Loading summary
A
For thousands of years, Korea has stood at the crossroads of East Asia, shaped by powerful neighbors yet never defined by them. It's been home to ancient kingdoms, Buddhist temples, Confucian scholars, devastating invasions, colonial rule, war, division, and one of the most remarkable economic and cultural turnarounds in modern history. Yet despite everything, they find themselves in the 21st century, independent yet divided. Learn more about the history of Korea on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. This episode is sponsored by Saily. When you travel internationally, staying connected can be a pain, something I have learned firsthand. You either have to pay expensive roaming fees, hunt for a local SIM card, or hope that airport and hotel wi fi actually work. Saily is an ESIM app that lets you buy mobile data for your destination before you leave home. Just download the app, choose the country or region you're visiting, install the esim, and you're ready to go when you land. No tiny plastic SIM cards you can lose, no standing in line at a kiosk, and no surprise roaming bill when you get home. Like the $500 bill I once got from 10 minutes of data use in Mozambique, Saily works with over 200 destinations, and because it comes from the team behind NordVPN, it also includes useful security features like web protection, ad blocking and virtual location tools. Download Saily in your app store and use Code everything everywhere at checkout to get an exclusive 15% off your first purchase. The details are in the Podcast Episode Description box. This episode is sponsored by Quints. Summer's here, and if you happen to live in a place with actual seasons as I do, that means wearing entirely different clothes. Wool sweaters are great when the temperatures drop, but they're not the best option when you're outside in the sun. Quince has European linen pants and shirts that are the perfect warm weather upgrade to add to your rotation. Starting at just $34. Their T shirts are soft and easy to wear, and their lightweight cotton sweaters are perfect for cool summer nights. I just got two Quint's T shirts myself, and I love them as always. Everything at Quint's is priced 50 to 80% less than similar brands, and they can do that by working directly with ethical factories and cutting out the middleman so you're paying for quality, not brand markup. Elevate your summer wardrobe. Go to quince.com daily for free shipping on your order and 365 day returns now available in Canada too. That's Q-U-I-N-E.com daily for free shipping and 365 day returns quince.com daily. In this episode, I'm going to provide a high level summary of the history of the Korean Peninsula. Although many of the subjects to be covered may warrant a dedicated episode in the future, this discussion is just going to focus on the pivotal historical events that help make Korea what it is. Korea is one of the great civilizations of East Asia, yet its history has been unlike that of any of its neighbors and has often been subject to their rule. At the heart of Korea's origin story is a foundational myth preserved by early chroniclers in a series of narratives known as the Tengun. According to the 13th century manuscript, which was likely compiled by a monk from earlier oral traditions, Hwang Gong, the son of the Lord of Heaven, descended to earth to live closer to people. The legend notes that a bear and a tiger prayed to him to become human. Hwan Ung then gave them a stay out of the sunlight and eat only garlic and mugwort for a hundred days and he would make them human. The tiger quit, but the bear persevered and transformed into a woman named Ungyo. She married Hwang Ung and their son Dan Gun established the Kingdom of Asadal near the modern day city of Pyongyang. There are many Paleolithic sites throughout the Korean peninsula, and some studies suggest that humans have occupied it for more than 20,000 years. Urban consolidation of the area began more than 7,000 years ago with the formation of rice cultivating Neolithic communities along Korea's river systems. Archaeologists trace the rise of these communities through their distinctive artifacts, including bronze daggers, massive stone tombs and impressive pottery. The history of the region becomes clearer from Chinese writings dating back to 1000 BC during the Zhou Dynasty, which first mentions the Korean peninsula as Chosan. Our knowledge of early Korean history largely comes from Chinese sources due to the region's limited literary development until the development of the Korean script in the 15th century. Although the early inhabitants of the Korean peninsula relied on an oral tradition, they adopted Chinese characters following interactions between the Gojoseon or Old Chosun Kingdom in the han dynasty approximately 2,000 years ago. During chaotic periods of Chinese history such as the Warring States Period, Chinese peasants often migrated in large numbers to the Korean peninsula. After the Han conquest of the Gojosean kingdoms, China launched a state sponsored colonization of the peninsula. Confucianism and the establishment of an imperial bureaucracy staffed by a civil service exam system were adopted in the Korean Peninsula. Korean kingdoms, which had often been decentralized, quickly began consolidating into larger states governed according to Chinese principles of imperial centralization the Three Kingdoms period in Koreanot to be confused with the Three Kingdoms period in China ran from 57 BC to the mid 7th century. During this period, three rival highly centralized kingdoms dominated the Korean peninsula and large parts of Manchuria. They were the Goguryu, the Pakchi, and the Silla. Of this group, the Silla emerged as the key player on the peninsula, thanks in large part to their military alliance with the Tang Dynasty in China. The Silla Tang alliance enabled Silla to unify