Movements - 30
Ready Posture - PARALLEL READY STANCE
END: Bring the left foot back to a ready posture.
This pattern is named for Choong-Moo, the honorary title
given to the great Admiral Yi Sun-Sin (1545-1598) of the
Yi I Dynasty. He was reputed to be the the inventor of
the first armored battleship (Kobukson) in 1592, which
is said to be the precursor of the present-day submarine.
His regrettable death is symbolized in the end of this
pattern with left-hand attack. Checked by the forced reservation
of his loyalty to the king, Yi Sun-Sin was given no chance
in his lifetime to show his unrestrained potentiality.
Remarkable
Born in 1545, Yi Sun-Sin is reputed to have been a master
naval tactician; his prowess was largely responsible for
the defeat of the Japanese in 1592 and 1598. He has been
compared to Sir Francis Drake and Lord Nelson of England.
His name is held in such high esteem that when the Japanese
fleet defeated the Russian navy in 1905, the Japanese
admiral was quoted as saying, "You may wish to compare
me with Lord Nelson but do not compare me with Korea'sAdmiral
Yi Sun-Sin.... He is too remarkable for anyone"
Yi Sun-Sin's most famous invention was the Kobukson,
or turtle-boat, a galley ship decked over with iron plates
to protect the soldiers and rowing seamen. It was so named
because the curvature of the iron plates covering the
top decks made it resemble a turtle's shell. The ship
was 110 feet long and 28 feet wide with a lower deck for
cabins and supplies, a middle deck for oarsmen, and an
upper deck for marines and cannons. Most of the timber
was 4-inches thick, giving the ship protection from arrows
and musket balls. It had a large iron ram in the shape
of a turtle's head with an open mouth from which smoke,
arrows, and missiles were discharged. Another such opening
in the rear and six more on either side were for the same
purpose. The armored shell was fitted with iron spikes
and knives that were covered over with straw or grass
to impale unwanted boarders.
The skip - Kobukson
The Kobukson was not only impervious to almost any Japanese
weapon, but it was heavier and built for speed, and could
overtake anything afloat. The ship carried approximately
40 3-inch cannons that fired shot or steel headed darts,
and had hundreds of small holes for firing arrows or throwing
bombs. In comparison, the Japanese ships usually carried
one cannon, many muskets, and no protective armor. The
Kobukson was, therefore, very effective in chasing down
and sinking large numbers of Japanese troop and supply
ships as well as successfully attacking numerous heavy
Japanese battleships head on. It was the most highly developed
warship of its time. The Kobukson was constructed in a
critical period in Korean history; one of the many times
Korean and Japanese destinies converged
The first invasion in 1592
When Toyotomi Hideyoshi, the shogun of Japan, rose to
power in 1590, he decided to control the internal feuding
in Japan. Because Japan's largest threat was the other
powerful war lords of Japan, he planned to tie up the
financial re sources of the lords with an invasion of
China and thereby dilute their power. He requested that
Korea aid him in his conquest; when it refused, he ordered
two of his generals, Kato Kiyomasa (the Buddhist commander)
and Konishi Yukinaga (the Christian commander), to attack
Korea in April 1592. The Japanese invasion force comprised
160,000 regular army troops; 80,000 bodyguard troops:
1.500 heavy cavalry; 60,000 reserve troops; 50,000 horses;
300,000 firearms; 500,000 daggers; 100,000 shorts words;
100,000 spears; 100,000 long swords; 5,000 axes; and 3-4,000
boats (40-50 feet by 10 feet). The army was also supported
by another 700 ships, transport vessels, naval ships,
and small craft manned by 9,000 seamen. Having been acquainted
with the use of firearms since 1543, the Japanese had
imported a large number of muskets from Europe, and had
developed the ability to manufacture those four years
before the first invasion
Weak Japanese morale
The Koreans, on the other hand, had few firearms, and
did not know how to use or manufacture them. Outnumbered
and armed only with swords, bows and arrows, and spears,
the Korean military was severely disadvantaged in the
face of the Japanese invading army armed with 300,000
muskets. Although a few courageous Korean units resisted,
such as those under the command of General Kim Si-Min,
the army of Japan reached Seoul in just 15 days and had
occupied the entire country by May 1592. The Korean king,
Son Jo, fled with his court to Uiju in the Northern Provinces
and Girl from the Ming emperor of China with whom the
Koreans had several treaties.
