Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T03:20:35.517Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The marriage market for immigrant families in Chosŏn Korea after the Imjin War: women, integration, and cultural capital

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2021

Sangwoo Han*
Affiliation:
Ajou University, Department of History, Dasan Hall 206, World cup-ro, Yeongtong-gu, Suwon-si, Gyeonggi-do, South Korea
*
*Corresponding author. Email: [email protected]

Abstract

Challenging the myth of premodern Korea as ethnically homogenous, this study focuses on immigrant marriages in Chosŏn Korea following Japanese invasions (Imjin War, 1592–1598). By examining household registers and genealogies, I investigate the status of women who married into the families of Japanese and Ming Chinese immigrants and the social consequences of such marriages. The results unexpectedly indicate that immigrant families rarely intermarried, preferring integration with local families. As a means of acquiring social and cultural capital, Korean brides from elite families were vital to the success of immigrant families in forming social networks and in producing candidates for the civil service examinations, with failure to obtain such a bride proving a potential long-term obstacle to social advancement. There is a noticeable difference between families of Chinese and Japanese origin in this context due to the preference shown by Korean families for the descendants of Ming generals over Japanese defectors. Contributing to a growing number of studies that question whether the Korean family was fully “Confucianized” in the seventeenth century with a consequent decline in the status of women, this study argues that women possessed social and cultural capital and held particular value for immigrant families.

Type
Individual Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

Korean words in this paper are romanized according to the McCune-Reischauer system.

References

References

Taegu household registers 大邱戶籍大帳. Accessed via the webpage of Academy of East Asian Studies, Sungkyunkwan University at https://skb.skku.edu/ddmh/db/list03.do.Google Scholar
Ch'oe, Myŏngkil 崔鳴吉. Chich'ŏnchip 遲川集. Collection of Kyujanggak Institute for Korean Studies (call number: 奎6552).Google Scholar
Chŏlgang Changssi sepo 浙江張氏世譜 (1981). Collection of Chosun University Library (call number: 929.1-ㅈ164절).Google Scholar
Chŏlgang kasŭng 浙江家乘 (1862). Collections of the Chŏlgang Shissi Association.Google Scholar
Chŏlgang Shissi chokpo 浙江施氏族譜 (1917). Collections of the Chŏlgang Shissi Association.Google Scholar
Chŏlgang Shissi sepo 浙江施氏世譜 (1947). Collections of the Chŏlgang Shissi Association.Google Scholar
Chŏlgang Sŏssi sepo 浙江施氏世譜 (1978). Collection of the National Library of Korea (call number: 古2518-33-66).Google Scholar
Chŏlgang Shissi chokpo 浙江施氏族譜 (2016). Collections of the Chŏlgang Shissi Association.Google Scholar
Chŏllabukto kŭmsŏngmun taegye 全羅北道金石文大系 2 (2008)Google Scholar
Kim Ch'ungsŏn 金忠善, Mohadang munchip 暮夏堂文集. Collection of the National Library of Korea (call number: 古3648-10-357).Google Scholar
Kimhae Kimssi Hyanghwakong p'apo 金海金氏向化公派譜 (1997). Personal Collection of Chin, Pyŏngyong.Google Scholar
Nongsŏ Yissi sepo 隴西李氏世譜 (1974). Collection of the National Library of Korea (call number: 古2518-62-442).Google Scholar
P'ung, Hakcho 馮學祖. Hwangjo yumin segye wŏllyu po 皇朝遺民世系源流譜.Google Scholar
Sangkok Massi sepo 上谷麻氏世譜 (2004). Personal Collection of Chin, Pyŏngyong.Google Scholar
Sasŏng Kimhae Kimssi sepo 賜姓金海金氏世譜 (1909). Collection of the National Library of Korea (call number: 古2518-10-1050).Google Scholar
Sasŏng Kimhae Kimssi sepo 賜姓金海金氏世譜 (2002). Personal Collection of Chin, Pyŏngyong.Google Scholar
