To Yu-ho

North Korean archaeologist
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroNorth Korean archaeologist
PlacesNorth Korea
wasAnthropologist Archaeologist
Work fieldSocial science
Gender
Male
Birth1 July 1905
Death1982 (aged 76 years)
The details

Biography

To Yu-ho (1 July 1905 – 1982) was a North Korean archaeologist and member of the National People's Assembly of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
To was born and raised in Hamhǔng. He earned a doctoral degree at Vienna University in Austria in 1935, was perhaps the first Korean archaeologist and among the first Korean academics to have received their training overseas. He married a German woman and returned to North Korea in the late 1940s. Do became a professor at Kim Il Sung University in Py'ǒngyang in 1947 and served as the director of a number of archaeological institutes through the 1960s. He also served in several capacities in the North Korean government, including as a representative in the Supreme People's Assembly in the early 1960s and in the National Assembly Standing Committee from the mid-1960s.
To was responsible for leading archaeological excavations at North Korean sites such as Kulp'o-ri, Ch'itam-ni, Odong, Allak, Ch'o-do, and Kungsan-ni. To's major monograph, Chosǒn Wonsi Kogohak, laid the groundwork for archaeological research in North Korea from the 1960s through the 1990s.

Selected bibliography

  • Chosǒn Wonsi Kogohak [Prehistoric Archaeology of Chosǒn]. Institute of Science Publications, Py'ǒngyang, 1960.
  • To, Yu-ho and Ki-dǒk Hwang. Ch'itam-ni Wǒnshi Yuchǒk Palgul Pogǒ [Excavation Report of the Ch'itam-ni Prehistoric Site]. Kwahakwǒn Ch'ulpan'sa, Py'ǒngyang, 1961.

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