Donghak Peasant Revolution

Donghak Peasant Revolution
Part of 19th-century peasant rebellions in Korea
Date11 January 1894 – 25 December 1895
Location
Result
Belligerents
Joseon
 Qing dynasty
Donghak  Japan
Commanders and leaders

King Gojong
Queen Min
Yi Yongtae
Hong Gye-hun
Yi Hakseung
Gu Sangjo
Seong Hayeong
Jang Yongjin
Yi Gidong
Yi Gyutae

Guangxu Emperor
Li Hongzhang
Ye Zhichao
Wei Rugui
Ma Yukun
Jeon Bongjun
Kim Gae-nam
Son Hwajung
Choe Gyeongseon
Kim Deokmyeong
Choe Sihyeong
Son Byong-hi

Emperor Meiji
Yamagata Aritomo
Itō Sukeyuki
Kawakami Soroku
Nogi Maresuke
Colonel Moriya

Lieutenant Suzuku
Strength
3,000–50,000 Korean soldiers 15,000–300,000 Southern Jeob rebels
10,000–300,000 Northern Jeob rebels
500–3,000 Japanese soldiers
Casualties and losses
6,000 Korean soldiers killed Tens to hundreds of thousands killed from both Jeobs 200 Japanese soldiers killed
Donghak Peasant Revolution
Hangul
Hanja
Revised RomanizationDonghak nongmin hyeogmyeong
McCune–ReischauerTonghang nongmin hyŏngmyŏng

The Donghak Peasant Revolution[a] (Korean동학농민혁명) was a peasant revolt that took place between 11 January 1894 and 25 December 1895 in Korea. The peasants were primarily followers of Donghak, a Neo-Confucian movement that rejected Western technology and ideals.

The Revolution began in the province of Gobu-gun. In the early 1890s, Jo Byeong-gap, nominated magistrate of the gun in 1892, enforced harsh, oppressive policies upon the local peasant population. Correspondingly, in March 1894, a group of peasants led by Jeon Bong-jun and Kim Gae-nam began an uprising against local authorities. The initial revolt was suppressed under Yi Yong-tae, and Jeon Bong-jun fled to nearby Taein. Jeon gathered an army in Mount Paektu and recaptured Gobu in April. The rebels then defeated governmental forces in the Battle of Hwangtojae and the Battle of the Hwangryong River. Jeon then captured Jeonju Fortress and fought in a siege against Hong Gye-hun's government forces. In May, the rebels agreed on a truce through the Treaty of Jeonju. However, an unstable peace continued throughout the summer.

The alarmed government requested the Qing dynasty for military intervention, to which the Qing responded with a deployment of 2,700 soldiers. Japan, angered that the Qing government had not informed Japan before the intervention (as promised in the Convention of Tientsin), started the First Sino-Japanese War.[1] The war resulted in an expulsion of Chinese influence in Korea and also signaled an end to the Self-Strengthening Movement in China itself.

Growing Japanese dominance in the Korean Peninsula caused anxiety amongst the rebels. From September to October, the Southern and Northern leaders negotiated the plans for the future in Samrye. On 12 October, a coalition army of Northern and Southern Jeobs was formed, and the army, numbering 25,000~200,000 (records differ), attacked Gongju. After several battles, the rebel army was decisively defeated in the Battle of Ugeumchi, and the rebels were again overthrown in the Battle of Taein. Hostility continued deep into the spring of 1895. The rebel leaders were captured in various locations in the Honam Region, and most were executed by a mass hanging in March.


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  1. ^ McClain 2002, p. 297.

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