Japanese invasions of Korea (1592-1598)

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Japanese invasions of Korea
(The Imjin War)

Date 1592 - 1598
Location Korean peninsula
Result Japanese defeat
Combatants
Joseon Dynasty Korea,
Ming Dynasty China
Japan under Toyotomi Hideyoshi
Commanders
Korea:
Yi Sun-sin,
Gwon Yul,
I Eok-gi,
Won Gyun,
Gim Myung-won,
Yi Il,
Sin Lip,
Gwak Jae-u,
Gim Si-min
China:
Li Rusong (pr.),
Li Rubai,
Ma Gui (pr.),
Qian Shi-zhen,
Ren Ziqiang,
Yang Yuan,
Zhang Shijue,
Chen Lin(pr.)
Katō Kiyomasa,
Konishi Yukinaga,
Kuroda Nagamasa,
Todo Takatora,
Katō Yoshiaki,
Mōri Terumoto,
Ukita Hideie,
Kuki Yoshitaka
Strength
Korea:
40,000 Korean Army,
(at the beginning)
unknown numbers of Korean volunteers and insurgents

China:
1st.(1592-1593)
50,000 over or Unknown
2nd.(1597-1598)
100,000 over or Unknown
1st.(1592-1593)
About 160,000
2nd.(1597-1598)
About 140,000
Casualties
Korea:
Unknown

China:
Unknown
Unknown
Hideyoshi's Invasions
BusanTadaejinTongnaeSangjuCh'ungjuOkpo1st SacheonImjin RiverDangpoDanghangpHansandoPyongyangChonju – Haejongchang – BusanJinjuPyeongyang – Uiryong – Byokchekwan – HaengjuJinju – Pusan – ChilchonryangNamwonMyeongnyangUlsan2nd SacheonNoryang Point
Korean Name
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
Japanese Name
Japanese: 文禄の役 / 慶長の役
Hepburn Romaji: Bunroku no Eki / Keichō no Eki
Chinese Name
Traditional Chinese: 壬辰衛國戰爭(萬曆朝鮮之役)
Simplified Chinese: 壬辰卫国战争(万历朝鲜之役)
Hanyu Pinyin: Rénchén Wèiguó Zhànzhēng
(Wànlì Cháoxiǎn Zhīyì)
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This article is about Japanese invasions of Korea during the 16th century. For other uses, see Seven Year War.
See also: Japanese occupation of Korea

The Japanese invasions of Korea of 1592-1598 were wars between Japan and Korea, which Japan originally had the professed aim of conquering Ming Dynasty China. Because the invasions were masterminded by Japanese kampaku Toyotomi Hideyoshi, they are often referred to as Hideyoshi's invasions of Korea or Hideyoshi's Korean Expeditions. They are also known as the Imjin War in reference to the "Imjin" year in the sexagenary cycle and the Seven-Year War in reference to the span of the invasions.

The first invasion (1592–1593) is called the "Japanese (= 倭 |wae|) War (= 亂 |lan|) of Imjin" (1592 being an imjin [= water—dragon] year in the sexagenary cycle) in Korean and "Bunroku Campaign" in Japanese. The second invasion (1597–1598) is called the "Second War" and "Keichō Campaign", respectively. In Chinese, the wars are referred to as the "Renchen (see Imjin above) War to Defend the Nation" or the "Wanli Korean Campaign", after the reigning Chinese emperor.

The Japanese forces saw initial success on land and continued failure at sea. In later years, the Japanese forces suffered heavily as they continued to push north and incurred disruptions to their naval supply chain. Furthermore, China entered the war as Korea's ally. The Japanese troops withdrew, and invaded for the second time to no avail. The war concluded with a naval battle at the Noryang Strait. In addition to human losses, Korea suffered cultural, economic, and infrastructural damage as a result of the war, such as a large reduction in the amount of arable land. The war impaired the Chinese military significantly, and eventually led to the Manchu's conquering of the Ming Dynasty.

Contents

[edit] Background

[edit] Korea

Main article Joseon Dynasty, History of Korea

Prior to the war, the Joseon Dynasty of Korea presided over 200 years of relative peace since the coup that overthrew its predecessor, the Goryeo Dynasty (918–1392). Koreans defended infrequent raids of the Jurchen in the north (ended by the extension of the Korean border to the Tumen River), and Japanese Wokou raids on Korea's ports and coastal villages (one of which led to Korea's retaliatory invasion into the Tsushima Island, called the Oei Invasion).

Also, Korea maintained a close relationship with the Ming Dynasty of China. Although China was a main enemy of Korea during the Tang, Sui, and Han dynasties, Korea was reasonably peaceful with Ming China. Fueled by the shared Confucian ideals, the threatening existence of the the Jurchens, and the commerce between the two countries, Korea and Ming China prospered together. Japan had commercial mutuality with Korea, and also licenced trade with China of the missions were identified by tallies (勘合符) issued by the Chinese authorities until 1549 known as the tally trade with Ming (勘合貿易 (ja)).[1]

By the 1570s and the 1580s however, the Korean military performed poorly. Also, with the wrong decision to ignore new weapons technology, the Korean military weakened considerably. As the conflict against the Jurchens in 1582 showed, Korea lacked strong military in terms of size, and capabilities. Yi I (1536–1584), then an influential scholar and philosopher, advised the king to maintain an army with minimum size of 100,000, to no avail[citation needed] and few scholars foresaw a Japanese invasion.

Then in the 1580s, Yu Seong-ryong (柳成龍), a prominent scholar, wanted to strengthen the military, fearing an invasion by Japan. He believed that all men, regardless of their social status (including slaves), should be conscripted. Yu also wanted to reorganize the military for better leadership, develop more advanced arquebuses, and improve armor even in the common foot infantry. However, his proposals were dismissed and the Korean court remained blissfully igonrant. Yu later became Prime Minister of Korea, and one of Admiral Yi's strongest advocates.

Yu insisted on rebuilding Korean castles near the coasts and garrison them with active soldiers. Because the castles were in terrible shape, Yu believed that an invasion would not be stopped with these defences. Yu wanted repaired walls with cannon holes and he wanted long and easy to defend walls with towers, similar to the castles in Europe.

