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Four Commanderies of Han

The Four Commanderies of Han (Chinese: 漢四郡; pinyin: Hàn-sìjùn; Korean한사군; Hanja漢四郡; RRHan-sagun) were Chinese commanderies located in the north of the Korean Peninsula and part of the Liaodong Peninsula from around the end of the second century BC through the early 4th AD, for the longest lasting.[1][2] The commanderies were set up to control the populace in the former Gojoseon area as far south as the Han River, with a core area at Lelang near present-day Pyongyang[3] by Emperor Wu of the Han dynasty in early 2nd century BC after his conquest of Wiman Joseon. As such, these commanderies are seen as Chinese colonies by some scholars. Though disputed by North Korean scholars, Western sources generally describe the Lelang Commandery as existing within the Korean peninsula, and extend the rule of the four commanderies as far south as the Han River.[3][4] However, South Korean scholars assumed its administrative areas to Pyongan and Hwanghae provinces.[5]

Four Commanderies of Han

Three of the commanderies fell or retreated westward within a few decades, but the Lelang commandery remained as a center of cultural and economic exchange with successive Chinese dynasties for four centuries. At its administrative center in Lelang, the Chinese built what was in essence a Chinese city where the governor, officials, and merchants, and Chinese colonists lived. Their administration had considerable impact on the life of the native population and ultimately the very fabric of Gojoseon society became eroded.[6] Later, Goguryeo, founded in 37 BCE, began conquering the commanderies and eventually absorbed them into its own territory by the early 4th century AD.[7]

Commanderies edit

Precedents edit

Before the fall of Gojoseon a single commandery, called Canghai Commandery, covered an area in northern Korean peninsula to southern Manchuria. Nan Lü (Hanja: 南閭), who was a monarch of Dongye and a subject of Wiman Joseon, revolted against Ugeo of Gojoseon and then surrendered to the Han dynasty with 280,000 people.[a] The commandery was established following this revolt, however in two years, it was abolished by Gongsun Hong.[8]

Four commanderies edit

Daifang commandery edit

A commandery that was separated out of Lelang Commandery in the later years of its history was named the Daifang Commandery (帶方郡, 대방군, AD 204-220/210 ~ AD 315).[13][14]

History edit

Han dynasty edit

When Gojoseon was defeated in 108 BC, three commanderies were established in its place: Lelang, Lintun, and Zhenfan. In 107 BC, Xuantu Commandery was also established in the place of Gojoseon's ally, Yemaek. In 82 BC, Lintun was absorbed into Xuantu and Zhenfan absorbed into Lelang. In 75 BC, Xuantu moved its capital to Liaodong due to resistance from the native people. Lintun was transferred to Lelang.[10]

Although often depicted as special administrative units within the Han dynasty, excavated records suggest that these commanderies were governed no differently than those in the core regions of the Han.[18] Neighboring Korean powers such as the Jinhan confederacy and Byeonhan confederacy imported goods from Lelang such as mirrors.[11] As indigenous groups started to assume Han culture, a hybrid Lelang culture developed in the 1st and 2nd centuries AD.[18]

Gongsun Du, Kang, Gong, and Yuan edit

Gongsun Du was born in Xiangping (Liaoyang, Liaoning). In his early years, Du's father fled to Xuantu Commandery, where Du became an office runner. Du attracted the support of the governor Gongsun Yu, whose daughter he eventually married. He rose up the ranks of officialdom in Ji Province until he became regional inspector.[19]

Gongsun Du was appointed Administrator of Liaodong Commandery by Dong Zhuo in 189 on the recommendation of Xu Rong. As a result of his lowly origins, Du harbored an intense hatred for the elite landowning class. Once he became administrator, Du carried out his vendetta against the wealthy by publicly flogging to death the Magistrate of Xiangping and extirpating the gentry. Du dominated the northeast and expanded into the territory of Goguryeo and the Wuhuan. When Cao Cao attempted to bestow titles upon Du, he rejected them and proclaimed himself king. Du died in 204 and was succeeded by his son, Gongsun Kang.[20][19] In 204 Kang expanded into Goguryeo and created Daifang Commandery. When the Wuhuan were defeated by Cao Cao in 207, Yuan Shang, Yuan Xi, and the Wuhuan leaders Louban and Supuyan fled to Kang. Kang killed them and sent their heads to Cao Cao.[21]

