Contact us
E-Submission
mobile search button
mobile menu button
Search
Advanced Search
Journal of SINOGRAPHIC PHILOLOGIES AND LEGACIES
ABOUT
Aims and scope
About the journal
Editorial board
Editorial team
Open access
News
Contact us
BROWSE ARTICLES
All issues
Current issue
All articles
Featured articles
Most viewed articles
Most cited articles
Metrics
EDITORIAL POLICY
Publication ethics and malpractice statement
FOR CONTRIBUTORS
Submission guidelines
Style sheet
E-submission
News
ABOUT
Aims and scope
About the journal
Editorial board
Editorial team
Open access
News
Contact us
BROWSE ARTICLES
All issues
Current issue
All articles
Featured articles
Most viewed articles
Most cited articles
Metrics
EDITORIAL POLICY
Publication ethics and malpractice statement
FOR CONTRIBUTORS
Submission guidelines
Style sheet
E-submission
Page Path
HOME
Search
commemoration
WHERE t1.sid in(parameter_dbtbl_keyword '%commemoration%') and t1.xml_status <> 99
1
results for
"commemoration"
Filter
Filter
Article category
Article (1)
Keywords
HangÅi sinp’yÅn
(1)
SunÅibi
(1)
Tongguk sinsok samgang haengsildo
(1)
Ŭich’ong
(Tomb of the Seven Hundred Righteous Martyrs) (1)
Cho HÅn (1)
More +
Publication year
2025 (1)
Authors
Hyok key Song (1)
Keywords
HangÅi sinp’yÅn
(1)
SunÅibi
(1)
Tongguk sinsok samgang haengsildo
(1)
Ŭich’ong
(Tomb of the Seven Hundred Righteous Martyrs) (1)
Cho HÅn (1)
collective memory (1)
commemoration (1)
Imjin War (1)
righteous armies (
ÅibyÅng
) (1)
stele inscriptions (1)
war memory (1)
Cancel
Close
authors
Hyok key Song (1)
Cancel
Close
Publication Year
2025 (1)
Cancel
Close
Funded articles
Cancel
Close
"commemoration"
Article
Ŭich’ong
義塚: Shaping the Memory of War
Hyok key Song
J Sinogr Philol Leg
2025;1(4):106-130.
Published online December 31, 2025
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.63563/jspl.2025.028
Abstract
PDF
This article examines the formation, transformation, and institutionalization of war memory in ChosÅn Korea through the case of Cho HÅn (1544–1592) and the Tomb of the Seven Hundred Righteous Martyrs (
Ŭich’ong
義塚). While contemporary evaluations of Cho HÅn æœæ†², the righteous armies (
ŬibyÅng
義兵), and their actions during the Imjin War (1592–1598) were far from uniform, the earliest official account—Yun KÅn-su å°¹æ ¹å£½â€™s inscription on the
SunÅibi
殉義碑 (1603)—selected and reorganized particular memories while excluding others. By framing Cho HÅn and the seven hundred martyrs as embodiments of
chÅlÅi
節義 (resolute loyalty unto death), this inscription exerted decisive influence on the subsequent shaping of collective memory. Rather than adjudicating historical accuracy or military effectiveness, this study focuses on how divergent memories were transformed into authoritative records through commemorative media such as steles, ritual sites, didactic compilations, and state-sponsored rites. Special attention is given to An Pang-jun 安邦俊’s
HangÅi sinp’yÅn
抗義新編 and its illustrated woodblock prints, as well as the compilation of the
Tongguk sinsok samgang haengsildo
æ±åœ‹æ–°çºŒä¸‰ç¶±è¡Œå¯¦åœ– under King Kwanghaegun 光海å›, which visually and textually codified righteous martyrdom as a moral foundation for postwar reconstruction. The article further traces how these selectively reconstructed memories were reinforced through honorific commendations, local ritual practices, and repeated acts of royal recognition, extending into the modern period through state-led heritage restoration. By situating the Ŭich’ong and the SunÅibi within a long continuum of remembrance, this study argues that war memory in ChosÅn Korea was neither static nor consensual but actively produced through processes of selection, exclusion, and reconfiguration. Monuments and records functioned not merely as reflections of the past but as instruments that shaped shared perceptions of loyalty, righteousness, and national reconstruction. In highlighting these dynamics, the article underscores the critical role of commemorative practices in transforming fragmented experiences of war into enduring collective memory.
139
View
12
Download
First
Prev
Page
of 1
Next
Last
TOP