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| Two '''Japanese invasions of Korea''' and subsequent battles on the [[Korean peninsula]] took place during the years 1592–1598. [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi]] led the newly unified Japan into these invasions with the professed goal of conquering [[Ming Dynasty]] [[China]]. The invasions are also known as '''Hideyoshi's invasions of Korea''', the '''Seven Year War''' (in reference to its span) and the '''Imjin War''' (in reference to the "Imjin" year of the [[sexagenary cycle]] in [[Korean language|Korean]]).<ref name="yonhap">{{cite news
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| | {{Image|The Japanese Landing At Busan.jpg|right|320px|The Japanese landing at Busan.}} |
| | The '''Korean War of 1592-1598''' was a major conflict between [[Japan]] and the alliance of [[Ming Dynasty|Ming]] of China and [[Joseon Dynasty|Joseon]] of [[Korea]]. Japan invaded Korea on [[May 23]], with the larger objective to conquer the entirety of Asia (and the whole world)<ref name="Hawleyxii-iii">Hawley, 2005. pp. xii-iii</ref> by using Korea as a land bridge to China. The battles that involved 300,000 combatants and claimed more than 2 million lives took place mostly on the Korean peninsula and its nearby waters. The war consisted of two main invasions from Japan – the first in 1592 and 1593, and the second from 1597 to 1598. |
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| | [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi]], the predominant warlord in Japan, had for long been aspiring to leave his name in history as a great conqueror of [[Asia]]. Even before unifying all of Japan in 1590, Hideyoshi in 1587 began sending ambassadorial missions to Korea in order to threaten the peninsular neighbor to submit and join with Japan in a war against China. Most of Hideyoshi's message initially failed to get across to the Korean side, however, since Hideyoshi relied on [[Tsushima Island]] as his main diplomatic channel to Korea, and Tsushima was a major beneficiary of the free trade between Korea and Japan during peacetime. During the subsequent diplomatic exchanges, the Koreans rejected Hideyoshi's demands, but they also refused to recognize his threats. The first invasion was launched late in May of 1592, commanded by Hideyoshi ''in absentia''. |
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| | The Japanese troops first attacked the southeastern part of Korea and advanced northwestward to the capital. Hanseong, Korea's capital and present-day [[Seoul]], fell within 3 weeks, and most of the peninsula came into Japanese control before the year's end. Without understanding the serious magnitude of the crisis, China initially responded by sending an advance force of 5,000 troops late in August, but the expedition was horribly outnumbered and defeated by the Japanese troops in [[Pyeongyang]]. Within a few days of the Chinese defeat, however, the Korean admiral [[Yi Sunshin]] annihilated the Japanese fleet tasked with securing the supply route to the Yellow Sea that would continue the invasion into China. On January 1, 1593, the Chinese launched a counter-offensive with 30,000 troops and reclaimed Hanseong by the middle of May. With the southeastern parts of the peninsula in Japanese possession, the two sides spent several years in diplomatic talks; the Japanese officials justified their invasion by asserting that Korea carried out policies to prevent Japan from entering the Chinese tributary system. Consequently the Chinese diplomats went to Japan and invested Hideyoshi, whose subordinates misled him into believing that the Chinese had come to surrender in person. The peace negotiations culminated in a second wave of invasion in October of 1597, after Hideyoshi learned the truth about the Chinese visit. The Japanese had different objectives in the second invasion, as Hideyoshi was primarily concerned with saving face against China, and his commanders sought to keep the southern parts of the peninsula as reward for their efforts. After scoring some points against the Chinese troops and wreaking unrestrained havoc on the civilians, the invaders turned back and began to partially withdraw by mid-1598.<ref>Swope, 2005. pp. 40</ref> The final climax of the war was the [[Battle of Noryang|naval battle]] at the straits of [[Noryang]] on December 16, when the combined Sino-Korean fleet defeated a sizable Japanese fleet from the east. The hundred or so surviving Japanese ships from the battle as well as those from the north that escaped the Sino-Korean naval blockade which was lifted prior to engagement arrived at Busan several days later, whereupon the final evacuation began. The last Japanese ships set sail on December 24, 1598.<ref name="hawley556">Hawley, 2005. pp. 556</ref> |
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| | The war is known by several English titles, including the '''Hideyoshi's invasions of Korea''', in context of Hideyoshi’s biography; the '''Seven Year War''', in reference to the war’s duration; and the '''Imjin War''', in reference to the war's first year, which was ''Imjin'', meaning water and dragon, in the 60-year cycle of the [[Chinese dating system]].<ref name="yonhap">{{cite news |
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| | publisher = Yonhap News Agency of Korea | | | publisher = Yonhap News Agency of Korea |
| | date = [[2006-11-28]] | | | date = 2006-11-28 |
| | url = http://find.galegroup.com/itx/infomark.do?&contentSet=IAC-Documents&type=retrieve&tabID=T004&prodId=ITOF&docId=A155053120&source=gale&srcprod=ITOF&userGroupName=tel_middleten&version=1.0 | | | url = http://find.galegroup.com/itx/infomark.do?&contentSet=IAC-Documents&type=retrieve&tabID=T004&prodId=ITOF&docId=A155053120&source=gale&srcprod=ITOF&userGroupName=tel_middleten&version=1.0 |
| | accessdate = 2007-03-24 }}</ref> The Korean name for the war means "the Japanese-started Invasion of the Year of the Dragon"; the Japanese, "Joseon Campaign"; and the Chinese, "the Eastern Pacification".<ref name="barry1-2">Strauss, Barry. pp. 1-2</ref> | | | accessdate = 2007-03-24 }}</ref> The Koreans call the war "the bandit invasion of the year Imjin." The various Japanese titles include the "Korean War", and the "Pottery War" and "War of Celadon and Metal Type" (in reference to the ceramic and metal printing technologies and booty that the returning Japanese soldiers brought home from the war). The Chinese generally use "the Korean Campaign" to refer to the war.<ref name="Hawleyxii-iii"/> |
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| The first invasion (1592–1593) is literally called the "Japanese ([[Wa (Japan)|= 倭 |wae|]]) War ([[Wiktionary:亂|= 亂 |ran|]]) of Imjin" (1592 being an ''imjin'' [= water — dragon] year in the [[sexagenary cycle]]) in [[Korean language|Korean]] and ''[[Bunroku]] no eki'' in [[Japanese language|Japanese]] (''Bunroku'' referring to the [[Japanese era]] under the [[Emperor Go-Yōzei]], spanning the period from 1592 to 1596). The second invasion (1597–1598) is called the "Second War of Jeong-yu" and "[[Keichō]] no eki", respectively. In [[Chinese language|Chinese]], the wars are referred to as the "Renchen (the information about the ''Imjin'' year also applies here) War to Defend the Nation" or the "[[Wanli]] Korean Campaign", after then reigning [[Emperor of China|Chinese emperor]].
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| Initially, the Japanese forces saw successes on land and consistent failures at sea. However, the Japanese forces came to suffer heavily as their communication and supply lines were thinned. The Korean navy starved the Japanese forces by successfully intercepting the Japanese supply fleets on the western waters of the peninsula, to which most major rivers of the Korean peninsula flow. Ming China under [[Wanli Emperor|Emperor Wanli]] brought about a military and diplomatic intervention to the conflict, which China understood as a challenge to its tributary system.<ref name="SWOPE761">Swope. 2002. pp. 761</ref> The war stalled for five years during which the three countries tried to negotiate a peaceful compromise; however, Japan invaded Korea a second time in 1597. The war concluded with the naval [[Battle of Noryang|battle at Noryang]]. All of the Japanese forces in Korea had retreated by the 12th lunar month of 1598 and returned to Japan after the devastating defeat against the Korean navy.
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| In addition to the human losses, Korea suffered tremendous cultural, economic, and infrastructural damage, including a large reduction in the amount of arable land,<ref name="yonhap" /> destruction and confiscation of significant artworks, artifacts, and historical documents, and abductions of artisans and technicians.<ref name="prime minister">{{cite web
| | {| class="wikitable collapsible collapsed" style="width: 28em; clear: right; float: right; margin: 0.5em 1em 0.8em 0px;" |
| | last = | | |- |
| | first = | | ! style="text-align: center;" | Titles in Chinese, Japanese & Korean |
| | authorlink = | | |- |
| | coauthors = | | | |
| | title = Early Joseon Period | | {| class="wikitable" style="width: 100%; margin: 3px 0 0 0;" |
| | work = History | | ! colspan="2" |Chinese |
| | publisher = Office of the Prime Minister | | |- |
| | date = | | | Traditional |
| | url = http://www.opm.go.kr/warp/webapp/content/view?meta_id=english&id=62 | | | 壬辰衛國戰爭(萬曆朝鮮之役) |
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| | doi = | | | Simplified |
| | accessdate = 2007-03-30 }}</ref> The heavy financial burden placed on [[China]] by the war adversely affected its military capabilities and contributed to the fall of the [[Ming Dynasty]] and the rise of the [[Qing Dynasty]].<ref name="barry21">Strauss, Barry. pp. 21</ref> However, the [[sinocentric]] tributary system that Ming had defended was restored by Qing, and the normal trade relations between Korea and Japan continued.<ref name="SWOPE758-9">Swope. 2002. pp. 758-9</ref> | | | 壬辰卫国战争(万历朝鲜之役) |
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| | | Hanyu Pinyin |
| | | Rénchén Wèiguó Zhànzhēng (Wànlì Cháoxiǎn Zhīyì) |
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| == Background == | | {| class="wikitable" style="width: 100%; margin: 3px 0 0 0;" |
| {{main|Joseon Dynasty|History of Korea}}
| | ! colspan="2" |Japanese |
| | |- |
| | | Kanji |
| | | 文禄\plainの役 / 慶長の役 |
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| | | Hepburn |
| | | Bunroku no Eki / Keichō no Eki |
| | |} |
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| {{main|Azuchi-Momoyama period|History of Japan}} | | {| class="wikitable" style="width: 100%; margin: 3px 0 0 0;" |
| | ! colspan="2" |Korean |
| | |- |
| | | Hangul |
| | | 임진왜란 / 정유재란 |
| | |- |
| | | Hanja |
| | | 壬辰倭亂 / 丁酉再亂 |
| | |- |
| | | Revised Romanization |
| | | Imjin waeran / Jeong(-)yu jaeran |
| | |- |
| | | McCune Reischauer |
| | | Imjin waeran / Chŏng'yu chaeran |
| | |} |
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| {{main|Ming Dynasty|History of China}}
| | |} |
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| | == Background reading == |
| === East Asia and the Chinese Tributary System === | | === East Asia and the Chinese Tributary System === |
| | {{Image|16th century East Asia.png|right|300px|East Asia in the 16th century.}} |
| | The war took place within the context of the Chinese [[tributary system]] that dominated the [[East Asia]]n geopolitics. In practice, the tributary states periodically sent ambassadors to the Chinese imperial court to pay homage and to exchange gifts, while maintaining complete autonomy. Many of the tributary states received from China the rights toward the international trade within the tributary system. The theoretical justification for the tributary system was the doctrine of the [[Mandate of Heaven]], that the Heaven granted the Chinese Emperor the exclusive right to rule, with the purpose of benefiting the entirety of mankind.<ref name="mandate">[http://wsu.edu/~dee/GLOSSARY/TIENMING.HTM T'ien ming: The Mandate of Heaven]. Richard Hooker (1996, updated 1999). ''World Civilizations''. Washington State University.</ref> Several Asian countries, including Korea,<ref name="Rockstein7">Rockstein, 1993. pp. 7</ref><ref name="Rockstein10-11">Rockstein, 1993. pp. 10-11</ref> voluntarily joined the tributary system in pursuit of the legal tally trade and to gain legitimacy from the Chinese recognition. |
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| In 1392, the Korean General [[King Taejo|Yi Seong-gye]] led a successful coup against [[King U]] of the [[Goryeo Dynasty]], and founded [[Joseon]].<ref name="Joongang126">Jang, Pyun-soon. pp. 123-132</ref> In search of a justification for its rule given the lack of a royal bloodline, the new regime received recognition from [[China]] and integration into its tributary system within the context of the [[Mandate of Heaven]].<ref name="Edward7">Rockstein, Edward D., Ph.D. pp. 7</ref> Under [[Ashikaga Yoshimitsu]]'s reign during the late 15th century, Japan, too, gained a seat in the [[tribute|tributary system]] (lost by 1547, see ''[[hai jin]]'').<ref name="Edward10-11">Rockstein, Edward D., Ph.D. pp. 10-11</ref><ref>Villiers pp. 71</ref> Within this [[List of tributaries of Imperial China|tributary system]], [[China]] assumed the role of a big brother, [[Korea]] the middle brother, and [[Japan]] the younger brother.<ref name="Alagappa117">[http://books.google.com/books?id=rnNnOxvm3ZwC&pg=PA117&lpg=PA117&dq=china+tributary+system+big+brother+korea&source=web&ots=IIlObnPWEw&sig=8oDox81E5Vwsm0kr3ESGGVaCq0o Alagappa, Muthiah pp. 117]</ref>
| | Japan actively sought to engage in the tributary trade and attained with China two treaties, in 1404 and in 1434, that admitted Japan into the tributary system and required Japan to police its waters against the [[wako]] pirates. But China expelled Japan from the tributary system in 1547 because the Japanese lords failed to effectively control piracy.<ref>Villiers pp. 71</ref> During the wartime negotiations between Japan and China, the trade issue would emerge again as a point of justification by the Japanese for their aggression against Korea, which was supposedly frustrating the Japanese aims to regain its tributary status. |
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| Unlike the situation over a thousand years earlier where Chinese dynasties had an antagonistic relations with the largest of the Korean polities (see [[‎List of Chinese invasions of Goguryeo]]), the Joseon Dynasty had a close trading and diplomatic relations with [[Ming Dynasty|Ming]] China, and also a continuous trade relations with Japan.<ref name="Sansom142">Sansom, George. pp. 142, 167-180.</ref> The two dynasties, Ming and Joseon, shared much in common: both emerged during the fourteenth century at the fall of the Mongolian rule, embraced the [[Confucian]] ideals in society, and faced similar external threats (the [[Jurchen]] raiders and the Japanese [[Wakō]] pirates).<ref name="turnbull11">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 11.</ref> As for the internal, both China and Korea were troubled with fights among the competing political factions, which would significantly influence the decisions made by the Koreans prior to the war, and those made during the war by the Chinese. <ref name="SWOPE771">Swope. 2002. pp. 771</ref><ref>Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 13.</ref> Dependence on each other for trade and also having common enemies resulted in Korea and Ming China having a friendly relationship.
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| === Toyotomi Hideyoshi and his preparations ===
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| By the last decade of the 16th century, [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi]] as [[daimyō]] had unified all of [[Japan]] in a brief period of peace. Since Hideyoshi came to hold power in presence of a legitimate [[Japanese emperor|Japanese imperial line]], Hideyoshi sought for military power to legitimize his rule and to decrease his dependence on the imperial authority.<ref name="Arano206" /> It is said that Hideyoshi planned for an invasion of China to fulfill which his late leader [[Oda Nobunaga]] dreamed of,<ref name="wsu">{{cite web
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| | last = Hooker
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| | authorlink = Richard Hooker
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| | title = Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1536–1598)
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| | publisher = [[Washington State University]]
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| | date = (C) [[1996]], last updated [[1999]]
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| | url = http://www.wsu.edu/~dee/TOKJAPAN/TOYOTOMI.HTM
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| | accessdate = 2007-05-12 }}</ref> and to mitigate the possible threat of civil disorder or rebellion posed by the excess number of [[samurai]]s and soldiers.<ref name="rebel">{{Citation
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| | title = Why Are Koreans So Against Japanese?: A Brief History Lesson Helps Foreign Investors Do Business
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| | newspaper = The Korea Times
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| | year = 2006
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| | date = [[2006-07-11]]
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| | url = http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/biz/200607/kt2006071120020911910.htm}}</ref> But it is quite possible that Hideyoshi might have set a more realistic goal of subjugating the smaller neighbouring states (i.e. [[Ryukyus]], [[Luzon]], [[Taiwan]], and Korea), and treat the large or too distant countries as trading partners<ref name="Arano206">Yasunori pp. 206.</ref>: all throughout the invasion of Korea, Hideyoshi sought for legal tally trade with China<ref name="Arano206" /> Hideyoshi's need for military supremacy as a justification to his rule that lacked royal background could, on an international level, translate into a Japanocentric order with Japan's neighbouring countries below Japan.<ref name="Arano206" /> Historian Kenneth M. Swope identifies a rumor relevant to the time that Hideyoshi could have been a Chinese who fled to Japan from the law, and therefore sought revenge against China.<ref name="SWOPE760">Swope. 2002. pp. 760</ref>
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| The defeat of the [[Odawara, Kanagawa|Odawara]]-based [[Late Hōjō clan|Hōjō]] clan in 1590<ref name="japanguide">
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| {{cite web
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| | title = Azuchi-Momoyama Period (1573–1603)
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| | publisher = japan-guide.com
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| | url = http://www.japan-guide.com/e/e2123.html
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| | accessdate = 2007-05-12 }}</ref> finally brought about the second unification of Japan,<ref name="UHK">{{cite web
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| | last = Stanley
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| | first = Thomas A.
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| | authorlink =
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| | coauthors = R.T.A. Irving
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| | title = Toyotomi Hideyoshi
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| | work = Nakasendo Highway: A Journey to the Heart of Japan
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| | publisher = [[University of Hong Kong]]
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| | date = (C) 1996, revised [[2001-09-14]]
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| | url = http://www.hku.hk/history/nakasendo/
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| | accessdate = 2007-05-12 }}</ref> and Hideyoshi began preparing for the next war. Beginning in March 1591, the Kyūshū daimyō and their labor forces constructed a castle at Nagoya (in modern-day Karatsu) as the center for the mobilization of the invasion forces.<ref name="Edward37">Rockstein, Edward D., Ph.D. pp. 37</ref>
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| Hideyoshi planned for a possible war with Korea long before the completing the unification of Japan, and made preparations on many fronts. As early as in 1578, Hideyoshi then battling under Nobunaga against [[Mōri Terumoto]] for control of the [[Chūgoku]] region of Japan, informed Terumoto of Nobunaga's plan to conquer China.<ref name="Edward23">Rockstein, Edward D., Ph.D. pp. 23</ref> In 1592 Hideyoshi sent a letter to the Philippines threatening the governor general for tribute and stating that Japan had already received tribute from Korea (which was a misunderstanding, as explained below) and the [[Ryūkyū Kingdom|Ryukyus]].<ref name="Edward24">Rockstein, Edward D., Ph.D. pp. 24</ref>
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| As for the military preparations, the construction of as many as 2,000 ships may have begun as early as 1586.<ref name="Edward38">Rockstein, Edward D., Ph.D. pp. 38</ref> To estimate the strength of the Korean military, Hideyoshi sent an assault of 26 ships to the southern coast of Korea in 1587, and he concluded that the Koreans were incompetent.<ref name="SWOPE21">Swope. 2005. pp. 21.</ref> On the diplomatic front, Hideyoshi began to establish friendly relations with China long before completing the unification of Japan and helped to police the trade routes against the ''wakō.''<ref name="japan101">{{cite web
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| | title = Toyotomi Hideyoshi - Japanese general who united Japan
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| | publisher = Japan101.com
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| | date = 2003–2005
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| | url = http://www.japan-101.com/history/toyotomi_hideyoshi.htm
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| ==== Diplomatic dealings between Japan and Korea ====
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| In 1587, Hideyoshi sent his first envoy Tachibana Yasuhiro,<ref>The Book of Corrections: Reflections on the National Crisis during the Japanese Invasion of Korea, 1592–1598. By Sôngnyong Yu. Translated by Choi Byonghyon. Berkeley: Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California, 2002. xi, 249 pp. James B. Lewis. The Journal of Asian Studies, Volume 63, Issue 02, May 2004, pp 524-526. doi: 10.1017/S0021911804001378, Published online by Cambridge University Press [[February 26]] [[2007]]. http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=787224</ref> to Korea then under [[Seonjo of Joseon|King Seonjo]]<ref name="daumseonjo">{{cite encyclopedia
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| | title = 선조[宣祖]
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| | encyclopedia = Daum 백과사전(Britannica)
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| | accessdate = 2007-5-18 }} http://enc.daum.net/dic100/viewContents.do?&m=all&articleID=b12s0368b </ref> to re-establish diplomatic relations between Korea and Japan (which was broken since a devastating pirate raid in 1555)<ref name="tiger12JIMWC">{{cite web
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| | last = Caraway
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| | first = Bill
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| | title = Ch 12 - Japanese invasions: More Worlds to Conquer
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| | work = KOREA IN THE EYE OF THE TIGER
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| | publisher = Korea History Project
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| | url = http://www.koreanhistoryproject.org/Ket/C12/E1202.htm
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| | accessdate = 2007-07-04 }}</ref> which Hideyoshi hoped to use as a foundation to induce the Yi Court to join Japan on war against China.<ref name="Jones240">Jones, Geo H., Vol. 23 No. 5, pp. 240</ref> Yasuhiro, with his warrior background and an attitude disdainful of the Korean officials in their customs he considered as effeminate, failed to receive the promise of future ambassadorial missions from Korea.<ref name="Jones240-1">Jones, Geo H., Vol. 23 No. 5, pp. 240-1</ref> Around May 1589, Hideyoshi's second ambassadors consisting of Sō Yoshitoshi (or Yoshitomo),<ref name="turnbull34">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 34.</ref> Gensho and Tsuginobu reached Korea and secured the promise of a Korean embassy to Japan in exchange of the Korean rebels having taken refuge in Japan.<ref name="Jones240-1" /> In fact, in 1587 Hideyoshi had ordered Sō Yoshinori, the father of Yoshitoshi and the daimyō of Tsushima, to offer Joseon the ultimatum to submit to Japan and participate in the conquest of China, or war with Japan.<ref name="turnbull33">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 33.</ref> However, as Tsushima enjoyed a special trading position as the single checkpoint to Korea for all Japanese ships and permission from Korea to trade with as many as 50 of its own vessels,<ref name="turnbull28">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 28.</ref> the Sō family delayed the talks for nearly two years.<ref name="turnbull34" /> Even when Hideyoshi renewed his order, Sō Yoshitoshi reduced the visit to the Yi Court down to a campaign to better relations between the two countries.<ref name="turnbull34" /> Near the end of the ambassadorial mission, Yoshitoshi presented King Seonjo a brace of peafowl and matchlock guns - the first advanced fire-arms to come to Korea.<ref name="Jones242">Jones, Geo H., Vol. 23 No. 5, pp. 242</ref> Then [[Yu Seong-ryong]], a high-ranking scholar official, suggested that the military put the arquebus into production and use, but the Yi Court failed to cooperate.<ref name="googuk">{{cite web
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| | title = 구국(救國)의 영재상, 서애 유성룡
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| | work = 경북혁신인물
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| | publisher = Gyeong-sang-buk-do Province
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| On April 1590, the Korean ambassadors including Hwang Yun-gil, Kim Saung-il and others<ref name="Joongang112">Jang, Pyun-soon. pp. 112</ref> left for [[Kyoto]], where they waited for two months while Hideyoshi was finishing his campaign against the Odawara and the Hōjō clans.<ref name="turnbull36">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 36.</ref> Upon his return, they exchanged ceremonial gifts with and delivered King Seonjo's letter to Hideyoshi.<ref name="turnbull36" /> As Hideyoshi assumed that the Koreans had come to pay homage as a tributary to Japan, the ambassadors were not given the formal treatment that was due in handling diplomatic matters; at last, the Korean ambassadors asked that Hideyoshi write a reply to the Korean king, for which they waited 20 days at the port of Sakai.<ref name="turnbull36-37">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 36-37.</ref> The letter, redrafted as requested by the ambassadors on the ground that it was too discourteous,<ref name="turnbull36-37" /> invited Korea to submit to Japan and join the war against China.<ref name="Jones242" /> Upon the ambassadors' return, the Yi Court held serious discussions concerning Japan's invitation;<ref name="Jones242-3">Jones, Geo H., Vol. 23 No. 5, pp. 242-3</ref> the ambassadors reported to the Yi Court conflicting estimates of Japan's military strength and intention, all of which were lost in the quarrels of competing political factions and ranks.<ref name="tiger12JIMWC" /> Some, including King Seonjo, argued that Ming should be informed about the dealings with Japan, as failure to do so could make Ming suspect Korea's allegiance,<ref name="turnbull38">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 38.</ref> but the Yi Court finally concluded to wait further until the appropriate course of action became definite.<ref name="Jones242-3" />
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| Hideyoshi initiated his diplomacy with Korea under the impression that Korea was a [[vassal]] of [[Tsushima Island]], which the Koreans considered theirs; the Yi Court approached Japan as a country inferior to Korea accordingly within the Chinese tributary system, and it expected Hideyoshi's invasions to be no better than the common [[Wako]] pirate raids.<ref name="SWOPE760-761">Swope. 2002. pp. 760-1</ref> The Yi Court handed to Gensho and Tairano, Hideyoshi's third embassy, King Seonjo's letter rebuking Hideyoshi for challenging the Chinese tributary system; Hideyoshi replied with a disrespectful letter, but, since it was not presented in person as expected in custom, the Yi Court ignored it.<ref name="Jones243">Jones, Geo H., Vol. 23 No. 5, pp. 243</ref> After the denial of his second request, Hideyoshi launched his armies against Korea in 1592. There were internal oppositions to the invasion within Japan's government; among them, [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]], [[Konishi Yukinaga]] and [[Sō Yoshitoshi]] tried to arbitrate between Hideyoshi and the Joseon court.{{Fact|date=July 2007}}
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| === Military Capabilities ===
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| {{main|Military history of Korea|Military history of Japan|Military history of China}}
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| [[Image:Hwacha2.jpg|thumb|[[Hwacha]] were developed by Koreans and could shoot up to 200 arrows at one time.]]
