Mongol invasions The
Mongol Empire first made contact with the Korean kingdom of
Goryeo when they killed a Goryeo envoy to the
Jin dynasty in 1211. In 1216, a host of
Khitans fleeing the Mongols crossed into Goryeo. A Mongol-Jurchen army arrived on Goryeo's borders two years later chasing after the enemy Khitans. After defeating the Khitans with the help of Goryeo, the Mongol army left behind dozens of overseers to learn the Korean language. From 1219 to 1224, the Mongols sent envoys to collect tribute from Goryeo. In 1225, a Mongol envoy was killed under uncertain circumstances while returning from a tribute collecting mission. The Goryeo officials blamed the murder on a bandit but the Mongols believed that the Goryeo government was responsible. Moreover, the Mongols were displeased with Goryeo's refusal to contribute military forces for the Mongol campaign against the Eastern Jurchens. They launched
several invasions against Goryeo from 1231 to 1259. There were six major campaigns: 1231, 1232, 1235, 1238, 1247, 1253; between 1253 and 1258, the Mongols under
Möngke Khan's general
Jalairtai Qorchi launched four devastating invasions in the final successful campaign against Korea, at tremendous cost to civilian lives throughout the Korean Peninsula. The Mongols annexed the northern areas of the Korean Peninsula and incorporated them into their empire as
Ssangseong Prefecture and
Dongnyeong Prefecture.
Ögedei Khan dispatched
Sartaq against Goryeo and after they ravaged the Korean countryside, Goryeo accepted the placement of overseers known as
darughachi within its borders. At the time, Goryeo was ruled by a
military regime led by
Ch'oe U (r. 1219–1249). The Ch'oe family had seized power from the king in the late 12th century. Despite retaining the king on the throne and the existing administrative structures, the Ch'oe family was usually the ones determining policy. In June 1232, Ch'oe U moved the court from
Gaegyeong to the more defensible
Ganghwa Island and murdered all the darughachi overseers. Ch'oe was willing to send tribute but refused to accept overseers, send royal hostages, or return the court to Gaegyeong. Further campaigns against Goryeo by the Mongols were undertaken by Tanggud (1253–1254), Ebügen (1247–1248), Prince Yekü (1253–1254), and Jalairtai (1254–1255). Goryeo quickly discovered that pitched battles usually led to defeat and instead retreated into the mountain fortresses and islands where they could more effectively defend their positions with their greater understanding of local geography. In 1241, Goryeo sent Wang Sun (1224–1283), a distant relative of the royal family posing as the crown prince, as hostage to the Mongols. Devastation from the Mongol raids caused the peasants to defect to the Mongols, who established Ssangseong Prefecture with the aid of local officials.
End of the war Goryeo held out against the Mongol invasions for about thirty years. Eventually, due to increasing pressure and instability from repeated devastation caused by the Mongol invasions, the Ch'oe family was ousted from power. In May 1258,
Ch'oe Ui (last head of the Ch'oe family) was assassinated by
Kim Chun, ending the Ch'oe military regime and returning the king to power. For the next ten months, the new government debated on how to handle the Mongol invasions, with the majority favoring a settlement agreement. In May 1259, the crown prince
Wang Chŏn was sent as a hostage to the Mongol court where he agreed to destroy Ganghwa's fortifications and return the capital to the mainland. Upon receiving news that his father had died, Wang Chŏn was sent back to Goryeo where he was enthroned as king (posthumously
Wonjong of Goryeo) in June 1260. Shortly after, he received a number of edicts from
Kublai Khan insisting again on the return of the capital to the mainland, but also agreeing to release thousands of Goryeo captives and that Goryeo may keep their traditional clothing. The latter command was later interpreted as an overarching directive to preserve Goryeo's institutions such as slavery and land tenure practices. Wonjong's government led by Kim Chun was overthrown by Im Yŏn in 1269. In response, the Mongols backed the rebellion of another group of Goryeo officials in the northwest and created the Dongnyeong Prefecture. Another invasion was prepared in 1270. In an event known as the
Sambyeolcho Rebellion, the Three Patrols army (
sambyeolcho) that served Goryeo's government rebelled against the Im family, overthrew them, and moved the officials back to Gaegyeong from Ganghwa. They fled to Jindo Island and then
Jeju Island, where they remained until 1273 when Goryeo forces arrived and defeated them, after which a part of the island was converted to a breeding ground for the Yuan royal herd. Goryeo regained formal control of Dongnyeong in 1290 and Jeju in 1294. However the military command (
Tumen) on Jeju (
Tamna Prefectures) remained outside of their jurisdiction. Due to the turmoil caused by the Mongol invasions, a number of Koreans from northern Goryeo entered China either as captives or willingly to seek their fortunes elsewhere, especially in the Yuan capitals of Khanbaliq and
Shangdu. Looser control from the Goryeo government resulted in the departure of farming families for
Liaoyang and
Shenyang to escape tax and labor services. Possibly as many as 250,000 Koreans lived in China during this period.
