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  1. Park Chung Hee (Korean: 박정희; November 14, 1917 – October 26, 1979) was a South Korean politician and army general. After seizing power in the May 16 coup of 1961, he was elected as the 3rd President of South Korea in 1963.

  2. Park Chung Hee, the third President of South Korea, was assassinated on October 26, 1979, during a dinner at the Korean Central Intelligence Agency (KCIA) safe house near the Blue House presidential compound in Jongno District, Seoul, South Korea. It was the first assassination of a head of state in Korea in 605 years, since the assassination ...

  3. Park Geun-hye ( Korean : 박근혜 ; RR : Bak Geun (-)hye; IPA: [pak‿k͈ɯn.hje]; often in English / ˈpɑːrkˌɡʊnˈheɪ /; born 2 February 1952) is a South Korean politician who served as the 11th (18th election) president of South Korea from 2013 to 2017, when she was impeached and convicted on related corruption charges .

  4. May 14, 2024 · Park Chung-Hee was a South Korean general and politician, president of the Republic of Korea from 1963 to his death. His 18-year rule brought about enormous economic expansion, though at the cost of civil liberties and political freedom.

  5. Aug 10, 2011 · The history of modern Korea is dominated by the figure of Park Chung-hee. Through his vision and forceful conviction, the compact dictator — Park was 1.63 meters tall — transformed a people who...

  6. Park Chung-hee (September 30 or November 14, 1917 – October 26, 1979) stands as the dominant figure in the Republic of Korea's history and particularly in the development of modern South Korea.

  7. Jul 1, 2015 · Park Chung Hee was one of the most important leaders of the second half of the twentieth century. The Republic of Korea (ROK) is one of the greatest economic success stories in history, thanks to Park's obsessive pursuit of economic strength.

  8. The first volume of a comprehensive two-part history, Park Chung Hee and Modern Korea: The Roots of Militarism, 1866–1945 reveals how the foundations of the dynamic but strongly authoritarian Korean state that emerged under Park were laid during the period of Japanese occupation.

  9. Whether one tends toward praise or criticism of the eighteen-year rule of Park Chung Hee, few would deny that Park and his associates brought to the South Korean modernization project of the 1960s and 1970s an affirmative “can-do” spirit that the new government then sought to infuse into the populace as a whole.

  10. Park Chung Hee as the Leader of South Korea. Park Chung Hee was a general when he seized power in a 1961 coup d'etat known as the May 16 Revolution after an attempt at parliamentary democracy ended in chaos.