ธํฌ ์‹œํŠธ๋Š” ๋‚™ํƒœ ๋œ ํƒœ์•„๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ํ™•๋ณด๋˜๋ฉฐ ์ผ๋ถ€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์€ ๋ถˆ์พŒ๊ฐ์„ ๋Š๋‚€๋‹ค." ์ด ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์‹œํŠธ๊ฐ€ ์†์ƒ๋œ ๊ฐ๋ง‰์— ์ด์‹๋˜๋ฉด ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋Š” ํšŒ๋ณต์„ ์ž๊ทนํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ ์‹œ๋ ฅ์ด ํšŒ๋ณต๋œ๋‹ค. 2005๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ์˜๊ตญ ์„œ์„น์Šค ํ€ธ ๋น…ํ† ๋ฆฌ์•„ ๋ณ‘์› (Queen Victoria Hospital of Sussex)์˜ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋“ค์ด ๋™์ผํ•œ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๋Œ€๋žต 40์—ฌ๋ช…์˜ ์‹œ๋ ฅ์„ ํšŒ๋ณต์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. ์ƒ์ฒ˜ ํšŒ๋ณต ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋Š” ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์กฐ์ง์˜ ์„ฑ์žฅ์„ ์ž๊ทนํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์„ฑ์ธ์ด ๋œ ํ›„, ์ƒ์ฒ˜ ์ž…์€ ์กฐ์ง์€ ํ”ผ๋ถ€์—์„œ ์กฐ์งํ™” ๋œ ์ฝœ๋ผ๊ฒ ๊ตฌ์กฐ, ๋ชจ๋‚ญ์˜ ์†์‹ค ๋ฐ ๋ถˆ๊ทœ์น™ํ•œ ํ˜ˆ๊ด€ ๊ตฌ์กฐ๋กœ ํŠน์ง• ์ง€์–ด์ง€๋Š” ํ‰ํ„ฐ ์กฐ์ง์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์ž์ฃผ ๋Œ€์ฒด๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ํƒœ์•„ ์กฐ์ง์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ, ์ƒ์ฒ˜๋ฅผ ์ž…์€ ์กฐ์ง์€ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ์˜ ํ™œ๋™์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ์ •์ƒ ์กฐ์ง์œผ๋กœ ๋Œ€์ฒด๋œ๋‹ค. ์„ฑ์ธ์—์„œ ์กฐ์ง ์žฌ์ƒ์„ ์œ„ํ•ด ์‚ฌ์šฉ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์€ ์„ฑ์ธ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ์ƒ์ฒ˜ ์ธต์˜ ์กฐ์ง ์ธต ๋‚ด์— ์œ„์น˜์‹œํ‚ค๊ณ  ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๊ฐ€ ์กฐ์ง ์ธต ์„ธํฌ๋กœ์˜ ๋ถ„ํ™”๋ฅผ ์ž๊ทนํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ์ด ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์€ ์„ฑ์ธ ํ‰ํ„ฐ ์กฐ์ง ํ˜•์„ฑ๋ณด๋‹ค ํƒœ์•„ ์ƒ์ฒ˜ ์น˜์œ ์™€ ๋” ์œ ์‚ฌํ•œ ์žฌ์ƒ ๋ฐ˜์‘์„ ์ด๋Œ๋‚ธ๋‹ค. ๋‡Œ์™€ ์ฒ™์ˆ˜์†์ƒ ๋‡Œ์กธ์ค‘๊ณผ ์™ธ์ƒ์„ฑ ๋‡Œ ์†์ƒ์€ ๋‡Œ์—์„œ ๋‰ด๋Ÿฐ๊ณผ ํฌ์†Œ๋Œ๊ธฐ์‹ ๊ฒฝ๊ต์˜ ์†์‹ค์„ ํŠน์ง•์œผ๋กœํ•˜๋Š” ์„ธํฌ ์‚ฌ๋ฉธ์„ ์ดˆ๋ž˜ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ฒ™์ˆ˜ ์†์ƒ์˜ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ์˜ ์‚ฌ์šฉ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ž„์ƒ ๋ฐ ๋™๋ฌผ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๊ฐ€ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฟ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ˜ˆ์•ก ์„ธํฌ ํ˜•์„ฑ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ๋ฉด์—ญ ์„ธํฌ ๋ ˆํผํ† ๋ฆฌ์˜ ํŠน์ด์„ฑ์€ ํ•ญ์›์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ธ์ฒด๊ฐ€ ๋น ๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ์ ์‘ํ•˜์—ฌ ์Šค์Šค๋กœ๋ฅผ ๋ฐฉ์–ด ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ฒŒ ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ์กฐํ˜ˆ ์„ธํฌ ์งˆ๋ณ‘์€ ํ˜ˆ์•ก ๋ณ‘๋ฆฌํ•™์œผ๋กœ ์•Œ๋ ค์ง„ ๋ณ‘๋ฆฌํ•™์˜ ํ•˜์œ„ ์ „๋ฌธ์„ฑ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ์ง„๋‹จ๋˜๊ณ  ๋ถ„๋ฅ˜๋œ๋‹ค. ๋ฉด์—ญ ์„ธํฌ์˜ ํŠน์ด์„ฑ์€ ์™ธ๋ž˜ ํ•ญ์›์˜ ์ธ์‹์„ ํ—ˆ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ฉด์—ญ ์งˆํ™˜ ์น˜๋ฃŒ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์„ฑ๊ณต์ ์ธ ์ด์‹ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•ด ๊ธฐ์ฆ์ž์™€ ์ˆ˜๋ น์ž ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ๋™์ผํ•œ ์ผ์น˜๊ฐ€ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์ ธ์•ผํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ 1 ์ฐจ ์นœ์ฒ™ ์‚ฌ์ด์—์„œ๋„ ์ผ์น˜๊ฐ€ ๋“œ๋ฌผ๋‹ค. ์กฐํ˜ˆ ์„ฑ์ฒด ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ๋ฐ ๋ฐฐ์•„ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ๋‘˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋Š” ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๋งŽ์€ ์งˆ๋ณ‘์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ๋ฉ”์ปค๋‹ˆ์ฆ˜ ๋ฐ ์น˜๋ฃŒ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ํ†ต์ฐฐ๋ ฅ์„ ์ œ๊ณตํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์‹ฌ์žฅ ์‹ฌ์žฅ์—์„œ์˜ ์„ฑ์ธ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฒ•์ด ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์ž„์ƒ ์‹œํ—˜ ์ค‘ ๋ช‡๊ฐ€์ง€ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๋งŒ ๋ด๋„ ์‹ค์ œ๋กœ ์•ˆ์ „ํ•˜๊ณ  ํšจ๊ณผ์ ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์ฆ๊ฑฐ๊ฐ€ ๋ณด๊ณ ๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ถ€ ์ž„์ƒ ์‹œํ—˜์—์„œ ๊ณจ์ˆ˜ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์š”๋ฒ•์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ ํ›„ ์‹ฌ์žฅ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์ด ์™„๋งŒํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๊ฐœ์„ ๋œ ์‚ฌ๋ก€๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์‹ฌ๊ทผ ๊ฒฝ์ƒ‰์˜ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ์š”๋ฒ•์€ ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ž๊ฐ€ ๊ณจ์ˆ˜ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ, ์ง€๋ฐฉ-์œ ๋ž˜ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์œ ํ˜•์˜ ์„ฑ์ฒด ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๊ฐ€ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ํšŒ๋ณต ๋ฉ”์ปค๋‹ˆ์ฆ˜์€ ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค. ์‹ฌ์žฅ ๊ทผ์œก ์„ธํฌ์˜ ์ƒ์„ฑ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ํ˜ˆ๊ด€ ์„ฑ์žฅ ์ด‰์ง„ ์„ฑ์žฅ ์ธ์ž ๋ถ„๋น„ ์น˜์•„ ์žฌ์ƒ 2004๋…„ ๋Ÿฐ๋˜ ํ‚น์Šค ๋Œ€ํ•™(King's College London)์˜ ๊ณผํ•™์ž๋“ค์€ ์ฅ์—์„œ ์™„์ „ํ•œ ์น˜์•„๋ฅผ ์žฌ์ƒํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์„ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์‹คํ—˜์‹ค์—์„œ ์ƒ์ฒด ๊ณตํ•™์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด์ง„ ์น˜์•„๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋“ค์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž๋“ค์€ ์น˜์•„ ์žฌ์ƒ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์˜ ์น˜์•„๋ฅผ ํ‚ค์šธ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ™•์‹ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด๋ก ์ ์œผ๋กœ, ํ™˜์ž๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ํ™•๋ณดํ•œ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋Š” ์ž‡๋ชธ์— ์ด์‹๋˜๋ฉด ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์น˜์•„๊ฐ€ ์ƒ๊ฒจ 3 ์ฃผ์— ๊ฑธ์ณ ์„ฑ์žฅํ•  ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์˜ˆ์ƒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ด์‹๋œ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋Š” ํ„ฑ๋ผˆ์™€ ์œตํ•ฉํ•˜๊ณ  ์‹ ๊ฒฝ๊ณผ ํ˜ˆ๊ด€์ด ์—ฐ๊ฒฐ๋˜๋„๋กํ•˜๋Š” ํ™”ํ•™ ๋ฌผ์งˆ์„ ๋ฐฉ์ถœํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ณผ์ •์€ ์›๋ž˜์˜ ์น˜์•„๊ฐ€ ์ž๋ž„ ๋•Œ ์ผ์–ด๋‚˜๋Š” ํ˜„์ƒ๊ณผ ์œ ์‚ฌํ•˜๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๊ฐ€ ๋ฏธ๋ž˜์— ๋น ์ง„ ์น˜์•„๋ฅผ ๋Œ€์ฒด ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ์„ ํƒ์ด ๋˜๊ธฐ ์ „์— ๋งŽ์€ ํ•œ๊ณ„๊ฐ€ ๋‚จ์•„ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ •ํ˜•์™ธ๊ณผํ•™ ์„ฑ์ฒด ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์œ ๋ž˜๋œ ์ค‘๊ฐ„์—ฝ ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ(MSC)์˜ ์‚ฌ์šฉ์€ ํŠนํžˆ ๋ผˆ ๋ฐ ๊ทผ์œก ์™ธ์ƒ, ์—ฐ๊ณจ ๋ณต๊ตฌ, ๊ณจ๊ด€์ ˆ์—ผ, ์ถ”๊ฐ„ํŒ ์ˆ˜์ˆ , ํšŒ์ „๊ทผ๊ฐœ ์ˆ˜์ˆ  ๋ฐ ๊ทผ๊ณจ๊ฒฉ๊ณ„ ์žฅ์• ์—์„œ ์™ธ๊ณผ์  ์ ์šฉ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ๊ฐ€ ๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ›„์ฒœ์„ฑ๋ฉด์—ญ๊ฒฐํ•์ฆ HIV์— ์˜ํ•œ ๋ฉด์—ญ๊ณ„์˜ ํŒŒ๊ดด๋Š” ๋ง์ดˆ ํ˜ˆ์•ก ๋ฐ ๋ฆผํ”„ ์กฐ์ง์—์„œ CD4 + T ์„ธํฌ์˜ ์†์‹ค์— ์˜ํ•ด ์œ ๋ฐœ๋œ๋‹ค. CD4 + ์„ธํฌ๋กœ์˜ ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค ์ง„์ž…์€ ์ผ€๋ชจ์นด์ธ ์ˆ˜์šฉ์ฒด์™€์˜ ์ƒํ˜ธ ์ž‘์šฉ์— ์˜ํ•ด ๋งค๊ฐœ๋˜๋ฉฐ, ๊ฐ€์žฅ ํ”ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์€ CCR5 ๋ฐ CXCR4์ด๋‹ค. ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค ๋ณต์ œ๋Š” ์„ธํฌ ์œ ์ „์ž ๋ฐœํ˜„ ๊ณผ์ •์„ ํ•„์š”๋กœ ํ•˜๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์—, ํ™œ์„ฑํ™”๋œ CD4 + ์„ธํฌ๋Š” HIV ๊ฐ์—ผ์˜ ์ฃผ์š” ํ‘œ์ ์ด๋‹ค. ์ตœ๊ทผ์— ๊ณผํ•™์ž๋“ค์€ ์ž๊ฐ€ ์œ ์ „์ž ๋ณ€ํ˜•(HIV-1- ๋‚ด์„ฑ)์กฐํ˜ˆ ์ค„๊ธฐ ๋ฐ ์ „๊ตฌ ์„ธํฌ์˜ ์ด์‹์„ ํ†ตํ•œ ์งˆ๋ณ‘ ๋‚ด์„ฑ ๋ฉด์—ญ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์˜ ์ƒ์„ฑ์„ ๊ธฐ๋ฐ˜์œผ๋กœ HIV-1 / AIDS ์น˜๋ฃŒ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ ‘๊ทผ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์„ ์—ฐ๊ตฌํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ•ญ์•” ์น˜๋ฃŒ 1994๋…„ ์บ๋‚˜๋‹ค ํ† ๋ก ํ†  ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ์—ฐ๊ตฌํŒ€์ด ํ˜ˆ์•ก์•” ํ™˜์ž์—๊ฒŒ์„œ ์•” ์กฐ์ง์„ ํ˜•์„ฑํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” '์•” ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ'๋ฅผ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ์ตœ์ดˆ๋กœ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ ๋‡Œ์ข…์–‘๊ณผ ๋Œ€์žฅ์•”, ์œ ๋ฐฉ์•”๊ณผ ๊ฐ„์•”, ์œ„์•”, ์ทŒ์žฅ์•”, ํ”ผ๋ถ€์•” ๋“ฑ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์•” ์กฐ์ง์—์„œ '์•” ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ'์˜ ์กด์žฌ๊ฐ€ ๋ณด๊ณ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. '์•” ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ'๋Š” ์•” ์กฐ์ง ๋‚ด์—์„œ 1~3%๋งŒ ์žˆ์„ ์ •๋„๋กœ ๊ทน์†Œ์ˆ˜๋กœ ์กด์žฌํ•œ๋‹ค. ์™ธ๊ณผ์ˆ˜์ˆ ์ด๋‚˜ ํ•ญ์•”์ œ ์น˜๋ฃŒ๋กœ ์•”์„ธํฌ๋ฅผ ๊ฑฐ์˜ ๋‹ค ์ฃฝ์˜€๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ์•”์ด ๋˜์‚ด์•„ ๋‚˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ์•” ์ค„๊ธฐ์„ธํฌ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์ค„๊ธฐ ์„ธํฌ ์‹ ๊ธฐ์ˆ  ์ˆ˜๋ช… ์—ฐ์žฅ ์˜๋ฃŒ ๋…ผ์Ÿ ์˜ํ•™์  ์น˜๋ฃŒ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stem-cell%20therapy
Stem-cell therapy
Stem-cell therapy is the use of stem cells to treat or prevent a disease or condition. , the only established therapy using stem cells is hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. This usually takes the form of a bone-marrow transplantation, but the cells can also be derived from umbilical cord blood. Research is underway to develop various sources for stem cells as well as to apply stem-cell treatments for neurodegenerative diseases and conditions such as diabetes and heart disease. Stem-cell therapy has become controversial following developments such as the ability of scientists to isolate and culture embryonic stem cells, to create stem cells using somatic cell nuclear transfer and their use of techniques to create induced pluripotent stem cells. This controversy is often related to abortion politics and to human cloning. Additionally, efforts to market treatments based on transplant of stored umbilical cord blood have been controversial. Medical uses For over 90 years, hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) has been used to treat people with conditions such as leukaemia and lymphoma; this is the only widely practiced form of stem-cell therapy. During chemotherapy, most growing cells are killed by the cytotoxic agents. These agents, however, cannot discriminate between the leukaemia or neoplastic cells, and the hematopoietic stem cells within the bone marrow. This is the side effect of conventional chemotherapy strategies that the stem-cell transplant attempts to reverse; a donor's healthy bone marrow reintroduces functional stem cells to replace the cells lost in the host's body during treatment. The transplanted cells also generate an immune response that helps to kill off the cancer cells; this process can go too far, however, leading to graft vs host disease, the most serious side effect of this treatment. Another stem-cell therapy, called Prococvhymal, was conditionally approved in Canada in 2012 for the management of acute graft-vs-host disease in children who are unresponsive to steroids. It is an allogenic stem therapy based on mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) derived from the bone marrow of adult donors. MSCs are purified from the marrow, cultured and packaged, with up to 10,000 doses derived from a single donor. The doses are stored frozen until needed. The FDA has approved five hematopoietic stem-cell products derived from umbilical-cord blood, for the treatment of blood and immunological diseases. In 2014, the European Medicines Agency recommended approval of limbal stem cells for people with severe limbal stem cell deficiency due to burns in the eye. Research Stem cells are being studied for a number of reasons. The molecules and exosomes released from stem cells are also being studied in an effort to make medications. In addition to the functions of the cells themselves, paracrine soluble factors produced by stem cells, known as the stem cell secretome, have been found to be another mechanism by which stem cell-based therapies mediate their effects in degenerative, autoimmune, and inflammatory diseases. Stem cell expansion To be used for research or treatment applications, large numbers of high-quality stem cells are needed. Thus, it is necessary to develop culture systems which produce pure populations of tissue-specific stem-cells in vitro without the loss of stem-cell potential. Two main approaches are taken for this purpose: two-dimensional and three-dimensional cell culture. Cell culture in two dimensions has been routinely performed in thousands of laboratories worldwide for the past four decades. In two-dimensional platforms, cells are typically exposed to a solid, rigid flat surface on the basal side and to liquid at the apical surface. Inhabiting such a two-dimensional rigid substrate requires a dramatic adaption for the surviving cells because they lack the extracellular matrix that is unique to each cell type and which may alter cell metabolism and reduce its functionality. Three-dimensional cell culture systems may create a biomimicking microenvironment for stem cells, resembling their native three-dimensional extracellular matrix (ECM). Advanced biomaterials have significantly contributed to three-dimensional cell culture systems in recent decades, and more unique and complex biomaterials have been proposed for improving stem-cell proliferation and controlled differentiation. Among them, nanostructured biomaterials are of particular interest because they have the advantage of a high surface-to-volume ratio, and they mimic the physical and biological features of natural ECM at the nanoscale. Applications Neurodegeneration Research has been conducted on the effects of stem cells on animal models of brain degeneration, such as in Parkinson's disease, Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, and Alzheimer's disease. Preliminary studies related to multiple sclerosis have been conducted, and a 2020 phase 2 trial found significantly improved outcomes for mesenchymal stem cell treated patients compared to those receiving a sham treatment. In January 2021 the FDA approved the first clinical trial for an investigational stem cell therapy to restore lost brain cells in people with advanced Parkinson's disease. Healthy adult brains contain neural stem cells, which divide to maintain general stem-cell numbers, or become progenitor cells. In healthy adult laboratory animals, progenitor cells migrate within the brain and function primarily to maintain neuron populations for olfaction (the sense of smell). Pharmacological activation of endogenous neural stem cells has been reported to induce neuroprotection and behavioral recovery in adult rat models of neurological disorder. Brain and spinal cord injury Stroke and traumatic brain injury lead to cell death, characterized by a loss of neurons and oligodendrocytes within the brain. Clinical and animal studies have been conducted into the use of stem cells in cases of spinal cord injury. Frailty syndrome A small-scale study on individuals 60 year or older with aging frailty showed, after intravenous treatment with Mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) from healthy young donors, showed significant improvements in physical performance measures. MSC helps with the blockade of inflammation by decreasing it, causing the effects of frailty to reverse. Heart Stem cells are studied in people with severe heart disease. The work by Bodo-Eckehard Strauer was discredited by identifying hundreds of factual contradictions. Among several clinical trials reporting that adult stem cell therapy is safe and effective, actual evidence of benefit has been reported from only a few studies. Some preliminary clinical trials achieved only modest improvements in heart function following use of bone marrow stem cell therapy. Stem-cell therapy for treatment of myocardial infarction usually makes use of autologous bone-marrow stem cells, but other types of adult stem cells may be used, such as adipose-derived stem cells. Possible mechanisms of recovery include: Generation of heart muscle cells Stimulating growth of new blood vessels to repopulate damaged heart tissue Secretion of growth factors Criticisms In 2013, studies of autologous bone-marrow stem cells on ventricular function were found to contain "hundreds" of discrepancies. Critics report that of 48 reports, just five underlying trials seemed to be used, and that in many cases whether they were randomized or merely observational accepter-versus-rejecter, was contradictory between reports of the same trial. One pair of reports of identical baseline characteristics and final results, was presented in two publications as, respectively, a 578-patient randomized trial and as a 391-subject observational study. Other reports required (impossible) negative standard deviations in subsets of people, or contained fractional subjects, negative NYHA classes. Overall, many more people were reported as having receiving stem cells in trials, than the number of stem cells processed in the hospital's laboratory during that time. A university investigation, closed in 2012 without reporting, was reopened in July 2013. In 2014, a meta-analysis on stem cell therapy using bone-marrow stem cells for heart disease revealed discrepancies in published clinical trial reports, whereby studies with a higher number of discrepancies showed an increase in effect sizes. Another meta-analysis based on the intra-subject data of 12 randomized trials was unable to find any significant benefits of stem cell therapy on primary endpoints, such as major adverse events or increase in heart function measures, concluding there was no benefit. The TIME trial, which used a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial design, concluded that "bone marrow mononuclear cells administration did not improve recovery of LV function over 2 years" in people who had a myocardial infarction. Accordingly, the BOOST-2 trial conducted in 10 medical centers in Germany and Norway reported that the trial result "does not support the use of nucleated BMCs in patients with STEMI and moderately reduced LVEF". Furthermore, the trial also did not meet any other secondary MRI endpoints, leading to a conclusion that intracoronary bone marrow stem cell therapy does not offer a functional or clinical benefit. Blood-cell formation The specificity of the human immune-cell repertoire is what allows the human body to defend itself from rapidly adapting antigens. However, the immune system is vulnerable to degradation upon the pathogenesis of disease, and because of the critical role that it plays in overall defense, its degradation is often fatal to the organism as a whole. Diseases of hematopoietic cells are diagnosed and classified via a subspecialty of pathology known as hematopathology. The specificity of the immune cells is what allows recognition of foreign antigens, causing further challenges in the treatment of immune disease. Identical matches between donor and recipient must be made for successful transplantation treatments, but matches are uncommon, even between first-degree relatives. Research using both hematopoietic adult stem cells and embryonic stem cells has provided insight into the possible mechanisms and methods of treatment for many of these ailments. Fully mature human red blood cells may be generated ex vivo by hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), which are precursors of red blood cells. In this process, HSCs are grown together with stromal cells, creating an environment that mimics the conditions of bone marrow, the natural site of red-blood-cell growth. Erythropoietin, a growth factor, is added, coaxing the stem cells to complete terminal differentiation into red blood cells. Further research into this technique should have potential benefits to gene therapy, blood transfusion, and topical medicine. Regrowing teeth In 2004, scientists at King's College London discovered a way to cultivate a complete tooth in mice and were able to grow bioengineered teeth stand-alone in the laboratory. Researchers are confident that the tooth regeneration technology can be used to grow live teeth in people. In theory, stem cells taken from the patient could be coaxed in the lab turning into a tooth bud which, when implanted in the gums, will give rise to a new tooth, and would be expected to be grown in a time over three weeks. It will fuse with the jawbone and release chemicals that encourage nerves and blood vessels to connect with it. The process is similar to what happens when humans grow their original adult teeth. Many challenges remain, however, before stem cells could be a choice for the replacement of missing teeth in the future. Cochlear hair cell regrowth Heller has reported success in re-growing cochlea hair cells with the use of embryonic stem cells. In a 2019 review that looked at hearing regeneration and regenerative medicine, stem cell-derived otic progenitors have the potential to greatly improve hearing. Blindness and vision impairment Since 2003, researchers have successfully transplanted corneal stem cells into damaged eyes to restore vision. "Sheets of retinal cells used by the team are harvested from aborted fetuses, which some people find objectionable." When these sheets are transplanted over the damaged cornea, the stem cells stimulate renewed repair, eventually restore vision. The latest such development was in June 2005, when researchers at the Queen Victoria Hospital of Sussex, England were able to restore the sight of forty people using the same technique. The group, led by Sheraz Daya, was able to successfully use adult stem cells obtained from the patient, a relative, or even a cadaver. Further rounds of trials are ongoing. Pancreatic beta cells People with Type 1 diabetes lose the function of insulin-producing beta cells within the pancreas. In recent experiments, scientists have been able to coax embryonic stem cell to turn into beta cells in the lab. In theory if the beta cell is transplanted successfully, they will be able to replace malfunctioning ones in a diabetic patient. Orthopedics Use of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) derived from adult stem cells is under preliminary research for potential orthopedic applications in bone and muscle trauma, cartilage repair, osteoarthritis, intervertebral disc surgery, rotator cuff surgery, and musculoskeletal disorders, among others. Other areas of orthopedic research for uses of MSCs include tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. Wound healing Stem cells can also be used to stimulate the growth of human tissues. In an adult, wounded tissue is most often replaced by scar tissue, which is characterized in the skin by disorganized collagen structure, loss of hair follicles and irregular vascular structure. In the case of wounded fetal tissue, however, wounded tissue is replaced with normal tissue through the activity of stem cells. A possible method for tissue regeneration in adults is to place adult stem cell "seeds" inside a tissue bed "soil" in a wound bed and allow the stem cells to stimulate differentiation in the tissue bed cells. This method elicits a regenerative response more similar to fetal wound-healing than adult scar tissue formation. Researchers are still investigating different aspects of the "soil" tissue that are conducive to regeneration. Because of the general healing capabilities of stem cells, they have gained interest for the treatment of cutaneous wounds, such as in skin cancer. HIV/AIDS Destruction of the immune system by the HIV is driven by the loss of CD4+ T cells in the peripheral blood and lymphoid tissues. Viral entry into CD4+ cells is mediated by the interaction with a cellular chemokine receptor, the most common of which are CCR5 and CXCR4. Because subsequent viral replication requires cellular gene expression processes, activated CD4+ cells are the primary targets of productive HIV infection. Recently scientists have been investigating an alternative approach to treating HIV-1/AIDS, based on the creation of a disease-resistant immune system through transplantation of autologous, gene-modified (HIV-1-resistant) hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (GM-HSPC). Clinical trials Regenerative treatment models Stem cells are thought to mediate repair via five primary mechanisms: 1) providing an anti-inflammatory effect, 2) homing to damaged tissues and recruiting other cells, such as endothelial progenitor cells, that are necessary for tissue growth, 3) supporting tissue remodeling over scar formation, 4) inhibiting apoptosis, and 5) differentiating into bone, cartilage, tendon, and ligament tissue. To further enrich blood supply to the damaged areas, and consequently promote tissue regeneration, platelet-rich plasma could be used in conjunction with stem cell transplantation. The efficacy of some stem cell populations may also be affected by the method of delivery; for instance, to regenerate bone, stem cells are often introduced in a scaffold where they produce the minerals necessary for generation of functional bone. Stem cells have also been shown to have a low immunogenicity due to the relatively low number of MHC molecules found on their surface. In addition, they have been found to secrete chemokines that alter the immune response and promote tolerance of the new tissue. This allows for allogeneic treatments to be performed without a high rejection risk. Drug discovery and biomedical research The ability to grow up functional adult tissues indefinitely in culture through Directed differentiation creates new opportunities for drug research. Researchers are able to grow up differentiated cell lines and then test new drugs on each cell type to examine possible interactions in vitro before performing in vivo studies. This is critical in the development of drugs for use in veterinary research because of the possibilities of species-specific interactions. The hope is that having these cell lines available for research use will reduce the need for research animals used because effects on human tissue in vitro will provide insight not normally known before the animal testing phase. With the advent of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC), treatments being explored and created for the used in endangered low production animals possible. Rather than needing to harvest embryos or eggs, which are limited, the researchers can remove mesenchymal stem cells with greater ease and greatly reducing the danger to the animal due to noninvasive techniques. This allows the limited eggs to be put to use for reproductive purposes only. Conservation Stem cells are being explored for use in conservation efforts. Spermatogonial stem cells have been harvested from a rat and placed into a mouse host and fully mature sperm were produced with the ability to produce viable offspring. Currently research is underway to find suitable hosts for the introduction of donor spermatogonial stem cells. If this becomes a viable option for conservationists, sperm can be produced from high genetic quality individuals who die before reaching sexual maturity, preserving a line that would otherwise be lost. Sources for stem cells Most stem cells intended for regenerative therapy are generally isolated either from the patient's bone marrow or from adipose tissue. Mesenchymal stem cells can differentiate into the cells that make up bone, cartilage, tendons, and ligaments, as well as muscle, neural and other progenitor tissues. They have been the main type of stem cells studied in the treatment of diseases affecting these tissues. The number of stem cells transplanted into damaged tissue may alter the efficacy of treatment. Accordingly, stem cells derived from bone marrow aspirates, for instance, are cultured in specialized laboratories for expansion to millions of cells. Although adipose-derived tissue also requires processing prior to use, the culturing methodology for adipose-derived stem cells is not as extensive as that for bone marrow-derived cells. While it is thought that bone-marrow-derived stem cells are preferred for bone, cartilage, ligament, and tendon repair, others believe that the less challenging collection techniques and the multi-cellular microenvironment already present in adipose-derived stem cell fractions make the latter the preferred source for autologous transplantation. New sources of mesenchymal stem cells are being researched, including stem cells present in the skin and dermis which are of interest because of the ease at which they can be harvested with minimal risk to the animal. Hematopoietic stem cells have also been discovered to be travelling in the blood stream and possess equal differentiating ability as other mesenchymal stem cells, again with a very non-invasive harvesting technique. There has been more recent interest in the use of extra embryonic mesenchymal stem cells. Research is underway to examine the differentiating capabilities of stem cells found in the umbilical cord, yolk sac and placenta of different animals. These stem cells are thought to have more differentiating ability than their adult counterparts, including the ability to more readily form tissues of endodermal and ectodermal origin. Embryonic stem cell lines There is widespread controversy over the use of human embryonic stem cells. This controversy primarily targets the techniques used to derive new embryonic stem cell lines, which often requires the destruction of the blastocyst. Opposition to the use of human embryonic stem cells in research is often based on philosophical, moral, or religious objections. There is other stem cell research that does not involve the destruction of a human embryo, and such research involves adult stem cells, amniotic stem cells, and induced pluripotent stem cells. On 23 January 2009, the US Food and Drug Administration gave clearance to Geron Corporation for the initiation of the first clinical trial of an embryonic stem-cell-based therapy on humans. The trial aimed to evaluate the drug GRNOPC1, embryonic stem cell-derived oligodendrocyte progenitor cells, on people with acute spinal cord injury. The trial was discontinued in November 2011 so that the company could focus on therapies in the "current environment of capital scarcity and uncertain economic conditions". In 2013 biotechnology and regenerative medicine company BioTime () acquired Geron's stem cell assets in a stock transaction, with the aim of restarting the clinical trial. Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) Scientists have reported that MSCs when transfused immediately within few hours post thawing may show reduced function or show decreased efficacy in treating diseases as compared to those MSCs which are in log phase of cell growth (fresh), so cryopreserved MSCs should be brought back into log phase of cell growth in invitro culture before administration. Re-culturing of MSCs will help in recovering from the shock the cells get during freezing and thawing. Various MSC clinical trials which used cryopreserved product immediately post thaw have failed as compared to those clinical trials which used fresh MSCs. Veterinary medicine Research conducted on horses, dogs, and cats has led to the development of stem cell treatments in veterinary medicine which can target a wide range of injuries and diseases, such as myocardial infarction, stroke, tendon and ligament damage, osteoarthritis, osteochondrosis and muscular dystrophy, both in large animals as well as in humans. While investigation of cell-based therapeutics generally reflects human medical needs, the high degree of frequency and severity of certain injuries in racehorses has put veterinary medicine at the forefront of this novel regenerative approach. Companion animals can serve as clinically relevant models that closely mimic human disease. Sources of stem cells Veterinary applications of stem cell therapy as a means of tissue regeneration have been largely shaped by research that began with the use of adult-derived mesenchymal stem cells to treat animals with injuries or defects affecting bone, cartilage, ligaments and/or tendons. There are two main categories of stem cells used for treatments: allogeneic stem cells derived from a genetically different donor within the same species and autologous mesenchymal stem cells, derived from the patient prior to use in various treatments. A third category, xenogenic stem cells, or stem cells derived from different species, are used primarily for research purposes, especially for human treatments. Bone repair Bone has a unique and well-documented natural healing process that normally is sufficient to repair fractures and other common injuries. Misaligned breaks due to severe trauma, as well as treatments like tumor resections of bone cancer, are prone to improper healing if left to the natural process alone. Scaffolds composed of natural and artificial components are seeded with mesenchymal stem cells and placed in the defect. Within four weeks of placing the scaffold, newly formed bone begins to integrate with the old bone and within 32 weeks, full union is achieved. Further studies are necessary to fully characterize the use of cell-based therapeutics for treatment of bone fractures. Stem cells have been used to treat degenerative bone diseases. The normally recommended treatment for dogs that have Leggโ€“Calveโ€“Perthes disease is to remove the head of the femur after the degeneration has progressed. Recently, mesenchymal stem cells have been injected directly in to the head of the femur, with success not only in bone regeneration, but also in pain reduction. Ligament and tendon repair Autologous stem cell-based treatments for ligament injury, tendon injury, osteoarthritis, osteochondrosis, and sub-chondral bone cysts have been commercially available to practicing veterinarians to treat horses since 2003 in the United States and since 2006 in the United Kingdom. Autologous stem cell based treatments for tendon injury, ligament injury, and osteoarthritis in dogs have been available to veterinarians in the United States since 2005. Over 3000 privately owned horses and dogs have been treated with autologous adipose-derived stem cells. The efficacy of these treatments has been shown in double-blind clinical trials for dogs with osteoarthritis of the hip and elbow and horses with tendon damage. Race horses are especially prone to injuries of the tendon and ligaments. Conventional therapies are very unsuccessful in returning the horse to full functioning potential. Natural healing, guided by the conventional treatments, leads to the formation of fibrous scar tissue that reduces flexibility and full joint movement. Traditional treatments prevented a large number of horses from returning to full activity and also have a high incidence of re-injury due to the stiff nature of the scarred tendon. Introduction of both bone marrow and adipose derived stem cells, along with natural mechanical stimulus promoted the regeneration of tendon tissue. The natural movement promoted the alignment of the new fibers and tendocytes with the natural alignment found in uninjured tendons. Stem cell treatment not only allowed more horses to return to full duty and also greatly reduced the re-injury rate over a three-year period. The use of embryonic stem cells has also been applied to tendon repair. The embryonic stem cells were shown to have a better survival rate in the tendon as well as better migrating capabilities to reach all areas of damaged tendon. The overall repair quality was also higher, with better tendon architecture and collagen formed. There was also no tumor formation seen during the three-month experimental period. Long-term studies need to be carried out to examine the long-term efficacy and risks associated with the use of embryonic stem cells. Similar results have been found in small animals. Joint repair Osteoarthritis is the main cause of joint pain both in animals and humans. Horses and dogs are most frequently affected by arthritis. Natural cartilage regeneration is very limited. Different types of mesenchymal stem cells and other additives are still being researched to find the best type of cell and method for long-term treatment. Adipose-derived mesenchymal cells are currently the most often used for stem cell treatment of osteoarthritis because of the non-invasive harvesting. This is a recently developed, non-invasive technique developed for easier clinical use. Dogs receiving this treatment showed greater flexibility in their joints and less pain. Muscle repair Stem cells have successfully been used to ameliorate healing in the heart after myocardial infarction in dogs. Adipose and bone marrow derived stem cells were removed and induced to a cardiac cell fate before being injected into the heart. The heart was found to have improved contractility and a reduction in the damaged area four weeks after the stem cells were applied. A different trial is underway for a patch made of a porous substance onto which the stem cells are "seeded" in order to induce tissue regeneration in heart defects. Tissue was regenerated and the patch was well incorporated into the heart tissue. This is thought to be due, in part, to improved angiogenesis and reduction of inflammation. Although cardiomyocytes were produced from the mesenchymal stem cells, they did not appear to be contractile. Other treatments that induced a cardiac fate in the cells before transplanting had greater success at creating contractile heart tissue. Recent research, such as the European nTRACK research project, aims to demonstrate that multimodal nanoparticles can structurally and functionally track stem cell in muscle regeneration therapy. The idea is to label stem cells with gold nano-particles that are fully characterised for uptake, functionality, and safety. The labelled stem cells will be injected into an injured muscle and tracked using imaging systems. However, the system still needs to be demonstrated at lab scale. Nervous system repair Spinal cord injuries are one of the most common traumas brought into veterinary hospitals. Spinal injuries occur in two ways after the trauma: the primary mechanical damage, and in secondary processes, like inflammation and scar formation, in the days following the trauma. These cells involved in the secondary damage response secrete factors that promote scar formation and inhibit cellular regeneration. Mesenchymal stem cells that are induced to a neural cell fate are loaded onto a porous scaffold and are then implanted at the site of injury. The cells and scaffold secrete factors that counteract those secreted by scar forming cells and promote neural regeneration. Eight weeks later, dogs treated with stem cells showed immense improvement over those treated with conventional therapies. Dogs treated with stem cells were able to occasionally support their own weight, which has not been seen in dogs undergoing conventional therapies. In a study to evaluate the treatment of experimentally induced MS in dogs using laser activated non-expanded adipose derived stem cells. The results showed amelioration of the clinical signs over time confirmed by the resolution of the previous lesions on MRI. Positive migration of the injected cells to the site of lesion, increased remyelination detected by Myelin Basic Proteins, positive differentiation into Olig2 positive oligodendrocytes, prevented the glial scar formation and restored axonal architecture. Treatments are also in clinical trials to repair and regenerate peripheral nerves. Peripheral nerves are more likely to be damaged, but the effects of the damage are not as widespread as seen in injuries to the spinal cord. Treatments are currently in clinical trials to repair severed nerves, with early success. Stem cells induced to a neural fate injected in to a severed nerve. Within four weeks, regeneration of previously damaged stem cells and completely formed nerve bundles were observed. Stem cells are also in clinical phases for treatment in ophthalmology. Hematopoietic stem cells have been used to treat corneal ulcers of different origin of several horses. These ulcers were resistant to conventional treatments available, but quickly responded positively to the stem cell treatment. Stem cells were also able to restore sight in one eye of a horse with retinal detachment, allowing the horse to return to daily activities. Society and culture Marketing and costs In the late 1990s and early 2000s, there was an initial wave of companies and clinics offering stem cell therapy, while not substantiating health claims or having regulatory approval. By 2012, a second wave of companies and clinics had emerged, usually located in developing countries where medicine is less regulated and offering stem cell therapies on a medical tourism model. Like the first wave companies and clinics, they made similar strong, but unsubstantiated, claims, mainly by clinics in the United States, Mexico, Thailand, India, and South Africa. By 2016, research indicated that there were more than 550 stem cell clinics in the US alone selling generally unproven therapies for a wide array of medical conditions in almost every state in the country, altering the dynamic of stem cell tourism. In 2018, the FDA sent a warning letter to StemGenex Biologic Laboratories in San Diego, which marketed a service in which it took body fat from people, processed it into mixtures it said contained various forms of stem cells, and administered it back to the person by inhalation, intravenously, or infusion into their spinal cords; the company said the treatment was useful for many chronic and life-threatening conditions. Costs of stem cell therapies range widely by clinic, condition, and cell type, but most commonly range between $10,000-$20,000. Insurance does not cover stem cell injections at clinics so patients often use on-line fundraising. In 2018, the US Federal Trade Commission found health centers and an individual physician making unsubstantiated claims for stem cell therapies, and forced refunds of some $500,000. The FDA filed suit against two stem cell clinic firms around the same time, seeking permanent injunctions against their marketing and use of unapproved adipose stem cell products. COVID-19-related marketing and government agency responses Although according to the NIH no stem cell treatments have been approved for COVID-19, and the agency recommends against the use of MSCs for the disease, some stem cell clinics began marketing both unproven and non-FDA-approved stem cells and exosomes for COVID-19 in 2020. The FDA took prompt action by sending letters to the firms in question. The FTC also warned a stem cell firm for misleading COVID-19-related marketing. See also Autologous stem-cell transplantation Cardiovascular Cell Therapy Research Network (CCTRN) Fetal tissue implant Induced pluripotent stem cell Induced stem cells Stem cell chip Stem cell therapy for macular degeneration References External links EuroStemCell: types of stem cells and their uses Stem cells Emerging technologies Life extension Medical treatments Medical controversies
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%97%90%EC%96%B4%ED%94%84%EB%A0%88%EB%AF%B8%EC%95%84
์—์–ดํ”„๋ ˆ๋ฏธ์•„
์—์–ดํ”„๋ ˆ๋ฏธ์•„()์€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์ค‘์žฅ๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ ํ•ญ๊ณต์‚ฌ์ด๋‹ค. ์ทจํ•ญ์ง€๋Š” ์ผ๋ณธ, ๋ฒ ํŠธ๋‚จ, ์‹ฑ๊ฐ€ํฌ๋ฅด, ๋กœ์Šค์•ค์ ค๋ ˆ์Šค, ์‚ฐํ˜ธ์„ธ ๋“ฑ์œผ๋กœ ์˜ˆ์ •์œผ๋กœ ์šดํ•ญ์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋ฉฐ ํ˜„์žฌ ๋กœ์Šค์—”์ ค๋ ˆ์Šค, ์‹ฑ๊ฐ€ํฌ๋ฅด,๋‚˜๋ฆฌํƒ€,ํ˜ธ์น˜๋ฏผ ๋“ฑ ๋…ธ์„ ์„ ์šดํ•ญํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ตญ๋‚ด์ตœ์ดˆ ํ•˜์ด๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ๋“œ ํ•ญ๊ณต์‚ฌ์ด๋‹ค. ์ฒ˜์Œ์—๋Š” ์—์–ด๋ฒ„์Šค A330neo์™€ ๋ณด์ž‰ 787 ๋“œ๋ฆผ๋ผ์ด๋„ˆ๋ฅผ ํ›„๋ณด๋กœ ๋‘์—ˆ๊ณ , 2019๋…„ 1์›” ๋ณด์ž‰ 787-9๋ฅผ ๋„์ž…ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ตœ์ข… ํ™•์ •๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด 10๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋„์ž…ํ•  ์˜ˆ์ •์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์•Œ๋ ค์ ธ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, 309์„ ๊ทœ๋ชจ์ด๋‹ค. ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ๋„์ž…ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ ๊ธฐ์ข…์ด ๋“œ๋ฆผ๋ผ์ด๋„ˆ ๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌ์šฐ๋Š” ๋ณด์ž‰ 787-9 ๊ธฐ์ข…์ด๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ธฐ์ข…์œผ๋กœ๋งŒ ์šดํ•ญํ•  ๊ณ„ํš์ด๋‹ค. ๋กœ๊ณ ๋Š” ํ•ญ๊ณต๊ธฐ์˜ ์ฐฝ๋ฌธ ๋ชจ์–‘์€ ๋ณธ๋–  ์ œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์Šน๋ฌด์› ์œ ๋‹ˆํผ์—๋„ ์ด ์ฐฝ๋ฌธ ๋ชจ์–‘์ด ๊ทธ๋ ค์ ธ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํšŒ์‚ฌ ์—์–ดํ”„๋ ˆ๋ฏธ์•„๋Š” ์ธ์ฒœ๊ตญ์ œ๊ณตํ•ญ์„ ํ—ˆ๋ธŒ๋กœ ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ตญ๋‚ด์ตœ์ดˆ ํ•˜์ด๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ๋“œ ํ•ญ๊ณต์‚ฌ(Hybrid Service Carrier, HSC)ํ•ญ๊ณต์‚ฌ์ด๋‹ค. 2021๋…„ 12์›” ์ฒซ ๊ตญ์ œ์„ ์œผ๋กœ ์‹ฑ๊ฐ€ํฌ๋ฅด ์ทจํ•ญ๋ฅผ ์‹œ์ž‘์œผ๋กœ ํ•ด์™ธ ์—ฌํ–‰์ด ํ’€๋ฆฌ๋ฉด์„œ ๊ตญ์ œ์„  ์šดํ–‰๋ฅผ ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ฝ”๋กœ๋‚˜ ๋ฐ”์ด๋Ÿฌ์Šค๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ๊ตญ๋‚ด์„ , ๋ฌด๊ธฐ์ฐฉ๋น„ํ–‰ ๋“ฑ์„ ๋น„์ •๊ธฐ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์‹ค์‹œํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 2022๋…„ 7์›”15์ผ ์‹ฑ๊ฐ€ํฌ๋ฅด๋ฅผ ์‹œ์ž‘์œผ๋กœ ์—ฌ๊ฐํŽธ ์šดํ•ญ์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์—ญ์‚ฌ 2010๋…„๋Œ€ 2017๋…„ 7์›”: ์—์ดํ”ผ์—์–ด ์„ค๋ฆฝ 2018๋…„ 5์›”: ์—์–ดํ”„๋ ˆ๋ฏธ์•„๋กœ ์‚ฌ๋ช… ๋ณ€๊ฒฝ 10์›”: ๊ตญ์ œํ•ญ๊ณต์šด์†ก์‚ฌ์—…์ž ๋ฉดํ—ˆ ์‹ ์ฒญ์„œ ์ œ์ถœ ๋ฐ LA ํ•œ์ธ์ƒ๊ณตํšŒ์˜์†Œ์™€ ๋งˆ์ผ€ํŒ… ํ˜‘๋ ฅ์„ ์œ„ํ•œ MOU ์ฒด๊ฒฐ 11์›”: ๊ตญ์ œํ•ญ๊ณต์šด์†ก์‚ฌ์—…์ž ๋ฉดํ—ˆ ์‹ ์ฒญ์„œ ์žฌ์ œ์ถœ 2019๋…„ 1์›”: ๊ตญํ† ๊ตํ†ต๋ถ€์— ํ•ญ๊ณต์šด์†ก์‚ฌ์—… ์‹ ์ฒญ 1์›”: ๋ณด์ž‰ 787-9 ํ•ญ๊ณต๊ธฐ ๋„์ž… ํ™•์ • 3์›” 5์ผ: ๊ตญ์ œํ•ญ๊ณต์šด์†ก์‚ฌ์—… ๋ฉดํ—ˆ ์ทจ๋“ 11์›” 2์ผ: ๋ณด์ž‰ 787-9 ํ•ญ๊ณต๊ธฐ 5๋Œ€ ๊ตฌ๋งค 2020๋…„๋Œ€ 2020๋…„ 2์›” 12์ผ: ์šดํ•ญ์ฆ๋ช…(AOC) ์‹ ์ฒญ 2021๋…„ 4์›” 2์ผ: 1ํ˜ธ๊ธฐ (๋ณด์ž‰ 787-9) ๋„์ž…(HL8387) 8์›” 11์ผ: ์„œ์šธ(๊น€ํฌ) - ์ œ์ฃผ ์ทจํ•ญ 10์›” 30์ผ: ๊ตญ๋‚ด์„  ์šดํ•ญ ์ข…๋ฃŒ 12์›” 24์ผ: ์„œ์šธ(์ธ์ฒœ) - ์‹ฑ๊ฐ€ํฌ๋ฅด ํ™”๋ฌผํŽธ ์ •๊ธฐ์ทจํ•ญ 2022๋…„ 1์›” 15์ผ: ์„œ์šธ(์ธ์ฒœ) - ํ˜ธ์ฐŒ๋ฏผ ํ™”๋ฌผํŽธ ์ •๊ธฐ์ทจํ•ญ 7์›” 15์ผ: ์„œ์šธ(์ธ์ฒœ) - ์‹ฑ๊ฐ€ํฌ๋ฅด ์—ฌ๊ฐํŽธ ์ •๊ธฐ์ทจํ•ญ 9์›” 23์ผ: 2ํ˜ธ๊ธฐ (๋ณด์ž‰ 787-9) ๋„์ž…(HL8517) 10์›” 6์ผ: ์„œ์šธ(์ธ์ฒœ) - ํ˜ธ์ฐŒ๋ฏผ ์—ฌ๊ฐํŽธ ์ •๊ธฐ์ทจํ•ญ 10์›” 8์ผ: 3ํ˜ธ๊ธฐ (๋ณด์ž‰ 787-9) ๋„์ž…(HL8388) 10์›” 29์ผ : ์„œ์šธ(์ธ์ฒœ) - ๋กœ์Šค์•ค์ ค๋ ˆ์Šค ์—ฌ๊ฐํŽธ ์ •๊ธฐ์ทจํ•ญ 12์›” 23์ผ : ์„œ์šธ(์ธ์ฒœ) - ๋„์ฟ„(๋‚˜๋ฆฌํƒ€) ์—ฌ๊ฐํŽธ ์ •๊ธฐ์ทจํ•ญ 2023๋…„ 4์›” 1์ผ : 4ํ˜ธ๊ธฐ (๋ณด์ž‰ B787-9) ๋„์ž… (HL8516) 5์›” 22์ผ : ์„œ์šธ(์ธ์ฒœ) - ๋‰ด์–ดํฌ ์—ฌ๊ฐํŽธ ์ •๊ธฐ์ทจํ•ญ 5์›” 27์ผ : ์„œ์šธ(์ธ์ฒœ) - ๋ฐฉ์ฝ•(์ˆ˜์™„๋‚˜ํ’ˆ) ์—ฌ๊ฐํŽธ ์ •๊ธฐ์ทจํ•ญ 5์›” 28์ผ : 5ํ˜ธ๊ธฐ (๋ณด์ž‰ B787-9) ๋„์ž… (HL8389) 6์›” 23์ผ : ์„œ์šธ(์ธ์ฒœ) - ํ”„๋ž‘ํฌํ‘ธ๋ฅดํŠธ ์—ฌ๊ฐํŽธ ์ •๊ธฐ์ทจํ•ญ ๊ธฐ๋‚ด ์„œ๋น„์Šค ๊ธฐ๋‚ด์‹ ๊ธฐ๋‚ด์‹์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ํ•œ์‹๊ณผ ์–‘์‹์ด ์ฃผ๋ฅผ ์ด๋ฃฌ๋‹ค. ๋น„๋น”๋ฐฅ์ด ์ผ๋ฐ˜์„ ๊ธฐ๋‚ด์‹์˜ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์ ์ธ ์Œ์‹์ด๋ฉฐ ์ด์™ธ์—๋„ ํฌ๋ฆผํŒŒ์Šคํƒ€, ๋”ฐ๋œปํ•œ ์ฃฝ, ๋ฉ”์‰ฌ๋“œํฌํ…Œ์ดํ†  ๋“ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํŠน๋ณ„ ๊ธฐ๋‚ด์‹์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ๋‹น๋‡จ์‹, ์ˆœ์ˆ˜ ์ฑ„์‹, ์œ ์•„์‹, ์–ด๋ฆฐ์ด์‹, ํ•ด์‚ฐ๋ฌผ์‹, ๊ณผ์ผ์‹์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์–ด๋ฆฐ์ด ๊ธฐ๋‚ด์‹๋„ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋ชจ๋‘ ํ•ญ๊ณต๊ธฐ ์ถœ๋ฐœ 48์‹œ๊ฐ„ ์ „์ธํ„ฐ๋„ท์œผ๋กœ ์˜ˆ์•ฝ์ด ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋‹ค. ํ”„๋ ˆ๋ฏธ์•„ 42 ์ผ๋ฐ˜ ๋ฉ”๋‰ด๋กœ ๋น„๋น”๋ฐฅ, ๋”ฐ๋“ฏํ•œ ์ฃฝ, ๋ฉ”์‰ฌ๋“œํฌํ…Œ์ดํ† , ํ•ซ์ผ€์ต, ์˜ค๋ฌผ๋ › ๋“ฑ์ด ์ œ๊ณต๋œ๋‹ค. ์™€์ธ๊ณผ ์ œ์ฃผ์‚ฐ ๋…น์ฐจ ์ปคํ”ผ๋ฅผ ์ œ๊ณตํ•œ๋‹ค ๊ธฐ๋‚ด์‹์— ๊ณผ์ผ ๋˜๋Š” ๋””์ €ํŠธ๊ฐ€ ํฌํ•จ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด์ฝ”๋…ธ๋ฏธ 35 ๋งˆ์ฐฌ๊ฐ€์ง€๋กœ ์ผ๋ฐ˜ ๋ฉ”๋‰ด๋กœ ๋น„๋น”๋ฐฅ, ๋”ฐ๋“ฏํ•œ ์ฃฝ, ๋ฉ”์‰ฌ๋“œํฌํ…Œ์ดํ† , ํ•ซ์ผ€์ต, ์˜ค๋ฌผ๋ › ๋“ฑ์ด ์ œ๊ณต๋œ๋‹ค. ํ”„๋ ˆ๋ฏธ์•„ 42์™€ ๋‹ค๋ฅด๊ฒŒ ์ปคํ”ผ๋งŒ ์ œ๊ณตํ•˜๊ณ  ๊ธฐ๋‚ด์‹์— ๊ณผ์ผ ๋˜๋Š” ๋””์ €ํŠธ๊ฐ€ ํฌํ•จ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ์ง€ ์•Š๋‹ค. ํŠน๋ณ„ ๊ธฐ๋‚ด์‹ ๊ฑด๊ฐ•(๊ฐ์ข… ์งˆ๋ณ‘ ๋ฐ ํŠน์ • ์‹ํ’ˆ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์•Œ๋ ˆ๋ฅด๊ธฐ ๋“ฑ), ์—ฐ๋ น ๋“ฑ์˜ ์ด์œ ๋กœ ์ •๊ทœ ๊ธฐ๋‚ด์‹์„ ๋ชป๋จน๋Š” ์Šน๊ฐ์„ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ œ๊ณต๋˜๋ฉฐ, ํ•ญ๊ณต๊ธฐ ์ถœ๋ฐœ 48์‹œ๊ฐ„ ์ „๊นŒ์ง€ ์˜ˆ์•ฝ์„ผํ„ฐ๋กœ ์ „ํ™” ์š”์ฒญ ๋˜๋Š” ํ™ˆํŽ˜์ด์ง€๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ์‹ ์ฒญํ•œ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์— ํ•œํ•˜์—ฌ ํƒ‘์Šนํ›„ ์ œ๊ณต๋œ๋‹ค. ํŠน๋ณ„ ๊ธฐ๋‚ด์‹์—๋Š” ์œ ์•„์‹ ๋ฐ ์•„๋™์‹(Baby Meal), ์•ผ์ฑ„์‹(์ˆœ์ˆ˜ ์ฑ„์‹), ์‹์‚ฌ์กฐ์ ˆ์‹(๋‹น๋‡จ์‹), ๊ธฐํƒ€ ํŠน๋ณ„์‹(ํ•ด์‚ฐ๋ฌผ, ๊ณผ์ผ)์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์—”ํ„ฐํ…Œ์ธ๋จผํŠธ ๊ธฐ๋‚ด ์—”ํ„ฐํ…Œ์ธ๋จผํŠธ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ ๊ฐœ์ธ์šฉ ๋ชจ๋‹ˆํ„ฐ๋กœ ์ œ๊ณต๋˜๋Š” ์ฃผ๋ฌธํ˜• ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ. ํ„ฐ์น˜ ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฐ์„ ์ด์šฉํ•ด ์›ํ•˜๋Š” ์˜ํ™”์™€ ์˜์ƒ๋ฌผ, ์Œ์•…์„ ์ด์šฉํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐ๋‚ด ์™€์ดํŒŒ์ด ๊ธฐ๋‚ด์— ์™€์ดํŒŒ์ด๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์–ด ์œ ๋ฃŒ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉ์ด ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋‹ค. ์ขŒ์„ ๊ตฌ๋ถ„ ํ”„๋ฆฌ๋ฏธ์—„ ์ด์ฝ”๋…ธ๋ฏธ๋Š” 56์„, ์ด์ฝ”๋…ธ๋ฏธ๋Š” ์ด 253, 282์„์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐฐ์น˜๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์—์–ดํ”„๋ ˆ๋ฏธ์•„์˜ ์ด์ฝ”๋…ธ๋ฏธ์„ ์„์€ ํƒ€ํ•ญ๊ณต์‚ฌ๋“ค์ด ์ถ”๊ฐ€ ์šด์ž„์„ ๋ฐ›๋Š” ์ด์ฝ”๋…ธ๋ฏธํ”Œ๋Ÿฌ์Šค์„๋ณด๋‹ค ๋„“๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ๋งž๋จน๋Š” ์ˆ˜์ค€์ด๋‹ค. ์šดํ•ญ ๋…ธ์„  ๋ณด์œ  ๊ธฐ์ข… 2023๋…„ 1์›” ๊ธฐ์ค€์œผ๋กœ ์—์–ด ํ”„๋ ˆ๋ฏธ์•„๋Š” ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด์œ ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์‚ฌ๊ณ  2022๋…„ 12์›” 19์ผ : ์ธ์ฒœ๊ณตํ•ญ ์ œ1ํ„ฐ๋ฏธ๋„ ๊ณ„๋ฅ˜์žฅ์—์„œ ๋ผ์˜ค์Šค ๋น„์—”ํ‹ฐ์•ˆ์œผ๋กœ ๋– ๋‚  ์˜ˆ์ •์ด๋˜ ๋ผ์˜คํ•ญ๊ณต(QV924)์—ฌ๊ฐ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๊ฒฌ์ธ์ค‘์ด๋˜ ์—์–ดํ”„๋ ˆ๋ฏธ์•„(HL8517) ํ•ญ๊ณต๊ธฐ์™€ ์ถฉ๋Œํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ํ•˜์ด๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ๋“œ ํ•ญ๊ณต์‚ฌ ๊ฐ์ฃผ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ•ญ๊ณต์‚ฌ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air%20Premia
