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Military history of Goguryeo

The military history of Goguryeo involves wars with other Korean kingdoms, Chinese dynasties, nomadic states and tribes, and Wa Japan. Goguryeo was a highly militaristic state;[1][2] it was a powerful empire and one of the great powers in East Asia,[3][4][5][6][self-published source] until it was defeated by a SillaTang alliance in 668 after prolonged exhaustion and internal strife caused by the death of Yeon Gaesomun.[7]

Conflicts with other Korean states edit

Baekje edit

Goguryeo and Baekje were two of the Three Kingdoms of Korea; both claimed descent from the ancient Korean kingdom of Buyeo. Onjo, the founder of Baekje, was said to be the second son of Jumong, the founder of Goguryeo.[8][9][self-published source] Despite the common ancestry, the relationship between Goguryeo and Baekje was often contentious.

During the 4th century, Geunchogo expanded Baekje's territory to the north at the expense of Goguryeo. In 369, Gogukwon, the monarch of Goguryeo, attacked Baekje with 20,000 troops, but was defeated by Crown Prince Geungusu at the Battle of Chiyang.[10] In 371, Geungusu led 30,000 troops and attacked the fortress of Pyongyang, slaying Gogukwon in battle.[11] Baekje was a powerful maritime nation whose influence extended across the sea to Liaoxi and Shandong in China, taking advantage of the weakened state of Former Qin, and to Kyushu in the Japanese archipelago.[12]

Gogukyang, a son of Gogukwon, invaded Baekje in 386.[13][14]

 
Goguryeo at its height in 476 CE.

In 392, Gwanggaeto the Great led an attack on Baekje with 40,000 troops, capturing 10 walled cities.[15] In response, Asin, the monarch of Baekje, launched a counterattack on Goguryeo in 393 but was defeated.[15] Asin invaded Goguryeo once more in 394, but was defeated again.[15] After suffering multiple defeats against Goguryeo, Baekje's political stability began to crumble.[16] In 395, Baekje was defeated once more by Goguryeo and was pushed south to its capital of Wiryeseong on the Han River.[15][17] In the following year, in 396, Gwanggaeto led an assault on Wiryeseong by land and sea, using the Han River, and triumphed over Baekje.[15] Gwanggaeto captured the Baekje capital and the defeated Asin submitted to him,[18][19] surrendering a prince and 10 government ministers.[15][20] Henceforth, Baekje lost its dominance in the central Korean peninsula and declined.[9]

In 400, Silla requested aid from Goguryeo in repelling an allied invasion by Baekje, Gaya, and Wa. Gwanggaeto dispatched 50,000 troops and annihilated the enemy coalition.[18]

In 433, Baekje and Silla formed an alliance (Hangul: 나제동맹, Hanja: 羅濟同盟) to balance the Goguryeo threat to the north.[21]

In 472, Gaero, the ruler of Baekje, requested a military alliance with Northern Wei against Goguryeo, but was unsuccessful.[21][22] In 475, Jangsu, the son of Gwanggaeto, launched an invasion by land and sea against Baekje, and captured the capital of Wiryeseong and executed Gaero.[23][24] Baekje had no choice but to move its capital to mountainous Ungjin (present-day Gongju), 80 miles to the south, which provided a natural protection for the devastated kingdom.[21][25]

In 479, Baekje and Silla reaffirmed their alliance through marriage,[21] which was the primary reason why Goguryeo was unable to conquer the entire peninsula.[26][self-published source]

In 551, a Baekje–Silla alliance attacked Goguryeo in order to capture the important Han River region from Goguryeo, planning to split it between them. In 553, Baekje gained the critical region after expending itself with a series of costly assaults on Goguryeo fortresses, but Silla troops, arriving on the pretense of offering assistance, attacked the exhausted Baekje troops and took possession of the entire Han River region, leading to a war between the two former allies in which the Baekje monarch was killed.[27][28]

Baekje attacked Silla in 612, 624, and 627.[29] Goguryeo and Baekje formed an alliance (Hangul: 여제동맹, Hanja: 麗濟同盟) in 642 aimed toward territorial restoration against Silla. King Uija of Baekje attacked Silla and captured around 40 strongpoints in 642,[30][self-published source] and 7 more fortresses in 645.[29] In 655, the Goguryeo–Baekje alliance captured 30 fortresses from Silla.[29]

Silla edit

In 245, Dongcheon ordered an attack on Silla, but the two kingdoms entered into friendly relations in 248.[31]

Nulji, the king of Silla, who had been a vassal of Jangsu, broke off relations with Goguryeo in 454. Jangsu invaded Silla in 468, expanding his domain into parts of Gangwon Province, and again in 489, capturing 7 walled cities and expanding his domain into parts of North Gyeongsang Province.[32]

Silla emerged as a major player in the Korean Peninsula after its betrayal of Baekje and conquest of the Han River region from Goguryeo in 553,[26] but Goguryeo and Baekje applied political, military, and economic pressure against Silla. In 643, under attack by the Goguryeo–Baekje alliance, the Silla court dispatched Kim Chunchu to the Tang dynasty to request military assistance, leading to Emperor Taizong's campaign against Goguryeo.

In 660, Goguryeo's ally, Baekje, fell to the Silla–Tang alliance; the victorious allies continued their assault on Goguryeo for the next eight years but could not defeat Yeon Gaesomun. However, Yeon Gaesomun died of a natural cause and civil war ensued among his three sons, leading the Silla–Tang alliance to launch a fresh invasion. In November 668, King Bojang surrendered to the Silla–Tang alliance and Goguryeo finally fell.