However, these proposals were opposed by most advisers of the court, who believed Japan was not in a position to attack Korea and Yu's proposals were snubbed. Also, they rejected the proposals to repair castles because of the amount of money and labour that would have to go into it. Yu was dismissed by King Seonjo.[citation needed]

[edit] Japan

Main article Azuchi-Momoyama period, History of Japan

Toyotomi Hideyoshi established his hegemony over the warring states in Japan in the latter part of the 16th century. Hideyoshi united all the states and brought Japan to a brief period of peace. Motivated in part by a need to satisfy the perpetual hunger for territory by his vassals and find employment for restive samurai, he began to plan for the conquest of Ming Dynasty China. He revealed his plan first to Mōri Terumoto in 1586, and pursued the plan after he defeated the clans of Shimazu and Hōjō. Thousands of troops were mobilized and trained; weapons, and supplies were gathered; and hundreds of arquebuses were imported from Portugal. Hideyoshi failed to hire two Portuguese galleons to join the invasion; [citation needed] therefore, hundreds of ships were quickly built to carry the entire Japanese army across the sea.

Hideyoshi sent ambassadors to request the Joseon court to allow his troops to move through the Korean peninsula to China. His first request was ignored, and the second request was snubbed after King Seonjo sent envoys to Hideyoshi's government and determined from their observations that Hideyoshi posed no threat. After the denial of his second request, Hideyoshi launched his armies against Korea in 1592. There were those who opposed Hideyoshi's plan, such as Tokugawa Ieyasu, and Konishi Yukinaga and So Yoshitoshi were among those who tried to arbitrate between Hideyoshi and the Joseon court.

[edit] Weapons and Equipment

[edit] Muskets (Arquebuses) and Bows

Japanese arquebus of the Edo era. These types of firearms were used by Japanese soldiers during Hideyoshi's Invasions.
Enlarge
Japanese arquebus of the Edo era. These types of firearms were used by Japanese soldiers during Hideyoshi's Invasions.

One reason the Japanese so dominated the early stages of the war was their development and implementation of advanced muskets, first introduced 50 years earlier by Portuguese traders in 1543, in Tanegashima, a small island south of Kyūshū.[2] The acquisition of the weapons, lightweight versions of matchlock muskets, was the first occasion of an opening of the Japanese market to the West's science and technology. The local lord, Tanegashima Tokiaki, impressed by the demonstration, purchased two of these firearms, from which he soon began to manufacture copies. About twenty years later, the arquebuses were standardized and improved from the Portuguese originals, and mass-produced throughout Japan at the rate of at least several thousand per year.[3]

Korea disassociated from Western weapons, and while sporadic usage of short-barrelled personal Chinese-style firearms ("sungja"), was seen, the main emphasis was on archery and fire arrows. Korea's reaction to the arquebus was much different than the Japanese. When the first arquebus was introduced to Joseon/Korea in 1590, during a visit of an Embassy sent by King Sonjo to Hideyoshi, the weapon was given cursory examination and promptly archived in the royal arsenal and forgotten about.

The Korean minister Yu Song-nyong, author of the Chingbirok (Record of Reprimands and Admonition), advocated the use of the new acquisition and its mass production as part of the strengthening of the national defenses, but his recommendations in favor of the creation of arquebus squads were dismissed as "something laughable",[4] and Korean bows continued to be the standard long-range arms. The maximum range of the Korean bow was 460 meters, in contrast to its Japanese counterpart, a heavy composite bow whose range was 380 meters[5] which sacrified raw distance for improved accuracy. In battle, Korean archers would find themselves outranged against Japanese musketeers, who had a range of about 500 meters. Still, the bow had significant utility with a short reload time (six arrows could be shot while an arquebus/musket was being loaded and fired) and was a strong asset. However, training men to become skilled archers was an arduous and repetitive task, which could take several years. The arquebus' lack of accuracy was compensated by effective technique; heavy volley fire and striking firepower that could easily pierce iron armor at closer distances. The overall efficiency of the weapon had been proven at the Battle of Nagashino, before being used in the Korean campaigns.

[edit] Armor

Joseon soldier in full armor. With the exception of elite capital city guards, rest of the Korean infantry was neglected the use of full armor.
Enlarge
Joseon soldier in full armor. With the exception of elite capital city guards, rest of the Korean infantry was neglected the use of full armor.

Korean soldiers had a notable lack of armor. Although Korean troops were equipped with iron and lamellar armor during the Goryeo Dynasty, its usage declined by the mid-16th century. Commanders saw no need for armor because of their confidence in their projectile weapons, which they believed made face-to-face combat less likely. Although the government mandated wearing armor for all ranks, generally only officers complied. Most soldiers hesitated to wear armor due to its bulky nature.

A common Korean soldier wore a heavy black leather jacket over their normal white clothes. A hard conical hat gave some protection as well. This uniform allowed easy movement and speed but no protection against bullets, arrows, or swords. Korean soldiers often used a long trident with blades on all prongs as their main weapon.

Japanese foot soldiers wore steel or leather plate and/or chainmail over their chest, arms, and legs. Shin guards added protection to the lower legs and feet. A round conical hat was worn by the Japanese, usually painted with an insignia of a samurai's crest. This armor did not prevent arrows or bullets from passing through but protected the soldier from sword or spear slashes.

[edit] Naval Forces

Probably the only military division Korea excelled in was the navy. Largely thourgh Admiral Yi's preparations, the navy was capable of successfully defeating the Japanese navy. The Korean navy was mainly made up of standard panokseons, and Admiral Yi's newly designed turtle ships, loosely based on an earlier ship with a the same name and similar design. Each panokseon had 32 large cannons and multiple hwachas, often preferring to fight at a distance, utilizing their firepower and range (for example, see Battle of Noryang Point). Japanese commanders preferred to engage in close combat, as the Japanese fleet excelled in boarding and the ensuing mêlée combat. The advantage of long range weapons Korea had however, left a boarding attack strategy obsolete and ultimately resulted in Japanese defeats at sea. The difference in philosophy is reflected in the contrast of the slower, high powered Korean vessels with the agile, lightweight Japanese ships.

Ironically, Korean soldiers had a wide selection of cannons, grenades, and mortars at their disposal although Korea had a lack of firearms. Korean versions of cannons were first developed in the 1400's under King Sejong (1418–1450) for use mainly on battleships and castles and improved vastly over the years.

