Korea’s Republic Was Not Given — It Was Fought For
K-Drama & Film
Perfect Crown is one of the most-watched K-dramas of 2026 — but Korean viewers are watching it with a complicated feeling that international fans might not fully understand. The fantasy of a royal Korea is beautiful. For Koreans, it also carries weight.
In Part 1, we looked at how Joseon ended. If you haven’t read it, start there. This part picks up where that one left off.
The Name “Daehanminguk” Already Has the Answer
The world calls Korea the “Republic of Korea.” In Korean, it’s Daehanminguk — 대한민국. These two names are often treated as direct translations. They aren’t quite.
Daehan (大韓) — A reference to the three ancient kingdoms of the southern Korean peninsula, unified under one identity. “Great Han.” The name of an entire people.
Min (民) — This is where it gets interesting. And a little disturbing.
In ancient East Asia, slaves were blinded in one eye to prevent escape. The character min (民) originated from that image — a person with one eye destroyed, the controlled, the subjugated. Minguk (民國) literally means: the nation of those who were ruled.
This is not just etymology. Nine years after Japan annexed Korea, a government-in-exile drafted a constitution for a new nation in Shanghai. No emperor. No king. No aristocracy. A nation belonging to those who had been ruled. Korea’s independence movement was, from the beginning, a democracy movement. That declaration was written into the name Daehanminguk.

Three Dictators. Three Victories.
Korea was founded in 1948. Then came war. In 1950, North Korea invaded across the 38th parallel. Three years of fighting left the entire peninsula in ruins. What remained was poverty, rubble, and a division that has never healed.
Democracy had to be built on that rubble. It wasn’t easy.
The First Dictatorship — and the Students
The founding president tried to hold onto power through election fraud. In 1960, students took to the streets. Police opened fire. 186 people died. The students didn’t stop. The president fled the country. It was students and the citizens who followed them — not a single shot fired — who brought down the dictator.
The Second and Third Dictatorships — and the Citizens of Gwangju
A year later, the military seized power. For the next two decades, generals ruled Korea. The economy grew. Democracy did not exist. In 1980, a second military dictator took power. The citizens of Gwangju, in the south of the country, were the first to resist. Special forces units were deployed. Citizens were massacred. The official death toll: 166. The entire city was cut off from the rest of the country. Gwangju did not surrender.
The Third Wave — and Millions
Seven years later, in 1987, a university student died under police torture. The government tried to cover it up. Koreans took to the streets. Millions of them. Across the entire country. The dictator backed down and announced direct presidential elections. The electoral system Korea has today was created on that day.
And Then: December 3, 2024
Democracy is never finished in a single victory.
On the night of December 3, 2024, a president deployed military forces and attempted to dissolve the National Assembly. It was a coup.
Citizens ran to the National Assembly. They blocked the doors with their bodies. The soldiers were slow to follow orders. Every one of them knew what had happened in Gwangju 44 years earlier. The citizens knew too. That’s why they weren’t afraid.
The coup failed. The president was impeached and is currently on trial.
Did the people who died in Gwangju know their sacrifice would save South Korea 44 years later? They probably didn’t. They didn’t surrender anyway.
Why Koreans Don’t Want the Crown Back
Perfect Crown is a good drama. I watch it every week.
But for Koreans who know what the name Daehanminguk means — and what it cost to keep it — the scenes with the royal family feel a little different.
Korea’s democracy was not handed down from above. It was built by nameless students, by the citizens of Gwangju, by millions of ordinary people who took to the streets and refused to go home. A nation where the ruled became the rulers. That is what Daehanminguk means.
The crown is better left as a beautiful fantasy.
If you’re watching Perfect Crown and feeling the romantic pull of the royal world — and now also understanding why that crown disappeared — you’re watching the drama with two sets of eyes.
Films That Help You Understand This Era
A Taxi Driver (2017) — Netflix
Gwangju, May 1980. An ordinary Seoul taxi driver agrees to drive a German journalist into the city — without knowing what’s happening there. Starring Song Kang-ho. 12.2 million admissions. You don’t need to know the history. This film puts you inside it.
1987: When the Day Comes (2017) — Netflix
How one student’s death under police torture brought millions into the streets. Based on real events. Starring Kim Yun-seok, Ha Jung-woo, and Kim Tae-ri.
A tax lawyer defends a student accused under national security law — and is changed by it. Based on the early life of former President Roh Moo-hyun. Starring Song Kang-ho. 11.37 million admissions.
12.12: The Day (2023)— Netflix
The night of the 1979 coup — the event that made Gwangju inevitable. Starring Hwang Jung-min and Jung Woo-sung. Over 13 million admissions. Watch this before the others.
Korea has a long history. If watching Perfect Crown has sparked any questions about Korean history or culture, leave them in the comments — I’ll cover them in a future post.
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