User:MargaretRDonald/sandbox/Korean articles/Proposal for Wikicon Brisbane 2023

Brief description of your talk/workshops/session edit

Depending on what time I am allowed, I would prefer a workshop as this area needs considerable work. Of 63898 Qitems showing that they belong to Korea in its various manifestions from the three kingdoms period to now, there are 13,304 items lacking the property P31 (instance of) This means that monoglot English speakers have no way of finding these items which usually link to kowiki pages.

Of the Qitems for Korean people https://w.wiki/7aY9 13861/37479 (37%) Qitems have no English label making such people unfindable unless you know the Hangul. Even with English labels, Koreans and Korean subjects can be extraordinarily difficult to find because of the varying romanization of the Hangul.

In an attempt to make these more accessible, I have constructed many queries, which enable me to add labels,descriptions, P31, coordinates, street addresses, and all manner of statements to thousands of Korean Qitems, including the addition of the property P9475 {Encyclopedia of Korean Culture ID) to 2315 Qitems of the mix'n'match catalogue for the Encyclopedia of Korean Culture(https://mix-n-match.toolforge.org/#/catalog/4392). (58% of those matched)

Unexpected pleasures: the mode of construction of the Jincheon Nongdari Bridge; that even trees as young as 100 years are cultural monuments: Dokdo Perpetual Tree (Q16092819). Not only do I find images for commons to illustrate the articles but when articles exist in English, I frequently fix a paragraph or several in an attempt to make the article read like English.

I presented part of this work at Wikimania 2023 and have been invited to present another facet of it at the Seoul Wikiconference in October 2023.

If this is to be a five (ten would be better) minute talk then I will be presenting what I have done, my motivations and my pleasures

If it is to be an hour long workshop, the plan would be to work via queries on A) humans, labelling them effectively and adding statements to Wikidata from kowiki, and having found something out about the human, matching that human to a encyclopedia of Korean culture entry. (Each person could work on a different century/decade from the query birthdates.) B) heritage items (adding label, description, instance of, coordinates and Encyclopedia of Korean Culture IDs) C) working in other languages to give labels, P31 and whatever else you can glean. For example: Queries:

MD introduction edit

For Seoul edit

Margaret has been a Wikimedian since December 7, 2017 and in that time has made 694, 510 edits: 620833 in Wikidata; 21676 in commons; 41046 in enwiki (and 53 in kowiki). She started to watch K-dramas a year ago, and since then has been immersed in things Korean, whather it be Taejo, Taejong, Jinheung, Sejong, Jeong Yak-yong, Jeongjo, Jang Yeong-Sil, Sedo politics or cultural monuments,

Every wikidata item found via a query leads to a story, whether it is the extraordinary mode of construction of the Jincheon Nongdari Bridge; or that trees may be cultural monuments: Dokdo Perpetual Tree (Q16092819), as can forests (the Geoje Hakdong-ri Camellia Forest and Pale-colored Bird Breeding Site (Q12583322), and places (the Geomun Oreum (Q12583307), the Ganghwa mudflats and black-faced spoonbill breeding grounds (Q12583174), or the Gajisan azalea colony (Q12582483)

‎How can I convey the pleasure of starting to learn a very little of Korean history, Korean culture, Korean people, Korean places and things which are valued, by adding one fact at a time (subject, verb, object - with reference) to the structured, graphical database which is Wikidata.

How can one not honour this culture of written records? Where one may hear the living voices of the long dead (for me in sijo only).

Story for Brisbane edit

How can one not honour a culture of written records?