Imjin War - Japanese Invasion of Korea 1592-1598 - 4K DOCUMENTARY

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Kings and Generals animated historical documentary series on the history of Japan continues with an episode episode on the Imjin War - the Japanese Invasion of Korea between 1592 and 1598, during which the armies of the Shogunate fought against the allied Korean and Chinese armies. This conflict is famous for many dramatic battles and sieges, and the naval heroics of the Korean admiral Yi Sun-sin.
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The video was made by Antoni Kameran while the script was researched and written by Matt Hollis and Dimitris Koutsoumis. This video was narrated by Officially Devin ( / @offydgg & kzread.info/dron/79s.html.... Machinimas made using Total War: Shogun 2 engine, Shogun 2 10th anniversary mod and reShade mod
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#Documentary #Japan #Imjin

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  • @KingsandGenerals
    @KingsandGenerals Жыл бұрын

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  • @hanpyulkong3676

    @hanpyulkong3676

    Жыл бұрын

    Although 430 years ago, the Imjin War is a deeply humiliating history for South and North Koreans. One of the reasons why South Korea is strengthening its defense capabilities and fostering the defense industry is that it will not be invaded like the Imjin War. In Sacheon, where Admiral Yi Sun-shin fought his first naval battle against the Japanese Navy, there is the headquarters and factory of KAI (Korea Aerospace Industries), a Korean aircraft manufacturer. It is the company that KAI exported the FA-50 to Poland, the standard for Western light attack aircraft.

  • @peasantmob1712

    @peasantmob1712

    Жыл бұрын

    Suggest you read the critique of Samuel Hawley's book from the Great Ming Military website, which contains a lot of examples in which historical sources were misused said book, ie claiming a source said there’s X amount of men when the source said no such thing. As at least some parts of the video seem to have came from Samuel Hawley either directly or indirectly.

  • @wisdomleader85

    @wisdomleader85

    Жыл бұрын

    "Japan might still show up at your door." Yeah, with weeaboos and waifus. Not dangerous at all, but can be quite annoying.

  • @WellBattle6

    @WellBattle6

    Жыл бұрын

    At 54:26, the Battle of Byeokjegwan banner incorrectly reads Siege of Pyongyang.

  • @morningcalmrisingsun

    @morningcalmrisingsun

    Жыл бұрын

    Fianlly youre covering the Imjin waeran but my criticism is that it seems sort of a Japenese centric documentary. Why? Because you don't even mention some Korean commanders. You don't even mention Seoul was not called seoul but Hanseong. You didnt mention the korean sides diplomats and how because of their rivalry gave completely different accounts about the Japanese and why their mission was such a failure.

  • @c.w.simpsonproductions1230
    @c.w.simpsonproductions1230 Жыл бұрын

    The tale of Admiral Yi is nothing short of superhuman, and yet at the same time a tragedy. Other men would have turned their back or defected after being treated the way he was. But he cared more for his nation than himself, even when the leadership of that nation betrayed him time and time again for their own selfish ambition. But he fought not for the government, but the nation itself. True patriotism.

  • @jonbaxter2254

    @jonbaxter2254

    Жыл бұрын

    The true Nelson of the East.

  • @jonransdell

    @jonransdell

    Жыл бұрын

    I had no idea that Admiral Yi could make good tamales.

  • @hanpyulkong3676

    @hanpyulkong3676

    Жыл бұрын

    In Sacheon, where Admiral Yi Sun-shin fought his first naval battle against the Japanese Navy, there is the headquarters and factory of KAI (Korea Aerospace Industries), a Korean aircraft manufacturer. It is the company that KAI exported the FA-50 to Poland, the standard for Western light attack aircraft.

  • @gloomy3501

    @gloomy3501

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jonbaxter2254 na Nelson is Yi of west

  • @lafeelabriel

    @lafeelabriel

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jonbaxter2254 Wtih all due respect to Nelson, he doesn't even come close.

  • @adamwu4565
    @adamwu4565 Жыл бұрын

    One of the most amazing thing about Yi Sun Shin was that all his prior military experience prior to the Imjin War was in the army, and he only started studying naval warfare after he was appointed the commander in Cholla shortly before the war started. All his subsequent naval brilliance was self-taught.

  • @ravenblood1954

    @ravenblood1954

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah and he was such a fucking genius that he designed his own ships which turned the tide of the naval war. It would be like Patton suddenly becoming an admiral and inventing the aircraft carrier xD

  • @YuuSHiiiN

    @YuuSHiiiN

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ravenblood1954 The one known Patton invention funny enough was his Patton cavalry sword due to having a background as a competitive fencer and swordsman.

  • @oododd

    @oododd

    Жыл бұрын

    ㄹㅇ 어떻게 한것이오 이순신장군!!!

  • @bkjeong4302

    @bkjeong4302

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ravenblood1954 Yi didn’t design his own ships: the turtle ship was an earlier innovation he resurrected, and he left the design modifications necessary to one of his most able captains, Na Dae-yong (who actually sailed the turtle ship into battle at Sacheon and Hansando). What Yi DID do was invent a new naval doctrine focused much more heavily on gunnery and battleline engagements, the first officer in Asia (and one of the first naval officers in general) to do this. So it wouldn’t be like Patton switching to naval command and inventing the aircraft carrier; it would be like Patton switching to naval command and inventing the concept of carrier battlegroups and multiple-deck massed airstrikes.

  • @Luboman411

    @Luboman411

    Жыл бұрын

    I tend to think Yi's self-taught naval strategies after a stint in the army was probably what made Yi such a tremendous stand-out success. If he had been taught in the old naval ways due to being in the navy since his youth, he would've been more tied to the conventional ways of fighting naval battles, like his Japanese enemies. Outsiders at times have great success in a field--in this case a former soldier in naval strategy--because they can really think outside of the box and are not tied down to traditions and norms. I do wonder if there's been a very successful person the other way around--a former sailor who becomes a great general of land armies.

  • @dongwonkim1223
    @dongwonkim12239 ай бұрын

    That's truly amazing. I've never seen an English video that describes the Imjin War in such detail and accuracy. Thank you for your effort.

  • @edwardkim2579
    @edwardkim2579 Жыл бұрын

    People need to know that YI had no support from his country. He raised money himself, built the ships himself, made the first musket for korea, made the first ironclad turtleship, fed his people from starvation and saved korea from Japan. He is a Saint of saints in Korea along with King Sejong

  • @johnnybaum7957

    @johnnybaum7957

    Жыл бұрын

    That is insane.

  • @Wandrative

    @Wandrative

    Жыл бұрын

    Ironclad turtleships existed since the Goryeo era. He didnt invent them.

  • @edwardkim2579

    @edwardkim2579

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Wandrative nope not true. Provide source.

  • @Wandrative

    @Wandrative

    Жыл бұрын

    @@edwardkim2579 This is basic Korean history. The usage of turtle ships started to deal with the Jurchen pirates. And during the 1400s, there are numerous Joseon records of using Turtle ships as well.

  • @edwardkim2579

    @edwardkim2579

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Wandrative there is no record of a turtle ship during goryo dynasty. Like I said, state source

  • @TheNorthie
    @TheNorthie Жыл бұрын

    Admiral Togo, the Japanese admiral who won the decisive naval battle at the Tsushima straits was once compared to Yi and Nelson. Togo was taken aback by this and said: “It may be proper to compare me with Nelson, but not with Korea's Yi Sun-sin, for he has no equal.”

  • @rvrv7021

    @rvrv7021

    Жыл бұрын

    Its true

  • @Yhunhu

    @Yhunhu

    Жыл бұрын

    To add to Northie's comment, the full quote, for reference, is: "It may be proper to compare me with Nelson, but not with Korea's Yi Sun-shin, for he has no equal. Nelson and I both fought battles with full support from the government, but General Yi Sun-shin achieved victory without any government support. Compared to General Yi, I am but a petty officer." What happened was in 1905, Japan's Admiral Togo Heihachiro brought the war to an end in victory for the Japanese against the Russians. The victory granted tremendous amount of prestige and gaze from European powers. A part of it was that the Japanese studied and adopted Yi Sun-Shin's strategies. After the war, a party was held to celebrate Japan's victory. At the party, a reporter asked Admiral Togo the above. The source is that is usually cited is from Samuel Hawley "The Imjin War".

  • @Yhunhu

    @Yhunhu

    Жыл бұрын

    @@asdfghjjhgf thank you. I had inferred respect on Togo’s part, but I was mistaken

  • @lafeelabriel

    @lafeelabriel

    Жыл бұрын

    @@asdfghjjhgf No more than there is any proof of Yamamoto ever having said that they'd awoken a sleeping giant by attacking Pearl Harbour. He almost certainly *thought* something along those lines, as he knew, having lived in the US for several years between the wars, in just how deep trouble Japan was when they'd pissed America off like this, but he never actually *said* or wrote it.

  • @InquisitorXarius

    @InquisitorXarius

    Жыл бұрын

    Nelson is overrated garbage

  • @Quincy_Morris
    @Quincy_Morris Жыл бұрын

    There’s a lot of amazing things about Admiral Yi. One of them was his repeated ability to adapt his tactics to defeat his enemy even after his enemy repeatedly adapted their tactics to account for Yi’s previous successes.

  • @infinitecontent8001

    @infinitecontent8001

    Жыл бұрын

    The battle in the straits where he used the reversing currents against the Japanese? ABSOLUTE brilliance!

  • @warpigs9069

    @warpigs9069

    Жыл бұрын

    The enemy was 1 step of ahead of the enemy, so Yi launched himself 2 steps ahead!

  • @casper191985

    @casper191985

    Жыл бұрын

    Not true

  • @bkjeong4302

    @bkjeong4302

    Жыл бұрын

    There is actually a basic pattern to Yi’s victories, which can also found in various other successful admirals like Nelson or De Ruyter: - Being good at forcing engagements on favourable terms while being able to recognize unfavourable terms and not getting involved in these conditions. - Aggression at the tactical level - catching enemy forces off guard while at anchor (Yi during his earliest naval engagements and Nelson at the Battle of the Nile) to ensure you have the initiative - Focus on breaking up enemy formations (Yi at Sacheon and at Hansando to an extent, Nelson at Trafalgar) or otherwise being able to control their numbers (enveloping them, holding a choke point to force a meatgrinder, etc) to overcome numerical disparity.

  • @casper191985

    @casper191985

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bkjeong4302 actually that’s not true

  • @itvirgil
    @itvirgil Жыл бұрын

    Yi Sun Shin was a genius tactician with an unmatched record of naval victories. It's no wonder Koreans are the best StarCraft players.

  • @booprice5473

    @booprice5473

    Ай бұрын

    Lolllll

  • @alexw8758

    @alexw8758

    Ай бұрын

    It's not often talked about, but their main battle ships were the major factors in winning all of his naval battles. Panoksuns were vastly heavier and much taller, equipped with cannons because Korean naval warfare favoured ranged battles, whereas the Japanese ships were designed to be narrow and fast as they favoured boarding on the enemy ships and fight in melee. This enabled vastly outnumbered Korean naval soldiers to shoot and sink Japanese ships even before they could shoot their guns. When the wind and current favoured Koreans, they could simply ram into enemy ships while firing cannons point blank and there wasn't much Japanese navy could do. In a way, this naval doctrine, and the way they constructed their ships helped General Yi to save Korea from the Japanese. If Japanese had arquebus vs Korea's bows, Korea had Panoksuns vs Japanese battleships.

