Early humans were living on the Korean peninsula about a half
million years ago,
and modern humans hunted more than 40,000 years
ago.
Pottery was made there and in Japan ten thousand years ago.
Koreans trace their ancestry back to the era of China's Xia dynasty
in 2333 BC.
The legendary Tangun was said to have been the son
of a heavenly incarnation
and a female bear, possibly indicating
the totem of the original tribe.
Farming and walled houses developed
by 2000 BC,
and bronze daggers were used about 1500 BC.
As with
most indigenous peoples, their spiritual beliefs were shamanistic.
By the 8th century BC people with an Altaic language were practicing
agriculture and using bronze on the Korean peninsula.
Having benefited
from iron plows,
four centuries later a league of tribes formed
the Choson state.
During China's Period
of Warring States refugees brought Chinese culture.
About
190 BC Wiman, who was either Chinese or served the Chinese,
usurped
the Choson throne and established a capital on the Taedong River
at what is now P'yongyang.
In 109 BC the Chinese Han Emperor Wudi sent an
army of 60,000
with a navy of 7,000 to invade the peninsula.
The
next year Choson was destroyed as Wiman's grandson was killed.
The Chinese set up four commanderies, though by 75 BC this had
been
reduced to Lolang (called Nangnang in Korean).
Wang Tiao
led a revolt in 30 CE, but Lolang's new governor Wang Zun put
it down.
According to legend, Chumong founded Koguryo in 37 BC north
of the Yalu River.
In 12 CE Koguryo warriors decided
not to help Wang Mang fight the Xiongnu and
attacked the Chinese army.
The Puyo tribe living along the Sungari
River in Manchuria had their chief recognized
as a wang
(king) by the Chinese in 49 CE,
and Koguryo developed into a state
during the long reign of Taejo
that began four years later.
Puyo
made slaves of war captives and criminals, executing as many as
a hundred
at a time to accompany a clan patriarch to the grave
and the next world.
Koguryo also held slaves, excelled in iron
work,
and trained all their men for the military.
The ruling class
wore silk, furs, and caps decorated with gold and silver ornaments.
The Old Choson law code authorized capital punishment for murder,
compensation in grain for bodily injury,
and enslavement or an
expensive fine for stealing.
At Puyo they also enslaved the family
of a murderer and put women to death
for adultery or even jealousy.
Stealing was considered so shameful that no one would marry a
thief.
Koguryo king Kogukch'on (r. 179-96) ruled over enclaves in
the center,
north, east, south, and west.
King Sansang (r. 196-227)
established the line of succession as father to son.
In 242 CE
Koguryo king Tongchon (r. 227-48)
attacked people near the mouth
of the Yalu River.
Two years later the Chinese state of Wei sent
a force of 20,000
and took the Koguryo capital while Puyo made
an alliance
by supplying the Chinese troops.
Paekche in the southwest
was thriving by the time of its eighth king, Koi (r. 234-86).
When Xienpei tribes from the north attacked in 285,
Puyo king
Uiryo committed suicide;
but the Chinese Qin state helped fight
them off.
Koguryo tribes ended four centuries of Chinese colonial
exploitation
of fish, salt, iron, timber, and farm produce by
overthrowing Lolang in 313.
The Xienpei, who became the Earlier
Yen, invaded Koguryo in 342,
and four years later they ended Puyo
independence by carrying off their king Hyon
along with 50,000
prisoners.
King Kun Ch'ogo (r. 346-75) ruled the aristocratic
state of Paekche.
In 369 he led the destruction of Mahan and urged
Japan to attack Silla.
Two years later 30,000 Paekche men attacked
Koguryo
and killed their king Kogugwon.
Koguryo's King Sosurim
(r. 371-84) became a Buddhist and founded
the National Confucian
Academy in 372.
With few exceptions Korean would be written in
Chinese characters
until the 15th century.
Influenced by the Chinese,
the Koreans also wrote histories—
Paekche during Kun Ch'ogo's reign,
Silla in 545, and Koguryo in 600.
Silla emerged as a powerful state in the southeast under its
king Naemul (r. 356-402),
who made it a hereditary monarchy.
During
the reign of Paekche king Kun Kusu (r. 375-84), scholar Wang In
took the Chinese classics to the Japanese court at Yamato.
In
384 the Chinese monk Malananda brought Buddhism to Paekche,
and
Kun Kusu's successor Ch'imnyu adopted it that year.
When Japan
invaded Silla in 399, a Koguryo army of 50,000
came to their neighbor's
defense;
another Japanese expedition five years later was also
turned away.
Koguryo expanded its kingdom under warrior king Kwanggaet'o
(r. 391-413)
to include 64 walled cities and 1,400 villages.
From
Manchuria he moved south to attack Paekche
and the Wa (Japanese)
invading Silla.
During the long reign of King Changsu (r. 413-91)
Koguryo formed diplomatic relations
with the northern Wei and
other Chinese states, "pitting one barbarian against another."1
The Koguryo capital was moved south to P'yongyang in 427.
In 475
a Koguryo army of 30,000 captured Paekche's capital
and killed
their king Kaero (r. 455-75);
Paekche moved their capital south
to Ungjin.
In 494 the state of Puyo disappeared when its aristocratic
families migrated
to live under Koguryo rule.
Paekche king Tongsong
(r. 479-500) strengthened defenses
and formed a military alliance
with Silla against Koguryo.
Nulchi (r. 417-58) established a father-to-son succession in
Silla
and formed an alliance with Paekche in 434.
He was followed
by Chabi (r. 458-79), who made a marriage tie with Paekche.
Plowing
with oxen and irrigation were introduced under King Soji (r. 479-500).
Silla king Pophung (r. 514-40) formalized the aristocratic social
hierarchy
in a code of laws with his hereditary "bone-rank"
social hierarchy.
Conservative Silla did not officially recognize
Buddhism
until after the noble monk Ich'adon was martyred in 527.
Paekche kings Tongsong (r. 479-501) and Muryong (r. 501-23)
expanded
their realms to include 22 districts.
Paekche king Song (r. 523-54)
spent most of his reign importing Confucian
and Buddhist culture
from Liang China.
After Koguryo's army encroached into his territory
in 551,
King Song attacked them with Silla and the small kingdom
of Kaya;
but then Silla turned against them, killing Song and
taking over the Kaya kingdom.
According to Silla's history, Paekche's
entire force of 30,000 was killed or captured.
Buddhism flourished
in Paekche, and in 599 new monasteries were built.
Like Silla,
they limited the slaughtering of animals.
While Koguryo was suffering a civil war, Silla king Chinhung
(r. 540-76) sent a force
into the upper Han area and then defeated
Paekche, taking the lower Han also.
Silla built the Tanghang fortress
in the Han valley, which not only
separated Koguryo from Paekche
but gave Silla access
to the gulf of Namnyang (Inchon) and Chinese
commerce.
Chinhung trained men in group cooperation and national
service
in the Hwarang (Flower Youths) program.
The Buddhist monk
Won'gwang Popsa wrote "Five Commandments for Mundane Life"
to teach them to serve the king loyally and their parents with
filial piety,
be true to their friends, not retreat in battle,
and not destroy life indiscriminately.
Silla also practiced the
Hwabaek system of consensus decision-making
with conferences of
selected aristocrats until the king's power supplanted it.
Koguryo encroached on the Chinese empire by crossing the Liao
River in 598,
and after five years of preparation in 612 Sui emperor
Yang Di sent six armies
reported to have a total of 1,133,800
soldiers.
After they crossed the Yalu and the Ch'ongch'on, exhausting
their supplies,
Koguryo's envoy suggested that the Chinese general
withdraw.
A detachment of 300,000 Chinese soldiers that marched
on the capital at P'yongyang
fell into a trap; it was said that
only 2,700 returned.
Yang Di made two more attempts to invade
Koguryo;
but they failed, and he lost power to the Tang in 618.
Koguryo accepted the Tang calendar in 624, and in 631 they began
building a wall
that ran 200 miles and took sixteen years to complete.
In 642 General Yon Kaesomun seized power, and the same year
Paekche
king Uija (r. 641-60) captured forty fortresses from Silla.
Paekche
joined with Koguryo to take over the port of Namyang.
In 645 Tang
emperor Taizong personally led an army of 170,000 that invaded
Koguryo,
but two months of determined resistance, losses,
and
cold weather forced them to withdraw.
Three more Chinese invasions
in the next decade also failed.
Koguryo made all men serve in
the army and do forced labor.
Silla ended its highest "hallowed-bone" lineage when
it was ruled by the queens
Sondok (r. 632-47) and Chindok (r.
647-54).
Kim Ch'un-ch'u went to the Yamato court in 647 to complain
about Japanese raids
and the next year visited Tang Taizong twice.
When Queen Chindok died without an heir,
her cousin Kim Ch'un-ch'u
became King Muyol.
In 655 Koguryo and Paekche invaded Silla,
whose
king Taejong asked for aid from Tang China.
The despotic and unpopular
Uija surrendered;
but Paekche revived under Prince Pung's leadership.
In 660 Tang emperor Gaozong sent a fleet commanded by Su Dingfang
against Paekche
while Kim Yu-sin led land forces from Silla.
They
captured Sabi, and King Uija surrendered.
The noble Poksin and
the monk Toch'im organized resistance,
and Prince Yung returned
from Japan to lead the effort to regain Sabi;
but Poksin killed
Toch'im and was killed by Yung.
The Silla and Tang armies then
ended the kingdom of Paekche.
China imposed its administration
under Silla king Munmu (r. 661-80).
In 661 Su Dingfang led 40,000
Chinese forces up the Taedong River
to attack P'yongyang, but
they were defeated by Yon Kaesomun's Koguryo army.
After Yon Kaesomun
died, the Tang and Silla armies in 667 closed in on Koguryo
and
took P'yongyang the next year, removing 200,000 prisoners to China.
Silla conquered Koguryo in 668.
After two years of resistance
led by Kommojam, Koguryo prince Ansung
surrendered to Silla and
was appointed a king.
The Chinese converted Paekche's five provinces
into commanderies
and Koguryo into nine commanderies.
When General
Kommojam revolted against the Tang occupation in 670,
Silla reinforced
him with 10,000 men, causing Tang emperor Gaozong
to reinforce
P'yongyang.
