This list primarily covers newspapers published in Korea before the late August 1945 division of Korea. For the post-division newspapers, see List of newspapers in South Korea or List of newspapers in North Korea. For a prose history, see History of newspapers in Korea. Note that this excludes newspapers published abroad by or for the Korean diaspora. It also excludes other types of publications like magazines and academic journals.
Many of these newspapers are scanned, searchable, and available for free on the Korean Newspaper Archive website. [1]
Image | Names [a] | Languages [b] | Year range | Notes | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chōsen shinpō 朝鮮新報 조선신보 | Japanese Chinese Korean | 1881–? | Japanese newspaper, first newspaper in Korea. [2] | [2] | |
Hansŏng sunbo 한성순보 漢城旬報 | Chinese | 1883–1884 | First Korean newspaper, published by Korean government. Succeeded by Hanseong jubo. | [3] | |
Hansŏng jubo 한성주보 漢城周報 | Korean Chinese | 1886–1888 | Successor to Hanseong sunbo. First newspaper primarily in Korean (mixed script). | [4] | |
Chōsen shinpō 朝鮮新報 조선신보 | Japanese | 1890–1908 | Unrelated to the 1881 paper. The second-ever Japanese newspaper in Korea, and first in Incheon. Founded as Jinsen Keijō Kakushū Shōhō, renamed to Chōsen Shunpō, then to Chōsen Shinpō. Merged with the Chōsen Times and succeeded by the Chōsen Shinbun. | [5] | |
Chōsen jihō 朝鮮時報 조선시보 | Japanese Korean | 1892–1941 | Founded as Fuzan Shōkyō, renamed to Tokua Bōeki Shinbun. Merged into Fuzan Nippō. | [6] | |
Shin chōsenpō 新朝鮮報 신조선보 | Japanese | 1894–1895 | Founded during a hiatus in Incheon's only Japanese newspaper at the time, Chōsen Shinpō. [7] Not to be confused with a 1945 Korean newspaper of the same name. [8] | [7] | |
Kanjō shinpō 漢城新報 한성신보 | Japanese Korean | 1895–1906 | Involved in the 1895 assassination of Empress Myeongseong. Merged into Keijō Nippō. | [9] | |
Tongnip sinmun The Independent 독립신문 獨立新聞 | Korean English | 1896–1899 | First to print exclusively in Hangul, and first private Korean newspaper. | [10] | |
Genzan jiji 元山時事 원산시사 | Japanese | 1897–? 1903–1906 | [11] | ||
The Korean Christian Advocate 대한그리스도인회보 | Korean | 1897–1900 [12] 1910–1915 | First Christian newspaper in Korea, founded by Methodist missionaries. Founded with a different Korean name (죠선크리스도인회보), changed in 1897. Joined The Christian News in 1905, [13] split back off in 1910 with different Korean title (그리스도회보). Merged back again into the successor paper Kidok Sinbo. [14] | [12] | |
The Christian News 예수교회보 | Korean | 1897–1915 | Presbyterian publication. Founded with different Korean name (그리스도신문), became nondenominational when The Korean Christian Advocate was merged into it in 1905, Korean name changed (예수교신보) in 1907. [15] Split again (예수교회보) from The Korean Christian Advocate. [14] [16] Merged back again into the successor paper Kidok Sinbo. [14] | [12] | |
Hyŏpsŏnghoe hoebo 협성회회보 協成會會報 | Korean | 1898–1898 | Succeeded by Maeil Sinmun. | [17] | |
Kyŏngsŏng sinmun 경성신문 京城新聞 | Korean | 1898–1898 | First Korean commerce newspaper. Merged into the Hwangsŏng Sinmun. Not to be confused with the 1907 Japanese newspaper of the same name. | [18] | |
Cheguk sinmun 제국신문 帝國新聞 | Korean | 1898–1910 | [19] | ||
Hwangsŏng sinmun 황성신문 皇城新聞 | Korean | 1898–1910 | Briefly went by Hansŏng Sinmun before its closure. | [20] | |
Maeil sinmun 매일신문 每日新聞 | Korean | 1898–1899 | Successor to Hyŏpsŏnghoe Hoebo. First daily newspaper in Korea. | [21] | |
The Korean Repository | English | 1899–1899 | Normally a monthly journal, published as a weekly newspaper for around four months. | [22] | |
Sisa ch'ongbo 시사총보 時事叢報 | Korean | 1899–1899 | Reorganized into the publishing company Kwangmunsa. | [23] | |