Mongol invasions of Japan Militarily, following the 1259 peace treaty, Mongol ambitions on Japan resulted in two
invasions of Japan. In both efforts, the Mongols directed Korean shipbuilding and militarization towards the amphibious assault of the Japanese coasts and pressed a large proportion of Korean naval and infantry forces into the service of Mongol military objectives. Korea supplied 770 fully manned ships and 5,000 soldiers in 1274 and 900 ships and 10,000 soldiers in 1281. For a variety of reasons, both invasions failed. During the periods leading up to and during the invasions, Korea was effectively forced to serve as a Mongol military base. The Yuan dynasty paid for ships and soldiers in Goryeo with
baochao paper money.
Status After 1270, Goryeo became a "fully integrated client kingdom," however official protocol was that of a subordinate principality. David M. Robinson described Goryeo's status as incorporated within the "Great Yuan
ulus" but legally distinct from the rest of the empire. Yuan legal codes separated Goryeo from southern China. In the 1990s, some Korean scholars called the period of Mongol rule the age of "Yuan intervention".
Rashid al-Din Hamadani described Goryeo as a province in name but a separate state within the Yuan dynasty. It has also been called a "son-in-law kingdom in the Mongol empire". Starting with
King Chungnyeol (r. 1274-1308), kings of Goryeo were married to Mongol
Borjigid princesses and Goryeo princes were raised and educated at the Yuan court.
Gongmin of Goryeo (r. 1351-1374) referred to Goryeo's relationship with the
Genghisids as that between vassal and lord. Because of royal marriages with princesses of the Mongol Yuan royal family, Goryeo was considered unique among the states. The Genghisids had also established marriage alliances with other rulers and allies early on such as the
Khongirads and
Qocho Uyghurs, but in no other case except Goryeo did they both go to war and form a marriage alliance with later on. Consequently, Goryeo remained a bulwark of support for the Genghisids and was the last state in East Asia to recognize them as a legitimate polity in the 1380s. In 1280, the Branch Secretariat for Eastern Campaigns was created, which lasted until the end of the dynasty. According to Christopher P. Atwood, the Goryeo prince served as the grand councilor (
chengxiang) but the secretariat managers (
pingzhang) were appointed by the Yuan court. According to David M. Robinson, it was the Goryeo king who was head of the Branch Secretariat. In 1300, Manager Körgüz proposed abolishing Goryeo court ritual and official hierarchy to better fit its status as a province, but this proposal was rejected. The Mongols established several autonomous commands in Korea that remained outside the control of the Goryeo court. However George Qingzhi Zhao states that the kings of Goryeo retained the autonomy to conduct their own government, including setting up bureaucratic structures, selecting officials, exercising laws and taxes, and using those taxes for Goryeo rather than sending them to the Yuan court. The issue of Goryeo's status was raised again in 1302 and between 1309-1312. In both cases, the proposal to change Goryeo's status was raised by the Hong clan of
Hong Ta-gu, who were Goryeo defectors with a long history of conflict with their homeland. The Hong clan was a
