Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904
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Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904
Summary
Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904 is a treaty[1]. It draws 10 Wikipedia views per month (treaty category, ranking #186 of 1,157).[2]
Key Facts
- Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904's instance of is recorded as treaty[3].
- Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904's follows is recorded as Japan–Korea Agreement of May 1904[4].
- Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904's followed by is recorded as Japan–Korea Agreement of April 1905[5].
- Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904's language of work or name is recorded as Japanese[6].
- Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904's language of work or name is recorded as Korean[7].
- Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904 was dissolved in +1965-00-00T00:00:00Z[8].
- Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904's publication date is recorded as +1904-08-22T00:00:00Z[9].
- Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904's point in time is recorded as +1904-08-22T00:00:00Z[10].
- Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0dr_kfm[11].
- Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904's signatory is recorded as Hayashi Gonsuke[12].
- Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904's signatory is recorded as Yun Ch'iho[13].
- Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904's first line is recorded as {'lang': 'ko', 'text': '大韓政府ᄂᆞᆫ大日本政府가推薦ᄒᆞᆫ바日本人一名을財政顧問으로ᄒᆞ야大韓政府에傭聘ᄒᆞ야財務에關ᄒᆞᄂᆞᆫ事項은一切其意見을詢ᄒᆞ야施行ᄒᆞᆯ事'}[14].
- Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904's first line is recorded as {'lang': 'ja', 'text': '韓國政府ハ日本政府ノ推薦スル日本人一名ヲ財務顧問トシテ韓國政府ニ傭聘シ財務ニ關スル事項ハ總テ其意見ヲ詢ヒ施行スヘシ'}[15].
- Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904's McCune–Reischauer romanization is recorded as Che-il-ch'a Han-il Hyŏp-yak[16].
- Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904's Revised Romanization is recorded as Je-il-cha Han-il Hyeop-yak[17].
- Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904's time period is recorded as Meiji era[18].
- Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904's National Library of Korea ID is recorded as KSH2000006668[19].
- Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904's copyright status is recorded as public domain[20].
Why It Matters
Japan–Korea Agreement of August 1904 draws 10 Wikipedia views per month (treaty category, ranking #186 of 1,157).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 9 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[21] It is known by 11 alternative names across languages and contexts.[22]