Sunday, November 8, 2015


Gracious Da-yeon of the establishment's exploration group says that amid the frontier period, the Japanese Government-General of Korea revealed a hefty portion of Korea's social properties, including old tombs. Additionally, people frequently purchased and sold Korean social properties through barters, and trafficked unlawfully unearthed things, she said. "Ogura gathered numerous and various social properties through these official unearthings, tomb burglaries, and also an individual intensity for gathering workmanship," she clarified.
In any case, the greatest revelation by the Overseas Korean Cultural Heritage Foundation is the likelihood that a percentage of the things were gained and traveled through unlawful means, which could offer Korea some assistance with repatriating the accumulation. "On account of things uncovered from the tomb complex in Yeonsan-dong, Busan," Oh said, "they were unlawfully exhumed in 1931 and trafficked." Goodness included that the relics from Geumgwanchong Tomb in Gyeonggi, North Gyeongsang - formally exhumed by the Japanese government and itemized in an official report - sooner or later made it under the control of Ogura. Amid the frontier time, the Japanese government uncovered numerous social properties over the Korean Peninsula under an exertion named the "Examination Project of Joseon Historical Remains."
The guideline of the exhuming undertaking was that everything found turned into the ownership of the Japanese government. In any case, Ogura claims eight relics that were revealed in Geumgwanchong. Records demonstrate the relics from the tomb were exchanged at high costs not long after the unearthing.

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