In 208, Kang sent aid to Balgi in support of his claim to the Goguryeo throne.[22] According to the 12th century chronicle Samguk Sagi, the invasion was defeated by Gyesu, younger brother of Sansang of Goguryeo.[23] However this is not reported in the Chinese records, which state that the invasion was a success and Balgi was settled in conquered territory. K.H.J. Gardiner says that this is because the Samguk Sagi sought to reverse the reality of defeat in a number of instances and questioned both the existence of Gyesu and his victory.[22] Gongsun Kang took some territory in 209 and Goguryeo was forced to move its capital further east to the Yalu rivery valley near Hwando.[24][25][26] Kang died in 220 when his children were too young to rule, so his brother Gongsun Gong succeeded him. Gong maintained his independence, albeit while accepting titles issued by Cao Pi. Gong became ill and was replaced by his nephew Gongsun Yuan in 228.[27] Yuan ruled independently until Sima Yi invaded in 238 and annexed his territory.[28]

Goguryeo re-established in its former territory and established dominance over the tribes at the mouth of the Yalu River sometime before 233. In 238, Goguryeo allied with Cao Wei to overthrow the Liaodong regime.[29][30]

Cao Wei, Jin, and Xianbei edit

Goguryeo raided the Xuantu Commandery in 242. In retaliation, Cao Wei invaded Goguryeo from 244 to 245. The Wei general Guanqiu Jian sacked the Goguryeo capital of Hwando, sent its king fleeing, and broke the tributary relationships between Goguryeo and the other tribes of Korea that formed much of Goguryeo's economy. Although the king evaded capture and eventually settled in a new capital, Goguryeo was reduced to such insignificance that for half a century there was no mention of the state in Chinese historical texts.[30][29]

Afterwards, the Lelang, Daifang, and Xuantu commanderies were ruled by Cao Wei, the Jin dynasty, and the Murong Xianbei until they were conquered by Goguryeo in the early 300s.[11]

Goguryeo edit

Lelang Commandery was ruled by the Jin dynasty (266–420) until 313. Due to civil war, the Jin dynasty was unable to send officials to govern its territory in northern Korea. The leaders of Liaodong and Lelang led over one thousand households to break away from Jin and submitted to the Xianbei warlord of Former Yan Murong Hui. Murong Hui relocated the remnants of the commandery to the west within Liaodong. Goguryeo attacked and annexed the commandery in 313.[31][32] Daifang was conquered in 314-315 and Xuantu in 319.[11][14] After the collapse of the Han commanderies, Goguryeo accepted émigrés of Chinese origin to strengthen their control over the region.[18]

K.H.J. Gardiner argues that even though the commanderies had been conquered by Goguryeo, it did not rule Lelang directly until after the death of Dong Shou in 357.[33] Dong Shou was a general from Former Yan who fled to Goguryeo in 336 and was given a position in the former territory of Lelang.[34]

Revisionism edit

In the North Korean academic community and some parts of the South Korean academic community, the Han dynasty's annexation of parts of the Korean peninsula have been denied. Proponents of this revisionist theory claim that the Han Commanderies (and Gojoseon) actually existed outside of the Korean peninsula, and place them somewhere in Liaodong Peninsula, in modern-day China, instead.[35][36][37]

The stigmatization of colonial Japanese historical and archaeological findings in Korea as imperialist forgeries owes in part to those scholars' discovery and promotion of the Lelang Commandery—by which the Han dynasty administered territory near Pyongyang—and insistence that this Chinese commandery had an impact on the development of Korean civilization.[38] Until the North Korean challenge, it was universally accepted that Lelang was a commandery established by Emperor Wu of Han after he defeated Gojoseon in 108 BCE.[39] To deal with the Han Dynasty archeological remnants such as tombs, jewelry and laquerware North Korean scholars have reinterpreted them as the remains of Gojoseon or Goguryeo.[38] For those artifacts, whose artistic style is undeniably originating in Han China and contrasts the previous Gojoseon Bronze dagger culture, they propose that they were introduced through trade and international contact, or were forgeries, and "should not by any means be construed as a basis to deny the Korean characteristics of the artifacts".[40] The North Koreans also say that there were two Lelangs, and that the Han actually administered a Lelang on the Liao River on the Liaodong Peninsula, while Pyongyang was ruled by an "independent Korean state" called Nangnang, which existed between the 2nd century BCE until the 3rd century CE.[39][41] The traditional view of Lelang, according to them, was expanded by Chinese chauvinists and Japanese imperialists.[39]

