ro88 NOTES TO CHAPTER ro
r o. This regulation appears to indicate that slaves owned, rather than simply occupied
or possessed, the land on which they paid the land tax, for if the master were the regis-
tered owner, one would expect that he also would have been the subject of tax reduction.
r I. Ch'a, "Hyojong Iii kun 'gi kwangch'ung," pt. 1, pp. 47-48.
f2. PGSR 2 I :31a-32a, for this and previous quotations. The order of the quoted mate-
rial has been rearranged slightly. Yu's short commentary to his proposed law to remedy
the practice of substitute cloth taxes contains a brief summary of the points made above.
Ibid. 21: 30a-b.
- Ibid. 2 I :68b; see also 21:3 I b.
- Ibid. 2 I :68a-b.
IS. Ibid. 26:68b. - Ibid. 2I:3Ib-32a.
- Ibid. 2I:30b-3Ia.
- Ibid. 2r:3Ib-32a.
- Ibid. 21 :30b.
- Ibid. 2 r: 3 I a.
2 I. Ibid. 2 r:30b-3 I a. - Ibid. 21:30b, 32b.
- Ibid. 2 r:7 I a-b; KSDSJ 2: 1439-I 440.
- PGSR 2 I :34a-b, 69b.
- Ibid. 2 I :24b, 36a. On 2 I :69b Yu stipulated that troops on frontier duty could be
used as the servants (saryang) of garrison commanders, but their duties should be lim-
ited to carrying firewood. The rest of their time was to be spent in practicing archery and
shooting. - Yu cited the memorial of Chung bong, Cho Han, and Yi Sugwang's Chibong yusol,
preface dated 16r 4, but the latter states on 3:28a (Seoul: Kyong'in munhwasa ed., 1970,
p. 56) that total strength of soldiers and support personnel in Korea (date unspecified)
was no less than 500,000 of which 180,000 were soldiers. PGSR 2 I :64a. - Chibong Ylls0l3:28b-29a.
- These figures were exclusive of marines (.I'llglln) for which Yu had only sparse infor-
mation. The total number of registered soldiers is slightly higher than Minister of War
Won Tup'yo's report in 1653 that there were only 150,000 men on the national military
registers. - PGSR 21 :64b-68a. There are some minor discrepancies in Yu's arithmetic, hardly
worth fussing about. Yu noted elsewhere that the sog'ogun were not provided with sup-
port personnel like the regular troops of good status, an added deficiency that only they
had to suffer. Ibid. 2 [:30b; Min Hyon'gu, "Kunse Choson chon'gi kunsa chedo Iii songnip,"
[The establishment of the early modern military system in the early Choson period], in
Yukkun sagwan hakkyo Han'guk kunsa yon'gusil, Hun'guk kunjesa: Kiinse ChosrJn
chi5n 'gi-p 'YrJn [The history of the Korean military system: The early modern Choson
period] (N.p.: Yukkun ponbo, [968). pp. 43-46. - Chon Hyongt'aek. ChoscJn hugi nobi sinbun yon 'gu [A study of slave status in late
Choson] (Seoul: Ikhogak, [989), pp. 176-77.
3I. The Later Han commentator, Cheng Hstian, in interpreting the Hsiao ssu-tu sec-