Air Premia
Air Premia () is a budget (HSC) hybrid service carrier based in Seoul, South Korea. The airline was founded in 2017 by the former president of Jeju Air, Kim Jong-Chul. Operations The company was established on July 27, 2017, by the ex-president of Jeju Air , Kim Jong-Chul. In April 2019, the airline intended to launch in 2020 and lease three Boeing 787-9 from Aircraft Lease Corporation (ALC), but announced and agreed to buy five. Air Premia was initially expected to launch its flight to a regional routes within Asia, but already had U.S. destinations on their radar. They are initially planning routes to the US and Australia from its base in 2021. In April 2021, they received their first Boeing 787-9 and are planning to operate 10 aircraft by the end of 2024. On 11 August 2021, the airline started flights between Seoul and Jeju. The domestic flight ended on 30 October 2021 for preparation of international routes. Destinations , Air Premia operates or has operated to the following destinations: Fleet , Air Premia operates the following aircraft: References Airlines of South Korea Low-cost carriers Companies based in Seoul South Korean companies established in 2017 Airlines established in 2017
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EB%AF%B8%EB%93%9C%EC%86%8C%EB%A7%88
๋ฏธ๋“œ์†Œ๋งˆ
ใ€Š๋ฏธ๋“œ์†Œ๋งˆใ€‹(Midsommar)๋Š” 2019๋…„ ๊ฐœ๋ด‰ํ•œ ๊ณตํฌ ์˜ํ™”์ด๋‹ค. ใ€Š์œ ์ „ใ€‹์œผ๋กœ ๋ช…์„ฑ์„ ์–ป์€ ์•„๋ฆฌ ์• ์Šคํ„ฐ ๊ฐ๋…์˜ ์ฐจ๊ธฐ์ž‘์œผ๋กœ, ๋ฌธํ™”์ธ๋ฅ˜ํ•™๊ณผ ํ•™์ƒ๋“ค์ด ์Šค์›จ๋ด ์–ด๋Š ๋งˆ์„์˜ ํ•˜์ง€ ์ถ•์ œ์— ์ฐธ์„ํ•ด์„œ ๊ฒช๋Š” ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์„ ๊ทธ๋ฆฐ๋‹ค. ํ”Œ๋กœ๋ Œ์Šค ํ“จ๊ฐ€ ์ฃผ์ธ๊ณต '๋Œ€๋‹ˆ' ์—ญ์„ ๋งก๊ณ , ์žญ ๋ ˆ์ด๋„ˆ, ์œŒ ํดํ„ฐ, ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„ ์žญ์Šจ ํ•˜ํผ, ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ ๋ธ”๋กฌ๊ทธ๋ Œ์ด ์ถœ์—ฐํ•œ๋‹ค. ์‹œ๋†‰์‹œ์Šค ์—ฌ๋ฆ„, ๋‚ฎ์ด ๊ฐ€์žฅ ๊ธด ๋‚ ์˜ ํ•˜์ง€. ๊ฐ€์กฑ์„ ๋ชจ๋‘ ์žƒ์€ ๋Œ€๋‹ˆ๋Š” ํŽ ๋ ˆ์˜ ์ดˆ๋Œ€๋กœ ๋‚จ์ž์นœ๊ตฌ ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ‹ฐ์•ˆ ๋ฐ ์นœ๊ตฌ๋“ค๊ณผ ํ˜ธ๋ฅด๊ฐ€ ๋งˆ์„๋กœ ๋– ๋‚œ๋‹ค. ๊ฒ‰์œผ๋กœ ๋ณด๊ธฐ์—” ํ‰ํ™”๋กญ๊ณ  ๋”ฐ์Šคํ•œ ๋งˆ์„์ด๋‚˜ ์ ์  ๊ธฐ์ดํ•œ ๋น„๋ฐ€์ด ๋“œ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ... ์ค„๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ "๊ณ ํ†ต๊ณผ ๋‘๋ ค์›€๊ณผ ์ˆ˜์น˜ ์†์— ์ฃฝ๋Š”๊ฒŒ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ผ ์ƒ๋ช…์„ ์ฃผ๋Š”๊ฑฐ์˜ˆ์š”" ์ฃผ์ธ๊ณต ๋Œ€๋‹ˆ๋Š” ํ‰์†Œ ๊ฐ€์กฑ ๋ฌธ์ œ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๋‚จ์ž์นœ๊ตฌ์ธ ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ‹ฐ์•ˆ์—๊ฒŒ ์˜์กดํ•˜๊ณ  ์–ฝ๋งค์—ฌ ์žˆ๋Š” ์ƒํƒœ์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ฒฐ๊ตญ ๋™์ƒ์ด ๋ถ€๋ชจ๋‹˜๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๊ฐ€์Šค ์ž์‚ด์„ ํ•ด๋ฒ„๋ฆฐ ๋’ค๋กœ ๋”๋”์šฑ ์ •์‹ ์ ์œผ๋กœ ํž˜๋“ค์–ด ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ‹ฐ์•ˆ์€ ๋Œ€๋‹ˆ์—๊ฒŒ ์งˆ๋ฆฌ๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฌธํ™”์ธ๋ฅ˜ํ•™๊ณผ๋ฅผ ์กธ์—…ํ•œ ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ‹ฐ์•ˆ์€ ์Šค์›จ๋ด ์ถœ์‹  ํŽ ๋ ˆ์˜ ์ œ์•ˆ์œผ๋กœ ๊ณผ ์นœ๊ตฌ๋“ค์ธ ๋งˆํฌ, ์กฐ์‹œ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ํŽ ๋ ˆ๋„ค ๋งˆ์„ ํ•˜์ง€ ์ถ•์ œ๋ฅผ ํƒ๋ฐฉํ•˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์— ๋Œ€๋‹ˆ๋ฅผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋ฐ๋ ค๊ฐ€๊ธฐ๋กœ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์Šค์›จ๋ด์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ„ ์ผํ–‰์€ ํŽ ๋ ˆ์˜ ํ˜• ์ž‰๋งˆ๋ฅด์™€, ๋งˆ์ฐฌ๊ฐ€์ง€๋กœ ๊ฒฌํ•™์„ ์˜จ ์˜๊ตญ์ธ ์ปคํ”Œ ์ฝ”๋‹ˆ์™€ ์‚ฌ์ด๋จผ๊ณผ ๋งŒ๋‚œ๋‹ค. ๋ฐฑ์•ผ๊ฐ€ ์ง€์†๋˜๋Š” ํ‰์›์— ๋ˆ„์›Œ ํ™˜๊ฐ์ œ(์‹ค๋กœ์‹œ๋นˆ)๋ฅผ ์ฆ๊ธฐ๊ธฐ๋กœ ํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ, ์‹ฌ์•ฝํ•œ ๋Œ€๋‹ˆ๋Š” ๊ฐ€์กฑ ์–˜๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋“ฃ์ž ํŠธ๋ผ์šฐ๋งˆ์— ํœฉ์‹ธ์—ฌ ํ™˜์ƒ์„ ๋ณด๊ณ , ๋ช‡ ์‹œ๊ฐ„ ๋™์•ˆ ์ •์‹ ์„ ์žƒ๊ณ  ๋งŒ๋‹ค. ํ˜ธ๋ฅด๊ฐ€ ๋งˆ์„์— ๋„์ฐฉํ–ˆ์„ ๋•Œ๋Š” ์ถ•์ œ ์ค€๋น„๊ฐ€ ํ•œ์ฐฝ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ผํ–‰์€ ์ˆ™์†Œ์—์„œ ํ•˜๋ฃป๋ฐค์„ ๋ฌต๊ณ  ๋‹ค์Œ๋‚  ์ถ•์ œ๊ฐ€ ๋ฒŒ์–ด์ง„๋‹ค. ์ ˆ๋ฒฝ์—์„œ ์น˜๋Ÿฌ์ง„๋‹ค๋Š” ์˜์‹์€ ๋†€๋ž๊ฒŒ๋„ ๋‚จ๋…€ ๋…ธ์ธ ๋‘˜์ด ๋†’์€ ์ ˆ๋ฒฝ ์œ„๋กœ ์˜ฌ๋ผ ๋ชธ์„ ๋˜์ ธ ๋Œ๋ฐ”๋‹ฅ์— ์ถ”๋ฝํ•ด ์ž์‚ดํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ๋กœ ๋–จ์–ด์ง„ ๋…ธ์ธ์ด ๋‹ค๋ฆฌ๋งŒ ๋ถ€๋Ÿฌ์ง€๊ณ  ์ฆ‰์‚ฌํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์ž, ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์€ ๋ฏธ๋ฆฌ ๋“ค๊ณ  ์žˆ๋˜ ๋ง์น˜๋กœ ๋จธ๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๊นจ ์ฃฝ์ธ๋‹ค. ํฌ๊ฒŒ ์ถฉ๊ฒฉ์„ ๋ฐ›์€ ์™ธ๋ถ€์ธ๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ํŽ ๋ ˆ์™€ ๋งˆ์„ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์€ ์ „ํ†ต๊ณผ ์ข…๊ต์  ์˜๋ฏธ๋ฅผ ๋“ค๋ฉฐ ์ดํ•ด์‹œํ‚ค๋ ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ฝ”๋‹ˆ๋Š” ๋‹ค์Œ๋‚  ๋งˆ์„์„ ๋– ๋‚˜๋ ค๊ณ  ํ•˜๋‚˜, ์‚ฌ์ด๋จผ์ด ์˜๋ฌธ์Šค๋Ÿฝ๊ฒŒ ์‚ฌ๋ผ์ ธ ๋ฒ„๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์ฝ”๋‹ˆ๋„ ๋’ค์ด์–ด ๋ชจ์Šต์ด ๋ณด์ด์ง€ ์•Š๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ์กฐ์‹œ๋Š” ์ถ•์ œ์™€ ์˜์‹์„ ์ฃผ์ œ๋กœ ๋…ผ๋ฌธ์„ ์“ฐ๋ ค๊ณ  ํ•˜๋Š”๋ฐ ๋‹ค๋งŒ ์˜์‹ ๋•Œ ์Š๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์ „์„ ์ฐ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ํ—ˆ๋ฝ๋ฐ›์ง€ ๋ชปํ•œ๋‹ค. ์‹์‚ฌ ๋•Œ ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ‹ฐ์•ˆ์˜ ์‹์‚ฌ์—์„œ ์—ฌ์ž์˜ ์Œ๋ชจ๊ฐ€ ๋‚˜์˜ค๋Š” ์ผ์ด ๋ฒŒ์–ด์ง€๊ณ , ๋งˆํฌ๋Š” ์–ด๋Š ๋งˆ์„ ์—ฌ์ž๊ฐ€ ๋ณด์—ฌ์ค„ ๊ฒƒ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค๋ฉด์„œ ๋ฐ๋ ค๊ฐ€ ๋ฒ„๋ฆฐ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋‚  ๋ฐค ์กฐ์‹œ๊ฐ€ ๊ฒฝ์ „์„ ํ›”์น˜๋ ค๊ณ  ์‹ ์ „์— ๋ชฐ๋ž˜ ์ˆจ์–ด ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ”๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ๋งˆ์„ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์˜ ๋ง์น˜๋ฅผ ๋งž๊ณ  ์“ฐ๋Ÿฌ์ง„๋‹ค. ์„ธ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ๋‚  ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ‹ฐ์•ˆ์€ ๋™๋„ค ์ฒ˜๋…€์ธ ๋งˆ์•ผ์™€ ์„ฑ๊ด€๊ณ„๋ฅผ ํ•  ๊ฒƒ์„ ์ข…์šฉ๋ฐ›๋Š”๋‹ค. ๋Œ€๋‹ˆ๋Š” ์ •์ฒด๋ถˆ๋ช…์˜ ์ฐจ๋ฅผ ๋งˆ์‹  ๋’ค ์ถ•์ œ์˜ ์ƒ์ง•์ธ '5์›”์˜ ์—ฌ์™•'์„ ๋ฝ‘๋Š” ์ถค์— ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•ด์„œ ์šฐ์Šนํ•˜๊ณ , 5์›”์˜ ์—ฌ์™•์œผ๋กœ ๋ฝ‘ํžŒ๋‹ค. ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ‹ฐ์•ˆ์€ ์•Œ๋ชธ์˜ ์—ฌ์ž๋“ค๋กœ ๋‘˜๋Ÿฌ์‹ธ์ธ ๊ณต๊ฐ„์—์„œ ๋งˆ์•ผ์™€ ์„ฑ๊ด€๊ณ„ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€๋‹ˆ๊ฐ€ ์—ฌ์™•์˜ ์˜์‹์„ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰ํ•˜๋˜ ๋„์ค‘ ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ‹ฐ์•ˆ์˜ ์„ฑ๊ด€๊ณ„๋ฅผ ๋ชฉ๊ฒฉํ•˜๊ณ  ์˜ค์—ดํ•œ๋‹ค. ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ‹ฐ์•ˆ์ด ์„ฑ๊ด€๊ณ„๋ฅผ ๋งˆ์นœ ๋’ค ๋งˆ์•ผ๋Š” ์•„๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋Š๊ผˆ๋‹ค๋ฉฐ ์†Œ๋ฆฌ์น˜๊ณ , ๋‘๋ ค์›Œ์ง„ ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ‹ฐ์•ˆ์€ ์•Œ๋ชธ์œผ๋กœ ๋›ฐ์ณ๋‚˜๊ฐ€ ๋Œ์•„๋‹ค๋‹ˆ๋‹ค๊ฐ€, ํ™๋”๋ฏธ์— ๊ฝ‚ํžŒ ์กฐ์‹œ์˜ ๋‹ค๋ฆฌ์™€ ํ”ผ์˜ ๋…์ˆ˜๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ๋œ ์‚ฌ์ด๋จผ์„ ๋ณธ๋‹ค. ์ด์œฝ๊ณ  ๋งˆ์„ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์ด ๋ฟŒ๋ฆฐ ๊ฐ€๋ฃจ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์ด๋งˆ์‹œ๊ณ  ๊ธฐ์ ˆํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ˜ธ๋ฅด๊ฐ€ ๋งˆ์„ ์ถ•์ œ๋Š” ์‚ฌ์‹ค 9๋ช…์˜ ์ œ๋ฌผ์„ ์„ ๋ณ„ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ณผ์ •์œผ๋กœ, ์™ธ๋ถ€์ธ ๋„ค ๋ช…๊ณผ ๋งˆ์„ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ ๋„ค ๋ช…, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  '5์›”์˜ ์—ฌ์™•'์ด ํƒํ•œ ํ•œ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์ด ์ œ๋ฌผ๋กœ ๋ฐ”์ณ์ง€๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€๋‹ˆ๋Š” ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ‹ฐ์•ˆ์„ ํƒํ•˜๊ณ , ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ‹ฐ์•ˆ์€ ๋ง‰ ํ•ด์ฒด๋œ ๊ณฐ ๊ฐ€์ฃฝ์„ ๋’ค์ง‘์–ด ์“ฐ๊ณ  ์‹ ์ „์—์„œ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ œ๋ฌผ๋“ค๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋ถˆํƒœ์›Œ์ง„๋‹ค. ๋Œ€๋‹ˆ๋Š” ์ด ๊ด‘๊ฒฝ์„ ๋ณด๊ณ  ์ฒ˜์Œ์—๋Š” ๋‘๋ ค์›Œํ•˜๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ์กฐ๊ธˆ์”ฉ ๋ฏธ์†Œ๋ฅผ ์ง“๋Š”๋‹ค. ์ถœ์—ฐ ํ”Œ๋กœ๋ Œ์Šค ํ“จ - ๋Œ€๋‹ˆ ์•„๋” ์žญ ๋ ˆ์ด๋„ˆ - ํฌ๋ฆฌ์Šคํ‹ฐ์•ˆ ํœด์Šค ์œŒ๋ฆฌ์—„ ์žญ์Šจ ํ•˜ํผ - ์กฐ์‹œ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ ๋ธ”๋กฌ๊ทธ๋ Œ - ํŽ ๋ ˆ ์œŒ ํดํ„ฐ - ๋งˆํฌ ์—˜๋กœ๋ผ ํ† ํ‚ค์•„ - ์ฝ”๋‹ˆ ์•„์น˜ ๋งค๋ฑ - ์‚ฌ์ด๋จผ ํ—จ๋ฆฌํฌ ๋†€๋ Œ - ์šธํ”„ ๊ตฐ๋„ฌ ํ”„๋ ˆ๋“œ - ์‹œ๋ธŒ ์ด์ €๋ฒจ ๊ทธ๋ฆด - ๋งˆ์•ผ ์•™๋„ค์Šค ๋ผ์„ธ - ๋‹น๋‰˜ ์œจ๋ฆฌ์•„ ๋ž‘๋‚˜๋ฅด์† - ์ž‰๊ฐ€ ๋งˆ์ธ  ๋ธ”๋กฌ๊ทธ๋ Œ - ์˜ค๋“œ ๋ผ๋ฅด์Šค ๋ฒ ๋ง์—๋ฅด - ์Šคํ… ์•ˆ๋‚˜ ์˜ค์ŠคํŠธ๋ฃ€ - ์นด๋ฆฐ ํ•จํ‘ธ์Šค ํ• ๋ฒ ๋ฆฌ - ์ž‰๋งˆ๋ฅด ๋ฆฌ๋ธŒ ๋ฏธ์—๋„ค์Šค - ์šธ๋ผ ๋ฃจ์ด์ฆˆ ํŽ˜ํ…Œ๋ฅดํ˜ธํ”„ - ํ•œ๋‚˜ ์นดํƒ€๋ฆฌ๋‚˜ ๋ฒ ์ดํŠธํ•˜๊ฒ - ์ผ๋ฐ” ๋น„์—๋ฅธ ์•ˆ๋“œ๋ ˆ์„ผ - ๋‹จ ์ฐจ๋‹ˆ ํด๋Ÿฌ์šฐ๋””์–ด - ํ…Œ๋ฆฌ ์•„๋” ํฐ ๊ฑฐ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ์—˜๋Ÿฌ, ๋ณด์•ผ๋ฆฌ ์กธํŠธ - ๋Œ€๋‹ˆ์˜ ์—„๋งˆ, ์•„๋น  ํ—๊ฐ€๋ฆฌ์—์„œ ์ดฌ์˜ํ–ˆ๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์—, ๋Œ€์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ์—†๋Š” ๋“ฑ์žฅ์ธ๋ฌผ๋“ค์€ ๋Œ€์ฒด๋กœ ํ—๊ฐ€๋ฆฌ์ธ๋“ค์ด๋‹ค. ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ 2019๋…„ ์˜ํ™” ์˜์–ด ์˜ํ™” ์ž‘ํ’ˆ ์Šค์›จ๋ด์–ด ์˜ํ™” ์ž‘ํ’ˆ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ณตํฌ ์˜ํ™” ์Šค์›จ๋ด์˜ ๊ณตํฌ ์˜ํ™” ์ข…๊ต ๊ณตํฌ ์˜ํ™” ์ž์‚ด์„ ์†Œ์žฌ๋กœ ํ•œ ์˜ํ™” ๊ทผ์นœ์ƒ๊ฐ„์„ ์†Œ์žฌ๋กœ ํ•œ ์˜ํ™” ์ธ์‹ ๊ณตํฌ๋ฅผ ์†Œ์žฌ๋กœ ํ•œ ์ž‘ํ’ˆ ์Šค์›จ๋ด์„ ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฝ์œผ๋กœ ํ•œ ์˜ํ™” ๋ถ€๋‹คํŽ˜์ŠคํŠธ์—์„œ ์ดฌ์˜ํ•œ ์˜ํ™” A24 ์˜ํ™” ํฌํฌ ํ˜ธ๋Ÿฌ ์˜ํ™” ์ปฌํŠธ๋ฅผ ์†Œ์žฌ๋กœ ํ•œ ์˜ํ™”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midsommar
Midsommar
Midsommar is a 2019 folk horror film written and directed by Ari Aster. The film stars Florence Pugh and Jack Reynor as a dysfunctional American couple who travel to rural Sweden with a group of friends for a midsummer festival, but find themselves in the clutches of a sinister cult claiming to practice Scandinavian paganism. Supporting actors include William Jackson Harper, Vilhelm Blomgren, Ellora Torchia, Archie Madekwe, and Will Poulter. A co-production between the United States and Sweden, the film was initially pitched to Aster as a straightforward slasher film set among Swedish cultists. While elements of the original concept remain in the final product, the finished film focuses on a deteriorating relationship inspired by a difficult breakup experienced by Aster himself. The film's soundtrack, composed by British electronic musician Bobby Krlic (better known as The Haxan Cloak), takes inspiration from Nordic folk music. The film was shot on location in Budapest in the summer and autumn of 2018. Midsommar was theatrically released in the United States by A24 on July 3, 2019, and in Sweden by Nordisk Film on July 10, 2019. The film grossed $48 million and received positive reviews, with praise for Aster's direction and Pugh's performance in particular, although it polarized general audiences. Plot American student Dani is left deeply traumatized after her bipolar sister Terri kills their parents and herself. The incident further strains Dani's relationship with her increasingly distant boyfriend, a fellow student named Christian, who, with his friends Mark and Josh, has been invited by their Swedish friend Pelle to attend a midsummer festival at his ancestral commune, the Hรฅrga, in the rural Hรคlsingland region of Sweden. The festival occurs only once every 90 years; Josh, who is writing his thesis on European midsummer festivities, regards it as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Christian had not discussed the trip with Dani, as he intended to break up with her before her family tragedy happened, but he reluctantly invites her along after an argument. Upon arrival at the commune, they meet Simon and Connie, a British couple who were invited by Pelle's commune-brother Ingemar, who offers the group psychedelic mushrooms, causing Dani to have a bad trip and hallucinate about her dead family. The day after their arrival, the group witnesses an รคttestupa ceremony, where two elders commit suicide by jumping off a cliff onto the rocks below. When one of the elders survives the fall, the commune members mimic his wails of pain before crushing his head with a mallet. Commune elder Siv attempts to calm Connie and Simon by explaining that every member of their community does this at the age of 72, and that it is believed to be a great honor. Christian also decides to write his thesis on the Hรฅrga commune, irritating Josh by plagiarizing his idea. Disturbed by the ceremonies, Dani attempts to leave, but Pelle convinces her to stay. He explains that he too was orphaned after his parents perished in a fire, and the commune became his new family. Connie and Simon demand to leave and are supposedly driven to a nearby train station individually. During his thesis research, Christian is told that outsiders are sometimes brought into the commune for "mating" purposes to avoid incest. He is encouraged to participate, but refuses. After unwittingly urinating on a sacred tree, Mark is lured away from the group by one of the female commune members and murdered in the woods. That night, Josh sneaks out of bed to take illicit photographs of the commune's sacred texts. He is caught and distracted by a man wearing Mark's skinned face, and is then bludgeoned to death with a mallet and dragged away. The following day, both Dani and Christian are separately pressured into drinking a hallucinogenic tea. Dani wins a maypole dancing competition and is crowned May Queen. Christian is drugged and participates in a sex ritual designed to impregnate Maja, a young member of the Hรฅrga, while older nude female members watch and mimic Maja's moans. Dani witnesses the ritual and has a panic attack while the commune's women surround her, mimicking her cries of sorrow. After the ritual, a naked Christian attempts to flee. He discovers Josh's severed leg planted in a flowerbed and Simon's corpse on display in a barn, the latter having been made into a blood eagle. An elder then paralyzes Christian with a drug. For the final ceremony, the commune leaders explain that the commune must offer nine human sacrifices to purge it of evil. The first four victims (Mark, Josh, Simon, and Connie) were outsiders lured to them by Pelle and Ingemar, while the next four victims (the two รคttestupa elders, plus volunteers Ingemar and Ulf) are from the commune. As the May Queen, Dani must choose either Christian or a randomly chosen commune member as the final sacrifice. She chooses Christian, who is stuffed into a disemboweled brown bear's body and placed in a triangular wooden temple alongside the other sacrifices. The commune members to be sacrificed are given drugs and told they will feel no fear or pain, but Christian is not and remains paralyzed. The structure is set alight, and the commune members mimic the screams of those being burned alive. Dani initially sobs in horror and grief, but eventually begins to smile. Cast Production Development In May 2018, it was announced that Ari Aster would write and direct the film, with Lars Knudsen serving as producer. B-Reel Films, a Swedish company, produced the film alongside Square Peg, with A24 distributing. Aster's previous horror film, Hereditary, had been a huge critical success, making over $80 million to become A24's highest-grossing film worldwide. According to Aster, he had been approached by B-Reel executives Martin Karlqvist and Patrik Andersson to helm a slasher film set in Sweden, an idea which he initially rejected as he felt he "had no way into the story." Aster ultimately devised a plot in which the two central characters are experiencing relationship tensions verging on a breakup, and wrote the surrounding screenplay around this theme. He described the result as "a breakup movie dressed in the clothes of a folk horror film." Aster has mentioned 1981 Albert Brooks film Modern Romance as an inspiration for Midsommar, and also called it "The Wizard of Oz for perverts". Aster worked with the film's production designer Henrik Svensson to develop the film's folklore elements and the traditions of the Hรฅrga, while visiting Hรคlsingland together. He researched Hรคlsingegรฅrds, "centuries-old farms that typically had painting on the walls", to develop a stylized version for the set, as well as May Day and midsummer celebrations in Swedish, German and English folklore. Aster also researched spiritual movements and communities, saying he particularly drew inspiration from Rudolf Steiner's anthroposophy and the theosophy movement. Florence Pugh, Jack Reynor, Will Poulter, Vilhem Blomgren, William Jackson Harper, Ellora Torchia, and Archie Madekwe joined the cast in July 2018. Filming Some early scenes set in the United States were also filmed there; Dani's apartment was filmed in Brooklyn, New York City, while other scenes where Christian's friends interact were filmed in Utah. The majority of the film was shot in Hungary rather than Sweden, primarily due to financial constraints, but also as Sweden limits daily film shoots to no longer than eight hours. Principal photography began on July 30, 2018, in Budapest, and wrapped that October. Harper said the shoot was "arduous" due to the heat. Wasps were highly abundant and a major issue on set. Pugh reflected "the shoot was totally nuts" and commended Aster's direction: "he was dealing with possibly 100, 120 people, additional extras and actors there, all speaking in three different languages and he was the captain of the ship". Ahead of filming the drug use scenes, Reynor said that the cast discussed their own experiences with psychedelic mushrooms. On her breakdown scene with the Hรฅrga, Pugh commended the other women involved, saying they "made this scene possible" as she typically struggles to cry on camera. She reflected: "I knew I would never be so open and so raw and so exhausted like I was that day ever again". The sex scene between Christian and Maja was filmed on the final day. Reynor said he spent time attempting to boost morale among the other cast members involved, none of whom spoke English, including Isabelle Grill (who plays Maja) who was appearing in her first feature film role. He reflected he felt male nudity was unusual for a horror film, where female nudity is more typical. He said that he "advocated for as much full-frontal nudity as possible, I really wanted to embrace the feeling of being exposed and the humiliation of this character. And I felt really, really vulnerable, more than I had actually even anticipated.โ€ Props and costume design Svensson said the mallet prop used for the senicide scene was a replica of one at a museum in Stockholm, and that the cliff-jumping was based on historic practices in Sweden. Costume designer Andrea Flesch developed the Hรฅrga's costumes with antique linen from Hungary and Romania, and buttons from Sweden. Aster asked for the clothing to appear handmade, and for the Hรฅrga to dress in white. Many of their costumes were hand-embroidered with rune designs unique to individual community members, signifying their families and occupations. Murals and tapestries in the background of some scenes indicate events in the film. In April 2020, A24 announced it would be auctioning off props from its films and television series, including the 10,000-silk-flower May Queen dress worn by Pugh, which was reportedly purchased by the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures for $65,000, after both Ariana Grande and Halsey had expressed interest on social media. The proceeds were donated to provide COVID-19 pandemic relief for firefighters and their families. Other items from the film that sold at auction were the bear costume worn by Reynor for $4,760, the mallet used to crush a cult member's skull for $10,000, and other villager costumes that sold in the $4,500 range. All the proceeds from the Midsommar collection raised over $100,000 for the FDNY Foundation. Post-production Aster said the visual effects for the psychedelic scenes involved considerable trial and error: "I'm sure for some of those shots we got to the point where we had 60 versions. In one iteration the tripping was way too distracting and you're not paying attention to the characters, and then you brought it down to the point where if you are paying attention to the characters, you'll never notice the tripping effects." The more minimal visual effects were settled on a week before the first screening. There was around a six-week debate as to whether the film would be given an NC-17 rating or R rating by the MPAA for its US release due to its graphic nudity, with it eventually being given an R rating after cuts. An NC-17 rating is considered harmful to films' box-office performance. Music Aster wrote the film while listening to British electronic musician The Haxan Cloak's 2013 album Excavation. Aster later recruited him to compose the film's score, credited under his real name Bobby Krlic. Krlic began composing the music before filming began, taking inspiration from Nordic folk music, and collaborating closely with Aster. The film makes use of diegetic music, where events on screen meld with the score. The soundtrack album was released on July 5, 2019 via Milan Records. Release Midsommar had a pre-release screening at the Alamo Drafthouse Cinema in New York City, on June 18, 2019. The film was theatrically released in the United States on July 3, 2019. Director's cut Aster's original 171-minute cut of the film, which A24 asked Aster to trim down for a wide theatrical release, had its world premiere at the Film Society of Lincoln Center in New York City on August 20, 2019. It was shown in theaters across the United States for a weekend starting on August 29, 2019. The director's cut was released as an Apple TV exclusive on September 24, 2019. On physical media, it saw a British release on Blu-ray and DVD on October 28, 2019, an Australian Blu-ray release on November 6, 2019 and a US release on Blu-ray in July 2020. Home media Midsommar was released on Digital HD on September 24, 2019, and on DVD and Blu-ray on October 8, 2019. The director's cut of the film was then released on Blu-ray and 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray as an A24 shop exclusive on July 20, 2020, in limited copies. Reception Box office Midsommar grossed $27.5million in the United States and Canada, and $20.5million in other territories, for a total worldwide gross of $48million. In the United States and Canada, the film was projected to gross $8โ€“10 million from 2,707 theaters over its first five days. It made $3 million on its first day, including $1.1 million from Tuesday night previews, which Deadline Hollywood called a "smashing start". It went on to debut to $10.9 million, finishing sixth at the box office; IndieWire said it was "just decent" given its estimated $8 million budget, but the film would likely find success in home media. In its second weekend, the film dropped 44% to $3.7 million, finishing in eighth, and then made $1.6 million in its third weekend, finishing in ninth. Audience reception Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film a grade of "C+" on an A+ to F scale, while those at PostTrak gave it an average 3 out of 5 stars, with 50% saying they would definitely recommend it. According to Screen Rant writer Mark Birrell, Midsommar was "one of the most polarizing horror movies of 2019" among general audiences, while Ankur Pathak of The Huffington Post says it "divided audiences (and some critics)". Critical response On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 83% based on 404 reviews, and an average rating of 7.6/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Ambitious, impressively crafted, and above all unsettling, Midsommar further proves writer-director Ari Aster is a horror auteur to be reckoned with." On Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, the film has a score of 72 out of 100, based on 54 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews". John DeFore of The Hollywood Reporter described the film as the "horror equivalent of a destination wedding", and "more unsettling than frightening, [but] still a trip worth taking." Writing for Variety, Andrew Barker noted that it is "neither the masterpiece nor the disaster that the film's most vocal viewers are bound to claim. Rather, it's an admirably strange, thematically muddled curiosity from a talented filmmaker who allows his ambitions to outpace his execution." David Edelstein of Vulture praised Pugh's performance as "amazingly vivid" and noted that Aster "paces Midsommar more like an opera (Wagner, not Puccini) than a scare picture," but concluded that the film "doesn't jell because its impulses are so bifurcated. It's a parable of a woman's religious awakeningโ€”that's also a woman's fantasy of revenge against a man who didn't meet her emotional needsโ€”that's also a male director's masochistic fantasy of emasculation at the hands of a matriarchal cult." In The New York Times, Manohla Dargis was critical of the character depth behind Dani and Christian, finding them "instructively uninteresting" and stereotypically gendered as a couple. Eric Kohn of IndieWire summarized the film as a "perverse breakup movie," adding that "Aster doesn't always sink the biggest surprises, but he excels at twisting the knife. After a deflowering that makes Ken Russell's The Devils look tame, Aster finds his way to a startling reality check." Time Outs Joshua Rothkopf awarded the film a 5/5 star-rating, writing, "A savage yet evolved slice of Swedish folk-horror, Ari Aster's hallucinatory follow-up to Hereditary proves him a horror director with no peer." For The A.V. Club, A. A. Dowd stated that the film "rivals Hereditary in the cruel shock department", and labelled it a "B+ effort". Writing for Inverse, Eric Francisco commented that the film feels "like a victory lap after Hereditary", and that Aster "takes his sweet time to lull viewers into his clutchesย ... But like how the characters experience time, its passage is a vague notion." He described the film as "a sharp portrayal of gaslighting". Richard Brody of The New Yorker said that the film "is built on such a void of insight and experience, such a void of character and relationships, that even the first level of the house of narrative cards can't stand." He added, "In the end, the subject of Midsommar is as simple as it is regressive: lucky Americans, stay home." Emma Madden in The Guardian criticised the film for its depiction of disabled characters as "monstrous", and argued it resurrects harmful horror film tropes of ableism and eugenics. Tomris Laffly of RogerEbert.com rated the film 4 out of 4 stars, describing it as a "terrifically juicy, apocalyptic cinematic sacrament that dances around a fruitless relationship in dizzying circles". A Vanity Fair article from December 2019 reflecting on the 2010s in horror films argued that Midsommar was part of a trend of "elevated horror" along with Aster's previous Hereditary and Robert Eggers directed The Witch, and that it was an example of "horror at its best". Accolades Themes and analysis Writing in The Guardian, Steve Rose describes Midsommar as "a powerful study of grief, betrayal, breakups, and more". Rose suggests that Dani's three male companions may be seen as representing "toxic masculinity", or analogues of the three male companions in The Wizard of Oz (namely the Tin Man, Cowardly Lion and Scarecrow). Rose proposes that the film may be read as a "parable of snarky, city-smart, modern rationalism undone by primal rural values". Alternatively, he proposes that the villagers' traditions could be read as far-right, white nationalist or eugenicist. In Vox, Alissa Wilkinson described Midsommar's story as following Dani's emotional journey and following fairy tale conventions, where Dani loses her family at the beginning and goes on to become a Queen, as with Cinderella and Snow White. The article also notes the use of imagery foreshadowing later events throughout the film. Aster himself said "We begin as Dani loses a family, and we end as Dani gains one. And so, for better or worse, [the Hรฅrga] are there to provide exactly what she is lacking, and exactly what she needs, in true fairy tale fashion." Monica Wolfe discussed Midsommar as reflecting themes of globalization and American imperialism in a 2022 article in the Journal of Popular Film and Television. Wolfe outlines the film's competing ideologies of femininity versus masculinity, academic knowledge versus folk knowledge, and capitalism versus communism, writing that "the horror of the film is driven by the objectified Otherโ€™s resistance to the imperial powerโ€™s desire to dominate physical place and own ideological space, but is complicated by a suggestion that, in this unique case, the Other is also a nationalist, right-wing power, and the tension between home and foreign reflects that of a new Cold War." The film's central sex scene, between Christian and Maja, has been the subject of debate as to whether it depicts rape. An article in Sexuality & Culture asserts that "the ambiguous nature of this scene may be viewed as problematic because it blurs the line between consent and sexual assault" and that the film has implications for contemporary understandings of rape, particularly of males. Yusuke Narita, a Japanese professor at Yale University, positively cited a scene in the film where an elderly person is forced to jump off a cliff. Narita used this as an example of "mass suicide" or "mass seppuku", which he claimed was the only way to solve the aging crisis in Japan. The comments resulted in a major controversy but also resulted in Narita becoming a popular figure among some young Japanese people. See also The Wicker Man, a 1973 British folk horror film revolving around a pagan cult. References External links 2019 films 2019 horror films 2019 independent films 2010s American films 2010s English-language films 2010s Swedish films A24 (company) films American horror films American independent films English-language Swedish films Fiction about familicide Films about couples Films about cults Films about disability Patricide in fiction Matricide in fiction Films about festivals Films about hallucinogens Films about human sacrifice Films about grieving Films about neopaganism Films about rape Films about suicide Films about vacationing Films based on European myths and legends Films directed by Ari Aster Films scored by The Haxan Cloak Films set in Sweden Films set in the United States Films shot in Budapest Films shot in New York City Films shot in Utah Folk horror films Holiday horror films Incest in film Murderโ€“suicide in films Psychedelic films Swedish horror films
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kdenlive
Kdenlive
Kdenlive (KDE ๋น„์„ ํ˜• ๋™์˜์ƒ ํŽธ์ง‘๊ธฐ ) ๋Š” MLT ํ”„๋ ˆ์ž„์›Œํฌ, KDE ๋ฐ Qt์— ๊ธฐ์ดˆํ•œ ์ž์œ  ์˜คํ”ˆ ์†Œ์Šค ๋น„๋””์˜ค ํŽธ์ง‘ ์†Œํ”„ํŠธ์›จ์–ด์ด๋‹ค. ์ด ํ”„๋กœ์ ํŠธ๋Š” 2002๋…„ ์ œ์ด์Šจ ์šฐ๋“œ(Jason Wood)์— ์˜ํ•ด ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ด์ œ๋Š” ์ž‘์€ ํŒ€์˜ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ์ž๋“ค์— ์˜ํ•ด ์œ ์ง€ ๊ด€๋ฆฌ๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. Kdenlive 15.04.0์˜ ์ถœ์‹œ๋กœ ๊ณต์‹ KDE ํ”„๋กœ์ ํŠธ์˜ ์ผ๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. Kdenlive ํŒจํ‚ค์ง€๋Š” Linux, FreeBSD ๋ฐ Microsoft Windows์—์„œ ๋ฌด๋ฃŒ๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์†Œ์Šค ์ฝ”๋“œ๋Š” GNU General Public License ๋ฒ„์ „ 2 ๋˜๋Š” ๊ทธ ์ดํ›„ ๋ฒ„์ „์˜ ์กฐํ•ญ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํŠน์ง• KDE์˜ Kdenlive๋Š” MLT, Frei0r ํšจ๊ณผ, SoX ๋ฐ LADSPA ๋ผ์ด๋ธŒ๋Ÿฌ๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ๋‹ค. Kdenlive๋Š” FFmpeg ๋˜๋Š” libav (QuickTime, AVI, WMV, MPEG ๋ฐ Flash Video ๋“ฑ)์—์„œ ์ง€์›ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ชจ๋“  ํ˜•์‹์„ ์ง€์›ํ•˜๋ฉฐ, PAL, NTSC ๋ฐ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ HD ํ‘œ์ค€(HDV์™€ AVCHD๋ฅผ ํฌํ•จ)์„ ์œ„ํ•œ 4 : 3 ๋ฐ 16 : 9 ์ข…ํšก๋น„๋„ ์ง€์›ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋น„๋””์˜ค๋Š” DV ์žฅ์น˜๋กœ ๋‚ด๋ณด๋‚ด๊ฑฐ๋‚˜, ์ฑ•ํ„ฐ์™€ ๊ฐ„๋‹จํ•œ ๋ฉ”๋‰ด๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ DVD์— ๊ธฐ๋กํ•  ์ˆ˜๋„ ์žˆ๋‹ค. Kdenlive๋Š” ํƒ€์ž„ ๋ผ์ธ ๊ธฐ๋ฐ˜์˜ ๋ฉ€ํ‹ฐ ํŠธ๋ž™ ํŽธ์ง‘๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋‚ด์žฅํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋ฌด์ œํ•œ์˜ ๋น„๋””์˜ค ๋ฐ ์˜ค๋””์˜ค ํŠธ๋ž™์„ ์ง€์›ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋‚ด์žฅ๋œ ํƒ€์ดํ‹€ ์—๋””ํ„ฐ ๋ฐ ๋น„๋””์˜ค ํด๋ฆฝ, ์˜ค๋””์˜ค ํด๋ฆฝ, ํ…์ŠคํŠธ ํด๋ฆฝ ๋ฐ ์ด๋ฏธ์ง€ ํด๋ฆฝ์„ ์ƒ์„ฑ, ์ด๋™, ์ž๋ฅด๊ธฐ, ์‚ญ์ œํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋„๊ตฌ. ์‚ฌ์šฉ์ž ์ง€์ • ํšจ๊ณผ ๋ฐ ์žฅ๋ฉด์ „ํ™˜์„ ์ถ”๊ฐ€ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ํšจ๊ณผ์™€ ์žฅ๋ฉด์ „ํ™˜. ์˜ค๋””์˜ค ํšจ๊ณผ์—๋Š” ์ •๊ทœํ™”(๋…ธ๋ฉ€๋ผ์ด์ €), ์œ„์ƒ ๋ฐ ํ”ผ์น˜ ์ด๋™, ๋ฆฌ๋ฏธํ„ฐ, ๋ณผ๋ฅจ ์กฐ์ •, ๋ฆฌ๋ฒ„๋ธŒ ๋ฐ ์ดํ€„๋ผ์ด์ € ํ•„ํ„ฐ ๋“ฑ์ด ํฌํ•จ๋œ๋‹ค. ์‹œ๊ฐ์  ํšจ๊ณผ์—๋Š” ๋งˆ์Šคํ‚น, ๋ธ”๋ฃจ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฐ, ์™œ๊ณก, ํšŒ์ „, ์ƒ‰์ƒ ๋„๊ตฌ, ๋ธ”๋Ÿฌ, ํ๋ฆผ ํšจ๊ณผ ๋ฐ ๊ธฐํƒ€ ์˜ต์…˜์ด ํฌํ•จ๋œ๋‹ค. ์žฌ๊ตฌ์„ฑ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ํ‚ค๋ณด๋“œ ๋‹จ์ถ•ํ‚ค ๋ฐ ์ธํ„ฐํŽ˜์ด์Šค ๋ ˆ์ด์•„์›ƒ. ๋ Œ๋”๋ง์€ ๋ณ„๋„์˜ ๋„Œ๋ธ”๋กœํ‚น ํ”„๋กœ์„ธ์Šค๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰๋˜๋ฏ€๋กœ ์ค‘์ง€, ์ผ์‹œ ์ค‘์ง€ ๋ฐ ์žฌ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ Kdenlive๋Š” ์†Œํ”„ํŠธ์›จ์–ด์˜ ์ตœ์‹  ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ์ž ๋ฒ„์ „๊ณผ ์†Œ์Šค์˜ ์ฃผ์š” ์ข…์†์„ฑ์„ ์ปดํŒŒ์ผ ํ•˜๋Š” Kdenlive Builder Wizard (KBL)๋ผ๋Š” ์Šคํฌ๋ฆฝํŠธ๋ฅผ ์ œ๊ณตํ•˜์—ฌ, ์‚ฌ์šฉ์ž๊ฐ€ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์„ ํ…Œ์ŠคํŠธํ•˜๊ณ  ๋ฒ„๊ทธ ์ถ”์ ๊ธฐ์—์„œ ๋ฌธ์ œ๋ฅผ๋ณด๊ณ  ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋„๋ก ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์—ญ์‚ฌ ์ด ํ”„๋กœ์ ํŠธ๋Š” 2002๋…„ ์ œ์ด์Šจ ์šฐ๋“œ(Jason Wood)๊ฐ€ ์ฒ˜์Œ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. Kdenlive์˜ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ์€ K Desktop Platform 3 ๋ฒ„์ „ (์›๋ž˜ MLT ์šฉ์œผ๋กœ ์ œ์ž‘๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์€ ๋ฒ„์ „)์—์„œ KDE ํ”Œ๋žซํผ 4 ๋กœ ์˜ฎ๊ฒจ ๊ฑฐ์˜ ๋ชจ๋“  ๋‚ด์šฉ์ด ๋‹ค์‹œ ์ž‘์„ฑ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ 2008๋…„ 11์›” 12์ผ์— ๋ฐœํ‘œ ๋œ Kdenlive 0.7์œผ๋กœ ์™„์„ฑ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2014๋…„ 10์›” 1์ผ์— ๋ฐœํ‘œ๋œ Kdenlive 0.9.10์ด ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰ KDE 4 ๋ฆด๋ฆฌ์Šค๋‹ค. Kdenlive๋Š” 2014๋…„์— KDE ํ”„๋กœ์ ํŠธ์™€ ์ธํ”„๋ผ๋กœ์˜ ์ „ํ™˜์„ ๊ณ„ํšํ•˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. KDE ํ”„๋ ˆ์ž„์›Œํฌ 5์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ „ํ™˜์€ KDE ์‘์šฉ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ 5์˜ ์ผ๋ถ€๋กœ 2015.04.0์˜ ๋ฆด๋ฆฌ์Šค๋กœ ์™„๋ฃŒ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. KDE๋กœ์˜ ์ด๋™์€ ์ง„ํ–‰ ์ค‘์ด๋‹ค. 2017๋…„ ์ดˆ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ ํŒ€์€ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ ๋ฆฌํŒฉํ„ฐ๋ง ์ž‘์—…์„ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ 2017๋…„ 6์›”๊นŒ์ง€ ์ฒซ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ๋ฏธ๋ฆฌ๋ณด๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌ์šฉ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ์ฒซ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ๋ฏธ๋ฆฌ๋ณด๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ์ถœ์‹œ๋จ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ 2017๋…„ 12์›”๊นŒ์ง€ ๋ฆฌํŒฉํ† ๋ง์ด ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ ํŒ€์˜ ์ฃผ์•ˆ์ ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฆฌํŒฉํ† ๋ง ๋ฒ„์ „์˜ ์ถœ์‹œ๋Š” KDE 18.08 ์‘์šฉ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ ๋ฆด๋ฆฌ์Šค์—์„œ 2018๋…„ 8์›”๋กœ ์˜ˆ์ •๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์œˆ๋„์šฐ ํ™˜๊ฒฝ์—์„œ์˜ ๋ฌธ์ œ์™€ ๋Œ€์ฒ˜๋ฒ• Kdenlive๋Š” ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ์šด์˜ ์ฒด์ œ์—์„œ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ํŠนํžˆ ๋ฆฌ๋ˆ…์Šค ํ™˜๊ฒฝ์—์„œ ๋งค๋„๋Ÿฝ๊ฒŒ ์ž˜ ์ž‘๋™ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์•Œ๋ ค์ ธ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์œˆ๋„์šฐ ํ™˜๊ฒฝ์—์„œ ์‚ฌ์šฉ ์‹œ ๋‹ค์†Œ ๋ถˆํŽธ์„ ๊ฒช์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ตœ๊ทผ ๋ฒ„์ „ ๋ณ„๋กœ ๋ฐœ์ƒํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋ฌธ์ œ์™€ ๋Œ€์ฒ˜๋ฒ•์€ ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค. 17.12.0 ๋ฒ„์ „ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ ์ข…๋ฃŒ ํ›„์—๋„ kdenlive.exe ํ”„๋กœ์„ธ์Šค์™€ dbus-daemon.exe ํ”„๋กœ์„ธ์Šค๊ฐ€ ์ฃฝ์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ๋‚จ์•„ ์žˆ๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ํ•ด๊ฒฐ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์€, ์ž‘์—… ๊ด€๋ฆฌ์ž์—์„œ kdenlive.exe ํ”„๋กœ์„ธ์Šค๋ฅผ ์ฐพ์•„ ๊ฐ•์ œ๋กœ ํ”„๋กœ์„ธ์Šค ํŠธ๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ์ข…๋ฃŒ์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ํŽธ์ง‘ ์ค‘ ํƒ€์ž„๋ผ์ธ์„ ์žฌ์ƒํ•˜๋ ค ํ•  ๋•Œ ์žฌ์ƒ ๋ฒ„ํŠผ์„ ๋ˆŒ๋ €์Œ์—๋„ ๋ถˆ๊ตฌํ•˜๊ณ  ์žฌ์ƒ์ด ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๊ฐ€ ์ž์ฃผ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ•ด๊ฒฐ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์€, ์žฌ์ƒ ๋ฒ„ํŠผ์„ ๋ˆ„๋ฅธ ํ›„ ์žฌ์ƒ์ด ์‹œ์ž‘๋˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ํ˜„์ƒ ๋ฐœ์ƒ ์‹œ ํ‚ค๋ณด๋“œ์—์„œ ์ขŒ์šฐ ํ™”์‚ดํ‘œ ํ‚ค๋ฅผ ํ•œ๋ฒˆ ๋ˆ„๋ฅด๊ฑฐ๋‚˜, ํƒ€์ž„๋ผ์ธ์—์„œ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด ํ—ค๋“œ ๋˜๋Š” ๋นˆ ๊ณณ์„ ๋งˆ์šฐ์Šค๋กœ ํ•œ๋ฒˆ ํด๋ฆญํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. 18.12.1 ๋ฒ„์ „ ํด๋ฆฝ ๋ชจ๋‹ˆํ„ฐ์—์„œ ํ‘œ์‹œ ์ค‘์ธ ๋ฏธ๋””์–ด๋ฅผ ๋“œ๋ž˜๊ทธํ•˜์—ฌ ํƒ€์ž„๋ผ์ธ์— ๋“œ๋กญํ•˜๋ฉด ๋งˆ์šฐ์Šค ํฌ์ธํ„ฐ๊ฐ€ ์ƒํ•˜์ขŒ์šฐ ์‹ญ์ž ํ™”์‚ดํ‘œ ๋ชจ์–‘์œผ๋กœ ๊ณ ์ •๋˜์–ด ๋ฒ„๋ฆฌ๋ฉฐ, ์ดํ›„ ํƒ€์ž„๋ผ์ธ์— ๋ฐฐ์น˜๋œ ํด๋ฆฝ์˜ ๊ฐ€์žฅ์ž๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ์กฐ์ž‘ํ•˜๋Š” ํŠธ๋ฆผ, ํŽ˜์ด๋“œ, ํŠธ๋žœ์ง€์…˜ ์ž‘์—…์„ ํ•˜๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ๋งค์šฐ ๋ถˆํŽธํ•ด์ง„๋‹ค. ํ•ด๊ฒฐ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์€, ๋ฉ”์ธ ์ฐฝ ์ตœํ•˜๋‹จ์˜ ์ƒํƒœ ๋ฐ” ์˜์—ญ์„ ํด๋ฆญํ•˜๋ฉด ๋งˆ์šฐ์Šค ํฌ์ธํ„ฐ๊ฐ€ ์ •์ƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋Œ์•„์˜จ๋‹ค. .jpg ํŒŒ์ผ์„ ๋ฏธ๋””์–ด ์†Œ์Šค๋กœ ์‚ฌ์šฉ ์‹œ ํด๋ฆฝ ๋ชจ๋‹ˆํ„ฐ๋‚˜ ํ”„๋กœ์ ํŠธ ๋ชจ๋‹ˆํ„ฐ์—์„œ๋Š” ์ •์ƒ์ ์œผ๋กœ ํ‘œ์‹œ๋˜๋‚˜, ๋ Œ๋”๋ง ์‹œ ํ•ด๋‹น ์†Œ์Šค๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ ๋ถ€๋ถ„์€ ๋น„์–ด ์žˆ๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ํ•ด๊ฒฐ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์€, ๋ชจ๋“  .jpg ํŒŒ์ผ์„ ์‚ฌ์ „์— .png ํŒŒ์ผ๋กœ ๋ณ€ํ™˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ํŽธ์ง‘์— ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ์ฐธ๊ณ  ๋ฌธํ—Œ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ์˜์ƒ ํŽธ์ง‘ ์†Œํ”„ํŠธ์›จ์–ด
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kdenlive
Kdenlive
Kdenlive (; acronym for KDE Non-Linear Video Editor) is a free and open-source video editing software based on the MLT Framework, KDE and Qt. The project was started by Jason Wood in 2002, and is now maintained by a small team of developers. With the release of Kdenlive 15.04.0 in 2015 it became part of the official KDE Projects suite. Kdenlive packages are freely available for Linux, FreeBSD, and Microsoft Windows. As a whole it is distributed under the GPL-3.0-or-later license, while parts of the source code are available under different licenses such as GPL-2.0-or-later and GPL-3.0-or-later. History The project was initially started by Jason Wood in 2002. The development of Kdenlive moved on from the K Desktop Environment 3 version (which wasn't originally made for MLT) to KDE Platform 4, with an almost complete rewrite. This was completed with Kdenlive 0.7, released on 12 November 2008. Kdenlive 0.9.10 released on 1 October 2014 was the last KDE 4 release. Kdenlive started to plan a move into the KDE Projects and its infrastructure in 2014. Port to KDE Frameworks 5 was finished with the release of 2015.04.0 as part of KDE Applications 5. The move to KDE is ongoing. In early 2017 the development team started working on a refactoring of the program, and by June 2017 a first preview was available. By December 2017 the refactoring became the main focus of the development team with the release of the first usable preview. Release of the refactoring version was originally planned for August 2018 in the KDE 18.08 Applications release. The refactored version of Kdenlive was released on 22 April 2019 in the KDE 19.04 Applications release. On 20 September 2022, KDE began the first fundraising drive for Kdenlive, with the funds to be used to implement major features and bring Kdenlive up to the standards of more professional video editors. By 18 October 2022, the initial goal of โ‚ฌ15,000 had been met. Features KDE's Kdenlive makes use of MLT, Frei0r effects, SoX and LADSPA libraries. Kdenlive supports all of the formats supported by FFmpeg or libav (such as QuickTime, AVI, WMV, MPEG, and Flash Video, among others), and also supports 4:3 and 16:9 aspect ratios for both PAL, NTSC and various HD standards, including HDV and AVCHD. Video can also be exported to DV devices, or written to a DVD with chapters and a simple menu. Multi-track editing with a timeline and supports an unlimited number of video and audio tracks. A built-in title editor and tools to create, move, crop and delete video clips, audio clips, text clips and image clips. Ability to add custom effects and transitions. A wide range of effects and transitions. Audio signal processing capabilities include normalization, phase and pitch shifting, limiting, volume adjustment, reverb and equalization filters as well as others. Visual effects include options for masking, blue-screen, distortions, rotations, colour tools, blurring, obscuring and others. Configurable keyboard shortcuts and interface layouts. Rendering is done using a separate non-blocking process so it can be stopped, paused and restarted. Kdenlive also provides a script called the Kdenlive Builder Wizard (KBW) that compiles the latest developer version of the software and its main dependencies from source, to allow users to try to test new features and report problems on the bug tracker. Project files are stored in XML format. An archiving feature allows exporting a project among all assets into a single folder or compressed archive. Built-in audio mixer See also List of video editing software Comparison of video editing software References External links Free and open-source video-editing software KDE Applications Software that uses FFmpeg Video editing software for Linux Video editing software for Windows Video software that uses Qt
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%9E%94%EB%93%9C%EB%9D%BC%20%EB%A1%9C%EC%A6%88
์ž”๋“œ๋ผ ๋กœ์ฆˆ
์ž”๋“œ๋ผ ๋กœ์ฆˆ(Dame Zandra Lindsey Rhodes, 1940๋…„ 9์›” 19์ผ~)๋Š” ์˜๊ตญ์ธ ํŒจ์…˜ ๋””์ž์ด๋„ˆ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ฐ€์กฑ ๋ฐฐ๊ฒฝ๊ณผ ์–ด๋ฆฐ ์‹œ์ ˆ ์ž”๋“œ๋ผ ๋กœ์ฆˆ๋Š” ์˜๊ตญ ์ผ„ํŠธ์ฃผ ์ฑ„ํ…€์—์„œ ํƒœ์–ด๋‚ฌ๊ณ , ๋‹น์‹œ ํŒŒ๋ฆฌ์˜ ํŒจ์…˜ ์—…๊ณ„์—์„œ ์ผํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๋ฉ”๋“œ์›จ์ด ์˜ˆ์ˆ  ๋Œ€ํ•™์—์„œ ๊ต์‚ฌ๋กœ ์žฌ์ง ์ค‘์ด๋˜ ์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ํŒจ์…˜์„ ์ ‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ›„์— ๋ฉ”๋“œ์›จ์ด ์˜ˆ์ˆ  ๋Œ€ํ•™์„ ๊ฑฐ์ณ ๋Ÿฐ๋˜ ๋กœ์—ด ์นผ๋ฆฌ์ง€ ์˜ค๋ธŒ ์•„ํŠธ์—์„œ ์žฌํ•™ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์žฌํ•™ ์ค‘ ์ „๊ณต ๋ถ„์•ผ๋Š” ์˜ท๊ฐ ํ”„๋ฆฐํŠธ ๋””์ž์ธ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ 1966-69๋…„์— ๋กœ์ฆˆ๋Š” ๋‹น์‹œ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์žฌํ•™์ค‘์ด๋˜ ์‹ค๋น„์•„ ์—์ดํŠผ(Sylvia Ayton)๊ณผ ํ’€๋Ÿผ ๋กœ๋“œ ํด๋กœ์ฆˆ ์ƒต(Fulham Road Clothes Shop)์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์ด๋ฆ„์˜ ๋ถ€ํ‹ฐํฌ ๊ฐ€๊ฒŒ๋ฅผ ์—ด์—ˆ๊ณ , ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์„œ ์—์ดํŠผ์ด ์˜๋ฅ˜ ๋””์ž์ธ์„, ๋กœ์ฆˆ๋Š” ์˜๋ฅ˜ ์ œ์ž‘์— ์“ฐ์ผ ์˜ท๊ฐ ๋””์ž์ธ์„ ๋‹ด๋‹นํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฒซ ์ฝœ๋ ‰์…˜์€ ํ—๊ฒ๊ณ  ๋กœ๋งจํ‹ฑํ•œ ์˜์ƒ์œผ๋กœ ๊พธ๋ ธ๋‹ค. 1969๋…„์— ๋กœ์ฆˆ์™€ ์—์ดํŠผ์€ ๊ฐ์ž์˜ ๊ธธ์„ ๊ฑท๊ธฐ๋กœ ๊ฒฐ์ •, ๋กœ์ฆˆ๋Š” ๋Ÿฐ๋˜ ์„œ๋ถ€ ํŒจ๋”ฉํ„ด ๊ทผ์ฒ˜์— ์ŠคํŠœ๋””์˜ค๋ฅผ ์ฐจ๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ์˜ ์ƒํ™œ ๋ฐฉ์‹๋„ ๋””์ž์ธ ๋งŒํผ์ด๋‚˜ ๊ทน์ ์ด๊ณ  ํ™”๋ คํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์™ธํ–ฅ์ ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋จธ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ํ˜•๊ด‘ ์—ฐ๋‘์ƒ‰์œผ๋กœ ์—ผ์ƒ‰ํ•˜๊ณ (ํ›„์— ํ•‘ํฌ์ƒ‰์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐ”๊พธ๊ณ , ๊ฐ€๋” ๋นจ๊ฐ„์ƒ‰์ด๋‚˜ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์ƒ‰์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐ”๊พธ๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค) ์–ผ๊ตด์—๋Š” ๊ทน์ ์ธ ํ™”์žฅ์„, ๋ชฉ, ๊ท€์™€ ํŒ”์—๋Š” ๋Œ€๋‹ดํ•œ ์˜ˆ์ˆ  ์žฅ์‹ ๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ๊ฑด ๊ทธ๋Š” ๊ตญ์ œ ํŒจ์…˜๊ณ„์— ๊ฐ•ํ•œ ์ธ์ƒ์„ ๋‚จ๊ฒผ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” 1970๋…„๋Œ€์— ๋Ÿฐ๋˜์ด ์„ธ๊ณ„ ํŒจ์…˜๊ณ„์˜ ์ค‘์‹ฌ์ง€๋กœ ์ž๋ฆฌ๋งค๊น€ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ํฐ ์—ญํ• ์„ ํ•œ ์˜๊ตญ๊ณ„ ๋””์ž์ด๋„ˆ๋“ค ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋กœ์ฆˆ์˜ ๋””์ž์ธ์€ ๋ถ„๋ช…ํ•˜๊ณ  ์ฐฝ์˜์ ์ด๋ฉฐ, ๊ทน์ ์ด์ง€๋งŒ ์šฐ์•„ํ•˜๊ณ , ๋Œ€๋‹ดํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์—ฌ์„ฑ์ ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ํ‰์„ ๋ฐ›๋Š”๋‹ค. ๋กœ์ฆˆ๋Š” ์œ ๊ธฐ์ ์ธ ์žฌ๋ฃŒ์™€ ์ž์—ฐ์—์„œ ์˜๊ฐ์„ ๋ฐ›๋Š”๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ์˜ ํ˜์‹ ์ ์ด๊ณ  ๋‹ค์ฑ„๋กœ์šด ํ”„๋ฆฐํŠธ๋Š” ์—ฌํ–‰์—์„œ ์ธ์ƒ์„ ๋ฐ›๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด ์šฐํฌ๋ผ์ด๋‚˜์—์„œ๋Š” ์…ฐ๋ธŒ๋Ÿฐ ์ŠคํŠธ๋ผ์ดํ”„(chevron stripe)๋ฅผ, ๋ถ๋ฏธ์—์„œ๋Š” ์ธ๋””์–ธ ๊ณต์˜ˆํ’ˆ์˜ ๋ฌด๋Šฌ๋ฅผ, ์ผ๋ณธ์—์„œ๋Š” ๊ฝƒ, ์„œ์˜ˆ๋‚˜ ์กฐ๊ฐœ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์•„๋“ค์˜€๋‹ค. ์˜๋ฅ˜ ์ œ์ž‘์— ์žˆ์–ด์„œ์˜ ํŠน์ง•์€ ๋ฐ”๊นฅ์œผ๋กœ ๋“œ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜๊ฒŒ ๋’ค์ง‘์–ด์ง„ ์†”๊ธฐ๋ผ๋“ ์ง€, ๋ณด์„์œผ๋กœ ์žฅ์‹๋œ ์•ˆ์ „ํ•€์ด๋‚˜, ํŽ‘ํฌ ํ’์˜ ์ฐข๊น€ ๋“ฑ์„ ๋“ค ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ฒ ๋‹ค. ๋กœ์ฆˆ๋Š” 1977๋…„์— '๊ฐœ๋…์  ์‹œํฌ(Conceptual Chic)', ์ฆ‰ ์ฃผ๋ฅ˜์— ๋ฐ˜ํ•˜๋Š” ํŽ‘ํฌ ํ•ด์„์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์ด๋ฆ„์„ ์•Œ๋ ธ๋‹ค. ๋ฒ ๋ฅด์‚ฌ์ฒด๋ณด๋‹ค 10๋…„ ์•ž์„œ ๊ทธ๋Š” ๊ตฌ๋ฉ์ด ๋šซ๋ฆฌ๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ๊ตฌ์Šฌ ์žฅ์‹์ด ๋“ค์–ด๊ฐ„ ์•ˆ์ „ํ•€์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•ด ๋“œ๋ ˆ์Šค๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋“ค์—ˆ๊ณ , ์ด๋Š” ์ผ์ข…์˜ ์ž์ˆ˜์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ, ๋Š์Šจํ•œ ๋ชจ์–‘์ด ๊ทธ๋ ค์ง„ ์‹คํฌ ์ €์ง€, ํ˜น์€ ์ƒˆ๋กœ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ๋œ ์šธํŠธ๋ผ์Šค์›จ์ด๋“œ ์˜ท๊ฐ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ์›จ์ผ์ฆˆ ๊ณต์ž‘ ๋ถ€์ธ ๋‹ค์ด์• ๋‚˜๋ฅผ ํฌํ•จ, ์™•์กฑ ๋ฐ ์œ ๋ช…์ธ์„ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋””์ž์ธ์„ ๊ณ„์† ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ž˜ ์•Œ๋ ค์ง„ ์ฝ”์Šค์ธ” ๋””์ž์ธ ์ค‘์—๋Š” ๋” ์ŠคํŠธ๋Ÿฌ์ธ ์˜ ๋ฃจํฌ ์Šคํ•„๋Ÿฌ(Luke Spiller), ํ€ธ์˜ ํ”„๋ ˆ๋”” ๋จธํ๋ฆฌ์™€ ๋ธŒ๋ผ์ด์–ธ ๋ฉ”์ด ๋“ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฏธ๊ตญ, ์˜๊ตญ, ํ˜ธ์ฃผ์—์„œ ์ž˜ ์•Œ๋ ค์กŒ๋‹ค. 1995๋…„์—๋Š” ์บ˜๋ฆฌํฌ๋‹ˆ์•„์— ์‹ค๋‚ด ๋””์ž์ธ ์‚ฌ์—…์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ์ŠคํŠœ๋””์˜ค๋ฅผ ์ƒˆ๋กœ ์—ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2001๋…„์—๋Š” ์ƒŒ๋””์—๊ณ  ์˜คํŽ˜๋ผ์—์„œ ์ฒซ ์˜คํŽ˜๋ผ ๊ณต์—ฐ์ด์—ˆ๋˜ "๋งˆ์ˆ ํ”ผ๋ฆฌ"๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ์ฝ”์Šค์ธ” ๋””์ž์ธ์„ ์˜๋ขฐํ–ˆ๊ณ , ํ›„์—๋„ ๊ทธ๋Š” ์ƒŒ๋””์—๊ณ  ์˜คํŽ˜๋ผ์™€์˜ ๊ด€๊ณ„๋ฅผ ์ง€์†ํ•˜์—ฌ ์กฐ๋ฅด์ฃผ ๋น„์ œ์˜ "์ง„์ฃผ์กฐ๊ฐœ์žก์ด"๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋ฌด๋Œ€์™€ ์ฝ”์Šค์ธ”์„ ๋””์ž์ธํ•˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ๊ทธ๋Š” ํœด์Šคํ„ด ๊ทธ๋žœ๋“œ ์˜คํŽ˜๋ผ ๋ฐ ์ž‰๊ธ€๋ฆฌ์‹œ ๋‚ด์…”๋„ ์˜คํŽ˜๋ผ๊ฐ€ ๊ณต์—ฐํ•œ ์ฃผ์„ธํŽ˜ ๋ฒ ๋ฅด๋””์˜ "์•„์ด๋‹ค"์˜ ๋””์ž์ธ๋„ ๋งก์•˜๋‹ค. ๋กœ์ฆˆ๋Š” ๋Ÿฐ๋˜์˜ ํŒจ์…˜ ์ง๋ฌผ ๋ฐ•๋ฌผ๊ด€(Fashion and Textile Museum)์„ 2003๋…„ 5์›”์— ์„ค๋ฆฝํ–ˆ๊ณ , ๊ฐœ๊ด€์‹์—๋Š” ์ผ„ํŠธ ๊ณต์ž ๋งˆ์ดํด์ด ์ฐธ์„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2006๋…„ 9์›” 22์ผ์— ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋ณธ์ธ ์—ญํ• ๋กœ BBC ๋ผ๋””์˜ค 4 ์ฑ„๋„์—์„œ ๋ฐฉ์†กํ•œ ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋” ์•„์ฒ˜์Šค(The Archers)์— ๋“ฑ์žฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2007๋…„์—๋Š” ํ—ค๋ฆฌ์—‡ ์™€ํŠธ ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต์—์„œ ๋ช…์˜ˆ ๋ฐ•์‚ฌ ํ•™์œ„๋ฅผ ์ˆ˜์—ฌ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. BBC ํ…”๋ ˆ๋น„์ „์—์„œ ๋ฐฉ์˜ํ•œ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ ์•ฑ์†”๋ฃจํ‹€๋ฆฌ ํŒจ๋ทธ๋Ÿฌ์Šค(Absolutely Fabulous) 2๊ธฐ์—์„œ ๋ณธ์ธ ์—ญํ• ๋กœ ํ•œ ํšŒ์— ๋“ฑ์žฅํ•˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ํ”„๋กœ์ ํŠธ ์บฃ์›Œํฌ(Project Catwalk) ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ์—์„œ 3๊ธฐ 1ํ™” ๋ฐฉ์˜๋ถ„์— ์ดˆ๋Œ€ ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ์œ„์›์œผ๋กœ ์ฐธ๊ฐ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2009๋…„ 11์›”์— ๊ทธ๋Š” ์˜๊ตญ ์‹ ์„ค ๋Œ€ํ•™์ด๊ณ  ๋ฏธ์ˆ  ๋ฐ ๋””์ž์ธ ๊ด€๋ จ ๋Œ€ํ•™์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ๋‘๋ฒˆ์งธ์ธ ์œ ๋‹ˆ๋ฒ„์‹œํ‹ฐ ํฌ ๋” ํฌ๋ฆฌ์—์ดํ‹ฐ๋ธŒ ์•„์ธ (University of the Creative Arts)์˜ ์ด์žฅ ์ž„๋ช…์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ณต์‹ ์ž„๋ช…์‹์€ 2010๋…„ 6์›”์— ํ™”์ดํŠธํ™€ ๋ฑ…ํ‚ท ํ•˜์šฐ์Šค์—์„œ ์—ด๋ ธ์œผ๋ฉฐ ํ–‰์‚ฌ ์ค‘ ๋กœ์ฆˆ๊ฐ€ ์žฌํ•™ํ–ˆ๋˜ ์ผ„ํŠธ, ๋ฉ”๋“œ์›จ์ด์˜ ๋กœ์ฒด์Šคํ„ฐ ์บ ํผ์Šค์—์„œ ํŒจ์…˜ ๋””์ž์ธ ๋ฐ ํŒจ์…˜ ํ˜์‹  ๊ฒฝ์˜ ํ•™๊ณผ ์กธ์—…์ƒ, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์„œ๋ฆฌ ์—ก์†œ ์บ ํผ์Šค์˜ ํŒจ์…˜ํ•™๊ณผ ์กธ์—…์ƒ ์ž‘ํ’ˆ๋“ค ์ค‘ ์šฐ์ˆ˜ํ•œ ๋””์ž์ธ์„ ์„ ๋ณ„ํ•œ ํŒจ์…˜์‡ผ๋ฅผ ์—ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2009๋…„์— ์˜๊ตญ ์˜๋ฅ˜ ์†Œ๋งค ์ฒด์ธ์ธ ๋ง‰์Šค ์•ค ์ŠคํŽœ์„œ์Šค์—์„œ ๋กœ์ฆˆ๊ฐ€ ์ œ์ž‘ํ•œ "์ž”๋“œ๋ผ ๋กœ์ฆˆ ์ฝœ๋ ‰์…˜"์„ ๋Œ€ํ˜• ์ ํฌ์— ํ•œํ•ด ์„ ๋ณด์˜€๋‹ค. ๋กœ์ฆˆ์˜ ์žฅ์‹ ๊ตฌ ์ฝœ๋ ‰์…˜์—๋Š” ์˜ค๋ฆฌ์—”ํƒˆ ์œ„์Šคํผ ์ฝœ๋ ‰์…˜, ํŽ‘ํฌ ์‹œํฌ ์ฝœ๋ ‰์…˜, ๋Ÿฌ๋ธ”๋ฆฌ ๋ฆด๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ ์ฝœ๋ ‰์…˜, ์‹œ๊ทธ๋„ˆ์ณ ์ฝœ๋ ‰์…˜, ๋งจํ•˜ํƒ„ ๋ ˆ์ด๋”” ์ฝœ๋ ‰์…˜ ๋“ฑ 5๊ฐœ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. 2011๋…„ 8์›”์—๋Š” ์•„๋ธ ๋งˆ๋ฆฌ ๋Ÿฐ๋˜(Adele Marie London)๊ณผ ํ•ฉ์ž‘ํ•˜์—ฌ "์ž”๋“œ๋ผ ๋กœ์ฆˆ ๋กœ ์•„๋ธ ๋งˆ๋ฆฌ"๋ผ๋Š” ์žฅ์‹ ๊ตฌ ์ฝœ๋ ‰์…˜์„ ๋‚ด ๋†“์•˜๋‹ค. ์ด ์ฝœ๋ ‰์…˜์€ ์ด์ œ ์œ ๋ช…ํ•ด์ง„ ๋กœ์ฆˆ์˜ ์ดˆ์ฐฝ๊ธฐ ์˜ท๊ฐ์„ ์žฅ์‹ ๊ตฌ์˜ ํ˜•์‹์œผ๋กœ ์žฌํ•ด์„ํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2010๋…„์—๋Š” ๋ธ”๋ฃจํ”„๋ฆฐํŠธ(Bluprint)์™€ ๋ผ์ด์„ผ์Šค ๊ณ„์•ฝ ํ•˜์— ํ•ธ๋“œ๋ฐฑ ์ฝœ๋ ‰์…˜์„ ์ถœ์‹œํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์นจ๊ตฌ ๋ฐ ์•ผ์™ธํ™œ๋™์šฉ ์˜๋ฅ˜ ๋ฐฉ๋ฉด์œผ๋กœ๋„ ํ•ฉ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2013๋…„ 3์›” 26์ผ์—๋Š” ๊ฐœ์ธ ์†Œ์žฅ์ค‘์ด๋˜ ์œ ๋ช… ์˜์ƒ 500๊ฐœ๋ฅผ ๋””์ง€ํ„ธ ์Šคํ„ฐ๋”” ์ฝœ๋ ‰์…˜์œผ๋กœ ์ œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์— ์Šค์ผ€์น˜ ๋ฐ ๋ฏธ๊ณต๊ฐœ ์ธํ„ฐ๋ทฐ๋‚˜ ์ŠคํŠœ๋””์˜ค ๋‚ด ํ™œ๋™ ๋“ฑ๋„ ํฌํ•จ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ž”๋“œ๋ผ ๋กœ์ฆˆ ๋””์ง€ํ„ธ ์Šคํ„ฐ๋”” ์ฝœ๋ ‰์…˜์€ ์œ ๋‹ˆ๋ฒ„์‹œํ‹ฐ ํฌ ๋” ํฌ๋ฆฌ์—์ดํ‹ฐ๋ธŒ ์•„์ธ  ์ฃผ๊ด€, ์ง€์Šคํฌ(Jisc) ํ˜‘์ฐฌ์œผ๋กœ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์ ธ ์ „ ์„ธ๊ณ„์˜ ๋””์ž์ธ ํ•™์ƒ๋“ค์ด ์ฐธ๊ณ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ฒŒ๋” ๋งŒ๋“ค์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ž‘์œ„ ๋กœ์ฆˆ๋Š” ์˜๊ตญ ํŒจ์…˜ ๋ฐ ์˜ท๊ฐ์— ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ•œ ๊ณตํ—Œ์„ ๋ฐ”ํƒ•์œผ๋กœ 1997๋…„๊ณผ 2014๋…„์— ๋Œ€์˜์ œ๊ตญํ›ˆ์žฅ(CBE, DBE)์„ ์ˆ˜์—ฌ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ธฐํƒ€ ์ž”๋“œ๋ผ ๋กœ์ฆˆ๋Š” 1975๋…„ ์ด๋ž˜๋กœ ์›Œ๋„ˆ ๋ธŒ๋ผ๋”์Šค ์ „ ํšŒ์žฅ ์‚ด๋ผ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋„จ(Salah Hassanein)๊ณผ ๊ด€๊ณ„๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. 2009๋…„ 6์›” 30์ผ์— ๊ทธ๋Š” ์ƒŒ๋””์—๊ณ ์˜ ๋ผ ์กธ๋ผ ๋ถ€๊ทผ์˜ ์—์ด์Šค ํ•˜๋“œ์›จ์–ด ๊ฐ€๊ฒŒ๋ฅผ ์ฐจ๋Ÿ‰์œผ๋กœ ๋“ค์ด๋ฐ›์•˜๊ณ  ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ ํ•œ 42์„ธ ์—ฌ์„ฑ์ด ๋ถ€์ƒ์„ ์ž…์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2010๋…„์— ๊ทธ๋Š” ๋‹น์‹œ ์ƒˆ๋กœ ์ถœ๋ฒ”ํ•œ ๋ฐ์ด๋น„๋“œ ์บ๋จธ๋Ÿฐ ์ •๋ถ€์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์šฐํ˜ธ์ ์ธ ์˜๊ฒฌ์„ ํ‘œ์ถœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1940๋…„ ์ถœ์ƒ ์˜๊ตญ์˜ ๋””์ž์ด๋„ˆ ์‚ด์•„์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zandra%20Rhodes