While promoted by the academic community of North Korea, and supported by certain writers and historians in South Korea, this theory is not recognized in the mainstream academic circles of South Korea, the United States, China, and Japan.[38][42][43][44][45] Most Korean scholars in the Goryeo and Joseon dynasties considered the location of Lelang county somewhere around today's Pyongyang area based on the Korean history record Samguk Yusa. There were also scholars who believe that Lelang was in Liaodong, such as Bak Ji-won, a Joseon dynasty silhak scholar who had conducted field research in Manchuria during his visit to Qing in 1780. Bak claimed that the location of commandries were actually in the Liaodong area in The Jehol Diary.[46][better source needed] Ri Ji Rin (Lee Ji Rin), a respected North Korean historian who obtained his Ph.D. in history from China's top university Peking University in 1961, in his published Research on Ancient Korea suggests that based on the initial records of Chinese texts and archaeological findings in Liaodong, the Han commanderies were located in Liaodong Peninsula.[47] Another historian from South Korea, Yoon Nae-hyun also published a similar research in 1987, suggesting the Han commanderies were not in Korean peninsula.[48]

Maps edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Book of the Later Han, Treatise on the Dongyi (元朔元年武帝年也. 濊君南閭等【集解】 惠棟曰, 顏籀云, 南閭者, 薉君之名.畔右渠, 率二十八萬口詣遼東內屬, 武帝以其地爲蒼海郡, 數年乃罷.)

