Shin Rip

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Shin Rip
Hangul:
신립
Hanja:
申砬
Revised Romanization: Sin Rip
McCune-Reischauer: Sin Rip

Shin Rip was a distinguished Korean general who lived from 1546 to 1592. He passed the Korean national military examinations at the age of 22. Shin earned prominence by driving out the Ni-Ting-Gae barbarians from the northern provinces of Joseon. Shin was a successful general who also gained renown for protecting the borders of Joseon against the Jurchen. When the fortifications at Busan fell to the Japanese at the outset of the Japanese invasions of Korea (1592-1598), Shin Rip, the Vice Minister of War, was despatched to Chungju to stop the advancing invaders. He raised a substantial force, 8,000 strong, consisting primarily of cavalry. He was joined at Chungju by Gyeongsang Provincial Governor Gim Su, who had previously collected a large force at Taegu while waiting for a general to be sent from the capital, Hanseong (modern day Seoul). When no general materialized and it was learned that the Japanese were en route, Gim's force largely evaporated.

Shin Rip was en route to the Choryong Stronghold to block the Choryong Pass which the Japanese would have to use to move north when he learned that [Yi Il]'s forces had been routed at Sangju by Konishi Yukinaga's First Division and that General Yi had fled, he decided to to remain at Ch'ungju and fight the Japanese on level terrain to better employ his cavalry. This, however, left a key choke point undefended and facilitated Konishi's forces' advance northward. Shin selected a large, natural amphitheater at a place called Dangeumdae with mountains at one side and a curving river at the other to make his stand. The only approaches were two narrow passages at either end where the mountains met the river. Apparently Shin chose this site thinking to best employ his cavalry against a Japanese enemy that was predominantly infantry. Modern analysts have also theorized that Shin, in light of reports of Korean forces fleeing in the heat of battle, may have contrived to lock his troops into a life or death situation where they would be forced to fight for their very survival. In the battle, Shin-Rip was up against great odds. The Japanese, moreover, were equipped with a type of musket, arquebus, which Shin had not seen in action. The Japanese outnumbered the Korean cavalry by more than 2:1 (18,700 to 8,000)and Shin's cavalry were largely raw recruits plus some scattered remnants of defeated forces from the south.

On June 6, 1592, Konishi's troops advanced to battle Shin's forces at Dangeumdae. The Japanese blocked both the narrow entrances and then sent musketeers and archers to rain down a withering hail of musket balls and arrows on the Korean forces. Suddenly aware of their tactical disdvantage, many of the Korean forces broke ranks and frantically tried to escape through one or the other of the passages, but were either cut down by the Japanese or drowned in the river. A few broke through the Japanese lines and fled, including Shin and two of his officers, who subsequently jumped into the water and drowned rather than face their disgrace.


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[edit] References

  • Nuneuro Boneun Hanguk Yeoksa, Joseon Junggi (눈으로 보는 한국역사, 조선중기), Vol. 7, Jungang Gyoyuk Yeonguweon (중앙교육연구원), Pg. 117.
  • Homer B. Hulbert, Hulbert's History of Korea, Vol. I, p. 356.
  • James Murdoch, A History of Japan, Vol. I, pp. 322-323.
  • William Ellsworth Henthorn, A History of Korea, p. 180.
  • Samuel Hawley, The Imjin War, pp. 152-158.
  • Stephen Turnbull, Samurai Invasion: Japan's Korea War 1592-1598, pp. 58-63.
  • Cho Byonghon, The Book of Corrections: Reflections on the National Crisis during the Japanese Invasion of Korea 1592-1598, pp. 67-70.
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