In 671 Silla captured Sabi and took over the former
Paekche realm.
By 677 Silla forces had driven the Chinese completely
out of the Korean peninsula to form a unified state.
In 698 the
former Koguryo general Tae Cho-yong founded the state of Parhae
(Pohai to the Chinese) in the north and became King Ko.
In 732
Parhae king Mu (r.719-37) sent a naval force
to attack the Chinese
port of Dengzhou.
While the Tang dynasty was suffering the An
Lushan rebellion,
Parhae under King Mun (r. 737-94) annexed the
Liaodong peninsula.
Parhae reached its greatest extent under King
Son (r. 818-30),
and the kingdom lasted until it was overcome
by the Khitans in 926.
The Buddhist monk Wonhyo (617-86) studied Consciousness-Only
philosophy
and attempted to unify the different schools of Buddhism
into
Ilsung Pulgyo (One Vehicle) by writing 240 volumes, including
a
"Treatise on the Harmonious Understanding of the Ten Doctrines."
The handsome Wonhyo gave up celibacy and married.
Later in life
he devoted himself to practicing and promoting the Pure Land sect
that he believed was for everyone.
Chinese Chan Buddhism, introduced
in Silla in the mid-7th century,
became popular as Son in Korea
and Zen in Japan.
A national school established in 682 gave aristocratic
young men nine years of courses
that culminated in examinations
for public office.
The Analects of Confucius and the Classic
of Filial Piety were the basic texts
for all three courses
of study that also included
the other classics, histories, and
literary selections.
Silla's government followed the Chinese model and included
a
board of censors (Sajongbu) to investigate corruption
and bad administration,
though most power was reserved for the
royal Chingol clan and other aristocrats.
Former Koguryo and Paekche
officials who supported Silla were given
their old positions back,
though in Paekche at one rank lower.
King Sinmun (r. 681-92) won
an internal struggle for power and had his rivals killed.
Silla
experimented with Tang-like land reform in 689,
and in 722 King
Songdok (r. 702-37) began distributing land directly to free farmers
between the ages of 20 and 60 who were liable to military and
labor service.
However, the great estates of the rich and Buddhist
temples deprived the government
of tax revenue and prevented them
from redistributing land by population.
This effort was apparently
abandoned by 757 when ownership was made hereditary.
Two years
later Silla king Kyondkok (r. 742-65) reorganized the government
again
along Chinese lines to try to control the aristocracy;
but
in 768 civil war broke out, and Kim Yang-sang seized power in
774.
He killed King Hyegong in 780 and took the throne as King
Sondok,
ending the dynasty that had unified Silla two centuries
before.
Sondok's successor, King Wonsong (r. 785-98) claimed to
be a descendant
of King Naemul, as did all the subsequent Silla
rulers.
In the next 150 years succession violence would bring
twenty kings to the Silla throne.
The government attempted to
improve civil service by instituting examinations in 788.
During King Hondok's reign (809-26) the monk Toui promoted
the
Son (Zen) sect of Buddhism by founding Mount Kaji at Porim-sa,
and this spread to become the Nine Mountain Sects of Son.
Buddhist
monasteries were supported by powerful gentry and became
so wealthy that the government put restrictions on their holdings.
Conservatives
in the royal Chingol clan struggled against Confucian reforms
while other aristocrats resented their exclusion from power.
Major
revolts occurred in the countryside in 822 and 825 as Kim Hon-ch'ang
tried
to claim the throne and begin a new state; but he and his
son failed.
King Hungdok (r. 826-36) established a garrison on
Wando,
and the wealthy merchant Chang Po-go
was given a force
of 10,000 men to reduce Chinese piracy.
After Hungdok died in
836, Chang helped Kim U-jing
become King Sinmu after a three-year
succession struggle.
Sinmu's son Munsong (r. 839-46) wanted to
marry Chang's daughter,
but aristocrats in the capital blocked
this and assassinated Chang in 846.
The Ch'onghae Garrison was
abolished in 851.
During the feuding wars, great estates became little kingdoms
and exploited their workers unmercifully.
Suffering unpaid corvée
labor, many landless wanderers turned to banditry and plundering.
According to Ilyon, Queen Chinsong (r. 888-98) let her lovers
and favorites
usurp authority and acquire fortunes by oppressing
the people.
Ch'oe Ch'i-won urged the appointment of men based
on their learning
rather than on their bone-rank lineage, but
the aristocrats objected.
Wang Ko-in also protested the bone-rank
system
and was arrested for criticizing the government with hidden
meanings.
Ch'oe Ch'i-won, when his proposals were not accepted,
resigned and lived away from the capital.
When the government
attempted to enforce tax collection in 889,
a peasant uprising
led by Kyonhwon in Sangju spread throughout the country.
In 892
he proclaimed the Later Paekche kingdom.
Kungye was a Silla prince
who became a monk,
but in 891 he joined the rebellion led by Yanggil
at Wonju.
Put in command of forces, Kungye's growing army captured
the provinces
of Kangwon, Kyonggi, and Hwanghae.
He overthrew
Yanggil in 897 and four years later
proclaimed the Later Koguryo
kingdom.
Kungye claimed to be the Maitreya Buddha, and he ruled
despotically,
trying to re-impose the old "bone-rank"
system.
His reign of terror was ended in 918 by his own generals,
and the fleeing Kungye was killed by his own people.
Wang Kon
was from a wealthy family of merchants and served Kungye
as a
commander in the southwest and then as prime minister.
In 918
the generals put him on the throne,
and Wang Kon founded the Koryo
dynasty, from which Korea is named.
Wang Kon moved the capital
to Songak (Kaesong) and formed an alliance with Silla.
Kyonhwon wanted revenge against Silla, and in 927 his Later
Paekche forces
killed King Kyongae and pillaged Kyongju, abducting
high officials
and seizing treasure, arms, and skilled craftsmen.
Wang Kon wanted friendly relations with Silla
and led his army
against the invading Later Paekche forces.
The people of Silla
welcomed Wang Kon, and he made a truce with Later Paekche.
In
930 the Koryo forces won a battle over the Later Paekche army,
which retreated from Silla territory.
The Koryo army attacked
the Later Paekche at Unju in 934.
Because Kyonhwon had named his
fourth son his successor,
his oldest son Sin'gom detained his
father in a temple
and ascended the throne of Later Paekche.
Kyonhwon
escaped to his former enemy Wang Kon,
and in 935 the last Silla
king Kyongsun surrendered to Koryo.
Then the next year Kyonhwon
helped the Koryo troops against his son's army,
and the Later
Paekche kingdom was ended.
Wang Kon gave his oldest daughter to
Kyongsun in marriage
and incorporated Silla administration into
his new state.
He also welcomed refugees from the Parhae kingdom
that had been recently overthrown by the Khitans.
In 936 Wang Kon as Koryo's first king T'aejo led the invasion
that wiped out the Later Paekche regime and unified the country.
T'aejo married a woman from the Silla royal family and was kind
to the Silla nobles.
He also married 29 women from various clans
of gentry.
He promoted Buddhism within limits, and using geomancy
favored the cities of
Kaeson and P'yongyang, while discriminating
against people from inauspicious regions.
In 940 T'aejo began
distributing land to officials
who had helped him found the Koryo
dynasty.
In 942 the Khitans sent an embassy with a gift of fifty
camels for the Koryo court,
but T'aejo banished the envoys to
an island and let the camels starve to death.
A month before he
died in 943,
T'aejo wrote a book of advice on governing called Ten Injunctions.
His son Hyejong did not live long during
the intrigues of Wang Kyu and his family,
and Hyejong's successor
Chongjong (r. 945-49) ended the rebellion of Wang Kyu.
Chongjong
began construction to improve the capital at P'yongyang
and prepared
the army for a northern invasion.
The Koryo also used Chinese administrative methods.
After Kwangjong
became king in 949,
all opposition and suspected relatives were
slaughtered.
Seven years later he weakened the aristocrats and
increased tax revenue
by promulgating the Slave Review Act that
freed many people
who had been unlawfully enslaved, although many
hereditary slaves
who could be bought and sold still remained.
Kwangjong also made landholding depend upon one's government rank.
In 958 he adopted a more liberal examination system proposed by
the
Chinese scholar Shuang Chi, though aristocrats were still
greatly favored.
Kwangjong instituted court robes of four different
colors to indicate rank.
He made Kaesong the imperial capital
and sent nobles to the western capital at P'yongyang.
Kwangjong
purged those who did not submit to his authority,
and during his
reign (949-75) the Koryo army pushed toward the Yalu River
by
establishing forts across the Ch'ongch'on River.
The Stipend Land Law was initiated by Kwangjong's successor
Kyongjong in 976.
Confucian Ch'oe Sung-no submitted a policy memorial
before he died in 989,
and the centralized bureaucracy of Songjong
(r. 981-97) relied on his views.
In 987 Songjong ordered private
weapons confiscated and recast as agricultural tools,
and in 992
he established the National University.
After Mokchong (r. 997-1009)
became king, grants were implemented in 998
based on Songjong's
eighteen stipend grades.
In 993 a Khitan army of 900,000 crossed Koryo's northern border;
but the Koreans were prepared, and their defense forced the Khitans
to negotiate with So Hui, who persuaded them to withdraw.
Summoned
to squelch a subversive plot, military administrator Kang Cho
eliminated the conspiracy of Kim Ch'i-yang but also assassinated
King Mokchong,
enthroning Hyonjong (r. 1009-31).
However, this
provided an opportunity for the
Khitan Liao king to invade the
next year with 400,000 troops.
Kang Cho was captured and killed,
and the Liao forces besieged P'yongyang.
The capital at Kaesong
was abandoned, resulting in raping, killing,
and the destruction
of many valuable monuments and documents.
Yet Korean general Yang
Kyu inflicted
thousands of casualties on the retreating Liao army.
Two military officers took control of the Koryo government in
1014.
Four years later the Liao army crossed the frontier again;
but a reorganized Koryo army decisively defeated them,
and only
a few Liao troops survived to return home the next year.
In 1018
King Hyonjong tried to reform provincial governments by ordering
their staffs to investigate the people's hardships, abilities
of head clerks, crime,
and the clerks' loss of public funds.