References edit

  1. ^ Dane Alston. "Contested domains: The Poetic Dialogue between a Ming Emperor and a Chosŏn Envoy". Retrieved 2 April 2012.
  2. ^ Lim Jie-Hyun. "The Antagonistic Complicity of Nationalisms". Retrieved 2 April 2012.
  3. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 25 June 2015. Retrieved 15 June 2015.
  4. ^ Carter J. Eckert, el., "Korea, Old and New: History", 1990, pp. 13
  5. ^ Yi Pyong-do, 《The studies of the Korean history》 Part 2, Researches of problems of the Han commanderies, PYbook, 1976, 148 p
  6. ^ Eckert, Carter J.; el. (1990). Korea, Old and New: A History. Korea Institute, Harvard University. p. 14. ISBN 978-0962771309.
  7. ^ 'Ki-Baik Lee', "A New History of Korea", 1984 Harvard University Press, page 24'
  8. ^ 창해군 한국민족문화대백과 Encyclopedia of Korean Culture
  9. ^ 《前漢書》卷二十八〈地理志〉第八:"樂浪郡,武帝元封三年開。莽曰樂鮮。屬幽州。戶六萬二千八百一十二,口四十萬六千七百四十八。有雲鄣。縣二十五:朝鮮;□邯;浿水,水西至增地入海,莽曰樂鮮亭;含資,帶水西至帶方入海;黏蟬;遂成;增地,莽曰增土;帶方;駟望;海冥,莽曰海桓;列口;長岑;屯有;昭明,高部都尉治;鏤方;提奚;渾彌;吞列,分黎山,列水所出,西至黏蟬入海,行八百二十里;東暆;不而,東部都尉治;蠶台;華麗;邪頭昧;前莫;夫租。"Wikisource: the Book of Han, volume 28-2
  10. ^ a b c Park 2013, p. 203.
  11. ^ a b c d Park 2013, p. 204.
  12. ^ 玄菟郡,武帝元封四年開。高句驪,莽曰下句驪。屬幽州。戶四萬五千六。口二十二萬一千八百四十五。縣三:高句驪,遼山,遼水所出,西南至遼隊入大遼水。又有南蘇水,西北經塞外。上殷台,莽曰下殷。西蓋馬。馬訾水西北入鹽難水,西南至西安平入海,過郡二,行二千一百里。莽曰玄菟亭。Wikisource: the Book of Han, volume 28-2
  13. ^ Barnes 2001, p. 40.
  14. ^ a b (PDF). web.archive.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 October 2011. Retrieved 12 April 2024.
  15. ^ 通典 邊防 朝鮮 武帝元封三年、遣樓船將軍楊僕從齊浮渤海、兵五萬、左將軍荀彘出遼東、討之。朝鮮人相與殺王右渠来降。遂以朝鮮為真蕃、臨屯、楽浪、玄菟四郡。今悉為東夷之地。昭帝時罷臨屯、真蕃以并楽浪、玄菟。
  16. ^ 《三國志》卷30 魏書 烏丸鮮卑東夷傳 穢 自單單大山領以西屬樂浪、自領以東七縣、都尉主之、皆以濊為民。後省都尉、封其渠帥為侯、今不耐濊皆其種也。漢末更屬句麗。Wikisource: the Records of Three Kingdoms, volume 30
  17. ^ 《後漢書》卷85 東夷列傳 濊 至元封三年、滅朝鮮、分置樂浪・臨屯・玄菟・真番四郡。至昭帝始元五年、罷臨屯・真番、以并樂浪・玄菟。玄菟復徙居句驪、自單單大領已東、沃沮・濊貊悉屬樂浪。後以境土廣遠、復分領東七縣、置樂浪東部都尉。the Book of Later Han, volume 85
  18. ^ a b c Park 2013, p. 210.
  19. ^ a b "Gongsun Du 公孫度, Gongsun Kang 公孫康, Gongsun Gong 公孫恭, Gongsun Yuan 公孫淵 (www.chinaknowledge.de)".
  20. ^ de Crespigny 2007, p. 266.
  21. ^ de Crespigny 2007, p. 268.
  22. ^ a b de Crespigny 2007, p. 385.
  23. ^ "History: King Sansang". KBS. March 2015. Retrieved 30 August 2023.
  24. ^ Barnes 2001, p. 22-23.
  25. ^ de Crespigny 2007, p. 988-989.
  26. ^ Chen Shou. Records of the Three Kingdoms. Vol. 30. 建安中,公孫康出軍擊之,破其國,焚燒邑落。拔奇怨爲兄而不得立,與涓奴加各將下戶三萬餘口詣康降,還住沸流水。
  27. ^ de Crespigny 2007, p. 267.
  28. ^ de Crespigny 2007, p. 271.
  29. ^ a b Barnes 2001, p. 44-45.
  30. ^ a b Byington, Mark E. Journal of Northeast Asian History volume 4, number 1 (June 2007):93.
  31. ^ Barnes 2001, p. 46.
  32. ^ Kwon, O-Jung. "The History of Lelang Commandery". The Han Commanderies in Early Korean History (Cambridge: Harvard University, 2013), p.96-98
  33. ^ Barnes 2001, p. 59, 151.
  34. ^ . Archived from the original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 14 April 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  35. ^ . ngonews. 24 December 2015. Archived from the original on 19 September 2016.
  36. ^ "요서 vs 평양... 한무제가 세운 낙랑군 위치 놓고 열띤 토론". Segye Ilbo. 21 August 2016. from the original on 13 April 2017.
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  38. ^ a b c Pai, Hyung Il (2000), Constructing "Korean" Origins: A Critical Review of Archaeology, Historiography, and Racial Myth in Korean State Formation Theories, Harvard University Asia Center, pp. 127–129, ISBN 9780674002449
  39. ^ a b c Ch'oe, Yŏng-ho (1980), "An Outline History of Korean Historiography", Korean Studies, 4: 23–25, doi:10.1353/ks.1980.0003, S2CID 162859304
  40. ^ Ch'oe (1980), p. 509
  41. ^ Armstrong, Charles K. (1995), "Centering the Periphery: Manchurian Exile(s) and the North Korean State", Korean Studies, 19: 11–12, doi:10.1353/ks.1995.0017, S2CID 154659765
  42. ^ United States Congress (2016). North Korea: A Country Study. Nova Science Publishers. p. 6. ISBN 978-1590334430.
  43. ^ Connor, Edgar V. (2003). Korea: Current Issues and Historical Background. Nova Science Publishers. p. 112. ISBN 978-1590334430.
  44. ^ Kim, Jinwung (2012). A History of Korea: From "Land of the Morning Calm" to States in Conflict. Indiana University Press. p. 18. ISBN 978-0253000248.
  45. ^ Lee, Peter H. (1993). Sourcebook of Korean Civilization. Columbia University Press. p. 227. ISBN 978-0231079129.
  46. ^ 熱河日記 卷一 渡江錄 [The Jehol Diary Chapter 1. Dogangnok - 高氏境土之在遼東者。唐雖得之。不能有而復歸之高氏。則平壤本在遼東。或爲寄名與浿水。時有前郤耳。漢樂浪郡治在遼東者。非今平壤]. Wiki E-text.
  47. ^ "CHINA'S IMPACT ON KOREAN PENINSULA UNIFICATION AND QUESTIONS FOR THE SENATE". U S Government Information.
  48. ^ True Understanding of Old Choson." Korea Journal 27:12 (December 1987): 23-40

