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First Lady of North Korea

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wife of the supreme leader of North Korea

First Lady of North Korea
Incumbent
Ri Sol Ju
since 15 April 2018
StyleRespected First Lady
ResidenceRyongsong Residence,Pyongyang,North Korea
Inaugural holderKim Song-ae
Formation17 December 1963

Thefirst lady of North Korea is the wife of thesupreme leader of North Korea and holds the official title ofRespected First Lady (Korean존경하는 녀사). The inaugural holder of the title wasKim Song-ae, the second wife of the first supreme leaderKim Il Sung. The title was not used during the tenure of the second supreme leaderKim Jong Il. It was revived by the third supreme leaderKim Jong Un, with his wifeRi Sol Ju being the second and current holder.

History

[edit]

As the wife of the first supreme leader Kim Il Sung, Kim Song-ae assumed the duties of first lady in 1963, eleven years after their marriage.[1][2][3][4] The position was left vacant under the leadership of the second supreme leader Kim Jong Il, who is believed to have married twice and to have had three domestic partnerships at different times.[5]

The third supreme leader Kim Jong Un reestablished the position in April 2018 when Ri Sol Ju, whom he married in 2009,[6][7][8] was elevated from the title of "comrade" to "RespectedFirst Lady". The promotion occurred ahead of theApril 2018 inter-Korean summit, where Ri andSouth Korean first ladyKim Jung-sook were in attendance.[9][10]

List

[edit]
No.PortraitName
(birth – death)
TenureAge at tenure startHusband
(year married)
1Kim Song-ae
(1924–2014)
17 December 1963 – 15 August 1974[citation needed]38 years, 353 daysKim Il Sung
(m. 1952)
2Portrait of Ri Sol JuRi Sol Ju
(b. 1989)
15 April 2018 – present[citation needed]28 years, 158 daysKim Jong Un
(m. 2009)

References

[edit]
  1. ^Eckert, Carter J.;Lee, Ki-baik; Lew, Young Ick; Robinson, Michael; Wagner, Edward W. (1990).Korea, Old and New: A History. Seoul: Korea Institute,Harvard University. p. 377.ISBN 978-0-9627713-0-9. Retrieved14 October 2024.
  2. ^"North Korea leader Kim Jong-un married to Ri Sol-ju".BBC News. 25 July 2012. Retrieved25 July 2012.
  3. ^Sang-hun Choe (25 July 2012)."North Korean Leader Marries".The New York Times. Retrieved25 July 2012.
  4. ^"Keeping up with the Kims: North Korea's elusive first family".BBC News. 29 August 2017. Retrieved29 August 2017.
  5. ^"The Women in Kim's Life". Time. Archived fromthe original on 10 July 2010. Retrieved10 July 2010.
  6. ^Joohee Cho (26 July 2012)."North Korea's First Lady Was Cheerleader, Ditches Drab Outfits".ABC News. Retrieved26 July 2012.
  7. ^Thayer, Nate (26 July 2012)."North Korea IDs Mystery Woman as Kim Jong-Un's Wife—But Who Is She, Really?".The Daily Beast. Retrieved26 July 2012.
  8. ^O'Connor, Tom (27 September 2017)."Meet Ri Sol Ju, wife of Kim Jong Un and first lady of North Korea".Newsweek. Retrieved10 February 2018.
  9. ^"Kim Jong-un elevates wife to position of North Korea's first lady".The Guardian. Seoul. Agence France-Presse. 19 April 2018. Retrieved19 April 2018.
  10. ^"First ladies of two Koreas meet for first time". 27 April 2018.

Further reading

[edit]
Spouses of national leaders
Republican leaders
First ladies
and
gentlemen
(may include
non-spouses)
Monarchs
Commonwealth
governors-general
Heads of government
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