  • @hiroono1

    @hiroono1

    12 күн бұрын

    @@alexw8758 That's also a lie. Korean ships were built like rubber boats without keels, so they had poor straightness and were slow. The Korean cannons captured by the Japanese army are still stored in Japan, but when you look at them, you can see that their manufacturing precision and accuracy were low. Rapid fire was also impossible. The only effective weapon Joseon had was a flaming arrow. Furthermore, there is no evidence that the Turtle Ship was completed. Of course, there is no record of them fighting against the Japanese army.

  • @zuchangs

    @zuchangs

    10 күн бұрын

    ​@@hiroono1 War criminal nation japan

  • @user-ib8ei5vo6v

    @user-ib8ei5vo6v

    8 күн бұрын

    When Japan invaded Korea in 1592, Korea was defeated on all fronts. The Ming Dynasty of China, which was supporting Korea at this time, fell into a financial crisis due to this war. I'm sure you're only learning history that is convenient for you, so I'll tell you this: Of the three great conquests of Banreki, this war was the one in which the most silver was spent. His other two wars combined did not reach the funds used for this war. More than 7.4 million taels of silver were used in this war, while in other wars he used 800,000 taels and 2.4 million taels of silver. Approximately 80,000 Japanese soldiers died during the two dispatches to Korea, but half of them died from infectious diseases and the remaining 40,000 died in battle. To kill these 40,000 people, the Joseon Dynasty lost 260,000 soldiers and the Ming Dynasty lost 38,000 soldiers. Where is the victory? Including civilian deaths, the total number of deaths in the Sino-South Korean coalition is likely to exceed 1 million. This war was not a big deal for Japan, but the Ming Dynasty and its vassal states suffered irreparable damage (lol) The number of troops dispatched to Korea at that time was 150,000, 25% of Japan's total military force. was. was. Do you know of any small country that could not protect itself from this 25% total military force and asked China for help? (Laughs) Then Japan made peace with the Ming Dynasty and withdrew without paying any reparations. By the way, the Joseon Dynasty was refused participation in negotiations by China. It seems that there was also a sailor who was considered a Korean hero who made a surprise attack on the retreating Shimazu and was killed by Shimazu's casual soldiers. Did you know that during the heyday of the Edo period, Japan was an economic power that surpassed Britain and Spain, and even just before the Meiji Restoration, Japan's GDP was slightly higher than that of the Ottoman Empire? Did you know that even just before the Meiji Restoration, Japan's per capita GDP was half that of the United States? Korea has always been a small country, but Japan has always been a large country.

  • @sambirch5153
    @sambirch5153 Жыл бұрын

    I used to have lunch sat by the statue of Yi Sun Sin in Gwanghwamun square and wonder how I'd never heard of him before I moved to Korea. I'm so glad he gets love from your channel because his is one of the most incredible stories in military history.

  • @grandadmiralzaarin4962
    @grandadmiralzaarin4962 Жыл бұрын

    'Diplomatic failures provoked Hideyoshi to launch a Second Invasion' That is an understatement. His Daimyo came up with a scheme to pretend the Ming were surrendering while also telling the Ming that Hideyoshi was acquiescing to their demands. It went so far as Hideyoshi wearing what he thought was a gifted 'Emperor's robe' but actually signified becominga 'Vassal King' under the Ming. This all came unglued when Hideyoshi's Monk(who could read the documents) told Hideyoshi their true meaning and Hideyoshi flew into a rage demanding blood.

  • @mrttripz3236

    @mrttripz3236

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh my lord. That seems straight out of a sitcom!

  • @YuuSHiiiN

    @YuuSHiiiN

    Жыл бұрын

    One does not simply bamboozle the Taiko!

  • @uanime1

    @uanime1

    Жыл бұрын

    This nearly came undone when the Ming diplomats and Hideyoshi met and both asked why the other one wasn't bowing to them. That required quick thinking (basically they said Hideyoshi was too old to bow and the Ming were too proud).

  • @grandadmiralzaarin4962

    @grandadmiralzaarin4962

    Жыл бұрын

    @@uanime1 yep, honestly the entire scrambling shenanigan deserves a video unto itself.

  • @mh-tw4kx

    @mh-tw4kx

    Жыл бұрын

    That daimyo was probably pissing his pants fearing his head, family, and land confiscation 💀

  • @oortcloud7358
    @oortcloud7358 Жыл бұрын

    After the devastating defeat of Won Gyun, Joseon court planned to merge the remaining navy into the army. However, general Yi said to the king, "There are 12 battle ships left, the numbers are insufficient, but with this humble man still alive, enemy will not covet our seas." And comes the famous battle of Myeong yang, where general Yi defeated the 200 Japanese ships with 13 battle ships(one ship joined later). General Yi had lost his mother when he was demoted (his mother was 83 years old and was on the sail to meet her demoted son when she passed away on a ship). And general Yi's most beloved son died while fighting the Japanese forces. Such a shame that a man of such accomplishment and devotion had to go through all that personal tragedy...

  • @DN-uv6ik

    @DN-uv6ik

    Жыл бұрын

    A genius and a true patriot to his people.

  • @lawkey14

    @lawkey14

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, he pretended to be ok about his son's death in front of his men, but after went to the warehouse and cried alone. If it weren't for his diary, we wouldn't be able to see his human side.

  • @worldmarumaru1020

    @worldmarumaru1020

    10 ай бұрын

    명양해전 ㅡ>명량해전

  • @ceu160193

    @ceu160193

    8 ай бұрын

    @@lawkey14 He specifically went to warehouse with salt, so his tears won't be noticed.

  • @qcp9143

    @qcp9143

    8 ай бұрын

    tearful He's a great general He's the creator of Korea

  • @reaperking2121
    @reaperking2121 Жыл бұрын

    Admiral Yi is one of the greatest millitary minds of all time. He makes Nelson look like a first year in the Naval academy. While his life may have been a tragedy in many ways at the end he wins over those who wronged for he is remembered today as one of the greatest admirals of all time, Saviour of Korea and Marshal lord of Loyalty.

  • @goognamgoognw6637

    @goognamgoognw6637

    9 ай бұрын

    He is the greatest Korean recorded in History to ever live in my non-Korean opinion.

  • @luckybrave2035

    @luckybrave2035

    8 ай бұрын

    @@goognamgoognw6637 The story of Yi Sun-shin is well known in Korea. But he is barely mentioned in Chinese and Japanese history books. Because his story is meaningful only to Koreans, it has no effect on the outcome of the war. Although the main war was fought on the Korean Peninsula, it was actually fought by China and Japan. In the same way, the Korean War of the 1950s was fought on the Korean Peninsula, and the North and South Koreans still did not decide whether the war would be won or lost. So I agree with the Koreans that they didn't lose the Korean War, because with or without them, it doesn't matter.

  • @Ilikemeows

    @Ilikemeows

    7 ай бұрын

    @@luckybrave2035 grow a brain

  • @nikolasdemoulin8093

    @nikolasdemoulin8093

    6 ай бұрын

    Literal nonsense. Nelson was fighting other advanced navies with advanced canons and extremely skilled professional sailors, and still repeatedly won despite the odds. Admiral Yi was fighting literal makeshift fishing boats rigged into a ramshackle navy.. The Japanese had no actual navy. Their entire fleet barring like 4 ships, were merchant and fishing boats rigged to carry soldiers. Almost none even had any canon’s. The Koreans had an actual navy with western canons. Claiming admiral Yi “made Nelson look like a first year student” is just objectively nonsense. Yi has every advantage. The Japanese had no canons except for in 1 engagement and even then it was only on 2 ships. The Japanese relied on the simple tactic of swarming Korean ships until they could physically board them and engage in melee where they had an advantage. All any Korean admiral has to do was use their superior and faster ships to avoid coming into physical contact with the Japanese fishing boats, and light them up with their plentiful canons. The Japanese would be totally helpless. And were. which is what admiral Yi did. Admiral Nelson was not fighting a vastly inferior force (technologically). He was engaging other extremely well armed advanced warships. Admiral Nelson’s victories were objectively far more impressive. Genuinely Not trying to take away from Yi, although I am. He was a talented admiral and general. But it’s just rubbish to try and claim he was superior to Nelson. It’s just a weird cope non-whites and self-hating whites do, because they think that claiming random non-whites “make [insert famous and extremely skilled white person who defined an entire theory of warfare or technology/sciences] look like a first year student!! Haha!”. It’s always nonsense in my experience.

  • @9PZ0

    @9PZ0

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@nikolasdemoulin8093I remember my history teacher saying that Nelson was gay, but he was good at fighting on the sea. Yes, I agree with you. I mean, this Chinese general is no match for Nelson.😂😂

  • @Dree74
    @Dree74 Жыл бұрын

    Put yourself into Yi's shoes: The selfish and incompetent boss (King Seonjo), jealous and unqualified coworkers who makes things worse (Won Kyun), all his subordinates inexperienced and cowardish, and your job is to fight against 10 times the numbers of invaders who are battle-hardened veterans with full support and advanced firearms.

  • @andricrypto2852

    @andricrypto2852

    8 ай бұрын

    He should be worshiped as a God just like Guan Yu in China.

  • @user-ib8ei5vo6v

    @user-ib8ei5vo6v

    8 күн бұрын

    When Japan invaded Korea in 1592, Korea was defeated on all fronts. The Ming Dynasty of China, which was supporting Korea at this time, fell into a financial crisis due to this war. I'm sure you're only learning history that is convenient for you, so I'll tell you this: Of the three great conquests of Banreki, this war was the one in which the most silver was spent. His other two wars combined did not reach the funds used for this war. More than 7.4 million taels of silver were used in this war, while in other wars he used 800,000 taels and 2.4 million taels of silver. Approximately 80,000 Japanese soldiers died during the two dispatches to Korea, but half of them died from infectious diseases and the remaining 40,000 died in battle. To kill these 40,000 people, the Joseon Dynasty lost 260,000 soldiers and the Ming Dynasty lost 38,000 soldiers. Where is the victory? Including civilian deaths, the total number of deaths in the Sino-South Korean coalition is likely to exceed 1 million. This war was not a big deal for Japan, but the Ming Dynasty and its vassal states suffered irreparable damage (lol) The number of troops dispatched to Korea at that time was 150,000, 25% of Japan's total military force. was. was. Do you know of any small country that could not protect itself from this 25% total military force and asked China for help? (Laughs) Then Japan made peace with the Ming Dynasty and withdrew without paying any reparations. By the way, the Joseon Dynasty was refused participation in negotiations by China. It seems that there was also a sailor who was considered a Korean hero who made a surprise attack on the retreating Shimazu and was killed by Shimazu's casual soldiers. Did you know that during the heyday of the Edo period, Japan was an economic power that surpassed Britain and Spain, and even just before the Meiji Restoration, Japan's GDP was slightly higher than that of the Ottoman Empire? Did you know that even just before the Meiji Restoration, Japan's per capita GDP was half that of the United States? Korea has always been a small country, but Japan has always been a large country.

