Karl Ivanovich Weber

Karl Ivanovich Weber (also Carl von Waeber; Russian: Карл Иванович Вебер, 17 June [O.S. 5 June] 1841 – 8 January 1910) was a diplomat of the Russian Empire and a personal friend to King Gojong of Korea's Joseon Dynasty. He is best known for his 1885–1897 service as Russia's first consul general to Korea.[1][2]

Karl Ivanovich Weber
Korean name
Hangul
위패
Hanja
Russian name
RussianКарл Иванович Вебер

Early life and career

Tomb of Weber, his wife Eugenie (1850–1921), and his son Ernst (1873–1917) in Radebeul

Weber was born to a middle-class family, and expressed an interest in the history of Asia from an early age. He graduated from the University of Saint Petersburg in 1865, and joined the diplomatic service the following year. His first overseas posting was in Beijing; he was named Russian Consul in Tianjin in 1882.[2]

In Korea

Weber signed the Treaty of Amity and Commerce between Russia and Korea on 25 June 1884, and moved to Seoul in April of the following year as Russia's first official representative to Korea.[2] He was accompanied by his wife as well as a housekeeper from Alsace, Antoinette Sontag.[3][4] His wife had personality conflicts with several other members of the Russian and German expatriate communities of Seoul; in particular, she was believed to be responsible for a malicious rumour in the late 1880s that the German consul, Ferdinand Krien, held orgies in the German legation.[4] During his early service in Korea, Weber developed his friendship with King Gojong; when the Russian government made known their intention to transfer him onward to another posting, King Gojong wrote a letter of protest to Nicholas II of Russia, dated 2 July 1895, in which he praised Weber's wisdom and asked that he be allowed to remain in Korea longer. His request was fulfilled when Alexei Speyer, Weber's intended replacement, was instead posted to Tokyo, Japan.[2]

After the 1895 assassination of Queen Min, Weber personally offered King Gojong refuge in the Russian Legation building in Jeongdong (modern-day Jung-gu, Seoul), where he lived between February 1896 and February 1897.[2] This time marked the height of Russian influence in Korea; Weber was able to persuade King Gojong to appoint a new cabinet consisting of a "pro-Russian faction" led by Yi Wan-yong, Yi Beom-jin, and Yi Yun-yong, and in May 1896 signed the Komura-Waeber Memorandum with his Japanese counterpart Komura Jutarō, granting Russia the right to station four companies of troops in the Korean peninsula, and requiring the Japanese to recognise the new cabinet.[2] Gojong was also quite impressed with Weber's housekeeper Sontag, and would go on to employ her as majordomo in charge of household affairs after he returned to the palace.[3]

Later career

Speyer finally arrived to replace Weber in September 1897, whereupon he returned to Saint Petersburg.[5] Weber would again visit Seoul in an official capacity in April 1903, on the eve of the Russo-Japanese War, for further talks with King Gojong. He was a recipient of the Order of St. Andrew, Russia's highest order of chivalry.[2] He died in Niederlößnitz and was buried in Kötzschenbroda, today both Radebeul. His tomb was designed by the architects Otto Rometsch[fn 1] and Adolph Suppes, with sculptures by Ernst Thalheim.[6]

Publications

  • Ch. Waeber (1900), Map of north-eastern China, Shanghai and London, OCLC 354973129, 497551936
  • Ch. de Waeber (1907), Index de la section géographique de la grande encyclopédie chinoise T'ou-chou-tsi-tch'eng, Saint-Pétersbourg: impr. de l'Académie impériale des sciences, OCLC 185170504, 252061484, 315451509, 458811458, 602347971
  • К. И. Вебер [Ch. de Waeber] (1907), О корейском языке и корейском чтении китайских иероглифов (O koreĭskom i︠a︡zyki︠e︡ i koreĭskom chtenīi kitaĭskikh īeroglifov = On the Korean language and reading of Chinese characters), Санкт-Петербург, OCLC 62584148, 162379237, 315453262
  • К. И. Вебер [Ch. de Waeber] (1907), Пробная транскрипция всех городов Кореи (Probnai︠a︡ transkript︠s︡īi︠a︡ nazvanīĭ vsi︠e︡kh gorodov Korei = Proposed transcription of the names of Korean towns), Санкт-Петербург, OCLC 62584149, 162379238, 707158002
gollark: Also also, `def __str__(self): pass` doesn't seem to do anything either.
gollark: Also, this function seems to have no valid reason to exist.
gollark: > def indIncreaseCounter(tickInstance):Python convention is to use `snake_case`, not `camelCase`.
gollark: Just looking at this file here: https://github.com/mHappah3019/Tick-Counter/blob/main/TickClass.py> # creates an attribute called identifier and assigns to it> # the value of the "identifier" parameter> # creates an attribute called macro and assigns to it the> # value of the "macro" parameterThese comments are not useful. It is generally assumed that whoever is reading your code is aware of the basics of how the language is used, so your comments should instead describe higher-level stuff like *why* it's doing what it does, what an entire function does, unusual things it might be doing, etc.
gollark: Increasing the version number would imply that it's actually a significant change.

See also

Notes

  1. See the article in the German Wikipedia: Otto Rometsch

References

  1. Gang, Gwang-sik (Spring 1986), Hwang Seong-mo (ed.), 英國의 對韓半島政策 展開樣式에 관한 硏究 [On the method of development of England's policy towards the Korean peninsula], 《정신문화연구》 (in Korean), Academy of Korean Studies (28): 97–121
  2. Volkov, M. (May 2004), "Русские в Корее- имена и судьбы (Russians in Korea - Names and Fates)", Korusforum Journal (in Russian), Center for Contemporary Korean Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences, 23, archived from the original on 27 September 2007
  3. Kneider, Hans Alexander (2010), "Deutsche Persönlichkeiten im Königreich Joseon", Koreana, 5 (1), pp. 84–85, archived from the original on 27 November 2010; available in English as: Remarkable Germans in the Choson Kingdom (PDF), Seoul: German Embassy in the Republic of Korea, archived from the original (PDF) on 18 July 2011, retrieved 2 September 2010
  4. Neff, Robert (20 October 2010), "First gentlemen's club in Seoul established in 1889", Korea Times, retrieved 21 October 2010
  5. Duus, Peter (1998), The Abacus and the Sword: The Japanese Penetration of Korea, 1895-1910, University of California Press, pp. 118–121, ISBN 0-520-21361-0
  6. Landesamt für Denkmalpflege Sachsen und Stadt Radebeul, ed. (2007), Stadt Radebeul, Denkmaltopographie Bundesrepublik Deutschland: Denkmale in Sachsen, Beucha: SAX-Verlag, ISBN 978-3-86729-004-3

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