Queen Jeongsun Explained

Queen Jeongsun
정순왕후
貞純王后
Succession:Grand queen dowager of Joseon
Reign:1800 – 11 February 1805
Reign-Type:Tenure
Predecessor:Grand Queen Dowager Hyesun
Successor:Grand Queen Dowager Myeonggyeong
Succession1:Queen regent of Joseon
Reign1:1800–1803
Reign-Type1:Regency
Predecessor1:Queen Insun
Successor1:Queen Sunwon
Succession2:Queen dowager of Joseon
Reign2:22 April 1776 – 1800
Reign-Type2:Tenure
Predecessor2:Queen Dowager Gyeongsun
Successor2:Queen Dowager Kim
Succession3:Queen consort of Joseon
Reign-Type3:Tenure
Reign3:22 June 1759 – 22 April 1776
Predecessor3:Queen Jeongseong
Successor3:Queen Hyoui
Father:Kim Han-gu
Mother:Internal Princess Consort Wonpung of the Wonju Won clan
Spouse:Yi Geum, King Yeongjo (m.1759–d.1776)
Birth Date:2 December 1745
Birth Place:Yeoju, Gyeonggi Province, Joseon
Death Place:Gyeongbok Hall, Changdeok Palace, Joseon
Place Of Burial:Wonreung
Posthumous Name:예순성철장희혜휘익렬명선수경광헌융인정현소숙정헌정순왕후
House:Gyeongju Kim

Queen Jeongsun (; 2 December 1745 – 11 February 1805), of the Gyeongju Kim clan, was a posthumous name bestowed to the wife and second queen consort of Yi Geum, King Yeongjo, the 21st Joseon monarch.[1] She was queen consort of Joseon from 1759 until her husband's death in 1776, after which she was honoured as Queen Dowager Yesun during the reign of her step-grandson Yi San, King Jeongjo and as Grand Queen Dowager Yesun during the reign of her step great-grandson Yi Gong, King Sunjo.

Biography

Early life

On 2 December 1745, Lady Kim was born to Kim Han-gu of the Gyeongju Kim clan and Lady Won of the Wonju Won clan. She was born in the wealthy sector of the current Seosan, South Chungcheong Province during the reign of King Yeongjo, her future husband. Her hometown was Yeoju, Gyeonggi Province, and she had two older brothers.

Through her 5th great-grandfather, Lady Kim was a 25th great-granddaughter of King Gyeongsun of Silla and Princess Nakrang through their second son, Kim Eun-yeol. Making her be distantly related to Queen Jeongan, who was the wife of King Jeongjong, the second King of Joseon, as they shared Kim Jeong-gu (김정구, 金正矩; 973–1057) as their last common ancestor; who was the grandson of Kim Eun-yeol.

Through her 5th great-grandmother, she was a 8th great-granddaughter of Yi Je, Grand Prince Yangnyeong who was the eldest son of Queen Wongyeong and King Taejo, and the older brother to King Sejong.

Marriage and becoming queen

After the death of Queen Jeongseong in 1757, King Yeongjo held bridal selections to choose his second queen. His father had banned former concubines from becoming queen, so King Yeongjo could not elevate one of his concubines to queenship, as many former kings had done.

On 9 June 1759, Queen Jeongsun was chosen as queen. During the bridal selections, Yeongjo allegedly asked the candidates what the deepest thing in the world was. Some cited the mountains, the sea, or a parent's love, but she cited the human heart, capturing his attention on her wisdom. When asked about the most beautiful flower, she answered, "The cotton flower is the most beautiful flower, although it does not exude fashion and scent, but it is the most beautiful flower that warms the people by weaving thread."

On 22 June 1759, Queen Jeongsun formally married King Yeongjo at Changgyeong Palace. This marriage was considered the oldest marriage in Joseon Dynasty history as Yeongjo was 64 years old, and the Queen was 13 years old at the time of the marriage. She was also 10 years younger than her husband's son and heir, Crown Prince Sado, and his daughter-in-law, Lady Hyegyeong. As well as being 7 years older than his grandson, Grand Heir Yi San.

Queen Jeongsun's father was given the royal title of "Internal Prince Oheung", and her mother was given the royal title "Internal Princess Consort Wonpung" .

