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Kim Song-ryeong 1810–1899: Kim Ung-u 1848–1878: Kim Bo-hyon 1871–1955: Kim Hyong-jik 1894–1926: Kang Pan-sok 1892–1932: Kim Jong-suk 1917–1949: Kim Il Sung
Kim Song-ae (Korean: 김성애; MR: Kim Sŏngae; 29 December 1924 – September 2014), born Kim Sŏngp'al (김성팔), [2] was a North Korean politician who served as the first lady of North Korea during the time that the position existed, from 1963 to 1974 [citation needed].
This is a list of Korean surnames, in Hangul alphabetical order. The most common Korean surname (particularly in South Korea) is Kim (김), followed by Lee (이) and Park (박). These three surnames are held by around half of the ethnic Korean population. This article uses the most recent South Korean statistics (currently 2015) as the basis.
To keep the tree of manageable size, it omits five out of the seven known legitimate children of Kim Il Sung. Other children not shown in the tree are: Kim Man-il (1944-1947; child of Kim Jong Suk), Kim Kyong-jin (1952-; child of Kim Song-ae), Kim Yong-il (1955-2000; child of Kim Song-ae), and Kim Kyong Suk (1951-; child of Kim Song-ae). A ...
The Kim family, officially the Mount Paektu bloodline (Korean: 백두혈통), named for Paektu Mountain, in the ideological discourse of the Workers' Party of Korea (WPK), and often referred to as the Kim dynasty after the Cold War's end, is a three-generation lineage of North Korean leadership, descending from the country's founder and first leader, Kim Il Sung.
Kim comes from a line of Communist Party dignitaries and North Korean heads of state that stretches back to the end of World War II, but he doesn't have a clear heir. Rumors are flying about North ...
Name (birth – death) Tenure Age at tenure start Husband (year married) 1 Kim Song Ae (1924–2014) 17 December 1963 – 15 August 1974 [citation needed] 38 years, 353 days Kim Il Sung (m. 1952) 2 Ri Sol Ju (b. 1989) 15 April 2018 – present [citation needed] 28 years, 158 days Kim Jong Un (m. 2009)
The first historical document that records the surname dates to 636 and references it as the surname of Korean King Jinheung of Silla (526–576). In the Silla kingdom (57 BCE – 935 CE)—which variously battled and allied with other states on the Korean peninsula and ultimately unified most of the country in 668—Kim was the name of a family that rose to prominence and became the rulers of ...