The Korean cannons were much more powerful than their Japanese counterparts. Large wooden arrows were used to supplement the limited number of cannonballs, and yet they still proved to be effective due to the weakness of the Japanese ships.

[edit] First Invasion

Japanese first invasion wave[6]
1st div. Konishi Yukinaga 7,000
Sō Yoshitoshi 5,000
Matsuura Shigenobu 3,000
Arima Harunobu 2,000
Ōmura Yoshiaki (ja) 2,000
Gotō Sumiharu 700 18,700
2nd div. Katō Kiyomasa 10,000
Nabeshima Naoshige 12,000
Sagara Yorifusa (ja) 800 22,800
3rd div. Kuroda Nagamasa 5,000
Ōtomo Yoshimasa 6,000 11,000
4th div. Shimazu Yoshihiro 10,000
Mōri Yoshimasa (ja) 2,000
Takahashi Mototane (ja), Akizuki Tanenaga, Itō Suketaka (ja), Shimazu Tadatoyo[7] 2,000 14,000
5th div. Fukushima Masanori 4,800
Toda Katsutaka 3,900
Chōsokabe Motochika 3,000
Ikoma Chikamasa 5,500
Ikushima (Kurushima Michifusa)? 700
Hachisuka Iemasa (ja) 7,200 25,000 (sic)
6th div. Kobayakawa Takakage 10,000
Kobayakawa Hidekane, Tachibana Muneshige, Tachibana Naotsugu (ja), Tsukushi Hirokado, Ankokuji Ekei 5,700 15,700
7th div. Mōri Terumoto 30,000 30,000
Subtotal 137,200
Reservers (8th div.) Ukita Hideie (Tsushima Island) 10,000
(9th div.) Toyotomi Hidekatsu (ja) and Hosokawa Tadaoki (ja) (Iki Island) 11,500 22,500
Subtotal 158,700
Naval force Kuki Yoshitaka, Wakisaka Yasuharu, Katō Yoshiaki, Otani Yoshitsugu 9,000
Subtotal 167,700
Stationed force at Nagoya Ieyasu, Uesugi, Gamō, and others 75,000
Total 234,700

[edit] Initial Landing

Main articles Siege of Busan, Battle of Tadaejin

The invasion began when Japanese forces of the First and Second Divisions, under Katō Kiyomasa and Konishi Yukinaga landed at Busan and Tadaejin (다대진) respectively on May 23, 1592 with a combined 150,000 soldiers.[8] The Siege of Busan was won after the Korean troops' morale crumbled when their general, Jeong Pal, died of a gunshot wound. Tadaejin fell in a matter of hours. The cities were fortified to allow safe passage for reinforcements, supplies, and ships.

It is interesting to note that the two battles happened at nearly the exact same time.[citation needed]

[edit] Battle of Sangju

Main article: Battle of Sangju

After securing the ports, the First Division (under Konishi Yukinaga) with 25,000 men marched quickly north to Sangju. Sangju was defended by Yi Il, a senior general who fought the Jurchens in northern Korea. However, with a small garrison and a weak castle, Yi Il's men fell again to the powerful arquebuses.

Konishi then crossed Choryang Pass, which was a major strategic point that the Koreans failed to guard when Sin Lip made a bad decision to pull his cavalry back the Chungju, believing that the cavalry would fight easily in open grounds. This enabled the Japanese army to simply pass the point without any resistance at all. The failure to defend Choryang Pass led to the capture of Hanyang (present-day Seoul).

[edit] Battle of Chungju

Main article: Battle of Chungju

Konishi soon reached Chungju defended by a cavalry division under the command of Sin Lip. The newly recruited cavalry division of 8,000, having been outnumbered and limited to melee weapons, was overwhelmed by 19,000 Japanese soldiers equipped with arquebuses. The Battle of Chungju marked the last defense line to Hanyang, and the Japanese forces journeyed north without much complication.

Upon hearing of General Sin Lip's defeat, the Yi court took flight toward Pyongyang. In Kaesong, the Korean commoners mourned bitterly because they believed that their king was abandoning them. The Yi court would eventually travel as far as the very northern states of Korea, and the prince would be sent with other ambassadors to ask the Ming Emperor for military aid.

Meanwhile, the Second Division of 23,000 men under Katō Kiyomasa captured Gyeongju, the former capital of Korea during the Silla Dynasty, and massive looting and burning took place. A series of minor battles between the Koreans and Japanese led Katō to Chuksan, and eventually Seoul in a month.

[edit] Capture of Hanseong

Chungju was the last line of defense for the Koreans and the road to Hanseong (present-day Seoul) was open to the Japanese. Both Generals Katō and Konishi vied to earn the honor of reaching Hanseong first, and the Third Division under Kuroda Nagamasa was not far behind. In the end, Konishi managed to arrive near Hanseong first, and planned to attack the East Gate.

To their surprise, the city was left undefended and was found burned and destroyed. Konishi and his men simply walked through the massive gates. King Seonjo had already fled to Pyongyang the day before. There were no soldiers either. Korean looters helpfully destroyed the food warehouses and armories and the Japanese failed to collect any treasures or supplies.

[edit] Siege of Jinju

Main article Siege of Jinju (1592)

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, commanded 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.

In 1593, Jinju would fall to the Japanese.[9]

[edit] Japanese Northern Campaign

(See also Katō Kiyomasa's campaign in the North-Eastern part of Korea)

Japanese troops ravaged and looted many key towns in the southern part of Korea, took Pyongyang and advanced as far north as the Yalu and Tumen rivers. By 1593, Konishi was already planning to invade China.

Of the Second Division, Katō Kiyomasa was still unhappy because of Konishi's glory from the capture of Seoul. Katō planned to invade Hamgyong province in northern Korea and begin his China campaign. With an army of 20,000 men, Katō advanced north, capturing every single castle he arrived at. This included all the castles along Korea's eastern border.

