Kang Cho
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Kang Cho | |
---|---|
Born | 964 Sinchon, Seohae-do Goryeo |
Died | January 1, 1011 (aged about 47) Liaoyang, Liao dynasty |
Years of service | Goryeo Army (?–1010) |
Battles / wars | Goryeo-Khitan War |
Children | Lady Kang (daughter) |
Korean name | |
Hangul | 강조 |
Hanja | |
Revised Romanization | Gang Jo |
McCune–Reischauer | Kang Cho |
Childhood name | |
Hangul | 진형 |
Hanja | |
Revised Romanization | Jinhyeong |
McCune–Reischauer | Chinhyŏng |
Kang Cho (Korean: 강조; Hanja:
Rise to power
[edit]Kang Cho was the military inspector (도순검사;
After assassinating King Mokjong, Kang placed King Hyeonjong of Goryeo on the throne. Kang merged the Security Council (중추원;
War with the Liao and death
[edit]Soon after this, Emperor Shengzong of Liao attacked Goryeo during the fall of 1010, under the pretext that Kang Cho had committed regicide. The newly installed King Hyeonjong gave Kang 300,000 men under his command to stop the Khitan invaders.[4] According to the Goryeosa, a 400,000-man Liao army invaded Goryeo territory. Liao first attacked but failed to capture the fort of Heunghwa-jin, whose defender was General Yang Kyu.
Next, the Liao finally headed to the city of Tongju, which is where Kang Cho and 300,000 Goryeo troops were waiting. Kang Cho set up an ambush on a narrow pass that the Liao army was inevitably going to have to pass. There, he directly led his troops in a three-pronged attack when the Liao came. The Liao soldiers were forced to retreat and 10,000 died during this ambush. The enemy troops again attacked Tongju but faced a humiliating defeat with severe casualties.
The Liao commander launched another attack on the city, with Kang Cho as his main target. The Liao were defeated a third time, and were forced to retreat once more. In one last-ditch effort, the Liao army came attacking once more, but this time, Kang Cho did not directly orchestrate the attack and played baduk with one of his lieutenants instead, thinking that victory was a given.[5] In the same time, Liao general Yelü Pennu led the Khitan army to attack and capture Samsu (삼수;
Place in history and comparison to Yeon Gaesomun
[edit]Kang Cho is seen as a hero. Though his rule was a time of war against the invading Liao, not many deaths were ordered by the general with the exception of King Mokjong and the conspiring scholar-officials. Kang Cho can be compared with his predecessor Yeon Gaesomun of Goguryeo, who had also killed a King of Goguryeo for conspiring against him.
Kang, however, was not as brilliant as Yeon Gaesomun, as he was not able to keep control for very long. Kang Cho did bring great victories to Goryeo over the Liao dynasty, but his death brought about another period of trouble for Goryeo, just as Yeon Gaesomun's death had done to Goguryeo. Kang Cho can be seen as a smaller-scale version of Yeon Gaesomun.
Family
[edit]- Father: Kang Tae-ju (강태주;
康 泰 周 ) - Daughter: Lady Kang (부인 강씨;
夫人 康 氏 )- Son-in-law: Kim Chin-yu (김진유;
金 振 酉 )
- Son-in-law: Kim Chin-yu (김진유;
In popular culture
[edit]- Portrayed by Choi Jae-sung in the 2009 KBS2 TV series Empress Cheonchu.
- Portrayed by Lee Won-jong in the 2023 KBS2 TV series Korea–Khitan War.
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ In the Korean calendar (lunar), he died on 24th day of the 11th lunar month in 1010.
References
[edit]- ^ Kim, In-ho. "김치양(
金 致陽)". Encyclopedia of Korean Culture (in Korean). Retrieved 24 February 2024. - ^ a b Breuker, Remco (2008). "Forging the Truth: Creative Deception and National Identity in Medieval Korea" (PDF). East Asian History. 35: 1–73. Retrieved 29 November 2023.
- ^ Kim, Bo-kwang (March 2013). "The Coup of Gang Jo and The Emergence of Jungdaeseong(
中臺 省 , Palace Secretariat) in the Early Period of the Goryeo Dynasty". Sahak Yonku: The Review of Korean History (109): 41–84. ISSN 1225-133X. Retrieved 3 December 2023. - ^ Kim, Jinwung (2012). A history of Korea: from "Land of the Morning Calm" to states in conflict. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. p. 143. ISBN 9780253000248.
- ^ Goryeosa] (in Chinese) – via Wikisource. [Volume 127]. [
- ^ "한국사데이터베이스". db.history.go.kr. Retrieved 2018-08-24.
- ^ Tennant, Roger (12 November 2012). A History Of Korea. Routledge. p. 84. ISBN 978-1-136-16698-3.