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Travel

City break in Seoul

July 18, 2012 12:38
A scene at the Dongdaemum market where you can buy anything from knock-off Prada to ginseng

BySharron Livingston, Sharron Livingston

3 min read

Somewhere in South Korea is a young woman who was named Leah, after my daughter. When we met on a sunny Friday morning in Seoul she said her “English name” was Eileen, adding that she wanted to change her Western moniker because it sounded like “alien.” Could I suggest an alternative?

“Oh, Leah — that’s so pretty, but it’s a name for a cute girl and I am not cute,” she demured with a giggle.
Of all the conversations I enjoyed with the people of Seoul this is the one I really can’t shake off. In just a few words, my daughter’s new namesake seemed to encapsulate her city’s unapologetic pro-Western stance and the friendliness of its people.

The architecture of this great 24-hour metropolis is just as appealing. Endless shiny skyscrapers, swish retail complexes and neon-saturated streets sit cheek by jowl with the palaces, temples and royal tombs that declare Seoul’s status as a seat of regal power from as far back as 1392, when the Korean Peninsula was united by the kings of the Josean dynasty.

Elegant colonial structures from the city’s Japanese occupation and the clay tiled roofs of Korea’s traditional squat wooden hanok houses, jostle for space with pale clusters of tower blocks adorned with words such as “Harmony” and ‘Happy Home’ on their facades.