Sangmuch'ongbo 상무총보 商務總報 | Korean | 1899–? | Commerce newspaper, published after Maeil Sinmun closed and used its facilities. Closure date unknown. | [24] | |
Moppo shinpō 목포신보 木浦新報 | Japanese | 1899–1941 [25] | Merged into the Zennan Shinpō (全南新報). | [26] [27] | |
Tassei jūhō 達成週報 달성주보 | Japanese | 1901–1901 | Closed after four issues. | [28] [29] | |
Genzan nippō 群山日報 군산일보 | Japanese? | c. 1902–1941 | First weekly paper in North Jeolla Province. Founded as Genzan Shinpō, changed name and to daily paper in 1908. Merged into the Zenhoku Shinpō. | [30] | |
Kannan shinpō 韓南新報 한남신보 | Japanese | 1903–1908 [31] | Merged into the Genzan Nippō. | [32] | |
Taehan ilbo 대한일보 大韓日報 | Korean | 1904–? | Pro-Japanese Korean-language arm of the Incheon-based Chōsen Shinpō. | [33] | |
Daitō shinpō 大東新報 대동신보 | Japanese Korean [34] | 1904–1906 | Merged into Keijō Nippō. | [35] | |
The Korea Daily News Daehan Maeil Sinbo 대한매일신보 大韓每日申報 | English Korean | 1904–1910 | Two concurrent Korean versions: mixed script and Hangul. Succeeded by Maeil Sinbo, then by Seoul Shinmun . | [36] | |
Chōsen mainichi shinbun 朝鮮每日新聞 조선매일신문 | Japanese | 1904? | |||
Chōsen nichi nichi shinbun 朝鮮日日新聞 조선일일신문 | Japanese | 1904–? | Previously the Jinsen Shōbō (仁川商報; 인천상보). | [33] | |
Zenhoku shinpō 全北新報 전북신보 | Japanese Korean | 1904–1912 [37] | Distinct from a 1941 publication of the same name. | [38] | |
Zenhoku nippō 全北日報 전북일보 | Japanese | 1904–1941 | First newspaper in Jeonju. Founded as Zenshū Shinpō, changed name to Zenhoku Nichi Nichi Shinbun. Merged into Zenhoku Shinpō. | [39] [40] | |
Chōsen 朝鮮 조선 | Japanese | 1905–? | [41] | ||
Masan jihō 馬山時報 마산시보 | Japanese | 1905–1906 | First newspaper in Masan. | [42] | |
Fuzan nippō 釜山日報 부산일보 | Japanese | 1905–1945 | Previous names Chōsen Nippō and Chōsen Jiji Shinpō. Seized upon the arrival of the United States occupation force and reorganized into Busan Ilbo . | [43] [44] | |
The Seoul Press | English | 1905–1937 | Purchased by Japanese resident-general and converted into de facto Japanese colonial government publication. Sole daily English-language publication in Korea during colonial period. [45] [46] | [46] | |
Heijō shinpō 平壌新報 평양신보 | Japanese Korean | 1905–1908 | Acquired by Heijō Jitsugyō Shinpō and renamed to Heijō Nippō. | [47] | |
Chungang sinbo 중앙신보 中央新報 | Korean | 1906–1906 | Pro-Japanese Korean-language newspaper owned by a Japanese person. | [34] | |
Nanpo shinbun 南浦新聞 남포신문 | Japanese | 1906–1907 | Founded as Shinbun Chinnanpo (新聞鎭南浦). Merged into Chinnanpo Shinpō (鎮南浦新報). | [42] | |
Taikyū nichi nichi shinbun 大邱日日新聞 대구일일신문 | Japanese | 1906–1908 | Not to be confused with c. 1940 paper of the same name. Initially founded as the Taikyū Jitsugyō Shinpō. Changed names to Taikyū Shinpō, then Taikyū Nichi Nichi Shinbun. After a conflict, a separate newspaper called Taikyū Shinpō was founded, and then they merged into Taikyū Jihō (later Chōsen Minpō). | [48] | |
Kungmin sinbo 국민신보 國民新報 | Korean | 1906–1910 | Pro-Japanese paper published by Iljinhoe. | [49] | |
Mansebo 만세보 萬歲報 | Korean | 1906–1907 | Affiliated with Cheondoism. | [50] | |
Nanpo nippō 南浦日報 남포일보 | Japanese | 1906–1907 | Merged into Chinnanpo Shinpō (鎮南浦新報). | [42] | |
Keijō nippō 京城日報 경성일보 | Japanese | 1906–1945 | Merged from around seven newspapers. [35] De facto Japanese colonial government publication, the most significant newspaper in colonial Korea. [51] | [52] | |
Kitakan jitsugyō shinpō 北韓実業新報 북한실업신보 | Japanese | 1906–1907 | Merged into the Genzan Nippō. | [31] | |
Kyŏnghyang sinmun 경향신문 京鄕新聞 | Korean | 1906–1910 | Catholic. Restarted in 1946 as Kyunghyang Shinmun . | [53] | |
Heijō jitsugyō shinpō 平壌実業新報 북한실업신보 | Japanese | 1906–? | [54] | ||
Mankan shinpō 滿韓新報 만한신보 | Japanese | 1906–? | Changed names to Shingishū Jihō in 1908, then to Ōkō Nippō (鴨江日報) in 1910. | [55] | |