Katō's first real resistance was at Haejungchang. Katō met Northern Korean Contingents, who were renowned as elites among the Korean army. Korean cavalry charged the field and smashed Kato's army as a whole. Surprised, Katō fell back to Haejungchang, a rice storage, built cover from rice pouches and waited for the attack to stop. Feeling confident about the first victory, the Korean commander ordered the cavalry to charge and harass the enemy under cover. Katō replied by heavy arquebus fire behind a 'rice wall' and forced the Koreans back to a nearby hill. After nightfall, Katō silently led his troops to the foot of the hill. He then ordered an attack from three sides and destroyed the Korean army as a whole.

This would be the last Korean resistance to his advance into northeastern China.

Katō then marched toward northeastern China, leaving the coast, and after the Battle of Songjin, captured two Korean princes who were sent down south with an escort of 1,000 Japanese soldiers as a negotiation condition. After crossing the Tumen River, Katō arrived in northeastern China, where Chinese authority did not reach and Jurchens ruled. Here Katō attacked a Jurchen fortress and took it by heavy arquebus fire. The next day Jurchens retaliated against the Japanese with 10,000 strong troops. The Japanese were practically surrounded by the Jurchen cavalry and while managing to pull out of Jurchen attacks, Katō quickly retreated back across the Tumen River. This would be the first and last time Katō and the Japanese ever stepped outside Korea during the war. It is interesting to note that Japan never reached China - their strategic goal - after this.

[edit] Naval battles of Yi Sun-shin

 A Panokseon; these made up the majority of Yi's naval fleet.
Enlarge
A Panokseon; these made up the majority of Yi's naval fleet.
A naval battle. Close combat was very rare during Admiral Yi's operations.
Enlarge
A naval battle. Close combat was very rare during Admiral Yi's operations.

Battles are listed at the end of the article

On the naval front, admiral Yi Sun-sin, who kept a war diary, was preparing for battle against the Japanese ships docked in Busan.

While the Japanese army were greatly successful on land, in June, 1592, a small Korean fleet commanded by Yi destroyed several Japanese flotillas and wrought havoc on Japanese logistics in the Battle of Okpo, Dangpo Battle, and Battle of Sacheon (1592). During the Battle of Sacheon, the Korean iron-roofed Geobukseon, or turtle ships, were introduced. After another Korean victory at the Battle of Tanghangpo, Japanese generals at Busan began to panic, fearing that their supply lines would be destroyed, so therefore the Japanese naval generals decided to kill Yi before his threat to Japanese supply ships escalated and sent Wakizaka Yasuharu to destroy him.

Wakizaka Yasuharu was reported seen with a very large Japanese fleet sailing down the Straits of Kyonnaeryang by local fishermen and scouts. Yi was reluctant to attack the Japanese in the narrow strait, for fear of his Panokseons performing badly in a tight quarters. He also did not want the Japanese to escape onto land, where they could commence operations. Instead, he lured the Japanese out of the strait into the Bay of Hansando with a few ships. When the bulk of the Japanese forces pursued into open water, the Battle of Hansando commenced, with Yi using a crane-wing formation and continuous firing of cannons to achieve a victory.

In September 1592, Yi attacked the Japanese naval headquarters at Busan. Yi managed to leave with all of his ships intact, while inflicting damage on several hundred enemy ships still in their docks. Focusing on naval control, a 1592 battle near Hansan Island succeeded in severely disrupting the Japanese naval supply lines.[10]

The Japanese lost control of the Korea Strait after such naval defeats, and their activities were largely limited around Busan until the Battle of Chilchonryang in 1597. Without the continuous supplies coming from Busan, the Japanese army lost their initial advantage and could not proceed any further from Pyongyang.

Much credit of the war's eventual outcome has been attributed to Admiral Yi's efforts.

[edit] Korean Irregular Army

Throughout Hideyoshi's Invasions, irregular Korean forces were active and operated against the Japanese forces. Both Korean civilians and Buddhist monks gathered to form a militia. The irregulars' main jobs were to harass Japanese communication lines, ambush armies, kill Japanese commanders, and provide reinforcements.

Insurgency resistance was especially strong in the southern provinces of Chungcheong, Jeolla and Gyeongsang. Gwak Jae-u, Jo Heon (조헌), Kim Cheon-il (김전일), Go Kyung-myung (고경명), and Jeong In-hong (정인홍) were among the notable insurgency leaders.

Gwak Jae-u is one of the most celebrated heroes of the Seven Year War. He was originally a landowner in Gyeongsang province, but the urgency of the war caused him to begin gathering volunteers to fight the Japanese. In popular depiction, Gwak Jae-u is wearing an all-red tunic, claiming that the tunic was stained with the blood of Korean innocents slaughtered by the Japanese. Today, Gwak is remembered by Koreans as a mysterious patriotic hero.

Gwak Jae-u's first attack was on Japanese supply boats that transported supplies up and down on the Nam River. Gwak positioned his men in tall reeds in the water and preyed on Japanese river boats that ferried supplies. One of Gwak's most important achievements was to destroy Japanese communication systems in Korea.

In the north, insurgency leader Jeong Mun-bu (정문부) fought against Katō Kiyomasa, and defeated the Japanese at the northernmost point in Korea. One of his most decisive victories was the Battle of Gilju, which forced Katō's army into retreat. Jeong's victories helped force the Japanese to retreat permanently from northern Korea. The whole of his campaign was carved into a stone memorial after the war.

While the official army was being easily overrun by the Japanese army, the hit-and-run tactics of the irregular army was actually the biggest threat for the invaders.

[edit] Buddhist Volunteers

As mentioned above, Buddhist monks formed a large part of the Korean irregular forces. An interesting thing to note is the participation of Buddhist monks who were only seen in mountains since the overthrow of the Goryeo dynasty. Buddhist monks proved to be great leaders and excelled at fighting the Japanese.

Buddhist monks recruited to the Korean irregular forces, with the inspiration of patriotism and to raise the status of Buddhism, since Joseon was a highly Confucianistic society. A certain monk named Hyujong, called on all monk volunteers to destroy the Japanese samurai, described as "poisonous devils". By the fall of 1593, a total of about 8,000 monk warriors gathered over the next couple months.

[edit] Battle of Haengju

Main article Battle of Haengju

The Japanese invasion into Jeolla province was broken down and pushed back by Gwon Yul, a respected general 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 destroyed at Pyokje, Gwon Yul decided to fortify Haengju.