Bibliography edit

  • Barnes, Gina L. (2001), State Formation in Korea: Historical and Archaeological Perspectives, Routledge
  • de Crespigny, Rafe (2007), A Biographical Dictionary of Later Han to the Three Kingdoms, Brill
  • Park, Jun-hyeong (2013), The Han Commanderies in Early Korean History: A Reconsideration of the Han Commanderies from a Broader East Asian Perspective

four, commanderies, chinese, 漢四郡, pinyin, hàn, sìjùn, korean, 한사군, hanja, 漢四郡, sagun, were, chinese, commanderies, located, north, korean, peninsula, part, liaodong, peninsula, from, around, second, century, through, early, longest, lasting, commanderies, were. The Four Commanderies of Han Chinese 漢四郡 pinyin Han sijun Korean 한사군 Hanja 漢四郡 RR Han sagun were Chinese commanderies located in the north of the Korean Peninsula and part of the Liaodong Peninsula from around the end of the second century BC through the early 4th AD for the longest lasting 1 2 The commanderies were set up to control the populace in the former Gojoseon area as far south as the Han River with a core area at Lelang near present day Pyongyang 3 by Emperor Wu of the Han dynasty in early 2nd century BC after his conquest of Wiman Joseon As such these commanderies are seen as Chinese colonies by some scholars Though disputed by North Korean scholars Western sources generally describe the Lelang Commandery as existing within the Korean peninsula and extend the rule of the four commanderies as far south as the Han River 3 4 However South Korean scholars assumed its administrative areas to Pyongan and Hwanghae provinces 5 Four Commanderies of Han Three of the commanderies fell or retreated westward within a few decades but the Lelang commandery remained as a center of cultural and economic exchange with successive Chinese dynasties for four centuries At its administrative center in Lelang the Chinese built what was in essence a Chinese city where the governor officials and merchants and Chinese colonists lived Their administration had considerable impact on the life of the native population and ultimately the very fabric of Gojoseon society became eroded 6 Later Goguryeo founded in 37 BCE began conquering the commanderies and eventually absorbed them into its own territory by the early 4th century AD 7 Contents 1 Commanderies 1 1 Precedents 1 2 Four commanderies 1 3 Daifang commandery 2 History 2 1 Han dynasty 2 2 Gongsun Du Kang Gong and Yuan 2 3 Cao Wei Jin and Xianbei 2 4 Goguryeo 3 Revisionism 4 Maps 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 BibliographyCommanderies editPrecedents edit Before the fall of Gojoseon a single commandery called Canghai Commandery covered an area in northern Korean peninsula to southern Manchuria Nan Lu Hanja 南閭 who was a monarch of Dongye and a subject of Wiman Joseon revolted against Ugeo of Gojoseon and then surrendered to the Han dynasty with 280 000 people a The commandery was established following this revolt however in two years it was abolished by Gongsun Hong 8 Four commanderies edit Lelang Commandery 樂浪郡 낙랑군 락랑군 BC 108 AD 313 9 25 prefectures 62 812 households population of 406 748 in 2 CE Lintun Commandery 臨屯郡 임둔군 BC 107 BC 82 absorbed into Xuantu 10 Xuantu Commandery 玄菟郡 현도군 BC 107 AD 319 11 12 3 prefectures 45 006 households population of 221 845 in 2 CE Zhenfan Commandery 眞番郡 진번군 BC 107 BC 82 absorbed into Lelang 10 Daifang commandery edit A commandery that was separated out of Lelang Commandery in the later years of its history was named the Daifang Commandery 帶方郡 대방군 AD 204 220 210 AD 315 13 14 Other descriptions the Tongdian 15 the Records of Three Kingdoms 16 the Book of Later Han 17 History editHan dynasty edit When Gojoseon was defeated in 108 BC three commanderies were established in its place Lelang Lintun and Zhenfan In 107 BC Xuantu Commandery was also established in the place of Gojoseon s ally Yemaek In 82 BC Lintun was absorbed into Xuantu and Zhenfan absorbed into Lelang In 75 BC Xuantu moved its capital to Liaodong due to resistance from the native people Lintun was transferred to Lelang 10 Although often depicted as special administrative units within the Han dynasty excavated records suggest that these commanderies were governed no differently than those in the core regions