Taikyū nippō 大邱日報 대구일보 | Japanese | 1906–? | Forced to close after it published a critical piece about Itō Hirobumi. [56] | [57] | |
Masan shinpō 馬山新報 마산신보 | Japanese | 1906–? | Closed in 1908, reestablished, but closed again. Sold to the Keijō Nippō. Paper reopened in 1911 as Nansen Nippō. | [58] | |
Chōsen times 朝鮮タイムス 조선타임즈 | Japanese | 1907–1908 | Merged into Chōsen Shinbun. | [59] | |
Heian nippō 平安日報 평안일보 | Japanese | 1907–1908 | Based in Sinuiju. | [55] | |
Keijō shinpō 京城新報 경성신보 | Japanese | 1907–1912 | Briefly went by Keijō Shinbun in 1908 before returning to original name. | [60] | |
Fuzan nichi nichi shinbun 釜山日日新聞 부산일일신문 | Japanese | 1907–? | Closed shortly after founding. | [57] | |
Genzan jiji shinpō 元山時事新報 원산시사신보 | Japanese | 1907–1907 | Merged into the Genzan Nippō. | [31] | |
Kitakan shin nippon 北關新日本 북관신일본 | Japanese | 1907–? | Closed shortly after founding. | [55] | |
Taehan sinmun 대한신문 大韓新聞 | Korean | 1907–1910 | Pro-Japanese newspaper. Briefly renamed Hanyang Sinmun before being merged into Maeil Sinbo. | [61] | |
Chōsen minpō 朝鮮民報 조선민보 | Japanese | 1908–c. 1940 | Merged from Taikyū Nichi Nichi Shinbun and Taikyū Shinpō. [62] Earlier names Taikyū Jihō and Taikyū Shinbun. Merged with other local papers into the Taikyū Nichi Nichi Shinbun. [63] | [63] | |
Kankō shinpō 咸興新報 함흥신보 | Japanese | 1908–? | Closed shortly after founding. | [55] | |
Minyū shinbun 民友新聞 민우신문 | Japanese | 1908–? | [55] | ||
Chōsen shinbun 朝鮮新聞 조선신문 | Japanese | 1908–1942 | Merged from the Incheon-based Chōsen Shinpō and Chōsen Times. Merged into the Keijō Nippō. | [64] [65] | |
Taehan minbo 대한민보 大韓民報 | Korean | 1909–1910 | [66] | ||
Taedong ilbo 대동일보 大同日報 | Korean | 1909–1910 | Pro-Japanese publication. | [34] | |
Heijō shinbun 平壌新聞 평양신문 | Japanese Korean [67] | 1909–? | [54] | ||
Hansŏng sinbo 한성신보 漢城新報 | Korean | 1909–1909 | Pro-Japanese Korean-language publication owned by a Japanese person. Unrelated to the 1895 Japanese publication of the same name. | [34] | |
Chūsen nippō 中鮮日報 중선일보 | Japanese | 1909–1945 | First newspaper in Daejeon. First named Ōta Shinbun, then Sannan Shinpō in 1910, acquired by Keijō Nippō in 1912 and renamed to Konan Nippō. Became independent in 1918. Renamed to Chōsen Chuō Shinbun in 1932, then renamed to Chūsen Nippō in 1936. Seized upon the liberation of Korea. | [55] [68] | |
Gyeongnam Ilbo 경남일보 慶南日報 | Korean | 1909–1915 1946–1980 1989– | First regional Korean-language newspaper, [69] and first in Jinju. [70] Restarted twice, and still publishes today. | [69] | |
Shisa sinmun 시사신문 時事新聞 | Korean | 1910–1910 [34] 1919–1921 [71] | Pro-Japanese publication. | [34] [71] | |
Keijō shinbun 京城新聞 경성신문 | Japanese Korean | 1910–? | Distinct from the 1907 Keijō Shinpō, which briefly went by the same name | ||
Taehan ilil sinmun 대한일일신문 大韓日日新聞 | Korean | 1910–1910? | Pro-Japanese Korean-language publication owned by a Japanese person. Same owner as Hansŏng Sinbo. Closed after the annexation of Korea. | [34] | |
Maeil sinbo 매일신보 每日新報 | Korean | 1910–1945 | Pro-Japanese successor to The Korea Daily News, subordinated to the Keijō Nippō until 1937. Succeeded by the modern Seoul Shinmun . | [72] | |
Nansen nippō 南鮮日報 남선일보 | Japanese | 1911–1941 | Successor to Masan Shinpō. Merged into the Fuzan Nippō. | [58] | |
Chōsen jitsugyō shinpō 朝鮮実業新報 조선실업신보 | Japanese | 1911?– | [73] | ||
Kidok sinbo The Christian Messenger 기독신보 基督新報 | Korean | 1915–1937 | Successor to The Christian News and The Korean Christian Advocate. | [74] | |
Sungdae sibo 숭대시보 崇大時報 | Korean | 1919–1938 | First college newspaper in Korea. Affiliated with Soongsil University. Restarted in 1956. | [75] | |
Chosŏn tongnip sinmun 조선독립신문 朝鮮獨立新聞 | Korean | 1919–1920? | [76] | ||
The Chosun Ilbo 조선일보 朝鮮日報 | Korean | 1920– | [77] | ||
