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Empress Myeongseong

Empress Myeongseong[b] (Korean명성황후; 17 November 1851 – 8 October 1895)[c] was the official wife of Gojong, the 26th king of Joseon and the first emperor of the Korean Empire. During her lifetime, she was known by the name Queen Min (민비, 閔妃). After the founding of the Korean Empire, she was posthumously given the title of Myeongseong, the Great Empress (명성태황후, 明成太皇后).

Empress Myeongseong
Empress Consort of Korea (posthumously)
Queen consort of Joseon
Tenure20 March 1866 – 1 November 1873
PredecessorQueen Cheorin
SuccessorEmpress Sunjeong as the Empress of Korea
Tenure1 July 1894 – 6 July 1895
PredecessorHerself as the Queen of Joseon
SuccessorEmpress Sunjeong as the Empress of Korea
Queen regent of Joseon
Tenure1 November 1873 – 1 July 1894
Predecessor
SuccessorNone
MonarchGojong
Tenure6 July 1895 — 26 September 1895
PredecessorRegained title
SuccessorTitle and position abolished
MonarchGojong
Born17 November 1851
Gamgodang [ko], Seomrak Village, Geundong-myeon, Yeoheung-mok, Kimhwa County, Gyeonggi Province, Kingdom of Joseon[a]
Died8 October 1895 (1895-10-09) (aged 43)
Okhoru Pavilion, Gonnyeonghap, Gyeongbok Palace, Kingdom of Joseon
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1866⁠–⁠1895)
Issue
Posthumous name
Full title
  • Empress Hyo-ja-won-seong-jeong-hwa-hap-cheon-hong-gong-seong-deok-je-hwi-yeol-mok-myeong-seong-tae
    (효자원성정화합천홍공성덕제휘열목명성태황후; 孝慈元聖正化合天洪功誠德齊徽烈穆明成太皇后)
HouseYeoheung Min (by birth) Jeonju Yi (by marriage)
FatherMin Chi-rok, Internal Prince Yeoseong
Mother Internal Princess Consort Hanchang of the Hansan Yi clan
ReligionShamanism
Seal
Korean name
Hangul
명성황후
Hanja
明成皇后
Revised RomanizationMyeongseong Hwanghu
McCune–ReischauerMyŏngsŏng Hwanghu
Birth name
Hangul
민자영
Hanja
閔玆暎
Revised RomanizationMin Ja-yeong
McCune–ReischauerMin Cha-yŏng
A posthumous status representation of King Gojong and Empress Myeongseong Elementary History of Korea (1908). No verified uncontested contemporary photograph of the Empress has so far been found, though there has been much speculation as to whether a photograph might have survived.

The later Empress was of aristocratic background and in 1866 was chosen by the de facto Regent Heungseon Daewongun to marry his son, the future King Gojong. Seven years later his daughter-in-law and her Min clan forced him out of office. Daewongun was a conservative Confucian later implicated in unsuccessful rebellion against his daughter-in-law’s faction. He believed in isolation of Joseon from all foreign contact as a means of preserving independence. She, by contrast, was a believer in gradual modernisation using Western and Chinese help. From 1873 to her assassination in 1895 she oversaw economic, military and governmental modernisation.

In the 1880s and 1890s the relationship between Joseon and neighbouring Japan deteriorated. The queen consort was considered an obstacle by the government of Meiji Japan to its overseas expansion.[1] She took a firmer stand against Japanese influence after Daewongun's failed rebellions that were intended to remove her from the political arena.[2] Miura Gorō, Japanese Minister to Korea, backed the faction headed by Daewongun and directly ordered the assassination. On 8 October 1895, the Hullyeondae Regiment loyal to the Daewongun attacked the Gyeongbokgung Palace and overpowered its Royal Guards. The intruders then allowed a group of ronin, specifically recruited for this purpose, to assassinate the queen consort. Her assassination sparked international outrage.[3]

The Japanese-backed cabinet in the winter of 1895–1896 ordered Korean men to cut off their top-knot of hair. This caused uproar, because this style of hair was considered a badge of Korean identity.[4] This topknot edict and the assassination provoked nationwide protests.[5][6] Gojong and the Crown Prince (later Emperor Sunjong of Korea) accepted refuge in the Russian legation in 1896. The anti-Japanese backlash led to the repeal of the Gabo Reform, which had introduced other measures increasing Japanese influence.[5] In October 1897, Gojong returned to Gyeongungung (modern-day Deoksugung). Whilst there, he proclaimed the founding of the Korean Empire[5] and raised the status of his deceased wife to Empress.

Names and titles edit

As was the custom in late Joseon society, the woman who came to be Empress Myeongseong never had a personal name. "Min" is the name of her clan. "Empress" was a title conferred after her assassination. Changes in her marital status or the status of her husband are reflected in her own title. In Western terms, she was nameless throughout her life.[7] For the most part, the narrative below refers to her as the queen consort because that was her title during life at the beginning of her political activity, and was her functioning position. For convenience the description queen regent is not separately used.

Background edit

Clan tensions at the death of the King edit

In 1864, Cheoljong of Joseon died suddenly[8][9] aged only 32. The exact cause of death is uncertain.[10] Cheoljong was childless and had not appointed an heir.[8] The Andong Kim clan had risen to power through intermarriage with the royal House of Yi. Queen Cheorin, Cheoljong's consort and a member of the Andong Kim clan, claimed the right to choose the next king. Traditionally, the most senior Queen Dowager had the official authority to select the new king. Cheoljong's cousin, Grand Royal Dowager Hyoyu (once known as Queen Sinjeong), was the most senior Dowager. She was of the Pungyang Jo clan and the widow of Heonjong of Joseon's father. She had risen to prominence by intermarriage with the Yi family.

Alliance between the Pungyang Jo clan and Yi Ha-eung edit

Grand Queen Dowager Hyoyu saw an opportunity to advance the cause of her Pungyang Jo clan, the only true rival of the Andong Kim clan in Korean politics. As King Cheoljong was dying, she was approached by Yi Ha-eung, a distant descendant of King Injo (r.1623–1649), whose father was made an adoptive son of Prince Eunsin, a nephew of King Yeongjo (r.1724–1776).

The branch that Yi Ha-eung's family belonged to was a distant line of descendants of the Yi clan. They survived the often deadly political intrigue that frequently embroiled the Joseon court by forming no affiliation with any factions. Yi Ha-eung himself was not eligible for the throne due to a law that dictated that a successor had to be part of the generation after the most recent monarch. Yi Ha-eung's second son, Yi Myeong-bok, was a possible candidate for the throne.

The Pungyang Jo clan saw that Yi Myeong-bok, was only 12 years old and would not be able to rule in his own name until he came of age. They hoped to influence Yi Ha-eung, who would be acting as de facto regent for his son. (Technically Grand Queen Dowager Hyoyu would be regent but in fact she did not intend to play an active role in the regency). As soon as news of King Cheoljong's death reached Yi Ha-eung through his intricate network of spies in the palace, the hereditary royal seal required for the selection of a new monarch was taken to or by Grand Queen Dowager Hyoyu. She already was strictly entitled to make the appointment.[11] She thereupon chose her great-grandson, Yi Myeong-bok. The Andong Kim clan was powerless to act because the formalities had been observed.

Accession of a new King edit

In the autumn of 1864, Yi Myeong-bok was renamed as Yi Hui (이희, 李㷩) and was crowned as Gojong King of Joseon, with his father as Regent titled as Grand Internal Prince Heungseon. He is referred to in this article henceforth as Heungseon Daewongun or Daewongun.

The strongly Confucian Daewongun proved to be a decisive leader in the early years of Gojong's reign. He abolished the old government institutions that had become corrupt under the rule of various clans, revised the law codes along with the household laws of the royal court and the rules of court ritual, and heavily reformed the military techniques of the royal armies. Within a few years, he was able to secure complete control of the court, and eventually receive the submission of the Pungyang Jo's while successfully disposing of the last of the Andong Kim's, whose corruption, he believed, was responsible for the country's decline in the 19th century.[12]

Early life and family edit

 
House of Gamgodang, the birthplace of Empress Myeongseong

Yeoheung Min clan antecedants edit

The future queen consort was born into the aristocratic Yeoheung Min clan on 17 November 1851[13][14][15][16] within the House of Gamgodang [ko] in Seomrak Village, Geundong-myeon, Yeoheung (present-day Yeoju), Gyeonggi Province, where the clan originated.[17]

The Yeoheung Mins were a noble clan boasting many high-ranking bureaucrats in its illustrious past, princess consorts, and two queen consorts. These were firstly, Queen Wongyeong (wife of Taejong of Joseon and mother of Sejong the Great) and, secondly, Queen Inhyeon (second wife of Sukjong of Joseon).[17]

When her father Min Chi-rok was young, he studied under scholar Oh Hui-sang (오희상; 吳熙常), and eventually married the scholar's daughter. She became Min Chi-rok's first wife, Lady Oh of the Haeju Oh clan. In 1833 Lady Oh died childless at the age of 36. After three years' mourning, Min Chi-rok in 1836 married Lady Yi of the Hansan Yi clan (later known as Internal Princess Consort Hanchang). She was the daughter of Yi Gyu-nyeon. The future Empress was the fourth and only surviving child of Lady Yi.

Before her marriage, the later empress was known as the daughter of Min Chi-rok, Lady Min, or Min Ja-yeong (민자영; 閔玆暎).[18] At age seven, she lost her father to an illness on 17 September 1858[d] while he was in Sado city. Lady Min was raised by her mother and Min relatives for eight years until she moved to the palace and became queen.[19][20] Lady Min assisted her mother for three years while in living in Gamgodang. In 1861 it was decided that Min Seung-ho, would become her father's heir.

Selection as queen consort and marriage edit

When Gojong reached the age of 15, his father began to seek a bride for his son. Ideally the choice would be a person without politically ambitious relatives and someone who was of noble lineage. After rejecting numerous candidates, the Daewongun's wife, Grand Internal Princess Consort Sunmok (known at the time as Grand Internal Princess Consort Yeoheung; Yeoheung Budaebuin; 여흥부대부인; 驪興府大夫人)[21] and his mother, Princess Consort Min, proposed a bride from their own clan, the Yeoheung Min.[17] The girl's father was dead. She was said to possess beautiful features, a healthy body, and an ordinary level of education.[17]

This possible bride underwent a strict selection process, culminating in a meeting with the Daewongun on 6 March, and a marriage ceremony on 20 March 1866.[22] The Daewongun, likely fearing that the Andong Kim clan and the Pyungyang Jo clan, who were political rivalries for the future, may have been influenced favourably towards Lady Min due to her lack of a father or brother. He did not suspect Lady Min herself as politically ambitious, and he was satisfied with the interview.[23] It was only later he observed that she "...was a woman of great determination and poise“ but that he nevertheless allowed her to marry his son.[24] In doing so, he raised to the throne a woman who by 1895 had proven herself to be "his chief foil and implacable enemy."[25]

Lady Min, aged 16, married the 15-year-old king and was invested in a ceremony (책비, chaekbi) as the Queen Consort of Joseon.[26] Two places assert claims as the location of the marriage and accession. These are Injeongjeon Hall (인정전) at Changdeok Palace[17] and Norakdang Hall (노락당) at Unhyeon Palace. The headdress typically worn by brides at royal weddings was so heavy for the bride that a tall court lady was specially assigned to support it from the back. Directly following the wedding was the three-day ceremony for reverencing of ancestors.[27]

When Lady Min became Queen Consort, her mother was given the royal title of "Internal Princess Consort Hanchang" (한창부부인; 韓昌府夫人). Her father was given the royal title of "Internal Prince Yeoseong" (여성부원군; 驪城府院君), and was posthumously appointed as Yeonguijeong after his death.[28][29][30] Her father's first wife also given the royal title of "Internal Princess Consort Haeryeong" (해령부부인; 海寧府夫人).

On the day of their marriage ceremony, Gojong did not go to his wife's quarters to consummate the marriage, but to the quarters of concubine Royal Consort Yi Gwi-in of the Gyeongju Yi clan. This preference would later be approved by the Heungseon Daewongun.[31][32]

 
Gyeongbokgung Palace was expensively restored and refurbished during the Regency of Daewongun. The iconic palace complex was vast, containing some 500 buildings. Most of it, apart from the Throne Room and the Gyeonghoeru Pavilion was demolished during the Japanese colonial period. It was the principal home of the king and queen consort. This is a photograph taken in 1886.

The first impression of the queen consort at the palace was that she was dutiful and docile. Over time, Daewongun changed his view of her.[23] Officials noticed that the new queen consort differed from previous queens before her in her choices and determination. She did not participate in lavish parties, rarely commissioned extravagant fashions from the royal ateliers, and almost never hosted afternoon tea parties with the various princesses of the royal family or powerful aristocratic ladies unless politics required her to do so. Expected to act as an icon for Korea's high society, the queen rejected this role. Instead, she spent her time reading books written using Chinese characters, whose use in Korea was usually reserved for aristocratic men. Spring and Autumn Annals and its accompanying Zuo Zhuan[17] are examples. She furthered her own education in history, science, politics, philosophy, and religion.

As queen consort edit

Court domination edit

By the age of twenty, the queen consort had begun to leave the total seclusion of her apartments at Changgyeong Palace and to play an active part in politics. This was not at the invitation of Heungseon Daewongun and his high officials. Daewongun directed his son to conceive through the concubine Yi Gwi-in from the Yeongbo Hall (영보당귀인 이씨).[e] On 16 April 1868, the concubine gave birth to Prince Wanhwa (완화군), to whom Daewongun gave the title of crown prince. It was said that Daewongun was overwhelmed with joy at the arrival of Gojong's first born son, and that afterwards the queen consort was not accorded respect or honour as before.[23]

Discord between the queen consort and Daewongun became public when her infant son died in late 1871 four days after birth. Daewongun publicly accused her of being unable to bear a healthy male child. She suspected her father-in-law of foul play through the ginseng emetic treatment he had brought her.[33] It seems likely the queen consort's intense distrust of her father-in-law dates from this time.

Meanwhile the queen consort secretly formed a powerful faction against the Heungseon Daewongun. With the backing of high officials, scholars, and members of her clan, she desired to remove Daewongun from power. Min Seung-ho, the queen consort's adoptive older brother, along with court scholar Choe Ik-hyeon, devised a formal impeachment of Daewongun. The impeachment was to be presented to the Royal Council of Administration, arguing that the 22 year old Gojong should now rule in his own right. In 1873, with the approval of Gojong and the Royal Council, the Heungseon Daewongun was forced to retire to Unhyeongung, his estate at Yangju. The queen consort then banished the royal concubine along with her child to a village outside the capital.[34] The child was stripped of royal titles and died on 12 January 1880.

After these expulsions, the queen consort had control over the court, where her own clan family members received high office. As queen consort she ruled along with her husband but was recognized as being more politically active than him.[35]

Start of imperial Japanese influence edit

After Korean refusal to receive Japanese envoys announcing the Meiji Restoration, some Japanese aristocrats favored an immediate invasion of Korea. Upon the return of the Iwakura Mission, this idea was quickly dropped because the new Japanese government was neither politically nor fiscally stable enough to start a war.[36] When Heungseon Daewongun was ousted from politics, Japan renewed efforts to establish ties with Korea, but the Imperial envoy arriving at Dongnae in 1873 was turned away.[37]

 
1894 map created in Shanghai showing the Korean peninsula within easy sailing of both Shanghai and Nagasaki. Fusan (Busan, Pusan) at that time is the principal trading port in Korea.

In 1875 the Japanese gunboat Unyō was dispatched towards Busan and a second warship was sent to the Bay of Yeongheung, ostensibly surveying sea routes. On 20 September 1875 in a move seen by the Koreans as provocative, the Unyō,ventured into restricted waters off Ganghwa Island. Korean shore batteries then opened fire. Thus arose a violent confrontation between the Japanese and the Koreans known as the Ganghwa Island incident.[38] Following this incident, six naval vessels and an imperial Japanese envoy were sent to Ganghwa Island to enforce the wishes of the Japanese government, which was then in a position to insist on Korea opening to trade generally. There was precedent for this line of action in the behaviour of European powers and their extraction of the so-called Unequal Treaties.

 
1892 A street in the Japanese quarter of Busan, being of the character described by Isabella Bird.

Whilst a majority of the royal Korean court favored absolute isolationism, Japan had demonstrated its willingness and capacity to use force. The deposed Daewongun took the opportunity to blame the Min clan for their weakness in contrast to his own previous isolationist, anti-foreign policies.[39] After numerous meetings, the Ganghwa Treaty was signed on 26 February 1876, thus opening Korea to Japan and the world. The treaty was modeled after treaties imposed on Japan by the United States. Various ports were forced to open to Japanese trade, and Japanese now had rights to buy land in designated areas. The treaty permitted the immediate opening of Busan (1876) and later other major ports, Wonsan (1880) and Incheon (1883) to Japanese merchants. For the first few years, Japan enjoyed a near total monopoly of trade. Japanese cotton goods were imported to Korea, which was unindustrialised and still dominantly dependent on limited modes of agricultural production. Rice and cereals became the main export to Japan, whose merchants came to inhabit the major ports.[40] By 1894 Busan gave every appearance, according to doctor-missionary Isabella Bird, of being a town in Japan. She reports the fact that the customs were levied by the Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs officers on behalf of the Korean Crown. At least one of these officers was English.[41]

Social revolution edit

Reorganisation of Joseon government edit

In 1880, a mission headed by Kim Gi-su (Kim Hong-Jip) was commissioned by Gojong and the Min clan to study Japanese westernisation and its intentions for Korea. The immediate diplomatic objective was to persuade the Japanese that there was no need to open a Legation in Seoul and that the port of Incheon should not be opened.[42] It arrived on 11 August 1880.

 
Korean topknot worn by married men, sketched in 1891 by English artist Henry Savage-Landor. The wearing of the topknot was considered an aspect of Korean identity.

While in Japan, Kim visited the Chinese embassy in Japan no less than six times. He met with the Chinese first envoy to Japan, He Ru-zhang,[43] and his staff adviser, Huang Zunxian. In September 1880, a prepared paper was written for the benefit of, and was presented to, the visiting Koreans, the purpose of which was to change their whole approach towards modernisation through external contact. This paper, whose text survives in five differing forms, was written by Huang. It was entitled Korean Strategy and examined the strategic position of Korea in the context of its need for strength in the international situation of the day. The essence of its thesis was that Russia was land-hungry and represented the primary threat to Korea. The Chinese, it argued, should be regarded as natural close allies from whom full independence was undesirable. Huang advised that Korea should adopt a pro-Chinese policy, while retaining close ties with Japan for the time being. He also advised an alliance with the United States in particular because it did not occupy the countries with which it traded, and because it would be a protection against Russia. He considered it wise to open trade relations with Western nations and to adopt Western technology, arguing that their interest in Korea was trade rather than occupation. The modernisation of Japan through Western contact was pointed to as a promising precedent for study.

Kim returned from Japan in late 1880. By early 1881 the paper had made a considerable impression on the king and the queen consort.[44] Copies were commissioned to be sent out to all ministers. She had hoped to win yangban (aristocratic) approval to invite Western nations into Korea, and to open up trade so as to keep Japan in check. She wanted to first allow Japan to help in the modernisation process but after completion of certain projects, have them be driven out by Western powers. However, the yangban aristocracy opposed any opening of the country to the West. Choi Ik-hyun, who had helped with the impeachment of Heungseon Daewongun, sided with the isolationists. He maintained that the Japanese were just like the "Western barbarians" and would spread subversive notions, just as previous Western contact had brought Roman Catholicism. That had been a major issue during Daewongun's regency and Catholicism was crushed by widespread persecution.[45]

To the socially conservative yangban, the queen consort's plan meant the end of social order. Accordingly, the response to the distribution of Korean Strategy was a joint memorandum to the throne from scholars in every province of the kingdom. They stated that the ideas in the book were impractical theories, and that the adoption of Western technology was not the only way to enrich the country. They demanded that the number of envoys exchanged, ships engaged in trade and articles of trade be strictly limited, and further that all foreign books in Korea should be destroyed. Two thousand (out of office) scholars gathered at Cho-rio, planning to march on Seoul and overwhelm the serving Ministers. The gathering was met at Cho-rio by royal envoys who promised to stop the mission to Japan, to which the protesters objected. It was too late, however, and the Korean mission by then had landed in Nagasaki in Japan.[46]

Thus in 1881, a large fact-finding mission was sent to Japan under Kim Hongjip. It stayed for seventy days observing Japanese government offices, factories, military and police organizations, and business practices. The visitors obtained information about innovations in the Japanese government copied from the West, especially the proposed constitution. On the basis of these reports, the queen consort began reorganisation of the government.[47] Twelve new bureaus were established to deal with foreign relations with the West, China, and Japan. Other bureaus were established to supervise commerce. A bureau of the military was created, tasked to modernize weapons and techniques. Civilian departments were established to import Western technology.

Meanwhile in September 1881, a plot was uncovered to overthrow the queen consort's faction, depose the King, and place Heungseon Daewongun's illegitimate (third) son, Yi Jae-seon (known posthumously as Prince Imperial Waneun) on the throne. The plot was frustrated by informants to[48] and spies of the queen consort. Heungseon Daewongun (whose involvement was not proved) was unharmed. However, the attempted coup resulted in Yi Jae-seon's death in late October 1881.

In October 1881, the queen consort arranged for 60 top Korean military students to be sent to Tientsin in Qing China where they were to study arms manufacturing and deployment.[49] The Japanese volunteered to supply military students with rifles and train a unit of the Korean army to use them. She agreed but reminded the Japanese that students would still be sent to China for further education on Western military technologies. The modernisation of the military was met with opposition.

The insurrection of 1882 edit

In June 1882, members of the old military became resentful of the special treatment of the new units. They destroyed the house of Min Gyeom-ho and killed him. He was Gojong's maternal uncle, being his mother's younger brother, and was the administrative head of the training units and in charge of the treasury. Yi Choi-eung and Kim Bo-hyun, a magistrate, were also killed.[50] These had been associated with the Min corruption whereby the soldiers got rotten rice in payment of wages. These soldiers then fled to the protection of Daewongun, who publicly rebuked but privately encouraged them. Daewongun took control of the old units. He ordered an attack on the administrative district of Seoul that housed the Gyeongbokgung, the diplomatic quarter, military centers, and science institutions. These soldiers attacked police stations to free comrades who had been arrested and ransacked private estates and mansions belonging to relatives of the queen consort. These units stole rifles and killed Japanese training officers. They narrowly missed murdering the Japanese ambassador to Seoul, who escaped to Incheon, and thence to Japan where he was interviewed at court for an account of events.[51] The military rebellion then headed towards the palace but both queen consort and the King escaped in disguise. They fled to her relative's villa in Cheongju, where they remained in hiding.[f] Rumour supplied differing accounts of the escape. The truth may lie in the detailed account recorded by Homer Hulbert.[52]

One rumour was that Grand Internal Princess Consort Sunmok had entered the palace, and hidden her daughter-in-law, the queen consort, in a wooden litter that the older woman was riding on. Allegedly a court officer saw this and informed the soldiers invading the palace.[53] Princess Sunmok did try to persuade her husband Heungseon Daewongun to stop the hunt for the queen consort. This seemed so suspicious that later he kept her away from his affairs.[54] When Daewongun could not find the queen consort, he likely assumed she was dead (according to Hulbert). He announced, "the queen is dead".[55][56][57] Numerous supporters of the queen consort were executed once Daewongun took control of Gyeongbokgung Palace. He immediately dismantled the recent reform measures and relieved the new units of duty. Foreign policy reverted to isolationism. Both Chinese and Japanese representatives were forced to leave the capital.

