Ihwa Sikdang (이화식당) - Information sur les alentours - informations de Voyage Corée

Ihwa Sikdang (이화식당)

Ihwa Sikdang (이화식당)

18.4Km    63     2021-03-24

214-6, Jeonseo-ro, Andong-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do
+82-54-842-3456

This Andong Jjimdak restaurant is located near Hahoe Village. This Korean dishes restaurant is located in Andong-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do. The most famous menu is andong braised chicken.

Bune Sikdang (부네식당)

Bune Sikdang (부네식당)

18.4Km    40     2021-03-24

214-6, Jeonseo-ro, Andong-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do
+82-54-821-2738

This is a place where you can enjoy Andong Jjimdak, the representative dish of Andong. The best menu at this restaurant is bibimbap. This Korean dishes restaurant is located in Andong-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do.

Hahoe Minsok Sikdang (하회민속식당)

Hahoe Minsok Sikdang (하회민속식당)

18.4Km    32     2021-03-24

214-6, Jeonseo-ro, Andong-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do
+82-54-853-0521

This is a place where you can enjoy Andong steamed chicken and grilled mackerel, the representative foods of Andong. This Korean dishes restaurant is located in Andong-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do. The most famous menu is Andong braised chicken.

Ilmi Sikdang (일미식당)

Ilmi Sikdang (일미식당)

18.6Km    24     2021-03-24

1672, Jipung-ro, Andong-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do
+82-54-853-2490

This is a place that is visited frequently by Andong citizens. This Chinese (cuisine) restaurant is located in Andong-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do. The most famous menu is noodles in black bean sauce.

Spectacle de la danse des masques, Hahoe Byeolsingut Tallori (하회별신굿탈놀이 상설공연)

18.7Km    6063     2020-04-28

3-15, Hahoejongga-gil, Andong-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do
- Ligne Info Tourisme : +82-54-1330 (anglais, japonais, chinois)
- Pour obtenir plus d'info : +82-54-854-3664 (anglais)

Le Byeolsingut Tallori du village de Hahoe a été désigné comme patrimoine culturel intangible numéro 69. Il est joué depuis près de huit cents ans et se compose de 12 actes de danses dynamiques incluant des parties chantées ou parlées faisant la satire de moines corrompus et de nobles déchus. De façon plus générale, cette danse des masques évoque les relations entre classes dominantes et dominées à travers les joies et les peines de personnages représentatifs du peuple, soulignant les irrationnalités de la société de l’époque. La diversité des masques et la mise en scène ajoute un intérêt supplémentaire à ce spectacle d’une durée d’une heure environ.

Cheonji Sikdang (천지식당)

Cheonji Sikdang (천지식당)

19.0Km    35     2021-03-24

90, Utjangteo-gil, Andong-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do
+82-54-822-7008

You can eat maeuntang (fish stew) made with fresh freshwater fish. This Korean dishes restaurant is located in Andong-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do. The representative menu is spicy freshwater fish stew.

Falaise de Buyongdae (부용대)

Falaise de Buyongdae (부용대)

19.2Km    3576     2021-05-25

72, Gwangdeoksolbat-gil, Pungcheon-myeon, Andong-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do
+82-54-852-6800

La falaise de Buyongdae mesure 64 mètres de haut et se situe à l’extrêmité de la chaîne de montagnes Taebaek. Le sommet offre une vue panoramique du village de Hahoe à Andong. Son nom vient d’une ancienne histoire chinoise. Le nom de Buyongdae, qui signifie lotus, lui aurait été donné à cause de la configuration du village de Hahoe en forme de fleur de lotus. Par conséquant, c’est depuis la falaise que l’on a la meilleure vue de Hahoe. A proximité de Buyongdae se trouve la maisone de Ogyeonjeongsa, la maison de Gyeomamjeongsa et l’académie de Hwacheon Seowon.

Maison Ogyeonjeongsa (하회옥연정사)

Maison Ogyeonjeongsa (하회옥연정사)

19.3Km    4658     2017-05-24

86, Gwangdeoksolbat-gil, Pungcheon-myeon, Andong-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do

La Maison Ogyeonjeongsa, située au pied de la falaise Buyongdae dans le village de Hahoe à Andong, a été construite par Ryu Seong-yong, qui fut ministre durant la période Joseon. Sa construction a débuté en 1576 (9ème année du règne du roi Seonjo) et s’est achevée en 1586 (19ème année du règne du roi Seonjo). C’est dans cette maison que furent écrites les mémoires de guerre « Jingbirok » après l’Imjinwaeran, l’invasion de la Corée par le Japon en 1592. Pour vous rendre à la maison Ogyeonjeongsa, il vous faut traverser la rivière en ferry. En dépit de l’apparence modeste de la demeure, la beauté sans prétention de cette maison coréenne se fond parfaitement dans le magnifique cadre naturel des falaises, de la rivière et de la forêt.

