Ye Wanyong

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Ye Wanyong
이완용
File:Lee Wan-yong Portrait.jpg
7th Prime Minister of Korea
In office
11 August 1910 – 29 August 1910
Monarch Sunjong
Preceded by Pak Che-soon
Succeeded by Office abolished
Personal details
Born (1858-07-17)17 July 1858
Seongnam, Korea
(now Seongnam, South Korea)
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Keijō, Japanese Korea
(now Seoul, South Korea)
Ye Wanyong
Hunminjeongeum
Hanja
Revised Romanization I Wanyong
McCune–Reischauer Yi Wanyong
Pen name
Hunminjeongeum 일당
Hanja
Revised Romanization Ildang
McCune–Reischauer Iltang
Courtesy name
Hunminjeongeum 경덕
Hanja
Revised Romanization Gyeongdeok
McCune–Reischauer Kyŏngdŏk

Ye Wanyong (pronounced [iː wɐȵoŋ]; 17 July 1858 – 12 February 1926), also spelled Yi Wan-yong or Lee Wan-yong (Korean: 이완용),[1] was a Korean politician who served as the 7th Prime Minister of Korea. He was pro-Japanese and is best remembered for signing the Japan–Korea Annexation Treaty, which placed Korea under Japanese rule in 1910.

Early life and education

Ye Wan-yong was born to a poor aristocrat family in 1858, but grew up with a lot of support after he became the stepson of Lee Ho-jun, a friend of Heungseon Daewongun and in-laws. He learned English and theology at Yookyoung Park, went to the United States to live as a diplomat, and returned to Korea to serve as a pro-Russian politician until the 1896 Agwan Pacheon incident, where King Gojong and his crown prince took refuge at the Russian legation in Seoul. As Japan grew stronger, he became a pro-Japanese politician.[2]

Ye was a founding member of the Independence Club established in 1896 and belonged to the "reform faction" which wanted to Westernize Korea and to open the country to foreign trade.[3][4]

Career

Ye was a prominent government minister at the time of Eulsa Treaty of 1905, and was the most outspoken supporter of the pact which made the Korean Empire a protectorate of the Empire of Japan, thus stripping it of its diplomatic sovereignty. The treaty was signed in defiance of Korean Emperor Gojong, and he is thus accounted to be the chief of five ministers (including Park Jae-soon, Lee Ji-yong, Lee Geun-taek, Gwon Joong-hyun) who were later denounced as Five Eulsa Traitors in Korea.

Under Japanese Resident-General Itō Hirobumi, Ye was promoted to the post of prime minister from 1906 to 1910. Ye was instrumental in forcing Emperor Gojong to abdicate in 1907, after Emperor Gojong tried to publicly denounce the Eulsa Treaty at the second international Hague Peace Convention. In 1907 Ye was also chief amongst the seven ministers who supported the Japan–Korea Treaty of 1907, which further placed the domestic affairs of Korea under Japan's control, thus completing the colonialisation of Korea by Japan. Ye is therefore also listed in Korea amongst the Seven Jeongmi Traitors. In 1909, he was seriously injured in an assassination attempt by the "Five Eulsa Traitors Assassination Group".

Japanese rule

General power of attorney to Lee Wan-Yong signed and sealed by Sunjong.

In 1910, Ye signed the Japan-Korea Annexation Treaty by which Japan took full control over Korea, while Korean Emperor Sunjong refused to sign. For his cooperation with the Japanese, Ye is also listed in Korea amongst the eight Gyeongsul Traitors. He was rewarded with a peerage in the Japanese kazoku system, becoming a hakushaku (Count), in 1910, which was raised to the title of kōshaku (Marquis) in 1921. He died in 1926.

Legacy

After the independence of Korea at the end of World War II, the grave of Ye was dug up and his remains suffered the posthumous dismemberment, which is often considered to be the most disgraceful punishment in Confucian ideology.[verification needed] Ye's name has become a byword for "traitor" in contemporary South Korea.[1]

However, Seo Jae-pil's Dongnip Sinmun (Independence Newspaper) never wrote a single line of criticism against him.[5]

The South Korean Special law to redeem pro-Japanese collaborators' property was enacted in 2005 and the committee confiscated the property[6] of the descendants of nine people that had collaborated with Japan when Korea was annexed by Japan in August 1910. Ye is one of those heading the list.[7]

In popular culture

  • Ye is portrayed by Woo Sang-jeon in the 2015 film Assassination.
  • Both Ye Wanyong as well as Lee Wan-ik, a fictional pro-Japanese Korean Minister that resembles Ye in name and action, are characters in the South Korean television series Mr. Sunshine.

References

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  5. English JoongAng Ilbo August 30, 2001
  6. Committee OKs Seizure of Collaborators’ Property The Chosun Ilbo,December 7, 2005
  7. South Korea: Crackdown On Collaborators The New York Times, December 24, 2007