Korea under their rule. While the partnership helped them assume dominion over the peninsula, it immediately created challenges as the Tang sought to colonize Korea, prompting the Silla to take up arms to drive them out. In the late 7th century, the Silla gradually moved away from certain core Chinese values, including Confucian meritocracy. In the 6th century, the Silla leaders adopted a lineage based social organization called the Bone Rank system, or galpum. The Golpum created a rigid caste system that divided people into royalty, nobility, and commoners. At the top tier one, only those with royal blood held eligibility to join the royal court and leadership class, angering those who had previously risen on the basis of their merit. The system didn't just outline political leadership, it also defined Korea's social customs. Your Bone Rank determined your attire, your profession, your housing, marriage options, and wealth. A 7th century Korean source, the Samguk Sagi, illustrated how the system imposed limitations on lower groups in Korean society and why many of them were driven to migrate to China. It notes, in Chile, the Bone Rank is the key to employment. If one is not of the nobility, no matter what his talents, he cannot achieve a high rank. I wish to travel to China, display rare resources and perfect meritorious deeds, and thereby open a path to glory and splendor, that I might wear the robes and sword of an official and serve closely the Son of Heaven. When the rival Goryeo Dynasty took control of the peninsula in the 10th century, it systematically dismantled the hereditary caste system, replacing it with a meritocratic Confucian Chinese style civil service system. The system flourished until the Mongol invasions reached the Korean peninsula in the 13th century. The Koreans fought valiantly against the Mongols, but they proved impossible to resist. The Mongols destroyed the Goryeo Dynasty in Korea, ultimately driving the ruling class into exile. The Mongol occupation resulted in the widespread ruin of the Korean peninsula through a campaign of massive cultural destruction. They razed native treasures like the Hwangyongse Pagoda, incinerated Korean literature, and dismantled the fundamental structures of the nation's governance and heritage. The death toll is unknown But. But historians place the number of Korean dead at nearly a million. The leader of Mongol, China, Kublai Khan, made the Korean peninsula a subject state of the Great Khanate. This subservient arrangement required unquestioned obedience and mandated that the Korean leadership reside at the Mongol court. To achieve the next phase of their expansion, the invasion of Japan, the Mongols required a massive naval fleet. To that end, the Mongols systematically stripped the Korean landscape of trees. They clear cut the forests of Korea, sacrificing even young trees to supply the Mongol navy, ushering in a wave of ecological devastation. Korea required centuries to recover from this calamity. The resurrection of the Korean state fell to Korea's most famous dynasty, the Chosan. The Choson Dynasty ruled Korea after the Mongols left and governed the peninsula until the dawn of the 20th century. The Choson oversaw a golden age in which Seoul began to emerge as the prominent administrative center. Seoul became synonymous with the resurgence of the Chinese style civil service bureaucracy and subsequently became a center of learning. But outsiders knew very little about Seoul, for in the wake of the Mongol occupation, the Choson adopted a very strict form of isolation. Korea became referred to as the Hermit Kingdom. Unlike their Asian neighbors, the Choson resisted all European involvement and limited their interaction to trade agreements with Japan and diplomatic exchanges with Qing China. Despite its isolation, the Choson enjoyed a technological boom. The Choson fully maximized the legacy of movable type printing, which was originally developed in Korea centuries before the Gutenberg press. The Choson took full advantage of this foundation by developing a new written script known as the Hangul Alphabet. Scholars have praised this writing system for its simplicity and ease of use. Containing only 28 phonetic symbols that capture the intricacies of Korean speech. It was widely taught in schools, leading to an explosion in literacy across the peninsula. The expansion of literacy created an equality of opportunity on the state sponsored bureaucratic examinations. This expansion didn't stop with Confucian exams, though. It continued into the halls of Korean science. The dynasty's most famous ruler, King Sejong, established the hall of Worthies, a royal research institute that produced innovations to improve Korean life. Like the House of Wisdom during the Abbasid Caliphate, this institute achieved great things, including the invention of advanced rain gauges, water clocks and sundials, as well as revolutionary agricultural manuals tailored to Korean soils. Following a destructive period of conflict with Japan in the 16th century, the Choson dynasty ushered in a remarkable era of peace and stability. Known as the Two Centuries of Peace. This isolationist era lasted from the early 1600s to the mid-19th century, during which The Tokugawa shogunate of Japan and the Korean state maintained peaceful diplomatic ties. But this peace and stability gradually came to an end in the late 19th century as an industrial and imperial Japan expanded its regional hegemony, forcing Korea to sign the first of its unequal treaties in 1876. This opened the door for European and Western powers to follow suit, rapidly fracturing the nation's isolation. Korean independence collapsed in 1910 as the rapidly expanding Japanese state swallowed up the peninsula. Korea's experience under Japanese military rule proved a dark and painful chapter. Koreans still find the period so painful that