wonsu
{{Short description|Korean military rank}}
{{Infobox Korean name
|hangul=원수
|hanja=元帥
|rr=Wonsu
|mr=Wŏnsu
}}
{{lang|ko-Latn|Wonsu}} is the highest military rank in the armed forces of North Korea and South Korea.Chung-in Moon, Understanding regime dynamics in North Korea International Political Science Association. World Congress – 1998 Page 105 "Kim Jong Il.. ... which places him at the top of the party hierarchy, he holds the titles of the chairman of the National Defense Commission and the supreme commander of the Korean People's Army (KPA). He is, moreover, one of the two marshals ({{lang|ko-Latn|Wonsu}}) in the DPRK, the other being Li Ul Sol who heads the KPA unit that guards top officials (howi ch'ongguk)."
Historical
The title of Wonsu or its variations had been used as the title of high-ranking military commanders in Korean history since Goryeo Dynasty onward. For example, Gwon Yul, a famous general in 16th century who rose to the supreme command of Korean forces during Imjin War held the title of "{{lang|ko-Latn|Do-wonsu}}", roughly translated as "high marshal".
North Korea
{{more citations needed|section|date=November 2015}}
{{lang|ko-Latn|Wonsu}} is a rank in the Korean People's Army of North Korea, equivalent to marshal in other armies. This rank is held by all Supreme Leaders of the DPRK.
While he was the Supreme Commander of the Korean People's Army, Kim Il Sung became North Korea's first marshal during the Korean War by the decision of the Supreme People's Assembly, the unicameral parliament of North Korea, on February 4, 1953. Period photographic evidence demonstrates that the early marshal shoulder board rank insignia was the same as that of the current vice marshal shoulder boards (a large star overlain with the Democratic People's Republic of Korea coat-of-arms).
The rank of vice marshal ({{lang|ko-Latn|chasu}}) is unique to the North Korean ranking system. Vice marshal was first conferred in February 1953 on Choe Yong-gon. Sources suggest that the shoulder board rank insignia for marshal and vice marshal then became a single large star without the state coat-of-arms (for marshals) and the state coat-of-arms without a star (for vice marshals).{{citation needed|date=August 2014}} By the time the next conferral of rank to vice marshal was awarded (1985), the shoulder board rank insignia for marshal and vice marshal had taken on their current design.
The next change in the DPRK marshal ranks took place in 1992 when the rank of dae wonsu or grand marshal (full title grand marshal of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea) was created for Kim Il Sung. At this time the rank of marshal was divided into two ranks: the rank of marshal with the title "marshal of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea" (konghwaguk wonsu) was conferred upon Kim Il Sung's son Kim Jong Il, and the same rank but with the title "marshal of the Korean People's Army" was conferred upon O Jin-u. In 1995, two other military officers were conferred the rank of marshal with the title "marshals of the Korean People's Army", i.e. Choe Kwang and Ri Ul-sol. Insignia of rank of the two grades of marshal are different (with the insignia for marshal of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea being more like that of grand marshal—the grand marshal insignia has a larger wreath encompassing the marshal's star—but is smaller as it is below the star itself).
Also, in 1992 eight other generals were promoted to vice marshal at which time in North Korea there was one grand marshal, one marshal of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, one marshal of the Korean People's Army and eight vice marshals.
The rank (as marshal of the DPRK) was bestowed to Kim Jong Un in 2012.
On April 15, 2016, Kim Yong-chun and Hyon Chol-hae were promoted to the rank of Marshal of the Korean People's Army, the first promotions of active duty officers after 21 years.