Zandra Rhodes
Dame Zandra Lindsey Rhodes, (born 19 September 1940), is an English fashion and textile designer. Her early education in fashion set the foundation for a career in the industry creating textile prints. Rhodes has designed garments for Diana, Princess of Wales and numerous celebrities such as rock stars Freddie Mercury and Marc Bolan. She has also designed textiles for interiors, featuring her prints on furniture and homewares. In 2003 Rhodes founded the Fashion and Textile Museum in London. Over her fifty year career Rhodes has won numerous awards recognizing contribution within the fashion industry, including Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement in the Performing Arts โ€“ Costume Design 1979, Designer of The Year in 1972 and the Walpole British Luxury Legend Award 2019. A Rhodes dress featured on a commemorative UK postage stamp issued by Royal Mail in 2012 celebrating Great British Fashion. Early life and education Rhodes was born 19 September 1940, in Chatham, Kent, England. Her mother was a fitter at the House of Worth in Paris and later became a professor at Medway College of Art, now the University for the Creative Arts. Her father was in the air force in Egypt and later became a lorry driver. Three years after Rhodes was born, her mother gave birth to her sister Beverley Rhodes. Rhodes' mother having an occupational background in fashion, the industry was instilled in her as an adolescent; she has described her mother as one of her greatest influences, to whom she owes her career. Rhodes first studied at Medway College of Art; her major area of study was printed textile design in England. Pop artist Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol, and textile designer Emilio Pucci were a few of Zandra Rhodes' early influences. Textile design instructor Barbara Brown inspired her interest in textile designs during the course of her studies. Rhodes later furthered her education under a scholarship at Royal College of Art. She strayed away from the traditional patterns many designers were producing to create furniture. Rhodes utilised her skill towards designing patterns to create garments. In 1964, Zandra Rhodes graduated with a degree in home furnishing textile design. Career Rhodes' early textile fashion designs were considered outrageous by the traditional British manufacturers, which made it hard to find work. In 1968 Rhodes started a business with fashion designer Sylvia Ayton. The two designers opened a boutique called Fulham Road Clothes Shop. The business allowed Rhodes to create her textile designs onto garments designed by Sylvia Ayton. She produced her first collection showing loose, romantic garments. In 1969, Rhodes and Ayton went their separate ways, with Rhodes establishing her own studio in Paddington in West London. As a freelancer she released her first solo collection. The collection of garments received recognition from both the British and American market. Marit Allen, editor of American Vogue at the time featured pieces of Rhodesโ€™s collection in an issue. Receiving recognition by Marit Allen persuaded high end retailers like Henri Bendel, Fortnum and Mason, Neiman Marcus, and Saks to purchase her collection. Rhodes' own lifestyle proved to be as dramatic, glamorous and extrovert as her designs. With her hair a vivid shade of bright green (later changed to pink, and sometimes red or other colours), her face painted with theatrical makeup and audacious art jewellery swinging from her neck, ears and arms, she stamped her identity on the international world of fashion. Rhodes was one of the new wave of British designers who put London at the forefront of the international fashion scene in the 1970s. Her designs are considered clear, creative statements; dramatic but graceful; audacious but feminine. Rhodes' inspiration has been from organic material and nature. Her unconventional and colourful prints were often inspired by travel; chevron stripes from Ukraine and the symbols of the North American Indian, Japanese flowers, calligraphy and shells. Her approach to the construction of garments can be seen in her use of reversed exposed seams and in her use of jewelled safety pins and tears during the punk era. Rhodes created handmade evening wear using her unique feminine textiles. Each garment created incorporates different types of feminine style into place. She made her biggest splash in 1977 with the establishment take on punk, which she called Conceptual Chic. She created dresses with holes and beaded safety pins โ€“ 10 years before Versace โ€“ to form a sort of embroidery, mixed with loosely drawn figures screen-printed on silk jersey, or on the newly developed Ultra suede fabric. When she creates her garments a lot of thought goes into the construction. Simplistic shapes help mould the foundation of Rhodes's garments. The foundation of the shapes, functions as an enhancer that maximizes the effects of her prints. She achieves this look by using techniques including layering, smocking, and shirring. All of Zandra Rhodes's garments are constructed around the design of her distinct prints, despite being structured around the formation of the dress. Rhodes designed for Diana, Princess of Wales, and continues to design for royalty and celebrities. She has notably designed costumes for rock musicians, glam rock pioneer Marc Bolan of T. Rex, and Freddie Mercury and Brian May of Queen. Multidisciplinary design Rhodes has branched out from fashion, bringing her textiles into other design disciplines. In 1976 Rhodes designed her first interior home dรฉcor collection, licensed under Wamsutta. The collection featured household linens, glassware, cushions, throws, and rugs. Zandra Rhodes also used her signature prints to create, ties, lingerie, and a fragrance. In 1995 she established a studio in California to develop an interior design business. The San Diego Opera commissioned her to design the costumes for their production of Mozart's The Magic Flute in 2001. In 2004 she designed the set and costumes for the San Diego Opera performance of Bizet's Les pรชcheurs de perles. She designed for Verdi's Aida at the Houston Grand Opera and English National Opera. In 2002 Rhodes designed a poster for Transport for London showing the River Thames as a woman wearing London landmarks as jewelry. Rhodes is the founder of the Fashion and Textile Museum in London, which opened in May 2003. The four-million-dollar project took approximately seven years for architect Ricardo Legorreta to build. The museum provides exhibitions and educational programs for fashion students. Contained in the museum is a library and lecture room that will help immerse people into the ways fashion has impacted society throughout the years. In the first exhibit titled "My Favourite Dress" there are dresses from over seventy fashion designers including Oscar de la Renta, Donna Karan, Valentino, and Giorgio Armani. Zandra Rhodes personally asked each designer to choose one of their favourite dresses for the exhibit. It was important for Rhodes to incorporate other designers into the exhibit so the museum provided a nuance of design besides from her own, although the museum withholds a variety of designers' garments. Rhodes included three thousand of her own original garments, and her sketch books and silk screens. The Fashion and Textile Museum produces shows a year, with changing exhibits. On 22 September 2006 she appeared as herself on the long-running BBC Radio 4 soap opera The Archers. Rhodes received an Honorary Doctorate from Heriot-Watt University in 2007. She appeared, as herself, in an episode of Absolutely Fabulous during the BBC show's second season. Rhodes was a Guest Judge for the first episode of the third season of Project Catwalk. In November 2010, Rhodes was appointed Chancellor of the University for the Creative Arts, one of the UK's newest universities, and only the second to focus specifically on art and design. An official installation ceremony was held in June 2010 in the Banquet House, Whitehall, accompanied by a fashion show. Marks and Spencers introduced the upmarket Zandra Rhodes collection, modelled and made by Rhodes, into the bigger stores by late 2009. She has her own collection of jewelry. The Zandra Rhodes jewelry includes five separate collections, which are Oriental Whisper collection, Punk Chic Collection, Lovely Lilies collection, Signature collection and Manhattan Lady Collection. A more recent jewellery collection created in collaboration with Adele Marie London, called Zandra Rhodes for Adele Marie, launched in August 2011. This collection features iconic pieces of Rhodes' early textiles work remade as jewellery. Rhodes launched a handbag range made under licence by Blueprint in 2010 and has also collaborated to produce a bed linen range and a new improved outdoor clothing range. On 26 March 2013, Rhodes launched a Digital Study Collection of 500 of her iconic garments from her private archive, as well as drawings and behind-the-scenes interviews and tutorials in her studio. The Zandra Rhodes Digital Study Collection was developed through a project led by the University for the Creative Arts and funded by Jisc. Making key garments she designed available for student study worldwide. In September 2021, Rhodes launched a 26-piece homeware collection with IKEA of Sweden, available globally in-stores and online. Honours and awards Rhodes was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 1997 and Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) in the 2014 Birthday Honours for services to British fashion and textiles, having been invested at Buckingham Palace by Princess Anne. 1972 Designer of the Year, English Trade Fashion, Royal Designer Industry, Royal Society of Arts 1978 Fellow of the Society of Industrial Arts, Moore College of Art Award, Philadelphia 1979 Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement in the Performing Arts Costume Design 1983 British Designer, Clothing and Export Council and National Economic Development Committee 1985 Alpha award for Best Show of the Year, Saks Fifth Avenue, New Orleans 1986-Women of Distinction Award, Northwood Institute, Dallas 1990 Number One Textile Designer, Observer Magazine 1995 Hall of Fame Award, British Fashion Council 1997 Golden Hanger award for lifetime achievement, Fashion Careers of California College, San Diego 1998 Leading Woman Entrepreneur of the World by the Star Group U.S.A., Honor award from the National Terrazzo and Mosaic Association Honor for Del Mar Terrace 2006 Montblanc de la Culture Arts Patronage Award 2019 Walpole British Luxury Legend Award Personal life Rhodes describes former president of Warner Brothers Salah Hassanein (1921-2019) as having been her long-standing partner, and the greatest love of her life, until his death in 2019. She was arrested for growing cannabis in 1986. On 30 June 2009, Rhodes crashed her car into a hardware store in La Jolla, California, injuring a woman. Notes Morgan, Ann Lee (ed.) (1984) "Rhodes, Zandra (1940โ€“)" Contemporary Designers First edition, Gale Research, Detroit; O'Hara, Georgina (1986) "Rhodes, Zandra (1940โ€“)" The Encyclopaedia of Fashion Harry N. Abrams, New York; Parry, Melanie (ed.) (1997) "Rhodes, Zandra (1940โ€“)" Chambers Biographical Dictionary Sixth edition, Larousse Kingfisher Chambers, New York; Crystal, David (ed.) (1998) "Rhodes, Zandra (1940โ€“)" The Cambridge Biographical Encyclopedia Second edition, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England; San Diego Opera News Release: The Art of Zandra Rhodes Zandra Rhodes: A Lifelong Love Affair with Textiles See also List of Marks & Spencer brands fashion houses Per Una punk era References Sources Zandra Rhodes profile, make-me-beautiful.co.uk Interview, vogue.co.uk Profile , University for the Creative Arts website Profile, bbc.co.uk External links 1940 births British Jews Living people English fashion designers English designers Alumni of the University for the Creative Arts Alumni of the Royal College of Art People from Chatham, Kent Dames Commander of the Order of the British Empire People associated with the University for the Creative Arts Conservative Party (UK) people British women fashion designers
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EB%B2%84%EB%8B%9D%EC%8D%AC%20%EA%B2%8C%EC%9D%B4%ED%8A%B8
๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ ๊ฒŒ์ดํŠธ
๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ ๊ฒŒ์ดํŠธ๋Š” ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ์„œ์šธํŠน๋ณ„์‹œ ๊ฐ•๋‚จ๊ตฌ ๋ด‰์€์‚ฌ๋กœ 120์— ์œ„์น˜ํ•ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋˜ ๋ฅด ๋ฉ”๋ฅด๋””์•™ ์„œ์šธ ํ˜ธํ…”์˜ ๋‚˜์ดํŠธํด๋Ÿฝ "๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ"์—์„œ ๋ฒŒ์–ด์ง„ ํญํ–‰ ๋ฐ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ ์œ ์ฐฉยท๋งˆ์•ฝยท์„ฑ๋ฒ”์ฃ„ยท์กฐ์„ธ ํšŒํ”ผยท๋ถˆ๋ฒ• ์ดฌ์˜๋ฌผ ๊ณต์œ  ํ˜์˜ ๋“ฑ์„ ์•„์šฐ๋ฅด๋Š” ๋Œ€ํ˜• ๋ฒ”์ฃ„ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์ด๋‹ค. ๋ฅด ๋ฉ”๋ฅด๋””์•™ ์„œ์šธ์— ์ž…์ฃผํ•ด ์žˆ๋˜ ํด๋Ÿฝ "๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ"์—์„œ ๊น€์ƒ๊ต๊ฐ€ ํญํ–‰์„ ๋‹นํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์€ ์˜คํžˆ๋ ค ๊น€์ƒ๊ต๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€ํ•ด์ž๋กœ ์ฒดํฌํ•˜๊ณ  ํญํ–‰๊นŒ์ง€ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊น€์ƒ๊ต๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ด ํด๋Ÿฝ ์ธก์„ ์˜นํ˜ธํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค๊ณ  ํญ๋กœํ•˜๊ณ , ์ด๋ฅผ ๊ณ„๊ธฐ๋กœ ํด๋Ÿฝ ๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จ๋œ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์˜ํ˜น์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์–ธ๋ก  ๋“ฑ์— ์ œ๋ณด๊ฐ€ ์ด๋ค„์ง€๋ฉด์„œ ๋“œ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ์˜ ์ง€๋ถ„ 42%๋Š” ๋ฅด ๋ฉ”๋ฅด๋””์•™ ์„œ์šธ์„ ์†Œ์œ ํ•œ ์ „์›์‚ฐ์—…์˜ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ ์ตœ ๋ชจ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๊ทธ๋Š” ์„œ์šธ๊ฐ•๋‚จ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ๋ฐœ์ „์œ„์›์œผ๋กœ ํ™œ๋™ํ•ด ์™”๋‹ค. ์ „๊ฐœ ํญํ–‰ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด ๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ์—์„œ ๊น€์ƒ๊ต๊ฐ€ ๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ ์ง์›์—๊ฒŒ ํญํ–‰์„ ๋‹นํ–ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์€ ์˜คํžˆ๋ ค ๊น€์ƒ๊ต๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€ํ•ด์ž๋กœ ์ฒดํฌํ•˜๊ณ  ํญํ–‰๊นŒ์ง€ ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ์ธ๊ถŒ ๋ฐ ๊ฑด๊ฐ•๊ถŒ์„ ์œ ๋ฆฐํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊น€์ƒ๊ต๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ด ํด๋Ÿฝ ์ธก์„ ์˜นํ˜ธํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค๊ณ  ํญ๋กœํ•˜๊ณ , ์ด๋ฅผ ๊ณ„๊ธฐ๋กœ ํด๋Ÿฝ ๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จ๋œ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์˜ํ˜น์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์–ธ๋ก  ๋“ฑ์— ์ œ๋ณด๊ฐ€ ์ด๋ค„์ง€๋ฉด์„œ ๋“œ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊น€์ƒ๊ต๋ฅผ ํญํ–‰ํ•œ ์ตœ์ดˆ ํญํ–‰์ž๋Š” ์ •ํ™•ํžˆ ๋ˆ„๊ตฐ์ง€ ๋ฐํ˜€์ง€์ง€ ์•Š์•˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฐ๋ฐ ์˜ค์˜ํ›ˆ ์˜์›์€ ๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ ๊ฒŒ์ดํŠธ, YG ์—”ํ„ฐํ…Œ์ธ๋จผํŠธ, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๋ฐ•๊ทผํ˜œ์ •๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ์—ฐ๊ฒฐ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋Œ€์ •๋ถ€์งˆ๋ฌธ์—์„œ ๊ด€๊ณ„๋„๋ฅผ ์ œ์‹œํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์ตœ์ดˆ ํญํ–‰์ž๋Š” ์ตœ์ˆœ์‹ค์˜ ์กฐ์นด ์„œํ˜„๋•์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ์‹ค์ œ๋กœ๋Š” ํด๋ŸฝVIP ๋‚˜์‚ฌํŒธ์˜ ์ตœ๋ชจ์”จ์™€ ์‹œ๋น„๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์—ˆ๊ณ  ํด๋Ÿฝ์ข…์—…์› ์žฅ๋ชจ์”จ๊ฐ€ ์ตœ์ดˆํญํ–‰์ž๋กœ ๋ฐํ˜€์กŒ๋‹ค. ์ด ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์€ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์œ ์ฐฉ, ์ฒญ์™€๋Œ€ ๋น„ํ˜ธ, ์„ฑ์ ‘๋Œ€, ๋ชฐ์นด๊ณต์œ , ์‚ฌ๋ชจํŽ€๋“œ ๋“ฑ ๋ณต์žกํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์–ฝํžˆ๋ฉฐ ์„ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์ฃผ๋ชฉ์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ํด๋Ÿฝ๋‚ด์— ๋งˆ์•ฝํŒ๋งค์ฑ…์ด ํ™œ๋™ํ•˜๋Š” ๋“ฑ ๋ฐํ˜€์•ผํ•  ์‚ฌ์•ˆ๋“ค์ด ๋งŽ์•˜์Œ์—๋„ ์„์—ฐ์น˜์•Š๊ฒŒ ์ข…๊ฒฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋งˆ์•ฝ์ด ํ™œ๊ฐœ์น˜๊ธฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ•˜๋Š” ์‹œ์ ์— ๊ฒ€์ฐฐ์˜ ๋งˆ์•ฝ์ˆ˜์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ์œ„์ถ•๋˜๋Š” ๊ณผ์ •์€ ์กฐ์ง์ถ•์†Œ์™€ ๊ถŒํ•œ์ถ•์†Œ๋กœ ๋‚˜๋‰œ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ•์ƒ๊ธฐ ๋ฒ•๋ฌด๋ถ€ ์žฅ๊ด€ ์‹œ์ ˆ์ธ 2018๋…„ 7์›” ๋Œ€๊ฒ€ ๊ฐ•๋ ฅ๋ถ€๋Š” ๋Œ€๊ฒ€ ๋ฐ˜๋ถ€ํŒจ๋ถ€์™€ ํ•ฉ์ณ์กŒ๋‹ค. ์ถ”๋ฏธ์•  ์žฅ๊ด€ ์‹œ์ ˆ์ธ 2020๋…„ 9์›” ๋Œ€๊ฒ€ ๋งˆ์•ฝ๊ณผ๊ฐ€ ๋Œ€๊ฒ€ ์กฐ์ง๋ฒ”์ฃ„๊ณผ์™€ ํ†ตํ•ฉ๋๋‹ค. ๋ฐ•๋ฒ”๊ณ„ ์žฅ๊ด€ ์‹œ์ ˆ์ธ 2021๋…„ 7์›” ์ „๊ตญ 8๊ฐœ ์ง€๋ฐฉ๊ฒ€์ฐฐ์ฒญ ์ค‘ ๋Œ€๊ตฌยท์ธ์ฒœ์„ ์ œ์™ธํ•œ 6๊ณณ์—์„œ ๊ฐ•๋ ฅ๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ๋ฐ˜๋ถ€ํŒจ๋ถ€ ๋“ฑ์— ํ†ตํํ•ฉ๋๋‹ค. ์„œํ˜„๋•์€ ๊น€๋ฌด์„ฑ ์˜์›์˜ ์‚ฌ์œ„ ์ด์ƒ๊ท ๊ณผ ๋…ธ์„ฑ์ผ ๋ฏธ์ฆˆ๋ฉ”๋”” ์ด์‚ฌ์žฅ์˜ ์•„๋“ค ๋…ธ์˜ํ˜ธ์™€ SNS ์นœ๊ต๋ฅผ ๋งบ๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ํ‰์†Œ์—๋„ ํ˜ธํ™”๋กœ์šด ์‚ถ์„ ์ฆ๊ธฐ๋Š” ์ธ๋ฌผ๋กœ ์•Œ๋ ค์ ธ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์€ ๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ์˜ ์†๋‹˜ ์ตœ ๋ชจ๋ฅผ ์ตœ์ดˆ ํญํ–‰์ž๋กœ ์ถ”์ •ํ•˜๊ณ  ์กฐ์‚ฌ ์ค‘์ด๋‹ค. ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ ์œ ์ฐฉ ๊ฐ•๋‚จ์˜ ํด๋Ÿฝ ๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ๊ณผ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ ๊ฐ„ ์œ ์ฐฉ ์˜ํ˜น์„ ์ˆ˜์‚ฌ ์ค‘์ธ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ด ์ด ํด๋Ÿฝ์— ๋“ค๋ฝ๊ฑฐ๋ฆฐ ๊ฐ•๋‚จ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ ์†Œ์† ํ•œ ํ˜„์ง ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ๊ด€ ๊น€๋ชจ๋ฅผ ๋‚ด์‚ฌ ์ค‘์ธ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ํ™•์ธ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. โ€˜์œ ์ฐฉ ๊ณ ๋ฆฌโ€™๋กœ ์ง€๋ชฉ๋œ ์ „์ง ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ๊ด€์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด์„œ๋Š” ๊ตฌ์†์˜์žฅ์ด ์ฒญ๊ตฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ˜์˜๋ฅผ ๋ถ€์ธํ•ด ์™”๋˜ ๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ ๊ณต๋™๋Œ€ํ‘œ๊ฐ€ ์ง€๋‚œํ•ด ๋ฏธ์„ฑ๋…„์ž ์ถœ์ž… ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์„ ๋ฌด๋งˆํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ „์ง ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ๊ด€์—๊ฒŒ 2์ฒœ๋งŒ ์›์„ ๊ฑด๋„ธ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ธ์ •ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์„œ์šธ์ง€๋ฐฉ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ฒญ ๊ด‘์—ญ์ˆ˜์‚ฌ๋Œ€๋Š” ์ „์ง ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ๊ด€ ๊ฐ• ๋ชจ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊ตฌ์† ์ „ ํ”ผ์˜์ž ์‹ฌ๋ฌธ(์˜์žฅ์‹ค์งˆ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ)์ด 3์›” 15์ผ ์˜ค์ „ 10์‹œ30๋ถ„ ์„œ์šธ์ค‘์•™์ง€๋ฒ•์—์„œ ์—ด๋ฆด ์˜ˆ์ •์ด๋‹ค. ์ •์ค€์˜์˜ ๋‹จ์ฒด์นดํ†ก๋ฐฉ์—์„œ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ๊ณผ ์œ ์ฐฉ์ด ์˜์‹ฌ๋˜๋Š” ๋Œ€ํ™” ๋‚ด์šฉ์ด ๊ณต๊ฐœ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ 10์›” 7์ผ ๊ฒ€์ฐฐ์€ ์œค ์ด๊ฒฝ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์•Œ์„  ์ˆ˜์žฌ์™€ ์ž๋ณธ์‹œ์žฅ๋ฒ• ์œ„๋ฐ˜ ๋“ฑ์˜ ํ˜์˜๋กœ ๊ตฌ์†์˜์žฅ์„ ์ฒญ๊ตฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค ์‚ฌ๊ฑด ํ”ผ์˜์ž ๊ฐ€์ˆ˜ ์Šน๋ฆฌ์˜ ๋‹จ์ฒด์นดํ†ก๋ฐฉ์—์„œ ์œค๊ทœ๊ทผ ์ด๊ฒฝ์ด '๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ด์žฅ'์œผ๋กœ ์–ธ๊ธ‰๋˜๋ฉด์„œ ์ฒญ์™€๋Œ€์™€์˜ ๊ด€๋ จ์„ฑ์ด ์ฃผ๋ชฉ์„ ๋ฐ›๋˜ ์ค‘์— ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ด ํŠน๋ณ„์ˆ˜์‚ฌํŒ€์„ ๊ตฌ์„ฑํ•˜๊ณ  ์œค๊ทœ๊ทผ๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จ๋œ ๋ถ€๋ถ„์„ ์ˆ˜์‚ฌํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๊น€์˜๋ž€๋ฒ• ์œ„๋ฐ˜์œผ๋กœ ์ถ•์†Œ ์ˆ˜์‚ฌํ•˜์ž 2019๋…„ 9์›” ๊ฒ€์ฐฐ์€ ์žฌ์ฐจ ์œค๊ทœ๊ทผ์„ ์ˆ˜์‚ฌํ•˜์—ฌ ์กฐ๊ตญ ์ „ ๋ฒ•๋ฌด์žฅ๊ด€์ด ๊ด€๊ณ„๋œ ์‚ฌ๋ชจํŽ€๋“œ์™€ ๊ด€๊ณ„๋œ ํšŒ์‚ฌ์˜ ๋ฏธ๊ณต๊ฐœ ์ •๋ณด๋ฅผ ์ด์šฉํ•ด ์ฃผ์‹ ํˆฌ์žํ•œ ํ˜์˜๋กœ ์œค๊ทœ๊ทผ์„ ๊ตฌ์†ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2020๋…„ 4์›” 8์ผ ๊น€์ƒ๊ต๋Š” ์—ฌ๊ถŒ ์‹ค์„ธ๋ฅผ ์ž์ฒ˜ํ•œ ๋ฐ•๋ชจ ์‹ ๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ์ฒ˜์Œ์— ๊น€์ƒ๊ต์—๊ฒŒ ์ ‘๊ทผํ•˜์—ฌ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด ํ•ด๊ฒฐ์„ ๋„์™€์ฃผ๊ฒ ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•˜๋‹ค๊ฐ€ ์ฒญ์™€๋Œ€ ๋ฏผ์ •์ˆ˜์„์‹ค์ด ๊ด€์—ฌ ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ์‚ฌ์‹ค์„ ์•Œ๊ณ  "3์ฒœ ๋งŒ์›์ด๋ฉด ์กฐ์„ ์กฑ์„ ์‹œ์ผœ์„œ ๋„ˆ๋ฅผ ์ฃฝ์—ฌ๋ฒ„๋ฆด ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค"๋ฉฐ ๊น€์ƒ๊ต๋ฅผ ํ˜‘๋ฐ•ํ•œ ์‚ฌ์‹ค์„ ํญ๋กœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ ๊น€์ƒ๊ต๋Š” ์ •์˜๋‹น์—๋„ ๋„์›€์„ ์š”์ฒญํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ๊ทธ๋“ค๋งˆ์ €๋„ ์ด ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์„ ์™ธ๋ฉดํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํญ๋กœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋งˆ์•ฝ 2019๋…„ 3์›” 12์ผ ๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ ํด๋Ÿฝ ์ง์›์œผ๋กœ ์ผํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋งˆ์•ฝ์— ์†์„ ๋Œ„ ํ˜์˜๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›๋Š” ์กฐ ๋ชจ(28)๊ฐ€ ๋งˆ์•ฝ๋ฅ˜๊ด€๋ฆฌ๋ฒ•์ƒ ๋งˆ์•ฝยทํ–ฅ์ •ยท๋Œ€๋งˆ, ํ™”ํ•™๋ฌผ์งˆ๊ด€๋ฆฌ๋ฒ•์ƒ ํ™˜๊ฐ๋ฌผ์งˆํก์ž… ํ˜์˜๋กœ ๊ตฌ์† ์ƒํƒœ๋กœ ์žฌํŒ์— ๋„˜๊ฒจ์กŒ๋‹ค. ์„ฑ๋ฒ”์ฃ„ ์Šน๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๋น„๋กฏํ•œ ๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ๋“ค๊ณผ ๊ทธ ์ง์› ๋ฐ MD๋Š” ์„ฑ๋ฒ”์ฃ„ ์•Œ์„ ์— ๋Œ€๊ฑฐ ์—ฐ๋ฃจ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ๋‚ด์šฉ์€ ํฌ๊ฒŒ ์„ฑ๋งค๋งค ์•Œ์„  ๋ฐ ์„ฑ์ ‘๋Œ€, ๋ฌผ๋ฝ•์„ ํ†ตํ•œ ๊ฐ•๊ฐ„ ์•Œ์„  ๋‘ ๊ฐ€์ง€๋กœ ๋‚˜๋‰  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์•ฝ๋ฌผ ์„ฑํญํ–‰ ์•Œ์„  ๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ์—์„œ ์ด๋ฅธ๋ฐ” "๋ฌผ๋ฝ•"์ด๋ผ ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๊ฐ๋งˆ ํ•˜์ด๋“œ๋ก์‹œ๋ทฐํ‹ฐ๋ฅด์‚ฐ(GHB)์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•œ ์„ฑํญํ–‰์ด ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ณด๋„๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ์ •ํ™•ํ•œ ์„ฑํญํ–‰ ํ”ผํ•ด์ž ์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚œ ๊ฒƒ์€ ์—†์œผ๋ฉฐ ์‹ค์ œ GHB์— ์˜ํ•ด ์„ฑํญํ–‰์œผ๋กœ ์‹ ๊ณ ๋œ ๊ฑด ์ˆ˜๋Š” ํƒœ๊ตญ ๋‚จ์„ฑ์ด ํ•ด์™ธ์—์„œ ๋ฐ˜์ž…ํ•œ GHB์— ์˜ํ•œ ์„ฑํญํ–‰ 1๊ฑด์ด๋‹ค. VIP ๋ฃธ์—์„œ๋Š” ์„ฑ๋งค๋งค ์—ฌ์„ฑ๋“ค์„ ์†Œ์ˆ˜ GBH๋ฅผ ์ด์šฉํ•˜๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ๋ฌผ๋ฝ•์— ์ทจํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ์—ฐ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์‹œ์ผœ ์„ฑ๋งค๋งค๋ฅผ ์•Œ์„ ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด ์ ๋ฐœ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ ์ง์›์—๊ฒŒ ํญํ–‰๋‹นํ•œ ๊น€์”จ๊ฐ€ ์ธ์Šคํƒ€์™€ SNS ๋“ฑ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ์˜ GHB ํ”ผํ•ด์ž๋“ค์˜ ์ œ๋ณด๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์•˜๊ณ  ์นดํ†ก ๋“ฑ์ด ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๋‰ด์Šค์—๋„ ๊ณต๊ฐœ๋˜์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ์ต๋ช…์ด๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์‹ค์ œ ํ”ผํ•ด์ž๋“ค์ธ์ง€๋Š” ๋ถˆํ™•์‹คํ•˜๋‹ค. ๋ถˆ๋ฒ• ์ดฌ์˜๋ฌผ ๊ณต์œ  ๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ ์กฐ์‚ฌ ๋„์ค‘ ํ•œ ์ œ๋ณด์ž์˜ ์นด์นด์˜คํ†ก ์ œ๋ณด๋กœ ์—ฐ์˜ˆ์ธ ๋‹ค์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ์นด์นด์˜คํ†ก์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ์Œ๋ž€๋ฌผ, ๊ฐ•๊ฐ„ ๋ฐ ๋ถ€์ ์ ˆํ•œ ๋‚ด์šฉ์„ ์ฃผ๊ณ ๋ฐ›๊ณ  ๋ถˆ๋ฒ• ์ดฌ์˜ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์œ ํฌํ•œ ์ •ํ™ฉ์ด ๋“œ๋Ÿฌ๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ์ด๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ์ •์ค€์˜์„ ์‹œ์ž‘์œผ๋กœ ์šฉ์ค€ํ˜•์„ ๋น„๋กฏํ•ด ์—ฐ์˜ˆ๊ณ„ ๋‹ค์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ์ด ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์— ์—ฐ๋ฃจ๋˜๋ฉฐ ํฐ ํŒŒ์žฅ์„ ์ผ์œผ์ผฐ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ€์ˆ˜ ์ •์ค€์˜์€ ๋ถˆ๋ฒ•์ดฌ์˜๋ฌผ์„ ๋‹ค์ˆ˜ ์œ ํฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ€์ˆ˜ ์Šน๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์•ž์„œ ์–ธ๋ก  ์ธํ„ฐ๋ทฐ์—์„œ ์ •์ค€์˜์ด ๋ถˆ๋ฒ•์ดฌ์˜๋ฌผ์„ ์œ ํฌํ•˜๋Š” ํ–‰์œ„๋ฅผ ๋ณด๊ณ  ์˜คํ”„๋ผ์ธ์—์„œ ์ ๊ทน ๋ง๋ ค์™”๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ฐœ์–ธํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜, ๋ณธ์ธ ๋˜ํ•œ ๋ถˆ๋ฒ•์ดฌ์˜๋ฌผ์„ ์œ ํฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ๋ฐํ˜€์กŒ๋‹ค. ์„ฑ๋งค๋งค ์•Œ์„  ํ•œ๊ตญ,์ผ๋ณธ ๋ฐ ํ•ด์™ธ ํˆฌ์ž์ž ์„ฑ๋งค๋งค ์•Œ์„  2015๋…„ 12์›” 6์ผ ๋ฐค ์Šน๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ ์ง์› ๊น€ ๋ชจ์—๊ฒŒ ๋Œ€๋งŒ์—์„œ ์˜จ ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ ํˆฌ์ž์ž ์ผํ–‰์„ ์„ฑ์ ‘๋Œ€ํ•˜๋ผ๊ณ  ์ง€์‹œํ•œ ์‚ฌ์‹ค์ด 2์›” 26์ผ ๋ณด๋„๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋ฐํ˜€์กŒ๋‹ค. ์œ  ๋ชจ ์œ ๋ฆฌํ™€๋”ฉ์Šค ๋Œ€ํ‘œ, ๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ ์ง์› ๊น€ ๋ชจ ๋“ฑ์ด ๋‚˜๋ˆˆ ์นด์นด์˜คํ†ก ๋Œ€ํ™” ๋‚ด์—ญ์„ 2019๋…„ 2์›” 26์ผ, SBS funE๊ฐ€ ์ž…์ˆ˜ํ•ด ๋ณด๋„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์Šน๋ฆฌ๋Š” "์‘ ์—ฌ์ž๋Š”? ์ž˜ ์ฃผ๋Š” ์• ๋“ค๋กœ"๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ฌผ์—ˆ๊ณ  ๊น€ ๋ชจ๋Š” "๋ถ€๋ฅด๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ์ฃผ๊ฒ ๋‚˜ ์‹ถ๋‹ค. ๋‹ˆ๋“ค์ด ์•„๋‹Œ๋ฐ ์ฃผ๊ฒ ๋ƒ. ์ผ๋‹จ ์‹ผ๋งˆ์ด ๋ถ€๋ฅด๋Š” ์ค‘. ์—ฌ์ž ํ•ด์ค„ ์‚ฌ์ด์ฆˆ๊ฐ€ ๋‚˜๋ณด๋‹ค ๋ผ์ง€ 3๋ช…ใ…‹ ๋Œ€๋งŒ ๊นกํŒจ๋ผ๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค"๊ณ  ๋‹ตํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์กฐ์„ธ ํšŒํ”ผ ๋ฐ˜์‘ ์—ฐ์˜ˆ๊ณ„ ์Šน๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์ด ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์œผ๋กœ ๋น…๋ฑ…์—์„œ ํƒˆํ‡ดํ•˜๊ณ  ์—ฐ์˜ˆ๊ณ„์—์„œ ์€ํ‡ดํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ํ˜„์žฌ ์ด ์‚ฌ๊ฑด๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จํ•ด ์„ฑ๋งค๋งค ์•Œ์„  ํ˜์˜๋กœ ์ˆ˜์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ณผ์ •์—์„œ ๋ชจ๋“  ์ง€์ƒํŒŒ(KBS, EBS, MBC, SBS), ์ข…ํŽธ ์ถœ์—ฐ ์ •์ง€ ์—ฐ์˜ˆ์ธ ๋ช…๋‹จ์— ์˜ฌ๋ž๋‹ค. ์ •์ค€์˜์€ ๋ชจ๋“  ๋ฐฉ์†ก๊ตญ ์ถœ์—ฐ ์ •์ง€ ์—ฐ์˜ˆ์ธ ๋ช…๋‹จ์— ์˜ฌ๋ž๋‹ค. ์ •์น˜๊ถŒ 2019๋…„ 3์›” 13์ผ ๋ฐ”๋ฅธ๋ฏธ๋ž˜๋‹น์€ ์Šน๋ฆฌ-์ •์ค€์˜ ๋‹จํ†ก๋ฐฉ ํŒŒ๋™๊ณผ ๊ด€๋ จ "๋งˆ์•ฝ ํˆฌ์•ฝยท์œ ํ†ต, ์•ฝ๋ฌผ์„ ์ด์šฉํ•œ ์„ฑ๋ฒ”์ฃ„, ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ, ์†Œ๋ฐฉ ๋“ฑ ๊ถŒ๋ ฅ๊ณผ์˜ ์œ ์ฐฉ ์˜ํ˜น์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด์„œ๋„ ์ฒ ์ €ํ•œ ์กฐ์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ์ด๋ค„์ ธ์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค"๊ณ  ์žฌ์ด‰ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2020๋…„ 2์›” 10์ผ ๊น€์ƒ๊ต๋Š” ์ฒญ์™€๋Œ€ ํŠน๋ณ„๊ฐ์ฐฐ๋ฐ˜ ๋น„์œ„ ๋…ผ๋ž€์„ ํญ๋กœํ•œ ๊น€ํƒœ์šฐ ์ „ ์ˆ˜์‚ฌ๊ด€๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋ฏธ๋ž˜ํ†ตํ•ฉ๋‹น ํ•ฉ๋ฅ˜์™€ ์ง€์ง€ ์„ ์–ธ์„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ ์ฃผ ์ด์šฉ ๊ณ ๊ฐ ๋‹ค์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ๊ฒฝ์ œ์  ์—ฌ์œ ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ–์ถ˜ ๊ณ„์ธต์œผ๋กœ ๋Œ€์ฒด์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์˜ ํž˜ ์ง€์ง€ ๊ธฐ๋ฐ˜์ธ ๊ฑธ ๊ฐ์•ˆํ•˜๋ฉด ์ƒ๋‹นํžˆ ์ด๋ก€์ ์ธ ์ผ์ด ์•„๋‹ ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋‹ค. ํด๋Ÿฝ ์—…๊ณ„ ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ์œ ๋ฆฌํ™€๋”ฉ์Šค ์œ ์ธ์„ ๋ฐ•ํ•œ๋ณ„ ์กฐ ๋กœ์šฐ , (1MDB scandal, ๋ง๋ ˆ์ด์‹œ์•„ํŒ ๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด) ๋‚˜์ง‘ ๋ผ์ž‘ ์Šน๋ฆฌ ์ตœ์ข…ํ›ˆ ์ด์ข…ํ˜„ YG์—”ํ„ฐํ…Œ์ธ๋จผํŠธ ์ •์ค€์˜ ์‚ผํ•ฉํšŒ ์ฃฝ๋ จ๋ฐฉ ์•ผ์ฟ ์ž ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ 2018๋…„ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ 2019๋…„ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์Šค์บ”๋“ค ์„น์Šค ์Šค์บ”๋“ค ์Šน๋ฆฌ (๊ฐ€์ˆ˜) ์—ฐ์˜ˆ๊ณ„ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burning%20Sun%20scandal
Burning Sun scandal
The Burning Sun scandal, also known as Burning Sun gate, was a 2019 entertainment and sex scandal in Seoul, South Korea, which involved several celebrities, including Korean idols of popular K-pop groups, and police officials. It was the largest scandal to hit the K-pop industry. The allegations of sex crimes added to the country's "epidemic" of what is called molka, a Korean word for the online distribution of unconsented sex videos taken of women, and the scandal became fodder for political parties, who argued over how to handle it. It began on January 28, 2019, when MBC Newsdesk reported a November 2018 alleged assault of a male clubgoer at the Burning Sun, a prominent nightclub in Gangnam, by a staff member. The Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency investigation soon turned to one concerning the club's alleged involvement in prostitution, drug trafficking and police corruption. Seungri of the band Big Bang, one of the club's directors, subsequently resigned from the entertainment industry on March 11, 2019, after being charged with sexual bribery. The scandal quickly encompassed allegations of rape and spy cams when singer and entertainer Jung Joon-young confessed to secretly filming himself having sex with women and sharing the videos, without their knowledge or consent, in the Jung Joon-young KakaoTalk chatrooms, and he resigned from the entertainment industry on March 12, 2019. While looking into the Burning Sun scandal, SBS funE had discovered videos dated from 2015 to 2016, as well as conversations Jung shared in chat groups on the social media app KakaoTalk with Seungri and acquaintances. The chatroom exposรฉ immediately affected a few celebrities, and more as the case developed. On March 14, Yong Jun-hyung of Highlight and Choi Jong-hoon of F.T. Island resigned from their positions, after allegations they were participants in the chatrooms, and the agency for Lee Jong-hyun of CNBLUE admitted his involvement on March 15. Legal proceedings for criminal investigations generated by the scandal continued into 2021. Although several police officers were disciplined for their actions involving the Burning Sun club, the two highest profile cases resulted in trial acquittals. Burning Sun's co-CEO, Lee Sung-hyun, testified that he had paid a former police officer named Kang to cover for an underage clubgoer incident, but Kang's one-year prison sentence was overturned for lack of evidence. Also, a well publicized case involved a senior police official, Yoon Gyu-geun, who was arrested for allegations of bribery and mediating favors for the Burning Sun club and others, which ended with an innocent verdict at his first trial. Among other verdicts, Burning Sun's co-CEO, Lee Moon-ho, was sentenced to a year in prison for habitual drug use, including ecstasy and ketamine in Gangnam clubs, and one of the club's promoters, MD Cho, was sentenced to four years and six months for drug use and smuggling. Due to public interest in the scandal, police conducted drug sweeps at entertainment venues that yielded hundreds of drug-related arrests, a large percentage involving ecstasy and GHB, a common date rape drug; along with cases of sexual assault and rape, and the filming of illegal videos during drug use. Seungri's business associate, Yoo In-seok, admitted to providing potential Japanese investors with prostitutes and received a suspended sentence of three years probation and an embezzlement charge. Seungri's entertainment agency head, Yang Hyun-suk, admitted to gambling and illegal money transactions in Las Vegas casinos and was sentenced to paying a fine, along with three YG and YGX associates. Seungri's case concluded in January 2022 in a military appeals court, with a reduced prison sentence of one year and a half and a fine. The nine charges included habitual gambling overseas and illegal money transactions, prostitution mediation and purchase, violence instigation, violation of the Specific Economic Crimes Act, embezzlement, sharing illicit photos, and a business operations violation. Background Burning Sun nightclub The Burning Sun nightclub, (Hangul: ํด๋Ÿฝ ๋ฒ„๋‹์ฌ, Club Burning Sun), opened at the Le Mรฉridien Seoul hotel in Yeoksam-dong, Gangnam-gu, on February 23, 2018, and closed during the investigation of the scandal on February 17, 2019. The upscale hotel had just replaced the Ritz Carlton Hotel and opened in September 2017, months before the Burning Sun's opening. The nightclub was often called "Seungri's Club", due to its affiliation with K-pop idol Seungri of Big Bang. The Burning Sun advertised itself as "the most elegant and finest club in South Korea". It included a basement level for EDM, a second level for hip hop, VIP admittance, 60 VIP tables near the DJ box and stage, spacious dance floors and accommodation for 1000 guests. The drink menu listed Armand de Brignac champagne and Louis XIII cognac sets, priced in the thousands of dollars. The sound system was set up by Funktion-One, a specialized overseas company, whose sound expert, Tony Andrews, was invited to the club for sound tuning. Seungri served as one of the DJs, along with other local and visiting guest artists like R3hab. The club's CEOs were Lee Moon-ho and Lee Sung-hyun, a former board member of the company that operated the Le Mรฉridien Seoul hotel. Seungri was one of seven in-house directors, and resigned from his position in January 2019. Seungri was the co-founder of Yuri Holdings, a shareholder of Burning Sun Entertainment that operated the club. which owned as much as 20 percent in shares, and which was established in March 2016, with Yoo In-seok, to manage his restaurant and entertainment businesses. Seungri resigned from his position in mid February and Yoo resigned on March 13. Seungri described his relationship to the club in an interview with The Chosun Ilbo, published on March 22, 2019, saying that CEO Lee Moon-ho, a friend of his, was the operator of the club and in charge, while Seungri's name was used for marketing, after his initial investment of 10 million won (around US$8,800). In the interview, Seungri said the breakdown of Burning Sun's shares were as follows: owners of Le Mรฉridien Seoul, 42 percent; Lee Sung-hyun (CEO of Le Mรฉridien Seoul), 8 percent; Yuri Holdings, 20 percent, Madam Lin (Taiwanese investor), 20 percent; and Lee Moon-ho, 10 percent. Other clubs Monkey Museum was the first Gangnam club to associate Seungri's name, and opened on July 27, 2016, in the upscale neighborhood of Cheongdam-dong, Gangnam-gu. It was a trendy hip hop lounge-style bar, co-owned by Seungri, Yoo and a group of K-pop singers. During the scandal's investigation, it became one of the first non-relevant charges against Seungri, of illegal operation as a bar, while it was registered as a restaurant; and later involved allegations of embezzlement of funds by Seungri and Yoo. Arena (or Club Arena) was a dance club that opened in 2014 in Nonhyeon-dong, Gangnam-gu. It was known as a TV and sports celebrity hang-out, had a reputation for a very strict dress code, and could accommodate 700 guests with separate EDM and hip hop dance floors. It was another club Seungri was affiliated with, and where he was alleged to have made arrangements for investors to receive sexual favors. The owner, last name Kang, and another of the club's operators, were arrested on tax evasion charges during the scandal's investigation. Seungri's background as a businessman The club's scandal was heightened in the media, exacerbated by Seungri's wide popularity and his possible business connections to it. He had developed a second career in business, and the nightclub business was not his first business venture, having been preceded by several others: a Japanese ramen restaurant chain, cosmetics, a Belgian waffle cafe, and a record company co-founded with his agency YG Entertainment. He invested in biotechnology and nanotechnology and the development of masks for yellow dust protection, and failed at real estate and electronic businesses. He closed his successful vocal and dance academy, the Joy Dance โ€“ Plug In Music Academy, which he first opened in 2011, in his home town of Gwangju, with branches around South Korea, after some parents complained about an "overly friendly" teacher-student relationship at one location. In November 2018, he entered the IT sector when he became the Creative Director and model for HeadRock VR, a franchise brand of the AR product company SocialNetwork and affiliate Mediafront; and assisted in the opening of the Headrock VR theme park in Singapore. Seungri who used a stage name that means "victory" in Korean, his real name is Lee Seung-hyun, at the age of 28, was the youngest member of BigBang; having debuted at age 15. Just before the scandal broke, he released his first solo Korean language studio album in July 2018, and was conducting his first solo tour, The Great Seungri, after 13 years as a group member. He was filling the void for the band's hiatus while all remaining four members were in military service, and waiting for his own enlistment in March. Jessica Oak at Billboard wrote, "Seungri has forged and built an empire all his own during his 13 years in the industry. The superstar has become known as a thriving entrepreneur with business ventures in food, nightlife and music labels". He had been the subject of a popular TV show on SBS, about his life and businesses, filmed "speaking four languages and throwing lavish parties in luxury resorts." In August 2018, Baik Su-jin, a journalist at The Chosun Ilbo, described his story, among other rich celebrities, as a "rags-to-riches" story, adding that Seungri was a late bloomer in the spotlight, only coming into his own after the other BigBang members were absent. Seungri said, "I had a tough time outshining other members of the group, so I studied foreign languages." He said he had tried to succeed at business, in part, because he felt "overlooked and underappreciated" by fans, being the youngest of the famous group, and business was a place where he would not have to compete with the other band members. Seungri said his popularity had been a business asset and he had looked for partners that would benefit from it." His last studio album The Great Seungri was a play on his nickname, from the novel The Great Gatsby. After his involvement in the scandal, a popular culture critic in Seoul, Lee Moon-won, said "the multilingual Seungri", with "has multiple business interests" had been seen as an โ€œideal cultural exportโ€, deemed to be a hard-worker by his fans. Lee pointed out the irony of Seungri's having been found to be thoroughly comparable to The Great Gatsby protagonist, not only for his good looks, business acumen, and lavish parties, but because both had sought "illicit and corrupt activities to gain fame and wealth." Seungri's friends and scandal participants Seungri was close to celebrity friends Jung Joon-young, age 30, and Choi Jong-hoon, age 29, who joined him when his agency YG Entertainment launched their newest YG Republique restaurant in August 2017, in Kuala Lumpur. Jung, a singer-songwriter and television celebrity, and the key person in the illicit sex video portion of the scandal, had been a friend of Seungri for several years. In 2015, he showed off their relationship by telephoning Seungri for a chat during a live radio broadcast. In August 2018, Seungri joined him on the travel show Salty Tour, where Jung was a main cast member, and made comments that generated disciplinary actions by the Korea Communications Standards Commission due to their gender insensitivity or potential "sexual harassment". During a broadcast episode on a trip to Xiamen, China, Seungri asked a female guest to pick a favorite amongst the five male cast members and pour them a drink; which viewers complained about. Development 2019: Scandal begins and cases develop January 28, Kim Sang-kyo assault at Burning Sun reported The first public awareness of the Burning Sun scandal was on January 28, 2019, when MBC Newsdesk reported on an alleged assault of a 29-year-old clubgoer, Kim Sang-kyo, at the Burning Sun nightclub. Kim said he was attempting to help a woman who was being sexually harassed, but staff had assaulted him. When the Yeoksam police arrived, he was arrested as the assailant and booked on seven charges, including criminal battery, an indecent act, defamation and the obstruction of the performance of official duties. He said the police assaulted him after he was placed under arrest. The incident occurred on November 24, 2018, but came to media attention in January 2019, after Kim posted a petition on the Cheong Wa Dae website detailing his assault by Burning Sun staffers and mistreatment by police; and further stating that female customers were drugged by staffers and the club had a corrupt relationship with district police. Another current petition on the website called for the investigation of the club scene, in general, and druggings occurring there. Cheong Wa Dae is a petition website based on former President Obama's We the People, and which was launched in August 2017, on President Moon's 100th day in office. Kim's petition had received the benchmark 200,000 signatures prompting an official response. Initial allegations at Burning Sun During the early stages, the scandal evolved around Kim's complaint against the Burning Sun nightclub, including any possible crimes that may have occurred there, and the identities of responsible parties. The initial January 28 report of the Kim incident, by MBC Newsdesk, included two CCTV videos of the club's security footage purportedly showing Kim's assault inside the club, and a second one showing a woman being dragged down a hallway, and alleged to have been drugged. A KBS report soon added that an alleged former employee had talked about illegal drug use in the club's VIP rooms. An additional report by MBC, on February 14, included allegations of a purported VIP client of the club, who said staff solicited him in text messages, offering women who were available for sex, after readying them with date rape drugs. He claimed to have received a video clip from staff, showing "an intoxicated woman being raped". By January 31, 2019, the Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency (SMPA) had taken charge of the investigation, which included allegations of local Gangnam police corruption and collusion with the club's owners, and had assigned a team to look into the club's allegations of sexual violence, drug use, Kim's arrest and any connection with the local police station. The SMPA said their quick response and follow-up investigation was due to media attention garnered by the BigBang K-pop group member Seungri's affiliation with the club. They also said they had expanded their probe of drug-related allegations to all Gangnam clubs, due to club marketing by independent "merchandisers" or "MDs" for many different clubs. Seungri's involvement and his relationship to the nightclub immediately became a hot media issue. Yang Hyun-suk the chief of his agency, YG Entertainment, released a statement on January 31, that Seungri had been at the club on November 28, but left before Kim's incident occurred. He also said Seungri's recent resignation as a senior director of the club was due to his upcoming military enlistment. Seungri's delayed response to the controversy was in an Instagram statement on February 2, stating that he was not present at the club during Kim's alleged assault, had belatedly heard about it, and served as an executive director for the club and had no part in the club's operation or management; but he, however, apologized that he had not taken responsibility from the beginning. February 26, first KakaoTalk messages revealed On February 26, 2019, SBS FunE released the first portions of the KakaoTalk recordings that would become crucial in the investigation, saying their origin was an anonymous source which had turned them over to the Anti-Corruption and Civil Rights Commission on February 22. The recordings dated back to 2015, and seemed to implicate Seungri with allegations that he had directed Burning Sun staff to arrange prostitutes for foreign investors who were coming to Seoul, at another Gangnam nightclub. The source had cited possible police collusion as the reason for not turning them over directly to police. The police held a press conference on March 4, saying they had not seen the original, unedited KakaoTalk messages and doubted their veracity, just prior to an SBS report detailing how they had obtained them. On February 27, Seungri was questioned by the SMPA, a lengthy interview that lasted overnight and included a drug test. Seungri denied allegations of attempts to buy sex for potential foreign investors (or sex for business favors) and any knowledge of the KakaoTalk messages, which had been disclosed by media, conversations he allegedly had with a Burning Sun co-founder and another of its employees about such arrangements; and he denied drug use. Media reports said that various nightclubs were used for the lobbying, including one named Arena, where Seungri allegedly arranged sexual favors for investors. In one alleged chat conversation between Seungri and his business partners in December 2015, Seungri says, "Give B (the anonymous investor) everything she wants. Get a hold of the main [rooms] 3 and 4 at the [club] Arena. We have guests from Taiwan". After confirming arrangements with a man surnamed Kim, Seungri asked, "And what about the girls? [Give them] the easy girls." Yoo answered, "I'm getting the prostitutes ready, so if you get two prostitutes, then lead them to the hotel rooms. Two is good?" On International Women's Day, March 8, the scandal led to a street protest in Gangnam against the Burning Sun and other nightclubs, calling for an end to what the protesters called a culture that treats women as sexual objects. Although thousands of women had rallied in 2018 against illicit filming and sharing, the allegations against the idealized image of pop idols still surprised the public. The serious nature of the scandal prompted a response from President Moon Jae-in, who ordered a thorough investigation. Seungri booked On March 10, Seungri was booked on sex bribery charges. The following day, he resigned from entertainment on his Instagram account, stating that he had caused a "societal disturbance" and said he would cooperate with the investigation. March 11, Jung Joon-young KakaoTalk chatrooms and source revealed The source of the KakaoTalk messages was revealed to be a lawyer, Bang Jung-hyun, on March 11, when he was interviewed on SBS Eight O'Clock News. He had obtained the messages from a whistleblower or "anonymous source", possibly a technician at a phone repair shop, where singer and entertainer Jung Joon-young had dropped his phone off for repairs. The whistleblower had sent an email to Bang, of thousands of chats taken from Jung's phone, which took place over eight months between 2015 and 2016. When the Burning Sun scandal started, the phone messages were forwarded to the Anti-Corruption and Civil Rights Commission and to SBS FunE; and the secretly filmed sex tapes and other chat messages on Jung's phone became public. During the SBS interview, the integrity of the chat room file was discussed, and was said to have a tamper-proof device, technically a hash-code verification, showing that the file had not been manipulated; and could stand as circumstantial evidence to seek more evidence. Bang, an economics graduate of Seoul