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# Kingdom of Korea (朝鲜王国) — V3 Start 1836
## Basic Info
- **Capital**: Hanyang (Seoul equivalent)
- **Head of State**: King of Korea (朝鲜王朝 — Joseon-equivalent dynasty, possibly Goryeo continuation)
- **Government**: Monarchy with Privy Council (議政府-equivalent). In practice: **oligarchy** of two elite groups — native Korean yangban (両班) aristocracy + ex-Song Chinese military-industrial families (華族 "Sino-Korean houses"). King mediates between them.
- **Economy**: State-owned mining sector (nationalized ~1650) transitioning to **oligarchic market economy** — mining families (both Korean and Chinese-origin) control key industries as private/semi-private conglomerates.
- **State Religion**: Confucian state ideology + Buddhism (popular)
- **Technology Tier**: 2.5 (mining/metallurgy strong, manufacturing developing, consumer industry weak)
- **Population**: Medium (~10-15M)
- **Literacy**: Moderate-high (Confucian education, possibly Korean script exists alongside Chinese characters)
## Territory
- Korean Peninsula (full — no division)
- No overseas territories (yet)
- Northern border: Jianzhou Republic (land connection — THE security threat)
- Western: Yellow Sea → New Song
- Eastern/Southern: Sea of Japan/Korea Strait → Japan
## The Two Aristocracies
The defining feature of Korean politics: **two parallel elite classes that must coexist but don't trust each other.**
### Native Korean Yangban (両班 — 본토 귀족)
```
Who: Traditional Korean aristocratic families
Origin: Pre-Song-vassalage Korean nobility. Survived 400 years of Song suzerainty.
Control: Land ownership, civil bureaucracy, Confucian academies, court ritual
Culture: Korean language (日常), Chinese literary culture (official), Confucian values
Want: Korean identity primacy, reduce Chinese-origin families' power
Traditional social order, land privileges maintained
Skeptical of industrialization (disrupts social hierarchy)
Strength: Numbers, legitimacy, cultural institutions, royal family ties
Weakness: Conservative, technologically behind, no industrial expertise
```
### Sino-Korean Houses (華族 — 화족)
```
Who: Descendants of Northern Song garrison officers absorbed ~1650
Origin: Chinese military-technical families who chose to stay + intermarried with Koreans
Control: Mining sector, heavy industry, weapons manufacturing, military commands
Culture: Bilingual (Korean + Chinese), technically educated, pragmatic
Want: Maintain industrial/military dominance, market access, modernization
Don't want to be purged as "foreigners" (185 years later they're Korean too!)
Strength: Control the economy (mines, factories), military expertise, technical knowledge
Weakness: ~15-20% of elite? Seen as "not truly Korean" by nativists
Vulnerable to nationalist purge campaigns
```
### The King's Balancing Act
```
The King needs BOTH groups:
├ Yangban: provide legitimacy, administration, cultural cohesion
└ Sino-Korean: provide industry, military capability, modern technology
If Yangban dominate → Korea falls behind technologically → conquered
If Sino-Korean dominate → Korean identity erodes → becomes Song satellite
King must balance → never let either group get too powerful
V3 mechanic: Two competing interest groups with inverse relationship
→ Empowering one weakens the other
→ Events force choices between them
→ Optimal play: thread the needle between both
```
## Economy: Mining Oligarchy
### From State Ownership to Oligarchic Market
```
~1650: Mines nationalized (seized from Song merchants)
~1650-1750: State-owned mining (royal monopoly)
~1750-1836: Gradual privatization → mining families (both Korean and Sino-Korean)
become industrial oligarchs (재벌 precursors)
By 1836:
├ 5-8 major mining/industrial families control the economy
├ Mix of yangban and Sino-Korean houses (intermarried in some cases)
├ Iron, coal, gold, copper → steel, weapons, machinery (some)
├ Market economy BUT oligarchic (few families control everything)
├ Small merchants/workers have little economic power
└ State still has nominal ownership stake in some mines (royal revenue)
Problem: oligarchs resist competition, block new entrants, keep labor cheap
→ Similar to historical Korean chaebol but in 1836 context
```
## Core Gameplay
### 1. The Belgian Dream: Navy + Colony
```
Korea is small and surrounded → the sea is the only escape.
Historical Belgium (1830s): small, industrial, surrounded by France/Germany/Netherlands
→ Belgium built a navy and grabbed Congo
→ Punching above its weight through colonial enterprise
Korea's version:
├ Build a modern navy (currently almost nonexistent)
├ Find a colony somewhere (where? options below)
├ Colonial resources + markets = economic independence from neighbors
└ Navy = deterrence against Japan (sea power) and projection capability
Possible colonial targets:
├ Pacific islands? (Japan already dominates the North Pacific → risky)
├ Formosa/Taiwan area? (contested between Song and others → dangerous)
├ Southeast Asian fragments? (far but some Chinese polities might welcome Korean trade)
├ A piece of underclaimed Australia? (very far, speculative)
└ Or accept: Korea is too small for colonies → focus on domestic development
Journal Entry: "Korean Navy" → build fleet → then "Colonial Venture" unlocks
→ But building a navy means diverting resources from land defense (北方 Jianzhou threat!)
→ Classic small-state dilemma: guns vs butter vs ships
```
### 2. The Jianzhou Problem (北方 위협)
```
Jianzhou Republic shares Korea's only land border.
Both countries are ex-Northern Song industrial successor states.
Both compete in the same economic niche (heavy industry, weapons).
Both are small and threatened by Song.
