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Disaster rips apart the Korean fleet. But as long as he has ANY ships, Yi will defend Korea.

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Korea: Admiral Yi - IV: Those Who Seek Death Shall Live - 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 ____________ Yi's success had forced the Japanese to give up offensive naval operations, but their huge fleet remained entrenched in Busan harbor. While Yi pinned them down, reinforcements from the Chinese army had finally arrived and helped the Korean army take back the country on land. Yi petitioned for marines to take Busan back from the Japanese, but his requests were ignored. Instead, he focused on making his base on Hansando self-sufficient: he promised protection to refugees in exchange for them working the island, building his equipment, and even researching military technology. But a truce was called with Japan, one that dragged on for years until Hideyoshi broke it by ordering a second invasion. An informant brought word of secret, unprotected Japanese fleet movements, but Yi recognized it as a trap and refused to go. However, his friend Ryu's enemies at court seized on this as an opportunity to put Yi on trial for treason. They demoted him again, and gave his fleet to Won Kyon. Won Kyon fell into the trap Yi had refused, and a coordinated surprise attack from the Japanese resulted in the destruction of all but 12 ships. Yi was quickly re-instated, but ordered to disband the navy. He refused, and planned his counterattack carefully: he would fight at Myeongnyang Strait, where he hoped the natural currents would do what his numbers could not. His plan worked: the reversing tide caught the Japanese by surprise and flung their ships against each other right as he pressed the attack. With 13 ships versus 133, he once again drove back Japan with zero losses to his own navy. Word of his success brought other ships out of hiding and convinced the Chinese navy to ally with him at last. ____________ 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 - Warring States Japan: Sengoku Jidai Battle of Okehazama: http://bit.ly/1IUpYw2 Extra Credits - What Type of Player are You? Bartle's Taxonomy: http://bit.ly/1LSrtIx

Comments

Anonymous

i like video

Anonymous

I making people restart from scratch a standard punishment?

Anonymous

At about 1:54 you state that Yi was promoted to supreme commander of the Korean army. I believe it is more correct to say supreme commander of the Korean naval forces. All the naval commanders were generals because Korea did not have a navy that was separate from the army.

Hasan Mahmood

Admiral Yi, utter bad ass.

Anonymous

Admiral Yi; the frustrating story of being the only competent dignitary in the country.

Anonymous

Whenever I get frustrated things aren't going my way, I think I'll watch Yi get stripped of rank over and over, and still kick everyone's ass. That's some major resilience and focus

Michael Waisfeld

I recall reading somewhere while researching Bushido for a university essay, about how counter productive the practice of sepuku was. The writer went on to comment on how different history would have been if admiral Yi had committed suicide after getting disgraced and demoted twice. No Japanese commander would endure that shame.

noah

I feel so sorry for Yi demoted again... Again. Did they guys pushing for it ever get what's coming to them. Becouse that's just depressing and stupid sending the one man they need away. And almost destroying themselves. There has to be some kind of retribution for those guys.

Anonymous

I'm remembering when they covered the Punic wars, and Hamilcar Barca felt spurned by everybody. Yet here Yi is time and again being called a traitor, but he still fights for Korea. Just a major contrast is all I'm seeing.

Anonymous

1:54 Supreme commander of the Korean army? What? Shouldn't it be the navy? Man, I just don't know how to feel about Yi investing so much time and building ships only to have it robbed from him and wasted on a futile battle. Yet he didn't do it for personal glory or achievement, even if he deserved it. He did it out of clear loyalty to his nation and its people. That's quite admirable. Oh, and you finally gave an honorable mention to the Chinese and the righteous armies, thank you for that.

Luna

Every time I see the drill going into the soldier's head I am reminded of the movie Pi. I should go watch that again.

Anonymous

Must've been hard for Korea, trapped between two powerful nations vying for dominance of Asia.

The Cayute

And that's what happens when your country has known peace for so long: Your court just can't seem to stop stabbing themselves in the back. Hell, I know it's not uncommon for every political party to screw their rivals for personal gain, but they put a LOSER in place of the guy who was so consistently whooping ass he was the only reason the Koreans weren't subjects of Japan. And I know this is only still a slimmed down version of events, but good gods, the fact that it happened at all...

Anonymous

Awesome as always, your Amazingness

Anonymous

If that's not THE definition of dedication, i cant imagine what it would be.

Anonymous

It's funny how Yi was beating the Japanese fleets with the same tactic over and over again. And then when the Japanese try an obvious trick to get the entire Korean fleet into a trap, the one guy that doesn't fall for it is reduced to a common foot soldier. Again. And then not even a month later fall for the same trick with the same moron that thought scuttling a fleet was a good idea. I'm actually angry at this vast level of incompetence.

Anonymous

It truly is amazing just how much more competent Yi was compared to pretty much everyone else around him. To achieve victory time and again, and only lose to your own government has to take a toll on anyone. And yet he persevered. I hope James talks about what motivated Yi so much in the Lies episode like he did with Hideyoshi vs. Nobunaga vs. Ieyasu.

