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Goryeo–Khitan War

The Goryeo–Khitan War (Chinese: 遼麗戰爭; Korean고려-거란 전쟁) was a series of 10th- and 11th-century conflicts between the Goryeo dynasty of Korea and the Khitan-led Liao dynasty of China near the present-day border between China and North Korea.

Goryeo–Khitan War

Map of the two dynasties, Liao Dynasty in green, Goryeo in white
Date993,[1] 1010,[2] 1018–1019[3]
Location
Result Goryeo victory[4][5][6][7][8]
Belligerents
Goryeo dynasty Liao dynasty
Commanders and leaders
Hyeonjong of Goryeo
Kang Kam-ch'an
So Hui
Kang Cho 
Yang Kyu 
Emperor Shengzong
Xiao Hengde
Xiao Xunning [zh]
Xiao Paiya [zh]
Yelü Pennu
Strength
Second conflict: Approximately 300,000
Third conflict: Approximately 208,000

First conflict: Approximately 800,000[9][10]

Second conflict: Approximately 400,000[9][11]
Third conflict: Approximately 100,000

Goryeo–Khitan relations edit

On the Korean Peninsula, Silla was succeeded by Goryeo in 918. The Liao dynasty conquered Balhae in 926, with Balhae refugees forced to migrate by the Liao Empire,[12] a portion of its people including the ruling class moved south and joined the newly founded Goryeo dynasty.[13][14]

When Balhae fell to the Khitan a few years later, King Taejo embraced refugees from Balhae and pursued a policy of northern expansion (possibly enabled by the absence of a fellow Korean kingdom in what was once Goguryeo territory).[15] In 942, the Khitan sent another 50 camels to Goryeo, but this time Taejo refused the gift, exiled the envoy to an island, and had the camels starved to death.[16]

First Invasion edit

In 993, the Liao dynasty invaded Goryeo's northwestern border with an army that the Liao commander claimed to number 800,000.[9][10] After a military stalemate,[17] negotiations began between the two states, producing the following concessions: Firstly, Goryeo formally ended all relations with the Song dynasty, agreed to pay tribute to Liao and to adopt Liao's calendar.[18][19][20] Secondly, after negotiations led by the Goryeo diplomat So Hui, Goryeo formally incorporated the land between the border of Liao and Goryeo up to the Yalu River, which was at the time occupied by troublesome Jurchen tribes, citing that in the past the land belonged to Goguryeo.[21][22][23] With this agreement, the Liao forces withdrew. However, in spite of the settlement, Goryeo continued to communicate with Song,[24] having strengthened its defenses by building fortresses in the newly gained northern territories.[25]

Second Invasion edit

In 1009, General Kang Cho of Goryeo led a coup against King Mokjong, killing him and establishing military rule.[26] The Liao dynasty attacked with 400,000 troops in 1010, claiming to avenge the murdered Mokjong.[27][28] Kang Cho blocked the Liao's first attack, but he was defeated in the second one and was executed.[9][29] King Hyeonjong of Goryeo was forced to flee the capital, which was sacked and burnt by the Liao,[28][30][31] to Naju temporarily.[9] Unable to establish a foothold and to avoid a counterattack by the regrouped Goryeo armies, the Liao forces withdrew.[32] Afterward, the Goryeo king sued for peace, but the Liao emperor demanded that he come in person and also cede key border areas to him; the Goryeo court refused the demands, resulting in a decade of hostility between the two nations, during which both sides fortified their borders in preparation of war.[32][30] Liao attacked Goryeo in 1015, 1016, and 1017, but the results were indecisive.[33]

Third Invasion edit

In 1018, Liao assembled an army of 100,000 troops to invade Goryeo. In preparation, General Kang Kam-ch'an ordered a stream to the east of Heunghwajin to be dammed. When the Liao troops crossed the Yalu River, Kang Kam-ch'an opened the dam and attacked the enemy troops with 12,000 mounted troops, catching them by surprise, inflicting severe losses, and cutting off their line of retreat. The Liao troops soldiered on and headed toward the capital, but were met with stiff resistance and constant attacks, and were forced to retreat back north. During the retreat, 10,000 Liao army troops were annihilated by the Goryeo army under Kang Min-cheom of Goryeo.[34] Kang Kam-ch'an and his troops waited at Gwiju and engaged the approaching Liao army, annihilating most of them. Barely a few thousand Liao troops survived after the Battle of Gwiju.[35]