Conflicts with Chinese states edit

Han dynasty edit

Goguryeo became a significant independent kingdom in the first century, and began expanding its power in the region.[1][33] Taejodae conquered neighboring Okjeo and Dongye, and made repeated attacks against the Chinese commanderies and incursions into Liaodong, which would be continued by his successors.[1]

Cao Wei edit

In 244, Guanqiu Jian, a general of Han's successor state Cao Wei, defeated Dongcheon and briefly occupied and sacked Goguryeo's capital.[34]

Wei invaded again in 259 but was defeated at Yangmaenggok;[35] according to the Samguk Sagi, Jungcheon assembled 5,000 elite cavalry and defeated the invading Wei troops, beheading 8,000 enemies.[36]

Lelang commandery edit

As Goguryeo extended its reach into the Liaodong Peninsula, the last Chinese commandery at Lelang was conquered and annexed by Micheon in 313, bringing the remaining northern part of the Korean peninsula into the fold.[37] This conquest resulted in the end of Chinese rule over territory in the northern Korean peninsula, which had spanned 400 years.[38][39]

Former Yan edit

During the winter of 342, the Xianbei of Former Yan, ruled by the Murong clan, attacked and destroyed Goguryeo's capital, Hwando, capturing 50,000 Goguryeo men and women to use as slave labor in addition to taking the queen mother and queen prisoner and exhuming the body of Micheon,[40] and forced Gogukwon to flee for a while. The Xianbei also devastated Buyeo in 346, accelerating Buyeo migration to the Korean peninsula.[38]

Later Yan edit

In 385, Gogukyang, the son of Gogukwon, invaded and defeated Later Yan, the successor state of Former Yan.[13][14]

In 400, the Xianbei state of Later Yan, founded by the Murong clan in present-day Liaoning, attacked Goguryeo.[41] Gwanggaeto the Great repulsed the enemy troops.[42][43] In 402, Gwanggaeto retaliated and conquered the prominent fortress called 宿軍城 near the capital of Later Yan.[41][44] In 405 and again in 406, Later Yan troops attacked Goguryeo fortresses in Liaodong (遼東城 in 405, and 木底城 in 406), but was defeated both times.[41] Gwanggaeto conquered all of Liaodong.[18][45] By conquering Liaodong, Gwanggaeto recovered the ancient domain of Gojoseon;[18][42] Goguryeo controlled Liaodong until the mid-late 7th century.

Sui dynasty edit

 
Eulji Mundeok

In 589, the Northern and Southern dynasties period ended and the Sui dynasty unified China after four centuries of fragmentation.[46] The Sui Empire reconquered Vietnam and defeated Champa, sacking its capital,[47][self-published source][48] and conquered important lands in northern China and Central Asia against Turks, Tibetans and proto-Mongolians.[49]

In 598, Goguryeo made a preemptive attack on Liaoxi,[50] leading Emperor Wen to launch a counterattack by land and sea that ended in disaster for Sui.[47][51]

In 612, Emperor Yang mobilized a huge force said to number over a million men and invaded Goguryeo.[50][51][52] Unable to overcome the defenses of Yodong (Liaodong) Fortress, Emperor Yang ordered 305,000 troops to attack the Goguryeo capital of Pyongyang.[50] However, General Eulji Mundeok baited the Sui troops and annihilated them at the Battle of Salsu;[50][51][53] according to Chinese historical records: of the 305,000 Sui troops, a mere 2,700 returned.[54] Emperor Yang lifted his siege of the Korean fortress and withdrew his forces back to China.[50]

Emperor Yang was obsessed with defeating Goguryeo.[55][56] He attacked Goguryeo again in 613 and 614,[57][self-published source][58] but failed against Goguryeo's defensive strategies, fierce resistance, and able leadership;[55][56] furthermore, his campaign in 613 was cut short by internal discontent and floods back home.[57][59] Emperor Yang's disastrous defeats in Korea greatly contributed to the collapse of the Sui dynasty.[51][55][56][60]

Tang dynasty edit

 
Korean ambassadors during an audience with king Varkhuman of Samarkand. They are identified by the two feathers on top of their head.[61] 648-651 CE, Afrasiyab murals, Samarkand.[62][63]

Emperor Taizong ascended the Tang throne in 626, and led many successful military campaigns. In 630, Emperor Taizong defeated the Eastern Turkic Khaganate, an ally of Goguryeo, bringing much of Central Asia under Tang control; he then conquered the Tarim Basin, and defeated the Tibetan Empire in 640.[64] In 643, Queen Seondeok of Silla requested military aid against the Goguryeo–Baekje alliance.[60][65][self-published source] Tang forged an alliance with Silla, and began preparations for a major campaign against Goguryeo in 644.[66]

In 645, Emperor Taizong personally led a campaign against Goguryeo by land and sea with 113,000 Tang troops plus an unspecified number of tribal auxiliaries.[66] His noted army captured a number of Goguryeo border fortresses, including the potent Yodong (Liaodong) Fortress, which had repulsed Emperor Yang in 612 and 613.[67] Arriving outside Ansi Fortress on July 18, Emperor Taizong prepared to meet an approaching relief army, said to number 150,000 men, in battle. Emperor Taizong ordered Li Shiji to bait the Koreans with 15,000 troops, while Zhangsun Wuji's concealed troops would ambush them from behind.[67] On the following day, the two sides clashed and Emperor Taizong inflicted a crushing defeat on the confused Koreans, inflicting 20,000 casualties and capturing 36,800 prisoners.[67] Emperor Taizong then laid siege to Ansi Fortress; his troops attacked the Korean fortress as many as six or seven times per day, but were repelled each time by the defenders.[68] Unable to breach the adamant fortress despite months of siege, Tang eventually staked everything on the construction of a huge mound, designed to tower over the walls of the fortress; however, the defenders captured and successfully held the mound despite three days of frantic assaults by Tang troops.[69] Furthermore, exacerbated by worsened conditions for the Tang army due to cold weather (and winter approaching) and diminishing provisions, Emperor Taizong was compelled to order a withdrawal from Goguryeo on October 13,[69] but left behind an extravagant gift for Yang Manchun, the commander of Ansi Fortress.[70]