Bolstered by the victory at Pyokje, 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 3,800 led by Gwon Yul was garrisoned at the fortress waiting for the Japanese. Kato believed his overwhelming army would destroy the Koreans and therefore ordered the Japanese soldiers to advance upon the steep slopes of Haengju with little apparent plan. Gwon Yul answered the Japanese with fierce fire from the fortification using Hwachas, rocks, handguns, bows, and even quicklimes were thrown at the Japanese. But Katō stubbornly ordered his men up. The Japanese eventually forced the Koreans to the second line of defense, but they pushed no further. After nine massive assaults and 10,000 casualties, Katō burned his dead and finally pulled his troops back.

The Battle of Haengju was an important victory for the Koreans, and celebrated as one of the three most decisive Korean victories; Battle of Haengju, Siege of Jinju (1592), and Battle of Hansando.

Today, the site of Haengju fortress has a memorial built to honor Gwon Yul.

[edit] Intervention of Ming China

China sent land and naval forces to Korea in both the first and second invasions to assist in defeating the Japanese.

After the fall of Pyongyang, King Seonjo retreated to Uiji, a small city near the border of China. With the First and Second Divisions rapidly approaching, King Seonjo made another shameful retreat into China. At the Chinese court, King Seonjo informed of the Japanese invasion.

In July, the Ming Dynasty Emperor Wanli and his advisers took the threat of the Japanese lightly and responded to King Seonjo's request for aid by sending an inadequately small force of 5,000 soldiers.[11]

Hideyoshi, having suffering numerous setbacks, including logistical problems caused by Korean saboteurs and major naval defeats at the hands of the Korean navy, 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 promptly rejected. This negotiation was, of course, done out of sight of the Korean Royal Court. Both sides resumed hostilities.

The Ming Emperor sent a large force in January 1593 under the two famous 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.

In February 1593 a large combined force of Chinese and Korean soldiers attacked Pyongyang and drove the Japanese into eastward retreat. Li Rusong personally led a pursuit with over 20,000 strong troops, along with a small force of Koreans, but was halted near Pyokje by the sally of a large Japanese formation.

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.

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 to last for close to four years.

[edit] Negotiations between China and Japan

With pressure from the Chinese and Korean army and supplies cut off by the Korean naval fleet, Konishi was compelled to negotiate for peace. Konishi's forces were reduced by nearly one third from desertion, disease and death. General Li Ju-sung offered a way out for Konishi by giving him a chance to put an end to the hostilities. In the spring of 1593, China and Korea agreed to cease hostilities if the Japanese would withdraw altogether. General Konishi had no option but to accept the terms, but he would have a hard time convincing Hideyoshi he had no other choice.[12]

By May 18, 1593, all the Japanese soldiers 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.

An envoy from Hideyoshi reached Beijing in 1594. Most of the Japanese army had left Korea by autumn 1596; a small garrison nevertheless remained in Busan. Satisfied with the Japanese overtures, the imperial court in Beijing dispatched an embassy to allow retired Regent (Taikō (太閤)) Hideyoshi to have the title of "King of Japan" on condition of complete withdrawal of Japanese forces from Korea.

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.

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.

[edit] Korean Military Reorganization

[edit] Proposal for Military Reforms

During the period between the First and Second invasion, the Korean government had a chance to examine the reasons on why they had been easily overrun by the Japanese. Yu Seong-ryong, the Prime Minister, spoke out about the Korean disadvantage.

Yu pointed out about the Korean castle defences (which he had vigorously advocated before the war) that were extremely weak. He noted how Korean castles had incomplete fortifications and walls too easy to scale. He also wanted cannons set up in the walls. Yu proposed to have 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 as the center.

Yu also pointed out how efficient the Japanese army was (considering their speed of taking only 1 month to Seoul) and how well trained they were. The superior military units the Japanese generals deployed was a large part of the Japanese. Yu noted how the Japanese moved their units in complex movements, often weakening the enemy with arquebuses, then attacking with melee weapons. Korean armies often moved forward in one body, without any organization.

China helped Korea reorganize the military largely. Yu was recommended to train Korean soldiers with the "three arts", which included the skills of swordsmanship, archery, and arquebuses. Chinese generals suggested that Koreans should be trained in all three skills, clearly being able to effectively repel any kind of attack, be they melee, arrows, or bullets.

[edit] Military Training Agency

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 up the army into units and companies. Also, within the companies were squads of archers, arquebusers, and edged weapons. The agency set up divisional units in each region of Korea and battalions were garrisoned at castles. The number of the members of the agency soon grew to about 10,000, originally less than 80 members.

One of the most important changes were the eligible people to be conscripted. Now, both high, upper class citizens and slaves were subject to drafts and all males had to enter military service to be trained and famimliarized with weapons.

Unfortunately, the creation of the Military Training Agency was halfhearted and under developed. Also, nearly all the reforms Yu called for were ignored again. 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 again; with another cost when the Manchu came to power in China.

[edit] Second Invasion

Hideyoshi was unsatisfied with the first campaign, and decided to push his luck with another attack on Korea.

One of the main differences of the First and Second invasions, was that China was a long lost achievement for the Japanese. Failing to gain a foothold during Kato Kiyomasa's Chinese campaign and the full retreat of the Japanese during the first invasion affected the Japanese morale. Hideyoshi and his generals planned to conquer Korea.

Soon after the Chinese ambassadors returned safely to China, in 1597, Hideyoshi sent 200 ships with approximately 141,100 men[13] under the overall command of Kobayakawa Hideaki.[14] Japan's second force arrived unopposed on the southern coast of Kyonsang province in 1596. However, the Japanese found a that Korea was both equipped and ready to deal with an invasion this time.[15] In addition, upon hearing this news in China, the imperial court in Beijing appointed Yan Hao (楊鎬) as the supreme commander of an initial mobilization of 55,000 troops[13] from various (and sometimes remote) provinces across China, such as Sichuan, Zhejiang, Huguang, Fujian, and Guangdong.[16] A naval force of 21,000 was included in the effort.[17] 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.[18] 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, General Gwak Jae-u's soldiers in Changnyeong (창녕), Yi Bok-nam’s (이복남) army in Naju, and Yi Si-yun's troops in Chungpungnyeong.[13]

[edit] Initial Offensive

Initially, the Japanese found little success being confined mainly to Kyongsang province and only managing numberously short range attacks to keep the much larger Korean and Chinese forces off balance.[19] All through out the second invasion Japan would mainly be on the defensive locked in at Kyongsang province.[20] The Japanese planned to attack Jeolla Province in the southwestern part of the peninsula, and eventually occupy Jeonju, the provincial capital. Korean success in the Siege of Jinju in 1592 had saved this area from further devastation during the first invasion. But this time, Japanese commanders wanted to capture this area. Two Japanese armies, under Mori Hidemoto and Ukita Hideie, began the assault in Busan and marched towards Jeonju, taking Sacheon and Changpyong along the way.