Aftermath edit

In the next year the Liao assembled another large army in order to launch another invasion but it became clear that neither side could gain a decisive victory. In 1020 King Hyeonjong resumed sending tribute, and in 1022 the Khitans officially recognized the legitimacy of King Hyeonjong's reign. In 1022, a Khitan envoy was sent to invest Hyeongjong as king, and when he died in 1031, his successor Wang Heum was also invested by the Liao court as king. Goryeo broke off relations with Song and the Liao ceded territory around the Yalu to Goryeo. The relationship between Liao and Goryeo would remain peaceful until the end of the Liao dynasty.[35][36][37][38]

In the Goryeo-Liao peace treaty formalized in 1022, the only terms stipulated were that the Goryeo king acknowledge their vassalage to the Liao and to release detained Liao envoys. After 1022, Goryeo did not have diplomatic relations with the Song until 1070, with the exception of an isolated embassy in 1030. The sole embassy was probably related to the rebellion of Balhae people in the Liao dynasty. The rebellion was quickly defeated by the Khitans, who returned to enforce Goryeo's tributary obligations. Goryeo adopted the reign title of the Liao in the fourth month of 1022.[39] However according to Bielenstein, Goryeo maintained diplomatic relations with Song, Hyeonjong kept his own reign title, and the two states concluded peace as equals in 1022.[4]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "China's Liao Dynasty". Asia Society.
  2. ^ "The Koryo or Goryeo Kingdom of Korea". ThoughtCo. Retrieved July 20, 2018.
  3. ^ Twitchett & Tietze 1994, p.101: "Third invasion, 1018-19".
  4. ^ a b Bielenstein 2005, p. 183-183.
  5. ^ Cohen, Warren I. (2000-12-20). East Asia at the Center: Four Thousand Years of Engagement with the World. Columbia University Press. p. 116. ISBN 9780231502511. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  6. ^ Bowman, John (2000-09-05). Columbia Chronologies of Asian History and Culture. Columbia University Press. p. 202. ISBN 9780231500043. Retrieved 30 July 2016. The Mongolian-Khitan invasions of the late tenth century challenge the stability of the Koryo government, but a period of prosperity follows the defeat of the Khitan in 1018..
  7. ^ Walker, Hugh Dyson (2012-11-20). East Asia: A New History. AuthorHouse. p. 207. ISBN 9781477265178. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  8. ^ Yi, Ki-baek (1984). A New History of Korea. Harvard University Press. p. 126. ISBN 9780674615762. Retrieved 30 July 2016. Subsequently the Khitan launched several small-scale attacks, to press demands for Hyŏnjong's appearance at their court and surrender of the region of the Six Garrison Settlements, before mounting their third great invasion in 1018. Led by Hsiao P'ai-ya, this time the Khitan army was harassed at every turn and then, retreating, was all but annihilated by a massive Koryŏ attack at Kuju (Kusŏng) executed by Kang Kam-ch'an. The Koryŏ victory was so overwhelming that scarcely a few thousand of the 100,000 man invasion force survived. The Khitan invasions of Koryŏ thus ended in failure. Koryŏ had resolutely resisted foreign aggression and had driven the invaders back. The result was that the two nations worked out a settlement and peaceful relations were maintained between them thereafter.
  9. ^ a b c d e Nahm 1988, p. 89.
  10. ^ a b Twitchett & Tietze 1994, p. 103.
  11. ^ Twitchett & Tietze 1994, p.111.
  12. ^ (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2019-04-30. Retrieved 2019-08-01.
  13. ^ 이상각 (2014). 고려사 - 열정과 자존의 오백년 (in Korean). 들녘. ISBN 9791159250248. Retrieved 23 March 2018.
  14. ^ "(2) 건국―호족들과의 제휴". 우리역사넷 (in Korean). National Institute of Korean History. Retrieved 23 March 2018.
  15. ^ Rossabi, Morris (20 May 1983). China Among Equals: The Middle Kingdom and Its Neighbors, 10th-14th Centuries. University of California Press. p. 323. ISBN 9780520045620. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  16. ^ "Goryeo: the dynasty that offered Korea its name". m.koreatimes.co.kr. 2012-04-04. Retrieved 2022-05-21.
