"Draft Relations between Korea and Japan in Ancient Times"의 두 판 사이의 차이

Korea100
이동: 둘러보기, 검색
1번째 줄: 1번째 줄:
 
{{BasicInfo
 
{{BasicInfo
 
|Title=The Gaya People's Non-recognition of Early Japan  
 
|Title=The Gaya People's Non-recognition of Early Japan  
|Author=  
+
|Author= 조윤정
 
|Actor=[[Gaya]], [[Imna/Mimana]], [[Yamato Japan]], [[Empress Jingū]]
 
|Actor=[[Gaya]], [[Imna/Mimana]], [[Yamato Japan]], [[Empress Jingū]]
 
|Place=[[Southern Region of the Korean Peninsula]], [[Kansai Region of Japan]]
 
|Place=[[Southern Region of the Korean Peninsula]], [[Kansai Region of Japan]]

2017년 8월 21일 (월) 20:56 판

Title The Gaya People's Non-recognition of Early Japan
Author 조윤정
Actor Gaya, Imna/Mimana, Yamato Japan, Empress Jingū
Place Southern Region of the Korean Peninsula, Kansai Region of Japan
Record History of the Three Kingdoms, Gwanggaeto Stele Epigraph, Records of Japanese History
Concept colonial historiography, heteronomy
Object Gwanggaeto Stele



1차 원고

Gaya is an ancient tribal confederacy that existed in the southern-most part of the Korean Peninsula, beginning to form in the 1st century 100 BCE and flourishing until it was conquered and absorbed by the burgeoning Silla Kingdom in the 6th century CE.

The Gaya Confederation existed for hundreds of years, developing its own unique culture. It carried out active exchanges with neighboring nations and served as a trade intermediary between Baekje and Japan. In regard to the relationship between Gaya and Japan during the later Gaya period, some Japanese scholars argue that the Yamato Wa invaded the southern part of the Korean Peninsula in the 4th century and ruled over Baekje, Silla and Gaya until the mid-6th century, establishing a military base in Gaya called Imna Nihon-fu.

By the 1930s, Japan used this "Imna Nihon-fu theory" to provide historical grounds for its annexation of Korea in the early 20th century, claiming that Japan ruled the southern part of Korea in ancient times and that Koreans and Japanese have the same ancestry.

The name Imna appears in various records including the epitaph on the Monument of King Gwanggaeto, History of the Three Kingdoms and Chronicles of Japan (Nihon shoki). It refers to either the Gaya Confederacy itself or to Geumgwan Gaya, the ruling city-state of the confederacy. The name Imna Nihon-fu, however, only appears in the Nihon shoki, not in any Korean or Japanese records.

In recent times both Korean and Japanese scholars have agreed there is little evidence to support the "Imna Nihon-fu theory." The main documentary evidence comes from the Nihon shoki, which states that the Wa entered and conquered parts of the Korean Peninsula in 369. But the book was written in the 8th century, and its records of the pre-5th century period are considered unreliable. An earlier history text, Records of Ancient Matters, does not mention Imna.

It is believed that an organization like Imna Nihon-fu did exist in the 6th century, probably in Aragaya, a major Gaya state. This institution would have been a channel for active trade between Gaya and Baekje and Japan. But considering that the name "Nihon" (Japan) did not appear until 645, some 80 years after Gaya's demise, it can be said that the Gaya people did not know about "Japan."