of the Han 18 Neighboring Korean powers such as the Jinhan confederacy and Byeonhan confederacy imported goods from Lelang such as mirrors 11 As indigenous groups started to assume Han culture a hybrid Lelang culture developed in the 1st and 2nd centuries AD 18 Gongsun Du Kang Gong and Yuan edit Gongsun Du was born in Xiangping Liaoyang Liaoning In his early years Du s father fled to Xuantu Commandery where Du became an office runner Du attracted the support of the governor Gongsun Yu whose daughter he eventually married He rose up the ranks of officialdom in Ji Province until he became regional inspector 19 Gongsun Du was appointed Administrator of Liaodong Commandery by Dong Zhuo in 189 on the recommendation of Xu Rong As a result of his lowly origins Du harbored an intense hatred for the elite landowning class Once he became administrator Du carried out his vendetta against the wealthy by publicly flogging to death the Magistrate of Xiangping and extirpating the gentry Du dominated the northeast and expanded into the territory of Goguryeo and the Wuhuan When Cao Cao attempted to bestow titles upon Du he rejected them and proclaimed himself king Du died in 204 and was succeeded by his son Gongsun Kang 20 19 In 204 Kang expanded into Goguryeo and created Daifang Commandery When the Wuhuan were defeated by Cao Cao in 207 Yuan Shang Yuan Xi and the Wuhuan leaders Louban and Supuyan fled to Kang Kang killed them and sent their heads to Cao Cao 21 In 208 Kang sent aid to Balgi in support of his claim to the Goguryeo throne 22 According to the 12th century chronicle Samguk Sagi the invasion was defeated by Gyesu younger brother of Sansang of Goguryeo 23 However this is not reported in the Chinese records which state that the invasion was a success and Balgi was settled in conquered territory K H J Gardiner says that this is because the Samguk Sagi sought to reverse the reality of defeat in a number of instances and questioned both the existence of Gyesu and his victory 22 Gongsun Kang took some territory in 209 and Goguryeo was forced to move its capital further east to the Yalu rivery valley near Hwando 24 25 26 Kang died in 220 when his children were too young to rule so his brother Gongsun Gong succeeded him Gong maintained his independence albeit while accepting titles issued by Cao Pi Gong became ill and was replaced by his nephew Gongsun Yuan in 228 27 Yuan ruled independently until Sima Yi invaded in 238 and annexed his territory 28 Goguryeo re established in its former territory and established dominance over the tribes at the mouth of the Yalu River sometime before 233 In 238 Goguryeo allied with Cao Wei to overthrow the Liaodong regime 29 30 Cao Wei Jin and Xianbei edit Goguryeo raided the Xuantu Commandery in 242 In retaliation Cao Wei invaded Goguryeo from 244 to 245 The Wei general Guanqiu Jian sacked the Goguryeo capital of Hwando sent its king fleeing and broke the tributary relationships between Goguryeo and the other tribes of Korea that formed much of Goguryeo s economy Although the king evaded capture and eventually settled in a new capital Goguryeo was reduced to such insignificance that for half a century there was no mention of the state in Chinese historical texts 30 29 Afterwards the Lelang Daifang and Xuantu commanderies were ruled by Cao Wei the Jin dynasty and the Murong Xianbei until they were conquered by Goguryeo in the early 300s 11 Goguryeo edit Lelang Commandery was ruled by the Jin dynasty 266 420 until 313 Due to civil war the Jin dynasty was unable to send officials to govern its territory in northern Korea The leaders of Liaodong and Lelang led over one thousand households to break away from Jin and submitted to the Xianbei warlord of Former Yan Murong Hui Murong Hui relocated the remnants of the commandery to the west within Liaodong Goguryeo attacked and annexed the commandery in 313 31 32 Daifang was conquered in 314 315 and Xuantu in 319 11 14 After the collapse of the Han commanderies Goguryeo accepted emigres of Chinese origin to strengthen their control over the region 18 K H J Gardiner argues that even though the commanderies had been conquered by Goguryeo it did not rule Lelang directly until after the death of Dong Shou in 357 33 Dong Shou was