  17. ^ Twitchett, Denis C.; Franke, Herbert; Fairbank, John King (1978). The Cambridge History of China: Volume 6, Alien Regimes and Border States, 907-1368. Cambridge University Press. p. 103. ISBN 9780521243315. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  18. ^ Ebrey & Walthall 2014, [1], p. 171, at Google Books: Liao forces invaded Goryeo territory in 993. Instead of pushing for total victory, the Khitans negotiated a peace that forced Goryeo to adopt the Liao calendar and end tributary relations with Song (a violation of King Taejo’s testamentary injunction never to make peace with the Khitan)."
  19. ^ Hyun 2013, p. 106: "the Khitan army attacked Goryeo, who was forced to accept the status of a Liao tributary in 994."
  20. ^ Twitchett & Tietze 1994, p.103: "The Korean king was invested with his title by the Liao emperor."
  21. ^ Kim, Djun Kil (2014-05-30). The History of Korea, 2nd Edition. ABC-CLIO. p. 66. ISBN 9781610695824. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  22. ^ Yun 1998, p.64: "By the end of the negotiation, Sô Hûi had ... ostensibly for the purpose of securing safe diplomatic passage, obtained an explicit Khitan consent to incorporate the land between the Ch’ôngch’ôn and Amnok Rivers into Koryô territory."
  23. ^ Twitchett & Tietze 1994, p.102: "Until the 980s Khitan-Koryǒ relations had been at arm’s length, for the Jurchen tribes and Ting-an had provided a buffer zone between Koryǒ's northern frontier and the Liao border". p.103: "Koryǒ was left free to deal with the Jurchen tribes south of the Yalu Valley".
  24. ^ Hyun 2013, p.106: "Even though the Goryeo court agreed to set up tribute exchanges with the Liao court, that same year [=994] it also sent an envoy to the Song court to appeal, but in vain, for military assistance against the Khitan."
  25. ^ Twitchett & Tietze 1994, p.103.
  26. ^ Bowman 2000, p. 203: "Fearful of plots against him, Mokchong summons Kang Cho from his administrative post in the northwest. However, Kang Cho himself engineers a successful coup in which Mokchong is assassinated."
  27. ^ Bowman 2000, p. 203: "Liao initiates a fresh attack on Koryo's northern border with the ostensible purpose of avenging the murdered Mokchong."
  28. ^ a b Ebrey & Walthall 2014, [2], p. 171, at Google Books: "In 1010, on the pretext that the rightful king had been deposed without the approval of the Liao court, the Khitan emperor personally led an attack that culminated in the burning of the Goryeo capital."
  29. ^ Twitchett & Tietze 1994, p. 111.
  30. ^ a b Simons 1995, p. 93: "a second Liao incursion resulted in heavy losses, the sacking of Kaesong, and the imposition of Liao suzerainty over the Koryo state." p. 95: "a prelude to more invasions during the reign of King Hyonjong (1010-1031) and the occupation of Kaesong, the Koryo capital."
  31. ^ Hatada, Smith Jr & Hazard 1969, p. 52: "in the reign of King Hyŏnjong (1010-1031) there were numerous Khitan invasions, and even the capital Kaesŏng was occupied."
  32. ^ a b Twitchett, Denis C.; Franke, Herbert; Fairbank, John King (1978). The Cambridge History of China: Volume 6, Alien Regimes and Border States, 907-1368. Cambridge University Press. p. 111. ISBN 9780521243315. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  33. ^ Twitchett, Denis C.; Franke, Herbert; Fairbank, John King (1978). The Cambridge History of China: Volume 6, Alien Regimes and Border States, 907-1368. Cambridge University Press. p. 111. ISBN 9780521243315. Retrieved 30 July 2016. From 1015 to 1019 there was incessant warfare, with attacks on Koryŏ in 1015, 1016, and 1017 in which victory went sometimes to Koryŏ, sometimes to the Khitan, but in sum were indecisive.
  34. ^ '姜民瞻. 2023-02-04.]
  35. ^ a b Twitchett & Tietze 1994, p. 112.
  36. ^ Rossabi, Morris (1983-05-20). China Among Equals: The Middle Kingdom and Its Neighbors, 10th-14th Centuries. University of California Press. p. 323. ISBN 9780520045620. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  37. ^ Shin, Hyeongsik (January 1, 2005). A Brief History of Korea, Volume 1. Ewha Womans University Press. pp. 64–65. ISBN 9788973006199. "On the 9th year of Hyeongjong (1018), Khitan launched another invasion with a 100,000 strong army, but the army was crushed by general Gang Gamchan at the Great Battle of Guiju. Thus, Goryeo expanded its territory to the north as far as the Yalu River basin."
  38. ^ Yi, Ki-baek (1984). A New History of Korea. Harvard University Press. p. 126. ISBN 9780674615762. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  39. ^ Rogers 1961, p. 418.

