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Population?

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It seems population is poorly sourced for this article, specifically in that some of them reference the Samguk Sagi without providing a direct citation/online citation which would be preferrable. I'll look for some myself later but if anyone has statistics already would appreciate adding citations to the population of Silla Sunnyediting99 (talk) 15:36, 22 June 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Any updates on this? If anyone has reliable population stats I would appreciate it Sunnyediting99 (talk) 02:23, 29 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Keeping Hangul on Infobox and Wikipedia Page

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It's not productive at all to just remove Hangul from the various Korean states, especially because now in its current form Hangul is entirely non-existent on the infobox for readers to see. Additionally, the Korean states are not unique at all in this context. Đại Việt has both the traditional Vietnamese script that derived from Chinese as well as the modern romance language inspired script. The Shang dynasty has both the bone script and the modern Chinese script. Same with the Ottoman Empire, etc etc. Hanja is already in the article, it's not like it's being erased from the article, and keeping Hangul with it is the most efficient and productive design. Sunnyediting99 (talk) 14:51, 30 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]

The point is entirely that hangul was not the native script used in this polity. While it's of course more nuanced than saying "Chinese characters represent the same system in 1100 BC as in 1900 AD", there is an obvious distinction in the contiguous graphemic evolution of that system, as opposed to hangul, which was essentially invented from scratch in the 15th century. Its presence where the native name would be is misleading to readers who may not know this history. Remsense 16:46, 30 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I didn't see this until now, but the key counterpoint is that first and foremost, this effectively erases Hangul from the infoboxes, the resulting changes essentially had Hangul entirely absent from many of the pages of Baekje, Silla, Goguryeo, Goryeo, etc. We have cases of multiple Korean dynasties with no Hangul that not only makes the pages look awkward but also does erasure of Korean identity, hence why again keeping it with Hanja and Hangul is preferable.
Additionally, there are various states that I mentioned beforehand that the same metric is not applied at all towards, such as the Shang Dynasty article, or Dai Viet. There's also numerous other ones like the Ottoman Empire too. And also let's not forget that Joseon had its own hangul removed, which means this rule wasn't even applied fairly to the one state where it shouldn't have been applied to given that Hangul was invented very early on into Joseon and quickly became the script of the commoners, women, and the Buddhists.
The status quo, which has existed for the past two decades or so, is the correct path of keeping Hanja and Hangul together, this change is unnecessary and frankly would cause more confusion to readers. Sunnyediting99 (talk) 13:59, 6 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
There's no real justification to have forms that were not used by the state in question, because WP:Wikipedia is not a dictionary. Moreover, since the subject is obviously a part of Korean history, the name with hangul is in numerous other locations in the article, just not the |native_name= parameter, because it was not the native name. If this constitutes some erasure, then that it is an erasure of clear misconceptions about Korean history that we don't want a general audience to have. Remsense 23:48, 6 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Unfortunately this is not the case at all, in numerous edits, the Hangul was non-present and thus was only really visible in the infobox such as for Silla. In this edit https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=1231296695, 신라 doesn't appear anywhere in the introduction and doesn't appear until the second paragraph of Etymology. In some of the less egregious cases, they still didn't appear until the first page of Etymology. Additionally, I saw in the recently made edits it was even worse for the Vietnamese articles, in this case, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=1236166538, the current modern Latin-based Vietnamese script was entirely erased from the article.
While you make a fair point, the edits here can just as easily endanger the exact opposite, that people who aren't familiar with the Korean or Vietnames (or other countries) wikipedia articles can get the wrong impression that the Sino-script is the script of modern Korea/Vietnam (and vice versa for other countries) due to the removal.
Again, the compromise of Hanja and Hangul has been the status quo for the past twenty years, I would be supportive and open to notes that state that the script of the era was Hanja, but the edits made for these articles often lead to complete erasure of the modern script. Sunnyediting99 (talk) 00:20, 7 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Then hangul should probably be added back to the lead, and not specifically to an incorrect place for it. Longevity and oblique comparisons with other articles are the weakest arguments for retaining a certain presentation of information; each article is assessed on its own needs, and many articles have glaring deficiencies for decades at a time that must nevertheless be corrected. (WP:BEENHERE; WP:OTHERCONTENT). There's nothing to compromise about: hangul wasn't the native script, so it doesn't go in that particular spot regardless of whatever makes a particular editor happy; an idiosyncratic local consensus does not override sitewide policies or basic logic. To be clear, I would also be fine with removing hanja from the infobox if it's seen as misleading, as parameters shouldn't be filled unless they are clear and helpful in the context of a particular article. Remsense 00:27, 7 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
In an ideal situation it should, but that is not what is happening. What is happening is that Hangul is being erased from the articles, and there is no follow up on it, creating the opposite problem that I have been talking about that can lead to other misperceptions.
And the native script argument creates problems of its own, when does the native script become applicable and when does it not? How would we even define what is the native or official script, what makes the script deserving to be in the infoxbox?
For example the extensive list of Joseon monarchs has both Hangul and Hanja, at what point does it start applying to one or the other? Hangul wasn't officially used until late Joseon, but then again does not mean that Sejong the Great shouldn't have Hangul in his infobox despite inventing it, just because officially it wasn't the Joseon Government's script? And technically, the native script of original hangul was very different from modern Hangul, so then by that technically we should use the exact native Hangul to write out Sejongs name if we did (which would further complicate things, I'm not even sure if the Korean Wikipedians on here would know how to do that unless if we had a linguist). Furthermore, Hangul nearly died out post-Sejong until the Imjin War, this would completely disrupt uniformity for Hangul to appear and then disappear from infoboxes and could confuse readers.
This isn't even getting into the colonial period, Korea under Japanese rule, the Japanese Government tried to ban and eradicate Hangul, so it wasn't the official script of Colonial Korea and not used for government documents and etc and there were generations of Koreans between 1910-1945 who grew up not knowing Hangul due to the spread of the Japanese language, by this point its muddied on if we use Hangul or not because the script was widely banned and not used in official documents. When the script becomes native/official would be impossible to define in these situations.
By doing these changes it would create chaos and irregularity amongst the Korean states infobox pages, not to mention we can't even completely verify if Hanja was used in many of these states (almost all the pre-Three Kingdoms States such as Gojoseon, Buyeo, early Tamna, Jin have barely any historical records or none at all given that the earliest verified and still existing Korean historical records only really begin around the 300s/400s AD). Sunnyediting99 (talk) 01:07, 8 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I am not going to dispute any other articles that may or may not also be doing something idiosyncratic and incorrect; we are talking about this article, once again per WP:OTHERCONTENT. If it's not the native name, it shouldn't be presented as the native name, period. To me, it makes perfect sense to be in the lead sentence of the article, but since it's not obviously wrong it would be something that would be decided per article like any other on the encyclopedia. I'd appreciate your help in rectifying articles rather than gesturing to some secret "compromise" that seems to serve the tastes of specific editors rather than the readership or anything else transparent or rooted in site guidelines.

