[quote=limited time=1780653762 user_id=116835]
Also, there are some quotes by Korean nationalists pretending to be Japanese nationalist propagandists on the internet, like Koreans editing Japanese wikipedia and posting this quote they attribute to Hideko Tojo upon the fall of Nanjing, projecting what happened to Koreans onto Han people.
Korean nationalists are literally making up Japanese propaganda and passing it off as WW2 statements to push their own nationalist agendas.
[quote]Why do you cry over the fall of Nanjing? You Han Chinese were slaves to the Xianbei, slaves to the Goguryeo, slaves to the Mongols, and slaves to the Manchus. We Japanese are simply the next in line to rule you.[/quote]
Japanese version edited by Korean nationalists living in Japan onto Japanese wikipedia with foul attacks against Chinese women (projecting what Xianbei, Mongols, Manchus and Japanese did against Korean women onto Han people)
[quote] 東条英機が頻繁に使用した言葉だという記録がある。当時、日本軍の南京占領後、東条英機は支那のちゃんころの歴史は漢民族の女性の尻で成し遂げた歴史にすぎないと言った。また、支那の歴史は異民族の支配に点綴された歴史だと言ったがこれは高句麗やモンゴル族、鮮卑、契丹、そして満州族などが中国を支配した歴史的事実の根拠から出た言葉である。東条英機はこれに加えてちゃんころは人間の姿をしたゴキブリのようなものだという発言をした。(原文ママ)南京の日本軍、藤原彰著
東条英機が頻繁に使用した言葉だという記録がある。当時、日本軍の南京占領後、東条英機は支那のちゃんころの歴史は漢民族の女性の尻で成し遂げた歴史にすぎないと言った。また、支那の歴史は異民族の支配に点綴された歴史だと言ったがこれは高句麗やモンゴル族、鮮卑、契丹、そして満州族などが中国を支配した歴史的事実の根拠から出た言葉である。東条英機はこれに加えてちゃんころは人間の姿をしたゴキブリのようなものだという発言をした。(原文ママ)南京の日本軍、藤原彰著
[/quote]
Korean version edited by Korean nationalists into Korean wikipedia.
[quote]도조 히데키는 "챵코로(짱깨)의 역사는 한족(漢族)여성의 엉덩이로 이룩한 역사일 뿐이다. 중국은 이민족의 지배로 점철된 역사이다"라고 주장하였는데 이것은 고구려가 중국을 정복하였고 선비족, 몽골족, 만주족 등 여러 이민족에게 지배당한 한족의 역사를 비하하는 말이었다.
[1] 도조 히데키는 "챵코로(짱깨)의 역사는 한족(漢族)여성의 엉덩이로 이룩한 역사일 뿐이다.중국은 이민족의 지배로 점철된 역사이다"라고 주장하였는데 이것은 이것은 고구려가 중국을 정복하였고 선비족,몽골족,만주족 등 여러 이민족이 중국을 정복했기 때문에 나온 말이다.[2]
[/quote]
This appears to be fabricated, and made by Korean nationalist given the insertion of Goguryeo, which never ruled a single piece of Han Chinese land in history (on the contrary, Han Chinese repeatedly sacked and committed mass rape against Goguryeo during the Han dynasty and Cao Wei, before the Sui-Tang wars against Goguryeo which Koreans love to tout)
[b]Not to mention, that the Xianbei also sacked and raped Goguryeo's capital Hwando and the Mongols and Manchus both invaded Korea, and committed mass atrocities against Koreans, including mass rape, mass enslavement and the Japanese also massacred and raped 1 million Koreans in the Imjin war and then mass raped Koreans in the Gando massacre.[/b]
And every single one of those "invaders" gave their women to Han Chinese.
Xianbei like Murong and Tuoba married their daughters to Han men, Sima Chuzhi married a Xianbei Tuoba wife and his son Sima Jinlong married a Xiongnu Juqu wife. Other Han from the Liu and Xiao families like Liu Hui married Xianbei Tuoba women.
The Northern Yan Han ruler. Feng Ba married a Rouran woman, Yujiulü Zhaoyi
His brother Feng Hong married a Xianbei Murong princess.
Han Chinese also used to rule and massacre Xianbei before the Xianbei dynasties were established, the Han Chinese inspector of Liang province during Western Jin was Zhang Gui and he defeated Xianbei rebels in Liangzhou in 301 and in 305 he defeated and beheaded Xianbei leader Ruoluobabeng (若羅拔能) and captured 100,000 Xianbei as slaves.
https://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/%E5%BE%8C%E6%BC%A2%E6%9B%B8/%E5%8D%B785#%E5%A4%AB%E9%A4%98%E5%9C%8B
https://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/%E6%99%89%E6%9B%B8/%E5%8D%B7086#%E5%BC%B5%E8%BB%8C
[quote] 張軌,字士彥,安定烏氏人,漢常山景王耳十七代孫也。家世孝廉,以儒學顯。父溫,為太官令。軌少明敏好學,有器望,姿儀典則,與同郡皇甫謐善,隱于宜陽女幾山。泰始初,受叔父錫官五品。中書監張華與軌論經義及政事損益,甚器之,謂安定中正為蔽善抑才,乃美為之談,以為二品之精。衛將軍楊珧辟為掾,除太子舍人,累遷散騎常侍、征西軍司。
軌以時方多難,陰圖據河西,筮之,遇《泰》之《觀》,乃投策喜曰:「霸者兆也。」於是求為涼州。公卿亦舉軌才堪禦遠。永甯初,出為護羌校尉、涼州刺史。于時鮮卑反叛,寇盜從橫,軌到官,即討破之,斬首萬餘級,遂威著西州,化行河右。以宋配、陰充、氾瑗、陰澹為股肱謀主,征九郡胄子五百人,立學校,始置崇文祭酒,位視別駕,春秋行鄉射之禮。秘書監繆世征、少府摯虞夜觀星象,相與言曰:「天下方亂,避難之國唯涼土耳。張涼州德量不恆,殆其人乎!」及河間、成都二王之難,遣兵三千,東赴京師。初,漢末金城人陽成遠殺太守以叛,郡人馮忠赴屍號哭,嘔血而死。張掖人吳詠為護羌校尉馬賢所辟,後為太尉龐參掾,參、賢相誣,罪應死,各引詠為證,詠計理無兩直,遂自刎而死。參、賢慚悔,自相和釋。軌皆祭其墓而旌其子孫。永興中,鮮卑若羅拔能皆為寇,軌遣司馬宋配擊之,斬拔能,俘十餘萬口,威名大震。惠帝遣加安西將軍,封安樂鄉侯,邑千戶。於是大城姑臧。其城本匈奴所築也,南北七里,東西三里,地有龍形,故名臥龍城。初,漢末博士敦煌侯瑾謂其門人曰:「後城西泉水當竭,有雙闕起其上,與東門相望。中有霸者出焉。」至魏嘉平中,郡官果起學館,築雙闕於泉上,與東門正相望矣。至是,張氏遂霸河西。
Zhang Gui, courtesy name Shiyan, was a native of Wushi in Anding Commandery, and a 17th-generation descendant of Zhang Er, King Jing of Changshan during the Han Dynasty. For generations, his family members were nominated as Xiaolian (Filial and Incorrupt) and distinguished themselves through Confucian scholarship. His father, Zhang Wen, served as the Director of the Palace Domestic Service. From his youth, Zhang Gui was intelligent, quick-witted, and fond of learning; he possessed a grand reputation, a refined demeanor, and an exemplary carriage. He was close friends with his fellow commanderyman Huangfu Mi, and they lived in seclusion at Mount Nvji in Yiyang. At the beginning of the Taishi era, he accepted his uncle Zhang Xi's fifth-rank official position. Zhang Hua, the Director of the Secretariat, discussed Confucian classics and the merits and drawbacks of political affairs with Zhang Gui, and greatly admired his talent. Believing that the Zhongzheng (Local Rectifier) of Anding Commandery had suppressed and obscured a great talent, Zhang Hua spoke highly of him, considering him of the finest calibre for a second-rank evaluation. General of the Guards Yang Yao then recruited him as an assistant, after which he was appointed as a Palace Attendant to the Crown Prince, and through successive promotions became a Cavalier Attendant-in-Ordinary and Military Supervisor of the Campaigning-West Army.
