Upper class couples
[IMG] [/IMG]
[IMG] [/IMG]
Family photos
[IMG] [/IMG]
[IMG] [/IMG]
Minister Yun Ung-nyeol playing xiangqi with his friend (1903)
[IMG] [/IMG]
Dancers at the theater "Hyopyul-sa" founded in 1902.
[IMG] [/IMG]
[B]Korean church communities (1907 - 1940)[/B]
Pyongyang Central Presbyterian Church, 1907
[img] [/img]
[img] [/img]
1907 Pyongyang Revival
[img] [/img]
Street evangelists
[img] [/img]
Another church in Pyongyang, probably during the colonial period
[img] [/img]
Sunday school group, Seoul (~1940). or so. You can see Sun Myung Moon second from right in the top row of boys
[img] [/img]
Crown Princess Uimin of Korea (also Euimin, Japanese: 李方子 Ri Masako) (4 November 1901 – 30 April 1989) was the consort of Crown Prince Euimin of Korea. She and her husband would have been the emperor and empress of the Empire of Korea if Korea had not been annexed to the Empire of Japan in 1910.Born Princess Masako Nashimoto, she was the first daughter of Japanese aristocrat Prince Nashimoto Morimasa, the seventh son of Prince Kuni Asahiko, and his wife, Princess Itsuko, a daughter of Marquis Naohiro Nabeshima. She was a first cousin of Empress Kōjun of Japan, the wife of Emperor Shōwa and mother of Emperor Akihito, and of Princess Yoshiko, the wife of Prince Yi Geon. On her mother's side, she was also a first cousin of Princess Setsuko, the wife of Prince Chichibu, Emperor Hirohito's younger brother.
66 Photos of Korea after Liberation Day
http://www.huffingtonpost.kr/2015/08...krhpmg00000001
Highlights and English commentary here:
http://beyondhallyu.com/culture/amaz...iberation-day/