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Korea
is a modern nation with a history of over 5,000 years.
The history of its culture can be seen in the Korean
art and architecture that remains today.
In
Korea mythology there is a story of the birth of the
Korean nation when a god named Hwanung comes from heaven
and transforms a bear into a woman. He marries her and
she gives birth to a son, Tangun.. Tangun establishes
the first capital of the Korean nation in 2333 B.C.
and calls it Joseon - Land of the Morning Calm.
The
migration of Neolithic nomads from central Asia and
Siberia led to the gradual emergence of villages and
small communities in Manchuria, China and Korea. Sedentary
nomadic clans established agricultural settlements that
later evolved into the first walled-town tribal states
which set the mold for future social evolution on the
Korean peninsula. Developments in China during the Warring
States Period led to a buildup of tensions among China,
Manchuria, and Korea's emerging tribal states
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[
Tales of Three Kingdoms ]
Alliances
among Korea's tribal states gave rise to the kingdoms of Puyo
and Koguryo. China conquered the Liao-tung River basin and
northern Korea to protect its northeastern frontier from the
increasingly powerful northern steppe nomads. After the fall
of the Chinese Wei Kingdom, Hsiung-nu nomads took control
of northern China and the Liao-tung region. Manchurian Hsien-pei
tribes destroyed the northern kingdom of Puyo and battled
Koguryo for control of Liao-tung region. Refugees from Puyo
later formed the southern Korean kingdom of Paekche. The Kingdom
of Silla emerged as a major aristocratic power in southeastern
Korea. The Japanese kingdom of Yamato emerged as diplomatic
relations developed among Korea's Three Kingdoms and China.
[ Paekche and Silla ]
The powerful
nation state of Koguryo dominated northern Korea and much
of the Manchurian Plain, fighting China's Sui and T'ang dynasties
for both territory and independence. Battling Koguryo and
each other, the kingdoms of Paekche and Silla competed for
dominance on the peninsula, while the smaller Kaya League
struggled to hold its own in the southern Naktong River basin.
A major Paekche expedition to Kyushu, Japan, led to the creation
of the Yamato Kingdom and the beginnings of a new cultural
legacy. The Kingdom of Silla unified Korea and took on the
cloak of T'ang Chinese culture, eventually falling victim
to the same internal problems that plagued China's great dynasties.
[ Koryo and Khitan ]
Numerous
battles among Korea's Later Three Kingdoms led to the surrender
of Silla and the collapse of Later Paekche. Wang Kon emerged
from the fighting to unify Korea under the kingdom of Koryo.
Khitan nomads in Manchuria conquered the Kingdom of Parhae
and created the Liao Dynasty. Tense relations between the
Khitan and Koryo overshadowed social and political developments
under King T'aejo. The Khitan Liao Dynasty in Manchuria increased
pressure on both Sung China and Koryo from the north, but
the newly formed state held on to its independence, strengthened
its government and expanded its territory northward to the
Yalu River.
[ Koryo and Mongols ]
In the
aftermath of the Khitan invasion of Koryo, Jurchen tribes
emerged to create the Chin dynasty in Manchuria. Jurchen warriors
broke out of Manchuria to the southwest and conquered the
Chinese Sung dynasty. The appearance of aristocratic factionalism
in the Koryo government lead to widespread social turmoil
in Korea, including a military revolt and numerous peasant
uprisings. The emergence of Genghis Khan in Mongolia began
a dramatic expansion of nomadic power in Central Asia and
led to the conquest of the Chin Dynasty in the Liao-tung region
and a series of Mongol invasions into Sung China and Manchuria.
[ Koryo under the Mongols ]
After
subjugating the Chin Empire, the Mongols invaded Korea and
brought the peninsula under the umbrella of their own expanding
empire. Faced with the Mongol onslaught, the government of
Koryo fled to Kanghwa Island for refuge while peasants began
openly resisting Mongol occupation of their country. Following
a military revolt, the Ch'oe clan established a military dictatorship
in Koryo. Kublai Khan conquered Sung China and used Koryo
in launching two failed invasions against Japan. The Mongols
controlled the Koryo government through its "two kings"
system, degraded the Koryo royal house, and virtually erased
any enhancement of royal authority.