Observing that the realm was facing many hardships at the time, Zhang Gui secretly planned to occupy the Hexi region. He performed divination regarding this and obtained the hexagram change from Tai to Guan. He threw down his divination sticks in delight and said, "This is the omen of a hegemon." Consequently, he requested to be assigned to Liang Province. The dukes and ministers also recommended Zhang Gui, stating his talent was capable of managing distant frontiers. At the beginning of the Yongning era, he departed the capital to serve as the Colonel Protecting the Qiang and Governor of Liang Province. At that time, the Xianbei tribes were in rebellion, and bandits and raiders plundered at will. Upon arriving at his post, Zhang Gui immediately attacked and defeated them, decapitating over ten thousand enemies; consequently, his prestige resounded across the Western Provinces, and his civilising influence spread throughout the lands west of the Yellow River. He appointed Song Pei, Yin Chong, Fan Yuan, and Yin Dan as his core advisors and strategists. He recruited five hundred elite youths from the nine commanderies to establish schools, created the position of Libationer for the Venerations of Literacy—a rank equivalent to the Biejia (Regional Vice-Governor)—and observed the traditional seasonal township archery rites. Miao Shizheng, the Director of the Secret Secretariat, and Zhi Yu, the Director of the Palace Imperial Outbuildings, observed the astrological signs at night and remarked to one another, "The realm is about to fall into chaos, and the only land to escape the hardships will be the Liang territory. Governor Zhang of Liang Province possesses extraordinary virtue and capacity; he must surely be the person." When the disturbances involving the two princes of Hejian and Chengdu arose, Zhang Gui dispatched three thousand troops eastward to assist the imperial capital. Previously, at the end of the Han Dynasty, Yang Chengyuan, a native of Jincheng, killed the commandery administrator in rebellion; Feng Zhong, a fellow native of the commandery, rushed to the corpse, wept bitterly, and coughed up blood until he died. Wu Yong, a native of Zhangye, had been recruited by Ma Xian, the Colonel Protecting the Qiang, and later became an assistant to Grand Veteran Pang Can; when Pang Can and Ma Xian accused one another of treason—a crime punishable by death—both summoned Wu Yong to testify for them. Realizing that his testimony could not validate both sides, Wu Yong slit his own throat and died. Pang Can and Ma Xian felt deeply ashamed and remorseful, and consequently reconciled with one another. Zhang Gui performed sacrificial rites at both their graves and honored their descendants. During the Yongxing era, the Xianbei chieftain Ruoluobuneng and his tribes ran rampant as raiders. Zhang Gui dispatched his Major, Song Pei, to strike them; Song Pei decapitated Ruoluobuneng and captured over one hundred thousand captives, causing Zhang Gui's military prestige to shake the realm. Emperor Hui dispatched an envoy to elevate his rank to General who Pacifies the West and enfeoffed him as the Marquess of Anle District, with a fief of one thousand households. Following this, he significantly expanded the city walls of Guzang. The city had originally been built by the Xiongnu; it measured seven li from north to south and three li from east to west. Because the terrain resembled the shape of a dragon, it was named Wolong (Crouching Dragon) City. Previously, at the end of the Han Dynasty, Hou Jin, a Scholar from Dunhuang, told his disciples, "In the future, the spring water west of the city will dry up, and a pair of watchtowers will rise above it, facing the East Gate directly. From within, a hegemon will emerge." By the Jiaping era of the Wei Dynasty, the commandery officials did indeed construct a schoolhouse and built a pair of watchtowers above the spring, directly facing the East Gate. By this point, the Zhang clan had established its hegemony over the Hexi region.[/quote]
The Khitan in the Liao dynasty ruled over the Jurchens for two hundred years and forced Jurchens to give them their Jurchen virgin girls to sleep with Khitan men and then later took married Jurchen women to their beds.
https://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/松漠紀聞
[quote]大遼盛時,銀牌天使至女真,每夕必欲薦枕者。其國舊輪中、下戶作止宿處,以未出適女待之。後求海東青使者絡繹,恃大國使命,惟擇美好婦人,不問其有夫及閥閱高者,女真浸忿,遂叛。
During the peak of the Great Liao Dynasty’s prosperity, whenever their silver-tablet imperial envoys arrived in the Jurchen territories, they insisted on having a woman provided to share their bed every night [3]. According to the old customs of the Jurchen state, middle- and lower-class households took turns providing lodging, using unmarried daughters to host and attend to these envoys [3]. Later on, as envoys dispatched to hunt for gyrfalcons (Haidongqing) arrived in continuous successions, they grew to rely on the power and authority of their great empire’s missions [3]. They began exclusively selecting the most beautiful women, completely disregarding whether they were already married or belonged to high-ranking, distinguished families [3]. Consequently, the Jurchen people grew increasingly furious and ultimately rose in open rebellion [3].[/quote]
Tang dynasty China ruled Mongolia as the Protectorate General to Pacify the North and Chanyu Protectorate after conquering the Eastern Turkic Khaganate and the Khitan which resulted in Gokturk Khagan Bilge Khan erecting the Orkhon inscription saying that that Turk men were forced to fight for China against other enemies like Goguryeo and the Turk girls became slaves of Tang China, Han dynasty China also destroyed the Northern Xiongnu and carved the Yanran inscriptions into Outer Mongolia's mountains to commemorate their victory over them.
Qin dynasty Chinese general Meng Tian cleansed the Xiongnu under Touman from the Ordos loop of Inner Mongolia.
Genghis Khan massacred and raped Jurchens and Tanguts, Genghis took a Wanyan Jurchen Princess, Princess Qiguo as his concubine, and also a Tangut Western Xia Princess from the Tuoba Li family of the Tanguts. Genghis wanted to take revenge against the Wanyan Jurchen for torturing his great great uncle Ambaghai Khan to death on a wooden donkey.
https://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/新元史/卷104#岐國公主
[quote] 太祖公主皇后,完顏氏。金衛紹王女也。太祖圍燕京,金宣宗納女請和。太祖命阿剌淺使於金,金諸帝女未嫁者七人,後最秀慧,宮中稱為小姐姐。宜宗封為岐國公主,以遣嫁焉。引見阿刺淺,即拜後於階下,又請後北鄉拜,後不敢拒。
The Emperor’s (Genghis Khan's) Princess-Empress, surnamed Wanyan, was a daughter of King Weishao of the Jin Dynasty. When the Emperor besieged Yanjing (modern-day Beijing), Emperor Xuanzong of the Jin Dynasty offered a princess in marriage to sue for peace. The Emperor dispatched Alaqian as an envoy to the Jin court, where among the seven unmarried imperial daughters of Jin, the Empress was the most refined and intelligent, known in the palace as the "Little Sister" (Xiaojiejie). Emperor Xuanzong enfeoffed her as the Princess of Qi and sent her off to be married. When she was presented to Alaqian, he immediately bowed to the Empress at the foot of the steps and requested that she bow toward the north (toward Genghis Khan), which the Empress did not dare refuse.[/quote]
Genghis had Han Chinese Tumen generals leading Han armies with him against the Jurchens and Khwarezmians like Shi Bingzhi (father of Shi Tianlin, grandfather of Shi Gang, and uncle of Shi Tianlin), Guo Baoyu (father of Guo Dehai and grandfather of Guo Kan).
Shi Tianllin served as a military judge in the Mongol invasion of eastern and central Europe under Batu Khan, reaching eastern Austria and eastern Germany. Guo Baoyu helped Genghis conquer Khwarezmia in Central Asia and Guo Kan helped Hulagu Khan and Kitbuqa Noyan conquer Baghdad in Iraq.
Kublai Khan married off one of his own daughters to the Han Zhao Xian, emperor Gong of Song. Han tumen general Shi Bingzhi had a Jurchen wife and Han wife, and his son Shi Tianze had two Jurchen wives, a Korean wife and a Han wife. Shi Tianze's son Shi Gang married a Mongol Kerait woman. Another one of Shi Tianze's son married a daughter of Menggu Baer, a Mongol official.