When the Ming armies joined in the fight the tide of the
war shifted away from the Japanese. They had to fight
Korean guerilla groups as well as the Ming army, while
at the same time finding that they were cut off from their
supplies by a Korean admiral named Yi Sun-Sin. Disease,
malnutrition, and the cold soon took its toll on Japanese
morale. Having lost the will to fight, retreating Japanese
forces were stalked by guerilla forces led by Confucian
scholars and Buddhist monks. Peace negotiations eventually
took place between the Ming general and the Japanese;
however, these talks dragged on for five years and reached
no conclusion.
Able to outguess the enemy
In early 1592 at the outset of this conflict, Admiral
Yi Sun-Sin, in charge of the Right Division of Chulla
Province, made his headquarters in the port city of Yosu.
There he constructed his famed turtle ships. The first
Kobukson was launched and outfitted with cannons only
two days before the first Japanese troops landed at Pusan.
In the fifth month of 1592, assisted by the admiral of
the Left Division of Chulla Province, Won Kyun, Admiral
Yi engaged the Japanese at Okpa. In his first battle,
Admiral Yi commanded 80 ships compared to the Japanese
naval force of 800 ships. The Japanese were trying to
re-supply their northern bases from their port at Pusan.
By the end of the day Yi had set afire 26 Japanese ships
and the rest had turned to flee. Giving chase, he sank
many more, leaving the entire Japanese fleet scattered
several major engagements followed in which Admiral Yi
annihilated every Japanese squadron he encountered. Courageous
and a tactical genius, he seemed to be able to outguess
the enemy. In one incident, Admiral Yi dreamt that a robed
man called out "The Japanese are coming." Seeing
this as a sign, he rose to assemble his ships, sailed
out, and surprised a large enemy fleet. He burned twelve
enemy ships and scattered the rest. In the course of the
battle, he demonstrated his bravery by not showing pain
when shot in the shoulder. He revealed his injury only
when the battle was over, at which time he bared his shoulder
and ordered that the bullet be cut out.
One of history's greatest naval battles
In
August of 1592, 100,000 Japanese troop reinforcements
headed around Pyongyang peninsula to head up the west
coast. Admiral Yi and his Lieutenant Yi Ok-Keui confronted
them at Kyon-Na-Rang among the islands off the southern
coast of Korea. Pretending at first to flee, Admiral Yi
then turned and began to ram the Japanese ships. His fleet
followed his lead and sank 71 Japanese boats. When a Japanese
reinforcement fleet arrived, Admiral Yi's fleet sank 48
more Japanese ships and forced many more to be beached
as the Japanese sailors tried to escape on land. This
engagement is considered to be one of history's greatest
naval battles. Unaware of this battle, the Japanese commander
had sent a message to the Korean King Son-Jo that read:
"A 100,000 men are coming to reinforce me. Where
will you flee then?" Upon hearing that Admiral Yi
had shattered the Japanese fleet, the king was elated
and heaped all possible honors upon him. For the Japanese,
any hope of an invasion of China was now totally crushed.
Admiral Yi Sun-Sin pushed on to Tang-Hang Harbor where
he encountered another large Japanese fleet that included
the huge Japanese flagship of the Japanese admiral. Admiral
Yi ordered his best archer to shoot the Japanese admiral,
who sat on the deck dressed in silk and gold. The arrow
pierced the Japanese admiral's throat, throwing the entire
Japanese fleet into a panicked retreat which ended in
carnage as Yi pursued in his usual fashion.
A brilliant military move
In a brilliant military move, Admiral Yi took the entire
Korean Navy, 180 small and large ships, and sailed right
into the Japanese home port at Pusan harbor and attacked
the main Japanese naval force of more than 500 ships that
was still at anchor. Using fire boats and strategic maneuvering,
he sank over half of the Japanese vessels. However, receiving
no land support, Admiral Yi was forced to withdraw. With
this battle, Admiral Yi completed what some naval historians
have called the most important series of engagements in
the history of the world.