Li Hongzhang, with the consent of Korean envoys in Beijing, sent 4,500 Chinese troops to restore order and secure Chinese interests in Korea. His troops arrested Daewongun, who was then taken to Paoting in China where he remained under house arrest.[58] The royal couple returned and overturned all of Daewongun's actions.

The Japan-Korea Treaty of 1882, signed on 10 August 1882 required the Koreans to pay 550,000 yen damages in respect of Japanese lives and property lost during the insurrection. This agreement also permitted Japanese troops to guard the Japanese embassy in Seoul. The queen consort proposed to China a new trade agreement granting the Chinese special privileges and rights to ports inaccessible to the Japanese. Public order was enforced by Wu Chang-ching and his detachment of 3,000 Chinese troops. She also successfully requested that a Chinese commander, General Yuan Shih-kai, take control of the new military units and that a German adviser, Paul Georg von Möllendorff, head the Maritime Customs Service. The Chinese desired further trade treaties so as to deflect a Japanese monopoly. Treaties were later signed with the United States (1882) and France (1886).[50]

 
Min Yeong-ik (1860-1914) in aristocratic Korean clothes. He visited the United States at the queen consort's request. He was by occupation a royal philosopher and painter. His younger sister married the Crown Prince, son of the queen consort.

Mission to North America edit

In July 1883 the queen consort sent a special mission to the United States. It was headed by Min Yeong-ik, her adoptive nephew. The mission arrived at San Francisco on 2 September 1883 carrying the newly created Korean national flag. It visited U.S. historical sites, heard lectures on U.S. history, and attended a gala event in their honor given by the mayor of San Francisco and other U.S. officials. The mission dined in New York at the Fifth Avenue Hotel with President Chester A. Arthur, and discussed the growing threat of the Japanese and the possibility of U.S. investment in Korea. The Korean visit lasted three months, returning via San Francisco.[59] At the end of September, Min Yeong-ik travelled to Seoul and reported to the queen consort. She at once established English language schools with U.S. instructors. Min Yeong-ik's report had been optimistic:

I was born in the dark. I went out into the light, and, your Majesty, it is my displeasure to inform you that I have returned to the dark. I envision a Seoul of towering buildings filled with Western establishments that will place herself back above the Japanese barbarians. Great things lie ahead for this Kingdom, great things. We must take action, your Majesty, without hesitation, to further modernize this still ancient kingdom.

 
Korean ambassadors to the United States 1883 formal photograph. Min Yeong-ik is the minister in charge (front row, second from left). Percival Lowell (front row, European clothes) is their escort for the trip.

Matters culminated in October 1883 with a royal request that the Americans send an adviser to Korea to the office of foreign affairs, and instructors for the army. An order for arms was placed with a US firm based in Yokohama.[60] A complement of three military instructors arrived in April 1888.[61]

Progressives vs Conservatives edit

The Progressives were founded during the late 1870s by a group of yangban who supported westernisation of Joseon. They wanted immediate westernisation, including a complete cessation of ties with Qing China. With the queen consort possibly unaware of their anti-Chinese sentiments, they were granted frequent royal audiences and meetings to discuss progressivism and nationalism. They advocated for educational and social reforms, including the equality of the sexes by granting women full rights. The queen consort was convinced at first, but she did not support their anti-Chinese stance. In the result, she became a proponent of the Sadae faction which was pro-China and in favour of gradual westernisation.

In 1884, the conflict between the Progressives and the Sadaes intensified. The Progressives, frustrated by the Sadaes and the growing influence of the Chinese, successfully conspired to secure the aid of Japanese Legation staff and troops.[62] American Legation officials, in particular Naval Attaché George C. Foulk, heard about the possibility of trouble breaking out caused by the Progressives. This rumour reached the British who put out feelers to their various other contacts. All this found its way back to the chief Progressive conspirators, who, fearing their dangerous game was almost up, decided to act immediately.[63]

They staged a bloody palace coup on 4 December 1884 (the Gapsin Coup) on the occasion of a diplomatic dinner celebrating the opening of the new Korean postal service.[64] The Progressives killed numerous high-ranking Sadaes and secured key government positions vacated by Sadaes who had fled the capital or had been killed. This new administration began to issue edicts in both the King and queen consort's names. The King and the queen consort had been kidnapped and were held prisoner by armed Japanese guards. The new cabinet did not secure popular support despite their agenda of modernisation and planned political, economic, social, and cultural reforms.[65]

 
The Japanese Legation photo c1900. This was the second Legation building, rebuilt by the Koreans after the first one was destroyed by insurrectionist arson.

The queen consort was horrified by the violence of the Progressives. They effected seven murders of high-ranking Koreans. Clan leaders summoned to the palace by letters purporting to come from the King were beheaded on stepping out of their sedan chairs.[66] Following suppression of the coup, the queen consort no longer trusted the Japanese.[67] She refused to support the actions of the Progressives, declaring any documents signed in her name to be null and void. After only two days[68] of control over the administration, the Progressives were crushed by Chinese troops under Yuan Shikai's command. These were sent following a secret request by the queen consort to the Chinese Resident. A handful of Progressive leaders were killed, others escaping to Japan.[69] The Japanese troops were only 130 in all and were easily overwhelmed. Japanese deaths and property damage followed. The Treaty of Hanseong (8 January 1885) negotiated by Count Inouye on behalf of the Japanese required Joseon to pay a "moderate" indemnity for damages inflicted: 40 Japanese were killed during the coup and the Japanese legation was burned to the ground. In addition, the Koreans agreed to rebuild the Japanese Legation plus some barracks for their troops. Lastly, those guilty of murdering a Japanese officer were to be punished.[64]

On 18 April, the Convention of Tientsin (1885) was made in Tianjin, China, between the Japanese and the Chinese. In it, they both agreed to pull troops out of Joseon. Each party agreed it would send troops only if their property was endangered; each would inform the other before doing so. Both nations also agreed to pull out their military instructors so as to allow the newly arrived Americans to perform that task. The Japanese withdrew troops from Korea, leaving a number of legation guards.

Public policy edit

Economy edit

 
Japanese bank note dated 1881 of the type used in trade in Korea. Strings of copper cash coins were impractical for commerce.

Following the opening of all Korean ports to the Japanese and Western merchants in 1888, contact and involvement with outsiders increased foreign trade rapidly. In 1883, the Maritime Customs Service was established under the patronage of the queen consort and the supervision of Sir Robert Hart, 1st Baronet of the United Kingdom. The Maritime Customs Service administered the business of foreign trade and collection of tariffs.

By 1883, the economy was now no longer in a state of monopoly conducted by Japanese merchants as it had been only a few years ago. Much of the economy was controlled by the Koreans, with some participation shared between Western nations, Japan and China. In 1884, the first Korean commercial firms such as the Daedong and the Changdong Company emerged. The Korean copper coinage had been debased to the exchange of 500 cash to one US dollar. This meant that transactions in cash were heavy and bulky. It was not a currency suited to the scale of commercial transactions. Japanese yen and Japanese banks were used everywhere.[70] In 1883 the Korean Bureau of Mint produced a new coin, tangojeon or dangojeon thereby securing a stable Korean currency, but in the five years following the new currency was blamed, rightly or wrongly, for the inflation of basic commodities.[71] Western investment also began to grow in 1886. One third of all imported goods were carried inland by men or pack animals. They were frequently stopped and taxed for transit by road barriers on the way. The Seoul government in exchange for a fee authorised these barrier levies.[72]

The German A.H. Maeterns, with the aid of the United States Department of Agriculture, created a new project designated the "American Farm."[73] This was on a large plot of land donated by the queen consort to promote modern agriculture. Farm implements, seeds, and milk cows were imported from the United States. In June 1883, the Bureau of Machines was established and steam engines were imported. Finally, telegraph lines facilitating communication between Joseon, China, and Japan were laid between 1883 and 1885.[74]

Despite the fact that the royal couple had brought the Korean economy to a degree of westernisation, modern manufacturing facilities did not emerge.

Education edit

From early projections in 1880, in May 1885 a palace school to educate the children of the elite was approved by the queen consort. The Royal English School (육영공원; 育英公院; Yukyŏng Gongwŏn) was established by the American missionary Homer Hulbert and three other missionaries. The school had two departments, liberal education and military education. Courses were taught exclusively in English using English textbooks. However, due to low attendance, the school was closed shortly after the last English teacher, Bunker, resigned in late 1893.[75]

In 1886, the queen consort patronized the first all-girls' educational institution, Ewha Academy (later Ewha University). The school was established in Seoul by Mary F. Scranton. She collaborated with Methodist missionary and teacher Henry Gerhardt Appenzeller, who worked in Korea from 1885 to his death in June 1902.[76] As Louisa Rothweiler, a founding teacher of Ewha Academy observed, the school was, at its early stage, more of a place for poor girls to be fed and clothed than a place of education.[75] The creation of the academy was a significant social change.[77]

Missionaries contributed much to the development of Western education in Joseon.

Medicine, music, and religion edit

The arrival of Horace Newton Allen under invitation of the queen consort in September 1884 marked the formal introduction of Christianity, which spread rapidly in Joseon. He was able, with the queen consort's permission and official sanction, to arrange for the appointment of other missionaries as government employees. He also introduced modern medicine in Korea by establishing the first western Royal Medical Clinic of Gwanghyewon in February 1885.[g]

In April 1885, numerous Protestant missionaries began to arrive in Joseon. Prominent Protestant missionaries Horace Grant Underwood, Lillias Horton Underwood, and William B. Scranton (with his mother, Mary Scranton) moved to Korea in May 1885. They established churches within Seoul and began to establish centers in the countryside. Catholic missionaries arrived soon afterwards.

Christian missionaries made converts but also created contributions towards modernisation of the country. Concepts of equality, human rights and freedom, and the participation of both men and women in religious activities were introduced for the first time to Joseon. The queen consort wanted the literacy rate to rise, and with the aid of Christian educational programs, it did so within a matter of a few years.

Notable changes were made in music. Western music theory partly displaced the traditional Eastern concepts. Protestant missions introduced Christian hymns and other Western songs that created a strong impetus to modify Korean ideas about music. The organ and other Western musical instruments were introduced in 1890, and a Christian hymnal was published in the Korean language in 1893 under the commission of the queen consort.

The queen consort invited different missionaries to enter Joseon. She valued their knowledge of Western history, science, and mathematics. It can be assumed these advantages were seen as outweighing the potential loss of ancestor worship, which Catholic converts were well-known to have resisted in face of sustained persecution in the past.[78] Isolationists continued to view Christianity as subversive of morals in the refusal to perform rites for ancestors and the perceived disloyalty to the state. Some scholars had attempted to classify Christianity not as a religion but a school of learning.[79] A degree of religious tolerance was a practical outcome of the queen consort's policies, whether or not it had been an overt goal. The queen consort herself never became a Christian, but remained a devout Buddhist with influences from shamanism and Confucianism.

Military edit

Modern weapons were imported from Japan and the United States in 1883. The first military factories were established and new military uniforms were created in 1884. Under joint patronage of Gojong and the queen consort, a request was made to the United States for more American military instructors to speed up the military modernisation of Korea. Military modernisation was slow compared to the other projects.

In October 1883, American minister Lucius Foote arrived to take command of the modernisation of Joseon's older army units, which had not started to Westernise. In April 1888, General William McEntyre Dye and two other military instructors arrived from the United States, followed in May by a fourth instructor. They brought about more rapid military development.[80]

A new military school was created called Yeonmu Gongwon, and an officers' training program began. Visible progress in the preparedness and capacity of the Korean military was being achieved. The growing troop numbers caused the Japanese concern as to the possible impact of Korean troops if the Japanese government did not interfere to stall the process. By 1898 the Korean army comprised 4,800 men in Seoul who were drilled by the Russians at that time. There were 1,200 Korean soldiers in the provinces and the navy owned two small vessels.[81]

Despite army training becoming increasingly on par with that of the Chinese and the Japanese, naval investment of all kinds was neglected. This omission represented a gap in the modernisation project. Failure to develop naval defence rendered Joseon's long sea borders more vulnerable to invasion. This was a severe contrast to the period nearly 300 years earlier when Joseon's navy under Admiral Yi Sun-sin had been the strongest in East Asia.[82] Now, the Korean navy comprised old ships almost powerless against the advanced ships of modern navies.

Press edit

 
Hanseong Sunbo 1883 first edition of newspaper. This would have been limited to a readership able to read Chinese characters ie aristocratic men.

The first newspaper to be published in Joseon was the Hanseong Sunbo Hanseong Sunbo, an all-Hanja newspaper. It was published as a thrice monthly official government gazette by the Bakmun-guk (publishing house), an agency of the Foreign Ministry. It included contemporary news of the day, essays and articles about westernisation, and news of modernisation of Joseon. In January 1886, the Bakmun-guk published a new newspaper, Hanseong Jubo (The Seoul Weekly). The publication of a Korean-language newspaper was a significant development, and the paper itself played an important role as a communication medium to the masses until it was abolished in 1888 under pressure from the Chinese government. A newspaper entirely in Hangul, making no use of the Korean Hanja script, was not published again until 1894. Ganjo Shinpo (Seoul News) was published as a weekly newspaper under the patronage of both Gojong and the queen consort. It was written half in Korean and half in Japanese.

Reforms, rebellion, and war edit

Trade 1875 onwards edit

 
Korean rice terracing 1892. Agriculture in Korea was the dominant occupation, producing large crops for export.
 
Special commemorative coin issued to celebrate the April 1895 formal independence of Korea from China. The coin takes the shape of the ubiquitous copper cash coins with the square hole in the centre. This coin was not for general use.

The queen consort's economic reforms opened the Korean economy to the world, but in practice the majority of trade for Korean agricultural products was with China and Japan. After the failure of the Progressive coup, Japanese policy focused on expanding economic ties. Between 1877-81 imports into Korea increased by 800%; between 1885-1891 rice and other grain exports increased by 700%. Most grain was exported to Japan via Osaka. Many kinds of household and luxury goods were imported into Korea, in turn encouraging officials to demand extra or new taxes from the farmers.[83] Between 1891 and 1895 the chief Korean exports were rice, beans, tobacco, raw hides, gold dust and silk. Ginseng was now permitted to be exported as a privately traded product, the old government monopoly ending and being replaced by high taxation. The 1895 trade value was almost 13 million US dollars of the day.[84]

Economic activity between 1883 and 1897 was conducted in a society unprepared for the impact of mass importation of foreign-produced goods, largely from Japan.[85] In the period 1886 to 1888 an ineffective currency reform fuelled inflation; it was not until 1897 that relative price stability in textiles was experienced.

In the period 1875-1894 Korea signed 11 treaties with 9 foreign powers. These were: Austria (1892); China (1882); France (1886); Germany (1883); Great Britain (1883); Italy (1884); Japan (1876), (1882), (1885); Russia (1884); and the United States of America (1882). Their descriptions and chronological sequence are given with Korean names elsewhere.[86]

Political instability 1894–1895 edit

 
A group of armed people marching along singing, as observed by a French visitor in 1892. Social cohesion made peasant unrest a persistent issue.

Under this external economic pressure, Korean peasants decided to protest, then rebel. The Donghak Peasant Revolution, that lasted from January 1894 to 25 December 1895, presented the queen consort with an extremely dangerous situation. Its causes are complex, being religious, nationalistic and economic. The queen consort was assassinated in October 1895 before this matter was resolved. During 1894, much of Southern Korea was in a state of open peasant revolt which the government could not control. The Chinese were requested by Korea to send troops to restore order, which they did, hoping to establish a fully committed pro-Chinese policy at court. The Japanese government unilaterally sent troops to Korea, abducting the now pro-Chinese Daewongun and effecting a violent coup at the palace resulting in a pro-reform, pro-Japanese government. By this time the peasants had largely withdrawn and neither Japanese nor Chinese troops were required for any Korean purpose. Each side refused to return troops to their country of origin until the other did so first.[87] Thus arose the First Sino-Japanese War (January 1894-25 December 1895) in which the Japanese were the decisive victors.

Personal life edit

Personality and appearance edit

Detailed descriptions of the queen consort can be found in The National Assembly Library of Korea and in records kept by Lillias Underwood[88] a close and trusted American friend of the queen consort. Underwood had come to Korea in 1888 as a missionary and was appointed by the queen consort as her doctor.

These sources describe the queen consort's appearance, voice, and public manner. She was said to have had a soft face with strong features. These were considered attributes of classic beauty in contrast to the king's known preference for "sultry" women. The queen consort's personal speaking voice was soft and warm, but when conducting affairs of the state, she asserted her points with strength. Her public manner was formal, and she heavily adhered to court etiquette and traditional law. Underwood described her in the following way:[89]

I wish I could give the public a true picture of the queen as she appeared at her best, but this would be impossible, even had she permitted a photograph to be taken, for her charming play of expression while in conversation, the character and intellect which were then revealed, were only half seen when the face was in repose. She wore her hair like all Korean ladies, parted in the center, drawn tightly and very smoothly away from the face and knotted rather low at the back of the head. A small ornament...was worn on the top of the head fastened by a narrow black band...

Her majesty seemed to care little for ornaments, and wore very few. No Korean women wear earrings, and the queen was no exception, nor have I ever seen her wear a necklace, a brooch, or a bracelet. She must have had many rings, but I never saw her wear more than one or two of European manufacture...

According to Korean custom, she carried a number of filigree gold ornaments decorated with long silk tassels fastened at her side. So simple, so perfectly refined were all her tastes in dress, it is difficult to think of her as belonging to a nation called half civilized...

Slightly pale and quite thin, with somewhat sharp features and brilliant piercing eyes, she did not strike me at first sight as being beautiful, but no one could help reading force, intellect and strength of character in that face...

Isabella Bird Bishop, a well-known British travel writer and member of the Royal Geographical Society, described the queen consort's appearance as that of "...a very nice-looking slender woman, with glossy raven-black hair and a very pale skin, the pallor enhanced by the use of pearl powder" while meeting with her when Bishop traveled to Korea.[90] Bishop had also mentioned Empress Myeongseong in her book, Korea and Her Neighbours[91], in detail:

Her Majesty, who was then past forty, was a very nice-looking slender woman, with glossy raven-black hair and a very pale skin, the pallor enhanced by the use of pearl powder. The eyes were cold and keen, and the general expression one of brilliant expression. She wore a very handsome, very full, and very long skirt of mazarine blue brocade, heavily pleated, with the waist under the arms, and a full sleeved bodice of crimson and blue brocade, clasped at the throat by a coral rosette, and girdled by six crimson and blue cords, each one clasped with a coral rosette, with a crimson silk tassel hanging from it. Her headdress was a crownless black silk cap edged with fur, pointed over the brow, with a coral rose and full red tassel in front, and jewelled aigrettes on either side. Her shoes were of the same brocade of her dress. As soon as she began to speak, and especially when she became interested in conversation, her face lighted up into something very like beauty.

— Isabella Bird Bishop (1897), Korea and Her Neighbours, Pg. 252–253

On each occasion I was impressed with the grace and charming manner of the Queen, her thoughtful kindness, her singular intelligence and force, and her remarkable conversational power even through the medium of an interpreter. I was not surprised at her singular political influence, or her sway over the King and many others. She was surrounded by enemies, chief among them being Tai-Won-Gun (Daewongun), the King's father, all embittered against her because by her talent and force she had succeeded in placing members of her family in nearly all the chief offices of State. Her life was a battle. She fought with all her charm, shrewdness, and sagacity for power, for the dignity and safety of her husband and son, and for the downfall of Tai-Won-Gun.

— Isabella Bird Bishop, Korea and Her Neighbours (1897), Pg. 255

Bishop described Jayeong as "clever and educated", and Gojong to be "kind" during the time she visited the palace.[h][92][i]

William Franklin Sands, a United States diplomat who came to Korea during Japan's colonisation, also spoke highly about the queen consort:

She was a politician and diplomat who overtaken the times, striving for the independence of Joseon, possessing outstanding academics, strong intellectual personality, and unbending willpower.

Early years edit

The young queen consort and her husband were incompatible in the beginning of their marriage. Both found the other's preferences unattractive. She preferred to stay in her chambers studying, while he enjoyed spending his days and nights drinking, attending banquets and enjoying royal parties. The queen, who was genuinely concerned to understand affairs of state, immersed herself in philosophy, history, and science books of a kind normally reserved for yangban men. Court officials noted that the queen consort was highly selective in choosing who she associated with and confided in.

Her first pregnancy came five years after marriage, at the age of 21, and ended in despair and humiliation when her infant son died shortly after birth. She lost all her children apart from Yi Cheok, born when she was 24.[93] His older sister was born when the queen consort was 23, but died and with a birth of two sons followed Yi Cheok's birth. They were born respectively during the queen consort's 25th and 28th years, and neither survived. These difficulties experienced in bearing healthy children may reflect in part the stresses of family and political relationships. There were no pregnancies after the age of 28, which was earlier than some other royal wives whose child-bearing ended in around their early thirties.[94]

Korean politics had resulted in the deaths of many of the queen consort's immediate relatives. In August 1866, the year of the royal marriage, there was an armed skirmish between the French Admiral Roze and the Korean troops at Ganghwa Island.[95] In 1876, the process leading to the Treaty of Ganghwa soured the relationship of Heungseon Daewongun with his son. As that relationship deteriorated, the king's father made death threats against the queen consort. Her mother was assassinated in 1874 in a bombing incident, along with her adoptive older brother, Min Seung-ho.[96][97][98][99] During the Insurrection of 1882 and the 1884 coup, some of the queen consort's relatives were killed. The queen consort herself was exposed to personal danger as the attempts on her life and safety demonstrate.

The royal couple's surviving son, Sunjong, was a sickly child, frequently catching illnesses and convalescing for weeks.[citation needed] The Empress cared personally for the Crown Prince and sought help from shamans and monks. The latter received rewards for blessings. Had the Crown Prince died, his rights would have devolved to the offspring of a royal concubine. The Crown Prince and his mother shared a close relationship despite her strong personality.[100]

Later years edit

Gojong and his wife shared an affection during the later years of their marriage. Gojong was chosen to become King not because of his astuteness (lacking because he was never formally educated) or because of his bloodline (which was mixed with courtesan and common blood), but because the Pungyang Jo clan had wrongly assumed they could control him indefinitely through his father. Eventually Gojong was pressured by his Min advisers to seize control of the government, which he did. In attending to responsibilities of state, he depended frequently on his capable wife for the conduct of international and domestic affairs. In so doing, Gojong came to appreciate his wife's wit, intelligence, and ability to learn quickly. As the problems of the kingdom increased, Gojong relied even more on his wife.