By doing these changes it would create chaos and irregularity amongst the Korean states infobox pages,

Nonsense. Let's do things the right way and stop intoning darkly about nonsense. Whatever clique that decided this do not own these articles independently of site guidelines; the next step would be to open an RfC about it, where I would guess the broader community would make the obvious choice to use the parameter for what it plainly says it's for.Remsense 02:07, 8 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
This is still relevant, because starting here would open that can of worms. Just because we are talking about this page doesn't mean we should ignore the consequences that will happen down the road, especially given that the initial edits that started this conversation were done precisely to enforce this uniformity onto the other pages. If the edits were done just to this page then I wouldn't be raising this, but it's very clear that the edits done to the other pages I mention did not happen out of nowhere, it was all done by one editor whose agenda was clearly to enforce their perception of uniformity. The uniformity argument is relevant because again, it's not like only the Silla article was edited, it was merely one of multiple edits with all the same intent and purpose.
Then there are the other problems with the native name argument. If we're strictly talking about native names, the native name for this page wouldn't even be Silla, the state was until 504 AD not standardized with the name Silla, and the reverse argument would hold true for the Goguryeo page (given that Goguryeo changed its name to Goryeo, just as Silla had changed its name from Saro to Silla). The fact that moree than half of Silla's history, the native name wasn't even Silla (and term that only got applied much later in its history) shows the folly of the native name argument, the infobox and page don't reflect that either. So what are the infoboxes reflecting then?
It's reflecting the name and information of the fallen state as recognized by its succesor states in the modern era, in this case, because Korean historiography came to call Silla as "Silla" rather than Saro, it's original name, or Goguryeo as Goguryeo rather than "Goryeo." The addition of Hangul reflects the same, the name and title of the states are the modern understanding of its predecessor state. Using the native name for the infobox is not as effective or useful to readers as the use of the modern name for the infobox which is what the current state of the article reflects.
I don't know what clique you are referring to, this was in all likelihood the organic growth from various Wikipedian editors over the years. I also do not appreciate the way you are painting me as serving "the tastes of specific editors" which makes no sense given that there hasn't been a single person discussing this besides me and you, or advocating a "secret compromise" given that I was the one who openly started this discussion on a Talk Page and preferred the status quo state of the article. If I were an actual bad faith actor I would not be talking with you right now. I have not once implied you were acting maliciously or in a negative light, please do not engage in Wikipedia:No personal attacks to me. Sunnyediting99 (talk) 12:31, 8 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]

If we're strictly talking about native names, the native name for this page wouldn't even be Silla [until 504 AD]

Then it possibly shouldn't be there either, but it likely should since it was used at some point during the state's existence.

The addition of Hangul reflects the same, the name and title of the states are the modern understanding of its predecessor state.

No it doesn't; it implies that was the native name used by the state itself.

I don't know what clique you are referring to

Whoever created this consensus we're supposed to adhere to instead of what we're generally supposed to do for any other historical context.
You said there was some previous agreement, and that was what I was referring to in my reply. In any case, if you're not presently convinced I'll likely be opening an RfC about the use of |native_name= in infoboxes for historical Korean states soon.Remsense ‥  22:29, 21 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]