  • @user-fp2pj4ph5l

    @user-fp2pj4ph5l

    5 күн бұрын

    @@user-ib8ei5vo6v そして日本は明治維新以前まで中央集権を果たせなかった劣等な国家だ。また、文化と技術を教えた韓半島の恩恵を裏切りに返した恩知らずの国でもあった。昔、古代日本は韓半島から文化と宗教、そして技術を学んだが、その恩恵を知らずに、日本は高麗時代には数え切れないほど攻め込んで海賊行為をし、略奪をし、朝鮮時代には200年も平和を享受していた朝鮮に攻撃し、多くの文化財と技術を盗んだ。特に陶磁器の拉致したのは本当に野蛮だといえる

  • @ajc71398

    @ajc71398

    10 сағат бұрын

    ​@@user-ib8ei5vo6vsomewhere along the way I lost the point you were trying to make

  • @cgt3704
    @cgt3704 Жыл бұрын

    Interesting fact: When Yi was dying he told to his son and his nephew: "We are going to win this war. Keep beating the drum. Do not announce my death". And then both his son and nephew took his armour and pretended they were the admiral and kept fighting. It wouldnt be until tge end of the battle that Yi's death would be known. The admiral had quite a life. He was mistreeated by corrupt officials, almost sentenced to death for being blamed and ended it as a hero to his people. He didnt see the end of the war but his legacy lives on as one of, if not, THE best admiral in history

  • @PrograError

    @PrograError

    Жыл бұрын

    there's a reason why he's among the most liked figures of the (korean) history which is shared with the likes of the King Sejong (Hangul), General Douglas MacArthur (Korean War)

  • @cgt3704

    @cgt3704

    Жыл бұрын

    @@homerj806 sorry. That was a typo

  • @resentfuldragon

    @resentfuldragon

    Жыл бұрын

    He is definitely the best Admiral in terms of actual tangible achievements in known history. We will never know all human history, but from what we know he was the best in raw achievement.

  • @DccAnh

    @DccAnh

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@resentfuldragon If someone else achieve more than him it would have been recorded lol, so he is the best for both known and unknown.

  • @resentfuldragon

    @resentfuldragon

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DccAnh that logic is completely wrong. Most of human history is lost because either they failed to record it properly or the knowledge was destroyed by an outside source. Its not about greatness, its how its recorded and how its lost. Its arrogant to claim we know for a fact who was the best at anything since we don't actually have the information to prove that. Many cultures wrote on perishable goods (wood, early forms of paper, leather, etc.) ad many didn't write at all. Of those who wrote much of what they had is lost. The abbassids obsessively wrote down information even from other cultures, yet a large percent if not the majority of their writings were lost by the mongols burning their libraries. We can't possibly know who was the richest, smartest, best general, best admiral, or anything like that. As of recorded history we currently possess Admiral yi is the best, but we have no clue about who was objectively best ever.

  • @billzaruss7752
    @billzaruss7752 Жыл бұрын

    Rarely comment on youtube, but this was one of the most interesting and exciting videos you have ever uploaded. With each passing video your team seem to get better and better with the research you do and the cinematic presentation of history. Honestly, hats off to all involved! Keep em coming.

  • @billzaruss7752

    @billzaruss7752

    Жыл бұрын

    Admiral Yi is up there with Caesar, Alexander and Napoleon

  • @williamrobert9898

    @williamrobert9898

    Жыл бұрын

    @@billzaruss7752 Hmmm

  • @billzaruss7752

    @billzaruss7752

    Жыл бұрын

    @@williamrobert9898 i know i know, sweeping statement, top 25 or 50 then haha. Hard one to say. Not exactly better than those that i mentioned, but definietly up there 😆

  • @williamrobert9898

    @williamrobert9898

    Жыл бұрын

    @@billzaruss7752 Agreed 👍🏻👌🏻

  • @DccAnh

    @DccAnh

    Жыл бұрын

    @@billzaruss7752 Nah he surpass them, alexander is overrated, caesar got assassinated and die like an idiot while napoleon only know how to fight on land with support from advance artillery, Yi would destroy them all.

  • @Luboman411
    @Luboman411 Жыл бұрын

    Admiral Horatio Nelson, the one who defeated the combined Franco-Spanish fleet at Trafalgar and crushed Napoleon's maritime ambitions, thought only a few men in history were the perfect warrior-leaders after which he modeled himself. There was, of course, Alexander the Great and Julius Caesar. But Nelson had also read about Admiral Yi and included Yi in his estimations. Books in French/Italian about Korea and Admiral Yi had been translated to English throughout the late 1700s and were housed in the British Museum's library. This had included excerpts from "The Book of Corrections" or "Jingbirok" written in the late 1500s about the Imjin War. Korean books, in turn, had ended up in Europe starting in the late 1600s thanks to Italian Jesuit missions to China--which included Jesuit embassies to Korea and its court. A few Korean books had also made it to Europe via the tiny amount of Dutch trade with Korea. I tend to think that Nelson's cunning with his fleet at Trafalgar and other battles was inspired by what he read about Admiral Yi's numerous accomplishments during the Imjin War.

  • @ToyotomiHideyoshiGre

    @ToyotomiHideyoshiGre

    Жыл бұрын

    lol,you are funny!

  • @davidkusanagi589

    @davidkusanagi589

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ToyotomiHideyoshiGre Your mom was fun last night.

  • @zejusun323

    @zejusun323

    21 күн бұрын

    Korean books are books from Mainland . Vietnamese, Mainlanders, Koreans, Manchus and Mongolians all use Chinese characters

  • @user-ib8ei5vo6v

    @user-ib8ei5vo6v

    8 күн бұрын

    When Japan invaded Korea in 1592, Korea was defeated on all fronts. The Ming Dynasty of China, which was supporting Korea at this time, fell into a financial crisis due to this war. I'm sure you're only learning history that is convenient for you, so I'll tell you this: Of the three great conquests of Banreki, this war was the one in which the most silver was spent. His other two wars combined did not reach the funds used for this war. More than 7.4 million taels of silver were used in this war, while in other wars he used 800,000 taels and 2.4 million taels of silver. Approximately 80,000 Japanese soldiers died during the two dispatches to Korea, but half of them died from infectious diseases and the remaining 40,000 died in battle. To kill these 40,000 people, the Joseon Dynasty lost 260,000 soldiers and the Ming Dynasty lost 38,000 soldiers. Where is the victory? Including civilian deaths, the total number of deaths in the Sino-South Korean coalition is likely to exceed 1 million. This war was not a big deal for Japan, but the Ming Dynasty and its vassal states suffered irreparable damage (lol) The number of troops dispatched to Korea at that time was 150,000, 25% of Japan's total military force. was. was. Do you know of any small country that could not protect itself from this 25% total military force and asked China for help? (Laughs) Then Japan made peace with the Ming Dynasty and withdrew without paying any reparations. By the way, the Joseon Dynasty was refused participation in negotiations by China. It seems that there was also a sailor who was considered a Korean hero who made a surprise attack on the retreating Shimazu and was killed by Shimazu's casual soldiers. Did you know that during the heyday of the Edo period, Japan was an economic power that surpassed Britain and Spain, and even just before the Meiji Restoration, Japan's GDP was slightly higher than that of the Ottoman Empire? Did you know that even just before the Meiji Restoration, Japan's per capita GDP was half that of the United States? Korea has always been a small country, but Japan has always been a large country.

  • @rapchoi1815
    @rapchoi1815 Жыл бұрын

    This is best english documentary of the Korea Japan war of 1592 that i have ever watched. Great job!

  • @user-ib8ei5vo6v

    @user-ib8ei5vo6v

    8 күн бұрын

    When Japan invaded Korea in 1592, Korea was defeated on all fronts. The Ming Dynasty of China, which was supporting Korea at this time, fell into a financial crisis due to this war. I'm sure you're only learning history that is convenient for you, so I'll tell you this: Of the three great conquests of Banreki, this war was the one in which the most silver was spent. His other two wars combined did not reach the funds used for this war. More than 7.4 million taels of silver were used in this war, while in other wars he used 800,000 taels and 2.4 million taels of silver. Approximately 80,000 Japanese soldiers died during the two dispatches to Korea, but half of them died from infectious diseases and the remaining 40,000 died in battle. To kill these 40,000 people, the Joseon Dynasty lost 260,000 soldiers and the Ming Dynasty lost 38,000 soldiers. Where is the victory? Including civilian deaths, the total number of deaths in the Sino-South Korean coalition is likely to exceed 1 million. This war was not a big deal for Japan, but the Ming Dynasty and its vassal states suffered irreparable damage (lol) The number of troops dispatched to Korea at that time was 150,000, 25% of Japan's total military force. was. was. Do you know of any small country that could not protect itself from this 25% total military force and asked China for help? (Laughs) Then Japan made peace with the Ming Dynasty and withdrew without paying any reparations. By the way, the Joseon Dynasty was refused participation in negotiations by China. It seems that there was also a sailor who was considered a Korean hero who made a surprise attack on the retreating Shimazu and was killed by Shimazu's casual soldiers. Did you know that during the heyday of the Edo period, Japan was an economic power that surpassed Britain and Spain, and even just before the Meiji Restoration, Japan's GDP was slightly higher than that of the Ottoman Empire? Did you know that even just before the Meiji Restoration, Japan's per capita GDP was half that of the United States? Korea has always been a small country, but Japan has always been a large country.

  • @shawnv123

    @shawnv123

    7 сағат бұрын

    @@user-ib8ei5vo6vchina always loses a lot of soldiers in war and they don’t care, they only care about the defense of their land, the main purpose of this war was japans ambitions into making korea a vassal as it already was to china and conquering china, japan has always hated china and this was first attempt they tried to invade china through korea and they failed

  • @dr.j5642
    @dr.j5642 Жыл бұрын

    The story of Admiral Yi is absolutely insane, and we'd all believe it to be a story of fiction if it weren't for corroborated reports from Korea's enemy in this conflict, Japan. Furthermore, the accounts from the Chinese side are glowing as well. This was an uncommon man, put squarely in position, by sheer chance or divine intervention, to save a people and their nation. Just incredible.

  • @morningcalmrisingsun

    @morningcalmrisingsun

    Жыл бұрын

    Yi also reported to the king as well as having a war diary. We have those sources.

  • @worsethanjoerogan8061

    @worsethanjoerogan8061

    Жыл бұрын

    When Yi was taking his military exams it includes a horsemanship test. He managed to fall from his horse and broke his leg. Rather than give up he splinted his own leg with a tree branch and continued. He still failed but he passed the next year. Shows what kind of man he was

  • @hpdpco6634

    @hpdpco6634

    Жыл бұрын

    Amazingly he had the same fate as nelson. Nelson was shot by a sharpshooter. Yi died the same way. Is this just coincidence, or are great admirals supposed to die this way?