National University, and a practicing lawyer, said of the chats, "Their conversations showed that there were not only sex crimes by celebrities, but also a cozy relationship between them and top police officers," and "It is someone higher up than [the Gangnam Police Precinct chief]." Also, on Monday, March 11, due to possible police involvement, the Commission, a watchdog agency, turned the records over to the Supreme Prosecutors' Office of the Republic of Korea, asking them to investigate the scandal instead of the police. Within a week, the case was transferred to the Seoul Central District Prosecutorsโ€™ Office who said they would assign a team to direct the SMPA's investigation. Also, due to the new allegations of possible police misconduct, on March 14, Commissioner Min Gap-ryong of the Korean National Police Agency (KNPA) reported to the Ministry of Public Safety and Security at the National Assembly, that "A total of 126 agents will be assigned to investigate the nightclub Burning Sun, the assault at Club Arena, drug use, ties with the police, and allegations of brokering prostitution, filming and distributing illegal videos, among other things". President Moon ordered an investigation of the scandal on March 18, to include two past sex scandal cases; the first one involved a former vice justice minister, Kim Hak-ui, who was cleared of a scandal in 2013, but had new allegations of raping women and appearing in sex videos with them, and the second one was the 2009 suicide of rookie actress Jang Ja-yeon, whose purported suicide note included a list of men who she was forced to have sex with, by her entertainment agency. The handling of those cases had been criticized for nonimpartiality due to the involvement of high-profile figures. He said, "The current leadership of the prosecution and police should stake the fate of their organizations with responsibility on uncovering the truth and becoming a law enforcement agency that can reveal its own shameful acts so as to regain trust," and "I am stressing that if we cannot fix it, we cannot call this society a just one." Ha Hyun-ock, a deputy financial news editor of the JoongAng Ilbo likened the burgeoning events to the Korean Mafia, with allegations of "drug dealing, prostitution, violence, tax evasion and collusion with police". He referred to the assessment Bang brought up on the SBS news program, of its being the beginning of a Korean Mafia, with K-pop's popularity creating celebrities of new money and status, who hobnob with business and government connections. Seungri's and Jung's inter-locking scandals were combined in public televised view when both were called into the SMPA station on March 14, with more than 100 journalists gathered for Jung's 10 a.m. appearance. It consisted of his arrival, and apology, before entering the station for questioning and a drug test; followed similarly by Seungri, some three hours later. Police also questioned Seungri's business partner and Yuri Holdings CEO Yoo In-seok. Seungri exited first, at around 6:15ย a.m. on March 15, some 16 hours later, and he told reporters, as he exited, that he would be putting in a request to delay his mandatory military service later in the month. Jung exited, about an hour later, after his 21-hour interrogation. April 1 โ€“ end of year, Seungri's business partner admits to hiring prostitutes, and first arrest warrant fails On April 1, SMPA announced they had booked Seungri and Yoo for allegations of embezzlement from the Monkey Museum club, which they opened in 2016. Later allegations stated that funds from Yuri Holdings were used to pay attorney fees for a criminal case involving an employee of the club. On April 29, a Chosun Ilbo headline, "Seung-ri's Business Partner Admits Pimping", followed Seungri and Yoo's new questioning by SMPA, in which Seungri continued to deny any involvement with prostitution, and Yoo finally admitted that he supplied prostitutes to six or more Japanese investors at their Gangnam nightclub in December 2015. SMPA had paper trails of money transactions, a YG Entertainment credit card payment by Seungri and a wire transfer by Yoo, and chat room conversations the two had with Jung about the arrangements; and had booked 17 prostitutes and pimps related to the incidents. Seungri was summoned for questioning about alleged embezzlement of the Burning Sun club's funds for the first time, on May 2, following sixteen prior interrogations about his alleged arrangement of sexual services for investors. On May 7 SMPA requested arrest warrants, to include pre-trial detention, for Seungri and Yoo, and they appeared at May 14 hearings, on charges of embezzling company funds and arranging sexual services for foreign investors, along with a new charge that Seungri had paid for sexual services himself. Seungri admitted that he received illicit sex services but denied all other allegations at the Seoul Central District Court hearing, and was led to a holding cell in ropes to await the decision, which came later in the evening, when both arrest warrants were denied, with the court citing "room for dispute" over the alleged embezzlement, and said the possibility of destroying evidence was slim. SMPA referred Seungri's case to prosecutors on June 25, with charges related to 1.1 billion won (US$951,000) in embezzlement, destruction of evidence, violation of laws on sex trade, sexual crimes and food hygiene. Allegations included procuring prostitutes for himself and for others from Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Japan from December 2015 to January 2016. His business partner Yoo was also referred to prosecutors for procuring prostitutes. MBC TV's May 27 show Straight introduced new allegations and another celebrity name to the scandal. It alleged that YG Entertainment's founder Yang Hyun-suk had arranged sexual services for foreign investors in July 2014, which he and the company denied. SMPA began an investigation based on the show's details of an alleged dinner meeting in Gangnam and a trip to a nightclub NB, affiliated with Yang, that included Yang, age 50, a Malaysian fugitive Jho Low, age 38, a Thai national named Bob (Chavanos Rattakul), a YG singer, a Madam Jung, Hwang Ha-na; and as many as 10 prostitutes, who allegedly provided sexual services at the nightclub. Singer Psy, age 42, who was with YG Entertainment at the time, released a statement that he had introduced his friend Jho Low to Yang, and acknowledged that he and Yang had been invited to the dinner and drinks with Low and the other man but denied any involvement in the alleged activities. Allegations also referenced a December 2018 rape complaint at the Burning Sun against Rattakul, one of the foreign investors also affiliated with Seungri, and who had been summoned by police. In June, Yang was questioned by police about the prostitution allegations but not taken in as a suspect and Psy was questioned as a witness about the July 2014 incident, which statute of limitations was soon to expire. On July 17, SMPA reported having booked Yang for allegations of arranging sexual services for the foreign investors in 2014, along with three more suspects for prostitution allegations; but dropped the charges against Yang on September 20, stating that they had failed to prove them. A prior allegation of Seungri's possible gambling overseas was reignited by an August 9, JTBC report alleging instances of Yang and Seungri having gambled up to 1 to 2 billion won at the MGM Grand Las Vegas on past occasions. SMPA said they were examining Yang's financial records for possible illegal foreign exchange transactions that may have been used for his alleged gambling, which is illegal for South Koreans at home and abroad. On August 14, both Yang and Seungri were booked on charges of habitual gambling, and by August 20, charges included illegal foreign trade transactions and a travel ban had been imposed. On August 28 and 29, both were questioned and Seungri admitted to gambling, but denied allegations of illegally securing funds, in violation of the Foreign Exchange Transactions Act. Seungri was questioned again on September 24 and Yang on October 1. On October 31, SMPA said they would be referring Yang and Seungri, along with three others, for prosecution of alleged habitual gambling, for a time period from the second half of 2014 to the present. In the first case with allegations of police collusion, a former Gangnam police officer surnamed Kang, age 44, was sentenced to one year in prison on August 14. During the trial co-CEO Lee Sung-hyun testified that he paid 20 million won (US$17,000) to Kang to cover for an underage clubgoer incident at the Burning Sun and had not discussed the arrangements with Seungri. In drug related cases, on August 22, co-CEO Lee Moon-ho received a suspended sentence of three years probation and community service for a year and a half prison term in a habitual drug use case where he pled guilty, but at a second trial on November 28, was sentenced to one year in prison with charges of using more than 10 drugs, including ecstasy and ketamine in Gangnam clubs from 2018 through February 2019. The court said that Lee Moon-ho's position as the operator of the Burning Sun Club put him at a different level than an "ordinary drug offender" and his first sentencing had been "light and unfair". A senior SMPA official, Yoon Gyu-geun, age 49, referred to as the "police chief" in the chatrooms, was arrested on October 10, on charges of accepting bribes and misuse of power, among others, following a search at his office in September. Yoon was referred for prosecution in June for allegedly informing Seungri and Yoo In-seok of police crackdowns, but the late search and focus on Yoon was questioned by a The Korea Times report by Lee Suh-yoon as possibly being related to his having worked in the Blue House in 2017 under Justice Minister Cho Kuk, who was being investigated in a separate case. A businessman named Jeong, a possible link between Yoon and Yoo was arrested earlier on embezzlement charges. Yoon was indicted on October 29, on charges of bribery, obstruction of business, and concealing evidence, among others, related to allegations of attempting to cover up illegalities at the Burning Sun and other businesses run by Seungri and Yoo. Yoon was also alleged to have received unlisted stocks from businessman Jeong in relation to the case; while Jeong is suspected of being tied to illicit financial transactions in the separate case against ex-Justice Minister Cho. A Burning Sun employee, an MD named Cho, age 28, one of the first investigated in the club's scandal, was sentenced to four years and six months imprisonment in early December for smuggling and administering drugs. Other investigations SMPA announced on May 15 they had referred the original whistleblower of the club's scandal, Kim Sang-kyo, to the prosecution for indictment for sexually assaulting three women and obstructing the business. In early July, the government responded to an April 11 Cheong Wa Dae petition which had detailed new allegations at the Burning Sun club, which was followed by a report on MBC TV's Straight. Witnesses interviewed on the program alleged "underage sex trafficking and violent sexual abuse of women", claiming VIP rooms at the club and offsite were set up for customers, including those from upperclass Korean families, and a special clean-up crew called the "incinerators" were employed to remove blood and incriminating evidence. The petition which received the required signatures, asked for the investigation of an alleged group rape by six men in one of the VIP rooms, of a woman who had been given GHB, called "mulpong" in South Korea. In late June, BBC News reporter Laura Bicker shared similar allegations of Gangnam's nightlife, "in its glitzy nightclubs, women have been drugged to order by powerful men and raped" and "underage girls are being sexually exploited for profit". On July 9, KNPA Commissioner Min responded that the allegations of sexual abuse and drug use in the VIP rooms, per the petition, were not confirmed. He added, "I will humbly accept the public's criticism that the results of the investigation are insufficient in relation to the Burning Sun case". On July 17, SMPA held a preventive meeting at the Seodaemun-gu police offices to discuss a "Second Burning Sun Club Opening", after a KBS report detailed possible new problems of sexual harassment at a new club in the Gangnam area, opened by former employees of the Burning Sun club, just four months after it closed down. Also, as part of an anti-corruption initiative established at the troubled Gangnam Police Station, SMPA announced an unprecedented open recruitment just for that police station in mid July, after 164 officers were transferred to other departments. A newly formed three month joint response team was also set up to investigate club illegal activity in Gangnam, from August through October, to prevent a new Burning Sun incident. On September 10, SMPA's Cyber Security Division referred charges of defamation and pornography for twelve participants in an investigation of media personnel which began on May 3. A Cheong Wa Dae petition was filed, alleging that a chat group of about 200 reporters, producers and media staffers had shared illicit video clips of incidents that had occurred at the Burning Sun, as well as information about brothels and prostitutes. On September 29, Lee Jae-jung, a member of the National Assembly Public Administration and Security Committee released SMPA data showing that 12 of 40 police officers involved in the initial assault allegations of Kim Sang-kyo and afterwards had been disciplined, with any actions pending for key figures, such as Yoon. Lee criticized the results as "very disappointing" and "far from the public's expectation". 2020: Indictments and trials continue Seungri second arrest warrant fails, prosecution indicts without arrest On January 8, 2020, seven months after police had submitted their case, the prosecution filed a second warrant requesting Seungri's arrest on seven charges โ€“ procuring prostitution for himself and others (29 times for foreign investors between September 2015 and January 2016), embezzlement (about $17,000 from Yuri Holdings), habitual gambling in Las Vegas (for a period of three years and six months since 2013), illegal currency transactions, violation of the Food Sanitation Law (at Monkey Museum club), and sharing three unconsented nude photos of women via mobile messenger. No other warrants for his business partner Yoo, or any others involved, were requested. The court denied the request at a hearing on January 13, saying detention was not warranted based on Seungri's "role and involvement in wrongdoings" and "his attitude toward the prosecution's investigation". On January 30, prosecutors indicted nine people, without detention, for allegations of crimes related to the Burning Sun case, including: Seungri for mediating prostitution, gambling, and violation of the Foreign Exchange Transaction Act, Yoo In-seok for mediating prostitution and business embezzlement, and Yang Hyun-suk for gambling and violation of the Foreign Exchange Transaction Act. Another two, Jung Joon-young and Choi Jong-hoon, who were already imprisoned after a rape trial in 2019, were indicted for allegations of soliciting prostitution and for bribery of a police officer in a drunk driving incident, respectively. On February 7, former police officer Kang's trial conviction and sentencing in August 2019 for police collusion in the admittance of an underage customer at the Burning Sun club was overturned by an appeals court, based on lack of evidence showing that Kang had received the money. On April 3, four of the nine people charged with prostitution allegations received a summary judgment, with Jung Joon-young fined one million won and the Burning Sun's prior MD Kim fined two million won. On April 25, the so-called "police chief" Yoon Gyu-geun, previously arrested in the fall of 2019 for allegations of bribery and mediating favors for the Burning Sun club, among others, was acquitted of all charges by a Seoul Central District trial court due to the prosecution's lack of evidence, although the court said, "It is not that the accused is 100 percent innocent or that the charges are not true." At a June 3 court hearing, Yoo admitted to all charges, including those related to prostitution and embezzlement. At trial on June 22, Yoo again admitted to most of the charges, but denied intentionality, in particular in the embezzlement charge. His charges include allegations of sex trafficking a total of twenty-four times to foreign investors from 2015 to 2016 to open the Burning Sun club. At a court hearing on September 9, Yang admitted to the gambling charges involving about 400 million won (around US$335,000) in Las Vegas casinos approximately twenty times between 2015 and 2019; with the next hearing scheduled for October 28. At a court date for Yoo on October 14, the questioning of duplicate witnesses for both the civilian trial and military trial for Seungri was discussed. On November 27, a trial court sentenced Yang Hyun-suk to a 15 million won (US$13,600) fine for some twenty Las Vegas gambling charges between July 2015 and January 2019; along with three YG Entertainment and affiliated company YGX associates, a 37-year-old Kim and 41-year-old Lee were also fined 15 million won, and 48-year-old Keum was fined 10 million won. Yoo received a suspended sentence of three years probation for a one year and eight months prison term on December 24. Seungri's military trial begins After the conclusion of the criminal investigation and indictment in civil court, on February 4, Seungri, who had already turned 30 (Korean age) received a final notification for his mandatory military service by the Military Manpower Administration. Their statement said they were "concerned a protracted trial in civilian courts" might restrict the military obligation and the case against him would be referred to a military court for trial. Seungri joined the military on March 9, and on May 15, his trial was transferred from the Seoul Central District Court to a military court, with the civilian court trial for a remaining six defendants, including Yoo In-seok, scheduled to proceed separately. At his first hearing at the Ground Operations Command's General Military Court in Yongin on September 16, Seungri denied all the charges except for the violations of the Foreign Exchange Transaction Act. A second court date on October 14 listed some twenty-two witnesses scheduled to testify. 2021 โ€“ 2022: Final trials Seungri's military trial concludes and appeals filed On January 14, during the ongoing military trial, prosecutors added a ninth charge against Seungri, alleging that he and Yoo involved gang members to intervene in a bar dispute in December 2015. Witness testimony concluded on July 1, with Seungri's denial of all the charges except one violation of the foreign curency act during gambling in Las Vegas; and the prosecution recommended a five-year sentencing and fine for all the charges. A military prosecutor said of Seungri, "Despite gaining advantages from the crimes, he is shifting the responsibility on another person... Considering his problematic views and attitude regarding sex, he needs to face severe punishment." On August 12, Seungri was sentenced to a three-year prison term, a fine of 1.15 billion won (US$990,000) and immediate detention. The nine charges were: "prostitution mediation in violation of Act on the Punishment of Arrangement of Commercial Sex Acts Etc., embezzlement, overseas gambling, procuring prostitution service, violation of Foreign Exchange Transactions Act, violation of Food Sanitation Act, violation of the Act on Special Cases Concerning The Punishment, Etc. of Sexual Crimes, violation of an Act on the Aggravated Punishment Etc. of Specific Economic Crimes and mobilizing gang to threaten people." The total embezzlement amount was 528 million won (around $US455,000); the Las Vegas gambling amount, between December 2013 to August 2017, was 2.2 billion won (around US$2 million); and the period for procuring prostitutes for foreign investors from Taiwan, Japan, Hong Kong and other countries was between December 2015 to January 2016. Due to the charge of "violation of the Act on Special Cases Concerning The Punishment, Etc. of Sexual Crimes" or the distribution of three nude photos of women via a mobile chatroom, he was ordered to provide his personal information to a sex crimes registry". While denying charges, Seugri had claimed that his KakaoTalk message, widely reported by media, about women that "give well", might have been a typo that his phone's autocorrection function caused. Appeals were filed by Seungri and the military prosecution on August 19 and 25, respectively. On January 27, 2022 a military appeals court reduced Seungri's three-year prison sentence by half, to one year and six months, and imposed a smaller fine, based on his admission of guilt and "reflection" on all nine charges. Seungri's military imprisonment, at the time, was calculated to end after another thirteen months. This sentence was upheld by the Supreme Court of Korea on May 26, 2022, whereupon Seungri was discharged from the military and transferred to a civilian prison to serve the remainder of his term. First reporter Kim Sang-kyo sentenced The original complainant, Kim Sang-kyo, was subsequently tried and sentenced after his 2018 indictments for sexual assault and obstruction of business in the Burning Sun club. On November 8, 2022, Kim was found guilty of one of three sexual assault charges, obstruction of business and defamation. The court ordered a suspended sentence for one year in prison and two years of probation, along with the completion of a 40-hour sexual assault treatment program and 80 hours of community service. Two men who were involved in the initial assault complaint filed by Kim against the club were also sentenced, a club director named Jang received eight months in prison and two years probation, and another man named Choi was fined. Investigative reporting The SBS investigative reporter who examined the KakaoTalk chat messages sent by the whistleblower to the television station SBS funE was Kang Kyung-yoon. Her previous work included reporting on the corruption cases related to former President Park Geun-hye. When she started interviewing some of the victims of the videos, she found they did not know of their existence. She said, "Some of them begged, 'Please save me. How do I live after this?'" She said they were ashamed and angry but feared "wearing a scarlet letter as a sex crime victim", and so feared being identified. Kang said that the sex video investigation was seen by some people as a means to avert attention away from the larger corruption scandal with its multiple allegations, but she perceived it as a serious social issue that needed reporting on. At the end of March 2019, Seungri told the director of SBS's investigative program, Unanswered Questions, in a text message, that the lawyer, whistleblower, and journalist were responsible for all the criminal allegations against him, had not checked facts properly and had "ruined his career for their own personal gain". In June, the production team of Unanswered Questions (also called I Want to Know) received the Seoul City's Gender Equality Award Grand Prize, in part for their coverage of the scandal. Investigation summary During the course of the investigation, SMPA focused on the Burning Sun club and its affiliates. Police conducted searches at the Burning Sun club, at the homes of CEO Moon and a sales executive Han, as well as at Burning Sun Entertainment, YG Entertainment, Yuri Holdings, Junwon Industries and Club Arena (and at the Seoul Regional Office of the National Tax Service of South Korea related to allegations of tax evasion). The investigation found a 2.45 billion won (US$2.15 million) investment to the Burning Sun, with the Taiwanese investor having contributed 1 billion won and Seungri having contributed 225 million won. Yonhap News Agency reported that one of the club's investors, perhaps Junwon Industries (also called Cheonwon Industry and a major shareholder in Burning Sun Entertainment which operated Burning Sun), Le Mรฉridien Seoul's operator, may have forged a connection with the hotel, in the amount of $8.8 million, using the intermediary firm to attract larger investments to the club. Junwon CEO Choi Tae-young was charged with embezzling funds, along with Seungri and Yoo. A Burning sun employee Ahn, who worked as a female Taiwanese investor's Korean guide, was booked for embezzlement charges, and the possibility of any Triad investments or organized crime connections were investigated with Interpol and other agencies. Burning Sun's female Taiwanese investor Lin was also booked on charges of embezzlement, in collusion with Seungri and Yoo. Seungri was investigated for allegedly: supplying prostitutes for investors, sharing an illicit photo of a woman in Jung's chatroom, giving concert tickets to a police officer Yoon, and embezzlement of funds from the clubs Monkey Museum and the Burning Sun. Seungri's business partner and CEO of Yuri Holdings, Yoo In-seok, age 34, was investigated for connections to Gangnam police officer Yoon, embezzling Monkey Museum and the Burning Sun's funds, and for supplying prostitutes, along with Seungri. CEO's Lee Sung-hyun and Lee Moon-ho, both age 29, were investigated for allegedly hiring minors as security guards and for bribing former Gangnam police officer Kang with 20 million won (US$17,700) to cover up an underage drinking issue at the club, the latter which Lee Sung-hyun admitted to doing, at a hearing for Kang. YG head Yang and singer Psy were questioned as witnesses about additional allegations of sex-for-favors involving Yang and foreign guests Jho Low and Chavanos Rattakul. Allegations which they both denied, and the case was eventually closed for lack of proof. Arrests related to Burning Sun included CEO Lee Moon-ho who was detained and charged with drug use and distributing drugs to Burning Sun customers. Others included a Burning Sun board member Jang, the alleged attacker of clubgoer Kim Sang-kyo, a chat group member named Kim who distributed illicit videos, and a Club Arena security guard Yoon, accused of attacking a guest in 2017. A Chinese promoter, nicknamed Anna, age 26, was investigated for drug use and distribution, but no arrest was made. An owner of Arena, Kang Mo, age 46, and a "puppet head" of the club, surnamed Lin, were arrested on charges of tax evasion, alleged to have not paid taxes in the amount of 16.2 billion won (US$14.31 million) between 2014โ€“2017. On April 11, SMPA said 59 persons had been apprehended related to drug use and distribution charges in the Burning Sun scandal, and 11 were under arrest. Former Gangnam police officer Kang, age 44, was arrested for allegations of brokering between the Burning Sun and other police officers, and booked for assisting with an underage drinking incident at the Burning Sun, which co-CEO Lee Sung-hyun admitted to paying him for. Police firings and investigations included a senior superintendent Yoon, who knew Yoo, and assisted with the underage drinking incident and Monkey Museum's business zoning violations, and was charged with violating the Improper Solicitation and Graft Act for receiving concert tickets from Seungri. In peripheral investigations, police announced over 500 drug related arrests on March 25, 2019, after declaring "total war" against drug crime on February 25, due to the scandal at the Burning Sun. Of the 523 arrests for the use and distribution of drugs, 216 were detained. 421 cases, or 82 percent, involved psychotomimetic drugs like GHB, a common date rape drug, and one alleged to have been used at the Burning Sun. On May 30, SMPA reported to have arrested nearly 4,000 people at 148 entertainment establishments on drug related charges in the three month crackdown after the scandal started. Some 920 of those were detained; 886 for drug related crimes, 23 for sexual assault or rape while under the influence of drugs, and 11 for taking illegal videos during drug use. Most were in their 20s and 30s, and about 40 percent of the crimes involved the use of the drug ecstasy. Women's issues and public protests The scandal ignited public protests early in March 2019, and later, after police attempts to arrest Seungri and Yoo fell through. A May 17 press conference held by women's rights groups, in front of the SMPA, criticized the results of the three month Burning Sun investigation, conducted by some 152 officers, as "dismal", with allegations of the club's "cozy" ties with police, and the illegal filming of women and distribution still unresolved. Weekend rallies condemning the investigation's results started at the Blue House on May 19 and in Gangnam on May 25. Lee Taek-kwang, a professor at Kyung Hee University said, "The recent Burning Sun nightclub scandal exposed a culture that exploits women, which has brought about public rage." Months later, on November 6, members of seven civic and women's groups, including the Green Party Korea and the Korean Cyber Sexual Violence Response Center (KCSVRC) held a press conference and protest in front of the SMPA Jongno-gu building demanding the resignation of KNPA's Commissioner Min Gap-ryong, criticizing the police investigations of the Jang Ja-yeon and Burning sun cases as biased and poorly conducted. The scandal added to ongoing discussions of women's issues in South Korea โ€” gender inequality, the budding Me Too movement in South Korea, feminism, "molka", prostitution, and the K-pop industry's attitude towards women. South Korea's #MeToo movement began in January 2018 and was followed by a students' #SchoolMeToo, which became the most tweeted social issue in South Korea in 2018, followed by "feminism", then "molka", the abbreviation for "spy cameras that are hidden in places such as public bathrooms and for the explicit videos later posted on porn sites". In July 2018, thousands marched in Seoul against spy cameras and the government responded by hiring workers to monitor public bathrooms, but activists criticized a general dismissive attitude towards the crimes, citing a "deeply rooted gender inequality and misogyny in the country". A 2018 OECD ranking of the country, at 30 out of 36 for women's employment, exemplifed the country's gender pay gap, while it ranked highly for women's education. Jung's distribution of sex videos was one of the top gender issues talked about on online platforms in South Korea for the first half of 2019, with research showing a growing trend of gender based topics, most in a negative context. Talks included the K-pop industry, which critics had blamed for sexualizing women; Jang Yun-mi, a spokesperson for the Korean Women Lawyer's Association said, "The industry in Korea โ€ฆ is a boys' club". Women's rights activist Bae Bok-ju said of the spycam allegations in the scandal, "This case just shows that male K-pop stars are no exception when it comes to being part of this very disturbing reality that exploits women". But, Seoul freelance journalist Haeryun Kang opined in The Washington Post, "The most recent celebrity scandal has generated fury among so many Korean women not because it is unique but because the story goes far beyond K-pop. The patterns of male behavior feel disturbingly familiar. The gender power dynamics โ€” that often objectify women into sex tools โ€” feel exhaustingly repetitive", and said the scandal was more than "misogyny and spy cameras", but a larger story of the Burning Sun nighclub's "alleged involvement in prostitution, drug trafficking and police corruption". Effects on entertainment industry Between February 25 and March 15, 2019, five major South Korean entertainment companies lost 17.52 percent in value, with their market value dropping from 3.35 trillion won (around US$2.96 billion) to 2.76 trillion won. Stocks dropped for the "big three" K-pop management companies: YG Entertainment (Seungri's company), 24.8 percent, SM Entertainment, 20 percent, JYP Entertainment, 5.5 percent; and additional 20 percent drops for Cube Entertainment and FNC Entertainment. But, on April 11, while the scandal was still under investigation, entertainment companies were forecast by experts (FinGuide Inc. and a Hyundai Motor Securities analyst) to post solid profit growth in 2019, with substantial operating profits for the three big labels; while others added that K-pop's financial reliance on YouTube was unlikely to be affected. However, by September 16, YG Entertainment stocks had dropped by nearly half since January 7. Actress Park Han-byul, who married Yoo of Yuri Holdings in 2017, first stated that she knew nothing more than his being Seungri's business partner, but made a public apology on March 19, after it was reported that she and her husband had played golf previously with the high-ranking police official under investigation for collusion with the nightclubs in the scandal. She said she would not leave a major role in the television drama Love in Sadness, despite calls from some viewers for her to do so. YG Entertainment discontinued sales of merchandise featuring Seungri, and major networks and cable companies deleted episodes of programs both Seungri and Jung had appeared in. In another YG Entertainment artist's scandal, on June 12, 2019, idol B.I, whose real name is Kim Han-bin, age 23, a songwriter and leader of K-pop band iKon, quit his group after the media outlet Dispatch revealed 2016 KakaoTalk messages of him attempting to purchase LSD from a suspected drug dealer, which he admitted to. YG Entertainment, still under scrutiny for allegations concerning their former artist Seungri and head Yang in the Burning Sun scandal, quickly ended their contract with B.I, stating their "sense of responsibility in managing its associated artists"; and Yang resigned from the agency on June 14, amidst allegations of police collusion to cover up the case. Seoul's EDM festivals responded that they would not hold after-parties in 2019 in Gangnam's clubs, due to the Burning Sun police investigation. The festivals were often promoted in association with entertainment clubs and Ultra Korea, Seoul World DJ Festival and Spectrum Dance Music Festival all held after-parties in 2018 at the Burning Sun, among other clubs. An organizer for the largest, Ultra Korea, said that due to the scandal's allegations of sex crimes involving GHB or "mulpong", and cannabis use at festivals, plans were being made to mobilize detection dogs, bag checks and X-rays for monitoring drug trafficking this year. Gangnam's nightclubs, usually "a pilgrimage site for K-pop fans", immediately saw a tapering of Chinese tourists, followed by a general decline of customers to nightclubs and lounge bars. Bars that were registered as general restaurants with the Ministry of Food and Drug Safety, where dancing is not allowed, a tactic used by clubs in the Burning Sun scandal to avoid paying higher taxes, underwent a strict monitoring, causing a subdued atmosphere with "Please do not dance" signs posted and police checking in, to enforce the rule. In late October, France's Ministry of Europe and Foreign Affairs released an informational report (not a travel alert) for travelers to South Korea, advising caution due to reported cases of GHB and assault drugs at clubs in Hongdae, Itaewon and Gangnam, following earlier French media reports of the Burning Sun scandal. After internet users raised rumors about the possible involvement of several actresses in the scandal, Go Joon-hee, who was managed by YG Entertainment in 2015, first objected on social media, then filed a libel suit for defamation against twelve of them, citing damages to her career, and Han Hyo-joo filed a criminal complaint against thirty-three more. Other actresses and their agencies made denials and warned of legal actions, and at least seven (which included college students, the unemployed, construction workers, and one U.S. citizen) were arrested and referred for prosecution. Some scenes from a 2019 South Korean film, Quantum Physics, about a celebrity drug scandal at a nightclub, were filmed at the Burning Sun nightclub before it closed down. Although it was not based on the real-life scandal, Director Lee Sung-tae said he reconsidered one of the film's scenes, as they were editing as it was ongoing. A November 2019 retrospective article, written by Matthew Campbell and Sohee Kim for Bloomberg Businessweek, pointed out that the K-pop industry, in general, had ignored the scandal, with "no organized demands for better behavior from male stars or serious discussions about revamping how idols are trained." They quoted a former SM Entertainment executive, Jeong Chang-hwan, on its implicit impact, "It's a huge lesson in what not to do," he says. "The best teacher for young idols is to see fellow idols get into a scandal and disappear from the industry." Public response Allegations of police misconduct and corruption in the scandal added public support to a government proposal to create an independent investigative agency, first announced by President Moon in July 2017, and still undergoing political debate. Proposed to "uncover wrongdoing by high-level government officials and their relatives", with the power to take over prosecutions, opponents had questioned its own potential for corruption. K-pop fans' reactions were mixed, some called for YG Entertainment to remove Seungri from the group BigBang for tarnishing the group's image and having used the group's celebrity to promote his business, even waiting outside his agency's office for an explanation. However, other fans continued to support him. The public appeared to boycott a noodle chain called Aori Ramen between January and April 2019, according to multiple store owners who filed a compensation lawsuit in July blaming Seungri, who had run and promoted the franchise, for falling sales. Google Korea's most popular domestic searched terms for 2019 included Jung Joon-young ranked at number two over-all, and number one for top public figure; with Burning Sun ranked at number three for domestic news and issues. Yonhap News Agency editors selected the scandal as one of the top ten South Korean news stories of 2019. References External links Entertainment scandals Law enforcement scandals Sex scandals in South Korea Crime in South Korea Seungri Rape in South Korea Obscenity controversies in music Sex crimes in South Korea Music controversies
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%ED%8C%A8%EC%85%98%20%EC%A7%81%EB%AC%BC%20%EB%B0%95%EB%AC%BC%EA%B4%80
ํŒจ์…˜ ์ง๋ฌผ ๋ฐ•๋ฌผ๊ด€
ํŒจ์…˜ ์ง๋ฌผ ๋ฐ•๋ฌผ๊ด€()์€ ์˜๊ตญ ๋Ÿฐ๋˜ ๋ฒ„๋ชฌ์ง€์— ์œ„์น˜ํ•œ ํ˜„๋Œ€ ํŒจ์…˜ ๋ฐ•๋ฌผ๊ด€์ด๋‹ค. 2003๋…„์— ์˜๊ตญ์ธ ๋””์ž์ด๋„ˆ ์ž”๋“œ๋ผ ๋กœ์ฆˆ๊ฐ€ ์„ค๋ฆฝํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋‰ด์—„ ์นผ๋ฆฌ์ง€(the Newham College of Further Education) ์‚ฐํ•˜์— ์†Œ์†๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ตœ๊ทผ ์ „์‹œ์—๋Š” Liberty in Fashion, Art Textiles, 1920s Jazz Age Fashion & Photographs, Missoni Art Colour ๋“ฑ์ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜๊ตฌ ์ „์‹œํ’ˆ์€ ์—†์œผ๋ฉฐ ํŠน๋ณ„ ์ „์‹œ๋ฅผ ์—ฐ์†์œผ๋กœ ๊ธฐํšํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฑด๋ฌผ ๋ณธ ๋ฐ•๋ฌผ๊ด€์€ ์ฐฝ๊ณ ๋ฅผ ๊ฐœ์กฐํ•œ ๊ฑด๋ฌผ์— ์œ„์น˜ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋ฉ•์‹œ์ฝ”์ธ ๊ฑด์ถ•๊ฐ€ ๋ฆฌ์นด๋„ ๋ ˆ๊ณ ๋ ˆํƒ€๊ฐ€ ์ž”๋“œ๋ผ ๋กœ์ฆˆ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์„ค๊ณ„ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ๋นŒ๋”ฉ์ด ๋ ˆ๊ณ ๋ ˆํƒ€๊ฐ€ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์—์„œ ์„ค๊ณ„ํ•œ ์ตœ์ดˆ์ด์ž ์œ ์ผํ•œ ๊ฑด๋ฌผ์ด๋‹ค. ๊ฑด๋ฌผ์—๋Š” ์ „์‹œ ๊ณต๊ฐ„ ์ด์™ธ์— ์ง๋ฌผ ์ŠคํŠœ๋””์˜ค, ํ”„๋ฆฐํŒ… ์ŠคํŠœ๋””์˜ค ๋ฐ ์ฃผ๊ฑฐ ๊ณต๊ฐ„์ด ํ•จ๊ป˜ ํฌํ•จ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋นŒ๋”ฉ ๋ฒฝ์— ํ•ซ ํ•‘ํฌ์ƒ‰, ์˜ค๋ Œ์ง€์ƒ‰, ๋…ธ๋ž€์ƒ‰, ๋ฐ์€ ํŒŒ๋ž€์ƒ‰ ๋“ฑ์˜ ๋…ํŠนํ•œ ์ƒ‰๊น”์ด ์น ํ•ด์ ธ ์žˆ์–ด ๊ฑด์ถ•๋ฌผ ์ž์ฒด๋กœ์„œ์˜ ๊ด€๊ด‘ ๋ช…์†Œ๋กœ๋„ ์•Œ๋ ค์ ธ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ „์‹œ ํ˜„์žฌ ์ „์‹œ Night and Day: 1930s Fashion and Photographs Cecil Beaton: Thirty from the 30s ํ–ฅํ›„ ์ „์‹œ Swinging London: A Lifestyle Revolution / Terence Conran โ€“ Mary Quant ๊ณผ๊ฑฐ ์ „์‹œ Orla Kiely: A Life in Pattern T-Shirt: Cult โ€“ Culture โ€“ Subversion โ€“ 2018๋…„ 2์›” 9์ผ - 2018๋…„ 5์›” 6์ผ Louise Dahl-Wolfe: A Style of Her Own โ€“ 2017๋…„ 10์›” 20์ผ - 2018๋…„ 1์›” 21์ผ Harper's Bazaar 150 Years โ€“ The Greatest Moments โ€“ 2017๋…„ 10์›” 20์ผ - 2018๋…„ 1์›” 21์ผ Wallace Sewell: 25 Years of British Textile Design โ€“ ย 2017๋…„ 10์›” 20์ผ - 2018๋…„ 1์›” 21์ผ The World of Anna Sui โ€“ 2017๋…„ 5์›” 26์ผ - 2017๋…„ 10์›” 1์ผ Josef Frank Patternsโ€“Furnitureโ€“Painting โ€“ 2017๋…„ 1์›” 28์ผ - 2017๋…„ 5์›” 7์ผ 1920s Jazz Age Fashion & Photographs โ€“ 2016๋…„ 9์›” 23์ผ - 2017๋…„ 1์›” 15์ผ Missoni Art Colour โ€“ 2016๋…„ 5์›” 6์ผ - 2016๋…„ 9์›” 4์ผ Liberty in Fashion โ€“ 2015๋…„ 10์›” 9์ผ - 2016๋…„ 2์›” 28์ผ Riviera Style: Resort and Swimwear Style Since 1900 โ€“ 2015๋…„ 5์›” 22์ผ - 2015๋…„ 8์›” 30์ผ (King and McGaw ํ•ฉ์ž‘) Knitwear: From Chanel to Westwood โ€“ 2014๋…„ 9์›” 19์ผ - 2015๋…„ 1์›” 18์ผ Designing Women: Post-war British Textiles โ€“ 2012๋…„ 3์›” 16์ผ - 2012๋…„ 6์›” 16์ผ The Printed Square โ€“ Vintage Handkerchiefs โ€“ 2012๋…„ 3์›” 22์ผ - 2012๋…„ 6์›” 16์ผ POP! Culture and Fashion 1955โ€“1976 โ€“ 2012๋…„ 7์›” 6์ผ - 2012๋…„ 10์›” 27์ผ Tommy Nutter: Rebel on the Row โ€“ 2011๋…„ 5์›” 20์ผ - 2011๋…„ 10์›” 22์ผ Sue Timney and the design of Timney-Fowler โ€“ 2010๋…„ 11์›” 16์ผ - 2011๋…„ 4์›” 25์ผ Horrockses Fashions: Off the Peg Style in the '40s and '50s โ€“ 2010๋…„ 7์›” 9์ผ - 2010๋…„ 10์›” 24์ผ Very Sanderson โ€“ 150 years of English decoration โ€“ 2010๋…„ 3์›” 19์ผ - 2010๋…„ 6์›” 13์ผ 30 years of Pineapple by Debbie Moore โ€“ 2010๋…„ 1์›” 18์ผ - 2010๋…„ 2์›” 24์ผ Foale and Tuffin โ€“ Made in England โ€“ 2009๋…„ 10์›” 23์ผ - 2010๋…„ 2์›” 24์ผ Undercover: The Evolution of Underwear โ€“ 2009๋…„ 6์›” 12์ผ - 2009๋…„ 9์›” 27์ผ Swedish Fashion: Exploring A New Identity โ€“ 2009๋…„ 2์›” 6์ผ - 2009๋…„ 5์›” 17์ผ Billy: Bill Gibb's Moment in Time โ€“ 2008๋…„ 10์›” 24์ผ - 2009๋…„ 1์›” 18์ผ Little Black Dress โ€“ 2008๋…„ 6์›” 20์ผ - 2008๋…„ 8์›” 25์ผ Peacocks and Pinstripes โ€“ 2008๋…„ 2์›” 8์ผ - 2008๋…„ 5์›” 31์ผ ์ฐธ๊ณ  ๋ฌธํ—Œ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ๋Ÿฐ๋˜์˜ ๋ฐ•๋ฌผ๊ด€ ํŒจ์…˜ ๋ฐ•๋ฌผ๊ด€ ์„ฌ์œ  ๋ฐ•๋ฌผ๊ด€ ์„œ๋”ํฌ๊ตฌ์˜ ๋ฐ•๋ฌผ๊ด€
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fashion%20and%20Textile%20Museum
Fashion and Textile Museum
The Fashion and Textile Museum is the only museum in the UK of contemporary fashion and textile design. The Fashion and Textile Museum was founded in 2003 by Dame Zandra Rhodes. Today, the museum is operated by Newham College, London โ€“ one of Europe's largest further education colleges. Situated in the heart of fashionable Bermondsey Village, the museum is housed in a distinctive building, designed by Mexican architect, Ricardo Legorreta. Building The museum is housed in a converted warehouse which was redesigned by the Mexican architect Ricardo Legorreta in collaboration with Dame Zandra Rhodes. It was Legorreta's first and only building in Europe. In addition to the exhibition space, the building contains a textile studio and printing workshop and private residential quarters. The building has become a tourist attraction in its own right due to its colour scheme of hot pink, burnt orange, yellow, and bright blue. Exhibitions Past exhibitions 150 Years of the Royal School of Needlework: Crown to Catwalk - 1 April โ€“ 4 September 2022 Beautiful People: The Boutique in 1960s Counterculture - 3 September 2021 โ€“ January 2022 Annie Phillips: Ancient Technique and Contemporary Art - 18 May โ€“ 12 September 2021 Chintz: Cotton in Bloom - 18 May โ€“ 12 September 2021 Out of the Blue: Fifty Years of Designers Guild - 14 February 2020 โ€“ 21 February 2021 Zandra Rhodes: 50 Years of Fabulous - 27 September 2019 โ€“ 26 January 2020 Norman Hartnell โ€“ A Tribute - 27 September 2019 โ€“ 26 January 2020 Weavers of the Clouds: Textile Arts of Peru - 21 June โ€“ 8 September 2019 Will You Be My Valentine? Works by Natalie Gibson - 8 February โ€“ 2 June 2019 Swinging London: A Lifestyle Revolution | Terence Conran โ€“ Mary Quant - 8 February โ€“ 2 June 2019 Elizabeth Suter: Sharp Lines and Swift Sketches - 8 February โ€“ 2 June 2019 Night and Day: 1930s Fashion and Photographs - 12 October 2018 โ€“ 20 January 2019 Cecil Beaton: Thirty from the 30s โ€“ Fashion, Film and Fantasy - 12 October 2018 โ€“ 20 January 2019 Orla Kiely: A Life in Pattern - 25 May โ€“ 23 September 2018 T-Shirt: Cult โ€“ Culture โ€“ Subversion โ€“ 9 February 2018 โ€“ 6 May 2018 T: The Typology of The T-Shirt - 9 February โ€“ 6 May 2018 The Secret Life of Scissors - 9 February โ€“ 6 May 2018 Harper's Bazaar 150 Years โ€“ The Greatest Moments โ€“ 20 October 2017 โ€“ 21 January 2018 Wallace Sewell: 25 Years of British Textile Design โ€“ ย 20 October 2017 โ€“ 21 January 2018 Louise Dahl-Wolfe: A Style of Her Own โ€“ 20 October 2017 โ€“ 21 January 2018 The World of Anna Sui โ€“ 26 May โ€“ 1 October 2017 Festival of Textiles 2017 - 28 January โ€“ 7 May 2017 Josef Frank Patternsโ€“Furnitureโ€“Painting โ€“ 28 January โ€“ 7 May 2017 Full Circle & Recycle: 21st Century Swedish Textiles - 28 January โ€“ 7 May 2017 Gudrun Sjรถdรฉn: Four Decades of Colour & Design - 25 April โ€“ 7 May 2017 1920s Jazz Age Fashion & Photographs โ€“ 23 September 2016 โ€“ 15 January 2017 James Abbe: Photographer of the Jazz Age - 23 September 2016 โ€“ 15 January 2017 London Design Festival: New Artist Textiles from Canada - 16โ€“18 September 2016 London Fashion Foundation Show - 16โ€“18 September 2016 Missoni Art Colour โ€“ 6 May โ€“ 4 September 2016 Festival of Textiles 2016 - 11 March โ€“ 17 April 2016 Art Textiles: Marian Clayden - 11 March โ€“ 17 April 2016 Liberty in Fashion โ€“ 9 October 2015 โ€“ 28 February 2016 The Art of Pattern - 9 October 2015 โ€“ 28 February 2016 Rayne: Shoes for Stars - 22 May โ€“ 13 September 2015 Riviera Style: Resort and Swimwear Style Since 1900 โ€“ 22 May 2015 โ€“ 30 August 2015 (in partnership with King and McGaw) A Journey to the Riviera - 22 May โ€“ 13 September 2015 Nautical Chic by Amber Jane Butchart - 22 May โ€“ 27 August 2015 Thea Porter: 70s Bohemian Chic - 6 February โ€“ 3 May 2015 Mirror Man: Andrew Logan Portraits - 6 February โ€“ 3 May 2015 Knitwear: From Chanel to Westwood โ€“ 19 September 2014 โ€“ 18 January 2015 How to Draw Vintage Fashion - 19 September 2014 โ€“ 18 January 2015 PATTERN: Wattsโ€™ Architect Wallpapers 1870 to today - 19 September 2014 โ€“ 18 January 2015 Knitwear in Fashion Photography - 19 September 2014 โ€“ 18 January 2015 Visionary Knitwear - 19 September 2014 โ€“ 18 January 2015 El Intercambio Cultural/A Cultural Exchange - 6 June โ€“ 31 August 2014 Made in Mexico: The Rebozo in Art, Culture & Fashion - 6 June โ€“ 31 August 2014 Artist Textiles: Picasso to Warhol - 31 January โ€“ 18 May 2014 Sarah Campbell โ€˜from start to finishโ€™ - 31 January โ€“ 17 May 2014 The Glamour of Bellville Sassoon - 20 September 2013 โ€“ 11 January 2014 Zandra Rhodes: Unseen - 12 July โ€“ 31 August 2013 Designing Women: Post-war British Textiles 16 March 2012 โ€“ 16 June 2012 The Printed Square โ€“ Vintage Handkerchiefs โ€“ 22 March 2012 โ€“ 16 June 2012 Kaffe Fassett: A Life in Colour - 22 March โ€“ 29 June 2013 Hartnell to Amies: Couture By Royal Appointment - 16 November 2012 โ€“ 23 February 2013 POP! Culture and Fashion 1955โ€“1976 โ€“ 6 July 2012 โ€“ 27 October 2012 Designing Women: Post-War British Textiles - 16 March โ€“ 16 June 2012 Catwalk to Cover โ€“ A Front Row Seat - 18 November 2011 โ€“ 25 February 2012 Tommy Nutter: Rebel on the Row โ€“ 20 May 2011 โ€“ 22 October 2011 Sue Timney and the design of Timney-Fowler โ€“ 16 November 2010 โ€“ 25 April 2011 Horrockses Fashions: Off the Peg Style in the '40s and '50s โ€“ 9 July 2010 โ€“ 24 October 2010 30 years of Pineapple by Debbie Moore โ€“ 18 January 2010 โ€“ 24 February 2010 Very Sanderson โ€“ 150 Years of English Decoration - 19 March โ€“ 13 June 2010 Foale and Tuffin โ€“ Made in England โ€“ 23 October 2009 โ€“ 24 February 2010 Undercover: The Evolution of Underwear โ€“ 12 June 2009 โ€“ 27 September 2009 Swedish Fashion: Exploring A New Identity โ€“ 6 February 2009 โ€“ 17 May 2009 Billy: Bill Gibb's Moment in Time โ€“ 24 October 2008 โ€“ 18 January 2009 Little Black Dress โ€“ 20 June 2008 โ€“ 25 August 2008 Peacocks and Pinstripes โ€“ 8 February 2008 โ€“ 31 May 2008 See also Fashion museum Textile museum References Textile museums in the United Kingdom Fashion museums in the United Kingdom Museums in the London Borough of Southwark Bermondsey Museums established in 2003 2003 establishments in England Ricardo Legorreta buildings
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EB%8C%80%ED%95%9C%EB%AF%BC%EA%B5%AD%20%EC%9D%B8%EA%B6%8C%EC%83%81
