The earliest settlement of Japan by people most resembling modern Japanese in littoral northern Kyushu next to the Eastern Channel is supported by legendary, historical, and archeological evidence, and is undisputed. A range of dates when immigration began from what is the mainland via the Korean Peninsula to north Kyushu from the fall of
Four Commanderies of Han (108 BC) to the 4th century AD. Historically these narrows (i.e., the whole Korea/Tsushima Strait) served as a highway for high-risk voyages (southern end of the Korean Peninsula to the Tsushima Islands to Iki Island to the western tip of Honshu) for trade between the countries of the Korean peninsula and Japan. The straits also served as a migration or an invasion path, in both directions. For example, archeologists believe the first
Mesolithic migrations (
Jōmon) traveled across to Honshu around the 10th century BC, supplanting
Paleolithic people that walked from Asia to Japan overland over 100,000 years ago when the sea level was lower during the
Pleistocene ice age. Immigrants from
Korea and
China also contributed to waves of immigrants arriving in Kyushu, although who, when, and how many exactly is a matter of intense debate.
Buddhism, along with Chinese writing, was initially transmitted from Korean Peninsula via Eastern Channel to Japan in the 5th century by way of the straits as well. Iki to Kamino-shima, the southern end of the large island of Tsushima, is about 50 kilometres.
Busan (Korea), to the northern tip of Tsushima, about the same across the Korea Strait. These were tremendous distances to attempt in small boats over open seas. The
Mongol invasions of Japan crossed this sea and ravaged the Tsushima Islands before the
kamikaze – translated as "divine wind" – a
typhoon that is said to have saved Japan from a
Mongol invasion fleet led by
Kublai Khan in 1281. The 16th century,
Toyotomi Hideyoshi was aimed at the conquest of China via the Korean Peninsula from this strait. The decisive naval battle in the
Russo-Japanese War, the
Battle of Tsushima, took place in the strait between the Japanese and Russian navies in 1905; the Russian fleet was virtually destroyed by a Japanese naval force for the loss of only three Japanese
torpedo boats. ==See also==