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| The two major security threats to Korea and China at the time were the [[Jurchen]]s, who raided along the northern borders, and the ''[[Wokou|wakō]]'' (Japanese pirates), who pillaged the coastal villages and trade ships.<ref name="Edward26">Rockstein, Edward D., Ph.D. pp. 26</ref><ref name="turnbull9">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 9.</ref> In response to the Jurchens, the Koreans constructed a thorough defense line of fortresses along the [[Tumen River]]; in response to the Japanese, the Koreans developed a poweful navy and even [[Oei Invasion|took control of the island of Tsushima]].<ref name="Edward14">Rockstein, Edward D., Ph.D. pp. 14</ref> This defensive environment of relative peace pushed the Koreans to depend on the heavy artillery of fortresses and warships. China bore a much larger responsibility than Korea as the head of its tributary system and had to make adjustments to all sorts of environments.<ref name="SWOPE26" /> China was the main source of new military technologies in Asia, and excelled in both cannon manufacturing<ref name="SWOPE26" /> and shipbuilding.<ref name="SWOPE32">Swope. 2005. pp. 32.</ref> Japan, on the other hand, had been in a [[Sengoku Period|state of civil war]] for over a century, so the military had come to favor the muskets adopted from [[Portugal]] over such other weapons. This strategic difference in weapons development and implementation contributed to the in-war Japanese dominance on landd, and the Sino-Korean dominance at sea.<ref name="SWOPE26">Swope. 2005. pp. 26.</ref>
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| As Japan had been at war since the mid-15th century, Hideyoshi had half a million battle-hardened soldiers at his disposal<ref name="barry3">Strauss, Barry. pp. 3</ref> to form the most professional army in Asia.<ref name="turnbull21">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 22.</ref> While Japan's chaotic state had left the Koreans with a very low estimate of Japan as a military threat,<ref name="turnbull22">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 22.</ref> A new sense of unity among the different political factions in Japan, and the "Sword Hunt" in [[1588]], the confiscation of all weapons from the peasants, indicated otherwise.<ref name="turnbull31">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 187.</ref> Along with the hunt came “The Separation Edict” in 1591, which effectively put to end all Japanese [[wakō]] piracy by prohibiting the [[daimyō]]s from supporting the pirates within their fiefs.<ref name="turnbull31" /> Ironically enough, the Koreans believed that the Hideyoshi’s invasion would be just an extension of the previous pirate raids that had been repelled before.<ref name="turnbull26">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 26.</ref> As for the military situation in Joseon, the Korean scholar official [[Yu Seong-ryong]] observed, "not one in a hundred [Korean generals] knew the methods of drilling soldiers":<ref name="turnbull15">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 15.</ref> rise in ranks depended far more on social connections than military knowledge.<ref>Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 16.</ref> Korean soldiers were disorganized, ill-trained and ill-equipped,<ref>Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 16.</ref> and they were used mostly in construction projects such as building castle walls.<ref name="tiger12JIMWTC">{{cite web
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| | last = Caraway
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| | first = Bill
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| | authorlink =
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| | coauthors =
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| | title = Ch 12 - Japanese invasions: More Worlds to Conquer
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| | work = KOREA IN THE EYE OF THE TIGER
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| | publisher = Korea History Project
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| | date =
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| | url = http://koreanhistoryproject.org/Ket/C12/E1202.htm
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| ==== Problems with the Korean defense policies ====
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| [[Image:Tempo-p1000697.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Japanese arquebuses of the Edo era. These types of [[firearm]]s were used by Japanese soldiers during Hideyoshi's invasions.]]
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| There were several defects with the organization of the Korean military.<ref name="turnbull17-18">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 17-18.</ref> An example was a defense policy that local officers could not individually respond to a foreign invasion outside of their jurisdiction until a higher ranking general, appointed by the king's court, arrived with a newly mobilized army.<ref name="turnbull17-18"/> This arrangement was highly inefficient in that the nearby forces would remain stationary until the mobile border commander arrived to the scene and took control.<ref name="turnbull17-18"/> Secondly, as the appointed general often came from an outside region, he was likely to be unfamiliar with the natural environment, the available technology and manpower of the invaded region.<ref name="turnbull17-18"/> Finally, as a main army was never maintained, new and ill-trained recruits conscripted during war constituted a significant part of the army.<ref name="turnbull17-18"/> The Yi Court managed to carry out some reforms, but even they were problematic. For example, the military training center established in 1589 in the [[Gyeongsang]] province recruited mostly the too young or old soldiers (as able men targeted by the policy had higher priorities in farming and other economic activities), augmented by some adventure-seeking aristocrats and slaves buying their freedom.<ref name="turnbull17-18" />
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| The dominant form of the Korean fortresses was the "Sanseong", or the mountain fortress,<ref>Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 20.</ref> which consisted of a stone wall that continued around a mountain in a serpentine fashion.<ref name="turnbull21" /> These walls were poorly designed with little use of towers and cross-fire positions (usually seen in European fortifications) and were mostly low in height.<ref name="turnbull21" /> It was a wartime policy for everyone to evacuate to one of these fortresses nearby and for those who failed to do so to be assumed as collaborators with the enemy; however, the policy never gained any effect because the fortresses were out of reach for most refugees.<ref name="turnbull21" />
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| ==== Troops size ====
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| Hideyoshi mobilized his army at the [[Nagoya castle]] on [[Kyūshū]], newly built just for the purpose of housing the invasion forces and the reserves.<ref name="turnbull40">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 40.</ref> The first invasion consisted of 9 divisions totalling 158,800 men, among which the last two of 21,500 were stationed as reserves in [[Tsushima]] and [[Iki]] respectively.<ref name="turnbull42">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 42.</ref> On the other hand, Joseon maintained only a few military units and no field army, and its defense depended heavily on the mobilization of the citizen soldiers in case of emergency.<ref name="tiger12JIMWTC" /> During the first invasion, Joseon deployed a total of 84,500 regular troops throughout, assisted by 22,000 irregular volunteers.<ref name="turnbull109">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 109.</ref> The Chinese aid during the war could not have made up for the difference in numbers since they maintained never more than 80,000 troops in Korea at any point of the war,<ref name="SWOPE186" /> while the Japanese used a total of 500,000 troops throughout the entire war.<ref name="barry3"/>
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| As early as [[1582]], the Korean scholar official Lee Yul-gok recommended the Yi Court to implement a nationwide expansion of troops up to 100,000, including a conscription of slaves and sons of concubines, after the northern troops performed miserably against a [[Jurchen]] attack.<ref name="turnbull15" /> However, as Lee was of the Western Faction, the dominant and the competing Eastern Faction (led by Yu Seong-ryong) rejected the proposal.<ref name="turnbull15" /> The same result applied to a [[1588]] proposal from a provincial governor to arm the twenty islands of the southern coast of the peninsula and a proposal in [[1590]] to fortify the islands around the port city of [[Busan]].<ref name="turnbull15" /> Even when the Japanese invasion seemed probable and Yu Seong-ryong switched side on this issue, counter arguments brought purely out of political competition neutralized any gains for those advocating for the expansion of the military.<ref name="turnbull15" />
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| ==== Weapons ====
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| Since its introduction by the Portuguese traders on the island of [[Tanegashima]] in 1543,<ref name="hawley3-7">Hawley, Samuel. pp. 3–7.</ref> the [[musket]] became widely used in Japan.<ref name="hawley6">Hawley, Samuel. pp. 6.</ref> Both Korea and China had already been using firearms similar to the Portuguese [[arquebus]], but the weapon fell into disuse in Korea<ref name="SWOPE21" /> and the focus for the [[gunpowder]] weapons in Korea rested primarily on the artillery and archery.<ref name="SWOPE25">Swope. 2005. pp. 25.</ref> When the Japanese diplomats presented the Yi Court arquebuses as gifts, the Korean scholar official Yu Seong-ryong advocated for the use of the new weapon unsuccessfully.<ref name="turnbull36" />
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| The Japanese saw a very infrequent use of their [[katana]] (curved long sword), which were sharper and longer than the Korean and Chinese counterparts,<ref name="SWOPE24">Swope. 2005. pp. 24.</ref> and relied mostly on the muskets (in combination with their bows<ref name="SWOPE184">Swope. 2006. pp. 184.</ref>) instead.<ref name="SWOPE30">Swope. 2005. pp. 30.</ref>
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| [[Image:Joseon era cannon arrow.jpg|thumb|180px|Large iron-tipped wooden arrow fired from [[Korean cannon]]s.]]
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| The Korean infantry was equipped with one or more of the following personal weapons: [[Korean sword|swords]], spears, tridents and [[Korean bow|bow-and-arrows]].<ref name="SWOPE32" /> The Koreans used one of the most advanced bows in Asia<ref name="SWOPE26" /> - the [[composite bow|composite]] [[reflex bow]] that had different materials laminated together (composite, the application of different characteristics of the materials for specific designs) with an inward curve (reflex) for maximum effectiveness; its maximum range was 500 yards, compared to the 350 yards for the Japanese bows.<ref name="SWOPE29">Swope. 2005. pp. 29.</ref> The Chinese infantry used a variety of weapons, as they had to deal with many different environments throughout their empire, including bows (mainly [[crossbow]]s),<ref name="SWOPE29" /> swords (also for its cavalry)<ref name="SWOPE37">Swope. 2005. pp. 37.</ref>,<ref name="SWOPE38">Swope. 2005. pp. 38.</ref> muskets, [[smoke bomb]]s and [[hand grenade]]s.<ref name="SWOPE26" />
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| In the early part of the war, the Japanese gained a significant advantage with its monopoly on guns, which had a greater range of 600 yards<ref name="SWOPE24" /> and penetrating power than the arrows,<ref name="SWOPE22">Swope. 2005. pp. 22.</ref> and which could be fired in concentrated volleys to make up for its lack of accuracy (at both close and long ranges; the bow and arrow, at long range). However, later into the war, the Koreans and Chinese adopted and increased the use of the Japanese muskets.<ref name="turnbull36" />.<ref name="Brown241">Brown, Delmer M., pp. 241</ref> It has also been claimed that the Chinese developed [[bullet-proof armor|bullet-proof suits]] for use during the second invasion.<ref name="SWOPE39">Swope. 2005. pp. 39.</ref>
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| Both Korea and China deployed their cavalry divisions in action, however with much negative results. The mountainous environment in Korea, which lacked both the flat plains suitable for cavalry charges and the grass essential in feeding the horses, and the Japanese use of muskets at long range and the katana swords in melee combat put cavalry units at a disadvantage.<ref name="SWOPE38" />
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| Korean cavalrymen were equipped with [[Flail (weapon)|flail]]s and spears (longer than the Japanese swords) for melee combat and bows and arrows for ranged engagement.<ref name="SWOPE28">Swope. 2005. pp. 28.</ref> Most of the cavalry action for the Koreans took place in the [[Battle of Chungju]] at the beginning of the war where the they were outnumbered and wiped out by the Japanese infantry.<ref name="SWOPE28" /> The Japanese divisions included cavalry as well, sometimes equipped with guns designed smaller specifically for use on horseback.<ref name="SWOPE24" /> The Japanese use of cavalry was reduced by their previous civil war experiences with the use of guns in concentrated volleys.<ref name="tiger12JIUASS">{{cite web
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| | last = Caraway
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| | first = Bill
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| | authorlink =
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| | coauthors =
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| | title = Ch 12 - Japanese invasions: Song of the Great Peace
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| | work = KOREA IN THE EYE OF THE TIGER
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| | publisher = Korea History Project
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| | date =
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| | url = http://koreanhistoryproject.org/Ket/C12/E1201.htm
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| | format =
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| | accessdate = 2007-07-04 }}</ref>
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| =====Armor=====
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| {{Unreferenced|date=October 2007}}
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| While even the common foot soldier in Japan wore chainmail and bamboo armor, Korean soldiers had almost no armor at all.
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| Korean foot soldiers wore a heavy leather black vest over their common white clothes and a strictly ceremonial felt hat that offered some protection. Other than this, only the elite soldiers stationed at [[Seoul]] (the capital) had armor. Korean captains and generals wore chainmail and scale armor, with shoulder, leg and chest plates. Often, a padded piece of leather was worn around the waist for protection as well.
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| The Korean military believed that the soldiers did not need armor because emphasis was placed on ranged weapons, instead of hand-to-hand combat.
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| ====Naval power====
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| [[Image:Panokseon.jpg|thumb|240px|An old painting of a panokseon.]]
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| The allies' lead in the artillery technology also gave their navies a tremendous advantage. Especially with the complete lack of cannons on the Japanese ships in the first phase of the war,<ref name="SWOPE32"/> the Korean and Chinese fleets could bombard the Japanese ships while remaining outside of the retaliatory range of the Japanese muskets, arrows, and catapults.<ref name="SWOPE32"/> Even when the Japanese attempted to add more cannons to their fleet,<ref name="Brown252">Brown, Delmer M., pp. 252</ref> their lightweight ship design prevented them from placing as many cannons on board as the allies.<ref name="barry9">Strauss, Barry. pp. 9</ref>
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| There were fundamental design flaws with the Japanese ships: first of all, most of the Japanese ships were merchant ships modified for the transportation of troops;<ref name="SWOPE32" /> (it should be also noted that fishing vessels made up for much of the Korean navy)<ref name="barry10">Strauss, Barry. pp. 10</ref> second, the Japanese ships each contained a single square sail (effective only in favorable winds) while Korean ships could be powered by both sails and oars. Also, Japanese ships had V-shaped bottoms (also the Chinese ships as well) that were ideal for speed but were less maneuverable than the flat-bottomed panokseons; and fourth, the Japanese ships relied on nails to hold its wood together while the Korean panokseons used wooden pegs, and this difference added onto the Korean advantage because, in water, nails corroded and loosened while wooden pegs expanded and strengthened the joints.
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| It should be noted that Hideyoshi tried but failed to hire two Portuguese galleons to join the invasion.<ref name="Brown243">Brown, Delmer M., pp. 243</ref>
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| == First invasion (1592–1593) ==
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| [[Image:Dong Rae Bu Sun Jaul Do.jpg|thumb|left|230px|"Dong Rae Bu Sun Jaul Do", a Korean painting from 1760 depicting the Battle of Dong-rae.]]
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| [[Image:1592invasionmap.png|185px|thumb|A map of the first invasion in 1592. Click on this image for details and captions.]]
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| === The initial attacks ===
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| ==== Busan and Tadaejin ====
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| {{main|Siege of Busan|Battle of Tadaejin}}
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| On [[May 23]], [[1592]], the First Division of 7,000 men led by [[Konishi Yukinaga]]<ref name="turnbull47">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 47.</ref> left Tsushima in the morning, and arrived at the port city of [[Busan]] in the evening.<ref name="turnbull48">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 48.</ref> The Korean naval intelligence had already detected the Japanese fleet, but [[Won Gyun]], the Right Naval Commander of Gyeongsang, mistook the fleet to consist of trading vessels on a mission.<ref name="turnbull83-4">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 83-4.</ref> A later report of an arrival of additional 100 Japanese vessels raised his suspicions, but the general did nothing about it.<ref name="turnbull83-4"/> Sō Yoshitoshi landed alone on the Busan shore to ask the Koreans for a safe passage to China for the last time; the Koreans refused, and Sō Yoshitoshi [[Siege of Busan|hit the city]] while Konishi Yukinaga [[Battle of Tadaejin|attacked nearby fort of Tadaejin]] the next morning. <ref name="turnbull48">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 48.</ref> Japanese accounts claim that the battles provided the Koreans a complete annihilation (one claims 8,500 deaths, and another, 30,000 heads), while a Korean account claims that the Japanese themselves took significant losses before sacking the city.<ref name="turnbull50-1">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 50-1.</ref>
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| ==== Dongnae ====
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| {{main|Battle of Dongnae}}
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| On the morning of [[May 25]], [[1592]], the First Division arrived at the mountain fortress (sanseong) of [[Dongnae]].<ref name="turnbull50-1" /> The fight lasted twelve hours, killed 3,000, and resulted in a Japanese victory.<ref name="turnbull52">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 52.</ref> A popular legend describes the governor in charge of the fortress, [[Song Sang-hyeon]]. When Konishi Yukinaga again demanded, before the battle, that the Koreans allow the Japanese to travel through the peninsula, the governor replied, "It is easy for me to die, but difficult to let you pass."<ref name="turnbull52" /> Even when the Japanese troops during the battle neared his commanding post, Song remained seated with cool dignity.<ref name="turnbull52" /> And when a Japanese cut off Song's right arm holding his staff of command, Song picked up the staff with his left arm, which was then cut off; again Song picked it up, this time with his mouth, but was killed by a third blow.<ref name="turnbull52" /> The Japanese, impressed by Song's defiance, treated his body with proper burial.<ref name="turnbull52" />
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| ==== The occupation of the Gyeongsang Province ====
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| Katō Kiyomasa's Second Division landed in Busan on [[May 27]], and Kuroda Nagamasa's Third Division, west of Nakdong, on [[May 28]].<ref name="turnbull55-6">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 55-6.</ref> The Second Division took the abandoned city of [[Tongdo]] on [[May 28]], and captured [[Kyongju]] on [[May 30]].<ref name="turnbull55-6" /> The Third Division, upon landing, captured the nearby [[Kimhae]] castle by keeping the defenders under pressure with the guns while building ramps onto the walls with bundles of crops.<ref name="turnbull56-7">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 56-7.</ref> By [[June 3]], the Third Division captured Unsan, Changnyong, Hyonpung, and Songju.<ref name="turnbull56-7" /> Meanwhile, Konishi Yukinaga's First Division passed the Yangsan mountain fortress (captured on the night of the Battle of Dongnae, when its defenders fled at the Japanese scout party's fire of their arquebuses), and captured the Miryang castle on the afternoon of [[May 26]].<ref name="turnbull53-4" /> The First Division secured the Chongdo fortress in the next few days, and destroyed the city of Daegu.<ref name="turnbull53-4" /> By [[June 3]], the First Division crossed the [[Nakdong River]], and stopped at the Sonsan mountain.<ref name="turnbull53-4" />
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| === Joseon response ===
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| Upon receiving the news of the Japanese attacks, the Joseon government appointed General [[Yi Il]] as the mobile border commander, as was the established policy.<ref name="turnbull53">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 53.</ref> General Yi headed to Myongyong near the beginning of the strategically important Choryong pass to gather troops, but he had to travel further south to meet the troops assembled at the city of [[Daegu]].<ref name="turnbull53-4">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 53-4.</ref> There, General Yi moved all troops back to Sangju, except for the survivors of the Battle of Dongnae who were to be stationed as a rearguard at the Choryong pass.<ref name="turnbull53-4" />
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| ==== Battle of Sangju ====
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| {{main|Battle of Sangju}}
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| On [[April 25]],<ref name="daumsangju">{{cite encyclopedia
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| | title = 상주전투
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| | encyclopedia = 문화원영 백과사전
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| | volume =
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| | pages =
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| | publisher = Daum
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| | accessdate = 2007-07-24 }}</ref> General Yi deployed a force of less than 1,000 men on two small hills to face the nearing First Division.<ref name="turnbull57-8">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 57-8.</ref> Assuming that a smoke rising was from the burning of buildings by a very nearby Japanese force, General Yi sent sent an officer to scout on a horse; however, when he neared a bridge, the officer was ambushed by a Japanese musket fire from below the bridge, and beheaded.<ref name="turnbull57-8" /> The Korean troops watching him fall were greatly demoralized.<ref name="turnbull57-8" /> Soon the Japanese began [[Battle of Sangju|the battle]] with their arquebus; the Koreans replied with their arrows, which fell short of their targets.<ref name="turnbull57-8" /> The Japanese forces, having been divided into three, attacked the Korean lines from both the front and the two flanks; the battle was over with General Yi Il’s retreat and 300 casualties.<ref name="turnbull57-8" />
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| ==== Battle of Chungju ====
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| {{main|Battle of Chungju}}
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| General Yi Il then planned to use the Choryong pass, the only path through the western end of the [[Sobaek mountain range]], to check the Japanese advance.<ref name="turnbull57-8" /> However, another commander, [[Sin Rip]], appointed by the Joseon government had arrived to the area with a cavalry division, and moved the total sum of 8,000 combined troops to the Chungju fortress, located above the Choryong pass.<ref name="turnbull59-60">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 59-60.</ref> General Sin Rip then decided to fight a battle on an open field ideal for the deployment of his cavalry unit, and placed his units on the open fields of [[Tangeumdae]].<ref name="turnbull59-60"/> Furthermore, the general feared that, since the cavalry consisted mostly of new recruits, his troops would flee in battle easily, <ref name="independentchungju">{{cite news
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| | last =
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| | title = 한니발의 背水陣, 김정일의 배수진: '''부하의 ''''''마음을 ''''''얻지 ''''''못한 ''''''배수진은 ''''''死地가 ''''''된다'''
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| | work =
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| | pages =
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| | language = Korean
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| | publisher = 독립신문
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| | date = [[2006-10-18]]
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| | url = http://www.independent.co.kr/news_01/n_view.html?id=16165&kind=menu_code&keys=5&search=&listpage=n_list.html
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| | accessdate = 2007-07-25 }}</ref>, and felt the need to trap his forces in the triangular area formed by the convergence of the [[Talchon river|Talchon]] and [[Han river]]s in shape of a “Y”.<ref name="turnbull59-60"/> However, the field was dotted with flooded rice paddied, and was not suitable for cavalry action.<ref name="turnbull59-60"/>
