Kjemi Coup: Difference between revisions

m
no edit summary
mNo edit summary
mNo edit summary
 
(7 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1:
{{Infobox military conflict
The '''Gjemi Coup''' [Hankoel: 계미정변, Handja: 癸未政變] was a [[Corea|Corean]] coup d'état that overthrew the government of King Hjodjo of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseon Tsjasan] and led to the enthronement of [[Tedjo of Sjakwang|King Tedjo]], founding the [[Corea|Sjakwang]] state.
| conflict = Kjemi Coup
| image =
| caption =
| date = 5 - 17 June 1883
| place = Corea
| result = Anti-Tsjosan coalition victory
| combatant1 = {{indented plainlist|indent=2.2em|
* [[House of Ki]]
* Corean Catholics
* Silhak scholars
* Taulander mercenaries
* [[Netherlands]] (support)
}}
| combatant2 = {{indented plainlist|indent=2.2em|
* Tsjosan dynasty
* [[Great Qing]] (support)
}}
| commander1 = {{indented plainlist|indent=2.2em|
* Tedjo the Great
}}
| commander2 = {{indented plainlist|indent=2.2em|
*
}}
| casualties1 =
| casualties2 =
}}
 
The '''GjemiKjemi Coup''' [Hankoel: 계미정변, Handja: 癸未政變] was a [[Corea|Corean]] coup d'état that overthrew the government of King Hjodjo of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseon Tsjasan] and led to the enthronement of [[Tedjo of Sjakwang|King Tedjo]], founding the [[Corea#Sjakwang dynasty (1883-1935)|Sjakwang state]] statein 1883. It lasted from the 5th to the 17th of June and provoked a series of changes and social unrest across Corea and East Asia.
 
== Etymology ==
The word GjemiKjemi [癸未] comes from the ancient Sinospheric [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sexagenary_cycle#:~:text=The%20Korean%20(%ED%99%98%EA%B0%91%3B%20%E9%82%84%E7%94%B2,as%20a%20count%20of%20years. sexagenary cycle]. During the 19th century, it was still used commonly in Corea to name events and incidents.
 
== Causes and Background ==
 
==== Corea's Silhak movement ====
Originating in the late 17th century, the [https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EC%8B%A4%ED%95%99 Silhak] [실학, lit. ''practical knowledge''] was a philosophical, practical, and reformist movement that was opposed to the Neo-Confucian social order. The [https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EB%B0%98%EA%B3%84%EC%88%98%EB%A1%9D Banje Records] is considered to be the first Silhak publication. Throughout the centuries, Silhak has remained mainly apolitical, focusing on the reformation of Corean society and public policy instead. Several contrasting political parties have had significant Silhak influence, making this movement one of few that united much of the Corean public against the ills and stagnation of the Neo-Confucian order.
 
==== Dutch influence and the Sjinsa Party ====
{{Main|Corea#Dutch_Influence_In_Corea_and_Sjahak}}
The Sjinsa Party [신서파, lit. ''new Western faction''] was a political and intellectual coterie that actively associated themselves with Western ideas and Christian doctrine. They gained notability during the mid 18th century after the Dutch acquired control of Poesjan and especially during the discord that followed the [[Japan#Encroachment of the Dutch and Russians|1754 Japanese succession crisis]] [徳川継承の危機]. Their most persistent political opposition was the [http://contents.history.go.kr/front/hm/view.do?treeId=010603&tabId=03&levelId=hm_108_0100 Kongsa Party] [공서파, lit. ''anti-Western faction''], their brother faction from the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southerners_(Korean_political_faction)#:~:text=%22South%20people%22)%20were%20a,Minister%20from%201675%20to%201678. Southerner] bloc.
 
Many viewed them as "conceited aristocrats enthralled with the artifacts of the West, unconcerned for rural folk and addicted to grape wine" (as described by politician [https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EA%B9%80%EC%9E%AC%EB%A1%9C Kim Jero]). Ultimately, their laudations for the West did expose Corea to entirely different concepts and invited nuanced debates on Corean society and politics. This contributed to the public's dissatisfaction with the Neo-Confucian status quo over the next 130 years.
 