a general from Former Yan who fled to Goguryeo in 336 and was given a position in the former territory of Lelang 34 Revisionism editIn the North Korean academic community and some parts of the South Korean academic community the Han dynasty s annexation of parts of the Korean peninsula have been denied Proponents of this revisionist theory claim that the Han Commanderies and Gojoseon actually existed outside of the Korean peninsula and place them somewhere in Liaodong Peninsula in modern day China instead 35 36 37 The stigmatization of colonial Japanese historical and archaeological findings in Korea as imperialist forgeries owes in part to those scholars discovery and promotion of the Lelang Commandery by which the Han dynasty administered territory near Pyongyang and insistence that this Chinese commandery had an impact on the development of Korean civilization 38 Until the North Korean challenge it was universally accepted that Lelang was a commandery established by Emperor Wu of Han after he defeated Gojoseon in 108 BCE 39 To deal with the Han Dynasty archeological remnants such as tombs jewelry and laquerware North Korean scholars have reinterpreted them as the remains of Gojoseon or Goguryeo 38 For those artifacts whose artistic style is undeniably originating in Han China and contrasts the previous Gojoseon Bronze dagger culture they propose that they were introduced through trade and international contact or were forgeries and should not by any means be construed as a basis to deny the Korean characteristics of the artifacts 40 The North Koreans also say that there were two Lelangs and that the Han actually administered a Lelang on the Liao River on the Liaodong Peninsula while Pyongyang was ruled by an independent Korean state called Nangnang which existed between the 2nd century BCE until the 3rd century CE 39 41 The traditional view of Lelang according to them was expanded by Chinese chauvinists and Japanese imperialists 39 While promoted by the academic community of North Korea and supported by certain writers and historians in South Korea this theory is not recognized in the mainstream academic circles of South Korea the United States China and Japan 38 42 43 44 45 Most Korean scholars in the Goryeo and Joseon dynasties considered the location of Lelang county somewhere around today s Pyongyang area based on the Korean history record Samguk Yusa There were also scholars who believe that Lelang was in Liaodong such as Bak Ji won a Joseon dynasty silhak scholar who had conducted field research in Manchuria during his visit to Qing in 1780 Bak claimed that the location of commandries were actually in the Liaodong area in The Jehol Diary 46 better source needed Ri Ji Rin Lee Ji Rin a respected North Korean historian who obtained his Ph D in history from China s top university Peking University in 1961 in his published Research on Ancient Korea suggests that based on the initial records of Chinese texts and archaeological findings in Liaodong the Han commanderies were located in Liaodong Peninsula 47 Another historian from South Korea Yoon Nae hyun also published a similar research in 1987 suggesting the Han commanderies were not in Korean peninsula 48 Maps edit nbsp Korea prior to 108 BC Wiman Joseon before it was destroyed by the Han dynasty nbsp Han Dynasty destroys Wiman Joseon in 108 BC and establishes the Four Commanderies nbsp Four Commanderies of Han in 1st century AD nbsp Four Commanderies of Han in 3rd century AD nbsp Korea in 315 Goguryeo recovered the former Gojoseon territory See also editHan conquest of Gojoseon Daifang Commandery Canghai Commandery Wiman JoseonNotes edit Book of the Later Han Treatise on the Dongyi 元朔元年武帝年也 濊君南閭等 集解 惠棟曰 顏籀云 南閭者 薉君之名 畔右渠 率二十八萬口詣遼東內屬 武帝以其地爲蒼海郡 數年乃罷 References edit Dane Alston Contested domains The Poetic Dialogue between a Ming Emperor and a Chosŏn Envoy Retrieved 2 April 2012 Lim Jie Hyun The Antagonistic Complicity of Nationalisms Retrieved 2 April 2012 a b Early Korea Archived from the original on 25 June 2015 Retrieved 15 June 2015 Carter J Eckert el Korea Old and New History 1990 pp 13 Yi Pyong do The studies of the Korean history Part 2 Researches of problems of the Han commanderies PYbook 1976 148 p Eckert Carter J el 1990 Korea