Emperor Taizong attacked Goguryeo again in 647 and 648, but was unsuccessful.[71][72][73][74]

Defeating Goguryeo had been an obsession with Emperor Taizong,[75][self-published source] and after his death in 649, his son Emperor Gaozong continued his ambition. Upon the suggestion of Kim Chunchu, the Silla–Tang alliance first conquered Baekje in 660 to break up the Goguryeo–Baekje alliance, and then turned its full attention to Goguryeo.[76] However, Emperor Gaozong, too, was unable to defeat Goguryeo led by Yeon Gaesomun;[76][77] one of Yeon Gaesomun's most notable victories came in 662 at the Battle of Sasu (蛇水), where he annihilated the Tang forces and killed the invading general Pang Xiaotai (龐孝泰) and all 13 of his sons.[78][79] Hence, while Yeon Gaesomun was alive, Tang could not defeat Goguryeo.[80]

Fall and aftermath edit

In 666 (though dates vary from 664–666), Yeon Gaesomun died of a natural cause and a civil war ensued among his three sons. His eldest son and immediate successor, Yeon Namsaeng, defected to Tang and provided the secrets and weaknesses of Goguryeo to Emperor Gaozong, and played a critical role in the next invasion and downfall of Goguryeo.[81] Yeon Gaesomun's second son, Yeon Namgeon, resisted in the face of death, as opposed to his brother's treachery, and fought until the very end. Meanwhile, Yeon Gaesomun's younger brother, Yeon Jeongto, defected to the Silla side.[82]

The Tang–Silla alliance mounted a fresh invasion of Goguryeo in 667, aided by the defector Yeon Namsaeng,[82] and in 668, finally vanquished the divided kingdom, which had been plagued by violent dissension, numerous defections, and widespread demoralization following the death of Yeon Gaesomun.[7]

Silla thus unified most of the Korean peninsula in 668, but the kingdom's reliance on Tang China had its price. Tang China attempted to impose its rule over the entire Korean peninsula, but Silla, aided by Goguryeo and Baekje refugees, forcibly resisted and expelled Tang.[83][self-published source] However, Silla's unification of the Three Kingdoms of Korea was short-lived because the former Goguryeo general Dae Joyeong led remnants of Goguryeo, united with the Mohe people, and established Balhae, a successor of Goguryeo.[84] Balhae eventually reconquered and retained much of Goguryeo's former territory.

The Tang dynasty Goguryeo general Gao Juren ordered a mass slaughter of Sogdian Caucasians from West and Central Asia, identifying them through their big noses and lances were used to impale Caucasian children when he stormed Beijing (Jicheng (Beijing)) from An Lushan when he defeated An Lushan's rebels.[85][86]

Balhae became a powerful empire like its predecessor, but its eventual end came at the hands of the Khitan Empire in 926. Balhae's end was a decisive event in Northeast Asian history for it was the last Korean kingdom to hold territory in Manchuria. Goguryeo was revived once more in 918 by successor state Goryeo,[87][88][89][90] founded by Wang Geon, a descendant of Goguryeo nobility.[91][self-published source][92] In 937, much of the ruling class and the last crown prince of collapsed Balhae fled to Goryeo, where he was warmly welcomed and included into the ruling family by Wang Geon, thus unifying the two successor nations of Goguryeo.[93]

Conflicts with nomadic states edit

In 395, Gwanggaeto the Great invaded the Khitan Baili clan to the west on the Liao River,[94] destroying 3 tribes and 600 to 700 camps.[95]

In 398, Gwanggaeto conquered the Sushen people to the northeast,[18] who were Tungusic ancestors of the Jurchens and Manchus.[96][self-published source]

In 479, Jangsu invaded the Khitans, and then attacked the Didouyu with his Rouran allies.[97]

Conflicts with Japanese states edit

In 404, Gwanggaeto defeated an attack by the Wa from the Japanese archipelago on the southern border of what was once the Daifang commandery, inflicting enormous casualties on the enemy.[41][98][99]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Graff, David A. (2002). Medieval Chinese Warfare, 300–900. New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-23954-0.

