South Korea Traditional Family Life
"Spring Time," a traditional dance performance
Courtesy Robert L. Worden
Filial piety (hyo in Korean; xiao in Chinese),
the second of the Five Relationships, defined by Mencius as
affection between father and son, traditionally has been the
normative foundation of Korean family life. Though its influence
has diminished over time, this relationship remains vitally
important in contemporary South Korea. Entailing a large number
of reciprocal duties and responsibilities between the generations
of a single family, it generally has been viewed as an unequal
relationship in which the son owed the father unquestioning
obedience. Neo-Confucianists thought that the subordination of
son to father was the expression, on the human level, of an
immutable law of the Cosmos. This law also imposed a rigidity on
family life.
Family and lineage continuity traditionally was, and to a
great extent remains, a supremely important principle. This
reflects Mencius's view that of all possible unfilial acts, to
deprive one's parents of posterity is the worst. Historically,
the Korean family has been patrilineal. The most important
concern for the family group was producing a male heir to carry
on the family line and to perform ancestor rituals in the
household and at the family gravesite. The first son customarily
assumed leadership of the family after his father's death and
inherited his father's house and a greater portion of land than
his younger brothers. This inheritance enabled him to carry out
the ritually prescribed obligations to his ancestors.
Ancestor worship was, simultaneously, a social ethic and a
religion. In some ways, it was the most optimistic of faiths. It
taught that deceased family members do not pass into oblivion, to
an afterlife, or, as the Buddhist believe, to rebirth as humans
or animals in some remote place, but remain, in spiritual form,
securely within the family circle. For traditionally minded
Koreans, the presence of the deceased could be an intensely real
and personal one. Fear of death was blunted by the consoling
thought at even in the grave one would be cared for by one's own
people. Succeeding generations had the obligation of remembering
the deceased in a yearly cycle of rituals and ceremonies.
Traditionally, the purpose of marriage was to produce a male
heir to carry on the family line and not to provide mutual
companionship and support for husband and wife. Marriages were
arranged. A go-between or matchmaker, usually a middle-aged
woman, carried on the negotiations between the two families
involved who, because of a very strict law of exogamy, sometimes
did not know each other and often lived in different communities.
The bride and groom met for the first time at the marriage
ceremony, a practice that ended in the cities by the 1930s.
The traditional Korean kinship system, defined by different
obligations in relation to ancestor worship, was complex.
Anthropologists generally view it in terms of four separate
levels, beginning with the household on the lowest level and
reaching to the clan, which included a large number of persons
often spread over an extensive geographical area. The household,
chip or jip
(see Glossary) in Korean, consisted of
husband and wife, their children, and if the husband were the
eldest son, his parents as well. The eldest son's household, the
stem family, was known as the "big house" (k'unjip), while
that of each of the younger sons, a branch family containing
husband, wife and children only, was known as the "little house"
(chagunjip). It was through the stem family of the eldest
son that the main line of descent was traced from generation to
generation. The eldest son was responsible for rituals in honor
of the ancestors, and his wife was responsible for producing the
all-important male heir.
The second level of kinship was the "mourning group"
(tangnae), which consisted of all those descendants of a
common patrilineal forbearer up to four generations back. Its
role was to organize ceremonies at the grave site. These rites
included the reading of a formal message by the eldest male
descendant of the tangnae progenitor and the offering of
elaborate and attractive dishes to the ancestral spirits.
Similar rituals were carried out at the third level of
kinship organization, the lineage
(p'a--see Glossary). A
lineage might comprise only a handful of households, but in some
cases included hundreds and even thousands of households. The
lineage was responsible for the rites to ancestors of the fifth
generation or above, performed at a common grave site. During the
Choson Dynasty, the lineage commonly possessed land, grave sites,
and buildings. Croplands were allocated to support the ancestral
ceremonies. The lineage also performed other functions: the aid
of poor or distressed lineage members, the education of children
at schools maintained by the p'a, and the supervision of
the behavior of younger lineage members. Because most villagers
were members of a common lineage during the Choson Dynasty, the
p'a performed many of the social services on the local
level that are now provided by public schools, police, and social
welfare agencies.
The fourth and most inclusive kinship organization was the
clan, or, more accurately, the tongjok (surname origin
group). Among ordinary South Koreans, this was commonly known as
the pongwan, or "clan seat." Members of the same
tongjok shared both a surname and origins in the generally
remote past. Unlike members of the smaller kinship groups,
however, they often lacked strong feelings of solidarity.
Important tongjok include the Chonju Yi, who originated in
Chonju in North Cholla Province and claimed as their progenitor
the founder of the Choson Dynasty, Yi Song-gye; and the Kimhae
Kim, who originated in Kimhae in South Kyongsang Province and
claimed as their common ancestor either the founder of the
ancient kingdom of Kaya or one of the kings of the Silla Dynasty
(A.D. 668-935).
Approximately 249 surnames were used by South Koreans in the
late 1980s. The most common were Kim (about 22 percent of the
population), Li or Yi (15 percent of the population), Pak or Park
(8.5 percent), Ch'oe (4.8 percent), and Chong (4.2 percent).
There are, however, about 150 surname origin groups bearing the
name Kim, 95 with the name Yi, 35 with the name Pak, 40 with the
name Ch'oe, and 27 with the name Chong.
In many if not most cases, the real function of the
tongjok was to define groups of permissible marriage
partners. Because of the strict rule of exogamy, people from the
same tongjok were not permitted to marry, even though
their closest common ancestors in many cases might have lived
centuries ago. This prohibition, which originated during the
Choson Dynasty, had legal sanction in present-day South Korea. An
amendment to the marriage law proposed by women's and other
groups in early 1990 would have changed this situation by
prohibiting marriages only between persons who had a common
ancestor five generations or less back. However, the amendment,
was strongly opposed by conservative Confucian groups, which
viewed the exogamy law as a crystallization of traditional Korean
values. Among older South Koreans, it is still commonly thought
that only uncivilized people marry within their clan group.
Data as of June 1990
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