Old and New A History Korea Institute Harvard University p 14 ISBN 978 0962771309 Ki Baik Lee A New History of Korea 1984 Harvard University Press page 24 창해군 한국민족문화대백과 Encyclopedia of Korean Culture 前漢書 卷二十八 地理志 第八 樂浪郡 武帝元封三年開 莽曰樂鮮 屬幽州 戶六萬二千八百一十二 口四十萬六千七百四十八 有雲鄣 縣二十五 朝鮮 邯 浿水 水西至增地入海 莽曰樂鮮亭 含資 帶水西至帶方入海 黏蟬 遂成 增地 莽曰增土 帶方 駟望 海冥 莽曰海桓 列口 長岑 屯有 昭明 高部都尉治 鏤方 提奚 渾彌 吞列 分黎山 列水所出 西至黏蟬入海 行八百二十里 東暆 不而 東部都尉治 蠶台 華麗 邪頭昧 前莫 夫租 Wikisource the Book of Han volume 28 2 a b c Park 2013 p 203 a b c d Park 2013 p 204 玄菟郡 武帝元封四年開 高句驪 莽曰下句驪 屬幽州 戶四萬五千六 口二十二萬一千八百四十五 縣三 高句驪 遼山 遼水所出 西南至遼隊入大遼水 又有南蘇水 西北經塞外 上殷台 莽曰下殷 西蓋馬 馬訾水西北入鹽難水 西南至西安平入海 過郡二 行二千一百里 莽曰玄菟亭 Wikisource the Book of Han volume 28 2 Barnes 2001 p 40 a b Control or Conquer PDF web archive org Archived from the original PDF on 5 October 2011 Retrieved 12 April 2024 通典 邊防 朝鮮 武帝元封三年 遣樓船將軍楊僕從齊浮渤海 兵五萬 左將軍荀彘出遼東 討之 朝鮮人相與殺王右渠来降 遂以朝鮮為真蕃 臨屯 楽浪 玄菟四郡 今悉為東夷之地 昭帝時罷臨屯 真蕃以并楽浪 玄菟 三國志 卷30 魏書 烏丸鮮卑東夷傳 穢 自單單大山領以西屬樂浪 自領以東七縣 都尉主之 皆以濊為民 後省都尉 封其渠帥為侯 今不耐濊皆其種也 漢末更屬句麗 Wikisource the Records of Three Kingdoms volume 30 後漢書 卷85 東夷列傳 濊 至元封三年 滅朝鮮 分置樂浪 臨屯 玄菟 真番四郡 至昭帝始元五年 罷臨屯 真番 以并樂浪 玄菟 玄菟復徙居句驪 自單單大領已東 沃沮 濊貊悉屬樂浪 後以境土廣遠 復分領東七縣 置樂浪東部都尉 the Book of Later Han volume 85 a b c Park 2013 p 210 a b Gongsun Du 公孫度 Gongsun Kang 公孫康 Gongsun Gong 公孫恭 Gongsun Yuan 公孫淵 www chinaknowledge de de Crespigny 2007 p 266 de Crespigny 2007 p 268 a b de Crespigny 2007 p 385 History King Sansang KBS March 2015 Retrieved 30 August 2023 Barnes 2001 p 22 23 de Crespigny 2007 p 988 989 Chen Shou Records of the Three Kingdoms Vol 30 建安中 公孫康出軍擊之 破其國 焚燒邑落 拔奇怨爲兄而不得立 與涓奴加各將下戶三萬餘口詣康降 還住沸流水 de Crespigny 2007 p 267 de Crespigny 2007 p 271 a b Barnes 2001 p 44 45 a b Byington Mark E Control or Conquer Koguryǒ s Relations with States and Peoples in Manchuria Journal of Northeast Asian History volume 4 number 1 June 2007 93 Barnes 2001 p 46 Kwon O Jung The History of Lelang Commandery The Han Commanderies in Early Korean History Cambridge Harvard University 2013 p 96 98 Barnes 2001 p 59 151 Archived copy Archived from the original on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 14 April 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link 매국사학의 몸통들아 공개토론장으로 나와라 ngonews 24 December 2015 Archived from the original on 19 September 2016 요서 vs 평양 한무제가 세운 낙랑군 위치 놓고 열띤 토론 Segye Ilbo 21 August 2016 Archived from the original on 13 April 2017 갈석산 동쪽 요서도 고조선 땅 vs 고고학 증거와 불일치 The Dong a Ilbo 22 August 2016 Retrieved 14 April 2017 a b c Pai Hyung Il 2000 Constructing Korean Origins A Critical Review of Archaeology Historiography and Racial Myth in Korean State Formation Theories Harvard University Asia Center pp 127 129 ISBN 9780674002449 a b c Ch oe Yŏng ho 1980 An Outline History of Korean Historiography Korean Studies 4 23 25 doi 10 1353 ks 1980 0003 S2CID 162859304 Ch oe 1980 p 509 Armstrong Charles K 1995 Centering the Periphery Manchurian Exile s and the North Korean State Korean Studies 19 11 12 doi 10 1353 ks 1995 0017 S2CID 154659765 United States Congress 2016 North Korea A Country Study Nova Science Publishers p 6 ISBN 978 1590334430 Connor Edgar V 2003 Korea Current Issues and Historical Background Nova Science Publishers p 112 ISBN 978 1590334430 Kim Jinwung 2012 A History of Korea From Land of the Morning Calm to States in Conflict Indiana University Press p 18 ISBN 978 0253000248 Lee Peter H 1993 Sourcebook of Korean Civilization Columbia University Press p 227 ISBN 978 0231079129 熱河日記 卷一 渡江錄 The Jehol Diary Chapter 1 Dogangnok 高氏境土之在遼東者 唐雖得之 不能有而復歸之高氏 則平壤本在遼東 或爲寄名與浿水 時有前郤耳 漢樂浪郡治在遼東者 非今平壤 Wiki E text CHINA S IMPACT ON KOREAN PENINSULA UNIFICATION AND QUESTIONS FOR THE SENATE U S Government Information True Understanding of Old Choson Korea Journal 27 12 December 1987 23 40Bibliography editBarnes Gina L 2001 State Formation in Korea Historical and Archaeological Perspectives Routledge de Crespigny Rafe 2007 A Biographical Dictionary of Later Han to the Three Kingdoms Brill Park Jun hyeong 2013 The Han Commanderies in Early Korean History A Reconsideration of the Han Commanderies from a Broader East Asian Perspective Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Four Commanderies of Han amp oldid 1220983175, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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