PhotosLocation


Buk_District,_Daegu Latitude and Longitude:

35°53′N 128°35′E / 35.89°N 128.58°E / 35.89; 128.58
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Buk
북구
Korean transcription(s)
 • Hanja
 • Revised RomanizationBuk-gu
 • McCune-ReischauerPuk-ku
Flag of Buk
Country South Korea
Region Yeongnam
Provincial level Daegu
Administrative divisions23 administrative dong
Area
 • Total93.99 km2 (36.29 sq mi)
Population
 (2021)
 • Total441,642
 • Density4,699/km2 (12,170/sq mi)
 • Dialect
Gyeongsang
Website Buk District Office
Administrative divisions

Buk District (literally north district) is a district in northwestern Daegu, South Korea. It adjoins Chilgok County on the north. The area is 93.99 km2. [1] The population is about 444,923.

Buk-gu was first created as an office of Daegu in 1938, during the period of Japanese rule. It was raised to the status of a district in 1963. For most of the twentieth century, Buk-gu was purely an administrative division of Daegu, without any local autonomy. The first district council was inaugurated in 1991, and the first district head was elected in 1995, as part of nationwide local government reforms.

Kyungpook National University and Yeungjin College are located in Buk-gu.


History

During the Silla Dynasty, it belonged to Daegu and palgeori prefectures, and during the Later Three Kingdoms period, it belonged to Daegu and Pali. During the Joseon Dynasty, it was located on the border of Daegu. In January 1963, it was upgraded to the status of Buk-gu. In 1981, as Daegu rose to a direct city, its status was raised to Buk-gu, Daegu. [1]

Library

Bukbu Library
Hangul
북부도서관
Hanja
Revised RomanizationBukbu doseogwan
McCune–ReischauerPukpu tosŏgwan

Bukbu Library is municipal library that is located in Buk-gu. The library opened 24 November 1983. The number of books is total 250,956; that of papers is 31,997.

Gususan Library consists of one basement floor and three floors above the ground. It is a district library with more than 100,000 books and 544 seats. [2]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "History". Buk-gu government website. Retrieved 2006-02-07.

References

External links

35°53′N 128°35′E / 35.89°N 128.58°E / 35.89; 128.58