Namtaeryeong Station
Name
Its name means "great southern pass," referring to a passageway linking Seoul and Gwacheon, between Mt. Gwanak and Mt. Umyeon. The name came from the Choson Dynasty. Jeongjo of Joseon, the 22nd King of Choson, had gone to Hwaseong Fortress, Suwon, where Jeong-Jo's father was buried on. When Jeong-Jo came back to palace, he passed the hill named 'Fox Hill.' But King Jeong-Jo didn't know about this hill's name, and suddenly he saw one old man, so he asked to him "What is this hill's name?" So the old man answered "Oh lord! This hill's name is Namtaeryeong." However, the one vassal already knew what's this hill's real name; Fox Hill, so he contradict to old man and said "No! This hill's name is Fox Hill." King Jeong-Jo wondered why the old man had lied to him. So the old man said "Actually fox is very vicious and sly animal, so I couldn't say the real name to you, because you are the King of us, so I couldn't make a mess to your name, I decided to tell you the better name Namtaeryeong, which means 'Great Hill located on Southern part,' instead of Fox Hill." King Jeong-Jo was impressed, and decided to change that hill's name Fox Hill to Namtaeryeong.
History
Most provincial railways in South Korea were built with Japanese expertise while Korea was under Japanese rule. Trains still run on the left hand side of the track on these railways. But the Seoul Subway, which was constructed in the 1970s, ran on the right hand track. Therefore, between Namtaeryeong and Seonbawi Stations, where the two lines connect, the underground tracks must cross over from right hand drive in Namtaeryeong to left hand drive in Seonbawi.
Station layout
G | Street level | Exit |
L1 Concourse |
Lobby | Customer Service, Shops, Vending machines, ATMs |
L2 Platforms |
Northbound | ← Line 4 toward Jinjeop (Sadang) |
Island platform, doors will open on the left | ||
Southbound | Gwacheon Line toward Oido (Seonbawi) → |
References
- ^ "남태령역" (in Korean). Doopedia. Retrieved 2017-07-18.
- ^ "Namtaeryeong". Seoul Metro. Archived from the original on 2017-10-30. Retrieved 2017-07-18.
- ^ "<오후여담>좌측통행" (in Korean). Munhwa Ilbo. 2006-05-16. Retrieved 2017-07-12.
Preceding station | Seoul Metropolitan Subway | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Sadang towards Jinjeop
|
Line 4 | Seonbawi towards Oido
|
37°27′50″N 126°59′21″E / 37.46379°N 126.98912°E