=Insignia=
{{see also|Military ranks of North Korea}}
style="border:1px solid #8888aa; background-color:#f7f8ff; padding:5px; font-size:95%; margin: 0px 12px 12px 0px;" | |
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! Rank group | colspan=4| General/flag officers |
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| Native name | {{lang|ko|대원수/大元帥}} | {{lang|ko|공화국원수/共和國元帥}} | {{lang|ko|인민군원수/人民軍元帥}} | |
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! Literal translation | Grand marshal | Marshal of the Republic | Marshal of the Army | |
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=List of Marshals of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea=
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! colspan=4 align="center" width="0"|Marshal of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea |
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!colspan=2 align="center" width="0"|Marshal !colspan=1 align="center" width="0"|Date of promotion !colspan=1 align="center" width="0"|Notes |
File:Kim Il Sung Portrait-3.jpg
|Kim Il Sung |7 February 1953 |Promoted to Grand Marshal of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea on 13 April 1992. |
File:Kim Jong il Portrait-2.jpg
|Kim Jong Il |20 April 1992 |Posthumously promoted to Grand Marshal of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea on 14 February 2012. |
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|Kim Jong Un |18 July 2012 |Promoted to Marshal of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea in July 2012.{{cite news |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-18881524 |title=North Korea's Kim Jong-un named 'marshal' |date=18 July 2012 |access-date=18 July 2012|url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120718074405/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-18881524 |archive-date=18 July 2012 |work=BBC News}} |
= List of Marshals of the Korean People's Army =
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!colspan=3 align="center" width="0"|Marshal of the Korean People's Army |
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!colspan=1 align="center" width="0"|Marshal !colspan=1 align="center" width="0"|Date of promotion !colspan=1 align="center" width="0"|Notes |
O Jin-u 오진우 1917–1995 |20 April 1992 | |
Choe Kwang 최광 1918–1997 |8 October 1995 | |
Ri Ul-sol 리을설 1921–2015 |8 October 1995 | |
Kim Yong-chun 김영춘 1936–2018 |14 April 2016 | |
Hyon Chol-hae 현철해 1934–2022 |14 April 2016 | |
Ri Pyong-chol 리병철 born 1948 |5 October 2020 | |
Pak Jong-chon 박정천 |5 October 2020 |Demoted to Vice Marshal of the Korean People's Army in June 2021, and was promoted back at an undisclosed time before September 2023.{{Cite web |first= |date=31 August 2023 |title=Kim Jong Un visits General Staff Post |url=https://dprktoday.com/abroad/songun/2146?lang=e |website= |publisher=dprktoday}} |
South Korea
{{More citations needed section|date=October 2021}}
{{Infobox military rank
| name = {{lang|ko-Latn|Wonsu}}
| native_name = {{lang|ko|원수|italic=no}}
| image = SouthKorea-Collar-OF-10.svg
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| caption = Insignia
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| country = {{flag|South Korea}}
| service branch = {{army|South Korea|name=Army}}
{{navy|South Korea|name=Navy}}
{{air force|South Korea|name=Air Force}}
| abbreviation =
| rank group = General officer
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| lower rank = {{lang|ko-Latn|Daejang}}
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{{lang|ko-Latn|Wonsu}} ({{langx|ko|원수}}), known in English as "General of the Army of the Republic of Korea" or "Admiral of the Fleet of the Republic of Korea", is the highest military rank of the Republic of Korea (ROK) armed forces and is the combined equivalent of a field marshal, fleet admiral and marshal of the Air Force in other nations. The rank is senior to that of {{lang|ko-Latn|Daejang}}. As of {{date}}, {{lang|ko-Latn|Wonsu}} only exists on paper, and has never been held by an officer of the South Korean Armed Forces. According to the Armed Forces Personnel Act of National Defense Law of the Republic of Korea, the {{lang|ko-Latn|wonsu}} is appointed from the {{lang|ko-Latn|daejang}} who has distinguished achievements.
The rank insignia for {{lang|ko-Latn|wonsu}} is heavily influenced by United States military insignia of General of the Army and General of the Air Force for Army and Air Force.{{cite book |last1=Katz |first1=Rodney P. |editor1-last=Savada |editor1-first=Andrea M. |editor2-last=Shaw |editor2-first=William |title=South Korea: a country study |series=Area Handbook |date=1992 |publisher=Library of Congress |location=Washington, D.C. |lccn=91039109 |page=291 |edition=4th |url=https://www.loc.gov/resource/frdcstdy.southkoreacountr00sava_0/?sp=341 |access-date=20 October 2021 |chapter=National Security}} While the rank insignia for the Navy remains the same the sleeve insignia for a naval officer promoted to the rank is the same sleeve insignia of Fleet admiral used in the United States Navy.
Homophone
Coincidentally, wonsu is also a word meaning "mortal enemy" (怨讐). The two words have different etymologies and hanja, but in South Korea are homophonous and so are written identically in hangul. In North Korea, the government has addressed the issue by changing the word for "enemy" to "wonssu" (원쑤).{{harvnb|Sohn|2006|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=H4CsWDEi52IC&pg=PA38 38]}}
See also
{{Portal|North Korea|South Korea}}
- Yuan Shuai, the Chinese equivalent, written identically in Hanja/Hanzi
- Republic of Korea Armed Forces
- Korean People's Army
- Six-star rank
References
= Citations =
{{Reflist}}
= Sources =
- {{citation |last = Sohn |first = Ho-min |year = 2006 |title = Korean language in culture and society |publisher = University of Hawaii Press |isbn = 978-0-8248-2694-9}}
{{Highest Military Ranks}}
{{North Korean marshals}}
{{Star officer ranks}}
{{italic title}}
Category:Military ranks of South Korea