Pyongyang

national capital, North Korea
Also known as: P’yŏngyang
Formerly spelled:
P’yŏngyang

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Pyongyang, province-level municipality and capital of North Korea. It is located in the west-central part of the country, on the Taedong River about 30 miles (48 km) inland from Korea Bay of the Yellow Sea. The city site occupies a level area on both sides of the river, and the built-up area spreads northward and eastward toward low mountains. Pyongyang is reputed to be the oldest city in Korea. Pop. (2008) city (urban area), 2,581,076; municipality, 3,255,288.

History

The ancient capital of the legendary Dangun dynasty (2333 bce) was located on the site where, according to legend, Pyongyang was founded in 1122 bce. The city’s history began in 108 bce with the establishment of a Chinese trading colony near Pyongyang, and the city was subsequently fortified. In 427 ce Pyongyang became the capital of the Goguryeo kingdom, but in 668 it was captured by Chinese invaders. Later the kings of the Goryeo dynasty (918–1392) made Pyongyang their secondary capital. The city fell to the Japanese in 1592 and was devastated by the Manchu in the early 17th century.

The successive invasions left their mark on the Koreans, who became suspicious of all foreigners. When Korea finally opened its doors to foreigners in the 19th century, Pyongyang became the base of an intensive campaign to bring Christianity to Korea. More than 100 churches were built in the city, which in the 1880s was reputed to have more Protestant missionaries than any other city in Asia.

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During the Sino-Japanese War (1894–95), much of Pyongyang was destroyed. Plague followed war, and in 1895 Pyongyang was left a virtually deserted and ruined city. During the Japanese occupation of Korea (1910–45), Pyongyang was built up as an industrial center. During the Korean War (1950–53) numerous air raids devastated Pyongyang. It was captured by United Nations forces in 1950 but subsequently was lost when Chinese communist forces entered the war. After 1953 the city was rebuilt with Soviet and Chinese assistance.

The contemporary city

A huge bronze statue of Chollima, a winged horse of Korean legend, atop a high pedestal dominates the skyline of Pyongyang and symbolizes to the residents the economic progress made after the end of the Korean War. Sections of the inner and northern walls and Hyonmu Gate are still standing, and several temples and pavilions that date from the Goguryeo kingdom have been reconstructed in the original architectural style. Modern landmarks include the Grand Theater; the Okryu Hall, which contains a large banquet hall for official functions and recreation facilities for the workers; and Kim Il-Sung Stadium. Beneath Moran Hill, the city’s main recreational center, is a huge underground theater. The reputed grave of the Chinese sage Kija (1122 bce), legendary founder of the city, is north of the city.

The industrial infrastructure in and around Pyongyang is the most highly developed in the country. It was the first to emerge in North Korea in terms of modern industry, and its development owes much to bountiful and available natural resources such as coal, iron, and limestone, as well as the convenient ground and waterborne transportation systems. Heavy and light industries in Pyongyang’s manufacturing base have grown in parallel, the core activity being the mechanical industry. The city also produces such heavy manufactures as cement, munitions and weaponry, and industrial ceramics. Light industries developed in the capital region include textiles and, to a lesser extent, footwear, food, and other commodities. The government operates the major commercial and financial institutions.

Farming takes place on the outskirts of the city, and activity is concentrated on growing subsidiary crops for city workers; special emphasis is placed on the production and supply of fresh produce. Also grown are rice, corn (maize), and soybeans, but their quantities are not enough to meet the grain needs for Pyongyang. Efforts are being made throughout the capital region to achieve self-sufficiency in meat production. Chicken, hogs, and other livestock are raised in high-density facilities.

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As North Korea’s center of transportation, Pyongyang commands a dense network of air, rail, and road routes, both as points of departure and arrival. Some airlines reach both domestic and international destinations, including Beijing and Moscow. Also radiating out of Pyongyang are inter-regional highways and expressways that reach to Nampo, Wonsan, and Kaesong. Sunan International Airport is the only port of entry for visitors to North Korea. The city’s subway, bus, and trolley systems are used mainly by commuters as their primary means of urban transportation.