[ The Death of Koryo ]
The future
of Koryo's highly centralized feudal society became inextricably
tied to that of the Y?n Dynasty. The social and political
philosophy of Neo-Confucianism took root in Korea and found
adherents among a new class of young, highly educated and
competent government administrators. China's Red Turban Rebellion
threatened Mongol rule and quickly spread into Koryo. Soon
after the Ming Dynasty replaced the Y?n in China, Kaesong's
conservative pro-Mongol faction blocked reforms to protect
its status. Koryo General Yi Song-gye led a coup that toppled
the badly weakened Kaesong government and laid the foundation
for the emergence of the Yi Dynasty.
[ Chos ]
Confucian
philosophy had a deep and lasting impact on Korea's social
and political life. Following the formation of the Yi Dynasty,
Choson established deeper relations with the neighboring countries
of China and Japan. King T'aejo established a new Korean capital
at Seoul and laid the foundation for a centralized Neo-Confucian
government under an absolute monarchy. Despite Choson's rigidly
stratified society and the ever-present political conflicts,
Korea witnessed many new and exciting technological developments
during the reigns of King T'aejong and King Sejong, including
the creation of the Han'gul, the Korean alphabet.
[ A Centralized Society ]
Ming China's
symbolic tributary system created a model for diplomatic relations
and economic trade with Korea and Japan. As Korea expanded
to its present day borders, attempts to reform society triggered
clashes between the king and the Neo-Confucian literati which
degenerated into bloody, vindictive government purges. Land
use and tax reforms contributed to the emergence of powerful
land owners and the impoverishment of Korean peasants. Court
intrigues and the struggle for power in Korea gave rise to
factionalism based on personalities. The nearly constant political
infighting became a striking characteristic of Korean politics
that lasted until the downfall of the Yi dynasty in the twentieth
century.
[ Polotical Turmoil ]
Korea's
political atmosphere turned violent under the reign of Yonsan'gun,
as the royal palace battled the government bureaucracy for
prominence. The rising influence of the Neo-Confucian literati
dramatically clashed with the entrenched power of conservative
supporters of the king's rise to the throne. Yonsan'gun's
tyrannical rule led to abuses of power and two vengeful and
bloody government purges. As the purges continued under King
Chungjong, open factional strife began in earnest with the
Neo-Confucian literati gaining both power and influence in
government.
[ Western Encroachment ]
Under
pressure from the Mongols along its northern frontiers and
financially weakened at home, China turned inward just as
Europe began its golden Age of Discovery. The voyages of Marco
Polo and the closure of the Silk Road soon prompted an increased
European interest in geography and cartography. Driven by
curiosity and adventure, Portuguese explorers led Europe into
the unknown world and opened the path to empire in India and
expansion into China and Japan. With the door to the Orient
opened, European sea power carried the Western world into
East Asia in search of wealth.
[ Japanese Invasion ]
The Onin
War in Japan brought the feudal lords to power under the leadership
of Oda Nobunaga. Toyotomi Hideyoshi, a subordinate general
under Oda Nobunaga, dreamed of conquering Asia and led the
first Japanese invasion of Korea. Overpowered on land, Korea
found its salvation in the brilliant tactics of naval Admiral
Yi Sun-sin, whose navy constantly struck fear in the Japanese
military. Although the Korean government retreated north in
the face of the Japanese threat, Korean peasants banded together
to form guerilla forces that turned against the invaders.
China quickly helped Korea drive the Japanese from the peninsula.
While Japan and China talked peace however, Japan invaded
Korea a second time.
[ The Hermit Kingdom ]
Korea
suffered dramatic social and economic changes following the
two Japanese invasions. At the top of Korean society, the
spread of political factions took a toll on the aristocracy.
The emergence of the Tokugawa Shogunate in Japan led to the
reestablishment of trade relations between Japan and Korea.
Meanwhile, in the north, the Jurchen Manchus became a powerful
regional force and attacked both Ming China and Korea. The
Manchus subjugated Korea as a vassal state and established
the Ch'ing dynasty in China. In response, Korea sealed its
northern border with Manchuria and, after centuries of being
a battleground for neighboring disputes, withdrew into itself.
