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What is the ending of "Korean Royal Family"?

The Korean dynasty was the last feudal dynasty in Korean history. Li Ju's life is the epitome of North Korea's shameful and tragic modern history. 1907, Li Tuo succeeded to the throne, and British Prince Li Yin was made Crown Prince. 19 10, the Japanese forcibly annexed the Korean peninsula, the Korean dynasty perished, and Li tuo became the last emperor.

Li Tuo receives a considerable amount of living expenses from the Japanese every year, maintaining a superficial imperial life. But soon, in order to consolidate its colonial rule and completely eliminate the ruling foundation of the former Korean dynasty, Japan moved its descendants to Japan. So, the prince's palace was built near Tokyo Palace (now Prince Akasaka Hotel) in Japan. 1926 Chunzong died, and the British prince succeeded to the throne and was placed under house arrest in Taiuterus. 193 1 year, the "Crown Prince" Li Ju was born here.

Li Jue was a conquered person from the day he was born, and he received slave education. The Japanese royal family conferred him the title of "Prince", and the Jeonju Lee Clan Association of South Korea also recognized him as "the grandson of the emperor" (Crown Prince). But these appellations remained in his life forever like shackles.

On August 1945, Japan was defeated and surrendered.

The hostage life of the British prince family is over, but there is no institution to support them. To their bewilderment, their family suddenly became stateless. Japan did not recognize them as Japanese, nor did the Li Chengwan government of South Korea recognize them as Koreans, and nationalized the palaces and other properties. The descendants of the royal family had to drag out an ignoble existence in Japan.

1963, Li Ju first set foot on the land of the motherland. He was 32 years old that year. After returning to China, he taught architecture at Seoul National University and started a company to undertake architectural design. "Building a number of beautiful buildings in the Republic of Korea" was his goal, but just as he was about to show his talents, his company went bankrupt at 1979. Lee left North Korea for Japan in despair.

During his stay in Japan, the clan association advised Li Ju to divorce on the grounds that his wife Juliet was "childless". 1982, Li Ju was forced to end her marriage and live with a Japanese fortune teller. After the divorce, Juliet stayed in Korea and made a living by making handicrafts. 1995, poor Juliet returned to America alone. Juliet returned to Korea in 2000. At that time, her greatest wish was to meet Curie, but she failed to do so.

She gave hundreds of royal cultural relics to the Korean government and then returned to the United States with a sad heart.

Li Ju has a distant relative in Japan who often takes care of him. On July 19, relatives called Li Ju, but no one answered. So he ran to the hotel and unexpectedly found that Curie had died in the bathroom. After the autopsy, the Japanese procuratorate determined that the death was due to myocardial infarction, and the estimated time of death was1July 6. The relative said that Li Ju had been unable to make a living before his death. In June, because he couldn't pay the rent, he had to leave home and stay in a hotel.

After Li Ju's death, a mourning hall was temporarily set up in Taitung District of Tokyo. According to the host of the mourning hall, "there are very few people here, that is, 10 to 15 people." On July 20th, Li Ju's body was airlifted to Seoul. South Korea announced that it will set up a mourning hall and hold a funeral in Leshan Zhai, the ancient palace of South Korea, on the morning of July 24th 10. Li Ju will be buried in the British Prince's Mausoleum in Nanyang County, Gyeonggi Province.