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Detailed Information
Openning hours
  • Monday Closed
  • Tuesday 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM
  • Wednesday 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM
  • Thursday 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM
  • Friday 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM
  • Saturday 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM
  • Sunday 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM
Photos
Ahn Jung Geun Memorial Hall
Ahn Jung Geun Memorial Hall
Ahn Jung Geun Memorial Hall
Ahn Jung Geun Memorial Hall
Ahn Jung Geun Memorial Hall
Ahn Jung Geun Memorial Hall
Ahn Jung Geun Memorial Hall
Ahn Jung Geun Memorial Hall
Ahn Jung Geun Memorial Hall
Ahn Jung Geun Memorial Hall
Reviews
N R (12/21/2020)
This is the museum about Ahan junghun an korean Independence activist.he faught and killed Itawhirobomi( Japanese)... This museum have things about his family personal belongings like his room in prison his rewards sample of his motivational writings and things about his activities for Independace of Korea... Elementary Students of history really enjoy it ... And can see through so many things which they study in books 📚
ken chon (01/03/2020)
A must to learn Korean independce movement.... Ahn Jung Geun a freedom fighter and a true Patriot... Please visit it's a unique and touching experience.
Tony Ahn, Jr. (10/23/2019)
Free entry - no cost of admission. Every Korean should visit this place at least once in his/her lifetime, and pay the honor & respect due to this great Patriot who gave his life for the civil rights of all Asians.
Gina Ng (02/18/2020)
Free Korean museum with minimum English (either read the brochure or download free app for audio guide) but might not be suitable for young children or people sensitive to violence/gore Staff was nice to talk to me in English & played the video in English for me 👍🏻
hypnodisc Eckhardt (07/13/2018)
So, this was the most controversial museum I've ever visited. Ahn Jung Geun is treated here as a revolutionary, dedicated to the freedom of his country. He is celebrated, he has a giant statue, his calligraphy is all over the place. His quotes are memorialised, his actions re-enacted in wax statues speaking with the voices of actors. Here's the problem, though. His most famous action is the assassination of a Japanese prince in a train station. So, the story is very interesting. The whole museum is in Korean, with no English anywhere, so I experienced this museum through the lens of Google translate, which was surprisingly doable. The only English in the museum is in the foreign newspapers in the exhibit that report on the murder/assassination. The foreign language newspapers are hilarious, because they're captioned in Korean like, "the foreign newspapers report on the farcical show trial", but then when you read it in English, they call Ahn a thug, who was given a fair chance to speak, but just rambled incomprehensibly about his ideas, so the jury decided that his crime couldn't have been politically motivated, because he was so ignorant. We see the prince called an oppressor in Korean, while the newspapers called him basically an unimportant old man, who had no reason for being targeted. I don't want to say the museum was bad, but it is very biased, so bear that in mind when you visit. It is a fascinating look into how every country in the world is rewriting their history, not just the big players. I'd recommend it for the pure novelty value, and for curiosity, but if you're just looking for a history museum to bring your kids to to learn about Korea, maybe choose somewhere else. There's a graphic exhibit about the assassin's cutting part of their finger off, and it's a lot of reading, and a couple of audio recordings.
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