Lee Man-gyu

North Korean linguist and politician (1889–1978)

Lee Man-gyu
Hangul
이만규
Hanja
李萬珪
Revised RomanizationLee Mangyu
McCune–ReischauerLee Mankyu

Lee Man-gyu (Korean: 이만규; 1889–1978), was an educator, linguist of Korean, and Korean independence activist. After the Japanese colonial period, he aligned himself with North Korea. His art name was Yaja (也自, "myself" in Japanese).

He was an educator, scholar of Korean literature, and researcher of Korean language during the Japanese colonial period. He stayed in North Korea following the Inter-Korean negotiations in April 1948, and participated in the establishment of North Korea.[1]

Life

He was born in Wonju, Gangwon, Joseon.[citation needed]

He studied medicine for three years at Daehan Hospital, graduating in 1910,[2] but practised medicine for only 7 months.[3] He served as the principal of Baehwa Girls' Middle School, and was a friend and in-law of Yeo Woon-hyung. As a member of the Korean Language Society he was arrested in 1942 by the Japanese colonial authorities, and imprisoned.[4] He was also involved in the Hanyeongseowon patriotic song incident,[5] the March 1 Independence Movement, the Heungeop Club incident, and for these was arrested four times and imprisoned three times, spending more than 18 months in prison.[3]

After participating in inter-Korean negotiations in April 1948, he remained in North Korea and participated in the establishment of the government of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea in September of that year. Until his death in 1978, he was a socialist politician and unification activist who served as a representative of the Supreme People's Assembly, the chairman of the Joseon Character Reform Committee, and the president of the History of the Unification of the Fatherland. He served as the director of general education in North Korea, and led the translation project of Goryeosa and Rijo Annals early on.

Works

  • The History of Joseon Education (published, 1988)

See also

  • Lee Man-gyu, the core of the Korean Language Society, was actually a pro-Japanese
  • ANALYSIS OF 'THE EDUCATIONAL HISTORY OF CHOSUN' BY LEE MAN KYU
  • Yoon Hyung Park; Tae Sook Hong; Kyu Hwan Sihn; Sun Mi Lim; Hee Gon Kim (1 December 2008). "[Medical doctors' independence movement during the Japanese colonial period]". Ui sahak (in Korean). 17 (2): 223–237. ISSN 1225-505X. PMID 19174627. Wikidata Q119912356.
  • Lee Gil Sang (2012). "Lee Man-gyu's National Identity during the Hwangminhwa Period - Focused on the Pro-Japanese Tendency -National identity of Lee Man-gyu - mental anguish and pro-Japanese vestiges". The History of Korean Education (in Korean). 34 (1): 57–78. doi:10.15704/KJHE.34.1.201203.57. ISSN 2713-6019. Wikidata Q119913138.

References

  1. ^ 심, 성보 (26 June 2010). ""세종이 말을 듣지 않는다"…집현전 학생도 '동맹휴학' "Sejong doesn't listen"... Jihyunjeon students also take a leave of absence". Pressian (in Korean). Retrieved 24 June 2023.
  2. ^ 황, 상익 (13 September 2010). "식민지 의대 졸업생이 선택한 두 가지 길 Two Paths Chosen by Colonial Medical College Graduates". Pressian (in Korean). Retrieved 24 June 2023.
  3. ^ a b Kim, Se-min (2019). "학술논문검색사이트 KISS: Lee Man-gyu's life and national movement". Oncology Research (in Korean). 18: 135–163. Retrieved 24 June 2023.
  4. ^ "이만규는 '친일파'가 아니라 '독립운동가'였다 Lee Man-gyu was not a 'pro-Japanese' but an 'independence activist'". OhmyNews (in Korean). 15 February 2012. Retrieved 24 June 2023.
  5. ^ "개성 한영서원의 애국창가집 사건과 3·1운동 The incident of the patriotic songs of Gaeseong Hanyeongseowon and the March 1st Movement". Gyeonggi Studies Plaza (in Korean). 4. 2020. Retrieved 24 June 2023.