By the years of modernisation of Joseon, it is safe to assume that Gojong had come to love his wife. They began to spend much time with each other, privately and officially. His affection for her was enduring. When Daewongun regained political power after the death of the queen consort, he presented a proposal with the aid of certain Japanese officials posthumously to lower his daughter-in-law's status from queen consort to commoner.[101] The official degree of degradation issued against the dead queen was regarded as a fraud and was rescinded by the issuers not long afterwards, in the meantime having been rejected by the US and all legations bar one.[102] On 15 October 1895, a few days after the murder, when the terrified King and the Crown Prince were confined to the palace, still believing that the queen consort had managed to run away from her pursuer, Daewongun issued in the King's name an edict that she was to be divorced for desertion and that the King would remarry.[103]

Gojong bitterly refused to cooperate. Instead, he raised his deceased wife's position to Bin (; );[104][105][106] the title being the first rank of Women of the Internal Court. He erected a spirit shrine to her in the inner palace enclosure. It was connected to the house by a decorated gallery.[107]

After Gojong's father died in early 1898, he did not attend the funeral due to their strained relationship in consequence of the queen consort's murder and Daewongun's subsequent actions. It is said that Gojong's cries at the death of his father were heard over the palace walls.[108][109]

Residence edit

The royal couple had three palaces available to them in Seoul. They chose to reside in the Northern Palace, Gyeongbokgung Palace, where ultimately the queen's assassination took place. After that, and following his return from sanctuary in the Russian Legation, Gojong refused to live in Gyeongbokgung Palace.[110] In life, the queen consort used a series of inter-communicating small rooms separated by sliding panel doors. These rooms were approximately 8 foot (2.4 metres) square. This palace also contained the great Throne Hall, Geunjeongjeon.

Assassination edit

 
Okhoru, the pavilion where the Queen was assassinated.

The Eulmi Incident edit

In the immediate run-up to her death, the queen consort had allied herself with Russian interests to counterbalance Japanese influence. She was perceived by the Japanese as an important hostile target.[111] Her assassination took place in the early hours on 8 October 1895 within the king’s private quarters, in an attack known in Korea as the Eulmi Incident (을미사변; 乙未事變). A few court ladies also shared her fate due to the Japanese mistaking them for the queen. The attack was organized by Miura Gorō and carried out by over fifty Japanese agents.[112] The royal palace was in disarray after the ordeal, but Gojong had ordered a eunuch to search for the queen’s remains: only a singed finger bone was later found.[113][112][114]

Funeral procession and tomb edit

 
1897 Funeral of Empress Myeongseong

On 13 October 1897, Gojong (with Russian support) had regained his throne, and spent a fortune (70,000 dollars in United States money of the day[115]) to have his beloved queen's remains properly honored and entombed. On 22 November 1897,[116] her mourning procession included 5,000 soldiers, 650 police, 4,000 lanterns, hundreds of scrolls honoring her, and giant wooden horses intended for her use in the afterlife. The honors Gojong placed on her at her funeral were a recognition of her diplomatic and heroic efforts on behalf of Korea against the Japanese. They were also a statement of his own love for her. The recovered remains are in her tomb located in Namyangju, Gyeonggi, South Korea.[117]

Aftermath edit

 
Empress Myeongseong’s state funeral in front of Daehanmun Gate, Seoul.

Gojong left the palace in 1896 and took refuge on 11 February for a year in the nearby armed Russian Legation where he remained safe with the Crown Prince until February 1897.[118] Meanwhile the third stage of the Gabo Reforms were hugely unpopular including because Korean men were ordered to cut off their topknots.[119] By the time Gojong returned to the palace, the temporary ascendancy of Japanese interests (a pro-Japanese cabinet and the Japanese-instigated Gabo Reform) following the Sino-Japanese war and the assassination of the queen consort was over. This was because of popular anti-Japanese sentiment, and the fact that the King had been in the effective control of the Russians.[120] In the longer term these tensions resulted in Japan's victory in the Russo-Japanese War.[121] In 1910 the Japan-Korea Annexation Treaty established Korea's status as a Japanese colony. This status lasted between 29 August 1910 and 15 August 1945.

Proclaimed titles edit

 
Book of funeral protocols for the 1897 cortege and procession. This is on display at the National Palace Museum in Seoul.

On 6 January 1897, Gojong changed the queen consort's posthumous name to "Queen Munseong" (문성왕후, 文成王后), and altered her funeral location to Hongneung. Officials advised that the name was too similar to King Jeongjo's Munseong temple name, therefore on 2 March 1897 Gojong changed the name to "Myeongseong." That name is not to be confused with Queen Myeongseong of the Cheongpung Kim clan, King Hyeonjong's wife.[104][122][123]

 
The queen's place of cremation, sketch published by Isabella Bird in 1898. Behind are the woods mentioned in witness accounts.

Gojong proclaimed a new reign and became Emperor Gwangmu on 13 October 1897. The queen's title was also changed to "Empress Myeongseong" (명성태황후; 明成太皇后), that same month adding Tae (; ), meaning Great, to her posthumous title.[124][125]

Memorials edit

 
1912 photograph of the Seoul memorial to the Empress. It appears in the pro-Japanese biography of Methodist missionary Henry Gerhard Appenzeller by William Elliot Griffis.

In the place where the limited physical remains of the queen consort were found after cremation, a marker of the site was erected by 1898. Gojong built a spirit house for her, now demolished, a photograph of which survives from 1912. The mortal remains of the couple are interred together at the Joseon Royal tombs complex at Hongyuneung (홍유릉), Namyangju.

Photographs and illustrations edit

Speculation as to photograph edit

Documents note that the queen consort was in an official royal family photograph, but its whereabouts are unknown. Another royal family photograph does exist, but it was taken after the Empress' death. It shows Gojong, Sunjong, and Crown Princess Min, Sunjong's first wife. Shin Byong-ryong, a professor at Konkuk University, has stated his belief that the lack of photos of the queen consort derives from her constant fear of being recognisable to the public. Others believe that a photo must exist due to her political prominence. They suspect that the Japanese government may have removed all evidence of this kind after her assassination. It is their further speculation that the Japanese themselves may have kept a photo of her.[126] As at 2022, it remains questionable whether any contemporary image of her in photographic form survives.[127]

 
Wooden headdress of high rank: structure tied on with pre-installed cap. Identification of the queen consort assumes her to be wearing one such.

The 2003 photograph (below) and the Japanese print of 1895 both show the women depicted as wearing a wooden headdress of a distinctive character. These are the prerequisite of elite or royal women in the late 19th century, though the precise constructed form is difficult to distinguish when in use. An example survives in the National Palace Museum of Korea in Seoul.

2003: a photograph surfaces edit

 
Labelled as "a Lady's maid in Korean emperor's court" but also thought by many to be Myeongseong, c.1900; p.183 The passing of Korea (book)

KBS News in 2003 reported that a photograph allegedly of the queen consort had been disclosed to the public.[126] The photograph was said to have been purchased for a large sum by the grandfather of Min Su-gyeong and that it became a family heirloom. In the photo, a woman is accompanied by a retinue at her rear. Some experts have stated that the woman was clearly of high-rank, and possibly a wife of a bureaucrat. The woman's clothing appears to be of the kind worn only by the royal family, but her outfit did not display the embroideries expected to decorate the apparel of the Empress. Some consider further that she may be a high-ranking maidservant of the Empress.[128][126]

Alleged portraits of Empress Myeongseong edit

Italian artist Giuseppe Castiglione (1688–1766) was once alleged to have painted the portrait of the Empress in oils. However, the painting was too early and was subsequently discovered to be a portrait of Xiang Fei, a concubine of Emperor Qianlong during 18th century Qing Dynasty.[129]

In August 2017, a gallery exhibition held by Daboseong Ancient Art Museum in Central Seoul displayed a portrait of a woman said to be Empress Myeongseong. The woman is seen wearing a white hanbok, a white hemp hat, and leather shoes. She sits on a western-style chair. Kim Jong-chun, director of Daboseong Gallery, stated that when the portrait was examined, "Min clan" was written above the face side, and "portrait of a Madame" had been inscribed on the back. Subsequently, based on infrared research by the gallery, scholars and an art professor doubt the identification of the woman as being the queen consort.[130]

Japanese illustration edit

 
Japanese illustration of Gojong and the queen consort receiving Inoue Kaoru

On 13 January 2005, history professor Lee Tae-jin (이태진, 李泰鎭) of Seoul National University unveiled an illustration from an old Japanese magazine he had found at an antique bookstore in Tokyo. The 84th edition of the Japanese magazine Fūzokugahō (風俗畫報) published on 25 January 1895 has a Japanese illustration of Gojong and the queen consort receiving Inoue Kaoru, the Japanese chargé d'affaires.[128] The illustration is marked 24 December 1894 and signed by an artist with the surname Ishizuka (石塚). It also has an inscription: "The [Korean] King and Queen, moved by our honest advice, realize the need for resolute reform for the first time." Lee considered that the depiction of clothes and background are sufficiently detailed to suggest that it was drawn at the scene. Both the King and Inoue are shown looking at the queen consort in a manner that suggests the conversation was taking place between the queen consort and Inoue, with the King listening.

Family edit

  • Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather
    • Min Sa-yong (민사용, 閔思容) (1 May 1515 - 30 March 1579)[131]
  • Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandmother
    • Lady Yi of the Gwangju Yi clan (광주 이씨) (1518 - ?); daughter of Yi Wi (이위, 李緯; 1492 - ?), Min Sa-yong’s first wife
  • Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather
    • Min Yeo-jun (민여준, 閔汝俊) (1539 – 18 May 1599)
      • Adoptive Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather - Min Yeo-geon (민여건, 閔汝健; 1538-1585), older brother of Min Yeo-jun
  • Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandmother
    • Lady Yi of the Jeonju Yi clan (1543 - 1635); descendant of Grand Prince Hyoryeong
      • Adoptive Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandmother - Lady Kang of the Jinju Kang clan (진주 강씨, 晉州 姜氏); daughter of Kang Sa-sang (강사상, 姜士尙; 1519-1581)[132]
  • Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather
    • Min Gi (민기, 閔機) (1568 – 18 January 1641)
  • Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandmother
    • Lady Hong of the Namyang Hong clan (1571 - 1655); daughter of Hong Ik-hyeon (홍익현; 洪翼賢)
  • Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather
    • Min Gwang-hun (민광훈, 閔光勳) (10 August 1595 – 17 July 1659), scholar during the reign of King Injong.
  • Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandmother
    • Lady Yi of the Yeonan Yi clan (연안 이씨) (1594 - 1653);[133] daughter of Yi Gwang-jeong, Internal Prince Yeonwon (연원부원군 이광정, 李光庭) (1552 – 1629)
  • Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather
    • Min Yu-jung, Internal Prince Yeoseong (여양부원군 민유중, 閔維重) (1630 – 29 June 1687)
  • Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandmother
  • Great-Great-Great-Grandfather
    • Min Jin-hu (민진후, 閔鎭厚) (10 January 1659 – 1720), eldest brother of Queen Inhyeon (second consort of King Sukjong).
  • Great-Great-Great-Grandmother
    • Lady Yi of the Yeonan Yi clan (1664 - 1733); daughter of Yi Deok-ro (이덕로; 李德老), Min Jin-hu's second wife
  • Great-Great-Grandfather
    • Min Ik-su (민익수; 閔翼洙) (1690–1742)
  • Great-Great-Grandmother
    • Lady Nam of the Uiryeong Nam clan (증정경부인 의령 남씨) (1690 - 16 October 1756); youngest daughter of Nam Jeong-jung (남정중, 南正重; 1653 - 1704)
  • Great-Grandfather
    • Min Baek-bun (민백분; 閔百奮) (1723 - 1794)
  • Great-Grandmother
    • Lady Sim of the Cheongsong Sim clan (청송 심씨) (1722 - 1760)[134]; youngest daughter of Sim Jung-hyeon (심중현; 沈重賢), Min Baek-bun’s second wife
  • Grandfather
    • Min Gi-hyeon (민기현; 閔耆顯) (1751–1 August 1811)
  • Grandmother
    • Lady Jeong of the Yeonil Jeong clan [ko] (1773–9 March 1838); Min Gi-hyeon's third wife
  • Father
    • Min Chi-rok, Internal Prince Yeoseong (여성부원군 민치록, 閔致祿) (1799 – 17 September 1858)
  • Mother
    • Internal Princess Consort Hanchang of the Hansan Yi clan (한창부부인 한산 이씨) (1818 – 28 November 1874); Min Chi-rok's second wife
      • Grandfather: Yi Gyu-nyeon (이규년; 李圭年) (1788 - ?)
      • Grandmother: Lady Kim of the Andong Kim clan (안동 김씨, 安東 金氏) (1788 - ?)
    • Stepmother: Internal Princess Consort Haeryeong of the Haeju Oh clan (1798 – 15 March 1833)
      • Step-Grandfather: Oh Hui-sang (오희상; 吳煕常) (1763–1833)[135]
  • Siblings
    • Adoptive older brother: Min Seung-ho [ko] (1830 - 28 November 1874);[j] son of Min Chi-gu (1795–1874)
      • Adoptive sister-in-law: Lady Kim of the Gwangsan Kim clan clan (1843 - 1867 23 April); Min Seung-ho's first wife
        • Unnamed adoptive nephew (1864 - 1874)
      • Adoptive sister-in-law: Lady Kim of the Yeonan Kim clan [ko]) (1851 - 11 February 1919); Min Seung-ho's second wife
        • Adoptive nephew: Min Yeong-ik [ko] (1860–1914); eldest son of Min Tae-ho (1834–1884)
      • Adoptive sister-in-law: Lady Yi of the Deoksu Yi clan [ko] (1830 - 1 July 1859); Min Seung-ho's third wife
    • Unnamed older brother (1840 - 1847)
    • Older sister: Lady Min of the Yeoheung Min clan (1843 - 1849)
    • Older sister: Lady Min of the Yeoheung Min clan (1847 - 1852)
  • Husband
  • Children
    • Son: Prince Royal Yi Choi (원자 이최) (4 November 1871 – 8 November 1871)[k]
    • Unnamed daughter (13 February 1873 – 28 September 1873)
    • Son: Yi Cheok, Emperor Sunjong (25 March 1874 – 24 April 1926)
      • Daughter-in-law: Empress Sunmyeong of the Yeoheung Min clan (20 November 1872 – 5 November 1904) – daughter of Min Tae-ho, leader of the Yeoheung Min clan
      • Daughter-in-law: Yun Jeung-sun, Empress Sunjeong of the Haepyeong Yun clan [ko] (19 September 1894 – 3 February 1966) – daughter of Marquis Yun Taek-yeong
    • Son: Grand Prince Yi Deol (대군 이덜) (5 April 1875 – 18 April 1875)[136]
    • Son: Grand Prince Yi Bu (대군 이부) (18 February 1878 – 5 June 1878)

In popular culture edit

Film and television edit

Musicals edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Current location: 250-1 Neunghyeon-dong, Cheorwon County, Gangwon Province, South Korea
  2. ^ Her name is also romanized "Empress Myungsung".
  3. ^ In the lunar calendar, the Empress was born on 25 September 1851 and died on 20 August 1895.
  4. ^ In Kim Dong-in's historical novel Spring of Unhyeongung, Empress Myeongseong is said to be a filial child when her father Min Chi-rok was lying in bed due to illness.
  5. ^ Palace hall names were eventually used to differentiate Gojong’s three concubines who had the same surname and title: Royal Consort Yi Gwi-in of the Yeongbo Hall (영보당 귀인 이씨), Royal Consort Yi Gwi-in of Naean Hall (내안당 귀인 이씨), and Royal Consort Yi Gwi-in of the Gwanghwa Hall (광화당 귀인 이씨)
  6. ^ It was said that the Empress Myeongseong disguised herself in advance by acting as Hong Kye-hun's sister, and was carried on the back of Hong Kye-hun. She was able to escape the city and go to Yeoju to hide.
  7. ^ The hospital was renamed "Jejungwon" on 23 April 1885. Currently, this would be the future Yonsei University & Severance Hospital.
  8. ^ Isabella Bird Bishop talked about serving dinner with a Western-style dining table. It was said that he was so meticulous enough to let the Sanggung attend the service. When visiting Gyeonghoeru, the court ladies and the guards followed, and he wrote that he was impressed by saying that England and Joseon were neighbors.
  9. ^ "The Queen spoke of Queen Victoria, and said, “She has everything she can wish—greatness, wealth, and power. Her sons and grandsons are kings and emperors, and her daughters empresses. Does she ever in her glory think of poor Korea? She does so much good in the world, her life is good. We wish her long life and prosperity"; to which the king added, "England is our best friend". It was really touching to hear the occupants of that ancient but shaky throne peaking in this fashion." “The king and queen rose when I took my leave, and the Queen shook hands. They both spoke most kindly, and expressed the wish that I should return and see more of Korea." Pg. 48–49
  10. ^ Younger brother of her mother-in-law, Grand Internal Princess Consort Sunmok (Gojong's mother)
  11. ^ Died from complications of imperforate anus; was given title of Prince Royal (원자, 元子) before he died