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๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ์ธ๊ถŒ์ƒ์€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์ธ๊ถŒ์œ„์›ํšŒ๊ฐ€ ๋งค๋…„ ์ˆ˜์—ฌํ•˜๋Š” ์ธ๊ถŒ์ƒ์ด๋‹ค. 2006๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ฐœ์ธ ๋ถ€๋ฌธ์ธ ํ›ˆ์žฅ, ํฌ์žฅ๊ณผ ๋‹จ์ฒด ๋ถ€๋ฌธ์ธ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์ธ๊ถŒ์œ„์›ํšŒ์œ„์›์žฅ ํ‘œ์ฐฝ ๋“ฑ์œผ๋กœ ๋‚˜๋ˆ  ์‹œ์ƒํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋งค๋…„ 12์›” 10์ผ์— ์—ด๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์„ธ๊ณ„์ธ๊ถŒ์„ ์–ธ ๊ธฐ๋…์‹์—์„œ ์ˆ˜์—ฌํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž 2006๋…„ ๊ตญ๋ฏผํ›ˆ์žฅ ์„๋ฅ˜์žฅ ์ž„๊ธฐ๋ž€ (์ „ ๋ฏผ์ฃผํ™”์‹ค์ฒœ๊ฐ€์กฑ์šด๋™ํ˜‘์˜ํšŒ ์ƒ์ž„์˜์žฅ) ๊ทผ์ •ํฌ์žฅ ๊ณฝ๋ณ‘์€ (์›์ฃผ๊ต๋„์†Œ ์ „ ๋ณด๊ฑด์˜๋ฃŒ๊ณผ์žฅ) ๋‹จ์ฒด๋ถ€๋ฌธ ํ‘œ์ฐฝ ํ•œ์„ผ๋ณ‘๋ณด์ƒ์ฒญ๊ตฌ์†Œ์†ก ์ผ๋ณธ๋ณ€ํ˜ธ๋‹จ ํ•œ๊ตญ์—ฌ์„ฑ๋…ธ๋™์žํšŒํ˜‘์˜ํšŒ ๊ด‘์ฃผ์ธํ™”ํ•™๊ต ์„ฑํญ๋ ฅ๋Œ€์ฑ…์œ„์›ํšŒ ๊ตญ์ œ์žฅ์• ์ธ๊ถŒ๋ฆฌ์กฐ์•ฝ ํ•œ๊ตญ์ถ”์ง„์—ฐ๋Œ€ ์„œ์šธ์‹ ๋ฌธ ๋งˆ์ด๋„ˆ๋ฆฌํ‹ฐ๋ฆฌํฌํŠธ ํ•œ๊ตญ๊ต์œก๋ฐฉ์†ก๊ณต์‚ฌ โ€˜๋˜˜๋ ˆ๋ž‘์Šคโ€™ ์ œ์ž‘ํŒ€ ์„ฑ์•ˆ๋“œ๋ ˆ์•„์ •์‹ ๋ณ‘์› ์ „๋ถํ‰ํ™”์™€์ธ๊ถŒ์—ฐ๋Œ€ 2007๋…„ ๊ตญ๋ฏผํ›ˆ์žฅ ๋™๋ฐฑ์žฅ ์กฐํ™”์ˆœ ๋ชฉ์‚ฌ ๊ตญ๋ฏผํฌ์žฅ ์•ˆ์˜๋„ ๋ณ€ํ˜ธ์‚ฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์ธ๊ถŒ์œ„์›์žฅ ํ‘œ์ฐฝ ์„œ์šธ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ์ด์ฃผ๋…ธ๋™์ž์„ผํ„ฐ ์†Œ์žฅ ์ตœ์˜ํŒ” ๋ชฉ์‚ฌ ์žฅ์€์ฃผ ์›์ฃผ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ ๊ฒฝ์‚ฌ ๋…ธ์ˆ˜ํ™˜ ๋Œ€์ „์ง€๊ฒ€ ๊ฒ€์ฐฐ์ฃผ์‚ฌ ๊ถŒ๊ฑด์•„ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ฒญ ์ธ๊ถŒ๋ณดํ˜ธ์„ผํ„ฐ ๊ฒฝ์œ„ ํ•จ์œ ๋ณต ์ถ˜์ฒœ๊ต๋„์†Œ ๊ต์œ„ ์ด์šฉ์ต ์ธ์ฒœ๊ตฌ์น˜์†Œ ๊ต์œ„ ์ตœ์ฒœ์‹ ์˜ฅ๊ตฌ์ดˆ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต ๊ต์žฅ ๋ฐ•ํ˜„ํฌ ๊ตฌ์ผ๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต ๊ต์‚ฌ ๊ตญ๋ฐฉ๋ถ€ ์ธ๊ถŒํŒ€ ์žฌ์ผ์ฝ”๋ฆฌ์•ˆ ๋ณ€ํ˜ธ์‚ฌํ˜‘ํšŒ ์šธ์‚ฐ์ง€์—ญ ์—ฐ๋Œ€๋…ธ์กฐ ์šธ์‚ฐ๊ณผํ•™๋Œ€์ง€๋ถ€ ๋ฌธํ™”๋ฐฉ์†ก ๋“œ๋ผ๋งˆ โ€˜๊ณ ๋ง™์Šต๋‹ˆ๋‹คโ€™ ํ•œ๊ฒจ๋ ˆ 21 SBS ๊ธด๊ธ‰์ถœ๋™ SOS 24 ๊ด‘์ฃผ์‹œ ์ค‘์ฆ์žฅ์• ์ธ์ž๋ฆฝ์ƒํ™œ์ง€์› ์กฐ๋ก€์ œ์ • 2008๋…„ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์ธ๊ถŒ์œ„์›ํšŒ๋Š” ๋ถ€์‚ฐ์ธ๊ถŒ์„ผํ„ฐ ์ด์ •์ด ๋Œ€ํ‘œ๋ฅผ ์ตœ์ข… ์ถ”์ฒœํ•˜์˜€์œผ๋‚˜ ํ–‰์ •์•ˆ์ „๋ถ€์—์„œ ์ •๋ถ€์˜ ํ›ˆ์žฅ ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ ๋Œ€์ƒ์—์„œ ์ œ์™ธํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹จ์ฒด๋ถ€๋ฌธ ํ‘œ์ฐฝ ์žฅ์• ์ธ์ฐจ๋ณ„๊ธˆ์ง€์ถ”์ง„์—ฐ๋Œ€ ์ฐธ์—ฌ์™€ ํ‰ํ™”๋กœ ๊ฐ€๋Š” ์›์ฃผ์‹œ๋ฏผ์—ฐ๋Œ€ ์ •์‹ ์žฅ์• ์ธ์„ ์œ„ํ•œ ์‚ฌํšŒ๋ณต๊ท€์‹œ์„ค์ธ ํƒœํ™”์ƒ˜์†Ÿ๋Š”์ง‘ ๋ถ€์‚ฐํ•ด์šด๋Œ€๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ ์œก๊ตฐ๋ณธ๋ถ€ ๋ฒ•๋ฌด์‹ค 2009๋…„ 2009๋…„ 10์›”, ํ•œ๊ตญ์˜ ์ธ๊ถŒ์ƒ ํ›„๋ณด๋กœ ์ง€๋ช…๋œ 45๊ฐœ์˜ ์ธ๊ถŒ ๋‹จ์ฒด๋Š” ์ƒˆ๋กœ ์ž„๋ช…๋œ ํ˜„๋ณ‘์ฒ  ์œ„์›์žฅ์˜ ๋…๋ฆฝ์„ฑ๊ณผ ์ •์น˜์  ํŽธ๊ฒฌ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์šฐ๋ ค ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๊ทธ ํ•ด์˜ ์„ ๋ฐœ ๊ณผ์ •์— ์ฐธ์—ฌํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ฒ ๋‹ค๋Š” ์„ฑ๋ช…์„œ๋ฅผ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์€ ํ•ด 11์›” โ€œํ˜„๋ณ‘์ฒ  ์œ„์›์žฅ ์ทจ์ž„ ์ดํ›„ ์ธ๊ถŒ์œ„๊ฐ€ ์ •๊ถŒ์˜ ๋ˆˆ์น˜๋ฅผ ๋ณด๊ณ  ์ •๋ถ€์˜ ์ •์ฑ…์— ๋ถ€๋‹ด๋  ๊ฒƒ ๊ฐ™์€ ์‚ฌ์•ˆ๋“ค์€ ์˜๊ฒฌํ‘œ๋ช…์„ ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ๊ธฐ๊ฐํ•˜๋Š” ๋“ฑ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๋ฌธ์ œ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹คโ€๊ณ  ๋น„ํŒํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์ธ๊ถŒ์œ„ ์œ„์› 61๋ช…์ด ์‚ฌํ‡ดํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ตญ๋ฏผํ›ˆ์žฅ ์ด์–‘ํฌ (์œ ์—”์•„๋™๊ถŒ๋ฆฌ์œ„์›์žฅ) ๊ฐœ์ธ ๋ถ€๋ฌธ ์ด์žฌํ˜„ (์žฌ์ผ๊ตํฌ ๊น€ํฌ๋กœ์”จ ์„๋ฐฉ ์šด๋™) ๊น€์ข…์ฒ  (๊ตญ์ œ๊ฐ€์กฑํ•œ๊ตญ์ด์—ฐํ•ฉ ๋ถ€ํšŒ์žฅ) ํ˜„์‹œ์›… (๋Œ€๊ตฌ๋…ธ์ˆ™์ธ์ƒ๋‹ด์ง€์›์„ผํ„ฐ ์†Œ์žฅ) ๊น€ํ™๋‚จ (๋ถ€์‚ฐ๊ต๋„์†Œ ๊ต์œ„) ํ™์ˆœ์ฐฝ (์ „๋ถ๊ต์œก์ฒญ ์žฅํ•™์‚ฌ) ๋ฐ•์˜๋ฏธ (๊ตญ๋ฐฉ๋ถ€ ๋ฒ•๋ฌด๊ด€๋ฆฌ๊ด€์‹ค ํ–‰์ •์ฃผ์‚ฌ) ๋‹จ์ฒด๋ถ€๋ฌธ ํ‘œ์ฐฝ ์‚ผ์ฒญ๊ต์œก๋Œ€ ์ธ๊ถŒ์šด๋™์—ฐํ•ฉ ๋Œ€ํ•œ์—์ด์ฆˆ์˜ˆ๋ฐฉํ˜‘ํšŒ ๋Œ€๊ตฌ๊ฒฝ๋ถ์ง€ํšŒ ๋ถํ•œ๋ฏผ์ฃผํ™”๋„คํŠธ์›Œํฌ MBC ํฌ๋ง๋‚˜๋ˆ”๋ฌด์ง€๊ฐœ ์ œ์ž‘์ง„ ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ ์ฃผ๋ฏผ์„ผํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ์šด์˜ํ•œ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋„ ์•ˆ์‚ฐ์‹œ 2010๋…„ ์œ„์›์žฅ ๋‹จ์ฒด ํ‘œ์ฐฝ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž๋กœ ๊ฒฐ์ •๋œ '์ด์ฃผ๋…ธ๋™์ž์˜ ๋ฐฉ์†ก'(MWTV)์ด "์ธ๊ถŒ์œ„๊ฐ€ ์ •์ƒ์ ์ธ ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์„ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰ํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค"๊ณ  ์ˆ˜์ƒ์„ ๊ฑฐ๋ถ€ํ–ˆ๊ณ , ์ธ์ฒœ์žฅ์• ์ธ์ฐจ๋ณ„์ฒ ํ์—ฐ๋Œ€๋„ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์„ ๊ฑฐ๋ถ€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐœ์ธ ๋ถ€๋ฌธ ์œคํ˜„ (๋ถํ•œ์ธ๊ถŒ์‹œ๋ฏผ์—ฐํ•ฉ ์ด์‚ฌ์žฅ) ๊น€๋ช…ํ˜ธ (๊ฐ•๋ฆ‰์›์ฃผ๋Œ€ ๊ต์ˆ˜) ์–‘์ •์ˆ™ (๊ด‘์ฃผ YWCA ๊ฐ€์ •ํญ๋ ฅ์ƒ๋‹ด์†Œ์žฅ) ์ •๋•ํ›ˆ (์˜๊ด‘๊ตํšŒ ๋‹ด์ž„๋ชฉ์‚ฌ) ํƒœ์›์šฐ (๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ณ€ํ˜ธ์‚ฌํ˜‘ํšŒ ์ธ๊ถŒ์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์›) ๊ณต๋ฌด์› ์ด์ƒ์ˆ  ํ™”์„ฑ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ๋ณดํ˜ธ์†Œ ์ถœ์ž…๊ตญ๊ด€๋ฆฌ์ฃผ์‚ฌ๋ณด ๋ฐฐ์ฐฌ ๋Œ€์ „๊ต๋„์†Œ ๊ต์œ„ ์กฐ๋™์–‘ ๊ตญ๋ฐฉ๋ถ€ ๋ฒ•๋ฌด๊ด€๋ฆฌ๊ด€ ์‹ฌ์€๋ณด ์ด์›”์ดˆ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต ๊ต์‚ฌ ์žฅ์Šน์ง„ ์„œ์šธ์‹œ์ฒญ ์ง€๋ฐฉํ–‰์ •์ฃผ์‚ฌ ๋‹จ์ฒด๋ถ€๋ฌธ ํ‘œ์ฐฝ ๋ชฉํฌ๊ฒฝ์ œ์ •์˜์‹ค์ฒœ์‹œ๋ฏผ์—ฐํ•ฉ ์ธ์ฒœ์žฅ์• ์ธ์ฐจ๋ณ„์ฒ ํ์—ฐ๋Œ€ (์ˆ˜์ƒ ๊ฑฐ๋ถ€) 2011๋…„ ๋‘์˜ค๊ท  ์‚ฌ๋‹จ๋ฒ•์ธ ๋Œ€์ „์žฅ์• ์šฐ๊ถŒ์ต๋ฌธ์ œ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์†Œ์žฅ ํ•˜ํƒœ๊ฒฝ ์‚ฌ๋‹จ๋ฒ•์ธ ์—ด๋ฆฐ๋ถํ•œ๋ฐฉ์†ก ๋Œ€ํ‘œ ๋‹จ์ฒด ๋ถ€๋ฌธ ๊ฐ€์˜จ์žฅ์• ์ธ์ธ๊ถŒํ–‰๋ณต์œ„์›ํšŒ ๋‚˜๋ˆ”์˜ ์ง‘ 2012๋…„ ๊ตญ๋ฏผํ›ˆ์žฅ ๊น€์˜ํ™˜ ์‚ฌ๋‹จ๋ฒ•์ธ ๋ถํ•œ๋ฏผ์ฃผํ™”๋„คํŠธ์›Œํฌ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์œ„์› ๊ทผ์ •ํฌ์žฅ ๊น€์ธ์ˆ™ ๊ตญ์ œ์•„๋™์ธ๊ถŒ์„ผํ„ฐ ๊ธฐํš์ด์‚ฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์ธ๊ถŒ์œ„์›์žฅ ๊ฐœ์ธ๋ถ€๋ฌธ ํ‘œ์ฐฝ ๊ด‘์ฃผ์ธํ™”ํ•™๊ต ์ด๋™๋ฌธํšŒ ์„œ๋งŒ๊ธธ ํšŒ์žฅ SBS ์ด๊ฒฝํ™ PD ์กฐ์ฐฝ์› ์ „ ์†Œ๋ก๋„๋ณ‘์› ์›์žฅ ์„ฑ๊ณตํšŒ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ์ •์›์˜ค ๊ต์ˆ˜ ๋Œ€์ „๊ต๋„์†Œ ๊น€๋ณ‘ํ™” ๊ต์œ„ ์—ฌ์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ ์ „์ƒ๊ทœ ๊ฒฝ์œ„ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ์ง€๋ฐฉ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ฒญ ๊น€ํšจ์ • ๊ฒฝ์žฅ ์œก๊ตฐ ์ œ5993๋ถ€๋Œ€ ์ตœ๋งŒํ˜ธ ์ƒ์‚ฌ ๋ณด๊ฑด๋ณต์ง€๋ถ€ ๊ตญ๋ฆฝ์ถ˜์ฒœ๋ณ‘์› ์ดํƒœ์ˆ™ ๊ฐ„ํ˜ธ ์ฃผ์‚ฌ ์˜์ •๋ถ€ ํ˜ธ๋™์ดˆ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต ์ž„์ข…์ˆ˜ ๊ต์žฅ ๋‹จ์ฒด๋ถ€๋ฌธ ํ‘œ์ฐฝ ์‚ฌ๋‹จ๋ฒ•์ธ ๊ฐ•์›์—ฌ์„ฑ์ธ๊ถŒ์ง€์›๊ณต๋™์ฒด ์ถ˜์ฒœ ๊ธธ์žก์ด์˜ ์ง‘ ์‚ฌํšŒ๋ณต์ง€๋ฒ•์ธ ๋ผํŒŒ์—˜ ํด๋ฆฌ๋‹‰ ๋“œ๋ฆผ์Šคํƒ€ํŠธ ์‚ฌ์—… ์ธ์ฒœ๊ด‘์—ญ์‹œ ๋‚จ๊ตฌ ์‚ฌ๋‹จ๋ฒ•์ธ ํœด๋จผ์•„์‹œ์•„ 2013๋…„ ๊ทผ์ •ํ›ˆ์žฅ ์„œ์šธ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ์‚ฌํšŒ๊ณผํ•™๋Œ€ํ•™ ์ •์ง„์„ฑ ๊ต์ˆ˜ ๊ตญ๋ฏผํฌ์žฅ ์ •์‹ ๋Œ€๋ฌธ์ œ๋Œ€์ฑ…๋ถ€์‚ฐํ˜‘์˜ํšŒ ๊น€๋ฌธ์ˆ™ ์ด์‚ฌ์žฅ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์ธ๊ถŒ์œ„์›์žฅ ๊ฐœ์ธ๋ถ€๋ฌธ ํ‘œ์ฐฝ ์•ˆ์–‘์—ฌ์„ฑ์˜์ „ํ™” ์ตœ๋ณ‘์ผ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ ์ „๋ž€ํ”ผํ•ด์—ฌ์„ฑ์ธ๊ถŒ์—ฐ๋Œ€ ์•ˆ์„ฑ์ž ํšŒ์žฅ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์ธ์žฌ์—ฐํ•ฉํšŒ ๋ฐ•ํ˜ธ์–ธ ๋ฒ•๋ฅ ์ž๋ฌธ์œ„์› ๋‹จ์ฒด๋ถ€๋ฌธ ํ‘œ์ฐฝ ํ•œ๊ตญ์—ฌ์„ฑ์˜์ „ํ™” ๋‹ค์‹œ์„œ๊ธฐ์ข…ํ•ฉ์ง€์›์„ผํ„ฐ ํ”ผ๋žยทํƒˆ๋ถ์ธ๊ถŒ์—ฐ๋Œ€ 2014๋…„ ํ›ˆ์žฅ ์—ฐ์„ธ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ์˜๊ณผ๋Œ€ํ•™ ์ธ์š”ํ•œ ๊ต์ˆ˜ ๊ตญ๋ฏผํฌ์žฅ ํ•œ๊ตญ์žฅ์• ์ธ์žฌ๋‹จ ์„œ์ธํ™˜ ์‚ฌ๋ฌด์ด์žฅ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์ธ๊ถŒ์œ„์›์žฅ ๊ฐœ์ธ๋ถ€๋ฌธ ํ‘œ์ฐฝ (์‚ฌ)์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ๊ทผ๋กœ์ž๋ฌธํ™”์„ผํ„ฐ ์ด์ฒœ์˜ ์ด์‚ฌ์žฅ ๋ถ€์‚ฐ์ธ๊ถŒํฌ๋Ÿผ ๊ตฌ์ˆ˜๊ฒฝ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ ๆ•…์ด์ฃผํ—Œ ์˜๋ฃŒ์„ ๊ต์‚ฌ KBS ์œค์ง„โ€งํ™ฉํ˜„ํƒ ๊ธฐ์ž ๋ฒง์—˜์˜์ง‘ ์›์šฉ์ฒ  ๋ชฉ์‚ฌ ์—ด๋ฆฐ๋ถํ•œ๋ฐฉ์†ก ๊ถŒ์€๊ฒฝ ๊ตญ์ œํŒ€์žฅ ๊ตญ๋ฐฉ๋ถ€ ํ•ด๊ตฐ๋ณธ๋ถ€ ๊ณ ๋ฏผ์ˆ™ ์ธ๊ถŒ๊ณผ์žฅ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ฒญ ์ธ๊ถŒ๋ณดํ˜ธ๋‹ด๋‹น๊ด€์‹ค ๋ฐ•์ˆญ๊ฐ ๊ฒฝ์œ„ ๊ฐ•์›์ง€๋ฐฉ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ฒญ ํ”ผ๊ธฐ์ถ˜ ๊ฒฝ์œ„ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ ์†”๊ฐœ์ดˆ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต ๊น€ํ˜„์ง„ ๊ต์‚ฌ ๋‹จ์ฒด๋ถ€๋ฌธ ํ‘œ์ฐฝ ๊ตฐ์ธ๊ถŒ์„ผํ„ฐ(๋Œ€ํ‘œ ์ž„ํƒœํ›ˆ) ์žฌ๋‹จ๋ฒ•์ธ๋™์ฒœ(๋Œ€ํ‘œ ์ด์ •ํ›ˆ) (์‚ฌ)์žฅ์• ์šฐ๊ถŒ์ต๋ฌธ์ œ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์†Œ(๋Œ€ํ‘œ ๊น€์„ฑ์žฌ) ๋Œ€๊ตฌํ•˜๋‚˜์„ผํ„ฐ(๋Œ€ํ‘œ ํ—ˆ์˜์ฒ ) ํ•œ๊ตญ๋…ธ์ธ๋ณต์ง€์ค‘์•™ํšŒ(๋Œ€ํ‘œ ๋ฐ•์ง„์šฐ) 2015๋…„ ๊ตญ๋ฏผํ›ˆ์žฅ ๋ชจ๋ž€์žฅ ๊น€๋ณต๋™ ํ• ๋จธ๋‹ˆ ๊ตญ๋ฏผํฌ์žฅ ํ•œ๊ตญ์—ฌ์„ฑ์˜์ „ํ™” ์ •์ถ˜์ˆ™ ์ด์‚ฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์ธ๊ถŒ์œ„์›์žฅ ๊ฐœ์ธ๋ถ€๋ฌธ ํ‘œ์ฐฝ ์˜์›ํ•œ ๋„์›€์˜ ์„ฑ๋ชจ ์ˆ˜๋…€ํšŒ ์˜คํ˜œ์ • ์ˆ˜๋…€ ์ผ๋ณธ ๊ฐ€๋‚˜๊ฐ€์™€์‹œํ‹ฐ์œ ๋‹ˆ์˜จ ๋ฌด๋ผ์•ผ๋งˆ์‚ฌํ† ์‹œ ๋…ธ๋™์šด๋™๊ฐ€ ์ธ์ฒœํญ๋ ฅ์˜ˆ๋ฐฉ๊ต์œก์ „๋ฌธ๊ธฐ๊ด€ ํ•˜๋ชจ๋‹ˆ ๊น€์‹ ์ˆ™ ์†Œ์žฅ ๋งˆ์Œํ–ฅ๊ธฐ๋ณ‘์› ๊น€์ข…์ฒœ ๋ณ‘์›์žฅ ์ด์ฃผ๋ฏผ๋ฌธํ™”์„ผํ„ฐ ์ „๋ณ‘ํ˜ธ ์„ผํ„ฐ์žฅ ๋ถ€์‚ฐํ•œ์†”ํ•™๊ต ๊น€๋ฏธ์˜ ๊ต์žฅ ๊ด‘์ฃผ์ง€๋ฐฉ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ฒญ ๋ฐ•๋ณ‘์šฐ ๊ฒฝ๊ฐ ๊ตญ๋ฆฝ๊ณต์ฃผ๋ณ‘์› ์ด๋ž˜์ˆ™ ๊ฐ„ํ˜ธ์ฃผ์‚ฌ ์„œ์šธ์†Œ๋…„๋ถ„๋ฅ˜์‹ฌ์‚ฌ์› ์ •์žฌํ˜ธ ๋ณดํ˜ธ์ฃผ์‚ฌ๋ณด ์ƒํƒ„์ดˆ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต ๊น€์œค์‹ค ๊ต์‚ฌ ๋‹จ์ฒด๋ถ€๋ฌธ ํ‘œ์ฐฝ ๋ฐœ๋‹ฌ์žฅ์• ์ธ๋ฒ•์ œ์ •์ถ”์ง„์—ฐ๋Œ€(๊ณต๋™๋Œ€ํ‘œ ์œค์ข…์ˆ , ๋…ธ์ต์ƒ, ๊น€์šฉ์ง, ๊น€์„ฑ์กฐ) ๋Œ€๊ตฌ์ด์ฃผ์—ฌ์„ฑ์‰ผํ„ฐ(๋Œ€ํ‘œ ๊ณ ๋ช…์ˆ™) Know Your Rights(๋Œ€ํ‘œ ๊ฐ•์Šน์šฑ) 2016๋…„ ๊ตญ๋ฏผํ›ˆ์žฅ ๋™๋ฐฑ์žฅ ๋ฐ•๋ฌธ์ˆ˜(์„œ๊ฐ•๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ์ด์‚ฌ์žฅ) ์‹ ๋ถ€ ๊ตญ๋ฏผํฌ์žฅ ์ด๊ฒฝํ˜œ(์‚ฌ๋‹จ๋ฒ•์ธ ๋ฌธํ™”๋ณต์ง€ ๊ณต๊ฐ์˜ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ) ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์ธ๊ถŒ์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์›์žฅ ํ‘œ์ฐฝ ๊ฐ•์šฉ์กฐ(์ฒญ์ฃผ๊ต๋„์†Œ ๊ต์œ„) ๊ฐ•์€์ด(์•ˆ์‚ฐ ์ด์ฃผ์•„๋™์ฒญ์†Œ๋…„์„ผํ„ฐ ์„ผํ„ฐ์žฅ) ๊น€๊ตญํ˜„(์ง„์ฃผ ํ˜œ๊ด‘ํ•™๊ต ์ˆ˜์„๊ต์‚ฌ) ๊น€์ •์˜(์‚ฌ๋ž‘์† ๋ณดํ˜ธ์ž‘์—…์žฅ ์‹œ์„ค์žฅ) ์•ˆ์ •ํ˜ธ(์šธ์‚ฐ์ง€๋ฐฉ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ฒญ ๊ฒฝ์‚ฌ) ์›์ค€ํฌ(๊ฐ•์›์ง€๋ฐฉ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ฒญ ์›์ฃผ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ ๊ฒฝ์œ„) ์ด์€์ฃผ(์‚ฌ๋‹จ๋ฒ•์ธ ๊ฒ€์ •๊ณ ์‹œ์ง€์›ํ˜‘ํšŒ ์ด๋ฌด์ด์‚ฌ) ์ดํ‰์„ญ(์ˆ˜์›๊ตฌ์น˜์†Œ ๊ต์œ„) (์‚ฌ)๋‹ค๋ฌธํ™”๊ฐ€์กฑํ–‰๋ณต๋‚˜๋ˆ”์„ผํ„ฐ(๋Œ€ํ‘œ ๊น€์˜์ˆ˜) ๋ถ„๋‹น ๋…ธ์ธ์ข…ํ•ฉ๋ณต์ง€๊ด€(๊ด€์žฅ ์ด์ •์šฐ) ์†ก๊ตญํด๋Ÿฝํ•˜์šฐ์Šค(๋Œ€ํ‘œ ์œ ์ˆ™) (์‚ฌ)์ฒญ์†Œ๋…„๊ต์œก๋ฌธํ™”๊ณต๋™์ฒด ๋ฐ˜๋”ง๋ถˆ์ด(๋Œ€ํ‘œ ๊น€ํ˜•์„ญ) 2017๋…„ ๊ตญ๋ฏผํ›ˆ์žฅ ๋™๋ฐฑ์žฅ ์ด์ •ํ˜ธ ๋‚จ์–‘์ฃผ์‹œ ์™ธ๊ตญ์ธ๋ณต์ง€์„ผํ„ฐ ๊ด€์žฅ ๊ตญ๋ฏผํฌ์žฅ ๊น€ํšจ์ง„ ์žฅ์• ์—ฌ์„ฑ๋„คํŠธ์›Œํฌ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ ๊ฐœ์ธ๋ถ€๋ฌธ ์ „์„ฑํ˜„ ์•„์ดํผ์ŠคํŠธ์•„๋™๋ณ‘์› ๋ณ‘์›์žฅ ๊ถŒํ˜„ํฌ ํ•œ๊ตญ๊ฑด๊ฐ•๊ฐ€์ •์ง„ํฅ์› ๋‹ค๋ˆ„๋ฆฌ์ฝœ์„ผํ„ฐ ๊ด‘์ฃผ์ง€์—ญ์„ผํ„ฐ ์„ผํ„ฐ์žฅ ํžˆ๋ผ๋งˆ ๋งˆ์‚ฌ์ฝ” ์ผ๋ณธ ๊ฐ€๋‚˜๊ฐ€์™€์‹œํ‹ฐ์œ ๋‹ˆ์˜จ ์ง‘ํ–‰์œ„์› ๋ฐฑ์ธํ˜ธ ์‚ผ์„ฑ์ „์ž UX ๋””์ž์ด๋„ˆ ๊น€์ฒ ๋ฏผ ์ง„์ฃผ๊ต๋„์†Œ ๊ต์‚ฌ ๊น€๋ช…๋ž˜ ๊ฐ•์›์ง€๋ฐฉ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ฒญ ํšก์„ฑ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์„œ ๊ฒฝ๊ฐ ์œ ์ง€ํ›ˆ ๊ฒฝ์ฐฐ์ฒญ ์ˆ˜์‚ฌ๊ธฐํš๊ณผ ๊ฒฝ๊ฐ ์žฅ์˜๋ฏผ ์–‘์ผ๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต ํŠน์ˆ˜๊ต์‚ฌ ๋‹จ์ฒด๋ถ€๋ฌธ ์žฅ์• ์ธ์ฐจ๋ณ„๊ธˆ์ง€์ถ”์ง„์—ฐ๋Œ€ ์–‘์‹ฌ๊ณผ ์ธ๊ถŒ-๋‚˜๋ฌด ๊ด‘๋ช… ์‹œ๋ฏผ์ธ๊ถŒ์„ผํ„ฐ ํ•œ๊ตญ๋น„์ •๊ทœ๋…ธ๋™์„ผํ„ฐ 2018๋…„ ๊ตญ๋ฏผํ›ˆ์žฅ ๋ฌด๊ถํ™”์žฅ ๋…ธํšŒ์ฐฌ ๊ตญํšŒ์˜์› 2019๋…„ 2020๋…„ ๋ฐฑ๋„๋ช… ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ๊ตญ๊ฐ€์ธ๊ถŒ์œ„์›ํšŒ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๋ฏผ์‚ฌํ›ˆ์žฅ ์ธ๊ถŒ์ƒ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human%20Rights%20Award%20of%20Korea
Human Rights Award of Korea
The Human Rights Award of Korea () is the highest human rights award of the Republic of Korea, bestowed annually by the National Human Rights Commission of Korea. It was established in 2005 for human rights organizations, and started to award individuals from 2007 to recognise the contribution to Korean and international human rights. The award are presented at annual Human Rights Day Ceremony on 10 December in every year. Categories There are three categories of the award Human Rights Advocate and Extension Human Rights Education and Cultural Promotion Human Rights Policy and Research Recipients 2005 Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Seoul Anti Sexual Discrimination Movement against YMCA Korea 2006 In 2006, a total of seventeen organisations and individuals received the Human Rights Award of Korea, including: Kwak Byeong-eun (๊ณฝ๋ณ‘์€), age 53, in recognition of his work with prisoners at the Wonju Correctional Institute since 991 St. Andrew's Mental Hospital of Icheon City, Gyeonggi Province Seoul Sinmun "Minority Report", which writes about human rights issues facing women and minorities The production team for the Educational Broadcasting System programme Tolerance Countermovement Committee against Sexual Violence in Gwangju Inhwa School 2007 Human Rights Team of the Ministry of National Defense of Korea 2008 Nominee Lee Jeong-yi of the Busan Human Rights Center, well known for her work with prisoners of conscience, was disqualified from consideration after objections by the Ministry of Security and Public Administration. Conservative groups had accused Lee of being "a pro-North Korea, anti-U.S. activist". An anonymous National Human Rights Commission employee quoted by the Hankyoreh objected to the decision and described it as politically motivated. Korean Broadcasting System Judge Advocate General's Corps, Republic of Korea Army 2009 In October 2009, forty-five human rights organisations which had been nominated for the Human Rights Award of Korea issued a statement that they would not participate in the selection process for that year due to concerns over the independence and political bias of newly appointed Human Rights Commission head Hyun Byung-chul. The following month saw broader strife in the HRC; sixty-one HRC advisors also threatened to resign in protest, calling Hyun "nothing more than a 'yes man'" for the Lee Myung-bak administration. Yanghee Lee (former chairperson of the Committee on the Rights of the Child) Network for North Korean Democracy and Human Rights Ansan City 2010 The year 2010 saw further boycotts of the Human Rights Award, including several by student writers who had participated in the essay competition. The Human Rights Commission announced on December 10 that the Incheon League for the Abolition of Discrimination against People with Disabilities (์ธ์ฒœ์žฅ์• ์ธ์ฐจ๋ณ„์ฒ ํ์—ฐ๋Œ€), an organisation which had been selected for the award, would not accept it. A spokesperson for the National League for the Abolition of Discrimination Against People with Disabilities stated that there continued to be concerns over the independence and operation of the Human Rights Committee. Tae Wonwoo (Partner of Gyeomin and Member of Human Rights Committee of Korean Bar Association) Citizens' Coalition for Economic Justice 2011 Ha Tae-keung (Member of National Assembly and President of Open Radio for North Korea) Korea Association of Social Workers Yeungnam University 2012 Joung Won Oh (Professor and the President of Social Enterprise Research Institute of Sungkonghoe University) Dream Start Center of Ministry of Health and Welfare Human Asia 2013 Peter Park (Former Youth Ombudsman of Korea and Election Commissioner in Melbourne, Overseas Election Commission of Korea) Choi Byeongil, director of Anyang Korea Women's Hotline Coalition for Human Rights of Abductees and North Korean Refugees 2014 John Linton (Professor and the President of International Medical Center, Yonsei University) Center for Military Human Rights, Korea Dongcheon Foundation 2015 Hyejung Oh (Sister, Sisters of Our Lady of Perpetual Help) The Know Your Rights, Victoria, Australia 2016 Eunjoo Lee (Secretary-General, School Equivalent Examinations Support Association) Multicultural Family Service Center References External links National Human Rights Commission of Korea Human rights awards Civil awards and decorations of South Korea Awards established in 2007
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%ED%8F%AC%EC%BC%93%EB%AA%AC%EC%8A%A4%ED%84%B0%20%EC%86%8C%EB%93%9C%C2%B7%EC%8B%A4%EB%93%9C
ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ์Šคํ„ฐ ์†Œ๋“œยท์‹ค๋“œ
ใ€Šํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ์Šคํ„ฐ ์†Œ๋“œใ€‹ ์™€ ใ€Šํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ์Šคํ„ฐ ์‹ค๋“œใ€‹๋Š” ๊ฒŒ์ž„ํ”„๋ฆฌํฌ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœํ•˜๊ณ  ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ ์ปดํผ๋‹ˆ์™€ ๋‹Œํ…๋„๊ฐ€ ๋ฐฐ๊ธ‰ํ•œ 2019๋…„ ๋กคํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ž‰ ๋น„๋””์˜ค ๊ฒŒ์ž„์ด๋‹ค. ใ€Šํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ์Šคํ„ฐใ€‹ ๋น„๋””์˜ค ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ์˜ 8์„ธ๋Œ€๋ฅผ ์—ฐ ์ฒซ ์ž‘ํ’ˆ์ด์ž ใ€Šํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ์Šคํ„ฐ ๋ ˆ์ธ ๊ณ ! ํ”ผ์นด์ธ„ยท๋ ˆ์ธ ๊ณ ! ์ด๋ธŒ์ดใ€‹์— ์ด์–ด ๋‹Œํ…๋„ ์Šค์œ„์น˜๋กœ ๋ฐœ๋งค๋œ ๋‘ ๋ฒˆ์งธ ๋ณธํŽธ ๊ฒŒ์ž„๊ตฐ์ด๋‹ค. ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ ์ตœ์ดˆ๋กœ '์ต์ŠคํŒฌ์…˜ ํŒจ์Šค'๋ผ๋Š” ์ด๋ฆ„์œผ๋กœ ์œ ๋ฃŒ ๋‹ค์šด๋กœ๋“œ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ ์ปจํ…์ธ ๋ฅผ ๋„์ž…ํ•ด 2020๋…„ 6์›” ใ€Š๊ฐ‘์˜ท์˜ ์™ธ๋”ด์„ฌใ€‹, 2020๋…„ 10์›” ใ€Š์™•๊ด€์˜ ์„ค์›ใ€‹ ์ด 2๊ฐœ์˜ ํ™•์žฅํŒฉ์ด ๋ฐœ๋งค๋๋‹ค. 2020๋…„ 11์›” ๋ณธํŽธ๊ณผ ํ™•์žฅํŒฉ๋“ค์ด ๋ชจ๋‘ ์ˆ˜๋ก๋œ ์‹ค๋ฌผํŒ์ด ๋ฐœ๋งค๋๋‹ค. ใ€Š์†Œ๋“œยท์‹ค๋“œใ€‹๋Š” 2016๋…„ ใ€Šํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ์Šคํ„ฐ ์ฌยท๋ฌธใ€‹์˜ ์ œ์ž‘์„ ๋งˆ์น˜์ž๋งˆ์ž ๊ณ„ํš๋œ ์ž‘ํ’ˆ์œผ๋กœ์„œ ๊ทธ ๊ณ„ํš์ด ์ œ์ž‘์˜ ๋‹จ๊ณ„๊นŒ์ง€ ์˜ฎ๊ฒจ์ง€๊ธฐ๋Š” 2017๋…„ ๋ง๋ถ€ํ„ฐ์˜€๋‹ค. 2017๋…„ E3์—์„œ ์ตœ์ดˆ๊ณต๊ฐœ๋ผ 2019๋…„ 11์›” 15์ผ ์ถœ์‹œ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ „์ž‘๋“ค์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ ํŠธ๋ ˆ์ด๋„ˆ๊ฐ€ ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ์ด ๋˜๊ธฐ๊นŒ์ง€์˜ ์—ฌ์ •์„ ๋‹ค๋ฃจ๋ฉฐ, ํ˜„์‹ค์˜ ์˜๊ตญ์— ๊ธฐํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฐ€๋ผ๋ฅด์ง€๋ฐฉ์ด ๋ฌด๋Œ€์ด๋‹ค. ์ฃผ๋ชฉํ‘œ๋Š” ๊ฐ ์‹œํ‹ฐ์˜ ์ฒด์œก๊ด€ ๊ด€์žฅ๋“ค์„ ๋ชจ๋‘ ์ด๊ธด ๋‹ค์Œ ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ ์ฑ”ํ”ผ์–ธ ๋‹จ๋ธ์„ ์ด๊ฒจ ๊ทธ ์ž๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๊ณ„์Šนํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ ์™€์ค‘์— ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด๋Š” ๊ฐ€๋ผ๋ฅด ๋ฆฌ๊ทธ์—์„œ ์ผ์–ด๋‚œ ํ‰์•…ํ•œ ์Œ๋ชจ๋ฅผ ๋งž๋‹ฅ๋œจ๋ฆฌ๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋ณธ์ž‘์—์„œ๋Š” 81์ข…์˜ ์ƒˆ ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ๊ณผ ์•„์šธ๋Ÿฌ 13์ข…์˜ ์ข…๋ž˜์˜ ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ์˜ ๋ฆฌ์ „ ํผ์ด ์ถ”๊ฐ€๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋”๋ถˆ์–ด ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ์˜ ํŠน์ •์กฐ๊ฑด์„ ์ถฉ์กฑ์‹œ์ผฐ์„ ์‹œ ๊ทธ ํฌ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์ปค์ง€๊ฒŒ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋‹ค์ด๋งฅ์Šค, ๊ฑฐ๋‹ค์ด๋งฅ์Šค๋Š” ๋‹ค์ด๋งฅ์Šค์ง€๋งŒ ์ผ๋ถ€ ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ์—์„œ๋Š” ๊ทธ ๋ชจ์Šต๋งˆ์ € ๋ฐ”๊ฟ” ๋ฒ„๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๊ฑฐ๋‹ค์ด๋งฅ์Šค, ์ž์œ ์‹œ์  ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ ๋ฐ ํ˜‘๋™ ๋ ˆ์ด๋“œ ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์ด ๋„์ž…๋œ ์™€์ผ๋“œ์—๋ฆฌ์–ด ๋“ฑ์ด ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์ถ”๊ฐ€๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ใ€Š์ฌโ€ข๋ฌธใ€‹, ใ€Š๋ ˆ์ธ ๊ณ ! ํ”ผ์นด์ธ„ยท์ด๋ธŒ์ดใ€‹์—์„œ ๋ฒŒ์จ ์†Œ๊ฐœ๋๋˜ ์ง€์—ญ์  ๋ณ€์ข…๊ณผ, ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ์˜ ์˜ค๋ฒ„์›”๋“œ์—์„œ์˜ ๋Œ์•„๋‹ค๋‹˜์ด ์žฌํ˜„๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ™•์žฅํŒฉ์—์„  ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์Šคํƒ€ํŒ… ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ, ์šฐ๋ผ์˜ค์Šค (์ผ๊ฒฉ์˜ ํƒœ์„ธ), ์šฐ๋ผ์˜ค์Šค (์—ฐ๊ฒฉ์˜ ํƒœ์„ธ), ๊ฑฐ๋ถ์™•, ์ด์ƒํ•ด๊ฝƒ์ด ๊ฑฐ๋‹ค์ด๋งฅ์Šค ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜๊ณ  ใ€Š๊ฐ‘์˜ท์˜ ์™ธ๋”ด์„ฌใ€‹์—์„œ๋Š” ์ „์„ค์˜ ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ ์น˜๊ณ ๋งˆ, ์šฐ๋ผ์˜ค์Šค๊ฐ€ ์ถœํ˜„ํ•˜๊ณ  ใ€Š์™•๊ด€์˜ ์„ค์›ใ€‹์—์„œ๋Š” ์ „์„ค์˜ ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ ๋ฒ„๋“œ๋ ‰์Šค์™€ ๋ ˆ์ง€๋“œ๋ž˜๊ณ , ๋ ˆ์ง€์—๋ ˆํ‚ค, ํŒŒ์ด์–ด, ํ”„๋ฆฌ์ ธ, ์ฌ๋”, ๋ธ”๋ฆฌ์žํฌ์Šค, ๋ ˆ์ด์Šคํฌ์Šค๊ฐ€ ์ถœํ˜„ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ํ”„๋ฆฌํฌ๋Š” ใ€Šํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ์Šคํ„ฐ ์†Œ๋“œยท์‹ค๋“œใ€‹์—์„œ ์ „์ž‘๋“ค๊ณผ๋Š” ๋‹ฌ๋ฆฌ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ ์ „์ฒด๋ฅผ ํฌํ•จํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ์ผ๋ถ€ ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ๋งŒ ๋“ฑ์žฅ์‹œํ‚ค๋Š” ๊ฒฐ์ •์„ ๋‚ด๋ ธ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Š” ์ผ๋ถ€ ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด์–ด ๊ณ„์ธต์—์„œ ๋ถ€์ •์ ์ธ ๋ฐ˜์‘์„ ์–ป์–ด ์ผ๋ช… "Dexit(ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ ๋„๊ฐ 'Pokรฉdex'์™€ ๋ธŒ๋ ‰์‹œํŠธ์˜ ํ•ฉ์„ฑ์–ด)"๋ผ ๋ถˆ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๋ณด์ด์ฝง ์šด๋™์„ ์ผ์œผ์ผฐ๋‹ค. ๋ฐœ๋งค ๋‹น์‹œ ใ€Šํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ์Šคํ„ฐ ์†Œ๋“œยท์‹ค๋“œใ€‹๋Š” ๋Œ€์ฒด์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ธ์ •์ ์ธ ํ‰๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ ๋””์ž์ธ, ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ, ๋‹จ์ˆœ์„ฑ, ์ž์œ ๋กœ์šด ๊ฒŒ์ž„ํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ด, ๊ฒฝํŽธํ™”๋œ ์ธ์นด์šดํ„ฐ์— ํ˜ธํ‰์ด ์žˆ์—ˆ์ง€๋งŒ, ๋™์‹œ์— ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ ๋„๊ฐ์˜ ์ถ•์†Œ, ๋œ ๋œ ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ์ฝ˜ํ…์ธ ์—์„œ ํ˜นํ‰์ด ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2022๋…„ 3์›” ๊ธฐ์ค€์œผ๋กœ ์ „์„ธ๊ณ„ ํŒ๋งค๋Ÿ‰์ด 2427๋งŒ ์žฅ์œผ๋กœ ๋‹Œํ…๋„ ์Šค์œ„์น˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌ์ƒ ๋นจ๋ฆฌ ํŒ”๋ฆฐ ๊ฒŒ์ž„๋“ค์˜ ์ˆœ์œ„๊ถŒ์— ์˜ฌ๋ž์œผ๋ฉฐ, ใ€Šํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ์Šคํ„ฐใ€‹ ๋น„๋””์˜ค ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ ์‚ฌ์ƒ ํŒ๋งค๋Ÿ‰ 2์œ„, ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๋‹Œํ…๋„ ์Šค์œ„์น˜ ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ์‚ฌ์ƒ ํŒ๋งค๋Ÿ‰ 5์œ„๋ฅผ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ํ‰๊ฐ€ ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ ์Šคํƒ€ํŒ… ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ ํ’€ํƒ€์ž…: ํฅ๋‚˜์ˆญ ๋ถˆ๊ฝƒํƒ€์ž…: ์—ผ๋ฒ„๋‹ˆ ๋ฌผํƒ€์ž…: ์šธ๋จธ๊ธฐ ์ „์„ค์˜ ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ (๊ฐ•์ฒ ), ํŽ˜์–ด๋ฆฌํƒ€์ž…: ์ž์‹œ์•ˆ (์†Œ๋“œ) (๊ฐ•์ฒ ), ๊ฒฉํˆฌํƒ€์ž…: ์ž๋งˆ์  ํƒ€ (์‹ค๋“œ) ๋…, ๋“œ๋ž˜๊ณคํƒ€์ž…: ๋ฌดํ•œ๋‹ค์ด๋…ธ (์†Œ๋“œ, ์‹ค๋“œ) ๊ฒฉํˆฌํƒ€์ž…: ์น˜๊ณ ๋งˆ (๊ฐ‘์˜ท์˜ ์™ธ๋”ด์„ฌ) ๊ฒฉํˆฌ, ์•…ํƒ€์ž…: ์šฐ๋ผ์˜ค์Šค (์ผ๊ฒฉ์˜ ํƒœ์„ธ) (๊ฐ‘์˜ท์˜ ์™ธ๋”ด์„ฌ) ๊ฒฉํˆฌ, ๋ฌผํƒ€์ž…: ์šฐ๋ผ์˜ค์Šค (์—ฐ๊ฒฉ์˜ ํƒœ์„ธ) (๊ฐ‘์˜ท์˜ ์™ธ๋”ด์„ฌ) ํ’€, ์—์Šคํผํƒ€์ž…: ๋ฒ„๋“œ๋ ‰์Šค (์™•๊ด€์˜ ์„ค์›) ์–ผ์Œํƒ€์ž…: ๋ธ”๋ฆฌ์žํฌ์Šค (์™•๊ด€์˜ ์„ค์›) ๊ณ ์ŠคํŠธํƒ€์ž…: ๋ ˆ์ด์Šคํฌ์Šค (์™•๊ด€์˜ ์„ค์›) ์—์Šคํผ, ์–ผ์Œํƒ€์ž…: ์•„์ด์Šค ๋ผ์ด๋” ํผ ๋ฒ„๋“œ๋ ‰์Šค(์™•๊ด€์˜ ์„ค์›) ์—์Šคํผ, ๊ณ ์ŠคํŠธํƒ€์ž…: ์„€๋„์šฐ ๋ผ์ด๋” ํผ ๋ฒ„๋“œ๋ ‰์Šค(์™•๊ด€์˜์„ค์›) ๋“œ๋ž˜๊ณคํƒ€์ž…: ๋ ˆ์ง€๋“œ๋ž˜๊ณ  (์™•๊ด€์˜ ์„ค์›) ์ „๊ธฐํƒ€์ž…: ๋ ˆ์ง€์—๋ ˆํ‚ค (์™•๊ด€์˜ ์„ค์›) ์—์Šคํผ, ๋น„ํ–‰ํƒ€์ž…: ํ”„๋ฆฌ์ ธ (๊ฐ€๋ผ๋ฅด์˜ ๋ชจ์Šต) (์™•๊ด€์˜ ์„ค์›) ์•…, ๋น„ํ–‰ํƒ€์ž…: ํŒŒ์ด์–ด (๊ฐ€๋ผ๋ฅด์˜ ๋ชจ์Šต) (์™•๊ด€์˜ ์„ค์›) ๊ฒฉํˆฌ, ๋น„ํ–‰ํƒ€์ž…: ์ฌ๋” (๊ฐ€๋ผ๋ฅด์˜ ๋ชจ์Šต) (์™•๊ด€์˜ ์„ค์›) ์ด์™ธ์—๋„ ์™•๊ด€์˜ ์„ค์›์—์„œ ์ด์ „ ์„ธ๋Œ€ ์ดˆ์ „์„ค ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ๋“ค, ์ค€์ „์„ค ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ, ์šธํŠธ๋ผ๋น„์ŠคํŠธ๋“ค๋„ ๋ชจ๋‘ ์–ป์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ™˜์ƒ์˜ ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ ํ’€, ์•…ํƒ€์ž…: ์ž๋ฃจ๋„ ์—์Šคํผํƒ€์ž…: ๋ฎค ๊ฐ•์ฒ , ์—์Šคํผํƒ€์ž…: ์ง€๋ผ์น˜ ํ’€, ์—์Šคํผํƒ€์ž…: ์„ธ๋ ˆ๋น„ ๋ถˆ, ์—์Šคํผํƒ€์ž…: ๋น„ํฌํ‹ฐ๋‹ˆ ๋ฒŒ๋ ˆ, ๊ฐ•์ฒ ํƒ€์ž…: ๊ฒŒ๋…ธ์„ธํฌํŠธ ๊ฒฉํˆฌ, ๋ฌผํƒ€์ž…: ์ผ€๋ฅด๋””์˜ค ๋ถˆ๊ฝƒ, ๋ฌผํƒ€์ž…: ๋ณผ์ผ€๋‹ˆ์˜จ ๋ฐ”์œ„, ํŽ˜์–ด๋ฆฌํƒ€์ž…: ๋””์•ˆ์‹œ ๊ฒฉํˆฌ, ๊ณ ์ŠคํŠธํƒ€์ž…: ๋งˆ์ƒค๋„ ์ „๊ธฐํƒ€์ž…: ์ œ๋ผ์˜ค๋ผ ๊ฐ•์ฒ ํƒ€์ž…: ๋ฉœํƒ„ ๊ฐ•์ฒ ํƒ€์ž…: ๋ฉœ๋ฉ”ํƒˆ ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์„œ 4์„ธ๋Œ€ ํ™˜์ƒ์˜ ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ์ด ์—†๋Š” ์ด์œ ๋Š” ์ดํ›„์— 4์„ธ๋Œ€ ๋ฆฌ๋ฉ”์ดํฌ ๋ฒ„์ „์ธ ใ€Š๋ธŒ๋ฆด๋ฆฌ์–ธํŠธ ๋‹ค์ด์•„๋ชฌ๋“œ ์ƒค์ด๋‹ ํŽ„ใ€‹์—์„œ ๋‚˜์˜ฌ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ถ”์ธก๋œ๋‹ค. ์ฒด์œก๊ด€ (์†Œ๋“œ)โ€ป๋‹ค์ด๋งฅ์Šค์œ„์ฃผ ํ’€ ์ฒด์œก๊ด€: ์•„ํ‚ฌ - ๋ฐฑ์†œ๋ชจ์นด ๋ฌผ ์ฒด์œก๊ด€: ์•ผ์ฒญ - ๊ฐˆ๊ฐ€๋ถ€๊ธฐ ๋ถˆ ์ฒด์œก๊ด€: ์ˆœ๋ฌด - ๋‹คํƒœ์šฐ์ง€๋„ค ๊ฒฉํˆฌ ์ฒด์œก๊ด€: ์ฑ„๋‘ - ๊ดด๋ ฅ๋ชฌ ํŽ˜์–ด๋ฆฌ ์ฒด์œก๊ด€: ๋น„ํŠธ -๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ๋ฌด์Œ(์ฒ˜์Œ์—๋Š” ํฌํ”Œ๋Ÿฌ -๋งˆํœ˜ํ•‘) ๋ฐ”์œ„ ์ฒด์œก๊ด€: ๋งˆ์ฟ ์™€-์„ํƒ„์‚ฐ ์•… ์ฒด์œก๊ด€: ๋‘์†ก(๋‘์†ก์€ ๋‹ค์ด๋งฅ์Šค๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค.) - ์Šค์ปนํƒฑํฌ(๋งˆ๋ฆฌ:์˜ค๋กฑํ„ธ) ๋“œ๋ž˜๊ณค ์ฒด์œก๊ด€: ๊ธˆ๋ž‘ - ๋‘๋ž„๋ฃจ๋ˆ (์‹ค๋“œ)*๋‹ค์ด๋งฅ์Šค ์œ„์ฃผ ํ’€ ์ฒด์œก๊ด€: ์•„ํ‚ฌ - ๋ฐฑ์†œ๋ชจ์นด ๋ฌผ ์ฒด์œก๊ด€: ์•ผ์ฒญ - ๊ฐˆ๊ฐ€๋ถ€๊ธฐ ๋ถˆ ์ฒด์œก๊ด€: ์ˆœ๋ฌด - ๋‹คํƒœ์šฐ์ง€๋„ค ๊ณ ์ŠคํŠธ ์ฒด์œก๊ด€: ์–ด๋‹ˆ์–ธ - ํŒฌํ…€ ํŽ˜์–ด๋ฆฌ ์ฒด์œก๊ด€: ๋น„ํŠธ - ๋ธŒ๋ฆฌ๋ฌด์Œ(์ฒ˜์Œ์—๋Š” ํฌํ”Œ๋Ÿฌ -๋งˆํœ˜ํ•‘) ์–ผ์Œ ์ฒด์œก๊ด€: ๋ฉœ๋ก  - ๋ผํ”„๋ผ์Šค ์•… ์ฒด์œก๊ด€: ๋‘์†ก(๋‘์†ก์€ ๋‹ค์ด๋งฅ์Šค๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค.) - )(๋งˆ๋ฆฌ:์˜ค๋กฑํ„ธ) ๋“œ๋ž˜๊ณค ์ฒด์œก๊ด€: ๊ธˆ๋ž‘ - ๋‘๋ž„๋ฃจ๋ˆ ์ฐธ์กฐ ์ฃผํ•ด ๊ฐ์ฃผ ์™ธ๋ถ€ ๋งํฌ ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ์Šคํ„ฐ ์†Œ๋“œยท์‹ค๋“œ ๊ณต์‹ ํ•œ๊ตญ์–ด ์‚ฌ์ดํŠธ ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ์Šคํ„ฐ ์†Œ๋“œยท์‹ค๋“œ ๊ณต์‹ ์ผ๋ณธ์–ด ์‚ฌ์ดํŠธ ํฌ์ผ“๋ชฌ์Šคํ„ฐ ๋น„๋””์˜ค ๊ฒŒ์ž„ 2019๋…„ ๋น„๋””์˜ค ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ๋กคํ”Œ๋ ˆ์ž‰ ๋น„๋””์˜ค ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ๊ฒŒ์ž„ํ”„๋ฆฌํฌ ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ๋‹ค์šด๋กœ๋“œ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ ์ฝ˜ํ…์ธ ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋Š” ๋น„๋””์˜ค ๊ฒŒ์ž„ ํ™•์žฅํŒฉ์ด ์žˆ๋Š” ๋น„๋””์˜ค ๊ฒŒ์ž„
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pok%C3%A9mon%20Sword%20and%20Shield
Pokรฉmon Sword and Shield
and are 2019 role-playing video games developed by Game Freak and published by The Pokรฉmon Company and Nintendo for the Nintendo Switch console. They are the first instalments in the eighth generation of the Pokรฉmon video game series. First teased at E3 2017 and announced in February 2019, the games were released in November 2019. The games were accompanied by a downloadable content (DLC) expansion pass consisting of Part 1โ€”The Isle of Armor (released in June 2020) and Part 2โ€”The Crown Tundra (October 2020). Conceptualization began immediately following the completion of Pokรฉmon Sun and Moon in 2016, while full development began a year later in September 2017. Like previous instalments, the games follow a young Pokรฉmon trainer as they train and battle Pokรฉmon, aiming to become a Pokรฉmon Champion. The games introduced many new features including the Dynamax/Gigantamax mechanic, a gigantic-size Pokรฉmon transformation. When the decision to exclude many pre-existing Pokรฉmon from Sword and Shield was announced, it triggered backlash from fans and resulted in a controversy known as "Dexit". In spite of this, Sword and Shield received generally positive reviews from critics, who praised the games' gameplay, exploration, and mechanics, although the visuals, as well as the lack of depth and innovation, received some criticism. As of June 2023, the games had sold more than 25.92 million copies worldwide, making them the second best-selling titles in the Pokรฉmon video game series. The games were nominated for numerous awards and won the SXSW Gaming Awards and Famitsu Dengeki Game Awards 2019. Gameplay Pokรฉmon Sword and Shield are role-playing video games with adventure elements. They are usually presented in a fixed camera, third-person perspective, although sometimes they also allowed free camera movement. The player controls a young trainer who goes on a quest to catch and train creatures known as Pokรฉmon and win battles against other trainers. By defeating opposing Pokรฉmon in turn-based battles, the player's Pokรฉmon gains experience, allowing them to level up and increase their battle statistics, learn new battle techniques, and evolve into more powerful Pokรฉmon. The player can capture wild Pokรฉmon through wild encounters by weakening them in battle and catching them with Pokรฉ Balls, adding them to their party. The player can also battle and trade Pokรฉmon with other players via the Switch's connectivity features. As with previous Pokรฉmon games, certain Pokรฉmon are only obtainable in either Sword or Shield, and the player must trade with others to obtain every Pokรฉmon from both versions. Sword and Shield are set in the Galar region, which consists of numerous cities and towns connected by a route system. There is an open world area in the centre of the region known as the "Wild Area". Random encounters with wild Pokรฉmon typically occur in tall grass or in bodies of water along routes or in the Wild Area, and they might chase or run away from the player depending on their disposition. The player occasionally battles notable trainers in cities, towns, along routes, and in the Wild Area. The driving force bringing the player to travel around the Galar region is to participate in the "Gym Challenge", an open tournament to decide the greatest Pokรฉmon Trainer (the Champion) in the region. Eight of the game's cities and towns are homes to stadiums housing "Gym Leaders", powerful trainers specializing in certain types of Pokรฉmon; beating a Gym Leader will grant the player a "badge". After collecting all eight Badges, the player will be allowed to participate in the "Champion Cup", where they will face off in a single-elimination tournament against the previously faced Gym Leaders and other trainers in the Gym Challenge. After they emerge victorious, the player will face the reigning Champion of the Galar region. New features The games introduce several new features to the series, which includes cooperative raid, the Wild Area, and the temporary transformations Dynamax and Gigantamax; Dynamax allows Pokรฉmon to transform into gigantic-sizes, and Gigantamax which is limited to selected Pokรฉmon additionally alters Pokรฉmon's physical appearance and replaces their Dynamax Max Move battle technique for the exclusive G-Max Move. The Wild Area is a fully explorable open world area with free camera movement and dynamic weather, which has implications on which Pokรฉmon species appear at a given time. A new mechanic called "Pokรฉ Jobs" tasks the player's Pokรฉmon with completing requests, such as assisting in construction or cooking, to gain experience or rare items. Pokรฉmon Gyms returned in the games after being absent in Pokรฉmon Sun and Moon and Pokรฉmon Ultra Sun and Ultra Moon. The games have version-exclusive content such as certain Pokรฉmon and Gym Leaders. A new 'Camp' mode allows the player to interact and play with their Pokรฉmon as well as cook different types of curry to provide them with bonuses. New customization options for the player character have been added, like outerwear and other accessories. Similar to Pokรฉmon Sun and Moon, many Pokรฉmon previously introduced in older games reappeared as regional form in the games, gaining new types, statistics, appearances, and evolutions. Connectivity Internet connectivity to other players is supported for functionality such as trades, battles, and encountering other trainers in the Wild Area; these functions however require a paid subscription to the Nintendo Switch Online subscription service. Sword and Shield only support direct game-to-game connectivity between themselves. The games are also compatible with Pokรฉmon Home, an online cloud storage service for storing Pokรฉmon, released in February 2020. Supported Pokรฉmon can be transferred to the games from the Nintendo 3DS app Pokรฉmon Bank, Pokรฉmon Go and Pokรฉmon: Let's Go, Pikachu! and Let's Go, Eevee! via Pokรฉmon Home. Plot Setting Sword and Shield are set in the Galar region. The region is inspired by the United Kingdom, with its many landmarks resembling places such as the Bath, Somerset and York. Within the Galar region lie countryside towns featuring cottages and Victorian architecture to the south. There are also Industrial Revolution and steampunk references. Many of the region's towns and cities feature Pokรฉmon Gyms stylized like football stadiums, showcasing the games' Dynamax and Gigantamax mechanic. Snow-covered mountains dominate much of the northern areas of the region. Encompassing a large portion of the south-central part of the region is the Wild Area, an open world area with numerous roaming Pokรฉmon species. Weather in the Wild Area changes regularly. Story Similar to many previous games in the Pokรฉmon franchise, the player travels across the region to become the strongest trainer, fighting eight powerful trainers called Gym Leaders and eventually the region's Champion. The player and their best friend, Hop, receive one of three starter Pokรฉmon: Grookey, Scorbunny, or Sobble from Leon, Champion of the Galar region and Hop's older brother. Afterward, the two explore a forest called the Slumbering Weald but are driven off by a powerful Pokรฉmon. During their subsequent visit to the region's Pokรฉmon Professor, Magnolia and her granddaughter Sonia, they convince Leon to endorse them to take part in the Gym Challenge. After traveling to the next city to register for the Gym Challenge, they encounter rivals Bede and Marnie along with Team Yell, a devout group of hooligans who act as Marnie's unintentional fanbase and are determined to stop anyone else from completing the Challenge. The player also meets Chairman Rose, who, in addition to endorsing Bede as a Gym Challenger, presides over the Galar Pokรฉmon League and the region's main energy company, Macro Cosmos. As their quest continues, the player assists Sonia in her research on two Legendary Pokรฉmon who saved Galar from an ancient crisis called the Darkest Day and deduces that they are the same Pokรฉmon previously encountered in the Slumbering Weald. After beating the eight Gym Leaders, including Piers, Marnie's older brother and the leader of Team Yell, the player makes their way to Wyndon where they win the Champion's Cup, earning an opportunity to battle Leon. Hop and the player then head to a hotel to meet with Leon, but he does not come. With help from Piers, Marnie, and Team Yell Grunt they get the keys from Chairman Rose' guard and make their way to Rose Tower. They reach the top of Rose Tower and battle with Rose' assistant, Oleana, and find Leon who is talking to Rose. Rose reveals his intentions to trigger the Darkest Day to solve a power crisis "thousands of years in the future." Leon, Hop, and the player head home. The next day, before the battle between the player and Leon can commence, Chairman Rose awakens the legendary Pokรฉmon Eternatus in an attempt to harness its power to provide unlimited energy to Galar, purposefully triggering a second Darkest Day. The player and Hop return to the Slumbering Weald and secure the aid of the legendary Pokรฉmon, Zacian and Zamazenta, through a sword and shield they find in the ruins, to defeat Chairman Rose and Eternatus, after which the player catches Eternatus and Rose hands himself over to the authorities. Three days later, the player faces and defeats Leon in a battle and becomes the new Champion of the Galar region. After defeating Leon, the player and Hop return to the Slumbering Weald to return Zacian and Zamazenta's artefacts to their rightful place. The two also meet Sonia, who has become the Galar region's new Pokรฉmon Professor. However, they are confronted by Sordward and Shielbert, two brothers claiming to be descendants of ancient Galarian kings. The two steal one of the relics and begin forcing innocent Pokรฉmon to Dynamax. The player, Hop, and Piers work with the Gym Leaders to subdue the Dynamax Pokรฉmon and then track down and confront the brothers. Once both the player and Hop corners the brothers in the Hammerlocke Power Plant, they then explain why they forced many innocent Pokรฉmon to Dynamax. They forced innocent Pokรฉmon to Dynamax as experiments on what would happen if Zacian/Zamazenta was to be sprinkled with Galar particles. The brothers' ultimate goal is to reveal the true barbaric and brutish nature of Zacian or Zamazenta, because Sonia thought that the two heroes who stopped the Darkest Day were Pokรฉmon rather than humans. They use Dynamax energy to drive Zamazenta (in Sword) or Zacian (in Shield) berserk, and the player drives them off with the help of Zacian (in Sword) or Zamazenta (in Shield). They then are challenged to a battle by the Legendary Pokรฉmon and allowed to catch it, while Hop follows Zamazenta/Zacian back to the Slumbering Weald and calms it down, being chosen by it as its Trainer. The player and Hop have a final battle, after which Hop decides to be a Pokรฉmon Professor and becomes Sonia's assistant. Development Conceptualization Conceptualization of Pokรฉmon Sword and Shield began immediately following the completion of Pokรฉmon Sun and Moon in the months preceding their release in November 2016. Shigeru Ohmori, who previously directed Sun and Moon, formed a team to brainstorm ideas for the title. Kazumasa Iwao, director of Pokรฉmon Ultra Sun and Ultra Moon, later joined the project as planning director. One of the first ideas the team had was making Pokรฉmon gigantic-size to capitalize on the Switch's high resolution and TV connectivity. Ohmori suggested a sword and a shield Pokรฉmon to defeat this gigantic Pokรฉmon; these concepts formed the games' titles. Game Freak approached the games based on the theme of strength and striving to be the "greatest or the strongest," which was expressed through the Switch's status as the most powerful console to run a Pokรฉmon game, the gigantic-size Pokรฉmon Dynamax mechanic, and in-game references to various British folklore featuring giants and other mythical creatures. The concept of "growing and evolving" is an important theme in the games, and it was heavily emphasized in the story. Production Full production began in September 2017. Approximately 1,000 people from multiple companies were involved in the development, marketing, localization, and public relations, and approximately 200ย Game Freak employees worked directly on the games while around 100 Creatures Inc. employees worked on 3D modeling; an additional 100ย worked on debugging and game testing. Game Freak assembled a small team to systematically plan and design the game, enabling them to seamlessly incorporate all desired elements; this approach replaced their previous iterative method, which became impractical due to the complexities of the game's 3D graphics. Before developing the games, Game Freak worked on Pokรฉmon: Let's Go, Pikachu! and Let's Go, Eevee! as a research project to study the Switch, incorporating a similar code base structure for Sword and Shield. The developers explored various ways to improve and innovate the traditional random encounter mechanic, and after several experiments, they redesigned it to have the player encounter Pokรฉmon freely roaming around the environment. Similarly, they considered allowing the player to freely control the camera to enhance the games' exploration experience, before consulting the staff members in the form of an internal debate, and it was ultimately included. With the transition to the Switch from previous iteration, Game Freak had to meticulously design Pokรฉmon models from scratch to adapt them to the higher fidelity and more expressive graphics of the Switch when compared to the Nintendo 3DS. The Pokรฉmon design process involved planners and concept designers creating settings for each Pokรฉmon, which were compiled into a text file outlining the vision for each Pokรฉmon's placement in the game. They designed the Wild Area as a "wide-open space" that is different from the traditional route systems and is constantly changing where "it would be interesting to come back every day and see what has changedโ€”something that would feel different each time." Music Minako Adachi and Go Ichinose composed the music, incorporating elements of UK rock music; a track was composed by Toby Fox, creator of Undertale. Ohmori stated that they included fairly short loop tunes for the route music, as opposed to the longer, more dynamic songs in the Wild Area. The games are first Pokรฉmon game with a title theme that features lyrics. "Cutting" Pokรฉmon Unlike previous core series games, many pre-existing Pokรฉmon are not available in Sword and Shield, and only Pokรฉmon that appear in the Galar region can be transferred from previous titles via Pokรฉmon Home. Producer Junichi Masuda addressed this as a potential issue in a 2018 interview with GameSpot, saying that "it does get complicated when you talk about the details and we're still figuring it out, but we do have plans to find ways to let players use their Pokรฉmon in the next game." In 2019, he explained that the sheer number of Pokรฉmon, combined with the need to produce assets for new features such as the Dynamaxing mechanic, and maintaining a good game balance and high quality standard made it infeasible to include all pre-existing Pokรฉmon without extensively lengthening development time. He stated all three companies involved in the development, Nintendo, Game Freak, and The Pokรฉmon Company, agreed to reduce the games' Pokรฉmon. Release Sword and Shield were first teased through a special message by The Pokรฉmon Company president Tsunekazu Ishihara during Nintendo's E3 2017 presentation, where Ishihara mentioned that Game Freak was working on a new core series Pokรฉmon role-playing game for the Nintendo Switch but that it would not be released for more than a year. During a press conference held by The Pokรฉmon Company in Japan on 30 May 2018, Game Freak announced that the games would be released on Switch in the second half of 2019. The games were fully unveiled in a special Nintendo Direct presentation on 27 February 2019, introducing the games' region and starter Pokรฉmon. The presentation coincided with Pokรฉmon Day, a fan celebration of Pokรฉmon on the anniversary of the Japanese release of Pokรฉmon Red and Green. A second Nintendo Direct about the games was held on 5 June 2019, and it further revealed the games' new features, characters, and Pokรฉmon. A release date of 15 November 2019, was also announced as part of this presentation. Game Freak intentionally limited the number of new Pokรฉmon they revealed through promotional materials to encourage players to discover them in-game. A promotional crossover between Sword and Shield and Tetris 99 occurred from 8โ€“11 November, during which a limited-time unlockable theme based on the games was available. A web app was also released, allowing the viewer to explore the Wild Area online. In Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, an online tournament themed around Pokรฉmon was held from 15 to 18 November to promote Sword and Shield release, while a spirit event occurred from 22 to 27 November, with some Pokรฉmon being available as collectible spirits. Expansion pass During the Pokรฉmon Direct on 9 January 2020, an expansion pass were announced consisting of two parts, The Isle of Armor, and The Crown Tundra, and they were released on 17 June 2020 and 22 October 2020, respectively. A physical bundle including both parts and the games was released on 6 November 2020. The expansion pass added additional storylines, places, Pokรฉmon, characters, and other features. Controversy The decision to exclude many pre-existing Pokรฉmon in the games drew criticism from many fans, who referred to it as "Dexit", a portmanteau of "Pokรฉdex" and "Brexit" (tying in with the Galar region's British theme), and used the hashtag "#BringBackNationalDex" to discuss the matter on social media. Fan backlash focused on the removal of a long-standing aspect of the franchise, the discouraging of its former English tagline "gotta catch 'em all," and a perceived lack of improvements in other areas of the games, such as graphics and animations. Some fans called for the games to be delayed until all of the Pokรฉmon could be added. Writing for Polygon, Patricia Hernandez commented that "to some degree, the backlash makes sense" while adding that it had "gotten out of hand". Alex Donaldson of VG247 noted that feature creepโ€”where an increase in new features over time may lead to removal of previous onesโ€”had finally reached Pokรฉmon, and long-overlooked design shortcomings of Game Freak were brought to the forefront as a result. Kotaku Gita Jackson summarized the backlash as "the tension of a desire to indulge in nostalgia against a desire to experience more complexity." Joe Merrick, the webmaster of fansite Serebii, considered the controversy to have caused the most unrest among Pokรฉmon fans since the troubled launch of Pokรฉmon Bank in 2013. Masuda formally responded to the criticism on 28 June 2019, two weeks after it erupted, expressing appreciation for the love and passion shown by fans. He reiterated that the removal of certain Pokรฉmon was a difficult decision to make and that they would be available in different games in the future. Michael McWhertor of Polygon noted that while Masuda's statement acknowledged the fans' discontent, it "[did not] amount to much". After the game's release, fans who support "Dexit" strongly criticized the games for their graphics, story, and characters. Further criticism came from data miners accusing Game Freak of reusing the same models and animations from the 3DS games, resulting in the games being review bombed on Metacritic and the hashtag #GameFreakLied trending on Twitter. Game Freak denied this, stating that these elements were in fact redesigned. The announcement of the Isle of Armor and Crown Tundra expansion packs drew further outrage, with some fans believing that the packs should have been free or part of the base game due to "Game Freak's actions". Reception Critical response Reception of the games was largely positive. According to the review aggregator Metacritic, Sword and Shield received "generally favourable" reviews from critics. Critics praised Sword and Shield's gameplay, exploration, and mechanics. Game Informer critic Brian Shea praised the games for their captivating battle mechanics and sense of exploration. Similarly, Casey DeFreitas of IGN praised their engaging gameplay, complemented by compelling battle and exploration experiences. Writing for GameSpot, Kallie Plagge praised the dynamic exploration aspect and streamlined gameplay. Sword and Shield's lack of depth and innovation were criticized. In Eurogamer, Chris Tapsell criticised the games for their lack of depth, absence of complex dungeons and intricate lore, limited exploration option, and a restricted Pokรฉdex, creating an illusion of scale and ambition that ultimately fails to provide a satisfying Pokรฉmon experience of depth and substance that characterized previous iterations. In their GQ review, James Grebey and Tom Philip criticised their lack of challenge, depth, and innovation, expressing disappointment in the games' execution and their failure to fully utilize the capabilities of the Switch. Mack Ashworth of GameRevolution cited the subpar visuals and mediocre story execution, and he compared the games' underperformed, inferior visuals to other top Switch games. Sales In Japan, Sword and Shield sold two million copies during their first three days on sale, surpassing Super Smash Bros. Ultimate as the fastest-selling Switch games in that region. In the US, they sold more than two million copies in their opening weekend. During its opening weekend, Sword and Shield had sold more than six million copies worldwide, surpassing Super Smash Bros. Ultimate as the fastest-selling Switch games. As of June 2023, the games had sold million copies worldwide, becoming the second best-selling titles in the Pokรฉmon video game series, behind Pokรฉmon Red and Blue. Awards Notes References External links 2019 video games Game Freak games Japanese role-playing video games Multiplayer and single-player video games Nintendo Switch games Nintendo Switch-only games Sword and Shield Role-playing video games Video game sequels Video games scored by Toby Fox Video games set in the United Kingdom Video games about size change Video game controversies Video games developed in Japan Video games with gender-selectable protagonists Video games scored by Go Ichinose Video games with alternative versions Video games with expansion packs Video games with customizable avatars
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%97%A0%EC%8A%A4%20%EC%A0%84%EB%B3%B4%20%EC%82%AC%EA%B1%B4
์— ์Šค ์ „๋ณด ์‚ฌ๊ฑด
