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  1. There were 13 provinces in Korea during Japanese rule: Keiki-dō, Kōgen-dō, Chūseihoku-dō, Chūseinan-dō, Zenrahoku-dō, Zenranan-dō, Keishōhoku-dō, Keishōnan-dō, Heian'nan-dō, Heianhoku-dō, Kōkai-dō, Kankyōnan-dō, and Kankyōhoku-dō.

  2. Kankyōhoku-dō (咸鏡北道, Korean : 함경북도), alternatively Kankyōhoku Province, Kankyo Hoku, or North Kankyō Province, was a province of Korea under Japanese rule. Its capital was at Seishin (Chongjin). The province consisted what is now the North Korean province of North Hamgyong, as well as parts of neighboring provinces. [1] Population.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ri_Ul-solRi Ul-sol - Wikipedia

    Ri Ul-sol ( Korean : 리을설; 14 September 1921 – 7 November 2015) was a North Korean politician and military official. He played an important role in the administrations of Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il, achieving the rank of marshal of the Korean People's Army.

  4. KOREA UNDER JAPANESE RULE* 'Can a robust public sphere coexist with an authoritarian state?'1 Scholars have posed this question in regard to both political life in Japan before 1945 and civic life in South Korea after 1945.2 Between these two distinct areas of inquiry, however, lies the his

  5. Korean children should study together through the medium of the Japanese language, and calls for facilitating intermarriages as a means of fostering greater unity in Korean and Japanese ways of thinking.

  6. The Japanese territorial colonization of Korea went hand in hand with railway building and other infrastructural projects, with a level of financial commitment no other empire would match.

  7. Nov 1, 2021 · Abstract: This article discusses Japan’s colonization of Korea in the context of world time. Korea was a unique colony as it was one of the last to be colonized in the world. Japanese colonizers pushed a heavy-handed “military policy”, mainly because of the sharp resistance at their accession to power in the period 1905-1910.