The Age of Imperialism
[
Western Contacts ]
Korea
learned about the West and got its first exposure to Western
culture and knowledge through its diplomatic and tribute mission
contacts in Peking. The wreck of a Dutch ship Sparrow Hawk
on Cheju Island began the remarkable Korean odyssey of Hendrick
Hamel and his fellow survivors. Hamel later published his
impressions of Korean society and gave the West its first
look inside the Hermit Kingdom. The reemergence of political
factionalism and the influence of Western culture led to the
Sirhak Movement in Korea and the introduction of a number
of social and economic reforms. French missionaries operating
out of China introduced Catholicism to Korea, bringing both
Western culture and religious conflict onto the peninsula.
[ A Crumbling Dynasty ]
The ever-present
drive for power in Korea's government brought the royal in-laws
to a dominant position in the Yi court. Catholicism took root
in Korea amidst a deterioration of the country's traditional
Confucian social order and despite government-backed religious
persecutions. Abusive government practices combined with the
impact of natural disasters increased the suffering of both
the aristocracy and the peasants. While economic mismanagement
provoked popular uprisings, the increased activity of the
Catholic Church in Korea led to continued religious persecution
and increased government fear of foreign influences. The development
and spread of the Tonghak Doctrine built the foundation for
a major social revolution in Korea.
[ The End of Asian Isolation ]
Japan,
like Korea, lived in isolation and actively persecuted the
intrusions of Western religion and influence. Jesuit and Franciscan
missionaries from Europe worked for both religious converts
and increased commercial profitability for their ventures
in China. European commerce gained a foothold in China, principally
through the Chinese foreign trade system in Canton. Europe
and the United States, both seeking increased outlets for
their burgeoning industries, expanded trade with the Chinese
while Russia made its first attempts to open relations with
Japan. The British East India Company, arguably the most powerful
influence in the Canton trade system, moved to increase its
profits by introducing opium smuggling to the China trade.
[ A Clash of Cultures ]
The British
mounted strong pressure both at home and in China for free
trade. The conflicting positions taken by Britain and China
on the nature of international relations quickly led to clashes
between them over trade regulations and practices. China undertook
the daunting task of eradicating the opium problem and suppressing
the Canton opium trade. The Canton opium crisis brought the
British Crown deeper into the China market as China found
itself ensnared in a web of Western diplomacy and international
law. While China tried to hold tightly to its past, Great
Britain forced its Western morality and law into the Orient
and pushed Asia toward an uncertain future.
[The Penetration of China ]
Western
business interests pressured the British government to intervene
in the trading ports of Canton and Macao. Chinese attempts
to force a return to the old trade system led to armed conflict
with Great Britain. In the wake of the disastrous Sino-British
Opium Wars (1839-1840 and 1841-1842), Great Britain acquired
the island of Hong Kong and extraterritoriality rights in
China as part of the postwar settlement. The later treaties
of Nanking and the Bogue set the stage for a whole series
of "unequal treaties" with China that formally parted
the Bamboo Curtain and opened China to the West.
[ The Western Foothold in Asia ]
Following
Britain's "unequal treaty system" with China, the
West dramatically expanded its commercial interests in China.
In China's interior, the T'ai-Ping Rebellion gave vent to
deeply held hatred of foreign intervention and the rule of
the Manchus in Peking. The issues of the "Canton City
Question" and the "Arrow Incident" near Hong
Kong prompted the British and French to dispatch a joint expeditionary
force to China. The resulting Treaties of Tien-tsin partitioned
Chinese territory among the British, French, Russians, and
Americans. Finally, forced with the threat of military force,
China signed the Treaties of Peking, which sealed its defeat
and final humiliation.
[ The Awakening of Japan ]
The gradual
intrusion of shipping into the Pacific sparked American interest
in Asian markets. Japan had already learned much about the
West through the Dutch East India Company at Nagasaki. The
diplomatic missions of Commodores Biddle and Perry gave the
Japanese their first lesson in gunboat diplomacy and produced
a treaty that finally opened the door to Japan. American diplomat
Townsend Harris laid the foundation for Japan's commercial
relations with other foreign powers. Rebellious feudal lords
accelerated the decline of the Japanese Shogun and the political
turmoil that resulted prompted open attacks against foreigners
and western interests in Japan.
