Chaeryŏng County 재령군 |
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County | |
Korean transcription(s) | |
• Hanja | 載寧郡 |
• McCune-Reischauer | Chaeryŏng-gun |
• Revised Romanization | Jaeryeong-gun |
Country | North Korea |
Province | South Hwanghae Province |
Administrative divisions | 1 ŭp, 1 rodongjagu, 24 ri |
Chaeryŏng County is a county in South Hwanghae province, North Korea.
Located on the Chaeryŏng River, the county is bordered to the west by Anak and Sinch'ŏn, to the south by Sinwŏn, and to the east by Ŭnp'a, Pongsan and Sariwŏn in North Hwanghae Province.
Chaeryŏng County was first founded by the kingdom of Koguryo, who called it Siksŏng (). Koguryo lost the area during the unification of Korea by the Koryo dynasty, who gave it its current name in 1217. In 1415 it was promoted to county level under the Yi. Chaeryŏng was briefly merged into the newly formed Hwanghae District in 1895 during an experimental redistricting, but was restored to its previous form in 1896. The county's current form was settled in the 1952 redistricting changes.
Chaeryŏng county is served by the Ŭllyul Line of the Korean State Railway. There is also a highway which runs through Chaeryŏng-ŭp.
The county is divided into one town (ŭp), one worker's district (rodongjagu) and 24 villages (ri).