Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Kim_Chon-hae> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 51 of
51
with 100 items per page.
- Kim_Chon-hae abstract "Kim Chon-hae (Hangul: 김천해; hanja: 金天海; RR: Gim Cheon-hae, Japanese reading: Kin Tenkai; 10 May 1898, Ulsan-gun, South Gyeongsang – 1969?) was a Zainichi Korean who was a leading figure in the Japanese Communist Party and a founder of the pro-communist League of Koreans in Japan, predecessor of the modern Chongryon. He was subsequently a politician in North Korea, holding posts connected to the Workers' Party of Korea.Born in 1898 at Ulsan, in 1920 he moved to Japan and studied mathematics at Nihon University in Tokyo. While there, he organized a Korean workers' movement and was elected chairman of the Federal Union of Zainichi Koreans. Detained as a political prisoner, he was released in 10 October 1945 after Japan's defeat in the Second World War, and became a member of the executive committee of the JCP.Although the League of Koreans was founded as a non-political organization, his appointment as supreme adviser ensured its drift toward the left. Under Kim's influence, the League purged its anti-communist members and in February 1946 it joined the Korean Democratic National Front. In 1951, Edward Wagner described Kim as "the man who probably is to be credited more than any other with shaping the League's political orientation and preserving its undeviating character".He subsequently moved to North Korea in 1950 and became a member of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea, and from April 1956 he served as chairman of the Fatherland Front. He remained in the Front's presidium through the first half of the 1960s. North Korean official sources state that Kim died in 1969, but the actual date and circumstances of his death are unknown.".
- Kim_Chon-hae birthDate "1898-05-10".
- Kim_Chon-hae birthPlace South_Gyeongsang_Province.
- Kim_Chon-hae birthPlace Ulsan.
- Kim_Chon-hae birthYear "1898".
- Kim_Chon-hae thumbnail Kim_Chyon-hae.JPG?width=300.
- Kim_Chon-hae wikiPageID "35850385".
- Kim_Chon-hae wikiPageRevisionID "546345681".
- Kim_Chon-hae dateOfBirth "1898-05-10".
- Kim_Chon-hae hangul "김천해".
- Kim_Chon-hae hangulho "김학의".
- Kim_Chon-hae hasPhotoCollection Kim_Chon-hae.
- Kim_Chon-hae img "Kim Chyon-hae.JPG".
- Kim_Chon-hae mr "Kim Ch'ŏn-hae".
- Kim_Chon-hae mrho "Kim Hak-ŭi".
- Kim_Chon-hae name "Kim, Chon-hae".
- Kim_Chon-hae placeOfBirth "Ulsan, South Gyeongsang, Korean".
- Kim_Chon-hae rr "Gim Cheon-hae".
- Kim_Chon-hae rrho "Gim Hak-ui".
- Kim_Chon-hae shortDescription "Japanese and North Korean politician".
- Kim_Chon-hae text Japanese_name.
- Kim_Chon-hae description "Japanese and North Korean politician".
- Kim_Chon-hae description "Japanese and North Korean politician".
- Kim_Chon-hae subject Category:Japanese_Communist_Party_politicians.
- Kim_Chon-hae subject Category:Korean_communists.
- Kim_Chon-hae subject Category:North_Korean_politicians.
- Kim_Chon-hae type Agent.
- Kim_Chon-hae type Person.
- Kim_Chon-hae type Person.
- Kim_Chon-hae type Q215627.
- Kim_Chon-hae type Q5.
- Kim_Chon-hae type Agent.
- Kim_Chon-hae type NaturalPerson.
- Kim_Chon-hae type Thing.
- Kim_Chon-hae type Person.
- Kim_Chon-hae comment "Kim Chon-hae (Hangul: 김천해; hanja: 金天海; RR: Gim Cheon-hae, Japanese reading: Kin Tenkai; 10 May 1898, Ulsan-gun, South Gyeongsang – 1969?) was a Zainichi Korean who was a leading figure in the Japanese Communist Party and a founder of the pro-communist League of Koreans in Japan, predecessor of the modern Chongryon.".
- Kim_Chon-hae label "Kim Chon-hae".
- Kim_Chon-hae label "金天海".
- Kim_Chon-hae label "金天海".
- Kim_Chon-hae sameAs 金天海.
- Kim_Chon-hae sameAs 김천해.
- Kim_Chon-hae sameAs m.0jws5y0.
- Kim_Chon-hae sameAs Q5366258.
- Kim_Chon-hae sameAs Q5366258.
- Kim_Chon-hae wasDerivedFrom Kim_Chon-hae?oldid=546345681.
- Kim_Chon-hae depiction Kim_Chyon-hae.JPG.
- Kim_Chon-hae givenName "Chon-hae".
- Kim_Chon-hae isPrimaryTopicOf Kim_Chon-hae.
- Kim_Chon-hae name "Chon-hae Kim".
- Kim_Chon-hae name "Kim, Chon-hae".
- Kim_Chon-hae surname "Kim".