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  2. Remarriage & Desires - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remarriage_&_Desires

    Remarriage & Desires (Korean: 블랙의 신부) is a 2022 South Korean television series directed by Kim Jeong-min and starring Kim Hee-sun, Lee Hyun-wook, Cha Ji-yeon, Jung Yoo-jin, and Park Hoon. This series is a satire on the Korean society that tells the desire in the remarriage market, revolving around upper-class marriage information ...

  3. The Last Empress (TV series) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Last_Empress_(TV_series)

    The Last Empress (Korean: 황후의 품격; RR: Hwanghuui Pumgyeok) is a 2018–2019 South Korean television series starring Jang Na-ra, Choi Jin-hyuk, Shin Sung-rok, Lee Elijah, and Shin Eun-kyung. It aired on SBS Wednesdays and Thursdays at the 22:00 KST from November 21, 2018, to February 21, 2019, for 52 episodes.

  4. Web novels in South Korea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_novels_in_South_Korea

    The cover of the Korean web novel 'The Remarried Empress' Web novels in South Korea (Korean: 웹소설; Hanja: 웹小說; RR: Websoseol) have been growing in popularity in the 21st century. Among e-publishing fields, web novels are the core contents that are leading the e-book market.

  5. Empress Myeongseong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empress_Myeongseong

    After the founding of the Korean Empire, she was posthumously given the title of Myeongseong, the Great Empress (명성태황후; 明成太皇后). The later Empress was of aristocratic background and in 1866 was chosen by the de facto Regent Heungseon Daewongun to marry his son, the future King Gojong. Seven years later his daughter-in-law and ...

  6. Heo Hwang-ok - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heo_Hwang-ok

    Heo Hwang-ok (Korean: 허황옥; Hanja: 許黃玉; 32AD – 189AD) also known as Empress Boju (보주태후; 普州太后), [2] was a legendary queen mentioned in Samguk yusa, a 13th-century Korean chronicle.

  7. Empress Sunjeonghyo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empress_Sunjeonghyo

    The empress later meet her that same day before the princess underwent a surgery at Seoul National University Hospital. Empress Sunjeonghyo became a Buddhist in her later years. She died childless on 3 February 1966, aged 72, at Nakseon Hall, Changdeok Palace, Seoul from a heart attack. She was given a state funeral and a private Buddhist funeral.

  8. Sunjong of Korea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunjong_of_Korea

    On 29 June 1898, he was appointed as the Field Marshal of the Imperial Korean Army. [6] Sunjong remarried again 3 years later to the daughter of Yoon Taek-young, Yun Jeung-sun of the Haepyeong Yun clan, who was 20 years younger than him, on 11 December 1906, [7] and she became Crown Princess Consort Yun (later Empress Sunjeong).

  9. Queen Hyojeong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queen_Hyojeong

    It wasn’t until Gojong’s proclamation of the Korean Empire that the Queen Dowager became and held the title of being the empire’s only Empress Dowager of Korea on 13 October 1897. She later died on 2 January 1904 within the palace quarters of Gyeongun Palace, now known as Deoksu Palace, during the 7th year of Emperor Gwangmu’s reign.