Jeong Su-il explained

Jeong Su-il
Other Names:Muhammad Kansu (pseudonym)
Nationality:
  1. Manchukuo (1934–1945)
  2. Republic of China (1945–1949)
  3. People's Republic of China (1949–1963)
  4. North Korea (1963–1980s)
  5. Lebanon (1980s–1983)
  6. Philippines (1983–2000s)
  7. South Korea (2000s–)
Occupation:President of the Korea Institute of Civilizational Exchanges
Birth Date:1934
Birth Place:Yanbian, Manchukuo (today Jilin, China)
Module:
정수일
T:鄭守一
S:郑守一
P:Zhèng Shǒuyī
Hangul:정수일
Hanja:鄭守一
Rr:Jeong Su-il
Mr:Chŏng Suil
Ibox-Order:zh, ko1, ko4, ko3
Child:yes

Jeong Su-il (ko|정수일; born November 12 1934) is a South Korean historian, specializing in Silk Road history.

Life

Jeong Su-il was born to ethnic Korean parents in Longjing, Jilin, China. He always considered himself Korean and studied in ethnic Korean high schools. During his last year in high school, he became one of two ethnic Koreans admitted to Peking University when it opened its entrance exam to all students in 1952. He migrated to Pyongyang, North Korea in 1963.[1] He was trained as a spy, travelled to Lebanon, Tunisia, Papua New Guinea, Malaysia, and Philippines, and obtained Lebanese and Filipino nationalities. In 1984, he entered South Korea under the disguise as Filipino researcher Mohammad Kansu, and worked at Dankook University. He was arrested in 1996 after a hotel clerk recognized him while he was faxing a North Korean agent in Beijing and was sentenced to 15 years in prison.[2] [3] However, he was released in 2000 after being granted amnesty.[4]

Education and career

Jeong studied Arabic in Peking University and continued his studies in Cairo University. Later, he became a history professor at Dankook University. Currently, Jeong is the president of Korea Institute of Civilization Exchanges.[5] Jeong had embarked on dozens of journeys along the Silk Road to study the cultural exchange. Major works include A History of Trans-Civilizational Exchanges (2002) and The Cyclopedia of Silk Road (2013).[6]

Writings

Translations

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Claire. Lee. 2024-07-22. A life stranger than fiction. 6 December 2013. The Korea Herald.
  2. News: Man arrested suspected of spying for North Korea . 21 November 2018 . AP . 23 July 1996.
  3. Web site: 2024-07-22. [THIS WEEK IN HISTORY]A cult leader falls, a spy is exposed and a coup succeeds]. 6 January 2003. koreajoongangdaily.joins.com.
  4. News: Cho . Woo-suk . Cloaks and Daggers . 21 November 2018 . . 6 September 2001.
  5. Web site: International Association for Silk-Road Studies . Silk Road Universities Network . 21 November 2018 . 21 November 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20181121203743/http://www.sun-silkroadia.org/eng/activities/02.php . dead .
  6. News: Oh . Mi-hwan . The Sea Completes Silk Road . 21 November 2018 . . 25 December 2014 . 21 November 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20181121203744/http://www.koreafocus.or.kr/design2/layout/content_print.asp?group_id=105713 . dead .