Anonymous

You guys... you guys! I honestly can't believe how enthralled I am hearing these incredible stories told by people who care enough about History to really paint them out the way you guys do! Have 5 dollars a month. Just HAVE it. I want nothing more than to ensure you KEEP. DOING. THIS.

Anonymous

It's strange, in a way. Yi is quite obviously brilliant, but his brilliance is magnified by the apparent lunacy and idiocy of the folks around him. During the Lies video, could you maybe address this? It seems a little crazy, to be just handwaved away as "enemies in court". Sometimes when a General is too successful, the state fears him winning the way, turning around, and taking over. Is that what happened here? Or was it more like Galileo, who was put under house arrest less because of his theories and more because he was a brash, insulting know-it-all that pissed people off left and right?

Julian Arce

TBH I would have told them all to go to hell the second time they demoted me. It says a lot of the character of Yi to suffer humiliation time and time again, and just keep at it

Robert S

Confucianism probably played some role in Yi's incredible tolerance for bullshit. I don't know for sure, but it seems likely.

ExtraCredits

In fact, he's sometimes used as an exemplar of Confucian behavior just for this reason!

ExtraCredits

I'm excited that we get to tell stories like this! I hadn't heard of Admiral Yi before James put him on the voting list, and I am absolutely loving his story. -Soraya

ExtraCredits

Not their finest moments, to be sure. :\ I once asked James if we were going to talk about Ryu Seong-ryong, whose journal we also have, and he just said "That would require an entirely different series." There was a lot going on over there... which I guess is not too surprising, since you don't uproot your entire court and move practically out of the country to escape a conquering invasion force without a whole lotta drama.

ExtraCredits

I looked this up because I didn't know what you were talking about and AHHHH

ExtraCredits

I'll have to double-check, but I think you're right! I know that at least later on, his title was "Naval Commander of the Three Provinces." Not sure if this was the title given to him during this period. But yeah, now that the Chinese armies have arrived, they're going to play a slightly bigger role in the series. Don't expect too much more on the land side of things, though, since this series is much more focused on Yi's naval campaign!

ExtraCredits

It's true, although Hamilcar remained nominally loyal to Carthage - even if he did go set up a personal base in Spain, more or less. He certainly instilled in his sons a sense of loyalty to Carthage, and hatred for its enemy, Rome.

ExtraCredits

Well, they lost the fleet, and history does not look upon them kindly, but were they stripped of their own titles or nobility? Afraid not. The king himself took part in Yi's demotion, which makes it difficult for anyone to point fingers.

ExtraCredits

Most Korean commanders would not have endured this shame, either: they also lived and died on their sense of honor. Most would have, at the very least, retired after the shame of that demotion. Yi, however, continued to serve as a lowly foot soldier - and his new commanders showed him a great deal of respect. They knew what was up.

ExtraCredits

Haha! Well, we're not going into the story of the courts or the land commanders (too much to cover), but there were definitely forces working against him.

ExtraCredits

I think you're right here; we'll have to check on this when we're writing Lies!

Anonymous

How come the Japanese keep falling for Yi's traps I understand the last stand at the strait (Yi had a home field advantage) but the Japanese kept falling for the Crane Wing formation over and over again.

Anonymous

Primarily because the Japanese tactics worked against almost every other Korean admiral. Whenever Admiral Yi sent ships out as bait none of them flew his banner; so, the Japanese would follow them thinking they were part of some other admiral's force. Also, in the battle discussed in this episode Admiral Yi advanced against the Japanese alone. The other 12 Korean ships were anchored in a position to watch the battle because the commanders and their men lacked confidence that they could succeed against such an overwhelming force (133 ships vs 13 ships). If you get the opportunity, take a look at the Korean movie, The Admiral: Roaring Currents. It is available with English subtitles.

Anonymous

Initially, the battle was 133 Japanese warships against 1 Korean warship. The other 12 Korean warships did not enter the battle until the tide had turned. Also, there were over 200 Japanese transports present; so, as far as the Koreans knew there were over 300 ships attacking them.

Anonymous

this guy went through hell more often than any character I've encountered and being betrayed so often. I mean you'd think he's proven his value so often that it is without doubt anymore. Id like to know know how many other warriors get shafted this often?

Bjørnar Røsnes Ersdal

It's a miracle at this point Yi's ship is not being sunk under the weight of his massive balls.

Anonymous

I hope that you mention this in Lies but the battle of Myeongnyang was the only battle where it was reported that a Japanese Daimyo died in battle in the imjin war. At least, that is what most sources say online. Not sure if you found any primary sources to back this up.

Jim McGeehin

Given Yi's difficulty, part of me wants to nominate Benedict Arnold to go under the Extra History microscope. But the other part of me has my naval fixation a-going, and wants to relax the year requirements to do the Pacific Theater for WWII. There's even a perfect chapter title for Leyte Gulf: "The World Waits"

ExtraCredits

Benedict Arnold will actually be coming up on his own next month! He came in fourth place during the vote that brought us the First Crusade. Our fourth place finished always come back for a second chance, and that poll's coming up in a few weeks.