military, history, goguryeo, military, history, goguryeo, involves, wars, with, other, korean, kingdoms, chinese, dynasties, nomadic, states, tribes, japan, goguryeo, highly, militaristic, state, powerful, empire, great, powers, east, asia, self, published, so. The military history of Goguryeo involves wars with other Korean kingdoms Chinese dynasties nomadic states and tribes and Wa Japan Goguryeo was a highly militaristic state 1 2 it was a powerful empire and one of the great powers in East Asia 3 4 5 6 self published source until it was defeated by a Silla Tang alliance in 668 after prolonged exhaustion and internal strife caused by the death of Yeon Gaesomun 7 Contents 1 Conflicts with other Korean states 1 1 Baekje 1 2 Silla 2 Conflicts with Chinese states 2 1 Han dynasty 2 2 Cao Wei 2 3 Lelang commandery 2 4 Former Yan 2 5 Later Yan 2 6 Sui dynasty 2 7 Tang dynasty 2 7 1 Fall and aftermath 3 Conflicts with nomadic states 4 Conflicts with Japanese states 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingConflicts with other Korean states editBaekje edit Goguryeo and Baekje were two of the Three Kingdoms of Korea both claimed descent from the ancient Korean kingdom of Buyeo Onjo the founder of Baekje was said to be the second son of Jumong the founder of Goguryeo 8 9 self published source Despite the common ancestry the relationship between Goguryeo and Baekje was often contentious During the 4th century Geunchogo expanded Baekje s territory to the north at the expense of Goguryeo In 369 Gogukwon the monarch of Goguryeo attacked Baekje with 20 000 troops but was defeated by Crown Prince Geungusu at the Battle of Chiyang 10 In 371 Geungusu led 30 000 troops and attacked the fortress of Pyongyang slaying Gogukwon in battle 11 Baekje was a powerful maritime nation whose influence extended across the sea to Liaoxi and Shandong in China taking advantage of the weakened state of Former Qin and to Kyushu in the Japanese archipelago 12 Gogukyang a son of Gogukwon invaded Baekje in 386 13 14 nbsp Goguryeo at its height in 476 CE In 392 Gwanggaeto the Great led an attack on Baekje with 40 000 troops capturing 10 walled cities 15 In response Asin the monarch of Baekje launched a counterattack on Goguryeo in 393 but was defeated 15 Asin invaded Goguryeo once more in 394 but was defeated again 15 After suffering multiple defeats against Goguryeo Baekje s political stability began to crumble 16 In 395 Baekje was defeated once more by Goguryeo and was pushed south to its capital of Wiryeseong on the Han River 15 17 In the following year in 396 Gwanggaeto led an assault on Wiryeseong by land and sea using the Han River and triumphed over Baekje 15 Gwanggaeto captured the Baekje capital and the defeated Asin submitted to him 18 19 surrendering a prince and 10 government ministers 15 20 Henceforth Baekje lost its dominance in the central Korean peninsula and declined 9 In 400 Silla requested aid from Goguryeo in repelling an allied invasion by Baekje Gaya and Wa Gwanggaeto dispatched 50 000 troops and annihilated the enemy coalition 18 In 433 Baekje and Silla formed an alliance Hangul 나제동맹 Hanja 羅濟同盟 to balance the Goguryeo threat to the north 21 In 472 Gaero the ruler of Baekje requested a military alliance with Northern Wei against Goguryeo but was unsuccessful 21 22 In 475 Jangsu the son of Gwanggaeto launched an invasion by land and sea against Baekje and captured the capital of Wiryeseong and executed Gaero 23 24 Baekje had no choice but to move its capital to mountainous Ungjin present day Gongju 80 miles to the south which provided a natural protection for the devastated kingdom 21 25 In 479 Baekje and Silla reaffirmed their alliance through marriage 21 which was the primary reason why Goguryeo was unable to conquer the entire peninsula 26 self published source In 551 a Baekje Silla alliance attacked Goguryeo in order to capture the important Han River region from Goguryeo planning to split it between them In 553 Baekje gained the critical region after expending itself with a series of costly assaults on Goguryeo fortresses but Silla troops arriving on the pretense of offering assistance attacked the exhausted Baekje troops and took possession of the entire Han River region leading to a war between the two former allies in which the Baekje monarch was killed 27 28 Baekje attacked Silla in 612 624 and 627 29 Goguryeo and Baekje formed an alliance Hangul 여제동맹 Hanja 麗濟同盟 in 642 aimed toward territorial restoration against Silla King Uija of Baekje attacked Silla and captured around 40 strongpoints in 642 30 self published source and 7 more fortresses in 645 29 In 655 the Goguryeo Baekje alliance captured 30 fortresses from Silla 29 Silla edit In 245 Dongcheon ordered an attack on Silla but the two kingdoms entered into friendly relations in 248 31 Nulji the king of Silla who had been a vassal of Jangsu broke off relations with Goguryeo in 454 Jangsu invaded Silla in 468 expanding his domain into parts of Gangwon Province and again in 489 capturing 7 walled cities and expanding his domain into parts of North Gyeongsang Province 32 Silla emerged as a major player in the Korean Peninsula after its betrayal of Baekje and conquest of the Han River region from Goguryeo in 553 26 but Goguryeo and Baekje applied political military and economic pressure against Silla In 643 under attack by the Goguryeo Baekje alliance the Silla court dispatched Kim Chunchu to the Tang dynasty to request military assistance leading to Emperor Taizong s campaign against Goguryeo In 660 Goguryeo s ally Baekje fell to the Silla Tang alliance the victorious allies continued their assault on Goguryeo for the next eight years but could not defeat Yeon Gaesomun However Yeon Gaesomun died of a natural cause and civil war ensued among his three sons leading the Silla Tang alliance to launch a fresh invasion In November 668 King Bojang surrendered to the Silla Tang