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| On [[June 5]], [[1592]] the First Division of 18,000 men<ref name="independentchungju"/> led by Konishi Yukinaga left Sangju, and reached an abandoned fortress at Mungyong by night.<ref name="turnbull61-2">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 61-2.</ref> The next day, the First Division arrived at Tangumdae in the early afternoon, where [[Battle of Chungju|they faced the Korean cavalry unit]]. Konishi divided his forces into three, and attacked with arquebuses from both flanks and the front.<ref name="turnbull61-2"/> The Korean arrows missed the Japanese troops, outside their range, and General Sin led two charges that failed against the Japanese lines. General Sin then killed himself in the river, and the Koreans that tried to escape by the river either drowned in the river, or were decapitated by the pursuing Japanese.<ref name="turnbull61-2"/>
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| === Capture of Seoul ===
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| The Second Division led by Katō Kiyomasa arrived at Chungju, with the Third Division not so far behind.<ref name="turnbull63-4">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 63-4.</ref> There Katō expressed his anger against Konishi for not waiting at Busan as planned, and attempting to take all of the glory for himself; then Nabeshima Naoshige proposed a compromise of dividing the Japanese troops into two separate routes to [[Hanseong]] (the capital and the present-day [[Seoul]]), and allowing Katō Kiyomasa to choose the route that the Second Division would take to reach Seoul.<ref name="turnbull63-4"/> The two divisions began the race to capture Hanseong on [[June 8]], and Katō took the shorter route across the [[Han River]] while Konishi went further upstream without any waters posing as large barriers.<ref name="turnbull63-4"/> Konishi arrived at Hanseong first on [[June 10]] while the Second Division was halted the river with no boats to cross.<ref name="turnbull63-4"/> The First Division found the castle undefended but its gates tightly locked, as King Seonjo had fled the day before.<ref name="turnbull65-6"> Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 65-6.</ref> The Japanese broke into a small floodgate, located in the castle wall, and opened the door capital city gate from the behind.<ref name="turnbull65-6"/> Katō’s Second Division arrived at the capital the next day (by taking the same route as the First Division), and Third and Fourth Divisions the day after.<ref name="turnbull65-6"/> Meanwhile, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, and Eighth Divisions had landed on Busan, with the Ningth Division reserved on the island of [[Iki Island|Iki]].<ref name="turnbull65-6"/>
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| Parts of Hanseong had already been looted, burnt (i.e. bureaus holding the slave records and the weapons), and abandoned by its inhabitants.<ref name="turnbull65-6"/> General Kim Myong-won in charge of the defenses along the Han River had retreated.<ref name="turnbull67-8"> Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 67-8.</ref> The King’s subjects stole the animals in the royal stables and fled before he, leaving the King to rely farm animals.<ref name="turnbull67-8"/>In every village, the King’s party was met by its inhabitants, lined up by the road, grieving that their King was abandoning them, and neglecting their duty of paying homage.<ref name="turnbull67-8"/> Parts of the southern shore of the [[Imjin River]] was burnt to deprive the Japanese troops of materials to arrange their crossing with, and General Kim Myong-won deployed 12,000 troops at five points along the river.<ref name="turnbull67-8"/>
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| === Japanese campaigns in the north ===
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| ==== The crossing of the Imjin River ====
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| While the First Division rested in Hanseong, the Second Division began north, only to be hampered by the Imjin River for two weeks.<ref name="turnbull67-8"/> The Japanese sent a familiar message to the Koreans on the other shore requesting them to open way to China, but the Koreans rejected.<ref name="turnbull67-8"/> Then the Japanese retreated its main forces to the safety of the Paju fortress; the Koreans saw this as a retreat, and launched an attack at dawn against the remaining Japanese troops on the southern shore of the Imjin River.<ref name="turnbull67-8"/> The main Japanese body retaliated against the isolated Korean troops, and acquired their boats; at this, the Korean General Kim Myong-won retreated with his forces to the [[Kaesong]] fortress.<ref name="turnbull69-70"> Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 69-70.</ref>
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| ==== The distribution of the Japanese forces in 1592 ====
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| With the Kaesong castle having been sacked shortly after (General Kim Myong-won retreated to Pyeongyang),<ref name="turnbull69-70"/> the Japanese troops divided their objectives as thus: the First Division would pursue the Korean king in the [[Pyongan|Pyongan Province]] in the north (where [[Pyongyang]] is located); the Second Division would attack the [[Hamgyong Province]] in the northeastern end of Korea; the Sixth Division would attack the [[Jeolla Province]] at the southwestern tip of the peninsula; the Fourth Division would secure the [[Gangwon Province]] on the midwestern part of the peninsula; and the Third, Fifth, Seventh, and Eighth Divisions would stabilize the following provinces respectively: the [[Hwanghae Province]] (below the Pyongan Province), [[Chungchon Province]] (below the Kyonggi Province); [[Gyeongsang Province]] (southeastern part where the Japanese first landed); and the [[Gyeonggi Province]] (where the capital city is located).<ref name="turnbull71"> Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 71.</ref>
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| ==== Capture of Pyeongyang ====
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| The First Division under Konishi Yukinaga progressed up north, and sacked Pyongsan, Sohung, Pungsan, Hwangju, and Chunghwa on the way.<ref name="turnbull72-3"> Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 72-3.</ref> At Chunghwa, the Third Division under Kuroda Nagamasa joined the First, and continued to the city of [[Pyeongyang]] located behind the [[Taedong River]].<ref name="turnbull72-3"/> 10,000 troops guarded the city against the 30,000 Japanese troops<ref name="turnbull240"> Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 240.</ref> under the various commands including the General Yi Il and Kim Myong-won, and their defense preparations made sure that no boats were available for Japanese use.<ref name="turnbull72-3"/>
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| On the night of [[July 22]], [[1592]], the Koreans silently crossed the river and launched a successful surprise attack against the Japanese encampment.<ref name="turnbull72-3"/> However, this stirred up the rest of the Japanese army, which took the rear of the Korean positions and destroyed the reinforcements crossing the river.<ref name="turnbull73-4">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 73-4.</ref> Then the rest of the Korean troops retreated back to Pyeongyang, and the Japanese troops gave up their pursuit against the Koreans to observe the way the Koreans crossed the river.<ref name="turnbull73-4"/>
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| The next day, the Japanese began sending troops to the other shore over the shallow points in the river, in a systematical manner, and at this the Koreans abandoned the city over the night.<ref name="turnbull74-5">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 74-5.</ref> On [[July 24]], the First and Third Divisions entered the deserted city of Pyeongyang.<ref name="turnbull74-5"/>
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| ==== Campaigns in the Gangwon Province ====
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| The Fourth Division under the command of Mōri Yoshinari set out eastward from the capital city of Hanseong in July, and captured the fortresses down the eastern coast from [[Anbyon]] to [[Samchok]].<ref name="turnbull74-5"/> The division then turned inward to capture [[Chongson]], [[Yongwol]], and [[Pyongchang]], and settled down at the provincial capital of [[Wonju]].<ref name="turnbull74-5"/> There Mōri Yoshinari established a civil administration, systematized social ranks according to the Japanese model, and conducted land surveys.<ref name="turnbull74-5"/> Shimazu Yoshihiro, one of the generals in the Fourth Division, arrived to Gangwon lately due to the [[Umekita Rebellion]], and finished the campagin by securing [[Chunchon]].<ref name="turnbull75-6">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 75-6.</ref>
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| ==== Campaigns in the Hamgyong Province and Manchuria ====
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| Katō Kiyomasa led the Second Division of more than 20,000 men went across the peninsula to [[Anbyon]] within ten days' march, and swept north along the eastern coast.<ref name="turnbull75-6"/> Among the castles captured was [[Hamhung]], the provincial capital of the Hamgyong Province, and here a part of the Second Division was allocated for defense and civil administration.<ref name="turnbull77-8">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 77-8.</ref>
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| The rest of the division at 10,000 men<ref name="turnbull240"/> continued north, and fought a battle on [[August 23]] against the southern and northern Hamgyong armies under the commands of Yi Yong and Han Kuk-ham at Songjin (present-day [[Kimchaek]]).<ref name="turnbull77-8"/> A Korean cavalry division took advantage of the open field at Songjin, and pushed the Japanese forces into a grain storehouse.<ref name="turnbull77-8"/> There the Japanese barricaded themselves with bales of rice, and successfully repelled off a formation charge from the Korean forces with their arquebuses.<ref name="turnbull77-8"/> While the Koreans planned to renew the battle in the morning, the Katō Kiyomasa ambushed them at night; the Second Division completely surrounded the Koreans forces with the exception of an opening leading to a swamp.<ref name="turnbull77-8"/> Here, those that fled were trapped and slaughtered.<ref name="turnbull77-8"/>
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| Koreans who fled gave alarms to the other garrisons, allowing the Japanese troops to easily capture [[Kilchu]], [[Myongchon]], and [[Kyongson]].<ref name="turnbull77-8"/> The Second Division then turned inland through [[Puryong]] toward [[Hoeryong]] where two Korean princes had taken refuge.<ref name="turnbull77-8"/> And on [[August 30]], [[1592]], the Second Division entered into Hoeryong where Katō Kiyomasa received the Korean princes and the provincial governor Yu Yong-rip, having already been captured by the local inhabitants.<ref name="turnbull77-8"/> Shortly afterward, a Korean warrior band handed over the head of an anonymous Korean general, and the General Han Kuk-ham tied up in ropes.<ref name="turnbull77-8"/>
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| Katō Kiyomasa then decided to attack a nearby [[Jurchen]] castle across the [[Tumen River]] in [[Manchuria]] to test his troops against the “barbarians”, as the Koreans called the Jurchens (“[[oranke]]” in Korean and “[[orangai]]” in Japanese – the Japanese derived both the word and the concept of the Jurchens as barbarians from the Koreans).<ref name="turnbull79-80">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 79-80.</ref> The Koreans with 3,000 men at Hamgyong joined in (with Kato’s army of 8,000), as the Jurchens periodically raided them across the border.<ref name="turnbull79-80"/> Soon the combined force sacked the castle, and camped near the border; after the Koreans left home, the Japanese troops received a retaliatory assault from the Jurchens.<ref name="turnbull79-80"/> Despite having the advantage, Katō Kiyomasa retreated with his forces to avoid heavy losses.<ref name="turnbull79-80"/>
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| The Second Division continued east, capturing the fortresses of [[Chongsong]], [[Onsong]], [[Kyongwon]], and [[Kyonghung]], and finally arrived at [[Sosupo]] on the estuary of the Tumen River.<ref name="turnbull79-80"/> There the Japanese rested on the beach, and watched a nearby volcanic island rising on the horizon that they mistook as [[Mount Fuji]].<ref name="turnbull79-80"/> After the tour, the Japanese continued their previous efforts to bureaucratize and administrate the province, and allowed several garrisons to be handled by the Koreans themselves.<ref name="turnbull81-82">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 81-82.</ref>
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| === The naval battles of Admiral Yi ===
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| {{main|Joseon naval campaigns of 1592}}
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| Having secured Pyeongyang, the Japanese planned to cross the [[Yalu River]] into China, and use the waters west of the Korean peninsula to supply the invasion.<ref name="turnbull82">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 82.</ref> However, Yi Sun-sin, who held the post of the Left Naval Commander (equivalent of "[[Admiral]]” in English) of the [[Jeolla Province]] (which covers the western waters of Korea), successfully destroyed the Japanese ships transporting troops and supplies.<ref name="turnbull82"/> Thus the Japanese, now lacking enough arms and troops to carry on an invasion into China, changed their objective of the war to the occupation of Korea.<ref name="turnbull82"/>
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| When the Japanese troops hit the port of Busan, Bak (also spelled [[Park (Korean name)|Park]]) Hong, the Left Naval Commander of the Gyeongsang Province, destroyed his entire fleet, his base, and all armaments and provisions, and fled.<ref name="turnbull83-4"/> [[Won Gyun]], the Right Naval Commander, also destroyed and abandoned his own base, and fled to Konyang with only four ships.<ref name="turnbull83-4"/> Therefore, there was no Korean navy active around the Gyeongsang Province, and the surviving two, out of the total four, navies were active only on the other side of the peninsula.<ref name="turnbull83-4"/> Admiral Won later sent a message to Admiral Yi that he had fled to Konyang after being overwhelmed by the Japanese in a fight.<ref name="turnbull85-6">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 85-6.</ref> A messenger was sent by Admiral Yi to the nearby island of [[Namhae]] to give Yi’s order for war preparations, only to find it pillaged and abandoned by its own inhabitants.<ref name="turnbull85-6">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 85-6.</ref> As soldiers began to flee secretly, Admiral Yi ordered “to arrest the escapees and had two of the fugitives brought back, beheaded them and had their heads exposed”.<ref name="turnbull85-6">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 85-6.</ref>
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| ==== Battle of Okpo ====
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| {{main|Battle of Okpo}}
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| Admiral Yi relied on a network of local fishermen and scouting boats to receive intelligence of the enemy movements.<ref name="turnbull90-1">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 90-1.</ref> On the dawn of [[June 13]], [[1592]], Admiral Yi and Admiral Yi Ok-gi set sail with 24 [[Panokseon]]s, 15 small warships, and 46 boats (i.e. fishing boats), and arrived the waters of the [[Gyeongsang Province]] by sunset.<ref name="turnbull90-1"/> Next day, the Jeolla fleet sailed to the arranged location where Admiral Won was supposed to meet them, and met the admiral on [[June 15]]. The augmented flotilla of 91 ships<ref name="barry11">Strauss, Barry. pp. 11</ref> then began circumnavigating the [[Gojae Island]] for the island of [[Gadok]], but scouting vessels detected 50 Japanese vessels at the [[Okpo]] harbor.<ref name="turnbull90-1"/> Upon sighting the approaching Korean fleet, some of the Japanese who had been busying themselves with plundering got back to their ships, and began to flee.<ref name="turnbull90-1"/> At this, the Korean fleet encircled the Japanese ships and finished them with its artillery bombardments.<ref name="turnbull91-2">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 90-2.</ref> The Koreans spotted 5 more Japanese vessels by the night, and managed to destroy four.<ref name="turnbull91-2"/> The next day, the Koreans approached 13 Japanese ships at [[Chokjinpo]] as reported by the intelligence.<ref name="turnbull91-2"/> In the same manner as the previous success at Okpo, the Korean fleet destroyed 11 Japanese ships – completing the Battle of Okpo without a loss of a single ship.<ref name="turnbull91-2"/>
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| [[Image:Turtle boat.jpg|250px|right|thumb|A turtle ship [[replica]] at the military museum in Seoul.]]
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| ==== Battle of Sachon and the Turtle Ship ====
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| {{main|Battle of Sachon}}
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| About three weeks after the Battle of Okpo,<ref name="barry12">Strauss, Barry. pp. 12</ref> Admirals Yi and Won sailed with a total of 26 ships (23 under Admiral Yi) toward the Bay of [[Sachon]] upon receiving an intelligence report of the Japanese presence.<ref name="turnbull93">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 93.</ref> Admiral Yi had left behind his fishing vessels that used to make up for most of his fleet in favor of his newly completed [[Turtle ship]].<ref name="barry12"/>
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| The Turtle Ship (called “Gaubooksaun” in Korean) was a vessel of a [[Panokseon]] design with the removal of the elevated command post, the modification of the gunwales into curved walls, and the addition of a roof covered in iron spikes (and hexagonal iron plates, which is disputed).<ref name="turnbull94-5">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 94-5.</ref> Its walls contained a total of 36 cannon ports, and also openings, above the cannons, through which the ship’s crew members could look out and fire their personal arms.<ref name="turnbull93">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 93.</ref> This design also prevented the outsiders from boarding the ship and aiming at the personnel inside.<ref name="turnbull94-5"/> The ship was the fastest existing warship in the East Asian theater, as it was powered by two sails and 80 oarsmen taking turns to handle the ship’s 16 oars.<ref name="barry10"/> No more than 6 Turtle Ships served throughout the entire war, and their primary role was to cut deep into the enemy lines, cause havoc with its cannons, and destroy the enemy flag ship.<ref name="barry10"/>
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| On [[July 8]], [[1592]], the fleet arrived at the Bay of [[Sachon]], where the outgoing tide prevented the Korean fleet from entering.<ref name="barry12"/> Therefore, Admiral Yi ordered for the fleet to fake withdrawal, which the Japanese commander observed from his tent on a rock.<ref name="turnbull94-5"/> Then the Japanese hurriedly embarked their 12 ships and pursued the Korean fleet.<ref name="barry12"/> The Korean navy counterattacked, with the Turtle Ship in the front, and successfully destroyed all 12 ships.<ref name="barry12"/> Admiral Yi was shot by a bullet on his left shoulder, but survived.<ref name="barry12"/>
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| ==== Battle of Dangpo ====
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| On [[July 10]], [[1592]], the Korean fleet again found and destroyed an enemy fleet, at a total of 21 ships, anchored while the Japanese were raiding a coastal town.<ref name="turnbull96-7">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 96-7.</ref>
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| ==== Battle of Danghangpo ====
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| Admiral Yi Ok-gi with his fleet joined Admirals Yi Sun-sin and Won Gyun, and participated in a search for enemy vessels in the Gyonsang waters.<ref name="turnbull96-7"/> On [[July 13]], the generals received an intelligence from the local boatmen that a group of Japanese ships including those that escaped from the Battle of Dangpo was resting in the Bay of [[Danghangpo]].<ref name="turnbull96-7"/> Having traveled through a narrow gulf, the Koreans sighted a total of 26 enemy vessels in the bay.<ref name="turnbull96-7"/> The Turtle Ship penetrated into the enemy formation and rammed the flagship, while the rest of the Korean fleet held back.<ref name="turnbull98-107">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 98-107.</ref> Then Admiral Yi ordered for a fake retreat, as the Japanese could escape to land while in the bay.<ref name="turnbull98-107"/> When the Japanese pursued the Koreans far enough, the Korean fleet turned and surrounded the Japanese fleet, with the Turtle Ship again ramming against the enemy flag ship.<ref name="turnbull98-107"/> Only 1 Japanese ship managed to escape from the defeat, and that too was caught and destroyed by a Korean ship the next morning.
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| [[Image:Su Jo Byung Pung Do.JPG|thumb|right|350px| Admiral Yi's crane wing formation.]]
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| ==== Battle of Yulpo ====
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| On [[July 15]], the Korean fleet was sailing east to return to the island of Gadok, and successfully intercepted 7 Japanese ships coming out from the Yulpo harbor and escaping to the city of Busan.<ref name="turnbull98-107"/>
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| ==== Battle of Hansando ====
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| {{main|Battle of Hansando}}
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| In response to the Korean navy’s success, Toyotomi Hideyoshi recalled from land-based activities his three admirals: Wakizaka Yasuharu, Kato Yoshiaki, and Kuki Yoshitaka.<ref name="turnbull98-107"/> They were the only ones with naval responsibilities in the entirety of the Japanese invasion forces.<ref name="turnbull98-107"/> However, the admirals arrived in Busan 9 days before Hideyoshi’s order was actually issued, and assembled a squadron to counter the Korean navy.<ref name="turnbull98-107"/> Eventually Admiral Wakizaka completed his preparations, and his eagerness to win military honor pushed him to launch an attack against the Koreans without waiting for the other admirals to finish.<ref name="turnbull98-107"/>
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| The combined Korean navy of 70 ships<ref name="barry13">Strauss, Barry. pp. 13</ref> under the commands of Admiral Yi Sun-sin, Yi Ok-gi, and Won Gyun was carrying out a search-and-destroy operation because the Japanese troops on land were advancing into the [[Jeolla Province]].<ref name="turnbull98-107"/> The Jeolla Province was the only Korean territory to be untouched by a major military action, and served as home for the three admirals and the only active Korean naval force.<ref name="turnbull98-107"/> The admirals perceived it best to destroy the naval support for the Japanese to reduce the effectiveness of the enemy ground troops.<ref name="turnbull98-107"/>
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| On [[August 13]], [[1592]], the Korean fleet sailing from the [[Miruk Island]] at [[Tangpo]] received a local intelligence that a large Japanese fleet was nearby.<ref name="turnbull98-107"/> The following morning, the Korean fleet spotted the Japanese fleet of 82 vessels anchored in the straits of [[Gyeonnaeryang]].<ref name="turnbull98-107"/> Because of the narrowness of the strait and the hazard posed by the underwater rocks, Admiral Yi sent 6 ships to lure out 63 Japanese vessels into the wider sea,<ref name="barry13"/> and the Japanese fleet followed.<ref name="turnbull98-107"/> There the Japanese fleet was surrounded by the Korean fleet in a semicircular formation called “crane wing” by Admiral Yi.<ref name="turnbull98-107"/> With at least 3 Turtle Ships (of which 2 were just built) spearheading the clash against the Japanese fleet, the Korean vessels fired volleys of cannonballs into the Japanese formation.<ref name="turnbull98-107"/> Then the Korean ships engaged in a free-for-all battle with the Japanese ships, maintaining enough distance to prevent the Japanese from boarding; Admiral Yi permitted melee combats only against severely damaged Japanese ships.<ref name="turnbull98-107"/> The battle ended in Korean victory, with Japanese losses of 59 ships – 47 destroyed and 12 captured.<ref name="barry14">Strauss, Barry. pp. 14</ref> Several Korean prisoners of war were rescued by the Korean soldiers throughout the fight. Admiral Wakisaka escaped due to the speed of his flag ship.<ref name="barry14"/> When the news of the defeat at the Battle of Hansando reached Toyotomi Hideyoshi, he ordered that the Japanese invasion forces should cease all naval operations.<ref name="turnbull98-107"/>
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| ==== Battle of Angolpo ====
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| On [[August 16]], [[1592]], Yi Sun-sin and Won Gyun led their fleet to the harbor of Angolpo where 42 Japanese vessels were docked.<ref name="turnbull98-107"/> When Admiral Yi tried to fake a retreat, the Japanese ships did not follow; in response, Admiral Yi ordered for the Korean ships to take turn bombarding the Japanese vessels.<ref name="turnbull98-107"/> In fear that the Japanese troops would take revenge for their losses against the local inhabitants, Admiral Yi ordered the Korean ships to cease fire against the few remaining enemy vessels.<ref name="turnbull98-107"/>
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| === Korean Militias ===
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| {{main|Righteous army}}
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| Since the beginning of the war, the Koreans organized militias called the "Righteous Army" (의병) to resist the Japanese invasion.<ref name="yahooright">{{cite web
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| | last =
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| | first =
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| | authorlink =
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| | title = 의병 (義兵)
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| | work = Encyclopedia
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| | publisher = Yahoo Korea!