Sŏng, Taechung 成大中. Ch'ŏngsŏngjapki 靑城雜記. (http://db.itkc.or.kr/).Google Scholar
The Annals of the Chosŏn Dynasty 朝鮮王朝實錄.Google Scholar
The Daily Records of Royal Secretaria 承政院日記.Google Scholar
The Records of the Border Defense Council 備邊司謄錄.Google Scholar
Turŭng Tussi sepo 杜陵杜氏世譜 (1999). Personal Collection of Chin, Pyŏngyong.Google Scholar
Yŏngyang Ch'ŏnssi chokpo 穎陽千氏族譜 (1815). Collection of the National Library of Korea (call number: 古2518-81-4).Google Scholar
Agnew, Christopher (2009). “Migrants and Mutineers: The Rebellion of Kong Youde and Seventeenth-Century Northeast Asia.” Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 52:3, pp. 505–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bohnet, Adam (2011). “Ruling Ideology and Marginal Subjects: Ming Loyalism and Foreign Lineages in Late Chosun Korea.” Journal of Early Modern History 15:6, pp. 477505.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bohnet, Adam (2012). “From Liaodongese Refugee to Ming Loyalist: The Historiography of the Sanggok Ma, a Ming Migrant Descent Group in Late Joseon Korea.” The Review of Korean Studies 15:1, pp. 109–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bohnet, Adam. Turning toward Edification: Foreigners in Chosŏn Korea. University of Hawai‘i Press (2020).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre (1986). “The Forms of Capital.” In Handbook of Theory and Research for the Sociology of Education, ed. Richardson, J. G., pp. 241–58. New York: Greenwood.Google Scholar
Che, Changmyŏng (2007). “Imchinwaelan siki hangwae ŭi yuch'i wa hwalyong.” Yŏksawa sekye 32, pp. 95122.Google Scholar
Chin, Pyŏngyong (2015). “Tusach'ung ŭi saengae wa momyŏngchae e taehan yŏksachŏk koch'al.” Daegusahak 119, pp. 177210.Google Scholar
Ch'oe, Hokyun (2000). “Imjin⋅Chŏngyu waeran gi inmyŏng p'ihae e taehan kyeryang jŏk yŏn'gu.” Kuksagwan nonch'ong 89, pp. 3555.Google Scholar
Clements, Rebekah (2020). “Post-Imjin Relations Between Chosŏn Captives and the Satsuma Domain.” Presented at the monthly research seminar of the ERC project “Aftermath of the East Asian War of 1592–1598” at the Autonomous University of Barcelona on 15 January 2020.Google Scholar
Daegu Gyeongbuk Development Institute (2012) Hanil p'yŏnghwa ŭi kakyo Kim ch'ungsŏn kwa Ulok-li e kwanhan yŏnku. Taegu.Google Scholar
Deuchler, Martina (1992). The Confucian Transformation of Korea: A Study of Society and Ideology. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Asia Center.Google Scholar
Duncan, John B. (2000). “Hyanghwain; Migration and Assimilation in Choson Korea.” Acta Koreana 3, pp. 99113.Google Scholar
Elman, Benjamin A. (1991). “Political, Social, and Cultural Reproduction via Civil Service Examinations in Late Imperial China.” Journal of Asian Studies 50, pp. 728.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fujiwara, Takao (2014). “Sayak'a (Kim ch'ungsŏn) ŭi t'uhang yoin kwa siki ŭi yunsaek munche.” Chosŏnsa yŏnku 23, pp. 83116.Google Scholar
Han, Kyung-Koo (2007). “The Archaeology of the Ethnically Homogeneous Nation-State and Multiculturalism in Korea.” Korea Journal 47:4, pp. 831.Google Scholar
Han, Sangwoo (2020a). “The Historical Background of the Popularity of Genealogies in Korea.” Journal of Family History 45:4, pp. 498516.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Han, Sangu (2020b). “Imjin waeran p'iroin gwa tohwanin dŭrŭi hŭnjŏk ŭl ch'ajasŏ - 17segi ch'o hojŏk ŭrobut'ŏ.” Taetongmunhwa yŏnku 110, pp. 173200.Google Scholar
Han, Sangwoo and Lee, Sangkuk (2013). “The Influences of Kinship and Marriage Networks on Upwardly Mobile Yangban Elite in Joseon Korea.” Presented at the 2013 annual meeting of the Social Science History Association.Google Scholar
Han, Sŭnghyŏn (2018a). “19seki chŏnpanki myŏng yumin ŭi chŏngch'esŏng kwa kupyŏl chiski.” Yŏksa kyoyuk 146, pp. 325–65.Google Scholar