  • @aa-rq9qd

    @aa-rq9qd

    Жыл бұрын

    @@morningcalmrisingsun This video makes little reference to the records on the Japanese side, and I'm surprised that Yi's rating is so high. The reason for Japan's defeat in this war was the lack of military strength and the high number of deaths from disease.

  • @UhtredSonOfUhtred6

    @UhtredSonOfUhtred6

    Жыл бұрын

    @@aa-rq9qdop trying to downplay Yi’s accomplishments. In doing so you’re diminishing the nation of Japan you admire so much (whom he crushed, twice). Yi was a gargantuan of a man, recognized by all sides as one of the greatest in history. Cope.

  • @francine13
    @francine13 Жыл бұрын

    The storytelling and the event it self is so great that I didn't even notice the video was almost 90 mins long

  • @jaeshin1983
    @jaeshin1983 Жыл бұрын

    I love this content. Please continue to highlight important conflicts.

  • @mrels6903
    @mrels6903 Жыл бұрын

    I didn't know about Yi Sun Shi's history, truly a amazing and capable man

  • @trob1173
    @trob1173 Жыл бұрын

    I spent a year in S. Korea in the U.S. Army. I regret not discovering Korea's rich and fascinating medieval period until later in life. The Koreans are a brave, and resourceful people and also one of the kindest and most hospitable I've encountered. Thank you for this very educational video.

  • @CBRN-115

    @CBRN-115

    Жыл бұрын

    As a Korean who also went through mandatory military service, thank you for your service

  • @user-tk6zx9nz1h

    @user-tk6zx9nz1h

    Жыл бұрын

    As a Korean, I also appreciate your service in Korea.

  • @yuefei8696

    @yuefei8696

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@user-tk6zx9nz1hso sad the once proud & unified country call as Korea had lost her dignity & becomes a slave to the yankee & the western barbarian & the most laughable & ungrateful thing is how they betraying the Chinese&Korean people's hundreds yrs of friendship by joining the Japanese & yankee to go against the Chinese by providing military base for the outsider west barbarian force to threatening China security & whole Asia..pathetic

  • @bigshot7

    @bigshot7

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your service, bro.

  • @goognamgoognw6637

    @goognamgoognw6637

    9 ай бұрын

    @@user-tk6zx9nz1h But you are wrong, united statians wronged Korea for their own imperialist hegemony and are applying 50 years of embargo on half the Korean population. You are a traitor of Korean ancestors for acting like a vassal and dog to the usa.

  • @williamcarson2811
    @williamcarson2811 Жыл бұрын

    Yi Sun Shin's tactics are beautiful and using the elitest mindset of the Japanese warrior caste just perfect. Hail Kings and Generals long may they reign

  • @user-ib8ei5vo6v

    @user-ib8ei5vo6v

    8 күн бұрын

    When Japan invaded Korea in 1592, Korea was defeated on all fronts. The Ming Dynasty of China, which was supporting Korea at this time, fell into a financial crisis due to this war. I'm sure you're only learning history that is convenient for you, so I'll tell you this: Of the three great conquests of Banreki, this war was the one in which the most silver was spent. His other two wars combined did not reach the funds used for this war. More than 7.4 million taels of silver were used in this war, while in other wars he used 800,000 taels and 2.4 million taels of silver. Approximately 80,000 Japanese soldiers died during the two dispatches to Korea, but half of them died from infectious diseases and the remaining 40,000 died in battle. To kill these 40,000 people, the Joseon Dynasty lost 260,000 soldiers and the Ming Dynasty lost 38,000 soldiers. Where is the victory? Including civilian deaths, the total number of deaths in the Sino-South Korean coalition is likely to exceed 1 million. This war was not a big deal for Japan, but the Ming Dynasty and its vassal states suffered irreparable damage (lol) The number of troops dispatched to Korea at that time was 150,000, 25% of Japan's total military force. was. was. Do you know of any small country that could not protect itself from this 25% total military force and asked China for help? (Laughs) Then Japan made peace with the Ming Dynasty and withdrew without paying any reparations. By the way, the Joseon Dynasty was refused participation in negotiations by China. It seems that there was also a sailor who was considered a Korean hero who made a surprise attack on the retreating Shimazu and was killed by Shimazu's casual soldiers. Did you know that during the heyday of the Edo period, Japan was an economic power that surpassed Britain and Spain, and even just before the Meiji Restoration, Japan's GDP was slightly higher than that of the Ottoman Empire? Did you know that even just before the Meiji Restoration, Japan's per capita GDP was half that of the United States? Korea has always been a small country, but Japan has always been a large country.

  • @user-ii5bf4md6k
    @user-ii5bf4md6k9 ай бұрын

    1:25:50 When the admiral was minutes before passing away, he told his navy officers not to tell the soldiers that he was dead in order to keep the fighting spirit among his men.

  • @Khichira2012
    @Khichira2012Ай бұрын

    Thank you for the video. It was much appreciated to learn such a fascinating history!

  • @glenglen6386
    @glenglen6386 Жыл бұрын

    Hideyoshi had united Japan, but he was surrounded by samurai armies which had swelled in number over the years of Japan's internal conflicts. They needed to be culled in order to ensure stability of the realm. Not willing to give up their swords he sent them to Korea. Many minor and great clans were extinguished as their leaders and men fell on the battlefield. Those that did not die in battle found themselves accused for cowardice or punished for failure in the Korea campaign. Often ending with them losing their heads and their estates being confiscated by Hideyoshi.

  • @arthas640

    @arthas640

    Жыл бұрын

    It's funny how many parallels there were between the Japanese an Europeans. Europe had too many knights fighting one another in never ending wars and skirmishes so they got sent to the crusades. Japan had too many samurai who'd run out of battles to fight so they got sent to Korea. I'd be willing to bet as smart as Hideyoshi was he knew they had little chance of actually taking Korea once the Chinese came (China was viewed as nearly unbeatable at the time and many times larger ajd more wealthy than Japan, it would be like Canada going to war with the US) so they were likely sent as a "hail Mary". Either they'd get lucky and take part of Korea, or more likely all the samurai would expend their lives and/or bloodlust fighting in Korea leaving far fewer skilled soldiers available to plot rebellions or coups.

  • @JayFLee1

    @JayFLee1

    Жыл бұрын

    That makes very little sense. Hideyoshi's ambition at the first invasion was the toppling of the Ming. He wasn't fully wrong. The Ming military had plenty of issues, but not quite enough yet they would be toppled.

  • @ekulerudamuru

    @ekulerudamuru

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JayFLee1 it made sense, while he wants to topple the ming, a lot of clans still have bad blood with each other and who know when or where another civil war may happen, so win or loose in his expedition abroad he will still have last laugh against all the Daimyos he sent, in the end he succeeded in what he wanted

  • @JayFLee1

    @JayFLee1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ekulerudamuru if weakening rival clans was a major part of why he invaded, Hideyoshi fucked up since the majority of the invading armies were Toyotomi vassals. As in they were daimyo because of Hideyoshi rather than clans whose power and existence predated his rise. Granted the invasion being from Kyushu meant the Western clans got dibs, but if it was meant to weaken his rivals then where are the Date and Tokugawa?

  • @Emilechen

    @Emilechen

    Жыл бұрын

    @@arthas640 you are right, otherwise, China of Eastern Zhou Dynasty looks like Wetsrn Europe, but not very well-known, there are different Warring State, the king of Zhou is like the Pope, venerated by without real military power, especially the State of Qin has such similarities better with Prussia, at that tike, China was feodal too, with aristocrat warruor class, but once China is united, it looks like Roman Empire and not Medieval Europe anymore,

  • @happilyignorant
    @happilyignorant Жыл бұрын

    You know, I didn't realize just how practical Sun Tzu's art of war was until you see it played out in conflict. Turns out levelheadedness aswell as compassion for fellow humans make ideal commanders

  • @JMB_focus

    @JMB_focus

    Жыл бұрын

    Agree people nowadays are foolish for making meme on sun tzu

  • @linshitaolst4936

    @linshitaolst4936

    Жыл бұрын

    Li Rusong deliberately left a gap in the encirclement circle, because Sun Tzu said in the art of war that the enemy should not be cornered, because it would make the enemy resist crazily. Only by leaving a way to survive will the enemy's will collapse

  • @reaperking2121

    @reaperking2121

    Жыл бұрын

    People meme on Sun Tzu's or for that matter Von Clausewitz "On War' because the advise they seem is so often blatantly obvious. However, that does not diminish the validity of their assesments. Yi Sun Sin won many of his battles because he was a master of the advise Sun Tzu offers in his infamous work. Yi understood his enemy perfectly, knew his own ships in and out and never let the enemy dictate the terms of engagement. Thus that which seemed impossible ( Victory over Japan) suddenly became reality.

  • @user-cc3tm5ps9p

    @user-cc3tm5ps9p

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@linshitaolst4936原文: 归师勿遏,围师必阙,穷寇勿迫(围兵者,围其三面,开其一面,以示生路也)。

  • @numarex

    @numarex

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@reaperking2121 War seems easy on paper but is actually very difficult in reality, that's why people make light of Master Sun's and Von Clausewitz's works. By the way, Von Clausewitz's work is more of a philosophical theoretical approach to warfare rather than a handbook on tactics and strategy.

  • @dwayneskinner6984
    @dwayneskinner69847 күн бұрын

    Wow. Really well done. I imagine such a long video takes a lot. Very happy your willingness to make them

  • @ZombieGrandpa
    @ZombieGrandpa Жыл бұрын

    That was very well done! Happy I stumbled across your channel.

  • @josephsuh525
    @josephsuh525 Жыл бұрын

    Finally a Korean history that isn't a 1950's civil war. Thank you Kings and Generals I do hope for more Korean History.

  • @andrewchung2940

    @andrewchung2940

    9 ай бұрын

    Indeed, Korean history deserves more exposure and recognition outside of the Korean War. The Korean War was indeed one of the most important events in Korean history that placed it in the greater international conflict, but it certainly is not the only conflict to do so. Imjin War is another such event.

  • @jmlee-bd8lb

    @jmlee-bd8lb

    3 ай бұрын

    역사를 제대로 모르는 인간이 일본해 표기 당장 식제해라

  • @TheStrategos392
    @TheStrategos392 Жыл бұрын

    Admiral Yi was a naval genius. Without him, Korea would have lost.

  • @jonbaxter2254

    @jonbaxter2254

    Жыл бұрын

    As an Englisman, with a vast number of naval leaders, I rank him at the top by far. Drake, Cook, Nelson, Roberts were all fantastic, but Yi was a superman.

  • @TheStrategos392

    @TheStrategos392

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jonbaxter2254 Indeed, he was. I would rank Thomas Cochrane very high as well.

  • @kaltaron1284

    @kaltaron1284

    Жыл бұрын

    Not sure about that. Depends on how dedicated the Qing would be on supporting the land war. But he really helped a lot.

