Ascending to the Imperial Throne: Kojong’s Elevation from King to Emperor and British Responses, 1895-1898

This article aims to examine the objective and the background of Kojong’s assumption of the title of emperor in 1897 and the British response. Kojong’s assumption of the new imperial title mainly aimed to end Korea’s centuries-long tributary relationship with China and to reclaim its position as an...

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Main Author: Euysuk Kwon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korea University, Center for Korean History 2021-02-01
Series:International Journal of Korean History
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ijkh.khistory.org/upload/pdf/ijkh-26-1-219.pdf
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spelling doaj-d151b8d420504a71912fd794f7cbc32e2021-03-26T02:05:41ZengKorea University, Center for Korean HistoryInternational Journal of Korean History1598-20412021-02-0126121925310.22372/ijkh.2021.26.1.219542Ascending to the Imperial Throne: Kojong’s Elevation from King to Emperor and British Responses, 1895-1898Euysuk Kwon0HK+ Research Professor, Center for Northeast Asian Humanities and Social Science, Wonkwang UniversityThis article aims to examine the objective and the background of Kojong’s assumption of the title of emperor in 1897 and the British response. Kojong’s assumption of the new imperial title mainly aimed to end Korea’s centuries-long tributary relationship with China and to reclaim its position as an independent country, which had been damaged by severe political events, such as the Japanese murder of Queen Min and Kojong’s asylum at the Russian Legation. To avoid any objection from foreign representatives, which he had already faced in 1895, Kojong took a very cautious and patient approach for months by building up justifications on why Kojong should assume a new imperial title. Kojong and his loyal officials mainly argued that the title would represent the complete independence of Korea and raise Korea’s status to the same level as China and Japan. However, foreign powers, especially Britain, were indifferent to the question of the assumption of the imperial title because their primary interest in the country, which was to balance Russia’s advance towards Korea, could not be achieved by a change in title. This show differences between Korea and Britain in their policies towards Korean questions.http://ijkh.khistory.org/upload/pdf/ijkh-26-1-219.pdfanglo-korean relationsemperor kojongdiplomatic historytaehan empirekorean history
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Euysuk Kwon
spellingShingle Euysuk Kwon
Ascending to the Imperial Throne: Kojong’s Elevation from King to Emperor and British Responses, 1895-1898
International Journal of Korean History
anglo-korean relations
emperor kojong
diplomatic history
taehan empire
korean history
author_facet Euysuk Kwon
author_sort Euysuk Kwon
title Ascending to the Imperial Throne: Kojong’s Elevation from King to Emperor and British Responses, 1895-1898
title_short Ascending to the Imperial Throne: Kojong’s Elevation from King to Emperor and British Responses, 1895-1898
title_full Ascending to the Imperial Throne: Kojong’s Elevation from King to Emperor and British Responses, 1895-1898
title_fullStr Ascending to the Imperial Throne: Kojong’s Elevation from King to Emperor and British Responses, 1895-1898
title_full_unstemmed Ascending to the Imperial Throne: Kojong’s Elevation from King to Emperor and British Responses, 1895-1898
title_sort ascending to the imperial throne: kojong’s elevation from king to emperor and british responses, 1895-1898
publisher Korea University, Center for Korean History
series International Journal of Korean History
issn 1598-2041
publishDate 2021-02-01
description This article aims to examine the objective and the background of Kojong’s assumption of the title of emperor in 1897 and the British response. Kojong’s assumption of the new imperial title mainly aimed to end Korea’s centuries-long tributary relationship with China and to reclaim its position as an independent country, which had been damaged by severe political events, such as the Japanese murder of Queen Min and Kojong’s asylum at the Russian Legation. To avoid any objection from foreign representatives, which he had already faced in 1895, Kojong took a very cautious and patient approach for months by building up justifications on why Kojong should assume a new imperial title. Kojong and his loyal officials mainly argued that the title would represent the complete independence of Korea and raise Korea’s status to the same level as China and Japan. However, foreign powers, especially Britain, were indifferent to the question of the assumption of the imperial title because their primary interest in the country, which was to balance Russia’s advance towards Korea, could not be achieved by a change in title. This show differences between Korea and Britain in their policies towards Korean questions.
topic anglo-korean relations
emperor kojong
diplomatic history
taehan empire
korean history
url http://ijkh.khistory.org/upload/pdf/ijkh-26-1-219.pdf
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