they often refer to its initial decade as the Dark period. Koreans suffered from forced labor, sexual abuse and military conscription. Observers have widely chronicled these abuses, including British journalist Fred Mackenzie, who covered the trauma of the Japanese occupation firsthand. He noted the forms of torture freely employed include, among others, the stripping, beating, kicking, flogging and outraging of schoolgirls and young women the burning of men, women and children by searing their bodies with hot irons, stringing men up by their thumbs, beating them with bamboo and iron rods until unconscious. Japan's control over Korea was ultimately one of resource extraction. They gave no thought to the human rights of the Korean people. But despite this, Japan ended up actually building modern infrastructure across the peninsula. The Japanese built extensive railway networks, telegraph lines, modern seaports, hydroelectric dams, and heavy industrial chemical plants. Japan didn't intend to develop Korea. It was simply pursuing its own interests. Nonetheless, the process did put Korea on a path towards modernization in the post World War II period. The defeat of the Japanese in the Second World War opened the door to the partition of Korea, with Communist North Korea aligning with the Soviet Union in China, and the south aligning with the United States in the Western world. These challenges ultimately played out in the Korean War, which I've covered in a previous episode. Technically, the war never ended. There has only been a ceasefire, which has been in effect for over 70 years. North and South Korea have evolved into vastly different states. North Korea has continued the tradition of being a hermit state, isolating itself and its people from the rest of the world. Since the end of the Cold War, South Korea has undergone one of the most dramatic transformations in modern history. It emerged from the war devastated, impoverished and politically unstable. But after decades of turmoil, South Korea has emerged not only as one of the wealthiest countries in the world, but also as one of the most culturally powerful. With K Pop and Korean movies and television consumed worldwide, the story of Korea isn't over. South Korea currently has one of the lowest birth rates in the world. Which means it will experience massive social upheaval in the future, no matter what happens. Despite centuries of invasion and control by its neighbors, the Korean Peninsula today is independent, albeit divided. The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel. The associate producers are Austin Otkin and Cameron Kieffer. Research and writing for this episode was provided by Joel Hermanson. My big thanks go to everyone who supports the show over on Patreon. Your support helps make this podcast possible, and I also want to remind everyone about the community groups on Facebook and Discord, as this is where everything happens outside of the podcast. As always, if you leave a review on any of the major podcast apps, you too can have it running the show.
Everything Everywhere Daily – Episode Summary: "A Brief History of Korea" (June 15, 2026)
In this episode, host Gary Arndt delivers a high-level yet engaging summary of the entire history of the Korean Peninsula, spanning mythical origins, dynastic changes, invasions, colonialism, war, and Korea’s remarkable modern resurgence. The episode aims to recount pivotal developments shaping Korea’s unique identity and its persistent resilience, while remaining concise and accessible—a foundation for deeper dives in future episodes.
"In Silla, the Bone Rank is the key to employment. If one is not of the nobility, no matter what his talents, he cannot achieve a high rank." (12:10)
“The forms of torture freely employed include, among others, the stripping, beating, kicking, flogging and outraging of schoolgirls and young women, the burning of men, women and children by searing their bodies with hot irons…” (24:10)
On Bone Rank System:
“In Silla, the Bone Rank is the key to employment. If one is not of the nobility, no matter what his talents, he cannot achieve a high rank.” — Gary Arndt quoting Samguk Sagi, (12:10)
On Mongol Occupation:
“The Mongols destroyed the Goryeo Dynasty in Korea, ultimately driving the ruling class into exile. The Mongol occupation resulted in the widespread ruin of the Korean peninsula through a campaign of massive cultural destruction.” — Gary Arndt, (14:22)
On Hangul Script:
“Scholars have praised this writing system for its simplicity and ease of use. Containing only 28 phonetic symbols that capture the intricacies of Korean speech.” — Gary Arndt, (18:35)
On Japanese Colonial Atrocities:
“The forms of torture freely employed include, among others, the stripping, beating, kicking, flogging and outraging of schoolgirls and young women…” — Fred Mackenzie (quoted by Gary Arndt), (24:10)
On Modern South Korea:
“It emerged from the war devastated, impoverished and politically unstable. But after decades of turmoil, South Korea has emerged not only as one of the wealthiest countries in the world, but also as one of the most culturally powerful.” — Gary Arndt, (27:10)
Gary Arndt’s narration is factual, concise, and lightly conversational, clearly intended for education without sacrificing narrative engagement. He maintains an accessible, almost storytelling tone throughout, anchoring sweeping developments with vivid details and poignant quotes.
This episode succinctly captures millennia of Korean history, balancing mythological, cultural, social, and political transformations. By weaving in notable anecdotes and arresting quotations, it provides an essential primer for understanding Korea’s past, present, and looming future dilemmas, all within a compact, digestible format. The episode stands as an ideal introduction for the curious, offering both breadth and memorable color.