The Dong-A Ilbo 동아일보 東亞日報 | Korean | 1920– | [78] | ||
Sidae ilbo 시대일보 時代日報 | Korean | 1924–1926 | [69] | ||
Chungoe ilbo 중외일보 中外日報 | Korean | 1926–1931 | [79] | ||
Chosŏn chungang ilbo 조선중앙일보 朝鮮中央日報 | Korean | 1931–1937 | Previously named Jungang Ilbo. | [80] | |
Koryŏ sibo 고려시보 高麗時報 | Korean | 1933–1941 | [81] | ||
Pulgyo sibo 불교시보 佛敎時報 | Korean | 1935–1944 | [82] | ||
Keinichi shōkokumin shinbun 경일소국민신문 京日少國民新聞 | Japanese | 1938–1945 | Children's newspaper published by the Keijō Nippō. Founded as Keinichi Shōgakkōsei Shinbun, renamed in 1942. | [83] [84] | |
Kidok sinmun 기독신문 基督新聞 | Korean Japanese? | 1938–1942 | Founded by Korean Christians. Discontinued by order of the Japanese colonial government. | [85] | |
Kokumin shinpō 國民新報 국민신보 | Japanese | 1939–1942 | Japanese-language youth newspaper published by the Maeil Sinbo. [86] | [69] | |
Zenhoku shinpō 全北新報 전북신보 | Japanese Korean? | 1941–1945 [87] | Merged from around three newspapers. [40] After liberation, succeeded by a series of newspapers, ending with the contemporary Jeon Buk Il Bo . | [38] | |
Kōmin nippō 皇民日報 황민일보 | Japanese | 1942–1942 |
The Gyeongnam Ilbo (Korean: 경남일보) is a daily Korean-language regional newspaper published in Sangpyeong-dong, Jinju, South Korea.
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The Maeil Sinbo was a Korean-language newspaper that was published from 1910 to 1945 from Keijō (Seoul), Korea, Empire of Japan. The newspaper was the successor to The Korea Daily News, which was first published in 1904. It continued publication, largely as an organ of the Japanese colonial government, until the liberation of Korea in 1945. Afterwards, it was taken over by the United States Army Military Government in Korea and reorganized into the Seoul Shinmun by November 23, 1945.
Keijō nippō was a Japanese-language newspaper published in Korea from 1906 to 1945. It is primarily associated with the Japanese colonial period in Korea, and is considered to have functionally been an official newspaper of the Japanese Governor-General of Chōsen.
The Kanjō shinpō was a Japanese- and Korean-language newspaper published in Seoul, Joseon. It was founded in either late 1894 or February 1895, and ran until it was acquired by the Japanese Resident-General of Korea in 1906. It was then merged with another newspaper, Daitō shinpō, and became the Keijō Nippō.
The Daitō shinpō was a Japanese newspaper published in the Korean Empire between 1904 and 1906.
Chōsen Jihō was a Japanese-language and Korean-language daily newspaper published in Korea from 1894 to 1941.
Fuzan Nippō was a Japanese-language newspaper published in Busan, Korea from 1905 to 1945. It previously went by the names Chōsen Nippō and Chōsen Jiji Shinpō.
Chōsen Shinbun was a Japanese-language daily newspaper published in Korea from 1908 to 1942. It was merged from the Chōsen Shinpō and the Chōsen Times, and later merged into the Keijō Nippō by order of the Japanese colonial government.
The Chōsen shinpō was a Japanese-language newspaper published in Korea from 1890 to 1908. It was first published as Jinsen Keijō Kakushū Shōhō, then changed its name to Chōsen Shunpō in 1891. It received its final name in 1892. In 1908, it was merged with the Chōsen Times into the Chōsen shinbun.
Chūsen Nippō was a Japanese-language newspaper published in Daejeon, Korea, Empire of Japan from 1909 to 1945.
Heijō Shinpō was a Japanese-language and Korean-language newspaper published in Pyongyang, Korean Empire from 1905 to 1908.
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Keijō Shinpō was a daily Japanese-language newspaper published in Korea from 1907 to 1912. It briefly went by the name Keijō Shinbun in 1908 before returning to its original name.
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