Gwanghaegun of Joseon

Gwanghaegun
광해군
光海君
King of Joseon
Reign6 March 1608 – 12 April 1623
PredecessorSeonjo
SuccessorInjo
Regent of Joseon
Regency1592–1608
MonarchSeonjo
Born4 June 1575
Hanseong, Joseon
Died7 August 1641(1641-08-07) (aged 66)
Jeju-mok, Jeolla Province, Joseon
Burial
Gwanghaegunmyo Mausoleum, Namyangju, South Korea
Spouse
(m. 1587; died 1623)
Issue4 sons, 1 daughter
Names
Yi Hon (이혼; 李琿)
ClanJeonju Yi
DynastyYi
FatherSeonjo of Joseon
MotherRoyal Noble Consort Gong
ReligionKorean Confucianism (Neo-Confucianism)
Korean name
Hangul
이혼
Hanja
李琿
RRI Hon
MRI Hon
Royal title
Hangul
광해군
Hanja
光海君
RRGwanghaegun
MRKwanghaegun

Gwanghaegun or Prince Gwanghae (Korean광해군; Hanja光海君; 4 June 1575 – 7 August 1641), personal name Yi Hon (이혼; 李琿), was the 15th monarch of the Joseon dynasty of Korea. As he was deposed in a coup d'état, he did not receive a temple name.

Biography

Birth and background

Gwanghaegun was the second son of King Seonjo; he was born to Royal Noble Consort Gong, a concubine, who died a year after his birth. He had one older brother.

When Sengoku Japan, managed by Toyotomi Hideyoshi, invaded Joseon in the Imjin War (1592–1598), he was installed as Crown Prince. When the king fled north to the border of the Ming, he established a branch court and fought defensive battles. Gwanghaegun acted as the de facto ruler of Joseon beginning in 1592, commanding battles and taking care of the reconstruction of the nation after the devastating wars in place of old and weak King Seonjo.[1]

Although it conferred prestige on him, his position remained unstable. He had an elder but incompetent full-brother, Prince Imhae (임해군; 臨海君), and a younger but legitimate half-brother, Grand Prince Yeongchang (영창대군; 永昌大君), who was supported by the Lesser Northerners faction. Fortunately for Gwanghae, King Seonjo's abrupt death made it impossible for his favourite son, Yeongchang, to succeed to the throne.[citation needed]

Violence of Greater Northerner faction

Before King Seonjo died in 1608, he designated Gwanghae as his official successor and ordered his advisers to draft a royal decree. However, Yu Yeong-gyong of the Lesser Northerners faction hid the document and plotted to install Grand Prince Yeongchang as king, only to be found out by the head of the Great Northerners faction (대북; 大北), Chŏng Inhong of the Seosan Jeong clan. Yu was executed immediately.

After the incident, Gwanghae tried to bring officials from various political and regional backgrounds to his court, but his plan was interrupted by Greater Northerners, including Yi I-cheom and Chŏng Inhong. Then, Greater Northerners began to remove members of other political factions from the government, particularly the Lesser Northerners. In 1613, the Greater Northerners moved against Grand Prince Yeongchang; his maternal grandfather, Kim Je-nam, and his maternal uncles were found guilty of treason and executed, while Yeongchang was exiled and executed in 1614. At the same time, Greater Northerners suppressed the Lesser Northerners. In 1618, with the help of the kungnyŏ Kim Kaesi, Grand Prince Yeongchang's mother, Queen Inmok, was stripped of her title and imprisoned along with his younger half-sister, Princess Jeongmyeong. Gwanghae had no power to stop this even though he was the official head of the government.[citation needed]

Achievements

Despite his poor reputation after his death, he was a talented and pragmatic politician. He endeavored to restore the country and sponsored the restoration of documents. As a part of reconstruction, he revised land ordinance and redistributed land to the people; he also ordered the rebuilding of Changdeokgung along with several other palaces. Additionally, he was responsible for reintroducing the hopae identification system after a long period of disuse.[2]

In foreign affairs, he sought a balance between the Ming Empire and the Jurchen people. Since he realized Joseon was unable to compete with Manchu military power, he tried to maintain a friendly relationship with the Jurchens while the kingdom was still under the suzerainty of Ming, which angered the Ming and dogmatic Confucian Koreans. The critically worsened Manchu-Ming relationship forced him to send ten thousand soldiers to aid Ming in 1619.[3] However, the Battle of Sarhū ended in Manchu's overwhelming victory. The Korean General Gang Hong-rip lost two-thirds of his troops and surrendered to Nurhaci. Gwanghaegun negotiated independently for peace with the Jurchen, and thereby avoided another war. He also restored diplomatic relations with Japan in 1609, reopening trade through the Treaty of Giyu with the Sō clan of Tsushima, and sent his ambassadors to Japan in 1617.

In the domestic sphere, Gwanghaegun implemented the Daedong law, which facilitated tax payment for his subjects. However, this law was implemented only in Gyeonggi Province, the largest granary zone at the time, and it took a century for it to be extended across the entire kingdom. He encouraged publication to accelerate reconstruction and restore the kingdom's former prosperity. Many books were written during his reign, including the medical book Donguibogam, and several historical records were rewritten.

In 1616, tobacco was first introduced to Joseon, and it soon became popular amongst the yangban.

