Park Gyu-su | |||||||||
Office: | Right State Councillor | ||||||||
Term Start: | 19 January 1874 | ||||||||
Term End: | 4 November 1874 | ||||||||
Predecessor: | Han Gye-won | ||||||||
Successor: | Kim Byeong-guk | ||||||||
Birth Date: | 27 October 1807 | ||||||||
Birth Place: | Gahoe-dong, Hanseong, Joseon | ||||||||
Death Place: | Suwon-gun, Gyeonggi Province, Joseon | ||||||||
Module: |
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Spouse: | Lady Yi of the Yeonan Yi clan (연안 이씨) | ||||||||
Children: | Park Je-eung | ||||||||
Relations: | Park Jon-chae (father) Lady Yu (mother) |
Bak Gyusu (; 1807 - 1877) was a scholar-bureaucrat, teacher, politician, and a diplomat of the Joseon period. He was known as a pioneer of the enlightenment group. Bak Gyusu was the grandson of Park Ji-won, the great Silhak scholar of the Joseon. He was also known by the names of Hwanjae, Hwanjae, Heonjae, and Hwanjaegeosa .
In 1827, Bak Gyusu met Crown Prince Hyomyeong who quickly became a trusted friend. The Crown Prince would often ask Gyusu for his thoughts on delicate political and social issues. When the Crown Prince died three years later at the age of 20, Gyusu fell into a deep state of mourning. Due to this, Gyusu isolated himself from the outside world for twenty years.[1]
In 1848, he successfully passed the Gwageo civil service exam, a test required for government work. Doing well on this test allowed Bak Gyusu to acquire a well-paid job early on. Later in his life, Gyusu became a mentor for a Korean politician Pak Yung-hio during the mid-1870s. Gyusu decided to instruct Pak Yung-hio in his ways of enlightened thinking after he took initiative and sought the politician out.[2] Gyusu's ideas influenced many throughout Korea, the most notable being the Korean reformist Kim Okgyun, who went on to incorporate foreign sciences and technologies into Korea in an attempt to strengthen it against further military advances by the rapidly technologically developing Meiji Japan.[3]
During the period of King Gojong's reign, the Queen actively supported him. Queen Sinjeong had been the wife of Crown Prince Hyomyeong, who was posthumously named King Munjo. Bak Gyusu was the governor of Pyongan province when the General Sherman incident occurred, an event commonly cited as a factor important to the end of Korean isolationism in the 19th century. On the 9th of July 1866, the General Sherman entered the Keupsa Gate without permission. Gyusu gave the General Sherman