Pyongyang is the seat of Kim Il-Sung University (1946), a medical school, and a communist university for training party leaders. Adult education is encouraged through classes taught at the factories. There are numerous venues for opera, theater, dance, and acrobatics, and many well-tended parks dot the city’s landscape. Rungrado 1st of May Stadium, the world’s largest-capacity stadium, was completed in 1989 on an island in the Taedong River in central Pyongyang. The country’s principal museums and libraries are also located in Pyongyang.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Ethan Teekah.
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North Korea, country in East Asia. It occupies the northern portion of the Korean peninsula, which juts out from the Asian mainland between the East Sea (Sea of Japan) and the Yellow Sea; North Korea covers about 55 percent of the peninsula’s land area. The country is bordered by China and Russia to the north and by the Republic of Korea (South Korea) to the south. The national capital, P’yŏngyang, is a major industrial and transport centre near the west coast.

North Korea faces South Korea across a demilitarized zone (DMZ) 2.5 miles (4 km) wide that was established by the terms of the 1953 armistice that ended fighting in the Korean War (1950–53). The DMZ, which runs for about 150 miles (240 km), constitutes the 1953 military cease-fire line and roughly follows latitude 38° N (the 38th parallel) from the mouth of the Han River on the west coast of the Korean peninsula to a little south of the North Korean town of Kosŏng on the east coast.

Quick Facts
North Korea
See article: flag of Korea, North
Head Of State And Government:
Supreme Leader1/Chairman of the State Affairs Commission: Kim Jong-Un
Capital:
P’yŏngyang
Population:
(2025 est.) 26,403,000
Form Of Government:
unitary single-party republic with one legislative house (Supreme People’s Assembly [687])
Official Language:
Korean
Official Religion:
none
Official Name:
Chosŏn Minjujuŭi Inmin Konghwaguk (Democratic People’s Republic of Korea)
Total Area (Sq Km):
123,214
Total Area (Sq Mi):
47,573
Monetary Unit:
([new] North Korean) won (W)
Population Rank:
(2025) 56
Population Projection 2030:
26,701,000
Density: Persons Per Sq Mi:
(2025) 555
Density: Persons Per Sq Km:
(2025) 214.3
Urban-Rural Population:
Urban: (2024) 63.5%
Rural: (2024) 36.5%
Life Expectancy At Birth:
Male: (2022) 67.9 years
Female: (2022) 75.9 years
Literacy: Percentage Of Population Age 15 And Over Literate:
Male: not available
Female: not available
Gni (U.S.$ ’000,000):
(2021) 26,247
Gni Per Capita (U.S.$):
(2021) 1,029
  1. Per constitutional revision of April 2009.

Land

Relief

Mountains and valleys characterize most of North Korea. The Kaema Highlands in the northeast have an average elevation of 3,300 feet (1,000 metres) above sea level and form the topographic roof of the entire Korean peninsula. Mount Paektu (9,022 feet [2,750 metres]), the highest mountain in North Korea and on the peninsula, rises at the northern edge of this plateau in the Changbaek (Changbai) Mountains along the Sino-Korean border; it is an extinct volcano topped by a large crater lake. The Nangnim Mountains run from north to south through the middle of the country, forming a divide between the eastern and western slopes of the peninsula. The Kangnam and Myohyang ranges and Mounts Ŏnjin and Myŏrak, all structural extensions of the Nangnim Mountains, extend parallel to each other toward the southwest. Large river-valley plains have developed between the western mountains; they merge along the narrow, irregular coastal plain on the west coast. The Hamgyŏng Mountains, extending from the Nangnim Mountains to the northeast, form a steep slope between the Kaema Highlands and the East Sea. The T’aebaek Mountains extend from southeastern North Korea into South Korea along the eastern coast; one peak, Mount Kŭmgang (5,374 feet [1,638 metres]), is renowned for its scenic beauty.