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| | date =
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| | url = http://kr.dic.yahoo.com/search/enc/result.html?p=%C0%C7%BA%B4&pk=16989000&subtype=&type=enc&field=id
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| | format =
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| | doi =
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| | accessdate = 2007-10-07 }}</ref> These fighting bands spurred throughout the country, and participated in battles, guerilla raids, sieges, and the transportation and construction of the wartime necessities.<ref name="turnbull108-9"/>
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| There were three main types of Korean militias during the war: first, the surviving and leaderless Korean regular soldiers; second, the “Righteous Armies” (Uibyong in Korean) consisting of patriotic [[yangban]]s (aristocrats) and commoners; and third, the Buddhist monks.<ref name="turnbull108-9"/>
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| During the first invasion, the [[Cholla Province]] remained the only untouched area on the Korean peninsula.<ref name="turnbull108-9">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 1-8-9.</ref> In addition to the successful patrols of the sea by Admiral Yi, volunteer activism pressured the Japanese troops from avoiding the province for other priorities.<ref name="turnbull108-9"/>
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| ==== Gwak Jae-u's Campaigns along the Nakdong River ====
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| [[Gwak Jae-u]] was a famous leader in the Korean militia movement, and it is widely accepted that he was the first to form a resistance group against the Japanese invaders.<ref name="turnbull110-5"/> He was a land-owner in the town of Uiryong situated by the [[Nam River]] in the [[Gyeongsang Province]]. As the Korean regulars abandoned the town<ref name="turnbull108-9"/> and an attack seemed imminent, Gwak organized fifty townsmen; however the Third Division went from [[Changwon]] straight toward [[Songju]].<ref name="turnbull110-5">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 110-5.</ref> When Gwak used abandoned government storages to supply his army, the Gyeongsang Province Governor [[Kim Su]] branded Gwak's group as rebels, and ordered that it be disbanded.<ref name="turnbull110-5"/> When the general asked for help from other landowners, and sent a direct appeal to the King, the governor sent troops against Gwak, in spite of having enough troubles already with the Japanese.<ref name="turnbull110-5"/> However, an official from the capital city then arrived to raise troops in the province, and, since the official lived nearby and actually knew him, he saved Gwak from troubles with the governor.<ref name="turnbull110-5"/>
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| Gwak Jae-u deployed his troops in guerilla warfare under the cover of the tall reeds on the union of the [[Nakdong River|Nakdong]] and the Nam Rivers.<ref name="turnbull110-5"/> This strategy prevented easy access for the Japanese troops to the Jeolla Province where Admiral Yi and his fleet were stationed.<ref name="turnbull110-5"/>
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| ==== Battle of Uiryong/Chongjin ====
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| The Sixth Division under the command of Kobayakawa Takakage was in charge of conquering the Jeolla Province.<ref name="turnbull110-5"/> The Sixth Division marched to Songju through the established Japanese route (i.e. the Third Division, above), and cut left to [[Kumsan]] in [[Chungchong]], which Kobayakawa secured as his starting base for his invasion into the province.<ref name="turnbull110-5"/>
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| Ankokuji Ekei, a former Buddhist monk made into a general due to his role in the negotiations between Mōri Terumoto and Toyotomi hideyoshi, led the units of the Sixth Division assigned with the invasion of the Jeolla Province. The units began their march to Uiryong at [[Changwon]], and arrived at the [[Narm River]].<ref name="turnbull110-5"/> Ankokuji’s scouts planted meters measuring the river’s depths so that the entire squadron could cross the river; over the night, the Korean militiamen moved the meters into the deeper parts of the river.<ref name="turnbull110-5"/> As the Japanese troops began to cross, Gwak’s militia ambushed them, and caused heavy losses for the Japanese.<ref name="turnbull110-5"/> In the end, to advance into the Jeolla Province, Ankokuji’s men had to try going north around the insecure grounds and within the security of the Japanese-garrisoned fortresses.<ref name="turnbull110-5"/> At Kaenyong, Ankokuji’s target was changed to [[Gochang]], to be taken with the aid of Kobayakawa Takakage.<ref name="turnbull110-5"/> However, the entire Jeolla campaign was then abandoned when [[Kim Myon]] and his guerillas successfully ambushed Ankokuji’s troops by firing arrows from hidden positions within the mountains.<ref name="turnbull110-5"/>
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| ==== The Jeolla coalition & the Battle of Yong-in ====
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| When the Japanese troops were advancing to Hanseong (present-day [[Seoul]]), the Yi Kwang, the governor of the Jeolla Province, attempted to check the Japanese progress by launching his army toward the capital city.<ref name="turnbull116-123">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 116-123.</ref> Upon hearing the news that the capital had already been sacked, the governor retreated his army.<ref name="turnbull116-123"/> However, as the army grew in size to 50,000 men with its accumulation of several volunteer forces, Yi Kwang and the irregular commanders reconsidered their aim to reclaim Hanseong, and led the combined forces north to [[Suwon]], 26 miles (42 km) south of Hanseong.<ref name="britannicasuwon">{{cite web
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| | last =
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| | title = Suwon
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| | work =
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| | publisher = Encyclopedia Britannica
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| | date =
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| | url = http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9070532/Suwon
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| | accessdate = 2007-09-01 }}</ref><ref name="turnbull116-123"/> On [[June 4]], an advance guard of 1,900 men attempted to take the nearby fortress at Yong-in, but the 600 Japanese defenders under Admiral Wakizaka Yasuharu avoided engagement with the Koreans until the [[June 5]], when the main Japanese troops came to rescue the fortress.<ref name="britannicasuwon2">{{cite web
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| | last =
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| | title = 용인전투
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| | work = Britannica Encyclopedia
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| | publisher = Daum
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| | date =
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| | url = http://enc.daum.net/dic100/contents.do?query1=b16a3034a
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| | accessdate = 2007-09-01 }}</ref><ref name="turnbull116-123"/> The Japanese troops counterattacked successfully against the Jeolla coalition, forcing the Koreans to abandon arms and retreat.<ref name="turnbull116-123"/>
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| ==== The First Geumsan Campaign ====
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| Around the time of General Kwak's mobilization of his volunteer army in the [[Gyeongsang Province]], [[Go Gyung-myung]] at the [[Jeolla Province]] formed a volunteer force of 6,000 men.<ref name="turnbull116-123"/> Go then tried to combine his forces with another militia in the [[Chungcheong|Chungchong Province]], but upon crossing the provincial border he heard that Kobayakawa Takakage of the Sixth Division launched an attack to Jeonju (the capital of the [[Jeolla Province]]) from the mountain fortress at Geumsan, Go returned to his own province. <ref name="turnbull116-123"/> Having joined forces with General Gwak Yong, Go then led his soldiers to Geumsan.<ref name="turnbull116-123"/> There, on [[July 10]], the volunteer forces fought with a Japanese army retreating to Geumsan after a defeat at the [[Battle of Ichi]] two days earlier on [[July 8]]<ref name="daumichi">{{cite encyclopedia
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| | title = 이치전투 (조선 역사) [梨峙戰鬪]
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| | encyclopedia = Daum 백과사전(Britannica)
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| | volume =
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| | accessdate = 2007-9-29 }} http://enc.daum.net/dic100/contents.do?query1=b18a0543a </ref>
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| === Battle of Haengju ===
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| {{main|Battle of Haengju}}
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| [[Image:Battle of Haengju.jpg|thumb|250px|A contemporary painting of the Battle of Haengju. Note the hwacha used.]]
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| The Japanese invasion into Jeolla province was broken down and pushed back by General [[Gwon Yul]] at the hills of Ichiryeong, where outnumbered Koreans fought overwhelming Japanese troops and gained victory. Gwon Yul quickly advanced northwards, re-taking Suwon and then swung south toward Haengju where he would wait for the Chinese reinforcements. After he got the message that the Koreans were annihilated at Byeokje, Gwon Yul decided to fortify Haengju.
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| Bolstered by the victory at Byeokje, Katō and his army of 30,000 men advanced to the south of Hanseong to attack Haengju Fortress, an impressive mountain fortress that overlooked the surrounding area. An army of a few thousand led by Gwon Yul was garrisoned at the fortress waiting for the Japanese. Katō believed his overwhelming army would destroy the Koreans and therefore ordered the Japanese soldiers to simply advance upon the steep slopes of Haengju with little planning. Gwon Yul answered the Japanese with fierce fire from the fortification using [[Hwacha]]s, rocks, handguns, and bows. After nine massive assaults and 10,000 casualties, Katō burned his dead and finally pulled his troops back.
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| The [[Battle of Haengju]] was an important victory for the Koreans, as it greatly improved the morale of the Korean army. The battle is celebrated today as one of the three most decisive Korean victories; [[Battle of Haengju]], [[Siege of Jinju (1592)]], and [[Battle of Hansando]].
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| Today, the site of Haengju fortress has a memorial built to honor [[Gwon Yul]].
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| === Siege of Jinju ===
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| {{main|Siege of Jinju (1592)}}
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| Jinju (진주) was a large castle that defended [[Jeolla]] Province. The Japanese commanders knew that control of Jinju would mean the fall of Jeolla. Therefore, a large army under [[Hosokawa Tadaoki]] gleefully approached Jinju. Jinju was defended by [[Kim Si-min]] (김시민), one of the better generals in Korea, commanding a Korean garrison of 3,000 men. Kim had recently acquired about 200 new arquebuses that were equal in strength to the Japanese guns. With the help of arquebuses, cannon, and mortars, Kim and the Koreans were able to drive back the Japanese from Jeolla Province. Hosokawa lost over 30,000 men. The battle at Jinju is considered one of the greatest victories of Korea because it prevented the Japanese from entering Jeolla.
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| In 1593, Jinju would fall to the Japanese.<ref name="SamuraiSourcebook">Turnbull, Stephen. 1998. pp. 248.</ref>
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| === Intervention of Ming China ===
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| [[China]] sent land and naval forces to Korea in both the first and second invasions to assist in defeating the Japanese.
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| After the fall of Pyongyang, King Seonjo retreated to Uiju, a small city near the border of China. With the First and Second Divisions rapidly approaching, King Seonjo made another desperate retreat into China. At the Chinese court, King Seonjo informed of the Japanese invasion.
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| The [[Ming Dynasty]] Emperor [[Wanli]] and his advisers responded to [[Seonjo of Joseon|King Seonjo]]'s request for aid by sending an inadequately small force of 5,000 soldiers.<ref>http://koreanhistoryproject.org/Ket/C12/E1204.htm</ref> These troops provided almost no help however.
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| As a result, the Ming Emperor sent a large force in January 1593 under two generals, [[Song Yingchang]] and [[Li Rusong]]. The salvage army had a prescribed strength of 100,000, made up of 42,000 from five northern military districts and a contingent of 3,000 soldiers proficient in the use of firearms from South China. The Ming army was also well armed with artillery pieces.
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| In February 1593, a large force of Chinese soldiers meet up outside of [[Pyongyang]] with a group of Korean militas. By King Seonjo's decree, Ming general Li Rusong was appointed the supreme commander of armies in Korea. Li then led the allied troops to victory in the bloody [[Siege of Pyongyang (1593)|siege of Pyongyang]] and drove the Japanese into eastward retreat. Overconfident of his recent success, Li Rusong personally led a pursuit with over 20,000 strong mounted troops, along with a small force of Koreans, but was ambushed near Pyokje by a large Japanese formation. Li escaped when his brother's relief force saved the cavalry.
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| In late February, Li ordered a raid into the Japanese rear and burned several hundred thousand [[koku]] of military rice supply, forcing the Japanese invading army to retreat from Seoul due to the prospect of food shortage.
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| These engagements ended the first phase of the war, and peace negotiations followed. Some Japanese soldiers abandoned the army and settled down in Korea. The Japanese evacuated Hanseong in May and retreated to fortifications around Busan. An uneasy truce was lasted about four years.
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| == Negotiations and truce between China and Japan (1594–1596) ==
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| Under pressure from the [[Chinese army]] and local guerrillas, with food supplies cut off and his forces now reduced by nearly one third from desertion, disease and death, Konishi was compelled to sue for peace. General Li Rusong offered General Konishi a chance to negotiate an end to the hostilities. When negotiations got underway in the spring of 1593, China and Korea agreed to cease hostilities if the Japanese would withdraw from Korea altogether. General Konishi had no option but to accept the terms, but he would have a hard time convincing Hideyoshi that he had no other choice.
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| Hideyoshi proposed to China the division of Korea: the north as a self-governing Chinese satellite, and the south to remain in Japanese hands. The peace talks were mostly carried out by Konishi Yukinaga, who did most of the fighting against the Chinese. The offer was taken into consideration until Hideyoshi also demanded one of Chinese princesses to be sent as his concubine. Then the offer was promptly rejected. These negotiations were kept secret from the Korean Royal Court, which had no say in the negotiations.
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| By [[May 18]], [[1593]], all the Japanese soldiers had retreated back to Japan. In the summer of 1593, a Chinese delegation visited Japan and stayed at the court of Hideyoshi for more than a month. The Ming government withdrew most of its expeditionary force, but kept 16,000 men on the Korean peninsula to guard the truce.
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| An envoy from Hideyoshi reached [[Beijing]] in 1594. Most of the Japanese army had left Korea by the autumn of 1596; a small garrison nevertheless remained in Busan. Satisfied with the Japanese overtures, the imperial court in Beijing dispatched an embassy to allow Hideyoshi to have the title of "King of Japan" on condition of complete withdrawal of Japanese forces from Korea.
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| The Ming ambassador met Hideyoshi in October 1596 but there was a great deal of misunderstanding about the context of the meeting. Hideyoshi was enraged to learn that China insulted the [[Emperor of Japan]] by presuming to cancel the Emperor's divine right to the throne, offering to recognize Hideyoshi instead. To insult the Chinese, he demanded among other things, a royal marriage with the Wanli Emperor's daughter, the delivery of a Korean prince as hostage, and four of Korea's southern provinces.
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| Peace negotiations soon broke down and the war entered its second phase when Hideyoshi sent another invasion force. Early in 1597, both sides resumed hostilities.
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| == Korean military reorganization ==
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| === Proposal for military reforms ===
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| During the period between the First and Second invasions, the Korean government had a chance to examine the reasons why they had been easily overrun by the Japanese. Yu Seong-ryong, the Prime Minister, spoke out about the Korean disadvantage.
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| Yu pointed out that Korean castle defences were extremely weak, a fact which he had already pointed out before the war. He noted how Korean castles had incomplete fortifications and walls that were too easy to scale. He also wanted cannons set up in the walls. Yu proposed building strong towers with gun turrets for cannons. Besides castles, Yu wanted to form a line of defences in Korea. He proposed to create a series of walls and forts, all enveloping Seoul in the center.
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| Yu also pointed out how efficient the Japanese army was, in that it took them only one month to reach Seoul, and how well trained they were. The organized military units the Japanese generals deployed were a large part of the Japanese success.{{Verify source|date=July 2007}}<!-- needs to check whether edit changed intended meaning --> Yu noted how the Japanese moved their units in complex maneuvers, often weakening the enemy with arquebuses, then attacking with melee weapons. Korean armies often moved forward as one body without any organization.
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| === Military Training Agency ===
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| King Seonjo and the Korean court finally began to reform the military. In September 1593, the Military Training Agency was established. The agency carefully divided the army into units and companies. Within the companies were squads of archers, arquebusers, and edged-weapon users. The agency set up divisional units in each region of Korea and garrisoned battalions at castles. The agency, which originally had less than 80 members, soon grew to about 10,000.
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| One of the most important changes was that both upper class citizens and slaves were subject to the draft. All males had to enter military service to be trained and familiarized with weapons.
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| The creation of the Military Training Agency was halfhearted and under-developed. In addition, nearly all the reforms Yu had called for were again ignored. The lack of manpower and a devastated economy put Korea in nearly the same position as in the first invasion. Although the second invasion was quickly repelled with the help of China, Korea ultimately failed to reform the military.
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| == Second invasion (1597–1598) ==
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| Hideyoshi was dissatisfied with the first campaign and decided to attack Korea again. One of the main differences between the first and second invasions was that conquering China was no longer a goal for the Japanese. Failing to gain a foothold during Katō Kiyomasa's Chinese campaign and the full retreat of the Japanese during the first invasion affected Japanese morale. Hideyoshi and his generals instead planned to conquer Korea.
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| Instead of the nine divisions during the earlier invasion, the armies invading Korea were divided into the Army of the Left and the Army of the Right, consisting of about 49,600 men and 30,000 respectively.
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| Soon after the Chinese ambassadors returned safely to China in 1597, Hideyoshi sent 200 ships with approximately 141,100 men<ref name="second">브리태니커백과사전. [http://www.mtcha.com.ne.kr/korea-term/sosun/term312-jungyujeran.htm 정유재란 (丁酉再亂)]</ref> under the overall command of [[Kobayakawa Hideaki]].<ref name="turnbull187">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 187.</ref> Japan's second force arrived unopposed on the southern coast of Gyeongsang Province in 1596. However, the Japanese found that Korea was both better equipped and ready to deal with an invasion this time.<ref name="project">Korean History Project - Where the Past is Always Present. [http://koreanhistoryproject.org/Ket/C12/E1205.htm Song of the Great Peace]</ref> In addition, upon hearing this news in China, the imperial court in Beijing appointed [[Yang Hao (Ming Dynasty)|Yang Hao]] (楊鎬) as the supreme commander of an initial mobilization of 55,000 troops<ref name="second" /> from various (and sometimes remote) provinces across [[China]], such as [[Sichuan]], [[Zhejiang]], [[Huguang]], [[Fujian]], and [[Guangdong]].<ref>Hawley, ''The Imjin War'', ''op. cit'', p. 450.</ref> A naval force of 21,000 was included in the effort.<ref>Huang, Ray, "The Lung-ch'ing and Wan-li Reigns, 1567–1620." in ''The Cambridge History of China. Vol. 7, ''The Ming Dynasty, 1368–1644, Part I, edited by Denis Twitchett and John Farbank. Cambridge University Press, 1988, p. 572.</ref> [[Rei Huang]], a Chinese historian, estimated that the combined strength of the Chinese army and navy at the height of the second campaign was around 75,000.<ref>Huang, Ray, "The Lung-ch'ing and Wan-li Reigns, 1567–1620." in ''The Cambridge History of Chani. Vol. 7, ''The Ming Dynasty, 1368–1644, Part I, edited by Denis Twitchett and John Farbank. Cambridge University Press, 1988, p. 572.</ref> Korean forces totaled 30,000 with General [[Gwon Yul]]'s army in Gong Mountain (공산; 公山) in [[Daegu]], General [[Gwon Eung]]'s (권응) troops in [[Gyeongju]], [[Gwak Jae-u]]'s soldiers in [[Changnyeong]] (창녕), [[Yi Bok-nam]]’s (이복남) army in [[Naju]], and [[Yi Si-yun]]'s troops in [[Chungpungnyeong]].<ref name="second" />
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| === Initial offensive ===
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| Initially the Japanese found little success, being confined mainly to Gyeongsang Province and only managing numerous short-range attacks to keep the much larger Korean and Chinese forces off balance.<ref name="project" /> All throughout the second invasion Japan would mainly be on the defensive and locked in at Gyeongsang province.<ref name="project" /> The Japanese planned to attack [[Jeollanam-do|Jeolla Province]] in the southwestern part of the peninsula and eventually occupy [[Jeonju]], the provincial capital. Korean success in the [[Siege of Jinju (1593)|Siege of Jinju]] in 1592 had saved this area from further devastation during the first invasion. Two Japanese armies, under [[Mōri Hidemoto]] and [[Ukita Hideie]], began the assault in Busan and marched towards Jeonju, taking Sacheon and Changpyong along the way.
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| === Siege of Namwon ===
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| {{main|Siege of Namwon}}
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| [[Namwon]] was located 30 miles southeast of Jeonju. It was the largest fortress in Jeolla Province,{{Fact|date=February 2007}} and a coalition force of 6,000 soldiers (including 3,000 Chinese)<ref>Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 191.</ref> and civilian volunteers were readied to fight the approaching Japanese forces. The Japanese laid siege to the walls of the fortress with ladders and siege towers.<ref> 脇坂紀, 太田 藤四郎 and 塙 保己一, editors, 続群書類従 [Zoku Gunsho Ruiju Series], 1933, p. 448.</ref> The two sides exchanged volleys of arquebuses and bows. Eventually the Japanese forces scaled the walls and sacked the fortess. According to Japanese commander [[Okochi Hidemoto]], author of the ''[[Chosen Ki]]'', the [[Siege of Namwon]] resulted in 3,726 casualties<ref name="noses"> This refers to a record of the number of noses collected, as samurai were paid according to how many noses they collected, both from the living and the dead, in contrast to the more traditional practice of collecting heads.</ref> on the Korean and Chinese forces' side.<ref>Hidemoto, Okochi, 朝鮮記 [Chosen Ki}, 太田 藤四郎 and 塙 保己一, editors, 続群書類従 [Zoku Gunsho Ruiju Series], 1933</ref> The entire Jeolla Province fell under Japanese control, but as the battle raged on the Japanese found themselves hemmed in on all sides in a retreat and again positioned in a defensive perimeter only around Gyeongsang Province.<ref name="project" />
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| === Battle of Hwangseoksan ===
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| {{main|Battle of Hwangseoksan}}
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| Hwangseoksan Fortress consisted of extensive walls that circumscribed the Hwangseok mountain and garrisoned thousands of soldiers led by the general [[Jo Jong-do]] and [[Gwak Jun]]. When [[Katō Kiyomasa]] laid siege to the mountain with a large army, the Koreans lost morale and retreated with 350 casualties. Even with this incident the Japanese were still unable to break free from Gyeongsang Province and were reduced to holding a defensive position only, with constant attacks from the Chinese and Korean forces.<ref name="project" />
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| === Korean naval operations (1597–1598) ===
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| [[Image:Navalzhugenu2.jpg|thumb|240px|A naval battle. Close combat was very rare during Admiral Yi's operations.]]
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| The Korean navy played a crucial part in the second invasion, as in the first. The Japanese advances were halted due to the lack of reinforcements and supplies{{Fact|date=February 2007}} as the naval victories of the Korean navy prevented the Japanese from accessing the south-western side of the Korean peninsula.<ref>Lee, Ki-Baik, ''A New History of Korea'', Translated by Edward W. Wagner and Edward J. Shultz, Ilchorak/Harvard University Press, 1984, p. 214, ISBN 0-674-61575-1.</ref> Also, during the second invasion, China sent a large number of Chinese ships to aid the Koreans. This made the Korean navy an even bigger threat to the Japanese, since they had to fight a larger enemy fleet.
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| ====Plot against Admiral Yi====
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| The war at sea took off on a bad start when [[Won Gyun]] took Admiral Yi's place as commander.
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| Because Admiral Yi, the commander of the Korean navy, was so able in naval warfare, the Japanese plotted to demote him by making use of the laws that governed the Korean military. A Japanese double agent working for the Koreans falsely reported that Japanese General [[Katō Kiyomasa]] would be coming on a certain date with a great Japanese fleet in another attack on Korean shores, and insisted that Admiral Yi be sent to lay an ambush.<ref>Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 182–183.</ref>
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| Knowing that the area had sunken rocks detrimental to the ships, Admiral Yi refused, and he was demoted and jailed by [[King Seonjo]] for refusing orders. On top of this, Admiral Won Gyun accused Admiral Yi of drinking and idling. Won Gyun was quickly put in Admiral Yi's place. The replacement of Admiral Yi by Admiral Won would soon bring the destruction of the Korean navy at Chilchonryang.
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| ====Battle of Chilchonryang====
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| After Won Gyun replaced Admiral Yi, Won Gyun gathered the entire Korean fleet, which now had more than 100 ships carefully accummulated by Admiral Yi, outside of Yosu to search for the Japanese. Without any previous preparations or planning, Won Gyun had his fleet sail towards Busan.
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| After one day, Won Gyun was informed of a large Japanese fleet near Busan. He decided to attack immediately, although captains complained of the exhausted soldiers.
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| At the [[Battle of Chilchonryang]], Won Gyun was completely outmaneuvered by the Japanese in a surprise attack. His ships were overwhelmed by arquebuse fire and the Japanese traditional boarding attacks. Eventually, the battle destroyed the entire Korean fleet. However, before the battle, Bae Soel, an officer ran away with 13 Panokseons, the entire fighting force of the Korean navy for many months.
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| The Battle of Chilchonryang is Japan's only naval victory of the war. Won Gyun was killed after he struggled ashore and subsequently killed by a Japanese garrison.
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| ====Battle of Myeongnyang====
| | China came to Korea's aid during the war mainly because of Korea's symbolic importance to the Chinese. The Chinese and Koreans considered themselves as the pinnacles of civilization, similarly to today's cross-national cultural identities (such as "the West") based on scientific and cultural achievements.<ref name="hawley54-6">Hawley, 2005. pp. 54-6</ref> The very strict [[Confucian]] ideologies that imbued the two countries contributed to this elitism by rejecting the foreign customs and learnings as barbaric and possibly immoral. In addition, China had to fulfill its promise to provide security to its tributary states. The Chinese authorities feared greatly that the China's loss of legitimacy on this occasion would spur a domino effect of opposition, collapsing the entire tributary system.<ref name="Swope761-2">Swope, 2002. pp. 761-2</ref> And lastly the Japanese invasion of Korea posed a significant security threat to China itself, since Hideyoshi had openly proclaimed his intention to wage war with China following a successful conquest of Korea, and, even in the case that a direct confrontation with Japan could be avoided, China would have had to deal with an upgraded threat of the hostile [[Jurchen]] tribes from [[Manchuria]], without a friendly ally in the position to outflank them.<ref name="strauss6">Strauss, 2005. pp. 6</ref> |
| After the debacle in Chilcheollyang, [[King Seonjo]] immediately reinstated Admiral Yi. Admiral Yi quickly returned to Yeosu only to find his entire navy destroyed. Yi re-organized the navy, now reduced to 12 ships and 200 men from the previous battle.<ref>桑 田忠親 [Kuwata, Tadachika], ed., 旧参謀本部編纂, [Kyu Sanbo Honbu], 朝鮮の役 [Chousen no Eki] (日本の戦史 [Nihon no Senshi] Vol. 5), 1965, p. 192.</ref> Nonetheless, Admiral Yi's strategies did not waver, and on [[September 16]], [[1597]], he led the small Korean fleet against a Japanese fleet of 300 war vessels<ref>''Nanjung Ilgi. War Diary of Admiral Yi Sun-sin''. Translated by Ha Tae Hung, edited by Sohn Pow-key. Yonsei University Press, Seoul, Korea, 1977, p. 312, ISBN 89-7141-018-3.</ref> in the [[Myeongnyang Strait]]. The [[Battle of Myeongnyang]] resulted in a Korean victory with at least 133 Japanese vessels sunk, and the Japanese were forced to return to [[Busan]],<ref name="turnbull202">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 202,</ref> under the orders of Mōri Hidemoto. Admiral Yi won back the control of the Korean shores. The Battle of Myeongnyang is considered Admiral Yi's greatest battle because of the disparity of numbers.