Koryo
used 30,000 laborers to build a wall around the capital in 1029,
and between 1033 and 1044 they constructed a wall along the entire
northern border
that stretched from the mouth of the Yalu River
on the west coast to Kwangpo on the east coast.
The Koryo aristocracy had civilian officials, military officers,
court functionaries, and soldiers.
The peasants could not hold
offices, and below them were the slaves.
Social status was usually
hereditary,
but one could rise through the civil service examinations.
Soldiers could advance by meritorious service.
A council advised
the king, and officials were sent to the twelve provinces.
The
capital sent out officials as inspector-generals,
and young aristocrats
were assigned to duties at the capital.
Using iron coins as a
money economy developed, the Koryo culture
prospered during the
bureaucratic era of Munjong (r. 1046-83).
When the Confucian scholar
Ch'oe Ch'ung retired from the government in 1055,
he accepted
private students, who were so successful
that soon there were
twelve such private schools.
The curriculum of government schools
was improved too,
and military subjects were dropped.
Taking a
half century of work, the Buddhist scriptures compiled in the
immense Tripitaka were carved on blocks, and the printing
was completed in 1087.
Kaesong had seventy Buddhist temples, and
monks took examinations.
Yijong (r. 1103-22) established lectures
on the Chinese classics and military studies.
When the Jurchens invaded Koryo in 1104, an army of 170,000
was organized that even included a unit of Buddhist monks.
Three
years later Yun Kwan led the Koryo army
that routed the Jurchen
forces at Chongp'yong.
After continuing Jurchen attacks and diplomatic
pressure, jealousy toward Yun Kwan
at the Koryo court resulted
in the return of the nine forts region to the Jurchens.
In 1127
Yi Cha-gyom decided that Koryo should submit to the sovereignty
of the now powerful Jin empire of the Jurchens in order to avoid
a possible invasion.
Eighty years of dominance by the Inju Yi
clan ended early in Injong's reign (1122-46)
when Yi Cha-gyom
was driven out by Ch'ok Chun-gyong.
Yi Cha-gyom had burned down
the palace in Kaesong,
and Myoch'ong urged Injong to move the
capital to P'yongyang;
but the Confucian Kim Pu-sik argued against
him.
Myoch'ong raised an army at P'yongyang and proclaimed a kingdom,
but the Koryo army led by Kim Pu-sik captured P'yongyang
and defeated
him the next year.
Six new colleges were added in the capital,
and the Chinese classics remained the basic curriculum.
Schools
were also established in rural areas to educate the youth.
Kim
Pu-sik compiled the History of the Three Kingdoms for King
Injong in 1145.
Military officers resented civilian superiority during King
Uijong's decadent reign (1146-70).
After being humiliated, the
commanders Yi Ui-bang, Yi Ko, and Chong Chung-bu
revolted against
the royal party, banishing Uijong and replacing him
with his younger
brother Myongjong (r. 1170-97).
A military council took control
and murdered many civilian officials,
replacing them mostly with
military officers.
Within four months Yi Ko executed several military
officials for criticizing him,
and so Yi Ui-bang killed Yi Ko.
After Yi Ui-bang killed another military officer four months later,
he made a pact with Chong Chung-bu.
A civil war compounded by
rebelling peasants resentful of Uijong's extravagance
broke out
and lasted a generation.
The powerful military families became
great landowners,
using their private armies to collect arbitrary
taxes from peasant farmers
in the name of the government or in
defiance of it.
On public land the rent was a quarter of the harvest,
but on private lands the aristocrats collected half the yield.
Adult males between the age of 16 and 60 could be forced
to work
on government construction projects and did not even receive food.
In 1172 soldiers in the western region revolted against the
local officials.
The demoted military commissioner for the northeast,
Kim Podang,
revolted in 1173 but was defeated in a month.
The
next year Cho Wi-ch'ong, an official in the western capital at
Sogyong,
led a revolt that lasted a year and a half before they
were captured.
Also in 1174 more than two thousand monks of the
Doctrine (Kyo) school of Buddhism tried to assassinate Yi Ui-bang.
In 1176 an uprising broke out in the forced labor district of
Myonghak.
The rebels marched toward Kaesong but were put down
after a year.
Meanwhile Yi Ui-bang intended to marry his daughter
to the crown prince,
but Chong Chung-bu's son Kyun assassinated
Yi Ui-bang in 1176.
The Chong faction ruled until the young commander
Kyong Tae-sung
murdered Chong Chung-bu and Kyun in 1179.
Kyong
tried to protect himself from the hostility he aroused and died
of illness.
His rival Yi Ui-min was the son of a slave, and he
had murdered Uijong in 1173.
He advanced in the military by suppressing
rebellions
but stayed away from the capital while Kyong ruled.
In 1182 soldiers and government slaves revolted again in Chonju
and held the city for forty days.
Yi Ui-min returned from the
countryside to rule despotically from 1184 to 1196.
In 1193 the
rebellions led by Kim Sami and Hyosim
joined forces and defeated
government troops.
The next year they were defeated in the battle
at Miryang,
where 7,000 rebels were killed.
General Ch'oe Ch'ung-hon became prominent for
having defeated
the rebels led by Cho Wi-ch'ong.
Ch'oe Ch'ung-hon organized his
own private army.
He and his brother Ch'oe Ch'ung-su assassinated
Yi Ui-min in 1196.
Ch'oe Ch'ung-hon gained the approval of King
Myongjong and control
of the government the next year by defeating
the forces of Yi Ui-min.
Then Ch'oe forced Myongjong to abdicate
in favor of his younger brother Sinjong.
Ch'oe Ch'ung-hon consolidated
his power by executing his nephew and killing
his brother Ch'ung-su
in the street for trying to marry his daughter to a crown prince.
He revived the military council.
The next year a plot of government
slaves organized by Manjok was discovered,
and more than a hundred
of them were executed by drowning.
Manjok asked why they should
toil under the whip
since the low-born were rising to become high
officials.
In the next two years revolting peasants and slaves
killed thousands of local officials,
and in 1202 an army mutiny
had to be put down.
Although these revolts did not end slavery,
forced labor districts were abolished.
Ch'oe established the Directorate
of Decree Enactment to assert his dictatorial power.
Ch'oe sent
magistrates out from the capital to smaller counties that had
lacked them.
Ch'oe Ch'ung-hon criticized Buddhists and compelled monks,
even sons of kings,
to leave the capital, and he used his military
to crush the armed monks.
The Chogye sect within Son Buddhism
was founded by Chinul (1158-1210),
who taught that "sudden
enlightenment" should be followed by "gradual cultivation."
He revived the Son school at the Suson temple.
He taught meditation
for the less intellectual but also encouraged scholars to study
the texts.
Chinul became known as National Preceptor Pojo
and
was succeeded by Hyesim (1178-1234).
In 1212 Ch'oe forced King
Huijong (r. 1204-11)
and monks into exile for having plotted to
kill him.
He selected four kings, the last being Kojong (r. 1213-59).
Ch'oe implemented ten reforms that included eliminating corruption,
removing extraneous officials, making taxes impartial, prohibiting
construction of temples,
and reducing aristocratic extravagance.
Several attempts to assassinate Ch'oe Ch'ung-hon failed,
and he
surrounded himself and his son U with more than ten thousand house
troops.
He died in 1219 and passed his power on to his son Ch'oe
U (r. 1219-49).
In 1215 the Mongols captured
the Jin capital, driving the Khitans into Koryo territory.
After
a few years of turmoil, the Mongols and Koryo combined forces
to besiege the Kangdon Fortress in 1219, and the Khitans surrendered.
Ch'oe U stopped a plot by generals to murder civilian officials
by sending the conspirators into exile in 1223.
The Mongols
demanded tribute from Koryo,
but their envoy Chu-ku-yu was killed
returning from Koryo in 1225.
Six years later the Mongol emperor
Ogodei Khan sent an army to invade Koryo,
and Ch'oe U had to accept
a humiliating and expensive peace.
In 1232 the court took refuge
on the island of Kanghwa; a monk killing
the Mongol general Sartai
with an arrow led to the Mongol army's withdrawal.
Ch'oe U had
to send his own troops to put down a rebellion at Sogyong in 1233.
A Mongol invasion got to Kyongju in 1235,
and in thirty years
the Mongols invaded Koryo six times.
Koryo used movable type made of metal to print
Prescribed Ritual
Texts of the Past and Present in 1234.
Emergency Remedies
of Folk Medicine was published two years later.
Ch'oe U died
in 1249 and was succeeded in power by his son Ch'oe Hang,
who
ruled with mostly civilians on his council until 1257,
when Ch'oe
Ui, his son by a concubine, inherited his position.
Between 1253 and 1257 Mongols
led by Jalairtai sacked all the major cities,
killed too many
to count, removed more than 200,000 male captives,
and destroyed
the 86,600 wood blocks the Koreans used to print the Buddhist Tripitaka.
The people prayed to the Buddha, and the government
sponsored
the carving of a new set of Tripitaka woodblocks.
In 1258 the civilian official Yu Kyong and the military officer
Kim Chun assassinated
the foolish dictator Ch'oe Ui and his main
supporters, enabling King Kojong to govern.
The next year Prince
Chon submitted to the Mongol court and became king as Wonjong.
The Kanghwa fortifications were dismantled.
Resenting this submission,
in 1268 Im Yon killed Kim Chun, seized power,
and replaced Wonjong
with his brother the next year.
However, the Mongols
got Wonjong restored, and he requested their troops.
Im Yon died,
and Wonjong had his son Im Yu-mu assassinated in 1270.
That year
ended the Koryo struggle against the Mongols
as they moved the
court back to Kaesong.
The stipend land system broke down as land
was allocated to office holders as salaries.
Thus powerful families
living at Kaesong became absentee landlords.
Three Elite Patrols
revolted against this and became the anti-Mongol opposition
to
the government at Kaesong before moving to the southern island
of Chindo.
Finally the resistance on Cheju Island was subdued
in 1273.
The Mongols had proclaimed the
Yuan empire in 1271,
and Koryo princes had to live in Beijing
as hostages.
A daughter of Khubilai Khan was made Ch'ungnyol's
queen,
and the Mongols worked their
way into the Koryo royal line
by forcing Koryo kings to marry
Mongol princesses.
