This article examines typological features of South Korean law using a comparative historical method. Namely: the relationship between religious and secular principles in South Korean law from the time of the establishment of the law of the ancient Korean state of Silla to the present day. The purpose of the study is a comparative analysis of the influence that religion and the secular world with their requirements, regulatory rules and regulations had on the development of South Korean law. The evolution of law in the south of the Korean Peninsula is a long process of creating a national legal system through the normative and regulatory requirements of a wide variety of beliefs, including primitive ones, which the secular authorities officially recognized as generally binding and provided them with all the power of state coercion, drawing them into the cycle of lawmaking and law enforcement.
Malinovskaya et al. (Wed,) studied this question.