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| === Siege of Ulsan === | | === Military situations of Japan, Korea, and China === |
| {{main|Siege of Ulsan}} | | {{Image|Japanese arquebus.jpg|left|250px|A collection of 16th century Japanese arquebuses and ramrods.}} |
| | The war of 1592-1598 was probably the earliest instance in which the European guns were used, the first of which were brought to Japan in 1543 by the Portuguese traders on the island of Tanegashima. Upon introduction, the Portuguese arquebus (slightly smaller than a musket) deeply impressed the Japanese, who had by then experienced more than a century of civil war. Within few years, several hundred ''tanegashima'' (as they were first called)<ref name="hawley6">Hawley, 2005. pp. 6</ref> were locally produced in Japan, and, by 1556, 300,000 guns existed in Japan.<ref name="brown238">Brown, 1948. pp. 238</ref> |
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| [[Image:Ulsan waesung attack.jpg|thumb|250px|Korean and Chinese soldiers assault the Japanese-built fortress at Ulsan.]] | | The arquebus' widespread use in Japan was a natural consequence of the tactical and economic advantages gained by its patrons over their enemies. Compared to the traditional bow and arrow, the arquebus offered a greater penetrating power and range of nearly half a kilometer, as well as being more economical in terms of the costs of ammunition (lead bullets were cheaper than crafted arrows) and recruitment (gunners could be hired at lower wages than skillful bowmen).<ref name="hawley8-9">Hawley, 2005. pp. 8-9</ref> But there were several inconveniences with the new weapon, including its relatively poor accuracy beyond a certain distance and slow loading time. Among the first to work around these limitations was a warlord by the name of [[Oda Nobunaga]], who arranged his gunners to fire in concentrated volleys like the western style of engagement pioneered by [[Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden|King Adolphus]] of [[Sweden]] around 1620.<ref name="hawley588">Hawley, 2005. pp. 588</ref> With his shrewd military tactics, Nobunaga conquered a third of the country before his assassination in 1582. [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi]], one of Nobunaga's followers who emerged as the successor in the ensuing power struggle, continued to exploit Nobunaga's gains and achieved the political unification of Japan by 1590. |
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| By late 1597, the Joseon and Ming allied forces achieved victory in [[Cheonan|Jiksan]] and pushed the Japanese further south. After the news of the loss at Myeongnyang, [[Katō Kiyomasa]] and his retreating army decided to destroy [[Gyeongju]], the former capital of [[Unified Silla]]. | | By the end of civil war in Japan, Hideyoshi had built up an army of 500,000 veteran troops. The army consisted mainly of infantry and partly of cavalry, and the infantry further divided into archers, spearmen, and gunners. The flawed, conventional view of the war in brief is that the Japanese, superior to the allies tactically and technologically (by reason of their possession of arquebuses), were winning the war until [[Yi Sunshin|Admiral Yi]] developed the (possibly iron-clad) [[turtle ship]]s, and the Chinese came to the Korea's aid. This became the dominant perspective in all three countries due to the biased tendency of the Japanese chroniclers (i.e. they inflated the number of enemies) and the prevalence of a praise-and-blame analytical framework within the established historiographical practices of Korea and China.<ref name="swope16-7">Swope, 2005. pp. 16-7</ref> |
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| Eventually, Japanese forces sacked the city and many artifacts and temples were destroyed, most prominently, the [[Bulguksa]], a Buddhist temple. However Joseon and Ming allied forces repulsed the Japanese forces who retreated south to Ulsan,<ref name="turnbull203">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 203.</ref> a harbor that had been an important Japanese trading post a century before, and which Katō had chosen as a strategic stronghold.
| | {|align="right" cellpadding="10" style="background:lightgray; width:30%; border:1px solid #aaa; margin:20px; font-size: 93%; font-family: Gill Sans MT;" |
| | |Basically, they do not know anything about fighting, and they have no units such as platoons, squads, banners or companies to which they are attached. They are in confusion and without order, make a big racket and run around in chaos, not knowing what to do with their hands, feet, ears or eyes. And then all of a sudden these men are placed in midst of arrows and stones where they have to fight to the death and give their all in the fight to gain a victory over the enemy. Is this not indeed difficult [for them to do]?<br> |
| | <center>—Yu Seongnyeong, concerning the state of Korea's defenses<ref name="palais515-6>Palais, 1996. pp. 515-6</ref></center> |
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| | In fact, Korea's military was much smaller and less experienced than Japan's, since the country had never faced a major military conflict during the 200 years since its founding. Its troops for the most part were poorly equipped and trained, and the military bureaucracy tended to favor men with political connections rather than individuals of merit, whereas the opposite was true in the Japanese chain of command. Although proposals for reform were made at the highest levels of the Korea's Joseon government, including a nationwide increase of regular troops to 100,000 and the adoption of the matchlock guns brought as gifts by a Japanese ambassador (see [[Korean War of 1592-1598#Pre-War embassies and preparations|below]]), these voices were lost in the constant political battles waged by the two dominant factions within the king's court.<ref name="turnbull15">Turnbull. 2002, pp. 15.</ref> The last-minute preparations that were made with the expectation that there would be no war with Japan did little to amend Korea's fate; when it recovered from the initial shock of the first invasion, the Korean military possessed a mere total of 84,500 troops against a Japanese sum of 158,000.<ref name="hawley270">Hawley, 2005. pp. 270</ref><ref name="nyquery">Kristof, Nicholas D., ''[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C03EED71E39F937A2575AC0A961958260 Japan, Korea and 1597: A Year That Lives in Infamy]''</ref> |
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| Yet Admiral Yi's control of the areas over the Korea Strait permitted no supply ships to reach the western side of the Korean peninsula, into which many extensive tributaries merge. Without provisions and reinforcements, the Japanese forces had to remain in the coastal fortresses known as ''[[Waeseong|wajō]]'' that they still controlled. To gain advantage of the situation, the Chinese and Korean coalition forces attacked Ulsan. This siege was the first major offensive from the Chinese and Korean forces in the second phase of the war.
| | China was equally challenged in its military affairs. Because the Chinese military farmed and provided for itself during peacetime, the garrisons became domesticated and became comparable to "an undisciplined mob."<ref name="hawley34-5">Hawley, 2005. pp. 34-5</ref> The Chinese soldiers were apt to flee from battle unless they were threatened by their officers, and cases of desertion were rampant due to widespread corruption. But the official figures were overblown at 2 million men because the generals profited by submitting inflated numbers to Beijing and securing some of the surplus payments for themselves. The lower-ranking officers, many of whom were illiterate or semi-literate, took little interest in the military tactics and the discipline of their troops, but they eagerly ordered killing of non-combatants to increase their head counts in battle.<ref name="hawley34-47">Hawley, 2005. pp. 34-47</ref> |
| | {{Image|Korean cannon.jpg|left|250px|Korean cannons.}} |
| | {{Image|Hwacha.JPG|left|250px|Hwacha.}} |
| | {{Image|Japanese cannon on ropes.jpg|left|300px|A Japanese cannon hung on ropes.}} |
| | On the other hand, China and Korea were ahead of Japan in all areas of military technologies, except in the manufacture of lighter and sharper swords.<ref name="swope24">Swope, 2005. pp. 24</ref> Traditionally, China had been a major source of military inventions like the gunpowder and rockets, and during the 16th century the Chinese were able to reproduce the "red-barbarian cannons" that were on the European vessels trading in China.<ref name="swope20-1">Swope, 2005. pp. 20-1</ref> Other interesting weapons in the Ming arsenal included the crossbows,<ref name="swope29">Swope, 2005. pp. 29</ref> smoke bombs, hand grenades, battering rams loaded with gunpowder,<ref name="swope27">Swope, 2005. pp. 27</ref> and mortars that fired up to 100 missiles per discharge.<ref name="swope34">Swope, 2005. pp. 34</ref> Furthermore, there is some evidence indicating that during the war the Chinese had invented bulletproof armor to counter the Japanese muskets.<ref name="swope39">Swope, 2005. pp. 39</ref> |
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| The effort of the Japanese garrison (about 7,000 men) of Ulsan was largely dedicated to its fortification in preparation for the expected attack. Katō Kiyomasa assigned command and defense of the base to Katō Yasumasa, Kuki Hirotaka, Asano Nagayoshi, and others before proceeding to Sosaengpo.<ref name="turnbull204-205">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 204–205.</ref> The Chinese Ming troops' first assault on [[January 29]], [[1598]], caught the Japanese army unawares and still encamped, for the large part, outside Ulsan's unfinished walls.<ref>文禄\u12539 ・慶長役における被虜人の研究, 東京大学出版, 1976, p. 128, ASIN 4130260235.</ref> | | The Koreans entered the gunpowder age in the late 14th century during the Goryeo Dynasty. They discovered the secrets to make black powder and developed rockets and cannons based on the existing models in China. By 1592, the Korean arsenal would include anti-ship wooden missiles, a primitive [[multiple rocket launcher|multiple rocket launcher (MLRS)]] called "hwacha", and the delayed-action explosive iron shells, which contained an internal explosive charge with time delay fuse. (Unlike the conventional round shots without explosive charge, the delayed-action shells could be fired over fortifications to blindly hit the enemies inside.)<ref name="turnbull125">Turnbull, 2002. pp. 125</ref> The technological differences between the Japanese and the allies were such that the Koreans could immediately manufacture the match-lock guns of the Japanese on the event of the war but the Japanese could not compete with the allies in the production and deployment of artillery. |
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| A total of around 36,000 troops with the help of [[singijeon]]s and [[hwacha]]s nearly succeeded in sacking the fortress, but reinforcements under the overall command of [[Mōri Hidemoto]] came across the river to aid the besieged fortress<ref name="turnbull215">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 215.</ref> and prolonged the hostilities. Later, the Japanese troops were running out of food and victory was imminent for the allied forces, but Japanese reinforcements arrived from the rear of the Chinese and Korean troops and forced them to a stalemate. After several losses, however, Japan's position in Korea had significantly weakened.
| | The allies' lead in the artillery would prove to be most fatal to the Japanese at sea. Whereas the Japanese fought naval battles by boarding enemy ships and fighting as if on land, the main strategy of the Korean and Chinese navies was to sink the enemy ships with fire arrows and [[naval gun|naval artillery]]. Consequently, cannons were absent in most Japanese vessels, and the allies could implement fire tactics involving overwhelming concentration of firepower in their engagements, most effectively in tight channels of water where they would not be surrounded. Furthermore, the Japanese deployed the small amount of cannons that they possessed without strategy or experience; for example, it was found that in some instances the Japanese reduced the accuracy of their cannons considerably by suspending them on ropes.<ref name"ropes">Woon Yeong-ja, 2005-08-08. [http://www.dkbnews.com/main.php?mn=news&mode=read&nidx=2452 해전도, 명량대첩이 아니라 칠천량해전?] (in Korean), dkbnews.</ref> Because Japanese ships were mostly built lightly as transports, they were severely lacking in terms of stability and structural strength, and they were naturally unable to hold as many cannons as the Chinese and Korean vessels.<ref name="strauss9">Strauss, 2005. pp. 9</ref> |
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| === Battle of Sacheon === | | The differences in the shipbuilding techniques of the allies and the Japanese also contributed to the superiority of the allies' vessels in terms of stability and maneuverability. For example, the Koreans had to build their ships with rectangular bottoms so that, during low tide, they may "sit" on the sand.<ref name="koreanship">Korea Culture & Content Agency, [http://koreanship.culturecontent.com/structure.asp web] |
| {{main|Battle of Sacheon (1598)}} | | "Design of the ship" <span style="font-family: Batang, Serif">(배의 구조)</span></ref> The underwater geography around the Korean peninsula was flat, and therefore the Korean coastlines experienced fast tides that vacillated over a wide [[littoral (military)|littoral span]]. The U-shaped hull reduced the speed of the Korean ships but fared much better than the "V"-shaped hulls of the Japanese and some of the Chinese ships in terms of stability and maneuverability. The maneuverability of Japanese ships was further compromised by the Japanese' reliance on single, square [[sail]]s, which were useless without good winds unlike the fore and aft sails on the Chinese and Korean ships. |
| | {{Image|The correlation between the tides and the bottom designs.png|right|270px|The Korean ships had a different bottom layout from the Japanese ships; the Chinese used both designs.}} |
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| During the autumn of 1597, the Korean and Chinese allies repelled the Japanese forces from reaching Jiksan (present-day Cheonan). Without any hope of conquering Korea, the Japanese commanders prepared to retreat. From the beginning of spring in 1598, the Korean forces and 100,000 Chinese soldiers began to retake castles on the coastal areas. The [[Wanli Emperor]] of China sent a fleet under the artillery expert [[Chen Lin (Ming)|Chen Lin]] in May 1598; this naval force saw action in joint operations with the Koreans against the Japanese navy. In June 1598, under Commander [[Konishi Yukinaga]]'s warning of the dire situations in the campaign, 70,000 troops were withdrawn and 60,000 troops were left behind — mostly [[Satsuma Province|Satsuma]] soldiers under the [[Shimazu]] clan commanders Shimazu Yoshihiro and his son Tadatsune.<ref name="turnbull219">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 219.</ref> The remaining Japanese forces fought desperately, turning back Chinese attacks on Suncheon and Sacheon.
| | In summary, Japan had fully mobilized for the war, and her troops were professional and well-equipped; China and Korea lacked preparations, and their military bureaucracies were corrupt. In the first half of the war, the Japanese did not win as much with their guns as the Koreans lost with fewer men, lack of experiences in war, and not enough of their cannons and rockets. It is interesting to add that the Japanese guns with a maximum range of 500 meters did not completely outdate the Koreans' composite-reflex bows with a similar limit of 450 meters (the Japanese bows had a range of 320 meters);<ref name="hawley8-9"/><ref name="hawley112-8">Hawley, 2005. pp. 112-8</ref> rather, this small difference multiplied considerably in the hands of untrained Korean peasants. Whereas the artillery gave the Koreans a clear advantage over the Japanese at sea from the beginning, it would require the input of the Chinese to counter the multitude of Japanese muskets with a handful of heavier cannons on land.<ref name="swope25">Swope, 2005. pp. 25</ref> |
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| The Chinese believed that [[Sacheon]] was crucial in their program to retake the lost castles and ordered an attack. Although the Chinese were ascendant initially, the tide of battle turned when Japanese reinforcements attacked the rear of the Chinese army and the Japanese soldiers inside the fortress counter-attacked through the gates.<ref name="turnbull220-221">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 220–221.</ref> The Chinese Ming forces retreated with 30,000 losses.<ref name="turnbull222">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 222.</ref> However, numerous assaults on the Japanese position in the coastal fortresses weakened the Japanese forces and were barely controlling the coastal areas.
| | == Pre-war embassies and preparations == |
| | {{Image|Toyotomi Hideyoshi.jpg|left|225px|Toyotomi Hideyoshi at the tea arbor in Fushimi Castle.}} |
| | Toyotomi Hideyoshi pacified Japan through his conquests. Warlords no longer wasted energy in their endless feuds, but instead they united behind Hideyoshi for the single goal of unification and the promise of more lands. Hideyoshi realized that he would inevitably run out of new lands to conquer in Japan, in which case the idle warlords would again engage in internal power struggles, unity would disappear, and as a result he himself would lose power. Thus, even before he unified all of Japan, Hideyoshi looked outward to keep his military machine running. Hideyoshi said in 1585, "I am going to not only unify Japan but also enter Ming China."<ref name="hawley21-2">Hawley, 2005. pp. 21-2</ref> |
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| === Death of Hideyoshi ===
| | Hideyoshi had pretty good reasons to believe that China could be won within his lifetime. First, Hideyoshi observed that the Ming government was unable to protect the seas against the Chinese and Japanese pirates. Second, Hideyoshi believed that China's lack of interest in keeping Japan within the tributary system also indicated Ming's weakness because, as a military dictator himself, Hideyoshi could not imagine otherwise.<ref name="hawley23-5">Hawley, 2005. pp. 23-5</ref> Third, Hideyoshi gathered clear evidence of Korea's weakness when in 1587 he sent 26 ships to the southern parts of the peninsula to test the coastal defenses.<ref name="swope20-1"/> Hideyoshi believed that he could blitzkrieg across the Korean peninsula toward Beijing and drive the entire tributary system into his hands.<ref name="hawley23-5"/> |
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| On [[September 18]], [[1598]], Hideyoshi ordered the withdrawal of forces from Korea on his deathbed<ref>The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition; 2006 - Hideyoshi</ref> . The [[Council of Five Elders]] made a secret of Hideyoshi's death to preserve morale and sent the decree in late October to the Japanese commanders to withdraw.
| | In his past winning experiences, Hideyoshi offered his enemy a chance to surrender before engaging in battle, and Hideyoshi planned to bestow that same benevolence to Korea. It was a simply logical response that Hideyoshi developed to his successive victories, although the method would not work on the Koreans as it might have in Japan. Not only were the Koreans unaware of the recent developments in Japan, but the Koreans also had a negative view of Japan as uncivilized and belligerent and assumed such people could not challenge a civilized power like China or even Korea. Again and again, the Koreans would find the Japanese behaviors at court to be rude and contrary to the Chinese practices; for example, the Japanese would surprisingly refer to their powerless [[Emperor of Japan|emperor]] with the Chinese character reserved solely for the Chinese Emperor, the son of Heaven.<ref name="hawley54-5">Hawley, 2005. pp. 54-5</ref> The Koreans also found Japan's status as a country to be questionable, since the emperor was simply a figurehead and his subjects with actual power always waged wars amongst themselves. |
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| === Battle of Noryang Point === | | Hideyoshi ordered So Yoshishige, the daimyo of the Tsushima Island, to carry out the diplomacy with the Koreans. Since all trade and diplomatic ships between Japan and Korea had to pass through the "Tsushima gate" (all traffic coming from elsewhere would be considered hostile), So was very well aware of the Korean situation, and yet at the same time he had a vested interest to keep the Japanese-Korean relations at its best in order to continue to oversee and benefit from the free trade between the two countries.<ref name="hawley75-8">Hawley, 2005. pp. 75-8</ref> Since So was positive that Hideyoshi's approach was bound to fail and was not sure whether Hideyoshi was truly intending to invade or merely bluffing, So molded Hideyoshi's first message to the Koreans as a request to re-establish diplomatic relations with Japan<ref name="jones240">Jones, 1899. pp. 240</ref> rather than a demand to submit and send tributes. And, in 1587, So sent Yutani Yasuhiro, a family retainer and a roughened veteran of Japan's civil war, to convey the modified message to the Koreans. Unfortunately for So, Yutani was sent away empty-handed due to his lack of courtly manners and the fact that Hideyoshi's letter was rude by the Koreans' standards, even with So's more refined touch. It was another occasion that the Koreans at the capital court reaffirmed their negative perception of the Japanese.<ref name="hawley77-81">Hawley, 2005. pp. 77-81</ref> |
| {{main|Battle of Noryang Point}}
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| The Battle of Noryang Point was the final naval battle in the war. The Korean navy under Admiral Yi had recovered from its losses and was aided by the Chinese navy under [[Chen Lin (Ming)|Chen Lin]]. Intelligence reports revealed that 500 Japanese ships were anchored in the narrow straits of Noryang in order to withdraw the remaining Japanese troops.<ref name="turnbull227">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 227.</ref> Noting the narrow geography of the area, Admiral Yi and Chen Lin led a surprise attack against the Japanese fleet at 2:00 am on [[December 16]], [[1598]], using cannons and fire arrows.
| | Hideyoshi was outraged with the Koreans' response. He accused Yutani of collaborating with the Koreans and killed him along with his entire family. So Yoshishige lost his position as the daimyo of Tsushima, and So Yoshitoshi, who was the adopted son of Yoshishige and the son-in-law of Konishi Yukinaga, was put in his father's place: Hideyoshi felt that So Yoshitoshi was more dependable because Konishi was one of his most trusted generals. Late in 1588, Hideyoshi ordered So Yoshitoshi to carry out another embassy to the Joseon court. So himself led 25 men to the Korean capital and reached there by February of 1589; So took care to have with him an old Buddhist monk, Genso Keitetsu, so that his scholarship might impress the Koreans. This time, So presented Hideyoshi's letter in its original form:<ref name="hawley77-81"/> {{Image|King Seonjo.jpg|right|290px|Portrait of King Seonjo.}} |
| | <blockquote> |
| | When my mother conceived me it was by a beam of sunlight that entered her bosom in a dream. After my birth a fortune teller said that all the land the sun shone on would be mine when I became a man, and that my fame would spread beyond the four seas. I have never fought without conquering and when I strike I always win. Man cannot outlive his hundred years, so why should I sit chafing on this island? I will make a leap and land in China and lay my laws upon her. I shall go by way of Korea and if your soldiers will join me in this invasion you will have shown your neighborly spirit. I am determined that my name shall pervade the three kingdoms.<ref name="hawley77-81"/> |
| | </blockquote> |
| | Having read the letter, the Korean King Seonjo and his officials discussed how they should respond to Hideyoshi. Recalling that Hideyoshi previously asked Joseon to re-establish diplomatic relations with Japan (since this is how So Yoshishige had presented Hideyoshi's demands), the Koreans decided to send a good-will embassy to Japan. The Koreans believed that Hideyoshi's belligerence as an outsider would go away once they treat him with recognition and welcome him into the sinocentric world order. The Korean envoys would also take the occasion as an opportunity to gather intelligence on the recent developments in Japan.<ref name="hawley77-81"/> The Joseon court informed So Yoshitoshi that they would send ambassadors to Japan on a friendly visit but only under one condition, which was that the Koreans who had collaborated and fled to Japan in a recent case of wako piracy should be repatriated. In agreement, So sent one of his men in search of those wanted by the Korean officials and was able to turn up 10 of those who had fled and many more who were taken as prisoners.<ref name="hawley77-81"/> |
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| By dawn, nearly half of the Japanese battle ships were destroyed; as the Japanese began to withdraw, Admiral Yi ordered the final charge to destroy the remaining few ships. As Yi's flagship sped forward, he was shot on the left side of his chest under the arm. Only 3 nearby captains, including his cousin, saw his death. Yi told his captains to keep his death secret and to continue the battle so that the morale of the soldiers would not drop. Admiral Yi died in minutes.