  • @skyereave9454

    @skyereave9454

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kaltaron1284 the Ming actually

  • @jonbaxter2254

    @jonbaxter2254

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheStrategos392 Aye, my boy! I love that guy, so mad he helps 4 countries in South America win independence.

  • @iron4517
    @iron45178 ай бұрын

    I remember watching a few videos about this but Ive never seen one this detailed, well done

  • @user-gx5im9dr4b
    @user-gx5im9dr4b3 ай бұрын

    Best channel ever! I'll become a member this year!

  • @SeHaryu
    @SeHaryu Жыл бұрын

    Yi Sun Shin's statue is in the middle of Seoul, right in front of King Sejong's statue and GyeongBok-gung palace. A famous monument that symbolizes downtown Seoul, and he absolutely deserves that spot.

  • @Luboman411

    @Luboman411

    Жыл бұрын

    Isn't there a subway station named after Admiral Yi? Is the subway station next to this statue--I've seen pics of it on the internet--in central Seoul? I live in NYC and I don't know if any subway station is named after a great American military hero, not even George Washington. Washington D.C.'s subway stations are--there are two named after this admiral who was successful in the U.S. Civil War--Farragut. But I do know that in Mexico City, that subway system has a lot of stations named after national heroes. I stayed near the "Insurgentes" station the last time I was in Mexico City. "Insurgentes" commemorated the teen-boy "insurgents" of the Mexican military academy who fought tooth and nail against the invading U.S. army entering Mexico City during the Mexican-American War of 1848.

  • @SeHaryu

    @SeHaryu

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Luboman411 I don't think there is a subway station named after Admiral Yi, but there is a road named 'Chung-mu ro' which was named after him. Admiral Yi is often referred to as Chung-mu gong and the road is nearby his birthplace in Seoul. And there is a warship named after him, too.

  • @Joseph-eh4rs

    @Joseph-eh4rs

    Жыл бұрын

    Pretty much all schools had statue of Admiral Yi.

  • @user-un5qv3dc9n

    @user-un5qv3dc9n

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Luboman411 There is a subway station named after the road named after Admiral Yi.

  • @Trgn

    @Trgn

    Жыл бұрын

    It's only after his death they would make him a national hero. If he was still alive, the court would probly demote him again and would never tell his story, as other court officials would see him a continue political threat to the status quo.

  • @dirkaminimo4836
    @dirkaminimo4836 Жыл бұрын

    I just wanted your team to know how much I enjoyed the little details sprinkled throughout this video. Your channel never takes sides and seem to clear up many issues I have found hard to resolve, like the naval battles and the statistics from them. Thank you so much for making worthwhile content.

  • @DominicBarnes
    @DominicBarnes3 ай бұрын

    Absolutely incredible video. One of the best I've ever seen, on any topic. Great attention to detail and clear visualisation of events. And they even got the pronunciation of the Chinese names right, which is super rare

  • @alucardjc84
    @alucardjc84 Жыл бұрын

    Whoah, narration and visuals were a blast, really loved it. Hoping for more contents.

  • @aznhomig
    @aznhomig Жыл бұрын

    One of Admiral Yi Sun-Shin's most famous quotes: “必死卽生, 必生卽死” "죽고자 하면 살고, 살고자 하면 죽는다" "Those who seek death shall live. Those who seek life shall die." An absolute legend.

  • @HebrewsElevenTwentyFive

    @HebrewsElevenTwentyFive

    Жыл бұрын

    The Bible said if one dies to self, then one shall live. This is merely a rewording of the Bible.

  • @DetectiveRackham

    @DetectiveRackham

    Жыл бұрын

    Not sure if they had bibles in popular fiction section of book stores back then there. Besides, what the quote actually means is “if you cower and run for your lives you will die (by court martial), but if you fight for your lives you shall survive (with great strategies of the man himself).”

  • @user-cp1mw3kt2l

    @user-cp1mw3kt2l

    Жыл бұрын

    It's not just about the will, it's also the basic principle of war. An army that runs away in search of a way to live becomes an easy prey, but an army guarding its ranks as if they wanted to die will win and survive.

  • @helloworld5334

    @helloworld5334

    10 ай бұрын

    Someone mentioned the Bible, which made me laugh. “必死卽生, 必生卽死” /"Those who seek death shall live,Those who seek life shall die" came form one of the old Chinese military strategy and tactics book called《吴子·治兵》:“凡兵战之场,立尸之地。必死则生,幸生则死''(I am not good at English, translating it by yourself please), which shared the same importance as Sun Tzu's Art of War in ancient China

  • @jisungchoi7511

    @jisungchoi7511

    9 ай бұрын

    @@HebrewsElevenTwentyFive Ummm... No.

  • @counterbloxpersonsong9654
    @counterbloxpersonsong9654 Жыл бұрын

    Up to now I still remember replaying the older version of this always loved to watch it whenever I get bored and now it's updated version shows how much has changed in kings and generals.

  • @williamcarson2811

    @williamcarson2811

    Жыл бұрын

    Here here!

  • @jonbaxter2254

    @jonbaxter2254

    Жыл бұрын

    I love it, but always get furious at how they treatetd Yi. The man saved your country like 6 times!!!

  • @salakiadam24

    @salakiadam24

    Жыл бұрын

    Is this all a compilation of older videos or they changed the content itself?I remember watching some about this and the Byzantines but I'm pretty sure they are not the exact same ones

  • @jamesson1154

    @jamesson1154

    Жыл бұрын

    @@salakiadam24 they like to re-upload some of their dated videos. To make a more consistent “product”.

  • @nathanielmuga6597
    @nathanielmuga6597 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this amazing content!

  • @lifeisasimulatedillusion
    @lifeisasimulatedillusion5 ай бұрын

    If you ever visit Korea, within Seoul is the Royal Palace of Joseon knwon as Gyeongbok-gung. In front of that palace is a huge road with a park in the middle which has two statues. The one that is sitting down is King Sejeong (inventor of the Korean Language) and the one standing with a sword in his hand is Admiral Yi. The two are the most individuals in Korea.

  • @captain0310
    @captain0310 Жыл бұрын

    From this war, the biggest beneficiary was the Manchus. After this war both Ming and Chosun were too weak to fight off Manchu invasion and Japan was isolated for over 200 years. BTW, Admiral Yi is taught at U.S. Naval Academy.

  • @primarch02

    @primarch02

    Жыл бұрын

    The Manchus are a fighting people. According to Korean records, five Japanese samurai were equal to one Manchurian warrior(Cause they've been fighting two peoples). Nurhaci's troops were armed with very heavy armor and even fended off Joseon and Ming muskets. In the Battle of Sarhu, the size of the Joseon and Ming forces was much greater, but the result of the battle was disastrous.

  • @user-vh8ni3fe1w

    @user-vh8ni3fe1w

    Жыл бұрын

    @@primarch02 일본군이 쳐들어 오기 전에는 한국군이 이 만주로 넘어가 수시로 주르첸 인들을 학살 했었다. 그들은 용맹하지만 무적은 아니었다 그들이 뭉쳤을때는 강하지만 부족 단위로 있을때는 한국과 중국인 몽골인에게 학살 당하는 약한 존재 였다 많은 기간동안 한국에 복속된 주르첸 부족과 명나라에 복속된 부족이 있었다. 한국과 일본이 전투할때 주르첸 부족이 이 한국의 북쪽을 침략 하였는데 그걸 기억하고 있다가 임진왜란이 끝난후에 한국군이 만주로 넘어가 노토 주르첸 부족을 학살하였다. 그들은 2번의 제국을 세웠지만 첫번째 제국을 세우려 할때 고려군 17만이 먼저 만주 까지 쳐들어 갔음 그들은 고려와 화친을 한후 키탄제국과 송나라 를 멸망시켰지만 고려는 침략 하지 않았음

  • @user-vh8ni3fe1w

    @user-vh8ni3fe1w

    Жыл бұрын

    @@primarch02만주족은 그렇게 대단 하지도 않았음 한국을 침략한 만주족을 죽이고 갑옷을 빼앗아 입은 한국인도 있었다 그들은 운이 좋았을 뿐이다 단순무력은 일본군이 최강이 맞다 그들은 말을 잘타고 화살을 잘쏠뿐이지 칼을 들고 싸운건 그렇게 대단 하지 않았음

  • @mr6943

    @mr6943

    Жыл бұрын

    @@user-vh8ni3fe1w 이게 뭔 개 씹소리인지 모르겠는데 칼을 들고 싸우는게 중요한건 원시시대에서나 통하지 일본군도 주무기는 활과 창이였고 몽골군도 주무기는 기마궁수였음. 칼싸움 실력이 왜 나옴?

  • @mr6943

    @mr6943

    Жыл бұрын

    @@user-vh8ni3fe1w 여진족 만명이 모이면 천하를 도모할만하다는 중국 속담처럼 중국인들이 가장 두려워 한 민족은 옛날부터 몽골이나 티벳이 아니라 여진족이였음 누르하치가 기마 전술로 몽골의 절반을 정복한건 알고 있음?

  • @messiusonline2817
    @messiusonline2817 Жыл бұрын

    on the korean marine base near marine camp mujuk theirs a 12-14ft tall statue of admiral yi in the middle of their square it was beautifully made and the description on his plaque detailing he's heroic actions where many others both politicians and generals have massively failed he alone carried the korean on hes back while hes steel balls kept it all neatly balanced

  • @eriche9297
    @eriche92975 күн бұрын

    Thanks! Amazing well researched video

  • @DSS-jj2cw
    @DSS-jj2cw Жыл бұрын

    I had the privilege of seeing a recreation of one of these turtle ships at the Korean War Museum in Seoul in 2005. Also, nice video!

  • @kimyeonjoon474
    @kimyeonjoon474 Жыл бұрын

    Learned more from this video than in my history class. Thanks always for providing such quality content!

  • @khal7702

    @khal7702

    Жыл бұрын

    probably because u don't read or listen

  • @sharkrecorder1738

    @sharkrecorder1738

    Жыл бұрын

    @@khal7702 Nah, Korean history class doesn't really dig into the detail of actual historical events very much. It's more or less state propaganda best suited for brainwashing people.

  • @Jean_Jacques148

    @Jean_Jacques148

    Жыл бұрын

    @@khal7702 or because the schools classes refuse to teach anything valuable.

  • @elbias220

    @elbias220

    Жыл бұрын

    @@khal7702 As someone deeply involved in history and almost done with highschool, never have I ever seen at least the (American) education system mention anything in detail like this. Infact, the lack of stories like this one being told in education is the REASON why people sleep/dont read in History class.

  • @kimyeonjoon474

    @kimyeonjoon474

    Жыл бұрын

    @@khal7702 I do have exams in school. Listening to history class is one of the easiest ways to get a good score. You just need to memorize it after class.

  • @bravozero7
    @bravozero72 күн бұрын

    Great content fellas, keep them coming. 👏

  • @DeathMammoth91
    @DeathMammoth91 Жыл бұрын

    More amazing work by this channel! Keep up the great work!!

