The following is an archived discussion of the DYK nomination of the article below. Please do not modify this page. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as this nomination's talk page, the article's talk page or Wikipedia talk:Did you know), unless there is consensus to re-open the discussion at this page. No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was: promoted by SL93 (talk) 02:42, 10 August 2020 (UTC)
... that the Naewat-dang shamanic paintings(example pictured) were discovered when a university professor encountered a nearly eighty-year-old homeless woman living in a cave? Source: "그의 사망 후 집안이 몰락하자 그 부인이 집을 팔고 제주시 산지천(山地川) 가까이에 있는 남수각 근처의 굴 속에서 살 때 이들 무신도와 무구 등도 이곳으로 옮겼다. 1959년 현용준 교수가 우연히 이곳을 지나다가 뱃가에서 어떤 한 노인이 무슨 이상한 그림을 가지고 이리저리 짝을 맞추고 있는 것을 보고 이상하게 생각하여 확인한 결과 그 한 노인은 고임생의 부인이고 그림들은 내왓당의 무신도이며 그림은 전부 10폭이라는 것을 알았다... 고임생의 처는 1959년 처음 만났을 때 거의 팔십 살에 가까웠다고 한다" ("After his [Go Im-saeng's] death, the family was [economically] ruined. His wife sold the house and lived inside a cave near the Namsu Pavilion close to the Sanji Stream in Jeju City, where she moved the paintings in question and other ritual implements. In 1959, Professor Hyun Yong-jun [then of Jeju National University] happened to pass by and saw an old woman by the side of a boat arranging certain strange paintings here and there. Thinking this odd, he inquired into her and discovered that the woman was the wife of Go Im-saeng, that the paintings were the shamanic paintings of Naewat-dang, and that there were ten paintings in total... [Hyun Yong-jun] recounts that Go Im-saeng's wife was nearly eighty years old when they first met in 1959.") (Hyun Y., Ha H. & Lee S. 2001, pp. 5-6)
Reviewed: None needed (3rd DYK nom)
Created by Karaeng Matoaya (talk). Self-nominated at 09:48, 22 July 2020 (UTC).