Recent content by democracy101

  1. A Light in the East: A Korean TL

    Threads about Korea Hi everyone, I'm back. I decided to take some time off (around half a year) from posting after RL eventually caught up with me. However, I occasionally checked the forums during my spare time, and back in September, someone (not on this website) contacted me by email with...
  2. How to get China to feel conquest is a good idea.

    I guess I'll have to say the same. As much as I want to discuss this more thoroughly, I will not have time to do so, so my points may not be fully fleshed out. I don't have an issue with you questioning the hypothesis, but referring to irrelevant “revisionist” ones rejected by mainstream...
  3. How to get China to feel conquest is a good idea.

    The Chinese figures are extrapolated from Chinese sources after assuming that a significant number of non-Han Chinese, migrants, and non-citizens (slaves, monks, bandits, etc.) would not have been included in the total count. For reference, the Jin population was recorded as 17 million, while...
  4. How to get China to feel conquest is a good idea.

    I don't have much time, so I'll try to be brief. I'm fully aware of when assimilation began (at least by 108 BC), but emigration from Korea to Japan (due to movements from Manchuria) beginning in 300 BC was entirely unrelated to the much later emigration waves from the Korean peninsula to...
  5. How to get China to feel conquest is a good idea.

    The main problem with this is that "Korea" from around 300 BC to AD 668 was very different from modern "Korea." While Southern Manchuria (including Liaodong and Liaoxi) remained culturally "Korean" before 300 BC, topographical evidence indicates that the peninsula south of Pyongyang remained...
  6. Greater chaos under heaven 天下大混亂: Alternate Post-Yuan China

    Sure. Will these do? All of the maps show the Former Yan (337-70), a Xianbei state, in full control of Liaodong (and other regions), and are fully backed by primary Chinese sources. Additionally, Murong Hui (the founder's father), had directly governed Liaodong since 289 as a Jin vassal...
  7. Greater chaos under heaven 天下大混亂: Alternate Post-Yuan China

    (In the interest of time, non-English sources will not be translated.) Glad I could help. That's not what you had said earlier, though. You had specified 700-800 years of Chinese control through the Han-Wei-Jin, not Yan-Qin. Your duration would require political control starting from 500-400...
  8. Greater chaos under heaven 天下大混亂: Alternate Post-Yuan China

    What sources are you relying on? I've stated this before, but while that assumption is true for the northeast, it is incorrect for the northwest and Jeju (Tamra until 1294). This map indicates possessions at the beginning of Gongmin's reign in 1351 (in green), as the northwest was returned by...
  9. Greater chaos under heaven 天下大混亂: Alternate Post-Yuan China

    It's well known that the Jeju dialect/language borrowed numerous cognates from Mongolian, while the horses on the island are assumed to be descendants of Mongol breeds. I'm well aware of that, but the northern Korean border (ignoring Liaodong, which continued to remain under Yuan...
  10. Greater chaos under heaven 天下大混亂: Alternate Post-Yuan China

    (I realize that the first map may not necessarily represent all of the borders accurately.) A few notes on Korea: The "Jin" in Liaodong is an anachronism. Goryeo princes were directly appointed by the Yuan as governors of Shenyang from 1307-76 (Goryeo from 1376-88), administering what is now...
  11. Keep it in the family: Jingnan Rebellion averted in variant early Ming sucession

    I'm still convinced that with a relatively late PoD in 1392, the vast majority of developments within Korea would have remained similar. This was mostly because the kingdom (not principality) was briefly in turmoil due to countless purges initiated by Yi Seong-gye against the former Goryeo...
  12. Keep it in the family: Jingnan Rebellion averted in variant early Ming sucession

    Adding on to this, it would have been a logistical nightmare for the Ming to conquer Korea, even in part, making it essentially impossible for the former to do so. Specifically, Korean troops (during Goryeo) repelled two invasions by the Red Turbans in 1359 and 1361 (the latter involving...
  13. Common and Overdone before 1900 What Ifs?

    Apologies for the long response below, but I just wanted to be thorough in order to prevent endless discussions. Ask and you shall receive. There's much more, but I don't feel like providing every single link right now. Please don't make blanket assumptions without throughly understanding...
  14. Common and Overdone before 1900 What Ifs?

    Oh, that's certainly a big cliché that I've tried to extensively disprove as well, although I'm not sure if that's as common as the Imjin War one. Thanks for reminding me.
  15. Common and Overdone before 1900 What Ifs?

    The most common (thread) topic on Korea (before 1900) is No or dead Yi Sun-shin/Japanese victory in the Imjin War, or a similar variant. This is despite the fact that I've repeatedly stated why and how the former wouldn't have made a substantial difference (a surplus of other talented admirals...
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