| | With the condition having been satisfied, the Koreans agreed to send an embassy to Japan, and they allowed So Yoshitoshi to see King Seonjo for the first time. In his meeting with the Korean king, So received a fine horse as a gift and presented in return a peacock and some arquebuses<ref name="hawley77-81"/> (as mentioned previously, the Koreans neglected this early chance to manufacture and distribute this new weapon). Since winter was approaching and the embassy would have to wait until the spring of the following year, the Joseon court took the time to debate and pick the ambassadors for the mission to Japan. Hwang Yun-gil of the Western Faction and Kim Song-il of the Eastern Faction were named the chief ambassador and the vice ambassador respectively, and the embassy set out in April of 1590 with So Yoshitoshi's party in their company.<ref name="hawley82-87">Hawley, 2005. pp. 82-87</ref> Not much happened during the 4 months of the journey except that the Koreans were again bothered by the different Japanese customs, and especially the vice ambassador was very vocal in his criticisms of what he saw as shortcomings on part of the Japanese. For example, on a stop at the island of Tsushima, Kim refused to attend a feast prepared by So Yoshitoshi on the ground that the Japanese let the Koreans in on sedan chairs rather than on foot. So apologized and immediately killed his sedan bearers to appease the vice envoy.<ref name="hawley82-87"/> The Korean embassy arrived in Kyoto (used to be Japan's capital) in August of 1590, and waited for Hideyoshi to return from his campaign in the Kanto region. After returning to the capital in October, Hideyoshi tried unsuccessfully to win [[Emperor of Japan|Emperor]] [[Go-Yozei]]'s presence in meeting with the Koreans in order to boast his own legitimacy and delayed seeing the Koreans until December.<ref name="hawley82-87"/> |
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| The battle ended as an allied victory and a Japanese loss of nearly 250 battleships out of the original 500. Only after the battle did the soldiers learn of Yi's death, and it is said that Chen Lin lamented that Yi died in his stead.<ref>pg. 111 Woongjinweewinjungi #14 ''Yi Sun-shin'' by Baek Sukgi. (C) Woongjin Publishing Co., Ltd.</ref> | | The Koreans were bemused by their strange meeting with Hideyoshi. There was no extravagant banquet that the Koreans were familiar with in their typical diplomatic exchanges. After the Koreans presented their letter from King Seonjo to the "King of Japan", a plate of rice cakes and a bowl of wine were passed around for everyone present to share. With all seated in complete silence, Hideyoshi left the hall and reappeared with his son Tsurumatsu. Moving freely around the hall and cooing to the child, Hideyoshi ordered that music be played. Then, when the baby urinated on his clothes, Hideyoshi laughed and went away with the baby.<ref name="hawley82-87"/> Shortly thereafter, So Yoshitoshi and the monk Genso led the Korean envoys to the port of Sakai, near Osaka, to wait for Hideyoshi to write a reply to King Seonjo. By then, the Koreans were doubtful on whether they should have undertaken the mission at all, since Hideyoshi was short and ugly, he behaved and appeared common, and, furthermore, he was only a "kampaku" or a regent, not a king. For the Korean King to have addressed a Japanese ''regent'' as an equal was an absolutely humiliating and inappropriate diplomatic mistake.<ref name="hawley82-87"/> But for Hideyoshi, it was different, since he perceived that the Korean embassy was sent as a tribute mission to show Korea's submission to Japan. It was necessary for Hideyoshi to make clear to the Koreans the absolute power that he possessed despite his status as a regent. Hideyoshi could have easily impressed the Koreans by holding a feast that was expected of him, but Hideyoshi decided to defy that very expectation: unlike the [[Emperor of Japan]], Toyotomi Hideyoshi was free to do as he wished.<ref name="hawley82-87"/> |
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| There are marked similarities between the Battle of Noryang Point and the [[Battle of Salamis]], which was fought between the Greeks and the Persians in 480 BC, on the tactical, strategic and even operational levels.
| | The Korean ambassadors returned to Seoul with Hideyoshi's letter in March of 1591. The letter thanked King Seonjo for sending a "tribute mission" and ordered Korea to prepare to war against China. Also, the letter originally contained the phrase, "surrendering to the Japanese court", but the Koreans had it removed back in Sakai. The Korean officials discussed at length the appropriate measures that they should implement in response to this letter. Hwang, who headed the embassy to Japan, asserted that Japan was fully prepared for war; the vice ambassador Kim strongly disagreed. In fact, the two envoys had gathered only a small bit of useful intelligence, but they and the other court officials argued intensely for the sake of party politics. Since Kim's Eastern Faction now held the edge over the previously dominant Western Faction, the debates came to the conclusion that Hideyoshi posed no real threat to Korea.<ref name="hawley82-87"/> The Joseon court sent a firm reply to Hideyoshi, admonishing him for failing to "understand...[his] situation as well as...[Korea's]". Hideyoshi also sent So Yoshitoshi back to Korea with his ultimatum: submit or be destroyed.<ref name="hawley88-93">Hawley, 2005. pp. 88-93</ref> So hastily handed Hideyoshi's letter to the Korean authorities at the port of Busan, but the Koreans at the capital court doubted its authenticity on the basis that the letter was not presented directly to the court by a Japanese envoy.<ref name="jones243">Jones, 1899. pp. 243</ref> |
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| == Postwar negotiations == | | As a vassal state, the Koreans had to report to China on their recent exchange with Hideyoshi. However, some Korean officials feared that China would become irate upon finding out that Korea carried out diplomacy with Japan without China's consent. Others argued that, even if they were to keep silent about Hideyoshi, China might find out about Hideyoshi's intentions through other channels within its tributary domain and may suspect Korea to be in accord with Hideyoshi. In fact, as early as 1591 the Chinese had heard of Hideyoshi's plans for invasion, first from the Ryukyu Islands, and were waiting for the "Little China" to notify them. Luckily, the Inspector General Yun Tu-su wrote an individual report about the "rumors" of Hideyoshi's plans for war and had it carried to the Chinese by the Ambassador Kim Ung-nam on his tribute mission to Beijing. Although this averted serious damage to the bilateral relationship, Yun was exiled to the countryside for overstepping his authority.<ref name="hawley107-9">Hawley, 2005. pp. 107-9</ref> |
| | {{Image|Daenammum fortress.jpg|right|275px|The Daenammum gate at the Bukhansan mountain near Seoul. The walls of these "mountain castles" (''san-sung'') were too long and hard to defend.}} |
| | The disputed status of the crisis at court meant the preparations were insufficient not only on paper but also in their execution. Many of the programs were were ill-attended, including the military drills which could be avoided through bribery, because they were seen as yet another form of government taxation on top of the poor harvests in the recent years. In the end, many building projects were abandoned incomplete, and many others, which were built as miniature [[Great Wall of China]]'s, were too large to be defended effectively.<ref name="hawley112-8"/> |
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| As Tsushima suffered greatly from its loss of trade with Korea as a result of the invasions, Yoshitoshi of the Sō family then dominant in Tsushima sent four peace negotiation missions to Korea since 1599: the first three were captured and sent to Beijing by the Chinese troops, and the fourth one in 1601 successfully obtained from Seoul the condition of returning the Korean captives for peace.<ref name="turnbull235"> Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 235.</ref> However, the major incentive for Korea toward normalization of relations with Japan was the withdrawal of the Chinese soldiers, which could result from the normalization, since the Chinese themselves were causing havoc as much as the Japanese had.<ref name="turnbull235" /> Yoshitoshi then released several Korean prisoners, and, between the years 1603 and 1604, helped the two Korean envoys in repatriating of a further 3,000 by organizing a negotiation at Kyoto with [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]], then the [[Shogun]] of Japan.<ref name="turnbull235" />
| | Meanwhile, all of Japan prepared for total war, amassing an army of 235,000 troops at Nagoya (present-day Karatsu). Hideyoshi built an invasion headquarters often referred to as the "Nagoya Castle" (different from the Nagoya Castle that was constructed from 1610 to 1612)<ref name="nagoyabritannica">"Nagoya Castle." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 09 Apr. 2009 <http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/401681/Nagoya-Castle>.</ref>, and gathered troops from all parts of the country. The amount of contribution required of each daimyo differed based on factors such as the cost of travel and tax exemptions, as well as the degree of loyalty to Hideyoshi.<ref name="hawley94-107">Hawley, 2005. pp. 94-107</ref> In fact, a total of 335,000 men were mobilized nationwide, but 100,000 troops were stationed throughout Japan to fill in the holes left by the invasion. 75,000 of the 235,000 troops at Nagoya would guard the base against a possible Chinese attack, and only 158,800 men would sail to Korea in the first offensive.<ref name="hawley94-107"/> Hideyoshi amassed a total of 700 transports at Kyushu, Shikoku, and Chugoku, and had several hundred battleships built at the Bay of Ise on [[Honshu]]. Furthermore, Hideyoshi in 1586 had obtained an informal agreement from a Portuguese Jesuit to allow 2 men-of-war to be hired for war, but in the end the Portuguese authorities refused to lend their warships in 1592.<ref name="hawley94-107"/> |
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| In continuation of the diplomatic talks toward peaceful relations, Korea in 1606 demanded that the Shogun write a formal letter wishing for peace, and that the Japanese soldiers who had defiled the royal tombs in Seoul be extradited.<ref name="turnbull235" /> Unable to fulfill the request, Yoshitoshi sent a forged letter and a group of criminals instead; despite the apparent fraud, the great need to dispel the Chinese soldiers appropriately pushed the Koreans to send an embassy in 1608.<ref name="turnbull235" /> The end result of the visit was a return of hundreds of Koreans as well as the restoration of the diplomatic relations between the two countries.<ref> Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 236.</ref>
| | == First invasion == |
| | {| class="wikitable collapsible collapsed" style="width: 22em; clear: left; float: left; margin: 0.5em 1em 0.8em 0px;" |
| | |- |
| | ! style="text-align: left;" | Japanese troops divisions |
| | |- |
| | | |
| | {| class="wikitable" style="width: 100%; margin: 3px 0 0 0;" |
| | ! colspan="2" |Div. 1: 18,700 |
| | |- |
| | | Konishi Yukinaga |
| | | 7,000 |
| | |- |
| | | So Yoshitoshi |
| | | 5,000 |
| | |- |
| | | Matsuura Shigenobu |
| | | 3,000 |
| | |- |
| | | Arima Harunobu |
| | | 2,000 |
| | |- |
| | | Omura Yoshiaki |
| | | 1,000 |
| | |- |
| | | Goto Sumiharu |
| | | 700 |
| | |} |
|
| |
|
| == Aftermath and Conclusion == | | {| class="wikitable" style="width: 100%; margin: 3px 0 0 0;" |
| | ! colspan="2" |Div. 2: 22,800 |
| | |- |
| | | Kato Kiyosama |
| | | 10,000 |
| | |- |
| | | Nabeshima Naoshige |
| | | 12,000 |
| | |- |
| | | Sagara Nagatsune |
| | | 800 |
| | |} |
|
| |
|
| [[Image:Port of Yeosu.jpg|thumb|240px|Yeosu today. Admiral Yi's headquarter was stationed here.]]
| | {| class="wikitable" style="width: 100%; margin: 3px 0 0 0;" |
| | ! colspan="2" |Div. 3: 11,000 |
| | |- |
| | | Kuroda Nagamasa |
| | | 5,000 |
| | |- |
| | | Otomo Yoshimune |
| | | 6,000 |
| | |} |
|
| |
|
| The two Japanese invasions were the Asia's first [[world war]] that involved massive armies equipped with modern weapons.<ref name="SWOPE13">Swope. 2005. pp. 13.</ref> The regular deployment of Japanese armies sizing up to 200,000, Chinese armies in the 80,000 at the most,<ref name="SWOPE186">Swope. 2006. pp. 186.</ref> and the regular and irregular Korean participation in the hundreds of thousands find no equivalent European counterpart of that period.<ref name="SWOPE13-14">Swope. 2005. pp. 13-14.</ref>
| | {| class="wikitable" style="width: 100%; margin: 3px 0 0 0;" |
| | ! colspan="2" |Div. 4: 14,000 |
| | |- |
| | | Shimazu Yoshihiro |
| | | 10,000 |
| | |- |
| | | Mori Yoshinari |
| | | 2,000 |
| | |- |
| | | Takahashi Mototane |
| | | |
| | |- |
| | | Akizuki Tanenaga |
| | | |
| | |- |
| | | Ito Yuhei |
| | | |
| | |- |
| | | Shimazu Tadatoyo |
| | | 2,000 |
| | |} |
|
| |
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| The invasions also stood as a challenge to the existing Chinese world order on two levels:<ref name="SWOPE757">Swope. 2002. pp. 757</ref> the military, in which the war reaffirmed [[Ming Dynasty|Ming]]'s status as the supreme military power in [[East Asia]], and the political, in which the war promised Chinese benevolence for the protection of its tributary states.<ref name="SWOPE781">Swope. 2002. pp. 781</ref>
| | {| class="wikitable" style="width: 100%; margin: 3px 0 0 0;" |
| | ! colspan="2" |Div. 5: 25,100 |
| | |- |
| | | Fukushima Masanori |
| | | 4,800 |
| | |- |
| | | Toda Katsutaka |
| | | 3,900 |
| | |- |
| | | Chosokabe Motochika |
| | | 3,000 |
| | |- |
| | | Ikoma Chikamasa |
| | | 5,500 |
| | |- |
| | | Hachisuka Iemasa |
| | | 7,200 |
| | |- |
| | | Kurushima Michiyuki |
| | | |
| | |- |
| | | Kurushima Michifusa |
| | | 700 |
| | |} |
|
| |
|
| If the theory that Hideyoshi attempted to conquer China (as opposed to the thesis that Hideyoshi dealt with the goal of the "Japanocentric world order" in more realistic yet theoretical terms) holds true, it is important to note that the geopolitical position of Korea as the bridge between China and Japan caused the war to happen completely on the Korean peninsula (the same holds true for the [[Sino-Japanese War]], and the [[Mongol invasions of Japan]] in reverse).<ref name="turnbull9" />
| | {| class="wikitable" style="width: 100%; margin: 3px 0 0 0;" |
| | ! colspan="2" |Div. 6: 15,700 |
| | |- |
| | | Kobayakawa Takakage |
| | | 10,000 |
| | |- |
| | | Kobayakawa Hidekane |
| | | 1,500 |
| | |- |
| | | Tachibana Munetora |
| | | 2,500 |
| | |- |
| | | Tsukushi Jonosuke |
| | | 800 |
| | |- |
| | | Takahashi Saburo |
| | | 900 |
| | |} |
|
| |
|
| === Losses and gains === | | {| class="wikitable" style="width: 100%; margin: 3px 0 0 0;" |
| | ! colspan="2" |Div. 7: 30,000 |
| | |- |
| | | Mori Terumoto |
| | | 30,000 |
| | |} |
|
| |
|
| All three participant countries - [[Japan]], [[China]], and [[Korea]], took very heavy losses from the war. Japan achieved zero material gain at the cost of thousands of lives and large sum of national wealth.<ref name="tiger12JISOTGP">{{cite web
| | {| class="wikitable" style="width: 100%; margin: 3px 0 0 0;" |
| | last = Caraway
| | ! colspan="2" |Div. 8: 10,000 |
| | first = Bill
| | |- |
| | authorlink =
| | | Ukita Hideie |
| | coauthors =
| | | 10,000 |
| | title = Ch 12 - Japanese invasions: Song of the Great Peace
| | |} |
| | work = KOREA IN THE EYE OF THE TIGER
| |
| | publisher = Korea History Project
| |
| | date =
| |
| | url = http://www.koreanhistoryproject.org/Ket/C12/E1205.htm
| |
| | format =
| |
| | doi =
| |
| | accessdate = 2007-07-04 }}</ref> When Toyotomi Hideyori, only five years old, was made the heir to the Hideyoshi’s throne, internal power struggles arose and led to the proclamation of [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] as the Shogun in 1603.<ref>Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 233.</ref> China had to bear the financial burden from defending Korea, all the while fighting a new war with the Manchus (which would culminate in the rise of the [[Qing Dynasty]]).<ref name="barry21" /> As for Korea, which withstood the most damage out of the three, <ref name="barry21" /> this conflict was more devastating than any other event in its history (even the [[Korean War]]).<ref name="SWOPE758-9" /> Reduction of arable land to sixty-six percent of the prewar farming<ref name="prime minister" /> greatly hurt Korea's mainly agricultural economy;<ref name="tiger12JISOTGP" /> famine, disease, and rebellions ran rampant in Korea.<ref name="barry21" /> Significant losses of historical archives, cultural and scientific artifacts (such as the [[water clock]] ''Ja-gyuk-roo''<ref name="Donga">{{cite news
| |
| | last = Yi
| |
| | first = Gwang-pyo | |
| | coauthors = Yoon Wang-joon | |
| | title = 500년 전의 첨단과학 다시 숨쉰다…자격루 복원-작동 성공 | |
| | work =
| |
| | pages = | |
| | language = Korean
| |
| | publisher = Donga
| |
| | date = [[2007-02-20]]
| |
| | url = http://www.donga.com/fbin/output?n=200702200055
| |
| | accessdate = 2007-07-04 }}</ref>), and skilled artisans marked the nadir of [[Science and technology of Korea|Korean science]] in its decline.<ref name="Osiris">Kim, Yung-sik. pp. 55</ref>
| |
|
| |
|
| The total military and civilian casualty as estimated by a late 19th century historian, Geo H. Jones, is 1 million,<ref name="Jones254">Jones, Geo H., Vol. 23 No. 5, pp. 254</ref> and the total combat casualty ranges around 250,000.<ref name="users">{{cite web
| | {| class="wikitable" style="width: 100%; margin: 3px 0 0 0;" |
| | last = White
| | ! colspan="2" |Div. 9: 11,500 |
| | first = Matthew | | |- |
| | authorlink = | | | Hashiba Hidekatsu |
| | coauthors = | | | 8,000 |
| | title = Selected Death Tolls for Wars, Massacres and Atrocities Before the 20th Century | | |- |
| | work = Historical Atlas of the Twentieth Century
| | | Hosokawa Tadaoki |
| | publisher = | | | 3,500 |
| | date = [[2005-01-20]]
| | |} |
| | url =http://users.erols.com/mwhite28/warstat0.htm#Total | |
| | format = | |
| | doi = | |
| | accessdate = }}</ref> A total of 185,738 Korean and 29,014 Chinese prize heads, and 50 to 60,000 captives were taken by the Japanese throughout the war.<ref name="turnbull230" /> Among those captured, a total of 7,500 were returned to Korea through diplomatic means.<ref name="Arano197">Yasunori pp. 197.</ref> A large portion of the captives were sold to European traders — mainly Portuguese, who then resold them to Southeast Asia.<ref name="Arano199">Yasunori pp. 199.</ref>
| |
|
| |
|
| The captives brought, including scholars, craftsmen, medicine makers, and gold smelters, provided to Japan many cultural and technological gains.<ref name="turnbull230">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 230.</ref> Japanese [[typography]] began with Korean fonts and technicians along with the adoption of the Western techniques.<ref name="sohn102">Sohn, pp. 102.</ref> The first production of porcelain ([[Arita]]) in Japan began in 1616 at the town of [[Imari]] when a Korean potter called Yi Sam-pyong discovered kaolin-rich clay.<ref name="turnbull231">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 231.</ref> As [[Korean pottery]] was highly prized in Japan, many Japanese lords established pottery-producing kilns with the captured Korean potters in Kyūshū and other parts of Japan,<ref name="turnbull231" /> and these communities were forced to maintain their Korean traditions and to keep away from the rest of the society.<ref name="Arano198">Yasunori pp. 198.</ref>
| | {| class="wikitable" style="width: 100%; margin: 3px 0 0 0;" |
| | ! colspan="2" |Total: 158,800 |
| | |} |
|
| |
|
| === Cruelty and war crimes ===
| | |} |
| | On the afternoon of May 23, 1592, the first Japanese troops set sail to invade Korea. Hideyoshi had originally planned the launch of his invading forces to be on April 12, as he had with the Kyushu campaign in 1587 and the Odawara Siege in 1590, but he delayed the invasion because he was waiting on a final response from the Koreans to be relayed by So Yoshitoshi (and it would never come), and there were other issues that had to be resolved, such as logistics and his deteriorating health, which also rendered him unable to make the customary visit to the Emperor before heading off to war. Finally on April 24, Hideyoshi sent orders to commence operation, and, on May 7, he himself left Kyoto and headed for Nagoya.<ref name="hawley123-151">Hawley, 2005. pp. 123-151</ref> |
|
| |
|
| Participants from the all three countries committed some form of crime during the war. Some Korean [[bandits]] and [[highwaymen]] took advantage of the chaos during the war to form raiding bands and rob other Koreans.<ref name="turnbull170">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 170.</ref> The inhabitants of the Hamgyong Province (in the northernmost parts of the Korean peninsula) surrendered their fortresses, and turned in their generals and governor officials to the Japanese invaders (because they felt that their Joseon government had oppressed them).<ref name="turnbull77-8"/> Many Koreans generals and government officials deserted their posts whenever danger seemed imminent.<ref name="turnbull53-4" /> The Chinese were said to be no better than the Japanese in the amount of destructions they caused and the degree of the crimes they committed.<ref name="turnbull235" /> They even attacked Korean forces,<ref name="turnbull231"/> and could not distinguish between the Korean civilians and the Japanese.<ref name="turnbull236-7">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 236-7.</ref> Military competition that the Chinese generals felt with the Koreans resulted, by the end of the war, in the indiscriminate killing of the Korean civilians in [[Namhae]], whom the Chinese General [[Chen Lin]] labeled as Japanese collaborators in order to gain more head counts.<ref name="turnbull236-7"/>
| | By the time the orders were received, the first 3 divisions, which would see action before the rest of Hideyoshi's troops at Nagoya, were stationed at Tsushima. Of the 3, the First Division under the command of [[Konishi Yukinaga]] was to lead the start of the war by securing the port city of Busan. Without waiting for the convoy of warships due to arrive from Honshu, Konishi proceeded in complete eagerness to set out with his 400 transport vessels, which were seen "covering all of the sea" that early morning on May 23. Gyeongsang Left Navy Commander Bak Hong and the Right Navy Commander Won Gyun merely stood by as the count of enemy vessels climbed throughout the day, although these were essentially fishing boats that would have stood little chance against their 200-strong Korean navy. By nightfall all 400 ships reached the waters off Busan harbor, and a final letter regarding a "safe passage" to China was sent for the Busan commander by So Yoshitoshi and monk Genso, but, without a forthcoming response, the Japanese troops began landing at 4 o' clock the next morning, on May 24th. They divided into 2 groups, one of which under Konishi advanced a few kilometers southwestward to take the fort at Dadaepo near the mouth of the Nakdong River. The besieged fort was initially held together under the command of Yun Hung-shin, but it was overwhelmed by a second assault that killed all therein. At Busan castle, <ref name="hawley123-151"/> |
|
| |
|
| According to [[Stephen Turnbull (historian)|Stephen Turnbull]], a historian specializing in the Japanese [[samurai]]s, the Japanese troops committed the worst crimes against civilians in battles, and killed indiscriminately, including farm animals.<ref name="turnbull50-1"/> Outside of the main battles, Japanese raided Korean habitations to “kill, rape and steal in a more cruel manner than…”<ref name="turnbull169">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 169.</ref> Japanese soldiers treated their own peasants no better than the captured Koreans, and worked them all to death by starvation and [[flogging]].<ref name="turnbull206-7">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, pp. 206-7.</ref> The Japanese collected enough ears and noses<ref name="mimi">{{Citation
| | Yoshitoshi tried one last time to convince Jeong Bal to surrender |
| | <ref name="hawley123-151"/> |
| | {{Image|Turtle Ship.jpg|right|250px|A modern replica of the turtle ship on display at South Korea's national museum.}} |
| | {{Image|Admiral Yi Sunshin.jpg|right|250px|Portrait of Admiral Yi, drawn in 1952.}} |
|
| |
|
| | == Peace negotiations == |
|
| |
|
| | last = KRISTOF
| | == Second invasion == |
| | first = NICHOLAS D.
