User:Dckewon5131/이병렬 (1870년)

Lee Byung-ryul (born 28 July 1870 in Eumseong, Chungcheong-do, Korea - died November 20, 1955 in Eumseong, Chungcheongbuk-do, South Korea)

He was a bureaucrat during the Korean Empire and Japanese occupation, and served as a member of the Central Council of the Governor-General of Joseon.

The pen name was Hyeonha, the domicile was Yeonan, and the hometown was Gamgok-myeon, Eumseong-gun, Chungcheongbuk-do.

Life
In 1902, he entered the relationship by becoming a junior official of the Agriculture, Industry and Energy Department, such as Pan Im-gwan 6. He worked in the Department of Agriculture and Commerce for the fair. In 1903, he was dispatched to Osaka, Japan.

When the Russo-Japanese War broke out in 1904, his ability to speak Japanese was recognized. As a Japanese interpreter, he helped Japan win the Russo-Japanese War and was appointed as an instructor at the Army Youth School. In 1908, he was appointed as an official of Pyeongannam-do.

When the Korea-Japan annexation treaty was signed in 1910, he was immediately appointed as the head of Anak-gun, Hwanghae-do, and served as the head of Yeoju-gun, Gyeonggi-do, through Seoheung-gun and Bongsan-gun. At the end of 1922, the head of Yeoju-gun, Gyeonggi-do, was the last to leave.

After leaving the army, he led the New Japanese Movement, which openly advocated pro-Japaneseism, as the executive director, vice chairman, chairman, and advisor of the National Association

In 1927, he was selected as a member of the Central Council. He lived in the current Seodaemun-gu area of Seoul and worked as acommunity leader in this area, and in his old age, he went down to Eumseong-gun, Chungbuk, and served as the head of Gamgok-myeon.

In 1912, when he was serving as the governor of Seoheung-gun, Hwanghae-do, he was awarded the Korean Merger Memorial Medal by the Japanese government. As of 1938, when he was the head of Gamgok-myeon, Eumseong-gun, he was ranked 5th in the rank of King Hun 6th.

After death
The center of the pro-Japanese group 708-member list announced in 2002 and the pro-Japanese group category,

It was included in both the central and bureaucratic sectors of the National Institute of Korean Studies's pro-Japanese life dictionary, which was released in 2008, and was also included in the 705 pro-Japanese anti-national activities announced by the pro-Japanese anti-national activities committee in 2009.

See more

 * Chosun Government-General's Central Office
 * the National Association

Reference

 * Lee Byung-ryul - National History Compilation Committee
 * Lee Byung-ryul - National History Compilation Committee