Logic says: ALLY (共同 대Song 방어)
Reality: deep mutual suspicion
├ Jianzhou is a republic (Korea is a monarchy → ideological friction)
├ Jianzhou's industrial oligarchs compete directly with Korean oligarchs
├ Border disputes (where exactly is the Yalu River line?)
├ Jianzhou sells weapons to EVERYONE including potential Korean enemies
└ But: if Song attacks one, the other must help or be next
V3: Permanent tension with diplomatic events
→ Alliance of convenience (anti-Song pact) possible but fragile
→ Or: one side tries to absorb/vassalize the other (risky — the third parties intervene)
```
### 3. Japan: The Wound That Never Heals
```
Japan invaded Korea TWICE (~1592, ~1650s)
Both times repelled — but devastation enormous
185 years later: Korean national psyche still defined by anti-Japanese resistance
BUT: Japan is now a Tier 1.5 Pacific power with dreadnoughts
AND: Japan and Korea share an enemy (Jianzhou → forced BOTH open / invaded BOTH)
AND: Japan might be Korea's best counterweight against Song
The impossible choice:
├ Ally with Japan → strategic security, but national humiliation ("we allied with the invaders")
│ → Yangban aristocracy FURIOUS ("betraying the ancestors")
│ → Sino-Korean houses might support (pragmatic)
├ Remain hostile → principled but dangerous (Japan is too strong to antagonize without allies)
├ Cautious engagement → trade yes, alliance no, keep your distance
└ V3: Japan-Korea diplomatic events constantly test this tension
If Japan's military does a 独走 into Korea:
→ All bets off → war → Korea must fight alone or beg for Song/Jianzhou help
→ Catastrophic event that reshapes NE Asian politics
```
### 4. Song: The Cultural Black Hole
```
New Song = former suzerain, cultural hegemon, enormous neighbor
Pull factors:
├ Korean elite educated in Chinese classics → cultural gravity
├ Song market = enormous (hundreds of millions of consumers)
├ Song protection against Japan/Jianzhou → security
Push factors:
├ Re-vassalization risk ("join us or else")
├ Song's economic dominance → Korean industry can't compete
├ Loss of independence (400 years of Song suzerainty already happened once)
V3: Song is always there, always pulling, never satisfied with mere friendship
→ Trade agreements that slowly become dependency
→ "Cultural exchange" programs that are actually soft power operations
→ Song offers military protection that comes with strings
→ Player must set boundaries or get absorbed
```
### 5. The Identity Project
```
The most important long-term goal: build a KOREAN national identity
that is neither Chinese nor Japanese.
Tools:
├ Korean script (한글 — if it exists in this timeline; historical invention 1443)
│ → Promote as national language vs Chinese characters used by elite
│ → Literacy campaign in Korean → creates national consciousness
├ Korean history narrative ("we resisted Song AND Japan → we are survivors")
├ Korean art, literature, music (distinct from Chinese traditions)
├ "Korean" as ethnic identity embracing BOTH yangban and Sino-Korean houses
│ → "We are all Korean now — Chinese-origin or not"
│ → Defuses the two-aristocracy split through nationalism
└ National education reform: Korean-language schools → new generation thinks in Korean
V3: Journal Entry "Forge the Korean Nation"
→ Steps: script reform → education law → cultural institutions → national narrative
→ Each step faces resistance (Yangban want Chinese classics, Sino-Korean want bilingualism)
→ Completion: unified national identity → political stability → reform capability
```
## Flavor
### The Hermit Kingdom That Opened
- Korea's historical nickname: "Hermit Kingdom" (隐士之国)
- In this timeline: was a "hermit" under Song suzerainty for 400 years → then forced to stand alone
- 185 years of independence → now neither hermit nor vassal, but WHAT is Korea?
- National character: resilient, stubborn, suspicious of outsiders, proud of survival
- Flavor events: historical memory of invasions, ancestral rites controversy, port city cosmopolitanism vs rural conservatism
### Mining Towns vs Court Culture
- Korea has two faces: the aristocratic court (Hanyang) and the industrial mining towns (north)
- Court: Confucian ritual, poetry, painting, traditional robes
- Mining towns: hard hats, coal dust, factory whistles, pragmatic engineering
- Cultural tension: which is "real Korea"?
- Flavor events: mining disasters, court scandals, culture clash between aristocrats visiting mines
### The DMZ That Isn't
- Northern border with Jianzhou: heavily fortified, militarized, tense
- Not officially a "DMZ" but effectively one
- Smuggling, espionage, defections (both directions — some Jianzhou workers want Korean monarchy, some Korean dissidents want Jianzhou republicanism)
- Flavor events: border incidents, spy cases, tunnel discoveries
## Relationships
| Country | Relationship | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| New Song | **Cultural magnet / threat** | Wants Korea back in orbit. Enormous trade partner but re-vassalization risk. |
| Japan | **Historical enemy / potential ally** | Two invasions never forgotten. But shared threats force pragmatism. 独走 risk = existential. |
| Jianzhou | **Rival twin / reluctant ally** | Same origin (ex-Song), same niche, same enemies. Logical alliance but emotional rivalry. Land border = permanent tension. |
| England | **Best distant friend** | Far enough to not threaten, wants Pacific partners, buys Korean minerals, sells naval technology. |
| Mongol Khanate | **Minor / buffer** | Sparse neighbor to northwest. Irrelevant unless it collapses (then land grab opportunity?). |
| Kalmar Union | **Minor trade** | Distant but Vinland settlers might buy Korean steel/goods via Pacific routes. |
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