Confucian Statecraft and Korean Institutions. Yu Hyongwon and the Late Choson Dynasty - James B. Palais
NOTES TO CHAPTER 7 1073
q. PGSR p8h.
- Ihid. I :5a.
- Ihid. I:I 9b; Kuksa-daesajon [Great dictionary of Korean history], Yi Hongjik ed.
1 (Seoul 1962):247.
- See n. 3. supra.
- Consult Kato Shigeshi, Shina kadensei, and Hori Toshikazu, Kindensei 110 kenkyil.
[A study of the equal-ficld system] (Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1<)75).
- PGSR 5: I8a. See also Ch 'un-ch 'iu Kung-yang chiian-chu-shu, Ssu-pu pei-yao ed.
16 (Shanghai I936?):8a.
- See the article by Miyazaki Uchisada on shih-ta-fu (sadaebu in Korean) in Ajia
rekishijiten 4 (Tokyo: Heibonsha, 1962):I74a, and the article by Masubuchi Tatsuo on
the Spring and Autumn period in ihid. 4:343a-h.
- PGSR I :2a, 6b-7a.
- Ihid. I: lOa.
- Ihid. 1 :2:.1.
- Ihid. 5:2 I h-22a; T~u-chih (ung-chien, Shang-mu yin-shu-kuan ts'ang-fan cd. 33:6a-
b; de Bary et aI., Sources olChinese Tradition 1:216-18; Joseph R. Lcvcnson, "TIl Wind
in the Well-field: The Erosion of the Confucian Ground of Controversy," in Arthur F. Wright,
ed., The Conluciilll Persuasion (Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press. 1960), p. 273.
The phrase hanmin myongjiin means "limit the name-land ofthe people" where "name-
land" refers to land registered in someone's name.
- PGSR 5:22b.
- Hori Toshikazu, Kindensei, pp. 19-27; William G. Crowell, "The Land Limita-
tions of Emperor Ai - A Reexamination," paper presented at the Asian Studies on the
Pacific Coast Conference at Eugene, Oregon, June 1<)77.
- Tzu-chilz t 'illig-chien kang-mu 7:53a-b.
- Chll Hsi's paraphrase was close to a verbatim transcript of SSlI-Illa Kuang's text
in the T~II-('hih t'ung-chien 33:6a-h, hut since Chu Hsi'sfLm-li (introduction and expla-
nation of the principles used in the text) explicitly remarked that he was emulating the
cryptic, didactic style of The Spring and Autumn Annals to praise moral deeds and con-
demn immoral ones. Yu Hyongwon obviously felt he had the license to interpret Chu
Hsi's motivations.
Thefan-li provides among other things the code language Chu Hsi used to assess praise
and hlame with regard to legitimate rulers and usurpers, The opening lines ofHsiian-tsung's
preface notes that the Tzu-chih t'lifl/i-chien kang-l1JlI is hased on the format of the Ch 'un-
ch'iLl classic and its traditions (chuan, commentaries) and that its purpose is to "clarify
Heaven's principles, rectify moral relationships, praise good, and blame bad .... "
- PGSR 5:22h; T'zmg-tien, ch, I, shih-/lUo, 1.
- For a thorough survey of the equal-field system and its antecedents, see Hori
Toshikazu. Killdensci,
34, Yu accepted the statement in the History (~lthe Korw) /)nzasty (KorwJsa) that the
early Koryo c/IIJllsiklt'o land system was a replica of the equal-field system, but recent
scholarship has demonstratcd that this interpretation was incorrect. See James B. Palais,