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Almost all of Korea has fallen to the Japanese army, but Admiral Yi has a secret weapon: turtle ships.

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Korea: Admiral Yi - III: The Bright Moonlight of Hansando - Extra History

Support us on Patreon! http://bit.ly/EHPatreon Watch the Admiral Yi series! http://bit.ly/1FkP5ZO Subscribe for new episodes every Saturday! http://bit.ly/SubToEC Follow us on Facebook! http://bit.ly/ECFBPage Follow us on Twitter! http://bit.ly/ECTweet Follow us on Twitch! http://bit.y/ECTwitch ____________ While Yi found success at sea, the Korean land army suffered terrible losses. Yi Il, the man who once accused Yi of negligence, lost one battle after another, until finally the regular forces were annhilated at Chungju. The Joseon court that ruled to Korea fled to Pyongyang, on the verge of being pushed out of their own country. But that same day, Admiral Yi tore through a Japanese fleet at Okpo. He moved on to Sacheon, where he baited the Japanese commander into a trap and debuted his turtle ship. The unstoppable turtle ship carried the day, so he used this tactic again and again he destroyed a Japanese fleet while suffering no losses of his own. Finally, Hideyoshi ordered his naval commanders to take Jeolla, Yi's headquarters. Sadly for him, his general Wakisaka Yasaharu grew too eager and engaged Yi without backup at Gyeonnaeryang Strait, only to find himself lured into an even more sophisticated version of Yi's bait-and-retreat strategy: a "Crane's Wing" of ships that collapsed on the overextended target from all sides. In one of the largest naval battles in history, Yi scored a decisive win and again didn't lose a single ship. He headed to Angolpo to attack Hideyoshi's two remaining generals and seal his victory, but they refused to be baited. He had to settle for a long range exchange of cannon fire, which worked at the cost of many injuries to his own men. In the end, he destroyed all but a few Japanese ships, and those he only spared to give the Japanese some means to escape and stop raiding in Korea. But he had accomplished his goal: Hideyoshi ordered a halt to all naval operations except guarding Busan, and without this control of the sea, Japan could not re-supply their troops nor hope to resume the assault that would have finally pushed Korea's leaders out of Korea. ____________ Get the intro music here! http://bit.ly/1EQA5N7 *Music by Demetori: http://bit.ly/1AaJG4H Get the outro music here! http://bit.ly/1NbpIcd *Music by Sean and Dean Kiner: http://bit.ly/1LBy9zh __________ Extra History - Byzantine Empire: Justinian and Theodora From Swineherd to Emperor: http://bit.ly/1LYJKFX Extra Credits - Looking at Hearthstone and Planning Ahead Future Proofing Your Design: http://bit.ly/1MjBu6t

Comments

Raspberyl

Well I was just playing some old EC videos as background noise while I chip away at D5 but I could take a break for this.

Michael Waisfeld

The funny thing is that the biggest loser of this war was actually China

Anonymous

Yeaaah, about that. Its estimated that Japan did more economic damage to Korea in this war than the Korean war in 1950. I would argue that the biggest loser of this war were the Korean citizens who had to flee from the Japanese armies.

GooGhoul

If that bullet that hit Admiral Yi had been slightly closer to centre; He could've died right there and Korea may well no longer exist. Japan would've won the Korean War, and not turned to Isolation. Japan would've tried to dominate East Asia before European & American powers had enough influence in the Pacific to stop them like they did in WW2. That is some "for want of a nail"-level insanity right there. A single bullet that could've resulted in completely different Asia, a completely different world.

Jason Youngberg

The Crane Wings reminds me of the horns maneuver we saw in the Zulu series (but with the head being used to pull the enemy into the trap). I wonder how many more times we'll see this style of warfare in future series.

Jim McGeehin

I can't wait for Myeongnyang. It's up there with Salamis and Samar Island for one of the greatest naval engagements in history.

Anonymous

Marry me

Michael Waisfeld

It's not like the japanese were any more able to take over all of china in the 16th century than in the 20th. Hideoshi would have still died and Tokugawa would still want to stabilize his nation. With the financial hardships of the 18th century I doubt the japanese could have held korea

Anonymous

I wonder how different Asian history would be if the Japanese had been successful in their invasion of Korea. Somebody get the Alternate History Hub on the line!

The Cayute

Turtleshell too OP, nerf plz. Seriously, holy shit. I hadn't had a chance to study Japanese invasion of Korea in school, just that it had been a catalyst for increased trade with the West (supposedly, my high school world history had been lacking). I had no idea how one sided the naval and land campaigns had been. Keep it up guys!

Anonymous

I love your attention for Yi's naval tactics. Watching it through your channel, it made me realize how similar Yi's crane wing formation is to Hannibal's Cannae encirclement. A product of brilliant tactical minds perhaps? I appreciate your hard work and I understand that this series is about Yi (I wouldn't want anything else). Still, I felt that the righteous armies of Korea and the role of the Ming, both militarily and politically, didn't get the honorable mention they deserved. Yi was not the sole responsible for Korea's victory after all (even if his battles might be the coolest).

