The Korean Folk Custom Forbidding The Establishment of Water Wells
For over a thousand years many settlements in Korea forbid the digging of water-wells. This custom can be explained using geomancy, which personifies local landscapes or names them after animate or inanimate objects. In 'sailing boat' landscapes the digging of water-wells was prohibited be...
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description | For over a thousand years many settlements in Korea forbid the digging of water-wells. This custom can be explained using geomancy, which personifies local landscapes or names them after animate or inanimate objects. In 'sailing boat' landscapes the digging of water-wells was prohibited because this was viewed as analogous to making a hole in the bottom of a boat, which would thus bring misfortune to local residents. Based on this geomantic reasoning, people considered the custom of forbidding well digging to be an integral part of the art of geomancy, with its origin in a geomantic belief system. My earlier research sustained this explanation but this paper, which is based on two recent instances of field work, rejects the established view on the custom. The aim of this paper is to critically re-examine this established view and suggests a new idea that the folk custom of prohibiting well digging in Korea was not originally derived from geomancy, but was conceived from a non-geomantic indigenous Korean idea and have become linked to geomancy through the enforcement process of practicing the custom in traditional Korean society. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1111/j.1931-0846.2015.12139.x |
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This custom can be explained using geomancy, which personifies local landscapes or names them after animate or inanimate objects. In 'sailing boat' landscapes the digging of water-wells was prohibited because this was viewed as analogous to making a hole in the bottom of a boat, which would thus bring misfortune to local residents. Based on this geomantic reasoning, people considered the custom of forbidding well digging to be an integral part of the art of geomancy, with its origin in a geomantic belief system. My earlier research sustained this explanation but this paper, which is based on two recent instances of field work, rejects the established view on the custom. The aim of this paper is to critically re-examine this established view and suggests a new idea that the folk custom of prohibiting well digging in Korea was not originally derived from geomancy, but was conceived from a non-geomantic indigenous Korean idea and have become linked to geomancy through the enforcement process of practicing the custom in traditional Korean society.</description><subject>forbidding well digging</subject><subject>Geography</subject><subject>geomancy</subject><subject>golden hen sitting on egg landscape</subject><subject>Korea</subject><subject>Power</subject><subject>Religion</subject><subject>sailing boat landscape</subject><subject>settlement</subject><subject>Society</subject><subject>South Korea</subject><subject>Water 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This custom can be explained using geomancy, which personifies local landscapes or names them after animate or inanimate objects. In 'sailing boat' landscapes the digging of water-wells was prohibited because this was viewed as analogous to making a hole in the bottom of a boat, which would thus bring misfortune to local residents. Based on this geomantic reasoning, people considered the custom of forbidding well digging to be an integral part of the art of geomancy, with its origin in a geomantic belief system. My earlier research sustained this explanation but this paper, which is based on two recent instances of field work, rejects the established view on the custom. 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subjects | forbidding well digging Geography geomancy golden hen sitting on egg landscape Korea Power Religion sailing boat landscape settlement Society South Korea Water wells |
title | The Korean Folk Custom Forbidding The Establishment of Water Wells |
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