warlord family that originated in northwestern Goryeo. They made contact with the Mongols in 1218 and defected to the Mongol Empire in 1231. As a former warlord family in Goryeo, the Hong clan specialized in military matters pertaining to Goryeo and made their name by participating in campaigns against their homeland, even stoking conflict on purpose to their benefit. In 1302, they proposed combining Liaoyang and the Branch Secretariat for Eastern Campaigns (Goryeo). Between 1309-1312, the sons of Hong Ta-gu proposed establishing a province in Goryeo instead of having a separate kingdom. This was because
Chungseon of Goryeo held both the position of king of Goryeo and
Wang of Shenyang. The
Wang of Shenyang was created in 1260 to rule Goryeo people living in Shenyang. While real power resided in the Hong clan and other families, the symbolic power of the post occupied by the Goryeo royal family provided an alternative center of power among the Goryeo elites. In 1308,
Külüg Khan granted the post to Chungseon. The emperor rejected the proposal to turn Goryeo into a province in 1312. The Hong clan lost most of its power and the brothers are not mentioned again after 1312. Goryeo was lower ranked than Inner Asians who surrendered to the Mongols earlier. When the Mongols placed the Uighurs of the
Kingdom of Qocho over the Koreans at the court the Korean King objected. The Mongol Emperor Kublai Khan said that the Uighur king of Qocho was ranked higher than the Karluk Kara-Khanid ruler, who in turn was ranked higher than the Korean King, who was ranked last among the three because the Uighurs surrendered to the Mongols first, the Karluks surrendered after the Uighurs, and the Koreans surrendered last, and that the Uighurs surrendered peacefully without violently resisting.
Koreans were classified along with Northern Chinese, Khitan, Balhae and Jurchen people as "Han people." Starting in 1271, the Goryeo royal family sent its boys to serve in the
kheshig, the Great Khan's imperial bodyguard. Their service lasted from a few years to more than a decade. Their status as part of the kheshig granted them privileges in Goryeo such as legal immunity and the ability to appropriate government assets such as horse fodder or special gowns worn by the guards. In 1350, a Goryeo man named Choe Won who was part of the kheshig made demeaning comments about the Goryeo king
Chungjeong. When he was taken in for interrogation by Goryeo authorities, Choe Won asserted his rights as part of the kheshig, refused to kneel, and left the premise. The Goryeo men serving in the kheshig were lumped in together with the northern and southern Chinese, who were sometimes subject to sumptuary restrictions that Goryeo protested. In 1315, an order was given to restrict extravagant clothing among the "northern Chinese, Goryeo men, and southern Chinese" in the kheshig that did not apply to Mongols. In 1345, Yi Jehyeon protested such restrictions when another similar order was given. He emphasized Goryeo's dedicated service to the Genghisids, military service rendered in putting down a Khitan rebellion, immediate recognition of Kublai as the Great Khan, marriage ties to the Genghisid princesses, and their service in the kheshig. The petition also noted that the Goryeo royal family members sat among the
Khongirad with the "white nine", which might refer to the white clothing of esteemed people or the mare's milk that they drank.
