Yi U Explained

Yi U
Prince of Korea
Head of Unhyeon Palace
Native Lang1 Name1:이우
Succession:Duke of Unhyeongung
Predecessor:Yi Jun-yong
Successor:Yi Cheong
Reign:1917–1945
Birth Date:15 November 1912
Birth Place:Keijō, Keiki-dō, Korea, Empire of Japan
(today Seoul, South Korea)
Death Place:Ninoshima, Hiroshima Prefecture, Empire of Japan
Date Of Burial:15 August 1945
Place Of Burial:Heungwon
Father:Prince Imperial Ui
Mother:Lady Suin, concubine
Spouse:Lady Park Chan-ju (m. 1935)
Issue:Yi Cheong
Yi Jong
Module:
Embed:yes
Serviceyears:1933–1945
Rank:Colonel (posthumous)
Unit:Information officer, China; GSO at Hiroshima
Battles:Second Sino-Japanese War
Second World War
Awards:Order of the Chrysanthemum
Showa Enthronement Medal (1928)
Tokyo Earthquake Rehabilitation Medal (1930)
Japanese Red Cross Order of Merit
China Incident Medal (1937)
Hangul:이우
Rr:I U
Mr:Yi U

Colonel Prince Yi U (; 15 November 1912  - 7 August 1945) was a member of the imperial family of Korea as a prince, the 4th head of Unhyeon Palace, and a lieutenant colonel in the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II. He was killed during the atomic bombing of Hiroshima.

Biography

He was born the second son of Prince Kang, the fifth son of Emperor Gojong.

At the age of five, he was adopted to be the heir of the deceased Prince Yeongseon, the 3rd head of Unhyeon Palace and the only son of the elder brother of Emperor Gojong, Prince Hui. He was taken to Japan shortly afterwards under the pretense of educational purposes.

However, unlike his elder brother, Prince Geon, he maintained his identity as a Korean, despite his Japanese education. This made him the favorite son of his father, Prince Kang, who himself attempted to escape from Korea to join the exiled Korean government. He overcame all attempts by the Japanese to marry him off to a minor Japanese noble, and married Lady Park Chan-ju of the Bannam Park clan, a granddaughter of Marquis Pak Yung-hio who was a husband of Princess Yŏnghye of Korea. They had two children, Yi Cheong and Yi Jong.

Prince Yi served in the Japanese Army and was stationed in China. Commissioned a second lieutenant on 25 October 1933, he was promoted to lieutenant on 25 October 1935, to captain on 1 March 1938, to major on 15 October 1941 and to lieutenant colonel on 10 June 1945.

Death

Prince U was transferred to Hiroshima in 1945, and on 6 August 1945, he was mortally injured by the atomic bomb blast on the way to his office, and died later that day at a medical aid station. He was posthumously promoted to the rank of colonel.[1] On August 8, Adjutant Lieutenant Colonel Yoshinari Hiroshi (吉成 弘) committed suicide on account of not being able to save Prince Yi.[2] Thereafter his body was moved to Korea and was buried in Heungwon on 15 August 1945, the day the war ended.

Popular culture

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: August 15, 1945. His Highness Prince Ri Decorated, Promoted To Rank Of Colonel. Nippon Times. The Japan Times Archives.
  2. News: August 30, 1945. Army Officer Kills Self. Nippon Times. The Japan Times Archives.