Lee Yongsang ( cor. 이은상 ; October 22, 1903 , Masan - September 18, 1982 , Seoul ) - poet of the Korean lyric poetry " Sijo ", historian, activist of the Korean independence from the Japanese Empire, and historian of the Republic of Korea . His pseudonym is Nosan ( cor. 노산 ).
| Lee Yinsang | |
|---|---|
| Date of Birth | |
| Place of Birth | Masan The Republic of Korea |
| Date of death | |
| A place of death | Seoul The Republic of Korea |
| Citizenship | The Republic of Korea |
| Occupation | , , |
| Direction | Patriotism , Buddhism , Traditional Korean Idea |
| Genre | Sijo |
| Language of Works | Korean |
- This name is Korean ; “Lee” is a surname , not a personal name ; this person’s personal name is Yinsan. Koreans have no middle name or middle name.
Biography
Li Yongsang was born on October 22, 1903 in Changwon . In 1918, he graduated from Chanshin High School, which was built by his father, and in 1923 he entered the Department of Humanities at Yonsei University . He took off in 1923. He worked at Chanshin School as a teacher for a time, until he enrolled at Waseda University in Japan, but most of all history in 1926. He worked as a professor at Ewha Womans University from 1931 to 1932. After that, he worked for the Tona Ilbo newspaper and the Joseon Ilbo newspaper.
In 1942, he was arrested on suspicion of involvement in the so-called “incident of the Korean language academy,” and was released the following year when his indictment was suspended. In 1945, he was detained as a political criminal at the Gwangyang Police Station and was released at the time of independence from Japan.
After Korea was liberated from Japan, Lee Yongsan taught at Cheonggu University, Seoul National University, and Yongnam University. In 1954, he was invited to the Korean Academy of Arts, and by 1978, he had reached a lifetime membership in the Korean Academy of Arts. Lee Yongsang served as chairman of Admiral Lee Songsin Memorial Committee, a member of the Korean Mountain Climbers Association, the Korean Culture Protection Association and the People’s Culture Association, and is also the editor-in-chief for Korea Independence transportation history. Lee Yongsang passed away in 1982.