์— ์Šค ์ „๋ณด ์‚ฌ๊ฑด(EMS้›ปๅ ฑไบ‹ไปถ, , , )์€ ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ์˜ ๊ตฐ์ฃผ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 1์„ธ๊ฐ€ ์ž์‹ ๊ณผ ๋…์ผ ์ฃผ์žฌ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ๋Œ€์‚ฌ ์‚ฌ์ด์— ์žˆ์—ˆ๋˜ ์ผ์„ ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ ์ˆ˜์ƒ ๋น„์Šค๋งˆ๋ฅดํฌ์—๊ฒŒ ์•Œ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๋ชฉ์ ์˜ ๋‚ด๋ถ€ ์ „๋ณด๋ฅผ ๋น„์Šค๋งˆ๋ฅดํฌ๊ฐ€ ์˜๋„์ ์œผ๋กœ ํŽธ์ง‘ํ•˜์—ฌ ์„ธ๊ฐ„์— ๊ณตํ‘œํ•œ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์ด๋‹ค. ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ ์™•์œ„ ๊ณ„์Šน ๋ฌธ์ œ์™€ ์–ฝํ˜€์„œ ๋ถˆ๊ฑฐ์กŒ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ดํ›„ ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ-ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ์ „์Ÿ์˜ ์ง์ ‘์ ์ธ ์›์ธ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด์‚ฌ๋ฒจ 2์„ธ๋ฅผ ์ถ•์ถœํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๋“ค์–ด์„  ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ ํ˜๋ช…์ •๋ถ€๋Š” ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 1์„ธ์˜ ์นœ์ฒ™ ๋ ˆ์˜คํดํŠธ ๊ณต์—๊ฒŒ ์™•์œ„๋ฅผ ์ œ์•ˆํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด ์†Œ์‹์„ ์ ‘ํ•œ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค๋Š” ๊ฐ•๋ ฅํžˆ ํ•ญ์˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ž๊ตญ ์˜ํ† ๊ฐ€ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ๊ณผ ๋…์ผ์— ๋‘˜๋Ÿฌ์Œ“์—ฌ ์•ˆ๋ณด๊ฐ€ ์œ„ํƒœ๋กœ์›Œ์ง€๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ ˆ์˜คํดํŠธ ๊ณต์€ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ ์™•์œ„ ๊ณ„์Šน์„ ๊ฑฐ์ ˆํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ๋น„์Šค๋งˆ๋ฅดํฌ๋Š” ์ด๋ฅผ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์™€ ์ „์Ÿ์„ ํ•˜๊ธฐ์œ„ํ•œ ์ข‹์€ ๊ธฐํšŒ๋ผ ํŒ๋‹จํ–ˆ๊ณ  ์ˆ˜๋ฝ๋ฐœํ‘œ๋ฅผ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค๊ฐ€ ๋‹ค์‹œ ํ•ญ์˜ํ•˜์ž ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 1์„ธ๋Š” ์ฒ ํšŒ์˜์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๋ฐํ˜”๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค๋Š” 1870๋…„ 7์›” ์ž๊ตญ๋Œ€์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์— ์Šค์— ๋ณด๋‚ด ์ฒ ํšŒ์‚ฌ์‹ค์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์„œ๋ฉด๋ณด์žฅ์„ ์š”๊ตฌํ•˜์˜€๊ณ  ์™ธ๊ต๊ฒฐ๋ก€์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ๋ถˆ์พŒํ•ด์ง„ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 1์„ธ๋Š” ์ด๋ฏธ ์ข…๋ฃŒ๋œ ์‚ฌ์•ˆ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ํ†ต๋ณด์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋Œ€์‚ฌ์ ‘๊ฒฌ์„ ๊ฑฐ์ ˆํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์ด ์‚ฌ์‹ค์„ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์—๊ฒŒ ์ „๋ณด๋กœ ํ†ต๋ณดํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ๋น„์Šค๋งˆ๋ฅดํฌ๋Š” ์–ธ๋ก ๋ฐœํ‘œ์‹œ ์ „๋ณด์˜ ๋‚ด์šฉ์„ ์ผ๋ถ€ ์™œ๊ณกํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์‹ ๋ฌธ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ์‚ฌ์‹ค์ด ์•Œ๋ ค์ง€์ž ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ์€ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์˜ ์™ธ๊ต๊ฒฐ๋ก€์— ๋ถ„๋…ธํ–ˆ๊ณ  ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค๋Š” ์ž๊ตญ๋Œ€์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๋ชจ์š•ํ•œ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 1์„ธ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ๋ถ„๋…ธํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์–‘๊ตญ ๊ตญ๋ฏผ๊ฐ์ •์ด ๊ฒฉํ•ด์ง€๋ฉฐ ์ „์Ÿ์ด ๋ฒŒ์–ด์กŒ๋Š”๋ฐ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค๊ฐ€ ๋Œ€ํŒจํ•˜์—ฌ ๋‚˜ํด๋ ˆ์˜น 3์„ธ๋Š” ํ์œ„ ๋‹นํ•˜๊ณ  ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ์€ ํ†ต์ผ ๋…์ผ์ œ๊ตญ์„ ์ˆ˜๋ฆฝํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ฒฝ๊ณผ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ ์™•์œ„ ๊ณ„์Šน ๋ฌธ์ œ 1868๋…„ 9์›” ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ์—์„œ ํ›„์•ˆ ํ”„๋ฆผ(Juan Prim y Prats) ์žฅ๊ตฐ์ด ์ฟ ๋ฐํƒ€๋ฅผ ์ผ์œผํ‚ค์ž ์ •๊ถŒ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ถˆ๋งŒ์ด ํ„ฐ์ ธ ๊ฐ์ง€์—์„œ๋„ ๋ฐ˜๋ž€์ด ์ž‡๋”ฐ๋ž๊ณ  ์ด๋Š” ํ˜๋ช…์œผ๋กœ ํŒŒ๊ธ‰๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ตฐ์˜ ์ง€์ง€๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๋˜ ์ด์‚ฌ๋ฒจ 2์„ธ๋Š” ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค๋กœ ๋ง๋ช…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ดํ›„ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ์€ 1869๋…„ 1์›” ์ฒ˜์Œ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณดํ†ต์„ ๊ฑฐ๋ฅผ ์‹ค์‹œํ•˜์—ฌ ์˜ํšŒ๋ฅผ ๊ตฌ์„ฑํ•œ ๋’ค ํ—Œ๋ฒ•์„ ๊ณตํฌํ•˜์—ฌ ์ž…ํ—Œ๊ตฐ์ฃผ์ œ๋ฅผ ๋„์ž…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ํ˜๋ช…๊ฐ€๋“ค ์‚ฌ์ด์—์„œ๋Š” ๊ณตํ™”์ • ์ˆ˜๋ฆฝ์„ ์š”๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ๋ชฉ์†Œ๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์–ด ์‹ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ๊ตญ์™•์„ ํ•œ์‹œ๋ผ๋„ ๋นจ๋ฆฌ ์„ ์ถœํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ์ค‘์š”ํ•œ ๊ณผ์ œ๊ฐ€ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด์‚ฌ๋ฒจ 2์„ธ๋Š” ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์•„๋“ค ์•Œํฐ์†Œ 12์„ธ์—๊ฒŒ ์–‘์œ„ํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ๋œป์„ ๋ฐํ˜”์ง€๋งŒ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ ์‹ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” ์ด๋ฅผ ์ธ์ •ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์•„ ์™•์œ„ ๊ณ„์Šน ๋ฌธ์ œ๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœ์ƒํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ ์‹ ์ •๋ถ€๋Š” ์ข…๊ต ๊ฐœํ˜ ์ดํ›„์—๋„ ๊ฐ€ํ†จ๋ฆญ์„ ์‹ ๋ด‰ํ•˜๋˜ ํ˜ธ์—”์ด๋ ˆ๋ฅธ์ง€ํฌ๋งˆ๋ง๊ฒ๊ฐ€์˜ ๋ ˆ์˜คํดํŠธ ๊ณต์ž‘(Leopold von Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen)์„ ์—ผ๋‘์— ๋‘๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ๊ณ  ๋ณธ๊ฐ€์ธ ํ˜ธ์—”์ด๋ ˆ๋ฅธ๊ฐ€๋„ ์ด๋ฅผ ์ง€์ง€ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค๋Š” ์ž๊ตญ์˜ ๋™์ชฝ๊ณผ ๋‚จ์ชฝ์— ํ˜ธ์—”์ด๋ ˆ๋ฅธ๊ฐ€๊ฐ€ ๋‹ค์Šค๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๊ฐ€ ๋“ฑ์žฅํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๊ฒฝ๊ณ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ์—๊ฒŒ ๊ฐ•๋ ฅํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•ญ์˜ ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๊ฑฐ๋ถ€ํ•  ๊ฒƒ์„ ์š”๊ตฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ ๊ตญ์™• ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 1์„ธ์™€ ๋ ˆ์˜คํดํŠธ ๋ชจ๋‘ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ ์™•์œ„์— ํฐ ๊ด€์‹ฌ์ด ์—†์–ด 7์›” 12์ผ ๋ ˆ์˜คํดํŠธ๊ฐ€ ์ •์‹์œผ๋กœ ์™•์œ„๋ฅผ ๊ฑฐ์ ˆํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ์„ฑ๋ช…์„ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์— ์Šค ์ „๋ณด ์‚ฌ๊ฑด ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค๋Š” ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์— ๋งŒ์กฑํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ์•ž์œผ๋กœ๋„ ํ˜ธ์—”์ด๋ ˆ๋ฅธ๊ฐ€๊ฐ€ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ ์™•์œ„๋ฅผ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ฒ ๋‹ค๋Š” ์•ฝ์†์„ ๋ฌธ์„œํ™” ํ•ด์ค„ ๊ฒƒ์„ ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ์— ์š”๊ตฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‹น์‹œ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 1์„ธ๋Š” ๋ฐ”ํŠธ์— ์Šค์—์„œ ์š”์–‘ ์ค‘์ด์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค๋Š” ์ด๊ณณ์— ๋ฑ…์ƒ ๋ฒ ๋„ค๋””ํ‹ฐ(Vincent, Count Benedetti)๋ฅผ ๋Œ€์‚ฌ๋กœ ํŒŒ๊ฒฌํ•ด ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 1์„ธ๋ฅผ ์•Œํ˜„ํ† ๋ก ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 1์„ธ๋Š” ์ด๋ฏธ ๊ฑฐ์ ˆํ–ˆ์Œ์—๋„ ๋ถˆ๊ตฌํ•˜๊ณ  ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค๊ฐ€ ์ด์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ์š”๊ตฌ๋ฅผ ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ๋ฌด๋ก€ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๋ฉฐ ๊ฑฐ์ ˆํ•˜๊ณ  ์ด ์‚ฌ์‹ค์„ ์ˆ˜์ƒ ์˜คํ†  ํฐ ๋น„์Šค๋งˆ๋ฅดํฌ์—๊ฒŒ ์•Œ๋ ธ๋‹ค. ์ „๋ณด๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์€ ๋น„์Šค๋งˆ๋ฅดํฌ๋Š” ์ด๋ฅผ ์ •์น˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ด์šฉํ•  ์ƒ๊ฐ์„ ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋‚ด์šฉ์˜ ์ผ๋ถ€๋ฅผ ์˜๋„์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ƒ๋žตํ•ด ๋ฌด๋ก€ํ•œ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ๋Œ€์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ์•ž์œผ๋กœ๋„ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ ์™•์œ„๋ฅผ ๋…ธ๋ฆฌ์ง€ ๋ง ๊ฒƒ์„ ๊ฐ•์š”ํ–ˆ๊ณ  ๋นŒํ—ฌ๋ฆ„ 1์„ธ๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ•ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋ฌผ๋ฆฌ์ณค๋‹ค๊ณ  ํŽธ์ง‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณค ์ด ์ˆ˜์ •๋œ ์ „๋ณด๋ฅผ 7์›” 14์ผ ๊ฐ๊ตญ์˜ ์‹ ๋ฌธ์— ๊ณตํ‘œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ์€ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ๋Œ€์‚ฌ์˜ ๋ฌด๋ก€ํ•œ ํƒœ๋„์™€ ๋ฌด๋ฆฌํ•œ ์š”๊ตฌ์— ๊ฒฉ๋ถ„ํ–ˆ๊ณ  ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค๋Š” ์ž๊ตญ ๋Œ€์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ๋ฌผ๋ฆฌ์นœ ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ ๊ตญ์™•์˜ ํƒœ๋„์— ๋ถ„๋…ธํ•˜์—ฌ ์–‘๊ตญ ๊ฐ„์— ์ ๊ฐœ์‹ฌ์ด ๋ฐœ์ƒํ•˜๊ณ  ์—ฌ๋ก ์€ ์ „์Ÿ๊นŒ์ง€ ์š”๊ตฌํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ˜์ „ ์—ฌ๋ก ์ด ์กด์žฌํ–ˆ์œผ๋‚˜ ๋Œ€์„ธ๋Š” ์ „์Ÿ ์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ ํ˜๋Ÿฌ๊ฐ”์œผ๋ฉฐ 7์›” 15์ผ ๊ฐ์˜๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด 19์ผ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค๊ฐ€ ๋จผ์ € ์„ ์ „ํฌ๊ณ ๋ฅผ ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ-ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ์ „์Ÿ์ด ์ผ์–ด๋‚˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์— ๊ด€ํ•ด ๋…์ผ์˜ ํ†ต์ผ์„ ์œ„ํ•ด ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์™€์˜ ์ถฉ๋Œ์ด ๋ถˆ๊ฐ€ํ”ผํ•˜๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ƒ๊ฐํ–ˆ๋˜ ๋น„์Šค๋งˆ๋ฅดํฌ๋Š” ์‚ฌ์ „์— ์ „์Ÿ์— ํ•„์š”ํ•œ ์ธํ”„๋ผ๋ฅผ ์ •๋น„ํ•˜๊ณ  ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ์ด ์„ ์ „ํฌ๊ณ  ๋ฐ›์•˜์„ ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ์ค‘๋ฆฝ์„ ์ง€ํ‚ค๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ํ˜‘๋ ฅํ•  ๊ฒƒ์„ ๊ฐ๊ตญ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์‚ฌ์ „์— ์•ฝ์†์„ ๋ฐ›์•„๋ƒˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์ ์—์„œ ์— ์Šค ์ „๋ณด ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์€ ๋น„์Šค๋งˆ๋ฅดํฌ๊ฐ€ ํŒ ๋˜ ํ•จ์ •์— ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค๊ฐ€ ์†์•„๋„˜์–ด๊ฐ”๋‹ค๋Š” ์˜๊ฒฌ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค๋Š” ๋…์ผ๊ณผ ํ˜ธ์—”์ด๋ ˆ๋ฅธ-์ŠคํŽ˜์ธ์— ๋‘˜๋Ÿฌ์Œ“์ด๊ฒŒ ๋˜๋Š” ์‚ฌํƒœ์— ์ง€๋‚˜์น˜๊ฒŒ ๋ฏผ๊ฐํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋ฐ˜์‘ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋ ˆ์˜คํดํŠธ๊ฐ€ ์™•์œ„๋ฅผ ์ˆœ์ˆœํžˆ ํฌ๊ธฐํ•˜์ž ์ด๋ฅผ ์ž๊ตญ์˜ ๊ตฐ์‚ฌ๋ ฅ์˜ ์Šน๋ฆฌ๋ผ๊ณ  ๊ณผ์‹ ํ•œ ๋ฉด๋„ ์žˆ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•˜์ง€๋งŒ ๋‹น์‹œ ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ์€ ์ด๋ฏธ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์˜ ๊ตฐ์‚ฌ๋ ฅยท๊ณต์—…๋ ฅ์„ ๋›ฐ์–ด๋„˜์—ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ์ด๋ฅผ ์ œ๋Œ€๋กœ ์ง์‹œํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๊ณ  ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ-ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ์ „์Ÿ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋…์ผ์ด ํ†ต์ผ์„ ์ด๋ฃจ๊ฒŒ ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋‹ˆ ๋‹น์‹œ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ํ™ฉ์ œ์˜€๋˜ ๋‚˜ํด๋ ˆ์˜น 3์„ธ์˜ ์น˜๋ช…์ ์ธ ์™ธ๊ต ์‹ค์ˆ˜๋ผ๊ณ  ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ-ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ์ „์Ÿ ๊ฐ์ฃผ ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ ์™•๊ตญ ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ์ œ2์ œ๊ตญ 1870๋…„ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๋…์ผ-ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ๊ด€๊ณ„ ํ”„๋กœ์ด์„ผ-ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค ์ „์Ÿ ์™ธ๊ต ์‚ฌ๊ฑด ๋‚ ์กฐ ์ „๋ณด ํ”„๋ž‘์Šค์˜ ์•…ํฌ 1870๋…„ ๋ฌธ์„œ ์˜คํ†  ํฐ ๋น„์Šค๋งˆ๋ฅดํฌ 1870๋…„ 7์›”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ems%20Dispatch
Ems Dispatch
The Ems Dispatch (, ), sometimes called the Ems Telegram, was published on 13 July 1870; it incited the Second French Empire to declare war on the Kingdom of Prussia on 19 July 1870, starting the Franco-Prussian War. The actual dispatch was an internal telegram sent by Heinrich Abeken from Prussian King Wilhelm I's vacationing site at Ems to Otto von Bismarck in Berlin, describing demands made by the French ambassador concerning the Spanish succession. Bismarck, the chancellor (head of government) of the North German Confederation, released a statement to the press, stirring up emotions in both France and Germany. The name referred to Bad Ems, a resort spa east of Koblenz on the Lahn river, then in Hesse-Nassau, a new possession of Prussia. Background The Austro-Prussian War, from 16 June to 23 August 1866, which involved south and north German states on both sides as well as the emerging Italy, increased Prussia's power. Austria was defeated in the key Battle of Kรถniggrรคtz (or Sadowa) on 3 July 1866. The preliminary Peace of Nikolsburg, 26 July, was followed by the Peace of Prague, 23 August. Bismarck thus managed to expel Austria from the German Confederation, to set up and dominate the North German Confederation (north of the Main) and to secure Prussian territorial gains. Hanover, Schleswig-Holstein, Nassau and Hesse-Cassel, and Frankfurt were incorporated into Prussia, whose territory expanded thus by nearly a quarter and its population by more than 4 million to roughly 24 million, which was still less than France's 38 million. France did not take part in the war, which was brief but altered the European balance of power, and did not gain territories or prestige. French demands for a revanche pour Sadova ("revenge for Sadowa") took root. In early 1870, the German Prince Leopold, of the Roman Catholic cadet branch Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, had been offered the vacant Spanish throne. French Emperor Napoleon III and his government voiced concern over a possible Spanish alliance with the Protestant House of Hohenzollern, which ruled the Kingdom of Prussia, protested against the offer and hinted at war. Following the protests by France, Leopold had withdrawn his acceptance on 11 July 1870, which was already considered a diplomatic defeat for Prussia. The French were still not satisfied and demanded further commitments, especially a guarantee by the Prussian king that no member of any branch of his Hohenzollern family would ever be a candidate for the Spanish throne. Incident On 13 July 1870, King Wilhelm I of Prussia, on his morning stroll in the Kurpark in Ems, was stopped by Count Vincent Benedetti, the French ambassador to Prussia since 1864. Benedetti had been instructed by his superior, Foreign Minister Agenor, duc de Gramont, to present the French demand that the king should guarantee that he would never again permit the candidacy of a Hohenzollern prince to the Spanish throne. The meeting was informal and took place on the promenade of the Kursaal with the King's entourage at a discreet distance. Politely and in a friendly manner, "with the courtesy that never failed him", the King refused to bind himself to any course of action into the indefinite future. After their exchange, "the two departed coolly." Heinrich Abeken, Privy Legation Councillor of the North German Confederation's Foreign Office, wrote an account of the event for Otto von Bismarck in Berlin. Wilhelm described Benedetti as "annoyingly persistent". The King asked Bismarck to release an account of the events. Bismarck had full liberty to inform the press in a suitable way; it was not his task to publish Abeken's original report. Bismarck decided to use some of Abeken's wording for his own press release. He removed Wilhelm's conciliatory phrases and emphasised the real issue. The French had made certain demands under threat of war, and Wilhelm had refused them. That was a clear statement of the facts. Certainly, Bismarck's text, released on the evening of the same day (13 July) to the media and foreign embassies, gave the impression both that Benedetti was rather more demanding and that the King was exceedingly abrupt. It was designed to give the French the impression that the King had insulted Benedetti; likewise, the Germans interpreted the modified dispatch as Benedetti insulting the King. Bismarck had viewed the worsening relations with France with open satisfaction. If war had to come, then better sooner than later. His press release, he assured his friends, "would have the effect of a red rag on the Gallic [French] bull." The document was then to be presented as the cause of the war. Text Sent by Heinrich Abeken at Ems under King Wilhelm's Instruction to Bismarck. Abeken's message His Majesty the King writes to me: Count Benedetti intercepted me on the promenade to demand of me, finally in a very importunate manner, that I should authorize him to telegraph at once that I bound myself in perpetuity never again to give my consent if the Hohenzollerns renewed their candidature. I rejected this demand somewhat sternly [ ], as it is neither right nor possible to undertake engagements of this kind ร  tout jamais. Naturally, I told him that I had not yet received any news and, since he had been earlier informed concerning Paris and Madrid than I was, he must surely see that my government was not concerned in the matter. His Majesty later received a message from the Duke. As His Majesty had told Count Benedetti that he was expecting news from the Duke, he personally, in view of the above-mentioned importunity, upon the advice of Count Eulenburg and myself, decided not to receive Count Benedetti any more, but merely to have him informed by an adjutant: that His Majesty had now received from the Duke confirmation of the news which Benedetti had already had from Paris and had nothing further to say to the ambassador. His Majesty suggests to Your Excellency, that Benedetti's new demand and its rejection might well be communicated both to our ambassadors and to the Press. Bismarck's communiquรฉ After the news of the renunciation of the Prince von Hohenzollern had been communicated to the Imperial French government by the Royal Spanish government, the French Ambassador in Ems made a further demand on His Majesty the King that he should authorize him to telegraph to Paris that His Majesty the King undertook for all time never again to give his assent should the Hohenzollerns once more take up their candidature. His Majesty the King thereupon refused to receive the Ambassador again and had the latter informed by the Adjutant of the day that His Majesty had no further communication to make to the Ambassador. French translation The French translation by the agency Havas did not translate the German word , which refers to a high-ranking aide de camp, but in French, it describes only a non-commissioned officer (), which implied that the King had deliberately insulted the ambassador by not choosing an officer to carry the message to him. That was the version printed by most newspapers the following day, which happened to be July 14 (Bastille Day), setting the tone, letting the French believe that the king had insulted their ambassador before the latter could tell his story. Aftermath France's mistaken attitude of its own position carried matters far beyond what was necessary, and France mobilized. Further improper translations and misinterpretations of the dispatch in the press made excited crowds in Paris demand war, just as Bismarck had anticipated. The Ems Dispatch had also rallied German national feeling. It was no longer Prussia alone; South German particularism was now cast aside. For the French declaration of war the dispatch and the message to the press was rather irrelevant. Napolรฉon had already decided to go to war to stabilize his regime and keep its dominant position in Europe. This intention did not depend on Bismarck's action. France went to war because it believed that it would win. Contrary to popular belief, Bismarck did not prepare everything long before (he himself had contributed to that myth). As a good politician, he tried to keep several options open; when the opportunity showed up, he published the message to the press with the intention to stir up the emotions. Benedetti, the messenger for the Duc de Gramont's demands for pointless guarantees (the Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen family had withdrawn Prince Leopold's candidature on 11 July 1870 with Wilhelm's "entire and unreserved approval"), became an unseen bit-player; his own dispatches to Paris no longer mattered. In the legislative chamber, by an overwhelming majority, the votes for war credits were passed. France declared war on 19 July 1870, starting the Franco-Prussian War. Following the French defeat in 1871, the Duc de Gramont attempted to throw the blame for the failures of French diplomacy on Benedetti, who published his version of the events in his defence in Ma mission en Prusse (Paris, 1871). See also Schnaebele incident German Unification Notes References Crankshaw, Edward. Bismarck. The Viking Press. 1981. Howard, Michael. The Franco-Prussian War. New York: Dorset Press. 1990 (originally published in 1961). Koch, H. W. A History of Prussia. New York: Dorset Press. 1987 (originally published in 1978). Taylor, A. J. P. Bismarck, The Man and the Statesman. New York: Vintage Books. 1967. Further reading Both Ems Dispatch versions in their German original 1870 in France Otto von Bismarck Franco-Prussian War Telegrams Hoaxes in France Diplomatic incidents 19th-century hoaxes July 1870 events 1870 documents
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EB%B0%95%ED%98%95%EC%84%9C
๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œ
๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œ(1972๋…„~)๋Š” ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์†Œ์„ค๊ฐ€์ด๋‹ค. ์‚ฌ์†Œํ•œ ์ผ์ƒ์˜ ์„œ์‚ฌ์—์„œ ๊ฑฐ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ฌธ๋ช…์‚ฌ์  ์„œ์‚ฌ์— ์ด๋ฅด๊ธฐ๊นŒ์ง€ ์Šค์ผ€์ผ์— ๊ตฌ์• ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ๊พผ์œผ๋กœ์„œ ๊ธฐ์ƒ์ฒœ์™ธํ•œ ์ƒ์ƒ์„ ์‹คํ—˜์  ์„œ์‚ฌ ํ˜•์‹์œผ๋กœ ๋‹ด์•„๋‚ด๋Š” ๋ฐ ๋›ฐ์–ด๋‚œ ๋Šฅ๋ ฅ์„ ๋ณด์—ฌ์ค€๋‹ค. ์œ ๋จธ, ์ฒ ํ•™, ๋ฌธํ•™์‚ฌ, ๊ณผํ•™, ์ •์‹ ๋ถ„์„, ์‹ ํ™”, ์—์„ธ์ด, ๋…ผ๋ฌธ ๋“ฑ์˜ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ์ง€์  ๋‹ด๋ก ๋“ค์„ ๋Šฅ์ˆ˜๋Šฅ๋ž€ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๊ตฌ์‚ฌํ•˜์—ฌ ํ˜„์‹ค์— ์–ฝ๋งค์ด์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ์ˆœ์ •ํ•œ ํ—ˆ๊ตฌ ์„ธ๊ณ„๋ฅผ ์ฐฝ์กฐํ•ด์™”๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ธฐ์ดํ•œ ์ƒ์ƒ๊ณผ ์„œ๋Š˜ํ•œ ์œ ๋จธ, ์ง€์  ๋‹ด๋ก ์ด ์–ด์šฐ๋Ÿฌ์ง„ ์†Œ์„ค๋“ค์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ์ด ์‹œ๋Œ€์—์„œ ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ์™€ ์†Œ์„ค์˜ ๊ฐ€์น˜, ์ธ๋ฅ˜์‚ฌ์—์„œ ์ข…๊ต์˜ ์˜๋ฏธ์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ์ธ๋ฌธํ•™์  ์งˆ๋ฌธ์„ ์ œ๊ธฐํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ƒ์•  1972๋…„ ๊ฐ•์›๋„ ์ถ˜์ฒœ์—์„œ ํƒœ์–ด๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ์—ฌ์„ฏ ์‚ด ๋•Œ ํŽธ๋„์—ผ์— ์˜ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ถ”์ •๋˜๋Š” ์ฒญ๋ ฅ ์ƒ์‹ค์„ ๊ฒฝํ—˜ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์กฐ๊ธˆ์”ฉ ์ฒญ๋ ฅ์„ ๋˜์ฐพ์•„ ๋‹ค์‹œ ์†Œ๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๋“ฃ๋Š” ์ผ์— ์ ์‘ํ•˜๊ธฐ๊นŒ์ง€ ๋Œ€๋žต ๋‘ ํ•ด ๋™์•ˆ์ด ๊ฑธ๋ ธ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ๊ทธ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ์ดˆ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต ์ผํ•™๋…„ ๋•Œ๋Š” ์ „ํ˜€, ์ดํ•™๋…„ ๋•Œ๋Š” ๊ฑฐ์˜ ๊ธ€์„ ์ฝ๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ์“ฐ์ง€ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ํ›„์—๋„ ์ผ์‹œ์ ์ธ ์ฒญ๋ ฅ ์ƒ์‹ค ์ฆ์„ธ๋ฅผ ์•“์•˜๊ณ , 2007๋…„๊ฒฝ ๋ฐ›์€ ์ •๋ฐ€ ์‹ ์ฒด๊ฒ€์‚ฌ์—์„œ๋Š” ํ–ฅํ›„ ๋ช‡ ๋…„ ์•ˆ์— ์ฒญ๋ ฅ์„ ์™„์ „ํžˆ ์ƒ์‹คํ•  ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ๋Š” ์ง„๋‹จ์„ ๋ฐ›๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ณต๋ฆฝํ•™๊ต ๊ต์‚ฌ์˜€๋˜ ๋ถ€๋ชจ๋ฅผ ๋”ฐ๋ผ ์ „ํ•™์„ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ๋ฒˆ ํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ-๋‚˜์ค‘์— ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€๋Š” ์ถ˜์ฒœ๊ต๋Œ€ ๊ต์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ๋˜๊ณ  ์ด์žฅ์„ ์—ญ์ž„ํ•จ-, ์›์ฃผ์—์„œ๋Š” ์†Œ์„ค๊ฐ€ ์ด๊ธฐํ˜ธ์™€ ๊ฐ™์€ ํ•™๊ต๋ฅผ ๋‹ค๋‹ˆ๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ดˆ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต 3ํ•™๋…„ ๋•Œ ์„œ์šธ๋กœ ์ „ํ•™์„ ์™”์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์–ด๋Š ์‹ ๋ฌธ์‚ฌ์—์„œ ์ฃผ์ตœํ•œ ์–ด๋ฆฐ์ด ๊ธ€์ง“๊ธฐ๋Œ€ํšŒ์—์„œ ์šฐ์Šน์„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ดํ•™๋…„ ๋•Œ๊นŒ์ง€ ํ•œ๊ธ€์„ ์ œ๋Œ€๋กœ ์“ฐ์ง€๋„ ๋ชปํ–ˆ๊ธฐ์— ๋”์šฑ ๊ทน์ ์ธ ๊ฒฝํ—˜์ด์—ˆ์„ ์ด ์ˆ˜์ƒ์„ ๊ณ„๊ธฐ๋กœ ๊ทธ๋Š” ๊ธ€์„ ์“ฐ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์ด ๋˜๊ธฐ๋กœ ์ž‘์ •์„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ•™์ฐฝ ์‹œ์ ˆ ๋‚ด๋‚ด ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์•„์ด๋“ค๊ณผ ๋Š์ž„์—†์ด ์‹ธ์›€์„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ํ•œ์–‘๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๊ตญ๋ฌธ๊ณผ์— ์ง„ํ•™ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ํ•™๊ธฐ ๋‚ด๋‚ด ์‚ฐ์†Œ์šฉ์ ‘, ์ฃผ์œ ์†Œ ์ฃผ์œ ์›, ๋ถˆ๋ฒ• ์ „๋‹จ์ง€ ๋ฐฐํฌ ๋“ฑ์˜ ์•„๋ฅด๋ฐ”์ดํŠธ๋ฅผ ํ•ด ๋ฐฉํ•™๋งˆ๋‹ค ์™ธ๊ตญ์œผ๋กœ ์—ฌํ–‰์„ ๋‹ค๋…”๋‹ค. ๋ณ‘์—ญ๊ณผ ์žฅ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ–‰ ๋“ฑ์˜ ์„ธ ๋ฒˆ์˜ ํœดํ•™ ๋์— 1999๋…„์— ๋Œ€ํ•™์„ ์กธ์—…ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ณ ๋ ค๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ์ธ๋ฌธ์ •๋ณด๋Œ€ํ•™์› ๋ฌธ์˜ˆ์ฐฝ์ž‘ํ•™์ „๊ณต ์„์‚ฌํ•™์œ„(2003), ๊ณ ๋ ค๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ์‘์šฉ์–ด๋ฌธ์ •๋ณดํ•™ ๋ฐ•์‚ฌํ•™์œ„(2010)๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. 2011๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ณ ๋ ค๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๋ฏธ๋””์–ด๋ฌธ์˜ˆ์ฐฝ์ž‘ํ•™๊ณผ ๊ต์ˆ˜๋กœ ์žฌ์งํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€ํ•™ ๋•Œ ์ž์‹ ์ด ์ฐฝ์ž‘ํ•œ ์†Œ์„ค์— ์ผ๋ จ๋ฒˆํ˜ธ๋ฅผ ๋ถ™์—ฌ ์ €์žฅํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, 1๋ฒˆ์€ ใ€Œ์œค์ฒ ์˜ ์‚ฌ๋ž‘ใ€์ด์—ˆ๊ณ  ์กธ์—…ํ•˜๋˜ ํ•ด์— 65๋ฒˆ์„ ์ผ๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์‹ ์ถ˜๋ฌธ์˜ˆ์—์„œ 3๋…„ ์—ฐ์† ๊ณ ๋ฐฐ๋ฅผ ๋งˆ์‹œ์ž 73๋ฒˆ์ธ ใ€Œ์‚ฌ๋ง‰์—์„œใ€๋ฅผ ์ธ์ƒ์˜ ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰ ์†Œ์„ค์ด๋ผ ์—ฌ๊ฒผ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์˜ค๋ž˜์ „ ํˆฌ๊ณ ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žŠ์—ˆ๋˜ ์†Œ์„ค์ด ใ€Žํ˜„๋Œ€๋ฌธํ•™ใ€์— ์‹ค๋ฆฌ๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค ๊ทน์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋“ฑ๋‹จํ•œ๋‹ค. ์†Œ์„ค์ง‘์œผ๋กœ ใ€Žํ† ๋ผ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋ฅด๊ธฐ ์ „์— ์•Œ์•„๋‘์–ด์•ผ ํ•  ๊ฒƒ๋“คใ€(๋ฌธํ•™๊ณผ์ง€์„ฑ์‚ฌ, 2003), ใ€Ž์ž์ •์˜ ํ”ฝ์…˜ใ€(๋ฌธํ•™๊ณผ์ง€์„ฑ์‚ฌ, 2006), ใ€Žํ•ธ๋“œ๋ฉ”์ด๋“œ ํ”ฝ์…˜ใ€(๋ฌธํ•™๋™๋„ค, 2011), ใ€Ž๋„๋ผ๋น„ใ€(๋ฌธํ•™๊ณผ์ง€์„ฑ์‚ฌ, 2014). ใ€Ž๋‚ญ๋งŒ์ฃผ์˜ใ€(๋ฌธํ•™๋™๋„ค, 2018)๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ค‘ํŽธ์†Œ์„ค๋กœ ใ€Ž๋‹น์‹ ์˜ ๋…ธํ›„ใ€(ํ˜„๋Œ€๋ฌธํ•™, 2018)๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๊ณ , ์žฅํŽธ์†Œ์„ค๋กœ ใ€Ž์ƒˆ๋ฒฝ์˜ ๋‚˜๋‚˜ใ€(๋ฌธํ•™๊ณผ์ง€์„ฑ์‚ฌ, 2010)๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. 2010๋…„ ์ œ18ํšŒ ๋Œ€์‚ฐ๋ฌธํ•™์ƒ, 2012๋…„ ์ œ44ํšŒ ์˜ค๋Š˜์˜ ์ Š์€ ์˜ˆ์ˆ ๊ฐ€์ƒ, 2016๋…„ ์ œ10ํšŒ ๊น€์œ ์ •๋ฌธํ•™์ƒ์„ ์ˆ˜์ƒํ•˜๋Š” ๋“ฑ ํฅ๋ฏธ์ง„์ง„ํ•œ ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ์™€ ์‹คํ—˜์  ํ˜•์‹์„ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉํ•œ ๋…ํŠนํ•œ ์†Œ์„ค ์„ธ๊ณ„๋ฅผ ๊ฐฑ์‹ ํ•ด๋‚˜๊ฐ€๊ณ  ์žˆ๋Š” ์ž‘๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€์šด๋ฐ ํ•œ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์ด ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ž‘ํ’ˆ ์„ธ๊ณ„ ๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œ๋Š” ์‚ฌ์†Œํ•œ ์ผ์ƒ์˜ ์„œ์‚ฌ์—์„œ ๊ฑฐ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ฌธ๋ช…์‚ฌ์  ์„œ์‚ฌ์— ์ด๋ฅด๊ธฐ๊นŒ์ง€ ์Šค์ผ€์ผ์— ๊ตฌ์• ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š” ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ๊พผ์œผ๋กœ์„œ์˜ ๋ฉด๋ชจ๋ฅผ ๋ณด์—ฌ์ค€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Š” ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ์†Œ์„ค์—์„œ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ธฐ์ƒ์ฒœ์™ธํ•œ ์ƒ์ƒ์„ ์‹คํ—˜์  ์„œ์‚ฌ ํ˜•์‹์œผ๋กœ ๋‹ด์•„๋‚ธ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ฃผ๋ชฉ์„ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ทธ์˜ ์†Œ์„ค ์„ธ๊ณ„์—์„œ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์ด๋‚˜ ํ–‰๋™์˜ ์ธ๊ณผ์„ฑ์ด ํ•ด์ฒด๋˜๊ณ , ํ•์ง„์„ฑ์ด๋‚˜ ๊ฐœ์—ฐ์„ฑ์ด ๊ฒฐ์—ฌ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์šฐ๊ฐ€ ํ”ํ•˜๋‹ค. ๋งํ•˜์ž๋ฉด ๋ฏธ๋ฉ”์‹œ์Šค์  ์ถฉ๋™๋ณด๋‹ค๋Š” ํŒํƒ€์ง€์˜ ์ถฉ๋™์ด ์›”๋“ฑํ•˜๋‹ค. ์ด์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ํ˜„์‹ค์— ์–ฝ๋งค์ด์ง€ ์•Š์€ ์ˆœ์ •์˜ ํ—ˆ๊ตฌ์ด์ž, ์ธ๊ณผ์„ฑ ์—†๋Š” ์—ฌ๋‹ด๋“ค์˜ ์ฆ์‹์œผ๋กœ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์ ธ ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ์˜๋ฏธ์—์„œ ๊ทธ์˜ ์†Œ์„ค์€ ํŽธ์ง‘์ฆ์  ์„œ์‚ฌ๋กœ ์ง„๋‹จ๋˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์‹ค์ œ๋กœ ์ž‘๊ฐ€ ๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œ๋Š” ์œ ๋จธ, ์ฒ ํ•™, ๋ฌธํ•™์‚ฌ, ๊ณผํ•™, ์ •์‹ ๋ถ„์„, ์‹ ํ™”, ์—์„ธ์ด, ๋…ผ๋ฌธ ๋“ฑ์˜ ๋‹ค์–‘ํ•œ ๋‹ด๋ก ๋“ค์„ ๋Šฅ์ˆ˜๋Šฅ๋ž€ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๊ตฌ์‚ฌํ•˜๊ณ , ์ ์žฌ์ ์†Œ์— ๋ฐฐ์น˜ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐฉ์‹์œผ๋กœ ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ์ „๊ฐœํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ€๋ น ์†Œ์„ค ์ „์ฒด๊ฐ€ ๋…ผ๋ฌธ์˜ ํ˜•์‹์„ ์ทจํ•œ ใ€Œใ€Œ์‚ฌ๋ž‘ ์†๋‹˜๊ณผ ์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆใ€์˜ ์Œ๋ž€์„ฑ ์—ฐ๊ตฌใ€๋Š” ๋ฌธํ•™ ๋…ผ๋ฌธ์˜ ์ต์ˆ™ํ•œ ์–ดํœ˜์™€ ๊ด€๋ก€๋“ค์„ ํŒจ๋Ÿฌ๋””ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ง€์  ์œ ํฌ๋กœ ๊ฐ€๋“ํ•œ ํ—ˆ๊ตฌ ์„ธ๊ณ„๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋“ค์–ด๋‚ธ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๊ฐ€ ์Šค์Šค๋กœ โ€˜์ž์ •์˜ ํ”ฝ์…˜โ€™์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ๋ช…๋ช…ํ•œ ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์„œ์‚ฌ์  ์‹คํ—˜์€ ํ˜„์žฌ์˜ ๋ฌธํ•™์žฅ์—์„œ โ€˜์†Œ์„คโ€™์ด๋ž€ ๊ณผ์—ฐ ์–ด๋– ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๊ณ , ๊ทธ๊ฒƒ์ด ์–ด๋–ป๊ฒŒ ๊ฐฑ์‹ ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š”์ง€์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ฌผ์Œ์—์„œ ๋‚˜์˜จ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋ผ ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œ์˜ ์ดˆ๊ธฐ์ž‘๋“ค์— ์ง™๊ฒŒ ๋ฐฐ์–ด์žˆ๋Š” ๋ฌต์‹œ๋ก์  ์ƒ์ƒ๋ ฅ์ด๋‚˜ ํƒ€๋‚˜ํ† ์Šค์—์˜ ์ถฉ๋™์€ ์ ์ฐจ ์ธ๋ฅ˜์˜ ๋ฌธ๋ช…์‚ฌ์™€ ์šฐ์ฃผ ์ง„ํ™”๋ก ์— ์ด๋ฅด๋Š” ๊ด‘๋Œ€ํ•œ ์Šค์ผ€์ผ์˜ ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ๋กœ ํ™•์žฅ๋˜๊ณ , ์œ ๋จธ์™€ ๋ฉœ๋ž‘์ฝœ๋ฆฌ, ์น˜๋ฐ€ํ•œ ๋…ผ์ฆ์ด ์ •๊ตํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉ๋œ ์„ธ๋ จ๋œ ์Šคํƒ€์ผ์˜ ๋ฌธ์ฒด๋กœ ์ง„ํ™”ํ•ด๊ฐ„๋‹ค. ์ด์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ ๊ธฐ์ดํ•œ ์ƒ์ƒ๊ณผ ์„œ๋Š˜ํ•œ ์œ ๋จธ, ์ง€์  ๋‹ด๋ก ์ด ์–ด์šฐ๋Ÿฌ์ง„ ๊ทธ์˜ ์†Œ์„ค์€ ์„ธ์ƒ๊ณผ ์ธ๊ฐ„์„ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์‹œ์„ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐ”๋ผ๋ณด๊ฒŒ ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฌต์งํ•œ ์งˆ๋ฌธ๋“ค์„ ๋‹ด๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์žฅํŽธ์†Œ์„ค ใ€Ž์ƒˆ๋ฒฝ์˜ ๋‚˜๋‚˜ใ€๋Š” ํ•œ๊ตญ ๋‚จ์ž ๋ ˆ์˜ค๊ฐ€ ์•„ํ”„๋ฆฌ์นด๋กœ ์—ฌํ–‰ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋“ค๋ฅธ ํƒœ๊ตญ์—์„œ ์ตœ๊ณ ์˜ ๋งค์ถ˜๋ถ€ ํ”Œ๋กœ์ด์™€ ๋งŒ๋‚˜ ๋œป๋ฐ–์—๋„ ๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ์˜ ์ด๋ฐฉ์ธ์œผ๋กœ ์ง€๋‚ธ ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ๋ฅผ ๋“ค๋ ค์ค€๋‹ค. ์ด ์†Œ์„ค์€ ๋ ˆ์˜ค์™€ ํ”Œ๋กœ์ด์˜ ์—ฐ์• ์‚ฌ์— ์ดˆ์ ์„ ๋งž์ถ”๊ธฐ๋ณด๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ทธ๋“ค์˜ ๊ด€๊ณ„๋ฅผ ํ‹€๋กœ ์‚ผ์•„ ์ˆ˜๋งŽ์€ ์—ฌ๋‹ด์„ ์ˆ˜์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ ์—ฌํ–‰์„ ๋‹ฎ์€ ์ธ๊ฐ„์˜ ์‚ถ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด์„œ ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด๊ตญ์˜ ํ•œ ๊ฑฐ๋ฆฌ์—์„œ ๋งŒ๋‚˜๊ฒŒ ๋˜๋Š” ์ˆ˜๋งŽ์€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์˜ ๋ณต์žกํ•œ ์–ฝํž˜, ๋ฌด์ˆ˜ํ•œ ์‹œ๊ฐ„์  ๊ฒน์นจ๊ณผ ํšŒ๊ท€์™€ ์ดˆ์›”์„ ์ œ์‹œํ•จ์œผ๋กœ์จ ์šฐ๋ฆฌ์˜ ์‚ถ์€ ๋งค์ˆœ๊ฐ„ ๋Œ์•„๊ฐˆ ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋Š” ์—ฌํ–‰๊ณผ ๊ฐ™๋‹ค๋Š” ํ†ต์ฐฐ์„ ์ „ํ•ด์ค€๋‹ค. ๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œ์˜ ์ตœ๊ทผ์ž‘๋“ค์€ ๋ณด๋‹ค ๋„“์€ ์‹œ์•ผ๋กœ ์ธ๊ฐ„ ์‚ฌํšŒ์˜ ์ „์ฒด ํ๋ฆ„๊ณผ ์†Œ์„ค์˜ ์ž๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๊ด€์ฐฐํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ํŠน์ง•์„ ๋ณด์—ฌ์ค€๋‹ค. ใ€Œ๊ฐœ๊ธฐ์ผ์‹ใ€์€ ๊ฐœ์—ฐ์„ฑ๊ณผ ์ธ๊ณผ๋ฅผ ๋‚ด์„ธ์šด ์†Œ์„ค๋กœ ๊ณต๊ณต์˜ ์ ๊ณผ ํˆฌ์Ÿํ•ด์•ผ ํ–ˆ๋˜ ์‹œ๋Œ€๋ฅผ ์ง€๋‚˜, ๋ชจ๋ฐฉ์ด ์•„๋‹Œ ์™œ๊ณก์ด์•ผ๋ง๋กœ ์˜ˆ์ˆ ์˜ ๋ณธ์งˆ์ž„์„ ์ฃผ์ฐฝํ•œ ์‹œ๋Œ€ ๋˜ํ•œ ์ €๋ฌผ์—ˆ์„ ๋•Œ, ์†Œ์„ค์€ ์–ด๋””๋กœ ๋‚˜๊ฐ€์•ผ ํ•˜๋Š”๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ๋ฌป๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ž‘๊ฐ€ ์Šค์Šค๋กœ ์ œ๊ธฐํ•œ ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌํ•œ ์งˆ๋ฌธ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์•”์ค‘๋ชจ์ƒ‰์˜ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋กœ ํŠนํžˆ ์ฃผ๋ชฉ๋˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์€ ใ€Œํ‹ฐ๋งˆ์ด์˜ค์Šคใ€, ใ€ŒQ. E. D.ใ€, ใ€Œ๊ฑฐ๊ธฐ ์žˆ๋‚˜์š”ใ€ ๋“ฑ์˜ ๋…ํŠนํ•œ ๊ณผํ•™์†Œ์„ค์˜ ์ฐฝ์ž‘์ด๋‹ค. ์ž‘๊ฐ€๊ฐ€ โ€œ์•„๋งˆ์ถ”์–ด ์ˆ˜ํ•™์žโ€๋ฅผ ์ž์ž„ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ์ผ๊ณ , ์‹ค์ œ ์ˆ˜ํ•™๊ณผ ๊ต์ˆ˜์—๊ฒŒ ๊ฒ€ํ† ๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค๋Š” ใ€ŒQ. E. D.ใ€๋Š” โ€˜์ฒจ๋‹จโ€™ ์ˆ˜ํ•™์˜ ์ „๋ฌธ์šฉ์–ด๋“ค์ด ์„œ์‚ฌ์˜ ๋‹ดํ™”๋ฅผ ํ˜„๋ž€ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ์ˆ˜๋†“๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ใ€Œ๊ฑฐ๊ธฐ ์žˆ๋‚˜์š”ใ€๋Š” ์ธ๋ฅ˜์˜ ์ง„ํ™”๊ฐ€ ์–ด๋– ํ•œ ๊ณผ์ •์„ ๊ฑฐ์ณ์„œ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์กŒ๋Š”์ง€๋ฅผ ์–‘์ž์—ญํ•™์  ๊ณต๊ฐ„์—์„œ ์žฌํ˜„ํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ๋…ํŠนํ•œ ์ƒ์ƒ์„ ๋ณด์—ฌ์ค€๋‹ค. ์–‘์ž๋ฌผ๋ฆฌํ•™์— ๊ทผ๊ฑฐํ•œ ํฅ๋ฏธ์ง„์ง„ํ•œ ์ƒ์ƒ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด์„œ ์ธ๋ฅ˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌ์— ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚œ ํญ๋ ฅ๊ณผ ์ €ํ•ญ์˜ ์ง„ํ™”๋ก , ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์ข…๊ต์˜ ์˜๋ฏธ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ๊นŠ์€ ํ†ต์ฐฐ๊ณผ ์งˆ๋ฌธ์„ ๋™์‹œ์— ์ „ํ•ด์ฃผ๋Š” ์ž‘ํ’ˆ์ด๋‹ค. ํƒ€๊ณ ๋‚œ ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ๊พผ์ด์ž ์ฒจ๋‹จ ๊ณผํ•™์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์™•์„ฑํ•œ ์†Œํ™”๋ ฅ๊ณผ ์ธ๋ฌธํ•™์  ํ†ต์ฐฐ๋ ฅ์„ ๋‘๋ฃจ ๊ฐ–์ถ˜ ์ž‘๊ฐ€ ๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œ์˜ ์†Œ์„ค ์„ธ๊ณ„๋Š” ์ž๊ธฐ ๊ฐฑ์‹ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๋“ญํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๊ณ„์†ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ง„ํ™”ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ฃผ์š” ์ž‘ํ’ˆ ์†Œ์„ค์ง‘ ใ€Žํ† ๋ผ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋ฅด๊ธฐ ์ „์— ์•Œ์•„๋‘์–ด์•ผ ํ•  ๊ฒƒ๋“คใ€, ๋ฌธํ•™๊ณผ์ง€์„ฑ์‚ฌ, 2003. ใ€Ž์ž์ •์˜ ํ”ฝ์…˜ใ€, ๋ฌธํ•™๊ณผ์ง€์„ฑ์‚ฌ, 2006. ใ€Žํ•ธ๋“œ๋ฉ”์ด๋“œ ํ”ฝ์…˜ใ€, ๋ฌธํ•™๋™๋„ค, 2011. ใ€Ž๋„๋ผ๋น„ใ€, ๋ฌธํ•™๊ณผ์ง€์„ฑ์‚ฌ, 2014. ใ€Ž๋‚ญ๋งŒ์ฃผ์˜ใ€, ๋ฌธํ•™๋™๋„ค, 2018. ์ค‘ํŽธ์†Œ์„ค์ง‘ ใ€Ž๋‹น์‹ ์˜ ๋…ธํ›„ใ€, ํ˜„๋Œ€๋ฌธํ•™, 2018. ์žฅํŽธ์†Œ์„ค ใ€Ž์ƒˆ๋ฒฝ์˜ ๋‚˜๋‚˜ใ€, ๋ฌธํ•™๊ณผ์ง€์„ฑ์‚ฌ, 2010. ์ˆ˜์ƒ ๋‚ด์—ญ 2010๋…„ ์ œ18ํšŒ ๋Œ€์‚ฐ๋ฌธํ•™์ƒ ์ˆ˜์ƒ (์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž‘ ใ€Ž์ƒˆ๋ฒฝ์˜ ๋‚˜๋‚˜ใ€) 2012๋…„ ์ œ44ํšŒ ์˜ค๋Š˜์˜ ์ Š์€ ์˜ˆ์ˆ ๊ฐ€์ƒ ์ˆ˜์ƒ, 2016๋…„ ์ œ10ํšŒ ๊น€์œ ์ •๋ฌธํ•™์ƒ ์ˆ˜์ƒ (์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž‘ ใ€Œ๊ฑฐ๊ธฐ ์žˆ๋‚˜์š”ใ€) ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ๋น„ํ‰ ๊ถŒํ˜์›…, ใ€Œ๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œ ํ”„๋กœ์ ํŠธใ€, ๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œ, ใ€Žํ•ธ๋“œ๋ฉ”์ด๋“œ ํ”ฝ์…˜ใ€, ๋ฌธํ•™๋™๋„ค, 2011. ๊น€๋Œ€์‚ฐ, ใ€Œ์†Œ์„ค์˜ ์˜ํ˜ผ : ๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œ ใ€Ž์ƒˆ๋ฒฝ์˜ ๋‚˜๋‚˜ใ€์˜ ์ฃผ๋ณ€ ํ˜น์€ ์ค‘์‹ฌ์—์„œใ€, ใ€Ž๋ฌธํ•™๊ณผ์‚ฌํšŒใ€23:4, 2010๋…„ ๊ฒจ์šธํ˜ธ. ๊น€ํ˜•์ค‘, ใ€Œ์†Œ์„ค ์ด์ „, ํ˜น์€ ์ดํ›„์˜ ์†Œ์„คใ€, ๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œ, ใ€Ž์ž์ •์˜ ํ”ฝ์…˜ใ€, ๋ฌธํ•™๊ณผ์ง€์„ฑ์‚ฌ, 2006. ๋…ธ๋Œ€์›, ใ€Œ๋‚˜๋Š” ใ€Œ๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œ๋ก ใ€์„ ์ด๋ ‡๊ฒŒ ์“ธ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค : ๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œ๋ฅผ ์—ฌํ–‰ํ•˜๊ณ  ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋ฏธ์™„์˜ ๊ณ„ํš์„œใ€, ใ€Ž๋ฌธํ•™๋™๋„คใ€72, 2012๋…„ ๊ฐ€์„ํ˜ธ. ๋…ธ๋Œ€์›, ใ€Œ์†Œ์„ค ์‹คํ—˜์‹ค, ์ธ์ƒ ์‹คํ—˜์‹ค : ๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œ ์†Œ์„ค์˜ ์•Œ๋ ˆ๊ณ ๋ฆฌใ€, ใ€Ž์ž‘๊ฐ€์„ธ๊ณ„ใ€29:1, 2017๋…„ ๋ด„ํ˜ธ. ๋ฐ•๋Œ€ํ˜„, ใ€Œโ€˜๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œโ€™๋ผ๋Š”, ์ Š๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ๋Š™์€ ๋ชจ๋‚˜๋“œ(monad)ใ€, ใ€Ž์˜ค๋Š˜์˜ ๋ฌธ์˜ˆ๋น„ํ‰ใ€67, 2007. 11. ์˜ค์œคํ˜ธ, ใ€Œ๋ถˆ์˜จํ•œ ์˜ˆ์–ธ์ž๊ฐ€ ์ค‘์–ผ๊ฑฐ๋ฆฐ ๋ฏธ๋ž˜์˜ ๋ง๋“ค : ๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œ๋ก ใ€, ใ€Ž๋ฌธํ•™๊ณผ์‚ฌํšŒใ€, 2006๋…„ ๊ฒจ์šธํ˜ธ. ์šฐ์ฐฌ์ œ, ใ€Œ์•…๋ชฝ์˜ ํƒˆ์ฃผ์™€ ํ˜ผ๋ˆ์˜ ์ˆ˜์‚ฌํ•™ใ€, ๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œ, ใ€Žํ† ๋ผ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋ฅด๊ธฐ ์ „์— ์•Œ์•„๋‘์–ด์•ผ ํ•  ๊ฒƒ๋“คใ€, ๋ฌธํ•™๊ณผ์ง€์„ฑ์‚ฌ, 2003. ๋Œ€๋‹ด, ์ขŒ๋‹ด, ์ธํ„ฐ๋ทฐ, ์—์„ธ์ด ๋“ฑ ๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œ, ใ€Œ์•Œ๋ ˆ๊ณ ๋ฆฌ ์†Œ์„ค ์—ฐ๊ตฌใ€, ๊ณ ๋ ค๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ์„์‚ฌ ๋…ผ๋ฌธ, 2003. ๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œ, ใ€Œ๊น€์Šน์˜ฅ ์†Œ์„ค ํ”Œ๋กฏ์˜ ๊ตฌ์กฐ์™€ ์˜๋ฏธใ€, ๊ณ ๋ ค๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๋ฐ•์‚ฌ ๋…ผ๋ฌธ, 2010. ๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œ, ใ€Œ์†Œ์„ค๊ฐ€ ๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œ์˜ ์ด์•ผ๊ธฐ์˜ ์„ธ๊ณ„ใ€, ใ€Ž๋ ˆ์ด๋””๊ฒฝํ–ฅใ€, 2011๋…„ 10์›”ํ˜ธ, ๋ณด๋Ÿฌ๊ฐ€๊ธฐ ๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œ, ใ€Œ์„œ์ˆ ์˜ ์‹ ๋น™์„ฑ ์—ฐ๊ตฌใ€, ใ€Ž์šฐ๋ฆฌ์–ด๋ฌธ์—ฐ๊ตฌใ€52, 2015. ๋ฐ•ํ˜•์„œ, ใ€Œ์„œ์‚ฌ์˜ ์žฅ๋ฅด๊ทœ์•ฝ ์œ„๋ฐ˜๊ณผ ๊ทธ ํ•จ์˜ใ€, ใ€Ž์–ด๋ฌธ๋…ผ์ง‘ใ€78, 2016. 1972๋…„ ์ถœ์ƒ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์†Œ์„ค๊ฐ€ ํ•œ์–‘๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๋™๋ฌธ ์‚ด์•„์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Park%20Hyoung-su
Park Hyoung-su
Park Hyoung-su (born August 11, 1972) is a male South Korean writer of fiction born in Chuncheon, Gangwan-do, South Korea. His short story Krabi, named after the Thai district, has been published in a bilingual edition in France. Life Park was born in Chuncheon, Gangwon-do in 1972 and graduated from Korea University graduate school, with a Ph.D. in 2010 from Korea University Graduate School with a Masters in 2003, and from Hanyang University, a Bachelor of Korean literature in 1999. Park made his literary debut in 2000 through the Hyundae Munhak. He currently teaches creative writing at Korea University. Work Park is an unusual novelist for a Korean, often placing his works outside of Korea, or finding their genesis outside of Korea. and Korean critics have had a difficult time pigeonholing him, various describing him as a "storyteller", "metamorphic", and "self-aware", among other terms. LIST Magazine has summarized Park's role as a modern novelist: "The novel as a modern invention is what many young Korean writers are pondering as they attempt to redefine the landscape of modern Korean literature. Out of these writers, Park Hyoung-su stands out for the perception, intelligence, and playful imagination so evident in his work. At the moment, his only work translated into English is Arpan (ASIA Publisher)) which has been well reviewed at www.ktlit.com as "another shock to a habitual reader of Korean literature in translation as it treads overseas as well as into cultural relativism, and the position of plagiarism/copying in Korea.". Awards 2016: The 10th Kim you jeong literary Award 2012: Today's Young Artist Award 2010: The 18th annual Daesan literary fiction Award Works in English Arpan (Asia Publishers, 2014) Works in Korean ๋บจ์— ๋ฌป์€ ๋ณด์„ ๋งˆ์Œ์‚ฐ์ฑ… 2021. 06. 10 ์—ฌ๊ธฐ ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ๋งˆ์ฃผ (2021 ํ˜„๋Œ€๋ฌธํ•™์ƒ ์†Œ์„ค์ง‘) ํ˜„๋Œ€๋ฌธํ•™ 2021 ๋งˆ์Œ์˜ ๋ถ€๋ ฅ (2021 ์ด์ƒ๋ฌธํ•™์ƒ ์ž‘ํ’ˆ์ง‘) ๋ฌธํ•™์‚ฌ์ƒ์‚ฌ 2021 ๋‚ญ๋งŒ์ฃผ์˜ ๋ฌธํ•™๋™๋„ค 2018. 07. 11 ๋‹น์‹ ์˜ ๋…ธํ›„ ํ˜„๋Œ€๋ฌธํ•™ 2018 ์‚ฐ์ฑ…์ž์˜ ํ–‰๋ณต (2016,์ดํšจ์„ ๋ฌธํ•™์ƒ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž‘ํ’ˆ์ง‘) ์ƒ๊ฐ์ •๊ฑฐ์žฅ 2016 ๊ฑฐ๊ธฐ ์žˆ๋‚˜์š” (2016 ๊น€์œ ์ •๋ฌธํ•™์ƒ ์ œ10ํšŒ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž‘ํ’ˆ์ง‘) ์€ํ–‰๋‚˜๋ฌด 2016 ์ž‘๊ฐ€์™€ ๊ณ ์–‘์ด ํญ์Šค์ฝ”๋„ˆ 2016 ๋ฒ ๋ฅผ๋ฆฐ ํ•„ (2016 ์ œ61ํšŒ ํ˜„๋Œ€๋ฌธํ•™์ƒ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์†Œ์„ค์ง‘) ํ˜„๋Œ€๋ฌธํ•™ 2016 ๋„๋ผ๋น„ ๋ฌธํ•™๊ณผ์ง€์„ฑ์‚ฌ 2014.05.08 ๋นˆ์ง‘ (์ œ12ํšŒ ํ™ฉ์ˆœ์› ๋ฌธํ•™์ƒ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž‘ํ’ˆ์ง‘) ๋ฌธ์˜ˆ์ค‘์•™ 2012.10.25 ํ•ธ๋“œ๋ฉ”์ด๋“œ ํ”ฝ์…˜ ๋ฌธํ•™๋™๋„ค 2011.12.05 ๋ถ€๋ฉ”๋ž‘ (2011 ์ œ11ํšŒ ํ™ฉ์ˆœ์›๋ฌธํ•™์ƒ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž‘ํ’ˆ์ง‘) ๋ฌธ์˜ˆ์ค‘์•™ 2011.10.20 ์ž‘๊ฐ€๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ •ํ•œ ์˜ค๋Š˜์˜ ์†Œ์„ค (2012) ์ž‘๊ฐ€ 2012.03 ์ž‘๊ฐ€๊ฐ€ ์„ ์ •ํ•œ ์˜ค๋Š˜์˜ ์†Œ์„ค (2011) ์ž‘๊ฐ€ 2011.03.15 ์ƒˆ๋ฒฝ์˜ ๋‚˜๋‚˜ (์ œ18ํšŒ ๋Œ€์‚ฐ๋ฌธํ•™์ƒ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž‘) ๋ฌธํ•™๊ณผ์ง€์„ฑ์‚ฌ 2010.05.13 ์‚ฌ๋ž‘์„ ๋ฏฟ๋‹ค (2008๋…„ ์ œ32ํšŒ ์ด์ƒ๋ฌธํ•™์ƒ ์ž‘ํ’ˆ์ง‘) ๋ฌธํ•™์‚ฌ์ƒ์‚ฌ 2008.01.18 ์ž์ •์˜ ํ”ฝ์…˜ ๋ฌธํ•™๊ณผ์ง€์„ฑ์‚ฌ 2006.10.30 ํ† ๋ผ๋ฅผ ๊ธฐ๋ฅด๊ธฐ ์ „์— ์•Œ์•„๋‘์–ด์•ผ ํ•  ๊ฒƒ๋“ค ๋ฌธํ•™๊ณผ์ง€์„ฑ์‚ฌ 2003.12.22 References 1972 births South Korean novelists Living people Academic staff of Korea University People from Chuncheon
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%96%8C%EB%82%98%EC%95%BC%20%EB%AC%B8%ED%99%94
์–Œ๋‚˜์•ผ ๋ฌธํ™”
์–Œ๋‚˜์•ผ ๋ฌธํ™”(Yamnaya culture)๋Š” ๊ธฐ์›์ „ 3400๋…„์—์„œ ๊ธฐ์›์ „ 2600๋…„๊ฒฝ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์˜ ๋„๋‚˜์šฐ๊ฐ•๊ณผ ์šฐ๋ž„์‚ฐ๋งฅ ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ๊ด‘๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ง€์—ญ์„ ๊ฑธ์ณ์„œ ์กด์žฌํ•œ ์ธ๋„์œ ๋Ÿฝ์ธ ์ตœ์ดˆ์˜ ์ฒญ๋™๊ธฐ ๋ฌธํ™”๋ฅผ ๋งํ•œ๋‹ค. ๋ฌผ์งˆ์  ๋ฌธํ™”๋Š” ์•„ํŒŒ๋‚˜์‹œ์—๋ณด ๋ฌธํ™”์™€ ๋งค์šฐ ๊ฐ€๊นŒ์šฐ๋ฉฐ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ์›๋“ค์˜ ์œ ์ „์  ํŠน์ง•๋„ ๊ตฌ๋ณ„์ด ์–ด๋ ค์šธ ์ •๋„๋กœ ๊ฐ€๊น๋‹ค. ์ด๋“ค์€ ๊ตฐ์žฅ๊ตญ๊ฐ€ ์ฒด์ œ์˜ ๋ฐ˜-์œ ๋ชฉ๋ฏผ ๋ฌธํ™”๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง€๊ณ  ์žˆ์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋ฐ”ํ€ด๊ฐ€ ๋‹ฌ๋ฆฐ ๋งˆ์ฐจ๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์ด๋“ค์€ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ๊ณผ ์ค‘์•™์•„์‹œ์•„์— ๊ฑธ์นœ ๋‹น๋Œ€์˜ ๋ฌธํ™”์  ์ง‘๋‹จ๋“ค, ๊ณง ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์˜ ์ „๋ถ€๋ฌธํ™”, ๋ฒจ๋น„์ปค ๋ฌธํ™”์™€ ์ค‘์•™์•„์‹œ์•„์˜ ์‹ ํƒ€์‹œํƒ€ ๋ฌธํ™”, ์•ˆ๋“œ๋กœ๋…ธ๋ณด ๋ฌธํ™”, ์Šค๋ฃจ๋ธŒ๋‚˜์•ผ ๋ฌธํ™”์™€๋„ ์—ฌ๋Ÿฌ ์ธก๋ฉด์—์„œ ์—ฐ๊ด€์„ฑ์ด ๊นŠ์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ถ€ ํ•™์ž๋“ค์€ ์ด๋“ค์„ ํ†ตํ‹€์–ด ์ฟ ๋ฅด๊ฐ„ ๋ฌธํ™”๋กœ ๋ฌถ์–ด ๋ถ€๋ฅด๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์˜ค๋Š˜๋‚  ์ด๋“ค์€ ํ›„๊ธฐ ์›์‹œ ์ธ๋„์œ ๋Ÿฝ์ธ๊ณผ ๋™์ผํ•œ ์ง‘๋‹จ์œผ๋กœ ์ถ”์ •๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์–Œ๋‚˜์•ผ ๋ฌธํ™”๊ฐ€ ์œ ๋ž˜ํ•œ ํฐํ† ์Šค-์นด์Šคํ”ผ ์Šคํ… ์ง€์—ญ์€ ์ธ๋„์œ ๋Ÿฝ์–ด์กฑ์ด ์œ ๋ž˜ํ•œ ์›ํ–ฅ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์œ ๋ ฅํ•œ ํ›„๋ณด์ด๋‹ค. ํŠน์ง• ์ฃผ๊ฑฐ์˜ ํ”์ ๋“ค์€ ์œ ๋ชฉ๋ฏผ๋“ค์˜ ์•ผ์˜์ง€๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋Œ๋กœ ์Œ“์•„๋†“์€ ์„ฑ์ฑ„๊ฐ€ ๋งค์šฐ ๋งŽ์ด ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์–ด๋–ค ์žฅ์†Œ๋Š” 2๋ฏธํ„ฐ ๋†’์ด์˜ ๋Œ๋กœ ์Œ“์€ ์„ฑ๋ฒฝ์ด ์‚ผ๊ฐํ˜• ๋ชจ์–‘์˜ ๋งˆ์„์„ ์ง€ํ‚ค๋Š” ๋ชจ์–‘์˜ ์œ ์ ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์Šน๋งˆ์šฉ์˜ ๋ชฉ์ถ•์„ ๋งŽ์ด ํ•˜์˜€๊ณ  ๊ฐ€์ถ•์€ ์ง€๋ฐฉ์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ์„œ ์†Œ๋ฅผ ์ฃผ๋กœ ํ‚ค์šฐ๊ฑฐ๋‚˜ ์–‘์ด๋‚˜ ์—ผ์†Œ๋ฅผ ํ‚ค์šฐ๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๋ง์„ ํ‚ค์šฐ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ์ •์ฐฉ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ์–Œ๋‚˜์•ผ ๋ฌธํ™”์˜ ํฐ ํŠน์ง•์œผ๋กœ์„œ ๋ง์˜ ๋ผˆ๋Š” ์ฃผ๊ฑฐ์ง€์™€ ๋ฌ˜์ง€์—๋„ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜๋ฉฐ ๋ฌ˜์ง€์—์„œ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋œ ๋ง์€ ์žฅ๋ก€์‹์„ ํ•  ๋•Œ ํฌ์ƒ๋‹นํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณด์ธ๋‹ค. ๋ถ๋ถ€์˜ ์‚ผ๋ฆผ์ง€๋Œ€์™€ ๊ณ„๊ณก์—์„œ๋Š” ๋ชฉ์ถ•๋ณด๋‹ค๋Š” ๋†์—…์ด ๋งŽ์ด ํ–‰ํ•˜์—ฌ์กŒ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋ฌ˜์ง€์—๋Š” ๋ง์— ๋Œ๊ฒŒ ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋ฐญ์„ ๊ฐ€๋Š” ์Ÿ๊ธฐ๋„ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ง ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์˜ ๊ฐ€์กฑ๋“ค์ด ํƒˆ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์†Œ๊ฐ€ ๋„๋Š” ์šฐ์ฐจ(็‰›่ปŠ), ๋„“์€ ์ดˆ์›์— ์‚ฌ์œกํ•˜๊ธฐ ์ ํ•ฉํ•œ ์ข…๋ฅ˜์˜ ๊ฐ€์ถ•๋“ค, ๋‚™ํƒ€์™€ ์‚ฌ์ด๊ฐ€ ์‚ฐ์–‘์„ ์‹œ์ž‘์œผ๋กœ ์Šคํ… ์ง€์—ญ ์‹ฌ์ธต๋ถ€์— ์ƒ์‹ํ•˜๋Š” ๋™๋ฌผ์˜ ๋ผˆ๋“ค, ์Šคํ… ์ง€์—ญ ์‹ฌ์ธต๋ถ€์— ์ž์ฃผ ์ฐพ์•„๋ณผ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์ข…๋ฅ˜์˜ ๊ฐ€์กฑ ๋ฌ˜์ง€ ๋“ฑ๋“ฑ์˜ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋ฌผ์—์„œ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์–Œ๋‚˜์•ผ ๋ฌธํ™”๋Š” ๋ฐ˜์œ ๋ชฉ์‹ ๋ชฉ์ถ•์˜ ์ตœ์ดˆ ์‹œ๊ธฐ(ๆ™‚ๆœŸ) ๋ฌธํ™” ์ค‘์— ํ•˜๋‚˜๋ผ๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋ฌ˜์†Œ๋Š” ์ฟ ๋ฅด๊ฐ„ ์–‘์‹์œผ๋กœ์„œ, ์ตœ์ดˆ์— ๋ฌปํžŒ ์œ ์ฒด๊ฐ€ ๋จผ์ € ์žˆ๊ณ  ๊ทธ ์ฟ ๋ฅด๊ฐ„์„ ๋”์šฑ ํฌ๊ฒŒ ์ฆ์ถ•ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ƒˆ๋กœ์šด ์œ ์ฒด๋ฅผ ์ด์žฅํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐฉ์‹์œผ๋กœ ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐ์› ์–Œ๋‚˜์•ผ ๋ฌธํ™”์˜ ๊ธฐ์›์€ ๋ณผ๊ฐ€๊ฐ• ์ค‘์ƒ๋ฅ˜์˜ ํ๋ฐœ๋ฆฐ์Šคํฌ ๋ฌธํ™”(Khvalinsk culture)์™€ ๋“œ๋„คํ”„๋ฅด ๊ฐ• ์ค‘์ƒ๋ฅ˜ ์ง€์—ญ์˜ ์Šค๋ ˆ๋“œ๋‹ˆ ์Šคํ† ํฌ ๋ฌธํ™”(Sredny Stog culture)์— ์žˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ๋ณด๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์Šน๋งˆ์šฉ์˜ ๋ง๊ณผ ๊ฐ€์กฑ ์ด๋™์šฉ ์†Œ์˜ ์šฐ์ฐจ(็‰›่ปŠ)์—์„œ ๋ณด์ด๋“ฏ์ด ์ด๋™์€ ๋งค์šฐ ์šฉ์ดํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์ถ”์ธก๋˜๋ฉฐ ๊ด‘๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ง€์—ญ์— ์–Œ๋‚˜์•ผ ๋ฌธํ™”๊ฐ€ ํŽ„์ณ์ง„ ๊ฒƒ์€ ์ด๋Ÿฐ ์ด๋™์ด ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ–ˆ๋˜ ์ด์œ ๋กœ ์ƒ๊ฐ๋œ๋‹ค. ์–Œ๋‚˜์•ผ ๋ฌธํ™” ์–‘์‹์˜ ๋ฌ˜์ง€๋Š” ๋™์ชฝ์—์„œ๋Š” ์šฐ๋ž„์‚ฐ๋งฅ ๋™์ชฝ ๊ธฐ์Šญ์—์„œ๋„ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณด์•„ ์•Œํƒ€์ด ์‚ฐ๋งฅ๊ณผ ์˜ˆ๋‹ˆ์„ธ์ด๊ฐ• ์ง€์—ญ์— ์กด์žฌํ–ˆ๋˜ ์•„ํŒŒ๋‚˜์‹œ์—๋ณด ๋ฌธํ™”(Afanasevo culture)์˜ ์œ ๋ž˜๊ฐ€ ์–Œ๋‚˜์•ผ ๋ฌธํ™”์™€ ๊ทธ ์ฃผ๋ณ€์˜ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์Šคํ… ์ง€๋Œ€์—์„œ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๊ธฐ์›ํ–ˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ์•Œ ์ˆ˜๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์„œ์ชฝ์—์„œ๋Š” ๋ถˆ๊ฐ€๋ฆฌ์•„, ์„ธ๋ฅด๋น„์•„, ํ—๊ฐ€๋ฆฌ์— ๊ฑธ์นœ ๋„๋‚˜์šฐ๊ฐ• ํ•˜๊ตฌ(ๆฒณๅฃ) ์ง€๋Œ€ ์ผ๋Œ€์— ํŽผ์ณ์ ธ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ๋„์œ ๋Ÿฝ์ธ๋“ค๊ณผ์˜ ๊ด€๊ณ„ ์ด๋ ‡๊ฒŒ ๊ด‘๋Œ€ํ•œ ๋ฒ”์œ„์— ๊ฑธ์ณ์„œ ํŽผ์ณ์ ธ ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ๊ณผ ๊ทธ ์ฃผ๋ณ€ ์ง€์—ญ์ด ํ•ญ์ƒ ํฌ๊ฒŒ ๋ณ€๋™๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ, ๋ง๊ณผ ์šฐ์ฐจ(็‰›่ปŠ)๊ฐ™์€ ์ƒํ™œ๋ฌธํ™”์–‘์‹์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์–Œ๋‚˜์•ผ ๋ฌธํ™”๋Š” ์ธ๋„์œ ๋Ÿฝ์ธ ์ดˆ๊ธฐ์˜ ๋งค์šฐ ์ค‘์š”ํ•œ ๋ฌธํ™” ์ค‘์— ํ•˜๋‚˜๋ผ๋Š” ์ถ”์ธก์ด ๋„๋ฆฌ ์ธ์ •๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ค‘์•™์•„์‹œ์•„์˜ ์Šคํ… ์ง€์—ญ์—์„œ ์ •์น˜์ ์ธ ํž˜์„ ์–ป์€ ์ธ๋„์œ ๋Ÿฝ์ธ ์ง‘๋‹จ๋“ค์ด ์ ์  ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ ์ง„์ถœํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ๊ทธ๋“ค์ด ๋„์ฐฉํ•œ ๊ณณ์ธ ๋™์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์Šคํ… ์ง€๋Œ€์—์„œ ๋„“๊ฒŒ ๋ฐœ์ „ํ•œ ์Šคํ… ๋ฌธํ™”์ด๋‹ค. ์ด๊ฑธ๋กœ ์ฟ ๋ฅด๊ฐ„ ๊ฐ€์„ค์˜ ๋ฌธ์ œ์ ์ด์—ˆ๋˜ ๊ฒƒ๋“ค์ด ํ•ด์†Œ๋˜๋ฉด์„œ ๊ตฌ์ƒ ์•ˆํฌ๋ผ ๋ฌธํ™”์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์–Œ๋‚˜์•ผ ๋ฌธํ™”๊ฐ€ ์›์‹œ ์ธ๋„์œ ๋Ÿฝ์ธ ์‹œ๋Œ€์— ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์— ์กด์žฌํ–ˆ๋˜ ๋งค์šฐ ์ค‘์š”ํ•œ ๋ฌธํ™”๋ผ๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ๋„๋ฆฌ ์ธ์‹๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์œ ์ „ํ•™ ์ƒ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด ๋ถ„์„ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์— ์˜ํ•˜๋ฉด ์–Œ๋‚˜์•ผ ๋ฌธํ™”๋ฅผ ์ด๋ฃจ๋˜ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ๋“ค์€ ๋™์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์ˆ˜๋ ต์ฑ„์ง‘๋ฏผ(EHG)๊ณผ ์บ…์นด์Šค ์ˆ˜๋ ต์ฑ„์ง‘๋ฏผ(CHG) ์ง‘๋‹จ์ด ๋น„์Šทํ•œ ๋น„์œจ๋กœ ํ˜ผํ˜ˆ๋œ "์„œ๋ถ€ ์Šคํ… ์œ ๋ชฉ๋ฏผ" ์ง‘๋‹จ์— ์ผ๋ถ€ ์ดˆ๊ธฐ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๋†๊ฒฝ๋ฏผ(EEF) ์ง‘๋‹จ์ด ์„ž์—ฌ ์„ฑ๋ฆฝํ•˜์˜€์„ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. EHG ์ง‘๋‹จ๊ณผ CHG ์ง‘๋‹จ ๊ฐ„์˜ ํ˜ผํ˜ˆ์€ ํฐํ† ์Šค-์นด์Šคํ”ผ ์Šคํ… ์„œ๋ถ€์ฏค์—์„œ ์•ฝ ๊ธฐ์›์ „ 5์ฒœ๋…„ ๊ฒฝ์— ์ผ์–ด๋‚ฌ๊ณ , ๊ทธ ํ›„ ์Šคํ…์˜ ๋‚จ๋ถ€ ์ง€์—ญ์—์„œ EEF ์ง‘๋‹จ๊ณผ์˜ ํ˜ผํ˜ˆ์ด ์ผ์–ด๋‚ฌ์„ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ถ”์ •๋œ๋‹ค. ์–Œ๋‚˜์•ผ์ธ์—๊ฒŒ์„œ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ํ”ํžˆ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜๋Š” Y-DNA ํ•˜ํ”Œ๋กœ๊ทธ๋ฃน์€ R1b๋กœ์„œ, ์˜ค๋Š˜๋‚  ์„œ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์ธ์—๊ฒŒ์„œ๋„ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ํ”ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ€์„ค์— ์˜ํ•˜๋ฉด ์„ฑ์ธ์ด ์œ ๋‹น์„ ๋ถ„ํ•ดํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ์œ ์ „์ž๋Š” ์–Œ๋‚˜์•ผ์ธ์˜ ์œ ์ž…๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์œผ๋กœ ๋“ค์–ด์™”์„ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ์„ฑ์ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด์ฃผ์™€ ํ™•์žฅ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์–Œ๋‚˜์•ผ ๋ฌธํ™”์™€ ๊ด€๋ จ๋œ ์ด์ฃผ๋Š” ์ธ๋„์œ ๋Ÿฝ์ธ์˜ ํ™•์žฅ๊ณผ ์—ฐ๊ด€์„ฑ์„ ๋ณด์ธ๋‹ค. Haak et al. (2015)์—์„œ ์ „๋ถ€๋ฌธํ™”์™€ ์—ฐ๊ด€๋œ ๋…์ผ ์ง€์—ญ์˜ ๊ณ ๋Œ€ ์œ ๊ณจ์„ ๋ถ„์„ํ•œ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ, ์ƒ์—ผ์ƒ‰์ฒด ์œ ์ „์ž์˜ 73%๊ฐ€ ์–Œ๋‚˜์•ผ์ธ์œผ๋กœ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋ฌผ๋ ค๋ฐ›์€ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๊ณ„์ธก๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์€ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์— ์˜ํ•˜๋ฉด ์–Œ๋‚˜์•ผ์ธ ์กฐ์ƒ์€ ํ˜„๋Œ€ ์ค‘์œ ๋Ÿฝ, ๋ถ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์ธ DNA์˜ 38.8โ€“50.4%, ๋‚จ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์ธ DNA์˜ 18.5โ€“32.6%(์‚ฌ๋ฅด๋ฐ๋ƒ์ธ๊ณผ ์‹œ์น ๋ฆฌ์•„์ธ์—๊ฒŒ์„œ๋Š” ํฌ๊ฒŒ ๋‚ฎ์Œ)์— ๊ธฐ์—ฌํ–ˆ์„ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋ณด์ธ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ๋™์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์ˆ˜๋ ต์ฑ„์ง‘๋ฏผ(EHG)์„ ํ†ตํ•ด "๊ณ ๋Œ€ ๋ถ์œ ๋ผ์‹œ์•„์ธ" ๊ณ„ํ†ต(๋งํƒ€-๋ถ€๋ ˆํŠธ ๋ฌธํ™” ์—ฐ๊ด€ ์ธ๊ตฌ)๊ณผ๋„ ์—ฐ๊ด€์ด ์žˆ์„ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ์ถ”์ •๋˜๋ฉฐ, ์ด ์œ ์ „์  ๊ตฌ์„ฑ์€ ํ˜„๋Œ€ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์ธ์—๋Š” ์กด์žฌํ•˜๋‚˜ ์ฒญ๋™๊ธฐ ์ด์ „์˜ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์—๋Š” ์กด์žฌํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋˜ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ์ค‘์•™์•„์‹œ์•„์™€ ๋‚จ์•„์‹œ์•„ ์–Œ๋‚˜์•ผ์ธ์˜ ์œ ์ „์  ๊ณ„ํ†ต์€ ๋™์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ์˜ ์—ญ์ด์ฃผ(back-migration)๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ์‹ ํƒ€์‹œํƒ€ ๋ฌธํ™”๋ฅผ ๊ฑฐ์ณ ์•ˆ๋“œ๋กœ๋…ธ๋ณด ๋ฌธํ™” ์ธ๊ตฌ์— ์˜ํ–ฅ์„ ๋ผ์ณค์œผ๋ฉฐ, ์ด๊ฒƒ์€ ํ˜„๋Œ€ ๋‚จ์•„์‹œ์•„์ธ์—๊ฒŒ์„œ๋„ ๊ทธ ํ”์ ์ด ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌ๋˜๋Š” ๊ฒฝ์œ„๋ผ๊ณ  ์ถ”์ •๋˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ์›์‹œ ์ธ๋„์œ ๋Ÿฝ์ธ ์ธ๋„์œ ๋Ÿฝ์–ด์กฑ ์ฟ ๋ฅด๊ฐ„ ๊ฐ€์„ค ์ธ๋„์ด๋ž€์–ดํŒŒ ์ „๋ถ€๋ฌธํ™” ์•ˆ๋“œ๋กœ๋…ธ๋ณด ๋ฌธํ™” ์ธ๋„์œ ๋Ÿฝ์ธ ์›์‹œ ์ธ๋„์œ ๋Ÿฝ ์‹ ํ™” ์ธ๋„์œ ๋Ÿฝ์–ด์กฑ ์ธ๋„์œ ๋Ÿฝ์กฑ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌ ์œ ๋Ÿฝ์˜ ์ฒญ๋™๊ธฐ ๋ฌธํ™” ์ค‘์•™์•„์‹œ์•„์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌ ๊ธฐ์›์ „ ์ œ4์ฒœ๋…„๊ธฐ ์ธ๋„์œ ๋Ÿฝ ๋ฌธํ™”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamnaya%20culture
Yamnaya culture