* Ecole Sesimjae
Cette école privée est dotée en son centre d’un plancher en bois Gamrokheon, flanqué de chambres de chaque côté.
* Maison Wolnakjae
Wolnakjae signfie « attendre un ami ». C’est dans cette maison que le ministre Ryu Seong-yong a écrit ses mémoires de guerre Jingbirok.
* Centre d’activités
Sesimjae (deux chambres de quatre personnes maximum chacune, plancher en bois Gamrokheon)
Wolnakjae (une chambre pour huit personnes maximum, plancher en bois Aeoheon)

Okyeon pavilion [Korea Quality] / 옥연정사 [한국관광 품질인증]

Okyeon pavilion [Korea Quality] / 옥연정사 [한국관광 품질인증]

19.3Km    13101     2023-04-13

86, Gwangdeoksolbat-gil Pungcheon-myeon, Andong-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do
+82-54-854-2202 / +82-10-4520-3640

Ogyeonjeongsa House was established by Ryu Seong-yong (pen-name: Seoae, 1542-1607), a minister of Joseon, with the help of Buddhist monk Tanhong, as a place to study and educate his students. After building Wonjijeongsa House, Ryu wanted to build another house at the foot of Buyongdae Cliff amid a tranquil environment away from the village, but due to his financial situation he was unable to complete the building by himself. Then, the monk Tanhong helped him build Ogyeonjeongsa House, which took ten years (1576 to 1586) to complete, when Ryu was 45 years old. Later, Ryu Seong-yong was able to share warmth with his brother (Gyeomam), who lived in nearby Gyeomamjeongsa House. Ryu later lost his house in Hahoe in the great flood of the Nakdonggang River in 1605, and retired to Ogyeongjeongsa House where he wrote Jingbirok (The Book of Correction, National Treasure 132), a memoir of the Imjin War (Japanese Invasion of Korea in 1592). The house’s guestrooms include Sesimjae (meaning ‘having a mind to this place to achieve at least one in ten thousand things,’ inspired by the I Ching or The Book of Changes), which was used by Ryu as a schoolhouse and has two small rooms between the maru gamheonrok (wooden floor, meaning ‘looking up at the sky and down at the blue water,’ inspired by Wang Xizhi’s poetic diction); Wonlakjae (meaning ‘waiting for a friend’s visit,’ inspired by the Analects of Confucius), in which Ryu himself resided and wrote Jingbirok; and the maru aeoheon (meaning ‘I also love my hut,’ taken from a poem by Chinese poet Tao Yuanming), which measures two kan (a unit of measurement referring to the distance between two columns).

Bukchondeak [Korea Quality] / 하회 북촌댁 [한국관광 품질인증]

Bukchondeak [Korea Quality] / 하회 북촌댁 [한국관광 품질인증]

19.3Km    115761     2020-09-08

7, Hahoebukchon-gil, Pungcheon-myeon, Andong-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do
+82-54-853-2110, +82-10-2228-1786

Located in Hahoe-ri (Pungcheon-myeon, Andong-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do), Hahoe Bukchondaek House is a hanok stay that was originally built by a civil official named Ryu Sa-chun in 1797 (the 21st year of the reign of King Jeongjo of the Joseon dynasty). It consists of a small sarangchae (men’s quarters) with two wing buildings at sides. As the anchae (women’s quarters), large sarang, daemungan (gate building), and shrine were built by Ryu’s great-grandson, Ryu Do-seong (who served as a governor of Gyeongsang-do), in 1862 (the 13th year of the reign of King Cheoljong), the house displays the typical features of a Joseon nobleman’s house and is the largest in Hahoe. The large sarangbang, Bukchonyugeo (measuring 7-kan* at the front, 3-kan at the sides), consists of two 2-kan rooms, two 1-kan rooms, a 4-kan daecheong (wooden floor), a 3-kan numaru (upper floor), a 3-kan kitchen, a 3-kan garret, a 5-kan toe (the narrow wooden veranda running along the outside of the building), and a jjokmaru (narrow wooden veranda). The entire building can be converted into a single space simply by opening the sliding doors between the rooms and the doors between the rooms and the daecheong. The medium-sized sarang, Hwagyeongdang, consists of a 2-kan room, a 1-kan daecheong, a 3-kan toe, and a jjokmaru, while the small sarang, Susinwa, consists of a 1-kan room, a 1-kan daecheong, and a 2-kan toe. The anchae has a courtyard in the middle, a kitchen, a main room, a daecheong, a gobang (storeroom), a witsangbang (upper room), a toenmaru (a narrow wooden porch running along the outside of the building), an araetsangbang, a jungmun that links to the large sarang, an araetgwang (storeroom), a dwiju (grain-chest), and a munganbang (gate building room). The munganchae (gate building) and shrine are also situated within the grounds of the house, along with a 300-year-old pine tree that is known for its curved shape, which is said to resemble the Nakdonggang River as it meanders around the village of Hahoe. The house contains valuable cultural heritages including Doseongpaldojido (Map of the Eight Provinces of Korea), which is estimated to date from the seventeenth century, and is regarded as an invaluable historic material as it includes Dokdo Island and Jiandao as part of the Korean territory, and a painting titled ‘Sehwa,’ which is believed to have been given to Ryu Yi-jwa (pen-name: Hakseo, 1763-1837) by the king as a New Year’s present. Bukchondaek House was built by one of the richest families in Hahoe, who are well known for their generosity as they have helped local people on many occasions throughout history. *kan: a unit of measurement referring to the distance between two columns.