alliance and Goguryeo finally fell Conflicts with Chinese states editHan dynasty edit See also Battle of Jwawon Goguryeo became a significant independent kingdom in the first century and began expanding its power in the region 1 33 Taejodae conquered neighboring Okjeo and Dongye and made repeated attacks against the Chinese commanderies and incursions into Liaodong which would be continued by his successors 1 Cao Wei edit Main article Goguryeo Wei War In 244 Guanqiu Jian a general of Han s successor state Cao Wei defeated Dongcheon and briefly occupied and sacked Goguryeo s capital 34 Wei invaded again in 259 but was defeated at Yangmaenggok 35 according to the Samguk Sagi Jungcheon assembled 5 000 elite cavalry and defeated the invading Wei troops beheading 8 000 enemies 36 Lelang commandery edit As Goguryeo extended its reach into the Liaodong Peninsula the last Chinese commandery at Lelang was conquered and annexed by Micheon in 313 bringing the remaining northern part of the Korean peninsula into the fold 37 This conquest resulted in the end of Chinese rule over territory in the northern Korean peninsula which had spanned 400 years 38 39 Former Yan edit During the winter of 342 the Xianbei of Former Yan ruled by the Murong clan attacked and destroyed Goguryeo s capital Hwando capturing 50 000 Goguryeo men and women to use as slave labor in addition to taking the queen mother and queen prisoner and exhuming the body of Micheon 40 and forced Gogukwon to flee for a while The Xianbei also devastated Buyeo in 346 accelerating Buyeo migration to the Korean peninsula 38 Later Yan edit In 385 Gogukyang the son of Gogukwon invaded and defeated Later Yan the successor state of Former Yan 13 14 In 400 the Xianbei state of Later Yan founded by the Murong clan in present day Liaoning attacked Goguryeo 41 Gwanggaeto the Great repulsed the enemy troops 42 43 In 402 Gwanggaeto retaliated and conquered the prominent fortress called 宿軍城 near the capital of Later Yan 41 44 In 405 and again in 406 Later Yan troops attacked Goguryeo fortresses in Liaodong 遼東城 in 405 and 木底城 in 406 but was defeated both times 41 Gwanggaeto conquered all of Liaodong 18 45 By conquering Liaodong Gwanggaeto recovered the ancient domain of Gojoseon 18 42 Goguryeo controlled Liaodong until the mid late 7th century Sui dynasty edit nbsp Eulji MundeokMain article Goguryeo Sui War In 589 the Northern and Southern dynasties period ended and the Sui dynasty unified China after four centuries of fragmentation 46 The Sui Empire reconquered Vietnam and defeated Champa sacking its capital 47 self published source 48 and conquered important lands in northern China and Central Asia against Turks Tibetans and proto Mongolians 49 In 598 Goguryeo made a preemptive attack on Liaoxi 50 leading Emperor Wen to launch a counterattack by land and sea that ended in disaster for Sui 47 51 In 612 Emperor Yang mobilized a huge force said to number over a million men and invaded Goguryeo 50 51 52 Unable to overcome the defenses of Yodong Liaodong Fortress Emperor Yang ordered 305 000 troops to attack the Goguryeo capital of Pyongyang 50 However General Eulji Mundeok baited the Sui troops and annihilated them at the Battle of Salsu 50 51 53 according to Chinese historical records of the 305 000 Sui troops a mere 2 700 returned 54 Emperor Yang lifted his siege of the Korean fortress and withdrew his forces back to China 50 Emperor Yang was obsessed with defeating Goguryeo 55 56 He attacked Goguryeo again in 613 and 614 57 self published source 58 but failed against Goguryeo s defensive strategies fierce resistance and able leadership 55 56 furthermore his campaign in 613 was cut short by internal discontent and floods back home 57 59 Emperor Yang s disastrous defeats in Korea greatly contributed to the collapse of the Sui dynasty 51 55 56 60 Tang dynasty edit Main articles First campaign in the Goguryeo Tang War and Goguryeo Tang War nbsp Korean ambassadors during an audience with king Varkhuman of Samarkand They are identified by the two feathers on top of their head 61 648 651 CE Afrasiyab murals Samarkand 62 63 Emperor Taizong ascended the Tang throne in 626 and led many successful military campaigns In 630 Emperor Taizong defeated the Eastern Turkic Khaganate an ally of Goguryeo bringing much of Central Asia under Tang control he then conquered the Tarim Basin and defeated the Tibetan Empire in 640 64 In 643 Queen Seondeok of Silla requested military aid against the Goguryeo Baekje alliance 60 65 self published source Tang forged an alliance with Silla and began preparations for a major campaign against Goguryeo in 644 66 In 645 Emperor Taizong personally led a campaign against Goguryeo by land and sea with 113 000 Tang troops plus an unspecified number of tribal auxiliaries 66 His noted army captured a number of Goguryeo border fortresses including the potent Yodong Liaodong Fortress which had repulsed Emperor Yang in 612 and 613 67 Arriving outside Ansi Fortress on July 18 Emperor Taizong prepared to meet an approaching relief army said to number 150 000 men in battle Emperor Taizong ordered Li Shiji to bait the Koreans with 15 000 troops while Zhangsun Wuji s concealed troops would ambush them from behind 67 On the following day the two sides clashed and Emperor Taizong inflicted a crushing defeat on the confused Koreans inflicting 20 000 casualties and capturing 36 800 prisoners 67 Emperor Taizong then laid siege to Ansi Fortress his troops attacked the Korean fortress as many as six or seven times per day but were repelled each time by the defenders 68 Unable to breach the adamant fortress despite months of siege Tang eventually staked everything on the construction of a huge mound designed to tower over the walls of the fortress however the defenders captured and successfully held the mound despite three days of frantic assaults by Tang troops 69 Furthermore exacerbated by worsened