User:Dckewon5131/이범관 (1888년)

Lee Beom-kwan (September 23, 1888) was a local administrative official during the Japanese occupation.

Life
The son of a government official, born in Danyang-gun, Chungcheongbuk-do, Lee Beom-gwan is the younger brother of Lee Beom-ik, who served as the governor and the governor-general of the Joseon Dynasty during the Japanese colonial period. In March 1910, just before the Korea-Japan annexation treaty was signed, he graduated from the Japanese Department of the Government public Hansung Foreign Language School.

Shortly after graduating from school, in April 1910, he was hired as a junior official and briefly worked as an official at the end of the Korean Empire. Four months later, the Korea-Japan annexation treaty was signed, and following the personnel transfer in October, it became a member of the local bureau of the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications of the Governor-General. He was dispatched to the civil engineering department and Sarriwon branch office of the local government and worked in Hwanghae-do.

The following year, in March 1911, he was appointed as a military secretary of the Governor-General's Office and was appointed to Danyang-gun, Yeongdong-gun, and Goesan-gun, Chungcheongbuk-do. In 1927, he was promoted to the secretary general of Eumseong-gun, and in April 1930, he was selected as the governor-general and became the governor of Boeun-gun. Since then, he has served as county governors in Jincheon-gun and Jecheon-gun.

"Joseon Meritorious Service" compiled by the Governor-General in 1935 while serving as the 6th-ranked Jincheon-gun County governor 에 It is included as one of the 353 Korean contributors. The booklet has a reputation as "a strong-willed person." It is also included in the list of commendators awarded by the Governor-General to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the city government.

As of 1941, when he was the governor of Jecheon, he was ranked 6th in the rank of King Hun 5th in the rank of King Hun 5th.

Among the list of prospective pro-Japanese life dictionaries released by the Institute for National Affairs in 2008, it was included in the bureaucratic sector and 705 pro-Japanese anti-ethnic activities announced by the Committee on the Truth of Anti-ethnic Act in 2009. His older brother Lee Bum-ik is also on two lists.

See more

 * Lee Bum-ik

Reference

 * Lee Beom-kwan - National History Compilation Committee