  • @bilimus_
    @bilimus_ Жыл бұрын

    I can't believe I've never ever heard of Admiral Yi before watching this video. He sounds like one of the greatest military commanders ever.

  • @PhoenixGK99
    @PhoenixGK99 Жыл бұрын

    Hadn't seen a Japanese video that wasn't WW2 based. This was very well done and could've even been an entire series too

  • @cccspwn

    @cccspwn

    Жыл бұрын

    One common theme is the war crimes they committed

  • @egoamigo-1377

    @egoamigo-1377

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cccspwn Isn’t it ironic how pop culture always taught us how “honourable” the Japanese were when in fact it’s the opposite..

  • @blahz7152

    @blahz7152

    11 ай бұрын

    @@egoamigo-1377 All thanks to Japanese propaganda, Japanese were evil barbarians in reality. The internet has really helped to unveil Japan's lies.

  • @user-un5qv3dc9n

    @user-un5qv3dc9n

    8 ай бұрын

    @@egoamigo-1377 Well, they were in fact honorable. Except for the minor drawback that their idea of honor was collecting as many heads as possible, committing suicide rather than surrendering, and cutting open their own stomachs with a dagger if their honor was damaged, I'd say they were as honorable as pop culture tells us.

  • @teovu5557

    @teovu5557

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@egoamigo-1377isn't that literally every nation today? Lol

  • @Kevintj
    @KevintjАй бұрын

    It's the first time I see this channel and the quality was excellent. I didn't expect watching all these battles would be captivating.

  • @mileymarielow3850
    @mileymarielow38503 ай бұрын

    Another great upload!!!

  • @jasonlee0290
    @jasonlee0290 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the full unedited version! Now more other Korean history please.

  • @bee-fs3vb
    @bee-fs3vb Жыл бұрын

    I'm always excited when this channel posts about anything, they are very well detailed and just amazing

  • @terencekoh6296
    @terencekoh6296 Жыл бұрын

    might be the best overview of the Imjin War I've seen

  • @TheBeachesandshores
    @TheBeachesandshores Жыл бұрын

    This episode is soo good. You really outdid yourself. The breakdown of the situation all way way down to the battlefields is really well done.

  • @sayuas4293
    @sayuas4293 Жыл бұрын

    Respect to Yi... never heard of him before

  • @brotherseverus4962
    @brotherseverus496226 күн бұрын

    Absolutely a great video,well crafted and extremey neureal and informative.

  • @StephanePare
    @StephanePareАй бұрын

    Thank you for showing us a more complete understanding of this often looked over campain. The other video I'd seen about it was really all about Yi, and treated the war as a backdrop. This shows that even when the map leads you to think one side is steamrolling the other, it's never that simple. Yi did great, but Koreas also had amazing land generals, once the shackles of corruption were off.

  • @Patlichan
    @Patlichan Жыл бұрын

    When kings and generals and wizards and warriors upload at the same time and you don't know which one to watch

  • @tamara_diamonds422

    @tamara_diamonds422

    Жыл бұрын

    Wizards and Warriors. Never of that that channel. Will check that out. Thanks.

  • @tamara_diamonds422

    @tamara_diamonds422

    Жыл бұрын

    Just a quick check. Is the voice the same guy ? You just got me hooked on another channel. I won’t be bored this Sunday. Lol.

  • @Patlichan

    @Patlichan

    Жыл бұрын

    @@tamara_diamonds422 its the same guy

  • @bigdkenergypodcast

    @bigdkenergypodcast

    Жыл бұрын

    Porque no los dos?

  • @kaltaron1284

    @kaltaron1284

    Жыл бұрын

    Coin flip.

  • @tedk1677
    @tedk1677 Жыл бұрын

    1:18:18 There's no proof that Admiral Yi had the makeshift Turtle ships during Myung ryang battle. Since all the Turtle ships were destroyed during Chilchunrang battle, he had to fight 300 Japanese ships with only 13 Panoksuns.

  • @reaperking2121

    @reaperking2121

    Жыл бұрын

    Which makes it even more insane that he not only won. But completly crushed the enemy fleet without losing a single ship of his own.

  • @bingobongo1615

    @bingobongo1615

    Жыл бұрын

    Its actually pretty unclear how much ships he had and how much the Japanese (where we have no first hand accounts or reports) but indeed everyone in Japan also agreed that it was an amazingly huge victory

  • @alexw8758

    @alexw8758

    Ай бұрын

    If I remember correctly, they were in the middle of constructing turtle ships but could not finish for some reason. They sailed to battle with panoksuns.

  • @user-ib8ei5vo6v

    @user-ib8ei5vo6v

    8 күн бұрын

    When Japan invaded Korea in 1592, Korea was defeated on all fronts. The Ming Dynasty of China, which was supporting Korea at this time, fell into a financial crisis due to this war. I'm sure you're only learning history that is convenient for you, so I'll tell you this: Of the three great conquests of Banreki, this war was the one in which the most silver was spent. His other two wars combined did not reach the funds used for this war. More than 7.4 million taels of silver were used in this war, while in other wars he used 800,000 taels and 2.4 million taels of silver. Approximately 80,000 Japanese soldiers died during the two dispatches to Korea, but half of them died from infectious diseases and the remaining 40,000 died in battle. To kill these 40,000 people, the Joseon Dynasty lost 260,000 soldiers and the Ming Dynasty lost 38,000 soldiers. Where is the victory? Including civilian deaths, the total number of deaths in the Sino-South Korean coalition is likely to exceed 1 million. This war was not a big deal for Japan, but the Ming Dynasty and its vassal states suffered irreparable damage (lol) The number of troops dispatched to Korea at that time was 150,000, 25% of Japan's total military force. was. was. Do you know of any small country that could not protect itself from this 25% total military force and asked China for help? (Laughs) Then Japan made peace with the Ming Dynasty and withdrew without paying any reparations. By the way, the Joseon Dynasty was refused participation in negotiations by China. It seems that there was also a sailor who was considered a Korean hero who made a surprise attack on the retreating Shimazu and was killed by Shimazu's casual soldiers. Did you know that during the heyday of the Edo period, Japan was an economic power that surpassed Britain and Spain, and even just before the Meiji Restoration, Japan's GDP was slightly higher than that of the Ottoman Empire? Did you know that even just before the Meiji Restoration, Japan's per capita GDP was half that of the United States? Korea has always been a small country, but Japan has always been a large country.

  • @Dropkick1901
    @Dropkick190111 ай бұрын

    Watched to the end. Thank you.

  • @Greywarden-ne5lc
    @Greywarden-ne5lc8 ай бұрын

    great video guys... keep on with the good work...

  • @Apollonear
    @Apollonear Жыл бұрын

    This video is amazing!!! So much work into it. I hope you guys know people like me really appreciate it

  • @blockmasterscott
    @blockmasterscott Жыл бұрын

    I had never even heard of of this war until about two years ago when I saw a book on it in the library. I was like wtf is this crap, and I spent literally all night reading that damn book. It was like a medieval DDAY on Juno beach. And that Korean admiral winning battles, getting sent to jail for being popular from winning too many battles and being asked to win more battles was like something out of a corny movie. And this was all real life. I was amazed.

  • @greendalf123
    @greendalf123 Жыл бұрын

    Quality video gentlemen, well done.

  • @Siptom369
    @Siptom3695 ай бұрын

    As allways such a great detailed historic overview of this war

  • @hzhang1228
    @hzhang1228 Жыл бұрын

    there is also the battle of Baekgang around 660s featuring Korea, China and Japan that featured naval battles, probably the first major conflict involving these parties.

  • @Redmalicious
    @Redmalicious Жыл бұрын

    Yi Sun Shin has to be the most badass naval commander I've ever heard of

  • @user-wd2ln6dk1x

    @user-wd2ln6dk1x

    7 ай бұрын

    맞습니다 한산도전투에서 3명의 사망자가 발생하였습니다 일본군은 8-9000명 사망한것으로 기록되어있는데 3명의 사망자도 발생하지말앗어야했습니다 이순신은 나쁜지휘관입니다

  • @simhong

    @simhong

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@user-wd2ln6dk1x 모지리야 badass는 나쁘다는 뜻이 아니라 멋지다는 말이야

  • @user-li1br9np3s

    @user-li1br9np3s

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@user-wd2ln6dk1x여기서 badass는 칭찬일텐데ㅋㅋ 혼자 급발진 하시네..

  • @user-ib8ei5vo6v

    @user-ib8ei5vo6v

    8 күн бұрын

    When Japan invaded Korea in 1592, Korea was defeated on all fronts. The Ming Dynasty of China, which was supporting Korea at this time, fell into a financial crisis due to this war. I'm sure you're only learning history that is convenient for you, so I'll tell you this: Of the three great conquests of Banreki, this war was the one in which the most silver was spent. His other two wars combined did not reach the funds used for this war. More than 7.4 million taels of silver were used in this war, while in other wars he used 800,000 taels and 2.4 million taels of silver. Approximately 80,000 Japanese soldiers died during the two dispatches to Korea, but half of them died from infectious diseases and the remaining 40,000 died in battle. To kill these 40,000 people, the Joseon Dynasty lost 260,000 soldiers and the Ming Dynasty lost 38,000 soldiers. Where is the victory? Including civilian deaths, the total number of deaths in the Sino-South Korean coalition is likely to exceed 1 million. This war was not a big deal for Japan, but the Ming Dynasty and its vassal states suffered irreparable damage (lol) The number of troops dispatched to Korea at that time was 150,000, 25% of Japan's total military force. was. was. Do you know of any small country that could not protect itself from this 25% total military force and asked China for help? (Laughs) Then Japan made peace with the Ming Dynasty and withdrew without paying any reparations. By the way, the Joseon Dynasty was refused participation in negotiations by China. It seems that there was also a sailor who was considered a Korean hero who made a surprise attack on the retreating Shimazu and was killed by Shimazu's casual soldiers. Did you know that during the heyday of the Edo period, Japan was an economic power that surpassed Britain and Spain, and even just before the Meiji Restoration, Japan's GDP was slightly higher than that of the Ottoman Empire? Did you know that even just before the Meiji Restoration, Japan's per capita GDP was half that of the United States? Korea has always been a small country, but Japan has always been a large country.

  • @btarczy5067
    @btarczy506711 ай бұрын

    If this was fiction it would be deemed unrealistically stupid that Admiral Yi was ever backstabbed, especially considering the sheer brutality of defeat suffered to the Japanese. For that matter, his feats would seem equally impossible. I'm usually weary about hero worship but in his case it appears to be absolutely justified. What a legend.

  • @goognamgoognw6637

    @goognamgoognw6637

    9 ай бұрын

    His character, intellect, demeanor and appearance though unknown must have called for great respect. A lot of luck is nowhere enough to accomplish what he did. He must have been able to unify men and create diligence and trust among them naturally. Whereas Japanese where like loose packs of dogs hating each other. I bow to Yi Shun Shin even 20 centuries later. He must have been a very inspiring example for all the men under his command.