During one patrol sweep Admiral Yi's fleet spotted 26
Japanese ships on the horizon. He spread out his forces
in a formation known as the fishnet and advanced. The
fishnet or inverted V grouped the heaviest ships of the
fleet at its vortex. As the enemy ships were forced inside
the V they were trapped and destroyed by Yi's heavy ships.
On this occasion the enemy entered into the V and before
long was surrounded and all boats were burned.
Korean control of the sea, under the command of Admiral
Yi Sun-Sin, soon forced the Japanese invasion to a complete
standstill. Although the Japanese ground commanders begged
for supplies, neither supplies nor reinforcements could
get past Admiral Yi Sun-Sin to reach the Japanese forces
along the western coast of the peninsula. Because of this
situation, the following months saw little military action.
During his forced idleness Admiral Yi Sun-Sin prepared
for the future; he had his men make salt by evaporating
seawater, and used it to pay local workers for building
ships and barracks and to trade for materials his navy
needed. His energy and patriotism were so contagious that
many worked for nothing. Having heard not only of Yi's
military feats, but his contributions to the navy as well,
the king conferred upon him the admiralty of the surrounding
three provinces.
Admiral Yi arrested, beaten, tortured
For a successful invasion of Korea, the Japanese knew
that they would have to eliminate Yi Sun-Sin. No Japanese
fleet would be safe as long as his turtle boats were prowling
the sea. Seeing how the internal court rivalries of the
Koreans worked, the Japanese devised a plan. A Japanese
soldier named Yosira was sent to the camp of the Korean
general, Kim Eung-Su, and convinced the general that he
would spy on the Japanese for the Koreans. Yosira spent
a long time acting as a spy and giving the Koreans what
appeared to be valuable information. One day he told General
Kim that the Japanese General Kato would become on a certain
date with a great Japanese fleet, and insisted that Admiral
Yi be sent to lie in wait and sink it. General Kim agreed
and requested King Son-Jo for permission to send Admiral
Yi. The general was given permission, but when he gave
Admiral Yi his orders, the admiral declined. Yi knew that
the location given by the spy was studded with sunken
rocks and was very dangerous. When General Kim informed
the king of Admiral Yi .Sun Sin's refusal to go, Admiral
Yi's enemies at court insisted on his replacement by Won
Kyun and his arrest. As a result, in 1597 Admiral Yi Sun-Sin
was relieved of command, placed under arrest, taken to
Seoul in chains, beaten, and tortured. The king wanted
to have Admiral Yi but the admiral's supporters at court
convinced the king to spare him due to his past service
record. Spared the death penalty, Admiral Yi was demoted
to the rank of common foot soldier. Yi Sun-Sin responded
to this humiliation as a most obedient subject, going
quietly about his work as if his rank and orders were
totally appropriate.
With Admiral Yi stripped of any influence, when negotiations
broke down in 1596 Hideyoshi again ordered his army to
attack Korea. The invasion came in the first month of
1597 with a Japanese force of 140,000 men transported
to Korea in thousands of ships. Had Admiral Yi been in
command of the Korean Navy at that time, the Japanese
would most likely never have landed on any shore again.
As it was, however, the Japanese fleet landed safely at
Sosang Harbor.
The spy
The spy Yosira now continued to urge General Kim to send
the Korean Navy to intercept a fleet of Japanese ships.
When ordered to do so, Won Kyun gathered his 80 ships
together and reluctantly set sail. This fleet was hardly
recognizable as Yi Sun-Sin's former one: Won Kyun had
eliminated all of the rules and regulations set up by
Yi when he took command as well as purging the ranks of
all who had been close to Admiral Yi. His inept maneuvers
almost destroyed the entire Korean fleet and alienated
all his men. Consequently, this battle ended in a complete
defeat for the Korean Navy while Yi Sun-Sin was being
detained as a foot soldier. The Korean fleet scattered
in a night storm and the main portion blundered upon the
Japanese fleet the next day. On seeing the Japanese fleet,
Won Kyun panicked and retreated. He beached his boats
and took to the land but the Japanese overtook and beheaded
him. The Korean fleet scattered was mostly destroyed.
