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正祖 즉위 초기 對淸 외교 정책과 조정의 對淸 인식

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Authors

한승현

Issue Date
2021-12-31
Citation
한국문화, Vol.96 No., pp. 137-176
Keywords
정조건륭제칠순 진하동순 진하화이의식전례 만들기ChŏngjoQianlongQianlong's seventieth birthdayEastern imperial tour
celebration
Sino-Barbarian dichotomyprecedent fabrication
Abstract
This article examines Chosŏn courts diplomatic policy toward the Qing during the
first few years of King Chŏngjo's reign up until Qianlong Emperors seventieth birthday
in 1780. Existing studies have stressed the significance of this imperial birthday as a
pivotal moment in the relationship between Chosŏn and the Qing. Seldom, however, did
they venture to explore the role and importance of Chŏngjos early policy toward the
Qing prior to 1780. This article argues that, during these early years of his reign,
Chŏngjo actively pushed forward various measures to show the sincerity of the Chosŏn
in serving the great.
The king sent a special diplomatic mission to the Qing to apologize for inappropriate
words in a previous memorial. The king also dispatched envoys to Shengjing in
Manchuria to greet Qianlong despite the emperors prior order to exempt Chosŏn from
this obligation. These were all received very favorably by Qianlong. Furthermore,
Chŏngjo even insisted the court send a special envoy to celebrate the imperial visit to
Shengjing, even if his suggestion did not materialize mainly due to the absence of a
proper precedent. All of these active royal efforts aimed at exemplifying to the Qing the
sincerity of Chosŏn and at bolstering amicable relations between the two states. The
courts decision to celebrate in advance the seventieth birthday of the emperor should be
understood in this context.
It did not mark the beginning of Chŏngjos active policy toward the Qing but was a
continuation of a series of such efforts taken earlier in his reign. Chosŏn, however, had
no precedent that could justify sending a mission to celebrate the seventieth birthday of
a Qing emperor. Shortly before the demise of Kangxi Emperor in 1722, the Qing court
delivered an order to Chosŏn that an envoy should be sent carrying a special memorial
congratulating the seventieth imperial birthday that would fall in the third month of
1723. The memorial, however, was never submitted because of the emperors death.
While assigning to the regular mission arriving in Beijing at the end of 1779 the task
of carrying a memorial celebrating Qianlongs seventieth birthday, Chief State Councilor
Kim Sangchŏl surprisingly claimed that Chosŏn had sent an envoy to celebrate Kangxis
seventieth birthday, fabricating a precedent by distorting diplomatic documents exchanged
earlier. Kims fabrication of a precedent undoubtedly grew out of his concern to justify
the kings unprecedented action to send such a mission.
Kim soon fabricated another precedent regarding the timing of Chosŏn's celebration of
Kangxi's birthdays, this time to support his suggestion that the court sends another
mission in 1780 to celebrate the imperial seventieth birthday on the birthday itself. Why
was Kims fabrication necessary? This article argues that solid Sino-barbarian dichotomy
pervasive among envoys and other court officials at that time lay behind Kim's
fabrication.
With the flourishing of the Qing and the stabilization of Chosŏn-Qing relations during
the eighteenth century, there were officials in Chosŏn who acknowledged the prosperity
of the Qing. The view that the Qing was treating Chosŏn very favorably was also
widely shared among the monarchs and court officials. However, underneath this level of
perception toward the Qing lay a firmly-rooted view that considered the Manchus as
barbarians. Celebrating the seventieth birthday of a Qing emperor was, in fact,
unprecedented, and the Qianlongs court, at least officially, had never mandated Chosŏn
to dispatch a mission for that purpose. The dispatch was primarily a voluntary move by
Chŏngjo. In light of the still-solid Sino-barbarian dichotomy, the lack of a precedent,
and the absence of a Qing order to mandate the dispatch of a mission, it was difficult
for Chŏngjo to put his scheme into action. Kim Sangchŏl, therefore, found a way to
relieve the burden for the king by fabricating precedents justifying Chŏngjos actions.
ISSN
1226-8356
Language
Korean
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/180163
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