Korean names questions,,,,

Yesterday I found out the names of my korean great-grandparents: 백 준목 and 신 복네요. I was very surprised to see that the name of my great grandmother had 4 syllables! I know that most korean names have 3 syllables. I’ve seen some with 2 and I assumed that they existed but they were unusual. But 4??? Are they less common? Why / since when have korean names been stipulated to be 3 syllables long? I thought that maybe since it’s such an old name (my grandfather is 85 yo now and we’re talking about his parents) maybe it was not so strange back then.

PS: did I get the hangeul right? I found the names romanized in a document from the late 60s/early 70s as “Jun Mok Baek” and “Bok Neyo Shin” (Baek/백 is my last name so I assumed they were written backwards). Also, I’m from Argentina, I don’t know it makes any difference for the romanization method…

PS2: my grandfather’s name is Joon-Nam (준남) is it a thing to share the first syllable with your father?

submitted by /u/King_Of_Illiterature
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