conditions for the Tang army due to cold weather and winter approaching and diminishing provisions Emperor Taizong was compelled to order a withdrawal from Goguryeo on October 13 69 but left behind an extravagant gift for Yang Manchun the commander of Ansi Fortress 70 Emperor Taizong attacked Goguryeo again in 647 and 648 but was unsuccessful 71 72 73 74 Defeating Goguryeo had been an obsession with Emperor Taizong 75 self published source and after his death in 649 his son Emperor Gaozong continued his ambition Upon the suggestion of Kim Chunchu the Silla Tang alliance first conquered Baekje in 660 to break up the Goguryeo Baekje alliance and then turned its full attention to Goguryeo 76 However Emperor Gaozong too was unable to defeat Goguryeo led by Yeon Gaesomun 76 77 one of Yeon Gaesomun s most notable victories came in 662 at the Battle of Sasu 蛇水 where he annihilated the Tang forces and killed the invading general Pang Xiaotai 龐孝泰 and all 13 of his sons 78 79 Hence while Yeon Gaesomun was alive Tang could not defeat Goguryeo 80 Fall and aftermath edit In 666 though dates vary from 664 666 Yeon Gaesomun died of a natural cause and a civil war ensued among his three sons His eldest son and immediate successor Yeon Namsaeng defected to Tang and provided the secrets and weaknesses of Goguryeo to Emperor Gaozong and played a critical role in the next invasion and downfall of Goguryeo 81 Yeon Gaesomun s second son Yeon Namgeon resisted in the face of death as opposed to his brother s treachery and fought until the very end Meanwhile Yeon Gaesomun s younger brother Yeon Jeongto defected to the Silla side 82 The Tang Silla alliance mounted a fresh invasion of Goguryeo in 667 aided by the defector Yeon Namsaeng 82 and in 668 finally vanquished the divided kingdom which had been plagued by violent dissension numerous defections and widespread demoralization following the death of Yeon Gaesomun 7 Silla thus unified most of the Korean peninsula in 668 but the kingdom s reliance on Tang China had its price Tang China attempted to impose its rule over the entire Korean peninsula but Silla aided by Goguryeo and Baekje refugees forcibly resisted and expelled Tang 83 self published source However Silla s unification of the Three Kingdoms of Korea was short lived because the former Goguryeo general Dae Joyeong led remnants of Goguryeo united with the Mohe people and established Balhae a successor of Goguryeo 84 Balhae eventually reconquered and retained much of Goguryeo s former territory The Tang dynasty Goguryeo general Gao Juren ordered a mass slaughter of Sogdian Caucasians from West and Central Asia identifying them through their big noses and lances were used to impale Caucasian children when he stormed Beijing Jicheng Beijing from An Lushan when he defeated An Lushan s rebels 85 86 Balhae became a powerful empire like its predecessor but its eventual end came at the hands of the Khitan Empire in 926 Balhae s end was a decisive event in Northeast Asian history for it was the last Korean kingdom to hold territory in Manchuria Goguryeo was revived once more in 918 by successor state Goryeo 87 88 89 90 founded by Wang Geon a descendant of Goguryeo nobility 91 self published source 92 In 937 much of the ruling class and the last crown prince of collapsed Balhae fled to Goryeo where he was warmly welcomed and included into the ruling family by Wang Geon thus unifying the two successor nations of Goguryeo 93 Conflicts with nomadic states editIn 395 Gwanggaeto the Great invaded the Khitan Baili clan to the west on the Liao River 94 destroying 3 tribes and 600 to 700 camps 95 In 398 Gwanggaeto conquered the Sushen people to the northeast 18 who were Tungusic ancestors of the Jurchens and Manchus 96 self published source In 479 Jangsu invaded the Khitans and then attacked the Didouyu with his Rouran allies 97 Conflicts with Japanese states editMain article Goguryeo Wa conflicts In 404 Gwanggaeto defeated an attack by the Wa from the Japanese archipelago on the southern border of what was once the Daifang commandery inflicting enormous casualties on the enemy 41 98 99 See also editHistory of Korea Military history of KoreaReferences edit a b c Yi Ki baek 1984 A New History of Korea Harvard University Press pp 23 24 ISBN 9780674615762 Retrieved 20 November 2016 Walker Hugh Dyson November 2012 East Asia A New History AuthorHouse p 104 ISBN 9781477265161 Retrieved 20 November 2016 Roberts John Morris Westad Odd Arne 2013 The History of the World Oxford University Press p 443 ISBN 9780199936762 Retrieved 15 July 2016 Gardner Hall 27 November 2007 Averting Global War Regional Challenges Overextension and Options for American Strategy Palgrave Macmillan pp 158 159 ISBN 9780230608733 Retrieved 15 July 2016 Laet Sigfried J de 1994 History of Humanity From the seventh to the sixteenth century UNESCO p 1133 ISBN 9789231028137 Retrieved 10 October 2016 Walker Hugh Dyson 20 November 2012 East Asia A New History AuthorHouse pp 6 7 ISBN 9781477265178 Retrieved 20 November 2016 a b Graff David 2 September 2003 Medieval Chinese Warfare 300 900 Routledge p 200 ISBN 9781134553532 Retrieved 6 November 2016 Lee Kenneth B 1997 Korea and East Asia The Story of a Phoenix Greenwood Publishing Group p 13 ISBN 9780275958237 Retrieved 20 November 2016 a b Yu Chai Shin 2012 The New History of Korean Civilization iUniverse p 27 ISBN 9781462055593 Retrieved 20 November 2016 치양전투 민족문화대백과사전 Academy of Korean Studies Yi Ki baek 1984 A New History of Korea Harvard University Press p 37 ISBN 9780674615762 Retrieved 20 November 2016 A Brief History of Korea Ewha Womans University Press January 2005 pp 29 30 ISBN 9788973006199 Retrieved 20 November 2016 a b 국양왕 KOCCA Korea Creative Content Agency Retrieved 11 October 2016 a b King Gogukyang KBS World Radio Retrieved 11 October 2016 a b c d e f 이윤섭 7 March 2014 광개토대왕과 장수왕 in Korean ebookspub 이북스펍 pp 89 91 ISBN 9791155191323 Retrieved 