Sources edit

  • Bielenstein, Hans (2005), Diplomacy and Trade in the Chinese World, 589–1276, BRILL, ISBN 978-90-474-0761-4
  • Ebrey, Patricia Buckley; Walthall, Anne (2014), Pre-Modern East Asia: To 1800: A Cultural, Social, and Political History, Third Edition, Boston, MA: Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, ISBN 978-1-133-60651-2
  • Hatada, Takashi; Smith Jr, Warren W.; Hazard, Benjamin H. (1969), A History of Korea, Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, ISBN 0-87436-064-1
  • Hyun, Jeongwon (2013). Gift Exchange among States in East Asia during the Eleventh Century (Ph.D. thesis). University of Washington. hdl:1773/24231.
  • Nahm, Andrew C. (1988), Korea: Tradition & Transformation: A History of the Korean People, Elizabeth, NJ: Hollym, ISBN 0-930878-56-6
  • Rogers, Michael C. (1961), "Some Kings of Koryo as Registered in Chinese Works", Journal of the American Oriental Society, 81 (4): 415–422, doi:10.2307/595688, ISSN 0003-0279, JSTOR 595688
  • Simons, Geoff (1995), Korea: The Search for Sovereignty, New York, NY: St. Martin's Press, ISBN 0-312-12531-3
  • Twitchett, Denis; Tietze, Klaus-Peter (1994). "The Liao". In Franke, Herbert; Twitchett, Denis (eds.). The Cambridge History of China (Thesis). Vol. 6: Alien Regime and Border States, 907–1368. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. pp. 43–153. ISBN 0-521-24331-9.
  • Yun, Peter I. (1998). Rethinking the Tribute System: Korean States and northeast Asian Interstate Relations, 600-1600 (Ph.D. thesis). University of California, Los Angeles. ISBN 9780599031203.

