Guryongpo Japanese House Street in Pohang-si, South Korea
Legend has it that during the reign of King Jinheung of Silla, the county magistrate of today’s Goryongpo witnessed an extraordinary sight, ten dragons soared skyward as a sudden storm raged. A bolt of lightning hit one of the dragons, causing it to fall into the sea. This somehow calmed the storm and the county was later named Goryongpo, meaning Nine Dragons’ Beach.
Located on the near-easternmost point of Korea facing the Sea of Japan, this eup (town) became home to Japanese immigrants around 1906. Most of them were fishermen from the village of Oda in Kagawa, who were seeking new fishing grounds as the Seto Inland Sea grew fraught with rivalries between locals. For them, Goryongpo was quite an ideal location with its abundant fish population. It’s said boats would topple over under the weight of massive hauls.
By the 1930s, 10,000 Japanese people had moved to Goryongpo, creating a moderate-sized Japantown around the houses of Togawa Yasaburo and Hashimoto Zengichi. Zengichi’s former house has been renovated and stands today as the Guryongpo Modern History Museum.
The town’s flourishment, however, was not all fun and games (especially in retrospect). Its heyday came right after the Empire of Japan’s occupation of Korea in 1910, which heavily exploited its people. Although the colonial rule itself ended along with World War II, its repercussions persist to this day.
The Japanese immigrants returned to their country after the war, but their houses were kept intact in spite of the nationwide movement to remove imperial influence from the country. They soon became local homes that preserved the Japantown of old. In the meantime, the fishing in Guryongpo remained as plentiful as ever until the end of the 20th-century, when its population started to decrease.
To give a new boost to the economy of the region, the city started to renovate the old neighborhood in the early 2010s as a tourist attraction called the “Guryongpo Japanese House Street.”
It’s as if a piece of Showa-era Japan was thrown into modern South Korea, an intriguing time capsule that has come through the shadows of colonialism.