Family
- Father: King Wonjong
- Mother: Queen Inheon of the Neungsung Gu clan (인헌왕후 구씨)
- Consorts:
- Queen Inryeol of the Cheongju Han clan (인렬왕후 한씨)
- Queen Jangryeol of the Yangju Jo clan (장렬왕후 조씨)
- Deposed Jo Gwi-in (폐귀인 조씨)
- Jang Gwi-in (귀인 장씨)
- Issue:
- Prince Successor Sohyeon (소현세자), 1612–1645) - 1st Son of Queen Inryeol of the Cheongju Han clan.
- Grand Prince Bongrim (봉림대군), 1619–1659) - 2nd Son of Queen Inryeol of the Cheongju Han clan.
- Grand Prince Inpyeong (인평대군, 1622–1658) - 3rd Son of Queen Inryeol of the Cheongju Han clan.
- Grand Prince Yongseong (용성대군) - 4th Son of Queen Inryeol of the Cheongju Han clan.
- Prince Sungseon (숭선군) - 1st Son of Deposed Jo Gwi-in.
- Prince Nakseon (낙선군) - 2nd Son of Deposed Jo Gwi-in.
- Princess Hyomyeong (효명옹주) - Only Daughter of Deposed Jo Gwi-in.
Read more about this topic: Injo Of Joseon
Famous quotes containing the word family:
“With a new familiarity and a flesh-creeping homeliness entirely of this unreal, materialistic world, where all sentiment is coarsely manufactured and advertised in colossal sickly captions, disguised for the sweet tooth of a monstrous baby called the Public, the family as it is, broken up on all hands by the agency of feminist and economic propaganda, reconstitutes itself in the image of the state.”
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“For every nineteenth-century middle-class family that protected its wife and child within the family circle, there was an Irish or a German girl scrubbing floors in that home, a Welsh boy mining coal to keep the home-baked goodies warm, a black girl doing the family laundry, a black mother and child picking cotton to be made into clothes for the family, and a Jewish or an Italian daughter in a sweatshop making ladies dresses or artificial flowers for the family to purchase.”
—Stephanie Coontz (20th century)
“True spoiling is nothing to do with what a child owns or with amount of attention he gets. he can have the major part of your income, living space and attention and not be spoiled, or he can have very little and be spoiled. It is not what he gets that is at issue. It is how and why he gets it. Spoiling is to do with the family balance of power.”
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