To support the Mongol invasions of Japan,
35,000
Korean workers built nine hundred ships,
though both attempts
of 1274 and 1281 failed because of storms.
As farmers suffered
under Yuan and Koryo taxes, many became brigands.
Others were
so poor that they chose to be slaves on private estates.
Since
most slaves were on private estates,
the government had few to
call on for corvée labor.
Larger private estates and smaller
public lands also decreased government revenue.
Under King Ch'ungnyol (r. 1275-1308), An Yu and others reorganized
the national university system by adding buildings and by providing
scholarships
for students and seven professorships in Chinese
classics and history.
An Yu was the first to adopt the Neo-Confucian
philosophy
that spread quickly among Koryo literati.
Many scholars
went to study at the Yuan capital.
The Buddhist monk Ilyon (1206-89)
wrote Samguk Yusa,
a legendary history of the three ancient
kingdoms, especially Silla,
that included a hagiographic account
of the rise of Buddhism.
When Ch'ungson became king in 1308,
he
brought scholars back with him along with 4,000 books.
Five years
later he abdicated in favor of his son Ch'ungsuk and returned
to Beijing.
Japanese raiding of the coastlines increased after 1350.
As
Mongol power declined, Koryo king Kongmin (r. 1351-74)
abolished
the Yuan's eastern field headquarters.
In 1356 Koryo regained
Hamgyong-do province, and in 1359 about 40,000
rebelling Red Turbans
fled from a Mongol army into Koryo and took P'yongyang.
Two years
later 100,000 of them took over the north and even the capital
at Kaesong
before they were defeated in a counter-attack.
Mun
Ik-chom brought cotton seeds from China in 1363,
and his father-in-law
Chong Ch'on-ik made both a cotton gin and a spinning wheel.
In
1365 King Kongmin appointed the monk Sin Ton to reform the country.
Sin Ton dismissed those of exalted lineage who were corrupt,
and
he reformed the examination system.
He decreed that land and slaves
be returned to their rightful owners
while freeing some slaves.
Sin Ton was popular, but the powerful families eventually had
him killed.
Kim Yong tried to assassinate King Kongmin in the
Hungwang-sa temple but failed,
while the Yuan proclaimed the Koryo
king deposed.
When the Ming dynasty
overthrew the Yuan in 1368, Kongmin immediately sent envoys.
Ch'oe
Mu-son learned how to manufacture gunpowder, and in 1377
the Superintendency
of Gunpowder Weapons began producing various cannons.
New ships
helped the Koryo navy fight the Japanese marauders.
General Yi Song-gye put down a pro-Mongol rebellion in 1370
and reduced Japanese piracy in the northeast.
After King Kongmin
was assassinated four years later,
the legitimacy of King U (r.
1375-88) was questioned.
Yi In-im, the military hero who brought
him to power,
reverted from favoring the Ming to supporting the
Yuan,
but he was opposed by Yi Song-gye, Chong Mong-ju, and others.
Ch'oe Yong and Yi Song-gye drove out the Yi In-im faction.
King
U and Ch'oe Yong wanted to attack the Ming
for trying to establish
the Ch'ollyong commandery.
When Yi Song-gye was ordered to attack
Chinese Ming forces
on the northern border in 1388, he declared
this policy was wrong
for the following four reasons:
1) a small
country should not attack a larger one;
2) a military campaign
should not proceed during the summer agricultural season;
3) this
could provide an opening for Japanese pirates; and
4) the seasonal
rain would damage bows and cause epidemics.
Yi Song-gye marched back to the capital at Kaesong, deposed
King U,
and removed Ch'oe Yong.
Yi and his supporters also deposed
U's son Ch'ang and put Kongyang
from the royal Wang house on the
throne in 1389.
They began implementing the land reform advised
by the literati.
After a cadastral survey, the existing land registers
were burned in 1390.
Examinations were instituted for military
service.
The next year they promulgated the Rank Land Law
that
provided stipend land to the official class according to their
rank.
The rest of the agricultural land was taken over by the
state,
confiscating the powerful estates.
Chong Mong-ju opposed
this and was assassinated by Yi's fifth son Pang-won.
Kongyang
was compelled to abdicate,
and in 1392 Yi Song-gye founded a new
dynasty
that used the ancient name Choson suggested by the Chinese
emperor.
Pang-won had taken 9,800 horses as tribute to the Ming
court
to get Emperor Hongwu to invest Yi as king.
As T'aejo (Progenitor) of the Choson or Yi dynasty that he
founded in 1392,
Yi Song-gye enlisted the support of officials
eager to apply Neo-Confucian principles.
All land was nationalized,
and grants were redistributed to support government officials,
breaking up the great estates and making them taxable.
Yi Song-gye
removed remaining conservatives from office
and even burned the
old land registers.
Coastal and reclaimed lands were reserved
to support the army,
which was reorganized with a royal guard.
Landlords were not allowed to charge more than ten percent of
the crop in rent.
However, slaves, artisans, merchants,
and Buddhist
monks were not eligible for land grants.
Peasants were restrained
from leaving the land they worked
by making them wear identification
tags around their necks.
In 1393 T'aejo named Pang-sok, his youngest
son by his current queen as his heir,
and two years later he moved
the capital from Kaesong to Hanyang (modern Seoul).
Yi T'aejo formed a Privy Council of 39 Confucian advisors
who
had supported his taking power and were rewarded with large estates.
Chong To-jon compiled the Administrative Code of Choson
and in 1397
the Six Codes of Governance corresponding to
the six governmental departments
of personnel, revenue, rites,
war, justice, and public works.
Rites included education and the
examination system.
Relations with China were difficult because
Korea refused
to repatriate Manchurians migrating from China's
Liaodong peninsula.
T'aejo finally sent back 400 Manchurians,
and most of the Liaodong refugees were absorbed into Korean society.
Buddhism was attacked as a superstitious and anti-social religion
by Neo-Confucians such as Kim Cho,
who advocated returning Buddhist
monks to farming and the military.
T'aejo required monks to be
registered so that their numbers would not increase.
All but 242
Buddhist temples and monasteries were closed,
and their lands
and slaves were confiscated by the government in 1406.
In 1398 T'aejo's fifth son Yi Pang-won killed T'aejo's youngest
son Pang-sok
and his older brother, and Chong To-jon was beaten
to death.
T'aejo retired to his family home at Hamhung,
as his
son Chongjong moved the capital back to Kaesong.
Another brother
named Pang-gan attempted a coup,
and so Pang-won and his brother
Pang-ui appealed to their father.
After shooting his envoy in
the back with an arrow and missing Pang-won,
T'aejo said he could
have the throne.
Pang-won as T'aejong (r. 1400-18) moved the capital
back to Seoul,
where a labor force of 120,000 had built a wall
around the city.
He supervised the construction of a sewage system
and fire-walls,
and he established a press for printing books.
T'aejong abolished private armed forces and centralized military
control.
He changed the Privy Council to a State Council and gave
the authority
to the six ministries, who reported directly to
him.
He had the Six Codes revised to reflect these changes.
Koreans began the tradition of writing a history
of each reign
with the Annals of T'aejo in 1413.
The Yi dynasty imitated Ming
China and would not confiscate granted land
except as punishment
for a serious crime;
so the lands of the yangban class
of officials and the military became hereditary.
The large yangmin
class of free peasant farmers
carried the burden of production
and taxation.
The low-born chonmin slaves were exploited
for their labor;
shamans, courtesans, butchers, tanners, actors,
and other entertainers also fell into this lowest class.
In 1414
a law was enacted discriminating against the children of concubines
by barring them from most government positions even if the father
was a yangban.
T'aejong ordered printing from copper type
in 1403,
and moveable lead type was used in 1436.
Neo-Confucian
philosophy replaced Buddhism as the dominant view,
as Zhu Xi's
doctrines on social propriety and family relationships became
orthodox.
Of the five Confucian relationships, only friendship
was reciprocal and not patriarchal,
as the father expected filial
piety from his sons,
the ruler loyalty from his subjects, the
husband submission from his wife,
and the elder brother respect
from his younger brothers.
T'aejong prohibited women from marrying
a third time.
T'aejong found that his oldest son was mentally
unstable,
and his second son became a Buddhist monk;
but he was
so impressed by the Confucian qualities of his third son
that
he abdicated in his favor and returned to military pursuits on
the frontiers in 1418.
King Sejong (r. 1418-50) founded the Chiphyonjon (Institute
of Sages) in 1424
for the best scholars, and they published the
six-volume Orthodox Code.
Tribute of gold, silver, and
horses to China was costing Korea until 1429
when they were allowed
to substitute textiles for the precious metals.
Tribute thus became
trade missions, and they were increased to three per year.
Korea
exported horses, ginseng, hides, and textiles
for silk, porcelain,
chemicals, and books.
However, Koreans resented the Ming court's
demand to send
castrated boys and virgin girls to the Chinese
emperor's harem annually as tribute.
In 1433 this was suspended,
and three years later 53 women were repatriated.
For a long time
piracy had prevented trade with Japan;
but in 1419 Sejong sent
Yi Chong-mu to attack their lair at Tsushima Island,
defeating
them and making this a port for trade.
In 1443 the Kyehae Treaty
with the So family that ruled Tushima
limited the amount of rice
per ship and the trade to fifty ships per year.
The Japanese traded
sulphur, herbs, silver, copper, lead, chemicals, dyes,
and aromatics
for cotton, hemp cloth, ginseng, hides, embroidered cushions,
porcelain, and books, especially Buddhist scriptures.
In 1425 Buddhism was reduced to the two main sects of
Kyo (Doctrine)
and Son (Zen) with only 36 temples remaining.
Temple lands were
taxed as were persons wishing to become monks.
The research institute
of Chiphyonjon published the
85-volume Library of Folk Medicine
in 1433
and the 264-volume Classification of Pathologies
in 1445.
The Exemplar for Efficient Government was compiled
in 1443 to guide administrators.
In 1444 a land law defined six
grades of land for fair taxation.
The tax rate was lowered to
five percent for the landlord,
but with crop-sharing arrangements
the peasant usually had to give the landlord
between one-third
and two-thirds of the crop.
Agricultural research was conducted
by 160,000 farmers and officials.
Koreans used anemometers to
measure the wind,
and they began using rain gauges in 1442, two
centuries before Europeans.
