1.9Km 2024-04-19
F11-11, B580 Gukchaebosang-ro, Jung-gu, Daegu
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1.9Km 2024-04-19
B580 Gukchaebosang-ro, Jung-gu, Daegu
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1.9Km 2024-04-27
B580 Gukchaebosang-ro, Jung-gu, Daegu
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1.9Km 2024-04-19
B580 Gukchaebosang-ro, Jung-gu, Daegu
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2.0Km 2024-04-22
593, Gukchaebosang-ro, Jung-gu, Daegu
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2.0Km 2021-12-20
50-5, Jungang-daero 77-gil, Jung-gu, Daegu
+82-53-252-6606
Petite Joongang Family Museum is a family-owned museum that showcases the antiquities of Oriental medicine, as practiced by a local family for three generations over 90 years in the city of Daegu, a city known for its 350-year-old medicinal herb market. The tools used by the family including scales, medicine bowls, prescriptions and manuscripts of traditional medicine tell the history of Oriental medicine in Korea as well as the family's dedication to treatment using the traditional herbal medicine practice. The museum serves its visitors with healthy Oriental medicine tea, while the living family members offer free medical consultation.
2.0Km 2023-04-13
Gukchaebosang-ro, Jung-gu, Daegu
• 1330 Travel Hotline: +82-2-1330 (Korean, English, Japanese, Chinese) • For more info: +82-53-430-1261~4
Colorful Daegu Festival offers performances and art programs for everyone to enjoy and participate in. A variety of street performances are held, with the highlight of the festival being the Colorful Parade.
2.0Km 2023-01-06
49, Dalgubeol-daero 415-gil, Jung-gu, Daegu
+82-53-253-3359
Yangnyeongsi Museum of Oriental Medicine continues to provide an opportunity to experience the 350-year-old traditions of Oriental medicine and medicine markets through multiple exhibitions and various hands-on experience programs. The museum provides graphics and animation shows in four languages as well as approximately 300 items on display. The first floor also houses the nation’s only wholesale market of traditional medicinal herbs.
2.0Km 2023-01-20
22, Namseong-ro, Jung-gu, Daegu
Established in December 1921, the Gyonam YMCA Hall served as a gateway to the modern movement in Daegu. During the Japanese colonial period, it was a meeting place and a base for Christian national movements such as the Product Promotion Movement, the Christian Rural Movement, and the Singanhoe Movement. This hall is a two-story red brick building built by the American missionary Blair in 1914. It retains the characteristics of the 1910s and '20s masonry construction, such as decorating the first and second floors with cornices and securing a square window with arches. In the early days, it was used as a place for students' education, evening classes, and lectures.