Han Chinese ruled Manchus during the Ming dynasty. The Ming Hongwu and Yongle emperors had Manchu eunuchs like Yishiha, who led Ming expeditions against his own Jurchen (Manchu) people in the Amur river region and erected the Yongning temple stele in what is now "Outer Manchuria" in Russia. The Ming ruled the Jurchens in the Nurgan regional military commission and the Ming also created the Jianzhou Jurchen guard, appointing Mentemu (MongKe Temur) as a chief inside it, forcing Koreans in Joseon to back off and making Mentemu pay tribute to China and not Korea. Han officials and officers had Jurchen concubines during Ming rule. Nurhaci and Aisin Gioro were descended from Mentemu and rebelled against the Ming.
Nurhaci's maternal grandfather was Jurchen chief Wang Gao who unsuccessfully tried to storm Fushun in 1573 and the Ming executed Wang Gao by death by 1,000 cuts (slow slicing) in 1576. Nurhaci's father Taksi and paternal grandfather Giocangga were killed by Ming troops in one of their regular punitive expeditions due to their rivalry with pro-Ming Jurchen chief Nikan Wailan.
The Ming Chenghua emperor launched a mass campaign against the Jurchen including slaughter and rape called Chenghua Liting (成化犁庭), literally "ploughing" the Jurchens in 1478-1479
The Manchus handed out Aisin Gioro Manchu princesses to Han Chinese officers and officials who defected like Wu Sangui's son Wu Yingxiong, Geng Zhongming's family, Fan Wencheng's son Fan Chengzuo married a Manchu woman from the Niohuru clan.
Han banner general Nian Gengyao had two Manchu wives, a daughter of Nalan Xingde and an Aisin Gioro woman, daughter of Duke Suyan.
Han banner general Sun Sike's wife Lady Ji was the Aisin Gioro Manchu Gurun Princess Aohan, Sun Sike's son Sun Cheng'en married the fourth daughter of Manchu Prince (Junwang) Zhi and a daughter of Manchu Beile Haishan, his other son Sun Chengyn married the 14th daughter of the Manchu Kangxi emperor, Princess Heshuo Quejing.
Han Chinese bannerman Li Zhiying's son Li Haiqing married a Korean woman Jin (Kim), daughter of Korean jin jian and niece of imperial Consort Shujia, a Korean concubine of the Manchu Qianlong emperor. her sister Li Haiqing also married a Manchu Aisin Gioro woman, daughter of Qianfu of the Plain Yellow Banner and his wife. Lady Donggo of the Manchu Plain White banner, her grandfather was the Manchu Fiyanggu of the Donggo clan.
Han Chinese bannerman Gao Heng married a Manchu woman from the Nara clan, daughter of Derbi, and Gao Heng was the son of Gao Bin.
Gao Heng's second son Gao Fang and fourth son Gao Qi both married Manchu women from the Niohuru clan.
Gao Qi's son Gao Zhuo married a Manchu woman from the Niohuru clan, elder sister of consort Shun.
Gao Jin was a son of Gao Shuming and Gao Jin was a nephew of Gao Bin. Gao Jin married a Manchu woman from a Wang clan, Delin from the Plain Blue banner. Gao Jin's eldest son Shulin married Manchu woman Lady Yi (her father was Yindebu a Manchu of the Bordered White Banner)
Gao Shulin’s son Zijilang'a inherited the title of First-Class Baron; his wife was from the Manchu Zhangjia clan (her grandfather was a Manchu of the Bordered Yellow Banner Yengišan (Yinjishan)). Zijilang'a's son was Changshan.
Han bannerman Shoushan, a descendant of Han Ming general Yuan Chonghuan, married a Mongol woman, daughter of a Mongol Dorbod banner chief.
Han men moved into Mongoila during the Ming and Qing and married Mongol women.
https://search.proquest.com/openview/5c6d78516e80433b02e24bbac4409096/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=18750
https://www.jstor.org/stable/23615320?seq=5
[b]First, off, the ancient "Korean" kingdom of Gojoseon itself was ruled by Chinese dynasties, first by Jizi (Gija) of the Shang dynasty and then by Wei Man (Wi Man) from the Chinese state of Yan during the Han dynasty.[/b]
While Jizi story is disputed, the Wei Man dynasty is not disputed.
[b]Secondly, Han dynasty China conquered Gojoseon itself, deposing the Wei Man dynasty king who was already of Chinese descent, and divided Korean lands in northern Korean peninsula into the four commandaries, Lelang commandery (near modern-day Pyongyang), Xuantu (near the Yalu River), Lintun, and Zhenfan.
[/b]
https://ctext.org/shiji/zhao-xian-lie-zhuan
朝鮮列傳
https://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/資治通鑑/卷021#元封三年(癸酉,公元前一零八年)
[quote]左將軍已并兩軍,即急擊朝鮮。朝鮮相路人、相韓陰、尼谿相參、將軍王唊相與謀曰:「始欲降樓船,樓船今執,獨左將軍並將,戰益急,恐不能與戰;王又不肯降。」陰、唊、路人皆亡降漢,路人道死。夏,尼谿參使人殺朝鮮王右渠來降。王險城未下,故右渠之大臣成己又反,復攻吏。左將軍使右渠子長、降相路人之子最告諭其民。誅成己。以故遂定朝鮮,為樂浪、臨屯、玄菟、真番四郡。封參為澅清侯,陰為萩苴侯,唊為平州侯,長為幾侯,最以父死頗有功,為涅陽侯。
The General of the Left had already combined the two armies, whereupon he launched an urgent and fierce attack against Joseon. The Joseon Chancellor Luren, Chancellor Hanyin, Chancellor Can of Nixi, and General Wang Jia conspired together, saying: "Initially, we wished to surrender to the General of the Tower Ships, but the General of the Tower Ships has now been arrested. The General of the Left alone has consolidated the armies, and the fighting grows increasingly urgent; we fear we cannot withstand him in battle, yet our King refuses to surrender." Consequently, Hanyin, Wang Jia, and Luren all fled to surrender to the Han Dynasty, though Luren died along the way. In the summer, Chancellor Can of Nixi sent men to assassinate Ugeo, the King of Joseon, and subsequently came forward to surrender. However, the capital city of Wanggeom-seong had still not fallen; thus, Shengji, a high minister under the late King Ugeo, rebelled anew and repeatedly attacked the Han officials. The General of the Left dispatched King Ugeo's son, Chang, along with Zui, the son of the deceased Chancellor Luren, to proclaim a message of admonishment to the people. They subsequently executed Shengji. By these means, Joseon was finally pacified and settled, and it was divided into the four commanderies of Lelang (Naknang), Lintun (Imdun), Xuantu (Hyeondo), and Zhenfan (Jinbeon). Chancellor Can was enfeoffed as the Marquess of Huaqing; Hanyin was enfeoffed as the Marquess of Qiuju; Wang Jia was enfeoffed as the Marquess of Pingzhou; and Chang was enfeoffed as the Marquess of Ji. Zui, having demonstrated considerable merit due to his father dying in service of the cause, was enfeoffed as the Marquess of Nieyang.[/quote]
Goguryeo (Gaogouli) actually originated outside the Korean peninsula, in Jilin where its original capital Wandu (Hwando) was.
[b]Third, the Xin dynasty emperor of China Wang Mang killed the King of Goguryeo and demoted him to Marquis.
[/b]
https://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/漢書/卷099中
[quote]初,五威將帥出,改句町王以為侯,王邯怨怒不附。莽諷牂柯大尹周歆詐殺邯。邯弟承起兵攻殺歆。先是,莽發高句驪兵,當伐胡,不欲行,郡強迫之,皆亡出塞,因犯法為寇。遼西大尹田譚追擊之,為所殺。州郡歸咎於高句驪侯騶。嚴尤奏言:「貉人犯法,不從騶起,正有它心,宜令州郡且尉安之。今猥被以大罪,恐其遂畔,夫餘之屬必有和者。匈奴未克,夫餘、穢貉復起,此大憂也。」莽不尉安,穢貉遂反,詔尤擊之。尤誘高句驪侯騶至而斬焉,傳首長安。莽大說,下書曰:「乃者,命遣猛將,共行天罰,誅滅虜知,分為十二部,或斷其右臂,或斬其左腋,或潰其胸腹,或紬其兩脅。今年刑在東方,誅貉之部先縱焉。捕斬虜騶,平定東域,虜知殄滅,在于漏刻。此乃天地群神社稷宗廟佑助之福,公卿大夫士民同心將率虓虎之力也。予甚嘉之。其更名高句驪為下句驪,布告天下,令咸知焉。」於是貉人愈犯邊,東北與西南夷皆亂云。
Previously, when the Five-Majesty Generals and Marshals were sent out, they demoted the King of Guding to the rank of Marquess, causing King Han of Guding to become deeply resentful and angry, refusing to submit to the new regime. Wang Mang covertly instigated Zhou Xin, the Grand Governor of Zangke, to treacherously assassinate Han, prompting Han’s younger brother, Cheng, to raise troops, attack, and kill Zhou Xin in retaliation. Prior to this, Wang Mang had mobilized troops from Goguryeo to launch a campaign against the Hu nomads, but because the soldiers did not wish to go and the local commandery forcibly compelled them, they all fled beyond the frontier, violated the laws, and turned to banditry. Tian Tan, the Grand Governor of Liaoxi, pursued and attacked them but was killed by the deserters, leading the provincial and commandery authorities to place the blame entirely on Zou, the Marquess of Goguryeo. General Yan You submitted a memorial to the throne, advising that the violations of law committed by the Mo people did not originate from Marquess Zou, and even if he harboured separate intentions, it would be best to instruct the provinces and commanderies to pacify and comfort them for now; he warned that if they were abruptly charged with a massive crime, they would completely rebel and groups like the Buyeo would surely join them, creating immense grief since the Xiongnu had not yet been conquered while Buyeo and the Weimo would be rising up again. Wang Mang refused to pacify them, and the Weimo people subsequently rose in open rebellion, prompting an imperial edict for Yan You to attack them. Yan You lured Zou, the Marquess of Goguryeo, to a meeting and decapitated him, sending his severed head back to Chang'an. Wang Mang was greatly pleased and issued an imperial decree stating that he had recently deployed fierce generals to jointly execute Heaven's punishment and annihilate the deceitful barbarians, dividing the forces into twelve armies—some to sever their right arm, some to cut away their left armpit, some to smash their chest and abdomen, and some to pierce their flanks—and since cosmic punishment resided in the east this year, the armies tasked with crushing the Mo were unleashed first. He declared that with the barbarian Zou captured and executed, the eastern regions were pacified and the total destruction of the deceitful barbarians was a matter of mere moments, a blessing granted by the protection of Heaven, Earth, the numerous spirits, the altars of state, and the ancestral temples, as well as the unified hearts of the officials, scholars, citizens, and the roaring-tiger strength of the generals. Commending this deeply, Wang Mang ordered the name of Goguryeo to be changed to Xiaguryeo and proclaimed it to the entire world so that everyone should know it. Following this insult, the Mo people raided the borders with even greater frequency, and both the northeastern and southwestern barbarians plunged into total chaos.[/quote]
[b]Fourth, Cao Wei dynasty of China defeated Goguryeo in 244–245 in the "Goguryeo–Wei War" and completely sacked the Goguryeo capital Hwando, slaughtering, enslaving and raping its people.
[/b]
https://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/三國志/卷28#毌丘儉
[quote]正始中,儉以高句驪數侵叛,督諸軍步騎萬人出玄菟,從諸道討之。句驪王宮將步騎二萬人,進軍沸流水上,大戰梁口,〈梁音渴。〉宮連破走。儉遂束馬縣車,以登丸都,屠句驪所都,斬獲首虜以千數。句驪沛者名得來,數諫宮,〈臣松之按東夷傳:沛者,句驪國之官名。〉宮不從其言。得來歎曰:「立見此地將生蓬蒿。」遂不食而死,舉國賢之。儉令諸軍不壞其墓,不伐其樹,得其妻子,皆放遣之。宮單將妻子逃竄。儉引軍還。六年,复征之,宮遂奔買溝。儉遣玄菟太守王頎追之,〈《世語》曰:頎字孔碩,東萊人,晉永嘉中大賊王彌,頎之孫。〉過沃沮千有餘里,至肅慎氏南界,刻石紀功,刊丸都之山,銘不耐之城。諸所誅納八千餘口,論功受賞,侯者百餘人。穿山溉灌,民賴其利。
During the Zhengshi era, Sima Yi's general Guanqiu Jian, because the state of Gaoguli (Goguryeo) had repeatedly invaded and rebelled, commanded an army of ten thousand infantry and cavalry out from Xuantu to launch a punitive expedition against them from various routes. Gong, the King of Gaoguli, led twenty thousand infantry and cavalry to advance upon the Feiliu River, and a great battle ensued at Liangkou, where Gong was repeatedly defeated and forced to flee. Guanqiu Jian subsequently bound his horses and hung his chariots to ascend Wandu, whereupon he slaughtered the capital city of Gaoguli, decapitating and capturing several thousand enemies. The Paizhe (a high official title of Gaoguli) named Delai had repeatedly admonished Gong, but Gong did not follow his words; Delai lamented, saying, "I shall soon see this land covered in wild weeds and wormwood," and subsequently refused to eat until he died, for which the entire country revered him as a virtuous man. Guanqiu Jian ordered his troops not to destroy Delai's tomb nor to cut down its trees, and upon capturing Delai's wife and children, he released and sent them all away. King Gong fled into hiding accompanied only by his wife and children, and Guanqiu Jian withdrew his army. In the sixth year, Guanqiu Jian launched another campaign against them, causing Gong to flee to Maigou. Guanqiu Jian dispatched Wang Qi, the Grand Administrator of Xuantu, to pursue him; Wang Qi advanced more than a thousand li past Woju until he reached the southern border of the Sushen people, where they carved a stone monument to record their achievements, inscribed their victory upon Mount Wandu, and engraved it upon the walls of Bunai City. In total, over eight thousand captives were executed or accepted into submission, rewards were distributed based on merit, and over a hundred individuals were enfeoffed as marquesses; they also cut through mountains to build irrigation systems, from which the local population benefited greatly.[/quote]
[b]Fifth, the Murong Xianbei Former Yan state led by Murong Huang invaded Goguryeo and in 342 again sacked Goguryeo's capital Hwando, slaughtering looting, raping, taking 50,000 Goguryeo people as sex slaves including women of the Goguryeo royal family like the Queen mother and Queen as well as the corpse of King Micheon.
[/b]
https://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/晉書/卷109#慕容皝
[quote]咸康七年,皝遷都龍城。率勁卒四萬,入自南陝,以伐宇文、高句麗,又使翰及子垂為前鋒,遣長史王寓等勒眾萬五千,從北置而進。高句麗王釗謂皝軍之從北路也,乃遣其弟武統精銳五萬距北置,躬率弱卒以防南陝。翰與釗戰於木底,大敗之,乘勝遂入丸都,釗單馬而遁。皝掘釗父利墓,載其屍並其母妻珍寶,掠男女五萬餘口,焚其宮室,毀丸都而歸。明年,釗遣使稱臣于皝,貢其方物,乃歸其父屍。
In the seventh year of the Xiankang era, Murong Huang moved his capital to Longcheng and subsequently led forty thousand elite troops to invade from the southern mountain pass in order to launch a campaign against the Yuwen tribe and Gaoguli (Goguryeo); he also appointed Murong Han and his son Murong Chui as the vanguard, while dispatching Chief Secretary Wang Yu and others to command fifteen thousand troops to advance from the northern route. Zhao, the King of Gaoguli, assumed that Murong Huang’s main army would come via the northern route, so he dispatched his younger brother, Wu, to command fifty thousand elite troops to resist them at the northern position, while he personally led the weaker soldiers to defend the southern mountain pass. Murong Han engaged King Zhao in battle at Mudi and decisively defeated him, riding the momentum of victory to enter the capital of Wandu, while Zhao fled alone on horseback. Murong Huang exhumed the grave of Zhao's father, King Uri, seized his corpse along with Zhao's mother, wives, and precious treasures, plundered more than fifty thousand captives of both sexes, burned down the palace chambers, destroyed the city of Wandu, and returned home. The following year, Zhao sent an envoy to declare himself a vassal to Murong Huang and offered local tribute, whereupon Murong Huang returned his father's corpse.[/quote]
Han Chinese also defeated a Buyeo (Fuyu or Puyo) raid on Xuantu commandery in Korea and beheaded Buyeo soldiers.
https://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/%E6%99%89%E6%9B%B8/%E5%8D%B7086#%E5%BC%B5%E8%BB%8C
[quote]永康元年,王夫台將二萬餘人寇玄菟,玄菟太守公孫域擊破之,斬首千餘級。至靈帝熹平三年,復奉章貢獻。夫餘本屬玄菟,獻帝時,其王求屬遼東云。
In the first year of the Yongkang era, the Buyeo king Futai led more than twenty thousand men to raid Xuantu Commandery; Gongsun Yu, the Grand Administrator of Xuantu, attacked and decisively defeated him, decapitating over a thousand enemies. By the third year of the Xiping era during the reign of Emperor Ling, the Buyeo once again presented memorials and offered tribute. Buyeo originally belonged to Xuantu, but during the reign of Emperor Xian, its king requested to be attached to Liaodong instead.[/quote]
In 285 the Murong tribe of the Xianbei, led by Murong Hui, invaded the Koreans in Buyeo and mass raped and killed Koreans, forcing Koreans to flee to Okjeo and into the peninsula. Murong Hui sold Buyeo people as slaves in China. Buyeo had to beg Han Chinese in Western Jin for help in driving out the Murong Xianbei.
[quote] 武帝時,頻來朝貢,至太康六年,爲慕容廆所襲破,其王依慮自殺,子弟走保沃沮。帝爲下詔曰:「夫餘王世守忠孝,爲惡虜所滅,其湣念之。若其遺類足以復國者,當爲之方計,使得存立。」有司奏護東夷校尉鮮于嬰不救夫餘,失於機略。詔免嬰,以何龕代之。明年,夫餘後王依羅遣詣龕,求率見人還復舊國。仍請援。龕上列,遣督郵賈沈以兵送之。廆又要之于路,沈與戰,大敗之,廆衆退,羅得復國。爾後每爲廆掠其種人,賣於中國。帝湣之,又發詔以官物贖還,下司、冀二州,禁市夫餘之口。
During the reign of Emperor Wu, they frequently came to court to present tribute; however, by the sixth year of the Taikang era, they were launched upon with a surprise attack and crushed by Murong Hui, causing their king, Yilu, to commit suicide, while his sons and brothers fled to shelter in Woju. The Emperor consequently issued an imperial edict stating: "The kings of Buyeo have for generations maintained loyalty and filial piety, yet they have been destroyed by a wicked barbarian; We remember them with deep pity and compassion. If their remaining kin are sufficient to restore their state, we ought to devise plans and strategies for them so that they can preserve their standing and exist." The relevant officials submitted a memorial stating that Xianyu Ying, the Colonel Protecting the Eastern Barbarians, had failed to rescue Buyeo, failing in his tactical planning. An edict was issued dismissing Ying from office, and He Kan was appointed to replace him. The following year, Yiluo, the succeeding king of Buyeo, sent an envoy to visit He Kan, requesting to lead his remaining people back to restore their old state, and further pleading for military reinforcements. He Kan submitted a report to the throne and dispatched the Commandery Inspector Jia Shen with troops to escort them. Murong Hui again lay in wait to intercept them on the road, but Jia Shen engaged him in battle and decisively defeated him, causing Murong Hui’s forces to retreat, whereupon Yiluo was able to restore his state. After that event, Murong Hui frequently plundered their tribespeople to sell them inside China. The Emperor took pity on them, and issued another edict to ransom them back using state funds, sending orders to Si and Ji provinces to ban the trading of Buyeo captives in the marketplaces.[/quote]
https://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/%E6%AC%BD%E5%AE%9A%E5%8F%A4%E4%BB%8A%E5%9C%96%E6%9B%B8%E9%9B%86%E6%88%90/%E6%96%B9%E8%BC%BF%E5%BD%99%E7%B7%A8/%E9%82%8A%E8%A3%94%E5%85%B8/%E7%AC%AC032%E5%8D%B7#%E5%A4%AA%E5%BA%B7%E5%85%AD%E5%B9%B4%E6%89%B6%E9%A4%98%E7%82%BA%E6%85%95%E5%AE%B9%E5%BB%86%E6%89%80%E7%A0%B4%E8%A9%94%E5%85%8D%E8%AD%B7%E6%9D%B1%E5%A4%B7%E6%A0%A1%E5%B0%89
[quote]太康六年扶餘為慕容廆所破詔免護東夷校尉
按《晉書武帝本紀》,不載。按《扶餘傳》,太康六年,為慕 容廆所襲破,其王依慮自殺,子弟走保沃沮。帝為下 詔曰:「扶餘王世守忠孝,為惡虜所滅,甚愍念之。若其 遺類足以復國者,當為之方計,使得存立。」有司奏護 東夷校尉鮮于嬰不救扶餘失於機略。詔免嬰,以何 龕代之。
太康七年遣督郵賈沉率兵復扶餘之國。
按《晉書武帝本紀》,不載。按《扶餘傳》,「明年,扶餘後王 依羅遣詣龕,求率見人還復舊國,仍請援龕上列。遣 督郵賈沉以兵送之。廆又要之于路,沉與戰,大敗之。 廆眾退,羅得復國。爾後每為廆掠其種人賣于中國。 帝愍之,又發詔以官物贖還,下司冀二州,禁市扶餘 之口。」按《慕容廆載記》,「廆率眾東伐扶餘,扶餘王依 慮自」殺,廆夷其國城,驅萬餘人而歸。東夷校尉何龕 遣督護賈沉將迎,立依慮之子為王。廆遣其將孫丁 率騎邀之,沉力戰,斬丁,遂復《扶餘》之國。
In the sixth year of the Taikang era, Buyeo was crushed by Murong Hui; an imperial edict dismissed the Colonel Protecting the Eastern Barbarians.
According to the Annals of Emperor Wu in the Book of Jin, this event is not recorded. According to the Biography of Buyeo: In the sixth year of the Taikang era, [Buyeo] was launched upon with a surprise attack and crushed by Murong Hui, causing their king, Yilu, to commit suicide, while his sons and brothers fled to shelter in Woju. The Emperor consequently issued an imperial edict stating: "The kings of Buyeo have for generations maintained loyalty and filial piety, yet they have been destroyed by a wicked barbarian; We remember them with deep pity and compassion. If their remaining kin are sufficient to restore their state, we ought to devise plans and strategies for them so that they can preserve their standing and exist." The relevant officials submitted a memorial stating that Xianyu Ying, the Colonel Protecting the Eastern Barbarians, had failed to rescue Buyeo, failing in his tactical planning. An edict was issued dismissing Ying from office, and He Kan was appointed to replace him.
In the seventh year of the Taikang era, the Commandery Inspector Jia Shen was dispatched with troops to restore the state of Buyeo.
According to the Annals of Emperor Wu in the Book of Jin, this event is not recorded. According to the Biography of Buyeo: "The following year, Yiluo, the succeeding king of Buyeo, sent an envoy to visit He Kan, requesting to lead his remaining people back to restore their old state, and further pleading for military reinforcements. He Kan submitted a report to the throne and dispatched the Commandery Inspector Jia Shen with troops to escort them. Murong Hui again lay in wait to intercept them on the road, but Jia Shen engaged him in battle and decisively defeated him, causing Murong Hui’s forces to retreat, whereupon Yiluo was able to restore his state. After that event, Murong Hui frequently plundered their tribespeople to sell them inside China. The Emperor took pity on them, and issued another edict to ransom them back using state funds, sending orders to Si and Ji provinces to ban the trading of Buyeo captives in the marketplaces." According to the Chronicle of Murong Hui: "Hui led his forces eastward to launch a campaign against Buyeo, causing the Buyeo king Yilu to commit suicide; Hui then razed their state capital and walls, and drove more than ten thousand captives back with him. He Kan, the Colonel Protecting the Eastern Barbarians, dispatched the Commandery Inspector Jia Shen with troops to welcome and install the son of Yilu as the new king. Murong Hui sent his general, Sun Ding, to lead cavalry to intercept them on the road, but Jia Shen fought with all his might and decapitated Sun Ding, subsequently restoring the state of Buyeo."[/quote]
There is literally a Korean clan called Dokgo (Dugu) in Korea, the Namwon Dokgo clan, of paternal Xianbei ancestry and maternal Korean ancestry. Koreans talking about Xianbei rape are hilarious when they have Xianbei paternal ancestry.
Goguryeo only took the four commanderies from China like Lelang in 313 after China fell into internal civil war and rebellion in Western Jin, after the War of the Eight Princes between Jin princes and the rebellion of the five barbarians, when Xiongnu and Jie slaves like Shi Le revolted agianst their Han masters and joined Han peasant rebels.
These were all before the Sui-Tang wars against Goguryeo that Koreans love to brag about, which was fought by the Sui and Tang invading Goguryeo, not Goguryeo capturing Han land.
[b]Sixth, and many of the Sui and Tang forces were non Han Gokturks or southern Nanman ethnic minorities like Pang Xiaotai (庞孝泰) and his 13 sons from Guangxi, who were former Baiyue/Nanman minority rebels against the Tang, conscripted into war against Goguryeo. He was not Han and Koreans brag about killing him and his 13 sons and falsely claim he was Han.
[/b]
Tang dynasty sent many Turk soldiers against Goguryeo like Tiele Qibi Heli (wounded), Gokturks, Ashina Buzhen, Ashina She'er (wounded), Ashina Simo (Qilibi Khan) (wounded), Ashina Mishe, as well as Xianbei like Yuchi Gong (Yuchi Jingde) and Zhangsun Wuji. The Tang dynasty had subjugated the Gokturks in 630 and used their troops as slaves against Goguryeo as stated on the Orkheon stele where Bilge Khan said Gokturk men served the Tang in their wars and Gokturk women became slaves of Chinese.
[b]Seventh, the Mongols conquered all of Korea before fighting Southern Song dynasty of China, and Kublai Khan even forced Koreans to pay massive tributes of Korean women and Kublai Khan personally gave Korean women to Southern Song Han Chinese (Manzi) soldiers who defected from the Southern Song at Xiangyang to the Yuan dynasty, as recorded in Korean history Goryeosa. Kublai Khan also married Korean tribute women off to foreign Central Asian and Omani Arab Muslim men like Sayyid Abu Ali when they moved to Dadu (Beijing, Khanbaliq). Kublai Khan also married off one of his daughters to the Southern Song emperor Gong, aka Zhao Xian, since that was standard Mongol policy. Han general Shi Tianze who worked for the Mongols had a Korean wife and two Jurchens wives like his father Shi Bingzhi did. His son Shi Gang married a Turco-Mongol Kerait woman. Another son of his married a daughter of a Mongol official, Menggu Baer[/b]
https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=7fcFEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA52
https://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/高麗史/卷二十七#十五年
[quote]三月丙戌,元遣經略司王緫管來,命發軍五千,助征日本,時全羅州道,造船役徒三萬五百餘名,洪茶丘所領監造軍,供給不足,輸東京、晋州道內癸酉,年祿轉與之。王患徭役之煩,轉輸之弊,有防農務,遣上將軍李汾禧,往說茶丘,請令分半歸農,茶丘頗然之,每一[17]船,留雙丁五十人,其餘單丁,悉放歸農。壬寅,元遣蠻子媒聘使肖郁來,中書省牒云:「南宋襄陽府生券軍人,求娶妻室,故差委宣使肖郁,押官絹一千六百四十段[12],前去下高麗國,令有司差官,一同求娶施行。」肖郁令選無夫婦女一百四十名,督之甚急,於是,置結昏都監,自是至秋,窮搜閭井獨女、逆賊之妻、僧人之女,僅盈其數,怨咨大興。例給一女資粧絹十二匹,分與蠻子,蠻子卽率北還。哭聲震天,觀者莫不悽唏。丙午,幸王輪[18]寺。
In the third month, on the day of Bingxu, the Yuan Dynasty dispatched Manager Wang of the Pacification Office with an imperial decree ordering the mobilization of 5,000 troops to assist in the conquest of Japan; at that time, over 30,500 forced laborers in Jeolla Province were conscripted for shipbuilding, but because the supervisory army under Hong Dagu suffered from inadequate supplies, the grain and annual stipends collected from the previous Guiyou year within the regions of Donggyeong and Jinju Province were transferred to them instead. Distressed by the heavy burdens of forced corvée labor and the hardships of transporting provisions, which were severely disrupting agricultural activities, the King sent Senior General Yi Bun-hui to persuade Hong Dagu to allow half of the laborers to return to their farms, a proposal Hong Dagu agreed to, resulting in fifty shuangding—men from multi-male households—being retained for each ship while all remaining danding—sole providers—were released to return to farming. On the day of Renyin, the Yuan Dynasty sent Xiao Yu, a matchmaking envoy for the Manzi subjects, bearing an official dispatch from the Secretariat stating that the newly surrendered soldiers of Xiangyang Prefecture from the former Southern Song Dynasty were seeking wives, and thus Envoy Xiao Yu was commissioned to escort 1,640 bolts of official silk to the Kingdom of Goryeo with orders for the relevant authorities to assign officials to jointly execute the acquisition of these brides. Xiao Yu demanded the selection of 140 unmarried women and widows under extreme urgency, prompting the establishment of the Directorate of Marriage, which thoroughly scoured the neighborhoods from then until autumn to hunt down only-daughters, the wives of rebels, and the daughters of Buddhist monks, barely filling the required quota amidst immense public resentment and bitter lamentation. Each woman was provided with a standard dowry of twelve bolts of silk and distributed to the Manzi soldiers, who immediately led them away to return north as the sound of their weeping shook the heavens and left no onlooker without tears of profound grief; following these events, on the day of Bingwu, the King made a royal visit to Wangryunsa Temple.[/quote]
https://thetributewomen.wordpress.com/
https://web.archive.org/web/20160804091847/https://en.unesco.org/silkroad/knowledge-bank/inscription-memory-sayyid-bin-abu-ali
https://web.archive.org/web/20210512210351/https://en.unesco.org/silkroad/sites/default/files/knowledge-bank-article/an%20inscription%20in%20memory%20of%20sayyid%20bin%20abu%20ali.pdf
https://web.archive.org/web/20191117211948/https://en.unesco.org/silkroad/content/did-you-know-sayyid-bin-abu-ali-true-representative-intercultural-relations-along-maritime
https://www.ibadica.org/s/bibliographie/item/38445
https://ftp.berghahnbooks.com/title/ElisseeffSilk/loc
https://pieterderideaux.jimdofree.com/6-contents-1301-1400/liu-minzhong-1318/
There was literally a Korean song in Goryeo about a Huihui Muslim from Central Asia or Arabia sexually harassing and groping a Korean woman in a bakery, and the Korean woman enjoys it. The Daroreugeodireo are nonsense lyrics indicating sexual innuendo.
https://www.seelotus.com/gojeon/gojeon/korea-gayo/ssang-hwa-jeom.htm
https://ko.wikisource.org/wiki/글로벌_세계_대백과사전/언어I·한국문학·논술/고려-조선의_문학/고려시대_문학/고려_후기#쌍화점(雙花店)
https://ko.wikisource.org/wiki/쌍화점
[quote]雙花店(솽화뎜)[3]에 雙花(솽화) 사라 가고신ᄃᆡᆫ
回回(휘휘)[4]아비 내 손모글 주여이다[5]
이 말ᄉᆞᆷ미 이 店(뎜) 밧긔 나명 들명
다로러거디러 죠고맛감 삿기[6] 광대 네 마리라 호리라
더러둥셩 다리러디러 다리러디러 다로러거디러 다로러
긔 자리예 나도 자라 가리라[7]
위 위 다로러거디러 다로러
그 잔 ᄃᆡ가티 더ᇝ거츠니[8] 업다
三藏寺(삼장ᄉᆞ)애 블 혀라 가고신ᄃᆡᆫ
그 뎔 社主(샤쥬)ㅣ 내 손모글 주여이다
이 말ᄉᆞ미 이 뎔 밧긔 나명 들명
다로러거디러 죠고맛간 삿기上座(샹좌)[9]ㅣ 네 마리라 호리라
더러둥셩 다리러디러 다리러디러 다로러거디러 다로러
긔 자리예 나도 자라 가리라
위 위 다로러거디러 다로러
긔 잔 ᄃᆡᄀᆞ티 더ᇝ거츠니 업다
드레 우므레[10] 므를 길라 가고신ᄃᆡᆫ
우믓 龍(룡)이 내 손모글 주여이다
이 말ᄉᆞ미 이 우물 밧ᄭᅴ 나명 들명
다로러거디러 죠고맛간 드레바가 네 마리라 호리라
더러둥셩 다리러디러 다리러디러 다로러거디러 다로러
긔 자리예 나도 자라 가리라
위 위 다로러거디러 다로러
긔 잔 ᄃᆡᄀᆞ티 더ᇝ거츠니 업다
숨 ᄑᆞᆯ 지븨 수를 사라 가고신ᄃᆡᆫ
그 짓 아비 내 손모글 주여이다
이 말ᄉᆞ미 이 집 밧ᄭᅴ 나명 들명
다로러거디러 죠고맛간 싀구바가[11] 네 마리라 호리라
더러둥셩 다리러디러 다리러디러 다로러거디러 다로러
긔 자리예 나도 자라 가리라
위 위 다로러거디러 다로러
긔 잔 ᄃᆡᄀᆞ티 더ᇝ거츠니 업다
Middle Korean text for the Goryeo gayo (Goryeo song) Ssanghwajeom (雙花店/쌍화점), a 13th–14th century work
When I went to the dumpling shop to buy some dumplings, the Huihui (Muslim Central Asian/Persian/Arab) shopkeeper grabbed me by my wrist, and if this rumor should spread outside of this shop, Daroreugeodireo, I will say it was you, little clown puppet, who spread the words, Deoreodungsyeong darireodireo darireodireo daroreugeodireo darore, to that very place, I, too, shall go to sleep, Wi wi daroreugeodireo darore, ah, there is no place as cluttered and cozy as where we slept.
When I went to Samjangsa Temple to light the ceremonial lanterns, the head monk of that temple grabbed me by my wrist, and if this rumor should spread outside of this temple, Daroreugeodireo, I will say it was you, little novice monk, who spread the words, Deoreodungsyeong darireodireo darireodireo daroreugeodireo darore, to that very place, I, too, shall go to sleep, Wi wi daroreugeodireo darore, ah, there is no place as cluttered and cozy as where we slept.
When I went to the well out in the yard to draw some water, the dragon living in the well grabbed me by my wrist, and if this rumor should spread outside of this well, Daroreugeodireo, I will say it was you, little water bucket, who spread the words, Deoreodungsyeong darireodireo darireodireo daroreugeodireo darore, to that very place, I, too, shall go to sleep, Wi wi daroreugeodireo darore, ah, there is no place as cluttered and cozy as where we slept.
When I went to the tavern to buy some wine, the master of that tavern grabbed me by my wrist, and if this rumor should spread outside of this wine house, Daroreugeodireo, I will say it was you, little wine dipper, who spread the words, Deoreodungsyeong darireodireo darireodireo daroreugeodireo darore, to that very place, I, too, shall go to sleep, Wi wi daroreugeodireo darore, ah, there is no place as cluttered and cozy as where we slept.
[/quote]
Poor Mongols sold their own daughters as slaves to Han during the Yuan dynasty, while Mongol men, Han men and Semu men all had Korean concubines from Goryeo tribute women.
https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=qyJXEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA470
Korea has multiple clans of paternal Han, Hui and Jurchen origin from those foreign men marrying Korean women
Deoksu Jang clan, Imcheon Lee clan, Gyeongju Sol clan and Sanggok Ma clan all descend from Hui-hui (Hoe-hoe) men marrying Korean women, both Muslim and non-Muslim Hui. Jang Samga (Jang Sunnyong) was a Central Asian Hui who moved into Korea and married a Korean woman. Later on his mixed blood descendants married into the Korean Yi royal family of Joseon.
Cheonghae Lee clan was founded by a Jurchen man marrying a Korean woman.
Gwangdong Jin clan, Yeonan Myeong clan, Yeongsan Shin clan Yangsan Jin clan, Yeoyang Jin clan, Gwangdong Jin clan are all of paternal Han Chinese descent from Han men marrying Korean women. Yeonan Myeong clan descend from Ming Sheng of Ming Xia state whose family came from Hubei and ruled Sichuan. Yangsan Jin descend from Chen Li, son of Chen Youliang of Chen Han in Hubei.
Yeoyang Jin clan was founded by a Han Chinese man Jin Chong-hu who helped the Korean Goryeo King kill Korean rebels led by Yi Cha-gyŏm and was awarded with a Korean wife and land.
The "Korean" Wang royal family of Goryeo itself claimed paternal descent from Tang dynasty emperors like Suzong who impregnated a Korean woman from the Sinchon Gang clan, and Sinchon Gang clan itself claimed paternal descent from the Chinese Zhou dynasty King Wen via his grandson Gang Hu (Kang Hou), when his 14th generation descendant Gang Ji-yeon moved to Korea and married a Korea woman and founded the clan. Gang Hogyeong was a 67th generation descendant of Gang Hu and his son Gang Chung had a son named Gang Po-yuk who had a daughter named Chin-ŭi who had sex with a Chinese Tang dynasty imperial family member (named as Emperor Suzong of Tang) and she bore a son named Chakchegŏn
[b]Eighth, the Jurchens, Manchus of Later Jin and the Qing invaded Korea twice in 1627 and 1636, including Manchu bannermen, Mongol bannermen and Han bannermen, and they committed massive slaughter and rape and enslavement against Koreans especially in 1636. Korean child slaves begged the Korean King Injo to save them as he had to meet the Qing Manchu officials but he could do nothing.
[/b]
https://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/%E6%9C%9D%E9%AE%AE%E7%8E%8B%E6%9C%9D%E5%AF%A6%E9%8C%84/%E4%BB%81%E7%A5%96%E5%AF%A6%E9%8C%84/%E5%8D%81%E4%BA%94%E5%B9%B4#1%E6%9C%8830%E6%97%A5
https://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/%E6%9C%9D%E9%AE%AE%E7%8E%8B%E6%9C%9D%E5%AF%A6%E9%8C%84/%E4%BB%81%E7%A5%96%E5%AF%A6%E9%8C%84/%E5%8D%81%E4%BA%94%E5%B9%B4#%E9%96%8F4%E6%9C%8828%E6%97%A5
https://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/%E6%9C%9D%E9%AE%AE%E7%8E%8B%E6%9C%9D%E5%AF%A6%E9%8C%84/%E4%BB%81%E7%A5%96%E5%AF%A6%E9%8C%84/%E5%8D%81%E4%BA%94%E5%B9%B4#2%E6%9C%8819%E6%97%A5
And the Japanese themselves in the Imjin war also raped and kill 1 million Koreans in 1592-1598, taking Korean sex slaves and even selling Korean women to Portuguese merchants. Ming Chinese soldiers who fought Japan inside Korea in the Imjin war also married Korean women.
https://sjks.snu.ac.kr/issue/download.jsp?id=734&aid=62&ek=e995f98d56967d946471af29d7bf99f1
https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=l8HT-sIrVB0C&pg=PA52
https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=kVy2BQAAQBAJ&pg=PT539
https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=kVy2BQAAQBAJ&pg=PT524
https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=p3yW5MdzKnUC&pg=PA114
https://www.jstor.org/content/oa_book_monograph/j.ctv17bt3jv
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv17bt3jv.8
These are from Korean books themselves like Samguk Sagi, Goryeosa, and Veritable Records of Joseon.
Japanese men also repeatedly insulted Koreans post war, Japanese businessmen used to go to South Korea for sex tourism with Korean women in the 1970s since Park Chunghee encouraged hundreds of thousands of Korean women to enter prostitution trade for foreign investment.
https://taylorfrancis.com/chapters/mono/10.4324/9781351185271-6/corporate-kisaeng-prostitution-tourism-caroline-norma
https://jstor.org/stable/43923277
https://newint.org/features/1993/07/05/sex
https://tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1215/s12280-008-9054-5
Even if the quote was made by Tojo, its completely inaccurate since Goguryeo never ruled Han Chinese populations or lands, and Jurchen Toi pirates themselves raided Japan in 1019, raping Japanese girls and taking Japanese girls as sex slaves.
[quote=Tanzania post_id=2626782 time=1780573623 user_id=36950]
Hello everyone,
Personally, I appreciate it when someone engages with a topic as intensively as has been done in this thread.