  • @user-rw3bk6wp4m

    @user-rw3bk6wp4m

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@goognamgoognw6637 국뽕 치사량인데

  • @yttst7110

    @yttst7110

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@user-rw3bk6wp4m이순신은 치사량해도돼

  • @MyVanir

    @MyVanir

    5 ай бұрын

    Nah, there were plenty of historical examples of successful generals winning the war and then getting shafted by political backstabbing.

  • @ingwerschwensen8115
    @ingwerschwensen8115 Жыл бұрын

    Another great video(series). Wow! And thanks!

  • @paul5475
    @paul5475 Жыл бұрын

    Yi Shun Shi one of the heroes that even you aren't Korean was still proud how this General stood up against the odd with his strong and disciplined soldiers.

  • @DescendantofYellowEmperor

    @DescendantofYellowEmperor

    6 ай бұрын

    😂 arrogant Koreans...yi was a sideshow joker when Chinese army defeated Japanese almost all by themselves

  • @BenyOh
    @BenyOh Жыл бұрын

    that was a great doc, thank you! this Yi sun sin... what a legend

  • @neilboardman6640
    @neilboardman6640Ай бұрын

    love your work man!

  • @Shenp-ef3yg
    @Shenp-ef3yg Жыл бұрын

    A roller coaster of events brought to order by one man. Admiral Yi Sun Shi, how admirable!

  • @coryfice1881
    @coryfice1881 Жыл бұрын

    Yi Sun Shin is that guy who does the hardest difficulty with cheating ai on whilst installing mods that further hinders him challenge and wins without taking damage except in the very last boss where a glitch causes him to take damage.

  • @bigdkenergypodcast

    @bigdkenergypodcast

    Жыл бұрын

    And still wins!

  • @itvirgil

    @itvirgil

    Жыл бұрын

    It's not surprising Koreans are the best StarCraft players

  • @astranix0198

    @astranix0198

    Жыл бұрын

    Yi doing micro before it was cool.

  • @EugenePaints
    @EugenePaints Жыл бұрын

    This is one of my favorite history videos from you all.

  • @weemac2k6
    @weemac2k6 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the video!

  • @user-gf7mp3nf3w
    @user-gf7mp3nf3w6 ай бұрын

    There are really really few men who changed history by their own. Admiral YI was one of that few men. He changed not only result of war but also fate of nations. Until today, his statue stands at center of Seoul.

  • @tc8025
    @tc8025 Жыл бұрын

    Great summation of a part of history I never knew much about. Admiral Yi was an amazing commander and I'm definitely going to be looking for a good book about his life. Just signed up for my Sakuraco subscription, looking forward to it.

  • @thats_songi

    @thats_songi

    3 ай бұрын

    He actually wrote a diary called Nanjung-Ilgi, definetly worth a read!

  • @PhoenixRiseinFlame
    @PhoenixRiseinFlame Жыл бұрын

    Admiral Yi is one of my favourite people from history. He was an absolute BA, who fought for the freedom and well-being of his country. All this despite the fact that the government tortured him, due to jealousy. I lived in Korea for a year and one of my favourite experiences was seeing his famous turtle ship in Yeosu.

  • @PhoenixRiseinFlame

    @PhoenixRiseinFlame

    Жыл бұрын

    @@grapesurgeon yeah man, I also really like the light canopy they had designed when I was there. I was also able to try “San-nakji” for the first time in Yeosu which was also an incredible experience. I love Korea and I can’t wait to go back.

  • @Meowmento

    @Meowmento

    Жыл бұрын

    Great to know you admire Yi Sun Shin. What would be some of your othet favorite historic figures I wonder.

  • @PhoenixRiseinFlame

    @PhoenixRiseinFlame

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Meowmento here’s a non comprehensive list: - George Washington - Augustine - Thomas Aquinas - John Calvin - Cincinnatus - Friederich Hayek - Winston Churchill - Rene Descartes - Calvin Coolidge - Miyamoto Musashi - Admiral Yi - Fyodor Dostoyevsky - Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn - Cato the Elder - Marcus Aurelius - Seneca - Cicero - Plato - Soren Kierkegaard - Abraham Kuyper - John Locke - Boethius - The Apostle Paul - Marie Curie - Dante Alighieri - Desiderius Erasmus - Leonidas - Anselm of Canterbury - Ernest Hemingway - El Cid - Jan Zizka - William Tyndale - Judas Macabees - Thomas Sowell - Immanuel Kant - Sun Tzu - Carl von Clausewitz - Alfred the Great - Charlemagne - Leif Erikson - Simo Hayha - J.R.R. Tolkien - C.S. Lewis - Adam Smith - Jonathan Edwards - Homer - Josephus - Charles Martel - Michael Faraday - Martin Luther - Blaise Pascal - Nicola Tesla - Theodore Roosevelt - Otto von Bismarck - Frederick Douglas - Milton Friedman - Ludwig von Mises - Justinian - William Blackstone - Edward Coke They weren’t perfect, but I have a lot of respect for the lives they lived. There’s a lot that can be gained from their insights.

  • @delmont2793

    @delmont2793

    Жыл бұрын

    Currently, there is no data to know the exact design of the Turtle Ship. What you see in Yeosu is an estimate, not a replica of the actual Turtle Ship.

  • @user-ib8ei5vo6v

    @user-ib8ei5vo6v

    8 күн бұрын

    When Japan invaded Korea in 1592, Korea was defeated on all fronts. The Ming Dynasty of China, which was supporting Korea at this time, fell into a financial crisis due to this war. I'm sure you're only learning history that is convenient for you, so I'll tell you this: Of the three great conquests of Banreki, this war was the one in which the most silver was spent. His other two wars combined did not reach the funds used for this war. More than 7.4 million taels of silver were used in this war, while in other wars he used 800,000 taels and 2.4 million taels of silver. Approximately 80,000 Japanese soldiers died during the two dispatches to Korea, but half of them died from infectious diseases and the remaining 40,000 died in battle. To kill these 40,000 people, the Joseon Dynasty lost 260,000 soldiers and the Ming Dynasty lost 38,000 soldiers. Where is the victory? Including civilian deaths, the total number of deaths in the Sino-South Korean coalition is likely to exceed 1 million. This war was not a big deal for Japan, but the Ming Dynasty and its vassal states suffered irreparable damage (lol) The number of troops dispatched to Korea at that time was 150,000, 25% of Japan's total military force. was. was. Do you know of any small country that could not protect itself from this 25% total military force and asked China for help? (Laughs) Then Japan made peace with the Ming Dynasty and withdrew without paying any reparations. By the way, the Joseon Dynasty was refused participation in negotiations by China. It seems that there was also a sailor who was considered a Korean hero who made a surprise attack on the retreating Shimazu and was killed by Shimazu's casual soldiers. Did you know that during the heyday of the Edo period, Japan was an economic power that surpassed Britain and Spain, and even just before the Meiji Restoration, Japan's GDP was slightly higher than that of the Ottoman Empire? Did you know that even just before the Meiji Restoration, Japan's per capita GDP was half that of the United States? Korea has always been a small country, but Japan has always been a large country.

  • @satanwithinternet2753
    @satanwithinternet2753 Жыл бұрын

    fun fact: in eu4 if you play has kora you get admiral ye. and he is the only charector in the game with a perfect 6/6/6 skill set. my man is litterally OP

  • @nathanc939

    @nathanc939

    Жыл бұрын

    If you purposefully lose your lands, as Korea, you can become a pirate republic, which means you can actually have Yi as your Pirate King. This was one of my best campaign ever, I lost it all to Jurchens, to become a PR, then took it all back. In 1586, by memory, I got Yi as an admiral by event, so I fired all other admirals and made sure to have my current ruler die ASAP. Not only was he a 6/6/6 admiral, the general's (admiral) skills also impact his rolls on ruler stats, the fucker was also a 6/6/6 ruler with the ship durability trait. This time around, Korea was the one invading Japan in the 1590's and Kyushu was my bounty. I also was rich as hell, from permanently raiding Ming's coast, which kept their mandate low, which in turn made all their attempted invasions utterly patetic.

  • @aznhomig

    @aznhomig

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nathanc939 This guy games.

  • @satanwithinternet2753

    @satanwithinternet2753

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nathanc939 welp as soon as im done with my current ottoman campaign i will be doing a korea one now :D

  • @nathanc939

    @nathanc939

    Жыл бұрын

    @@satanwithinternet2753 Enjoy! There are other crazy ones that can be done, including in MP if you got lads.

  • @jamesson1154

    @jamesson1154

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nathanc939 I went the opposite route, I refused tribute to Ming from the jump, tech’d up to mil 5. Declared for mandate. Took me several attempts but after you take the mandate, it’s pretty much smooth sailing.

  • @joshuairiarte3785
    @joshuairiarte378511 ай бұрын

    Awesome stuff thank you 😊

  • @Numba003
    @Numba003 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you guys for another excellently informative episode. These videos are fantastic. Just trying to imagine leading 13 ships up against hundreds is crazy. God be with you out there everybody. ✝️ :)

  • @smuller85
    @smuller85 Жыл бұрын

    Sea of Japan? It's a humiliation to Admiral Yi who protect the sea of Chosen province.

  • @tedk1677

    @tedk1677

    Жыл бұрын

    Can't agree more on this. Sea of Japan? Admiral Yi would see this as a huge insult. Sad to see this disgraceful mistake from this history channel.

  • @lin0345

    @lin0345

    Жыл бұрын

    This video got sponsored by Japanese companies. No wonder they put it like that.

  • @paranmanjang02

    @paranmanjang02

    10 ай бұрын

    @@ChillDfect East Sea

  • @Hanfugirl_Hanzi

    @Hanfugirl_Hanzi

    9 ай бұрын

    Only Korean says Japan Sea as 'East Sea' and Yellow Sea as "West Sea" what a joke😂 they think the centre of East Asia themselves

  • @kaiserwilhelmii6765

    @kaiserwilhelmii6765

    9 ай бұрын

    if Japan were not exist, that sea would be called "Pacific Ocean“lol

  • @milabugtcher990
    @milabugtcher99013 күн бұрын

    really great video! I am big yi sun shin fan so I appreciate this doube!🙂

  • @marksnyder7255
    @marksnyder7255 Жыл бұрын

    The sound effects are so satisfying

  • @acerock013
    @acerock013 Жыл бұрын

    it's nice to see more and more information and videos being put out about the Imjin War.