Scholars at the Chiphyonjon devised the phonetic Korean alphabet
of 28 letters
(17 consonants and 11 vowels) in 1443,
and this Han'gul script was adopted by royal decree three years
later.
The shape of the letters depicts the position of the tongue
in pronouncing them.
Government records and serious works, such
as histories, were still written in Chinese;
but in 1447 verses
were composed in the new Korean Han'gul for the
eulogy
cycle Songs of Flying Dragons to celebrate the founding
of the Yi dynasty by General Yi Song-gye, including
"Because
robbers poisoned the people, he initiated land reform."2
Referring to Chinese classics and history, parallel verses justify
how Yi gained the mandate of heaven for his heroic actions.
The
work shows the dominance of Confucian philosophy in current Korean
policies,
and it admonished future rulers to follow the virtuous
example of Yi.
When punishing and sentencing, it asked them
to
remember the mercy and temperance of Yi.
If flattered by ministers
to arouse the ruler's pride,
he should remember Yi's prowess and
modesty.
Rulers who tax the people too much should recall his
justice and humanity.
In his old age King Sejong had the Buddhist
Won'gak-sa temple built
and allowed Buddhist sutras to be published
in spite of protests
by Chiphyonjon scholars and university students
who went on strike.
After ruling only two years, King Munjon died in 1452.
The
young Tanjong was soon replaced by the ruthless Prince Suyang, who took
control of the military and in 1453 massacred the regents
and prominent officials,
including his brother and a loyal general.
Prince Suyang took the throne as King Sejo (r. 1456-68) and abolished
the state council so that the six ministries would be directly
under his control.
Six Chiphyonjon scholars tried to restore the
deposed Tanjong; but they were detected,
and these leaders were
executed along with more than seventy followers.
Sejo degraded
and banished Tanjong; but after another failed rebellion
by Sejong's
sixth son, Sejo had Tanjong murdered.
In the northeast a rebellion
allied itself with the Jurched tribes,
but this revolt was crushed
by the Korean army.
Many conscientious Confucian officials withdrew
from the government.
Kim Si-sup was one of six young officials
who chose to retire.
Kim went to a monastery in the hills of Yongnam,
where Kil Chae had retired when the Koryo dynasty was overthrown.
There Kim Si-sup wrote New Tales of the Golden Turtle,
the first major work of Korean fiction.
In 1457 Sejo designated
the monk Sumi to publish translations of Buddhist texts,
and later
he commissioned Kim Si-sup to translate more Buddhist scriptures.
In 1466 Sejo decreed that land could only be held by officials
while they were in office,
and taxes were to be paid directly
to the King's government.
Thus the yangban aristocracy
was brought under royal control.
In 1467 another local rebellion
led by Hyeryong governor Yi Si-ae
against the interference of
the central government also failed.
Yi Si-ae fled from the Korean
army of 30,000 men but was caught and beheaded.
Then King Sejo
replaced every official in that Hamgyong province
and abolished
local councils.
Commoner men were conscripted into military service,
but most got out of it by paying a special tax.
Sejo decreed that
each man on active duty must be supported by two others exempted.
He made communities mutually responsible for their good behavior
and sent out officials to check on provincial administrators.
He also replaced the Chiphyonjon Institute with the Office of
Special Advisors
who searched for precedents and prepared state
documents.
The Office of the Inspector-General evaluated official
conduct
and tried to correct public behavior, while the Office
of the Censor was responsible
for criticizing the king to restrain
the arbitrary use of power.
Sejo oversaw the most comprehensive
recodification of Korean laws that was
promulgated as the National
Code in 1471, and he loosened the restrictions
that had been
imposed on Buddhism.
Sejo came to regret his earlier violence
and died a devoted Buddhist.
Sejo's 19-year-old son Yejong was put under the regency of
Queen Dowager Yun
but died a year later, succeeded by his 13-year-old
nephew Songjong (r. 1469-94),
who was under the regency of the
dowager queen until 1477.
Songjong was a conscientious Confucian
and ruled Korea in an era of peace
except for a brief war near
the end of his reign on the northern frontier.
During his reign
junior officials were allowed to criticize their superiors.
Most
of the army was made up of volunteers.
In 1470 he ended the land
assignment system for officials by paying them only in salaries.
Land reclamation policies of the Yi dynasty would triple the cultivated
land
of the late Koryo period, but the cost of reclaiming land
tended to favor the wealthy.
Emancipation of slaves to commoner
status was promoted,
though the chonmin class remained
large.
The number of slaves had increased from about 200,000 in
1420
to 350,000 in 1484 out of a total population of two million.
Corvée labor was supposed to be limited to six days per
year and was used
by the army to construct and repair walls, roads,
and dams,
and for transportation of tax grain or tribute.
One
third of the navy's 45,000 men on active duty were supported
by
the other two thirds on reserve.
Songjong disliked Buddhism and
banned ordination of priests.
Each of the eight provinces was under a governor, but the county
magistrates
governed the people directly, collected taxes, and
mobilized corvée labor.
The magistrates' terms were for
five years, and they had to be from another county.
Each county
had a school, and the capital Seoul had four schools
and the National
Confucian Academy.
Private primary schools called sodang
were established in every large village
but were mostly for the yangban class.
The national university was expanded to
serve 200 students,
who often got their demands met by sitting
down in front of the royal palace.
The increased size of the yangban
class made the examinations even more important.
Both lower and
higher examinations were given every three years.
Those passing
local tests went to the capital to be tested
on the Confucian
classics, poetry, and composition.
The higher exams were similar
but had a third stage
of testing in the presence of the king.
The military exam tested for skill in archery, marksmanship, and
saddle maneuvering
as well as for knowledge of the classics and
military texts.
Four other examinations were in law, medicine,
foreign languages, and astronomy,
which included meteorology and
geomancy.
In 1472 sorceresses, fortune-tellers, and Buddhist monks were
banned from the capital,
and scholars could only be tried before
the college of scholars.
There was a Korean saying that legal
punishments do not apply to yangban,
and Confucian principles
do not apply to commoners.
Songjong prohibited dancing girls,
replacing them with boys.
Yangbans and others usually only married
within their class.
A 1477 law banned women from marrying a second
time.
Some widows committed suicide, and monuments were often
erected in their memory.
Women, especially Yangbans, were not
to be in public
without a veil and were segregated even at home.
A wife could be sent home (divorced) for sterility, licentiousness,
jealousy,
a bad disease, loquacity, stealing, or for disrespecting
her husband's parents.
However, a husband was not supposed to
divorce his wife
if she had no one to support her or if she had
been with her husband
during his three-year mourning period for
a parent
or if he had become rich since marrying her.
Marriages
were usually arranged by the parents,
and as in China, one could
not marry anyone with the same family name.
A comprehensive history
of Korea up to 1392 was completed in 1484
as a reference book
to guide rulers.
Nine volumes on music were published in 1493.
Kim Chong-jik (1431-92) was the leading Neo-Confucian scholar
of the Mountain and Forest tradition, and his friendship with
King Songjong
got his conscientious disciples into government
positions.
These censors drove out many officials who had capitulated
with Sejo's usurpation.
However, the first purge of these radicals
occurred in 1498
during the reign of Yonsan'gun (r. 1495-1506).
Kim Chong-jik's disciple Kim Il Son (1464-98) got in trouble
compiling
an official history by alluding to Sejo's usurping the throne
and executing his nephew Tanjong.
In the purge of 1498 Yonsan'gun
executed some and banished others.
He was called "Prince"
Yonsan because he ruled so badly
that Koreans refuse to call him
a king.
He degenerated into debauchery, obsessive hunting, paranoid
executions
and banishment of officials, and destruction of educational
and religious institutions.
Yonsan used Buddhist temples as stables
for his horses and the university
for pleasure houses as provincial
officials scoured the country
for young girls to increase his
harem.
After Yonsan learned that his mother had been deposed and
executed
while he was a child, he conducted a second purge in
1504,
executing hundreds of officials and their sons.
Finally
in 1506 he was deposed by senior officials
with the tacit of approval
of his step-mother, Queen Dowager Yun.
Queen Dowager Yun's son succeeded as Chungjong (r. 1506-44),
and he brought reforms guided by Cho Kwang-jo (1482-1519)
of the
Mountain and Forest Confucianism.
Neo-Confucians got this name
after they withdrew from the court
to Kyonsang province because
of Prince Suyang's usurpation.
By simplifying the examination
system Cho recruited many young zealots
into the government and
promoted them quickly.
Cho got Daoist rituals abolished and implemented
village charters (hyangyak)
for promoting community cooperation
to encourage morality,
reprimand wrong conduct, and provide relief
for hardships and disasters.
The population of Korea reached ten
million in 1511.
During this Confucian period the Book of Filial
Piety was the most widely read book.
Cho extended the yangban
privilege by allowing the common people
to mourn a parent for
three years.
In 1518 Cho Kwang-jo opposed a surprise attack on
a Jurched rebellion
as immoral, and Chungjong canceled the expedition.
In 1519 Cho and his censors threatened to resign unless Chungjong
took away the titles and land from 76 merit subjects
who had helped
him take the throne;
but the King turned against the radicals
and had them executed, banished, or dismissed.
Storage grain had been loaned to farmers during a lean year,
but a series of poor crops around 1500 resulted in
charging them
ten percent interest on these loans.
Local officials did not record
these interest earnings until it was decreed
in the middle of
the 16th century so that some of it must go to the national government.
In 1537 a decree forbade anyone except a yangban from wearing
long flowing sleeves.
In 1543 Chu Se-bung established the Paegundong
Academy,
the first local college or private academy (sowon)
sponsored by the court.
Complaints by Japanese traders that the Tsushima daimyo
had become dependent
on Korean imports led to an uprising in 1510
that stopped trade.
This stimulated the forming of a Defense Council,
and in 1512 King Chungjong agreed to allow 25 Japanese ships to
visit Korea
each year in addition to the regular ship sent by
the Shogun.
Japanese pirates also caused uprisings
in Korea's
southern coastal provinces in 1541 and 1555.
Economic development
in the late 16th century increased the slim middle class
of skilled
workers and professionals between the yangban officials
and the yangmin farmers.