Han, Sŭnghyŏn (2018b). “Ming Loyalist Families and the Changing Meanings of Chojong'am in Early Nineteenth-Century Chosŏn.” Acta Koreana 21:1, pp. 169203.Google Scholar
Im, Haksŏng (2008). “17seki chŏnpan hochŏk chalyo lŭl t'onghae pon kwihwa yain ŭi Chosŏn esŏŭi saenghwal yangsang: Ulsan hochŏk (1609) kwa Haenam hochŏk (1639) ŭi salye punsŏk.” Komunsŏyŏnku 33, pp. 95128.Google Scholar
Kurahashi, Keiko (2011). Chūgoku dentō shakai no erīto-tachi: Bunka-teki sai seisan to kaisō shakai no dainamizumu. Fūkyōsha 風響社.Google Scholar
Kim, Haksu (2016). “Han Ilbonin ŭi Chosŏn chŏngch'ak kwa sahoe munhwa jŏk jŏkŭng yangsang – hangwaejang Sayaga (Kim Ch'ungsŏn, 1571–1672) chiban ŭl chungshimŭro.” Taedong hanmunhak 46, pp. 139–94.Google Scholar
Kim, Kuentae and Park, Hyunjoon (2019). “The Roles of Mothers in Social Mobility in Joseon, Korea.” Presented at the 2019 annual meeting of the Social Science History Association.Google Scholar
Kim, Kuentae, Park, Hyunjoon and Jo, Hyejeong (2013). “Tracking Individuals and Households: Longitudinal Features of Danseong Household Register Data.” The History of the Family 18:4, pp. 378–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kim, Kyŏngran (2003). “Chosŏn huki hochŏk taechang ŭi yŏsŏng hoch'ing kyuchŏng kwa sŏngkyŏk – Tansŏng hochŏk ŭl chungsimŭlo.” Yŏksawa hyŏnsil 48, pp. 191219.Google Scholar
Kim, Kyungran (2018). “Female Heads of Households Registered in Korea's Census Registers Between the Seventeenth and Nineteenth Centuries and Their Historical Significance.” International Journal of Korean History 23:2, pp. 167–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kim, Sun Joo (2019). “My own flesh and blood: stratified parental compassion and law in Korean slavery.Social History 44:1, pp. 125.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kim, Sŏnki (2011). “Hangwae Kim Ch'ungsŏn (Sayaka) ŭi moha sasang yŏnku.” Ph.D. diss., Pusan National University.Google Scholar
Kim, Sut'ae (1981). “Koryŏ pon'gwan chedo ŭi sŏngnip.” Chindanhakpo 52, pp. 4164.Google Scholar
Kim, Yongu (2019). “The Occurrence and Acceptance of Hangwaes during the Imjin War.” M.A. diss., Pusan National University.Google Scholar
Kim, Youngmin, and Pettid, Michael J., eds. (2011). Women and Confucianism in Choson Korea: New Perspectives. Suny Press.Google Scholar
Kwŏn, Oyŏng (2007). “Hwang Yunsŏk ŭi hangmun saenghwal kwa sasang kyŏnghyang.” Chosŏn chishigin ŭi saenghwalsa. Han'guk'ak chungang yŏn'guwŏn, pp. 171234.Google Scholar
Ledyard, Gari (1988). “Confucianism and War: The Korean Security Crisis of 1598.” Journal of Korean Studies 6:1, pp. 81119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee, Donggue (2017). “Chosŏn huki yuip oeintŭl ŭi sinpun punhwa wa sinpun sŭngkye ŭisik.” Presented at the Collaborative Conference for Computerizing Household Registers by the project teams of Sungkyunkwan University and Ulsan National University, September 15, 2017 in Seoul, Korea.Google Scholar
Lee, Donggue and Han, Sangwoo (2020) “Families in the Household Registers of Seventeenth-Century Korea: Capital, Urban and Rural Areas”, European Journal of Korean Studies 20:1, pp. 134.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee, Yean-Ju, Seol, Dong-Hoon and Cho, Sung-Nam (2006). “International Marriages in South Korea: The Significance of Nationality and Ethnicity.” Journal of Population Research 23:2, pp. 165–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maske, Andrew (1994). “The Continental Origins of Takatori Ware: The Introduction of Korean Potters and Technology to Japan through the Invasions of 1592–1598.” Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan 9, pp. 4361.Google Scholar
Min, Tŏkki (2013) “Imjin waeran chung ŭi napch'i doen Chosŏnin munje.” Imjin lan yŏn'gu ch'ongsŏ: Imjin 7chugap kinyŏm. Seoul, Imjin lan chŏngshin munhwa sŏnyanghoe, pp. 276300.Google Scholar
