Notable Members
Lodge Han Yang has had the great privilege of counting many prominent individuals among its members, including royalty, captains of industry, political visionaries, military commanders and religious leaders.
Gifford W. Cheeseman 1908- 85 PM Mining Engineer
Alexander MacFarlane 1872 -1931 PM Mining Engineer
Mark Owens PM
Douglas B. Avision 1893-1952 Missionary
George R. Frampton 1870 – 1931 PM Medical Mission
Arthur B. Gorman 1889 – 1929 PM Standard Oil Canada
James Henry Morris PM
Chang Eun Park PM AFKN Engineer
Boiling J Reynolds 1894 – 1909 Missionary
G. Williams Browse 1912 – 1964 Engineer Trans Asia
William H. Shaw 1922 – 1950
A. Kristian Jensen 1897 – 1956
Ernest T. Bethel 1872 – 1909 British Journalist
A.W. Taylor
W. B. Scranton Missionary
Charles A. Sauer US Army
Lincoln T. French 1898- 1923 Salvation Army
Hoon Sohn 1914- 1973 Trans Asia Engineer
Charles W, Tayler 1914 – 1982 Businessman
Edward Stys
Benjamin B. Weems US Civil Service
Bro. Prince KyuLee ( Second son of Crown Prince Eun Lee)
Lodge Han Yang 1048 (Roll # 742) initiated Sept 1966
Yi Gu (Hangul: 이구; hanja: 李玖; RR: I Gu) (born 29 December 1931 – 16 July 2005 (aged 73)), the second son of Prince Eun and his wife, Princess Bangja. Prince Gu became the 29th Head of the Korean Imperial Household upon the death of his father. He married Julia Mullock, an American citizen (b. 1928) on 25 October 1959 at St George’s Church in New York, they had no issue but adopted a daughter, EugeniaUnsuk Lee (Eun-sook) (b. 1959)
Yi Gu
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Yi Gu | |
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Gu as a young boy
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Emperor of Korea | |
Pretend | 1 May 1970 – 16 July 2005 |
Predecessor | Crown Prince Yi Un |
Successor | Disputed Prince Yi Won or Prince Yi Seok |
Born | 29 December 1931 Kitashirakawa Palace (nowAkasaka Prince Hotel), Kioicho, Kojimachiku, Tokyo, Japan |
Died | 16 July 2005 (aged 73) Akasaka Prince Hotel, Kioicho, Kojimachiku, Tokyo, Japan |
Spouse | Julia Mullock (m. 1959; div. 1982) |
Issue | Eugenia Unsuk (adopted) |
House | House of Yi |
Father | Yi Un |
Mother | Masako of Nashimoto |
Yi Gu | |
Hangul | 이구 |
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Hanja | 李玖 |
Revised Romanization | I Gu |
McCune–Reischauer | Yi Ku |
Imperial title | |
Hangul | 황태손 |
Hanja | 皇太孫 |
Revised Romanization | Hwangtaeson* |
McCune–Reischauer | Hwangt'aeson |
Posthumous title | |
Hangul | 회은황태손 |
Hanja | 懷隱皇太孫 |
Revised Romanization | Hoeeun Hwangtaeson** |
McCune–Reischauer | Hoeŭn Hwangt'aeson |
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Prince Yi Gu (29 December 1931 – 16 July 2005) was a Korean prince. He was pretender to the Korean Imperial Throne from 1970 until he died in 2005. He was the grandson ofGojong of the Joseon dynasty. Gu was born in Kitashirakawa Palace (nowAkasaka Prince Hotel), Kioicho, Kojimachiku,Tokyo, Japan; his father was Crown Prince Eunof Korea, and his mother was Princess Bangja, born Masako Nashimoto, a Japanese princess. Gu attended the Gakushuin Peers' School in Tokyo. He later attended Centre College,Danville, Kentucky and studied architecture atMassachusetts Institute of Technology both in the U.S.. He was employed as an architect withI.M. Pei & Assocs, Manhattan, New York from 1960 to 1964. Made stateless by Japan in 1947, Gu acquired United States citizenship in 1959, and Korean citizenship in 1964. He married Julia Mullock (b. 1928) on 25 October 1959 at St George's Church in New York, and they adopted a daughter, Eugenia Unsuk. After the fall of Syngman Rhee, he returned to Korea in 1963 with the help of the new president Park Chung-hee, moving into the new building in Nakseon Hall, Changdeok Palace with his mother and wife. He lectured on architecture at Seoul National Universityand Yonsei University and also managed his own airline, Shinhan. When that went bankrupt in 1979, he went to Japan to earn money. In 1982, his family forced him to divorce his wife because she was sterile; his mother died in 1989. He started living with a Japanese astrologer, Mrs. Arita. In November 1996, he made what he hoped would be his permanent return to Korea but, showing signs of a nervous breakdown, he was unable to adjust to life in Korea.[citation needed]Restlessly going back and forth between Japan and Korea, he eventually died of a myocardial infarction, a heart attack, at the age of seventy-three, on 16 July 2005 at the Akasaka Prince Hotel, the former residence of his parents in Tokyo, Japan. His funeral was held on 24 July 2005 and his posthumous title decided as "Prince Imperial Hoeun of Korea" by the Lee Family Council.
External links[edit]
- Korean royalty
- Death announcement in Korea Times
- Farewell to royal heir evokes memories of Korea's past
- obituary in the English edition of Dong-A Ilbo
Yi Gu
Born: 29 December 1931 Died: 16 July 2005 |
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Titles in pretence | ||
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Preceded by Crown Prince Uimin | — TITULAR — Emperor of Korea Joseon 1 May 1970 – 16 July 2005 Reason for succession failure: Empire abolished in 1910 | Succeeded by Won, Hereditary Prince Imperial |
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- 1931 births
- 2005 deaths
- Centre College alumni
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni
- House of Yi
- Japanese emigrants to the United States
- American people of Korean descent
- South Korean people of Japanese descent
- South Korean Roman Catholics
- Pretenders to the Korean throne
- Zainichi Korean people
- People from Tokyo
- Korean anti-communists