[ Mounting Pressure Against Choson ]
The impact
of China's Opium War and the opening of Japan turned Korea
strongly isolationist and fearful of the outside world. Korea's
Prince Regent, the Taewon'gun, gave strong impetus to this
sense of isolationism by introducing many reforms and changes
to Korean society. The country's foreign and domestic relations
remained guided by his anti-foreign exclusionist policy. Continued
religious persecutions in Korea, the bizarre Oppert affair,
and the tragic voyage of the merchant schooner General Sherman
led to direct intervention by France and the United States.
The fall of the Japanese Shogunate and the Meiji Restoration
turned Japan on a new path to the future. In Korea, it was
the beginning of the end of the peninsula's long period of
isolation.
[ Resistance to Change ]
The Japanese
Shogunate came to an end, replaced by the imperial government
of the Meiji Emperor. The Meiji Restoration led to new initiatives
to improve relations with Korea, but the peninsula nation
adamantly resisted any attempt by the West to gain entry,
diplomatically or physically. The American diplomatic mission
of Frederick Low and Admiral Rogers led to a military clash
at Kanghwa Island that, ironically, convinced Korea it was
strong enough to repel foreigners. Although Japan and China
entered into the first treaty between Asian nations, Japanese
attempts at diplomacy in Korea were continually frustrated.
In the end, Korea's powerful Prince Regent was finally forced
from power.
[ The Opening of Choson ]
China
urged King Kojong to be cautious in dealing with the Japanese,
prompting the king to reevaluate Korean-Japanese relations
Out of frustration, the Meiji government shifted its attitude
and advocated the use of gunboat diplomacy in Korea. The "Unyo
Maru Incident" provided Japan both a pretext for direct
talks with Korea and an opportunity to blame Korea for its
diplomatic isolation. While pressuring Korea to open talks,
Japan exerted diplomatic pressure to challenge China's traditional
suzerain-vassal relationship with Korea. A Japanese diplomatic
mission backed by armed force traveled to Kanghwa Island and
pressured Kojong's government into signing the Treaty of Kanghwa,
an unequal treaty that finally brought Korea out of isolation
and onto the international stage.
[ Japanese Expansion into Choson ]
As Korea
learned more of the West through its continued contacts in
China and Japan, the government made a number of social and
administrative reforms. Frustrated by years of deteriorating
treatment, the Korean military rebelled in 1882. As tensions
mounted between Japan and China, Korea became the focus of
a gathering conflict. After lengthy talks between China and
Japan over the status of Korea, the Treaty of Inch'on strengthened
Japan's position in Korea by weakening Chinese claims to suzerainty.
[ End of the Hermit Kingdom ]
China
took an active role in assisting the United States and other
Western powers to enter into treaty agreements with Korea,
in large part to check the growing influence of Japan. Britain
and Germany took an active interest in Korea as a potential
check against Russian expansion. The reforms instituted by
King Kojong brought some benefit to Korea, but the people
were not pleased with the influx of Western influences and
the changes left the military badly discontented. The military
mutinied and turned against Japanese nationals living in Korea.
Japan responded with troops and strong diplomatic pressure
for further reform. The deepening involvement of both China
and Japan in Korea intensified the growing rift between the
two powers.
[ Coup d'état and Rivalries ]
The Korean
Progressive Party staged a coup d'état against Queen
Min's conservative pro-Chinese faction. The Li-Ito Convention
of Tien-tsin settled Sino-Japanese differences and defined
the relationship between China and Japan in Korea. While Russia
disputed Korea's status relative to China, Japan continued
to expand its commercial interests on the peninsula, causing
a further deterioration of the Korean economy. The resurgent
Tonghak Movement staged another major revolt in Korea, bringing
Chinese and Japanese intervention to suppress them. The result
was to intensify the Sino-Japanese conflict over the future
status of Korea.