Mun, Sukcha (2019). “Kyunbun sangsogŭi kyunyŏl, kŭ ihuPunjaegie nat'anan Chosŏn chunggi sangsok munhwawa kajok chedo, Seoul: Saemulgyŏl, pp. 119160Google Scholar
Nahapiet, Janine and Ghoshal, Sumantra (1998). “Social Capital, Intellectual Capital, and the Organizational Advantage.” Academy of Management Review 23:2, pp. 242–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Naitō, Shunpo (1976). Bunroku〮Keichō no eki ni okeru hiryonin no kenkyū. Tōkyō Daigaku Shuppankai.Google Scholar
No, Hyekyŏng (2009). “Yŏngchotae hwangchoin taehan.” Tongyang kochŏn yŏnku 37, pp. 127–59.Google Scholar
Pak, Hyŏnkyu (2019). “Uwi Massi myochisŏk kwa Sangkok Massi chokpo koch'al.” Chungkuk inmun kwahak 71, pp. 353–71.Google Scholar
Palais, James B (1998). “Slave Society.” Views on Korean Social History, pp. 2347.Google Scholar
Park, Hyunjoon and Lee, Sangkuk (2008). “A Survey of Data Sources for Studies of Family and Population in Korean History.” The History of the Family 13:3, pp. 258–67.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peterson, Mark A (1996). Korean Adoption and Inheritance: Case Studies in the Creation of a Classic Confucian Society. New York: Cornell University – Cornell East Asia Series 80.Google Scholar
Raymo, James M. and Park, Hyunjoon (2018). “Marriage Trends in Korea: Changing Composition of the Domestic Marriage Market and Growth in International Marriage.” In the annual meeting of the Population Association of America, Denver.Google Scholar
Rhee, Young-hoon and Yang, Donghyu (2010). “Korean Nobi and American Black Slavery: An Essay in Comparison.” Millennial Asia 1:1, pp. 539.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robinson, Kenneth R (2008). “The Chinese Ancestors in a Korean Descent Group's Genealogies.” Journal of Korean Studies 13:1, pp. 89114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Son, Pyŏngkyu (2004). “Inkusa chŏk ch'ŭkmyŏn esŏ pon hochŏk kwa chokpo ŭi chalyo chŏk sŏngkyŏk – 17-19seki Kyŏngsang to Tansŏng hyŏn ŭi hochŏk taechang kwa Hapch'ŏn Yissika ŭi chokpo.” Taetongmunhwa yŏnku 46, pp. 79109.Google Scholar
Son, Pyŏngkyu (2007). Hochŏk: 1606-1923 hogu kirok ŭro pon Chosŏn munhwasa. Seoul: Hyumŏnisŭtŭ.Google Scholar
Son, Pyŏngkyu (2014). “18, 19seki Tansŏng hochŏk kachok pokwŏn ŭl t'onghan honin, ch'ulsan ŭi kyech'ŭngsŏng punsŏk.” Hankukmunhwa 67, pp. 3559.Google Scholar
Son, Pyŏngkyu (2015). “20segi ch'o Han'gugŭi chokpo p'yŏnch'an'gwa ‘tongjok chiptan’ kusang - Kyŏngsangdo Tansŏng chiyŏk Andong Kwŏnssi myŏt kagyeŭi sarye.” Taedongmunhwa yŏn'gu 91, pp. 6592.Google Scholar
Song, Yangsŏp (2005). “19segi yuhak ch'ŭng ŭi chŭngga yangsang.” Yŏksawa hyŏnshil 55, pp. 323–45.Google Scholar
Swope, Kenneth M. (2004). “A Few Good Men: The Li Family and China's Northern Frontier in the Late Ming.” Ming Studies 1, pp. 3481.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swope, Kenneth M. (2006). “Beyond Turtleboats: Siege Accounts from Hideyoshi's Second Invasion of Korea, 1597–1598.” Sungkyun Journal of East Asian Studies 6:2, pp. 177206.Google Scholar
Swope, Kenneth M. (2014). The Military Collapse of China's Ming Dynasty, 1618–44. New York: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Takao, Fujiwara (2016). “Sayak'a yŏn'gu ŭi hoego wa chŏnmang.” Chosŏnsa yŏn'gu 25, pp. 59112.Google Scholar
U, Kyŏngsŏp (2015). “Chosŏn huki taemyŏng yumin ŭi mangpokchiŭi – Chenam Wangssi kamun ŭi salye.” Hankukhak yŏnku 36, pp. 179206.Google Scholar
Wagner, Edward W. (1974). “The Ladder of Success in Yi Dynasty Korea.” Occasional Papers on Korea, pp. 18.Google Scholar