  • @user-ib8ei5vo6v

    @user-ib8ei5vo6v

    8 күн бұрын

    When Japan invaded Korea in 1592, Korea was defeated on all fronts. The Ming Dynasty of China, which was supporting Korea at this time, fell into a financial crisis due to this war. I'm sure you're only learning history that is convenient for you, so I'll tell you this: Of the three great conquests of Banreki, this war was the one in which the most silver was spent. His other two wars combined did not reach the funds used for this war. More than 7.4 million taels of silver were used in this war, while in other wars he used 800,000 taels and 2.4 million taels of silver. Approximately 80,000 Japanese soldiers died during the two dispatches to Korea, but half of them died from infectious diseases and the remaining 40,000 died in battle. To kill these 40,000 people, the Joseon Dynasty lost 260,000 soldiers and the Ming Dynasty lost 38,000 soldiers. Where is the victory? Including civilian deaths, the total number of deaths in the Sino-South Korean coalition is likely to exceed 1 million. This war was not a big deal for Japan, but the Ming Dynasty and its vassal states suffered irreparable damage (lol) The number of troops dispatched to Korea at that time was 150,000, 25% of Japan's total military force. was. was. Do you know of any small country that could not protect itself from this 25% total military force and asked China for help? (Laughs) Then Japan made peace with the Ming Dynasty and withdrew without paying any reparations. By the way, the Joseon Dynasty was refused participation in negotiations by China. It seems that there was also a sailor who was considered a Korean hero who made a surprise attack on the retreating Shimazu and was killed by Shimazu's casual soldiers. Did you know that during the heyday of the Edo period, Japan was an economic power that surpassed Britain and Spain, and even just before the Meiji Restoration, Japan's GDP was slightly higher than that of the Ottoman Empire? Did you know that even just before the Meiji Restoration, Japan's per capita GDP was half that of the United States? Korea has always been a small country, but Japan has always been a large country.

  • @markkarle9966
    @markkarle9966 Жыл бұрын

    Japan had continuous ambition of korean peninsula in history. History recorded the first thing they did after entering civilization was asking chinese emperor to recognize their dominion of korean peninsula. They fought three wars with china in peninsula,which happened in tang, ming and qing. At the third time, they won the war and finally annexed the Korean.

  • @kgjung2310

    @kgjung2310

    Жыл бұрын

    They also continued to fight WW2 well beyond any hope of winning partly because they wanted to keep Korea. The leadership couldn't agree to even think of ending the war with Japan getting nothing in return for the millions of deaths they already suffered. How could they tell the people it was all for nothing? Since America wasn't going to settle for anything less than unconditional surrender, that wasn't going to happen.

  • @user-hn4qr8ty6f

    @user-hn4qr8ty6f

    Жыл бұрын

    Until more than 2000 years ago, the southern part of the Korean Peninsula and Kyushu were inhabited by an ethnic group called the Wajin (seaman genus). history. Around the 4th century, Kyushu and the southern part of the Korean Peninsula became vassals of Yamato Province (Japan), but in the 7th century they lost the war with the Tang dynasty and decided to withdraw completely from the southern part of the Korean Peninsula. The southern part of the Korean Peninsula was originally part of Japan's territory, but over time the rulers have changed, including the northern Han, the Tungus, and the Mongols. Qin Dynasty and Han Dynasty = Northern Han People Sui Dynasty and Tang Dynasty = Mongol Xianbei Yuan dynasty = Mongols Ming Dynasty = Southern Han Chinese Southern Song = Turkic ethnic group (Uyghur) Qing Dynasty = Manchu Jurchen Japan has had a friendly relationship with the Han people in the south since ancient times, but had a hostile relationship with the northern Han people and the Tungus people.

  • @markkarle9966

    @markkarle9966

    Жыл бұрын

    @@user-hn4qr8ty6f I think what you are saying is mimana. Japanese scholars think it exists, Korean scholars think it doesn't. No matter whether it exist, Book of Song recorded that five kings of Wa continuous asked liu song chinese emperor to recognize their dominion of Korean Peninsula. This is the earliest recorded credible history about Japan. I know some Japenese scholars believed that the kings recorded in Book of Sone was the kings recorded in Nihon Shoki. The interest thing is, chinese emperor didn't accept at four times. At the fifth time, perhaps he was moved by the sincerity of sending envoys for decades, finally the liu song chinese emperor recognized what Japan asked. The three wars happened in AD 663(tang), AD 1592-1598(ming), AD 1894-1895(qing). Japan had wars with almost every dynasty of chinese empire in Korean Peninsula. Nationlism didn't exist in Ancient Asia.The emperor of the chinese empire were Hans in most of time. But sometimes they may have been Mongols, Manchus, but they all believed that their groups were a part of chinese, their government were the government of chinese empire, they were chinese emperors. This is the ancient Chinese national identity. The most population of chinese empire were Hans at any time. There is also a big part of your perception of the national identity of the Chinese emperor wrong. Japan had conflicted with chinese empire in Korean Peninsula, it doesn't matter what nationality the emperor is. Chinese emperor wanted to protect Korean, Japan wanted to annex the Korean. That's why the last two wars happened.

  • @ZSX-ho1xc

    @ZSX-ho1xc

    2 ай бұрын

    @@user-hn4qr8ty6fYou are talking nonsense. The Han Ethnic Group in China has never been divided into the Southern Han Ethnic Group and the Northern Han Ethnic Group, and besides the Yuan Dynasty and the Qing Dynasty, other dynasties are all Han Ethnic Group dynasties.

  • @AtifHieder

    @AtifHieder

    Ай бұрын

    ​​​@@user-hn4qr8ty6f什么乱七八糟的东西?汉人自古就是一体,历史也一脉相承,南方汉人是北方汉人迁徙过去的,母系带有南方土著血统,汉人父系血统的纯粹度是最高的,现在的研究显示如今60%的中国男人父系祖先可以追溯到五个生活在新石器时代的男性。汉人的文化也是一脉相承,从黄帝开始就没要断绝过

  • @ryanrep9194
    @ryanrep919411 ай бұрын

    Oh my this episode was amazing!!! Loved it. Great job!

  • @aaronabraham5199
    @aaronabraham5199 Жыл бұрын

    Such a good documentary 👏

  • @user-Mush1000
    @user-Mush1000 Жыл бұрын

    10:08 The reason why the navy of Gyeongsang-do did not engage in naval battles(At the time, there were two naval headquarters in Gyeongsang-do, and the area that was first attacked was under the jurisdiction of another general, not Won Gyun.) was that there was not enough time to mobilize the ships at each base due to the technology of the times. Although some forces were concentrated in Busan due to intelligence just before the war, due to the war that started abruptly, the naval command in Gyeongsang-do could not overcome the overwhelming difference in power between ships and grounded the ship, continuing the battle on land. Yi Sun-sin's Jeolla-do Navy also spent about two weeks mobilizing all forces after hearing the news of the outbreak of war, and a naval commander who had jurisdiction over an area located to the west of Yi Sun-shin took longer to mobilize forces, joining the Joseon Combined Fleet. 1:11:04 Unfortunately, Bae Seol, who preserved the only naval power at the time, deserted right before the Battle of Myeongnyang, and was executed after the war. 1:18:32 Turtle ships were all sunk after the Battle of Chilcheonryang and were not rebuilt until the end of the war. Ships depicted on maps are considered errors.

  • @alexanderrahl7034
    @alexanderrahl7034 Жыл бұрын

    "They didn't just burn their weapons and supplies, but also scuppered their fleet." That's not your average every day incompetence... thats _advanced incompetence_

  • @jeremar4617
    @jeremar4617 Жыл бұрын

    Nicely done video. Educational and clear 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

  • @bondrewd3313
    @bondrewd33136 күн бұрын

    I recently watched your fascinating documentary "Imjin War - Japanese Invasion of Korea 1592-1598" and appreciated the detailed coverage of this pivotal conflict. However, I noticed the video did not mention the Battle of Sacheon (泗川の戦い) from October 1598, near the end of the war. At Sacheon, a Japanese force of just 2,000 men led by Shimazu Yoshihiro is said to have repelled a Ming-Joseon allied army of 100,000 troops under the Ming general Dong Yiyuan. Despite the overwhelming odds, this improbable Japanese victory has been passed down as a legendary battle highlighting Shimazu's tactical skill and the high morale of the Japanese troops. Some argue the true size of the allied army was much smaller than 100,000. In any case, the Battle of Sacheon allowed Japan to mount a final offensive before ultimately transitioning to peace negotiations. It seems to have been an important engagement in the closing stages of the Imjin War. I understand not every battle can be included, but I was curious if there was a particular reason the Battle of Sacheon was left out of your otherwise comprehensive documentary. I would be very interested in hearing any additional insights or perspectives you may have on this battle and its significance. Thank you for all the work you put into creating such informative historical content! Best regards,

  • @hanpyulkong3676
    @hanpyulkong3676 Жыл бұрын

    During the Imjin War i, Japan kidnapped Joseon potters and revived the ceramic industry, and made foreign currency by exporting ceramics made in Japan's Kyushu Saga and Kagoshima prefectures to Europe. At that time, the ceramic industry was the same cutting-edge technology as the semiconductor industry today.

  • @williamjaffersonclinton131

    @williamjaffersonclinton131

    Жыл бұрын

    But North Korea's ceramic technology still lags behind China's, and it is impossible to have such a big impact.

  • @davidkusanagi589

    @davidkusanagi589

    Жыл бұрын

    @@user-cg2tw8pw7j This is true. Its even written in Japanese books.

  • @delmont2793

    @delmont2793

    Жыл бұрын

    @@user-cg2tw8pw7j At that time, Toyotomi Hideyoshi Japanese aristocrats coveted Korean studies and ceramics and plundered numerous technicians, scholars, and cultural assets during the war. In particular, Japan and Korea They kidnapped potters, treated them with utmost respect, and encouraged them to pass on their pottery skills to Japan. In fact, if you go to the Japanese Ceramics Museum The beginning of their own pottery history is recorded in 1602 (consistent with the end of the Japanese invasion of Korea in 1592). The shrine is still in operation. After the war, Japan developed Japanese pottery based on the techniques handed down by Korean potters, and pottery trade with Europe blossomed. From this period, Japanese porcelain products became popular in Europe. Immediately after the end of the war, the cultural levels of Korea and Japan begin to reverse. Korea has become a heap of ashes deprived of numerous cultural assets, buildings and technologies. Japan made its own technology and culture that it looted from Korea. Japan enjoyed a splendid heyday in the Edo period by selling pottery made with Joseon's technology to Europe with money.

  • @delmont2793

    @delmont2793

    Жыл бұрын

    @@user-cg2tw8pw7j Take a look at the names of the people worshiped at the shrine as the founders of Japanese pottery. They have Korean names. They are Joseon pottery craftsmen kidnapped by Japan during the Japanese invasion of Korea in 1592.

  • @turbonerd6552
    @turbonerd6552 Жыл бұрын

    This is a part of history I didn't know I really wanted a long video for. I love it 😀

  • @chinoandsons
    @chinoandsonsАй бұрын

    Fantastic video. Enjoyed it

  • @sipdercochon9463
    @sipdercochon9463 Жыл бұрын

    hehe very nice ! i notice how you used Shogun total War to build up so footage images love it :)

  • @Uptotheceilingdowntothefloor
    @Uptotheceilingdowntothefloor Жыл бұрын

    Yi Sun Sin is my favorite admiral after Hayreddin and Zheng He 👀

  • @jonbaxter2254

    @jonbaxter2254

    Жыл бұрын

    My man had a real-life anime moment like seven times.

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