User:Dckewon5131/김한경 (1881년)

Kim Han-kyung (1881–?) was a Japanese colonial eran official and county governor.

Life
He was born on January 13, 1881. He is from Hanseongbu. In November 1905, he was selected as a survey trainee at the Yangji Department of the Takji Department and began his survey technology class in January 1906. In July of that year, after completing the class, he was appointed as a jockey of the Takji Department and served until December 1907. In January 1908, when the Provisional Financial Investigation Bureau of the Takji Department was established, he was appointed as the flag bearer of the Takji Department's Provisional Property Organization Bureau from July of the same year and the flag bearer of the Takji Department's Land Investigation Bureau from March 1910.

After Gyeongsul National Rule, he served as a surveyor and jockey of the Provisional Land Survey Bureau of the Governor-General of Joseon from October 1910 to 1913, and received the Korean Merger Memorial Medal in August 1912. From 1914 to July 1917, he served as a flag bearer at the Geodetic Division of the Provisional Land Survey Bureau of the Japanese Government-General of Korea, and in November 1915, he received the Daisho Denno, a memorial to commemorate the crisis. He served as secretary of Jangyeon-gun, Hwanghae-do from November 1919, and became a member of Jangyeon-gun due to the change of government control in February 1921. From April 1927 to April 1930, he served as the county governor of Eunyul-gun, Hwanghae-do. He also served as the head of Jinnampo Branch Office of the Pyongyang Exclusive Bureau in 1928, and as the head of Sariwon Branch Office of the Pyongyang Exclusive Bureau from 1929.

In November 1929, Hirohito Denno was awarded the Daerye Memorial Medal, and in April 1929, he received the Hun8 Seobo award.

In April 1930, he was promoted to county governor and retired in 1933 after serving as head of Singye-gun, Hwanghae-do. In January 1931, he received the Hun 7th Seobo award, the Joseon Showa 5-year National Tax Service Memorial Medal in October 1932, and the Hun 6th Seobo award in January 1933.

After death
In November 2009, it was included in the Pro-Japanese Biographical Dictionary published by the Institute for Ethnic Affairs.

Reference

 * Pro-Japanese Dictionary, National Research Institute of Korean Studies.