Anonymous

So far, I have not seen any mention regarding the superiority of the regular Korean warships and naval cannon compared to those of the Japanese during this period. Other Korean admirals did not understand these strengths and weaknesses as well as Admiral Yi and, as a result, lost battles through using the same tactics as the Japanese.

Anonymous

Two things. 1) I find it hilarious that the Japanese ships actually looked like that - basically just a Japanese castle made to float and given oars. I'm not exactly a military history expert, but this suggests to me that they were designed with defending against boarding in mind, not with actually being sunk. 2) How are you measuring when you say that was the "largest naval battle in history"? Weren't there some back in the first punic war with hundreds of ships involved? ...maybe that'll come up during lies.

Anonymous

It also strongly resembles the Bull's Horns formation of Shaka Zulu. Apparently there's nothing quite as effective as making your enemy a peninsula in a sea of enemies.

Anonymous

Has the Meiji restoration ever been a potential theme for a series on extra history?

Anonymous

You mentioned during the last Q&A that the main source for this is Yi's own writing. Do we know how fair his assessment of the land war is (Which based on this episode seems to be 'they retreated from fortifications that they couldn't afford to retreat from'), if so?

Anonymous

You know, this makes it a a little hard to tell whether Yi was one of the greatest Admirals, or his enemies were just worthless seamen.

Leonard Rinehart-Mann

Not really, Yi's tactics in these battles are sound strategy, and that Cranes Wing Formation... Yi successfully adapted and employed envelopment tactics on open water; also, Yi's secret weapons, the Turtle ships are a design masterpiece of their era, and how he used them was brutally efficient.

Anonymous

It was mentioned a few videos ago when separating the tactics, and how although the Japanese had a far more modern army, their navy was lacking compared to the Korean. It was even implied in this video when Dan states that the Korean ships have regular range, though I too would like more specifics regarding the ways that the Korean ships were better.

Anonymous

I'll give you the turtle ship. But the Crane's wing is not a an unusual battle formation, and seeing lightning and hearing thunder are not proof of a great commander. Yi's tactics here are certainly sound, but their immense effectiveness seems to have a strong relation to how terrible the Japanese are at naval strategy and tactics. They took the bait on almost every lure Yi put out, and allowed themselves to be encircled by a superior force. Yi is not being challenged by this enemy. Now, something that is credit to Yi, is the consistency of this. He almost never lost a ship, across all those fights, and several times the number of wounded were also tiny. He drilled his men excellently, and pulled off what is in theory a simply plan, with expert skill. And he has continually demonstrated himself to be a dedicated and capable warrior. Also, while Yi regularly has a numbers advantage per fight, that is a sign he is a wise commander. He does not go picking fights with much larger forces, on terms where he doesn't have an advantage--that's something a foolhardy glory-seeker does (see the Japanese naval commanders). I think the next episode will be a better example of Yi's genius as an admiral, as he'll be seriously put to the test.

ExtraCredits

The next episode will definitely show Yi's strengths as a commander, and also highlight something that can seem kind of invisible in the story so far: how *good* Yi is at managing his ships. It's true that his ships have superior cannon (with better range) and that he's been very good at baiting the Japanese into bad engagements, but he also *commands* those engagements with really amazing efficiency. Coaching his commanders and keeping an eye on everything in battle to make sure none of his ships get caught overextending is a big part of why Yi keeps being able to conduct such perfect victories.

ExtraCredits

Yi's own writing is a major source for this, but far from our only one! Information about the land war actually comes much more from other sources than Yi, who was really just keeping a diary of his experiences, not attempting to retell the history of the war from afar. As many advantages at the Korean navy had over the Japanese navy, the Japanese army had just as many advantages over the Korean army: superior equipment, better commanders, and so on. We are not telling much of the story of the land war in this series, but there certainly were commanders who organized brave defenses and some even did better than you might expect given their disadvantages... but in the end, they were all forced to retreat time and again because their alternative was basically annhilation at the hands of the Japanese.

ExtraCredits

It hasn't been in the Patreon vote, but it's a subject we'd be willing to cover!

ExtraCredits

I'm actually not sure how the measurements for largest battle work out, but I'll see if James wants to talk about it during Lies. And you're correct that the Japanese navy was much, much more prepared for naval battle that focused around boarding over cannonades.

ExtraCredits

It is bizarre, isn't it, how lopsided those two halves of the battle are? We don't talk much about the Japanese strategies on land, but even while some parts of the Korean army put up a strong resistance, the Japanese still steamrolled those parts of the battle almost as cleanly as Yi was streamrolling affairs in the navy.

ExtraCredits

I'm guessing they still would have been stopped before achieving Toyotomi's ambition of taking over China, but even so, Japan having a land holding on the continent would definitely have changed things!

ExtraCredits

Coming up shortly! This is absolutely my favorite episode of this series - the one where my jaw just dropped and I found myself saying, "No way."

ExtraCredits

Very often! I went into some detail in another comment, but encircling your enemy is a very common strategy... pulling it off correctly, though, is far less common than you'd think, once you factor in the panic and adrenaline of a live battle.