Social class was determined by
the mother's status,
and yangban children born from concubines
usually fell into this growing middle class.
Farmers were still
about half the population but now outnumbered the slaves.
Children
of slaves were still slaves,
but their efforts for emancipation
brought increased litigation.
After ruling for only a year, Injong, Chungjong's son by his
second queen,
died of grief and was succeeded by Myongjong (r.
1546-67),
the 12-year-old son of Chungjong's third queen.
By the
end of 1545 this faction had eliminated most of the other faction,
and for the next twenty years they used corruption to increase
their wealth.
Queen Dowager Munjong was regent for the first seven
years
of her son Myongjong's rule, and a lull in the suppression
of Buddhism
occurred until her death in 1565.
In 1553 a conscription
law required all men over fifteen years of age
to serve at least
two years in the military; but this law was soon followed
by another
allowing men to pay a tax to be exempt from this service.
Rim Kkok-Jong
led peasants rebelling against the oppression
from 1559 to 1562 in Hwanghae province.
In 1563 a rebellion led by a butcher was
tracked down
by the army into the mountains and eliminated.
Sejo's
Rank Land Law was abolished in 1566,
and officials were no longer
given land but only salaries.
Neo-Confucian philosopher Yi Hwang or T'oegye (1501-70) believed
in
combining knowledge with action and that the human autonomy
of one's own efforts can lead to a fulfilling life.
Yi Hwang agreed
with Zhu Xi in considering rational principle (li)
more
important than material energy (qi).
He emphasized the
Neo-Confucian virtue of kyong,
which means seriousness
or reverence.
When Yi Hwang became ill, his older associate Yi
Hyon-bo (1457-1555)
explained how violations of social customs
should be punished.
He listed the most serious offenses as disobeying
parents, quarrelling with brothers,
disrupting the family, interfering
with official business, arrogating public power
for private gain,
insulting village elders, and seducing or threatening virtuous
widows.
Yi I or Yulgok (1536-84) argued that action is shaped by the
energy of cosmic force,
which influences the seven human emotions
of
joy, anger, sorrow, fear, love, hatred, and desire.
Principle
can not be bad, but the energy is what
makes the conduct of individuals
different.
Yi I combined the Neo-Confucian
ideas of both Zhu Xi and Wang
Yangming,
emphasizing the integration of the facts of nature
with guiding moral principles.
He promoted the community compact (hyangyak) that had the following four purposes:
mutual
encouragement of virtuous acts, mutual correction of wrong conduct,
fellowship with social decorum, and mutual aid in case of illness
or disaster.
After one joined, records were kept of members' good
and bad deeds.
Yi I recommended the following liberal reforms:
government insuring everyone's standard of living,
removing corruption
from tax collection,
regulating financial institutions for fairness,
recruiting from all social classes for the military,
educating
all social classes,
creating jobs for all,
allowing widows to
remarry,
and insuring support for the aged, handicapped, and orphans.
During the reign of Myongjong more than twenty new colleges
were founded,
as were 124 under Sonjo (r. 1567-1608).
These provincial
colleges (sowon) provided teaching jobs for radical thinkers;
but factionalism was increased by this, and an increasing number
of
educated yangban grouped around powerful families with
geographical bases
striving for the limited number of governmental
positions.
King Sonjo let the Neo-Confucians gain political influence
in the capital as well,
and during his reign the village codes
were implemented throughout the country.
The Buddhist monk Hyujong (1520-1604) did much to promote an
ecumenical
movement and harmonized the value of Buddhism with
philosophical Daoism
and Confucianism in his Mirror of the
Three Teachings.
Hyujong emphasized meditation that is the
Buddha's mind,
which is superior to the doctrine that is the Buddha's
words.
Those with high spiritual ability can become enlightened
quickly by their own efforts,
but those with a lesser faculty
can be enlightened slowly with help from others.
Everyone has
the Buddha-nature, but people differ because of greed and desire.
A conflict over the head of the personnel department in 1575
resulted
in an Eastern faction that followed the ideas of Yi Hwang
and a Western faction that believed in Yi I's philosophy
(These
directions referred to portions of the capital, not the whole
country.)
The Easterners were dominant for a decade but then split
into
Northerners and Southerners in 1589, when the Westerner Chong
Yo-rip,
who appealed to Easterners, tried and failed to seize
power.
After another decade the Northerners prevailed but divided
into Great Northerners
and Small Northerners, showing the continuing
factionalism.
When a faction dominated the government, those from
other factions
were not given positions and usually did not even
pass the examinations.
In 1583 the Ruzhen tribes attacked northeastern
forts,
and Yi I recommended raising an army of 100,000;
but Yi
Hwang's disciple Yu Song-nyong quipped that maintaining an army
in peacetime was buying misfortune, and he won the argument before
King Sonjo.
Manchus led by Nurhaci, who proclaimed himself king
in 1589,
raided northern Korea, and they also took advantage
of
the Japanese war that soon followed.
The imperialistic Japanese shogun Toyotomi Hideyoshi
sent envoys to Korea
demanding passage through their country so
that his army could invade China.
When the Koreans refused, Hideyoshi sent an army of about
160,000
to invade Korea in 1592.
Japan had muskets that gave them
a military advantage,
and within two weeks they had taken the
Korean capital.
The court had fled north while the slaves burned
the registry of slave rosters.
The Japanese subjugated the country
as far north
as P'yongyang, which they entered unopposed.
They
sent 38,000 ears to the emperor at Kyoto
as proof of the Koreans
they had killed.
General Sayaga and his 3,000 warriors were so
impressed
by the Confucian culture they found that they defected
to the Korean side.
The Korean navy led by Yi Sun-sin had perhaps the first armored
ships in history,
and in four battles they destroyed more than
three hundred Japanese ships
without losing a vessel.
Korea appealed
to China, which sent 50,000 troops through Manchuria that
drove
the Japanese out of P'yongyang in 1593 and forced them to retreat
to the south.
Then the Japanese won a battle at Pyokchegwan,
and
the Chinese retreated back to P'yongyang.
Meanwhile Koreans led
by Confucian scholars and Buddhist monks
organized a guerrilla
campaign that harassed the Japanese.
Buddhist Hyujong was 72 years
old but led an army of 5,000 monks.
These attacks and reprisals
devastated the food supply.
With the Korean navy cutting their
supply lines, the Japanese held out in the south
while they negotiated
with the Chinese for years,
causing more resentment among the
excluded Koreans.
In 1596 Yi Mong-hak led a rebellion in the Ch'ungch'ong
province,
and the government struggled without records
for collecting
taxes or enforcing corvée levies.
In 1597 Hideyoshi launched
a second invasion with about 140,000 troops,
but Japanese forces
could not get beyond the southern Korean provinces.
Korean admiral
Yi had been replaced for disregarding an order,
and a new Japanese
fleet of more than three hundred ships
defeated the Korean navy
of more than two hundred and lost only eight vessels.
The Japanese
army then marched northward, but they were defeated south of the
capital.
Admiral Yi was reinstated and destroyed 33 Japanese ships
without a loss.
The Japanese army was confined to a coastal zone
but held out against about 140,000 Korean and Chinese allies.
In this stalemate news of Hideyoshi's death caused the Japanese
to withdraw in 1598.
After taking bribes from the retreating Japanese,
the Ming fleet was persuaded
by Admiral Yi to attack with his
Korean navy;
the allies destroyed two hundred Japanese ships,
but Admiral Yi was killed.
The Japanese war caused much devastation in Korea;
many were
killed, and a hundred thousand prisoners may have been sold
to
Japanese and Portuguese slave merchants.
The population had been
fourteen million in 1591,
but it went below eleven million before
it reached fourteen million again in 1679.
Cultivated land was
reduced to less than a third and grain supplies to less than a
sixth.
Then famine and pestilence followed, stimulating the
publishing
of the influential Exemplar of Korean Medicine.
Treasures
of Eastern Medicine was published in 1606
and was still used
in China and Japan in the 18th century.
Amid the economic chaos
and factionalism, yangban aristocrats
claimed royal patronage
and grabbed land.
Slaves had burned the registers of their status,
and some had gained status by serving in the military during the
war.
Now the government and the Yangbans emancipated many slaves
because they could no longer house and feed them.
Royal palaces
and government buildings had been destroyed,
and many rare books
were lost.
The government sold official positions and ranks for
grain contributions.
Koreans hated the Japanese for this imperialistic
aggression and because
the Japanese had taken away captive Koreans,
including skilled potters.
Books and Korean printing type were
also taken and were imitated in Japan.
In 1604 the monk Yujong
went to Japan and brought back 3,000 Korean prisoners.
Korea made
peace with Japan in 1606 after Tokugawa Ieyasu
became shogun.
Japan released more prisoners, and in 1609 trade
was resumed with Tsushima.
Korea's King Sonjo was succeeded by his son Kwanghaegun (r.
1608-23).
He sent 10,000 soldiers to support the Ming army fighting
the Jurchen Manchus
in Manchuria, but at an opportune moment
he
ordered General Kang to surrender to the Manchus.
Kwanghaegun
was supported by the Northerners and tried to build up Korea's
defenses,
but the Westerners faction forced him off the throne.
Yi Su-gwang was an envoy to Beijing, where he met the Jesuit Matteo
Ricci.
In 1614 Yi published his discussion of Ricci's writings
on
astronomy, mathematics, geography, and Christianity.
He added
his own views on Korean history, society, and government.
Ho Kyun wrote the fantasy Story of Hong Kil in Korean
with the Han'gul alphabet
between 1608 and 1613, satirizing
social discrimination against concubines and their children.
Hong
Kil Tong is the son of a yangban minister of high rank
and his slave-maid but is not even allowed to call him father.
He becomes a leader of conscientious bandits called "Save
the Poor" who
loot a temple of its treasures and rob grain
and money from the governor of Hamgyong.
Hong uses occult powers
and becomes a wanted man.
Their private war causes reform when
Hong becomes minister of war
and abolishes the unjust law.
Then
they take over an island, and Hong rules it as king.
Ho Kyun continued
to agitate for the rights of such children,
and during a coup
attempt by some of them in 1618 he was executed.
Soon after Injo (r. 1623-49) became king, Yi Kwal led an insurrection
and marched on
the capital with 12,000 men that included a company
of feared Japanese swordsmen.
