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Siege of Jinju
Part of Japanese invasions of Korea
Date October 5, 1592
Location Jinju Fortress, Korea
Result Decisive Korean victory
Belligerents
Japanese army Korean army, citizens
Commanders
Hosokawa Tadaoki Kim Si-min
Gwak Jaeu
Jeong Gi-ryong
Im Gye-yeong
Choe Gyeong-hoe
Yu Sung-in
Strength
20,000 soldiers 3,800 Jinju army
2,500 Righteous armies
Casualties and losses
Unknown Unknown
Siege of Jinju (1592)
Hangul 진주대첩
Hanja 晋州大捷
Revised Romanization Jinju Daecheop
McCune–Reischauer Chinchu Taech'ŏp

The Siege of Jinju was one of two battles during the Japanese invasions of Korea; the first in 1592, and the second in 1593. The first battle of Jinju along with the Battle of Hansan Island and the Battle of Haengju are regarded as the three most important battles of the war. The second battle of Jinju was not as successful, and it fell to the Japanese.[1]

Contents

[edit] Prelude

Jinju castle was an important castle that guarded Jeolla province. Ukita Hideie and Hosokawa Tadaoki agreed on taking Jinju castle because if the Japanese captured it, it would open up a new road to Jeolla, and they would be able to attack Gwak Jaeu's guerilla forces hiding in the area. Jeolla was also place for plenty of loot. Ukita also agreed to recapture Changwon, a small fortress that led to Jinju castle. Therefore, an army of 30,000 men to recapture Changwon and Jinju set out.

[edit] Changwon

The general at Changwon placed his army at a hill awaiting the Japanese. Arquebuses played a strong role again and the Koreans were cut down by the bullets. Changwon was recaptured. The Koreans retreated to Haman, another castle, which fell to the Japanese as well. After this, the Koreans were forced to run to Jinju castle.

[edit] Siege of Jinju

The Japanese heartily approached Jinju castle. They expected another easy victory at Jinju but the Korean general Kim Si-min defied the Japanese and stood firm with his 3,800 men. Again, the Koreans were outnumbered. Kim Si-min had recently acquired around 170 arquebuses, equivalent to what the Japanese used. Kim Si-min had them trained and believed he could defend Jinju.

The Japanese charged and began to bring ladders to scale the wall. They also brought a siege tower to try to gain the higher ground. As a counter, the Koreans unleashed massive volleys of cannons, arrows, and bullets. Surprised, Hosokawa tried another angle of approach by using his arquebuses to cover the soldiers scaling the wall. This still had no success because the Koreans ignored the bullets and smashed ladders with rocks and axes. When the Koreans began to lob mortars down at the Japanese, the Japanese began to lose even more men.

After three days of fighting, Kim Si-min was hit by a bullet on the side of his head and fell, unable to command his forces. The Japanese commanders then pressed even harder on the Koreans to dishearten them. But the Koreans fought on. The Japanese soldiers were still unable to scale the walls even with heavy fire from arquebuses. The Koreans were not in a good position since Kim Si-min was wounded and the garrison was now running low on ammunition.

[edit] Reinforcements

Gwak Jaeu, one of the main leaders of the Righteous armies of Korea arrived at night with an extremely small band, not enough to relieve the Koreans at Jinju. Gwak ordered his men to grab attention by blowing on horns and making noises. About 3,000 guerrillas and irregular forces arrived at the scene. At this time, the Japanese commanders realized their danger and were forced to abandon the siege and retreated.

[edit] Aftermath

The irregular army was too small to relieve Jinju. But, the retreat of Japanese soldiers heartened the Koreans and the biggest thing earned from the siege was that the Korean morale was boosted greatly.

In 1593, Jinju would see another battle, but would fall to the Japanese.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Stephen Turnbull, Peter Dennis (2007). Japanese Castles in Korea 1592-98. Osprey Publishing. p. 10. ISBN 1846031044. 

[edit] External links




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