External links edit

goryeo, khitan, south, korean, television, series, series, chinese, 遼麗戰爭, korean, 고려, 거란, 전쟁, series, 10th, 11th, century, conflicts, between, goryeo, dynasty, korea, khitan, liao, dynasty, china, near, present, border, between, china, north, korea, dynasties,. For the South Korean television series see Goryeo Khitan War TV series The Goryeo Khitan War Chinese 遼麗戰爭 Korean 고려 거란 전쟁 was a series of 10th and 11th century conflicts between the Goryeo dynasty of Korea and the Khitan led Liao dynasty of China near the present day border between China and North Korea Goryeo Khitan WarMap of the two dynasties Liao Dynasty in green Goryeo in whiteDate993 1 1010 2 1018 1019 3 LocationNorthern Korean PeninsulaResultGoryeo victory 4 5 6 7 8 BelligerentsGoryeo dynastyLiao dynastyCommanders and leadersHyeonjong of GoryeoKang Kam ch anSo HuiKang Cho Yang Kyu Emperor ShengzongXiao HengdeXiao Xunning zh Xiao Paiya zh Yelu PennuStrengthSecond conflict Approximately 300 000Third conflict Approximately 208 000First conflict Approximately 800 000 9 10 Second conflict Approximately 400 000 9 11 Third conflict Approximately 100 000 Contents 1 Goryeo Khitan relations 2 First Invasion 3 Second Invasion 4 Third Invasion 5 Aftermath 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksGoryeo Khitan relations editOn the Korean Peninsula Silla was succeeded by Goryeo in 918 The Liao dynasty conquered Balhae in 926 with Balhae refugees forced to migrate by the Liao Empire 12 a portion of its people including the ruling class moved south and joined the newly founded Goryeo dynasty 13 14 When Balhae fell to the Khitan a few years later King Taejo embraced refugees from Balhae and pursued a policy of northern expansion possibly enabled by the absence of a fellow Korean kingdom in what was once Goguryeo territory 15 In 942 the Khitan sent another 50 camels to Goryeo but this time Taejo refused the gift exiled the envoy to an island and had the camels starved to death 16 First Invasion editMain article First conflict in the Goryeo Khitan War In 993 the Liao dynasty invaded Goryeo s northwestern border with an army that the Liao commander claimed to number 800 000 9 10 After a military stalemate 17 negotiations began between the two states producing the following concessions Firstly Goryeo formally ended all relations with the Song dynasty agreed to pay tribute to Liao and to adopt Liao s calendar 18 19 20 Secondly after negotiations led by the Goryeo diplomat So Hui Goryeo formally incorporated the land between the border of Liao and Goryeo up to the Yalu River which was at the time occupied by troublesome Jurchen tribes citing that in the past the land belonged to Goguryeo 21 22 23 With this agreement the Liao forces withdrew However in spite of the settlement Goryeo continued to communicate with Song 24 having strengthened its defenses by building fortresses in the newly gained northern territories 25 Second Invasion editMain article Second conflict in the Goryeo Khitan War In 1009 General Kang Cho of Goryeo led a coup against King Mokjong killing him and establishing military rule 26 The Liao dynasty attacked with 400 000 troops in 1010 claiming to avenge the murdered Mokjong 27 28 Kang Cho blocked the Liao s first attack but he was defeated in the second one and was executed 9 29 King Hyeonjong of Goryeo was forced to flee the capital which was sacked and burnt by the Liao 28 30 31 to Naju temporarily 9 Unable to establish a foothold and to avoid a counterattack by the regrouped Goryeo armies the Liao forces withdrew 32 Afterward the Goryeo king sued for peace but the Liao emperor demanded that he come in person and also cede key border areas to him the Goryeo court refused the demands resulting in a decade of hostility between the two nations during which both sides fortified their borders in preparation of war 32 30 Liao attacked Goryeo in 1015 1016 and 1017 but the results were indecisive 33 Third Invasion editMain article Third conflict in the Goryeo Khitan War In 1018 Liao assembled an army of 100 000 troops to invade Goryeo In preparation General Kang Kam ch an ordered a stream to the east of Heunghwajin to be dammed When the Liao troops crossed the Yalu River Kang Kam ch an opened the dam and attacked the enemy troops with 12 000 mounted troops catching them by surprise inflicting severe losses and cutting off their line of retreat The Liao troops soldiered on and headed toward the capital but were met with stiff resistance and constant attacks and were forced to retreat back north During the retreat 10 000 Liao army troops were annihilated by the Goryeo army under Kang Min cheom of Goryeo 34 Kang Kam ch an and his troops waited at Gwiju and engaged the approaching Liao army annihilating most of them Barely a few thousand Liao troops survived