The King reinstated Admiral Yi
With the news of Won Kyun's disastrous defeat, a loyal
advisor of the king called for Yi Sun-Sin's reinstatement.
Fearing for his country's security, the king hastily reinstated
Yi Sun-Sin as the naval commander. In spite of his previous
unfair treatment, Yi immediately set out on foot for his
former base at Hansan. As he traveled he met scattered
remnants of his former force. By the time he arrived at
Hansan he had only twelve boats but no lack of men, for
the people all along the coast had flocked to him when
they heard of his reinstatement. Yi drew up his fleet
of 12 boats in the shadow of a mountain on Chin-Do Island
off the Myongyang straits. One night his scouts reported
the approach of a Japanese fleet. As the moon dropped
behind the mountain, the Korean fleet of 12 ships was
shrouded in total darkness. When the Japanese fleet of
133 ships sailed by in single file, Admiral Yi's forces
gave a large shout and fired point blank. Yi employed
one of his tactics, the use of two salvo fire that resulted
in a continuous barrage causing the Japanese to think
that they had run into a vastly superior force. Their
fleet scattered in all directions in a total panic. The
next day several hundred more Japanese ships appeared
and Admiral Yi, fearless as ever, made straight for them
He was soon surrounded, but sank 30 Japanese boats. The
remainder of the Japanese fleet, recognizing the work
of the famous Admiral Yi Sun-Sin, turned and fled. Admiral
Yi gave chase, decimated the enemy y, and killed the Japanese
commander Madasi. After this battle, Admiral Yi returned
to Hansan and once again began rebuilding the navy and
making salt. His former captains and soldiers came back
to him in "clouds." With his salt-making operations
and the money collected as a toll from fleeing merchant
ships, Admiral Yi purchased needed plies and materials
such as copper used in making cannons and ships. He again
managed to establish a large, well-equipped garrison.
Korea was alone and in trouble
Despite Admiral Yi's personal success, Korea was alone
and in trouble. What help was available was most often
supplied by Chinese troops and naval units. Although this
military support was extremely welcome, it carried with
it a new set of problems. Often, these problems took the
form of Korean fighting units having to put up with Chinese
commander being in charge of them. These commanders were
usually not inspired by the same patriotism that the good
Korean commanders were guided by.
In 1598 the Chinese emperor sent Admiral Chil Lin to
command Korea's western coast. Admiral Chil Lin was an
extremely vain man and would take advice from no one.
Knowing this to be a serious problem, Admiral Yi made
every effort to win -the trust of the Chinese admiral.
His political skills proved to be as good as his military
ones. He allowed Admiral Chil Lin to take credit for many
victories that really were his own. He was willing to
forgo the praise and let others reap the commendation
in order to have the enemies of his country destroyed.
Yi Sun-Sin was soon in charge of all strategy while Admiral
Chil Lin took the credit. This arrangement made the Chinese
seem successful, which so encouraged them that they gave
Korea the aid it desperately needed. Admiral Chil Lin
could not praise Admiral Yi enough, and repeatedly wrote
to the Korean King So-Jon that the universe did not contain
another man who could perform the feats that Yi Sun-Sin
apparently found easy.
Admiral Yi died in battle in 1598
It is fitting that Admiral Yi died in battle in 1598.
It was during the time when the Japanese were trying to
evacuate many of their forces. Admiral Yi and the Chinese
Admiral Chil Lin swooped down on their forces and nearly
wiped out the entire fleet. Yi Sun-Sin, while standing
in the bow of his flagship directing the battle, was struck
with a stray bullet. Before he died, he is quoted as saying,
"Do not let the rest know I am dead, for it will
spoil the fight."
During the second invasion of Korea in 1597, the Japanese
were only able to occupy Kyongsang and part of Chulla
Provinces. Their efforts were thwarted by the harassment
of the Korean volunteer army and the strategies of Admiral
Yi Sun-Sin that prevented them from landing or being supplied
beyond the southern provinces. Partly due to this lack
of progress, the war ended after Hideyoshi's death late
in 1598 when the Japanese troops were recalled to Japan.
