Lеlаng Соmmаndеry
Lelang was one of the Chinese commanderies which was kept in the Korean Peninsula over 400 years until it declared independence as a separate Chinese state. It controlled the majority of the Korean peninsula.
History
In 108 B.C. Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty conquered the area under Youqu(右渠), a grandson of chinese general Weiman of Guchaoxian. The Emperor set up Lelang, Lintun, Xuantu and Zhenfan, known as the Four Commanderies of Han (漢四郡) in the Korean Peninsula. The Book of Han records Lelang belonged to Youzhou, located in northwestern Korea consisted of 25 prefectures, 62,812 houses, and the population was 406,748. Its capital was put near P'yŏngyang. (Rangrang 樂浪/락랑 is a district in central P'yŏngyang today.)
After Emperor Wu's death, Zhenfan and Lintun were abolished and Xuantu was moved to Liaodong. Some prefectures of the abolished commanderies were incorporated into Lelang. Lelang after the consolidation is sometimes called "Greater Lelang commandery". Since Lelang became too large for a commandery, the Defender of the Southern Section (南部都尉) was set up to rule the seven prefectures which formerly belonged to Zhenfan. Before that, the Defender of the Eastern Section (東部都尉) was put to rule former Lintun's seven prefectures.
A flux Chinese immigrations, mainly from the Yan (Hebei) and Qi (Shandong) provinces, continued without cessation, implanting Chinese culture into the peninsula. The Yan people came from the Yan area, around what is now Beijing, via Liaodong; and the Qi people came across the Yellow Sea. Among them, the Wang clan, whose ancestor is said to have fled there from Qi in the 2nd century B.C., became powerful. It is presumed that most of the Lelang Chinese spoke the Yan dialect.
While the Han Dynasty was taken over by Wang Mang, China fell into chaos. [Wang Tiao] (王調) started a rebellion and tried to secede from China. In 30 A.D. the rebellion was stopped by Wang Zun (王遵), whom Emperor Guangwu appointed as governor. Lelang came under the direct control of China once again. However, the shortages of human resources caused by the turmoil resulted in the abolishment of the seven eastern prefectures. The administration was left to the Hui (濊) natives, whose chiefs were conferred as marquisate.
At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, Gongsun Du, appointed as the Governor of Liaodong in 184, extending his semi-independent domain to the Lelang and Xuantu commanderies. His son Gongsun Kang separated the southern half from the Lelang commandery and established the Daifang commandery in 204. As a result, the Lelang commandery reverted to its original size.
In 236 under the order of Ming Di of Kingdom of Wei, Sima Yi crushed the Gongsun family and annexed Liaodong, Lelang and Daifang to Wei. Lelang was inherited by the Jin Dynasty. Due to bitter civil wars, Jin became unable to control the Korean peninsula at the beginning of the 4th century. Zhang Tong (張統) broke away from Jin in Lelang and Daifang. After Luoyang, the capital of Jin, was occupied by the Xiongnu in 311, he went for help to Murong Hui, a Xianbei warlord, with his subjects. Murong Hui put another small Lelang commandery in Liaodong. The former Lelang then declared indepedence.
See also
- List of China-related topics
- List of Korea-related topics
- History of Korea
- History of China
External links
- 1 Description of the Nangnang Tombs in Pyongyang (in Korean)
- Tian Huang Stone (樂浪太守椽王光之印)
de:Lelang-Kommandantur ko:낙랑군 ja:楽浪郡 zh:乐浪郡