11 October 2016 King Gwanggaeto the Great 1 KBS World Radio Korea Communications Commission Retrieved 7 October 2016 Yi Hyun hui Pak Song su Yun Nae hyon 2005 New History of Korea Seoul Jimoondang p 170 ISBN 8988095855 a b c d e Kim Jinwung 5 November 2012 A History of Korea From Land of the Morning Calm to States in Conflict Indiana University Press p 35 ISBN 978 0253000781 Retrieved 11 October 2016 Jeon ho tae Koguryo the origin of Korean power amp pride Dongbuka History Foundation 2007 ISBN 8991448836 p 137 Institute of Korean Studies Seoul National University 2004 Korean studies Seoul Journal of Korean Studies 17 15 16 a b c d Ring Trudy Watson Noelle Schellinger Paul 12 November 2012 Asia and Oceania International Dictionary of Historic Places Routledge p 484 ISBN 9781136639791 Retrieved 12 October 2016 Kim Bushik 1145 Samguk Sagi Retrieved 2 February 2016 Historical Survey Society 2007 Seoul a field guide to history English ed Paju Dolbegae Publishers p 16 ISBN 9788971992890 Korean Historical Research Association 2005 A history of Korea London Saffron Books p 43 ISBN 9781872843872 King Jangsu KBS Radio KBS Retrieved 2 February 2016 a b Walker Hugh Dyson 20 November 2012 East Asia A New History AuthorHouse p 137 ISBN 9781477265178 Retrieved 12 October 2016 Chŏng Yang mo Smith Judith G Metropolitan Museum of Art New York N Y 1998 Arts of Korea Metropolitan Museum of Art p 25 ISBN 9780870998508 Retrieved 14 October 2016 Kim Jinwung 2012 A History of Korea From Land of the Morning Calm to States in Conflict Indiana University Press pp 44 45 ISBN 978 0253000248 Retrieved 12 September 2016 a b c Barnes Gina 5 November 2013 State Formation in Korea Emerging Elites Routledge pp 54 55 ISBN 9781136840975 Retrieved 16 November 2016 Whiting Marvin C Imperial Chinese Military History 8000 BC 1912 AD iUniverse p 257 ISBN 9780595221349 Retrieved 2 November 2016 동천왕 민족문화대백과사전 Academy of Korean Studies Retrieved 20 November 2016 장수왕 민족문화대백과사전 Academy of Korean Studies Retrieved 12 October 2016 Guo Rongxing 29 August 2009 Intercultural Economic Analysis Theory and Method Springer Science amp Business Media p 42 ISBN 9781441908490 Retrieved 20 November 2016 Charles Roger Tennant 1996 A history of Korea illustrated ed Kegan Paul International p 22 ISBN 0 7103 0532 X Retrieved 9 February 2012 Wei In 242 under King Tongch ŏn they attacked a Chinese fortress near the mouth of the Yalu in an 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sacked and burned the Koguryŏ capital at Hwando They took away some thousands of prisoners to provide cheap labour to build more walls of their own and in 346 went on to wreak even greater destruction on Puyŏ hastening what seems to have been a continuing migration of its people into the north eastern area of the peninsula but Koguryŏ though temporarily weakened would soon rebuild its walls and continue to expand Chinul 1991 Buswell Robert E ed Tracing Back the Radiance Chinul s Korean Way of Zen Translated by Robert E Buswell abridged ed University of Hawaii Press p 3 ISBN 0824814274 Retrieved 22 April 2014 Chinul 1991 Buswell Robert E ed Tracing Back the Radiance Chinul s Korean Way of Zen Translated by Robert E Buswell abridged ed University of Hawaii Press p 4 ISBN 0824814274 Retrieved 22 April 2014 a b c d 이윤섭 7 March 2014 광개토대왕과 장수왕 in Korean ebookspub 이북스펍 pp 93 95 ISBN 9791155191323 Retrieved 11 October 2016 a b 김상훈 22 March 2010 통 세계사 1 인류 탄생에서 중세 시대까지 외우지 않고 통으로 이해하는 in 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9781317463726 Retrieved 16 November 2016 a b c d e Yi Ki baek 1984 A New History of Korea Harvard University Press p 47 ISBN 9780674615762 Retrieved 16 November 2016 a b c d White Matthew 7 November 2011 Atrocities The 100 Deadliest Episodes in Human History W W Norton amp Company pp 78 79 ISBN 9780393081923 Retrieved 16 November 2016 Chan 陳志海 Warren 28 October 2015 All Kinds of Everything From Chinese Civilization to World History until 1912 2nd edition 精裝本 Red Publish p 147 ISBN 9789888380008 Retrieved 16 November 2016 Grant Reg G 2011 1001 Battles That Changed the Course of World History Universe Pub p 104 ISBN 9780789322333 Retrieved 16 November 2016 in Korean Battle of Salsu Encyclopaedia Britannica Korean Edition Archived 2011 07 16 at the Wayback Machine a b c Walker Hugh Dyson 20 November 2012 East Asia A New History AuthorHouse p 153 ISBN 9781477265178 Retrieved 16 November 2016 a b c Bedeski Robert 12 March 2007 Human Security and the Chinese State Historical Transformations and the Modern Quest for Sovereignty Routledge p 90 ISBN 9781134125975 Retrieved 16 November 2016 a b Walker Hugh Dyson 20 November 2012 East Asia A New History AuthorHouse p 152 ISBN 9781477265178 Retrieved 16 November 2016 Ebrey Patricia Buckley Walthall Anne Palais James B 2013 East Asia A Cultural Social and Political History Volume I To 1800 Cengage Learning p 106 ISBN 978 1111808150 Retrieved 16 November 2016 Tanner Harold Miles 13 March 2009 China A History Hackett Publishing p 170 ISBN 978 0872209152 Retrieved 16 November 2016 a b Ebrey Patricia Buckley Walthall Anne Palais James B 2013 East Asia A Cultural Social and Political History Volume I To 1800 Cengage Learning p 106 ISBN 978 1111808150 Retrieved 16 November 2016 Library British 2004 The Silk Road Trade Travel War and Faith Serindia Publications Inc p 110 ISBN 978 1 932476 13 2 Baumer Christoph 18 April 2018 History of Central Asia The 4 volume set Bloomsbury Publishing p 243 ISBN 978 1 83860 868 2 Grenet Frantz 2004 Maracanda Samarkand une metropole pre mongole Annales Histoire Sciences Sociales 5 6 Fig C Tucker Spencer C 23 December 2009 A Global Chronology of Conflict From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East 6 volumes From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East ABC CLIO p 406 ISBN 9781851096725 Retrieved 16 November 2016 Walker Hugh Dyson 20 November 2012 East Asia A New History AuthorHouse