Hwangbo Man-shik
Hwangbo Man-shik | |
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Native name | 황보만식 |
Nickname(s) | Tigerclaw |
Born | 7 June 1886 Taeju, Yeongpeong Province, Joyonghea |
Died | 10 February 1989 Taeju, Yeongpeong Province, Joyonghea | (aged 92)
Allegiance | Joyonghea |
Branch | Joyonghean Sovereign Army |
Years of service |
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Rank | |
Commands held | Special Operations Battalion, 52nd Infantry Regiment |
Battles/wars | |
Relations |
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Hwangbo Man-shik (7 June 1886 – 10 February 1989) is a Joyonghean soldier and intelligence officer. He is regarded for being a significant spy during the Great Eastern Rivalry, which he recounts in his 1978 memoir Tigerclaw: Recounts of Espionage.
Hwangbo was born in Taeju in 1886 to a hunting and farmer family. He is regarded for his leadership skills when leading hunts with his friends. In 1904, he decided to enroll in the Soverign Army Academy, Boyeong, and found intelligence appealing. He graduated 7th in his class in 1908. He participated in the Jeongsa War and served in Bactieu. Subsequently, he was transferred to Indiae to provide assistance to Aurucolian personnel in the Carnatic. During the Tibetian-Quenminese War, he was transferred to serve with Jang Iseul and Mun Baek-hyeon to infiltrate Quenminese bases and sabotage equipment while disguised as monks and pilgrims to assist the Tibetian war effort. He later resigned from the Army in 1934 in support of Iseul's information. He made a living off hunting, and in 1935, his face was scarred from an encounter of a famous tiger named "Man of Wrath" in Joyonghea, which fostered his nickname Tigerclaw. He was offered to join the Army again in 1941, and served with the newly formed Special Operations Battalion of the 52nd Infantry Regiment. Alongside Jang Iseul, he played a major role in Joyonghea's slow liberation during the Third Joyonghean-Quenminese War, the destabalization of Churuongchandat via the assassination of Uriangkadai in Operation Chosbul, and the destabilization of Quenminese military presence in Tibetia. During the War of Lorican Aggression, he replaced Iseul as Director of Army Intelligence from 1966 to the end of the war. He retired to continue pursuing his hunting career, and give advice to apprentice hunters. He died in his birthplace in 1989.