User:Dckewon5131/이택규 (1875년)

Lee Taek-gyu (July 20, 1875 – May 4, 1951) was an official of the Korean Empire and the Japanese colonial period, and his hometown was Panbu-myeon, Wonju-gun, Gangwon-do.

Life
In July 1902, he was appointed as the chief of the telecommunications department, and served as Hyoreung Chambong (appointed on October 7, 1905), Wonju-gun, Gangwon-do (appointed on December 21, 1906), and Wonju-gun, Gangwon-do (appointed on January 1, 1908). In 1907, while serving as a governor of Wonju-gun, Gangwon-do, he participated in actively interfering with the activities of the righteous army.

On October 1, 1910, he was appointed as the governor of Wonju-gun, Gangwon-do, and on August 1, 1912, he received the Memorial of the annexation of Korea from the Japanese government and the Daisho Daerye Memorial on November 10, 1915. He served as Uljin-gun, Gangwon-do (appointed on March 1, 1914), Gangneung-gun, Gangwon-do (appointed on July 1, 1918), and Tongcheon-gun, Gangwon-do (appointed on November 9, 1923) and was appointed as a temporary member of the Gangwon-do Local Land Investigation Committee on April 23, 1917. He actively participated in interrupting the March 1st Movement by touring Gangneung and issuing warnings to prevent the spread of the March 1st Movement in Gangneung, Gangwon Province, from March to April 1919.

From May 15 to June 12, 1920, he visited Japan as an inspection team, and received a sixth-grade warrant from the Japanese government on September 29, 1920. On December 1, 1924, he was appointed as a participant in Chungcheongnam-do, a member of the Civil Service Disciplinary Committee of Chungcheongnam-do, and a member of the General Examination Committee, and on February 26, 1926, he received a fifth-grade warrant from the Japanese government.

From September 6, 1926 to June 1, 1927, he served as a participating officer in Chungcheongbuk-do, and on October 11, 1926, he was appointed as a member of the Civil Service and General Disciplinary Committee of Chungcheongbuk-do. From June 3, 1927 to June 2, 1936, he served as a member of the Central Committee of the Japanese Government-General of Korea, and on June 30, 1927, he was crowned 4th (at that time, he was treated according to the courtesy of the aristocrat.

On October 13, 1927, the Japanese government received the 4th Huns and the Showa Daeri Memorial Medal on November 16, 1928, and on January 23, 1930, he was appointed as a counselor to the National Association.

On February 23, 1933, he consoled the Japanese military stationed in Manchuria as a representative of the Central Committee of the Korean Government-General, and in July 1933, he was appointed as a member of the Economic Division of the Central Committee of the Korean Government-General. While serving as a director of the National Association since 1935, he participated in the so-called suffrage petition campaign, which demanded that Japan's lower house election law be enforced in Joseon, and received a commendation from the Governor-General of Korea in October 1935.

pro-Japanese group It was included in the 705 list of pro-Japanese anti-national activities released by the 708-member list, the 705-member list of pro-Japanese biographical dictionaries of the Institute for National Affairs, the bureaucracy, and the Pro-Japanese Anti-National Action Committee.