References edit

  1. ^ Park, Jong-hyo (박종효) (1 January 2002). "일본인 폭도가 가슴을 세 번 짓밟고 일본도로 난자했다" [Japanese mob tramped down her breast three times and violently stabbed her with a katana]. Sindonga 新東亞. pp. 472–485.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 March 2002.
  3. ^ S.C.M. Paine, The Sino-Japanese War of 1894–1895: Perceptions, Power, and Primacy (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003), p. 316.
  4. ^ The top-knot was "the distinctive mark of Korean citizenship": at page 302, The History of Korea Homer B. Hulbert Vol 2 The Methodist Publishing House, Seoul (1905) https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/52749 Retrieved 16 September 2023
  5. ^ a b c 아관파천 (in Korean). Naver/Doosan Encyclopedia.
  6. ^ Encyclopaedia Korea its land, people and culture of all ages (1960) Hakwon-sa Ltd under Opening of Yi Chosun (1875-1910), After the Sino-Japanese War at page 80-81
  7. ^ "She—the most powerful Korean in Korea—is content to be nameless; a sovereign with almost unlimited power, but without a nominal individuality; and to be called merely by the family name of her forefathers, and to be designated only as the daughter of her fathers, the wife of her husband, and the mother of her son.” Chapter 5, Quaint Korea Louise Jordan Miln (1895) Osgood, McIlvaine & Co, London https://www.gutenberg.org/files/56623/56623-h/56623-h.htm Retrieved 11 September 2023
  8. ^ a b Kim, Wook-Dong (2019). Global Perspectives on Korean Literature. Ulsan: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 36. ISBN 9789811387272.
  9. ^ Quinones, C. Kenneth (December 1980). "The Kunse Chosŏn Chŏnggam and Modern Korean Historiography". Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies. 40 (2): 511. doi:10.2307/2718991. JSTOR 2718991.
  10. ^ See discussion Cheoljong of Joseon, under: death and succession.
  11. ^ Choe Ching Young. The Rule of the Taewŏn’gun, 1864-1873: Restoration in Yi Korea. Cambridge, Mass.: East Asian Research Center, Harvard University, 1972.
  12. ^ These reforms and his career are described in detail with references at Heungseon Daewongun
  13. ^ Some sources say that she was born 25 September; the date discrepancy is due to the difference in the calendar systems. . Archived from the original on 17 February 2006.
  14. ^ The house she was born in was built in 1687, in the 13th year of King Sukjong, and was rebuilt in 1975 and 1976. In 1904, a stone monument inscribed with the handwriting of her husband Gojong (called the Tangangguribi) was erected on the alleged site used by her for study.. myhome.shinbiro.com. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 23 July 2007.
  15. ^ The House of Gamgodang is that in which she lived from her birth until she was eight. In 1687, a hut for the king's father-in-law, the father of Queen Inhyeon, Min Yu-jung was built. Only the main building remains today, but the building was restored to its natural state in 1995. In the room where the empress studied as a child, a monument was erected inscribed with the words "Empress Myeongseong Tangangguri" (the village where Empress Myeongseong was born) to commemorate her birth. . Archived from the original on 27 February 2008. Retrieved 20 January 2008.
  16. ^ The inscription, measuring 250 by 64 by 45 cm3, which her husband Gojong erected in 1904 (The Gwangmu Emperor's 8th year (Gapjin), 5th month, 1st day), read 明成皇后誕降舊里碑 명성황후탄강구리비 Myeongseong Hwanghu Tangangguribi The Stone Tablet for The Empress Myeongseong's Birthplace, her Former Village. "명성황후탄강구리비(明成皇后誕降舊里碑)". minc.kr.
  17. ^ a b c d e f Queen Min of Korea: Coming to Power . Archived from the original on 17 February 2006. Retrieved 19 February 2007.
  18. ^ 《명성황후와 대한제국》, 18~20쪽
  19. ^ 한영우, 22쪽 ~ 23쪽에서
  20. ^ 아버지가 죽은 뒤 섬락리 사저에서 한양 감고당으로 옮겨 홀어머니와 함께 지냈다
  21. ^ The Daewongun's wife is the Princess Consort to the Prince of the Great Court.
  22. ^ Based on the existing (lunar) calendar of the time. See . Archived from the original on 17 February 2006. Retrieved 19 February 2007.
  23. ^ a b c 이경재, 한양이야기(가람기획, 2003) 234페이지 (Translation: Yi Gyeong-jae, Hanyang History (Garam Printing, 2003) pg. 234)
  24. ^ Cumings, Bruce. Korea's Place in the Sun: A Modern History. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2005.
  25. ^ Page 467 in Corea, the hermit nation...III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis (1897) C. Scribner's sons, New York https://archive.org/details/coreahermitnation00grif/page/439/mode/1up?view=theater Retrieved 20 September 2023
  26. ^ Styled as "Her Majesty, the Central Hall" (jungjeon mama, 중전마마, 中殿媽媽).
  27. ^ History Resources Queen Min 17 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  28. ^ 음서로 벼슬에 올라 장악원과 사도시의 첨정을 지냈으며, 딸이 왕비로 간택되면서 영의정에 추증되고 여성부원군(驪城府院君)에 추봉되었다. [1]
  29. ^ 한영우, 24쪽 ~ 27쪽에서 (Translation: Han Yeong-woo, pg. 24–27)
  30. ^ 지두환, 241쪽 (Translation: Ji Du-hwan, pg. 241)
  31. ^ 임중웅, 370 ~ 371쪽에서 (Translation: Im Jung-eung, pg. 370–371)
  32. ^ 한영우, 28쪽에서 (Translation: Han Yeong-woo, pg. 28)
  33. ^ Szczepanski, Kallie (16 May 2019). "Biography of Queen Min, Korean Empress". ThoughtCo.
  34. ^ In line with Korean custom: "“Korean wives have one rather desirable prerogative—a prerogative which the wives of China do not share with them, nor I fancy, do the wives of Japan. A Korean man cannot house his concubines or second-class wives under the roof that shelters his true or first wife, without her permission.” Chapter 5, Quaint Korea Louise Jordan Miln (1895) Osgood, McIlvaine & Co, London https://www.gutenberg.org/files/56623/56623-h/56623-h.htm Retrieved 13 September 2023
  35. ^ Chapter X in Corea or Cho-sen, Land of the Morning Calm A. Henry Savage-Landor (1895) William Heinemann, London https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/13128/pg13128-images.html#LIST_OF_PLATES Retrieved 23 September 2023
  36. ^ At page 58 in William Elliot Griffis A Modern Pioneer in Korea: The Life Story of Henry G Appenzeller (1912) Fleming H. Revell Company, London & Edinburgh https://ia800306.us.archive.org/33/items/amodernpioneerin00grifuoft/amodernpioneerin00grifuoft.pdf Retrieved 13 October 2023
  37. ^ On the alleged basis that the Japanese letter addressed the Koreans disrespectfully not as equals. See at page 216 and 221 in The History of Korea Homer B. Hulbert Vol 2 The Methodist Publishing House, Seoul (1905) https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/52749/pg52749-images.html Retrieved 17 September 2023
  38. ^ Page 219-221 The History of Korea Homer B. Hulbert Vol 2 The Methodist Publishing House, Seoul (1905) https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/52749/pg52749-images.html Retrieved 17 September 2023
  39. ^ By means of thousands of stone monuments set up at cross-roads and markets that he ordered to be inscribed with slogans. Even sticks of ink were sloganised. See at page 437 in Corea, the hermit nation...III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis (1897) C. Scribner's sons, New York https://archive.org/details/coreahermitnation00grif/page/437/mode/1up?view=theater Retrieved 17 September 2023
  40. ^ Encyclopaedia Korea its land, people and culture of all ages (1960) Hakwon-sa Ltd under Opening of Yi Chosun (1875-1910), Treaty with Japan at page 72-3
  41. ^ At page 23 in Korea and her neighbors : a narrative of travel, with an account of the recent vicissitudes and present position of the country by Bird, Isabella L. (1898) Fleming H. Revell Company, New York, Chicago, Toronto https://archive.org/details/koreaandherneig02birdgoog/page/80/mode/2up Retrieved 23 September 2023
  42. ^ Hirano, Kenichiro. "Interactions among Three Cultures in East Asian International Politics during the Late Nineteenth Century: Collating Five Different Texts of Huang Zun-xian's "Chao-xian Ce-lue" (Korean Strategy)" Retrieved 15 September 2023
  43. ^ Described by Hirano as "Huang (1848–1905, alias Gong-du, a native of Jia-ying county, Guangdong province and a Hakka)"
  44. ^ Page 430 in Corea, the hermit nation...III Modern and Recent History William Elliot Griffis (1897) C. Scribner's sons, New York https://archive.org/details/coreahermitnation00grif/page/408/mode/1up?view=theater Retrieved 15 September 2023
  45. ^ Encyclopaedia Korea its land, people and culture of all ages (1960) Hakwon-sa Ltd under Taewongun's Regency and Western Challenges, Persecution Renewed at page 70
  46. ^ At page 432, Corea, the hermit nation... III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis (1897) C. Scribner's sons, New York https://archive.org/details/coreahermitnation00grif/page/99/mode/1up?view=theater Retrieved 16 September 2023
  47. ^ Encyclopaedia Korea its land, people and culture of all ages (1960) Hakwon-sa Ltd under Opening of Yi Chosun (1875-1910), Modern Innovation at page 73-74
  48. ^ 황현, 《역주 매천야록 (임형택 외 역, 문학과지성사, 2005) 176"페이지 [Hwang Hyeon, 《Translated by Maecheon Yarok (translated by Lim Hyeong-taek et al., Munhwagwajiseongsa, 2005), page 176]
  49. ^ Encyclopaedia Korea its land, people and culture of all ages (1960) Hakwon-sa Ltd under Opening of Yi Chosun (1875-1910), Modern Innovation at page 74
  50. ^ a b Encyclopaedia Korea its land, people and culture of all ages (1960) Hakwon-sa Ltd under Opening of Yi Chosun (1875-1910), An army revolt and political changes at page 74-75
  51. ^ At pages 438-440 in Corea, the hermit nation...III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis (1897) C. Scribner's sons, New York https://archive.org/details/coreahermitnation00grif/page/439/mode/1up?view=theater Retrieved 16 September 2023
  52. ^ Pages 228-9 in The History of Korea Homer B. Hulbert Vol 2 The Methodist Publishing House, Seoul (1905) https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/52749 Retrieved 15 September 2023
  53. ^ 황현, 《매천야록》 (정동호 역, 일문서적, 2011) 55페이지 (translated: Hwang Hyeon, 《Maecheon Yarok》 (translated by Jeong Dong-ho, Japanese Books, 2011), page 55)
  54. ^ 황현, 《매천야록》 (정동호 역, 일문서적, 2011) 56페이지
  55. ^ 중궁전이 승하하여 거애하는 절차를 마련하도록 하다 조선왕조실록, 고종 19권, 19년(1882 임오 / 청 광서(光緖) 8년) 6월 10일(갑자) 7번째 기사에서.
  56. ^ 임중웅, 374 ~ 375쪽
  57. ^ 지두환, 245쪽
  58. ^ Events to 13 September including the arrest are in a telegram to the New York Tribune of 2 October, reproduced in full at page 441 in Corea, the hermit nation...III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis (1897) C. Scribner's sons, New York https://archive.org/details/coreahermitnation00grif/page/440/mode/1up?view=theater Retrieved 17 September 2023
  59. ^ At pages 446-447 in Corea, the hermit nation...III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis (1897) C. Scribner's sons, New York https://archive.org/details/coreahermitnation00grif/page/448/mode/1up?view=theater retrieved 16 September 2023
  60. ^ At page 477-478 in AMERICANS IN EASTERN ASIA, A Critical Study of the Policy of the United States with reference to China, Japan and Korea in the 19th Century Tyler Dennett (1922) The Macmillan Company, New York https://archive.org/details/americansineaste00denn/page/n5/mode/1up?view=theater Retrieved 18 September 2023
  61. ^ Dennett at 481
  62. ^ At page 478 and following in AMERICANS IN EASTERN ASIA, A Critical Study of the Policy of the United States with reference to China, Japan and Korea in the 19th Century Tyler Dennett (1922) The Macmillan Company, New York https://archive.org/details/americansineaste00denn/page/n5/mode/1up?view=theater Retrieved 18 September 2023
  63. ^ At page 235-8 in The History of Korea Homer B. Hulbert Vol 2 The Methodist Publishing House, Seoul (1905) https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/52749 Retrieved 20 September 2023
  64. ^ a b At page 479 in AMERICANS IN EASTERN ASIA, A Critical Study of the Policy of the United States with reference to China, Japan and Korea in the 19th Century Tyler Dennett (1922) The Macmillan Company, New York https://archive.org/details/americansineaste00denn/page/n5/mode/1up?view=theater Retrieved 18 September 2023
  65. ^ Encyclopaedia Korea its land, people and culture of all ages (1960) Hakwon-sa Ltd under Opening of Yi Chosun (1875-1910), Abortive Reform at page 75-76
  66. ^ At page 450 in Corea, the hermit nation...III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis (1897) C. Scribner's sons, New York https://archive.org/details/coreahermitnation00grif/page/457/mode/1up?view=theater Retrieved 20 September 2023
  67. ^ At page 166 in Korea and Japan (May 1905) in The Korea Review, Vol. 5 No. 5, May 1905 (ed) Homer B. Hulbert https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/58243/pg58243-images.html Retrieved 15 September 2023
  68. ^ At page 451 in Corea, the hermit nation...III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis (1897) C. Scribner's sons, New York https://archive.org/details/coreahermitnation00grif/page/453/mode/1up?view=theater Rterieved 16 September 2023
  69. ^ The Progressive coup participant Kim Ok-kiun (modern designation Kim Ok-gyun) was lured to Shanghai by his "friend" then murdered there. The involvement of Chinese General Yuan Shi Kai was suspected (at least by the Americans). The General brought the body back to Korea in a Chinese war vessel and the murderer was received at court. The corpse was cut up and pieces were displayed in various parts of Korea. See:at page 486 AMERICANS IN EASTERN ASIA, A Critical Study of the Policy of the United States with reference to China, Japan and Korea in the 19th Century Tyler Dennett (1922) The Macmillan Company, New York https://archive.org/details/americansineaste00denn/page/n5/mode/1up?view=theater Retrieved 19 September 2023
  70. ^ At page 20 in Korea and her neighbors : a narrative of travel, with an account of the recent vicissitudes and present position of the country by Bird, Isabella L. (1898) Fleming H. Revell Company, New York, Chicago, Toronto https://archive.org/details/koreaandherneig02birdgoog Retrieved 23 September 2023
  71. ^ see Dangojeon, under History
  72. ^ At page 25 in Korea and her neighbors : a narrative of travel, with an account of the recent vicissitudes and present position of the country by Bird, Isabella L. (1898) Fleming H. Revell Company, New York, Chicago, Toronto https://archive.org/details/koreaandherneig02birdgoog Retrieved 23 September 2023
  73. ^ Page 447 in Corea, the hermit nation...III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis (1897) C. Scribner's sons, New York https://archive.org/details/coreahermitnation00grif/page/446/mode/1up?view=theater Retrieved 16 September 2023
  74. ^ Page 447 in Corea, the hermit nation...III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis (1897) C. Scribner's sons, New York https://archive.org/details/coreahermitnation00grif/page/439/mode/1up?view=theater Retrieved 20 September 2023
  75. ^ a b Neff, Robert (30 May 2010). "Korea's modernization through English in the 1880s". The Korea Times. Seoul, Korea: The Korea Times Co. Retrieved 31 May 2010.
  76. ^ See Gallery photograph of Appenzeller's school in 1887.
  77. ^ [Ewha Hankdang (Ewha Academy)] (in Korean). Nate/ Encyclopedia of Korean Culture. Archived from the original on 10 June 2011. 1887년 학생이 7명으로 늘어났을 때, 명성황후는 스크랜튼 부인의 노고(勞苦)를 알고 친히 '이화학당(梨花學堂)'이라는 교명을 지어주고 외무독판(外務督辦) 김윤식(金允植)을 통해 편액(扁額)을 보내와 그 앞날을 격려했다. 당초에 스크랜튼 부인은 교명(校名)을 전신학교(專信學校, Entire Trust School)라 지으려 했으나, 명성황후의 은총에 화답하는 마음으로 '이화'로 택하였다.이는 당시에 황실을 상징하는 꽃이 순결한 배꽃〔梨花〕이었는데, 여성의 순결성과 명랑성을 상징하는 이름이었기때문이다.
  78. ^ Encyclopaedia Korea its land, people and culture of all ages (1960) Hakwon-sa Ltd under Catholic Conversions and State Oppression at page 63-65
  79. ^ An Chongbok in Chonhak Mundap and Chonhakko quoted in Encyclopaedia Korea its land, people and culture of all ages (1960) Hakwon-sa Ltd under From Learning to Conversion at page 63
  80. ^ At pages 453 in Corea, the hermit nation...III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis (1897) C. Scribner's sons, New York https://archive.org/details/coreahermitnation00grif/page/453/mode/1up?view=theater retrieved 16 September 2023
  81. ^ At page 19 in Korea and her neighbors : a narrative of travel, with an account of the recent vicissitudes and present position of the country by Bird, Isabella L. (1898) Fleming H. Revell Company, New York, Chicago, Toronto https://archive.org/details/koreaandherneig02birdgoog Retrieved 23 September 2023
  82. ^ Encyclopaedia Korea its land, people and culture of all ages (1960) Hakwon-sa Ltd under Yi Chosun before Hideyoshi, Command of the Seas, a Great Admiral at page 49
  83. ^ Encyclopaedia Korea its land, people and culture of all ages (1960) Hakwon-sa Ltd under Opening of Yi Chosun (1875-1910), Western Entires and Japanese Expansion; The Tonghak Rebellion; Sino-Japanese War, Kabo Reforms at page 76-80
  84. ^ page 467 in Corea, the hermit nation...III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis (1897) C. Scribner's sons, New York https://archive.org/details/coreahermitnation00grif/page/439/mode/1up?view=theater Retrieved 20 September 2023
  85. ^ Kim, S.Y. and Ha-Brookshire, J.E., 2015, November. Cotton Cloth Trades, Currency Reforms, and Inflations: Korean Experiences of the Industrial Revolution from 1883 to 1897. In International Textile and Apparel Association Annual Conference Proceedings (Vol. 72, No. 1). Iowa State University Digital Press. https://www.iastatedigitalpress.com/itaa/article/id/2487/ Retrieved 23 October 2023
  86. ^ See under "After 1875" in Politics of the Joseon dynasty
  87. ^ At page 250-251 in The History of Korea Homer B. Hulbert Vol 2 The Methodist Publishing House, Seoul (1905) https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/52749/pg52749-images.html Retrieved 15 September 2023
  88. ^ The former Lillias Horton (1851–1921), wife of Horace Grant Underwood.
  89. ^ Underwood, Lillias Horton (1904). Fifteen Years Among the Top-knots: Or, Life in Korea. pp. 24, 89–90.
  90. ^ Neff, Robert (10 May 2020). "Beholding Queen Min". The Korea Times.
  91. ^ Bird, Isabella L. (Isabella Lucy) (6 November 2022). Korea and her neighborsA narrative of travel, with an account of the recent vicissitudes and present position of the country.
  92. ^ Lucy Bird, Isabella (1898). Korea and Her Neighbours: A Narrative of Travel, with an Account of the Vicissitudes and Position of the Country, Volume 1. John Murray, 1905. pp. 48–49.
  93. ^ Kim Jiyoung; Fertility and Childbirth among Royal Women in Nineteenth-Century Korea, Pg. 93
  94. ^ Kim Ji-yeong; Fertility and Childbirth among Royal Women in Nineteenth-Century Korea, Pg. 92
  95. ^ Encyclopaedia, Korea its land, people and culture of all ages (1960), Hakwon-sa Ltd, under Taewongun's Regency and Western Challenges, Gunboat Diplomacy at page 71
  96. ^ Oh, Yeong-Seop (2007). 《한국 근현대사를 수놓은 인물들(1)》. p. 315.
  97. ^ Min Seung-ho, Min Seung-ho's son, and his adoptive mother, Gamgodang Hansan Yi, all died on the spot.
  98. ^ Bird Bishop, Isabella. Korea and Her Neighbours. Revell. p. 255. She had cut many lives short, but in doing so she had not violated Korean tradition and custom, and some excuse for her lies in the fact that soon after the King's accession his father sent to the house of Her Majesty's brother an infernal machine in a shape of a beautiful box, which on being opened exploded, killing her mother, brother, and nephew, as well as some others. Since then he plotted against her own life, and the feud between them was usually at fever heat.
  99. ^ Kim Ji-yeong; Fertility and Childbirth among Royal Women in Nineteenth-Century Korea, Pg. 94
  100. ^ Bird Bishop, Isabella. Korea and Her Neighbours. Revell. p. 253. He was the only son and the idol of his mother, who lived in ceaseless anxiety about his health, and in dread lest the son of a concubine should be declared heir to the throne. To this cause must be attributed several of her unscrupulous acts, her invoking the continual aid of sorcerers, her always increasing benefactions to the Buddhist monks. During much of the audience mother and son sat with clasped hands.
  101. ^ The History of Korea Homer B. Hulbert Vol 2 The Methodist Publishing House, Seoul (1905) Chapter XXI at page 297 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/52749 Retrieved 9 September 2023
  102. ^ The History of Korea Homer B. Hulbert Vol 2 The Methodist Publishing House, Seoul (1905) Chapter XXI at page 298 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/52749 Retrieved 9 September 2023
  103. ^ At 274-8 in Korea and her neighbors : a narrative of travel, with an account of the recent vicissitudes and present position of the country by Bird, Isabella L. (1898) Fleming H. Revell Company, New York, Chicago, Toronto https://archive.org/details/koreaandherneig02birdgoog Retrieved 23 September 2023 The text of the decree of demotion of the queen is at page 276.
  104. ^ a b Im Jong-eung, Pg. 385–387
  105. ^ "민왕후를 서인으로 강등시키다". 조선왕조실록, 고종 32년. 33. 22 August 1895.
  106. ^ "민왕후에게 빈의 호칭을 특사하다". 조선왕조실록, 고종 32년. 33. 23 August 1895.
  107. ^ At page 491 in Korea and her neighbors : a narrative of travel, with an account of the recent vicissitudes and present position of the country by Bird, Isabella L. (1898) Fleming H. Revell Company, New York, Chicago, Toronto https://archive.org/details/koreaandherneig02birdgoog Retrieved 23 September 2023
  108. ^ 우리곁에 살아 있는 역사의 맥박과 숨결 월간조선 2001년 3월호 (Translation: The pulse and breath of history that lives with us, Monthly Chosun March 2001 issue)
  109. ^ 나각순, 승상배, 이창훈, 《운현궁과 흥선대원군》 (종로문화원, 2000) 207페이지 (Translation: Na Gak-soon, Seung Sang-bae, Yi Chang-hun, 《Unhyeon Palace and Grand Internal Prince Heungseon》 (Jongno Cultural Center, 2000) Pg. 207)
  110. ^ At page 56 Korea Coulson, Constance J. D (1910) A and C. Black, London https://archive.org/details/korea00coul/page/56/mode/1up?view=theater Retrieved 16 October 2023
  111. ^ Encyclopaedia Korea its land, people and culture of all ages (1960) Hakwon-sa Ltd under Opening of Yi Chosun (1875-1910), After the Sino-Japanese War, Russian Influence at page 80-81
  112. ^ a b Kim, Tae-ik (25 August 2009). "The Sobering Truth of Empress Myeongseong's Killing". english.chosun.com. Retrieved 20 October 2020.
  113. ^ (in Korean) 을미사변 乙未事變 (in Korean) Naver Encyclopedia
  114. ^ PhD, History; J. D., University of Washington School of Law; B. A., History. "Biography of Queen Min, Korean Empress". ThoughtCo. Retrieved 31 January 2021.
  115. ^ Page 469 in Corea, the hermit nation...III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis (1897) C. Scribner's sons, New York https://archive.org/details/coreahermitnation00grif/page/439/mode/1up?view=theater Retrieved 20 September 2023
  116. ^ 《Empress Myeongseong and the Korean Empire》, Pg. 58–60
  117. ^ History's Great Untold Stories: Obscure Events of Lasting Importance Joseph Cummins. Allen & Unwin (2006) at Queen Min and the Battle to Save Korea page 256 and following
  118. ^ The History of Korea Homer B. Hulbert Vol 2 The Methodist Publishing House, Seoul (1905) Chapter XXI at page 303 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/52749 Retrieved 9 September 2023
  119. ^ For a full account of these Stage Three reforms see The Gabo Reform
  120. ^ Encyclopaedia Korea its land, people and culture of all ages (1960) Hakwon-sa Ltd under Opening of Yi Chosun (1875-1910), After the Sino-Japanese War, Russian Influence; Western Concessions at page 80-81
  121. ^ Encyclopaedia Korea its land, people and culture of all ages (1960) Hakwon-sa Ltd under Opening of Yi Chosun (1875-1910), Japanese Moves and Korean Resistance at page 84-90
  122. ^ 왕후 대행에게 문성의 시호를, 홍릉의 능호를, 경효의 전호를 주기로 의논하여 정하다 조선왕조실록, 고종 35권, 34년(1897 정유 / 대한 건양(建陽) 2년) 1월 6일(양력) 1번째 기사에서 (Translation: “It was discussed and decided to give the posthumous name of Munseong, the tomb name of Hongneung, and the full title of Gyeonghyo to the acting queen.” Annals of the Joseon Dynasty, Volume 35 of King Gojong, Year 34 (1897 Jeongyu / 2nd year of Geonyang of Daehan) January 6 (Solar Calendar) ) in the first article)
  123. ^ 시호의 문성(文成)이 정조의 시호와 같다 하여 여러 논의 끝에 음력 3월 2일 명성왕후로 개칭됐다. 왕후 대행에게 명성의 시호를 주다 조선왕조실록, 고종 35권, 34년(1897 정유 / 대한 건양(建陽) 2년) 3월 2일(양력) 5번째 기사에서. (Translation: “Since her posthumous name was the same as that of King Jeongjo, after much discussion, she was renamed Queen Myeongseong on March 2nd of the lunar calendar) giving a posthumous title of fame to the acting queen.” In the 5th article of the Annals of the Joseon Dynasty, Volume 35 of King Gojong, 34th year (1897 Jeongyu / 2nd year of the reign of the Great year of Geonyang).
  124. ^ 고종 황제의 행장 조선왕조실록, 순종부록 10권, 12년(1919 기미 / 일 대정(大正) 8년) 3월 4일(양력) 4번째 기사에서. (Translation: From the 4th article of the Annals of the Joseon Dynasty, Volume 10 of King Sunjong’s Appendix, Volume 10, Year 12 (1919, 8th year of Daejeong), March 4th (Solar Calendar) of Emperor Gojong’s conduct)
  125. ^ 고종이 황제의 자리에 오르고, 민왕후를 민황후로, 왕태자를 황태자로 책봉하고 산호만세 등을 창하다 조선왕조실록, 고종 36권, 34년(1897 정유 / 대한 광무(光武) 1년) 10월 12일(양력) 1번째 기사에서. (Translation: Gojong ascends to the throne of emperor, appoints Queen Min as Empress Min and the Crown Prince as crown prince, and said “Long Live the King”, etc. Annals of the Joseon Dynasty, King Gojong Volume 36, Year 34 (1897 Jeong Yu / 1st year of Gwangmu of Daehan) 10 In the 1st article on the 12th of the month (solar calendar)).
  126. ^ a b c . KBS News. 28 December 2003. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007. Retrieved 6 July 2006.
  127. ^ Antonetta L. Bruno; Kukjin Kim The Conundrum of Queen Min’s Portrait: A Denied or Partial Identity? (2022) International Journal of Korean History (Vol.27 No 1, Feb 2022)
  128. ^ a b . The Chosun Ilbo. 13 January 2005. Archived from the original on 21 June 2006.
  129. ^ Kim, Ji-myung (14 December 2018). "Portraits of Queen Min and Xiang Fei". The Korea Times.
  130. ^ Kwon, Mee-Yoo (15 August 2017). "1st portrait of Empress Myeongseong?".
  131. ^ He was the 6th great-grandson of Queen Wongyeong’s granduncle, Min Yu who was also the 9th great-grandfather of Queen Inhyeon.
  132. ^ He was the grandfather of Kang Hong-rip
  133. ^ She is a maternal cousin of Heo Jeok. Their grandmother, Lady Min, was the aunt of Royal Noble Consort Jeong of the Yeoheung Min clan (a concubine of King Seonjo) and the granddaughter of Princess Gyeongsuk (a daughter of King Seongjeong)
  134. ^ She was the 5th great-granddaughter of Sim Eom (심엄, 沈㤿; 1563 - 1624), who was the nephew of Queen Insun, thru her younger brother, Sim In-gyeom (심인겸, 沈仁謙; 1533 - 1580). While her 5th great-grandmother was the older sister of Queen Inheon (who was also Queen Insun’s adoptive granddaughter-in-law).
  135. ^ He is a maternal great-grandnephew of Queen Ingyeong, the first wife of King Sukjong, and was the adoptive great-grandson of Princess Myeongan, who was also the younger sister of King Sukjong
  136. ^ Was also known as Grand Prince Yi Po (대군 이표)
  137. ^ "The Sword with No Name (2009) – IMDb". IMDb.