Yang, Chao, Kurahashi, Setsuya, Kurahashi, Keiko, Ono, Isao and Terano, Takao (2009). “Agent-Based Simulation on Women's Role in a Family Line on Civil Service Examination in Chinese History.” Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation 12:2, pp. 15.Google Scholar
Yang, Hŭngsuk (2016a). “Ulsanpu hochŏktaechang ŭl t'onghae pon chosŏn huki hangwae ŭi chonchae wa chŏngch'ak.” Hanil kwankyesa yŏnku 54, pp. 229–61.Google Scholar
Yang, Hŭngsuk (2016b). “Chosŏn huki hangwae ŭi chonchae yangsang kwa chŏngch'ak – Taeku-si Ulok-ri Kim Ch'ungsŏn ŭi huson salye lŭl chungsimŭlo.” Daegu Sahak 122, pp. 4179.Google Scholar
Yi, Chunku (1997). Chosŏn hugi shinbun chikyŏk pyŏndong yŏn'gu. Seoul: Ilchogak.Google Scholar
Yi, Sŏngmu (1994). Hankuk ŭi kwakŏ cheto. Seoul: Chipmuntang.Google Scholar
Yu, Ch'unran (1997). Myŏng, Ch'ŏng kyoch'eki hanchok ŭi Chosŏn imin. Ph.D. diss., Academy of Korean Studies.Google Scholar
Zhu, Mei, Son, Byunggiu and Seo, Byungtae (2015). “Family Strategy of Economic Inequality among Brothers in Korean Rural Society, 1690–1795.” The History of the Family 20:2, pp. 291307.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taegu household registers 大邱戶籍大帳. Accessed via the webpage of Academy of East Asian Studies, Sungkyunkwan University at https://skb.skku.edu/ddmh/db/list03.do.Google Scholar
Ch'oe, Myŏngkil 崔鳴吉. Chich'ŏnchip 遲川集. Collection of Kyujanggak Institute for Korean Studies (call number: 奎6552).Google Scholar
Chŏlgang Changssi sepo 浙江張氏世譜 (1981). Collection of Chosun University Library (call number: 929.1-ㅈ164절).Google Scholar
Chŏlgang kasŭng 浙江家乘 (1862). Collections of the Chŏlgang Shissi Association.Google Scholar
Chŏlgang Shissi chokpo 浙江施氏族譜 (1917). Collections of the Chŏlgang Shissi Association.Google Scholar
Chŏlgang Shissi sepo 浙江施氏世譜 (1947). Collections of the Chŏlgang Shissi Association.Google Scholar
Chŏlgang Sŏssi sepo 浙江施氏世譜 (1978). Collection of the National Library of Korea (call number: 古2518-33-66).Google Scholar
Chŏlgang Shissi chokpo 浙江施氏族譜 (2016). Collections of the Chŏlgang Shissi Association.Google Scholar
Chŏllabukto kŭmsŏngmun taegye 全羅北道金石文大系 2 (2008)Google Scholar
Kim Ch'ungsŏn 金忠善, Mohadang munchip 暮夏堂文集. Collection of the National Library of Korea (call number: 古3648-10-357).Google Scholar
Kimhae Kimssi Hyanghwakong p'apo 金海金氏向化公派譜 (1997). Personal Collection of Chin, Pyŏngyong.Google Scholar
Nongsŏ Yissi sepo 隴西李氏世譜 (1974). Collection of the National Library of Korea (call number: 古2518-62-442).Google Scholar
P'ung, Hakcho 馮學祖. Hwangjo yumin segye wŏllyu po 皇朝遺民世系源流譜.Google Scholar
Sangkok Massi sepo 上谷麻氏世譜 (2004). Personal Collection of Chin, Pyŏngyong.Google Scholar
Sasŏng Kimhae Kimssi sepo 賜姓金海金氏世譜 (1909). Collection of the National Library of Korea (call number: 古2518-10-1050).Google Scholar
Sasŏng Kimhae Kimssi sepo 賜姓金海金氏世譜 (2002). Personal Collection of Chin, Pyŏngyong.Google Scholar
Sŏng, Taechung 成大中. Ch'ŏngsŏngjapki 靑城雜記. (http://db.itkc.or.kr/).Google Scholar
The Annals of the Chosŏn Dynasty 朝鮮王朝實錄.Google Scholar
The Daily Records of Royal Secretaria 承政院日記.Google Scholar
The Records of the Border Defense Council 備邊司謄錄.Google Scholar
Turŭng Tussi sepo 杜陵杜氏世譜 (1999). Personal Collection of Chin, Pyŏngyong.Google Scholar
Yŏngyang Ch'ŏnssi chokpo 穎陽千氏族譜 (1815). Collection of the National Library of Korea (call number: 古2518-81-4).Google Scholar
Agnew, Christopher (2009). “Migrants and Mutineers: The Rebellion of Kong Youde and Seventeenth-Century Northeast Asia.” Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 52:3, pp. 505–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bohnet, Adam (2011). “Ruling Ideology and Marginal Subjects: Ming Loyalism and Foreign Lineages in Late Chosun Korea.” Journal of Early Modern History 15:6, pp. 477505.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bohnet, Adam (2012). “From Liaodongese Refugee to Ming Loyalist: The Historiography of the Sanggok Ma, a Ming Migrant Descent Group in Late Joseon Korea.” The Review of Korean Studies 15:1, pp. 109–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bohnet, Adam. Turning toward Edification: Foreigners in Chosŏn Korea. University of Hawai‘i Press (2020).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre (1986). “The Forms of Capital.” In Handbook of Theory and Research for the Sociology of Education, ed. Richardson, J. G., pp. 241–58. New York: Greenwood.Google Scholar
