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Jo Sang-man (August 14, 1888 – ?) was a bureaucrat during the Japanese colonial period, and his hometown was Uiju-myeon, Uiju-gun, Pyeonganbuk-do.

Life
He graduated from a private Japanese language school in March 1907, and served as the head of the Ganggye Finance Department of the Pyongyang Financial Supervisory Service in January 1908, and as the head of the Unsan Finance Department in January 1909. From October 1, 1910 to November 26, 1911, he served as a secretary of Unsan-gun, Pyeonganbuk-do, and received the Korean Merger Memorial Medal from the Japanese government on August 1, 1912.

On March 28, 1914, after registering the establishment of the gold mining right for 944,351 pyeong (3,121,821.49m2) located in Seonhong-myeon, Yeongheung-gun, Hamgyeongnam-do, he was engaged in the mining industry for a while, and on June 25, 1915, he was appointed as a secretary of Jindo-gun, Jeollanam-do. He served as a member of Jindo-gun, Jeollanam-do in 1923 and Yeongam-gun, Jeollanam-do in March 1923, and was appointed as the governor of Hampyeong-gun, Jeollanam-do on December 24, 1924.

On November 16, 1928, he received the Showa Daeri Memorial Medal from the Japanese government, and served as Yeonggwang-gun of Jeollanam-do (appointed on March 12, 1929), Suncheon-gun of Pyeongan-do (appointed on September 20, 1929), Gangseo-gun of Pyeongan-do (appointed on December 28, 1931), Pyeongan-nam-do, Pyeongwon-gun (appointed on June 11, 1936, 1943). On November 7, 1931, the Japanese government received the 6th Seobo award and the 5th grade Seobo award on November 2, 1936, and on October 1, 1935, the Governor-General of Korea received a commemorative plaque and a silver badge to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the municipality.

While serving as Pyeongwon-gun and Daedong-gun, he was responsible for raising military supplies, supplying and promoting defense ideas, expanding productivity, encouraging government bonds and saving, and raising funds for national defense and patriotism

On April 29, 1940, in recognition of his cooperation in the Sino-Japanese War, he was awarded the 5th Hon. On March 30, 1940, he was ordained as the third highest official and fifth highest official on April 23, 1943, respectively, and on November 12, 1942, he received a fourth-highest official Seobo award from the Japanese government.

It was included in the list of 705 pro-Japanese anti-national activities released by the Committee on the Truth of Pro-Japanese Anti-National Activities, a bureaucratic section of the pro-Japanese dictionary of the Institute for Ethnic Affairs.