| |
| | author-link =
| |
| | last2 =
| |
| | first2 =
| |
| | author2-link =
| |
| | title = Japan, Korea and 1597: A Year That Lives in Infamy
| |
|
| |
|
| | newspaper = New York Times
| | == Normalization of relations == |
| | pages =
| |
| | year = 1997
| |
| | date = 1997-09-14
| |
| | url = http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C03EED71E39F937A2575AC0A961958260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=print}}</ref> (cutting ears off of enemy bodies for making casualty counts was an accepted practice) to build a large mound near the Hideyoshi’s Great Buddha, called the [[Mimizuka]], or “the Mound of Ears”.<ref name="turnbull195">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 195.</ref>
| |
|
| |
|
| === Legacy === | | == Conclusion == |
| | |
| The war embedded mythical and nationalistic elements into the three countries. The Koreans gained several national heroes, including Admiral Yi, whose ancestral home was made a shrine. Admiral Yi was and still is a subject of reverence in both China and Japan: for example, [[Admiral Togo]], famed for his success at the [[Battle of Tsushima]] during the [[Russo-Japanese War]], called Admiral Yi the greatest naval commander in history.<ref name="barry20">Strauss, Barry. pp. 20</ref> In appreciation of the Chinese aid, the Koreans built a sacrificial alter for the Chinese Emperor Wanli, and held rituals for the emperor well into the 1990 s.<ref name="SWOPE758-9">Swope. 2002. pp. 758-9</ref> In the Chinese academia, the historians made the war as one of Wanli Emperor's "Three Great Punitive Campaigns".<ref name="SWOPE758-9" /> As for Japan, the contemporary leaders justified the war with a previous incursion to Korea led by [[Empress Jingu]] in 400 AD, claiming that they were being blessed by the god of war, [[Hachiman]], whom Empress Jingu carried in her womb during her invasion.<ref name="turnbull236">Turnbull, Stephen. 2002, p. 236.</ref> This temporary and partial occupation of Korea fixed a Japanese argument that Korea had always been part of Japan,<ref name="hoj">{{cite web
| |
| | last = Wilhelmina
| |
| | first = Nina
| |
| | authorlink =
| |
| | coauthors =
| |
| | title = HISTORY OF JAPAN 660 BCE - 500
| |
| | work = Oda Nobunaga, Samurai Cultural History & Everything You Don't Wanna Know
| |
| | publisher = geocities
| |
| | date = [[2006]]
| |
| | url = http://www.geocities.com/odamachi2/nihongi2.htm
| |
| | format =
| |
| | doi =
| |
| | accessdate = 2007-07-29 }}</ref> and the Japanese leaders of the late 19th and the early 20th centuries used the war to justify the [[Japanese occupation of Korea|their occupation of Korea]].<ref name="SWOPE16">Swope. 2005. pp. 16.</ref> Hideyoshi's former castle at Osaka was restored as a museum in the 1930 s to commemorate Japan's military history.<ref name="SWOPE12">Swope. 2005. pp. 12.</ref> In the context of [[Japanese imperialism]], the invasions are seen as the first Japanese attempt to become a global power.<ref name="SWOPE758-9" /> In China (as well as Korea)<ref name="SWOPE13" />, the war inspired nationalistic resistance against the Japanese imperialism during the 20th century.<ref name="SWOPE758-9" />
| |
| | |
| ==== International awareness ====
| |
| | |
| Despite the great enthusiasm for the war in East Asia,<ref name="SWOPE12" /> the Japanese invasions of Korea are not widely known in the west.<ref name="SWOPE14">Swope. 2005. pp. 14.</ref> Historian Stephen Turnbull attributes to this ignorance titles such as the ''Hideyoshi's Invasions of Korea'' (merely an extended part of [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi]]'s biography) and the ''Japanese invasions of Korea'' (simply a larger repeat of the Japanese [[wako]] pirate raids) absent the distinction as a "war".<ref name="turnbull9" /> Some textbooks treat the war with a few lines, and to date not a single complete academic study on the subject exists in English.<ref name="SWOPE15">Swope. 2005. pp. 15.</ref> Historian Kenneth M. Swope lists a near exception: ''Samurai Invasion: Japan’s Korean War 1592–98'' by Stephen Turnbull, but criticizes the work for undercoverage on the Chinese perspective, and for its pro-Japanese bias.<ref name="SWOPE15" />
| |
| | |
| == Footnotes ==
| |
| | |
| * '''Note''': All websites are listed here independently from the ''References'' section.
| |
|
| |
|
| | === notes === |
| {{reflist|3}} | | {{reflist|3}} |
|
| |
|
| == References == | | == Further Reading == |
| <div class="references-small">
| | * Berry, Mary Elizabeth. ''Hideyoshi'' (1982), the standard biography |
| * Alagappa, Muthiah. "Asian Security Order: Instrumental and Normative Features", Stanford University Press, 2003. ISBN 080474629X | | * Chase, Kenneth Warren. ''Firearms: A Global History to 1700'' (2003), Cambridge University Press. ISBN: 0521822742 |
| | | * Duffy, Christopher. ''Siege Warfare: The Fortress in the Early Modern World 1494-1660'' (1996), Routledge. ISBN: 0415146496 |
| * Arano, Yasunori. "The Formation of a Japanocentric World Order." ''International Journal of Asian Studies'' 2:2 (2005).
| | * Kye, Seung B. "The Posthumous Image and Role of Ming Taizu in Korean Politics." In ''Long Live the Emperor! Uses of the Ming Founder Across Six Centuries of East Asian History,'' ed. Sarah Schneewind. (Minneapolis: Society for Ming Studies, 2008). |
| | | * Swope, Kenneth M. ''A Dragon's Head and a Serpent's Tail: Ming China and the First Great East Asian War, 1592-1598'' (November 23, 2009). University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN: 0806140569 |
| * Brown, Delmer M. "The Impact of Firearms on Japanese Warfare, 1543-1598", ''The Far Eastern Quarterly'' May 1948 (Volume 7, Number 3: pp. 236-253), Association for Asian Studies. | | * Swope, Kenneth M. "Turning the Tide: the Strategic and Psychological Significance of the Liberation of Pyongyang in 1593." ''War & Society'' 2003 21(2): 1-22. Issn: 0729-2473 |
| | | * Yu Sŏngnyong. ''The Book of Corrections: Reflections on the National Crisis During the Japanese Invasion of Korea, 1592-1598,'' trans. Choi Byonghyon (2002). The book is known in Korean as the Chingbirok.[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]] |
| * Eikenberry, Karl W. "The Imjin War." ''Military Review'' 68:2 (February 1988), pp. 74–82.
| |
| | |
| * Ha, Tae-hung, tr., and Sohn Pow-key, ed. ''Nanjung Ilgi: War Diary of Admiral Yi Sun-sin''. Seoul: Yonsei University Press, 1977, ISBN 89-7141-018-3.
| |
| | |
| * Hawley, Samuel, ''The Imjin War'', The Royal Asiatic Society, Korea Branch/UC Berkeley Press, 2005, ISBN 89-954424-2-5.
| |
| | |
| * Jang, Pyun-soon. ''Noon-eu-ro Bo-nen Han-gook-yauk-sa 5: Gor-yeo Si-dae'' (눈으로 보는 한국역사 5: 고려시대), Park Doo-ui, Bae Keum-ram, Yi Sang-mi, Kim Ho-hyun, Kim Pyung-sook, et al., Joog-ang Gyo-yook-yaun-goo-won. 1998-10-30. Seoul, Korea.
| |
| | |
| * Jones, Geo H. "The Japanese Invasion of Korea - 1592", ''The China Review, or notes & queries on the Far East'', 1899 (Volume 23, Number 4-5: pp. 215-219, pp. 239-254), China Mail Office. | |
| | |
| * Kim, Ki-chung. "Resistance, Abduction, and Survival: The Documentary Literature of the Imjin War (1592–8)." ''Korean Culture'' 20:3 (Fall 1999), pp. 20–29.
| |
| | |
| * Kim, Yung-sik. "Problems and Possibilities in the Study of the History of Korean Science". ''Osiris'', 2nd Series, Vol. 13, Beyond Joseph Needham: Science, Technology, and Medicine in East and Southeast Asia. (1998), pp. 48-79. [http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0369-7827%281998%292%3A13%3C48%3APAPITS%3E2.0.CO%3B2-Q JSTOR]
| |
| | |
| * 桑田忠親 [Kuwata, Tadachika], ed., 舊參謀本部編纂, [Kyu Sanbo Honbu], 朝鮮の役 [Chousen no Eki] (日本の戰史 [Nihon no Senshi] Vol. 5), 1965.
| |
| | |
| * Neves, Jaime Ramalhete. "The Portuguese in the Im-Jim War?" Review of ''Culture'' 18 (1994), pp. 20–24.
| |
| | |
| * Niderost, Eric. “Turtleboat Destiny: The Imjin War and Yi Sun Shin.” ''Military Heritage'' 2:6 (June 2001), pp. 50–59, 89.
| |
| | |
| * Niderost, Eric. "The Miracle at Myongnyang, 1597." ''Osprey Military Journal'' 4:1 (January 2002), pp. 44–50. | |
| | |
| * Park, Yune-hee. ''Admiral Yi Sun-shin and His Turtleboat Armada: A Comprehensive Account of the Resistance of Korea to the 16th Century Japanese Invasion''. Seoul: Shinsaeng Press, 1973.
| |
| | |
| * Rockstein, Edward D., Ph.D. ''Strategic And Operational Aspects of Japan's Invasions of Korea 1592-1598'', 1993-6-18. Naval War College, Newport, R.I.
| |
| | |
| * Sadler, A.L. "The Naval Campaign in the Korean War of Hideyoshi (1592–1598)." ''Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan Second Series'', 14 (June 1937), pp. 179–208.
| |
| | |
| * Sansom, George. ''A History of Japan 1334-1615'', Stanford University Press. (1961) ISBN 0-8047-0525-9
| |
| | |
| * Sohn, Pow-key. "Early Korean Painting", ''Journal of American Oriental Society'', Vol. 79, No. 2. (April - June, 1959), pp. 96-103. [http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0003-0279%28195904%2F06%2979%3A2%3C96%3AEKP%3E2.0.CO%3B2-T JSTOR].
| |
| | |
| * Stramigioli, Giuliana. "Hideyoshi's Expansionist Policy on the Asiatic Mainland." ''Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan Third Series'', 3 (December 1954), pp. 74–116.
| |
| | |
| * Strauss, Barry. "Korea's Legendary General", ''MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History'' Summer 2005 (Volume 17, Number 4: pp. 52-61).
| |
| | |
| * Swope, Kenneth M. "Beyond Turtleboats: Siege Accounts from Hideyoshi's Second Invasion of Korea, 1597-1598", ''Sungkyun Journal of East Asian Studies'' (Vol. 6, No. 2. 2006 ''Academy of East Asian Studies''. pp. 177-206) | |
| | |
| * Swope, Kenneth M. "Crouching Tigers, Secret Weapons: Military Technology Employed During the Sino-Japanese-Korean War, 1592-1598", ''The Journal of Military History'' pp. 69 (January 2005): pp. 11-42. (C) Society for Military History.
| |
| | |
| * Swope, Kenneth M. "Deceit, Disguise, and Dependence: China, Japan, and the Future of the Tributary System, 1592-1596". ''The International History Review'', XXIV. 4: December 2002, pp. 757-1,008. | |
| | |
| * Turnbull, Stephen. ''Samurai Invasion: Japan’s Korean War 1592–98''. London: Cassell & Co, 2002, ISBN 0-304-35948-3.
| |
| | |
| * Turnbull, Stephen. 'The Samurai Sourcebook'. London: Cassell & Co. 1998. | |
| | |
| * Villiers, John. "SILK AND SILVER: MACAU, MANILA AND TRADE IN THE CHINA SEAS IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY" (A lecture delivered to the Hong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society at the Hong Kong Club. [[10 June]] [[1980]]). [http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&ct=res&cd=15&url=http%3A%2F%2Fsunzi1.lib.hku.hk%2Fhkjo%2Fview%2F44%2F4401436.pdf&ei=RaqDRrqJLpCwetCq2fgB&usg=AFQjCNH2vXzeIjw8pn_xNFf24pWVDRQTzQ&sig2=q9TdkqX0kSJJrqAoEHpqMg The HKUL Digital Initiatives]
| |
| | |
| * Yi, Min-Woong [이민웅], Imjin Wae-ran Haejeonsa: ''The Naval Battles of the Imjin War'' [임진왜란 해전사], Chongoram Media [청어람미디어], 2004, ISBN 89-89722-49-7.</div>
| |
| | |
| == See also ==
| |
| | |
| * [[Timeline of the Japanese invasions of Korea (1592-1598)]] — incomplete
| |
| * [[List of battles during the Japanese invasions of Korea (1592-1598)]]
| |
| * [[List of naval battles during the Japanese invasions of Korea (1592-1598)]]
| |
| * [[Naval history of Korea]]
| |
| * [[Immortal Yi Soon-shin]] (TV series)
| |
| | |
| == External links ==
| |
| | |
| * [http://www.h4.dion.ne.jp/~room4me/korea/bunroku.htm Toyotomi Hideyoshi's Korean Invasions: the Bunroku Campaign (1592–93)]
| |
| * [http://www.chungdong.or.kr/middroom/syshim/%C7%D1%B1%B9%BB%E7/k-3-9.htm 임진왜란] (very visual website)
| |
| * [http://www.e-sunshin.com/e-sunshin/life/yimjin_04.jsp The Battles of Imjin Waeran] (in Korean)
| |
| * [http://www.boseong51.net/user/ftp/free/LeeSS/IMJIN-War-Outbreak.html The Imjin Waeran] (in Korean)
| |
| * [http://jinju.museum.go.kr Jinju National Museum] is dedicated to this topic. Information in English and Korean.
| |
| * [http://www.teachenglishinasia.net/the-imjinwaeran The Imjinwaeran] (in English)
| |
PD Image The Japanese landing at Busan.
The Korean War of 1592-1598 was a major conflict between Japan and the alliance of Ming of China and Joseon of Korea. Japan invaded Korea on May 23, with the larger objective to conquer the entirety of Asia (and the whole world)[1] by using Korea as a land bridge to China. The battles that involved 300,000 combatants and claimed more than 2 million lives took place mostly on the Korean peninsula and its nearby waters. The war consisted of two main invasions from Japan – the first in 1592 and 1593, and the second from 1597 to 1598.
Toyotomi Hideyoshi, the predominant warlord in Japan, had for long been aspiring to leave his name in history as a great conqueror of Asia. Even before unifying all of Japan in 1590, Hideyoshi in 1587 began sending ambassadorial missions to Korea in order to threaten the peninsular neighbor to submit and join with Japan in a war against China. Most of Hideyoshi's message initially failed to get across to the Korean side, however, since Hideyoshi relied on Tsushima Island as his main diplomatic channel to Korea, and Tsushima was a major beneficiary of the free trade between Korea and Japan during peacetime. During the subsequent diplomatic exchanges, the Koreans rejected Hideyoshi's demands, but they also refused to recognize his threats. The first invasion was launched late in May of 1592, commanded by Hideyoshi in absentia.
The Japanese troops first attacked the southeastern part of Korea and advanced northwestward to the capital. Hanseong, Korea's capital and present-day Seoul, fell within 3 weeks, and most of the peninsula came into Japanese control before the year's end. Without understanding the serious magnitude of the crisis, China initially responded by sending an advance force of 5,000 troops late in August, but the expedition was horribly outnumbered and defeated by the Japanese troops in Pyeongyang. Within a few days of the Chinese defeat, however, the Korean admiral Yi Sunshin annihilated the Japanese fleet tasked with securing the supply route to the Yellow Sea that would continue the invasion into China. On January 1, 1593, the Chinese launched a counter-offensive with 30,000 troops and reclaimed Hanseong by the middle of May. With the southeastern parts of the peninsula in Japanese possession, the two sides spent several years in diplomatic talks; the Japanese officials justified their invasion by asserting that Korea carried out policies to prevent Japan from entering the Chinese tributary system. Consequently the Chinese diplomats went to Japan and invested Hideyoshi, whose subordinates misled him into believing that the Chinese had come to surrender in person. The peace negotiations culminated in a second wave of invasion in October of 1597, after Hideyoshi learned the truth about the Chinese visit. The Japanese had different objectives in the second invasion, as Hideyoshi was primarily concerned with saving face against China, and his commanders sought to keep the southern parts of the peninsula as reward for their efforts. After scoring some points against the Chinese troops and wreaking unrestrained havoc on the civilians, the invaders turned back and began to partially withdraw by mid-1598.[2] The final climax of the war was the naval battle at the straits of Noryang on December 16, when the combined Sino-Korean fleet defeated a sizable Japanese fleet from the east. The hundred or so surviving Japanese ships from the battle as well as those from the north that escaped the Sino-Korean naval blockade which was lifted prior to engagement arrived at Busan several days later, whereupon the final evacuation began. The last Japanese ships set sail on December 24, 1598.[3]
The war is known by several English titles, including the Hideyoshi's invasions of Korea, in context of Hideyoshi’s biography; the Seven Year War, in reference to the war’s duration; and the Imjin War, in reference to the war's first year, which was Imjin, meaning water and dragon, in the 60-year cycle of the Chinese dating system.[4] The Koreans call the war "the bandit invasion of the year Imjin." The various Japanese titles include the "Korean War", and the "Pottery War" and "War of Celadon and Metal Type" (in reference to the ceramic and metal printing technologies and booty that the returning Japanese soldiers brought home from the war). The Chinese generally use "the Korean Campaign" to refer to the war.[1]
Titles in Chinese, Japanese & Korean
|
Chinese
|
Traditional
|
壬辰衛國戰爭(萬曆朝鮮之役)
|
Simplified
|
壬辰卫国战争(万历朝鲜之役)
|
Hanyu Pinyin
|
Rénchén Wèiguó Zhànzhēng (Wànlì Cháoxiǎn Zhīyì)
|
Japanese
|
Kanji
|
文禄\plainの役 / 慶長の役
|
Hepburn
|
Bunroku no Eki / Keichō no Eki
|
Korean
|
Hangul
|
임진왜란 / 정유재란
|
Hanja
|
壬辰倭亂 / 丁酉再亂
|
Revised Romanization
|
Imjin waeran / Jeong(-)yu jaeran
|
McCune Reischauer
|
Imjin waeran / Chŏng'yu chaeran
|
|
Background reading
East Asia and the Chinese Tributary System
(PD) Image: Chunbum Park East Asia in the 16th century.
The war took place within the context of the Chinese tributary system that dominated the East Asian geopolitics. In practice, the tributary states periodically sent ambassadors to the Chinese imperial court to pay homage and to exchange gifts, while maintaining complete autonomy. Many of the tributary states received from China the rights toward the international trade within the tributary system. The theoretical justification for the tributary system was the doctrine of the Mandate of Heaven, that the Heaven granted the Chinese Emperor the exclusive right to rule, with the purpose of benefiting the entirety of mankind.[5] Several Asian countries, including Korea,[6][7] voluntarily joined the tributary system in pursuit of the legal tally trade and to gain legitimacy from the Chinese recognition.
Japan actively sought to engage in the tributary trade and attained with China two treaties, in 1404 and in 1434, that admitted Japan into the tributary system and required Japan to police its waters against the wako pirates. But China expelled Japan from the tributary system in 1547 because the Japanese lords failed to effectively control piracy.[8] During the wartime negotiations between Japan and China, the trade issue would emerge again as a point of justification by the Japanese for their aggression against Korea, which was supposedly frustrating the Japanese aims to regain its tributary status.
China came to Korea's aid during the war mainly because of Korea's symbolic importance to the Chinese. The Chinese and Koreans considered themselves as the pinnacles of civilization, similarly to today's cross-national cultural identities (such as "the West") based on scientific and cultural achievements.[9] The very strict Confucian ideologies that imbued the two countries contributed to this elitism by rejecting the foreign customs and learnings as barbaric and possibly immoral. In addition, China had to fulfill its promise to provide security to its tributary states. The Chinese authorities feared greatly that the China's loss of legitimacy on this occasion would spur a domino effect of opposition, collapsing the entire tributary system.[10] And lastly the Japanese invasion of Korea posed a significant security threat to China itself, since Hideyoshi had openly proclaimed his intention to wage war with China following a successful conquest of Korea, and, even in the case that a direct confrontation with Japan could be avoided, China would have had to deal with an upgraded threat of the hostile Jurchen tribes from Manchuria, without a friendly ally in the position to outflank them.[11]
Military situations of Japan, Korea, and China
(CC) Photo: Jonathan Ellgen A collection of 16th century Japanese arquebuses and ramrods.
The war of 1592-1598 was probably the earliest instance in which the European guns were used, the first of which were brought to Japan in 1543 by the Portuguese traders on the island of Tanegashima. Upon introduction, the Portuguese arquebus (slightly smaller than a musket) deeply impressed the Japanese, who had by then experienced more than a century of civil war. Within few years, several hundred tanegashima (as they were first called)[12] were locally produced in Japan, and, by 1556, 300,000 guns existed in Japan.[13]
The arquebus' widespread use in Japan was a natural consequence of the tactical and economic advantages gained by its patrons over their enemies. Compared to the traditional bow and arrow, the arquebus offered a greater penetrating power and range of nearly half a kilometer, as well as being more economical in terms of the costs of ammunition (lead bullets were cheaper than crafted arrows) and recruitment (gunners could be hired at lower wages than skillful bowmen).[14] But there were several inconveniences with the new weapon, including its relatively poor accuracy beyond a certain distance and slow loading time. Among the first to work around these limitations was a warlord by the name of Oda Nobunaga, who arranged his gunners to fire in concentrated volleys like the western style of engagement pioneered by King Adolphus of Sweden around 1620.[15] With his shrewd military tactics, Nobunaga conquered a third of the country before his assassination in 1582. Toyotomi Hideyoshi, one of Nobunaga's followers who emerged as the successor in the ensuing power struggle, continued to exploit Nobunaga's gains and achieved the political unification of Japan by 1590.
By the end of civil war in Japan, Hideyoshi had built up an army of 500,000 veteran troops. The army consisted mainly of infantry and partly of cavalry, and the infantry further divided into archers, spearmen, and gunners. The flawed, conventional view of the war in brief is that the Japanese, superior to the allies tactically and technologically (by reason of their possession of arquebuses), were winning the war until Admiral Yi developed the (possibly iron-clad) turtle ships, and the Chinese came to the Korea's aid. This became the dominant perspective in all three countries due to the biased tendency of the Japanese chroniclers (i.e. they inflated the number of enemies) and the prevalence of a praise-and-blame analytical framework within the established historiographical practices of Korea and China.[16]
Basically, they do not know anything about fighting, and they have no units such as platoons, squads, banners or companies to which they are attached. They are in confusion and without order, make a big racket and run around in chaos, not knowing what to do with their hands, feet, ears or eyes. And then all of a sudden these men are placed in midst of arrows and stones where they have to fight to the death and give their all in the fight to gain a victory over the enemy. Is this not indeed difficult [for them to do]?
—Yu Seongnyeong, concerning the state of Korea's defenses[17]
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In fact, Korea's military was much smaller and less experienced than Japan's, since the country had never faced a major military conflict during the 200 years since its founding. Its troops for the most part were poorly equipped and trained, and the military bureaucracy tended to favor men with political connections rather than individuals of merit, whereas the opposite was true in the Japanese chain of command. Although proposals for reform were made at the highest levels of the Korea's Joseon government, including a nationwide increase of regular troops to 100,000 and the adoption of the matchlock guns brought as gifts by a Japanese ambassador (see below), these voices were lost in the constant political battles waged by the two dominant factions within the king's court.[18] The last-minute preparations that were made with the expectation that there would be no war with Japan did little to amend Korea's fate; when it recovered from the initial shock of the first invasion, the Korean military possessed a mere total of 84,500 troops against a Japanese sum of 158,000.[19][20]
China was equally challenged in its military affairs. Because the Chinese military farmed and provided for itself during peacetime, the garrisons became domesticated and became comparable to "an undisciplined mob."[21] The Chinese soldiers were apt to flee from battle unless they were threatened by their officers, and cases of desertion were rampant due to widespread corruption. But the official figures were overblown at 2 million men because the generals profited by submitting inflated numbers to Beijing and securing some of the surplus payments for themselves. The lower-ranking officers, many of whom were illiterate or semi-literate, took little interest in the military tactics and the discipline of their troops, but they eagerly ordered killing of non-combatants to increase their head counts in battle.[22]
(CC) Photo: Kai Hendry Korean cannons.