Further reading edit

  • Bird, Isabella. (1898). Korea and her Neighbours. London: Murray. OCLC 501671063. Reprinted 1987: ISBN 9780804814898; OCLC 15109843
  • Dechler, Martina. (1999). Culture and the State in Late Choson Korea. ISBN 0-674-00774-3
  • Duus, Peter. (1998). The Abacus and the Sword: The Japanese Penetration of Korea, 1895–1910. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 9780520086142/ISBN 9780520213616; OCLC 232346524
  • Han, Young-woo, Empress Myeongseong and Korean Empire (명성황후와 대한제국)(2001). Hyohyeong Publishing ISBN 89-86361-57-4
  • Hann, Woo-Keun. (1996). The History of Korea. ISBN 0-8248-0334-5
  • Keene, Donald. (2002). Emperor of Japan: Meiji and His World, 1852–1912. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231123402; OCLC 46731178
  • Lewis, James Bryant. (2003). Frontier Contact between Choson Korea and Tokugawa Japan. ISBN 0-7007-1301-8
  • MacKensie, Frederick Arthur. (1920). Korea's Fight for Freedom. Chicago: Fleming H. Revell. OCLC 3124752 Revised 2006: ISBN 1-4280-1207-9 (See also Project Gutenberg.)
  • __________. (1908). The Tragedy of Korea. London: Hodder and Stoughton. OCLC 2008452 Reprinted 2006: ISBN 1-901903-09-5
  • Nahm, Andrew C. (1996). A History of the Korean People: Tradition and Transformation. (1996) ISBN 0-930878-56-6
  • _________. (1997). Introduction to Korean History and Culture. ISBN 0-930878-08-6
  • Schmid, Andre. (2002). Korea between Empires, 1895–1919. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231125383; ISBN 9780231125390; OCLC 48618117
  • Andrews, William. (2018) The Dragon Queen. (Fiction) Amazon Publishing. ISBN 9781495618642