A valuable collections were destroyed
The six years of war, from 1592 to 1598, laid waste to
the whole Korean peninsula. Hardly a building still stands
in Korea that predates the Hideyoshi invasions except
for a few stone structures. Rare and valuable collections
of books were destroyed, including the official records
of the reigns of the Yi dynasty. A series of famines,
epidemics, peasant revolts, and a full-scale renewal of
political squabbling in the Korean government followed
on the heels of the war. As a result, culture and government
were left in chaos and the social system of the country
was disrupted.
One of its most celebrated national heroes
for all its disastrous aftermath, the war did provide
Korea with one of its most celebrated national heroes,
Admiral Yi Sun-Sin. Known primarily as an inventor of
the world's first iron-plated vessel, master tactician
credited with having sunk an unbelievable number of enemy
vessels with only a small naval force, Yi also had other
accomplishments. Some of his little-known inventions included
the use of a smoke generator in which sulphur and saltpeter
were burned, emitting great clouds of smoke. This first
recorded use of a smoke screen struck terror in the hearts
of the superstitious enemy sailors, and more practically,
it masked the movements of Admiral Yi's ships. Another
of his inventions was a new Korean weapon' a type of flamethrower,
that was a small cannon with an arrow-shaped shell housing
an incendiary charge. This flamethrower successfully set
afire hundreds of enemy ships. Along with his inventions,
specific tactical maneuvers demonstrate Yi's brilliance
as a naval tactician. One such tactic was his defeat of
a large enemy convoy by using a formation described as
the fishnet, described earlier. Yi also used two salvo
fire against a large force of Japanese warships -- an
early, if not first, use of such firepower.
Choong Moo (Lojalitetens Orden)
Admiral Yi Sun-Sin was one of the greatest heroes in Korean
history. He was posthumously awarded the honorary title
of Choong-Moo, "Loyalty-Chivalry," in 1643.
The Distinguished Military Service Medal of the Republic
of Korea, the third highest, is named after this title.
Numerous books praise his feats of glory, and several
statues and monuments commemorate
his deeds. In April 1968, a 55-foot high statue of Yi
(reportedly the tallest in the Orient) was dedicated in
Seoul, Korea. His statue on the peak of Mt. Nam-mang,
life-size, indicates that he was a very large man, as
judged by the size of the sword on it. The shrine of Chungnyol-Sa,
meaning "faithful to king and country," established
in 1606, is now both a m museum and shrine dedicated to
the admiral. The eight relics on display in this shrine
were gifts to Admiral Yi Sun-Sin f rom the Chinese emperor
and include a 7foot commander's bugle, a ( Admiral Yi
Sun Sin) 5-foot sword, a ceremonial sword (weighing 66
pounds), Admiral Yi's seal, and several flags. Another
Korean treasure is the war diary of Admiral Yi Sun-Sin,
which, in addition to some of his personal articles, is
preserved at the shrine of Hyonchung-Sa. In addition,
a small museum in the city of Choong-Moo, a traditional
seaport named after him, displays a replica of the turtle
ship as well as other articles of that period.
One of Yi Sun-Sin's greatest qualities
Perhaps one of Yi Sun-Sin's greatest qualities was his
drive to serve his king and Korea in any way he could.
When almost everyone in Korean politics and military service
was forced to side with one of the two powerful Korean
political parties of the time to survive the ruthless
atmosphere, Yi chose neither and was only loyal to his
king and country. Moreover, at a time in Korean history
when position and rank meant everything, Yi Sun-Sin demonstrated
a remarkable ability to maintain his pride in the face
of an unwarranted demotion. Any other officer of his time
would have been driven to suicide or revenge in an attempt
to erase such a terrible disgrace. Yi, however, merely
went about his work as a common foot soldier without a
thought for these courses of action. Not only a naval
innovator and tactician hundreds of years ahead of his
time, Yi was also a man with bravery and loyalty matched
by few in the history of the world.