(CC) Photo: Brian Dye Hwacha.
PD Image A Japanese cannon hung on ropes.
On the other hand, China and Korea were ahead of Japan in all areas of military technologies, except in the manufacture of lighter and sharper swords.[23] Traditionally, China had been a major source of military inventions like the gunpowder and rockets, and during the 16th century the Chinese were able to reproduce the "red-barbarian cannons" that were on the European vessels trading in China.[24] Other interesting weapons in the Ming arsenal included the crossbows,[25] smoke bombs, hand grenades, battering rams loaded with gunpowder,[26] and mortars that fired up to 100 missiles per discharge.[27] Furthermore, there is some evidence indicating that during the war the Chinese had invented bulletproof armor to counter the Japanese muskets.[28]
The Koreans entered the gunpowder age in the late 14th century during the Goryeo Dynasty. They discovered the secrets to make black powder and developed rockets and cannons based on the existing models in China. By 1592, the Korean arsenal would include anti-ship wooden missiles, a primitive multiple rocket launcher (MLRS) called "hwacha", and the delayed-action explosive iron shells, which contained an internal explosive charge with time delay fuse. (Unlike the conventional round shots without explosive charge, the delayed-action shells could be fired over fortifications to blindly hit the enemies inside.)[29] The technological differences between the Japanese and the allies were such that the Koreans could immediately manufacture the match-lock guns of the Japanese on the event of the war but the Japanese could not compete with the allies in the production and deployment of artillery.
The allies' lead in the artillery would prove to be most fatal to the Japanese at sea. Whereas the Japanese fought naval battles by boarding enemy ships and fighting as if on land, the main strategy of the Korean and Chinese navies was to sink the enemy ships with fire arrows and naval artillery. Consequently, cannons were absent in most Japanese vessels, and the allies could implement fire tactics involving overwhelming concentration of firepower in their engagements, most effectively in tight channels of water where they would not be surrounded. Furthermore, the Japanese deployed the small amount of cannons that they possessed without strategy or experience; for example, it was found that in some instances the Japanese reduced the accuracy of their cannons considerably by suspending them on ropes.[30] Because Japanese ships were mostly built lightly as transports, they were severely lacking in terms of stability and structural strength, and they were naturally unable to hold as many cannons as the Chinese and Korean vessels.[31]
The differences in the shipbuilding techniques of the allies and the Japanese also contributed to the superiority of the allies' vessels in terms of stability and maneuverability. For example, the Koreans had to build their ships with rectangular bottoms so that, during low tide, they may "sit" on the sand.[32] The underwater geography around the Korean peninsula was flat, and therefore the Korean coastlines experienced fast tides that vacillated over a wide littoral span. The U-shaped hull reduced the speed of the Korean ships but fared much better than the "V"-shaped hulls of the Japanese and some of the Chinese ships in terms of stability and maneuverability. The maneuverability of Japanese ships was further compromised by the Japanese' reliance on single, square sails, which were useless without good winds unlike the fore and aft sails on the Chinese and Korean ships.
(PD) Image: Chunbum Park The Korean ships had a different bottom layout from the Japanese ships; the Chinese used both designs.
In summary, Japan had fully mobilized for the war, and her troops were professional and well-equipped; China and Korea lacked preparations, and their military bureaucracies were corrupt. In the first half of the war, the Japanese did not win as much with their guns as the Koreans lost with fewer men, lack of experiences in war, and not enough of their cannons and rockets. It is interesting to add that the Japanese guns with a maximum range of 500 meters did not completely outdate the Koreans' composite-reflex bows with a similar limit of 450 meters (the Japanese bows had a range of 320 meters);[14][33] rather, this small difference multiplied considerably in the hands of untrained Korean peasants. Whereas the artillery gave the Koreans a clear advantage over the Japanese at sea from the beginning, it would require the input of the Chinese to counter the multitude of Japanese muskets with a handful of heavier cannons on land.[34]
Pre-war embassies and preparations
(CC) Photo: Jonathan Ellgen Toyotomi Hideyoshi at the tea arbor in Fushimi Castle.
Toyotomi Hideyoshi pacified Japan through his conquests. Warlords no longer wasted energy in their endless feuds, but instead they united behind Hideyoshi for the single goal of unification and the promise of more lands. Hideyoshi realized that he would inevitably run out of new lands to conquer in Japan, in which case the idle warlords would again engage in internal power struggles, unity would disappear, and as a result he himself would lose power. Thus, even before he unified all of Japan, Hideyoshi looked outward to keep his military machine running. Hideyoshi said in 1585, "I am going to not only unify Japan but also enter Ming China."[35]
Hideyoshi had pretty good reasons to believe that China could be won within his lifetime. First, Hideyoshi observed that the Ming government was unable to protect the seas against the Chinese and Japanese pirates. Second, Hideyoshi believed that China's lack of interest in keeping Japan within the tributary system also indicated Ming's weakness because, as a military dictator himself, Hideyoshi could not imagine otherwise.[36] Third, Hideyoshi gathered clear evidence of Korea's weakness when in 1587 he sent 26 ships to the southern parts of the peninsula to test the coastal defenses.[24] Hideyoshi believed that he could blitzkrieg across the Korean peninsula toward Beijing and drive the entire tributary system into his hands.[36]
In his past winning experiences, Hideyoshi offered his enemy a chance to surrender before engaging in battle, and Hideyoshi planned to bestow that same benevolence to Korea. It was a simply logical response that Hideyoshi developed to his successive victories, although the method would not work on the Koreans as it might have in Japan. Not only were the Koreans unaware of the recent developments in Japan, but the Koreans also had a negative view of Japan as uncivilized and belligerent and assumed such people could not challenge a civilized power like China or even Korea. Again and again, the Koreans would find the Japanese behaviors at court to be rude and contrary to the Chinese practices; for example, the Japanese would surprisingly refer to their powerless emperor with the Chinese character reserved solely for the Chinese Emperor, the son of Heaven.[37] The Koreans also found Japan's status as a country to be questionable, since the emperor was simply a figurehead and his subjects with actual power always waged wars amongst themselves.
Hideyoshi ordered So Yoshishige, the daimyo of the Tsushima Island, to carry out the diplomacy with the Koreans. Since all trade and diplomatic ships between Japan and Korea had to pass through the "Tsushima gate" (all traffic coming from elsewhere would be considered hostile), So was very well aware of the Korean situation, and yet at the same time he had a vested interest to keep the Japanese-Korean relations at its best in order to continue to oversee and benefit from the free trade between the two countries.[38] Since So was positive that Hideyoshi's approach was bound to fail and was not sure whether Hideyoshi was truly intending to invade or merely bluffing, So molded Hideyoshi's first message to the Koreans as a request to re-establish diplomatic relations with Japan[39] rather than a demand to submit and send tributes. And, in 1587, So sent Yutani Yasuhiro, a family retainer and a roughened veteran of Japan's civil war, to convey the modified message to the Koreans. Unfortunately for So, Yutani was sent away empty-handed due to his lack of courtly manners and the fact that Hideyoshi's letter was rude by the Koreans' standards, even with So's more refined touch. It was another occasion that the Koreans at the capital court reaffirmed their negative perception of the Japanese.[40]
Hideyoshi was outraged with the Koreans' response. He accused Yutani of collaborating with the Koreans and killed him along with his entire family. So Yoshishige lost his position as the daimyo of Tsushima, and So Yoshitoshi, who was the adopted son of Yoshishige and the son-in-law of Konishi Yukinaga, was put in his father's place: Hideyoshi felt that So Yoshitoshi was more dependable because Konishi was one of his most trusted generals. Late in 1588, Hideyoshi ordered So Yoshitoshi to carry out another embassy to the Joseon court. So himself led 25 men to the Korean capital and reached there by February of 1589; So took care to have with him an old Buddhist monk, Genso Keitetsu, so that his scholarship might impress the Koreans. This time, So presented Hideyoshi's letter in its original form:[40]
PD Image Portrait of King Seonjo.
When my mother conceived me it was by a beam of sunlight that entered her bosom in a dream. After my birth a fortune teller said that all the land the sun shone on would be mine when I became a man, and that my fame would spread beyond the four seas. I have never fought without conquering and when I strike I always win. Man cannot outlive his hundred years, so why should I sit chafing on this island? I will make a leap and land in China and lay my laws upon her. I shall go by way of Korea and if your soldiers will join me in this invasion you will have shown your neighborly spirit. I am determined that my name shall pervade the three kingdoms.[40]
Having read the letter, the Korean King Seonjo and his officials discussed how they should respond to Hideyoshi. Recalling that Hideyoshi previously asked Joseon to re-establish diplomatic relations with Japan (since this is how So Yoshishige had presented Hideyoshi's demands), the Koreans decided to send a good-will embassy to Japan. The Koreans believed that Hideyoshi's belligerence as an outsider would go away once they treat him with recognition and welcome him into the sinocentric world order. The Korean envoys would also take the occasion as an opportunity to gather intelligence on the recent developments in Japan.[40] The Joseon court informed So Yoshitoshi that they would send ambassadors to Japan on a friendly visit but only under one condition, which was that the Koreans who had collaborated and fled to Japan in a recent case of wako piracy should be repatriated. In agreement, So sent one of his men in search of those wanted by the Korean officials and was able to turn up 10 of those who had fled and many more who were taken as prisoners.[40]
With the condition having been satisfied, the Koreans agreed to send an embassy to Japan, and they allowed So Yoshitoshi to see King Seonjo for the first time. In his meeting with the Korean king, So received a fine horse as a gift and presented in return a peacock and some arquebuses[40] (as mentioned previously, the Koreans neglected this early chance to manufacture and distribute this new weapon). Since winter was approaching and the embassy would have to wait until the spring of the following year, the Joseon court took the time to debate and pick the ambassadors for the mission to Japan. Hwang Yun-gil of the Western Faction and Kim Song-il of the Eastern Faction were named the chief ambassador and the vice ambassador respectively, and the embassy set out in April of 1590 with So Yoshitoshi's party in their company.[41] Not much happened during the 4 months of the journey except that the Koreans were again bothered by the different Japanese customs, and especially the vice ambassador was very vocal in his criticisms of what he saw as shortcomings on part of the Japanese. For example, on a stop at the island of Tsushima, Kim refused to attend a feast prepared by So Yoshitoshi on the ground that the Japanese let the Koreans in on sedan chairs rather than on foot. So apologized and immediately killed his sedan bearers to appease the vice envoy.[41] The Korean embassy arrived in Kyoto (used to be Japan's capital) in August of 1590, and waited for Hideyoshi to return from his campaign in the Kanto region. After returning to the capital in October, Hideyoshi tried unsuccessfully to win Emperor Go-Yozei's presence in meeting with the Koreans in order to boast his own legitimacy and delayed seeing the Koreans until December.[41]
The Koreans were bemused by their strange meeting with Hideyoshi. There was no extravagant banquet that the Koreans were familiar with in their typical diplomatic exchanges. After the Koreans presented their letter from King Seonjo to the "King of Japan", a plate of rice cakes and a bowl of wine were passed around for everyone present to share. With all seated in complete silence, Hideyoshi left the hall and reappeared with his son Tsurumatsu. Moving freely around the hall and cooing to the child, Hideyoshi ordered that music be played. Then, when the baby urinated on his clothes, Hideyoshi laughed and went away with the baby.[41] Shortly thereafter, So Yoshitoshi and the monk Genso led the Korean envoys to the port of Sakai, near Osaka, to wait for Hideyoshi to write a reply to King Seonjo. By then, the Koreans were doubtful on whether they should have undertaken the mission at all, since Hideyoshi was short and ugly, he behaved and appeared common, and, furthermore, he was only a "kampaku" or a regent, not a king. For the Korean King to have addressed a Japanese regent as an equal was an absolutely humiliating and inappropriate diplomatic mistake.[41] But for Hideyoshi, it was different, since he perceived that the Korean embassy was sent as a tribute mission to show Korea's submission to Japan. It was necessary for Hideyoshi to make clear to the Koreans the absolute power that he possessed despite his status as a regent. Hideyoshi could have easily impressed the Koreans by holding a feast that was expected of him, but Hideyoshi decided to defy that very expectation: unlike the Emperor of Japan, Toyotomi Hideyoshi was free to do as he wished.[41]
The Korean ambassadors returned to Seoul with Hideyoshi's letter in March of 1591. The letter thanked King Seonjo for sending a "tribute mission" and ordered Korea to prepare to war against China. Also, the letter originally contained the phrase, "surrendering to the Japanese court", but the Koreans had it removed back in Sakai. The Korean officials discussed at length the appropriate measures that they should implement in response to this letter. Hwang, who headed the embassy to Japan, asserted that Japan was fully prepared for war; the vice ambassador Kim strongly disagreed. In fact, the two envoys had gathered only a small bit of useful intelligence, but they and the other court officials argued intensely for the sake of party politics. Since Kim's Eastern Faction now held the edge over the previously dominant Western Faction, the debates came to the conclusion that Hideyoshi posed no real threat to Korea.[41] The Joseon court sent a firm reply to Hideyoshi, admonishing him for failing to "understand...[his] situation as well as...[Korea's]". Hideyoshi also sent So Yoshitoshi back to Korea with his ultimatum: submit or be destroyed.[42] So hastily handed Hideyoshi's letter to the Korean authorities at the port of Busan, but the Koreans at the capital court doubted its authenticity on the basis that the letter was not presented directly to the court by a Japanese envoy.[43]
As a vassal state, the Koreans had to report to China on their recent exchange with Hideyoshi. However, some Korean officials feared that China would become irate upon finding out that Korea carried out diplomacy with Japan without China's consent. Others argued that, even if they were to keep silent about Hideyoshi, China might find out about Hideyoshi's intentions through other channels within its tributary domain and may suspect Korea to be in accord with Hideyoshi. In fact, as early as 1591 the Chinese had heard of Hideyoshi's plans for invasion, first from the Ryukyu Islands, and were waiting for the "Little China" to notify them. Luckily, the Inspector General Yun Tu-su wrote an individual report about the "rumors" of Hideyoshi's plans for war and had it carried to the Chinese by the Ambassador Kim Ung-nam on his tribute mission to Beijing. Although this averted serious damage to the bilateral relationship, Yun was exiled to the countryside for overstepping his authority.[44]
(CC) Photo: Craig Nagy The Daenammum gate at the Bukhansan mountain near Seoul. The walls of these "mountain castles" (
san-sung) were too long and hard to defend.
The disputed status of the crisis at court meant the preparations were insufficient not only on paper but also in their execution. Many of the programs were were ill-attended, including the military drills which could be avoided through bribery, because they were seen as yet another form of government taxation on top of the poor harvests in the recent years. In the end, many building projects were abandoned incomplete, and many others, which were built as miniature Great Wall of China's, were too large to be defended effectively.[33]
Meanwhile, all of Japan prepared for total war, amassing an army of 235,000 troops at Nagoya (present-day Karatsu). Hideyoshi built an invasion headquarters often referred to as the "Nagoya Castle" (different from the Nagoya Castle that was constructed from 1610 to 1612)[45], and gathered troops from all parts of the country. The amount of contribution required of each daimyo differed based on factors such as the cost of travel and tax exemptions, as well as the degree of loyalty to Hideyoshi.[46] In fact, a total of 335,000 men were mobilized nationwide, but 100,000 troops were stationed throughout Japan to fill in the holes left by the invasion. 75,000 of the 235,000 troops at Nagoya would guard the base against a possible Chinese attack, and only 158,800 men would sail to Korea in the first offensive.[46] Hideyoshi amassed a total of 700 transports at Kyushu, Shikoku, and Chugoku, and had several hundred battleships built at the Bay of Ise on Honshu. Furthermore, Hideyoshi in 1586 had obtained an informal agreement from a Portuguese Jesuit to allow 2 men-of-war to be hired for war, but in the end the Portuguese authorities refused to lend their warships in 1592.[46]
First invasion
Japanese troops divisions
|
Div. 1: 18,700
|
Konishi Yukinaga
|
7,000
|
So Yoshitoshi
|
5,000
|
Matsuura Shigenobu
|
3,000
|
Arima Harunobu
|
2,000
|
Omura Yoshiaki
|
1,000
|
Goto Sumiharu
|
700
|
Div. 2: 22,800
|
Kato Kiyosama
|
10,000
|
Nabeshima Naoshige
|
12,000
|
Sagara Nagatsune
|
800
|
Div. 3: 11,000
|
Kuroda Nagamasa
|
5,000
|
Otomo Yoshimune
|
6,000
|
Div. 4: 14,000
|
Shimazu Yoshihiro
|
10,000
|
Mori Yoshinari
|
2,000
|
Takahashi Mototane
|
|
Akizuki Tanenaga
|
|
Ito Yuhei
|
|
Shimazu Tadatoyo
|
2,000
|
Div. 5: 25,100
|
Fukushima Masanori
|
4,800
|
Toda Katsutaka
|
3,900
|
Chosokabe Motochika
|
3,000
|
Ikoma Chikamasa
|
5,500
|
Hachisuka Iemasa
|
7,200
|
Kurushima Michiyuki
|
|
Kurushima Michifusa
|
700
|
Div. 6: 15,700
|
Kobayakawa Takakage
|
10,000
|
Kobayakawa Hidekane
|
1,500
|
Tachibana Munetora
|
2,500
|
Tsukushi Jonosuke
|
800
|
Takahashi Saburo
|
900
|
Div. 7: 30,000
|
Mori Terumoto
|
30,000
|
Div. 8: 10,000
|
Ukita Hideie
|
10,000
|
Div. 9: 11,500
|
Hashiba Hidekatsu
|
8,000
|
Hosokawa Tadaoki
|
3,500
|
|
On the afternoon of May 23, 1592, the first Japanese troops set sail to invade Korea. Hideyoshi had originally planned the launch of his invading forces to be on April 12, as he had with the Kyushu campaign in 1587 and the Odawara Siege in 1590, but he delayed the invasion because he was waiting on a final response from the Koreans to be relayed by So Yoshitoshi (and it would never come), and there were other issues that had to be resolved, such as logistics and his deteriorating health, which also rendered him unable to make the customary visit to the Emperor before heading off to war. Finally on April 24, Hideyoshi sent orders to commence operation, and, on May 7, he himself left Kyoto and headed for Nagoya.[47]
By the time the orders were received, the first 3 divisions, which would see action before the rest of Hideyoshi's troops at Nagoya, were stationed at Tsushima. Of the 3, the First Division under the command of Konishi Yukinaga was to lead the start of the war by securing the port city of Busan. Without waiting for the convoy of warships due to arrive from Honshu, Konishi proceeded in complete eagerness to set out with his 400 transport vessels, which were seen "covering all of the sea" that early morning on May 23. Gyeongsang Left Navy Commander Bak Hong and the Right Navy Commander Won Gyun merely stood by as the count of enemy vessels climbed throughout the day, although these were essentially fishing boats that would have stood little chance against their 200-strong Korean navy. By nightfall all 400 ships reached the waters off Busan harbor, and a final letter regarding a "safe passage" to China was sent for the Busan commander by So Yoshitoshi and monk Genso, but, without a forthcoming response, the Japanese troops began landing at 4 o' clock the next morning, on May 24th. They divided into 2 groups, one of which under Konishi advanced a few kilometers southwestward to take the fort at Dadaepo near the mouth of the Nakdong River. The besieged fort was initially held together under the command of Yun Hung-shin, but it was overwhelmed by a second assault that killed all therein. At Busan castle, [47]
Yoshitoshi tried one last time to convince Jeong Bal to surrender
[47]
(CC) Photo: Phrederick McLelland A modern replica of the turtle ship on display at South Korea's national museum.
PD Image Portrait of Admiral Yi, drawn in 1952.
Peace negotiations
Second invasion
Normalization of relations
Conclusion
notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Hawley, 2005. pp. xii-iii
- ↑ Swope, 2005. pp. 40
- ↑ Hawley, 2005. pp. 556
- ↑ Today in Korean History, Yonhap News Agency of Korea, 2006-11-28. Retrieved on 2007-03-24. (in English)
- ↑ T'ien ming: The Mandate of Heaven. Richard Hooker (1996, updated 1999). World Civilizations. Washington State University.
- ↑ Rockstein, 1993. pp. 7
- ↑ Rockstein, 1993. pp. 10-11
- ↑ Villiers pp. 71
- ↑ Hawley, 2005. pp. 54-6
- ↑ Swope, 2002. pp. 761-2
- ↑ Strauss, 2005. pp. 6
- ↑ Hawley, 2005. pp. 6
- ↑ Brown, 1948. pp. 238
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 Hawley, 2005. pp. 8-9
- ↑ Hawley, 2005. pp. 588
- ↑ Swope, 2005. pp. 16-7
- ↑ Palais, 1996. pp. 515-6
- ↑ Turnbull. 2002, pp. 15.
- ↑ Hawley, 2005. pp. 270
- ↑ Kristof, Nicholas D., Japan, Korea and 1597: A Year That Lives in Infamy
- ↑ Hawley, 2005. pp. 34-5
- ↑ Hawley, 2005. pp. 34-47
- ↑ Swope, 2005. pp. 24
- ↑ 24.0 24.1 Swope, 2005. pp. 20-1
- ↑ Swope, 2005. pp. 29
- ↑ Swope, 2005. pp. 27
- ↑ Swope, 2005. pp. 34
- ↑ Swope, 2005. pp. 39
- ↑ Turnbull, 2002. pp. 125
- ↑ Woon Yeong-ja, 2005-08-08. 해전도, 명량대첩이 아니라 칠천량해전? (in Korean), dkbnews.
- ↑ Strauss, 2005. pp. 9
- ↑ Korea Culture & Content Agency, web
"Design of the ship" (배의 구조)
- ↑ 33.0 33.1 Hawley, 2005. pp. 112-8
- ↑ Swope, 2005. pp. 25
- ↑ Hawley, 2005. pp. 21-2
- ↑ 36.0 36.1 Hawley, 2005. pp. 23-5
- ↑ Hawley, 2005. pp. 54-5
- ↑ Hawley, 2005. pp. 75-8
- ↑ Jones, 1899. pp. 240
- ↑ 40.0 40.1 40.2 40.3 40.4 40.5 Hawley, 2005. pp. 77-81
- ↑ 41.0 41.1 41.2 41.3 41.4 41.5 41.6 Hawley, 2005. pp. 82-87
- ↑ Hawley, 2005. pp. 88-93
- ↑ Jones, 1899. pp. 243
- ↑ Hawley, 2005. pp. 107-9
- ↑ "Nagoya Castle." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 09 Apr. 2009 <http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/401681/Nagoya-Castle>.
- ↑ 46.0 46.1 46.2 Hawley, 2005. pp. 94-107
- ↑ 47.0 47.1 47.2 Hawley, 2005. pp. 123-151
Further Reading
- Berry, Mary Elizabeth. Hideyoshi (1982), the standard biography
- Chase, Kenneth Warren. Firearms: A Global History to 1700 (2003), Cambridge University Press. ISBN: 0521822742
- Duffy, Christopher. Siege Warfare: The Fortress in the Early Modern World 1494-1660 (1996), Routledge. ISBN: 0415146496
- Kye, Seung B. "The Posthumous Image and Role of Ming Taizu in Korean Politics." In Long Live the Emperor! Uses of the Ming Founder Across Six Centuries of East Asian History, ed. Sarah Schneewind. (Minneapolis: Society for Ming Studies, 2008).
- Swope, Kenneth M. A Dragon's Head and a Serpent's Tail: Ming China and the First Great East Asian War, 1592-1598 (November 23, 2009). University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN: 0806140569
- Swope, Kenneth M. "Turning the Tide: the Strategic and Psychological Significance of the Liberation of Pyongyang in 1593." War & Society 2003 21(2): 1-22. Issn: 0729-2473
- Yu Sŏngnyong. The Book of Corrections: Reflections on the National Crisis During the Japanese Invasion of Korea, 1592-1598, trans. Choi Byonghyon (2002). The book is known in Korean as the Chingbirok.