Branch Secretariat for Eastern Campaigns The Branch Secretariat for Eastern Campaigns was created in 1280 to mobilize Goryeo resources for the
Mongol invasions of Japan. Its offices were located in
Gaegyong and was nominally led by the king of Goryeo, who held the dual titles of Imperial Son-in-Law King of Goryeo and Minister of the Left of the Branch Secretariat for Eastern Campaigns. However even though it was largely staffed by Goryeo officials, it was directly subordinate to the Yuan throne, which stationed Chinese, Jurchens, and Mongols in many of the Branch Secretariat's key posts. After the end of the Japanese campaigns, the Branch Secretariat continued to function as an institution of Mongol political control in Goryeo, with King
Chungnyeol of Goryeo being appointed as its head by
Kublai Khan in 1288 with the expectation that he would contribute to the
Mongol Civil War. To gain Kublai's acceptance and prevent further demands, Chungnyeol dressed in Mongol clothing, cut his hair in the Mongol fashion, and agreed to change the names of Goryeo's administrative bureaus to reflect their subordination to the Mongols. Chungnyeol's successor,
Chungseon of Goryeo (Kublai's grandson), spent a good deal of his youth in the Yuan capital and saw himself as both the king of Goryeo and as a prince of the empire. He favored adopting the Yuan legal code and implementing reforms to reduce Goryeo's slave population, which elicited opposition from Goryeo elites who feared that such measures would erode Goryeo's sovereignty. They appealed to Kublai's order that Goryeo's "dynastic customs" be retained and argued that aligning with Yuan legal institutions contravened Kublai's will. As a result of such advocacy, fundamental changes to Goryeo's institutions were not made. Chungseon abdicated in 1313 after only five years on the throne and chose to live in the Yuan capital instead because he believed the Yuan court was the true center of power, and power in Goryeo ultimately came from successfully cultivating relations there. In 1343, King
Chunghye of Goryeo was dethroned after being arrested by Yuan envoys. Gi Cheol and Hong Bin were appointed to the Branch Secretariat's leadership by the Yuan until Chunghye's son,
Wang Hŭn, had an audience with the Yuan emperor
Toghon Temür, and was appointed king as well as head of the Branch Secretariat. The
darughachi were Mongolian resident commissioners sent to the Goryeo court. These commissioners, while nominally subordinate to the Goryeo king, were routinely supplied with provisions and were actively involved in the affairs of the Goryeo court. Although the Branch Secretariat was used as a means of Mongol political control over Goryeo, Goryeo rulers also used the Branch Secretariat to advance their own claims on the Goryeo throne. The king's position as head of the Branch Secretariat enhanced his station within Goryeo as well as in the empire.
Chungsuk of Goryeo lobbied Mongols, Koreans, and Chinese with ties to the Yuan court for support in regaining his throne from his son and promised them posts in the Branch Secretariat. Chungseon also benefited from three rest stop villages established by Kublai in 1279 between Goryeo and Khanbaliq that became his base for expansion into Liaoyang. He was granted lands on the northern bank of the
Yalu and gained significant influence over the region. Empress Gi intervened in Goryeo and her family contended with the Goryeo royal family; her family was purged by
Gongmin of Goryeo in 1356. By 1356 Goryeo under King Gongmin regained its lost northern territories such as the Ssangseong Prefecture placed under the
Liaoyang province by the Yuan. He also repulsed the
Red Turban invasions of Goryeo in 1360.
Empress Gi sent the Mongol army to invade Goryeo in 1364, but it failed. By 1370, Goryeo had terminated its tributary relationship with the Yuan and sent military forces to the border of the
Ming dynasty in
Liaodong. However, even after the eventual expulsion of the Yuan dynasty from China in 1368, some Goryeo kings such as
U still favored the Yuan, still a formidable power in the
Mongolian Plateau as the
Northern Yuan, over the Ming dynasty established by
Han people. After the assassination of King Gongmin in 1374, the newly enthroned King U's court was dominated by pro-Yuan families. Three years after King U's accession, Goryeo re-established its tributary status with the Yuan. In 1388, Goryeo sent an army to attack the Ming dynasty due to demands by the Ming to turn over territory in the north, but deputy commander Yi Seong-gye refused to carry out the invasion and instead turned back the army to remove the Goryeo king from power. In 1392, Yi Seong-gye, also known as
Taejo of Joseon, officially founded the state of
Joseon, cut off relations with the Mongols and sent tributary envoys to the Ming founder
Emperor Hongwu for recognition. == Marriage ==