Che, Changmyŏng (2007). “Imchinwaelan siki hangwae ŭi yuch'i wa hwalyong.” Yŏksawa sekye 32, pp. 95122.Google Scholar
Chin, Pyŏngyong (2015). “Tusach'ung ŭi saengae wa momyŏngchae e taehan yŏksachŏk koch'al.” Daegusahak 119, pp. 177210.Google Scholar
Ch'oe, Hokyun (2000). “Imjin⋅Chŏngyu waeran gi inmyŏng p'ihae e taehan kyeryang jŏk yŏn'gu.” Kuksagwan nonch'ong 89, pp. 3555.Google Scholar
Clements, Rebekah (2020). “Post-Imjin Relations Between Chosŏn Captives and the Satsuma Domain.” Presented at the monthly research seminar of the ERC project “Aftermath of the East Asian War of 1592–1598” at the Autonomous University of Barcelona on 15 January 2020.Google Scholar
Daegu Gyeongbuk Development Institute (2012) Hanil p'yŏnghwa ŭi kakyo Kim ch'ungsŏn kwa Ulok-li e kwanhan yŏnku. Taegu.Google Scholar
Deuchler, Martina (1992). The Confucian Transformation of Korea: A Study of Society and Ideology. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Asia Center.Google Scholar
Duncan, John B. (2000). “Hyanghwain; Migration and Assimilation in Choson Korea.” Acta Koreana 3, pp. 99113.Google Scholar
Elman, Benjamin A. (1991). “Political, Social, and Cultural Reproduction via Civil Service Examinations in Late Imperial China.” Journal of Asian Studies 50, pp. 728.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fujiwara, Takao (2014). “Sayak'a (Kim ch'ungsŏn) ŭi t'uhang yoin kwa siki ŭi yunsaek munche.” Chosŏnsa yŏnku 23, pp. 83116.Google Scholar
Han, Kyung-Koo (2007). “The Archaeology of the Ethnically Homogeneous Nation-State and Multiculturalism in Korea.” Korea Journal 47:4, pp. 831.Google Scholar
Han, Sangwoo (2020a). “The Historical Background of the Popularity of Genealogies in Korea.” Journal of Family History 45:4, pp. 498516.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Han, Sangu (2020b). “Imjin waeran p'iroin gwa tohwanin dŭrŭi hŭnjŏk ŭl ch'ajasŏ - 17segi ch'o hojŏk ŭrobut'ŏ.” Taetongmunhwa yŏnku 110, pp. 173200.Google Scholar
Han, Sangwoo and Lee, Sangkuk (2013). “The Influences of Kinship and Marriage Networks on Upwardly Mobile Yangban Elite in Joseon Korea.” Presented at the 2013 annual meeting of the Social Science History Association.Google Scholar
Han, Sŭnghyŏn (2018a). “19seki chŏnpanki myŏng yumin ŭi chŏngch'esŏng kwa kupyŏl chiski.” Yŏksa kyoyuk 146, pp. 325–65.Google Scholar
Han, Sŭnghyŏn (2018b). “Ming Loyalist Families and the Changing Meanings of Chojong'am in Early Nineteenth-Century Chosŏn.” Acta Koreana 21:1, pp. 169203.Google Scholar
Im, Haksŏng (2008). “17seki chŏnpan hochŏk chalyo lŭl t'onghae pon kwihwa yain ŭi Chosŏn esŏŭi saenghwal yangsang: Ulsan hochŏk (1609) kwa Haenam hochŏk (1639) ŭi salye punsŏk.” Komunsŏyŏnku 33, pp. 95128.Google Scholar
Kurahashi, Keiko (2011). Chūgoku dentō shakai no erīto-tachi: Bunka-teki sai seisan to kaisō shakai no dainamizumu. Fūkyōsha 風響社.Google Scholar
Kim, Haksu (2016). “Han Ilbonin ŭi Chosŏn chŏngch'ak kwa sahoe munhwa jŏk jŏkŭng yangsang – hangwaejang Sayaga (Kim Ch'ungsŏn, 1571–1672) chiban ŭl chungshimŭro.” Taedong hanmunhak 46, pp. 139–94.Google Scholar
Kim, Kuentae and Park, Hyunjoon (2019). “The Roles of Mothers in Social Mobility in Joseon, Korea.” Presented at the 2019 annual meeting of the Social Science History Association.Google Scholar
