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Daehan Cheon-il Bank

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Daehan Cheon-il Bank
Native name
대한천일은행
Company typeJoint-stock company
IndustryFinancial services
FoundedJanuary 30, 1899 (1899-01-30) in Hanseong (now Seoul, South Korea)
Defunct1997 (1997)
FateRescued and merged
SuccessorWoori Bank
Headquarters,
Area served
Korea
ProductsBanking services

The Daehan Cheon-il Bank (Korean: 대한천일은행), sometimes transcribed as Daehancheonil Bank, was the first viable domestic joint-stock bank in Korea, established in 1899. In 1911 it was renamed Chōsen Commercial Bank (조선상업은행, also transcribed as Joseon Sangup Bank), then in 1950 Korea Commercial Bank (한국상업은행).

By the 1990s, Korea Commercial Bank was still one of the five most prominent banks in South Korea, alongside Chohung Bank, Korea First Bank, Hanil Bank, and Seoul Bank.[1] It suffered from the 1997 Asian financial crisis, however, and was eventually merged with Hanil Bank to form Woori Bank.

Background

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Modern financial development in Korea started with the Japan–Korea Treaty of 1876 and the subsequent entry into the country of joint-stock Japanese banks, which themselves had only been established in the course of that same decade. Thus, the Dai-Ichi Bank ("First Bank"), Japan's first joint-stock bank created by Shibusawa Eiichi in 1873, opened a branch in Busan in 1878,[2] followed by Chemulpo (nowadays Incheon) in 1883.[3] The Eighteenth Bank, established in Nagasaki in 1877, similarly opened a branch in Chemulpo in 1890.[4]: 21 

The dominance of Japanese banks created dismay among Korean reformers. In 1894, the Joseon government created a department to oversee banking activities in the country.[2] Several attempts were made in the following years to establish banks, including the Joseon Bank (1896),[5] Hanseong Bank (1897) and Daehan Bank (1898), but most of these turned out to be short-lived.[2]

Daehan Cheon-il Bank

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On 30 January 1899,[6] the Daehan Cheon-il Bank was created by merchants of Hanseong (now Seoul) with ostensible backing by the Joseon government, which two years before had proclaimed the Korean Empire.[5] Only Korean nationals were allowed to be shareholders, and the government was itself the bank's largest investor.[2] Ownership of the bank was reserved for a narrow elite, with the total number of shareholders growing to only 24 in 1901 and 38 at end-1902.[5] The bank's first president was Joseon senior official Min Byeong-seok [ko], who in 1902 was succeeded by Prince Imperial Yeong, himself succeeded by Kim Gi-yeong (김기영), one of the bank's merchant founders,[5] in 1906, and by Lee Bong-rae in 1909.

The bank became associated with Russian interests and suffered from Russia's defeat in the Russo-Japanese War, during which it had to suspend operations. It resumed its activity in 1906.[5]

In 1909, the Daehan Cheon-il Bank moved its head office to the street level of the newly erected Gwangtonggwan building, which had just been erected by the Takjibu (financial department) of the Korean imperial government on the thoroughfare later known as Namdaemunno in central Seoul. (The upper level was used as a public assembly hall.) Gwangtonggwan is consequently viewed as the oldest standing bank building in Korea.[2]

Under Japanese rule

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Head office building of Chōsen Industry Bank (1923–1924), then Chōsen Commercial Bank and Korea Commercial Bank until 1965

In 1911, Daehan Cheon-il Bank was renamed by the Japanese colonial authorities as Chōsen Commercial Bank.[2] In 1924, it merged with Chōsen Industry Bank (조선실업은행, established 1913 as Gyeongseong Bank; 경성은행), and moved its head office to the latter's building, across the street northeast from the Bank of Chōsen on the same side of Namdaemunro. The building was demolished in 1965.[citation needed]

Korea Commercial Bank

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With the division of Korea, as with other banks previously controlled by Japanese interests, the respective operations of Chōsen Commercial Bank were taken over by public authorities on both sides of the 38th parallel. In North Korea, they were soon merged into the central bank within the country's monobank system.[7]

In South Korea, Chōsen Commercial Bank was renamed Korea Commercial Bank on 24 April 1950. It was listed on the Korea Exchange in 1956,[8] nationalized by the military government in the early 1960s (by expropriating large shareholders on the premise that their wealth had been amassed illicitly),[9]: 43  and privatized in 1972, ahead of other Korean commercial banks that were only privatized in the early 1980s.[9]: 60 

Following the 1997 Asian financial crisis, Korea Commercial Bank was rescued by the Korea Deposit Insurance Corporation and merged with the similarly troubled Hanil Bank.[10]: 174  The merged and recapitalized entity, in which the government held a 95-percent equity stake,[11]: 35  was named Hanvit Bank (sometimes transcribed as Hanbit), acquired the distressed Peace Bank [ko] in 2001, and was subsequently renamed Woori Bank in 2002.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Suh Kyoung-ho (21 February 2023). "Profit vs. public obligations". Korea JoongAng Daily.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Kim Hyung-eun (5 October 2009). "Korean finance, past and present". Korea JoongAng Daily.
  3. ^ Andrei Lankov (7 June 2007). "Great City of Incheon". The Korea Times.
  4. ^ Takeshi Nishimura (March 2017), "A Preliminary Investigation into the Activities of the Hongkong Shanghai Banking Corporation in Nagasaki during the Meiji Period" (PDF), Kansai University Review of Economics (19): 9‒25
  5. ^ a b c d e 권석천 (25 April 2004). "고종이 1899년 대한천일은행 설립 주도했다". Naver News.
  6. ^ "最古 은행건물 우리銀 종로점". khan.co.kr. 14 August 2005.
  7. ^ "Banks in N. Korea". KBS World. 3 October 2019.
  8. ^ 신민호 (17 November 2021). "[은행의 뿌리를 찾아서①] 122년을 버텨온 거목, 우리은행". m.g-enews.com.
  9. ^ a b Byung-sun Choi (1991), "The Politics of Financial Control and Reform in Korea" (PDF), Korean Journal of Policy Studies (6): 41–73
  10. ^ Stijn Claessens (16 January 2001), Chapter 15 Korea’s Financial Sector Reforms, International Monetary Fund
  11. ^ Tomás J. T. Baliño & Angel Ubide (1 March 1999), The Korean Financial Crisis of 1997—A Strategy of Financial Sector Reform, Washington DC: The Korean Financial Crisis of 1997