Korean folk painting
1 2017-07-14T22:13:59-07:00 Sookja Cho 1d4634c412c83e66660393b2fef755a9066983c7 19534 2 Anonymous (Chosŏn Dynasty) from the National Library Korea Digital Collection. plain 2019-07-23T14:50:32-07:00 Ronae Matriano 8ed24d71e6036affdb22f6e2fd0ec83a8e515e95This page is referenced by:
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2017-06-29T10:33:29-07:00
Korean Envoys and Sino-Korean Exchange
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2019-12-04T11:08:04-08:00
It is a well-known fact that Korea has had a long and close relationship with China, and that China has exerted considerable cultural influence on Korea. For this reason, when we talk about premodern Korea, particularly her diplomatic policies and perception of non-Koreans, China’s role and power is the first question to consider.
This class offers a general overview of Korea’s relationship with China, with a focus on the events of the Chosŏn dynasty (1392-1910), a long-enduring Confucian kingdom of Korea. It will reveal how the depth and breadth of Korea’s relationship with China affected Koreans’ lives, how their relationships changed over time, and how Chosŏn Korea’s relationship with China affected Korea’s image as a Hermit Kingdom. I will also introduce some underrepresented topics and issues related to Koreans' engagement with the West through China, as well as some representative chapters from documents on diplomatic journeys from the period.Sahaeng and Yŏnhaengnok
Sahaeng 사행 (diplomatic journeys): envoys to Ming China (1368–1644) for annual events and special occasions based on mutual needs.
Yŏnhaengnok 연행록 (records of diplomatic mission to China): term used by officials dispatched to Qing China (1644–1911).- Currently, 562 yŏnhaengnok texts are known and available at Yŏnhaengnokchŭngbo ch’onggan 연행록증보총간 (Enlarged Yŏnhaengnok Collection, 2016).
- Different styles and languages: prose-essays, kasa, sijo, travelogues, and diaries in classical Chinese and vernacular Korean
- Important authors: Hong Taeyong (1731–1783), Yŏngi 연기; Kim Ch'angŏp (1658–1722), Nogajae Yŏnhaeng ilgi 노가재연행일기; Pak Chiwŏn (1737–1805), Yŏlha ilgi 열하일기
Yŏnhaeng map
Land route: Yalu river - Liaodong - Fenghuangcheng - Shenyang - Heishan - Jinzhou - Xingcheng - Shanhaiguan - Beijing
Journeys to China during late ChosŏnAll of the above paintings are from Yŏnhaengdo (18th century) in the collection of the Korean Christian Museum at Soongsil University.
Read:
King Yŏngjo the Great (1724-1776) is known to be the wisest king of Chosŏn next only to King Sejong, and his reign, the longest of all Chosŏn kings, is largely remembered a time of peace and prosperity. He managed to keep factional struggles under control and implemented policies that benefited the poor.
Cultural Exchange in Beijing between Chinese and Korean Intellectuals
King Chŏngjo (1752-1800), a grandson and successor of Yŏngjo, is known as the “Enlightened Monarch” for his interest in new knowledge and science. His premature death at the age of forty is a subject of much speculation among historians, all the more because Chosŏn began its decline after his death.
Pak Chiwŏn (1737-1805)
Jehol Diary (Yŏrha ilgi, 1790)
Record of his travel to China and satirical novels in Chinese
Pak Chega (1750-1805)
Discourse on Northern Learning (1778)
Born to a yangban's concubine, he was Pak Chiwŏn's disciple and an erudite literatus. He became an interpreter for royal emissaries to China and tried to spread the new knowledge from Qing to Chosŏn.
Chŏng Yagyong (1762-1836)
Sirhak scholar par excellence; Korea's "Renaissance man"
Writings:
-Design for Good Government (1817)
-Admonitions on Governing the People (1818)
-Toward a New Jurisprudence (1819)
-Comprehensive Treatise on Smallpox (1798)
-Treatise on Land (1799): advocates the “village land system”
-Register of Hŭksan Fish (1815): record of the names, distribution, morphology, habits, and uses of 155 varieties of marine life
Intellectual life and materials imported from China
Korean folk painting of books and antiquities