The Yamnaya culture or the Yamna culture, also known as the Pit Grave culture or Ochre Grave culture, was a late Copper Age to early Bronze Age archaeological culture of the region between the Southern Bug, Dniester, and Ural rivers (the Ponticโ€“Caspian steppe), dating to 3300โ€“2600ย BCE. It was discovered by Vasily Gorodtsov following his archaeological excavations near the Donets River in 1901โ€“1903. Its name derives from its characteristic burial tradition: (romanization: ) is a Russian adjective that means 'related to pits ()', as these people used to bury their dead in tumuli (kurgans) containing simple pit chambers. The Yamnaya economy was based upon animal husbandry, fishing, and foraging, and the manufacture of ceramics, tools, and weapons. The people of the Yamnaya culture lived primarily as nomads, with a chiefdom system and wheeled carts and wagons that allowed them to manage large herds. They are also closely connected to Final Neolithic cultures, which later spread throughout Europe and Central Asia, especially the Corded Ware people and the Bell Beaker culture, as well as the peoples of the Sintashta, Andronovo, and Srubnaya cultures. Back migration from Corded Ware also contributed to Sintashta and Andronovo. In these groups, several aspects of the Yamnaya culture are present. Yamnaya material culture was very similar to the Afanasevo culture of South Siberia, and the populations of both cultures are genetically indistinguishable. This suggests that the Afanasevo culture may have originated from the migration of Yamnaya groups to the Altai region or, alternatively, that both cultures developed from an earlier shared cultural source. Genetic studies have suggested that the people of the Yamnaya culture can be modelled as a genetic admixture between a population related to Eastern European Hunter-Gatherers (EHG) and people related to hunter-gatherers from the Caucasus (CHG) in roughly equal proportions, an ancestral component which is often named "Steppe ancestry", with additional admixture from Anatolian, Levantine, or Early European farmers. Genetic studies also indicate that populations associated with the Corded Ware, Bell Beaker, Sintashta, and Andronovo cultures derived large parts of their ancestry from the Yamnaya or a closely related population. There is now a rough scholarly consensus that the common ancestor of all Indo-European languages, with the possible exception of Anatolian, originated on the Pontic-Caspian steppe, and this language has been associated with the people of the Yamnaya culture. Additionally, the Pontic-Caspian steppe is currently seen as the most likely candidate for the original homeland (German, Urheimat) of the Proto-Indo-European language, including the ancestor of the Anatolian branch. Origins The Yamnaya culture was defined by Vasily Gorodtsov in order to differentiate it from the Catacomb and Srubnaya cultures that existed in the area, but were considered to be of a later period. Due to the time interval to the Yamnaya culture, and the reliance on archaeological findings, debate as to its origin is ongoing. In 1996, Pavel Dolukhanov suggested that the emergence of the Pit-Grave culture represents a social development of various different local Bronze Age cultures, thus representing "an expression of social stratification and the emergence of chiefdom-type nomadic social structures" which in turn intensified inter-group contacts between essentially heterogeneous social groups. The origin of the Yamnaya culture continues to be debated, with proposals for its origins pointing to both the Khvalynsk and Sredny Stog cultures. The Khvalynsk culture (4700โ€“3800 BC) (middle Volga) and the Don-based Repin culture (โ€“3300 BC) in the eastern Pontic-Caspian steppe, and the closely related Sredny Stog culture (โ€“3500 BC) in the western Pontic-Caspian steppe, preceded the Yamnaya culture (3300โ€“2500 BC). Further efforts to pinpoint the location came from Anthony (2007), who suggested that the Yamnaya culture (3300โ€“2600ย BC) originated in the Donโ€“Volga area at , preceded by the middle Volga-based Khvalynsk culture and the Don-based Repin culture (โ€“3300ย BC), arguing that late pottery from these two cultures can barely be distinguished from early Yamnaya pottery. Earlier continuity from eneolithic but largely hunter-gatherer Samara culture and influences from the more agricultural Dnieperโ€“Donets II are apparent. He argues that the early Yamnaya horizon spread quickly across the Ponticโ€“Caspian steppes between and 3200ย BC: Alternatively, Parpola (2015) relates both the Corded ware culture and the Yamnaya culture to the late Trypillia (Tripolye) culture. He hypothesizes that "the Tripolye culture was taken over by PIE speakers by c. 4000 BC," and that in its final phase the Trypillian culture expanded to the steppes, morphing into various regional cultures which fused with the late Sredny Stog (Serednii Stih) pastoralist cultures, which, he suggests, gave rise to the Yamnaya culture. Dmytro Telegin viewed Sredny Stog and Yamna as one cultural continuum and considered Sredny Stog to be the genetic foundation of the Yamna. The Yamnaya culture was succeeded in its western range by the Catacomb culture (2800โ€“2200ย BC); in the east, by the Poltavka culture (2700โ€“2100ย BC) at the middle Volga. These two cultures were followed by the Srubnaya culture (18thโ€“12thย centuryย BC). Characteristics The Yamnaya culture was nomadic or semi-nomadic, with some agriculture practiced near rivers, and a few fortified sites, the largest of which is Mikhaylivka. Characteristic for the culture are the burials in pit graves under kurgans (tumuli), often accompanied with animal offerings. Some graves contain large anthropomorphic stelae, with carved human heads, arms, hands, belts, and weapons. The dead bodies were placed in a supine position with bent knees and covered in ochre. Some kurgans contained "stratified sequences of graves". Kurgan burials may have been rare, and were perhaps reserved for special adults, who were predominantly, but not necessarily, male. Status and gender are marked by grave goods and position, and in some areas, elite individuals are buried with complete wooden wagons. Grave goods are more common in eastern Yamnaya burials, which are also characterized by a higher proportion of male burials and more male-centred rituals than western areas. The Yamnaya culture had and used two-wheeled carts and four-wheeled wagons, which are thought to have been oxen-drawn at this time, and there is evidence that they rode horses. For instance, several Yamnaya skeletons exhibit specific characteristics in their bone morphology that may have been caused by long-term horseriding. Metallurgists and other craftsmen are given a special status in Yamnaya society, and metal objects are sometimes found in large quantities in elite graves. New metalworking technologies and weapon designs are used. Stable isotope ratios of Yamna individuals from the Dnipro Valley suggest the Yamna diet was terrestrial protein based with insignificant contribution from freshwater or aquatic resources. Anthony speculates that the Yamnaya ate meat, milk, yogurt, cheese, and soups made from seeds and wild vegetables, and probably consumed mead. Mallory and Adams suggest that Yamnaya society may have had a tripartite structure of three differentiated social classes, although the evidence available does not demonstrate the existence of specific classes such as priests, warriors, and farmers. Gallery Archaeogenetics According to Jones et al. (2015) and Haak et al. (2015), autosomal tests indicate that the Yamnaya people were the result of a genetic admixture between two different hunter-gatherer populations: distinctive "Eastern Hunter-Gatherers" (EHG), from Eastern Europe, with high affinity to the Mal'taโ€“Buret' culture or other, closely related people from Siberia and a population of "Caucasus hunter-gatherers" (CHG) who probably arrived from the Caucasus or Iran. Each of those two populations contributed about half the Yamnaya DNA. This admixture is referred to in archaeogenetics as Western Steppe Herder (WSH) ancestry. Admixture between EHGs and CHGs is believed to have occurred on the eastern Pontic-Caspian steppe starting around 5,000 BC, while admixture with Early European Farmers (EEF) happened in the southern parts of the Pontic-Caspian steppe sometime later. More recent genetic studies have found that the Yamnaya were a mixture of EHGs, CHGs, and to a lesser degree Anatolian farmers and Levantine farmers, but not EEFs from Europe due to lack of WHG DNA in the Yamnaya. This occurred in two distinct admixture events from West Asia into the Pontic-Caspian steppe. Haplogroup R1b, especially subclades of R1b-M269, is the most common Y-DNA haplogroup found among both the Yamnaya and modern-day Western Europeans. Additionally, a minority are found to belong to haplogroup I2. They are found to belong to a wider variety of mtDNA haplogroups, including U, T, and haplogroups associated with Caucasus Hunter-Gatherers and Early European Farmers. People of the Yamnaya culture are believed to have had mostly brown eye colour, light to intermediate skin, and brown hair colour, with some variation. A 2022 study by Lazaridis et al. found that the typical phenotype among the Yamnaya population was brown eyes, brown hair, and intermediate skin colour. None of the Yamnaya samples were predicted to have either blue eyes or blonde hair, while the people of the Corded Ware culture, which is regarded as to have originated from the Yamnaya people, had a higher proportion of blue eyes and blonde. Some Yamnaya individuals are believed to have carried a mutation to the KITLG gene associated with blond hair, as several individuals with Steppe ancestry are later found to carry this mutation. The Ancient North Eurasian Afontova Gora group, who contributed significant ancestry to Western Steppe Herders, are believed to be the source of this mutation. A study in 2015 found that Yamnaya had the highest ever calculated genetic selection for height of any of the ancient populations tested. It has been hypothesized that an allele associated with lactase persistence (conferring lactose tolerance into adulthood) was brought to Europe from the steppe by Yamnaya-related migrations. The geneticist David Reich has argued that the genetic data supports the likelihood that the people of the Yamnaya culture were a "single, genetically coherent group" who were responsible for spreading many Indo-European languages. Reich's group recently suggested that the source of Anatolian and Indo-European subfamilies of the Proto-Indo-European (PIE) language may have been in west Asia and the Yamna were responsible for the dissemination of the latter. Reich also argues that the genetic evidence shows that Yamnaya society was an oligarchy dominated by a small number of elite males. The genetic evidence for the extent of the role of the Yamnaya culture in the spread of Indo-European languages has been questioned by Russian archaeologist Leo Klejn and Balanovsky et al., who note a lack of male haplogroup continuity between the people of the Yamnaya culture and the contemporary populations of Europe. Klejn has also suggested that the autosomal evidence does not support a Yamnaya migration, arguing that Western Steppe Herder ancestry in both contemporary and Bronze Age samples is lowest around the Danube in Hungary, near the western limits of the Yamnaya culture, and highest in Northern Europe, which Klejn argues is the opposite of what would be expected if the geneticists' hypothesis is correct. Language Marija Gimbutas identified the Yamnaya culture with the late Proto-Indo-Europeans (PIE) in her Kurgan hypothesis. The Pontic-Caspian steppe is the strongest candidate for the Urheimat (original homeland) of the Proto-Indo-European language, and evidence from linguistics and genetics suggests that the Yamnaya culture may be the homeland of the Indo-European languages, with the possible exception of the Anatolian languages. According to David W. Anthony, the genetic evidence suggests that the leading clans of the Yamnaya were of EHG (Eastern European hunter-gatherer) and WHG (Western European hunter-gatherer) paternal origin and implies that the Indo-European languages were the result of "a dominant language spoken by EHGs that absorbed Caucasus-like elements in phonology, morphology, and lexicon." It has also been suggested that the PIE language evolved through trade interactions in the circum-Pontic area in the 4th millennium BCE, mediated by the Yamna predecessors in the North Pontic steppe. Yamnaya-related migrations Western Europe Genetic studies have found that Yamnaya autosomal characteristics are very close to the Corded Ware culture people, with up to 75% Yamnaya-like ancestry in the DNA of Corded Ware skeletons from Central and Eastern Europe. Yamnayaโ€“related ancestry is found in the DNA of modern Central, and Northern Europeans (c. 38.8โ€“50.4 %), and is also found in lower levels in present-day Southern Europeans (c. 18.5โ€“32.6 %), Sardinians (c. 2.4โ€“7.1 %), and Sicilians (c. 5.9โ€“11.6 %). Genetic studies also suggest that subclades of Y-DNA haplogroup R-M269 were introduced to Western and Central Europe from the Eastern European steppes after c. 3000ย BC together with Yamnaya-related ancestry. Autosomal tests also indicate that the Yamnaya are the vector for "Ancient North Eurasian" admixture into Europe. "Ancient North Eurasian" is the name given in literature to a genetic component that represents descent from the people of the Mal'taโ€“Buret' culture or a population closely related to them. That genetic component is visible in tests of the Yamnaya people as well as modern-day Europeans. Eastern Europe and Finland In the Baltic, Jones et al. (2017) found that the Neolithic transitionย โ€“ the passage from a hunter-gatherer economy to a farming-based economyย โ€“ coincided with the arrival en masse of individuals with Yamnaya-like ancestry. This is different from what happened in Western and Southern Europe, where the Neolithic transition was caused by a population that came from Anatolia, with Pontic steppe ancestry being detected from only the late Neolithic onward. Per Haak et al. (2015), the Yamnaya contribution in the modern populations of Eastern Europe ranges from 46.8% among Russians to 42.8% in Ukrainians. Finland has the highest Yamnaya contributions in all of Europe (50.4%). Central and South Asia Studies also point to the strong presence of Yamnaya descent in the current nations of South Asia, especially in groups that are referred to as Indo-Aryans. According to Pathak et al. (2018), the "North-Western Indian & Pakistani" populations (PNWI) showed significant Middle-Late Bronze Age Steppe (Steppe_MLBA) ancestry along with Yamnaya Early-Middle Bronze Age (Steppe_EMBA) ancestry, but the Indo-Europeans of Gangetic Plains and Dravidian people only showed significant Yamnaya (Steppe_EMBA) ancestry and no Steppe_MLBA. The study also noted that ancient south Asian samples had significantly higher Steppe_MLBA than Steppe_EMBA (or Yamnaya). The study identified the Rors and Jats as the population in South Asia with the highest proportion of Steppe ancestry. Lazaridis et al. (2016) estimated (6.5โ€“50.2 %) steppe-related admixture in South Asians, though the proportion of Steppe ancestry varies widely across ethnic groups. According to Narasimhan et al. (2019), the Yamnaya-related ancestry, termed Western_Steppe_EMBA, that reached central and south Asia was not the initial expansion from the steppe to the east, but a secondary expansion that involved a group possessing ~67% Western_Steppe_EMBA ancestry and ~33% ancestry from the European cline. This group included people similar to that of Corded Ware, Srubnaya, Petrovka, and Sintashta. Moving further east in the central steppe, it acquired ~9% ancestry from a group of people that possessed West Siberian Hunter Gatherer ancestry, thus forming the Central Steppe MLBA cluster, which is the primary source of steppe ancestry in South Asia, contributing up to 30% of the ancestry of the modern groups in the region. According to Unterlรคnder et al. (2017), all Iron Age Scythian Steppe nomads can best be described as a mixture of Yamnaya-related ancestry and an East Asian-related component, which most closely corresponds to the modern North Siberian Nganasan people of the lower Yenisey River, to varying degrees, but generally higher among Eastern Scythians. See also Kurgan Kurgan stelae Butmir culture Vinฤa culture Beaker culture Baden culture Botai culture Khvalynsk culture Mamai-Hora Samara culture Sintashta culture Yersinia pestis Proto-Indo-Europeans Indigenous Aryanism Notes References Sources Supplementary Information External links Indo-European archaeological cultures Archaeological cultures of Europe Bronze Age cultures of Europe Chalcolithic cultures of Europe Archaeological cultures in Ukraine Archaeological cultures in Russia Archaeological cultures in Moldova Archaeological cultures in Kazakhstan 4th millennium BC Prehistoric Russia
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%A0%95%EC%A0%90%EC%8B%9D
์ •์ ์‹
์ •์ ์‹(้„ญ็‚นๆค, 1965๋…„ 7์›” 15์ผ~)์€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๋ฒ•์กฐ์ธ, ์ •์น˜์ธ์œผ๋กœ ์ œ20ยท21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ์˜์›์ด๋‹ค. ๊ฒฝ์ƒ๋‚จ๋„ ๊ณ ์„ฑ๊ตฐ ์ถœ์ƒ์ด๋‹ค. 1988๋…„ 30ํšŒ ์‚ฌ๋ฒ•์‹œํ—˜์— ํ•ฉ๊ฒฉํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ๋กœ ํ™œ๋™ํ•˜๋‹ค๊ฐ€ 2017๋…„ 6์›” 8์ผ์— ๋Œ€๊ฒ€์ฐฐ์ฒญ ๊ณต์•ˆ๋ถ€์žฅ์„ ์‚ฌ์งํ•˜๊ณ  ๋ณ€ํ˜ธ์‚ฌ๋กœ ๊ฐœ์—…ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ 3์›” 11์ผ์— 4ยท3 ๋ณด๊ถ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๊ฒฝ์ƒ๋‚จ๋„ ํ†ต์˜์‹œยท๊ณ ์„ฑ๊ตฐ ์ž์œ ํ•œ๊ตญ๋‹น ํ›„๋ณด๋กœ ๊ณต์ฒœ๋˜์—ˆ๊ณ , 4์›” 3์ผ ์น˜๋Ÿฌ์ง„ ๋ณด๊ถ์„ ๊ฑฐ์—์„œ ์ œ20๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ์˜์›์œผ๋กœ ๋‹น์„ ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•™๋ ฅ 1974๋…„ ๊ณ ์„ฑ๋Œ€์„ฑ๊ตญ๋ฏผํ•™๊ต ์กธ์—… 1980๋…„ ๊ณ ์„ฑ์ค‘ํ•™๊ต ์กธ์—… 1983๋…„ ์ฐฝ์› ๊ฒฝ์ƒ๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต ์กธ์—… 1988๋…„ ์„œ์šธ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๋ฒ•ํ•™ ํ•™์‚ฌ 1994๋…„ ์„œ์šธ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๋Œ€ํ•™์› ๋ฒ•ํ•™ ์„์‚ฌ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ 1988๋…„: ์ œ30ํšŒ ์‚ฌ๋ฒ•์‹œํ—˜ ํ•ฉ๊ฒฉ 1991๋…„: ์ œ20๊ธฐ ์‚ฌ๋ฒ•์—ฐ์ˆ˜์› ์ˆ˜๋ฃŒ 2003๋…„ 2์›”~2003๋…„ 8์›”: ๋ถ€์‚ฐ์ง€๋ฐฉ๊ฒ€์ฐฐ์ฒญ ๋ถ€๋ถ€์žฅ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ 2003๋…„ 8์›”~2005๋…„ 4์›”: ์„œ์šธ์ง€๋ฐฉ๊ฒ€์ฐฐ์ฒญ ๋ถ€๋ถ€์žฅ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ 2005๋…„ 4์›”~2006๋…„ 2์›”: ์šธ์‚ฐ์ง€๋ฐฉ๊ฒ€์ฐฐ์ฒญ ํ˜•์‚ฌ2๋ถ€์žฅ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ 2006๋…„ 2์›”~2007๋…„ 3์›”: ์ œ36๋Œ€ ์ถ˜์ฒœ์ง€๋ฐฉ๊ฒ€์ฐฐ์ฒญ ์†์ดˆ์ง€์ฒญ์žฅ 2007๋…„ 3์›”~2008๋…„ 3์›”: ๋Œ€๊ฒ€์ฐฐ์ฒญ ๊ณต์•ˆ2๊ณผ์žฅ 2008๋…„ 3์›”~2009๋…„ 1์›”: ๋Œ€๊ฒ€์ฐฐ์ฒญ ๊ณต์•ˆ1๊ณผ์žฅ 2009๋…„ 1์›”~2009๋…„ 8์›”: ์„œ์šธ์ค‘์•™์ง€๋ฐฉ๊ฒ€์ฐฐ์ฒญ ๊ณต์•ˆ1๋ถ€์žฅ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ 2009๋…„ 8์›”~2010๋…„ 8์›”: ์ œ45๋Œ€ ์ฐฝ์›์ง€๋ฐฉ๊ฒ€์ฐฐ์ฒญ ํ†ต์˜์ง€์ฒญ์žฅ 2010๋…„ 8์›”~2011๋…„ 8์›”: ๋ถ€์‚ฐ์ง€๋ฐฉ๊ฒ€์ฐฐ์ฒญ 2์ฐจ์žฅ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ 2011๋…„ 8์›”~2012๋…„ 7์›”: ์„œ์šธ์ค‘์•™์ง€๋ฐฉ๊ฒ€์ฐฐ์ฒญ 2์ฐจ์žฅ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ 2012๋…„ 7์›”~2013๋…„ 4์›”: ์ œ5๋Œ€ ์ˆ˜์›์ง€๋ฐฉ๊ฒ€์ฐฐ์ฒญ ์•ˆ์–‘์ง€์ฒญ์žฅ 2013๋…„ 4์›”~2013๋…„ 12์›”: ์„œ์šธ๊ณ ๋“ฑ๊ฒ€์ฐฐ์ฒญ ๊ณตํŒ๋ถ€์žฅ, ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ์žฅ 2013๋…„ 9์›”~2015๋…„ 1์›”: ๋ฒ•๋ฌด๋ถ€ ์œ„ํ—Œ์ •๋‹นยท๋‹จ์ฒด ๊ด€๋ จ ๋Œ€์ฑ… TF ํŒ€์žฅ, ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ์žฅ 2013๋…„ 12์›”~2015๋…„ 2์›”: ๋ฒ•๋ฌด์—ฐ์ˆ˜์› ๊ธฐํš๋ถ€์žฅ, ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ์žฅ 2015๋…„ 2์›”~2017๋…„ 6์›”: ๋Œ€๊ฒ€์ฐฐ์ฒญ ๊ณต์•ˆ๋ถ€์žฅ, ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ์žฅ 2017๋…„ 6์›”: ๋ฒ•๋ฌด์—ฐ์ˆ˜์› ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์œ„์› 2017๋…„ 9์›”~2019๋…„ 4์›”: ๋ฒ•๋ฌด๋ฒ•์ธ ์•„์ธ ๋Œ€ํ‘œ๋ณ€ํ˜ธ์‚ฌ 2018๋…„ 3์›”~2019๋…„ 4์›”: ๋…น์›์”จ์—”์•„์ด ์‚ฌ์™ธ์ด์‚ฌ 2019๋…„ 4์›”~2020๋…„ 2์›”: ์ž์œ ํ•œ๊ตญ๋‹น ์›๋‚ด๋ถ€๋Œ€ํ‘œ 2019๋…„ 4์›”~2020๋…„ 2์›”: ์ž์œ ํ•œ๊ตญ๋‹น ๋ฒ•๋ฅ ์ž๋ฌธ์œ„์›ํšŒ ๋ถ€์œ„์›์žฅ 2019๋…„ 5์›”~2020๋…„ 2์›”: ์ž์œ ํ•œ๊ตญ๋‹น ๊ฒฝ๋‚จ๋„๋‹น ํ†ต์˜์‹œยท๊ณ ์„ฑ๊ตฐ ๋‹นํ˜‘์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์›์žฅ 2019๋…„ 5์›” : ์—ฌ์˜๋„์—ฐ๊ตฌ์› ์ฐจ์„ธ๋Œ€๋ธŒ๋žœ๋“œ์œ„์›ํšŒ ๊ณ ๋ฌธ 2019๋…„ 7์›”: ์ž์œ ํ•œ๊ตญ๋‹น ์žฌํ•ด๋Œ€์ฑ…์œ„์›ํšŒ ๋ถ€์œ„์›์žฅ 2019๋…„ 7์›”: ์ž์œ ํ•œ๊ตญ๋‹น ์—๋„ˆ์ง€์ •์ฑ… ํŒŒํƒ„ ๋ฐ ๋น„๋ฆฌ ์ง„์ƒ๊ทœ๋ช… ํŠน๋ณ„์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› 2019๋…„ 8์›”: ์ž์œ ํ•œ๊ตญ๋‹น ๊ฐ•์„ฑ๊ท€์กฑ๋…ธ์กฐ๊ฐœํ˜ํŠน๋ณ„์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› 2019๋…„ 9์›”: ์ž์œ ํ•œ๊ตญ๋‹น ๊ฒฝ๋‚จ๋„๋‹น ์›๋‚ด์ˆ˜์„๋ถ€์œ„์›์žฅ 2020๋…„ 2์›”~2020๋…„ 5์›”: ๋ฏธ๋ž˜ํ†ตํ•ฉ๋‹น ์›๋‚ด๋ถ€๋Œ€ํ‘œ 2020๋…„ 2์›”~2020๋…„ 7์›”: ๋ฏธ๋ž˜ํ†ตํ•ฉ๋‹น ๋ฒ•๋ฅ ์ž๋ฌธ์œ„์›ํšŒ ๋ถ€์œ„์›์žฅ 2020๋…„ 5์›”~2020๋…„ 9์›”: ๋ฏธ๋ž˜ํ†ตํ•ฉ๋‹น ๊ฒฝ๋‚จ๋„๋‹น ํ†ต์˜์‹œยท๊ณ ์„ฑ๊ตฐ ๋‹น์›ํ˜‘์˜ํšŒ ์œ„์›์žฅ 2020๋…„ 7์›”~2020๋…„ 9์›”: ๋ฏธ๋ž˜ํ†ตํ•ฉ๋‹น ๋ฒ•๋ฅ ์ž๋ฌธ์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์›์žฅ 2020๋…„ 8์›”~2020๋…„ 9์›”: ๋ฏธ๋ž˜ํ†ตํ•ฉ๋‹น ์ด์ƒ์ง์˜์›-์ด์Šคํƒ€ ๋น„๋ฆฌ์˜ํ˜น ์ง„์ƒ๊ทœ๋ช… ํƒœ์Šคํฌํฌ์Šค ์œ„์› 2020๋…„ 9์›”~2021๋…„ 8์›”: ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์˜ํž˜ ๋ฒ•๋ฅ ์ž๋ฌธ์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์›์žฅ 2020๋…„ 9์›”~: ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์˜ํž˜ ๊ฒฝ๋‚จ๋„๋‹น ํ†ต์˜์‹œยท๊ณ ์„ฑ๊ตฐ ๋‹น์›ํ˜‘์˜ํšŒ ์œ„์›์žฅ 2020๋…„ 9์›” : ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์˜ํž˜ ์ด์ƒ์ง์˜์›-์ด์Šคํƒ€ ๋น„๋ฆฌ์˜ํ˜น ์ง„์ƒ๊ทœ๋ช… ํƒœ์Šคํฌํฌ์Šค ์œ„์› 2020๋…„ 9์›” : ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์˜ํž˜ ๋ถํ•œ์˜ ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ๊ตญ๋ฏผ ์‚ฌ์‚ดยทํ™”ํ˜• ๋งŒํ–‰ ์ง„์ƒ์กฐ์‚ฌ ํƒœ์Šคํฌํฌ์Šค ์œ„์› 2020๋…„ 12์›”~2021๋…„ 3์›”: ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์˜ํž˜ 4ยท7 ์žฌโ€ง๋ณด๊ถ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๊ณต์ฒœ๊ด€๋ฆฌ์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› 2021๋…„ 3์›”~2021๋…„ 4์›”: ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์˜ํž˜ 4.7 ์žฌ๋ณด๊ถ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์ค‘์•™์„ ๊ฑฐ๋Œ€์ฑ…์œ„์›ํšŒ ๋ฌธ์žฌ์ธ ์ •๊ถŒ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ณต์ž‘ ์ €์ง€ ๋ฐ ๋ฒ•๋ฅ ์ž๋ฌธ๋ณธ๋ถ€์žฅ 2021๋…„ 5์›”~2021๋…„ 6์›”: ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์˜ํž˜ ์ „๋‹น๋Œ€ํšŒ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๊ด€๋ฆฌ์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› 2021๋…„ 6์›” : ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์˜ํž˜ ๊ตฐ ์„ฑ๋ฒ”์ฃ„ ์ง„์ƒ๊ทœ๋ช… ๋ฐ ์žฌ๋ฐœ ๋ฐฉ์ง€ ํŠน๋ณ„์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› 2021๋…„ 8์›”~2021๋…„ 11์›”: ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์˜ํž˜ ์œค์„์—ด ์ œ20๋Œ€ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์˜ˆ๋น„ํ›„๋ณด ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์บ ํ”„ ๊ณต์ •๊ณผ ์ƒ์‹ ์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์›์žฅ 2021๋…„ 11์›”~2022๋…„ 1์›”: ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์˜ํž˜ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๋Œ€์ฑ…์œ„์›ํšŒ ์ค‘์•™์„ ๊ฑฐ๋Œ€์ฑ…์œ„์›ํšŒ ํด๋ฆฐ์„ ๊ฑฐ์ „๋žต๋ณธ๋ถ€ ๋„ค๊ฑฐํ‹ฐ๋ธŒ๊ฒ€์ฆ๋‹จ์žฅ 2021๋…„ 12์›”~2022๋…„ 3์›”: ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์˜ํž˜ ๊ฒฝ๋‚จ์„ ์‚ด๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์„ ๊ฑฐ๋Œ€์ฑ…์œ„์›ํšŒ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๋Œ€์ฑ…์œ„์›์žฅ๋‹จ ๊ณต๋™์„ ๊ฑฐ๋Œ€์ฑ…์œ„์›์žฅ 2022๋…„ 1์›”~2022๋…„ 3์›”: ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์˜ํž˜ ๋Œ€์žฅ๋™ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœ ๋น„๋ฆฌ ํŠนํ˜œ ์˜ํ˜น ์˜๋ฌธ์‚ฌ์ง„์ƒ๊ทœ๋ช…์œ„์›ํšŒ ๊ฐ„์‚ฌ 2022๋…„ 1์›”~2022๋…„ 3์›”: ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์˜ํž˜ ์ œ20๋Œ€ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น ์„ ๊ฑฐ ์„ ๊ฑฐ๋Œ€์ฑ…๋ณธ๋ถ€ ํด๋ฆฐ์„ ๊ฑฐ์ „๋žต๋ณธ๋ถ€ ๋„ค๊ฑฐํ‹ฐ๋ธŒ๊ฒ€์ฆ๋‹จ์žฅ 2022๋…„ 3์›”~2022๋…„ 5์›”: ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์˜ํž˜ 6ยท1์ง€๋ฐฉ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๊ณต์ฒœ๊ด€๋ฆฌ์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› 2022๋…„ 7์›”~2023๋…„ 7์›”: ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์˜ํž˜ ๊ฒฝ๋‚จ๋„๋‹น ์œ„์›์žฅ 2022๋…„ 9์›”~2023๋…„ 3์›”: ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์˜ํž˜ ๋น„์ƒ๋Œ€์ฑ…์œ„์› 2023๋…„ 4์›”~: ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์˜ํž˜ ์ „์„ธ ์‚ฌ๊ธฐ ํ”ผํ•ด ๋Œ€์ฑ…์„ ๋งˆ๋ จํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•œ ๋‹น๋‚ด TF ์œ„์› 2023๋…„ 9์›”~: ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์˜ํž˜ ๋Œ€์„  ๊ณต์ž‘ ๊ฒŒ์ดํŠธ ์ง„์ƒ์กฐ์‚ฌ๋‹จ ์œ„์› ์˜์ • ํ™œ๋™ 2019๋…„ 4์›” 4์ผ~2020๋…„ 5์›” 29์ผ : ์ œ20๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ์˜์›(๊ฒฝ๋‚จ ํ†ต์˜์‹œยท๊ณ ์„ฑ๊ตฐ) 2019๋…„ 4์›”~2019๋…„ 7์›”: ์ œ20๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ํ›„๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ ๋ฌธํ™”์ฒด์œก๊ด€๊ด‘์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› 2019๋…„ 7์›”~2020๋…„ 5์›”: ์ œ20๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ํ›„๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ ๋ฒ•์ œ์‚ฌ๋ฒ•์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› 2019๋…„ 7์›”~2020๋…„ 5์›”: ์ œ20๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ํ›„๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ ์˜ˆ์‚ฐ๊ฒฐ์‚ฐํŠน๋ณ„์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› 2019๋…„ 8์›”: ์ œ20๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ํ›„๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ ์šด์˜์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› 2019๋…„ 10์›”~2020๋…„ 5์›”: ์ œ20๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ํ›„๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ ์šด์˜์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› 2020๋…„ 5์›” 30์ผ~: ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ์˜์›(๊ฒฝ๋‚จ ํ†ต์˜์‹œยท๊ณ ์„ฑ๊ตฐ) 2020๋…„ 7์›”~2021๋…„ 9์›”: ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ์ „๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ ๋†๋ฆผ์ถ•์‚ฐ์‹ํ’ˆํ•ด์–‘์ˆ˜์‚ฐ์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› 2020๋…„ 7์›” : ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ์ „๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ ์—ฌ์„ฑ๊ฐ€์กฑ์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› 2020๋…„ 7์›”~: ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ๋ฏธ๋ž˜ํ˜์‹ ํฌ๋Ÿผ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ์˜์› 2020๋…„ 7์›”~: ๊ตญํšŒ ๋Œ€์ค‘๋ฌธํ™” ๋ฏธ๋””์–ด ์—ฐ๊ตฌํšŒ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ์˜์› 2020๋…„ 8์›”~2021๋…„ 6์›”: ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ์ „๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ ์šด์˜์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› 2021๋…„ 4์›”~2021๋…„ 4์›”: ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ๋Œ€๋ฒ•๊ด€(์ฒœ๋Œ€์—ฝ) ์ž„๋ช…๋™์˜์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ์ธ์‚ฌ์ฒญ๋ฌธํŠน๋ณ„์œ„์›ํšŒ ๊ฐ„์‚ฌ 2021๋…„ 9์›”~2022๋…„ 5์›”: ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ์ „๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ ๋†๋ฆผ์ถ•์‚ฐ์‹ํ’ˆํ•ด์–‘์ˆ˜์‚ฐ์œ„์›ํšŒ ๊ฐ„์‚ฌ ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ์ „๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ ๋†๋ฆผ์ถ•์‚ฐ์‹ํ’ˆํ•ด์–‘์ˆ˜์‚ฐ์œ„์›ํšŒ ๋†๋ฆผ์ถ•์‚ฐ์‹ํ’ˆ๋ฒ•์•ˆ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ์†Œ์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ์ „๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ ๋†๋ฆผ์ถ•์‚ฐ์‹ํ’ˆํ•ด์–‘์ˆ˜์‚ฐ์œ„์›ํšŒ ํ•ด์–‘์ˆ˜์‚ฐ๋ฒ•์•ˆ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ์†Œ์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ์ „๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ ๋†๋ฆผ์ถ•์‚ฐ์‹ํ’ˆํ•ด์–‘์ˆ˜์‚ฐ์œ„์›ํšŒ ์˜ˆ์‚ฐ๊ฒฐ์‚ฐ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ์†Œ์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์›์žฅ 2021๋…„ 10์›”~2021๋…„ 11์›”: ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ๊ฐ์‚ฌ์›์žฅ(์ตœ์žฌํ•ด) ์ž„๋ช…๋™์˜์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ์ธ์‚ฌ์ฒญ๋ฌธํŠน๋ณ„์œ„์›ํšŒ ๊ฐ„์‚ฌ 2021๋…„ 12์›”~2022๋…„ 5์›”: ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ์ •์น˜๊ฐœํ˜ ํŠน๋ณ„์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› 2022๋…„ 7์›”~: ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ํ›„๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ ๋ฒ•์ œ์‚ฌ๋ฒ•์œ„์›ํšŒ ๊ฐ„์‚ฌ ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ํ›„๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ ๋ฒ•์ œ์‚ฌ๋ฒ•์œ„์›ํšŒ ๋ฒ•์•ˆ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ์ œ1์†Œ์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ํ›„๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ ๋ฒ•์ œ์‚ฌ๋ฒ•์œ„์›ํšŒ ๋ฒ•์•ˆ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ์ œ2์†Œ์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์›์žฅ ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ํ›„๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ ๋ฒ•์ œ์‚ฌ๋ฒ•์œ„์›ํšŒ ์˜ˆ์‚ฐ๊ฒฐ์‚ฐ๊ธฐ๊ธˆ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ์†Œ์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์›์žฅ ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ํ›„๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ ๋ฒ•์ œ์‚ฌ๋ฒ•์œ„์›ํšŒ ์˜ˆ์‚ฐ๊ฒฐ์‚ฐ๊ธฐ๊ธˆ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ์†Œ์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› 2022๋…„ 8์›”~2023๋…„ 5์›”: ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ํ˜•์‚ฌ์‚ฌ๋ฒ•์ฒด๊ณ„๊ฐœํ˜ ํŠน๋ณ„์œ„์›ํšŒ ๊ฐ„์‚ฌ 2022๋…„ 8์›”~2022๋…„ 11์›”: ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ๋Œ€๋ฒ•๊ด€(์˜ค์„์ค€) ์ž„๋ช… ๋™์˜์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ์ธ์‚ฌ์ฒญ๋ฌธ ํŠน๋ณ„์œ„์›ํšŒ ๊ฐ„์‚ฌ 2022๋…„ 8์›”~2023๋…„ 5์›”: ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ํ›„๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ ์˜ˆ์‚ฐ๊ฒฐ์‚ฐํŠน๋ณ„์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ํ›„๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ ์˜ˆ์‚ฐ๊ฒฐ์‚ฐํŠน๋ณ„์œ„์›ํšŒ 2021ํšŒ๊ณ„์—ฐ๋„ ๊ฒฐ์‚ฐ์†Œ์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ํ›„๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ ์˜ˆ์‚ฐ๊ฒฐ์‚ฐํŠน๋ณ„์œ„์›ํšŒ ์˜ˆ์‚ฐ์†Œ์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› 2023.02~: ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ํ›„๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ ์ •๋ณด์œ„์›ํšŒ ์œ„์› 2023.06~2023.07: ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ๋Œ€๋ฒ•๊ด€(๊ถŒ์˜์ค€ยท์„œ๊ฒฝํ™˜) ์ž„๋ช… ๋™์˜์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ์ธ์‚ฌ์ฒญ๋ฌธ ํŠน๋ณ„์œ„์›ํšŒ ๊ฐ„์‚ฌ 2023.09~2023.10: ์ œ21๋Œ€ ๊ตญํšŒ ๋Œ€๋ฒ•์›์žฅ(์ด๊ท ์šฉ) ์ž„๋ช… ๋™์˜์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ์ธ์‚ฌ์ฒญ๋ฌธํŠน๋ณ„์œ„์›ํšŒ ๊ฐ„์‚ฌ ์—ญ๋Œ€ ์„ ๊ฑฐ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ 1965๋…„ ์ถœ์ƒ ์‚ด์•„์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ ๊ณ ์„ฑ๊ตฐ (๊ฒฝ์ƒ๋‚จ๋„) ์ถœ์‹  ๊ณ ์„ฑ์ค‘ํ•™๊ต (๊ฒฝ๋‚จ) ๋™๋ฌธ ๊ฒฝ์ƒ๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต (๊ฒฝ๋‚จ) ๋™๋ฌธ ์„œ์šธ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๋ฒ•๊ณผ๋Œ€ํ•™ ๋™๋ฌธ ์„œ์šธ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๋Œ€ํ•™์› ๋™๋ฌธ ์‚ฌ๋ฒ•์—ฐ์ˆ˜์› ์ˆ˜๋ฃŒ์ž ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์ง€๋ฐฉ๊ฒ€์ฐฐ์ฒญ ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ์žฅ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๋ณ€ํ˜ธ์‚ฌ ์ž์œ ํ•œ๊ตญ๋‹น ๋‹น์› ์นœ์œค ๊ตญ๋ฏผ์˜ํž˜์˜ ์ •์น˜์ธ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์‚ฌ์™ธ์ด์‚ฌ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์œ ํŠœ๋ฒ„ ๊ฒฝ์ƒ๋‚จ๋„์˜ ๊ตญํšŒ์˜์›
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeong%20Jeom-sig
Jeong Jeom-sig
Jeong Jeom-sig (; born 15 July 1965) is a South Korean politician who was a prosecutor and lawyer. Life Jeong was born in Goseong County, South Gyeongsang Province. He passed the 30th judicial examination in 1986. He later served as a high-level prosecutor at the prosecution office before retiring in June 2017. He later opened as a lawyer. In 2019, he ran in the Tongyeong-Goseong by-election with the Liberty Korea Party's nomination. References External links Jeong Jeom-sig's blog 1965 births Living people People from South Gyeongsang Province Members of the National Assembly (South Korea) Liberty Korea Party politicians South Korean prosecutors
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%ED%83%80%EB%A5%B4%EC%8A%A4%ED%82%A4%EC%9D%98%20%EC%A0%95%EC%9D%98%20%EB%B6%88%EA%B0%80%EB%8A%A5%EC%84%B1%20%EC%A0%95%EB%A6%AC
ํƒ€๋ฅด์Šคํ‚ค์˜ ์ •์˜ ๋ถˆ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ์„ฑ ์ •๋ฆฌ
์ˆ˜๋ฆฌ ๋…ผ๋ฆฌํ•™์—์„œ ํƒ€๋ฅด์Šคํ‚ค์˜ ์ •์˜ ๋ถˆ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ์„ฑ ์ •๋ฆฌ()๋Š” ํ˜•์‹ ์˜๋ฏธ๋ก ์— ์žˆ์–ด์„œ ์ž๊ธฐํ‘œํ˜„์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ์ค‘์š”ํ•œ ์ œํ•œ์„ ๊ฐ€ํ•˜๋Š” ์ •๋ฆฌ์ด๋‹ค. ์ด ์ •๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๋น„ํ˜•์‹์ ์œผ๋กœ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ํ•˜๋ฉด, "์‚ฐ์ˆ ์  ์ง„๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์‚ฐ์ˆ  ๋‚ด์—์„œ ์ •์˜๋  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋‹ค"์ด๋‹ค. 1936๋…„ ์•Œํ”„๋ ˆํŠธ ํƒ€๋ฅด์Šคํ‚ค๊ฐ€ ๊ธฐ์ˆ ํ•˜๊ณ  ์ฆ๋ช…ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์ด ์ •๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์ถฉ๋ถ„ํžˆ ๊ฐ•๋ ฅํ•œ ๋ชจ๋“  ํ˜•์‹ ์ฒด๊ณ„(formal system)์— ๋”์šฑ ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ ์šฉ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ์ด๋•Œ๋Š” "์–ด๋–ค ์ฒด๊ณ„์˜ ํ‘œ์ค€ ๋ชจํ˜• ๋‚ด์—์„œ์˜ ์ง„๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๊ทธ ์ฒด๊ณ„ ๋‚ด์—์„œ๋Š” ์ •์˜๋  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋‹ค"๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ณด์—ฌ์ค€๋‹ค. ์ •๋ฆฌ 1์ฐจ ์‚ฐ์ˆ (ํŽ˜์•„๋…ธ ๊ณต๋ฆฌ๊ณ„)์˜ ์–ธ์–ด L๊ณผ ๊ทธ ํ‘œ์ค€ ๋ชจ๋ธ N์„ ์žก์œผ๋ฉด, (L, N)์€ '์‚ฐ์ˆ ์˜ 1์ฐจ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ ์–ธ์–ด์˜ ํ•ด์„'์„ ์ด๋ฃฌ๋‹ค. L ์†์˜ ๋ชจ๋“  x๋Š” ๊ฐ๊ฐ ๊ดด๋ธ ์ˆ˜๋งค๊น€ g(x)๋ฅผ ๊ฐ€์ง„๋‹ค. T๊ฐ€ N์—์„œ ์ฐธ์ธ L-๋ฌธ์žฅ๋“ค์˜ ์ง‘ํ•ฉ์ด๋ผ ํ•˜๊ณ , T*๋ฅผ T ์†์˜ ๋ฌธ์žฅ๋“ค์˜ ๊ดด๋ธ ์ˆ˜์˜ ์ง‘ํ•ฉ์ด๋ผ ํ•˜์ž. ์—ฌ๊ธฐ์„œ T*๊ฐ€ 1์ฐจ ์‚ฐ์ˆ ์˜ ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์‹์œผ๋กœ ํ‘œํ˜„๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ๊ฐ€ ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ์ด ์ •๋ฆฌ์˜ ์ฃผ์ œ์ด๋‹ค. ํƒ€๋ฅด์Šคํ‚ค์˜ ์ •์˜ ๋ถˆ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ์„ฑ ์ •๋ฆฌ (์‚ฐ์ˆ ): T*๋ฅผ ์ •์˜ํ•˜๋Š” L-๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์‹ True(n)์€ ์กด์žฌํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค. ์ฆ‰, ๋ชจ๋“  L-๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์‹ A์— ๋Œ€ํ•˜์—ฌ True(g(A)) โ†” A ๊ฐ€ ์„ฑ๋ฆฝํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•˜๋Š” True(n)์€ ์กด์žฌํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋‹ค. ๋น„ํ˜•์‹์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋งํ•ด์„œ ์ •๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ๋งํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ”๋Š”, ์–ด๋–ค ํ˜•์‹ ์‚ฐ์ˆ ์ด ์ฃผ์–ด์กŒ์„ ๋•Œ ๊ทธ ์‚ฐ์ˆ ์—์„œ์˜ ์ฐธ์˜ ๊ฐœ๋…์€ ๊ทธ ์‚ฐ์ˆ ๋กœ ํ‘œํ˜„๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์œผ๋กœ๋Š” ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ผ ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ์ด๋Š” "์ž๊ธฐํ‘œํ˜„"์˜ ๋ฒ”์œ„์— ์ค‘์š”ํ•œ ์ œํ•œ์„ ๊ฐ€ํ•œ๋‹ค. T*๋ฅผ ํ™•์žฅ(extension)์œผ๋กœ ํ•˜๋Š” ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์‹ True(n)์€ ์ •์˜ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋‚˜, ์ด๋Š” L์˜ ํ‘œํ˜„๋ ฅ์„ ๋›ฐ์–ด๋„˜๋Š” ๋ฉ”ํƒ€์–ธ์–ด๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด์„œ๋งŒ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์งˆ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด 1์ฐจ ์‚ฐ์ˆ ์˜ ์ง„๋ฆฌ ์ˆ ์–ด๋Š” 2์ฐจ ์‚ฐ์ˆ ๋กœ ์ •์˜๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜, ์ด ์‹์€ ์›๋ž˜์˜ ์–ธ์–ด L ์†์˜ ๋ฌธ์žฅ์— ๋Œ€ํ•œ ์ง„๋ฆฌ ์ˆ ์–ด๋งŒ์„ ์ •์˜ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฉ”ํƒ€์–ธ์–ด๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ์ง„๋ฆฌ์ˆ ์–ด๋Š” ํ‘œํ˜„๋ ฅ์ด ๋”์šฑ ๊ฐ•ํ•œ ๋ฉ”ํƒ€-๋ฉ”ํƒ€์–ธ์–ด์—์„œ ๊ตฌ์„ฑํ•ด์•ผ ํ•˜๊ณ , ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๊ผด์ด ๋ฐ˜๋ณต๋œ๋‹ค. ์œ„ ์ •๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์‚ฌ์‹ค ์‚ฐ์ˆ  ์œ„๊ณ„(์‚ฐ์ˆ ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ •์˜๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ๋ชจ๋“  ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์‹์„ ์œ„๊ณ„๋กœ ๋ถ„๋ฅ˜ํ•œ ๊ฒƒ)์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ํฌ์ŠคํŠธ์˜ ์ •๋ฆฌ(Post's theorem)์˜ ๋”ฐ๋ฆ„์ •๋ฆฌ๋กœ์จ ๋‚˜์˜จ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ, ์‹ค์ œ Tarski (1936)์˜ ๋ฐœํ‘œ ๋ช‡๋…„ ์ดํ›„์— ์ œ์‹œ๋œ ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. ์ด ํƒ€๋ฅด์Šคํ‚ค ์ •๋ฆฌ์˜ ์˜๋ฏธ๋ก ์  ์ฆ๋ช…์€ ๋‹ค์Œ๊ณผ ๊ฐ™์€ ๊ท€๋ฅ˜๋ฒ•์œผ๋กœ ์ด๋ฃจ์–ด์กŒ๋‹ค. T*๊ฐ€ ์‚ฐ์ˆ ์ ์œผ๋กœ ์ •์˜๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋‹ค๊ณ  ํ•˜๋ฉด, ํฌ์ŠคํŠธ์˜ ์ •๋ฆฌ์— ์˜ํ•ด ์–ด๋–ค n์— ๋Œ€ํ•˜์—ฌ ์œ„๊ณ„์˜ ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์‹์œผ๋กœ T*๋ฅผ ์ •์˜ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์–ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฐ๋ฐ T*๋Š” ๋ชจ๋“  k์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด -์ •์˜๋ถˆ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋‹ค. ์ด๋ ‡๋‹ค๋ฉด ์‚ฐ์ˆ  ์œ„๊ณ„๊ฐ€ ์„ฑ๋ฆฝํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์•„ ํฌ์ŠคํŠธ์˜ ์ •๋ฆฌ์™€ ๋ชจ์ˆœ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ฐ˜ํ™” ๋ณธ๋ž˜ ํƒ€๋ฅด์Šคํ‚ค๊ฐ€ 1936๋…„ ์ฆ๋ช…ํ•œ ์ •๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์œ„์˜ ์ง„์ˆ ๋ณด๋‹ค ๋” ๊ฐ•๋ ฅํ•œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ, ํŠนํžˆ ์™„์ „ํ•œ ๊ตฌ๋ฌธ๋ก ์  ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•๋งŒ์œผ๋กœ ์ฆ๋ช…๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Š” ๋ถ€์ •(ยฌ)์„ ํฌํ•จํ•˜๊ณ  ์ž๊ธฐ์–ธ๊ธ‰์ด ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ(์ •ํ™•ํžˆ๋Š” ๊ดด๋ธ์˜ ๋ถˆ์™„์ „์„ฑ ์ •๋ฆฌ ์ฆ๋ช…์— ๋“ฑ์žฅํ•˜๋Š” diagonal lemma๊ฐ€ ์„ฑ๋ฆฝํ•˜๋Š”) ํ˜•์‹ ์–ธ์–ด ๋ชจ๋‘์— ์ ์šฉ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋ฉฐ, ๋ฌผ๋ก  1์ฐจ ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ๋„ ํฌํ•จ๋œ๋‹ค. ํƒ€๋ฅด์Šคํ‚ค์˜ ์ •์˜ ๋ถˆ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ์„ฑ ์ •๋ฆฌ (์ผ๋ฐ˜): ๋ถ€์ •์„ ํฌํ•จํ•˜๋Š” ํ˜•์‹์–ธ์–ด ํ•ด์„ (L, N)์—, ๊ดด๋ธ ์ˆ˜๋งค๊น€ g(x)๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์–ด์„œ ๋ชจ๋“  L-๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์‹ A(x)์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด B โ†” A(g(B))๊ฐ€ N์—์„œ ์„ฑ๋ฆฝํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•˜๋Š” B๊ฐ€ ์กด์žฌํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๋œ๋‹ค ํ•˜์ž. N์—์„œ ์ฐธ์ธ L-๋ฌธ์žฅ์˜ ๊ดด๋ธ ์ˆ˜์˜ ์ง‘ํ•ฉ์„ T*๋ผ ํ•˜์ž. ๊ทธ๋ ‡๋‹ค๋ฉด T*๋ฅผ ์ •์˜ํ•˜๋Š” L-๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์‹ True(n)๋Š” ์กด์žฌํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๋Š”๋‹ค. ์ฆ‰, ๋ชจ๋“  L-๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์‹ A์— ๋Œ€ํ•˜์—ฌ True(g(A)) โ†” A ๊ฐ€ N์—์„œ ์ฐธ์ด ๋˜๋Š” L-๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์‹ True(n)์€ ์กด์žฌํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋‹ค. ์ด ์ •๋ฆฌ์˜ ์ฆ๋ช…์€ ์œ„์™€ ์œ ์‚ฌํ•˜๊ฒŒ ๊ท€๋ฅ˜๋ฒ•์œผ๋กœ ์™„์„ฑ๋œ๋‹ค. ํƒ€๋ฅด์Šคํ‚ค ์ •๋ฆฌ๋Š” ์ด๋ก ์˜ ์ง„๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ๋” ๊ฐ•ํ•œ ์ด๋ก ์—์„œ ์ •์˜๋˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋ถ€์ •ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด ์•„๋‹ˆ๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด 1์ฐจ ํŽ˜์•„๋…ธ ์‚ฐ์ˆ ์˜ N์—์„œ ์ฐธ์ธ ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์‹์˜ (๊ดด๋ธ ์ˆ˜์˜) ์ง‘ํ•ฉ์€ 2์ฐจ ์‚ฐ์ˆ ์˜ ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์‹์œผ๋กœ ์ •์˜๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋‹ค. ํ•œํŽธ 2์ฐจ ์‚ฐ์ˆ ์˜ ํ‘œ์ค€ ๋ชจํ˜•์—์„œ ์ฐธ์ธ ๋ฌธ์žฅ๋“ค์˜ ์ง‘ํ•ฉ์€ 1์ฐจ ZFC ์ง‘ํ•ฉ๋ก ์œผ๋กœ ์ •์˜๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•˜๋‹ค. ๊ฐ™์ด ๋ณด๊ธฐ ์ง„๋ฆฌ๋ก  ์‚ฐ์ˆ  ์œ„๊ณ„ ๊ดด๋ธ์˜ ๋ถˆ์™„์ „์„ฑ ์ •๋ฆฌ ์ฐธ๊ณ  ๋ฌธํ—Œ J.L. Bell, and M. Machover, 1977. A Course in Mathematical Logic. North-Holland. G. Boolos, J. Burgess, and R. Jeffrey, 2002. Computability and Logic, 4th ed. Cambridge University Press. J.R. Lucas, 1961. "Mind, Machines, and Gรถdel ". Philosophy 36: 112โ€“27. R. Murawski, 1998. Undefinability of truth. The problem of the priority: Tarski vs. Gรถdel. History and Philosophy of Logic 19, 153โ€“160 R. Smullyan, 1991. Godel's Incompleteness Theorems. Oxford Univ. Press. R. Smullyan, 2001. "Gรถdelโ€™s Incompleteness Theorems". In L. Goble, ed., The Blackwell Guide to Philosophical Logic, Blackwell, 72โ€“89. A. Tarski, tr J.H. Woodger, 1983. "The Concept of Truth in Formalized Languages". English translation of Tarski's 1936 article. In A. Tarski, ed. J. Corcoran, 1983, Logic, Semantics, Metamathematics, Hackett. ๋…ผ๋ฆฌ์ฒ ํ•™ ์ง„๋ฆฌ๋ก  ์ˆ˜๋ฆฌ๋…ผ๋ฆฌํ•™
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarski%27s%20undefinability%20theorem
Tarski's undefinability theorem
Tarski's undefinability theorem, stated and proved by Alfred Tarski in 1933, is an important limitative result in mathematical logic, the foundations of mathematics, and in formal semantics. Informally, the theorem states that "arithmetical truth cannot be defined in arithmetic". The theorem applies more generally to any sufficiently strong formal system, showing that truth in the standard model of the system cannot be defined within the system. History In 1931, Kurt Gรถdel published the incompleteness theorems, which he proved in part by showing how to represent the syntax of formal logic within first-order arithmetic. Each expression of the formal language of arithmetic is assigned a distinct number. This procedure is known variously as Gรถdel numbering, coding and, more generally, as arithmetization. In particular, various sets of expressions are coded as sets of numbers. For various syntactic properties (such as being a formula, being a sentence, etc.), these sets are computable. Moreover, any computable set of numbers can be defined by some arithmetical formula. For example, there are formulas in the language of arithmetic defining the set of codes for arithmetic sentences, and for provable arithmetic sentences. The undefinability theorem shows that this encoding cannot be done for semantic concepts such as truth. It shows that no sufficiently rich interpreted language can represent its own semantics. A corollary is that any metalanguage capable of expressing the semantics of some object language (e.g. a predicate is definable in Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory for whether formulae in the language of Peano arithmetic are true in the standard model of arithmetic) must have expressive power exceeding that of the object language. The metalanguage includes primitive notions, axioms, and rules absent from the object language, so that there are theorems provable in the metalanguage not provable in the object language. The undefinability theorem is conventionally attributed to Alfred Tarski. Gรถdel also discovered the undefinability theorem in 1930, while proving his incompleteness theorems published in 1931, and well before the 1933 publication of Tarski's work (Murawski 1998). While Gรถdel never published anything bearing on his independent discovery of undefinability, he did describe it in a 1931 letter to John von Neumann. Tarski had obtained almost all results of his 1933 monograph "The Concept of Truth in the Languages of the Deductive Sciences" between 1929 and 1931, and spoke about them to Polish audiences. However, as he emphasized in the paper, the undefinability theorem was the only result he did not obtain earlier. According to the footnote to the undefinability theorem (Twierdzenie I) of the 1933 monograph, the theorem and the sketch of the proof were added to the monograph only after the manuscript had been sent to the printer in 1931. Tarski reports there that, when he presented the content of his monograph to the Warsaw Academy of Science on March 21, 1931, he expressed at this place only some conjectures, based partly on his own investigations and partly on Gรถdel's short report on the incompleteness theorems "" [Some metamathematical results on the definiteness of decision and consistency], Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna, 1930. Statement We will first state a simplified version of Tarski's theorem, then state and prove in the next section the theorem Tarski proved in 1933. Let be the language of first-order arithmetic. This is the theory of the natural numbers, including their addition and multiplication, axiomatized by the first-order Peano axioms. This is a "first-order" theory: the quantifiers extend over natural numbers, but not over sets or functions of natural numbers. The theory is strong enough to describe recursively defined integer functions such as exponentiation, factorials or the Fibonacci sequence. Let be the standard structure for i.e. consists of the ordinary set of natural numbers and their addition and multiplication. Each sentence in can be interpreted in and then becomes either true or false. Thus is the "interpreted first-order language of arithmetic". Each formula in has a Gรถdel number This is a natural number that "encodes" In that way, the language can talk about formulas in not just about numbers. Let denote the set of -sentences true in and the set of Gรถdel numbers of the sentences in The following theorem answers the question: Can be defined by a formula of first-order arithmetic? Tarski's undefinability theorem: There is no -formula that defines That is, there is no -formula such that for every -sentence holds in . Informally, the theorem says that the concept of truth of first-order arithmetic statements cannot be defined by a formula in first-order arithmetic. This implies a major limitation on the scope of "self-representation". It is possible to define a formula whose extension is but only by drawing on a metalanguage whose expressive power goes beyond that of . For example, a truth predicate for first-order arithmetic can be defined in second-order arithmetic. However, this formula would only be able to define a truth predicate for formulas in the original language . To define a truth predicate for the metalanguage would require a still higher metametalanguage, and so on. To prove the theorem, we proceed by contradiction and assume that an -formula exists which is true for the natural number in if and only if is the Gรถdel number of a sentence in that is true in . We could then use to define a new -formula which is true for the natural number if and only if is the Gรถdel number of a formula (with a free variable ) such that is false when interpreted in (i.e. the formula when applied to its own Gรถdel number, yields a false statement). If we now consider the Gรถdel number of the formula , and ask whether the sentence is true in , we obtain a contradiction. (This is known as a diagonal argument.) The theorem is a corollary of Post's theorem about the arithmetical hierarchy, proved some years after Tarski (1933). A semantic proof of Tarski's theorem from Post's theorem is obtained by reductio ad absurdum as follows. Assuming is arithmetically definable, there is a natural number such that is definable by a formula at level of the arithmetical hierarchy. However, is -hard for all Thus the arithmetical hierarchy collapses at level , contradicting Post's theorem. General form Tarski proved a stronger theorem than the one stated above, using an entirely syntactical method. The resulting theorem applies to any formal language with negation, and with sufficient capability for self-reference that the diagonal lemma holds. First-order arithmetic satisfies these preconditions, but the theorem applies to much more general formal systems, such as ZFC. Tarski's undefinability theorem (general form): Let be any interpreted formal language which includes negation and has a Gรถdel numbering satisfying the diagonal lemma, i.e. for every -formula (with one free variable ) there is a sentence such that holds in . Then there is no -formula with the following property: for every -sentence is true in . The proof of Tarski's undefinability theorem in this form is again by reductio ad absurdum. Suppose that an -formula as above existed, i.e., if is a sentence of arithmetic, then holds in if and only if holds in . Hence for all , the formula holds in . But the diagonal lemma yields a counterexample to this equivalence, by giving a "liar" formula such that holds in . This is a contradiction. QED. Discussion The formal machinery of the proof given above is wholly elementary except for the diagonalization which the diagonal lemma requires. The proof of the diagonal lemma is likewise surprisingly simple; for example, it does not invoke recursive functions in any way. The proof does assume that every -formula has a Gรถdel number, but the specifics of a coding method are not required. Hence Tarski's theorem is much easier to motivate and prove than the more celebrated theorems of Gรถdel about the metamathematical properties of first-order arithmetic. Smullyan (1991, 2001) has argued forcefully that Tarski's undefinability theorem deserves much of the attention garnered by Gรถdel's incompleteness theorems. That the latter theorems have much to say about all of mathematics and more controversially, about a range of philosophical issues (e.g., Lucas 1961) is less than evident. Tarski's theorem, on the other hand, is not directly about mathematics but about the inherent limitations of any formal language sufficiently expressive to be of real interest. Such languages are necessarily capable of enough self-reference for the diagonal lemma to apply to them. The broader philosophical import of Tarski's theorem is more strikingly evident. An interpreted language is strongly-semantically-self-representational exactly when the language contains predicates and function symbols defining all the semantic concepts specific to the language. Hence the required functions include the "semantic valuation function" mapping a formula to its truth value and the "semantic denotation function" mapping a term to the object it denotes. Tarski's theorem then generalizes as follows: No sufficiently powerful language is strongly-semantically-self-representational. The undefinability theorem does not prevent truth in one theory from being defined in a stronger theory. For example, the set of (codes for) formulas of first-order Peano arithmetic that are true in is definable by a formula in second order arithmetic. Similarly, the set of true formulas of the standard model of second order arithmetic (or -th order arithmetic for any ) can be defined by a formula in first-order ZFC. See also References Primary sources English translation of Tarski's 1936 article. Further reading Mathematical logic Metatheorems Philosophy of logic Theorems in the foundations of mathematics Theories of truth
