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Summary
In February 2002, while seeking UNESCO listing for Koguryo relics found within its territory, China launched the Northeast Asia Project. The research project sought to rewrite the position of the ancient kingdom, presenting it as a Chinese provincial government rather than a sovereign nation. In response, South Korean scholars demanded their government lodge aprotest for what they saw as a deliberate and systematic attempt todistort history. China��s attempted revision of ancient history to claim the Koguryo kingdom as its own has raised concerns around the region of a resurgent Chinese nationalism that could have damaging effects on the intertwined relations of Northeast Asian powers. The South Korean government loudly protested recent moves by China to assimilate the history of Koguryo. Koguryo seems destined to join Taiwan, Tibet and Mongolia on a long list of disputes involving territories on China��s periphery. |