They captured Seoul so easily that
later stronger defenses were built.
After Yi Kwal died, his followers
fled to Manchuria
and urged the Manchus to invade Korea to restore
Kwanghaegun.
In 1627 an army of 30,000 Manchus attacked Kado Island
and invaded Hwanghae province.
The court fled from Seoul toward
Kanghwa and negotiated.
After the Koreans pledged to honor them
as older brothers
and stop supporting the Ming dynasty, the Manchus
withdrew.
When the Manchus declared the Qing dynasty and sent
envoys to demand
Korea recognize their sovereignty, King Injo
rejected them.
The Manchus led by Abahai invaded again in 1636
and took P'yongyang.
Unable to flee because of winter ice, Injo
was compelled to surrender in public
and promised to support the
Qing against the Ming.
The crown prince Sohyon and his two half-brothers
were taken as hostages,
and three officials who had advised against
making peace were put to death.
Sohyon met the Jesuit Adam Schall
in Beijing
and in 1644 brought back books and tools of western
science.
The Westerners faction dominated the governments of Injo and
Hyojong (r. 1649-59).
Song Si-yol (1607-89) was Hyojong's tutor
and held a high position.
He wanted to help the Ming empire and
tried to build up the military secretly.
Kim Cha-jom found out
and told the Manchus,
resulting in their killing the hostage, General Im Kyong-op.
Hyojong then executed Kim.
In 1653 the Choson
court indicated its change in loyalty by using the
Gregorian calendar
that the Qing court had adopted.
A Dutch castaway named Weltevree
had been helping the Koreans
manufacture cannons since 1628.
He
was sent to communicate with 36 Dutch survivors
of a shipwreck
on Cheju Island in 1653.
They were taken to Seoul, detained as
curiosities,
put under military command, and banished to the southwest.
Eight of them escaped to Nagasaki in 1666, and two years later
Hendrik Hamel
wrote the first book about Korea known in Europe.
In 1654 and 1658 Korean forces helped the Qing army fight the
Russians.
When Hyojong died, he was succeeded by his son Hyonjong (r.
1659-74).
He settled a controversy over how long dowager Queen
Cho
should mourn by accepting Song Si-yol's view.
The radical
Southerner Yun Hyu, who believed a scholar must seek
the truth
itself rather than anyone's interpretation, was banished.
Song
commented that Yun was even more evil than Wang Yangming.
Song
was criticized by Yun Son-go and, after his death in 1669,
by
his son Yun Chung, who founded the Soron (Young Doctrine) party.
When Hyonjong's mother died in 1674, Song Si-yol lost the argument
over the mourning period to the Southerners,
who nonetheless divided
into the Ch'ong and Tak factions.
Yu Hyong-won (1622-73) was the first scholar of the Practical
Learning (Sirhak)
to criticize the Yi land system, education,
military service,
and official appointments and salaries.
He proposed
a public land system with a fixed amount for each farmer.
He wrote,
Under a system of public land ownership, the people have a
constant source of production, their minds are secure,
their moral transformation through education can be achieved,
their mores and customs can be generous, and in all matters
there will be no one who does not obtain his proper share.
Under a system of private land ownership,
everything will be contrary to this.3
Yu Hyong-won also argued that taxes and labor service
should
be based on land rather on individuals.
He opposed hereditary
slavery and noted that the ancients
never penalized the descendants
of criminals.
Slavery, which in Korea was actually more like a
class of serfs,
was also condemned by Yi Ik and Yu Suwon.
King Sukchong (r. 1674-1720) succeeded his father Hyonjong
at the age of 13.
In 1680 his wife died, and Prime Minister Ho
Chok's son Ho Kyon
was accused of plotting to put Injo's oldest
grandson on the throne.
Ho Chok and Yun Hyu were compelled to
drink poison,
as Song Si-yol's Noron (Old Doctrine) party gained
control.
Kim Su-hang became prime minister,
and Sukchong married
Inhyon from a Noron family.
When she did not produce an heir,
Sukchong named the son of his concubine Lady Chang in 1689.
Queen
Inhyon refused to adopt him;
she was accused of plotting to kill
the child and was deposed.
Song Si-yol and Kim Su-hang opposed
this and had to take poison.
In 1694 the Soron faction got Inhyon
reconciled with King Sukchong;
they replaced the Southerners,
and Lady Chang was accused of crimes and deposed.
Queen Inhyon became the subject of two famous novels.
One was
anonymous, and Kim Man-jung, who had been banished with
Norom
officials in 1689, wrote Sassinamjong-ji before he died
in 1692.
He set the story at the Ming court and presciently
concluded
his story with the restoration of Lady Sa.
Kim Man-jung also wrote
the famous novel,
Nine Cloud Dream (Kuun mong) to comfort
his mother.
His father had died heroically after destroying the
ancestral tablets at Kanghwa
so that they would not be desecrated
by the Mongols.
In the prolog of Nine Cloud Dream the Buddhist
monk Xingzhen
is persuaded to drink wine and on a bridge encounters
eight fairy maidens.
Fantasies of them disturb his meditation,
and his teacher Liuguan
sends him to the underworld for punishment.
In the main part of the novel, he forgets his past
as he is born
in the Confucian Yang family as Shaoyu.
His hermit father returns
to the immortals, and Shaoyu is raised by his mother.
He excels
in the exams and is engaged to Jewel.
Successful at court, Princess
Orchid wants to marry him,
and her mother agrees to adopt Jewel
into the royal family.
Shaoyu lives happily with two wives and
six concubines.
In the epilog he is sad in retirement and sees
an old monk,
who wakes him from his dream.
Suddenly Xingzhen is
back in the Lotus Peak monastery and remembers
being reprimanded
by his teacher, who now teaches him the Diamond Sutra
in
which everything is seen as illusion, dream, and fantasy.
The Life of Unyong is another dream novel that is anonymous.
This novel describes the suffering of hundreds of women imprisoned
in the royal palace who are not allowed to marry or raise a family.
Unyong protests the unnatural circumstances, saying,
"Sir,
it is only our fear of your displeasure that keeps our feelings
and desires tightly wrapped up within ourselves, thus withering
away till death."4
She risks a secret love with Master Kim.
After they are caught, she hangs herself with her silk handkerchief,
and Kim starves himself to death.
Unlike other Korean fantasies,
this story is realistic and exposes the plight of many women.
The Soron faction led by Yun Chung would control
the positions
of power for the next period.
There were 274 colleges founded
during Sukchong's long reign,
but only 131 had royal authorization.
The government began minting copper coins in 1678, and they were
so popular
that people hoarded them as savings or lent them for
interest.
In 1688 the monk Yohwan and ten of his followers
were
executed for plotting against the state.
Experiments with allowing
payments in rice for the tribute tax
began in Kyonggi province
in 1623.
This was extended to other provinces,
and by 1708 was
enforced throughout Korea as the Uniform Land Tax.
About one percent
of the harvest was collected in rice,
and the tax could be paid
in cotton cloth or coin.
King Sukchong also reorganized the army
into five garrisons that included the
northern approaches, the
southern approaches, the capital, and the royal guards.
Instead
of providing a soldier, peasant farmers could supply
the government
with two bolts of cotton cloth per year.
Those with influence
could get exempted, and so the burden fell on the poor.
Corrupt
officials also collected more by putting boys and the dead on
the tax rosters.
Taxes for those who fled had to be paid by their
kin or neighbors.
Merchant guilds formed at Kaesong and the northern
border town of Uiju
to conduct trade with China and Japan.
The
main export to Japan was silk from China,
and it yielded more
than 300% profit.
Sukchong was succeeded by Lady Chang's son Kyongjong (r. 1720-24).
When Noron leader Kim Ch'ang-jip urged the new king
to let his
younger half-brother Yongjo rule because of Kyongjong's poor health,
the Soron factions accused their rivals of treason.
Four Noron
ministers were killed in a purge, and a hundred officials were
banished.
When Kyongjong died three years later,
the four leading
Soron ministers were forced to drink poison.
Yu Su-won spent eight
years in prison writing a book on how to reform the society
by
allowing equal opportunity and government assistance to aid new
businesses.
King Yongjo (r. 1724-76) wisely adopted the even-handed policy
of appointing officials
based on merit from all four colors of
the Soron, Noron, Southerners, and Northerners.
He called this
Confucian policy magnificent harmony (t'angp'yong).
Hearing
complaints about high taxes in 1725, he immediately ordered a
reduction.
Yongjo also lessened the cruel torturing of suspects
and criminals.
With multiple factions in his administration, Yongjo
had to resolve their conflicts.
He rejected Min Chinwon's arguments
against abolishing factions
because Yongjo believed that moral
judgments that lead to the
taking of human lives are neither correct
nor honest.
In 1727 he replaced the leaders Min Chinwon of the
Noron
and Yi Kwanmyong of the Soron, but later that year he brought
the Soron ministers back
while dismissing 101 Noron officials
who had gone on strike the previous year.
He prohibited the defending
of factions.
A famine led to a rebellion in 1728.
Yongjo responded quickly
by reducing taxes and distributing grain.
Starving crowds occupied
two mountains in Cholla province,
and seditious posters soon spread
to Seoul.
Yongjo delayed mobilizing the army until military officers
began joining the rebellion.
He ordered capital punishment for
any family assisting the rebels.
The Ch'ungch'ong province fell
to the rebels as they argued that
Yongjo was not the legitimate
ruler.
The royal army defeated the rebels in Kyonggi province;
leaders were arrested in Cholla;
and by May 1728 the last rebel
stronghold in the Kyongsang province was taken.
Rebels were interrogated
for two months, and about a hundred were executed;
their families
were enslaved.
The organizers of the revolt were Soron extremists,
and they had spread the rumor that Yongjo had murdered Kyongjong
to become king.
Yongjo continued his t'angp'yong policy
by keeping
both Noron and Soron officials in the bureaucracy.
Yongjo's only son died in 1728, and the next year Prince Milp'ung
was executed because the rebels had wanted to put him on the throne.
In 1730 the king tried to get Min Chinwon and Yi Kwangjwa
to
take each others' hands, but they politely refused.
Another epidemic
occurred in 1731 and led to cannibalism the next year.
Relief
measures were inadequate, and in 1733 even palace guards starved
to death.