Drainage and soils

The longest river of North Korea is the Yalu, in Korean called the Amnok. It rises on the southern slope of Mount Paektu and flows southwestward for some 500 miles (800 km) to its mouth on Korea Bay. The Tumen (Tuman) River also begins at Mount Paektu but runs northeastward for about 325 miles (520 km) to the East Sea. There are no large streams along the east coast except for the Tumen River, and all the significant rivers, such as the Yalu, Ch’ŏngch’ŏn, Taedong, Chaeryŏng, and Yesŏng, drain to the Yellow Sea. The relatively large valley plains of the western rivers are major agricultural regions.

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More than three-fifths of the soils are locally derived from the weathering of granitic rocks or various kinds of schists (crystalline rocks). The soils are generally brownish, abundant in sandy materials, and low in fertility. Well-developed reddish brown soils derived from limestone are found in North Hwanghae province and the southern part of South P’yŏngan province. Podzols (ash-gray forest soil) have developed in the Kaema Highlands as a result of the cold climate and coniferous forest cover there. Although most of the soils are infertile and lack organic content, the valleys and coastal plains have relatively rich alluvial soils.

Climate

North Korea has a generally cool continental climate. The winter season, from December to March, is long and cold; mean temperatures in January range between about 20 °F (−7 °C) in the south and −10 °F (−23 °C) in the northern interior. The summer, from June to September, is warm, with mean July temperatures above the upper 60s F (about 20 °C) in most places. Accordingly, the annual range of temperatures is large—about 54 °F (30 °C) at P’yŏngyang and about 77 °F (43 °C) at Chunggang (Chunggangjin), where the lowest temperature in the Korean peninsula, −46.5 °F (−43.6 °C), has been recorded. Because of ocean currents and the mountain ranges bordering the narrow coastal lowlands, winter temperatures on the east coast are some 5 to 7 °F (3 to 4 °C) higher than those of the west coast.

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Most of the country receives about 40 inches (1,000 mm) of precipitation annually. The northern inland plateau, however, receives only about 24 inches (610 mm) and the lower reaches of the Taedong River valley 32 inches (810 mm), while the upper Ch’ŏngch’ŏn River area averages between about 48 and 52 inches (1,220 and 1,320 mm) yearly. Some three-fifths of the annual precipitation falls in the four months from June to September; this heavy concentration of rainfall is related to the humid summer monsoon from the Pacific Ocean, which also produces occasional typhoons (tropical cyclones). Only a small portion of the total precipitation occurs in winter, generally as snow; snowfall can be locally heavy, as in the T’aebaek Mountains. There are about 200 frost-free days along the coast but fewer than 120 in the northern Kaema Highlands.

Plant and animal life

Vegetation on the highlands, especially around Mount Paektu, consists of coniferous trees such as the Siberian fir, spruce, pine, and Korean pine (Pinus koraiensis). The western lowlands were originally covered by temperate mixed forests with many types of plants, but continuous deforestation has left only remote patches of the original forests. Most of the lowlands are now cultivated, except for some of the hills that are covered with small pine groves mixed with oaks, lindens, maples, and birches. Along streams that are subject to flooding or where the ground is too stony for cultivation, reeds, sedges, wild mulberry trees, and Italian poplars are found. Common river fish include carp and eels.

Because of deforestation, the populations of deer, mountain antelope, goats, tigers, and leopards have greatly decreased and are restricted to the remote forests. In the plains, however, it is still possible to see wild pigeons, herons, cranes (which nest near areas of human habitation), and many migratory waterfowl, which alight in the rice fields.

The DMZ between North and South Korea has become a de facto nature preserve. Once farmland and subsequently a devastated battleground, the DMZ has lain almost untouched since the end of hostilities in 1953 and has reverted to nature to a large extent, making it one of the most pristine undeveloped areas in Asia. The zone contains many ecosystems including forests, estuaries, and wetlands frequented by migratory birds. It serves as a sanctuary for hundreds of bird species, among them the endangered white-naped and red-crowned cranes, and is home to dozens of fish species and Asiatic black bears, lynxes, and other mammals.