Kim Ja-jeom (original) (raw)

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Joseon scholar-official (1588–1652)

Kim Ja-jeom김자점
Chief state councillor
In office1646 – 22 June 1649
Preceded by Kim Ryu
Succeeded by Yi Gyeong-seok
Left state councillor
In office3 April 1646 – 12 May 1646
Preceded by Hong Seo-bong
Succeeded by Kim Sang-hyeon
In office29 December 1643 – 10 April 1644
Preceded by Sim Gi-won
Succeeded by Sim Yeol
Right state councillor
In office21 June 1643 – 14 January 1644
Preceded by Sim Gi-won
Succeeded by Yi Gyeong-yeo
Personal details
Born 1588
Died 27 January 1652(1652-01-27) (aged 63–64)
Spouse(s) Lady, of the Hwangju Byeon clanUnnamed womanUnnamed concubine
Children Kim Ryeon (son)Kim Sik (son)Kim Jeong (son)
Parents Kim Tak (father)Lady, of the Gigye Yu clan (mother)
Korean name
Hangul 김자점
Hanja
Revised Romanization Gim Jajeom
McCune–Reischauer Kim Cha-jŏm
Art name
Hangul 낙서
Hanja 西
Revised Romanization Nakseo
McCune–Reischauer Naksŏ
Courtesy name
Hangul 성지
Hanja
Revised Romanization Seongji
McCune–Reischauer Sŏngji

Kim Ja-jeom (Korean: 김자점; 1588 – 27 January 1652) was a Korean scholar-official of the Joseon dynasty period and Ming-Qing transition. He was one of the disciples of Seong Hon and came from the Andong Kim clan.

He was Joseon's chief state councillor from 1645 to 1650,[_citation needed_] and was an ancestor of Kim Ku, a famous Korean independence activist.[1]

In 1646, threatened by the return of Im Gyeong-eop to the capital, Kim Ja-jeom paid soldiers to assassinate Im Gyeong-eop.

  1. ^ Son, Sae-il (16 December 2003), "孫世一의 비교 傳記 (1)" [Son Sae-il's Comparative Critical Biography (1)], Monthly Chosun (in Korean), archived from the original on 1 May 2023, retrieved 1 May 2023