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

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1112 NOTES TO PART IV. CONCLUSION

monks, shamans, willow-basket weavers, single-woman households). See Kim Yongsop,
"Choson hugi kunyokche ijong iii ch'uri wa hop'obOp."

PART IV. Conclusion


  1. Kang Man'gil. "Kuny6k kaehyongnon'ii1 t'onghaebon sirhak ili sonky6k [The nature
    of Practical Learning as secn through proposals for the reform or military service], Tong-
    banghak chi 22 (June 1979):153-69: Kim Yongsop. "Choson hugi kunyokche iii tongyo
    wa kunyokchon" [The reasoning behind reform of the military service system in the late
    Ch6son period and the household cloth system] Srlnggok nonch'ong 13 (1982): 100.

  2. Yi asserted this opinion in his commentary on a story about Chien-tzu, the ruler of
    the state of Chao in the Warring States period of Chou China, who gave orders to cut
    household taxes in the territory of Chin-yang. Yi anachronistically interpreted this state-
    ment as if the Chao tax systcm were identical to the T'ang triple tax systcm of thc ninth
    century A.D. hy rcmarking that a wise ruler who sought to alleviate tax burdcns on the
    people only hau the option of reducing the household tax hecause the land tax was a fair
    and just tax that simply had to he collected, and personal service was a necessity because
    men were needed to fight in wartime. Yi Ik, Sangho saesa/ YlIs(i/l, ed. An Ch6ngbok (Seoul:
    Kyongmunsa. [(nO, reprint of Keijo: Chosen kosho kankokai, [915), sang (vol. 1), p.
    351, cited in Han Woo-keun [Han Ugiin], Yijo hugi iii sahoe wa sasang [Society and
    thought in the late Yi dynasty] (Seoul: Oryu munhwasa, 1961), p. 287. Yi Kawon, Kwon
    Odon. and 1m Ch'angsun, eds., Tonga Hanhandaesajan [The Great East Asia Sino-Korean
    Dictionary), (Seoul: Tong'a ch'ulp'ansa, [982). p. I [99, gives the original source of the
    story as the the section on the hereditary house of Chao in the Shih-chi. I am indebted
    to my colleague, Jack Dull, a specialist in the Han dynasty, for pointing out to me that
    Yi Ik's commentary on the Chao tax system as if it were the same as the triple tax sys-
    tem of the Tang era is a gross anachronism.

  3. Yi lk, SiJngho srlnsael1g chrinjip 46:6b-7a (Seoul: Ky6ng'in munhasa, 1974), ha (vol.
    2), pp. 206-7, cited in Han Woo-keun, Yijo hugi!:ii sa hoe Wll,wHang [Society and thought
    in the late Yi dynasty[ (Seoul: Urchi munhwasa, 196r), p. 288.

  4. Yi Ik, S()ngho saes(l! 1 ::\:'\6. These issues are discussed and summarized in Han Woo-
    keun, Sangho Yi Ik YOI1 'gu [A study of Songho Yi Ik] (Seoul: S6ul taehakkyo ch'ulp'anbu,
    1980), pp. 200-20r.

  5. Han Woo-keun, Yija hugi, p. 292; original quoted from the Kwagurok, "Saengjae"
    [Production of wealth], section, not available to me. See also ibid., p. 291, and Yi Ik,
    Sangha sonsaeng chOnjip [The complete works of master Songho] (Seoul: Kyong'in
    munhwasa, 1974) 46:6a-7b; Han Woo-keun, Sdllgho Yi lk ydn 'gu, pp. 202-4.

  6. Yu Suwon, Usrl(Seoul: Seoul Taehakkyo Kojon kanhaenghoe, 1971), pp. 109, 112-13,
    1'7, [2~.

  7. An Ch6nghok, Chap/ong san'i [Miscellaneous information] (Seoul: Han'gukhak
    munh6n y6n'gllso, 198I) 2:118-20.

  8. Yi KYllgy6ng, Oju yi5mllllll changjon san 'go, ha (vol. 2) (Seoul: 1(59), pp. 307-8.

  9. Ch6ng Yagyong, Mongmill simsa [Essays from the heart 011 governing the people)

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