[ Rebellion and Mounting Tentions ]
The inroads
of foreign powers in Korea and the mounting rivalries between
them brought many of the domestic problems of the participants
onto the peninsula. China, Japan and Russia struggled to win
the support of King Kojong and the powerful Min clan. With
anti-foreign sentiments still running high, the Tonghak Rebellion
erupted again, supported in part by Japanese interests. China
and Japan used the rebellion as a pretext for stationing troops
in Korea. The Korean government, through negotiation and the
use of force, quelled the rebellion, but could not convince
Japan or China to remove their forces from the peninsula.
Although Britain and Russia tried to intervene in the mounting
dispute between China and Japan, nothing short of war would
settle the matter.
Conquest and Division
[
The Sino-Japanese War ]
Korea
became the prime focus of international rivalries in Asia.
Japan pressured the Yi government for economic concessions
and led a coup that ended the rule of the pro-Chinese Yi government.
A Japanese puppet regime in Seoul forced political, social
and administrative reforms on Korea. To solidify its preeminent
position on the peninsula, Japan attacked China without warning
and began the Sino-Japanese War, scoring notable military
successes against China in Korea. The Japanese Fleet under
Admiral Togo quickly gained control of the Yellow Sea and
devastated the Chinese navy in the Battle of the Yalu River.
While fighting the Chinese, Japan used its army to ruthlessly
suppress the Tonghak Revolt in Korea.
[ Twilight of the Yi Dynasty ]
Japan
treated Korea as a conquered land. When Queen Min maneuvered
the Yi government against Japan, Japanese militarists plotted
and carried out her assassination and forced many radical
reforms on Korea. Japan's rapid military expansion prompted
Russia to develop closer ties with China in an attempt to
isolate Japan. A Sino-Russian treaty gave Russia territorial
rights in Manchuria and a firm foothold on Chinese soil. A
separate protocol divided Korea into Russian and Japanese
spheres of influence. Faced with continued Russian expansion
and European encroachment in Asia, Korea gave concessions
to foreign powers in order to play one intruder off against
another. In the process it lost control of its own future.
[ The Last Hope for Freedom ]
Western
culture influenced a move toward enlightened thought in Korea
and led to a national independence movement for democracy.
The Yi government turned against the independence movement
to protect its position and the perquisites of power. Mounting
hatred of foreigners led to the Boxer Rebellion in China,
which immediately triggered a large-scale foreign intervention
by the West. In its aftermath, the treaty settlement of the
Boxer Rebellion led to the further weakening of Chinese autonomy
and gave Russia a pretext to seize Manchuria, a leasehold
at Port Arthur, and additional territory on the Liao-tung
Peninsula.
[ Prelude to War ]
Russian
expansion in East Asia and its threat to Japanese interests
in Korea caused anxiety in Japan. While the West mounted increasing
pressure on China to remove Russia from Manchuria, Japan and
Russia negotiated over the future of Manchuria and Korea.
Japan soon realized the inevitability of a war with Russia
over Manchuria. In a futile attempt at self-preservation,
Korea proclaimed itself neutral as the Japanese Imperial Fleet
moved against the Russian navy at Port Arthur. Admiral Togo
again gained quick mastery over the Yellow Sea. The Battle
of Port Arthur opened the Russo-Japanese War.
[ The Russo-Japanese War ]
While
the Japanese Army rapidly advanced through Korea toward Manchuria,
the Japanese government laid plans for the eventual annexation
of the Korean peninsula. Japan pushed Russia out of Korea,
captured Darien and Port Arthur and fought the Russians deep
into Manchuria. Admiral Togo defeated Russia in the dramatic
Battle of Tsushima Straits and secured Japan's status as a
world class military power. Meanwhile, as King Kojong gave
Japan a stronger economic hold over Korea, America and Great
Britain bargained away Korea's freedom to protect themselves
from the rising power of Japan.
[ The Protectorate ]
The Portsmouth
Peace Conference insured Japan's dominant position in Korea
and East Asia. Unhindered by outside forces, Japan expanded
and solidified its control over Korea. The Protectorate Treaty
of 1905 gave Japan full authority over Korean foreign relations
and placed the peninsula under the administration of the Japanese
Residency-General. The West ignored Korean pleas for help
against Japan. As Japan tightened its grip, Koreans resisted
Japanese regulations and reforms. Korean exiles and numerous
anti- Japanese guerilla groups formed to continue the struggle
for independence.
