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

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.Iii. T 50, 155
.Ii/kyol. 852
Silla dynasty: bone-rank aristocracy, 294, 666;
and currency, 5 I, 52, 904: growth of, I 17:
lingering influences of, 15, 295; recruitment
in, 146: ruling class, 34, 632
silli. 12, 13
Sillok (Veritable Records), 40, 2 I 3,45 1,543,
559-60,785,796,811,869-70,931,978,
1031,103 2
siisa, 12, 13
Sil:iO. 309
Silver. See Currency
Sim Chiwon, 477-78, 732
SimKiwon,94, 102,104
Sim Sugyong, 7
Sim Suhyon, 95 I
Sim Sunmun, 607
Sim T'aekhyon, 936, ')38, 940
sim'iii, 592,637,639
Simyak, 679, I 123
sin (male base person), 256
sin (subject or official), 348
Sin Ch'osu, 939
Sin Hum, 785
Sin Ki, 756
Sin Kyongsin, 94
Sin Myonggyu, 808
Sin Rip, 1033
Sin Sacha!, 937
Sin Sang, 56
Sin Somju, 56
Sin Sukchu, 65, 639, 1093
Sin Ton, 216
Sin Wan, 373, 540
Sin Yonggae, 1030
sinecures, 33, 315; ch'ea, 186, 187,617,623,
841, 847; eh 'en;ik, 628,629; ch 'omscJlchik.
709
sill 'gong, 49, 55, 68, 232,437,779, 1060
sin hack t'onggoni;. 985
sinje, 501
sinjcJn, 993
Sinmyongsaek,7lo
sinobi, 258, 259, 1067, 1069
lil1p·0.4 81
.linscJfl. 489
Sinson'gun,5 02
sinycJk, 254, 258, 403, 480, 487, 488, 564,
1069
sip 'a. 1069
Sipchon t'ongbo, 857
Sirhak (Practical Learning): and adoption


INDEX

of cash, 874: and igi debate, I 1-13: and
land reform, 10 16; meaning of sirhak, 150,
53 I; and military reform, 569-77; and the
scholar-soldier. 506: twentieth-century view
01',9: and Yu Hyongwon's role,s, 9, 265,
354,53^1 ,57^1
sirhakcha, 956
Six Boards, 59/;, 603, 615
Six Classics, 182
Six Departments (Sheng), 613
Six Edicts, 721, 733, 753, 756
Six Ministries (Chinese), 593-94, 613, 6 I 5,
620,624
Six Ministries (Korean; Yukeho), 62, I 11,588,
596,596-97,604,606,610,620,625,626,
627,641: agencies, list of, 644-45
Slave Agency (ChangyewanJ, 227, 62 1,641,
645, 869
Slave Agency (Togwan), 217, 219
Slave Bureau (Changyesa; proposed by Yu
Hyongwon), 620-21, I I 16
Slavery: and Buddhism, 118, 2 I 0, 258;
bureaus, 620-21; in China, 232-33, 235,
239-40,256, 6X6: commoners become
slaves, 68; and Confucianism, 15, I 18, 1 19,
210,217-25, 236, 240, 269, 1015; crimi-
nals, 844: decline of, 4,247,249-52; in
early Chason, 15,35,41,55,60,217-25;
and education, 191, 193, 198: forced labor,
47,49: government slaves, 217; hereditary
status, 41, 118,213,214,217,225,237,
247,262-63,334,686. 1014: hired labor,
238-46,256, 37S, 1015; and humanitarian-
ism, 218-19,235-36: in Koryo period, 26,
41,118,213-17,221,226,234,258,262;
and landownership, 118,333-35: lawsuits
and petitions, 219-21, 235, 247; limits on
ownership, 286: manumission, 88, I 19,
209,214-15,21,),225,227,228-31,255,
264, 333-34, 404, 438: marriage, 2 I I,
221-25,237; and military service, 19,76,
88, 119, 193,226-28,249-)0,399,404-5,
415-16, 435-39; morality of slavery,
208-10,238: mourning rituals, 724; at
National Academy, 193: and obedience,
72 5: official slaves, 55, 57, 58, 230, 249,
255,257- 61 , 26 5,268,437,844,1014:
origins in Korea, 212-13, 233-35: outside-
resident slaves, 49, 68, 21 I, 250, 25 I, 337,
438; patrimonial rights of, 217-18; post-
station slaves, 260; private slaves, 436, 745,
1014; registrars, 230, 258, 268; revolts, 216;
runaways, 69, 119,246,250,396-97,
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