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April 4, 2009 | By Allan M. Jalon
In 1443, a Korean ruler named King Sejong reinvented language as a more democratic medium. He issued a royal edict establishing a new alphabet to help Korean commoners read and write more easily, while conveying what was especially Korean in a society deeply influenced by China. "The sounds of our language differ from those of Chinese," Sejong wrote of the new linguistic system his experts created, called hangeul.

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