"E2024-G180"의 두 판 사이의 차이
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== Narrative == | == Narrative == | ||
| − | [[수피아여학교|Speer Memorial | + | [[수피아여학교|Speer Memorial Girls’ School]] was founded in 1908 by the missionary [[배유지|Eugene Bell (1868-1925)]], with [[엄언라|Ella Graham (1889-1930)]] as the school’s first principal. Later principals included [[구애라|Anna McQueen (1883-1964)]], [[마정원|Margaret Martin (1892-?)]], [[유화례|Florence E. Root (1893-1996)]], and [[김필례|Kim Pil-rye (1891-1983)]]. In 1937, Principal Root shut down the school herself in protest against imperial Japan’s forced worship of Shinto shrines. The school reopened after Korea’s liberation in 1945. In 1951, the school was split into a middle and high school. |
| − | The young women of Speer were active participants in the anti-Japanese independence movement. The students participated in the [[광주_3.1운동|March | + | The young women of Speer were active participants in the anti-Japanese independence movement. The students participated in the [[광주_3.1운동|March First Movement of 1919]], with 22 students being arrested. Among them, teacher [[박애순|Bak Ae-sun]] and student [[윤형숙|Yun Hyeong-suk]] led the demonstrations. The schools students participated in the pro-independence [[광주학생운동|Gwangju Student Movement]] of 1929. The movement began in November 1929 and lasted until March 1930. It is considered one of the three major independence movements of the colonial period, along with the March 1 Movement and the June 10 Movement of 1926. At the time of the movement, the students of Speer had formed an underground independence gathering. Upon being discovered in 1933, those involved were imprisoned, and this became know as the [[백청단_사건|Baekcheongdan Incident]]. Those imprisonsed included [[조아라|Jo A-ra (1912-2003)]], known as the “Mother of Gwangju.” |
==Network Graph== | ==Network Graph== | ||
| 11번째 줄: | 11번째 줄: | ||
==Story Map== | ==Story Map== | ||
| + | *[[S2024-G011| Women and Democracy: The Untold Stories of May 18]] | ||
| + | ** [[E2024-G087|The Role of the YWCA in the May 18 Democratic Uprising]] | ||
| + | ** [[E2024-G090|Women and the May 18 Democratic Uprising]] | ||
| + | ** [[E2024-G180|The Young Women of Speer Girls’ School and the Independence Movement]] | ||
| + | ** [[E2024-G163|The Western Women Who Helped Lead Gwangju’s Modern Women’s Education]] | ||
| + | ** [[E2024-G184|Kim Pil-rye: Leader of Modern Women’s Education in Gwangju]] | ||
[[분류:Story]] [[분류:이야기 조각]] [[분류:린지]] | [[분류:Story]] [[분류:이야기 조각]] [[분류:린지]] | ||
2025년 10월 11일 (토) 14:49 기준 최신판
The Young Women of Speer Girls’ School and the Independence Movement
Narrative
Speer Memorial Girls’ School was founded in 1908 by the missionary Eugene Bell (1868-1925), with Ella Graham (1889-1930) as the school’s first principal. Later principals included Anna McQueen (1883-1964), Margaret Martin (1892-?), Florence E. Root (1893-1996), and Kim Pil-rye (1891-1983). In 1937, Principal Root shut down the school herself in protest against imperial Japan’s forced worship of Shinto shrines. The school reopened after Korea’s liberation in 1945. In 1951, the school was split into a middle and high school.
The young women of Speer were active participants in the anti-Japanese independence movement. The students participated in the March First Movement of 1919, with 22 students being arrested. Among them, teacher Bak Ae-sun and student Yun Hyeong-suk led the demonstrations. The schools students participated in the pro-independence Gwangju Student Movement of 1929. The movement began in November 1929 and lasted until March 1930. It is considered one of the three major independence movements of the colonial period, along with the March 1 Movement and the June 10 Movement of 1926. At the time of the movement, the students of Speer had formed an underground independence gathering. Upon being discovered in 1933, those involved were imprisoned, and this became know as the Baekcheongdan Incident. Those imprisonsed included Jo A-ra (1912-2003), known as the “Mother of Gwangju.”
Network Graph