Sangsa-myeon
Sangsa-myeon
상사면 | |
---|---|
Township (myeon) | |
Korean transcription(s) | |
• Hangul | 상사면 |
• Hanja | 上沙面 |
• Revised Romanization | Sangsa-myeon |
• McCune-Reischauer | Sangsa-myŏn |
Coordinates: 34°57′N 127°27′E / 34.95°N 127.45°E | |
Country | South Korea |
Province (do) | South Jeolla |
City (si) | Suncheon |
Administrative divisions | 11 jurisdiction
|
Area | |
• Total | 60.31 km2 (23.29 sq mi) |
Population | |
• Total | 2,989 |
• Density | 50/km2 (130/sq mi) |
Time zone | UTC+9 (Korea Standard Time) |
Sangsa-myeon (Korean: 상사면; Hanja: 上沙面; RR: Sangsa-myeon; MR: Sangsa-myŏn), also called Sangsa Township or Sangsa for short, is a myeon (township) in Suncheon, a city in the South Jeolla Province, South Korea. It is located in the south-central part of the city with a total area of 60.31 square kilometres (23.29 sq mi), 6.7% of a total area of Suncheon City. The population is 2989 people, 1501 males and 1488 females, and the number of houses total 1334. The township office is located in 330, Sangsaho-gil in Heulsan-ri. There are Hyang-dong, Namje-dong, and Dosa-dong in the east of the township; Nagan-myeon in the west; Byeollyang-myeon in the south; and Seungju-eup in the north. Mountains in the township are Oknyeobong (옥녀봉) with the height 549 metres (1,801 ft) on the border to Seungju-eup, and Undongsan (운동산) with the height 465 metres (1,526 ft) on the border to Byeollyang-myeon, etc. Rivers in the township are Isacheon (이사천), Sangsacheon (상사천), Chogokcheon (초곡천), and Seokheungcheon (석흥천), etc. It also has Sangsa branch dam of Juam dam.[1][2]
History
[edit]It was in Gampyeong-gun (Korean: 감평군) in the Baekje. It was in Suncheon-mok (Korean: 순천목) in the Goryeo. It became Maejae-gol, Suncheon-bu (Korean: 순천부 매재골) in Joseon. It became Sangsa-myeon, Suncheon-gun (Korean: 순천군 상사면) on the 32nd year of Gojong of Joseon (1895 CE). It became Sangsa-myeon, Seungju-gun (Korean: 승주군 상사면) on 15 August 1945. It became Sangsa-myeon, Suncheon-si (Korean: 순천시 상사면) on 1 January 1995.[2]
Ri
[edit]Seo-myeon has eleven jurisdictions, twenty-five administrative districts, and thirty bans.[2][3]
Dowol-ri
[edit]Dowol-ri (Korean: 도월리) has only one administrative district: Migok-ri (미곡리).
Maryun-ri
[edit]Maryun-ri (Korean: 마륜리) has two administrative districts: Maryun-ri (마륜리), and Hwasumok-ri (화수목리).
Bongrae-ri
[edit]Bongrae-ri (Korean: 봉래리) has only one administrative district: Nodong-ri (노동리).
Bichon-ri
[edit]Bichon-ri (Korean: 비촌리) has two administrative districts: Bichon-ri (비촌리), and Seodong-ri (서동리).
Ssangji-ri
[edit]Ssangji-ri (Korean: 쌍지리) has three administrative districts: Ssangji-ri (쌍지리), Eoeun-ri (어은리), and Ungok-ri (운곡리).
Ogok-ri
[edit]Ogok-ri (Korean: 오곡리) has two administrative districts: Ogok-ri (오곡리), and Yeondong-ri (연동리).
Yonggye-ri
[edit]Yonggye-ri (Korean: 용계리) has two administrative districts: Yonggye-ri (용계리), and Gugye-ri (구계리).
Yongam-ri
[edit]Yongam-ri (Korean: 용암리) has two administrative districts: Hoeryong-ri (회룡리), and Yongam-ri (용암리).
Eungnyeong-ri
[edit]Eungnyeong-ri (Korean: 응령리) has four administrative districts: Eungnyeong-ri (응령리), Geumgok-ri (금곡리), Munhwa-ri (문화리), and Seojeong-ri (서정리).
Chogok-ri
[edit]Chogok-ri (Korean: 초곡리) has two administrative districts: Chogok-ri (초곡리), and Gidong-ri (기동리).
Heulsan-ri
[edit]Heulsan-ri (Korean: 흘산리) has four administrative districts: Heulsan-ri (흘산리), Dangchon-ri (당촌리), Icheon-ri (이천리), and Dongbaek-ri (동백리). It has township office on 330, Sangsaho-gil.
References
[edit]External links
[edit]- Sangsa-myeon office (in Korean)