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๊น€์—ฐ์ฒ 
๊น€์—ฐ์ฒ (้‡‘้Š้ต, 1964๋…„ 5์›” 7์ผ~)์€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ์ •์น˜์™ธ๊ตํ•™์ž, ์ธ์ œ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๊ต์ˆ˜์ด๋‹ค. ๊ฐ•์›๋„ ๋™ํ•ด ์ถœ์ƒ์ด๋‹ค. ์กฐ์„ ๋ฏผ์ฃผ์ฃผ์˜์ธ๋ฏผ๊ณตํ™”๊ตญ์˜ ์‚ฐ์—…ํ™” ๊ณผ์ •์„ ๋ถ„์„ํ•˜์—ฌ '์ˆ˜๋ น์ œ'๋ผ๊ณ  ํ•˜๋Š” ์ •์น˜์ฒด์ œ๋ฅผ ๊ฐ–๊ฒŒ ๋œ ๊ธฐ์›์„ ๋ฐํžŒ ๋…ผ๋ฌธ์œผ๋กœ ์„ฑ๊ท ๊ด€๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต์—์„œ ์ •์น˜ํ•™ ๋ฐ•์‚ฌ ํ•™์œ„๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›์•˜๋‹ค. 2017๋…„ ๋Œ€์„  ๋•Œ ๋ฌธ์žฌ์ธ ํ›„๋ณด ์บ ํ”„์—์„œ ํ™œ๋™ํ•˜์—ฌ 2018๋…„ ํ†ต์ผ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์› ์›์žฅ์— ์ž„๋ช…๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. 2019๋…„ 4์›” ๋ฌธ์žฌ์ธ ์ •๋ถ€์˜ ํ†ต์ผ๋ถ€ ์žฅ๊ด€์ด ๋˜์—ˆ์œผ๋‚˜, 2020๋…„ 6์›” ๋ถํ•œ์˜ ๋‚จ๋ถ๊ณต๋™์—ฐ๋ฝ์‚ฌ๋ฌด์†Œ ํญํŒŒ๋กœ ์ธํ•ด ์žฅ๊ด€์ง์—์„œ ์‚ฌํ‡ดํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ํ•™๋ ฅ 1980~1983: ๋ถํ‰๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต 1983~1990: ์„ฑ๊ท ๊ด€๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ์ •์น˜์™ธ๊ตํ•™ ํ•™์‚ฌ 1990~1992: ์„ฑ๊ท ๊ด€๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๋Œ€ํ•™์› ์ •์น˜์™ธ๊ตํ•™ ์„์‚ฌ 1992~1993: ์„ฑ๊ท ๊ด€๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๋Œ€ํ•™์› ์ •์น˜์™ธ๊ตํ•™ ๋ฐ•์‚ฌ ๊ฒฝ๋ ฅ 1997๋…„~2002๋…„: ์‚ผ์„ฑ๊ฒฝ์ œ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์†Œ ๋ถํ•œ์—ฐ๊ตฌํŒ€ ์ˆ˜์„์—ฐ๊ตฌ์› 2004๋…„~2006๋…„: ํ†ต์ผ๋ถ€ ์žฅ๊ด€ ์ •์ฑ…๋ณด์ขŒ๊ด€ 2008๋…„~2010๋…„: ํ•œ๊ฒจ๋ ˆํ‰ํ™”์—ฐ๊ตฌ์†Œ ์†Œ์žฅ 2010๋…„~: ์ธ์ œ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ํ†ต์ผํ•™๋ถ€ ๊ต์ˆ˜ 2018๋…„~2019๋…„: ์ œ16๋Œ€ ํ†ต์ผ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์› ์›์žฅ 2019๋…„ 4์›” 8์ผ~2020๋…„ 6์›” 19์ผ: ์ œ40๋Œ€ ํ†ต์ผ๋ถ€ ์žฅ๊ด€ 2021.3~ : ํ•œ๋ฐ˜๋„ํ‰ํ™”ํฌ๋Ÿผ ์ด์‚ฌ์žฅ ์ €์„œ ใ€Šํ˜‘์ƒ์˜ ์ „๋žตใ€‹. ํœด๋จธ๋‹ˆ์ŠคํŠธ. 2016๋…„. ใ€Š70๋…„์˜ ๋Œ€ํ™”ใ€‹. ์ฐฝ๋น„. 2018๋…„. ์ˆ˜์ƒ 2009๋…„: ์ œ15ํšŒ ํ†ต์ผ์–ธ๋ก ์ƒ ๋Œ€์ƒ ๋…ผ๋ž€ ๋ถ€๋™์‚ฐ ํˆฌ๊ธฐ ์–‘๋„์†Œ๋“์„ธ ํƒˆ์„ธ ๊น€์—ฐ์ฒ ์€ 1993๋…„ ๋‹น์ฒจ๋œ ์„œ์šธ ์„œ์ดˆ๋™ ์‚ผ์„ฑ๋ž˜๋ฏธ์•ˆ ์•„ํŒŒํŠธ ๋ถ„์–‘๊ถŒ์„ ์ „๋งคํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๋‹ค์šด๊ณ„์•ฝ์„œ๋ฅผ ์ž‘์„ฑํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1999๋…„์—๋Š” ์„œ์šธ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฐ๋™ ์‚ผํ˜ธ์•„ํŒŒํŠธ๋ฅผ 7500๋งŒ์›์— ๊ตฌ๋งคํ•ด 4๋…„ ํ›„ ๊ฐ™์€ ๊ฐ€๊ฒฉ์— ํŒ”์•˜๋‹ค๊ณ  ์‹ ๊ณ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋Š” ๋‹น์‹œ ์ด ์•„ํŒŒํŠธ ์‹œ์„ธ๋ณด๋‹ค ์ตœ์†Œ ์ˆ˜์ฒœ๋งŒ์› ๋‚ฎ์€ ๊ฐ€๊ฒฉ์ด๋‹ค. ๊น€์—ฐ์ฒ  ๋ถ€๋ถ€๋Š” ๋˜ 2003๋…„ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฐ ๊ถ์ „์•„ํŒŒํŠธ, 2004๋…„ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฐ ์‚ผํ˜ธ์•„ํŒŒํŠธ๋ฅผ ์‚ด ๋•Œ๋„ ์‹œ์„ธ๋ณด๋‹ค ๋‚ฎ์€ ๊ฐ€๊ฒฉ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฑฐ๋ž˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์‹ ๊ณ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2003๋…„ 9,800๋งŒ ์›์— ์‚ฐ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฐ๋™ ๊ถ์ „์•„ํŒŒํŠธ๋ฅผ 2๋…„ ๋’ค 5์–ต 2์ฒœ๋งŒ ์›์— ํŒ”์•„ 5๋ฐฐ ๋„˜๋Š” ์ฐจ์ต์„ ๋ดค๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฐ๋ฐ ๋‚˜์ค‘์— ์–‘๋„์†Œ๋“์„ธ๋ฅผ ๋‚ผ ๋•Œ๋Š” "์‚ฌ์‹ค 3์–ต ์›์— ์ƒ€๋‹ค"๋ฉฐ ๋ฐ”๊ฟ”์„œ ์‹ ๊ณ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์–‘๋„์„ธ๋ฅผ ์ ๊ฒŒ ๋‚ด๋ ค๊ณ  ์ผ๋ถ€๋Ÿฌ ๋งค์ž…๊ฐ€๋ฅผ ๋†’์˜€๋‹ค๋Š” ์˜ํ˜น์ด ์ œ๊ธฐ๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜, 2004๋…„ ๊ณ„์•ฝ์„œ ์ƒ 1์–ต7์ฒœ900๋งŒ ์›์— ์ƒ€๋˜ ๋ฐฉ๋ฐฐ๋™์˜ ์‚ผํ˜ธ์•„ํŒŒํŠธ๋ฅผ 11์–ต์—ฌ ์›์— ํŒ”๊ณ , ์‹œ์„ธ์ฐจ์ต์€ 6์–ต์—ฌ ์›์— ๊ทธ์นœ๋‹ค๊ณ  ์‹ ๊ณ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊น€์—ฐ์ฒ ์€ 2005๋…„ ๊ฒฝ๊ธฐ๋„ ๋‚จ์–‘์ฃผ์˜ ํ† ์ง€๋ฅผ ๋งค์ž…ํ•  ๋•Œ๋„ ๋‹ค์šด๊ณ„์•ฝ์„œ๋ฅผ ์ผ๋‹ค. ์œ ๊ธฐ์ค€ ์˜์›์€ "๊น€์—ฐ์ฒ ์€ ์•„ํŒŒํŠธ๋งŒ 5๊ฑด, ๋ถ„์–‘๊ถŒ 2๊ฑด, ํ† ์ง€ 1๊ฑด์„ ํฌํ•จํ•ด ๋ถ€๋ถ€๊ฐ€ ์‹œ์„ธ์ฐจ์ต์„ ๋…ธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  8๋ฒˆ์˜ ๋‹ค์šด๊ณ„์•ฝ์„œ๋ฅผ ์ž‘์„ฑํ–ˆ๋‹ค"๊ณ  ์ง€์ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊น€์—ฐ์ฒ ์€ 2019๋…„ 3์›” 26์ผ ์ธ์‚ฌ์ฒญ๋ฌธํšŒ์—์„œ ์ œ๊ธฐ๋œ ์˜ํ˜น์„ ์‹œ์ธํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ถ€๋™์‚ฐ ์ฐจ๋ช…๊ฑฐ๋ž˜ ์˜ํ˜น ๊น€์—ฐ์ฒ ์˜ ์ฒ˜์ œ๊ฐ€ 2016๋…„ 6์›” ๋…ผ์‚ฐ์˜ ์ฃผ๊ณต์•„ํŒŒํŠธ๋ฅผ ๋งค์ž…ํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ, ๋‹น์‹œ ์ฒ˜์ œ๋Š” ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์— ์žˆ์—ˆ๊ณ , ๊น€์—ฐ์ฒ ์˜ ๋ฐฐ์šฐ์ž๊ฐ€ ์ฒ˜์ œ๋ฅผ ๋Œ€์‹ ํ•ด ๊ณ„์•ฝ์„ ์ง„ํ–‰ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ •์ง„์„ ์˜์›์€ "์œ„์ž„์žฅ๋„ ์—†์ด ์–ด๋–ป๊ฒŒ ๋ถ€๋™์‚ฐ ๊ฑฐ๋ž˜๊ฐ€ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ๊ฐ€"๋ผ๊ณ  ์ง€์ ํ•˜๋ฉฐ "๊น€์—ฐ์ฒ ์ด ์‹ ๊ณ ํ•œ ์žฌ์‚ฐ์ด 6์–ต2000๋งŒ์› ์ •๋„์ธ๋ฐ, ์ง€๋‚œ 7๋…„ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ์œ ํ•™ ์ค‘์ธ ๋‘ ๋”ธ์— ์†ก๊ธˆํ•œ ์œ ํ•™๋น„์šฉ์ด 5์–ต6000๋งŒ์› ์ •๋„"๋ผ๋ฉฐ "์ฒ˜์ œ์˜ ํ†ต์žฅ์—์„œ ๋น ์ง„ ๋ญ‰์นซ๋ˆ์ด ์œ ํ•™๋น„์šฉ์œผ๋กœ ์†ก๊ธˆ๋๋‹ค๋Š” ํ•ฉ๋ฆฌ์ ์ธ ์˜์‹ฌ์„ ๊ฐ–๋Š” ๊ฒƒ"์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์„ค๋ช…ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊น€์žฌ๊ฒฝ ์˜์›์€ ๊น€์—ฐ์ฒ ์˜ ์•„๋‚ด์™€ ์ฒ˜์ œ์˜ ๋ถ€๋™์‚ฐ ๊ฑฐ๋ž˜๋‚ด์—ญ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ์งˆ์˜ํ•˜๋ฉฐ ๋ถ€๋™์‚ฐ ์ฐจ๋ช…๊ฑฐ๋ž˜ ์˜ํ˜น์„ ์ œ๊ธฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2011๋…„ 9์›” ๊น€์—ฐ์ฒ ์ด ๊ฒฝ์ƒ๋‚จ๋„ ๊น€ํ•ด์—์„œ ๋Œ€ํ•™ ๊ต์ˆ˜๋กœ ์žฌ์งํ•  ๋‹น์‹œ ์ฒ˜์ œ ์†Œ์œ ์˜ ๋‹ค์„ธ๋Œ€์ฃผํƒ์— ๋จธ๋ฌผ๋ €๋˜ ์‚ฌ์‹ค์„ ์ง€์ ํ•˜๋ฉฐ "์ง‘ ์ฃผ์ธ์ด ๋ˆ„๊ตฌ๋ƒ๋ฅผ ๋ฐํžˆ๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ˆ„๊ตฌ ๋ˆ์ธ์ง€๋ฅผ ๋“ค์—ฌ๋‹ค๋ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค"๊ณ  ์ž๋ฃŒ ์ œ์ถœ์„ ์š”์ฒญํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊น€์—ฐ์ฒ ์ด ๋จธ๋ฌผ๋ €๋˜ ๊น€ํ•ด ๋‹ค์„ธ๋Œ€์ฃผํƒ์€ 2011๋…„ 2์›” ์ฒ˜์ฒด๊ฐ€ ๋งค์ž…ํ•œ ๋ฐ” ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊น€์—ฐ์ฒ ์ด ๊น€ํ•ด ๊ทผ๋ฌด๋ฅผ ๋งˆ์น˜๊ณ  ์„œ์šธ ์ „์ž…ํ•œ ํ›„์ธ 2014๋…„ ๋งค๊ฐ๋œ ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚˜๋ฉด์„œ ์ฐจ๋ช…๊ฑฐ๋ž˜ ์˜ํ˜น์ด ์ œ๊ธฐ๋๋‹ค. ๋ฐ•์™•์ž ํ”ผ๊ฒฉ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์€ ํ†ต๊ณผ์˜๋ก€ ์ฃผ์žฅ 2010๋…„ ์–ธ๋ก  ๊ธฐ๊ณ ๋ฌธ์—์„œ ๋ฐ•์™•์ž ํ”ผ๊ฒฉ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด ๊น€์—ฐ์ฒ ์€ "์ด๊ฒฉ ์‚ฌ๊ฑด์œผ๋กœ ๊ด€๊ด‘๊ฐ์ด ์‚ฌ๋งํ•˜๋Š” ์‚ฌ๊ฑดยท์‚ฌ๊ณ ๋“ค์€ ์ผ์ฐ ์‹œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ์–ด๋„ ์šฐ๋ฆฌ๊ฐ€ ๊ฒช์–ด์•ผ ํ•  ํ†ต๊ณผ์˜๋ก€์˜€๋‹ค"๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด์  ๋‹จ์ฒด ์˜นํ˜ธ ๋‚จํ•œ์„ ๋ฏธ ์ œ๊ตญ์ฃผ์˜ ์‹๋ฏผ์ง€๋กœ ๊ทœ์ •ํ•˜๊ณ  ๋ถํ•œ ์„ ๊ตฐ์ •์น˜๋ฅผ ์ฐฌ์–‘ํ•˜์—ฌ ๋Œ€๋ฒ•์›์—์„œ ์ด์ ๋‹จ์ฒด๋กœ ๊ทœ์ •ํ•œ ํ•œ๊ตญ์ฒญ๋…„๋‹จ์ฒดํ˜‘์˜ํšŒ์˜์˜ ํ™œ๋™์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด 2002๋…„ ๋ฒ•์ •์—์„œ ์˜นํ˜ธํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ํ•œ๊ฒจ๋ ˆ ํ‰ํ™”์—ฐ๊ตฌ์†Œ์žฅ์œผ๋กœ ์ผํ•˜๋˜ 2008๋…„ ์ด์  ํ™œ๋™ ํ˜์˜๋ฅผ ๋ฐ›๋Š” ํ•œ๊ตญ์ฒญ๋…„๋‹จ์ฒดํ˜‘์˜ํšŒ์˜ ๋ฌด์ฃ„ ์„ ๊ณ ๋ฅผ ์ด‰๊ตฌํ•˜๋Š” ์„ ์–ธ๋ฌธ์— ์„œ๋ช…ํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. ์„ ์–ธ๋ฌธ์—๋Š” ๊ตญ๊ฐ€๋ณด์•ˆ๋ฒ•์„ ํ์ง€ํ•ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค๋Š” ๋‚ด์šฉ๋„ ๋‹ด๊ฒจ์žˆ๋‹ค. ํŽธํ–ฅ๋œ ๋Œ€๋ถ๊ด€ ๊น€์—ฐ์ฒ ์€ ๋…ผ๋ฌธ๊ณผ ์ €์„œ์—์„œ ๋Œ€๋ถ์ œ์žฌ ๋ฌด์šฉ๋ก ๊ณผ ํ•ต ๋™๊ฒฐ๋ก ์„ ์ฃผ์žฅํ•˜์˜€๋‹ค. 2016๋…„ ํŽด๋‚ธ ๋…ผ๋ฌธ ใ€Š๋Œ€๋ถ์ œ์žฌ์˜ ํŽธ๊ฒฌ๊ณผ ๋ถ๋ฐฉ ๊ฒฝ์ œ์˜ ๋ฏธ๋ž˜ใ€‹์—์„œ "ํž˜์œผ๋กœ ๋ถํ•œ์„ ๊ตด๋ณต์‹œํ‚ค๊ฒ ๋‹ค๋Š” ์ œ์žฌ๋ก ์€ ๋ชฉ์ ์„ ๋‹ฌ์„ฑํ•˜์ง€ ๋ชปํ•œ ์ฑ„ ์ƒํ™ฉ๋งŒ ์•…ํ™”์‹œ์ผฐ๋‹ค. ์ œ์žฌ์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ํŽธ๊ฒฌ์ด ์˜ค๋žซ๋™์•ˆ ํ•œ๋ฐ˜๋„ ์ •์„ธ๋ฅผ ์•…ํ™”์‹œํ‚ค๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹ค"๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2017๋…„ ๋™์•„์‹œ์•„์žฌ๋‹จ์˜ ์ •์ฑ…๋…ผ์Ÿ ๊ธฐ๊ณ ๋ฌธ์—์„œ "ํ•ต ๋™๊ฒฐ์ด ์ด๋ค„์ง€๋ฉด ์‹œ๊ฐ„์„ ๋ฒŒ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋น„ํ•ตํ™”์— ์•ž์„œ ํ•ต ๋™๊ฒฐ์ด ์ค‘์š”ํ•˜๋‹ค"๊ณ  ์ฃผ์žฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ •์น˜์ธ ๋น„ํ•˜ 2015๋…„ ๋”๋ถˆ์–ด๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์˜€๋˜ ๋ฌธ์žฌ์ธ์ด ๊ตฐ๋ณต์„ ์ž…๊ณ  ๊ตฐ๋Œ€๋ฅผ ์ฐพ์€ ๊ฒƒ์„ ๋‘๊ณ  โ€œ์‡ผ๋ฅผ ํ•˜๊ณ  ์žˆ๋‹คโ€๋ฉด์„œ ํŽ˜์ด์Šค๋ถ์„ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋น„๋‚œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2016๋…„์—๋Š” ์ถ”๋ฏธ์•  ๋”๋ถˆ์–ด๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์—๊ฒŒ "๊ฐ์—ผ๋œ ์ข€๋น„"๋ผ๊ณ  ๋น„ํ•˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด๋ช…๋ฐ• ์ •๋ถ€ ๋ฐ ๋ฐ•๊ทผํ˜œ ์ •๋ถ€์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด์„œ๋Š” "์—ญ์‚ฌ์  ์ •ํ†ต์„ฑ์ด ๊ฒฐ์—ฌ๋œ ๋ณด์ˆ˜ ์„ธ๋ ฅ", ๊น€์ข…์ธ ์ „ ๋”๋ถˆ์–ด๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น ๋Œ€ํ‘œ์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด์„œ๋Š” "๋ฐ•๊ทผํ˜œ๊ฐ€ ์”น๋‹ค ๋ฒ„๋ฆฐ ๊ปŒ", ์ด๋ช…๋ฐ• ์ „ ๋Œ€ํ†ต๋ น์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด์„œ๋Š” "์œ„๋Œ€ํ•ด C-ba ๊ฐ€์นด๋งŒ์„ธ!"๋ผ๊ณ  ๋น„ํ•˜ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ˜๊ธฐ๋ฌธ, ๊น€์˜์‚ผ, ์•ˆ์ฒ ์ˆ˜์— ๋Œ€ํ•ด์„œ๋„ SNS๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ๋น„๋‚œํ•œ ๋ฐ” ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ์ฃผ ๋‚ด์šฉ ์ถœ์ฒ˜ 1964๋…„ ์ถœ์ƒ ๋™ํ•ด์‹œ ์ถœ์‹  ์„ฑ๊ท ๊ด€๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๋™๋ฌธ ์„ฑ๊ท ๊ด€๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๋Œ€ํ•™์› ๋™๋ฌธ ์ธ์ œ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๊ต์ˆ˜ ์นœ์ด์žฌ๋ช… ์˜› ๋”๋ถˆ์–ด๋ฏผ์ฃผ๋‹น์˜ ์ •์น˜์ธ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ†ต์ผ๋ถ€ ์žฅ๊ด€ ๋ฌธ์žฌ์ธ ์ •๋ถ€์˜ ๊ตญ๋ฌด์œ„์› ์‚ด์•„์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ตญ์ œ ๊ด€๊ณ„ ์—ฐ๊ตฌ์ž
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kim%20Yeon-chul
Kim Yeon-chul
Kim Yeon-chul (; born 26 March 1964) is a South Korean associate professor of unification at Inje University who served as Minister of Unification under President Moon Jae-in from April 2019 to June 2020. Before promoted to Minister, Kim was the president of the Korea Institute for National Unification, a government-funded research institute. He was previously a policy advisor to then-Minister of Unification Chung Dong-young from 2004 to 2006. After completing his doctorate programme, he joined Samsung Economic Research Institute as its senior researcher. He was also the first president of The Hankyoreh's research institute on peace studies. Kim holds three degrees in political science from Sungkyunkwan University from a bachelor to a doctorate. Following North Korea's destruction of its Kaesong liaison office and a general worsening of inter-Korean relations, he offered to resign on June 17, 2020. On June 19, 2020, President Moon Jae-in officially accepted his resignation as the Minister of Unification. References Sungkyunkwan University alumni Living people 1964 births People from Donghae City Government ministers of South Korea Experts on North Korea Academic staff of Inje University South Korean international relations scholars
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%BD%94%EB%93%9C%2039
์ฝ”๋“œ 39
์ฝ”๋“œ 39๋Š” ๊ฐ€๋ณ€ ๊ธธ์ด์˜ ๊ฐœ๋ณ„ ๋ฐ”์ฝ”๋“œ๋‹ค. ์ฝ”๋“œ 39๋Š” ๋Œ€๋ฌธ์ž (A ~ Z), ์ˆซ์ž (0-9) ๋ฐ ํŠน์ˆ˜ ๋ฌธ์ž (-,., $, /, +, % ๋ฐ ๊ณต๋ฐฑ )๋กœ, ์ด 43์ž๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ถ”๊ฐ€ ๊ธ€์ž( '*'๋กœ ํ‘œ์‹œ๋จ)๋Š” ์‹œ์ž‘ ๊ตฌ๋ถ„ ๊ธฐํ˜ธ์™€ ์ข…๋ฃŒ ๊ตฌ๋ถ„ ๋ฌธ์ž ๋ชจ๋‘์— ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ ๋ฌธ์ž๋Š” 9 ๊ฐœ์˜ ์š”์†Œ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋œ๋‹ค : 5 ๊ฐœ์˜ ๋ง‰๋Œ€์™€ 4 ๊ฐœ์˜ ๊ณต๋ฐฑ. ๊ฐ ๋ฌธ์ž์˜ 9 ๊ฐœ ์š”์†Œ ์ค‘ 3 ๊ฐœ๋Š” ๋„“๊ณ  (2 ์ง„ ๊ฐ’ 1) 6 ๊ฐœ ์š”์†Œ๋Š” ์ข๋‹ค. (2 ์ง„ ๊ฐ’ 0) ๋„ˆ๋น„์™€ ๋„ˆ๋น„ ๊ฐ„์˜ ๋„ˆ๋น„ ๋น„์œจ์€ ์ค‘์š”ํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์œผ๋ฉฐ 1 : 2์—์„œ 1 : 3 ์‚ฌ์ด์—์„œ ์„ ํƒํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ”์ฝ”๋“œ ์ž์ฒด์—๋Š” ํ™•์ธ ์ˆซ์ž๊ฐ€ ํฌํ•จ๋˜์ง€ ์•Š์ง€๋งŒ (์ฝ”๋“œ 128๊ณผ ๋Œ€์กฐ์ ์œผ๋กœ), ์ž˜๋ชป ํ•ด์„๋œ ๋‹จ์ผ ๋ง‰๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ๋‹ค๋ฅธ ์œ ํšจํ•œ ๋ฌธ์ž๋ฅผ ์ƒ์„ฑํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋‹ค๋Š” ์ด์œ ๋กœ ์ž์ฒด ๊ฒ€์‚ฌ๋กœ ๊ฐ„์ฃผ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ฝ”๋“œ 39์˜ ๊ฐ€์žฅ ์‹ฌ๊ฐํ•œ ๋‹จ์ ์€ ๋‚ฎ์€ ๋ฐ์ดํ„ฐ ๋ฐ€๋„๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด ์ฝ”๋“œ 128๋ณด๋‹ค ์ฝ”๋“œ 39์—์„œ ๋ฐ์ดํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ์ธ์ฝ”๋”ฉํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ๋” ๋งŽ์€ ๊ณต๊ฐ„์ด ํ•„์š”ํ•˜๋‹ค. ์ฆ‰, ์•„์ฃผ ์ž‘์€ ์ œํ’ˆ์—๋Š” ์ฝ”๋“œ 39 ๊ธฐ๋ฐ˜ ๋ฐ”์ฝ”๋“œ๋กœ ๋ ˆ์ด๋ธ”์„ ์ง€์ •ํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋Ÿฌ๋‚˜, ๋น„๋ก ์ฝ”๋“œ 39๋Š” ์—ฌ์ „ํžˆ ๋ช‡๋ช‡ ์šฐํŽธ ์„œ๋น„์Šค์— ์˜ํ•ด ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. (๋งŒ๊ตญ ์šฐํŽธ ์—ฐํ•ฉ์€ ๋ชจ๋“  ๊ฒฝ์šฐ์— ์ฝ”๋“œ (128)๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•  ๊ฒƒ์„ ๊ถŒ์žฅํ•˜๊ณ , ) ๊ฑฐ์˜ ๋ชจ๋“  ๋ฐ”์ฝ”๋“œ ๋ฆฌ๋”๋กœ ๋””์ฝ”๋“œํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ฝ”๋“œ 39์˜ ์žฅ์  ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋Š” ์ฒดํฌ ๋””์ง€ํŠธ๋ฅผ ์ƒ์„ฑํ•  ํ•„์š”๊ฐ€ ์—†๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์— ๋ฐ”์ฝ”๋“œ ๊ธ€๊ผด์„ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์ด๋‚˜ ํ”„๋ฆฐํ„ฐ์— ์ถ”๊ฐ€ํ•œ ๋‹ค์Œ ํ•ด๋‹น ๊ธ€๊ผด๋กœ ๋ฐ์ดํ„ฐ๋ฅผ ์ธ์‡„ํ•˜์—ฌ ๊ธฐ์กด ์ธ์‡„ ์‹œ์Šคํ…œ์— ์‰ฝ๊ฒŒ ํ†ตํ•ฉํ•  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์ด๋‹ค. Code 39๋Š” 1974๋…„ David Allais ์™€ Intermec์˜ Ray Stevens๊ฐ€ ๊ฐœ๋ฐœํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋“ค์˜ ์›๋ž˜ ๋””์ž์ธ์€ ๋‘ ๊ฐœ์˜ ๋„“์€ ๋ง‰๋Œ€์™€ ๊ฐ ๋ฌธ์ž์— ํ•˜๋‚˜์˜ ๋„“์€ ๊ณต๊ฐ„์„ ํฌํ•จํ•˜์—ฌ 40 ๊ฐœ์˜ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ๋ฌธ์ž๋ฅผ ๋งŒ๋“ค์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ๋ฌธ์ž ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋ฅผ ์‹œ์ž‘ ๋ฐ ์ค‘๋‹จ ํŒจํ„ด์œผ๋กœ ๋‚จ๊ฒจ๋‘๋ฉด 39 ์ž๊ฐ€ ๋‚จ์•˜๋‹ค. ์ด ๋ฌธ์ž๋Š” Code 39๋ผ๋Š” ์ด๋ฆ„์˜ ๊ธฐ์›์ด์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๋‚˜์ค‘์— 4 ๊ฐœ์˜ ๊ตฌ๋‘์  ๋ฌธ์ž๊ฐ€ ์ถ”๊ฐ€๋˜์–ด ๋„“์€ ๋ง‰๋Œ€์™€ 3 ๊ฐœ์˜ ๋„“์€ ๊ณต๋ฐฑ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š๊ณ  ๋ฌธ์ž ์„ธํŠธ๋ฅผ 43 ์ž๋กœ ํ™•์žฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. Code 39๋Š” ๋‚˜์ค‘์— ANSI MH 10.8 M-1983 ๋ฐ MIL-STD-1189๋กœ ํ‘œ์ค€ํ™”๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  MIL-STD-1189๋Š” ์ทจ์†Œ๋˜๊ณ  ANSI / AIM BC1 / 1995, ํ†ต์ผ ๊ธฐํ˜ธ ํ‘œ์ค€ - ์ฝ”๋“œ 39๋กœ ๋Œ€์ฒด๋˜์—ˆ๋‹ค. ์ธ์ฝ”๋”ฉ ์•„๋ž˜ ํ‘œ์‹œ๋œ * ๋ฌธ์ž๋Š” ์‹ค์ œ ์ธ์ฝ”๋”ฉ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅ ๋ฌธ์ž๋Š” ์•„๋‹ˆ์ง€๋งŒ ์ฝ”๋“œ 39์˜ ์‹œ์ž‘ ๋ฐ ์ค‘์ง€ ๊ธฐํ˜ธ๋‹ค. ๊ธฐํ˜ธ์˜ ๋น„๋Œ€์นญ์„ฑ์€ ํŒ๋…๊ธฐ๋กœ ํ•˜์—ฌ๊ธˆ ์Šค์บ”๋˜๋Š” ๋ฐ”์ฝ”๋“œ์˜ ๋ฐฉํ–ฅ์„ ๊ฒฐ์ •ํ•˜๊ฒŒ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด ์ฝ”๋“œ๋Š” ์ „ํ†ต์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋ฐ”์ฝ”๋“œ ๊ธ€๊ผด์˜ '*' ๋ฌธ์ž์— ๋งคํ•‘๋˜๋ฉฐ ๋ฐ”์ฝ”๋“œ์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ์ด ์ฝ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋Š” ํ‘œํ˜„์œผ๋กœ ํ‘œ์‹œ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ผ๋ฐ˜์ ์œผ๋กœ ๋‘ ๊ฐœ์˜ ๋„“์€ ๋ง‰๋Œ€์˜ ์œ„์น˜๋Š” 1์—์„œ 10 ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ์ˆซ์ž๋ฅผ ์ธ์ฝ”๋”ฉํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ„์ฃผ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ๋„“์€ ๊ณต๊ฐ„์˜ ์œ„์น˜ (๋„ค ๊ฐœ์˜ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ์œ„์น˜๊ฐ€ ์žˆ์Œ)๋Š” ๋ฌธ์ž๋ฅผ ๋„ค ๊ฐœ์˜ ๊ทธ๋ฃน ์ค‘ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋กœ ๋ถ„๋ฅ˜ํ•˜๋Š” ๊ฒƒ์œผ๋กœ ๊ฐ„์ฃผ๋  ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ์Šต๋‹ˆ๋‹ค ( ์™ผ์ชฝ์—์„œ ์˜ค๋ฅธ์ชฝ์œผ๋กœ)ย : ๋ฌธ์ž (+30) (U-Z), ์ˆซ์ž (+0) (1-9,0), ๋ฌธ์ž (+10) (A-J) ๋ฐ ๋ฌธ์ž (+20) ํ‹ฐ). ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด, ๋ฌธ์ž P (์•ŒํŒŒ๋ฒณ์˜ 16 ๋ฒˆ์งธ ๋ฌธ์ž)๋Š” ์ˆซ์ž 6์„ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ด๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๋ง‰๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ์ •๋ ฌ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๊ณ  ๋งจ ์˜ค๋ฅธ์ชฝ ์œ„์น˜์˜ ๊ณต๋ฐฑ์€ ๊ทธ๋ฃน ๋ฌธ์ž (+20)๋ฅผ ์„ ํƒํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ˆซ์ž๋กœ ํ‘œํ˜„ ๋  ๋•Œ ์ˆซ์ž "10"์€ ์ˆซ์ž 0์„ ์ธ์ฝ”๋”ฉํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. ์™œ๋ƒ๋ฉด ๋ฌธ์ž (+ 30) ๊ทธ๋ฃน์—๋Š” ๋ฌธ์ž๊ฐ€ 6 ๊ฐœ (๋ฌธ์ž 30-35 ๋˜๋Š” U-Z)์ด๋ฏ€๋กœ ์ด ๊ทธ๋ฃน์˜ ๋‚˜๋จธ์ง€ 4 ๊ฐœ ์œ„์น˜ (36-39)๋Š” ๋Œ€์‹œ, ๋งˆ์นจํ‘œ, ๊ณต๋ฐฑ )๋ฟ๋งŒ ์•„๋‹ˆ๋ผ ์‹œ์ž‘ ๋ฐ ์ •์ง€ ๋ฌธ์ž์ด๊ธฐ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์ด๋‹ค. 5 ๊ฐœ์˜ ๊ฐ€๋Šฅํ•œ ์œ„์น˜ ์ค‘ ๋‘ ๊ฐœ์˜ ๋„“์€ ๋ง‰๋Œ€๋Š” 1, 2, 4, 7, 0์˜ ์ˆซ์ž ๋™๋“ฑ์„ฑ์„ ๊ฐ–๋Š” 2์˜ 5 ์ฝ”๋“œ๋ฅผ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜์—ฌ 1์—์„œ 10 ์‚ฌ์ด์˜ ์ˆซ์ž๋ฅผ ์ธ์ฝ”๋”ฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ˆซ์ž๋Š” ํ•ฉ์‚ฐ๋œ๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด, ์ˆซ์ž 6์€ 2์™€ 4 (2 + 4 = 6)์˜ ์œ„์น˜๋ฅผ ์ฐจ์ง€ํ•˜๋Š” ๋„“์€ ๋ง‰๋Œ€์™€ ํ•จ๊ป˜ NWWNN์œผ๋กœ ์ธ์ฝ”๋”ฉ๋œ๋‹ค. NNWWN์ด ๊ฒฝ์šฐ ์ˆซ์ž (+0)๋Š” 0, ๋ฌธ์ž ์—ด (+10 - +30)์€ 10์œผ๋กœ ์ง€์ •๋œ๋‹ค. (+10์—์„œ +30) ๊ธ€์ž๋ฅผ ์ธ์ฝ”๋”ฉ ํ•  ๋•Œ ๋ฐฉ์ •์‹์— "-1"์ด ํ•„์š”ํ•˜๋ฏ€๋กœ ํ‘œ์— ํ‘œ์‹œ๋œ ๋Œ€๋กœ 'A'๋Š” WNNNW โ†’ 1 + 10-1 โ†’ 10์ด๋‹ค. ๋งˆ์ง€๋ง‰ ๋„ค ๋ฌธ์ž๋Š” ๋ชจ๋“  ์ข์€ ๋ง‰๋Œ€์™€ ์„ธ ๊ฐœ์˜ ๋„“์€ ๊ณต๋ฐฑ์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ข์€ ๋‹จ์ผ ๊ณต๊ฐ„์—๋Š” 4 ๊ฐ€์ง€ ์œ„์น˜๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋‹ค. ์ด ํ‘œ์—๋Š” Code 39 ์‚ฌ์–‘์ด ์š”์•ฝ๋˜์–ด ์žˆ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ ๋ฌธ์ž์— ํ• ๋‹น๋œ ์ˆซ์ž ๊ฐ’ (์‹œ์ž‘ ๋ฐ ์ •์ง€ ์ œ์™ธ)์€ ์•„๋ž˜ ์„ค๋ช…๋œ ์ฒดํฌ์„ฌ(checksum) ์•Œ๊ณ ๋ฆฌ์ฆ˜์—์„œ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋œ๋‹ค. ๋ฌธ์ž๋Š” ์ข์€ ๊ณต๊ฐ„์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ๋ถ„๋œ๋‹ค. ์˜ˆ๋ฅผ ๋“ค์–ด, ์‹ค์ œ๋กœ ์‹œ์ž‘์„ ํฌํ•จํ•˜๊ณ  ๋ฌธ์ž๋ฅผ ์ค‘์ง€ ๋‹จ์ผ ๋ฌธ์ž "A"์˜ ์ „์ฒด ์ธ์ฝ”๋”ฉ "* A *"์ด๋ฉฐ, โ–ฎ | | โ–ฎโ–ฎ | ์ด๋Ÿฌํ•œ ๋ฌธ์ž ๊ฐ„ ์ŠคํŽ˜์ด์Šค๊ฐ€ ์—†์œผ๋ฉด ์ฝ”๋“œ๋ฅผ ์ œ๋Œ€๋กœ ์ฝ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋‹ค. ๋ฐ”์ฝ”๋“œ ๊ธ€๊ผด์€ ๋ฌธ์ž์˜ ๊ธ€๋ฆฌํ”„ ๋‚ด์— ํ•ญ์ƒ ์ด ๊ณต๊ฐ„์„ ํฌํ•จํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ฝ”๋“œ 39์™€ mod 43 ์ฝ”๋“œ 39๋Š” ์„ ํƒ์  ๋ชจ๋“ˆ๋กœ 43 ์ฒดํฌ์„ฌ๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์‚ฌ์šฉ๋˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ•˜๋ ค๋ฉด ์ด ๊ธฐ๋Šฅ์„ ๋ฐ”์ฝ”๋“œ ์ธ์‹๊ธฐ์—์„œ ํ™œ์„ฑํ™”ํ•ด์•ผ ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ฒดํฌ ์ˆซ์ž๊ฐ€ ์žˆ๋Š” ์ฝ”๋“œ๋ฅผ ์ฝ”๋“œ 39 mod 43 ์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ํ•œ๋‹ค. ์ด๋ฅผ ๊ณ„์‚ฐํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ๊ฐ ๋ฌธ์ž์— ํ•˜๋‚˜์˜ ๊ฐ’์ด ํ• ๋‹น๋œ๋‹ค. ํ• ๋‹น์€ ์œ„์˜ ํ‘œ์— ๋‚˜์—ด๋˜์–ด ์žˆ์ง€๋งŒ ๊ฑฐ์˜ ์ฒด๊ณ„์ ์ด์ง€๋Š” ์•Š๋‹ค. ๋‹ค์Œ์€ ์ฒดํฌ์„ฌ ๊ณ„์‚ฐ์„ ์ˆ˜ํ–‰ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐฉ๋ฒ•์ด๋‹ค. ์‹œ์ž‘ ๋ฐ ์ข…๋ฃŒ ์ฝ”๋“œ๋ฅผ ์ œ์™ธํ•œ ๋ฐ”์ฝ”๋“œ์˜ ๊ฐ ๋ฌธ์ž ๊ฐ’ (0 - 42)์„ ๊ฐ€์ ธ์˜จ๋‹ค. ๊ฐ’์„ ํ•ฉํ•œ๋‹ค. ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ๋ฅผ 43์œผ๋กœ ๋‚˜๋ˆˆ๋‹ค. ๋‚˜๋จธ์ง€๋Š” ์ถ”๊ฐ€ํ•  ์ฒดํฌ์„ฌ ๋ฌธ์ž์˜ ๊ฐ’์ด๋‹ค. ์ „์ฒด ASCII ์ฝ”๋“œ 39 ์ฝ”๋“œ 39๋Š” 43 ์ž๋กœ ์ œํ•œ๋œ๋‹ค. ์ „์ฒด ASCII ์ฝ”๋“œ 39 ๊ธฐํ˜ธ 0-9, AZ, ".", "-"๋ฐ ๊ณต๋ฐฑ์€ ์ฝ”๋“œ 39์˜ ํ•ด๋‹น ํ‘œํ˜„๊ณผ ๋™์ผํ•˜๋‹ค. ์†Œ๋ฌธ์ž, ์ถ”๊ฐ€ ๊ตฌ๋‘์  ๋ฌธ์ž ๋ฐ ์ œ์–ด ๋ฌธ์ž๋Š” ์ฝ”๋“œ 39์˜ ๋‘ ๋ฌธ์ž ์‹œํ€€์Šค๋กœ ๋‚˜ํƒ€๋‚ธ๋‹ค. ์ฐธ๊ณ  ๋ฐ”์ฝ”๋“œ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code%2039
Code 39
Code 39 (also known as Alpha39, Code 3 of 9, Code 3/9, Type 39, USS Code 39, or USD-3) is a variable length, discrete barcode symbology defined in ISO/IEC 16388:2007. The Code 39 specification defines 43 characters, consisting of uppercase letters (A through Z), numeric digits (0 through 9) and a number of special characters (-, ., $, /, +, %, and space). An additional character (denoted '*') is used for both start and stop delimiters. Each character is composed of nine elements: five bars and four spaces. Three of the nine elements in each character are wide (binary value 1), and six elements are narrow (binary value 0). The width ratio between narrow and wide is not critical, and may be chosen between 1:2 and 1:3. The barcode itself does not contain a check digit (in contrast toโ€”for instanceโ€”Code 128), but it can be considered self-checking on the grounds that a single erroneously interpreted bar cannot generate another valid character. Possibly the most serious drawback of Code 39 is its low data density: It requires more space to encode data in Code 39 than, for example, in Code 128. This means that very small goods cannot be labeled with a Code 39 based barcode. However, Code 39 is still used by some postal services (although the Universal Postal Union recommends using Code 128 in all cases), and can be decoded with virtually any barcode reader. One advantage of Code 39 is that since there is no need to generate a check digit, it can easily be integrated into an existing printing system by adding a barcode font to the system or printer and then printing the raw data in that font. Code 39 was developed by Dr. David Allais and Ray Stevens of Intermec in 1974. Their original design included two wide bars and one wide space in each character, resulting in 40 possible characters. Setting aside one of these characters as a start and stop pattern left 39 characters, which was the origin of the name Code 39. Four punctuation characters were later added, using no wide bars and three wide spaces, expanding the character set to 43 characters. Code 39 was later standardised as ANSI MH 10.8 M-1983 and MIL-STD-1189. MIL-STD-1189 has been cancelled and replaced by ANSI/AIM BC1/1995, Uniform Symbology Specification โ€” Code 39. Encoding The * character presented below is not a true encodable character, but is the start and stop symbol for Code 39. The asymmetry of the symbol allows the reader to determine the direction of the barcode being scanned. This code is traditionally mapped to the * character in barcode fonts and will often appear with the human-readable representation alongside the barcode. As a generality, the location of the two wide bars can be considered to encode a number between 1 and 10, and the location of the wide space (which has four possible positions) can be considered to classify the character into one of four groups (from left to right): Letters(+30) (Uโ€“Z), Digits(+0) (1โ€“9,0), Letters(+10) (Aโ€“J), and Letters(+20) (Kโ€“T). For example, the letter P (being the 16th letter of the alphabet) has its bars aligned to represent the number 6, and the space in the far right position to select the group Letters(+20). When represented as a digit, the number "10" is used to encode the number zero. Because there are only six letters in the Letters(+30) group (letters 30โ€“35, or Uโ€“Z), the other four positions in this group (36โ€“39) are used to represent three symbols (dash, period, space) as well as the start/stop character. The two wide bars, out of five possible positions, encode a number between 1 and 10 using a two-out-of-five code with the following numeric equivalence: 1, 2, 4, 7, 0. The numbers are summed together. For example, the number 6 is encoded NWWNN, with wide bars occupying the positions for 2 and 4 (2+4=6). In the case of NNWWN which is it is assigned to 0 for digits (+0), and 10 for the letter columns (+10 โ€“ +30). When encoding the (+10 to +30) letters the equation needs a "โˆ’1" added so 'A' is WNNNW โ†’ 1 + 10 โˆ’ 1 โ†’ 10 as shown in the table. The last four characters consist of all narrow bars and three wide spaces. There are four possible positions for the single narrow space. This table outlines the Code 39 specification. The numeric value assigned to each character (except start/stop) is used in the checksum algorithm described below. Characters are separated by an additional narrow space. For example, the full encoding for the single letter "A", which actually includes the start and stop characters as "*A*", is . The code will not be read properly without these inter-character spaces. Barcode fonts invariably include this space within the glyph for the character. Code 39 check digit Code 39 is sometimes used with an optional modulo 10 or 43 check digit. Using it requires this feature to be enabled in the barcode reader. The code with check digit is referred to as Code 39 mod 10 or Code 39 mod 43 respectively. To compute this, each character is assigned a value. The assignments are listed in the table above, and almost, but not quite, systematic. Here is how to do the checksum calculation: Take the value (0 through 42) of each character in the barcode excluding start and stop codes. Sum the values. Divide the result by 10 (for Mod 10 check digit) or by 43 (for Mod 43 check digit). The remainder is the value of the checksum character to be appended. Full ASCII Code 39 Code 39 is restricted to 43 characters. In Full ASCII Code 39 Symbols 0-9, A-Z, ".", "-" and space are the same as their representations in Code 39. Lower case letters, additional punctuation characters and control characters are represented by sequences of two characters of Code 39. Software The following free and open source software can produce Code 39 barcodes: GNU Barcode. References Barcodes pt:Cรณdigo de barras#Cรณdigo 39
https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EB%B0%95%EB%AC%B8%EC%98%81
๋ฐ•๋ฌธ์˜
๋ฐ•๋ฌธ์˜(ๆœดๆ–‡ๆฆฎ, 1952๋…„ ~ )์€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์ž‘์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ยท์ž‘๊ณก๊ฐ€ยท๊ฐ€์ˆ˜ยท๊ธฐํƒ€ ์—ฐ์ฃผ์žยทํ”„๋กœ๋“€์„œยท์Œ์•… ํ‰๋ก ๊ฐ€ยท์ž‘๊ฐ€์ด๋‹ค. ์ž‘์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ยท์ž‘๊ณก๊ฐ€๋กœ ํ™œ๋™ํ•˜๋˜ ๋™์•ˆ์—๋Š” ๋ฐ•์ธํ˜ธ(ๆœดไปๆตฉ)๋ผ๋Š” ์˜ˆ๋ช…์„, ์ž‘๊ฐ€๋กœ ํ™œ๋™ํ•˜๋˜ ๋™์•ˆ์—๋Š” ๋ฌธ์˜์ด๋ผ๋Š” ํ•„๋ช…์„ ์‚ฌ์šฉํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ƒ์•  ๋ฐ•๋ฌธ์˜์€ 1952๋…„์— ๊ฒฝ์ƒ๋‚จ๋„ ๋ถ€์‚ฐ์‹œ(ํ˜„์žฌ์˜ ๋ถ€์‚ฐ๊ด‘์—ญ์‹œ)์—์„œ ํƒœ์–ด๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ•๋ฌธ์˜์˜ ์•„๋ฒ„์ง€๋Š” ๊ฐ•์›๋„ ์›์ฃผ์‹œ ์ถœ์‹ ์˜ ๋ชฉ์ˆ˜์ด๊ณ  ์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ๋Š” ๊ฐ•์›๋„ ํ‰์ฐฝ๊ตฐ ์ถœ์‹ ์ด๋‹ค. ๋ฐ•๋ฌธ์˜์˜ ๋ถ€๋ชจ๋Š” 6.25 ์ „์Ÿ์ด ์ง„ํ–‰ ์ค‘์ด๋˜ 1952๋…„์— ํ”ผ๋ž€์ง€์˜€๋˜ ๋ถ€์‚ฐ์—์„œ ๋ฐ•๋ฌธ์˜์„ ์ถœ์‚ฐํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ•๋ฌธ์˜์€ ์–ด๋ฆฐ ์‹œ์ ˆ์— ๊ฐ€์กฑ๋“ค๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ์„œ์šธํŠน๋ณ„์‹œ๋กœ ์ด์ฃผํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ดˆ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต ์žฌํ•™ ์‹œ์ ˆ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ๋ฐ”์ด์˜ฌ๋ฆฐ์„ ๋ฐฐ์› ๋‹ค. ๋Œ€๊ด‘์ค‘ํ•™๊ต, ๋Œ€๊ด‘๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต, ์„œ์šธ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๊ณต๊ณผ๋Œ€ํ•™ ๊ฑด์ถ•ํ•™๊ณผ๋ฅผ ์กธ์—…ํ–ˆ๊ณ  1973๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 1978๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ๊น€์€๊ด‘๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋‚จ์ž 2์ธ์กฐ ๊ธฐํƒ€ ์Œ์•… ๊ทธ๋ฃน ๋…ผ๋‘๋  ๋ฐญ๋‘๋ ์˜ ๋ฉค๋ฒ„๋กœ ํ™œ๋™ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ•๋ฌธ์˜์€ ๊ตฐ๋ณต๋ฌด ์ดํ›„์— ํ•œ๋™์•ˆ ๋Œ€์šฐ์—”์ง€๋‹ˆ์–ด๋ง์—์„œ ๋ฐœ์ „์†Œ ์„ค๊ณ„ ๋‹ด๋‹น์ž๋ฅผ ๋งก์•˜๊ณ  1977๋…„์— ๋™์–‘๋ฐฉ์†ก(TBC) FM ๋ผ๋””์˜ค ํ”„๋กœ๋“€์„œ๋กœ ์ž…์‚ฌํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1980๋…„ 11์›”์— ์‹ค์‹œ๋œ ์–ธ๋ก ํ†ตํํ•ฉ ์กฐ์น˜์— ๋”ฐ๋ผ ํ•œ๊ตญ๋ฐฉ์†ก๊ณต์‚ฌ(KBS)๋กœ ์ž๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ์˜ฎ๊ฒผ๊ณ  ๋ผ๋””์˜ค ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ ใ€Š๋ฐค์„ ์žŠ์€ ๊ทธ๋Œ€์—๊ฒŒใ€‹, ใ€Š์•ˆ๋…•ํ•˜์„ธ์š” ํ™ฉ์ธ์šฉ ๊ฐ•๋ถ€์ž์ž…๋‹ˆ๋‹คใ€‹, ใ€Š๊ฐ€์œ„๋ฐ”์œ„๋ณดใ€‹, ใ€ŠKBS ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ฐ€์š”์ถ•์ œใ€‹์˜ ์—ฐ์ถœ์„ ๋งก์•˜๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ์™ธ์— KBS 2TV ๊ฐœ๊ทธ ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ ใ€Š์œ ๋จธ ์ผ๋ฒˆ์ง€ใ€‹์˜ ์ž‘๊ฐ€๋กœ๋„ ํ™œ๋™ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ•๋ฌธ์˜์€ 1982๋…„์— ๊ฐ€์ˆ˜ ์ •๊ด‘ํƒœ๊ฐ€ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ•œ ๋…ธ๋ž˜ ใ€Š๋…๋„๋Š” ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ๋•…ใ€‹์„ ์ž‘์‚ฌยท์ž‘๊ณกํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ๋ถ€ํ„ฐ ์ž‘์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ยท์ž‘๊ณก๊ฐ€ยท์Œ์•… ํ‰๋ก ๊ฐ€๋กœ ํ™œ๋™ํ–ˆ์œผ๋ฉฐ ์ฃผ๋กœ ํ•œ๊ตญ์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌยท๋ฌธํ™”๋ฅผ ์†Œ์žฌ๋กœ ํ•œ ๋…ธ๋ž˜๋ฅผ ๋ฐœํ‘œํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1990๋…„ 7์›”์—๋Š” KBS FM ๋ผ๋””์˜ค ์Œ์•… ์ „๋ฌธ ํ”„๋กœ๋“€์„œ ์ž๋ฆฌ์—์„œ ๋ฌผ๋Ÿฌ๋‚ฌ๋‹ค. 1991๋…„์—๋Š” ํฌ๊ทน์ธ ์ตœ์˜์ค€์ด ๋ฐœํ‘œํ•œ ๋…ธ๋ž˜ ใ€Šํ•œ๊ตญ์„ ๋น›๋‚ธ 100๋ช…์˜ ์œ„์ธ๋“คใ€‹์„ ์ž‘์‚ฌยท์ž‘๊ณกํ–ˆ๋Š”๋ฐ ์ด ๋…ธ๋ž˜๋Š” 1991๋…„์— ํ•œ๊ตญ๋…ธ๋žซ๋ง์—ฐ๊ตฌํšŒ๊ฐ€ ์ฃผ์ตœํ•œ ์ œ5ํšŒ ํ•œ๊ตญ๋…ธ๋žซ๋ง๋Œ€์ƒ ์‹œ์ƒ์‹์—์„œ ๋‚˜๋ผ์‚ฌ๋ž‘ ๋…ธ๋žซ๋ง์ƒ์„ ์ˆ˜์ƒํ•˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ•๋ฌธ์˜์€ ์–ด๋ฆฐ์ด์—ญ์‚ฌ๋…ธ๋ž˜ํšŒ๋ฅผ ์ง์ ‘ ์„ค๋ฆฝํ•˜์—ฌ ํ•œ๊ตญ์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌยท๋ฌธํ™”๋ฅผ ์†Œ์žฌ๋กœ ํ•˜์—ฌ ์ž‘์‚ฌยท์ž‘๊ณกํ•œ ๋…ธ๋ž˜๋ฅผ ๋ณด๊ธ‰ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๊ทธ ์™ธ์— ์–ด๋ฆฐ์ด ์—ญ์‚ฌ ์บ ํ”„, ์–ด๋ฆฐ์ด๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ์—ญ์‚ฌ ๋…ธ๋ž˜ ๊ต์‹ค, ๊ตญํ†  ์—ญ์‚ฌ ์—ฌํ–‰ ์ˆœ๋ก€๋ฅผ ์šด์˜ํ•˜์—ฌ ์–ด๋ฆฐ์ด๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ํ•œ๊ตญ์˜ ์—ญ์‚ฌ๋ฅผ ์„ค๋ช…ํ•˜๋Š” ๋ฐ์— ์ฃผ๋ ฅํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋˜ํ•œ ์Œ์•… ํ”„๋กœ๋“€์„œ๋กœ ํ™œ๋™ํ•˜๋ฉด์„œ ๊น€๊ด‘์„, ๊ธธ์€์ •, ๋ณ€์ง„์„ญ, ์‹œ์ธ๊ณผ ์ดŒ์žฅ์„ ๋น„๋กฏํ•œ ์‹ ์ธ ๊ฐ€์ˆ˜๋“ค์„ ๋ฐœ๊ตดํ•˜๊ธฐ๋„ ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1992๋…„ 11์›”์—๋Š” ํ™ฉ์˜์กฐ ์„ ์ˆ˜์˜ 1992๋…„ ๋ฐ”๋ฅด์…€๋กœ๋‚˜ ํ•˜๊ณ„ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ๋‚จ์ž ๋งˆ๋ผํ†ค ๊ธˆ๋ฉ”๋‹ฌ์„ ๊ธฐ๋…ํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ ใ€Šํ™ฉ์˜์กฐ ๋งˆ๋ผํ†ค ์ œํŒจ ๊ธฐ๋… ์Œ๋ฐ˜ - ์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ ๋‚˜๋Š” ํ•ด๋ƒˆ์Šต๋‹ˆ๋‹คใ€‹๋ฅผ ์ œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ•๋ฌธ์˜์€ 1992๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 1998๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ SBS ๋ผ๋””์˜ค ํ”„๋กœ๋“€์„œ๋กœ ๊ทผ๋ฌดํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 1994๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 1995๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ KBS ํ”„๋กœ๊ทธ๋žจ ใ€Š์ „๊ตญ๋…ธ๋ž˜์ž๋ž‘ใ€‹ ์‹ฌ์‚ฌ์œ„์›์„ ๋งก์•˜๋Š”๋ฐ ๊น€์„ ๋™ ์•„๋‚˜์šด์„œ๊ฐ€ ํ•˜์ฐจํ•˜๊ณ  ์†กํ•ด๊ฐ€ ๋‹ค์‹œ ๋“ค์–ด์˜ฌ ๋•Œ ์ •ํ’์†ก, ์‹ ๋Œ€์„ฑ, ์ดํ˜ธ์„ญ์—๊ฒŒ ์ž๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ๋ฌผ๋ ค์คฌ๋‹ค. ๋ฐ•๋ฌธ์˜์€ 2000๋…„๋ถ€ํ„ฐ 2006๋…„๊นŒ์ง€ ๊ฐ€์กฑ๋“ค๊ณผ ํ•จ๊ป˜ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ๋Œˆ๋Ÿฌ์Šค์— ๊ฑฐ์ฃผํ–ˆ๋‹ค. 2010๋…„์—๋Š” ํ•œ๊ตญ์ฝ˜์„œ๋ฐ”ํ† ๋ฆฌ(ํ˜„์žฌ์˜ ํ•œ๊ตญ๊ตญ์ œ์˜ˆ์ˆ ์›) ์—ฐ์˜ˆ๋น„์ฆˆ๋‹ˆ์Šคํ•™๋ถ€ ๊ต์ˆ˜๋กœ ํ™œ๋™ํ–ˆ๊ณ  2017๋…„์—๋Š” 2018๋…„ ํ‰์ฐฝ ๋™๊ณ„ ์˜ฌ๋ฆผํ”ฝ ์„ฑ๊ณต ๊ธฐ์› ๋™์š” ์•จ๋ฒ” ใ€Šํ‰์ฐฝ์†กใ€‹์„ ์ œ์ž‘ํ–ˆ๋‹ค. ์ฃผ์š” ์ž‘ํ’ˆ ๋…ธ๋ž˜ ใ€Š๋…๋„๋Š” ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ๋•…ใ€‹ (1982๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ •๊ด‘ํƒœ) ใ€Š๋„์š”์ƒˆ์˜ ๋น„๋ฐ€ใ€‹ (1983๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ •๊ด‘ํƒœ) ใ€Šํ˜ธ๋ž‘์ด์™€ ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜๊นกใ€‹ (1983๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ •๊ด‘ํƒœ) ใ€Š๋ฐ”๋ณด ์˜จ๋‹ฌ๊ณผ ํ‰๊ฐ•๊ณต์ฃผใ€‹ (1983๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ •๊ด‘ํƒœ) ใ€Š๋‹น์‹ ์€ ๊ฝƒ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผใ€‹ (1983๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ •๊ด‘ํƒœ) ใ€Š์ง€๊ตฌ๋Š” ๋ฉธ๋งํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์œผ๋ฆฌใ€‹ (1983๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ •๊ด‘ํƒœ) ใ€Šํ™”๋ž‘ ๊ด€์ฐฝใ€‹ (1983๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ •๊ด‘ํƒœ) ใ€Š์•„์ธ์Šˆํƒ€์ธใ€‹ (1983๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ •๊ด‘ํƒœ) ใ€Š์˜๋ณ‘๋Œ€์žฅ ๊ณฝ์žฌ์šฐใ€‹ (1983๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ •๊ด‘ํƒœ) ใ€Š๊ณ„๋ฐฑ ์žฅ๊ตฐใ€‹ (1983๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ •๊ด‘ํƒœ) ใ€Š๊ด‘๊ฐœํ† ๋Œ€์™•ใ€‹ (1983๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ •๊ด‘ํƒœ) ใ€Š์•„๋ฆ„๋‹ค์šด ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ๋‚˜๋ผใ€‹ (1984๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ธ์ˆœ์ด) ใ€Šํ”๋“ค๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๊ฐˆ๋Œ€ใ€‹ (1984๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ธ์ˆœ์ด) ใ€Š์—ฌ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ์–ด๋””๋ƒใ€‹ (1984๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ธ์ˆœ์ด) ใ€Š์•ผ์†ํ•œ ๋‚ด๋‹˜ใ€‹ (1984๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ธ์ˆœ์ด) ใ€Š๋„ˆ์™€ ๋‚˜ใ€‹ (1984๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ธ์ˆœ์ด) ใ€Š์ด๋ณ„์˜ ๋ˆˆ๋™์žใ€‹ (1984๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ธ์ˆœ์ด) ใ€Š๊ธธ์„ถ์— ํ•€ ๊ฝƒใ€‹ (1984๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ธ์ˆœ์ด) ใ€Š๊น€์น˜ ์ฃผ์ œ๊ฐ€ใ€‹ (1985๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ •๊ด‘ํƒœ) ใ€Š์งœ๋ผ๋น ๋น ใ€‹ (1985๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ •๊ด‘ํƒœ) ใ€Š์•…์–ด ์‚ฌ๋ƒฅใ€‹ (1985๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ •๊ด‘ํƒœ) ใ€Šํž˜๋‚ด๋ผ ํž˜ใ€‹ (1985๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ •๊ด‘ํƒœ) ใ€Šํƒˆ์ถค ๋…ธ๋ž˜ใ€‹ (1985๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ •๊ด‘ํƒœ) ใ€Šํฐ ๋ฐ”์œ„ ์ž‘์€ ๋ฐ”์œ„ใ€‹ (1985๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ •๊ด‘ํƒœ) ใ€Š๋ฒˆ์ฉ ๋ฒˆ์ฉใ€‹ (1985๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ •๊ด‘ํƒœ) ใ€Š๋‚จ๋ชฐ๋ž˜ ํ˜๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๋ˆˆ๋ฌผใ€‹ (1988๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ๋‚จ๊ถ์˜ฅ๋ถ„) ใ€Š๋Šฆ์ง€ ์•Š์•˜์–ด์š”ใ€‹ (1990๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ด์ง€์—ฐ) ใ€Š์™ธ๋กœ์›€์˜ ๊ณ„์ ˆใ€‹ (1990๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ๊ฐ•์ˆ˜์ง€) ใ€Šํ•œ๊ตญ์„ ๋น›๋‚ธ 100๋ช…์˜ ์œ„์ธ๋“คใ€‹ (1991๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ตœ์˜์ค€) ใ€Š๋งˆ์Œ์€ ํ•˜๋‚˜ใ€‹ (1991๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ตœ์˜์ค€) ใ€Š๋Œ€ํ•œ์˜ ์šฉ์‚ฌใ€‹ (1991๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ตœ์˜์ค€) ใ€Š์šฐ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ํ•œ๋ฏผ์กฑใ€‹ (1991๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ตœ์˜์ค€) ใ€Š๋‹ฌ๋ ค๋ผ ์†Œ๋…„ ๊ณ ์ฃผ๋ชฝใ€‹ (1991๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์„œ์„ ํƒ(์Šˆํผ๋งน๊ฝ์ด)) ใ€Š๋ฐฑ๊ฒฐ ์„ ์ƒ ๋–ก๋ฐฉ์•„ใ€‹ (1991๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์„œ์„ ํƒ(์Šˆํผ๋งน๊ฝ์ด)) ใ€Šํ•ญ์ผ ํˆฌ์Ÿ 33์ธใ€‹ (1991๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์„œ์„ ํƒ(์Šˆํผ๋งน๊ฝ์ด)) ใ€Š๋‚˜์˜ ๊ฟˆใ€‹ (1992๋…„, ๋‚ญ์†ก: ํ™ฉ์˜์กฐ) ใ€Š์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ ๋‚˜๋Š” ํ•ด๋ƒˆ์Šต๋‹ˆ๋‹คใ€‹ (1992๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ๋ฐฐ์˜ํ˜ธ) ใ€Šํž˜๋‚ด๋ผ ์ฝ”๋ฆฌ์•„!ใ€‹ (1992๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์†Œ๋ฆฌ๋ชจ๋‘ ) ใ€Š์ Š์€ ๋‚ ์— ๋งบ์€ ์šฐ์ •ใ€‹ (1992๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ๋ฎค์ฆˆ) ใ€Šํž˜๋‚ด๋ผ ํž˜ ์ ‘์†๊ณกใ€‹ (1992๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์‚ฌ๋ž‘๋…ธ๋ž˜์™€ ํ•˜๋‚˜๋˜๊ธฐ) ใ€Š๊ฟˆ์˜ ์„ธ๊ณ„๋กœใ€‹ (1992๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์‚ผ๊ฐํ˜•) ใ€Šํ™ฉ์ œ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌใ€‹ (1993๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ํ™์ˆ˜์ฒ ) ใ€Š๋ˆ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์—ใ€‹ (1993๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ํ™์ˆ˜์ฒ ) ใ€Š์‚ฌ๋ž‘์„ ๊ฐ€๋ฅด์ณ์ค€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒใ€‹ (1993๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ํ™์ˆ˜์ฒ ) ใ€Š๊ทธ๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ์›ํ•œ๋‹ค๋ฉดใ€‹ (1993๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ํ™์ˆ˜์ฒ ) ใ€Š์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆใ€‹ (1993๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ํ™์ˆ˜์ฒ ) ใ€Š๊ฒฐ๋ฒˆใ€‹ (1993๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ํ™์ˆ˜์ฒ ) ใ€Š๋Œ€์ง€์˜ ํ•ญ๊ตฌ, ๋…๋„ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์„œ์šธใ€‹ (1994๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ๋ธ”๋ž™ํ™€) ใ€Šํ•œ๊ตญ์„ ๋น›๋‚ธ 100๋ช…์˜ ์Šคํฌ์ธ ๋งจใ€‹ (2001๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ตœ์˜์ค€) ใ€Š์•„! ๊ณ ๊ตฌ๋ คใ€‹ (2004๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์„œํฌ) ใ€Š๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ์‹ธ์šฐ์ง€ ๋งˆใ€‹ (2004๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์„œํฌ) ใ€Š๋…๋„๋กœ ๋‚ ์•„๊ฐ„ ํ˜ธ๋ž‘๋‚˜๋น„ใ€‹ (2005๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ์ •๊ด‘ํƒœ) ใ€Š์‹  ๋…๋„๋Š” ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ๋•…ใ€‹ (2006๋…„, ๋…ธ๋ž˜: ๋งˆ๋ฒ•์ „์„ค) ์ €์„œ ์‹œ์ง‘ ใ€Š๋„ˆ๋ž‘ ๊ฒฐํ˜ผํ•˜๊ณ  ์‹ถ์–ดใ€‹ (1991๋…„, ๋ฐ”ํ•˜) - '๋ฌธ์˜'์ด๋ผ๋Š” ํ•„๋ช…์œผ๋กœ ์ถœ๊ฐ„๋จ. ์ฐฝ์ž‘ ์†Œ์„ค ใ€Š์ •์ง€ ๋งˆ์„์—์„œ ๋ณด๋‚ด์˜จ ์Œฉ๋–ฝ์ฅ๋ฒ ๋ฆฌ์˜ ํŽธ์ง€ใ€‹ (1992๋…„, ๋ฐ”ํ•˜) - ์•™ํˆฌ์•ˆ ๋“œ ์ƒํ…์ฅํŽ˜๋ฆฌ์˜ ์†Œ์„ค ใ€Š์–ด๋ฆฐ ์™•์žใ€‹์˜ ์†ํŽธ ์„ฑ๊ฒฉ์„ ๋ค ์šฐํ™” ํ˜•์‹์˜ ์†Œ์„ค. ๋งŒํ™” ใ€Š์–ด๋ฆฐ์ด๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ์—ญ์‚ฌ ์—ฌํ–‰ ๋งŒํ™” ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ - ํ•œ๊ตญ์„ ๋น›๋‚ธ 100๋ช…์˜ ์œ„์ธ๋“คใ€‹ (1996๋…„, ์ƒ์•„์ถœํŒ) - ์ด 5๊ถŒ์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋จ. ๋ฐ•๋ฌธ์˜์ด ๊ธ€์„, ์ด๋‚จ์šฐ๊ฐ€ ๊ทธ๋ฆผ์„ ๋‹ด๋‹นํ•จ. ๋งŒํ™” ใ€Š์–ด๋ฆฐ์ด๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ์—ญ์‚ฌ ์—ฌํ–‰ ๋งŒํ™” ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ - ์„ธ๊ณ„๋ฅผ ๋น›๋‚ธ 100๋ช…์˜ ์œ„์ธ๋“คใ€‹ (1996๋…„, ์ƒ์•„์ถœํŒ) - ์ด 3๊ถŒ์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋จ. ๋ฐ•๋ฌธ์˜์ด ๊ธ€์„, ์ด๋‚จ์šฐ๊ฐ€ ๊ทธ๋ฆผ์„ ๋‹ด๋‹นํ•จ. ์ฐฝ์ž‘ ์†Œ์„ค ใ€Š์•„๋ฆ„๋‹ค์šด ์—ฌํ–‰ใ€‹ (1997๋…„, ๋ถํด๋Ÿฝ) - ์•™ํˆฌ์•ˆ ๋“œ ์ƒํ…์ฅํŽ˜๋ฆฌ์˜ ์‹ค์ข…์„ ๋ชจํ‹ฐ๋ธŒ๋กœ ํ•˜์—ฌ ์‚ฌ๋ง‰์—์„œ์˜ ์ž์‹ ๋งŒ์˜ ๊นจ๋‹ฌ์Œ์„ ์ฃผ์ œ๋กœ ์ง€์€ ์†Œ์„ค. ์†Œ์„ค ใ€Šํ™ฉ์ œ - ์ œ๊ตญ์˜ ๋ถ€ํ™œใ€‹ (2009๋…„, ํ‰๋ฏผ์‚ฌ) - ์ด 3๊ถŒ์œผ๋กœ ๊ตฌ์„ฑ๋จ. '๋ฌธ์˜'์ด๋ผ๋Š” ํ•„๋ช…์œผ๋กœ ์ถœ๊ฐ„๋จ. ํ•œ๊ตญ์ฝ˜ํ…์ธ ์ง„ํฅ์›์ด ์ฃผ์ตœํ•œ ์ œ1ํšŒ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ๋ฌธํ™”์ฝ˜ํ…์ธ  ๊ณต๋ชจ์ „ ์†Œ์„ค ๋ถ€๋ฌธ 1์œ„ ์ˆ˜์ƒ์ž‘. ์ˆ˜ํ•„์ง‘ ใ€Š๋„˜์–ด์ ธ์•ผ ์ผ์–ด์„ค ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ณ  ์ผ์–ด์„œ์•ผ ๊ฑธ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹คใ€‹ (2013๋…„, ๋‚˜๋ž˜๋ถ) - ์Šค์Šค๋กœ ์ž์‹ ์„ ๋˜๋Œ์•„๋ณด๊ณ  ๊นจ์šฐ์ณ๊ฐ€๋Š” ๊ณผ์ •, ์ธ์ƒ ์—ญ์ „์˜ ์ง€ํ˜œ๋ฅผ ์•Œ๋ ค์ฃผ๋Š” ์—์„ธ์ด๋ฅผ ๋ชจ์€ ์ฑ…. ์ˆ˜ํ•„์ง‘ ใ€Š๋ˆ„๊ตฌ๋‚˜ ๊ฟˆ๊พธ์ง€๋งŒ ์•„๋ฌด๋‚˜ ์ด๋ฃฐ ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋Š” ๊ฒƒ๋“คใ€‹ (2014๋…„, ๋‚˜๋ž˜๋ถ) - ์ž์‹ ์˜ ์ธ์ƒ์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ํšŒ๊ณ ์™€ ์šฐํ™”๋ฅผ ๊ฒฐํ•ฉํ•œ ์ˆ˜ํ•„์ง‘. ๊ทธ๋ฆผ์ฑ… ใ€Š(๊ทธ ๋ˆ„๊ฐ€ ์•„๋ฌด๋ฆฌ ์ž๊ธฐ๋„ค ๋•…์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์šฐ๊ฒจ๋„) ๋…๋„๋Š” ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ๋•…ใ€‹ (2015๋…„, ํ•˜๋Š˜์„๋‚˜๋Š”์ฝ”๋ผ๋ฆฌ) - ์–ด๋ฆฐ์ด๋“ค์—๊ฒŒ ๋…๋„์— ๊ด€ํ•œ ์ •๋ณด๋ฅผ ์ „๋‹ฌํ•˜๊ธฐ ์œ„ํ•ด ์ง‘ํ•„ํ•œ ๊ทธ๋ฆผ์ฑ…. ์ˆ˜ํ•„์ง‘ ใ€Š๊ฑฑ์ • ๋ง์•„์š”, ์—„๋งˆใ€‹ (2017๋…„, ๋‚˜๋ž˜๋ถ) - '์—„๋งˆ'๋ฅผ ํ†ตํ•ด ํ–‰๋ณตํ•œ ์‚ถ์„ ๋ฐœ๊ฒฌํ•˜๋Š” ๋‚ด์šฉ์ด ๋‹ด๊ธด ์—์„ธ์ด๋ฅผ ๋ชจ์€ ์ฑ…. ๊ฐ์ฃผ 1952๋…„ ์ถœ์ƒ ์‚ด์•„์žˆ๋Š” ์‚ฌ๋žŒ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์ž‘์‚ฌ๊ฐ€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์ž‘๊ณก๊ฐ€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๋‚จ์ž ๊ฐ€์ˆ˜ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๊ธฐํƒ€ ์—ฐ์ฃผ์ž ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ๋ฐฉ์†ก์ธ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ํ”„๋กœ๋“€์„œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์Œ์•… ํ”„๋กœ๋“€์„œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์Œ์•… ํ‰๋ก ๊ฐ€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์ž‘๊ฐ€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์‹œ์ธ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์†Œ์„ค๊ฐ€ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์˜ ์ˆ˜ํ•„๊ฐ€ ๋ถ€์‚ฐ๊ด‘์—ญ์‹œ ์ถœ์‹  ๋Œ€๊ด‘์ค‘ํ•™๊ต (์„œ์šธ) ๋™๋ฌธ ๋Œ€๊ด‘๊ณ ๋“ฑํ•™๊ต ๋™๋ฌธ ์„œ์šธ๋Œ€ํ•™๊ต ๊ณต๊ณผ๋Œ€ํ•™ ๋™๋ฌธ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ์— ๊ฑฐ์ฃผํ•œ ๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ์ธ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Park%20Moon-young
Park Moon-young
Park Moon-young (; born 1952) is a South Korean lyricist, composer, singer, guitarist, producer, music critic and writer. During his career as a lyricist and composer, he used the stage name Park In-ho () and the pen name Moon Young () during his career as a writer. Life Park Moon-young was born in 1952 in Busan, Gyeongsangnam-do. Park's father is a carpenter from Wonju, Gangwon Province, and his mother is from Pyeongchang County, Gangwon Province. Park Moon-young's parents gave birth to Park Moon-young in 1952 when the Korean War was under way in Busan, a refuge. Park Moon-young moved to Seoul with her family as a child and learned to play the violin since she was in elementary school. He graduated from Daegwang Middle School, Daegwang High School and Seoul National University of Technology, and worked with Kim Eun-kwang as a member of the male duo-member guitar music group "Nondureong Batdureong" () from 1973 to 1978. Park Moon-young was in charge of plant design at Daewoo Engineering for a while after serving in the military. In 1977, he joined the company as an FM radio producer for Tongyang Broadcasting Corporation (TBC). He moved to the Korea Broadcasting System (KBS) following the Policy for Merger and Abolition of the Press in November 1980 and directed the radio programs To You For Forgetting the Night, Hello, Hwang In-yong, Kang Bu-ja, Rock-paper-scissors, and KBS University Song Festival. He also worked as a writer for KBS 2TV's comedy show Humour No. 1 (). Park Moon-young worked as a lyricist, composer, and music critic since writing and composing the song Dokdo is Our Land released by singer Jeong Gwang-tae in 1982, and published songs mainly based on Korean history and culture. In July 1990, he resigned as a music producer for KBS FM Radio. In 1991, he wrote and composed the song 100 Great People Who Shined Korea () released by comedian Choi Young-joon, which won the Patriotic Lyrics Award at the 5th Korean Song Awards hosted by the Korean Lyric Research Association in 1991. Park Moon-young established a children's history singing group and distributed songs written and composed based on Korean history and culture. In addition, he focused on explaining Korean history to children by operating a children's history camp, a history song class for children, and a pilgrimage to the country's history. While working as a music producer, he also discovered new singers such as Kim Kwang-seok, Gil Eun-jung, Byun Jin-sub and Siinkwa Chonjang. In November 1992, he produced A Record Celebrating Hwang Young-cho's Victory in Marathon - Mother I Did It () to commemorate Hwang Young-cho's gold medal in the men's marathon at the 1992 Summer Olympics held in Barcelona, Spain. Park Moon-young worked as a Seoul Broadcasting System (SBS) radio producer from 1992 to 1998. From 1994 to 1995, he served as a judge for the KBS program National Singing Contest and when announcer Kim Sun-dong got off and Song Hae came back in, he handed over his seat to Jeong Poong-song, Shin Dae-sung, and Lee Ho-seop. Park Moon-young lived with her family in Dallas from 2000 to 2006. In 2010, he worked as a professor of entertainment business at the Korea Conservatory (currently the Korea Institute of International Arts) and in 2017, he produced a children's song album Pyeongchang Song (), wishing for the success of the 2018 Winter Olympics held in Pyeongchang, South Korea. Works Songs Dokdo is our territory (๋…๋„๋Š” ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ๋•…, 1982, Song: Jung Kwang-tae) The Secret of the Sandpiper (๋„์š”์ƒˆ์˜ ๋น„๋ฐ€, 1983, Song: Jung Kwang-tae) Tiger and susukkang (ํ˜ธ๋ž‘์ด์™€ ์ˆ˜์ˆ˜๊นก, 1983, Song: Jung Kwang-tae) Foolish Ondal and Princess Pyeonggang (๋ฐ”๋ณด ์˜จ๋‹ฌ๊ณผ ํ‰๊ฐ•๊ณต์ฃผ, 1983, Song: Jung Kwang-tae) You're like a flower (๋‹น์‹ ์€ ๊ฝƒ์ฒ˜๋Ÿผ, 1983, Song: Jung Kwang-tae) The Earth Will Not Perish (์ง€๊ตฌ๋Š” ๋ฉธ๋งํ•˜์ง€ ์•Š์œผ๋ฆฌ, 1983, Song: Jung Kwang-tae) Hwarang Gwanchang (ํ™”๋ž‘ ๊ด€์ฐฝ, 1983, Song: Jung Kwang-tae) Einstein (์•„์ธ์Šˆํƒ€์ธ, 1983, Song: Jung Kwang-tae) Kwak Jae-woo, the leader of the righteous army (์˜๋ณ‘๋Œ€์žฅ ๊ณฝ์žฌ์šฐ, 1983, Song: Jung Kwang-tae) General Gyebaek (๊ณ„๋ฐฑ ์žฅ๊ตฐ, 1983, Song: Jung Kwang-tae) Gwanggaeto the Great (๊ด‘๊ฐœํ† ๋Œ€์™•, 1983, Song: Jung Kwang-tae) Our beautiful country (์•„๋ฆ„๋‹ค์šด ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ๋‚˜๋ผ, 1984, Song: Insooni) Shaking Reeds (ํ”๋“ค๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๊ฐˆ๋Œ€, 1984, Song: Insooni) Where are you (์—ฌ๊ธฐ๊ฐ€ ์–ด๋””๋ƒ, 1984, Song: Insooni) Heartless me (์•ผ์†ํ•œ ๋‚ด๋‹˜, 1984, Song: Insooni) You and Me (๋„ˆ์™€ ๋‚˜, 1984, Song: Insooni) Eyes of Farewell (์ด๋ณ„์˜ ๋ˆˆ๋™์ž, 1984, Song: Insooni) Flowers on the edge of the road (๊ธธ์„ถ์— ํ•€ ๊ฝƒ, 1984, Song: Insooni) Kimchi Theme song (๊น€์น˜ ์ฃผ์ œ๊ฐ€, 1985, Song: Jung Kwang-tae) Jjarappappa (์งœ๋ผ๋น ๋น , 1985, Song: Jung Kwang-tae) Crocodile Hunting (์•…์–ด ์‚ฌ๋ƒฅ, 1985, Song: Jung Kwang-tae) Cheer up, Power (ํž˜๋‚ด๋ผ ํž˜, 1985, Song: Jung Kwang-tae) Mask dance song (ํƒˆ์ถค ๋…ธ๋ž˜, 1985, Song: Jung Kwang-tae) Big rocks, small rocks (ํฐ ๋ฐ”์œ„ ์ž‘์€ ๋ฐ”์œ„, 1985, Song: Jung Kwang-tae) Glisteningly (๋ฒˆ์ฉ ๋ฒˆ์ฉ, 1985, Song: Jung Kwang-tae) Secretly shed tears (๋‚จ๋ชฐ๋ž˜ ํ˜๋ฆฌ๋Š” ๋ˆˆ๋ฌผ, 1988, Song: Namgoong Okbun) It's Not Too Late (๋Šฆ์ง€ ์•Š์•˜์–ด์š”, 1990, Song: Lee Ji-yeon) The Season of Loneliness (์™ธ๋กœ์›€์˜ ๊ณ„์ ˆ, 1990, Song: Kang Susie) 100 Great People Who Shined Korea (ํ•œ๊ตญ์„ ๋น›๋‚ธ 100๋ช…์˜ ์œ„์ธ๋“ค, 1991, Song: Choi Young-joon) Mind is one (๋งˆ์Œ์€ ํ•˜๋‚˜, 1991, Song: Choi Young-joon) Korean warrior (๋Œ€ํ•œ์˜ ์šฉ์‚ฌ, 1991, Song: Choi Young-joon) We Are the Korean People (์šฐ๋ฆฌ๋Š” ํ•œ๋ฏผ์กฑ, 1991, Song: Choi Young-joon) Run Boy Go Jumong (๋‹ฌ๋ ค๋ผ ์†Œ๋…„ ๊ณ ์ฃผ๋ชฝ, 1991, Song: Seo Sun-taek (Super Mencius)) Teacher Baekgyeol's rice cake mill (๋ฐฑ๊ฒฐ ์„ ์ƒ ๋–ก๋ฐฉ์•„, 1991, Song: Seo Sun-taek (Super Mencius)) 33 People in Anti-Japanese Struggle (ํ•ญ์ผ ํˆฌ์Ÿ 33์ธ, 1991, Song: Seo Sun-taek (Super Mencius)) My Dream (๋‚˜์˜ ๊ฟˆ, 1992, Recitation: Hwang Young-cho) Mother, I did it (์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ ๋‚˜๋Š” ํ•ด๋ƒˆ์Šต๋‹ˆ๋‹ค, 1992, Song: Bae Young-ho) Cheer up, Korea! (ํž˜๋‚ด๋ผ ์ฝ”๋ฆฌ์•„!, 1992, Song: Sorimodum) Friendship Made on Young Days (์ Š์€ ๋‚ ์— ๋งบ์€ ์šฐ์ •, 1992, Song: Muse) Cheer up, Power Connection Song (ํž˜๋‚ด๋ผ ํž˜ ์ ‘์†๊ณก, 1992, Song: Becoming One with Love Song) To the World of Dreams (๊ฟˆ์˜ ์„ธ๊ณ„๋กœ, 1992, Song: Samgakhyeong) For the emperor (ํ™ฉ์ œ๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•˜์—ฌ, 1993, Song: Hong Soo-chul) Because of Money (๋ˆ ๋•Œ๋ฌธ์—, 1993, Song: Hong Soo-chul) The one who taught me love (์‚ฌ๋ž‘์„ ๊ฐ€๋ฅด์ณ์ค€ ์‚ฌ๋žŒ, 1993, Song: Hong Soo-chul) If you want (๊ทธ๋Œ€๊ฐ€ ์›ํ•œ๋‹ค๋ฉด, 1993, Song: Hong Soo-chul) Mother (์–ด๋จธ๋‹ˆ, 1993, Song: Hong Soo-chul) Missing number (๊ฒฐ๋ฒˆ, 1993, Song: Hong Soo-chul) The Port of the Earth, Dokdo and Seoul (๋Œ€์ง€์˜ ํ•ญ๊ตฌ, ๋…๋„ ๊ทธ๋ฆฌ๊ณ  ์„œ์šธ, 1994, Song: Black hole) 100 Sportsmen Who Shined Korea (ํ•œ๊ตญ์„ ๋น›๋‚ธ 100๋ช…์˜ ์Šคํฌ์ธ ๋งจ, 2001, Song: Choi Young-joon) Ah! Goguryeo (์•„! ๊ณ ๊ตฌ๋ ค, 2004, Song: Seo Hee) Don't Fight, Korea (๋Œ€ํ•œ๋ฏผ๊ตญ ์‹ธ์šฐ์ง€ ๋งˆ, 2004, Song: Seo Hee) Swallowtail butterfly flew to Dokdo (๋…๋„๋กœ ๋‚ ์•„๊ฐ„ ํ˜ธ๋ž‘๋‚˜๋น„, 2005, Song: Jung Kwang-tae) New Dokdo is our territory (์‹  ๋…๋„๋Š” ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ๋•…, 2006, Song: A conjurer legend) Books Poetry collection I Want to Marry You (๋„ˆ๋ž‘ ๊ฒฐํ˜ผํ•˜๊ณ  ์‹ถ์–ด, 1991) - Published under the pen name "Moon Young". Original novel Letters from Saint-Exupery from Jeongji Village (์ •์ง€ ๋งˆ์„์—์„œ ๋ณด๋‚ด์˜จ ์Œฉ๋–ฝ์ฅ๋ฒ ๋ฆฌ์˜ ํŽธ์ง€, 1992) - a fable-style novel with the character of a sequel to Antoine de Saint-Exupรฉry's novel The Little Prince. Comic History Travel for Children - 100 Great People Who Shined Korea (์–ด๋ฆฐ์ด๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ์—ญ์‚ฌ ์—ฌํ–‰ ๋งŒํ™” ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ - ํ•œ๊ตญ์„ ๋น›๋‚ธ 100๋ช…์˜ ์œ„์ธ๋“ค, 1996) - consists of a total of five volumes. Park Moon-young is in charge of writing and Lee Nam-woo is in charge of painting. Comic History Travel for Children - 100 Great People Who Shined the World (์–ด๋ฆฐ์ด๋ฅผ ์œ„ํ•œ ์—ญ์‚ฌ ์—ฌํ–‰ ๋งŒํ™” ์‹œ๋ฆฌ์ฆˆ - ์„ธ๊ณ„๋ฅผ ๋น›๋‚ธ 100๋ช…์˜ ์œ„์ธ๋“ค, 1996) - consisting of a total of three volumes. Park Moon-young is in charge of writing and Lee Nam-woo is in charge of painting. Original novel Beautiful Journey (์•„๋ฆ„๋‹ค์šด ์—ฌํ–‰, 1997) - a novel based on the theme of one's own enlightenment in the desert, inspired by the disappearance of Antoine de Saint-Exupรฉry. Novel The Emperor - Rebirth of the Empire (ํ™ฉ์ œ - ์ œ๊ตญ์˜ ๋ถ€ํ™œ, 2009) - consists of a total of three volumes. Published under the pen name "Moon Young". Hosted by the Korea Creative Content Agency, the first winner of the novel category at the first Korea Culture Content Contest. Essay collection You can stand up when you fall over and walk when you stand up (๋„˜์–ด์ ธ์•ผ ์ผ์–ด์„ค ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๊ณ  ์ผ์–ด์„œ์•ผ ๊ฑธ์„ ์ˆ˜ ์žˆ๋‹ค, 2013) - a collection of essays that tell you the wisdom of life's reversal, the process of self-reflecting and enlightening yourself. Essay collection The Things Anyone Dream But Can't Achieve (๋ˆ„๊ตฌ๋‚˜ ๊ฟˆ๊พธ์ง€๋งŒ ์•„๋ฌด๋‚˜ ์ด๋ฃฐ ์ˆ˜ ์—†๋Š” ๊ฒƒ๋“ค, 2014) - a collection of essays combining reminiscences and fables about one's life. Picture book (No matter how many people claim to be their land) Dokdo is our territory ((๊ทธ ๋ˆ„๊ฐ€ ์•„๋ฌด๋ฆฌ ์ž๊ธฐ๋„ค ๋•…์ด๋ผ๊ณ  ์šฐ๊ฒจ๋„) ๋…๋„๋Š” ์šฐ๋ฆฌ ๋•…, 2015) - a picture book written to convey information about Dokdo to children. Essay collection Don't Worry, Mommy (๊ฑฑ์ • ๋ง์•„์š”, ์—„๋งˆ, 2017) - A collection of essays about discovering a happy life through "Mommy". References 1952 births Living people South Korean lyricists South Korean composers South Korean male singers South Korean guitarists South Korean record producers South Korean male writers South Korean male poets South Korean novelists South Korean essayists Musicians from Busan Seoul National University alumni South Korean expatriates in the United States Singers from Busan