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Queen Ansun

Queen Ansun
안순왕후
安順王后
Grand queen dowager of Joseon
Tenure19 January 1495 – 3 February 1499
PredecessorGrand Queen Dowager Jaseong
Successor
Queen dowager of Joseon
Tenure31 December 1469 – 19 January 1495
PredecessorQueen Dowager Jaseong
Successor
Queen consort of Joseon
Tenure3 October 1468 – 31 December 1469
PredecessorQueen Jeonghui
SuccessorQueen Gonghye
Born27 April 1445
Ansan, Gyeonggi Province, Joseon
Died12 February 1499 (1499-02-13) (aged 53)
Jagyeongjeon Hall, Gyeongbokgung, Hanseong, Joseon
Burial
SpouseYi Hwang, King Yejong (m.1463–d.1469)
Issue
Posthumous name
인혜명의소휘제숙안순왕후; 仁惠明懿昭徽齊淑安順王后
HouseCheongju Han
FatherHan Baek-ryun, Internal Prince Cheongcheon
MotherInternal Princess Consort Seoha of the Pungcheon Im clan
Queen Ansun
Hangul
안순
Hanja
安順
Revised RomanizationAnsun
McCune–ReischauerAnsun

Queen Ansun (Korean안순왕후; Hanja安順王后; 27 April 1445 – 12 February 1499) of the Cheongju Han clan, was the second wife and queen consort of King Yejong, the 8th Joseon monarch.[2] She was queen consort from 1468, until her husband's death in 1469, after which she was honoured as Queen Dowager Inhye (인혜왕대비) during her adoptive son, King Seongjong's reign, and later as Grand Queen Dowager Inhye (인혜대왕대비) during her grandnephew, King Yeonsangun's reign.

Biography

The future Queen Ansan was born on 18 April 1445 into the Cheongju Han clan, as the second child and eldest daughter of Han Baek-ryun and his second wife, Lady Im of the Pungcheon Im clan.[3]

On her paternal side, Lady Han was a fifth cousin to Queen Jangsun and Queen Gonghye as they shared Han Ak as their ancestor. She was also a fourth cousin once removed to Queen Sohye, as they also shared Han Ak as their ancestor.

In 1462, Crown Princess Han, the Crown Princess Consort of the then Crown Prince Yi Hwang, died. As Lady Han was born in the same year as Ansun, she was chosen as a concubine of Crown Prince Yi Hwang in 1463 and received the title of So-hun (junior 5th rank);[4] thereafter she was known as Royal Consort So-hun of the Cheongju Han clan and lived temporarily within the residence of Dong Palace. Although she was not a primary consort, she received the treatment of one.[5]

Royal Consort So-hun gave birth to two daughters and two sons, including Yi Hyeon, Grand Prince Jean and Princess Hyeonsuk, however only one prince and one princess survived through childhood.

In 1468, the Crown Prince took over the throne and became the 8th Joseon King, after Sejo abdicated due to illness. Consort So-hun was the one nominated by the former King to become the new Queen Consort. Since she was nearly due to give birth at that time, guards were sent to her maternal home to guide the future Queen.

Her time as Queen Consort was short, as her husband died only 13 months after his ascension and, to make the situation worse, her son, Grand Prince Jean, was deemed too young to be invested as the new King. Hence, her mother-in-law, Queen Dowager Jaseong and Han Myeong-hoe, the Chief State Councillor at that time, chose Prince Jasan, Han Myeong-hoe's son-in-law and Yejong's nephew, to become the successor. Since the Queen was the former King's wife, she was legally the mother of the new monarch, Yi Hyeol, King Seongjong, and was honored as Queen Dowager Inhye (인혜왕대비).[6]

Conflicts happened when the King's deceased father, Crown Prince Uigyeong, was posthumously declared as King, which made his widow, Crown Princess Consort Su (Seongjong's mother), a Queen Dowager (with the honorary name Insu). Because there was a need to determine the seniority between Inhye and Insu, Grand Queen Dowager Jaseong, as the eldest member of the Royal Family, solved the problem by declaring that Insu was entrusted with the task of protecting Yejong by the late Sejo of Joseon, implying her seniority above both King Yejong and Queen Dowager Inhye.

Seongjong's wife died in 1474, at the age 17, and was posthumously honoured as Queen Gonghye. The Ksitigarbha Pranidahana Sutra (The Great Vows of Ksitigarbha Bodhisattva) was commissioned by the three Queens Dowager through the Royal Treasury Agency. This Sutra is now considered an important artifact for the study of printing and Buddhism during the Joseon Dynasty.[2]

Grand Queen Dowager Jaseong died in 1483, and was posthumously honoured as Queen Jeonghui. Her death made Inhye the most senior member of the royal family after Queen Insu.

