Ch'ŏnggu Sinbo

Ch'ŏnggu Sinbo was a weekly Korean-language newspaper published in Nikolsk-Ussuriysky, Russian Empire from 1917 to 1919. It was renamed to Hanjok Kongbo shortly before its closure.

Background
A previous newspaper for Koreans in Vladivostok, Kwŏnŏp Sinmun, had been published from 1912 to 1914, but was discontinued due to political pressure from the Empire of Japan and the Russian Empire. Furthermore, the Korean organization that published the newspaper, Gwoneophoe, was also disbanded. However, with the rise of the 1917–1923 Russian Civil War, Koreans found themselves with more political freedom. In April 1917, a convention was called to create a new organization for Koreans in Russia (tentatively called 노령한인협회발기회). But negotiations for the creation of the new organization were strained due to a number of divisions in the Korean community, such as whether or not the Koreans wanted to obtain Russian citizenship or whether they supported the Bolsheviks in the civil war. The pro-Bolshevik faction left the conference, and the remaining majority anti-Bolshevik faction that supported obtaining citizenship formed an organization based in Nikolsk-Ussuriysky: the Korean General Assembly (고려족중앙총회). The pro-Bolshevik faction established a separate organization, the Aryŏng Korean Association, and began publishing their own newspaper, the Hanin Sinbo.

History
The Korean General Assembly began publishing the Ch'ŏnggu Sinbo on March 31, 1917. It was intended to be a weekly newspaper, but this effort was frustrated due to financial constraints.

In January 1918, the two organizations merged into a new organization (전로한족회중앙총회). Around this time, they renamed the paper to Hanjok Kongbo.

The newspaper closed around the end of 1919.