External links edit

empress, myeongseong, series, series, korean, 명성황후, november, 1851, october, 1895, official, wife, gojong, 26th, king, joseon, first, emperor, korean, empire, during, lifetime, known, name, queen, 민비, 閔妃, after, founding, korean, empire, posthumously, given, t. For the TV series see Empress Myeongseong TV series Empress Myeongseong b Korean 명성황후 17 November 1851 8 October 1895 c was the official wife of Gojong the 26th king of Joseon and the first emperor of the Korean Empire During her lifetime she was known by the name Queen Min 민비 閔妃 After the founding of the Korean Empire she was posthumously given the title of Myeongseong the Great Empress 명성태황후 明成太皇后 Empress MyeongseongEmpress Consort of Korea posthumously Queen consort of JoseonTenure20 March 1866 1 November 1873PredecessorQueen CheorinSuccessorEmpress Sunjeong as the Empress of KoreaTenure1 July 1894 6 July 1895PredecessorHerself as the Queen of JoseonSuccessorEmpress Sunjeong as the Empress of KoreaQueen regent of JoseonTenure1 November 1873 1 July 1894PredecessorGrand Internal Prince Heungseon Queen SinjeongSuccessorNoneMonarchGojongTenure6 July 1895 26 September 1895PredecessorRegained titleSuccessorTitle and position abolishedMonarchGojongBorn17 November 1851Gamgodang ko Seomrak Village Geundong myeon Yeoheung mok Kimhwa County Gyeonggi Province Kingdom of Joseon a Died8 October 1895 1895 10 09 aged 43 Okhoru Pavilion Gonnyeonghap Gyeongbok Palace Kingdom of JoseonBurialHongreungSpouseYi Hui Gojong of Korea m 1866 1895 wbr IssuePrince Royal Yi Choi Unnamed daughter Yi Cheok Sunjong of Korea Grand Prince Yi Deol Grand Prince Yi BuPosthumous nameFull title Empress Hyo ja won seong jeong hwa hap cheon hong gong seong deok je hwi yeol mok myeong seong tae 효자원성정화합천홍공성덕제휘열목명성태황후 孝慈元聖正化合天洪功誠德齊徽烈穆明成太皇后 HouseYeoheung Min by birth Jeonju Yi by marriage FatherMin Chi rok Internal Prince YeoseongMotherInternal Princess Consort Hanchang of the Hansan Yi clanReligionShamanismSealKorean nameHangul명성황후Hanja明成皇后Revised RomanizationMyeongseong HwanghuMcCune ReischauerMyŏngsŏng HwanghuBirth nameHangul민자영Hanja閔玆暎Revised RomanizationMin Ja yeongMcCune ReischauerMin Cha yŏngThis article includes inline citations but they are not properly formatted Please improve this article by correcting them Use Template sfn February 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message A posthumous status representation of King Gojong and Empress Myeongseong Elementary History of Korea 1908 No verified uncontested contemporary photograph of the Empress has so far been found though there has been much speculation as to whether a photograph might have survived The later Empress was of aristocratic background and in 1866 was chosen by the de facto Regent Heungseon Daewongun to marry his son the future King Gojong Seven years later his daughter in law and her Min clan forced him out of office Daewongun was a conservative Confucian later implicated in unsuccessful rebellion against his daughter in law s faction He believed in isolation of Joseon from all foreign contact as a means of preserving independence She by contrast was a believer in gradual modernisation using Western and Chinese help From 1873 to her assassination in 1895 she oversaw economic military and governmental modernisation In the 1880s and 1890s the relationship between Joseon and neighbouring Japan deteriorated The queen consort was considered an obstacle by the government of Meiji Japan to its overseas expansion 1 She took a firmer stand against Japanese influence after Daewongun s failed rebellions that were intended to remove her from the political arena 2 Miura Gorō Japanese Minister to Korea backed the faction headed by Daewongun and directly ordered the assassination On 8 October 1895 the Hullyeondae Regiment loyal to the Daewongun attacked the Gyeongbokgung Palace and overpowered its Royal Guards The intruders then allowed a group of ronin specifically recruited for this purpose to assassinate the queen consort Her assassination sparked international outrage 3 The Japanese backed cabinet in the winter of 1895 1896 ordered Korean men to cut off their top knot of hair This caused uproar because this style of hair was considered a badge of Korean identity 4 This topknot edict and the assassination provoked nationwide protests 5 6 Gojong and the Crown Prince later Emperor Sunjong of Korea accepted refuge in the Russian legation in 1896 The anti Japanese backlash led to the repeal of the Gabo Reform which had introduced other measures increasing Japanese influence 5 In October 1897 Gojong returned to Gyeongungung modern day Deoksugung Whilst there he proclaimed the founding of the Korean Empire 5 and raised the status of his deceased wife to Empress Contents 1 Names and titles 2 Background 2 1 Clan tensions at the death of the King 2 2 Alliance between the Pungyang Jo clan and Yi Ha eung 2 3 Accession of a new King 3 Early life and family 3 1 Yeoheung Min clan antecedants 3 2 Selection as queen consort and marriage 4 As queen consort 4 1 Court domination 4 2 Start of imperial Japanese influence 5 Social revolution 5 1 Reorganisation of Joseon government 5 2 The insurrection of 1882 5 3 Mission to North America 5 4 Progressives vs Conservatives 6 Public policy 6 1 Economy 6 2 Education 6 3 Medicine music and religion 6 4 Military 6 5 Press 7 Reforms rebellion and war 7 1 Trade 1875 onwards 7 2 Political instability 1894 1895 8 Personal life 8 1 Personality and appearance 8 2 Early years 8 3 Later years 8 4 Residence 9 Assassination 9 1 The Eulmi Incident 9 2 Funeral procession and tomb 9 3 Aftermath 9 4 Proclaimed titles 9 5 Memorials 10 Photographs and illustrations 10 1 Speculation as to photograph 10 2 2003 a photograph surfaces 10 3 Alleged portraits of Empress Myeongseong 10 4 Japanese illustration 11 Family 12 In popular culture 12 1 Film and television 12 2 Musicals 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 16 Further reading 17 External linksNames and titles editAs was the custom in late Joseon society the woman who came to be Empress Myeongseong never had a personal name Min is the name of her clan Empress was a title conferred after her assassination Changes in her marital status or the status of her husband are reflected in her own title In Western terms she was nameless throughout her life 7 For the most part the narrative below refers to her as the queen consort because that was her title during life at the beginning of her political activity and was her functioning position For convenience the description queen regent is not separately used Background editClan tensions at the death of the King edit In 1864 Cheoljong of Joseon died suddenly 8 9 aged only 32 The exact cause of death is uncertain 10 Cheoljong was childless and had not appointed an heir 8 The Andong Kim clan had risen to power through intermarriage with the royal House of Yi Queen Cheorin Cheoljong s consort and a member of the Andong Kim clan claimed the right to choose the next king Traditionally the most senior Queen Dowager had the official authority to select the new king Cheoljong s cousin Grand Royal Dowager Hyoyu once known as Queen Sinjeong was the most senior Dowager She was of the Pungyang Jo clan and the widow of Heonjong of Joseon s father She had risen to prominence by intermarriage with the Yi family Alliance between the Pungyang Jo clan and Yi Ha eung edit Grand Queen Dowager Hyoyu saw an opportunity to advance the cause of her Pungyang Jo clan the only true rival of the Andong Kim clan in Korean politics As King Cheoljong was dying she was approached by Yi Ha eung a distant descendant of King Injo r 1623 1649 whose father was made an adoptive son of Prince Eunsin a nephew of King Yeongjo r 1724 1776 The branch that Yi Ha eung s family belonged to was a distant line of descendants of the Yi clan They survived the often deadly political intrigue that frequently embroiled the Joseon court by forming no affiliation with any factions Yi Ha eung himself was not eligible for the throne due to a law that dictated that a successor had to be part of the generation after the most recent monarch Yi Ha eung s second son Yi Myeong bok was a possible candidate for the throne The Pungyang Jo clan saw that Yi Myeong bok was only 12 years old and would not be able to rule in his own name until he came of age They hoped to influence Yi Ha eung who would be acting as de facto regent for his son Technically Grand Queen Dowager Hyoyu would be regent but in fact she did not intend to play an active role in the regency As soon as news of King Cheoljong s death reached Yi Ha eung through his intricate network of spies in the palace the hereditary royal seal required for the selection of a new monarch was taken to or by Grand Queen Dowager Hyoyu She already was strictly entitled to make the appointment 11 She thereupon chose her great grandson Yi Myeong bok The Andong Kim clan was powerless to act because the formalities had been observed Accession of a new King edit In the autumn of 1864 Yi Myeong bok was renamed as Yi Hui 이희 李㷩 and was crowned as Gojong King of Joseon with his father as Regent titled as Grand Internal Prince Heungseon He is referred to in this article henceforth as Heungseon Daewongun or Daewongun The strongly Confucian Daewongun proved to be a decisive leader in the early years of Gojong s reign He abolished the old government institutions that had become corrupt under the rule of various clans revised the law codes along with the household laws of the royal court and the rules of court ritual and heavily reformed the military techniques of the royal armies Within a few years he was able to secure complete control of the court and eventually receive the submission of the Pungyang Jo s while successfully disposing of the last of the Andong Kim s whose corruption he believed was responsible for the country s decline in the 19th century 12 Early life and family edit nbsp House of Gamgodang the birthplace of Empress MyeongseongYeoheung Min clan antecedants edit The future queen consort was born into the aristocratic Yeoheung Min clan on 17 November 1851 13 14 15 16 within the House of Gamgodang ko in Seomrak Village Geundong myeon Yeoheung present day Yeoju Gyeonggi Province where the clan originated 17 The Yeoheung Mins were a noble clan boasting many high ranking bureaucrats in its illustrious past princess consorts and two queen consorts These were firstly Queen Wongyeong wife of Taejong of Joseon and mother of Sejong the Great and secondly Queen Inhyeon second wife of Sukjong of Joseon 17 When her father Min Chi rok was young he studied under scholar Oh Hui sang 오희상 吳熙常 and eventually married the scholar s daughter She became Min Chi rok s first wife Lady Oh of the Haeju Oh clan In 1833 Lady Oh died childless at the age of 36 After three years mourning Min Chi rok in 1836 married Lady Yi of the Hansan Yi clan later known as Internal Princess Consort Hanchang She was the daughter of Yi Gyu nyeon The future Empress was the fourth and only surviving child of Lady Yi Before her marriage the later empress was known as the daughter of Min Chi rok Lady Min or Min Ja yeong 민자영 閔玆暎 18 At age seven she lost her father to an illness on 17 September 1858 d while he was in Sado city Lady Min was raised by her mother and Min relatives for eight years until she moved to the palace and became queen 19 20 Lady Min assisted her mother for three years while in living in Gamgodang In 1861 it was decided that Min Seung ho would become her father s heir Selection as queen consort and marriage edit When Gojong reached the age of 15 his father began to seek a bride for his son Ideally the choice would be a person without politically ambitious relatives and someone who was of noble lineage After rejecting numerous candidates the Daewongun s wife Grand Internal Princess Consort Sunmok known at the time as Grand Internal Princess Consort Yeoheung Yeoheung Budaebuin 여흥부대부인 驪興府大夫人 21 and his mother Princess Consort Min proposed a bride from their own clan the Yeoheung Min 17 The girl s father was dead She was said to possess beautiful features a healthy body and an ordinary level of education 17 This possible bride underwent a strict selection process culminating in a meeting with the Daewongun on 6 March and a marriage ceremony on 20 March 1866 22 The Daewongun likely fearing that the Andong Kim clan and the Pyungyang Jo clan who were political rivalries for the future may have been influenced favourably towards Lady Min due to her lack of a father or brother He did not suspect Lady Min herself as politically ambitious and he was satisfied with the interview 23 It was only later he observed that she was a woman of great determination and poise but that he nevertheless allowed her to marry his son 24 In doing so he raised to the throne a woman who by 1895 had proven herself to be his chief foil and implacable enemy 25 Lady Min aged 16 married the 15 year old king and was invested in a ceremony 책비 chaekbi as the Queen Consort of Joseon 26 Two places assert claims as the location of the marriage and accession These are Injeongjeon Hall 인정전 at Changdeok Palace 17 and Norakdang Hall 노락당 at Unhyeon Palace The headdress typically worn by brides at royal weddings was so heavy for the bride that a tall court lady was specially assigned to support it from the back Directly following the wedding was the three day ceremony for reverencing of ancestors 27 When Lady Min became Queen Consort her mother was given the royal title of Internal Princess Consort Hanchang 한창부부인 韓昌府夫人 Her father was given the royal title of Internal Prince Yeoseong 여성부원군 驪城府院君 and was posthumously appointed as Yeonguijeong after his death 28 29 30 Her father s first wife also given the royal title of Internal Princess Consort Haeryeong 해령부부인 海寧府夫人 On the day of their marriage ceremony Gojong did not go to his wife s quarters to consummate the marriage but to the quarters of concubine Royal Consort Yi Gwi in of the Gyeongju Yi clan This preference would later be approved by the Heungseon Daewongun 31 32 nbsp Gyeongbokgung Palace was expensively restored and refurbished during the Regency of Daewongun The iconic palace complex was vast containing some 500 buildings Most of it apart from the Throne Room and the Gyeonghoeru Pavilion was demolished during the Japanese colonial period It was the principal home of the king and queen consort This is a photograph taken in 1886 The first impression of the queen consort at the palace was that she was dutiful and docile Over time Daewongun changed his view of her 23 Officials noticed that the new queen consort differed from previous queens before her in her choices and determination She did not participate in lavish parties rarely commissioned extravagant fashions from the royal ateliers and almost never hosted afternoon tea parties with the various princesses of the royal family or powerful aristocratic ladies unless politics required her to do so Expected to act as an icon for Korea s high society the queen rejected this role Instead she spent her time reading books written using Chinese characters whose use in Korea was usually reserved for aristocratic men Spring and Autumn Annals and its accompanying Zuo Zhuan 17 are examples She furthered her own education in history science politics philosophy and religion As queen consort editCourt domination edit By the age of twenty the queen consort had begun to leave the total seclusion of her apartments at Changgyeong Palace and to play an active part in politics This was not at the invitation of Heungseon Daewongun and his high officials Daewongun directed his son to conceive through the concubine Yi Gwi in from the Yeongbo Hall 영보당귀인 이씨 e On 16 April 1868 the concubine gave birth to Prince Wanhwa 완화군 to whom Daewongun gave the title of crown prince It was said that Daewongun was overwhelmed with joy at the arrival of Gojong s first born son and that afterwards the queen consort was not accorded respect or honour as before 23 Discord between the queen consort and Daewongun became public when her infant son died in late 1871 four days after birth Daewongun publicly accused her of being unable to bear a healthy male child She suspected her father in law of foul play through the ginseng emetic treatment he had brought her 33 It seems likely the queen consort s intense distrust of her father in law dates from this time Meanwhile the queen consort secretly formed a powerful faction against the Heungseon Daewongun With the backing of high officials scholars and members of her clan she desired to remove Daewongun from power Min Seung ho the queen consort s adoptive older brother along with court scholar Choe Ik hyeon devised a formal impeachment of Daewongun The impeachment was to be presented to the Royal Council of Administration arguing that the 22 year old Gojong should now rule in his own right In 1873 with the approval of Gojong and the Royal Council the Heungseon Daewongun was forced to retire to Unhyeongung his estate at Yangju The queen consort then banished the royal concubine along with her child to a village outside the capital 34 The child was stripped of royal titles and died on 12 January 1880 After these expulsions the queen consort had control over the court where her own clan family members received high office As queen consort she ruled along with her husband but was recognized as being more politically active than him 35 Start of imperial Japanese influence edit After Korean refusal to receive Japanese envoys announcing the Meiji Restoration some Japanese aristocrats favored an immediate invasion of Korea Upon the return of the Iwakura Mission this idea was quickly dropped because the new Japanese government was neither politically nor fiscally stable enough to start a war 36 When Heungseon Daewongun was ousted from politics Japan renewed efforts to establish ties with Korea but the Imperial envoy arriving at Dongnae in 1873 was turned away 37 nbsp 1894 map created in Shanghai showing the Korean peninsula within easy sailing of both Shanghai and Nagasaki Fusan Busan Pusan at that time is the principal trading port in Korea In 1875 the Japanese gunboat Unyō was dispatched towards Busan and a second warship was sent to the Bay of Yeongheung ostensibly surveying sea routes On 20 September 1875 in a move seen by the Koreans as provocative the Unyō ventured into restricted waters off Ganghwa Island Korean shore batteries then opened fire Thus arose a violent confrontation between the Japanese and the Koreans known as the Ganghwa Island incident 38 Following this incident six naval vessels and an imperial Japanese envoy were sent to Ganghwa Island to enforce the wishes of the Japanese government which was then in a position to insist on Korea opening to trade generally There was precedent for this line of action in the behaviour of European powers and their extraction of the so called Unequal Treaties nbsp 1892 A street in the Japanese quarter of Busan being of the character described by Isabella Bird Whilst a majority of the royal Korean court favored absolute isolationism Japan had demonstrated its willingness and capacity to use force The deposed Daewongun took the opportunity to blame the Min clan for their weakness in contrast to his own previous isolationist anti foreign policies 39 After numerous meetings the Ganghwa Treaty was signed on 26 February 1876 thus opening Korea to Japan and the world The treaty was modeled after treaties imposed on Japan by the United States Various ports were forced to open to Japanese trade and Japanese now had rights to buy land in designated areas The treaty permitted the immediate opening of Busan 1876 and later other major ports Wonsan 1880 and Incheon 1883 to Japanese merchants For the first few years Japan enjoyed a near total monopoly of trade Japanese cotton goods were imported to Korea which was unindustrialised and still dominantly dependent on limited modes of agricultural production Rice and cereals became the main export to Japan whose merchants came to inhabit the major ports 40 By 1894 Busan gave every appearance according to doctor missionary Isabella Bird of being a town in Japan She reports the fact that the customs were levied by the Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs officers on behalf of the Korean Crown At least one of these officers was English 41 Social revolution editReorganisation of Joseon government edit In 1880 a mission headed by Kim Gi su Kim Hong Jip was commissioned by Gojong and the Min clan to study Japanese westernisation and its intentions for Korea The immediate diplomatic objective was to persuade the Japanese that there was no need to open a Legation in Seoul and that the port of Incheon should not be opened 42 It arrived on 11 August 1880 nbsp Korean topknot worn by married men sketched in 1891 by English artist Henry Savage Landor The wearing of the topknot was considered an aspect of Korean identity While in Japan Kim visited the Chinese embassy in Japan no less than six times He met with the Chinese first envoy to Japan He Ru zhang 43 and his staff adviser Huang Zunxian In September 1880 a prepared paper was written for the benefit of and was presented to the visiting Koreans the purpose of which was to change their whole approach towards modernisation through external contact This paper whose text survives in five differing forms was written by Huang It was entitled Korean Strategy and examined the strategic position of Korea in the context of its need for strength in the international situation of the day The essence of its thesis was that Russia was land hungry and represented the primary threat to Korea The Chinese it argued should be regarded as natural close allies from whom full independence was undesirable Huang advised that Korea should adopt a pro Chinese policy while retaining close ties with Japan for the time being He also advised an alliance with the United States in particular because it did not occupy the countries with which it traded and because it would be a protection against Russia He considered it wise to open trade relations with Western nations and to adopt Western technology arguing that their interest in Korea was trade rather than occupation The modernisation of Japan through Western contact was pointed to as a promising precedent for study Kim returned from Japan in late 1880 By early 1881 the paper had made a considerable impression on the king and the queen consort 44 Copies were commissioned to be sent out to all ministers She had hoped to win yangban aristocratic approval to invite Western nations into Korea and to open up trade so as to keep Japan in check She wanted to first allow Japan to help in the modernisation process but after completion of certain projects have them be driven out by Western powers However the yangban aristocracy opposed any opening of the country to the West Choi Ik hyun who had helped with the impeachment of Heungseon Daewongun sided with the isolationists He maintained that the Japanese were just like the Western barbarians and would spread subversive notions just as previous Western contact had brought Roman Catholicism That had been a major issue during Daewongun s regency and Catholicism was crushed by widespread persecution 45 To the socially conservative yangban the queen consort s plan meant the end of social order Accordingly the response to the distribution of Korean Strategy was a joint memorandum to the throne from scholars in every province of the kingdom They stated that the ideas in the book were impractical theories and that the adoption of Western technology was not the only way to enrich the country They demanded that the number of envoys exchanged ships engaged in trade and articles of trade be strictly limited and further that all foreign books in Korea should be destroyed Two thousand out of office scholars gathered at Cho rio planning to march on Seoul and overwhelm the serving Ministers The gathering was met at Cho rio by royal envoys who promised to stop the mission to Japan to which the protesters objected It was too late however and the Korean mission by then had landed in Nagasaki in Japan 46 Thus in 1881 a large fact finding mission was sent to Japan under Kim Hongjip It stayed for seventy days observing Japanese government offices factories military and police organizations and business practices The visitors obtained information about innovations in the Japanese government copied from the West especially the proposed constitution On the basis of these reports the queen consort began reorganisation of the government 47 Twelve new bureaus were established to deal with foreign relations with the West China and Japan Other bureaus were established to supervise commerce A bureau of the military was created tasked to modernize weapons and techniques Civilian departments were established to import Western technology Meanwhile in September 1881 a plot was uncovered to overthrow the queen consort s faction depose the King and place Heungseon Daewongun s illegitimate third son Yi Jae seon known posthumously as Prince Imperial Waneun on the throne The plot was frustrated by informants to 48 and spies of the queen consort Heungseon Daewongun whose involvement was not proved was unharmed However the attempted coup resulted in Yi Jae seon s death in late October 1881 In October 1881 the queen consort arranged for 60 top Korean military students to be sent to Tientsin in Qing China where they were to study arms manufacturing and deployment 49 The Japanese volunteered to supply military students with rifles and train a unit of the Korean army to use them She agreed but reminded the Japanese that students would still be sent to China for further education on Western military technologies The modernisation of the military was met with opposition The insurrection of 1882 edit See also Imo Incident In June 1882 members of the old military became resentful of the special treatment of the new units They destroyed the house of Min Gyeom ho and killed him He was Gojong s maternal uncle being his mother s younger brother and was the administrative head of the training units and in charge of the treasury Yi Choi eung and Kim Bo hyun a magistrate were also killed 50 These had been associated with the Min corruption whereby the soldiers got rotten rice in payment of wages These soldiers then fled to the protection of Daewongun who publicly rebuked but privately encouraged them Daewongun took control of the old units He ordered an attack on the administrative district of Seoul that housed the Gyeongbokgung the diplomatic quarter military centers and science institutions These soldiers attacked police stations to free comrades who had been arrested and ransacked private estates and mansions belonging to relatives of the queen consort These units stole rifles and killed Japanese training officers They narrowly missed murdering the Japanese ambassador to Seoul who escaped to Incheon and thence to Japan where he was interviewed at court for an account of events 51 The military rebellion then headed towards the palace but both queen consort and the King escaped in disguise They fled to her relative s villa in Cheongju where they remained in hiding f Rumour supplied differing accounts of the escape The truth may lie in the detailed account recorded by Homer Hulbert 52 One rumour was that Grand Internal Princess Consort Sunmok had entered the palace and hidden her daughter in law the queen consort in a wooden litter that the older woman was riding on Allegedly a court officer saw this and informed the soldiers invading the palace 53 Princess Sunmok did try to persuade her husband Heungseon Daewongun to stop the hunt for the queen consort This seemed so suspicious that later he kept her away from his affairs 54 When Daewongun could not find the queen consort he likely assumed she was dead according to Hulbert He announced the queen is dead 55 56 57 Numerous supporters of the queen consort were executed once Daewongun took control of Gyeongbokgung Palace He immediately dismantled the recent reform measures and relieved the new units of duty Foreign policy reverted to isolationism Both Chinese and Japanese representatives were forced to leave the capital Li Hongzhang with the consent of Korean envoys in Beijing sent 4 500 Chinese troops to restore order and secure Chinese interests in Korea His troops arrested Daewongun who was then taken to Paoting in China where he remained under house arrest 58 The royal couple returned and overturned all of Daewongun s actions The Japan Korea Treaty of 1882 signed on 10 August 1882 required the Koreans to pay 550 000 yen damages in respect of Japanese lives and property lost during the insurrection This agreement also permitted Japanese troops to guard the Japanese embassy in Seoul The queen consort proposed to China a new trade agreement granting the Chinese special privileges and rights to ports inaccessible to the Japanese Public order was enforced by Wu Chang ching and his detachment of 3 000 Chinese troops She also successfully requested that a Chinese commander General Yuan Shih kai take control of the new military units and that a German adviser Paul Georg von Mollendorff head the Maritime Customs Service The Chinese desired further trade treaties so as to deflect a Japanese monopoly Treaties were later signed with the United States 1882 and France 1886 50 nbsp Min Yeong ik 1860 1914 in aristocratic Korean clothes He visited the United States at the queen consort s request He was by occupation a royal philosopher and painter His younger sister married the Crown Prince son of the queen consort Mission to North America edit Main article 1883 Korean special mission to the United States In July 1883 the queen consort sent a special mission to the United States It was headed by Min Yeong ik her adoptive nephew The mission arrived at San Francisco on 2 September 1883 carrying the newly created Korean national flag It visited U S historical sites heard lectures on U S history and attended a gala event in their honor given by the mayor of San Francisco and other U S officials The mission dined in New York at the Fifth Avenue Hotel with President Chester A Arthur and discussed the growing threat of the Japanese and the possibility of U S investment in Korea The Korean visit lasted three months returning via San Francisco 59 At the end of September Min Yeong ik travelled to Seoul and reported to the queen consort She at once established English language schools with U S instructors Min Yeong ik s report had been optimistic I was born in the dark I went out into the light and your Majesty it is my displeasure to inform you that I have returned to the dark I envision a Seoul of towering buildings filled with Western establishments that will place herself back above the Japanese barbarians Great things lie ahead for this Kingdom great things We must take action your Majesty without hesitation to further modernize this still ancient kingdom nbsp Korean ambassadors to the United States 1883 formal photograph Min Yeong ik is the minister in charge front row second from left Percival Lowell front row European clothes is their escort for the trip Matters culminated in October 1883 with a royal request that the Americans send an adviser to Korea to the office of foreign affairs and instructors for the army An order for arms was placed with a US firm based in Yokohama 60 A complement of three military instructors arrived in April 1888 61 Progressives vs Conservatives edit The Progressives were founded during the late 1870s by a group of yangban who supported westernisation of Joseon They wanted immediate westernisation including a complete cessation of ties with Qing China With the queen consort possibly unaware of their anti Chinese sentiments they were granted frequent royal audiences and meetings to discuss progressivism and nationalism They advocated for educational and social reforms including the equality of the sexes by granting women full rights The queen consort was convinced at first but she did not support their anti Chinese stance In the result she became a proponent of the Sadae faction which was pro China and in favour of gradual westernisation In 1884 the conflict between the Progressives and the Sadaes intensified The Progressives frustrated by the Sadaes and the growing influence of the Chinese successfully conspired to secure the aid of Japanese Legation staff and troops 62 American Legation officials in particular Naval Attache George C Foulk heard about the possibility of trouble breaking out caused by the Progressives This rumour reached the British who put out feelers to their various other contacts All this found its way back to the chief Progressive conspirators who fearing their dangerous game was almost up decided to act immediately 63 They staged a bloody palace coup on 4 December 1884 the Gapsin Coup on the occasion of a diplomatic dinner celebrating the opening of the new Korean postal service 64 The Progressives killed numerous high ranking Sadaes and secured key government positions vacated by Sadaes who had fled the capital or had been killed This new administration began to issue edicts in both the King and queen consort s names The King and the queen consort had been kidnapped and were held prisoner by armed Japanese guards The new cabinet did not secure popular support despite their agenda of modernisation and planned political economic social and cultural reforms 65 nbsp The Japanese Legation photo c1900 This was the second Legation building rebuilt by the Koreans after the first one was destroyed by insurrectionist arson The queen consort was horrified by the violence of the Progressives They effected seven murders of high ranking Koreans Clan leaders summoned to the palace by letters purporting to come from the King were