After Seongjong's death, in 1494, Inhye was honoured as Grand Queen Dowager Inhye.

She died at the age of 53, during the reign of her grandnephew, Yeonsangun, and was posthumously known as Queen Ansun (안순왕후).

Family

Parents

  • Father − Han Baek-ryun (한백륜; 韓伯倫; 1427–1474)
  • Mother
    • Step - Lady Hwang of the Hoideok Hwang clan (회덕 황씨 懷德 黃氏; 1425–?)
    • Biological - Internal Princess Consort Seoha of the Pungcheon Im clan (서하부부인 풍천 임씨; 西河府夫人 豊川 任氏; 1432–1472), Han Baek-ryun's second wife

Sibling

  • Older brother − Han Hwan (한환; 韓懽; 1441–?)
  • Younger sister − Princess Consort Cheonan of the Cheongju Han clan (천안군부인 청주 한씨; 1447–?)
  • Younger brother − Han Yeol (한열; 韓悅; 1449–?)
  • Younger sister - Lady Han of the Cheongju Han clan (청주 한씨; 1451–?); Nam Hyo-won's first wife
  • Younger brother − Han Hang (한항; 韓恒; 1451–?)
  • Younger brother − Han Sun (한순; 韓恂; 1453–1541)
  • Younger sister − Lady Han of the Cheongju Han clan (정부인 청주 한씨; 貞夫人 淸州 韓氏; 1459–?)
  • Younger sister - Lady Han of the Cheongju Han clan (청주 한씨; 1465–?)

Consort

Issue

  • Daughter - Princess Hyeonsuk (현숙공주; 1464–1502)
  • Son - Yi Hyeon, Grand Prince Jean (이현 제안대군; 13 February 1466 – 14 December 1525).
  • Daughter - Princess Hyesun (혜순공주; September 1468 – 5 August 1469)
  • Unnamed grand prince (대군; 1468–1472)
  • Portrayed by Lee In-hye and Gim Eun-ju in the 1994 KBS2 TV series Han Myeong-hoe.
  • Portrayed by Choi Eun-sook in the 1995 KBS2 TV series Jang Nok Soo.
  • Portrayed by Gyeong In-seon in the 1998–2000 KBS TV series King and Queen.
  • Portrayed by Lee Jae-in in the SBS 2007–2008 TV series The King and I.
  • Portrayed by Lee Yeon-doo and Gim Won-hee in the 2011–2012 JTBC TV series Insu, The Queen Mother.

References

  1. ^ "Royal Tombs; Seooreung, Onreung, Seosamneung". Cultural Heritage Administration. 2008-06-27. Retrieved June 5, 2014.
  2. ^ a b "Treasure 1567". Cultural Heritage Administration. 2006. Retrieved June 5, 2014.
  3. ^ Kim-Renaud, Young-Key (2015-02-24). Creative Women of Korea: The Fifteenth Through the Twentieth Centuries: The Fifteenth Through the Twentieth Centuries. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-47365-7.
  4. ^ Kim, Soo Ja (December 2017). "Post-Colonialism and the Restoration of Cultural Identity : A Study on the Reconstruction of Changgyeong Palace :A Study on the Reconstruction of Changgyeong Palace". The Review of Korean Studies (in Korean). 20 (2): 53–80. doi:10.25024/review.2017.20.2.003. ISSN 1229-0076.
  5. ^ Duncan, John (2004), "The Naehun and the Politics of Gender in Fifteenth-Century Korea", Creative Women of Korea: The Fifteenth Through the Twentieth Centuries, Routledge, doi:10.4324/9781315705378, ISBN 978-1-315-70537-8, retrieved 2024-01-30
  6. ^ Haewon, Kang; Goeun, L. E. E.; Twining, Lyndsey; Jeongsoo, Shin (June 2017). "An Annotated Translation of Daily Records of King Yeonsangun, Chapter One (the 25th Day to the 29th Day of the 12th Month of 1494)". The Review of Korean Studies (in Korean). 20 (1): 173–217. doi:10.25024/review.2017.20.1.007. ISSN 1229-0076.
Queen Ansun
Cheongju Han clan
Royal titles
Preceded by
Queen Jeonghui
of the Papyeong Yun
Queen consort of Joseon
1468–1469
Succeeded by
Han Song-yi, Queen Gonghye
of the Cheongju Han clan
Preceded by
Queen Dowager Jaseong (Jeonghui)
of the Papyeong Yun clan
Queen dowager of Joseon
1469–1494
with Han Jeong, Queen Dowager Insu (Sohye; 1475–1494)
Succeeded by
Queen Dowager Jasun (Jeonghyeon)
of the Papyeong Yun clan
Preceded by Grand queen dowager of Joseon
1494–1498
with Han Jeong, Grand Queen Dowager Insu (Sohye)
Succeeded byas sole grand queen dowager