Japanese missions to Joseon represent a crucial aspect of the international relations of mutual Joseon-Japan contacts and communication. The bilateral exchanges were intermittent.
The unique nature of these bilateral diplomatic exchanges evolved from a conceptual framework developed by the Chinese. Gradually, the theoretical model would be modified. The changing model mirrors the evolution of a unique relationship between two neighboring states.
Muromachi shogunate missions to Goryeo
In 1377 Goryeo envoy ChÃ
Âng Mong-ju travelled to Tsukushi in Japan where he met Imagawa RyÃ
Âshun; and the consequences of his efforts were only seen later.
Muromachi shogunate missions to Joseon
The Muromachi bakufu's diplomatic contacts and communication with the Joseon court encompassed informal contacts and formal embassies. Muromachi diplomacy also included the more frequent and less formal contacts involving the Japanese daimyo (feudal lord) of Tsushima Island.
In addition, trade missions between merchants of the area were frequent and varied.
- 1403 – A Japanese diplomatic mission from the Japanese shogun, Ashikaga Yoshimochi, was received in Seoul; and this set in motion the beginnings of a decision-making process about sending a responsive mission to Kyoto.
- 1404 – Former-Shogun Ashikaga Yoshimitsu causes a message to the Joseon king to be sent; and the sender is identified as "king of Japan". The salutation construes the Joseon monarch as the sender's co-equal peer.
- 1422 – Nihonkoku Minamoto Yoshimochi sent the Joseon king a letter in Ã
Âei 29, as time was reckoned using the Japanese calendar system.
- 1423 – Nihonkoku Dosen sent the Joseon king a letter in Ã
Âei 30.
- 1424 – Nihonkoku Dosen sent the Joseon king a letter in Ã
Âei 31.
- 1428 – Nihonkoku Dosen sent the Joseon king a letter in Ã
Âei 35.
- 1432 – Shogun Ashikaga Yoshinori sent an ambassador to the Joseon court.
- 1440 – Nihonkoku Minamoto Yoshinori sent the Joseon king a letter in RyakuÃ
 3, which the Japanese era at that time.
- 1447 – Nihonkoku Ã
 Minamoto Yoshinari sent the Joseon king a letter in JÃ
Âwa 3, which was the Japanese era at that time.
- 1456 – Shogun Ashikaga Yoshimasa caused a letter to be sent to the king of Joseon.
- 1474 – Shogun Ashikaga Yoshihisa sent an ambassador to China, stopping en route at the Joseon court in Seoul. The ambassador's charge was to seek an official seal from the Imperial Chinese court.
- 1499 – Shogun Ashikaga Yoshizumi dispatched an envoy to the Joseon court asking for printing plates for an important Buddhist text; and although the specific request was not fulfilled, the Joseon court did agree to offer printed copies.
Tokugawa shogunate missions to Joseon
In the Edo period of Japanese history, diplomatic missions were construed as benefiting the Japanese as legitimizing propaganda and as a key element in an emerging manifestation of Japan's ideal vision of the structure of an international order with Edo as its center.
Japanese-Joseon diplomacy adapting
Japanese-Joseon bilateral relations were affected by the increasing numbers of international contacts which required adaptation and a new kind of diplomacy.
1876
The Korea-Japan Treaty of 1876 marked the beginning of a new phase in bilateral relations.
See also
Notes
References
- Ferris, William Wayne. (2009). Japan to 1600: a Social and Economic History. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press.
- Hall, John Whitney. (1997). The Cambridge History of Japan: Early Modern Japan. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ;
- ÃÂÂì¼ê´Âê³Âì“°구ëÂ
¼ì§Âø찬ìÂÂìÂÂÃÂÂ. (2005). õì ì‹ÂȓÂÂê´Âê³¼ÃÂÂì¼ê´Âê³ (Han Il kwangyesa yÃ
Ângu nonjip, Vol. 6). ê²½ì¸문ÃÂÂì¬. .
- Kang, Etsuko Hae-jin. (1997). Diplomacy and Ideology in Japanese-Korean Relations: from the Fifteenth to the Eighteenth Century. Basingstoke, Hampshire; Macmillan. ;
- Kang, Woong Joe. (2005). The Korean Struggle for International Identity in the Foreground of the Shufeldt Negotiation, 1866-1882. Latham, Maryland: University Press of America. ; OCLC 238760185
- Titsingh, Isaac, ed. (1834). [Siyun-sai Rin-siyo/Hayashi GahÃ
Â, 1652], Nipon o daï itsi ran; ou, Annales des empereurs du Japon. Paris: Oriental Translation Fund of Great Britain and Ireland. OCLC 84067437
- Toby, Ronald P. (1991). State and Diplomacy in Early Modern Japan: Asia in the Development of the Tokugawa Bakufu. Stanford: Stanford University Press. ;
- Walker, Brett L. "Foreign Affairs and Frontiers in Early Modern Japan: A Historiographical Essay," Early Modern Japan. Fall, 2002, pp. 44âÂÂ62, 124-128.
External links