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'''Ahn Jung-Geun''' or '''An Jung-Geun''' ([[September 2]], [[1879]] - [[March 26]], [[1910]]) (Christian name: Thomas) was a [[Korea]]n [[Korean nationalism|nationalist]]<ref name="dudden">{{cite book|title=Japan's Colonization of Korea: Discourse and Power|first=Alexis|last=Dudden|publisher=University of Hawaii Press|date=2005|isbn= 0-82482-829-1}}</ref> and a [[pan-Asianism | pan-Asianist]]<ref>{{cite book|title=Ethnic Nationalism in Korea|first=Gi-Wook|last=Shin|publisher=Standford University Press|date=2006|isbn= 0-8047-5408-X}}</ref> who assassinated the first [[Prime Minister of Japan]], [[Itō Hirobumi]], following the signing of the [[Eulsa Treaty]], with Korea on the verge of annexation by [[Japan]].
'''Ahn Jung-Geun''' or '''An Jung-Geun''' ([[September 2]], [[1879]] - [[March 26]], [[1910]]) (Christian name: Thomas) was a [[Korea]]n independence activist <ref name="dudden">{{cite book|title=Japan's Colonization of Korea: Discourse and Power|first=Alexis|last=Dudden|publisher=University of Hawaii Press|date=2005|isbn= 0-82482-829-1}}</ref> and a [[pan-Asianism | pan-Asianist]]<ref>{{cite book|title=Ethnic Nationalism in Korea|first=Gi-Wook|last=Shin|publisher=Standford University Press|date=2006|isbn= 0-8047-5408-X}}</ref> who assassinated the first [[Prime Minister of Japan]], [[Itō Hirobumi]], following the signing of the [[Eulsa Treaty]], with Korea on the verge of annexation by [[Japan]].


==Biography==
==Biography==

Revision as of 02:05, 17 January 2008

Template:Korean name

An Jung-geun
Hangul
안중근
Hanja
安重根
Revised RomanizationAn Jung-Geun
McCune–ReischauerAn Chunggŭn

Ahn Jung-Geun or An Jung-Geun (September 2, 1879 - March 26, 1910) (Christian name: Thomas) was a Korean independence activist [1] and a pan-Asianist[2] who assassinated the first Prime Minister of Japan, Itō Hirobumi, following the signing of the Eulsa Treaty, with Korea on the verge of annexation by Japan.

Biography

An was born in Haeju, Hwanghae Do, to a family of the Sunheung An lineage. He worked first in education, later joining the armed resistance against the Japanese colonial rulers.

An Jung-geun assassinated Ito Hirobumi on the railway platform in Harbin, Manchuria in 1909. After firing upon Hirobumi, he is said to have yelled for Korean independence and waved the Korean flag. Afterwards a Japanese colonial court sentenced him to death. The execution by hanging took place in Port Arthur, then also known as Ryojun. Itō's death resulted in the acceleration of the final stage of the colonization process.

An Jung-Geun was an admirer of Emperor Meiji of Japan. One of the 15 'charges' An leveled against Ito was that he had deceived the Emperor of Japan, whom An felt desired peace in East Asia and Korean independence. An requested that Meiji be informed of his reasons for his assassination of Ito in the hopes that if Meiji understood his reasons, the emperor would realize how mistaken Ito's policies were and would rejoice. An also felt sure that most Japanese felt similar hatred for Ito, an opinion he formed from talking with Japanese prisoners in Korea.[3]

For his actions as a resistance fighter, he was awarded South Korea's Order of Merit for National Foundation in 1962.

He is commemorated in the martial art Taekwondo with the Joon Gun pattern being dedicated to him.

Novelist Bok Geo-il's 1987 novel Looking for an Epitaph (碑銘(비명)을 찾아서) is an alternate history story, which is set in the 1980's of Korea that remained a permanent colony of Japan, as a cascade effect of An's failure to assassinate Ito. The Korean movie 2009 Lost Memories is very loosely based on the novel but tells a completely different story.

In the PC game Civilization IV expansion pack, Beyond the Sword, An Jung-geun is a Great Spy.

See also

References

  1. ^ Dudden, Alexis (2005). Japan's Colonization of Korea: Discourse and Power. University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 0-82482-829-1.
  2. ^ Shin, Gi-Wook (2006). Ethnic Nationalism in Korea. Standford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-5408-X.
  3. ^ Emperor of Japan: Meiji and His World, 1852–1912 by Donald Keene, Columbia University Press, 2002. ISBN 0-231-12340-X


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