The Queen was known to be a little assertive towards her husband. When it had come to get measured for clothing, the palace maid had politely asked the King to turn his back. Yet, she also asked her husband in a decisive tone saying, "Can you turn around?".

She and her husband shared a deep love for one another, but despite that, they produced no princes or princesses. There was no record of the young queen bearing children, or having a miscarriage.

Crown Prince Sado died in 1762 and his sister, Yi Yong-wan, Princess Hwawan, became protectress of Sado's son, Yi San. Yeongjo died on 22 April 1776 and Yi San ascended to the throne as the 22nd Joseon monarch (temple name: Jeongjo).

As widow of a king, the 31-year-old Queen Consort was honoured as Queen Dowager Yesun. But Hong Bong-han, Jeongjo's maternal grandfather, and Jeong Hu-gyeom, Princess Hwawan's adoptive son, protested this decision.

Yesun's older brother, Kim Gwi-ju, advised his sister to wait for the right moment, but Jeongjo acted first. He dismissed Hong Bong-han and Jeong Hu-gyeom from office. However, Jeongjo later exiled Kim Gwi-ju to Heuksan Island on the grounds of disrespect towards the King's mother, Lady Hyegyeong, but the real reason was because of Kim Gwi-ju's involvement with Hong Bong-han's dismissal during Yeongjo's reign. This action caused unspoken tension and extreme confrontations between Yesun and Jeongjo.

Regency

In 1800, Jeongjo died of an abscess on his back at age 49. He died 15 days after first being treated. His last words were 'Sujeongjeon Hall,' which was the residence of Yesun, giving rise to speculation to this day that Queen Dowager poisoned Jeongjo.

He was succeeded by his 10-year-old son, Yi Gong (temple name: King Sunjo) and Yesun was raised to the status of Grand Queen Dowager.[2] As the most senior-generation royal family member, Yesun acted as regent for the young king and exerted power until she voluntarily gave it up in 1803. She departed from the policy of the late King, enforcing the Catholic Persecution of 1801 and favoring the Noron Byeokpa faction.

Yesun had purged a large number of conflicting Soron sects, executed Jeongjo's half-brother and maternal uncle, Prince Euneon and Hong Nak-im, abolished Jang Yong-young established by Jeongjo, and massively defeated the Catholic Church that Jeongjo had tolerated. It was repressed and expelled other people and the Soron faction.

She also hired many Noron Bukpa officials, such as Kim Gwan-ju and Kim Yong-ju, whom she had struck by Jeongjo. In 1802, under Jeongjo's law, she had Kim Jo-sun's daughter, the future Queen Sunwon, became the queen consort of Sunjo, and Kim Jo-sun was sealed to Internal Prince Yeongan (永安府院君) and was resigned from her rule.

On 9 February 1804, after reaping the convergence and cleansing, when Sunjo's family was declared, most bureaucrats were purged by Kim Jo-sun, the father of Queen Sunwon, and the power of King Jeongjo. Her influence was weakened, and she had a futile last year of reign, and a year later, on 30 February 1805, she died in Gyeongbokjeon Hall at Changdeokgung Palace. She was posthumously honoured as Queen Jeongsun.

Death

Prior to their deaths, King Yeongjo had designed and built Queen Jeongseong's tomb intending to be on the right side of her mound. But the previous queen ended up alone even after death when the next king made changes.

Despite the indifferences between Jeongjo and Grand Queen Dowager Yesun, and prior to King Jeongjo’s death in 1805, the king himself was considerate of having his grandfather be buried next to the late Grand Queen Dowager within the dynastic tombs at Donggureung, the royal tomb of Wonneung, in the city of Guri, Gyeonggi Province.

Family

Siblings

Consort

In popular culture

External links

Notes and References

  1. Park . Hyunmo . September 2009 . How and when the Gyeongguk daejeon System Dismantled? . The Review of Korean Studies . 12 . 3 . 197–221 . 10.25024/review.2009.12.3.009.
  2. Jung . Byungsul . Collibee . William . 2020 . The Joseon Government's Changing Perception of Early Catholicism Examined through Law Application . Seoul Journal of Korean Studies . 33 . 2 . 323–342 . 10.1353/seo.2020.0013 . 2331-4826 . 231624875.