after the Battle of Gwiju 35 Aftermath editIn the next year the Liao assembled another large army in order to launch another invasion but it became clear that neither side could gain a decisive victory In 1020 King Hyeonjong resumed sending tribute and in 1022 the Khitans officially recognized the legitimacy of King Hyeonjong s reign In 1022 a Khitan envoy was sent to invest Hyeongjong as king and when he died in 1031 his successor Wang Heum was also invested by the Liao court as king Goryeo broke off relations with Song and the Liao ceded territory around the Yalu to Goryeo The relationship between Liao and Goryeo would remain peaceful until the end of the Liao dynasty 35 36 37 38 In the Goryeo Liao peace treaty formalized in 1022 the only terms stipulated were that the Goryeo king acknowledge their vassalage to the Liao and to release detained Liao envoys After 1022 Goryeo did not have diplomatic relations with the Song until 1070 with the exception of an isolated embassy in 1030 The sole embassy was probably related to the rebellion of Balhae people in the Liao dynasty The rebellion was quickly defeated by the Khitans who returned to enforce Goryeo s tributary obligations Goryeo adopted the reign title of the Liao in the fourth month of 1022 39 However according to Bielenstein Goryeo maintained diplomatic relations with Song Hyeonjong kept his own reign title and the two states concluded peace as equals in 1022 4 See also editKorean Jurchen border conflicts Mongol invasions of KoreaReferences edit China s Liao Dynasty Asia Society The Koryo or Goryeo Kingdom of Korea ThoughtCo Retrieved July 20 2018 Twitchett amp Tietze 1994 p 101 Third invasion 1018 19 a b Bielenstein 2005 p 183 183 Cohen Warren I 2000 12 20 East Asia at the Center Four Thousand Years of Engagement with the World Columbia University Press p 116 ISBN 9780231502511 Retrieved 30 July 2016 Bowman John 2000 09 05 Columbia Chronologies of Asian History and Culture Columbia University Press p 202 ISBN 9780231500043 Retrieved 30 July 2016 The Mongolian Khitan invasions of the late tenth century challenge the stability of the Koryo government but a period of prosperity follows the defeat of the Khitan in 1018 Walker Hugh Dyson 2012 11 20 East Asia A New History AuthorHouse p 207 ISBN 9781477265178 Retrieved 30 July 2016 Yi Ki baek 1984 A New History of Korea Harvard University Press p 126 ISBN 9780674615762 Retrieved 30 July 2016 Subsequently the Khitan launched several small scale attacks to press demands for Hyŏnjong s appearance at their court and surrender of the region of the Six Garrison Settlements before mounting their third great invasion in 1018 Led by Hsiao P ai ya this time the Khitan army was harassed at every turn and then retreating was all but annihilated by a massive Koryŏ attack at Kuju Kusŏng executed by Kang Kam ch an The Koryŏ victory was so overwhelming that scarcely a few thousand of the 100 000 man invasion force survived The Khitan invasions of Koryŏ thus ended in failure Koryŏ had resolutely resisted foreign aggression and had driven the invaders back The result was that the two nations worked out a settlement and peaceful relations were maintained between them thereafter a b c d e Nahm 1988 p 89 a b Twitchett amp Tietze 1994 p 103 Twitchett amp Tietze 1994 p 111 Gosudarstvo Bohaj 698 926 gg in Russian Archived from the original on 2019 04 30 Retrieved 2019 08 01 이상각 2014 고려사 열정과 자존의 오백년 in Korean 들녘 ISBN 9791159250248 Retrieved 23 March 2018 2 건국 호족들과의 제휴 우리역사넷 in Korean National Institute of Korean History Retrieved 23 March 2018 Rossabi Morris 20 May 1983 China Among Equals The Middle Kingdom and Its Neighbors 10th 14th Centuries University of California Press p 323 ISBN 9780520045620 Retrieved 30 July 2016 Goryeo the dynasty that offered Korea its name m koreatimes co kr 2012 04 04 Retrieved 2022 05 21 Twitchett Denis C Franke Herbert Fairbank John King 1978 The Cambridge History of China Volume 6 Alien Regimes and Border States 907 1368 Cambridge University Press p 103 ISBN 9780521243315 Retrieved 30 July 2016 Ebrey amp Walthall 2014 1 p 171 at Google Books Liao forces invaded Goryeo territory in 993 Instead of pushing for total victory the Khitans negotiated a peace that forced Goryeo to adopt the Liao calendar and end tributary relations with Song a violation of King Taejo s testamentary injunction never to make peace with the Khitan Hyun 2013 p 106 the Khitan army attacked Goryeo who was forced to accept the status of a Liao tributary in 994 Twitchett amp Tietze 1994 p 103 The Korean king was invested with his title by the Liao emperor Kim Djun Kil 2014 05 30 The History of Korea 2nd Edition ABC CLIO p 66 ISBN 9781610695824 Retrieved 30 July 2016 Yun 1998 p 64 By the end of the negotiation So Hui had ostensibly for the purpose of securing