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Queen Hyoui (Korean: 효의왕후; Hanja: 孝懿王后; 5 January [citation needed] 1754 [1] – 10 April [citation needed] 1821 [2]), of the Cheongpung Kim clan (청풍 김씨; 淸風 金氏), was the wife and queen consort of King Jeongjo of Joseon.
Jeongjo (Korean: 정조; Hanja: 正祖; 28 October 1752 – 18 August 1800), personal name Yi San (이산; 李祘), sometimes called Jeongjo the Great (정조대왕; 正祖大王), was the 22nd monarch of the Joseon dynasty of Korea. He was the second son of Crown Prince Sado and Lady Hyegyŏng, and succeeded his grandfather, King Yeongjo, in ...
She died in 1756, three years after giving birth to the future Seong Ui-bin. Seong Yun-woo's third wife was Lady Ji of the Danyang Ji clan (단양 지씨; 丹陽 池氏). Their family was quite poor, and at the time of Lady Seong's birth, her father worked as a steward for Hong Bong-han, the maternal grandfather of King Jeongjo. [1]
In the Joseon Dynasty records, it stated that she conceived a princess in 1781 but her pregnancy was an imaginary one. Royal Noble Consort Hwa died without issue, on September 14, 1824 (the 24th year of King Sunjo 's reign).
Queen Jeongsun (Korean: 정순왕후 김씨; 2 December 1745 – 11 February 1805 [a]), of the Gyeongju Kim clan, was a posthumous name bestowed to the wife and second queen consort of Yi Geum, King Yeongjo, the 21st Joseon monarch. [1]
Joseon King accepted Chinese suzerainty and acknowledged the Chinese emperor as their nominal overlord [2] until the Gabo Reform in December 1894. The Primary Consort of the Joseon King bore the title wangbi (왕비, 王妃), [a] translated as Queen in English, with the style of "Her Royal Highness" (baama; 마마, 媽媽).
Yunggeolleung is a burial ground from the Joseon dynasty, located within an oak-forested park in Hwaseong, South Korea. Yungneung is the tomb of Crown Prince Sado and Lady Hyegyeong (posthumously honored as King Jangjo and Queen Heongyeong), while Geolleung houses King Jeongjo and Queen Hyoui. They are an UNESCO World Heritage Site. [3]
The suggestion of executing "Jeong's wife", or alternatively referred as "Jeong Chi-dal's wife" still constantly reoccurs throughout the reign of Jeongjo, according to records from the Journal of the Royal Secretariat, until she died in 1808, during the reign of Sunjo of Joseon, the son of King Jeongjo. [13] [14]