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(1)During the Japanese Invasion of Korea in 1592, Japanese soldiers who came to Joseon collapsed because of three major reasons
(2)First, King Seonjo, the monarch, abandoned the capital and ran north
(3)At that time, Toyotomi Hideyoshi, a government official, tried to capture King Seonjo, end the war, and bring him barrenly, but no one expected the king to run away
(4)Thanks to this, the Japanese army, who thought it would be over if the capital was occupied, was greatly embarrassed
(5)The second was the presence of King God Yi Sun-shin
(6)At the time, Japan thoroughly investigated Joseon’s leadership and officials, especially armed ones, through Japanese inspectors, but it failed to properly investigate Yi Sun-sin, a junior military officer at the time, and as a result, the Japanese army, which had lost its supply in the middle, began to lose power quickly, unlike in the early days
(7)My grandson, a master of military studies, described the supply of soldiers well-fed and well-dressed, to a level of vomiting, but it was natural that he could not fight properly because the supply was cut off
(8)The above is summarized in detail as follows
(9)1 Japanese commanders confused by the absence of a king
(10)2 The appearance of Yi Sun-shin who cuts off the supply in the middle
(11)And it was the last of the righteous army
(12)Even in Japan, mint chocolate woke up with it I called them Ikeki
(13)But in their case, they were close to their own group, and if an agreement is reached, they would disband themselves
(14)I did, and more than anything else, I was different from the army
(15)a middle-aged executive
(16)Chalbang Main Station
(17)the Teenage Expressway
(18)Korean Studies Institute of Weightlifting
(19)EB membership
(20)Haeju, high technology
(21)the five-span edition
(22)It used to be said that there was no Joseon road, but today in paved or stone bay
(23)It wasn’t a road that went in, but it was a road that I built
(24)Today, it’s very similar. It’s the only way to go west
(25)It was a normal path
(26)But to explain it again, the rest of the way, except for that road
(27)Welcome to Hell itself. It’s hot in the summer and frozen in the winter
(28)Then let’s clean it up again
(29)The supply has been cut off, and the road is rugged, even though it has to be covered locally
(30)There
(31)He’s coming to the ruling guillotineIt’s their specialty, mint chocolate, being heavily armed and standing there
(32)I’m guerillaizing
(33)Why are you a commander of the army, or a war in Sibal
(34)If you pick Joseon soldiers, you know. Come to the mountain to catch them Laughing out loud
(35)Why don’t you think you can’t be a military commander
(36)Joseon army! Yes, they can’t come up
(37)the mountain where the commander of the Japanese army must go to find the righteous army
(38)the commander of the Japanese army
(39)Joseon army soldiers
(1)Solvent 2024-01-17 1912345 22970image text translation
(2)And when I go to the mountains, I get shocked by the sound
(3)I’m sure the surviving Japanese soldiers will leave it as a painting
(4)FIG. 9
(5)Rabbitohs 2024-01-17 19422 17170
(6)I’m sure those mint chocolate people participated, but they actually participated in the righteous army movement
(7)It was the noble class trained by Confucianism that led the movement
(8)Recommendation reply
(9)Myang Myang Myang 2024-01-17 222320
(10)In this way, it seems like only the aristocratic class trained in Confucianism participated in the righteous army campaign. LOL. Please say that the learned aristocrats participated as officers, not as Yangmin and Cheonmin as soldiers. In fact, righteous army leaders such as Kwak Jae-woo, Choheon and Ko Kyung-myung were from the civil class, and Kim Deok-ryeong, like Baekjeong, a tiger who said, “I am Kim Deok-ryeong” in the Imjin Rock Game, was surprisingly a Neo-Confucianist
(11)LOL
(12)Am I the only one who found it? 2024-01-15 225706
(13)Be careful when Koreans ask you to go hiking!
(14)I want to go to the mountain this weekend to Koreans
(15)A Japanese recommended that
(16)←Imagining scenery Real scenery →
(17)Even in the 21st century, I’m perplexed