Misplaced Pages

Iljinhoe

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
1904–1910 Korean political organization
Iljinhoe
Hangul일진회
Hanja一進會
Revised RomanizationIljinhoe
McCune–ReischauerIlchinhoe

The Iljinhoe (一進會; 일진회) was a nationwide organization in Korea formed on August 8, 1904. A Japanese record states the number of party members was about 800,000, but another survey record by the Japanese Resident-General of Korea in 1910 shows the number was about 90,000. After seeing the failure of Korea's isolationism, the party claimed that Korea could not develop capitalism on its own, and demanded a merger with the Japanese Empire. Song Byeong-jun (송병준), the leader of the group and a high-ranking official in the Korean government before the Japan-Korea Annexation Treaty actively pushed ahead the annexation and received a title of nobility from the Japanese government in 1920. The group was disbanded on September 26, 1910, a month after the Japan-Korea Annexation Treaty. Song Byeong-jun is considered a traitor in modern day Korea.

In 2006, a South Korean presidential committee announced the names of 120 people suspected of collaborating with Japan during its annexation rule of Korea. The list included 27 members of Iljinhoe, all of whom allegedly took the lead in suppressing Korean troops and supporting Japan-Korea annexation. The people on the list will face investigation on suspicion of conducting traitorous pro-Japanese activities during the 1904–1919 period, although no prosecutions will take place as the people implicated have long since died.

See also

References

  1. Japan Center for Asian Historical Records (in Japanese) Reference Code B03041514200, pp.12, "種別 政社, 名称 一進会, 設立年月 光武八年八月, 事務所 永楽町二丁目, 重ナル役員 会長 李容九 副会長 洪肯燮, 会員数 凢八十万名"
  2. Hosaka, Y. (2005, p.146). 일본 고지도에도 독도 없다. . Seoul, Korea: Jaeumgwa Moeum. ISBN 89-544-0366-2.
  3. ^ Doosan Encyclopedia
  4. Doosan Encyclopedia
  5. Archived 2006-07-21 at the Wayback Machine 2006 KBS article

External links


Korea under Japanese rule
Colony of the Empire of Japan from 1910 to 1945
Government
Cultural policies
Economy
Companies
Controversies
Forced labor
Events
Collaborators
Independence movement
Places and structures
Legacy
Comfort women
Categories: