Everything about U Of Goryeo totally explained
King
U (often written
Woo, born
1363, died
1389) ruled
Goryeo (
Korea) from
1374 until
1388.
Cultural background
At the beginning of the
thirteenth century,
Mongol forces had advanced into
China and the
Korean peninsula, and by the year
1238 Goryeo was fully under Mongol domination and would remain so for the next full century. The
Ming Dynasty in China had grown extremely powerful during the 14th century, however, and began to beat back the Mongol armies, so that by the 1350s Goryeo had regained its independence, although China garrisoned a large number of troops in the north-east of Goryeo, effectively occupying part of the country.
Accession to the throne
In
1374 a military hero and high official named Yi In-Im led a small yet strong anti-Ming faction that assassinated
King Gongmin.
The anti-Ming group enthroned an eleven-year-old boy reportedly born to a palace slave girl as Gongmin's successor. The Chinese were suspicious about King Gongmin's sudden and unexplained death, and had real doubts about the legitimacy of the adolescent King U.
Diplomatic tensions with China
The Chinese turned away Goryeo envoys en route to the Ming court on the pretext that Goryeo was sending them old, weak horses in tribute. Tensions over this crucial foreign policy protocol hadn't been resolved when, in
1388, the Ming dynasty proclaimed its intention to establish a command post headquartered in the Ch'ollyeong pass at the southern end of the
Hamgyŏng plain. The occupation of the area by the Ming army was tantamount to annexing the entire northeastern territory once under the command of the Mongols.
Goryeo's senior military commander, General
Choe Yeong, consulted with General
Yi Seonggye and determined that in order to reduce the perceived threat from Ming China, they'd have to remove the anti-Ming faction from power in
Kaesŏng. Choe, supported by Yi, accordingly removed Yi In-Im and his group in a coup d'état, and Choe took personal control of the government.
Fall
There was a growing feeling in Kaesŏng that Goryeo needed to take some kind of pre-emptive action against China, and advisors to King U eventually goaded him into attacking the powerful Ming armies. Against universal opposition, and in violation of the long-standing Goryeo practice of not invading its neighbors, King U went one step further and insisted on attacking China proper. In 1388, General Yi Seonggye was ordered to use his armies to push the Ming armies out of the Korean peninsula. The general realised the strength of the Ming forces when he came into contact with them at the
Amrok River, and made a momentous decision that would alter the course of Korean history. Knowing of the support he enjoyed both from high-ranking government officials and the populace, he decided to return to the capital and take control of the government instead of possibly destroying his army attacking the Chinese.
He returned to Kaesŏng and, after overpowering the royal court's defenders and killing General Choe Yeong, Yi Seonggye usurped the throne from Goryeo's Dynasty and took control of the government. King U and his son
King Chang were both assassinated.
U became the only king in Korea's long history never to have had a posthumous title for his reign.
Further Information
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