safe diplomatic passage obtained an explicit Khitan consent to incorporate the land between the Ch ongch on and Amnok Rivers into Koryo territory Twitchett amp Tietze 1994 p 102 Until the 980s Khitan Koryǒ relations had been at arm s length for the Jurchen tribes and Ting an had provided a buffer zone between Koryǒ s northern frontier and the Liao border p 103 Koryǒ was left free to deal with the Jurchen tribes south of the Yalu Valley Hyun 2013 p 106 Even though the Goryeo court agreed to set up tribute exchanges with the Liao court that same year 994 it also sent an envoy to the Song court to appeal but in vain for military assistance against the Khitan Twitchett amp Tietze 1994 p 103 Bowman 2000 p 203 Fearful of plots against him Mokchong summons Kang Cho from his administrative post in the northwest However Kang Cho himself engineers a successful coup in which Mokchong is assassinated Bowman 2000 p 203 Liao initiates a fresh attack on Koryo s northern border with the ostensible purpose of avenging the murdered Mokchong a b Ebrey amp Walthall 2014 2 p 171 at Google Books In 1010 on the pretext that the rightful king had been deposed without the approval of the Liao court the Khitan emperor personally led an attack that culminated in the burning of the Goryeo capital Twitchett amp Tietze 1994 p 111 a b Simons 1995 p 93 a second Liao incursion resulted in heavy losses the sacking of Kaesong and the imposition of Liao suzerainty over the Koryo state p 95 a prelude to more invasions during the reign of King Hyonjong 1010 1031 and the occupation of Kaesong the Koryo capital Hatada Smith Jr amp Hazard 1969 p 52 in the reign of King Hyŏnjong 1010 1031 there were numerous Khitan invasions and even the capital Kaesŏng was occupied a b Twitchett Denis C Franke Herbert Fairbank John King 1978 The Cambridge History of China Volume 6 Alien Regimes and Border States 907 1368 Cambridge University Press p 111 ISBN 9780521243315 Retrieved 30 July 2016 Twitchett Denis C Franke Herbert Fairbank John King 1978 The Cambridge History of China Volume 6 Alien Regimes and Border States 907 1368 Cambridge University Press p 111 ISBN 9780521243315 Retrieved 30 July 2016 From 1015 to 1019 there was incessant warfare with attacks on Koryŏ in 1015 1016 and 1017 in which victory went sometimes to Koryŏ sometimes to the Khitan but in sum were indecisive 姜民瞻 2023 02 04 a b Twitchett amp Tietze 1994 p 112 Rossabi Morris 1983 05 20 China Among Equals The Middle Kingdom and Its Neighbors 10th 14th Centuries University of California Press p 323 ISBN 9780520045620 Retrieved 30 July 2016 Shin Hyeongsik January 1 2005 A Brief History of Korea Volume 1 Ewha Womans University Press pp 64 65 ISBN 9788973006199 On the 9th year of Hyeongjong 1018 Khitan launched another invasion with a 100 000 strong army but the army was crushed by general Gang Gamchan at the Great Battle of Guiju Thus Goryeo expanded its territory to the north as far as the Yalu River basin Yi Ki baek 1984 A New History of Korea Harvard University Press p 126 ISBN 9780674615762 Retrieved 30 July 2016 Rogers 1961 p 418 Sources editBielenstein Hans 2005 Diplomacy and Trade in the Chinese World 589 1276 BRILL ISBN 978 90 474 0761 4 Ebrey Patricia Buckley Walthall Anne 2014 Pre Modern East Asia To 1800 A Cultural Social and Political History Third Edition Boston MA Wadsworth Cengage Learning ISBN 978 1 133 60651 2 Hatada Takashi Smith Jr Warren W Hazard Benjamin H 1969 A History of Korea Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO ISBN 0 87436 064 1 Hyun Jeongwon 2013 Gift Exchange among States in East Asia during the Eleventh Century Ph D thesis University of Washington hdl 1773 24231 Nahm Andrew C 1988 Korea Tradition amp Transformation A History of the Korean People Elizabeth NJ Hollym ISBN 0 930878 56 6 Rogers Michael C 1961 Some Kings of Koryo as Registered in Chinese Works Journal of the American Oriental Society 81 4 415 422 doi 10 2307 595688 ISSN 0003 0279 JSTOR 595688 Simons Geoff 1995 Korea The Search for Sovereignty New York NY St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 12531 3 Twitchett Denis Tietze Klaus Peter 1994 The Liao In Franke Herbert Twitchett Denis eds The Cambridge History of China Thesis Vol 6 Alien Regime and Border States 907 1368 Cambridge England Cambridge University Press pp 43 153 ISBN 0 521 24331 9 Yun Peter I 1998 Rethinking the Tribute System Korean States and northeast Asian Interstate Relations 600 1600 Ph D thesis University of California Los Angeles ISBN 9780599031203 External links editKorea Britannica Archived 2007 04 10 at the Wayback Machine Doosan Encyclopedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Goryeo Khitan War amp oldid 1188673139, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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