Kim, Kuentae, Park, Hyunjoon and Jo, Hyejeong (2013). “Tracking Individuals and Households: Longitudinal Features of Danseong Household Register Data.” The History of the Family 18:4, pp. 378–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kim, Kyŏngran (2003). “Chosŏn huki hochŏk taechang ŭi yŏsŏng hoch'ing kyuchŏng kwa sŏngkyŏk – Tansŏng hochŏk ŭl chungsimŭlo.” Yŏksawa hyŏnsil 48, pp. 191219.Google Scholar
Kim, Kyungran (2018). “Female Heads of Households Registered in Korea's Census Registers Between the Seventeenth and Nineteenth Centuries and Their Historical Significance.” International Journal of Korean History 23:2, pp. 167–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kim, Sun Joo (2019). “My own flesh and blood: stratified parental compassion and law in Korean slavery.Social History 44:1, pp. 125.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kim, Sŏnki (2011). “Hangwae Kim Ch'ungsŏn (Sayaka) ŭi moha sasang yŏnku.” Ph.D. diss., Pusan National University.Google Scholar
Kim, Sut'ae (1981). “Koryŏ pon'gwan chedo ŭi sŏngnip.” Chindanhakpo 52, pp. 4164.Google Scholar
Kim, Yongu (2019). “The Occurrence and Acceptance of Hangwaes during the Imjin War.” M.A. diss., Pusan National University.Google Scholar
Kim, Youngmin, and Pettid, Michael J., eds. (2011). Women and Confucianism in Choson Korea: New Perspectives. Suny Press.Google Scholar
Kwŏn, Oyŏng (2007). “Hwang Yunsŏk ŭi hangmun saenghwal kwa sasang kyŏnghyang.” Chosŏn chishigin ŭi saenghwalsa. Han'guk'ak chungang yŏn'guwŏn, pp. 171234.Google Scholar
Ledyard, Gari (1988). “Confucianism and War: The Korean Security Crisis of 1598.” Journal of Korean Studies 6:1, pp. 81119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee, Donggue (2017). “Chosŏn huki yuip oeintŭl ŭi sinpun punhwa wa sinpun sŭngkye ŭisik.” Presented at the Collaborative Conference for Computerizing Household Registers by the project teams of Sungkyunkwan University and Ulsan National University, September 15, 2017 in Seoul, Korea.Google Scholar
Lee, Donggue and Han, Sangwoo (2020) “Families in the Household Registers of Seventeenth-Century Korea: Capital, Urban and Rural Areas”, European Journal of Korean Studies 20:1, pp. 134.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee, Yean-Ju, Seol, Dong-Hoon and Cho, Sung-Nam (2006). “International Marriages in South Korea: The Significance of Nationality and Ethnicity.” Journal of Population Research 23:2, pp. 165–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maske, Andrew (1994). “The Continental Origins of Takatori Ware: The Introduction of Korean Potters and Technology to Japan through the Invasions of 1592–1598.” Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan 9, pp. 4361.Google Scholar
Min, Tŏkki (2013) “Imjin waeran chung ŭi napch'i doen Chosŏnin munje.” Imjin lan yŏn'gu ch'ongsŏ: Imjin 7chugap kinyŏm. Seoul, Imjin lan chŏngshin munhwa sŏnyanghoe, pp. 276300.Google Scholar
Mun, Sukcha (2019). “Kyunbun sangsogŭi kyunyŏl, kŭ ihuPunjaegie nat'anan Chosŏn chunggi sangsok munhwawa kajok chedo, Seoul: Saemulgyŏl, pp. 119160Google Scholar
Nahapiet, Janine and Ghoshal, Sumantra (1998). “Social Capital, Intellectual Capital, and the Organizational Advantage.” Academy of Management Review 23:2, pp. 242–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Naitō, Shunpo (1976). Bunroku〮Keichō no eki ni okeru hiryonin no kenkyū. Tōkyō Daigaku Shuppankai.Google Scholar
No, Hyekyŏng (2009). “Yŏngchotae hwangchoin taehan.” Tongyang kochŏn yŏnku 37, pp. 127–59.Google Scholar
Pak, Hyŏnkyu (2019). “Uwi Massi myochisŏk kwa Sangkok Massi chokpo koch'al.” Chungkuk inmun kwahak 71, pp. 353–71.Google Scholar
Palais, James B (1998). “Slave Society.” Views on Korean Social History, pp. 2347.Google Scholar