[edit] Siege of Namwon

Main article Siege of Namwon

Namwon was located 30 miles southeast from Chonju. It was the largest fortress[citation needed] in Jeolla Province, and a coalition force of 6,000 soldiers (including 3,000 Chinese)[21] 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.[22] The two sides exchanged volleys of arquebuses and bows. Eventually the Japanese forces scaled the walls and sacked the fotress. According to Japanese commander Okochi Hidemoto, author of the Chosen Ki, the Siege of Namwon resulted in 3,726 casualties (number of noses collected) on the Korean and Chinese forces' side.[23] 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 only positioned in a defensive perimeter around Kyongsang province again.[24]

[edit] Battle of Hwangsoksan

Main article Battle of Hwangsoksan

Hwangsoksan Fortress consisted of extensive walls that circumscribed the Hwangsok mountain, and garrisoned thousands of soldiers led by the guerilla leader Gwak Jae-u. When Kato Kiyomasa laid siege on the mountain with a colossal army, the Koreans lost morale and retreated with 350 casualties. Even with this incident the Japanese were still unable to break free from Kyongsang province and was reduced to hold a defensive position only with the constant attack of the even more colossal Chinese and Korean forces.[25]

[edit] Korean naval operations 1597-1598

The Korean navy played a crucial part in the second invasion, as well as the first. The Japanese advances were halted due to the lack of reinforcements and supplies[citation needed], as the frequent naval victories of the allied forces prevented the Japanese from accessing south western side of the Korean peninsula.[26] Also, China sent a large number of Chinese fleets 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.

The war at sea took off on a bad start when Won Gyun took Admiral Yi's place as commander.

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 Kato Kiyomasa would be coming on a certain date with great Japanese fleet on another attack on Korean shores, and insisted that Admiral Yi be sent to lay an ambush.[27]

Knowing that the area had sunken rocks detrimental for the ships, Admiral Yi refused, and for refusing instruction from higher command he was demoted and jailed by King Seonjo. Added to that, Admiral Won Gyun accused Admiral Yi of drinking and idling. Won Gyun was quickly put in Admiral Yi's place. Won Gyun's place of Admiral Yi would soon bring the destruction of the Korean navy at Chilchonryang.

[edit] Battle of Chilchonryang

Main article Battle of Chilchonryang

On August 28, 1597, a Japanese fleet engaged the entire Korean navy at Chilchonryang strait, and the battle resulted in 157 sunken Korean ships and 20,000 casualties[citation needed] when Won Gyun failed to effectively use his cannons. Won Gyun and his remaining army were killed after he struggled ashore to a Japanese fort. Only 12 Korean warships survived the battle and retreated to Yeosu. With the destruction of the Korean navy, the area around the Korea Strait was finally under Japanese control and supply ships could reach Busan without being attacked. This battle was Japan's only naval victory of both campaigns.

[edit] Battle of Myeongnyang

Main article Battle of Myeongnyang

After the debacle in Chilchonryang, King Seonjo immediately reinstated Admiral Yi. Admiral Yi quickly returned to Yeosu only to find his entire navy destroyed. However, Yi re-organized the navy now reduced to 12 ships and 200 men,[28] saved from the previous battle, which would be the grand total of the Korean navy for next several months. Nonetheless, Admiral Yi's strategies did not waver, and on September 16, 1597, he led the Korean fleet against a Japanese fleet of 133 war vessels[29] in the Myeongnyang Strait. The naval Battle of Myeongnyang resulted in Korean victory with at least 123 Japanese vessels sunk, and the Japanese were forced to return to Busan,[30] under the orders of Mori Hidemoto. Admiral Yi won back the control of the Korean shores.

[edit] Siege of Ulsan

Main article: Siege of Ulsan

By late 1597, Japanese forces were very near Hanseong, and behind them was a trail of devastation. They defeated the Korean forces at Chiksan and Sangju, and laid siege on Kyeongju. After the news of the loss at Myeongnyang, Kato Kiyomasa decided to destroy Kyeongju, the former capital of the Silla kingdom. Already sacked and looted in the first invasion during two battles, the city was this time burnt down by the Japanese soldiers in a vengeful raid. The Pulguksa temple, one of the prominent place of Korean buddhism, was entirely detroyed in the process (it has since been restored). The Japanese proceeded to retreat south to Ulsan,[31] a harbor that had been an important Japanese trading post a century before, and that Kato chose as a strategic stronghold.

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 wajo that they still controlled. To gain advantage of the situation, the Chinese and Korean coalition forces attacked Ulsan, a major Japanese stronghold. This siege was the first major offensive from the Chinese and Korean forces in the second phase of the war.

The effort of the Japanese garrison (about 7,000 men) of Ulsan was largely dedicated to its fortification, in preparation for the expected attack. Kato Kiyomasa assigned the direction and defense of the base to Kato Yasumasa, Kuk Hirotaka, Asano Nagayoshi, and others before proceeding to Sosaengpo.[32] The Chinese Ming troops' first assault on January 29, 1598, caught the Japanese army unawares and still encamped, for a large part, outside Ulsan's unfinished walls.[33] A total of around 36,000 with the help of singijeons and hwachas nearly succeeded in sacking the fortress, but reinforcements under the overall command of Mori Hidemoto came across the river to aid the besieged fortress[34] and prolonged the hostilities. Later, Japanese were running out of food and the victory was imminent for the allied forces, but another Japanese reinforcement arrived from the rear of the Chinese and Korean troops and forced them to a stalemate. By 1598, Japan's position in Korea had became so bad that the Japanese field commander was on the verge of asking to negotiate an armistice.[35]

[edit] Battle of Sacheon

Main article Battle of Sacheon (1598)

During the winter of 1597, the Chinese and Korean allies repelled the Japanese forces from reaching Hanseong (present-day Seoul). Without any hope to conquer 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 in May 1598; this naval force saw action in joint exercises with the Koreans against the Japanese navy. And in June 1598, under Commander Konishi Yukinage's warning of the dire situations in the campaign, withdrew 70,000 troops and left 60,000 -mostly Satsuma warriors under the Shimazu clan commanders, Shimazu Yoshihiro and his son Tadatsune.[36] The remaining Japanese forces fought desperately, turning back Chinese attacks on Suncheon and Sacheon as the Ming army amassed more troops to prepare for a final assault.