[ The Annexation Agreement ]
Korea's
Prime Minister collaborated in the annexation of Korea and
signed the annexation agreement with Japan. The Japanese forced
the abdication of the King, ended the Yi Dynasty, and took
control of Korea under the new regime of a military Governor-General.
Japanese efforts to subordinate Korea in thought, word and
deed led to striking measures designed to forever erase Korea's
heritage. Japanese merchants and industry began an expanded
"economic" invasion of Korea. Thousands of Koreans
joined anti-Japanese guerilla movements in northern Korea,
southern Manchuria and the Russian Maritime Territory as Japan
proceeded to exploit the Korean economy and its natural resources
to support its continued economic growth.
[ The Rise of Nationalism ]
The rise
of Japanese militarism and imperialism threatened the future
of East Asia. One side effect of World War I was the birth
of a sense of nationalism in Asia. Korean exile groups moved
against Japan through diplomatic efforts and the use of armed
force. President Wilson's Fourteen Points and the perceived
impact of Russia's Bolshevik Revolution contributed to the
spread of nationalism and gave oppressed nations a sense of
hope for freedom. A resurgent Korean independence movement,
encouraged in part by the rapid spread of Asian communism,
triggered major nationwide demonstrations for freedom.
[ The Rape of Korea ]
Japan
placed stringent economic demands on Korea and dominated its
economy, forcing many Koreans into poverty. As Korea became
a captive market for the Japanese economy, the exploitation
of Korea's natural resources and labor force continued unabated.
The activities of anti-Japanese Korean guerrillas in Manchuria
and the many fragmented attempts of Korean exiles to rid Korea
of the Japanese kept the hope for freedom alive. Korean students,
disturbed over the state of affairs in the Korean education
system, took the lead in the independence movement against
Japan.
[ The Road to War ]
Russian
communism took root in China at the same time the Chinese
Nationalist movement began gathering strength in southern
China. The emergence of General Chiang Kai-shek and the Kuomintang
signaled the start of a nationalist revolution in China and
a rising conflict between the Nationalists and the Communists.
Japanese suspicions regarding these developments prompted
Japan to turn towards war in China. After China and Japan
clashed over the status of Manchuria, the Mukden Incident
opened Japan's push toward the conquest of China. Japan rebuffed
a League of Nations' attempt to settle the matter, established
the puppet state of Manchukuo, and turned its eyes toward
the heart of China.
[ Exploitation ]
Japan
expanded into Manchuria and began the exploitation of its
vast wealth. The increased Japanese influence over the Korean
economy intensified Korean resistance to occupation. Korea's
living standard dropped dramatically and the country suffered
widespread labor problems. Significant Japanese investments
in Korea led to the development of new industries, the production
of hydroelectric power, mining, the exportation of natural
resources, and the development of Korea's railway system and
seaports. The increased emphasis on the production of war
materiel converted Korea into a wartime economy.
[ World War II ]
The Communists
under Mao Tse-tung secured a foothold in China and declared
war on Japan. Chiang Kai-shek began a civil war against the
Communists and the United States maintained a policy of neutrality
in Asia. Unchallenged by the West, Japan opened hostilities
against China and signed the Triple Alliance with Germany
and Italy. After the Japanese opened the war in the Pacific,
Korean exiles and guerilla organizations in China and Manchuria
joined the war effort against Japan. In Korea, the Government-General
adopted a policy of assimilation. Near the end of the war,
the United States, Great Britain, and the Soviet Union established
the concept of a Korean trusteeship at the Potsdam Conference.
[ A House Divided ]
Russia
advanced into Korea in the remaining weeks of World War II,
a move which forced the hasty division of Korea at the 38th
Parallel. The People's Committee of North Korea was created
under Russian guidance as a national government. Mao Tse-tung
drove the Nationalists out of China and proclaimed the creation
of the People's Republic of China. Japan underwent a massive
social and economic transformation under the aegis of General
Douglas MacArthur. China, the oriental monarchy, had become
a communist state. Japan, once a feudal island nation, had
become a newly-born democracy. Korea an agrarian monarchy
and former Japanese colony had become a divided nation; communist
in the north and a developing democracy in the south. The
stage was set for the Korean War
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