This is an interesting thread, featuring highly conflicting accounts and arguments. Most readers likely find themselves in the same boat as I do, given that the timeline and locations within this "[b]Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945)[/b]" are difficult to follow. In this regard, I was only able to rely on Wikipedia for a superficial overview. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Sino-Japanese_War
Even though we are all aware of Wikipedia’s strengths and weaknesses, this source of information—at least for me—provides a useful initial overview. I watched the aforementioned film, “[b]The 800 Heroes[/b]“ ; - in my view, it is far from being a neutral portrayal. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/800_Heroes_(film)
As for the "short-cut" version on YouTube—to label that a documentary strikes me as completely exaggerated, much like almost all content on YouTube, for that matter. “[b]Sihang Warehouse 1937 - Chinese Thermopylae - WW2 DOCUMENTARY[/b]“ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IxpG19OTmns
Limited,
Naturally, I am not aware of any neutral and objective sources on this subject; however, I consider your arguments to be overly one-sided and biased. To rely almost exclusively on Chinese, US, or British sources—wartime news paper reports from 1941–1945—is, in my view, on the exact same level as: [quote=limited post_id=2625940 time=1779943512 user_id=116835] . . . [b]This would be like Hitler claiming he withdrew from Stalingrad voluntarily after just staying there to try to defeat the Soviet attempt to retake the city[/b]. . .[/quote]
Regards Holger
[/quote]
pro-Japanese pretending to be humanitarians are falsely claiming that Chinese blew up the dikes on unaware people. The contemporaneous western media reports from before the final dykes blew up show everyone knew who was blowing the dykes up and for what purpose before the flood happened.
None of them show Chinese troops suddenly opening up dikes on unaware peasants.
Also, pro-Japanese claim Japan never had any plans to advance into Ningxia and Gansu and Qinghai (when contemporaneous western media reports show that they already had plans for the Huihuiguo puppet state in those provinces, in 1938.
This is why contemporaneous media reports are valuable in case people try to revise history and claim this thing was never reported on that date or so on.
Also another lie pro-Japanese propagandists do, is try to conflate Chinese majority Singapore, with Indonesia, and claiming Japan had the same policy in both, and they lie that Japan only killed Chinese in Southeast Asia and spared natives, which is wrong, the majority of dead and rape victims in Southeast Asia were native Southeast Asians.
There were 1.2 million to 1.5 million Chinese in Dutch East Indies in total. Japan killed 4 million Indonesians (vast majority of them were Javanese Muslims, Sundanese Muslims, Balinese Hindus). Most Indonesian comfort women were Javanese Muslims, Sundanese Muslims and Balinese Hindus, at least 80% of them, the Japanese sent Javanese comfort girls to other islands.
https://verzetsmuseum.org/en/kennisbank/the-pre-war-dutch-east-indies
https://indischekamparchieven.nl/en/occupation-and-bersiap
https://journals.openedition.org/remi/23184
Chinese were the majority in Singapore and parts of British Malaya (some even say Chinese were plurality in British Malaya and Malays were a minority along with Malaysian Indians).
Chinese in Singapore and Malaya were NOT disproportionately targeted compared to their population ratio and role in resistance. Chinese in British Malaya dominated and led the Malayan Communist party under Chin Peng. The Malayan Communist party violently resisted the Japanese.
while in Indonesia, the Indonesian Communist party was led and dominated by mostly Javanese Muslims and Balinese Hindus, most Indonesian communists weren't Chinese Indonesians, and most Chinese Indonesians were not communist.
Chinese made up most of the dead in Singapore during Sook Ching massacre, because Chinese were, and are the majority in Singapore. No shit the majority would make up most casualties. Chinese weren't a small peaceful minority in Singapore or Malaya that was singled out by Japanese for cruelty, they were literally the majority and the most violent fighters against the Japanese.
Japan never carried out Sook Ching style massacres against Chinese Indonesians in Java. There was no mass executions or massacres of Chinese in Java under Japanese occupation, only a few political activists were arrested and interned.
Chinese Indonesians in Java were even exempted from forced labour, while Japanese starved and worked millions of Indonesian Javanese Muslim men to death in addition to raping Javanese girls. Japanese even stopped the Dutch and local Indonesians from looting and destroying Chinese owned sugar mills and warned them to stop attacking Chinese in Java or they would face punishment.
This was because Japan desperately need the cooperation of Chinese industrialists of Java to manage the economy of the Dutch East Indies, and Chinese did not make up the Indonesian communist party.
Japanese also beheaded the 12 Malay and Arab Hadrami Sultans of western Borneo (Kalimantan) in Indonesia, and used forced Malay and Javanese Romusha labour along with Javanese comfort women in British Borneo in Sabah and massacred local Suluk Muslims in Sabah after the Jesselton revolt in 1943.
In British Malaya, Japanese didn't spare Malay Muslims from rape, they raped Malay Muslim girls and Malaysian Tamil Indian girls and used Malaysian Tamil Indians as forced labour on the Siam-Burma death railway, killing between 100,000-200,000 of them.
Also like in Java in Indonesia, Chinese in Vietnam didn't suffer massacres by Japan. Most of the 2 million starvation victims of Japan in Vietnam were Kinh Vietnamese in north Vietnam, and also Japan raped and massacred Kinh Vietnamese in 1944-1945 when taking control from Vichy French authorities.
In Philippines, Japan's rape and massacre victims were majority native Filipinos and even Germans, Italians and Spanish (Fellow fascists) in the Manila massacre.
There wasn't any anti-Chinese massacre in Java, Indonesia or in Vietnam or Philippines under Japanese occupation. Only in Singapore and parts of Malaya in 1942, and that was because Chinese were majority in those parts and made up most of the Malayan communist party fighters.
And Japanese still raped Malay Muslim and Malaysian Indian women and girls and used them as forced labour despite there being no resistance from them.
[/quote]
[quote=limited time=1780372644 user_id=116835]
https://forum.axishistory.com/viewtopic.php?p=2626521#p2626521
1938 Chinese postcard?
https://www.ebay.com/itm/156316804403
Chinese refugees
https://www.ebay.com/itm/206224505889
https://www.ebay.com/itm/306956060236
Japanese propaganda republished in Horrors of War
December 1937 bombing of Chinese ships retreating on the Yangtze from Nanjing
https://www.ebay.com/itm/353291782906
Japanese propaganda on 27 January 1938 about landing at Lienyunkang (Lianyungang) harbour at he terminus of the Lunghai (Lunghai) railway and attacking Chinese pillboxes.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/145608508425
Japanese propaganda falsely claiming on 2 March 1938 that they defeated 8,000 Communists in a surprise attack at Paotch in Shanxi and forced them to retreat across the Yellow River into Shaanxi and killed 500.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/389780082005
https://www.ebay.com/itm/306955621652
https://www.ebay.com/itm/198178387224
Japanese propaganda falsely claiming Chinese bombed civilians in Shanghai in 1938
https://www.ebay.com/itm/135293269920
Japanese propaganda claiming Chinese "terrorists" attacking them in Nanjing
https://www.ebay.com/itm/286511453487
Japanese propaganda falsely claiming Chinese planes killed civilians in Taiwan in 1938.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/265575902851
https://www.ebay.com/itm/358555423250
87
Chinese Bombers Raid Japanese Territory
Forty Chinese bombers made their first attack on Japanese territory on February 23, 1938 inflicting many casualties on the unsuspecting civilian population of Formosa. The raiders struck at the air-base on the outskirts of Taihoku, capital of Formosa, at 11 a. m., dropping bombs. They flew so high that anti-aircraft batteries on the island were unable to reach them, but consequently the bombs landed far afield, hitting private homes and causing tragic casualties among women and children. An hour later the raiders at-tacked Shinchiku City. Ten bombs were dropped on Chikuto, nearby, and several civilians were killed. The raiders returned unscathed. Formosa lies approximately 120 miles east of the southeastern coast of China. It was ceded to Japan by China in 1895 as a result of the Chinese-Japanese war of 1894-95.
To know the HORRORS OF WAR is to want PEACE
This is one of a series of 240 True Stories of Modern Warfare. Save to get them all. Copyright 1938, GUM, INC., Phila., Pa.
[/quote]