During the late 1860s and 1870s, the Sjinsa and Kongsa factions would be united by the anti-King Hjodjang opposition through a mutual moral duty to defend Corean Christians from unjust persecution despite their thoughts on the West.
 
==== Ascendancy of the [[House of Ki|Ki family]] ====
Always having been a prestigious family, the Hengdjoe Ki clan gained modern prominence when their patriarch, Lord Ki Tsjangdjin, moved the political and economic center of the clan to the capital region in 1858. Lord Ki used his own ability, the family's [[House of Ki#History|historical reputation]], and the dynamicity of a modernizing Corea to pave the way for their eventual dominance of the country for decades.
 
==== The Oelhe Repression ====
King Hjodjong instituted a series of edicts and policies that came to be known as the Oelhe Repression [Handja: 乙亥壓迫 lit. ''pressure of the earth pig year'']. Following the [[Canton War|collapse of Qing hegemony]] and the rise of a [[Wahhah Republic#Kingdom of Canton|Christian state]] in southern China, the Neo-Confucian ruling class became au courant with Corea's position as [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_China_(ideology)#Korea Little China], allowing for the passage of several anti-Western and anti-Silhak laws in rapid succession. Many Coreans reacted harshly to these restrictions, with many different intellectual and political factions banding together under the leadership of several public figures like Lord Ki, [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yun_Ung-nyeol Yoen Oengnjal], [https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EB%B0%95%EA%B7%9C%EC%88%98 Pak Kjoesoe], and others.
 
==== Oeitongbang Incident of 1881 ====
Line 29 ⟶ 66:
Guerrilla activity continued throughout Kjanggi province - in fact, most of Corea - for the next two years. Hansjang remained under martial law for the majority of this time, with many other Corean cities and ports having to institute measures to preserve food supplies and improve defensive apparatuses in their respective provinces.
 
== TimelineEvents of the Coup ==
On the 5th of June, 1883, the Coup began in the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insa-dong Insa Locale]. Rebels assassinated four Tsjosan officials within an hour.
 
[[Tedjo of Sjakwang|Military Governor Ki]] (with 500 soldiers) and several other resistance leaders arrived in Hansjang on the 6th, fighting government forces. A Dutch Reformed church in Jongsan District was set ablaze that night, leading to an extremely destructive conflagration that destroyed much of Hansjang and caused the forced evacuation of 10,000 people.
 
Eventually, on the 17th of June - twelve days since the Coup began and with over 1,000 casualties - Governor Ki's forces imprisoned the King and executed the Left and Chief State Councillors.
 
== Aftermath ==
 
==== Ascension of the new King ====
A week after the coup, [[Tedjo of Sjakwang|Ki Ripbam]] was a leading candidate for the new King. He was challenged by candidates from the Andong Kim, Soenhoeng Ahn, and other clans. Using his connections, he hired mercenaries from [[Tauland]] and allied with several key families in return for discreet favours.
 
Eleven days before [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chuseok Tsjusak], Ki Ripbam decisively declared himself King of Corea, the formation of the [[House of Ki]], and the establishment of the [[Corea|state of Sjakwang]]. 326 people were exiled, 64 sentenced to death, and 1,102 pardoned on the day of the declaration. Ripbam declared himself King Tedjo and began his coronation on the 26th of October, the same day as King Yangdjo's. Shortly before his coronation, King Tedjo divorced his estranged wife Lady Pak Mjanghwa and took on two consorts the next day.
==== Resistance to the new regime ====
The Ki clan and their allies commit acts of violence across the nation in response to resistance, at one time even executing the wife and children of an ultraconservative governor. Nakatomi Hidehasa, a Japanese accountant and translator in Corea at the time, described the Ki clan's atrocities as 'tragedy framed by justice' and 'the novel Jansangun dreamed of writing'.
 
==== Shift in Corean policy ====
 
==== Damage & death toll ====
rtl-contributors
1,630

edits