Confucian Statecraft and Korean Institutions. Yu Hyongwon and the Late Choson Dynasty - James B. Palais

(Darren Dugan) #1
1090 NOTES TO CHAPTER IO

of the Northern Army (i.e., Capital Guards) had direct control of the village or hsiang
soldiers in the capital districts.


  1. He traced the origin of shifts for frontier duty to the Ch'in method of treating exiled
    criminals, hence not a proper method for ordinary peasants. PGSR 23:6b-7b.

  2. Hamaguchi has a chapter on the division of soldiers and peasants in the end of the
    Later Han and under the regime of Ts'ao Ts'ao of the Wei (in the third century A.D.) in
    Tokan zuit()shi no kenkyu, pp. 326-35. See also ibid., p. 33.
    3S. See PGSR 23:Sa-9a for the general outline of the system, and ibid. Sa-I2b for
    commentaries by later Chinese writers of the T'ang and Sung.

  3. Hamaguchi Shigekuni has pointed out that the number of fu varied from one time
    to another but usually there were about 600 to 630 of them. There were also three grades
    offu based on the number of soldiers attached, 1,200, 1,000, or Soo. These troops were
    also assigned to the capital guards (wei) or frontier garrisons for rotation duty there. PGSR
    23 :Sa-9b; Hsin T'ang-shu 50, ping-chih [Treatise on military affairs], 40: I b-3a. See also
    Hamaguchi Shigekuni's article on the Che-ch 'ungIu in the Ajia rekishi jiten 5:249, and
    Charles O. Hucker, A Dictionary of Official Titles in Imperial China (Stanford: Stanford
    University Press, I9S5), pp. 119-20. For more detail see Hamaguchi, "Fuhei seido yori
    shinheisei COO [From thefu-ping system to the new-soldier system], in Shinkan zuiU5shi
    no kenkyfi, pp. 3-S3, first published in Shigaku zasshi 41 (1930):II-I2.

  4. PGSR 23: IOb-I Ia; Hsin T'ang-shu 50, ping-chih, 40: I a.
    4I. PGSR 23:1 Ib, Hsin T'ang-shu 50, ping-chih 40:1b-3a.

  5. PGSR 23:10a.

  6. These long-term soldiers were dubbed kuang-chi in 724.

  7. Lin Chiung of the Sung also deplored the decline ofthejiJ-ping system by the late
    seventh century, and the conversion of the militia soldiers to permanent or long-term troops
    in 723. PGSR 23: IOa, II a-I2a; Hsin T'ang-shu 50, ping-chih 40: la-b, 3a.

  8. The first were the palace and capital guards, the second the garrison troops of the
    various prefectures attached to the walled town of the prefectural seat, and the third were
    the local troops (hsiang-chiin) who were selected from the household registers, formed
    into units where they were recruited for service, and trained as a defensive reserve. PGSR
    23:I2b.

  9. Ibid. 23:I2b-14b.

  10. Ibid. 23:I4b-I 5 a.
    4S. See his citation of Su Shih's praise of the system in Shinkan zuitoshi no kenkyu,


P·35·



  1. Hamaguchi, "Fuhei seido yori," pp. IO-I I, 32-33. This arrangement had not been
    typical of the system when first founded in the Western Wei. In his account in the Ajia
    rekishi jiten 5:249, he said that So percent of the Che-ch 'ung-jiJ were in the capital area
    and 20 percent on the frontier, somewhat different percentages than one would derive
    from the statements in his article.

  2. Hamaguchi, "Fuhei seido yori," pp. 15-16.
    5 I. A system of matching copper tallies in the form of a fish was used when peasants
    were called up to ensure that no unauthorized service was imposed on families. And
    when on duty, soldiers were exempted from labor service and local products tribute pay-

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