beheaded on stepping out of their sedan chairs 66 Following suppression of the coup the queen consort no longer trusted the Japanese 67 She refused to support the actions of the Progressives declaring any documents signed in her name to be null and void After only two days 68 of control over the administration the Progressives were crushed by Chinese troops under Yuan Shikai s command These were sent following a secret request by the queen consort to the Chinese Resident A handful of Progressive leaders were killed others escaping to Japan 69 The Japanese troops were only 130 in all and were easily overwhelmed Japanese deaths and property damage followed The Treaty of Hanseong 8 January 1885 negotiated by Count Inouye on behalf of the Japanese required Joseon to pay a moderate indemnity for damages inflicted 40 Japanese were killed during the coup and the Japanese legation was burned to the ground In addition the Koreans agreed to rebuild the Japanese Legation plus some barracks for their troops Lastly those guilty of murdering a Japanese officer were to be punished 64 On 18 April the Convention of Tientsin 1885 was made in Tianjin China between the Japanese and the Chinese In it they both agreed to pull troops out of Joseon Each party agreed it would send troops only if their property was endangered each would inform the other before doing so Both nations also agreed to pull out their military instructors so as to allow the newly arrived Americans to perform that task The Japanese withdrew troops from Korea leaving a number of legation guards Public policy editEconomy edit nbsp Japanese bank note dated 1881 of the type used in trade in Korea Strings of copper cash coins were impractical for commerce Following the opening of all Korean ports to the Japanese and Western merchants in 1888 contact and involvement with outsiders increased foreign trade rapidly In 1883 the Maritime Customs Service was established under the patronage of the queen consort and the supervision of Sir Robert Hart 1st Baronet of the United Kingdom The Maritime Customs Service administered the business of foreign trade and collection of tariffs By 1883 the economy was now no longer in a state of monopoly conducted by Japanese merchants as it had been only a few years ago Much of the economy was controlled by the Koreans with some participation shared between Western nations Japan and China In 1884 the first Korean commercial firms such as the Daedong and the Changdong Company emerged The Korean copper coinage had been debased to the exchange of 500 cash to one US dollar This meant that transactions in cash were heavy and bulky It was not a currency suited to the scale of commercial transactions Japanese yen and Japanese banks were used everywhere 70 In 1883 the Korean Bureau of Mint produced a new coin tangojeon or dangojeon thereby securing a stable Korean currency but in the five years following the new currency was blamed rightly or wrongly for the inflation of basic commodities 71 Western investment also began to grow in 1886 One third of all imported goods were carried inland by men or pack animals They were frequently stopped and taxed for transit by road barriers on the way The Seoul government in exchange for a fee authorised these barrier levies 72 The German A H Maeterns with the aid of the United States Department of Agriculture created a new project designated the American Farm 73 This was on a large plot of land donated by the queen consort to promote modern agriculture Farm implements seeds and milk cows were imported from the United States In June 1883 the Bureau of Machines was established and steam engines were imported Finally telegraph lines facilitating communication between Joseon China and Japan were laid between 1883 and 1885 74 Despite the fact that the royal couple had brought the Korean economy to a degree of westernisation modern manufacturing facilities did not emerge Education edit From early projections in 1880 in May 1885 a palace school to educate the children of the elite was approved by the queen consort The Royal English School 육영공원 育英公院 Yukyŏng Gongwŏn was established by the American missionary Homer Hulbert and three other missionaries The school had two departments liberal education and military education Courses were taught exclusively in English using English textbooks However due to low attendance the school was closed shortly after the last English teacher Bunker resigned in late 1893 75 In 1886 the queen consort patronized the first all girls educational institution Ewha Academy later Ewha University The school was established in Seoul by Mary F Scranton She collaborated with Methodist missionary and teacher Henry Gerhardt Appenzeller who worked in Korea from 1885 to his death in June 1902 76 As Louisa Rothweiler a founding teacher of Ewha Academy observed the school was at its early stage more of a place for poor girls to be fed and clothed than a place of education 75 The creation of the academy was a significant social change 77 Missionaries contributed much to the development of Western education in Joseon Medicine music and religion edit The arrival of Horace Newton Allen under invitation of the queen consort in September 1884 marked the formal introduction of Christianity which spread rapidly in Joseon He was able with the queen consort s permission and official sanction to arrange for the appointment of other missionaries as government employees He also introduced modern medicine in Korea by establishing the first western Royal Medical Clinic of Gwanghyewon in February 1885 g In April 1885 numerous Protestant missionaries began to arrive in Joseon Prominent Protestant missionaries Horace Grant Underwood Lillias Horton Underwood and William B Scranton with his mother Mary Scranton moved to Korea in May 1885 They established churches within Seoul and began to establish centers in the countryside Catholic missionaries arrived soon afterwards Christian missionaries made converts but also created contributions towards modernisation of the country Concepts of equality human rights and freedom and the participation of both men and women in religious activities were introduced for the first time to Joseon The queen consort wanted the literacy rate to rise and with the aid of Christian educational programs it did so within a matter of a few years Notable changes were made in music Western music theory partly displaced the traditional Eastern concepts Protestant missions introduced Christian hymns and other Western songs that created a strong impetus to modify Korean ideas about music The organ and other Western musical instruments were introduced in 1890 and a Christian hymnal was published in the Korean language in 1893 under the commission of the queen consort The queen consort invited different missionaries to enter Joseon She valued their knowledge of Western history science and mathematics It can be assumed these advantages were seen as outweighing the potential loss of ancestor worship which Catholic converts were well known to have resisted in face of sustained persecution in the past 78 Isolationists continued to view Christianity as subversive of morals in the refusal to perform rites for ancestors and the perceived disloyalty to the state Some scholars had attempted to classify Christianity not as a religion but a school of learning 79 A degree of religious tolerance was a practical outcome of the queen consort s policies whether or not it had been an overt goal The queen consort herself never became a Christian but remained a devout Buddhist with influences from shamanism and Confucianism Military edit Modern weapons were imported from Japan and the United States in 1883 The first military factories were established and new military uniforms were created in 1884 Under joint patronage of Gojong and the queen consort a request was made to the United States for more American military instructors to speed up the military modernisation of Korea Military modernisation was slow compared to the other projects In October 1883 American minister Lucius Foote arrived to take command of the modernisation of Joseon s older army units which had not started to Westernise In April 1888 General William McEntyre Dye and two other military instructors arrived from the United States followed in May by a fourth instructor They brought about more rapid military development 80 A new military school was created called Yeonmu Gongwon and an officers training program began Visible progress in the preparedness and capacity of the Korean military was being achieved The growing troop numbers caused the Japanese concern as to the possible impact of Korean troops if the Japanese government did not interfere to stall the process By 1898 the Korean army comprised 4 800 men in Seoul who were drilled by the Russians at that time There were 1 200 Korean soldiers in the provinces and the navy owned two small vessels 81 Despite army training becoming increasingly on par with that of the Chinese and the Japanese naval investment of all kinds was neglected This omission represented a gap in the modernisation project Failure to develop naval defence rendered Joseon s long sea borders more vulnerable to invasion This was a severe contrast to the period nearly 300 years earlier when Joseon s navy under Admiral Yi Sun sin had been the strongest in East Asia 82 Now the Korean navy comprised old ships almost powerless against the advanced ships of modern navies Press edit nbsp Hanseong Sunbo 1883 first edition of newspaper This would have been limited to a readership able to read Chinese characters ie aristocratic men The first newspaper to be published in Joseon was the Hanseong Sunbo Hanseong Sunbo an all Hanja newspaper It was published as a thrice monthly official government gazette by the Bakmun guk publishing house an agency of the Foreign Ministry It included contemporary news of the day essays and articles about westernisation and news of modernisation of Joseon In January 1886 the Bakmun guk published a new newspaper Hanseong Jubo The Seoul Weekly The publication of a Korean language newspaper was a significant development and the paper itself played an important role as a communication medium to the masses until it was abolished in 1888 under pressure from the Chinese government A newspaper entirely in Hangul making no use of the Korean Hanja script was not published again until 1894 Ganjo Shinpo Seoul News was published as a weekly newspaper under the patronage of both Gojong and the queen consort It was written half in Korean and half in Japanese Reforms rebellion and war editTrade 1875 onwards edit nbsp Korean rice terracing 1892 Agriculture in Korea was the dominant occupation producing large crops for export nbsp Special commemorative coin issued to celebrate the April 1895 formal independence of Korea from China The coin takes the shape of the ubiquitous copper cash coins with the square hole in the centre This coin was not for general use The queen consort s economic reforms opened the Korean economy to the world but in practice the majority of trade for Korean agricultural products was with China and Japan After the failure of the Progressive coup Japanese policy focused on expanding economic ties Between 1877 81 imports into Korea increased by 800 between 1885 1891 rice and other grain exports increased by 700 Most grain was exported to Japan via Osaka Many kinds of household and luxury goods were imported into Korea in turn encouraging officials to demand extra or new taxes from the farmers 83 Between 1891 and 1895 the chief Korean exports were rice beans tobacco raw hides gold dust and silk Ginseng was now permitted to be exported as a privately traded product the old government monopoly ending and being replaced by high taxation The 1895 trade value was almost 13 million US dollars of the day 84 Economic activity between 1883 and 1897 was conducted in a society unprepared for the impact of mass importation of foreign produced goods largely from Japan 85 In the period 1886 to 1888 an ineffective currency reform fuelled inflation it was not until 1897 that relative price stability in textiles was experienced In the period 1875 1894 Korea signed 11 treaties with 9 foreign powers These were Austria 1892 China 1882 France 1886 Germany 1883 Great Britain 1883 Italy 1884 Japan 1876 1882 1885 Russia 1884 and the United States of America 1882 Their descriptions and chronological sequence are given with Korean names elsewhere 86 Political instability 1894 1895 edit nbsp A group of armed people marching along singing as observed by a French visitor in 1892 Social cohesion made peasant unrest a persistent issue Under this external economic pressure Korean peasants decided to protest then rebel The Donghak Peasant Revolution that lasted from January 1894 to 25 December 1895 presented the queen consort with an extremely dangerous situation Its causes are complex being religious nationalistic and economic The queen consort was assassinated in October 1895 before this matter was resolved During 1894 much of Southern Korea was in a state of open peasant revolt which the government could not control The Chinese were requested by Korea to send troops to restore order which they did hoping to establish a fully committed pro Chinese policy at court The Japanese government unilaterally sent troops to Korea abducting the now pro Chinese Daewongun and effecting a violent coup at the palace resulting in a pro reform pro Japanese government By this time the peasants had largely withdrawn and neither Japanese nor Chinese troops were required for any Korean purpose Each side refused to return troops to their country of origin until the other did so first 87 Thus arose the First Sino Japanese War January 1894 25 December 1895 in which the Japanese were the decisive victors Personal life editPersonality and appearance edit Detailed descriptions of the queen consort can be found in The National Assembly Library of Korea and in records kept by Lillias Underwood 88 a close and trusted American friend of the queen consort Underwood had come to Korea in 1888 as a missionary and was appointed by the queen consort as her doctor These sources describe the queen consort s appearance voice and public manner She was said to have had a soft face with strong features These were considered attributes of classic beauty in contrast to the king s known preference for sultry women The queen consort s personal speaking voice was soft and warm but when conducting affairs of the state she asserted her points with strength Her public manner was formal and she heavily adhered to court etiquette and traditional law Underwood described her in the following way 89 I wish I could give the public a true picture of the queen as she appeared at her best but this would be impossible even had she permitted a photograph to be taken for her charming play of expression while in conversation the character and intellect which were then revealed were only half seen when the face was in repose She wore her hair like all Korean ladies parted in the center drawn tightly and very smoothly away from the face and knotted rather low at the back of the head A small ornament was worn on the top of the head fastened by a narrow black band Her majesty seemed to care little for ornaments and wore very few No Korean women wear earrings and the queen was no exception nor have I ever seen her wear a necklace a brooch or a bracelet She must have had many rings but I never saw her wear more than one or two of European manufacture According to Korean custom she carried a number of filigree gold ornaments decorated with long silk tassels fastened at her side So simple so perfectly refined were all her tastes in dress it is difficult to think of her as belonging to a nation called half civilized Slightly pale and quite thin with somewhat sharp features and brilliant piercing eyes she did not strike me at first sight as being beautiful but no one could help reading force intellect and strength of character in that face Isabella Bird Bishop a well known British travel writer and member of the Royal Geographical Society described the queen consort s appearance as that of a very nice looking slender woman with glossy raven black hair and a very pale skin the pallor enhanced by the use of pearl powder while meeting with her when Bishop traveled to Korea 90 Bishop had also mentioned Empress Myeongseong in her book Korea and Her Neighbours 91 in detail Her Majesty who was then past forty was a very nice looking slender woman with glossy raven black hair and a very pale skin the pallor enhanced by the use of pearl powder The eyes were cold and keen and the general expression one of brilliant expression She wore a very handsome very full and very long skirt of mazarine blue brocade heavily pleated with the waist under the arms and a full sleeved bodice of crimson and blue brocade clasped at the throat by a coral rosette and girdled by six crimson and blue cords each one clasped with a coral rosette with a crimson silk tassel hanging from it Her headdress was a crownless black silk cap edged with fur pointed over the brow with a coral rose and full red tassel in front and jewelled aigrettes on either side Her shoes were of the same brocade of her dress As soon as she began to speak and especially when she became interested in conversation her face lighted up into something very like beauty Isabella Bird Bishop 1897 Korea and Her Neighbours Pg 252 253On each occasion I was impressed with the grace and charming manner of the Queen her thoughtful kindness her singular intelligence and force and her remarkable conversational power even through the medium of an interpreter I was not surprised at her singular political influence or her sway over the King and many others She was surrounded by enemies chief among them being Tai Won Gun Daewongun the King s father all embittered against her because by her talent and force she had succeeded in placing members of her family in nearly all the chief offices of State Her life was a battle She fought with all her charm shrewdness and sagacity for power for the dignity and safety of her husband and son and for the downfall of Tai Won Gun Isabella Bird Bishop Korea and Her Neighbours 1897 Pg 255 Bishop described Jayeong as clever and educated and Gojong to be kind during the time she visited the palace h 92 i William Franklin Sands a United States diplomat who came to Korea during Japan s colonisation also spoke highly about the queen consort She was a politician and diplomat who overtaken the times striving for the independence of Joseon possessing outstanding academics strong intellectual personality and unbending willpower Early years edit The young queen consort and her husband were incompatible in the beginning of their marriage Both found the other s preferences unattractive She preferred to stay in her chambers studying while he enjoyed spending his days and nights drinking attending banquets and enjoying royal parties The queen who was genuinely concerned to understand affairs of state immersed herself in philosophy history and science books of a kind normally reserved for yangban men Court officials noted that the queen consort was highly selective in choosing who she associated with and confided in Her first pregnancy came five years after marriage at the age of 21 and ended in despair and humiliation when her infant son died shortly after birth She lost all her children apart from Yi Cheok born when she was 24 93 His older sister was born when the queen consort was 23 but died and with a birth of two sons followed Yi Cheok s birth They were born respectively during the queen consort s 25th and 28th years and neither survived These difficulties experienced in bearing healthy children may reflect in part the stresses of family and political relationships There were no pregnancies after the age of 28 which was earlier than some other royal wives whose child bearing ended in around their early thirties 94 Korean politics had resulted in the deaths of many of the queen consort s immediate relatives In August 1866 the year of the royal marriage there was an armed skirmish between the French Admiral Roze and the Korean troops at Ganghwa Island 95 In 1876 the process leading to the Treaty of Ganghwa soured the relationship of Heungseon Daewongun with his son As that relationship deteriorated the king s father made death threats against the queen consort Her mother was assassinated in 1874 in a bombing incident along with her adoptive older brother Min Seung ho 96 97 98 99 During the Insurrection of 1882 and the 1884 coup some of the queen consort s relatives were killed The queen consort herself was exposed to personal danger as the attempts on her life and safety demonstrate The royal couple s surviving son Sunjong was a sickly child frequently catching illnesses and convalescing for weeks citation needed The Empress cared personally for the Crown Prince and sought help from shamans and monks The latter received rewards for blessings Had the Crown Prince died his rights would have devolved to the offspring of a royal concubine The Crown Prince and his mother shared a close relationship despite her strong personality 100 Later years edit Gojong and his wife shared an affection during the later years of their marriage Gojong was chosen to become King not because of his astuteness lacking because he was never formally educated or because of his bloodline which was mixed with courtesan and common blood but because the Pungyang Jo clan had wrongly assumed they could control him indefinitely through his father Eventually Gojong was pressured by his Min advisers to seize control of the government which he did In attending to responsibilities of state he depended frequently on his capable wife for the conduct of international and domestic affairs In so doing Gojong came to appreciate his wife s wit intelligence and ability to learn quickly As the problems of the kingdom increased Gojong relied even more on his wife By the years of modernisation of Joseon it is safe to assume that Gojong had come to love his wife They began to spend much time with each other privately and officially His affection for her was enduring When Daewongun regained political power after the death of the queen consort he presented a proposal with the aid of certain Japanese officials posthumously to lower his daughter in law s status from queen consort to commoner 101 The official degree of degradation issued against the dead queen was regarded as a fraud and was rescinded by the issuers not long afterwards in the meantime having been rejected by the US and all legations bar one 102 On 15 October 1895 a few days after the murder when the terrified King and the Crown Prince were confined to the palace still believing that the queen consort had managed to run away from her pursuer Daewongun issued in the King s name an edict that she was to be divorced for desertion and that the King would remarry 103 Gojong bitterly refused to cooperate Instead he raised his deceased wife s position to Bin 빈 嬪 104 105 106 the title being the first rank of Women of the Internal Court He erected a spirit shrine to her in the inner palace enclosure It was connected to the house by a decorated gallery 107 After Gojong s father died in early 1898 he did not attend the funeral due to their strained relationship in consequence of the queen consort s murder and Daewongun s subsequent actions It is said that Gojong s cries at the death of his father were heard over the palace walls 108 109 Residence edit The royal couple had three palaces available to them in Seoul They chose to reside in the Northern Palace Gyeongbokgung Palace where ultimately the queen s assassination took place After that and following his return from sanctuary in the Russian Legation Gojong refused to live in Gyeongbokgung Palace 110 In life the queen consort used a series of inter communicating small rooms separated by sliding panel doors These rooms were approximately 8 foot 2 4 metres square This palace also contained the great Throne Hall Geunjeongjeon Assassination editMain article Assassination of Empress Myeongseong nbsp Okhoru the pavilion where the Queen was assassinated The Eulmi Incident edit In the immediate run up to her death the queen consort had allied herself with Russian interests to counterbalance Japanese influence She was perceived by the Japanese as an important hostile target 111 Her assassination took place in the early hours on 8 October 1895 within the king s private quarters in an attack known in Korea as the Eulmi Incident 을미사변 乙未事變 A few court ladies also shared her fate due to the Japanese mistaking them for the queen The attack was organized by Miura Gorō and carried out by over fifty Japanese agents 112 The royal palace was in disarray after the ordeal but Gojong had ordered a eunuch to search for the queen s remains only a singed finger bone was later found 113 112 114 Funeral procession and tomb edit nbsp 1897 Funeral of Empress MyeongseongOn 13 October 1897 Gojong with Russian support had regained his throne and spent a fortune 70 000 dollars in United States money of the day 115 to have his beloved queen s remains properly honored and entombed On 22 November 1897 116 her mourning procession included 5 000 soldiers 650 police 4 000 lanterns hundreds of scrolls honoring her and giant wooden horses intended for her use in the afterlife The honors Gojong placed on her at her funeral were a recognition of her diplomatic and heroic efforts on behalf of Korea against the Japanese They were also a statement of his own love for her The recovered remains are in her tomb located in Namyangju Gyeonggi South Korea 117 Aftermath edit nbsp Empress Myeongseong s state funeral in front of Daehanmun Gate Seoul Gojong left the palace in 1896 and took refuge on 11 February for a year in the nearby armed Russian Legation where he remained safe with the Crown Prince until February 1897 118 Meanwhile the third stage of the Gabo Reforms were hugely unpopular including because Korean men were ordered to cut off their topknots 119 By the time Gojong returned to the palace the temporary ascendancy of Japanese interests a pro Japanese cabinet and the Japanese instigated Gabo Reform following the Sino Japanese war and the assassination of the queen consort was over This was because of popular anti Japanese sentiment and the fact that the King had been in the effective control of the Russians 120 In the longer term these tensions resulted in Japan s victory in the Russo Japanese War 121 In 1910 the Japan Korea Annexation Treaty established Korea s status as a Japanese colony This status lasted between 29 August 1910 and 15 August 1945 Proclaimed titles edit nbsp Book of funeral protocols for the 1897 cortege and procession This is on display at the National Palace Museum in Seoul On 6 January 1897 Gojong changed the queen consort s posthumous name to Queen Munseong 문성왕후 文成王后 and altered her funeral location to Hongneung Officials advised that the name was too similar to King Jeongjo s Munseong temple name therefore on 2 March 1897 Gojong changed the name to Myeongseong That name is not to be confused with Queen Myeongseong of the Cheongpung Kim clan King Hyeonjong s wife 104 122 123 nbsp The queen s place of cremation sketch published by Isabella Bird in 1898 Behind are the woods mentioned in witness accounts Gojong proclaimed a new reign and became Emperor Gwangmu on 13 October 1897 The queen s title was also changed to Empress Myeongseong 명성태황후 明成太皇后 that same month adding Tae 태 太 meaning Great to her posthumous title 124 125 Memorials edit nbsp 1912 photograph of the Seoul memorial to the Empress It appears in the pro Japanese biography of Methodist missionary Henry Gerhard Appenzeller by William Elliot Griffis In the place where the limited physical remains of the queen consort were found after cremation a marker of the site was erected by 1898 Gojong built a spirit house for her now demolished a photograph of which survives from 1912 The mortal remains of the couple are interred together at the Joseon Royal tombs complex at Hongyuneung 홍유릉 Namyangju Photographs and illustrations editSpeculation as to photograph edit Documents note that the queen consort was in an official royal family photograph but its whereabouts are unknown Another royal family photograph does exist but it was taken after the Empress death It shows Gojong Sunjong and Crown Princess Min Sunjong s first wife Shin Byong ryong a professor at Konkuk University has stated his belief that the lack of photos of the queen consort derives from her constant fear of being recognisable to the public Others believe that a photo must exist due to her political prominence They suspect that the Japanese government may have removed all evidence of this kind after her assassination It is their further speculation that the Japanese themselves may have kept a photo of her 126 As at 2022 it remains questionable whether any contemporary image of her in photographic form survives 127 nbsp Wooden headdress of high rank structure tied on with pre installed cap Identification of the queen consort assumes her to be wearing one such The 2003 photograph below and the Japanese print of 1895 both show the women depicted as wearing a wooden headdress of a distinctive character These are the prerequisite of elite or royal women in the late 19th century though the precise constructed form is difficult to distinguish when in use An example survives in the National Palace Museum of Korea in Seoul 2003 a photograph surfaces edit nbsp Labelled as a Lady s maid in Korean emperor s court but also thought by many to be Myeongseong c 1900 p 183 The passing of Korea book KBS News in 2003 reported that a photograph allegedly of the queen consort had been disclosed to the public 126 The photograph was said to have been purchased for a large sum by the grandfather of Min Su gyeong and that it became a family heirloom In the photo a woman is accompanied by a retinue at her rear Some experts have stated that the woman was clearly of high rank and possibly a wife of a bureaucrat The woman s clothing appears to be of the kind worn only by the royal family but her outfit did not display the embroideries expected to decorate the apparel of the Empress Some consider further that she may be a high ranking maidservant of the Empress 128 126 Alleged portraits of Empress Myeongseong edit Italian artist Giuseppe Castiglione 1688 1766 was once alleged to have painted the portrait of the Empress in oils However the painting was too early and was subsequently discovered to be a portrait of Xiang Fei a concubine of Emperor Qianlong during 18th century Qing Dynasty 129 In August 2017 a gallery exhibition held by Daboseong Ancient Art Museum in Central Seoul displayed a portrait of a woman said to be Empress Myeongseong The woman is seen wearing a white hanbok a white hemp hat and leather shoes She sits on a western style chair Kim Jong chun director of Daboseong Gallery stated that when the portrait was examined Min clan was written above the face side and portrait of a Madame had been inscribed on the back Subsequently based on infrared research by the gallery scholars and an art professor doubt the identification of the woman as being the queen consort 130 Japanese illustration edit nbsp Japanese illustration of Gojong and the queen consort receiving Inoue KaoruOn 13 January 2005 history professor Lee Tae jin 이태진 李泰鎭 of Seoul National University unveiled an illustration from an old Japanese magazine he had found at an antique bookstore in Tokyo The 84th edition of the Japanese magazine Fuzokugahō 風俗畫報 published on 25 January 1895 has a Japanese illustration of Gojong and the queen consort receiving Inoue Kaoru the Japanese charge d affaires 128 The illustration is marked 24 December 1894 and signed by an artist with the surname Ishizuka 石塚 It also has an inscription The Korean King and Queen moved by our honest advice realize the need for resolute reform for the first time Lee considered that the depiction of clothes and background are sufficiently detailed to suggest that it was drawn at the scene Both the King and Inoue are shown looking at the queen consort in a manner that suggests the conversation was taking place between the queen consort and Inoue with the King listening Family editGreat Great Great Great Great Great Great Great Grandfather Min Sa yong 민사용 閔思容 1 May 1515 30 March 1579 131 Great Great Great Great Great Great Great Great Grandmother Lady Yi of the Gwangju Yi clan 광주 이씨 1518 daughter of Yi Wi 이위 李緯 1492 Min Sa yong s first wife Great Great Great Great Great Great Great Grandfather Min Yeo jun 민여준 閔汝俊 1539 18 May 1599 Adoptive Great Great Great Great Great Great Great Grandfather Min Yeo geon 민여건 閔汝健 1538 1585 older brother of Min Yeo jun Great Great Great Great Great Great Great Grandmother Lady Yi of the Jeonju Yi clan 1543 1635 descendant of Grand Prince Hyoryeong Adoptive Great Great Great Great Great Great Great Grandmother Lady Kang of the Jinju Kang clan 진주 강씨 晉州 姜氏 daughter of Kang Sa sang 강사상 姜士尙 1519 1581 132 Great Great Great Great Great Great Grandfather Min Gi 민기 閔機 1568 18 January 1641 Great Great Great Great Great Great Grandmother Lady Hong of the Namyang Hong clan 1571 1655 daughter of Hong Ik hyeon 홍익현 洪翼賢 Great Great Great Great Great Grandfather Min Gwang hun 민광훈 閔光勳 10 August 1595 17 July 1659 scholar during the reign of King Injong Great Great Great Great Great Grandmother Lady Yi of the Yeonan Yi clan 연안 이씨 1594 1653 133 daughter of Yi Gwang jeong Internal Prince Yeonwon 연원부원군 이광정 李光庭 1552 1629 Great Great Great Great Grandfather Min Yu jung Internal Prince Yeoseong 여양부원군 민유중 閔維重 1630 29 June 1687 Great Great Great Great Grandmother Internal Princess Consort Eunseong