The Chinese believed that Sacheon was crucial in their program to retake the lost castles. Although the Chinese were ascendant initially, the tide of the battle turned when Japanese reinforcements attacked the rear of the Chinese army and the Japanese soldiers inside the fortress counter-attacked through the gates.[37] The Chinese Ming forces retreated with 30,000 losses[38] As the battles raged on the Chinese and Korean forces again were able to turn the Japanese to a full retreat by the summer of 1598 and again reduce the Japanese to a defensive position situated in Kyongsang province. By this time the Japanese were barely maintaining their position and considering a peace armistic with Korean and China.[39]

[edit] Death of Hideyoshi

On 18 September 1598 Hideyoshi, on his deathbed, ordered the withdrawal of forces from Korea,[40] and died peacefully in his sleep.[citation needed] 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.

[edit] Battle of Noryang Point

Main article Battle of Noryang Point

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. Intelligence reports revealed that 500[41] Japanese ships were anchored in the narrow straits of Noryang in order to withdraw the remaining Japanese troops. Noting the narrow geography of the area, Admiral Yi and the Chen Lin led a surprise attack against the Japanese fleet at dawn on December 16, 1598.

The allied fleet fired volleys of cannons and fire arrows against the resting Japanese fleet. The Japanese fleet hurriedly prepared and sailed toward the allied fleet through the strait. Their ships suffered much devastation from the bombardments as the ships became concentrated into bundles, due to narrowness of the strait. As mentioned above, Japanese gunpowder technology was less advanced compared to that of the Koreans and Chinese. They were unable to return any fire.

Yeosu today.
Enlarge
Yeosu today.

As the Japanese ships became nearer, Chen Lin ordered the Chinese fleet to engage in melee combat. Fierce close-quarter combat ensued. The Japanese counter-attacked with familiar boarding methods and arquebus volleys. When Chen Lin's flagship was threatened, Admiral Yi came to his aid by entering the heat of the battle. Lobbing mortars shells and fire arrows into the Japanese ships, Admiral Yi's fleet managed to neutralize many of the Japanese arquebus squads. Admiral Yi personally wielded a bow himself.

By dawn, nearly half of Japanese battle ships were destroyed; as the Japanese began to withdraw, Admiral Yi ordered the final charge to destroy the remaining few. 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.

The battle ended as an allied victory and a Japanese loss of nearly 450 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.[42]

There are marked similarities between the Battle of Noryang Point and the Battle of Salamis, 480 BC on the tactical, strategic and even operational levels.

[edit] Aftermath

Hideyoshi's Invasions left deep scars in Korea. Farmlands were devastated, irrigation dikes were destroyed, villages and towns were burned down, the population was first plundered and then dispersed, and many skilled workers (celadonware makers, craftsmen, artisans, etc) were kidnapped and brought to Japan to help develop and expand Japan's crafts during and after the war. Japanese craftsmanship increased dramatically after the war.

One of the worst consequences Korea suffered were the hundreds of Korean artifacts stolen by the Japanese generals. Even today, many Korean artifacts are displayed in Japan. For several years Korea has been demanding the return of these artifacts, but Japan has yet to comply. Instead, they remain on display in museums. Artifacts under private collectors are not even displayed and are inacessible to the public.

Japanese culture was somewhat influenced by the ideas and skills of the Korean craftsmen in Japan, perhaps most notably in the area of pottery.[43] The cultural exchange with Korea included the introduction of many ideas about Buddhism, celedonware, and art, which helped develop a deeper culture in Japan. Today, many similarities between Korean and Japanese celedonware can be identified, a hint of the interchange that took place.

In 1598 alone, the Japanese took some 38,000 ears as gruesome trophies. A survey conducted in 1601 revealed that the productive capacity of farmlands had been reduced from 1.5–1.7 million gyeol,[44] assessed in 1592, to 30,000 gyeol.[45]

Many captured Korean nationals were eventually sold as slaves to Portuguese traders, and to various European colonies around the world.[46][47] With the death of Hideyoshi, Tokugawa Ieyasu eventually gained control of Japan and established 300 years of political stability.

Most of Seoul, the capital city was laid to waste. The royal palace was heavily damaged and markets of Seoul were destroyed.

Ming Dynasty China had invested enormous human and material resources in Korea, which depleted the state treasury and weakened its northeastern border against the emerging power of the Manchu. The Ming Dynasty eventually crumbled after wars against the Manchu.

Following the war, political and economic relations between Korea and Japan were completely suspended. Negotiations between the Korean court and the Tokugawa Shogunate were carried out via the Japanese daimyo of Tsushima Island, So Yoshitomo, who had avoided intervening in the invasion. The So clan desired to restore commercial relations with Korea, Japan at the time relying on Chinese and Korean silk for kimonos and various other mainland technologies. Tokugawa Ieyasu favored peaceful relations abroad.