Park, Hyunjoon and Lee, Sangkuk (2008). “A Survey of Data Sources for Studies of Family and Population in Korean History.” The History of the Family 13:3, pp. 258–67.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peterson, Mark A (1996). Korean Adoption and Inheritance: Case Studies in the Creation of a Classic Confucian Society. New York: Cornell University – Cornell East Asia Series 80.Google Scholar
Raymo, James M. and Park, Hyunjoon (2018). “Marriage Trends in Korea: Changing Composition of the Domestic Marriage Market and Growth in International Marriage.” In the annual meeting of the Population Association of America, Denver.Google Scholar
Rhee, Young-hoon and Yang, Donghyu (2010). “Korean Nobi and American Black Slavery: An Essay in Comparison.” Millennial Asia 1:1, pp. 539.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robinson, Kenneth R (2008). “The Chinese Ancestors in a Korean Descent Group's Genealogies.” Journal of Korean Studies 13:1, pp. 89114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Son, Pyŏngkyu (2004). “Inkusa chŏk ch'ŭkmyŏn esŏ pon hochŏk kwa chokpo ŭi chalyo chŏk sŏngkyŏk – 17-19seki Kyŏngsang to Tansŏng hyŏn ŭi hochŏk taechang kwa Hapch'ŏn Yissika ŭi chokpo.” Taetongmunhwa yŏnku 46, pp. 79109.Google Scholar
Son, Pyŏngkyu (2007). Hochŏk: 1606-1923 hogu kirok ŭro pon Chosŏn munhwasa. Seoul: Hyumŏnisŭtŭ.Google Scholar
Son, Pyŏngkyu (2014). “18, 19seki Tansŏng hochŏk kachok pokwŏn ŭl t'onghan honin, ch'ulsan ŭi kyech'ŭngsŏng punsŏk.” Hankukmunhwa 67, pp. 3559.Google Scholar
Son, Pyŏngkyu (2015). “20segi ch'o Han'gugŭi chokpo p'yŏnch'an'gwa ‘tongjok chiptan’ kusang - Kyŏngsangdo Tansŏng chiyŏk Andong Kwŏnssi myŏt kagyeŭi sarye.” Taedongmunhwa yŏn'gu 91, pp. 6592.Google Scholar
Song, Yangsŏp (2005). “19segi yuhak ch'ŭng ŭi chŭngga yangsang.” Yŏksawa hyŏnshil 55, pp. 323–45.Google Scholar
Swope, Kenneth M. (2004). “A Few Good Men: The Li Family and China's Northern Frontier in the Late Ming.” Ming Studies 1, pp. 3481.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swope, Kenneth M. (2006). “Beyond Turtleboats: Siege Accounts from Hideyoshi's Second Invasion of Korea, 1597–1598.” Sungkyun Journal of East Asian Studies 6:2, pp. 177206.Google Scholar
Swope, Kenneth M. (2014). The Military Collapse of China's Ming Dynasty, 1618–44. New York: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Takao, Fujiwara (2016). “Sayak'a yŏn'gu ŭi hoego wa chŏnmang.” Chosŏnsa yŏn'gu 25, pp. 59112.Google Scholar
U, Kyŏngsŏp (2015). “Chosŏn huki taemyŏng yumin ŭi mangpokchiŭi – Chenam Wangssi kamun ŭi salye.” Hankukhak yŏnku 36, pp. 179206.Google Scholar
Wagner, Edward W. (1974). “The Ladder of Success in Yi Dynasty Korea.” Occasional Papers on Korea, pp. 18.Google Scholar
Yang, Chao, Kurahashi, Setsuya, Kurahashi, Keiko, Ono, Isao and Terano, Takao (2009). “Agent-Based Simulation on Women's Role in a Family Line on Civil Service Examination in Chinese History.” Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation 12:2, pp. 15.Google Scholar
Yang, Hŭngsuk (2016a). “Ulsanpu hochŏktaechang ŭl t'onghae pon chosŏn huki hangwae ŭi chonchae wa chŏngch'ak.” Hanil kwankyesa yŏnku 54, pp. 229–61.Google Scholar
Yang, Hŭngsuk (2016b). “Chosŏn huki hangwae ŭi chonchae yangsang kwa chŏngch'ak – Taeku-si Ulok-ri Kim Ch'ungsŏn ŭi huson salye lŭl chungsimŭlo.” Daegu Sahak 122, pp. 4179.Google Scholar
Yi, Chunku (1997). Chosŏn hugi shinbun chikyŏk pyŏndong yŏn'gu. Seoul: Ilchogak.Google Scholar
Yi, Sŏngmu (1994). Hankuk ŭi kwakŏ cheto. Seoul: Chipmuntang.Google Scholar
Yu, Ch'unran (1997). Myŏng, Ch'ŏng kyoch'eki hanchok ŭi Chosŏn imin. Ph.D. diss., Academy of Korean Studies.Google Scholar
Zhu, Mei, Son, Byunggiu and Seo, Byungtae (2015). “Family Strategy of Economic Inequality among Brothers in Korean Rural Society, 1690–1795.” The History of the Family 20:2, pp. 291307.CrossRefGoogle Scholar