p 160 ISBN 9781477265178 Retrieved 16 November 2016 a b Graff David 2 September 2003 Medieval Chinese Warfare 300 900 Routledge p 196 ISBN 9781134553532 Retrieved 3 November 2016 a b c Graff David 2 September 2003 Medieval Chinese Warfare 300 900 Routledge p 197 ISBN 9781134553532 Retrieved 4 November 2016 Yi Ki baek 1984 A New History of Korea Harvard University Press p 48 ISBN 9780674615762 Retrieved 4 November 2016 a b Graff David 2 September 2003 Medieval Chinese Warfare 300 900 Routledge p 198 ISBN 9781134553532 Retrieved 3 November 2016 Lee Kenneth B 1997 Korea and East Asia The Story of a Phoenix Greenwood Publishing Group p 16 ISBN 9780275958237 Retrieved 2 November 2016 Tucker Spencer C 23 December 2009 A Global Chronology of Conflict From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East 6 volumes From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East ABC CLIO p 406 ISBN 9781851096725 Retrieved 4 November 2016 Ebrey Patricia Buckley Walthall Anne Palais James B 2013 East Asia A Cultural Social and Political History Volume I To 1800 Cengage Learning p 106 ISBN 978 1111808150 Retrieved 4 November 2016 Guo Rongxing 29 August 2009 Intercultural Economic Analysis Theory and Method Springer Science amp Business Media p 42 ISBN 9781441908490 Retrieved 4 November 2016 Chen Jack Wei 2010 The Poetics of Sovereignty On Emperor Taizong of the Tang Dynasty Harvard University Press p 43 ISBN 9780674056084 Retrieved 4 November 2016 Walker Hugh Dyson 20 November 2012 East Asia A New History AuthorHouse p 161 ISBN 9781477265178 Retrieved 4 November 2016 a b Ring Trudy Watson Noelle Schellinger Paul 12 November 2012 Asia and Oceania International Dictionary of Historic Places Routledge p 486 ISBN 9781136639791 Retrieved 16 July 2016 Injae Lee Miller Owen Jinhoon Park Hyun Hae Yi 15 December 2014 Korean History in Maps Cambridge University Press p 29 ISBN 9781107098466 Retrieved 4 August 2016 이희진 2 September 2013 옆으로 읽는 동아시아 삼국지 1 in Korean EASTASIA ISBN 9788962620726 Retrieved 4 November 2016 통일기 한국콘텐츠진흥원 Korea Creative Content Agency Retrieved 4 November 2016 김용만 1998 고구려의발견 새로쓰는고구려문명사 in Korean 바다출판사 p 486 ISBN 9788987180212 Retrieved 4 November 2016 보장왕 상 삼국사기 고구려본기 디지털한국학 a b Yi Ki baek 1984 A New History of Korea Harvard University Press p 67 ISBN 9780674615762 Retrieved 5 August 2016 Loath to let slip such an opportunity T ang mounted a fresh invasion under Li Chi in 667 and Silla launched a coordinated offensive This time the T ang army received every possible assistance from the defector Namsaeng and although Koguryŏ continued to hold out for another year the end finally came in 668 Walker Hugh Dyson 20 November 2012 East Asia A New History AuthorHouse p 164 ISBN 9781477265178 Retrieved 29 November 2016 Injae Lee Miller Owen Jinhoon Park Hyun Hae Yi 15 December 2014 Korean History in Maps Cambridge University Press p 65 ISBN 9781107098466 Retrieved 20 November 2016 Hansen Valerie 2003 New Work on the Sogdians the Most Important Traders on the Silk Road A D 500 1000 T oung Pao 89 1 3 158 doi 10 1163 156853203322691347 JSTOR 4528925 Hansen Valerie 2015 CHAPTER 5 The Cosmopolitan Terminus of the Silk Road The Silk Road A New History illustrated reprint ed Oxford University Press pp 157 158 ISBN 978 0190218423 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 1 August 2016 Yi Ki baek 1984 A New History of Korea Harvard University Press p 103 ISBN 9780674615762 Retrieved 20 October 2016 Kim Djun Kil 30 January 2005 The History of Korea ABC CLIO p 57 ISBN 9780313038532 Retrieved 20 October 2016 Grayson James H 5 November 2013 Korea A Religious History Routledge p 79 ISBN 9781136869259 Retrieved 20 October 2016 Ryu Howard Jisoo 12 July 2007 Orderly Korea Unification With the Guarantee of Stability in East Asia Xlibris Corporation p 145 ISBN 9781462803323 Retrieved 18 July 2016 박 종기 24 August 2015 고려사의 재발견 한반도 역사상 가장 개방적이고 역동적인 500년 고려 역사를 만나다 in Korean 휴머니스트 ISBN 9788958629023 Retrieved 27 October 2016 Lee Ki Baik 1984 A New History of Korea Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press p 103 ISBN 067461576X When Parhae perished at the hands of the Khitan around this same time much of its ruling class who were of Koguryŏ descent fled to Koryŏ Wang Kŏn warmly welcomed them and generously gave them land Along with bestowing the name Wang Kye Successor of the Royal Wang on the Parhae crown prince Tae Kwang hyŏn Wang Kŏn entered his name in the royal household register thus clearly conveying the idea that they belonged to the same lineage and also had rituals performed in honor of his progenitor Thus Koryŏ achieved a true national unification that embraced not only the Later Three Kingdoms but even survivors of Koguryŏ lineage from the Parhae kingdom Bourgoin Suzanne Michele ed 1998 Kwanggaet o Encyclopedia of World Biography Kilpatrick Louis Gale Research p 94 Holcombe Charles 2001 The Genesis of East Asia 221 B C A D 907 Honolulu Associate for Asian Studies u a p 174 ISBN 9780824824655 Retrieved 17 June 2016 Walker Hugh Dyson November 2012 East Asia A New History AuthorHouse p 137 ISBN 9781477265161 Retrieved 29 July 2016 He also conquered Sushen tribes in the northeast Tungusic ancestors of the Jurcid and Manchus who later ruled Chinese barbarian conquest dynasties during the twelfth and seventeenth centuries 한나절에 읽는 백제의 역사 in Korean ebookspub 이북스펍 4 October 2014 ISBN 9791155191965 Retrieved 16 November 2016 Kamstra Jacques H Encounter Or Syncretism The Initial Growth of Japanese Buddhism p 38 Batten Bruce Loyd Gateway to Japan Hakata in War And Peace 500 1300 p 16 Further reading editGraff David A 2002 Medieval Chinese Warfare 300 900 New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 23954 0 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Military history of Goguryeo amp oldid 1154876645, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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