Battle of Hansan Island

Battle of Hansan Island
Date14-15 August 1592
LocationThe eastern coast of Hansan Island
Result Decisive Korean victory
Belligerents
Fleet of Toyotomi Hideyoshi Joseon navy
Commanders and leaders
Wakizaka Yasuharu
Kuki Yoshitaka
Kato Yoshiaki
I Sunsin
I Eokgi
Won Gyun
Strength
Hansando:
36 large ships[1]
24 medium vessels[2]
13 small boats[2]
Angolpo:
42 ships[2]
55 warships[3]
Casualties and losses
~100 ships[4] 19 dead[4]
114 wounded[4]
Battle of Hansan Island
Hangul 한산도대첩
Hanja 閑山島大捷
Revised Romanization Hansan-do Daecheop
McCune–Reischauer Hansan-do Taech'ŏp

The Battle of Hansan Island and following engagement at Angolpo took place from 14 to 15 August 1592. In two naval encounters, I Sunsin's fleet managed to destroy roughly 100 Japanese ships and halted Japanese naval operations along the southern coast.[4]

Background

I Eokgi joined with I Sunsin at Yeosu on 10 August. On 12 August they rendezvouzed with Won Gyun at Noryang, bringing their total fleet strength to 55 warships. At Dangpo they received news of a Japanese fleet sailing west from Busan.[2]

Battle

On 14 August I Sunsin's fleet encountered a Japanese scout vessel and gave chase but broke off after sighting a large fleet of Japanese warships in Gyonnaeryang Strait. I Sunsin sent a small detachment forward to lure the Japanese fleet, and they took the bait, following them into open waters off Hansan Island. The Korean fleet assumed a U shaped crane formation with large warships in the center and lighter ships on its wings. The two fleets engaged in battle and the Japanese ships were destroyed while their arrows did nothing to the Korean ships. The battle lasted throughout the day until the Koreans tired from chasing and returned to open sea. Fourteen Japanese ships that had not engaged in combat escaped, the rest were destroyed. Wakizaka Yasuharu managed to withdrew to Gimhae.[2]

News of the Japanese defeat reached Busan within hours and two Japanese commanders, Kuki Yoshitaka and Kato Yoshiaki, immediately set sail with 42 ships for the port of Angolpo, where they hoped to face the Korean fleet close to shore.[2]

I Sunsin received news of their movements on 15 August and he advanced towards Angolpo to confront them. This time the Japanese were unwilling to follow the Koreans into open water and stayed onshore. They would not take the bait. In response the Korean fleet moved forwards and bombarded the anchored Japanese fleet for hours until they retreated inland. Later the Japanese returned and escaped on small boats. Both Kuki and Kato survived the battle.[4]

Aftermath

Won Gyun was left behind to mop up Japanese soldiers marooned on a small isle but fled after receiving a false report of a large Japanese fleet approaching. The Japanese managed to drift to shore using rafts made from the wreckage of their ships.[4]

On 23 August, Hideyoshi Toyotomi ordered naval commander Todo Takatora to reinforce operations in Korea and halted naval operations at Busan.[4]

International recognition

George Alexander Ballard (1862–1948), a vice admiral of British Royal Navy, complimented Admiral Yi's winning streaks by the Battle of Hansando highly:

"This was the great Korean admiral's crowning exploit. In the short space of six weeks [actually about 9 weeks, May 7, 1592 – July 7, 1592] he had achieved a series of successes unsurpassed in the whole annals of maritime war, destroying the enemy's battle fleets, cutting his lines of communication, sweeping up his convoys, imperilling the situation of his victorious armies in the field, and bringing his ambitious schemes to utter ruin. Not even Nelson, Blake, or Jean Bart could have done more than this scarcely known representative of a small and cruelly oppressed nation; and it is to be regretted that his memory lingers nowhere outside his native land, for no impartial judge could deny him the right to be accounted among the born leaders of men."[5]

References

  1. Hawley 2005, p. 335.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Hawley 2005, p. 235.
  3. Hawley 2005, p. 234.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Hawley 2005, p. 239.
  5. The Influence of the Sea on The Political History of Japan, 57p

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See also

Coordinates: 34°45′44″N 128°30′09″E / 34.7622°N 128.5025°E / 34.7622; 128.5025

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