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Kangdong County

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Kangdong County is one of Pyongyang 's two suburban counties. In 1983 it was separated from South P'yongan Province and assumed direct governance by the Pyongyang City People's Committee. It is bordered by Sŏngch'ŏn-gun (Songchon County), South P'yongan in the north and east, Sŭngho-guyŏk (Sungho District) from the south and the Taedong River from the west.

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6-572: Kangdong-gun is best known as the location of the supposed Tomb of King Tangun , the Revolutionary Site at Ponghwa-ri. Kim Jong-un 's Kangdong Residence is located near the banks of Taedong River . The northeastern part of the county hosts the offices and facilities of the Second Economic Committee, which is the DPRK's weapons industry . Kyo-hwa-so No. 4 is a large reeducation camp in

12-496: A step pyramid , about 22 m (72 ft) high and 50 m (164 ft) on each side. According to the Samguk Yusa , Gojoseon was thought to have been founded in 2333 BCE. North Koreans claim that their current excavations have dramatically changed the estimates of North Korean historians back to at least 3000 BCE, making the site c.5011 years old (±267 years in 1993). North Korea 's leader Kim Il Sung insisted that Dangun

18-554: The other woman, and by dating the bone of the man using the method of electron spin resonance dating , it was found to be from more than 5011 years ago. A nail found in the mausoleum , dating to the Goguryeo period (37 BCE-668 CE), has been the subject of much controversy. This discovery has thus led some North Korean historians to conclude that the mausoleum was discovered and renovated during that period. Many observers and historians outside of North Korea, including South Korea, consider

24-469: The south eastern part of Kangdong-gun. Kangdong County is divided into 1 ŭp (town), 6 rodongjagu (workers' districts) and 16 ri (villages): This North Korea location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Mausoleum of Tangun The Mausoleum of Tangun is an ancient burial site in Kangdong near Pyongyang , North Korea . It is claimed by North Korea to be

30-404: The tomb of Tangun , legendary founder of Gojoseon , the first Korean kingdom. A pyramid was built on top of the grave in 1994, consisting of 1994 blocks of stone. The complex occupies about 1.8 km² (.70 mi²) on the slope of Mount Taebak (대박산). The complex is divided into three major sections: restoration work area, stone statue area, and the burial site. Dangun's grave is shaped like

36-450: Was not merely a legend but a real historical person. As consequence, North Korean archaeologists were compelled to locate the purported remains and grave of Dangun. In the October of 1993, through the thesis called the "Excavation reports of the mausoleum of Dangun(단군릉발굴보고)", North Korean academia announced that 86 human bone remains were found that can be traced to two individuals, one man and

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