Yongjo was childless when he fell in love with Lady
Sonhui,
and in 1735 he named her son Changjo crown prince Sado.
Yongjo was frustrated by the conflicts and often fasted
or refused to take medicine or went into seclusion.
As Prince Sado got older,
he would threaten to abdicate.
In September 1737 Yongjo stopped
eating to protest the factional disputes.
He considered beheading
the worst but after five days dismissed
every official and censor
who was not willing to accept punishment.
Censors strengthened
their criticisms by refusing to serve the king.
In 1741 Yongjo
burned the records of the 1722 purge
and promulgated the Great
Instruction, which warned that
his legitimacy was no longer
to be discussed.
That year he abolished 170 private academies
and shrines
that had been built without government approval since
1714.
The censor Cho Chunghoe wrote a memorial in 1744 complaining
about the lack of free speech because of punishments.
Yongjo reacted
by dismissing Cho and other censors
who did not demand his punishment.
In 1746 Yongjo prohibited the importation of richly patterned
Chinese silk,
and two years later he extended the ban to unpatterned
silk
and punished offending officials.
Yongjo appointed a committee
to investigate the military cloth tax in 1734,
but their report
in ten volumes was not completed until 1748.
Two years later after
an epidemic and famine,
Yongjo reduced the military cloth tax
from two bolts to one,
but the revenue was made up by taxing fish,
salt, ships, and grain.
The yangban class was exempt from
the grain surtax also.
In 1751 the reform of the landholding tax
was completed
amid a favorable popular response to the reduction.
Yongjo had overcome the bureaucratic resistance and implemented
a Confucian policy to benefit the people.
In 1749 King Yongjo made Prince Sado regent.
By 1752 officials
were complaining there were two courts,
and Sado felt his father's
disapproval so much that
he refused medical care and asked to
be relieved of the regency.
Yongjo treated Sado harshly and in
1754 began drinking heavily.
After a trial, rebels were executed
for believing that
Yongjo had poisoned Kyongjong by sending him
preserved crab.
Yongjo denounced factionalism again.
In 1756 he
decided that Sado was useless and cancelled his orders.
The Prince
neglected his studies, and several ministers complained
that the
King was too severe on his son.
When Queen Chongsong died in 1757,
Yongjo married 14-year-old Chongsun.
She came to hate Prince Sado,
who tried to commit suicide twice by jumping into a well.
He beat
eunuchs and even beheaded one.
He had orgies with Buddhist nuns.
Sado lived with the lady-in-waiting Pingae, and she bore two children.
In 1759 Sado's legitimate son, who would become Chongjo,
was named
the grand heir.
In 1760 Yongjo moved to another palace.
Prince
Sado murdered other servants, and Prime Minister Yi Ch'on-bo
and
two other ministers took responsibility for such lapses by committing
suicide.
Yongjo executed several persons who raped women while
pretending to be the prince.
By 1762 Sado was obsessed with death
and slept in a coffin;
a rumor spread that he planned patricide.
After Prince Sado's attempts to commit suicide were stopped by
tutors on July 4, 1762,
King Yongjo had him locked in a rice chest
until he died.
The Noron party split between the Sip'a
who objected
and the Pyokp'a who justified the execution.
In 1764 Chongjo was
made an adopted son of Yongjo's late son
in order to sever his
legal relationship with Sado.
Sado's widow, Lady Wong, wrote her memoirs of the crown prince
in her
Records Made in Distress, describing with psychological
insights
how the king did not understand his son, was displeased
by him,
and could not forgive him.
At one point Sado explains
to his father,
"I am hurt because you do not love me and
also, alas,
I am terrified of you because you constantly rebuke
me, sire."5
As in China, Confucian philosophy turned toward practical learning,
which the Koreans called Sirhak.
Scholars became more empirical
and sought verification by evidence.
Yun Chung (1629-1714) rejected
a government position and taught reforms,
emphasizing the welfare
of the people.
He and Chong Che-du (1649-1736) criticized the
rigid orthodoxy
based on Zhu Xi's writings.
Chong based his ideas
on the idealistic philosophy of Wang Yangming.
Yi Ik (1681-1763)
developed an encyclopedic system that
divided knowledge into the
physical environment, living organisms,
human conditions, Chinese
scholarship, and literature.
He published his ideas for reform
in his Record of Concern for the Underprivileged.
He recommended
an equal field for each peasant household,
and he advocated the
abolition of slavery and class restrictions.
Yi urged commoners
to devote themselves to farming rather than commerce,
and he encouraged
the use of new techniques and irrigation.
He made his family motto
"Shun usury," and he even proposed eliminating money.
Yi Ik wrote on factionalism and recommended simplifying
the civil
examinations to prevent unqualified people from being promoted.
Yu Suwon (1694-1755) argued that the official censors were
too judgmental and harsh.
Like Yi Ik, he also criticized slavery
and discrimination against the sons of concubines.
Yi Chunghwan
(1690-1752) suffered from factional persecution in his youth
and
believed that one should choose a community with ethical neighbors.
In 1770 King Yongjo sponsored the publication of an encyclopedia
called the Reference Compilation of Documents on Korea.
In 1772 Yongjo lifted the ban on the sons of concubines occupying
positions
as high officials, and he appointed three of them to
the Censorate.
In the 18th century proponents of the Northern Learning wrote
diaries
and travel memoirs that compared Chinese culture to their
class society
in which the yangban Confucians were parasites
who disdained to work in commerce, manufacturing, or agriculture.
They suggested using new technology and transportation to improve
commerce.
The bureaucracy should have professional public servants
based on educational opportunity for all.
The division of labor
in society should be based on ability instead of genealogy.
Gradually
wealth replaced lineage as the main criterion for social status.
Pak Chi-won (1737-1805) published travel stories in the 26-volume
Jehol Diary in 1780.
In China he observed their superior
building using bricks.
Included in Jehol Diary is his satirical
"Story of Master Ho."
His wife reprimands Ho for studying
seven years without accomplishing anything
and suggests he become
a merchant.
Ho goes to Pyon, the richest man in town, and borrows
10,000 in cash,
which he uses to corner the market in fruit.
From
this monopoly he makes much profit,
and then he does the same
with knives, hoes, cotton, hemp, and silk.
He finds an island
and pays unemployed bandits to go there and farm,
thus reducing
robbery on the mainland.
Ho uses his money to buy goods that the
bandits sell at Nagasaki.
Ho throws 500,000 in silver into the
sea to be found by others,
and he gives 100,000 back to Pyon,
saying the 10,000 made him ashamed.
Ho explains how he made a
million in five years,
and Pyon tries to introduce Minister Yi
Wan to him.
Ho asks the king to visit him, suggests marrying refugee
soldiers from the Ming army
to Korean princesses, and proposes
that the young men study under the Manchus.
When the minister
says these requests cannot be granted, Ho threatens to behead
him.
Yi Wan jumps out the window and returns to find that Ho has
moved.
This and other stories by Pak Chi-won satirized
the pretentious
and impractical yangban class.
His story, "The Life
of Mrs. Pak of Hamyang, a Faithful Wife," tells of a young
woman
who remains loyal to her ill fiancé and then is praised
for her virtue
in committing suicide as a widow.
This tragedy
reveals the absurdity of the Korean social prejudice
against a
widow remarrying.
The author asks if such fidelity to a dead husband
is not excessive.
King Chongjo (r. 1776-1800) continued his grandfather Yongjo's
impartial policy toward the factions.
He established a research
library and institute within the palace and patronized scholars.
In 1778 Yi Ik's disciple An Chong-bok completed a history of Korea
through the Koryo era, and his Comprehensive Record of Successive
Reigns
brought the history up to his own time.
Pak Chega suggested
that the bureaucracy was dysfunctional because
the civil service
exams tested literary skills instead of administrative ability.
Pak was sent on diplomatic missions to Beijing,
and he believed
that Koreans could learn from the Chinese.
In 1786 Pak submitted
a long memorial urging the King to promote agricultural
reforms
using Chinese techniques and tools as well as international trade.
The technique of transplanting rice seedlings enabled farmers
to grow a winter crop of barley also.
Irrigation became even more
important, and in 1778 a comprehensive plan
for maintaining irrigation
works was implemented through the
Office of Embankment Works that
had been established in 1662.
By the end of the 18th century there
were about 6,000 reservoirs,
and the double-cropping system greatly
increased agricultural production.
The furrow-seeding method in
dry-field farming
also reduced the labor needed for weeding.
Thus
these advanced techniques enabled a few farmers to prosper
while
others had to find other work.
Farming became a capitalist endeavor,
especially with commercial crops
for export such as ginseng, tobacco,
and cotton.
Commerce developed and gradually became an acceptable
profession
for the yangban class as well as farming.
Private
trade with Japan and China developed at designated locations.
Korea had about a thousand local markets that were open every
fifth day.
In 1779 a group of young scholars formed the
Society for the
Study of Western Doctrine in southeast Seoul.
Yi Sung-hun (1756-1801)
accompanied his father to Beijing
and was baptized by a Catholic
priest before returning to Korea in 1784.
He made converts among
the Southerners.
King Chongjo designated Christianity a heresy
and prohibited it in 1785,
and the next year he banned importing
any book from Beijing.
In 1790 a letter from Beijing informed
Catholics in Korea that
papal instructions forbade them from participating
in Confucian mourning rituals.
After Yun Chi-ch'ung buried his
mother in a Catholic manner, in 1791
Chongjo sentenced him and
Kwon Sang Yon to death
for destroying their ancestral tablets.
In 1795 Chou Wen-mu was the first Catholic priest to enter Korea,
and by the end of the century there were about ten thousand believers
in the country.
1. Traditional Korea by Wanne J. Joe, p. 49.
2. Songs of Flying Dragons 73 in Anthology of Korean
Literature ed. Peter H. Lee,
p. 75.
3. Pangye surok 2:12 by Yu Hyongwon, tr. James Palais in
Sourcebook of Korean Civilization ed. Peter H. Lee, Volume
2, p. 56-57.
4. Unyong chon quoted in An Introduction to Classical
Korean Literature
by Kichung Kim, p. 167.
5. Hangjungnok by Lady Hong quoted in An Introduction
to Classical Korean
Literature by Kichung Kim, p. 103.
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