Dethronement and later life

Gwanghaegun's diary

On April 11, 1623, Gwanghaegun was deposed in a coup by the Westerners faction that was crucially justified by Queen Inmok who was freed from prison during the coup.[4] The coup directed by Kim Yu took place at night, Gwanghaegun fled but was captured later.[5] He was confined first on Ganghwa Island and then on Jeju Island, where he died in 1641.[6] He does not have a royal mausoleum like the other Joseon rulers. His and Lady Ryu's remains were buried at a comparatively humble site in Namyangju in Gyeonggi Province. The Westerners faction installed Neungyanggun as the sixteenth king Injo who promulgated pro-Ming and anti-Manchu policies, which resulted in two subsequent Manchu invasions.

Legacy

Gwanghaegun's tomb

Gwanghaegun is one of only two deposed kings who were not restored and given a temple name (the other one being Yeonsangun).

He remains a polarizing figure among historians. Historian Oh Hang-nyeong strongly criticized the king, writing that he "practically used up the country's entire budget solely for the construction of palaces, his policies were flawed and moreover, he was absent in many of the cabinet meetings. Gwanghaegun failed to communicate with his servants and with his people." However, historian Lee Duk-il praised the king, did that he "indeed made some political errors, but during his reign, the famous oriental medical book 'Donguibogam' was published and he created the tax system 'Daedong law' that was enforced for the benefit of the people." Despite the controversy over the king's handling of domestic policies, most historians have a positive assessment of Gwanghae's acts regarding foreign affairs.[7]

Family

Consort(s) and their respective issue

  1. Deposed Queen Yu of the Munhwa Yu clan (폐비 유씨; 15 August 1576 – 31 October 1623)
    1. First son (1592)
    2. Second son (1596)
    3. Deposed Crown Prince Yi Ji (폐세자 이지; 31 December 1598 – 22 July 1623), third son
    4. Fourth son (1605–1610)
  2. Royal Noble Consort Su of the Yangcheon Heo clan (수빈 허씨; 1595–1623)[a]
  3. Royal Consort Gwi-in of the Papyeong Yun clan (귀인 윤씨; 1602 – 14 March 1623)
    1. Princess Hwain (화인옹주; 1619–1664), first daughter
  4. Royal Consort So-ui of the Pungsan Hong clan (소의 홍씨; 1584–1623)
  5. Royal Consort So-ui of the Andong Gwon clan (숙의 권씨; 1586–1624)
  6. Royal Consort Suk-ui of the Wonju Won clan (숙의 원씨; 1588–?)
  7. Royal Consort So-yong of the Dongnae Jeong clan (소용 정씨; 1592–1623)
  8. Royal Consort So-yong of the Pungcheon Im clan (소용 임씨; 1598–1628)
  9. Royal Consort So-won of the Yeongsan Shin clan (소원 신씨; 1594–?)
  10. Royal Consort Suk-won of the Han clan (숙원 한씨; 1585–?)
  11. Court Lady Kim (상궁 김씨; 1584–1623)
  12. Court Lady Yi (상궁 이씨; 1585–?)
  13. Court Lady Choe (상궁 최씨; 1585–?)
  14. Court Lady Jo of the Hanyang Jo clan (궁인 조씨; 1596–?)
  15. Court Lady Byeon of the Wonju Byeon clan (궁인 변씨; 1585–?)

Film and television

Music

  • Referenced in rapper Agust D's 2020 regnal march inspired Daechwita.[8][9] Both the song's lyrics and accompanying Lumpens music video draw further from the 2012 film Masquerade with Agust D portraying a scarred tyrant threatened by the arrival of his modern era doppelganger.[10][11]

Literature

  • Gwanghae's Lover, a 2013 novel written by Euodia. Originally posted on web portal Naver, it is a love story about Gwanghae and a time traveling high school girl.[12]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Her personal name was Heo Jeong-sun (허정순)

References

  1. ^ Quartermain, Thomas (December 2019). "State Symbols, Group Identity, and Communal Memory in Jeong Gyeong-un's Godae illok, 1592-1598" (PDF). The Review of Korean Studies. 22 (2): 77. Retrieved 15 January 2024.
  2. ^ Rutt, Richard; Pratt, Keith L.; Hoare, James (1999). Korea: A Historical and Cultural Dictionary. United Kingdom: Routledge. ISBN 0-7007-0463-9. (p252)
  3. ^ "The lament of Prince Gwanghae". Dong A Ilbo. 26 November 2019. Retrieved 15 January 2024.
  4. ^ Schmid, Alban. The Institutional Power of Chosŏn Korea’s Queen Dowagers. Leeds: Arc Humanities Press, 2024.
  5. ^ 승정원일기 1책(탈초본 1책) 인조 1년 3월 12일 임인. 승정원일기. Retrieved 12 December 2017.
  6. ^ Woo, Jiwon. "[Jeju Playbook] Banished to the Island!". Korea Foundation. Retrieved 15 January 2024.
  7. ^ "Controversy reignited over King Gwanghae". Korea JoongAng Daily. 16 September 2012. Retrieved 30 June 2022.
  8. ^ Agust D (22 May 2020). "D-2" (in Korean). Big Hit Music. Archived from the original on 11 April 2021. Retrieved 10 April 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  9. ^ Agust D (22 May 2020). "'D-2'" (in Korean). Big Hit Music. Archived from the original on 22 May 2020. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
  10. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Agust D '대취타' MV, 22 May 2020, retrieved 11 April 2021
  11. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Agust D 'D-2' Mixtape Interview, 27 May 2020, retrieved 11 April 2021
  12. ^ Baek, Byung-yeul (31 May 2013). "Recent Book: Gwanghae's Lover". The Korea Times. Retrieved 24 January 2014.