Skip to content
Category

Yeosan Song clan

page 1
Song Hye-kyo
South Korean actress
Song Kang
South Korean actor
Song Bum-keun
South Korean association football player
Song Yo-chan
Prime MInister of South Korea, former Japanese soldier (1918-1980)
Song Young-gil
South Korean politician
Song Ikp'il
Korean scholar (1534-1599)
Jeongsun
Queen Dowager of Joseon
Song Eun-i
South Korean comedian and singer
Song Tae-kon
South Korean go player
Song Dae Kwan
South Korean singer
Kyongho
Kyong Ho Seonsa (; 1849–1912) was a famous Korean Sŏn master, and the 75th Patriarch of Korean Sŏn. His original name was Song Tonguk (); and his dharma name was Sŏng’u (). He is known as the reviver of modern Korean Sŏn Buddhism. Song Tonguk was born in southern Korea (Chŏnju, Chŏlla province), and entered the sangha at the age of nine in 1857. He ordained at Ch'ŏnggye monastery located at Uiwang, in Kyŏnggi province. The young monk studied under the tutelage of Kyehŏ–sŏnsa. When he was 14, in 1862, Kyehŏ–sŏnsa disrobed and sent Kyŏnghŏ–sŏnsa to Manhwa–sŏnsa for further study at Tonghak–sa. K
Song Hae
South Korean TV host and singer (1927–2022)
Mangong
Mangong (, 1871–1946) or Song Mangong was a Korean Buddhist monk, independence activist, scholar, poet, writer, and philosopher during the Japanese occupation of Korea. Mangong was born in Jeongeup, Jeonbuk Province in 1871 and was ordained at the age of 14. Though he spent three years teaching Zen tradition in Mahayeon Temple in Keumkang Mountain and briefly served as the abbot of Magok Temple, he spent most of his life teaching Zen at Deoksung Mountain in Yesan, Chungnam Province. Mangong revitalized the Zen tradition of Korean Buddhism along with his teacher, Zen Master Kyongho.
Song Sang-hyeon
korean politician (Joseon dynasty)
Song Giwon
South Korean writer
Song Yoo-geun
South Korean academic prodigy
Song Yeong-chang
South Korean actor
Song Du-yul
German sociologist
Song Ha-jin
South Korean politician