of the Eunjin Song clan 은성부부인 은진 송씨 27 July 1637 28 November 1672 Min Yu jung s second wife daughter of Song Jun gil 송준길 宋俊吉 Yeonguijeong during the reign of King Hyojong Great Great Great Grandfather Min Jin hu 민진후 閔鎭厚 10 January 1659 1720 eldest brother of Queen Inhyeon second consort of King Sukjong Great Great Great Grandmother Lady Yi of the Yeonan Yi clan 1664 1733 daughter of Yi Deok ro 이덕로 李德老 Min Jin hu s second wife Great Great Grandfather Min Ik su 민익수 閔翼洙 1690 1742 Great Great Grandmother Lady Nam of the Uiryeong Nam clan 증정경부인 의령 남씨 1690 16 October 1756 youngest daughter of Nam Jeong jung 남정중 南正重 1653 1704 Great Grandfather Min Baek bun 민백분 閔百奮 1723 1794 Great Grandmother Lady Sim of the Cheongsong Sim clan 청송 심씨 1722 1760 134 youngest daughter of Sim Jung hyeon 심중현 沈重賢 Min Baek bun s second wife Grandfather Min Gi hyeon 민기현 閔耆顯 1751 1 August 1811 Grandmother Lady Jeong of the Yeonil Jeong clan ko 1773 9 March 1838 Min Gi hyeon s third wife Father Min Chi rok Internal Prince Yeoseong 여성부원군 민치록 閔致祿 1799 17 September 1858 Mother Internal Princess Consort Hanchang of the Hansan Yi clan 한창부부인 한산 이씨 1818 28 November 1874 Min Chi rok s second wife Grandfather Yi Gyu nyeon 이규년 李圭年 1788 Grandmother Lady Kim of the Andong Kim clan 안동 김씨 安東 金氏 1788 Stepmother Internal Princess Consort Haeryeong of the Haeju Oh clan 1798 15 March 1833 Step Grandfather Oh Hui sang 오희상 吳煕常 1763 1833 135 Siblings Adoptive older brother Min Seung ho ko 1830 28 November 1874 j son of Min Chi gu 1795 1874 Adoptive sister in law Lady Kim of the Gwangsan Kim clan clan 1843 1867 23 April Min Seung ho s first wife Unnamed adoptive nephew 1864 1874 Adoptive sister in law Lady Kim of the Yeonan Kim clan ko 1851 11 February 1919 Min Seung ho s second wife Adoptive nephew Min Yeong ik ko 1860 1914 eldest son of Min Tae ho 1834 1884 Adoptive sister in law Lady Yi of the Deoksu Yi clan ko 1830 1 July 1859 Min Seung ho s third wife Unnamed older brother 1840 1847 Older sister Lady Min of the Yeoheung Min clan 1843 1849 Older sister Lady Min of the Yeoheung Min clan 1847 1852 Husband King Gojong later Emperor Gojong 9 September 1852 21 January 1919 Father in law Heungseon Daewongun 21 December 1820 22 February 1898 Legal father in law King Munjo of Joseon 18 September 1809 25 June 1830 Mother in law Grand Internal Princess Consort Sunmok of the Yeoheung Min clan 3 February 1818 8 January 1898 Legal mother in law Queen Shinjeong of the Pungyang Jo clan 21 January 1809 4 June 1890 Children Son Prince Royal Yi Choi 원자 이최 4 November 1871 8 November 1871 k Unnamed daughter 13 February 1873 28 September 1873 Son Yi Cheok Emperor Sunjong 25 March 1874 24 April 1926 Daughter in law Empress Sunmyeong of the Yeoheung Min clan 20 November 1872 5 November 1904 daughter of Min Tae ho leader of the Yeoheung Min clan Daughter in law Yun Jeung sun Empress Sunjeong of the Haepyeong Yun clan ko 19 September 1894 3 February 1966 daughter of Marquis Yun Taek yeong Son Grand Prince Yi Deol 대군 이덜 5 April 1875 18 April 1875 136 Son Grand Prince Yi Bu 대군 이부 18 February 1878 5 June 1878 In popular culture editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Film and television edit Portrayed by Hwang Jeong sun in the 1959 film Daewongun and Minbi Portrayed by Choi Eun hee in the 1964 film The Sino Japanese War and Queen Min the Heroine Portrayed by Do Geum bong in the 1969 film Destiny of My Load Portrayed by Yoon Jeong hee in the 1971 film The Women of Gyeongbokgung Portrayed by Kim Yeong ae in the 1973 MBC TV series Queen Min Portrayed by Do Geum bong in the 1973 film Three Days of Their Reign Portrayed by Kang Soo yeon and Kim Yeong ae in the 1982 KBS1 TV series Wind and Cloud Portrayed by Kim Ji sook in the 1989 1990 KBS2 TV series Wind Clouds and Rain Portrayed by Kim Hee ae in the 1990 MBC TV series 500 Years of Joseon Daewongun Portrayed by Ha Hee ra in the 1995 1996 KBS1 TV series Dazzling Dawn Portrayed by Moon Geun young Lee Mi yeon and Choi Myung gil in the 2001 2002 KBS2 TV series Empress Myeongseong Portrayed by Soo Ae in the 2009 film The Sword With No Name 137 Portrayed by Kang Soo yeon in the 2006 film Hanbando Portrayed by Seo Yi sook in the 2010 SBS TV series Jejungwon Portrayed by Ha Ji eun in the 2014 KBS2 TV series Gunman in Joseon Portrayed by Choi Ji na in the 2015 KBS2 TV series The Merchant Gaekju 2015 Portrayed by Lee Yoon jeong in the 2015 film The Sound of a Flower Portrayed by Kim Ji hyeon in the 2019 SBS TV series Nokdu Flower Portrayed by Park Jung yeon in the 2020 TV Chosun TV series Kingmaker The Change of Destiny Portrayed by Cha Ji yeon in the 2021 film Lost FaceMusicals edit The Last Empress musical See also editSociety in the Joseon dynasty Political factions during the Joseon dynasty Japanese Occupation of Gyeongbokgung Palace Joseon DynastyNotes edit Current location 250 1 Neunghyeon dong Cheorwon County Gangwon Province South Korea Her name is also romanized Empress Myungsung In the lunar calendar the Empress was born on 25 September 1851 and died on 20 August 1895 In Kim Dong in s historical novel Spring of Unhyeongung Empress Myeongseong is said to be a filial child when her father Min Chi rok was lying in bed due to illness Palace hall names were eventually used to differentiate Gojong s three concubines who had the same surname and title Royal Consort Yi Gwi in of the Yeongbo Hall 영보당 귀인 이씨 Royal Consort Yi Gwi in of Naean Hall 내안당 귀인 이씨 and Royal Consort Yi Gwi in of the Gwanghwa Hall 광화당 귀인 이씨 It was said that the Empress Myeongseong disguised herself in advance by acting as Hong Kye hun s sister and was carried on the back of Hong Kye hun She was able to escape the city and go to Yeoju to hide The hospital was renamed Jejungwon on 23 April 1885 Currently this would be the future Yonsei University amp Severance Hospital Isabella Bird Bishop talked about serving dinner with a Western style dining table It was said that he was so meticulous enough to let the Sanggung attend the service When visiting Gyeonghoeru the court ladies and the guards followed and he wrote that he was impressed by saying that England and Joseon were neighbors The Queen spoke of Queen Victoria and said She has everything she can wish greatness wealth and power Her sons and grandsons are kings and emperors and her daughters empresses Does she ever in her glory think of poor Korea She does so much good in the world her life is good We wish her long life and prosperity to which the king added England is our best friend It was really touching to hear the occupants of that ancient but shaky throne peaking in this fashion The king and queen rose when I took my leave and the Queen shook hands They both spoke most kindly and expressed the wish that I should return and see more of Korea Pg 48 49 Younger brother of her mother in law Grand Internal Princess Consort Sunmok Gojong s mother Died from complications of imperforate anus was given title of Prince Royal 원자 元子 before he diedReferences edit Park Jong hyo 박종효 1 January 2002 일본인 폭도가 가슴을 세 번 짓밟고 일본도로 난자했다 Japanese mob tramped down her breast three times and violently stabbed her with a katana Sindonga 新東亞 pp 472 485 Korean Women in Resistance to the Japanese Archived from the original on 8 March 2002 S C M Paine The Sino Japanese War of 1894 1895 Perceptions Power and Primacy Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2003 p 316 The top knot was the distinctive mark of Korean citizenship at page 302 The History of Korea Homer B Hulbert Vol 2 The Methodist Publishing House Seoul 1905 https www gutenberg org ebooks 52749 Retrieved 16 September 2023 a b c 아관파천 in Korean Naver Doosan Encyclopedia Encyclopaedia Korea its land people and culture of all ages 1960 Hakwon sa Ltd under Opening of Yi Chosun 1875 1910 After the Sino Japanese War at page 80 81 She the most powerful Korean in Korea is content to be nameless a sovereign with almost unlimited power but without a nominal individuality and to be called merely by the family name of her forefathers and to be designated only as the daughter of her fathers the wife of her husband and the mother of her son Chapter 5 Quaint Korea Louise Jordan Miln 1895 Osgood McIlvaine amp Co London https www gutenberg org files 56623 56623 h 56623 h htm Retrieved 11 September 2023 a b Kim Wook Dong 2019 Global Perspectives on Korean Literature Ulsan Palgrave Macmillan p 36 ISBN 9789811387272 Quinones C Kenneth December 1980 The Kunse Chosŏn Chŏnggam and Modern Korean Historiography Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 40 2 511 doi 10 2307 2718991 JSTOR 2718991 See discussion Cheoljong of Joseon under death and succession Choe Ching Young The Rule of the Taewŏn gun 1864 1873 Restoration in Yi Korea Cambridge Mass East Asian Research Center Harvard University 1972 These reforms and his career are described in detail with references at Heungseon Daewongun Some sources say that she was born 25 September the date discrepancy is due to the difference in the calendar systems Queen Min Archived from the original on 17 February 2006 The house she was born in was built in 1687 in the 13th year of King Sukjong and was rebuilt in 1975 and 1976 In 1904 a stone monument inscribed with the handwriting of her husband Gojong called the Tangangguribi was erected on the alleged site used by her for study Place 2 myhome shinbiro com Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 23 July 2007 The House of Gamgodang is that in which she lived from her birth until she was eight In 1687 a hut for the king s father in law the father of Queen Inhyeon Min Yu jung was built Only the main building remains today but the building was restored to its natural state in 1995 In the room where the empress studied as a child a monument was erected inscribed with the words Empress Myeongseong Tangangguri the village where Empress Myeongseong was born to commemorate her birth Home gt Tourism gt Historical Relic Archived from the original on 27 February 2008 Retrieved 20 January 2008 The inscription measuring 250 by 64 by 45 cm3 which her husband Gojong erected in 1904 The Gwangmu Emperor s 8th year Gapjin 5th month 1st day read 明成皇后誕降舊里碑 명성황후탄강구리비 Myeongseong Hwanghu Tangangguribi The Stone Tablet for The Empress Myeongseong s Birthplace her Former Village 명성황후탄강구리비 明成皇后誕降舊里碑 minc kr a b c d e f Queen Min of Korea Coming to Power Queen Min Archived from the original on 17 February 2006 Retrieved 19 February 2007 명성황후와 대한제국 18 20쪽 한영우 22쪽 23쪽에서 아버지가 죽은 뒤 섬락리 사저에서 한양 감고당으로 옮겨 홀어머니와 함께 지냈다 The Daewongun s wife is the Princess Consort to the Prince of the Great Court Based on the existing lunar calendar of the time See Queen Min Archived from the original on 17 February 2006 Retrieved 19 February 2007 a b c 이경재 한양이야기 가람기획 2003 234페이지 Translation Yi Gyeong jae Hanyang History Garam Printing 2003 pg 234 Cumings Bruce Korea s Place in the Sun A Modern History New York W W Norton amp Company 2005 Page 467 in Corea the hermit nation III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis 1897 C Scribner s sons New York https archive org details coreahermitnation00grif page 439 mode 1up view theater Retrieved 20 September 2023 Styled as Her Majesty the Central Hall jungjeon mama 중전마마 中殿媽媽 History Resources Queen Min Archived 17 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine 음서로 벼슬에 올라 장악원과 사도시의 첨정을 지냈으며 딸이 왕비로 간택되면서 영의정에 추증되고 여성부원군 驪城府院君 에 추봉되었다 1 한영우 24쪽 27쪽에서 Translation Han Yeong woo pg 24 27 지두환 241쪽 Translation Ji Du hwan pg 241 임중웅 370 371쪽에서 Translation Im Jung eung pg 370 371 한영우 28쪽에서 Translation Han Yeong woo pg 28 Szczepanski Kallie 16 May 2019 Biography of Queen Min Korean Empress ThoughtCo In line with Korean custom Korean wives have one rather desirable prerogative a prerogative which the wives of China do not share with them nor I fancy do the wives of Japan A Korean man cannot house his concubines or second class wives under the roof that shelters his true or first wife without her permission Chapter 5 Quaint Korea Louise Jordan Miln 1895 Osgood McIlvaine amp Co London https www gutenberg org files 56623 56623 h 56623 h htm Retrieved 13 September 2023 Chapter X in Corea or Cho sen Land of the Morning Calm A Henry Savage Landor 1895 William Heinemann London https www gutenberg org cache epub 13128 pg13128 images html LIST OF PLATES Retrieved 23 September 2023 At page 58 in William Elliot Griffis A Modern Pioneer in Korea The Life Story of Henry G Appenzeller 1912 Fleming H Revell Company London amp Edinburgh https ia800306 us archive org 33 items amodernpioneerin00grifuoft amodernpioneerin00grifuoft pdf Retrieved 13 October 2023 On the alleged basis that the Japanese letter addressed the Koreans disrespectfully not as equals See at page 216 and 221 in The History of Korea Homer B Hulbert Vol 2 The Methodist Publishing House Seoul 1905 https www gutenberg org cache epub 52749 pg52749 images html Retrieved 17 September 2023 Page 219 221 The History of Korea Homer B Hulbert Vol 2 The Methodist Publishing House Seoul 1905 https www gutenberg org cache epub 52749 pg52749 images html Retrieved 17 September 2023 By means of thousands of stone monuments set up at cross roads and markets that he ordered to be inscribed with slogans Even sticks of ink were sloganised See at page 437 in Corea the hermit nation III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis 1897 C Scribner s sons New York https archive org details coreahermitnation00grif page 437 mode 1up view theater Retrieved 17 September 2023 Encyclopaedia Korea its land people and culture of all ages 1960 Hakwon sa Ltd under Opening of Yi Chosun 1875 1910 Treaty with Japan at page 72 3 At page 23 in Korea and her neighbors a narrative of travel with an account of the recent vicissitudes and present position of the country by Bird Isabella L 1898 Fleming H Revell Company New York Chicago Toronto https archive org details koreaandherneig02birdgoog page 80 mode 2up Retrieved 23 September 2023 Hirano Kenichiro Interactions among Three Cultures in East Asian International Politics during the Late Nineteenth Century Collating Five Different Texts of Huang Zun xian s Chao xian Ce lue Korean Strategy https web archive org web 20150402100550 http dspace wul waseda ac jp dspace bitstream 2065 789 1 20031113 hirano eng pdf Retrieved 15 September 2023 Described by Hirano as Huang 1848 1905 alias Gong du a native of Jia ying county Guangdong province and a Hakka Page 430 in Corea the hermit nation III Modern and Recent History William Elliot Griffis 1897 C Scribner s sons New York https archive org details coreahermitnation00grif page 408 mode 1up view theater Retrieved 15 September 2023 Encyclopaedia Korea its land people and culture of all ages 1960 Hakwon sa Ltd under Taewongun s Regency and Western Challenges Persecution Renewed at page 70 At page 432 Corea the hermit nation III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis 1897 C Scribner s sons New York https archive org details coreahermitnation00grif page 99 mode 1up view theater Retrieved 16 September 2023 Encyclopaedia Korea its land people and culture of all ages 1960 Hakwon sa Ltd under Opening of Yi Chosun 1875 1910 Modern Innovation at page 73 74 황현 역주 매천야록 임형택 외 역 문학과지성사 2005 176 페이지 Hwang Hyeon Translated by Maecheon Yarok translated by Lim Hyeong taek et al Munhwagwajiseongsa 2005 page 176 Encyclopaedia Korea its land people and culture of all ages 1960 Hakwon sa Ltd under Opening of Yi Chosun 1875 1910 Modern Innovation at page 74 a b Encyclopaedia Korea its land people and culture of all ages 1960 Hakwon sa Ltd under Opening of Yi Chosun 1875 1910 An army revolt and political changes at page 74 75 At pages 438 440 in Corea the hermit nation III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis 1897 C Scribner s sons New York https archive org details coreahermitnation00grif page 439 mode 1up view theater Retrieved 16 September 2023 Pages 228 9 in The History of Korea Homer B Hulbert Vol 2 The Methodist Publishing House Seoul 1905 https www gutenberg org ebooks 52749 Retrieved 15 September 2023 황현 매천야록 정동호 역 일문서적 2011 55페이지 translated Hwang Hyeon Maecheon Yarok translated by Jeong Dong ho Japanese Books 2011 page 55 황현 매천야록 정동호 역 일문서적 2011 56페이지 중궁전이 승하하여 거애하는 절차를 마련하도록 하다 조선왕조실록 고종 19권 19년 1882 임오 청 광서 光緖 8년 6월 10일 갑자 7번째 기사에서 임중웅 374 375쪽 지두환 245쪽 Events to 13 September including the arrest are in a telegram to the New York Tribune of 2 October reproduced in full at page 441 in Corea the hermit nation III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis 1897 C Scribner s sons New York https archive org details coreahermitnation00grif page 440 mode 1up view theater Retrieved 17 September 2023 At pages 446 447 in Corea the hermit nation III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis 1897 C Scribner s sons New York https archive org details coreahermitnation00grif page 448 mode 1up view theater retrieved 16 September 2023 At page 477 478 in AMERICANS IN EASTERN ASIA A Critical Study of the Policy of the United States with reference to China Japan and Korea in the 19th Century Tyler Dennett 1922 The Macmillan Company New York https archive org details americansineaste00denn page n5 mode 1up view theater Retrieved 18 September 2023 Dennett at 481 At page 478 and following in AMERICANS IN EASTERN ASIA A Critical Study of the Policy of the United States with reference to China Japan and Korea in the 19th Century Tyler Dennett 1922 The Macmillan Company New York https archive org details americansineaste00denn page n5 mode 1up view theater Retrieved 18 September 2023 At page 235 8 in The History of Korea Homer B Hulbert Vol 2 The Methodist Publishing House Seoul 1905 https www gutenberg org ebooks 52749 Retrieved 20 September 2023 a b At page 479 in AMERICANS IN EASTERN ASIA A Critical Study of the Policy of the United States with reference to China Japan and Korea in the 19th Century Tyler Dennett 1922 The Macmillan Company New York https archive org details americansineaste00denn page n5 mode 1up view theater Retrieved 18 September 2023 Encyclopaedia Korea its land people and culture of all ages 1960 Hakwon sa Ltd under Opening of Yi Chosun 1875 1910 Abortive Reform at page 75 76 At page 450 in Corea the hermit nation III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis 1897 C Scribner s sons New York https archive org details coreahermitnation00grif page 457 mode 1up view theater Retrieved 20 September 2023 At page 166 in Korea and Japan May 1905 in The Korea Review Vol 5 No 5 May 1905 ed Homer B Hulbert https www gutenberg org cache epub 58243 pg58243 images html Retrieved 15 September 2023 At page 451 in Corea the hermit nation III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis 1897 C Scribner s sons New York https archive org details coreahermitnation00grif page 453 mode 1up view theater Rterieved 16 September 2023 The Progressive coup participant Kim Ok kiun modern designation Kim Ok gyun was lured to Shanghai by his friend then murdered there The involvement of Chinese General Yuan Shi Kai was suspected at least by the Americans The General brought the body back to Korea in a Chinese war vessel and the murderer was received at court The corpse was cut up and pieces were displayed in various parts of Korea See at page 486 AMERICANS IN EASTERN ASIA A Critical Study of the Policy of the United States with reference to China Japan and Korea in the 19th Century Tyler Dennett 1922 The Macmillan Company New York https archive org details americansineaste00denn page n5 mode 1up view theater Retrieved 19 September 2023 At page 20 in Korea and her neighbors a narrative of travel with an account of the recent vicissitudes and present position of the country by Bird Isabella L 1898 Fleming H Revell Company New York Chicago Toronto https archive org details koreaandherneig02birdgoog Retrieved 23 September 2023 see Dangojeon under History At page 25 in Korea and her neighbors a narrative of travel with an account of the recent vicissitudes and present position of the country by Bird Isabella L 1898 Fleming H Revell Company New York Chicago Toronto https archive org details koreaandherneig02birdgoog Retrieved 23 September 2023 Page 447 in Corea the hermit nation III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis 1897 C Scribner s sons New York https archive org details coreahermitnation00grif page 446 mode 1up view theater Retrieved 16 September 2023 Page 447 in Corea the hermit nation III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis 1897 C Scribner s sons New York https archive org details coreahermitnation00grif page 439 mode 1up view theater Retrieved 20 September 2023 a b Neff Robert 30 May 2010 Korea s modernization through English in the 1880s The Korea Times Seoul Korea The Korea Times Co Retrieved 31 May 2010 See Gallery photograph of Appenzeller s school in 1887 이화학당 梨花學堂 Ewha Hankdang Ewha Academy in Korean Nate Encyclopedia of Korean Culture Archived from the original on 10 June 2011 1887년 학생이 7명으로 늘어났을 때 명성황후는 스크랜튼 부인의 노고 勞苦 를 알고 친히 이화학당 梨花學堂 이라는 교명을 지어주고 외무독판 外務督辦 김윤식 金允植 을 통해 편액 扁額 을 보내와 그 앞날을 격려했다 당초에 스크랜튼 부인은 교명 校名 을 전신학교 專信學校 Entire Trust School 라 지으려 했으나 명성황후의 은총에 화답하는 마음으로 이화 로 택하였다 이는 당시에 황실을 상징하는 꽃이 순결한 배꽃 梨花 이었는데 여성의 순결성과 명랑성을 상징하는 이름이었기때문이다 Encyclopaedia Korea its land people and culture of all ages 1960 Hakwon sa Ltd under Catholic Conversions and State Oppression at page 63 65 An Chongbok in Chonhak Mundap and Chonhakko quoted in Encyclopaedia Korea its land people and culture of all ages 1960 Hakwon sa Ltd under From Learning to Conversion at page 63 At pages 453 in Corea the hermit nation III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis 1897 C Scribner s sons New York https archive org details coreahermitnation00grif page 453 mode 1up view theater retrieved 16 September 2023 At page 19 in Korea and her neighbors a narrative of travel with an account of the recent vicissitudes and present position of the country by Bird Isabella L 1898 Fleming H Revell Company New York Chicago Toronto https archive org details koreaandherneig02birdgoog Retrieved 23 September 2023 Encyclopaedia Korea its land people and culture of all ages 1960 Hakwon sa Ltd under Yi Chosun before Hideyoshi Command of the Seas a Great Admiral at page 49 Encyclopaedia Korea its land people and culture of all ages 1960 Hakwon sa Ltd under Opening of Yi Chosun 1875 1910 Western Entires and Japanese Expansion The Tonghak Rebellion Sino Japanese War Kabo Reforms at page 76 80 page 467 in Corea the hermit nation III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis 1897 C Scribner s sons New York https archive org details coreahermitnation00grif page 439 mode 1up view theater Retrieved 20 September 2023 Kim S Y and Ha Brookshire J E 2015 November Cotton Cloth Trades Currency Reforms and Inflations Korean Experiences of the Industrial Revolution from 1883 to 1897 In International Textile and Apparel Association Annual Conference Proceedings Vol 72 No 1 Iowa State University Digital Press https www iastatedigitalpress com itaa article id 2487 Retrieved 23 October 2023 See under After 1875 in Politics of the Joseon dynasty At page 250 251 in The History of Korea Homer B Hulbert Vol 2 The Methodist Publishing House Seoul 1905 https www gutenberg org cache epub 52749 pg52749 images html Retrieved 15 September 2023 The former Lillias Horton 1851 1921 wife of Horace Grant Underwood Underwood Lillias Horton 1904 Fifteen Years Among the Top knots Or Life in Korea pp 24 89 90 Neff Robert 10 May 2020 Beholding Queen Min The Korea Times Bird Isabella L Isabella Lucy 6 November 2022 Korea and her neighborsA narrative of travel with an account of the recent vicissitudes and present position of the country Lucy Bird Isabella 1898 Korea and Her Neighbours A Narrative of Travel with an Account of the Vicissitudes and Position of the Country Volume 1 John Murray 1905 pp 48 49 Kim Jiyoung Fertility and Childbirth among Royal Women in Nineteenth Century Korea Pg 93 Kim Ji yeong Fertility and Childbirth among Royal Women in Nineteenth Century Korea Pg 92 Encyclopaedia Korea its land people and culture of all ages 1960 Hakwon sa Ltd under Taewongun s Regency and Western Challenges Gunboat Diplomacy at page 71 Oh Yeong Seop 2007 한국 근현대사를 수놓은 인물들 1 p 315 Min Seung ho Min Seung ho s son and his adoptive mother Gamgodang Hansan Yi all died on the spot Bird Bishop Isabella Korea and Her Neighbours Revell p 255 She had cut many lives short but in doing so she had not violated Korean tradition and custom and some excuse for her lies in the fact that soon after the King s accession his father sent to the house of Her Majesty s brother an infernal machine in a shape of a beautiful box which on being opened exploded killing her mother brother and nephew as well as some others Since then he plotted against her own life and the feud between them was usually at fever heat Kim Ji yeong Fertility and Childbirth among Royal Women in Nineteenth Century Korea Pg 94 Bird Bishop Isabella Korea and Her Neighbours Revell p 253 He was the only son and the idol of his mother who lived in ceaseless anxiety about his health and in dread lest the son of a concubine should be declared heir to the throne To this cause must be attributed several of her unscrupulous acts her invoking the continual aid of sorcerers her always increasing benefactions to the Buddhist monks During much of the audience mother and son sat with clasped hands The History of Korea Homer B Hulbert Vol 2 The Methodist Publishing House Seoul 1905 Chapter XXI at page 297 https www gutenberg org ebooks 52749 Retrieved 9 September 2023 The History of Korea Homer B Hulbert Vol 2 The Methodist Publishing House Seoul 1905 Chapter XXI at page 298 https www gutenberg org ebooks 52749 Retrieved 9 September 2023 At 274 8 in Korea and her neighbors a narrative of travel with an account of the recent vicissitudes and present position of the country by Bird Isabella L 1898 Fleming H Revell Company New York Chicago Toronto https archive org details koreaandherneig02birdgoog Retrieved 23 September 2023 The text of the decree of demotion of the queen is at page 276 a b Im Jong eung Pg 385 387 민왕후를 서인으로 강등시키다 조선왕조실록 고종 32년 33 22 August 1895 민왕후에게 빈의 호칭을 특사하다 조선왕조실록 고종 32년 33 23 August 1895 At page 491 in Korea and her neighbors a narrative of travel with an account of the recent vicissitudes and present position of the country by Bird Isabella L 1898 Fleming H Revell Company New York Chicago Toronto https archive org details koreaandherneig02birdgoog Retrieved 23 September 2023 우리곁에 살아 있는 역사의 맥박과 숨결 월간조선 2001년 3월호 Translation The pulse and breath of history that lives with us Monthly Chosun March 2001 issue 나각순 승상배 이창훈 운현궁과 흥선대원군 종로문화원 2000 207페이지 Translation Na Gak soon Seung Sang bae Yi Chang hun Unhyeon Palace and Grand Internal Prince Heungseon Jongno Cultural Center 2000 Pg 207 At page 56 Korea Coulson Constance J D 1910 A and C Black London https archive org details korea00coul page 56 mode 1up view theater Retrieved 16 October 2023 Encyclopaedia Korea its land people and culture of all ages 1960 Hakwon sa Ltd under Opening of Yi Chosun 1875 1910 After the Sino Japanese War Russian Influence at page 80 81 a b Kim Tae ik 25 August 2009 The Sobering Truth of Empress Myeongseong s Killing english chosun com Retrieved 20 October 2020 in Korean 을미사변 乙未事變 in Korean Naver Encyclopedia PhD History J D University of Washington School of Law B A History Biography of Queen Min Korean Empress ThoughtCo Retrieved 31 January 2021 Page 469 in Corea the hermit nation III Modern and recent history William Elliot Griffis 1897 C Scribner s sons New York https archive org details coreahermitnation00grif page 439 mode 1up view theater Retrieved 20 September 2023 Empress Myeongseong and the Korean Empire Pg 58 60 History s Great Untold Stories Obscure Events of Lasting Importance Joseph Cummins Allen amp Unwin 2006 at Queen Min and the Battle to Save Korea page 256 and following The History of Korea Homer B Hulbert Vol 2 The Methodist Publishing House Seoul 1905 Chapter XXI at page 303 https www gutenberg org ebooks 52749 Retrieved 9 September 2023 For a full account of these Stage Three reforms see The Gabo Reform Encyclopaedia Korea its land people and culture of all ages 1960 Hakwon sa Ltd under Opening of Yi Chosun 1875 1910 After the Sino Japanese War Russian Influence Western Concessions at page 80 81 Encyclopaedia Korea its land people and culture of all ages 1960 Hakwon sa Ltd under Opening of Yi Chosun 1875 1910 Japanese Moves and Korean Resistance at page 84 90 왕후 대행에게 문성의 시호를 홍릉의 능호를 경효의 전호를 주기로 의논하여 정하다 조선왕조실록 고종 35권 34년 1897 정유 대한 건양 建陽 2년 1월 6일 양력 1번째 기사에서 Translation It was discussed and decided to give the posthumous name of Munseong the tomb name of Hongneung and the full title of Gyeonghyo to the acting queen Annals of the Joseon Dynasty Volume 35 of King Gojong Year 34 1897 Jeongyu 2nd year of Geonyang of Daehan January 6 Solar Calendar in the first article 시호의 문성 文成 이 정조의 시호와 같다 하여 여러 논의 끝에 음력 3월 2일 명성왕후로 개칭됐다 왕후 대행에게 명성의 시호를 주다 조선왕조실록 고종 35권 34년 1897 정유 대한 건양 建陽 2년 3월 2일 양력 5번째 기사에서 Translation Since her posthumous name was the same as that of King Jeongjo after much discussion she was renamed Queen Myeongseong on March 2nd of the lunar calendar giving a posthumous title of fame to the acting queen In the 5th article of the Annals of the Joseon Dynasty Volume 35 of King Gojong 34th year 1897 Jeongyu 2nd year of the reign of the Great year of Geonyang 고종 황제의 행장 조선왕조실록 순종부록 10권 12년 1919 기미 일 대정 大正 8년 3월 4일 양력 4번째 기사에서 Translation From the 4th article of the Annals of the Joseon Dynasty Volume 10 of King Sunjong s Appendix Volume 10 Year 12 1919 8th year of Daejeong March 4th Solar Calendar of Emperor Gojong s conduct 고종이 황제의 자리에 오르고 민왕후를 민황후로 왕태자를 황태자로 책봉하고 산호만세 등을 창하다 조선왕조실록 고종 36권 34년 1897 정유 대한 광무 光武 1년 10월 12일 양력 1번째 기사에서 Translation Gojong ascends to the throne of emperor appoints Queen Min as Empress Min and the Crown Prince as crown prince and said Long Live the King etc Annals of the Joseon Dynasty King Gojong Volume 36 Year 34 1897 Jeong Yu 1st year of Gwangmu of Daehan 10 In the 1st article on the 12th of the month solar calendar a b c Photo of the Last Empress KBS News 28 December 2003 Archived from the original on 29 September 2007 Retrieved 6 July 2006 Antonetta L Bruno Kukjin Kim The Conundrum of Queen Min s Portrait A Denied or Partial Identity 2022 International Journal of Korean History Vol 27 No 1 Feb 2022 a b Japanese Illustration of Last Korean Queen Discovered The Chosun Ilbo 13 January 2005 Archived from the original on 21 June 2006 Kim Ji myung 14 December 2018 Portraits of Queen Min and Xiang Fei The Korea Times Kwon Mee Yoo 15 August 2017 1st portrait of Empress Myeongseong He was the 6th great grandson of Queen Wongyeong s granduncle Min Yu who was also the 9th great grandfather of Queen Inhyeon He was the grandfather of Kang Hong rip She is a maternal cousin of Heo Jeok Their grandmother Lady Min was the aunt of Royal Noble Consort Jeong of the Yeoheung Min clan a concubine of King Seonjo and the granddaughter of Princess Gyeongsuk a daughter of King Seongjeong She was the 5th great granddaughter of Sim Eom 심엄 沈㤿 1563 1624 who was the nephew of Queen Insun thru her younger brother Sim In gyeom 심인겸 沈仁謙 1533 1580 While her 5th great grandmother was the older sister of Queen Inheon who was also Queen Insun s adoptive granddaughter in law He is a maternal great grandnephew of Queen Ingyeong the first wife of King Sukjong and was the adoptive great grandson of Princess Myeongan who was also the younger sister of King Sukjong Was also known as Grand Prince Yi Po 대군 이표 The Sword with No Name 2009 IMDb IMDb Further reading editBird Isabella 1898 Korea and her Neighbours London Murray OCLC 501671063 Reprinted 1987 ISBN 9780804814898 OCLC 15109843 Dechler Martina 1999 Culture and the State in Late Choson Korea ISBN 0 674 00774 3 Duus Peter 1998 The Abacus and the Sword The Japanese Penetration of Korea 1895 1910 Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 9780520086142 ISBN 9780520213616 OCLC 232346524 Han Young woo Empress Myeongseong and Korean Empire 명성황후와 대한제국 2001 Hyohyeong Publishing ISBN 89 86361 57 4 Hann Woo Keun 1996 The History of Korea ISBN 0 8248 0334 5 Keene Donald 2002 Emperor of Japan Meiji and His World 1852 1912 New York Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231123402 OCLC 46731178 Lewis James Bryant 2003 Frontier Contact between Choson Korea and Tokugawa Japan ISBN 0 7007 1301 8 MacKensie Frederick Arthur 1920 Korea s Fight for Freedom Chicago Fleming H Revell OCLC 3124752 Revised 2006 ISBN 1 4280 1207 9 See also Project Gutenberg 1908 The Tragedy of Korea London Hodder and Stoughton OCLC 2008452 Reprinted 2006 ISBN 1 901903 09 5 Nahm Andrew C 1996 A History of the Korean People Tradition and Transformation 1996 ISBN 0 930878 56 6 1997 Introduction to Korean History and Culture ISBN 0 930878 08 6 Schmid Andre 2002 Korea between Empires 1895 1919 New York Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231125383 ISBN 9780231125390 OCLC 48618117 Andrews William 2018 The Dragon Queen Fiction Amazon Publishing ISBN 9781495618642External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Empress Myeongseong Making of an Asian hit A Korean royal tragedy in the Broadway style by Ricardo Saludo Asia Week 18 December 1998 Source of Illustrations by Henry Savage Landor in Corea or Cho sen Land of the Morning Calm A Henry Savage Landor 1895 William Heinemann London https www gutenberg org cache epub 13128 pg13128 images html LIST OF PLATES Characteristics of Queen of Corea The New York Times 10 November 1895 Japanese Document Sheds New Light on Korean Queen s Murder by Yoo Seok jae The Chosun Ilbo 12 January 2005 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Empress Myeongseong amp oldid 1207410720, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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