In the spring of 1604, Tokugawa Ieyasu released 3,000 captives.[48] In 1608, an Embassy of three officials and 270 men was sent to Edo, and received by Shogun Tokugawa Hidetada, Ieyasu's son. As a result of the visit, thousands of prisoners were returned to Korea, and Japanese captives were repatriated.[49] Accompanying this action, limited trade relations were restored.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ George Sanson (1961) A History of Japan 1334-1615, Stanford University Press, p. 142, 167-180. ISBN 0-8047-0525-9
  2. ^ Hawley, Samuel, The Imjin War, The Royal Asiatic Society, Korea Branch/UC Berkeley Press, 2005, pp. 3–7, ISBN 89-954424-2-5/
  3. ^ Hawley, Samuel, The Imjin War, The Royal Asiatic Society, Korea Branch/UC Berkeley Press, 2005, p. 6.
  4. ^ Palais, J.B., Confucian Statecraft and Korean Institutions: Yu Hyongwon and the Late Choson Dynasty, University of Washington Press, 1996, p. 520.
  5. ^ Hawley, Samuel, The Imjin War, The Royal Asiatic Society, Korea Branch/UC Berkeley Press, 2005, p. 8.
  6. ^ George Sanson (1961) A History of Japan 1334-1615, Stanford University Press, p. 352, based on the archives of Mōri clan
  7. ^ based on the archives of Shimazu clan
  8. ^ The University Record, February 22, 1999. Imjin War diaries are memorial of invasions for Koreans
  9. ^ Turnbull, Stephen (1998). 'The Samurai Sourcebook'. London: Cassell & Co. 248.
  10. ^ http://koreanhistoryproject.org/Ket/C12/E1203.htm
  11. ^ http://koreanhistoryproject.org/Ket/C12/E1204.htm
  12. ^ 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 Ju-sung offered General Konishi a chance to negotiate an end to the hostilities. When negotiations got underway in the spring of 1593, China and Choson agreed to cease hostilities if the Japanese would withdraw from Choson altogether. General Konishi had no option but to accept the terms, but he would have a hard time convincing Hideyoshi he had no other choice.
  13. ^ a b c 브리태니커백과사전. 정유재란 (丁酉再亂)
  14. ^ Turnbull, Stephen, Samurai Invasion: Japan's Korean War, Cassel, 2002, p. 187, ISBN 0-304-35948-3.
  15. ^ http://koreanhistoryproject.org/Ket/C12/E1205.htm
  16. ^ Hawley, The Imjin War, op. cit, p. 450.
  17. ^ 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.
  18. ^ 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.
  19. ^ http://koreanhistoryproject.org/Ket/C12/E1205.htm
  20. ^ http://koreanhistoryproject.org/Ket/C12/E1205.htm
  21. ^ Turnbull, Stephen. Samurai Invasion: Japan’s Korean War 1592–98. London: Cassell & Co, 2002, p. 191.
  22. ^ 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.
  23. ^ Hidemoto, Okochi, 脇坂紀 [Chosen Ki}, 太田 藤四郎 and 塙 保己一, editors, 続群書類従 [Zoku Gunsho Ruiju Series], 1933
  24. ^ http://koreanhistoryproject.org/Ket/C12/E1205.htm
  25. ^ http://koreanhistoryproject.org/Ket/C12/E1205.htm
  26. ^ 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.
  27. ^ Turnbull, Stephen, Samurai Invasion: Japan's Korean War, Cassel, 2002, pp. 182–183.
  28. ^ 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.
  29. ^ 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.
  30. ^ Turnbull, Stephen, Samurai Invasion: Japan's Korean War, Cassel, 2002, p. 202, ISBN 0-304-35948-3
  31. ^ Turnbull, Stephen, Samurai Invasion: Japan's Korean War, Cassel, 2002, p. 203.
  32. ^ Turnbull, Stephen, Samurai Invasion: Japan's Korean War, Cassel, 2002, pp. 204–205.
  33. ^ 文禄・慶長役における被虜人の研究, 東京大学出版, 1976, p. 128, ASIN 4130260235.
  34. ^ Turnbull, Stephen, Samurai Invasion: Japan's Korean War, Cassel, 2002, p. 215.
  35. ^ http://koreanhistoryproject.org/Ket/C12/E1205.htm
  36. ^ Turnbull, Stephen, Samurai Invasion: Japan's Korean War, Cassel, 2002, p. 219.
  37. ^ Turnbull, Stephen, Samurai Invasion: Japan's Korean War, Cassel, 2002, p. 220–221.
  38. ^ Turnbull, Stephen, Samurai Invasion: Japan's Korean War, Cassel, 2002, p. 222.
  39. ^ http://koreanhistoryproject.org/Ket/C12/E1205.htm
  40. ^ The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition; 2006 - Hideyoshi
  41. ^ Turnbull, Stephen, Samurai Invasion: Japan's Korean War, Cassel, 2002, p. 227.
  42. ^ pg. 111 Woongjinweewinjungi #14 Yi Sun-shin by Baek Sukgi. (C) Woongjin Publishing Co., Ltd.
  43. ^ http://koreanhistoryproject.org/Ket/C13/E1301.htm
  44. ^ Palais, Confucian Statecraft, op. cit., pp. 105–106. "In the mid-fifteenth century households held parcels of land measured in gyeol, not really a measure of land area but a constant measure of crop yield produced by an area that varied from 2.25 to 9.0 acres, depending on the fertility of the land".
  45. ^ Hawley, Samuel, The Imjin War, op. cit., p. 564.
  46. ^ Hur, Nam-Lin, "The Korean Diaspora in the Imjin War, 1592–1598", Centre for Korean Research, University of British Columbia, Centre for Korean Research, Seminars 2003
  47. ^ Neves, Jaime Ramalhete. "The Portuguese in the Im-Jim War?" Review of Culture 18 (1994), pp. 20–24.
  48. ^ Yamagata I., "Japanese-Korean Relations after the Japanese Invasion of Korean in the XVIth Century", Transactions of the Korean Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1913, p. 5.
  49. ^ Turnbull, Stephen, Samurai Invasion: Japan's Korean War, Cassel, 2002, p. 236.

[edit] References

  • 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.
  • Kim, Kichung. "Resistance, Abduction, and Survival: The Documentary Literature of the Imjin War (1592–8)." Korean Culture 20:3 (Fall 1999), pp. 20–29.
  • 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.
  • 이민웅 [Lee, Min-Woong], 임진왜란 해전사 [Imjin Wae-ran Haejeonsa: The Naval Battles of the Imjin War], 청어람미디어 [Chongoram Media], 2004, ISBN 89-89722-49-7.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • Turnbull, Stephen. Samurai Invasion: Japan’s Korean War 1592–98. London: Cassell & Co, 2002, ISBN 0-304-35948-3.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links