User:Dckewon5131/김사준

Kim Sa-jun (1855–1917) was an official of the late Joseon Dynasty. It is said that he had a beautiful appearance and was good at poetry.

Life
The 10th son of Kim Je-nam, the father of King Inmokdaebi, the ancestor of the Joseon Dynasty, and his daughter Deokdang Kim Soo-deok (Lee Gang-gongbi after the annexation) married King Uichin in 1893 and became his father-in-law.

In Hwanghyeon's "Maecheonyarok", Inmokdaebi, who lost his father and son due to a power struggle with Gwanghaegun, once gave a precept to his parents not to marry in the future, so Kim Sa-jun refused to marry his daughter.

There is a rumor that the marriage was established according to the will of the Empress Myeongseong who liked the bride.

In 1879, he was recommended as a subordinate official as a Umseo, and in 1881, he was appointed to the shrine, and later served as a government official of the prefectural governor and county governor. In 1901, he became a medical officer at the Central Garden of the Korean Empire, and served as the director of the Ministry of Justice, Naejangwongyeong, Uijeongbu Chanjeong, the special promotion hall in the palace, and Kyujanggak Jihoogwan.

In 1910, he received a baronetcy from the Japanese government for his cooperation in the conclusion of the annexation treaty between Korea and Japan, and received 25,000 won in silver bonds. On August 1, 1912, he was awarded the Korea Merger Memorial Hall and the fifth-ranked servant on December 7 of that year. He was appointed a councillor of the Central Committee of the Japanese Government-General of Korea. However, in 1916, it was revealed that it was linked to an overseas independence movement organization seeking asylum in King Gojong, and he was deprived of his title under Article 16 of the Joseon nobility decree. He died in March 1917 (see article 8 March 1917 in the Maeilshinbo).

The list of 708 pro-Japanese groups announced in 2002 was included due to the fact that they were knighted, the list of prospective pro-Japanese biographical dictionaries compiled by the Institute for National Affairs in 2008 to be included in the pro-Japanese biographical dictionary was excluded in recognition of the deprivation of the title.

Family

 * Ancestors: Kim Je-nam → Kim Hong-seok → Kim Ho → Kim Sang-yoon → Kim Sik → Kim Han → Kim Seung-yeon → Kim Deok-soo
 * Father: Kim Deok-soo (1832 ~ 1867)
 * Mother: Dongnae Jeong (1832-1861), daughter of Kim Se-cheol
 * Mrs. Hwang of Changwon (1855~?), daughter of Hwang Geung-yeon
 * First daughter: Kim Soo-deok
 * Son-in-law: Uichin of Baekje : Yi Kang
 * Family: Kim Sa-cheol
 * In-law : Gojong of Korea

Reference

 * Kim Sa-joon - Korea Research Institute