User:Dckewon5131/김상연

Kim Sang-yeon (26 June 1874 – 29 September 1941) was a bureaucrat of the Korean Empire and the Japanese colonial period, whose the hometown is Yeongcheon, his pen name is Susong, and his domicil is Gyeongseongbu-dong.

Life
As an apprentice to the Ministry of Agriculture, Industry and Energy in May 1895, he visited the 4th Waseda Expo in Japan and studied political economy at Waseda University from September 1899 until his graduation in July 1902. He studied administrative affairs in the Tohoku region of Japan from August to December 1902 and returned to Japan in February 1903.

From July 1904 to May 1906, he served as an instructor at the Agricultural and Commercial School, and from October 1904 to February 1905, he served as a member of the Government Administration. From April 1, 1905 to February 16, 1906, he served as vice president of Hwangseong Newspaper and was appointed as an instructor at the Judicial Training Center in June 1906. He served as the governor of Hongju-gun, Chungcheongnam-do from March 13 to October 29, 1907, and was appointed as Yongcheon Buyun, Pyeonganbuk-do on September 3, 1908, and Yongcheon-gun, Pyeonganbuk-do on October 1, 1910.

In May 1910, a wooden boat was received from the Governor-General of Joseon on June 20, 1911 for donating KRW 12 to repair teachers at Yongampo Union Primary School in Yongcheon-gun, Pyeonganbuk-do. On August 1, 1912, he received a commemorative letter for the annexation of Korea from the Japanese government, and on March 1, 1914, he was appointed as the head of Uiju-gun, Pyeonganbuk-do. On November 10, 1915, he received the Daisho Daishin Memorial Medal from the Japanese government and served as a temporary member of the North Pyongan Provincial Land Investigation Committee from August 18, 1917 to March 28, 1918.

On September 29, 1920, he received a certificate of honor from the Japanese government and served as a participating officer in Gangwon Province from February 12, 1921 to November 30, 1924. While promoting the government policy of the Joseon Governor-General while serving as a participating officer in Gangwon Province, he contributed several articles glorifying and praising the annexation of the Korean Empire by the Japanese Empire and praising the Japanese Emperor. From 1923 to 1924, he served as a member of the Gangwon-do Provincial Government of the Civil Affairs and Common Disciplinary Committee, and received a certificate of honor from the Japanese government on November 28, 1928 and a Showa Daerye Memorial Medal on November 16, 1928. In 1924, he was ranked 5th in the bell and 3rd in the high school, respectively, and served as the representative of Hanyang Yangjo Association's subsidiary from 1931 to 1939. pro-Japanese group It was included in the 708-member provincial participation hall section, the bureaucracy section of the pro-Japanese dictionary list of the National Research Institute, and the 705-member pro-national activities announced by the Pro-General National Act.